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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

OSU slips
by Iowa five
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Pick 3: 721
Pick 4:7516

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Cards:

,

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Q-H; 6-C; 2-D;
A-S

Super Lotto:
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Kicker: 574945

Page4

Vol. 42, No. 180
Copyrighted 11192

Clear tonight. Low In 20s.
High Tuesday near 45.

1 Socllon,10 P•g" 25 con to

A lluHimedla Inc. Newapapor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 20, 1992

Decision on dioxin levels may
be made Thursday in Charleston
By Mindy Kearns
The topic of dioxins wiU
probably come before the Legislature's Joint Commiuee on RuleMaking Wednesday or Thursday,
and what ultimately is decided in
Charleston might mean the difference between 800 to 1,000 jobs in
Mason County... or nolhing. In various materials submitted by Apple
Grove Pulp and Paper Co. to public
and private sector agencies close to
the projec~ the proposed sJandard
o~ 1.0 parts per quadrillion if applied to the Ohio River would limit
the maximum allowable discharge
from all sources to 1.1 ounces per
year.
.
The Apple Grove Pulp and Paper
Co., a subsidiary of Parsons &amp;
Whittemore plans to spend over $1
bi!lio~ buildmg a pulp and paper
m11l m Mason County. The mill
would release some dioxins iniO the
river, and the company wants legislators to ease lhe regulations
rc;commended years a~o by the Envuonmental Protecuon Agency
(EPA} to those recommended
recen~y by the Water Resouces
Board of West V"UEinia.
Environmentalists say a change
in lhe dioxin levels would have a
A MILE OF PENNIES • Members or the congregation and
lriends or the First Southern Baptist Church or Pomeroy collected
a "mile or pennies" lor the annual Lottie Moon Christmas offering
· lor loreign missions. Monday morning the pennies • totaling
.... ~.SO ..... w.ere..lllken. b~~-..ReY. Lamar OcBrjlanUq.tlu!, Oilio..
Southern Baptist Association headquarters in Columbus. Here the
local pastor is assisted by Bill Pullins in loading up pennies.

Emmogene Hamilton
will seek re-election

AND IT MUST 8£ 5AID, T~lS F'ACT 15 NOT

ONCE "'"- AI«:' GAWAIN STAND
. ON TI-lE EDGE' at A CLIFT
TI-lEY MAAE A TEMPflNGo
TARGET TO ONE WOO 15
~!&gt;ENrlAI.LY A PR~R.

LO!lT ON c.cgMAC . IT MA'I EVEN 8El' THAT
T,_.E WORD6 "JI/ST CiVE 1./TTlli PiJSII•
CIW66 HI&amp; MIND. 6IJT HE 00);6 NOI'l-llNGo,

HAVING GIVEN 1116 WORD. A GOOD Tl-li~LTOO.
VAl. AND G.'WAIN WCXJLD IIAVE E!£01 I'RE~?V&lt;ED.

Meigs County Recorder Emmogcnc Holstein Congo will seek reelection to that office in the May
Republican Primary Election.
Congo, who was recently married to Charles Hamilton of Syracuse, will u~e her new married
name, Emmogene Hamilton on the
May ballot. State law, however,
requires Hamilton to use her former
name of Emmogene Holstein
Congo in all official recorder's
business throughout her current
term.
Mrs. Hamilton was appointed to
the office in January. 1982 by the
Republican Central Committee,
following the death of Recorder
Eleanor Robson. She has served in
the office since that time, and will
mark her lith year in office later
this month.
A native of Meigs County, Mrs.
Hamilton and her husband reside in
Syracuse, where She is a member or
the Asbury United Methodist
Church. She has also served as a
member of the Republican Central
Committee since the late 1970's.
She is an avid walker and enjoys
crocheting.
: :Mis. Hamilton is also ·active in
the Ohio Recorder's Association,
aild curren~y serves as that assoc iati.tin's door prize commiuee.
Since she was appointed to the
ol'fice. Hamilton has instituted seveml changes 10 aid the public . All
of lhe office's index ·records . 328
volumes of deeds and 186 m6rtgage volumes · have been recorded
microfilm. That microfilm is
tl)en stored with National Underground Stdrage. However,the vol-

on

EMMOGENE HAMILTON
umes in the office are available to
the public.
Courtesy to both local pat;ons
and out~of-town visitors has been a
hallni'ark of her office, Hamilton
says, stating that she and her staff
"try to be as accommodating as we
can wilh all of the public."
"People are very important to
me," Hamilton said. "To run this
type of office, you have to like people."
Hamilton's deputies, Judy King
and Kar Hill, ~ve work~d in the
office smce the time of Hamilton's
appoinunent

--- Local.- briefs--::Stolen vehicle recovered
A 1986 Mercury taken from· the driveway of Milton E. Roush,
.: Syracuse, early Monday morning was recovered a shon time later
; ·on the,Pomeroy Kroger parking loL ·
.·
,
: . Chtef of Pohce ~erald Rought reported that. two juveniles were
. m the vehtclecwheh ttwas spotted by a polic~ office on the lot about
: .,2:30a.m. Tbe yo~lhs were taken 10 the station. questioned, amt lhen
·.·turned oved'bthetr parents.
·
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Pattol probes tWO accidents
No injuries were.reporleil resulting from two one-car· accidents
over the weekend.
.
.
.
Aaudlng' to a repQ(I from the Oallia-Meig1 Post of the State
HlJhway PaJrol, Shirlee A. Evans, 47, of Ponllnd wu northbcund
on l-Cbinon Township Road 134 (Sharon HoUow Road} Fri!fay
COilllnaed on page J

profound impact on the environment and health of the state. But
recently scientific findings have indicated that dioxin may- not be as
toxic as once lhought, and that exposure to dioxin is no more hazar·
dous lhan spending a week sunbalhing.
What is dioxin
Dioxin is one compound in a
family of chlorinated organics that
occur naturally, or as a by-product
of certain processes includmg lhe
bleaching of cellulose fibers with
chlorine. According to the materials
released by lhe pulp company, less
than II'&gt; percent of tile dioxin ad·
ded to lhe environment each year if
from lhe pulp and paper industry.

sJandards based on lhe laJest
scientific knowledge regarding lhe
effects on human heai!A and lhe
environment. A number of states,
including Maryland and Virginia,
have developed "state specific"
sJandards of 1.0 ppq, which have
been approved by EPA.
The Water Resource Board
through its public notice and public
hearing process received ovinions
and comments from a vanety of
sources and has recommended on
the basis of scientific evidence that
a 1.0 ppq sJandard is protective of
human heallh and the environment
for lhe State of West Virginia.
. The standard being proposed is
Continued on page 3

Major contributors of dioxin to lhe
environment are forest fires, like
the ones West Virginia experienced
in the Fall, and lhe combustion of
municipal solid waste. ·
The company states in the
materials that dioxin was identified
as a poiiUJant of concern by lhe
Environmental Protection Agency
in the early 1980's as a result of
one animal study (Kociha}. In
1984, lhe company states, hased on
this study, the EPA recommended
that ambient water not exceed
0.013 parts per quadrillion (ppq},
but left it to individual staleS to
develop their own standards.
The Clean Water Act allows
states to develop water quality

Board
·-discusses
.....
water issues
.

.

Ivan Powell was re-elected presidem of the Racine Board of Public
Arfairs when the board met recently.
During the meeting, discussion
was held on the need for water
meters. It was reported that in
1991, there were 60,210,000 gallons of water pumped. That is over
400 gallons per person per day.
Thc· Environment:ll Protection
Agency has been urging the board
to install meters to cut down on
excess water usage. For the past
several years, the village has been
pumping and 1reating an amoum or
water in excess or the normal
amount of systems with same number of water customers. This excess
usage costs the board more in electricity to pump the water and in
chemicals to treat the water. The
board is taking steps to determine
the costs of installing meters at all
water hookups.
The board i,s also requesting lhat
residents of the village conserve
water when there is a power outage, since when the electricity is
off, there is no water being pumped
iniO the system . The tank could bo
easily emptied and would be a
problem should a fire break out
within the village.
It was also reported that during
cold weather, a number of residents arc leaving their water running to keep their pipes from freezing. The practice of letting the
water run is another factor that
caused the increase in lhe price of
the water. Rc$idents arc urged to
wrap their water pipes to keep them
from freezing rather Jhan letting the
water run.

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WINTER'S DRESS· The pale cloak of win·
ter draped the region overnight and the pine
trees and picnic tables of Pomeroy's mini-park
provided a placid scene on a quiet morning.

Nearly two inches of snow fell in the Bend area
early Monday morning, th'e first measurable
amount this winter.

No accidents reported despite snow
'

Schools, couhty offices and
many businesses were closed today
in observance of Marlin Luther
King Day so the early morning
snowfall had less than usual an
effect on activity in lhe Bend area.
While lhe roads were reportedly
slick around the county, motorists

Monday morning, lhc first measurable amount of the season.
There was a light snow last
Wednesday night resulted in some
slick road which resulted in the
schools in the Eastern and· Meigs
Local Di stricts dismissing on
Thursday.

apparently managed without much
difficulty. No accidents were
reported by the Pomeroy or Mid·
dleport police departments or the
sheriff's department, ahhough it
was noted that there were reports or
a few cars having slid into ditches.
About two inches of snow fell

King programs emphasize uf!ily, education
By The Associated Press
Programs emphasizing tolemne~;
and unity arc dmwing attention as
the nation prepares to celebmte the
birthday of slain civil rights leader
Martin Luther King Jr.
Other observances of the 63rd
anhiversary of King's birth focus
·on education.
Cleveland State University Pres,
.idcnt John Flower and Cuyahoga
CommtDliiy College President Jerry
Sue Owens planned a brunch today
for Cleveland's loti educators, civic
and business leaders. Topics of Jhe
program would include t11e princi•
· pies that Kin~ advocated, such as
equal educauonal and economic .
Of'IK1r1Uiiities for ~veryone, commtuuty ~ollege spokesmlll Mlchilel
Nogy said.
,
·..,,,
Tommie Harris Stewart:· an ·
actress, director and educator,
noted Ki~s's achievements in a
speech at'lbe college's 16th annual
,.-

..

celebration on Sunday.
"Since Jan. 16. 1986, the United States of America has been duly
charged to recognize Dr. King's
monumental achievements to
humankind, at home and 'arouitd
the world," said Ms. Stewart, who
appears in lhe television show "In
the Heat of the Night."
"We are committed to join
hands with the rest of the nation to
continue the legacy of tllis holiday,
to celebrate the _triumpH of truth
marching on, enriching all of our
lives." she said\
.
In central Ohio, the first in a
series of worship services to unite
predominantly black or white
churches was held Sunday. ··
-The effort toward unity is one
way to meet the goals set by King,
organizers said.
·
The Rev. Mitchell McGuire
pastor of Community Baptisi
Church in Columbus, said similar

programs around Ohio arc no acci- dom in the Civil War era.
Barham J. Fields, the on-camem
dent. His church was formed
narrator for the PBS television
Jhrough such a merger in 1981.
"I think it' s (the unity effort} series on the war, detailed the his·
been well thought out and tory of the conOict during an annuplanned," he said. "I'm just elated al King lecture.
Jhat it's coming together. '
Even after slavery was officially •
Last week, plans were outlined
abolished,
she said, "freedom did
in Columbus for aprogram to focus
on education, the arts, civic groups, not come from words on paper."
Most fcdcral and state offices
n:ligion and the workplace .
were
scheduled to be closed for the
Sponsors of "A World of Difholiday.
'ference" said thf program is
Cuyahoga Comm~nity College
designed to help spread under·
a
lso
awarded S750 Km~ Memorial
standing aild tolerance.
Fund
Awards scholarshtps on Sun·
"It's been lost in other places;
day
to
six sophomores. • ·
it's not going to be lost hete," said
Alan Katchen, regional director of
the Aqti-Defamation League of
The fund est~blished in 1980
B'nai B'rith. '.'The ·people want 10 honors students based on acaworlc l!igether." .
.
demics and community involve.
lr] Akrofi on Sunday, a htstorian men(·. This year's winners are
!Old an audience that the power and working toward associate degrees
detcrm!nation , of slaves ~err ~ -graduated from Cleveland pubrespons•bhl for the push foJ free
ltc'schools.
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MO!lday,·January 20, 1992

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, January 20, 1992

•

The Daily Sentinel

·Congress goes after 'orphan drug' makers

WASHINGTON - A congres: sional subcommittee will call some
l'OmeiOJ', Ohio
· of lhe nation's biggest drug manuDII:VontD TO THB ll'fTEltE8T8 01' THE MEIGS-MASON AREA : facturers on lhe carpet Jan. 21 for
using a government-granted
monopoly to charg'e outrageous
prices for a few precious drugs that
treat mre diseases.
Our sources say that Genentech
ROBERT L. WJNGETI'
Inc., Eli Lilly and Co., and Amgen
Publisher
Inc. will take the worst beating at
the hands of the Senate Antitrust
PAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Subcomminee chaired by Sen.
Assistant PubUsher/Controller
Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio.
Genel'lll Manager
Metzenbaum sent out specific
questionnaires to the blockbuster
AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
drug companies last July trying to
lhe American Newspaper Publisher Association.
get at their bottom lines - how
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
much of a profit margin have they
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wilh name,
made off of so-called "orphan
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters · drugs."
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
These are the drugs that no company originally wanted to develop
because the market is so small · only a handful of people with mre
diseases. As incentive, in 1983
Congress agreed to a seven-year
monopoly on the market for any
company thar produced an orphan

111 Cout Street

Republican party
t~rgets black voters

drug. If a company invested the
money to develop a limited-use
drug, Congress pledged that the
Food and Drug Administration
would not approve the sale of a
similar drug by any other company
for the fJISI seven years.
The law worked well, and the
crop of new orphan drugs flourished. But soon a few high-priced
ocphans began raking in big profits
from their protected markets.
Most orphan drug producers sell
at reasonable prices and have sales
less than $10 million a year, but a
few are raking in profits that
Congress never intended. They justify their prices by saying their
development costs were high and
they give away some of lhe drugs
to non-paying patients. "For every
10 patients that you see talting our
drug, one gets it free from Lilly,"
Ed West, a spokesman for Eli Lilly,
!Old us.
Eli Lilly and Genentech Inc .
share an annual market of $250
million for !heir versions of a
human growth hormone to treat

dwarfism. By charging prices of
$10,000 to $30,000 pez patient pez
year, the companies have been able
to recoup lheir development costs
by substantial margins, according
10 Wall Street analysts.
Amgen's orphan drug, EPO, led
the industry last year with sales of
more than $300 million. EPO is
given to lcidney dialysis patients at
a price that can cost them up to
$8,000 a year. In 1992, EPO is
expected to cost taxpayers more
than $300 million through the
Medicare program. A repon nearly
two years ago by the Heslth and
Human Services Department concluded that the government was
paying too much for EPO and recommended that Amgen's books be
opened 10 reveal the profit margin.
That was not done.
Another company, Genzyme,
produces a drug called Ceredase
that treats a potentially fatal
enzyme defiCiency, Gaucher's Disease. Patients face first-year costs
for the treatment o( as much as
$350,000. Genzyme officials

By LISA CORNWELL

..

Letters to the editor
tCitizen soldiers'
Dear Editor.

On June 14, 1952 Ohio's "citizen soldiers" were provided another opportunity 10 serve their nation,
when the 302nd Troop Carrier
Group was activated at Clinton
County AFB, Wilmington, Ohio.
Later designated the 302nd Tactical
Airlift Wing, the unit moved to
Riclcenbacker AFB near Columbus
in 1971. Until it was officially
inactivated in April, 198l,lhe wing
compiled an outstandin~ record of
performance and readmess as an
1mportant component of the U.S.
Air Fon:e Reserve. ·
'
Since lhe majority of its members were recruited from the cities,
towns, villages and farms of Ohio,
the unit ~ecame known as "The

Buckeye Wing". 1n 1986 an Associadon was organized to renew the
bonds of friendship, established
among these members. Every man
or woman, who served in the Wing
on either ·military or civilian status
is eligible for membership. We are
hopeful, that this message will
reach some of the hundreds of such
individuals with whom we ~
· not made ~ntact and who may be
unaware that "the Buckeye Wing
lives on."
For information, regarding the
Association, its activities and plans
for the future, readen are invited 10
contact Paul R. Priday, 7755 Harriott Rd., Plain City, Ohio 43064.
Sincerely yours,
Paul R. Priday,
President,
Buckeye Wing Association

Today in his~ory
By The Asloeiatecl Press
Today Is M~y. )an. 20, ~20th ~ of 1992. There .are 346 days
left in the year. 'Ibis is the Martin Lulher King Jr. federal holiday.

counter that the price averages out
to only $50,000 a year after the initial therapy. They blame "manufacturing costs" for the high ~!ice.
A company spokesman clatmed
Genzyme made "nowhere near lhe
profits of some of the other companies." The federal Office of Technology Assessment and Stanford
University are now conducting an
investigation to get the details
behind the high price tag on
Ceredase.
Les Rodin, a Gaucher's patient
in Los Angeles, has a· treatment
schedule that costs his insurance
carrier nearly $200,000 a year. "I
believe that the biotech companies
are entitled to their profits," he
said, ·'but some lime ago I told
them the war drums are beating out
there and that if they are gouging
people, the truth is goinc to come

~e impetus ror the states'

clampdown on welfare can be
found in current economic statistics. Vinually every state is in ftscal trouble. On the one hand, the
recession has sharply cut revenues.
On the other, state budgets batloaned and state responsibilities
mushroomed throughout the late
1970s and 1980s as the federal
government shed programs and
mandated stale responsibilities.
State government was a growth
industry, somewllat akin 10 the conslfuction business. As with construction, the crash has made it a
basket case.
Every state is required 10 have a
balanced budget. In a time of
falling revenues, you can balance
the budget either by raising tax~ or
by slashing services. In the first
round of post-recession budget bal-

ancing, many states tried both love." Proponents argue that they
simultaneously. That made every- are the new wave of welfare
one mad, but no one madder than reform . Op~onents argue that,
the middle class. whose entitle- whatever !herr merits, their timing
ments are higher than any other is execmble. To them, it is self-evigroup's but whose tax burden is dent that a severe recession is no
higher as well.
time to reduce government assisAs it happens, there is good rea- tance 10 those unable to help !hemson for the liberality of middle selves.
class entitlements. Middle class
To a large degree, this debate
Americans vote more than poorer misses the point of many of the
Americans, though less than upper "reforms" currently being advoincome citizens. Incumbent parties cated and adopted. At their root is
in New Jersey and Massachusetts the belief that a vast tide of welfane
rediscovered just how potent mid- recipients constantly flows back
dle class anger could be at the and forth across the continent seekpolls. Other incumbents are not ing the most generous welfare proinclined to repeat the experience.
grams. As a Wisconsin official told
Which has led Io the current a reponer for the Chicago Tribune,
slatehouse fad. Capitalizing on the "We can't be the trll!gne~ the cenwidespread belief that welfare costs ter for every other state's most
are out of control and the reality down and out." In California,
that welfare rolls are at an all-time recent immigrants and illegal aliens
high, Democratic and Republican are swamping the social system,
governors alike are proposing caps and' Gov. Pete Wilson's (lriority is
and reductions. Over a dozen slates 10 discourage further imm1gration.
have cut lheir general assistance
It is fairly clear that the magnet
programs. Nine have cut back on theory proves out. It is equally
Aid to Families with Dependent apparent that the states ane individChildren payments. Proposals have ually wrestling with what is actualbeen made in Califom1a and New ly a national problem. Ergo, the
Jersey to limit the total number of solution is to abandon the patchchildren who can receive benefits. work quilt approach, nationalize
In several stales, full benefits welfare and provide a single stanwould be withheld from any chil- dard b&lt;ith for eligibility and for
dren born to mothers after they had total benefits. It would be a fair
enroUed in assistance programs.
swap for all the programs recently
These and similar restrictivt' Unloaded on lhe StateS by Washingpolicies aimed at modifying behav- 1011. It would help stabilize indigent
IOr and reducing costs are "tough popullllions •.And it should, if ban- ·

Eight EMS calls answered
The weekend brought eight calls for assistance to Meigs County .
Emergency Medical Services units.
·
On Saturday at 10':42 a.m., RuUand unit went to Meigs Mine 2.
Gary Woodruff was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 7:58 p.m.,
Middleport squad went to Locust Slreet. Christy Barton was taken to
Holzer. At 9:33 p.m., Middleport unit went Bone Hollow Road.
Della Milliron was laken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
On Sunday at 12:40 a.m., Pomeroy unit was sent to Third Street.
Tom Lane was taken to Veterans. At 2:24 p.m., Rutland squad went
to Salem School Lot Road and took Marjorie Burnem to Veterans.
At 2:29 p.m.• Racine squad went to Reedsville. Melissa Lee Stewart
was taken to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital. At 9:02p.m., Syracuse unit was took Ricky Laudennit, Jr. from Chancey's Food Mart
to Veterans. At 2:54 a.m .. Pomeroy unit went 10 Alfred Road. Tom
Scyoc was ~ransport'lil to Camden,Clark.

--Area deaths.-_.;._
Robert Purtell
Robert Edward Purtell, 67, of
37420 Zion Road in Rudand, died
on Saturday, January 18,' 1992 at
Holzer Medical Center following a
brief illness. He was the pastor of
Zion Church of Christ, and had
served in the ministry for41 years.
He was born on March 13, 1924
in Sabina, the son of the late Roben
Edward and Carrie Isabell McNeil
Purtell.
A graduate of McClain High
School and Kentucky Christian
College in Grayson, Ky ., Mr.
Purtell was ordained to the Chris·
tian Mini stry at Washington Coun·
house in 1951. In addition to serving the Zion Church of Christ for
14 years, he served the Bradbury
Church of Christ and churches in
West Mansfield, Van Wert and
Newark.
He is survived by his wife, Marjorie June Peters Purtell of RuUand;
two daughters, Deborah Owens of
Louisville, Ky ., and Mrs. John
(Teresa) Whittington of Granville;
a son. John kobert Purtell of London, Ohio; a .brother, Philip (Janet)
Purtell of Leeburg; and two granddaughters, Karel Michele and Jennifer Leigh Owens of Louisville.
Local funeral services will be
held on Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. at
Ewing Fun~ral Home i~ P.omeroy
with·John Edmonds offic1atmg.
Funeral services are also scheduled for Wednesday· at 10:30 a.m.
at the Second Church of Christ in
Newark, Ohio.
'
Friends may call at Ewing
Funeral Home from 5 p.m . to 9
p.m. on Mond~y, and ~ Brucker .
and K·is~ler Fu)leral Home, 985
North 21st Street in Newark from 6
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesday.
Burial will be on Wednesday at
Newark Memorial Garden.
Memorial contributions may. he
made to Ohio Valley Chnsuan
Assembly Camp in Pomeroy.

died properly, actually cut costs by
reducing the number of bureancratIC layers involved in welfare programs.
The idea, as noted earlier is not
new. It received i~ last big push
under Pres1dent R1chard Nixon,
than~s to the v.rodding of Daniel
Patnclc Moymhan, then Nixon's
urban policy adviser and now
Democratic senator from New
York. His proposal was for a Family Assistance Plan, which was basi~ ally nationwide, a guaranteed
mcome floor. It was defeated in
Congress by a combination of liberals, who feared the floor would
be too low, and by conservatives
who wanted nothing to do with
government assistance tD the ablebodied.

,,'1

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·Series on Quayle clouds.the picture
·.

