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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, February 5, 1993

Sunda~

•

7~ l'l'lll..,

Buckeyes edge Penn State 62-59 - C-1

Gallipolis
doctor, wife
complete
. . .

Advice for those still on the single
scene • By Kevin Pinson • Page B· 7

'

IDISSIODID

Philippines
Men are just creatures of habits •
By Fred W. Crow • Page A • 4

B-1

Inside ·
Along tbe river ""-""_81-8
Buslness!Parm"-"-"".D 1-8
Classllled ""-""--"..D2·7
Deaths. ......................... ~-3
·Ediioral .......................... -.A-4
Sports.....- ........._ .._ ....Cl-8
Weather.........................~.A-2

Partly &lt;loudy. Hl&amp;h In mid 4Gs.

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Vol 27, No. 51
Can•lal • 1111

13 Section 106 Pages
., Alolulllmeclll Inc. n-•pa~

_ Mlddleport-Pomeroy:-Galllpolls-Polnt Pleasant, February 7, 1993 ·

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0 DOT crews tackling '
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The pe!fecl way ro express YOlD'
feelinp on Vlllenlbu: 's Day. tho
Sweelhelrt Diimond Pendlnt is a
bealllifully cnliecl 14k sold hearth
pondlnt wilh a spllldins dianond

••

ICCOIIL

And, while supplies lui, you Ill&lt;&gt;

set
• A sofl, cuddly teddy bear
• A hean-ohapcd reel nlin lift box.
and

• Alift )las wilh a gift Cll'd
ALL FREEl 'N,ilh tho purchue of
lhe di11111ond heon peni!w far only

'

$50.00.

Sponsored by the Pomeroy
·Merchants Association

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• •0

Tell your Valentine how special she
teally is, wilh lhc Sweclhcart
Diamond Pendant Gift SeL

0

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'l(&amp;C Jewefers ·
992-3785

BRIDGE llD'AIIliN PROGRESS- WIIR
kldael•ltalde 7.-all of Cllester Ire
edll'pf" .., ~.1 willie wider Mil lllfll' lor tile•
Qiftlllt)!IM~r&gt; ~6owP It is u IBcaaft~ tw1

SALE

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repairs on .SR 7 spans

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By JULm E. DILLON
Subcontractors on the project
Times·Sentioel Staff
include M.P. Dory Co.• Summitt
·CHESTER -Two bridge pro- Station, installing guardrail; and
jects on State Route 7 just north of RIB Sandblasting and Painting Inc.,
Chester may slow motorists' ttav· Lancaster, doing the painting and
els, but the temporary inconve· concrete sealing. .
nience is worth it, says John
For several years, District 19
Dowler, deputy director of Dislrict has been involved in ·a ''Fast Track
10 of the Ohio Department of · Program" to update, and in some
Transponation, Marieoa.
. cases, replace state-mainiained
When completed, the two bridges. There are 1,208 OOOT
bridges will be wider and safer for bridges in District IO which
the traveling public, Dowler says.
includes the nine counties of
·The two bridges are being Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Meigs•
repaired by OGM Inc.• Beaver. The Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Vinton
contract calls for grading, draining and WashingtOn.
and installing new decks of reinIn Galli a County • the state
forced concrete. Work is underway inspects 210 bridges and mainlains
. on only one side of each bridge, so 18.4 · In' M.eigs, there ~re l2l
that one-lane ll'affiC, conlnllled by bndges wh!ch .the S!&amp;te IJ!Spects
signal light. may still use tho othu and 1,19 maontamed, mcludin.g the
side. As soon as one side ccmplete, two currently under repaor on
work Will start on the other.
Route 7.
. .
The contract price for the two
For the-last tw~ years, Dislnct
structures is $667,566 and the com- 10 has been submtnmg ~ Colwn·
pletion dale is Aug. 31 of Ibis year. b~ fm- approval IJIIXOlUI11lllely 35
The project began last fall and will brodge repatr proJects each year.
continue
stiaight through to the A_bout 40 bridges throughout Dis·
llinlce tor aow. Completion-is expected around
completion
dale, weather penn it- b1Ct 10 are ~bed~ for some trPC
Alii- 31. The worlr; is llelng completed by DGM · .
ling.
·
·
of work ~·s _commg consttucuon
" -" IK.aiBeaver. (T..S plooto).
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Don
Tillis
of
Meigs
County
is
~n. wot!J 'w~ll over, 100 more
.,~
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the project engineer fill' OOOT.
bndge projects on some stage of

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design," says Dowler. It takes three
or four years to take a bridge pro.
ject from design to construction, tie
adds.
1
In some cases, new structures
are built to replace old, narrow
structures, or to take out a bad
curve. In other cases, such as on
Route 7, renovatiog is oeeded. As
is the case on Route 7, the bridges
were adequate, but the decks were
due for replacement.
District 10's bridge departmC!It
. is headed by Engineer Larry Coler
and Jim Corbell, bridge inspeccOr,
both of tbe Marietta area The dis·
trict has its own bridge repain:n;w '
which is headed by Ron Stritz Qf
Noble County. With assistance
from ODOT workers form the
. respective county garages, th·~ ·
crew is able to handle many bridge
repair or.replacement jobs on jls
own. Only the larger projects must
be contracted.
·;
To date, OOOT still owns foi.r ·
Ohio River bridges at Pomeroy
Portsmouth, Ironton and East Liv~
erpool. These bridges were once
owned by the Ohio Toll Commission, but w~ the lOlls were elimi·
Continued on A·l

·Decline of coal
industry
makes
Kanawalsky indicted on murder charges
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strike less-crippling prospect

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

OFA

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With 1he Sweetheart (JK
Diamond Pendant -~
Gift Package '5o

O!F .9LS

,,. . ·..., ,-_

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IS NOW OPEN FOR ,
THE SEASON

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CEN1RAL CITY, Ky. (AP)- Muhlenberg Co110ty saw their
When coal was Iring along the booming economies slide almost
· Orccn River in wc:stcm Kealuclty, -into dqa · "' ovanight as min·
.JII.ine ~ lliiUid . . . the tin&amp;·
witboua payrbcdrs
"'~ . oullrti:
""Bact tben, it wonld have
But
of coal indiJs. replaced UK (University of Ken·
cry declillll in the uea. llU week's tncty) basketball or local high
. walkout by -ay 900 Uniled Mine school bastdbell as the hot lqric of
Worlrcn! apimt W y Cad Co. conversation," said Mark S'wne,
mines in tbree counties caused edilor of The tinJes.Aqus, Central
hardly a stir.
City's wcetly newmanet. ''Now,
. In 19'n. wbea the mine -ms pcoplc llad1y IIDlici f&gt;' -·
· weal 011 suite for 111 days. CenThe number of mining 1·obs in
tral City and odlcr coal towns in . Muhlenberg County fel from

·REG.

CIS-

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799.95

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POMEROY • A 44-year-old
Kanawalsk)' is accused of
Reedsville man was indicted·by the killing his ncxt·door neighbor,
Meigs County Gmnd Jury Friday Bernard Dyle Bay. at !he Bay resi·
1,830 in 1970 to about 500 last on charges of the Dec. 19, 1992 dence near Reedsville on the
evening of Dec. ·19. He has been
year, the Kentucky Division of murder of his neighbor.
Meigs
County
Prosecuting
inCBICerated in the Meigs County
Employment Services said. In
western Kentucky as a whole, the Attorney John R. Lentes said Satur· Jail sioice his arres1 that evening.
number of coal jobs fell.to 5,586 in · day that Joseph E. Klnawalsky was
According to Lentes, . the
1990 from a peak of 11 ,874 a indicaled on a count of aggmvaled attempted murder char~e accuses
decade earlier, according to the murder and a count of attempted Kanawalsky of shooung at law
Governor's Office of Coal and murder.' Both charges are aggravat- enforcement offteials who arrived
ed felonies of the fust degree. Bolh at the murder scene.
Energy Policy.
"On behalf of !he people of !he
In 1972, nearly 26 million tons · charges also carry fueann, specifi.
of sulfur-rich coal was mined in cations which increase the maxi· state, I am reassured by today"s
indicunent," Lenles said. "Not only
Muhlenberg County. In 1990, with mwn penalties.
.
much of its countryside mvaged by
If convicted of the two charges, did Mr. Kanawalsky shoot his
strip mining, the county produced Kanawalsky·could receive a maxi- innocent neighbor in cold blood in
only 5 million tons.
mmn sentence of life in prison and front of the victim's wife, bul he
also fired numerous shols at law
a total line of $40,000.

enforcement officers. The people '
of !his county surely cannot toler·
ate a citizen who attempts to kill
those who are worki111 to ensure
public safety, and I intend to see
that Mr. Kanawalsky is adequately ·
punished for his heinous crime." •
Lemes said he anticipates that'
.Kanawalsky will be arraignect
before Meigs County Common .
Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow II ·
on Wednesday.
"I anticipate requesting a very- •
high bond to make certain that Mr.
Kanawalsky does not flee the county. and that he is not released so
that he once again endangers the
people of this community."

Fifty years and still going....
REGISTER to WIN A LADIES PINK ICE RING.
~ NO PURCHASE NEEDED. JUST STOP ,IIA

A~
INANDSIGNUP.
'T.J'
•~
Drawing to be held Feb. 13,4:00 P.M. C'~

w~

t--a-11-lC-OUR-TS--:T.

•

POMEROY, OH.
992•2054

_a

•VISA
•M/C
•DISCOVER

~~

Your Profsaawfttll Jeuels

HOURS: MOII.·SUII. I 0:00 A.M.· I 0:00 P.M.
992·2556

THE FABRIC SHOP

Anderson's
Speeial Gifts
At
Speeial Priees
J'or Your
Speeial Valentine
'

··RECLINERS

•TELEVISIONS

•TELEVISIONS

•GLIDER·
ROCKERS

•GLIDER·
ROCKERS

...JUST TO NAME A FEW OF THE GREAT GIFT
IDEAS.
~

, .CHAPMAN SHOES
SWE.IrBEART 0'1 A SOfT SPO'l SAI.I

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY·

saoo Off

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People. I enioy helping them form
an Op 'n"on of What they WOUld
do When they are Olde., "
na1ter nalker, SO-year scou er

•.

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS

•111 c...ty's 01ly C-lldre1'1 s,.clalty s•op

0Vfl300 IIIISSII OIDIIID 101
IASTII, AIIIVIIIG DAIIYI

JUST ARRIVED FOR THE KIDS:

Each Pair Soft Spots
Get a FREE Valentine Flower and Box
of Candy with Each Purcba4e • .

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Cross Necklaces &amp;Earrings·
Baby Screwback Earrings
Pink Ice Rings &amp; Earrings
Kt. G.F~ Baby.Bracelets &amp;Rings
Blrthsto• Earrings ·
NEWI Lilli SELECTION OF

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•LmLE GENtS• SUITS• Slz•• 12 ~os.-41

...... -s·

·Let us ship your paokagtts via UPS. .,
Pickup dally.

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100

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, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - , ·scouters to sleep under !he slars
alone followed by a day of hard
labor with little food. The two days
lire spen1 in complere silence.
"This makes you an inc~ laller
&lt;J
than.thc next guy," Walker said.
The OA also participates in
I I
IIK.ta....
authentic Indian dancing demon·
strations. Walker said he is "~oing
••
into his second childhood'f and
U7
U7
t.
recently dusted.off his Indian. costume so he could begin dancing
again.
''I"m tind of showing my fine
By KEVIN PINSON
Walker was recently a guest . order of scout hilnor campers. He {ealhered friends (olher costumed
TI.es-Selltillel News Staff
speaker at a ceremony honoring a bmgs of being the only acuve char- dancers) that the old ones ean still
GALLIPOLIS - Wbea ,an sit Boy Scout's ucensioo to the lllllk ter member of the Thai-Coo-Zyo slrut !heir stuff," he said.
down wilh 08llipolis ...., . Wal·
of&amp;gle.
OA Lodgell457.
. Recently, in honor of hisser·
tel F. Walter it is not bard to sec
. '!'the audicooe he saw two men
In 1962, he became the vice to the OA, a totem pole was
why he was gival the Indiln . - sotllnjl t~gether who ~ere once youngest scouter to receive Ihe erected at ca111 p Arrowhead near .
l·A..Oo. which means "grea stoty· boys oa his boOp who did not get Vigil Honor. the highest honor in . Huntin1Jon, W.Va., the home of
teller."
along.
the OA. It was an OA committee Loci
57
Wallcef bas sd yean of ICOUiing
"That was an honor," Walker which gave Walker his Indian
:S:h lodge in the distrlcl carved
experiences under his belt and is :;r.;,~bisg" ~-~almost
." lost name. "J.A-&lt;lo."
a two-foot section fa the 101em and
more than bappy to~ !be mc:m·
"6"
"They selecled the name erected it with a plaque in Walker's
aries wilh ..yonc Who willlislea.
He Jlii*Ddy aves as Webelos because !lecture," he explained.
honor
·
He speeh of the pcoplc he bas met commissioner, district roundtable
Walker o~
. spoke the lines in
Other recognilion Walker has
through scouting II 01111 speaks of IMe~,!_...~~...~~~~~t.in the the OA's specie! Ordeal and Broth- ·· received include lite Silver Beaver
clole family lllmlbln.
~.....,.. "'"u"'
erbood ceremorues. .
Award, the most honorable award
A5 weD as be 11nows the The bi~ c:hanF Walker hu . At one time, he Sl!'d• he hal! !he that can be bestowed upon an adult
of his relativca, be can m:ite the witt r rd m the I*Dfll"B over the lines to the ceremomes commmed scouter.
names of his den mother from past balf·century 11 the boys' to mem~ ho condu th
Walker's scouting adventures
when he was a Cub Seoul, bis inwlWIDIIII in activitie.s
But
w
ct e CC!e- include many camping and canoe·
scoutmuter wben lie wu a Boy sucb 1111)1011111111 bind.
m~ no"!' do not bother.ID mem- ing ventures u well as national
Scout IOd die ICOIItl Y(llo haJled
"Youna men now, some of o~ze th~ hnes and that os some- jamborees. which altract Scouts
unc1er hllpkla•' wbea lie lined IbiD, lnl iiMihed in 10 many dif- thmg he IS not haRPY a~t. · ..
from all over the world, and the
u ICOIIbiiiSICI' of Oallipolit 1'nlop =~!.!:Illy ha-we time
"l:llll been known 10 lhrow fits," Philmont Scout Ranch in Cimar·
200.
..,
he saod.
.
ron, New Mexico.
Walbr said be does not lhillt of
He
~of tbis chlllge
~alker lakes lhe ceremonies
His-fondest memorie.s, however,
.lliruelf as a r.bc:l' fi&amp;IR, blallllllt to the facllbatmost boys today lenOUS!Y because he f~ they are are of a 2,3()().mile 19S9 bus !rip to
u ~..
_clole~ ~CIIIIO thenotboya.to .....,_ ~ thea-~ -when they tum truly ngh~ of· asc,enslon as w~re Canada with 42 boys and four
lilt ....... 16 and can be involved in 1 Jot the Amencan Indtan ceremomes adults.
tathen tbe way tllcy can lalt to men.
~ !" bued on. .
. ..
The trip wu made on "The Blue
·
THE GREAT STORYTELLER - Scovtar Walter W1"'.er.J
me.• be lliL
•
·wben I was tba~e, we
I m a linn believer of thts • he
· odifi
And .....
of _ . , ..... ==±'le ....
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Pie," am · ied school bus which
wbOie
'hcll•n name meau "'''Ie Great SklrJteler," ltUd II -s
-m-OIIlle,, ""
said
.
. . . corilained 'a 60-gallon water Iallie,
Amerleaahdlln
COitume nat to a totem POle ereeted In bll . . _
boysllllllllJ ·
bim IIDllling
Walbr is aiJo WlrY ICiiYe in lhe
· .The .OA Ordeal, a IWIHiay o~tU· an icebox and a boule us stove
at
Camp
ArrowiiiiiCIM&amp;I'
HuntlnJtoa, W.\'a,
.
butjoy.
Order of tbe Anow. 1 fraternal auon mto the order, requores · ·
Conllnutdoa A·3

''I like working with the younger

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' TOP OF THE LINE!

'

ANDERSON'S

· Scouter has enough memories to fill two lifetimes .

992·5177
St. PoJU.rtf
VldiGnllt Ferre~ OWitr

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February 7, 1993

:.Sunday, Feb. 7

;Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high

• lcolumbusl4s•

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W.VA.

Weather

•
Soutb-Ceutral Ohio
: Sunday, partly cloudy and
:warmer with a high 45 to 50.
'. .Extended Forecast
: -Mond1y through Wednesday
:· 'Monday, a chance. of rain or

snow. Lows mainly in the 20s.
Highs 35 to 45. Tuesday, fair.
Lows 15 to 25. Highs in the upper
20s to mid 30s. Wednesday, fair.
Lows around 20. Highs in the 30s.

and oven . Us1ng money-saving
practices such as purchasing slight·
ly damaged goods from a market
where he worked, Walker reduced
the cost of the trip to only $12 per
person.
'it was a !rip which created a lot
· of great memories for him, but also
· for the boys who went along.
"A lot of them still talk about
that," he said.
During his tenure as scoutmas·
ter, Walker saw 32 boys achieve
the ran\( of Eagle. Quite an accomplishment considering only two
percent of all scouts reach that
goal.
His list of Eagles include five
lawyers, four doctors and a twostar Air Force genua! as well as
Gallipolis busi.nessmen Bob
Burlile, David Tawney and James
E. Morrison,
. . ·
"A lot of good guys, family peo-.
pie," he said.
Walker said one thing he always
tried to do as a scouimaster was
remain truthful with his scouts.
"Ir they want to know some- ·
thing and it is within my power, I
give it to them," he·said.
·
He also helped lead them to
solve their own problems and lhink
for themselves.
'To make them think, ihat is the
key to the whole thing," lie said.
Walker said scouting teaches
boys to grow into upstanding men
by teaching them to walk a
tightrope of guidelines known as
the Scout Law:
A Scout is Trustworthy, Loyal,

:snow tape.rs off .
in northern Ohio
: It will be partly ~loudy agd

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nia and .,otbern Fl~

·

- ·~SOs~yiil~=:tsn:
ac~;o:~~~;z;~n!;J;.e:,
in the ex1reme south.
producmg overmght wind ~hills of

,
ArouDd the aatlon
2o to 30 degrees belo!" ~·
• Snow fell Saturday morning in
Showers fell Fnday m ~e~
;arts of the Midwest and Northeast England, upstate ~ew YOrlt, MichlIIP4 rain dampened portions of the . gan, northern Mmnesota, N&lt;?rth
~
Dail:ota, JIII1S of tbe Soufhea:9t 10 ~
New Yorlt City, Buffa- eastern Texas, northem CalifOI'IUJI
~·N.y., Cleveland and Pit!Bburgh and south~est. Oregon. . .
. e among the snowy spots. . Tempetatures. were _spnng-Jike
Clt8rleston, S.C., Jacksonville, FilL, m_ a fe'!"' areas, mcludi~g recor~lVJd New Orleans !lad rain.
tymg highs for the date m Detrott, .
•' Wann temperatures were pre- at Sl degrees; Paducah, Ky., 64 :
dieted from the central Plains 10 the and WilliaqtSport, Pa., 53 ·
~est Ci:last, with mild conditions
••
Continued from A·l

:·Boston.

hDOT.••
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nited, they became the poputy of
tfa: tranSpOrtation departinent.
·: \There exists an agreement that
~ these bridges an: replaced, the
n'.ew structures will become the
Jilbperty of West Virginia or Ken~
t14:ky, depending upon which state
lies across the river from Ohio,"
eiplains Dowler. Ohio will then
. .ist the owner-states financially
!().help pay the maintenance costs.
·•
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Annual inspections i1re conducted on the Ohio River bridges by an
outside consultant. During_these
thorough, yearly inspectiOf!S. every
inch of steel and cona-ete •s examined by experts. From time to time
throughout the year, ·ODOT_ personnel also check these bridges.
"Bridge maintenance has always
been a major part of ODOT's job,"
Dowler concludes.

OJ
d• d I~or museum
·
£ ans .rea Ie
; POINT PLEASANT - Wiihin
••L. ian
""'next two to •'--•
uu"" w....... p s
e
Point
Pleasant
River
Musefior th
u6J should be on the desk: of Mayor
~II Holland.
• Holland has been in contact
with David M. Marshall of Paul D.
~I &amp; Associates Inc., architocts in Charleston, W.Va. , the
designer of the project. Marshall
told Holland engineers were in
Point Pleasant recently shooting
e~vations of the property, as well
Dgeoing other site information.
: The building for-the museum,
dGI!ated by the Hartley family, will
~ painted on the outside and the
,i.o..

, : .
(USPS Uf 100)
t.hliohod ooch Sunda,; 82&amp; Tbinl-.
Wipollo, Ohio. by 1bo Ohio Valley
P,.bHohl.,. C0111poay/Malllmedlo, lac.

- . 1 c1-

pc1111ap oold at GalllpoHo,
~o 45631. Entered u .uond c::lua
=~ IMUer at Pamera,, Ohio, Pc.i

•

lllamber: The Aoloclaled Pt.,., ud tha
oertt.inl
Newopopor
- - · Brlllha.m
Nalloaal
Repruentadn,
Sal~•. 733 Third Afen.ae,
NOw Yodt, N.,. Yoit 10011.
·

E.,.,.per
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IIHnn"'A.WONJ.Y
GVn~

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"''

IUBICIUPTIO!f IIATZII
By (:IU'rier or Motor ILou.te
~Week............................................. ...,.

Oilo v-........................................
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'".80

BINGU:COPY
PBICJ:
~...................................._ .7&amp;Ceoll

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119

·-pliono by mail permitted ia

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where motor earrier aerttee· II
.....lila.
.
.,... s.u.tar n-SeoUnal ..01 oat ho
~

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JIAIL 111UCaJPTIONI

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06a v-............................... - ......-*47.14

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inside will be renovated, Holland
'd

S3l

After the plans are complete,
Holland said the city council must
approve them before they are
advertised for bid.

Considers cap on
,
•
JnSUrance premiUmS
LOS ANGELES (AP) _ The
Clinton administration is considering limiting insurance premiums as
a quick way to slow soaring health
care costs, the Los ·Angeles Times
reported today.
Unidentified insurance industry
officials told the newspaper that
they have been warned a cap on
health policy premiums is under
consideration.
At the moment, the cap is considered pail of a reform package
that also would prohibit insurers.
from excluding people with preexisting illnesses. The rate ceiling
would be a short-term way of
reducing health care costs while
other measures are worlced out
A pn:sidential task force chaired
by fUSt lady Hillary Rodham Clinton favors the rate ceiling because
it would prompt insurers to force
doctors and other providers to curb
their fees, sources told the Times.
Among the questions are how to
set premium rates w.hile
into
account age and regional differences, said Richard I. Smith of the
Washington Business Group on
Health, a lobbying group.

lalcin'

Hospital news

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Helpful, Friendly, Co11rteous, Kind,
Obedient, Cheerful, Thrifty, Brave,
Clean and Reverent
"!f you can live up to
those ... you're going to be a good
citizen," Walker said.
· He added he would not change
one thing about ·the _scouting pro-

gram and loves ~ng the organization.
"I enjoy what I'm doing," he
said. "I like working with the
younger people. I enjoy helping
them form an opinion of what they
would like to do when they. are
older. With a little guidance, they

Friday admissions - Gwendolyn Folmer, Pomeroy; I ana
Williams. Middleport; Thomas
Kelly, Coolvjlle; Charlene.Foreman, Pomeroy; William Kennedy,
Pomeroy.
.
Friday discha~ges - Jacob
Shuler, Cjlrlos McCall.

theOvaiOffJCe. .
"We're going to do everything
we can to protect the people who
are suffering the most from declin;
in' incomes and vanishing jobs, the
mtddle class and the working
poor," he said.
The president appears to be try·
ing to prepare Americans for the
likelihood of higher iaxes. Options
under consideration include liigher

s· ears. maz -oruer
, houses·
·~ ·

,1

w;ll surv;ve ca·talog"•'s" death
"

"
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _
Even as the Sears catalog fades
away, some of its merchandise will
continue to be displayed on city

s~Ciintoqville, Bexley' the Hill-

top and other old Columbus neighborhOods, some Sears mail-order
houses still stand. ,
Franco Ruffini and his wife,
Mary Beth Hirsch, live in a Clintonville house that was purchased
ftom a Sears catalog in 1915.
Ruffini, deputy State historic
preservation efftcer, said they
bought the house in 1983 because 11
was a gOod example of the California bungalow style. They didn't
realize until later that it also was a
Sears model.
The house, called The Osborn,
was advertised at $2,157 in the
Sears catalog. Ruffini said it's
probably worth about $95,000
~y.
·
Sears, Roebuck and Co. recently
announced it will end the catalog,
which began in 1886. The Chicago
company sold houses by catalog
between 1908 and 1940, shipping
parts by rail.
D 'd s·
h h 1'd
avJ
•mmons, w 0 e pe
research the house sales for the
Ohio Historical Society's Timeline
magazine in 1989, said the houses
were known for being solid and
affordable.
In 1930, Sears sold 50,000
houses nationwide, Timelinesaid.
Ruffini's house has been remodeled1mt retains most of its original
features.
"We've tried to maintain the
architectural style of the house,"
he said.
The top of Sears' housing line
was its " Honor Bilt Modern
Homes,'' which were shipped with
all lumber pre-cut Buyers obtained
land and hired conttactors to erect
the houses or did it themselves.
Jean Hannon lives in an Honor
Bill house in Ointonville.
The house, a model called the
Dover, was built in 1929 and car-

.
ried an original mortgage of
$4,500, according to Simmons'
researth
Ms. Hannon, the second owner
of the house, said she hesitates to
remodel it
.
"I keep wondering if I'd be
ruininll the historical value cif it,''
she said.
Sears sold more than $12 million worth of houses in 1929 and

had a gOod year in 1930, but the
stock market erash and Depression
eventually hurt sales, said Simmons, Timelinc ediror. ·
Sears experimented briefly with
steel-frame houses in the 1930s
before ending house sales for gl!Od
in 1940.

are pi-e tty good people."
· (Editor's rwte: The Boy Scows
of Aliltrica Tri-State Area CoJUJcil '
will celebrate scollllng' s 83rd JtlU
with SeoUl W~el:. F~b. 7-13. The
cou"cil ~rves mor~ than /00,000
youths of 35 colllmiUJill~s in Ohio,
West_Yirglnia and KenlllCky.)

CLEVELAND (AP) - There
was one ticket sold naming all live
numbers drawn in Friday night's
· Buckeye 5 drawing, and the winnjng ticket is worth $100,000, tile
Ohio Lottery said. ·
The ticket was sold in Dover.
The Buckeye 5 numbers were 2,
6, 10, 26, 32.
In Pick 3 Numbers, lhe winning
number was 432.
In Pick 4 Numbers, the winning
number was 7452.
,
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$1,222,486.
There were 450 Buckeye 5' tick·
ets with four of the numbers, and
each is worth $250. The 14,064
tickets showing three of the nulll·
bers are·each worth $10, and the
135,872 tickets showing two or the
pumbers an: each worth S1.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1,566,429.50, and winners will
receive $1,202,647.50.
Pick 4 Numbers P.layers
wagered $335,651 and will share
$161)00.
.
Pkk 3 Numbers
4-3-2
(four, three, two)
Pick 4 Numbers
7-4-5-2
(seven, four, five, two)
Buckeye 5
2-6-10-26-32
· (two, six, ten, twenty-six, thirtytwo)
The jackpot for tonight's Super
Lotto drawing will be S4 million.

LUMBER

energy taxes, tax incmlscs oo alcohol and tobacco products, Social
Security reductions, limits on
deductions (or home mortgage
interest and stepped-up tax collcc·
lions on foreign companies operating iJJ the United States.
He presents details of his economic stimulus plan to Congress
on Fell. 17 a~d unveils his first
.
budget Man:h 23.
Clinton's mission is to devise an
economic stimulus package expected to include !loti! increased
public works speDding and new tax '
breaks for businesses - . at the
same time he makes inroads in the
burgeoning federal-deficiL
hi. a Republican response to
Clinton's address, Sen. Coimie
Mack of Florida said ihat while the
GOP has much common ground
with the new president on cutting
sP.ending and other initiatives,
• talk of raising laXcs has to ilop"
if the economy is to improve.
"'

- ~~ru£L

~ y~ABUSHED 1895
Leo Welch

L 0 tt. ery resu
· · Its

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CLEVELAND (AP)- The around
body or on a tank or
Pentagon is uying to fmd out whal planes,' said lJhan Aksay, who is
makes reindeer antlers and sea directing the research at Princeton.
· P&lt;?INTPLEASANT • Relha La Bush, 70, ofPointPieasant, died Satur- shells so tough but light. Tile
''In both cases, the idea is to
day, Fcbna-y 6, 1993 at Pleasant Valley Hoepitll.
answer could mean better protec· · look at structures and learn lessons
Born February 25, 1922 in Hartford, she was the~tu of the late lion for soldiers and pilots, as well from the way nature designed them
I ames r. Lee and Nannie Collins Lee. She wa abo
in death by a as stronger cars, medical implants and see if we can design similar
SOil, ~A. Bush; giand-daughta, Me1iaa Ann Lta and IWQ silten.
and bowling balls.
·
structures through synthetics,'' he
SurviVIng are ber '" husband, river Clplain, Paul L. Bush, Sr., Point
"We need very lightweight, said.
Pleasant; five daugh~en, Mlwy La Beikley, Henderson, Ka!en Lucille thin, high-strength materials," said
Sill dying items from nature is
Youngt Ada. Oklahoma, N30Cy Ann Gardner, Point Pleasant, Kathy Ruby Wilbur C. Simmons with the Anny '"the cutting edge of research in
Berkley, Biloxi, Mississippi and Susie Bush, also from Point Pleasant; Research Office near Durham , materials," said Frank N. Kelley,
tlwe ~· Paul L Bush, U, Pomeroy, Ohio, Roy A. Bush, Ada, OJclahoma N.C., which commissioned the $2 dean o.f the polymer science and
and Ricky Bush, Letart; one sister, Amanda Bums, Point Pleasant; two million study.
.
·
engineering school at the Univenibrot~Jc:.oJ, Leonard Lee, Point Pleaslnt and James· Lee Hendenon· 30
Resean:hers at three universities · ty of Akron.
grandchildren and IS great·grancjcbildreo.
'
.' '
across the country are involved in
At Akron, researchers are trying
Services will be at 1:30 p.m. on Monday, Febru8ry 8 at the Wilcoxen the five-year project Case Western determine why a spider web is
Funeral Home with the Rev. Isaiah Crump officiating. Burial will follow at · Reserve University in Cleveland stronger than nylon. The goal is to
the Henderson Cemetery.
.
.
will study antlers, the University of learn what lends special JIQJICI~
Friends may call on Sunday, February 7 from 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral Washingtoi) will examine sea to materials in na!UJe, such as 111:eS
home.
.
.
shells, and Princeton University that bend but don't break.
will do both.
At Case Western Reserve,
Researchers will study the researches hope to duplicate the
ceramic"type properties that pro- toughness and fast-growing ~vide a sea shell's hardness and the ty of antlers through "biomimtckCJ1ESAPEAKE- Carl E. Hicks, 79, Chesapeake, died Friday, Feb. 5,
1993 at his residence.
·
· ·. .
·
organic properties that enable ry" - the manufacture of a synBorn Sept. 18, 1913, son of the late Clarence and Alberta Gillette anders to absorb shock such as the thetic material based on a principle
Hicks, he was. a minister for many years in the area and was affiliated
collision of two male reindeer found in nature.
with the Ohio Methodist Conference.
charging each other. They will also
Antlers interest scientists
Surviving are his wife, Eleanor Maxine Hicks; four daughters, Carleua try 10 find out what makes them because the velvet-covered horns
are incredibly sturdy and grow
Haltom of Pheonix, Ariz., Lynda Todd of Logan, Karen Cost of Newark, light
and Joy Black of Zanesville; nine grandchildren and six grtat-grandcbil· ·
"If you're going to have an yearly, said Eric Baer, director of
dren; a brother. ChaUncy Hicks of Redlands, Calif.; and two sisters, Mar·
application of say, armor, you the research at Case Western
garet Bradshaw of Chesapeake, and Gamet McCallister of Wilmington, don't want to carry all thnt weight Reserve. At their peak, anllers can
Del.
.
He was preceded in death by iwo brothers and one sister.
Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Schneider Funeral Home,
Chesapeake, with the Revs. JOhn Stockbridge, Ed Mingus and Chet Lemley officiating. Burial will be in Rome Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home Sunday from 5·9 p.m.
·

Guitarist, Marshall Univ.
SAT., FEB. 20, 8 P.M.
AdmlulonFFri. -

SHOW TillES:
..$un. 7:10 I 1:41

MONDAY THRU 1JIURIDAY

One Evon!ntl-7:10
Admlulon lUll • _ ,

Prom Styli Rtvllw Ftb. 21,2 P.ll.
llorrla 10d Dorolhy Ha•~•
Ariel Tltutre
428 2nd Ava., Gllllpolla, Oh.
c.a 44&amp;-ARTS for mprelnfo.

BOSTON (AP) - . George Schiavone
is tax consultant to the
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Lewis A. Schmidt Ill, 65, Gallipalis, died Saturhomeless.
day, Feb. 6, 1993, at Riverside' Hospital in Columbus.
Homeless himself, Schiavone is
, He is swvived by his wife, Joan E. SchmidL
.
helping
others like him file tax
Priendli may cal'i at Willis Funeral Home on Monday from 2-4 p.m.
and collect the refunds
returns
Services will be held Tuesday at .the First Presbyterian
and 7-9
many
didn't
know they wen: due.
· Churc~. allipolis.
"A
.lot
of
these people are
ln lieu of flowers, donations may he made to the Firsl Presbyterian
falling
through
the cracks,'' he
Church Organ Fund, 51 State St., Gallipolis, or the American Cancer
said.
Society, 444 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
The National Coalition for the
Complete arrangements will be innounced later by the funeral home.
Homeless estimates ihat as many as
80 percent of homeless adults hold
part-time or temporary jobs, and
have state and federal taxes autoPO~TSMOUTH- Clarence Ray Stev_
ens, 76, died Friday, Feb. 5, matical'iy withheld from their mea1993. at Southern Ohio Medical Center, Portsmouth.
ger paychecks.
·
l{e was retired ftom·the Norfolk &amp; Southem Railway, where he was a
'!The taxes ~et taken out from
foreman in the Portsmouth Yards. He was a World Warn veteran serv- the first penny,' said Schiavone, a
.ing in both the European and Asian theaters.
'
soft-spoken former lecturer in manHe was preceded in death by his fll'St wife, Addie Alice Stevens· his agement at Boston University, the
father, Will Stevens; and li daughter, Louella Pierce.
.
'
University of Massachusetts at
Surviving an: his second _wife, Mabel Marie Stevens; a son, William Boston and Roxbury Community
Ivan.Stev~ns; a daughter, Hilda "Faye Adams; a stepson, Leroy Herston College. ·
Col her; h1s mother, Bertha Stevens; and by 20 grandchildren and 11
He said he became homeless
great-grandchildren.
two years ago after suffering real
Memorial ~ervices are 1 p.m. Monday in !he Daehler Mortua')'. estate setbacks and now stays at the
Portsmouth, With the Rev. Thomas Weeks offJC•ating. Burial will be 1n Mission Shelter in downtown
Melllj)lial Burial Parle. Friends may call at the mortuary Sunday from 2-4
Boston.
.
• .
and 6-8 p.m.
, .
.
"When you're talking about
. ..
withholding taxes from homeless
people, it's -a classic example of
· · adding insllltto injury," Schiavone
POMEROY - Services for Olga Stewart, 65, Wellsville, who died said.
Wednesday, Feb. 3, 1993, at City Hospital in East Liverpool, wen: held
Schiavone, 44, whose office is a
Sarurday at the Dawson Funeral Home m East Liverpool.
table hidden in the stacks of
Born in Apple Grove in July 1927, she was the daughter of the late Boston's public library, helped one
Edward and Eugia Johnson .of Mason, W.Va. She was a homemaker and client who eamed about $3,000 last
belonged to the Senior Citizens Center.
.
year as a day laborer. Because his
She is survived by two sons and daughters-in-law, Bernie and Pat mcome fen below the minimum on
Stewart of Wellsville, ·and James and Patty Stewart of Columbus; three which single people must pay
daughters and sons-in-law, Shelia and Sid Johnson of Oklawaha, Fla., taxes, he was due a $442 refund of
Ruth and Lennie Crouder of Kent, and Tammy and Steve Smith of the state and federal taxes that were
Lorain; and a special friend, Raymond Roush of Alliance.
taken from his paycheck.
1\Jso llirvivlt)g are three brothers and sisters-in-law, James and Betty · "There's this huge chunk of
JOhnson _of Middleport, Bill and Delores Johnson of Lithopolis, and Bob folks who aren't taking advantage
and D:lris J.ohnson of Columbus; a sister and brother-in-law, Donna and of wl!at's out there for them," said
Frank Gheen of Middlejxlrt; six grandchildren, one great-grandchild and Palll Heimer, volunteer coonlinator
several nieces and nephews.
'
at the Alexandria, Va., Community
. Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Shelter and the founder of the
Bernard Stewart; a son, John Stewart; and a brother, Milton Johnson.
Homeless Income Tax Self-Help
Initiative.
With a small cadre of volunteer
accountants, lawyers and accounting students, the initiative helped
143 homeless people in the Wash-

8.m.

Clarence Ray Stevens

~

Olga Stewart

Judge Wood withdraws
from AG consideration

'
"
J

THE

VANISHING

....... ..,..........
IIIIIIIIIS IIIII SIIRRII
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'

1:00.t:IO 111\nT.
MTJ
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See a SpediJ s-It Pm1ew
of lhe new advenbue ...

lmiC01111l

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7:00,1:30 IIAIU ,

WASHINGTON (AP)- Feder·
ar Judge Kimba WOod, President
Clinton's expected choice for attor·
ney general, withdrew from consid·
eration Friday, saying ber baby sit·
ter had been an illegal alien for
seven years. The announcement"
caJIIe two weeks after a similar
problem torpedoed Clinton's first
choice, Zoe Baird.
•
In yet another e~traordinary
twist to Clinton's search for an
attorney general, an adminislration
offiCial cOnfumed Friday night ihat
While House offwials also discovered Wood briefly trained as a
Playboy bunny when she was sm ~
dent in the 1960s.
The official, speaking on c:Ondition of anonymity, said the bunny

training was regarded as "irrele·
v~t" to Wood's possible nomina. lion. But The New York Times,
which fll'St reported the disclosure
in Saturday's edition, said White
House officials feared it might
become the source of jokes.
Wood, 49, had been cited by
senior administration officials as
Clinton·~ near-certain choice as
recently as early Friday, when the
officials said she likely woulll be
named unless problems developed
during an FBI bacltground check.
Administration officials said
that Wood was asked three times
- once by the president - if she
had problems related to hiring illegal aliens aiKJ that she had 'insisted
shedidnot

Advocates said there an: virtually no other programs targeting
homeless people for help in filing
income till rt&lt;ums.
"It's a shame that we're not
doing more about it," said Bill
Faith, director of the Ohio Coali~
lion for the Homeless. "But next to
nothing's being done in a lot of
places."
People with no incomes an: not
required' to file tax returns. Single
filers under 65 pay if they earn
$5,900 or more: people married but
not living with their spouses,
$2,300 or more; and married couples living together, $10,600 or
more. Unemployment compensation also may be taxed.
·
''If a person comes in under
those amounts, if they worked dur·
ing the year and had any taxes
withheld, they need to file the
return to get the refund on the tax
that was withheld," said IRS
spokesmiln Don Roberts.
The agency trains volumeers to
offer iricome laX assistance, including many of the people workirig in
the Washington. D.C.-area initiative.
In another section of the Boston
Public Library, for example, volunteer law students offer free tax
help.
But Schiavone said, "most law
students look like law students, talk
like law students. When I'm with a
client, I'm just a regular guy. I'm
one of them."

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DATE: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11th
PLACE: GALLIPOLIS HOLIDAY INN

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GAlLIPOLIS, omo

SPEAKERS: RONAlD L LOONEY, Resident Vice President
STAN EVANS. Assistant Vice President
RSVP: Sosielllacku

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GALLIPOLIS • 446 11495

~lclll Thelwpr
olpolta Mldlclnt Program

''The fiBJ muse-see movie of '93.
Helt 's a film rh.tt cuJS sttaighl 10 lhe hean.
An insllnJ dossi&lt; from Disney."

the toughness of their andcn. Jte':
~as ~n reindeer llft IS·foot, 10. :
inch diameter 1ree trunks and push
aside huge piles of brush with the~";
anllers.
. .
. . :·.;
BOb Stoll, • wildlife specialist •.~ .
Wate~loo in ~uthern Ohio, said ;
Amen can Ind1ans used antlers to .
shape:: arrowheads. Storie~ of deer
prercmg car panels an: ev1dence of
antler toughne~
· But B~ said he hopes to develop J_llaterials that an: less prone 10 .
drymg out than antlers. As they ,
dry, the antlers become more bryl·
tle.
..
.
.
Baer sa1d mas~-P,roductlOn of .
antler-tough ~terial mus~ also be ,
faster than the ~·x months lltD!Jk !0 •
~W the 16-pomt antler that Sits 10
his.~~·
.
.
-.:
. . We rc not ·~ten:~ m syntht 1
SIZIDIJI an antler m the laboratory, ;
he said.
'
·
'

.

(Physician R~trral By Appointment)

Delivery

.

start.' ~

PHYSICAL THEUPY SERVICES

1 1

growaninchaday.
ADders an: strooger than bone,
possibly heclnse of complex layers
ofJ!Illlein and minc:niJs.
That makeup may give clues to
creating materials collld lead to
sturdier medical implants, bowling
balls that never nick and automobile panels that resist chips and
dings from gravel. ·
And the Pentagon is interested
in llnyihing that offers better proiection against high-velocity
ob. 19
~
. ae~ has been promised a free
SIJPPIY of antlers from the herd of
five Greenland reindeer at the
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. Reindeer both bucks and does, shed
anum yearly. ·
Alan Sironen, reindeer keeper at
the zoo, has gained a respect for
both the strength of reindeer and

ington, D.C., area get $90,185 in
refunds last year - an average of
$630each.
"That' s just the tip of the iceberg;" Heimer said.
·
He said $630 can buy a fresh
start for a homeless~'
"It means out,' said Heimer.
"In four to six weeks, when the
check comes, somebody can get
out of here."
Schiavope agreed. "I don't
think it's too farfetched to make a
connection between getting that
refund back and getting a new

for lhe
Successful
Di1ney Film of All Time.

'$699! !.

\

Homeless may be
due tax refunds

Dr. Lewis A. Schmidt III

I

,/

I

.110
.40

IDI upedlllou he bas experienced ID the last 50
years.
'

FIRESIDE DUTY -Scouter Walter F.
Walker tends the fire at one ol the many scout-

Sunday Times Sentinel-Page-~

Antlers, sea shells could offer clues to super-tough materials [:::

Carl E. Hicks

.WASHING10N (AP) -Presi- plans he will unveil later this
dent Clinton Saturday told the month, also promised to "set an
nation in his first White House example" by maldng big cutbacks
radio address that his economic . in his White House staff.
program will ask the most of
"We have to aslc: everyone to
America's "privileged few" contribute ~g to get the job
before looking for more sacrifices done but we're going to ask the
· from the middle clasS and working , most from those who ~ the most
puor.
and gave the least dunng the past
Clinton, trying to build suppon dozen years- those at the top,''
for the budget and deficit-reduction Clinton said__ in a live address from
..

=~~~e,~a1. ~4,&gt;~,~~~,~~~:.~-

wv

.

Retba Lee Bush

Clinton to nation: 'privileged few' to sacrifice the most

By The Associated Press
in the central Rockies over the next
. .Snow that came into northern several days.
9Jtio Friday night tapered to OurTtmperatures ranging from near
lies or showers by Sarurday af!Cr• . zero to the 20s were forecast for
6oon
the Northeast, frOm 10 deJllllCll into
• ~to three inches·accumulated the 40s in the nation's midsection
In regions near Lake Erie. FIUITies and in the 40s and 50s in the Rocky

.

---Area deaths

Scouting
'""I)
Continued from A-1

OHIO Weather

Pomeroy-Mtddteport-Galllpolls, OH-Potnt Pleasant,

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•

·1

1
I

. I

llerUILWia'I ~, !

• . _ .. lnll&amp;...

······-···········~················J

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·:•'
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. -- ··

-···~

---.... - ..... .
~

.,

February 7,1993

Commentary and perspective

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH~olnt Pleaiant, wv

•

Does nation's economy still :
.,...,
need _ sti~ulu~ program?

Februa~~11j

Witness to CIA .killings opposes weapon ban.

~j

'

WASIDNGTON - As one of libraries."
South Al\ica, according to the ate mail, or tobacco companies, ~:
the National Rifle Association's
Smith received some $10,000 in Coalition to Stop Gun Violence. which can tap huge political conlri- :·
leading water- CIIITicrs; Sen. Roben NRA contributions during 1989-90 One weapon marll:ets itaelf as the butions, can match !he NRA. The •:
~NC
Smith, R-N.H. , recently wiblessed -the second largest sum it doled "~t sweeper," the "machine to NRA declined to comm~t 911 this ::
the other side of the gun control ·
clcln tholllugly on the first pass. :.. article.
:•
. debate in the vacant glare of an
It's a jungle out there. There's a
A Smith spokeswoman said that •:
U1 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
115 Third A•e., GIIUpolls, Ohio
assault weapon-wielding assassin
diasc, and we've got the cure."
"it's imponant ro note it was the :·
1
(614) !192-215.6
(614)~1342
outside CIA headquarters.
JQC .
President Clinton believes that milo behind the gun that did the ::
.
weapciu are the diseaie. He sup- ldlling" at the CIA. Smith and the -:
"Cooly and methodia.lly, with
ROBERT L. WJNGETI
no emotion, no expression and no
ports 'banning assault weajiOns, NRA have consistently fought :·
Publbber
words, he simply walked up to the
which may explain why the NRA is restrictions-on the purchase of •:
automobiles and fired at point
sounding a call-to-arms. Recent assault weapons, which can fire ;;
PAT WIUTEHEAD
HOBAIU WILSON JR.
Assistant Publlsber.ControUer
blank range into the windows at
mailings warn: "Get ready for dozens of bullets in seconds.
;•
Executive Editor
these people,'' Smith said of the
wbat may well be the wont year
According to ·Larry Sllerman, •:
tragedy leavijlg two dead and three out ro any one candidate during this yet for American gun owners. ... professor of criminology at the •:
A MEMBER of The AJsocialed Press, and the Amcriem
injured.
"It Was a pretty bonifying period. Smith has battled, blocked 1993 promises to be 1968 (when University of Maryland, the
Newspoper Publisbers Asoocjation.
experience to witness."
or boated up every bill or amend• the assassinations of Robert arms rsce is growing more lethal •:
This "horrifying experience" ment that would rein in the urban . Kennedy and Milrtin Luther King - and not just because of assault :•
LETTERS OF OPINION are welco!IJO. They should be leu thon ·
300 wonts. All leuen are subject to ediJins ond mus1. be ~igned with
was produced by an assault arms race. As the CIA incident sparked calls for gun control) all weapons. Semi-automatic pisrols '
n1r11e, oddre1s and lelellhone number. No· unsiped teners will be
weapon, a·weapon Smith not long underscores, not even suburbs are over again. Never before have are increasingly the v.:eapon of '•
publlihed. Letlers shou1d be in aood tasle, lddressina issues. not
ago referred to as if it were some sanctuaries. . ,
·more powerful people had their choice among teen-age hoodlums.
personalilies.
benign wrenc!i or screw driver.
Ironically, last summer Smith eyes 00 your guns."
.
They now outnumber revolvers,
During a debate on the Senate Ooor scuttled the District of Columbia's
_ One Senate Republican staffer, and they are blamed for the near
~~year, Smith compared assault assault weapon liability taw. wbo worb for a non.NRA senator, doubling of the youth homicide
· o~ consti- cite$ the gun lobby's
- ,..~ superior fire '"
~te in recent yean.
.weapons ro "mechanical devices." Tho. ugh sm1'th assailed
. _11
He blamed the "failure of social tuti~!Jal ll?unds, claimmg 1t would pow,er: "They use both maior
"The AK-47 used in the CIA
and political institutions" as being unfarrly ~mgle out manufacture~CS ~ns in the lobbying campaign killings is an imponant symbol of
~n
the real causes of crime. In a subsc· who have no control over bow theu effectively _ high pressure and excess rii'CpOWer in America, but it'
quent interview with us, he Cillled products are used, there was not • persOnal arm twisting of members misleads hecsusc the major weapon
•
for capital punishment- and for even a fig-leaf covering the true of Congress, and grass roots phone llsed in urban homi!:ides ~ to ~
:
By WALTER R. MEARS
•
AP Special Correspondent
making prison life harsher .by targets of these wC!'pons. So"!e and mail campaigns. •• Not ·even be the semi-automatic pntol,''
: WASmNGTON - As the senaror was telling the governors, it's easy removing "color'TVs" and· "law were des1gned for not controlm consumer groups, which can gener- Sherman said "That is due in pan,
~
10 the fact that semi-automatic pis- !
tp demand an end 10 federal deficits, and state legislatures do it all the
rots have become a larger portion
lime- sometimes in two-pan resolutions \hat also ask Congress to send
of all new pistols sold, they've ·
tlem more money.
WHAT EXCITtMtNT!risen to about' half. They have a .
• That may be contradictory, but it is not uncommon. People want the
15
THAT
CONFETTI
great concealability compared
&amp;:licit curbed with cuts in other people's progmms, oft¢n while seeking
assault
weapons, and they have _
iOcreases in the ones that benefit diem.
·
PRESIDENT
CliNToN'S
• ."It's a phenomenon with which we illl must live," said Senate Majori'
enormous fire power." He.calls the ,
THROWIN$?
tY Leader George MitcheU, D-Maine, ·' ... and which we've not dealt With
weapon's one "saving grace" the
CAMPA16N
effectively."
.
fact that it t¢nds to jam.
..
; Mitchell said that attiblde must he changed in order 10 face up to the
Outside
the
CIA,
Smith
initially
:.
ProMISES.
~litically difficult choices of
the budget in order. Bob Dole of
thought the pop, ~· pop, sounds
~. the Senate Republican
, agrees, as do the National Goverhe heard the mortlmg of Jan. 25 ,·
nor$' Association and the White House. In Congress, and across the politwere those of pebbles tossed'.,
, i~ establishment, there's a chorus for tough decisions, shared sacrifice,
against his .car by children. He.
~medicine.
·
knew better when be SllOIIed a man ·
dressed in an army field jacket and
• But it is still rhetoric, still in generalities. "The hard pan is not making
sPeeches about the def'JCit or making suggestions about ... how you reduce
·armed with a rifle. He ·was filled ~ ·
i~" Dole said in a speech about the deficit The hard pan is in the details,
with relief that his son, whom he 1'
due from President Clinron in his rltSt address ro Congress in two weeks,
had just droPPed off at school, was
a+!:lii:tbudl!et in March.
•
not a passenger. He said ~-'by . the ';•
: ~·s When tile consensus on th~ need for stem action usually begins
grace of God, it could have been '
to fray inro'feullin(loverwhat it should he.
me."'
. : Dole thinks atutudes nuiy be different this time because the voters of
Of cilurse, that's the whole point .
I?92 d~manded deficit control. The Kansas senator said that wherever he
the NRA ~~ 10 ignore.
J~k Aqderson and Michael ·
goes, he finds people willing to talk about it, even when their own interetts are affected.
,
Blostein are writers United Fea- '
1 "There's gotro be some pain and rou've got 10 make certain it's evenlure, Syndlcste, InC. .
lY, spread and that it's real and it's gomg to have an impact," Dole said at
a :governors conference in Washingron this week.
• Mitchell said one good wsy IIi start the process would he to talk in
plain language about what's involved. Entilteinents, for example. ·Mitchell
suggested that would be a good word ro drop.
·
•" "It induces people to think that there's some vague category of things .
'
aut there Cillled entidemcnts,"' he said. Instead, .he said, people ought ro
i
lflderstand that politicians who talk about saVing money on entitlements
The word, habit is def'med in the legs are caused by their being on
Chec~ yourself to ~ whai you. smoking of tobacco, A p,efSOnt·.
111ean cutting Social S~urity and Medicare.
•
.
dictionary as, "a thing done often thenoor when I awaken. In short, were domg the 7th day of Febru- addicted to these substances wilk
~ When the governors dealt with the deficit, in a policy statement they
and hence easilj' or a usual way of the circulation ro my feet and legs ary, 1992. The chances are that a alter his life greatly. He has 10 have· :
adopted Tuesday, it was in language roned down ro drop a can for curbs doing things. My definition is has been disrupted by my ~leeping year ago on this very date you were his substance in order to survive\.
oil future Social Secur\ty increases and higher taxes on benefits. It has ro similar. I define it as something
at your pi-ce of business at the- the day. Finally it becomes too
'
It: done, they said, in order ro reach consensus.
which a person does consistently
usual time and you drove home at much for him to overcome. Many•~
• They had no such trOuble agreeing on an even stiffer, but generalized, without change. Habits are things
the
same time. After you arrive at people break this habit .only.••
call for spending cuts of $2.75 for every $1 taxes are increased. The diffi- which when used oft¢n enough can
you normally would eat your through the help of others, the wiU .
_home
in my recliner or chair.
tlllty is not in advocating a fonnula; it is in saying where the cuts are to lead to dire results.
For ihe most part, I feel meal. Some people will take a nap Ill overcome l!JI(l through God. This ·.
1if made. The new budget director, Leon Panetta, is said ro seek a $2 to $1
The sleeping habit is the one
or after this meal. You can person has to have the desire to ·
SliVings-to-tax ratio, and he'll have to r.n in the blanks.
that nearly everyone has. We go ro refreshed when I arise from my big before
bet
illl
the
tea in China you proba- · quit If he does not, his life will be ,
• While Clinron is committed ro stan with spending cuts, he also has bed at a certain time and get up at a recliner. On some days I need a nap
bly
did
the
same
th!::~ on this date.
dcstro~ed.
·
and I can do this by simply sitting
olans ·for a $31 billion progmm to create jobs and-offer tax incentives for cenairi time.
Anothtz
habit
d
with
bathing
Fi11ally,
the
dress code habit Is .·
b)Jsiness investment, adding those costs 10 the deficit in order ro stimulate
Of course, there are instances in my office. chair. Th1s lasts
your
body,
etc.
Do
you
ta1ce
a
bath
one•
which
has
changed greatly. · .
tile economy.
when your sleep will be interrupted approximately one hour. This after·_
or
shower
each
day
or
do
you
limit
More
and
more
women
are wearin&amp;•·:
: To hold the congressional suppon he'll need when there are politically by events which are totally unex- noon nap only occurs when I fail to
it
10
two
or
th~
times
each
-week?
pants
or
jeans
or
whatever.
Any-, '
tqugh votes to be taken, Clinton has ro balance deficit curbs with mea- pected. The most common is the get the necessary sleep at night.
If
you
.resdily
bathe
each
day,
then
thing
causal
is
worn.
Today
dresses
·,
Most people will tell you that
slll'es for long-term economic expansion. And there are no precedents ro stress factor. Occasionally every·
in
all
probability
you
did
this
a
year
are
out
of
style
except
for
evening
gjlide him, the president said, "since no one has ever tried to do both one has nights when burdensome . when you are past 75 that you only
these things at once."
mauers prey upon your mind. For need four or five hours of sleep to ago. Bathing habits are usually reg- wear. Frankly, I don'tlike this - '
: Even Democrats differ on the right mix. Liberals want the emphasis on the most pan, however, one devel- feel refreshed. What they don't tell ular habits. Did you know that change, but it doesn't really matter, •
jdbs now, others demand deficit curbs rust. Republicans favor the latter, ops a pattern of sleep which devel- you is that an older person really there are some people that never Rupe. My position is that a woman :
but Dole said they "aren't going to walk the plank so the Democmts can ops into a habit. Each person may steeps more than a younger person. take a .bath? This person would should dress as a woman and not as '
eicape the rough votes_"
.
' ·
.. .,.,
"
!\ave a different schedule of sleep Naps lire more frequent for the old have a habit of not wanting 10 usc a man. Old fashioned, you bet your !· .
0
timers. Actually I am sleeping
but whatever it is he follows same.
• b lind there me·toagh votes coming. .
··
.
, ''"
,
There comes a time in every- more than I formerly did when you ~C::'a:7e~~~w=~i ~· ~;~~~~!L~·Ii!l~Jfe~o e
\ "The unpleasant truth is that there are no alternatives 10 painful meafor the most part they are very · Other habit! which are real and •
slires that cut government programs many regard as worthwhile, and raise one's life when sleeping habits consider the entire day and night
I have lried to ~et back to nor- und.esirable company,. ~ person !OlDY individuals have are, 1) talc·
change. For many, many years the
~es that many regard as already excessive," said Robert Reischauer,
duecror of the Congressional Budget Office.
writer would go to bed between the mal by using sleepmg piUs. At first who luis clean health liablts In ~e mg your medicine on time, 2) i
•
hours or 10 and 12 and awaken at these pills·did help but before roo past will have clean health habits m beinl! punctual for all meetings, 3) ;
readmg habits, 4) slurping your ~
: EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum· approximately 7 or 7:30 a. m. With long they ~e a problem. Saine the future.
Going
to
chur~h
o!l
Sunday
.
soup, Oh, what the l!ell, Rupe, most i
of
them
will
cause
drowsiness
to
·
few
exceptions,
this
habit
persisted.
nist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
ab~ut
the
same
t1me
•s
a
hab•t
:
babtts aren'tllad, including reading •
excess
in
the
mornings.
Also,
1
Now,
at
the
age
of
77,
my
national politics ror more than 30 years.
wh1ch
most
chll{ch
patrons
have.
.
this
column.
'
•'
noticed
that
some
would
lose
their
sleeping habit has been drastically
Do
you
know
how
often
you.
sit
in
Carry
on
.
;
after
a
period
of
time.
So,
I
effect
changed. All of a sudden I can no
the
same
pew
each
Sunday
1f
that
Editor's
aote
•
Long-time
•
longer sleep six or eight hours in quit both and I am trying another
pew
is
available
for
you
to
sit
in?
I
Attorney
Fred
W.
Crow
Is
the
'
bed. I now follow the following pill, The results are still in limbo.
•
believe
that
I
~II!'
safely
say
that
contributor
of
a
weekly
column
I
Rupe,
I
would
give
anything
to
get
schedule. For the most pan, I normost
people
s•t
m
the
same
pew
for
The·
Sunday
Times-Sentinel
•
.
t
mally report to work around 10 back to my former slc!iepin~ habit I
'r
'
each
Sunday
when
they
auend
Readers
wishing
to
applaud,
crit~
·: "Have we as Americans inad- dent has done thus far has to do o'clock, give or take an hour on have a f~ling that this will never .church.
icize
or
comment
on
any
subject
:
each side of that time. Prompdy at happen. So much for sleep.
vertently elected our fiTS! homoscx- with lifting this ban.
The worst habit that most peo- (except religion or politics) are ··
The feeding of your face, or
On the contrary, President Clio- noon I journey to my favorite food
u~l president?", was a question
pte
have is the alcohol or drug encouraged to write to Mr ::
wsed to readers only a few days ron is doing much more, but eco- trough and have lunch with mostly food intalce, does also create an eat; habit. Also high on the list is the Crow,lncsreoftllisnewspaper.' '1
nomic policy docs not inake quite the same people Tuesday through ing habit. For the most pan, each
ago.
'•
·.
, Let's not be so shallow ro make the exciting srory that the military Friday. Then, I return ro the ofrlce person eats three meals each day.
udrounded allegations about our homosexual ban controversy docs about 1:15 and usually work to Usually, but not always, you eat
when it comes 10 the six o'clock 4:30. I drive home after visiting my your breakfast, lunch and dint1er at
n~ president's sexual orientation.
·We as Americans should be news. Maybe we should give Presi- grocer. At five to six I eat my own approximately the same time.
slipportive of our new leader and dent Clinton a little more credit; cooking, which is not alwats the Many times the writer has noticed
c&lt;JIIcemed about his domestic poli- perhaps he is only ttying to proVide best. Then 1 take my nap in the that he is eating only because it
AR"e '&lt;{)l)
was time 10 eat. Those who are in
cies on issues like the weathered peace and harmony throughout' his evening. This can last until 10 the
construction business or so
G/11.'(~
ecbnomy and health care reform, as country. After all, aren't those two when I awaken, eager to devoilr the called
heavy
work
do
require
three
TV
programs
available.
Wfll as being conscious of foreign liberties on which this country was
Some of them are pistols, Rupe, meals a day. Some individuals,
t&gt;O ~OIJ ME.AN A~
cnses in Somalia, Bosnia, and Iraq. founded?
including
yours
11\dy,
do
not
necesbut
I
will
not
bore
you
at
this
time
I'll
repeat
the
initial
question,
:Although lifting the ban on
Cl-\AAAC:.TERIZEt&gt;
hqmosexuals in tho military is an "Is Bill Clinton our rlfSt homosexu- with my TV plight. Anyhow, sarily have lo have this much food.
A
person
in
business
will
usual.
imponant mission for Bill Clinron, al president?". I DON'T THINK depending when r awaken from
~v exlJeEAA~c.E
SO! Fear breeds ignorance. Com- this heav_y sleep in my gmndfather ly have his breakfast in the vicinity
it~s only oqe of many. Unfonu~ Mt~fi.JI­
passion does not equal panicipa- bear ch8lf, I am now fully awake of 7 19 8 a.m. and his lunch at 12 pr
~ly, we aUow the media to dicalld ready for any activity. Before 1 I and his supper at approximately S
tate 10 us what they believe we tion.
excrre.ME~'T;o
.
know it, it is time to go to bed. or 6 p.m. Whatever time you take
David
G.
Dodson,Jr.
\
shbuld feel is important. We would
Middlepon During the time I am awake, I am for these meals, you csn bet that
be; led to believe that aU the presistuck to the boob tube. At approxi- you do this .day in and day out.
mately I a. m. I go 10 bed 10 my Thus the habit of eatinj! It a schedbedroom upstairs. I am now sleep- uled time is very realm most indiing approximately two to three viduals' lives.
.
hours in bed. I awaken and go to
Some exceptions must be made
the bathroom, then return to my for all habits of eating, sleepins,
.
By Tile Alaoclated Preas
_: Today is Sunday, Feb. 7, the 38th day of 1993. There are 327 days left bed. Try as I may, I cannot go back etc. on weekends. Howevtz, you
10 sleep ·in it. For the past two or can bet that these habits are the
tJ1ithe year.
three weeks, I go downstairs, sit same week in and week ouL
: Today's Highlight in History:
·
down
in my recliner and immediIf you don't think habits arc
• On Feb. 7, 1964, thousands of screaming fans welcomed the Beatles
tty complrina what you did
real,
ately
I
go
10
sleep.
I
will
awaken
uPon their arrival at Ne.w York's John F. Kennedy International Airponas
~ "Fab Four" began their fiTSI U.S. rour.
·
·
usually around 7 am. Lo and one year aso this date and what
· On this date:
behold, I feel like I had a good you are doing today. l.f both days
night's sleep with one exception. are work days you will find that
1812, author Charles Dickens·was born ilt Pollsmouth England
1904, a rue began in BaltilllOlC that raged for aboui 30 hourS IBid That is, I have developed a condi- there is little deviation of achedulc.
·
destroyed more than 1,500 buildings.
.
·
tion which I csl1 heavy legs. ThCS!J. All ~ita are .similar.
•

