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Page-14-The .
•
Sentinel
Controversy
•
conttnues
over.cancer
treatment
By ROB STEIN
UPI Science Writer
BOSTON (UPI) - Breast
cancer patients appear Jess
likely to suffer relapses If they
receive drug therapy after
surgery, even if the cancer does
not seem to have spread, four
major studies have concluded.
The studies. involving more
than 5,000 women whose cancer
appeared to have been confined
to their breast, found those who
received chemotherapy were up
. to 15 percent less likely to have a
recurrence If they received chemotherapy or hormonal therapy
following surgery.
The findings support a controversial advisory Issued by goverrunent cancer experts last
spring suggesting all women
with breast cancer consider
so-called adjuvant therapy after
surgery.
But experts continue to di sagree. Some argue that the new
studies provide convincing evidence that nearly all breast
cancer patients should receive
adjuvant therapy. Others maintain that more research Is needed
to determine who would be most
likely to benefit.
About One aut of every 10
American women will . develop
breast cancer during her life, and
about 140,000 new cases of breast
cancer are diagnosed each year.
About half the cases are called
"node negative"· because tests
find no evidence that .the cancer
spread to lymph nodes In the
armpits.
Before May 1988, doctors had
usually recommended that most
"node negative" patients have
the cancer removed surgically,
but did not require · followup
therapy.
But citing preliminary results
of three government studies, the
National Cancer Instllute (NCI)
issued a "clinical alert" suggestIng that all breast cancer pa·
tients could benefit from either
chemotherapy or hormone treatments after surgery.
The suggestion touched off a
controversy, with some researchers arguing that there was
not enough evidence to support
recommending that so many
women undergo the costly and
potentially dangerous followup
therapy.
In this we.e k's issue of The New
Engiand Journal of Medicine.
researchers reported full results
of the three studies on which the
NCI based its alert, plus a fourth
study that supports the findings
of the other three.
The studies found that whlle
there was no overall di f!erence in
the death rate between "nodenegative" women who received
adjuvant therapy and those who
did not, the women who received
the foilowup therapy were significantly less likely to suffer
recurrences of their cancers.
In orie of two editorials accompanying the studies. former NCI
Director Dr. VIncent DeVita Jr.
said the studies demonstrate that
foilowup therapy causes "an
Impressive reduction in the risk
of recurrence among patients
with node- negative disease."
"All the findings indicate that
all women with newly diagnosed
localized invasive breast cancer
can and should be offered some
form of systemic treatment,"
said DeVita, who Is now at the
Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center In New Yot·k.
But In a companion editorial,
Dr. William McGuire of the
University of Texas Health
Science Center In San Antonio
noted thai studies have shown
that 70 percent of "nodenegative" patients will not suffer
a relapse regardless of whether
they receive followup treatment.
MaGuire argued it was not
worth subjecting the majority of
such patients to followup therapy
In the hopes of benefiting the 30
perceni of patients at risk of
suffering a recurrence.
Adjuvant treatment Is relatively ~afe but does produce
adverse side effects and occasionally death, he said. McGuire
es tlmated that as many as 50 to
100 patients would die If all
patients received the therapy,
and It would cost more than $338
million a year to treat the
patients who would not benefit.
"I would argue that the cost
considerably outweighs the benefits, especially In the absence
of proved survival benefit,"
McGuire wrote.
Dr. Arnold. Reiman, editor of
the prestigious medical journal,
said in another essay accompanying the studies that the confusion probably will be cleared up
by future research.
"In the meantime, physicians
faced with the responsibility of
advising patients should study
!he available evidence for them~elves," he said.
Wednesday. February 22, 1989
Ohio Lottery
Flyers Kerr
in spotli~t
Daily ·Number
200
Pick4
5106
Super Lotto
16, 17, 32,
35, 36, 38
Kicker 914179
Page 3
We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities
STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM
Cloudy, to parllJ cloudy
today. Low between 5 and len.
Friday, fair and co lei. tughs In
the upper 20s.
•
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., FEB. 19 THRU SAT .. FEB. 25. 1989
.'
.
Vot.39, No.202
'
2 Soctlono. 12 Pageo
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ollio, Thursday. February 23, 1989
Copyrighted 1989
2& Cenu
A Multimedia Inc. NewJPeper
Commission appoints
waste district bOard
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ar
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Sausage •••••••••••••••
10 OZ. LINK OR lB. ROLl
· Two cats and a lrullding wefe~·
damaged but no personal lnjuries Incurred In an accident at the
intersection of West Second Ave.
and Mulberry Ave. Wedn(sday
afternoon.
According to Pomeroy police,
the brakes failed on the car
driven by Rebecca Davidson, 23,
of Dark Hollow Road, Pomeroy,
as she approached the lnterseC'
\
Bacon-•••••••••••••••••-.~·~ 69<
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W1eners .•.•••••••••••••-. 99<
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The car went across the
Intersection, struck the rear of a
parked car owned by Coty Curtis
of Seneca Drive, Pomeroy,
knocked down a parking meter
and then struck a building owned
by Bill Quickel at the corner of
Mulberry and Court Streets
before coming to a stop.
· There was moderate front end
a·a mage to the Davidson vehicle,
light rear end damage to the
Curtis car, and heavy structural
damage to the building, accord·
ing to the report. ·
Neither the driver nor the two
passengers In the Davidson vehi."
cle were injured.
Davidson was charged by the
police for the lack of financial
responslblllty insurance.
$6 m~llion schoo,lloans approved
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) The state Controlling Board
Wednesday approved the release
of more than $6.1 million from the
Emergency School L.oan Fund to
seven school districts, with
nearly half that money going to
Cleveland aty schools.
The school systems need the
money to make up for taxes that
were not collected because of
bankruptcies and cutbacks by
large sources of revenue within
BOUNTY
Pomeroy as she approached the lnlersectlon. The
vehicle went across West Second, st~uclc a parked
car, knocked down a parking meter and stopped
after hitting the Quickel buDding. (Sentinel photo)
.No injuries reported in accident
'
that damages two cars, building
BALLARD'S
CAROLINA PRIZE
BRAKE FAILURE - This was lhe accident
scene at the Intersection of Mulberry and West
Second Avenue Wednesday afternoon. The brakes
failed on a car driven by Rebecca Davidson of
The Meigs County Commissioners officially made appointments to the governing board of
the new Solld Waste District
which Includes Meigs, Athens,
· Hocking, Vinton, Gallla and
Jackson Counties. According to
State law, each county in the
district must appoint five
members to the district governing board, Including the mayor of
!he largest municipality In the
county, the pres !dent of the
county commission, a township
trustee representative and the
county deputy health commis·
stoner. These four board
members must then select the
fifth board member.
Appointed by the commissioners In Wednesday's regular
meeting were Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman, County Commission President Manning Roush.
Township Trustees' Association
President Gary Dill and County
Deputy Health Commissioner
Jon Jacobs.
These four members are to
select the fifth by next Wednesday's commission meeting.
CAT FOOD
6.0-6.5
oz.
51Sl
• PUREX DETERGENT
147
oz.
$399
C•tomtr
Super Valu
1'
f •. 25. 1919 •
their dis trlcts.
. Without objection, the sevenmember board released
$2,968,727 from the fund to. the
Cleveland City school district,
which suffered a financial setback when the LTV Steel Co.
declared bankruptcy.
The amount of the loan was
calculated through a complicated formula based on Information certified by the Cuyahoga
County auditor, said James Van
Keuren, director of the Ohio
Department of Education's Dlv·
islon of School Finance.
The money must be repaid by
the end of fiscal199l, or earlier if
the school system can reach a
back-tax settlement with LTV
before then, VanKeuren said.
Loans also were approved for
Groveport-Madison Local
schools In Franklin County
($853,642), Warren City schools
(See $6 MILLION, page 6)
The commissioners,
James
M. Soulsby andSheriff
Fire
Marshall Richard Dutton completely toured the Meigs County
Jail Wednesday morning . and
discussed at that ·time any Items
that may need corrected.
Commissioner Richard Jones
said a lull report 6f any changes
that are to be made wlll be
announced at next Wednesday's
meeting when: Sheriff Souisby
can be present.
Upon recommendation of
County ·Prosecuting Attorney
Steven L. Story, the commissioners rejected four bids for a
pickup truck that was being sold
by the county, because two of the
four bids were Identical.
The commissioners must post
the county auditor's office, and
no bid less that $401 will be
accepted since that was the
amount of the two previously
Identical bids.
In other business matters, the
commissioners discussed a requestfrom Serenity House, Galli·
polls, to · receive their disbursement of mar.rlage license tax
money for victims of domestic
violence on ·a monthly rather
than semi-annual basis.
The commissioners Instructed
Clerk Mary Hobstetter to write
Serenity House that It was their
understanding that according to
law, the money could not be
distributed monthly. The commlssion~rs said that until they
receive official authority from
the state, the semi-annual disbursement procedure must
continue.
Upon recommendation of Mellon Bank, Plt1sburgh, Pa .• tbe
firm· of Prescott, Ball and Turbin
Inc. . has been accepted by the
commissioners as successor in·
dexlng agent on the Big Wheel
Industrial ·a ands Sale, ·replacing
Kenny Informatlo'lSystems. The
change will be in effect as soon as
contract ural document · are _
executed.
A request for a Cl-C2 liquor
license transfer from Allen and
Donna Stacy, doing business as
the Little Coal Bucket, Salem
Township, Langsv(lle1 to Cecil D.
and VIckie J. Frye, at the same
location, has been received by
the commissioners.
The transfer request must be
sent to the State Department of
Liquor Control by March 16. Any
comments on the transfer request must be In to the commissioners no later that March 10.
Finally, a request from the
county prosecutor aq.d sheriff to
evenly divide Law Enforcement
Trust Fund monies between their ·
two offices was tabled until a
meeting between .the commissioners, the Prosecutor and the
sheriff can be scheduled to
discuss the matter in greater
detail.
Elect;on board rules
l"
d
peltltlons lnva f,
11
•
•
•
•
Tbree petitions. two for Mldddleport Village Council and a
third for Pomeroy \Tillage Council have been declared invalid
by the Meigs County Board of Elections.
Ail three petitions were ruled insufficient, according to Jane
Frymyer, Board of Elections director.
For seats on Middleport Village Council, the Invalid petitions
were filed by Robert Gilmore, Republican, Incumbent, and
Jack Satterfield, Democrat, incumber!.
Also ruled Invalid was the petition of Barbara James,
Republican, who had filed for a seat on Pomeroy Village
Council.
All three can go the route of being a write-In candidate Gilmore and James In tne May 2 primary, and Satterfield in the
November general election since no democratic primary will be
held this year.
· · '
the rebidding In thelr~o;f;fi~ce~a:nd~-=======:;:===::;:::=;;;tm~aniiiiiiiii~
Senate education·reform study
will cost little, president says
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Substituting the ''R'' word for the
•'T" word, Senate President
Stanley Aronoff said Wednesday
the Senate will begin a comprehensive study of a package of
education reforms that will cost
little money.
"Our slate needs educatiOn
reform," Aronoff, R-Cinclnnatl,
told a press conference. ''Far too
much attention has been focused
on the question of whether to tax
or not to tax that not enough
. attention has been trained on !he
recommendations designed to
make our schools work better.
The 'T' word has dominated so
much that the 'R' word has
•'The commission recommenalmost been lost."
dations Include a number of bold,
Aronoff said he will introduce innovative initiatives to reform
legislation encompassing the re- the delivery of education In our
commendations of special com- state," said the senator.
missions established last year by
"The omnibus biD will give the
the Senate and Gov. Richard public and education community
Celeste.
an opportunity to debate and
Among those recommendaclarify the numerous suggestions
tions, he said, are accountability outlined by the commissions
in schools, statewide tesiing,
without the dlstracllon of the tax
parental involvement, student debate."
and teacher Incentives, school
Aronoff said he hopes a reform ·
partnerships with business,
package could be sent to the
teacher recruitment, school conHouse about the time the House
solidation. open enrollment, teen ; sends the Senate the $25 billion
pregnancy programs and basic
state budget for 1990-91. That is
reading.
(See SENATE, page 6)
IS THAT A
-Heavy raiJIS over !he past
few days have caused many lawns, like this one In
Bishops seek reconsideration of Court's abortion
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Saying lawful abortions have failed
to solve medical and family
prol,llems, the nation's Roman
Catholic bishops Thursday asked
the Supreme Court to rethink its
16-year-old filling that legalized
!he procedures.
''To be true to Its constitutional
roots and history, the court
should courageously label excess
for what II is and promise to
begin a thoughtful reconsideration of abortion jurisprudence," ·
the U.S. Catholic Conference said
In a friend-of-the-court brief.
The conference Is the social
policy arm of -U.S. Roman
Cathollc bishops, who number
more than 300,
The brief was filed in connection- with lhe abortion case
"Webster vs. Reproductive
Health Services," which the
court has agreed to hear ancl
which activists on both sides of
the Issue believe could lead to
significant erosion of the law
legalizing most abortions .
The Reagan administration
Just two days after the November
election - before the court had
agreed to hear the case - also
asked the justices to use !he
Webster case to reconsider its
aborllon rulings . More briefs are
expected to be filed by opponents
of abortion and pro-choice
advocates.
The· bishops asked the Supreme Co'urt to review the 1973
"Roe vs. Wade" decision and "to
reconsider Its rationale tor Including abortion within the right
of privacy."
"I'hls court placed a freedom
to choose abortion within Its
privacy doctrine because It
thought that by constitutlonallz·
lng abortion, the health and
welfare· of both women and
society would improve," the
brief stated.
But it said the evidence Indicates "abortion has failed to
solve the medical, famlllal and
societal problems it was suppOsed to cure.
• •'To the contrary, it has Inflicted Its own evils upon women,,
the family, our communities and
the nation."
The Webster case reached the
Supreme Court when the Mls•sourl attorney general appealed
a decision by the 8th U.S. Circuit
, Court of Appeals that Invalidated
several provisions of a state law
-
the Rutlaad area, to look more like lakes than
lawns.
regulating abortion .
The Missouri law defined human life as beginning at conception and required tests to determine fetal viability before an
abortion could be performed.
The law banned the use of public
funds for counseling orencourag·
log women to have an abortion.
The bishops did not address the
specifics of the Missouri law, but
said the court "has accepted a
unique challenge - whether to
continue the wholesale Invalidation of regulatory efforts di·
rected at abortion or to begin a
process of reasoned reconsldera-
rul~g
Uon of Its jurisprudence in this
controversial area."
The church leaders said becauSe the "right" to have an
abortion "imperils vital and
fundamental interests of many,
not merely the concerns of
women and their physicians, this ;
court shoqld review Its basic
approach to abortion cases."
If the Supreme Court upholds
the lower court decision striking
down the Missouri regulations,
''otl)er fundamental rights, mo~t
especially those of countless
unborn children" would be vlolated, the ~!shops said.
.
•
�Thursday, February 23, 1989
·c ommentarY_
The Daily Sentinel
11_1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
· DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA
~~
!Sl mii:l
~v
I'"T"'L....L....... rT"'Ea .:~ '"""
.
ROBERT L. WINGETJ'
Publisher
PAT WHITEtiEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer
A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association aad the AmeriCan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300 words
long. All letters are subject toedttlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUJ be published. Letters should be In
&Qod taste, Bddresslng Issues, not persooalltles.
Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, Feb. 23, the 54th day of 1989 with 311 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this day are under the sign of Pisces. They include
German composer George Frederick Handel in 1685, Meyer Amschel
'Rothschild, European banker and founder of the Rothschild financial
dynasty, in 1743, black writer and p'hilosopher W.E.B. DuBois ln 1868.
film director Victor Fleming in 1883, journalist-author William Shirer
in 1904 (age 85), and actor Peter Fonda in 1939 (age 50 )_.
On this date In history:
. In 1942. a Japanese submarine surfaced off the coast of Ca lifornia
and fired 25 shells at an oil refinery near Santa Barbara.
In 1945, six members of the 5th Division of the U.S. Marines planted
an American flag atop Mount Suribachi on the Pacific Island of Jwo
Jlma.
In 1982, Canada. Japan and the Common Market nationns of Europe
joined the United States in economic and diplomatic sa nctions
against Poland and the Soviet Union to protest imposition of martial
law in Poland.
A thought for the day: Historian W.E.B . DuBois wrote , "Always,
human beings will live and progress to greater, broader and fuller
llfe."
Thursday. February 23. 1989
Union Leadership due for a change
WASHINGTON - Organized
labor has a chancetoretireoneof
Its old-sChool bosses when the
board of the Laborers International Union of North America
convenes its annual pow-wow
this week.
·
LIUNA represents the men and
women who do some of the most
dangerous, tedious and grlmey
jobs in America, ranging !rom
demolition and excavation to
mail handling and garbage col·
lection.
More than soft tropical breezes
will be blowing through the
scandal-plagued union when Its
general executive board meets In
Bal Harbour, Fla. Reform·
minded labor leaders across the
country are cheering at the
possibility of a palace ·coup that
would displace LIUNA's tainted
leader, Angelo Fosco, and his
unpopular lieutenant, Robert
Connerton.
Like the aging potentate of a
banana republic, LIUNA pres!·
dent Fosco has clung to power too
long. Fosco's loathed general
counsel, Connerton, has enriched
himself over the years serving as
the LIUNA's lawyer. Sources
close to Fosco consider Conner·
ton to be the power behind the
throne - or what some in the
union cynlcally,call the tail that
wags the dog.
The inside story Is that while
Fosco is willing to abdicate,
Connerton would find himself out
in the cold if his old protector
retires .
The FBI has been Investigating
possible Mafia control of L lUNA
for 11 years, according to FBI
Director William Sessions . In
1986, the President's Commis·
slon on Organized Crime spelled
out some of LJUNA's seedy
exploits. Fosco was indicted In
1981 in a case involving alleged
benefit plan swindles. He was
later acquitted. Arthur E. Cola ,
LJUNA's secretary-treasurer ,
has been Indicted and acquitted
of racketeering charges involvIng union benefit funds.
The president's commission
reported, "Although LIUNA has
not achieved the notoriety of the
Teamsters union, It Is nevertheless a union with clear ties to
organized crime.''
We reported last year that one
Mail Handlers' Union local in
New York City, a division of
LIUNA, had begged Sessions to
put the local In a federal
trusteeship to keep it out Of the
clutches of organized crime.
Labor leaders are increasingly
embarrassed over the way Fosco
has run LIUNA as if it were a
family business. He inherited the
job from his father , and now
would like to pass it on to one of
his two sons.
Connerton has spent more than
three decades In Washington,
D.C., as a labor mover and
shaker and as chief lobbyist for
the union. He Is credited with
blunting ·the Impact of antiracketeering laws and
enforcement.
"Connerton needs Fosco to
stay," one labor source told us.
"He's privately urging Fosco not
to do what he has said he wanted
Dea.r Editor:
: Well, Eastern Local School
:District just had another levy go
·down the tubes . I teach at
Eastern High School. My wife
and I live and pay taxes In the
Eastern school district. I do not
.think I would have gotten a raise
· If the levy had passed, believe
·me, nor would I have wanted a
raise, knowing how badly the
money is needed in other student·
related areas. I am very proud of
our students at Eastern. These
students have tremendous capa·
bilitles, as do the fine students at
Meigs and Southern High
Schools. I voted for the school
levy, but I can understand why
almost BO% of our district voted
against the school levy. The vast
majority of the people voting
agaiils the levy gave their
decision alot of thought and
Commentary
"Satanic Verses':
Murder, not free speech
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Editor
. WASHINGTON (UP!) - That Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomelni
·undermined free speech by ordering the execution of novelist Salman
Rushdle and others is an unassailable but obvious argument that
misses the point.
What we're talking about here Is murder -a plot to perpetrate
premectitated ones publicly.
In a stunning demonstration of understatement, Pulitzer
prlze·.wlnning au thor Studs Terkel called Khomeinl' s death decree an
•'obl!cene approach to literature."
More to the point. the ayatollah's Incitement to murder Is a~ assault
on life.
Murder is a crime coademned by all people who are civilized, but
· free speech Is relatively new Western notion .
:
A majority ·of the world's people - Including those In the
: ayatollah's Islamie republic- do not understand free speech, much
· less practice and enjoy it.
.
Khomelni sentenced Rushdie to death for alleged blasphemy
against Islam in his novel "Satanic Verses."
So Rushdie, a British citizen born a Moslem in Bombay, has been
forced into hiding with a bounty on his head. Others Involved In the
publicatJon and sale of the book also must fear for their lives .
· western -w riters were quick to brand Khomelnl's latest outrage an
"attempt at censorship by terror."
·
Amnesty International knows the Issue is larger than censorship.
The highly respected watchdog organization told the U.N . Human
Rights Commission Tuesday that Iranians Imprisoned merely on
suspicion of political opposition are secretly executed and tortured.
Khomeinl's operations bear some re~emblance to Murder Inc.,
founded In the United States ln the 1930s to threaten, maim or murder
designated victims.
The business produced a special argot that has applications to the
ayatollah's operations. An assignment to murder a "mark" was
called a "contract." So, when Khomelni put out a contract on
Rushdle, the author !Jecame a mark.
Some contend Khomeini decreed Rushdie's death to fire up support
for his sagging Islamic revolu Uon, while his devotees insist he was
.
only defending Islam.
American writers will read excerpts from "The Satanic Verses"
Wednesday in a public demonstration in Manhattan of their solidarit y
with Rushdle.
Writer Gara LaMarche said. "With leading book store chains
deciding to pull the book from their shelves, this has turned out to be
the single most lmporant freedom -of-expression controversy of our
a
1
tlme. "
Perhaps, but the much larger Issue still is murder.
· Other writers plan to demonstrate at the Irantan mission to the.
U.N. In an effort to end threats against Rushdle's life.
Still other .s cribes protested to book stores which pulled the novel
from their shelves. The Writers Guild of America, which represents
tum and television writers, put it this way:
"Intimidation and fear generated by those who do not believe In our
system of free speech cannot justify your company Imposing a new
fonn of censorship."
Harry Holtman, president of Waldenbooks, understands that the
primary issue here Is much larger and more terrifying than an ·
assault on free speech.
In a piece published Tuesday in The New York Times, Hoffman
said, "To bave refused to withdraw 'The Satanic Verses' would have
required a violation of principle every bit as fundamental as that of
the First Amendment: our employees' and our customers' right to
life, Uberty and the pursuit_of happiness."
•
_.
tnat case, he convinced 90,000
postal workers to sign consent
forms allowing Connerton to
represent them in a private
capacity, independantofLJUNA.
Then Connerton negotiated a .
settlement with t)le Postal Ser·
vice and took $1 million as his cut
- for representing union
members who were already
paying his salary with their dues.
It's time for Fosco to go; and
for Connerton to find himself
another client.
to do (retire)." Another union
source criticized Connerton as
11
Someone who has never been
elected to anything," yet finds
ways to "run the union through
his law firm ."
Connerton raised some eyebrows when he became a mutlonatre courtesy of LIUNA. creal·
lng what some detractors call a
"one-client law firm." Herepres·
ented mail handlers In a claim
against the U.S. Postal Service
for back pay and overtime. In
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weighed the pro's and con's of
their voting choice. I have heard
many of the reasons why people
voted against the levy. I have to
admit that I understand why
these people voted "no." We are
all entitled to our own opinions
and the people against the levy
are definitely In the majority of
those that vote.
As a school syste(TI, Eastern
must move on now to do the best
we can with what we have. I
believe we will. However, we are
going to have to hope for some
new leadership to come In that
will listen to some of the ideas of
the public.
Furthermore, there are a couple of school board members
who, I feel, allow themselves to
be led around by the nose. The
next school board election may
or may not ·take care of this
problem. It is a shame that many
In the public sector feel shut out
from the decision-making process. Our school district Is filled
with many people who have good
intentions and good ideas. It is
about time certain people be
more responsive to all Ideas, not
just their own.
