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•
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
·

�Commentary

Tuesday, February 11, 1992

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OH IO Weather

TUesda~February11,1992

Wednesday, Feb.12

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cold temperatures returning to Ohio

Accu-Weathere rorccast

The Daily Sentinel

There's nobody here but us Puritans

111 Court Street
. Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS or THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Pubtisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The A~ociated Press, Inland Daily Press Association 11nd
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETrERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
words long . All letters are subjecl to editi ng 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 perso nalities.

Letters to the editor

Ben Franklin could have told us:
In this world of politics, nothing
· can be said to be certain, except
demagoguery and taxes. And we
know how much President Bush
hates both.
Bush especially hates to hear
Democrats remind us that twothirds of the money government
will lose with his capilal gains tax
cut will be kept by America's richest I percent. He ridiculed the
"demagogues" by telling a downhome State or the Union joke:
" ... those or you who say, 'Oh no.
someone who's comrortable may
benerit from this' - you ki.nd or
rem1nd me or the old defimt1on of
the Puman, who couldn't sleep at
night worrying that somehow.
someone, some~!!"re, was out havmg a good ume.
.
No doubt, they were st tll
chortlmg m the country clubs, as

a

SeVeRaNCe
CHe.cK?

Appreciates help

the Bushes left the Capitol to drlve
home. Now il can be to.ld: George ·
and Barbara didn't really go home.
They just drove up the road to 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue. Now, some
Puritans may think that is Bush's
home. But no. I[ the Bushes called
that home (as Money Magazine
noted), they'd be paying $30,000 a
year in District or Columbia
income taxes- and they pay zero.
Other Puritans may think the
Bushes' home is in Kennebunkport,
Maine, where they own a 26-room
mansion in which they spent 108
nights since Inauguration Day. But
no. 1r they called Kennebunkport
their legal residence, they'd be pay·
ing $29,000 a year in Maine's
income taxes_ and they don'L
Only the Impuritans in our midst
(read here: tax lawyers) will quickIy grasp all the benefits that go. with
the territory the Bushes' list as the11

YouR SHaRe.
oF Tfle Pe.ac.e.
DiViDe.NP!

I am certain you read in the Criminal Investigation, the
Daily Sentinel, Thomas San[ord or Pomeroy Emergency Squad, the
New York, was recently sentenced Nurses and Dr. Patterson at Veter[or two counts or rape in the Meigs ans Memorial Hospital, and my
Common Pleas Court.
own o[ficers or the Pomeroy Police
With the rna hours or help rrom Department and anyone else who
the [allowing people we were able helped in some way on the Sanrord
to get a conviction: The Meigs Case. I wish to thank you all. Your
County Sheri[r's Ofrice, Middle- help was greatly appreciated.
port Police Department, Prosecut·
Chier Gerald E. Rought,
in g Auoney Ofrice, Bureau or
Pomeroy Police Chief

No backing today
The low standing or American
students among the others or the
world
will rail on deaf ears in this country. (Re[erences is made to testing
results shown on Channel 3 TV
among the industrialized nations or
the world).
Real academic achi~f~'Mnt is

·w ·i!t Ut,ii~try. I
on· observauon and per-

.Dill. I~

JQ

liasi!' th~
sonal experience .
When I started in the classroom
teachers could crack down and
generally
got good backing rrom parents and
the school-head. Tbat is no! so today and in my opinion its part of

the new liberalism creeping into all
phases of our society.
We get lip service, spend more
and more money and let the poilU·
cians run the schools.
We have some good teachers
but more or them is needed at all
levels. Real learning and achievement will take place when top
minds are in the classroom and
given what it lakes in support and
equipment to do the job.
School board members should
have to meet educational qualifications and for.get thai the public
schools are sports entertainment
centers.
Gayle Price

'Intentional Torts'
revisit legislature

~report.

Today in history
'
By Tile Allocllhel...._
.
.
.
. . today is TUCidly, Feb. 11, die 42nd day rl1992, ~ li'C 324 days
leiHn the yea-.
.
·
'
Today't lfiahUaht in Hillory: . .
.
On Feb. 1f. 1f90, Sotldl Afrbn bid: ICiiviJt Nelton Mlndela Yias
fiNd 1f1« 27 )'0111 in ~ Mandel&amp; wllbd tJwouab die pre of
ven~er prj.- 01mi"" Cllf' Torm. te111na off celelnliotlt 11110118 his fol-

Ylctor

w-..

'

.

Marlin Schram

Health care reform takes on new urgency
This past week the President put
rorward a comprehensive health
reronn proposal that most are viewing as a welcome, albeit somewhat
modest, ajlproach to the health care
problems ·that exist Most consider
the President' s proposal a good
starting point, but one that no doubt
would have to be considerably
modified i[ it is to gain passage by
theCon~s.

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The Legislature is being asked to again enact an
injured worker statute that the Ohio Supreme Court last year declared
unconstitutional.
But a bitter debate is almost certain.
The 1986 statute, backed by manuracturers and other employers, sup- ·
posedly helped protect them from unjustiried lawsuits stemming [rom
worlc place injuries already covered by.worke~; com~nsauon.
..
It also permitted employers to pay mto 311 Intenuonal Tort Fund so
they could share liabilities stemming rrom court-ordered damage awards.
The pending legislation tightens the definition of an tntenuonal ton,
defined earlier as an acctdenl caused by the neghgence or an employer
who knew that an accident "was substantially certain to occur."
It also contains a rormula ror rerunding an estimated $36 million that
employers paid into the ruod and authorizes. imurance ~mpanies to offer
coverage against claims under the new defimuon or an mtenuonal to.rt.
Employers have lobbied hard to re-enact the law, claimmg theor solvency ts threatened by exposure to [rivolous.la~suits ~t a time when their
workers' compensation assessments are conbnumg to mcrease.
A Senate-House conference committee, appointed to resolve dirrerences on a routine worlcers' compensation bill, added the reworked mten·
tional tort language to that proposal.
.
. . .
Sens. M. Ben Gaeth, R·Deftance, and Richard H. Fman, R-Crncmnau,
asked the Senate on Thursday to approve the conrcrence commmee
report, insisting that the new language will preserve injured workers' right
to sue.
. .. G eth
rtcd
"Employers will not be protected if they are gut1ty, a asse .
But Sen . Robert Burch , D-Dover, and Sen. flarry Meshel, D·
Youngstown, took exception to Gaeth's claims, contending the proposal
would eliminate intentional tort lawsutts.
Burch, a lawyer, re[erred language that says suits . may be filed Ir &amp;[!
employer "subjectively and dehberately mtends to '"Jure the employee
and has had acrual knowledge of unsafe working condttions and is virtually certain of serious injury.
"This is going to eliminate intentional tort, so rar as employers are
concerned," said Burch.
He also objected to "a Stealth con[erence committee" writing new language that had not been considered bef~ by either ~use. He ca_ll"'!, it
•'the most egregious abuse or the process I v_e ever been mvo\~ed V.:''!t·
Meshel said the proposal would depn~e workers or JUSitflable
redress" and that " the interest who want th1s legJSiabon should be hung
(sic) at sunrise." .
· Majority Repoblicans baited the debate at thai point for a party caucus,
returning a half-hour later to say it would be voted on ~r. day ..
; They said they did so to saye time -for another maJor bill to iedraw
Ohio's congressional disuiciS that wu nell on the calendar. The conference repoii also will have 10 be·IIJliiiOved by the House.
Burch waS'a member or the conference committee but he said the .oth·
ers acted without in knowledge and in his absence. Gaeth and Fman
signed the report along with Rep. Ross Boggs, D·Andover.
; _Rep. Joseph Koziura, D-Lorain, was also a conreree but did not sign

MICH.

pennanent residence. It's Houston,
where the Bushes bave no penna·
"They are abiding by the law,"
nent domicile at all- noihing con- ·· says Bush-Quayle '92 Press Secretinuously rented, nothing owned tary Torie Clarke; and thai seems to
except a tiny vacant lot - but be the case. But it is nol the poinL
where there is no state income tax. The point isn't what is legalbut
As president, Bush has spent just what is rair. It's a nuance that
14 days in his ~rficial home, a s~ite seems to escape the auention of our
m the Houstonran Hotel, [or wh1ch presidents from time to time.
he pays only when he sleeps there.
Back in 1974, at one or those
(You too can rent Bush's home old-fashioned, prime-time, nationsuite home - if you're a corporate ally televised press conferences,
VIP, explains a hotel exec.)
live [rom the East Room, I called a
. Here we are, trapped in a recessimilar matter to the attention of
Sl(~n thai has states gom~ broke and
our then-president "April21, 1969
ratsmg taxes on the mtddle class,
was a significant day for you, in
and another multimillion~ire has
taxes, and ror the counuy, too. That
round a way to avotd paymg state
is the notary dale on the deed that
taxes where he really hves. It IS allowed you to give your papers to
legal, accordmg to Texas law,
the government and pay just token
because Bush stgned a swom state- (virtually no [ederal) taxes for two
ment saymg he: mtends to lrve m years. On that same date, you bad
Houston after hts pubbc servtce m (issued) a tax rerorm message in
Washington.
which you said, and I quote:. 'Special preferences in the law permit
far too many Americans to pay less
than their rair share or taxes. Too
many others bear too much .or the
tax burden.'
"Now, Mr. President, do you
think you paid your fair share of
taxes?"
Richard Nixon replied that it
was a "proper deduction" and
"probably a proper ,decision."
(Never mind that, as we now know,
his deed was backdated; he'd
donated his papers arter the legal
deadline. He also named a rew lilr
erals and Ivy League professors
who took similar deductions; later,
aides apologized because Nixon
had snooped into, and publicized,
confidential tax inronnation.)
Two decades and four presidents later, we are still grappling
with The Fairness Issue. Whether
the subject is Nixon's [ederal tax
avoidance, Bush's state tax avoid·
ance or just plain tax breaks for the
rich, there's nobody here but us
Puritans.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Commg as it does in an election
year, the proposal has been met by
a predictable chorus or criticisms
by those seeking political advantage in the debate over health care
reronn. I'm afraid any plan, be it
the President's, or be it one prorfered by one or his challengers,
would receive much the same partisan treaunenl Focus will be on the
shortcomings, rather than on the
merits or the proposals tendered.
Personally, I wish the ge neral public could be given the opportunity
to evaluate the pros and cons or
such propqsals independent or
these partisan criticisms, but admittedly that would be dirficult to do
in the environment or a presidential
election year.
The Presiden't's proposal is
aimed at maintaining a choice ror
the person seeking a health care
provider and insurer. Rather than
calling ror the establishment of a

IMansfield I 29•l•
IND.

vast new federally run pugnun the
magnitude or the Social Security . cosUy. Another effort toward this
/jystem, the President's proposal objective or increased accessibility
would build on the existing net· and afrordability or coverage is the
work or health care providers a~d President's call ror the establishinsurers. As he remarked when ment or health insurance nel·
unveiling his plan, it is aimed at works," the banding together or
"preserving what works and small businesses into one common
reforming what doesn't," rather insurance pool which would therethan rundamentally changing the by permit the employees of these
basic nature or our counuy's pre- small companies to enjoy the gensent health delivery system.
erous range or benefits extended to
employees of iarJ!e corporations.
To extend and enhance coverage to
As all know, one of the major
the approximately 34 million concerns shared by most AmeriAmericans who are presenUy with- cans is· the rapidly escalating cost
out·health insurance, and the count· of medical care. To address this
less others who are underinsured, concern, while still preserving the
the President's plan proposes a open and competitive nature or our
series or tax credits and deductions health delivery system, the Presiaimed at making such coverage dent's plan calls ror an overhaul of
a[fordable. Acknowledging the our counuy's malpractice statutes,
existing shortcomings that exist with an eye toward not only lowerwith many of the health insurance ing the ultimate cost or such cases,
plans presently being marketed, the but lowering the exorbitantly high
President's plan is aimed at making cost of insurance medical providers
health insurance premiums lower, have to purchase to protect themcancellation less likely, and cover- selves against such claims. Also in
age broader and easier to obtain.
the area or cost containment, the
One particular objective in this President's. proposal calls for a
regard is to preclode insurers from revamping of medical claim procererusing coverage to persons with dures, and of[ers up a series of
pre-existing conditions or dropping incentives for states to make [uller
such persons i[ they moved from use or health maintenance organione job to another, or ir the nature zations and other ronns of managed
or their illness was prohibitively care programs, which the White

.W. VA.

(tQld'A
Ice

exports.
recent State or the Union address
One of Governor Voinovich's
focused almost exclusively on the initiatives calls for Ohio to build an
No.I issue that most Americans are ' International Export and Exhibition
grappling with: the nation's strug- Center, a kind of global shopping .
gling economy.
mall or Ohio-produced products.
The President's ·about-race call This world-mart would display all
for a wide range of direct govern- or Ohio's high quality goods under
ment actions to help jump stan the one roof, ofrering roreign "shopweak economy evidences the con- pers" from arou~d the world the
tinucd concern over an entrenched opportunity to "shop Ohio" in one
recession. From Wall Street to convenient location.
Main Street, stock broker.s, shop
Other proposals call for tax
owners, company CEO's and breaks to encourage Ohio businessassembly line workers are ivatehing es 10 export more products and
to. see what new laws and programs state runding to help .smaller comCongress and the White House panics compete in the global mar-.
eventually agree upon. While the kelplace. Considering that only a
eyes of America are focused on the 10% increase in Ohio exports
nation's capital, the stirrings or a would create 67,500 new jobs, it
new economic strategy tailored to makes sense to continue nunuring
Ohio's economy is beginning 10 this growth sector.
take shape in our state's capital. . • "'nother tax incentive being
JUSt two weeks before the Presi- considered would exempt company
dent's speech, Governor George pun:hases of new machinery and
Voinovich orrered his vision for equtpment used in ·research and
Ohio's economy.lnvokin« a famil- deve1opment from the swc sales
iar "jobs and progre,s. theme, tax. Ohio already enjoys a solid
Governor Voinovich sltet.:hed out base in aerospace, biochemicals,
pin to boOIIt expons, reaeardl and advanced manufacturina. lllCI polydevelopment and environmental · mencbnology.
ta;hnology.
· •
· While tbele Jlllvw!• ate much
1Jn!1er f01111et Oovsnot Richard Iesa ambitious lhllll those bcins
CeleSIC, Ohio lfClo' Ill be a nalional t!ebaled In Congras, they nonethe·
leader in eapons. Today, Ohio is leu offer a Sllrlinc point 111 chan
the lhinllelditg exporlll' of manu- wbenl Ohio's CICOUOinic futtue lies
faclured products; tolaling nearly and tho best way for the Stare of .
$27 billion in export lilies. Not sur- Obio to belp the prh·ate soc-or
prisinaJy, over a third of a millioo reach iL l...awmalreis ll1d hosims
Ohio job• are tied directly to ~ are eagerly anticiJ*ing a

full debate on these ideas, a debate
that could help put Ohio ahead of
other states for years to come.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me. Sta~ Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
C1992 Accu·W811her, Inc.

------Weather----Soutb·Central Ohio
Tonight, becoming partly
cloudy with the low 20-25.
Wednesday, increasing cloudiness
with a slight chance or snow. High
in the mid-30s. Chance of snow 30

percent.
Extended foretast:
Thursday tbrougb Saturday:
A chance of snow Thursday and
Friday. Fair on Saturday. Highs 3545 with lows in the 20s.

--Local briefs...----,
Continued from page 1
143 in Salisbury Township.
According tQ a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Hi~hway PalrOI, Robert R. Johnson, 53, a[ Langsville, drove of[ the
right side of the road in a 1977 Fortl Bronco.
His vehicle then slid back across the road, went off the Iert side
into. an embankment and overturned.
The pa1r0l is investigating the accident.
A hospital spokesman said Tuesday morning that Johnson was
lis!Cd in good condition in the hospital's 1rauma unit.

