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Mn1nd~,v.

•
.
January 13, 1992;
-

Ohio Lottery

Eastern ·
girls defe..at
North Gallia

THIS WEEK'S GAMES
BOYS
Tuesday, January 14- North Gallia••••••••.••••••••• H
Friday, January 17-Symmes Valley.................H
Saturday, January 18-Federal Hocking••••••;:.•••• H

.GIRLS

·

·

Monday, January 13- North Gallia..................A
Wednesday, January 1S..Meigs.......................A
Thursday, January 16-Symmes Valley•••••••••••••A

BOYS
Tuesday, January 14-Kyger Creek...................H
Friday, January 17-Southwestern................... H
Saturday, January 18-Ross Southeastern••••••••A

GIRLS
Monday, January 13-Kyger Creek...................A
Thursday, January 16-Southwestern•••••.•••:..... H
Saturday, January 18-Nelsonville·York ••••••••••• A

EASTERN EAGLES
1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE
JAN. 10-AT HANNAN TRACE
JAN. 14-NORTH GALLIA*
JAN. 17-SYMMES VALLEY"
JAN. 111-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 24-AT SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 25-SOUTHERN
JAN. 31-AT KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 1-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 4-AT SOUTHERN
FEB. 7-0AK HILL*
FEB. 14-HANNAN TRACE*
FEB.18-AT NORTH GALLA*
FEB. 21-AT SYMMES VALLEY*

Tuesday, January 14-Federal Hocking ••••••••••••• A
Friday, January 17-Nelsonville·York............... H
Tuesday, January 21-Belpre...........................A

Page4

Wednesday in mld·20s.

JAN. 9-HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 13-AT NORTH GALLIA*
JAN. 15-AT MEIGS
JAN. 16-AT SYMMES VALLEY*
JAN. 23-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 27-SOUTHERN
JAN. 30-KYGER CREEK*
FEB •. 3-AT OAK HILL
FEB. 5-TRIMBLE
FEB. 6-AT HANNAN TRACE*
FEB. 10-NORTH GALLA*

Vol. 42, No. 178

Cgpy!lghted 1992

Middleport Council
OKs appropriations

'-Indicates SVAC games

1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE

JAN. 1O-AT OAK HILL*
JAN. 14-KYGER CREEK*
JAN. 17-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT ROSS SOUTHEASTERN
JAN. 22-RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 24-HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 25-AT EASTERN*
JAN. 31-NORTH GALLIA*
FEB. 1-AT SOUTH POINT
FEB. 7-AT SYMMES VALLEY*
FEB. 11-WARREN
FEB. 14-0AK HILL*
FEB. 18-AT KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 21-SOUTHWESTERN*

JAN. 8-NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 9-0AK HILL*
JAN. 11-AT MEIGS
JAN. 13-AT KYGER CREEK*
JAN.16-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 23-AT HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 27-EASTERN*
JAN. 30-AT NORTH GALLIA*
FEB: 3-SYMMES VALLEY*
FEB. 6-AT OAK HILL*
FEB.10-KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 12-WATERFORD
FEB. 13-AT SOUTHWESTERN*
'-Indicates SVAC games

1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE

JAN. 7-AT WELLSTON
JAN.10-TRIMBLE
JAN. 11-ATHHENS
JAN. 14-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN: 17-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 21-AT BELPRE
JAN. 25-AT WARREN
JAN. 28-MILLER
JAN. 31-VlNTON COUNTY
FEB. 4-AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 7-WELLSTON
FEB. 11-AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 14-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK

JAN. 9-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 11-AT MEIGS
JAN.13-AT KYGER CREEK*
.JAN. 16--SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 23-AT HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 27-EASTERN*
JAN. 3D-AT NORTH GALLIA*
FEB. 3-SYMMES VALLEY*
FEB. 6-AT OAK HILL*
FEB. 1D-KY.GER CREEK*
FEB. 12-WATERFORD,
FEB. 13-AT SOUTHWESTERN*
'- Indicates SVAC games

1 Sac~on, 10 Pages 25 canto
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 14, 1992

'-Indicates SVAC games

'-Indicates SVAC games

Low tonight in mid -teens.

Chance of snow 40 percent. High

1991·92 GIRL5 SCHEDULE

MEIGS MARAU8ERS
BOYS

Pick 3: 009
Pick 4: 7008
Cards:
K-H; 4-C; K-D;
8-S

deposit, $29,918; sewer, $175,523;
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
fire equipment, $29,406; economic
Sentinel News Staff
Funds totaling $:1.042,894 were development, $25,804; mini golf,
appropriated for village operations $12,943; Issue 2, $66,035; rcvolv·
in 1992 at Monday night's meeting ing loan, $52,785; refuse fund,
$114,005; ODNR waterways safeof Middleport Village Council.
The estimated funds available ty, $104,050; litter control,
for the year, according to the pro- $24 ,000.
Dewey Horton was re-elected
posed 1992 appropriations
president
of council and also
approved by Council, include gennamed
from
,Council as the repre·
eral fund, $725,382; fire truck,
$73,908; street maintenance, sentative on the Middleport Plan·
$90,003; cemetery, $42,946; recre- ning Commission.
An ordinance changing the zonation, $37 ,537 ; public transporla·
ing
on the Betsy Ross building
tion, $ 188,903; water, $206,469;
area,
South Seventh, 10 Palmer and
water sys tem improvement,
South
Fifth to Williams. was given
$37,210.
a
third
reading and adopted during
Arts Council, $6,067; meter

the meeting. The area is now zoned
for residential. Previously it was
zoned for industrial use.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reponed
on three grants for public transportation (Blue Strea.k Cab)
received by the village. From the
Ohio Department of Transponation
the village has received for 1992
two grants, one for $38,855 and the
other for $61.628, and a federal
grant totaled $47,768. This brings a
total of $148,252 in funds 10 subsidize the local public transponation
system. The amount received thi s
year is slightly higher than what
was received by the village last
Continued on page 3

Columbus Southern asks
Retail sales up 0.7 percent Supreme Court to hear case
SWORN IN - Shown left to right, James
Clatworthy and ·William Walters, re-elected for
terms on Middleport Village Council, were given

WASHINGTON (AP) - Retail
sales inched up 0. 7 percent last
year, the smallest advance in more
than 20 years, the government said
today, as recession-skinish con·
sumers shied away from showrooms and shopping malls.
It was the slimmest gain in this
vital economic sector since the
Commerce Department began
tracking sail'S in 1970. Economists
foresee lit~e improvemept before
summer due to consumer concerns
over jobs and incomes.
The weakness is troubling since
retail sales represent half of overall
consumer spending, which itself
comprises two-thirds of the
nation's economic activity. Thus, a
lack of consumer participation
threatens any recovery from the
recession.
Tbe Co!llmerce Depanrnent also
confirmed what many retailers
already )lad reported - the Christ, mas shopping· season was a disappointment in 1991, for the third
straight year, as December sales
fell 0.4 porcent.
Sales in December totaled a seasonally adjusted $!51.2 billion,
down from $151.7 billion a month
earlier, the department said. And
the November decline of 0.5 percent was even sharper than the 0.3
porcent drop originally estimated.
Sales also fell in October, down o:I
percent rather than remaining
unchanged as fust was reported.
The December sales decline
came despite aggressive discounting and other promotions by anxious retailers who make half of
their annual sales and profits

oaths of office by Mayor Fred Hoffman preceding a meeting of council Monday night.

between Thanksgiving and -Christmas,
For the year, sales totaled $1.8
trillion. Sales had risen 3.8 percent
in 1990 and 6.8 percent in 1989.
Automobile sales, which fell 1.5
percent in November, were down
an additionall.l percent in December. Automakers said purchases
were up in the fmal 10 days of the
year, but some economists said the
infonnation probably was posted
too late to be included in today's ·
report.
Automakers previously reponed

Barton to head
Meigs Local Board
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Starr
Robert Barton was elected by
unanimous vote to again serve as
preside nt of the Meigs local
School Board and Larry Rupe was
unanimously elected to serve as
vice president during Monday
evening' s organizational meeting
of the board.
The board voted to hold meetings on the second and fourth
Thursdays of each month through
February. After that time meetings
will be held on the second and
fourth Tuesdays of each m'onth.
The board also voted to hold its
meetings at each school in the dis-.
trict at least once during the school
year. Meetings at the schools '!"ill

.---- Local briefs----.
Thacker to begin job in February
Paula Thacker, Meigs County's newly appointed Chamber oJ
Commerce and E~onomic Development Director, will begin work
on February 3.
Chamber President lenny Eliason announced Thacker's appointment to the position- Monday. SI:te will replace Elizabeth ·Schaad,
who resigned from the posibon in early December to take a statelevel economic development position in Marietta.
The chamber and development office will continue to be located
at 200 East Second Street in Pomeroy, in the former Carnegie
Building.
Thacker, who now serves as Executive Director of the Gallipolis
Area Chamber of Commerce, will meet with the board of the Meigs
chamber on January 28.

Proposed Pomeroy budget adopted
• A proposed 1992 budget in the amount of $1,427,311.66 was
approved on Monday night by Pomeroy Village Council, meeting in
special session.
·
According lD Village Cleric Brenda MOl'ris,lhe budget will now
be submitted lD County Auditor William R. Wickline for approval
prior lD being published.
-

Reed fi11es two defendants

.

Pomeroy Mayor Bruce I. Reed fined two defendants while
another forfeited blind when Pomeroy Mayo(s Coun w.as conducted on Monday nigh~
"
Fined were Kevin Manley, Middlepon, $250 and costs, operating
under suspension; and Brian BuffinglOil, Polneroy, $213 and costs,
assault.
John Bass of~tcr-forfeited. $20
. for a seat belt'violillion.

Power out~ge reported
Nearly 1,100 Ohio Power customers in Meigs County were without electricity on Tues4ay morning, but that power mice was
Continued on page 3

f/

'

1991 was the worst year for auto
sales since 1983, when the ccono·
my was emergin,g from the last
recession.
Excluding auto sales, which represent one-fifth of retail purchases,
sa les were down 0.2 percent in
December, the same percentage
that was posted a month earlier.
Despite the holiday shopping
season, department store sales fell
2.2 percent after edging up 0.6 percent in November. Apparel sales
were down 0.7 percent after
remaining nat a month earlier.

be followed with a tour of the facti·
itics by the board.
Also during the organ izational
meeting, Jane Fry, treasUrer, was
authorized to ren ew the liability
insurance for the board members,
treasurer, school administration and
certified and non-cenificd employees; to secure advances from the
auditor when funds are available
and payable to the school district;
and to invest inactive funds at the
most productive rates whenever
.inactive funds arc available.
. A service fund was established
for the board in the amount of $500
and membersh ip was renewed in
the Ohio School Boards Association for 1992.
·
Also during the organizational
meeting the board voted Ill renew a
performance bond for the board
president, treasurer and superintendent in the amount of $20,000 with
the Ohio School Board Association.
During the regular board meeting several personnel matters were
approved:
Lorri Barnes was granted a
maternity leave from March 19 to
May 4; Jody Shipley, certified in
Art for K-12, was employed as a
· substitute teacher for the 1~91-92
school year; Norma Baker, linda
Gilkey, Diane Hawley, Jackie JusContinued on page 3

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Columbus Southern Power Co. has
asked the Ohio Supreme Court to
consider a lawsuit about the utility's request to raise rates 28.4 percent.
A lawsuit should be transferred
from common pleas coun because
it doesn't have jurisdiction over
state agencies. the utility's attorneys said in documents filed Monday.
Orders handed down by the
Peblic Utilities Commission of
Ohio normally are heard by the
state Supreme Coun.
"We're going to vigorously
oppose it," said Ohio Consumers'
Counsel William A. Spra~ey, who
filed the lawsuit against the

mc~~fJusuceThomasJ.Moycr

said the court would rule quickly "We had a heating on it Friday. If
on Columbus Southern's request.
they had questions about Jurisdic"! would expect we would take tion, they should have brought
some action in a mauer of days," them up then,''
he said.
The lawsuit questions the conThe proposed $202.5 million stitutionality of a law allowing util rate increase would add about ities to impose rate increases if the
$16.21 to the average residential PUCO l:tils to act on a case within
customer's monthly bill. The com- 275 days.
pany has said it needs the money 10
Columbus Southern filed its rate
help pay for convening its Zimmer request on April 2-: The company
plant to using coal.
announced late last year it would
On Friday. Common Pleas impose the full28.4 rate hike Jan. 3
Judgc Richard S. Sheward granted after the 275-day deadline passed.
a temporary restraining order on
The utility has accepted a
the increase, which was scheduled PUCO offer to defer $4 million a
month of the increase , which could
to go into effect Monday.
" It sounds to me like the elec- be included in a later increase.
Columbus Southern, a subtric company didn't like the deci·
sian and sued the judge," said sidiary of American Electric
Columbus City Auorney Ronald J. Power, has 473,000 customers in
O'Brien, who joined the lawsuit. 25 of the state's 88 counties.

Budget woes hit state funding,
schools and air sliow victims
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- the Legislature has not acted on the
Ohio's latest budget problem s request.
asserted themselves in the stale
Van Keuren said many school
Controlling Board when it cut the districts, already financially
state's January school subsidies by crimped when the governor acted,
$20 million.
now are in deep trouble and will
Controllers also decided Mon- have to request loans.
day to reject a state $250,00 subOther districts that earlier
sidy for the Dayton Air Show received authority from the state Ill
although the legislature apparently borrow will have to come back to
promised it last year.
get approval for increased ainounts.
The board authorized the release he said.
of $263 million to the schools.
"I don't know how all of this is
The subsidies would have goi ng to play out," Van Kuren
totaled $283 million, but the lower said.
figure renee ted the initial impact of
The 4-3 . vote rejecting the Dayan $88 million annual budget cut ton Air Show mon ey came after
ordered in education funding by Sen. William Bowen, D-Cincinnati,
Gov: George Voinovich as pan of a and OJhers questioned using the
plan to balance the budget.
money to promote !fie show when
Basic aid is affected, along with officials are struggling to -solve a
certain ~ial-aid programs.
$457 million state budget deficit.
James-van Keuren, the DepanHowever, George Kaitsa, chief
ment of Education 's fmancc chief, financial officer of the Ohio
said all of Ohio's 612 school dis- Department of Development, said
tricts will be affected by the cut, , the event pumps about $7 million
which represents about 2.5 percent into the Dayton economy.
of their annual subsidies.
"This event is very important to
Voinovich has asked ~c Legis- the Dayton area," he said, adding
lature to earmark about $8 million- that he will seek to have the vote
$9 million in•excess lottery profits reconsidered.
Bowen and Rep. Patrick
to reimburse about 170 of the poorest districts for their cuts. However, Sweeney, D-Cleveland, noted that

the Day_ton Chamber of Commerce,
which would receive the air-show
money, planned to give it to Dayton Air Fair Inc., a private group
that runs the show, for promotion.
The state has programs that provide grants and low-interest loans
to private companies that expand to
create or increase jobs.
Sweeney said the Dayto~ event
is promoted nationally and internationally on trips to Paris "and it
doesn't create a single job."
The state has provided grants to
the show totaling $450.000 over
the last two years.
Sen. Robert Ney, R-Bamesville,
who sat on a joint conference commiuee last year that worked out an
agreement on Ohio's two-year budget, said the conferees agreed to
continue the funding "but didn't
make it a line item.
Ncy voted to release the
$250,000, as did Rep. Robert Netzley, R-Laura, and Stratford Shields.
the governor 's representative who
serves as president of the board.
Sweeney and , Bowen were
JOined by Rep. Joseph Koziura, DLorain, and Sen. Theodore Gray,
R-Columbus, in voting against the
grant.
11

Officials discuss collection of delinquent accounts
for the district. The names of TayThe procedure for collecting a was requested that he ·pay $150 Bank.
Rocky Johnson updated the lor and Barren, Jr., new board
delinquent account was discussed security deposit, ,a $50 reconnect
at length at Thursday night's meet· fee, and S20 on the past due board membe~ on the progres$ in members, were addcd 'to the the
putting the inventory and budgeting accoJJnl at Ban'k One , Rutland
ing .of the Leading Creek Conser- account.
· Tbe board entered into an agree. materials in the computer.
Branch, and all three board mernvancy District.
A
ment
with
Smith
and
Associates
for
Records
Commission
Combe~ to the account at Peoples Bank
It w~s reported at the meeting
work
on
the
LCCD's
1992
annual
miuee
consisting
of
the
board
·
account:
that the account, amounting to
·After the bQard reconvened Col$813.85, had been laken to small budget and for some reseaJth worlc. members, Bob Snowden, presiden~
claims coun and is i!fheduled for a The board m:eivecl an invoice from Charlie Banet~ Jr., Fenton Taylor, lowing a lengthy executive session
hearing on Jan. 22.'The'cnstomer Cathy Smilh·Berkhimer, Smith and ;and secretary-treasurer, Carol Rus- R. 0. Thomas questioned why he
was tenninated as ,pan-time custowith the delinquent account had . Associates for $940 for services sel~ was named.
A
discuS$ion
was
held
on
autho·
dian.
Snowd.en explained to
requested-that the board dismiss the rendered which was approved for
the
secretary-treasurer
to
Thomas
that the board had taken
rizing
action, bin at Thursday night's payment.
It was voted lD renew the Mem· pun:hase and redeem certiftealeS of action to do away with all part-time
meeting, it was decided that the
orandum of Agreement for Deposit de~osit ~ith information o_n any . help and to have the employee on
court action will stand.
The ~CQUeSt has been made that of Public Funds with Btlrik One, acuon, etther when pun:hastng or weekend call clean the office on
the judge set up a payment plan of Rutland, for the period covering redeeming certificates, to be pre- the weekend.
The board approved the paymll ·
$25 a month through the court until Aug. I, 1991 to July 31, 1993. It · sen ted .to the board prior Lo atcy
ending Jan. 7 and various othtr
such tiille as the delinquent«couni was noted that ihe agreement with action.
Jud! Mattea, an en)ployee was monthly biUs. Next meeting will be
is paid. If the customer is to be Ctntral Trust 'is void since that
reinstaled for water service, then it ,agency was pun:hased by Peoples · au\honzed to handle night deposits held on Jan. 23.at7 p.m.

•

jJ

'

�Tuesday, January 14, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel ,
111 Court Street ,,
Pomeroy, Oblo

· ·· · · ·•

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE IIEIQS..MASON AREA

8MU.TIMEDI~ INC.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publhber
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to ediling and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiU be publisbed. Leiters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

0 hio business leaders
hear good forecast

P11ge-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
TUesday, January 14, 1992

cut would be "small or non-exis·
tent.''

The almost unanimous advice
that a tax cut will not help the
economy has not lessened the tax·
cut fever sweeping Capitol Hill. As
a Ways and Committee staffer puts
it, " This is, after all, an election
year and nothing makes voters happier than a smaller tax biU."
At least three separate DemQ·
cratic plllJIS are currently circulat·
ing. The .inost modest is one introduced by Sen. Lloyd Bensten, DTexas, which calls for a lax credit
of up to $300 per child to a maximum of $600, coupled with allowing all Americans to invest up to
$2,000 tax-free in a personal IRA
even if they have employer-span·
sored retirement plans.
Much more ambitious plans are
being floaled by House Democrats:
Ways and Means Chairman Rep.
Dan Rostenkowski, D-111 ., and
House Majority Leader Richard
Gebhardt, D-Mo .. continue to stress
that the Democrats ' top legislative
priority in 1992 is to provide si~-

nifican t tax relief for midclleincome wage earners.
Rostenkowski .has introduced a
plan that he claims would save
middle·income taxpayers about $46
billion over iwo years. It features a
tax credit of 20 percent of Social
Security tax paid up to $400 per
couple, plus adjustments in tlie tax
brackets that middle-income tax·
payers fall into. ,
"This plan will give 90 million
working families a tax cut that will
help them and I hope the economy," said Rostenkowsl:i.
A second plan is being floated
by moderate Democrats through
the Progressive Policy Instirute. It
calls for a 10 percent cut in the tax
rate covering the first $32,500 in
taxable income for joint filers. It
would also cut from the current 28
percent to 26.5 percent the tax rate
on joint in comes of between
$32,450 and $78,400, while contin·
uing ihe current tax rate of 31 per·
cent for those with income s
between $78,400 and $150,000.
This proposal would also increase

C~\·CH\N6!

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Gov. George Voinovich is launching his frrsi major
effort since taking office a year ago to attract businesses and jobs from
outside the stale.
Today through Friday , the Department of Development is running
daily ads in the Wall Street Journal.
,
The department said the ads, which cost $65,000, aie new and will set
a theme that the administration plans to develop.
In the past, the administration has stressed such things as Ohio's business climaie and assets such as research centers, skilled workers and the
state's proximity to most of the nation's major population centers.
The governor announced Thursday that the April 27 edition of Forbes
magazine. which will Jist Forbes' top 500 corporations for the year, will
feature a sup'plement on Ohio.
Voinovich elaborated on his efforts at a reception for Malcolm S.
Forbes Jr., who succeeded his late father as editor-in-chief and president
of the magazine in February 1990.
Forbes, in a lalk to about 50 Ohio business leaders, gave an optimistic
economic forecast for Ohio and the nation in the coming year 3Qd decade.
. However, he based it in part on what he indicated is an essential cut in
the cap ital gai ns tax.
Forbes said, for instance, that if Congress approves such a reduction,
the Dow-Jones stock average - which hovered around 3200 late last
week - will hit 4000 over the next several months.
He predicted further reductions in mortgage interest rates over the next
year, to 6-6.5 percent from around 7 percent currently.
The drop in interest raies will boost housing and increase real estate
values while taking pressure off banks which have undergone a federal
r~ l atory " reign of tenor" in recent years, making loans scarce, he said.
·- · He also said that inflation is not a threat.
Voinovich, referring to the national advertising campaign, said Ohio
Ohio Legislalure's first chal- delivery of major services.
" is blessed with an abundance of opportunities, and we've got to get that
lenge: plug budget shortfall As the
The most important accomplish·
message out. "
New
Year
dawns,
our
nation
is
ment
of any two -year General
He said Ohio 's industries and corporations arc stronger than those in
confronied
by
many
complex
chal·
Assembly
is the shaping and pas·
most other slaies hit by the recession.
lenges.
Jobs,.affordable
health
care,
sage
of
the
state's operating bud·
Ohio's businesses are strong now because they went through tough
good
schools,
and
effective
crime
get· the revenue and spending
times in the early 1980s and were forced to slim down and increase proprevention top America's list of blueprint which guides all stale
&lt;l uctivity, Voinovich said.
He conceded that the slate suffers from problems with a bureaucratic "must do" problems to tackle, a government agencies and services
and cumbersome workers' compensation program, a major concern of perplexing list that forever seems to for the next two fiscal years.
employers, but that he expects refonns to be approved by the Legislature demand attention and new solu- Underpinned by an Ohio economy
tions.
expected to gen erate little new
soon.
When lawm akers return to growth in tax revenues, the $27 bil·
· " We will not be having any new business faxes in this state," he said.
: The Republican governor said Ohio's big and small cities arc primed Columbus this week for the second lion Voinovich budget enacted last
and final year of the I 19th Ohio summ er still proved to be the
for growth.
.
· "Columbus is the fast growing city cast of the Mississippi and north of General Assembly, they will con- largest in Ohio history. Promoted
tinue grappling with these and as a prudent and auslere plan, budihe Mason-Dixon line," he said.
: Voinovich said Cleveland has rebounded and Cincinnati is one of the other ·issues in !992 . issues being get writers did find the money to
strongest cities in the nation. Smaller cities such as"Mansfield "are dia· debated in statehouses across the substantially boost some program
mends in the rough," the governor said.
nation . Almost before they get a funding, including changes in Med·
chance to hang their coats and roll icaid funding as mandated by the
up their sleeves, though, lawmakers federal government, Head Start and
will be confronted with a problem other programs for disadvantaged
that could have a profound impact children.
on meaningful solutions to many
On the other hand, spending was
other issues. The challenge: plug a slashed on many programs, includ·
looming $457 million state budget ing environmental protection, colshortfall without disrupting the
Dear Editor
their voices heard so that our sports
We are writing this letter to program can again command a
express our displeasure.with the position of respect in this COQnty.
recent series of events that have
Signed by, .
been occurring with the Eastern
I sympathize with conservative and slu sh of the Granite State
High School basketball program.
Diana Nelson, Rick Hollon, C.
It is indeed a shame that a few D. Mcintyre, Joe R. Bailey, Mickie New Hampshire Republicans. Next myself to campaign for him.
I will even go so far ·as to conparents who arc opposed to having Hollon, Dennis R. Eichinger, L. month they will be asked to choose
between
President
Bush
and
Pat
cede
that, in the ·long run, the
a well ·disciplined team of which Kay Bailey, Mary J. Dempsey ,
Buchanan
(forget
David
Duke)
in
Buchanan
candidacy may actually
all of us can be proud, can force the Mary Dillard, Susan E. Arnold Don
the
slate's
presidential
primary,
and
advance
the
Republican (and conres ignation of a well-intentioned Jackson, Jennifer Jackson, Steve
the
choice
isn't
going
to
be
an
easy
servative)
cause
this year. Pat
Wcber, Lany Hines, Maida Long,
coach.
Buchanan has it within his power
The fact that the Eastern Local Jam es Weber, Eric Chambers, one.
On one side is a presidem elect- to ·bring. into the o~e~ $ w~ole
!loard of Education was firmly Paula Horton, Robyn Piller, Glensupporting the coach seemed irrele· da Benedum; Grace Stout, Clint ed by essentially the same coalition senes of tssues on wh1ch Amencan
Mullens, Rila Williams and Jeffery that pl'l Ronald Reagan in the voters feel s!rongly, but which the
· vant to those parents:
White House, yet w~o has deviated Democmts have hitherio succeeded
For a sports program whose A. Baker,
Steve Bowen, Lucille Kimes, from conservative orthodoxy in in keeping anyone from raising
financial life's blood comes from
community suppon, this could be Mike Will, Andrew Phalin, Dixie some major respects. Nothillg, for explicitly: the root causes of our
Sayre, Wilma Parker, Sandy example, can make conservatives · drug and crime problems, the
considered sudden death!
· Th~ damage this incident has Bowen, Joann Calaway , Susan forge~. or forgi~e. Bush's outrjght unholy mess lhat is the welfare syscaused runs far deeper and will last Pullins, John and Connie Rankin, repudiauon of hts "No new taxes" !em, etc. The GOP will gain ntight·
ily by the public discussion of these
lbnger than these few unhappy par· Joyce 6tto, Pennee Knapp, Cindy pledge.
Scott,
James
Scott,
Debbie
On
tbe
other
side
is
Pat
subjects,
even if President Bush
e}lts could possibly comprehend.
McGuire,
John
Hogan,
·
Pam
Buchanan. He is young, combative, P.rotests that he doesn't want to
. It is time the majority of parents
of Eastern student-athletes make Hogan, R. Halland Marcia Guess. articulate, yet good-natured. The 'exploit" them.
·dark charges of anti·Semitism that
Moreover, Buchanan has
have been hurled against him are acknowledged that he. will have to
overwrought, and wrong. Ht~e and endorse Mr. Bush aftet the conventbere ,he may end?rse some policy · tion reriomin~tes him - though
(e.g. protecuontsm) that IS til- adding that lhe enthusiasm of such
advised, but it is hard to think of an endorsem~nt can ·be tempered.
any conservative'Spokesman today But by that time Buchanan will
.·,.
By The Associated Press
who symbolizes better, or summa- have his eyes on 1996, and will
' Today is Tuesday, Jan. 14, the 14th day of 1992. '!l)ere are 352 days rizes more comprehensively, what khow that his cha~ces then will
the modem con~Mtive mo!ement depend, in part, on his being
I¢ft in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
IS all about, polincally speaking.
remembered llS a cheerful loser in .
One hundred years ago, on Jan. 14, 1892, Hollywood producer Hal
A ~ many New Hampshire 1992 Meanwhile, ,his support may
Roach - the creative force behind the "Our Gang" comedies and thq conservatives are going to be well add to Bush' s Jllcimentum in
teaming ofStanLaurelandOiiver ~y - was born in Elmira, N.Y. · , tempted to vote for Buchanan next · November.
.month, not because tl!ey think he · Despite such considerations,
On this dale:
'
In 1639, the fU1t conllitution ,l)l' COnnecticut - known as the ~ 'Funda- can (or even shoUld) actually win !hough, I cannot bring myself to
mental Orders" - waudopted ata meeting in Hl!lfoid.
· · the nomint~tioil, but simply to say that I would vote fOr my-old
In 1742, Englilll BSilliDOtllel' l;dmQnd Halley, who observed the comet "!ICIId a message" 10 Mr. Bush.
friend Pat if 1 were a New Ramp.. that now bearS hiuwne, died at a!O 85. ',. '
, ·
. ~Y I am. in no position ·to shire ReJ&gt;!tblic"'. Tbe 1*0 aaainil,
In 1784, the Uniled Slltel ratified the peace lrCat)' with England that cnuctze thaliiUIIeJY. I supported Oeore Bush ~~~ly Isn't bad
ended the Revolllliolllry W11.
the late Congretsm111John Ash· enou tojustily
a,..aue.
In 1858, Frenclt llmJiciOr Napoleon mescaped an auempt on his life brook's quixotic but highly princ,i·
0 ;_ be betrayed us ontues.
by Felice ~Mini.: Ill Jllliljl patriot who wu ,larer executed.
pled ntnlpinlt.Pielident NlllOII in·· And hele and dtel8 bo hal filled 10
In l898,1he Rev. Clllrlea L. Dodaon - beaer known as lllllhor Lewis the 1972 'New,JJathpshire primary, fight U fimely • M ~ 11m
Clll'oll - diedletldlltiiWO 'weeks liefore hls66dl ~Y· . · . •
II,ICI_~· tlllllped duough the 1110w :· Ul:e4 on other issues. But who

