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Pomeroy-MI.ddleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Page-DB-Sunday Tlme....Sentlnel

February 9, 1992

Ohioans urged to.help preserve state's
national heritage and endangered wildlife

SOIL DEPOSITED DOWNSTREAM ·The
soil eroding from this site of the Kyger VI pro-

posed reclamation sire Is being deposited down·
stream and bas resulted in serious road ftooding.

Continued from D-1
RAMP.... - ----------

into the fund at a rate of 35 cents
per 10n of coal produced from surface mining and 15 cent per ton of
coal produced by underground
mining. In 1991, $12 million was
appropriated for RAMP by
Congress. Total appropriations
made available 10 RAMP since the

beginning of the program in 1978 Surface Mining Reclamation and
amounts of 125.6 million. Of this Enforcement (OSMRE) 10 impleamount, $93.5 million has been ment related reclamation efforts.
allocated 10 f rnancial assistance.
Coordination of reclamation acti viSCS provides technical assis- ties in Ohio is accomplished
tance under cooperative agree- through the state RAMP Review
ments with states and the Office of Committee.

COLUMBUS-It's lax time
again . Here in Ohio, this some·
times frustrating task is actually
rewarding for the thousands of
Ohioans who annually contribute
part of their income tax refund to
the Ohio Depanment of Natural
Resources' (ODNR) Natural Areas
and Do Something Wild! tax
checkoff programs.
Governor George V. Voinovicb
is urgiqg all taxpayers to help preserve Ohio's natural heritage and
endangered wildlife by checking
Line 21 and Line 22 of their Ohio
income tax return.
"All but I percent of Ohio's
original landscape has been altered
by man." the governor said. "Successful management and prolection
of Ohio's environment requires a
spirit of cooperation. We must all
consider ourselves panners in the
effort to protect and preserve
Ohio's precious natural resources."
The checkoff allows taxpayers
10 donate all or part of their state
income tax refunds by checking
Line 21 and Line 22 of their state
income tax form . Last year more
than of 151,000 taxpayets donated

a record $1,268,584 to these pro·
grams, proving that Ohioans care
about their natural environment and
native wildlife even in recessionary
times.
Money given by checking Line
21 helps pay for the protection of
the state's natural areas, scenic
rivers and endangered plants and
animals. Last year, these funds
were used to protect in excess of
SOO acres of new scenic river and
natural area sites. In addition, the
money is used to develop visitor
access facilities and educational
materials.
Money given by checking Line
22 helps protect endangered
wildlife and pays for programs to
reintroduce species once eliminated
from Ohio. Projects include bald
eagle management, introduction of
peregrine falcons, creation of bluebird nesting habitat, conservation
education in our sc!Iools and acquisition of valuable 'lvetlands across
the state.
Tax Checkolrs-2222
Since the checkoff programs
began in 1984, more than $9-4 mil-

Bane One acquires First Southeast Banking Corp.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Bane One Corp. has acquired First
Southeast Banking Corp. of Lake
Geneva, Wis., company officials
said.
Terms of agreement call for the
exchange of Bane One common
stock for shares of First Southeast.
The ttansaction, valued at $51.4
million, was expected to be completed during the third quarter of
1992, a news release from Bane
One said Thursday. It is subject to
shareholder and regulatory
approval.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - released by the Labor Department.
First Southeast would be associ- Ohio's jobless rate increased twoThe unemployment rate was 6.7
ated with Bane One Wisconsin tenths of a percent from December percent last month and 6.5 percent
Corp.
to January, according to figures in December.
The nation •s unemployment rate

State J. obless rate increases

Rate decrease ts approve
COLUMBUS, OHIO (UPI) -

The Ohio Department of Insurance

announced Wednesday it had
approved a S20 million rate
decrease requested by State Fann
Mutual Au10mobile Insurance Co.
State Farm will lower its au10
insurance rates in Ohio by an average 3.4 perc.ent per car, effective
March I, the department said.
The decrease is relative to auto·
mobile policies that cover collision
damage to vehicles and for auto
thefl, vandalism, storm damage,
glass breakage and other car losses.
"This is very welcome news for
Ohio policyholders," said Harold
Duryee, State Insurance Director.
"It demonstrates once again that
responsible companies competing
on a level playing field provide the
best deal for Ohio consumers."

d

He said the change in premiums
for policyholders wiU vary depend·
mg on the type of auto coverage,
place of residence, the kind of car
in~ured, the designated Miver or
dnvers named on the pohcy, and
how often the vehicle is driven.
This is the second bonus auto
policyholders have received from
State Fann in recent weeks, Duryee
said. In December, the company
began paying $37.1 million in dividends amounting 10 12.5 percent of
eac h cusiOmer's premium for the
preceding six months.
"That's over $50 million in
reductions in which State Farm's
Policyholders will reap the benefits," said Duryee. "I want 10 congratulate State Farm for their
actions taken on their own inilia·
tive."

Should harvesters

45,31, and you may win a $5 prize from the
Obio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your ume,
address and lelepbOM •umber with your card
or letter. No telepbolle call&lt;! will be Kctpted. All
coolest eatrles should be turaed In to tile newspaJ)er olf'lct by 4 p.m. each WedlieSday. In case
or a tie, tbe winner will be chosea bylollfry.
Nul week, a Meigs County farm will be fn·
tured by tbe Meigs Soil and Water c_,ntlon
Distiid.

Ufe Insurance

be licensed?
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
Kansas lawmaker says Congress
needs to clear up confpsfon over
whether operators of cus.IOm·harvesting equipment must comply
witll commercial driver's license
tequirements.
Democratic Rep. Dan Glickman
the House subcommiuee on
surface transportation to move
quietly to exempt the CUSIOm-cut·
ws and custom ~arvestins farm
MaChinery from tlle•commercial
elmer's license requirements ol tile
Commen:ial Motor Vehicif Safety
Actol1986.
Olickman said the custom har·
·ves~er~ Ulilt in harvcllin'- nearly
40 pen:ent of die c:ouatry 1 wheat
crop, u well u com, soybeus,
.,... ud Nv«al ather commodi·

•

PROPANE!

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customer, we want lo give you betler service while we help
you contriJI cosls. ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL
CUSTOMER PROGRAMS, including our Level Payment
Plan and the Ferrellgas lnstallalion Review.
Slate Route 35

-

446-2264

·
Gary D. (Denny) Evans, Pan·
Ian d·Racine Road, has announced
his candidacy for the Republican
nomination for the Jan. 2 term of
Meigs County Commissioner in the
May Primary.
Evans filed his petition of candi·'
dacy Friday with the Meigs County
Board of Elections. He is the third
to file for the nomination for that
term with several petitions still
being circulated. Deadline for fil.
ing is Feb. 20.

Ferrellgas

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2.9'4- 24 Months

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GARY EVANS

~-Local

1991 Gtind 1Ms..........'8995 1991 Sunblrds.............. 7495
1

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Gallipolis, Ohio

..........

A

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hearings begin in the House this
week on competing congressional
redistricting plans, but a vote by the
full House is not immediately
expected.
The House State Government
Committee will hear testimony
about the redistricting proposal that
cleared the Republican-conuolled
Senate last week and an alternate
plan introduced by majority .
Democrats in the House. The plans
would cut from 21 to 19 the num·
ber of congressional disuicts in
Ohio.
Kent Carson, an aide to House
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, said a redistricting vote by
the full House was not expected

"Where Sentee Make• The

·

,
·

Dift'«~~~e. ,;

'

•

,.

tives by two members because of
population shifts recorded in the
1990 U.S. Census.
The Senate plan would carve up
the disUict of retiring U.S. Rep.
Donald Pease, D-Oberlin, and combine the districts of U.S. Reps.
Clarence Miller, R-LancasiCr, and
Douglas
Applegate,
D·
Steubenville.
Huuse Democrats proposed
combining the districts of U.S.
Reps. Willis Gradison, R-Cincin·
nati, and John Boehner. R-West
Chester. The district of retiring
U.S. Rep. Dennis Eckart, D-MenIOr, would be diSsolved.
Redistricting hearings would be
held Wednesday and Thursday,
said State Government Chairman
William Healy, D-Can10n.
The House Human Resources
Committee will look Tuesday at a

this week.
"The Senate passed theirs so I
guess that puts a little pressure on
us," Carson said. "I think they're
going .to have hearings this week
and see how it goes. Obviously we
want 10 speed this along as much as
we can.··
Bills that would withhold some
welfare benefits from high school
dropouts and would require motor·
cyclists to wear helmets also arc
before House panels.
Representatives, who took a
break from full voting sessions last
week while the Senate continued to
meet, will operate solo while senaIOrs take the week off.
Ohio must reduce its delegation
in the U.S. House of Representa-

briefs---

Icy road conditions Salurdlly morning was the cause of two acci·
deniS lnvestipled by P.omcroy Police.
·,
.
At 9:03 Lm, on SecOnd SlfCel, the 1982 Oldsmobile driven by
Steve La"e, 39, Middlepcl!1, slid into tbe parked 1987 Pontiac
owned by Gay II Hanning, 24. Pomeroy, as he IUmed ·from Second
onto Sycamore. There- Upt dlmaje to the left door ol the Hanning vehicle but no dii.!I-.ID Line's car. ·
.·
·
Continued on pap 3 .
..
.,:; .

..
•

American products in
the global marketplace
EDITOR'S NOTE -The A~ociated Press asks the major presi·
dential candidates a question each weekday about their views on a
particular issue and assembles their responses.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Here are the views of the major presidential
candidates on the question: "What should be done 10 encourage American manufacturers to be more competitive in the global marketplace?"
DEMOCRt\1'S
- Jerry Brown: "We need to make quality products. The auto industry
needs to make a non-polluting, energy efficient car that the rest of the
world wants 10 buy. We also need 10 mvest in a 21st century infrastructure, which includes building high-speed trains and developing ports 10
increase trade with markets in the Eastern Bloc countries and the
republics of the former Soviet Union. And we also need to create a
national health care system that will allow manufacturing industries to
save money which they can then invest in creating better quality products."

- Bill Clinton: "I have proposed a national economic strategy that
includes incentives for investment, such as an investment tax credit;
increased research and developmen~ and expanded worker training programs.''
- Tom Harkin: " We just need to do a much better job of breaking
down barriers and getting access 10 foreign markets. ... We must invest in
our current infrastructure, such as highways, mass transit, housing and
schools and in the infrastructure of the future ... We need a national strategy to foster the growth of new competitive industries and 10 promote
research, development and commercialization of the new technologies ...
Most imporuint, thou~h. we must make the necessary investments in our
people in order ID mamtain a high-skill, competitive work force."
-Bob Kerrey: "We must have a national economic strategy whose
central goal is 10 improve productivity. The path to that goal is invesunent
-in our people, our mdustry. and our foundaMn. With long-term mvestments in health care, education, new technologies, infrasuucture, and
communications, we can boost productivity and increase our competitiveness.''
- Paul Tsongas: •'America is one of the only industrialized nations in
the world that lacks an economic strategy for global competiti~eness . As
president, I will put in place an economic strategy that encourages businesses and government 10 work IOgether, 10 form successful pannerships
and 10 create jobs and high-quality products.''
REPUBLICANS
-George Bush: "We will work 10 break down the walls that stop
world trade. Will work to open markets everywhere. And in our major
trade negotiations, I will continue pushing 10 eliminate tariffs and subsidies that damage America's farmers and workers. And we'll get more
good A.merican jobs within our hemisphere through the North American
Free Trade Agreement, and through the Enterprise for the Arnericas Ini-

Cremeans to seek state
representative post
Frank A. Cremeans, Gallipolis,
recently announced his intentions
to run in the May 5 primary elec·
tion for the Republican Pany nomi·
mition for the 94th Disuict Ohio
House of Representatives.
Cremeans, a Gallia County
native, is the founder, owner and
president of Cremeans Concrete

FRANK A. CREMEANS

tiative. "

- Pauick Buchanan: "The U.S. has imposed production costs on
domestic manufacturers that 10 large degree are not borne by foreign
manufacturers, making domestic industry less competitive in the global
marketplace. We need a two-year mO!lll!&gt;rium ~n nc":' federal regulati.ons,
and invesunent incenbves for domestJc mdustncs 10 Improve producuvuy
and competitiveness."
-David Duke: "Large scale tax reform, including a capital ~ains tax
cut would make our manufacturerS more profitable and competiuve in the
wo;ld market. I would also redirect federal research and development
~rants away from defense projects and toward projects which will
1m prove our ability to compete in the world market.'

a

and Supply Cci., .Inc. and Cremeans
Crane and Rigging. He ~lso spent
10 years as an edu.ca10r, served as
superintende,nt of the Kyger Creek
Local School District and served as
a~sistant superintendent for the
Gallia County School System.

Election '92 II!

•

Cremeans is a member of the
Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted
M~son of Ohio, the Knights of
Pythias, the Benevolent and i'I:Otec'
live order of Elks, Phi Kappa Delta.
Grace United Methodist C~urch,
the executive committeo pf the Boy
Scouts of America and II lifetime
member of the Ohip Ready Mix
Association.
A 1961 graduate of Kyger
Creek, he reeeivod a bachelor's
· degree from the University of Rio
Grande in 1966 and a master's
degree from Ohio University in
1969. He is currently worki"g
toward a l'b.D. at Ohio University.
Cremeans and his wlfe. Carol,
have three children: two daughten,
. Leigh Anc and Cari Betb; and a
· son, John Chandler. ,
,

Officials try to stem violence
AKRON Ohio (AP) - School officials are taking steps to prevent
student vi~lence as expulsions resulting from violent incidents
increase. a newspaper-reported.
. During the 1990-91 school year, 29 students in grades four through
12 were expelled after injuring someon~. tile Akron Beacon Journal
reported Sunday. As of Feb; 1,' about 50 studeniS already had been
expelled this school year for the same reason, the paper said. ·
Efforts by school officials to address student"Violence include a
pupil adjusuneot program in which two psychologists,counsel offend·
ers to try 10 curb aggtessive .behavior:
.
. Jim Zwisler; a counselor for the City schools, S31d nellfly half of the
district's 2.000 teachers are using special training 10 help youngsten
·adjust to society.
•
According 10 tile National School Safety Center and the Centers for
Disease Conirol, about one of every five high sehool students carried a
firearm. knife, or club at~ once during a recent 30-day period.
Tbe agency said one-founh of the nation's 50 biggest scbQOI sys, '
tern$ make children pass throu~h meial detectors wheit they enter a
school building.
'

t .•

' .

.

'

.
.

, I

bill that would bar high school
dropouts under age 22 from receiving General Assistance or Disability Assistance benefits. People
younger than 22 would need a high
school diploma to qualify for the
programs.
Education is the only proven
way to avoid long-term welfare
dependency, said sponsoring Rep.
Ronald Mottl, D-Parma. He indi·
cated the current system rewards
students who drop out of school.
Hearings continue Tuesday in a
House Public Safety and Highways
subcommittee on a bill that would
mandate use of protective helmets
by motorcycle operators or riders.
Ohio and 25 other states face an
Oct. I, 1993, federal deadline for
enacting helmet laws or losing control over millions of dollars in
highway consunction money.

The Issue:

The stud¥ released Sunday by thr~ years,, the study S3ld.
the .ag.ency ~ Bureau of Justice •
There s Important feedback
Stausucs esumated 43 percent ol ~ere. for Judges that there may be a
the 12,370 probauoners 11 stud~ed nsk mvolved .m not followmg .the
wer~ arrested anew for felomes recomm~?dauon of the probation
~1thm three ~ears of their super- officl31s, Langan S3ld
vised released m 19&amp;6.
The survey of .convicted felons
The subsequent .arrests of 8.5 placed on probauon m 1986 was
~t of.the JK?baUo~ers were for based on court records {rom 32
violent cnme~. mcludmg _Q.8,per· cou~tics in. ~7 states,, l!l~s followce.nt. who·were'charged with corn· up mformauon ~leaned from the
mnun~murder,~estudySBld.
filesofprobationoflicesandstatc
While a maJOntY of tllose arrest· pollee rap sheets.
e~ while. on probation were charged
In all, 79,043 felons were placed
With a different come, the StatiStiCS On probation in 1986 in the stateS
showed a tendency of some groups where the study was conducted.
to repea t th e same offense for The s1udy tracked about one·six
· th
which they were given probation.
of them.
Convicted robbers on probation
The survey was not intended 10
were the most likely 10 commit the be a representative sample of the
same crime again, with 17.3 per- entire United States, but "if we did
cent of the robbers studied being that I don't think there would be a
arrested for robbery again within widely different results," Langan
the three years, the study said.
said.
Five percent of the murderers
released on probation were arrested
EDITORS' NOTE - The
for another killing during the three study ww; based on records comyears wl)ile 3 percent of the rapists piled from the following jurisdic·
on probdtion were charged with the lions: Maricopa County, Ariz.;
same offense, it said.
Los Angeles, Orange, San
The study made no recommen- Bernardino, San Diego, Santa
dations. "It's up to legislators, Clara, Ventura and San francisjudges and the Arnerican public 10 co counties in California; Denver,
decide what that 43 percent figure Col.; Dade County, Fla.; HonUiu·
means to them, whether it's too lu, Hawaii; Cook County, Ill.;
high or not," Langan said.
Jefferson County, Ky.; Baltimore
But Langan said one statistic County and Baltimore City, Md.;
might alarm judges - 21 percent Hennepin County, Minn.; St.
of those placed on probation were Louis County and St. Louis City,
given that sentence by a judge Mo.; New York, Kings, Monroe,
despite a recommendation from Erie, Nassau and Suffolk coun·
probation officials that they did not ties In New York; Franklin
County, Ohio; Oklahoma, Okla.;
qualify.
That group was nearly twice as Philadelphia; Bexar, Dallas and
likely as other probationers to be Harris counties, Texas; King
sent back 10 prison during the next County, Wash., and Milwaukee.

:Ice blamed for 2 wrecks

BUICK·PONTIAC
_ ...l

Employed at the Southern Ohio
Coal Co. for the past 18. years,
Evans is vice president of Local
1857, United Mine Workers of
America.
He is on the Republican Cenual
Committee, a member and past
president of the Southern Local
Athletic Boosters, and belongs to
the Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ, Lauer Day Saints.
Raised in the Forest Run area,
Evans is the son of Carolyn Salser
and the late Mark Evans. He gradu·
atcd from Southern High School·in
1966, and served in 1968 and 1969
in the Vietnam War.
He is married to the former
Linda Adams and they have three
children, a daughter, Becky Taylor.
Racine, and sons, Michael and
Jamie, both at home, and a grand·
son, Jordan Taylor.

Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow III
. reporiS that two criminal cases which had been set for trial on Tues. day and Wednesday have been canceled, because the defendaniS
entered guilty pleas.
·
·
According to Criminal Bailiff Paul Gerard, the uial of Greg
Becker of Middlepon was set for Tuesday and the trial of Joey
Thomas of Middleport for WednesdaY··
.
Both men were c~ed with two counts of the sale of marijuana
to an undercover agent m 1990. The incidents occUlTed on different
dates, bu! each was a felony of the foarth degree. Both men
appeare4 before Judge Crow on Thursday to enter their guilty pleaS.
· Each ch8rge carries a maximum possible penalty of 18 months in
prison and a fine of $2,500 (of which $1,000 1,! a manda10ry fme),
according to Gerard. ·
. Sentencins for both defendants was set for March 11. A pre-sen·
l tence inveatigaaion .was ordered and t1ie defendants were rei~ on
bonds previously posted.
·

1991 Skylark...............'8995 1991 Regai...............SI1~900

16 FORD IROICO 4x4'

For the past 15 years Evans has
Served On the Southern Local
School Disuict Board of Education . He is actively involved in
school and community affairs and
expresses suong support for Meigs
County and iiS need for economic
improvement. "My life has been
spent here, I've raised my family
here and my interest is in keeping
iobs in MeillS Countv."

Two enter pleas on charges

1991 Grand Prbs•••••• ~11,900 1991 Pontiac leMans.•.S6995

IIIIIIIOit tt oondltloll,...., drtwn,

vide judges with feedback for making future decisions, an agency
spokesman said.
·'These judges sentence these
felons to probation and quite often
they don't know what happens 10
them after the sentences,'' said
Patrick A. Langan, a department
statistician who supervised the
study.
.

Evans Seeks Seat On County
• • on GOP tic
• ket
commzsszon

Ferrellgas

Call us at (61

A Multimedia Inc. Nowapaper

Ohio House begins hearings
on new redistricting plans

WASHiNGTON (AP) _ AJuslice Department study of felons in
17 states estimates nearly half of
those released on probation in 1986
were arrested again for serious
offenses within three years.
The findings mark the depart·
ment's first effort to track the
actions of state court felons on
sU~ release and should pro. ,,, '

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 10, 1992

Nearly half ofJelons on prob·ation
are arrested again, study reveals.

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•

Vol. 42, No. 194
Copyrighted 1992

wooooyoo

..,ed

lies.

Page6

DONATION MADE. H&amp;R Block of Pomeroy made a $300
donation to the Meigs County Soapbox Derby on Thursday. The
funds will be used to help tonduct this year's county-wide derby,
which will be held on July 4. Pictured left, presenting the check to
Derby Director Charles Neutzling, is Karl Kebler of H&amp;R Block.

ANYONE CAN SELL YOU

'

MYSTERY FARM ·This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Gallla County. Individuals wishing to partie!·
pate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
guess off to the Daily Sentinel111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio,

health
report

responsibility and as. mbst .recent- boating and antiques.
Lowe's Companies, Inc., is one
ly, direciOr, corporate research.
She graduated from Gallia of America's largest specialty
Academy High and earned a B. A. retailers of building materials and
Dewee in Philosophy from Miami related products for the do-it-your·
Umversity and an M.B.A. from the self home improvement and home
University of Cincinnati. She cur- construction markets, operating
rently resides in North Wilkesboro. over 300 stores in the Southeastern
In her spare time, enjoys reading, United States.