EMS units answer 8 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services units answered eight
calls [or assistance on Monday.
On Monday at 12:29 p.m., Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine
31. Don Markins was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital . At 12:45
p.m., Racine units went to. County Road 28 ror an auto. accident.
Amy Stato.n was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 3:20
p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Pomeroy Pike for Jennirer Chasteen,
who was taken to Veterans. At4:26 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to
Welchtown Hill. Raben Kline was tranported to Holzer Medical
Center. At 6:28 p.m., Pomeroy units went 10 ~tate Route 143 for an
auto aecidenL Bob Johnson was taken to Veterans. AI 8:29 p.m..
Johnson was taken by Li[e Flight to Grant Medical Center. At 8:29
p.m., Middlepon unu went to Overbrook Center ror Lula Barber.
She was taken to. Veterans. At 9:45 p.m., Racine squad uansported
Coition Roush to Veterans rrom the station.

'

House contends are much more
cost erricient than conventional
care.
The President estimates the five
year cost or his proposal lo be in
the neighborhood of $IOO billion,
but, unfonunately, he fails to define
how it is 10 be paid ror. I might
add, thai this jnability to come up
with a runding mechanism .also
plagues most or the other proposals
that have heretofore been advanced
by presidenfial contenders· and
other legislators interested in see:
ing action taken on this pressing
national issue.·
Unfortunately, i[ any such
refonn is to go forward this year it
will have to do so against a backdrop or spiraling budget deficits at
both the rederal and state levels.
While all of us would ~ke 10 see a
com~rehensive and rar reaching
soluuon to. the problems that exis~
I' m arraid the reality of the situation is such that for now the best
we can expect is a modest well·lar·
geted attack at those areas of the
health care delivery system that are
in most urgent need of repair. To
reach beyond our means at this
juncture in time, could work at
cross purposes with our long-term
objective of top to bottom reform.

--Area deaths-Carl Nutter

Ervin Phillips
Ervin Phillips, 55, of Hamlin,
W.Va., former Meig~ County resident, died on Friday, Jan. 31, 1992
at Cabell County Hospilal in Huntington, W.Va., arter an extended
illness.
Born on July 23, 1936, he wns
the son or the late James and
Martha Phillips.
Surviving are his wire, Vivian
Walsh Phillips of Hamlin; a &lt;laugh·
ter, Mrs. Thomas (Ruth) Swan, also
or Hamlin; three sons, Lee, Rodney
and Alvin Phillips, all or Hamlin;
two sisters, Mrs. Roger (Lucille)
Taylor or Columbus and Mrs. John
(Helen) Turnible, New Haven,
W.Va.; rour brothers: Earl Phillips
or Columbus, Cornelius l'hiUips.or
Rutland, Ezina Phillips, Syracuse,
and Matthew Phillips of Hamlin;
and two grandchildren.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded in death by two sis-

Ohio explores options to improve economy
AfJ we alll\llow, the President's

Qa
•I Columbus I 29•1

Cong. Clarence Miller

ters.

Funeral services were held on
Feb. 3 at. Evans Funeral Home in
Chapmanville, W.Va., with the
Rev. Anson Tackett o[[iciating.
Burial was in Pridemore Cemetery
in Harts, W.Va.

Sen. Jan Long
questions or comments abtiut .thesC
or any .other issues My number is
(614)-466-8156, and my address is
!h.e Statehouse, Columbus Ohio
432I5.
'

Tite

Berry's World

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-3-

Carl V. Nuuer, 77, of Route I in
Coolville, died on Monday mom·
ing, February 10, 1992 at Camden·
Clark Memorial Hospilal following
an extended illness.
Mr. Nutter was born in Port
Kells, British Columbia, the son or
the late William and Densie
Lindquist Nuuer. lie was a retired,
sel[-empioyed meat cutter and a
veteran of the U.S. Army.
Surviving are two sons, James
Nutter and Jerrrey Nuuer, both of
Coolville; a daughter, Jane Waters
or Newport, Ohio; a half-sistcr,
June Porter of Washington; five
grandchildren and four step-grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Joan; a
brother, Walter; and a stepsister,
Sylvia Sorrell.
Graveside services will be
Thursday at2 p.m. at Torch Baptist
Cemetery in Torch wtth Rev. Donald Wilcoxen officiating.
Friends may call on Wednesday
rrom 7 p.m. lo 9 p.m. at WhiteBlower Funeral Home in Coolville.
. ~ ·'

By Y.he Associated Press
Seasonal weather is returning to
Ohio tonight.
Forecasters 1aid cold air will
spread into the state behind a cold
front, dropping temperatures into
the single digits some places. Lows
will range from 5 to 15.
Some lake-effect snow is likely
in extreme northeast Ohio.
A high pressure system will pro'
duce some sunny slcies on Wednes· ·
day, the National Weather Service
S81d, but temperatures will remain
on the chilly side, in the mid-20 to
mid-30s. Some snow is possible in
southwest Ohio.
The record high temperature ror
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 70 degrees in 1932. The
record low was II below zero in
1885.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:02
p.m. Sunrise on Wednesday will be
at 7:29a.m.
Around the nation
Light rain fell today in Southern
California after a fterce storm that
sent raging floodwaters through the
suburbs west of Los Angeles. ·
Rain showers fell in western
Nevada. Snow fell in Ohio and
North Dakota. High winds rauled
northern New York State.

Subdued
...
Continued from page 1
stable but subdued recovery over
the remainder or the forecast horizon," according to Robert J.
Eggert Sr., editor or the Blue Chtp
Economic Indicators, the Sedona,
Ariz., newsletter which conducts
the monthly survey.
The survey released Monday
shows the consensus or the 50
economhts projec1s the economy
will grow just 0.5 percent at an
annual rate in the January-March
quarter. Tbat' s little more than the
barely perceptible 0.3 percent during the final three months or 1991.
But the consensus sees growth
at an annual rate or 2.2 percent in
the second quarter, 3.1 percent in
the second and 3.3 percent in the
third. For the year, it projects
growth or 1.6 percent.
President Bush' s budget
assumes the economy will grow 1.5
percent in 1992, and 3.0 percent in
1993. The economy has averaged 6
percent growth during the first year
or recovery from previous postWorld War II recessions.
The Blue Chip projection or 1.6
percent growth in 1992 was idemical to the consensus rorecast in the
January survey. However, the
economists at that time suggested
the economy would grow at a 0.8
percent rate during the JanuaryMarch quarter.
The Blue Chip economists rep·
resent many or the nation 's top
banks brokerage companies, corporadons, economic rorecasting
finns and universities.
The Bush ·administration and
many private economists arc urging
the Federal Reserve to nudge mter·
est rates lower to insure the recov·
ery.
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan
has said he believes rates have been
slashed enough. but added the central bank would ease runher i[
needed as "additional insurance."
At the same time, Bush ~as proposed a package or tax cuts and
other incentives to stimulate economic growth, which the Blue Chip
economists awarded a grade or C.
Eggert. said that while many
said, "super delivery - his bcs~"
a frequent comment [rom the. ana·
lysiS was,."too little, 100 late . "
According to the Blue Chrp survey, the cop proposals were a
$5,000 tax credit [or first-time
home buyers, a cut in the capital
gllins tax and tax credits [or business invesunenl

.stocks
Am Ele Power .................. .36 7!8
Ashland Oil ....................... 33
AT&amp;T... .............................. 37 3/4
Bank One.......................... .45 7!8
Bob Evans ...................... .. .26 5/8
Charming Shop...................27 5/8
City Holding ...................... 18
Federal Mogul.. ................. .17
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................62 1/8
Key Centurion ...................15 It2
Lands' End ........................ 32 3/8
Limited Inc ....................... 31 1/8
Multimedia Inc..................27 1/4
Rax Restaurant .................. 1
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 19
Shoney 's lnc ...................... 24 5/8
Star Bank ........................... 25 1/2
Wendy lnt'l ........................ l2
Worthington Ind . ............... 24 3/4
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by B/unl, Ellis
and Loewi of Gallipolis.
Bob Evans and Bank One are
ex-dividend today.

Meeting date changed
The Eastern Local School Board
will meet Tuesday, Feb. 18 at 7
p.m. rather than Wednesday, Feb.
19, as regularly scheduled.

Licenses granted
Marriage licenses have been
gramed in Meigs County Probate
Court to Jerrrey Joe Nottingham,
27, and Valerie Lynn Simpson, 23,
both or Pomeroy; and to George
Ewing Oiler, 24, and El~abelh Sue
McKnight, 24, both or Mrddleport.

o

BUBBCRIPftON RATES
By. Carrier pr Motor Roulo '
OM Week ....................:......................l1.60
Ooo Monlh ..:................... ......... .......... l6.96
Ooo Ycar.......... ........................ ,_ .. ,$83.20
StNGLEIIPPY.

PI\ICB

DAily.. ,.. ,, ..... ............................. ~••.25 Centl

'

•

Mall lutilcrlptloM

••

' Jnaldo Oallla CounQr
t3 Wteko.........................................12t.S4
26 Woeko ..... ...,................................. H3.t6
62 w..u .......................................... t64.76
Oataldo 0,.111• C011nt)t
13 w..a ..........................................W.40

WGAlN

'

11 JACKSO«! Pl~f
~{)uTt

~nllm ~T\JAnA Y

IAIGAJN MIGHT

I

l'J WLST

i SUH!IAY .

TU~MT

FI•RUARY t thru 13

l - - ~ R \OAT

_j

W ll lllUASOAT I

MEIGS COUNTY KARATE
CLUB
WILL HAVE BEGINNING
KARATE CLASS .
STARTING FEB. 11-6:00 PM
AT CARLTON SCHOOL
IN SYRACUSE, OHIO.
Instructors are Mlck Howell
and Tim Jenkins
For more lnformaUon Call
614-992-6839 or 992-6170

1. Your phone call
Your answers to a few simple questions are all it takes for our
specialists to prepare your IRA form. We can even mail the
necessary paperwork for your signature. At Peoples Bank we
make opening an IRA ... simple, quick and convenient.

· Whoever said you needed $2,000 to open an IRA?At Peoples
Bank, we offer a variety of CD terms and interest rates for you
to choose from . As little as $1.00 will open an 18-month, variable r;lte CD. We'll even lerid you the mqney you need to
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Peoples Bank the money you deposit to an IRA is yours
should you need it. However, regulations require a substantial
penalty for early withdrawals.

value Packed
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l'oopnl.11· "u•··,

FRONT END ALIGNMENT ,
95
$16
Moncus
Member FOJC

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
600 E. M• St. 992-2094

Athens

593-7761

118 . . ................,.......................,.144.10
II w..a.............,............................M1.40
Jl

446 ·4524

·

No •abteripdon~ by. mnll permiUed in
are•• wht.re home Curler W
. I ce Ia
IVIIilAIJic; .

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

2. As little as $1.00

OantpoUi Dally Tribune on a 3.8 ai 12
month bollo. c..dl' ;rill be giYOn '"rrier

'

...........

~

SubiKTibcn not dclliring to pny O.ti c:Ani•
er mil)' nmjit in achanco dired \0 Tho

eac:hwefl.k.

Dance planned
There will be a Valentine round
and square dance on Friday from 8· ,
11:30 p.m. at Hockingport op
Route 124 at Kenny and Millie
Reynolds. Music will be provided
by "Don and Buddy and the
Smokey Mountain Dri[ters." Ronnie Wood will be the caller.
Country, bluegrass and· gospel
music is played there every Monday al 7 p.m. The public is invited
to all events.
Open house planned
There will be an open house
birthday. celebration in honor of
Opal Harris on her 80th birthday at
the VFW Hall in Tuppers Plains on
Sunday rrom 2-5 p.m. All [riends
are invitet to auend.

Continued from page 1
rate has been decreased from 5.6 .
percent to 1.86 percent, a savings :
or between, $13.000 and $15,000 a ·
year.
•
A resolution was passed by
Council establishing a policy ror:
health insurance. It provides [or acontinuance orthe insurance for 16
weeks ror employees on workers
compensation.
Work on the Betsy Ross housing site is progressing, it was
reported. The environmental
review is being completed and the
next step is appropriate asbestos·
removal berore demolition can be
started. it was reported. Spring is
still a target date for construction of.
housing in that area, the mayor
said.
The mayor 's report showed .
receipts of $4,090 for January .
Attending were Mayqr. Hofrman,
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck, and
Council members, Dewey Horton,
James Clatworthy, Judy Crooks,
Paul Gerard, William Walters, and
Jack Saucrficld.

3. Peoples Bank

POSTMASTER: Send oddn&gt;u ehnnp.t to
Th11 DAlly Santinel, 111 Court SL.,

l'o"""'Y· OHio 45769.

Middleport...

Three things are
necessary to
open ani •••

Dnily Sentinel

M&lt;!mbor: 'J'he A.Mocialcd Pmui, Inland
Daily PrcMa Anoclation and lhe Ohio
NewHpapcr A•sociAlion, Na\io~al
Advcrtllml ~preiKlnLalivf!l, DranhAhl
Now~paper Snloa, , 733 Third. Avanua,
Now YOrk, Now YOrk 10011.

•

Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS •
Charles Kiser, Pomeroy; Virginia
Estep, Middleport; Terry Grogan,
Middleport; and Orin Roush,
Racine.
MONDAY DISCHARGES ·
Wayne Gillilland and Dorothy
Thurston.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DiscbarRes Feb. 10 - Henry
Barneu, Lilhan Gibbs, Nonna Harless, William Hoi~ Linda Johnson,
Charles Kight, Mrs. Jack Klontz
and twin daughters, and Charles
Wildennuth.
Births Feb. 10- Mr. and Mrs.
David Haynes, daughtcr, Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles McNeely,
son, Ewington.

Dance planned
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 and Ladies Auxiliary will
sponsor a dance on Friday [rom 811:30 p.m. with music by CJ. and
the Country Gentlemen."

CompRny/M ullimedia lne., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, Ph. 1192-2156. Second dtta
po~~t.Rge pRid ~l Pomeroy, Ohio.

WE:' l)S€\&gt; ·,-o
WOIZJl.~ ASOtJ"I" f!o(S:1NGt:'Mf'1''1 N~S'l'E:R5o~

Hospital news

VFW Post to meet
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. at the post home.

(USPS 213·960)
Pul.lli1hed every Rft.emoon, Mond1y

~11-lt&lt;.­

'

upper Midwest and northern Plains;
in the 20s in northern New England
and an area stretching from eastern
Montana to southern Michigan; in
the 30s rrom the noithern Rockies
across Nebraska, the lower Midwest to. SQuthem New England; in
the 40s rrom the interior Northwest
across the central Plains to the mid·
Allantic states; the 50s in the P.aciric' Northwest, central California and
the upper South; the 60s [rom .
coastal California to most or the ·
Deep South; and the 70s in south- .:
emFlorida and Texas.
·
The high temperature ror the
nation Monday was 77 degrees in
the Florida cities or Bartow, Fort :
Myers, Naples and Miami.

__ Meigs announcements_

lhrough Friday, Ill Court. Sl, Pcmeroy,
Ohio by lh Ohio Valley Publishing

lo

caused by 6 inches of rain west of
Los Angeles.
Another storm was expected to
reach the West Coast on Wcdnes·
day.
Snow was expected today across
the ,Great Lakes. Rain was forecast
over the Northwest and the Southem Plains, spreading east into the
Mississippi Valley.
Temperatures were expected in
the single digits or teens in the

Clouds and rog hung over much
or the rest or the natio~.
Fire department helicopters on
Monday plucked about 50
motorists rrom car roars where they
scrambled to escape floodwaters

\I

J

Belpre
UH516

Middleport

992·6661

Nelsonville
753-1955

The Plains

797-4547

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Tuesday, February 11, 1992
Page--4

FSU adds N.C. State to list of ACC victims
Dy TOM FORE;MAN Jr.
AP Sports Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Flori·
da Slatc has proven 10 be a preuy
good road team - and an especial·
ly good Tobacco Road team.
You can't be among lhe elitc in
th e Atlantic Coast Co nferen ce
without winnin g in the hean of
North Carolina. where lhe basket·
ball teams usuall y rank as high as
the basketbal l trndition.
Count Florida State among the
conference's elite.
The No. 23 Seminoles survived
a record-setting three-point attack
to defeat North Carolina Slate 87·

79 its third win over an ACC
sc hool in North Carolina this season and lhe only game involving a
ranked team on Monday nighL
Coac h Pat Kennedy, who fig .
ured eight confe rence wins would
be a good showing in FSU's first
year' has that many already more' than half of lhem on the road.
"I th ink th e North Carolina
game on the road set lhe tone for
our whole season," said guard Bob
Su ra who al ong with Douglas
Edw,;,ds scored 25 points to lead
the Seminoles over lhe Wolfpeck.
For Sura, it was a career-high .
Sam Cassell added 24 points for

Scoreboard
lndi111 Vall. 49, Sandy Vall40
lacluoo MiltCil ,2, Berlin CcnlCI' W.
Resc:r.oe 45
Leipsic 48, McComb 31
Ltbcn)·· Benton 72, P1ndora·Gilboa

In the NHL ...
WALES CO:'I'FERE:'\CE
Pal ric k Dl ~l5l on

Team

W L T Pli. GF GA

N.Y Rangen;

3518 3

73 217182

W.uhington ...
32 IP ol
r-;cwJem:y ...... 28\8 1

68 235184
63 2031 M

Pittsburgh ....... 26 23 6

58 238 214

~ - y ls landen

49 202 214
48 1601&amp;0

21 25 7
19 25 10

l~n\adclp/111 ....