A Dlvtslon of

B
:Y

k A _, ·
RueTSOn
d
.

an
Michael Bin stein ·

urban :·

•

,.'

Deficit cutters must fight 'not
my back yard' syndrome

SCOUT WEEK- To kick off Scout Week in
rf(opltlon of Boy Scouts or' America's 83rd
anniversary, Gallipolis Troop 200 Boy Scouts
Kevin Walker and Walter Strarrord decorate
the window at The Hasklas-Tanner Clothiers
Company, 332 Second Aveaue, GalUpolls, Satur-

t·

to :.

NO ...

e

Men are cre.a tures of habits

1

FredW. Crow

:;

.

Letters to the editor
In response

Berry•s World

.

today
in history ·
.

Sunday Times Sentinel-Page-AS

-

'

10 reconsidC'Z. And there isn't much day last Thursday.
chance of that happening.' '
"I don't know if it feels any difJohn Coleman, executive dlrec- ferent than being the youngest
ror of the Ohio Municipal League, one," Shue said. "I just move a litS&amp;id the group formerly kept track tle slower than the younger fellows,
of the ages and other statistics on and it takes me a little longer to get
mayors but recendy lost the infor- . staned in the morning.''
mation when a computer malfuncShue grew up in nearby Sidney
tioned.
and sold bakery equipment for
However, Coleman said he many years. He didn't begin his
lcnows of no mayor in Ohio older politiCal career until be was 72. ·
than Shue.
He was appointed in 1976 to the
Shue celebrated his 90th birth- council of this village of 1,200 people.
. ·
.
"I figured I had a few good
.
.
years left," he recalled. "It was an
opportunity 10 serve the community
I cons~er my adopted hometown. I
enjoyed the work then, and I still '
it now."
· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- actions have been in other states. enJOY
He
from council presi-Gov. George Voinovich's state Voinovicb's plan' "could let the dentromoved
mayor in 1981 when Mayor
budget JllopusaliO stan eliminating -courts know that some effons are Keith Downey st,epped down. In
~ school flpancing ineq~ities bas bein~ made," Riffe said.
·
1984, Shue lost re-election to Stan:been endorsed in concept by House
R1ffe also said he thinks the ley Egben by 19 votes.
"Speaker Vern Riffe.
.
governor is moving in the right
" "When he decided not to seek
· At a news conference Friday, direction with his plan to curtail another
term 'in 1988, I put in
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, stopped prison conStrUction, tho$ encourag- another hitch because nobody else
. short .o f an outright endorsement ing wider use of community cor- wanted the job,'' Shuc said.
' but said Voinovich "is on the ljght rectional programs. .
.
• He said his two dljughters have
track."
·
However, he said he was con· not been pleased about his decision
· The governor is proposing cuts cerned that Voinovich may not to seek additionaltcnns.
,' In state aid to about 16 of the keep commianents 10 build prisOns
"Neither of them would. speak
state's wealthiest iebool districts as near St. Clairsville, Caldwell and to me for a litde while," he said. ·
pan of the two-year, $30.8 billion elsewhere.
'
•'They thought I should slow down
spending plan he announced Thurs- . Those prisons will be delayed and take life a little easier. If I had
ilaY. ·
and perhaps never may be built, gone home and sat in a rocking
_ The budget must be adopted by although the state spent $6.6 mil- chair, I would have rocked my way
July I but first will be given lion for architectural plans and to Graceland Cemetery by now.''
months of examination in both designS, the adminislration said.
As mayor he earns $~ ,000 a
houses. "There. are some things
Riffe said the governor hasn't year, or roughly eight cents an 'hour
that we are going to take a real hail! dOric a good job of telling residents by his estimate.
look at. That's the history of the of the affected areas why the proPeople who attend council meetbudget (tirocess)," Riffe ssud .
jects may be scrapped.
ings say the tall, lean mayor wallcs
, He said c~anges in lhe school
"I understand some property softly but wields a mighty gavel.
form.ula are ll!'ponant because of was purchased. I think. that you
Nothing is approved or disappending lawsuits which·say the for. owe a real ·good explanation " the proved before Sbue raps his 11avel
mula ~ ~ diltriets and · ~alcer saJd.
'
on the mauer. And he routmely
' tewards wealll)ieti 'districts witli •. • Riffe said ··the' governor is right chews on the end of an unlit cigar
.money they 111!"'1 ~:
in trying to make prisons less these days in deference to a "No
State offic1als heheve the lsw· crowded. "It's the direction we Smoking" sign.
suits could be successful, as sin:!ilar should be going,' • he saill.
' ANNA, Ohio (AP) - The
mayor of this westcni Ohio village
says .he probably won't run for ro.elec.tion nex1 year so he C1J!1 make
way for the younger generatiOn.
At age 90, Harold Shue is
'believed to be the oldest mayot in
Ohio.
'
"There comes a time when you
have to step aside and let a yollf!ger
,person have a chance," be said. "I
won't run when my tenns ends in
1994 unless liOITieOIIC persuades me

WASHINGTON (AP) - In the
past week, the economic news
could hardly have been beuer:
- brisk retail sales, a big jump in fac·
lOry orders and even a significant
decline in the unemployment rate.
With all these SJgns of an economic rebound, some might wondC'Z why President Clinton is going
ahead with a program to give the
economy an extia shove - a mQve ·
that could add $31 billion or so to a
budget deficit already headed into
· the stiarosphere. .
Privat~ economists say there
really is no mysrery. Clinron, they
say, is taking out a small insurance
policy to guard against the economy doing to him what it did to
George Bush.
·
A year ago, Bush administiation
ofrlcials decided they did not need
10 put forward a massive stimulus
progmm because the economy was
well on its way out of the recession.
But encouraging signs that winter faltered in the spring as the jobless rate climbed ro an ei(lht-year
high of 7.7 percent, a nse that
played a big part in dooming
Bush's presidency. ·
"While th11 recovery looks sustainable right now, it is still on a
razor's edge and the administration
is ttying to buy a little insurance,"
said Roger Brinner, an economist
at DRI-McGraw Hill Inc., the
countty's largest private forecasting fmn.
·
The government reponed Friday
that the unemployment mtc dipped
ro 7.1 percent in January, the lowest level in a year, as employers
added 106,000 jobs to their payrolls, the biggest gain six months.
But economists were less than
impressed with either figure. They

,

noted !hat the drop in th~ unemployment mte was solely because
the lsbor force shrank when a half·million people gave up looldng for
a job.
And the gain in payroll jobs,
while double the SO.O&lt;Xl per month
a'(erage of 1992, is still far below
what's·expected at this stage of a
recovery.
Before the latest unemployinent
repon came out, Labor Secretary
Robert Reich said the new administration was committed to fulfilling
CliniQn's campaign pledge to create 8 million jobs over the next
four years.
. "The economy is like a plane
that is finally getting off the
ground; but it is flying low and
there's not much gas in it," said
Rep. David Ol)ey, D· Wis. !lnd
chairman of the Joint Economic
Committee. "The economy clearly
needs a boost."
If Congr~ss can vote on tax
breaks and inereased ptojects for
their llislricts rlfSt, it may be easier
for them to go along with the
painful tax increases and benefit
cuts Clinton has promised for the
long-term deficit program.
Clinron, in l!is first White Hou~
radio addreS$ Saturday. also tried to
soften any future blows 10 taxpayers by promising to CUI the White
House staff and fulfilling his
promise to increase taxes on the
rich. "We:re going to ask the most
from those who $Ot the most and
gave the ·least dlinng the past dozen
years - those at the top," he said
in a live address from the Oval
Office.
Still, suppon is not universal;
Some economists are worried that a
Democmtic Congress will overdo .
the politically popular stimulus

package and fail to delivtz on the .l,
painful tax hikes and benefit cuts ,
needed ro get control or the deficit : :•
"My own view is that a fiscat ~
stimulus program will do more ~
harm than good," said Norman ,
Robertson, a private economist in ·
Pittsburgh. " We would be bettcf. \
off cutting the deficit than playing •.
around with a stimulus program :.
that is no longer needed. ~'
.

Byer to speak

:

BURLINGHAM - ·Bob Byer;;
director of Meigs County Emergen~
cy Medical Services, will speak at:
the Burlinaharn
Modem Woodmen•
p
I'
Hall on Fnday at 7 p,m.
, :•
He Will speak about organizing;
a volunteer tue depanmenL The~·
will aslo be a presentation on wy;
rue hydrants.
:::
Bedford Township has no fir~·
departmenL Everyone is urged to
attend.
Refreshments will be served.

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PIGS A8 Sunday nmes SenUnel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH--Polnt Pleasant, wv

February 7, 19931

1113

-------Local briefs--------. EMS units respond to 15 call~
Three jailed overnight Friday
GALLIPOLIS - Local authorities made lhne arrests overnight
Friday.
Gary A. Stewart, 29, 130 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, was arrested
early Saturday morning by Gallipolis police for disorderly conduct;
Daniel Lawrence,, 39, Rio Grande, was &amp;nest Friday night by Gallia
County sheriff's deputies on a municil)ll) cOUrt onler for failure to
appear 1114 ~A. Hudson, 30, 196Midway Road, Bidwell, was
amsted Friday mght by Gallia County sheriff's deputies for domes. tic violence.

GVFD respond to two calls .
. GAL(.IPOLI$ -The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department
responded to two fires between Friday afternoon and early Saturday
morning.
.
Eight fu:efightcrs responded to a brush fu:e Friday afternoon at
the residence of Melvin Craft. 2584 Raccoon Road, Gallipolis.
According to the report, a trash fue had ignited grass but was out
oo arrival. Approximately 1/8 of an acre was burned.
.
A c~ discarded in a !rash can was lisWI as the cause of a
Salunlay early morning fire at the residence of Donna Phillips, 50
1/2 Gripe Stteet. Gallipolis. .
.
Seventllell firefighters responded and extinguished the fire with
waiCl' from the kitclien .faucet.
The two calls were the 27th and 28th of !he year, respectively.

Vehicle B&amp;E reported
GALLIPOLIS -James M. Saunders, 17, 33 Cooper Road, Gallipolis, rded a !heft compliant with the Gallia County Sheriff's
~~Friday morning after someone reportedly broke the passenger side window of his vehicle and stole a $300 leather jacket.
According to the report, the vehicle was parked behind ·Holzer
Medical Cenler at the time of the incidenL A beer can found nearby
was believed to have been used
to break the window.
•
.
'

Chain saws stolen in B&amp;E
GALLIPOUS - Thomas D. Caldwell, 4324 Stare Route 325,
Vinton, flied a theft complaint Thursday with the Gallia County
Sheriff's DepanmenL According to the repoJt, someone forced open
a side door Wednesday at his residence and stole two chain saws.

VVFD respond to brush fires
,
•
:
,

~.

:
r

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VINTON - The Vinton Volunteer Fire Department responded
to dwc calls Friday. two of which were brush ftres, a department
spokesman said.
.
Eisht fii'Cfightcrs responded with two trucks Friday afternoon to
the Jean McCully residence, Main Stteet, 'Vinton where they battled
a brush fu:e .started by open burning. One eighth of an acre was
burned before the fire was extinguished.
Less than one quarter of an hour later, the same fu:eflghrers and
trucks were called to the residence of Randy Nolsn, Andrew Road,
Huntington Township when a brush burning got out of control and
burned half art acre before it was brought under control.
The department was also called to the Steve Baldridge residence,
State Route S54, Morgan Township, when a passerby reported a
brush fii'C. Upon arriving \vith one truck, the depanment learned the
fu:e was actually a cootrolled burning.
The calls were the 12th, 13th and 14th of the year, respectively.

i
t Woman cited in accident
:
GALLIPOLIS -A Clifton, W.Va., woman was cited by the
~
~

siate highway patrol for failure to yield when turning left Friday
evening following an accident on State Route 7 at the U.S. 35
t. entnnce ramp.
·.
I' Accordiilg to a report from the Gallia-Meiss Post of the ~tate
1 Highway Patrol, Betty A. Young, 44, 197 Mason. Street, Clifton,
1 W:Va., was northbound and attempted to make a left tum onto the
, ramp and turned into the path of a southbound vehicle driven by
i CharlesH.Jolmson,63,1401 Meadowbrook,PointPieasant, W.Va.
~
No injuries were reported. Both vehicles sustained light damage
: · and weze driven from the scene.
•' .

Purse reported lost or stolen

.

told Gallipolis police her purse was either lost or stolen Friday
while shopping.
. Accordiitg to the report, the purse cootained $100, aedit cards
and-prescription medicatioo.

Deputies cite McArthur man
GALLIPOLIS - Stephen L. James, 40, ·Rt. 2 McArthur, was
cited Friday evening by Gallia County sherifrs deputies for driving
under a court ordered suspensiQII.
.

Chamber luncheon set
GALLIPOLIS - aandall Diller of !he West Virginia Department of Transportation has been slated as the speaker at the Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce's monthly lurieheon, scheduled for
noon Tuesday at the Stowaway Restaurant and Lounge, 300 Second
Ave.
·
Diller will he re~g on a .feasibility study condilc.red by the
state of West Virgtnia 011 the regional airport. Also scheduled to
appear is Representative Mark Malone (D-92nd District).
·

Deputies ticket Middleport ma,n
MIDDLEPORT -Matthew A. Eblin, 18, Middleport, was cited
by the Meigs County Sheriff's Department to Meigs Coimty COUrt ·
on a failure to IJillintain control and a drivinj! under the influence
charge following a one-vehicle accident on Bnar Ridge Road.
According to a report from the department, Eblin was traveling
west and lost control of his 1985 Ford pickup and went over the
embanlcmenL The vehicle reportedly rolled once landing on its
wheels. Moderate damage was listed to the vehicle.

Vandals strike at parked cars
POMEROY - The Meigs County Sheriff's Depl!rtment
received a report at I a.m. on Saturday that two vehicles parked at
the Park and Ride 011 Route 7 had been entered when someone
smashed out the side glass. ·
Vehicles owned by Stephanie English, Middleport, and Carlos
Swisher. Gallipolis, were the ones damaged. It was not immediately
known if anytfiiog was missing.
According to the report, the vehicles had been parked there since
around 2 p.m. Friday.
·

POMEROY -Fifteen caBs ~or
assistance were answered by uruts
of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services ~n Friday and
early Saturday mommg.
On Friday at 6:39 a.m. the Rut- ·
land Fire Pe~CI'!t responded to
a mdlor vehicle acc~nt on Route
143 ..'The Rutland unit ~
Ed Daniels to VeteranS Memonal
Hospital. ·
·
.
At 7:S2 a.m. the Rutland untt
responded to Meigs Mine No.2 for
Larry Haifl!UI, who w@-5 taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
The Rutland F'II'C ~t, at
9:43 •a.m., responded to afire at the
Birchfield residence on Beech
Oro'fe Road. At 9:54 a.m . the
Pom~roy F!re Department was
called to ustst. UR!IS weze oo the
scene fqr appro~tJmately 1-1/2
hours, 1 05
th Middl rt ·
At 1 : a.m., e
epo
unit_respo!K'ed to Page Street for
Marilyn Bishop, who. was taken to
Pleasant Valley J:losllllal. • .
The Columbia townshtp Ftre
Department, at 11 :~3 a.~..
respondedonamuwallJldrunwtth .
Albany F'ue Dep~ent at Route
681 North.
.
At 2:29 p.m., the Middleport
unit went to· Route 7 for Dorsel
Thomas, who .was !Bken to .Veter•:

·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Alaoo Be.con Journal Saturday reported, that former Obio
Supreme Court emplovees said
they often heard J ustfce Craig ·
Wnght make racist remarks, an
allegalion he denied 011 Friday.
Wright said at a news conference that the reoorter who wrote
the story had a •rnla!icious vendetta" api1ISt bini.
The newspaper had planned to
publish the story on Sunday but
deCided to print it today bt&lt;:anse of
the news conference. Dale Allen,
the newspaper's editor, said the
news confereuce was an attempt at
a "p~eo-e~~~J)tivestrike."
The story said fanner Supreme
· Court employee Lou Damiani lll!d
several other employees who
weren't identified by the newspa·
per frequendy heard Wright use the

Thi

wii

• T01111117 L, McElroy, 35, Ia llllld·
Pollee after being 8ITtlted • a lll1lped
State Trooper Michael. Greene Friday
McElroy was.an ested behind a westside

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- A
lrooper w!Jo stopped to quesa man he saw urina!ing along
inlerstate WaS fatally soot Fri-

POMEROy- Emil Thompson, Star Hal~ Roac!, LangsviDt;. was
picked up by deputies from Cleveland on Fnday mght, according to
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The report stated Thompson was rerurned to Cleveland to answer
an old warrant charging rape.
Thompson was a former resident of Lakewood, near Cleveland.

~P~n~'"' arrested two suspects
a short time but said It was
what happened.
Tiooper Micbilcl E. Greene, 42,
of a single wound to the chest
he was brought l!y air ambu"-·-to Methodist Hospital, .said
~:fb~Helrick, spokesman for the

~

Music recital at RG Tuesday
RIO GRANDE- A recital has been set for Tuesday at3 p.m. in
the atrium of the Fine and Performing Arts C!:nter at the University
of Rio Grande by the university's music department.
The recital is free of charge and a reception will he held after·
ward for the soloist and the audience.

i

Ewn Biyh said the shootwas a reminder.. of the dangers

otlolflltld Becle
.P.t!ent Llfte
oChuu &amp; D..,_
•WMelchlll1'8
-Gown•
ofwdlng,Purnpe
oStethoacopee
oDuoderm
•Air MatlrHoOatomy
•TENS Unlta
•Trape••
· oBeck Brac!M
oJobet Stecklnga
24 Hour Er'nergency Service • Free O.llvery • Raeplretory
Thenlplat on St.tf • w. Do the ....,_.work • MedlcUedlcald • WorkiiN Comp. • BIIICk
• Prlv.te lne:

.._.,._I

HomaOwned &amp;

of New Albeny.

Music recital at RG Tfiesday

.

'Oreb~lll · was -shot ·after . he

Intentate 6S 011 the
side about 2 p.m.,
Supcrintendent
'
the iroopcr saw
who appeared to be

RIO GRANDE -· A recital has been set for Tuesday at 3 Jl.m. in
the atrium of tile F'lne and Perfonning Arts Cente( at ~University
of Rio Grande by the university's music departmenL
· The recital is free of charge and a reCeption will he held after·
ward for the soloist and the audience.

.

•

!·
I

none of the employees Understood side. Wright said that's when he by the Africans, ai be pat it, and :

intoxicaled, urinating by lite side of
the highway. He stopped to investigatC, found MCElroy was wanted in
Keatucky and had handcuffed the
man when he was shot.
Jelitlin said there was no indiCation trouble during a radio
conversation Greene had with his
state·pollce dispalcber.
.
"He did call in to check on the
suspect and was.not excited,'' Jennings said. "We're out there by
ouraelves and we have to take what

or

action we can.' l

McElroy. arrested a short time
later behind a grocery store, said
.!he olher man killed Greene. • ..
' 'I !Was bein' handcuffelf while
he I shot I him, ' McElroy told
reporlerS. "!'didn't do iL"
Jennings said Greene, shot
point-blank i.n the chest, was not
wearing the j)ullet-resistant body
armor issued 10 all troopers.
"Whether the vest would have
stopped that, we can only specu.late," he said. "But I would sar,
!here's probably a good chalice 1t
would have." ~
A passing moiorist called f~
help on Greene's radio. But Jennings said authorities were not positive who shot the officer, and
appealed fo_r help from any witnesses.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Avia·
tors who llrunkenly fondled wOIIIen
at a convention also elljl08Cd themselves, and at least ODe bad public
sex, according to the Pentagon's
final report on the Tailhook SCIIndal
as reported today in a newspaper.
••n.ere was a lot of public sex,••
an unidentified· source who had
seen -an early draft of !he report
told the LDs Angeles Times. "It's a
pretty tawdry picture."

•

decided to go pubHc.
that he thought I probably did
Snell declined comment on (have black blood) - aad be coa1d ·
Wright's alleJBlions. He referred tell by my 6ose."
queatioos to hia edilln.
.
J?amiani, a former employee of
Allen said by telephone that he former Supreme·(:ourt CbiCf Jua- :
had complete coafideoce in Snell.
tice Frank Celebrezze, said his 1•
"Roger has dOIIe some excellent grandparents were from Italy.
•
reporting for us. on. the court over
"I can't think of a word that I
the~ year," Allen said.
could usc that would be 1trong
' One of the principles of jour- enough to describe the way I ,
nalism is that you air OOth sides of delestcd these frequent episodes of :
a story," Allen said. "Justice harassment at the hands of this •
Wright has chosen not to give us ·man," Damiani said.
:
raciSDl.
.
. .
his side of the story in many
Damiani, now in private practice :
The correspondence dated to instances." ·
.
as an attorney in Cleveland, •
Jan. 4. In a leiii:Z writt.e11 WednesThe Beacon J ourna1 quoted worked for the S uprome Court
day, Wright cited a busy schedule Damiani, who is white. as saying, from 1982 until Dec. 31, 1986. ,
and proposed a meeting for the "I remember him (Wrigbl) coming Wright was elected in November 1
week of Feb. 22,
.
into my office once anii asking me 1984 and took office in January :
Snell replied Thursday that the if I had any black blood in me.
1985. He won re-dectioo 10 a six- •
story would be published this .
"He proceeded io tell me that year term in November 1990 and t
weekend and that he eo~old meet Sicily had been overrun and coo- says he won't run again.
;
the context in which the phrase was
used.
.
Wright said at the news confer·
ence that Beacon Journal.reporter ·
Roger Snell, who was in auendance, jnviously wrote inaccurate
SIOriesabout him.
\'Roger is about to unload on
me again,'' said Wright.
He handed out copies of letters
he ex~ed with Snell in which
!hey couldn't agree on a time to
~Ito discuss !he allegations of

i

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M~";r;;;,~;;;~;t~:;;::;;:;;; IS officers

Cuyahoga deputies transport man

GALLIPOLIS - Two Mason County residents were involved in
a two-vehicle accident Friday on lhe eastbound U.S. 35 ramp, the
Gallia-Meigs Post of !he State Highway PaU:Ol reported.
.
Troopers said Betty Ann Young, 44, Clifton, was northbound on
State Route 7 at 7:05 p.m. when she attempted ID make a left tum
Qnto the ramp. A car driven by Charles H. Johnson, 63, Point Pleas• ant, was southbound and collided with Young.'s car, causing slight
damage to both.
There were no injuries and Young was cited for failure to yield.

Sunday

Newspaper reports allegations of racism against Wright

At 2:49 p.m., the Racine umt
transported Charles Heck from the
Racine Fire Depwnentto Pleasant
Valley.
. The Middleport unit went to
Overbrook at 5:22 p.m. for 'Edlll!·
Pickens, who was taken to Plellsailt
Valley.
:•
The Racine unit was call!ld t.Q
Third Stteet at 7:59p.m. for Kaellll:
Proffitt. who was transported R:
Holzer
.
: ...
Middleport Fire Depafl#:
ment responded to motor veh.ic~:
accident at 8:08p.m .. on BallG~·
Run Road. One Middleport U'IJ~:
rook Kathy Brumfield and anothC•
MiddlcJx.lfl unit lnlllSIJOfled ~:
tine .Wtthrow. Both weze ~~:
Veterans. At 8:19 p.m., lhoRu
l
unit was called to the scene
·:
transported Heather Withro •:
Candy Lambert and CharleD(r
Brumfield.
. ••
At IO:Sip.m., the Syracuse
went Wolfe Drive for Harotl{
Lohse, who was taken to·Veteranlb
on Saturday at 2:50a.m .. itlf
Syracuse unit went to Basluin Roa4
for Luvenia Hayman who was
taken to ·veleranS.
'
:{
At 3:48 a.m., the Rutland unit'
to Hysell Run Road for Retha
who was
to SL
in
· ·

tate trooper shot,
~...... ed in traffic stop

Clifton woman ticketed in accident

wv

OH--Polnt

Expected to .accompany the ty and ui ensure fair hearings. "Thef want to protect names
report are confidential memos by
Derek J. Vander Schasf, the and not Jeopl!fdize future courts·
Defense Department's inspector martial with premature publicity,''
·
general, recommending courts· a source told the Thnes.
The report, expected to be
martial for IS officen oo charges
of assault or indecency, and Ieiser releaSed sometime this moolh, will
proceedings for a siniiJar namber include about 300 pages, and possi·
of officers, soureea told the Times.. bly explicit photographs taken by
However, none of the officers those who attended the 1991 Tail·
are expected to be named in the hook convention of Navy and
report, for reasons of confidenliali- Marine aviators in Las Vegas, the

newspaper said.

·
:
Ali mvestigation was started •
after women at the botd where the :
cooventioo was held w* aoirvt that •
they were IIOiled by dumbn nia1e I
officas wiMl tDrmed a pntlet cfnm ,.

awridor.

Tbe report alleges that some
men exposed themselves in the
hotel, and that at least one man ;
publicly had oral sex. with a JIIUSii· ,
tute and other women. He could :
face criminal charges under the ·I··
military's anti-sodomy law.
More than 2,100 Navy and
Marine Corps officers weze i.nler· 1,
viewed duri,ng tbe seven-monlh :
"It turned out to he the Jlrave of itivestigation.
the victim," Prindle said.

Man sought · in slayii,tg of missing Xenia man
XENIA, Ohio (AP) - Police
~king a man wanted i.n the
slaying of a Xenia man whoso body ·
was found in a shallow grave in the
yard of the suspect's Clifton' home.
Xenia police Lt. Eric Prindle
said Friday that a warrant has been
issued for the arrest of James..!'.
Keihl n, 23, oo a charge of aura·
vated murder. He said Kelhl, who
lived at the house wilh his parenis,
has fled.
Prindle said police have
launche.d a search for Keil'tl and
have placed his name in a nationwide COJ!lputer netw&lt;?rk used by
law enforcement agencres.
William McCarthy, investigator
for the Greene County coroner,
identified the victim as Gregory
Douglas Turner, 23. Turner had
been missing for more than two
months.
Prindle said Turner and Keihl
were acquaintances and had a
mutual girlfriend.
·
Turner was last seen Dec. 3 at a
. Xenia groc~ry store. Turner'.s
father said his son had been on hiS
way to see his girlfriend in Waynesville.
.
Police later found a pool of

are

blood, a hearing-aid batiCry and
fraamenta of eyeglasses in the
driveway of Turner's apartment ·
comjllex.Theyalsorecoveredskull

NEW LIFE
CENTER· •

ftuineats and hair.

Turner, who was -born with
hear~ and vision problems,
wor
as a laborer 011 a farm in
Waynesville.
Prindle said police had inter·
viewed Keih1 aeveral times as part
of their investigation. However,
Keihl failed to appear at police
headquarterS to retake a pOiygmph
test Thursday morninf.• ponce said.
Prindle said Kelhl s pan:nts told
police they fo,md a fiOlA! from their
son telling them he needed a break . ·
and was leavioJt
a vacation. He
left on a bicycfe and didn't say in
the note exactly. when he would
retum, said Prindle.
- When police·went out to the
horne, Prindle said, Keihl's JlBI'!lnts
showed them another note from
their son they had found in his bed·
rQOIIl. Police said it appeared to be
Keihl's last will.
·
Prindle said.Keihl's mother then
showed police a sunken spot under
a rack of firewood beside the
house. :which has a privacy fence.