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people without jobs. the government said Friday.
"The marginal increase in
Ohio's unemployment rate is in
line with national trends and unem·
ployment claims filed in our
offices," said James Conrad,
administrator of the Ohio Bureau
ofEmployinent S!m'iceS.
·
•'The persistent sluggishness in
the economy continues to make for
a dirricult job market for
Ohioans," he said. The most jobs
have been lost in durable goods
· manufacwring, but there is incrcas·
ing weakness in the retail and
wholesale sectors, Conrad said.
Some 5.122 million Ohioans
had jobs last month, up 30,000
from December. Some 370,000
Ohioans were jobless in January,
up from 353,000 in December.

lion has been donated to these
important projects. The latest
statistics indicate that Ohio ranks in
the top three nationally in total
donations among the 34 states that
have conservation checkoff sys·
tems:
Ohio citizens are clearly in the
forefront of national efforts 10 protect
natural resources, goveF
nor Voinovich said.
This year governor Voinovich
and ODNR urges all Ohioans to d~
something special for tlleir children
and grandchildren by checking:
Line 21 and Line 22 of their state
income tax form.
Taxpayers not receivin~ an:
income tax refund may contnbute
directly to the programs by mailing
a check or money order 10 either ot
both programs at:
.
Nongame and Endangered
Wildlife Special Account ODNR
Division of Wildlife,J840 Belcher
Drive Columbus, OH 43224 and
Natural Areas Checkoff, ODNR
Division of Natural Areas and Pre·
serves, 1889 Fountain Square
Court, Columbus, OH 43224.
,

Pick 3: 993
Pick 4: 2695
Cards:
3-H; 6-C; 10-D;
A-S
Super Lotto:
2-16-22-26-34-40
Kicker: 358820

Mae Kemp, Gallipolis·native, promoted

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C.
Lowe's Companies, Inc .
announced Saturday that Mae K.
Kemp, a native of Gallipolis was
promoted 10 senior direc10r, mar·
• 'The market area served by Bane One said.
keting services ·in tile planning and
First Southeast will significantly
Columbus-based Bane One information services department. In
extend our presence in southeastern Corp. has asseiS of $46.3 billion this position she will be responsible
Wisconsin," said Frederick L. and IOial equity of $3.5 billion as of for planning activities and manageCullen, chairman of Bane One Dec. 31, 1991. It operates 53 banks ment functions for Lowe's marketwith 843 offices in Indiana, Illi- ing information needs, including
Wisconsin Corp.
David A. Suaz Jr., president of nois, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, consumer research, market
First Southeast, will retain his post Texas and Wisconsin.
research, merchandising developFirst
Southeast
has
two
banks
ment and vendor relations.
during the uansition and will be
chairman of the board of the banks with 23 offices in Wisconsin, with
Kemp joined Lowe's in 1985 as
after the transaction is completed, assets of $450 million.
a project director. Since that lime
she has held positions of increasing

•

Ohio Lottery

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�Monday, February·1o, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TIIB IN1'ERE8T8 OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. ·WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBERof The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should bt le" than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Bush and Buchanan tread
warily as primary nears
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - So far. the oddsmaking on New Hampshire's
Republican presidential primary has con~trated o~ the potential dama~e
to President Bush - but there's an outside chance tl could turn out to his
advantage.
. .
.
The Bush campaign d~sn't talk that up, suckmg to the expectauons
strategy in which the greater the percetved threat and the lower the target,
the more likely the outcome will be seen as a vic«ry. .
.
Challenger Patrick J. Buchanan has lned a vanati~n . He had to .aim
high enough and claim strength enough to estab!o.sh himself_as a senous
rival in the leadoff pnmary while av01dmg expectauons too high to meet.
Sounding upbeat and cautiously pessimistic at the same time is no
small political trick.
"George Bush will have a tough time in New Hampshire for a while,
but it will move on," Rich Bond, the new Republican national chainnan,
said in a television interview the other day. " ... He mi~hl have to say
'ouch' somewhere along the way, but we'll keep moving.'
Buchanan says Bush is far ahead of him but that his support is soft
enough and there are enough undecided voters to make a race of it on Feb.
18. Beyond that. the challenger says, he won't seta threshold.
.
"There are numbers Ooating all over, and I am not gomg to gel mlo
the numbers game," he says, a disclaimer repeated over and over during
his eight weeks of campaigning.
The Bush camp isn't seuing a victory standard, either. The president
and his campaign manager both have said that anything over half the vote
would be a win, but they know a close count against Buchanan would be a
severe setback for the re-election campaign.
.
On the other hand. the kind of margin that might well have been diS·
missed as expectable not long ago could now be read as a significant victory for the president.
1
Buchanan has established himself and his challenge; he's no longer a
conservative commentalor just in from Washington. He is an aggressive,
full-lime campaigner, his standing certified by his appearances on natioaal TV interview and talk shows.
That makes him somebody to beat, and that lowers the threshold for
Bush. Once or twice, Buchanan has said he might beat the president outright, but neither he nor anyone else really expects thaL
So the question becomes the margm,
,
. .
..
When Richard M. Nixon was runnmg for re-elecuon m 1972, ndmg
high in the polls, he got just under 68 percent of the New Hampshire primary vote. losing 32 percent to two token challengers and a scauenng of
other protest votes.
. Even ·when there is no campaign challenge there are protest votes; 14
percent of the vote .was cast against Ronald Reagan in the 1984 GOP pri-

m~i.•on. Buchanan's old boss, has said he thinks his fonner speech writer wiU get over 40 percent ofthevote.
·
.
In one White House venture mto the numbers, Samuel K. Skmner, the
chief of staff, said in a television interview that he doesn't think Buchanan
will get that big a share.
·
But nobody has blurted the kind .of benchmarks that got other candidates into trouble in New Hampshtre, as when a campaign leader for
Edmund S. Muskie said anything short of half the Democrauc vote m
1972 would be grounds for suicide, and rued it when he got46 percent; or
when the state •s conservative governor declared that Reagan would beat
President Ford in 1976 with 55 percent of the vote. Ford barely beat Reagan but the overdone forecast magnified his victory.
Polls conducted last weekend in New Hampshire rate Bush substantially stronger than a !'lonth ago, putting his support at.about 60 percent,
Buchanan in the mid-20 percent range. But a Umversny of New Hampshire Survey Center poll also rated up to 35 percent of likely Republican
voters as either uncommitted or not ftrmly committed.
That's not unusual - late swings in New Hampshire support have produced the most.dramatic and pivotal of the primary outcomes, from Sen.
r;ugene J. McCarthy's surpnse showing against President Lyndon B.
Johnson in 1968 to Bush's own comeback from a 20-point poll deficit and
a.third-place finish in the Iowa caucuses in 1?88.

Today in history
Today is Monday, Feb. 10, the 41st day of 1992. There are 325 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in Histof)':
Fifty years ago, on Feb. 10, 1942, the fonner French liner Nonnandie
capsized in New YO!k Harb&lt;r a day after it caught fire

Berry's World

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,...;:HaNK Yoll FoR

,...
'.I•

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lllllloM BMIN lmT*nt'J"

Accu·Weather" forecast for daytime conditions and high
MICH.

Jack Anderson,
Michael Einstein

IMansfield I 42' I•

IND.

will cave in again.
Bush drew a line in the sand for
the DemocratS - pass his sweeping budget package by March 20,
or look out for trouble. On~ scenario being tossed around m the·
Republican ranks is that the genial
and conciliatory Hous_e Speaker.
Tom Foley, D-Wash., will show up
at the Oval Office on March 10 and
disarm Bush with a call to split the
difference and come up with a budget that pleases all of the people
some of the time. Some Republi-:
cans would prefer the "give-'em-:
hell" Harry Trum~n a~proach
instead of a compromise.

Back during the Reagan administration, whenever the stock markettumed downward or was stubbornly sluggish, Bryant Gumbel,
anchor-man of NBC's " Today"
show,loved to ask guests, "What's
the marketttying to tell us?"
The expected answer, of course,
was that under Ronald Reagan the
country was going to hell in a
handbasket, and the market knew it
and was ttying to warn us.
Fortunately for both the countty
and the market. however, the economy under Reagan wound up doing
remarkably well .
I no longer watch the "Today"
show, so I don't know for sure, but
I'll bet that Gumbel isn't playing
that particular tune on his political
piano these days. For while the
media have been ttying to convince
us that the countty is in the longest
and deepest recession since the
Great Depression, the stock market
during the pa$l two months has
been enjoying a boom.
In early December the Dow
Jones industrial average was
around 2850 - not far below its

averdge for the whole year 1991.
One month later the market broke
3200 for the first time in history,
and now stands not far short of
3250: up almost 400 points, or
more than a tenth of its entire
value, in just two months.
OK. Bryant - what's the marketttying to tell us?
Let me, fl!St of all, avoid falling
into the trap that ensnares Gumbel:
I am very dubious about the diagnostic, let alone predictive, powers
of the stock market. I have often
compared it to an hysterical little
dog that overreacts to everything
- good news as well as bad. For
all I know. it may have taken an
historic skid before this column
appears.
But that wouldn't alter the fact
that the people whose sales and ·
purchases cOnstitute the market's
daily record have had, during these
past two months, a view of the
prospects for the U.S. eoonomy that
was sharply at odds with all the
doom and gloom that was being
peddled by the liberal media.
Don't forget that these investors

put their money where their mouth
IS. If, therefore, the market goes up
400 points in two months, it's
because a large number or serious
students of the economy are betting
cash - their own cash - that the
stocks they buy, and the economic
enterprises these represent, are
going to do substantially better in
the reasonably near future.
That (to repeat) is not to say that
the market is right. And it is true,
of course, that the Fed's slashingof
interest rates was a powerful psychological stimulus to investors.
But so what? It stimulated them
because it convinced them that lots
of individuals and businesses will
be tempted into renewed economic
activity by the slash.
Certainly the opinions of
investors as to the economy's
prospects, however mistaken they
may be, deserve more respect than
the tendentious bushwah spewed
out by an envi.ous crowd of academic economists and the equally
hberal reponers who quote them so
reverently.
Remember, however, that the

BOISE, Idaho - The slogans
and phrases that pepper Washington's debates take on a different
meaning when you leave the capital. Abstractions become concrete;
bloodless formulations acquire
human dimension.
When viewed from Washington,
for instance, a " national energy
~!icy" is a familiar label for an
Illusive goal. The failure to reach
agreement in this field is seen as
just one among many similar failures in areas as diverse as national
health insurance and welfare.
When viewed from the perspeetive of the Southwest and Mountain
West, however, the continued energy policy stalemate has quite spe·
cific, and specifically unpleasant,
consequences. The White House
and Capitol Hill, unable to come
together on anr!hing else, have
agreed on one lhin&amp;: The tetriiOij

Slleldlilla from Jdlllo'a border with
Canada to Now Mt.dco 'a bolder
with Mexico Ia 111 ideal place to

PM;::.:

cvtiYfhlnlto do wllll JIQilticl. It II
a pclldm buill not 01 idlokJay IIIII
pro1ram but on aambon. Tbla
flllao II ..-.oly populaled. Con·
acq
.1
y,_.Ita polldell clout illlm·

itod

Thus, when tho DeJllftiiiOllt of

Energy went looking for possible
sites for a permanent nuclear waste
repository, its eommiunentto finding one m the Eastern half of the
United States and one in the West
was an early casualty. Congress
passed the Nuclear Waste Policy
Act in 1982, requiring siting for
permanent storage. The ~nergy
. deparuni::nt selected mne s1tes for
further exploration a year later. A
few years after that for rea~ohs
never fully revealed or explamed,
the energy department narrowed
the field to possible sites in T~w.
Nevada and Washington state.
Finally in 1987, Congress ordered
thnnergy department to ' conce~tra1e on only one: Yucca MountaJn
in Nevada.
Nevadans think they got the
green banana for one reason a~d
one reason only, Theie are M! million people in Nevada, Abolit245
mlllion PcoPio live Ia lhll·odler 49
st11e1. rtew "people want blah !qvol'
nllCiear waste, such as tbal repre·
seated by the spent rods from
nucle~~r power pl8llll, In their back·

when few people understood the
risks and everyone enjoyed the federa! dollar, Nevada ·and its neighbors were happy to accept maj()r
nuclear facilities. The world's firstnuclear device was e•ploded in the
New Me•ico desert. Above-ground
and underground nuclear tests were
routine features of life in Nevada
and ldahd. Major facilities for handling or developing nuclear materia1 for and from military use were
put on the gnJIDld in Washington,
Idaho, Nevada and New Mexico.
Even .today, there are over !2,000
people at the Idaho National Engi·
neering Liboratory, whic:h handles
vast quantities of the Waste generated by the Navy's nuclear fleet,
among other users.
Then, slowly and painfully, it
became clear that the federal gov·
emment had been wilfully, some·
times deceptively and always
promltcllously ,P.Ollutlna the land,
u and Wlltt With iiS nuclear activ·
itiCI. It became equally cleir that
the commercial nuclear energy
lndultl'y wu ICCUIIIUlatin8 stock·
pllea of JIIIClear,wute tltal would
ovent~ly .overwhelm Ita· on-site
llllllp "'jj'd"• l'll1lolll'had to be
helenoed 1 hlloq •n1""" 8
to pool~ ud lllo onvlrona~onl, .
What
·been dono wiiiy-niUy
now bid to bO ntedf'Jed IXIliiJRberi-

· yard: U.hu a tadioaqlve nro 111111111 fnlllltens of thousand&amp; 10 liU1·
lions of yean, and lhlll fat 110 OIIC
hu deviled a totally life BIOIIJO'
medlod. Eqo tbele - :US mil·
llolugumenll for atic.klns It to
Nevada n4 only one III.UIOn Cor
pul!iq IUtlllllolbele e1ao.
~J.
·
Boildea In a more nalvo lime . Whlcb Ia extcdy what hu 1101
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Sunny Pt. Cloudy

~
Cloudy

Wednesday lhrough Friday:
Fair through the period. Highs
in the 30s Wednesday, the mid-30s
to mid-40s Thursday and mostly in
the 40s Friday. Lows in the midteens to mid-20s Wednesday and
Thursday and mostly in the 20s Friday.

--Area deaths-Virginia S. Burke
Virginia S. Burke, 72. of State
Route 7 in Tuppers Plains, died on
Sunday, Feb. 9, 1992 at Holzer
Medical Center.
·she was born in Briar Hill, Pa.,
the daughter of the late Sanford K.
and Leota Whetzel Swift She was
a housewife and a member of
South Bethel New Testament
Church near Reedsville.
She is survived by a dau$hter,
Mrs. John (Joyce) Schultheiss of
Logan; three sons: Robert (Gay
Ann) Burke, Coolville, Gerald
(Joyce) Burke, Reedsville, and
Kenneth (Teresa) Burke of Texas;
two siSiers, Evelyn Reagan or Ric:e
Landing, Pa., ~ Deity O'Brien of
Scottsdale, Anz.; stx brothers:
C~arles S~ift of Anti~h, Tenn.,
Wilbur Sw1ft of Canmchaels, Pa.,
James Swift of Oak Harbor, Ohio,
Kenneth Swift of Lake City, Fla.,
Robert Swift of Marion, and
Leonard Swift of Columbus; 13
grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
· Besides ~arents, she was
preceded in
by. her husband,
Robert Burke, who ~ ?".Jan. 9,
1992; a daughter, Vngmia Jean
Burke; a grandson, Scott A!~n
Burke; two brolhet;s. Donald Sw!ft
and Sanford K. Sw1f~ Jr.; and a SIS·
ter, Thelma. .
.
Funeral services wtU be held. on
Wednesday at 3 p.m.. at Wh1~eB!ower Funeral Home ~~ Coolvlll_e
w!th Rev. ~bar~ ~ugan offiCI·
aung. Bu'!AI will be m Keebaugh
Cern~ m Tuppers Plains.
Fnends
call at the funeral
home on T
Yafter 2 p.m.

children; 19 great-grandchildren;
and six great-great-grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her five brothers, a sister and a grandson. ·
Funeral services will be held on
Wednesday at I p.m. at WhiteBlower Funeral Home in Coolville.
Burial will be Troy Baptist Cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9p.m.

Madalena Neutzling

Madalena Neutzling, 73, of
Mason, died Sunday, Feb. 9, 1992,
. in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Aug. 6 1918. in Mason,
she was a daughter of ihe late John
L Young Sr and Una May Ingels
Y~ung. ' ·
A housewife she was also
preceded in death by five brothers.
Woodrow R., Ralph T. Peter, Bruce
R. and John L. Young.
·
Surviving are her husband, Bernard C. Neutzling; three daughters,
Mary M. McDaniel and Connie J.
Hollis, hoth of Mason, Vicki L.
Bradshaw of Middleport, Ohio;
four sons, Charles L. Meutzling of
Leading Creelc, Ohio, Edwin F.
Neutzling of Syracuse, Ohio, Hernard L. Neutzling of Mason, David
K. Neutzling of Mason; a sister,
Beatrice B. Russell of West
Columbia; three brothers, William
R. Young and Harry L. Young, both
of Zanesville, Ohio, Charles Joseph
Young of Mason; 14 grandchildren,
12 great-grandchildren and special
friends.
The funeral will be Wednesday,
11 a.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with Father Andrew Hohmll!l
officiating. Burial will be in the St.
Gracie G. Gainer
Joseph Catholic Church Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
Gracie G. Gainer, 88, of Route 2
home
Tuesday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to
in Coolville, died on Sunday, Feb.
9, 1992 at Camden-Clalt Memorial 9p.m.
Hospital.
She was born on July 8, 1903 in John Young .
Nobe, W.Va., the daughter of the
John L. Young, Jr., 76, of Mason,
late James ·and Annie G. Murphy.
died
Saturday, Feb. 8, 1992. in
She was a member of tho Chapel
Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Baptist Church in Nobe.
Born
June
19, 1915, in Mason,
Surviving are her husli!lnd of 70
years, Carl F. Gainer; a daughter, he was a son of the late John L.
Hazel Hawlc of Frederickstown; a Young, Sr. and Una May Ingels
son, Orval Gainer of Coolville; two Young. A retired coal miner, he was
sisters, Lona Chevalier of also preceded in death by his wife,
Reedsville and Daisy ProVIIICC of Velma V Young in 1991, a son,
Athens; a brother, Ola E. Murphy Clarence Eugene Young, daughter,
or Scottsburg, Ind.; seven grand· Debra A. Young, and four brothers,
Woodrl!w R., Ralph T.• Peter and
Bruce R. Young.
Survivors . include
eight
Tite Doily Sentinel
daughte", Kathryn V. Reed of
(USP8113-810)
Coming, Ohio, Violet R. Lee of
Published 'evflry 11\ernoon, Monday
Pomeroy, Ohio, Bertha H. Knapp,
lhnnljih Frid•y, I U Court St, Pamm&gt;y,
Velma L. Thylor, Una Mae McOhio by ~he Ohio· Valle)' Publishing
Companj'!MuhiMedla Inc.\ Pomeroy,
Daniel, all of Middleport, Ohio,
Ohio 46769, Ph. 992-2166. Socond ct.•
Mary
Lee Brown of Lincolnton,
pc.tap p~~~id aL Pooleroy, Ohio.
N.C., Emma Jo Slallley and Wilda
Member: The Aaoctatod Pial, Inland
E. Hudson, both of Mason; eight
O.llY ProM Aalod•Uon and Lha Ohio
sons,
John L., Roger D. and Gerald
New1papei' A.. oclaUon , NaLional
Adnrti•IRI Re~c..Uve, .Bnnham
M. Young, aU of Mason, Harold E.
Now~paper !JAin,. 133 Ttit~ Avonue.,
and
Charles T. Young, both of Lin·
NewYOrt,NowYo.t 10011.
colnton, N.C.. H~ J. Young ·of
.POSTMASTER: S.ntlaildnudul- 1D
Pomcro)l, Ohio, Cec1I W. Young of
The D•ily .Sentinel, 111 Court. 81..,
Point Pleasan~ Roy A. Young of
f'l&gt;o11tny, OHio 46768,
Letart; two sisters, Madalena NeutBUB8CIIIPTlON IIATIS
Br Carrlar or Motor h h
zling of M8son, Beatrice B. RliSSell
One Week..........................................$1.80 · of West Columbia; three brothers,
One MCIIIth .........&gt;................ ..............,$8.911
Charles Joseph Young or ,Mason,
One v..................................... -_.. N:J,20
BINOLBOOPY
William R. Young and Hany L.
PRICII .
:Voilns
•. both of lanesville, Ohio; 49
l)olly...................................... .......26 c.n..
~ildlen, . and 36 great·
s.~• ·riban Mt IIMirlrclo piy l.he ant~
pdchildlen.
er may n.Mt. In .cl•anoe direct t.o The
The funeral will be TuCidly, II
OoUIJiollo tla~bUM on 1 U or 12
-11&gt; bollo.
1 will bo Jllnn CllfW
a.m., • die Foglesong Funeral
Heinle with the Rev. George . Has·
. No '"'*'"~'1o.. bJ ,nan pormtuecl tn
cliat
officiating. Burial wiD ,lie in
area• whllre •ome carrier urvt~ II
tho
Rocksprings
Cemetery.
aV~~illble.
1 F~ may call at the funeral
I..W.O.Uio C..at¥ '
home today (Monday) 6to 9 p.m.
t3 w4..........~........................... J:1.14

!.1a

Hodding Carter lit
happened, despite torrents of :
rhetoric and volumes of argumenta- :
tion. What we have is stalemate, •
reflected in the Senate's stunning :
repudiation last year of a carefully :
crafted, though imperfec~ energy :
policy package.
•
The result is free·lance policy· (
making, as in Nevada's utterlY ~
understandable guerrilla war )
against. the arbitrary designation of (
Yucca Mountain as the only possi- '
ble site for a pennanent repository. :
A~other example was the recent · :
invocation of states' rights by Gov. •
Cecil Andrus of Idaho. Andrus : .
closed his 'state's borders to the t
importation of any further nuclear· ~
Waste until the eorrgy dq&gt;artment ~
could assure him that Idaho will ~
n91 become the de facto dumpin&amp; •
IIIOlllld for the nation's llllloeCtlve . !