4l

!.Jbwn B c.~ver ({I, Wellsville 57
Lcd.land 62, Cin. Clwttan 45
Logln
h ckson 46
Maumee Vall. Coun1ry Dty 33,
8et!J'Itlle 27
Me1gs 39. Wellstoo 2(l
Miami.$burg 64, Lemon·~f onroe 5 I
Midd leto wn Fen~o~nck 38, Trenton
Edgewood 2~
Mmford 47, Z.ne Tme 46
~1ing() 40, Cmol.loo Valle)' 35
New ~ti ddlctown Spnr~ g . 35, MeDon·
aid 29
:\. lh lumorc H. C a ~y 49
1\'orwood 56. C1t1. ?urcdl- Muitn 41
Obc:rhn 66.Eiyna Wcst45
O~gon Cia~ 50. Amhony Wtync. 47
Otuwa ! W!s 35,1\or\hwood 29
Olford Talt wanda 49, Lebanoo 37
Piketon 56, Wt vcrly 45
PlcuanL 61, Mm on Cti.h. 33
Rt )'land Buckeye40, Bell ai~ 38

n

Ad ams Dl vlslon
33 21

Montreal

'I1
iluffa]fl
.. 21
Hllrtford - '"" . 15
.. 12
Q»ob«

"""""

CA"PBELL

4

21
24
26
36

70 187 144

8
10
10
6

62
52
40
30

195 190
196196
160 1&amp;4
159222

C O~FEREI\ C E

Sorr LI Dl vblon
W L T Pl1. CFGII.
Tum
. 2917 9 672261 84
Detrotl .. .
... 25 21 10 60 180167
Ctw:ago.. .
.... 2323 9 55 117 188
St l..oo.us
1\UnnesOI.I .. .... 23 2.5 5 51 172183

Toron1.0 ............. 19 31

43154201

5

Smythf Dl vislorl
30 16 8 68 193 162

Vancoova ........
Winnipeg .......
Los Angeles .
Edmon\oo .
Calgary ....
San Jose

23 22 11

56 196207

23 26 1
22 25 1
11 J8 4

53 202 209
51 200 194
JU \42241

Mondt~ y 's

Morutetlll,

57 113 166

22 21 12

score

Vai\COIJV~ 3

RcedJV~Uc Ea~ttm 4$ , N. G1lli1 44
River Vie• 61. Croci:Mlle 31
Rossford 44, Swltlt.rln 40
S1. Mtrya82, Rockford P.!Sway 51
Sutlinit Etstem 57, Fayencville 46
Sidney 51. Celina 49, OT
Skyvue 48. BetliJville 39
S. Range49, Lowellville 43
Spring. South 6\, D1y. Patt.cnoo 53
SU\Ithen 32, Gitartl 29
S~lnru t ~onhview 49, Tol. Wood·
wud 12
Tllnlp]e Ouutian 65, Bethel OuiJtlan

Ta l. SL Urwl a ?9 , Tol. CC'l'ltral 66
To!. Stan 71, Tol. Libbey 24
Tol. Whitmer 51, To\. Bows.htt 34
Tri-Va lle~ 63, New Le.tington 36
Trotwood· Mtdi son 54, Dt y. Mead·
owdtle 46
Tusc.trawu Vall. 32, ClaymCK~I 27
Vanluc49, Cory·R•""'* oo 44
Vinc ent Wtrren 69, Gall ipoli1 65,

Wednesday's games

lOT
Wnerford SO, Frontic:t 41
, W. Geiu ~ a 63, Ge. Omi,se 40
Wintcn:ville42, Toronto41
Xccil Wilson 98, Day. Miltni Vtlley

pm

Major college
basket ball scores

72
Zanerville 58, Ctmbri dge 51
Z.ncs.., ilJ e RMec n ns 64, Col. De·
Salel 57

Ei1St
Drne\73, Yoonguo wn St 63

MILWA UKEE

Agreed 10 lUIN with Bill Spiers, infield·
er, w1 Angel Minnda. pitchcn, on oo eyear conmcu.
1\"EW YORK YANKEES - Aped
w term1 with Alvaro F_.spinou., lhOIUI.op ,
and Mc:lida Pt:rc:z, pii.Chcn, on on e · y e~.r

Aoridt St. t!7, N. C.rolJ\1 St. 79
Funu n \OJ , E. Te nnessee St. 94,

'""'""·

tZb

N1tlonal Lt•aut
CI!"'CINN ATI REDS - Agreed 10
tc:mn with Jc.ff Bra n~o n , in fiel der, and
Vict or Guc:il and Juon St ue, ptlchcn ,
Cl1 ooc-)'e.ar corrtnu:ta.
LOS ANG EL ES DODGE RS ~• m e d Ltrry Dough1y ma jor lu goe

Gco'ie Muon 54, V~t a Tech 53
Grambling St '12, Praine View 77
Howard U. 72, Floridt A&amp;: M 68
hd:~ St. 79, AI cern St. 74
luna ~ bduOJI 16, Eut C t ~t~ltnt 48
Mercer 61, Sooth Ca rol ina 59
Middle Tmn 92, Morehc.td SL 85
~" V&amp;lie y St 80, Teus SouiJ'lcm

.. 4(1

~rue

PHIL ADELPIIIA PHILLI ES Agreed to ICrTJ\1 with W• Uy Ritchie tnd
Durin Chapin, piu:hen, on me-ywo eon·

Mo11•n St. 80, Debwarc St. 78, OT

"""

Mum)' St 83, E. Kcntocky 62
~ . C.-Asheville 82, I.J ~ny

77
81, Mc:\~e SL 51
:\ichoHs St. 97. ~"W Loo~ian a 87
R•d!!Ktl 84, O.•rle51on Southern '16
Rite 53, Stmford 43
Riclvnond 79, KC .-Wilmingum 69
Soolhcm U. 96, A l aba m.~ St.ll3
Tn .·Chtlunnos• 76, Manhi.I J 75

Basketball

~'E i..owJ~~n~

S1tllNial Bnkdball Auoclallon

Schedule For Completion On February 14, 1992

MU\'N EsafA TI~mERWOlVES ­
Fdtm Spencer, center, (1'1 Lhe in_iumllist Activncd Tom Garrick, JUud,
from the injute.l lisl
P\a ~

Don't miss your ellanee to tht'i 11 someone
Bpceial with your ve1·.v own meSSilge r,f love .

Football

W. Carolutt 89. VMI 88

W. Kentud: y 81. Cent. Flori d• 711,

N•llant l t'ootb•ll Lt•aut
INDIANAPOU S COLTS - Named
Gene Huc:y Nnning 'tJ.ack1 coech.
NEW YO RK GIAr-.'TS - N&amp;med
Dtck Rehbein ti ght en.dl COlch

Midwest
Cleveland St 85, Wri glu St. 67
Dtyt.on 10, 8 roo.k.lyn tol. 4]
lklroit 73, Taledo 62
E. U!.iooU 70. VaJP'rWo 56
lnditnl St 55, Drake 46
Iowa St. 96. Colondo 82, ar
Mo.-Kt NU City 79, CmaMon 68

Here's 'lhe Nuts &amp; Bolts:
• Your Message Only Cos ts 20~ Per Word

Hockey
N•llonalllockty lA•&amp;ut

N. /llinoU 52. W. lllinoil 77

N'IIL - Supended Bry•n MWTty,
Detroit Red Winas coach. for lh e g&amp;me.~
for flilinB to con lrol 1 phyc:r. and y.,.et

s UtAh 74, ChietJ,OSt 73
SE Miuouri 76, T~u1euee St. 66
XIVIc:r, Otuo 69, l.oyoU, W. 56

Rteine. dereruema n. for 10 games for
1~vin. the pmtlty bo~ 10 join In a1teret ·
Ooo.

Southwest

Cillod Jim Hrivn ak.aodtcnder, from Bal·
timm: of the American I Iock ey l.etguc.

• Bring in or Mail your typed or neatly
handwritten message to Valentine Greetings,
care of this newspaper.

9iASHINGTOS CAPITALS - Re-

r\onh Tr:~ u 70, SW Tuu St. 52
TcA.s·S•n Atttonio 19, Tu u -Atlina·

S1

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

Far West
New Me~co St. 75, Utah St 61.1
WashingiOn 61,CSNorthridp57

•

AUTO

Ohio high school
girls basketball scores
Alcunder41, Mill~ 40
An:adil 46. Arlina\01'1 36
Alhcn1 12, Marieua 49
B u~

H
t ' '(

•

I ,

52, Ktaerina Alter 32

Bt.tvcr Eu lml 61, Rich mon d D•lo
SE. 48
BcllaiR St. John 67, Bamc:rville 41
Btlmonl Un ion t oed 72, St.
ClairrvUle. C2
Bridgc:pon 43, EdiMJI Nonh )4
8ri.MI60, IAcvi.cw 53

Brookfield 47.11owland 46
Buckeye Vtllc)'

SZ. Spana HiahJand

........ a.w,. 61, """' . , . _
Byca ¥il1f Meadowbrook 57, John

GICM so

C•diz 68, S\.ellberWillo C.Lh. 47
Ctnftdd 7B, Campbdl Mlmoria1 29

Cin. Olea £ate (i(l, Oolh«&lt;4l
Cln. McAuley 47. AmWa ..0

Slate Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
and home with the State
Auto Companies.
Let us !ell you just
h9w much your savings
can be.

Cin. OU: HUll 7t,Cin. Coim.in41
Claywn Nortbmont 31, O.y. Oltmin•6c-Julicnnc 19

C1ammt N~ 46, BaPYi• 34
c ....... (Xy.) Holy

MD~W~I NoueJ:lratM 41

Crooo 69, an.

Blyri.oc.oh . 54, Open Do&gt;r34
F1Uboln 51. Xcnia41,0T

Fodenl Hodtin&amp;62. Trimlio 34
felidty 6S, IIelhal. T•&amp;e 35
F... s..,...l?,MillorCily ~ ar

ffCI!PO" Lakeland 56. NeweoalN·

mwn4l

0m••1 #, DWm Ill

HwtibllRi¥&lt;r61,S-31

Hardin NIII'Vwm 5J, y., Bwwt U
Indian Lake II], W•t Liblr\y Salem

.

•

992·2156
.

.

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Tllal w.r•:......................................................................................... . . . ... .... . . . . .
. Tllal ..... lodMI:................................................................:................................
AllHIUStiUE~D IY 5:00P.M. JEIRUARY 12 AND PAID INADVANCI

L--------------------------------------·-·-.-.---.-.-.~-;.,;;-•-··--· -

rl'he Daily ·Sctl'titiel .

By SCOTI WOLFE
not give NG a legitimate shot at the
Sentinel Correspondent
wm.
Senior center Jennifer Roush
EHS was not in the bonus, plus
tossed in 13 points and grabbed 17 NG delayed in taking the quick
rebounds, while teammate Shelly foul as valuable seconds ran off the
Metzger netted 17 points, as the clock. NG did send Roush to the
Eastern Eagles rolled to a narrow line wilh seven seconds lef~ where
48-44 SV AC basketball victory she hit one to secure the win.
over visiting Nonh Gallia Monday
Eastern had 60 rebounds, hitting
night.
18-59 from the floor and 11-24 at
Also contributing heavily to lhe the line. They had 12 fouls, 13
Eagles' cause was Tiffany Gardner, steals (Metzger 4) and 18
who had more rebounds (16) lhan turnovers.
points (five).
NG had a 16·50 night from the
North Gallia was led by Nickie floor and 3-6 night at the line with
Meade with IS markers and 10 18 fouls .
rebounds, while Dama Twyman
netted 13 points and 10 rebounds.
Nonh Gallia took the initial lead
on a baseline drive from Meade,
but at the 6:30 mark Shelly Met·
zger was fouled and hit the first of
a two shot foul, lhe score now 2·1.
Dama Twyman hit a comer jumper
By DAVE CARPENTER
for a 4-1 NG lead, then Easterner
AP Sports Writer
Tiffany Gardner posted up for a 4-3
ALBERTVILLE, France (AP)
score.
Twyman swished another - Bravo for Bonnie. But now
jumper from near the same spot, what?
America's medal prospects for
lhen Meade drove baseline for an
th e duration of the Winter
8·3 NG lead at the 3:30 mark.
Olympics
don't all sparkle wilh the
The remaining three minutes
glint
of
gold.
But Bonnie Blair's
was perhaps the most important
victory
in
the
women's
500-meter
point in the game as Eastern
speedskating helped erase the dis·
outscored the Lady Pirates 9·0 to appointment of some early let·
lead 12·8 at the initial buzzer.
downs and ensured that the U.S.
Eastern went up 17-1 0 tn the
team has a- hello, jinx - golden
second round on buckets by Met· opportunity
to surpass its 1988
zger and Gardner with a free throw total of six medals including two
from Burke.
gold.
'
Meade added two for NG, _then
What hometown hero Franck
Salisbury "buried" a long three Piccard did for France wilh a silver
pointer for a 19-15 score.
in the men's downhill Sunday,
Eastern could have put the gsme Blair accomplished Monday for the
away at the foul line, but in twelve
United States when she became lhe
tries to this point in the game, the first
woman to defend her Olympic
Eagles were only 6-12. One such title at 500 meters.
free throw came by Metzger (20·
"This is great for her and great
15), but Meadows hit_a lane jumper for us ," said Mike Moran,
for a 20-17 score. Gillilan and
Pirate Twyman traded buckets with spokes~an for lhe U.S. Olym~ic
, wh1ch retooled 1ts
Twyman's being a lhree poiner,lhe Commtttee
·
· · · program . 10
·
01
ymptc trammg
score 22-20. A three·point play by
Meade with 10 seconds left erased ~mbarrassment at the poor showmg
.
a hefty EHS lead as both clubs m Calgary four yearsagQ.
Celebrat,ory whoops were heard
went to the locker rooms with
from Dims hometown of Cham·
EHS leading 27-24.
pa1gn,
III., to Colorado Sprm~s .
Goals by Tina Myers and Delh
Colo
..
home
of the. Olymptc tram·
Salisbury gave NG a 28-27 lead
tng
~enter,
':"here
employ~s w~re
before Metzger tied the score at 28·
28 to begin the second period. NG holdmg thClf own flame -hghtmg
remained within one until Metzger ccrc'!'ony when they got word of
drilled a break away lay-up at the Dlrur s triumph.
. ''I,t, lifted a lot of, ~pprchcnbuzzer, 34-31.
s1on,
Moran Sa!~. We thmk
The game remained a three· to
we'rcon
trncknow. .
six-point point game, with EHS
Enc Lmdros, a Nat1~nal H~key
going up in the latter stages 47-41
on three straight field goals by Jen- League s.uperstar-m-wa1tmg,
nifer Roush. With I:08 left, Mende flashed skatmg .power of a different
drilled a three-pointer, but three sort Monday mght w1th two goals
straight fouls by North Gallia did and an ass1st for unbeaten Canada
in a 6· 1 rout of Switzerland.

In the preliminary game, the
EHS junior high girls upset North
Gallia 37-34 behind Ntcole Nel·
son's 14 points and six rebounds.
Following in scoring were Jessica
Karr (12), Patsy Aeiker (five),
Crystal Holsinger (four) and Laura
Easunan (two).
Staton and Neal each had 15 for
North Gallia, while Dobbins added
four.
North Gallia drops 10 12·5 with
one game left, while Eastem finish·
es at 11·3, 8·2 in SVAC play for at
least a second place finish.
Eastem will host Symmes Val·
ley Thursday.