Mill. BUll\lrkovlch

I

6 Year Anniversary
Sunday, February
14th
•
10:00 am &amp; 1:90 pm

•LOOK WHAT THE LORD HAS DONEI•
~~~~~ eelebau Mr~ tt,t

for

NURSERY AND·
CHILDREN'S CHI:JRCH
PROVIDED FOR ALL
· SERVICES
•
3773 George Creek Rd•.
Gallipolis, OH~
446-8613

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u tDOrth ahtJ time!

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GALLIPOLIS ·-. Betty Conkle, 920 FOUrth Avenue, Gallipolis,

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Blaze destroys
i~~~' .~rs ......r
i

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RUTLAND - A garage ,and .
vehicle4 in it owned by Alex

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HOLZER HEALTH
HOTLINE

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The Answers You Need ...
As Close As Your Phone!

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JODO Bi{chfiolli-AM!·~I!III•IIII.~

1Ro'ad, Rutland, was destroyed by ..
jfue Friday morning. · ·
.
, The Rutland Fire Department
!was caUed to the scene at 9:46 am.
A deparunent spokesman said that
the t"tre started in the rear of the
garage near a wood burner and
moved swiftly through the garage.
, Rutland had 11 fu:eflghters on
:me scene and three trucks, plus an
.emergency squad, and also
' :received assistance from Pomeroy,
I"'~
· ~tin three firefighters with ·
The garage loss was set at
S,OOO. A 1983 Chevrolet and a
985 Honda three-wheeler were .
lso destroyed. There was light
damage to a garden tractor, accord~ng to the report.
• Rutland firefighters also
sponded at 6:43 a.m. Friday to an
utomobile accident on State Route
43 investigated by the Ohio State
ighway Pauol. Ed Daniels, the
Slrl ver, was taken by the Rutland
tquad to Veterans Memorial Hospilal for treatment. Fi\le firefighters
ere on the scene.

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LAWPHOY.

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yrd says he will
f'bury" corps
I
;ob cuts plan

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If you quaiHy, Peoples Bank will
setup a line of Cled~ of up 10
75% olthe appraised value of
your home less the outstanding
mortgage balance. For example:

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
obert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., said Friy he hopes to " bury" a plan to
~r:·: the U.S. Army Corps of

Ji1

l

10 lffecled.

: B)'fd. chairman of lhe Senate
&amp;oaroDrillions Committee, said he
~ to it the plan dies in
'• "AI chlirmlll•I will he ready to
lilly tbiJ popoal.'' said Byrd:
'

Appraised Value

75% of appraised value

and cut 2,600 jobs.

yrd l8ltcd Leoti Panetta. director_ of tbe OffiCe of Management
lliCI BQdaet, to eliminate money for
p mtructuriog, which B)'l'd said
+-td COli about $200 million.
· L11t November, the Corps
nnounced tbe restructuring, tiS
in SO years. Under the plsn, a
ia.DDII office in Cincinnati would

..

4'12 HP; 21" Cut
Self-Propelled Mulching ·Mower
•2-cycle engine

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$100,000

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$75.000

Peoples lkmk WID waive dosing C0S1s
on Equ1L1ne undl Aprll15, 1993.

Less balance of mortgage $40.000
'Potential line of CledH

•Coriverta to lldi dllcharge

$35,000

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The Store With "All Kinds of Stuff" for Pets,
Stables, Large and Small Animals,

.

Lawns and Gardens.

.

•ILLNESS OR INJURY • PHYSICIAN REFERRAL

.

•HEAL:TH CARE OPPORTUNITIES • SUPPORT GROUPS

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.R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply Co.
399 W. Main

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•5-year limited warranty on ignition 191770

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992·2164

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MAIIITTA . ATIIIJIII

37HI"

Pomero
(\\

,3-7761

IILfll ·

03-7516

LOWI1L

MIDDLifOIT

"'-U69

m-6661

NILION,ILLI Til PLAIN' TID OIIILY

755-1955

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J76-ms

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Pomeroy-Middleport GallipoliS, OH Point Pl81unt, wv

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February 7, 11193

long the JljVer

Man says former wife has made .Jife miserable
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP)
- A lawyer said Fridsy he left his
four children with a baby sitibr
before he went on his honeymoon
in Florida, noc home alone with no
food as his former wife corucnds.•
John Jacltson said his former
wife, Diane DeWeese, was trying
to get. ~im in trouble by,calling
authonues.
"She carefully planned and
coordinated this whole thing,"
Jacksoo aaid in a·telephooe inter·
view from his home, about 25
miles south of Toledo.
·
Three of the youths - a 9-yearold boy, 13-year-old girl and a lS·
year-old girl - are Mrs. Jackson's
children. The fourth, a 15-year-old
GREW UP NEAR CHURCH • Bessie Jackson once wrote
girl, is Jackson's daughter with Ms.
about ber recoUectlons ofJII'owinK up near Bethel Baptist Cburcb
DeWeese.
(Morgu TOWDsblp Ia GaiUa County). Her father and Jll'&amp;ndfatber
JackSon said Ms. DeWeese
cailed police and told them "all the
• were pastors··or tbe cburcb.
·
children had been abandoned with
no food and supervision, which
wasn't the case.
"I had someone who was supposed to be spending the night
here. I'm not disclosing the 118!De
I
By JAMES SANDS
thenubbincom'and scrubbypotatoes of that 'person at this point in time
flfS; the best of of everything was because I don't want them to be
Special Correspondent
sav"ed
· 'or lasL"
hounded."
GALLIPOLIS-In 1961 French
"
I 1c
d h'
'f B da
Ci PressofGalli lis . iedabook . "Mother would paper our house
ac son an IS wt e, ren '
en30ea,"Bomln~v!;!.ltwasan with newspapers. The mice were so left Jan. 28 for SL ~burg, Fla.
auiO~phy ofBessieJactson who numerous it was hard to keep them . ~ returned to Bowling Green on
was boin in 1898
·
fromcuuingthroughthepaper. They • =·aaid the Jacksons left $5
inGalliaCbunty's
wouldgetbet~eenthe_pspcrandlogs for each child. They also said they
Morgan town·
and start thetr gnawmg, The way didn'tleave a telephone number or
ship. Mrs. Jackson
mother tried to lcill them was 10 take address where they could 'be
relaled in her book
matches and cut them up in the paste reached.
as
po ;·~ ."
sodes
from
her
epi._
.
-·
own life as well as
Sometimes Mrs. Miller would jab
stories handed
a fork through the paper at the mice.
down to her about
Once she jabbed a snake. Asnake did
in fact enter the cabin on another
her ancestorS.
Bessie writes about her maternal occasion. It feU on Bessie as she was
grandmother Madeline Scruggs: "Sbe sleeping. She was unharmed.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ A
was born a slave on a plantation in
"Now I am going to teD you about former official.of the u.s. DepanFnmklin County, Virginia. The year a pet pig that we bad. We raised hiJ!I ment of Health and Human Ser·
Was probably 1858 or 1859 as mother on the boule. He grew and grew wti1 vices .has been appointed to direct
'CJjd not know the exact date. My • his weight ~ tipping 200 pounds.
the Ohio Department of Human
s
·
told me that grandmother But still we played with him and
eT.;:.ld
Tompkins, 43, wUI
.would run away from her slave petted him not knowing that be was
owners, but with the help of their angry and did not care tp be ~ replactake James.C. Conrafd,thwDeho.will
.flloodhounds they would always fmd any longer. He ~ at me Wtth his
e over as ~tm: 0 e . pan:her and bring her back to the planta; long tusks protmding on the outside ment of Administralive Servtees.
Tompkins' appointment by Gov.
· &amp;n."
of his mouth, pushed me down and
·
· h · ff · ·
G
; • Once they found her in a tree. She roll~ me over into a ditch; ~ W':15
eorge Vom!&gt;vtC '!I e ccuve
given a hard whipping. Another making headway ~ plunge nght1n Maroh 1. He will be patd $89,419 a
·lime they cut her legs and allowed the after me.when my siSter, Mabel,heaid Year' the governor's office said Fri•
'bloodhounds to lick the wounds. This my cries and f!l$hed .to my rescue. dsyConrad has 6een interim mrecwookl make the hounds bloodthirsty She grappled with him and told me to tor of the Human Services Depan·
~thai would help them tJack down get up as quickly as I could and run. menL· ·
·
l}tberrunaway slaves. Madeline later But you koow it was hard for me to
Tompkins fOrmerly was assis1iwrie4 John Bvans who was part believe that our pet pig had venge- tant secretary for managementbudCiienJiiicitilnc!i•n .:
ance in his heart. From that dsy until get and chief .financial officer for
'' Besile'spalsnatgrandfatbcrwas time for him to be slaughtered, he the federal Health and Human SerPoweuMillcr:wboatage l7mnolfto was a dangerous hog."
vices DepartmenL
~ Teim.alongwith Wyatt
Since, Rev. Milia: had to ~eric
He also has served within the
l'!fosby to join the Union army in away from thefarmfor-daysataume, department as counselor 10 the
J86t. Powell was later a Baptist the mother and children were "home deputy ~ and assistant aecj!linister at seve¢ of the area Mri· alone". At times they wert tormented rerary filr planning and evaluation.
can-American Baptis.t churches in· by a prowler who tried to get in the
"I am
pleasedto to
eluding two no longer in operation • house. Tbe MiUers had two vicious Amo1d
Tompkins
thewelcome
adminis·
JJoke Pall:h in Greenfield Township dogs(oneabloodhOWld) butitseemed tration," Voinovich said. "He
and Pleasant Hill in Green Town- the dogs were never home at the right clearly has· the experience and
ilhip. Bessie's paternal grandmother time; B~t once the prow_ler and the knowledge we need to effectively
was a very religious woman and was dogsarnvedattbesame umeand tile lead the Human Services Depanbrten heard to say "I done heard from two dogs Chased the prowler around ment' '
Conmd, who had been adntinis·
1\eavenlOday!"or"Ihavegotonmy the house several times be£ore the
trator
of the Ohio Bureau of
shoes!"
prowler1etoutaiO!)g blood-curdling
yell. He took off through the dsrk·
· ness with the dogs on his tail. He
' never bolhered the Millers again but
' 'llld ootliei"Oihei families:". .. '
James Sands Is a special correspondentoftheSundayTimes-SenLOS ANGELES (AP) - TV
AboulhcrcarlyyeaiSMrs.Jackson tine!. His address is: 65 Willow cameras are banned in federal
linote:"l was born in a typical log Drive, Springboro OH 45066
court, so the second trial of four
. cabin lltat £ather built himself. It
police officers in the videotaped
. contained one bedroom, kitchen, and Found guilty
beating of Rodney King will be
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -One of covered .the old-fashioned way sitting room . The snow would sift
'lthrough the chinks of our little log four inmates accused of plotting to with sketch psds and notebooks.
~'Cabin, but we did not care, for we kill a guard and escape from the
Jury selection began last wee.k
Lucas County jail was found guilty in the federal civil rights trial of the
~were happy and carefree."
white officers videotaped beating
·: Bessie.tokl about how everything of violating jail rules.
Elijah
Smith,
43,
was
found
King in March 1991 after a car
~n the kill:ben would freeze. They
'burned wood for heaL On their land guilty Friday of attempting to chase.
possessing dangerous conSome observers and cominunity
'
kept cows, pigs, chickens and escape,
traband, commiuing 811 act that leaders say a lack of TV coverage
!ho1ises and had a large garden.
threatens jail security and damag· in the federal case could prove
It was her mother's practice of ing or destroying ptopeny.
worrisome.
''We used

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~imes-~tadi~l

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·Section

~ Born

-in Poverty' a journal
bf Gallia woman's life

Ms. DeWeese notifled authori·
ties that no O!le was watching the .
children after visiting the girl last
week. The teen-agel' is now staying ·
with Ms. DeWeese in Columbus.
The Wood County Human Services Department placed the other

Former federal official
to join Voinovich cabinet

:mother

-was

No cameras to be
.
allowed at trial

~-K-EN-~--LE~R~D~O~D~GE~---------­

THE KANAWHA VALLEY'S FIRST DODGE WHOLESALE OUTLET

. Cj)~ . ....

EVERY NEW "VEHICL

over
Ice

. four cbDdren Wltb a babysitter befQfe be went •
on bls bone:JIDOOD ID Florida, not home alone "
wltb no food as his.former wife contends. (AP)

HOME ~LONE PARENTS • Attorney John
Jackson opens bt.s .r.efrlgerator In Bowling
Green, Oblo, Friday. Jackson says be left bis

Employment Services, moved to
the Human Services Department
late last year after Terry Wallace
resigned as its director.
Wallace depaned after a repon
b)"ii!e state inspector general criticized hiring practices in the depsnme~spector General David Sturtz
aaid last October that the depansed ·
h' ·
, ment u
unproper ~g proce·
dures and granted ps)' nuses to top
administrators at a ume of budget
cu18·
The investigation found that
proper, procedures weren't fol·
lowed m the. emploY)!lent of.~
peopl~ de~!'lbed as must-~trea.
~uch mdmduals are promtsed ,a
JOb and referred by the _governor s
off!ce. the depsnment director or a
leB!Jia_tor. .
. ·
. '~ omovtch satd lie neve~ us~
his mfluence to get f'r!ends hired m
the department, wh1ch employs
about l,SOO people .and .h~s an
annuill budget ~ Bbout S7 billion.

.three children in a foster home.
Jackson said be found out the
children had been placed in a foster·
home one dsy after they left. He
said they didn't return right away
because authorities told them thele
was nothing they could do until the
hearing.
"We were told we wouldn't be
allowed to see them or talk to .
them," be said.
A bearing Friday oo wbelher the
children should be rewmed to the
Jacksons was postponed until Feb.
25 by Juvenile Coun Judge Roben
Pollex.
Prosecutor Alan Mayberiy said
he hasn't decided whether child
endangering charges would be
filed.
A telephone call to Ms.
DeWeese's heme wasn't answered
Fridsy.
Jackson said he and Ms.
DeWeese have ~t\ fighting for

custody of their 15-year-old daughter for months.
•
' He said Ms. DeWeese was in '
Bowling Green on Jan. 28 and
decided to visit her daughter.
"'
"As soon as our car went out of
the driveway, she barged into the
house. took my daughter and left."
I acks.on said.

.,

PASSPORT
DD I.D,
PHOTOS
s•••u~s

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECotiD AYE.

GIWPOLI OH.

(SU BW ~t·u:~)
SUNDAY FAMILY MEAl, DEAl,

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CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDMON
(IDcludlilg ~mestlc ud F~ Snbsldlarles) .

·The Ohio Valley Bank
Federal Reserve District No.4 •
of Gallipolis, Gallla County, In the State ol Oblo at tbe close of business on December Jl, 1992.
'

:.\SSETS

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a. Noninterest-bearing balances and currency md coin ........................................ ............................6,513,000.00
b. Intenost·bearing bli111ces............................................................................................................... 3,011,000.00
S&lt;eurilies ....................;............................. ...........................................................................................81,U2,000.00
Federal funds sold &amp; securities purchased under agreements ·
to resell in domestic otrtceS of !be bank &amp; of its
Edae &amp; Apeementsut.idiories &amp; in IBFs:
' Federal funds sold. ...............................-......................................................................................14,100,000.00
Lo1111 and lease finan~ing receivables:
Loons and leases, net of unoamod income ...................................................169,411,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan111d lease losses .....................................................1,701,000.00
Loant llld leues, net or wteamod income,
.
aDowanc:e, and reserve ....:...............:....................................................................- .................:.... 167,710,000.00
Premises and riXed assets (including capitalized Jeases) ........................:.................................... ;........ .S.33S.OOO.OO
Other real estate owned ..................................................................................................... ........................ .21,000.00
buangible useu ..................................................................................................................- ............... 130,000.00
Other assets .... .......................................................................:.... :........................................................... 2,869,000.00
· Total wets ......................................................................................................................... - ........280,801,000.00
Total assets ond losses deferred pursuan't to l2 U.S.C. 1823(j)............................................. _ .....280,801,000.00

Cash and blianc:es due from depository inslitutionJ:

I

. LI:.\BILITIES
Deposits:

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L In domestic of!ices ......................................................................................................................249.S3~000.00
(lj Noninterest·beoring..............:..............................:.... ,...........................24,422,000.00
(2) lnletest-belring................................................................................ :.. 215.114,000.00
FoderBl funds purehased and securities sold 'under agreements
to Rpurchase in domestic om... of the bank&amp; of its
Edge &amp; Agreement subsidioriea, &amp; in IBFs:
·
: ·
·
S.ecurities sold under agreements to Rpurchase ......................................... :............................. v ....... A.SS2,000.00
Other bomiwed money...: ..;........... :......................................................... :.............................................4,11S,OOO.OO
Other Habilities. ............................. :..............................................:.............:.......................................... 2,377,000.00
Total HabiHties ...............................................................:........................................... ........................ 260,580,000.00

.

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Civilians are not allowed.in lite the Medical Mission is the only were 70 dilierent uperallve proce·
camp, said Dr. Simon, so security fprm of medical treatment they dures.
was definitely apparent. Th'e mis' receive, putting some treatable
"We operate on those most· in
, GALLIPOLIS - "We are so sion joined the station hospital's cases in advanced stages.
need," said Dr. .Simon. "Tbe hard
: lucky."
·
lWO top commanders, both having
Following the first day of part is that not everyone can be
, That was lite comment made by six doctors and four nurses under pstient screenings, many of which helped." The doctors worjced until
;_Lydia Simon, wife of Gallipolis each one-respectively, who also are made ·b)' local physicians prior all the supplies were exhausted, he
to the miss1on's arrival, the 8 a.m. ad4¢.
urologist Dr. Mel P. Simon, as the assisted in the mission.
•l:ouple looked the many photos of
Upon ·their arri.val, the ladies to ntidnight dsys begin. Of the 150
· Dr. Simon recalled one panicu''their recent trip to the Philippines were assigned lO the women's offi· patients seen and scree~ed, there lar patient who had an advanced.
;with Medical Mission '92.
cers' barracks and the men were
Through sponsorship from the directed 10 the male officers' bar·
&lt;Philippine Surgeoos Charity Foun- racks.
.
.dation; Pangisinan Medical Aid · "The barracks were doriniiO~
~istance Foundation, (PMAAF), style and without any hot water,'
liSociety of Philippines Surgeons of said Dr. Simon. ;·our wives
~ merica, and local contriblltions, wouldn't talk to us for a couple -of
, :much needed medical and·surgical days."
·,
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ll!!elp .is given to ~coplc in th~
"There was no privacy," ·said
~ imons '· homeland of the PhiliP" •Mn:&gt;Simoil a Jelistered'.lltmewho
Iiles. . ,
,
·
was in charic o( food for the doc·
The Gallipolis-based PMAAF, tors. ''We luiCI a pig~ in bact and
founded by Di-. Simon in 1987, achickenCOOpinfronL"
Tbe barraCts were not the only
•allows tax relief' to potential
&amp;rus. Making local contributions things with minimal provisions,
~ the mission were.Holzer Medical according to the Simons, the station
Center, the Gallipolis DeveiOptRCn· hospital in which the doctors
tal Center, Veterans Memorial worked consisted of 30-40 beds
tJ:ospital, and Pieal!ant Valley Hos- and three operating suiies. The
.
suites had never been used since its
pital, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
: Dr. Simon is head of the mem- establishment, they added.
bership/credentials of Philippine
Getting to work
:0. urgeons Charity in Chicago, Ill .,
As part of the year-long preparajuld is among the board of 'over- lions, a 20 by 20 foot shipment of
nors of the Society of Philippine supplies were sent .to the site con~urgoons of America.
sisting of anestllesia ·and x-ray
;_ A member of the Gallipolis machines, and-other medical necesKotary Club, Dr. Simon said the sities.
mission's trip was coordinated
"The station hospital is DOl
lbrough fellow Rotarian Dr. Delfin equipped for Sl!.l.'histicated operaP. Santos, a member of the Rotary lions," said Dr. Stmon.
j::lubofMorong.
The area where the mission
j
The mlasl~
group was located was much like
•· Eleven doctors and the suppon an Indian reservation in the United
kroup consisting of five women, States, he added.
imived for the firSt segment of lite
"If the Dumagats need surgery,
mission, from Dec . 1-4, in the they are sent to a government hospplands of Tanay, in 'tlie Province pital," be said "Many can't afford
of Rizal, 70 kilometers southwest the trip to the hospital much less
f f Manila.
the hospital CQSI$,"
, Serving primarily the Dumagats,
The AFl' has general practition,
aboriginal people of the mountain ers but no surgeons. The Walter
l&gt;f Sierra Madre, the mission group Reed Hospital of the Armed Forces
was in Camp Capinpin, located of the Philippines is two hours
f;here the Ju(lgle Fighters of the away and about 20 to 30 minutes
1\rmed Forces of the Philippines by helicopt,er, said Dr. Simon.
COMPLETE TREATMENT • Members of the Dnmagat tribe
(AFl') are trained. For this reason, ·
Nearly ISO Dumagats, ranging
ilre
plctnred ID the station hospital In Tanay following tbelr medi·
• military bus was sent to pick the in age from infantJ to the elderly,
cal
treatment.
The ftrst Medical Mission Was taken in 1983. Medi·
croup up and take them to their were waiting for the mission group
w
Mission
'92
was tbe first lllll'glcal mission taken to lbe PbiUp·
barracks.
at the station hospital . For many,
pines.
By KRJS COCHRAN
Times-Sentinel Starr

~.~_

FOOTLONGS

· WELCOME • The welcome buner was out
as members of Medical Mission '92 arrived in
Naga City, one boor by air 1011tb of Manila. The
group stayed in Naga from Dec. 6-10. Pictured

wltb their fellow missionaries are Dr. Mel P. :
Simon, (kneeling center front), and his wife, ·
Lydia, (standing fifth from left).
·
'

!Gallipolis.couple among Medical Mission '92

... .

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Pictured are Gallipolis Dr, Mel P. Simon, (sec·
ond fl:om right), foUowlng tbe presentation of a
resolutloo by tribe Chieftain Zoilo P. Gerones,
(right), on behalf of tbe tribe members that were
served by the doctors. ,

.

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ANY 3 REGULAR

ENJOY DINNER • Following four days of
)lard work members of Medical Mission '92 and
the Dumagat tribe sit ~ether dm:lng a dinner
party held in bonor or_the mission members.

EQUJTY .CAPIT:.\~

Common stock (No. of Sluores L Authorized .................. S61,740
.
·
b. 0ut1Widln&amp;.................561,740)....................................................... S,617,000.00
Swplus (eiu:lude an swplus relatod to preferred ltoclt). .................... :............... ;............................:~....9,71S,OOO.OO
LUndivided profits and e~pitil reaervea. ..........................................................................................5,100,000.00 .
b. LESS: Net~D~Jealized lo11 on morketal&gt;le equity JOCUriliea. .............................................................lli,OOO.OO
Total equity capital...........................................:.....................................:............................................20,221,000.00
Total equity capital and Jouea deferred
.
.,
pursuanl to .12 U.S.C. 1823(j) ............... ............:.............. ................................................................ .20,221,000.00
Totallilbitilies, limiled-life preferred stock; 111d equity c:apital,
· 1
and Jouea deferred pursUIIIt IO 12 U.S.C. 1823(j):....~........................ .'......................................... .280,801,000.00

•
cancerous tumor in his stomach.
"He was slowly suffocating to
death," he said. "He. was told he
would die without surgery, and that
.he could die during surgery."
. Despite the grim odds, the
patient told the doctors he wanied
to have surgery.
"He survived," Dr. Simon aaid
smiling. The tumor doctors
removed ranged in size from a
grapefr.uit to a watermelon, he
added.
The patients are not the only
. ones helped by the Medical Mis·
sion, said Dr. Simon.
Since the local doctors are sta·
tioned in the area, they already
know the patients, he said. While
getting lite patienrs read)', members
of the Medical Mission and the surgical residents work together in
diagnosising and treating the vari·
ous cases.
However, contacts willt the surgical residents are still continued
by the Society of Philippine Surgeons in America.
·
Initiated personally by Dr.
Simon, one or two of the,best surgical residents from the Philippines
are brought to the Uniied States to
visit lite major hospitals in Ameri·

ca.

''The society now sees the need
for this program and provides funding," said Dr. Simon, who began
the projecl by sponsoring a surgical
resident with his own money.
Successful mission
On the final evening of the mission group's trip to Tanay, mem-

bers of the Duniagat tribe treated
llie group to a dinner part)' at lite
officer's club, complete wtth honors and awards.
.
Tribal Chieftain Zoilo ~
Gerones and members of the tri~
presented their special guests wit\1 .
a resolution expressing their appreciation to them. Those who coulll
· write signed their name, and ~
who couldn't made thumb marks te
seal their approval, said Dr. Simon:
"They are very respectful," tiie
couple agreed. ''The smiles on thefl'
faces makes all the hard wor~
worth iL"
Once the doctors' work wa~
done in 'fanay, they traveled onto
Bicol Regional Hospital in Nag~
City for the second leg of their mis&lt;
sioo from Dec. 6-10. The third and
final mission, from Dec. 14-11.
was in SL Martin de Pom:s Chari!)'
Hospital in San Juan MelrO, Manil
k
.
"
"Mter ever~tng is s.aid an'il
done, we come
to the Sl8leS in
our respective communities willl
the belief and conviction that w
have not forgonen our poor and
less privile$ed fellow humap
beings in sptte of time and dis 1
tance," said Dr. Simon.
"As we call it in Rotary, 'Ser.
vice Above Self,'" he added.
',
Anyone wanting to make a COfl·
tribution to Medical Mission mu'
their contribution to the PMA~
in care of Dr. Simon.
'
"We've already received the g9
11head for Medical Mission '93,'"
said Mrs. Simon.
.~

.,

Photos provided by
Dr. Mel
' and
Lydia Simon
i

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MEMORANDA: Amounll oniiWidlq u of Report D•te:
·
.
·
Standby letun of crediL Total ............................. .'.........................................;............. ~ ........................469,000.00

--

I. lhe undersi&amp;ned ollicer, do hereby decln that thiJ Report of ea.\dilion hu been prepared in conf011111111:e
with official instrucli0111 and ia lrUe and correot to tho but of my kllawt.dae and belief.
·

· Milia• B.llogl

,

v.... Preoldonl ind Comroller, January 26, 1993

We, the underslpld cllreclon. IIIMt tho of lhll Report of Condition IIIII declare that it hal been
euminod by us and to tho boot of our kllawlod&amp;e IIIII belief llld blo been peporod in CIWDI'IItiiiCe With officio!
instructiOIII IN! ia aue IIIII cotnl!lL .
.
Keith R. Bnndebarry
Robert H. l!uanan - Dlnclcin
Thomu B. W111111111

Stale of Ohio, County of Oallia, u:
·.
·
•
, Swom to INI1Ublcribod before me thil 27th day of Jm~J~rY, 1993 ond l.henby cenify thallllllnolan
ollicer or direc:utr of thlo bank. .
.
Cindy H. J~1on, No'-J Pab&amp; ,
Cindy H. ~ Nowy Public, State of Ohio; My~ llpinl Moroll 26, )996.
"

•
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,,
r

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I'·

l I

·M ir

after

•

-.. Dr. Mel sa.-. (lltlrd rr._ left), ud L,...
-ShiKMI,(INJek).
:

. TAKING A BREAK· .uterloliJIIoul of
I 'f1 ......
·• ...ell lleeded break. Smlbl fbr • ca•ra

qei'J, docton , _ MIIIIW M

·,

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�Ott Point Pleelllnt, WV

Rev. Arthur C. Lund ...
·elected to state office
'

GALLIPOUS - Rev. Anhur C.
Lund, dirccror of Q!~'lcy Services at Holzer Medtcal Cen1er,
waa recently elected Centtal District Repreaentative for the Ohio
"-ldl Care O!aploina AwriatiOil
(OHCCA) Bon of Dim:ton.
The OHCCA is the professional
cblplain's orpnjzatioo for tbettate
!If Ohio and an affilialed society of
the Obio Hospital Associltion. lt
bM a membership of 68 clenmlerIOIIS that serve full time in litalth
care institutions throughout the
state.
Rev. Lund received his B.A.
degree, Magna Cum Laude, from
Concordia College, Moorhead,
Minn., and his Master of Divinity
degn:e from Wartbury Theological
Seminary, Dubuque, Iowa. During
his reminary tnining, he seiYed an
internsht:.!o,Peter's Luiheran

-Chun:b,

Md.

.

VILLAGE FLORIST

o•.

Rio Grandt,
245-5671
Your ValentfM Be1Uf41111rter•!
ORDERS TAKEN ANYTIME!
Roses, Candy, Gifts, Valentlhe Cards
·
and Morel
Holiday Hours M·F 1Q..5; Sat. 11J..6

.

REV. ARTHUR C. LUND

He completed a SUinlller unit of
Clinkl1 Pastoral Education at Mas-

sachusetts General Hospital,
Boston, Mass •. Following graduation from W~~ill8r)', 'be sened four
years as JIIStDr of SL Paul's Lul!leran Chun:h, Pomeroy. During the
.I.OIBCI£UIHIIJUISa _.UCHD HYSELL
rear 1973-74, be completed an
internship in Clinical Pastoral Education at the Fallsview Mental
ne.tlb Center, Cuyahoga Falls. He;
began his wort as chaplain and
POMEROY - ·P It _.Gail
llolls Hyse1l will be a 1993 grad- director of chaplaincy services at
Hysell. I'
•.,. _. r z _. au: of Meigs. High School. the Holzer Medical Center on July
Toay c.diliD, a· s,
Rcy..,.. is 1 1989 graduate of 8,1974.
th
...
I"
Rev. Lund is a clinical member
»:ip HiP Scbool and is currently
m!.n~of.
"!
p
;
sed
with
Hc:rald
Oil
and
Gas
·----....a ir L o .. ; .
Da~ Hysell, 1D P
_.
Reynolds Jr~ - o f
A Jaly wedding is being
I
OtwUe
p.
GALLIPOLIS - Bernadine
Steinebrunner, Outreach w&lt;der for
the Gallia County Senior Citizens
Center will be laking applications
for the Home Energy Assistance
Program (HEAP) and the Golden
Buckeye Card Program a1 the
Bossard Memorial Library Tuesday
from 10 a.m. 10 2 p.m.
HEAP, a federal program, is
designed to assist low-uicome families meet the rising cost o~ home
heating and a household may qualify for this assistance if the total
household income falls within the
income guidelines.
' For example, income in a oneI
l'erson household cannot exceed
~ 10,215 (f~ each additional member add $3,570).
Applicants must bring proof of
income, their most recent beating
bill and the socialiiCCIIity numbers
of everyone in the household.
To qualify for a Golden Buckeye Card, a person must be 60
years of age or older and bring
•
EMPLOYilE OF 1BE IIOINIB- ...---.Baxter "riobt) bas
beal · rt t 'a6eF
yE ak;a7.kn &amp;~tPm~est
.Care C........ S. is au.
' b • ••,. Nwa .....weds on the
skilled
sr.
._
ltula
I~ Jiila, St '-ber 1990
Ka.. - ._.,
~
~

CR,AIG HARDWICK and LORI TOPE

Tope-Hardwick
GALLIPOLIS - Thomas E.
Tope and Dr. and Mrs. E. John
Strauss, Jt ., a.l l of Gallipolis,
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter. Lori Beth Tope, to Craig
:Fitzgerald Hardwick, son of Dr.
•and Mrs. C. Patrick Hardwick of
:Wbeaton, m.
; Ms. Tope graduated cum laude
•in 1991 from Ohio Slate Universi;!)', where she m!ljored in Communications and minored in Marketing
,and Japanese. She was a member
:of several national academic hono'Taries and .the social sorority of
:Alpha Xi Delta. She is presently

-•

m.

,pyde Casto, and Mr. and Mrs.
;George Barnette, all of Gallipolis,
•announce the engagement and
:approaching marriage of their chit-

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h'i

,....

Applica~ions

7

Mr. Hardwick is a 1990 graduate-of Ohio State University where
he double majored in Marketing
and Finance and was a member of
Phi Kappa Tau social fraternity. He
currenlly holds the position of
senior trust administtator with Continental Bank in downtown Chicago.
A May 15 wedding is planned at
St. Clements Catholic Church,
Chicago.

Casto-Barnette

r'

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:'J
'.0: GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.

.•

7

employed with the banking investment firm of Griffin, Kubik,
SIevens &amp; Thompson in Chicago,

dren, Christy Lynn Casto and Eric
William Barnette.
An open ceremony will be held
S~nday, Feb. 14 at 2:30 p.m. at
Elizabeth Chapel.

Names in the 'news

=
-.

to be taken·
P!OOf of .age (i.e. driver's license;
· birth certificate, etc.). Pasons 18 or
older may qualify if they are completely and totally disabled and
they must bring proof of age and
disabili!Y papers.

Singer says friends
are never far away" :
NEW YORK (AP) -It's been

two years since her band memberS
died in a plane crash, but Reba
McEntire says those departed
friends are never far from her.
·
''7 don ' t know where we go
when we die. I don't know if we
become guardian angels, but I feel
their presence an awful lot " the·
37-year-old, country siilger says in
the March tSSUe of Ladies· Home
Journal. "There are times I
wouldn't be surprised to find them
standing beside me."

whom are living with problems' this
country is dealing with - problems like poveny, lack of health
care and racial tensions," JenninRs
~.
.
said.
;; "Everything I do is. new and
In addition to a "town meet. fascinating again,•• Ander$()n told ing" audience of children in the
8,000 real estate agents Thursday. White j:Iouse, youngsters at televione vlll.,e aatll
.....,. is pio:laa tit receiving her
;"Life is a joy.''
· sion studios around the country
Confidential Services:
awal'illnao,.IGa
.(WQ._AwJw--:Nw- I' .
. • Anderson, 45, said he has been will participate by satellite. Young
Birth Control
:Spending his time working on a viewers at home also will be able
V.D.
Screening
:book due out this summer and is to join in.
Cancer Screening
.~tying to use his celebrity status to
The special will also feature
iKtvance such causes as Improving Jaleel White, who plays the nerdy
Pregnancy
Testing
.
education.
Steve Urkel on the ABC comedy
;· He has had informal ralks about "Family Matters." White, in charA1'HENS - All h piGSliding itt scale. No one refUHd s~rYkes lttcant of Jnallllty lo pay1
;joining the U.S. delegation to the acter. will visit Capitol Hill and gram ·sponsoR~~ by IK A•h:as die AIDS Tal Force will bring
--~lhk -strained personnel to
·United Nations but said he doesn't congressional leaders to illustraie AIDS Task Faroe is die SW 7 n
laFdt bits aDd other community
:know if his schedule will allow him how a bill becomes law.
Bureau, wbid! &gt;11iwa ., lllaiiiiiM
.
.to serve.
awareness .o flhe 5ICIJjte of6c ADll5
It is eg· 'td thal the speaking
Anderson was taken hostage
LOS ANGELES (AP) ..nons reach about 1,500
while working for The Associated Divorce lawyer Marvin Mitchelson ~ bodt •*" , ... !tal- .piP•
ado p. For more inforMIDDLEPORT
GAWPOLIS
Press as chief Middle East corre- "spent money like wild(rre" as he
The :!ilpe*m; B
- rl •llfioe Rl_.ding, the Speakers
.spondent in Beirut. He was held was ho~nded by creditors, said a students. cOt
509 5. 3rd Ave.
414 Setold Ave.. 21d Floor
•1
_, • ..t P
w 1D sdledule a speaking
'nearly seven years before his prosecutor in his tax fraud trial.
HlV-infeacdiufii7 7 ...., __ ~E. CQOract the Athens
992:5912
446-0166 '
release 14 months ago. ·
Mitchelson is charged with tax el around • •
a
&lt;aiD
Ptitllll
AIDS
Task
FOrte
at
(614)
5928:30 to 5:00 Moldoy,Friclay ·':30 to 5:00 Mo•da.,Frlday
: He is engaged to Madeline fraud for allegedly failing to repon prc$CJ!dMJi&lt;w oa die ADll5 ..._., qn_
.... -~8:30 to 12 Satwday
:Bassil. Their daughter, Sulome, nearly $2 million on his income tax educaticm.• 0
-., . . . dwd
Closed
'Dt:
AIDS
Tast.
Force
is
an
edu)'lias born while he was in captivity. returns from 1983 to 1986. If con- groups.
~·"-'
0osec1 n.rsc~a,
aliaa ..t ditecl care agency servvicted,
he
could
be
sentenced
to
12
· ALSO: Jockson. Cltesoptokt, Athens, ChUcotht, Lop &amp; McArtllur.
"We willlhttspclla.._,.., illc p
IJj Qbio,
": LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP)- years in prison and fined $1 mildo gt!)UJ! ..
i t - k dnaa"t
Education, cities and the federal lion.
have to be an ofticit4 •&amp; ·.,.
'budget deficit are the nation's three
Prosecutors alleged that don,• said AIDS TIISiti'GKle Diia:most pressing and unaddressed Mitchelson took a $24,000 deduc- tor Jeanne r._ h
problems, columnist George Will tion for "professional fees" for
A·s1de from &amp;iwia&amp; &amp;cacnJ
:said.
payments to a girlfriend and over- speeches. &lt;~be Spi
B
CM
· He was in Lawrence on Friday stated fees he paid to assisting gear ,a ·p resMtllioa 10 a q; ·
to receive a journalism award from attorneys by more than $700,000.
Health care in the comfort of y~mr own _home. That's
tion ~s specific...,..., Ia erM«M•
ihe William Allen White Founda:tion.
what the. Home Health Service . of Veterans Memorial
· Will on education: "We are, in
a sense, a nation in danger, suictly
Hospita1 is all about.
speaking, of losing our mind .
"School days are too short. The
The hospital's service has grown in leaps and bqunds
movement away from testing srandatds in the schools is a mistake."
over the 'years. In 1972, the service made 82? h~me visits.
He told a University of Kansas
audience that the nation is experi ·
In 1982:~ it made 5,149 visits and in 1992, the service '
encing something without precedent in urban history: "broad-scale
made 29,S40 visits to homes of residents·. Our Honie
social aggression in the midst of
DONa
rising prosperity."
·
HeaJth Service Department prides itself on providing
HowAhut•Be••
• WiU, whose syndicated column
appears in about 4~0 newspapers,
care. .
'
•
said the "professional political
•
class loves' the defiCit and there is
Vala:tfiN'•~
H you feel you have the need ~or the Home Health
no hard motive to cut it
. LAS VEGAS (AP) - Former
:hostage Terry Anderson said he has
;adjusted to freedom and is trying to
;act his fiancee to set a wedding

7

aft...._

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ct-=•;~~•'Y•_=• qss-:•:;::::r~

Athens AIDS TaskForce
sponsors Speakers Bureau
7

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Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••
.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO .

a

HEALTH CARE AT HOME

•as

Instead of •

•

l

.'
•

••rrs,

TannlntS.,.,...,...

'

When you buy 1218SS1ons

NEW YORK (AP) - President .
Clinton will appear with ABC
news anchorman Peter 'Jennings on
a live children's television show
(rom the Wl)ite House.
The 90-minute special, •'President Clinton: Answering Chililrc:n's Questions," will be broad·
cast Feb. 20 at II :30 a.m. on ABC,
pte nctwat said Friday. ·
• "We're taking the president up
on his promise to stay in touch with
the Americ:an people and to contin·
ae the dial~ he began during the
campaign, ' Jennings said in a
ll8felllellt.
: "And who better to begin with
lhan America's youlh, many of

r

2 FREE! First 30 cuslton-.

.

quality

Semce of Veterans Memorial, call 992-3231 or 992-2104. ,.
Referrals may be made by physicians, .hospitals, family
members,.friends and agen~ies.

E ADDED

VmRANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ..
,

I

115 E. M..tal Drive

'"

t'

YlCQf[liSI'l109{S

of the Association for Clinical Pastoral Education, a member of the'
College of Chaplains and the Ohi!!:
Healthcare Cluiplains Association:
He pteviously served on· the Continuing Education Committee~ of
the Ohio Health Care Chaplains
Association and as a niember of the
Clersy Advisory Commiltee for the
Ohio Atnerican Cancer Society.
Rev. Lund and his wife, Corrine, is an art inslructor in the Gallipolis City School system, have a
daughter, Rachael, a junior at the
University of Rio Grande. ·

Hysell-Reynolds ·

•

WI Will Be OPEN 08 SUNDAY, VAI.INfiRI'S

••

••

~.and MRS, ERIC

FINE JEWElRY

(STEPHANIE) KEMPER

Varney-Kemper
GALLIPOLIS - Stephanie
Michelle varney and Eric Samuel
Kemper were united in marriage
Dee. 4, 1992, during a private ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. ·
and Mrs. Panny K. Varney of Bidwell. She is employed by Mr. and
Mrs. Brent Easlman of Gallipolis,
and McDonald's of Henderson,

MR. and MRS. HEATH (DIANE) lULL

Wolfe-Hill
RACINE- Diane Kay Wolfe whiteandredroses.
and Heath Ryan Hill we{e united in
The groom wore a blaek longmarriage on Jan. 2 at the Racine tailed tuxedo with a white vest and
.United Methodist Church with tie. The best man was Kevin
Dugan, cousin of the ~m. The
'Rev. Roger Grace officiaiing. ,
· • The bride is the daughter of groomsmen were Chns Baer and
:Mrs. Evelyn Hachmeister, Lenora, Corey Hill, brother of the ~·
•Kan., and the · late George They wore blaet tuxedos wtth red
Hachmeister. The groom is the son ties and cummerbunds.
·
of Mr. and Mrs.• Don Richard
The ringhearer·was Krte Wolfe,
(Mary) Hill, Letart Falls: He is .tile son of the bride. He earned a laceJirandSon of Mrs. Inez Hill, Racme, · trimmed white satin pillow,
and Mrs. Ethel Euler, Letart Falls.
designed by the bride, wh1ch reaThe bride was escorted by her lured red satin bows and pearls. He
brother, Larry Hachmeister, Good- wore a black ruxedo with a red rie
.land, Kan. 'She wore a white gown · and cummerbund.
fearuring a sweetheart neckline,
Rosalie Wrighl, sisler of the
·long tapered sleeves and a long bride, Houston, Texas, was soloist.
,~athedral train. The bodice and The pianist was Mary Louise
;sleeves were adomed with pearl Shuler. Lois Hachmeister, sister of
beads and iridescent $C!Iuins. The the bride, was the guest book attenbasque waist featured a decorative dant and passed out long stem red
~ow and fell into a full bouffant roses filled with binlseed.
~)cirt which flowed into a laceThe reception followed in the
trimmed cathedral train with lace church basemept featuring a stairinserts. She wore a fingertip veil way of.love cake prepllled:by Jocelhat she designed herself which · lyn Bailey. The cake featured a red
. f~atured a v-shaped band decorated flowing fountain below the cakes,
with siinulaled pearls in front and a staircases on both si&lt;t_es wilh the
pour in back. She carried a cascad- wedding party on them and.a bride
mg bouquet of white roses accent- and groom cake top that was used
~by red roses and pearls.
•
on the bride's parents'. wedding
' The· matrori of honor was Carol ; cake.
~ape. The bridesmaids were CarisThe bride is a 1985 graduate of
~ll Hill, sister of the 11room, and
Lenora High School, Lenora, Kan.,
Belh Hachmeisrer. Sister of the and a recent studentat Kansas State
· ~de. They wore red velvet dresses - University majoring in accounting.·
fitade by the bride which featured· She is employed with Kenneth Uu,
lOng tapered sleeves and a button- CPA, as a staff accountant
down front accented by goldThe groom is a 7986 graduate of
!flmmed pearl bu~tons. They car- Southern High ~ool and a 1990
rl.ed bouquets of .white and red graduate ~?f the University of Rio
ses. The flowerg1rl was Brittney Grande w1th a bachelor of sc1ence
ill. She wore a red velvet dress de.gree in business administration.
ade by the bride which featured a He is currently farming.
·
while lace collar and white lace
Following a honeymoon trip to
tluicoat. She carried a bouquel or · Kentucky, the couple is now resi4l
. ·
ing in Lerart Falls.
'

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) .and the risks of hypnosis, the hear- A Cadiz, Ohio, psychiatrist was ing examiner said.
reprimanded and fined $1,000 for
The board said Modi must have
using experimental hypnotherapy patients sign release forms if she
on a patient in Wheeling, the state uses "depossession or spirit
Board of ~~inc said Friday.
releasement therapy."
The board said Dr. Shakuntala
Modi· failed to get tlie coosent of a
patient who believed he was possessed by spirits.
The Board of Medicine said
Modi hypnotized four patients, one
of whom flied a eomplainL · •
...L,. L,
The patient who complained
was treated in June 1990, according
AnORNEY AT LAW
to a hearing examiner's report.
8 East Broad StrMt,
Modi failed to warn patients thal
sutteeoo
the process is questioned by many
Columbua,
Ohio
in the medical community, the
hearing examiner said. Modi
1-800-886-0LAW
should have explained the benefits
(1-800-886-0520)

Wedding policy

•

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
a)ld Mason 'counties as news and is
happy to publish wedding stories
and photographs without charge.
: However, wedding news mus!
ri)eet general standards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
~dition, the wedding must have
jaken place within 60 days prior to
ihe publication, ani\ may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
. ong the River must be received
y the editqriaJ department by
hursday, 4 p.m., prior to the date
~f publication.
:,• Those not making the 60 day
~eadline will be published during
'the daily paper as space allows.
... Photographs of either the. bride
:lir the bride and groom may lie
published with wedding stories if
·&lt;!esired. Photographs may be either
.black and white or good quality

Hi! This is
Karen (Davis) Cox,
hair stylist for 12
years; 5 years in the
Gallipolis ar~; 2
years at "Fantastic
Sllm's." I'd like to
inform my regular
customers that I am
now employed at...

~

;· BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP)
A three-judge panel Friday sen. !=ed a man to life in prison for
ping and strangling a 3-y•-old
y.
.
.: John Umbel, 36, of Bowling·
(lreen, showed no emotioa aa he
as sentenced in Wood County
ommon Pleas Court.
Umbel was eonvicled last month'
df auravated murder, kidnlpPtng
' I felonious IOXual peMirllion jn
death or Alex Lelrillntber.
He will i1e eliJible for parole in
)'em.
,
The ~~es made their 'decision
r 10
days olleldmony durthe scntcncina phase of
·
bel's trial. Th~::uld bavo
UmboiiO
·

~

,
t•renoed
~-

,,

/Jism1Jnd11 Dl1mDntl11
_;/'

1390 Eastern Ave.
And to invite you to stop in to see me
9-5 Monday-Saturday
Or Call for an Appointment 446-8922

SAVE

/

HUGE SELECTION OF •
•SOliTAIRES
'
•CLUSTERS
•DINNER RINGS
.

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STARTING
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(%Carat to 1'/z Carat Also on Sale)

v..

FROM
SALE
$99

$159
$269
$299
$599
$850

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(Yes - even since our huge Christmas Sale)
As the price of gold goes down so does
our 141 gold chain prices•
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2342.

Insight Outpatient Services and
New Hope Christian Counseling Center
Present

It's Back!

Being Your Own Valentine Learning To Love And Accept Yourself
1

,,

.

Monday, February 8
Time:
6:30- 8:00p.m.
Piace:
Mason County Library
Speaker: · Merrit Moore, M.A.
Dll.te:

·I.

:"Man receives
:t,.ife sentenced

.

.

FINEST STYLING SALON

color. billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos
are not of acceptable quality.
Questions may be directed to the.,
editorial depar1JIIent from ·t-5 p.m.
Mon.day thrpugh Friday at 446-

Outstanding Values!

~ 614·221~88
W. aNNAMO

~

?

W.Va.
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Samuel W. Kemper of Oatlipolis. He is a member of the Vinton Volunteer F'm: Depaibnent and
is employed at Foodland, JackSon
Pike, Gallipolis.
.
The couple reside at 934 Sllile
Route 588, Gallipolis.

Doctor reprimanded for
experimental hypnotherapy
.

GALLIPOLIS

Thursday, February 25
6:30- 8:00p.m,
.Mason County Library ·
Speaker: . David Clay, M.A., L,l&gt;C

· · Date:
Time:
Place:

•

PINK
ICE' .

CROSS
PENS

WATCHES

Set Ia IOK

REDUCED

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These free lectures are provided as a community service. Seating is limited.
Please call 67.5-3389 or l-800-992-9106
for reservations.
.
.

Famous

DIAMOND
HEART PENDANT
REG. SALE
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Y. Carat. ............. $499 $299
1 Carat... ........ , .. $699 $398

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•FREE PAlliNG
9:5Daly
9:6 ....111
HFrlllar

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Y'rst.!Jl,~ ,
'.
CORNER SECOND AVE. AND GRAPE ST,

441:2842

(

•

or

·'

�. .

•
~omeroy-Middleport

February 7, 1983·

Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleuant, WV

Meigs County ·calendar of events
Commaulty Caleadar Items
appear two claJ'I before -1111 eveat
ud the day ol that eveat. Items
must be received weiiD . .YUCe
to assure publleatloa !. lite cal·
elldar.

day from 1~3 p.m.
' MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT· Revi\'111 at Old
Bethel Freewill Baptist Chun:li will
'be Monday through Saturday at 7
p.m. with Rev. Marvin Markin .
Ralph Butcher, pastor, invites the
public.
·

~

OH-Polnt

abused niece dunng
'obedience' sessions

•

"'

POMEROY • Ohio Eta Phi
SANTA BARBARA, Calif,,
Chapter, Beta Sipm Phi Sorority, (AP) - A jury concluded that an
will hold a sing-a-long for residents • auto mechanic was intent on ·.
of
the Meigs County Infirmmy on inflicting systematic sexual abuse ·
SUNDAY
Tuesday
at 7 p.m. Hostesses are on a niece whom he beat. stiipped '
CLIFTON, W.VA. · Revival
Terri
Neece,
Mandy Ru.ssell and and shaved on lhe pretense of cjisci- ,.
will be Saturday and Sunday at 7
Kathy
Haley.
RACINE • Racine Board of
p.m. atlhc Clifton Tabemacle with
plining the girl.
:·
Jerry Cottrell, evangelist. Everyone Public Afl'airs will meet Monday at
John Shipm.., 53, was convict·
POMEROY • American Legion ed Friday of four counta of lewd
10 a.m •.at Star Mill Pad. .
·
welcome.
Drew Webster Post No. 39 will conract with a child under lhc ag~~
CHESHIRE • Women ~live meet Tuesday at the post home. of 14 and 11 counts ·of mpe with-a '
TUPPERS PLAINS • A ltouse·
will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at Dinner will be at 7 p.m. followed foreign object.
.•
hold shower ·will be held for Beu·
by
meeting
at
8
p.m.
Kyger
Creek
Clubhouse.
Brenda·
what
we
wanted,
10
put;
"That's
lalf and Rufus Cline on Sunday
from 2-4 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains Faulk will .be the devotiOnal~­
him away for as long as we can:'
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun· We certainly don'i want him t&lt;ll
VFW Post Home. The Cline's lost cr. The~ will be a craft demonstration. Refreshments will include a ty Board of Elee tions will meet ever be around children again,' ~
all their belongings in a·fii'C.
Tuesday at 4:30p.m. at the offiCe.
salad bar. .
~ Qeputy District Attorney Gene;,
· CHESTER • "Growing Through
Martinez.
";.'
WEDNESDAY
Grief' group will meet Sunday at 7
POMEROY • The Disabled
"He definhely got what he
POMEROY • Pomeroy Mer- deserved," Martinez said. "It's ~
p.m. at the Chester United · American Vererans will meet Moo·
chats
Association will meet sad; though, because of the effect it·
Methodist Church. Call Rev • . day at 7 p.m. at the hall, 124 But·
Wednesday
at 8:30 Lm. at the con- ' has on (me girl). She certainly his;
Sharon Hausman at 985-4312 for ·temutAvenue.
ference room at Bank One.
· along way 10 go."
. information,
. RUTLAND • The Leading
LOTI'RIDGE • Th= will be a Creek Conservancy District will
smorgasbor.d dinner at the Lot- . hold a special meeting Mpnday at
·
trldge Community Center on Sun· 7:30a.m. at the boatd office.
day from noon to 1:30 p.m. Cost is
, TUESDAY
$5 for adults and $2.50 fot chit~
MIDDLEPORT
• The Middleunder 12. Everyone welcome.
port Community Association will
MIDDLEPORT· Rev. Robert meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. atlhc PeoGibson, guest speaker, Four Chap- ples Bank in Middleport. The busi•
lains Dinner and Dance on Sunday ness meeting will be followed with
at 6:30 p.m., Middleport American a program on tourism by Mary
Legion Annex. The 10 a.m. Four Powell, Meigs County Park District
Chaplains service, hosted by the director.
MR. and MRS. RANDALL (TINA) ROACH
Middleport Church of Christ, is
'
.
HAMISONVILLE • The Har·
open to the public.
riSOnville Senior Citizens will hold
RUTLAND · There will be a a blood pressure clinic Tuesday .
deer hunting meetil)g at the Ameri· from 10 a.m. to noon at the town·
Ringbearer
was
Brandon
can Legion Hall in Rutland on Sun·
. SYRACUSE - Tina M. Collins
Grover,
ne)lhew
of
the
·bride.
and Rarida11 W. Roach we~ united ·
Rice bags were distributed by
in marriage Dec. 23, 1992 in SyraKimberly
and Jennifer Mayle, .
cuse with Rev. David Russe11 offi·
nieces
of
the
bride.
ciating.
Best
man
was Doug Cleland.
The bride was escorted by her
Ushers were Raymond and Darrin
brother, Calvin Mayle.
Matron of honor was Trina Roach, brolhcrs of the groom.
gerous because the man's immune
By JIM URBAN
The bride is the daughter of
Bachtel, niece of lhc bride. Brides·
system
was being suppressed by
Associated Press Writer
maids were Tracy and Wendi May Mayle and Calvin Mayle.
drugs
designed
to ~vent rejection
PITTSBURGH - The second
The groom is lhc son of Dorothy
Collins, daughters of lhe bride, and
of
the
liver,
Fung
said.
person to receive a baboon liver
Ashley and Charla Roach, daugh- Roach and the late Carl Roach.
The
patient
was
suffering from
A reception was held at the transplant died from an abdominal hepatitis B and near death when he
ters of the groom.
that one of his doctors
Flower girl was Carrie Mayle, Meigs County Public Library in infection
said
may
have
resulted from faulty received a baboon liver, which
.Pomeroy.
niece of the bride.
transplant surgeons say resists the
stitches.
diseaSe.
They said a human liver
· The 62-year-old man, whose
·
would
have
named was not released, never hepatitis B. been· destroyed ~y the
regained full consciousness after
An overdose of an anti-~jection
the Jan. 10 surgery at the Universi· druj!
the infection that
ty of Pittsburgh Medical Center. He killed hastened
the
fust
recipient
on Sept 6,
died Friday.
70
days
after
the
uansplanL
: Dr. John Fung, the hospital's
•'
Animal-rights activists, who had
day of the Hollywood swdio sys- chief of uansplantation, said he
By ROBERT MONROE
protested
outside the hospital after
tem and ended with the hit believed the infection was caused
Associated Press Writer
both
transplanis,
called for an end
by a leak of intestinal content into
BEDFORD, N.Y.- As a direc· "Sleuth" in 1972.
to
cross-species
transplants.
Friday
Mankiewicz coined the phrase lhc cavity. The exact cause would
tor, Joseph L. Mankiewicz was
They
no!ed
that
no
human
has sur·
hailed for the clever use of flash- "my little chickadee" for W.C. not be known until an autopsy next
vived lonf' than nine months with
backs and soundtraclc rwration. As Fields in "If I Had a Million." week, he said. ·
Since .the leak occurred at the an animal s organ.
a writer, he penned some of Holly- Bette Davis owes him the line
"The~ is no evidence that this
wood's most witty, biting dialogue. "Fasten your seat belts. It's going place wbere the liver was sewn 10
the small intestine, Fung specillated procedure offers a better chance for
: . The Academy Award winner to be a bumpy night!"
.
said Steven Simmons,
M -Golden Buckeye
•Wheelchairs
; died Friday at age 83 with dozens
He produced the firSt movie that a stitch might have fallen out or humans,"
Washington·
spokesman
for
.
the
!@
Discount
-canes and Crutches
·of films to his credit. including thi: teamed Katharine Hepburn with have been put in incorrectly.
classics "All About Eve," "A Let· Spencer. Tracy, "Woman of the
The doctor also said it was pos- based People for the Ethical T~t­
•Walkers
· "
sible that tissue around the su~ ment of Animals.· "The only thing
ter to Three Wives" and "Sudden· Year."
it offers is false hope."
·
'
•Hospital Beds
·
ly Last Summer."
Joseph Leo Mankiewicz was did not heal properly.
An
ethics
board
ai
the
medical
-commode Chairs
. Mankiewicz, who lived in Bed· bom in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., on Feb.
"The whole cavity was grossly
center has approved two more
~~j
Medicare and
•ford, was pronounced dead at II, 1909, the youngest of three infected," Fung said.
•Attends, Chux and
uansplants
of
baboon
livers
into
,,
Medicaid accepted
:Nonhero Westchester Hospital in children of immi$rantS Frank and
The infection was doubly danhumans, officials said.
Incontinent Supplies
Mt. Kisco after falling ill at home, Johanna MankieWICZ.
•Free Delivery- 24 Hr.
• Bath Safety Aids
~is wife said.
He began by writing title cards
Se~ice - 7. Days A ·
•
"I've lived without caring what for silent films. He was nominated
Week
·
olJrinary and Ostomy
anybody thought of me," for an Oscar for co-writing "Skip:::::~:: "'-- Dill
N
Supplies
•m:
"""
on, R•.
:Mankiewicz said in an interview PY" in 1931 and continued collab•Mastectomy Products
:tast year. "I followed very few of orating on scripts, but his real
RIO GRANDE • The following Jacobs, Christina Jenkins, Samp
Ma;e~:~ Fltter; Owner
'die rules. I think I've wriuen some ambition lay.elsewhere.
swdents have been named to the Johnson, Brian Johnson, Dawn . •Home Oxygen
'"''
Saltia Manager
:good screenplays, gouen some
"! felt the urge to direct because honor roll at Buckeye HijJs Career . Knepper, Andrea Lewis, Wendy
,good performances and made some I couldn't stomach what was being Center.
'
Louden; Rachel Moore, Amy Pat·
done with what I wrote,"
good movies."
Gf)lia Academy High School • terson, Melissa Pearce, David·PolHis career began as the silent Mankiew icz once said. "Every 4.0 • Teresa Bowman, Eric Clary • . ing, Dawna Rainey, Steven Ratliff,
em ended, peaked during the hey· screenwriter worthy of the name and Barbie Green.
Julie Reynolds, Connie Skaggs,
has already directed his film when
Honor roll-Shane Barton, Jason Jamie Smith, Shelis Stapleton,
he has written his script.''
Brown, Valerie Cooper, Shannon Amy Taylor, Steve Voreh, James
As a producer, he had some Franklin, David Gilbert, Jimmy Whealdon, Tia White, and Brandi·
earlY. critical successes, but "The Harrison, Heather Harrop. Pam naWiUiams.
Philadelphia Story" with Hepburn, Hughes, Jason Johnson, 'Peter Lee,
. GALLIPOLIS · February is the James Stewart and Cary Grant was Trisha Peters, Kelly Pratt. Brandon
"love month" and Gallia County his flfSt smash.
Prau, and Tony Ratliff.
Mankiewicz's rirst chance at
senior citizens are collecting items
River Valley High School· 4.0 •
for "Love Baskets" for needy directing was in 1946 with the roanna Allbright, Tina Barcus,
Gothic chiller "Dragonwyck." "A Amanda Benson, Melissa Bums,
seniors.
Letter to Three Wives" soon fol· The Gallia County Senior Citi· lowed, then was followed by the Melissa Cain, Christina Farley,
I
~ens Center will be accepting dona· triumph, "All About Eve," a back· James Goody, Amanda 9regory,
David
Lambert,
Teresa
Oiler,
Nina
I
tions until Feb. 19. Donattons ·stage s10ry of an aging star. played
Schcolcraft.
Heather
Spwts,
Angie
I
include:
Miss Davis, and an ambitious Tackett, Valerie Varney , and
Food items • canned meats, by
I
young acttess.
Matthew Wiamail.
soups, fruits, vegetables, pastas and
Includes
In addition to the writing and
I
Honor roll- Jonathan Allbright,
IWd candy;
.
Heather
Barker,
Chastity
Blevens,
directiOn
awards,
..
Eve"
won
an
I
All
. Personal care uems · hand
I
lotion, tea 10wels, pot holders, and Oscar as best picture and George Renea Chapman, Loraine Cochran,
Quantum
Carolyn Colburn, Carlene Fillinger,
·
Sanders
as
best
actor.
wash cloths:
I
•SHAMPOO
In recent interviews, the film- Jack Griffith, Scott Haislop, Kim
Perms
Paper items • note paper, boxecl
•CONDITION
RINSE
I
cards, envelopes, pens, and pencils. ·maker was critical of the state of Hatfield, Jodie Hopper, Cherise
•PRECISION CUT
I
film.
The FirSt Presbyterian Church is
•
·c6MPLETE
collecting items and is donating
STYLEIFINISH
SlSO toward the "Love Baskets".
I
'l'he:GaUia County Animal Welfare
League recognizes that many
I
seniors have pets who are, for
I
many, their only companion. The
I
league has donated $100 for the
I
puR:hase of pet food for the "Love
I
Baskets".
·
I
Senior volunteers will also be
If
you
are
planning
a
wedding,
makin~ Valentine cards to be
then you should coma see us at
placed m the baskets.
. .
• Any group .or orgamzau!&gt;n
Haskins·Tanner.
: •Shampoo
•Shampoo
:
wanting 10 conmbute or help deliv:
•Precision
Cut
.
·
I
1
:
You wil have over 190 atyl" of
~r the. baskets, ean call 446-7000,
1
tuxedos 10 choose from. We have a
·
::::• .
~· Style Flniah
I
1 •Helene Curtis Perm
for more information.
·
1
large
seleclion
of
tha
latest
llyles
'
1 .Complete Style/Finish
•
• •7S.oo
I
1 oComplnDIIIUIIIWI
'
·
I
and complimentary accilssories lor
this special occasion.

By JERRY BUCK
AP TeleYislon Writer
.
LOS ANGELES - The genests
of ,','R&lt;!wan an~ Manin's LaughIn, Diclc Martin says, was a cartoon he and h\s late pBf!Der Dan
Rowan SllO!ted m ~ magaztne.
Vermym!Crestingl
"Tiie New Yorker, Esquire,
Punch ran those great, !lne, tv.:o.
!~ree-panel cartoons, he sll!d.
We saw one of two guys hangmg
on a dungeon .wall about two feet
off the ground. One says to the
other, 'Now, here's lhc plan.' ·
- "Dan and 1 were doing our act
and we had a wall built for us 10
stretCh out on. The writers thought
. up all kinds of things for us, and
we did one-line blackout skits.
That's the concept we wanted to
brinf. to 'Laugh-In' - shon and
fasL '.
You can look that up in your
Funk and Wagnallsl
"Rowan an4 Martin's Laugh·
,In!' celebmtes its 25th anniversary
'With a two-hour special Sunday on

NBC.

:J

MR.andMRS.EDGAR (KAmRYN)HARROP,JR.

f'

•.

.......

.

§,Oth anniversary celebrated

,

.
.
:: GALLIPOLIS .' Mr. and Mrs.
·Edgar Harrop, Jr., celebrated their
.~Qth wedding anniversary Satur:ay, Feb. 6 with lhcir chi!~ and

Second patient to receive
baboon liver transplant dies

'

·pdchil~n.

:; They were married in Pennsyl'

vania, and have lived in the GillJipolis fur the past 25 )'CI!'SMr. Harrop is a retired structural
steel draftsman. Mrs. ·Harrop is a
homemaker. .

.

Students named to honor roll

..:

t!l

HOWARDaod MARYCHILDERS
.

Couple
observes anniversary
•

-~~!J!l;)

••

:•. VINTON • Howard and Mary
(Gay) Chit~ of Vinton, celebrat·
~ their 40 wedding anniversary
Friday, Feb. 5. They were married
E'eb. 5, 1953 in Northup.

·1480 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, Ohio

446·2206

.

;:

~tudent

•

SALE

They are the parents of three
children, Fred Childers and Esta
Childers, both of Gallipolis, and
Paula Childers of Vinton. They
have one grandchild.

MIDDLEPORT -Jason. Dow·

c~nt

social movements.
Dowell, a graduate of Meigs
High School, is the SOli of Ben and
Kim Dowell, Middleport.

ing major at Berea College, spent
three weeks touring El Salvador
lwith lhc college's Country Dancers
:as part of a J..uary term class.
During the' four-week January
, Us!ion, stUdents at Beres do in!Cn·
!live study in only one course of
~al inlerest. Those not enrolled
POMEROY - Rusty Dean
tn on-campus courses are involved Bookman, Pomeroy, has been
,n self-initiated projecJS, off cam· aw~~tded his master of science in
pus study or exchange programs education administration from the
.wilh other colleges.
University of Dayton. The Meigs
: Students enrolled in the class, High School teacher was one of
!'An· Adventure in El Salvador."' 500 undergraduate, graduate and
kave concerts and worlcshops both spedalist•degrees awarded to Uni)!lithin San Salvador and other versity of DaytOn students on Dec•
areas of the counay. They stlidied 19 at winter commencement exerSpanish and learned about Centtal cises held at the Mna.
f-meri!=Bn history, .geography and

LADIES'
SMECUT

Rer;eives degree

$99~

•

• ••••••••
•••••••••

SPIUl PERM :
5

.'

*39' ~

LUll IILICftll

, HUNTINGTON, W.Y.a. ·A
being held for Erma
Lou Ring, who has been hosp!tal·

¢ard shower is

446·SUS

Qu.Uty Fonaolweor ot
AHor4•1• Prices

OHIO 11¥11 PLAIA
ltlwHII H11'1 &amp; ._ ...
. GAWPOUS, OliO

fzed.

Cards can be !ICilt 10: Erma Lou
king SL Mary's Hospital, Bremer
Hav~n, 2900 First Ave., Room
~.Huntington, W.Va., 25702.
' J, '

•

.

..

,,

\'

_______ :. ~ --~
Rook
otfW8 you • cholc• or 1 dl,..m colored pnlee. Wtuavw your nqulr&lt;Mu•ntai!IIJ be,_,.._.....,_
tlan le
ROok or Ago.

---

..:
Mon. &amp; frL t to t P.M.
·s.t. 9 to 6 P.M.
Sun•ay 12 to S P.M.

a

MM..... ..
, ., ,~

, .~-

LONDON fOG
MACIIIOSH
IRAFIIR

of Agee

IIIUIWCI With

Wlntw Houra: Frldlly t-4. OttiWI by AflpDintmlrlt.
113 1111 or 4414317

ftAIUY A. SAUIDIRS MOIUMIITS

NO APPOINTMENT
'
NECESSARY I
.

UJ'IIIInlln.
t

.

25%oFF

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

•

AKRON, Ohio (AP)- A judge have their daughter back,' ' lhc cou- visited Carla and SeeD the Jid
has ruled against a couple aying to pie said.
move hei eyes and swallow adopt a severely bram-damaged
The girl, who was injured in an from a sponge stick. She aii!G Slid
teen-ager who was disconnected October traffic accident, bas been Carla has squeezed her iliad.
from lif&amp;-suJIIIIXl.
in a vegetative state at Edwin Shaw
Doctors say a n y - is a
The couple has "no real interest Hospital. Doctors said they're con- reflex and that Carla sbows 110
in the matter,'' Summit Probate vinced she bas no chance ofrecov- sil!ls that she sees, hears or apcriJudge W.F. Spicer said in ruling ering.
ences anything.
Friday against Stephen and Sylvia
But those protesting the decisio.n
The second molion filal il
Slifko of Barberton. They wanlell to discontinue the life-support mea- the Ninth District Cout of
permission to adopt Carla Myers, sores for Carla have not giVen up Appeals. H charge.s dw Spil:cr
15, of Akron.
their efforts.
·
erred and deprived Carla fl. eq.il
· The ' girl's father, Timothy
Two more motions involving protection or the law wbm lie rlllcd
M)ICrs, told the judge that he Carla were flied Friday in two sep- that the life-support measares
opposed lhc adoption request and arate courts.
should be removed.
said he was an~ by iL
Cleveland attorney Ellen Foell
That motion seeks aa onler 10
"It's been rough,''. he said. "I filed both motions on behalf of Jirevent Spicer from· enfanD&amp; die
don't know what's going to come Lisa Myers, who identiftes herself removal ·order.
out of the woodwott next. I don't in court papers as a fust oousin of
ear.
Also Friday, about~JIO!tik
know where these people come Carla Myers.
protesting the deciSi011 to JcaOte
from but I hope this ·is the last of
One of the motions - filed in Carla from life-support m=
es
iL' •
Summit County Probate Court continued their wcek'lol\g .vi&amp;ila ·
. The girl's mother, Robin Myers, ·asks Spicer to issue an emergency the hospital.
also said she opposed lhc adoption. order preventin~ family members
Randall Terry Of BiJ\ghamkWI,
The Myers are divorc'ed.
from withholdmg nutrition and N.Y., founder of the Operatioa
By RICHARD LORANT .
The Slifkos said they wanted to water.
·
Rescue anti-abortion group, jaDed
Associated Press Writer
try to nurse Carla back to good
The motion includes an affidavit the protesterS. He :Said !he oould . .
Sl\N FRANCISCO -On a bal· health. "In six months they would from Lisa Myers, who says she has feel sympathetic toward the parcpny overlooking the whirring
ents' decision . .
cables and whirling wheels that
"The premise is·murd«." lie
drive the world's only cable cars,
.,_said. ~·we don't.show oomr-•••
San Francisco Cable Car Muse: .for murder. This is lhctypeo(_..
offers glimpses of a largely
people were tried f0r at N--·
by(ODe
burg.''
arena
is
named
in
the
elder
SavTOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - The·
-.,-r:
~;om:museum:iiii
itself
is
in
dan·
age's
honor.
·,
a relic, as much a fanner owner or a trucking compapast as the vintage ny has been sentenced to six to 25
years iri prison for running ·one of
cable car it displays.
region'S largest truck theft
the
Pacific Coast Chapter of the
rings.
.
~;~~~~ &amp;: Locomotive Historical
Michael
Wymer,
41, of Toledo.
s,
which·bas run lhc museum r
pleaded
guilty
Thursday
to ~ngag •
since was founded in 1974,. said
mg
in
a
corrupt
activity,
three
days
last week it was pulling out at the
Ylliid lll'hf1 01'1)' Olher
after
his
trial
began
in
Lucas
Counpockoge pet /ami!)-.
of March because it couldn't
Portroil ~zeJ ~f!IIM.
ty Common Pleas Colin.
aiiioru 10 keep running the museum.
Three other people charged with
A declining number of visitors
Wymer
pleaded guilty to lesser
rising securit~ costs have left
charges
Thursday
.
nonprofit soctety 'running the
Wymer's
brother.
Gary Wymer.
museum at a loss.
35,
of
Toledo,
pleaded
guilty to
City officials hope 10 reopen the
museum under new management iwo counts ot~taining stolen prop· within a year, but they admit no erty. His other brother, Terry
cable car museum can prosper Wr.mer, 25, of Toledo, pleaded
without the· society's three antique guilty to two counts of disposing of
cars, which form the mainstay of stolen p10petty. Clarence Chismra,
23, of Toledo, pleaded guilty to one
lhc collection . .
The collection wi11 go into" stor· count of disposing of swlen properage until the society finds new ty.
fudge Robert Christiansen
home, possibly in another city, said
IHII 11U I IIIII' W A "'"'•IT SIUDIO OJIEII S Mil
Arthur Lloyd, chairman of the ordered a presentence investigation. They will probably be senWID.,FEL IO•SUL,FEI.14•WM.•s.t.10a00&amp;&amp;•7100,_
Pacific Coast Chapter.
.
"It would be strange 10 have a tenced next month.
0•
fr1m Store 0!1•1 .. U•llll H•r ..,_ C.... •
·
..._UPOUS
Prosecuun s8y Michael Wymer
cable car museum in· Baltimore, I
was
the