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So TV's canics ind multimedia to dig deeply 10 discover an unflatChapter Seven: Finally, we
PWJdits got it wrong, yet again. The . tering vein. "Gently written," come to evidence that QIMtyle may
Toda 's Highlight in Histay:
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Fift/yeat'l qo, on J111. 20, 1942, Nazi offiCials held the ·'hotorious ·Washington Post has birthed a
observed The Jl(ew York Times, be savvier but surely 1101 smarter
wannsee conference in BerliD, durioc which tbey llrived at their "fmal . study - in-depth; up-close and 1 with all the subtlety that's fit to than we thought.
. -~
solution" calling for the extamination of European Jews.
personal - .which makes a case
print. Quayle's office was giddy
Asked if he had any black
011 this dltc:
'
that ~ice Presi4ent Dan Quayle
with delight, chortled GOP pals. friends or staff he regularly con- ..
In 1265, England's Pllrliam
. • ent. representing districts, cities and bor- really IJII't an amiable dunce,
.And The Post siiiiS bit TV's new- suits, Quayle named the womu
ouldts. met for tlle ftnt time.
. What Quayle seems ID be, on a
stalk circuit. No doubt, the sjgbt of wbo heads the housekeepers at the
Jn 1801, John Marshall was appointed chief justice of the United scale of 1 to I 0, ia an amiable
our president looking deatlfly ill Veep's mansion. Then there are
deuce.
infused network execs witb an those things even his best friends
· _,S~i839, Cl!ile deleared a coafedmdon of Peru and Bolivia in the BatAssembly lines halted in the urgency 10 tell us all about the won't tell him;
.
110 of Yunpy.
..
Company Town u die bolt tipten- Veep dleY. feared we don'tlmow.
(I) Net one GOP senator named
In 184l,lhe island oflfonJ KonJ- c:¢ed 10 Gtetlt Brillin.
cn, beaD counterw llld Ilia sbOII · What 1 110110 know? Here llfC Quayle in his rop three choices for
In 1887, die U.S. Sale 'fiilOYed Ill apenJenttD leue Pearl Harbor wbo make llld exjxJrt one product tbc Cliff's Notes on The Post's Veep in 1988.
in Hlwlii •• Dl\'llbue.
. '
'
- pollticJ - ID I lllfiilul llllioa erfon - all you 'II need to set · (2) Hit pal, Sen. Warren Rud111 1936, Ilrilllll's Kits 0eorae v died. He
lliCCeeded by EclwiRI Mmbed for new audll about our throull1 your multiple choice exam man (R-N.A.),I&amp;yl Quayle doesn't
VDJ.
I
,
four-year llilblaln: could-be Pia- .oo !hi tint Tuesday of November.
have "tbe' moral authority ... tbe.
In 1937, Preiident Frlnldia D. Roole\'elt brcl'!le the fint dllef execu- ideal Quayle. The llliel bed 10 be
Chapters ,One, Two, Three, American people are really tbinttive Ill be MM&amp;*MI~ 01 Jan. :ID b•ter 11ll Maldl4, because of die 20th special; iu audlon Win iu 1111*Four, Five, Sax: Qua.lj~illamarter . ing (about) when they want a preaiAnwt•miiiDC'D"4'Mhe '/
,
·
llln: Bob Woodwud, muter of and avvicr lbln we
denL"
be Ia.
11 JP45, Pn dt•N llooiMit WIIIWOIII iDID otlk:e fer 111 utiJIICO:Oileal_llldDevldlkudlr,_._
of . In Cllrly 1988, Dan and Marilyn
(3) White House aides say
edr.dllllll.
·'
Quayle
is, II:(:Ofdlng 10 The Poet,
,......
10
PI
blm
lllded
1D
0earac
·
II 1911, ,_ m' 1 52 Amft:w II had lleld bolllae far o444 dayl,
B1t what •IOIIiabed Wuh=·- Bulh'a Veep I...ilt-111 IIIey did die ''l!llneone who nliel oo cnl·llicfml
afttlrdle vsi' ") .... a. Ji-y-Carter ID'lc!aald Rclpn. ron 11101t W11 tblt lbe Wood
111ft or dlinp dozens or po1a t1o 10 inaa. , _ , ID NlliD little froll
111916, IIIII Uidled Slllii • ' •ed lbc flnl fedcnl bollday in honOr of Broder IICriea, wlllcb wi1110011 be
ICt noticed Alao, Sen. Quayle ... mil rl&amp;fllllelder ...... LudMr KiDI Jr.
"
die
bouQd into a book, wu heavily liaflllllllill in 11101 toniiUIIDII job wllat be .... llld
....... !hal be II
willl
fiVe,_..,: A'Jft Clatlli eawy Teny Waite clilappcad in · front-loaded with ev=live
tralolna errom - jual u muy a ·aarface bruab-bt.~! bare.IJ
Befnd. Ltllall, wldiO llleiiiDdnllli ~te~odare Jllc ielease of Western nugec dley'd milled.
bed ....,.m. eWI)' now llld dlen.
~ 1 (lie WM
hcd fill lllowrnbet). .
. ·
Jeacbea beyond 1110
--,.
~

Martin Schram
level of sophistication.''
Oh, the reading thin~ . Quayle
told The Post several umea Paul
Johnson's boolt "Mllj]em Times"
impressed him. So they asked what
in the boot he considered most
im)lManL

.

-:

•
Eric !.llewellyn.

...'

=

tlllalll

or:.,tr

'

.

.

· ·

•

Eric Allen Llewellyn, 15, of
Louridgc Road in Coolville, die.d
unexpectedly at the home of hts
paternal grandpareqts, Charles and
· Kathy Llewellyn of New Marsh-

:'
'u

w•

........

Fair through the period. Highs
mostly in lhe 40s Wednesday and
Friday and 35-45 Thursday. Lows
around 30 Wednesday and 25-35
Thursday and Friday.

Continued from page I
afternoon when a deer ran iniO the side of her Oldsmobile Cudass
causing light damage.
.
The patrol reponed Billy J. Murphy. 16, of Reedsville was northbound on Olive Townsh1p Road 273 (Hudson Road) Saturday
evening when he lost control of his car which ran off the left side of
the road and into a fence.
.
Damage to Murphy's Ford Mustang was listed as moderate. No
citations were issued although the patrol listed unsafe speed as the
contributing factor in the accidenL

Hodding Carter III

Proposals for some form of a
national welfare program have
been advanced periodically every
since, usually without oonviction or
adequate preparation. The current
crisis in state government ofl'ets an
opponunity ID reopen lhe subject_·
The ~f.uments in ill favor seem
compeuing, ranging' from lhe economtc 10 the moral. In lhe absence
of such an approach, an ever more
intense war against the poor, illller
than against poverty, seems.
inevitable. IUu.bleak p1ospec1,
for lhe nation no less than for the
poor.

More than 200 strikin~ employ- employees are on strike.
ees or Heiner's Bakery w1ll vote on · Only a handful of Heiner's
a new comract this afternoon, less employees are not members of the
than 48 hours after the group union. All non-members are either
turned down management's origi- management or hourly employees
nal comract offer, company and of the bakery's surplus wholesale
umon off1c1als said Sunday night, store.
according to Monday's Huntington
Workers are. striking over
Herald-Dispatch.
employee insurance and wages.
Clinton Bush, president of Local
Hemer's Bakery, founded by
21 of the Retail-Wholesale and Charles W. Heiner in 1905 is still
Department Store Union AFL-CIO, owqed and operated by. the Heiner
said union leaders met with man- family . h delivers bread and other
agement and a federal mediator for baked goods in West Vugm1a,
about nine hours Sunday before Ohio and Kentucky, but unton
coming up with a new proposal.
workers said several hundred retail
In Gallipolis , shelves at the grocers that buy from Hein~r·s will
Heiner's Bakery outlet on Eastern not receive any further sh1pmen1s
Avenue sat empty for the most part. until the strike can be settled, the
Instead of a picket line, delivery Herald-Dispatch said.
.
trucks without drivers sat outside
According to the Herald-Dtscovered with snow.
patch, workers said 'mast, stores
Workers in Huntington formed stockpile about three days worth
two groups of pickets.
of baked items and should be out of
Non-union employees at the bread by Wednesday. The bakery
Gallipolis store said that no bread had nothing in surplus Sunday.
will be delivered while union employees said.

The -overnight snowfall of 2-4
inches in nonheast Ohio and 1-3
inches in the east and east-central
parts of the state wasn't expected to
stick around long.
·
The National Weather Service
said warming temperatures should
take care of that. It said highs today
would be 25-35 and even warmer
on Tuesday, possibly in the40s.
Forecasters said the fair weather
likely will continue through Friday.
The record high tempemture for

.--Local briefs...----..

Uniform welfare is moral, economic
The states have taken a giant
leap forward into the tou~h new
world of cutthroat competibveness.
The problem is that the throats
which are being cut belong to
dependent children, unemployed
mothers and other Americans
already at risk and in need. State
governments ane falling over each
other 10 clamp new restrictions and
impose severe reductions on welfare. A better solution than this 50state game of beggar-the-~r is to
nationalize welfare, an 1dea that
surfaced 20 years ago and is overdue for serious reconsid~ion

War'm ;temperatures to wipe out sno~

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low in
the low20s. Tuesday. mostly
sunny. High near 45.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday:

out ..."

'

field, early on Saturday morning,
January 18, 1992.
·
He was born in Athens, and was
a freshman at Federal Hocking
High School. He was a member of
the varsity football team, the freshman basketbalLteam, Federal
Hocking Future Farmers of America, Lottridge Lucky Clovers 4-H
Club, and was a former player in
the Athens County Baseball
League.
In addition to his paternal
grandparents, he is survived by his
father and stc(!mothcr, Charles L.
and Robin Llewellyn of-Lottridge;
hi s mother and stepfather, Mary
Osborne Llewellyn and Harold
Jones of Pomeroy; a sister, Misty .
Llewellyn of Pomeroy: four stepsisters: Beverly and Chasity Hess
of Lotlridge. Marlene Hess of Middleport, and Brandy Jones of
Albany; his maternal grandfather,
Bill Osborne of Pomeroy; his
maternal grandmother, Shirley
Osborne of Albany; putcrnal greatgrandmother, Mildred Llewellyn of
New Marshfield; .maternal stepgrandparents, William and Helen
Capehart of Middleport; and several aunts and uncles.
He was preeeded in death by his
paternal great· grandfather, Charles
G. Llewellyn; paternal great-grandparents, Roy ·and Ardath
Llewellyn; maternal great-grandparents, Glenn and James Hudnall
and Lindley and Elizabeth
Osborne; and maternal step greatgrandparents, William and Opal
Capehart and Cecil and Elizabeth
KaufL
Funeral services will be held on
Tuesday at I p.m. at Jagcrs and
Sons Funeral Home in Athens with
Pastor Willard Love officiating.
Burial will be in New Marshfield
CemCJery.
·
Friends may call at the funeral
·home on Monday from 2 p.m . to 9
p.m.

-'

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"·
By The Associated Preu

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Super J.oao JlckDot will pow 10 at
least $24 m1lllon for Wedneaclay
night's Ohio Loacry driWiJII, afttr
110 one C8llle up with all
numbers picked Saturday night witb

m

'

Association to meet
AuxiliarY will meet tin "Thursday
, The PomefQy Alumni Associa- · even:!: the lclioe hall a&amp; 7p.m. ·
tion will 'mcot on Tbuiada)' II 7
II.
rt
of V
p.m. at Dairy C)leen.AIIlnlallllld'
The 'MIIIIIII'I
el·
alumni 111 Welcome 10 IUCIId.
er.11 Memorial
wiD meet
Lealon A.uxlll•ey...a
on Tueiday at 1:30 p.111. ID the 1101Raci~ .Aillerican Le~tion 11602 pltal c:onfnnce room.

$

'

...•'.

this date at the Columbus weather ground this morning from weststation was 68 degrees in 1906. The central Texas across southern
record low was 19 below zero in Arkansas. central Mississippi and
1985.
Alabama, nonhern Georgia and the
Sunset tonight will be at 5:36 Carolinas.
Strong winds produced intense
p.m. Sunrise on Tuesday will be at
7:49a.m.
squalls with heavy snow in tqe
Around the nation
Great Lakes region last night and
The South was a winter wonder- · Saturday. Snow squalls buried
land on Sunday and sub-zero cold Symcuse, N.Y., under 21 1(2 inchplagued the Northeast. Vicious es of snow between early Saturday
snow squalls slammed the Great afternoon and early Sunday mornLakes.
ing.
A band of snow covered the
OverniRht snowfall totals in the

South incfuded up to .8 1/2 inches
around Atlanta, 4 to 6 inches · -;
around Columbus, Miss., 5 inches
•
at Tuscaloosa·, Ala., and 3 l/2 inch. es at Aiken, S.C. and Edgefield,
S.C ..
Rain extended across central
and northeastern florida at midday.
'
Light rain and drizzle spread over
;
southeastern Georgia and coastal ·:
South Carolina. Rain and snow
•
were reported along the coast of· ,
North Carolina.
•
;
· Dry weather prevailed over -•
much of the nation, with sunny · ~: .
skies in many areas. Fog lingered" . : ·
in the valleys of the Pacific Coast.
'
Readings dipped below zero " ~­
from Minnesota through Michigan··.. - ~
and Ohio to northern New England... -:~
Temperatures of 10 degrees below .:
zero or colder were reported in
•
Maine,
·
Vermont,
New
York,
riding the bleach plant is cooked
: .
with the use of an extended Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesola
:
modified continuous cooking and North Dakola.
Hibbing,
Minn.,
was
the
coldest
•
(EMCC) Kamyr digester, followed
spot
in
the
Lower
48
States
with
a
j
with screening/washing, a dualmorning
low
of
27
degrees
below
reactor oxygen delignification sys.'
•
tem, and two stages of pressure dif- zero.
Sub-zero
readings
were
also
~
:
fuser washing. The pulping-bleaching . operation is done entirely at reported in the Great Basin and • ··Rockies.
,
•
medium consistency.

Decision on dioxin levels may
be made Thursday in Charleston
Continued from page I
for rivers in the state and not any
specific industry, acrording to the
pulp company materials. The
proposed standard of 1.0 ppq if applied 10 the Ohio River would limit
the maximum allowable discharge
from all so'urtes to 1.1 ounces per
year, the materials stale.
Is lhe dioxin level Sl!re?
Company materials say considerable debate has surrounded the
issue of whether the Kociba Study
was correct in identifying dioxin as
highly carcinogenic, or whether
dioxin is in fact carcinogenic at all.
Scientific evidence has subsequently been ~enerated to indicate
that the origmal findings significantly overstated the carcinogenic
potential of dioxin, and EPA is in
the process of reas~ssing dioxin
risks.
An a.nicle in the August 28, 1991
issue of the Richmond Times-Dispatch told the story of residents of
Times Beach, Missouri, who were
ordered evacuated nine years ago
because the land was thought to be
dangerously contaminated with
dioxin.
It cost Missouri and federal taxpayers more than $37 million to
buy out Times Beach residents, the
Times-Dispatch wrote, and it cost
another $100 million for the Symtex Corp.. whose plant was the
source of · the contamination, to
clean up dioxin conlaminated soil
at Times Beach and 28 other Missouri sites.
But now the government
scientist who called the alarm on
Times Besch and dioxin says he
was wrong, according to the TimesDispatch.
·
It stated Dr. Vernon Houk of the
Center for Disease Control (CDC)
said lhe improved scientific techniques enabled a more accurate assessment of the toxicity of dioxins,
which come in several vurieties.
Newer research, he said, showed
that his alarmist conclusions of
1982 were wrong.
Houk added it looked as if the
evacuation of Times Beach was
unnecessary and now believes that
federal policy needs to reflect that
if dioxin is a carcinogen, it's a very
weak one, with exposure to dioxin
no more hazardous than spending a
week sunbathing.
The World 'Health Organization
backs him up, according to the
Times-Dispatch, with its dioxin
standards 1,600 times more than
the EPA's level.
.
Alan Rcoks, ediror-in-chief of
PIMA Magazine, wrote in the September 1991 issue that "We've
been had." (PIMA stands for Paper
Industry Management Association,
and is a monthly liade magazine
that has been in publication since
1919.)
"Even in high doses, it's (diQxin)
not the .environmental marauder
people said it was," he wrote.
Rooks noted the foUowing:
• Vernon Houle, director of the
Center for Environmental Health at
the National Center for Disease
Control, the leading federal official
on environmental health hazards,
says he apd other officials have
seriously overestimated the hazard
of dioxin.
• A CDC study examining health
records of more thin S,OOO workers
in chemical factories wilh dioxin
wastes found no higher incidence
of cancers and related diseases.
• In Seveso, Italy, residents
received very high doses of dioxin
after a ,factory explosion . .f!. study
showed no excess long-tenn heslth
problems.
"What does all this mean?"
Rdoks · wrote. "We've been led
around by the nose by lhe government and by the environmentalists;
wl!ose accusations that we we~
poisoning lhe environment were
based on incomplete reseatt:h.' In
'

'

520 million at stake.
There ~ve been five consecutive Super l.ottD drawings without
a jacllpot winner.
Here arc Satunlay niahi's Ohio
Lottery •lectlona:

Super LotiD
·
10.18-23-.36-37-39
(ten1 eiJ.bteen, twenty-three,

..

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'

'

,

The APP digester is the first system ·designed and built specifically
to run the EMCC technology. In an
EMCC operation, the whole digester vessel is used for cooking, including the countercurrent coolcing
in the three-hour wash zone, resulting in a gender cook while producing a lower-kappa-number pulp
with higher strength than that
produced by conventional kraft
cooking.
TheJreimpregnation vessel is
design to operate al 240 degrees
for a period of 30 minutes, according to Pulp &amp; Paper. Chips are then
transferred into the main cooking ,
vessel, which has cocurrent cooking in the upper ponion at 310 degrees for one hour.
The chip column then moves
into the modified continuous cooking section for an additional hour,
then the "hi-heat" wash zone follows for three hours. White liquor
is added at the bottom of the digester and upHows through the hi-heat
wash zone, resulting in the EMCC
feature.
From the reactors, the magazine
slates, pulp discharges to a stainless
steel h1gh blow lube. An MC pump
feeds it to the first-stage postoxygen pressure diffuser washer,
and from there is pumped to a
second washer and into a tile-lined
bleach plant feed tank.
Bob Collins, director of marketing at Kamyr, was quoted as
sayin~. '"fhere arc less-expensive
washmg alternatives, which we
also offered 10 APP. But they insisted on pressure di[fusers because
lhey wanted to have the environmentally cleanest pulp system possible. They paid a premium to
protect the environment." Less active chlorine is needed in the
bleaching process. and because it is
completely enclosed, the pressure
diffuser has no air emissions.
The unit has a single screen
cylinder within a metal pressure
housing. Pulp enters from the bottom and forms a uniform 8-inch
bed between the outside housing
and the internal screen. Washwater
passes through this bed and is collected behind the screen and exlracted from the bottom of the unit. The
key to the washer's high efficiency
is the uniform density of the
moving pulp bed lrllpped between
the housing and the screen plate.
Liquor in the pulp cannot find an
essy way through the bed.
Water is applied through a series
of II or 12 baffled ring openings
along the pressure diffuser's length,
ensuring uniform distribution
through the pulp bed. Liquor is extracted through the pulp and into
the center of the unit for subsequent
discharge at the bottom.
Also contributing to ihe unit's
overall efficiency, according to
Pulp and Paper Magazine, is the
fact that it is pressurized and can be
more easily opemted at elev~ted
tempemtures.
From the bleach plant feed tank,
pulp is discharged using an MC
pul~ for delivery to two MC mixers
des1gned for addition of either
chlorine dioxide or chlorine.
After the mixers, pulp goes into
lhe De rower for retention. A
titanium, single-stage, a(JIIospheric
dfffusion washer is mounted in the
top· or , the be rower. The
~hlorinated wasbed pulp then drops

Somttmf18 r;ooas .Jt!'Ufri!JS CooKJ"8 &gt;11

llundlr fwouljii

'

:t;IX,lllllty-se~ thiny-niJ,Ie) .

5·7-4-9-4-S
(ftye, nven, four. nine, fQur,
live)
.
Pick 3 Nu•bera
7-2-1
.
(aven;twO, one)

the process, they ·scared miUions of
people needlessly. An are the major
media picking up the 'dioxin isn't
dangerous' story? Don't hold your
breath."
Pulp technology
.
According to the materials
released by Apple Grove Pulp and
Paper Co., Parsons and Whittemore
of which Apple Grove Pulp and
Paper and Alabama River Pulp is a
division, proposes to build an integrated "kraft" chemical pulp and
paper mill in West Virginia.
According 10 the company information, the plant will utilize the
best industry technology to minimize the impact on the surrounding
environment. It stated the chemical
process is where the actual cellulose fibers are separated by dissolving the lignin and other organic
compounds. The chemical process
produces a pulp with superior
strength and durability, when compared to a mechanical process, and
is employed mainly in printing and
writing papers by the manufacturer
of stationery. photo-copying paper
and others.
There are several chemical
processes including the sulfate
process, which is generally refem:d
to as the "kraft" (J'OCess. The kraft
chemical pulping process is the
process which would be employed
in Apple · Grove, according to the
company materials.
The materials further stated that
in 1984 dioxin was identified as a
by-product of the chlorine bleachiiiJ. process employed by kraft pulp
m1lls. Since then, technological
developments, including the utilization of oxygen as a pre-bleaching
agent to dissolve as much lignin as
possible before the bleach sequence
and the use of hydrogen peroxide,
oxygen and chlorine dioxide as a
substitute for chlorine, have
reduced the amount of chlorine involved while maintaining brightness and strength.
Considerable research is currently . underway into altema~ve
bleachmg sequences that would
eliminate the use of chlorine, the
company, information stated; includmg the use of owne and enzymes (Parsons &amp; Whittemore has
run enzyme trials at its Alabama
plant). However, 110 large scale
commercial operation has been
proven which eliminates chlorine
completely, nor does it now appear
that doing so would be as beneficial
to the environment as WllS
originally pezceived, although the
company continues 10 actively investigate other practical alternatives.
The Apple Grove mill
The Apple Grove project . is
modeled on the Alabama Pine Pulp
technology with provisions 10 incorporate the latest technological
development when the mill goes
forward, according to company information .
Althou~h the company has never.
released 1ts exact process for the
Apple Grove mill, Alabama Pine
Pulp's (APP) technology was explained in the June 1991 edition of
Pulp and Paper Magazine, a few
short months before the mill's
opening. j&lt;'ollowing is the process
as listed by the magazine:
The Dade rublication called the
Alabama mil "one or lhe world's
most advanced pulping and bleaching systems into commercial operation, producing a high-quality, (ully
bleached softwood kraft market
pulp with lhe most'environmentally
sound technology currendy available."
APP's softwood kraft pulp is
bleached 10 90-plus ISO brightness
in a Kamyr four-stage DcEoDD
bleach plant, with diffusion washing in the lOp of each tower. Pulp

MASON
FAMILY
RESTAURANT
Locltld on Rt S1 bMidiMiiiDII Emn IIIli MiiiDIIIrtDIII, lrlllon, WV

Super Lotto climbs to $24 million

_Meigs announcements_
"
• I

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Heiner's Bakery em-ployees
strike; local outlet affected

------Weather----........

Bills have been introduced in
the House and Senate to amend the
original orphan drug law and allow
competitors to enter eenain markets when the sales of a drug
exceed $200 million. But even at
that, if the company can prove that
the cost of develoP.ment was high
- at least $200 million in the Senate amendment and $100 million in
the House - then the monopoly
would stay in place for that drug.
Industry officials and even some
Wall S1reet biotech analysts don't
want any changes in the law. Eli
Lilly has threatened 10 stop mating
orphan drugs because of the continued "tinkering with the law." And
a Genentech executive told our
associate Dean Boyd that, "The
changes would create a dramatic
disincentive for companies ... "
Metzenbaum is walking a delicate line between lowering the cost
of medical care and scaring off the
drug companies. "No one wants
the drug companies 10 lose money
making drugs for mre diseases, •• be
said. "But the orphan drug program was never intended 10 be used
by drug companies to make blockbuster profits at the expense of desperately ill people."

Associated Press Writer

CLEVELAND - Securing mOle blaclt votes for the 1992 Republican
presidential candidate is a major goal of the Republican party, a party
official said.
The director of Political Outreach at the Republican National Committee in Washington held a news conference at Cuyahoga County Republican headquarters Friday to explain the party's efforts to attract black voters.
Clarence Carter said Cleveland was the fJISI stop in a speaking lOur of
22 cities where he hopes to spread the party's message to blacks.
"We don't expect 10 see significant increases in black support at fJISt,
but we think there are many blacks out there - especially middle class
blacks- that would support our philosophy if they will listen 10 our message," he said.
In the last election, President Bush received only about 10 pezcent of
lhe black vote, but Carter said the party hoped to increase that figure to at
least 18 pezcent in 1992.
"Blacks can no longer depend on government 10 save them but must
take responsibility for saving themselves," the black New Jersey businessman said. "And that's what our party believes in."
Carter said black candidates and spokespersons who are committed
activists and who will serve as role models for blacks are desperately
needed.
Although the party has allocated SI million for the outreach effon,
Carter admitted that his job was not goinl!to be easy in view of almost 60
years of black allegial!ce 10 the Democra~c Party.
. .
"It is extremely difficult to get a nauonal debate on this 1ssue started
among blacks in this country because of lhe almost violent reaction you
gel when you even say the words black and Republican together," he
said.
The Republican Party is hoping to receive suppon in spreading its
message to black Americans from state and local Republican groups such
as the Frontier Republicans.
The Cleveland-based group of black Republicans was fanned about a
year ago and is trying to expand membership across the state. The group
plans to aid Carter's efforts to gain black votes for Republicans on all levels of government.
James Raplin, president of the Frontier group, said pan of the effon
would be a bimonthly newspaper 10 be sold on newsstands and through
subscriptions.
.
Raplin also said Cleveland Mayor Michael R. White and U.S. Rep.
Louis Stokes, .both Democrats, can expect challenges from black Republican candidates in their next elections. He declined to say who was considering running for the mayoral and conpessional posts.
"We ane trying to instiblte something to save black America based on
the Republican tenet that we are responsible and must take cane of ourselves - not wait for someone to deliver us," Caner said. "We have to
take control of our destiny."

Jack Anderson
Michael Binstein

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh!o

• 10 em-0 pm

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSAlice Young, Middleport; Shirley·
Pauley, Middleport; and Junior
Hunt, Long Bottom.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESltolla Cassell and Ann Boso.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
None.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Ethel Reeves.