. .. ~

'
His concern Is ~by two , :
~

realities. First, the conpeuloaal J
.deadline for ~uelear WWOI\ plan
. I 1
waste cartllQI poulbly be met. Sec·. :
ond, tho iovemment'•lllau
. for a •
.ptiiDDDt ftiiiOIIIOiy Ill Ntw Max• ~
lcCI for nuclear wute from lb . :

w. . . facilhlea ... hillepiiJICI ·:

tochn~-!:'~1. Thall loavea, dlo • ·
ldlbo
En&amp;i~lll L1JJo. :
diOiy u tho tidy faU·bacL . . .•

i

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--·'
'. llloii--

:111 w........................................ -.
Sii:Woolll ...................,......................
O.llldo OoiUo Cooob'

&lt;

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

warm

Fair skies prevailed over much
of the rest of the nation.
The powerful Storm that lllQVed
into Southern California late Sunday sent rocks and mud sliding
onto portions of state Route 154,
the California Highway Patrol said.
Up to 2 inches of rain fell in Venhlra Counl)o.

em Plains; in the 30s i~ Pennsylvania, the Midwest, South Dakota and
the Rockies; in the 40s in the mid- ·
Atlantic states. the centr~ Plains :
and the West; in the 50s in the ·
Southeast, the Plains, Northern '
California and the coastal North. ·
east; and in the 60s in Florida ,'
Texas, the Southwest and Southern
California.

Heavy snow was expected today
in the mountains of California, Arizona and U.tah. Light snow or
freezing rain was expected
throughout the Great Lakes.

The high for the nation Sunday :
was 73 degrees at West Palm ·
Beach. Fla. .
:

Temperatures were expected in
the teens in New England, Minnesota and North Dakota; in the
20s in the Northeast and the north-

Hospital news

Contest to be held

EMS units answer nine calls
Nine calls for assistance were
answered by units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services over
the weekend.
At 12:55 p.m .. Rutland squad
was sent to State Route 143. Nettie
Goebel was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 5:07 p.m.,
Pomeroy unit went to Bearwallow
Ridge Road for Margery Douglas.
She was taken to Veterans. At7:06
p.m .• Pomeroy squad went to State
Route 124 and took Evelyn
Boggess to Veterans. At8:41 p.m.,
Racine units went to State Route
338 for a structure ftre at the Ron
Grady residence. At 10:59 p.m.,

Rutland squad was sent to Hysell
Run Road. Terrence Conlin, Jr. was
transported to Veterans.
·On Sunday at 6:09 p.m., Middleport squad went to Overbroolc
Center. Virginia Estep was transported to Veterans. At 9:04 p.m .,
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department went to State Route 7 for a
chimney fire at the Richard Dill
residence.
At 4:41a.m. on Monday, Racine
unit went to Mile Hill Road for lim
Kiser. He was taken to Veterans.
At 7:54 a.m., S)'lllcuse squad went
to State Route 124. Ella Quillen
was laken to Veterans.

Continued rrom page I
The second accident occurred at 9:05 a.m. on West Main StreeL
The front end of the 1988 Ford driven by Tammy Gardner, 23,
Marysville, Mich., was heavily damaged when the vehicle slid on
ice into a utility pole. The Pomeroy emergency squad transported
Gardner to Veterans Memorial Hospital where she was treated for
lacerations and released.

Veterans Memorial
.
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS •
Richard Fin law. Pomeroy, and Her~

be~!~o!~~iscHARGEs _.

the Henderson Community Center
in Henderson. W.Va. Billy Gene
Evans will be the caUer.
Sweetheart !lianer 5et
.
There will be a sweetheart dmner at the Wilkesvi~e Pythian Hall
on Saturday beginning at 4 p.m.
Cost is $5 for adults and $2.50 for
children under 12. The public is
invited.
Movies to bf shown
"Treasure Island" and "What
Mary Jo Shared" wiU be shown at
the Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy on Satunday and Sunday
at 2 p.m. and at the Middleport
Library on Monday at4:30 p.m.
Program planned
Janet Bolin, a volunteer arnbassador with AmeriFiora '92 in
Columbus, will present a program
on that event on Friday at 7 p.m. at
the Meigs County Public Lib~ in
Pomeroy. Mrs. Bolin will present a
video and also answer any questions pertaining to AmeriFlora. The
public is invited to attend.
Grange to meet
The Rock Springs Grange will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
hall.
PTOiomeet
The Middleport PTO will meet
at Middleport Elementary School
Tuesday at 7 p.m. The new teaching concepts in science and ~ath
will be discussed. A planetanum
will be in place for the meeting.
Dance planned
The Royal Oak Dance Club will
hold its fmt dance of the year on
Feb. 29 with music by George Hall.
The Doug Hess Combo will
play at the dance on May 2.
Future dances will be on Nov. 7
and Dec. I 9 with bands to be
armouneed at a later time.
All dances will be held at Royal
Oak Resort from 8to I I p.m.
Membership dues may be paid
at any time and the deadline is
March I. Dues remain at $40 per
year and may be sent to Opal
Grueser, 36192 Rock Springs
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .................. .30 3/4

Ashland Oil ...................... .33 1/2
AT&amp;T.................................37 1/4
Bank One........ ...................46
Bob Evans .........................24 3/4
Channing Shop................... 27 3/8
City Holding ...................... 17 ·
Federal Mogul... ................. 16 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ .... ......60 5/8
Key Centurion ................... 15 1/4
Lands' End ....................... .31 7/8
Limited Inc ....................... 31 3/8
Multimedia Inc .................. 26 1/2
Ra• Restaurant ..................! 5/16
Robbins&amp;Myers .. .............. 18 1/2
Shoney's Inc ...................... 24 1/8
Star.Bank ...........................25
Wendy !nt'l... ..................... l2
Worthington Ind ................ 24 1/8
Stock reports art lht 10:30 a.m.
quoits pro•ided by Blunt, Ellis
and Lotwl of Gallipolis.
Rob Elltlns and Bank Ont are
ex-dMdtnd today.

Doretta Brown and Emma ChapmSUNDA y ADMISSIONS •
None.
SUNDAy DISCHARGES •
None.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES, Friday, Feb. 7
_ Lorrie Booten, Evalyn Campbell, James Deweese, Helena
Feustal, Clara Gerlach, Barbara
Johnson, Mrs. Raymond Kimes and
daughter, Lawrence Leonard,
Clarence Miller, Kent Pancake,
Alice Peoples, Mrs. John Stapleton
and son, Cathy Syrus, Joseph
White, Mrs. Jamie Wolfe and son.
. Dorothy Wyant, Mrs. Roger
Zaragozy and son.
· BIRTHS, Friday, Feb. 7 -Mr.
and Mis. Jack Klontz of Oak Hill,
twin daughters; Mr. and Mrs.
William Severn of Leon, W.Va., a
daughter.
DISCHARGES. Saturday, Feb.
8 - Donald Craft, Larry Dunn,
Mrs. Jimmie Evans and daughter,
Maria Jackson, Joseph Miller, Mrs.
Homer Saunders and son, Judith
Wood.
DISCHARGES, Sunday, Feb. 9
- Ruth Curfman, Mary Eberts,
Lisa Lewis, Jared McKinney, Mary
Price, Mrs. William Severn and
daughter, Mrs. Robert Yates and
son.
BIRTHS, Sunday, Feb. 9- Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Wells of Patriot,
a son.

Court news
Divorces processed
A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County CommQn Pleas
Court by Jessica Spackey,
Langsville, against James W.
Spack~. Jr.. Lancaster.
A divorce has been ~:=.~ted in
the court to Nonna G.
from·
Todd D. Eads.
Marriage licenses granted
Marriage licenses have been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to Michael Christian Sturn~.
20, and Tammy Louise Reitmire,
18, both of Long Bottom; and to·
Jeffrey Allen DeLong, 31, and
Angela Irene Griffith, 28, bOll! of·
Pomeroy.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

A poblic hearins concerning Issue 2 Round Five projects will be
held FridiJy, February 21 at I p.m. in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Courtroom in the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy.

.ao I''

Courthouse to close Monday

.......

.

The offices of the Meigs County Courthou~ will close on .Monday, February 17 in observance of Presidents Day, accordmg to
Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow III. AU
offiCeS wiU n:sumc their usual hours on Tuesday, February 18.

Sanford conveyed
Thomas E. Sanford was uansported to Orient Correctional Center 90 Wednesday morning to begin serving his sentence on rape
charges.
·
·
Sanford was IICIItenced last week by Judge Fred W. Crow UI to
sentences of 10 to 2$ years on each of two aggravated fi!St-degree
felony counts in conjunttion with the November, 1991 rapes of two
teenaacd girls in Pomeroy.
Sanford was represented by Meigs County Public Defender

•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT •ALLERGY ·
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
·
Cm For ~eur famnf
Medicare &amp;UMWA Assig111en1 Accepted
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT
,..;_ ,

·-..- ..

Charles H. KnighL
~ ·Tet!NIII Pnle SlllAIItCII'l bill. FNrdl Friel, ~&amp;11811111
~ ICWc:h w1111 011 new Huh 11ro111111, ~a Salld Bar

.

s.

llllflll6l·AU·Y0tJ.CAN-EAT SPAG!ETTI (ALL DAY)
.
'IIIIJI!8Q'X .·Ileal Tlpll Nti(deS, Chtilce of f'oiU)e, ~ &amp;Salad Bar
fB!QAJ • AL.L·yoU.C~T FISH (AU DAY) . . ,
EV1U DAY DJ&amp;Ja-.IPICW.. ...... Ull

8Gme 11,011 Jadlee II'Nd Ia Cuba

wlliD II .40 ' Ia
ltp.

~.

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.

.11

,

..

Issue 2 hearing scheduled

.'18

11 w.~~a........-................. -.......-~.40

11
~
,.r.............."'.......
lilt w..u...... :........ :.....................,.

northern Ohio under clear skies
while remaining in the 20s in the
clouded-over south.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 69 degrees ih 1932. The
record low was 20 below zero in
!899.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:01
p.m. Sunrise on Tuesday l'ill be at·
7:30a.m.
Around the nation
, Windswept rains drenched
Southern California today, towling
trees and causing mudslides. Snow
fell in North Dakota and Montana.
Clouds dotted the Midwest, the
central Plains, Mississippi, the
The Eastern Concert Band will Southwest and the Northeast Rain
present its second concert for the fell in ·Nebraska and winds rauled
school year on Tuesday at 7:30 central Oklahoma.
p.m.
Music scheduled for performance includes Dr. Alfred Reed's
"A Festival Prelude," Karl L.
Sorority to meet
King's "Coast Guards March," and
The Preceptor Beta Beta ChaP.:
"Somewhere" from West Side
Story by Leonard Bernstein. Fea- ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority wtll
tured musicians for this concert are meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Charlene Dailey, trumpet, Dawn Grace Episcopal Church. Bring a
Foley, clarinet, Andrew Wolfe, gift for an auction. Vera Crow and
trombone, and Kyle Fausnaugh, Rose Sisson are the hostesses. All
tuba. These students will perform members are urged to attend.
Trustees to meet
as a dixieland quartet with the band
The Bedford Township Trustees
on "DiXieland Salute."
The final selection on the pro- will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
gram is "Canto" by W. Frances town hall.
Hymn sing slated
·
McBeth. This composition was
There
will
be
a
hymn
sing
on
wriuen during Dr. McBeth's trip to
Iapan where he was a consultant to Friday at 7 p.m. at the Faith Full
the All-Japan' High School Honor Gospel Church in Long Bottom
Band. It features special percussion featuring Jim Blair and the Southeffects and oriental-styled melodies ern Gospel Aires. Pastor Steve
capturing the feel of Japanese Reed inVItes the public. Fellowship
will follow.
music.
Valentine social
Band Director William R. Hall
There
will be a Valentine Social
reportS that the students have been
at
the
Senior
Citizens Center in
working very diligently in preparation for this perfonnance and that Pomeroy on Thursday from 6 to 8
this concert may be the best the p.m. Rita and Junior White, AI
band has presented in recent years. Windon and Bill Ward will be
The public is invited to attend the playing old time favorite music.
concert which will be held in the The public is invited to attend and
those attending are to bring snacks
high school gymnasium.
for the refreshment table. A free
will offering will be laken for the
musicians.
The Southeastern Ohio and
Buffington to speak
Hocking Valley Chapters of the
Rev. Eddie Buffington, GallipoNational Wild Turkey Federation lis, will be the guest speaker at the
will host the Ohio State Turkey Naomi Baptist Church in Pomeroy
Seminar calling contest and ban- on
Sunday at 10:45 a.m. The public
quet on March 7 and 8.
is
invited
to attend.
It will be held at Hocking TechSupport
group to meet
nical College in Nelsonville, and
A
stroke
group will
the featured speakers will be Dan meet Tuesdaysupport
at
4:30
p.m. at the
Stuckey who took the calling
American Hospital for Rehabilitachampionship 10 times and, went tion
in Huntington, W.Va. The
on to becoming a grand national meeting
is opened to all stroke surchampion; Wayne Bailey, the
vivors
and
their families. For fur"dean" of American's turkey huntther
infonnation
contact the Social
ing, and Rob Keel&lt; of the National Service Department
at 1-304-733Federation.
1060.
More information about the
Dance planned
event may be obtained by calling
The
Twirlers Western
Dave Graber at (614) 373-9613 Square Gallia
Dance Club will hold a
after 5 p.m.
dance Saturday from 8-11 p.m . at

--Meigs announcements

----~. Weather----South-Central Ohio · ·
Tonight, cloudy. Low near 30.
Chance of precipitation 20 percent.
Tuesday, cloudy with a slight
chance of showers. High in the
mid-40s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Extended rorecast:

By The Associated Press
High pressure centers moving in
tandem across Ohio will provide
fair weather for the Buckeye State
through the rest of this week, forecasters said.
But the associated clear skies
will allow the
air to escape
into the atm~;&gt;sphere and create
some chilly nights in the 20s.
Early today. temperatures
dipped into the single digits in

Band concert
planned Thesday

C1992Acc:u-Wealha', Inc.

.

!II

~

Ice

So, Bryan~ what the stock market has been ttying to tell you is ;
that the U.S. economy has been :
undergoing one of its periodic ·
shampoos, but the future is bright.

'

38'

:::::: -!)

one absolutely true comment on
any business's performance is the
one pronounced by the real market
- not the stock market When an
Eastern or a Pan Am · goes
bankrup~ that is because it has, in
some serious way, offended the
gods of arithmetic: by consenting
to unbearable union featherbedding, or committing itself to an
expansion it cannot afford, or
something of that sort. The shorttenn consequences are painful for
all concerned, but in the long run
the economy as a whole benefits,.
very much as a garden benefits by '
judicious pruning. It was the lack
of any market mechanism for deter-.,
mining what to prune that eventual- .
ly brought the Soviet economl
crashing down.
'

'

PA.

a&amp;

William A. Rusher

aebris.

e

W. VA.

The pall hanging over Republicans was best summed up in comments suggesting that Bush got
lucky when the Super Bowl was.
followed by a "60 Minutes" inter·
view with Bill Clinton about his
marital problems. Some Republicans think Clinton's problems have.
served to distract the public from
the soaring expectations Bush created by the speech.
Bush himself fueled some skepticism the day after the speech in a
closed-door meeting-with Republi·
cans on Capitol Hill. He was radiating confidence and optimism
about the impact of the speech.
And he caused a few jaws to drop
when he suggested that he "didn't
detect any ill will out there"
among Democrats, according to
one source. This was the same
Bush who only last month on a
campaign trip shouted, "I am sick
and tired of hearing every one of
these carping little liberal
Democrats jumping all over my
you-know-what!'·
After hearing Bush gush at the
meeting that there was no ill will,
one incredulous senator told us. "It
was like this prep school, Yale
thing where you have a good contest and then we all, jolly good; go
over to the yard and have some tea.
There was so much ill will out
there. They are Democrats and they
want to beat him and be in the
White House.' '

Nuclear waste furor heats up West

•

..

iill'IColumbusl43' I

What's the market trying to tell us?

1

l

"It got kind of quie~" said one
Republican in attendance. In an
election framed by a recession and
dominated by economics, a tax
increase for the rich stands out as
the one vote during which most ,
Republicans in Congress would
like to fmd themselves home with
the flu. If Bush promises no new
ta.es. and the Democratic-con trolled Congress sends him a tax
increase for the rich, does he veto
it? And if he does, will the Republicans in Congress stand behind
him?
It would be suicidal for any
politician to be perceived as ch~­
pioning the cause of the r1ch this
year. For that reason , a tax mcreasc

To SaHKRtJPTCY, WITH a
S~;eF SloP 3T CHaPTeR 11.

ueml.

I

.

FRoM CReDiTo~$ WiLL 1al(e.I!S

has-~~~
·--• .., dO w

••

rich.' '

on the wealthy could prompt
Republicans to rethink their diehard opposition to new taxes.
As sure as Congress is set to
pass a tax cut of some kind for the
middle class, Democrats are
chomping at the bit for the chance
to serve up to the president a tax
hike for the rich, and then dare him
to veto it.
Senators at the meeting with
Skinner rose one at a time to speak
their minds on everything from
taxes to Croatia. In the end. Skinner could promise little more than a
warmer and closer cooperation
with Congress, which is a step in
the right direction from his cranky
predecessor, John Sununu.
But that did little to mollify the
senators on taxes. Some Senate
leaders believe that Bush's reneging on his no-new-taxes promise
cost Republicans five Senate seats
in 1990. There was an instant
plunge in the polls for all the GOP
candidates when Bush went back
on his " read-my-lips" oath.
Despite Bush's promises in the
State of the Union speech, Republicans have been burned by him
once, and they harbor a fear that hr

WiTH VS 1oDaY. oiJR F\.i(;liT

nucle8r W81141.

Jl

cordial , e•cept when the issue of
cutting taxes was brought up. Several conservative senators pressed
Skinner to urge Bush to promise a
veto of any tax ir.crease he is sent
by Congress.
Skinner tanly carne back with:
" If you wiU guarantee to the president that 34 of you (the number
needed to sustain a presidential
veto) will vote to sustam his veto if
it's just the ta. increases on the

TR~Ve\.iNG

dump. tbe country's high level

,·

Tuesday, Feb. 11

Republican Senators tire of Bush flip-flops.
WASHINGTON - In a private
lunch with .a group of Senate
Republicans, White House Chief of
Staff Sam Skinner was given a gentle warning : Read our lips. No
more flip-flops.
It was two days after the State of
the Union address and; despite
mi•ed reviews in the heartland, the
speech had given Republicans
some hope that they and their president could work out their differences and present a united front for
the election. The Senate Republicans were ready to jump into the
foxhole with the White House in
what promises to be a mean political season . But before they did,
they wanted Skinner's promise that
Bush has the stomach for a fight
with the Democratic-controlled
Congress.
According to participants in the
closed-door meeting, the White
House and congressional Republicans, all too often, lake a position
against a particular bill, and then
Bush changes his mind after cutting a private deal. Flip-flops on
wes and quotas were most recently on the senators' minds.
The session with Skinner was

Good weather forecast for rest of week

01-110 W(:athet

Page-2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
MOnday, February 10, 1992

The Dally Sentinel-Page · 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'"• uaod!Jt Columbul

.

-

I

·"'- -...- ........" " '

�'

The Daily Se_n tinel

Sports
WALES CONFERENCE
PatrkklNYtllol

Twa
N.Y. Rqen .....
wl.lhinpln........
New Jcncy ........
J&gt;;o\Oboqh ..........

W L T Pta. CFCA
35 ts 3 73 117112
n 19 4 611 m 114
21 I &amp; 7 63 203 16.5

211 23 6 51 lllllo
N.Y. lalandm .... 2l2S 1 49 202214

Phi1adelphil .. ... . . 19 lS I 0

M1 160 110

AdiiN Dlvlaiol

,

Mootm.l ............ 3221 4 68179141
8Cital ................ T1 21 g 62 19~ 190
Buffalo .............. 21 1A 10

.52 196196

HanfmL. .......... 1.5 2610

40 160114

Qu&lt;boo ............... 12 36 6

JjJ

159222

Mainc114. Ne* HimpWta 64
Muia;h~~~t~U~Il, St. JOIC!pb's 13
Md.·Baltimml Cwnay 94, Ridtlr 79
Mount St Muy'•, Md . .51, Moll·
mouth, NJ. S7
Nny 89, Colaate S7
N-l:l.BoolmU.OI
,_.. 11' Columbia 76
Princdm 48, Ccancllll
Providatce 16, Cio:Jraa,owll. 6J
~Mom. 73, MW:t 69
Ru.... !'7, Clomp
62
S«m Hall II, Ccmocticut 69
SL Francia. NY 97, Lq llllnd U. 94
SL John '1 69, VllllniiiVl 53
Towson St. ,_.,Cent. CmnectiQit St.
10
WaP: 72, Broakl)'ll Col. 61
Wflll Vlrafldl 71, St. BOfll'fiiiiUr.
4l

w....._

9

s.. ylht Dlvtaton

Van~vcr .........
Winnipeg ...........
Lc»Angela~ .......
Edmontm ..........
Cal!l1}' ..............
SanJOK .............

30 15 8
23 22 II

Alabtnu St. 93, Alcom St. 11
Awalichian SL61, Furman 6S

Aoatin Pooyll. r-SLs~ar

67 226 114

c.rnpbdl69. N.C.·&lt;lloo&gt;obom 52
Charlcaton Southam 13, N.C.Duke

S1 200 194
l01427AI

Saturday's scores

Jame~

Konl»Cky 15, A"""' 67

HebKI:I Wcwood 57, W. Jcffe.rson

l6

M&lt;mpiU SL 9l,Monou It
Mia. Valley St. Ill,~ V~w 71
Mmpa St. 92, BcthW»Coctman 13
Mumy SL 93, M........ SL 91 , Of
N.C. OwkJu. 9S, Dl.vidlm IS
NW LouW.no 93, NE LoWoiono ll

Sunday's scores

B&lt;»\aa 6, Pittlburah 3

Minncu:u 4. Hanford 4, tie
New Jeney l, Quc:0oc I
Lot Anada S, Bulfa1o4
Detroit~. N.Y. RIJIICII"' ~ . ~

N'!Cbolb SL 80, SW Tua SL 73
Nollh C...lim l&lt;l. WU. l\moo78
Old Daninim 71, &lt;Jootac Muon 61

Tonlgbl's game

K.ad!nn.t 10, YCU!paown St sa
Richmond 89, l!ui. Cualina 64

Vmcwva at Montreal, 7:l5 p.m.