former
owner
of
Wymer
·agree. But we just can't continue to
r•~~ u: •
sustain a loss of $2,000 a month," Trucking Co. in Toledo and the .,....
leader of a truck theft ring that
Lloyd said.
dealt
with more than $4 million in
The museum now derives nearly
stolen
parts from August 1991 to
all its income from gift shop sales.
March
1992.
and pays 5 percent of the gross 10
.
•
Another
person. Jeff Savage, 29,
the city.
of
Curtic~.
'plesded
guilty last yeat
Municipal officials say they
to
receiviag
stolen
property
in con·
want the museum to add better
~tion
with
the
case.
Savage,
the
exhibits so the casb•sttapped city
son
of
a
well-known
Toledo
fami·
can increase its current take of
ly, received a suspended senleQCe.
about $17,000 a year.
.
Savage's falhcr is John F. Sav- ·
· But the city tumed down society
ag~.
owner of one of ~aledo's
prow.a!s to charge admission or
largest
insurance companies and a
establish parking for tour buses.
substantial
donor 10 many COII)IDU·
which took the museum off their
nity
and
University
of Toledo
itineraries a few years ago because
activities.
The
university's
athletic
of paddng problems .

NEW SPRING
JACKETS &amp; COATS

$2 2 95 : :=~;:Perm

Card shower

Judge rules against couple seeking
t~ adopt ~rain-damaged teenager

•••1r

back from tour

leU of Middlepon, a f~man nurs-

•••••••••

~

'Laugh-In."'
" They had enormous ae*ve r-..
Before " Laugh-In" came on the dom. It's funny )'011 doa't fiad dill
air, the show's guests didn't know today, except with ·s~ NiPt
what to expect. They were asked to Live.'''
say a line that didn't make sense to
Martin and RoWIII did a • Mil*
them. But when all the lines were of movies together - " Oooe lJpla
put together, it not only made a Horse" in 19S8 and ""The Malsense, It made television his10ry. tese Dippy" in 1969 -10 np' PI
'Everyone wanted to be On the ize on their "Laugb-ln'" :fame.
Martin appeared cadier Ibisshow.
Many people claimed to be the son as a poker player jill CBS'
father of the 'Laugh-In' concept. "Bob" and is scheduled 10 _ .
Its fast pace, repeated one-liners, another appearance. He'* • · .._
knockabout routines, unstructured ly directs the show for llis old
format and topicality all had been friend Bob Newban, ....,. " Bob
done before, but the show was the Newhart Show" Manill--.:d • a
fli'SltQ put t1tem all together.
sitcom director many .yq~~ J180.
"The rei! fathers of 'Laugh-In'
"Arthur Price, who fu M1M
were lhc 13 writers," Martin said. Studios and was Bob's I!I"'W&amp;a".
"They never had the freedom to . suggested I direct one of lite
write that way bef~. On a variety shows," ·Martin said. .. 1 said I
show, you had the monologue, lhc didn't know how, but I Sll ill die
skits, the chat with the guests, and audience for four weeks ud
the good night. Each segment was watched every reading, r'r sal
usually wrluen by different teams.
and taping. It s a com- ...., 10
. "Our writers could write any- . leam directing. Then I dius:bllllle
thing they wanted,'' he said . · next show."

Former trucking company
owner admits running theft ring

w

PLUS

M. Nixon said: "SOCtc it to me"
(that's right, Richard M. Nixon. In
his defense he only said it once).
"Laugh:ln" had a big effect on
the language. Not long after its
debut, just about eve~body was
repeating such lines as 'Soclc it to
me ·• "Bea11tiful·Downtown Bur·
bai{t, and "Herecomedejudge."
The special will reprise many
\ 'Laugh-In" routines from the pas!,
and new bits were filmed at an
anniversary party in mid-January.
Martin, who now directs situa·
lion comedies, said he didn't know
if he would do anything n~w, since
he didn't think it would wOrk without Rowan, who died in 1987.
" Dan was a used ear salesman
and I was a bartender when a mutu·
al friend introduced us in 1952,''
Martin said. "!don't think Dan
evu wanted to be a nightclub per·
fonner. He wanted to be an actor.
We tried out our ideas about short
skits on 'The Dean Martin Summer
Show' in 1966. That's what got us

Museum in danger
becoming a relic

!II ::!~;::J:~~~ptly

•••••••••

on television when it debuted in
January 1968. It was so different
that it took lhc audience a while to
get used to it. But by the eighth
show, it was flfS! in the ratings, and
it stayed fmt through the next two
seasons. It left the air in 1973, and
an attempt to revive it in 1979
without Rowan and Martin was a
quiclc fail~.
You bet your sweet bippy.
"Laugh-In" changed the audience's attention :pan .with mpid·
fii'C skits and one-lmers that helped
pave the way fcx the MTV generation. It made stars of such performers as Goldie Hawn and Lily Tomlin.
The pace was nonstop. Ruth
BIIZzi hit the old man over lhc head
with her umbrella. Ane Johnson
peered out from behind the palm
tree. Lily Tomlin was the telephone
operator. Gary Owens kept one
hand cupped behill!i his
Henry
Gibson recited poetry. And Richard

.

Filmmaker Joseph L.
Mankiewicz dead at 83

FANTAST

'

The show had a profound effect

Collins-Roach

.Gallia seniors
collect items

Sunday

'Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In' ~
celebrates 25th anniversary with special

Jl;UY: Man sexua¥y

house, weather permitting. Mcmben will have a covered dish dinner after lhc clinic.

wv

1I

... ....IUJ

OIL

Department .
992·3148
.,

J

-

r

�•

..

'

•
P.a ge-86:--Sunday llmes Sentinel

f ebruary 7,1993

February 1, 1193

Author offers advice for
t!L~~2.!! the single scene

_Gallia Co11:nty calendar of events
Baptist Church, 7 p.m.
Sunday, Feb.?
'
: GALLIPOLIS - MS Support
GALLIPOLIS
- Narc otics
!}roup meeting, 2 p.m., at WoodAnonymous
Two
Rivers
Group
land Centers' multipurpose room.
meeting,
noon,
at
Woodland
CenCall 446-5500 for more infonnaters.
' iion.

:z GALLIPOLIS

- Evangelis t
•Calvin Evans and Trio to sing and
:preach at Elizabeth Chapel Church, ·
·7 p.m.
: CROWN CITY • Gig Paige and
•The Harmonizers will be at Kings
'Ch 1Ch h 7
• ape
urc ' p.m.
:· BIDWELL • Born Agai n
:Believers will sing at Springfield
~

reakfast set

·B.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Animal Welfare League meeting 7
p.m. at Buckeye Rural Electric
Building.

Tuesday, Feb. 9
KANAUGA - Riverside Study
GALLIPOLIS - Dean Warner Club meeting 12:30 p.m. at Hobwill be preaching at Mina Chapel· day Inn . Book review by Joan
Church, 7 p.m.
Wood.
.
Monday, Feb. 8
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia C~unty
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County Library Board of TrusteeS meeting,
Deputy Sheriffs' Association meet- 5 p.m., at Bossard library.
ing 7 p.m. in the Gallia County
Courthouse.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Count)!'
Ex tension Homemakers Councd
GALLIPOLIS • Support group meeting, 10:30 a.m., at the C. H. .
for divorced persons, .7:30 p.m. at MacKenzie Agriculture Center.
New Life Lutheran Church, 1210 Members will tour the center folState Route 160. For more infonna- lowed by lunch at Frontlet Restaulion call 446-3808or446-9307. . rant. Every homemaker welcome.
For more infonnation call Gladys
GALLIPOLIS - OAPSE meet- Amsbary at 446-0239.
ing, 7 p.m ., at Washington Elemen·
tary cafeteria.
(Items for the community cal-

POMEROY The Ash
Wednesday Lenten breakfast will
be held at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy on Feb. 24 at7:45 a.m.
Reservations may be· made by
calling 992-7765 or 985-3842 to
indicate the number of J200Ple comGALLIPOLIS • Narcotics
ing from· each church m the com- Anonymous Just For Today Group
munity . P.hone .reservations are meeting, 7 p.m., at Grace United
requested by Feb. 22:
Methodist Church.

endar appear two days prior to an
event. They must be received. by
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune in
advance for publica~on)

ARIEL 'A TEAM' - Ja.ck Richards, tbalrmaa or the Ariel Theatre promotloas committee, ,
left, s.bows Gallla Academy High School principal Jim Pope tbe theater's plan for providiag a

free tickd hi -

otwdc•lS widt a pwle poiat

•vaaae &lt;:13.5 .-beau. cn--sutinel plloto ·
byK:eWI~)

•'

Ariel 'A Team' honors students
GALLIPOLIS - There is a new
team in Oallia County. It is the
Ariel " A" Team . It is not about
sports, although the members are
high scorers.
·
·
They-are high schOol students
from Gallia Academy High School,
Gallia Christian School, Ohio Valley Christian School and River
Valley High School who finished
the first semester of the 1992-93
year with a grade point average of
3.5 or better. In short, they played
hardball with their studies and won.
The Board of Directors of the
Morris and Oorothy Haslcins Ariel
Theatre is telling the students "well
'

.

done" wiih a ticket fur free lllbis-sion to one Ariel ptop- be(~
June 6 - roughly the cud of the
second semestt.r.
"We're thinking of doittg this
again," said board president Dr.
Dan Whiteley. "That's when this.
first set expires and the next set
recognizinl! second semester booor
students will go into effecL~
Artistic Director Lora Snow
says there is much fer the smdents
to choose from.
"If they like jazz, m- OlliiOClts
are scheduled," she said. "Bluegrass, country and light rock add
three more. They can retllnl to
Civil War times with an msrmble

of 'OIIio Villqe Siugcn' er heal
American popular music from ,.
Stephen Foster to the present
1IIVicMd A violin-piano duo, gui- • .
tarist, 0 . u. Scbool of Dance show .
ind tbe Ariel Playcn in three per-: .
fonnaoces of ' Dracula' complete :
tbelist."

... .

Ariel promotion committee
says prin- .
Cipals. ck:OIIIcd tbe idea.
" They thought it was great,
They offen:d to idmtiCy deserving
srudenu lild andiuate tictet dis~Jack~

pc:nal."

.

Richanls said more than 400
Slodems qualify. "That's a lot of
tictm, but tbe blEd is del,igblt.d." •

Man's assisted suicide leaves
friends surprised but sympathetic_
MERIT BADGE DAY - Scouter Carl
.• Cameron lectures Boy Scouts of Gallipolis
;; Troop 200 on Merit Badge Day, Jan. 23 for one
;: of their merit badges required for the rank of
•• Eagle Scout. The half-day event was held at the
:~ First Presbyterian Cbureb in Gallipolis tp make

counseling available for .boys working on the
required merit badges. Pictured are, clockwise
from 1~: Maxwell Bruce, Kevin Walker, Corey
Burlile, Carl Cameron, Walter Strafford, Rod
Hojat, T ,J. Lambert and Dan Magnussen.

:Scout news Report says Donald Trump
Area scouts participate
In Merit Badge Day
.
• GA LLIPOLIS - Area Boy
Scouts had the opportunity to earn
merit badges reqwred to obtain the
l ank of Eagle Scout Jan. 23 at
1-ferit Badge Day at the First Pres-byterian Church, 51 State Street,
:tallipolis.
.
::"..: Three sessions were held and
:seouts had a choice of one of three
·_liadges offered during each session.
.. Twenty-eight scouts earned a·
l otal of 60 badges during the event,
,)Vhich last all morning_; Troops par-tictpatmg were Galhpobs Troop
~200, Patriot Troop 222, Pomeroy
;Troop 249, Chester _Troop 259,
' Point Pleasant, W.Va., Troop 259
' iiJld Portsmouth Troop 115.
;.
Gallipolis Troop 200
~: During the mont!t of January ,
'Gallipolis Troop 200 participated
;I n Merit Badge Day and held a
•weekend campout.
: Ten scouts from the troop
:earned a total of 24 merit badges
·
-during Merit Badge Day.
:· The last weeken d of Janua ry
:was spent at Ca mp Stanley L.
~Evans , 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park, where
'the boys performed a little early
·:; pri ng cleaning at the cabin and
:practiced the skills they will be
~te s ted on at the Klondike Derby
:Feb. 1.3 at the Racine Locks and
:Dam.

-·,.'

considering expansion to Ohio
•

COLUMBUS (AP) - Casino
mogul Donald Trump has renewed
his interest in offering gambling
centers in Ohio, a newspaper
reported Saturday·.
Lorain County developer Alan
Spitzer said Trump' s aides have
been in touch for weeks, ever since
word leaked of state Rep. Joseph
Koziura's legislation that would
legalize gamblinll boats at Lake
Erie and Ohio Rtver port cities,
The Morning Journal of Lorain
reported.
" They'd like to be involved,"
he said. "I think they feel a need to
diversify and come to Ohio.''
Spitzer sWd Trump fears losing
business at his Atlantic City, N.J.,
casinos to other states legalizing.
riverboat gambling.
"As other states legalize gaming, Atlantic City will sacrifice the
mos~" Spitzer said.
Quentin Davis, director of
Cincinnati's Department of Economic Deve lopmen~ said Trump is
interested in establishing a riverboat gambling enterprise there.
"Donald Trump's people called
us last Friday, · Davis said .
"They're definitely interested."
Davi.s said he has given no
assurances Cincinnati will try to
become a home port for Ohio's

prov.osed floating casinos. Cincinnall' s mayor and City Council have
taken no official position on the
~ambling measure, which Koziura
mtroduced Tuesday.
.
"Per.;onally, I would rather create jobs on a more pennanent and
viable basis,'' Davis said.
Several calls to Trump's
Atlantic City and New York offices
were not returned on Friday, the
newspaper said.
The -newspaper said Trump's
interest dates back to 1989, when
he secretly visited Lorain to
explore establishing a land-based
casino.

Party slated
POMEROY - There will be a
valen\fne party at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center on Thursday.
'
Games will be played beginning
atll a.m.
.
Following dinner Brenda Roush ,
tour escort from the Gallipolis
AAA office, will be at the center
with information on trips planned
for 1993 for Meigs, Gallia and
Mason County senior citizens. This
will include one day trips and several overnight trips.
The public is invited to attend
the tour presentation.

c:er. " It's a 1011gb ny to tp, I tell
By JOHN FLESHER
should treaSUre iL"
''But you bave .to bave compas- )'Dll." be Slid.. " I IQUy can't ·conAssociated Press Writer
LELAND, Mich. - Friends of sion for those who sulier and their dcmtl somebody for doing this."
(jr4she(l said llis modacr-in-law
a blind cancer victim said they loved ones," he said.
Retired engineer B.iU Gorsball, was bpt .me a wa:t by .urtcid~
were surprised he commiued suicide with the help of Dr. Jack 73, recalled llis brother's misety as l!l~S as.~. was dying from &gt;
Kevorkian. But nobody criticized he slowly died !lr lJanCn:8lic caa- spilllllllfiP+. .bL
the retiree, whose iUness made him
live in constant pain.
Stanley Ball, 82, and Mary Biernat, 73, or Crown Point, Ind., kiUed
themselves in. Ball's lakeside bwt·
galow Thursday by inhaling carbon
monoxide gas from tanks supplied
by Kevorkian, who walched.
"Stanley was a good, all-around
joe," said Ed Kahrs, 85, a retired ·
farmer who -knew the one-time
agricultural extension agent for
, more than three decades. "He
could tell great stories, had a great
sense of humor."
Biernat's children drove her to
the Ball house after Kevorkian,
who had been counseling the two .
separately for about a month,
declined to travel to Indiana. Biernat suffered from breast cancer.
It was the frrst time the retired
pathologist ventured outside the
Dettoit area to assist suicides. Nine
other people have died with his
help. A state law temporarily banning the practice takes effect
March 30.
The deaths surprised this Lake
Michigan resort community of
1,600. Its nonnal winter tranquility
POST DONATION • Oil beii8H' ~die -ba-s~ VFW Post
was jarred by reporters and photog4464, Soany Clludler, (left), c:a-•....-, ltUIIdj aade a donaraphers converging on the scene.
tion toward the Gallipolis Vohlllteer Fire Deparbleat's "Child
At the village fire deparunent, a
Finder"
project. The b atloll ..._,a; 3 hit lluwp uy Galgroup of mostly elderly men gathlipolis
lire
fighter, are plac:ed • die witodow ~a -a cUd's bed- •
ered for morning coffee. While
room
to
belp
rue r.pler$ •llicklyloc:ale •Y trapped laditidul in
several said Ball's suicide had surthe
eveat
ora
lire eme•ctncy. A«eppittacdlc ,._at' a. Is .roa Saaa- ,
prised them, no one criticized the
den,
(rl&amp;ht),
departaaatl-ber.
man who was still swimming and
skiing in his late 70s before pancreatic_cancer left him blind and in
constant pain.
" I'd hate to have to go on and
on when there's no hope," said
Bill Peace, 70.
Ray Heine, 70, a retired Lutheran minister, said, "My own feeling
is that life is precious, and we

Scholarships
are available

'

THE PERRYS • Gospel music group The
Perrys "God's Little People'', 'VIII be performina
Thursday, March 4 at 7:30 p.m. at the Ariel
:-. Tbeatre. The sbow _Is presented by Upper Room
, Promotions, Kerr. The group has 14 major
•

j~.

'
I

•·

recordiDII accompanied by 12 singles and 4
vlcJeos, Tickets are $9 In advance and $10 at tlte
dotir. They can be pure baled at Willa ',1 Book·
store, Polat Pleuaat and Faith's Boobtore,
Gallipolis, or by caUIDg446-l8lO to order.

'

POMEROY - Students graduating from higll schools in Athens,
Hocldng, Morgan, Meigs or Gallia
counties who plan to continue their
education at Hocking College or
Ohio University with a con.centration in secretarial studies are eligible to apply for a scholarship from
the Athens Chapter of Professional
Secretaries International.
The group will be awarding two
scho;&gt;larships in April for the 199394 school year. A $500 PSI Schol·
arship will be awarded for the ninth
time and the $200 Joyce D. Malone
Memorial Scholanh1p for the ftnt
time.
Also eligible to apply for tho
scholarships are ptpdeos cumndy
anenclinjl Hocltin1 CoUqse or Oblo .
Univemty in the aoerewialiCience
program
.
rnteremoo students ahoold contact their businoai departmllnt
teaehon, Student Flaancial Aid
. Office, or Connie Norwa_y, PSI
Scholanhlp Commlueo, Ohio UDI· .
versity, lll Hlninl HaD, Adleal.
,- Applicadon deec!(ine Is March 19.
I'

428 2nd Ave. • Gallipolis, OH. • 441-GSOO
'

c

'

"Let w show rour lowed ones
how much. you care.,

• Premium Long Stemmed Roses
• Premium Sweetheart Roses
Carnations
•
• Silk Arrangements
Potted Plants ·
• Balloon Bouquets
• -Delivery Available ·
alscounts available for Senior Citizens
and Stucllnls.

441·0500
Mon•.saL 9-5:30
Valentine's Day 1-6

Pomeroy-Middltport-Galllpolll, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

(my mother's latest find-a-wife
pitch was to inform me my car ·
msurance would be much cheaper
i~=----,
if I were married), I recently condu cted an interyiew which will
hopefully help me make tlte fust
step in ftnding a mother for Mom's
gyandchildren. ·
Paul Hartunian, the author of
How·to be Outrageowly Succuiful
with t~ Opposite Sex claims be is
11!1 expert on helping land. that special person.
His credentials?
of tension as you trying to uphold lime. Singles, especially men, are
" I produce results," he said. your end of the conversation and not likely to approach someone if
Hartunian says he has stacks of not dribble spaghetti sauce down they' re standing in a group. People
thank-you letters from people who . your chin.
.
·
do not like audiences when they are
used his methods and landed smack
Good places for a firSt date are ftshing for a date. .
in ihe middle of gn:at relalionsbips street fairs, flea markets and comeHartunian emphasized that his
and marrii!JeS.
dy clubs, Hanunian said, because book is not "How to be a Pick-Up
A Flor1da man who read the they are usually inexpehsive, some- Artist." His advice can be used to
book and listened to the four cas- · times even free, and are fun and find that one special person or to
settes which come with the pack- create a lot of subjects to talk date successfully with several peoage wrote Hartunlan that not only about.
.
. pte.
.
did he land himself a wife, but he
The final step_is the rest of the
"You decide what you want it to
passed the set onto his brother who relationship bey011d the fust date. be," he said.
also hit the nuptial jackpot. The Most people make a ·lot of mistakes
How to be Outrageously Sucbrother then loaned the book to when they begin a relationship, cessful with the Opposite Sex sells
Hanunian said, and your partner for $49 .95 and can be ordered by
their sister who had equal success.
Harlunian said there are three will not readily teD YOII what mis- calling 1-800-544-5200. The book
steps to a relationship - · meeting tillt:es you made.
'COmes with a guarantee that you
someone, that anxiety-filled .first
"A lot of people bomb right will find love of your life in 90
date and the rest of the relalionsbip. there," he said.
days or you can returo it for full
One of the biggest mistakes sinThe secret is to think like a tefund
gle men and women l!'ake when member of the QPPOsite sex, which
Kevin Pinson is a SWM, 22,
!J'Ylng _to meet ~~ special someone - allows r.ou to anticipate what your stafT writer .for Ohio Valley Pub·
IS putbng_alltheu eggs m one bas- . date will find interesting and you
lishing whose hobbies include
ket, he S81d.
. .
can react,accordingly, ~e said.
reading and camping.
Rather than explore ,different
. "If_ you keep thinking like the
avenues of mate searchmg, most opJIOSlte sex you're staned on the
people pick one traditional method right path " tie said
s"!ch ~ si~gles bars or parties and
As fa; those who say you can
suck wtth IL •.
~at actively seek out someone, it
Not only !S th~ one-outl~t just happens naturally, Hartunian
method a bad pracuce, but trad1- said those people are in for a bleak
tiona! singles hot S(lOIS are no good future.
~ause tliere is too_much competi''Those are going to be the peoltol,J;·
.
. .
pie who are soing to be alone for
Put yourself m a Sltuatton the rest ofthell' lives," be said.
where you are tremendously outHe compared dating to hailing a
numbered by the opposite sex," taxi cab. If you stand on the comer
Hartunian said. With no competi- and wait for a cabbie to stop and
lion, !'Je ~site sex will_ flock. to ask you if you're wailing on a ~i.
y~u !ike flieS on a _roadk11l ~h1ch you' ll prpbably be standing 1\lere
ehmmates the ~x1ety assoctatelj for a while. Maybe forever, he said.
w1th approachmg someone and
Hartunian is a flflll believer in
eliminates the fear of rejection.
using the personal ads to land a
. "N_o ~ompe.tition, no ~ejec)ion, ma~e: He said. they are the "most
no pam, he S81d. .
-.
excJUng, easiest, best way to meet
The book contams a list of 76 the man or woman or your
places which offer a no-competi· dreams."
tlon atmosphere . He. gave the
The ads do all the. work for you
example of a commumty theater, and you have the additional securiwhere there are generally _10 to 20 ty of having interested parties
women for every man.
respond to a box number he
; Once you'.:ve ~eta potential · . explaiQed.
,
·.
'
mate, the next step IS the ftiSt date,
But to have a sueccssful ad, you
which Hartunian warns should have to write a headline which
never be an _expensive or fOIIWitiC "grabs lhem by throat, drags them
night on the town.
into the ad and almost forces them
He suggests something lnexpen- · to respond"
·
sjve and f!tn, which will ease tenThe worst method fer writing an
S10IIS and maease ~chan~ of_a ad, he said, is to look at other per~ccessful evem~g, wh1ch _1_
s sonals and use the same boring
1tnportant bee~: If y~~ blow 11 cliches as everyolie else.
on the ftiSt dale, it s over..
"You end up with one .ad 300
The worst firSt date 1s the old times • he said.
·
"dinner _and movie" ~uti~e which - How about ganging up with a
Hartu~tan call~~ bon~g ~nd few friends when you hunt?
·
WICre&amp;Uve and tens1on-creatmg.
· "Not a bad idea to stan out an
' Y_ou can ~ot converse during a evening," he said, because friends
DIOVJe, he said, and when II comes can lend support 10 the insecure
to the dinner you're forced to sit
But the group needs to set ~p a
face to face 11nd talk between rotation schedule so each person is ·
f!!OUthfuls, which can create .a lot left alme for 15 to 20 minutes at a

at

Only
these -stores:

Sunday Tlmes--Sentlnei-Page-87

Bank One and
Clark's Jewelry
launch contests
POMEROY - A monthly creative writing contest has been initiated at the Pomeroy Elementary
School under sponsorship _of Bank
One and Clark's Jewelry , the
schools' "partners in education."
On ·Specific topics each month,
older students will write essays ·
while younger students will design
posters. Classroom teachers will
select winners for their respective
classes and then a representative
from the two businesses will select
overall ·winners in the essay and
poster categories.
At the end of the school year, an ·
overall _winner will be selected and
that student ' s name will be
engraved.on a plaque which will
hang in the school lobby, with subsequent winners to be added to the
plaque annually.
Purpose of this program, as
explained by the partners in education, is to encourage stuc!ents to
develop their crelllive wrilinl! sld1ls
and an appreciation for reading and
writing 8! an early age.

WINNERS - "Wbyl am Proud of. )\feigs County" was the
topic of tlte Rrst creative writing contest spoasored by the Partaers
in Educatioo, Banll One and Clarks Jewelry, at Pomeroy Elemen·
tary School. Here, Des Jeffers, left, aad Steven Dunfee Of Bank
Oae, pose with students Michelle Cundilre, essay winner, Heidi
Fisher, post wiaaer, and Ryan Terzoppolus, honorable menlioa
poste~ witlner.
·

News notes
Tile mineral zinc is used as protective coating on steel. It is also
used as diecaslings and as chemical
compounds in rubber and paints. .
The ancient birthstone for the
mdith of April is the sapphire; the
modern stone is the diamond.
~uddhism was founded about
525 B.C., reportedly near Benares, .
India, and its founder was Gautama
Siddharlba.

BRmGIIYOD
OLD .101'01!

s,.,;.,_
2-5:1:7

-copy

$1495
STUDIO

Silver Bridge Pl,.za, Gallipolis, Oh.

EVERYTHING!**

HMC open hrbuse focpses
National/Heart Month

on

• GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Medic8I
Center's Coronary Care Unit
(CCU) and the adjacent Progressive Care .Unit (PCU) will be
focusing on vari0\15 aspects of the heart during the m11nth of February,
which has been desisnated as
National Heart Month, . ·
According to Priscilla Ferguson, R.N., nurse manager of the
units, plans for the observance are
being made and inclu~ an open
· house with free, screenings at the
hospital. Serving as co-chaitpersoDS of the planning committee are
Faye Hammond, R.N., CCU staff
nurse and Susy Merry, R.N., C.,
PCU sta1'f nurse.
·
The open house will be -held
Thursday, Feb.· 18 from 4-8:30
p.m. in the FrenchSOO Room at the
hospital. Emphasis will be on
maintaining normal weight and
blood pressure achieyed through a
weU-balanced diet low in salttillled
fats and a regular exercise routine,
Persons attending will lie informed

about high risk signals and how to
lower those risk factors. The general public is invited and urged to
take advantage of this o~ity
and receive~ EKG stnps, bloodpressure screenmgs, body fat analysis as well as learn how to take a
pulse and the proper administration
of nitrogtr.cerine. Educational
materials wtll also be provided. .
National Heart Month is dedicated to teaching the public about
healthy heart aware~. Heart disease risk factor education and
healthy heart maintenance will be
the topics of informational fairs,
health seminan and public service
BIUIOwtcemenis around the country
during February.
.
The CCUIPCU observance of
National Heart Month at the Holzer
Medical Center provides another
way for the hospital to serve the
residents of the surrounding counties while calling auention to the
importance of heart disease and
prevention.

to

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Uni1Pw

REBOUND FOR LANG • Duke's Aatonlo
Lang (21) grabl a rebound l'rom Notre Dame's
Mo11ty Williams, right, a11d John Ross, rear,

dnrln1 their pme Saturday afternoon In South
.
Bend, Ind. Duke wou, 67-50. (AP)

Miami Redskins outlast. Akron, 58-46
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Scott and started a 12-0.tun that gave the on Saturday.
.
Belyeu scored 17 points, including Eagles a 6~-54 victory over BowlMount Union (9-11 overa.ll, S-9
five straight in the closing minutes ing Green.
in the-Ohio Athletic Conference)
to help Miami of Ohio pull away
Ellery Morgan, the team's lead- was ahead 10-4 with 15:09 remainfrom Aleron for a 58-46 Mid-Amer- ing scorer, led Eastern Michi!lan ing in the fust ba.lf. But Heidelberg
lean Conference victory Sabtrday.
· (8-13 overall, 3-7 in the M1d- (7-13, 5-9) tied the game at 18 at
Belyeu had a sreal, a pair of rree Am.erican Conference) with 21 7:28 when Gene Johnson hit two
throws and a three-point play in a poipts, includinj! five 3-poinlers, foul shots.
·
3~-second span that put Miami (12after being held to three in the
The Student Princes took the
S, 8-2 MAC) in control. .
Eagles' fust game against Toledo. lead for good when Adams hit a
Akron (7-11, 2-8 MAC) had cut Kennedy and Theron Wilson added jump shot to make it 20-18 with
Miami's lead to 45-44 on Trot) . 12 apiece.
7:19 remaining in the ha.lf. HeidelJonkins'
3-pointer
with
three
and
berg
led 49-32 at the half.
.
'· · ha.lf minutes left. Derrick Cross Heidelberg 86,
" - · · -· ·
Oontae Edmondson added 15,
· matched it with a 3-pointer, ani! , Mount Union 67
Mike Hurst 14, and Adam Smith
Belyeu took over. ·
·
TIFFIN, Ohio (AP) - Mall 11 for Heidelberg.
Belyeu stole the ball, was fouled
Adams scored 17 points, all in the
Scou Gobley led~the Purple
ftrst ha.lf, to lead .Heidelberg to an Raiders with 19 points, and Mike
' and hit both free throws. He then
got open for a layup and was
86•67 victory over Mount Union • Murray added 16.
fouled. Miami was in control 53-44

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February 7, 1993

Kentucky, North Carolina,
Duke post hardwood wins

2 LITER BOnLES

STORE HOURS -

Section C

~:t:~~:::~~fl~~ the three-

Cross added 13~inrs and Matt

=~rT~;~~; ~=

:
··with 14; Jnd' Jenldns ~md Mark
·.,Alberts had 13 apiece.
' Both iliams were cold at the
start, going five minutes without a
point Aleron then. went on a 20-9
run for irs biggest lead of the game.
A 15-0 run sparlced by Kramer's
two 3-pointers put· the Redskins
' ahead 24-20 with three minuteS left
in the half.
Aleron dominated the boards 3721, but ilegaled that advantage by
turning the ball over more than
twice as often as Miami, 16-6.

E. Michigan 65,
Bowlltta Green 54
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio {AP)
- : Bryant Kennedy's 3-point shot
wtth 2:4l . to_play Saturday put
' Eastern Mich1gan ahead for good

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) take their ftrst lead of the second
Travis Ford sank four 3-pointers half at62-61 with 5:14 to go.
and handed out a career-high nine
Cincinnati got that lead on a
assists as·No. 2 Kentucky avenged three-pointer from the right comer
its only loss by defeating No. 11 by Allen Jackson.
Vanderbilt82-67 Saturday. ·
Memphis State took the lead
Kentucky (17-1, 8-1 Southeast- back at 63-62 .on a short jumper by
em Conference), which .lost 10 the Anthony Douglas, and Cincinnati
Commodores 101-86 on Jan. 13, trailedfottherestofthegame.
won the remaich by hitting )4 of
With the score 65-64 with 38
30 ~hots from 3-point range and seconds to go, reserve forward
· sconng 30 second-chance points.
Rodney Newsom .scored on a
Vanderl!ilt remained winless in rebound after a missed .3-point try
19 games against the Wildcats in by Smith to put the score at67-64.
Rupp Arena.
Cincinnati scored for the last
The Commodores (17-4, 7-2) time with 20 seconds to go on a
trai.led 54-48 on Bruce Elder's two layup by Erik Manin.
free lhrows with 14:26 remaining
Cincinnati had a chll!lC¢ to score
in the game.
.
with 10 seconds left, but Lazelle
Da.le Brown then scored on a · Durden missed a 3-pointer from the
baseline drive and Jama.l Mashburn left comer.
Anfernee Hardaway hit a free
hit a layup to push KeniUCky's lead
to 58-48 before Vanderbilt's Dan throw with five seconds to go for
Hall s.lipped inside for a layup to the fina.l score of the game.
cut the margin to eight points.
Kentucky then went on a 12-6 No. S Duke 67,
run on two 3-pointers by Ford and Notre Dame SO
one each from Brown and Tony
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) Delle to open a 70-56 advantage There were too many Hills for
with 7:19to go.
·
Notre Dame to climb Saturday
against No. S Duke.
Memphis SL 68,
The Fighting Irish (8-11) threatNo. 4 CinciDDati 66
en~d the ·two-time defending
MEMPHIS, Tenn. - (AP) - nahona.l champions Cot a.lmost 27
Memphis State's Billy Smith minutes before Grant Hill and
scored a career high 27 points Sat- Thomas Hill sparlced the Blue Devurday as the Tigers 6eat No.4 ils (17-3) to a 67-50 win.
Cincinnati 68-66 to end what had
The Hills - who are not related
been the longest winning streak in -scored 12 of Duke's fust 16 secthe nation at 14 games.
ond-hair points, derailing Notre
The Great Midwest Conference Dame's momentum and laWlChing
victory put Memphis SIBle at 14-7 a decisive run that sent the Blue
and 3-2, while Cincinnati fell to Devils to their 35th straight non17-2 and 4-1.
·
conference win.
Tbe Tigers held a 13-point lead
Duke, of the Atlantic Coasi
at 56-43 with 13:43 to play when Conference, also won its fourth
the Bearcats began a 19-5 run to straight overall. Notre Dame lost its

fourth in a row and has beaten
Duke only twice in 17 overall
meetings.
.
Notre Dame has not won siQce
Jan. 23, a 72-63 home win over La
Salle.
.
.
Grant Hill, who came into the
game leading Duke in scoring 31::19
points per game, scoied 16 points,
12 in the second ha.lf. Thomas Hill
finished with 17 and Bobby Hurley
had 14.
, Monty Williams led the Irish
. with 16.
·
No. ' NOrth Carolina 104,
N. CaroUna St; 58
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) Sixth-ranked North Caroliga.
rebounded in a big way Saturdaj
from a pair or recent losses, scori~
the most points in its 180-game·
series with North Carolina: State;
rolling to a 104-58 win.
The previous high game for the
Tar Heels was a 101-78 win in
1972, while they just missed the.
largest margin of victory - 52
points in a 62-10 victory in 1921.
North Carolina (18-3, 7-2),
•upset twice by the Wolfpack (5-12,
1-8) last season, gave N.C. State
two of its worst losses in the. series
this season, winning Saturday by
the most points since the two ~s
joined the ACC in 1954 and by 33
points last month in Ra.leigh.
George Lynch led the Tar H~
with 14 points, while Eric MQn;
tross added 13. Pat Sullivan, siBit•
ing in place of injured ·Brian R~
had 12, as did Henrik Rodl ail4
Dona.ld Williams. Derrick Ph~rps
had 10.
.
.\
Kevin Thompson led the Wolfpack with 15 pomts.

Skelton ~ leads

OSU comback
win over Penn State 62-59

By RUSTY MILLER
ing a string of II games in a row in God, we ,wete able to JllClc it up 'in
AP Sporta Writer
which the Lions had not shot better the second ha.lf,'' said Thomas.
. COLUMBUS - Jamie Skelton
than 44 percent from the field.
Northwestern (5-12, 0-8) played
scored 17 of his 22 points in the
Neither ream was helped much a solid ftrSt half, jumping to a 23~nd ha.lf and Ohio State came
by its leading scorer. DeRoo Hays, 17 lead behind a deliberate offense,
back from a 15•point deficit ·in the who leads the Lions with 16.1 flood shooting and Sll!&gt;ng reboundfinal 8 1(2 minutes to beat Penn. points a game, did not score before mg.
.
State 62-59 Saturday.
foulinl! out with 4:56lefL
"It took us a little time to get
Ohio State (1 0-8 overall and 3-6
Ohio Stale's Lawrence Funder- involved," said lllini freshman
in the Big Ten) hit only two 2-point burke scored only four points and Richard Keene.
field goa.ls in the second ha.lf, but was on the bench for most of the
The win was Illinois' rourth
hit five 3-poinlers. Tbe Buckeyes, second ha.lf.
straight, and their fans hope it will
who did not shoot a rree throw in
Penn State's three previous Big produce a Top 25 rankmg after
•
the first ha.lf, were 16 of 20 at the Ten road losses had been by a com- beating No. 9 Iowa on Thursday.
bined 92 points.
line in the secom! half. .
The Wildcats were playing
Ohio·State hit just 2 of its fust
without starting guard Pat Baldwin,
2Q shots in the second half, then hit IUiDois 82,
who injured a toe in Wednesday's
five ·Of its last seven in winning its Northwestern 67
at 136.
game at Wisconsin. They a.lso lb~t
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) starter Cedric Neloms and sub Mau
Milie Hill matched Colbert's 64 first game since climbing to 21st in
but was eight shots off the lead. the nationa.l rankings four weeks p~spite losing th_ree players to Purdy, who were suspended for
· IDJury and suspens10n, Northwest- fighting in the Badgers' game.
U.S. Senior Open champion Larry ago.
Penn State (6-ll, 1-7 in its fiiSI em gave llljno1s a russle - at least
Northwestern coach Bill Fosler
Laoretti ftred a 72 for 141.
said. the missing players caused
Colbert beJan his run with an year in the Big Ten) IIJ)IJC8red close for a half Saturday.
problems.
After trailing 33-32 81 ha.lftime
eight-foot birdie pun on No. 10. He to winning its fustllfg Ten road
Illinois pulled away in the second
"We did the best we could, but
sank a 25-foot uphill chip to birdie game ever.
The Nibany Lions were on' top half for. an 82-67 ,Big Ten victory the dry spell really hurt us," he
the next hole, then made four
said. "Give Illinois ciedit, in the
birdies in a row beginning on No. 48-33 after John Amaechi muscled over 1ts mbaState nvals.
"I thinlc we neCd to give North- clutch, when things were tight, we
13 with putts of three, one; 12 and in a shot under the basket with 8:30
left
,
western credit. They played us were hanging with them, but they
six'feet.
But
Ohio
State
relied
on
3-point
tough,"
said Illinois coach Lou prevented us from scoring. And
Then Colbert saved par with a
and
foul
Shots
to
get
back
into
the
"I think their lack of they scored themselves and scored
Henson.
10-foot putt at the 17th. His round
game,
outscoring
the
Lions
17-4
depth
hurt
them."
in the rashion that they basically
was one shot shy of Geiberger's
over
the
next
five
minutes.
Skelton
Deon
'Thomas
led the lllini (14- wanted to."
tournament record. He needs a 70
li was lllinois' IOOth defeat of
Sunday to break the tournament scored the fmal six points of the 6, 7-2) with 20 points and nine
rebounds.
Northwestern and the Wildcats
54-hole record of 13-under 200, set rally on a pair of 3-pomras.
· Down 54-50 after two P.enn
"We thought we were ready. 40th consecutive road loss.
by Gary Player in 1991.
-··· State free throws, Skelton flipped We came out a. .little flat.
. . .Thank
in a 3-pointer from the left corner
and was fouled by Eric Carr on the
shot with 2:07 left. He hit the rree
throw to complete a four-point play
that tied the game.
Seldom-used substitute Charles
Macon then blocked a shot by Penn
Stale'S Rahsaan Qlrlton with I :55
left, Ohio State converting a.lmost .
49ers with seven. ·
immediately at the other end when
The Da.llas contingent is led by A1Cx Davis hit Derek Andasal for
quarterback Troy Aikman, the a breakaway la&gt;"W·
Super Bowl MVP; Emmitt Smith,
After Carlton bed things up with
who rushed for 108 rards in that a 15-foot jumper at the 1:21 marie,
game; and wide recetver Michael Davis made an 18-footer with 49
Irvin, who had six catcbes. for 114 seconds remaining to give Ohio
yards and two touchdowns.
State the lead for good.
Other Cowboy aU-stars are tight
Once again Macon blocked a
end Jay Novacek and center Marie shot at the Penn State end, this time
S1eJlllll¥;i a guard Nate Newton, batting away a shot by Amaechi
the fust Da.llas offensive linemen with 28 seconds left Skelton was
fouled on the rebound and convertpia · the Pro B 1 · 11
to TbeYNR::'s
m
ow
m
years.
ed
both foul shots for a 60-56~defense is led by end
Repie White, who wiU be a free advantage.
agent and may or may not be back
Carlton countered wi!b a 3with the Pliiladc!phia Eaales next pointer at tho 12-second mark to
season; the New Orleans Saints' cut it to a one-point gallic, but
linebacking trio of Pat Swilling, Skelton bit two more free th_rows
Rickey Jackson and Sam Mills; with 8.7 seconds left to make 1162Atluta cornerback Deion Sanders 59.
.
and Phoenix llfety 11m McDonald.
After a bJDCOUt, Jlen!l State set
Tbepmo will be the swan - g up a play for the~ tyiq_3of Mite Singletary~ the retirlft&amp;~bul Amaecbi althot With
Chicqo Belli linebacker wbo hal
was short.
~layed In 10 consecutive Pro
•
loss was Penn State's fifth
'owla, aylng Lawrence Taylor's in a
and eighth in its last nine
record
·
games.
Offensively, San Franclaco'a
Andenon a~ 11 points and
SIIIVO YOUIII, wbo led the !cape's Davis had 10 loi Ohio Slate.
pn':l:• • 107, willatart for
Amllochi led Penn State with 20
the
:. Alb!• and Breu Favre DOints; wblle Clrlton ~ Brie Carr
Bay alao
had 12 apiece and Michael JcnBLOCKING • Teu-•s Alln I~
(21) driYea tUwa1i
··Detnlit''lllrry
will join
. . had 10.
.
a
bloc:k
by
Alabama's
Silo•
Peek-Lo~
IB
~tarda)''a
Smith as the stanera at running nmrenn State hit 23 of 44 ahots
KHm11e. The Tide-, 15-11. (AP)
.f
•
bact.
from the field for 52 pe~Q~Jt, end'
.
'

Colbert takes five-shot
lead in Caribbean Classic
KEY BISCA'YNB, Fla. (AP) ..,_

Jim Colbert had six birdies during a
seven-hole stretch and shot a 64
Saturday for a five-shot lead after
three rounds of the Senior PGA
Tour's Roya.l Caribbean Classic.
, Colbert had a two-round total of
129, 13 under par on The Links at
KeyB~e.

AI c;Jei!'C'ler, tied for the fustround lead With Colbert, shot a 2under 69 and was in second place
at 134.
Hometown favorite Ray Floyd
birdied Nos: IS, !II and 17 10 shoot
a 68 for 135. He was tied for third
.en
WI'th ·1•C• Snead, Who shot ""·
Sixty-three-year-old Don Jannary, seeking jlis fust victory since
1987, sbot67 and was in fifth place

Though there are no Cowboys on defense,

Tonight~s

Pro Bowl stocked with
Oilers, Bills, 49ers, but no Kelly
was the i'fFl. 's statistica11eader this
season ~nd forced a Super Bo~l
record rune turnovers by Buffalo tn
Da.llas' 52-17 victory, none of_ the
Cowboy derenders was voted Into
the.f.'!O Bowl.
.
They all play wuh such. a
sense of ~~y, and they're so. m
synch, I thinlc !t may be lulrd to liDgle out lndiv1d~~l ~layers on the
Da.llas de~ense., Sllld NR; coach
George Seifert of ~an FranciSCO.
The AFC should have some
add~ in~cndve a_fter the ~ference s mnth stral,ht.loJS tn the
Super Bowl. By wmnmg three of
tho last four Pro Bowls, the NFC
holds a 13-9 edge in the a.ll-star
PI!'~
. Of coune you would _rather
wm tho Super Bowl, but 1f you
don't, you • least want to win this
one," laid Buffalo's Steve Talk«,
aiPOdll '-Ill playa- for tile AFC.
lie Is one of 11 BIDa acheclulod
to play. But nanning bact Thurman
11ionw and tackle Will Wolford,
llt.e Kelly, were hurt ill the Super
Bowlltld will mill the pme.
With eiJht plfyen, Buffalo llill
. tion.
has more iCJUUDtatMa than any
· None of the Dallal defenders. team-other than Houston, which
: wiU play in the same, either, but has nine.
· fo'r a different reuon - they
Tbe Cowboys, meanwblle, have
· wenn't invited.
sill play'ers on the NFC aq.uad,
AllltouAit the Cowboys' defenac topped only by the SIR Franclaco

By 'KEN PETERS
.
HONOLYLU (AP) _ Jim
• Kelly wiD won't play in the game
a.lthough he does have a role at
Pro Bowl.
.
The Dallas Cowboys' defense
won't have a single representative
on hand.
There will be a few noticeable
absences in the Pro Bowl fame
toni,ht, although· most o the
NFL s top names WI
. ·n play in the
annua.l alf-star game~
Kickoff at Aloba. Stadium is set
for 8 p.m. EST,
Kelly, slated to be one of three
quarterbacks for the AFC, sustained a knee sprain In the Super
Bowl last s~ and will watch in
street clothes fiom the sidelines.
Although be 1cnew he Wllll't going
to be a61e 10 play Kelly lli1l decided to come over tOr the game. .
He led the AFC 10 its oaly vietory in the laat four Pro Bowls
throwinJ 1 late lliUCIIdowtt pass IJi
a 23-21 triwnpb in 1991
. This time, his sole ~ty
is to hand out awards 10 )'OIIIIgllel1
in lbc pun~ pass and kk:lc COIIIpeti-

me ·

.•t

'eft

oro-

=·

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•t•

••••ltl

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• •

•

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.-

-"~·

C2 -Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

February 7, 1993

February 7, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

, Sunday Tlmn

Sentinel-Page ~

With 64-44 road victory over Logan,

Gallipolis among SEOAL tri'-leaders·
. ·: LOOAN - G,allipolis climbed
rm10 a tluee-way ue for fist place in
Jhe ~outheastern Ohio League
standinp following a 64-44 confer(;&gt; ~ ~CIOI)' over host Logan Fri•
:l:'Y mght at Logan-HO!=king Mide SchooL
.
. Jackson knocked off Marieua
~7G10 drq!S the Tigers into a lie
~ft ~ and :~thcns. The Bull~" ~ vtSJbllg Warren Local
~ . .Y e~erung.
.
.
&lt;lia G~~~ h&lt;;lst Marietta Fn.Y~' e
. s VlSits JacJE:ron for
a ~oouerence Ult. Logan will host
~arren Local Feb. 12.

Cblefs lead early
The Otieftains grabbed an early
lead behind senior Torn Smilh and
was on top 12-11 before back-10back goals by Eric Hoffman and
Nathan Miller put the Gallians
allead 10 slay.
GAHS led 15-12 after one penod. The Gallians outscored LHS
20-8 in the second stanza 10 lake a
35-20 halftime lead. After three
quaners, the Gallians were on top
51-33, Bolh coaches cleared thetr
benches midway in the fmal. quartu.
Miller, who switched 10 point

guard after Chad Barnes suffered a er in double figures with 11.
sprained ankle in ·the first quarter, Brooks Burris added seven and
was the only Blue Devil in double Ryan Carpenter six.
figure in scoring with 24 points.
OalliDolis, now 11-4 overall and
Barnes, who missed 5:20 of the 6-2 insiile the league COIIIICCJed on
first period and half of the second 24 of 57 field goal .itcmpcs for 42
quarter, played less than half the percent. GAHS was four of 12
game. He finished with nine points. from the three-point range. The
Jason Williams, Horrman and Gallians were four of five at the .
David Hager chipped in with six line, had 17 personals, 33
points each.
rebounds, 10 by Hager, and ni~
. .Seni~r forward Adam Blair, turnovers.
.
IDJUred m the Portsmouth game,
GAHS was credited with 16
did not dress for .the Logan outing.
assists, eight by Barnes and fOlD' by
Smith paces Logan
. · Miller, 10 steals, three by Hoffman
Smith was the only Logan play(See GAHS on C-3)

With SEOAL wins by Jackson, Athens,

BOATSH.O W

FRIDAy, FEB. 1:!, 5 P.M. ,;, 9 P.M• .
SATURDAY, FEB. 13,9 A.M.· 9 P.M.
SUNDAY, FEB.14, 12 P.M.· 6 P.M.

-

WASIDNGTON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
MAll~ I lA, OJDO

lhree teams tied for first in home stretch

.• As the Southeastern Ohio Ath- od, but the Tigers nillied 10 narrow cbiimed 35 1'Cbounds, nine by Ben
!i:Jic League enters the linaltwo the gap 10 71.62 with two minutes Kroft
. Weeks of cornpelition, the Jackson left JHS converted one free throw
lronmen pulled off the fmt major after another down the stretch , fmMARIE1TA
upset Friday night by stunning the ishing with 21 of 23 in the fourlh
(14-17-17-19=67) .
Marietta T•gers 90-72, creating a quarter.
Mike Smith 5-5-4•24; Naihan
three-way tie at lhe lOp with GalMarietta was forced 10 foul fre- Stutler 0-1-0=3; Call) Mcintyre 1lipolis and Athens.
quenty 10 stop the clock, but Jack- 0·1=3; Ryan Robinson 3-1-2=11 ·
The. GAHS Blue Devils ·son's Steve Howe was a perfect 10 Ben Kroft 7..0:2=16; Greg Schieleii ·
whipped Logan 6444 and Athens for 10, while Matt Walburn and 1-0-1=3; Darrell Shuss 3-0-2=12
edged Warren Local 50-46. The Dave Se~each went4for4at TOTALS ....... 20-5·10=67
.
three leaders own 6-2 league the charity stripe in the fmal minrecords. Jackson stands at 3-S, utes.
JACKSON
Logan is 2-6, and Warren is on the
Jackson enjoyed a fme shooting
(25.·26-11-28=90)
bouom at 1-7.
game, hitting 27 of 54 fielders for
Robbie Travis 5-0-0=10; Dave
With two league srans remain- 50%, including nine of 22 from Seymon: 3-0-4=10; Dave Kight3ing, Marietta will face Gallipolis in three-point range. Walburn drilled 2-0=12; Man Walburn 3-6-Hl=34;
the Old French City next.Friday six treys in a game scoring high of Brad Howe 1-1-10=15; Tommy
and will host Warren in the finale 34 points. The Ironmen also fin: Hill 2-0-0=4; Dennis C!llbtree 0·0on Feb 19. Athens travels 10 Jack- ished witli 27 of 33 free throws and 3=3. TOTALS 18-9-27=90
son next week and 10 Logan for the ouuebounded the Tigers 38-35,
Reserve score- Marietta 51,
finele while Gallipolis is at home with Seymore leading .with 11 Jackson 27
against Marietta next week, and grabs.
closes out playing host 10 Jackson.
The T~rs finished. wilh a 32%
Atbens 50, Warren Local.46
· Jackaoa 90, Marietta 67
shooting rught (25 of 77), including
At the Plains, the Warri9rs
At Jackson, the lromncn jwnpcd seven of 32 on tluee-poinll:rs. Mike reverted 10 a slow down game and
. 10 an early 18-61ead, increased It 10
Smith nailed five ueys and finished nearly pulled off the upset, but
51-31 at halftime and then staved with 24 points 10 lead the visiiOrs. Sunny Kalu and Pat McHugh
off several Tiger rallies in the sec- Nalhan Studer and Ryan Robinson scored ,in the final minute 10 keep
ond half with some excellent free each drainectonc three-poinrer.
Athens tied for first place in the
throw shooting. The Iromnen built
Marietta made 10 of 18 free l!!3gue srandings.
a 62-48 lend entering the fmal peri- throws, committed 27 fouls, and
Athens held a lead thrc;mgiJ.out
the contest and was on top of a 40~~ge ~~~~dings
3~ score entering the final period,
but
the Warriors rallied 10 knot the
Brookhaven
at
Portsmouth
SEO, oppoaents
score
at42 with 3:41Jeft, and again
Fairland
at
Wheelersburg
(All games)
at
44
wilh
just 1:18 re!paining.
·
River
Valley
at
South
Point
Team
W .L
P OP
Kalu
scored
for
Athens
with
Tuesday's pmes:
Chesapeake ....... 16 0 '1099· 928
1:27 left and McHugh swiped an
Marietta............. l2 4 1264 981 River Valley at Marietta
inbounds
pass and scored a few
Gallipolis.......... .ll 4 1005 792 Fairfield at Greenfield
seconds
later
to put AHS on top
Southern ............ ll 4 1029 897 Pt. Pleasant at Hurricane
48-44.
The
Bulldogs
missed the
Point Pleasant.... ! 0 4 867 828 Fairland at Chesapeake
fltSI
of
two
one
and
one
chances in
· Friday's games:
Athens ...............10 6 916 920
the
closing
seconds
until
Kalu
RiverValley ........9 6 1056 981 Marietta at Gallipolis
scored
on
a
layup
steal
before
WarGreenfield ...........9 7 846 · 772 Athens·at Jackson
ren
canned
one
with
six
seconds
Jackson ................9 8 1141 1132 Warren Local at LDSIID
left fot the filial score.
Vinton County ....9 9 1132 1073 Southern at Meigs ·
Athens pailaycd a 61% shooting
Wheelersburg ......8 8 1036 1011 Portsmouth at Russell
night
(19 of 31) and a three of 10
Fairland .............. .5 9 827 848 Wahama at)'t. Pleas:mt
effort
at the charity stripe into·.the
Logan ..................5 11 868 1075 South Webster at Wheelersburg
victory.
The Bulldogs canned just
. Portsmoulh ..........3 11 881 991 South Point at Fairland
one
three-point
goal while Warren
Wmen Local ......2 15 965 1233 Chesapeake at Rock Hill
made
four
of
the
Jon!' shots. WarTrimble at Vinton County
(SEOAL VARSITY)
ren
•
s
statistics
were
mcomplete at
.
Feb. 13 games:
Team
, W L
P OP
press
time.
Gallipolis.............6 2 521 406 Gallipolis at Wheelersburg
Dan Kiger's 11 points Jed the
Marietta ...............6 2 591 479 Waverly at Athens
Athens
scoring, while Olip RobinAthens ........ ;........6 2 466 424 Groveport at Logan
son lOpped the Warriors with 14
Jackson ................3 5 531 541 Jackson·at WellsiOn
points.
Logan ..................2 6 414 663 Greenfield at Adena
Warren l.oca1 ...... 1 7 424 544 Waterford at Southern
TOTALS
24 24 2947 2947 River Valley at Fairland
Chesapeake at Hunting10n St Joe
(SEOAL RESERVES)
Team .
W L
P OP
Marietta. ............. 7 1 427 290
;. -Athens................ 6 2 379 367
,; Gallipolis ............ 4 4 385 349 Lyne Center' scbeduJe
.
~ Wmen Local..... 4 .4 329 422
. Logan................ 3 5 389 349 . RIO GRANDE - This week's
.; Jackson............... 0 8 223 355 activities schedule for Lyne Center
'. TOTALS
24 24 2131 1132 is a8 follows:
.
Gymnasium boors '
;• 1frldlly'' r~lll: ,
Today
7" 1-3' and 5-7 p.in., ~
··
~EO..U: Yinlty:
open recreauon
.
: Gallipolis,64 Logan44 '
Monday - 5-1 p.m., college
•: Athens 50 Warren Loca146
recreation
• Jaclcson 90 Marietta 67
Tuesday - closed for women's
:
SEOAL reserves:
basketball vs. Tiffin, 7 p.m.
: Logan 45 Gallipolis 37
• Athens 68 Warren Loca162
Pool hours ·
: Marieua 51 Jackson 27
Tod~y- 1-3 and 5-7 p.m .,
Area results:
Open SWim
; Ponsmoulh 70 Ashland 67
Monday- closed
• Wheelersburg 69 Northwest 59
: River Valley 68 Easlern 56
Tuesday - closed
: Rock Hill66 Fairland 57
· NOTE: All facilities in Lyne
• Chesapeake'59 Coal Grove 45
Center will be closed 10 the public
:
Last aiaht's aarues:
from Tuesday, Feb. 9 until Man:h I
: Gallipolis at Pt. Pleasant
for final exams and spring break. A
· Chillicothe at Athens
: Belpre at Warren Local
new schedule will be published
: Portsmouth Clay at So01hern
when classes resume on Man:h 2.

PIUUN1'KD .,.

WARREN LOCAL
(14-11-3-13=46)
Matt Dickey 1-1-2=7; Chan
Wentz 2-0-().4; Chip Robinson 70-0=14; Jeremy Gaul 1-0-0=2;
Jason Pyatt 2-0-2=6: Jilson ~or­
roughs 0-1-0=3; Jason Harris 3-20=12. TOTALS-15-4-4=46

MID OHIO VALLEY MARiNE DEALERS AssOCIATION

---....----..------------.., ·':...

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ATHENS
(15-14-11-10=50) ·.
Nick Toth 2-0-0=4; Matt Bucey
2-0-0-4; Sunny Kalu 5-0-0•10;
Justin Scholl 1-1-0=5; Pat McHugh
3-0-0•6; Kyle Lonas 5-0-0•IP;
Dan Kiger 4-0-3=11. TOTALS22-1-3=50 .
Reserve score - Athens 68
Warren 62

TO THE
- Meigs forward Trevor
past Federal
pla;yers Grant Schaller (32) and Myron
(far left) on
tlte boop for tbe laynp d~ring Friday night's
TVC 1ame at
Hocking Higb School, where tbe Marauders .
won 84-57. Harrison fialsbed witb a game-high 23 points. (Photo by
Cathy Edwards)

SLE

(WHY PlY MOB£)

Fairland girls defeat Eastern

4.3 V6
auto. trailS., 2 wheel drive (4 door),
air., AMIFM cassette/clock. Much, much more.
GREAT V!!HICLE- GREAT PRICE!

WILLIAMS GETS TWO • GaiDa's J~ Williams (12) drives
Inside aaalnst Logan's Dustin Dennis (14) to aet two or his sill
points in Friday's 64-44 Blue Devll hardwood victory over host
Logan.
'•
• ...·_(Continued
from__...:,;__
C-2) _ _ _ __
t:GAHS
wms
___

'

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK.CENTER, INC.
135

· ,446-2532

.

.

GALUPOUS, OHIO

'•'• and

'
s1x
blocked shots, five by
~.l~er·an. now 5_11 overall and 2_
I ' Log
-;,6 inside the SEOAL, hit 18 of 55
• field goal attempts for 32 percenL
:: LHS was, eight of 13 at the line,
; h~d IS per~nals, 30 rebounds,
:=e•~ht by Sm1th and seven by six by
:zo~;~ p~yed at Pt. P~t
•Saturday night. Arter Fri' day's
:Championship ~arne with Mariella,
;the Gallians will play at Wheelers-burg on Saturday.
: After Logan's ~arne with War-re. n Friday, the Chief•·'ns w•'IJ host
~
.£Groveport Saturday night
,
Blue Imps I~
~ In Friday's preliminary game, .
·~Logan reserve~ upset Gallipolis ·
:'15-37.
.
'! The Blue Imps, who beat the
~apooses by 30 points earlier in lhe
'fe&amp;r, led 8-5 after one period, bui
~re oulSCOrcd 13.2 in the second
3!Criod 10 fall behind 18-10 at half·
-tim~. Logan led 25-18 aftei'.three
lJenods of play. .
·
.
~ Josh Cook· s 10 markers paced
)he Blue Imps, now 7-8 overall and

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435 UPPEIIIYEIID. • GALLIPOLIS
446·4517

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Fairland
(15-11-11-21=58)
Kim Bonham 5-0-1=11, Angie
Ryder 0-0·1=1. Brea James 1-01=3, Misty Burd 0-0-1=1, Carrie
Hinlde4-1-0=Il, Rachael Bostic 30-7=13, Michelle Workman 0-02=2, Jessii:a Black 0-0-1=1, Nicole
Bradford 3-1-6=15. Totals- 16-220=58

.MONDAYS
TUESDAYS ··
WEDNESDAYS
THURSDAYS

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transmission, AM/FM stereo,
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FRIDAYS &amp;
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8 oz. Rlteye .Steak 0.. 12 oz. T-Bone S10.25

SUNDAYS

All $5.95 Dlllners for $4.95

Queen Prime Rib $9.95

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Our ~rvlce DePartment Ia Open Mon.·Frl. 8-5; Sat. 8-12
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Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Silt. 8-12

All sales are subtedto the terms of mbetino and sale documents.
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Children (12IIIIII•IICier) Eat for $1.49 (iKIIdes beverage)
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bruary 8-1

. Eastern hit a meager 17-71, was
5-17 at the line, _had 38 rebounds,

FROM CHILDREN'S MENU

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Eastern
.
(4-10-U-19=45)
Stephanie Otto 4-0-2=10, Jaime
Wilson 3-2-0=12, Amy Redovian
0:0-1=1, Penny Aeilcer 5·0-0=10,
Jessica Karr 4-0-1=9, Tara Congo
1-0-1=3. Totals -17-2-5=45

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LOGAN
(12-8-13-11=44)
Ed DoWI)s 1-0-1=3; .Chad Zimmerman 2-0-0=4; Dus'tin Dennis 10-3=5; Rudy Brandt 2-0-0=4; Chris
Stamer 1-0-0=2; Tim Nessley 1·00=2; Ryan Carpenter 3-0-0=6; Tom
Smilh 4;0-3=11; Broo~s Burris 30-1=7. Non-scorer- Tim Mauck.
TOTALS 18-.0·8=44

Jed by Aeiker with nine and Otto
eight; had 18 turnovers, 10 steals
and 24 fouls.
· Fairland hit 16-62, was 20-36 at
the line, had 43 rebounds Qed by
Bostic's 10 and nine each by Burd
and .Bonham), had 20 turnovers,
nine steals and 21 fouls.
Fairland won the reserve game
28,23. Beth Bay led Eastern with
six points an11 Tara Congo added
five. Jessica Black had nine for
Fairland, and teammate Angie
Stephens added eight
Eastun hosted Meigs Saturday.

.'·...

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GALUPOLIS
(15·20-16·13=64)
Jason Williams 3-0-0=6; Chad
Barnes 3-1-0-9; Chris Roetlker 11-0•S; Mike Donnally J-0-0=2;
Nathan Miller 8-2-2-24; Eric Hoffman 3-0-0=6; David Hager 3-00 6· Jeff Pope 2 0 0 4 T
= ' 0-0-2=2. Non-scorers
- · = ; erry
Qualls
Larr.y Howell, Brad Murphy.
TOTALS 24-4-4=64

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4-4 inside· the league. Heath
Hurchinsop ac:Jd.ed 7. Kris Begley
toss~d in 16 while Eric Cox and
Jearemy Klinger added 10 apiece.
L
·
d 6 0
ogan Improve to -1 overall
·and 3-5 inside the league.

PROCTORVILLE- Falling
behind early, Eastern's varsity girls
pulled back into contention, but it
was 100 linle, 100 late as Fairland
. rolled 10 a 58-45 non-leaJue girls .
basketball win Thursday rught over
the Eagles.
Fairland is now 14-3 and Eastem drops 10 6-11.
Eastern (6-11) pot itself in early
foul trouble and fell behind 15-4 in
the first period. Hitting just 3-9
from the foul line in the secood
f!llme, Eastern lost an .Opponunity
to really put itself back in . the .
game, but trailed 26-14 at the half.
With 1:10 to go in the half, Eastern
had cut the lead tb ei$ht at 22-14,
but a late second J?Cnod turnover
~Y Eastern and a pau of free throws
by Nicole Bradford accounted for
the twelve point halftime deficit.
Eastern pulled to within eight
. several times in the third frame, but
still trailed 37-26 after three
rounds. Eastern started out slow in
· the fourth round and fell behind by
as much as 20 points, then made a
late game rally. but fell short.
The game was decided at the
foul line as Eastern had one more
field goal than the Lady Dragons
(14-3), who hit 20-36 free throws.
Eastern was led by Jaime Wilson with 12 points, including two
three-pointers, while Penny Aeiker
and Stephanie Oua each had 10.
Bradford, who Jed Fairland wilh
15, was followed in double figures
by Rachel Qostic's 13 and 11-point
efforts by Kim Bonham and.Carrie

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. HAGER GRABS REBOUND • Gallipolis' David Hager (40)
piCks oft' oae of 1111 p~~~J-blalt 10 rellounda apinlt holt Logan Fri·
day nlgbt. ~
at rfptls Lotlm's Tom Smltb (44). ·Gallipolis won, 4i4 •
· allo bacf nve blocked sbots amt sill
points. (Kevin PIDSOD
• ·
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. February 7, 1-~

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

P.aga C4 Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

Despite Spurlock's 42-point clinic,

.

By SCOTI WOLFE
. Times-SelldDel COtTespoadeat
RACINE - Blasting South
Point 32-16 in the fmal ~od. the
Southern Tornadoes whuled 10 an
84-71 boyS' basketball victory over
tbe Pointers Friday night in Charles
W. Ha~ Gymnasium in Racine.
Utilizing balance, consistency
. and four quarters of intensity,
Soulhem "buried" the Poin~trs m

the final round 10 push its reconlto
11-4 overall. Two of Southern's
losses were to swe-ranlr.ed Chesapeake and Oak Hill. South Point
drops to 8-7.
.
Disappointed in previous perlormances, Southern head coach
Howie Caldwell said last week,
"Good teams bury their oppo·
. nents." Friday night Caldwell sai~,
"Finally, its CQming together. We

finally put a good team away. I
believe we crossed the bridge
Wednesday night in practice. Every ·
year you can see a little bit of
growth in a team at the end of a
season. Wednesday niJ!ht in practice, I saw that growth.
"Wednesday night we were as
sharp as we've been all year long.
When the third quarter ended, I
told the boys, 'Remember how
sharp we were Wednesday nighL
We've never done that in front of a
crowd before.' The boys came to
life in the last quarter and played as
well as we've played all year
long."
Balanced attack
Wben was lhe last time that five
Tornadoes hit double figures? It
had been quite a while, but Southern picked a fme time 10 produce a
balanced attock.
Career high
Southern point guard, sophomore Ryan Williams, ran the

offense like seuoned Velmll and
pouml in a vmity can:cr-high 2S
pointS. Williams hit 6 of 8 from the
field for 7S% and drilled four
clutch three-poinrers.
.
' Swing guard Mad; Allen played
a solid fiOOI" game with IS points,
Michael Evans added IS points
with a S-8 night from the !loa', and
Russell Singleton added IS points
and seven rebounds. Jllllior Robert
Reiber, improving with every
game, netted 14 points and tied for
top rebounding honors with seven.
Spurlock rules
. South Point's Jerry Spurlock
impressed fans from botb sides
with an offensive shooting display
that netted him a game-high 42
points. Spurlock was perfect from
the three-point stripe ·at 7-7 and hit
10-16 two point attempts. Spurlock
was perfect frOIJ! the field during
the second and third~·
- Mostly behind tbe seoring of
Spurlock, who opened die game

with I three-pointer, South Point
raced to a S-0 lead. Soulhem, who
was red-hot the first be,lf froin
three-point range, saw Evans,
Williams and Allen hit key threepoinlel1 to ovcrcdne a 10-9 deficit
and race 10 a 21-12lead. Reiber
and Singleton both hit two key
inside buckets each in the drive.
The Pointm had a late quarter rally
that pulled them 10 21-16.
Rebier hit a bucket with 42 seconds left and Spurlock canned a
free throw to push the score to 23'18 with SHS leading 11 the buzzer.
Beginning the second round,
Williams, Evans and Allen utili;r.ed
the fast bn:alr. 10 five SHS a 30-20
lead. Southern mixed up the scoring among its Sllrta'S, while Spurlock carried the load for South
Point, scoring ten points in the
frame, including two clutch three-

~ary7,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, O~olnt Pleasant, wv

Sunday Tlmea Sentinel-Page

•'•

In w_eekend home game against Eastern,

••

River Valley shakes off third-quarter deficit to win 68-56

...

Southern breaks prime-time deficit ato top Sourt h Point 84-71 .

•

.

pointel1 that pulled his club close
at the half 39-35.
Southern stumbled through the
third frame, playing steady, but
lacking itS first half spark. With ...
3:43 left in the rn.ne, Hank Fletch- ·
er put South Point up 47-46, its • ·
first lead since the first quarter. ·'
Spurlock shared in the SP come- ::
baclc Rl put SP up SS-SO with 30 ~
seconds left in the frame. Reiber hir·:
a pair of free throws to.pull SHS '.
cloaer.at the buzzer SS-52.
,
After Caldwell's pre-fourth peri- ' 1
!K1 ~ talk, Southern came to life ·~10 a btg way. M;ark Allen took a;·
Williams pass to lhe bucket to open •:
the frame, then after a SP mus/: '
canned a three-pointer !O give -''
South_ern a 57-SS lead. Trolller ':'
drove ~line to tie it at S7-S7, .
then Williams drove the lane 10 put H
(See SOlJTIIERN oa C-5) ' !'•

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
11mes-Send~el Statr
CHES~-~verValley~ot
a career-htgh 21 pmnts from sentor
frontma_n Rob C~nady , solid
reboundt~g from htm .and teammate Kev10 Hunt as well as the will
I&lt;! s~e off a six-point deficit in
the third quarter of Friday night's
s_ame agamst Eastern to beat the
Eagles 68-5.2.
. :r~e Ratders .(9-6), who won
thetr,seventh straight home contest
d~tte the loss of rescue !'8llgers
Chris ~ and Chris Mandeville
(both claimed ,back inj~s forced
l'tC!D on the. disnbled ltst), boosted
thCll' ~ 10 games in which they
get behmd at halftime 10 4-3.
. The .~gle~ (2' 13) wasted little
nme elimmaung one of lhe j!OOse
eggs on the scoreboard when Junior
~ Pat Newland nailed a threeoomter 18 seconds after tipoff.
· But the Raiders wasted little

time erasing that ~ as Canady,
w!Jo also led his team in .rcboUJM!s
With 13,sankafour-footJumpeun
the lane before senior guard Aaron
McCarty buried a three-spot from
the right wing 59 seconds into the
game to give River Valley a S-3
lead
·
.
Charlie Bissell, the Eagles' 6foot-3 sophomore center who ted
his team with 17 points and ruled
the boards with 14 grabs, tied the
game at 5-5 with 6:42 left with a
layup before Raider frontman Dave
Poling put his mates back on top
":ith a left-side baseline jumper
nmc seconds later.
Eagle P9int guard Chad Savoy
put his teim in the lead with a trey
from the !eft wing with 6:20 left in
the opem.ng act, .but 20 seconds
later, Poling, ·talting a pass from
Canad:,:. got in for the Ia~~ that
gave Rtver Valley a 9-8
and
ignited a general rally that sow the

cs.

J

hosts score 12 more ·points to the
Eagles' five the resJ of the way.
The result: River Valley took an
eight-point lead into the second
quarrer.
.
The ftrSt four minutes of act two
saw River Valley's offense contribute mightily to the Raiders' 13for-33 shooting from the fieldthat included missing six of seven
shots from three-point range - in
the first half. In that time, the
Eagles scored 10 pointS to their
hosts' three and kept after them
until Bissell, working on reducing
the RaidCI1' 29-2S lead in the last
90 seconds, sank a pair. of one-andones before making a layup and the
bonus foul shot made neceSSIIIY by
Poling's third foul ro give the gents
tn green the 30-29 lead that stood
at halfli.me.
. Shooting 9 for 26 from the field
10 any balf generally Isn't the way
to win, but Eastern got ahead by

doing three tbiRgs:
• Execution of tough pressure
defense, which n:main!l(l a constant
throughout the game.
• S-for-10 shooting from threepoil\t land.
• Solid inside play by Bissell
that netted him six points fiom the
field on 3-for-S shooting and 5-for7 shooting from lhe foul line that
eventually put Eastern on top .
"We haven't played good
defense all year,K SOld Raider mentor Mi1ce Jenkins. "We tried to stop
them outside, and they went inside

night with 3:39 left 10 lie the game
at38-38.
Eastern forwar.d Jeremy Cline
gav~ the Eagles a 41-38 lead with a

•

'•

th.ree-pointer from the right win&amp; •
w1th 3:23 lefL Butlhe Raiders· run
of II unanswered points began 18 '•
(See RAIDERS on C-')
..

sOUthern WinS' ••_cc_on_tin_ued_tro_m_C-4_&gt;_..,.;:·::

Southern on lOP for goodat59-S7.
Williams then nailed a tl!ree-pointer, and Singleton nailed a followup jumper to give Southern a 64-57
lead.
The 12-2 run prompted a time .
out from Pointer head coach Rick
Huckl!bay and brought the large,
on us."
· · vocal Southern crowd hack iniO the
.game.
~n the fust half of the thitd quarSpurlock followed w.ith a huckter, Eastern's lead varied between
one to five points, with the Eagles et, but Southern continued to build
reaching therr zenith when Bissell's itS intensity and wenron a 10-2 run
point-blank jumper with S:02 left to lead 75-61. Every Tornado
put the guests ahead 36-31. But the played i pan in the scoring drive
Raiders were knoclting on the door (Singleton, Reiber, Allen, Evans),
when senior guard Charles Peck but it was Williams who took th~
sank his only three-pointer of the. reigns of the SHS offense. With ·
1:llleft, SP cut the SCO«\ to 80-71 ,
but that was as close as thCy could
come as SHS raced to the 84-71 triumph.
Caldwell added, "With the
exception of a few mental lapses in
the third quarter, I thought we
played very well. I am especially
pleased with the way they played
the fourth quarrer. The boys really
responded."
.
Southern bit a warm 25 of 47
for 53%, hit 8-17 threes and 10-20
free throws. SP hit 21-45 two's, 712 threes and 2-3 at the.line.
Southern had 23 rebounds, led ·
by Singleton and Reiber (seven

each). - had 14 steals, seven·,·
turnovers, nine assistS and IS fouls.
South Point had 34 rebounds;·:
led by Fletchet's 12 and Spurlock's'',
seven, had seven steals, 21 .
turnovers and 22 fouls.
Southern won the reseive game
52-49 after leading 27-18 at the •
half. Jeremy Hill led the winner$•;
with 15, Mike McKelvey added 10,
Cass Cleland eigpt, Sam Sbairi
eight and Kevin Turley six . A,.,.
Johnson had 16 for South J:'ointf:'
and J. Mollineaux had 13.
.:!
Southern hosted Portsmoutll~:
Clay Saturday.
.
•:•
· ·
·~ •
SOUTHERN
· :!:
(23-16·13·32::84)
Mark Allen 3-3-0= 15, Rya.r;.
Williams 6-4-1=25, Michael EvanS:~
5-l-2=15, Robert Reiber 4-0-6=1~,
Russell Singleton 6-0-3=15:[,:
TOTALS- 24-8-12=84
·••
:,:
SOUTH POINT .
:&lt;
(18-18-19-16=71)
·:·
Hank Fletcher 4-0-0=8,
Sites 2-Q-0.04,
:t-o-o-o';.~
Jerry Spurlock
Troxler 2-0-0=4·,, rc~~c~:.~~~~f
t-0-0.2,
N
1';3, Gail G~~.~~ e :t-~1-U••4,~
71
TOTALS...-. 2•

r.;.

: PREP~RES TO PASS - Fedeul Hockla1'1 Brllin Beanett
(tlgbt) prepares to pus to an opea te•mmate·wlllle Melp ronm-d
Bobby Jolmsoa appUes dereaslve pressure duriDI Frldaf_nl&amp;bt's
'tVC p111e at Stewart, wbkh tbe Marauden woa 84-57. (Photo bt
Cathy
Edwards\
•
eigs wins.~.
(Continued from c-3)

!rf

•Hairison ied the way with his 23 Breu Newsome added seven for

points. He was joined in double
figures by Todd Dill with 16
points, John Bentley added IS and
·Jay Cremeans added 10. Other
~igs scorers included Eric Wagner'with eight, Bobby Johnson with
six. Benny Ewing added a threepointer, Scott Peterson ad4ed two
llfl!l Kyle Simpson added one.
Meigs hit32 of 72 shots from
the floor for 42% lhl casbed in on
1~ of 24 from the line for 63%.
Meigs pulled in 60 rebounds with
Jay Cremeans and Bobby 1ohnson
grJibbing 11, Bentley and .Harrison
and nine each, Wagner eight and
Dill seven. The Marauqc11 committed 25 turiiOVCI1.
Bentz led Federal Hocking
points, Brain Bennett
~~~~~ II with Myron Hart and
n
Schaller scoring 10 each.
Lancers hit only 21 of74 from
floor for a cool 27%. Federal
ijli&lt;:ltiJ1tg hit 15 of 26 for 58% from
Lancers
27