...

~

' .....!.- ---

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Friday. Jan. 17 - ,
Geneva Abbott, Tanya Barnhouse, -·,
Hazel Congo, Mrs. Wamie Crace --""-~·.. .
and son, Lori Exline, Christophe!_·..:
Holter, Stewart Keeton, Ula Lan- . .
don Litha Leedy. Michael Sellers, ~ :
Evelyn Smallwood, Anneliese ·
Summers ,and Douglas Wilson.
Discharges, Saturday, Jan. 18 Mrs. Brian Arthur and son, Beth · "
Bellisle, Joyce Bentley, Sylvia
Birchfield, Paul Jacks, Terrance
McKinnis, Mrs. Randy Oliver and
son, Nettie Rupe, and Joseph
Young.
Discharges, Sunday, Jan. 19Donald Allen, Vickie Blakeman,
Stephanie Grow, Nancy Jones,
Rose Nelson, Amanda Trout, Mrs.
Larry Young and son.
Births, Sunday, Jan. 19 - Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Williams from
Hamden, a daughter.

MAC to hold class
The Middleport Ar(s Council
will hold Texas-style dance classes
beginning on Tuesday.
Advanced classes will be held
from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. and begin·
ncr's classes from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m.
The cos is $7 per couple, per ses·
sion.
register or for information,
call 9 2-2675.

..

from the top of the tower into an
MC pump and is transferred for the
addition of oxygen.
The pulp then moves through the · ;
Eo tower for retention, where a
slain less steel, single-stage, atmos- ·- - •
pheric diffusion washer is mounted ...:...
in top of lhc Eo tower. Pulp from ' ··- ·" ·
this slage discharges into a titanium · · ·
dual-service MC pump/mixer ' and
is fed to the DI tower for retention
where a titanium diffusion washer
is mounted to the top in this tower.
Pulp discharges orr the lop of the · ·
DI tower into an identical
pump/mixer for delivery to the D2
tower and is put through a washer
L '
once again.
Fully bleached pulp is . then
delivered 10 either of two high-den- ' ·
sity storage tanks.
~ ;. In the four-stage bleach - p]Jmt. ,,..,.,~
freshwater is used on the D2 stage:·"""'
D2 filtrate is then used as wash- .:;.•
water on the DI stage, D1 fillrllte . ·-·
on the De stage, and pulp dryer ; .
whitewater on the Eo stage.
:

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. IN&lt;.
EAR.fiOSE-THROAT

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SPECIAUDNG Ill
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.T he Daily Sentinel

·sports

UCLA, Ohio State among weekend college cage victors
Ohio State 85, Iowa 81, and No. 14
North Carolina 76, Villanova 64.
On Saturday, it was: No. I Duke
104, No. 18 North Carolina Charhere.
.
lotte 82; No. 3 Oklahoma State 85,
No.
24 Iowa State 67; No. 5 Indi·
If you are a fan of the Bruins or
ana
96,
Northwestern 62; No. 6
enjoy seeing the traditional names
Kansas
81,
Colorado 80; No. 7 Ariof college basketball in the chase,
zona
78,
Washington
State 65; No.
read on ..
Second-ranked UCLA, about as 8 Connecticut 77, Miami 58;
traditional a name as there is, beat Auburn 81, No.9 Alabama 63; No.
: Oregon State 87-81 in overtime 10 Kentucky 85, Eastern Kentucky
Saturday to improve to 12-0. At 55; Minnesota 70, No. II Michigan
most schools that would be reason State 66; No. 12 Arkansas 114,
to pull out the record books. Mississippi 93; No. 13 Missouri
Remember, this is UCLA we're 83. Nebraska 73; No. 15 Michigan
68, lllinois 61; Wake Forest 86,
talking about.
The 12 wins to open the season No. 16 Georgia Tech 72; No. 17 St.
matches the I Oth best stan in John's 85, Providence 75; Texas
: school history. The 10 previous Tech 101, No. 19 Tulane 98; No.
limes the Bruins won at least 12 to 20 Syracuse 83, Pittsburgh 79;
open the season they went to the Boston College 65, No. 21 Seton
Final Four, and all but once they Hall 64: DePaul 72, No. 22
Georgetown 62; No. 23 Oklahoma
won it all.
No one's saying the Final 117, Kansas State 76; and No. 25
Four's a given. but the victory to Louisville 68, Wyoming 60.
Karl Anderson of Oregon State
stop Arizona's 71-game home winning streak last week and the close made two free throws with II secwin over a stubborn Oregon State onds left to force the overtime at
team has people thinking ahead to 72-72. MacLean then scored five
March where the Bruins (12-0, 4-0) points in the overtime, and his
three-pointer with 1:31 left
are concerned.
"It's tough because we were wrapped up the home win.
rolling for a while and this kind of
Scott Haskin had 19 points to
sets us back," UCLA forward Don lead Oregon Stale.
MacLean said after scoring 3 1
Sunday's games
points in the win over the Beavers
No. 4 Ohio State 85, Iowa 81
(9·8, 1-3). "I guess one positive
The Buckeyes (11-2, 3-1) led by
way to look at it is that's it the sign 15 with 13 1/2 minutes left but had
of a good team that we survived a to rely on Chris Jent scoring six of
close game twice now. We may their last nine points over the final
have to·do tharin the tournament." three minutes, including two free
In games involving ranked throws with 11.8 seconds left thai
teams on Sunday, it was No. 4 accounted for the final margin. The
By The Associated Press
If you don'tlike UCLA or have
some rare phobia causing allergic
reactions to dynasties, stop right

Ross Southeastern hands
:Southern 90-71 defeat

I

the half, then put the game out of
reach with a 20-11 off-set in scoring during the third frame to make
the score 69-45.
Southern played a good final
period, but the damage had been
done. Despite a good effort. it was
too little, too late for the Tornadoes.

Southern head coach Howie
Caldwell stated, "The kids really
played hard, but we just didn't capitalize early in the game. We made
a nice run early, but we made a lot
of turnover.; and lost that tempo."
Southern won the reserve game
56-42. Robert Reiber led the Whirlwinds with 10 points, while Eddie
Gilbert and Chad Ragland scored
II and 10 points, respectively, for
Southeastern.
In the varsity game, SHS hit 2350 from the floor, 5-22 three point·
ers, and was 10-20 at the line. Ross
hit 35-56, 5-8, and 5-7 at the line.
Southern had 45 rebounds, compared to Ross's 34. Bailey led with
I0, while Shane Weese and Stacy
Ragland each had six for SE.
SHS had 20 turnovers, eight
steals, and 14 personals. SE had 22
turnovers, eight steals and 23 personals.
Southern will host Hannan
Trare on Friday.
Quarter totals
Southern .............132!1126= 71
Ross SE ................6 23 20 21 = 90
SOUTHERN (71) - Mark
Allen 4-0-0=8, Michael Evans 4-31=18, Jeremy Roush 3-2·3=15,
Scott Lisle 2-0-=5, Roy J..t\e Bailey
6-0-3= 15, Joshua Codner :J-0-0=6,
Kenny Rizer 1-0-2=4. TOTALS
- 23-5-10=71
ROSS SOUTHEASTERN(~)
-Rick Strasbaugh 4-1·0=11,
Jason Rann 2-0=4, Mike Collins 81·0=19. Bob Hanigs 1-0-0=2,
Jason Weaver 1-1-0=5, Dave Hutton 4-1· 1=12, Brad Stolley 4-0·
1=9 . Stacy Ragland 4-I-3=14,
Chad Jordan 5-0·0=10, Jason
Adams 1-0-0=2, Shane Weese 1-00=2. TOTALS- 35-5-5=90

:SVAC cage standings
(Overall)
. ream
W L
Olik Hill ..............7 3
Southem ..............6 5
Eastern ................6 5
Hannan Trace ...... 5 5
North Gallia ........4 7
Kyger Creek ........ 3 6
Symmes Valley ... 2 7
Southweslem.......O 10

PF
661
774
762
583
621
466
490
523

(Conrerence)
Southem ..............6 I 538
Olik Hill ..............6 I 490
Hannan Trace ...... 5 2 453
. Eastern ................ 4 3 461
: North Gallia ........4 3 439
· Symmes Valley .. .I 5 322
Kyger Creek ........ I · 5 296
Southwestem .......O 7 373
TOTALS ,_.....17 27 3372
•

PA
583
675
787
677
723
541
564
729
383
408
433
455
428
391
372
502
3372

W L

:southern ..............?
;Eastern ................6
·Symmes Valley ...3
· ~orth Gallia ....... .3
Kyger Oetk ........2
Hannan Trace ..... .2
pair; Hill ............. .2
Southwcmm ....... l
ALS ;,_,.,,U

tor

o

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

l
3
4
3
4
5
6
U

Pultli11hed et.Jery •flemoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Courl. S&amp;.., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publithinl

KEVIN

JFK

ss .

One Well!lk ............................................l.60
One Manlh ........................................tll.llol
One Vear....................................- ....$83:20
SlNilLII OOPY

..

PRIOB

Daily............................................. 2!5 Centl ·

ll'!btcriben not d..tri"" to poy IIIII carri·

er

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t'l!lmit. ·in advanot dlnc:t Lo The

Golllpoll. D•lly Tribune

.... .......

ru _ .... aatiet .

on 1 8.6 or t2

mon!l. buto. Cndil wl)l be pven carrier

Taead17 - . Kyger Creek at

Creet; North Oallia' II Oak Hill;·

Lancers to within nine p&lt;)ints in the
third period as he collected 13
points in the first three minules of
the frame. Despite that run, FH fell
to a 55-42 score at the end of the
frame.
FH hit 20-49 from the field, 52! three pointers, and 7-18 at the
line. Eastern hit 27-40 from the
line and 26-63 overall from the
field .
Eastern had 34 rebounds to Fed·
eral's 33. FH was led by Viney and
Bennet with eight each.
Eastern had 20 steals (Durst
with six) , and had 15 assists (six
by Tim Bissell).
Eastern won the reserve game
43-33 led by Wes Arbaugh's 18
and Pat Newland's II. Federal was
led by Jeff Fury's 16 and Chad
Nelson's 10.
Quarter totals
Federal Hocking .. 8 16 26 20 = 62
Eastern ............... 18 20 17 23 = 78
EASTERN (78) - Terry
McGuire 2-0·1=5, Chad Savoy 40-5=13, Tim Bisssell 5-1·6=19,
Jeff Durst6-0-3=15, Chris Carleton
0-0-2=2, Jeremy Buckley 3-07=11, Charlie Bissell 5-0·3=13.
TOTALS....:. 25·1·25=78
FEDERAL HOCKING (62)
-Brad Bentz 3-1 ·4=13, Mat!
Harris 2-0-1=5, Myron Hart 2-00=4, Jeff Fury 1-0-0=2, Mike Mollohan I-0-0=2, Brian Bennett 3-41=19, Shan Mollohan 2-0-0=4,
Chris Viney 6-0-1=13. TOTALS
-21-4-7=62

Team
W
NewYuk .............. 21
Ba.tm. ............. ......23
New Jeney ............11

'

No t\PcripUont by maO · permitted ill
•.r eu where hOme ctrrler ~ervtce Ia
avtllable~

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26 Woello ....................................:.....l43.16
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Pd.
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21
Phil.adelplria ........... 11 ll
Mitmi .................... l"l 22
Wuhinaton............ l4 23
Orlando .................... &amp; 29

.44'7
.44'7
.436
.118
.216

6
6
6.5
1.5
14.5

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l.5. .605

Central Dhillon

I8
18
24
21

.526
.514
.315
.212

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Suuc:Jini5.SLW.,'~~CIL 12

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Nooth Cuoiioo ' 1 6 , - 114

Vlr&amp;lall '13, MuWI S3

Paclftc Dll'klm
Golda!. S1ale ..........24 10
Phocnia ............ .....,U, 13

Ponlond .................2l 13
L.A. Lokcn •.•.........22 Il
Seanle ........"..........20 18
L.A. Clippca ... ......20 20
SacramcDO ............ ll X1

Qio St.U,Ion 11

..526

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.289

· Saturday's srores

rarWtll

1
ll

.595

.

Alizoaa St. 61, WultiaFo 62

Ohio college
basketball scores

Philtddpbia lOS', Wahin
101
. Clt..landlOI,NewYo~D6
lndianal27. Milmi 103

New Jemy Ill. MiMclola 100
Ooldal Swe 143, DaD.u 141

UuhiOI!.-80

Seaale Ill. L.A. Labn 108
Sacnmcnto li9,Chulotte 113

Vflfllillea45, An&amp;onia 38

Milwaukee 108, Orlando 98
Pltotnil. 132,PM1and 128, OT
Allll\1.1 119, Denver 93
Botton 98, San Anlatio 89

Today's cames
Indiana It New Yolk, I p.m.
Botlon at Cltnland,3:30 p.m.
Selnle 11 L.A. Lab:n, 4:30p.m.
Cbulottc 1t Oolden Slate, 5 p.m.
Wuhinaton at Philadelphia, 1:30
p=
Minnolou a\ Milmi. 7:30p.m.

MWwealln C ' F'&amp;Cwltt&amp;WII

x.w.. ao.1l, Lo,do, m. "

Mld-Cto-C•-

OllloC-

H-~19,JdmCaaoD11

!+·=,_.lw.43
Olllo
O,M-0

Hi.Jlj

North Caul COIII'-

euoa-t6,l!odlum!l

w..,_

W'llll!nbcq67,a.tia 56

w...... to.Oitio

Salurday
Eut
Amctictn U. 80, Eut Carulin1 79
BOlton Collese 6S, Seum Hall 64
Brown 65, Yal!l59
Buckndl 83, Anny 65
Ccntc:n~~y 69', SteVen. Tech 51
Colaatc 87. Lehigh 82
Col.umt:ia 71, Comcll74
[)uqucme I!S, St. Bonavarture.57
Fmilh~m 80, Lafaydtc .52
Oeorae Wuhlngtoo 73, Rutaera 70,
Hutford 60, Ncrtheuaem .56
Hofstn 78, Brooklyn Col. S4
Holy Croa IS, Navy 80
La Salle 94. Sl. Peter'• 71
LonJ ltland U. 68, Monmouth, NJ.

66
Manhattan II, SiCila 66
Maria 94, Mount St. Mary't, Md. 10
Pa111 St. 11, Miami, Ohio 73

eoar--

Appaltcltian St. 86, Tn . -Ch.uan~q~

ar

Furman 8.5, Ciudel6S
Oeotail. Saul.hem 90, SE Louidu•

"

Bryan 67, N. C.unl .51
BucY"::! 59, Cra\line 52

Codiz 73, Ediaoo N. 31
Cvnbrid.le 11, w. Holme~ 73
Camoa J!erigp 94, Onnae Chr. 53
Camon McKinley SS, Ld:e•ood SL
Edwud33
Cudinal'19, Bloanlidd 61

C......... 84, l~wn Nollhrid•
Ccnerville 66, Lanon- Monroe SO
Oilllicdlte 52, l.ottn 51

CoL Brill' 67, M~t~tfield Mldiaon

Cal Sl O!uiw 12. Whi.lehaU 60
Colonel Cnwton16I, o.Iiom !5
Covinatm (K.y.) Latin 51, Norwood

841~t48

69

Dooy. Moodowololcl-4, Doy. ltll'.....

.

t...w-77

Day. Nor\hridae 69, Natimal Tn1161
Day. Whhctr. O.y. Slebbitd .S2
Doiphoo 1-59, ""'"'Y S4

63

Dublin 61,
N. 61,
&amp;lm 59, "'"'Milo 49

llolt&amp;19. au.,. 68 .

VMt74,M..... A69
Va. CCIIImCIIWCibh 71, South Pkldda

w""""'"

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p.-,62,T-41
Fairlon6I, 1\oo~w ltor
Fmview Parlt .S5, Modina HiJhlmd

or CIIIL MidUaan 64,. Tolodo 61

M'e=ea?O. ~St. 66
-13.N&lt;OaW1l
N. ~ 15, m..Qdolao II
NB D11oaD 72, v...,....wn Sl. 60

Oltlo U. 'II. .... C

OcJah-llt7, Kau lk. 76

:~'\~':u
w.-•.a.aaa.l9
Wltltltolli.t6,-II.SO

--·-Ol.lltob&gt;M
w~o..a-.layll,-66

· - WrillttiL 111, v.-63

x..Ior,Oido75,J.OyoU,lD.11

or

Blid1 84, Sylvanil Sputhviaw 66
FJ.ylia u. Lorain SUbview 60
Elyria fiat Baptilt 13, Youna. am...
tiaa 52
.
l!udld 10, 8""" 66

ViJKiai~I3,N*-Dame56

.

51 Findlay 66, Marion Hudini ::li6
'
R"' 69, BowtiqllNa&gt;ll

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FnailatSL101111b 60, E. ~tan~

Pl.l..Gnmlo 51, 0-lkiotO Vall. 56
Pl.
tlnd.) Nootltoidoll. l.iaM
s~61

w,,..

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&lt;lilmow 6!, c...... Catlt.ll
a-Milo 61 l!aia&gt; 43 .
a.- City iii~Col. lloS""' 4!

llalll!ltoo'll,uoy. - 6 9

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60, c,.illloaloa so
lliokowillll4,-:t.!
6 I , 5 '. 62.
1Blllal6!,

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S.lllrdiJ - Southwestern 11

52 Weeu ... ,... ,................, ...............IU.76

Cneli 11 Nonb Oallla; Oak

13 w.......,...............................,.......I23.40
28 Weeu,........................................1411.110
62 Weeb•. ,..................................... ..181.j0

l.loldiiJsaO..~
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The Dally Sentlnei.....Page-5

Lake Erie, Moun~ Vernon fall
to Redmen in weekend action
Two weekend victories in men's from the three for 26.9 percent). At
basketball - a 103-72 decision the line, they netted 16 of 22
over Lake Erie Sunday and a 94-79 attempts for 72.7 percent. Lake
loss dealt to Mount Vernon Erie was 38.7 percent on its shootNawene -provided an encourag- ing (29· 75, eight of 19from the
ing send-off for the University of three for 42.1 percent) and sank six
Rio Grande as it heads into the . of nine foul shot attempts for ~.7
remainder of its season schedule.
percent.
The wins put the Redmen at 15Redmen best Cougars
4 on the season, and the Mount
Shooting 58.3 percent from the
Vernon contest gave John three-point range during the first
Lawhorn's club a 2-0 standing in half, Scott Flemming's Mount Verthe Mid-Ohio Conference.
non crew stymied the Redmen
The Redmen had met Lake Erie defense for a six-point ·halflime
on Dec. 15, and the resulting 141- lead, and it took a little time for the
86 victory over the Sam Corabi- defending MOC champion to get
coached Storm propelled Rio control of its floor.
Grande into the NAJA record book
That happened in the last 10
when it tied the standard for the minutes of the game, played before
most number of three-point shots a capacity Foodland Night crowd,
made in a single game, 25. Lake as the Redmen outboarded their
Erie's four treys also tied the conference rivals and drew a 22record for the number of successful point, IS-rebound performance
trifectas made in a single game, 29. from starling renter Troy Donald·
On Sunday, however, there were son, who ended the week's action
a lot of threes passed around by with a total of 70 points and 31
both teams, but the Redmen exer- . boards. Brown, who managed six
cised a more patient offense agains.t points in the fitSt half, broke loose
the Storm at Lyne Center. Inspired for 21 more to gain the win.
by nationlilly-ranked Marty Stock·
"Our inside play in the second
well, who hit 13 first-half points half, and gettin~ the ball to Jeff,
(nine from the three), the Storm was important, Lawhorn comnever saW the lead but kept up with mented. "In the first half we were
Rio Grande, coming as close as not patient with our offense and
four (20-16) when Stockwell con- that was kind of disappointing. But
nected for a trey atl2:50.
in the second half we rebounded
The Redmen maintained a low well. Troy had 22 points and 15
profile in the opening half and boan\s, and that's pretty good prodidn't start building a large lead duction.
until 7:39 when Tim Christian hit
"Defensively, Mount Vernon
two of his 10 markers for the peri· either laid it on the glass or shot
od on a layup, which put the score threes. That's the best I've ever see
at 34-20. From there, Jeff Brown, them play," the coach added.
Brad Schubert and Matt Powell,
Rio Grande won the lead for the
who each scored in double figures first time with seven minutes left,
during the half, combined to slow and two minutes later held an 81down Lake Erie's game and streak 74 advantage easily in danger of
ahead for a 22-point halftime lead.
being toppled by another run from
With everything under control, the Cougars. However, MVNC ran
Lawhorn substituted freely and into fouling difficulties, and the
drew strong performances from his Red men, who sank 23 of 31
younger players, particularly Brett attempts at the line (74.2 pen:ent),
Coreno, 6-5 freshman forward were able to build a cushion and
from Nonh Olmsted, who netted 10 hold the lead.
points and 15 of Rio Grande's 60
The Cougars were led by Tim
rebounds. Darryl Dansby stepped Fenlon, who hit 23 points and had
forward to lead Lake Ene, ending five of MVNC's 34 rebounds.
the game with 22 points.
Jamie Perozek added 18 points and
Coreno's high scoring led a Eric Pennington had II. For Rio
parade of balanced scoring from Grande, Mark Er.;lan had 13 markthe Redmen. Powell had 19 points, ers and Schubert netted II. Lyndell
Brown and Schubert 15, and Chris- Snyder had eight assists, and the
tian had 14. In addition , Brown Redmen recorded 43 rebounds.
brought down 10 rebounds.
Rio Grande shot 53.3 percent
Ken Murray added 17 points for overall (32-60) and hit seven of 23
Lake Erie, while Stockwell ended three-point attempts for 30.4 perwith 16 markers and nine of the cent. The Cougars, who held
Storm 's 30 boards. Both teams had turnovers to nine and injlicted 13
19 turnovers apiece.
on their hosts, were 43.8 percent
Jhe Redmen were 48.8 percent from the field (32-73) and connect·
from the field (40-82, seven of 26 ed on II of 31 tries from the three

The two rivals for domination of
women's basketball in the Mid·
Ohio Conference did battle with
each other Saturday at Lyne Cen·
ter, but first-year MOC member
Shawnee State emerged with an
84-70 victory over the University
of Rio Grande.
"This game is a credit to
women's basketball," Redwomen
Coach Doug Foote remarked. "You
had two great teams combined with
a terrific crowd, and our kids just
refused to quit."
Bolstered by a 32-point performance by starting center Ann Barnitz, last week's top player in the
MDC, the Redwomen threw everything they had at Robin HagenSmith's defense-minded Lady
Bears to keep pace with the visitors' run·and-gun style, but foul
trouble and effective guarding prevented Rio Grande from going anywhere during the game's final SIX
minutes.
The win put Shawnee at 4-0 and
first place m the conference, the
spot where Rio Grande, which fell
to 4-2, had been at the beginning of
last week.
Shawnee quick-started its game
for an early lead and never let up,
but for most of the game the team
saw its margin whittled away to
.one and two points by the Red women. The •lsitors' defense pre·
vented most of the Rio ladivs from
breaking out of single fig~ in the
scoring column, but Michelle
Crouse had seven assists and .
Stephanie Gudorf snatched seven
of her team's 3 5 rebounds to stay
in the game. Rio Grande tied with
Shawnee at 30 late in the first half
and deadlocked again at 36 as half·
time began.
The Lady Bears, who suffered
15 turnovers and inflicted 17 on the
hosts, found themselves in a repeat
of the fitSt half as the game wound
down. Barnitz, who had eight
markers in the first 20 minutes,
exploded for 24 more during the
period, but was rivaled by
Shawnee's Tracy Williams-Riehl,
who emerged from a low-scorin~
start in the opening half to doml. nate during the second, assisted by
13-point performances by Sue
· Bowling and Tammy Mul1ens, and
1l points each offe~ liy Ashley
Allen and Annie Mains. Tiffany .
Clayton brou11ht 10 additional
points to Shawoee'a game, and
Bowling led tile boads with eight
of the teMJllllal of 37.
·
Rio Grande waa down 69-65
with six minute~ left when it ran
into fouling difllcultles lll1d a spate ·
of three·poirit shootina. O.verall,

BWtchatco11. spm.1booo77,ar

114

~

for 35.5 percent. The team wu
allowed only eight attempts from
the·line and was successful on four.
The Redmen will .be idle until
Wednesday, when they travello
Tiffin. Mount Vernon (6-ll, 1-4 in
the .MOC) is at Ohio Dominican
Tuesday, while Lake'Erie (1·15)
hosts SL Vincent (Pa.) Tuesday.
Box scores:
RIO GRANDE (103) - Lyn-.
dell Snyder, 2-0-4; Kyle Schroer,1-0-2; Mark Erslan, 2-1-2-9; Walter Slellhens. 2-0-4; Brad Schubert.
2-3-2-ls; Matt Powell, 3-2·7-19;
Brett Coreno, 5-0-10; J8SCII CUrtis,
2-1-0-7; Larry CAudill, l-2-4; Jeff
Brown, 7-1-15; itm Olrlstiln, 62-14. TOTALS~7-16-101
LAKE ERIE (7l)- Kra Murmy, 3-2-S..i7; J8SCII Weybm:bt, 01-0-3; Marty Stockwell, 2-4-0-16;
Darryl Dansby, 9-1-1-22; Eric
Janke, 3-0-6; Lou Greco, 3-0-6;
Dave Golen, 1-0-2. TOTALS 218-6-72.
Hatrtime score: Rio Graade
53, Lake Erie 31.
RIO GRANDE (~) r LyndeU
Snyder, 1-0-2; Mark l:irSian, 3-1-4·
13; Brad Schubert, i;3-0-11; Matt
Powell, 3-1-0-9; Breu Coreno, 1-20-8; Jeff Brown, 11-5-27; Tim
Christian, 1-0-2; Troy Donaldson,
4-14-22. TOTALS 25-7·23-94.
MOUNT VERNON (79) Aaron Reynolds, 0-2-2; Eric Pennington, 1· 3-0-11; itm Fenloo, 101-0·23; Jamie Perozck, 1-5-1-18;
Todd Tbomae, 3-1·7; Jeff KodJini,
3-1-0-9; Ou:k Speelman, 1-1-0-S;
Jason Paarlberg, 2-0-4. TOTALS
21-11-4-79.
.
Halrtlme llCOre: Mouat Vernon 47, Rio GI'JIIlde 41.