S. Carolinl St. 75, N. Cuilina A4T

Tuesday's comes

6l

Buffalo sal-lll\lord. 7:35p.m.
Wultinp&gt; u ~. 7,Jj p.m.
Detroit 1t TO«&lt;lto. 7:3.5 p.m.
Edmonlm It Minncllou.I:OS p.m.
Loa Anaelcl a1 SL Louis,&amp;:3!p.m.
N. Y. la!Andcn atCalpry, 9:n p.m.

Somlon15~-"'
Swthcm !diu. 8"1 , South Aoridl63

Southam U. l l, Jac:bm St. '19

"""..,_ 62, w""'o1139
lndiaa Lake 68, Ridpnonl64
lndiM Vall 57, Norwi}'I'IO 34
Kalum Ric!Je 74, Spinf Nonhwa:t·

_,2

IG-52, C..""ll&lt;rilo&amp;o45
cn 01en &amp;~o 59
Latcland 9!, Woodlfidd 4!
I.ibert.y Otr. 66, SprinJ Vall 56
Ubcrty.Bauon 76, Bluffton 37
~Gnat

ar

tide 49
Lorain Southview 62, Lorain Mid viewSI,OT
l...ouiaville 79, L..wimlle Aquinas S9
Mansfield Otr. 10, Hilklltle 48
Mansfield St. Peter'• SS. Ma rion
Cath. 50
MaryiVille 60, Buckeye Vall. S4
Maumi:IC VaLl. 69, Wellington 62

Meadv ille (Pa.) Chr. 63, Howland
Chd5
Miami. E. n, Bethel 61
Mi.ami1burJ 70, VaUey View61, aJ'
Middldawn Otr. 75, Mendon-Unioo

•
6
3
9
7
I

9. Miuowi .................. l6-3 1041
10. Syn.eu~e ................. l6-3 903

12
13
S
II

ll. Adu.nw ................. 17-S 900
12MiehipnSL... ........ IS-4 790
13. SoulhemCal ......... .. l6- 3 766

19. Kedudiy ................ t6-5
'20. LSU ........................ !4-S
21. Te.w-EI Puo ......... ll--3
2l.N'.C. Cb~ ........ l6-4
23 . florid,.. 5L ...... ......... 1S-(i
:U, et.d•Aidw----11•3
ll . Sdoo Holl ........ - .....1 H

Bowlina Green

14
17
18

630
450

10
19

:Mil

22
2:5

Mintonl61 , lkmr Eutem S4

Miuiulnawa Vall. 83, Tri-Villase 12
Mon1pclier 69, N. Cenlftl63
N. Olmsted 57, Rocky Rived3

N. Union 70, Johrutown Northridae

6l,ar

New BOlton 115, Patriol Soutl!.we.t·
em44
New Branfl'l S8, IIQIOG Caltct 54
New Knouillo 61, BcUW 61
New Miami 17, Cin. (.')u'iltian 71
New Philadelphia 41, Canton Timkm

&lt;6.ar

Newuk 74, Dublin 63
Newuk Calh. 81, Milla66
Not\lwnonL 70, Brookville 45
Ohio Dc&amp;t 64. Cin. SL Ri'-1 39
OlatWIJY 790, JonalhUI Alder 57
Oinlad Fan. 50, Wea!W 41
OnnpOu. .54, La..t.eP.idae43
().tlwt..ot&amp;ndorf 90, Va~ Bwat 51
Pandort·OOboa 56, ~ S4
Pl,.....,oh 69, N,...olll !o. P.ul 54

".,

Sttubu!J66, Jewctt-Scio SO
Syma VaU. 73, Pmumouth Nolre

o.rn. 70

T~7~.Uobw51

WII.·Checm 8•1"· N. D.Unoil70

51

Soulhwal
Lamar 95, Aibru.u St 71
Oklahunt SL 64, KafiiU 56
Rico 73, Boyi« 6l
Sowhem M«h.SI, Teua Tech4'1
Stqlhcn F.APilin II, North Tau 71

57

Tol. Whillmcr 70. To!. Central Clth.

r ........,... n. Sun '"""""' s..

Willard 13, Sbctby 68
Willi.m~~~ 14, N. Adami 11
WonhinJlon Clr. 73, O.y. Chrislian

Teua-El Puo 73, Air Forte 44
FarW.t
Boiac SL 11 N. Arizona 71
Cll SL·Fullenon 97, frelno St 79
Gonup90, San Fnnciloo II
Idaho 102, Nenda 16, OT
Idaho SL. II~. Mmunr. SL lOI ,OT

66

W111ktn MichiJtn ............1 2
Wiami .................... ........... 7 1

Orqon 64, ~ St 63

BclJ,.tft 61,

PaM.c U. 91, San JaM: SL64

Ba11Statc ............... ........... 6
OWo Ual•.
-S
Bowlin&amp;Grccn..................A
ecr.n.J'Mid\iasn .............. 3
foJ,odo ............................... J
Kan Swe .............. .........- 3
""""' M&lt;~Upn ... ........... l

Bucbyol.ocolol, Uoion Loulll
Bueyr.M Wynfotd Sl, Crrallnell
Camlhon S4. Cw1 fu.lum NW 36
CSn. Madcin 41. Cin. SL Beman134
Cin. Mariemont 66, New RU:hmcmd

Podlaad 63, SL M.aty't, Cal !I
Sanu Clara 70, Loyola Muymawn
4
6

2 17 4
-4 L3 7
5 I 11
6

9 10

6
6
1

6 12
6 14
1 1o

Cin. Mctfd\olll74, Cin. Tall: 41

Cin . Mown Hoeldly 41. Cin. Aiian
ll

:w

N......-r.,.._.

BaD Stata 61, 0Uc1F Ststc 55
Toolc~tt'•c~me
N'~tf'fiD

Dcuoilll Toledo

Wedaesday's aames
Bill S1.1tc st Miami
Ea~tan Ma.ipn II CcnuaJ. !&amp;chip.n
Kmtal WMian Michipn

R"""A!.;"'·21De« Pull :W

eopey&lt;l.

s...w. 0.... 60. C&lt;nlPl Mid&gt;ipn
OWo U•l•. 13, E. Mklllp• 5I
Mioml67, Ita&lt; 52
W.-n Midli.pn 1'2. Toledo 70, 0T

Cin . Nonh.- 39, ~llmiltm~ Btdin
Cia.

Saturday's «&lt;res

51

Suubcmvilla 37

8c1po ll, Wolodool44

W L
I6
14

Girls

Ay&lt;millc 61,1.lbaly C..., &lt;6
a.."'v~a 21. an. swnrrUt 19

Conr. Om1D
W L

Xenia 66, Yellow Sprint~~ 53

.

-...n.w•SLn

New MWco 6l,ColcndoSL47
~7 l ,SanDi.qo51

MAC cage standings

Mo:honi-

Triad f/1,
48
Urbana 51, ToeurNdt7i
Uticl 7H, Madison Plains 12
Van Wat 104, ~Jr.ffemon 64
VCll'l&amp;illm 56. Naw\On 36
w&amp;mil Hudina 60. N'alel 46
w.w..,.. 66, oo..tio 50

Tu.• Chrisa:im '13, Tu.u A.t.M S4

75

ll, low• 24. HOUilOn 20, West Vlrtlna
1,, Memph i• St. 15, Rh od e 11!Ml14,
SWifon:l f2. Mcdan.l II, t:ioomlown 10,
htwa St. I, Princdoa 7, New~ SL
~ . Tuu Quillian 4, Uwh 4, Louiailftll
Tech 3. 801\0n CoUeJe 2, Oelawue 2.
Peppcrdine l, W. Mic:h1pn I

River 86, Siywe 72
Riv«dale 53, Ontario S2
S. CCIIIml 10, Black Ri~« 63
SanduUy 70, N. Ridaeville 66
Sprina. Shawnee 9f. SprinJ. North·
euwn 52
SL Mal)'l S I, Piq~Y~ 31
Sl&lt;Uba&gt;.m. 53. PiwbwF (Po.) J'a.

S.lllinoi.l60, Brtdlcy S4
SW Miuowi SL 71, 'fulll74
Tc:rtftm~CC Ted! U, SE Millcuri 11
Valfaraiao 14, W. l1lincU II

w. ~11,Tolodo70,or

JJ9

Othrr nctl•lna •otu: Oilthoma

u.n. r.. Mlc:.._.• sa

l')mo- 1 v.u. 71,Bo4o~'l
Ricftnond HLI. 71, NewbUry 53
Ridplale 50, El&amp;in 49

Temple Ou-. 18, Akron 0\r. 51
Tlfr1r1 Ca.lvett 66, Tol Woodmlft 63
Tinan ! I, Striker 46
Tel. Cbriatian J!J, Jackson (Mich.)
Btpcia69
Tol.. Libbey 71 , Syl~ani• Sou t.bvicY

Ohio

20
23

100

Cent. Michia•n

Buller- 9S, Dclroit 14
Craiallton 67, Drake 66
E'l'ansville 51, 0.)'\011 52
m..auc.10 68, E. lllincU 67
D1inoiJ SL 64, Indiana Sl 62
K1.111• SL 10, Ncbruka 66
l.cJWivill&amp; I~ Xaviar, Ohio 73
Miami. Ohio 61 , X.ent S2
Michiaan SL19, Wilconlin64
Minnc:5oLI S7, Ncritftll&amp;em s~
N. Iowa 78, Widrita St. 6.S
Olllo St. 71, P...t. St

I~

21'9
220
195

6(1,

5I

16

704
703
670
638

19. OcaJia Tacl\1&amp;, w-.:~ Bty 47.
Bri&amp;hlm Youna 36, LouuviUe 31 , Nebrul:t 31. St. John'• 30, Mw..:hu.eu.

r-

Miller Cily 66, McComb~

MidAkron 39, WriaJlt Sl 16, 20T
Ah .· Binninah~m71, St. l.ow. l4
BaU St. 68, Chicaa~ St. 55

PlL Weft
1621
1
1529
2

151111
1331
IJSH
1259
17A9
1%34

14. Tulane .................... IS.2
1~ . UNLV ~ ..................20-2
16. Alabama - ............... 19-4
17. Mithipn ................ l4-5
11. Conncr:tia~t.. .......... l~

47

""51

Lui
RKord

UmaCath. 67. Sidney 59
Litna Sr. 101, Fuutlly 83
Uttlc Miami 62, Wlllll:m Browr~ 56
London 86, l.dio&amp; Vo11.51
Lotain 60, Vcnnilion 41
Lonin Clwview 55, Lon.in Brook·

W. Kentucky 13, Tu.u·Pill Ameri·

•

n.

Ubony-Union 63, AmandaClouaod&lt;lS
Uckin&amp; HI&amp;. 62. Bloom-Carroll 58,

Vandc:zbilt 74, Coil of Qadatm~68
W. C•rollaa M. MantuiiH

The Top T.-enty Five lclllll in The
Auoeiud Pn-1991 -92miqcbukcl·
ball poll, W'ith fint· pllce votes in pucn·
u.s-, record.l\luouah Feb. 9, toW pcinu
baaed 011 2S poinw l« • fim pl•ce ~OlO
lltrouah ane
~'" 25111 place vote
and iall ...._ 1 nnkinp:

ContinalW ll

ail)' 46

Tu.u Soulhcm 72. &lt;mmblina SL 70
Tn.·O!.Itunoop IS , VMI 75
Tulane 91, Va. Ccrnm&lt;r~wealth 80

AP Top 25 college
basketball poll

t. Duko(61) .............. 18-l
2. ~an~ St (2) ..... 21·1
l . ucu. (2) .... ............. 17·1
4. Indiana .... _............... l7·3
4. Kana11 ,_, ................. I 7·2
6. Nlllili C.rolinl ........ 17•3
1. Arilani ......... ........... J7·3
J, OMoSL.----16-l

SE LouWno ll c.n...., 72

Hol&amp;o~ Jj,

Hudson W. ~ 52, C1e. Uniw:r-

14

wuhinpn 6, San Ja&amp;e 2

TUIII

16. N.C.·Wilmm&amp;tm

!lbeny 63, Womhn&gt;o52
l...ouiliana Tech 70, New Odcul67
M.:Neae Sl 19, Tu.aa-San Antonio

Toroato6. Mmuu14
ChiCIJO 3, SL Louis I

rcnnl

Madilm

Iii

Jcney 6, Bo.aon 4
Lox AnJid.. 4, J&gt;;u.bwlh 3
PhiUddphio l , ~ ~

Dol!......."'

n. LSU 67

E. Kenudy 86. MidcOc Tenn. 79
E. Tcnncaec SL 10'7, Cit1del B&amp;
Fll . lntan~tionat68 , Stc:Um 6.5, ar
Floridl 11, M.illi.uippi St. 66
Florida AiilM 78, Coppin SL 76
FloOdo Sl. Ill!, ClcmoGa 90
GocqU Soolhem 91, ~ SLI4
Jacbanvillc 71, CanL Florida 73

68 190154
S7 173166

Ne~~&gt;

Ooohon52,Ci«monl-49
Onhoon 6&amp;,
51
Gr.!.villo 74, · ShiWMO 61
Hatioo 16, Cla.l!ldeo-70 .
--71,0n.IWrlloa52
HamiJion Rc.a Sl, On. NOI\hwmt 52

AihC\'illc 51.1
CoaiiAJ Cualina97, Trnn. Templ.a BS

2221 I:Z S6 !96207
73 26 7 53 202 209

22 25 7
l338 4

-li~Map&lt;&amp;,W.Vo.Sl

Sovlll

W L T I'll. GFGA.

10 60 180 167
9 55 187 1H8
s 51 1n 113
S 43 154 201

- - "·Dil e(//

AJat.ma IS, Tcmouee 61

N«rll Dl\'llloD

Dc:uttiL... ............ 29 17
Chicaao .............. 2S 21
St lwia ............ 23 23
Minncaou ..... ..... 23 25
TOlOIUo .............. 19 31

'

Page-4

CAMPBELL CONFERE~CE
Tetm

Doy. llonbu 60, S....,S. 51

.

OW.1l,A.-, 15
llo'I'CI' Sl, Martin~ 31
B. Li.r-apool SO, Steubenville Cath.

S run for the Yellow Jackets (16-7,
4-5). Forrest had 22 points for
Georgia Tech, which has now beaten Maryland (9-11, 2-8) 17 of 19,
times.
'
· In Saturday's action:,
No. 1 Duke 77, No. 20 LSU 67
Duke's Christian Laettner and
LSU's Shaquille .O'Neal bluled to
a draw in a sho'wdown or the
nation's be~t big men. But Grant
Hill, a 6-8 forward switched to
point guard in place of the injured
Hurley, had 16 points , nine
reoounds and six assists to lead
Dulce.
Laettner had 22 P,oints and 10
rebounds, while 0 Neal had 25
points and 12 rebounds for .LSU
(14-5).
No. 2 Oklahoma St. 64
· , No.4 Kansas 56
Sean Sulton scored seven
straight points late in the game 1o
seal the victory. Sunon had 16
points while Rex Walters had 18
for Kansas (17-2), tied for first
place in the Big Eight with OSU.
No. 3 UCLA82
Washington St. 61
Tracy Murray scored 20 points
and Don MacLean 19 points for the
Bruins, who beat the Cougars for
the 33rd suaight time in Los Angeles.
No.6 N. Carolina 80
Wake Forest 78
Brian Reese tracked down his
own missed shot and hit a 16-foot
jumper with 1.3 seconds left as
North Carolina (17-3, 7-2) overcame a 22 -point deficit. Hubert
Davis had 23 as !he Tar Heels beat
the Demon Deacons (12-7,4-6) for
the lOth straight time.
No.8 Ohio St. 71, Purdue 59

-Major college cage powe_rs
successful in Sunday action
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
Asso&lt;iated Press Writer
Coming off a week in which !he
No. I, No. 2, No. 3 and No. 5
teams all lost, and with no one left
undefeated, the debate over who's
!he best team is wide open.
Unlike last year, when UNL V
held the lop ranlc until its seasonending loss to Dulce in !he NCAA
semifinals, no team has shown
itself to be head and shoulders
above the res! this season.
The Dulce Blue Devils retained
the No. 1 ranking in the latest
Associated Press college basketball
poll, but their loss Wednesday lo
No. 6 North Carolina proved they
can be beat. Additionally, !he Blue
Devils (18-1) lost their playmaker,
Bobby Hurley, for three weeks
wilh a broken bone in his fool.
But while last week's schedule
was a minefield for the powerful ,
all the ranked teams that played on
Sunday were successful .
No. 7 Ariwna defeated California 80-68; No. 9 Missouri beat
Oklahoma, previously ranked 21st,
99-92; No. 15 UNL V toppled Long
Beach State, 96-77; No. 17 Michigan beat Notre Dame 74-65; and
Georgia Tech, previously ranked
24111, edged Maryland 67-65.
On Saturday, Dulce beat No. 20
LSU 77-67 and No. 2 Oklahoma
State ran its home winning streak
10 28 with 61-56 victOry over No. 4
Kansas.
In other games Saturday, i1was:
No. 3 UCLA 82, Washington St.
61; No.6 North Carolina 80, Wake
Forest 78; No. 8 Ohio State 71,
Purdue 59; Memphis Smte 92, No.
II Arkansas 88; No. 12 Michigan
State 79, Wisconsin 64; No. 13
Southern Cal 59, Washington 56;
No. 14 Tulane 97, Virginia Com-

SVAC cage standings
(Overall)
Team
W L
Oak Hill ........... .II 4
Eastern ................9 6
Southern ..............8 7
Hannan Trnce ......8 8
Nonh Gallia .. ......6 8
Kyger Creek ........5 10
Symmes Valley ....4 II
Southwestern....... 1 15

PF
1001
1028
I069
979
832
805
874
879

PA
875
I046
965
1074
943
915
949
1120

(Conference)
Oak Hill ................9 I 709
Southern ................8 2 756
Hannan Trace ......8 3 750
Eastern ................6 4 662
North Gallia .........6 4 650
Symmes Valley .... 2 8 568
Kyger Creek.. ...... 2 8 527
Southwestem ........O II 610
TOTALS .......... 41 41 5232

576
581
673
651
618
610
638
825
5232

(Reserves- SV AC only)
Team
W L PF PA
Southern ................9 0 572 330
Eastern ..................8 I 460 389
Symmes Valley .... 5 4 432 459
Oak Hill ..............4 5 416 414
Kyger Creek ........ 3 5 335 375
Hannan Trace ...... 3 6 403 481
Nonh Gallia ........ 3 6 363 448
Southwestern ....... ! 9 373 458
TOTALS .........40 40 3354 3354
Saturday's scores
Fairland 78, Hannan Trace 38
Symmes Valley 73, Port. N.D. 70
New Boston 114, Soulhwestcm 44
This week's games
Tuesday - Warren Local al
Southern; McDennou Nonhwest al
Oak Hill; OVCS at Hannan Trace;
Raceland (Ky.) at Symmes Valley;
Southwestern at Hannan
Friday- Oak Hill Ill Southern;
Hannan Trace at Eastern; Symmes
Valley at North Gallia; Kyger
Creek at Southwestern
Saturday - Ironton St. Joe at
Kyger Creek

No. 17 Michigan 74
monweallh 80; No. 16 Alabama 85,
Notre Dame 65
Tennessee 68; Seton Hall 81, No.
Michigan's
five fabulous fresh18 Connecticut 69; No. 19 Ken·
tucky 85 , Auburn 67; No. 21 men scored all the team's points in
Texas-EI Paso 73, Air Forc.e 44; a victory over Notre Dame. Jalen
No. 22 UNC-Charlotte 95, David· Rose scored 20 points, including
son 85; and No. 23 Florida State seven in !he final2:44. Notre Dame
(7 -11) trailed by 17 before scoring
I 02, Clemson 90.
13 con5ecutive points to trail 54-50
In Sunday 's action:
with
6:28left. But Michigan (14-5)
No. 7 Arizona 80
responded
and pulled away.
California 68
No.
15 UNLV 96
Chris Mills and Sean Rooks
Long Beach Slate 77
each scored 23 points as Arizona
J.R. Rider scored 32 points,
overcame a slow start to overpower
California 80-68 in a Pacific-10 Dexter Boney had 19 and Elmore
Conference game. The win was !he Spencer 17 to lead the Runnin'
seventh straight for the Wildcats Rebels 10 an easy Big West Conference victory.
(17-3, 7-2).
UNL V (20-2, 12-0) made 66
No. 9 Missouri 99
percent of its field goal auempts.
Oklahoman
Georgia Tech 67
Anthony Peeler and Jamal ColeMaryland65
man scored 23 of Missouri's final
James Forrest scored off an
30 points as !he Tigers (16-3, 4-2)
handed the Sooners their fiflh con- inbounds pass a1 the buzzer as
secutive Big Eight home loss.
. Georgia Tech ended a four-~e
st
Melvin Booker led M1ssour1 losing streak m !he Atlannc
wilh 24 points, while Bryan Saltier Conference. The shol capped a 14(See HOOPS on Page 5)
had 21 for Oklahoma (14-6, 2-5)