Letter to the editor

What's wrong with being disciplined?

tile dependent deduction.
Where these plans run into
Republican opposition is that both
seek to pay for the middle:Ciass tax
cut by increasing taxes on the rich.
Under the Rostenkowski plan, a
new 35 percent tax bracket would
be introduced for incomes above
$145,000 and an additional 10 per· .
cent tax surcharge would be tacked
on incomes in excess of $1 million.
Under the Progressive Policy lnstirute plan a new tax rate of 38.5 percent would be introduced for all
taxable income in excess of
$150,000.
Making the latter plan even
more unacceptable to Republicans
is a proposal to actually increase
the capital gains lax from the current 28 percent to 31 pereent. But
the plan would seek to help new
start-up businesses by exempting
for several years up to half the
profits earned by new businesses.
With a presidential veto looming over the tax-cutting debaie, the
big question is what the White
House will do. Last year the only
tax measure that President Bush
and OMB head Richard Darman
were even willing to disc uss was a
straight cut in the capital gains rate.
Only in the waning hours of the
session was Darman willing to
reluclantly endorse an "economic
growth package" put forward by
conservative House Republicans
led by Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga.
The package ceniered on a stepped
capital gains tax cut, the repeal of
luxury taxes, the restoration of
"passive" loss provisions for certain investments and allowing people to use IRA savings to buy houses.
Given that this is an election
year, the political pressure is
intense on Bush to come up with
wme sort of middle-class tax relief.
But this will be hard to accomplish
given the continuing high deficit
coupled with the president's
refusal, so far, to finance a middlechiss tax cut with higher taxes on
the wealthy.
(C) 1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRJSE ASSN.

lege tuition assistance and economic development funds. Also, it con·
tained millions of dollars in new
taxes and fees from a variety of
previously unassessed services,
including lawn care and private
investigating.
With six months to go in the
current fiscal year, it is clear that
unless revenues substantially pick
up or Slate spending is slashed · or
both · our Slate government is
headed for a deficit The Ohio Con·
stitution , fortunately , prohibits
deficit spending. Therefore, the
state budget must be balanced by
the end of the current fiscal year,
which ends on June 30.
Governor Voinovich has recent·
ly issued an executive order implementing $196 million in spending
cuts for most state-funded programs. The cuts range from 3% to
6% on an annual basis, depending
on the program, But because the
cuts will be spread over only palf a
year, they will have the impact of

Sen. Jan M. L_ong
6% to 12% cuts. But the spending
cuts will only make up part of the
shortfall. The Governor is asking
the legislature to make up the rest
of the deficit with new taxes on
tobacco and alcohol and other "revenue enhancements. "
Therefore, it will be "back to the
future" for state lawmakers as they
·try to balance the budget for the
second time in le ss than a year.
Nonetheless, this is the challenge
that slate lawmakers will lake up
early in 1992. These solutions
could have a si~nificant impact on
our slate's qualtty of life for years .
to come.
As always, please feel free to
call oc write me, State Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or comments about these
or any other issues My number is
(614)-466-8156, and my ad&lt;!ress is
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio,
43215.

Conservatives should stick with·Bush
brought us safely and even tri umphantly through the end of the
Cold War and the collapse of the
Soviet Union? Who perceived, in
Saddam 's invasion of Kuwait, the
deadly peril to the world economy,
and '\lObilized t~e .)VOrld against it?
Who ordered half a-mil~on· ~ri­
cl!n ttoops into haute (\II the Other
side of the ~lobe , won a brilliant
victory at mcredibly low cost,
thereby establishing America flflll·
ly as the ear'lll's leading nation?
Even on the domestic front, wbo

William A. Rusher

added two more solid conservatives :
to the Supreme Court, firmly
changing its basic direction? WhO
has stood like Stonewall Jackson
on the subject of abortion? Who
has ru~ circles around even Ronald
Reagari . when' it comes to vetoes,
and never~~ had one overridden?
Send a message ·lo George
Bush? Sure:· "Thanks. "
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

By The Associated Press
east Ohio could have three to five the Atlantic Coast and showers in
The snow was to taper off inches of snow on the ground by Tamp!, Fla.
.
tonight with some parts of Ohio the time the s10rm passes tonight
High winds whipped the Deep
having a haJf.fQ9t or more on the while the rest of the state would South and the northern Plains.
ground, the Nationill Weather Ser· · have one to three inches;
Clouds and rain enveloped the
vice said.
Colder temperatures accompa- Nonhwest, and tranquil weather
Northwest Ohio was getting hit nied the stonn. Lows tOnight were prevailed throughout the Souththe hardest early today and fore- to be 10-20 under variably cloudy west.
casters said that quadrant of the skies.
A stonn dumped up to 7 inclles
state could get accumulations of
Show flurries are likely on of snow in Oklahoma o~ Monday.
from six 10 10 inches.
. Wednesday with highs 20·30.
Rainshowers and thunderstorms
Blowing snow reduced visibiliAround tbe nation
strQclc the East and South, with
ties to near zero in the northwest.
Snow fell across the Midwest, thunderstorm winds causing clam·
Seneca County Sheriff Larry the central Rockies and North age in McKenzie; Ala; Hail fell
Stephens declared a snow emergen- Dakola today. Bitter cold gripped east of Troy, Ala.
1
cy and closed county and township MinnesoLa.
Bitter cold was expecied, to grip
roads to all but emergency traffic.
A band of rain crossed over tbe North Dakota today, with wind·
The weather service said north- Nonheas~ with scauered rain along chill readings as low as 40 degrees

'.

IND.
.

•
'

•I Columbus I 21•!

W. VA .

Showers T-st011TlS Rain

Ice

Via Associated Press GtapNe.Nff

Svnny

Pr. Cloudy Cloudy
C1992 Aceu-Wealtler. Inc.

------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, variable cloudiness
with a chance of flurries. The low
15-20. The chance of snow is 40
percent. Wednesday, becoming
cloudy. A chance of snow lale. The
high 25-30. The chance of snow is
40 percent.

Extended rorecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
Thursday, fair except a chance
of flurries east. Lows 5-15, Highs
in the teens to around 20. Friday, a
chance of snow. Lows 5-15. Highs
in mid-20s to mid-30s. Saturday, a
chance of snow. Lows in the teens.
Highs in the 20s to around 30.

Middleport... Continued from page 1
Council voted to conllfib~lte
Sali~h'!'rt Township
to the children 's rememin the amount of $ ,100, and $1
Cheshire Village, $2,800 plus $75 brance Christmas program man·
aged by the Meigs County Depart·
a calL
It was reported that Phase 2 of mcnt of Human Services.
Councilman Jack Satterfield
the pon study in the Hobson area
spoke
of the condition of the trees
of Middleport has been completed.
along
Powell Street and the need
That feasibility study includes esti·
mated costs for the projec~ includ- for removing them and putting in
ing the pon facility, road access to new ones. The mayor noted that
the pon, water and sewer services, the application for a tree grant
site development and lighting. It through the Department of Natural
also explores the opportunities for Resources is due in March. The
local businesses to expand by using need for paint on the Hobson
brid$e was noted, as was the recent
the port.
heanng
on the transfer of a MiddleFor the study, Middleport
port
liquor
license.
received a $40,500 Ohio Port
The mayor's report showed
Assistance Grant from the Ohio
Department of Transportation. This receipts in December of $2,523.
Charles Kitchen, vice presiden~
represents a 90 percent share of the
study cost. The village will con- and Kenneth Utt of the Meigs
tribute an additional $4,500 toward County Chamber of Commerce met
with Council to discuss progress of
the project's cost.
that
organization over the past year.
Mayor Hoffman noted that he
Kitchen
spoke of the efforts of
had resigned from the Meigs Coun·
the
Chamber
with the Tri-County
ty Metropolitan Housing Authority
and that Judy Crooks, council Coalition to preserve the Meigs
member, had been appointed to fiU Mines, of the work with the Southeastern Ohio Regional Council on
his vacancy.
.The mayor presented a letter highway development, of revital·
from CableVision regarding the ization in the Pomeroy downtown
planned rate increase which will area, of work with the Pomeroy
6ecome effective on Feb. I. The Merchants Association on the
optional CableVision Service tier Siemwheel Festival, of the Partners
will be $10 per month, it was in Education program, and or the
reported. The budget basic serVice, . Take Charge and small 'business
· according to a letu:r from Lester L. workshops.
Others. attending were Council
Erret~ genen\1 manager, noted that
members,
James Clatworthy and
the budget basic service will
Williams
Wallers,
both sworn in by
remain at the same low price of
Mayor
Hoffman,
for
another tenn
$9.95 per month and that none of
the the premium channels will be of office.

--Area deaths-Robert 'Sayre

Nancy Sullivan

Word has been received of the
death of Roben Lee Sayre, 71 , of
Okeechobee, Fla., who died on
Sunday,Jan\)at}' 5, 1992 at Florida
Hospital. Mr. Sayre was a native of
Pomeroy. He had resided in Florida
for 20 years.
He was a union carpenter and
was a veteran of the U.S. Army
during World War II.
He is su.rvived by his wife,
Wanda Sayre of Okeechobee; two
sons, Robert R. Sayre of Milford,
Ohio arid James Sayre of Paragold,
Ark.; three daughters: J~ie Wilson, ~ela Sayre and Wanda Jean
Sayre II, all of Okeechobee; a
brother, Charles E. Sayre of
Pomeroy; two sislers, Mary Rogers
of Danbury, Texas, and Martha
Jean Drenner of Fan Myers, Fla.;
10 grandchildren.

Nancy "Gracie" (Pickens) Sui·
!ivan, 90, of Letart, died Monday,
Jan. 13, 1~2. in Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born Sept 23 1901 ·
· •
; ·m
Elmwood, W.Va., she was . a

::::~~(Jf~) ~~·. Pickens

By The Associated Press ·
Ohio was hit with a severe
snowstorm today, forcing authorities to close some roads and school
officials to call off classes.
Th e weather service said the
storm was expected to drop 6-10
inches over northwest Ohio.
The Tiffin area had as much 4
inches by 5 a.m. prompting Seneca
County Sheriff Larry Stephens to
order all county roads closed
except to emergency traffic.
Deputy Richard Thompson said
blowing snow reduced visibility to
zero across the county.

snow and wind of up to 30 mph
were forecast for the area.
In Cincinnati, rain turned to
snow early today. Wet roads began
to freeze m some areas as Iempem·
tures dropped.
The. snow was expected to taper
off tomght, but a 50 percent chance
of snow was forecast for most of
the slaie for Wednesday, the weath·
er servtce satd.

Divorce granted
A divorce action has been grant·
ed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Sheila K. Bryan from
Derry Bryan.

The National Weather Service
said a winter stonn warning was in
effect today for northwest, west·
central and the Miaini Valley areas
of Ohio,
A winter storm warning was in
effect for extreme northeast Ohio
for this afternoon and early tonight.
Snow advisories were issued for
the rest of the slate.
Temperatures also were expect·
ed to drop through the day around
the slate,
In central Ohio, schools closed
or delayed opening. About 4,500
customers of Columbus Southern
·Power Co. were without power.
At Cleveland Hopkins Airport,
was cut to about a half mile.
Snow was expected to spread
over all of the lakeshore counties
by mid-morning. About 5 inches of

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Ronald Jeffers, Po(tleroy, and
Goldie Ingels, Mason, W.Va.
MONDAY DISCHARGES ·
None.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharge, Jan . 13 • Carol
Arnott, Gloria Cox, Linlee Hart,
Mrs. Jeffrey Haynes and daughter,
Mrs. Ricky Jackson and son, Mrs.
Michael King and son, Betty Pat·
ton, Madina Satterfield, Rebekah
Scites, and Debm Simpkins.
Births, Jan. 13 · Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Mahan, a daughter, Bidwell.

Barton...

Continued from page I
tice, Ruby D. King and Christy
Ramsburg were employed as substitute cooks for the 1991-92
school year; Virginia Sotomayor
was accepted as a foreign exchange
studen.t from Argentina for .the
remainder of the school year; the
resignation of Lynne Crow as secretary, who has been on a leave of
absence, was accepted; Myrville
Brown was reemployed as a part·
time cook at Bradbury Elementary;
Marilyn Meier was employed as a
secretary for the 1991-92 school
year at Pomeroy Elementary; and
Paul Carder, Columbus, was
accepted as a tuition srudent for the
remainder of the school year.
James Carpenter, superintendent. was directed by the board,
regarding consultation fo r the
installation of a septic system at
Salisbury Elementary, to obtain
quotes from all qualiftCd persons in
the county. Carpenter ts also to
check with the Meigs County Com ·
missioners to see if the consullation
work could be funded ~ough the
county with the assistance of Phil
Roberts. County Engineer. The job
is not til exceed $4,000.
The board entered into a pur·
chased services contract with
Juanita Oiler to llJUtsport a srudenL,
who is handiCapped to a sehilol for
the blind at a cnst of 25 cents per
mile and two trips per week.
Finally, the board adopted a resolution that because or reductions
in slate funding that it is necessary
to add on to the deficit for the state

She ,.as a homemaker and
be of the "-'·1 U01···•
mem
r
'""'""
""
Melhodisl Church.
She was also )l'eCeded in death
by her husband, Charles Wilson loan.
Other board members in attenSui ·
ho • • 9 8
. )ivan, w died m I S ; two dance were John Hood, Roger
brothen, one sister, and a grandson, Abbott and Randy J:Iumphreys.
David Sullivan.
·
.: .
. Surviving· arc two sons and
Tite Dolly Seuthiel
dau~hters-in·law, Herbert E. and
Nadia Jean Sullivan of Louisa, Ky.,
(USPS 213·9110)
Larry and Shirley Sullivan of West Publi&amp;hed , very af\em oon. Monday
Columbia; twO grandchildren, lhrourh Friday, tit Coorl St, Pomc10y,
Ohio by the Ohio V.Uey Publi1hin1
Michael of Louisa and OWies C. Company/Multimedia
Inc., Pomeroy,
David Arix
of West Columbia; three great· Ohio 4&amp;769, AI. 992-21116. Second clau
David Edward Arix, 32, gnllddaughtm ai1d a great· pllp paid •I l'omo"'f, Ohl ~
grancbon.
The
Ptwu, Intend
Pomeroy, died Sunday, Jan. 12,
The funeral wiU be Thuriday, 1 Member.
Daily Pteu AModaUo.P, and t.h e: Ohia
19928. . W
Mi h he
p.m., al the Foglesong . Funeral Newspaper Altoc:ia&amp;ion, N..Uonal
ReP(U!I!&amp;al.ive, Branham
orn m ayne, c ·• was a Home with the Rev. JOI!n Sn\ilh Advart.it lnl Sale•.
'133 Third Aven1lfl.
son of Jettie Mat Terry Arix. Route fft - · Burial will be · the ~ewtpapeT
New
YOrk.
New
Yon
10011.
· 4, P,orneroy, and the !ale Earl Rex
CWI~
.
tn
· Arix. H'e was a member of the OrahamFrlends
call.
the' &gt;...:..... POSTMASTER: S.nd'oddrou ohanl!""'
Daily Sentinel, 111 Court. St.., .
Syracuse Church of God. ·
may
at
'~""""' The
Poonoroy, OHio 4&amp;769,
,.
__
his
mother
Mr
Arix
IS
'
hotne
Wednesday,
6
to
9
p.m.
Bes.....
• ·
· Pallbeann will ~ude Roitald
8tiB8CRIPTIOI! RATES
survived by ·his wife,. Candy Ricklld, Charles Zttspin
By CMT6er or Motor Roata
Week ................................ ........... at.ao
G_illispie. A~ix, one daughter, ' zuspan, Mib Lambert, 'Mef Clirt 0no
One Monu. .......... ......,........................ l6.911
Tiffany; SIX 111811n, Loreaa Frlnce, and Delmer Ne ..._
One Year................ ., ................... - ...183.20
Kentucky; Leona Jones, Atbalia; ·
w_.,,
81!\IGU: COPY
"''PRJCJ:
Marie Johnsoo, Proctorvjlle; Ruth
0Aily.. ...........................,...... ,.... _.,26 Cenla
Donohue and Iris Norris, both of
'
Albany; and Evonne Va~ce,
M r'lNniiCK doioiri .. to poy 1ho - ·
er 11117 nnd&amp; in UY~nc. 4inct &amp;o The
PoiiMIIO)o; and one brother, Roser
01DtDOlto DillY Trib... on i 8.8 or 12
Arix, Ploctr:ltYille. .
Deer hunton killed 205 deer monlh '-'a. crr..u&amp; wfll M !Jlv•n e1nilr
Sarvlca wiD be held Wednes· durin&amp; primitive wcapo111 eeuon,
day at 1 ·p.m. at ibc Syracuse· held Tbundi~y and Satur· No aabocrip~... bjlllllll penniiLod in 1'.,,
lftM wlMfe horae urrier sirrioe II
Church of God Yiltb Rev. Davld dayln .
•
1
IYaftablio
·
. R - eftlclati!IJ. Bt'irlal wnt be '
County
lillaU hboortDIIollo
,
lD lleech GlOve~. .
Jnn••
QalHa COutr
Wildlife
Keltb Wood, that t3 w.............................................
bt.U
Friendl may can at ibe cbilrch figure is up from liS deer killed 21 w..u .......,..................................$43.1&amp;
onr hOllf prior to services on durin&amp; the 1991 primitive weapons 62
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bymond

Deer kill released
Ace~~ e~gs

'

q.;.;...~
I

ettn~-,;..~

STUCK PENDULUM

--·

,,,

w~muu are under the

dlreotloi of 'the Blaony·Jordan

Aaall HatM Ill Allllay.

SWOII.

Wo9d allo reported that

th~

tluee-day 1e11011 was ICCideat free.

Scipio trustees 10 meet
The Scipio Township Trustees
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
township hall in Pageville regard·
ing the expansion of rural waler in
Pageville,
·
Dance planned
The Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club will hold a spe·
cia! dance on Jan. 23 at Royal Oak
Resort from 8 to II p.m . with
national caller Gary Shoemaker
from Tennessee. All western style
square dancers are invited.
Dance slated
There will be a round and
square dance at the Rutland Ameri-

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

O.laldo Oallla Coon!)'
II W-.......... ................:...........88.40
21
141.10·

MW-...................... .................111~
'·

.

·

·

'

·

·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -'- A
30-day hiring freeze at Ohio State
University and budget cuts of up to
3 perc~nt should help offset a $14,
million reduction in state appropriations, university President Gordon
Gee says.
The cuts are in response to

reductions ordered by Gov. George
Voinovich to helP. eliminate an
estimated $457 mtllion deficit in
the state budget.
Gee on Monday alsd· placed a
moratorium on the creation of
administrative units and ordered an
indefinite halt on remodeling and
renovations of ldminislfative units.
He said colleges and offices will
see their annual general fund bud·
•
gets reduced betwC\ln 2.5 percent
Am Ele Power ..................3.2 7/8 and 3 percenL Actual atnounts will
Ashland Oi1 ..................... .30 7/8 be announced Feb. I, he sai~.
AT&amp;T.. .............................40 5/8
He also said blition wotlbl have
Bank One ..........................48
to be increased next fall, partly
Bob Evans ........................ 25 1/8 because of the slate-ordered cuts.
Charming Shop............:..... 24 1{2 No increase will be sought before
City Holding .....................l6 l{l then,
Federal Mogui... .......,. ........ J.6 .
Exemp'tcd from 'the hiring freeze
GOOdyearT&amp;R .......:......... .561fl are faculty, liealth and safety perKey Centurion ................... 14 3/4 sonnel and staff members whose
Lands' End ........................29
positions are funded totally by
Limited Inc . ...................... 28 3/4 sponsored research projects.
Multimedialnc ..........., ...... 24 3/4
"Although these budget cuts
Rax Reslaurant .................. 1/4
from the state mean fewer
Robbins&amp;Mycrs .............. ,.36
resources for Ohio Slate UniversiShoney's lnc .....................:23 3/8 ty, I am ~onvinced that we can and
Star Bank .... .......................26 · must address them within the conWendy lnt'l... .................... .l 2
text of respect for our institutional
Worthington lnd ...... .......... 23
priorities and values," Gee said a
Stock repor/S are lht 10:30 a.m. news release.
quotes pro~lded by Blunt, Ellis
Gee said the reductions will be--·l!.;;;an"'d"'Lo;;;;;;;ew"'l"'oi;;if;;;Gii a/;;i/lp;.;oii lisi.......
i
=.l included in deliberations on the
budget for fiscal year 1993, which
begins July' · ' 992·

Stocks

Lottery numbers

can Legion Hall on Saturday from
8 p.m. to midnight with music by Pick 3 Numbers
the Country Kin Band, Ray Fitch
0-0-9
will be the caller. The public is
(zero, zero, nine)
invited to auend.
Pick 4 Numbers
Square dance planned
7.0-0-8
There will be a round and
(seven, wro, zero, eight)
square dance on Friday from 8 to Cards
II :30 p.m. at Hockingport on
K (king) of Hearts
Route 124 at Kenny and Millie
4 (four) of Clubs
Reynolds'. Music will be provided'
K (king) of Diarnoods
by Don, Buddy and the Smokey
8 (eight) of Spades
Mountain Driflers. Jim Carnahan
will be the caller. Country and
bluegrass music is played there
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
every Monllay evening. The public
446 4514 .. ·.,·. :;,"
is invited to aU events.

restored shonl y after the interruption.
Customers in MinersviUe, Racine, Syracuse and the surrounding
area experienced the outage at 6:59a.m., and service was complete- ·
ly restored shortly after 8 a.m.
According to Local Ohio Power Manager Ernie Sisson, faulty
equipment, combined with last night's high winds, caused the out·
age.

EMS units answer calls
Four calls for assistance were answered by units or Meigs Coun·
ty Emergency Services on Monday ~nd early Tuesday.
On Mmiday at 1:41 p:m., Pomeroy unit went to Pleasant Ridge
Road. Betty Martin was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
At 6i21 p.m., Middleport· unit went to North FrOnt Street Donald
Shartiger was transponed to Veterans. At 10:07 a.m.. Tuppers
Plains squad went to Coolville Road for Homer Delong. He was
taken to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital
·on Tuesday at8:30 a.m., Racine squad went to Third Street for
Cathy Carleton. She was taken to Veterans.

Mr~ml

•••••••
{NI

IIA ILf ,
SAIISI.III IIA'tl fii££S
: 10 :
J ~ \ 0 ,9 : 10

"BOUNCE-BACK"
.
.

WEEKEND
ROYAL HAWAiiAN LUAU.
CINCINNATI, OHIO
JANUARY 25 &amp; 26, 1992
ONLY $149.50 PER MEMBER (DOUBLE OCCUPANCY!
[$ 174.50 PER NON-MEMBER!
.
0

Tak~

off for a fantasy weekend wtth )(Our Peoples Choice frtends and attend an authentic Royal
HaWallan Luau extravaganza at the La Comedta Dinner Theatre tn Clnctnnau. The luau will
feature songs by Hawaiian recording artist Blue Pau, the Aloha lll&amp;D4 Dancen In beautiful
Polyneslan -costume.s: tribal dances.and much. f!lUCh more. All this "':hlle you enjoy a sumptuous
feast native to the Islands at the Polyne11&amp;D Paradise buffet. You'll·stay at the beuaUful Omn1
NetherlaJtci Plua In the center of ClnclnnaU. conveniently connected by a skywalk to numerous
shops.
' .
.
.
Cost! $149.50 D(luble, $145.00 Triple, $130.00 Quad. or $170.00 Single. !There Is an addtuonat
$25.00 per peraon fee for non-members.)

,

.

~ 'Pre· tour recepuoil at Peoples Bank
~

Round trtp deluxe motorcoach transportiluon
_ .
· - l'ravei lnsuranc ~·. baggage handllng..ups &amp; gratutUes
·~ .Rc!Yal Hawattan Luau at the La CoJiledla Dtnner 'l'heatt'e
~ ·ave.Ught accommodauons at the Omnl Netherland Plam
• Sunday brunch at tl)e hotel

1

Call Mafj. Fowler at Peoplel Blink at 13041675\1 121 for tnformauon or rewvauons.
Peoples ChOice Is a dMiton of the Peoplt1 Bank of POint Pleuant, Member l'tllC.
'
.