HE'S BACK, ID a way. Soutbera 's Purple Demoa Is baclt OD the
Tornadoes' baslr.etbal sceue, but this time, the number oae dteer·
leade~ Is played by Southern High School treshman Luke Hobnan.
Here the Demon rallies tlte Tornado rattlttul during Friday nlcht's
game against 'Visiting South Point, which saw the Tornadoes win 8471.

Meigs, as teammates Scott Peterson, Travis Grate, Jered Hill and
Jason Hart all added six. Benny
Ewing added three, and Ray Russell had two.
.
es ror tbe beavent1 to block tile s11ot rl South
Hanil: ,
In other TVC action Belpre
Fletcher durln1 Friday *'ht's 1ame at Southern HI1h Scllool, !·
defeated Alexander 60-46, Trimble TVC varsity boys' basketball standings .
"'"·erall)
.
wllere
the TIJI'IIIIdoes WOD 71 in part beblnd Sinalet0a•1 JJ polnll
defeated Miller 54-51, and Well(v•
Belpre
60
Alexander
46
and
seven
reboua.ds.
ston beat Nelsonville-York 88-66. ' Team
W L PF PA r-_,:__;'-::--------------------------------'~''~
The Marauders (8-10, 8-7), Belpre ................. l6 1, 1147 865
,,••'
gained another loss this week when
Wellston .......... :.. 11 6 1135 1079
it was discovered that !hey used an Alexander .............9 8 1161 1I20
ineligible player in the Nelsonville- · Miller....................9 8 1061 1138
York game, forcing !hem to forfeit Vinton County... ,..9 9 1129 1147
•
the 89-79 win. Meigs will host MEIGS ................. 8 10 1231 1168
•
Southern next Friday evening.
Nelsonville-York ..S 13 1097 1232
••
Trimble .......... ,......3 14 929 1112
MEIGS
Federal Hocking ...2 15 92S 1147
(19·13-18-24=84)
' ...
Trevor Harrison 9-0-5=23, Todd
In theTVC...
Dill S-2-0= 16, John Bentley 5-1: Betpre ................. l3 1 941 682
2=15, Jay Cremeans 4-0-2=10, Eric Wellston ............. 11 3 943 881
Wagner 0-1-5=8, Bobby Johnson Vinton County......9 5 918 860
•'
,;
3-0-0=6, Kyle Simpson 0-0·1=1, Alexander ............. 8 6 996 918
Benny Ewing 0-1-0=3, Scott Peter- MEIGS ................. 8 7 1084 989
son 1·0-0=2. TOTALS - 27-5- Miller....................7 7 856 959
Nelsonville-York ..4 10 898 979
'"
Trimble ............... .-.3 11 753 895
II
· n;DiR~tuiklarm
Federal Hocking ... ! 14 80S IOOS
(14-12-17-14=57)
the reserve contest, Meigs
Mike Lucas 0-0-1=1, Grant
· hack frOm a 14-point deficit
Friday's action
Schaller
4-0-2=10, Myron Hart 5- ·
the Lancer lead to two before
MEIGS 84, Federal Hocking 57
' I
•
to the host team 56-48. 0-0=10, Mike Mollohan 1-0-1=3,
Wellston 88, N~lsonviile- York
Brian
Bennett
1-3-3=H,
Brian
Whiitina led the winners with
66
-"' '-'
Krawsczyn led Meigs Bentz 7-0-8-22. TOTALS - 18·
Trimble 54, Miller Sl
fnnrth period. · 3-15=57

TmS ONE'S MINE! -With Eastern trout-liners Randy Kaylor

'

: RELAXING - Former CIDdnnati Reds outrlelder Ken Griffey ·
,Sr. (center) e111•11es In conversation with River Valley High School
•leacher Bill Blltr whlle relulaa between ·games or the Eastern:River Valley reserve ·varsity doubleheader Friday aigbt. ·(Times: Sentinel pboto by G. Spencer Osborue)
·

..

(30) and Charlie Billell (40) behind him, River VaDey trontman
Kevin Huat (34) cradles the ball shortly after pulling down ODe or
his 11 rebounds ID tbe third quarter or Friday nigltt's game against

the visilln&amp; 'Eat1es, whkh the Raiders won 68-56 ror their seveath
straight home victory. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

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Pomeroy Mlddleport--Gall.lpolls, OH Point Pleasant, wv

Sundey 11mH Sentinel

C6

February 7, 1~.

:Ice-cold shooting proves fatal to Wahama in ~efeat to Duval
•:r GarJ Clark
S.ports Cormp IM'IIeat
ColclJ Lewis Hall's Wahama
While Fllcoo's sutrezed lhrougb a
mi1erabJe shooting outing against
visiliDg Duv1J Friday aflernoon in a
Southwestan Athletii: Coofercncc
outing played before the WHS Sill.

dalt lxidy wilh lhe Yellow Jackets
JRVailina by a 70-61 margin.
waJwna. idle since an emotional
66-S4 Joss to county rival Pt.
Pleasant a wee1c ago, staged a
second half rally t!lat saw the Bend
Area ream erase a 13 point Yellow
Jacket lead before Duval weathered
o

the Falcon comeback effon to and 7-1 in league play.
claim its aecond win of the year
Wahama shot a horrendous 29'1&gt;
over the local cagers.
on the day in making 14 of 37 two
The SWAC ~ dropped the point goals and seven 9f 35 atWhire Falccm aeasoa ~to 8-5 . lelllpiS from duec point land but
overall
S-4 inside the con- WHS coach Lewis HaU refused to
fcmJCC
while the Lincoln blame the week long layoff for his
Counlians improved to 8-6 overall reams shooting woes. · "We absoJureJy stunk up the place," Hall

and

:!:!;·:.s:;'cnsi~:r;~r::;

,-Raiders
notch Wln... (Continued from C-5)
:seconds later when McCarty nailed points toward the middle of the 53-32.
a 16-foot jumper from the right frame !bat eventually sealed !be
wing. Then wilb 2:28 left, Canady Eagles' fate.
·
dialed long distance from the right
The Raiders' drive 10 the win in
win~ and got the answer he was the last quarter wasn'tjust concenfor - a 43-41 River Val- tratcd in scoring, as Hunt made up
,ley lead.
.
· for his 4·for-14 field-goal shooting
• · "We couldn' t hit inside shots, by collecting 12 rebounds.
they were hitting pretty good,
Canady fmished with a 7-for-13
so
we
started
concentral.ing
on
gettally
from the field and recorded
1
ling inside, because we knew we boll's eyes in six Dies at the saipe.
had a game on our hands," said Bissell, who finished with a 6-forPeck of the Raiders' woes before 12 showing from the field, was
taking the lead back.
denied a Dip to the line in the secEastern's guns were silent for ond half.
1more than three minutes until
River Valley, which played at
,Cline's three-pointer and bonus South Point SatW'day night, will be
f~ s11ot made nt;eessary by Ryan
Mariena's guest team Tuesday
~cCarley's third foul cut the
ni~ht. while Easrem. which hosted
Raiders' eight-point lead to four Miller Saturday night, will play its
fmal road game of the season Fri1\ooith as many seconds left in the
;thir!l quarter. Only twice would day against Waterford.
:Eastern get that close, as the
Reserve notes: River Valley
1 Raiders essentially played tit for tat
reserve coach Chris Ellcessor said
Iwith Eastern in the first two min- his Raiders shot better than 50%
~ofthefinalquancrbeforereelfrom the field (21-40) for the ftrst
inJ off a run of .Ciaht un111swered time this season in beating Eastern ,

llooking

iand

!

Scoreboat·d
\li\

--

EASTERN CONnllENCE
,._

WLN. ' CI

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19 j:tJ
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3'0 bi= 3~ ~:.~ei~ ~
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Fielc:i coats -18-57 (31.6%)
Tbree-polnters 8-17
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AssiSts - 12 (Savoy 5)
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Tumovers- 17

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10'

e1~00
71.00

8'

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'

Cuh ond balan&lt;es due flom depository instilwions: .
Noninterest-bearing balances and currency and coin ......................................................................_1,417 ,000.00
Securities ...............................................................................................................................................4,861,000.00
Pederll funds sold ................................................................................................................................6,1 06,000.00
Loans and lease rmancing receivables:
Loans and leases, net or unearned inoome................................................... 27,Sl4,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and leue losses................................................ :......326,000.00
Loans aild leases, not of unearned income,
lllowance, and reserve.... ,...... ,.................... ,...................................................................................:1.1, 188,000.00
Pmnises and fixed assets (including capitalized le1Se1) ..........................................................................292,000.00
Other rell estate owned ........ ......................................................................................................................79,000.00
Other assets .........................................................................................: ................................................... .520,000.00
TotAl assets ................................................................................................ .'... ................... ...................40,463,000.00
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant 12 U.S.C. 1823(j)..................................... :........................40,463,000.00

AD.OO
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CCI6011121D
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10'
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COAFcAL GATES
WITH flAAME
COI8018404
C0/8018400

Gary P. NorriJ, Cashier
January 26, 1993

We, the undersigned direclora, attest lhls COJoeclhaa of lhilllltana~t of resources and liibiliti01. We dedl!l8
that it has been eumined by 111, ond to tho beat of our knowledge and belier hu been prepored in amfonnllhCe
with the instructiOJII and il ttue and correcL
Jolm T. Wolfe
Wayne Roulh - Dim:ton

George Nei&amp;ler

COte018410

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2-2 0-1 0-0 4
1-2 0-0 0-0 2 J. Bryant
lead but we just couldn't get that T. Roush
Toe
25-37
l-18 14-:ZS 70
bif basket to put us .over the topt I. Weaver
0-0 0-0 0-0 0
~ Hall. ''We missed far too many " Toe
14-37 7-35 1%-21 61 .By Qaarters:
,easy shots. both inside and ciuiSide
DUVAL (70)
I
1234Toc
.tnd we stood around for almost the M. Clay
5-19 1-6 4-8 17 Duval
18 16 16 20 70
1:ntire game and that in a nulshell M. McCalliSter 4-5 1-7 5-7 16 Wahama .
10 17 18 16 6l
!was the difference:"
- I. Griffith ·
6-8 0-2 4-6 16
; Hudson led all scorerS in the R. Collins
4-8 0-1 1-2 9 TotFO,Uls:Wahllnal6,Duval21
2-3 0-1 0-0 4 Fouled Out Clay
·pme with 21 points' while Van- R: Recves
Maire added 12 for WahamL Mark ~- Pauley
2-2 0-0 0-2 4 Ofliciala: A. Spaulding, E. Hayes
't:Iay popped in 17 with Matt Me- . ~_..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;._..;_....;....,
;,(:allister and Jason Griflith adding
~6 points each 10 pace the Yellow
•1ackets offensive output.
. :. Duval enjoyed a. commanding
60-35 edge in rebounding, wim
.konaie comns collecting 16
&amp;
:Jloanls; Griffith 10 111d McCallister
.
:fiine for Duval while Tommy

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PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
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~M'::culedv~ireear~:s
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,Wahama. The White 'Falcons com-

Pick Up On March 4, 1993

lnitted only seven turnovers in the
~Iest with the visiiOrs tossing the

loU-yml6""""".

~InYe~~Jtf.!cts"':~ ~~=·
sweep with a 65-43 aiumph over
~h Frank Capehart's Little l.'al·
. • Iatney Bryant totaled I3
ints
while r~n~my
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notChedTriplett
12 each and
for

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z

1

PrieR GOOd Tttrou h 2113193

ATHENS LANDMARK

.~ ~

.

~ Wahama is scheduled 10 return 10
'tttion this evening when the Bend
Area ream Iraocll ID Haman .10
lncet the Wlldci1S before Visiting
}outhwcstern Athletic Conference
lriader Vinson oo Tllcsday.

•
':~
:.·

SOUTHERN STATES

KURTZ STREET -- ATHENS, OHIO

I

6
the o.meler
. Jackie
the twoume ~Iymptc heptathlon gold
m~1Sl8l_ld ~orld record·holder,
finished third m the .60-mcter hur-.
dies. 4Yo!ina Martin ~oreal,~
Olymptc sliver medalist, won m
8.15.
, .
Other wom~n s wm~ers wt:re
Shelly S.tccly 10 the mtie; Amta
Howard tn ~e ~; Maria ~utola
of Mozambtq~e m th.e 8~. and
Yolanda Henry tn the high Jump.
lR

JENNINGS•

n,.• ,url beats Wahama ... ....:&lt;c_on_tinucd_rro_m_c_-6.:....&gt;_ _ _ _ __

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·
night. Wilb hundreds of family ·
members and friends from his
nativelrelandonhand,the~yearold Irishman won the Masters Mile
in an indoor reCord 4:05.95, clipping more than 2 1/2 seconds off
the mark he set at GaincsviUe, Fla.,
last Sunday. Along the way, he also
broke the wo.rld indoor Masters
l,SOO-meter ~ of3:49.9.
"I don't think I've ever e~enced the same intense electncity

67.00

••
,..

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best of my knowledge and belief.

·
patiently waited. for every one of
his opponenls I!&gt; try ill 22 seconds
toknoctoutfourbull'seyesplaced
at the corners of the net. Only
Tampa Bay's Brian Bradley get all
folD', but lOOt the full time and 10
shots. Bourque did it with four
shots in less than IS seconds.
Minnesota's Jon Casey got a
measure of redemption, winning
· the goaltender competition in a
three-way playoff against Calgary's Mike Vernon and Cbicago's
Ed Belfour. Vancouver managemcnt had questioned Casey's selectioo to the team over the Canucks'
Kiiii: Mcl.elll.
"It was starting to irritaJ.e me."
.......,, said. "It was in the back of
my miitd, but .I proved I desezve to
play 11m."

~~~~~=~::r :ig;!~/!r~~ :n~,.;:~tory
Jo~er-Kersee,

11.00

TotAl liabilities. liiniled-life preferred srock, and equity copital.
.
and Io;ses defmed punuont to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j).........................................................................;A0,463,000.00
I, Gary P. NorriJ, .Cuhier. ofthelbove-lllllled bOnk do llmby declare that thil ReponorCondition il true and

~~~:vc~hlan, the mile ~;~:~r::~f~th.~

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...

:!s,·
~
•
• ~
•
ByJOHNKEKIS
at 102:7. Only tw9 others players
.: MONTREAL (AP) - On a managed aiple digits - Minneso•night when the National Hockey ta's rising young star Mike
oiLCI!guc celebrated the past. Gordie Modano (101) and Chicago
.-Howe began to put the past behind defenseman Chris Chelios (100). .
1him.
Even at age 33, Mike Gartner
• Howe, who had steadfastly managed to regain his tide as the
·refused to take part in any NHL fastest player in the league. The
:functions because of an ongoing New YIXk Rangers' right wing out'dispute over pensions for retired raced Mike Sullivan around the
.:players, put on the sllates and Forum ice, edging the San Jose star
:grabbed his uusty stick Friday by just .14 of a second. Iafrate was
:night at the Mon!I'Cal Forum on the a close third. Paul COffey, now
•eve of the 44th AU-Star Game.
with Detroit, won the fastest stat; Howe was all smiles afterward, ing title .in 1990 ·and · Ser~i
'even though bis team Iost ·4-2 to a F·•·rov
· ,also
· ofDettot't,won 1•1 1
'team of former Montreal Canadiens
"""
:Jed by Guy Lafleur and Henri year.
• The shooting accuracy was no
;Richard. ·
··
contest. Boston defenseman Ray
• "It's fun to get back," Howe Bourque, a native of Montreal,
:said after bis first oldtimers' same
'in m&lt;ri than a decade. "I m•ssed
it, but if you've got a point to
:prove, it's not easy."
' Howe was part of a lawsuit ftlcd
~in Canada against the league
:because of the pension feud, and
'his side won. NHL president Gil
'S~ein baa said the league intends to
~appeal, but Commissioner Gary
,Beuman is reviewing the sitoation.
:· "Gary told me, 'The door is
·,open, if I'm not in, you 'II get a
' phone call back.'" said Howe, still
~ the league's career goalscoring
;Jcaukz with 801. "He said he'd like
ito clean it all up. It's a blight on
'hockey."
..
;; It was anptotional night at the
Forum. A sellout crowd of more
·dian 16.000 cheered the loudest for
&gt;J,.aOcur, and he responded by IICOI'·ing the ~e's first glial. two of
·. Lafleur s former teammates·- •
:J'ierre Larouche and Pierre Mon.;4011 - and tongh guy John Pergu•lon also scored for the Canadicns..
;Former Toronto star Darryl Sittler
·and Chicago Blackhawk$ defense- - .
:man Pierre Pilote scored for the
(NHL AU-Stars.
·
• •, Afterward, Howe received a
·tbuge birthday; •
in anticipation
;of bis 65th birthday. Then todaf.'s
lit up the Forwn in the skills

,Among the ~en, winners were
Michael Green tn .the 60; Andre,w
Valmon .in the~· MaJ:k Ev~ an
lhe 600, Fredd•e. Wtlhams m ~'
800; ~oc Falcoo m the 3,~ BtU:
Deartn$ In the pole vault, C.J.
Hunrer.m the .sh~ put; ·and Tony:·
Barton m the htghJump.

APPLE(OATE CORRAL PANEL GATES

._ Surplus ..................................................................... ................................................................................ 125,000.00
~ Undivided profits and capital reserves ................................................................................................ A,064,000.00
_ Total equity capitll...........................................................:....................................................................4,314,000.00

0

•

as I did ronight.'' Coghlan said. ".It
was unbelievable. "The athl~tes m
the other e~ents ~d the offictals all
were checnng. I m very thankful. I
'don' t desc.rve iL"
Olym[lliiD Lance Deal shatte:red
his recortl in the men's 35-pound
weight throw with a heave of 81
feet, 5 1/4 inches.
_
~ ~anamaker Mtle feaqared
~etnc mtle ~ord-hol~r Noll!'eddme Morceh of Algena agamst
Olympic champion Fennin ~ho
of Spain. But it was ~orceh, se~­
enth at B~lo~ agamst .lre~d s
Marcus 0 S~lhvan, a ftve-ttme
Wanamak~ wanner.
,
.
Morceh and 0 Sulhvan
exchanged the lead late tn .the ~.
before Morceli surged 10 vtctory m
3 :55 .~. Cacho faded to ftfth.
Gat,I pevers, the 100- met~r
champon ~ Barcelona who ~el110

· •a.oo

~ Totalliabilities.: .................................................................................................. ;............................... 36,149,000.00

5

rli'SI

vendetta against .mysclf to try to
iun to the best of my ability, no
matlicr the conditions. I'm just glad
it was a victory, that was what I
was looking fortonighL
· " I hope Ibis mates a StatclllCII.
What the IAAF 1i'resents to me
ticks me off, but did 1101 affect my
pcrfonnance. I have the fans· they
appreciate my performance.'' '
He hopes bis pcrfonnance aldie
world indoors in Toronto next
month attncls even more attention.'
"Toronto is important.' • he
said. "I'm looking forward 10 winning the gold and meeting Primo
Nebiolo (IAAF president) and see
if he puts that medal around my
neck or if he docs an Adolf Hitler
refusing 10 shake Jesse Owens'
hand."
Two world records were set in
the meet, although both were in

·=:=

8'
10'

12'

Deposits:
11: L In domestic oftices .......................................................................................................................35,928,000.00
:I Noninterest•bearing..............................................................................3,468,000.00
ii lnterest-bearing ................. .................................................................J2,460,000.00 ·
·
C Other liabilities .........................................................................................................................................221,000.00

...

·

years. Actually, it's been a much·
shor1er time, but so intense that he
has felt like a prisoner.
The 400-mcter"world recordholder, mak.ing bi~ firit indoor
appearance smce bemg suspended
for 2 1/2 years by iniernational
tmclc's govaning body for alleged
drug usc, scored a big win over
Oly!ftpic 400 hurdles champion
Kevm Young.
,
Reynolds, awarded $27.3 mtllion in damages against the IAAF
by .a ~cderal judge in C:olu!ftbus,
·Ohto, o:t .December, was 11! his
compctillvc race of any kind Since
last June. w~ he defied the IAAF
ban and firush¢ ftflb at the U.S.
Olympic trials.
"Every time I,stcp on the trac~:
I have so~et~tng to prove,
Reynolds said. I have a personal

aa.oo

II

:!

world outdoor titles and one
indoors. He also took the 1984
9!ympic silver medal, but. was
IDJured for the last two Olymptcs.
" He W!'S a hero of' mine when I
was stanmg. Once 1 found out I
was preuy decent at this thing, I
· began dealing with some of the
greatest coaches in the world, and
they would mention, ' Bones this
lind Bones that.' "
Now they can mention Foster
this and' Foster that after he leaves
the spon.
"The timing is right," Foster
said. "I don't want to quit when
I'm on the bottom. I'm still in the
top 10 in the world, as I have been
for the last 15 years.' '
·
Reynolds feels like he's .becn
persecuted by the IAAF for 15

1 TO o4
27.00

4'

0'

T01fJ.-1~188T

J

cr.

6 0 .. MOR. GAT•a .D.DUCT •:1::00 P.R QAT.

.

c1 Racine, in the state of Ohio, at lbe close or buslueaes • December 31, 1992, pnbllalled Ia
mponse to caD made b:r Comptroller or tbe Currency, under title 12, Ualted States Code,
Seetlon 161.
Cbarter Number 9815
Comptruller of the Currency 41b District ·
c

e•

12'

Home National Bank
.

t TO 4
410.00

4'

' REPORTOFCONDmON .
ConsoUdatlna domestic subsidiaries or lbe

I

•
B:r BARRY WILNER
" NEW Y9RK (AP)- Greg Fos·
. ter ts on ~~~ fare~ell tour. Butch
~eynolds ts on a ' vendetta."
• To th~ fan~ at th~ Mill rose
Games on Fnday ntght, both
qescrved long ovations - before
and after their victories.
.• First came Foster, beginaing his
l;7th and .final season of competi~on. A wmncr of evC!Y major track
titleexccptanOiymptcgoldmedal,
Foster tied Hllll of Farner Harrison
~ard's meet mark with his nin!h.
vtctory tn the 60-meier hurdles 10
~81 seconds. The 34-ycar·old Fos;~r e~ged 1992 Olympic silver
,ifledalist Tony Dees.
" I wanted to tie Harrison Dil~nrd's record in my last MillroSe,"
s aid Fosler, who has won three
~
.
'l
·

lHowe, Lafleur among ICe legends
ka"t•·ngi·n NHL old 't•·mers' ga·me

TUESDAY,
10 A.M.·7 P.M.~
Junior Fair Building Athens County Falrgro,unds .
West Union St. - Athens, Ohio
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1993
10 A.M.·7 P.M~
.
Grang~ Hall Meigs County Fairgrounds

Autborized Rock of Ages .·Dealer, we
are proud of our unmalcbcd reputation
for service. You can li'IISt Rock of·Ages
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Roush and
. Carl King lhe Wbue
Falcons c:m~ !JII a 17-5 nm .10,
puiiiO wtthm. a pomt at 5049 wull
~:40 to play m the final stanza but·
JUSt ~ suddenly as the Fal~
shooting ~ to warm up the'
streak subsided as Duval weathered~
the .WJJS .comeback effort to ~-

*
FEBRUARY 9,1993 ·

(13.17-15-11=~

Sunday 11mes Sentinel-Page

foster, Reynolds get standing ovations at Millrose Games

ended.
~
. "We made a run~ !hem and~
uon. .
a golden opporturuty to tala: ~
Behind Tommy Mayes, Mike
(See DUVAL 01 C-7)
~.

known brand of memorials. As an

IU
l1.S

be\03 ~

blowout by
the midway pomt I!J the game.
W~ ~re PlaYIIli so poorly,
trailed by Just seven at 34-27 at the
half.
.
.
.
Duval. ope~ third period ac11011
by sconng rune of the ~ .12
poin!J of the second half to enpy

Rock of Ag.. ;.' the only nationally

ll

WLN.GI
SID A '• '"'-..21 14 .667
- ··
Uloll------..21 16 .616
I
-- ~..--..26 .,
3.!5

m
.m

RIVER VALLEY
(21-8-20-19=68)
Canady 6-1-6=21, Peck 4-10=11, Poling 5-0-1,;11, McCirty 3J-0=9, Hunt 4-0-0=8, McCarley 20-1=5, Cox 0-0-3=3. TOTALS24-3-11=68 . .
Field goals -27-63 (42.9%)
Three-pointers _
3-16
(18.75%)
.
Free.throws-ll:l4 (78.6'1&gt;)
Rebouads-40(Canady 13)
Assists- l2 (Canady 6)
Steals-11 (McCarty 3)
Tamovers _ 6· ·

thirds of the game we played with
very little intensity."
For ·the first three quarters
Wahama was simply oulhustled
with Duval nearly running the
Wbire Falcons out of the gym. An
8-2 Yellow Jacket spurt 10 conclude
the opening SIIDZI put the Yellow
Jacla:ls in control with an 18·10
advantage after eight minutes of the
SWACcontest.
Six points by Danny Hudson and
duec point goals by Doug Huff,
Mike VanMalrc and Tommy Mayes
combined with IICvend Duval 1111'·

Professional

3

6JI

WI!STEilN CONFERENCE

- ----.-16 'ZI
M
. _ ...,..10 31
31

Jimmx Massie helped the
Raiders (6-9) win their third conrest in the last five~ by leading all scorers wuh 12 points.
Micah Otto Jed Roge_r BtsseU's
club with 10.
·

~-

novers m the ~canto kept the VanMaJre, Danny .Hudson, R.J.

con~ from

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

- february 7, 1993

..

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Page C8 Sunday llmes Sentinel

In NBA action,

~

·Farm/llusiness

_

-: Cleveland downs Detroit 109-89
Mills had 24 poinlS, only two ot t11em in the fourth
quaner, and' 12 reboWids for Detroit.
Cleveland led by as many as 10 points in the firsl
quaner and ~ in the third, but each time, Dumars
brought the PisiOIIS back. He scored eight poiniS during a 12-point Detroit flurry in the first quarter and
capped a 10-point Pisron spun with a 20-foot shot
thst pol them ahead 71-70 late in lhe third.
Dau~ , however, answered with a layup anc\ a
dunk, giving the Cavaliers the 1ea4 for good.
.
Cleveland led 75-74 after three, .!ben scored 13 of
lhe first 15 points in tm fmal period to take an 88-76
lead on Danny Ferry's 22-footjumper wilh five minuleS left Detroit got no closer lhan eight aCta' lhal
·· "I lhought we had some pretty good lookll, We
just dido ' t make any shots," Detroit coach Ron
Rolhstein said. "And we didn't stop anybody. The
ball wouldn' t go in, and lhen we lost our en~gy II
the defensive end. You have 10 dig in and get some
stops. You have 10 be tougher lhan that." .
Isiah Thomas had 12 assists .and scored nine
points for lhe Pistons, moving bim past Magic Johnson into 391h place on lhe NBA's career scoring list
wilh 17,245 points. Johnson scored 17,239.
Cleveland's Mark Price missed a free lhrow early
in !he third quarter, ending his streak of 100 consecu·
live successful free lhrows at home. He leads lhc
NBA in foul shooting 8194.3 pCn:ent

ByCHUCK~VIN

RICHFIELD. Ohio (AP) -. ~ssing. a shot can
shake your confidence a Jiule. Missing 10 straight
shots, lhe Detroit Pistons discovmd, can kill iL
The Pistons misfired on lheir fiBt 10 shots in the
fourt!l qWKia Friday night !IN! watched a Qne-point
deficit grow to as many as 22 in a 109-89 loss to the
Clevelilnd Cavaliers.
· The loss was Detroit's eighth suaight on the road.
Cleveland his won three in a row overall and five in
a row 8l heme.
.
"We had some good shoiS that didn' t go down.
Consequently, that turns into a lack of defensive
, effort at the other end," said Joe Dumars, who
scored 24 points in the fU'St three quaners, none in
- the fourlh.
"I don't thinlt we were fatigued. They weren't
tough shots. I think if diose shots fall, it gives us
' mere conftdence and more )IIISb,'' Dumars said
. Gerald WilkiruJ scored 22 points for the Cavaliers,
finishing off lheir 34-15 fourth-quarter rally widl a
? 360-degree spin lD1 dunk.
"I nile it an eight," said Wilkins, who has averaged 22 poiniS a game in Cleveland's three wins this
' week. "I am just trying 10 stay focused. I am out
the~ tryinJ 10 t'lay under control, and things arestartJng to now.'
, Brad DaUJ)Ieny scored 20 and Larry Nance had
· 19 points and 11 rebounds for die Cavaliers. Terry

•

1-

•

-

•- - •

:

· ~ Origin

of largemouth bass in Summit County
:lake shrouded in allegations of stocking trucks
markings on the Jruckll they can't have been the soun:e of alllhe ftsh
help me. All I know for sure is that we discovered' when lhe lake was
what happened at Silver Creek is taken doWn.
' Lake.
the
most unfortunate thing lO ·hap- . Shy said measures have been
' No one knows lhe origin of huntaken to ensure lhat no more fish
' dred:l of laqemoudl biSS and thou- pen to me in Ibis job."
are
flushed from the lake, and he
Shy said a few fish, no more
. sands of bluegills flushed from the
added
that an effort was made to
Silver Creek Metro Park lake in than 20, were deposited in Silver net some
of lhe fish in lhe small
Creek by Metro Parkll employees,
soulhem Summit County.
creek
below
the dam and return
· "Nobody bas come forward "but lhere's DO way in lhe world
there could · lhem to die Jake.
' wilh an explanation and I assure that the
·you I have DO cxplanerion," said
· Keilh Shy, director of operations
:for Akron Metro Pluts.
; Shy said lhllt to his knowledge,
fish never hid been stocked in the
SO-acre lake, wbich began filling
less lhan two yean IIJO·
MellO l'lrb emplOyeeS lowered
tbe lake during tbe faD so a swimming area coull( be built, and lhe.
. fish were wasbcd away in the process. creating a stir among spansmen and conservalionisiS.
• A puzzling mix of fact and fiction has emerged, including rtpilits
itbat stoCking ttuckll were seen at
,lhe park on two occasions, their
chuteS spewing fish iniO the lake.
. There also have been Iepui IS of
;anglers dumping fish into lhe lake
and a! least me Iqut of fish being
taken dlere from a private pond thst
was being drained.
"There's a lot of misinformation out lhae," Shy said. "I hear
1'W110fS d1llt diagnmtlcd employees
;...e going 10 go public wirh Ibis or
~.r.~ like to know wl!at there iS
AKRON, Obio (AP)- Rumors
· continue to abound about Silver

,

to~.

He said reports of stocking
trucks allhe lake are typical of lhe
-talk making the rounds.
' "People will tell me that lhey
saw a stocking truck," he said,
-"but when I ask lhem for dales and

:SJK!rti W41ines posted
.

.

. The Gallipolis Daily TribuiUI,
· ··Th( Daily Stn(lntl, the Poinl
'Pleasant Register and lhe Sunday.T~s-StnliiUII value lhe conlribu·tions their readers make to the
·spans sections of tbese papers, and
lhese conlributions will continue 10
,lie published.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions win be observed. The
deadline for photoS and relal.ed anicles for basketball and olher winter
sports is the last day of lhe NBA
Finals.
Likewise, lhe deadline for submissions of local baseball- and
softball-related photos and related
articles, from T-ballto lhe majors,
as well as olh« spring and summer
sports, is lhe day of lhe last game
of lhe World Series. The deadline
for photos and related arti~les for
foolball and oilier fall sports is !he
Saturday before lhe Super Bowl.
These deadlines have been instituted to give readers plenty of time
to get lheir phoros back from tbe
photography studio of choice and
to give lhe staffs lhe opportunity 10
publish these sports photos and
articles during lhe appropriate season for lhat sport.

I

WORKING OUT - As Beacla Athletic
Beac:b watches the action, club boxen Cecil D.
Jr. (left) and
Brad Robinsoo trade punchH during a s..rring workout midway
tbrouglllut week iD tile b-meot of Kntaht's Gym Ill Gallipolis.
Yost, a 160-poaader from Bidwell, and Robinson, a Middleport
maa fl&amp;hlin&amp; ia the 160-175-pouad light-heavyweight fi&amp;hlinl class,
wiD be among those fightina la the BAC's boxing tournament at tbe
old Hanua Trace High School In Mercervllle on Feb. 19 and 20.
(Times-Selltinel Jl!IOlO by G. Speacer Osborne)
·

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY
·
. PRAC'l'ICE
.

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

• EIGHTH-GRADE SEOAL
CHAMPS - Garry Adklas'
Gallia Academy eighth-grade
girls' basketball ·teaDJ kaocked
off Loaaa 50-37 to ano" the
pre-vanity dub to repeat u the
Southeaster• Ohio Athletic
League ,ch101plon, Kaeelina In
froot lli'e (L-R) Amber Howell,
Tiffany Foster, Lori Mllllron,
Andra Boggs, Mllldy Gorsuch
and Llza HoleskL SIQcilng are
Bridget Darst, Kelly ~aldwell,
Valerie Spence, Amanda Davis,
Joy Haynes, Julie Merry and

•
MYSTERY FARM -1'1t11 week's •:nle17
Olllo Vllle:r l'libllslll•a Co. Leave your name,
J"arm, featured by tile Mela• Soli ud Water
address ud teleplloae aumber with your card
._.Conservation District, Is located somewllere Ill
or letter•.No teleplaoae calls will be ~ted. AU
Meigs County. ladivlduala,wlshiaa to partlcl·
• coatest entries s&amp;ould be turned Ill to the news·
"pate In the weekly c:oatest lDIJ do so by paslna - . paper olllce by 4 p.lll. each Wednesday. ID case
of a tie, the wlauer will be chosen by lottery.
the rarm•s owner. Just man, or drop orr your
Next week, a Gallla County flll'm will be fea•. uess to the Dail)' Sentlael, 111 Court St.,
Pocoeroy, Ohio, .45769, or the GaUipolls Daily .
tured bribe Gallia Sollaad Water Conservatioa
Dlstrid.
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a ~5 prue rrom tile

Roqers E-Z Ride .
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•

.

\Cleveland questions
:Bank One's loan·practices

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Near Jtaaaap Drlv•Ja

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'

GALLIPOLIS '- Gallia Academy's eighth-grade girls' basJretliall
team won the club's second
straight Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League championship Thursday
nigl!t widl a S0-37 win over J..o&amp;an.
Garry Adkioa' Blue Angels (122, 7-1) were led by Lori Milliron's
18 poi11li, Andra Boggs' 15,
Valerie Spence's eight, Julie
Merry's seven and Tiffany Foster's
two. Also on the team are Kelly
Caldwell, Bridget Darst, Amanda
Davis, Mindy Gorsuch, Joy
Haynes, Liza Holeski and Amber
,Howell:
· The Angels will participate in
the league 101D'll81Dent Wednesday
at 7 p.m. at Alhons IIPiu!lt Jackllon
in semifmal actioo.
· ,

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· Southern-Meigs
cage tickets on sale
.