Warren Local pounds
Meigs 91-58 Saturday
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Warren outscored Meigs 31·9 in
the third period and cruised to a
surprisingly easy 91-58 victory
over !he Marauders in non-conference basketball action Saturday
night at Vincent.
The Warriors broke open a one
poim half-time lead and scored 19
of the second halfs firs121 points
to give Warren a 68-45 lead head·
ing into the final period. For the
enlire second half Warren
outscored Meigs 54·22.
Meigs came out of the blocks
fast and opened up an early 12-6
lead at !he 4:03 mark of !he period
on a bucket by Shawn Hawley. A
bucket by Scott Brackenridge wilh
2:53 left in the period cut the
Marauder lead to 14-11. Trevor
Harrison hit two straight buckets
and the Marauders held their
biggest lead of !he night at 18-11
wilh 2:14 left in !he period. Ryan
Dennis pulled the Warriors to 2217 at !he end of the period on a ISfooter wilh four seconds lcfL
Warren Local used the threepointer to overcome the Marauders' lead in the second period, as
the Warriors hit four in !he period.
Dennis drilled a long ball wilh 4:34
left in !he period to give !he. lead 10
Warren Local for good. Dennis hit
a short jumper with I :02 left in !he
half to give the Warriors a 37-33
lead. But John Bentley answered
with a three-pointer for the
Marauders to cut the Warren lead
to 37-36 a! the half.
With Jason Cravens and Dennis
leading the third quarter scoring
and the Marauders killing themself
with turnovers, the game quickly
got out of hand. Dennis scored II
third-period points, and Cravens
added 10, as the Warriors opened
up the 23 point lead heading into
the final eight minutes . In the
fourth period Jason Harris scored
II points to pace the winners,
while the Marauders were !heir
own worst enemy. After committing just five turnovers in !he first
half !he Marauders came all
unglued with 17 second half
turnovers and hit only six of 20
shots from the floor .
"We were two entirely different
ball clubs. In the first half we were
diseiplined and in control," a perplexed Phil Harrison said after the
game. "In the second half we lost
focus of our team concept, we
never did get back intO !he offen-

s1ve structure. All year long, we
have taken pride in our defense.
Tonight in the second half, we had
a complete breakdown. This is the
most disappointing loss we have
had all year.
"The character of our ball club
will be to see if we can put
1onight's loss behind us and
regroup against a much improved
Trimble club this Tuesday
evening," said Harrison.
Dennis led all scorers with 26
points, Harris added 24 and
Cravens 13 point to lead the Warriors. The trio combined for 46
points in the second half. Warren
Local hit 35 of 80 from the floor
for 44 percent and cashed in on 14
of 19 from the line for 74 pen;enL
The Warriors grabbed 40 rebounds
with Dennis picking up 10 and
Harris seven.
Trevor Harrison led the Marauders wilh 22 points, and LJ. Mitch
added 16, while Bentley added 12.
Meigs hit 25 of 57 from the flea,
including 3 of 9 from three-point
range, for 44 percent, and 5 or I0
from the line for 50 percenL Meigs
had 28 rebounds, with Mitch grabbin~ II. The Marauders had 20
ass1sts, with junior play maker
Bentley getting eight
In the reserve contest, Chris
Knight hit a bucket off of a missed
Meigs shot with two seconds left 1o
give !he Little Marauders a heartstopping 55-54 win over Warren.
Warren led the game by eight
points with just over a minute to go
but couldn '1 holU back the charging
Marauders . The win , the 15th
straight for Meigs, gives Coach
Rlck Edwards and the Marauders a
15-2 mark on the year.
Meigs will travel to Trimble on
Tuesday evening to batlle the Tomcats.
Quarter totals
Warren Local ...... !? 20 3123= 91
Meigs ..................22 14 9 13 = 58
WARREN LOCAL (91)Scou Brackenridge 4-0-1=9, Jason
Burroughs 1-0-2=4, Jason Cravens
5-0-3=13, Ryan Dennis 7-3-3=26,
Eric Harper 1-2-0=8, Jason Harris
8-1-5=24, Andy Aaron Merrels 11-0=5, Chris Ruble 1-0-0=2.
TOTALS -28-7-14=91
MEIGS (58) ~ unknown
Marauder 3-0-0=6, LJ. Mitch 5-13= 16, Trevor Harrison 11..()..()=22,
John Bentley 3-2·0=12, Carlton
Drummer 0-0-2=2. TOTALS 22-3-5=58

Taledo a&amp; OWo U.a,.

N~tnMe

SL Plwr'1 a

College hoops ..

Monday,
. February 10,
- 1992·

.

Scoreboard
In the NHL •..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bowimt &lt;Mat

2·111141
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18 ·GIANT WALLETS
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ClOSEOUT · ·IU ltiU ltfO IIAI PACU . . IIUCTit WU NCU .
Tile C~ Box 1110 bu alt..... """•tkm o1 Co.Je Boob
froaa Old 10 New for IINI Coale lloolr. Celeelon

Now You Cu lek Up Your Molllhly BUeball,
Footbd aud 8
Beebtll
.

OPII --oii11BAY It U.-1 ilL
CALL M7"'"J "I IPICIAL APPOIII.it

UTEP (18·3, 8-2) held Air Force to
just 16 first-half points.
No. 22 N.C. Charlotte 95
Davidson 85
Henry Williams scored 26
points as UNCC (16-4) beat Davidson (7-11) for the second tilr)e this
season.
No. 23 Florida St. 102
Clemson90
Doug Edwards scored 27 points
and litlle-used junior reserve Byron
Wells added 13 points and eight
rebounds for host Florida State (156, 7-4).

DON TATE C"EVROLET,
OLDSMOBILE, CADILLAC
invites you to attend the Skills
Competition on February 13,·
1992. We are proud to support the
future leaders of the area and the
Meigs High School Vocational
program. O~en to the public from
6:00·1 0:00 p.m.
ill:l
Parts

AERIAL WRESTLING Is what Indiana guard Damon Bailey

ur

hair or Sunday's Big Ten game in Bloomington, Ind., which the
Hoosiers won 81-66. (AP)

Fairland gets top seed
in Rio Grande Sectional
Fairland was top-seeded and
Gallipolis was seeded second in the
1992 Division II Rio Grande Sec·
tiona! basketballtournamenl during
drawings held Sunday afternoon in
Lyne Center.
Gallipolis was placed in !he lop
bracket Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils (12-5) drew a first round
bye, and will play the winner of !he
Jackson-Meigs game on Tuesday,
March 3, at 6:30p.m.
Jackson (9-6) and Meigs (10-7)
will open tournament play with a
single game on Friday, Feb. 28, at
?p.m.
In !he bottom bracket, Fairland
(13-3) will lake on Wellston (7·9)
at8:15 p.m. on March 3.
The two Rio Grande bracket
winners will advance to the Ohio
University District and play each
other on Thursday, March 12, at
6:30p.m.
,
Each participating school has
been allotted 500 advance tickets.
Schools get to keep I 0 percent of
the pre-tournament ticket sales.
Tickets are expected to go on sale
soon according to Dan Bri sker,
tournament manager.
In Division I sectional play at
Athens, Chillicothe will battle
Logan at6:30 p.m. on Feb. 28 and
Lancaster will meet Marietta at
8: 15. This winner advances 1o !he
Muskingum District.
In the Crooksville Division II
Sectional, Sheridan drew a first
round bye. Athens will battle Vinton County on Feb. 28 at 7 p1m.
New Lexington will meet Warren
Local on March 3. Winners of

~Ofl

HEALTH lr&lt; SURArlCE

CALL'
Jeff W•rner lmuranee
liS W. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-54 79

,.,...
~----·
. , ...
. ......
.,..c...,

...,..,

Jun Jackson scored 23 points as Jerry Walker added 22 as Seton
Ohio State beat Purdue (12-9, 4-5) Hall banded the Huskies !heir third
for its 30111 consecutive home vic- consecutive loss and first at home
tory. Jamaal Brown added 14 in nearly a yeal. It was the third
points for !he Buckeyes·(16-3, 8-1). win in four games for the Pirates
(13-6, 5-5).
Memphis St. 92
No. 19 Kentucky 85
No. 11 Arkaasas 88
Auburn67
Anthony Douglas had 24 points
Reserve Gimel Maninez scored
and nine rebounds as Memphis
State banded visiting Arkansas (17- 17 points, five during a 16-2 run
5) its second straight defeat. David early in the second half that helped
Vaughn finished with 23 points and visiting Kentucky (16-5, 6-3).
No. 21 Texas-El Paso 73
10 rebounds for Memphis State
Air Fol'(e 44
(13-6).
Marlon Maxey scoied 16 points
No. 12 Michigan St- 79
and Prince Stewart added II as
Wisconsin 64
Mike Peplowski had 19 points
and a career-high 16 rebounds, and
Michigan State (15-4, 5-4) took a
47-29 lead at halftime.
·
No. 13 Southern Cal 59
Washington 56
Rodney Chatman's free throw
with 45 seconds remaining broke a
tie and Harold Miner added two
more with 18 seconds left to lead
usc (16-3, 8-1).
No..14 Tulane 97
Va. Commonwealth 80
Anthony Reed scored 14 of his
16 points in the second half as
Tulane (18-2, 6-0) pulled away to
stay on top in the Metro Conference.
No. 16 Alabama 85
,
Tennessee 68
Latrell Sprewell sco.red 24
points, including 15 in the second
half to lead Alabama (19-4, 6-3).
Tennessee (13-8, 5-4) was within
six points at 61-58 before !he Tide
broke open the game with II
suaight points.
No. 25 Seton Hall81
No. 18 Connecticut69
Terry Dehere scored 24 and

(22) and Iowa's Jay Webb are doing above the rim during the nrst

HI!Mt&lt;*t:CMI,__f'lla. ~Oti4»1t

-~

e _:,.&lt;C_o
nu_
'nued_fro_
· m__,;;Pag:.;_e4):___ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Now Under Construction:

IIIIIIMilll . . . . . . . . . c....., .. -....~

T .... . .

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

!hose two games play· Sheridan on
March 4 at 7 p.m. Two winners
advance to the OU District and
play on March 11, 12 and 14.
Waverly was lop-seeded in !he
Chillicothe Division II Sectional.
Miami Trace will battle Greenfield
Feb. 28 at 7 p.m. Winner of that
game plays Washington CH on
March 4. Waverly plays Hillsooro
at 7 p.m. on March 3. The two wmners advance to OU District and
game dates are March II, 12 and
14.
-Ironton was top-seeded in the
South Webster Division II Sectional. The Tigers drew a first round
bye. Portsmouth West will meet
South Point on Feb. 28 at 6:30.
Winner of that game plays
Portsmoulh on March 3 at 7.
Rock Hill meets Northwest on
Feb . 23 al 8:15. Winner of thal
game meets Ironton at 7. The two
winners-will advance to the OU
District and play on March II, 12,

nual

reetin s ·ection!

14 . ~-

Schedule For Co•pletion On February 14, 1992
Don't miss your chance to Lht•IH someone
B[JCclal wiLil your vei'Y own meseage of love.

Here's '!he lluts &amp; Bolts:

l

• Your Message Only Costs 20t Per Word
•Dring in or Mail your typed or neally
handwrillen message to Valenline Greetings;
care of I his newspaper.

- ..- .... .;

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

•Your greeting must be rece ived
by Wed ., Feb. 12, 1992

INSURANCE

• All greetings will be published in
a special section on Valentine'
Day, February 14 .

Ill Second St., Pomeroy ·
YOUR INDEPENDENT
. AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

Spring.and Su~mer
Clothing Arriving Daily .At
..
. MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE
•USE OUR LAYAWAY.
.OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 8:00 P.M.
I .

•Ask about our Special
On Messiges with pictures!

For all the heartwarming detaUs, oall

992·2156

,---------------------------------------------------------,
I Write your message below:
Bring 11 or Mail your Message aiHI
1
I
I
I
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•

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~~~

YOIII Name: ................................................... ........ _,........................................................................

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Ad.km:.............................;..........................................-........................ _.................. _............................
.
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THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Olalo 45769

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Total w...:..... .................................................................................._.......... . . . ,.,..... ,. . . .