•,

If

f reeze.· budge.t cut s _

--Meigs announcements

°

RECESSION ,

Dakota and Minnesota were
expected to reach as low SO
degrees below zero. ·
Temperatures were exp:cted .in
the single digits in North I'Jakota;
in tlle teens in Minnesota; in the
20s in Dlinois and Wyom_ing; ir\ the
30s in Maine, the Ohio Valley,
Nebraska and Idaho; in the 40s in
New York, Mississippi, Ne\Y Mexi•
co and Oregon; in the 50s in Mas· ·
saehusetts, Georgia, and Northern
California; in the 60s in north.em
Florida, Southern Califomia and
southern Texas; in the 70s in
Miaini.
The high temperature for the
nation Monday was 83 at Home·

r-,-S-to_r_m_c_lo_s_e_s_s_ch-.-oo_l_s-,-ro_a_d_S....,
. , os·uc~~~re;;Ahf~f;g,Fia.

-led

Today in history

(,

Accu-Weather" foreea~t for daytime conditions and

Robert}. Wagman

First challenge: plug budget shortfall

'

First snowstorm of season hits .Ohio

VVednesday,Jan.lS ·

Congress to battle over tax-cut issue
WASHINGTON (NEA) - As
the Democrati c leadership
promised before Thanksgiving, one
of Con~res s'· first orders of business in tts new session will be a tax
cut. The debate, however, will be
heated: Democrats and Republicans
have fundamentally different ideas
about what form any tax cut should
take.
Tax-cut advocaies on both sides
of the aisle say an immcdiaie cut is
necessary to revive the lagging
economy. However, in hearings
during the congressional recess,
expen after expert explained that a
tax cut is no cure for a recession.
Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith said it would be
" foolish , even mildly insane" to
rush into a tax cut in hopes that it
will spur the economy. Former
Office of Management and Budget
head Roy Ash called a tax cut "the
wrong medicine for our current
economic disease. " The head of
the Congressional Budget Office,
Robert Reischauer, added that the
short-term economic effect of a tax

The D!!IIY Sentlriei~Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

.

'

�14,1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

By R.B. FALLSTROM
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP)- Four
players fouling out would be a big
problem for most schools. Not
Kansas.
"I've always said the only way
to have depth is 10 play i~" bead
coach Roy Williams said after his
sixth-ranked Jaybawks pulled away
from No. 13 Missouri in overtime
for a 92-80 victory Monday night
in the Big Eight Conference opener
for both teams. Regulation play
ended at 73-73.
"This game says we've got
pretty good doggone depth and
those kids that we put in there can
hold their poise in the end,"
Wiltiams said.
Richard Scott fouled out with
2:44 10 play. Eric Pauley followed
him wilh 1:08 to go. Reserve Ben
Davis got his fifth foul with 1.1
seconds remaining, ani! Alonzo
Jamison 'fouled out with 3:241eft in
overtime.
Still, Kansas (12-1) outscored
Missouri 19-7 in overtime with a
makeshift lineup. Rex Walters had
nine of his team-leading 21 points
in the extra period.
Walters hit a three-pointer with
I: 59 left in overtime to put Kansas
ahead 83-78, and he added two free
throws with I: 17 to go to give the
Jayhawks a seven-point lead.
In other games involving ranked