World Cup leader Paul Accola
of Switzerland was positioned for a
gold-medal run in today's slalom
ponion of the men's skiing combined competition. Accola was
fifth in Monday's downhill com·
bined, .79 seconds behind leader
Jan Einar Thorsen, but the Norwe·
gtan.ts not a g~ slalom skier and
prediCted he won .t wtn.
Perhaps Blatr should have
"Who you gonna call?" embla·
zoned on her skating warmups after
once again single-handedly busting
theU.S . teamoucofaslump.
At Calgary, Americans earned
only a single medal in the first
week or Olympic competition- a
bronze by Jill Watson and Peter
Oppegard in pairs skating. It was a
week remembered more for Dan
Jansen's tumbles on the speedskat·
ing rink and some other missed
opportunities.
The Albertville Games also
appeared to be slip-sliding away
from U.S. Olympians in lhe early
gomg.
That was
the 5-foot-5 Blair's
•
.
cue. Skaung on a sun:slowed rink,
she got off to a blazmg start and
completed a nearly ~awless race tn
40.33 seconds. Ye Qtaobo or Chtna
also. skated ":ell but lost prec!ous
mllltseeonds m a crossover miXup
With ~ung Elena TlOoch~ova of
the Umfied Te~ and fimshed .18
behmd for the sllv~.
.
Afterward, Blatr tearfully dedi·
cated the race to her father, who
dted mDecember 1990. .
Was her prst medal tn l9 88
mo~ spec1al .
.
.
They.~cre each bctter.~n ~eu
own way, sbe responded. In 88,
I was happy to wm a gold ~edal.
Now I'm very proud that I m the
first woman to win lhe 500 back·

to· back; "
· . .
She II take that pnde mto the
1,500 meters on Wednesday and
the 1,000 meters on Fnday, and 15 a
topcon~ndcr m the Iauer race. .
Ame!"cans rumbled~ otherwise
lost thetr.medal ho~s .tn the first
two day~ m the m~n s stngles lu~e,
the !"ens downhtll and the patrs
skaong. .
.
Bu~ besides Blatr, they h3!bor
reahsttc gold-medal chances tn ~t
least fi~e more events: ~a~sen m
the ~~n 500 =rs; ~o NYsmague.•, onya
,ns:m
ancy
~emgan m women s ftgure skat·
tng; Chnstopher Bo~man and
Todd Eldred~e tn men s ft.gures;
odds-on favo~tc Donna W~1brecht
tn the women s moguls. skimg a~d
~rhaps Csmmy Myler m women s
smgles luge.
Ltndros, a lf!Uscular 6-fooH,
de'!'onstrated 10 the game With
s.wnzcrland wh~ he was lhe No. I
P1 C~ or last years NHL draft. Af~r