TROY DONALDSON

Shawnee State bests Rio ladies

Bcalllvillc 59, Hundred, W.Va. 51
B'"""'4.1, St. Cloinvillo 43
Bellaire St !ohn'• 67, McMeehen
(W.V1.) Dooah~~e51
Bcllbroot 13. Ointon·Mauia 56
Bellelonllina 59'. Callna .56
Ben.ilmin U.an 'l6,lndian Ltk• $4
B~y I00, fdtnltowa 'I1

SGUihclmU. III,PrairiaV~ew65 ~J

Midiipa A,DllntU 61

36,

61, RiveolaleSi
.\Uoo Katmolo 59
Ayea:villo 69, Colltinantal 31

Srq&lt;ba!P.A.... ll,M&lt;N-SL..,
SldiOn II, o.or.il St. 63
r - Swtbltn 11, A1eom St. 60
Teu•·S•n Antonio 94 .- NW

~10,St. Loula.61

0o1.
Vlow33

5I
T~~p-60

Arcanum 91, OWe .57

s...-.-. 1~ ~Tooh60

lndju,St.1~11ndlaylt

c...Jtoo61,~

klin.,..
Aohlond 75,

.

E. ~1l,CioooUndSL 7I,or
Ev....W. "- o.oo;t 65
lodlou 96, Nortll-... 62

Col. """"'"·
Cot

Ann160, SUW:y Lchmm 58, OT

s""" c...w. 11. n..-;, 69

Clltdmad1J,...,..SL66
DeP1\Il n. Ooolplown 62

w-..
w -"S:;t..!;.::
a.a...r.....,.37 v...,.

Akron Mauei\CIItet 67, Akmn Cowwl·

63

-I

'

OtdO'Villt 31, BJ oam Curdl n
a- fodt !6, talll&amp;lat 46
Ciatao-Mudt!ll.&amp; rilnr46
Col. K...tr 61. Canal
3I

""63Ak.rm St. V·Sl.M54, Stwbenville 51

Sm:alk Alablma 91, !0111-Ptn Ameri·

SWt.ouio... I7,Ccnt.Fiorido10 •

23

Ada S6, Cory·RaWion 46
Akron Cen-Hower .S9, Tot Bowabcr

Cin. Moclla: Q, C'Ut. Prinoclon .55
Cin. T•1.1ot !11, Cin. Wymq 3.S
Circlevillo 70, Zlne Tnce till
Cia. Mulh.U 73, 8-.&amp;:hwood 6.5
Cte. Uniwnity 71, Pit1aburJh Shady
Sidc72
Cloverleaf 76, Modinl Bucbyo 63

1'

Cift. Unaline 62, CD. Pdncaloa 49
Cin. Woodwarcl 11, Cia. WN111ml
llillo3I
Cirt. Wytmia&amp; 49, WL Naln Duna

Saturday

N. CuoliN S1. 78, Clem10n 7.5
NE Louiliana71, SW Texu St. 6j
Nicholll St. 81, Sant Hau~toa St.
Kolfood c.moboll15
~ ~~ w'illiam .t Moly 65
s. c..w.a St. 76, Md.-e. s"'"' 63

73,ar

"

Boys-Sunday
Um• Cath. 61, De! pro. St. John 't 6$

•......,,.I.a9. w. "-o:J&lt;r "·or
I IU'Ia Madiam 92. Old Dominioa76
Ka,,cty 15, B. Kentud&lt;y 55
LSU 13, M!Wiipp( SL '10

Ubeny 86. Do"""'" 68
LouiiWio 68, wyomina 60
Middle Tcm. SS, T_.... St. 50
Min. Valley SLIO,Jacbon St. 73
"""""SL 92, Beth~ 61
Murrl)' St. 17, TenneuooTodtiO
N. Carolina A&amp;T 81, Dcltware St.

Cift. Sycaman 64, W. ClwMr t.at.Ka

Ohio high school
basketball scores

AD.amu 114, Miamlippi 93
Aubum 81, Alabema 63
Coulll CArolina 93, N.C.·Aahevilla
COIUiocticul ,TI, Miami !S 8
Cappin St. 90, Florida A&amp;M 19
Dub 104, N.C. &lt;llarlouo 12
E. Tem1110e St. 102. W. Carolina 66
F1a. lntemationa170, Samford .54
Ac.id1 71, TCIU*ICC 6.5
Florida So. 9I. Muyland 83,

nNon.conf'"""
~~·lndilnlpO&amp; w

Malone 93, Cwnl St.l4
NE IllinoiJ 72. YounptoWn St 60
Penn S\.17, Miami, Ohio 13

lUdu 93, Md.· Btltimote County 73
Robert MoaV 70, St. Fmu:ill, P.. 4.5
St. John't 8.5, ProvidcnCCI7S
S)TICUie 83, PittlbwP 79
ToWKft St. Tl, Buffalo 6S
Wtprl2, St. Francia, N.Y. 7.S

Sooth
Al&lt;·Biominalwn I~ SW O.ptilt66
Allbam• St. 85,0mnblini.S"l.71

16

Mki-OW.
alo Graadt U, Mo ..l VtraH
N. .rae79
Shl.wnat St. 13, c..t.amlla 6S
u...... 92, Oltio Dami • 13
WWh 13, Tlllla 61
Mttt-F.ul Colleftl
BI..m.. 9~ Wilmin&amp;la&gt; 18
Dd"WlOI!: 86, Thanu Mcn71
Findlay

18

Cin. Lockland 50, Cin. Summit 34
Cin. Maricmont18, CUt Ttylor 19
Cin. Mt. Hullhy 47, Norwood 36

Alloci-Y 10, lloriloo S1

LqooloCIIII.17,0..
L
t

Hlnl•tfnK:e; SOutllcm It Eutern;

Chippewa .57, Rillman 32
Cin. Aiken 46, Cin. Northwat 32
Cin. Bac:m 60, Cin. FinneyLOwn 31
Cin. Counlry Day .50, Cin . Seven

Oaodola ?I,IIaldwia-W.a- II

basketball sco~

..

C•nibridool4, B•o:l&lt;o,.T..U 38
Can1006th. 69. Faida~:a 53

~II,Hinm61

Major college

.

Alhllnd S7, Norwayno 28
BiJ Walnul 49, Jolvu\own 19
Bryan 43, LibatyCenu:r 34
Buckeye Cmltll 78, Sancct E. 3S
Buckeye Local 44, Youna. South 7:1

..-.v...,.c --

Atlan1a at Su.uls, 10 p.m.
Dawar It Sacrunento, 10:30 p.m.

can .S.S

Girls-Saturday
Amalia 61, Cin. PwccJ.l·Mari111 47

a.-•
Atblllllll75, Hermine 'J3

P"'·

15

pool63
Yellow Sprinp 113, Xcni• Wilson 74

E.lllioGo 13. Cionloaol St. 11, or
Wrip 11.10, Volpo1Uo63

MinnoiOU II Orilndo. 7:30p.m.
L.A. Lakcn a\ PaNand. 8 p.m.
PhoatiA 1\ Chio:aao. 8:30p.m.
Milwaukee l l Houtton, 8:30p.m.
L.A. CUppen 11 San Antonio, 8:30

"

W.Jcffczson 63, Utica 61
Wapakondl 56, Coldwater 46
Wa\110011. !Ol,Anthoty W1yne 73
Waverly 60, Gallipofu: 56
Wa)'TtC TmlCI71, Jl.deerton 66
WhMlins, (W.VL) linsly 76, Hudaat
Watcm Rae:ve 5.5
WhoeJin&amp; (W.Va.) Pllk 64, E. Livcr-

Aaool!,W.Illla&lt;U5-I

Tuesday's games

II

Paulding 69, Fli.Mcw S4
Pcd:lles. 81, Adena48
Plymouth 71, Alhltnd CIUlview 63
Poland 42, Young. Unuline41, Of
Part Clinllrl 76, Genoa j2
Reedlville Eutcm 78, Fedcnl Hcd.ins6l
Ridpdale 12. Wynlonl 10
Rock HiU 67, Port1mouth Notro
Dune 54
Rocky River 68, N. Royalton 47
RoWeR 64, Sylvania Northview 49
Sandvaty 50, Vermilion 4.5
SudWIEutem 51, Fe.licity47
Shaker Hu. 82, Padua 62
Spcnt.:a'!ille 73,1111din Nonhcm 6S
Sprin.. Shawnee 62, cm.c.-iaw 45
St. Henry 90, Cridersville Perry 46
Stow 72, Ken1 ROOieVelt 61
Strubutg 58, Riuman SO
Tipp City 37, Vandalii·B\Iller 36
ToL Rops.59,St. Mll')'l50
Tol Start 64, Akron Gufield S6
TrcD of Life 70, Lickins, Comly Chr.
63
Trotwood-Madiaon 72, ToLSoou 51
T\ISQJ"IWU V.U. 61, Sandy Vall 42
Upper Adins,ton 62, Col. Unda~·
McKinley .59
56 61
Valley View liS, 65,
O..y.""'""
OuiJtian

u""" s""'""''

Sunday's scores
Chicago 87' Delmil 85

ar

Onawa-Olandorf 65, Pllrid: llenry

64

Dolo-10, 1Wao6'7
Nn 9
' ' 175,0r.tl12
l'llqua 7t Lorola.lld. 73
66, Lo Sallo 5'7
Tomplo 14, St.looot"''• 6I

Gl

ll

Maldowtmd: 8'1, BllJI5Yille 61
Midd1ccown 69, W. Carrollm60
Mmtood 66. o..t Hillll
MiDilct 71, Fairlawn49
Moladcm~ 9.1, Ouratavillc 47
N.llidJev!l!e!SO, Midviow 25
N. Uoim 77, Worthinpn Clv. '10
.N•poloon 67, Poltoda 52
Newuk 66. Mt. Vemm62, ar
Notdlnm46, Elr.
· 45
Oak Hubr:.-1.5, 1J1111 Lakoc. 71
Ores,m Clly 72, PenyabwJ S3
"Onville 17, W. Salem NOithwcficm.

llautloaac.IU,Oiopla"
IXL\ n,a.-~~:at,ar

13
115
18.5
215

Mld'tflll Dlvlllon

PeL

Mwfidd Sr. 77, Shelby 15
Man1ficld St. Peter'• 6ti, Bucteyo
Cam! 53
Muion t.oo.l66, H""""" !2
Mum 54,11&amp;miltm R011 48
Mwi1loa Wuhinpm 85, Oc. VASJ

s. ~90.aN
"
s-o;..
711, ... p· ·•....

WESTERN CONFERENCE
L

0.. 51

12,or

NMda13,a.W-11

1111

Tum
W
Utah ...•.........•........J.I
San Antonio ...........21
HOUitm .... .............20
Denver ................... 1.5
D.U... ..................... ll
tdinnclllll ................7

ar Mwfidd Cbl. IOO, O.yohop v...,.

Haw MtliCIO 19,Ha.al"
N.. WW.O St. 90, Pot:lllo U. 77,
201'
Plw9'.r.:.diadTS

Slllday

"""" !9, w. llllnoil ,.

I

.

........ ,L-SI.l9

=:nd::::::::Ji
ti :: '
DetroiL ...................ll 17 .564 11.5
Atlantt ...................lO
Milwa!We ............. l9
lndiana ................... lS
Ctwloae ................ lt

c.I"SL· """""" 16, llC lMoo ll
Coiondo St. 67. t1tU 41
Oatt»p 9'1, ...,.,. ~ 95,

t.a-SLil,UtUII. 72

BowliDa linin 72, E. Miem,on 69,

, SUBSCRIPTION RA'l'ES
By Carrier or Motor Bout.

. COSTNER

7:l0"' MILl .

SOIMiwD; Syt111111111 VaJicy at Kypr

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Behind a 20-point cushion in the
first half (38-16), the Eastern
Eagles rolled to a 78-62 non-league
basketball triumph over the Federal
Hocking Lancer.; Saturday at Eastem High School. The win avenged
an earlier loss to the Lancers in
Stewart.
Easlern is now 6-5 overall and
is 4-3 in the SVAC.
Eastern again placed five men in
double figures, its key to success
the past several victories. Senior
Tim Bissell led the way with 19,
followed by Jeff Durst (15), Charlie Bissell and Chad Savoy (13
each), and Jeremy Buckley (I 1).
Durst and Charlie Bissell not only
hit double figures, but also added a
team-high nine rebounds each,
while Jeremy Buckley, hitting 5 for
6 at the line, had a great game coming off the bench.
Eastern used an upbeat fastbreaking tempo, capitalizing on the
fine passing of Terry McGuire and
Tim Bissellto hit the open man. An
upbeat defensive tempo kept the
usually agile Lancers handcuffed
for most of the first half, taking a
chunk out of their shooting percentage and forcing many costly
turnovers as well.
Eastern led 18-8 afier the first
frame, then behind a 20-8 second
frame, pushed its lead to 28-16 at
the half.
Brian Bennent then sparked the

AliUitlc mtt~lon

Woio Fonot "- Ge&lt;qia Toeh 12

POSTMASTER: Send adclre11 ehlnp~ to
The Dally Sentinel, lll · Co11rt' Sl.,
Pomeroy, 0Hio46169.

SATiSIJIIM.TIIIlU

Hannan Trace 11

David Hall, Ferrell Center worker
Anthony Hazley and A&amp;M assistant sports information director
Colin Killian.
Also treated were a Baylor stu·
dent reporter covering the game
and a catering service employee
who was setting up a press banquet
when she was afflicted.
Hillcrest treated between 40 and
50 people, nursing supervisor Ann
Gammel said.
Assistant A&amp;M coach Mitch
Buonaguro, Aggics freshman guard
Tooy McGinnis and Ferrell Center
employee Vincent Young were
admitted for observation at Providence Health Center in Waco.
Buonaguro and Young were
transferred to Humana overnight.
McGinnis was expected to be
released Sunday night from Providence, said head nurse Susan
Ready.
The eight patients undergoing
treatment at HUinana received I00
percent oxygen at atmospheric
pressures up to three times that at
sea level, said Lytle.
The hyperbaric chamber resembles a submarine, Turner said. It is
32 feet long and 8 feet wide with
portholes. Its purpose is to help the
body beuer purge itself of poiSons
such as carbon monoxide.
Turner said oxygen face masb
flush carbon monoxide out of one's
bloodstream quickly.
"However, it's deposited in the
tissues, and it takes longer to flush
it out of there,". he said.
..

Eastern posts 78-.62 win
over Federal Hocking

-11.12.-lt.lt

EASTERN CONFERENCE

(USPS 313-900)

Now YOri&lt;, New YOrk t00l7 ..

Ill

Prld•7 -

By ARNIE STAPLETON
AP Sports Writer
DALLAS (AP) - Two Texas
A&amp;M assistant basketball coaches
were among eight people treated in
a hyperbaric oxygen chamber Sunday for carbon monoxide poisoning. They were oven:ome Saturday
night when an arena heater system
malfunctioned at Baylor's Ferrell
Center.
Aggies senior Coward Anthony
Ware also was treated, but because
he suffered from a sinus infection,
doctors had to remove him from
the decompression chamber after a
shan time, said Dr. David Turner,
who accompanied the patients in
the chamber at Humana HospitalMedical City Dallas.
The patients' prognoses for
speedy recoveries were good, doctor.; said.
The nine patients were expected
to be released Monday after psy·
chological and psychometric test·
ing and a night of observation, said
Humana spokeswoman Ellen Lytle.
The Texas A&amp;M team, game
officials and others were taken to
two h&amp;~ls in Waco Saturday
night after being overcome by
fumes in the visitors' locker room
before their game against Baylor:
The arena was evacuated and the
game postponed.
Seven people admitted to Hill·
crest Baptist Medical Center were
flown overnight to Humana,
including Ware, A&amp;M graduate
assistant John Pigatti and official

Member: The Auoc:iat.ed Pma, Inland
Daily Pre.u AaaodaLion and lhe Ohio
New1paper All•ociat.ion , NaUonal
Advert.illnl -RIIpnaent.atin, Dranharn
New•p•per Sah11, 783 Third Avenue,

242
276
278
284
212
274
298
262
2U6

'\V~ SoutbWCIIdn II OVCS

Pis

Carbon monoxide poisoning
at Baylor's court injures
Texas A&amp;M players, coaches

Ohio •ts769, Ph. 992·2166. Second clAU
po~tqe paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

•
SahlrdaJ111Col'el
Minfonl66, Oak Hill
ttou SE 90, Southern 71 .
2askin
78 ' Federal Hockin
~
. g 62

•'•

·: ;, :

break the game's fmallie, and then 2) who managed just three field
in a 16:37 span in the middle
Billy Law made just one of two six
seconds later and the Jayhawks of the game.
No. 12 Arkansas 114
(13-1, 2-0) escaped with the Big
Mississippi 93
Eight road win. Eric Pauley led
The Razorbacks (15-3, 4·1) led
Kansas with 16 points, while fresh·
man Donnie Boyce had 27 for the 55-40 at halftime and by as many
as 30 points in the second half. Lee
Buffalos (9-6, 0-2).
Mayberry had 26 points. Joe
No.7 Ariwna 78
Harvell
had 30 pomts for the
Washington State 65
Rebels
(7-7,
0-3).
The Wildcats (11-3, 2-2)
No.
13
Missouri 83
snapped a two-game losing streak
Nebraska
73
with the Pac-iO road win. Kbalid
Anthony
Peeler
had
34 points as
Reeves had 21 points for Arizona,
which took the lead for good with the Tigers (12-2, 1-1) broke a two·
15:48 remaining. Terrence Lewis' game losing streak. Missouri start·
20 points led the Cougars (12-4, 0- ed the second half with a 14-4 run
to overcome a 42-39 halftime
3).
deficit
and then sealed it with free
No. 8 Coutctlcut 77
throws
down the stretch. Jamar
Miami 58
Johnson
led the Cornhuskers (12-2,
TbeHuskies(l3-1,4-l)used II
three-pointers to bring the Hurri- l·i) with 24 points.
No. 15 Michigan 68, Illinois 61
canes back down to·Earth four days
The Wolverines (10-3, 2-2) won
after their fust-ever Big East Contheir
second Big Ten road game of
ference victory. Scou Burrell and
the
season
as freshmen Jalen Rose
Chris Smith had 19 points each and
and
Chris
Webber
had 17 and 16
made five and three three-pointers,
.
respectively. Constantin Papa's 12 points, respectively.
Deon Thomas had 18 pomts to
points led Miami (6-10, 1-5).
lead the Fildlting Illini (7·7, 1·3).
Auburn 81, No.9 Alabama 63
Wake Forest 86
Auburn (8-6, 2-2) which was led
No.
16 Georgia Tech 72
by Wesley Person's 24 points, led
The
Demon
Deacons (9-4, 2-3)
40-25 at halftime and were never
had
lost
three
straight Atlantic
ahead by less than seven points in
Coast Conference games, two at
the second half.
Andre P~ had 12 points for home, before holding Georgia Tech
the visiting Cnmson Tide (14-3, 2- without a field goal for 7:49 in the
second half. Rodney Rogers had 24
2).
points for Wlike Forest.
Jon Barry had 24 points and
No. 10 Kentucky 85
shot 7-for-9 from three-point range
Eastern Kentucky 55
John Pelphrey scored 14 points for Georgia Tech (!3-4, 3-2). ·
and became the 38th 1,000-point
No. 17 St. John's 85
scorer in Kentucky history as the
Providence 75
Wildcats (14-2) cruised at Rupp
Malik Scaly had 34 points on
Arena for their eighth consecutive 10-for-26 shooting from the field
victory. Jamie Ross led the as the Redmen (10-4, 4-2) reboundColonels (9· 7) with 14 points.
ed from their worst Big East loss
Minnesota 70
ever, a defeat at Miami earlier in
No. 11 Micbigao State 66
the week.
Sophomore fllServe Townsend
Michael Smith led the visiting
Orr scored 20 points as the Golden Friars (8-9, 0-5) with 25 points, 16
Gophers (11·6, 3-1) beat the lith- rebounds and four blocks.
ranked team.
Texas Tech 101
Freshman Shawn Respert had
No. 19 Tulane 98
13 points for the Spartans (12-2, 2The Green Wave (13-1) were
knocked from the ranks of the
undefeated with the road loss,
Texas Tech' s first win over a

ranked team sinre the Red Raiders
(8-6) beat SMU in 1985.
Will Flemons had 25 points to
lead the Red Raiders, who shol66
percent fro.m th~ field and never
trailed, while Kim Lewis had 24
points for the Green Wave.
No. 20 Syracuse 83
Pittsburgh 79
Lawrence Moten's 32 points set
a school record for freshmen as the
Orangemen (13-I, 5-l) stayed
within striking diStance of first
place in the Big East.
'' Freshman Orlando Antigua led
the visiting Panthers ( 11-6, 3-2)
with 18 points.
Boston College 65
No. 21 Seton Hall 64
Gerrod Abram's eight-footer
with 3.8 seconds left gave the
Eagles ( !0-5, 2-4) their second
straight Big East win and first on
the road in 25 games. Seton Hall
(9-5, 2-4) had a fina! chance to
win, but Terry Dehere s JUmper at
the buzzer bounced off the rim.
Billy Curley led Bosto~ College
with 17 points, while Dlohere and
Arturas Kamishovas had 14 each
for the Pira1es.
DePaul 72, No. 22 Georgetown 62
· David Booth had 22 points to
lead the Blue Demons (10-5), who
were up by six or more for most of
the second half. The visiting Hoyas
(9-5) were led by Alonzo Mourning1s 24 points.
No. 23 Oklahoma 117
Kansas State 76
The Sooners (11-2, 1-l) set
re cords for most points scored
against Kansas State and most
points by an opponent at Manhattaii. Jeff Webster had 27 points for
Oklahoma, which led 59-33 at halftime. Gaylon Nickerson led the
Wildcats (8-5. 0-2) with 18 points.
No. 25 Louisville 68
Wyoming60
Everick Sullivan broke a 57-57
tie with consecutive field goals to
give the Cardinals (10-3) a fourpoint lead with 2:19 left, and they
then made seven of eight free
throws for the win. Greg Minor had
14 points for Louisville, while
Maurice Alexander led the visiting
Cowboys with 18 points.

_y_. ,. . . .,

In theNBA ...

Comp•ny/Mullimodi• Inc., Pomeroy,

PF PA

376
321
253
275
184
246
276
195
2124

win was Ohio State's 27th straight
at home and Iowa (9-5, 1-3) has
lost three in a row in the Big Ten,
the previous two in overtime. Jim
Jackson led Ohio State with 21
points.
No. 14 North Carolina 76
Villanova 64
The Tar Heels (!3 -2) solved
Villanovi's zone to break from a
31-28 halftime lead and go up by
as much as 62-44 with 6:43 left.
Hubert Davis had 19 points for
North Carolina. The visiting Wildcats (6- 7), who had a four-game
winning streak snapped, were led
by Chris Walker's 15 points.
Saturday's games
No. 1 Duke 104
No. 18 N.C. Charlotte 82
The Blue Devils (12-0) extend·
ed their non-conference winning
streak at Cameron Indoor Stadium
to 71 games over nine years and
their overall winning streak to a
national-best 18. Christian Laetmer
led Duke with 24 points.
James Terrell had 23 points for
the 49ers (11-2).
No. 3 Oklahoma State 85
No. 24 Iowa State 67
The last time the Cowboys started a season 16-0 was 1950-51, and
the last time they won their first
two Big Eight games was 1984-85.
Byron Houston scored a careerhigh 34 points as Oklahoma State
led 44-28 at halftime and then
coasted to its 26th straight home
wm.
Justus Thigpen had 20 points to
lead the Cyclones (13-3,1-1).
No.5 Indiana 96
Northwestern 62
The Hoosiers (13-2, 4-0) won
their lith straight and held on to
first place in the Big Ten. Calbert
Cheaney had a season-high 26
points for Indiana, which led by as
many as 24 points in the first half.
Kevin Rankin had 21 points and 14
rebounds for the visiting Wildcats
(7-7, 0-4).
No. 6 Kansas 81, Colorado 80
Sieve Woodbury made two free
throws with eight seconds left to

The Doily S-entinel · ·

(Reserves- SVAC only)

·Tam

.