My Father taught me two
valuable lessons before he died in
1981: Always tell the truth and do
not posterior· kiss to get ahead in
this world. I always do the first never the latter. Being a teacher
at Eastern H.S. has been one of
the greatest things to·happen to
my life • onty my present
marriage and my four children
mean more to me. I may or may
not receive some future job
harassment for writing this letter. But, until I wake up some
morning in Moscow, Russia, I
wUI continue to Jive my life the
way my Dad taught me to live it.
If I am harassed at some future
time, you'll be the fll'st to hear
about lt.
In closing, voters of Eastern
School District, lets work together, share ideas and live our
lives as God would want us to
live. We are destined for great
things if we do all three.
Steve Weber
46120 Eagle Ridge Rd.
Racine, Ohio
Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta
hlt·Pnllllltlll
Letters to the editor _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
School levies
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Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
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limit Quantities ·
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Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM
.298 SECOND ST.
. POMEROY, OH.
record-breaking fish
fro~ state waterways
Bowling Green senior
: ~ so effective, coach
:~ can't to start him
f.
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Joe Gregory pretty much has
.- played himself permanently out
• of the Bowling Green starting
'. lineup. The senior from Detroit
•• has been so effective coming off
: the bench, Falcons coach Jim
- Larranaga can't afford to start
• him.
The 5·foot·l0 1Gregory, who
almost slngle-handedly provided
BG with a 69-68 overtime win
over Western Michigan last
. Saturday, was up to his · new
· tricks Wednesday night.
'· Gn!gory's steal and layup and
resulting 3-point play broke a
61-61 tie in yet another overtime
game and ignited the Falcons to a
73-68 win over Ohio University.
:: · Gregory, who came off the
• bench for the third s!faight
:. game, all Bowling Green .wins,
· scored 17 points. Billy Johnson,
· another former starting Falcon
: guard. led BG with 19 points .
"I thought once we got the lead
: we'd be In great shape," saicl
· Larranaga, whose club trailed
• 39-24 at halftime. "But, OU got us
: Into overtime and the key play.
• then was Joe Gregory making
· the big steal and free throw for
- the 3-point play.
"From there on." added the
• BG coach, "We toughened up on·
- defense and played well down the
: stretch. It was a great overtime
• win for the team. Our guys are
: finding ways to win."
• Gregory and Johnson nullified
- an outstanding performance by
: OU's Paul "Snoopy" Graham,
• who scored 19 of his '1:1 points in
: the first half and also finished
: with 13 rebounds.
"We played him (Graham)
more aggressively before he
caught the ball and made him
work to catch it," Larranaga
said in explaining his team's
secol).d half defense against the
Bobcats' outstanding forward .
; "Billy (Johnson) and Derek
(Kizer) made him work hard to
get It and they got help from
teammates. We quit playing
individual defense and started
playing team defense."
In other MAC action Wednes·
day night, Ball State's 20thranked Cardinals clinched at
least a tie for the regular season
title with a 73-61 win over Kent
:. State, Toledo downed Western .
: Michigan 74-64 and ~astern
·: Michigan whipped Central Mich.- igan 90·77.
: In a non-conference g;~me,
Miami edged Davidson 65-63.
Ball State now Is 22-2 overall
·. and 11-2 In the conference, with a
·: three-game lead over runners-up
• Kent State and Toledo, both 8-5,
· with three games to play. ·
· At Kent, Ball State's Greg
· Miller came off he bench to score
·: 20 points to spark the Cardinals'
· .ninth win in a row ..
Ball State led just 29-27 at
: halftime but 'couldn't shake the
:. Golden F1ashes until late In the
;:- second half.
•' Ball State led 43-38 with 10
~
'
..
minutes left ln the game and
pushed its margin into double
digits for the first time at 57-46
with just over five minutes
remaining. The closest Kent got
the rest of the way was 60-52.
Curtis Kidd added 13 points • .
Shawn Parrish 12 and Paris
McCurdy 10 for Ball State. Eric
Glenn led Kent with 15 points,
Harold Walton had 12 and Jim
Mangapora 11.
Craig Sutters' 16 points Jed
three Toledo players In double
figures in Its win over Western
Michigan. Scott Riley added 13
points and Andy Fisher 12 as the
Rockets snapped a four-game
losing streak.
The Rockets led 34·27 at
halftime and by a 65-47 margin
with 3: 36 to play.
Cincinnati, playing without
leading scorer and rebounder
Cedric Glover. beat Brooklyn
1!6-72 behind Levertis Robinson's
career-high 25 points 20 by Louis
Banks.
The Bearcats, now 13-11, broke
a 2·2 tie with a 9·2 run and held the
lead the rest of the way. Clncin·
natlled 38-27 at the Intermission
and a 24·9 run the first 7:30 of the
second half gave the Bearcats a
62-36 bulge.
·
Glover missed the game with a
severely sprained ankle, injured
in last · Saturday's game at
Virginia Tech.
Akron won !or the 12th ttme In
Its last 14 games, beating Oral
Roberts 91· 72.
Shawn Roberis scored 26
points, Scott Paterson 21 and
Eric McLaughlin 17 for the Zips,
now 18-7.
In the quarterfinals of the Ohio
Athletic Conference tournament
Wednesday ·night, Capital beat
Mount Union 69-51, Otterbein
whipped Muskingum 83-66, Hel·
delberg downed Baldwin ·
Wallace 70-61 and Wittenberg
defeated Marietta 77-51'.
Friday night's semifinal mat·
chups at Otterbein find Capital
taking on the host Cardinals and
Heidelberg playing regular sea·
son champ Wittenberg.
'•
The Redwomen, who finished
their season Monday at Wingate,
N.C., are 16·10 a nd in eighth
place.
Pairings will be announced
following the district· coaches'
·meeting Friday.
The . Redwomen could face
district leader Central State,
which began with this week with
a 21·1 record and had three
games left to play. ending
Saturday at home against IUPU·
Indianapolis. The Lady Maraud·
ers began the week ranked 11th In
the NAIA .
•
SCRAMBLE FOR POSESS ION - Chris Felix ol
the Washington Capitals and Igor Liba ol the LA
Kings scramble on the ice for posession of the
By JEFF SHAIN
standings hold up, New York and
UPI Sports Writer
Philadelphia will meet In the first
Tim Kerr, a notable absence round of the divisional playoffs.
last year for the Philadelphia
"If we meet ln the playoffs, I
Flyers, showed the New York am sure both teams will be
.Rangers he Is rounding into form confident and ready and It will be
ln time for a potential Patrick a great series," Kerr said.
· New York led 3-2 after two
Division playoff series .
Kerr scored three goals and periods, but Pelle Eklund tied the
two assists Wednesday night, score at 5:12, scoring on the
Including the go-ahead goal at rebound of a Kerr shot. Kerr put
5:43 of the third period, leading the Flyers ahead 31seconds later
the Flyers to a 6-4 vlct.ory ·over when he tapped in his own
the Rangers.
rebound off Froese.
The big center, who Is one of
"All !try to do is get in position
the most distracting playets In In front of the net and put it In If
the league in front of· the net, they get the puck to me," Kerr
scored at least 54 pointslneachof said. "My teammates got the
the four seasons heading into puck to me tonight. and that's a
1987·88. But he only played eight · credit to· them."
games last season, scoring three
Kerr completed the hat trick
goals, suffering from torn liga· with a goal at 10: 3~, taking a.pass
ments. and cartHage ln his right from Kjeli Samuelsson and rush·
shoulder that required five oper· ing up t)le right side, scoring
from the right faceoff spot.
allons to repair.
But he has returned to his
Philadelphia 's Brian Propp
accustomed spot as the Flyers' notched his SOOth career NHL
leading scorer this year, ending poJnt In the firs~ period with his
the game with 37 goals and 64 25th goal of the year.
points on the season. His five
Elsewhere In the NHL, Buffalo
points against the Rangers were defeated the New York Islanders
one shy of a career high.
7·5, Montreal topped Winnipeg
"This has been a fun year for 6·3, Toronto clipped Calgary 4·3
me," said Kerr, who notched his In overtime, Washington routed
18th -career hat trick. "A Jot of Los Angeles 7-2 and Minnesota
people didn't think I could come and Chicago tied 5·5.
back after missing last year and
Sabres 7, Islanders 5
It's been an enjoyable year for
At Buffalo, N.Y., Scott Arnie!
me. "
scored two third-period goals to
Not so for opposing defense·
cap a five-goal Sabres rally and
men and goaltenders. AI 6-foot-3 , hand Islanders goaltender Jeff
and 230 pounds , Kerr is difficult Hackett a loss in his first NHL
to move out of the slot.
start. The Sabres came back
"He's a linebacker playing
hockey," Rangers goaltender
Bob Froese said. "He's strong
and wears you down, and he has
natural goal-scoring ability."
Rangers defenseman Brian
Leetch, who spent a good part of
the night trying to push Kerr out
of the slot, said the big center " is
just too big and too strong to get
tangled up with in front."
The Rangers could be seeing a
lot of K~rr in the playoffs . The
Rangers remain in first place in
the Patrick Division, while the
Flyers are fourth. If those
leaders this
St. Joseph,
third; ShawWalsh. fifth;
and Findlay ,
from 3-0 and 5·2 deficits as Kevin
Maguire also notched two goals
Canadlens 6, Jets 3
At Montreal, Ryan Walter
scored a short-handed goal and
added two assists to guide the
Canadlens. Montreal, which has
alreadycllnchedfirstplaceinthe
Adams Division, has lost just
once in its last 10 games. The
Canadlens hold a 26-point lead
over the second-place Boston
Bruins.
Maple Leals 4, Flames 3 (OT)
At Calgary, Alberta, Gary
Leeman scored with 49 seconds
left in overtime as the Maple
Leafs remained unbeaten
against the Flames this year.
MIZWAY
TAVERN
Capitals 7, Klnp 2
Blackhawks 5, North Stars 5 (tie
The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 111-BaO)
A Dl¥111on of Multtmedla, lat.
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through Friday , 111 Court St ., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
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•
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ICilvitillo.
#?:
992·5627
"
puck during tile first period at the Forwn In Los
Angeles Wednesday. (UPI)
Other district
week are Mount
second; Defiance,
nee State. fourth:
Cedarville, sixth;
seventh.
Flyers' Kerr returns to th·e icy spotlight
Go from workout to workout
,.,1
'
The committee chose togo with
an eight-team playoff setup this
year, rather than six, according .
to district officials . Last year, the
women's playoffs had been 11· .
mited to six. Playoffs are to begin
Tuesday. Feb. 28.
·
Men's Air CroBB
Trainer Low
'·
••
An appearance in the District
22 playoffs looms fol' the Rio
Grande women 's basketball
team. thanks to a decision by the
district's executive committee.
..
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I) Hoover Reservoir . The previous
Five Ohioans who caught recordrecord was 34 pounds. 8 ounces,
breaking fish this past year will
38 inches long, also taken from
Hoover Reservor , by Otis Seas of
be honored In April for the prize
catches.
Westerville In 1981.
Terry Paisley of Zanesville set
The Outdoor Writers of Ohio
Inc. will honor these five anglers
the record lor redear with a
3-pound, 1-ounce, 13 Yt ·lnch fish
at the same time 29 other anglers
will be recognized for their big . taken from a pond near Zanes·
ville. That's bigger than the
catches of the yeat through the
Fish Ohio program of the Ohio · 2-pound. 8-ounce, 14-lnch one
Department of Natural
taken by Ken Guiffre of Massil·
Resources.
Jon ln 1984.
Chris Campbell of Dayton
Outddoor writers say a record
caught a 22-pound, 6-ounce north·
37,232 Ohio anglers entered fish
ern pike, 43 inches long, from
exceeding the program 's
Lyre Lake near Dayton. That's
minimum-length requirements ,
bigger than the 22-pound, 2·
with five of them setting state
ounce, 44-lnc h pike Michael
records.
Smith took from the Lake of the
::. Richard Popp of Painesville
Four Seasons In 1981.
;· caugl\t a 6-pound, 13-ounce, 26
Department spokesman Todd
·· :%-inch lake troutfrom the Grand
Ambs said Mauk did not fill out a
;·: River to set the standard for a
form for Fish Ohio, although he ·
:. -category institute(! this past
·.. · year.
did notify the outdoor writers.
His catch was not Included in
Kenny Mauk of Lima caught
:
'DN~'s
listing of large fish.
the largest channel catfish, a
has not yet recog·
The
DNR
, 30-pound, 37-inch fish in the
n!zed
the
lake
trout category, so
Ferguson Reservoir. The old
Popp's large catch will not entitle
record was the 29-pound, 9
him to a Fish Ohio honor.
%-ounce. 34-lnch channel catfish
Heinselman, Paisley and
, caught by Russell Morris In 1980
Campbell will also receive Fish
in Lake Hodgson.
Ohio honors. Awards In both
. Dave Helnselman of Gahanna
categories will be given April r
:.' landed a 45-pound, 1-ounce buf·
during Fish Ohio Day.
. falo sucker 38 Inches long in
N. 2nd An.
•
District tabs
Rio ladies
for playoffs
A
R
Call or stop in today and dis·
cover how easy it is to put it all
together.
675-1121
MEMBER F.D.I.C.
PEOPLES
BANK
" Your Good Neighbor "
New Haven
882·2135
Point
Pleasant
675·1121
. Mason
773-5514
.
.
�1
Thursday. February 23. 1989
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Valvano 'gratified' by publisher decision
We.._..., ,•r•••
N..\TIONAL IJ.\8KETBA.LL
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EMRr 1 Coldereace
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Ore .. " L11Q' 78, Sylvulla So•llv!e-' II
Soloa n, Ora.nt~t 43
Ut11.h al Denver,lltp
HouMun at Chlcqo., nll((ht
Golden &ate a1 Dal~t. nlr:N
Philadelphia at Pllnenb:, nlpt
Sacramento at LA Lalun, niJh*
A.dlll\ll
Mell• it, BArbertoa 58
Mounl VeriiJD f.t, GahaaM n
Sl$tey 71,
Thunday's &unftl
O.•kKie at NN' '\'(Irk, 7: :111 p.m .
LA Cllpp!!fl at New Jerwy, 1: 30 p.m .
lndl•• at Atlanla, 7 :10p.m.
Frl~ 's
\11 . BolltOfl
lo._
P•ms Holr Name t7, ae-uncoln W 39
Wtdnt.!lda,y's re&ullll
Chlcqo UO, UurloUe 10!
PhUidelphlla 131, Mlam1108
CleveiWid lllll, New .JPrljt:f Ill
l>et rolt It), Porlland 94
Goldm Sta&e UK, San AniQIIIO
Denwr 101, Dallu 106
Uh•h ItS, LA Laker11 71
8ofl(ln 911, Sat'ftmRito II
Mllwauau•e
lln Waln•l Hills Sll
a~ Ken•clr '1'1. C1e E•t Tech 58
a~ Marlball
1"arm1 Normandy 4i
Cl~t lehn 11aJ '7!, a~
M1m11 ss
CGI Broo--ana 15. Gallowar Westland S&
l.akewDOd Si Ed Ill, UralaSouthvlew 15
LoraJnSr '73, myriaSr U
Ma1Sillot1Jack&oa M, WooMer ti
a.
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LA Laken;
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Tournament RNtas
DlvillkJ,nJ
. Alcr f.Htr&i· HDWH il, A.kr Elle& 31
Alhlud 'II, TUBa Colwnbl• 'HI
Cia Withrow H. On HUJbes"
L l'ct . GB
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!0 :It Jt 5I U8 !70
Eaal raJe~tine '73, United Loc 57
!Elyria C&th 76. Welllnrton U
Grandview 11, Ma•on MalnaiO
.Ju..tlu Al•r 10, Wsilelf 50
Ker•oae II. Avon n
Uberty Unkln 40, Ruth S8 (01')
Marlo1 Ple.-nt 1"/, ClrdlnJton 53
r'l.'ew Mbml II, Btlllroolllt
North U11lo11 18, Ola.latl 1Y 55
e Stlaw~e 1&, HamUitNI Badin Iii
Tulaw 1!, •ack IUver S8
Utica J8, Gra.nvUie J4
.,._t..
IMwlsiDn lV
Beaver Easlern 101. Trimble 87
BriiJhlf '711, IMoomlldtl A
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI ) -The "Personal Fouls' by Peter Golencentered around the 1986·87 sea·
attorney for Jim Valvano said bock did not meet the publishing
son. One of that team's student
the North Carolina State basket- s tandards established by Pocket · managers, John A. Simonds Jr.,
ball coach was " extreUlely grati- Books . Therefore, Pocket Soaks
was the primary source. Sl·
fied" Wednesday by the an· will not proceed with publication
monds apparently contact~po
tential writers for the book nd
nouncement that Pocket Books of the book. "
According
to
a
proof
of
!he
would not publish ··Personal
one, Dave KlndredoftheJ\tla ta
Fouls," a manuscrip t critical of book's jacket that was made
Journal·Constltulion, said here·
Valvano and the school' s basket· available to bookstores In early
jected the project when Simonds
January , Valvano was alleged to
asked for cash payments for
ball program .
Val va no could not be r eached run a corr upt program tllal
"lmself and others .
and his secretary referred included gifts of cash, cars and
Golenbock has had no com·
callers to the coach's attorney jewelry to players. There also
men!. Simonds said in an earlier
were charges that grades were
Art Kaminsky.
Interview that" he expected to
" Coach Valvano is extremely changed and positive drug tests
profit from the book.
gratified by tile decision of were covered up.
Valvano and . university offl·
Valvano and several former ·clals earlier said they would
Pocket Books, " Kaminsky said.
" He's very appreciative of the- -and current players repeatedly
consider legal action against the
author and publisher. At one
care and consideration of their denied those allegations. University officials also denied all
review of the manuscript. "
point, the North Carolina Attor·
Pocket Books, a division of charges. and N.C. State asked
ney General's Office, acting on
Simon & Schuster, released the both the Atlantic Coast Confer·
behalf of the university, wrole
!oUowing sta'lement Wednesday ence and NCAA to investigate.
Simon & Schuster and asked for
An NCAA investigator spent
morning:
an advance copy of the book to
about
a week In Raleigh bul there
"Following completion of care·
review material for . possible
ful pre-publication review by the has been no statement from the
legal action. That request was
editors With the author, it was NCAA.
denied.
Much of the book apparently
Kaminsky said he didn't antic!determined that the manuscript ·
pate any legal action by Valvano, .
even though h.e acknowledged
the coach's _Integrity had been
questioned by the allegations.
"'Let 's put it this way," Ka·
minsky said. '"I'm sure Salman
Rushdle would be happy if
everything went away and he
was left alone."
Rushdie is author of ··sataniC
Verses,·· and has had a S5milllon .
bounty put on him by Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini.
.
"Jim Is .happy lobe a basket ·
ball coach." Kaminsky said.
··t~e's not a litigator, he's not a
fighter . He's just a coach and
athletic direclor . He just wants to
concentrate on doing that and
getting ready for the NCAA"
playoffs."
Despite the controversy , which
has shadowed Valvano and his
team lor six weeks, the Wolfpack
has enjoyed an outstanding sea·
son. The 15th-ranked Wolfpack Is
18·5 and leads the ACC with an 8-2
record.
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
success of the Cleveland Indians'
pitching staff this coming season
may well hinge on Jesse Orosco's
left arm.
Orosco has a glitzy track
record . Yep, he's the one who
knelt on the pitcher's mound
after striking out Boston' s.Marty
Barrett as the New York Met.s
won the seventh game of the 1986
World Series. He's also the one
who earned another World Series
ring with the Los Angeles
Dodgers last year.
But Orosco's also the one who
could eventually get nearly $3
million for signing as a free agent
with the Indians. That kind of
money tends to spawn quile a lew
n
Keith Hernandez. If that sounds
whispers.
The word out of New York and cynical, maybe it is. Allen simply
L.A.ls that Orosco has lostthezlp has never lived up to his
on his fastball. But, presuming potential.
OK, that's nine pitchers. Who's
!hat Tribe President Hank Peters Isn't nuts. the Indication is Mr. 10? Tucson will tell. Among
!hat Orosco can still throw hard the hopefuls are the likes of Jon
enough to serve as the stopper so • Perlman, Joel Davis, Rod Nibadly needed to assist Doug chols, Brad Havens, Don Gordon,
Tim Sloddard, Mike Walker and
Jones.
Guessing the composition of Rafael Montalvo.
the Cleveland rotatglon and
Rule out Nichols and Dedmon .
bullpen is fairly easy. The The, rest know they're jockeying
to catch Manager Doc Edwards'
starters will be Greg Swindell,
eye. Perlman has an edge here
Tom Candiotli, John Farrell,
because he did pitch well last
Rich Yett and, yes, Bud "'He's no
season when he wasn'l hurt.
Pat Tabler" Black.
Random Tribe thoughts:
Rellef work will come from
-If Paul Zuvella beats out Jay
Orosco. Jones, Scott Bailes (if he
Bell lor the starting shorts top
isn't traded)and probably Nell
job, Bell should consider becomAllen. The highlight of his career
arguably was being traded by the
Ing a stockbroker. I've never
New York Mets to Sl. Louis for
been much of a BeHringer, but
he's significantly younger than
Zuvella and Is supposed to have a
better bat. That's the key -Bell
hits and he's ln.
Fort Loramie,,., Botkin• ts
Franll fbr Gre... ill, Ports EMt SS
Independence 15,. C.:rahop Hta 55
Klrtlud $8, AIIMat.lla Sl 1olul fl
Leetonia Ill, McDo.-1 d A
Locklud ~1. Balavla JZ
Marian Cacb 74, Worllllaaton 011r U
Rld&edlle It, Eut lin ox it
Se-lwla&:48, Lowellville fl (OTI
Shact111de $8. Buckqe North 51 (ot)
-An equally difficult choice
for Doc and his Interns wUJ be
between Dave Clark and Mel
'"Gunfighter'.' Hall for the lefthanded designated hitter role.
Again. ·whoever hils obviously
will get lhe job. Or will it be ·
whoever drops the fewest fly·
balls? Don't forget, it's likely the ·
winner will have to spell Oddlbe
McDowell in left field.
-Haven't seen or heard much
about this, but who's going to ·
back up Andy Allanson at
catcher? Ron Tingley, he from
the unlikely venue of Presque
Isle, Maine, currently is the
incumbent substitute, but Ed·
wards has nice things to say
about a left·handed fellow named ·
Tom Lampkin. Luckily, Doc's an
ex-catcher, so his pet position
likely will be flUed with someone
can contribute. Still, Allanson
may well consider playing
wrapped In bubble wrap and
other padding ... earring and all.
ROUSH'S .
BODY SHOP AND PARTS
•FREE ESTIMATES
•DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN
Aguirres 16-point
debut aids Detroit
in posting 105-94 win
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
UPI Sport& Writer
There's nothing like a standing
ovation to make a stranger feel
right at home.
"II was really a nervous point
for me." Mark Aguirre said
Wednesday night of his introduc·
tlon to -his new home fans In
Pontiac, Mich. "! didn't know If
they were going to boo me."
Aguirre, given a nice ovation In
pre·game Introductions then a
standing ovation when he entered the game at the four·
minute mark. made a ]!;.point
home debut to help the Detroit
Plston·s to a 105-94 victory from
the Portland Trail Blazers.
: '"I didn'tknowwhat to expect,"
Aguirre said. "Adrian Dantley
was such a well-liked person
here. It meant they're going to
give me a chance - andTm not
going to fumble it."
. Aguirre made half his 14 shots
t?ut only one of five free throws.
There were times he didn'tlollow
the ball upcourt and occasions
when he looked lost coming back
on defense.