LIWhrDU
. _II.I,at
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•Veryattordllble

·POMEROY - TickeiS for lhe
· Southern-~ boys', varsity and
reserve ......ct II games on Friday
night are for laic at Meigs Hi!!h
School and also at Locker 219 m
Middleport. The tickets
.
..;:··· will retnalil
on sale lhroufh rnday at $2 for
studeats and$ .SO for adults. .
Tickets arc-also available at
Southern High School.

TRV

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

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(304) 675-1675

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'I·'
'

ITH

BUICK·PONIIAC

·Hall.
: · •White said the bank made 39
ihome mortgage loans !INI36 home
Improvement loans in 1991 in
"Cleveland. Bane One officials conflfllled !he figures.
1 He said the bank has a poor
· ~cord of len~ing to blacks and
ade no home purchase or
; . provementloans in 1991 in four
black neighborhoods.
t The mayor also said lhere are 11
• black 'males among the bank's
1,0 12-member work force in the
• Cleveland area. He said lhere are
~ nine blacks and no Hispanics
: among Bank One, Cleveland's 196·
: managers. •
• Bank ofhcials said the work
; coree reflects !he overall location of
~ !he bank.' s offices and an employee
: diversity similar 10 lhat of the com-

Section. D
February 7, 1193

No
Appointment

N-ecessary//
• Available To Persons 18 Years &amp; Older

1900 WnRIIAYE. e IAlUPOUS
"

CHARLESTON; W.Va. - Key
Centurion Bancshares, Inc. (NAS·
DAQIKEYC), West Virginia's
largest bank holding company, has
reported operating results for the
year end and fourth quarter ending .
December 31, 1992. For lhe year,
net income of $34.1 million reflected an increase of 5.1 percent, compared with 199I net income of
$32.4 million. Earnings per share
increased 5.3 percentiO $1.40 compared wilh 1991's $1.33.
Founh quarter results included
$3.3 million, after tax, in special
charges and merger related exjlens·
es (incurred to dale) in conjunction
with the pending affiliation with
BANK ONE CORPORATION.
~ngly, quarterly net income
tolaled $5.3 million, which represents a decline of 42.8 percent
compared wilh net income of $9.3
• rth quarter.
million in I 99 I , s .ou

Earnings per share· decreased 42.1
percent to 22 cents compared with
38 cents in 1991's fourlh quarter.
During lhe fourth quarter, net
interest income increased 14 percent compared with the fourth
quarter of 1991 (and inc,eased 3
percent compared wilh lhird quarter 1991 netmterest income). However, the year-to-year founh quar·
ter comparisons showed tolal oilier
expenses (all non•interesl relqted
expenses) increased 31 percent, a
pnmary factor in lhe quarterly net
mcome decline. Moreover, noninterest income in 1991's fourth
quarter included $2 million in nonrecurring pension settlement gains.
Finally, lhe provision expense for
loan losses also rose 10 $1.9 million, compared wilh $1.5 million in
founh quarter 1991 (and $1.6 million in lhe lhinl quarter of 1992).
Total nonperforming asselS and
past dne loans declined 23 percent
to $25.2 million at the quarter's
end (a $7.7 million drop) compared
wilh lhc December 31, 1991 figure.
When comp8rcd wilh lhe September 30, 1992 figure, lhe decline was
18 percent. Since lhe allowance for
loan losses increased 10 $25.2 ·milJion (in part boosted by Key Centurion's most recently completed
merger) lhe result reflects a 138
percent reserve coverage of the
company's tolal,past due loans and
rionperforming loans at quarter's
end.

)ly ROB WELLS
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - The banking
industry seems to have recovered
from dis.astrous loans of recent
years, but the effects of its fonnerly
free~heeli ng credit policies are
surfacing in unexpected ways.
Citibank's exit from Arizona
Ibis week illustrates !he point ·
The nation's largest bank sold
its entire Citibank Arizona unit,
except for troubled loans and some
ATM machines, on Wednesday to
Norwest Corp. of Minneapolis.
Analysts say Citibank. bailed out
of Arizona because it missed lhe
boat to strenglhen its hand there by
snapping up faile"d or struggling
hanks and savings and loans.
"Certainly it would 8US$eSllhal
because of the capilal limttations,
Citicorp was unable to expand its.
franchise when olhers were growing," said John Leonard, bank analyst at Salomon Brothers Inc.
Since 1990, Citibllllk's parent,
Citicorp, has been recovering frOm
troubled loans for real estate projects and Third World countries.
Pressure Q:om bank securities analysts and regulators led Citicorp to
launch a restructuring in late 1990
lhat included raising $5 billion in
capital to strengthen its balance
sheet.
Citicorp has won praise for sue-

IBM

Dr. Bailes certified
for new license

cessfully culling costs, &lt;Jumping
nonessential businesses and
improving its capital levels. But
during this fmancial convalescence,
Citibank's better capilalized competitors swooped down on the
weak ArizMa thrifts and banks.
BankAmerica Corp. of San
Francisco, for example, aequired
Arizona's two largest failed thrifls
in 1990: the $5 . 1 billion-asset
Meribank Federal Savings and the
$4.6 billion-asset Western Savings
·and Loan, hoth of Phoenix, accordi!.g to lhe Resolution Trust Corp.,
!he federallhrift bailout agency~
Meribank. and Western Savings
were among the nine Arizona
lhrifts with $14 billion in assets
lhat failed since 1989, chiefly due
10 lhe collapse of lhe state's com·
mcrcial real estate market
The Economy
Judgin$ from the numbers, lhe
economy •s improving dramatically.
•
The National Association of
Purchasing Management said U.S.
manufacturing expanded in January
to lhe healthiest level in four-anda-half ye&amp;IS. AuiOmakers said sales
of domestically made cars and
trucks rose 24.6 percent in l8le January and while factory orders
reported the biggest gain in 17
monlhs; up 5.3 percent in December.

In addition, the government
chief !lCOOOIDic forecasting gauge,
the Index of Leading Economic
Indicators, leaptl.9 percent in
December. the biggest increase
since April 1983.
Some of the statistics were
deceptive. The January unemployment nile fell 0.2 percentage poiniS
to 7.I percent chiefly becettse there
were fewer people re~ IOolcing
for work.
·
TICKER
General Motors Corp. blues:
an Atlanta jury awarded $10S.2
million in damages in a lrial over a
faulty fuel tank design of a GM
pickup -truck ...GM says it expects
to report die largest annual loss in
U.s . history: $23 billion in 1992,
largely for heallh-&lt;:are accounting
revisions·. Clinton signed family
leave le~ while his administration Signaled a tougher policy on
trade wirh Japan and Europe; At
least 5,000 miners in four states
struck P~bocly Holdlna Co., tbe
nation's largest coal producer,
COMlN~UP

Mouday, Toy Fair, the ioy
industry's showcase of its new
products, begins in New York;
Thunday, lhe government IqiOitS
recail sales for January: FrldaJ, it
reports on January inflation. and
December manufacturing and
trade.

Bush effo.rt on S&amp;L cleanup
fell short of promises: GAO
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
Bush administration fell shott of its
promised effort to combat the
multibillion-dollar fraud !hat led 10
the collapse of banks and thrifts
nationwide, cdngressiorial investigators asserted Friday.
·
The General Accounting Office
said President Bush ' s Justice
Department treated lhe bank fraud
debacle like ' 'other enforcement
matters," and allowed bi,II'Ciucratic
turf baules to prevent a c~
. attacJ,.
"Justice did not do all it could
wilh !he aulhority it has 10 strengthen lhe government's financial institution fraud program," said the
GAO report, obtained by The
Associated Press.
In particular, !he GAO said !hat
while the deparunem has won convictions in 95 percent of lhe cases
it has brought, it created just two of
the 26 special task forces former
AtiOmey General Dick Thornburgh
had .promised to step up .prosecution. The government has also
managed to collect just4.5 percent
of the $846 million in fines and
judgements imposed in fraud.cases,
the report noted.·
The GAO, Congress' investigative arm, said the strongest effort

Future unclear
for r~search at
Wright-Patterson

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - The
Dayton Area Chamber of Commerce is worried local com!)uter
jobs might he in danger because of
"mixed signals" about the future
•
·rv
of
research at Wright-l'llnerson Air
,. mum~, .
Force Base.
•
. Earlier in the week, the Ai.r
Force awarded a five-year contract
to BDM Corp. of Arlington, Va., to
•
consolidate
majnframe computer
•
By STAN EVANS
leaving the board 8l thst time).
systems
at
the
Air Force Materiel
: GALLIPOLIS - In a stunning
It is our considered opinion thai
Command
at
Wright-Patterson,
and
: reversal of iiS previous comments, ·speculati.on about Alters' successor
its
live
major
maintenance
depots
: IBM announced that chainnan John does not alter the fact thst IBM's
around lhe nation.
: Akers would be replaced wilhin problems today do not represent
The contract could potentially
•approximalely 90
· mistakesoftherecentpastbutlhata
be worth $362 million and could
: days and lhat the
"clear lhe deckll" kind of mind set is
create at least 40 local jobs, ¥id
l buard of director~
necessary to deraillhe self fullilling
Michael Gessel, an aide to R'ep.
•has initiated a
negative momentum thst has accomTony Hall, D-Ohlo.
: search for his suc·
panicdlhestoek'sandlhecompany's
But in December, lhe Pentagon
• cessor. Accrmpanegali~ perfonnance.
cut $30.5 million of $83 million !he
nying this anIn effect, Akers' successor may
Air Force·had set aside for the cennouncement was a
accelerate the changes curlenlly
ter lhat manages development and
!reduction in lhe
underway but tbe problems remain
maintenance of software for
Materiel Command computer sys'company's quarterly dividend n11e diff'teult and not subjectiO solution
tems.
itrom$1.2110$0.54apdseventlolher lluoughsudden rcdiiectionsofSilllt"It's sending us mixed mesegy. The task: facing the buard is a
4man&amp;gement changes.
sages,"
Ron Wine, spokesman for
GAU.IPOUS • l&gt;f. A. Jacbon
~ • Frank Metz,IBM's chief fman- substantial one. They must choose a
lhe
DayiOn
Area Chamber of Com·
ial offic~. is retiring from IBM and · candidate who appeciale8 and his a Bailes, 2SO Second Avenue in Galmerce,
said
Friday.
·
high regard fer sharebolder value llpolls and llO Mechanic Stteet in
eft the board on Feb. 1.
Wine
said
he's worried because
;A • Paul Rizzo, who at one'time was issues while simultaiiCOUJly imple- Pomeroy, is one of a number of
the Defense Department plans to
:!JBM'schiefflnancialofficerandwho menting ~ lll'llegicil thai maintain Ohio optometrists recently board establish
a business center 10 mancertified
In
thc
therapeutic
managefetired as vicechainnan from IBM in IBM'snumerousloog term lllial&amp;rh&amp;
age military information systems.
ment
of
ocular
disease.
Under
a
11987, is reblming 10 IBM as ~
Reco&amp;nlzing lhe invesallent risk
- . law pusec! last year in Ohio, A location hasn't been decided yeL
i;hainitan and is replacing Metz as that cOuld Jelult WU"e the bolld IOiu- op1ometrtsts
The local computer ·research
obtaimn-' this new
'fhieffliWICialofficer.
tiontobeun-risfeciOrytothclaveat- license can now.
industry could lose. a lot of wort if
trelt
1nfeclions,
'Jaclt Kuchler IBM'
'den
mentcommunlty,weatlllbelievedlat injuries, di~ and other abnor- lhe center is built somewhere olher
•
'
I prell
OJ4Kiibmt'ty u•'-• will
..;,s relinquishlnglhaultle
and
becom·I, there IS' ""'~'·g
~ ......
niiiJtles of the anterier aegment of lhan Wright-Patterson, Wine said.
,ng vice chairman.
continue 10 emcrp lis IIJ'?Iatlon the bUIDID eye.
The Materiel Comm&amp;nd, which
·
• ThechangesaresignifJCantiDdtat mountsJegardlita tbebolld UOiith
This includes die prescribing of handles research, development and
~~~~ Metz and Kuchler are eootem- which will DO doubt be lar&amp;eted If a topical ointments,· solutions and acquisitions of new weapons for
Panties and confldanls of Akers so '· choice in time for ihe annual meeting oral medications for lhe treatment · Air Force operations , has been
)hatlhe clearing of lhe president and in April.
.
of such ocular conditions. Ohio is developing lhe systems since 1984.
the CFO's chair wiU pennit Akers' '
(Mr. Evaas Is a lluaelal COD· one of thirty-two states which The, effort has cost more lhan $1
fucceuor 10 usume full conaol of IUitut ror Merrm Lyncll ill Its I!Jowi ~ qllolnelrists 10 pro· billion and his drawn mere thaq 70
~fortunes of lhe IBM~ GalUpolllollke.Hec:aallereaclled VIde thiJ additional type of care for compuier-industry contractor~ into
southern Ohio.
their paliOnu.
!possibly even 10 lhe point of Akers at 61~1176.)
l

:Monf?Y Ideas

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Key centunon net tncome fior
: ~:,g~r~~~~d~t~:~cf:::;.~~ 1992 up from previous year
; a news conference outstde Ctly .
·

CALL

118 Vine Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-9333
Offer Good February 8th -::- 13th, 1993

Receive

f }
repor s success u year
t

. : . tio~~~hacl

. The Most Efficient Heat Pu1111p in the
Manufactured Housing Industry.

l

'" CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Bank One, Cleveland has $2.3 including five in Cleveland. The
· mayor and community leaders wllo biilion in assets and more than 20 parent compoany has more than
are upset wilh Bank One, Cleve· branches in Cuyahoga County, S64 billion in assets.
:1'a nd's inner-city lending and
; minority hiring practices say they
• want to delay lhe bank's parent
~· from making a proposed acquisiR. White is
, among those asldng fcdc:ntl regulaMARIETI'A • Robert E Evans,
Evarls staled, "Despite negative
' tors to delay a proposed $1.2 bil- · President and Chief Executive reports about the United States
; ;lion stoek deal imder which Bane Offtcer, reponed that ~es Ban- economy, Ohio banks continue to
~ ·One Corp.. the bank's Columbus- corp Inc., Maricua completed 19 be among tile best capilalized wilh
• based parent, would buy Valley consecutive_ years of increased strong earnings records in recent
years. Peoples Bancorp Inc. has
!:National Corp . .of Phoenix. The earnings in 1992 .
Net income of $4,550,000 was remained part of lhat growlh wilh
; purchase would make Bane One
1
!he !'lli,on's eildllh largest~ 25. 9% above the 1991 tolal. Pri- primary capital now standing at
msutubon and·lhe Iarxest m Ari· mary earnings per share was $3.76 9.4% of total assets. Book value
•:ocna.·- :~••; .&lt;- . &lt;OW'Jl&lt;':l&gt;rlflt ·. "'' . ~'"in •l99~r~:Umpared iO $'3.29 per per share of outstanding CommOn
•. Whtte s office satd Friday lhat ·share in 1991. Assuming full dilu- Stock increased to $30.39 at
he has sent the Federal Reserve lion earnings per share increased :December 31, 1992, up from
System a 25-page protest ~aying 22.0%.10 $3.49, compared to $2.86 ·$29.23 per share at year end 1991".
On December 31, l992,1he high
1 Bank One, Cleveland has fai~ 10 in 1991. The average number of
: respo~d a~equa1ely .to CO!f!plamts shares outstanding was increased in liid 'reported by National Quotation ,
: ,reprdinghirin•.tsmner-c•ty lending and 1992 lhrough a partial redemption Bureau, Inc. was $41.00 per share.
,. m~lyg prac~ .
.
of the Corporauon's Convertible
Peoples Bancorp Inc. is a South:. Julie Johnson, a vt,ce pres1de~t Subordinated Debenture.
eastern Ohio bank holding compa- .
, :Of Baoc. One Corp., Slid the :banks
Peoples Banco!Jl continued its ny with headquarters in Marietta.
: ~rd. m Cle~land should IIICiu!le record of annual dividend growlh, Banking subsidiaries are The Peo:1ts BfbVC busmess and commercial t&gt;.ayinl! out $1,276,000 t•ptock- _ pies Banking and Trust Company
.~endmg. .
holderS, 20.7'.11&gt; more lhan in 1991.
with offices in. Marietta Athens
The corporation reported steady Belpre Lowell MiddlePort Nel:
:· She. satd th~ bank has been
: )!cuve m provtdmg credit for lhe growth wilh loans increasing 4.6%, sonvill~ and The Plains, and The
.~ateway sports C&lt;?m.plex. and has deposits up 7,1%, stockholders' First National Bank of Soulheast·: purchase~ $~ 1 mtlh.on m bonds equity up 1g.8% and total assets em Obio wilh offices in Caldwell
:from lhe. C1o/ s fmancially suapped increasing 10.4% for the year Chesterhill and McConnelsville. '
, school distnct
ended December 31 1992
·: City Development Director
'
· •
•
:chris Warren an.d 10 community
; leaders represenung more lhan 20

p eop·
· Ies .Ban corp
' · 1n.· c.,

Adkins.

Smith's Fast Lube
TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS

~imes - ~entinel

Citibank misses·
the boat in Arizona

.

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•

February 7, 1993

made by lhe Bush administrati~n
was lhe creation of a special prose·
cutor's office to handle the burgeoning crisis, but even lhatlactcd
lhe resources and aulhority to adequately address !he issue.
f 'The special counsel cannot
.

ensure ... adequate resou~~~a are
available to investigate IIICI ~~
cute financial institution fraud in
part because the U.S. Auomeys
~xercise, gre8l discretion in managmg the.r own enforcement progr!l"'s and r~un:es," the report
said.
4

AEP seeks fair tax plan
· A\N'(ON.- American Electric
Power (AEP) has asked President
Bill Clinton and governors from its
seven-state region to monitor .proposed energy taxes to encourage
fairness, gradualism and clear
· understanding of the. economic
impact, officials of the Columbusliased company announced.
They warned lhat a carbon tax
could cost lhe Midwest industrial
heartland thousands of jobs and
damage the region's industrial
competitiveness. Company Chairman and CEO. Richard E. Disbrow
and President E. Linn Drape~ Jr.
wrote to President Clinton to
express concerns lhBl certain energy Wtes could have vastly uneven
effects on different regions of !he
C~try.

Presidents of AEP's seven
operating companies .sent similar
letters to the governors of their
respective states. Charles A. Heller,
president of Canton-based Ohio

Power Co.• wrote to Gov. George
Voinovich. Ohio Power serves
more than 650,000 residential,
commercial and industrial customers in 53 of Ohio's 88 counties.
''The stakes in our eff01t are high,"
the AEP executives wrote in their
letter to Clinron. ''The heallh of opr
region's economy and the .ecooomic health of lhe nation are linked to
a reliable, low&lt;ost, environmenlally sound usc of energy. "Energy
taxes will affect jobs and our customers' pocketbooks. If such taxes
must be considered at all, we must
ensure lhat our federal policy makers consider lheir im~t ·carefully
and impailially, wuhout undue
harm 10 oU'r region or any other.".
The AEP executives acknowl~dged !he need 10 discuss a wide
ranre of options to combat the federa budget deficit The company
offered 10 supply information and
support 10 lhe adminiStration during the ciDTCnl discussions.

Woodland management
workshop slated Feb. IS~
GALLIPOLIS • The Gallia Soil of Forestry will speak on marking
and Water Conservation District timber and different kinds of cuts
will sponser a Woodland Manage- used in a timber harvest
ment Workshop Feb. 18, from 7 - 9
Les Ou, a consulting forester
p. m. at the C.H. McKenzie Agri· from Poosmbulh, will speak on tbe
cultural Center, Ill Jackson Pike.
importance of. having contracts
Speakers include: Jerry Grezlik, . w11h loggers for any type of harvest
service forester wilh The Ohio you may be considering.
Division of Natural Resources
After all speakers have comclet~
Division of forestry. He is ,the ed lheir presentation, there wi be •
adminisa:ator for Gallia County for a panel discussion so questions can ·
all State and Federal programs such he directed to each speaker from
as lhe Stewardship Incentive Pro· lhe audience.
gram and the Forestry ImproveNo fee required to lltend. lndiment Program, etc. He will speak viduals will be asked .to register
on lhe subject of Best Management with the Gallia Soil and Water
Practices on erosion control on log- Conservation District. Call 446-,
ging sites.
8687 Monday- Friday from 8 a.m.•
Dave Schatz, who is also a ~4:30p.m . fer ad&lt;!ilinal infonna-1

fiiSvA.~;;~;~u;ces 1993 r.
burley tobacco.program 'j
I

gram assessment will be llilliOUIICeCl
later lhree factors llScd by USDA in
calculating the national quota
which must be announced by•
Fe~ 1, resulted in a total ~(.
520.8 million llOU1Idl. 22.3 pcJCG(
below the 1902 q1101a. However,•
leY IDiiai:c:o pl08nlll:
law stipulues thlt the burle)''
·A national mlrlreting quota of national quota for 1993 Jlhll1 be 110t
603 million pounds, down 10 per- · less thail~nt of the qDOIIJ
cent fro- the 1992 quo1a of 670 mil- for tbe
· I ,e.. In a Pdlni-1
lion pounds.
ary 1 2 referendum, prodDCera'
·A basic quota decrease for each approved poundage quotaa for lhe•
farm of 10 ~nt from 1992
1~2 -94 aops.
-An effective qUOII of 730 milGallia COunty producenlhould:
lion pounds, 106 million below anticipate receiving their 19!13
1992
qllllla noiiCcs in earl~~· ·For
' Tho support level, marketing . ·more infom._tion ptc14 COIIIBCI
usessment and n();net cost pro- lhe ASCS off'tce • 446-116116.
.
'\
lly E. A. Lisa CoWns,
GaUia ASCS County,
l!:xeeutlve Dlreetor
GALLIPOLIS • The u. s.
Department of Agriculture
lillKIU1lCCd on J~ 29 ihe fol~ pmvililllll of tbe 1993 bur:

�. .. .... . ...... . . . ........... . .... . . . . .

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Page

02-sunc1ay Times-Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, oH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

_February 7, 1993

February 7, 1993

Sides remain deadlocked in coal strike Perot pledges to add
millions to his group

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The United Mine Workers and
an association that represents 12 of
the nation's largest coal producers
remained gridlocked Saturday over
a strike involving 7,500 miners,
spokesmen said.
Union spokesman Jim Grossfeld
and T0111 Hoffman, spokesman for
the Bituminou.s Coal Operators
Association negotiating team, said
no negotiations are scheduled.
But neither would predict the
duration of the stalemate.
"1 think any time you're in a
n,egotiating situation the panics
~auld some way or another find a

way to get back to together and get
Grossfeld reiterated the union is
back together very quickly," Hoff- ready for a lengthy wall&lt;ouL
man said.
"We plan for Jon~ strikes,"
The selective strike was called Grossfeld said. "T&amp;at s been the
by UMW President Richard Trum • nature of labor relations within the
Ita on Monday after a contract coal industry.
involving more ,than 60,000 UMW
"The ability to tough out prominers and 150,000 retirees tracted labQr disputes has been one
expired. The striking miners work of the hallmarks of the UMWA,"
for two Peabody Holding Group he said.
subsidiaries: Eastern ·Associated
The union has a $100 million
Coal of Charleston and Peabody · strike fund. Considering weekly
Coal Co.
strike pay of $150 per each miner
Picket lines were up in West involved, it costs the union more
Virginia. Illinois, Indiana and Ken- than $1 million a week to stay on
tucky.
· strike.
· ·

: MOGADISHU, Somalia {AP)
- Deep in the interior, where
famine stalks and clan gunmen
prey
If anyone deserves to be ealled
lhe Mother Teresa of Somalia, it is
Annie Hellstrom, a frail, gray,
bumble woman known as Sister
Annie. .
. Like tl!e Nobel Peace laureate
who cares for Calcutta's most
wretched souls, Sister Annie has
devoted more years than any other
foreign aid worker in Somalia. She
feeds .!he starving, saves the newborn and prays for the countless
who have perished.
.
She. has dealt with bullets,
thugs, ruthless clan leaders and,
qccasiooally, Muslim fundamentalists who tried to discredit her work.
Not long ago. thieves ordered her

Family leave laws already
long on boo~s in several states
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Farni·
ly leave laws like the one signed
into law by President Clinton
aiready ex•st in several states,
bringing few complaints from busi·
nesses despite gloomy predictions.
In fact, some say the big question isn't whether employers can
afford to grant family leave. but
whether employees can afford to
take iL
. In Minnesota. family leave supporters say problems forecast by
o~ents in lhe business commumty haven't materialized.
"We heard capitalism as we
know it was going to end if this bill
passed, but there' s precious little
evidence that there's been serious ·
problems, " 'Said Peter Mclaughlin,
a former Minnesota state represenI.ative who helped write the law.
Minnesota's law, enacted in
1987, ailows workers in businesses
with 21 or more employees to take
up to six weeks of unpaid parenting
leave after the binh or adoption or
a cllild.
Maine, Connecticut, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Washin$ton,
Oregon, Wisconsin and the DIStrict
of Columbia have similar laws,
according to Donna Lenhoff, genera! counsel for the Women's
Ugal Defense Fund.
: The federal law requires compa·
nies .with SO or more employees to
allow up to 12 weeks of unpaid
leave for the binh or adoption of a
child, to care for a senously ill
family member, or if the worker's
own health condition makes work
impossible.
State laws vary, with some providing leave only for the binh or
adoption of a child, while others
also allow time off or personal
health vroblems or. to care for a
sick child or parent .. At least 19 ·
states have laws requiring some

form of maternity leave, Lenhoff
said.
Several businesses in Minnesota
said they've had little difficulty
dealing with mandatory leave, outside of some job-shuffling and a
slight decline in productivity.
Sanjay Syal, vice president of
Blue Star Marketing, a Minneapo·
lis computer company, says the law
has had little effect on his company
- . just one of 40 employees has
taken a six-week leave since the
law took effect.
"If we have to take 'temps in for
a while. it's more expensive, but
it's not a huge burden," Syal said.
"If people did it on a constant
basis, it might be. But the question
is, how can people afford to take
off six weeks unpaid? It's more of
a financial burden on the employee
than on the employer."
Others'llgreed the benefit is 6nly
for those who can afford to stay
home.
·'People need to be affluent
enough to take the leave or desperate enough to take the leave," said
Mary Dooley Burns, director of
Work and Family Spectrum, a
· working parent resource center in
Minneapolis. "I don't see people
doing 11 because they need ~
break.''

cles."

Those "miracles" began happening after her arrival in Somalia
more than a decade ago after years
of relief work in Tanzania and
Sudan.
After one raid on Saalcaw, a 12year-old girl was separated from
her mother, who fled with others to
seek food and security. in
Mogadishu. The daughter staggered across 300 miles of barren,
lawless countryside. She eventually
found her mother and Sister Annie.
who has cared for both of them
since.
Last November, Sister Annie
and six companions were taken at
gunpoint after risking a trip .to a
hospital in notthern Mogadishu to
deliver some urgently needed
moD\(y.
Tiley were marched to a wall
and feared they would be shot.
Instead, the gunmen took all their
valuables - except for Sister
Annie's Bible and the $2,000 she
had hidden between its pages.
Perhaps the experience that
inspired her most, she said, was an
act of reconciliation just before
U.S. forces landed early in December.
Aa baaa of food for ehildren
were being unloaded into her agencompound from a truck, two
• technicals" -pickup trucks
mounted with heavy machine guns
- roared in, their riders bent on

Bums said her informal surveys
of Minnesota employers show that
most workers who take leave are.
women.
. .
Elsewhere, family leave laws
app~ared to be equally well
received.
,
David Newby, secretary·treasur- •
. er of the Wisconsin AFL-CIO, said
there were no big problems there.
Wisconsin's law was enacted in
19~?T· h
d'
.
.
eon 1y •sappomtmen! IS 1
that more people aren't iakmg
advantage of it,' he said.
·

48 "Born -".
49 Permit
52 Fabricator
54 Avoids
56 Legumes
57 Fries quickly
in hot lot
59 Detroit player
61 Concept
62 - through (fall)

63 "West - Story"
64 As far as

86 Female deer
67
68
69
71
72
_74
76
77
78

Transgress
Twisted
Fonda ID
Before
Fat ol swine
" - Princess"
War god
Dove cry
Danson 10
79 Glossy Iabrie
81 In addition
82 Landed
83 Face part
84 Japanese
aborigine
85 Vessel
87 Empower
89 Incline
90 Sola

100 Precisely nice
101 Baseballstats
102· Chapeaus
103 Elaine 105 Boredom
107 Exist .
109 Abstract being
110 Drinks sloWly
111 Whimpers
113 "Freshman - "
114 That woman

its Swa~ID

116
117
118
120
121

Burrowing animal
Wire measure
Suitable
Myself
Hawaiian
rootstock
122 Go by water
123 Festive
124 Wading bird
126 Cooked slowly
128 Tangle
130 Signify
132 Allowance lor
waste
134 Gladden
135 High
136 Tellurium symbOl
137 Mixes
139 Nobleman
141 Roman 51
142 Dined
143. Criticizes sharply
145 Classifies
147 " - 222"
149 Doctrine
152 Greek letter
153 Animal disease
155 COmers
l 15 7 Amphibian
159 Agave plant
160 Malay canoe
162 Ranier's
document
164 "The - Family"
166 Female relatives
168 Dispatched
169 Chemical

2 Rl- In Siberia
3 Davis 10
4 Wire measure
5 Kind of collar
8 Put oH
7 Burton 10
8 Circle part
9 Soil
10 Good~; Carlos
11 Begin again
12 Concerning
13 Perform
14 Tab
15 Clawa
16 Cubic meter
17 lllumlnallld ·
18 Paid notice
19 Saturatlld
20 Skids
27 lnstr.-&gt;t
29 Store of goods
31 Bible bk.
34 MISlead
36 - polillh
38 A,_,.
40 A Roberts
42 Speck
44 Foray
46 Paradise
48 Hat .fabric
49 Item of property
so Scottish
landowner
51 You and t
53 Space
55 Babylonian deity
56 Prohibita
58 - of Uberty
60 Tidy
62 Extremities
65 Native metal
68 Kind of cheese
69 "The Turning - "
70 Baptismal basins
72 Paths
73 Leaves '
75 Enemy
76 Declared without
proof

. 86 TV's Danson
88 PrieSt's vaatment
89 Play a lian(o
90 Precipitous
91 M•lts
93 FeiGning
95. Steeples

97 "-Few"
98 Hindu cymbals
102 Mound
104 "My Favor~e - "
108 Monk's title
107 Brlmleal cap
away
108
110 Territory
111 Helmsmen
112 Quarrel
114 " - Flve-0"
116 Clayey earth
117 Provides crew
119 weary
t21 Narrate
122 Transaction
123 Earth goddess
125 TV's Norman 127 Tellurium symbol
128 Postage sticken
129 Mother130 Negates
131 Miatakes
133 Jog
136 - of contents
138 Bend down
140 Diving birds
143 Father
144 Chair
146 Kind oltegler
148 Post
. 150 Walk
151 - America
153 Informer
154 Dpp. of NNW
156 Sodium chloride
158 Billy - WUIIams
161 Running
163 Hesltatlon sound
165 Army on.
167 Eastwood 10

wear

w.....

1 fii.Jall'

J!f

German justice system suffers from Honecker fallout

RESTRAINING HER HUSBAND - A Somali woman
restrains her husband who was objecting to a search or his vehicle
at a marine checkpoint at the green line Saturday. Numerous raetiona! clashed look place in the area. {AP)

Bhutto's husband
released from jaif
KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) Asif Ali Zardari, the husband of
· ousted Prime Minister Benazir
; Bhutto, walked free today after 2
', 1/2 years in jail on charges ranging
,: from bank fraud to murder.
: A special teQ'Orlst coun cleared
'• the way 'for Zardari's release earlier
in the day by setting, $20,000 bail.
He has been cleared of nine of the
original 12 counts, but still faces
trial on char~es of kidnapping,
extortion and illegill possession of
· weapons.
Zardari did .not attend the hearing, which lasted less than five
minutes, because .he has been hospitalized for back problems. Six
hours later, he walked out of the
hospital and retlli'IIM to Landi jail
in central Karachi to collect his
belongings and say good-bye to
·
prisoners.
"It's been hell on earth,"
Zardari told rePQners .outside the
hospital. "Yolt learn a lot about
yourself in solitary confinement.''
The 40-year-old Karachi businessman has asked the court to
allow him to leave·Pakistan and go
-to London, where Ms. Bhutto is
hosvitalized. The former prime
mimster, who gave binh to their
third child Wednesday, is expected

GULU, Uganda (AP) - A
Sudanese bishop told Pope John
Paul II Saturday that the pope will
be shalcing a hand "drip,ping with
the blood of Christians ' when he
meets Sudan's president this week. ·
The pope came io Gulu, about
40 miles from Sudan's southern
border, to celebrate an open-air
mass. About 90,000 Sudanese
refugees have fled to the area and
ieveral hundred came from both
sides of the border to attend the
Mass.
Bishop Parde Taban, from Torit
in southern Sudan, said that even as
the pope celebrated an open-air
Mass, a column of 70 troop carriers
was heading south in ,an offensive
against sout_hern Sudan's mainly

..

•

BERLIN (AP) Erich
Honecker is gone but controversy
over lhe form« East Getman leader's manslaughter trial rumbles on.
German courts are a laughingstock
and a politician is under fire for
interfering in coun affairs.
Honecker, 80 years old and suffering from liver cancer, flew to
Chile on Jan. l3 when his trial was
abandoned on the grounds that he
. wasn't expected to live to see the
verdicL
Yet the Berlin district court
invited him to return to wrap up the
case properly - a request that
Honecker snubbed with a telefax
from Santiago.
The Volksstimme newspaper in
the eastern city of Magdeburg
printed a canoon with tltree judges
dressed as clowns pondering a fax
saying "Ha ha ba" and signed EH.
The Berlin.er Morgenpost had a
cannon Friday with three judges
lecturing a scarecrow: "I:!on't
think you can make the rule of law
look stupid, Herr Honecker."
German law doesn't permit a
trial in absentia for Honecker's
case.bulitappeilrsthatinabsentia.
he can pose a severe trial for Ger-

trial, not a politieal show. T'llouP
some Germans doubled the wisdom
of the whole affair, many hoped to
see the brutality of Communist .
East ,.Germany laid bare and condemned.
. More than 300 People died uy•
mg to escape across the bo11lea or
over the Berlin Wall, which
Honecker ordered built in 1961,
and prosecutors had e~ li.nlcing, Honecker to shoot-to-till
orders during his 1971-89 period as
Communist Party boss.
Honeck« and five fellow - bers of the National Security Oxtncil were charged with manslnp.
ter. But after the trial started oa
Nov. 12, the comt spent mom time
on the health of the elderly defcadants and on defense lawyers' stirmishing than on the charges. Two
co-defendants were peeled off fac .
reasons of poor health. The other
three are still on trial
·
· The only people wbo haVe been
convicted and sentenced are a

b•lful of fllllDp' Communist border guards, who ftlceived penalties
nnging from probalion to several
years in prison.
"
Tbe lint chief judge, Hamgi:Ofg

was dismi$sed for bias
of a nearly comical error:

B,.....rlgan~,

"""ISC
He pz-1 on a equesl for Hooccker's autograph to his defense
lawyers.
flnocctcr was set free after an
apprals roun JUied that the district
court was violating his human dignity- paranteed in Germany:s
COnSiihdioo
by CDiltinning trial
evm though IXIDR-appointed doctors pve him at -silt: months to

to undergo gaH bladder surgery
soon;.A heiring is set for Sunday.
Zardari had been jailed since
li¥1:.
SepL 10, 1990, a month lifter Ms.
Afu:c llonccka' flew to SantiaB'hutto's government was disgo, the name-calling Slal1ed. The
missed for alleged corruption and
Berlin chief prosecutor, Dfeter
abuse of power.
·
NaPmiDn, iS$Ued a S~a~CD~ent Jan.
The special terrorist ~ourt
criticizing the appeals courL
acquitted Zardari of charges includTwo days lall:r it lllltllged that the
ing bank fraud and conspitacy to .
aa.,.,.,, had been rewrillen by the
murder political opponents, and he
bead oCBcdin's jnstice dqabo.mt,
waa to have been freed on bail late
last year.
· But his release was blocked by
an ordinance, initiated by the con- ·
ser'vative Islamic goverilment, that
.
w, ·pros~nects
·
'Y
withdrew a coun's power to release
a suspect being tried in the terrorist mawustic~.
~
coon.
·
0
Pakistani news.Papers and
human rights organizations accused July, Honecker was promised a fair
An AP Analysis
over from the Americans and 23
the government of enacting the
By REID G. MILLER
IIDied ..-~."who have SIIDltnlllpl
ordinance to keep Zardari in jall.
Associated Prea Wriler .
After' weeks of harsh criticism and
toP'*"" food b the a.vMOGADISHU. Somalia (AP) ~ from falling into the IIands of
preubljc pressure, the ordinance was
- The U.N. Security Council is thie1a.
YOked.
The takeover will permit the
expected to ll(l(llOYe a major peaoeZardari has been largely blamed
keeping
force
m
the
coming
wec:b
United
Swes to withdrllw about
for the downfall of Ms. Bhutto's
20,000
of its men and women,
for
this
sha(tered,
famished
land
~ovemment after only 20 months
leaving
ID
cstimw.( 4,000 bebind
perhaps
its
biggest
ever.
m power. He was dubbed "Mr. 10
to
help
handle
logistics and adler
The
U.N.
special
envoy
to
Percent" for allegedly demanding
ByJEROMESOCOLOVSKY
support
tasts
fac
the U.N. force.
Somalia
predicts
the
blue-helmeted
kickbacks
lucrative government
Associated
Press
Writer
.
Butlsmll
Kinani,
the U.N. speforce
may
number
up
to
20,000
·
contracts while his wife wa! in
AMSTERDAM,
Netherlands
cial
envoy,
said
the
peac:ekccpers
3,000 more than in Cambodia, i.ts
offiCe.
(AP) - A man has confessed to largest current operation.
will be •I'Spl••sihle rae 111 of Somasmashing a monument to Holocaust
But even that number may not lia. Tbe U.N. li@!NW of the Amer·
victims for non-racial motives, say- allow U.N. peaeek:eepers to effec· ican-led !:OI!itino confines ilto the
ing he came forward because he tively carry on the work of the "tthem ltaif of the auttry. where
was moved by the emotiooal outcry 38,000-strong U.S.-led military the famine, clan fighting, lootillg
that erupted after the attack,
.coalition.
. the.ISWOISl.
.
Christian and animist rebels.
The vandalism led this nation to
The mission could succeed,
WjMU£
DOl what Ibis
A Sudanese government plane fear for five days that violent anti- according to most veteran aid country equires, it's peacemakbombed three villages in the south ~ Semites were on the march.
. workers, but there are a couple of ing," said Mite McDonagh, the
on Wednesday, kil~~!. 10 to 15
Police said Friday that a glass big ifs:
'Dublin-bmt bead of Irish Cmcem
civilians, the bishop · .
·
. cutter identified as Ruud S. con·
-If the Security Council bmlks inSmwlia
The pope will stop for nine ·fessed to using a pickax to shatter tradition and gives them a mandate
··Twenty-thousand would do
hours in Khartoum, Sudan's capi- the refleciive glass and mirror that permits them to move aggres- the job, but it wonld still need a
tal, on Wednesday on his way back tombstone inscribed with the words sively against Somali warlords who strong American presence and
to Rome from an eight-day trip to "Never Again Auschwitz."
step out of line, and to shoot first if leadership," Mc:Donagb ·said.
Africa.
He claimed he was under orders threatened.
··And it'D need a tou&amp;ft mandate.
He agreed to the visit to champi- to remove all evidence of a con·
-If they are intelligently led,
_••, worked in Cambodia for
,on Christians pressured by the struction flaw that allowed water to given a well-defmed mission and seven ~· md I saw the 17,000
Muslim-dominated government.
condense under the glass and adequately equipped with bell- peacekeepers there," be said.
"When in Khartoum. these peo- would have been a "terrible copters, planes and armored vehi- '"They've been made idiocs or· by
ple will shake your hand, you must embarrassment'' to the company.
cles.
the Communist Khmer Rouge know, holy father, that you are
In an interview with the Alge-If they are not spread out ··kidnapped 10. 12, 14 at a time.
shaking hands dripping with the meen Dagblad newspaper, Ruud S. · evenly across all of Somalia, a Tbey can't even defend themblood of Sudanese· Christians," · said his attack was devoid of "any country about the size of Texas, but selves. ...
Taban told the pope.
mcist motive" and that he went to concentrated in areas of greatest
McDonagh' s thonRhls were
th~ pOlice after seeing the public
need.
ecboed by Siefaluziz Milas, a
.
gnef.
The U.N. peacekeepers will tate Mozambican socioiORisl who
"1 was frightened out ·of my
wits when I saw all those people
crying on TV, thinking the vandalism was a sign of racism or hatred
of Jews," he told the newspaper.
Ruud S, claimed the Van Tetthat American military forces terode Glass Company offered him
would be required to enforce the $540 for each of six glass pan!!S he
plan.
·
·
shattered.
· CUnton and Mulroney agreed
Company director A.M. La
that the _peace process would be ·Roar, called the claim "preposterenhanced by greater involvement ous. ' In a radio interview, he U:J
by Russian President Boris "(eltsin. Ruud S. acted out of spite because
The distinction of being Clin- the company stopped advancing
ton's first visiting foreign leader him money to help cover drugwas reserved for Mulroney in related debts.
recognition of his country's status
Police questioned La Rooy and
as America's neighbor and largest other individuals Friday, but
trading partner.
.-refused to give details.
"Our steadfast relatlonship with
After days of fearing the attack
Canada is an indispensable ele- was evidence that racist hatred was
ment" of the continuitr of U.S. filtering in from neighboring Gerforeign policy, Clinton wd.
many. Jewish and anti-racism
· Mulroney, standinf alongside groups welcomed the news:
Clinton at a farewel ceremony
"We are very relieved," said
after three hours of·talks, seemed Annie Fels-Kupferschmidt of the
almost to lectwe the new president Auschwitz Committee, which orgaabout the importance of good rela- nizes an annual commemoration.
tions with Canada.
.
· The refurbished arid relocated
"The relationship is, by far, the memorial to the millions of Jews .
most. important one the United who DCrisbed in Nazi gas chambers
States has In the world," said Mul- waa found shattered Sunday, hours
roney, who was a close friend of before it was to be unveiled at the
both Ronald Reagan and George commemoration.
Busll:· "Tltls is the biggest trading
Hundreds of sympathizers laid
relafionship ever between two flowers on the splin~ted glass as
n!llions."
, the ceremony .went ahead. Days
· Clinton ptomised to give a high later, a letter claiming responsibiliTAKING IT EASY -Two Serbilla 1'1111 1
priority to economic ties witP
from a previously unheard of
take a break aear tile tow• of Beakouc ia
Canada but said "some dilagreo: nghtist group sent chills through
Croatia Prlda7. As lloeav7 ftallotiac coatiaae
ment even among cloae pannera" those who remember the terror of .
seems inevitable.
between Serb• and Croats, " " •edlaton
Nazi occupation.

·ingl/::.~!ee:i~~ ~! :o~~~~~~~;

•9

s

,•

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton, In his first White
House meeting with a foreign leader, disagreed Friday with Canadian
Prime Minister Brian Mulroney
over a peace proposal for war-tom
Bosnia.
.
_
Mulroney embraced the outlines
of a peace plan offered by international envoys Cyrus R. Vance and
Lord David Owen. He said it represented "a lot of constructive
worlc" and offered
.. the "elements
of an agreement. . ·
Clinton, however, said he was
reluctant to endorse the accord
because the United States did not
want "to impose an agreement on
the parties' to which. they do not
agreeH."
. B osma
.
e sat'd M us I'tms m
• "might be left a1 a severe d.laadvantage if th.e agreement is' not
undertaken in good failh by the ·
other parties and cannot be
enforced extemally.' •
The Vance-Owen plan would
ilivide Bosnia into 10 semiautonomoua provinces linked·to a
weak cen1ral government. The
United S181es objects that the plan
would not reverse the so-called
"ethnic· cleansing" campaign that
~ Serbs have caniCd oot fQ!'
almost a yea( ualnst their ethnic
rivills. Anotber 'U.S. eomplaint is
r

oo

..
and=-

tr

.-

'

court.

.••' .

On Thursday, prosecutors final.:
ly said they don't elipect Honecket ·
to return. Is the case over? Ndr
cxacdy.
.
·•
The decision io halt the trial was·
not made during a normal trial aes-·
sion, as the law requires, so the dis."
trict coon will have to find a way'
to close the case cleanly without
the presence of the defendanL
,·
No one believes, commented the'
Berliner Zeitung, that "the cancersufferer will sit for another 19'
hours in an airplane only so !he;
Germans can end the trial against
him c:orreclly.'' '
:

...
•
fior
'
•FF to UN unclear ·:
successJ"f'.tul h anuoJJ

Dutch admits
vandalizing
monument

-..

Jutta Limbach, who inserted tile
words "almost absurd" in describf
ingthe coon's ruling.
As a member of the executive
branch, Ms. Limbach should be
strictly separate from the judiciarj't
She came under heavy criticism for
overstepping her bounds, and two
lawyers' associations censured het.·
for lack of respect for the appeal~ ·

Jn omal•

Clinton, Mulroney disagree
on Bosnia peace effort

IOOL

faced each other the IICllt morning
hands were extended and shaken:
Together, they bu.ried the four
dead
·

•

Christian blood on .Sudanese .
leader's hands, bishop says

cfs

Guns blazed on both sides.
Three attackers .and one guard
hired by the agency feU dead.
That niJbt, the Swedu prayed
lhll !lo-•lw'a •• 1
1a.~, •
eye for • .,.. ....... • 'JIIIIIIIiL
Aiao ht 11W11. J' ' 4M11_. ...... w1111 ..

'

are

·SU·NDAY PUZZLER

against a w3il, their rifles cocked. · mother come home.
Sister Annie, a 62-year•old
"The buildings will be expenLutheran of deep conviction, says sive to rebuild, but the knowledge
God sent her to Somalia not to con- is still there," Sister Annie said.
ven Muslims, but to help in the She is plannin~ to revive Saakaw,
Christian way.
which clan militiamen destroyed in
That brought her to Saakaw, a · two years of civil war and looted
remote southern town that aid con- repeatedly, even of the farmers'
voys with U.S. military escons do · seed.
not reach. She and her agency,
She and her colleagues had
Swedish Church Relief, worked in implanted knowledge of basic
Saakaw from 1984 to 1989 to health care, nutrition and the sucimprove the lives of about 40.000 cessful delivery of babies. who forpeople in 28 impoverished, dis- merly would haVje died by the
ease-ridden villages.
scores, the nurse wd.
When Sister Annie returned for
Sister Annie remembers the illita visit late in I m, reporters who erate village midwives she formed
accompanied her said villagers into an enthusiastic corps, and how
swarmed out of the bush as her airl they made up songs about what she
plane descended. She was mobbed taughL
by cheering, applaildin~ people.
"Somalia doesn't seem like a
Women hugged her hke their place the Lorn planned out," she
•
said, her eyes damp. uBut miracles
do occur. Yes, wonderful mira-

. V~ce and t;&gt;wen ~ve ~ 1 1"!"d ing the .. aggressor must be Setbs bave carried out for almost a
Assoc18ted Press Wnter
dividing. Bosma-Henqov1111 ID!O IIJ1i asd to stop doing whal he is · year, clearing. MUJlims and Croats
UNITED NATIONS (AP) 10 provmces, drawn along ethnic doing.
.
out of the territory they have taken
The _Bosnian peace plan is bei_ng lines and linked to a weak cmnl
"The plan makes no difiermce
President Clinton said Friday~ ·
assailed on se_veral fronts, .w•th go~;rnmenL .
.
benoeen victim mt1 ~ - The administration is still trying to:
Serbs demandmg more tern tory
The Bosman Sery de~ plan deiCMS tbe democnn: ]irocess decide on its approach. He told.
~n~ t_he Muslim-led government feels ~hat th~ co-c~ 3 map and enconrages the nationalist reporters he was •'reluctant to
mSISbn~ on ne":' suar:m~s.
.
essen~y gives ev~,IWIY· fcm:s. Jt dearly mates the ethnic impose an agreement 011 the parties
PJ:esident &lt;;linton IS Withholding They re not happy Wtth tt, Fred division the mast important one...
to which they may not agree, espe- .
crucial Amencan suppon Co! the Eckhard. spokesman ~or '{aacc and
Silajdzk spoke to a gathering cially when Muslims may be left at:
sponsOted by the human rights a disadvantage."
· •.
plan drafted by U .J:'I. mediator Eckhard_. told lt(lOl1m Friday.
Cyrus Vance and hu European
He did not say how ~ucb man: group Amnc"Y IDumallonaL
Clinton, speaking in WashingCommum!y coun.terpart, Lo~d the Serbs .were demandinJ.,Serbs.
As a fllSt step toward peace, ton Friday, said MUJlims in Bosnia
Owen. Clinton dispatched his . abo~t a third of the repW1ic s JIOP" Silajdzic mmnnqen.ied lhat a dead- "might be left at a severe disaddefense secre(ary to Ellll?pe Satur- ulan~. now c~ttrol 70 pe!'tCitl of line be im(•aed 011 ' SerblaD forces vantage if the agreement is not ·'
~y talk, to U.Sd. all!es ab~ut ~osn•~ tern~~eyU!~lg~ to"!"lwlatheir-. apiAtstointer- undertaken _in good faith by. th~ .
as n~n sown • eas •Or ending
ance wen P
.
118b0... control, a move '!hal he other parties and cannot be
the lighnng..
.
close to40 pc:rcenL
•
said would aeate 1 tDCK
'table enfm:ed externally."
'
In. add•t•o~, Ec)'~ard sat~.
· · climale
eqw
Defense Secretary Les Aspin
. Vance~ h~ made no progress
m a meeung Fnday with B~snian B.os_ml!" Fore•gn..MiRiste~ ~ ~ Jdiue to meet the said he would discuss U.S. ideas
Serb leader ~OV!I'J Karadzic, but SilaJdz•c. added a fresh ~
deadline, •'you bomb them, " he for a solution with E~ lead~
was to see hun agam Saturday.
deman~mg g!'afllntees !'Jat all said. suggestiD that the task be ers. He declined to detail the pto·
Vance, a former U.S. secretary th~ee Sid~~ will honor theu com- :mignedtothe""TOallies.
posals, but told reponers Saturday
of. ~tale, ~nd Owen, a former mitrnents. .
.
. . .
The Muslims and the U.S~ gov- thai any plan had.to involve Russia,
Bnu~h fore•gn secretary, were also
.In Washington Fridaf. S~ CllllliCill oomplain the v-owen
Russia has been more supponmeeung separately Saturday with satd the whole premise ·0 the plan would~mlaliC the."ethnic ive of the Serbs than other EurO:.
.rep~sentauves of the government Van~-Owen ~h was Oa~ cleansing" campaign that Bosnian pean countries, who view the Serbs
and the Croats.
accusmg the negouators of believ.
as the clear aggressors.
.,.

'

ORONO, Maine (AP)- Ross paign, saying limo and time again
Perot vowed Saturday to recruit that politics has been debased by
millions to his political . or.ck~­ personal attacks. " I don't want to ·
tion, promising it would be
. • criticize anyone," he said, calling·
ed to populist causes rather than his an organization of "idealistic;
personal gain or attacks. Yet be selfless patriots." ·
•
Yet
a
few
minutes
laler
he
deliv•
aimedseveraiJ::::.:::S•the
new Clinton
· ·
· and irs ered pointed criticisms of pin~;
search for an attorney genml
members of the new adminiStraUOO:.
Perot staged three rallies in and even form« Ptesldcnt Bush. •
Perot said his organization ~
Maine aa he made his first poittical
appearances since Clinton s Inau- "United We Staild America· ~
guration, choosing this state · needed 10 quickly mobilize in sup- ·
because his second,place finish port of campaign fUUIIICC and other
here was his best November show- political reforms because Clinton:
ing.
and Congress were pushing a
Three months after the election "soft, squeamish reform package
·
and three weeks after the inaugura- now."
tion, Perot spoke as if the last camAnd, the morning after a second
paign was still going on, and the candidate for attorney general withnext Olie alrcady.\lnder way.
drew from consideration because of
The Texas billionaire railed her hiring of an illegal illien, Perot
against deficit spending, the influ; denounced the "arrogance" of
ence of money and lobbyists in pol- those he said
trained in the law
Children breathe lead in the dust exceed 25, a child may suffer sources and offer training in pro- i,ics and the perks of power in yet consider themselves above it.
Washington. from free airport
'• Anogance goes with it - they
of pollution aiKI in homes decomt- chronic memory loss and lose fessional lead cleanup.
Medicaid
also
now
requires
lead
parting
to
free
health
insurance.
He
are
son of above all this," Perot
levels
above
motor,coordination;
ed. with lead-based paint befOre it
testing
for
all
children
under
6
covpromised
repeatedly
to
get
to
the
50
can
cause
kidney
problems
and
said,
saying if a J!(llice officer comwas banned in the 1970s. Lead
ered
by
its
benefits.
Starting
in
"fme
print"
and
spell
out
his
soluiron
deficiencies;
levels
over
100
mitted
such violations they would
tastes sweet, tempting liule ones to
1995,
federal
law
will
require
dis·
tions
but
nev«
really
did
outside
of
-rare now -can kill.
"tear off his head because he is
nibble paint flakes.
Some pediatricians argue there's closure of any lead present in repeating his support for a balanced supposed to be a role model''
But lead also contaminates the
budget amendmenL
land, panicularl)' near foundries, no evidence that the lowest levels homes for,sale.
-After Kimba Wood withdrew
But
the
first
line
of
defense
is
Instead, Perot revived many of Friday night, it was also disclosed
gas stations and highways. And it's pose a risk. Some doctors also fear
the familiar slogans of his indepen- that she trained briefly as a Playboy
present in drinking water in the 20 that frightened parents will scrape · the informed parenL
"Nobody tells you anything in dent presidential campaign, urging bunny ll'hile at school in London,percent of U.S. homes still fitted old paint off walls, creating deadly
with old plumbing and with new dust. And sbme landlords complain time to stop the poisoning," said his supporters to worll; "all f01' one ln making a joke about that, Perot
dripless faucets made of metal that removing paint is too costly Mrs. Shelton, whose own doctor and one for all," denouncing lob- weaved in a poke at Clinton's colhelped remove the lead point from byists in "$1,000 suits and alliga- lege experimentation with marijuaalloys containing lead.
and often unnecessary.
Adul(s are at minimal risk
"It's going to be like asbestos, her hoii5C.
tor shoes" and quoting Roosevelt,
na.
"My daughter's lead reached Churchill and other historic p&lt;iliti·
because their bodies absorb only 10 where people ran to remove it from
"I love this one," Perot said.
percent of any lead they're exposed · their attics only to be told later it 107 and the teachers and doctors cians in painting himself aa a man "She trained as .a Playboy bunny
to. But children absorb 50 percenL
was safer to leave it alone," said said that lead killed her memory. ' of bold action.
but never worked as one. ... That's
And children under 7 are most Raben Gorghan, of the Coalition · lola's lead got to 52, and I hope to
He also revived one of the con- like 'I smoked but I didn't
at risk because their nervous sys- for Safe Housing, a group of Mas- God she woo't be as bad."
tradictions of his historic cam- inhale."'
tems and other organs are still sachusetts landlords lllid homeowndeveloping and acutely vuliK7able ers. An Option they prefer, is coverto absorbing even minute amounts.
ing the paint with a liquid plastic
,
Because lead pOisoning prese!liS sealant.
no discernible symptoms in its
Parents shouldn't remove lead
early stage, however, and parents on their own, expens agree. BUI
often don't know the dangers, chil- they need to shield their children
dren are seldom rOutinely tested.
fro!l) iL If not, they eventually may
The CDC deems dangerous a need chelation, a painful treatment .
See Answser .to Puzzle on Page B-7
lead level of 10 micrograms of lead that draws lead from the blood.
per deciliter of blood- an amoimt
Educating parents is a major ACROSS
92 The sweetsop
c:Ompound
77 Talisman
94 - gin fizz
the size of a pencil tip.
task of programs underway in 31
170
Varteiy
of
~t
79
Locations
1 Predestined
95 Begins
New studies show even 10 states and many cities, aided by
171 Slumbers
80
Memoranda
7 Burghoil TV role
96 StorieS
micrograms can lower a child's IQ $30 million in new CDC funds.
82 Around
12 Floats
DOWN
97card
several points. Once lead levels The programs also test and treat
83 Call lor: require
17 Young girl
99 Insect
children, trac_k contamination
1
out
84
Book of maps
21 Write

Swedish .nurse is a saint to
thousands of Muslim victims

..

By ~DREW KAT~L

Grossfcld declined to say how
the union could continue its
strike pay.
·
,
"That stans getting into areas
that we don't comment on publicly," he-said. "A union doesn't
go into any strike without considering these and other issues and without planning for every contingency."
.
.
The UMW's last major coal.
strike targeted Pittston Coal Group
in 1989 and 1990. It. lasted about
10 months and involved 1,700
union members in Kentucky, West
Virginia and Virgil)ia.

22 Groom's partner
23 Acclaim
24 Elvis, to some
25 Bond nemesis
26 Attic
28 Brittle
30 Innate ability
32 UK Princess
33 Terminate
35 Broadway light
37 Journeys
39 ..., au Prince .
40 "Jhe - Couple"
41 Printer's measure
43 Bellow
45 Struck
47 Neon symbol

Sunday Times SenUnel--Page-03_

Bosnian factions clash on peace plan .

lo~g

rJoctors, health officials step up
warnings against lead poisoning
ATLANTA (AP)- Every time
lola Moody sucks her thumb, she
may be poisoning herself,
· The 2-year-old lias dangerous
levels of lead in her body. It comes
from the dust she breathes, the soil
she plays in and the chipped paint
jn her family's Augusta home.
_ :·Her mama got lead paisoning
so bad when she was little, that
she's brain damaged," said Carol
Shelton, lola's grandmother. "I
never dreamed I'd have to go
l!lrough that again with this baby.
It's just a nightmare."
•, An estimated 3 million American children, like lola. are at risk of
stunted intellectual, behavioral and
emotional development because of
lead, according to the national Cencers for Disease Control and Prevention.
· At one time, doctors waited
until children turned ,up with lead
poisoning and treated them. New
s.tudies are prompting physicians
and public health authorities to
warn parents .that even tiny
amounts of the metal kill brain
cells.
"Lead poisoning is the No. I
environmental threat to children,
but it's preventable," said Dr.
William Roper, director of the
CDC.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaeant. wv

- . ..

-

-.

•

'

'
works as a coitsultant for the U.N.
Children!s Fund.
~
"Given the proper la'ins of ref.
erence, I t1tink 20,000 would be
enough,'' Milas said. "But they'll
need the right equipment, ·particu•
larly helicopter gunships.
'
"The principal battle machine·
of the warlords is the technical,''·
Milas said, referring to civilian
vehicles, usually trucks and pick:·
ups. mounted with machine guns
and light artillery.
•·
"The helicopter gunship can
make a technical a highly undesir·
able vehicle,'' Milas noted.
·
Rhodri Wynn-Pope, a retired
Britisli army major who now runs .
CARE International's Somali oper-'·
ation, also argued for strong, con-·
tinued American involvement, i ·
weU-defmed mission for the peacekeepers and the same rules of
engagemenlthe U.S. and its alli.S ·
nowemploy.
..·
"The question is, do you have a.
credible deterrence and are you
willing to use it?" Wynn-Po(i6
said. •'The Americans proved from' ~
day one that they were willin~ tq,
zap anyone who strayed out of bne. •
"If the U.N. force is seen as ·
urely defensive, we're going to
ose the momentum we've been
given by the Americans," he said. ·
~ II? be able to !alee a~~· ·
s•ve acbon m suppon of a poliCy of"
impartiality and contain the militia ·
forces in the country."
·

r.

·:n

�Page

04--Sunday Tlmes-.-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolll, OH-Polnt Plaaunt,

BRIDGE

l·f.ll

.7 32

.K J 8 43

•n

.

+A 54

PHILLIP

EAST
...
.Q6
• 10 7

6$

ALDER

7S
+QJ8632

.Q

.AKJ98U42

SOUTH

.

IAKQJ 104
• A 10 9 2
+K 9
. 10

Even experts nod
occasionally

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

By Pbillip Alder
The Senior Lile Master was really
warming to his dasses, and the stu·
dents were warming to him. This particular Saturday it was standing room
only.
Sometimes (the SLM began) bridge
players below the e1pert level, like
yourselves - and me (a couple of
cougl)s were heard as he added the
';lnd me" too much as an after·
thought). think that experts never
!liake mistakes. We may rest assured
that this isn't the case. As you cannot
see all the cards, it is impossible·to do
the right thing all the time. And there
~re occasions when an expert makes
not only a mistake but downright
Howler. This deal was played at the
1979 European Championships in Lau,sanne, Switzerland.
Auctions that start at the live-level
ate something of a lottery. You should
try to get the best result possible, not
tbe best possible result.
• West led the club queen. East over·
tOok with the king and continued with

a

So11tb
Obi.

6+

West

North

Elst

Pass

Pass

S•

Pass

s•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • Q

the ace. South ruffed high and West
discarded a diamond. Ne•t. declarer
drew trumps. Tben he cashed the dia·
mond king, played a diamond to dummy's ace, led a low heart to his ace and
finessed the heart 10. East gratefully
SC09ped up the queen: one down .
Declarer didn't just misplay; he
mangled. As I'm sure you have seen,
all he had to .do was to ruff the diamond five in bis hand. When East discards, he is known to have begun with
no spades, two diamonds and nine
clubs; therefore exactly two hearts.
The moral: Always get a complete
count when you can.

® ,. . _.....APOI.DDmlt..,IU'RIIUII! UM.

February

7, 1~

February

fits today can be worked out to your*
you don't reapect the source. Words of VIDIAQII, prOVIded you use your lmOOF
wisdom could spring from the moutha nation lnd 111011rceful.-.
TAUIWS (April 20-Mrlr 2G) Manage
of bebeS today.
CAPRICORN (Dac. 22cJH. 11) If yOil &gt;iour own altal111 today. eopoclolly lithe
buy aomething rather expensive today, atllk• are Olgnlllcant a~ there 01'!1
make sure you save the roceipt, This -elements of rlllka Involved. You!~
BERNICE
way you can return the merchandise if be better equipped to malce critical adBEDE OSOL
you find the same Item sold elsewhere justments.
GEIIII (llaf 21-.luna 201 Today's cl(!
lor a to- price.
•
velopmanta tend to work In your lavOI',
fab.l,1113
-latty wllera )Oinl venturM are con,
If both Plrllea .,. In accord,
FortUIII)US developments in llnanciat ar- cemed.
don't be afraid to latce 1 calculated rill!:;
.
- could develop fof you from time to . CANCIR (JuM 21-.luly 22) Try to....,_
up 10 a lot .
time In the year ahead . They moy come
LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) Guard yourself · lboutln o VflltY llrange·m.,_, 10 you elate lodily with ~whom you thl'll(
are progresa've and lm~gklatiYe. ldell
against Inclinations today to accept.in- must be constantly watcllful.
. rormation at face value from indhiiduals AQUARRJS (olin. 2G Feb. 11) YI)U may · that WQrk lor them could be tailored tQ
you do not know well. There Is a chance become Involved In a commercial Yen- your needs.
LEO (.luiJ 23-Aug. 22) A financial Ill..~
you might be misled.
lura at this lime that won't be conductFob. 7, 1993
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept, 22) You are quite ed liang conventional lines. Your lion thet hasn't made you too hopeful
COUld .take a turn lor the bettor at thli
imaginative today, but, unfortunately,
A close associate who is more experl- you might use your lmaginalion for the ~nlque Input could help to make It auc- time, producing a profit lnst..il of ·~
anced than you are could prove to be an wrong reasons, such as preparing alibis C811Sful. ·Major chongea are ahead lor ' loss. Don't throw In the towel pram&amp;;
Aquarlua In the coming year. Send for lurely.
ex:lremely staunch ally in the year ahead tor things you fail to do.
by helping you improve your tot in life. LIBRA (lapl. 23-0ct. 23) Do not make AquariUs' Aatro-Braph precllctlono to, VIIQO (A... 23-lapl. 22) Know-how II
day. Mill S1 .25 pluo a long, self.adAQUARIUS (JIIII, 20-Fab. 11) Make an
effort 10 be compllmenta~ Instead 01 unllatterlng comments today to friends dr&amp;Aed. otamped envelope to Mire- ono lhlng, knowing the right people 18
''
about ahemutual
pal wllo
Isn't present. Graph, clo this - · P.O. Box onother. Today you could do rather Wll!
critical in discussjpns wUh your mate to.;. H
1
1
e or s .w II learn o your deleterious 91428, C._and, OH 44101-:1&gt;428. Be .bY coupling knowledge and contacts/
day . It may ta ke on1Y one .sour note lo remarks
and even up the Score at a later
Fire your beat shot.
•
sura to state your zoditJC Olgn.
disrupt your household harmony. date
LIIIIIA (Sept. 23-0cL 23) It's imperative
Aquarius, treat yourself .to a birthday . SCORPIO (Oct. 24-HOv. 22) An un- PIICIS (Fab. 20-llorch 2D) Some un- today that you .,. persistent, becauoe
gln. Send for Aquarius Astro-Graph lrlendly observer might focus his or her expected developments could come the solutions you'll be -lng ·to r~
predlctoons for the year ahead by mall- eyes on you today, hoping that you'll do your way todily through a partnership solve your problems might not coma to
mg $1 .25 pius a long, self-addr.,.aed, something that could be the subject of arrangement, even though you haven"t you untlllha last minute.
stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o gossip. Play it cool and walk the stfalght prevlouoty been aHIIIated with this SCORPIO (Oct. 2• Nov. 22) A Cloee
group of people.
thos.newspaper. P.O. Box ~1428. Cleve- and narrow
friend might come to you·with a propos.
land, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state SAOinARius (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 11 be- ARIEl (llarch 21·April 11) Situations at today that sounds far-fetched upon•
than usual bene- ·
your zod1ac sign .
.
· ··
·. thot could offer
first hewing. - · It has merit and,
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 2G) Good inshouldn't be treated frivolously.
tentions will count for nothing today if
BAOITTARRJI (Nov. 23-Dac. 21) YOUI"
you give another advice on something
probabllltlee for personal galp loOk .,.,Y
you know little about. Keep mum if
encouraging today, ...,..Iaiiy II you al'l'
you're not sure of what you',re saYing.
selling or promoting 10Melhlng ·thai I&amp;
ARIES (Morch 21·April 11) Too much
unique or dlflerant.
'
or your time might.be devoted to trivial
CAPRICOIIti (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) If you:
or trivolous endeavorS today. When you
,!J'
uae your spacial gifts for handling tricky.
add things up at the end of the day, you
developments today. things should
are not apt to have an impressive total.
wortc out to your edvantage. However:
TAURUS (April20-llar 20) SP&lt;!aking in
you muat be original and not use Jhl'
ldau of others.
;
glowing

NORTH

wv

term~

hooves you to be a goOd listener, even 1t

about members of your

However, you must
be carelul not to attribute to them ac·
compllshrnents that they've never
achieved . ,
GEMINI (liar 21.Juna 2G) Belore signing any legal documents today, be car·
tain .that y~ understand them thor.
oughly, partlcutarty If they ·are binding
agreements.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) In your
buslneas aHalrs today, don't unneces·
sarlly yield small advantagea. When you
put lillie things together , this could add

famHy is admirable.

'Your ,
'Birthday

.ClACCIFIED ADC
fill THE

7, 1993

for Rem

~NoTICE TO CONTRACTORS

0::

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio
Jonu.ry 211, 1193

.-.
-~

-~

:~

·.

Coni1'8CI Silles

,

Lea-l Copy No. 9:1-126
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
•.
BRF-HES981(8)
•· Sealed propoaala will be
1~ved at the olftce of .lha
· Director of the Oh lo
Department of Trona·
, porlallon, Columbuil, Ohio,
until 10:00 A.M., ~hlo
Jllondord Timo, Tu•doy,
_.aroh 2, 1193, lor lm·
provemantaln:
.- Gallla County, Ohio lor
tmprovlng aoctlon GAL-218·
·11.55, Stole Route 218 In
:~H•rrleon Townahlp, by
·grading, draining, paving
· wllh 11ph1lt concrete on 1

oi educotion.
Spoclllcallona and In· 3 Announcements
• tructlona to bidder• may GIFTED PSYCHICSIII SENSAbe obtained at the office of TIONAL RESULTS! II ·1 - - .
the TrMaur•, Eaatern High 33n EXT. 31M. SUI PEA MIN.
MUST BE 11 YAS. UNISTAA CO.
School Buiklng.
IC12-631-ol15.
A certified check payable
\O the Treeaurer of the Pamrred Chef caoklng clue,
above Boord of Education v- - · · banatKa book
or 1 aatlofaclory bid bond your alioW today, call Fronllla
executed by the bidder ond ~~~
tho lady iram Qalllpolio that
the aurety company in an Win
CaiiMI abaUI the em pltl-. call
amount equal to live aoatn 304-17H113.
percent of tho bid oholl ba
aubrnllled with ..ch bid.
4
Giveaway
Said Board of Education .;.....,.....,.;:;;_;.;..~:,......,,.,.
reaervea the right to waive 12 wk old Slm..- kltten, 304informalitiea to accept or 171-H33 aftar 5:00 PM.
reject any ond oil or por.. of 2 Pupplaa, 1 Famala, 114-3888324.
any and oil bide.
No bida may . l&gt;e 4 Famalo 6 WMkl, Chow,
withdrewn for at leaotthlrty Australl•n Sh..,erc~ Pupple1,
(30) daya after the schedule For Info Call 114.-,6945.
closing time for rocolpt of Cuta mala blk puppy, 8 wka old,
bids.

:ionumlnoua oggrogate baoo
BOARD OF EDUCATION
'")nd by conatructlng Brldga
OF EASTERN LOCAL
"lto. GAL·218.09e2, a alngle
SCHOOL DISTRICT
-: tpln preatre11ed concrete
Eloiu Booton
.LOx blam bridge on cap.ped
TrNiurerof
-plla obuunanta (apon 42 .0",
Easl81'n Local Schoola
·roadway 34'.0", between
38900-SR7
. guordrolla), over Bullakln
Roedaville, Ohio 45n2
. Craalc.
(1)24, 31; (2) 7, 14. 41c
· Bidding 11
~ Bidding on thla proloctla
·J•trlcted to Dloodvantaged
:J:Jueln••• Enterprise•
Public Notice
(DBEa) certified 11 DBEo In
eccordance with the Sur·

, _ Tronaponatlon Uniform
· Ratocatlon Aaalatance Act
·- ol1187, and 49 CFR, Pan 23
; and quallllad to bid with
·• ODOT under Chopter 5525
: of the Ohio Ravlaecl Code,
;.. Tha Ohio Department ol
• Tronepor..llon hereby noll·
: flea all blddora that It will
&gt;olllnnotlvily lnaura that In

.. eny contr1ct entered Into

: pureuanl to lhla edver·
,. tlaaman~ minority bualneoa
: antorprloH will be afforded
• full opportunity to aubmll
; bid a In raaponoe to thla
' lnvllltlon and will not bo
: dlocrlmlnalad ogalnat on
~ the

Announcements

ground• of race, color,

.. or netlonel origin In
• conolderatlon lor an oward.
: Minimum wage ratea far
• thla proJect have bean
: predotarmlnad aa required
l by iaw end are aet forth In
' 'the bid propoool. "Tha do ..
''HI for completion of thlo
::work ahall be oat forth In
: .... blddklg propo.. l.•
• , Plana ond Spoclllcallana
• . . on lie In thollaplnmont
! of. Tronaportotlon and the
~oftloa of tho Dlatrlcl Deputy

NOTICETOCONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Cotumbua, Ohio
Januory 211, 1893
Contract Salea

Legal Copy No. 93-125
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
STP·FY83(2)
Sealed propoula will bl
received 11 the office of the
Director of the Ohio
Department of Tron•
ponollon, Columbua, Ohio,
until 10:00 A.M.:! Ohio
Standard Time, Iueaday,

~~75-42$8.

Froa flro wood, 304-171-1684.
F- Pupplas: MOihN -Huaky,
Father, - Tranllng_ Sllltll'nln,
Soma WHh Blua EyH. 614-388-

Public Sale
&amp;.Auction .
Rlck Puraon Auction Comp1ny,
full 11rne auctklneer, complet•

auction

UCenMd

ttrvlce.

Help Wanted

11

train.

Mn!ll"'.

nMd.ct.

21

Wllhout lui*Ylt+on For Tuu
ou Co. In Oalllo Area. Wa Train,

Wrlta T.J, Dlckaraon, PNa.,
8WEJOCC?, lo• 111005, Fl.
- h . TA 71181.

car

9 '"'anted to Buy
program. 304-175-3194.
.;........;.;"'=;,:;.;;~..:;.::.;._..,...
Camololo Hotiaaltold Ill' Eotatasl Any Ty"' Of Fumn..a,
AppiMCM, Mtlque'l, Etc. Alto

Approleat Anllablal 114-245-

lh52.

1056.

Wa,.ocl To 8uy: J101k Autco
WHh Or wtthoul llatoro. Call
Larry Uvaty. 114-3111-1303.
1Wo cal8, one Nrmle &amp; an.
mele. 304-675-5215.
Top Paid: All Old U.S.
Calno, Gold Ringo 811- Calna,
small White Poodle, To Good Gold Calna. M.T.S. Cain Shop,
HOme, 814--446-712•.
151 ~nd AVOI)ua, Oalllpolla.
Wonted to buy: uaocl mobllo
6
Lost &amp; Found
homoa.I14-441-C11711
FOUND Callla puppy, Rt. 82
FOUND fomoto blk Lab, Rt. 2

~1

Tunday -Fabruary a

14

Smiley'• Motel

r

WH0-0-0-0

Rout•:

Aecntlon

Po~-. Dapcol1, 814-

Business

EOEIIIFIIW

Valen:-~~~~~~~~;;;:

l.OM 10 To 15 Pound• By
t l - Day. 1GO'!f. Naturol, 100% I!':'""':"

GJur.nt:Ncl,
lnupinllve.
575-1311.

3Q3.

1
Ii~~~~~~~~~

MatuN womtn Wln11d to
Hbyell, North Point 11ihool dl•

trtct, ,.t.,.nc:e r.qulrwd. 304175-:1301.

·

haul~: logl to th•
call
11·1157.

Handyman, Odd j0bl, Indoor
/Outdoor MIH~IIaneoua Er-

•

I

i

1. . ...,... Holly Rlcfgo 14x'IV1

au

e~ec,

a

bedi'OOmll,

AJC,~

..uu ..... ..........

...... kltohon -~
new, 104-1'71-2414.
-.
11108pruoo Rklga,. :lbnfm.,1 ,
112 bath, pump, • .,.,,.

WOLPfTANNING IEDI

Nlw

CorruM~,

Home Unlta,

tal--.. . . _. . .

From 11".00. Lampo• Lollono,
AccntoriN. Monthly I'IYf!tlnta
Low Aa.fii.OO, !;all T~AEE
NEW Color Catalog. 1
41:Z.
1117.

''

12 monllw FREE lot--,
pofu••• -~~~ at 11112.f7 por'
rnDnlh, 1..0 -~. .

1.1'11. llxld 1110 -

~·-·!;aN

'

........

1 -·
-l1711or oppolntonont.
.
fanlaotlo
N- '1VIl14,
Jbdmt., lnclt~ .......,, ... •.
up, alolrtlng ., llopo, 11"11.47 por
=~·yr. fREE lot ront, 1-.

·=.

1
-rHioa, 11113 MK'IV llad-'

-

31 Homes for Sale
1588 Sq. Fl., .11 aero lol. 2xll
walla, 2 comptota blllla, fining

room, IIYina room, 3bdrm., walk·
In claHte,lully cilrpetld, 2 por.
chH, electric hNt, AC 1-.tcwe,
relrlgerator, ltaJH..wlrea, Horne
Nat'f Bank, Rtclne, OH. 114441-

22)0.

mon wlh I yoor - Y , tn-

ctudao dallriry, ....... _.....

and aldnlna, - · . . . . , 114-'
til 2414 • • tor Mllta.

:

-14·71~ , ......

.......... lath 1

Qii;l.;, Tub,:

F l - Front
k, 11W41-,
to'7.1,11Wa..t2S4.
• ..
-

Mobile Ho!IIO·

2 .... _

~" ExPIIrlonca
lliao
Roctulrad.
Proflclan1 18Typing
IKIMa Noadod For Coiro._.

And Comar Lot A- Forronda, J4,GO Par Hour, 814·2418111. 1M IU 1la:1, Or ~~~
3 - - 2 ....... Qlnlng 11244.
1443'
'
Han -m avolloblo In m~ ~-· ~ Living - ·
....,...., On
33 F
f S I
·~'
·-elderly ,.ople, Iota o Sclioolo,
home for
s Mtnut10 F"""
.::...:..::a:;nn.;:,:.•
.:;o::.r..::a::e:.__
llpolfo.
1114-441-71:17.
1
TLC, 20yra. experience, 114·2861153 any11m0. '
!_'? S BA Da- Farm Homo :.:~~'b.::
on your lol • .,... . , up. houle RIIWIJ nma1hl1d ·I .....,
Have v~e~~ncr foi' eldarly, .n.~ltt
lllrns. ...,_ . _ oarago,
..-able ral~'ti4"Hcmo owor ~~,~
from hon",l
1-22'711.
~: S BR 1-112 both, ..-,huntlnacabln,ly-.•
'".Rod"=";;.';;;.dl.;_114-.;_4-!111-121;:;;;;_=0.::.. __ _:
Mlao Paulo'a Day Can Cantor 1 h do ood ;
Block Waot Of HMC On Jack- ~~ng.~~~~35 Lots I Acreage
~
Pika 11-F • A,M. ·5:~ P.M. H ~:.=.w.oao.
OuaiHy And Expo~anco Ia Tho
.. .,_ Ill' LHa, North .
11 COncern For Your Chlla'1 City ..- . . -Homo. ..... Olllllo High .....
Care. !;all Ua For A VIall. Infant
s
..........
_.,
Utllltlao ,...~ - ··
ITaddtoro 814-44H227. p,... -Coinplal~
..-, f Full !lalha, l'lnanolng. 114
IIU.
;
Dhoolarw 18choot Age 114-4411224.
~K='
17 or 11 .._on Llnooln Hta. '
2 c;ar
IIS,aoo. can lit llna- tiSOil;
Nuralng stUdant CNA Will Cora laJIOP-.
Comiw
Flat
Lot.
Cono1'4, 114 IIIM1121, OUtdo, .
F« TIM Eldorty. tl4-246-51157.
Drln,ly lulldai, 114 441 IDJI
112 · - · P__,,
Point Socurltlecullonrlco, Inc. CLOIINQ 0011'1 PAID IV 1ft1 HoMI Ooldw•'Vt nNIIrlnt~
LEII, -ft~-- •-~
concllllanlw~:"-&lt;Mr-.flat
f:~= Butl~~ r:t::~-: ••
-L
:
• ~• Ad ~ 'l
botlw,
~~!"&gt;.••
·•
24 hour aervl- 304-e7Sol512. 2Mldwa
a~ fiDIN In
room ........._
-~
QuaJftv cteanin" eervlce, CDm&lt;' and IJJI!YWOY. I l
• ldan II11, call
marc ii'I and rH
AdiOI, 114-112•'N41,,

denol And Manlhty Report•.

WH11ng8,

=:::x..

Alllltanct

roar~m Hu An

For0..:111 !oo~1M'\r:
Control Offlco In Ch"hlro. A
MlniiiMim 01 4 Y0111 EKparlanco
In Camputlf ()pfratlon And
Doubla -Entry BOali:::J:lng In-

~~ :orequ::.:.eJ:o'-v!"r!
Ed--

11\'ond

HI

Or

lookkHDing

Equivalent

..-...:.':"::::

~~

"'*•· :l

..........

Annlveruri..,

11

&amp;::~·_.r l o'Yr.:;.~~::..:

Tho

'=:= !!.

1M3 At

"
........ 41 ott
.."
lkllit,
Dalflpollt WI Ani An ..... 0pportunltyl. .l•l•·
T.- PAM PlAID CHEF
EARN OAEAH U .

41 Hou. . tor Rem

. ,................
- - - Unl-··
1 I lWOi -

-

114-lt21210.
'
- lalipllt In Home CPR eta.
Dll, laporloncod. Ra-DII,
lolid -ma: Ct.l211, o/o Oa~
l!polla Dallv T~""".!..l21 Third

J • . 1 e• .......

-

:181

.,

P~,

"""'"' .......... --~'
II. * .N.O.H.I.1

Ml

·~·-

..._ fDr 1'11'11, Amllr lie, W.Va...
~

.....

•

Ita Clnndo, I lA, WI llath,•
l41hlo. ~ NIIIIINC. 1'14o"

Fmanc;al

......... ..,., 44Wnll.,..~~t . :

42 Mabile Homee
for Rent
Mo~leHomn

. torS.Ie
Coli RITA Aftar 4:00
f14.27HO:U (COU-ICT)

Ato.;

u..-.·--~~
::..~
1,
1r1'1. i

WIH'Ca111 Alao
COfo
tll1od
'Nu- Homa
A-1n1
1mo
-leal ~--•~-•-·
'

· 1ft

roqulnd, , . ,..._ • - ·

~.

a-.~.,...,.., w:n.

.~

.

'"Ill"•

&lt;~~

"'&lt;r"

46' Spac:e for Rent

Husband to wife who was not too
handy around the house, "Did you
sew the bunon on my shirt?" The wife
replied, "No. I couldn't find a bunon .
But it's okay. I sewed up the BUTTONHOLE!"

FOR RENT
Large .hlgiKelllng
ga...-type commercii! building In
Middleport.
Approximately 3,000

sqllll"l feet. lWo
ofltcel. Thi'M OVet'·
head 1o-loot doors

1711-4081.

W.ntod
to - · z .. 3 badiOCiftl
lion In country . W/aardon

56 Pets tor Sale
Pets tor Sele
Call 992-6637 or
Merchandise
1 AKC Cocliar '-'"I malo, Puppy Palaeo Pot Shop.
S125. BAW.IM-!41-4110.
Locatad In o.c.11..o11v.&lt;;o. Go~
446-9786.
o,_,. ao\cl su- Shop-POt llpolta. - apoli. li4-ti1.G404.
Couch with 2 ......"'"' c:lialro Oroom[ng. All.
atylol. Aoolllarad Dalma~on P fl25, End to- 1131. EIIIY llma Pol .l'ood DNtor. Julll 112f0, 114-311-1111,
w-. C.IIIM-141-0231.
gl- - maclilno
304-4'1M147111"
maoaago.11811.
·
Two Y01r Old Famalo, CFA . - - - - - - - - - - .
AKC Cocliar Sponlot Clotdon Aaglotarad Hlmaloyon Cat. Hao
$35. ~ 111-245- B-11501acli,t1W4WIV1. a_. looyad And Doc:lowad.
FOR RENT
orl
a 3154 .~ AKC Doblfman,.Rotlweller, Wire 8Mullful cat BIA Quite Ttm•
Recently' rem«&gt;
forT.,._, Min. Plowclior, Pug, poramontal. S250.IM-441-GI15.
Min. Soh-, - . llyrlall ....
Musical
deled office ~pace
llrd. 114-141-0404.
'"
for rent In
Instruments
For Ia"winter-· lui
Pomeroy.1200
to
longth, groy' wlplold acorf 11M MC -lllilon, fomafo, $250· Korv Prolaaalonll Kaybcard,
-.dry cloanad, S30, 1M-iii· liMa
. IIJ...!"!!!!'!._
~
M
. D; both atl ••cOitont condhlon, cau ln3000 square feet
2421.
· lhofiJ, ·~n 1
eluded, $400, uHd very ltttl• bv

· ha..Atnrl
-·
· Nortli or
of
K....
104-171-3311

For 8oito- 8lu milium IIdia AKC Aaglalarod Ca~n Tarrlor

56

54 Miscellaneous
Furnished

bi-.

Rooms

jrumlahecl, 2 or 3bdrm., for rent
111 Country Mobllo Part. Waahor/

,17,

&lt;lfJ'Ir, alr,~l231/ mOIL, 114·1192·
IM ...!I-8227.
8moll · 1 llodroam Trallar In
~nauga, UtlttiH Pold tl80/llo.
SM-146-11108.

1, Card of Thanks
.The lamlly of Carl
.Brennen wllh .. · tD
thenk the following
lor
their
help,
thoughtfulness, pray'
,,,., foDd, end support: the Pomeroy
Sq1111d members, the
employ•••
Df
Farmer'• Benk, the
1m1rgency room aiBII
at Veterans Memorial
· Hospital, FeenayBiennaH Poet of the
American Legion,'
·Bruce Fisher and his
'11111, AI Hl.rt10n, B Ul
Frazier, neighbors
an~ lrlendL

4&lt;1

Apanmem
for Rent

1 BR Opirlmtnt In
PI_..
Oulol, prima,

In Memory

In Memory Of
J. DAVID ATHA .
8111147 • 217111
lWo yaoro hava gona
alnoa thai awful day
whan wo know God'a
. -~·· xently took you
million tim•
•wa'va niNded you 10
hell! ua one - • • Uma,
to -the our tasro and
••ourfalra.
" A mlllon tim• .....
!lad to art and atort a
ltrancl - clay and know
your hondo wa con't
' toJJOh to guide ua on our

.-Y·

";. ml11 y~u more
aach pa11lng day ao
lime eo elowly movea.
.'will
rha ,d-m•
wo dr•IMCI
. _ ba baoluaodon'thavayou.
Wo koap you In our
heart• cleor ded, you'll
·- b e forgotlln.
. Your tanclamHa, .your
amlla and lhe lava you
to ua all, we'll
aiWaya ba together Popa
•• you llva ·wuh •ell ol

good

~borhDod. S2SO per month.
1 - 1 or 304-175-1550•
2bclrm. apta., lOIII afactrlc, appflo-• · lumtohocl, l!tundrr
room facUMiaa . - to achool
In lown. Appllc:iik:lna available
at: VII- ·oroan Aota. iMtl or
CIIIIM.fl2·371~ EOH.

.lpertmenta tor rent In Pom1~
and Mk141~, call 114-112·
240S or 114-1192·2780.

Lad._

lf7 wanted to Rent

Merchandtse

PICKENS FURNITURE

••holdNow.\laod

Hot
fumllhlng. 112 mi.
Jwrlcha Ad. Pt. PIUAnt, wv.
.... 3D4-t711-MSO.

Household
Gooda

51

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

R. &amp; e. Fumn.... - · UIOd ...
VI 'AA FURNITURE AND AP. tlquao.
- - fumlahli.ga
131 Jockaan Pika .
PUANCES
llliilon, WV. 304-77S-5341.
'
lrom Stowmo. Walk to ahop I
1114-44&amp;-1421 '0R 114-441-3158
movtoa. Coll614-141-2518. EOH.
Plolcl Cclwo!!1 Cltalr,
Blue Velvet Qtlllr, Atl
Contanary Am, Nlco 2 Bod- .
!arty AnwJfcan SIYII; Maple
rooms, Stove, AetrtjJintor,
llocialary, 114-288-1881.
ESTATE~L

==:!'

Water • 1240/lrlo. No Pete. BJ4.

401-8031.

Enlctonc:y

apa~mant,

52 Spontng Goods
Aariilngtan Modal 11G0,121A
Good cancflllon t3711.00. Col ·~

llulbony

Avenue, Pomeroy, B14-H2-&amp;858.

o........ living. 1 'lind 2 bad~ apertmenla al Vllllg•
lienor
and
Rlva&lt;Oido
Aponmanta In Mlddtoport. From
$1111. CIIIIM-Ift-6850. EOH.

a

2

1•1:30 114 ... , .

Wlnclilltor 12, 12 Qauga
*"25: Blowning 20 Oougo Pump
$350; Biilgtum Browning 12

roo; 4a=,•

MldcfiopOn, 2 bad"'""' lur·

53

..... --25M.

Buy or eeli. Aav.rinto Antlquee,
1124 E. M•ln St,..t, on At. 124,

n!Med &amp;. unt...nlehed apll, dep
a~~ulllod

kHchanc_71h

S1.,

11m~recl.

2

Oak - h otond Wipltctwr bowl
t3711. Oafc StngOr cablntt
maclolna 150. CoHN
........ $40. 304 112 3201.

-•!Ill

30(:'f7S.a813.

-banch with!no-;fi14.8U.
-laht
wafthta;

Zl28aftor5 .....

5

RDIVIL

Happy Ada

Feb.

Happy
Anniversary

8 thru 13th

WESLEYAN
_ CHURCH
: . Clark Chapel

Garrett&amp;
Mildred Watson

Rd. Bidwell,
Ohio Evangllst
Roche Jeffers

Weloveya

7:30p.m.

lhedl our._,.,
R•tume •r kin,
fMraourfMra •..
8lia 11- our fors,

WELCOME

I-AI~~~ L----4-46_-_9_7_8_6·--~

-L

IMU413.

·Canaday

.

..... Portablo - - .,..
1112-2024 ,...,. 188.

Skill Scroll law, MIIWIIukM
......., Bcoh Pluo Hand

Tool8,

m u. 114 i4• totO. .

m &amp; up, :so
CIA WuhOr &amp;

Drya~

Day Warnnty,

55

BUilding
Supplies .

J:.:•

winlln1ala, ....
Winton, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 114Block, lirlcll, -

-

. .

'

.

Realty

.

D. C. •111 Salts1 lac.
Cannal!¥.q.lnc. 45719

Specializtng In Pole
Builditgs.
Designed 10 meet ,OIK
needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Buldings and
Package Deals. Save
Hundreds, even Thou1satllljs I
of Dollars.
Lccal Sales Representative
OONNA CRISENBERY
1
7

446•3636:
.....

ANYHOlltl
aaeoum • MH'IIIliCu.t..
IN'VBNINT NOPU'nU

~~

NEW FREE QUALITY HQIIES IQQJS IIHOWINQ N!ARLY ALL
LOCAL REAL EITATE LIITINGI, IN COLQA, IS NOW
AVAILABLE. PLEASE STOP BY OUR OFFICE FOR YOUR
FREE COPY.

Coal Mine Contractors

If you have a contract mining
company and are interested in mining
coal , for a large coal oompany in
southern West Virginia, send you
resume to:
CONTRACTOR
P.O. Box 3506
Charleston, WV 25324
11

wanted

BEAUTIFUL BRIC,K ON NEARLY AN ACRE EXCELLENT FLOOR PLAN. FORMAL LIVING ROOM
OFF FOYER. FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, 3
BEPROOMS, 2 BATHS, ATIACHED GARAGE,
CONVENIENT LOCATION. CALL SOON FOR AN
APPOINTMENT. $72,000.
.
24 ACRES - NEAR CITY VERY NICE 3 BD. HOME,
POND. PERFECT FOR HORSES.
.
101 ACRES- MOSTLY WOODED. $23.000.
25 ACRES- NICE BUILDING SITE, $15,000

CHESHIRE - LARGE 2 STORY ON LARGE LOT.
$21.000.
'
.IN CITY- 2 STORY, NICE LOT. $22,000 .

5

HappyAda

drMmllhe ltwel.

4J.W. Douglaii
With much ID'Ie and

Ionon.

Batty S - - a y

and Family.

Good Location.
Call 992-6637 or

Ar!nouncem4!nts

(1115117•217/81)

Spr

FOR RENT

3 Announcements

oa,.. our ca,..,

•• Loratla, Oana, Heather

~6-97"6.

:,~· -·},.r4".,~-

9oara blliy bad and matt,.a,
lib
$51; bag of girl"o
cloUtN, 12 month~- 2T, $25; 114-

-roof
a n d and~";=
oalv.
orS72-1142.
3

Good location.
Call992·6637 r

Real Estate General

2454121.

And all aur hapee and

·S.dly mlued and loved,

I

Dr)w ~ 114 441 ..... .

All-lal,lgllaDWiol,lghtor,

' UI.

"'"""' _1••011 lf"ln11p0rt dleo. o.hl

Merchandise
31 Oollon Rah tank and fllli
pumpo, PO; Lowary orvan,

I!OVof!abla: l!harpol Wrto*lo
doi. full Ill aD 111 d, JOUIIQ, 1'110i

lnllemoryof
lly llothw
Mildred Leiper Swltln

li•••

Drlvo.-

. .....,. •

Mom and Dad

In Mem11_ry

M'llll•nRI8and • • • ·

avalla~e.

COMMERCIAL
::::::::.:::::::..---=.,.-,OFFICE
=~~~~~.~_1 J.aa!t11ncondy
trai~
BUILDING
low pro Ill; f14.l'l24418.
non lkock Bulk Food Btn wtth
in Gallipolis.

For Solo: AKC Dalmatian Pup.
- · 4 Malee &amp; 4
llonHor, 40MB Hard
Famlloa, 901 Cltockad, - ·
o- 11.100. Ontv 1 Y- Old And - - . Aalitna ms. 114- Motor, S7IO.I14-2411-1824.
Juot ..50.1-811.
31...121 Aftar I P.M.
NOw Haland 7ft liaybliW. Now
Holtond 1ft hayblna. 1ntama-

54 Miscellaneous

:rr...~-. ~=

114-4192-51d

-.-ond-

Antiques

to I:GO p.ni. 114-1112·2521.
FumMIIIW twpalr a rolinlahod,
buying old tantam~, Tllltlo
-lng machlnoo,- btolian
lumHuro, Oaby, IM-112·lil41.

Card of Tllanks

The family of
Eunice Cleo Sims
We the flmlly
would like to expr•••
our
he• 'rttelt
appreciation for the
lovely card1, fl~et'l,
food and prayer•
during thll time of
IOITOW. We would
also like to thank the
Doctors, Nuraea and
staff of Holzer
Medical Center and
tho•• of Plnecrelt
Care Center for t_helr
c1rlng and skilled
effort• : during her
Itaya at each facility.
All ot your help and
I_Cllfln1g Will IIWIYI ~

can..-114-441-

" - 311 ... Mhz WI VQA DIN, -

Lm. lo 8:00 p.m., Sunday ,1:00

lyra.:UM, 814417-R71, 114-&amp;171372.
.

1

ror

6 HMI«1 1200,
114!1.
'

Poliioroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00

- - . . . . . , . _ ....~-to,

worn.n,

lool..':

Gayte Auto J411i Browning 10
~ p...,p- 1521. 114-441-

UIIIHIM pekl, dllp a rwt,

2111.

roung

anytime.
rll;"'..:...-.::. ~..
l'uoo.O 1'!'3150L77000rMI Valonllno =.._=r=.,utGon--lo-or_ga_n-,-.••
$40cpold siio;'atoo ...:0. llclaa Olftaf ~ ~
.
~-77U431oftari:GO PM.
ctotnlno: Col! 114-112-21541, to AKC . Raglatorocl
Qannan
5pm or •14 1412204 aftor 5pm.
:;rrd puppf", $200, 114-112Farm Suppl;es
, Nutrition Prollucta
IMtu~no Amino Add 11octy AKC Aaaiot~&lt;ocl Lhaao Apoo,
&amp; Livestock
lutkflna, wafaht anct Ill olil, baautltul marldnga,
liunw ltirmul"aa. Avafloblo •· vwy lrlondfy houaa dog. 114- a l y at. Alto Aid -......,. :'":;;'-11:;:18:::·_ _ _ _ __
Tho aora- 10 dtat.
.ucc Aagtatarad Slborlin H•IIY 81 Farm Equipment
Hlda a bad - · llonl print. P""!,
. ,__.., Fob. IMh, caM 1MIll
PS I
groan racllner both ~oo -· 1112-~v.~
131 _, Forgu~or~, , ntar77H271
•• • lock rw-ond, .... ~ lliopo,
.
cr m-~toa,
·
Fllh Tank, 2413 .lackaon Ava. ~ol37-3453.
Kina 81D WOtarliocl Wa- Point P-nt, 304-175-2013,
llatr_., 11 • coli/ With M1r- lull Uno T~t fllh, blnls, 170 II&amp;M Trac:tcr, 1111, PS, II YO

:J:",

1'11H1117 aali for Tarry.

IUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON

MWdlapOrt 1

The family of
Orion
Roush
wlahes to thank all
who ware aupportlva
during o.u r rec;ant lima
of haartbraa~lng loaa.
You extended your
friendships, comfort,
kindness~ prayare,
lovely fiDWirl, food,
and many many other
geetures, that told us
you alao cared.
,FriendS
8r8
BO
prlcella8.
May God Blass All Of
You
Kllta Roush
and Family

P•nt

Nifty
Don Roush

Nifty, Nifty
Gruff's 50

MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
Pinecrest Care Canter, t70 Pinecrest Drive,
needs a working maintenance person with
experience In heating, air-conditioning, electric and general building maintenance. This
Is a depanmem head position· and will also
supervise Housekeeping and Laundry
employees. Supervisory experience required.
Contacf'Kathy Montgomery at
446-7112.

LOOKING FOR A
CAREER CHANGE?

VICTORY EXPRESS, 1 maJor 48 111811 carrier, will
tntln you to become· en over the reed Tr1ctor
Trlller Drlvet' 1nd hive you on the ro1d ••mlng
money In 1818 than 4 WlkL
We offer the lotJowlng bane!Hs:
r-~-~~----·11 •llrltlon FIH
Happy Birthday
•Competitive Ply Scali
•OUietandlng Profit Sh~rlng Pl1n
Ann Lemon
•Mcmthly Fuel end Performance Bonus
•PIIId Healtlt, Dlnlltl and Ult lnau11nca
you are a..spedal
•Ann11111 Holiday Fund
sister and close.
·PII-nger 18f1011•) Rldar Progrlm
·81-W..lcly It HoiiiB Polley
friend. As the
. •Pitld V•cetiDn
•
, ·
•Top Notch Equipment 1nll to 1H3 C.O.E. 1nd
years have
. conv•ntlon•t Fr~lghtllnlr end Peterblll

Happy Birthday

·-ror.

=·=.;;,r.,:=

Sentlnei-Page-05

2 bedroom, aJt alec, 1111. ~r
..... dip &amp; oitlllt.. , 1304-

a•

.='b:=:
oa-. -.

• P~ P
nelble For
And • l-Ion. Wll oaN for chlldran In IIIJ
•
Prewtow
E1Qt111ence With ~ Monday through Ftlday,

'-ral - m o · P - .
lo 'AIJlo To 1Worll Elfl.
alonlly . _ , _ . , . With
lllnlm_l'_ I 1on. At!HHy To
worto Wal Ofhon A MUll.
• W11 1o - o d

=j

.. _

-7171

u;;;j~ P-Ion For 304-67-IIM.

wu?

I

_-

Cenlral Air, 114411-2110.

month . ....,..... ild~lno.

2 hdroom Mobile Home, Fw·

2

11113 Alcl.w J n 'i"1111 3 Bod-,
........ 2 ....... Tub,,

SCRAM-LETS
UNHURT
TYRANT
OUTBID
VELURE
INTACT
KIMONO
BUTIONHOLE .

"'"":i'i r-·
1250 Dapoajt.
114711. 114-2511o8408.

2 1_1!,
2 bollia,
.~
.......
_ 12x88,
, Loltn..

crown City; tt2;GOO. --1111.

Goods

•
, ·
del)!•ry a Ml up. 1.oolet ftl'l.
2 Bedroom MobiJ. Home,
$22Wo. 1200 ~. Bldwatl
Area, t'M-381-Uet, H No
Answer leave u._.age.
~~~yo_ri'pji