Monday, January 20, 1992

Page-4

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
f'acing a rough start and uncharacteristic 20 turnovers, the Southem Tornadoes lost 90-71 to perennial stale basketball power RossSoutheastern - the Tornadoes'
fourth straight non-league loss of
the season ....,- Saturday night at
Richmondale.
Southern is now 6-5 overall and
6-1 in the SVAC.
Southeastern placed II men in
the scoring column, led by Mike
Collins' 19, Stacy Ragland's 14,
Dave Hutton's 12, Rick Strasbaugh's II, Chad Jordan's 10.
Southern placed seven men in
the scoring column, led by Michael
Evans with a team-high 18 points.
Teammates Roy Lee Bailey and
. Jeremy Roush tied for runner-up
honors with 15.
Southern faced a 26-13 deficit in
the first half, but could not capitalize on its scoring·opportunities, and
likewise had many turnovers .
Southern went down by 24 points,
made one good run of nine straight
points, then cut the lead to twelve
before again running into a string
·of ball-handling miscues.
Many of the mistakes, naturally,
were a credit to the Panther defense
which led them to the final four in
· Division III last season.
.
Ross went on to lead 49-34 at

Pomeroy......,.lddleport, Ohio

: Monday, Jiriu•ry 20, 1992

a:~

'-"'11.'-•
~ 11. ss, a.Noo NDQ. sl

I

o

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t/J

.'

the Lady Bears were 10 of 27 from
the three for 37 percent, while the
Redwomen, noted for their fondness for the trey, could only con·
nect on two of their II attempts
(18.2 percent).
"I thou~ht the whole -key was
that six-mmule period in the sec·
ond half when we were down by
four, they fired off three threes and
we got into foul trouble," Foote
commented. "Bu~ you bave to ~ve
Shawnee credit. because defensiVely, they are a very good team.
"One thing that was grc.rt,
though, was the fact Ann carried
us. She did everything she could to
win," the coach continued. "I think
our kids did a good job of getting
to the ball, and certainly they
played hard, but Shawnee is a great
team. In the second half, we just
couldn't guard Williams-Rich!."
Rio Grande's overall shooting
was 45.6 pen:ent (26-57) and 64
percent ( 16-25) from the line.
Shawnee was 43.3 ~nt (26-60)
from the field, but hit 22 of its 27
foul shot attempts for 8!.5 perrenL
The Redwomen (I S-4) continue
their conference schedule Tuesday
at home against Cedarville.
Shawnee (14-3) also plays host to a
conference rival, Walsh, on Tues·
day.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (70) - Gena
Norris, 1-1-3-8; Michelle· Cro~se,
2-3' 7· Jackie Hannon, 0-4-4; Tncl8
Colli~s. 2-3-7; Ann Damitz, 16·032; Stephanie Gudorf, 3-1-3·12.
TOTALS 4-2-16-70.
SHAWNEE STATE (84) Ashley Allen, 2-2-1-11; Annie
Mains, 1-3-0-11; Tiffany Clayton,

ANNBARNITZ
1-1-5-10; Tracy Williams-Riehl, 62-7 -2 5; Sue Bowling, 6-1·13;
Tammy Mullens, 0-2-7-13; Jenni
Wessel, 0-1-1. T9TAL.S 16-10·
22·84.
.
Halrtime score: Shawnee State
36, Rio Grande 36.

...

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
Ill Second Stv Pomerof
YOUR INDEPENDEN
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY •
SINCE 1868

H.D. VEST FINANCIAL
SERVICES
KARL KElLER Ill, C.P.A.
Reglitered Representative
IRA's * SEP IRA's
MUTUAL FUNDS * UIT's

�The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
.

,

·

·

•

Page-6

:~

.'

Dear·Ann Landers: I am sleam·
ing over the letter from "Outraged
in Indiana" the woman who· was
upset that people had sent in
more than $16,000 to help pay the
medical biDs of a dog tl)at had l_)een
chained to the back of a pickup truck
and dragged tluee-ijuarters of a mile.
She wrote, "There are children in
this counll'y who don't have enough
to eat ·and big bucks are pouring
in for a dog." This is crazy. Those
children can and do get fed by the
welfare system. An animal in need
· gets no such break. I am furious
over your correspondent's lack of
compassion ... ANIMAL LOVER
IN LONG ISLAND
DEAR LOVER: You and thousands of others. I heard from all
COMING -"Barnum!" the Tony Award-winning hit musical
over the counll'y and from Canada
based on tbe 6fe of 19th century circus man P. T. Barnum, wiD be
too. l haven't had such angry mail
presented Wednesday, Jan. 29, at 8 p.m. at Obio University's
since my readers argued about
Memorial Auditorium as part of tbe Performing Arts Series. "Bar·
whether a fireman would be
num!" which opened in .1.980, blends circus acts and Broadway
·"wasting
taxpayers' money" by
skills. The musical titerallj transforms the stage into tbe Big Top
auempting
to rescue a cat who had
wilb the actors ju~gling, clowning, swinging from trapezes and
run
up
a
telephone
pole. Read on:
walking the high w1re. Tickets are $9 and Sll.and are bemg so~d at
From San Jose: l had a smile on
Memorial Auditorium's box office. Informatmn may be obtamed
my
face all day when l read in your
by caUing the box office at 593-1780.
column that $16,000 had been
donated by suangers to help pay the
veterinarian bills of that poor dog
who was dragged on a chain behind
a truck.
Most of my adult life l have
The evening began with prayer been abused by cruel, insensitive
The annllal staff dinner of the
Hillside Baptist Church was held fol lowed by dinner and a message
recently 'in the Oak Room at the from Rev. Acree.
The past year's accomplish·
Mason· Family Restaurant in
mcnts
were discussed as well as
Mason, W.Va.
goals
for
the new year.
Staff personnel attendi ng were
Rev. Acree was presented a
Rev. and Mrs. James Acree, Rev.
and Mrs. Kay Willeu, Mr. and Mrs. plaque in his honor by all staff
Joe Humphrey, Mr. and Mrs. Gary memhers. Mrs. Acree was also pre·
The fifth birthdays of Dale and
Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hood, sented a dozen red roses.
Derek
Teaford, twin sons of Dale
The evening concluded with
·Mr. and Mrs. Ron Clonch.
and
Linda
Teaford, Racine, were
prayer.
celebrated recently with a party at
their home.
A "Teenage Mutant Ninja Tur·
tie" theme was carried out with
cake and other refreshments being
served.
Attending were the twins'
younger brother, Darin, and sister,
Lindsay; grandparents, Larry and
Phyllis O'Brien and Dale Teafad;

Hillsdale Baptist Church
holds annual dinner meeting

bosses, family members who did not bills of a devoted and loving pet is
avorove of the wav I was livimr mv beyond me .
Since animals have no voice, those
life, rude salespeople, smart·
mouthed teens, and men who of us who have known·the love and
beliuled and insulted me because I loyalty ol pets mlist speak for them.
l cannot imagine my life without
.,;,.as not thin and beautiful.
a
dog
or a cat My growing up years
My only friend, who has always
been there for me, making me feel were enriched a thousandfold by
two cats that
beautiful and loved and prorecting Muffle and Tiger,
slept
on
my
pillow
at
night. They
me from harm, is my dog.
Riverside, Calif.: I would much both lived to be 16 years old.
And then there was Buster, our
rather give money ID the humane
society and our local animal shelter adorable basset hound, with the
than PaY taXes to support the social most gorgeous brown eyes I have
agencies in our counll'y that are ever seen. When I manried, Buster
came along on the honeymoon.
bleeding people dry.
Just look at what people have My bride wasn't crazy about the
done. They have wrecked the planet. idea but she knew better than to
Humans are the cause of pollution. complain.
global warming and destruction of
Every year when l write checks
the ozone layer and the rain forest. for my favorite charities, our local
They have cattsed starvation through animal shelter is at the IDp of the
overpopulation and I won't even go list. My donations are always "In
into the destruction they have loving memory of t-Mfie, Tiger and
wrought through wars that solved
no problems. Those wars did,
however, kill the youth of many

me

.Ann
Landers

By Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens
If you were bom betw\"'n 1946
and 1964 then you are a member6f
the single largest generation in
American History.
Social Security has devoted a lot
of swdy to the baby boom generation ... and with gond reason. The
Social Security system will provide
retirement benefits for the 76 million members of this generation
who will begin to reach retirement
age in the second decade of the
next century.
While we know with certainty
that the first baby boomer will turn
65 in 2011. there are many uncer·
tainties about this generation. One
is this: no one is sure just how
many baby boomers will be retired
in 2020, for example. Acconling to
the Census Bureau, it could be as
many as 58 million or as few as 48
million. (t depends a great deal on
unknowables- how long are the
baby boomers likely to work, and
how long are they likely to live?
Take the question of workf.
Some experts say that because o
lower birth rates that followed the
boomer generation, there will be
fewer younger workers in the early
years of the next century. So, there
'
ldec
wr·11 be grea ter deman d .oro
workers to continue working. ..
On the other hand, . the same
experts agree that recent experience
indicates be
J'ust the
. . opposite:
. workers
. 1
seem to reunng at rncreasmg Y
younger ages.
A similar situation exists when
we look at probable monality rates

PRESENTATIONS MADE· Rev. James Acree of the Hillside
Baptist Church and his wife, Mrs. Betty Acree were presented
items or appreciation at a staff party held at Mason Family
Restaurant

hold
Wl"llm',g UTOrkers
VV I
. 1meetmg
,
OfgamzattOna

The Willing Workers of the St.
A donation of $2,000 was made
Paul United Methodi st Church in to th e churc h building fund in
Tuppers Plains met recently for an December and a load of limestone
organizational meeting.
was delivered to the church parking
New officers are Glenna lot.
Sanders, president; Mildred Cald·
Evelyn Spencer was thanked for
well, vice president; Mi ldred her dedication and service as past
Brooks, secretary ; and Patric ia president.
Hall, treasurer.
The program, "A New Begin·
ning"
was presented by Edna Har·
d l he
Evelyn Spencerfr conducte
th book 0 f mon, Evelyn SKencer, .Joanna
meeting
readthe om
e
Numbersand
about
"Leadership
of Weaver, Mildred rooks.
Cards were signed for Mildred
Israel."
d'
Caldwell and Glenna Sanders. Sev·
New program
IS·
era! s1'ck calls were repo
.
rt
tributed
and the books
group were
planned
work for four months.
Others attending were Doris
.11 be ·
M da
Koenig, Mae Vineyard and Bulah
Quilting WI
gm on on Y Maxey.
at9 a.m.
Refreshments 'or candies and
Lap robes for members in the
rest homes will be made in Febru· coffee were enjoyed.
ary.
.
.
The February meeting will be
An April bake sale will be held held Feb. II at which time there
on April 18.
will be an all day meeting.

tor erron flrtt dwy ed runs in paper) . Call before 2 ·00 p m
d., after publiution to mike co rrection.
'A~•

MONDAY
LET ART • The Let;ut Township
Trustees will meet Monday at 6
p.m. at the f?Cf!ce building to dis·
CUSSDARapprWINupna·llTheons. Bedliord Town·

. .

-~

Hamsonville news

ship Tru~ will meet Mc:mday at · . Recent guests of Mrs .' Stella , Recentsucsts of Mr. and Mrs.
7 p.m. at the to?"' hall for tts orga· Atkins and Miss Ruby Diehl were Bob Mahr were Mr. and Mrs. Fran· .
nizationalmeetmg.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Rtggs, Logan; . cis Poley, Debbie Foley and sons,.
Mrs. Gloria Kloes, SYJliCUSC, Miss Columbus; and Mr. and Mrs; Gary
• · TUESDAY
· Lisa Riggs; Kentucky, and Mr. and FoleY., Synrcuse. , •
P0MEROY ·.The re&amp;l!lar meet· Mrs, Roger Alkire, PomCII))'. ·
Mi. and Mrs. Doug Bishop vis··
ins of the Amencan Legton Ore~
Robert Gibson, ·Columbq( ·':, 11~ Wednesday't'with his sister,
Webs1er )'ost Na. 39, Pomeroy, Robin Gibson, Columbia; Mo., Mr; ' Lcnt111Sue Ferro, Caltlesburg, Ky.
will be held T~e$day' at the posd\ and Mrs. Chuck Al!clre, Racine, ·
Mn. Shirley Kanhner of. Van·
hotne. Di1rDet will ~at 7 p.m. an and Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sydenstriclc· dalia spent the past week with her
rneet~n~•Bp.m,
er, Mason, W.Va. , were recent parents,Mr. andMrU.omieBolin.
MII)~T • The organiza· guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Allcire. .

MONDAY PAPER

Classified

fi

=

I

Farm Supp lies
&amp; Llveslock

1 1- Htlp Wanled
1 2- Situation Wentad

61 62 6364 66 -

1 . 3 - lnst~i"ance

.....- 11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
- 2:00P.M MONDAY

14 - Bt~siness

16 -

·- 2 :00P .M . TUESDAY
·_ 2:00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P.M THURSDAY
- 2:00P .M FRIDAY

16 1718-

Training
Schooi1 &amp; lnttrut tion
Radio, TV I. CB Repair
Mi•celleneoua
Wanted To Do

pa~es ,corer 1he

21-Busin•s Oppo_rtunity

'

23- Prof•tioael Servrce•

Meigs County

Ma$on Co .. WV

Arn Code 614

Arell Code 304 .

446 - G•Uipolil
367- Cheshire
388 - Vinton
245-Rio Grande
266 - Guven Orsl
643 - Arabi•
379 - W•Inat

992 :_ Middleport
Pomll1'oy
985 - Chnter

71 - AuiQI for Sete
72 - Truc;kl for Sale
73 - Vans &amp; 4·wo·s
74 - Motorcycles
75 - Bo•ullo Motors for 5•1•
76 - Aulo Parts &amp; Acceuori.,.
17 -- Auto Repair
78 - Ca mping Equipmrtnl
7~ -C ampers
Motor Homes

Real Eslale
31 - Homn lor Sale
32 - Mobile Homes lor Sale
33 - Farml for Sale

675 - Pt . Pleasant
458 - Leon
576 - Appl t Grove
843 - Port~nG
, 773 - Met o"
247 - letart Falls 882 -New Haven
949 - A•eine ·
896 - Letart
742 - Rull•nd
937 - Buft.t o

34 - Busineu

a.

Bu~dings

::IIi - Lots &amp; Acruge
36 - Fiui htete Wanted

Serv1ces
81 -- Home improwmenu
82 - Piumbing &amp; Huting

83- hcavating
84 - Eiectrit_. &amp; Ren-0!!2!~
85 - Genttal Heuling
86 - Mobile Home Aep81r
87 - Upholatery

47 - Wanted.1o Rent
4S - Equipmen1 lor Rent
49 - For Luu ..,

. ,....
',9':
Ao?tl_
...

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
P,• M• DAY BEFORE
4•30
•
PUBLICATION

•

DALE TEAFORD

•
"

...

Names listed of those from
Chester on friendship quilt

t

JANUARY FREE SENIOR
DANCE (55 and over)
Pt. Pleasant Moose Lodge
6 ~il10 p.m. MON., JAN . 20
George Hall at the Organ
Light Relreshments.
Come Join the Fun'

....
.•

..
L

'·
•.

"·
•'·

PUBLIC BID
PUBLIC BID
ADVERTISEMENT
Sealed blds will be res.~Pe'nJJ~E~~~NJ. received by the Village or
celved by lhe VIllage ol Syracuse, Syracuse, Ohio,
Syracuse, Ohio, unlil 12 until 12:00 o'clock noon loo'clock noon local time on cal time on Thursday, Febru·
Thursday,
6,1992,
al ary 6, 1992, ot which time
which tlmeFeb.
they
will ba
they will be opened ol tho
opened end publicly read, lor Clerk'o
lor tho tale ol
lhe puochuo ola 1991 model a 1980 oHice,
lntornallonal
pollee cruiser wllh a V8 350 truck, with •now plowdump
and
gas engine. Complete spool· spreader box.
llcallons lor said pollee
Bldo must be addressed
cruiser can be obtained I rom
to
VIllage
of Syracuse, P.O.
the clerk·treaturer or pollee
Box
266,
Syracuse, Ohio
chief ol VIllage or Syrocuso.
IO VIllage ol Syracuoe,

Third

St.,Syracuse, OH. 45779, and
submiUed In a 11aled envelope plainly endoraed "Po-

llee Cruiser" Bid.

"'.
"'
.:'} '

Village of Syracuse reserves the right lo reject any,
or all bids, and to waive any

45779.
VIllage ol Syracuse reserves the right to reject any
or all bids.
VIllage of srrecuse
Janice awaon
Clerk· Treasurer
(1)

20, 27 (2) 3

lnformalltyorlrrogulorilythol t---:--;.____
the vlUage determines does
p bll N I
not melerlolly allecl lhe bid· J-.--..;u...;...;;c...;.;.:o:..;t:..;ce.:__

Public Notice
process.
24 75 5 92 dingVILLAGE
OF SYRACUSE NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
COMBINED STATEMENT OF Uooa.................... ' .
Caah Balance
Janice Lawson,
STATE OF OHIO
RECEIPTS,
Jan.
1,
1991
........
75,685.38
"'
CIOJk·Troasuror
DEPARTMENT
OF
DISBURSEMENTS, AND
p~ 20,27 (~3
TRANSPORTATION
CHANGES IN BALANCES- Fund Cash Balance
Doc.G1, 199t ....100,44t .3
Columbuo, Ohio
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
lonnie
Scott,
Clerk
•
JMuary
10, 1992
TYPES AND SIMILAR
Salem Township
Contr110t Salao
ADUctARY FUNDS
26239 Legion Ro-.ct
Legal Copy No. 92·96
For Aocal Ve• Ending
l.angovillo,
Ohio
4574t
UNIT
PRICE CONTRACT
Decembw 3t, 1991
Ph. 669 •309 t . 2
In Memory
Seal ad proponlo will ba
SALEM TOWNSHIP
MEIGS COUNTY
3tc
rocolvod at tho office ol tho
1 Mem
r
Director of tho Ohio
Thla lo 1f1 unaudited
n
ory
In Loving
Deparlmont or TraRfporte·
Anonclal Report
lion, Columbua, Ohio, until
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
Memory of Earl 10:00 A.M., Ohla Standard
REVENUE RECEIPTSTuea.............. .........7,714.72
. Shaffer who Time,
Tuuday, February 4,
1892 lor lmrrovemontaln:
Intergovernmental.
Racelpta ............. 17,963.n
died Jan. 20, are offered
Phase and lllnctualvo
•• one contract
lnteroal ...................4,a26.68
1990.
and will ba conaldarod on
All Other
the baoia ol tho total
R•venua............. 12,991.80
Love From amounl
bid.
TOTAL REVENUE
RECEIPTS.............43,496.97
'f
PHASE!
WI
Athona, Gallla, Hocking,
EXPENDITURE
DlSBURSEMENTS. ren and Ohio
M•lga and VInton counties,
Chl"ld
for Improving various
Genw•l Governmanl...................31 ,646.78
Grandchildren routoa and aecUona, lho
Publlo Satety...............483.3&amp;
'-----====.!.Vi:•:lla:!g:•:.o:,.l:::Albany, by mo,..
Health.......................... 924.17
Capitol Ouday,............764.t7
11 HelpWan1ed
TOTALEXP;
.
DISB.....;..............33,8t9.ot
hi Mentofl of
Total Rocalpll Over
(Undor) Diaburo•
Grace E. EIHs
manto ....................9,6n.aa
Who paned away
Olhtr Ananclng
Jan.20, 1991
SourCH. (U.n)........56.60
Total Olhor Financing
A
.year ltas passed
SourCtlo .....................56.60
slnta that fatal day
Total ol Roo. Wid Othtf
SourCH Over (undor) Dit·
When angels cane aitd
buiHI1lonll lnd Other
toolt her away
u.........................t,734.4a
AIIOwtr lr0111 ou(
Fund Cuh Balanco
·
Public Notice

.,..

985·4473
667·6179

614·992•6461

- "\

''

.

·~

5-31

FU TREE TRIMMING &amp;
.REMOVAL

Pruning and Landscaping
Froo bflmatos-2S Yrs. up.
Cal ahlf 6p.111; -992·2928

(113, 1... p4

Public Notice

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269

~thana,,

'.'

'..
• r ,.

...

R.N.~s

..

~

'

Needed

' ..

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~

-

1·11-tl

•I• "'&gt;

'• l

..

•. '-&lt;:"
'

'"•"\-

.. .
'•
,

'"

r~.

y;

.,,.."
.

•

Fund Cuh Balonco
12-3t-tt.............. 2f.735.7t
SPECIAL REVENUE
REVENUE RECEIPTS:
T.-.....................2&amp;,228.06
tntargovorn,nlll
R-lpto .............53,967.04
AltOther .
R..................... 42,na.O&amp;
TOTAL REVENUE
.
RECEIPTS ........ 122,974.16
EXPENDITURE DIS.
BURSEMENTS:
Public Work1.........64,207.t4

~

.~t~

..

,,~.. ~f

Heirlth... ,....................4,024.J1

r ,,~:.,

Capital Outlly........30, 131.18
TOTAL EXPENDITURE Dl8BURSEMENI1..~ ..ti,HI.24
Talal Rootlpll Ovw (Undor)

' ~ I,.

~ ·~·
....; .

D!Obll-li•. ~.24,10U2

OTHER FINANCING
.

garden of love
Now blooms In
splendor up above
GOne, 1ot lorgolfttl,
this one so ilear
Uves Ia our mttnOrles
throughout the year
Her s111t, her love, her
tender way
Lingers with us both
.•la•l and tloy
Tons of t~tmorlts, here
, tostoy
Evtt1 dealft ca1110t take
them a~
Sltaltlt us lleit to
11011

SOUR~~)

.-w..s

No 0111 o1 t«ttt, can

.
~··:..2
~ ':tS:: ...
fllltar5...S

'

MAKE YQUR TAUS LUS TAXlNa.

"-I

\ •

Medical-Surgical
Nursing
'

Experience Preferred
Opportunity To Cross-Train.
Contact

PERSONNEL OFFICE

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL
..fOlNT PLEASANT, WV
(304) 675-4340
EOEIAA

Nowln
Stock
AIR CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUMPS and

...

(6141446·9416 or HI00·872-5967
4·26·91

BISSELL BUILDERS,
1NC.
..
· · New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages •.Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
tO!tDIERtiAL nod RESWEJ'ItiTii\L
FREE Es11MATES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No Sunday Calls)

Gallia, Hocking,

6·t2·90·tfn
Vinton Counties , .__ _ _ _
_ _...,
lor Improving bvarlouo

12131191 t

routaa and aectiona, the

Village or Albany, by mow-,

ing, Pha111f.

Work Length: n .76 milee.
·"The date aet tor comple-tion of thla work shall be as

GET SOME BREAD
WITH .A WANT AD

required lo file wilh hia bid
a certilied check or cashier's check tor an amount
equallo live per cent of his
bid, but in no event more
than fifty lhouaand dollars,
or a bond lor ten par cent of
hie bid, payable to the
Director.
Bidder• must apply, on
the proper forma, for qualifi·
cation at leaat ten dayt pri·
or ~o the date aet lor open·
ing bid&amp; In accordance with
Chapter 5525 Ohio Revioed

Code.

Plane an4 apecificalion•
are on file In the Department

ol Transportation and the
office of the District q,eputy
Director.
The Director reserves the

right to reject any and all
bids.
JERRYWRAY
Director of Transportation

We would like lo
take this orportunity
on behal of the
deceased
Lillian
Napper to show
appreciation
and
gratitude, and to say
Thank You lo all who
se nl flowers made
visils and in some way
was responsible for
her welfare. Ewing
Funeral
Home,
Reverend
Robert
Sanders Neighbors &amp;:
Friends &amp; Relatives,
Dr. Walker &amp; Nurses
al Holzer Hospilal &amp;:
Emergency Squad
The Napper Family

RACINE'GUN
CLUB

INDEPENDENT
CARPET ClEANERS
and TilE FlOUR CARE
I•l·~,~~~i~~~~~
WorkRates

GUN SHOOT

~:~~~s

Dry

Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only
9-6-tf

FOREVER
BRONZE

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

RACINE

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER It
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Liconoad Wid Bonded

Swuth••rt ••••

14 TANNING
SESSIONS - 514'0

Offer Good Thru

Feb. 14

949·2826

PH. 614-992-5591

OPEN 9 AM-9 PM
1-6·1 mo.

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
StarUng at $235 par mo.