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!L--~---~-----------------------------------~~------------•
·
_...-. .
~~~~~; ~d~;av;D·~~:~~·;~·~~~~·i:i~N-D;~D.i"·•;•~a 1.
.
!

, _

.

The Daily Sentinel ..

�..
• hge 6 The Dally sentinel
\

Monday, February 10, 1992

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Monday, February

Annual health report released; clinics provide major part of overall program
;

Clinics which provide numerous
~ prevenlative healIll serviceS as --:ell
treatment programs for Me1gs
· County children and adults were a
: major part of activities of the
~ Meigs County Health Depanment
: in 1991.
· · A total of 2, 00 2 shots were
; 'given in lhe immunizations clinics
: during the year. This included Ou
: vaccines which were given to I,622
: Meigs Countians for a small fee,
• and routine immunizations clinics
:.-sponsored by the Health Department
,.., During the year 308 children
were assessed, diagnosed and treat·
ed in the Well Child· Health Chek
~linics coordinated by Carol Tanoehill, R.N. In addition 34 children
were seen and treated in lhe Onho·
pedic Clinic, 148 were screened in
• the eye and ear clinics, 15 were
: .lreated in the Plastic Surgery Clinic, and 40 in the Cardiac Clinic. In
addition , 117 children were
screened for Head Slarl These spe·
c.ialty clinics are coordinated by
T.C. Ervin, R.N., assiSiaDt nursmg
director, and Linda Vanlnwagen,
.R.N., PHN,
i In all of these clinics both local
: and Columbus area doctors provide

: as

the physician services. Much slaff
time is spent in assessing, referring,
scheduling, counseling, assisting
doctors, providing education or just
comfort for the children and their
families.
In 1991 the cholesterol and
triglycerides screening programs
were big success with 335 and 90
clients seen respectfully. Several
volunteers from lhe Retired Senior
Volunteer Program assisted with
the clinics and screenings.
Home visitation is an imporlant
part of the work of public health
nurses and Norma Torres, R.N.,
Er vin and Vaninwagen made
numerous trips out in the county to
visit residents in their homes.
At least 89 children on the
Bureau of Children with Medical
Handicaps have been followed by
the department's nursing staff.
The prenatal clinic, which cares
for pregnant women, provided ser·
vices for a total of 110 Meigs
County clients in 1991. These services provided prenatal visits with
Dr. Wilma Mansfield and Connie
Little, R.N., prenatal director to 26
weeks of pregnancy. Lab screenings and counseling are provided
and referrals for delivery made.

The clinics are coordinated by
Phyllis Bearhs, Women's H!llllth
Care Technician, and there were
252 pregnancy teSts perfmned.
W.I.C. (Women, Infants and
Children) is lhe supplemental nutritional program of ihe deparunent
and is directed by Debbie Babbiu,
R.N. In 1991,2,587 visits for assistance through the program were
reconded. Woricing in the program
is Janet Bolland, R.D.L.D., who
provides individual and group
nutritional counseling along with
Pam Shar.p, B.S., Home Economics. Other staff in W.I.C .
include Dortha Riffie, ADP Coordinator, Belinda Jeffers, contract
assistant ADP Co-ordinator, Becki
Ball, contract assislaDt ADP Coordinator, Norma Torres, R.N., fiscal
director, and Gloria Michael, pantime assislaDt fiscal director.
In 1991, 441 people were diagnosed and treated in lhe speech and
hearing clinics. Mrs. Susie Heines
serves as coordinator for that clinic
and some of those treated were
referred on for more specialized
services.
Health education classes were
held in numerous locations provid·
ing information on nutrition and
weight control, Lamaze, arthritis,
drug abuse, cancer, early intervention, poison control, communicable
disease, teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.
Jackie Starcher was the instruc·
tor for the nutrition and weight
control classes which had 134 participants. Norma Torres, R.N., Jon
Jacobs, R.S., Connie Little, R.N.,
T.C. Ervin, R.N., were instructors
for the other health related classes.
In addition, heahh department
persoMel attended 47 health relal· .
ed seminars for continuing educalion.
Early intervention
The Early Intervention Program
of the Meigs County Health
Depanment provides services for
children from birth through three
years of age.
Rita J. Fields, a licensed social
worker, is the coordinator of the
program for Meigs County and
works wilh an interagency committee consisting of representatives
from various health, social services
and education agencies.
The interagency commiuee

DR. MARGIE LAWSON

•-

•

\

_/
l

'

i

W.I.C •• The Women, Infant and Children's
' program operations at the Meigs County Health
Department are under the supervision or Debbie
Babbitt, noC pictured. Her assistants are, seated,
1-r, Dortha Rime, ADP coordinator, Becki Ball,

l'

CHILD AND FAMiLY HEALTH SER·
'• VICII • c...- LIUI, R.N. I tr d1 11ft, II pno
· !......Uirttttr, a•d Cuol Tatil8tlllll, R.N.,
--cntl, - . . •• tile prop~•. tor tile depllrt·
t

ADP assistant. Standing, 1-r, Belinda Jeffers,
assistant ADP coordinator, Pam Sharp, health
professional, and Norma Torres, R.N., WIC
health professional and fiSCal director.

merrt. OdMr ....,_ J~ldwlll ..,,. 1

':J; !•

r, 1'117111 ._.. w-·•H•D C.. I
claa, JM Jae611t, flri~.:J•••• nil Canl
Gllltdrlr, Hflllll Cllelt
Clri.
'

MEIGS BOARD OF HEALTH· Pictured Is
the Meigs County Board of Health for lbe Meigs
County Health Department. L-r, seated are
Jackie Hildebrand, green thumb worker, T.C.
Enin, R.N., assistant nursing director, Norma
Torres, R.N., nursing director, and Pearl Scott,
registrar. Standing, 1-r, are Keith Little, envi·

works with Mrs. Fields to identify
needed services and then to share
resources with the parents and
involved agencies to ensure that
developmenlal delars or suspected
handicapping conduions are diagnosed early so that the child can
start school wilh no labels lhat may
follow him or her. She also pro·
vides developmental screenings
and social services assessments
during bi-weekly child health clinics.
_
In 1991, 310 home visits were
made in the county and there were
125 office visits. Eighty-nine Denver Developmental Screening tests
were administered to children in
the 1991 year.
Sonya Allen, Bunon, is a social
work intern from Ohio University.
She works with thcflRADS IGraduation , Reality, and Duel Role
Skills) program witltin lhe county.
Inspections increase
Inspections by the environmental health section of the Meigs
County Health Depanment continued to increase during 1991 with
the largest increase being inspections of licensed food service operations, according to Keith Liule,
director. There were 278 inspections conducted at 102 licensed
food service operations in the
county in 1991.
Eighteen permits to inslall pri·
vate water systems and 1041X"'"'its
to install private sewage d1sposal
systems were also issued.
Inspections are conducted on a
regular basis at all landfill areas,
mobile home parks, recreational
campgrounds and schools in the
distncL
Approximately 67 requests for
testing of private water systems
were received.
There were 58 animal bites
· investigated with approximately 75
percent being dogs and none from
bats. Fifty-one of lhe reported animal bites required medical attention.
The continued support and
cooperation of citizens of Meigs
County is a very important factor
for continual upgrading and
improvement for the environment
in which we live. Personnel in the
environmenlal hcallh section of the
Health Depanment include Little,
Jon Jacobs, Registered Sanitarian/Administrator, and Zane Beegle,
Sanitarian-in-training.
Lawson, Jacobs bead department
Dr. Margie S. Lawson, D.D.S.,
is the Health Commissioner, and
Jon Jacobs, Deputy Health Com·
missioner and Registered Sanilarian.
Jon Jacobs, Keith Linle and
Zane Beegle comprise the environmental health department.
Nursing personnel are Norma
Torres, R.N., nursing director, T.C.
Ervin, R.N., assistant nursing direc·
tor, Carol Tannehill, R.N., Child
and Family Health Services Director, Linda Vanlnwagen, R.N., Public Health Nurse, Debbie Babbiu,
R.N., W.I.C. Director, and Connie
Little, R.N., prenatal director.
· Ancillary personnel include:
Carol Guinther, administrative
usislanl/health cheli clerk, Edwina
Ball,
nursing
clelkjreecptionist/tleputy registrar,
Phyllis Bearhs, women's health
care technician, Dortha Riffle, ·
W.I.CJA.D.P. Coordinator, Pam
Sharp, W.I.C.JNutritionist, Linda

Numerous
•
servlces
are
provided by
the Meigs ·
.Health Dept.
•
•

.
ronmental health director, Linda Vaolowagen,
public health nurse, Carol Guinther, administra·
tive assistant, Edwina Bell, deputy'registrar and
nursing clerk, Jon Jacobs, sanitation administra·
tor, and Zane Beegle, sanitarian. Not pictured are
Faye Schultz and Mary Durst, green thumb work·
ers.

Jeffers, W.I.C., pan-time assistant
A.D.P. Coordinator, Becki Ball,
W.I.C./part-time assistant A.D.P.
coordinator. Pearl Scou is the
department registrar and vital
statistician and Rita J. Fields, Early
Intervention Coordinator.
Three Green Thumb employees
work at the Meigs County Health
Department through a federally
funded program that taps the
numerous talents of senior citizens.
The employees are Faye $chultz,

Mary Durst and Jackie Hildebrand.
Twice monthly the nursing staff
was also aided by lhree RSVP volunteers, Dorothy Long. Mary Buck
and Helen Bodimer.
The health department continues
to be commilled to improve the
health of Meigs Countians, and all
personnel respond to innumerable
phone calls of Meigs Countians
who are seeking either medical
advice or environmental information as well as service coordination.

By Pblllp Walton
Social Security
Manager In ChiiUcothe
Social Security beneficiaries
who have not notified Social Secu·
rity of a change of address risk
having their checks stopped. It is
not enough to report your address
to the post office; you must report
it to Social Security also. If you're
receiving Social Security checks by
mail, you must report it to us
directly.
.
It is panicularly imporlanl for
direct depos,it beneficiaries to also
give us theii current address. Since
they have their benefits deposited
directly to a bank account, they
often forget to notify Social Securi:
ty promptly of their new address. If
we try to reach them about their
benefits and are unable to do so, we
may have to suspend benefits until
we get a current address and validate it with the beneficiary.
Social Security sent out year
end benefit statements in January
indicating the amount of benefits
paid in 1991. If the Form 1099 is
returned to $ocial Security by the
post office, a process will begin
which could result in benefits being
suspended, unless we can locate
you.
First, Social Security will check
its records .to see if a new address
has been reported since the mail•
ing. If so, the statements will be
mailed a second time . If it is
returned again and direct deposit is
involved, the financial institution
where lhe check is sent will be contacted for a current address. This is
permissable under the "Right to

Financial Privacy Act" If the fmancia! institution cannot, or will not,
High sc~ool students in Meigs
provide the address, the phone County and around Ob1o have until
company and the post office will be March 1to·complete their essays to
contacted. If all else fails, a hitter compete for cash prizes in the 1992
will be sent to th e last known " Conservation Essay Contest"
address of the direct depositor and ·sponsored by the Ohio Federation
~fits will be suspended until the of Soil and Water Conservation
beneficiary conlacl the agency and Districts (OFSWCD), and the
provides his or her current address. Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
So, if you have moved recently DistricL
and not notified Social Security, · The contes~ open to students in
now is the time to do it The Chilli· grades 7-12, is designed to encourcotbe office·is located at 606 Cen, age young people to increase their
tra1 Center. The local phone nom· knowledge of soil, water and relat·
ber is 774-5500. We also have a ed natural resource conservation
toll free number, 1-800-772-1213. issues. This year's topic is wood·
lands. Briefly discuss lhe historical
and current status of woodlands in
your county.
Essays are judged at the county,
SEATTLE (AP)- Alex Haley, area and stale level. The county
author of "Roo~" and "The Auto- prize is $50 savings bond for flfSl
biography of Malcolm X," died place; $15 for second place; and
early today at a bospital in the city, $10 for third place. The area level
a hospital official said. He was 70. award is $200 for first place and
Haley was admitted to Swedish the state award is an additional
Hospital on Sunday evening and $300 for first place winner. The
died shortly after midnigh~ nursing state award will be presented at the
supervisor John Folkrod said.
OFSWCD's Summer Meeting in
Haley does not live in Seaule Perrysburg next I uly. The area and
and was apparently admitted for a slate cash awards are made possi·
sudden illness, Follcrod said
ble by the suppon of the Farm and
Folkrod would not release the Dairy News, Ohio Farmers Union,
cause of death. Haley's family was Raben W. Teater and Cecil Robinflying to Seallle from the East son.
Coast, Follcrod said.
For more information, and an
Haley won .the. l977 Pulitzer entry form for the essay contest,
Prize for "Roots: The Saga of an contact any English or Vocational
American Family," tracing the Agriculture teacher or the guidance
African ancestry of a black family. counselor at the high schools or
Haley was born in Ithaca, N.Y., contact the Meigs Soil and Water
on Aug. II, 1921, and was raised Conservation District at992-6647.
in the west Tennessee town of HenDeadline for entries is March I,
ning.
1992.

Nowln
Stock
AIR CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

RACINE GUN

BENNETT' M3:~~fN~o:E

SUNDAYS

located on Sallard Sd.oal Rd. oH Rt. 14 I
(6141446·9416 or 1·800·872-5967
4·26-91
Public Notice

Alex Haley dies

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF ONE
SCHOOL BUS
FOR EASTERN LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Sealocl propoaala wlfl ~·
rocelvocl by tho Boord of
Educallon of the E.. tern

Local School Dlolrlct of
Roedovlflo, Ohio, by 12:00

achool

DARWIN . The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Monday at
7 p.m. atlhe town hall.

PORTLAND • The Portland
Elemenlary PTO will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
·•

TUESDAY
POMEROY • The Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi Sorority,
wiU meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
All members are urged to attend.

POMEROY • The regular meet·
ing of the American Legion Drew
Webster Post No 39 will be held
Tuesday at the post home in
Pomeroy with dinner at 7 p.m. and
meeting at 8 p.m.

LONG BOTTOM - The Flame
Fellowship Chapter will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Faith Full

MIDDLEPORT· The OAPSE
Local No. 17 will hold a ratification meeting on Tuesday at 7 p.m.

11-22-92-1 ...
TROLLEY STAnOI

CWTS

Public Notice

1--------

above Board of Education

acheduled .closlng time for

the surely company In an
amount equai to five per

Eaalem Local
School District
Eloise Boston, Treasurer

or a aallafoctory bid bond recelpl of bids.
Board of Education of
execulocl by lhe blddOf and

For More.lifo C. ·
614-992·2549 "

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

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

Eaaletn Local Schoola
38900 S.R. 7
Reedsville, Ohio 45772

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
•Insulation ·

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097
539 Bryan
Middleport,

EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
'
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
l.ANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKlN~
FREE ESTI~IATES ·

992-3838
MEIGS
GOLF COURSE ·
MEMBERSHIP FEES

Mea ...............S275 ea.
Women..........1225 ejt.
CouDie.................S450
Fam)lly ............1I550 (41'
Busluss ......... 650 (t)
Students..............' I00
College................1150
1/31/92/1 mo.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Building
EVERY

HOMEMADE CHICKEN &amp;
NOODLE DINNER
THURS., FEB. 13-4:00·7:00
Meigs High School Caleteria
Sponsored by MHS Band
BooS1ers
Aduhs: '3.50 Children '2.00

SUndoJHipm

6·12·90·1fn

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

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

.

Open Mon...., 10-pm
2-3·'92·1

reserves the right to waive
Informalities to accept or (2) 3, 10, 17, 24, 41c

LOS ANGELES (AP)
Actress Ann Jillian gave birth to a
9-pound, !-ounce boy, her first
child. Mother and son were home
and doing well on Sunday, her pub·
licist said.
Miss lillian, 41, entered CedarsSinai Medical Center last week and
the baby was delivered by Caesarean section on Feb. 3, said
spokesman Jeff Ballard. Andrew
Joseph .Murcia measured 21 1/2
inches long.

.

Fe•.tot•ru 14

985·4473
667·6179

Ho bldo may bo
School Building.
wlthdrown
for at leaet thirty
A carUIIad chock parable (30) days
after lhe
to the Treuurer o the

New arrival

985:4141 :

PalnUngCIIM

be obtained at the oHice of
the Treasurer1 Eastern High

Gospel Church in Long Bollom. at the Meigs Junior High Cafeteria.
David Dailey, Reedsville, will be
WEDNESDAY
the speaker. The public is invited to
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
auend.
Merchants Association will meet
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. in the con·
ty Chamber of Commerce will ference room at Bank One in
meet Tuesday at noon at the Pomeroy. All members are urged to
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita· attend.
lion Center. "How to Help Your
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun·
Child in School," a video production by Columbia Gas System, Inc., .ty 4-H Shepherd's Club will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
wiD be shown.
County Public Library. Anyone
LOTTRIDGE • The LottridJ!e interested in joining the club is to
Community Center will hold 1ts invited to attend or call 949-2136
regular meeting on Tuesday at 7 or 992-5547 for information.
p.m. Everyone welcome.

CHESTER· The Chester Township Trustees will bold their regular
meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the town
hall.

Choke

FREE ESTIAUlES

"

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication In the cal·
endar.

Starling Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory

FEB. 18- Aduft Blllliat
Clue• ~ 1;30 p.m. '
FEB. 24 -llegln.w Acrylic

reject any and all or parts of
any and all bids.

cent of tho bid ahall be
submitted with each bid.
Said Boord of Educallon

1:00 P.M.

MARCUM
CONTUCTING
-New H011es
-lemodehng . .
-Garages &amp; Room
Addltio•s ••

Special Valentine
Hours-10to a·

bull--------

according to opoclflcollona
of uld board of education.
Speclflcallona and
lnotruclfona to blddara may

GUN SHOOT

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

25, 1992, and 11 thot limo
openocl by the Tteaaurer of
aald Board as provided by ,...__ _ _.;...._ __.
low for ono (1) 72 ,panenger

CLUB

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

o'clock noon on February

Community calendar

MONDAY
POMEROY · The Disabled
American Veterans (DAY) will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at lhe hall
at 124 Buuernut Avenue in
Pomeroy.

EARLY INTERVENTION· Rita J, Fields, licensed social work·
er, Is coordinator for the Early lntenention Program at the Meigs
County Health Department. Her role Is to identify potential problems and ha11dlcapplng conditions In pre-school aged .children and
work with other agencies on solving or alleviating tbose problems.
Jon Jacobs, deputy health commissioner, is the fiSCal ofrlcer for tbe
program.

The Dally

Business Services

S&amp;WCD essay,
contests
fated
·-· ·

Your'Social .Security

'

...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1992

SAt NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Starting Sept. 28

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotgun Only
Strhlly Enforced

fL

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

-Room Addilions

-Gutter Work

-Electrical ond Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exlerlor
·
Painting , . (FREE E.STIMATESJ

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

:

11-14-"90;tf

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

PH. 614·992-5591

Fralllt
NIW &amp; USID
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODIIS
992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOll FREE .
1·100·141·0070 .

· DARWIN, OHIO

'

12·5·1fn

FOREVER
BRONZE

Quality

Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE

992;2259

.

COPY PEADLINE
Monday Paper

Call992-2156

.Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
·Thunday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper ·

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M •• SAT.8-12
CLOSED SVNDAY

POLICIES

608 EAST MAIN

DAY BEFORE PUBLICA110N
1 tOO p.m. Saturday
tOO p.m. Monday

FOR SALE

.POMEROY, OHIO
- ·-··-"'

· Call614·992·6637
51. Rl. 7
Cheshire, OH.

WOp.m. Tuesday
t OO p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. ThW'Sday
)~ p. m . Friday

1

• Ad.t out.Mio Callia, Matoa or Meip couatiu mul be prepaid :
• R.-w. diwnu.t for ad. paid in adq~~c:c.

Days
1

3
6

day al&amp;er publiettioa to.•ike ~OfftlCOoa
' ,\d. U...tMUI be pi!id in -.:Jy&amp;ace at'e t
C.rd cil Tb..k.o 'Hoppy Adt

·Ia M-oria,.
1•

..t..,._.,,.,

10
Monthly

Yord Saloo

A clooaif..t
plocoolloo Lloo Gollipolio Doily
Trllouao (Oicopl Clooalf..t D;oploy, B-C.rd or lepl
riotic:•)willa&amp;to 'appear iD the Poillt ~tR.pa.r "and
Lloo DUly S.nliaol, .,., hl"'lower 18,000 too-

I
.

1

I

Rate

Over 15 Words
L20
$ .30

15
15

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

15

$1.30/day

Words
15
15

Read the
.

'

Best se~er·
'
.

I·•

f\DS.

Offer Good T•ru
Feb. 14

949·2826

OPEN 9 AM-9 PM

New Homat, Addillona,
Siding, Pole &amp;.rno, :
Painting, Gal'lllll'8, .

,.~~TI:.:ns

AREAL HEARTTHROB! Located In Mlddeport a 2 siDry ,
tO room·5 bedroOm beauty. Inducing carpet &amp; drapes,
large living room wllh fireplace. modemllitd1en w/a cooolly ·
feel. Icar garage. patio wnumilure. VERY NICEI Too many
feaMes10 list.. COME S,EEI $79,900

$ .42
$ .60
$.05 / day

614-742-3090 or .
304-773·9545 :

NO SUNDAY CALLS;

YOU'LL JUST ADORE THIS.. a 2 story home in Racine, 4
BR's, 2 balhs, endosed front porch, red cedar, walnut &amp;
oak woodworf&lt;. many new repa1rs completed ""'und home.
lndudes 1 car garage &amp; possible additional lot. $41,500

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as B!!parate ads.

1

SESSIONS - 410

KING'S
HOME. .
IMPROYEMEII'I'J

RATES

• FneAdl: Ci~wayaad Foued acb uader 15 wonh will be
ru.a 3 day. at no cbarp.
• Phce of ad for aU eapitalleuan U doOle prin of ad COil
• 7 poiat IiDe type oaly ....d
• Trilna• il DOl n.po••ihM for erron d&amp;erlinld..y (cheek
forerror1 f&amp;nt day ad rwu in paptr). CaU hefoN 2:00p.m.

RACINE

BAING YOUR HOUSE HUNTING HONEY· to H6mtock
Grovel View lhis 1112 sto;y log lookhomew/3 BR's, equip!
kitchen, large poroh &amp;deck . Admire lhe surroundings. Stop
·hunting IYou've found your LOVE NEST lor only ~27 ,900
nestle up ... make an olferf

Citnt of ThMks

. F1milyof
SUSAN EMILY LEWIS
utendi• .P.:IIII
tb•nkl to the~ 811d
nurwa of Arc8lllll
Hurting Home fo~ their
klndn- and epecllll
cara given tD Aunt ·
Suale during h• .
rt~ldance their, and to
Ewing 1'1t1111ral Home
and our trllndlln the
community, our
gNIItudl for JOUr
COndDIInDII during
· aurrlli1nt

~I

YOU:LLJUST TINGLE· OVer lhis 1987 F""stParf&lt; Mobile
Home on 1.10 AC. 3 BR's, most furnishings. wilh 17 x52
carpons, large garage. Perfect lor new r:ouples slarting out
. or older owe&lt;illiHtll wanting convenioot &amp; comfortable
living. Alkklg $32,600
YOUR FUNNY VALENTINE• Will be delirious with ihla
deal! Allloorlrame homewt.l BA's, N.G. &amp; W.B.FP. New.
roof &amp; deck. 1 car ~rage, lui besemen~ on 2.13AC w/
ganlen space. ASWEETDEALAT$31 ,900 Check It Out!

2/4/92/1

MICROWAVES
VHSCAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

·H.E.C.

311' WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
. 614-112-3524
1·22·'92·1

BISSELL &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
•NI•WHOMII

ReModeling
:
Stop &amp; Co•p•• ·
Fru EsliMllles

915·4473 '
667·6179 ;

CUPID AIN'T BTUPID,.I!E'S DIRECTING YOU TO CLE·
LAND REALTY .., WHERE WE LOVE TO IIAKE YOU 1.11- - - - - - - ' - . . . . . , h-=~==~=,...;
HAPPYIIF YOU ARE WANTING TD BUY OR BELL...SEE
f&amp;A TREE TRIMMING
US FIRST! WE HANDLE ALL OUR CUSTOMERS WI7H
TENDER, LOYIIIO CARE. ·
IEIIOYAL

..

'

,,.

,..

I

�I

.

"

,

a

.: Plge

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

14

3. Al'lnouncemants

~=.·~,:'T1G•
zlr.tiX::;~
Roglolorotlon
121111.

Moot• Sing... : Guyo ' Glrlo. 1·
100-107·11104•· $2.11/mln. llilot
Bo o..r 18, ...,polllrvlno CA.
REDUCE: Born 011 Fot Whlil
You
Toko OPAL Avolllblo
At: Fruth Phonnoey.
Unottochod? Moot Anoo Slngloo
Thrauah Our Sing...
tw. W'rno: Slnatoo, P.O. Box
1043, Golllpollo, Ohio 45831.

-p,

18 Wantld to Do

-lot·

4

So-l don~
tho mill jull

Television
Viewing

Autos for Sale

Mech•nlc•, $100.

111~&amp;.0963

814-148-7371 Aftor &amp;p.m.
'
11183 Hondo Accord, ...,..,
88,1131MI, ollvw oderior, tlahi

8

blue valura Interior, $1500, ii-t-

8:00 (J) •

Banty htns, a

trodo .., S·10 Btozor or S·10
truck, 304-675-3319
t9e4 Cutlaoo Cloro, Good

liD II Nlahl Court Q
liJJ Smurfa C

\Zl

~ Reading Rainbow Q

READ
SOMEONE
SAID, II' A MAN
~AS THE LOVE

lull blooded BasSil
Hqund, 3yr. old to give away to
good home, 614·992:'7175.

6

446.0175.

-c--:-::====-'-

Lost &amp; Found

Employment Serv1ces

Lost : Alrldale Male, Cl1erry
Ridge Road, Rio

Gr~nde,

0111o.

614 ·~45o!IS35.

Found :

Red

~.!:========+========~

:.:.:..::......,...-...,...,....,......,.=,I

Help Wanted

tura, rt*POftalble pei'IOn who It

$2,500 CREDIT CAROl

raproductlve health nlldt of

11

ben•· nound,

POIItand, 614-843-5161

GUII'IntHd

Dog: White Samoytd,
Shot~trlng Rid!l", Reward! 614441-0619.
lost

Potlont Service Aulotont, opprollmototy 20-25hro. por - k,
muot bo ontrgotlc olld oblo to
worll flnlblo ochodulo Including
&lt;loy, ovo_lllng ond S1turdoy
houn. llodlcal offlco II·
porllnco holplul, wtll troln mo·

S1111e

~rovall

Dty Ap-

with

flgur11

AVON .. All

Will Do In Home Nuralng Cart.
Have RellrtncH. 614-44~441.

Fmancial

ana

Cell Marilyn Send retume and two employ·
' 992·2156 "' 614·992-7313
WHYit 304-882-at45.
ment r•rmce• to Planned
• Lost: f:Jart Chihuahua, part Rat A
Poronthood ol Sou1hooll Ohio,
Terrier, coal black, wltan pows, .gancy Needt PINunt In· 398 Richland AvanUI, Athena,
diVIdual To Anrnr Phone
; 1nswert to Suzy• 0, 614·742· Manawent, 35K + Or Will OH. 45701 by Fobruory 16, 1ua2,
1 ,...1,

~

6t4~-i4~11-~221~7§j[~!~ 1-St--H-o..:..u..:..se
..:..h_ o,_l_d__
Goods

llpollo Aroo. $4.50 Por Hr. 614·
446-8406
936 First Avonuo,
Ohio. 1br, Partially

clfonto. Mull bo woll orgonlzod 1
accurate

electrlc and

Will do HouH cltanlng In Ga1·

oonoltlvo to birth control ond

Atoo OUollly For NO rocord kooplng, hovo o..,.rlor
lllpotH VISAIMC And Cooh Ad· communication
akllla, must be
vancet. 1..S00.2M4781 Ext.
abft to work undlr guldellnn
l ost: Brown, Whit• Spaniel 2524.
minimal aupervrslon. R•
Name And Phone Numbtr On $350.00/Day Procooolng Phono with
~ulroo rolloblo lronoportotlon,
Collu, Vicinity ; Kanauaa/MIII
Or&lt;lorol Pooplo Coli You. No El· obiiHy to worll In Molgo, Golllo,
. Cr11k, G111ipolls. 614-446-§535.
periei1C8 NKnllry. 1-IQ0.2U- Lllwrtnce CountJte and att.r
II noodod. Tlmo ond out ol
Losl: Female Cll, 71h &amp; Main of 02
:::::
·42:::,,,--::-::---=-:,-,::-::-- IIIII
county IIIYII pold. Stort $5.50.
Mlddlaport, whlta &amp; yellow, 614·

~~~iu•

21

Business
Opponuntty
INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommend• that you do butl·
n... with people you know, tnd
NOT to send money through the
mall until you ha¥1 lnvtstigatad

$175. Call 614-446-4038,

Resume

And

Buslnllt Speclallti..·Malches).

Building

1989 Buick cantury V-5, 4 Dr.,

42 Mobile Homes

Supplies

air, caso . dock, crulu, till
16,300. 614·245-5946 oftor 5 p.m.

Whirlpool Wathtr 2 YNrt otd,

Llko Naw, $195; Whirlpool
for Rent
Wahor Huvoy Duty Woo $150,
_ __ :..:..:.__:.:..:..:.:.___ _, Cut To $125; Konmora ~~
14•70 With Expando 1 112 1 $85. Sluoggo Applloncoo, 14Saths, Rt. 141, 2 Mittt From Gal· 446·7318• Or 1-800-4H-3491.
llpolls, 6t4·44s-1824.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
===..:..:::..:.:::.::..
l - - - ·1 Woohors, dryorw, rolrlgorlloro,
11ngn.
Skoggo Af.:C:Ioncoo,
Upper Rlvar ACI. BH
Slone
7-7~-c-----,--..,......,.,.-· 1 Croll Motot. Coll614-441-7318.

Et.. Home Center,

5710.
1172 Vell1nt oHict

trail~r,

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

12x55,

bathroom,
must be moved, $1250, 614·992·
11121
ho1da 3 offices &amp;

1m

61 Fann Equipment

Throe bodroomo . $6000. Coli
304·1'73-58118.
1881 Noohuo t4x70 3b~ Good
CondHion, Aok $10,500. a14-44663t4.
1868 Gronvlllolu14x90, goo hoot,

4020 JD TI'ICtor, U..der, S5,850i

14x70 Ftlrmonl mobil•
homa. Remocletld. Nice kitchen.

rreetl fu letwe yoru·lwme.
J•lace your classified ad tO&lt;lay!
J 5 wtml~t •••· le~ts, 3 days,

Finance. 814·288.e522.

Jbn'a F1rm Equlpmant , SA. 35,

Will Oolllpollo, 814-141-W77:
Wkiettlectlon ntw &amp; uMd farm
troctoro · I lmplomonto. Buv.
11111 trade, 1:00.5:00 WHkdayt1
Sot. IMI Noon.

2, _ _ _ _ __

9._-.:....__ __

w_ ____

.'1.- - - - - ---- 1.1.- - - - 1··- - - - - - 12.·- - - - - r:.
J:J •. _ _ _ __
6. _ _ _ _ __
J4. •. _ _ _ __
7 . _ _ _ _ __
.15..________

···-----------

Hollond 457 hoy bind 7 "·
Holllnd Supw 717 lorogo
ho,..ootor. Gohl H grlndor
miiW. Otlvor 10 ft t11nopon
dloc. .All .good cond. 304-2734215.
Wonted: Uood lorm oqulpmont
anything you want lo ull. Call
114-256-1308, 288-5040 oftor 6
p.m.

pump, olumn oldlng; 12120 hont

porch, 304·516-21111 attar 6:00

.

,,..;1\ves
--....-1.- •

ChOOH Fro"!. Smoll Down
Poymont. Coll1-800-581-57tt.
Eny Ali 1, 2, 3. File You•.W Tun
Horo And Buy Hwo. Klio You're
Londlonl GoDdbvol EIOH Homo
cantor, 1-100-158W7tO.
Roducod: 1182 Skyllno 14170,
~ding,

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltlonol lllltlmo gUirantoo. Locol rolwoncoo lumloltod.
Fnoo ootlmotoo. can collocl 1·
814-237-0411, doy or ntglrl.
Aogoro Booimont ·Wotllng ..
Complllo Mobllo Homo Sot.Upo,
Rtpalrt; Commtrlcll,

A~­
lncl~:

tlol · lm-ollllrito.
Plumbing, £1octrtcol. lnou...CIIImo -plod, 814-288-ti1t
Curtlo HOmo IIIIJII'0•-111:
YNnl Elporlouco On Oldor &amp;
Hainoo. Room Addlllone.