Eastern joins North Gallia,
Hannan Trace at SVAC summit
with 5:41 left. Thiny-two seconds be so close again.
"We lost our point ~." said
later, Eastern got the ball back, and
Wilson canned a J'urnper two to Moore of sertior Tina Myers, who
three f~t in front o the foul line to had three fouls in the forst half and
picked up traffic ticket No. 4 seven
give lhe guests a 15-13lead.
In the minute that followed, seconds after Salisbury's gameNorth Gallia then proceeded to tying basket. "When they got ,their
miss a pair of one-and-ones in lhe momentum, we couldn't stop it,"
next minute, and Gillilan missed a he added.
With a turnaround jumper from
pair of shots against the Bucs' 1·2·
2 defense. Then with 3:43 left, the left half of the lane at the 6:36
Mead e, who led North with II mark, Wilson scored the f1rst baspoints for her first double-digit . ket of a 19-4 run fueled by an
scoring effon since connecting for aggressive defense working out of
18 in a 49-31 road victory against a matchup zone ("it kept us out of
Soulhern on Dec. 19, rebounded a foul trouble" - Heideman) and
Twyman missed shot and sank the using man-to-man at times, not 10
mention effectively-executed outlet
layup to create a 15-15 deadlock.
As was lhe case throughout lhe passes thai found its intended
game, Eastern got in prime position receivers on a consistent basis :~
on the boards, bui the Eagles' pass- When act three was in the books,
ing mistakes were causing North lO Eastern led by 15.
The Eagles, having put the first
get the ball more times and keep
ton. Metzger, a 5·-root-9 junior, led all scorers
GETS POSITION- Eastern guard Shelly
game
of its three-game road trip
the gai!Je close.
with IS points and collected eight rebounds and
Metzger (with ball) gets in front of North Gallia
EagTe forward Tiffany Gardner behind them, will face Meigs on
three steals in helping the Eagles post a 54-30
Becky
McCormick
(42)
and
in
position
to
center
dropped a baseline jumper from the Wednesday before ending the road
victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
score on this yardstick-length jumper in the first
left side on her second attempt 10 trip-with a visit to Symmes Valley
quarter
of
Monday
ni~bt's
SVAC
contest
at
Vin·
give Eastern a 17-15 lead with 3:22 on Thursday. The Pirates (8-1, 5-1)
left. Then Twvman, who wa's let will head to MercerviUe to take on
off the hook when Eagle forward Hannan Trace on Thursday before
Ruby Burke missed a one-and-one returning horne to host Portsmouth
situatio n (I :56) created by Notre Dame Saturday at I p.m.
Twyman's second foul, took full Quarter totals
advantage of junior guard Shelly Eastern ............... 11 8 21 14 = 54
Metzger's second foul (she bumped North Gallia ....... 13 6 6 5 = 30
Eastern (54) - Metzger 6-0point guard Doc Rivers when he ahead three-pomtcr.
Twyman on a scramble for the ball)
By The Associated Press
3=,
1
5;
Gardner
7-0-0=14;
Wilson
After a timeout, Sacramento set
and sank both one-and-ones to lie
With the score tied, Joe Dumars was called for a double technical
5-0·1=11;
Phillips
4-0-0=8;
Burke
up
for a final shot. but Tisdale's
foul
in
lhe
third
period.
the game at 17-17 wilh 1:331eft.
was worried about two things: win1-0-0=2;
Gillilan
2-0-o--4.
Totals
pa ss was interc epted by
errant
With
the
score
96-94,
Benjamin
After two missed shots by lhe
ning the game for lhe Detroit PisAnderson
with 5.1 seconds left.
-25-0-4=54
Eagles on their next possession,
tons and keeping the Dallas Maver- blocked Harper's attempted layup
Field
goals25-65
(38.5%)
Lionel
Simmons,
who scored 3I
and the Sanies called timeout with
Wilson slipped inside and got lhe
icks from winning it
Free
throws
-4-10
(40%)
points,
fouled
Mutombo,
who hit
layup to fall 20 seconds later. But
So when Dumars saw an open- 15 seconds remaining. But Johnson
Rebounds - 70 (Gardner 25)
Meade erased Eastern's 19-17 lead
ing 10 shoot with eight seconds left, missed from 17 feet, Harper one of two free throws with 1.6
Steals..,.. II (Metzger 3)
when she took Twyman's pass and
he waited a little longer. Finally, grabbed the. rebound and sank two seconds left. completing the scorNorth Gallia (30) - Meade 5· his three-point shot from lhe top of free throws with 3.8 seconds left. · ing.
drilled a 17-foot jumper from lhe
0-1=11;
Salisbury 4-0-0=8 ; the circle swished through the basMitch Richmond missed a midNuggets lll, Kings 109
left wing with 55 seconds left to tie
Twyman
3-0-2=8;
Meadows
1-0·
Denver
got
a
dominating
perforcourt
shot at the final buzzer.
ket with 1.8 seconds left, too little
the contest at 19-19- the~arne's
0=2;
McConnick
0-0·1=1.
Totals
mance
from
its
front
line,
but
the
Suns
131, Timberwolves Ill
time for the Mavericks to overfi fth deadlock.
Nuggets
needed
Reggie
Williams'
At
Phoenix,
Jeff Hornacek
-IJ.0-4=30
come the 84-81 deficit
When both teams returned to the
Field goals- 13-63 (20.6%)
"It was perfect timing," Detroit three-pointer wilh 14 seconds left scored 26 points and Kevin Johnfloor for the third quarter, Wilson
Free throws - 4-8
head coach Chuck Daly said. "The to win at horne against Sacramento. son had 19 points and 13 assists as
broke lhe tie with a layup 33 secRebounds- 27 (Salisbury 6)
Williams scored 26 points, fel· the Suns improved their three-year
onds after play resumed. Salisbury
idea was to get the last shot"
Assists - 3 (Myers 2)
tied it up at 21 with 6:56 left with a
After taking the inbounds pass, low forward Greg Anderson had 22 record against Minnesota to 10-0.
Steals- 8 (Myers 3)
Hornacek had 10 points in the
jumper just in front of the foul line.
Dtimars dribbled four times before points and 16 rebounds and center
Turnovers
15
third
quarter, when the Suns
Dikembe
Mutombo
had
22
poinL&lt;
From !here, North Gallia would not
releasing his game-winning shot
outscored
the Wolves 40-23 to take
and
II
rebounds
for
the
Nuggets,
over Derek Harper, dooming the
Mavericks 10 their eighth consecu- who snapped a four -game losing a 97-67 lead.
Dan Majcrle added '20 points in
streak.
tive loss.
Wayman Tisdal e, who scored 27 minutes for Phoenix, which won
"The hardest pan was holding
the ball and not shooting," sa id 29 points, put the Kings ahead 109- its fourth straight overall and 13th
Dumars . The Mavericks, whose 107 with an IS-footer with 27 sec- straight at home.
Pooh Richardson led Minnesota
losing skein is the longes t active onds left, sctti~g up Williams' goWith
14 IJUIIII&gt;.
streak in lhe NBA, lost their previ.'
ous seven games by an average of
points.
Quarter totals
20 points.
Oak Hill (2-6, 2-4) will play at
Southern ............... 4 12 5 II = 32
"It seems that when things go
Kyger Creck ....... 27 8 10 8 = 53 South Webster Wednesday mght bad, they continue to go bad, but
before returning home Thursday we still work hard," Harper said.
Kyger Creek (53) - S. Jones night to take on Kyger Cree k. "You want to try and let teams
8-0-1 = 17; Gindlesberger 4-0-0=8; Soulhwestern will head to Racine beat you from the outside rather
Ward 1-2-0=8; Black 3-0-0=6; to play Southern on Thursday.
than drive and possibly create other
Drummond 3-0-0=6; Bush 1-0- Quarter totals
things.
0=2; Mollohan 1-0-0=2; Wolfe 1- Soulhwestem ...... .4 4 5 6 = 19
In the only other NBA games, it
OakHill ............. \712 6 7=43 was Denver 111 , Sacramento 109;
0-0=2. Totals- 23-2-1=53
Oak Hill (43)- Fisher 5-0- Pho.enix 131 , Minnesota Ill; and
Free throws- 1-3
Southern (32) - Mills 3- 1- 0=10; Lloyd 5-0-0=10; Stumbo 3- the Los Angeles Clippers 98, Seat11=20; Ohlinger 2-0-1=5; Cross 1- 0-2=8; Carney 3·0·1=7; Ramsey 2- tle 94.
0-2=4; Moore 1-0-0=2; Mangeroy 0-0=4; Swann 0-1-0=3. TotalsThe Pi stons, who won their
19-0-4=43
0-0-1=1. Totals -7-1-15=32
fourth straight game and I lth in 13
Field goals- 19-81 (23.5%)
Free tbrows-1 5-22 (68.2%)
tries, were led by Orlando WoolFree throws- 4-9
ridge with 15 points. Dumars; DenRebounds- 50 (Stumbo 9)
Oak Hill43, Southwestern 19
nis Rodman and lsiah Thomas
Turnovers- 21
At Oak Hill, 10-point efforts by
scored 14 apiece, and Rodman had
Southwestern (19)- Hale 2-1· 21 rebounds, the 13th time in 19
seniors Tara Fisher and Alicia
Lloyd, not to mention Southwest- 0=7; Armstead 2-0-1=5; Lewis 2· games the NBA's rebounding leadem's failure to score in double dig- 0·1=5; Donta 0-0-2=2. Totals- er has grabbed 20 or more.
its in any quarter. were just what 6-l-4=19
Terry Davis had 14 points and
Field goals -7-51 (13.7%)
Oak Hill needed to capture its sec21 rebounds for the Mavericks.
Free throws- 4-11 (%)
ond win of lhe season. .
Rolando Blackman scored 15
Rebounds .;.. 39
Senior Renee Hale led the Highpoints.
Turnovers -.30
landers (1- 7, 1-5) with seven
Clippers 98, SuperSonics 94
Los Angeles beat Seattle for the
sixth consecutive time at the Sports
Football
IOC president Juan Antonio Sarna- Arena as Ron Harper scored 25
GAINESV ILLE, Fla. (AP) ranch met with Vitaly Srnirnov, points and Danny Manning 20.
The win was only the fifth in 14
Bill Arnsparger resigned as Flori- president of the former Soviet
zames·
for the Clippers. who also
da's athletic director to become- Olympic Committee, to review
gal r6 points and 14 rebounds from
defensive coordinator of the San preparations.
Diego Chargers, his forst NFL job
The official French name of the Olden Polynice, traded«&gt; the Clipin eight years.
team is still likely to be Equipe pers by the SuperSonics in
S - Meigs, who beat Trimble
Arnsparger, 65, Florida's athlet- UnifJCe, which he said he translated exchange for Benoit Benjamin last Athens in back-to-back weekend games, will head to Stewa1rt
ic.director since 1987, will take 35 into English as Unified Team. season .
• Eddie Johnson seared 20 points tonight to tak.e on Federal Hocking. Here, Marauder guard Frank.
years of ooaching experience to the Plans remain that the team will
Blake goes in for two of his six points during Saturday night's 81-54
Chargers . He began his NFL march under the Olympic flag and for the Sanies, who played without win over Athens.
coaching career with the Baltimore that the Olympic Anthem , scoring leader Ricky Pierce
in 1964, where he ~yed unti\1970 Beelhoven's "Ode to Joy," will be because of the nu and lost point
when he joined Don Shula's staff played whenever a member of lhe guard Gary Payton in lhe final minutes wilh bruised ribs.
in Miami. Arnsparget was head team wins a gold medal, he said.
The Clippers, who missed
coach of the New York Giants for
Hoc:key
WHAIIS !HE EARNED INCOME CREDIT
injured
backup point guard Gary
2 1/2 seasons before returning 10
NEW YORK (AP) - Quffalo
AND HOW DO IQUAliFY FOR 111
Miami.
·
Sabres center Pal LaFontairie; who' Grant because of a strained abdomU1 . llrH. lu•t lirt411 ... .ttl
He left the Dolphins in 1984 to ' had ~even· aoals and five assists in inalJJuiscle, lost le_ading scorer
IJiptUtl
t .. Is IIW ...... 1p tf 1.11~
become head co~ch at Louisiana four games last
was nained CharleS Sniith with a sore shoulder
ao411£
tiM
Nd&lt; .,,.,. ii&lt;OtOo ao41t, . o
State, where he s~ unbl acceptin the second quarter and staning
ingthejobatFlo ·
NHL·playeroftheweelc.
llttlt• iulltiKt crHi, ••• • ulrt atlllit
Football
lot 1 doiW .... II 1911. Not ooly ... tiM
NEW YORK (APj - Buffalo
-"loc•o nltt ~ upalo~ loti tiM
r~lllr-ts ltr dol•lll II • .,. ciMopcl
linebackl:r eomelius Benneu was
tot.
. named AFC Jllayer of llte week and
Was~ihgton quart~rbaek Marie
'" .,, ...111, '" tu ... •••ocl
Rypien was honorec!Jn tbeNFC.
·~"'"
...... -fori
HI .... loss tlooo
Bennett had nine tackles,
$2Ul0
1101
11&lt;1
yooho4
w111i • .., ..,,
including four for losses, in tlie
B'lls'
o er Den cr 1·n
lo tiM .... ""'' lo liM
1 10•7 victorv
-,
v
v
llollocl
ll1IH
lot
••1
tflao sll - • t1
the AFC cbarnp10nship. Rypien
tiMyw
(tiM
t~lkoy•
I tiM ...Jill
completed 12 of 17 ~(or 228
....
,..,
....
diiWJ,
yards in llte Redskin,s' 41-10 victolllo tl ...Ill . , . I" 011 lllllfo4 II lrlllocl 11 1 ,.,..., tll11 lht d
ry over Detroit in the NFC champi-.
,...tit,.
wlllo
1 lqor ,.,..., ..... llio- tltu yw ...W llllorwtso·owo. '
·onship.
. ·
·
'
WlooooYot
yw
IMvo ~- ... IMot liM lows ollott "" - . , cill yow locol NU
.
1 Olympics
....
tllkL
lotlot
J11, "• lor 11M .. ...,, yw. Wo'rt ""' II llolp !"!·
.. .
, · GENEVA (AP),.... .Top offiCialS
~~~~EK
of lhe In~ Olympic ec.'
lllklee aped taulliV&amp;!y in ~

,,,

n.•n
·u-...1-.....
18""

.

Field goals- 18-45 (40%)
Free throws- 13-25 (52%)
Rebounds- 30 (Stephanie
Stapleton 18)
Assists - II (Mullens 7)
Steals- at least 9
Turnovers-N/A
Symmes Valley (32) - Owens
4-0-4= 12; Krausz 3-0-0=6; Wiseman 2-0-2=6; Conley 1-0-2=4;
Massie 1-0-0=2; Schneider 1-00=2. Totals- {2-0-3=32
• Free throws- 8-20 {40%)
•
. .• So tb
Kyger Crefk .J, u ern 3.,
At Cheshire, freshman center
&amp;tephanie Jones carne o(f lhe bench
pn~ racked up a team-high 17
I'Ointa to JMICC Kyger CleekiO a 21point victory over Southern.
Thoup the Bobcats (2-7, 2-4)
paw the·23-pointlcad "!ey took
rhto lhe·seoond quartet shrink to 19
at halftime, Southern (0-8, 0-6)
couldn't keep chipping away at
Kc 's lead wnh·its third.quarter
acoting Jll!lblerns. ·
Southern'~ JeMi_fet Cross~ all
sharpshooters w1th 20 pomts,
whiCh included· an _ll-for-12 perat the clur~ily smpe. ·
Kyser Creek w1U h~d lo Oak
JlilliD fau Scot! Ca~ aOW on

.

..

In

rormance

.

f'!t::

~Wi~ 11Pd

. . . . - -'
- .-,Swilla'llnd,toplallbrllle
10 former Soviet team ill the Winter
IIOCIII. Sotldlent wiD play_
South~ Th~ nightllld Garnes at Albertville, Fmlcc.
J(el•arrrilie-York m 1 1 P-~· IIIli
Francois Clrrlrd, clirec:tot poa lilllidly.
. mJ of lhe IOC, said dllt he and

Atl111lle Dlrislon
Tum
W L Pet.
New Yod: ............ 21 11
.M6
H011tm ........... .. ...... 21 14 .600
Philadelphia ........... l6 19 .457
Miami .... ..... .. ......... l5 21
.417
NcwJeney ............ l4 21
.400
WuhinalOn .. . ...... .13 21
.382
Orlando ...... .............1 27 .206

Central Division
Chi.Cigo.... ............. .29 5
853
C le~c l a nd ... " ... - .. 14 9
•727
Detroit....
. .21 16 .568
1\L!In t.a ...... .. ....... 18 16 .529
Milwaukee ........... 17 16
SIS
Indiana .................. 14 21
400
Charlotte ............... ! 0 15
286

Midw~r~l Dhlslon
Team
W L PeL
U1ah ....
.. .....22 15 .59S
San Antonio ...... ...20 14 .588
HoustM ...
... 19 16 .543
Denver .......... . ... 14 21
.400
Dall11 ..................... 12 23 .343
Minne&amp;Oll ........ .... .... 7 27 .206

93110 StrMI

Middleport

t92·6617

9
15

4.5

9.5
ll
11 .5
15.5
19.5

GO
j

2

7

9
!3.5

1,374

7

S.Indiana ....... ......... .....ll·2 1).72
6.Kanm ....... ............ .. IJ.l 1,146
7. Arizatl.. ......... .....10.2 1,106
B. Connec:ticut .... ......... ll·ll.088
9. Alabama ..... ........ ... .. \4-1 1,080
IO. Kcntuc.ky ........... ..... l2·2 1,028
l l.~anSl. ...... ... .. ll·l 961
12.Manw .... ........ ... .JJ.J 907

10
4
6
5
16
15
'
13

IJ.Missouri .......... ..... .ll·l

12

14.Nort.hCarolina .. ... .. 10.2
ll. Mi&lt;~,. .............. .... 9-2
16.GcmtiaTech ........ .. l2-3
17. SLlolm'a .................. 9·3
18.N.C.Char1otte .. ...... ll ·l
19. Tullnc ................... .ll·O
20.Syracllle .. ..... ....... 11·1
21. Seton HalL ..
.....9·3
22. Gcorgctown .. ............9·2
23. Ok!ahom1 ..... .... ...... 10.2
24. low• St. .................. 12·2
25 . Louisville ............... 8·3

Villanova, 2-5 in non-confer. ence play, improved to 4-1 in lhe
Big East, rallying from a late
!three-point deficit 10 beat Seton
Hall at the Meadowlands.
Lance Miller 4it two free lhrows
and a jumper early in overtime,
giving the Wildcats the lead for
good. The victory was the founh
straight for Villanova and .ended an
eight-game losing streak against
the Pirates (9-4, 2-3).
Miller led Villanova with 26
points. Seton Hall was led by Terry
Dchere with 17 points.
No. 14 North CaroUna 96
Maryland 76
Huhen Davis scored 16 of his
26 points in the fust half as North
Carolina recovered from its upset
loss against Notre Dame to win at
home against Maryland.
The Tar Heels (11·2 overall, 2-1
in the Atlantic Coast Conference)
turned the ball over four times in
the first four minutes. But Davis
came off the bench to score 10
points in a 3 1/2-rninute span as the
Tar Heels took a 19-9 lead with

DEERFIELD, lll. (AP) Michael Jordan joins an elite club
as The Associated Press Male Ath-

WALES CONFERENCE
Patrick Dlvlalora
W L T I'll. CFCA
N.Y. Rangm ..... 2817 I 57177153

Tum

Wuhinpo........

PittlburJh ..... - ...
New Jersey ........
N.Y. W..don ....
P!Ubdelphil .......

T1 ll l . " 196 U.
52 200 166

24 16 4
22 IS 6

SO \64 126

ll 22 6 36 1~8 171
1420 I 36122146

Adanu Dhoislon
Manual.. .......... 29 14 3
Bmm ................ 2018 5
BWfolo............... 16 20 1
tuntool ............. ll20 l
~ebec .............. II T1 l

. Norrll Dl~lJion
Team
.
W L T Pll. CFGA
DdroiL ............... 26 12 S 57180141
SL Louil ... ,........ 2017 7 47 156 147
Chicoao.............. 1911 9 47 155146

- . .......... 19 20 ) 4{ 142154
T010nto .............. '1228 S 29116166

Smythe Dhillon
V111eouvor ......... 23 13 1 53 tl2121
461431~

39

'Tonight's games
Dewit It N.Y. lllandCIJ, 7:35p.m.
Butr&amp;lut N.Y; R-.en, 7:35p.m.
CoJaaty "Qloebe,, 7,35 p.m.
.
ChiCIJO II~· 7:3, p.m.

....,""' *•

~II Min
1 0 J';OS p.m.
Vuco.n•er • ~ 9:15' p.m.

Wuh.inpn n SlU.W., 1:35 p.m.
V~V~oiXII"" at W~, 1:35 p.m.
San lou It Lo. Aaaiil.-. 10:15 p.m.

Wed-y'llllll ..

Buffalo at NewJatey, 7:35p.m.

•

AP Top,lS college
basketball poJI ·
Till

-T-c;won'v Five tctma in thO

'
...n.... •-' •Aaddt\od
I" l· 92 ._....... ·
bollpoll,wilhlbol-ploo"-"'1"""'
ak....
lhroup lu. 12, 1o1al

.....,

,:,dordt

on 25 poiaul• oftdo pl&lt;oe
votoolinNaJiono.!'i"\f"•25ohpl.,.

'

-~~~~loot-•........,

-

·-

WL

•

•

lMI .
Plo.Wooll

Division D

Dlvlslonm

'

Team

{()I

ll
43

W-L Pu.

171

l . Onod.lnditnYo!I, ,Cil .......... I0-0 t7l
Ill
t'll

6. l.onln C.lhotic pj,,...... ......... 9-0
7. Tott~~~lO(l) ... ....... ................... a.o
8. CAPE .................................... .?·!
9. CllillicoUM: HuntingLan ........ 10-0
, 10. Htviland Wa,neTrace .........1·3
N~w MawnontFranl.ict(l) .. 9·0

72
44
39
39

Othera reul,lna12 or more polnu:
12. New LondiXI (lj29· 13. Belpre 25.
14. Wickliffe 21 1 . Albany Aleundet
19. 16. Andover Pymttunl.nl V.UCy II.
11 (tlt). Mlnfordt Nonh Bend Taylor 15.
19 (de). BaUbroot , Cincianati McNi·
:bobs, W11.110011 13. 22. Spll\1 HiJhlmd
1~

Division IV
Team

w.L

Ptl •

I, Fort lAramie (22) ...................9·0
2. Berlin Hiland \2) ....................1-0
3. Upper Sci01.0 Vall. (4).......... 10-0
4. Mansfield SL Pfur'l (1) ........9·1
l . Coni""' M.o~owood \4) ........9·0
6. Cincimati Counuy Day .........7· 1

333
261
216
213

165

129
7. S&amp;ndW.ySLMiry'J ............lQ.I 114 ·
I . U...Cm~.C.Ih.Cl) ..............l-1 10!

9. C..ol Windo...,CI) ............9-2

13

10. FOitoria SL Wmdclin ...........9·1

J6

Othm neeMna12 or More polnll:
11. Wella,UJe 32. 12. Zanelville Rote·
ctana 24 . 13 (tie). Fre.epon. L&amp;kehnd,
MoWI)'Mn Whi&amp;ocllk II. IS (tio). Cov·
Ln110n, Findlay Ubcrty-Benlon 14. 17
(ljc). Fort RtlllOYfW)', Tiffin Cliver\, Swlh
Charl..con SoolhiUian 12

Kner Cl"'dd: .53. Racine SoW\ em 32
Lakeltnd 59, Br.lla~SL John'a S4
l..iberty·BcnLOn 46, Hardin No~cm

No. 19 Tulane 83
New Orleans 61
Pointer Williams, a reserve
freshman point guard, had 17
points and six steals as Tulane
remained undefeated after 12
games with an easy victory against
New Orleans.
·
Four of Tulane's ·reserves ,
dubbed "The Posse" by head
coach Perry Clar11:, scored in double
figures.
New Orleans {11-5), which
trailed by 13 at halftime, closed to
40-31 when Louweegie Dyer
scored lhe first four points of the
second half, but the Privateers got
no closer.
Ervin Johnson soared 23 points
for New Orleans.

lete of the Year for 1991: The
Chicago Bulls player is only the
second NBA athlete to win the
award.
·
"I'm very surprised since I
thought all the awards had been
handed out," Jordan said. "And I
don't take the award lightly.
" I've had lots of honors over
the years, and every one is very
special to me," he added.
Jordan also was named NBA
Player of the Week on Monday.
Jordan, 28, led lhc Bulls to their
first title last season. He was
named league and playoff MVP.
Larry Bird of the Boston Celtics
was AP Male Alhlete of the Ycar
in 1986, the only other NBA player
to win the award in its 61-year history.
"There are a lot of lhings that
make· Michael very special," said
Bulls head coach Phil Jackson . ..
AP-meinber sports writers and
broadcasters were asked to vote for
three athletes, with a first-place
vote worth five points, second lhree
and third one. Jordan compiled 348
points to 134 for long jumper Mike
Powell and 80 for six-time
Olympic gold medalist and twotime AP Male Alhlete of the Ycar
Carl Lewis.
Jordan got 46 of 122 first-place
votes.
Powell, who broke Bob Beamon's 23-year-old world long jump .
record by leaping 29 feet, 4 1/2
inches at 1 the World Championships, got22 ftrst-place votes.
Lewis' 10-year, 65-meet streak
was broken by Powell. But at the
Championships at Tokyo in
August, he beat Leroy Burrell and
broke his world record for the 100meter dash with a time of 9.86 seconds. Lewis gol eight first-place
votes.
Nolan Ryan of the Texas
Rangers, baseball's no-hitter and
strikeout king, finished fourth in
the voting after a second-place finish last year to San Francisco 49crs
quarterback Joe Montana. Ryan
threw his seventh no-hitter last season. He led 10 ballots and got 76
points.
Fifth with eight first-place votes
and 68 points was Cal Ripken Jr. of
the Baltimore Orioles, who won his
second American League MVP
award. Magic Johnson, who
announced his retirement from the
Los Angeles l.akers because he had
contracted the virus that causes
AIDS, also got eight first-place
votes and finished wilh 48 points.
Finishing seventh in the balloting was tennis comeback sensation
Jimmy Connors. Next were p&lt;ile
vaulter Sergei Hubka or Ukraine,
Heisman Trophy winner Desmond
Howard and comeback boxer
George Foreman.

.Lakers to retire
Magic's-No. 32
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) The Los Angeles Lakers will retire
Magic Johnson's No. 32 in a ceremony at halftime of their game
against the lloston Celtics on Feb.
16.

Transactions
Due boll
National Leap
NEW YORX METS - Aareed to
1omu with Mal S1onlemyre Jr., Mike.
Bitkbeek and Tom Filet, pitc:hen, and
Stove s~. infielftr, on miDor ~cap
eonii'ICII tnth Tidaw•* of lhllnwma·
donal Leap. Named BI.UI ~ and
Dallu Oreen m•~ J,oqQe ICOIU . lnYilad
Mad!. Dewey and Brad' Moose, pilchera;
Odondo W....do onol AlAn Zlnur, """' .

Madllm 36, Alhta~la S

en; Jeff McXt!ipt, Wioldor, and D.J.
DOOc:r and lloaniD)' McCny. odddm:,

.. "ttt1 F:'X~c';';"C~f.;:~ -

Siped COl')' Srr.ydlr, out:filldtr, to a mi·

norlelptccmtllel

__ B _

w-

Ntlloulllullolboll-llao

DENVER NUOOBTS - .Placed
o...;, .,...t, •llMmjondllot.

-:a.lla&lt;-21 .
Tool' ValL 64 -T-op. 01

-- toL-l6LT~~s1

' Tol.
~:~l{~!~
N,.. Domo ll, Tol. Woodwud

Foolllll
Na- JOIIW t.oapo

-

CINaNNADIINOAU-Nomod
Mikollalv- u..-w cotdl, Bob
Kar111rwica det.iftline 001cb and

Tol.SL Umoto6'1,Toi.Uhbey211

Tol. 'Wiiw 57, Tol. S&amp;llt 54

Td-VolloyS4,New~ll
1\llaawu Ctdt.!I2.Kidiiln Olr. 22

• MID
•

Ualont-1 56, W-.W.43
Vlnluo•l.=21
36
·
W. 0 . . La1Ma 'N.-IWIUllon 57
W.""""' II.C-42

ll&amp;l&lt;.,._

BW~ - . .

*

45
It 0'
t ~::,~·::::··~l~~~~r=~·~~~k ..--14-0 IAN
3 ___:w.::I::L.ti:iU::~:..,~Mi:':::!~
til
-.
- --.:..-~l~·
&amp;t~a~cm:t
l

Johnson announced his retirement on Nov. 7 after he had teSted
positive for the virus that causes
AIQS.
He played 12 years ror the Laic· .
ers, leading Los Angeles to five
NBA tides and nine appearances in
the Finals.
The league's all-time assist
lea,der with 9,921, Johnson was
voted the NBA 's Most Valuable
Player three times, and also was the
MVP of lhe Finals three times.
He will become lhe fifjh Laker
to have his jersey number retired.
The olhers are Will Chamberlain,
No. 13; Elgin Baylor, 22; Kareem
Abdui·J~bat:. 33; and Jerry West,,

44.

YOU. JITI - N•ed Wall

--SANDIIOOCIW!t'MI~Nomod

w.-••·

6$,JtmlllonnJO

lit

3. Bucyna~ W)Tilord (8) ............. 8·0 l39
4. Camdrm.PrdlleShawnoc(l)ll ·O 213

40

u

279
232
166
161
145

2. Ornille02) ........................... 9·1 268

an:

w.tt

317

I. Choopukl \&lt;l-------'·1

Harrilon 46,
Colerain 2'
lhwi.cn 50, Wid:litfe40
H()Uit()tJ 62. Mia.iuintwl Vall 27
Hud aon We.11em Re1crvc 53. An ·
..... 28
lnditn VllJ, 48, Con"'10n VaU. 33
Jefferson 52, Asbubult Hubor 45
Kma:&amp;oo 51, Mtple H11. 33
Kcucrina Faitmon1 54, w. Curolhoo

It

Pts.

Othera recelvlna ll or mort polnll:
11 . Keaerina Alter 38. 12. Youn111:own
R1yen 35. 13. Draden Tri·Yalley (I) 33.
14 . W11h ington Court House Miami
Tnce 23. IS. Clcvcl&amp;nd Ccntnl Catholit
(I) 22. 16 (tic). C&amp;mbridae. Louilville 15.
t 8. Columbus .BriQ• 14. 19. Dapon
Chaminadc.JulieMe 13. 20. Vemu lion
12

Ham illon Badin 47. Hamilton Reus

M.tntficld Temple S6. Medina First
Bopoilll9
Mt)fWd 45, Soi.Ofl 39
MlamilbYrt. 91, Day, Slebbina 34
, MWotd 6!," Piketon 31
N. Collefc HU1 43, New Richmond
21
New BOMn 58, Laltwn Weal.etn 48
Nlllliuno&lt;ll, Foederitltlown 47
hU..Yille llaMy 53, Conneaul40
hiPuvWe Riverside 44, Aahubult
SL John 31
PuOon·Oilbot. 6i, McCM!b 44
iiMolo¥Ulo EuwnlO, N.Olllio lO
R;pley,lnd. 64,-59
Rivw S1, w.,. Local47 ~
JUverVaD. S4,A••41
Shoi,.W.l7. U..UMllel2
Skywo 50, c.u...u 4.1
SL Coimille 6~ S...boov;]]e 35

or mort polntJ:

Team
W-L
I. CoLLindmMc:Kinley(l8) .. .8·D
2. Vtn Wen (6) ................. ... ...... 9·0
3. Cohambwl SL OwiCII (1) ....... 9·0
4. CohonbuoEu!rnoorCt) ......... i-0
5. Bcloil WM Bnneh (1) .......... 9·0
6. Dtyton Dunblf ....................... 6-3
7. 8elldmWno(l) .................. l0-0
8. c..fidd (3) ............................ 9-11
Sl. Proctcntllt Fairland (l)_.. 7-1
!0. Cl". VA·SL 1c:woepb.............. 6-S

55, Wea~an BmW!! 45

23113197

n

Oreaon Clay, Upper Arlington 14 . 19.
Wanm Howland 12.

FLFryo62, Wataford47
Gthanna 52. Cd. Htnlcy 35
Gllfldd Hw. 41, Orange 19
GcncYa 56, Ashlabu\.t Edgewood 37
OrccnficJd 4). CliniOO·MIJiiC40
~ Otun 49, Akron Garficld

SanJ01e. ............. 1032 3

Monday's scores

Ollltn reeehlna

Clermont
Nonhcutcrn
65,
Williambura 39
Coal Giov~49, Che11pcakc 32
ConLinent.al66, DclJito• St. John's 53
Convoy Cratvicw 42, Ft. Jcnmnss 31
Crenwood 48, Olardon 44
Day. Bclmon160, Day. Jcffcnon 46
E. U~erpool51, Edi&amp;M N. 27
Editon S. 61, 'lloronto 47
Elgin 60, Marion C.th. 29
Elyria Cadt. 47. Broollyn 42
Falrl1nd 62, Rock HillS I

Lima Calh. S4, Blllfaon41
Lo~""' E. 43, C.yoho!' H"- 40

157
14'
115
]{18
59
44

I I. Stow {2) 39. 12. Lima Senior (I) 36.
\ 3. Rayland Buckeye26. 14. Middletown
(I) :M. 15 . 0C'Ici1Dd SL lpdut 17. 16.
Columbua Marion·Fnnklin IS . 17 (lia)

Cin. St Unult 47, Amclia 38
Cin. S~mit 70, New Miami 45
Cin. Walnut HiUs 49 . Cin. Purcell·
Marian 42

37

181