YOUNG'S.

12·5-tln

JAN. 20, 27,1992

Real Est81e General

CARPENTER SERVICE

-Aoo.QI AddiUono

-GutterWork
-Electrical and Plumbing

-Roofing

-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Vary nic• 2 or 3 BR, 2 bath
house w/baaementand
carpo~

V. C. YOUNG Ill•
992-6215

fru gas.

CALL 6t 4-92·5528 or
3B5-8227
12·11-t mo.

Pomeroy, Ohio

11-14 ·'90~r

DK's FARM TOYS
by ERTL
Displayed at The
.Oualily Print Shop

e,

·~

992·2772

•ttiiPOif

1·7·92, 1 mo

-========.

....

JAMlS KliD

BENNETT'

°

"

·An IRS-trained volunteercua help you with
your taxes. fBEE. Juat clllll-800-TAX-1040.
Stop struggling. Ate Yc&gt;u elderly? oO you have a disabil ili'? ·
Or is English your second language?
. Reach oul for .help. Caii1·800-TAX·1040. We'll tell you the .
place nearest Y9U where a volunteer can help Iill out your tax
form . Four million people like you got a helping hand last year.

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

Each bidder shall ba 1 card of Thanks

Public Notice

c.arorn.

Low Grade Oak.
Saw Logs
$150 per 1,00 FURNACES FOR MOBILE .DOUBLEWIDE HOMES
Delivered To
MOBILE
HOME
OHIO PALLET CO
.
.
HEATING
&amp;
Pomeroy, Ohio
l11&lt;atocl oo Salford Sdoool Rd. off Rt. 141

propoaal.'

Blda muat be addressed

~:

.·· ·

Need a hand?

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

'.

Guy Singer. ·
Hannah Cleland, Leah McLain,
Jean Louise Frank, Nell Roecher,
Marybelle Osborne, Rossie Warn·
er, Lettie Meredith, Paul Meredith.
Stella Hoffman, Mary Warner,
Henry Beaver, Lowell Beaver,
Ross Cleland, Elma Smith, Emma
Warner, Navada Beaver.
W.R. Bailey, James Weber ,
Olive McNett, Birdie McNett,
Let ha Wood, John Weber, Margaret E. Wood. Mr. Wallace.
Glennie Hayes, Lucille Smith,
Hattie Eiselstein, Anna Eiselstcin,
Charles Smith, Ben Smith, Daisy
Smith. Mabel Cleland.
Fred Rice, Margaret Folan,
Emma Bet.zing, Lenora Betz ing,
Edward Frisbie, Milwn Musgrave,
Ada VanMeter, Esther Kimes.
Lerha Koblentz, Helen Hayes,
E.R. Hoycs, Carrie Warner, Mabel
Swartz, Lillie Wells, Ida Ridenour,
Rua Ridenour.
Daisy Gaul, Ruth Gaul, George
Parker, Albert Parker, Harold Parker, Roy Parker, Herbe n Warner,
Pearl Hayes.
Bernice Ridenour, Li !lie
Chrisly, Mildred Christy, Jan ie
Young, Doris Young, Carl Christy,
Esther Christy, Thelma Talkington.

· Call614·992-6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

aot forth In the bidding

.
',.,.

·

. --

•Uabeebbl,o cncqy uvin•
oC111tom rat-no IWllation me~~
•Never rcqulre&amp; paietin1
•Satta tltt-in for euy clcuina:
•U.fdi.me rramc Wlltl'lllty

FOR SALE

USED RAILROAD TIES'

41 - Houses for Rent
42- Mobilel-lomes lo r Rf! nl
43- F•rm• tor Ren1
44- Apar1men1 for Ren1
45 -F ~o~rnished Room1
46 - Spae• for Rent

667 - Cootvillt

A few weeks ago The Daily
Sentinel published an article about
a fri endship quilt that has been in

flrm Equipment
Wanted to Buy
Live•tock
Hav &amp; Grain
Sud &amp; Fertil iler

Transportal ion

22 - r-lqn.,. 10 Loan

exchan~es ...

Galiie County
A1111 Code 614

D•••

DEREK TEAFORD

Anliques
Misc. Mereh.,dise
BuildinQ Supplr•
Peufor Seht

67 - Muaicallnstrum.,..tl
58 - Fruiu &amp; Veg«abllll
59 - For Sale or Trade

MASTIC®THE NATION'S FINEST
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

SIZED LIMESTONE

WANTED

51 - Houttllold Good~
Sporting Ooodl

5253 54 66 56 -

Quality
Ston·e Co.

12/12/t mo.

Merchandise

Serv1r.es

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

TUESDAY PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY il'APER
TI-IUASDAY PAPER
FA IDA.'( PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

I0:00 A.M. ·3:00 P.M.

ads

Emtlloymen l

will al•o appe• in the Pt . Ple•ent ~1git1er end the Galli·
polis Daily Tribune. reaching over 1t!.OOO home,.

COPY Cli£ADLINE -

11

liU6UIMijil

Or when judgment day comes
will he say, "Depart?" .
Ask Him now to forgive your
sins, and this
Christmas Day have sweet
peace within.
Now, thank you for coming and
watching our play,
We hope you are ready when
comes the big day.
The things of this pbly ·will one
day come true.
"Please • don't let him come '
and leave without
"You!"

Kenneth and Julie Ma'nicin,
Amelia; are announcing the birth of
their daughttc, Callie Ann Mankin,
on Dec. 12 at Mercy .ffospital
Andmon.
.
.
.
She weighed eight pounds and
14 ounces and was 21 and ooe-half
incbealoug. .
Matemallfllllc!Darenu are Pat
HA Boca Raloa, ~.. and Edward
E. Kltx:hen Sr., Middleport.
Patetpale.~· are 1M
::
~n.llld the

Yard Seles

c_ept - cl••ifiecl dis pi~ . Busmes, Card and leg a! noticesl

for the baby boomers.
When Social Security began in
!935, the average life expecrancy
for people turning 65 was a little
more than II years for men and 13
years for women. Today tho se
numbers are 15 years for men and
19 for women; and when the first
baby boomer reaches 65 in 2011 ,
the numbers could be as many as
18 for men and 23 for women.
But that last number is iffy.
New diseases, environmenlal haz.
ards or unexpected increases in, for
example, heart disease could cut
future life expectancy. By the same
token, new medical breakthroughs
or healthier lifestyles might length- gra~f~ re nce Michael, Gurney
en boomers' years after retirement. Mic hae l, Samuel Michael, Nellie
For example, the U.S. Publi c Michael, Ellen Atkinson, Ruth
Health Service has estimated that a Sm ith , . Lucy Haye s. Amanda
substantial reduction in cancer Heaton.
could add three years to everyone's
Monford Cassady, Betty Caslife expectancy.
sady, Ercel Cassady. Leonard Wil·
The Social Security disability son, Minnie Wilson, Rev. Cassady.
insurance trust funds will also be Lois Cassady, Leonard Cassady.
affected by the health of the baby
Nola K. Will, Emma Smith,
boom generation. Already, th e Mae Knight, Mary Parker, Nanna
average age of a male disabled ben· Dean, Virgene Knight, Mrs. J.R.
eficiary had declined from 57.3 Shank, Ida Knight.
years in 1960, to 51.1 years by
J.R. Allen , Edith Allen, Vern
FOR LIFE INSURANCE
1987.
Cleland, Louise Fi sher, William
We at Social Security continue Warner, Margaret Wood , Janie CALL:
to watch this generation with great Wond, Constance Trussell.
JEFF WARNER
interest- and plan accordingly.
Harry Lee Bailey, Liddi e
INSURANCE
·
Our trust fund balances, for exam· Spencer. Kathryn Bailey, Mab}J.
302 W. 2nd,
· accumu
· lat·ng··
enough Roush, Chi oe Bar'Iey , Joc .B:·ar.~ l ey,
Pomeroy, Ohio
P1e, are
'
NGlOHW'Ill!
reserves to pay benefits for at least Fannie McNet~ Rex Bailey.
614-992·5479
INIUMHCI
50 years.
Waid Kimes, Eva Kfmes; Paul
------But so muc h abo ut the baby Kimes, Betty Lou K'rmes, Fre d~
__
_ ......_
__
_'-"'"'"
_ ....
boomers remains unprediciable. r~B~etz~1~·n:g,~()~o~ld~ic~S~in!ge~r~,l~v~a:_Si~n~ge~r·~===·-="=-=-=:"':'":'===
And frankly, a generation that has
always prided itself on being dif·
ferent probably likes it that way.

birth of da,ughter

Happy Ads

following relephon!!

the Dick Gaul Family for many
years. The quilt contained th e
names of 128 residents of th e
Chester area during the time the
quilt was created . sometime dur·
ing the 1930's.
Following is a list of names that
appear on the quilt.
R. w. Vallandingham , Mary
Straw, C.B . Hutchin~o n , Billi
Hutchinson, Esther Hutchinson,
Blanche Vallandingha.i\, Alice
Vallandingham, Roben Barbour.
Elsie Kimes, Gertrude Frank,
Orpha Musgrave, Effie Calvort,
Emma Reibel, Margaret Weber,
Beulah Musgrave, Wilma Mus ·

r~---------------'"'!"-....., . Mankin·s ~ann
· ounce
·
•
~

Card of Thanks

'A cleuilied advertisement pieced in The Daily Sentinel (e•·

1

Communituy calendar

that .must be paid in advance an!
ln . MemO-ri&amp;m~

. rflw

1 - Card ot Th1nk1
2 - ln Memory
3- Annoucements
4 - Giveaway
5- Happy Adt
6 - lostand Found
7 - Vard Sale (Piid rn advance!
8 - Publie Sele &amp; Au ction
9 - Wanted to luv

'Price of ad tor all eapi1:at Ietten is double price ol ad cost
'7 point line type only used
·
'Sentinel is not responsible lor errors1fteJ first dlfy' . !Check

Forget to save some of your
favorite Ann /..anders columns?
"Nuggets and Ooozies" is the
answer. Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a check
or money order for $5 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Nuggets,
clo Ami Landm, 1'.0. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Ca/IIUUJ, send $6 .)

.42
.eo
.06/ day

19 .00

013.oo
11 .30/ doy

Announcements

run J d..,s uno ch•ge.

Ir----------------------.....,1
p Oet SCOrner

This poem, "Christmas Season,••
written by Shari Blackwell, was
read during the Christmas program
at the Pomeroy Nazarene Church. .
This is the season of the Christ
Child's birth,
·
Sent
fro
God
that
we
would
tiona! meeting for the 1992 Meigs ·
have
peach
on
earth.
County Soapbox Derj)y will be
Does your Christmas have real
held Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Middlemeaning
this year'/
port Trophies and Tees. Charles
Or
is
it
just presents, and flying
Neutzling has been named the
reindeel'l
director for the 1992 event. All
Does the name Jesus bring joy
interested individuals are urged to
to your bean?
attend the meeting.

tnr

'Aeeefve 1 .50 discount frH ads paid in edvar~ee
'Free ads - GiVIIWIY and found 11ds undlll', 5 words will be

Buster."
DEAR READERS: Americans
and Canadians really do love their
pets. Thanks to all who wrote.

.20
.30

Last markdown
on shoes
before closing
store.
OPEN FRI. &amp;SAt

Rat" ere tor conMCtJtiv• run1. broken updl'fl will be cflii'Ded

'Ads Oultide Meigt , Gatlie or Mtson cou nti• mull be pre·
paid.

Creators Syncllcate."

Ow'r 16 Worda

$4 .00
$6 .00

15
,5
15

10
Monltlly

"1991, Loa Angele~~

Rate

,6
,5

3
6

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

facturers rich.
To those fools who wrote to
complain about the moqey sent in
for the injured dog, l say, "Let 'em
ea1 dog biscuits."
Charleston, S.C.: How anyone can
be critical of people sending in
money to help pay the medical

Are you a baby boomer?

,

Words

Days

ANN LANDERS

11meA8)'ndlcate and

POMEROY

RATES

TO .PLACE AN AD CALL 992·21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

nations and make munitions ffilinu-

great grandparen,ts, Bob and Flo·
renee Adams.
Others anending were Carol and
Joshua Pape, Jim O'Brien, Ray·
mond Adams, Lori, Dustin and
Cameron Brinager, Mel, J.O. and
Jessica Smith, and Kenda and
Kelly Rizer.
Sending gifts were Dennis and
Ellie Teaford, Rod and Marjie
Grimm, Erma Norris, gnandmother,
Wanda Teaford and great gnandpar·
ents, Rex and Mary O'Brien.

PICK·A·PAIR

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Teaford twins celebrate
fifth birthday recently

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publitatlon in the cal·
endar.

J&amp;L BLOWN INSULATION

•!

Steaming over letter from 'Outraged in Indiana'

•

Business Services

Classi II

Monday, January 20, 1992

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan lulldiag
EVERY
SAt NIGHT
6:30P.M. .
Stariiag Sept: 28

HOURS:
8:30 am-4:00 pm

614·992·3394

Or Call
Evenings

Choko

12.Gauge

Strhllr

t2·2·9H mo.

Hi~~=~~~rf~~~~~;=~·

Beau1ilul h.
3RACINE·
BR's, 2 fireplaces,
has llad excellent care and must be seen to
)ISKING $53 '900 .

INSULATION

NEW USTING· Pomeroy· FANTASTIC PRICE IOn "'"-"'-1·11
•VInyl Siding
slory block home 6 rooms, 3 BR's, large lronl
basement, built in cabinets in OR. Large storage c•o,,~,.,
•Replacement
Home ln.good Condition located on apaved street.
Window
•Rooflnll
. OWNER WANTS "SQLD" SIGN in lhe yard of lh1s 1974
~nsulatton
New Yorker Mobile home with 5 rooms, 2 BR's, expando
and additional room bu ilt on. F.ront &amp; rear porches , I car

garage .69 acre. ROOMY $15,500 make an oiler!

NEW USTING- Racln• I tl211oor lrame home w/8 rooms,
4BA's, carpet &amp; paneling, blown in insulation, patio, block
buil&lt;ing wlgas electric all on a 65 ' !19+ lot ASKING

$21,000

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

a

AN ABSOLUTE "DOLL HOUSE"I Brick Ranch w/2 loiS,
fireplace cenlnll air allic &amp; lull basemen I 'co uld be eKira
rooms'. Fronl &amp; side porches, garage wlsrorage. Good
location! ASKING $45,000
MIDDLEPORT·GREATUTTLEVALUEII t12Sioryhome,
3 BR's, lanced in yard, lronl porch, slorage building an
abundance or closel space ASKING $19,500
IF YOU SEE SOMETHING THAT INTERESTS
YOU ...STOP INI WE'(L BE GLAD TO SHOW YOUI
PROVIDE INFORMATION &amp; ANSWER QUESTlONSI
NOW...IF YOU WANT TO SELL· AND NEED ASStsTANCE.IN THE ABOVE SERVICES GIVE US ACALLI
WE'RE YOUR DO IT ALL REALTY CO.I
ttEHAY E. CLEWD.........................................It2..1t1
TRACY IRINAGEA ..........................................t41-2431
JEAN TA...a!LL..................,;.......................Mf..HIO
OFFICI..-.--.~ ....- ...............,... .............."..

"2-221'

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772or
742-2097
539 Bryan Place
Mlddloport, Ohio

Sptdalbl~gln (UllOM

·

Ftatnt lttpalr

NEW ' USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
'MODUS
992-7013 or
992-5553

OR TOLL FREE
1·100.141·0070
DUWII,OHIO
7131rt11Hn

....

Re·Done

MOBILE
PARK

hos nice
ava11alrle up lo
ao hons;

JUST OFF RT. 33 .

On~ $75Jtr mo.

Cal
614-992·5528 or
385-8227
12·11-1

'c'

EXCAVATING

BULLDO~ 1,!1JtCKHOE

ond TRACMUt: WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPnc IYSTEIIS,
HOME 8tTE8 Md
TRAILEA81TE~

LANOCLEARIN
DRIVEWAYS liSTA D
UMESlONE-TRUCKINQ
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

.•! ...

'

�Ohio

Page · ~ \The Deily Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements
3

11

Pom•o,.
Nursing
And
Rthablllt1tlon Ctnltr 11 AcceptIng ANIIcttlons For Part·Time
LPN • .AOiatlng Shltt AYIIIable.
S.l~ B!•Md On Veare. Of Ex·
l*ltnct. Exctllant Btntfll
Package.
Call
.ctrol

Announcements .

bl rHponslbla tOr 1ny

I will not

35

Help Wantkl

debta other thin my own. Ktn·

neth M. Ktrsty.

Mtel Si~l1t : Guys • Olrll. Call
Tod1y. Oatt Tonight. 1-IOCJ.407·

lnt~r-

1004 , $2.05/mln. Mull Bt Over
,~

Rtptllentatlvn wanted for
Avon, no tenltory ntcnHry,
wfth algn-up, Call Kay,
I
·7180
Anponelble ptrwon to enewer
buelnete ctlll from own home
thru Ult ot call fo111wardlng,
good telephone aklllt a musl,
304.e75-7'101 after 5:00 PM.

Mttl A~a Slngl• By Choice
Not Chlnct. Writt: SlngiH, P.O.
Box 1043, Galllpolit, Ohlo 45631.

4

": &amp;"'

Giveaway

4 Month Old Shaph1rd Puppln,
To Good Homt Only. 614-4468728.

Lots

&amp; Acreage

1992
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

11

: ~·.

Autos for Sale

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1992

112 Aer., Flat, On At. 2, North Of
Point PIN1tnt, Septic Syet1m,
Electric Hook·up And Wat•r.
Rudy For Mobllt Home. F111nc:h
City MobUe Homes, 814-4489340, 1-80.0-231-4487.
For Salt : 1.25 Acre Lot, Located
At Charotalt Like SubdlvlsJon.
$9,500, Call After 5p.m. 814·258·
1901.

LOSER
,.Loo.:_ ~T [ RMIP

.IAV (()U)
IN THE ATfiG~'/:'Il,1611 ~

Television
Viewing

HA HA
~A~

~EARIW!.!

HA

Lola lor &amp;ale, trallera accepo
table. 304-175-2722.

I

W\HAHA

RU4\ a Millo From Golllpollt, 2
Story ~ Cobin, 14 lcm, 7
Acrtt Bottom Land, 7 Acrn
Woodod. 114·3711-218\ Evonlngt
Atltrlp.m.

41

F1 tm

For

IBM

i ;.;;·r

.!!.,~":_1 R•lnbow C

Houses for Rent

9

IT'S CALLED
•'SPOONS," AND
IT'S KIND OF
COMPLICATED.
BUT [THINK

446.0374.
a

beginner, 614·992-6949

th e day before the ad Is to run.

&amp; Auction
auction service. Lic ensed Ohio,

W11SI Virginia, 304·713·5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

12 1nch Plaine r, 614·256-6268.
Wanted to buy old tube radlot,

junkers or mint cond, big
money lor some modtls made
bal o re Ht42. Phona Ct1uch 304·
882·2220.

OH 4$665
HouMJCast Manager • B.A.
referred. ThrM (311ull time and
our (41 part-lime rHidtntlal aid
positions· High School Diploma
or GEO requfrld. All positions
oro lor otofflni o1 o rtoldln1~1
r-.aplte home. ppty to: Pre~llra
C.nter, 213 Vallt'r' Drive, Pl.
Pleaun1, WY 25550. 304-6752381, AAJEOE.
KUWAIT, SAUDI WORKERS
, NEEDED: ,
$3!5.00 &amp; Up Per Hour. Tax Free.
Bolh Skllltd &amp; Unskilled For
Info. Clll 615·179·5505 Ext. K·
699.

r.

Ric k Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, eomplelt

I II
$8.00/Hour, To
Rtsume To Cecilia

Box 604, Jackson, ""o"H.•.,_, ·-~ ·
Deadline For Applicants: 1127192.

Equal Oppol1unlty Employer.

Wa nted To Buy: Junk Autos
Wit h Or WlthoU1 Molors. Call
Larry Li vely. 614·388·9303.

$35010AY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERSI P£01'LE
C.IILL YOU,
Top Prlc:e11 Paid: All Old U.S. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY,
1-800·255-0242.
Coins, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins,
Gold Coins. ,,U.S. Coin Shop,
151 Seco nd Avenue, Gallipolis.
Wo uld Like To Buy Used Tan·
... POSTAL JOBS ning Bed. Call Arter 5p.m. 614·
NOW HIRING
446..{1929.
Clerke,
Sortn,
Carrier., .
Mechanics. Start $11.41/hr. For
Employment Jnto. Cell 1·21&amp;.
Employment Services 324·2102.
7a.m. • 1p.m., 7 Days.
AVON · All areas, Call Marilyn
Weaver 304·882·2645.
Help Wanted

Llc:en11d Manager For Local
Beauly Salon. Competllve
Weges Paid Vacation Medical
Plan Avallabla, .Training. · 614446-3353.
Local company nalde account·
lng clerk. Oullts lo Include kay
punch alp, light typing, tiling
end mtscelleneoua cleric:el
dut111. Ten key calculator ekllls
rtqulred. Pratar soma eompuler
exparlence bul It nOI a requirement Must be neal, raHabla,
able to lalta lnstruc:Uons and fol·
low through accurately. Send
resume and relerencll c:/o
Point Pleasant Rtglsler, P.O.
Box S10J._Polnt Pleuant, WV
25550. Euo .
$400 WNkty, StuHing Envtlopat At Home. Rusfi $'1.00
S.A.S.E. 110 O&amp;A SuppiiH, P.O.
Box 1443, Falrbom, Ohio 45324.
NEED AJOBI GREAT PAY II
Over 350 COmpenl•• N.-d You
NOWI Wori( From HOME And
GET PAID, 301-637-5078 Dopt.
en, 24 Houra.
Pay Off Those Chrletmas Bllltl
bm Exll'l C11h .Procnslng
Mill. 81 Your Own Sou. Fr11
Information And Applk:atlon.
Send Long SASE: Musklngum
I All Areas I Shirley Area Publishing, Sox 8161,
=.::_- - - - -- - ! ~~~3~0;4-~675-~14~2!:9·---,:-:--:- 1 ZlnfiYlllt, Ohio 43702.
DRIVERS
Bt on TV many neldad
Cl1rks,
sorters,
carriers,
Ea rn To .$650 Wkly, Will Train commercials. Now hiring
mechanics. Start $11.41hr. For
Several Openings Also Pt . 1- ages. For casUng Into call
employment Into. Call1·216-324·
800-231-71157.
n9-7111 axt. T-237.
2102, 7em·10pm, 7-day.

,,

Want to:

14

CA8H?H

Retrain
Nowl !!Southeastern
Bualnns College, Spring Valley
Plaza: Call Todiy, 614·446-4367[1
Reglstlfatlon 190-05·12748.

42

Homes ·

31 Homes for Sale

A••·

-.104.-24:111. .

100 Sprucorldgo, 14x70, :1bdnn., 1·both, hil1 pump, 2.71
acr"!'1. 2 mil" not1h of Chnttr,

111·..11-4492

11, Brentwood 3br 1 Bath,
14x70, Excellent Condfllon, 114·
441-1120.
- .
1tt1 SchuR 14•71 2br, 2 laths,

11.----12·..----------1

Fomlly Room, Utility A001r1,
S.vo: _,,000, F-h Chy
_ , . 114-4414340,
- · Flnanclna
Avo!&gt;
IIIIo.
1-'bo-231·
44f7.

5 . _ _....,.__ __ 13.________ ,
6, _ _ _ _ __
1
~=~~=~:
7. _________ 1.,,..__........;__ _ _ ,1~~~~

8-·- - - - .....

.446-2342 ..675-1333
...
992-2156
'

Merchandise

1121e

51

Household 1

Goods .

Now Mlabll OUitortl fit bnl,
32-1 up 10 48-JJ. 304 11113113.
A-llonld Wllhlrw , I
-~ t100 end ,.. wo
-~~ ...... Tho Wllltor I
Ory11SI......
Slgno: Portablo llahlld chlngooblo lllltor olgo All. '"' lol·
1'111tlc
$47.10 box, 1-111-:1413:
.... _
....~ Antty ........
by lllndywlllo P- Oftlco,
COUnly, WV. ll!all of~
n
Clthtn

*'""·

Boxtr Female, 1 1/2 Years Old,
Registered, 614·256·6259.
Fish Tank/ 2413 Jackson Ava.
Point Pleasant, 304-675-2063,
full Una Tropical flahl birdS,
small ani mals and supples .
Part Collie pupplta, black &amp;
white, $6.00ta, In order to get
mommy spayed, 614·742·3t18

57

Musical
Instruments

Eplphone Olbson · electric llat
top gul1ar, len than ,.,., old,
goocf ohopo, $350. 304-11023698,
.

Farm Suppli es
&amp; Livestock
61 Farm Equipment
4020 JD Tract, With Big JD
Lolder, 15 950; 1020 JD Dlnel
Shlrp, 14,t95; 460 Long Olo11l
With New 5 Ft. Bulh Hog,
ru~~nor Will Flnonco. 8145000 Ford DieHl Trtctor,
$5,150; Late Modtl 4000 Ford
With Loider, $6,350; 1991 Maritz
Stock Trallar, $1,895. Owner Will
Finance. 614·286-6522.