Shingle Root,

Front KHchln, Lorge Uvlng
Room Spoclol Low Prtco,
Fronch CHy MobUo Homoo, Inc.
I14-141-H40, Or 1-800.231-1467.
Aoducod: 1992 Skyllnt 16170, 2

Tr3nsportation
71 Autos for Sale

tlmot•l Ro,.,.,-, No .lob To'
Big Or SIIIOIIIIM-141-a!
Fnooman'o Plumbing And Hool·
lng, 814-256-1811,
Aon'o Tv Slrvlce, optclolt.lng
In Zonlth oloo oorvlclng moil
ochor brondo. Houoo collo, oloo
- · oppllonco ropolro. wv·
3001.Sl843te Ohio 114-441-2414.
Davlo
Sow·Voc
Slrvlco,
GNflll 1:-k Ad. Parto, plloo, Pickup, ond dollvory. 114441-0ZM•

.

tm Chryolor 48,000 . JCIUII Will build potlc! - · ~

Large S.draom1, 2 Baths, Extra
l.orje KHchon And Uvlng Room
Boroclot Low Prlco. Fronch CHy
llobUe Homla, 114-441-1340, or
1 - - 7.

=.:r

mi...,.!_dOor, ... _,., $2,300. -oonod ""' .
limo. ,.,. c:orv.no 14,000 actual
lrollor -.::.
mltoo, MtY rrp41on, oouthwn
cor, 14,100. firm. 1981 KowiHkl
Plumbing &amp;
750 LTb, 1S,OOO - · Nko now, 82
$12,010. Ialii l111ukl 121 cc dirt
Heating
blko 1210. 304-176-5431 ohor
1:00.
.
Cortor'a Pllrmblng
FowlltondPint
Golllpollo, Ohio

Aoducod: Skyolno Soctlonot
21•U. 3br, 2 lotho, Country
KMchon, lOla Anochod Porch,
'-111 Low Prlco, llootlonl
Financing . Aw...blol Fronch
CHy llalrllo - · Inc. 814-446113400r1--14S7. ,

814 44.,111

"·-----446;.2342 675-1333
992-2156

W~LL,

-

'''""'"
~ROFTIWol
MOST
~EM/

~TraveiiC

EEKANDMEEK

,,..

Winter &lt;llmet Speed
skating , women 's 500m:
alpine skiing, men's downhill
combined; luge mc
liD 8 MOVIE: TIMi Deer
H-r !PI 1 Of 2) IRI (2:00)
liJJ 116111 W11tmlnator
Kennel Club Dog Show
Breeds In the Working,
Terrier, Herding and
Non·Sportlng will be benched
and jud_ged. (L)
Ill On Slllga Stereo.

. ,.

(j~. AWJJ
y

D Prince Valleiif Stereo. r:;l
8:05 (!) MOVIE: An Eye lor 1n
Eye (2:00)
6:30 (2) • 0) Blouom Blossom
winds up speechless after
she joll: debate team .
Stereo.
Ill ill American
Dlloctlva A drug-sling
Informant needs protection
when her cover Is blown.
Stereo. C
(!) Are Y1iu Being Sarvecf'l
111 On SIIQa Slereo.
11J Bile* ftallon Stereo. r:;1
9:00 (2). aJ1 MOVIE: 'In tile

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I FEEL. 6C12fl:T FOR MY
FfO!t, I 1HINK He5 WAITING
FOR A F;o~.IR LADY•••

AND M'l' NCM15 BeiNEIVE:RY UNCOOPERATIVE.

Kt6er HIM
AND~

HIMINlOA
HANDSOME
PI&lt;!INCe . •.

Une of Duly: Siege II
Mlrlon' NBC Monclly Night
tJwiiMI Movie• (2:00) Stereo.

rn·w•
'The~ ol
(PI 2 Of ABC

Proof
2)'
Mondly Night Mo1lll (2:00)

s••aeo. n E1parltnca
til
Stereo.

BARNEY

,W~~~s::e ~OU
I

I GOT ATREAT
FER "AMEN"

NECK 'OF
WOODS?

.. .·-

.,

~·

Wesl
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

It
It
5NT
7t

ized.

Eut
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Nortll
2t
4+
7+
Pass

Opening lead: • 9

In principle, bridge bidding should
be like thai, each partner describing
his hand to the other, and eventually
one partner selecting the optimal final
contract. However, the limited vocabulary, the lack of bidding space and
the opponents' interference combine
to make this a difficult goal. But occa·
sionally everything does fall into place
and the perfect auction OC!CUrs. For
such an auction the International
Bridge Press Association gives the an·
nual Romex Award.
In last year's winning sequence,
South, Brian Gtubok, opened one dia·
mond. Immediately North, Edgar Ka·
plan, could sense a slam. He put his
partner In the picture with a strong
jump shift. South showed spade support; North showed diamond support.
Now South used the Grand Slam

Force, askong abOul his partner's dia·
· mood honors. The seven-club response
promised two of the top three ca ~ds.
South bid seven diamonds.
Note that in seven spade9, one club
trick must be lost. There are only .12
tricks: six spades, one bear~ four dia·
monds and one club. In seven dia·
moods, Glubok started with the sa!lle
12 tricks. But after winning the heart
lead and drawing trumps, he genetat·
ed a 13th trick with a heart ruff in tbe
dummy. His club Jdser disappeared on
one of dummy's spade winners.
When you need a discard or two,
choose as trumps the suit that is equal·
ly divided.

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Cooked In

liquid
7 Bllllb1llar Ty
.

11 King oltho
Huno
12 Actor Hum-

14 g~~ 15 Ph;;ogrlflh
Inventor
• 11 Wlduhoe

Anawtr to Prewloua Puult

36Pag-Halrt
37 Ball36 -~ICkll
3g Dra n•u•
clltnntla
42 - Flllgtrlld
45 Uen trugiiiY
48 Guido's high
note
48 More
cheerful
51 Kind ol
powI!

llza

53 BrlghUy
thlnlng
54 Dlmlnllh
55 Eya lnllcUon
56 Puullng

: 17 Creme- :
creme
· 18 Sllavoleu
· g1rmenl
; 20 C.vlly
•22 - Hill (Do: troll aran1)
. 25 Extinct bird
21 Long Um1
' 21 Seed
31 Bo1rd
lllrcroll
33 Promoter
35Bia1Hndglrtlc IIUCO

II tuition

DOWN

5 Ignore
8 lnhtblllnte
of Dtnmerk

1 BIHIIIIItr

Ruth

2 Slou1 Indian
3Ltt-(Baltltl

tlbum)
4 Womtn'a-

13 Powerful
explollvt
(abbr.)
18 NODHDII

7 Food fllh

8 Gothic 1rch
8 lnlamoue
albllno•
10
12 Uahtlno
dawlct

St•'•

20 G:"trtcal
. unl!
21 Sctndlntvlt&amp;
22 Small 111mon
23 Egg cell
24 AcDvt
28 Direction
27 AWill Of
(2 Wdl.)
.
28 Qu lor atoni
30 01 grodll r

1-12

•

32 Rtlldua
:
34 Quick lunch ·

3t

=~lila

form
40 VIlli organ
41 Buolna...

il!.t:.9

RobtriiQn.
10:05 (J) MOVIE: Bla,adlporl (RI
(2:00)
10:30 111 Crook and Chan
1t:OOCJJ• Ill Ill•
IIJ Ntwl

AS'l'R()..QRAPH

manc8 and you'll lind II. The AJlrO"' ·i LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Things must
:Graph Malchma~er lnst.,.lly · reveals managed elllclenlly tOday or
which Biglla are romanticallY perfect lor there's the chance you could taka
you. Mall $2 plus a long, sell·ad· step lllrward and two steps back . 11 vou
:dreued, stamped envei"PP! to Malcl&gt;- make gains, be sure to consolidate
maker, c/o this newspaper, P,O. Box accompliShments.
BERNICE
91421, Cleveland, OH ~4101·S.28.
(Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) II mljjhl
BEDEOSOL PIICEI (Feb. :10!1' c11211JII's bell YIR!JO
wlsetodaytowalkawaytromcompllca·
not to dltcuM your plana and lntenllons Ilona that appear Insurmountable. Solu·
.before you hiVe a cltance IO II!IPiernenl Ilona aren't likely to be found wtlh lndl·
them today. ll you lip your hand prema· ylduala who diametrically oppose you.
turely, II could- your probabilities LIIRA (hpt. 23-0c:L Zl) Be doubly
for succau. ·
'
protective of your poahlon today, eape.
ARiEl (lllrcll 21·April 111. You o;an clally II you are Involved In an Important
-Iller out financial uncertainties to- •Joint endeavor. When the chips are
day - II you manage your re1011rces .dowo, II could be every mW) lor hlmaell.
pNdently: But II you atart buying what ICORPIO IOcL M-Now. l2)1n order to
you don't .,..cl, things could get out of · negotiate an tlltctlve IIIJreemenltOday,
killer.
.
· ·
.r .
· • lltert IIIUII be p.rlty with regard to ev·
TAIIIiiii(Aprii»&gt;IQ20Jueemodtr· eryone Involved. " 11'1 a Q90d dell lor
1M mttlllodnnd l8cllce today, becalru you, but not lOr llltitra, 11 won't Blind
f'etL 11, 11111
you mlgllt be Inclined io be • shade too the 1111 o1 time.
.
'
·
I
.
; · 111111... Hanll behavior C!lllld prow '.UGIII'rAIIIUI (Now. :IJ.Otc. 21) " You're likely to ~ apllndld, oppol'lu-l ~'
pia you're IIIYOIWd wltll tOday /night not
nlllllln 1111 v- all8ld 10
(liar
Ill ·Organla perlomt yp to,.C;:'*'tatlona.

=
,_.1tldlll•

tt....,.

•::=1 ...,.,

=e

=:

.

a c•

~==Q
liD. Menlo 1111

liJJ ~ Stereo. Q
IIIOn .... s-.

illlpolltlllllgltl

1D tloldertown Stereo. Q

11:30~ ~:lmll
~~XVI, ~ ·.

Wlnllr llllnli In lnd around
1111 '12 Wlnllr &lt;llmeo. Q

·~·
~~McnTnln

10 111111 (PG) (2:00)

n.er..

, ...,.. . yaurame~ay......... dllegtt.... . rora.11o.no1

...

-

Soorl~

D 700 Club WHII Pll

=-p
.'

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

·
Stereo. Q
9:30 121 Colega BeollelbaM
Colorado il Iowa State (L)
10:0011? ......
til Dancing Man: Peg Leg
Belli The lilt of 84-year-old
Clayton Peg Leg Bates Is
traced as he recounts some
of the triumphs he
experienced and obstacles
he encountered. (1 :00)
. Ill A~n Elpalltnct
Stereo.

WAIT RIGHT
THAR II

DOIN' IN

"

Ill T a "'r!
Ill Nttlwllle Now Stereo.
8 Lony King Uvel
D F11htr Dowling Mytlarlta

algr-111 you ,... you'll ba unable !a
The men 401*11ve uatatance
you 1111•.tile baller.
.
llllll -:..::a~••
CAII08 (,_.JWulr Ill Tlillla 0111
. Vllllr·
•.,_ If ~ Ollh6M,.. diYI wllln ,av'rt iltolly to
Clo
~
~ do 1111111' ~~~~~~-W!l."
Wortc Dill
~.. •a..-.,., ~ 111....,1 tltln you "'"
, _,,
.,.....
'. . to IOoiC
ro- OIJn'tlll your pals 111!1 ""
l

•

• Q8 4 3

+A6

Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean
are the greatest ice-dancers ever. AJ
they glide a round the r ink, all their
movements are perfectly syncbrpn·

e

IIDl IIJ • xVr Olympic

Mlflli1Mitllllllllllltl 11c•

~

+QJ87

SOUTH
tKIO&amp;?
'AJ 2

By Pllllllp Alder

ra

T,t,LK INTO GOIN4f

on U.
It G· lOr
101111- to !Ole fiiiU I llw
AClUJIMII (........ 11)

·r

2 - 10

Cl 11192tly " EA , Inc

... AND 1'10111
••• HE'• PROBABI.Y Till'
IMAlltTANT\.Y... . ONLY ONE GUl. COULl!