•

114-f4Wm or 814-112 aei'f.

can help

CLASSFIED
· ADS

_111111

for Rem

2•a 3 lodrooma, N.O.H.I. I o...... looothon rontl - 2 or
Btova, Frlcfoa, Wotar, Tralli :lbdnna. ... only 1172.14 po&lt;

homli, CIH 1.0 til~

NlrltJanta&lt; ol - . $14 IIGt!"

Real Estate

:.:..:==.·====---

______

wtn oonaldoltloMlporu••t
and land .....,_, lllnlafaatod
colt 114-m-2403 or 114-lft·
2780 to achoduto an appotm.
mom.
Elm ...AGOO Monthly, Loo:al Pay
Plionl oull. Priced Right. f·
-1111-1181.

but

t-800-237-4142
USATilick
iU.S. &amp; l;anada)

No Elporlancol UOO To Uoo
ted
Weektv IPolentW Prac. .lng
H8 Ip ..,
Found: long blond holrod dog, 11
.. an
FHA llort~go Aofunda. Own
medium tiH, $R 248, CurUI
1 ~~
• • • - Ei11-3
Hollow,814-IIS-4432.
"AVON'ALLAREA918haro-•r u-·~•·
·•• '
24
Houn
tl me wIt h ue. You ,II lo'ft ~-~Full Blooded Cocker Spaniol com,..ny. 1.000."2-6351. t~..
PARK RANGERS
Answers To: Jllmlne, 114-643·
AVON
I
All
Araae
l
Shirley
Wardens,
Security
1710.
SpuN, 304-015-,.21.
1;~;!:"1:"!Etc. No Exp.
Info Cal 21tLoot Chlld'a Pat, Kanauga Aroa 1
2 Yoar Old Fomoto DOg Roo Elm~ WKh Now Avon Call -~
I A.M. To I
Collar, M•d. Slz.e Bkandi:h Red Tod,U For Spacial Of1ar, 1-100. _P.;;..M,_7
.
-'Da...:..yo.--=-----Long Hair, White 'Lega And
'
Styllot W.nlod, For lUll Salon.
Whife Around Noee. Anewer. To 1111 01.
Candy. Call Anytime. 614_.... Ciiofo ClaitoY And Cllppar Hciu~y Wago Up To 1200 A
Launoa: '"'dor now - · · WMit. Carof, 114-14H922.
1428.
Now hiring: oocklall w.h,....a,
LOST' pup naar Tranlc ,Cin:la, a woh-101; llno cooka, t~alo111. Tho Dalila ·Malga Cammunhy
monthe old, Sable Cdllt pup, No phone calli. AJiply In poroon Aollon AoancJ:"" Homo Enaflly
from 2-lp.m. 578 State Routt 7,

1-801)o

~cc·.c··· Tralnln~g;;;;;;;;;;;

H4EKII34
Hurrlcana, WHI Vtrglnla

Soil c,..k, 304 ~ 75 .3 4 QS.

0olllpolla.

(ONOW).

11 A.M.,··2 P.M., It P.M.

Nonhup Rcod, 114-141-o118.

Employment Serv;ces

12 - I ionllr
i I'IIEE
tat por
rontl
- ·
an lnveetment? We have...,..... :lbdtm.,
1152.17
month.•
In
and Mlddllport that ail~............ oat

I

~-773.5343.

WANTED TO BUY SAFE
814-441.0840
814-44ilo8702

-roy
~·~J=r:.= r;,:o ...

Do rou Nve or wanfl rantal8 lor

caah liiCCimo. 1-IOH53-8313.

Allond Our fREE SEMINAR To
Conitllo!• An Application And
Loam About TIMi Trucldno ln- WORIMI: Make morw money!
duatoy And Our Training . FrM olght .... k jab preparation
_,.,. abou1 nomradlllonal
Cell ,014-448- Progrerne ..

J I 0'1 Auto Part&amp; and S.IVIQI1
alto buying Junk care a 1rvcrta.

OpponunHy

32 Mobile Homes
for Sele

proof Dual- with a ataady -

Don, Junk HI Sal Uo Yiii!r NonWarldng MaJor Appt-,
~
TV'I
Aafri91ratoro,
Froazora VCR'a, Mlcoowhao,
Air eonil"tonaro, Guitar Ampo,
Etc. 114-251-1231.
Don'1 Throw Away Your Unwantad Waahon 6 Dryara, Tum
Them lnlo Caah,

Bual11811

Vending

Mell hlale, I To 8 Month• Ofd 1

March 2, 1893, for lm· wNrlng handmade red 6 whlll
provementeln:
collar, REWAR~?.t. Pl... call

Help Wanted

URGENTLY NEED DEPEij..
DAILE PERSON To Work

ExptMnoed ..... .. ..... On
FrtclaJa For I HouN, llual Ia
Expariancod And Ita" Aaforon-

11700.

~N=on~h~.~==~=7~~~~~~·~~~

,

1168,01ilo &amp; Waat VIrginia, 304- - . 11Co4-71 Aftlf I P.M.
77W785.
FASHION CONSULTINQPTIFT
W~er'e Auction s.Mce, 1300-1100 11&gt;11 h,., lk,ln care,
Rio Orondo, Ohio 614-2411,5152.
cotor IRIIIyalt, coemetiCII. we

Golllo County, Ohio for :304
:.:.:~cc754
:...:.:04..::2:.;orc_.:;•'..:5-..:71..::2..::1 · _ _
EIIIY Worlll EKcollant PIIYI ,._
Improving aactlona of SR Loot: $1,000 Reward For Tho aamblo
Producto AI Home. Call
1BO ond 325; SA 588 and TR :acot.o':,'71~~~~~ ~~~":: Toll Free, 1..-oo..l7-4116, &amp;1.
313. .
428, Village of Rio Grondo, 2541·1&amp;27, 304-453·2111.
by raaurlaclng with aaphall
Noodad:
Paid
LOST: 3 ,.. old Boaaat1 hound 6 Hairatyllst
concrete.
VacatiOM Glurantaed Wape.
1
yr
Baaola,
victnltr
of
Jolidio
Tho Ohio Department of Ad (bo~lnd High Sc'-4), 114-441-7267.
Tranaporlltlon hereby noll- Campbtlls 304-8~18152.
lleo all blddera that It will
3 yr old lan..t hollnd a
alflrmotlvely lnauro thot In 1LOST:
vicinity ol .larlcho
any contract onterod Into Adyr B•r.·
!bo nd High School),
purauant to lhla advtr• Compballa ~1652.
tlsamont, minority bualneaa
Loot: fold wolch whh ~"!!•
.: 01ractar.
enlerprlaea will ba oftorded around
h, vlciNty of Vau,han 1
;;
JERRY WRAY, full opporlunlty to aubmlt In Mlddlapon.l14-112-301 ,
Dlnalor of Tranoportatlon , blda In reapanao to thla
Loot: Baturdayl.aJ.;J•ry 30, In
~1EB. 7,14, 19113
Invitation and will nol ba Oolllpotle
81
no Aru,
dlocrlmlnatad ogolnot on Lad._ Ring, lafllll Pfnk Btorw,
the ground• of race, color, -diiM-317-11117.
~,._.:.=;:::..:..:.:::.::.:.::.._
Public Notice
or · nollonol origin In
•
conalderotlon lor on oward.
; NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Minimum WI~ IIIII for
PurchaH of~:! School Bua thla proJect hava baen
predotannlned 11 required
•· EASTERN LOCAL BOARD by law ond ore ..tlonh In
~·
OF EDUCATION
the bid propoul. "The date 7
Yard Sale
• Billed propoaalo will ba aet for C'omplatlon of thla .;..._ _.;__;_ _ __
~rec.ived by the Board of work aholl ~e oat forth .In
L Education of th• E••tern
the bidding propoul, •
,
~·Locol School Dlotrlct of
Pions ond Spoclflcatlona
- Gallipolis
! Raedavillo, Ohio, by 12:00 ora on flla In tho Depanmenl
! o'clock noon on February of Tronaporlallon ond tha
&amp; VIcinity
' 24, 1993, and atlhal time office of tho' Diatrlct Deputy
ALL Y1rd Solei lluat Bo Pold In
•opened by the Treaourer of 'Diroctpr.
Aclvanco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
~aald Boord 11 "provided by
JERRYWRAY, tho day lltforo tliO od 18 to Nn.
: I.W fof 0111 (1) 72 piiiMgtr
Dlroctor cl Tranoportallon. SUndoy adHion - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday odHion • 2:GO
•• achool bua according to , FEB. 8, 15, 19113
.
p.m. 111urdly.
•. ,.,..,;ncallona olaald board
~
:

11

tor Rem

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Public ~otlce

Sunday Times

~~2==Mo==~~le=Ho==m=e=.==~42~Mo~b~lle~H¥om:u:==l~~~=A~~~nm.=.=m~~~~~H~o~us~e~ho~ld~~~~~~~~~~~T~O~~~~~~h~~~.'~-5~:c:~~~~~.-~1 ~~~~;;~~~;;;

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PubliC Notice

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott-Point Pleasant, WV

Real Estate General

MEIGS COUNTY
(CAlL US ANl'TIMEJ

..

1-800-585-7101
(614) 446-7101

@jl ..,,

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
510 SECOND AVENUE, GALUPOUS, DH. 45631.
RUSSEL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley....................................... 742-3171
Sheryl Waller .......................... 367-04211992-6583

Dad

Jeffery L. Halley 2-11-55-2-8-91 ·
JefferyS. Halley 11-t7-7S-2-8-91
Two years have now passed. since
Jeff and Jeffery were so wrongly
· taken from us. Taken from us to be
murdered, dumped and many many
months later, found in the Portland
Area in Rural Meigs County. We
' still miss and love you both very·
much and always wlll. We well
spend the rest of our lives, doing all
we possibly can do, tO see that those
. responsible for this, get everything
they truly deserve, and. then some.
We miss and Love you both
· The famUies of
'
Jeffery L. Halley and
·JefferyS. Halley.