8ft . Locusl Posts, 614·256·6306.
Ftrm-all super MTA, Farm-all M,
Farm-all cub with cultivator,
mower, turn plow and blade,
614·915·3593
Gthf 95 grlndtr mixer. Ntw Hoi·
land 478 hayblne. New Holland
410 itt hayb1nt. Alle1 Chalmers
two row no tiU corn pfantar. All
good c:ond. 304·273·4~15.
Jim's Farm Equlpment1 SR. 35,
Woo1 Golllpollo, 614 .. 41-9777;
Mde ttltcllon new &amp; uHd farm
INctM I Implements. Buy,
Hll, lradt, 8:00..5:00 WHkdays,
Sat. till Noon.
Wontocl:
onythlng
258·1301,
lp.m.

H•r.

...._,pm

=-===-~·

1111.

_ _ ...

.......

I

XII

!i!EVfNUf
)f~ICf
~--~ .

,•

1184 Chevy Blazer, Silverado ,1
package, aut~1 305 engil'liiJ. 4 ·1
whHI drive, v-B, PS, AC, PB, t ·
sharp looking, 304·578--2652.
1984 Jttp Chrokee, 4 Whltl
Orlvt. 814-446-3869.
'·
1~85 Ford Club Wagon, Han· '•
dlcoppod Equlppod With Whool
Chair Uft. Can Be S11n At 761
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, ..
Ohio,
::19::110:'-:S-:·10::-:B::-Ia_zo_r-c4:-x4:-,-:
_b-:-lu-o1"7.:5- .'
epeed, 11k $5,000, call 614·W&gt; r
4492
'

PHILLIP
ALDER

Tonlghl

fiJT l . WON/Jf/l
.I cov1.1&gt; 1-1 v~
~ f'l NI"AT l

-

.

!

Newattour
IIIII Witte! o

•~

Fortqne
1121• Fomlly Foad
131111 1 Sblr Slereo.

a

&lt;

join lhe ell·male football,
team. (Rl Slareo. C
liD 18 MOVIE: Rod'bawn
(PG13) (2:001
a-.Shewro~~Q
11!1 On 8tlge Slereo.
f8 PokuoNowo C
RDOII(Pt 1 cif 8) (2:00)

EEKANDMEEK
1-\AV&amp; ANNWNC£D A
Nf.W AWARD 10 f£
GIVEN EV£10' RlJR"r£/\1(5 .. .

12 ft llberglall Stars jon boat,
1175. 304-6715-4276.
12ft V bottom boat, 15ft ll'lller,
4hp Evenrudt motor, . trolling
molor, Ulnkota, 304-&amp;75·71113.

8

1:05 w Tlte 41111 AnnUli OokiCit
Olollll Awardt Ctlel&gt;&lt;atlng

Auto Pans &amp;

outstanding achlavemaniS in
lelevlslon and motion
plcturas. (2:30)
1:30 Ill• Ill Blaoocxn Blossom

Accessories
Budget Transmissions, Used &amp;
rtbultt, starting at $99; Auto
Parts. 114-245-:S&amp;n, &amp;14-37l2213.
::'::':=-:-::-=c-:-:- -:- . '·'
Complete engine &amp; lr~nsmla- ~- ,'·
tlon tor 1986 Chlvlltl. Al10 :.,·
Cl'levaha whttle and tlrtt. Will ,.,.
Hit uperately. 304-875-6048 .w·
anytime.
, ~ ..,7
Ntw gas tanks, body parts, one
ton truck Wh1111, radiator•, --.,
floor mats, etc:. 0 &amp; A Auto, ' ••
Ripley, WV. 304·372·3933 or 1· · .:

,,
.,'•

Services
81

1·:1.0

'M-10 WAe II "THAT

aAID "iHe ..V.ORE

REMAIN "THE
SAMe'~

TH llol56 CHA!oJE:i&amp; •.•

••

••Jor 0oc:t Bricker
ancllhB Major try to gel

Holowachuk to make a
decllllon. Sioreo. r:;J
Ill On 1'- Slereo.

'

lnterYiews,deboloaand
analyalllaadlng to lhB
President's State of lhe
Union Addrass. (0:30)
t:OO (J) • . g 'Orutl Willi: Tlte
Cocllnl C8lllf 11'12 of 21'
NBC MonUy 111Ft at 1111
Movln 12:00) Sterea. Q
Ill Ill. MOVIE: 'llld of

'

:;:1'1

Complet1 M~l• Home S.t-Ups. ''
Reptlrs; Commerlcal, Rnldtn• •\ :: .
Uti Improvements. Including : ~ •1
Ptumblng, Elec:trk:1l. lnsuranca . ·,
Claims Accepted. 614-258·1811. ~: 1•
"I '
Curtis Home lmprovem·ents: , r: :.
"'"'' Exptrltnca On Okllr &amp; '"'- ,•
Newer Hom... Room Additions, •'
Foundation Work, Roofing, ·-: ~
KHch.ns And Btlhl. FrH Ei- ,.,
tlmatnl Att.ranct~, No Job To . ,,
llg Or SmoiiiiM-4.,-0225.

a

BARNEY

West

Nortlt

Eaot

Pass
Pass
Pass

3NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

3t

Pass

Opening lead: • K

'-- ----------.J
bad to hope the clubs would split S.3,
but they didn 't , and he finished one
down.
South needed the spade king for his
opening bid, but be didn't need it to
make his contract. If be bad bad two
low spades, be would have counted
these 10 tricks: five hearts, one dia·
mond, three clubs and a spade ruff in
band. At trick two, declarer sbould
lead a spade from hand. Whatever the
defenders do, they cannot stop South
from obtaining a spade ruff In his band
as the contract-fulfilling trick.
Whenever you can take a rul! in the
sbort· trump hand, that is likely to be
the right play.
.... .

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

38 Le1lle Caron

1
4
8
12
13

12, Roman
-- Jegger
Mineral
Carpel
Prayer
ending
14 TV's talking

40
42
43
45
47
4g

role
Encourlge
Fleur·d .. Funeral bell
Sincere

RoiOI

Allow lo
50 Voodoo cult
dolly
52 I think, tharo·

horee
(2 wds.)
15 Period In
hi atory
t6 CtPJblt of

tore--

54 Cry out
58 Pulpll
60 Contelnors
62 Law deg.
63 Wlra

12 w'dt.l

17 Fam111 horee
18 Moro Iandor
20 And 10 on

m11eur11
64 SlngorAdamo
65 Mro. Poron
Btl Ey1 lntoctlon
67 Clairvoyant
Btl Floh

22 btergoncy
olgnal
23 Grulland
25 Unlton
27 Foolllh
31 Leu moist
34 Comoc:tlan Phlllpo
35 U11oophlollo;-_
atad
37 CoMpalont

3 Romon
highway
4 ActrOII
O'Hara
5 Mltchlevou•
child
6 Wholo
7 - Landing

DOWN
1 Ooc. holldoy
2 VIllain In
Othello

Roman
10
Game flah
9 '"''
t 1 Cooling

drinks

tO Building
addiUon
21
ChariiH
24 Pronto

o....,

8 3,000,

-(2:001Sterl0.