I 0. Wmt Chmter La.lr.Oll .............7·2

39

43

2.45

8. lhmil... (1) ...........................8-2
9. Dayton Pau.ersort {I) .............. 8·2

Ctdiz ~.Bridgeport 37
O.illicothe 54, Miami Tnce 31
Cin.Ai.ken 66, Cin. Woodwud 4Ct
Cin. Christian 48. Cin. St Rita 16
Cin. Deer Pule 37, Cin. Indian Hil l 31
Cin. Madeira 60, Cin. T•ylrw 42
Cit!. McNicholas 66, Cin. Hughes 30
Cin. St. Bernard 79, Cin. l..andma&amp;

Fclici1y

Pll.
328
283

7 . Columbus8rookht~cn(J) ..... 7·1

Hcllaim 61, MutinJ Ferry 39
Hdlbn:d 73, Littla'Milllli 29
Driltol4l, BaUIWe 31
Buckeye Loeal6S. Boavet Local 50
Buckeye Trail 41, Newtomentown

44166150
41 161181

CalJUY 2., Montre112, tic
Edmolltm 7, Minnmota 4

W.L
I. Akron Firatonc (24).. ... ......... 6-0
2. Elltlid (l) .... ............... .......... .. 9·0
3. Can ten McKinley (I) ............. 8·1
4. Lcxinston(l) ............. .......... ll ·l
5. Od'ord Tala wanda (I) ............9·0
6. Findlay (1) ..............................9·0

21

Winnipq; ........... 191' 8
Calpry ..... :........ I918 6
Edmon* .......... 1722 7

t.ooAnadeo ....... 11" 7 41 157170

Team

Ill

Arctdia 50. Van Buten 29
Beaver Eanem 60. S. Wcbmt 51
Beavercrcdr: 0, Day. PaumotJ 42

25

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

Division I

2(]

Girls

61 144 99
45 151151

39 146 ll2
l! 124 139
21 135 176

14
17
22
24

Medina Highland 72, Covmtl)' 62

Tonight's games

In the NHL ...

526
487
431
421
244
218
143
110
96

ltetball LCimJ in thaiCCCild of ei,tht wcdt·

ly reslllat-tw:m polls for The Auociatod
Preu, by Ohio High School Athletic AI·
sociation diviaicm, with wort-lou record
through reBUlu·ICUOn &amp;lmCI of Jan. 12
(w:ilh rmt-place ~QUill in puemhcact) and
total point&amp;:

51

PhoaW.IJI,MinnC~CCalll

Wednesday's games

675

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How a
sute panel of sporu writetl and broad·
eutm ntet Ohio high scl!ool boys bu·

Cin. Summil 70, New Miuni 45
Ma111ficld Temple 75, Medina First
B•ptinSO
Mulillon Chr. 71, Southwestem au.

LA. Cii'P"' 91, Seoule 94

New h:rsc:y at ~m. 7:30p.m.
Penland It New Yolk, 7:30 p.m.
Milwaukee It Miami, 7:30p.m.
Dcttoit at ln diana, 7:30p.m.
Ctw!Dlte al L.A . Laten, I 0:30 p.m.
Phomil at Saa.mento. \0:30p.m.

I

II

basketball poll

Boys

Monday's scores

Dallu nNcw Jeney, 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Wnhingtan, 7:30p.m.
New YOlk ll Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Milwau.koc It Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
Portland al Cltnland, I p.m.
Philadelphia at OUcap, 8:30p.m.
Dcnvetlt Houston. 8:30p.m.
Golden Sme It S.n Antonio, 8:30
p.m.
Minnesou at Utah, 9:30p.m.
ChulotteatSmtllo, !Op.m.

761

733

AP boys high school

Ohio high school
basketball scores

.5
.5
2
5
S.S
13

808

11:28 1eft before halftime.
The Terrapins (0-4 in the ACC)
closed to 23-21 on an lalley-oop
dunk by Walt Williams, who led
Maryland with 32 points. North
Carolina then went .on a 15-3 run
over a five-minute span to take a
14-pointlead.
·

Jordan AP's 1991 Male
.Athlete of the Year

OliW!r rocelvlnR voles: Wake Forut
81, Tuu·El Puo 79, Nebrukl68, Pitu·
burgh 62. Stanford 57, UNLV 35. Mu·
mhusetts 34, Houstm 30, Clntlnnatll?,
New Mexico Sl. 22, Sauthcm Cal 18,
Florida Sl. 11, Virginia 9, Wia.·Grccm
Bay 9, Iowa 5, Montana S, Rhode Island
5. Wullillgton 4, WuhinfOR St. 4. All.·
Birmingham 3, Notre Dame 3, Princctm
3, Brigham Young 2, Sou\h f1orida I.

Detroit S4.D.Uu81
Dc:r!vr:r Ill, Sacrm~ento 109

Bc:.acrt.,lt HanloN, 7::f5 p.m.

992·6674

•

8.5

-....,.. .... -

'H&amp;R
BLOCK
-

61IIASIUIH

l.5
6.5
8

Paclnc Division
Golden S1aLe .... .... .. 21 10 .677
Portland .................22 ll
.647
PhocniA ..................2J 13 .639
L.A. LUen ...... .... ..21 14 .600
SC'~tlle .. ............ .... ..l 8 17
.514
LA . Clippm ......... l9 19 .SOO
Satnmcmo ............ \G 2.S .286

week,

'

GO

WESTERN CONFERENCE

THE WEEK

STREIT I.OOKS

4.0hl~Sl.-----MlM

the NBA .. :

EASTERN CONFERENCE

....;....---Sports briefs-----

BOOK
SALE
·•1· •a ·. · ss

teams, Villanova upset No. 21
Seton Hall 73-68 in overtime, No.
14 North Carolina defeated Maryland 96-76 and No. 19 Tulane routed New Orleans 83-61.
Walters, who leads Kansas with
a ! .~·point average, said he had
trouble getting into the flow of the
offense until overtime. But fatigue
wasn' L a factor because he got
enough rest, playing 31 ntinutes.
"Every time we go back in the
game, we're fresh," Walters said.
"At the end of lhe game we're not
gain~ to be holding our shorts and
gaspmg for air because we know
we've got guys who can come off
lhe bench and play."
Reserve Steve Woodberry added
19 points, hitting 7-of-10 shots and
going 3-for-3 from three-point
range, and Ben Davis came off the
bench to score 10 points.
A total of nine Kansas players
saw at least 15 minutes of action.
and the bench scored 39 points.
A familiar weapon for Kansas,
the three-point shot, helped bury
Missouri (11-2) in overtime. Walters and Woodberry each hit a
three-pointer in the extra period.
Anthony Peeler and reserve
Lamont Frazier carried Missouri in
lhe second half to force the overtime, combining for all but eight of
lhe Tigers' 37 points.
ViUanova73
No. 21 Seton Hal168 (OT)

Scoreboard

Dumars' trey helps Detroit hand
Dallas 84-81 defeat Monday night

Hannan Trace, Kyger Creek, Oak
Hill also record SVAC victories
Hannan Trace's girls basketball
team knocked off visiting Symmes
Valley 49-32 Monday night to join
Nort h Gallia and Eastern at the
SVAC summit.
The Wildcats (8-3, 5-1). who
kept scoring while the Vikings'
o[[ense went on vacation after lhe
first quarter, were led by a pair of
juniors - point guard Lucy Mullens, who scored a game-high !4
points, and forward/center
Stephanie Stapleton, who chalked
up II points and a game-high 18
rebounds. This was lhe firSt time
Stapleton has posted double figures
in scoring and rebounds this season .
Senior center Jennifer Owens
led the Vikings (3-6, 3-2) with 12
points.
Thursday's agenda will have
Hannan Trace entertaining North
Gallia, while Symmes Valley will
host Eastern.
Quarter totals
Hannan Trace ..... \2 13 12 12 = 49
Symmes VaUey .. IO 6 8 8 = 32
Hannan Trace (49)- Mullens
7-0-0= 14; Stephanie Stapleton 3-05= II; Ours 3-0-0=6; M. Sanders 20-1=5; Thomas 2-0-1=5; Sheila
Stapleton 1-0-2=4; Rossiter 0-0·
2=2; Triplett 1-0-0=2. Totals-

.

Kansas, Villanova win college games

TUesday, January 14, 1992
Page-4

With 54-30 win over Pirates Monday night,

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
It started at home. ll ended at
home.
North Gallia's eight-game winning streak, which began with a
win over Southwestern on the
Pirates· home court in the North
Gallia In vitational in December,
ended with a 54-30 loss to Dawn
Heideman's Eastern Eagles Monday night.
"We kicked a little behind on
rebounds.'' said Heideman, whose
cagers ruled lhe boards en route to
boosting !heir record to 6-3 overall
and 5-1 in lhe SVAC, good for a
three-way tie for'firsi plaa· wnh
the Pirates and Hannan Trace - a
49-32 winner over Symmes Valley.
The Eagles scored the game's
first seven points in lhe first four
mmutes, but lhe Pirates, who had
their share of shots fall far short of
the rim , played enough aggressive
defense 10 evaporate lhe four-point
lead Eas tern had in the la st two
minutes of lhe first quarter on baske ts by junior forward Belh Salisbury (long jumper. :54) and freshman (not junior, as was reponed
earlier in the season) forward Nickie Meade (layup, :46) and tie the
game at 11 -11.
Then after Eagle guard/forward
Lee Gillilan missed a 17-foot
jumper from lhe left wing with 34
seconds left. Salisbury got lhe ball
into lhe hands of sophomore guard
Dama Twyman, who canned a
ju mper from the left baseline to
give the Pirates a 13-11 lead with
II seconds left.
"S hut lhe baseline off, and get
in front of them" was what Pirate
head coach David Moore told his
charges before lhe stan of lhe second frame, but after the first two
minutes of the quarter passed by
withou t a basket (Eastern had two
missed shots and a three-second
viola tion that short-circ uited its
possessions), Eagle guard Jaime
Wilson tied lhe game at 13-all wilh
a baseline jumper from lhe left side

Ohio

II ••1111
Dtlt
M += _.
TAIIP BAYIIlCCANIBII NoaodlloloWJIIt-..lllo-'&gt;4

TheFeb. 16game,includinglhe
'
halftime ceremony, will be .telenadonall
vised
y.
. ,
. • Johnson repeated Monday his
'

_J ~lans
to0 ~nicip·
atesummer.
in the
arcelona
ic:s this

TURNOVER IN PROGRESS - Though it seems that be bas
things well in hand, Seton Hall's Jerry Walker (left) is about to Jose
the ball after Villanova's Chris Walker reach~ in rrom behind to
knock it loose during Monday night's Big East matchup in East
Rutherrord, N.J., which the visiting Wildcats won 73-68 in over·
time. (AP)

Seles AP's 1991 Female
Athlete of the Year
By STEVE WILSTEIN
AP Sports Writer
MELBOURNE. Australia (AP)
- It was a time of ~littering triumphs and embarrassmg gaffes for
Monica Scles, a Grand Slam year
with a giant hole in the middle and
wild rumors swirling aU around.
Yet, in lhe end, the tall, lanky
teen with the grunting groundstrokes stood above all others as
the 1991 AP Female Athlete of lhc
Year.
Selected overwhelmingly by
sports writers and broadcasters,
Seles today joined a sterling list of
athletes. Just turned 18. she became
lhe youngest_winner since IS-yearold Olympic gold medal gymnast
Mary Lou Reuon in 1984.
"It means a lot to me because of
all the great athletes who have won
it, like Florence Griffilh Joyner and
Jackie Joyner-Kersee," Seles said
as she learned of the vote at the

Australian Open. "To be in that
group, and with Michael Jordan
winning the men's award, is a really great feeling."
Scles won all three of the Grand
Slams she entered- the Aus trali~n. French and U.S. Opens plus the Virginia Slims Championships while winning a record
$2.5 million and succeeding Stcffi
Graf as No. I.
In the balloting, Seles received
72 of 120 first-place votes.
AP-member sports writers and
broadcasters were asked to vote for
three athletes, with a first-place
vote worth five points. three points
for second and one point for third.
Selcs compiled 432 poinls. Tied
with 114 points were tennis player
Martina Navratilova, a two-time
winner, and golfer Pat Bradley.
Gymnast Kim Zrn~ was sec.
ond to Seles in first-place votes.
She got 10 and a total of 72 points.

Dawson, Alberts push Akron to
71-67 win over Cleveland State
By The Associated Press
Akron has won its first road
game in five tries this season,
thanks to sharp-eyed shooting by
Brian Dawson and Mark Alberts
down the so-etch.
" It came down to two big shots
at the end and we made both of
them," Akron head coach Coleman
Crawford said after the Zips beat
Cleveland State 71-67 in Mid-Continent Conference play Monday
night. "(f you want to win big
games, you have to make the big
shots.''

The victory improved Akron's
record to 6-5 overall and 2-1 in the
MCC. The Vikings lost their third
straight game, dropping to 7-6 and
0-3.
Cleveland State, trailing 63-50
with 7:55 left, went on a 17-4 run
to tie lhe game at67 with 1:45 lcfL
But Dawson and Alberts
responded wilh baskets in the fmal
1:30 and the Vikings missed two
three-point attempts in the final
seconds.
Ray Coleman had 23 points and.
10 rebounds lO''pace the Zips.
Gravelle Craig had 16 poin ~fo r
Cleveland State and Anthony Reed

had 12.
In non-conference action Monday, Matt Otto scored 17 points to
pace host Bowling Green in an 8260 victory over Dcfl3nce.
Michael Huger added 13 points,
Vada Burnett 12 and Tom Hall 10
for the Falcons (3-8). Joe Herman
of Defiance, an NCAA Division III
sc hool. led all scorers with 27
points. Dave Jerkcn scored 10 for
the Yellow Jackets (7-6).
En Rock Hill, S.C., Jamie Gladden scored 16 points to lead Xavier
(8 -4) to an 83-56 victory over
Winthrop (4-8).
Xavier is now 8-4, while
Winthrop falls to 4-8.
Winthrop scored f1rst on a dunk
by Eddie Gay just 14 seconds into
the game, but that was the Eagles'
only lead of the nighL The Muske·
teers connected on 14 of their first
18 field goal attempts and built a
53-23 halftime lead.
Mark Hailey scored 10 points to
lead Winthrop.
Elsewhere, Dyke beat Waynesburg, Pa., 85-76 and John Carroll
defeated Washington &amp; Jefferson

82·60.

CAR CARE
Qualiiy Service Before, During and
After the Sale.

.FRONT END
.ALIGNMENT

s·169s
Most Cars With

Rell!llar Wlleels

BRAKES
FRONT OR REAR
•11'111111 pidlllhOII
tAiturfiCI rotor/drum•
. •Rtpteh front 'bHrtngt
-fltbulld 1'111' whHI Cyllndlrl
•lrwpt~

$6200
(Soml-mol.lll~

:~

-·---·- , , "

Moll (oro
,., blt

pado,

IIAI,.

lddltlonat hlrdwn
ertr1 If natdtd.)

16111

•

'

·poMEROY
HOME AND AUTO
600 EAST IIAIN 992·2094 POMEROY, Oil.
SERVING THE AREA 25 YEARS

.......::::.!::.l:=f:'t":P.:wwt:":,*:.;:•=-:...-..
_

'

mntlrc'fllnd•r

•AoldiHt

--

..... ...--...

�.

The Daily Sentine\

By The Bend

•

tuesday, January 14, 1992

By BrianJ , Rl't!d

Laurel Cliff area news
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore
spent a few days with their daughter, Mrs. Sandi Gilmore of Amlin.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Beach,
Sabina, and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Van Inwagen, Bradbury, spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs.
Guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Howell over the holidays
were Mrs. Fran Klein and son,
Terry, Cocoa. Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Walker and sons, Brian and
Bradley, Jacksonville, Fla.; Lennie
Lyons of Orlando, Fla.; and Leslie
and Christopher Lyons of Missouri.
Gues-ts at the hOme of Mrs .
Emma Fox were Dick Roush and
daughter, Amanda. and Mr. and
Mrs . Bob Burke and Michael ,
Reynoldsburg.
Mr . and Mrs . Phil Wi se,
McConnelsville, visited Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs on Wednesday evening.
Iva Powell , Marge Fetty, An
and Bob Brafford, Columbus; Mrs.
Belly Dill , Mrs. Sharon Folmer,

New arrival
Bobby and Teresa William s,
Rutland, are announcing the birth
of their third child, a daughter, Hailey Noelle Williams. on Dec. 21 at
Holzer Medical Center.
The inf3nl weighed seve n
pounds and four ounces and was 20
inches long.
The William s have two other
children, Holley, age fi ve, and
Hannah, age 19 months.
Maternal grandparents arc
Dorothy Harden, Pomeroy, and the
late William Harden. "
Paternal grandparents are Bob
and Pat Williams, Rutland.

ELECTED - Love Batey of Meigs High School's Chapter of
VICA will represent the South Central Ohio District at the National VICA Headquarters in Washington D. C. during a conference
there Jan. 19-25. She was elected as female ambassador at the
recent VICA conference held in Columbus. A feature of that conference was to elect regional officers from the represented vocational schools. Candidates presenting skits and cam paign speeches
were Miranda Nicholson, Mary Stein, Jason Dowell, and Batey.
Voting delegates from Meigs were Valerie Wilson, Scott Whitlatch,
and Kyle Fausnaugh. Here JeiT Merickle, Ohio VICA Director,
congratuates Batey.

Comfort on rails

Literary club meets
and his father bocame active in the
Indian Congress and Ghadi 's
movement. In 1950 Nehru was
established as a Super President
and was compared with such men
as Churchi ll , Roosevelt, Lenin,
Mao.
Mrs. Carl Horky, vice president,
conducted the meeting and roll call
was conducted with members reading a recent new clipping about
India.
Light refreshments were served
by the hostess.

Books offered .

Oran~e.

He said the documents present- Poland, before he joined Russian
Lawyers' fees and expenses of
ed to the court record Treblinka National Army, formed to assist the defending Demjailjuk have drained
guard Tavel Leleko saying three German army, in Graz, Austria. the family' s ~;wings, and Demjantimes in 1945 that the Treblinka But the defense has no evidence to juk's house in suburban Seven
gas chamber -guard was Ukrainian back up the alibi.
Hills has been ·remongaged, Nishnative Ivan Marchenko. No menmc .sa 1d .
lion was made of compatriot Ivan
Demjanjuk.
Demjanjuk changed his first
name to John when he became an
.
. . . 958
Amencan
clUzen m I .
At a hear1'ng ·m December, Pros;;. r
·
M' h I Sh k d 'd h
ccutor •c ae
a e sal t e
YOUNGS
Marchenko argument was a ploy
TOWN, Ohio (AP)City Prosecutor Maureen Cronin
by Sheftel to dramatize the appeal. Two men were arraigned on said Williams was arraigned MonThe prosecuuon has noted that charges of trying to infiltrate a day on 11 counts in the hostage
Demjanjuk gave his mother's juvenile detention center in an inCident at the center. The hostages
maiden name as Marchenko in his app_arent _attempt to take reprisals were freed unhanmed.
1948 U.S. visa application, agamst w1tnesses to the slayings of
The charges against Williams
although that was not her maiden four men.
include aggravated burglary, ~ggraname.
Willie Williams, 34, of vated robbery, kidnapping and
What became of Ivan Youngstown, has been charged weapons and escape counts. He
Marchenko is not known, but the with four counts of aggravated could be sentenced to death if he is
Israeli coun has had to consider the mu:der 10 the quadruple slayings, convicted of any of the slayings.
value of statements given about whtch occurred on Labor Day last
Keiper was arraigned on one
Marchcnko in past Soviet war- year.
count each of aggravated burglary,
crimes trials by other Treblinka
Police said Williams, a 16-year- compl icity to kidnapping, imperguards. . .
_
old juvenile and Paul Keiper, 29, of sonating an officer and helping
DernJanjuk chums to have been Cleveland, posed as police officers bring a weapon into a jail. He could
a prisoner of war, first in Rovno in Sunday when they entered the face a maximum of 25 .years in
. and Iater 1n
. Ch elm, Mah omng
. County Juven il e Just1ce
.
'
. d of all counts,
Ukrame
pnson
1'f conv1cte
•llliCeiiiniiter.
• • • •~M~s·~=·~s:ai~d...

ESC ape d

• rnat e h0Jd s
In
hOS t ages at cnunty J•a"l
I

L. Van John son, Minersv ille,
was also named to the dean's list at
Hocking College in Nelsonville.
His name was omitted from the list
which was sent to The Daily Sentinel by the college.

•'

''

H
t ' ..,

E

.,. ,

Slate Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced.even more by
insuring both your car
and home with the Slate
Auto Companies.

Mildred Morehead, by exec., Pt.
lots, to Terry Garland Taylor and
Carolyn Sue Taylor, Lebanon.
Jeffrey L. Knighting a~d Rexanne Knighting, .!SA, to Home
National Bani!:, Sutton.
Let us tell you jusl
Caralee Bailey, dec'd, affid, to,
Violet Jean Miller, Middlepon Vil·how much your savings
lage.
can be.
Violet Jean Miller and Donald
H. Miller, 14/IOOA, to Hope Bap.
tist Church Inc., Middleport Vii·
1011.
.
~
· Eloise M. Picken, parcels, to lage.
.Donald I.amben and Tina A. Lam·
bed, Bedford.
·
11111uuce Service•
Michael Andrew Bentz, Jr.,
d«'d, cen. of trans, to Ethel F.
214 EAST MAIN
Deniz, Chester.
.
A holding company is OQe
Raymond L. DeWitt, 17A., to
POMEROY .·
.Cecil D. Frye and Vickie J. Frye, whose principal assets.are the secu. rlties 1t owns in companies· that
992·6687
Rudlnd.
.
actually
provide-gOods
or
services.
,Biclon C. Walburn and Gladys
L, :Wilburn, lot 23, to Ropen H. . The usual reason for forming a
holding company is to enable one
8illon, Midcllclot Village.
... Aulo
COIJ)Oration
and its dircciOIS 10 con·
1CN""D P. Warmke, parcels, to
IIIli seventl companies by holdlnl a 1
1_, Wlllllke. Salem.
.
majority of their stock.
.........,_ _ __ ___....;.....~
MJrion ~~~~. oec'd cen.

· .it. rh vU ~o&lt;i.: Merrts. Gallra Of M ason countre&gt; mtr sl be pre
p ard
· R r •ccrvr ~ $ ~0 drscoufll lor dd S p.:r rd 111 &lt;Hhr.rncc
' ht!i~ arh
Grvt:awav ~ud Fou ud ads 1rndrlf 1 5 wonh wrll be

J

54.00

15
15

1
3
6

Rates .uc lor con~oecutrve runs. bf o tr.en up da)'!i. wrll be ch arycd
to r e ach dcry as separate ads

" P~r cu ol .tr:11or all ca prtal l l."'tcr s r\ d o r r blt~· Jmcc o t lUI cost
• 7 ll&lt;! llll lnH! type un ly u sr!fl
'S ell\ Ill! ~ •~ rmt ~~~p o n srb lr~ tnr crrur s dill! I lrr st day (Chr~ck
lor r~ rrurs lrr st day ad rrrrr~ 111 paJJml C.rlllmlllltl 2 00 p m
rl .rv ,rltm ~ubi! cat ro n t o malrrl c orrect run
'Ad s that rrr u ~ tlu~ vard rn arlv a n cc ""~
C.rrd ol Tlr;rnlr ~
Hoi!~IJ¥ A rh
lro Mt~nro r r;u tr
Y;rut S . +lr ~

• A c t.~~· lr t."&lt;; l illl\lt!l l · ~ enr t.~ ll , .. .. ..:. ~d +II 1 ht: D&lt;~rly s . ,ntrrtl!'l I Cl
Ct~ VI
c Lr ss rh t.'tltlr ~ vl ,tv Busu&gt;t.":&gt;S C,11d .mrl lc!t .rl n o lu:cs)
w1ll ,,l ~ u ••tJilClll rn lli u Pt Pl v.rs;mt flr!( j+ SH~r Jnrilhr~ G olllr
pull ~ D;rrlv Trrh11 rw. l!l.rdnn \t o ver 18.000 humtllo

COPV DI:ADliN t::
MONOAV PAPER
lUES DAY PAP ER
WWNF S DAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
~HIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

BULLETIN

DA\' BEF ORE PUBLICATIO N
11 00 AM SATUR D AY
700PM MONDAY
2 00 PM lUESDAV
2 00 PM WEO NESOAV
2 00 PM THURSDAY
200P M FRIDAY

RUTLAND LEGION HALL
Beach Grove Rd.. Rutland, Ohio
MARLIN'S
WHITE'S HILL BAND
Featunng good old counll'f mu~ c
with Marlin Wolle, Benny Wolle.
Emily Wolfe, Robin Wolfe, Rick
Saunders, Tony Combs, Charlie
Williamson and (Jennie Jeffers
Admission $2.00-Under 12 $1 .00
Evel'f Friday Nighl9-12 P.M.
Round Dancing-Be There!

550

oo

STERLING SILVER
EARRINGS .

50% on

UPTO

SO%

Yz ct. t.!w. EMERALD
&amp; DIAM ND 14K RING
WAS$S96.00
NOW
.

$23800

CHECK1Hl

$16

14K DIAMOND
HEART RING
WAS $152.00 $61 00
NOW
. 14K DIAMOND · ·
EARRIMGS
WAS $39.95 $1995
NOW
.

,.. The Famd~ Of
!:&lt; HERBERT L. AYRE
like to tha"k
whoheied
death o our

Fu"'rol

Roger

Thanks! .

ER

News notes

MON.•SAT.
I
9:30·5;00

5

Happy Ads

6 lost and Found
1

V'ard Sale \pard rn altva11ccl

8

Pubh c Sale &amp; AlrC iron
Warnt!d to Buy

32

M obt l~ Home~ lrH S&lt;.tlc

33

FJrm ~

3I

Busrnes s Burl&lt;l~ny ~

35

lot ~

36

Real Es tal c W amed

42
43

44

Services
l'lll'&lt;'r I h&lt;•

1.'/m.•ifi•·tl fmJ.il' ·'

11
12

full! 1will!( ·,,.{&lt;'f'h&lt; ;,,. ,. xdw11 /(''·' ···

13
14
15

Galh a C ounty
Area Code 6 14

...

Mergs Co unty
Aru Code 614

Gallrpolrs

992

367 Chostme
388 Vmton
246 Rro Grande

Mo~ :;, on

Co. WV
An~ a Code 304

M+ddloporl

Pommoy
985 Chester
843 Pan land
247 Leun fall t
949 Racrne
74 2 Rutland
667 Co ol~+lle

256 Guvan Drst
643 ArabtaOrst
379 Walnut

SHRUB

....,.
675

p, Pl11asant

16
17
1,8

47
48

He loWantud
Srtuatron Wanted
lllSUianct!
Busm ess TramrrHI
Schools &amp; hrstr1ic 1run
R a d1 0 ~ l\1 &amp; CB Rr: p;~rr
Mrtcellant!'Ou s
Walllt!dToO o

49

li1Uijhl4fill
Busrnes s Opp or tunrtv

12 Money to loan

57
58

11

~9

21

Proftl5srortal

6 t
62
63
64

Salr~

&amp; Acreagt'

55
56

Sef¥1 CI:'S

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BilL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
6-12-90-tln

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLOOZER ,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

The Family Of
ARDITH BARTON
Wishes .to thank ·
everyone for ell the
love shown to ua at the
death of our loved one
who went to his eternal
home January 4th.
. Speci•lthanka to
Dr. Westmoreland,
Nursing Staff at
Pleasant Valley
Hosp~al, Ewing
Funeral Home, Paator
Wllllamo and frlenda of
the Laurel ClltfFrl!l
Methodist Church, the
alngera, friends,
neighbor•, end
relative• tor food,
flowers, and pray,era. '
1\'lay God blue eich
aryd everyone of you.
· May God who called.
ourdear.JOved one
home
ond granted him
peoce and rest
glve ua the atrength
and t
Ieith to aay that He
alone knew beat.

JAYMA
Quality
Stone Co.

••mnma

Trans ortation
/1
72

73
J ell
7!;

76
17
7B
79

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614-992-b637
St. Rt.7
Cheshire, OH.
1

RACINE GUN
CLUB

13 or

GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only
9-6-tf

992-5553
OR TOll FREE
1·800·848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

Rl
82
8)
84
8fl
86
7

a

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING &amp;
REMOVAL
Pruning and Landscaflng
Free EstlmaloS"'2 5 Yn. 11·
Call alter 6 p.m. -992-29 8

FOREVER
BRONZE
RACINE
14 TANNING
SESSIONS..., 114°0
Offer Good Thru
Feb. 14

949·2826
OPEN 9 AM-9 PM
1-6-1 mo. d.

WANTED
Low Grade Oak
· Saw logs

CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•
-GuHer Work .

--EIOctotcaland Plumbing
-Rooting
-Interior &amp; Exterior

PalnUng
.(FREE ESTIMATES/
V. C. YOUNG II
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
...
1hW90~1

Nowln
· Stqck
AIR CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

E''

l

MOBILE HOME .
. HEATING &amp;
ltdled • Saffer. ScHtl R.. tH Rt. 141 .
1614)446-.9416., 1-100-872-5967

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
·R~Iacemen1

indow

•RoollnPc
•lnsula1 on
JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097
5.39 Bryan Place ·
Mlcldlepor~ Ohio
·
11114/Hn

1,00
Delivered To
OHIO PALLET (0
Pomeroy, Ohio

614·99 2·6461

1-7-92, 1 m

DK's FARM TOYS
by ERTL
Disfilayed at The
Qua i~ Print Shop
OURS:
8:30 am-4:00 pm
614·992·3394
Or Call
742·3020 Evenings
12·2-91-1 mo: pd.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
Now Gara1•• • Rlplaco11tn\ Windows
.
loo• Additioas • Rooting
f:OMMERCIAI.. aad RESIDI:NTIU
'

FREE ESTIMATt:S

614·949•2801
.lllo
.

asuper market
for everything"

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Gara9es
•Comp ete
Remodeling
Slop &amp;Compare
Free Estimates

985·4473
667·6179
5·31·'90-tfn

$150 per

.

YOUNG'S

-

or 949•2860
Sunday Calls)
.
12/311111 l

, ...

CLASSIFIED ADS

((Cli'SSIPI!D. APS B}lre to gat ta~un~)
· New~ Re·Done
COUN YMOBILE
HOME PARK
has nice homesltes
available lor up lo
80 homes.
JUST OFF RT. 33
Only 575/er mo.
Ca
614-992·5528 or
385~8221 •
12-11-1 mo.
•

Auto s lor Salu
Tnr c lr ~ lo r SaltJ
\lit11S8o4WD s
Motony Cit$
Bo&lt;rts &amp; Mot on lrr r S.1!t:
Aut u Part s llr ACCt:S!&gt;OII t:!r
Aut o Rep.m
Ca mprn!J Ertrr iVIll l"' \1
C,mr pers &amp; M ~lo r H m1 w~

Services

Houw hol d Goods
Sporting Goods
Anl rque s
Mr H M erc h artdi SI:
Burldrny Supplrts
Pet s lo r Sal~
M u sr c allnstrwnt:lll s
FrwlS &amp; \l ~g tll a bltl$
f.or Sale or Trade

Swedllearl Special

AUTO
PARTS
In

1-13-'92'·1 mo.

1 card of Thanks

lr~estoct.
Hay &amp; Gro~rn

Home lrnprovu ment ~
Plumbmgllr H11;Jtm 11
E .o.c ih'atrn\1
Electncal &amp; Rt!lnur~a11tJn
Gr!nl.'fal Haulony
Mob1l 11 H unr c R l:'p lt H
u ph o l ~ l c r ~

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

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY .
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28
FactoSf, Choko
12 Gauge olgun Only
Strhtly Enforced
9-13-'91-tln

REMOVAL

Farm Equrpnnmt
W auu: d to Buy

6S Seed Sr hrlllller

Merchandise
51
52

54

Apple Grovtl

713 Mason
882 New Hav e n
895 let au
937 Bullaio

45

46

lor

Hou s.es l or Rent
M obrl c H omes l or R cu t
Farm s l or R cr11
Apartrn t..•fU for Rr• rll