i

~~~~pi~c~;~~~:s h~nsc;:C~a~~

..

In its last four contests the
Meigs' Marauder freshman team
has won three of four, with two
wins over Jackson and one over .
Alexander.
Meigs, now in tournaments, fin·
ished the regular season at 9·6.
Meigs downed Alexander 51·35
behind the 31 points of Adam
Krawsczyn and 10 by Benny
Ewing. Krawsczyn had a great
overall floor game as well as hav·
ing the hot hand for Meigs. Ewing
picked up several assists with a fine
passing game to help set up goals
by Krawsczyn.
J.D. Stewan led Alex with nine.
In the first bout with Jackson in
the Ironmen's gym, Meigs escaped
with a 32-30 victory. Krawsczyri,
who led with eight, was followed
by Dreu Newsome (seven), Ewing
and Jerrod Folmer (six each).
Jerod Hill and Travis Grate each
added two. Geoff Matthews had
eight for Jackson.
' In .the next win over Jackson,
39·28, at horne, Mei~s was led by
Krawsczyn 's 18. Htll added 11,
and Folmer·had eigh~ while Adaril
Hendrix had twO. Maithews had 12
for Jackson.
Meigs' lone loss in the streak
·came at Point Pleasant, where lhe
Big_Blacks won 30.22.
Kl)lwsczyn had 10, an4 Hill and
. Todd Mitch scored four each.
.• ·Ewing and Folmer each hall two.
· Cory Hill led Point with nine.

.

.

!

· ·
d h ' b k
d
lip·m
an
a.
s
ort
rea
away
an
added an ass!SL
If the Quebec Nordiques offi.
cials who failed to sign .him were
watching on television, they had to
be shaking their heads in dismay.
"The big question is how do
u sto a Gretzk a Lemieux, a
Lfndros~ It's very aimcult," Canada assistant coach Wayne Fleming
said.
Canada im roved to 2·0 and
stayed in a tfree-way tie in its
group with the Unified Team ,
which blasted Norway 8· 1, and
Czechoslovakia, a 64 winner over
the stubborn French. The United
States was lookin~ for its second
traight victory tontght against Ger.
~any
·

TYSON FOUND GUlLTY- Former heavyweight boxing cham.
pion Mike Tyson (len) leaves the courtroom al the Marlon County
Courthouse in Indianapolis moments aner the jury returned a
guilty verdict in his rape trial. Sentencing is scheduled for March •.
{AP)
.
'

.-Area sports briefs---.
Meigs eighth-graders now 5-5

Quarter lolals
North Gallia .......... 8 16 7 13 = 44
Eastem ................ l2 15 7 14 = 48
North Gallia (44) - Tina
Myers 1..0-0=2, Becky McConnick
1·0-0=2, Belh Salisbury 2·1 ·0=7,
Elisha Meadows 2-0·1=5, Dama
Twyman 5·1·0=13, Nickie Meade
5·1·2=15. Tolals-16·3·3=44
Eastern (48) -Tiffany Gard·
ner 2·0·1=5, Tabby Phillips 3·0·
1=7, Jennifer Roush 5·0·3= 13, Lee
Gillilan 2-0.0=4, Shelly Metzger 60-5=17, Jaime Wilson 0·0·1=1, ··
Ruby Burke 0·0.1=1. Totals 18·0·
(11-24)=48

Meigs freshmen
now 9-6 on year

• Your greeting must be received
by Wed ., Peb. l2, 1992

Tulu 70. W1chit1 St. 66

dence," said the foreman, who cried in pain and begged him to
stop.
refused to give his name.
Other evidence included testi·
The victim wasn't in coun when
the verdicts were read . Deputy mony from an emergency room
Prosecutor Barbara Trathen said doctor who said the woman suf·
the woman felt "l'ust a sense of fered injuries consistent with rape,
and a chauffeur who said the
'It's finished,' relic." ~
Tyson was scheduled .to chal- woman appeared shaken when she
lenge Evander Holyfield in a bid to emerged (rom Tyson's hotel July
19.
regain the title last November Tyson won the heavyweight tide
after being indicted- but that bout
was canceled when Tyson injured a in 1986 at ~e 20 by knocking out
rib. It was not rescheduled when Trevor Berb1ck. He lost the title in
Japan to Buster Douglas on Feb.
lhe trial began Jan. 27.
Nothing in boxing regulations II, 1990- nearly two years to lhe
would automatically bar Tyson day of his conviction.
Tyson began life in poveny and
from fighting while free on appeal,
but boxing's governing bodies and ·crime, then was rescued and
state boxing commissions could steered into the ring by a gruff,
refuse to sanction a match. And no older trainer, Cus D' Amato.
promoter would undertake such a D' Amato died in 1985 when Tyson
was 19 and well on his way to box·
fight under those circumstances.
ing
stardom.
Tyson's accuser lestified that he
Tyson had a violent eight-month
had promised to take her sightsee·
marriage
to actress Robin Givens,
ing but instead went to his hotel on
and
he
has
also been embroiled in
the pretext of making a phone call,
numerous
lawsuits,
some filed by
pinned her to his bed, stripped her,
women
wbo
say
he
fondled
them or
raped her and laughed while she
roughed them up.

America's Blair captures 500-meter
speedskating title in Winter Games

BREWER S

Aus\J!I Pe&amp;y 87, Tennwcc Ta:h 79
Campbell 67, DaVJdwn64
Couu l Carolina 74. Winlhrop 61
Coppin St\OS, Bcthune.Coeokman 8J
Fit . ln\C.rmtiontl 79, Flondt At ll nuc

2af-

45

.

BOS&lt;ball

· •PJliLI Ch•l n St 78, Cit.adel 65

43

'

FLYING BY- VUianova's Lance MiUer (right) nies lo the hoop
pasl Pittsburgh's Ahmad Shareef in the first half of Monday night's
Big East malchup in Pittsburgh, which the Panthers won 77-68.
(AP)

Amf'rkan Luaut

South

"And I lhink tonight, one time
anyway, this kind of behavior's not
been tolerated."
Tyson stared strnight ahead. His
head jolted back but otherwise he
showed no emotion as the verdict
was read: Guilty on one count of
rape and two counts of criminal
deviate conduct. He had no comment as he left the couruoom.
Asked what his most effective
evidence was, Garrison said, "That
beautiful 18-year-old kid with a
pure heart. She's a ~oung person
withalotofcourage.'
Tyson's defense -that he was
a crude womanizer whose accuser
knew from the slllrt lhat he wanted
sex, and consented -didn't stand
up to the victim's story and the
physical evidence, jurors said.
"The accusing witness made a
very convincing case. We looked at
not only a moment in the bedroom
but a chain of events that
evening," said the jury's foreman,
a 37-year-old IBM marketing representative and ex-Marine.
"It was an accwnulation of cvi-

Eastern notches 48-44 win over North Gallia

Transactions

Jlituburgll 17, Villanovt 68
St. Francis, N.Y. 1S, Verma11 71
Wa gnc:t n, Maine 66

· 10n

!(We' ve seen so many times
recently that it doesn't matter what
a superstar does- it's OK," pros·
ecutor Greg Garrison said. "He can
brag about it in his h9oks, he can
demonstrate it in the public eye,
and as long as it suits him. it's all
right.

ur
nual
alentine' s Day
reetin s ection!

tin 36

Detroit 11 Buffalo, 7:35 p.m.
San J~BC a\ Monlr'Ul, 7:35 p.m.
Va ncou.,.e r at N. Y. Rangers , 7:35

the line for a cool 31%. Meigs had
33 rebounds with Baer grabbing
nine. Meigs had 14 assists with
Compston geuing four, and Vema
had five of the Marauders 15 steals,
while Mullen added four.
Hollie Maxwell, lenni Jenkins
and Brandy Lamben led Wellston
with six points each.
Meigs will battle Federal Hocking for the TVC title on Thursday
evening,. The reserve game will
stan at 5:55 p.m .. and the varsity
gsme will follow about 90 minutes
later.
Quarter totals
Meigs .................. IO 12 10 7 = 39
Wellston ............... 2 2 6 10 = 20
Meigs (39) - Mullen 4-0-0=8,
Compston 2-0-4=8, Baer 4-0·0=8,
Hanning 4..0-0=8, Henderson 1·00=2, Findley 1·0·0=2, Scott 1·0·
1=3. Totals-17-0·5=39
Wellston (20) - Ousley 0·0·
2=2, Maxwell 3..0..0=6, Jenkins 30-0=6, Lamben 3-0-0=6. Totals 9·0·2=20

By THOMAS P. WYMAN
Associated Press Writer
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Boxer Mike Tyson stepped from a
courthouse into a threatened future
as a convicted rapist, found guilty
of attacking a Miss Black America
contestant he lured to his hotel
The conviction late Monday was
Tyson's darkest moment in a trou·
bled history with women, anq it
threatened to end the rags-to-riches
~ of lha·youngest heavyweight
champion ever.
The 25-year-old boxer could get
as many as 60 years in prison at
sentencing March 6 but is likely to
get far less under Indiana gu1de·
lines. He remained free on $30,000
bail.

Now Under Construction:

Cthef1 72, Gibronburg 37
Tol. Rosen 55 . Tol. Emmtnllcl B•P"

Buffalo 11 Hartford, 7:35p.m.
Washington a\ Qu.cbec, 7:35p.m.
Delroit aLToronto, 7: 35 p.m.
Edmonton 11 Minne~ot a, 8:05p.m.
Loo
_ Aor,elcs It St Loois, 8:35p.m.
~ Y. ls anders at Ca.lg.uy, 9:35p.m .

49

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs jumped out to a 22-4
halftime lead and rolled to a 39·20
victory over Wellston in girls TVC
basketball action Monday evening
at Wellston.
The win gives the Marauders a
17·2 mark overall and a 14-1 mark
in the TVC, half a game ahead of
Federal Hocking. The TVC title
will be on lhe line Thursday night
when lhe Lancess invade Larry R.
Morrison Gymnaisum to tangle
with the Marauders. A Meigs win
will nail down their ftrst TVC ti~e
in four years and Ron Logan's third
as girls coach at Meigs.
Meigs had a balanced scoring
atlack with Reva Mullen, Verna
Compston, Tricia Baer and Kim
Hanning all scoring eight points.
Marauder head coach Ron Logan
cleared his bench in the second
half.
Meigs was an ice -cold 27%
from the floor hitting only 17 of 62
from the floor and five of 16 from

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Jury cQnvicts Tyson of contestant's rape
room.

Meigs beats Wellston 39-20

" Ttffm

Tonight's games

59

the Seminoles as North Carolina Tobacco Road.
State lost its seventh straight game.
Florida State also beat an
Florida State got the red· -or improved Wake Forest team 88-85
blue· - C81pCt treaunent in Chapel in overtime on the road last month.
Hill upon its inaugural ACC .game,
The Seminoles (16-~. 8·4) are
a Sunday afternoon battle tn the only I 1/2 games behtnd No . I
Smith Ce~ter.
.
Duke, the conference leader a.nd
Surpme, the Semtnoles the only ACC team to beat Ronda
whipped the Tar Heels 86-74 and · State on the road.
took a lot of the smoke out of

Tuesday, February 11, 1992

The Meigs Marauder boys eighth-grade basketball team recently
went2·3 in five games, bringing Coach Chris Stout's team to a 5-5
record on the year.
Meigs beat ViniDn County 4540 as Stanley led lhe Marauders'
·attack with two. Abbott, Bush and Mash scored six each, and
Hansen had four, while Pullins had two.
Meigs slipped past Gallipolis in a 43-40 thriller as Bush led . the
way with 16. Stanley added mne, and Abbott and Hansen had e1ght
each, while Yost and Pullins scored two each.
Nelsonville defeated lhe Marauders 50-47. Once again Abbott
led the Marauder atlack wilh his 20 points, Bush's 13, Hansen's
seven, S~anlcy's four and Pullins' three.
Athens defeated Meigs in overtime 50-44. Abbou, who poured in
17 10 lead the way, was followed by Bush (I 1), Hansen (10), Stan·
ley (four) and Yost (two).
And Meigs lost to a very talented Belpre team 59-36. Bush, who
led Meigs wilh 10, was followed by Abbott's e1ght, Hansen's SIX,
Slanlcy's four, three-point effons by Cunis and Yost, and Pullins'
two.

Division IV girls sectional
tournament dates announced
The Division IV girls sectional basketball tournament, to begin
Thursday Feb. 27 at Meigs High School, will feature Eastern and
Southern 'playing the 6:30 opener. Miller and Trimble will play in
the 8:15p.m. nightcap.
.
. .
The victors of those games wtll advance to the diStriCt IDuma·
men~ slaiDd for March 4· 7, at Jackson High School.

Basketball makeup dates posted
The Eastern boys varsity and reserve doubleheader against
Waterford, originally slated for Saturday, Feb. I, has been resched·
uled for Saturday, Feb. 15 at Waterford High School.
The Southem-Eastem boys varsity and reserve basketball con·
tests, postponed from Jan. 25 , will be rescheduled for Saturday,
Feb. 22.

Southern basketball team
to sponsor men's cage tourney
David Grindstaff, a member of lhe Southern Athletic Boosters
Club, announced lhat the Southern High School boys basketball
team will be sponsoring a men's independent basketball tournament
scheduled for Feb. 22 and Feb. 23.
·
The entry fee is $100 per IO·man roster. Trophies will be award·
ed 10 first· and second-place teams, and there will also be first· and
second-place sponsor trophies to the champion and the runner-up.
For more infonnation, please call949-2025 (Racine).

KCHS club to sponsor tourney
The Kyger Creek High School Pep Club will sponsor a men 's
league basketball tournament sebcduled for Feb. 29 and March I. ,
The entry fee for this double-elimination IDumamcnt, which will
be open to the first eig~t teams who enter, is $100 per team.
For more informauon, call Tom R1ccard1 at 367-7377 (Kyger
Creek H.S.).

Turkey hunting seminar slated
The Southeastern Ohio and Hocking Valley chapters of lhc
National Wild Turkey Federation will host the Ohio State Tur~ey
Seminar, Calling Contest and Banquet Masch 7 and 8 at Hockmg
Technical School in Nelsonville.
.· Featured speakers will be Da~ Stuckey, 10-time Ohio state call·
ing champion and past grand nauonal chsmp1on; Wayne Dailey, the
"Dean" of America's turkey hunting; and Rob Keck of the NWTF.
For more infonnation, contact Dave Graber at 373-9613 after 5
p.m.

TH~CARDBOX
I Yt Mile Sout• of Tuppers Pial as ~
01 State Route 7 (look for Slga) ., _
.DO MY DEPENDENTS NEED
SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBERS?

TRAIN FOR
MONEY
MAKING
CAREER IN
COSMETOLOGY
Available
to Those Who Qualify
•Approved By Ohio State
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Will you claim en exempUon lor

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whO

w•• age one or

older on Docomber 31, 1911? lloo,
you muot llal tho dlpendenl'o
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y011r Income tu return. '1M ooclol
01curlty number requlromonl
•r,pllee to eoch d9pendonl
c ai~ed an your InCome tax

rtlllm. It 1pplloo to lldulto 11 well
11 to ohlldr111.
Tho purpoulo to onouoe thotoll
exempllont on 1 tax . returft
rtiHooent IDIIlol people ond Chat
onlr !tn• t11p1yer claim• •
~ cllptndtnl

"To obllln 1 oooi1I otcurlty
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numb« for 1 dtpendln!, you mutt
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·
When- you hove quHdono iboul how. the tu Iowo affect •your
relllrn, oell your loco,l H'R Blook office. B - yo~ atop by the one
n. .oot you.~··,. here to help you.

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61 8 EAST Mllll

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POMEROY

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OPEN MONDAY-SITUIDIY 10 U.-6 1M.
(ALL 667~6092 FOI SltiC~l APPOINT.III'. '"
.,.

�Tuesday, February 11, 1992

~y

' ,.

. ..

The Daily Sentinel

The Bend

Tuesday, February 11, 1992
Page-6

•

-· ~.~------------------------------------------------------------------------··-

~ · Gardeners

learn to make flowers
under glass; discuss fair events

The February meeting of the
Chester Garden Club was held at
the home of Eleanor Knight with
Maurita Miller assisting.
The Gardener's Creed in unison
opened the meeting with Maida
Mora presiding. Devotions by
Bette Lou Dean, "Happy Valcn·
tine's Day" offered a list of things
giving a natural high . Included
were a letter from a friend, a job
. well done, rainbows, listening 10 a
· child's giggle, a long distance chat.
.h;ome -made vegetable soup, a
·warm smile, a snug spot 10 read on
·4 rainy day, hearing someone say
: nllove you." Poems, "Hugs" and
:, "Happy Valentine's Day" complet·
· ed devotions.
· Roll call, "A special event that
makes you thmk of flowers" was
:answered by ten members.
• The "Save the Earth " lesson,
"Pre-cycle" was by Dorothy Karr.
Some fact s presented in c! uded:
. each Am erican uses about 190
pound s of plastic .per year and
about 60 pounds of 1t IS packagmg,
which is discarded as soon as the
package is opened. One dollar out
of every $11 that Americans spend
on food goes for packaging. Pack·
aging waste accounts for about
one-third of all the garbage Amen·
cans send to landfills. Members
were encouraged to buy beverages
and food products in glass or alu·
minum, which are easy 10 recycle;
buy eggs in cardboard, not styro·

foam containers; teach children to
pre-cycle and support the effons of
children who are aware and work·
ing on pre-cycling.
Officers reportS were made and
the ill in the area noted.
Pauline Ridenour expressed
appreciation for her "Sunshine" in
January and will be sunshine chair·
man for February. Jean Frederick is
altar flower chairman at Chester
United Methodist Church in Febru·
ary.
A communication from the
Meigs County Park District by
Mary Powell was discussed. The
Meigs County Fair and Christmas
Flower Show dates wiU be added to
the county calendar of events for
1992. It was noted that June is the
deadline for entries in the Ohio
Festival Calendar.
A demonstration, "Flowers
Under Glass" was the program for
the evening. Oval and square pic·
ture frames of various sizes, with
beveled glass (to give room for
arranging) were decorated with airdried and pressed flow ers and
foliage. One featured tiny buttern,es made of seashells. One in the
onental manner was a back ground
of delicate paper, a pan of a gift
bag from Hong Kong . Pressed
nowers, fern and small valentine
beans arranged on a clear glass
dessert plate then covered with
another plate proved an attractive

party dessert plate when used on a
red cloth. The ferns used had been
dried in the microwave by Mrs.
Mora. Place a paper towel on a flat
dinner plate, arrange fern one
thickness deep, cover with another
paper towel and a second plate to
fit firmly. Microw~ve for three
minutes on high and change the
two wet towels . Assemble as
before. Microwave on high for
three more minute. The fern comes
out with a fresh green color. A
glass shade for a large candle, laid
on its side held an arrangement M
pheasant feathers, eucalyptus, fern
and dried flowers in lhe colors of a