DHDH II HERE COMES

TH 1 PARSON'S WIFE··
I'LL NEllER GIT
MY IRONIN1
DONE!!

~~~
Q
Ill 'ii'M'IIip!.y lrown

PAW II COVER UP
YORE FEET II

1-.)

28 F~11rm

owntr~'

Murphy's doctor ordot'a her
to IWO L aof bod rest.
Sterea.
..
I[J WWF
T1mo
Wnolliig .
.

• .30

LoYI

• ~·~·

2Q In bearable
mMner
30 Malo parent
32 Yalutudonto
33 llemalndlr
.36 Young hollo
3g Worltort'

r. .C.~IIgnlng

WorMII
llleltllbol

a

Oklahoma Stale at Oklahoma
(L)

aun.

41 Bedroom
furnltttre .
51, Aomlrt
46- dlgrH
48 Aaol ldgeo
50 Ruria from

10:00(1)
· In Amerlc8:
(lJ LHmlng

. ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDEOSQL .

·----·

'

84 .· EIIICtrlcal &amp; ·
·RefrigeratiOn
..... 21,1-

'

Ybu could' have greaoter oppo!lun~loo·

,.., ....... to.
--In., b......In 1M
tdllti,IIIIIIP1'11ing

tlterliMr bolore

.......

~·I.-_.. Of
'fiNI ·• Jl 011 wM tum out to be.

==,~M.1t)Takelll-

I

.

to someone with whom yoo'll have an - ·yltldhlgh«dlvldendslhonuaual,solry
lnltanl, dynamic affinity. Know whereto· to do a bit more lhali what' a oxPo&lt;:loc:t
look for romance and you'll find II. The of yoo,
Aotro-Graph Matchmaker IJIIIIInlly re- LIO (.MJ D-AUI. 12) E..., If you uveala which efgns are romantically per· sort yoorao4f lnd take charge of things
feel for y011 . Mall $2 plua along, aelf·ld· today, co-wortc... aron"lllkoly to r_,t
dreeeed,
stamped , onWIIopa
lo It - provided your ldoaa are bollIll' than
Matchmaker, c/o this rwwsp-. P.O. tholra.
,•
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 441D1·3428. v•GO (Aug. ~hpl. 221 Your poael·
PISCES (Fell. ZO..Mr all 211) This Is a bllhloo lor sue em will be aubotonllally
good day to launch a , _ endeavor, •
today - If
look out for
poclally If It Is creative and artistiC. II
of
Involved
could 1urn 0111 to have greator ramlftCa·
110111 lhan you Initially expec:tod.
Alltii(Marclt lt·Aprtl 11) You'll hiYI
a marvt1011a faculty todll)" for being
franl&lt; with othlfl wllhout being Offen·
aiV. - If IIOIMthlng negative hu Ia bo ·
atatod. - · don't Pullt II tao far. '
TIWIIUI (AprtiiO P' 1 101 Your luck'
could be tranalllanlllll IIIII time, oo you ' .-.ginO
ntullllkl ful advenlttge If IIOIMthlng lor dtlfrtbll-lna'opporlunllllc -lope lot you today. - ·

OQI~m~AI~IIII~JI~~~~~~~~
be
to ....

aood
UtJnaa lUI,_·
·· - t o
Dan'tnllkeiM
mill'!"• of thinking lhll :;
_.(llllri1-IO)Yoomlgtttbo ~ you
~ 1o.1lllkl a ciiCIEtiOn 011 on lm· e111

n

IIUip porllnt-lodW. YOII!altonllllll'lll j: ~tolllt gtrtnllly.
.. II&lt;IIY tollll-.poolllvelhln .,._ ,
live, ...S lUll blclt• they're, - : IIIII oltlntll. llkllr tCIII,Iy Nglrtltug

...,.._,.,A,._.

vwll a of 111r QIIPOriUnlllll you 001111

~·t - · · r e wrong.
I01ININnll ,..,.... llllrfuly lfdiOI.
CAIICIIII (.... .,......, Ill Wl)lth« · pdng. Aflittlte-llllltlod, ... ,..

-.a p

-

IIIII lNto ~~~~~~- peapll. , . . ...
I'

II)'I'Y JOU'I be lntroduCid

Educillon 011 Trill C
(ll Mtlltcln 1!1~

•

Holing re-oxoml1111 hlo lite
w1t11t hamg a mid-life crisis.

.

.

,.

law lot.)

·n.:-...s . .

51 loiYo out
53 FO!Ittlllrtlod
· S5 .._ CIUinl
58 lllowaoc:t
57 Construction
beam
58 lira~ rldgo
1 Railroad part

Steroo. Q

all 700 Club With Pat
Rablrteon

a Croolt 8ncl CltiM
8 lldFIIII Thl CUfl'ltrt

e

stalua at lhe Mafia. (0:301
IO:J5 (I) MOVIE: !14!1!1n11Y Nlgltt

=
I. --·""'

,.-_(POl (2:301

I 1:00 &lt;Jl •

IIJ

(I)

..... .

+

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c..tritr ClpMr cryptogf'MII . . arlltld lrOm qnMttiOIII IW ~ peqpll. Pitt lftd !)f'lllnt.

Cour1 r:;J

MlmO,•• C
On~Sh.

a=.:n~. Q

11:101ii.!.! '

I!· ,tt..:
.~

todll)" COUld \

'

'

Ill e Ill Oe

e AIWIIO Hal StareO.

you're _..lng for yourllll or lor....,.., IUI!IIItould ll11glt•t your aplrlll.
.... doing yout' -

«

Q_

a ·o• 11or11t1nt e., a....

1a:30

org.

27 Bandlaoc:tor
Lawrtnea 28--tht
Mood tor

af8 IIMitYIIe
- Sl8reo.
Lony'Kintl u..t

Heal· · ~· ,

='n:::g·c:l~14-=2=5f.=:11=c11;:..- -,--,--,-

perhaps he had a hand like today's ,in
mind.
If you would like to test yourself1
cover the East·West cards and plad
the play in four hearts, West leading
the diamond king.
After South's two-no-trump open- ,
ing, North used a transfer bid to show
five hearl~ . and then offered his pari- ·
ner a choice of games. South selected
four hearts, though three no-trump
would have been impregnable.
Declarer won the diamond lead with
his ace, played a trump to the dummy
and led the spade two: jack, king, ace.
Accurately West returned a trump.
Declan!r won in hand and led the
spade six. Guided hy bls partner's jack '
at trick three, West put up the spade
queen so that be could gain the lead to
play his last trump, stopping the spade
ruff in the South hand. Now declarer

LIM' A8C ...

,.

Plumbing And

tress." It's an interesting ·notion -

(abbf,)

f8 ltatt 0/IM PIOflle

"

1
BASEMENT
I,'
WATERPROOFING
r
UncondtUonal llflllme guer~n· ~~
tH. Local rtftrencu fumlshtd. '•
F,.. ntimatn. Call coiiiCt 1· ;; ~ ;.
114-237-0418, doy or night: • BIHmtnt WattrprOOt·:~

82

1J'i Are YOII llllntl Served?

Ill a •

PROI!IAei-Y -n-\E. et.JY
Wf-'0 INVEN"TCO
TV ReRLJNe.

''THe MC!I&lt;E 'THCY

'

Home
Improvements

Fr~~man'a

has a crush on a classmate

who ha~ jealous girlfriend.
Slereo.
Ill Ill Amlrlcan
Dltac:IIV. Pollee oHicera In
Freemont, Calif., conduct
l'!llque invastlgallons. Stereo .

,•

•'
,•
,.
,.

1.,1 .

a• Evening Shade
Two fomelo students ask to

1111

, 1986 Honda TAX-350, $2,500; ...
1986 Honda lAX-250, $2,000; 4 \
Wh.. tal'l. 11... 4&amp;-2148. .
.~

800·273-8585.

st.

SIOril1 Two peopiB kk!nap a
woman and bury her alive In
a coffin. SI1!!JO. r:;J

(lJ TrtYIII

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

By PbUUp Alder
good handmaid, but the worst mis&lt;

John's at Selon Hall (L)
f8 Croo1flre
7:35 (I) lllnlonl •ncl Son
8:00 tlle Ill Freah 1'11nce of
Bel Ak Geoffrey falls lor an
atfractlva~woalthy no"Ohbor.
Stereo.
(J) MOV : Kenny Rogera Aa
the Bot-= Advanture
ContlntiH (2:00)

7&gt;::;4:;;--;;M"::":O':"IO-;r;;:c;:.y-::c::les~=::-'
&lt;~

76

CoNtgo ....._ .

+K6
.KQ8
t A 7SI
+AKQ4

Spend your riches
carefully
Francis Bacon wrote, "Riches are il

r:;J

Ill Ill. FBI: Tlte Unlotd

dock~' 'It

1110 lulclt 4 Cyllndo&lt; R...,
- · "' It, ... t14.256-

\11, e Mlirttd••• Wlllt Children
(/j Mac:Ntll~ehror

I

.

.

stereo. r:;J

:l

I-

ALLEYOOP

for Sale

•s
SOUTH

7:30 tlle Ill Jtop11rdYI C
(J) Now It Con Ill toil
Ill Enter181nmont Tonlghl

0

,,

EAST
+J1098
4
• 10 6 2
+J985

7:05 (I) AdclaMI F8mlly

1910 Plymoth Voyager Mini-Van" ' :
loodlng lor new owner (1·· ·
ownerl, gone to Atrlc:a to llf· .. J
vic• aa a missionary, 6-c:yl, 3.:Jl :
Chryslar eng, ps, pb, auto, AIC, +'
AMJFM slereo auto rev 5-ban~, •,.
CS, very good tires, 39,300M1,='~"'
FL
regiSieraUon,
$10,500, •·
Langsville, 614·742·2337 even· , '·
lng•
··
.t_

75 Boats &amp; Motors

Sport~C...tli

WEST
+A Q 7 3
9763
t KQJ 9
+10 3

taM_.
1111 Tlte W•ltona

0

"''
"'
IF ... a

fAflN.

4pm

1........

THf~f"'J NO WAY Of
/(f'IOWIN(j 1 Of (;OLJ~Sf,

INTf~NAI.

Ron's TV Strvlet, sp:Kiallllng .. ;;:
In Ztnlth alsO Htvlclng most " 11
olhtr bn.nde. Houae calfa, am. ...,. ooollonco ropolro. WV 1tmi Cutl111 lupreme,·euto, air, 304-671~91 Ohio 114~41·2454.
ololn,1112 FOod Eooor1, 4op,
StW-Vac
Service,
- . . ..• . 11W48-M21 Oftlf Davit
010rg.. C,..k Rd. Parta, 1up- - p1)!"1 pickup, ond doiiYWJ; 114• ;&gt;
1m l'ord " - · ,_ ro11u11, 4....214.
;t. .
410 '"tlno, '"· 114-892·
WIR build polio COYIIS,
ic~ rooms, put up vln
1m Pontloo . _ ,.., 4dr, tiding
or trollor oklrilng. 6
C:onclltlon, -IIZ43, 24H152.

-·
••••.,., ••u:,:
Jtc-Ra••••••·

.AJI092
. -8 3
+7 6 2

aJMICG erC

a

--2144. -

·-Ivory.

ere=..-

Stereo.

t-zt-11

NORTH
• 5·4 2

Cll Ltgltlattio u~

lee:.

1o _____

-

Miscellaneous

:'ft'"

9,_ _ _ _ __

·----------------~-

54

· BRIDGE

=AflllrC
TA": TirO Noll

40" Eltctrlc
$10Gi 30 Gal.
Livestock
New Haven, ont bedroom fur· Eltctrlc Hot Wlltr Tank, $40, 63
3 Unit Rental, Sltusttd On 112 nlahtd epl, deposit end 114-14UlU.
AOHA 1989 Chutnut Gelding 90
Acre Lo,! 1 Mtlntenanc:e FrH, Ex· reference required, 304-882·
Big 4BA, 2 btth, Dakota dream Day• Training, 1911 Martz Stock
ctlllnl ::rnape, 151~6·8588 . · 2566.
homo bulK IOf you 121,995.114- Trtller, BJg Billy Roral Show
4 bedrooms, hall bailment, 1 Na 2 bedroom •P'. n.wly 1188-7311. Dilpll' model now Siddle. 114"-2111-6522.
acre, garbage plclt·up, city ttdlcorattd, no pt11, rtferiOCI open.
For Salt: 28 Nanny Goats, Will
water, cablt opllonal, good ttqulred, 304-175-5162.
ExerciH blkt for sale, Excellent Bt A1ady 11t Of A_prll. 614-4415·
locallon, $39,995. 304-895·3876.
4851 Or SM Lloyd Bllko.
Nlco 2 BR, 4-VZ mi . ffom Qol. condition. 304-675·4134. ·
Crest Modulart: Now Is The tlpoU1. Stovt &amp; r~frig. No pt1:1.
Firewood For Sill, Will Otllver. Aogltilorocl poftod Horolord bull,
Time To Buy. Manv Sizes And 52351mo. l14 448 1038.
3 y~ old. Coli 304-89S.307S.
614·256-6202.
Floor Plana Available. S.. AI
Frinch City Moblla HomH, Gal· Completl,. Fumlahed mobile
llpolla, OH 614-446·1340, 1·800- hom1, 1 mile below town OVtr• For sa• 10x12ft woodtn OVIr· Two mam and one 2 yr old
231-1467.
looking river. No Ptll, CA. 114· h11d garaaa door, 11-4-912-&amp;542 colt, so.t.a75-3749.
ort92'30119
441.0338.
32 Mobile Homes
and two
bedroom
Ont
epertmanle. lor rent. 304-675for Sale
2053 or 17S-1100.
1m C1stll, etntrtl air, under
For lilt: llembll
Roral
pinning, porch, port. lurnlohod, 45
Furnished
Otlto Rnort. Prlco I ,HI!, Coli
for 1111, 1000 baiH. $1 per
nooo, 614-'1112·2369
114-432-8013.
bo •· 304-67S·5216.
Rooms
1973 14dl Shuhz, mobllt home,
K~t01ene hlater, 20,000 BTU Round blln of mlxtd hay, 110
API 1ot rom by -.th ot -k, 17S a14-t4t-2710
good cond, 814-992·2111
Ooc:h, 114-1112·2015
304-682·25110.
1973 Darien, 12x50 mobile
Mtdk:al Supptltl: New And
home;- good cond, $2,500, or Room1 tor rent- wetk or month. Ultd Whlllchalre 3 WhHIId
Tran sportation
bitt othir. :104-576-2130.
~=~~~at $120/mo. Gallla Hotlt. ScootoraL Llftchol,., Eloclrlc
I
9580.
Btda, t.lc. Jnsuranct And
Coli Acl.on· 71 AuiOI tor Sale
Sleeping room• wllh cooking. Mocllcoro
Also trallar space. All hook-upa. tJtt1Hoohh,1
llft•1020.
==-==-=~~=~~
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304·773- Ntw Atnltor Motor, And TIIMr, 4 1m Chivy CeNro, - tUio,
5&amp;51, Maaon WV.
Sopllc Ttnko, Still In BoxL Now; t&gt;on~Yobocomb m1111L.MW tlroo,
4
lrt"" lo.!z. For HoUit rrtlltr. $HI Cl 114..ft2.2o111
I14-378-Z4...
1m
Cltryol•
Cctnlobo
·,_
Merchandise
Nlnt- . 111101 for 1111, Uko - · , _ tlr11, ttOOO, iiM-671-

Call our office for paid in advance Jales!

1..___ _ _ _ __

Mlddltport, BitCh St, 2 bed·
room tumrlshld a,:~t, utllltiH
paid, reflrtncn &amp; deposit ,..
qulrod, 304-682-:!SIIO.

3

'The best thing abut the future,' she lectured, "is that
it comes only ONE DAY at a time."

CDMH~"'
.
Ntwlllour
Ill •
Colltlrl

for Rent

I' 1 I' I' I' I' I' I' I
IIIIIIIII

PRINT NUMBFRED I'
l ETTERS
,

SCRA1Mn5 ANSWERS
Lend11r · Warty • Vault • Coldly ·ONE DAY
One cutie was trying to cheer her depressed friend .

111•
®Tlte Jettnono.C
. (l)lnaldo E-1;1-

2br Mobile Homt On Largt
18 Wanted to Do
-;;:~::::::;:-::-;-~:::::-;= Prlvale Lot, $215/Mo. Security
PICKENS FURNITURE
OepoSh, RetereHcaa. 814-445Will Babysll In My Home. Rod· 2238,
New/Used
614·446-2581.
ney Ar•a. References Avallablt.
Housthold furnishing. 112 mi.
Cal1614-245-588l
Att eltc:trlc unlurn. moblte Jerrlcho Ad. Pl. Pletllnt, WV,
home. Crean, good location. call 304-875·145G.
Dozer work, reasonabl• rates, 614·4464130 bttwHn 5 &amp; 9:30
304.{;75-7104.
p.m.
REN'T20WN
114-141-3156
E &amp; R TREE SERVICE. Topping, New 14ft mobllt l'l9f'l'lt, $199 per
Vl'ra FumlturJ
Trimming, TrH Removal 1 Htdge month Including lot rental, with
Trimming. Fr11 EaUmaln! 6f4· dtlivery, complete setup, 1klrt· Solo 6 Choir, 111.10 WHit;
Rec:llntr; $5.47 WMk, Swtvel
367-795T.
lng, end steps, call 1·800-$"37· Rocker,
$3.13 WNk.Bunk ltd
6625
Georgn Portable Sawmill, don't
Complete $1.41 WMk, 4 Drawtr
hut your loQs to tha mill jusl Real Nice 2br Trailer, located 8 Chill, $3.21 W...; Potter Sedcall304·675·1l57.
Miles Out State Route 2t8, NHd room Suht, 7 pc., $18.87 WMk,
lnclud11 Btddlng.Counlry Pine
Min Paula'a Day Cart Center. Dtpoall , Reference. 114·256- Dlnltte Whh Bench &amp; 4 Chalrt,
6251.
.
Safl, affordable, chlldcare. M·F
110.91 WHk.OPEN: Mondoy
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agas 2~10. TOial electric 2 BR, no pelt. 814- Thru Saturday, h.m. to &amp;p.m.,
Before, titer schooL Drop·lns 367-J1138.
Sundar 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
wekomt. 614-446·6224 . N1w In·
MillS OH Rou11 7 On Route 141,
fant Toddler cart, 614-446-6227. 44
In Cantenary.
Apanment
Plano ltssons, all levels! and
Side-by-side
relriglrttor,
for Rent
beginning organ Iasson• n my
electric double onn stove,
home, prefer sludants, 10 and 2 btdroom ap11 In Point $250. each both $450. after 5:00
over, Abblt Slratlon, 614·992· Plaasant modern, clean, Hud PM, 304-1175-5593.
1
1103
scc:eptea, 614-446·2200.
SWAIN
Will blbysll evanlr.gs, daytime 2br Furnished, $225/mo, 458 AUCTION &amp; FURN~URE. 62
on WHktnde, New Haven area, Second Avenue, Gallipolis. Olivo St., Golllpollo. Now &amp; Ulld
304-682-3722.
Security Deposit, References. fumilwt, hHtm, Wntem &amp;
Wortt boots. 114-446-3159.
Will do blbytftling anv shlttl 614·446·2236, 614-446-2581.
an)'tlmtJ wttkenchi, Langsville 3br 2 Baths, FP, OW, CA,
VI'RA FURNITURE
arll, 614·7112·2443
S4751mo. Dtposll Required, 814·
114-44&amp;-3151
Will Do Hou11 Cttanlng And 446-4222, or Evenings: 614-448-- UVING ROOII: Solo l Choir,
1189.00· Rocllno•
1148.00;
OHic:a Cleaning, Exptrlencl'd. 2174.
Swlvol
Rockor, lti.Oo; Co11H 6
614-446-7115, 814-441-1119.
Apartment For Rent, On First End Tl-, $19.00 SotOINING
Will Do Housecleaning, Call Avenue, In Galllpolle. 514-441- ROOM: Toblo Wl1h 4 Pocldocl
BltWHn 7:30, And 3 P:M. 614· 6221.
Cholrt, $14t.oo; Country Plno
643·2582.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Dlnllftl With Stnch And 3
Cltolrt , 12H.OO; Motchlng 2
Would Like To Babysll In My BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Door 1H~ch $349· Or ISill.oo
ESTATES,
5315
Jackson
Pike
Home, 614·258-85';'1.
from $1V2/mo. Walk to ahop &amp; Sol; Ook Toblo1 l2i12 WHh 6
Btc•
Chairs,
movltl . Call 814-446·2568. EOH. Bow
$e21.oo.BEDROOM: Pootor BodFinancial
Completly Fvmlshed Small room Suite (5 pc.), S34i.OOj 4
Houst, $250/mo. Plus Ulltlllea, Drawer ChHI, $44.1!1i Bunk
And Deposit. 614-446.0338. Call Bod, 1221;_Comploto Full Mon
Before 7p.m.
S.~ 1101.uu 811; 7 pc. Codlr
21
Business
s._.. 8ul1o, 18tl.oo.OI'EN:
EHiclencr apl. for 11nt, beautiful Monda,. Thru Saturdlr, ia.m. to
OpponunHy
carpet, nice couch and bar, 304- lp.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
INOTlCEI
61'H042
lo.m., 4 ..,,.. 011 Routo 7 On
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Route 141 In ,Ctnltnary.
recommencla that you do busl· Fumlahld Apartment, 1br, ntxl
n11a with people you know, end lo Ubrory, porklng, corortl holl, 53
Antiques
NOT· to und money thrOugh Ihe air, refertnctl. 614-448-0338,
mall until you hna lnvastfgaled Btfo,. 7p.m.
Sur or atll. Riverine Antiques,
1he offering.
Furnished Efficiency, Shere 1124 E. Main Streit, Pomeroy.
Private Pay Phones For Sale, All Bath, $185, Utllftln Paid, m Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
Fourth Ave, Oalllpolla. 114-445- p.m., Sundly 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
Cash Income. 1·800-225-4478.
4416 After 7p.m.
814·192·2526.
VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich
Quick? No Way I But We Have A G111clou1 living. 1 and 2 btd· Furniture A•JN~Ir, Fellnlstllng:
Good, Sttad)o, AHordable, BusJ. room apartments at Village Old Picture Framn; Trunb
Lklhlt Rewired;
nut, Won't Last. 1-800.284- Manor
and
RtversiCie Rntored;
YEND.
Apanment• In Mlddltport. From 125lrt. Experlenctl. Wallar
Wh 11. 814·245-8448.
$196, Coli 614·H:l·m7. EOH.

Real E s ta t e

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,$6o00

,,

1111 New ZOml Stareo. r:;J
8:35 (I) Andr llrlftlllt
7:00
Ill Wltoll
. ot Fortune

Business •
Training

IQ

. , UNSCRAMBlE FORI
AN SWER
.

D.CUNtwtr:;J

a ·Superlowl XVI

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PIN down EXTRA
•

llqun Ono TV Slereo.

Hlghllgltll

lng Creek Conservancy Oist
34481 Corn Hollow _Ad Rutland,

8

..~t•An1ootc8"':t:r£.Q

negOtiable, lalllng appllealions
lllrFrlday Jan 24, till 4pm. It In·

ltrftteCI mail or bring resumtl
epplleations to our office: LNd·

Public Sale

8

:Lc

till • Andy Clrltltth
I[J 8cooby Doo

1

I

1:30 (J). Ill NIC Nlwa r:;J
(J) lllvoc:t
1M !loll

Gen11al Manag1r needad, salary

•

1.

"One true conviction that a
man should have in his tile:
.
one old timer confided to his
.---:----:-:-"'--.old friend , 'is that nothing is to
S A YL I E
be taken too ......... :
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Comple1e the chuckle quoted
.
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by filling in the missing words
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Sund ay edition • 2 :00 p.m.
· Friday. Monday tdltlon r 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

1

a Up CioN

VOU'LL ENJO'r'

ALL Yard Salts Must Be Paid In
Adv ance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

stereo .

1

5

(J) Vldto PoSquare Ono JV Stsreo.

Of Printing! 614..,.46 -4436, 614·

for

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I

MON.. JAN. 20
"

Rentals

Ooa, Probably
Pan Collie And Hui'li:y, 614-446-

Medium Slzad

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-:-9

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: '"I'IM -ltd tci c11nct 11nco b11ore 1 " - ....ung - . 1 llwll)"l wamoc:t to CIM!I m8glc _ . . - Tony

•

.

�Monday, January 20, 1992.

Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Cleveland
Cavs drop
NBA battle

THIS WEEK'S GAMES
EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
January 24 - Southwestern •••••••••••••••••••••• A
January 25 - Southern.............................H
January 31 - Kyger Creek........................A

GIRLS
January 23 - Southwestern...................................... H
January 27- Southern.............................................A
January 30 - Kyger Creek•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H

SOUTHERN TORNADOES
BOYS

'

January 24 - Hannan Trace••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H
January 25 - Eastern ••••••••·.......................................A
January 31 - North Gallia........................................H

GIRLS
January 23 - Hannan Trace•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A
January 27- Eastern............................................... H
January 30 - North Gallia........................................ H

EASTERN' EAGLES
1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE
JAN. 1O-AT HANNAN TRACE
JAN. 14-NORTH GALLIA'
JAN. 17-SYMMES VALLEY*
JAN. 18-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 24-AT SOUTHWESTERW
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-ATNORTH GALLA*
FEB. 21-AT SYMMES VALLEY*

Pick 3: 398
Pick 4: 4630
Cards:
S,H; 9-C; 4-D;
K-S

PageS

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE
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*

Vat. 42, No. 181

'
By BRIAN
J. REED
Reed discussed with Anderson
Mayor Reed appointed two
Dt llon expressed concern for a
Sentinel News Staff
the procedure of calculating bills more commiltees last night. Coun· · sit,on that is being constructed at the
The time schedule for construc- ·for customers with broken meters. cil President Larry Wehrung was Nyc Avenu e intersection . Reed
tion of Pomeroy's new se wag e According to Anderson. some bills named chairman of th e Council indicated that the sign is being built
treatment plant was discussed are estimated, while others cus- Zoning Committee, and Council· on private property by th~ property
Monday night when Pomeroy Vil- tomers are billed an "historic aver- men John Blaettnar and Scott Oil- owner, and that the sign must con· ·
lage Council met in regular session. age", which the village 's billing . lon were named as memlx:rs of that form with the village zon ing laws.
The pre-consLruetion conference system computes by averaging commiuec. Council member Belly According to Reed, the property
· regarding the project was held three years in water bills.
Baronick was named chairman of owner, whose name was nm menMonday afternoon between Village
Reed told Anderson that he the Personnel Grievance Commit- tioned. has been contacted regard ·
Administrator John Anderson and would like to see the village pur- tee, with Bill Young and Thomas ing the sign.
the contractors in the project. chase new water meters for those Werry being appointed to serve as
Co un cilman Young reported
Anderson reported that the official homes with broken meters; Ander- members of that committee.
th at he has rec ctvetl more comstarting date will be February 5, son reponed that th e cos t of
Blaettn"' discussed the need for plaints about the need fo r limestone
that the contract is for a 270 day replacement is approximately $40 title opinions on properties on Willis Hill Street.
period and that completion is pro- per residential meter.
acquired by or donated to th e vilIn other action, coun(d :
jec ted at October 30.
Reed also stated th at he and lage, and sought cou ncil's pennis- Discussed the ne&gt;cd for a !lash·
Mayor Bruce J. Reed urged all Police Chief Gerald Rought were sion to have that legal work done ing sc hool zone sign on Mulberry
council members to lx: involved in working together to collect the on the Swanson property rece ntly Avenue at the Elementary School:
the project and encouraged fre - large wnount of delinquent fines m donated to the village. Council
· Discus sed a problem with
quent site visitation by council the village.
approved the title work on that dnvers running the red light at the
memlx:rs.
A leucr from Pomeroy Attorney property, with Mayor Reed stress·
of East Main and Sycamore
Reed reported that a (ampaign J.B . O'Brien wa s rev iewe d by ing the importance or having suc h comer
Streets. Rought reported that thi s
to collect delinquent water bills is council. In that letter, O'Brien work done anytime property is
may be caused by a malfunction of
now underway within th e village. expressed an interest in selli ng the acquired by th e village.
the light. The light is to be examReed told council that 5556.32 in larger Court Street mini-park to the
Anderson reminded counctl thaL ined and repaired, if necessary. ·
delinquent bills had lx:en collecled, village.
such work might be necessary foi
- Voted to cancc l the February 3
with a new payment plan for de lin·
While the funds for th e purchase the properties that will lx: cleaned meeting, as Reed will be out of
quent accounts lx:ing established.
are probably not immediately avail - up through Community Develop- town. The nex t regular mee ting of
According to Reed, many of the able to the village. council autho· ment Block Grant funds th is year, council will be held on February 17
delinquent bills involve customers rized Clerk Brenda Morris to saying that it might be a good idea at 7:30p.m.
whose servi ce has been discontin- inquire about the price of the lot to get th e title opinions and other
Prcscn&lt;,wcrc cou ncil members
ued and who, in all probability , and report back to cou nc iI at the "legwork" done prior to the com- Betty Baronick. Joh n Bla eun ar,
have moved out of the village. Still next regular meeting.
mencement of the gmn t work.
Scou Dillon, Bill Young, Thomas
others, Reed reported, can and will
The smaller Court Street park
Wehrung reported that he . too. Werry, and Larry Wehrung; Mayor
lx: collected through Small Claims was purchased last year by Ohio had lx:en working on that project. Bruce J. Reed and Clerk Brenda
Court.
Valley Publishing Company.
and anticipated having a list of Morris.
properties at the next meeting.

SOUTHER TORNADOES'
1991·92 GIRlS SCHEDULE

JAN. 1O-AT OAK HILL*
JAN. 14-KYGER CREEK*
JAN. 17-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT ROSS SOUTH•acm:RN
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. &amp;-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 HIL:L'
FEB.10-KYGER CREEK'
FEB. 12-WATERFORD
FEB. 13-AT SOUTHWESTERN'
'-Indicates SVAC games

MEIGS MARAUDERS
MEIGS MARAUDERS
BOYS
January 21 - Belpre.................................................A
January 25 - Warren Locai.......................................A
;:;:;;~~~ :!Ill .. 1111~·······················.....................11
January 23 - Miller.................................................. H
January 30 -Nelsonville-York................................... H

1991·92 BOYS 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-VINTON COUNTY
FEB. 4-AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 7-WELLSTON
FEB. 11-AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 14-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE
JAN. 9-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 11-SOUTHERN
JAN. 13-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 15-EASTERN
JAN. 16-TRIMBLE
JAN. 23-AT MILLER
JAN. 30-NELSONVILLE-VORK
FEB. 3-AT BELPRE
FEB. 6-;r.AXANDER
FEB. 1Q-AT ELLSTON
FEB. 13-FE ERAL HOCKING

A Multimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Council discusses sewage project

'-Indicates SVAC games

1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cen1a

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, January 21, 1992

eopvrlghled 1gg2

'-Indicates SVAC games

'-Indicates SVAC games

Clear tonight. Low In 30s.

High Wednesrlay In mld40s. ·

BIG SNOWMAN - Snowman builders around the county
agreed that Monday's damp snow was perfecl for snowmen (and
snowball) making. The ~ids at Pomeroy Village Green apartment
complex spent the day building this six-foot snowman outside of
the complex. Pictured, l·r, are Christian Welker, Matthew Smith,
Shannon Smith, Becky Ackerman (holding Samantha Ackerman),
Kindra Snouffer and Chris Snouffer.

AEP reports small
•
•
•
Increase In earnings

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Ohio consumers· counsel says
a small increase 'in 1991 profits
reponed by American Electric
Power Co. shouldn't affect the case
of a subsidiary trying to impose a
24.8 percent rate increase.
AEP reponed Monday a 0.30
percent increase in earnings during
1991 over the previous year.
The utility holding company had
earnings of $497.9 million in 1991,
up from $496.4 million in 1990.
AEP said in a news release. Earn·
ings per share were 52.70, co m·
pared with $2.65 for 1990.
Columbus Southern Power Co.
is u-ying to impose the $202.5 million increase. citing its part of the
$2.3 billion cost of the Zimmer
power plant ncar Cincinnati.
Columbus Southern, an AEP
subsidiary. is a partner in the Zim·
mer plum with Cincinnati Gas &amp;
Electric Co. and Dayton Power &amp; ~

Eastern schools may get reimbursme~t
From stall and wire reports
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Eastern Local School District
is one of 172 schools statewide Jargeted for reimbursment following
recent state cuts.
The Eastern School District is
targeted for a reimbursement of
$3 1,952.
Gov. George Voinovich says
$10.4 million available to help off·
set subsidy cuts to local sc hools
would lx:st be used for the state's
172 poorest districts than spread
over all613 systems.
A proposal drafted by the Office
of Budget and Management. simi·
lar to a memo Voinovich gave to
legislative leaders last week, identifies districts that would be reim bursed.
Southern Local and Meigs Local
Schools were not among those tar·
geted for reimbursement. However.
the Alexander District in Athens
County is sc heduled for a reim·

Lighl Co.
The city of Columbus and Consumcrs'. Counsel William Spratley
ftled sutl m Frankl m Counly Com mon Pleas Court seeking to prevent
Columbus Southern from imposing
the rate mcrease. Judge Rtchard
Sheward iss ued a tem porary
restraining order Jan. 10 agamst th e
company pcndmg lunher revtcw of
Jhc case.
"We have to look at Columbus
Southern individually. They have
had some very good years," Spmtley sa id . "Their stock reached a
new high in December and they're
doing very well."
AEP reported fourth·.quan er
ea rning s of Sl l 5 mtllion, an
inc rease of 4.4 perc ent over the . MONT
SAlNTE-ODlLE,
Sll0.2 million reported during th e France (AP) _ One of at least nine
same period of 1990. Earnings per
0 le to survive a French jetlinshare for the quarter ended D~c. 31 pe• p ash ·nto an alp "tne fore st
cr a terrif
1
were 62 cents, compared wnh 60 · er
d scribcd
ing 10 to 15 seccents for th o fourth qllllrtcrof 1990. 0~ of plowing ~rough trees. then
a four-hour wait in 20-degrcc cold.
Eighty-seven people were feared
deadintheMondayeveningcrash.
met with a federal mediator for
The twin-engine Airbus A320
about nine .hours Sunday.
jet, carrying 96 people on a LyonProducuo~ worker Ro.gcr
Thompson satd he voted agamst
the contract ~ecause the pay
mcrcascs weren t btg enough. .
Thompson swd workers routme·
ly work up·to.57 hours a w~~·
The npentn~ of an addtlUlMO
the b_akery wtll elimtn~te some
overume and the wage Increases
won't compensate, he said.
The resignatiol} of John Nichols
A Heiner's spokesma~ blam~d as head varsity boys basketball
the walkout on a br.eakdown tn coach at Eastern High School was
communications.
accepted and employment of Greg
· "It was unfortunate that poor Ullman to fill the vacancy was
communications caused a one-day approved at last week's meeting of
shutdown. We made an offer that the Eastern Board of.Edueation.
was a good offer. We told the
Ullman's employment is
union it was not a final offer," said retroactive to Jan. 3 and is for the
Rolx:n Agee, vice president.
remainder of the I 992 basketball

- HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (AP) 200 bakery workers
npprovcd a three-year contract,
en'ding a two-day strike. official.s
sjlid today.
&lt;Heiner's Bakery employees,
repr&lt;!sented by Local 21 of the
Retail-Wholesale and Department
Store Union, voted 113 to 88 to
approve the pact Monday. union
oTficials said.
· ·The contract calls for raises of
4Q cents per hour each year, said
P.roduction worker Charles Ball.
l\lso the company agreed to pay
liealth insurance premiums, satd
Olin Ingles, a union representative.
. "The dispute began Saturday
when union
bers rejected a
.
. ·
. company offer.
· • , Company an umon negotiators

nfil.

.

~ : ' A Ewington man was cited following a two-vehicle crash at the
i intersection of Salem Township roads 33 and 37 (Price Road and

o: FairplayRoad) Monday afternoon.

'
~ : According to a report from the GaUia·Meigs Post of the State
·· Highway Patrol, Brillfl D. Hicks, 25, of Ewington was westbound
·· on Price Road, slid across the snow-covered road in a turn and
" struck an eastbound vehicle driven b~ Judith A. Cossin, 29, of
'Ewington.
. No injuries were rcoorted.
. .

.

•

··

"There arc going to be those
who don ' t like this arrang ement.
But the fact of the matter is that the
people we're tr yi ng to help arc
th ose that have the leas! ability 1.0
handle thi s kind of a reduction," he
said. ·
The largest re imbursemen t,
$627,671.
would
go
to
Youngstown City sc hools. College
Corner sc hools in Preble County
would get the smalles t reimbursement, $3,903.
House Speake r Vern Riffe. DWheelersburg. said after a budget
meeting with Voinovich Thursday
there was not enough wne to fully
examine the memo. and the iss ue
was left unresolved.
Riffe said he and Senate Prcsi·
dent Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati,
both support reimburse ment, but
that there were legitimate quesuons
about how to identify the poorest
district.s.
.

to-Strasbourg flight, crashed in
snow a~d fog shortly before 7:30
p.m. whde on approach.
Survivors camed down th e
· 'deon
snow-covere d mountamst
stretchers included a 13-month-old
girl who was un scath ed and a 9year·old boy.
More than 1,000 rescuers
scarch.ed the area today.
Resc uers satd most or all of t~e

survivors were seated in the plane's
rca~;

We were ready to land. we had
on our scatbelts, and then 1 real tzed
·
we had h'11 somet h'tng, .. a sumvor,
Pierre Cota, told the French rati•o
network France In fo. He s:ttd passc ngcrs on the Atr Inter Otgh t had
no;-:ammg. .
.
We Jell mto th e forest and
were brought to a stop by th e

trees, ". sa id Cota, 45. "The roof
and cedtng 1~ere go ne. We kept
warm by th e It res th at were go mg.
and trt ed to keep people who were
· · d
..
IllJU re warn1too.
"There w~s a lot of noise. and
flames. I grabbcti th&lt;; boy nex 1 to
me, anti went out ~trough a, ~ol.e in
th ~ plane Int o th e snow , Cota
satd.

Eastern board names Ullman to
succeed Nichols as basketball coach

: .Local briefs...-....,
cited in two-vehicle
wreck ..
.::Man
.
,_

..''

in state subsidy reductions to pri·
mary and secondary education to
help offset a· 5457 million deficit in
the state budget. The cuts began
showing up in January payments to
local district.~.
The Voinovich proposal identifies schools to be helped through a
formula that takes into account the
per-capita income of district residents and a school 's cost of doing
business. Districts with adjusted ·
valuation per pupil of $47.500 or
less would lx: reimbursed for their
subsidy cut.
Paolo DeMaria, OBM assistant
director, acknowledged there likely
would be disagreement about th e
cutoff point.
"Somewhere the line has to be
drawn. I think we looked at different scenarios and proposed thi s
172. Now it doesn't mean it has to
be limited to that or what have
you." DeMaria said in an interview
Monday.

Plane crash kills 96 people in France

Heiner's Bakery strike ends

A~ out

burscment of $71,380.
Schools in neighbor,ing Gallia
County were not among those hsted for reimbursement.
Legislative approval would be
needed to implement th e reim bursemcnts.
"By targeting funds to the poorest districts, we are shifting the bur·
den away from those most dependent on state aid and least able to
afford reductions. We recognize
this group as needing special attention now and in the future. "
Voinovich's proposal said.
Money for the reimbursements
would come from the Ohio Louery
and the Vocational School Building
Fund.
"Spreading the available lottery
cash :Statewide to offset reductions
does little to help those districts
most in need and generally provides marginal relief to wealihier
districts," the proposal said.
Voinovich ordered $88 million

Continued on page 3
•&amp;•

•I

season.

Prior to the board taking action
on the two matters, Board Pn:sident
Ray Karr read a statement regarding the 'incident which resulted in
Nichols' resignation.
1. • .
It says, in part, "Thh-:Board
regrets this entire situation concerning the resignation of Coach
Nichols. Parents, boosters and concerned citizens are diviqed on their
opinions of the recent course of
events. The board does not wish to
inflame·an already ex~losive issue.
We mus11x: positive m.gain$ forward. Our cQmmunity is too small
with too few resources to be divid-

'
ed on this issue. We mustlx: wiited 1992 fiscal year budget, anti the the remainder or the sc hool year.
in th e overall support of our pro- basic ai d reduction to sc hools is
Arrang ements were made to
grams.
one method in which the governor advertise for the purchase of one
"We are in the process of hiring is hoping 10 deal with the problem.
new bus, and for building insurance
a new head coach. We as a board,
Smith also announced that the with a five pcrcen1 increase in
we as administrators, ·as athletic Meigs County spelling bee will be value. Liability insurance throug h
boosters, and most importantly par- held at Meigs High School on Feb. Nationwide Insurance Agency was
ents must give our total support to 25. 1992 at7:30 p.m.
approved and liability limits were
High School Principal Charles set at $1 million per claim. and S5
Mr. Ullman. There are specific
board policy procedures designed Moore gave a report on the planned per annual aggregate. Chapter 11,
to handle problems. They must be senior trip to Williamsb urg, Va.,
1992 ftscal year appropriations
followed."
and the new hall and exchange time were approved, and Feb. 19, ·at 7
The statement was read and the procedures that have lx:en im pte- ' p.m. was se t as the date and time of
action on the coaching position .mented at t1tt high sc hool. He also the next regular board meeting.
· taken after an executive session.
repo rted on the beginning alcohol
An organizational meeting was
Supt. Richard Smith reported and basic education studies which
held preceding the regu lar board
that it is projected the Eastern is a primary prevention program
meeting. Eloise Bostop, treasurer,
Local School Disuict will have cuts designed to give children a life administered the oath of office to
. or $3 I ;951.86 as a result of the time or protection from substance newly elected board members, Ron
· reduction of five percent in basic -abuse.
Eastman and Mike Martin, and to
aid .allowance from the State
other action the board accept- re-e lected board memher. Ray
Department of Education. He said eq the fCSigl)ations of Linda Shultz Karr. Karr wa~lecled board presithat it is his hope that the deficit as teacher at Chester Elementary dent and Jim SMith, vice prestdcnt.
can be absorbed within the present effective Jan. 10, and Bruce Myers Th~ third Wednesday of each
budget without having to apply for as a regular bus driver Wcctive month at 7 p.m. was set as the date
an additional loan. Ohio has a pro- Jan . 24, and employed Anita J. Md time for rc~ular meetings. ,
jected $450 million shortfall in the Needs as a substitute teacher for

In

'•

..

••

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