Joe Dumars and Vinnie John·
son ended a scoring slump by
Detroit guards with 19 and 18
golnts, respectively . Thomas and
James Edwards scored 13 points
while Dennis Rodman, whom
Aguirre will eventually displace
as a starter, added 12.
Portland has now lost six
straight, three under Interim
coach Rick Adelman; and is back
lo .500 for the first time since
Dec. 7.
Sam Bowie came off the bench
to score 19 points, the same as
Terry Porter. Adrian Branch and
Kevin Duckworth hit 15 while
Jerome Kersey and Steve John·
son added 10 apiece.
··He played well In the first half
(11 points)" and I went to him
more In the second," Adelman
said of Bowie. "I probably went
more minutes with him than
rpost wouW. But as long as he Is
playing hard·, I'll let him keep
lining to get over that condition·
lng period." ·
Portland again played without
Clyde Drexler but Its leading
scorer Is expected to rejoin the
club Friday Ia Cleveland - a
week after breaking his nose
against Los Angeles.
· Klkl Vandeweghe rejoined the
Blazers and saw limited action
. and scored two points.
'
Slxers 139, Heat 108
At Miami, Charles Barkley
scored 39 points, Including siX
3-polnters, to lead Philadelphia.
Barkley did not play in the final
period. Mike Gmlnskl finished
with 22 points.
Cavaliers 130, Nets 111
At Richfield, Ohio, Mark Price
scored 22 points and the Cleve·
land Cavaliers became the first
NBA team to reach 40vlctorles In
extending their team·record
home winning streak to 19
games. The Cavaliers are 40-12.
Dennis Hopson had 20 points for
New Jersey.
Bulls 130, Hornets 102
At Charlotte, N.C ., Michael
Jordan scored 24 points and
Horace Grant added 10 of his 20
points during a 42·polnt first
quarter to pace Chicago. The
Hornels received 22 points from
rookie Rex Chapman.
Nunets 109, Mavericks 108
At Denver, Walter Davis came
off the bench to score 20 points.
Denver pulled to wilhin a ·halfgame of thlrd·place Dallas in the
Midwest Division. The Maver·
leks' Rolando Blackman led all
scorers with 33 points.
Warriors 118, Spurs 107
At San Antonio, Chris Mullin
scored 27 points, including 11 In
the final 6: 12, to lead Golden
State. The Warriors outscored
the Spurs 18· 7 down the stretch.
Frank Brlckowski paced San
Antonio with 26 points.
Jazz 115, Lakers 'l9
At Salt Lake Ctly, Darrell
Grif!lth scored 19 points and led a
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (UP!)
- While mosl teammates of
Boston Red Sox third baseman
Wade Boggs reacted calmly to a
potentially damaging Interview
in Penthouse magazine In which
Boggs' former mistress details
alleged team racism and Infidel·
lty, at least one was furious.
Several players and manager
Joe Morgan reiterated skeptical
statements they had made in
recent weeks about the muchballyhooed article, which is due
to hit the newsstands In about a
week. Advance copies were re·
leased to the media Wednesday.
But out1ielder Mike Greenwell,
who admitted he was furious that
the story "madeusoutas a bunch
of sex·loving, no·morals bunch of
people," harshly criticized
Margo Adams, saying he ''hated
Orosco important to Indians' success
Canal Wla.c hNter 7&. ·Lanc&Mer Fl8h 51
Cln Mallllflln 11, Felldt)' l2
Col Wehrle 8!, Mlllenpon U
C..yallop Val Chr And 81. Dalton
DeGralf RlverMide 13, R•Hial8
Boggs' teammate
infur~ted by
Penthouse article
Cleveland beat
By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
•ALL INSURANCE CLAIMS
•COMPLETE COLLISION WORK
TO YOUR SATISFACTION
•AUTOMOTIVE PARTS AT
WHOLESALE PRICES
We Feature Fr- Repair On Thl
CHIEF E•Z-UNER
•
•
The Daily Sentinei-Page-5 .
1989
her.''
I'
'
Boggs. who denied former
lover Adams' allegations In a
statement, told the Boston Globe,
"Everything's fine. Everybody
was building It up like there was
going to be flst1lghts and people
screaming at each other and
shoving matches In the clubhouse. It's just not the case."
Boggs also said general man·
ager Lou Gorman dismissed
Adams' claims that Boggs had
called Gorman "a bastard."
"I spoke to Lou Gorman about
the stuff that was In there about
him, and he took It with a grain of
salt, he took It for where It came
from," Boggs told the Boston
Herald following a team meeting
at the club's spring training
headquarters.
Jim Rice, the focus of Adams'
most controversial remarks por·
traylng Boggs as a racist, left the
park without comment. However, several of his teammates
defended the third baseman and
.tashed
out at Adams.
·
'
. "A lot of people know I was
around Wade a lot," Greenwell
.said. "Maybe a lot of people don't
:~now this, bu ti was one of the big
·~easons Wade did break It off.
~ "I hated her. You could tell
't hat this girl was out to get Wade
tloggs. I think that was pretty
6bvious. Nobody saves a key to
~very room. I've been with my
wife since she was 13 years old.
Sure, she saves some things
'?'hen we go on a trip. But you
don't save every little key, every
little receipt.
: "She basically used her body to
get Into a player's life and now
~be's selling her soul to Pent·
house and her body to Penthouse,
so what do you say about a person
Measles threaten
basketball playoff
HARTFORD. <;onn . (UPI ) An outbreak of measles involving
players for at least two schools
threatens the ECAC North Allan·
lie Conferenc e ba sketball
playoffs set for Har tford March
7-11, officials said Wednesday.
University of Hart1ord spokes·
man Ed Metesky said the disease
has been confirmed so far in only
two players, one at Siena College
in Loudonville, N.Y.. and the
other at the University of
Hartford.
Officials are concerned the
highly contagious disease could
have infected other players as
well as students, however,
threatening the rest of the
season's schedule and lhe
playoffs, Malesky said .
Concern over measles also
forced postponement of Thurs·
day's game between Boston
University and Niagara, and a
March 1 contest between BU and
Greenwell. ·'She doesn 't care If
she gets Wade Boggs, whether
she gets even with Wade or
destroys other people's lives. She
doesn't care whether it's the
truth or false."
Relief pitcher Bob Stanley .
called Adams ' allegations
·~garbage . ''
"It doesn 't really bother me
because It's not true, because it's
a bunch of garbage and that 's It,"
Stanley said.
"'I don't care what he does off
the field. that's his business," said Dwight Evans, who was
described in the article as
disapproving and a snitch . " Alii
care about is what he does on the
field."
General Manager Lou Cor.
man, joking that he ··made
Penthouse," said the controv·
l!rsy will pass.
"The morale In the ball club is
good," said Gorman. "'The play·
ers are treating it like water off
their backs."
Gorman also said the team was
not looking to trade Boggs as a
result of the article. But he told
the Herald, "If someone came to
me tomorrow and offered a
trade, lor Wade Boggs or anyone
else, thai could Improve our ball
club I'd have to make that trade.
·That's my responsibility.
"But am I specifically looking
to trade him? No,'' Gorman said.
A BIG.JUMP -Los Angeles Dodgers Infielder Mariano Duncan
makes a leaping catch at second during fielding practice at the
Dodgers' spring training camp Wednesday In Vero Beach, Fla.
(UP I)
.
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k'
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Motor Oil
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Siena will be played without any
s~ctators , BU officials said. The
game with Niagara will be
played Saturday, pending the
outcome of tests, th ey said.
Athletic directors of the 10·
member ECAC North Atlantic
Conference planned to meet
Friday In Boston lo discuss
contingency plans and determine
whether the playoffs can take
place at the Hartford Civic
Center beghinlng March 7.
Metesky said Wednesday
night 's game between Hartford
and New Hampshire was rescheduled lor Thursday night In
Durham. N.H.
The delay will allow the school
more time to analyze blood
samples taken from the team ' s
players, Metesky said .
"One of our players apparently
contracted measles on Feb. 4
when the Hawks played at Siena,
which .has since experienced an
outbreak, .. said Metesky.
I cAll-Climate·
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ll
MOTOR OIL
ill.
Air Flit.,.
Air Filters
• Llmlt2
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~lk;h~r~~~:~o~a;~hotos of Boggs
and Adams together in the April
Penthouse Issue, but no nude
(l.hotos of Adams. More Is prom·
lsed In the May Issue, including
nude pictures of Adams.
' "She wants the publicity and
Ute money out of It," said
'.
ROUSH'S BODY SHOP & PARTS
773-5024
21 0 South S.Contl
lob lou1h, Owner
M•ICIII, WY.
DRMNGTOTHEHOOPBill Jones of New Jersey,
working his way around Mike
Sanders of CleVeland, drives
toward the basket In the first
qwuier of their game at the
Richfield Coliseum Wednesday. (UPI)
second quarter Utah blitz. The
Lakers again played without
guard Magic Johnson. They are
3-2 since he left the lineup with a
partially torn hamstring.
Celtlcs 99, Kings 91
At Sacramento, Calif., Kevin
McHale scored 25 points to help
Boston snap a five -game losing
streak. Sacramento, which lost
Its fifth straight game, made only
three of Its first 18 shots in the
·
second quarter.
ONLY
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-
·. FAIRFAX, Va. tUPI)
Renny Sanders scored 12 of his 22
points in the first hal!Wednesday
night to hetp·George Mason gain
a 21-polnt halftime lead en route
to a 91-64 Colonial Athletic
Association rout of William and
Mary.
The Patriots improved to 15·10
overall and 9-4 in the CAA.
William and Mary fell to5·21 and
2·11.
The Patriots roared to a 46-25
cushion at Intermission. Sanders
scored all George Mason· s points
in a 7-0 burst and Steve Smith
scored 7 points In a 9·0 run,
helping blow the game open
early.
Sanders also hauled in 10
rebounds : Smith scored 20 points
and Mike Hargett added 18, 11 in
the first half.
. Tom Bock paced the Tribe with
18 points and Scott Smith added
16.
, George Mason hit 15 of hits 16
free throws in the first tfali,
cluring which the Patriots did not
commit a foul until 5:54 remained. By then William and
1\fary point guard Matt O'Reilly
had tour personals himself.
, William and Mary came no
~loser than 12 points - at 68-56
with 7: 25 remaining - in the
(econd half.
.
'•
'
GOOD AT:
U'pptr liver ld.
HI's oman
af peuc;lll i'l
,.......... tile llrpertl
~.
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·-land.
'George Mason routs
William and Mary
=""""pQ=NDER~OS&:a:::-:1.
-
'Teachers, students
'o play basketball
Friday ~~ NGHS
,' The faculty and students
at
North Gallia High School will
•llold a basketball game Friday at
7 p.m. at the high school.
In addition to the game, there
will be a three-point shooting
contest and concessions.
Admission Is $2 for adults and
$1 for students.
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OPEN
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Store hour!; 9:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Monday through
Friday, 9:00a.m. to 6:00p.m. Saturday, and 10:00 a.m.
to 5:00p.m. Sunday."
~
Gllllpolll
g()9 Upper Rim Road
{614) 446·4103
I
,t
:
:
•
•
�.---Area news briefs--..... Area
deaths $6 million..
I
Jacqueline Elizabeth Bunch,
44, ofl07 Kerr St., Pomeroy, died
Wednesday afternoon at her
residence following a sudden
Illness.
A homemaker. Miss Bunch
was born Oct. 11, 1944 In Middleport. She was the daughter of the
late Clyde Allfrlend and Cornelia
Johns Bunch. '
.
Survivors Include her daughter, Nicole Tltamla Bunch,
Pomeroy; six sisters, Mrs. Aaron (Carla) Buffington, Detroit,
Mich., Mrs. Howard (Barbara)
English Jr., Middleport; Miss
Joyce Bunch, Pomeroy; Miss
Janice Bunch, Columbus, Mrs.
Martin (Effie AIIFrlend) Johnson, Middleport, and Mrs. Dan
(Donna) Buf!lngton, Pomeroy;
and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by one
brother, Edward Bunch, and her
stepfather, Orville Bunch.
Services will be 11 a.m. Satur·
day at Ewing Funeral Home with
Rev. Nyle. Borden and Rev.
Edward Buffington of!lciatlng.
Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m.
on Friday.
,
'
Admissions and discharges to Veteran' s Memorial Hospital
for Wednesday have been released.
'wednesday admissions were Nellie Crisp, Langsville; Roy
Betzlng, Pomeroy; Jerry Colllns, Portland; Goldie Roberts,
Racine.
Wednesday discharges were Mary Ball, Arthur Johnson,
Audr ia Arnold, Rosella Secoy , Hershel LeMaster.
EMS reports seven calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Wednesday; Pomeroy at 2:52p.m. to East Main Street for
Keith Nibert to Veterllns Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 3:35
p.m. to Qld Chester Road for Teresa DeLong to Holzer Medical
Ce nter; Syracuse at 4:17p.m. to Kerr Street for Jacklyn Bunch
who was dead on arrival; -Racine at 6:42p.m. to Portland for
Jerry Collins to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at
8:50p.m. to Tuppers Plains for Edna Lee to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 8:17p.m. to Pine .Grove Road for Goldie
Roberts to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 11 p.m. to an
auto accident on State Route 124 for Sally Savage who was
treated but not transported.
Development council to meet
A meeting of the recently formed Bend Area Economic
Development Council will be held next Wednesday, 7 p.m., on
the second floor of the Farmers Bank and Savings Company In
Pomeroy.
.
Sheriff investigating B&E
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports his
department is investigating the breaking and entering of the
Donald Guthrie residence on Carr Road In Orange Township.
According to the report, the Guthrie house was entered through
a window at approximately 7 p.m. Monday evening. It was
reported that a VCR imd guns were ta_ken.
Anyone who may have seen a vehicle In the vicinity of that
residence on Monday evening Is asked to contact the·sherlff's
office.
On Tuesday; Jim Crisp, Langsville, reported his barn had
been entered and several saddles and other tack taken.
Soulsby asks residents to record serial numbers, etc., for
their property to assist In identifying the Items, should they be
stolen. If the Item does not have a serial number, the sheriff
suggests engraving a social security number or birth date on the
item.
Deputies transported on Thursday, 20-year-old Gary F . Rood,
Reedsville. to the Orient Reception Center to begin serving a
sentence recently Imposed In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas for his conviction on rape charges.
Senate
...
(From SENATE, paJte
$240, no disbursements,
$1,250.40; permissive · tax,
$731.94, $830.05, $685.79; bond
retirement, no receipts, no dis·
bursemen ts, $1, 716.64; fire truck,
no receipts, $4,769, $12,546.73;
Main St. sewer, no receipts, no
disbursements, $500.
Dally stock prices.
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis II Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 26%
AT&T ....... .......... ................ 30%
Ashland Oil ................ ......... 34
Bob Evaf\S ............... ... ........ 15%
Charming Shoppes .............. 16%
City Holding Co .......... ........ 20%
Federal Mogul.. .................. 52%
Goodyear T&R ................... 48%
Heck's ..................... .. .. ....... . %
Key Centurion ...... .. ............ 14%
Lands' End ...................... ... 2934
Limited Inc ........................ 30\io
Multimedia Inc .............. ..... 84%
Rax Restaurants ............ .... .. 3')!
Robbins & Myers ................ 15~
Shone)l's Inc ...................... .. 8%
Wendy's Intl.. .............. ........ 6\io
Worthington Ind .............. .. .21%
(CIIy Holding Is ell· dividend
today)
$20 OFF ON FUll Sill SO,
OFF oN QUEEN SIZE sn,
$40 Off ON KINO SET
OF SIMMONS IEAUTYREST PIIMIUM BEDDING
$$ OFF
.
I
I
I
I
$$ OFF
I
WE'll IVIN DISCARD YOiJii OlD iiDDING iND DONATI IT TO A GOOD CAUS£1
fftl PARKING
Ill! DfliVIll
OPIN DAlY
Til 5 P.M.
MON. & 1111.
nt I P.M.
446-3045
::IC '• :
rill
WAS
SURE BET- If rain persists for several days,
you can just about bet money that Stale Route 124
from Pomeroy to Langsville will be ciO&ed
because Leading Creek has flooded somewhere
along the way.
NOW
$7495
Complete Water Bed
Package
CLOSE OUTI Bookcase w!Rose Mirror
King Size Only
..
824880
·fun MoUon M•ttfeas
L...<
........1\!,t\"'1
.......
r
·PIIIin P.....
·Condllloner 1 Fill tc.ll
Callll·N-C.rry
SAN DIEGO#l
s..tN :tnt:ao #7
OUR
BEST BUY!
SOLID
PINE
Add A Touch
01 Light With
Lamps And An
Etched Mirror.
Bookcase Waterbed
With Complete System.
Only
VALENCIA
129900
Bill ROBE
Stock I 9323t, 2 doors, V-8, air cond.,
vinyl roof, auto. trans., PS, PB, power
windows, power seat, power door locks,
ti~ wheel, cruise control, AMIFM radio,
stefeo rape, while walls.
WAS
NOW
11595
'•
•
Stunning
RedRoaaOval
......... ure
•7995
675,1371
HI.
'7499
1988 FORD TAURUS G.L.
1988 FORD T·BIRD
Stock#t2t50, 2doors, coupe, Scyl.,
cond., auto. trans., PS,
dows, power door locks, till w•hee1l, couise
control, AMIFM radio, bucket seats,
window defog.
WAS
s11 ,oa,c:;:
1981 BUICK LE SABRE
s3995
82995
1979 FORD MUSTANG
Stock I t2t80, 4 doors, ~onl wheel Stoekt93t34,2doors,c:oupe,4cyl.,air
drive, 6 cyl. , air cond., auto. trans., PS. cond.,au.to. trans.,PS, PB,AMIFMradio.
•10,995
•aaa•o
"Brand Name Furniture At Discount Prices"
Open W,, t • ·• ··• P."'-, f ...y.
•3795
Stock I 9200t, 4 cyl. , 5 speed trans ., Stock I 85772,4 doors, sedan, 6 cyl., air
cond., vinyl roof, aulo. lrans., PS, PB, till
PS,. fB, AM!FM radio, stereo tape.
wheel, cruise control, AM'FM radio, radial
NOW
tires, while walls , 66,000 act miles.
WAS
WAS
NOW
Mirror And Door
Glasa Adds Excitement
• To This Bookcaaa Waterbed.
Only
8700
1988 CHEVY 5-10
WAS
Yesterday's
Memories Are
Alive In The Wctorlan
Eleganca Of The Tall
Glals Doors And Etched Oval
Mirror 01 The .....,.cl&
Srock- 87563, 4 doors. hard top, 6
air cond., auto. lmns., PS, PB,
windows, power sea~"""'"".,;,·,~,,.
till wheel, crtJise control, AMIFM
slel'eo tape, radial tires, whito walls.
WAS
NOW
$4995
1976 LINCOLN MARK IV
tun.-7 p.m.; Cloud SWMI•y
W\1
--·'---'
I
·-":!~~.--~':-::~~~7---------------------------------·
Stock 19597t, 4 doors, ha~lop, 4 cyl .,
stand. trans., PS, AM'FMradio,
stefeo tape, radial tires.
South Central .Ohio
Tonight : Partly cloudy, with a
low between five and 10. Winds
north around 10 mph. Chance of
snow 20 percent.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with a
high In the upper 20s.
'
You make arrangments for a
long weekend
and you plan a
trip to the sunny
South. Sounds
great, right?
Wrong'
Barbara and
Jimmy Fry
found out a.boutthat over the past
weekend when they traveled to
Virginia Beach, Va. ;to visit their
daughter and son-ln·law. Ruth ".
and James Bush.
All went. well until they
rea.ched Virginia . then,
whammy! They found them·
selves In 11 Inches of snow and
with a Jato! drivers who probably
aren' t too good at coping with the
problem since they aren't used to
heavy snow .
By the way, Ruth and James
expect Ia make a .trip to the Big
Bend area this weekend to be
·part of the 50th wedding anniver·
sary observance of Mildred and
John Fry, New Haven, Ruth's'
paternal grandparents. An open
house from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday at
the St . Paul Lutheran Church In
New Haven will be held to mark
the occasion.
At any rate, the Frys, of
course, enjoyed their visit with
Mr. and Mrs. Bush In sptte of the
weather and on their return trip
home Monday drove out of the
snow at Richmond, Va., to get
back home safe and sound.
I
uo
a~rcond.,
' Only • •, . . . .
'
$$ OFF
Maid'\ Long, a new KOPS
(Keep Off Pounds Sensibly) was
honored at Tuesday night 's meet·
lng of TOPS Club 570 held at the
Coonhu nters building on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Lennie Belle Aleshire read an
article " More to This" and
presented Mrs. Long with a vase
of flowers and a gift from the
club: Other KOPS member s
taking part were Peggy Vining,
Julia Hysell, and Mary Martin.
Mrs. Long read a new article
entitled "A New KOPS."
TOPS queen for the week was
Frances Haggy with members
singing to her. Phylls McMillan
was runner-up, Virginia Dean
won the fruit basket, and the
game prize was won by Mrs.
'
·time of the first workshop and
there are certain other Items that
you havr to take along with you.
So if you want to pick up on the
art of caning give June a ring at
247-2344 and she'll be happy to fill
you In on the details and get you
registered.
The Pomeroy Area Merchants
Association is staging its annual
style show just a bit later this
year -April 13-atthePomeroy
Elementary School.
Business people taking part, of
course, have a captive audience
In the 400 people who at tend
• annually eager to see what's
available in the local stores .
Freqently, the models end up
b~ying the clothes and accessories they wear in the show.
Of course, participation Is the
key In the success of the event.
Susan Clark Is chairperson this
year, and she'll be happy to learn
that you're In, so give her a ring.
February is , of course, Heart
Month and a house-to-hOuse
program Is being carried out by
the Meigs County Chapter of the
American Heart Association to
raise funds.
Workers will probably be paying you a visit soon If they haven't
already done so. Heart disease Is
the number one cause of death so
there's a lot of emphasis In that
area these days - and haven't
we come a long way, Baby?
The local chapter's board of
trustees- which is composed of
Many of you will be pleased to a number of on the ball people
learn that George Folmer who meets monthly at Veterans Mem·
has had quite serious health orlal Hospital to plan activities.
problems over the past two years By the way, the hosp!\al does
regularly host the meetings of
Is considerably Improved.
George Is able to get around the several organizations including
house, can go to the table to eat not only the heart group but the
and also enjoys an occasional local cancer society.
Incidentally, as ' warmer
outing these days.
He'll be observing his 77th weather approaches you could be
birthday Sunday. Cards can be get tlng a phone call from one of
the heart chapter board
sent to Route 3, Pomeroy.
members .or workers since the
Chair caning won't become a annual sale of carnations Is
lost art if June Ashley can help it . upcoming. The group takes your
.June will be conducting a order by phone and then delivers
series of three workshops on the flowers to your home or place
caning at the Meigs Museum or business.
Dr. Wilma Mansfield ts curbeginning at 1 p.m. on Saturday,
rently
heading the local chap·
March 4. To pick up on how to do
ter's
board
of trustees.
caning, it Is nece~sary to attend .
all three workshops.
What do you know? That
You should have the stool, groundhog was right - but It's
chair or whatever you plan to only for six weeks and most of
recane ready to work on by the · that has passed. Do keep smiling.
1-!0W
•
WAS
sggs
NOW
8850
Elaine Freeman presented the
program, "The Glory of God"
and plans were made for the
Easter breakfast when Friendly
Circle met Tuesday evening at
Trinity Church.
Slides of 'nature's beauty from
coast to coast taken by Mrs.
Freeman were accompan led by
an original commentary begin·
ning with the creation. Scripture
from Psalms 121, ''I Ll It My Eyes
to the Hills", "The Wonders of
God's Word'', "Hts Ever Present
Guidance" and '!Man's Thank·
fulness" were woven Into the
commentary.