decoy duck used wilh lhe arrange·
ment. A glass dome displaying a
watch and antique watch job was
also decorated with tiny flowers.
A valentine dessen course was
served by the hostesses.
Bette Lou Dean and Pauline
Ridenour received the door prizes.
Dorothy Karr was auctioneer for
the Valentine Surprise Auction fol·
lowing the meeting. Wrapped
paclcages were sold sight unseen.
The money will be used for garden
club projl:cts both local and state.
The thought for the day was
"Don't forget, aluminum foil is
recyclable.
The March 4 meeting will be at
the home of Clarice Krautter. Twila
Buckley will create a rain forest
terrarium.
..

Literary club
elects officers

Community calendar

TUESDAY
POMEROY • The Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
wiU meet Tuesday 81 7 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
All members are urged to auend.

Pomeroy. All members are urged to
auend.

POMEROY • The Meigs Coun·
ty 4-H Shepherd 's Club will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
County Public Library. Anyone
LONG BOTTOM • The Flame interested in joining the club is to
Fellowship Chapter will meet invited to attend or call 949-2136
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Faith Full or 992-5547 for information.
Gospel Church in Long Bottom.
David Dailey, Reedsville, will be
LONG BOTTOM • Jerry Cot·
the spealcer. The public is invited to trill will be the guest spealcer at the
auend.
Mt. Olive Community Church in
Long Bottom on Wednesday at 7
LOTTRIDGE • The Louridge p.m. Pastor Lawrence Bush invites
Community Center will hold its the public.
regular meeting on Tuesday at 7
p.m. Everyone welcome.

By MICHELLE WILLIAMS
Associated Press Writer
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Police
questioned Jeffrey Dahmer on at
least four occasions and entered his
apartment twice during his string of
slayings without learning his grisly
secret, according to records and '
testimony at his trial,
·

THURSDAY
POMEROY · The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
Chun:h. Bring a gift for an auction.
Vera Crow and Rose Sisson are the
hostesses. All members are urged
to auend.
POMEROY · There will be a
homemade chicken and noodle din·
ncr on Thursday from 4 to 7 p,m. ~~
the Meigs High School Cafetena
sponsored by the Meigs High
School Band Boosters. Cost is
$3.50 for adults and $2 for chil·
dren. Dinn er also includes
coleslaw, roll, dessert and drink.

.

'· '

TESS THOMAS

JORDANN THOMAS

: Birthdays observed
Tess Thomas
Tess Thomas, daughter of
Tammy Landers, celebrated her
first binhday recently a party at her
home.
Attending, besides her mother,
• were brother, Michael, sister, lor: dann, grandparents Tom and Judy
: ,Porter, Matt Stewan, Rob, Margie,
• Beth and Matthew Landers, Char·
lie, Chuckle and Willy Landers,
' Bonnie and Jessica Dav is and Tim
• · and Adam Thomas.
: ·:
Jordann Thomas
· • · Jordann Thomas, daughter of
: Tammy Landers, celebrated her
' third birthday recently with a pany
; at McDonalds.
' : Attending. besides her mother,
~ were brother, Michael, sister, Tess,
• grandparents, Tom and Judy Porter,
• Matt Stewart, Rob. Margie, Beth
aild Matthew Landers, Chuckie and
Willy Landers and Jessica Davis.
Michael Dorst
,
:, · Michael Dorst, son of Tammy
. -Landers, celebrated his eighth
birthday recently with a party at
home.

St. Paul women
make '92 plans

Prom show set
MICHAEL THOMAS
Aue~ding.

besides his mother,
were sisters , Jordann and Tess,
grandparents, Tom and Judy Poner,
Matt Stewart, Rob, Margie, Beth
and Matthew Landers, Keith Landers, Matt Smith, Tim and Ashley
Thomas.

Prom show planned
"Unforg~ttable 1992," the latest
in gowns, flowers and shoes for the
1992 prom year will be presented
at the Meigs County Public Library
in Pomeroy on Sunday from 2 to 4
p.m.
The event is sponsored by the
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority River
Bend City Council in cooperation
with Brittany's Boutique of Gal·
lipolis and Athens.
The public is encouraged to
attend and a limited number of
tickets are available for $2.50 per
person from any Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority member or from Nichola
Pickens at Eastern High School;
Holly Williams and Kelly Doidge
at Meigs High School; and Amber
Cummings at Southern High
School.
Refreshments wiU be served and
door prizes awarded.

Domino's Knows

O.W.E. PROORAM • Don Hunnell is a student enrolled .in
O.W.E. (Oceupatloaal Work ~perlence) at Mel&amp;&amp; High School.
The program Is designed to develop student motivation, change
student attltu~es toward education and develop through work
:t!IJierlence tbe necessary attitudes and abilities to become gainfully
employed.

-Hemlock Grange recipe deadline set
:- A potluck dinner was served day.
: recently at Hemlock Grange No.
Bobbie Pauley, Bob Reed, Ocla
'! 2049 to 22 members, two guests Ward and Etta Cullums were
reported ill.
.
1 and four youths.
1 . Master Rosalie Story conducted
· P!Wine Rife and Olristina Nayi·
-• :·...Una -.4 ritual work was er .gave ~ repon of tjle convenuon
' Wln die foUriJi de~.
they &amp;!tended.
j ' Members sang • Happy Birth· · • Muriel Bradford, lecwrer, had a
• dly• to Edna Clark and Sylvia . program on the New Year. Each
I Midkiff.
mef!!ber was presented a candle to
: Members were reminded to be ht for the coming year.
1bake their oatmeal cake for contest • The next meeting will be held
' ··bring to the next meeting.
Saturday with 1 vegetable soup
I : Reeipes for the state grange dinner.
· ·
Codlbtd should be sei,Jt by Satur·

1

.,

'(

••

The St. Paul United Methodist
Women's Group, Tuppers Plains,
met recently at the church social
room.
Betty Chevalier presided at the
meeting and JoAnn Francis gave
the secretary and treasurer report.
Joanna Weaver presented a pro·
gram on "Racism" with Elsie
Cauley. Rev. Sharon Hausman,
Belly Chevalier and JoAnn Francis
participating.
The group planned their 1992
program which included "Recycling" by Brenda Weber, "Our
Children" by Betty Chevalier,
"World Thank Offering" by Elsie
Cauley.
Members of the UMW will pos·
sibly host a mission program sometime in June.
The group voted to donate $25
10 help pay for the new piano at the
Meigs County Inftrmary.
Refreshments of bread, dip,
cherry cheese cake and coffee were
served.
The next meeting will be held
April7 with an Easter theme.

To place an ad

r. ..
•&amp;.99
!
,.,,.:l1
....
!
__
__
...--·
--- -- - ...... ___ _

PEPPERONI PIZZAS · P~PPI.OII PIZZA ,I
AND'4COLAS . I '.
cow 'I
......,..._.,.
,-..........,-.. ~.. I
- -...... - .......... L41Jc...A . . . . . . I
....
' ...
.......

Ad1 ou\.llde Gallia, Ma1on or Meiga counlie. mwt be prepaid

I

Recei..-e dilcount ror ad• paid in advance.

• Free Ad.: Gl~eaway a nd Found ad. und er 15 word• Will he
run. 3 day• at no charge.
• Price of ad for all capitalletten i1 double price of ad co1l
• 7 point line type only used
• Tribune i1 not re~ponaible for errora after firat day (check
for erron faul day ad run• m p11per). Call before 2:00p.m.
day after publ1cation to make correction
• Ad. that muat he pa1d in ad\laoee are:
Card or Thank..
Happy Ada
In Memoriam
Yard Salet
• A cluaified adverti.ement placed in the Gallipolia Daily
Tribune (except Clusified Dilplay, BUiineaa Card or L.ee:al
Notice~) will also 11ppear in the Point Plea~anl Repter and
the D11ily Sentinel, reachi115 over 18,000 home.

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

was no problem. I believed his
story.
Dahmer told Yockey he met the
man at a gay nightclub and the two
went back to the West Allis home
of Dahmer's grandmother, where
he was li ving. He said the two
drank and fell asleep.
·
II

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Frtday Paper
Sunday Paper

HOMEMADE CHICKEN &amp;
NOODLE DINNER
THURS., FEB. 13-4:00·7:00
Meigs High School Cafeteria
Sponsored by MHS Band
Boosters
Adu~s: '3.50 Children '2.00

15
15
15
15
15

I
3
6
10
Monthly

Rate

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6,00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

21- BUiineu Opporlunily
22- Money &amp;o Loan
23- Prof. . ioaal Ser•M:•

992-Middleporli

67S-Pt. Pleasant

Pomeroy
985-Chelter
843-Portiand
247-Let•rt. r.u.
949-Racine
742-Rutland

458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882-New H•~en
895-Le!orl
937-Bufralo

7-

Loat a nd Found

8-

Public Sale &amp;
Auelion

Public Notice

Public Notice

unct.r the 11m1 term&amp; and

Interested In real estate

\I .~

I

GET RESULTS • FAST!

9- Wante&lt;l to Buy

667 -CoolviUe

34- Buine11 Buildin8'
35- Loll &amp; Acroap
36- Rnl Eo111e Wanled

1:1 \T

4- Civcaw•y
&gt;- Hoppy Ado
6- Lo.t and Found

58- Fruill &amp; Veptololu
59- For Sale or Trade

33- Far111.1 far Sale

f-------::::--=-:====:::-::::------1

41- Houte~ lor Rent
42- Mobile Homes for Rent
43-- Farm• for Rent
44- Apar1ment for Rent
45- Furnilhed Room•
46- Space lor Rent
47- Wanted to Rent·

Gallla County Meigs County M..on Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

367- Che•hire
388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan DilL
643-Arabia DUt.
379-Walnul

56- p.,. for Sale
'
57- Muted hutrwnent.l ''

13- ln1urance
14-- Bu1ine11 Training
I ~ Sc hool. &amp; Instruction
16- Radio , TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Ma.cellaneouJ
13- Wa nted To Do

IN THE

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST TEEN CHOIR

vs

.

SWEETHEART OF A SALE
AT HOODS

20% OFF STOREWIDE
WEDNESDAY·SATURDAY

NITA JEAN RITCHIE
41885 STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
DEFENDANT
NOTICE OF SALE .
UNDER JUDGMENT OF
FORE CLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DEUNQU~IlT
• · LAND TAXES
Cut No. 91-DLT-33
Whereaa, judg!Dent haa
been rendered egalnol
cariein parcelo ol r11t
property lor lana,
••••••menta, chargee,
penatllu, lntereot, and
coat. •• follows:

Parcel No.

SAYE ON NATURALIZERS,
HUSH PUPPIES, JUBILEE by D. Myer,
PORTSIDERS, FLORSHEIM, K·SWISS,
L.A. GEAR, KANGAROO, NURSE MATES

20%0FF RED
.Plain TGtd
· Stetd Toed
Insulated
ONE GIOIP OF SHOES

~~;:r

--50.%
OFF

HOOD FAMILY SHOES
992·6254

Alll..

-~~

I

Pomeroy

particularly deecrlbed 11
followo: Beginning at lh•
NOflheaol corner of Frection
No: 3, thence North 4 48'
Eaol 3IT.25 r..tto 1 point,
thence North 86 54' Weal
1,595.39 feel to 1 a take,
thence North 87 04' 30"
Weat1155.25 feet to the true
point of beginning, thence
South 87 04' .30" Eeol
367.45 IHito I atakl tt'tha
Northweol corner of 1 7.1
acre troc~ thence South 43
00' Wut 443.00 lui to 1
otake at the Soulhweol
comer of • 7.99 ecre troct,
thence South 35 27' E111
438.00 lui to a otake otlho
Southoaol corn., ol 1 7.1
point, thence North I 36'
Wealt33.32 leo! to a poin~
thence North 17 36' Weal
91.00 IMtlo 1 poln~ lhonco
North 43 3&amp;' West t83.58
fut to a poin~ thence North
8 36' Wool 174.10 lui to a
poin~ thence North 13 06'
Waott86.781utto lht point
of beginning, containing
t.71 tore, more or len.
Relerenc• Dttd, Daed
Book 228, Plgt 541.
Whoroae, euch judgment
orders ouch r.t property to
be oold by the undersigned
to aalltlly th• toll! amount
olauch juclgmonL
Now, therefore, public
nolle• II h~ ghlln thltl,
Jemee 11. Soutaby ol lltlga
County, Ohio, will 1111 such
reel proparty at p~bllc
euctlon, lor oaoh, to the
hlghelt bidder of an Mlount
thtl ....ala 11 Iaiii; AI In
lht court'• order, the l1lr
millet! vtlue ollht p.-ctla
11 determined by lha
county 1udllor, In the.
amount of S$,110.00 or the
tol1l "amount of tho
judgment, Including 111

P~AINTIFF

.

T-.lnteral
111d Penaltiea
I0-00554.0011
S 253.23
10-00555.000
$1,740.54
Total
$t,883.77
Parcel 1. llltuettd In tht
County ol Utl,go, Stale of
Ohio, and In the Townohlp
ol Orenge, end bounded
and deocrlbod aa lolowa:
Situeted In Fraction 3 and
FracUon 12, Town 4 North,
Ringe t2 Wnl, Orange
Townahlp, llelge County,
Ohio, and being mort
ptrUculerly dncrlbed- ao
lollowo: Bagtnnlng at •
olako whloh It North 4 48'
Eut 377.25 lett, and North
86 54 Weot.1 ,595.39 .lui
from the SouthNal corner
of Frection i2, thtnc:t North
81 00' W.at......leel 1o a
point; !honea South 43 00'
Weol 443.00 IMt 1o 1 point,
!hence South 35 27' Etol
438.0 IHIIo I polill, thonct
South It 33 40" Eaat
• 134.14 lui to ·• point,
thonoe North 14 33' 4'0"
" Eut 381.60 lUI to I point
on tht WMIIlnt ol T. R. No.
. 2AO th- alona tht Weal
, ana IMUtn lill 411 t. H. No.
210 North 23 ft' WMI 44.0
IHI to • ebikt;llttnoe North
., SO' W..t 142.0 lett to •
• point, th- N~ 20 45'
·Wt1l 2U lui to llit point
of btglnnlng, -wnlng 7.1

\1 L 1\ ( II \\I , I :-i I·,
51- Hou.. hold Coodo
52- Sporting Coodo
53- Anttquea
54- Mi1e. Merchandiae
SS-- Building Suppliea

t•x••, ••••••mente,

P1rael I. IIIUalt In
F110llon I IIIII Fnlallon tl,
1 Town 4, Rlnat 11, Or~~~g~
· Townehlp, lftlge County,
Ohio, 111d being mort
/1

'

•

I

••

Li~e.tock

Hay &amp; Crain

·

Seed &amp; Fertiliaer
AutM for Sale
Trueka for Sale
Vana&amp;4WD'•
MaLorcyclee
Boata &amp;: Moton for
Au10 Parll &amp; Acc.....rieaj
Aulo Repair
Camplllfl Equipmeftl

po
Pl ... blnl &amp; Healin1
Exca\laliDI

Eleclricol &amp; Ref•·i!!eoolio~

Bu·s iness Services

~~

MICROWAVES
VHS CAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

GUN SHOOT

.

'I

Low Grade Oak
Saw Logs
per
Delivered To·

Pomeroy, Ohio

~JAYMAR

s,t.

Clark=;,':'l:

YOUNG'S

ssso

cum

and

!

.

.,

· ~·

WANTED .

Quality
Stone Co.

ohargeo, penalllea, 111d
Inltrtll peyeble eub·
sequent to the dtllvtry to
the prottOullng 1ttom-r of
the delinquent lend llx
ctrtlftoelt or mull! llal ol
cltllnquenllrecta lor .• loW
o1•1.mn•
Tht ftlll IUCh ult ahll
at AT THE FRONT 'TEPS
OF THE MEIGS COUNTY
COURTHOUSE IN POIIE·
ROY, OHIO, ON THE 2nd
DAYOFIIAACH, 1181.
II ttld P••IIJ do 101 PollltfOY, Ohio.
All fMlrltn• and pvbllo
rtolln null lent bid, tiler
ehal ~ ollertcl lor ule, carporallona owning or

......,_.,ltllt.

Wanted lo Buy

condition• of the llrat aale within tho territory
and at the oame time ol day described above will be
and at the aame place, on given an opportunity to be
Monday, the 16th day of
March, tnt, lor an amount heard
place above
a1 thespeclfled.
time and the I1-:=======~;:::======:::;Tr~~~~;;;;;=;r;:;;:;=::====:
1
that equala at least, aa In
Larry E. Spe~~~~~ BISSELL &amp; BURKE
COUNTRY MOBILE HOME
the court'o order, tho lair
Meigs Counly Common
3Nlct Mollllt Htltts I« R..
market value ollht parcela
io determined by the
Pleu Court
CONSTRUCTION
Just Nortli of,_.,
county eudllor, In lh• (21 4, t1, 1a, 25, 4tc
•New Homes
Sttrtllg ot '225 P• ...
emount ol $5,8t0.00 or the
•Garages
GUN SHOOT
cal.,614-992-552&amp;
total amount of the
il
385-8227
Public
Notice
Judgment, Including all
•Comp ete
1
:00
P.M.
L..-----:!2/..:~..3 tt•..
taxea, ••••••mente,
Remodeling
·;
Remodeling
SUNDAYS
ANANCIA~ REPORT
ch•rgea, penaltlee, and
Stoll
&amp;
Co•11are
Using
the
Classifieds
Stop &amp; Co11par.:. ·
OF THE
inloreol payable oub·
BOARD OF UBRARY
flEE ESTIMATES
Starting Sept. 22
Is as Easy as, ..
aoquenl lo the dellvory to
Free Esti11ates :
TRUSTEES
the proaecuUng at;ornoy of
985·4473
12 Gauge Factory
~
985·4473 .
MEIGS COUNTY PUBUC
tho delinquent land tax
UBRARY
certlllcete or muter liat of
667·6119 :.
667·61
Choke Only9-&amp;·lf
\
For Atoll Y- Enclng
dallnqu..tlroclo lor a total
Dtctmber 31, 1191
of $t,t!l3.77.
County cl Melgo, Ohio
Jam Mil. Souloby,
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
Sh•iH of Melga County
REWARD
RECEIPTS:
(t)28; (2)4, t1,31c
Tueo......................... 428,t08
SSOO far Information
Palron
Anea
and
leading to the ,rrest and
Public Notice
F..............................2,354
convkHOI
of 1111 person
Earnings on
•VInyl Siding
PUB~IC NOTICE
or
~sons
lnvolvttlln
the
lnveetmen11..- ....... tl,347
•Replacement
To all peraon• Interested, Miocellaneouo
breaking
and
entering
of
$150
1,00
Window
pu~llc ~ollce Ia hereby
Recelpta .................... 1,287
Jhe
Racine
.Gun
Club
and
•Roofing
given:
Jhe theft of several
•Insulation
t. Thai on the 22nd day of Contributiono, Gilts a
Donation•···········-······•sa
articles
fro!!l the 1stab·
JAMES
KEESEE
OHIO PALLET CO
January, t992, pursuont to Total
Rocolpll..........452,055
Ohio Revlud Code Soctlon DISBURSEMENTS:
llshment. Alllnlormallon
992·2772 ur
391 WEST MAIN
6tt9.0t el aoc., there was Salarlea end
wdl be kept confidential.
742·2097
POMEROY,
OHIO
tiled In the olflce of the
539 Bryan
Benollll ................. t51,717
614·9U·6461
Call
614·949·2671
814-992-3524
Clerk of the Common Pleas SuppllM........................5,313
Middlepor~
1-7·92, 1
1·22·'92-lnto.
of Melgo County, Ohio, the Purchlaed 6 Contraclod
2-3·'92·1 rna
Petition of the Olive
Servicel.. .................82,467
Township Tr~slus lor the Ubrary lltlerlala a
eatabtlshmont of a Reglonol
lnformaUon••••••••••••••31,215
WHALEY'S AUTO
Public Notice
Sewer Dlatrlcl to be known Capital
OuUoy............. 12,055
os Tuppers Plains Regional Olhor Objecll............... 1,545
PARTS
RACINE
Sewer Dlalrlcl. Said Dlotrlct Total Dlobur...
Change Cteh.............. - ....14
In
FIRE DEPT.
Ia to be elllbllohed for the
mento............. - .....292,392 Othor
Frame
following purpoau : To Exceati(Deficloncy) of
Bashan Building
ln-tmonto..........370,812
WEW &amp;USED
provide lor the cotlecllon
Rcpll
ov•
EVERY
SIZED LIMESTONE
Tollt Fund
fOR ALL MAKES
and aanllary dlapo11t of
Dlebmta
.................
t51,663
Belanct-...............
315,455
&amp;
MODELS
SAT. NIGHT
sewage and other liquid OTHER ANANCING
Thlt Ia 111 uneucllod
FOR SALE
waste produced within the
6:30P.M.
nnancltlreport
992·7013 or
SOURCES/(USES):
proposed Sewer Dlolrlcl Operating
Call 614·992·6637:
I certify 'the preceding
992·5553
Transfers Starting
28
and to oddrua the building