Furnr!&gt;hed Ru o m ~
., Spa ~ c lor Rt~rr t
Want e d to Re nt
Equrp!llent l o r R1:n1
Forle asc

53

lt:on

GUN SHOOT

&amp; TREE

992~3838

wAss~~~s

4 Grveawa.,

Empl~yment

4:30 P. M. DAY BUORE

from Shade) , Ev~nyone Welcome .

ALL 14K GOLD
CHAINS &amp; BRACELETS

J 1 H onms l or Sale

(1J

Proporty o.W.S ~.BOO~- n.fa1111 .
(ai61H9HIIM lo .

1 ct. t.w. DIAMOND
14K CLUSTER _RING

Annoucemtlfll ~

~

B

bolo qoollyiog "'""' "~ ,.., ''' m"' J~ , ..

14K DIAMOND.&amp;
14K ·SOLID GOLD
'A ct. t.w. DIAMOND
RUBY PENDANT
HEART EARRINGS
14K CLUSTER RING
400
WAS $25.00 $l250 WAS $576.00
3.
000 WAS $412.00
NOW
.
NOW
· NOW

In Memory

Business Services

" oRoio. ~ Bi, 3lolls,_ 2goa:
,"~od I BR 11'1-

I. OFF!

2

41

PortO! "'"" f""~ awiobo. Tho ~·· IMis '""
.OXed Ia ~. ~ S73.900 aol ""'"
~no•~ al up lo 80'1i of ~IChoo '"""I ""'lo F

SALE
SAVE UP tO ~-gal

.OS ! dav

51 .30 / day

1 Ca rd nl Thanks

3

Farm Suppli es
&amp; Livestock

Real Estale

d~ :; il t I'IU Ch•9C

PRICE REDUCED!

STOCK OVERFLOW -

.60

$13.00

15
15

10

.20
30
42

56.00
S9 00

15

Announcements

Ovl!r 15 Words

Rate

Words

Day s

Monthly

PO UC II:S

I II II

RATES

TRIM arid

ROGAN

~lt
·"''"'•ne• eo,..,..,.,••

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21511
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until MOON SATURDAY
· ClOSED SUNDAY

PUBLICATION

$2

AUTO

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

d;

Name omitted

of trans., to Linda S. Warner, nka,
Linda S. Cozan, Pomeroy Village.
Jesse P. Blount and Eva M.
Blount, 1.174 A, to Jesse P. Blount,
Trustee and Eva M. Blount,
Trustee, Sutton.
Joseph D. Glenn and Janice M.
Glenn, parcels, to Mary J. Murray,

''Now we've proven he is not 'Ivan
the Terrible,' and they just want to
dragiton.Whenisitenough?"
John DemjanjukJr. added that it
is easier speaking about case evidence than family woes.
"It's difficult to speak about
emotions," he said. "We've been
in this thing for so long. We've had
t. k
d
h
,
o eep ourse1ves •ocuse on w at
we knew deep down inside what
.
was nght. From the yery begmmng we knew he was mnocent
'bl
··· ·
1 th. 'k th . . .
the ~~g~\!,~~h~~~~~ a~~h~~
him and this family by the Justice
Department and the State of
1 1..
sr~~mjaAjuk was extradited from
the United States to Israel in 1986
nine ears after tile Justice De an:
men/moved to revoke his U.Spcitizcnshi .
lsrfcli defense auorne Yoram
Sheftel now says he has Jbo pages
of documents obtained fro m the
.department 's Office of Special
Investigations showing that Israeli
and U.S. rosecutors knew in
Au ust 197P8 D . . k a
t
g
emJanJU w s no
"Ivan."

~-

Land transfers listed
Larry 0 . Young and Ncuie L.
Young, parcel, to Michael R. Harris and Lori L. Harris, Orange.
Geneva J. Frecker, undivided
II 15th int. ; to Mona G.. Frccker,
Chester.
Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
36.49A, to lack Ervin and Joyce
Ervin, Salem.
Raymond E. Maxson and
Frances Bernita Maxson, 4.157A,
to John Carlton Maxson, Chester.
Charles L. Kitchen and Helen
Lynn Kitchen, traCts, to Charles L.
Kitchen and Helen L. Kitchen ,
MiddlepM Village.
Clifton H. Williams and Mil dred C. Williams, 100 A., to
Clifton H. Williams, Trustee and
Mildred C. Williams, Trustee, Sut-

POMEROY - The Meigs County Salon, Eight and Fony, will,meet ·
Tuesday evening at the home of
Marge Feuy, weather permitting.
Inclement weather will cancel the
meeting.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
- The Pomeroy
TUESDAY
Merchants
Association
will meet
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Wednesday at 8:30a.m. at the conwill meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the feren ce room of Bank One. All
senior citizens center in Pomeroy. members arc urged to attend as this
is the fust meeting of tile new year.
All members are urged to attend.
SYRACUSE- The Syracuse ·
LONG BOTTOM - The Flame
Homemakers
Club will meet -,
Fellowship Chapter will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Faith Full Wednesday at 10 a.m. Crafts will ·
Gospel Church in Long Bollom. be in the morning. Bring men's colCass Twitchell, Ashland, will be ored handkerchiefs, double bias .
the guest speaker. Twitchell is a binding, eyelet or lace, scissors, ·
·
field representative for World as a and needle and thread. •
SYRACUSESyracuse
Village
Vision.
RACINE - The Racine Board of Council will meet in continued sesPublic Affairs will meet Tuesday at sion on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the -,;
~:
1:15 p.m. at the council chambers vi llage haiL
THURSDAY
•
at Star Mill Park.
POMEROY -The Meigs Coun- ~
LEBANON TWP. - A special
ty
Board of Elections will meet ~
meeting of Lebanon Township
Trustees will be held on Tuesday at Thursday at 4 p.m. at the board '
office, I 08 Mechanic Street in
7 p.m. at the township building.
·
,:;;
CHESHIRE - The Gallia-Meigs Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT - The regular '~
Community Action Agency will
sponsor a free clothing day for low membership meeting of the Mid- ·:
income persons on Tuesday from 9 dleport Fire Department will be :
a.m. to noon at the old high school held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. There · •·
will be an in·scrvice training ses- :
building in Cheshire.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The sion after the meeting concerning ¥
Orange Town ship Trustees will the cardiac thumper. All members . :
'
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the are urged to auend.
RACINE - The Racine Amerihome of clerk, Susan Pullins, to
complete appropriations and dis· ca n Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
cuss other mauers.
home.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Child Conservation League
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church. Tammie Mash will give a
BROCTON, N.Y. (AP) demonstration on stained glass.
Inventor and businessman George Favors will also be made for a
M. Pullman, born in Brocton in nursing home.
1831, moved to Chicago in 1855 to
produce improved railway sleeping
cars . They featured upper and
lower benhs, separated by cunains.
A cookbook entitled "Sharing. One of his early models was
Recipes"
from the Reedsville Unit-_.
used in Abraham Lincoln's funeral
ed
Methodist
Church is now avail- ,
train in 1865.
able.
The
book'
features recipes~'
Pullman introduced the dining
car in 1868 and the parlor car in from friends and members of tile_
1887. By 1890, Pullman cars were church at a cost of $5 per book.
operated on all major American Proceeds will benefit the church.
railroads. George Pullman died in Those interested in purchasing ll' ,
book may call any member o_f ~ ::
1897.
church congregation or 378-6338 ..

Community Calendar items
.... JIJ,PCllr. two days before an event
the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

Mrs. Donna G1lmore and Mrs. MilMrs. Dwight Wallace reviewed
dred Jacobs call ed on Mrs. Ann the book "Murder at the Palace" by
Mash during the holidays.
Elliott Roosevelt, and Florence
Mr. and Mrs . Clifford Jacobs Smith reviewed the book "Nehru"
and Larry Jacobs spent two weeks by tylichacl Brecher at the recent
in Clearwater and Largo, Fla. as the meeting of tile Middleport Literary
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs Club held at the home of Mrs .
and family and Mr. and Mrs. Dar- Chester ElWin .
rin Campbell.
In her review Mrs. Wallace statDarbi Dorst, Marysville, spent a ed the story takes place at th e
few days with Mr. and Mrs. James Buckingham Palace home of the
Gilmore.
King and Queen of England. It is
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Eblen, Ash- the scene of a brutal murder. First
ley and Julia , and Mr. and Mrs. Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, who is
Woodrow Mora were Friday dinner visiting the Palace as an emissary
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Eblen at the request of her hlJ$band, once
and daughter, Becky.
again takes on the dual role as First
Re.v. and Mrs. William Williams Sleuth. On the night of his murder,
spent Christmas with friends and Sir Anthony Brooke-Hardin gc
relatives in Lima.
planned a cocktail party with an
Mrs. Ann Mash cntenaincd with unusual guest list. The guests were
a Chrisunas pany at her home. Mr. enemies of the host and each had a
and Mrs . Bob Mash, Christi and strong motive for wanting him
Bobbie, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne dead. They gather at the suite in Sir
Pullins and son, Jesse, Mr. and Anthony's room in the Palace only
Mrs. Butch Mash, Chuck , Bert, - to find his dead battered body in
Leigh and Lisa attended.
the library . Eleanor Rooseve lt
along with her body guard from
Scotland yard solve the murder.
Miss Smith stated in her review
that "Nehru" is certainly the best
book that has been published on
Nehru. Nehru was a son of a
wealthy barri ster . Edu ca ted at
home until the age of 15, he spent
the next seven years in England
studying law . He came home and
went into a law firm with his father
at the age of 22. He and his wife
only had one child, Indira. Nehru

HAILEY WILLIAMS

theCLEVELAND (AP) - Th1s 1s in Jerusalern .in April 1988 of being
.an _week the.Jamily of Jobn Dem- that war cnmmal a~d was senJUk \opes Israel~ Supreme tenced to death f~rcrunes a!\amst
WII free the reured Cleve- hu~amty, spec~f!Cally cnmes
f 1 futo worker they say has been agamst the J ew1sh people . He
a se Y acc~sed of bemg a mon- _ appealed m 1989.
~ou s N~.z1 death CS!fiP ~uard
·:1r ever the~e was~ Da~id vs.
~':"n as Ivan tile Temble.
Gohath ~~ttl~ m JudiCJ.al hlSlory,
. . The fact;', show clearly that h.e thiS IS It, _said ~mjanjuk Jr., 26,
IS mnocent, sa1d the convrcted who has hved w1th accusations
man's son John DemJ·anJ.Uk Jr
. t h' f th .
h
11
" Th b d.
. .
'
. agams IS a_ er smce e w~s .
~ ur en of _bnng_ mg thts case " I fumly beheve we are gomg to
to a JUS! conclusiOn IS now on the prevail "
St t f I
I Ih h
.
.
a c o srae • a t o~g I thmk
Demjanjuk's family, including
~;~· a~~~~~ues should mtervene at his wife, Vera, and daughte~ 'c-Ydia
poh ·
.
and Irene, and John Jr., ms1sted
d T e coun Will convene Wednes- from the stan of_ the case m the late
ay to rule on accepung documents 1970s that DemranJuk (pronounced
t~at a defense att~m.ey says sup110n dem-Y AHN-y?&lt;Jk) was a victim of
c a1ms that DemJanJ_uk was framed miStaken 1denbty.
by Israel andtheUmted States.
The years of allegations and
But the JUd1c1al panel must coun battl~s ha-:e created a seemwe1~h newly subm1tted eVIdence mgly n~ver-e~dmg n~ghun:u-e for
agamst teStimony of several _Tre- the fam1ly, srud DemJanJuk s sonbhnka survivors who 1denuf1ed 10-law Ed N1shmc,_ 36, the farmly
De~JanJ~ the notonous Ivan.
spokesman and duector of The
Ivan O)lCrated the gas_cham- John DemJanJulc Defense Fund.
bers. at Trebhnka, the Naz1 death N1shmc IS marned to the former
camp m Poland where 850,000 lret,t~ De'!'Janjuk.
.
Jews penshed 10 1942-1943.
We JUSt get more b1tter by the
. . k, 72 , was conviCt
. . ed day about th'IS th.mg, " he sa1'd .
De mJanJu

t,_:::;n

Consider this ...
There has been some misunder- ness (Prior to working with Dave
standing about the federal prison · Thomas in the Wendy's Corporation, he was a ~uidance counselor
that will be built in Lisbon, Ohio.
in
Columbus.)
Governor George Voinovich
The partnerships arc as follows:
announced last week that the $200
MEIGS
LOCAL - Bradbury Elemillion facility would be built
mentary
and Meigs Chiropractic
sometime next year.
Clinic;
Harrisonville
Elementary
This decision has nothing to do
and
Southern
Ohio
Coal
Company;
with the prison now being considered for construction in Meigs Middleport Elementary and PeoCounty. That facility would be a ples Bank; Pomeroy Elementary,
state prison, and the decision as to Bank One and Clark's Jewelry;
which of three Southeastern Ohio Rutland Elementary and Bank One;
counties will be the site of the Salem Center Elementary and
prison is expected to be announced Southern Ohio Coal Company; Salisbu ry Elementary and Kroger;
before the end of January.
Meigs Junior High and Vaughan's
Cardinal;
Meigs High, Big Wheel
A cookbook, filled with recipes
provided by .members and friends and Facemeyer Lumber Company.
SOUTHERN LOCAL - Letart
of Reedsville United Methodist
Church is now available. Entitled Falls Elementary and Anhur Hill
"Sharing Recipes", the cookbooks Greenhouses; Portland Elementary
cost $5 each and proceeds benefit and Harris Farms and Greenhouses;
church programming and physical Racine Elementary and Downing
improvements. They may be pur- Childs Mullen Musser Insurance;
chased from those who attend the Syrncuse Elementary and Pleaser's;
Southern Junior High, WMPO and
church.
Marshall Roush Produce; Southern
After months of planning, "Part- Junior High and .Racine Home
ners in Education" is now under- National Bank.
EASTERN LOCAL - Chester
way in Meigs County. The program
Elem
entary and Dairy Queen ;
teams each sc hool building in
Riverview
Eleme ntary and The
Meigs County with a business panncr. The cooperative program is Daily Senrinei ; Tuppers Plains
designed to benefit both schools Elementary and Tuppers Plains Chester Water District; Eastern
and businesses.
Harvey Austin, a motivational High School and Fanmers Bank and
speaker from Columbus, kicked off Savings Company.
Good luck to all partners!
the program last Tuesday eveni~g
with a "bang". He IS a dynamiC
speaker with a background in the
Take Care
fields of both education and busi-

The Dally Senunel-Page-7

Convicted Nazi guard's family insists he's innocent ·

Tuesday, January 14, 1992;
Page-6

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR
POMEROY
last markdown
on shoes
before closing
store.
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAt
10:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.
12/1211 mo.
USED APPLIANCES
90 DAY WARRANTY
WASHIRS-SIOOup
DRYIR5 -$69 up
RIFRIGIRATORI- 5100
RANGII-Gas-lloc.-$12 up
FRIIZIRS- $!25 up
MICRO OVINI- $79
KEN'S APPLIA CE
SERVICE
992-S33S or 985·3561
Aaoss Fr011 Post Offl&lt;t
POMIROY, OHIO
101301'89nfn

'f

N

1 and2
FURNISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available in
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
Starting at 5235 per mo.
Very mce 2 or 3 BR, 2 bath
house wlbas&amp;!J!ent and
carport, free gaa.

CALL 614-92-5528 or
395-8227
12-11.1

MICROWAVE OVEN
REPAIR
All lUKES
lrlnJ 11 In Or Wt

.Ic!l Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561
lcroot Fr.. Poo1 Oflko
217 I, Soco..t St.
POMEIOl, OHIO

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
. PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone
Dirt, Gravel and Coal'
Ucanaed and Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591
12-5-tfn
INDEPENDENT
CARPET ClEANERS
and TILE FlOOR CARE
•Reasonable Rates
oQuality Work
•Free Estimates

•Carpet Heo Fast D{Y
Time
•High Gloss on Tile
Floor Finish
MIKILIWII, Own•
Rt. I, Rutland, ott.
742·2451
3-t4-'91'ttn

J&amp;L BLOWN INSULATION
···-

MAS.TIC®THE NATiONiSTINEST
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
•Unbellable e.ntrJY u rinp
&lt;'-"'Dm fit-no l ntWial:lon me&amp;&amp;
•Nevw require&amp; palnt1i1

•S•hel til·ln few euy cleaalni.
•Uredme rr.me w.mty

........_

Call r... rrefl

JIIIUISQ

ft2.VJI

. .lllUOII

�i

1\I(!Sday, January 14, 1992

~The

Page

Dally Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements
3

Aimouncements

to btgln this weak

TownShip

rd. 'R

Ol\

11

0

0
•

Road construc:tion Ia n:pected

Spaal"', 304-675-1429:

0

L.atart

motorlsta.

Wanttd: Musician for country

and wnlam band. Call 614-446·

Mlel Area Singlll By Cholca

9246 anytime..

NO\ Chlnc:t. WrQa: Singles, P.O.
Box 1043, GaUipolll, Ohlo 45631.

2 Bags Of Ciothea, Good Used
Clot has, 614·441K»2!i9.

12

Situation
Wanted

14

Employment Services
11

Losl: Black Lab, With White
Feet, Vicinity : Bunce Road, 614367-7046.
Lost : Black Purse In Rio Grande
And S.R. 325 Area . Reward!
Da ytime: 614·245-5353 Ext. 219.

lost : Blonde Garman Shept'lard
Family Dog, Name : Duka
Vicinity: Kempar Hollow Road

From Rt .160, Gallipolis. 614·441·

1420 .

Help Wanted

$3501Day processing, phone orders! People call you. No ax·
perienca necessary. HI00-255-

0242.

'''POSTAL JOBS ·NOW HIRING
Clarks,
Sorttrs,
Carrltrl,
M.chanlcs. Start $11.41fhr. For
Empklymtnt lnlo. Call 1-218324·2102. 7a.m. - 1p.m., 7 Days.
AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn
Weaver 304·882·2645.

ADDRESSERS WANTED Immediately!
No
Experience
Necessary.
Process
FHA
l osl : male, Siberian Husky, 1 Mortgage Ratunds . Work At
blue aye, 1 brown eye, vary Home. Can 1·405-321-3064.
friendly, reward, Crew rd. area,
AerotHc And Gymnastic Instruc614·992·7168
tors Needed. Contact: Gallipolis
Losl: Tuppers Plains area, Parks And Recreation At 614·
bla ck, mala miniahne poodle 446-1424 Exl . 37.
with red collar, please call 614·
AUSTRALIA WANTS VOU
667-6855
Excellent
Pay,
Benaflts,

Yard Sale

Transportalion,

407-292-4&gt;17,

---,.---.:..;,.:.:._ _ _ 1 Exl. 571. 9a.m.-10p.m. Toll
ALL Yard Sales Musl Be Paid In Refunded.
Advance . DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m. BE ON T.V. Many Needed For
the day before ll'tt ad is to run . Commercials. Now Hiring All
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. Ages. For Casting Info. ean 615·
Friday. Monday ~ilion • 2:00 719-7111 Ext . T-150l
p.m. Saturday.
sorters,
carriers
Clerks,
mlltChanics. Start $11.4thr. Fo;
Public Sale
employment into. Ca/11-216-324·
&amp; Auction
2102, 7am -10pm, 7-day.

a

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lime auelicnur, complete
auction service. Licensed Ohio,
Wast Vkglnla, 304·773-5785.
f~JII

. DRIVERS
earn to $650 wkly, will train ,

121nch Plainer, 61-4·256-6268.
Honda Odyssey, Red , modal in
good cond. Call Kant 614-446·
4371, 614-446-4682.

Elderly lady s"ks ll v• In
housekeeper, comfortabla home
and modest salaf')', 614·9512-7888

Wanted to Buy

Help Wanted

MINISTRATOR for Child and
Family Development Program.
Must 11avt MAIMS Degree In
Special Educalion or Early
Childhood or relaled area plus
tha Preschool Handicapped Endorsement plus 30 related
graduate hours. Mul1 hav• ad·
minlstratlve skills. Salary based
on qualifications . Must have car
with valid driver's license.
Basad in Huntington to work In
four coutles of Cabell, Lincoln,
Mason &amp; Wayne. TEACHING
ASSISTANTIORIVER for Haad
Slart cer~ter at Mt. Flower
Elementary School. Must have
Hl~l'l Scl1ool Diploma or GED or
Ch1ld Oavalopmanl Associate
(CDA) Credenlial or AA In Early
Childhood.
Pre school
ex ·
parlance preferred. Must have
ear with Commercial Driver's
licnese (COL) or willing lo go
through !raining to obtain COL
License. For application apply
at Southwestern Community Ae·
tlon Council, lne. 540 Fifth Ave,
Hunlir~glon, between hours 9-4
daily. Final day for applications
Is Friday, January 17, 1992.
S.C.A.C., Inc. Is an EEO
Em~oyar.

LABORERS

Earn To ·$450 Wkly. Will Train
Sev~ral

Opanlngs, Also PT, 1·
800-551-1545.

$400

Wttkly,

51UHing

En·

Wanted to Do

,:.;....,...;.:,:.:.;.:.:,:_::_::.:,_ _
Will Babysit In My Home. Rod·
nay Araa. Raferancn Ava/Jablt.
Call &amp;14-245-5887.
Babysitting in my home, Racine
araa, cartllled and ref, 614·949·
2610 .
Chimney Cleaning And Stain·
lass Steel Relinif\9 "Serving Tri·
State 16 Years" 614-867-3618,
Caldwell Chimnay Sweep.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don 't
11aul your · logs to the mill . just
cal l304·675·1957.

Mauser .22 Cal. Slngla Shot Part-Time Live-In Babyslner.
Rilla (Sportar Old Model.) Par· Must Have Ralerancn. Stnd
tlcular Model Wanled, Good RtsponH To: Box CLA 105, c/o
Cond., 98% Or Beller, {Blue And Galllpolla Dally Tribune, 825
Wood) Desirad. Pram. Pric1 For Third Av1nU11, Galllpollt, OH
Pr1m. Gun. Call Johf'l On 45631.
We~kends Al614-446-0649 .
Part-tim• recaptlonl11, must be
Wanted to buy, Standing timber, personable, have lallphona
Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614·992· skllla, able to dN.I with public,
5449.
and handle general oHica
Wantetd To Buy: Junk Autos duties, $4.60hr, lJomeroy area,
Wilh Or Without Moton. Call send resume' to: Dally Sentinel,
Box 729H, Pomeroy, OH
Larry Livaly. 814-388-9303.
Top Prices Paid: All Old U.S. Representatives wanted tor
Coins, Gold Rings, Silnr Coins. Avon, no territory nacusary,
Gold Colnt. M.T.S. Coin Shop, free gift with slgn-up, Call Kay,
614-992-7180
15t S.Cond Avenue, Gallipolla.

NHdad: Clnlstian musicians •
druma, bass, guitar, keyboard.
Call Dal1 aHar 5:30 p.m. 304·
675-JI54.
Part lim1 bookkHper, computer
and typing skllla helpful. Apply
BoJ: C·10 care Point Plaannt
Raglatar, 200 Main St, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550.
Part Tlma workers to provide in
home personal cara. Diploma or
GED required. Ml.:lmum 17 hrs
par week. Apply to Prastara
Center, 213 Valle~ Drive, Polnt
Pleasant, WV. AAIEDE .

PIN down EXTRA

CA~H?!!

Will do babysitting any shift/
anyllme/ waakend s, Langsville
area, 614-742·2443
Ex ·

L.ocai Vending Route Year
Round Prollt's . f--800·955·0354.
Privata Pay Phones Low Cost,
High Return. 1...S00-226·4503.

Real Estate
Homes for Sale

3 Unit Rental, Situated On ~12
Acre LothMaintanance Frat, Ex·
callent S ape, 614-446 -8568.

Double Wide Witt11 Acre Land ,
Gallipolis Ferry, 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Electric, Central Air,
$37,000. 304-675·1217.
For Sale by Owner: 2 city lots, 3
bedroom home, large out bldg ,
convenient North Pdlnl Elemen·
tary and City Recreation Com-·
plex. 304-675·3278 for appolnl·
ment .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 14ll68 Shultz, mobile home,

2.------

9,, _ _ _ __
1(} _ _ _ __

4624.

good cond, 614·9g2·2111

1i73 Darlan, 12x50 mobile
hom1, good cond, $2,500. or
best offer. 304·578·2930.
1979 Clalrmonl 14x70, 3 btd·
rooms, 1 bath, wi ~,Jnderpenn l ng
and front porch, gas tleat,
central air, must mova, $8,500.

304.&amp;82·2341.

1981 Nashua mobile home,
14x64, 2 BR, 1· bath, newly
recarpetadh wasl1trldrytr, b16
fronl pore . Park Lane Court.
614-446-8732 ahar 5. $9,300.
1987 14J:72 Claylon Fanata sy,
2br, 2 Bath s Lcadtd, Haat
Pump, 1 Acre lot, $28,000. 614·

441-0331.

2 bedroom all alec, Ashton
Upland Rd, Hud accepted, 304·
2 bedroom mobile home com pletely furnisl1ed, washer I
dryer, AC, 304·773-5956.

PICKENS FURNITURE

67S-4066.

2br Mobile Homa On LarR•
Private lot , $215/Mo. Secunty
Deposit, Relerences. 614 -4462236, 614·446-2581.

montl1 Including lot rental, with
~elivery, complete setup, skl11·
mg, and steps, call 1·800..837·
6625
.
Real Nice 2br Trai!tJ, L.oc:ated 8
Milas Out Slate Route 218 Need
Deposit, Relerance. 614-2566251.

Apartment
for Rent

1 bdrm. unfurnished apts., par·
tial utili ties tree, deposit ami
references requ ired, 614-992·

Apt lor rant , good cond, good
locat ion, new appllancn, cor·
a;s.~~ .Sbth Sl &amp; Main, 304-

6

536 Jacks.ctn

Pika

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Otiva St., Oallipolla . New &amp; Used
lumhurt, heaters, Western &amp;
Work boott. 614-44&amp;-3159.
814-448-3158

LIVING ROOM: Sofa &amp; Chair,
$199 .00·

Chalro, sm.oo; Mllchlng 2
Door Hitch $348; Or $568.00

Sal; Ook Table1 42x62 Wllh I
Bow

BeCK

Chairs,

1629.00.BEDRDOM: Poster Bod·
room Su"• 15 pc.), 134g.oo; ~

Drawer Chtst, $44.95; Bunk
Bad, $229; Compl•ta full Matt
Set, $1C.S.OO Set; 1 pc. Cedar
Bedroom Sultar $891.00.0PEN:
Monday Ttlru Saturday, 9a.m. to
&amp;p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Tilt
Sp.m., 4 Miln Off Routa 7 On
Roull 1411n Centanary.

52 Sporting Goods

Completly
Furnished
Small
House, $25Dimo. Ptue Utilities,
And Deposit. 614·446.o338. Call
Before 7p.m.

1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
HouJ'I: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. lo 1 :00
p.m., Sundar 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.

Grey, Top Condhlon, Call 814·
256-6554.

1989 ford E1cort, LX, Steel

25 ln. co!Wota color t.v. Good

r:and. $110. 614-4411-2711

Big 4BR, 2 bath, Dlkoti drum
home built tor you S29,H5. 514816·7311. Dlapl1y mocMI now
open.
FltiWood For Sale, Will Dtllvar.

:,
" ::'·,Z:SU::;:.:::20::::;2·___,___

For Sale: Raductd Cctmpttte
Waterbad With A Semi Wavaleu
Manraaa. Call614""41~28.
Good, uHd wash..- and drytr,

.

3-

:' Old -And lim,

.

f

.

·

~

""

.

.. .

992~2-156.'
•'

~--~--~~~----~~~~~1

'

4hp Evanrudt motor, !rolling

10 G£T Jl(o:;o"'IIJ'ItD
El-f BRAt U.£

1---------12h V boHom boal , 15ft trailer,

~IND

mo1or, Mlnkola, 304·675·&gt;113.

63

AOHA 1989 Chait nut Gelding 90
Daya Training, 11101 Martz Stock
Trailer, Big Billy Royal Shew

Limousine Bull, reg/sterad wit11
::;_,., Calla Her 5 p.m. 614-388·

!•

Bud~tt Transml11lons, Ustd

re~ull,

Parts.
2263.

&amp;

!'

starting 1 ~ $99; Aula
614-245-5677, 614 -379-

New gas tanks, body parts, ont
ton truck wl'ltiis, radiatora,
floor mats, ate. 0 &amp; R Auto,
Ripley, WV. 304-372·:1933 or t 800·273-8585.

Campers

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
NO,.

1967 Camtro, $2,500, pculble
trad" and cash , 614-698·1049

8981, 614·446·7501 .

1m

Cadillle Eldorado 83,573
Milas, Tires Uke New. NHds
Some Work, $400, Su At 76
Bulavilla Road, 814-446-1821
1178

Dodge ~·• plck·up, 6M·"II2·2185

1971 Chrytllr Cordoba new
palnl, new tlrn, $1000, 304-&amp;75·
61l55 attar 5pm

D tueoday Night Flghtl

81

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPRDOA NG

BARNEY

Unconditional lifetime guaranlea. local refaranees fum ishtd .
Free est/males. Call collect 1·
B14-237-G488, day or nlghl.
Rogers Basement Wattrprooflng .

GIT OVER THAR
AN' THAW
THEM THINGS

304-m·

lnaurance And
Call AdVIIn-

Mono Black L.,.lhor Molorcyclo
Jacket:, LIH New ·Call Evanrn·p
OJ Wukondo. IW25Ui535.

Riding lown I!IOWO&lt;, 17!10. 304~58·1559.

2110. $550 OBO.

Household

Sam .._..,..., Army, Sllfllluo
b)' Sandnlllo P- ott~.
GoOds
*I&lt;Mn
c:..m,, wv. IIEAIII otl·
·'
.
·
77
Rlwentwood.
C.rhlrt
18 cu n lrostffM ,.tlfrwiet' lkJa co•all 120. pali'. Fri., 111.,
Bun.
~

uo. ·~
:::
~':-::"":=~::"
, =~
U Inch Stovo '~ -

11powrHor 11ant1
0020

f'!oo*

:r~~~~ta.~=
Alii! .,.._ -

mo.,117. Coil

.:IN. """'

· Cavia

· S.Wf·Vac

IPI'ft. CIIMr

1911 Dido Cullo.. Cloro, Vl&lt;'f
, Oood Corocltlori, . V.., U L"or"
~·w·,--s..l,

=··=:a:-NIH~· .u.s.
8llht Chttn ill"" 011 ....,, _

l14llllllll .

5I . lulldlnG

.

..

..

Cllj CoiiiM-

S•rvlca,

plin, pickup, and dellv1ry. 814-

.

pitlo CO¥tl'l, decks,
ecrMned rocwn1, put up Vinyl
l&amp;dlng Cl' trllllr lkil11ng. 114- ;,

WI- Anti- LAC~ 4 ~

•"-· ooo&lt;t
. e.,r . .''t
'

·-

.

1

Rlfrlgaratlon

'·

My•-•

~

·-

3

I I I I I I .I I

LETTERS TO

. '·

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
'- ''
Abrupt - Leech · Amuse • Rumple - REMEMBER

We had watched a man act very foolishly at a party.