Diane Hawley presided at the
business meeting with officers'
reports being given. Cards were
signed for several members who
are ill. Louise Rosenbaum of
Wilmington, Dela ., was reported
home from the hospital. Thank
you notes were read from Pastor
Freeman, Neva Seyfried, and
Ruth Massar.
The soup supper on Thursday
Letters read
Theresa Kennedy presided at
the meeting which was held at
the Senior Citizens Center. She
read a thank you note from XI
Gamma Epsilon lor attending
the card party noting that pr~
ceeds went to the American
Heart Association.
A letter was read from International regarding the state convention noting that the cost Is $85
a person. Therewlllbea boutique
at the convention as a money
making project but the chapter
deferred a decision on whether to
participate In that.
For the cultural program,
Debbie Evans Introduced Carl
Hysell, juvenlle offleer, Rick
Chancey, assistant juvenile of·
fleer, and -Robbie Jacks, TI
representative.
They talked
about the local juvenile program
and ·showed a film on teenage
drinking.
A valentine cake was pres-.
ented to Mrs. Oark and served
with mints, chips and soft drinks.
She was also presented a rose in
· tribute to being named valentine
queen.
Sorority plans dance
Long.
· Reported ill were Ola Sl Clair
and Teresa Wood. The scrapbook
committee, Peggy Vining, Mrs.
Long and Mary Martin reported
on preparing It to enter In
competition at the Area Recognition Day with a March 15
deadline.
Gifts and cards were presented
to Mrs. Martin on her birthday
and she passed out new member ship lists.
NOW
A St. PatriCk's Day dance was
planned and severa·J members
volunteered to assist with the
Pomeroy Area Merchants Association's spring style revue at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sororlly.
The · dance will be held on
March 18 with Jack Horton of
WXIL to be the disc jockey .
szo .9 8]
•21,900
Tickets for the dance were
dlstribu ted by Susan Clark who
extended thanks 10 Linda Jones
for her work on the project .
Arrangements were made for
other chapters 10 be conta cted ro
sell tickets also. As a ways and
means project at th e dance. a pol
of gold ·project will be carried
out.
As chairman of the Apr il 13
style rev ue, Mrs . Clark as ked for
10 members to ass ist In handing
out door prizes.
NOW
S18.67
SUPER
ERTA®
ALE
IS WE
Super savings on super
1qu:arl.ltV Serta bedding this
I WE!Elk! Choose the size you
'"""',.., in the comfort you preEvery model in stock
is sale priced.
Circle plans Easter breakfast
Weather
Saturday lhrOUJh Moaday
A chance o! snow Saturday and
Sunday, with a chance of nila or
snow Monday. Highs will range ·
from the mid 20s to the mid 30s
Saturday, In the 30s Sunday, and .
in the 30s or 40s Monday. Early
morning lows will be between 10
and 20 Saturday, between 15 and
25 Sunday, and in the 20s
Monday.
By BOB HOEFLICH
r-$~-orF-~-------------------~----------~--,
AN ADDITIONAL
$1 0 OFF ON TWIN SIZE SET.
TOPS honors KOPS
Vacation south turns
into winter.whammy
..,.., O•'Y
O•Y• ~eft\
.
Page 7
Beat of the Bend
amounts."
Meigs County native VIrginia
Gothard Miller, 66, of 55 Brehl
Ave.. Columbus, 43222, died
Tuesday at Mt. Carmel Hospital
In Columbus.
She Is survived by her hu s·
band, James D. (Jack) Miller, at
home; three da1,1ghters and sonsIn· law, Johnnie Lou'and Charles
Buzby, Jackie and Mike Lenox,
Vicky and Mike Lathey , all of the
Columbus area; nine grandchild·
ren; two sisters, Juanita Harris,
of Florida, and Phyllis Pitts, of
Columbus; three brothers, Ell!
(Toot) Gothard, Frank Gothard
and John Gothard, all of the
Columbus area; and sisters-In·
liiw and brothers-In-law, nieces,
nephews, aunts, uncles and
cousins.
She was preceded In death by
her parents, Marvin and Lesta
Gothard; a siSter, Emily Shar·
key; and two brothers, Jim and
Marvin c;othard.
.
Services will be 1:30 p.m.
Friday at the Rutherford·
Shroyer Funeral Home, West
Broad Street., Columbus. Burial
will be In Lancaster. Calling
hours at the funeral home will be
Thursday from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.
Thursday, February 23, 1989
.
1)
Aronoff said effective reforms
In the educ a tiona! system can be
made with little cost. "I wouldn't
be going through this It I didn't
think that," he said. ''That
• doesn't mean that more money
; might not be necessary."
William Phillis, assistant state
superintendent of public instruc·
tlon, said the Oh lo Deparunen t of
Education supports the Idea of
reforms.
"Many of those recommendations (mentioned by Aronoff)
were In the state Board (of
Education) package," said
Phillis.
"If there are some things that
can be enacted that don't cost
any money, they should be
considered," said House Speaker •
Vernal Riffe Jr., D·
Wheelersburg. "I have no protJ.
lem with that."
·
But Senate Minority Leader
Harry Meshel, D·Youngstown,
was Jess receptive. "We'll have
to take a look at It first and see
what they're talking about," he
said. "There were some bad
things in those reports."
Meshel said the Republicans
were trying to "see I!they can get
credit tor doing something or
appearing to do something for
education without having to deal
with the financial responsibility
that goes with II."
The Daily Sentinel
·By The Bend
,_(Fr_o_m_ssM_ru.._
· _10N_,:.....:pag:.....e._,_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Stocks ·
'
1989
scheduled for passage In late
March.
The governor proposed a ballot
Initiative Including a 1 percent
Income tax for education, but the
House has shown little Interest In
it.
"Instead of just sitting and
beating that Issue to death, let' s
get to what the public wants to
talk about - performance and
accountability," said Aronoff.
He said the Senate bill may
contain some reforms that cost
"a little money, not massive
Virginia G. Miller
Clerk-treasurer report
made .for Pomeroy
Fefmlarv 23,
($847,599), Youngstown City discount of principal and inte est crease In appropriation author·
schools ($747,055), Lorain City of the Navtstardirect Joan In the ity for community Medicaid
schools ($350,232), Canton City amount of $1,310,496. The money expansion by the Department of
schools ($318,149) and Howland was lent to the company. then Mental Health .
-Approved a $4,015,984 in·
Local schools in Tru111bull known as International Harves·
crease
In the Department of
ter, In 1982 as an Inducement to
County ($97,945).
Natural
Resources' appropriaThe board also approved distrl· operate In Springfield .
tion
for
abandoned
mine lands.
-Approved $1,161,536 for purbution to the state's schools of
The
board
deferred
action on
$79,996,4741n excess Ohio Lottery chase of 47 school buses in 19
Attorney
General
Anthony
Celedistricts.
pro!lts from fiscal 1988.
brezze
J
r.'s
request
to
transfer
Van Keuren said the lottery · -Approved release of $4 mil_.
had excess pro!its of $119.2 lion as the state's share of the $350,000 from the Emergency
Bellefalre Residential Treat· . Purposes aceaunt to pay special
million that year.
In other action, board ment Center project in proseeu tor Lawrence Kane Jr.
for continued work on the state's
members:
Cleveland.
1985
savings and loan crisis.
-Approved a $13,350,000 In-Approved the payoff and
Jacqueline E. Bunch
Hospital report released
Pomeroy Clerk·Trlijlsurer
Jane Walton reports a balance of
$156,986.61 In the village budget
for the month of January. Receipts, disbursements and balances, respectively, in the various
funds which comprise the total
budget are as follows.
Receipts for the month
amounted lo $61,908.46 • while
disbursements totaled $52,392.10.
General lund, $20,820.11,
$15,662.75, $27·,668.75; safety, no
receipts, $19.07, $10,090.39;
street, $8,015.42, $9,443. 76, .
$6,067 .67; state highway, $168.54,
no di sbursements, $2,911.56; fire,
$1,177.95, $2,994.62, $1,567.51;
ce metery , $18.26, $304.48,
$5,375.23; water, $21,437.01,
$14,793.80. $38.714 .37; sewer,
$8,024.23, $996.57, $8,403.63; guaranty meter, $475, $250,
$13,891.67; utility, no receipts,
$2,328, $14,755.36; sale of build·
lng, $382.45, no disbursements,
$324.56; perpetual care, no receipts, no disbursements,
$5,069.77; cemetery endowment,
no receipts, no disbursements,
$17,825.11; pollee pension, no
receipts, no disbursements,
$728.39; building fund, $117.55, no
disbursements, $400; recreation,
Thursday,
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel
PRICES
and Friday was noted and plans
for the Easter breakfast were ·
completed:
The March 16 community
Lenten service will be held at
Trinity Church with the Rev. Mel
Franklin to be the speaker.
A shower for the church
kitchen was held following the
meeting. Unison grace preceded
a salad and sandwich course
served by Marie Hauck and
Pauline Mayer. A President's
Day table arrangement was used
on the table and refrigerator
magnets of burlap potato bags
were given as favors.
*16,500
NowS1
WAS
*14,700
NOW
sgggs
START AS LOW AS
TWIN,
Ea. Pc.
FULL.
Ea. Pc
QUEEN,
2Pc. Set
8 ·16,900
5
698
*13,900
NOW
S11
1988 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA
tc.JNG,
31>c. Set
$12495 $29995 '$39995
FLAIR FURNITURE
&DESIGN
67tJ-1371
Rt.
2,
Gallipolis Ferry, WV
WAS
'13,900
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NOW
S11.3Z3
NOW
WAS
'12,400
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S11.
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1988 FORD RANGER PICKUP
WAS
NOW
·~,700
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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
Wray back on top without King Kong
The cost of running a household
. By Cindy Oliveri
County Extension Agent,
Home Economics and 4-H
HOUSEHOLD EXPENSE QUIZ
How much does It cost to run
your household and can this be
reduced In any way? To quickly
ansll<er, most fam111es need
household spending records and
spending plan to help control
costs. And, cooperation ol all
fam!ly members Is essential.
This week "ln. The Spotlight"
locuses on a way to get your
fam!ly Involved In a financial
management discussion.
Cooperation of family
members can be easier if they
understand how much things cost
and why a spending plan Is
necessary for elfectlve money
.management. A periodic "household expense quiz:' can help
. family members consider expenses and ways to cut or
reallocate spending for more
satisfactory use.
· Some preparation Is need be·
fore doing the quiz. It will be
easier If you already are keeping
a household account book or
ledger. If not, gather grocery
register tapes, bill payment
receipts, checkbook register and
evening.
credit card statements so you
Give the correct answers to the
have curren t expenditure lnfor·
quiz . It's optional to exchange
mation for yourfamlly.
answers for scoring and/or to
Then. write 6-10 quiz questions ·give a prize for the highest score.
that apply to expenses In your
The key to use ·of the quiz Is to
family . Here are some exam- discuss some specifics about
ples:· What did we spend on · household spending as a basis for
groceries last month? What Is the
coming to some join agreements
price of a pound of potato chips
about avoldin.g overspending,
(or other favorite snack food )?
changing patterns, etc.
How much does It cost to fill the
If you don't already have a
car/van with gas? What does It
home account record or spending
cost to Insure the car/ van? How
plan for your family, contact the
much did we spend on electricity
Meigs County Extension Office
last month ? What does it cost to
for publications on this topic.
dryclean a winter coat or suit?
Design your questions so that
Did Yo \I' Know That . .. The
even school-age children can
annual cost of owning and
participate in at least part of the
operating a car averaged 27.3
quiz.
cents per mile In 1988. In the
Ask the family bill payer to
American Automobile Assocla·
prepare an answer sheet for the
tlon (AAA ) study, operating
quiz questions. Then gather
costs (7.fcents per mile) consist
!amlly members and briefly
of gasoline, oil, maintenance and
discuss the need to be m.o re
tires. Ownership costs ($8.24 per
k®wledgeable about household
day ) Include depreciation, fl.
costs and the Importance of
nance charges, license and regis·
working together to keep spend·
tratlon . fees, Insurance, and
lng under control. Have note
taxes. For the average car
~ards or paper and penCil handy
driven 15,000 annually, yearly
so each particlpan t can write
costs would total $1,110 for
his/ her answers to quiz quesoperation, and $2,989 lor ownertions. This actually could be done
ship. Air conditioning costs are
after a family meal or in the
extra!
LOS ANGELES (UPii - Jaz zpop singer Bobby McFerrin won
four awards, Including best song
and best record, and urban folk
singer Tracy Cbapman won
three of her six nominations at a
31st Annual Grammy Awards
show that featured performers
from violinist Itzhak Perlman to
heavy-metal band Metallica.
McFerrin's simple, upbeat hit
"Don' t Worry. Be Happy," beat
out Chapman's single "Fast
Car' ' for song of !he year and
record of the year honors.
•. "l.t was so popular because it
went to the spirit of the times ....
• People wanted to hear something
that was uplifting," McFerrin,
38, said backstage. "I was really
surprised about the song of the
year I award). I'm just sort of
numb right now," he said after
winning his fourth Grammy of
· the evening.·
• McFerrin. who said backstage
that he rarely listens to pop
music, outdistanced George Michael, Sting, Steve Winwood and
Phil Collins for top male pop
, vocalist. His fourtll award was
for best male jazz vocal performance for the song "Brothers"
on Rob Wassermim's album
named best mal e rhythm and
blues vocalist for his album
"Introducing the Hardline Ac·
cording to Terrence Tre n t
D'Arby."
"Giving You the Best That I
Got'· also was up for song of the
year along with Sting's "Be Still
My Beating Heart" and Brenda
Russell's "Piano in the Dark."
Robert Palmer was named
best male rock voca list over Er ic
Clapton. Rod Stewart, Robbie
Robertson and Joe Cocker.
In the tight race !Or bestfemale
vocalist.
Terrenct! Trent D'Arby was
3: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New HomM lullt
~
"F ree.Estimatea' '
3
-
PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or
at
Velerans Memorial Hospital
NO SUNDA HALLS
EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN ALL DAY ON
WEEKENDS
St. lt. 124, 3 Mi. paat
Southorn Hifh Schoal
949-2682 ·
1-27·'88· 1 mo.
(Subjt<t to Change
Without Notictl
•1 COPPER ............. 16' IlL
#2 COPP(R .............. 6S 'IIL
ClEAN AlUMINUM
SHEETS ..................... S2 ' IlL
ClEAN AlUMINUM
CASl...............:......... 40 ' IlL
. Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy,
3-ll·tln
KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE
OPEN 7 DAYS
9 AM- 7 PM
Payi"g today
Jan. 14, 1989
Television listenin&
Dependable Heari41& Aid.Sales &S•rvi••
CJ ·Hearing Evaluations Foi All A1es
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN .
INSULATION
56 AND UNDER
• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
WARNER HEATING &
1 COOLING
AlliMINUM
lEVERAGE CANS_ .... SO ' IlL
IRONY
SHEET ............. $' to30• • ·
IIONY CAST ... 3• •• 20' IlL
STAINlESS ................ 20' lb.
992-5114
. CHESTER, OHIO
INSTALLATION AND SERVICE OF
HElL ENERGY EFFICIENT HEAT
PUMPS, AIR CONDITIONING AND
95% EFFICIENT FURNACE.
..
. . .®
986-4222
DAY OR2· 15·1
EVENING
hf"..t.MC•C't'IOl.,..l'fal.crs
mod. pd.
llllia::r.••
Located Off Bypass
At Jet. of Rts. 7 &
143, Po•matct>v.
An noun cem enls
3 Announ·c ements
We wil h.,l coal for em•gencv
FIRST AID- On behalf of Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Mrs. Rhonda Dalley, lef!, inservice
director and director of nursing, presents a first
aid kit for use by the Portland Elementary School
basketball team. Accepting the kit for the team Is
Mrs. Sheila Long, president of the school's PTO.
rock vocalist category, Tina .
Turner bested veteran Pat Benatar and newcomers Me lissa
E theridge, Sinead O'Conner and
Toni Childs.
The Grammy committee
brought back comedian Billy
Crystal as host of the show for the
third straight year. guaranteeing
a fast-paced and funny telecast.
Baker, McFerrin and \:hapman were joined by a dozen other
nominees ranging from Metal·
lica to classical violinist Itzhak
Per !man in giving live perfor-
mances on the Grammy stage,
Pop superstar Michael Jack·
son - shut out in all televised
categories in 1988 - received
only one nomination this year.
His single, "Man In the Mirror,"
competed with Baker, Chapman.
McFerrin and Winwood efforts
for record of the year.
Vying with Chapman for the
new artist award were Rick
Astley, Toni Childs, the a cap·
pella gospel group Take 6 and
defrocked Miss America Vanessa Williams.
·
1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH
IES
Ride~
• Ads outside MeiQI, Galli a or Mason countiea muS'I be pre-
..•.'...
•
..
·•
•••
MOND)\Y PAPEA
a.
9- Wanted to Buv
- 11 :DO A.M . SATU~DAY
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY
- 2:00P.M. TUESDAY
~~~svotzP~~PER
-
2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
2 :00P .M . THURSDAY
- 2:00P.M. FRIDAY
.••
.•..
448- Gallipolis
367.!....Ch•hire
388-Vinton
· 245- Rio Grande
256-Gu.,.n Disl .
643-Arabia Oist .
379 - Walnut
992- Middleport
Pom•ov
985-CI'a.•ter
143- Port .. nd
247-letart fallt
949- Raeine
742- Rutland
667- Cootville
176-Pt. Pl . .ant
4!)8-Laon
571- Apple Gro..-e
773-Maeon
882'- New H.wen
896- Letart
937- Buffalo
.
Firm
•.•
Innerspring
21 - Busin•• Opportunity
22 - Monev to loan
23- Profeasional Services
Real Estate
31 - Hom• for Sate
.
32- Mobile Hom• for Sale
33- Farms for Sale
34- Buainlls Buildings
36-Lots • Acreage
36-Rell Esttte Wanted
1;1®111
41 - HouSM for Rent
42- Mobile ·Hom as for Rent
43- F•rma for Rent
44- Apartment for Rent
4S-Furnished Rooms
4&- Space for Rent
47- W..-.ted to Rent
48 - Equipment for Rent
49 - For Leae
·:'
Cet Resultt Fast
Mattress
61 625364-
Farm Equipment
Wanted to Buy
livestock
11av & Gra in
Transporlalion
71 - Aulos for Sale
72- Trucks for Sale
·73 - Vans & 4 WO' s
74- Motorcycles
~
75- Boata & Molors for Sale
76- Auto Pert a & AcceuoriM
Public Notice
BIG
·-'·
RECUNER
Sug. R.wil
'291
•.
~
The foltowing were receNed·
•. · / prepared by The Ohio En-
S179"
t~
.....,..
COUNTY; MEIGS
. PUBLIC NOTICE
·.
•,
...,..
··
,.
vironmenul Protection
Agency {OEPA) loot weak.
Effective datu of final action• and ia...ance datu of
proposed actions 1nd of
draft acttona era stltitd.
Final act iona may be appealed. in writing, within 30
days ot the data of this
notice, to The Environmen·
tal Board of Review. Rm.
Notice No. !Hl 88·1 14.
23. 1tc
12)
·..
'HAPPY' - Bobby McFerrin holds four Grammys thai he
won Wednesday making him the top winner of the leading
awards of the music Industry. IDs recording of "Don't Worry Be
Happy" won Song of the Year and Record of the Year. (UPI)
commitment to providing
your family
with quality health care.
'
THE CENTRAL TRUST
That's what Dr. Dan Trent is bringing to the people of the Bend Area
with the establishment of his private medical practice in New Haven.
It's the same commitment he's made at Pleasant Valley Hospital, where
he's been an Emergency Care Center physician for the
past four years and where he will continue as an
active member of the Medical Staff.
A West Virginia native, Dr. Trent graduated from
Marshall University with a degree in biological and
general science. He earned his medical degree from
the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine in
1983, and completed a rotating internship at Traverse
City Osteopathic Hospital in Michigan before
re-locating with his family, wife Linda and children
Lisa and Dan, to Mason County.
Dr. Trent is looking forward to bringing a
continuity of care to his patients and their families,
and working with the community for the good health
and welfare of all its residents. Appointments and walk-ins are welcome
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, and 9 a .m.
to noon Wednesday.
SPECIAL
6 MONTH
CE-RTI-FICATE OF
DEPOSIT
RATE 8.20°/o-8.52°/o ¢::'L ·
Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal
·-
$3,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
OF SOUTHEATERN OHIO, N.A.
Daniel R. Trent, D.O.
The Bank That Makes Things Happen
Family Practice,
vq
MIDDLEPORf
992-6661
~
'
138 Main Sf., New Haven, West Virginia+ (304) 882-3134
Formerly Bend Area Medical Center
Mombor FDIC
~--~------------~--------------~--~ I
.
1ice ot any appeal shell be
filed with the director within
3 days. Propo•d ections
will become finel unlen 1
written adjudication hearing
requett ia submitted within
30 day a of the ioau•r"o date;
or the director revises / with~
drawa the propo~ed action.
Anv parson may submit
comments and/ or a meeting
regarding any draft action
within 30 days of the date
indicated. ..Actiona··. ••
used above do• not include
receipt of a verified complaint. If significant public
interest exists, a public
meeting may be held. As to
any action, including receipt
of verified complaintl, any
peraon mev obtain notice of
further actions, and addi·
tionel Information. Unlen
otherwise provided in noti·
en of particular ections, all
communications shall be
tent to: Hearing Clerk,
Repair1
CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Canifled Ucensed Shop
Services
81 ~- Home Improvements
82- Piumbing & Heating
83- Ex.cavating ·
•
84- Eiectrical & Aeh ig eration,
85- Generel Hauling
86- Mobile Home Repair
87- Upholster-v
guns. 7:00p.m, Mile Hill Ad ..
Rac6ne.
FIREWOOD
OAK. LOCUST,
CHERRY
PER LOAD
DELIVERED '
BILL SLACK
992-2269
8-8-'81· lfn
prNate non~profit corpora·
tion, lntendl to submit an
epplication for a capital
grant under the provision of
auQ\.
Leesa Murphey
& Associates
PUBLIC
RELATIONS
108 High St ...•t
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone (6 14) 992·2922
2-3-'1!1-1 mo.
BISSELL
BUILDERS
Soctlon 111 (b) (21 of tho
Urbon Meta Tronaportlltion
Act of 1984. •• •mended, to
CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES & GARAGES
provide tr~naportlltion ..,.
vice for the elderly and/or
hond!CIIpped within Moigo
County. The grant application will requMt one (1)
"At Reason..le Prices"
PH. 949·2801
or les. 949·2860
Ught Tronait Vohido LVA-19·1 with whoolchllir
It ia projected that 76
u•
Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
Day
lift.
el dorly and hllndl-pod per·
992-2156
Of
4-16-U-tfn
lORI wiU
this Mrvice
five dava per week for: .
various activities. including
tranaporlltlon tQ medical
and aoclol lllfYice agencies
Meiga
toro. for tho provlclng of
trenaponation Mt'Vice for
the elderly ond~or htndl·
capped within our Ht'Vice
estod in offering propoaala
to provide _,Ice ohould
Open~tora
J&L
and adjacent
ators Including uxi opera-
who •r•
Inter~
INSUlATION
Mastic & Certainteedl
Vinyl Siding
Roofi~
Seamless utter
Re;lacement Windows
town Insulation
Storm Doors &
Windows
Fr.. Eatlmates
cau
MOBILE
HOME PARK..
•Mobile Home
Parts
·•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lo1 Rentals
992-7479
It. 33 North of
HOUSEIIEEPING SERVICE AVAILABLE
Meiga Industries. Inc .. in addition to provid·
ing general office and commercial cleening,
now offers
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL CLEANING
as a aervice.
We will contract
clean your home on a fixed
schedule, attending to items you delire.