ln ............................ 175,000 roporttobacorrocL
OR
TOll
FREE
factory Choke
St. Rt. 7
ban lmpoaed upon the
Trenolere12 Gauge Shotgun Only
Tuppers Plains area by lhe OpereUng
1·100·148·0070
OuL........................ t75,000
Cheshire, OH.
Strhtly lnforcad
State and Federal Fund
Balance
9·t3·'U·Ifn
112/tln
Envlronmenlol Prolocllon
Bawd of216
Ubrary
WntTruateu
Main SL ~=:::;::U~IWI=N;,O;H;IO~~
Jtn. t, tnt"-.......235,712
Agency.
.
Pomeroy, OH. 45781
Fund Beltlnce
2. That the land aought to
Dec..31, IHI.........3t5,455
Ph~4)1t2.U13
MEIGS
be Included In the Dlatrlcl
In Benki.,.......... 24,6H
7' tm
compllu Ianda In 'the OIIV. Cuh
!2)
1t,
ttc
F
"Y
GOLF
COURSE
and Orange Townahlpa In Petty Ctlh.........................so
CARPENTER SERVICE
MEMBERSHIP FEES
Meigs County, Ohio, _ _ __.._ _ __
-Room
Additions
1
Men...............~75 ea.
generally described •• the 1 ca d f Th k
2
In Memory
-Gutter Work
•
Tupper• Plain• area and ••
r 0
an B
-Electrical and PlumbinJ.
Wamen
........
..S225
ea.
being generally bounded on
-llooflng
....
CauDie.................S450
tho North by line numbers
-Interior 6 Exterior ·••
on..hall (tl2) mile from the
Fam'lly............
(41
PalnUng
::
interaocUon of Stile Route
(FREE ESTIMATES)
B.slless.........l650 (4)
7 111d State Routa 88t .and
V. C. YOUNG til·:
parellot to Sllte Route 68t:
Students ..............'I00
bounded on tho South by 1
\ 992·6215
College................' ISO
tina thalia on ..quarter (tl4)
Pomeroy, Ohio .
1/31/92/1 mo. pd.
mile south from the
1l·t4·'10i
lnleraocdon of 81111 Route
7 and Stale Route 18t, ond
parallel to Stala Route 881:
TROLLEY RATION
&amp;
bounded on tiHo Eaal by 1
R&amp;C
EXCAVATING
tine that Ia on..hall (112)
TRIM
BULLDOZING
mila uti from · the
Fell.10tllru
14
PONDS
interaocUon of Stale Route
REMOVAL
Special Valentine
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
7 end Stell Route 18t, end
lowers.
porotlll to Slate Ro4lt '7; OVI an WO
LAND CLEARING
•LIGHT HAULING
Hours -10 to 8
and bounded on lha Weal comfort at the
WATER&amp;
FE8.
18
•FIREWOOD •
by a tine thetis one-quortor her death.
SEWER LINES
(114) mile hom tho
Sadly milled by
BASEMENTS&amp;
BILL SLACK
lntoraoctlon ol Stale Route
HOME SITES
husband. Charles
7 and State Route 18t, and
HAULING: Lime1tone,
Manley, and children,
992·2269
for Mort
ptrtlltt to Slett RoUtt 7.
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Wes.
Peach,
John,
For 1 more dtlalled
614·992·2549
USED RAILROAD TIES
Uconoed and Bonded
I PatandSue
deeorlptlon of tho rool
Opon llon.-111. 10-' filii
PH.
614·992-5591
ealtte contelned In the
llunclly ... filii
12·6-tln
· 11 Help
pro.l'ooed Tupper• Ptatna
Rtglontl Sew.- Dlttrlclend
the actuel property ownn
ollaoted. All ,lnleretled
Now In
MARCUM
1180111. Cln COIIIeCI Lindsey
We ~Y' an immediate opening f9f a
Lyone, A· o. Box . 133,
Stock -,··
salesperson that wants to work lor one of the . ·CONTUCTING
TUPPfll Plains, 0No 417U.
3. A public hoertng on . largest and tasteat giowtng used car operations
All CONDIOONERS - HEAT PUMPS alii
aald Petition thetl be held
·
·
In
lhe trl-coufi.IV area. ·
In lltlga County Common
' . FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDI
. EXCELLENT EARNING POTENTIAL AND BENEFITS
Pfua Court on the 2nd day
of lleroh, tiiZ 11 to::so
WIS
MnO sAus • f &amp;I NfRIIfJ.
&amp;R0011
l MOIILI HOIQ ,
a.m., by the Court of
Co111111on Ptua of llataa IJiflY TOllY.,. IIIIY'IIUTO
HEAnNt&amp; .
AdciiHons I
Countr, Ollto, at tlie
l_.. • Wtn SdteaiR4. tilt. 141
CourtltoUit In the olty of

INSULATION

Public Notice

COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
HOWARD E. FRANK
MEIGS COUNTY
TREASURER

,,

43- Equipment for Rent
49- Fot I.euo

11- Help Wanted
12- Si tuatioru Wanted

H.E.C.

Public Notice

I \1: \1 'i 1'1'111'

,\ I I\ I ' I I II
l

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads,

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges •.•

4~olUpoUo

1' 1\ \\I 1\1

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$,05/day

~~ 92 _ 11•

PRICE REDUCED!

Coi!IH9H104lor

Words

RACINE GUN
CLUB

PartiJI ..,., lilanmg ""illllo. The pica has baeo
1adu1ed to !81;!00, m;100; 573,900 0~ IIWNI
lilaMOQ of '1' Ia 60% of pHdiOS! OIIIOUI! ""Y ba ponf
bla for ljJolfyitg -to bui ""f n&lt;o homo ao 3~ '"
11 nRaciM. 4 BR. 3ldls12ga!:11hlod I BR fl'.
Plq)Oi!y iKIHits 4,800 s~ o.la1111

Pluq Fnst

-·------

1

Hockman, Julie Buck, Erin Warner, Joy O' Brien, Beckie Elliott,
Arnie Elliott, Heather Hud son,
Jacob Powell and Megan Evans.
Ministers of the chun:h are AI
Hartson and Richard DuBose. The
public is invited to both performances.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1 ·00 p.m. Salurday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
I~ p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE

POLICIES

You'll Low Oar
Pep,aronl
WEST MAIN STREET- 992·2124
---~~--,
1 lOll
2 MEDIUM
I

al about Dahmer when they questioned him in 1988 about a man's
claim that Dahmer robbed and
dru~ged him .
He seemed normal. He wasn't
hesitant," said Detective Don
Yockey of the suburban West Allis
Police Department. "I felt there

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

Days

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.·5P.M.- SAT.S-12
CLOSED SUNDAy

Dawn Hockman, Brooke Coates,
Stephanie See, Loric Grimm, Tarn
Gerlach , Michelle Grimm, April
Hudson, Heather Davenport, Sharla
Cooper, Jared Stewart, Matt Benson, Jeremy Hartson, Dodger
Vaughan, Mikie Wilfong, David
Toundas, Bill Toundas. Aaron

investigating officers went to the
wrong addreSs.
And in another case, police
never followed up on a teen-ager's
repon that Dahmer hit ,him in the
head wilh a mallet.
Two police officers testified
~onday 81 the serial lciller's sanity
triallhat they found nothing unusu-

RATES

Teen choir to perform Sunday

'

dtunken driving in Ohio in 1978
while taking the body of his first
victim to a dump. But he talked his
way out of trouble even after police
shined a light on the plastic bags.
Dahmer also was linked with a
missing person's repon and a complaint about foul odors coming
from his aparUn_ent, but both times

'

MIDDLEPORT • The OAPSE
Local No. 17 will hold a ratification meeting on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
at the Meigs Junior High Cafeteria.

Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Middleport
Literary Club held at the Meigs
County Public Library with Mrs.
Dwight Wallace as hostess.
The Teen 'Choir of the MiddleNew officers are Mrs. Carl port Church of Christ will present
Horky, president; Mrs. Wenda II the musical, "The Big Picwre.~· on
Hoover, vice-president; Mrs. Sunday at 7 p.m. and again on
Richard Owen, secretary; Mrs. Monday at 7:30p.m, at the church,
Eileen Buck, treasurer.
located at the comer of Fiflh and
Mrs. Chester Erwin reviewed Main
Streets in Middleport.
the book "Livingston" by Tim Jeal.
This is the fourth year for the
Sh&lt;; stated Livingston was a poor
to use their talents in a musi·
boy who worked 12 and one-half choir
cal production. This year's musical
hours a day in a cotton mill . He features original songs written by
educated himself and eventually popular contemporary Christian
qualified as a medical missionary arust, Michael W. Smith. It focuses
in 1841 and went to Africa where on the age old question, "Why do
he stayed for 30 years. He married bad things happen to good peoa missionary's daughter and they ple?" In 'The Big Picture," this dif·
had children. They had a hard life ficult question is tackled through
as they traveled all over Africa songs and drama.
with no conveniences. He was a
Directors for the musical are
m•ss1onary,
geographer, Sharon Stewart, Shelly DeBose and
astronomer, ethnologis~ anthropol·
Mike Wilfong. The sets were crest: .
agist, chemist and botanist. How· ed
by Gail Davenport, Christi
ever, he also was a self-sacrificing
Lynch, Art Hess and Steve Pick·
man, ruthless and cruel. It came as
a great surprise when people ens. Pickens also serves as sound
learned that he had actually failed technician. Controlling the lighting
as a missionary as he only convert· is Tom Grimm and Becky Benson.
Members of the choir are Me lis·
ed one. He died in 1873 but his life
sa
Wilfong, Bridgett Powell, Ali·
played a major part in establishing
son
Gerlach, Sherry Johnson,
British Imperial power in Africa.
Roll call was answered with
members telling of a place in
Africa they would like 10 visit The
hostess served light refreshments.

The Dally Sentlnel-P• 7

•The Area's Number l
Marlietplace

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.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Merchants Association will meet
Wednesday at8:30 a.m. in the conference room at Bank One in

Records show Dahmer was
questioned in connection with a
robbery, a sexual assault, drunken
driving and his relationship with a
dazed, naked teen-ager during the
years he was killing and dismem·
bering 17 boys and men.
According to testimony. Dah·
mer was stopped on susptcion of

Call992-2156

ELECTRONICS • Mike Thomas and Danny Lewis are students
enrolled in tbe electronics program at Meigs High School. This is a
two-year program providing class room and lab experiences neces·
sary to gain the skills of basic electronic principles and theory, the
application of this theory to various components, circuitry, and
systems required in the neld of electronics.

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dahmer escaped one close call after another; talked his way out of trouble"

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

REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
Concen Band wdl present its sec·
ond concen for the school year on
Tuesday at 7;30 p.m. at the high
school gymnasium.

.

.

·"

•·

SALE8 OPPORTUNITY

ElrflaCJ.

ami

2M
•"•••m•aoAD
UUIPOUI, OliO

BENNEn

915•4141

PHOII446.f971 .

' I

-New Homes
-Re11odehng
-Garages

(614)44H41.•1-IIH72·St67

11-22·92-1
'

...
' '

.

,.

,
4-26-tl

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thci'
• SNAFu® by Bruee Beattie

Annou ncemenl s

11

Help Wanted

February 11, 1992

'
by Larry Wright

3~ MobiiB .H omes

71 Autos for Ssle

for sate

3

Announcements
Moot Slngift: Gup • Gl~a. 1·
900-4117·1004 $2.15/mln. Must
lo Ovor 18, Fonpalolrvlno CA.
REDUCE; Bum Off Fll Whllo
You Slooi» Tau OPAL Avalloblo

I

0

I P 1FFYII

At: FrU1h Phlrmacy.

U""'IIChod? Moll Arll Slnglll

6;oo(I)a Cll

Through Our Slnglu Newsltl~
ter. 'Nrltt: Slngltl, P.O. Box

(J)e llll oa

\ll Bquara One TV Stereo.

I

a Wolld Today

1D Rln 1Jn Tin, K·8 Cop
Slereo. 1;1
6:05 ()) a...rty Hllblllea

llll

II

0

I I I' I

I

L..-L-.L--L-.L-...1.--' yrw

'1:.
~..a. E;l
8 Andy Ottfllth

(9

(!)
I[J Scooby Doo

aUpCtoM
ID Zorro Stereo. E;1
6:35 ()) A1ottr Griffith
7:00~~~· 11J1 Wheel of Fortune

... '
...
.

develop lrom 111p No. 3 !&gt;.low.

PiiNT NUMB~iED
LElT ERS IN SQUAIE S

"

...

.

·-

SCRAIM.ns ANSWIRS
~.,o
Violin - Mercy - Ensue - Jumper - PROVE
.
Overheard in lobby ol courthouse: "An attorney ts
someone who knows you are innocent an.~ IS w1111ng to
spend every cent you have to PROVE 11.

ill The Jetteroont.D
(I) lnalda !dillon

~

II

1 1

L.

6:30 (%) 8 11J1 NBC Newt · ~
. (Jllav!ld by a. Bell
(I) 8 ABC Hewl

f£

..' .' .

Aman
DA K 0 V
wile drinks
popcorn at the
l---,~~~.,6r-r~~--I~J concession stand . He spilled
_ _ . _ _ _
the drinks and dropped the
popcorn . · A
woman
G1 L K y N
asked,"You aren't going to let
-.,.--.,...-r-.,~"Tr-1· I]Lm •··· the ··•· are you?"
r
B U Complete the chuckle quoted
.
.
.
_ .
.. by filling In 1ho mllllnjj words

DNBAT~

Cl.fUCK ? CHAZ ?
""'"·~~"? W~ATEVER. ..

,.! ,

t-1

rn Math Leeming Hour
gfrrt'J!Y!'W"., ~;~

Giveaway

.. '.

-r-j,Lro,r:-;y,---~IJ

IIJN&lt;Il Vklto Power

1043, Golllpollo, Ohio 45631.

4

" '

t;r

.lD MacN•Utrar

NeweHour
(J) a C.nd Camera

.....

.' .
....

(!) Ltglllallve U~te
llll Curran! Altair ~
~TAk: Tlie Next

9

Wanted to Buy

6 . Lost &amp; Found

1980-85 4-wheel

Lost : Alr~alt Ma~. Charry
Ricf.Qa Road, Rio Grande, Ohio.

pick-up, Amtt1can rnadl, good
mechanical cond, call 614·992·

614-~45-9535.

drl~t

Jongbed

3548

FOUND· male, Walker Coon Portable Refrlgeralor, Call 614·
d:l:,. Pomeroy Pike area, 614· 446-8594 after 5 p.m.
98 420
Tickets tor the Rtba McEntere

concert, 814-441-1305.

IDI8 E-"'hnent Tonlghl

Merchandiser To Stock &amp; lnvan·

tory In Two Local Sloret; Approx 8 Hrs Per MONTH. 1.aoG-

878-5796, ca111oA.M. 3P.M.

,18,....,,..w,_a:..n:..t.:.ed..,.,...to.,....Do_,.....,.
Bobyolt In My Homo. RodPatltnl S.rvlct Atalstant, tpo Will
ney Aru. Atftructe Avalltblt.
proximately 2Q-2Shrs. pw w.ek, cau 1114-245-51117.
muat be energtlic and lblt to
work llu:lblt echtdulelncludlng
day, evening and Saturdsy
hours. Mldlc:al oHI~ IX·
perlenct hllplul, will tn~ln ma-

Gtorgn Portable S.wmlll, don't

heul your logs to the mill lust
call 304-875·195l
·

tur~,

Employment Services

rlsptnalblt person who 11 Miss Ptula'a Day care Center.
sensitive fo blr1h control and Safw, aHordablt, chfldcara. M-F
reproductive heahh nNda of 8 1.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agos 210-10.
clfenls. Must be well orgtnlttdil Bttore, after school. Drop-Ins
accurate whh figures an welcome. 814-446-8224. New In·
record keeping, hl¥1 auperlor flnl Toddler Care. 614-446-622l
communication tkllla, mual be
able to work undlr guldtlln•· Pertnershlp Dane:• lnstNcUon.
wilh minimal aupervrslon. A• Praftnlonal young couple
qulras ,.liable lr~nsportatlon, teaching Country Wastem,
ability to work In Mtlga, Gallla, Ballroom, Latin and Modarn
Lawrence CountiM and othlr pa"norshlp donelng. Slngloo,
slt11 If nuded. Time and out of Couplel end graupa welcome.
counly lrovtl paid. Sian $5.50. For Into pleiH call after 7;00
Send mumt and two employ- PM ••k tor Anna or Jim, 304·
mtnt ralarencea to Planntd 675-3884.
Parw1thood ol Southn.. Ohio, Will care for ln¥111d In my home
396 Richland AnniJI, Athens, Racine aru, reuonable, gooe11
OH. 45701 by Fobruory 18, 1992, location end care, 614·949-2393

EOEIESP

Will do flooring lnotollallon 6

You'll be floating on a
with
the buys you'll find in the
classlfieds.

448-4222, ar Evenings: 614·4462174.

4 bdm.. houae In Racine, $250/
mo. plus deposit, you pay
electric and gas, ref. required,

614·94g.2217

936 First Avenue, Gallipolis,
Ohio. 1br, Partially Furnlshtd,

1175. Cell 614-448-4038, 614-4461115.
Big Country Hause: Deposit
And References
Required.
Ttrins: To Be OlscusHd On In·

apocllon. &amp;14·37g.2209.

Hou111 tor 1111 or rent on land

contract, down pilymenl is

Wlll do House cleaning In Gal·

Small houu, 2 bedroom, 1813
JeHerson Blvd. 2 btdroom apt,
2101112 Jetftrson Blvd. 304-615·

llpolla Arel. $4.50 Per Hr. 814-

446-11406

Will Do In Home Nursing Cere.
Have Alflrtncft. 614-446-4441.

golloblo, 614·992-3027

1365.

42 Mobile Homes

Will do Income taxM. Phone

· lor Rent

304-175-3138. Goillpollt Fony.

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

CL\~H?H

n•

repair, reasonal51e price, 13 'yrs

oxp. 304-875-52?? ar 675-61?1.

Financial
21

Buslnass
Opponunlty
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

recommends that you do busl·
ness with peopla you know1 and
NOT to stnd money ttwo~n the
mall until you have Investigated
the offering.
Private

Phone Route,
Llfttlmt Aftldual Income Call

Now

Pay

1-800-226-3305.
WolffTonnlng Bolli

N.w commlf'Cill.flome unite,

loom $181.00, Lampe, lotlono,

ecceaoriH, monthly payment•
low u $18.00, call todty, fr•
new color cttalog, 1-80()..228-

1292

Real Estate

14x70 Wllh Expando, 1 112
Baths, AI. 141, 2 Mlloa From Gtl·
llpolle, 614-448-4824.
2br Mobile Home, Clo11 In, No
Pelt, $200 Per Month Including

Wllor, S100 Dopooll. 614-4463617.
2br Mobile Home,

Refe~ncts,

7~.

Late model mobllt home, b1th

'·

,.

-.

•

1'nm. you,. du fie,. into cash,
Sell it the easy way.•• by plione,
rw nee(l to lem'e yon,. home.
J•lace your· cl(.tssi/ied ad tQ(lay!
.l5 wonls m· less, 3 days,
3 papers,$6.00

OffiCf

Merchandise

55

Building
Supplies
Sl
Household
Black, brick, IIWtr plpaa, win·
dowa, llnttf.s, etc. Claudt Win·
.Goods
IllS, Rio Grondo, OH Coli 614· 73 vans &amp; 4 WD's
Pig Sovlnga On All Corpel In 245-5121
Slack. Cloh And C.ory, Mai1979 Ford F-150, 4x4, 351 Malar
!Ohon Clrpolt, e14o441FIII44.
56 Pets for Sale
And Body, Excollent COndition.
614-448-1304.
COlor T.V.; Smoll F111Zor, Bot· =a~roo+m-ond-,-.,S-up-ip.,.ly--:S:-ho-p--:P:--:,,
ttry Cltorgar, Po- TOOio, Bolo Grooming. All br-, llyloa. 1979 JNp CJ5, now tap, !3,000 :
VCR,
Elactrlc
~rllor, lams Pet Food OHler. Julie mll11,1ocal owner, 304-875·1214.
Clolhu Oryor, 114-251-l:n&amp;.
Wobb. Coli 614-44tt.0231.
1987 Ford Bronco, Full Size. 1 ..
GOOD USED APPUAMCES AKC Female Boston Terrier. 4 Owner, Low Mileage, 614-446WatheN, dryere, rtfrigtr•tora,
montho old. Block &amp; Whitt. 6:::111::-B:C.::-.,.-::=-:-:-;;:=--:--:rangoo. Sltlgga APPill,_., I200.
304-175-5738.
1988 F0&lt;d F150 414 XLT La~ol,
Uppar Rlvw Ra. Booldo Stloaded,
extended cab, $11,000,
Cralll MOitl. Coli 114-4411-T.IN.
Dog Hou111 For Solo: Sovoral
Slzu. 1 112 Milo Ou1 Rl. 141, 614-992·7663
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Wayn• Shamakar. 614-441-- '7
COmplllt home tumllhlngo. D5t1
,,4
Motorcycles
Hours: Man-Sol, 8-1. &amp;14-448=.,.--,.-...:.,..-..,..--~
0322, 3 min out Bula¥111• Rd. Floh Tank, 2413 Jockaon Avo. 1987 Honda 4· whtlltr, good
Froo DoiiVIIy.
Polnl Pltulnl, 304-675-2083, condition 1 asking $1100, 614·
lull llno Troplcll tloh blrdo, 992-7467 or 614-1112-3154 esk lor
Now wlllta 30 Inch GE tloc cook llntllonlmaltond ouppilto.
Gary
PICKENS FURNITURE

Mall Buff Cock•r Spaniel, 12

Antiques