My husband commented that when a man lorgets him:
self he usually does something everyone else will
REMEMBER.

BRIDGE

1-11-t%

NORTH
t A76
'K 6 4 3

• 10 6 3

+6 12

PHILLIP

WEST
tKJI0 8 4 3 2

ALDER

'9
t A 52

.

• '3

n't be deaf
to the bidding

EAST'
tQ 9 5
'QJ10875
• 764

+A

·-

SOUTH

-. 'A 2
t KQ J 9
tKQJ 10964
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

The filth rubber between the espio- ·

nage experts of Kaos and the govern·
ment counterespionage organization,

,.
Soulb

Control. sta rted badly lor Conlrol.
Maxwell Smarl. Agent 86, had !ailed

to play the right ca rd to guarantee de·

West

Nortb
Pass

East
2'

Pass

Pass

Pass

'·

Opening lead: " 9

feating Simon the Likable's lour-heart

..

contract.
Max had a chance to level the rubber on the second deal.
After the Chiel passed as dealer.
Siegfried, the German who runs a pris·
on camp and dog pound somewhere in
New Jersey. opened with a weak twobid in hear ts. This gave Max a problem. Even though his partner was a
passed hand, it was stoll possible lhat
they could make a slam. Yet where
were all the spades• He decided to bid
the contract he thought he could make:
five clubs.
·
Simon the Likable smiled as he led
the heart nine. Max won in hand with
the ace and immediately led a low
trump. But Siegfried won with the ace
and returned a hea rt. Simon rufled

down
"Oh, Max!" wailed the Chief whon~.
he saw Max's hand .
~ Don 't tell me l could have made·.·:
love clubs, Chic!"
·
"You could have made five clubs:·.
Max."
,
"I asked you not to tell me tbat." : • .
·Alter Siegfried 's opening bid, yQ)I ~
know Simon the Likable's lead mwtt'&gt;
be a singleton. You should win the first',,
trick in the dummy with the. hear~&gt;
king. cash the spade ace and discard..
the beart ace. Then lead a trump. They.','
cannot get more than their two minor- ··.

and cashed the diamond ace: one

@ 1. . IIEWU'.vEFI INTI. . . . . Allfl.

suit aces."
"Sorry. Chiel ."
Both Simon and Siegfried smiled.

'.

The World Almanad' Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

35 Football

coach -

1 Grafting lwlg
5 Fast aircraft
labbr.)
8 GIOISI fabric
12 Cltruo fruit
13 Motorists'

Parsoghlan
36 Oeslructlve
spree
38 High up
(2 wds.)
4Dib"n

org.

"}

i•
l

'I•

character

14 E pluribus 15 Percolata
otowlr
16 56, Roman
17- ·poly
18 Plug
2DBut
21 Bridge expert

41
42
45
49
50
51

52
53

Culbertson
22 For ISp.)
23 Egg producer
26 Ono who

5~

55
56
57

razes

30 Comedian

Caeur

Heaven•
Enorgy
Earnoat
PlalntiH
Orlnk slowly
Amorous
look
Sonny'au
Joke
anthology
Snow flold
Caps
650, Roman
Orr up

DOWN

31 Pine product
32 Blohop'o

1 Swear
2 By lho time
--to

province

33 -Khan
34 Till

Phoenix

I
t

t

l

3 M~rgorlno
4 Crab'• claw
5 Aclrtll Flold
6 KHp
711111 (cocktalll
8 Arrow polson
g - - tht

CJ Coach Haydon

Stereo.

corn 's Aslro-Gra~h predictions for lhe CANCER.(June 21.Jutr ;12) Associates
year ahead bJ n)oiiNng S1.25 pius along, will find you an agreeable lndl¥1dual to
• •
sell--addreosed, slampe&lt;l envelope to deal wllh today because ot your s!rong
8
k&gt;r DtmoctlcY
Aolro-~apll. c/o !his -aper, ~. o . desire to be cooperatl.e. Any concesBox91428, Cieveland,OH4-11D1·342B. slons you makil will be l11&amp;tched wllh
BERNICE·
; Frond/no C
.
Be IUIIIIO Slata your 20&lt;10.:: llgn. ,
eqUal ¥1g0r_
.
WOikl Nhr.
BEDEOSOL . AOUAIIIUI
(.lin. IDfall.
You haVe LEO (Julr D-Aiog.ll2) Focua your ener~ 700 Club With Pat
" grealer liolltlve reurve upon whlcP lo gy lodl)' on your most amb"lous objet·
Rab1rtton
draw !odoy than you may realize. This ~~-- What was lormally unattainable 10:15ill MOYIE: Ulzana'a Rlolii{R)
will only bec:omeevldet\l!oyou.lhough, can now be achieved - II you lry.
(2:001
when yau hiVe to dell with uneKpected, VIRGO. (Aut. D-e.pt. !12) Your ability
·
10:308
Croolt end Chlee
challenging deveiOjlrnentl.
to obiOrb knowledge and Information
PIICEI (M. »1111011 "' This Ia I could be k - lhen uSUiiloday. You 11:00(%1. (I)
Ill
pr&lt;ipltloua day 10 launch a new ondeav- should be tllf)IICiolly actrollal pitl&lt;lng up
or, tllf)IICiolly II .It jo a ..,,lura that in· , po\nteralrom lndh(lduola you dell wllh
(!) ltlght Court Q
.
·
(f)Naaw-.
I
cloM
trtoncl.l!
W\11
be
up
to
yOUI
an
1
,.10-ane
·
j'
hqwoMr, l,O"IIIIIIIIe_.,.
' · ~ (. . . lloOct. iD) Tile end r•
~-....,..Hoi Stereo.'
Ailtft (1. iatl 11•.... tl) ~ IUitl IOU'te ttoping'lor totioutct work OU!
"p ct)
1:1
.
you hiM !OCia'l wllio:ll ~ oflect as IOU •111otp1tetodoy, p . - you
.
On~
.
.
..
your llatul and mattrtal cttcumollnCa 111ve notNno to ct~Mo~. Cnfulty mon·
~
Your horllana 11'1 llkoty to be subetln· oiiOUid wortc out to your ~. Hor '*Y 11ep of whit IOU undertake.
.,
...
""i•·l;l
.
to
ll!hlnce
your
•
of
tcons
10
10111.
....,...,
8)
Sunllllne
lltlly..,._ ill tho Y"'
CIOtlllllllflln to .._ Into _ . . alluolite 'IRdiDIIIOIII ,OU ~I . at1ltiiP1
I!IJnllytoi- Jlili!DUIIy tilfiG'IOI!y.
tlonl today wNCII hove ..... - · l y
YfNI ., •• aURUM . . MJC:Ctll ' 11'1 Wei
lltra u~ b y - · TllllllliJ be due lo.
. . ac1pport you'" now 11141 you

.......

oallpo1~ mo

Electrical &amp;

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN THE SE SQUA RE S

=

a - m•
··. oaoa

,·

'llrthday·

'

FounhlndPino

q.

gives his ex-wife's new
ftan~e
s e marital advice .

Ob•r

'

C.rtar'l Plumbing

Complele lho chuckle uoled
by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

11)

GlorgH Crwk ·Ad. Pans, sup-

hiUII, 114-m.me, ovonlngo
245-9152.
1114 P1ymo&lt;Oh Grand Fury,
$800. 114-4414731. . &gt;
82 Plumblllg &amp;
11185 Nova 5 Spood, Rul Oood
Healing
WOJ\\ Cor, $1,110. 11~-4712.

· ·0
-·
t.T!JIII, z,aa,
1.11W ••
Millo,
Or ... OttW":'iM 41Hht:-: . -AC, ea.,.ro
.
-·-lnlwlor And-·
~ lat-. 114-14
t. ~ =';~.:=!l'r• ~112.
'
i:&amp;':i!i;,llli-aool..:tll;

Dlnllto Ill: -

~ 1117

, TV S

arvlc1 1 apeclallzlng
19M Buick C.ntury._2.5 Llttr In Ztnllh atao servicing mo,t
Automat!~
New
urn All Olhlr br1nd1. Hou11 calls , •Ito
Around N8'ff Paint Job, 58,000 some 1ppllanet ' raptlra. WV
Mlln, ' " To a•lianl 814·3111· 304-578-2398 Ohio 614~2454 .

-2~~9~·~--~=-~--~
::
1184 Camaro Z/.20, T·tops, 360
eng, auto, loaded, $3000, 304·

L.-.L.-.1·-•·'--..L.--.L.--1.

B11katbaH
Louisiana Slale al Alabama
(L)
10:001%18 Ol Todl)' 1140 Bryant
Gumbel and Katie Cotnic are
joined by formei anchors and
currant regulars 10 discuss
special moments and
perlormers from past years.
(1:00) Stereo. t:;J
(!) Nowa
(I) ~· Homotront Bill
Caswell gets drunK and
allon~hl Sloan family.
Stereo.

=:,:~:-:;,;-;::::-.,.---:-:~~ 1 Ron 1

AMIFM, caslllta, 4 cJl, naw II·

by sldel, needs repaii'l,

9:30 (I)

THAWIN' II

lmpraviiTianta:

1711-3319
.
. 441.0214.
!114 Dodge A~oo. 4 door, black, Wll build

Merchandose
5I

Home

THAT AIN'T ALL
THAT NEEDS

DUTil

lng, 614·256-1811.

.

NABF Lightwalghl
Championship: ~rankle
Mllchell (26·1 , 11 KOs) vs .
·Bryant Paden 115-7·3. 6
KOs). from ·Philadelphia (L)
Ill Nlllhvllle Now Stereo.
LIOTJ King Uvol
~ Fotller Dowling
A mummy's curse, art
forgery and a sling operallon
~d lo murder. (A) Stereo.

a

good 111111. 814-446-3410, 446-

B,.t1,. t.tc.
Mldlcart

a

{RI(2:00)

$12&amp;, As II, Whn Ia. 114· 256· Y11rs Experience On Oldaf' &amp;
1434.

8:30 (I) ~ CJ Hollie
Improvement
III Are You Being Sonod?
Ill Chuoch Sb'tllt S ~ Wltne.. to SuNIVII Q
9:00 1%18 01 Llw Order The
chief witness in a major FBI
Case is~nd murdered.
Slareo.
(I) ~
Ro11anne It's
almosl open warfare when
Becky isift In cl1arge. IR)
Slereo.
(!) Front! no C
III Nov• The fighiiO
axlingul~ oil wall fires In
Kuwall.!.!
ali 1121e MOVIE: 'Breaking
lhl 81/enco' CBS TUildaJ
Movie (2:00) Slereo. C
liD. MOVIE: Duet tJ One

Services

or 61~.Sga.7186

197'1 Chryater 300 Good Condl·

rr.S ~n-u:mc WHEN He:
TRIE610 BS CL.SVI:R.

j

Tow vilhicle, 1984 Escort 4dr
with tow bar and tighl packaga,
good condhion, 614·949·2941

Act:t"519·1020.
llgo H11ittl, 1

614-4~~-9580.

12-CCUR5E:

DINNS2 FROM vo:; RJ~S-

1880 Monte Carlo, real nice, 304·

Apt for rant by month or WMk,

rre A

TAKE-HOME o-liN~

&amp;

Motor Homes

lion, lmoldo OUI, 1\000. 614-445-

12:10)

!

6992.

79

Autos for Sale

USUAU.Y t.UAIJT

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

454 over 40 Chevrolet motor
$1,200. or bast oHtr. 304-675·

LlveS1ock

a

-- - - - - - - I
.Modlcal SuppiiH: Now Ancl :175-4=.;::437.:::,
Uotd WhloiCholro, 3 Whoolld 1981 ChoVJ ChoveUo,- good BlgOrSmoiii6M-441.0225.
SCoolon• Llftcholro, Ellolric bodJ, Interior. 20, HB, ~. AIC, Fraamen's Plumbing And Heat-

.
,SUpptlt~
~::-JS:.+a:~~ .u:ptr:[i.o..~. fi:li;;:rcLt::
i

G..H5 IIJf-'0 5Alf WV£ IS

.... 304-175·1484.

c.~h \U: ·~~i :=~~Af;i•;·~~M....~i=

IOMI74lln.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

76

a

EEKANDMEEK

45

I

'446 23.42 I' 'ij675
9 3. , -COUNT.:,=·
• .
• •13
. tJ
ovw sOC:: Po~ ~~oa...::J;

t986 5·10 Bluer 4x4, blue, 5spaed, ask $5,000, call t!it-4-985·
4492
1988, 5·10 auto, 4 wheel drive,
$4,900. 304-675-3433 or 675-7109.

g

e

Roocue: 911 Six
friends struggle to survive a
rafting accident. Slereo. Q
liD • Family Worko Host
Ann Jlllian leads a discu9sion
of three vignettes which
dapict the Increase of
slepfamllies, worlclng parents
and single parents. (1 :DQJ.
0 Munier, Sho Wrote 1;1
Ill On Stege Stereo.
PrtmeNowa 1:1
~ Rln Tin Tin, l(.g COli
Slareo. 0
8:051lJ MOVIE: Tile Octagon iRI

4492

now buying all entry tickals 10
Ohio Lottery's cash explosion
game, cslf 514·912·3703

19711 Nova for Pfirtl

Kuwalt.

®l C

1986 S·10 Blazer 4.:4, blue, 5·
speed, ask $5,000, call 614-985·

Wanled 10 Buy

71

rnextinguish
Nove The lighllo
oil well fires in

t986 Dodge Caravan LE , loaded,
clean, 97,000 miles, NAOA
"Book" value· $5900. Asking
$4900. 304·675-5306 .

Ntv,ar Homes. Room Additions,
Rooll~, ¥1
FoundaUon Work ,
Kitchens And Batht. F111a £i. ~
lima teal A1f1renc•s, No Job ·To ,

Holt Fill, HIIIHIUwannCrook UnMW)IhFon,l14-4-.

Rood.C.IIIM-256-1~ .

62

Call (2 :00)

Ill ~Ill Full Houoo Stereo.

Curtis

~'r/:.:"~~71o:wn ,=a~i~~k5":ie~'1""::0;~

35 ,._11 6 ·A cre•ga
~

Wanted: U11d farm equipment,
anylhing you want to sail . 614·
~·1308 , 614·256·6040 Attar
&amp;p.m.

ALLEYOOP

1988 Bronco II, XLT, 4 wheel
drive, V~6 auto, air, PW, PO, 2
tone pain! , runlling boards,
original palnl, no ru sl , Zie-Bart
undercoat ing &amp; clear coal . Must
see to appreciale,
asking
$5,500. 304-576·2919.

1880 Buick 4 Cyllndar, Auli1,

Furnished
Rooms

Ill Be a Star SIOreo.
@ Coll898 Beokotbal Ohio
Slate at Indiana (LI
Crooollno
7:351ll Sonford and Son
8:00 liiii Olin tilt Haol ot tile
Night Althea causes a riff
wilh Virgil over h!!Ping a
student. Slereo. ~
IJl MOYIE: Brock 1 Las!

a

614-992-7'158

Jim's Farm Equipm1nl, SR. 35,
W•et Oalllpoli•, 614--44&amp;-gm;
Wide aatection new 6. used larm
tractors 6. lmplemanta. Buy,
sell, trade, 8:00·5:00 waekdays,
Sat. till Noon.

1--T.Ii...:.l,...:....;:l....:."'l';:,.-rl~

humor. He hung a sign in his
office that read: "Welcome To
My .....·- Station."

By Phillip Alder

®I Wheel of Fortune t:;J
112llll Femly Feud

1979 cuuess Suprama, au1o, air,
clun,1982 Ford Eacon, 4lp,
cluti, call 614·245-9429 afttr
4pm

cA.

IJllll
/ENeweHour
MlcNelll!,ehrer
g_

Ct.lll

Completly Furnished mobll1 HAPPY JACK MANGE LOTION•,
home, 1 mila below lown over·
looking river. No Pill,
614 _ promot•• healing and hair
446.0338.
growth lo 'any mange, hoi tpol
or ·fungus an dog~ I horan
One
and
two
bedroom whhouf Conllontf SOUTHERN
apartments tor rtnl. 304-6'75-o STATES 304.075-2710.
205l or 675--4100.
Lltlle alrll winter c01t and d,..

Wldu- 11 000 Oown And Single

=1.....

tifALTH

Complttl Mobile Homa Set-Ups,
Reralrs; Commarlcal, Resldan·
lla Improvements. Including :
Plumbing, Elac:trlt:al. Insurance
Claims Accepted. 614-256·1&amp;1t

6)4·2~7-38i5

.1 •.-----..,.-- 11.-------'hook-up~...
,
-------------1
2
,
_____
.
,
.
.
____
304.77).
Noon ~
•rs
4
_
7853.
· · 5758.
. .
ooll 304-m.MIS. Union
· Bh--· n me 0n·Job? p111 CrodlI ' 3: Place Llvlr,y ·Roomlklll•.
•
· made - •
a*lllillng
IIIII - · · 5 •------------- 1 '1, _________,;,_ '=•.:.
~=-'"'Jom!'~ CondMion,l1 -4~1-1:11t •·_· . ::.,::,::;II::;I;;Ca::nii:._,.,.,
:...,1-111
-,-Qci,.....-Antl
_.

6,_.:..- ------.:...-- 14,,__________
7
1.5 ..._ _ _...,_ _ _ _ _,_,
. •·----,----------8 ,_.....,_...,.._ _ _ _.,..._,.,__

r

1984 Ford Ranger 4-wheel drlvt,
V-6 auto, custom wheals, topptr, bed liner, running boards,

Transportation

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

-

1'-

Toola: Craftsman~ Ctlallenger, 1984 Chevy Blazer, Silverado
Rktgld, Prolo, wrench sockets, package, aulo, 305 engine:. 4
tOOlboxes, standard and metric, wheel driva, V..S, PS , A""C, . 1-'B,
61~·742·2006
sharp looking, 304-576·2652.

Gehl 95 grinder mixer. New Hoi·
land 478 hayblnt. New Holland
460 ill hayblna. Allee Chalmers
two row no till corn plantar. All
good cand. 304-~215. ·

K E P L, I C

e
e ~~ic:~~~iER

Afriendofmineisade. ntist.
He also has a great sense of

IO

,..

g

Belle Ami Afghans will do Topper, Low Mileage And Great
grooming, boarding lor all Condition! 614-446·1967.
Dreads. Reasom1bfe ratas, 304675-7Q95 after 4:00PM.
1989 Chev S·S, Blk, eJCc cond,
Silverado, 27,000 miles, all opFish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave . lions, $9,000. 304·895·3638 arter
Point Pleasant, 304·675-2063, 5:0GPM.
full line Tropical fish, birds
'
small animals and supplies.

614·992-2526.

Share
Furnished Ettlclancy
Bath, $185, Ullllllts Paid, 101
Fourlh Ave, Galllpolla. 814-4464416 A her 7p.m.

G111at $al1ctlon 01 Reposn a·
Hd Mobil• · Homn : Ooubla

Moblt. homt, S aeras extra
treller
oulbuhdlngl,
·fenced, 3 mllas "" · Pit, 504-175-

&amp;1990

992-7841
:;;::;,:..::::-,,-,.,.,..----,,--,-l1966 Chevy S·IO Plck·Up Wllh

286.&amp;522.

I~=·~==·~·=~o~

r:;J"

NtwaHaur
Cend Camera
III Laglotatlve Upc!ote
®I Currenl Atlatr
liD ID Ster Trek: Ttio Nolll
Gantiatlon C
112llll E'l!frtlfnment Tonight
Stereo. !.,1
D MocG,er t:;J
@ SpotUCanler
aMoneytlna
~ Tho WoHons
7:051ll Addams Family
7:30 (%111 \111 Jeopardrl C
IJ) Now It Con Be Tol!
(I) Entortolnment Tonight
Slereo. Q
Married... Willi Child ron

t978 International dump truck ,

4020 JO Tracl, With Big JO
Loader, $5,950 ; 1020 JO Diesel
Sharp, $4,995; 460 Long Diesel
With N•w 5 Pl. Bush Hog,
S4,350. Ownar Will Flnanea . 614·

lrJj

C Nl E E F
• 1 s 1 1 :

(J) Ill

F150, auto, air, good
Pomar1nlan, 5 mos. old, 614· condit ion, li14-247-3895
_

Jaruy
lamilr,
milk
cow,
presently milk ng 5gal 1 day,
can dalivar, $500, 8~4-992-6!594

A II

(I) lnalde Ed~ion

304-576-2966.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Clll

(!) MacNell~hrer

~A;;KC~::.:::,.:.:g;:ls::oo::rtd7--:l::-oac:-:cu-p 11985 Ford

53

54

Mkldlaport, BHch St, 2 btd~
room furnrlshad apt, utilltiQ 1
pa id, references &amp; deposit r•
qulrtd, 304·882·256&amp;.
Nice 2 BR, 4·112 mi. tron'l Gal·
Jipoll s. Stove &amp; refrlg . No pets.
$235/mo. 614-446-8038.

Mlnature Dachshund puppies,

1200, 304-675·3526.

Saddlo. 614-286.&amp;522.

Furnished Apartment , 1 br, naxt
to Ubtary, parking, central heat,
air, references. 614-446-0338,
Belora 7p.m.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Vlllaga
Manor
and
Rlverslae
Apartmants In Mlddttpoi1.. From
$196 . Call &amp;14·992·7787. EOH.

truck

1

/jj Tho Jelferlono_D

AKC Chocolate
plea, BNulifuf, 7 WHkl Old,
Shota And Wormed. Ready To 1978 Chevy pick up, 350 auto,
Bt Placadl $200 614-446·8'\11.
$800. 304-67S.245l

1 Bur Super M~num 44; 1
Golden Elgie Super Hawk
Turbo, axe. cond. Call 514-387-

lrom l1921mo. Walk 1o ohop &amp; :.--.....,,.n..:,.q::.u:.,e::..s:..,....,.._
movies . Call 614-446·2568. EOH. Buy Of 11 u, Rl't'trll'll Anllqutl,

SIHplng rooms with t:ooklng.
Alao tralltr.IPICt. All hook·Upl,
Call afttr 2:00 p.m.,
5651, Muon WV.

Finance Alt-614-772-1220.
·

. 657B.

vmo couw

I
Labrador Pup- 2886 after 5pm and weekends

61 Farm Equipment

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 7289.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES,

F-100

I I I 1I

@Up Ctoee
awo~d Today
~ Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Slereo. Q
8:051]) Beve~y HllbMIIel
8:30 (%111 0) NBC Nowo ~
IJ) Saved by 1111 Bell
(I) ~ Ill ABC Nowl
(!) Wild America Slereo. r:;J
illl 1121111 CBS Nowo r:;J
liD tD Andy 0~111111
9 Scooby Doo
@ Super Bowl X Hlghlljjhto
~ New Zom&gt; t:;J
·
6:351ll Andy Grllllth
7:00 ~ 11 a1l_Whool of Fortune

o~v o~
PI16VUlT f011£.~f FIRE-0.1

,,

-,

GO FARE

/Ji Mottl Looming Hour

.;,;~~~:;.:7~7:-::~ Kawasaki 4-wlleeler, 614-949-

Sofa bad, uc cond Early
Am..-ican llyla, $200. 3o4='675-

ROOM: Table With 4 Peddad
Chairs. $149.00; Couni'I Pine
nd 3
Dinelt• With Ranch

3br 2 Baths, FP, OW, CA,
S4751mo. Deposit Required, 614·
446-4222, or EveningS: 614~4462174.

1975

four terambltd

liD tD Nlalll Court r:;J
aJ Smurfo r:;J

I TliolUGHT I 'WM TUE:

AWRPRI$!

•

\Zl, Square One TV Stereo.

,,

1978 F-100 truck, 6t4·949·2886
after Spm and weekends

Rabbit Beagle 4 112 Months Old,
AKC Raglatered, Tan And White. 1979 Jeep CJS, new top, 53,000
$25. 614-446·1939.
miles, local owner, 304-675· 1254.

2 BR, CA, washer &amp; dryer
hookup, no pets. $250fmo. 614·
446-4491.

2BR,
batt"!,
kltchen ... Nawly
remodeled. Nice area, big yard .
$325/mo., $325 dtp. Days 614·
446·1157, Eve . S14-8!J4 ~4501.

Groom and Supply Shop·Ptt
Grooming. All breeds, styles.
lama ~l Food Dealer. Julie
Wabb. Cell614-446-0231.

614·446·3158
Vi'ra Furniture
Sofa &amp; Chair, $11.10 Wuk;
Rectlntr, $5.47 Week , Swlvat
Rocker, $3.63 WNk.Bunk Bed
Compieta $8.41 Week, 4 Draw1r
Chest, $3.26 Wuk; Poet1r Bid·
room Sulle, 7 pc., $16.67 WHk,
Includes Btddmg.Country Pina
Dlnltta With Bench &amp; 4 Chaira,
$10.98 WHk.OPEN: Mondav
Thru Saturday, h .m. to &amp;p.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
MUu Oft Route 7 On Route 141,
In Cenlenary.

End Tablu, $89.00 Sat.OINING

2br Apartment, Total Electrlc1
Extra Cle an, On Neighborhooa
Road , Gallipolis, 614·446·9755
Anytime .

Pels for Sale

"Me,

wm. THAT~

For Sale: 1982 Ford F-250 4x4.
Very Good Condition, $3,500.
614-949-2127.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

RENT 20WN

2094

1990 SpNctridga, 14x70, 3·
bdrm., 1-blth, heat pump, 2.75
acras, 2 mltaa north of Chasttr,

Down With A:ppro¥0&lt;1 Crodll. Call Mid' Ohio

Quean size pine bad complete
with linens $260. Call 614·4462991.

Reclintr,
114SII.OO;
Swivel Rocker, $81.00; Coffee 6.

Rooms for rent ·weak or monlh.
Starting at $120Jmo. Galllal-40181.

WkiH

NawiUsed
Household furnishing . 112 mi.
Jerricho Ad, Pt. Pleasant, WV,
call 304·675·1450.

VI'RA FURNITURE

1890 _ Sprucarldgt, 14x70, 3·
bdrm., 1·bath, Mat pump, 2.75
acres, 2 mliaa north of Chaster,
614·8854492

• 1500

APPLIANCES

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

304.&amp;82-2516.

AI . 7, 614·985-4492

USED

Complela home lurnishings.
Hours: Mon-Sat, 9·5. 614-4460322, 3 mile1 out Bulnlfla Rd.
Free Dtlivery.

44

1972 Castle, ctntral air, under
pinning, por ch, part. furnished ,
$3000; 614·'1112·2369

·1....._.._ _ __ _

14x70 With Expaf'ldo 11/2 Balhs
2 Mites From Town, Rt. 141:
Reference And Deposit. 614-446·

Trailer &amp; lot tor sa le, Ocala Nat '!
Forest Florida, 2·bdrm, 2·bath,
614-992-6783

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busl·
ness with pltOpla you know, and
NOT to sand money thro~h the
mail until you have lnvasl1gated
tl'\e o~arlng.

56

Household
Goods

Washers, dryers, refrigerators ,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances,
Upper River Acl Bulda Stene
Crest Motel. Call 614·4-46-7398.

367-&gt;136.

Business
Oppol1unlty

51

GOOD

2330.

Total electric 2 BR, no pats. 614·

14 acres, 2 bedroom mobile
home, Letart, WV, $16,500. 304·
895-3421 aher 5:00.

ralf!~! "

1-

KATHARINE ~EPBURN WROTE
A BOOK ABOUT ~ER LIFE,
AND CALLED IT, "ME "

12xSO 2br, Unfurnished, Holl~
P.ark, 1 112 Mile Past HMC,
DEiposlt And Raferanea Rt·
qwed. 614·446-4369, 304-675·

New 14h mobile hqme, $199 per

32

l(nll our offici! for paid in advance

bedroom trailer, pay own
utilities plus dapo&amp;lt, 304-675·
2535.

~=Power

--.!&gt;

••

~

low to form four 1lmpla word1.

8

TUE., JAN. 14
8:00(%111 &lt;ll ~~~Ill

2311 Lin coln Ava, $150. monlh,
utilities not Included, rateranca
required, 304-675·1180.

1

_ _ _ _;;;;_;;; 141!o4

EVENING

1988 Pontiac Bonneville, All
Power, $5 ,000; 1987 Horizon
Automati c With Ai f, $1,550; 614·
256-1270.

2 Bedroom House, Deposit And
Ra.fanmca Required.. No Pats.
614·446·4879.

Will ca111 for bed patient or In·
vllld In my home in Racina , OH,
6t4-949·2393.

21

•

1988 Ford Exp. standard shift.
Low mileaga. Exc. cond., 1
owner. $6,500.614-446-7904.

2 Bedroom Houu For Rant And
1 Btdroom· Apartmant For Rant.

0527.

Split entry, 2112 acres, 8 mile s
out Sand Hill, 2,240 sq h ,
swimming pool, 2 decks, 304895-3624.

Turn your clutter into cash,
Sell it the easy way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
15 words or less, 3 days ;
3 papers,$6.00 ·

41 Houses for Rent.

til ltd, 614-992.&amp;979

Buy now: Low lnterast, jus1
reduced $38,500. 3 BR, 1-112
balh, full carpet, 2 car garage.
751 S.R. 141 . 614·446-7878.

Want to:

I----------

Homes For
Rani:
Mobile
Reference And Deposit Ra·
qulrad. Call Ahar 2p.m. 614·446·

31

1987 Dodge Shelby CSX, 2.2
Turbo lntercoaled, 5·spead , 1 of
10:00 buill (M152), AM /FM east., ·
AC , PS, Pe. Serioua Inquiries ·
only! Evenings 614-992-6125.

Rentals

Will baby sit In my home, in
Syracuse, fenced yard, any age.
Pay negotablt, Ttti•20 Job ctr·

Financial

Needed: Adull from Long Bot·
tom'
Reedsville
area
to
transport students to Athens,
Clll6'14-985-4292 tor information

·

2br Mobile Home, FurnlshltdLOn
Private Lot, $225/Mo. ~-,oo
Deposit, 614-446·3870.

velopes AI Home. Rusfi $1.00 Will do housecleaning.
S.A.S.E. M10 D&amp;A Supplies, P.O. parieneed. 614·446·7715 .
Box t443, Fairborn, Ohio 45324.

NEED A JOB! GREAT PAY!!
Over 350 COmpanies Need You
NOW! Work From HOME And
GET PAID, 301-637·5078 Oepl.
03, 24 Hours.

CAN !BORROW ..:

t985 Monte Carlo SS, T-T011s,
69,000 Miles, $5,000. 304·675·
1525.

9

T=~:::~· S@\\~lA-l&amp;"Btrs·
::~.
CIAT R. POLlAN
0 Reorron~ ltllorowordaol · lho
be·

Television
Viewing

YO E!RUTUS i ~y~

72 Trucks for Sale

Rutrain
Now! !!Southaasttrn
Business College, Spring Valley
Plaza. Call Today, 614·446-4367!!
Ragisterallon 190-05-1274~.

18

BORN LOSER

71 Autos for Sale

Business
Training

savaral opelngs, also ptt -800..
231·7457
'
Easy Work! Excellant Pay! Asstmblt Products At Home. Call
Toll Free, 1·800-467-5566 Ext.
313 .
'

9

11

HANDICAPPED SERVICES AD-

lost : Heart Shaped Diamond
Ruby Earring, Sentimental Value
614-:J67-752B, Reward!

7

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

&amp; Acreage

614-446-8558.

We'll pay you to typa names &amp;
addrHus from home! $500. per
1000. 1·90D..S96-1666 {$0.99rmln
Mln/18 yrs ... ) or write: PASSE·
517M, 161 S. Lincolnway, N
Aurora, IL 60542.

Giveaway

Lost &amp; Found

Lots

304·'773-5808.

Surrogate Mothers Wanlad, Fea
Plus Expenses For Carrying A
Couple's Child. Must Be 18·35
And Pl'llvloualy Had A Child.
Stave Lltz, Any., 317·996-2000.

culvert lnaola-

directly olt SR 3l8, and an excasa road will bl available to

6

35

Help waoled

AVON ! All Arias I Shirley Lots lor sala New Haven, WV.

llon wortl. Is being dan• by
Dravo Basic Materials Co. inc.

4

Tuesday, January 14, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

;

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yau GOUld ...... to fllllll. ~101'1 lid
'!llnlngl. ...... to do tho- (ob you
I -;your lhWIII W\11 be prQport-1
to your ptOduotlvlty.

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ABOFILIIII.'

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Y M ' M N W M Ci •
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Flattery Is lroty~ 1111 , - h
apprec:lotlon lo from 1111 hHrt out." - Dale Carnoglo.
II -

•

11r .-A. InC.

Oul.

Sl-.

14

�I

0-The

Ohio

Sentinel

Ladies circle welcomes new members
Five new members were wei·
corned when lhe Faitir Full Gospel
Ladies Circle mel recently in the
church basement. New members
arc Rowha Reed, Eleanor Lawson,
Sandy Williams, Jenny Nutter and
Judy Hall.
The meeting opened witll prayer
by Sandy Cowdery and Vivian
Humphrey, president, gave the
women "Words of Wisdom " ro

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

think about.
Sandy Cowdery, program director, gave devotions entitled "We
Have Not Passed This Way
Before." She also recited a reading
called "Trust in God's Promises."
Jenny Nutter was appointed sec·
rctary for 1992 and tire group voted
to purchase a new coffee pot for
tile church.
Secret sisters for 1992 were

President Bush beliexes be bas" " the cases, because Barbara knew
Japan straightened out but the busi- how to care for him. Andrew, the
ness leaders malcing the trip with grandson of Carolyn and Tom
"him are not !hat sure. As usual, Grueser, Lincoln Heights,
time will tell.
Pomeroy, is now doing fine.
Meantime, on the local scene
Jason Bush, son of Celeste
efforts are underway to collect Coats of Middleport, was found to
delinquent real estate taxes which have a hole in the upper pan of the
IOta! hundreds of thousands. And heart and at the age of six under·
again, time will tell.
went surgery at Children's HospiBut, back at the ranch, some tal, Columbus. Jason got along
A Prom Formal, sponsored by Cross Bloodmobile and the Big
kind soul got in touch with the beautifully and played all sports at
operators of the Mississippi Queen Meigs High-in fact was all-state Beta Sigma Phi City Council, was Bend Sternwheel Festival Associaand the Delta Queen and as a result honorable mention. He then played discussed at !he recent meeting of tion for volunteered services.
The social commiltee served a
1 have my very own book telling football on a scholarship at Urbana the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter,
Beta
Sigma
Phi
Sorority,
held
at
pizza
surprise casserole, salad,
me when the pleasure boats will be College. Now 22, Jason auends
the
Episcopal
Church
in
Pomeroy.
bread
sticks
and apple pie.
traveling past our towns. And, by Sinclair Community College near
The
event
will
be
held
Feb.
16
The
Jan.
23
meeting will be held
the way, the book pictures Dayton where he is studying 10 be
Pomeroy in color-not identified- a physical therapist. By !he way, at !he Meigs County Public Library at 6 p.m. at tile Episcopal Church.
but witir the caption, "Quaint and Jason was named to "Who's Who in Pomeroy. The Preceptor Chapter Members bring a sack lunch.
The Grubb Family Singe~ will
quiet linle rivertowns dot th e in American Junior Colleges" in is to provide punch. This will be Dessert will be provided by Donna perform at tile Old Betllel Free Will
'Wilderness Rivers' section".
botll tile fall of 1990 and tile fall of handled by Jane Walton and Donna Jones and Lillian Moore. Projects Baptist Church on Route 7 'and