We provide full liability coverage, worl\ars
compensation. and pay all tek
requiramants .
FOI A PRICE QUOTE CAU:
LAllY HOFFMAN - PH. 992~6•• 1
to
Dell• Spurlock.
Giveaway
To give IWr(, Yt Billett, 'II 1.
Coli 614-218-1211 .~ ... 12
nocn.
2 yr. female biD Lab. Clll
evenlnge, 814-256-8504. 215&-
1367.
Queen lize 11111111ter t.d. Call
e1 4-3117-0274 or 3117-78315.
seringer Spanlll,. male. About
2Yil yrw. old. Country home
........ blo. 614-992·6301.
Part Boxer, Pert DobermM blec:k
puppy, 2 months old. Coli
814-949-3087m• e:oo p.m.
Queen eile m.nr... to gfve
away. 114-742-2328.
. Femllelrish Setter. 814-742-
3168.
SYIACUSE
CARTER'S
PLUMBING
& HEATING
New lecalion:
161 North Socond
Middleport, Olio 45760
992-6282
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Blllo Here
1·28-'18-tfn
SUPPLY COMPANY
PLUMIING & HEATING
•Mobile Home Parts
•Plumbing su·ppliea
MON.-TUfS •• WED.-FRI.
9 A.M.·6 P.M.
THUR~ 9 A.M.-12 NOON
SAT. 9 A.M.-2 P.M.
Cal Anytlotoo Day or
SALES & SERVICE
it
llltht
iUSIHISS I'IIONI
992-6135
{614) 992-6550
lr-. Ho-helf, Ownor
3nl St.,
Oh.
2-17·'11-1 mo.
s,,...,..,
IIESIIENct PHON!
.
10 months aid femaleplrtCollie
dog. 304-8711-1703
8 Lost and Found
•Electrical Supplies
Wt Carry Fiehing luppll•
!614) 992-1754
1128/tlrl
LOST;Beagle lype dog-light
brown & white we•lng red
coli• w/Oellla County tag.
Childr•'• pet. Lost in vicinity d
Afrl01 Ad. •100. A•vnrd. Call
814-387-0421.
FOUND:Kitten· Sprlnv Valley
.,.... Call aft• 5 PM, 151-4-446-
8419. PI••• dllicwlbe.
•
FOUND : Young Dobermen.
Aodn.,- .,... C.ll 114-246-
9181.
Lott; beD.."*' mdwhitef.nale
H1LLf1DE MUZZLE
OADING
AIID
MODliN GUN
SUPPLIES
Muulalooding SuJIII(i•
Mod•n Gun Suppli•
Gun< • Ammo · Slugo
22 Ammo ·
Rt. 124 Eaat of Rutland
Al::ro11 Happy Hollow Rood
Ph. 614-742·2355
WANTED
OF BUSINESS
DEAD OIAUYE
•Weshers •Dryers
•Rengea •F1'118zers
•Rtlfrlgeratou
"Must It Ropairaltlt"
lEN'S APPUANCE
SERYKE
985·3561
We Service
Jo's
Gift ShoJl
SYRACUSE. OHI
Everything Marked
Down
•Cement Items
•Flower Pots
•Bird Baths
•Yard Ornaments
Because of Cold Wnther
Everythin~ Inside.
Rinc Door Bel for Service
2·7·1 mo.
9 / 20/ tfn 1 mo. pd.
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
GREG I. ROUSH
Basham Building
RESIDENTIAL
COIIIERCIAI.
EVERY
eCUITOM K"CHENI. lATHS
-EXTENifVE REMOOE.UNQ
SM. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
•VINYL IICHNG. ROOANG
•METAL BUILOINOI
HOUSING. APT. PROJECTJ.
'
SINCE lfJ69
Foctory Chalto
12 Gouge Shoflllll Only
Slrictly Enfer...t
10-7-tfn
llln ST. SYIIAIII.
ONLY
_9-19-88 tfn
PUIUC
RECYCUNG
LINDA'S
PAINtiNG
LADIES WANTEDI
_PERM, CUT, STYLE
INTEIIOI·EXTEIIOI
Plus FREE .....
I Tonning Sonion and
I 5tulon at Fit & Trim
ONlY
Rt. ?, ftMhlnlfllaht It Bredbu"f.
Coii614-882-3G26.
Loa: Oa~rnan. 8 month• old.
T., .,d blacl<. In Klngobu..,
Aold . . .. Antwera to Sem .
814-992-3153.
Found: white .,dtan mile Coon
Hound. On Succ•• Road ••·
FobNory 19, Coli 614·117·
3402 efterl5:00 p.m.
Found: In Pom•ov Pike arM. 1
mile Coble. Feb. 15. 0111
114-992-1212.
LOST.IRIOHT BLUE OPAL ring
W found pi-• cell 304-67825110, REWARD.
FREE ESTIMATES
Tako the pain out of
painting. let mt do
it for rou.
VEir IEASONAilE
HAVE IEFEIENCE
TOP OF T.. STAllS
614-985-4180
992·6720
BOGGS
SAUS & SDYICI
I. S.lll. SO US1
GIYSft&l, 01110
614-662-3121
Authorized John
Dewo, N- Hollond,
Buoh H119 F11rm
EqupmentD.......
l'tr•l4tlt•.t
lll•lltrtltt .
.
1-J.'II-tfe
POMEIOY ·EAGLES
ClUI
224 E. MAIN ST. •
992-9978
THUIS. E.L 6:45 P.M •
SUII. E.L 1:45 P.M.
DOOI 'PIIll
2 H.D. FREE with -JIOflll!d
pun:h• of min. H.C. Ptdi·
... Um~ I coupon per a.s-.
per bin., MSIIOII.
W• l'ar •so.oo '• Gomo
o... '10
'65.00
,!OIIIIf
'"pio
.,
Game
.._U< #OOS· !:I .,.. __ _
_____
PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE
MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,
INC.
We 1'(1: Aluminum
Cans,
I/26/1 mo.
ROMINE
CONSTRUCTION
I••· Br111,
;',\P1 t; •,,.t.
,\1'
~~
[•1
~;:,',~!'J!
, t.:.·!P
Otlill
CALL 992·6681
wv
,•,
11:1~~~~-u
.~ '1'11 il'< l ')
ld i f.81 ,738
(l;
1 .HI
!-- '·'
I
11
ftOIW
boaldng
v•••
spring eel•. 17
•pe.
rrence. Phone 304-273-3U7
Rwenwsoad, W.Va .
Moving Sale Muat Sell. 4 pe..
IMng room IUitl, 25 w inch
Amana side b1f lida ref, freezer,
Full size book CMe bed. Chain
e.w. Ai«<ng mower. phone
814-258-6501.
9
Wanted To Buy
"
Compl•e houllholdl of "llrnt.
ture • enliquft, Also wood &
•
304-675-~161
f• Mtlro InfortMiion
1-24-' ... I -
Junk C.rt wh:h or wh:hout
motors. Call La. , Llvely -114-
Howard L. Write5el
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutt. .
!\·1()[)f :1\,1
riil'l' 1·,, '\ l''•lJ
i
Re. .onable Retea,
Fully· lnaured
1-31·'88·1 mo.
!it;~·i
I l H \" ·: t1'
.•1
AUCTIONEER
Edwin \Ninter
Copper 11nd More
MQN••fll.: 9 om·6 pm .
SAT.: I am·l2 Noon
--------...,j
1\:
Alck Pe.-son Auction.-. n.
eeneed Ohio end W.t VlrginiL
E.tate. .ntiQue. f•m. llqukt•
tlon ..1... 304- nJ-&785.
Paint PIM•IIt, W.Va.
Ill Woat Soarllll, 'om•l'f
~~~
f•m• • .-at-. antlqun. etc,
814-246-&152.
BUSINESS
UID
DESIG.I IOUJIQUI
'\Jl.\\'
Call M1tlln Wedem.,er. Auctlonew. Llcent.:f a Bonded In
State of Ohio : UquldMions,
14th & . . St•
r
BINGO
Public. Sale
lit Auction
NOW OPIN FOI
S27
2-I5-'88·1 mo. d.
av.-n for treetment plant.
·-· the·-
Satunt.v night.
I wtll not be r"ponalble for ..,V
· GENERAL CONTRACTORS
1 1·16· '68-ttn
contact Eleanor Thom•.
Executive Director, at the
Molgo County Council on
Aging. P. 0. Box 722.
Fln~~l io1110nco of CortlfiCII·
Pomeroy. Ohio 457119. to
tion: Huntington Dlatrklt, U obtain
ful detollo of the type
S Army Corpa of Engln-o: of tronoportatlon oervlce for
V11rlau1 Town8h1Pt. Molgo tho elderly ond/or hindi·
Co.. Oh. Effective O.te: capped within our ~«Vice·
Fob. 13. 1189. Thlo lnol
.ctk»ft not pNCI 1 f by proWrttten comment1and/or
poaed oct !on ""d io IPPNI• propooolo mull bo oubmlt·
bill to EBR. "-lno to 401
Cortlfl118tlon. Grant. Per· tid· within 30 doya tD the
-cy at
llddreol
tolna tD Hu-gton Di- with
o copy to 1ho Ohio
Corpo of Engln-• Public DIPIIrtmonl of TronoportoNotice No.-fHl 88-1111.
25 South Front • Huntington Dlatrlct. U S tlon;
Room
7111; Columbuo. Ohio
Army Corpo of Engln-o: 432111·0899;
Attention:
V11rlau1 Townehlpo. Melgo Oaputy DINC:tor.
Co.. Oh. Eftoctivo Dota: · (2) 23; (3) 2, 2tc
Fob. 13, 1181. Thil flnol
fNety
bills other tN!n my otNn. Signed
8
Waatewater: Application
propoiOd JCtion 11nd io lip·
pNIIIblo toE BR. Luch fillld
614-992-2403 0< 814-992·
2708. Cell for llltlngo ar aol•.
SHOOTING MATCH. Sl-•
PUBLIC NOTICE
in
814-992-3891 .
4
The Meip County Council
on Aging. Inc., which is 1
.....
1ctton not prec•eded by
Reference•·
prompt ~lv•IM. Excets6or Salt
Works. Inc. Pom•ov. Ohio.
Jeck W. Ceraev·Re.ttor.
985-4141
992-2198 .
Middleport.
end HEAP
H•v• Realty
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING lit REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
PAT HILL FORD
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
5-25-lfn
Olivo Twp., Moiga Co., Oh.
Effllctive date: Fob. 13,
1989. Facility description:
No. 08-2414. Thia flnlll
SYRACUSE, OHIO
Moat Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
NIASE Certified Mechanic
OEPA, P. 0 . Box 1041,
·
Columbua, OH . 43288- count•.
Maiga County Council
0149. Ph. {614l 644-2116. onThe
Aging, Inc. invites com·
Co111UK ORC Chop. 3745 menu
and/ or pr.opoa1la
and OAC Chapa. 3746·47 from oil in-ted public,
and 37411 · 5 for prNate 1nd p.r1ti'Wisit operrequirements.
Final isauance of permit to
inatell ; Tuppers Plaint·
Cheater Water District.
VAUGHN'S
AUTO & DIESEL
SERVICE
AIC Service
Public Notice
We can r~r and rt·
radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks,
Servl~.
..-ouchen . We c., give you
..._ .. ftbrulry 13. last ...,
All Major &. Minor
• . 300, 238 E. Town St.,
•• Columboa, Ohio432111. No·
CHESTER, OHIO
77- Auto Rep8ir
78- Camping Equipment
79- Campera & Motof Homes
Business Services
1ction not preceded by pro-poMd action end is eppeeleble to EBR. Plll'lllina to 401
Certlflca11on. Grant. Per~
tairat 10 Huntington District
Corps of Engineers Public
MARCUM CONTRACTING
COft
$3 5
65 - Seed & Fertiliur
'·
Public Notice
SER~ICE
LIGHT HAULING DONE
'I"E"'YFI'
Maaon Co .• WV
Area Code 304
Household Goods
Sponir,g Goodt
Antiques
Misc . Merch..-.dise
Building Supplies
Peta for Sale
Musical Instruments
Fruits & VagetabiM
For Sale or Trade
Farm Supplies
& Livestock
13 - lnsuranc:e
14-Busin•• Training
16- Schools & Instruction
16- Radio, TV & CB Repair
17- Miscellanaou s
, 18 - Wanted To Do
following telephone exchanges ...
'•.
51 5253545556 5758 59-
Ernployrnr.nt
Sr.rvtce::;
Classified pages cover the
Ar.. Code 614
Merchandise
11 - Help WantM
12- Situation Wanted
OAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
Meigs County
ads .
4 - GivertWay
Happy Ads
Yard Sah•
$7.00
$10 .00
$15 .00
S25 .00
$60 .00
ar11 for consecutive runs. broken up days will beeh arged
&- lost and Found •
7-.Y•d Sale (paid in advance)
8 - Public Sale Auction
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
Galli a Coumv
Area Cod• 614
$33.00
S- Happy Ada
• A clat~ified advertisement placed in The Deity Sentinel (ex cept- el•sified dis pl..,, Bus in en Csrd and legal noticnl
will also appew in the Pt . Ple•ant Register and the Gallipolia Daitv Tribune. reaching over 18,000 homes.
COPY DEADliNE -
$8.00
$13 .00
, - Card of Thanks
2 - ln Memory
3 - Annoucement s
dav after publiclltion to make correction.
·Ads that mu1t be ~Mid in advance are
2&-36 WORDS
$5.00
$8.00
$13 .00
S21 .00
$51 .00
$6.00
Anno unee rn en Is
"Sentinel is not responsible fOf en ora after first daot . !Chadt
for errors first dey ad runs in paper) . Call before 2:00p.m .
'' .
S4.00
for ear:h rtw 111
paid
•Receive 1.50 discount tor ada paid in advance.
"Free ads - Givea't"(av and Found ads under 15 words will be
run 3 dl'fs at no ch•ge.
"Price of ad for all capital letters is double price of ad cost .
'"7 potnt line typa only used .
Card of Thanks
In Memoriam
Hum8n
0-15 WORDS 18-25WORDS
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
best hard rock-heavy metal
artist, a new category. ·
Among the 61 awards left out of
the televised portion because of
time considerations was rap the other category added this
year.
In an effort to please its diverse
constituency, the academy scheduled prime-time awards for
bes t Mexican-Ame rican performance. best soul gospel performance, best classical soloist,
bes t ma le country vocalist a nd
HEAP. Melgt; County Dept. of
RATES
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
SUNDAY PAPER
GALLIPOLIS
446-0902
Business Services Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING
Foliage Plants
Baskets
Classified
''Duets.··
Chapman, a Boston-based
singer-songwriter whose bluesy
tales about poverty, war and the
struggles of the underclass have
been both critically and com mer·
· clally successful, also won for
· best contemporary folk record·
lng and was named best female
: pop vocalist for ''Fast Car," a
song about the frus tations of a
woman trying to escape inner·
: city poverty.
"I want to ... thank my mother,
who bought my first guitar. and
. my sister, who's always been my
· best audience," said the shy
Chapman, dressed In trademark
: leath¢1' jacket and black turtle·
· neck as she accepted her best pop
vocalist award.
Chapman had been nominated
for six awards and was given a good chance of breaking the
record of five Grammys won by
Christopher Cross-in 1980.
Classical conductor Sir Georg
Soltl, the all-time high Grammy
winner, picked up his 27tll and
28th awards for best chamber
: music performance and best
choral performance.
The Irish rock band U2, Anita
Baker and country star K.T.
Oslin won two awards each In the
ceremony broadcast live on CBS
from the Shrine Auditorium.
In one of the more surprising
victories of the night, Michael's
· · "Faith" beat out Chapman's
"Tracy Chapman," McFerrin's
" Simple Pleasures," Sting's
" Nothing Like The Sun" and
•Winwood's "Roll With It " for
album of the year honors.
OsUn's single " Hold Me" won
best country song and she was
named top female country vocal·
1st for the second year In a row.
Randy Travis was named top
male country singer for the
second year in a row.
Manhattan Transfer was
named best pop group for the
album, "Brasil," beating out the
· . Beach Boys, who have never won
a Grammy and were favored to
.
win.
U2' s single, "Desire," earned
· the band a Grammy for best rock
performance by a group and it
earned a second award for best
performance in a video for
"Where the Streets Have No
Name.''
Baker's single, "Giving You
the Best That I Got." won her
be5 t rhythm and blues song and
best rhythm and blues female
her character's name was Ann
Darrow .
' "King Kong Is more and more
my friend, " she told a recent
interviewer . "I've come to appreclate him. And he's a wonderful public relations thing, isn't
he?"
.
l n her autobiography, Wray
recalls anecdotes a bout starring
wit h the "tallest, darkes t leading
man in Hollywood. "
When her producer Mer ian
Cooper described her co-star (n
those terins, Wray told reporters
gathered on the 86th-floor obervation deck that her first re·
sponse was, "Great, I 'm going to
wor~ with Cary again."
,
McFerrin, Ch{lpman dominate 31st Annual .Grammy Awards
By JAMES RYAN
memb~r- few people recall that
By GERRY MULLANY
normal-sized gorilla suit who
NEW YORK (UPI) - It's a surprised her with a bouquet of
pressagent'sdream-FayWray roses, but declined his offer to
on top the Empire State Building carry her off.
giving out autographs. King
Wray appeared In more than 75
Kong? He was,h't Invited, but who movies stretching back into the
knows what a 100-foot, lovesic k silent film era when she arrived
gorilla might do?
in Hollywood at age 13 !rom
Wray, one of the most famous Alberta, Canada. She hit her
screamers in movie history, starring stride In Erich Von
celebrated the publiCation of her St roheim' s " The Wedd tng
autobiography "On the Other March" in 1928, and survived the
Hand," Wednesday evening look· advent of talking r,tctures"
lng down from the famou s
But she acknow edges th at her
skyscraper,. where King Kong . enduring fame goes back to that
carried her In the 1934 classic.
meeting with Kong on Skull
Vibrant in a drama.tlc red Island when the monster ape fell
dress, black cape and black lace head over heels In love with her,
gloves, the 81-year-old actress pith helmet and all. And it's
joked with reporters and blew a always Fay Wray they re·
in a
The Daily Sentinel- j;lage- 9
Dow011pouta
Gutter Cl11ning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
2·I0-'81-Imo. pd.
ooel helt•s. Swein' a F urnlture
Auction.
Third &
814-448-3159.
381-1303.
Olive,
'
Furnh:ure Md IPPii•cee by the
piece or entire houstlhold. flir
prlcesbtingpald. Calll14-4463158.
Wtnted To Buv-Usad mobile
homoo. Call 114-4441-0175.
Wll buy or _,..,... ""Ythingl
AntiQU81, furnM:u,., appll•c..
"'"-'• eutos. compl•• home
-hlngo. M•lln WOdom.,or,
81-4-241-1112.
Uted "llrnlture br" the piece or
Mtirl houMhold •o sllllng.
114-?42-2415.
Tot~ price tor UMd furnlh.l,..
...... houaoholt1 lnllqu ...
AH typoa, eon
.,d..,,
•.,_.
t14-9811-43Be.
'
�----
--- · ------ ·---~-
-~-----
Page 10 The Daily Sentinel
ThuiSday, Febn.lay 23, 1989
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
LAFF-A-DAY
fn1ployment
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Merchandise
KIT N' CARLYLE®
by Larry Wright
73
11
Help Wanted
Few Sal • or r.nt. 1 918 2
beeoom moble 14x70 horne,
30 4-175-7881 ahor 6:00.
BONUS INCOME
1200-1600 weektv. Meil·
fng 1189
b'odwJra For
morelniDrnwtion .-nd .t~m\"od
envelopeto: INC. P.O. Box2 39
Mieml.. Fl 3321&1 .
E~~rn
trW•
44
NIH •tre c•h1 Cell AvOn.
814-4411-4397., 4411-4882.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDClET PRICES AT JACK$DN ESTATES. 638 JodciCMI
Ake from •tal • mo. Wllk to
ahop •nd movies. 114-4412588. E.O.H.
FIJI t im~ s.r..e,.,.i ... ce hllfJ)tuL Apply' i'tAp. .on Tu•.-Frf ..
10 AM·4 PM. RiVtlf Front
t-tmct.. ••k tor Chuck or Kelty.
WANTED: Two
T••
Townhou• ep.,mant... 2
BAa ., 1 '12 blthl, CA., di1·
=
~-time Co~
mu rMtv Service Work• piMIIk»rw
hwuha', diap0181, privlte encto..d p .. io. pool. plarground.
W.t• . .,_..,, & tresh indudecl.
Stlttlng It t 289 .,.. mo. Cell
614-387-7880.
•v.Mible at a group home for
dtoveloo"*"•'IV dlublod odu~•
inBidweloC1127.5hooro/_.. :
11 PM-8:30AM . 'Ill; 11 PM-7
AM, FrVSat; or 11 otl'wwiae
ildlecl.lled: 2-hatl r w.-lv rmff
mHiin9; C21 33.5 hooro/ :
4o30-9 PM . M/ F; 4-9 PM .
Tu / W/ '111; 8:30-8 AM . M -F: "'
• att.wiae ,lc:h.IG.tled; 2-hour
"I hear he covers twice .the
distance m'. half the tun'el."
POSitiONS;
lgh """ol
del y mH H..-lng.
BOTH
,...._ void dri¥o(s ....... and
r~=::;;:::;:=;::==1'~~r.:ii;=;;::~~~:-i
15
32 Mobile Homes
good drWing
recorct good com-
Schools
Instruction
munlcmton -.,d orv-ntu.t ton
skill. punctUII.ItldebletoW(N'k .
~
• .,.... of • 1. . , requk'ed ;
__.
Oftdn 0
h:h p•
.,....onco w
~
•
RE-TRAIN NOW!
aontwtthmentatreur
, ionpreand SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
.t.elopnwnt•l
dl1.ait1•
f.-r.:l but not f!llquired. Sel.-y : COLLEGE. 529 JtiCbon Pike.
l4. 2 l5/ hour. Send resume end C•U 4.a.43e7. Reg. No. 86-1 1·
558
cover lett• inclcating which 1· 0:..::
~In &...
c. ·n posftfon lpp.,., 1g IU'I' , to: c• •
=.:·_:______
Bilk•.Buck.,.eComlftlnfty Ser·
-.Acea. P.O. lox 104.. Jeckaon.
Ohio 45840. Doodlino fo• oppK~.-.1:1 : 31/ 3/ 89. Equelopportun•Y omp """·
WANT B): Fuil-tirneCommunily
ServlceWor._ fongroup
~me
d.,elopmentllly di..bled
-.tta in Gllllipolll. Houn: 15·
11oOOPM. Fri; 7AM -11 PM.
SM.; 7 AM·1, PM. Sun.; Ot" It
ath9trwfM schld.lled: 2 ·11our
weektv steff m•ing. ttgh
school degr... velid
llcantlt •nd good *Ninu r1100rd.
good communicltlon lndorgen·
iu1ion lldllt, puncrual. Md able
to work • JMrt of 1 t_,..,
required; ex~i1noe working
with .,.-sans wllh mental ritter·
d•lion 1nd d...,efopmentel dis·
ebillti• pr.terr.t. but not ,..
qu ired. Sel.-y : *4.26 / hour.
lnauNna& wc•ion. sidl .,d
holide¥a. Sen dreeumeendcover
lett., to Cecill1 Ilk•. Bucll.r;-•
Comnufity SlfVM:a P.O. llox
804. Jodclon. Ohio 46040.
De1dllne for epplic•n1s :
for
"''¥•"•
18 Wanted to
Do
1---.:•_------W~ntlng to
do c.-p.-.:.-y warlt.
H1ve own truck .tools, By hour
or job. Col 814-4411-8232.