'

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passed I'm now
on November 11, ·1992
to Sbmi md Robot
Holl.y al Vlnlon Ohio'.
Cnndpannt• an Bu
and llarl Champlin of

Calllpollo, Ohio and
llerunl
Sue and
Holley of Bidwell.
Ohio.

sorrya~out

knocldng the
'
head off your
favorite doll
against the tree.
Love you

Trlctorl.

QUALIFICAnONS
23 Veal'l of Age
No OWl, DUI or RICklen Drtvlng
good Driving Record
II you 111 lnt11eetad In thll opportunity, pleaM
oonllct our Plt'eonnel Otflce 11 1-800-543-5033
lor lnform~tlon 1nd lppllcatlon (M-F 8:00-5:00).
All tlllnlng 11 done at our unra Modern terminal
10o8Jed In Mlldw1y, Ohio (Diyton, OhiD 1r11)
ullng 11818 of the 1rt ~q~~lll(lllnt and fBpllltiiL

l!.o.E. 11M'

EXECUTIVE HOllE ..: 2 story bncl&lt; colonial, 3 bedrooms
2'h baths, lull finished basement, alectric heat pump w~
tar heating srstem with amanities IDo numerous ID mention
nasded on 25+ acreo. Call today For your private shOwing

1418

.

NEW US'riNGI GREAT INVESTMENT - Older 2 otory
home with 3 bedrooms. ~vingroom, kitchen, lomily room,
laundry room and moreJ· 4'x32' building. On property '
there Ia 3 sewage and wa hOokups. Pricac:l in lhe $20'1.
NEW USTIIGI HOllE l :SO ACRES - SlaM lnd
aided bam atyled home with I~ bllhs, 3 tR diooma,
room, living room, kllchen. ruu buement. giii1Q8. t.Ma-•

:ao:a...:=n=·
t

FOR MOAI INFORIIATIOH'CN OUR llmlll Ull=fiiCI(
UP THE fREI QUALITY HOMES IAOCHURE AT
Till
LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STORES. SUPEIIIIARKITI, HCJI'ILI
AND

�...

S©Rdtl~-JG£tfS®

I

Autos for Sale

Autos for Sale

71

February 7, 1993

1993 .

Is, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Autos for Sale

71

Autos for Sale

71

Autos for Sale

71

71

Autos for Sale

Cllov-.

zzn, Pomoroy: 114-fDZ-1100.

4222,114-141-21111.

New gsa tanke, ona ton truck

I

PRIC&amp;D TO IELLI 1HI Clmii'O,
V.. t. . • au\0,,

....,...,.,....ne,
~ runa

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-BUDIOT

MAKE ANOTHER MOVE WITHOUT SEEING THIS HOME FIRSTI Located in · a quiet lanlily -oriented
neighborhood, lhis 3 bodroom heme offers a lot
without asking for a lot. Large kitc;htln/lamily
room area with cathedral ceill'ng and skylights, ·
living room, 2 full baths, screened in porch,
attached garage. Large lot City schools .
$59,800,
'
1200

I

_
.___..___.._...____.._ ...__.house, "Did you sew the butC A N T 1 T I ton on my shirt?" The wife re1---.--....-...---,·
.--...---1 plied, "No. I couldn't find abut9
But"it's okay. I sewed up
1L-...J.L...-u.. _...~._-J..._.~.,_ ___. ton.
the ---------- !"

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lot, off street parking, all brick. This
story has a lotto offor. 3 bodrooms, 1 bath, living room with fireplace, dining room,largo eatin kitchen. Upstairs you'll lind 2 very largo
unfinished rooms. lull unfinished basement.
Furnace and central air is only 3-4 years old.
Call Carolyn belore irs too lata. Priced at only
$74,900.
1611

~-7
quoted

Complete · the chuckle
by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

V

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~UMBERED

PRINT

LETTERS

I I I I I I I· I I

1·

I

61 Fann Equipment
Tray-Built

model,

IIIIer,

21

horN
row

7HP

t!lllar turrower,

marker, wrap around bumper,
grading blade, blr tlree, 114-

949-2182.

~U~IGE A BOOK BY ITS COVERII
- This 3 bodroom home is in immaculate condition. Recently remodeled throughout. Gas
heat, central air. New siding, windows and carpet $44,900. .
11201

~

FIVE LOTS FOR SALE • Located on Rt. 35
and old Rl. 35, this property Is private and oonvenlant. Prices "ill" at $6,900. Calf for mora
informadon.

Business
Opportunity

63

If you

Livestock
lOOn.

I
Walker Mare, v•ry •etyllah, 4

V,.

ald. Other riding horses. 304576-2001 after 5:0"0 PM.
Realstered Black Angua Bull.
can John eon... 1!114·388.a870.
A~latered

have a contract mining
company and are interested in mining
coal for a large coal company in
southern West Virginia, send your
resume to:
·
·
CONTRACTOR
P.O. Box 3506
Charleston, WV 25324

&amp; Black,Hay
614-367.0507.
64
&amp; Grain

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

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REDUCED! Wlrf NO
NOW IS THE nME TO
COME AND SEE..~NOW IS THE TIME TO BUYI Thit
gorgeous log home features 2208 sq. It of Dving apace 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, ceiling fans, buUtln book ahave&amp;lgun
C8blnets, large porch, 3 112 acres, 2 outbuildings, newer
heat pump. Thie home has many-many unique features
thai must be seen to appreclatel II you're thinking of
olvnlng a one of a kind homa ... STOP THINKING I THIS IS
·1!1 AND ITS REDUCED TO $n,500.

SPRING VALLEY HOME - Your family wiH
enjoy all tl1e space this 3 bodroom has to offer.
Includes extra farge family room with
woodbumer, living room with warm fireplace,
formal dining room and eat-in kitchen, 2 lull
baths. Outside amenities Include farge dock
and patio. GQOd size yard. Outbuilding. Priced
to sell at $79,900.
1221

NEW USnNGI SPECTACULAR CONTEMPORARY
J1PME-L.ocated on Skinner Ad. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, oun ·
porch, decking, appliances; fireplece, 60+acres that
inclUdes swimming pond, fish pond, ohed and extra t:abinl
Qwn this complete packago deaf $98,000

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DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446-9555

NEW LISTING! Buhan Ad. 8 t/2 acres with 1978 12 X
65 mobile. home and older house. Includes 2 septic
systems, TPC. water, FAN.G. and B.S. heat. OWner
Biking $23.000

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Loretta McDade- 446-7729
Carolyn Wasch- 441-1007
B. J ..Hairston - 446-4240
Pat Cochran - 446-8655 .

F"ANK RD. - Brick ranch home with 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, large glassed in family room with wood burning
tifeplaoe. Vary nice neighborhood /good location. $49,800
1

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I'!)RTLANIJ. Two story oiOer honie with 21011 of approx..
45 X 60, 624 X 1OQ, Close 10 river. Old home In need of
repair but may m~e nice camping/lraifer site. $5,000
WE HAVE THE HOME THAT'S RIGHT FOR YOU I STOP
BY AND SEE THE SELECTION AT CLELAND REALTY!

I·~~=====~~~~~~~~~=====
Real Estate

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

23 LOCUST ST.

688-6450.

Good Mixed Hay, Nllv• w•
11.80 Square Bale, 814·251-I'MO.
Hay, ~uare bales $2. &amp; $2.50.
304-&lt;117!5-31160.

446-6S06

lfiiJ-

~ iiii~J

@

TRACY BRINAGEIJ................................:MII-2438
JEAN· TRUSSELL..................................MII-2HO
KATHY CLELAND.........................·........H2-t1t1 •
9FFICE......... :..........................................H2·2251

..
...

VIRGINIA SMITH, B-ER ...................... - 2 1
EUNICE HIEHM, REALTOR ...............-..... 44&amp;-1187
RUTH BARR, REALTOR.............................411-0722
DEBORAH SCITES, REALTOR ..............-44NIOI
' LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR ...................... 4411801
MtCHAE~ MILLER, REALTOR ...................44N801
PATRICIA ROSI, REALTOR ...................... .245oiiiT5
. STEVEN 8WORDS ..................................... .241-1t01
WILMA WILLIAIIBON, ASSOCIATES.-.•2-70
JAMES WILLIAIISON, ASSOCIATE.---.o70

RESIDENTIAL • INVESTMENTS ·COMMERCIAL- FARMS

Ear corn for 1al1, also grinding
nallab11 1 · a14-G98--2412 Of' 11~

Ha~

DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

HENRY E. CLELA.N0..............."'''""''''""'""2..111

8001b. • round biiH ol hay,
$61bolo, will load, 614-949-2201.

Mixed

4t'-'ACREINioe II room CD&lt;!nby home, up lo 5 bedrooms WnMCiad.
Lb new ohingla IQ!lf recently inatallad. Rural wa•r 1\'1.rem , new Vinyt While aidng, insulatiqn blown in. Work·
shop, com crib, collar house, and storage bulking. All
mineral rights go, lru~ trHs. Col. &amp; So. Power Co. olecbic. Be lhe firwl to ' " and buy lhio lann.
1101.

Real Estate General

Purebr.d Llmousln

BuOa 8 Month• ·14 Manthe, Red

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

oome 1ppllance ropolro. WV

:104-6711-2;181 Ohio 114-44&amp;-2454.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

446?844 - . .

Coal Mine Contractors
iiOYI 1

fl23

Ron'• TV Servlo., ;,.ctaUzlng

BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE

REAL FSil\IE 1l\C

'

62 wanted to Buy

..

Real Estate General

In Z.nkh •lao MrYiclng mo.t

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY - Over
$1,200 pl!r month income is produced from this
five unit apartment building. Good locatjon in
town. Good rental history. Very nice lot with
B9COSS to back alley. $59,900.
1206
THE PRICE IS NICEi - $49,500 buys this 3
bedroom, t both ranch widf attached garage.
Raplacemant windOws and vinyl aiding keep
maintenance to a minimum. The overal oondlion of llils home fs excellent and furnace fs
lasothan a year old. Bettar caiiDday.
1502

Home
Improvements

245-1152.

WE'VE STOPPED FOOUNG AROUND. •
And reduoed the price on this channing ·oldar
classic to $72,500 . This home offers 3
!&gt;l&gt;drooms. 2 baths. living room, dining room,
family room, large eat·in kitchei1 1 2 car garage,
shualed on a picturesque 3 acres, mil, wooded
setting with access 10 large fishing pond. Seller
means business. No reasonable offer relused.
Calf Carolyn today. ·
1603

,.

.1 _I I I'

MI N K 0 0
t---,r-""T--nn-'T-""T--1
· C1l.

groolc.'!&gt;'&gt;b groot,

CLOSE TO GAVIN &amp; RIVER VALLEY
HIGH SCHOOLI - Two small· acreage lots on
blacktop road . Water available. $5,800 each.
Perfect lor mobile home. Both fcr$f0,000. Call
far more details.
112,14

t--ror
,-l"ii'"a-,....-_.--r--1

81

wheola, radlolora1 lloor m111, S.~lc Tank Pumt&gt;lng UOt..Galllo
llo. D• AAuto, Rl~.l!'/· 304- Co. RON EVANS ENTE.RPHISES,
.lackJon, DH 1-&lt;1100-637-8!521.
372·:1133 or 1~h:lt .
UIIIMy Bldg Spl: :!O'x40'11'
Palrrted StNI Sid.., Clllnlume
Serv1ces
StMI' Root, 15'd' SIMI Slldtr, 3"
Man Door, $$,444 Erected. Iron
HorN Bldga. 1-352-!MS.
81
Home
Will build polio -•ra, docQ,
Improvements
a11n0q roa~~o , put up vinyl
oldlng or lrolllr lkl111ng. 114-

HIGHWAY EXPOSURE - Need a piece of
ground with good Rt. 35 exposura and acres 7
Hare's 14.2 acres mA, right along U. S. ,35.
Good access to the highway: Good road
frontage also (townsh ip) . Producing gas well
on propl!rty.
11216

lEVRUE
Husband to wife who was
. 1
_ 1
_ 1
_ 1
_ _not too handy around the
1

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Te,OOOMI,
tlr,
new Cooper

a out, t4,wu, m1y con·
older por1lol """"· 114-'1142·2357.

DON'T

. 5 BEDROOMS- NEW ON TilE MARKpiiTrHevel has 2500+ "'\ ft. or livability 'lncriJding
a 19' 4"x20' familr room large mastor bedroom with dressing area.' 2~ baths (one on
each level) , living room, covered patio and
dock. plonty of closets and storage space.
~me- see for rourselfl
1400

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

'

..,., 114.24s.M77; l"'"f78.. ott.r brlndt. Hou. ctll8, a110

CUI.ttll, I SpHd, New · Tlree,
Runo I l.ool&lt;o GrooU 114_.41-

I

ARNYTT

76

robuTM, lillYpoo, atllllng at $H:

Rearrange the 6 scrambl ed
words be low to make 6
simple words. Print letlers of
each in its line o f squares.

I

72 Trucks for Sate

B - Tronamlealonl, UNCI I

0-

NUTHRU

Autos for Sale

AllorBP.II.

1W Dodao DoY1on1 Turbo Z.
LDH.d, · T:~l Power, AMIFM

Edited by CLAY R. POLLAN

1

71

1111 Coli VIole PS AC, Good OOOd oond,
Candltlon, f.DSO. il14 &lt;41 1038 $2,2110. ~.

That Intriguing Ware/ Game with a Chuckle

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt

WANT TO OWN A HOME? NO MONEY?
GOOD JOB? GOOD CREDIT? CALL
BLACKBURN REALTY today. We are
mortgage consultants. You may be
SURPRISED at what you can buy.
· Call 614-446-0008.

'

Real Estate General

OFFICE 992·2886

Squart Bales, 614·

245-{;457.

Premium Hay Rolls $25. Mor·
gan'a Farm, Rt. 35, Pliny, 304·
937~2018.

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Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

1955 Chevy Sellafre with 427 cu.
ln. engine. Caii614·24S.578a.
1978 Lincoln Mark V,

PRICE DRASTICALLY RE· loiiDDLEPORT - This home on
DUCEOI RUTLAND, NEW LIMA N. ltd Ave . l"las 3 bedrooms, ~v­
RD. -This 2 stor; house has 3
bedrooms, 1 baU1 (down), eat-in
kitchen and lull basement. Also a
1-car garage and a ;38&gt;:40 log
cabin sheU thai is unfinished

very good

ing room, dining room, 1~ bath,
lull basement, utility room, 2 car
garage. Beautiful woodwork! 2
large lots, fenced . In ltle 30'a.
let
how
"'~

LIST WITH J ACK AT HAVES REA L ESTATE

condition, $"1050, 614·992-33~8

1857. MA~E A DEAL - 24x64 Modulst home. 2.4
ac. mil, 2 car garage. Immediate pouenlon .
132,500.

'

•1859. FOR-ME·AND-MY.QAL - A lovely. mobile

hom&amp; and one acre of land. Fenced lot Very clean

and ready 10 occupy. Edge oi10Wn.
1817 SWEET 5 LOW - Comlor1able small3 beorm.

home. Lot 66&gt;:166', rural water, B. gas heat on $tate
route. $15,000.

992-.2403 992·27BO

'

attached gara,ge, IIY. rm. with nreplace and brick
atove, formal drn. rm., new windoWs, new electric heal
pump, good roof, Dunera &amp; downspouts . Ver; private
locatlori. Horo ~the boar parr. $45,000.00.

18!54. BEAUTY and the BEST attractive
desirable country home w/85 acres mil, 3 bedrms.,

1858. FOUR CnY .LOTS - BURKHART LANE -

Y~·n

SO'x13S' e,a.ch. Nice a_pot tor a large floor plan. Don't

pess up !his RARE JEWEL

1857. MAKE A DEAL- O.Vner wanta action. Just an
the marl&lt;tr, 3 bfdrm .. 1 bam , porch, 2 car ~ara~e .

Real Estate General

Nlca modular. 24x64. Rural . wa11r. 2.4

$32,500.

ac.

mil ,

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1155. TERRIFIC BUY - Seldom do you find a 5
Bedrm., 1112 aiOry brick home on 2 ac : m/1. 2 car
huge lR &amp; D,R. family rm. wlwoodl&gt;urr;ng fireplace, 2
b~tha &amp; utility rm. &amp; enclosed porcti . Equipped
kitchen, new 31b:40 garage. Lovely lawn, cattle barn.

ROCKSPRINGS ROAD- An older home with the
cjownstairw oomplatefy renovated. Hu an anonnous living
room with 2 boy windowa and a nice stone fireplace. The
ljeaulifuf kitchen has new cabinets with an island, .and 3
bedrooms with large walk-in closets. dinin~.- rQom,
.ltraparound porch , and many outbuildings , sitting en t
112-acres.
$55,000

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be proud Df this.property

l7e2. FOUR BEDROOM HOME, Z BATHS - Roomy
ranch home localtd in the country. Extensive work
oomplolod u lollowo: new Thermo Allside wlndowo
security doors, 11eel •iding, heavy root, kitchen:
ceramic tie entry extended Into kltd1en, 18xS3 deck
cement walks and pad. See this home and atoP
kmklng elsewhere.

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MIDDLEPORT· S. Fifth -A 1 t/2 siOry 3·4 bedroom home
with lenead yard and central air. II you want the
oonvenlence ol living in town, you botter took at thlo
home.
_,2,000

(CALL US ANYTIME)

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••

l-800-585-7101
(614) 446-7101

~ii&amp;il

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
510 SECOND AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631
Russell D. Wood, Broker ...... 446-4618 Judy Dawltt .................: .......... 446·4465
Phyllis Mllfer .......................... 256·1136 Martha Smlt~ ......................... 379-2651
J. Merrill Carter ..................... 379-2651 Cathy Wray ............................ 446-4255
Tammie Dewltt ....................... 441·1514
Drongowskl
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ft10. LOCATION IS THE KEY ro 1hlo 2 11DIY home

1114. LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDING. On State
Route. 2 bedrm. apt. on 1st noor. Posaiblt 3 more
opto. Wllltrada.
1853. BUY ONE I GET 2 FREE - 3 Ren1ala in
need of repair.

1150. COUNTRY

1130. EXCELLENT APARTMENT
BLDG.
INVESTMENT • GOOd money maker, IN TOWN.

COTTAGE

WITH

LOCATION - 2 BRa, living rm., ltit., w/country
cabinets, atorage build ing wJcarpor1 . 2.6 acres .
BEti~CJII

BRICK

NEWI100 MIL FARM - SR t41 NEW Olj MARKETI FARMI2 HOMES PLUS
location. One story Mck ranch style home OVER 180 ACRES, bam, tool house &amp; olher
with 3 bodrooms, 2112 baths ,living room, din- outbuildi~g•: 2 story ?&gt;Ionia! style home with

RA~CH,

lull basemen!,
;.:.lrnmiiog
,lcial
.
Gntlll~,iloiik:ltchen
,
2
car garage,
.. ~
AmuatiDsee.

POMEROY- Lincoln Steel· A. 2-3 badroom home with
upper and lower rear porches, and utility room . Could be
a nice · - home or rental proJM!rty.
$14,00,0

1,200 . 1,300 lb. tobacco quota. Approx. 40- One story home w/2 bedrooms, living room,
50 acres 1illable
1514 bath, kitchen &amp; basement Fencing on pro.
party, pond, wood &amp; tillable acreage. Call
today for complete listing! Raallor ownedl
1518
NEW LISTING I 247 EVERGREEN _ROADI _
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! Start packing today,

O«erina 2 tltlt to rolling Iota, a varletv of traM and
beaudfUI vlew of the rlkt. All amenfdaa avanlble

Rursi w11ar, Lndargrcun4 altc1rici1Y, a..- oyotomi
llCCipllble. Rntrlcllve covananta apply Cloae· 10
Holzar Ond lltctpplng.
·

th1s 3 bedroom .homo w•th bath, kitchen, hv1ng room needs a family! Owner has replaced
roof, furnace. water heater &amp; more within the past couple or years. Come and seel Priced

lf777. HANNAH TRACE ROAD. Cozy 3 BR ranch
wl!h eat·ln kl1clttn, LR, OR, ~1h, IUtl oil hotit, new
roOf. Just right br I'IIWt)...:t. or rtlirHt . 1J2 act8ITVI.

· 1511

t'ltfYihlng.

1858. NEW LISTING! - 25 aero larm In Clay

FOR MORE INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINGS PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY
HOMES BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STORES
SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS AND RESTAURANTS.
'

mineral rl~hto, tobacco 'baot'rl&gt;arn, ctllat, lbovt
ground pool and uiAIIIHo dith. ht houle h.. 3 ID 4
~eorooma, 2 bllhl. LR. FR. and urlllty room . .-.rry
and call now let an -ln1mont.

~ill

Tcwmship for only $43,000. Thla farm lnclu~tl all

ft34. BI·LEVEL HOME - 3
LA. 21121&gt;a1ho, 1 ac. mil.

I

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ea1-ln kit, lg .

- · LOCIKINO JIOR A PLACa TO fiAVI YOUR
OWN l U l l - IN YOUR HOIII, 1htn Ilia II 1ho
II&lt;OIMftY for you. 2·31&gt;adrooma, 21&gt;&amp;1111, LR, FR, letIn~-. oloc. BB hflt, rlW, uUI. room. Can 1110 bt
,alovlly 3 BR homo.
111121. CLOSE IN. 5 acreo milo! rcHing land.
1780. 2 or 3 BEDROOM, J bath, ll~ng room, lamlly
room. _,,. dllh and equipment. 1401. ·
I .

1121. E"~DY THI COUNTRY AIR when you
putenase thia neat and clean 3 BR home with one
bo1h, LR, Lo. FR, and H1·1n kl1chtn with garaga and
butment and 5 aCre a m'l. Also can bt 'purchued
wlf\ 10 aaea mote or .....
IIS1. LAND CONTRACT - Looking lor e ac mil
tarv• tloul&gt;lowlrlo,_llllrllge l&gt;ulldlniiJ loeatod ""oid sil
1eo, Pontr. Call ""aJIPOinrnent. ~.000.
.

'

.IODLEPOAT· This spacious 3 bedroo~. home is just .
what the family needs. k also has a lanle ltV1ng room, ntoe
lize kitchen with a cute little nook. Has new roof, new
wiring, and IIY8n'a new heat pump.
·
$23,100 '

•

tna. LAKEVIEW SUBDIVISION - A CHOICE
PLACE TO BUILD - 2 1D 5 acrn n'Qre or leu ll!lvt
EO Whllt Rd. to Charolala Lake Dr. 10 Lakevi8w Ct

ing&lt; room &amp; kitchen . 2 car garage. Approx. 4 bdrms., k•tc~ert d1n. room, bath &amp; morBI

RODNEY VILLAGE II
3 BAs, 2 boths, LR, DR, FR, 2 fireplaces,
heal pump, above ground

.

$38,000. Vwglnla 388-8826.

I'

NEWLY LISTED I 2 STORY OLDER HOME WITH CHARACTER- Situated at 90 Clay
Street -4 bedroo ms, nice large living room, dining room , kitchen, 1112 baths &amp; mora. 11511

Sales have been GREAT in 1993. We need all types of listings.
We BUY, SELL., TRADE .

LANGSVILLE-A newly deooraled 1
story frame home
with 4 bedrooms family room with a large stone fireplace,
above ground pOol new heal pump and big dick In rear.
Al1o has an older g'arage and cellar. Haa a nloe big tot.
$25,000
.•

PRIVATE

1141. BRICK BEAUTY - 3 BRa. 2112 1&gt;a1hs, 2 eat
-~4_ecrel mil. 4,000 sq. h. oommerclat build~~
S1ovi !.wordl245·5108.
'

1812. IN TOWN COMFORT- VOIY wol molmolnod 3
bodrm., kit, largo living rm., dlring rm" frOnt parch to
put a awing On, range, ref.. wuhtr &amp; otylf', Qat heat.
CA ., 2 car ~aro~e. grea1 nll~hborhood. CioN 10

NEW LISTING - Nice neighborllood,
rench style home offers 3 BRa. Ill baths,
LR, full basement, garage, heal pump,
rear deck. Just great for new home owner.

· Immaculate ranch
Lovely
new c:arpelltYOughOut. new
rool 3 yean old, 2
bedrmt., LA, din. rm ., kit ., encloted front po;rch, omc.
rm. oraludy and basemen! .

.'

BACK ON THE MARKEll OWNER REDUCED PRICE TO $5 000 - Approx 4 8 acres &amp;
1983 Schult mobije home with 3 bodroorns, living room, balh ,.:ith garden tub: rdlchen fully
equippl!d With washer &amp; dryer, range and refrigerator. Metal building with concrete ftooring
corn crib. OWNER WANTS SOLD!I.. ·
.
...34.

GET 8%.

414 THIRD
-415 BRs, 2 baths.
kitchen, DR,
siding, gas heat,
'cent air, new carpal
(903)

PANORAMIC VIEW OF OHIO RIVER
VALLEY - 2,484 sq. ft .. 3 BAs, 3 baths ,
great room combo (kitchen, .LR, OR), 8'
deck all around house heal pump
buildings on property. Too much to
advertise. Call.

car garaae . Alao attached 2 BR
LR, ea1-Tn kitchen, math. Also
car garage. All this on D.42 eoes m'l.

locafe&lt;! ~First Avenue. 4 bedrm., 1~ baths, family
room,~~~ room, basement, and 1r11all1 bdnn., bath
khchen, IIV&lt;n~ room. conago on lot Home ~ ottuaiOd

on ae&gt;mer lot Cal for an appoinlmonL

TIRED OF GEmNG 4%
ON YOUR CD1s? INVEST
IN REAL ESTAft
MORTGAGES AND

BRICK RANCH · In Up·1op
21&gt;alhs. LR, DR. ta1·1n ~1Cheol,

Large apt. bldg . wlth 3 IWD bedroom apta. Ttlla
property has been well maintained. Reduced price.

$20's.'

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

,

'

..'

WOODS IILL ROAD - 3 bedrooms,
bath, LR, kitchen with range and
refrigerator. barn with horse stalls. 27
aaes.
(1053)
31 ACRES, MINUTES TO Tmiiii
home on propl!rty featurea
lR, I&lt;Mchen, bam, tobliooO beae.
CORNER OF SR 325 AND SHELTON
ROAD- 2.25 ....,., m/1. Nice let.

to-

'
JOHNSON RIDGE
ROAD • ADDISON
1WP. - 38&amp; - · larni. 3 pondl,
baN, 56•100 ft. bam , with concrete
noon. May con•lder apit.
(571)

.

COUIIEIICIAL PROPERTY- - 2.4 mn,
2-48 frontage along SA 7 just acrosa lrom
Ohio River Plaza.

1'131. FOI! RENT - e321 MO. - Primo location .
Enltm Ave. Opportunity to oomblnt hon,a and
l&gt;ullneu. Ohio Rlvar lrontaee. llery nlea 3 l&gt;adrm
homt wl111 oppioncal, IUI-...,nt Thio II a nw.n.Y
making -Ilion.Csitlor appolnlmlnL

---··

·-..
PIKE STREET
Formerly TrNIUre
House Ceramics. 2,000 sq. ft . bath,
kitchen. t Ox52 mobile home used ao
rental.

INVESTORS
RACCOON RD. ·' 40
ACAES ·MOSTLY
WOODS. $160 PER
MONTH INCOME FROM

�-

,..

..

.

......

•
'

hge DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Mlddleport--Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Prune .exports climb Fresh fruit, tree nut exports slip· in November
WASIDNGTON (AP) - l'rune
expons are expected to climb to
nearly 90,000 tons for 1992,
according tb an Agriculrure Depanmentstudy.
"If you are looldng for a U.S.
trade success story, you need
search no further than the prune
industry,' ~ said a reeent report by
the Foreign Agricultural Service.
Export sales reached 54,000
tons in 1987,itsaid,and "in )992,
U.S. exports are expected to near a
record 90,000 tons valued at $137
million."
. The largest markets for U.S.
prunes in 1992 were Japan, 20 percent; Italy, 19 per&lt;;em; Germany,
13 percent; Canada, 7 percent; and
the Uniled Kingdom, 7 percent
The United States is the world's
dominant prune exporter, the report
said, with the U.S. marlcet share of
global prune e"ports rising from 55
percent in 1986 to 66 percent in
1991.
"The U.S. industry is benefiting
from two important consumer
trends: an aging population and a
growing health consciousness," the
report said. "Many older people
have long recognized prunes as a
natural laxative. In addition, the
growing health consciousness of
younger and older people alike has
spurred sales, as they become
aware of the nuaitional and convenience aspects of prune snacking.··
It also c(ted state-of-the-art production and packing techniques,
product innovation and astute marketing strategies as play'ing key
roles in the suceess story.

Among British consumers, however, the prune "has suffered a real
ima~e J?roblem which is only now
begmnmg to change," the report
noted.
According to the California
Prune Board, ''The image problem
comes from the laxative stigma and
the force'd .consumption of poor
quality prunes during childhood."
The board organized National
Prune Week in 1989. "This annual
public relations an&lt;! promotion
event caught the public ~y surprise,'· the report noted.
"The humorous element which
made it an overnight success was
inescapable· to the British public.
Prizes wet~: offered at cooking contests to introduce new recipes,
donations were made to the National Heart Association, and sampling

area.

.

·•· The beautiful trees that grew
along its shores, the flowers that
grew along the mill race, the mill
. pond that afforded !!'any happy
hours or swimming and fishing
when folks. came to the area around
the mill all made for lots of fond
memories. When folks came there
was always that happy and pleaSant
sound of water splashing and bubbling as it found its way down the
sluice. The water f)owed through
the millgate water wheel where it
performed its intended chore then
off to the next mill downstream .
The nostalgia aroused by the
memory of the old mills has captured the ·imagination of many writers. The water 'Wheel, the millstones, the dams, as water poured
over the edge creating miniature
waterfalls was something that
would cre8te images for most of us
toda
. ~wn By The Old Mill Stream,
On The Banks of the Old Mill
Stream and On the Banks of the
Wabash Far Away are songs that
once heard, are never forgotten.
These songs will be· legends; if not
already.
The farmers traveled the country
roads bringing their ghrists to be
ground into perfect \yheat flour, so
necessary as food. There was
always the pleasant sounds of the
water as it rushed through the .mill
race. the sluice gate, then through
the mill wheel. and pouring out
. into the stream from which it came.
There was the familiar rumble of
the miUs grinding and the sound of
the grain as it made ' it rattling
sound on its way to the garners, or
bins as we would say today. There
were the sounds of happy folks
swimming in the shallow water
beneath the old maple, oak, and
hickory trees that grew on the shore

of tomato paste and canned tomatoes reached record sales for the
January-November period o( 1992.
Paste exports totaled $55.9 million,
alrca&lt;!y greater than total calendar
year 1991's value of$44 million.
Most of the paste export
increase was to Canada, Mexico.
the Philippines and Korea.
Exports of canned tomatoes
reached $9.1' million during January-November 1992, which was
16 percent above the tlital value for
calendar year 1991.
The largest canned tornatli sales
increases in 1992 were to Japan
and Canada.
"Canned tomato production~~

varieties, bul those vllfieties wili
not be available to growers for
years,
Other techniques being worked
on includ~ experiments in infectin·g
trees with a mild ~n of the virus
to protect them from severe strains.
In another approach, researchers
are investigating the potential use
of parasites found in ASian countries as na1ural enemies of the
brown citrus aphid.
CTV causes two diseases,
known as "decline" and "stem
pitting," said Raymond Yokomi,
an entomologist at the U.S. Horticultural Research Laboratory in
Orlando, Fla.
Decline disease rapidly kills a
tree, Yokomi said. Stem pitting
reduces tree vigor, fruit size, quality and yield, he said. Grapefruit is
particularly vulnerable to stem pitting.
"We want to learn everything
possible about this pest in case it
does hit the states.'' said Vemon D.
Damsteegt; a plant pathologist in
charge of a colony of the aphids
maintained in a quarantine facility
at the Foreign-Disease-Weed Sci. ence Research Laboratory in Frederick, Md: That colony was
shipped from infested ,citrus in
Hilo, Hawaii.
"We are now establishing a
colony of the aphid from the
Caribbean for research purposes,''
Damsteegt said. "We need to
determine if the pest from the
Caribbean region is the same biotype as that from Hawaii and other
parts of the world where the aphid
transmits the virus with such high
efficiency."

WASIDNGTON (AP)- A disease-spreading pest found in many
citrus•growing regions around the
WASHINGTON (AP)- Lay; world may pose a threat to U.S.
ing flocks produced '6.09 billion groves, but scientists are developeggs during December 1992, up I ing strategies IIi control it.
percent from the 6.04 billion pro· "There is no cause for U.S. citduced the previous December.
rus growers to become unduly
Tbe total number of chicken and alarmed about this pest yet," said
turkey layers during December ' Edwin L. Civerolo, who oversees
1992 averaged 281 million, up horticulture research for the Agrifractionally from the 280 million a culture Department's Agricultural
·year ago.
·
Research Service.
December egg production per
The tropical brown citruS aphid
100 layers was 2,165 eggs, com- feeds exclusively on cil:r\IS and has
pared with 2,155 in December become well-established irr such ·
1991.
.'
places as Puerto Rico, the DominiThere·were 280 million layers in can Republic and Haiti. It carries ·
the U.nited States as of this Jan. I, severe strains 'o f a citrus disease
compared with 281 million a year known as CIV.
ago.
U.S. researchers have identified ·
genes in a citrus relative that would
make citrus resistant to the treeldlling CIV virus. They are breeding the resistant genes into new

Business
hz"ghlz"ghts

line.
As for life at a mill and those
whose occupations it was to operate the mill the job was often diffi- .
cult. In winter very few mills were
heated. A miller had to rise early
CHICAGO (AP) - Top G611eron :a cold winter morning and chop a! Motors Corp. officials moved
ice to free the mill wheel so it aggressively to counter the publicicould tum fast enough to malce the ty from an enormous n~gligeitce
ghrist wheel function properly. But, . verdict on GM's pre-1988 pickups,
near the end of the nineteenth cen- asserting it would have no impact
tury. millers were beginning to sell on sales or customer loyalty.
But autombile industry experts
their mills. Loss of business was
the main reason. .
said Friday the verdict was the last
thing the struggling automaker
needed as it tries to restore an
Colorado, California image
bauered by hom:ndous lossk
t1 d
es,
management
upheaval and an
share mar e ea
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sheep eroding share of the car marlcel
"We'Ve been very close to this
and lambs on feed for the slaughter
market in the 16 major producing . issue for some time and our dealers
states totaled 1.66 million head at have not felt any impact in the mar,
ketplace.from this problem," GMC
the start of this year. ·
California and Colorado tied for Truck Division general manager
the most sheep and lambs on feed Roy Roberts said in an interview at
with 315,000 head each, said the the Chicago Auto Show.
National Agricultural Statistics
LONDON (AP) - British AirService.
.
ways
chainnan Lord King said he's
It noted that the recent report on
retiring,
early, his suceess at .transsheep and lambs was the firSt one
forming
a money-losing state-run
released since a similar series was
carrier
into
a successful private
discontinued in March 1982.
company
overshadowed
in the end
The' other 14 states, together
a
"dirty
Dicks"
scandal.
by
with their totals of sheep and lambs
on f~ for slaughter, are Arizona,
NAPLES, Fla. (AP) - Coming
70,000; Illinois, 18,000; Iowa,
off
a second money-losing year,
, 85,000; Kansas, 87,000; MinnesoAmerican
Airlines will decide by
ta, 60,000; Montana, 34,000;
spring
on
jet and hub cuts that
Nebraska, 42,000; North Dakota,
produce
massive layoffs, top
could
37,000; Ohio, 35,000; Oregon,
95,000; South Dakl!t~. 91,000; executives of th~ nation •s biggest
·
Texas. 180,000; Vlfgmta, 25,000; carrier said.
American must decide the future
West Virginia, 175,000; and
6f
about 140 aircraft and unprofWyoming, 175,000.
itable hubs in Raleigh-Durham,
N.C., and San Jose, Calif., American chief fmancial officer Michael
Reports earnings
Durham said Friday.
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)
Owens-Illinois Inc. reported earnings before extraordinary items of
$2.9 million, or 2 cents per share,
for the fourth quarter of 1992. That
compares with a loss of $30.9 million, or 6 cents per share, for the
same period of 199 I.
The company said Friday that
net sales for the quarter were $931
million, up 5.5 percent from $882.5
million for the comparable period
in 1991.

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
January 30, 1993
STOCK STEERS:
65.00-108.00
300-undcr
69.00-98.00
300-500
55
.00-89.50
500-700
60.00-68.50
8QO-over
STOCK HEIFERS:
73.00-89.00
300-under
64 .00-86.00
30().500
50.00-79.00
500-700
48.50-67.00
8QO-over
STOCK BULLS:
60.00·1 00.00
300-uilder
61.00-103.00
300-500
58.00-83.50
500-700
54.00-60.75
Slaughter Bulls
350.00-810;00
Cows &amp; Calves nH
46.00-58.00
Bred Cows By #
350.00-650.00
Bred Cows BH
Slaughter Cows:
47.00-54.50
High Dressing
43.50-46.00
. Utility
40.00-43.00
Canner &amp; Cutter
87.00-96.00
Veal - choice
76.00-81.00
Medium
65.00-76.00
Good
23.00-28.00
Sheep- Ewes
.
68.50-75.00
Feeders
45.00-90.00
Baby Calves BH
42.00-58.00
HORSEScwt
29.00-43.00
POnies B.H.
32.00-35.00
HOGS 200-250
30.00-35.00
300-500
22.00-23.00
Male Hogs ·
25.00-61.25
Goats
.
Horse &amp; Tac Sale Fri. Feb. 19th, 6:00p.m . ·

tomato paste production in 1992c93 because of a sharp increase in U.S.
in the major countries, excluding production.
It said U.S. onm11e juice producthe United States, is estimated
down' • because· of reduced tomatli tion in 1992-93 JS forecast at
P-roduction, the report said. 855,000 tons, 30 percent above the
'Cannell production in 1992-93 is p~evious seas~m's output and the
•
estimaled at 1.4 million wns, 6 per- · htghest level smce 1979-80.
The repon also JIOted that the
cent below the previous season.
Paste production in 1992-93 is esti- Canadian government ruled recentmated at 903,000 tons, down nearly ly that cauliflower imported from
13 percent from the previous the pnited States "has not caused,
. is not causing and is not likely to
year."
The report noted that orange cause material injury" to British
juice prod~~~;tion for major produc- Columbia producers.
ing countries in the Northern . The dumping investi~atioll' was
Hemisphere in 1992-93 is forecnst initiated last July followmg a comat 1.02 million tons, 29 percent plaint by the BC :Vegetable Marall!&gt;ve the 1991-92 revised output, keting Commission.

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part time, plus some great
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to continue your education.
· You11 also be getting valuable
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Good extra money. Lots of
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Army Reserve your serious
·consideration.

Think about it.
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ARMY RISIRVI ··

WASHINGTON (AP) - · The Health Inspection Service's plant
government has expanded a quar- protecti,!lll and quarantine.
The qua,rantine prohibits the·
antined area in Los Angeles County into part of neighbciring Orange inlerstate movement of certain
County and quarantined a paxt of fruits and vegetables out of infesled
San Diego County after recent dis- areas unless they have been certi- ·
coveries of Mediterranean fruit · tied by the inspeetion service.
The expanded quarantine ·
includes
the Covina area in Los
flies.
•'These agricultural quarantines Angeles County and the Artesia,
are designed to stop the spread of Pico-Riveta and Walnut Park areas
the Mediterranean fruit fly through in Los Angeles and Orange counfruit and vegetable shipments,'' ties. The Oceanside area in Sa,n
said B. Glen Lee, deputy adminis- Diego County is newly quarantrator of the Animal and Plant tined.

Pick 3:
670
Pick 4:

0572
Super Lotto:
8-9-11-31-43-46

Page4

Kicker:

'
Vol. 43, No.. 202

Copyrighted 1as3

•

Union, Peabody at odds
over securlty pafrols
•

See me for ·

car, home, life
and health
insurance.

INSURANCE

®

•

Ph.o n• 446-4280
~446 4518

State Farm lnsuraflee Comp.ames • Home 0111ces. Bloom1nolon. llhno1s

-Great Selection in Stock! .
92 RIVIERAS
92 ROADMASTERS
92 CENTURYS
92 CADILLACS
92 REGALS
92 SKYLARKS
92.TRANSPORTS
·92 GRAND PRIXS
92 GRANDAMS
92 SUNBIRDS
92 LEMANS
ALL FACTORY PROGUMS
CARS CARRY BALANCE OF
fACTORY WARUNTY.

FUN ON A SUNNY AFTERNOON - As the
temperatures moved into the mid-SO's Sunday
afternoon the games on High Street in Pomeroy
began. While a couple or teenagers got out a
basketbaU to shoot some hoops, these youngsters

got out their vehicles .ror a few noisy runs down
the brick street. Here Nathan Burnem, left, and
Tller Faulk on scooters, and Zacll Faulk on bis
btg wheel prepare to take orr on just one of
many afternoon trips down High Street.

· t y ra te 18C.t.·s
P over

...--~~...;;..
'

'----------------------.....1

said. "But in the outer areas in the percent. Pike County was thirdcounty, levels of p,oveny do exist highest, at 26.6 percent.
to a htgher degree. '
.
Lake County in northeast Ohio
The U.S. Census Bureau had the lowest poveny rate, 4.9
acknowledges that numbers don't percent. Two other northeast counalways tell the whole story.
ties were second- and third-lowest
The poverty rate could be -Medina, 5.5 percent, and Geauskewed by the number of Ohio · ga, 5.6 percent.
University students living off campus. The university is in Athens,
the county seat.
1 w"I think that's what's happening
here. It shows there are some limi•
' '
tations of using poverty rates as a
ineasure of a community's wellTEHRAN, Iran (AP)- An Irabeing," said T.J. Eller, an analyst nian airliner carrying Muslim pitwith the Census Bureau in grims collided with a military plane
Washignton.
and went down in flames today,
College students generally don't killing all 132 people aboard the
depend on good-paying jobs to get jetliner, Iran's official news agency
by, and many have other SOUTC\l&amp; of reported.
support- such as money from ,
It was not known what haphotne. But they are counted an\ong pened to the crew of the military
the poor if their income is below · plane, but the Islamic Republic
the poverty line.
News Agency reported that the
Of Ohio University's 18,200 pilot and co-pilot were believed
students; about 11.000 live off- killed.
campus. Students who live in uniThe 10: 15 a.m. collision
versity housing are not included in occurred minuteS after the·leased
census figures for Athens County.
Russian airliner took off on a
Adams County, one of the most domestic flight from Tehran's main
blighled counties and usually hav- airpon for the Shiite Muslim holy
ing the highest unemployment rate, city of Mashhad, the repon said.
came in a close second to Athens
Witnesses said they saw passenCounty with a poverty rate of 28.5 gers thrown from the Russian
Tupolev after the nose of the military jet, a Russian-designed
Sukhoi, crashed into the passenger
plane's tail, !RNA reported. The
collision
caused an explosion.
~
The
jetliner
had 119 passengers
Two Meigs County men were charged with driving under the
.and
13
crew
members,
including a
influence over the wecltend by troopers of the Gallia-Meigs Post of
Russian
pifot,
the
official
news
the State Highway Patrol.
agency
report
said.
, Johnnie K. Harrison, 37,368 Bailey Run, Rutland, was cited .SatLocal journalists teported that
urday morning on Bailey Run.Road in Salisbury Township.
the
wreckage feU on a military base
Tony M. Quillen, 23, 234 Second Street, Pomeroy, was cited
·
at
Karaj,
west of the capital, and
Sunday morning on Ohio 124 in Rutland Township.
·
that fleets of ambulances ferried
Both men-were summoned to appear in court Wednesday mornthe bodies of the dead from the
ing.
scene.
It was not clear if anyone on the
ground was killed. The area around
the airpon is residential.
. A Rllcine man was cited after a two-vehicle wi1:ck at the junction
Pilots who fly out of Mehrabad
· of Ohio 124 and Eden Ridge Road in Olive Township Sunday
airport, which serves both military
around 2:45 p.m.
and civilian craft, complain of
.-.coording to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
near-collisions nearly every week
I· Highway Patrol, Jefftey C. Kimes, 31, Reedsville, was southbound
in Tehran •s ~otoriously overcrowdContinued on PIIRe 3
ed skies.
,

Two charged with DUI

'

Smith Buick-Pontiac
I .

"Voted # 1 in Customer Satisf.action!"
'
446·2282·
1900 EASTERN AVE., GALLIPOLIS

~

.
'By The'Associated Press
1990 poverty rate facts, uccording to the Census Bureau:
·-Highest rate in Ohio: 28.7 percent, Athens County, southeast
Ohio. Rtinked 242nd nationally .among 3,141 counties and indepen-dent cities.
·
'
-Lowest rate in Ohio: 4.9 percent, Lake County, northeast
Ohio. Ranked 3,078th natioqally among 3,141 counties and independent cities.
-Ohio rate: 12.5 percent, 24th highest among all states and the .
Disaict of Columbia. Tied with California.
-National rate: 13.1 percent.
~Highest state rate: 25.2 percent, Mississippi.
-Lowest state rat.e: 6.4 percent, New Hampshire.

...---Local briefs__,___,

'

By DAVID WILKISON
Associated Press Writer
Peabody Holding Co. officials
say the company has brought in
additional security guards at saikebound .mines to protect property,
not to harass pickets as the United
Mine Workers claim.
But UMW spokesman Jim
Grossfeld said Sunday that
increased .security at mines in West
Virginia, lllinois, Indiana and Kentucky is merely an anempt w intimidate 7,500 striking union members.
"We have several mines and
preparation plants and naturally
these are million-dollar investments and we have a judicial
responsibility to malce sure they're
protected,'· said Terry Whitt, a
spokesman for Peabody subsidiary
Eastero Associated Coal Corp.
Whitt said the additional guards
from Virginia-based Vance S'ecurity were instructed only IIi "observe
and ·document" problems on the
picket line.
~ep_orts of guards harassing
pickets were "totally untrue,'' he
said.
.

:Poverty doesn't !OO$en . for
Filing deadline _
May primary
:grip in: Ohio ;·foothi~ls
·
el~~!!!?,!!~~!~nthe
,.---------------..!!!!!!"!.-...;,..., .

CQLUMBUS·, Ohio (AP) New census figures affirm what
people in the Appalachian foothills
of Ohio have long endured as a
reality of life --' the relentless hold
ofpoveny.
Figures for 1990 show that the
concentration of poor people was
highest in the southeastero !hind of
Ohio, where poverty rates were far
above the state average of 12.5 percent. ·
Eleven of Ohio's 88 counties
had a poverty rate. above 21 perceo~; all are in Appalachia. They
are Athens, Adams, Pike, Meigs,
Scioto, Jackson, Vinton, Lawrence,
Galha, Monroe anjl Morgan.
Athens County's poverty rate of
28.7 percent was the highest in the
state, according to figures released
· Sunday. The government's poverty
line income was,$6,310 a year for a
single person and S12,67 5 for a
family of four.
John R. Frech, director of the
, Athens County Department of
Human Services, said the ·region
has lost hi$h-paying jobs in the
rnanufacturmg and mining indusDies.
While there are some jobs to be
found - the county's unemployment is 7.4 percent, about the average in Ohio - they tend to be in
the low-paying service indusaies,
such as fast-food restaurants.
"There has been s·ignificant
growth in service jobs," he .said.
•'But tbere are minimum-wage jobs
that don't take people over the
poverty line.
"We may be·on the cuuing edge
of what may happen in other areas
of the country."
Dan Neff, assistant director of
the · Governor's Office of
Appalachia, said he was surprised
by the ranking for Athens County.
particularly because Ohio University is a source of jobs.
"Obviously, the university's
impact is felt in the city," Neff

ON 1992 FACTORY
PROGRAM CARS!·

1 SectiOn, 10 Pogeo 25 _,,.:A lolultlmedlo Inc. Nowopo.,.r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February B, 1993

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.®

CAROLL SNOWDEN
342 Second Ave.
GIIUpolls, Oh.

40s.

•

I

STATE FARM

Low tonlgbtnoar 30.
Tuesday, cloudy. High In mid

940009

Scientists working to thwart pest that feeds on citrus

trials were run.''

Passing of an American .
era that is almost forgotten
By WENDELL TOPE
Earth Team Volunteer
GALLIPOLIS - The passing of
the old ghrist mills with their water
wheels closed an era of American
life country folks were dependent
upon. A country stream of freshwater with sufficient energy to grind
the ghrist that farmers would bring
to the mill was a focal point in the

WASHINGTON (AP) Exports of U.S. horticultural products totaled $573.4 million last
November, 7 percent below the
same month a year earlier, according to the Foreign Agricultural Scr• ·
vice.
The sharpest decreases in November were in fresh fruit and
tree nuts, it said in a report this
month.
.
During the flfSt two months of
fiscal 1993, October and November, the tlital value of U.S. horticultural exports was $1.29 billion. 2
percent above the same period a
year earlier, the report said. .
It also showed that U.S. exports

0 hio Lottery

Southern
upsets Clay
72-70 in 2 OT

February 7, 1993

Man cited in'two-vehicle wreck .

Plane c•ns'h
kz.llS 132 ;n J•an

"They are not , there to cause
any J?roblems with our ~pie on
the ptcket line," Whitt saJd. ·
The UMW has been on a selective saike against St. Louis-based
Peabody, the nation •s largest coal
producer, for nearly a weclt after a
contract involving more than
60,000 UMW miners and 150,000
retirees expired.
Grossfeld said no contract talks
were scheduled between ihe union
and the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association negotiating team. The
association represents 12 of the
nation's largest coal producers.
Thomas Hoffman. a spokesman
for the association's negotiating
team, did not return messages left
at his home Sunday.
The strike has been violencefree thus far, but UMW international board mell)ber Howard Green
said the security force hired by
Peabody is trying to stir trouble. .
· "This weekend, they kept moving in on different Peabody properties ... trying to use their intimidating means and methods to try to
provoke problems," Green said.
He works out of District 17,

based in Charleston.
"They've been basically trying
IIi hatass our people with cameras
and spotlights during the night,
things like that," Green said.
·
He said miners·on picket lines
have avoided confrontations. State
Jl(&gt;lice have reported no problems. .
"I think that the purpose is io
intimidate by their very presence,"
Grossfeld said. "I don't think
there's any question about that.
That's part of the reason why we
stress discipline among our own
pickets."
,
Meanwhile Sunday, church ser:
vices in strike-torn areas toucheil
on the labor dispute.
'•
At Miracll' Run United
Methodist Church, which sits
across from a picket line at tile
Federal No. 2 Mine near
Blaclisville, W.Va., ihe Rev. Jam~
Sturm called for peace.
·•
"1 have people iri my· churo6
who are umon people and thosP.
that are company employees, ~o
what I asked and prayed for i~
peace and a speedy resolution lo
this issue,'' Sturm said. "I encour; ·
aged them to live their faith and ti!i
ChriStianity be evident."
··- :

May Primary ~lot lu!ve only 10
days in which to ft)e their petitions
with the Meigs County Boatd of
Elections.
Feb. 18 at 4 p.m. is the deadline.
Rita Smith, director, said Monday morning that less tha,n 10 petitions have gone out and that only
one has been filed. George Wright,
Republican, flied a petition for his
party's nomination for,a seat on
Pomeroy ViUage Council.
Petitions can be picked up at
anytime ·at the Meigs County Board
of Elections office on Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy. Fifty' valid signatures are required and must be of
. the candidate's party or undeclared
voters. The filing fee is $10.
Both Pomeroy and Middleport
are expected to have Republican
and Democrat primaries since there .
are four seats open on each vii!age's co~ncil and each pany will
be nominating candidates to run in
the fall. 'f!te only way primaries
wiD not be held is if only the right
number of candidates file for the
;MIS- a total of not more than
foui in each party.
•
PUPIL AND TEACHER - Soutbem head r011cll Howie Cald•
In Middleport the terms of Judy
well (left) walks back to the bench after shakina hands with
Crooks, Dewey Horton, Paul Gerard; Republicans, and Jack Satter- ·Portsmouth Clay mentor Carl Wolfe before Saturday night's boys•
basketball game at Southern· Higb School, where the Tornadoes
field, Democrat, will expire as will
won 72-70 in double overtime. Caljlwell played tor Wolfe wben
the term of Bruce Fisher on the
Wolte was tbe bead coac!J at Southern In the 1970s. For the story
·
'
and other photos, see Pages 4 tmd 5.
Continued on page J

World mourns death of Arthur Ashe ·
NEW YORK (AP) - With
flags in Virginia flying at half
mast, President Bill Clinton led the
world in mourning the death of a
champion.
.
"In the last years of his life, he
continued his tenacious battle for
others in the face of a disease he
could not beat," Clinton said of
Arthur Ashe in a statement released
by the White House. "He was a
true American hero and a great
example to all of us."
Ashe, who died Saturday from
AIDS-relaled pneumonia, spent his
final hours asldng about current
events. He nas1ted the OK hand
sign IIi his doctor shortly before he
died, his physician said
Dr. Henry W. Murray and
lawyer Donald Dell, a longtime
friend of Asbe's.-held an emotional
news conference Sunday at New
York Hospital where the tennis legend had died the day before at age
49.
J
"His last gesture to me was
this. •• Murray said, making the circular OK sign with his dtitmb and
forefinger.
Ashe on Thunday wrote a kind
note of regret to a Long lslarid
group which was sponsoring a conference on "H1V -AIDS in the
Workplace" where Ashe was
scheduled to speak the next day.
"I was so looking forward to
speitlcing with all of you today,"

•

Ashe wrote. "As of Thursday
morning Febtuary 4, my doctors
have advised me to spend the ne"t
three weeks at home. We all must
fight the battle against AIDS iit our
own way. Today my way is to heal
at home, your fight must also continue. ••
Ashe, who contracted the AIDS
virus from a tainted blood transfusion, was credited with· helping
break rucial barriers in professional
tennis. He is the only black man to
win WimbledOn or the U.S. Open,
the two most prestigious tennis
titles.
"It was thanks to him that I
could have a career in tennis," said
Frepchman Yannick Noah, who
won the French Ope,. in 1083, the
only other black male to capture a
Grand -Slam singles title. "He was
a missionary for black American
sports. Just appearin~ on a tennis
court was a challenge. •
After winning a tournament in
Japan, tennis star Martina
Navratilova offered a prayer for
Ashe.
"I ask lthat we stop for. a
moment of silence here to remember an extraordinary human being
who ll'IIIICended his ~ his race,
religion and nationabty.and in his
own way helped to change the
wotld,'' Navratilova said. "We ·
wm always remember you,
Anhur.''

Ashe announced that he had
AIDS last April at a news conference prompted by a newspaper's
planned swry exposing his condition.
He defended his right to keep
his illness private, but nevertheless
became active in the fight against
AJDS, forming a fund-raising foun- .
dation and joining the boards of the·
. Harvard AIDS Institute and the ·
·UCLA AIDS Institute.
Continued on page 3

.AR111UR ASHE

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