FOR ONE

~~~AU.EY IS

llrnltflr

•

Fortune Q
1121• Family Feud
Ill ~ 1 Stllr Stereo.
121 College Beakelball
Villanova at Pittsburgh (L)
Cro1111re
7:35 (J) Sanford and Son
8:00 CJl
91 Fresh Prince of
Bel Air Will's lever can only
be cured by hawing his
tonsils remow~. Slereo. C
l!l MOVIE: E11y Money IRl
(2:00)
(]] 1))8 FBI: Tho Unlokl
Slorieo A highway patrol
officer Is lhe primary suspect
in a highway crime. Stereo.

ALLEYOOP

81

=""1nd t'1.. F'::....E::

Aapoae•ed Moblte Homn To

2br, Vinyl

Services

: ,987643

partnership
in tandem

New1Hour

Loto llodot 4000 JD, SlBSO:

Long 480 Dl-1 Troctor, 6uoh
llog, $4,450. OWnor Will

mlthld, Si,500.

PM.

mlcrownt, TV, tt..a, AC,
many extrae, $1,000. 304-1755408,

EAST

uu
'KQIO
+to 9 2

tJ5

8PrimeNe.. C

Motor Homes
1989 M1llord 15th whool wllh

. WEST

IIDJ Wheal

Old Wotllngton upright plono. _m_J_
. ------$50 or boot offor. 304-&amp;75-7114.
79
campers &amp;

1~o.589-

.•.. .

+K95 32

~ MacNtl~thrar

Budaot Tr~nomlootor., Uood I
rwbuTH, olo~lng ot SH: AWo
Porto. &amp;14-24S.58n, ~~

Rotund. 50 Homoo To Ch-o.

tA K 7 6
+10 4

c

Accessories

18111 Sunohlno 14165, l.lbr, 2
Bathal SH Up On Lot, 614-441·
0313, o14-44H011.
Short Tlmo On Job? Pool Crodlt
Hlllory A Problom? Mony

I ..__ ______

@ ·SporteCanter

D The W11ton1
7:0511) Addamo Family
7:30 (J) • @ Jtoplrdyl
(!) Now II Cali Be Toil
(]] Enll!!!lnmtnl Tonight
Stereo:_GI
1Jt 8 Mimed...With Children

•1983 C·Rav, 21 A. Cuddy Cobin,
v.a, Elcottont CondHion, ,,..
cludoo ~~~ ~;ut-. can Aftor
lp.m. St 4 1183.

Tax And TIU1 Down. Preowntd
Mobil• Hom11, Use Your Tax

PHILLIP
ALDER

8 Moneyllne

Auto Pans&amp;

1'urn your duller into t:ush,
SelUt the easy UJuy... by plume,

m11· 11jJir." fm· f'llltl In mltmnr.ll' nrh•8/

FRANK AND ERNEST

NORTH
:~-•-tt
+AQ8652

'5

liJJ MacG'lver Q

Motorcycles

Roll Wollor Pupploo Gorman 74
Brod, Pwonto O.F.A, 2 Moloo :WI:::------~":""--:--Loft, $300 Eoch. A~C Roglo·
II PIV _caoh lor uood motor
twod. &amp;14-245-5161.
cylo pono. Coii814-4JII.lQ55

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S
TO GET ANSWER

BRIDGE

ll) Leglalltive u~

!:?

TWo

1987 Plnecrtek 14x70, 2 bid·
room, 1 bath, tOI:al eltc heat

f :n/1

49,000 mi., power door locke,

Block, brick, oowor olpoo, win·
- · tlntolo, otc. Clsudo Win·
tn, Rio Gr1nde, OH Call 614· 72 Trucks for Sate
24;.;5..:-11;,;2: . 1 . - - - - - - :.
1977 Chevy Bon1n11. 1171
Pets for Sale
Chovy ScOffodalo. Boch runt &amp;
56
- - - - - - - - - looko good. 304-675-ISH or
675-6247.
.
Groom ond Supplv Shop-Pot
Grooming. All brHda, styl11. 1979 4x4 Chevy Luv truck1 runt
lamt Pel .Food Otallr. Julie good, 4a4 worb, low ml•age,
4sp., rust on body, $600, 614New Whitt 30 Inch GE eltc cook Wobb. Coli '14-146-0231.
llovo. $200. firm. 304-e75·1418.
992-7421
AKC F1m111 Baton Terri~r. 4
months old. Black I Whitt. 1990 GMC V-5 5 Spood, Foctory
PICKENS FURNITURE
2br Mobllt Home, A"'rtncel,
$200. 304-675-5736.
AC , PSIPB, CC, PW, POL, 13,600
NowAiood
And DepooH Noodod. 614-367Houuhold tumlt~. 112 mi .
Mllll, $9,500. 614-446-7357.
7866.
Jorricho Rd. PL PI-nt, WY, AKC regl11trtd Boxer pups,
304-582·3311
1991 Ford Rangsr, 19,000 Mlltt,
2br Aetertr-.ce And Dtpoelt A• call 304-875·1450.
15,500. 614-441~731.
qulred, 614-256-1922.
Boou11tul
Chocoloto
Lobrodor
SWAIN
3 nice mobile hom11 tor rent AUCTION I FURNITURE. 52 Fwnolo Puppy, 6-10 Wooko,
just south of Athans, starting at Olivo St., Galllpollo. How &amp;UHd Sholl And Wormod, AKC Roglo· 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
$225/mo., csll 614·092·5528 or tumtture, huttl"', Wntem &amp; twod, $300. 814-146-8111.
1979 Ford F-150, 4x4, 351 Motor
614-385-8227
Work boolo. 814-141-3159.
l;)og Hou111 For Salt: Stvtral And Body, Exctllent Condlllon .
Slzn. 1 112 Milo Out Rl. 141, 614-446·1304.
Wayne Shoemaker. 614-4461979 Jeep CJ5, new top, 53,000
0593.
mll11, local owner, 304-&amp;75-1264.
Flah Tank, 2413 Jsckeon Ave.
Point Ploooont, ·304-875-2063, 1987 Ford Bronco, Full Slze, 1
lull llno TrDplcol flshj blrdo, Ownor, Low Mlloogo, 114-44661118.
email animals and tuppl 11 .
Aoglotorod block/ whlto ""'' 1988 f«d Ft50 414 XLT Loriol,
CoCkor Sponlol puppv, groot loadod, ollondod cab, $11,000,
$200, no chocko, 614·992· 6t4-ua2·7663

firm. 304-675-58117.
1887 Clayton Ridgewood, 3BR, 2
lull batho, ,.n11t1y tum'od. Now
on llntod too. 614-146-1841

3 papert~,$6.00

til M1c~a11rer
NtwoHourillGCI
e-

t9e5 Otdo Delio·88 Broughman,

_,3_65_.- - - - - - - I $95: Kon111oro Woohot S75: 55

the offering.

3 bldroomt,

rw

1987 Dodge Shelby Shadow

CSX, 2.2 Turbo, lntorcoolod,_!sPMd AMIFM con. AC, ""
Pl!. Srinouo lnqul~oo ontyf
Evenings 614-192-6125.

614-146-1610, 614-446-4835,

for Sate

CA&amp;tl?H

®
The JeHe110111_D
(]]lnlldt Edltiolt ~;;~·

?te~
. E~nmen1 Tonight

11:00 AM. (Union modo Political·

32 Mobile Homes

Want to:
PIN down EXTlU.

IJIG

Both In Excellent Coildftlon,

Ravenswood. Fri, Sit, Sun,
noon-1:00 PM. Other dar- tor
hourt csll 304-273-5655 blfort

FltlertnCII To
Plonnod
Poronthood
01
Southall Ohio, 3!16 Rlchlond
Avonuo, Athono, Ohio 45701 Bv
Fobruory 16, 1992, EOEIESP.

151 S.Cond Avenue, GalllpoUs.

. 6:35 (J) Andy Qrlffllll
7:00
aJI Wheel of Fortune

illl Currtnt AHalr C
~~s:,T~lt: Tift Ntll

eomin,

Emptoymtnt

Honda Robot, Bt4-i49·284t
1987 Chivy Novli: high mlloogo,
neede repair. Good lransporla-

THESE SQUARES

1. -1
SCfiAM.lETS ANSWERS
Betray • Niece • Valve - 09ftly • DIRECTLY
Our local candy store owner claimed his candy was
almost like home made. He says that It comes straight
from the factory and then DIRECTLY to us.

121UpCion
D Zorro Stereo. Q

1988 Nltun Pulzar, Loaded,

Clothn Dryer, 614-256-1238.

gotltble, 614·992•3027

- -- - - -

Sind

• Andy OritiHII

liJJ Boooby Ooo

1987 Chevtrollt C1prlce, 1186

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

A
V

IIJ. CBS Ntwo Q

Frott Free RlfriQerator, Copper·
to,.. Woo $154, CUt To J95;
Small housa, 2 Mdroom, 1813 R•t;lu:r•tor Htrvest Gold, Ukl
Jatforson Blvd. 2 Mdroom
~25
2101 1/2 Jofforoon Blvd. •'14-~'ls: I Now, 95 : uprl""t
... Froozor.,
:
~
Whirlpool Woohor Horvolt Gold,

Hous11 tor nit or rent on land
contract, down payment Ia n•

dyvlllo Pool Offlco, Jockoon
County, WV. 5 mlloo foot I·T7,

e

Square One TYStereo.

Surpt,. onny comllougo, donlm, moro lnl«l!!atlon Coli 814-446Corhort, ronlll clothl"\c, Jr. 2342, Ask tor hul.

Private Pay Phon• Route,
EOEIESP
T I
- - · ••m 9
llltllme Resldllll Income Call
~ ~ra=n=·~·~
c• , =~
~
-~=~~~·~Now 1-600·226-3305.
Losl : While Bird Dog With Black Alto alnger nHdtd tar
~ Spots, Fltward Offered! VIcinity: "Fiallectlons Trio". PIMH reply Pooolblo $400. Wotk Stufflnm
:. Georges Crllk Roed, GllllpoUa, to Rt. 2 Baz 314-8, Lltlrt, WV Envolopoo At Homo,Got Crodft
· 614-446·2445, Ask For Paul.
Cllrdl, lolnt Even Whh Bad 23
Professional
25253.
Crodl Or No CrodH. Ruoh $1.00
Services
Sotf·AddrooHd Slompod En·
,7
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Yard Sale
ExctUent
P1y,
Benallll, vol- 110 To: D&amp;A Supplloo,
Wo C.n Hotp You Find MONEY
Tronoportatton,
407·2a2-11117, Box1443, Folrbcm,OH 45324.
FOR COLLEGE. Evory Student
Ext. 571. ta.m.·10p.m. Toll
RN Chorgo Nurso: 88 bod long lo Etlalblo For Rnonclol Ald. EJ.
Aotundod.
torm caro facility ••king RH lor Ira Ordln1ry Tuition Servlct.
Gallipolis
AVON I All Arooo I Shlrtoy port limo hours vortous ohlfto 814-44&amp;-7054.
&amp; VIcinity
Spur., 3[)4..675-M:te.
evalll~. Salary comnnauntt
wHh uporlonco EOE. oppty
ALL Yard Salas Mull Bt Paid In Be on TV many nlldld for care Haven of Point Pllaaant,
. Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. commercial•. Now hiring all Rl. , BOI 32e, 30+475-3005.
. the day before the ad It to run. 1goo. F01 colllng lnlo 815·77iReal Estate
Sunday td lllon • 2:00 p.m. 7!11 111. T·231
L•borert Wlntld
Friday. Monday ~Million • 2:00
Coomotologlol Hoodod: Gaurwn· Elm to $586, will lrtln, plec.
p.m. Saturday.
IHd $170 Por Wook, Paid wort!. 1110 by conll'lct, 1-800- 31 Homes for Sale
V•c•tlont, Call614-446·1287.
221-81111
3 Unit Rental, Situated On 112
KUWAIT, SAUDI WORKERS Patient Service Aulstanl, Ap- Acrt LDthMalnttnance FrH, Ex~
Public Sale
8
NEEDED:
proximlttly 20-25 Hourt: Per conant S opo, 814-446-8568.
$35.00 &amp; Up Ptr Hour. Tu Fr.a. WNkt· Mull Ba Enorgollc And
&amp; Auction
BOCh Sklttod I Unoklltod For Ablo o Wort&lt; Flnlblo 'Schodulo
Info. Coli 615-77V-5505 Ell. K· Including Day. Evening And
Rick Pearaon Aucllon
·full time auctlon11r, com 1 6ua.
Soturdoy Hours. Modlclf Offlco
·auction ltrvice. Llcenud
lo,
Elporionco Holptut; Wilt Train
Wtsl VIrginia, 304·1'73-5785.
Maturw, Anponslall Person
Who lo SonsHivo To Blnh Con·
trol And Roproductlvo HooHh
Noodo 01 Cllonlo. MUll Bo Wall
Qrganlzldi Accul'lte With
Flguroo And Aocord Kooplng :
Have Superior CommuniCIItiOn
Sklllo. Mull Bo Abto' To Work
Undtr Guldellus With Minimal
Suporvlolon. ~oqulroo Ralloblo
11 Help Wanted
Tronoportallon~ AbUitj To Work
In Meigs, utllll, l.lwrencl
Counties And Other Situ If
Noodod. Tlmo And Out 01
Wanttd To Buy: Junk
County Trovol Pold. Start $5.50.

Lorry Llvoty. 514-3118-nol.
lop P,lcoo Pold: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ringo, Sllvor Colno,
GOld Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,

i

·

lion car. Reduced: $1,000. For

•lz•
camllaug•, Sam
m•
rvlllo'o olnco 1984 booldo Son·

lhe ehueklo quotod
. ....;..1..-1..-.1..-1-.--'·
bv filling In tho mlutn; -d•
L -.1.
vou develop from step No. 3 below.

"W r:;l

~lg Sovlngo On All Corpol In
Stock. Cooh And Corry,. Mo~
lohon Cor"""', 814-141-11144.
.-Color T.V., Sm1ll Froozor, lot·
tory Chorgor, Poww Toolo, Bllo
VCR
Eloctric
Typowrltor,

1615.
Big Country Houoo: Depaoli
And Reflranc11 Required.
Tormo: To Bo Dlocu- On In·
opoctlon. 614·3711-2209.

•: 2736 ot 614-992·2380

Wllh Or Without Uotore.

54 Miscellaneous
.
Merchandise

1

1-"""TI....;;,
. lr-'--111'1!'5~,"""TI-l • •g~:pleto

~,lei,:.

305 H.O. can oftO. e p.m. 8141988 Monto Corle SS, loodod,
446·7651.

• one who knows you are
innocent and is willing to
r,-.~M~E~J~P~U~R--. spend every cent you have to
1-...L.--L.....JL.......L.....t

1:05 (J) Beverly 1111111111
6:30 (J) • aJ1 NBC Nowa Q
I!) Saved by "" Bell

15 A.LREADV A
MILLIONA(RE

houot, 614-ua:Z.7Z31, ovonlngo
1988 Lincoln Town Cor Loodod
111 or,tono. 82,000ml Wall
molnto nod ~Molly $5,900 or boot ollor814-44&amp;-7104

.

8 World Today
D Rln Tin Tin. K·9 Cop
Stereo. Q
·

OF A DOG, HE

AMIFM, cauatta, 4 eyl, new tX•

of

I

o Sporte Reporlero

.

tla~ Aoro, SE, Elcollonl Shapo
614·2156-8419 Anytlmo, Or 61~
256·1778 Ahor 5p.m.
1984 Dodgo Arioo, 4 door, block,

Malt,

1~--.....,.;,-.Y-,-i_;.;,y~--~1 1
S E E N U ~~I Overheard in lobby court·
h:~~,~;.l.:..,lr-;;,lr--1·7
house: "An attorney is some·

IIlii 1111 0 .

Ma-2... ovonlngo
tl84 ca,oro Z-26 1 H-. 350

Shapa, 78,000 Milia; 1984 Pon-

laying hono, 614o66a-1902

(]]

@NtWI
I!) VIdeo PoSquare One TV Stereo.

eng, auto, loldta, $3000, or

Used Mobile Horn11. Call 814·

: I 1 I I I

EVENING

PIOOL !14-t4HIOO doyo, 8,_:

rooster, 6 Banty hens, 13 big

••Y tor firewood,
30H75-3903 dor 3:00 PM.

I NtLOVI

8

MON., FEB. 10

2

11184 ·BMW 3181, 73"20111, ounroot, auto, •mnm atertO
orong.. block loothw lntlrlor'

t·Robblt Buglo, moll. 1.Chowl
Ml1, lomolo, 6l4-1112-2445

Tr• lo give

low to form fou r oll!!pli

IYtnlngt

Rentals

Senti

0 four
Rtorra~ letlors of
ICrambled wordo

MI-2600 dojl, 114-1411-2144

Giveaway

16 Cochlns

71

The
•

11183 Chovllto, Good Condhlon,
Air,
Now
Tlroo,
Good

4t A. I Room lrtCk Ronch, Ll' I
~ Dtn/Fp .Ko, Btk. Room, 3
lr, 1 111 lo\h, Full Flnlohod
loMmont, FUll 011 Furnoc., At·
IHlrod Woodbumor Slnglo At·
IIIChod Gr/Ofllnor, Ptuo 2 Cor
Garogo/ Woril Shop, 2 Lorgo
lomo, Crib/Shod, 314 MIIH OUt
Rl.2tl. 114-141-2380, Evonlngo
A""' 7:00p.m.

~ lllouthoollllfl

Aotroln

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry )Vrlght

3S Lots &amp; Acreage

Business
Training

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. Monday, February 10, 1992

· IIIY-:c;:~~ · l

...,.,.....,.._llllrlgllt ton ·
alai oonW'IIIImerriiiOr you.
OAMCOIIN (D.. ~Nan. 1t) Be oen-IOwiJd~IOCiay, butdonii 11a
OtilrlytKI'IIqJnt or loollall.ln order to
llllk8 1 good lmpi lion, you might
'

.

'

•

=.aa..!t.r"%"C:.:
Stno.

&lt;II Clllllll;l .

.
f

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~.

j

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y

C. F

T y I .,

vI

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F 0 H M c·D

uvc

XIIKBMYLH
II C

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'
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'

.LM:=,
,...,! !,. . . ~

12:GIIU'-=" ..

give ..-y more 11t1n you llt!IUfd..

i'
'~

11:31

CELEBRITY CIPHER

- -...~~,.o&amp;~"'a;,.••::"::.::::~.~=.:r'.,.:"L.tnd~.

II I L F I 0 .H I II H I C • '

KOXIHD
~~

KTIICitl.

-I ,:j..,.,.

. .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All ·IIIey did. lor mo II MGM cltonge my IMdlng """ and tho In my pool." - ~ Wlllfama..
' ·
"' ;
•

'·

•

4

•••

•

�.. .'

•
Monday, February 1o, 1992 ;

Sentinel

THIS WEEK'S GAMES
EAS,ERN EAGLES
BOYS
February 14 - Hannan Trace.....................H
February 18 - North Gallia..............................A

GIRLS

February 10 - North Gallia ....................................... H

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

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'
'-Indicates SVAC games

BOYS
February 11 - Warren Locai...................................... H
February 14 - Oak HIII.............................................H

GIRLS

February 10- Kyger Creek..................~.................... H
February 12- Waterford.......................................... H
February 13 - Southwestern..................................... A

1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE

JAN.10-AT OAK HILL*
JAN. 14-KYGER CREEK*
JAN. 17- SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN.18-AT ROSS SOUTH~6~T~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'
'-Indicates SVAC games

JAN. 8-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 9-0AK HILL*
JAN. ~1-AT MEIGS
JAN. 13-AT KYGER CREEK*
JAN. 16-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 23'-AT HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 27- EASTERN*
JAN. 30-At NORTH GALLIA'
FEB. 3-SYMMES VALLEY'
FEB. 6-AT OAK HILL*
FEB. 10-KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 12-WATERFORD
FEB. 13-AT SOUTHWESTERN*
'-Indicates SVAC games

MEIGS MARAUDERS
MEIGS MARAUDERS
BOYS
February 11 - Trimble..............................................A
February 14 - Federal Hocking.............:................... H

GIRLS

February 10- Wellston...........................................A
February 13 - Federal Hocking................................. 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-YORK
FEB. 3-AT BELPRE
FEB. 6-ALEXANDER
FEB. 10-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 13-FEDERAL HOCKING

Ohio Lottery

Tyson
found
guilty

EASTERN EAGLES

SOUTHERN TOR ADOES
SOU,BERN 'ORNADOES

Mei s observes National Vocational Week
Pick 3:862
Pick 4: 3525
Cards:
A-H ; 3-C; 10-D;
Low In mid 20s. Wednesday
cloudy. High In mid-30s.

5-S

PageS

Vol. 42, No. 195

Copyrighted 1992

1 Soctlon, 10 Pagu 25 conto '
AMultimedia Inc. Newopapar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, February 11, 1992

.

'

Middleport seeks additional Issue 2 funds
which is to be razed this spring ,
Park Street widening and paving,
and repair of a section of Broadway
•
AFJiication for an additional Street.
Council also voted to apply for
$33, 0 in Issue 2 funds through
the District 18, Ohio Public Works funds to clean the sewage lagoons,
Commission, for street improve- estimated to be over $300,000, in
ments will be made by Middlepon the competitive project program of
the Ohio Public Works.
Village Council.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
Council Monday night approved
the three projects for which fund· that in an earlier round of applicaing will be sought. They arc the tions, the village applied for about
new street to go through the pro· $30,000 for paving on Beech Street
posed housing area on Fifth! loca· from Park to Oliver, the block of
tion of the Betsy Ross bu•ldmg Pearl Street near the school, and
By CHARLENE HOEFLJCI:J
Sentinel News Staff

Hudson from Second to First
Streets. He said that funding
approval is expected in March.
Another paving project, the
mayor reported, will be First
Avenue . That work will be done
with Community Development
Block Grant monies, he noted.
It was also decided to apply for
comprehensive housing funds, this
to include housing rehabilitation
and infrastructure work, such as
sewers, sidewalks, and paving. The
mayor reponed that the village has
a consultant who is willing to work

on a contingency basis. He noted guardrail, stairs, and a public boat will not be taken.
that the village will be required launching nunp.
Council gave a second reading
when applying for fund s to target
A copy of a consumer survey to an ordinance regulating the
an area for housing rehabilitation form to be used in conjunction with planting of trees on village properand that overall impact on the area an application for downtown revi- ty along streets. II has been report;
is a important fa ctor in getting talization fund s was presented to ed that the ordinance will improVe
funding.
Council for approvaL The survey is the village's prospects of receiving
The project to improve the boat part of required community assess- a grant for tree planting from the
ramp in Middlepon is expected to ment before the villag~ can submit Dcparunent of Natural Resources.
get underway this spring, Mayor the application to the slnte.
Mayor Hoffman reported to
Hoffman said . The job is being
The telephone survey will be Council on the cost reduction in
advertised and bids will be accept· conducted over the county, and will workers compensation charges
ed through 4 p.m. on Feb. 24.
relate to the appcarnnee or the vil- attain ed by joining the Ohio
The work will include stream lage and what the business section Municipal League. He said that the
bank protection, asphalt pavement, has to offer to shoppers. Names
Con!inued on page 3

State controllers OK
more school loans

Gallia, Meigs districts included in list ··

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Stale controllers have approved
requests from 15 more school districts to borrow money to finish out
the year.
The Meigs Local and Gallia
County Local school districts arc
included in the lisL
The districts bring to.57 the
numher which have ha~ ~tum to
the state' ~ loan· program smce last
summer, and more requests arc on
the way.
In other business Monday, the
state Conuolling Board cleared th6
way for the opening of a new
• prison and authori!ed a contract
. ·that the Deparunent of Administra·
live Services says can save money
on stabl employee health care.
James Van Keuren, financ e
director of the Deparunent of Edu·
cation , said the latest loan autho·
rizations total $12.1 million.
He said about II more are
expected to be certified by State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson as
underfunded and eligible for the
loan program.
Another 25 are expected to seek
authority to increase the amounts
of loans approved earlier, Van
ACCIDENT
- Brian K. Taylor, 20
gency squad to Veterans Memorial Hos)lltal
Keuren said.
or near Racine, said a patch or lee on the pave·
where she was treated and released. Ne1ther
He said the districts that want tD
ment caused him to lose control or his vehicle.
Taylor nor the second passenger, Angie
increase their loans were caught
Tbe 1978 Mercury went over an embankment
Edmand, 19, Racine, were injured in the accishort as a result of recent spending
dent investigated by the Meigs County Sheriff's
and thro.ugb a renee berore coming to a stop.
cuts ordered by Gov. George
Department. Taylor was charged with railure to
Injured In the accident was Arnie Staten, 17, a
Voinovich to balance the state's
passenger. She was taken by the Racine emer·
control his vehicle. (Picture by Dennis Wolfe I
recession-riddled budget.
Since July I, the ·57 districts
have been authorized to borrow a
total or $80.3 million from local
banks. Under the loan program, the
state pays orr loans with funds
withheld from the subsidies of the
borrowing districts.
An open bouse featuring voca· dents from all three high schools in enrollees in action and to confer
The lar~est of the newest loans
tional skills competition will be the county. Sophomore students with th ~ the counselors and teach- is $3.06 m11lion for the Lorain City
staged at Meigs High School and their parents from the three ers about what is offered.
School District, followed by $2.36
Thursday evening, 6to 9 p.m.
Schools have been given a special
Visitors are invited to move million for the East Cleveland City
The vocational classes serve stu- invitation to see the department freely through the school during School District
The others are: Meigs Local,
~~d~~~n~~rd~~mayuseanavailable Meigs
County, · and Southern
•
During the evening the annual Local, Columbiana, both $1.0 I
skills competition in the areas of million, followed by:
auto mechanics, welding, electron·
Chippewa Local, Wayne,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An realize the extent of the benefits of ics, cosmetology, and nursing will $180,346; Clermont-Northeastern
Ohio University study shows that vocational education, both the early take place. At 9 p.m. in the cafctc· Local, Clennonl, $917,000; Qlvenvocational education graduates are advantage in ~ngs and a contin- ria, the winners wiU be recognized try Local, Summit, '$775,000;
making more money than other uing .growth in earnings," Qhaza. and presented prizes.
Crooksville Exempted Village~
high school graduates.
lab said.
The local skills competition is Perry, $223,000; Gallia County
I.A . . Ghazalah, an OU
He said the $1udy is the only one set up by Community Advisory . Local, Gallia, $162,000; Louisville
economiSt, used data from the in ·the nation that uses infonnation Committees in the respective 11fC8S. City, Stark, $636,451; Marietta
Internal Revenue Service to track from the Internal Revenue Service Local winners advance to a region- City, Washing!~, $913,000; Miller
15,055 students who graduated in for income documentation.
a1 level of skills competition, and
19:79. The study was released Mon.
someoftheotherfindings:
from there the' winners move into
day.
'
.
.
.
-Graduates of post-secondary state competition.
They were compared w1th thetr vocational education programs outFrom 4 to 7 p.m. in the cafete·
couillerparts in the general' work earned their counterjlans, who had ria, the Meigs Band Boosters will
force who were of the same age one to ·three Y.e4rS of college, by 73 serve a homemade chicken noodle
and SCI,lder, had ~e Sl!llle years of percent in the health field and 23 · dinner. Cost will be $3.50 for
schoohng and hved 10 the same percent in technical education.
adults, and $2 for those 12 and
region.
'
.
-Post-secondary vocation pro· under.
·
II
. The study.group mcluded 8!l'du- grams boosted the income of
ates of 12 htgh school VOCIIIOnal women more than men- 50 pere
' educ~lion programs and two ~I ' cent to 90 pen:ent CJllllJll!red with Police shoot suspect
•techmcal colleges.
20 percent to 55 percent respec.
Ohazalah. fpund that by 1,986, uvcly.
·· ' '
·
· ·
the 1979 g~aduates of vocational , -Men still catned the highest · KENT, Ohio (AP) - A man
WASHINGTON (AP) .edu.cation hish sc~ool ~rograms · average income.:Gfllduares or four suspected of shooting out windows Although the economy is showing
....... 13 e
4
K s u· ·
den renewed signs of w~ess, many
.e~"''" . . P· ~ce~tlo
percenl programs dOminated,lly men had at a ent tate mversoty·stu t . top forecasters beheve .it will
more than theu htgh schqol coun- · the hilhest 1986 incomes, from aeartme.nt complex ·was shot and
· · b • .
·
·
$
8
0
$20
629
killed
by
a
city
police.
officer·
late
resume
modest
growth
Y.pnng, a
..-...-- · .
.
I • I to . • ·
ne·w survey reveals
· He also IBid there was a widen- Retention tates by employers . Monday nigh~ !':!'lice said today,.
•
ing income gap·bctween !)le two of the 1979 group w
. as 82.75 !JerPolice i~Ufied the man killed
"~e eco1n90my \5 exh.pee ted to
i!OUP.In the ~ouith, .flfth, SIXth and cent, a decline of two percent com- as Mark K, Cunningham, 35, of remam near Y at 10 1 e current
seventh ycaB t~ the worlt force.
pared with'1983.
,
Ken!, and th'C police.officer who quarter before m9•i.ng toward a
·· "Theae findings.should help us
·
ftred on him as Jack lfcnnan.
Continued on page 3

City-New Cleveland Local, Put·
nam, $97 ,000; Minerva Local ,
Stark, $416,000; Western Reserve
Local, Mahoning, $11 1,255; and
Wynford Local, Crawford,
$256,000.
In other busincss,the board:
- Approved transfers totaling
more than $12.6 million for train·
ing, equipment and other costs
related to the opening of the new,
500-bcd Trumbull Correctional
Institution in September.
- Approved a $213,000 contact
with Coopers &amp; Lybrand, Colum·
bus, to help the Department of
Administrative Services develop a
managed health care program for

stale emplo yees . The program
envisions savings through referrals
to " preferred-phy ~ ic ians" who
agree to cenam fee doscounts.
- Transferred $1.063 million
from the state's Emergency Fund.
to match $2.06 million in fede'!ll
funds to pay counnes for admmostering the Department of Human
Services ' child support enforcement program.
- Permitted the Department of
Natural Resources to purchase
$100,000 worth of urban angler
education manuals to t.each young
~oplc and others m. ClUes ho~ to
f1sh. The program IS fully rcom burscd by the federal government

Vocational skills competition
to highlight open house Thursday
Vocational education grads .
doing better according to study

•

'Subdued' ---Local briefs----,
URG project groundbreaking set
recovery
.corecas't
sqby s.pri,' n.g

~·

A groundbreaking ceremony for the $2.3 million addition to the
physical education center at the University of Rio Grande will be
held Wednesday, Feb. 12, at9:30 a.m.
The addition will provide a multi-purpose gymnasium, new
officeS and classrooms and increased access to the present building
which was completed in 1969. The addition will add 28,000
feetlo the current structure.
General contraCtor on the project is The Nadal in Co., Plain City .
and conslrUCtion is estimated 10 be complete by spring 1.993, Fund:
ing for the job was appropriated in the capital improvements bill
approved by the Ohio ~gislature in 199o. ·
·.
For more; infonnatlon, contact the Office of University Relations · .
at the University of Rio Grande at 245-5353, ext. 3~7. The toll-free
num)ler in Ohio is 1-800-282-7201.
.

Area man hospitalized after wreck
wa5

A La)lgsville man
flown to Grant Medieal Cenler in Colum-· ·
bus .yesterday evening following a &lt;)De-vehicle wreck on state Route
' · Continued on page 3
·

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