WllltelleCif'eollldtrftt penon in
their home. E l!ll*'i... ce. C.H
114-441-0120 .nydme.
Appointment op•lng~ for .,.
alnning PilnO 1tudent1. IIV.,._
(nga & Set. morninga. C:.ll
01 4-3&7-7257.
'-intingtndwelpiP•· 20ye. .
ox . .lon"" CAll AI. 814-7422328.
d..,ln,
Wll do hou•
h101o
,... • .,011, 304-773-91 ...
for s,le
CAeH for your UMd home. CaH
Modern 1 BR . downtown. camplelo ldlchon. air, -pel, DepDlil. no pelt. Coli 614-4411.0 139 ......un.. m. 6.
SHADY
lAWN APT 5-
729
S.aond Aw. Furnlthod offldonciel starUng M e176 a mo.
in<*lding ._..,. & garbt!ae.
Single ackllta only. _ C.ll . 8f4-
448-~7 or 446-2802.
·uo fiml Now buying 1972 tlwu
- l y ....,.doled 1 BR . opt.
1984 m-.a.-l...
Appl. furnished. Ide .. tocation- 1
v - Ohio W1t1 800.
82fS-01&2 ••· 315.
· blo~ from dowmOONn. Cell
814-446-4e39.
1987 Cl..,tan 14x70. A•uma·
-,
2 BA . ~pt., new pluah c•pet
ble loan. APPJox. f14.&00 at n . . . .tnt. ulilitl• pertliDt peid.
1 3 Y.r % interest. peymenta
..,.076-I5104.
1176 emo. Call 30
1,17.37 e ma. 13yra. on loen.
-Coli v .L.SmMh-R .e. 814-388875-8386. 8711- .. ~.
8821 cw A.A . Goo~ . 11..,.379Apertmen1 evahbfe. HUD ae2828.
copted. Coli 304-8711-6104.
1 BR .• femily room. edd onwllh
Fwnithecf 2. 3. cw 4 rooma &.
firtplece on 'II
tot. Tycoon ...
h. Cl1111. Adutu only. No
Lob Coli 014-4411-0706.
pets. Ref. & dep. IIQU ited. C1ll
814-4411-1619.
1. BA . furrUt..d traM• . • ,800.
Coli 014-388-9834.
Nicety furnilhltd s mel hou...
1911 Porkwood.14>170.Control Efficiency ept.-1 mwa. Mobile
home below town ov•lookfng
eir conditioning. 2 be*oom.
river. ca & hNI, adults mly, .et.
underpinning. everything muat Call
&14-446;,.033B.
go. Coli J.D. ot 014-892-2174.
Furnished efficiency. 807 Se·
1972Von DyC<t 50x12. *2800. cond.
Galllpalle. •176. Sh•e
Midclapon loCIItion. 114-992· bath. Clll446-4410•fter7PM .
3488 day , 014-992-2367
ev.Una.
Second ftoor • ·· 738 Second
A .... Utiliti• included. t300Pit'
mo. Cell 814-448-8877.
•a-•
51 Housellold Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 82
Oltve St., GMiipolis.
NEW· I pc. wood group- t399.
Living room ...... 1199- 1199.
Bonk b • wllh beddln~t t249.
FIJI 1ize m . ., . . • foundtltion
stertlno· •&9. R•cllnen
.U.rtin g.. t99.
USED- Beds. dr• .... beG-oom
suH•. Deakl, wringerwaeh.-. 1
eompiMe line of ultd lurnllure.
NEW· Wwt.-n boot• 135,
Workboott 118 • up. (Steel &
sqtt too). Can 114-4411-3159.
F1nanc1al
21
Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . reoollln'Wtds thM you
do butln•• with people you
know, .-.d NOT to .nd monev"'
through tM meil untfl you haYe
..._lgelldtO.oflorlng.
35
Lots & Acreage
t...n d for •le. , to 15 acrep•cels.
h RutlandTownthip. 014--992·
3543.
36
Real Estate
Wanted
Prtv .. elnctYkalells looking far 1
2 or 3 be*oom home. PrN
clo11 to GeUip olit. c.! I 8 1""
BebVsHter n•ded elo11 to
4411-11382.
TURN KEY BUSINESS
Hollar H01~ol. Call 814-4411Compeny elt8bllltwd eccounta.
7498.
Absolutelv AO competttion. Eern
Meture ba~ lht• needed for 2 up tp 11100emonth. Pill time.
Rentals
.chool age c:hRdren. DIVI. Call No •f*i.,CII n c ry. lm•
814-3811-8794.
lit free. •pension
up.
08980 ............ Call 24
oCCt~>tlng applicotiont I<>< houro.1 -IOD-327-8919.
41
Hom88 for Rent
full a p.n time .-npkJyment.
Butfn.., for Sale
Applv in ,.-aon. Lorobi's Pizzi.
TeltPhone U • .nd ServiDe.
SUrver Bridge P. .e.
21 Gemeat. 1300emo. *200
Sound busin. . for I Y'l•s with . dapoal. CoR 014-44.22011.
O.ltipotll PerU and A•cr-'lon good ounanw .,_.. loW ~
is; now•eceptlng..,ptleet6onsfor 'r-t .,d good loCirtion. Good
3 8A . hou•. dlluxe. AC. •31501
eunwn• tot.. P011ftiorw lndu de: opportunity lor growth. Will aiW m-o. Cllll 304-878-5104. or
SwlmtringPoot Mlnl•ureQolf, fTIJinlng for new oom•. M"uat
875-13811.
Summer L.e~-. tnd Grounds hive bMiC electronic blck·
MelntaMnca. Appllmtlons m., ground. For lfPpofntrNnt call
3 BA . house. Oepod required.
bo picked up at tho Porlco end 304-8711;3253.
10 Old FOft Tral. CoH 814-4411Recnlfk>n Office. 1518 Second
2683. I to 8 dolly.
Aw .. Gallipolis. Ohio.
For R.n or 8.,•2 BR .. mown
t
GOVERNMENT JOBS
home. Close to town. e300 •
111. 040.- t59,230. ve•. How
mo. plus dtlf). & rif. Ctll
tliring. C.ll 11) 805-187-1000
814-4411-3848.
Ex1. R -98051<>< "'"'""''-<~oral 31 Hlll'lles for Sale
2 lr. , ~. dr, hllh. utlltty 100m.
Nlceytrd. ck»tatotown. •250•
Avon ceiling. Went 10 do ~ Very attrocli¥obrlck4bo ... oom. mo. No ptlta. Call &,._ 446tNng ntw 1r1d lkciling? Free 2 b• h. f1mlv room with fir• 1117.
Nrt- ~ ktt during montb of p i - tor ..! dlnlna 1aroo .,log
February. 814-992-7180.
room. 30 ft. cuttom Olllldtchtn 7.,.. old. 3 bo...oombrlck-llinyl
cetMn••· olk woodwA ftnieh totllf electric. .-tch aty&e ho.,e,
Government Jobll Now hiring baemertt, 2 c• a•11e. lwll c•plted throughout. 1 1are
thlur•l• 10,213. 10 •75.473. l.,dle~p.t IDt, 4 ml• from f., cad In bact! yard wMh dtck.
lmmtdilfe Op.,lnga! C.ll fr• Holzer Hotpital off At. 3&- Loctred 7 ml• from Holzer
lundoblt)1 -31 II- 733-8082 Ext. Pbn..,ook Subdt\lilion. Cell Hoopfiol on Rt. 180. Awltblo
814-4411-4189.
FZ7- .
M Dorch 1. nao. . . month. If
lntorOJtod. call 814-2811-1318
Job Hu,dng? Need • aldll1 We
l lA . houee for •1•. CJoclaronl oil• 7 p.m.
tnln P-'< I<>< jobs 01 Auto Own• fkl.nce.
304175Mechtnics, Cerplnl.., Cotm• 5104.
2 ••GOmhouMetd2bect-oom
tologlaU. Di¥orllllod Modlcol
1Ptr1mtnt. W-0 hoollup. ,...
Wo<lolrl. El-lcionl, FoodS«- GOVERNMENT HOMEII Froon deled. Soa~rlty dopooll. CIIM
1Ace wo..-.. Eledr<lnic. Tech- • 1.00 iU Ropolrl. Forodoo- 114-892-6818 of! or loOO p.m.
nlcilnl. lnct.lltrill MMII••ce Repoe. T• betlnquent PI'OJ*"
WorDra. NuningA llittents end tloo. NOW S ELLINCl THIS In MidciiPOft, Nee thr• bed0 tdtrfltl. Mllchln~t. OffiCI AREAl Col CRm-ot. 1- room r•Jdlnoa. Utllty room.
Wo<l•n ond - - · R-alator 3111-733-8084. e ... o-2732-A . kitdllr'l with lot• of c.bk1tt&.
now for cNe. . begtnnlng March FOR CURRENT USTINClSI
l•ge IWing room. nioltr deco27th. Cel Tri-CountyVocall:ionel
,.od. draped ond partially corAdull Cent• at 78~3111 ext. Nice bride
2 c• 11•111• p ..ld. c~.. to town. Working
1 4. A wrllty of fu ndtng source~ br-wvev. 21R .. • on ecrelot •cl.ltle. 'Mil accept one chid. no
to ~ for training IN wdlble wtlh t•oe Ull'den 11J0t within t..; ,.ta. 1210. p.- month plue
for thoH eligible.
' mila Gf IChool MerC*V•• C1H
utfiiU• ., d dep01tt. Cen e14814-88-1941 .
992-&292.
Att.-rtion. RN's-LPN'I
Am•lc.-•Pom•ov h• fmrne- Modern 8flck-3 BR ., 1'1J b•tw. In Pom•oy. nice one floor
opening~ for pert tim•
etteched g•aga llmrlc door home full be..mll'l't wkh w-d
· AN'•LPN'e M •• shlfl1.
op ..... a• hNC, CA. Loc81ed I
hookup. tt.1 driP•l•• . Cll'·
Comp«ttlve sllllf'Y, fl•ible
ml• up At. 7. te.,...Ck. IChool p.ted; refrisr-lfor .nd etove
sch•din~ end t.ntfits
diet. c.n help fln.nca C.ll provided. Off ttr• perking.
o ft..t. Com:ect Lerue Hll,
8,4- ....1-2&71
Five. roonw, kN.ty 11.1n pOtch.
RN-OON. Am.loer .. Pom•ov.
Working..., ...
IICCIPI one
38759 Rocbprtngs Rd ..
N.w 3 IR .-ewinl room 11x21, chilct no p11t1. '•225. plue
.,.,_... 114-812-8808.
bultt· in Uc:hen. diftlng room. utllll• 1nd dsp011t. Cel 814utlky roo"' 2 ""1w. •Ill-In 99 :n29 :z.
Sidln1 end window 1ub· doe•e. flr~PIMl& 22 IGI'• oH 1.:.:..:::..:::.::_______
ool'llrKtors. Muet furnilh own Ohio· Fit. 7-,"1.1 mil• lOUth of 3 IM*oom m Pom•ay. 1225
.,ulpmont. Call814-892-771 1. Clalllpollt loeb on • - Rd. - par moroh ..,, noo deposit.
flnl ,_.. on rlght. CoM 814- Call 814-892-5119.
AVON · AI .,..._ Cell M•rlfvn 2511-13&0.
304-182-2845.
N-ly rwnodolod 3 br houHin
2 ltGrf, 3 bectoom. 2 b.e:ht, ·on Maeon. 1250. p• month. Pev
AVON 111 -11 Shirl IV Spa••· rlvw In Mlddeport. Clll &14 own utl-1•. 304-"n3-9584.
304-8711-1421. '
185-4134 ...,.,lng1 .,d week·
Jult went to
little •tra 'ends.
morwv1 Or would you Ike ·to
~· • c•w1 Eilhlr WfiY Awn
c• hllpyau bet hi bllt you c.n
belli Call -llyn Wor11w. 304882-284&.
aft•••"
Real stole
....
Oelu••
c.•
hou•.
dl••
w•
w.-
••n •
1 ltld 2 bedroonll, plrtly
furnished. In Pom«oy. Call
014-992-8777 or 814-9928215.
INch StrWC. Middleport Ohio,
2 bedroom furnished ll)erfment,
utlltl• .-1111. Nl•enou. Phone
304-892-21188.
Now accepting lppUcetlons for
2 bect-oorn ep ........... fultv
cer~td . .llpplienc::e~ . 'l'l!leter and
truh JMc*upe provfded. Meint•
ntnce . . . living clote to ~op
plng. f»nks end schools. For
more informetion cell 304-882·
3716. E.O.H.
Furnished one bed room ept.
1200.00 plue electric, 1100.00
dapoolt. 304-6711-3900.
One 3 room fufni1hed utlhi81
peid very nice. rlfrenC* r•
quiftd . Two bedroom. 4 rooms
end birth gou nd ,..,.._ nrf•tr~e~~
required. 304-876-2722.
One bedroom ept, furnished .,d
ell utifiti• peid. refer.,cea ,..
quit•. 304-676-2722.
Now accepting 1ppllc.tione for
spU, equel houllngopportunity,
....,. fullsecuritydepotit•mount
one montht free rent.
30 .. 773- 810~ .
.
gel
2 bedroom mobile horne in
Mldcloport. Ohio. ntf•on coo
on d dopoo~ roqulrod. 304-9923207.
45
Furnished Rooms
tor
fWint· 'NHk Qf month.
St. .lng et •120 • ma. G•Mi1
Aooma
Hotol-814- 4411-9580.
Sl...,tng rooms wh:h coo kin g.
A leo Trllil• epee-e. All hoolt yp1.
CAN
aft• 2p.m. 304-773-
15851. Meson WV.
46
'
Space for Rent
Country Moblil• Home P•k.
Route 33. Nonh of Pom•oy.
I.Dts. ..n.a.. perts. sel•. C•ll
814-992-7479.
47 Wanted to Rent
2 -4 br. houM to r.rt ne•
GelllpoNs. Mull ellow 2 kldllrld
lmlllt inlklll dog. Cell collect
&13-181-3478.
49
For
leaae
. , (II (i) 11(11 9l Ill CIJ
N•wa
()) Motorweek llluatratad
(!) Shining Time Slltlon Matt
and Ta~a find a ball of
string .
ID Dr. ho: Planet of
SpCdara CNRI (2:15)
lll llll Happy Daya
® Facta o1 Ule
i1J Sha-Ro
12!1 Amellcon Magazln•
6:05 (]) Laverne lnd Shirley
PEANUTS
l- l}
6UT [ DON'T THI NK
1·\1 5 TIN'{ LITTLE
SNOWD065 A~E
CUTE AT ALL!
'80 ClMC, 4rl4. LWB. chromo
pka Rol ............. for ...e O<
trado 304-8711-83711.
8:30
Crwt Molal. 814-4411-7398.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
«>
1989 DY NEA, In!:
~-~=========;:=======::=~
Sot•
.,d
ch..,.
priood
t396 to
19915.
T•bl•
150from
1111d ~
up to $,25. Hid••·blldl 1390
to t5915. Rtclin.-. $221 to
1376. ·
ezs to ,,21. 54 Misc. Merchandise
Dlnltt• ., 9 end up to 1495.
Wood teblt w~e
t285 to
1795. Deelc 1100 up to •:J.76.
Hutch• t400 and up. lunk Colomon _..,.,, lriooo 6
bedl complete w-mlttrte. . Stretton motor. Both 220\1 &
t2951t1dupto 1395. BabV beda 11CN. Approx . UN 45 hrs.
t110. Mettr.... orboxsprln• Aoldng uoo. Cllll 114-4411ful or twin tea, firm t78, end 0488.
tea. Queen • • t2&0 & up,
King t350. 4 drewerch11t t88. Mbr.edh•dwoodtlebl. t,Zp•
Gun Cib'i nets 8 . 8 6 10 """- bundle. Contllinlng lpprox. 1 Y.t
Baby' m1ttreu11 t36 & t46. ton. Ohio P .. l• Co., Pom•oy.
Bod from• • 20. •30 • King Ohio. 814-992-1481.
fr.me I 50. Good "'ec:tion of
bedroom autt•. m•lll cebinet1..
heedbowds t30 and up to $115.
Lemg•
..
ch*•
90 D1y1 nrne •• c•h wll:h
•pproved credit. 3 Mil• ou1
Bul ... ih Rd. Open 9tm 1o 5pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 1&14-4460322.
VIIII81J' Furnil:ure
New- md us" lurniture .- d
eppl!cances . Call 8,4-448·
7572. Hours 9-5.
PICKENS USI!D RJRNITURE
Complete hou .. hold furnisttinga. VJ mii•Jerricho. 304-8761450 . 814 - 388 - 9773 .
evenings.
VI' Ra Furniture & Appllence~
Open Dlily, 9 AM-5 PM
Sund.,., 12 noon-5 PM
814-448-3188
Se•• refrig.-19
Call 814-4411-2360.
a.~.
ft. white.
8 pc. cheny dining room suite.
Kitchen Ajde dlshwlsher, chair,
orgon . eon 814-388-9088.
Picken• Furniture
304-878- 1460 or 614-3889773. .....
Nice 3 pc. bedroom' suite.
hide-e·bed, 2 pc. living room
euk•· llke niiW. e dinnette •••.
2 rNPie· hutchs, bunk beet.
complet.. twin· full-queen •II•
bedl. dr... .,., ch..ta. deek.
m.,y more 11.-ns. 1h mile ou1
Jerricho Rd ., Pt.PieM.,t. W.v •.
White g• Tapp., R.-.g& White
61 Farm E""ipment.
MF di•ll traor w / 5 ft. bueh
hoa t3610. Poot ..,.,, '5111.
JD grain drill *1911. -Idea
PTO
rn~r~Ure
•ns. 280 oat. IJII'IIf tonk wah
can: & boom. •211. Own•
rmonco. co• 114-2811-8822.
~ wood din«te Ht. Lirge
table. pedded chlirl. like MIN
condillan. Alldng • 200. 114742-2721.
1& cubic ft. .,_., 112&. ,3
4020J .D. wKh fr-DI•ot. "86
o• MF. 4o18 plows. 10 h .
T-Oll~ 350 N.H. II'-· 9ft
N.l. rok•820Fordharbal•. 7ft
M .H . dyno b.,., .. mower.
Thr• ,. fr: hit( wegona. PThrM
18 fhono 30'4-178-1881 alter
5:00PM.
Inch oolor T .V. • 100. 114-742232B.
Dehumhlfl.-. Mop.S, Engine
Anllyzer {new and in box).
three-wheeler, bleycle. a•
cooking 11ow. Phorwl14-98~
3838.
&11 Fcwd Hv•
...., peint. Phone
2 ...... t ..a. tor .... nooo.
Coil 814-992-8310.
63
Liveltock
---------
King WoodJu rner for •le t 250 .
Free pile of wood. 114-992·
2026
9 month oldmMelelgl.n horse.
Reinbow Vacuum clean•. Nns
with atttchm8f'lts.
$189.00 or term• arr.,ged.
304-875-4418 .
U&O. Colll14-2111-8701 .
Will cb tlJitom llvlltock hailing
.-.ywt.a. .-,ytlrne. loCII or long
For •1•: O.tl firM"aod . c.ll
304-8711-2767 aft or 4;30 p.m.
dietenc•. Experienoed with
_
.......... 114-949-2708.
.lm C.rn.tl .. .
SURPW!I-Origlnol bny. Donlm. Ranta! Clothln• oroon
c......,.ltupoCblado-whllot. Som
Som.MU. s Old Route 21Jun<:tfon lndep.-.clenoe Roed.
CNowERA). CEootRav-dl .
Frldrtf, Situ . . .. lun..., only
Noon-8:00P .M .. 10por-talf.
Cerh., clothino, Cemouftaage
lnouiOiod cov. .lh. 304-2735855.
84
53
Antiques
hNtet· br... Coppper Vwt.-i-
Sale
Colemlfl quick Ught. Also cletn
br... & copper item~. Cell
614-2611-1380.
Clroom ond luptlly lhap-Pal
Grooming. All breeds ... AII
Jtylea. loms Pot Food llMI•.
Julio Wobb Ph. 814-44"0231.
Buy or Sefl. RN.-tne Antique•.
1·1 24 E. M•in Stra.t, Pom•oy.
Hou rs: M.T,W 10e.m. to lp.m.,
Sundly 1 to &p.m. 014-9922526.
5~Misc . Merchandise
'Nhellchair•new or ulld . 3
wheeled electric 1cooten. Cell
Rogws Moblty collect. 1-114870.91181 .
FlrMood for
t215 10 t30
doli¥-. David Hll, 814-3888138.
Big Oeltote Farm horne built on
your lot. 113,996 & up. See our
model. eon 1-814-881-7311 .
for
Used Tr-mlulons
F01dCI outo •100.00. FOtdC4
111to 10. 000 ml• linae cw•
hsult12&. oo. Ford.-..~
4
•
1175 Dodge Cl- A mot.,..
homa. f6200. Col 814-3870543.
lmprov-19
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vah•
Dl• for •100. Fordl. M•ced-.
Corven... Ch-ve. Surplu1.
Buyonr Cluldo. C1l 805-6878000..... 8-10189.
1973 PI';' mouth IM'IO.Ida. If
SWEEPER .nd ,.,_.ingmiCIIhine
....,•• pano, .,d suppll•. ,,..
up .. d delt.rlrY. Dwia V•a.~um
Cleaner. one helf mile up
Claor1101 C - lid. Call 11._
4411-02114.
,980Cud.., newtnaln• Rune
gr .... Looa.,odiMktt .. dout.
t:IOOO. N... Call oft• 5 PM,
114-4411-1920.
1179 Cllm•o z-28. uaoo.
1988 Chwetto. 2 dr., AC.
t2200. 1915 Dodgo Ch•gor.
2.2. & spd.. AM -FM•IOpo, oun
roof. olu m,
'3500.
114-288-1410. '
c.•
1984 Ceclhc Eldorldo, sun
· roof. tllm. Mk.. MIN tlr•
Loeded. Em.t. conct 4-42"
!kip• Swemp• tlr•18.1.. .
Call 814-387-0548 ., 387·
0141 .
198& Buick lurnmoroel Roaol.
c ..... 4 oyl.. Milo.. AC. crulaa
lilt. AM -FM-C.•. Cllll 81431.1240.
·-r-
1968 Dune • ...,.
.,..,.. lh•pl *21100. Col
311-0143.
14-
R ond T Bulcloro fnlm fau-tion to roof · Inside or out. FNe
aellm•oo. ludgll prl•. Cal
114-892-3497.
IHE.Y
SIIJ\PUFI£0
IT...
MORTY MEEKLE
RON'I Tal .. lolon lorvlce.
Hou• Clftl on RCA. Quaur.
ClE. Spodotlng .. Z..th. Cal
304-8711-2398 or 814-44•
24114.
WE EPf TE+J ~5
OF HOME.WO<K
WE DIDN'T
TOC<AY.
.......-... ~---
Fetty Tr• Trlmning. stump .
l'omCMII. Call 30 .. 1711-1331 .
BUT MY TEACHER 16
T EN
~ E5 0F
HOY-.E.'M::JRK
G-ET
COM IN(;! TO DINNER AT
LOOKS E!ETTER A L L
ANY ...
OWR HOW6E:TCN.IGHT.
~E TIME .
I
/
Rotorv or calole tool ,..lllna
Moet well contphilldllllledW.
"'mp Ill• •d ..viol. 304- '
118-3902
.
liON'S APPUANCIIERVICE. :
houto call •-Iaing OE. Hot
Point. • • ......_ drv.. and ·
e l - :104-87.2381.
Plumbinll
H•tlng
9548.
FuH blocltad whllle Ger.m.,
Shaphordpu-ondcolortv'L
Calll14-441i'1149.
1177 Doda• 2 tmor. 13&0.
nulft•. Cal 814-118_3_1.;.38_._ _ __ _ __
Pllra brod lamalo Rei Tarrier.