Jones.
.
for Founder's Day will be worked Story's Run Road on Saturday at
1991.
A
letter
was
received
from
Divion
at tllis meeting.
A nice gesture by Mike Larkins
Delbert Lawson of near Five
7:30 p.m. Pastor Ralph Butcher
sion
Chairman,
Daneen
Thurman,
It
was announced that Ohio invites tile public.
and the Rutland Furniture Store Points underwent a quadruple
over !he holiday period.
bypass on May 4, 1988 at Universi- concerning information on the State Convention will be May 1-3.
group's program of reverse draw·
Members attending were Velma
Mike noticed a home in Rutland ty Hospilal in Columbus.
had ·burned shortly before ChristAs early as 1983, Delbert was · ing. Plans were made to take pic· Rue, Betty Ohlinger, Jean Werry,
'"Dream Forest" and "Legend of
mas. He noted that the family's having heart problems. He under- tures of the more suecessful .draw· Rose Sisson, Vem Crow, Charlotte
Johnny
Applcseed" will be shown
television had been ruined in the went catherization at University ings and send to her with explana- Elberfeld Clarice Krauuer, Ann
at
the
Meigs
County Public Library
Rupe, Jo~n Corder Jane Walton.
fire and was setting in the yard. Hospital in 1983, but was told at tions ofreve~sc ~wing.
on
Saturday
and Sunday at 2 p.m.
Commun1ca11ons were read and · Norm~uster Donna Jones and
Mike wrapped some toys and gifts that time there was nothing that
and
on
Monday
at 4:30 p.m. at the
for the family and tllen contacted could be done for him. However, the chapter received thank-you Maidie Mora. '
Middleport-Library.
RuLiand Furniture which provided a due to the progress made on tech. notes from the American Red ·
television set for the family.
niques and procedures in 1988, tile
See, good things are happening. open heart surgery proeeded even
though doctor's at tile time felt tllat
And more about your friends Delbert was a high risk and proba·
and neighbors who have undergone bly would be hospitalized for at
heart procedures:
least 45 days . Luckily, he got
Andrew Thomas Bareswih, son along well and eight days followof Barbara Bareswilt and Roy ing the operation was back at his
Bareswilt, was born prematurely home. He has had some setbacks
and had what is known as a PDA and still is under medical cared, but
closure. He weighed only two and he's getting along pretty good and
one-half pounds at birth and highly recommends open heart
dropped to a pound and one-half surgery for those who need that
when he went into surgery on kind of help.
March 7, 1990 at Children's Hospi·
Ia! in Columbus-only a week old.
The 28 percent Columbus and
Andrew is truly a miracle baby. He Southern Power Co. rate increase
Skip's left town again
was hospilalized for three and one· which was to have gone into effect
and Mitch and I want to
half montlls and then was released today has been put on the back
clean out the old
to his motller, a registered nurse~ burner for the time being. That
an earlier release tllan in most of should help you to keep smiling.
excess inventory before

Preceptor Beta Beta to
.sponsor prom formal

.
Group to perform

1

Southern,
·Eastern boys ·
triumph

exc~angcd

and !he group reported
35 SICk calls.
· Biblical games were played with
winners being Jenny Nutter, Mary
Folmer, Eleanor Lawson and Mary
Dailey.
Vivian Humphrey asked each
mcm ber to state her religious goals
for 1992. The women formed a circle and each woman prayed for tile
woman on her right.'
The blessing for the food was
asked by Judy Hall.
The riext meeting will be held
Feb. 4 at 7 p.m. at the church basement. Each member is to bring a
covered dish.
Attending were Rowha Reed,
Eleanor Lawson, Kate Evans, Marv
Dailey, "Mary Folmer, Vivian
Humphrey, Dolly Reed, Ada Van·
Meter, Virginia Walton, Jenny Nut·
ter, Tammy, Christopher and Sandy
Cowdery.

Movies announced

3DAYS ONL

Award winner
Brittany Nicole Denny, daughter
of Ronnie and Bonnie Denny •.
Keeshler Air Force Base, Biloxi,
Miss., has received several awards.
and trophies for her performance as "
a cheerleaders for the Pee Wee·
League for the City of Biloxi. She
is a first grade honor roll student at
Dukate Elementary School. She is "
the granddaughter of Earl and
Belly Denny and the great grand·:
daughter of Lillian Dcmosky, all of
Middleport.

Meetim~

scheduled

The AM VETS will meet Sun·
day at 2 p.m. at Smitty's in
Pomeroy.
·

FREE DELIVERY
FINANCING

'

't

Vol. 42, No. 177
Copyrighted 1992

Chamber reviews prison sites

Thousands
demanding
health care
By JOHN ROGERS
Associated Press Writer
Thousands of Americans rose
up at town meetings across the
nation to demand affordable healtll
care, saying they want the same
benefits offered congressmen,
criminals and people in almost
every industrialized nation but tlleir
own.

House Democrats sponsored !he
forums Tuesday to bolster support
for their national hcaltll-care pro·
posals.
In cities large and small, the
Democrats' message - that the
United States and Soutll Africa are
the only industrialized nations
without some form of national
health care - struck a responsive
chord.
"We've found an issue we can
tie around the president's neck,"
said Rep. Jose Serrano, who con·
ducted a meeting at Lincoln Hospi·
tal in the New York's South Bronx,
the nation's poorest congressional
district.
There, as .more tllan 100 people
seeking medical attention spilled
out into the halls, 300 listened as
Serrano said affordable heallh care
is more important than building
Star Wars defense systems or send·
ing aid overseas.
Many people around the nation
agreed.
"If we have a country that sees
fit to spend billions of dollars to
provide questionable defense
against a lheoretical nuclear war
and yet with a straight face says
!hat it doesn't have the resources to
attack real problems witll attainable
solutions, such as infant mortality
and affordable hralth care, then
there is something very, very
wrong with the system," Dr. Jeffrey Lamont said at a meeting in
Wausau, Wis.
In Collin sville, Ill., Charles

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Starr
A 16-year-old male accused of
killing a Bidwell man pleaded
guilty to a charge of volunta.ry
manslaughter Tuesday morning in
front of Probate/Juvenile Judge
Thomas Moulton.
The juvenile was accused of
killing Brian Mink, 32, during an
early morning altercation May 13,
!991. The youth was charged witll
voluntary manslaughter soon after
and placed in the custody of his
parents.
According to Judge Moulton,
the juvenile, who was IS-years-old
at the time of the shootmg, was
sentenced to at least one year al lhc
Ohio Department of Youth Ser·
vices.
However, tile judge suspended
the sentence and placed lhc youtll
on probation for one year. During
his probation, the youtll will under·
go court-ordered counseling. .
Moulton said a number of factors entered into his decision .

•

6
MONTHS
FREE

·- FINANCING
~

HEALTH CARE TALKS
• Rep. Larry Smith (D)-Fla.,
discusses plans for a national
health care system with a
crowd of more than 700 people during a town meeting at
Hollywood Hills High School
in Hollywood, Fla., Tuesday.
The meeting was one or about
200 held yesterday by Congressional Democrats in their
home districts to discuss the
health care issue. (AP)

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce continues to forge
ahead in promoting a proposed
prison site for the county, and that
effort was reviewed at the cham·
ber's monthly full membership
meeting Tuesday afternoon.
Chuck Kitchen told members
yesterday that proposed sites in
Meigs County have been reduced
from nine sites to two. Those sites
arc a 500-acre tract near Salem
Center owned by Southern Ohio
Coal Company and a smaller tract
iqJhe Great Bend area near the
Ra'c'lhe Locks and Dam, the owner
of which is not being released by
the chamber.
Botll property owners, according to Kitchen, are willing to
donate property for tile prison site.
Such a donation is a near necessity,
since tile state is not willing to pur·
chase tile property required, and the
county is not financially capable of
purchasing such a large tract of
land. (At least 300 acres will be
required.)
Kitchen, Executive Chamber
Secretary Pamela Newell and coun·
ly officials are expected to meet

Moore said it is a national disgrace
that inmates and elected officials
get free medical care but average
•
•
people do not.
Michael Kaiser said in Boston
that he pays $5,000 a year for
insurance under an employer-pro·
PORTSMOUTH, N.H. (AP) video plan but will lose his cover· President Bush today made a bid to
age if he loses his job. His employ· win back the support of voters dis·
er, Digital Equipment Corp., has gruntled over the economy;conlaid off thousands recently.
ceding on his ftrst campaign trip 10
The Democrats have proposed " New Hampshire that 'we've }111
tllree health-care plans rangmg in big problems" but pledging to
costJrom $65 billion to $415 bil- work hard to spur growtir.
lion.
Bush said he bad been the vic·
One would be operated entirely tim of "outrageous allegations" by
by the government and provide political opponents. "We are in a
low-cost care to everyone. Anotller demagogic year."
would be similar 10 the Medicare
The president began his first
plan for the elderly and would be campaign trip of 1992 by meeting
run by insurance companies. The with about 100 community and
third would operate through business leaders in a drafty hangar
employers.
at lhc former Pease Air Force Base
and was told llia1 tile state's economy is in dire shape.
• .
"The economy as we sec Jt
today is still in free fall," Dan
Ayers, town manager of Mcrri·
mack, told Bush.
The president agreed that the
economy
was in "a free-fall. I
The"youth had never been a
hope
I've
known
it Maybe r didn't
problem, Moulton said.
Moulton explained some of tile convey it," he said.
New Hampshire, whose ~b. 18
circumstances surrounding the
primary
is !he nation's first, gave
shooting: the youth was aw3kened
Bush
hifl
first major victory four
at approximately 1 a:m. !he mom- ·
years
ago.
·ing of the shooting by -a woman
In an indirect slap al GOP chalalleging domestic violence between
lenger
Patrick Buchanan, who has
her and Mink.
As a result of this, the Gallia called for cutting foreign aid and
County Sheriff's Department was expanding trade barriers, Bush
notified and checlced out tile area, vowed to "resist !he siren call of
protectionism."
Moulton said.
"I know I've got big prob·
Later, the youth was awakened
!ems,"
Bush told !he gathering Qf
again by tire same woman request·
bu
siness
leaders from southern
ing assistance, Moulton said. A
New
Hampshire.
"But we're going
verbal altertation between !he parto
take
care
of
tllem."
tics followed leading to Mink's
Bush suggested that his Jan. 28
deatll, MouiiOn added.
Due to the circumstances. sur· State of lhe Union address would
rounding the shooting, and the include tax breaks for middle-class
absense of any previous wrong· Americans. AI the same til!le; he
doing on the youth's part, Moulton said: "Anything we do with the tax
said !he youth could best be reha· code should be to stimulate real
bilitated by services available wilh· investment and, to some degree,
'
in tile community instead of being real savings."
Bush
commended
recent steps
sent to the Ohio Department of
by
the
Federal
Reserve
lo lower
Youtll Services.
interest rates. "Interest rates arc al
a wonderful level," he said,
adding: ·'I'd lilce to see them down
further, frankly."

with Ohio Depanment of Corrections and Rehabilitation officials
"within the next few weeks,"
Kitchen reported yesterday, to
review sites in !he county.
The other two counties in the
running for tile facility • Noble and
Belmont· also have submitted
specific sites to !he state. However,
Meigs County's proposal for the
prison was hand delivered to tile
Department of Corrections by
Newell, and was tile only proposal
tllat was delivered to Columbus in
person. Kitchen said that !he offi·
cials in " Columbus were
"impressed" by the care taken in
hand delivering tile proposal.
·The proposed medium-security
facility is expected to employ up to
300 people, most of tllem local res·
idents, with an estimated annual
payroll of $5 million. In addition to
tile actual building, which is esti·
mated to take up to 30 acres, the
facility will also have a farm,
which will provide a portion of the
food used by the inmates, and a
"buffer" area around the periphery
of tile facility, which will keep tile
facility from being "too close" to
surrounding homes.
Letters in support from individ-

'

game.
,
"
.
Refreshments were served by
Jean Frederick and Elizabeth
'Hayes.
Auending were Faye Kirkhart,
Margaret Amberger, Man:ia Keller,
Betty Roush, Erma Cleland, Ada
Bisset~. Mae McPeeii,'Goldie Fred·
crick, Lora Damewood, Elizabeth
Hayes, Thelma White, Mary Jo
Barringer, Pauline Ridenour, lnzy
Newell, Charlotte Grant. Ethel Orr,
Laura Mae Nice, Belly Young,
Opal Hollon, Jean Frederick, Alta
Ballard, and.a guest, Sandra White.

i

l

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I,,

uals and organizations in lhe coun-

ty are being solicited by lhe cham-

ber, and local residents can send
such letters to the chamber office
located at 200 E. Second Street i~
Pomeroy.
ln. other action at Monday 's
meetmg, the chamber recognized
two new members of its Board of
Dire~tors, Denny Facemcyer representmg M1ddlepon, and Fritz
Goebel representing tile community
of Tuppers Plains.
Additionally, Chamber Presi·
dent Lenny Eliason announced tllat
positions of board members representing Pomeroy and Racine will
also be available in the near future.
Bruce· J. Reed, one of Pomeroy's
board representatives, will step
down from that position in light of
his election to the Pomeroy
Mayor's office, and Bill Nease,
who currently represents Racine on
tile board, has expressed an interest
in resigning from his post on the
board, as well, if an interested
chamber member from that com-·
munity is found to replace him.
Franlc Vaughan was recognized
as a new member of tile chamber.
The annual dinner/dance hosted

by the chamber as a fund raiser will
be held at Royal Oalc Resprt on a
date in March to be announced, and
plans for that event are now under· "
way by the dinner/dance commit·
tee, made up of Kenny Utt and
Facemeyer. Another member of tile
committee is also being sought.
. Newell made a brief presenta·
uon about the chamber's "year in
review." Among tile events inelud·
ed was !he appointment of Elizabeth Schaad as the chamber's first
executive director/county.mtnotrnic"____
development director; the move of
the chamber office from Main
Street 10 !he current location in the
Carnegie Building; the hiring of
Newell as tile executive secretary;
tile success of "Leadership 2000"
and "Take Charge" programs; tile
commencement of the Partners in
Education program in cooperation
wnh the county's school districts;
the Second Annual Big Bend Stem·
wheel Festival, which the chamber
co-sponsored; the chamber's fight
to save the Meigs Mines in light of
tile Clean Air Act; and the current
drive in suppott of a state prison"
site in Meigs County.
:
"""·" The meeting was hosted by
Overbrook Center in Middleport.

President
campaigning

Deficit reduction bill
won't help schools
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP)- A
deficit reduction bill headed for a
vote in the; Senate would help bal·
ance Ohio's budget but would not
reimburse lhe state's poorest school
districts for cuts in government aid.
The bill introduced Tuesday by
Sen, Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati,
reflects agreements reached by
Sen&amp;te President Stanley Aronoff
and House Speaker Vern Riffe to
solve m'uch of a $457 miUion pto·
jected deficit in tile state l&gt;udget
· Gov'. George Voinovich has
ordered $196 million in cuts for
local !Chools, higher education and
other slate agencies to ease the
deficiL
Voinovich also said he intended
to seek r~imbursemcnl of the
state's 170 poorest tlisUicis tb soft·
en the impact of the cqts.

2 Section a, 12 Pagea 25 cent•·
A Multimedia Inc. Newapoper.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ·Wednesday, January 15, 1992

Youth pleads guilty to
manslaughter charge
CASBY JR. and MITCH
HAVE EXTENDED

Snow likely tonlghl. Low near
zero. Thursday's high, 20.

BRITTANY DENNY

Past Councilor's club holds meeting
The Past Councilor:s Club of
Chester ·council No. 323, Daugh·
ters of. America, mel recently 81 the
home of Jean Frederick. ·
Belly Young, vice-president,
opened the meeting by reading
from the book of Psalms. The
pledge to the fl~~ and Lord's
Prayer were given m unison. The
pass word was taken and.the secre·
wy's report was Jiven.
&lt;?eaJ Hollon read "Senior Citi·
·zcns.
·
Inzy Newell, Belly Roush and
Mary Io Barrinser conducted a

Cards: ·
10-H; 2-C; K-D;

Page 5

he can get back
Saturday. We're taking
36 hours for three days
to move it. The prices in
this ad are just part of
what we'v.e marked
down. Come on in for
our Free Delivery and
Financing Specials
marked with red tags.
-Cas by Jr.
(The Old Man)

The January me etmg of the the time limit.
The program, "How House
Chester Garden Club was held at
Plants Came Into the House" was
tile home of Maida Mora.
Roll call, 'Tell about a plant for presented by Mace! Barton. Plants
medicinal purposes" includctl hore- in tile home date back to the 19th
hound, sassafras, onions, ycllowrot century. Before that time in aver·
and black berry of child hood age homes, lack of space and the
memories. Aloe, dock, rosemary struggle for existancc left little time
for plants in the home. Gardens
and cinchoma were also discussed.
Devotion s prepared by Jean have always been a pan of life and
Frederick were given by Bette in tile mid-1800's, a definite move
Dean, "Care Takers of God's Gift." to the cities and the longing in
The Ten Commandments of the women's hearts to extend the sea·
New Earth emphasized that the son of flower enjoyment saw ferns
earth is God's gift to all people and other foliage plants becoming a
througout time, to be used as need- dcfmite part of home decor. Bego·
ed, but not wasted or ravaged. Mrs. nias, geraniums and herbs on win·
Dean also shared poems and read· dow sills also increased the period
ings concerning aging and changes of flower enjoyment. Choices of
the years bring about, from the dis· house plants mcreased as explorers
appearance of a familiar businesS brought plants from around the
to public buildings tllat di sappear world.
Mrs. Barton's suggestions for
from the scene. She closed with
prayer, "Getting Older.''
care of house plants included fmd.The "Save the World" lesson ing tile ~lace in the home where a
"Light Right" was by Twila Buck- plant w1ll feel most comfortable
ley who reported that one billion and nourish, providing humidity,
incandescent light bulbs were used as necessary as proper temperature.
every year in tile United States and Plants grouped m a shallow tray or ·
tllat lighting consumes one-fiftll of plant stand where shallow water
elecbic'power. Turning off unneed- adds to the humidity is helpful.
ed lights would be one helpful Plants need to be brought indoors
solution to the problem . Compact in tile fall before !he heat system is
flourescent lights arc energy savers activated. When repotting use next
and last longer, altllough there arc size to old container 10 help prevent
situations in the home where tlley over watering. Plants should be
sprayed for insect life and dust
can not be used.
The secretary report by Pat before being brought indoors. In
Holter and treasu rer report by tile spring select a place where tlley
Twila Buckley were heard during will be protected from sun and
tile business meeting conducted by wind, as tlley become used to out·
doors. Place tirem, where possible,
Maida Mora.
The sick were noted and "Mace! where they become a part of the
Barton will be sunshine chairman whole design of house and
in January. Appreciation from Ada grounds.
The thought for the day was
Holter and George Genheimcr were
"Doesn't
mauer if a refrigerator
received.
'
door
is
open
for 15 seconds or 30,
Bette Dean provided altar flow·
·
crs during December at Chester tile cold has escaped.
Mrs. 'Mora served a dessert
United Methodist Church. Pauline
course. Twila Buckley and Dorolhy
Ridenour will do so in January.
Pat Holter and Maida Mora Karr received the door ,11rizes.
assisted with holiday decorations at Maye Mora was a contributing
Trinity Church. Clarice Krautter hostess.
• "
The Feb. 5 meeting will be held
and Mrs. Mora decorated the flower boxes a~Trinity for tile holidays. at tile home of Eleanor Knight. Fol·
A leucr from Dennis Hoffmap, lowing lhe meeting a "Valentine
publicity chairman of the Ohio Surprise" auction will be held.
Assaciauon of Garden Clubs, was Each article is to be in a decorated
read notidg that the club's 199()..91 box or bag.
publicity book had arrived within

Pick 3: 217
Pick 4: 6024

J-S

---

Caring for house plants;
Chester gardeners meet

Ohio Lottery

Aronoff, R-Cincinnali, said
there was no school aid in tile bill
and indicated he was waiting for a
specific proposal from Voinovich.
Riffe, 0-Wheelersburg, suggest·
ed Voinovich moved too quickly
by ordering cuts in slate spending
to help deal witlllhe budget deficit.
"I think we should have moved
· a little cautiously on any cuts. I'm
not saying that cuts, don't have to
be' made, I'm not saying thai lit
all," Riffe said.
·
"What I do question is whetller
we moved a liale too.fast until we
really sal down and looked at
everything we could look alto
bring in revenue without increasing
taXes and then, if we had 10 do it,
then make the cuts," Riffe said."!
think that cuts s~ould have been !he
last thirig 11\at w.as doi)C'.'~

BE,F announces
quarterly dividends

'
the area. According to report~, lhe storm that
hit the lower section of Michigan was the worst
since 1982. (AP)

DIGGING OUT • A Detroit resident
attempts to dig his car out Tuesday after a win·
ter storm dumped up to nine inches of snow on

Motorist killed on icy ,
road in northeastern Ohio
By The Associated Press
At least one person has died in a
snowstorm !hat stranded travelers
at a Cleveland Greyhound bus sta·
tion and left lhousands of residents
in northern Ohio without electrici·
ty.
Ella Mcintosh, 27, of Leavitts·
burg, died Tuesday afternoon when
she lost control of her car on an icy
road in the Trumbull County com·
munity of West Farmington in
northeastern Ohio.
She was trapped inside tile car
after it went off !he road and into
the Grand River. She died about
eight hours later at Geauga Community Hospital.
'

About 40 people were stranded
Michigan State Police said at
at Cleveland's bus station least 46 schools would remain
overnight by the ·wintry weather closed today. "On Tuesday, 389
that arrived Tuesday in the Mid· sc hool districts in the state shut
west to tile Northeast.
down .
Wind-chill readings overnight
In Cleveland, parts of Interstate ·
plunged to 45 below zero in Nor- 90 were closed because of blowing
folk, Neb.
snow, and a 10-car pileup blocked
"We should be stuck in the the road cas~ of downtown . No
deep freeze until further noticc/'""'"·serious"injuries ~ere reported. The
said Ignatius Camporeale, ~ storm dumped 9 mches of ~now 10
Natioiilil Weather Service mctco- . Fostona 10 north-central OhiO.
rologist in New York.
The heav1est reported snowfall
Most of the tllousands who lost was II. I inches · at Detroit
electricity had power again today · Mettopolita.n Airport, 20 miles
and many roads closed on Tuesday west of tile City, SBJd meteorologist
were reopened. Otllcr effects lin· Ed Fenelon. That was the area's
gered bowever
heaviest snowfall since 1982, when
'
·
11.8 inches fell, he said.

Voinovich draws praise, criticism

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich got mixed
COLUMBUS - The board of reaction to a speech in which he
direciOrs of Bob Evans Farms Inc. claimed that during his fltSt year in
announced today a quarterly divi- office, he laid the foundauon for
dend of sev_en ,cents per ~are on jobs, education and other improve·
!he corporauon s outstanding com- meniS that Ohio needs.
mon SII;&gt;C~ ~$.01 Jl!lf value).
.
His fcUow Republicans general. The dividend ts payable March , ly applauded his secon~ Stale -of
2, 1992, to stockho~ders of record the State address to a joinllegisla·
at the close of busmess Feb. 14, tive session Tuesday. But
1992.
.
, • Democrats faulted hil!l for what ·
Bob Evans Farms currently they called a lack 'of leadership in
own~ and operates 2~9 full-service lougli'cconODiic times.
·
family restaurants m a 16-slatc • Voinovieh refem:d briefly in his
area.
..
.
.
39-lllinute speech 10 Ohio's $460
In add,mon, Bob Evans Farms · million budget deficit. He noted he
. food .products ire sold .under lhe submitted proposals earlier tP solve
Bob Evans Farms, Owens Country it and is willing 10 consider lhe
Sausage, Mn. Giles, Mrs. Kinser's, ideas of the Senate and .House.
.
Jack's•. Janet's and Today's llrand
He plans to meet with Senate
nam~ mall or pan of,2S ~laiCS and President Stanley A,ronoff, R·
!he DtStnct ofColurnbta. ,
, . Cincinnati, and Spe.ker Vern

Riffe, D·Wheelersburg, on Thursday to see if all can agree on both
short· and long-range solutions.
In roughly !he first half of his
address, Voinovich claimed to have
improved services for children and
families, with programs such as
Head Start, while malcing progress
toward education reform.
He cited increased highway con·
slruction, reorganization of the
Deparlllienl of Development,
~gthened child support,enforce·
·ment and others. He,satd some
steps have been taken toward cmb·
ing heallh·care costs but "much
more can and must be done."
Voi119vich was praised by many
lawmakers for new proposals that
would create a Slate center to boOSt
the export of Ohio products, and
bolsler research and development
to .~te .jobs in th~ environmental

cleanup business.
The speech olherwise included
praise for individual members of
the Senate and House, members of
Congress and other$ he named as
having helped Ohio with bHis or
actions favored by his administration.
·
Riffe, who has had strained relaiions with the govern.or at times,
called the speech typrcal as such ·
efforts go. Bu1 he said he was
encouraged by Voinovich' s
promise to cooperate and work
wltll tile Legislature.
'
•
Aronoff said the governor $ave •
a realistic speech that recognized ·:
the ailing econom~ and the slale'{
limited resources. 'Thele was a lot · .
of (former Gov.) Jim Rhodes In :
there," he added, referrlns to :Rhodes' penchant for stressing .lolls ·.
in his speC_ches over the yean,
:;
.

...

.

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.•• '

.•

,,

I "

'I

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-4

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