Red. t8n. AI 1hat1. wormed.
•eo. Call 814-4411-1384.
19"nFordLTD. E-onllllindltion. Lata thorl 81.000 .......
mila *1700. 010 . ca• ""•
5;00. 814-992-8339.
84
1979M•C>Iry Cll>rl llatly 8por1.
"''"' tel •1. 400.00 or b.t:
off• 814-4411-2115.
Rllldentl• or -~~~ wr.
ing. Naw ..-viot or ,.......
1171Voloo248_n_n.
... oond .,,eoo.oo. 1874
Iuick IIM•o. vwy good oond.
teoo.oo. 1857 a....... 4
door, Needs Painted.
• 1.ooo. oo . c.n 304-198·
3001.
11-\£. RICH ARt G£Tlli\X:.
RI<HERrMlD 1J.£.. ~~
GE:rnu;~ ..
Carpentry work b¥ , .. job or
hour• .-atlna dry -1 . ..,,.._
In a lfectflcll. remo•g oornplelo. Col 814-44.7829. .
B2
&
Cor. Founh •d "ne
0111o
FER A
CHAN6E!!
JUGHAID'S COMI~'
HOME FROM
SCHOOL--
.
wL":"-3811 or 114- •
Phone 814&
ON TIME
SI.ORY BE!!
CARTER'S ,WIIoiiiNCl
ANDHEAnNG
4.11-4477
'
Araenlo Hall
evening Newe
ill Crook and Chau
10:05 (]) MOVIE: 0..111 Wlllh II (R)
(1 ;33)'
:
ASTRO•SRAPH
.. . .
General Hauling
-· -
Bernice Bade Osol
32 Mobile Hom88
for Sale
•
1910 lparton 14rl70. 2 BR .. 2
b.... ol olactrlc. C A , ...,__ 101118 ...... 1 2x14
wood buldln• Cllll 114-2481028.
Wll ...... older...... t .....
110- ..........d. Coli 114387-7114.
87
USED HOME IAL8 Til 6 Tille
Down on 30 Pt.Owned Hom•
In ltodt. Wo flnon.._ FDollorory. Uoo yCM TAX AI·
Wll do pointing. ........ FUNI:IC CoiiLSMHOMECIN·
.,• • r. . . Col 11. . .2- '1!118 Todlrl ONo 100.
138.
128-17782.
Upholat.-y
Exceptional opportunl1lel mlghl be In·
the olftng for you In lhe year ahead , bul
unlesa each one Is aaaeoaad and ac1ed
upon In a pragmatic, realistic laahlon,i
they may count lor tittle.
P18CEI (Feb. ._..arcll 20}1f posalble
today try nat to request apeclal favors
from lrtlnda. becauae pals who
.,. cuatomarlty helpful mlgh1 not be en a
compl)lnt mood. Trying tci patch up a
broken romance? The Alfro.Graph
Mltchmlk• can help you to underlltand - t to do to make the relatlonIIIICp - Mall $2 to Matchmlker, P.O.
!lox 91428, Cleveland, 01:144101-3428.
~ (MIIrclt 11·Aprll 11) Try not lo
get younelllmrolved In lllluatlonl today
-.your aucc"a Ca predlcaCed upon
the whlma and IIUPPOrl ol otllft. Thare
lila poutblllty thai you and lhay will no1
.:be en sync.
T·AUAUS (April 20oM., 20} In your
•hasle to accomplish things loday ·
there's a chance you' ll operate in a slipshod fashion or ignore obvious detail&,
and 1hereby leSSen your effecllveness
and producllvl1y .
GEMINI (MIIr 21.June 20}11 you leei Inclined lo take risks loday, make sure
they're In proper proportion 10 what you
hope 10 gain. Don' l bet a dollar )usl to
win a dime back .
CANCER (Jome 21.JuCy 22} Your mate
mlgh1 be a 1rlflo dllllcull 10 plea~ 1oday
and It wen be up lo you lo lry to acquiIIIIC8. Keep trying avon If your Cnl11al efforts are not appreclaled.
LEO (.luiJ 21-Aug. 221 Your pallence
and tolerance mlgh1 be allow levela 1o·
day, especCalty In co-worker al1uatlona.
Don't gel Coo huffy, because !hay may
~-~ally dlopleued wl1h you .
(Aug. 21-Sepl. 221 Be extremely
carefUl regarding the ways you manage
your reaourcee today. because lhero Ia
a posalblllty that II you make a mistake,
you will compound It rather than correc1
II.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your chances
for overcoming dllifcultles today are
ralher " Iffy." Th is could be primarily
due to your lack of tenacity and follow
through .
SCORPIO (Oct. M-Hov. 22) Try not l o
anllclpele negallve developmenls today. IC's extremely likely that mosl of.
the things aboul which you're worried
will IMIY9r Cake peace.
ISAGmARIUI (Nov. 23-Dec:. 21} Be
fop11ml811c and positive today, bul keep
,your expectations wC1hln reasonable
bounds. If you are hoping to darlve a
ha..-t from a field you 've never
· known, you might be disappointed.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22........ It) Your
sall-lntareata may be very pronouncee
today and you might have to deal with people who leellhe same. II thlala true
It COUkl end up In a no-win altuallon fot
--,one l n v -.
AQUARIUS (.18ft. 20-Feb. 11} Usually
·you have the courage of your convlctlonl, but today evan II you gee reasaurance from people who10 advice yoc
you might stCtl have IOC? many sell·
ldOUbts to venture ln1o the unknown .
liNII,
,I
'
•
'
10:30 (!) Maetloplec• Theatre An
altampt is made to
assassinate Hider during
·world War Cl.
(f) Dlff...nt Drummer Glitch
In the System
12!1 New Country
11:00 (I) Remington S1Hie
•rn w 8(1)
Feb.23, 1Mt
E•ptrienoed bUr -'"•· In own
home. Ref.-encee IUpplltd.
' .,.,,........ Cllll 114-89231411.
his land . D
i1J1 Lany ICing Uvel
i1J MOVIE: Oetting even (R)
(1 :30)
9;30 II (II 1111 Deer John Louise
can'l decide whelher to
marry the father of her
unborn child.
12!1 VldeoCountry
10:00 (I) 700 Ctub
II (II 1111 L.A. Law Kuzak
agrees co pick a retired ludge
to hear champion athlete's
case. D
(I) II (I) HNrtSelltlnfant
needs heart surgery; Eve 's
niece comes to visit. E;l
iD1 Newt
(]) LegCaCallve Repon
I!DJ
Knoll Landing
Gary's con vinced young JuliE
was sn Innocent victim ol JIU
ii1J1 ((])
Electrical
Refrigeration
MTorMLT ASCP
Aolt tech . . HCtlone must be
.all• to work d8';'slnd al sNftt,
exl)«<ence pr.,.,.ed. c.fl per·
aonnol offlco 304-17&-4340.
AA-EOF.
Situations
Wanted
lumber company threatens
•c
• ..,..,.. .,d ~.V·
trMn-. OominotPinaofPolnt
Pla-t. 304-1711-1410.
12
8:30 8 (II i1SJ A Dlllerant World
Dwayne and Ron pledge a
fraternity , but Dwayne tires
of being hazed . E;l
8:00 II C%1 CIJ) ChHra Rebeeea
wants to demonstrate her
mark81ing skills on Norm's
business.
(!) College Bltaketball
(!) (]) Myat.IYI Miss Marple
is bequeathed a tour with a
slipulatlon attached . Q
CJ (I) Dynuty Adam
sex ually assaults VIrginia;
De• finds out and attacks
Adam. &:;I
9J •11) ParedC•e John
Taylor fights back when a
m
Ucenud eltctridan. Rict.nour
Bactrloat. 304-1711-1718.
85
·
(]) The World at War The
United States responds 10
the bombing of Pearl
Harbour. (1 :00)
9l
41 Houra D
CD((]) MOVIE: Aauuh on
Precinct 13 CRI (1:30)
i1J1 PrCrneNewa
1D1 MOYCE: One Flew Over
· the Cuckoo'• Ne•t (R) (2:091
liJ Murder, She Wrot•
® Naahvlll• Now
8:05 (]) MOVIE: Forced
'liongtance CAl (1 :30)
ec
BASEMENT
WATEAPROORNO
Unoondtionlll lfCimt ., .....
... loci' r.....OII bnllhed. .
Free •lmlll:a Cell oolite~ .
1-114-237-048& dar or nl,.. • .
Aoger•Beeement ·
w••-""a
w-.
women . C
swept back to the great war
w...t.t
GMt t.m1n In town n-* lfve In
h..p. good weg-. •MY work.
304-8711-1113.
8:00 Cll MOYCE: Swen Song CNR)
(1 :45)
8 C%1 CIJl The Coaby Show
Cliff and other doctors his
age play baske1ball againsl
Michael and Louisa are
Horne
1979d•k blueMercuryMerquil
St•lonMgGn wllh ,...lv owrhoulod8cyL 302.,gino.Auto ..
air, PW. Indother~~ttrt'e.NHdl
minOt . . . .. c .. 814-9$28192 all• 5o00pm. Askin g
, 000.
Attlnllon Hunt-AKC ~11t...tlrtn.ny Spenl... barn Dec.
4. 1918. •111. Call 814-2411-
a cm
(I) Cotlaga Bukafbatl
m ElhCca en Amelita The
doelol-patient ralatlonship
and the idaa of autonomy are
discussed E;l
.
II (I) A Fine Romance
79 Motors Homet1
& Campers
81
lntorOOiod ... 814-2511-8481
oil• &:30 PM.
o._~
emory l!onnol.
Pera-. •d Sl.n- •d Him•
lllflr\ ldttena. Chow ltud ....
vic.. Coli 814-4411-3844alt•7
PM.
.
~
380 C""'rv onaln• 4 bbl. 4 btl~
maln. 1999E1Camlnoforporto.
Clll 814-388-9714.
HOW c~ME' oppo~iUNlTY
J.:Noctc.s oNce; BUi
TtMPTAi"ION 8fATS Ai
MY poo~ E'VE!?Y PAY?
Grain
71 Auto 'a For Sale
it"
Pett
&
.
.
.
.
.
.
L....l.- . L -L-....1..-
e
I had gotten caught red·
handed cheating on
diet.
My daughter sighed , ' Mom .
we want you shipshape, not
shaped - a -."
mr,
~
I
'lri·I0
_ ;.:.....:
IR I:..I..:Z:....;,TI' '·:H,.,I
:.: s=-E
_
Comp lete the. chuckle quoted
~y f•llmg tn fhe m•ss•ng wor ds
.L...J you develop from step No 3 below.
.
1
PRINT NUMBERED
tEllERS IN SQUARES
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Beha# -
'
Usher.-
Ninth - Joggle -
THROUGH
. Myslery of poli1ics: How a c andidate can toss his hal into
th e ring and sl ill go on talking THROUGH il .
BRIDGE
cmCll SporiiCe-
IIDl
•c
• ((]) Love ConnectiOn
CIJ Moneyllne
amUIAr_,
11 ((]) Newtw wad O.me
CIJ --1onlght
IIID Pet .... lhow
tqt
1111 , . _ llkiM El
t.'ajltaln
Amltlclln Megazlne
12:00 ()) MOVIE: lwan Song CNRI
(1 :45/a..tu..
w~
EAST
+AK
+Q 8 3
'KJ7
'Q 9 2
• s 02
+KQ1098
• 982
om=~n~-
• J 10 4
SOUTH
+10762
•sst
chamber
tJ7
tK 7 6 3
By James Jacoby
It was strange that We st did not
open one no-trump with his balanced
. hand of 16 high-card points . Perhaps
that was why he felt constrained lo bid
two diamonds over one spade. North
raised spades, and East, who might
have competed with three diamonds,
tamely passed. West would not make
three diamonds if North finds the club
lead. However, against an opening
spade lead, West could shed a club los·
I er on the queen of spades. Meanwhile,
it was up to South to try to make eight
tricks with spades as trump.
At first glance, si • losers seem to be
Inescapable - three trump tricks, a
diamond, and two hearts. Sometimes
unwary defenders can err if some card
Uke the jack of spades is suddenly
playecl.. from dummy. Here, if El:tst
we•e to cover the jack of spades, the
defenders' trump tricks would be com pressed into only two. But it is better
to rely upon a true chance for the contract
than upon an opponent's
mistake.
The straightforward play lor eight
tricks is to find the club suit dividing S-
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
West
Nordl
Dbl.
I+
2+
2+
Pass
East
Sotltb
1+
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead:
t
K
3 while the trumps spliL 3-2. So decla rer can play four rounds of clubs, discarding a diamond, and allowing
. either defender to trump. The hope is
that a defender will ruff with trump
honor or, if he ruffs low , that subsequently the trumps will split, leaving
declarer with only two more trump
losers . And ao it was with today's hand.
Four rounds of clubs eliminated the di. amond loser. Although East trumped
.in with a small eard, eventually East's
and West's trump honors fell together.
JIUfH¥ Jll<dly .. "JO<Oby 00 Bridle"...,
'Jocoby"" C.rd a-· (rml,.. rPII/J » /at/Ju,
tlJe hte OlnJd Jacoby} 4ff DOW •r•Jl.ebJe .et
@ _ __
_
....,._
/Joobt(II'M
SoU ,,._ publbl»d
by PIMtw
Boob.
a
CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSlPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Fellow
1 Lamh cut
5 Throat
2 Float"
sound
3 Astonished
4 Ileal
time
5 Mountain
, 9 Golf
11
immortal
italia's
c apital
crest.
12 F.AA- ·
· I :1
~
6 .Jordanian
shap~d
RCmulin~
tall
mountain
7 ilalph
Waldo 8 ill'avy
. 15 Vitality
16 ()('slrny,
knif<'
a.~ ·hy fire 10 Nullify
18 Greek
14 lle!'r
··n"
17 Colorado
19 l':u1ial
Indian
rt>fuml
20 Rundll'
21 Congeal
23 Not a whit
22 Dl'vuurrd
23 Ohs~rvr
24 Boundary
26 Carpus
31 Beet.
varirt.y
32 n elish
26 Nur<'yl•v's 36 ForPsC
c·reature
field
27 Carry on 38 Insight.
28 T s ia, <'.g. 40 Fish -
24 Flatte ry
25 Menu
C<•rm
30 Exhaust
produc e
or talu"
27 Ridge
28 Thrash
29
Mohik
tuun<'
(ahhr.)
30 F:xdusivl'
33 Hila 34 Buddy
35 Possesse<l b..--J.- +--
37 F.lidt.
39 llc lrll'
41 IJI.oJiia
42 Germans tyle
cake
43 Wrest
44 Gl'rman
river
.,
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work II:
.
Holletft100nera
liJ Mlltml Viet Brother's
KNper, Part 1
aD You C.n Bot 1 Star
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JAMES
JACOBY
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11 :30 II (II CIJl ToniQht Show
(!) College a..ketbltiC
(I) ChHrl
(!)Onion One
NORTH
+J 9S t
'AIH3
e
movies.
Tr;msvor Io111111
Concrete blockl- Ill eiiHor deiWery. M•on sand Galt
I~ 8fock Co.. 123'1. Plno
..
GoiiiPDIII. Ohio. Call I 14-44112783.
66
'c••·
I old Ch.,dell••· a,.,
blow t ..ch. . 1902 • 1921.
.
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n.-y burn•~ 1909 wfth orginial
Hay
r
I
6
a..
(II Family Feud
(I) Entertainment Tonight
CJ(I) USA Today
IBJ Ill
Joopardyl E;l
CD l!ll M'A'S'H
liJ Cronflre
•
® NIQhl Court
® Crook and Cha..
7:35 (]) Sanford and Son
7:30
1973 Ch""Y 454. 0400. 400 .
Turbo, *100. COli -814-3888462.
u-. for solo. ,.._11 81 ._2156-
pu....,..
Lt ddin oil lempi:2-No. 12. , .
No. 11 . UddWI keroMne 1pece
Auto Parts
Acceuorlea
,..,
Two 99 gal 'l' fuol tonlar wkh
hMd
Chwy on• ton
DUIIty bed. Qt•y one tone
Duelty • • _.d wllh ..., ber.
Antlqut popler boerdl up to 18
inchs wide. 2x8 •d Zk,O .,d
other mise: uMd turrDtr. 30•
388-.8184.
WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Ch.,nol Ruadc
ond lovolod Lop Sldng
• Docie Matorllll
o-on-Ouollly
CETIDE . INC.. Athont -114514-3578
S..-'1 5 HP boll motor. Oood
condlton. CIM 814-742-2071.
aoez.
I
NBC Nightly New•
e
v-
t.mom H.trintum boa. 011'1. 2
ewlvel ,..._ t200. C.H e1•
4411-0932.
a.
l_
~
_
7:00 C]) Our HOUle
(II PM Magazine
Cll College
ketbaM
(I) 8 (I) Currant AHair
(!) (]) MllcNetl/ Lahrar
NewtHour (1 :00)
9l Ill CIJ CIJ) Wheel of
Fortun• 1;1
.
CDI!ll Th'"'' Company
11J Monayllne
II)Cheara
liJ MCaml V1ft
®Fandango
7:05 (]) Andy Orllllth
o.._
ft.
i
· ~____,:S;. . A:..:..,..V:_;:I_T;_,._--11 ~
ea
1-.12 lt V-bottoon aluminum
boll:, 11111.-.
lledriG ~
tor. 2 swivel ..... 3 floating
3 lpood ltlck .75.00. c
apoodotlck *110.00. 304-
- · ono tlmo. 814-892-2279.
BI.Aiding M .. eri...
I
8 e
1eoo. ,.u
tiSJ
P L ALE
l
SporttLook
(I) 8 (I) ABC N•ws Q
(!) Body Electric
(]) NIGhtly lkltlneaa Report
9J
CBS New•
CD llll WKRP In Cincinnati
liJ ShowBiz Today
C!J) WKRP In Cincinnati
liJ Cartoon Expraee
1:1!1 New Country
6:35 (]) One Day at a Time
••• loot-1987 Lan .... 11'1",
1117 -a~ry 31.., -orwRh
power trim md alto ollnjectlon.
1987 More>rry T - 1 - ... .
,187 lhoreline trill• plu'
more. .A I in good ooncltlon. C.H
114-812-2770.
cu•h6one.
e (II
~unger
Wedding dr•s with vel for .....
While wide• tel. bent wOOd
rock• brown vetvet 1eet lfld
Ilk• new
30~57&
2328 crl711-2808.
55 Building Supplies
40 Inch lapp., ~ r.nge,
..5.00. 304-675-.193.
pow•. 141 Ford
Se.. 10 HP riding mower.
Noodl oomo r-lr. t180 . Call
814-949-2727.
s
and
Motors for
78
1989 580 C.. a lock-. As il
*3500. Needl aomt work. Allo
Electric Orter. Cell 81..,.992·
314&. .
BrO'INn coucb. both ends recline
•2ao.oo. Ben Frlflklln •t~~lece .
coli 304-882-2744.
w•
Aototlll•r ettechmen1 for
Clrw..., ,_.,_ Call 814-44111356.
MontgomervW•rdW•h•. 0 .E.
back. ptOVklentM coffee table,
elll.enaw, 304-175-1584.
apr.-.
*W'"
Boats
75
I
: I I' I' 1· t
I
em
1971 Ch.,y 4whHI dr'Hetruck,
400 engin• 310 turbo .
•1.200.00 or off•. 304175-1772.
ring... Skeggs Appllencee ,
•I•
New famHv to eree looking tor
Epl~•
wheel•. W- 31 - 10. 150 tlru,
03.8911.00. 304-11711-1731.
Upp. River Rd. beside Stone
KNETTI
6;00 Cll Bonino : The Loot
1910 C""' holfton ._4, .no.
PS. tltw,_ AM-FMraolo. 8ft
btdwlthtoppw. dwornewaoon
GOOD USED APPUANCES
I
EVENING
1179 Ch""Y v. ton lhoot bed
4xC. 380. *21100. 1979Cult.._
•aoo. Coli _in,._ 814-2&11&80• or 2511-93117.
W•hw•. dry_.., refrig. .IOf'l.
1 lA . ep . . ment on First lYe. ·Truclt loede of n.., furnfture
Aduttt onty. ell 614-446-8221 . hii'Ve iuat ertivect Bring your old
furniture • T~DE ·IN for nerw.
2 be*oom Apts. tor rent. I f.lece wood group. 1369.
Cerp. . .. Nice letting. laundry So • • chain. • 289. 7 pi~
facilit;.. av•illlble. Call 814- country dinnlrtle 111, 1&50
(lndudel h.nch, . 5 piece bed-·
992-3711 . EOH.
roon eutte. •39.9-extr• nice.
Ortcioue living. 1 lf1 d 2 ber:l- Mattr... ~alf off regul.- price.
room ap.-tmentt at Vlllege Bunk b&dll w / beddlng. •229.
Manor .nd Rlv . .lde Apert· Rt. ,41 in Centenary, 1,4 niileon
menu in Middleport. From Lln(:Oin Pike.
*182 Call 814-992-"nB7.
1179Joap CJ-11. 304.3 spd..
chrome wheele, ntw top.
t2000. Coiii14-HII-1410.
County Ar.pliau::e. Inc. Good
uud IPPIIfiCM tnd TV •••·
Open BAM to 8PM. Mon dwu
Sot. 614-448-1899, 827 3rd.
Ave. G•lllpolil, OH.
Mod.-n one bedroom 8Pa'tmn. Cell 614-U&-0390.
3 / 3 / 89. Equli Oppor1unftv
EmpkJylr.
POSITION AVAILABLE
Subltitute tnstructor- Blchelore
degr. . .,IO. OOpwd-v. Hold ...
le-' one veNd t•ching certtfl·
Ule tuued b¥' "- Oh6o Dep..-r·
ment af Educ.Cion. A-.ebletor ·
1988-89 progr., ve•. Pleeu
tend ,....,,.. to Gellla County
Bo•d ofMRI DD.P.O. Box 14.
Ch•,... Ohio 46120 or cell
814-367-7371.
Apartment
for Rent
8o 4 W.D.
83 Ford 4 wheel drill' .. \4 tof\
480 or~gino. AC . Towing podolng. LooU • "'"' 'gDod. C.l
814-21111-1261 .
!:ierv1Les
2 beciooom turnilhed mobile
home. 304-875-85, 2 or 8753960.
Vans
"
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for anoUJer. In this sample A is used
·for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each
the code letters are different.
day
CRYPTOQOOTE
2-23
DSKKAEAKH :
ZVS
GRZ
KAMSK
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llllll TwHigllt zIIJIN-"Iaht
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WHAT YOU LIKE OR YOU WILL BE FORCED TO
LIKE WHAT YOU GET. -GEORGE 8. SHAW
© 1989 King Fealures Syndicale. Inc.
�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
Revival
The Grubb Family singers will
perform Sunday and Monday
evenings at revival services at
the Rutland Freewill B.!lpt!st
Church. Revival services start at
POMEROY - The Belles and . 7 p.m. and will continue through
March 11. Norman Taylor will be
Beaus Square Oance Club , is
speaking and Pastor Paul Taylor
sponsoring a dance on Saturday,
invites the public.
8 to 11 p.m., at the Senior Citizens
Center In Pomeroy. Caller will be
Dancing
Bllly Gene Evans. All western
Square, round and slow dancsquare dancers are welcome.
Ing will be featured Saturday
RUTLAND - There will be
square, round and slow dancing
Saturday, 8 p.m. to 'midnlght, at
the Ell Denison Post of the
American Legion, Ru !land. Everyone welcome.
Community calendar
Guiding Hand School In Cheshire . The public Is Invited to·
attend and provide community
Input.
THURSDAY
M !DDLEPORT - Middleport
Youth League will hold Its 1989
organ lza tiona I meeting on Th u rsday at 7 p.m. at the Middleport
Co uncil Room. Interested
coaches and parents are urged to
attend.
·
POMEROY - The OliveOrange VFW .Auxiliary Post
9053, wlll meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m . In special sessional the halL
Plans w!J.I be made for an arts
and craft sale sponsored by the
Auxiliary to be held at the hall on
March 4 and 18.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the post
home. A vote on Gir Is State will
be ta ken.
EWING- EwlngChapterSAR
will meet Thursday at the Meigs
Museum. Dinner will be served
at 6:.10 p.m. with the meeting to
follow at 7:30p.m. The program
will be on Arthur St. Clair.
L -Riverview
POMEROY Ga rden Club will meet at the
home of Janice Young on Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. Mary Grace
Cowdery will be co-hostess.
RACINE - Peter and Meryl
Burkhart, missionaries from the
Philllplnes , will speak Thursday ,
7 p.m., at the Racine Nazarene
Church. A potluck dinner at 5:30
p.m. will precede the service.
MIDDLEPORT
The
Women 's Fellowship of Meigs
County Churches of Christ will
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m., at the
Bradford Church.
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Youth League will hold Its
1989 organizational meeting
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Middleport Council Room. Interes ted coaches and parents are
urged to attend.
FRIDAY
• MIDDLEPORT - A weekend
revival will be held Friday
through Sunday at the Middleport. Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church. Buddy Jones, from Kentucky, will be the speaker.
Services will be at 7: 30 each
RACINE- The Racine Americ a n Legion Auxiliary Post 602
will meet at the post home
Thursday, 7 p.m., to vote on
Girls' Sta te.
evening.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club will meet Thursday, .
7: .10 p.m., at the home of Jah ice
Young. Mary Grace Cowdery
will co-hos tess.
MINERSVILLE
Church
Women United of Meigs County
will have a planning session
Friday rot World Day of Prayer
at the Minersville United Methodist Church, 1:30 p.m. Key
women of Meigs County
churches are urged to attend.
CHESHIRE - Gallia-Melgs
CAA will hold its regular meeting
on Thursday at 5:30p.m. at the
MIDDLEPORT -Adancewlll
be held at the American Legion
hall in Middleport Friday, 8 to
Seeing the ·serious point
Dear Ann Landers: A friend
senllhls tome.Atflrstllaughed,
but later I began to see that there
was a serious point to this story.
I'm not laughing anymore.
Please share It with your
readers:
A woma n arriving home from a
shopping trip was horrified to
find her husband in bed with a
lovely young thing. Just as she
was about to storm out of the
house her husband stopped her
with these words:
"~fore you leave, I want· you
to hear how this came about. I
was driving along the highway
when I saw this girl looking tired
and bedraggled, so I brought her
home and made her a meal from
the roast beef you had forgotten
was in the refrigerator. She was
wearing worn-out sandals, so I .
gave her a pair of shoes you had
discarded because they were out
of style. She was cold, S"O I gave
her the sweater I bought for your
birthday but you never wore It
because the colors weren' I
' right.' Her jeans were threadbare, so I g~ve her I! pair of
slacks that were perfectly good
but you hadn't worn them in a
long time because they were too
snug. As the woman·was about to
leave, she turned to me and
asked, with a smile, 'Is there
anything else your wife doesn't
Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS&
.. 1988, LCN A.nSf!le.
Tlml!e Syndl'*r •nd
C..-e .. on Syndicllle
10 envelope (65 c1:nts poslage) to
Ann Landers, P .O. 8ox 11562.
Chica!(o. Ill. 60611-0562.
midnight with Hardtlmes Band
to present 'the music. Cost wlll be
$5 a couple, $3 for singles.
MIDDLEPORT - A revival
wlll be held Friday through
Sunday evenings, 7:30 p.m., at
the Middleport Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church. Buddy
Jories, from Kentucky, wlll
spe.ak.
SALEM CENTER - A weekend revival will be held Friday
and Saturday, 7 p.m. each
evening, at the Salem Center
United Methodist Church. Rev.
A.B. Maloy will be the speaker.
POMEROY - A basket class
has been scheduled for Saturday
at 1 p.m. at the Meigs County
Museum. A round gathering
basket will be made with Janet
Theiss lristructlng. For reservations, call Theiss at 949-2714 by
Friday.
Susan ClarK, vatentlne queen
of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, was guest or
honor at a chapter party held
Saturday night at the Holly Hill
Inn.
Gifts were presented"to Mrs.
Clar k In recognition of being
selected for the honor. The group
enjoyed games and refreshments during the evening.
Attending were members and
their husbands, Joe and Susan
Clark, Theresa and Larry
Kennedy, Betsy and Brett Jones,
T11mmy and Steve Bachner,
Joyce and Rtch Douglas, Debbie
and Jay Evans, Julie and Scott
Dillon. Linda and Jeff Jones,
Jamie and Rick Blaettnar, Jan
and Sonny Haynes, and Cathy
Johnson, Marty Ferguson, and
Lori Powell, Bob and Charlene
Hoeflich, sponsor, and guests,
Paige Smith Cleek, and Chuck
Thomas, friend of Marty
Ferguson.
RUTLAND- Youth from the
Middleport Church of Christ will
present the musical "Friends
Forever," on Sunday at 7:30p.m.
at the Zion Church. Everyone
welcome.
RUTLAND- TheGrubbFamlly Singers will perform Sunday
and Monday evenings, 7 p.m., at
the Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church. The two-wek revival at
the church will continue through
March 11. Speaker will be Norman Taylor. Everyone welcome.
'
_Special Prices On ·End .Pieces
6'x6'10" STAIN-CHECK CARPET .....S4900
6'x7' INDOOR-OUTDOOR ...............$ 3900
CONGOLEUM CUSHION FLOOR
9'x12'
$5900
10'x12'
S6SOO
WE NOW CARRY 13'6" WIDE CA.RPET ICUSIION FlOOAI
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TUESDAY and FRIDAYS
10:00 A.M.-4:QO P.M. Call For Appointment
INGELS CARPET
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169 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
t1$t?
• Automatic Transmission
• Air Conditionine
• Power Steerinc
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• AMIFM Stereo • And More!!!
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-
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• Power Door Locks
• Tilt Steerin*
• Cruise Control
• AMIFM Stereo
• AM1FM Stereo
• Automatic Transmlalon
• AJr Conditioninc
• Power SteerinJ
• Power Brakes
• PowerWindowe.
Door Locka Available
• Automade
• Air Conditionlnc
• Power Window•
• Power Door Lock•
•AMIFMC._.te
• Aluminum Wheels
• Rebate In~lud~ In Price
• 360 Encine
•9/4Toa~
• Color T.V.
• Power Window•
• Power Door Loeka
• Loaded With Extra~lll
• Power Windowa
• Power Door Loclu
• Leather Interior
• V-8 ERline
• Dual Power Seata
•Loaded!
'
Two juveniles escaped injury
In an . accident which heavlly
damaged th,e vehicle Thursday
morning near the Intersection or
V{es! Main and Butternut Ave.
_According to a report from
Pomeroy Pollee, James Sauvage, 17, VIllage Green Apartments, Pomeroy, was traveling
west on West Main St., when he
hit some water and Ice on the
street resulting from a broken
water line in the area. He lost
control of the vehicle, and
traveled 206 feet down Main St.,
striking a fence and a utility pole:
Neither the dr lver nor his
passenger, Bobby Rupe, 16,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, were
injured.
Pomeroy pollee reported that
Sauvage was traveling too fast
for the road conditions and in
excess or the speed limit. The
driver was charged with !allure
to control and no financial
responsibility and the matter
was turned over to juvenile
authorities.
Explosion hits United flight
COUGH SUPPRESSANT
£XP£UORANl
S244
4 oz.
traveled 21161eet striking a lence andalitllitypole.
Neither the driver nor hls passenger were Injured.
Two escape injury in auto accident
Fehruarv Savings!
CANDY BARS
Reg. 4Sc
3'FOR 95(
HONOLULU (UP!) - An
explosion rocked a United Airlines plane carrying 355 people
Friday, ripping a hole in the
fuselage and forcing the pilot to
return to Honolulu for an emergenQ¥ landing. Twelve people
were injured and an undetermined number were missing.
Flight 811, a four-engine Boeing 747, was less than 30 minutes
Into its trip to Aukland, New
Zealand, when the pilot reported
a loss of power In one engine. He
managed to get the plane back to
International Airport, landing at
about 2:30 a.m., and the passengers were evacuated.
Passe11ger Gary Garber,
reached by CBS at a Honolulu
hospital, said 'some people Wf're
"blown out" of the plane.
"There was an explosion on the
plane, In the business section,
probably right above the cargo
area," he sal d. "We were In the
center section of the plane and
the people at the aisle section· .:..
about four, slx of them, whatever
- were blown out of the plane
and I presume they're lost."
"That was maybe about a .foot
and a half away from our seats In
the center section. We just hung
on for dear life until the pilot
made It back. "
A Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman In Los
Angeles, Barbara Abels, told
CBS, "TherE' was an explosion
during the climb out. There's a
hole in the right side cargo area."
"It was an emergency landing," said Lt. Edward Aklona of
the Honolulu airport's pollee
force. "The passengers evacuated the plane In chutes and there
are about 12 people taken to
hospitals."
· The plane carried .136 passengers and a crew of 19.
An FAA spokeswoman In Washington said a preliminary
(See EXPLOSION, page 6)
Federal Reserve hikes discount rate
WOMEN'S
FRAGRANCES
~~g~E 20°/o OFF
'
2 Sections, 14 Page$
25 Cents
A Mult imedia Inc. New spaper
1989.
WASHINGTON '(UPI) - The
Federal Reserve Board, signalIng Its determination to raise
Interest rates and curb Inflation,
Friday hiked the rate It charges
commercial banks from 6.5 percent to 7 percent, the highest
level since March 1986.
"In light of the Inflationary
pressures In the economy," the
Treasury Department said, the
Federal Reserve Board Friday
''announced It Increased the
discount rate to 7 percent from
6.5 percent effective
Immediately."
''In taking the action, the board
voted on requests submitted by
the board of directors of the
Federal Reserve banks of Boston, New York, Philadelphia,
Richmond, Atlanta, Chicago, St.
Louis, Minneapolis, Kansas City
and San Francisco," the announcement said.
The discount rate has been 6.5
percent since Aug. 9, 1988.
The Federal Reserve Board
then defied politiCal considerations imd raised Its benchmark
discount Interest rate less than
one week before the opening of
the Republican National Convention In New Orleans.
The news sent the value of the
dollar soaring and raised fears
that the trade deficit would suffer
because U.S. goods would lose
the competitive edge in world
markets they gained with the
falling dollar.
The Fed had kept the Interest
rate at 6 percent from Sept. 11,
1987, when board In agreement
with Alan Greenspan, the new
chairman, raised the discount
rate from 5 'h percent.
Critics at the time "accused
him of starling the countdown to
the stock market crash" of Oct.
19, 1987, David Jones, senior
economist at Aubrey G. Lanston
Co., a New York securities firm
(See FEDERAL, page 6)
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel New8 staff
The Ohio Department of Development took a giant step yesterday in helping to get a major
economic development project
for Meigs County off the ground.
State Senator Jan Michael Long,
(D-Gircleville ) , announced
Thursday afternoon that the Ohio .
Department of Development's
Financial Advisory Board on
Thursday morning, approved a
$200,000 loan for Meigs Manuafactured Homes, Inc. , a company
which will manufacture singlewide and double-wide mobile
homes.
Heading the company is area
businessman, Roger Davis. Davis's background includes being
a former plant manager for
Skyline Mobile Homes at Sugar
Creek. He is currently involved
In the selling end of m obile homes
but wants to r e turn to
manufacturing.
Although everyone involved in
the project is excited about
yesterday's loan approval, Long
points out that before the loan is a
sure thing, It must also be
approved by the State Controlling Board on April 3.
The loan Is being funded by the
State's Section 166 Program. The
166 funds are a portion of the
State's liquor profits which are
used to provide loans at low
interest rates to t·ndustrles
throughout the state. Few, If any,
of these 166 funds have ever been
granted to projects In Southeastern Ohio and this is the first time·
a s trlctly rural area like Meigs
County has received 166 funds.
Total start-up costs for the
local manufacturing project are
in excess of $1 million.
A key factor In · the state's
approval of the $200,000 share of
the total, according to a spokesman for Long, Is the . local
commitment to the project by the
Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy. Farmers Bank
has committed in excess of
$500,000 to the project at Interest
well-below prime rate.
•
An application for a $258,000
Community Development Block
Grant for the project is pending
at the state level and another
$40,000 In grant money frdl]l the
Departmen1 of De,·elopment's
Section 412 Fund is also pending.
The 412 Fund Is a discre tionary
fund which the stare director of
development ca n usc for expansion of State infras tr ucture. In
the case of Meigs Manufactured
Homes, In c. , the 412 funds will be
used to pave a road which is
presently gravel.
Remaining start -up costs are
coming from priva te Investors .
The actual manufacturing
plant is to measure 40,000 square
feet and will be located on an
eight acre site off U:S. 33 In the
Darwin area of Bedford Township. The plant 's first year
anticipated employment goal Is
45 employees, all of whi ch are
likely to come from Meigs
.County. At the end ofthreeyears,
a minturn of 80 employees is
expected.
Construction of th e plant can
begin once the Sl ate Controlling
Board approve s the loan and all
legally binding documents are
signed. Construction Is expected
to take about four months which
means production could start by
(See STATE, page 6)
Regents endorse Celeste plan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII The chairman of the Ohio Board
of Regents said Thursday the
nine-member ·board · has _e ndorSed Gov. Richard Celeste's
education initiative, which proposes a 1 percent income tax and
a spending oversight board.
In return, said Chairman Alva
"Ted" Banda of Cleveland, the
governor promised to press for
more money for higher education
in the 1990-91 state budget and to
modify the oversight board,
which has drawn fire from
university presidents.
Celeste told reporters last
week "It would be a mistake to
try to bend !his budget In a way
that solves education's problems
at the expense of other essentia l
services in Ohio."
The governor was out of town ·
and unavailable for comment
Thursday.
The board endorsement was
not made a t a publ ic meeting, but
Banda said a majority of
members participated.
Regents Chancel lor Will ia m
Coulter las t month criticized the
governor's budget a nd said
(See R EGENTS, page :l)
No opposition seen on farm bill
'COLUMBUS, Ghlo (UP!) Sen. Ben Gaeth said Thursday he
does·not expect any opposition to
his bill allowing multi -state agrl·
cultural businesses to participate In a low-inter~st loan
program for their Ohio
operations.
Gaeth, R-Deflance, said he
looks for the propdsal to be
passed out of the Senate Agriculture and Aging Committee, of
which he is chairman, In the third
or fourth week of March.
Under Gaeth's bill, eligible
farm operations doing business
both in and outside Ohio would be
allowed to qualify for reducedInterest loans through the Agricultural Linked Deposit
Program.
The program was created to
Increase the statewide avallabll·
lty of low-cost loans to agricultu- with Treasurer Mary Ellen Withral businesses. Eligible lending row concerning a reques t from a
Institutions participate In ex- farmer he said is In "a uniquely
change for the state treasurer different situation ."
"He owns land in Ohio and
opening certificates of deposit
with them.
farms considerabl e acres outside
To be eligible, a multl.state the state," explained Gaeth. "He
agricultural business would have wants some linked deposit mo ney for his land outs ide Ohio.
to have Ohio headquarters and
not less than 51 percent of Its
"The major portion of his
operations In the Buckeye State. operation Is outside the stare, but
he operates In Ohio, ' · Gaeth sal d.
The loan money couid be used
only for that portion of the "He does his bankin g in Ohio.
business located In Ohio.
He's got a legitima te concern,
Gaeth said he offered the but the fa ct Is there a r ~ a number
measure at the request of of farmers who live in Ohio a nd
farmers who live on the pe- . own property in other states."
riphery of Ohio and have acreage
Gaeth sa id he wan ts to ge t an
both in and outside the state.
i!Ppralsal fr om Withrow be fore
Gaeth's committee had been continuing work on the bilL
"I don' t think s he' l·l go for It, "
scheduled to take testlmony
Thursday, but the chairman said Gaeth. "That would be
postponed the .hearlng to consult opening up a real can of worms."
· I l \. I
'
'
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AZT offered to accidental victims
Q
MEN'S and WOMEN'S
AMITY BILLFOLDs ......
40 Vo OFF
PIICES GOOD THIOUGH MONDAY, FEB. 27, 1989
SUJISHER LOHSE
TOM PEDEN
LOST CONTROL - After James Sauvage,
Pomeroy, lost control of his car In the water. and
lee on West Main Street Thursday morning, II
~<'ntrTTERMS
.SWISHER LOHSE
24.
State approves loan
for Meigs project
'
•
1988 CHEVROLET CORSICA
•
\
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February
·ALL CARPET IN STOCK MUST GO!
Pharmacy
(------~--------~~----~-------------.----~--------------------------------~--------~--~~--~--------·~--------~~--------
'
Vol.39, No.203
Copyrighted 1989
DM
$6,999
$7,488
$8,888
$9,999
$10,999
$12,999
$17,988
$18 988
Page 3
F1urries , I hen "dcarlnJ( today. Low in lhc te ens. Saturday, partly c loud y and cool.
Highs In I he 20s.
8206
•
ROBITUSSIN
• Autom•tic Transmiuion
• Air Conditionln1
• Power Brakes
• Power Steering
• AMIFM Stereo
• Stee.l8elted Radial Tires
• And More!!!
Daily Number
876
Pick4
Sale
TOM PEDEN HAS SOMETHING FOR.EVERYONE!
1988 PONTIAC LEMANS
Ohio Lottery
The pain of
not playing
Missionaries to speak
Peter and Meryl Burkhart,
missionaries from the Phlllipines , will be speaking Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Racine
Nazarene Church. A potluck
dinner at 5:30 p.m . will preC'ede _
the missionary service.
Mia-Winter
Carpet Sale ·
Weekend revival
A weekend revival with Rev.
A.B. Maloy will be held Friday
and Saturday evenings at the
Salem Center Un !ted Methodist
Church. Services start at 7 p.m.
each evening. Everyone
welcome.
·
POMEROY - A basket class
will be held Saturday, 1 p.m., a!
the Meigs County Museum, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy: For reservations, call Janet Theiss at
949-2714 by Friday.
1988 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
.1988 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88
1
•
POMEROY - There will be a
round and square dance Friday
at the Senior Citizens Center.
Music will be by True Country
Ramblers. Admission Is $2 and
those attending are to take
snacks for the snack table .
• AMIFM Cassette
• Power Steering
• Power Braker
• Tinted Glass
• Steel Belted TiJ-e1
Chapter
honors queen
RACINE- The movie" Jon!,"
based on the life of Jonl Eareckson, will be shown Sunday, 7:30
p.m., at the Racine First Baptist
Church. '!'he public Is invited.
CHESTER - The Chester
Volunteer Fire Department will
have a soup bean dinner Saturday, with serving from 5to7p.m.
The menu will Include soup
beans, corn bread, hot dogs and
sauce.
1989 CHEVROLET CAVALIER
Are you having a problem finding
a J{ifr for the pernm who hWJ
t;>very thing? Ann Lander1' new
bookll't , ..Gems," is ideal for a
llij( ,ttstand or coffee table. ..Gems"
is a mllccrion of Ann Landers' mo.sl
rt>qucued poP.mJ and e.uay&. Send
$.J plus a self·addretsed srtunped
POMEROY - A gospel sing
will be held at the Carleton
Church on Kingsbury Road Sunday 7 p.m. with Jerry Frederick
and the McDaniel Trio Singers.
The Rev. Clyde Henderson, pastor, invites the public to attend.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 411, F. and A.M.
will met at 1 p.m. Saturday at the
temple. Entered apprentice and
fellow craft degree work will be
performed. All Masons are
welcome.
use anymore?' "
End of story.- "C" in Oregon
Dear 11 C": Some story. There's
a lesson to be learned here. I hope
the point Is not lost In the humor
of the tal~. Thanks for sharing.
My Laugh for the Day: You are
a bout my age if you remember
when a dime was a weekly
allowance. Today il Is used as an
emergency screwdriver.
Another reminder of how times
have changed: When I was
growing up we were delighted to
find a penny on the street.
Today's kids don't bother to pick
it up.
RUTLAND- The Grubb FamIly Singers will be at the Rutland
Free Wlll Baptist Church in
Rutland on Sunda,y at 7 p.m. Paul
Taylor, pastor,lnvites the public
!o attend.
evening at the Ell Denison Post of
the American Legion, Rutland.
Li ve music from 8 p.m. to 12
midnli!hl. Everyone welcome.
INGELS CARPET
SUNDAY .
RACINE -The movie "Jon!"
will be shown Sunday, 7: 30 p.l]l.,
at the Racine First Baptist
Church. The movie depicts the
trues tory of Jon! Eareckson. The
public Is Invited.
SATURDAY
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Square Dance Club Is
sponsoring a dance on Saturday,
Feb. 25, from 8 to 11 p.m:, at the
Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy. The caller will be Billy Gene
Evans. All western square
dancers are welcome.
\
Thursday, February 23, 1989
-
..
~·- - - - · - - _
___, -
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
National Institutes of Health said
Friday It will promptly offer the
AIDS.lighting drug AZT to any
government laboratory worker
accidentally exposed to the virus
that causes the deadly disease.
Dr. James Wyngaarden, director. of the federal government's
leading medical re$earch center,
announced the new strategy In a
one-page memo sent Thursday to
employees at about 70 Nmaf!lllated laboratories doing
work involving the AIDS virus.
A Health and Human Services
. Department official, who asked
not to be named, said the decision
to offer AZT to employees
exposed to "substantial"
amounts of the AlDS virus was
based on animal studies indicatIng the drug may possibly
prevent AIDS Infection If given
soon alter exposure.
--Hr-- -·:.'~
I
There are no results from
studies looking at whether quick
doses of AZT can prevent humans from becoming Infected
with ·the Human Immunodeficiency Virus, which causes acquired .Immune detlclency
syndrome.
AZT will be given workers who
experience a "significant or
massive exposure" to material
containing the AIDS virus, the
official said. Exposure could
come In the form of being stuck
with a contaminated needle or
splashed by Infected blood or
other body fluids.
"We have not had a lot of
problems with exposure to the
virus, nor are we experiencing an
Increase now," the official said.
"We are simply doing this as a
f OUrtesy to employees now."
· Hundreds of people are em- .
ployed at the 70 Nill-afflllated
labs . The official dld not know
exactly how many people had
been accidentally exposed to the
AIDS virus, buthesaldltwas "no
more than an handful."
There have been at least two
reported cases of laboratory
workers associated with Nm
apparently being l~tfected with
the AIDS virus during thelrwork.
Last year, Nm officials reported In the journal Science that
a person working at a government laboratory somehow became Infected with the virus .
even though he or she wa·s
wearing two layers of protective
rubber gloves.
Another researcher afflllated
with NIH reportedly got the virus
when the he or she was cut by a
contaminated glass test tube that
broke In a centrifuge.
AZT Is the only federally
(See AZT, page&)
NEW STATION - The active members ollhe
Ladles Auxlllary of Veterans Memorial Hospital
wUl be at this attracllve receptloa station at the
hospital as complete remodeling, redecorating
aad refunlshinJ takes place In the hospital lobby.
In froat of the new station Is Tom Fowler of lhe
Fowler Construction Co., a family construction
business aear Rutland, which buUt the station,
cabinets, new shelving for the adjoining gilt shop,
as well as Installed new suspended celllngs and
10me new walllll'eM. At the left In the pboto, Is
Mrs. Mary Folmer, president of the Volunteer
auxiliary unit at the ho1pltal.
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02. February
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February 23, 1989
bunch
gothard
miller