~~~~~~~

SqulrNI dog atartltd tor ula.

Buy or 1111. Alv•rlne Anllquaa, 304-1175-e131

614·192-2526.

qulrod. Call Ahar 614-448-0527

fiT

Musical
Instruments
2-onllquo uprlghl plonoo, 1·

playtr plsno wfllch nllda very
little wort, fair cond, rttaoneb ..
offer, 814-843-51'M
.

after 2 p.m.

Up to 6 mot. fTH lot rent lYaii·

tblt on naw homes plac-.:1 In
Country Mobllt Home Park,Juat

2.----------------

,'1.,------------ l l . - - - - - - 1
12._ _ _ __
4 · · - - -- -r:
1.1., _ _ _ __
6, _ _ _ _ _ __ .14·._ _ _ __

·'·------------

54 Miscellaneous •

614-992·2218

2

Merchandl!ll
Mo~ag ~-

7·----~­ 15..._--:-------

"·-----~

446-2342

Tronsportalton

5:00.

992-2156

..
'

ALLEYOOP

c

(2:30)

(I) (I) 8 Full HOUH Joey Is

mesmerized by Oannr,·s
sister until her pet ch mp
disappears. Stereo. C
(lJ Nova Our sensa Of smell
delects rnyslerious aromas
and hidden messages. E;1

tT MUSf BE t:lf'FICVLT R:R

1Ht~

A8AJ e:MemrfVG
.~I'I::IES TO 1-b:D
FI&lt;EE: £tE&lt;:TICNS

~

tr.n

a

MORTY MEEKLE AND
WINTHROP
'
I WAS ..J~T TH INKI~
ABQ..ITa.JR Ol-D OQ.\OOt..
8LJ? DR(VER.

Services
81

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhlonol lltllllmt guo...,.

NOr iHEONE WHO

THE! ONE WHO UOINI!:D

WENT~Y.. :ll4E;

THE: FORE:t6N L..EGiON

OTHER ON!:.
I

i

I'

•

IH. Local relaranc• tuml1hed.

Frtt nllmatu. Coli callocl 1·
114-237-o-188, doy or nlghl.

lrnpt0Vtt1tlnt Bob Villa and
Tim match will In a test of
tool knowledge. Stereo. C
(!) Ale YOtl Baing Servtil'l
aD Church Strati Station
1D Wltnt11 to Survi¥1tl E;l
8:00 (%)a !IJ Law &amp;Onltr A
15-yaar-old boys claims to
have accldenlaJ!1 shot his
lrlend. Slereo. 1,1
(I) (I) • R-ne
Roseanne has to decide
whalher to have
breast-reductiOn eurgery.
Stereo. C ,.,
(I) Frontirne .,.
(!) Nova Our sensa ol smell
delects myslerlous aromas ·
and hidden meesages. C
Nuhvlle Ster.O.

aa Latry Kino Uvtl

Rogers Bailment Weterproo-

llng.

ID FaflltlDowtlng Myaterieo

H I

S1ereo. 1;1

BARNEY

9:30 (I)

IS YORE
YES, MA'AM II
AUNTIE
SHE'S IN -TH' HOUSE
HOME,
HDLDIN' HANDS
JUGHAID?
WITH UNCLE
SNUFFY

CUPID
STIIICES
AS'IN It

a

(L)
10:00(%) 8

~V Sarvl~t.

-illldng

plift, pickup, ond dtNvory. 814448-0214.
Will buUd polla coVIrll, dtckl,
.CrHntd roome, put up vinyl .._
oldlng or lrolilr oldrtlng. 814- '
245-9152.
•
~
82
Plumbing&amp;'
Helltlng
Oil
Ohio
F"'f,~~=
114-44 ,.

-Plott Clr,

IMIInlnM-aW ~ ,~

PIJIIIOUih Rllilnl lllllon !!Iring,
·.........
Muhir - Uasnud
lllctrlolan.
r...,..~ Low m111ge. WT

304-fll.,

'

Upholltary

,'"'lrl-...
...... ·=lllo
MtAIH"I

Ulfll ? , N ....

IMil In ....... - ; l o ...
Clll I04-t7HII4 .. . . . .

...

By PbllUp Alder

Soalb
West Norl~ Eul
Pass 2NT
Pass
For several years, George Rosen· I +
Pass
3NT
Pass
kranz wrote articles entitled "Tips !or
Pass
6+
Pass
Tops" for the American Contract Pass
Obi.
All pass
Bridge League's Bulletin. In 1988 he '
I
published compilation of the best
Opening lead: • J
tips under the same title. Now he has
brought out a second book: "More Tips
for Tops' IDevyn, ,9 .95 , 800-274·
2221). It has 42 tips, some previously .
unpublished, covering all aspects of
the game, including the psychological.
There are quizzes so that you .can .
lest your methods. before reading the : a successful, and necessary, fii¥!SS&lt;! of
author's recommendations. And all the heart queen . The heart ace was
the tips, which are practical and can· cashed and a heart ruffed in band. The
not fail to help players get better re- club ace and ~-K of spades were fol·
suits, are highlighted with example lowed by a spade ruff in the dummy.
Declarer was left with the K·J of
deals. Today's hand comes from the
chapter called "Leave Advertising to clubs and the spade 10. West bad the
Q-10·9 of clubs. Rozecki .led a hear)
Madison Avenue."
The final contract was thin but rea· from lhe dummy and discarded his
sonable, yet it would have failed but spade. West had to ruff and lead back
for West's greedy double.
into declarer's club tenace.
West was lett to rue his revealing
The declarer, Aleksander Rozecki
of Poland, cashed dummy's A·K of di· double. Without it, declarer would
amonds, discarding a ~pade from have attempted to draw trumps and
hand. A diamond ruff was followed by gone down.

!:

a

Tbe World Almanac&lt;» Crossword Puzzle

'"·&lt;

ACROSS
1 Mackerel:•
relative
5 Mineral

8

~~~f.

12 Fulute
13
14
15
18
17
18
1g
21
22
24

U.Ba.' exam
Long Umt

Clique
Hair style
ElichSlrohtlm
Actor Bud 1002, Romin
Y.I.P.
For tach
Baaft:and·
garliC IIUCt
Shlttr Dtlla

211 Dll(lrt~t
28 Playing tlold"
2D Jam•• Bond,
lor one
30 Actor
Holbrook

31 Canalayattm
In northern
Michigan
32 Hubbub
33 Treasure box
35 Quoenly
38 DlgnUve
fluid
38 Church
council
41 Dawn
goddtll
42 Correct
46 Aulhor u....
btrlo47 Tower
4g Artful
50 Pl1nt dlltllt
51 Secred Image
52 Club53 llako angry
54 Knot• In cot·
ton fiber
55 Blahop'a
province
56 Ont-apota

DOWN

AntWif IO l'roVIout flllule

1 Thick clualer
2 Sell
3 Edible root
4 Ear Icomb.
torml
5 Goller-

. (PI 2 ot

(J)

(I) 8 Cfitu Clowns
Roseanne and Tom Arnold,
Bill Cosby, Howle Mandel
and Burt Reynolds visit
varlous high schools relaying
anecdOte&amp; and lhe
Importance ol education.
11:00)
(I) Th.t Dlleltte Ball- II:

'

S.w·Vac , Sei'vlca, -~
Georges Crttk Ad. Parti, 1up.

lloclrlol~

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

2) Stereo. C

'

Davia

or

+AKJ87

'

Dlcl&lt;:

badge and tr

"'

304-57e·23118 Ohio 114-448-2414;

Rllldilllllll·

'

iiJ ReaiiOIIIble
Doublat
tor his

.

'

In Zlnhh alsD HnlclnQI rnc*
ott~r branda. HouM calli, t18o
tarn• oppllanco rapalrs. WY

a

(I)
c~ swart
shows up with his girlfriend
at a party tor Kell.'s
grandpa. Sterep.
College Balk
Georgia et LouiSiana State

' '

W111on. . .1.1 ' Folr CondMion, Rldlnour
w.iillllloU Nloo Work Cu. 1141711.
117o01t4.

-

lTWTH MID UES

..

tQ984S
+2
SOUTH.

.,0
8
+2

More tips
to help your game

1:30 (I) (I) • " -

5400.

Ron'o

+Q 1096

&lt;7

.•.

.J654

aPrtmeNewaC

·-11-2111
'
84 Electrical &amp;
1181 Iuick Ellelro, traod lhopo, ,......,..,,...,..,...,.:_
Refrigeration
_ _ _....,.., J'•I
Y-1, 1100, 1114-'1112·

C.. tM-M

Kennel Club Dog Show
Breeds In the Sporting,
Hound, Toy and
Besl~n-Show will be
benched and Judgtd. ILl
On Stage Stereo.

1D Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo_._E;1
1:05 ()) MOVIE: The Sackelll
14:00)

cart..ol'lu_n!l&gt;lna

r:rr-blt,

N.J. ~y WIVE 10
IU?RI:. IVI1H ARE

·

campers&amp;

1250. :J04.175.5431 lfttr

1.ploct 10 I

Huiriir (PI2 ol 2) {A) (2:00)
11J 116th Weltmln-

rebuilt, starting al $99i Auto

1177 Cldllllc,IIOO, 814-112·11121
1V7a &amp;1111 Dodgo Mognum
Dlrll wlnltd: buy, o.U or frodt,

-

6.75-1333

A~®s lor Sale

14100. ..... 1111 1&lt;1-kl

iloC, hoot
olumn oldlna, 12I20 ~onl
' ~:nf\1 """ 1:00 .

Be • Slatr Stereo.
tlZ College Balkatbell Illinois
a1 Purdue (L)
acroaaftra
7:35 ()) Sanford and Son
8:00 (%)a 0 In lht Heat of a.
Nlghl A black woman's righl
to raglsler lo vote Is
dlsrupt!ld. s ..eo.
(Jl MOVIE: Mull (~13)

m

microwave, TV, stereo, AC,
many extral, $9,000. 304-875-

L'f6, 13,1100 rn..., Nko - ·
000. IIlii Surukl 12! cc dirt
- . 1 bolh, Iaiii

·a

Pano. 614-245-56??, 114-3782263.
Motor Homes
1989 Mollatd 51h whHI with

Apanment
lor Rent
1·bdrm apt. In Mlddloport,

1fl'l Cltryoiot 4i,OOo llctUII
....... 4 ~.... oond, 12,300.
flrm. 11!1 Corvo11114,000 ICIUII
' mry ........ -hom

iC:. .

·
llll Whet! of F011une E;1
!12l8 Family Feud

Wlnllor Gamn Figure
' skallng, pelrslong program •
(m!ldals awarded): alpine
skiing, man's slalom
combined; luge; hockey, USA
V5. Germany
E;l
1111• MOYIEi 1'IMi lletr

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories
Budgot Trsnsmlulono, Uotd I

44

71

1117 Pl-k 14)(7!) 2 btd·

WO~f&lt;!t/op

13

+AK1098

1111 !12l8 XVI Olyn\plc

''

.K

EAST
+Q32

• J 10 7

rnNtweHour
MacNalll!:.ehrar
I;;!

.r

76

79

875-1042

10~---­

1985 15' bass boat, trail•'· 55
HP Yamaha. Livewell, rodlocker
storage, ped. uats, extras. ~675-1616.

north of Pomeroy, 614-385-822'7

carpet, nice couch 1na bar, 304- PriDe To Sell: 114~41oJI70.

I'--- - -----'-

ffFICtfNcy

wkl. old, h11 oholt, S75, coli cylo pa"•· C.ll614o4JII·'I055
NawiU•td
614·885-3821oftor 5pm
HouHhold tumlohlng. 1/2 mi.
Jarrleho Rd. Pt. Pl .. unt, WV, Roglotorod black! wh~a molt 75 Boats &amp; Motors
coii304-I'IS·1450.
CoCkor Spaniol puppy, groel
lor Sale
~'7 $200, no chocks, 614-192·
SWAIN
1983 C·Ray, :II R. Cuddy Cobin,
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
V-8, Excellent Condition, In·
Olivo St., Oalllpollo. Now I UNd
eludes All Equipment, Call After 1
tumhure, heat.,., Wtstem &amp;
6p.m. 814-446·1763.
• ...
Watk baolo. 514-441-3151.

Farm Suppltes
wothlra (1
runs, 1 dotan,) bol.h tor $50;
31 Homes lor Sale
&amp; Livestock
2-bdrm, part turn apt, newly · living room cMJr, 121i .... n.w
runnlng
bolrda
lor
Chivy
3 Unit Rental, Situated On 112 redacoratad, W/0 hook-up,
Acre LothMalnttn1nce Fr11, Ex- Pomeroy, 614·992-1886 after
oldtbalrclt
BIIZW, $50; lor
36"lull
high
tlzowood
PU btd,
rill ~~~~~~~~~~=
collont 5 opa, 61H48-8568.
6pm
61 Fann
$40, 814-143-5:111
For Stle by Owner: 2 city lola, 3 2 bdrm. epl. In Middleport,
bldroom homo, llrgo out bldg, ulltl1les tumlshtd, $2751 mo.,
conven&amp;tnt North POinl Eltmen· 614-949-2217
lory ond Clly Rocroallan Cam·
pill&lt;. Polco roduced. 304-e"/S- 2br Clean, AppHanc11.L Water,
3278 tar oppollllmlnl.
lmmtdlale Avall1bllhy, "loae Ta
Shopglng, Kanaugt, $230/mo.
Rodueod To Soli: S41,iOO, Plus epooll. 814-245-mot. .
Chuhlro, Ohio. 804-1132-1958,
2br
Goroga
Apartment
1104-932-Je'IO, 114417-0649.
Rolrlgorlilor And Slovt And
Tupper Plolno, 1·olo/y 2-bdrm Water Furnlshld, Sacurfty $100,
houat, utllily rm, attechtd No Poll, $225/mo. 614-446-3444.
garogo, 1.1 aero, llorogo build·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
rng $29,500114-1189-2719.
BUDGET PRICES loT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jockoon Plkl.
32 Mobile Homes
lrom $182/mo. Wolk lo ahop &amp; Beal.lty aalon equipment for
movloo. Caii814-446.Z568. EOH. All, :J04.7!3-81119.1fttr 4:30
lor Sale
Complelly Fumlshed Small
Tox And Tille Down. Proowntd HouN,
$250/mo. Plue UUihltl, Blra Mut Bond Sow Good Can· Wollltd: Uttd lorrn oqulpmtnl,
Mol&gt;llo Homu, U11 Your Tox
onythlng you wonl 10 1111. Coil
Rotund. 50 HomH To Ch-o . And Dopooll. 814-445-o338. Coli dhlon, C.l 514-378-:1171.
EIMII Home Center, 1-800..581- Betore7p.m.
Flrowaod lor oar.: Dok~ooh, 1 114-251-1308, 251-1040 ahtr I
hiCkllfY. OollvMed loci! $40 I .P;;.
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5710.
Fumtshed. etfk::lency 1partment
-63
1H8 Baron 12115, 2br, 2 AC, with kllehontllo ond •bl1h. lotd .. 31or 1100. · - 7013.
Livestock
Undorplnnlno Wuhor, l)ryor, Dtposh and rer.rencea ,... For SoJo: Muol Sorll1111'1. Sol.r.
1no Dllh, TWo BoX Sfaltm, , "'Srno-,11:-:-hot-rd"'-,oi,.....,R"'og.-,P""o"'lled"""
Rtfrlgerltor, illavw, Part Fum., qulrod, No polo. 114-44HI79.
Good" Cond~lonl IM-441-2871 Efficiency 1partmlnl. Nnly ~; 12". Chlln Sow, $110. IJ4- · - tor 11111 an~lmo
Aftor 5p.rn.
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decorlted. Rtt.rence, clepol:lf. 441-11188
No polo. 304-175-!152.
For. Solo: S._go Trslltr, 1ft, wHILoildo, 814-NW3111 · ·
Efflcloncy opl. lor ran11 booutllul Wldo, 121. LonG, 1ft Helglol,

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ond holl, Sind Hill Road, 304· 1124 E. Mlln Stnll, Pomeroy.
675-3834.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. lo 6:00
p.m., Sundly 1:00 lo 6:00 p.m.
Mobile Homes For Rtnt:
Rateranea And O.poslt Rt-

PHILLIP
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7:05 ()) Addams Family
7:30 (%). IIJ "'-"1¥1
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til Ente!lllnment Tonight

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$350. Per month Oep. + 2
References required 614·446·
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304-175-7138, M·F 9:00.3:00 or

675-7373 after 3:00 and
WHktnds.
3 BR 2 full Batha fireplace, deck

3br 2 Baths, FP, OW, CA,

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a 8portiCentM

2 bedroom unturnlthed hou11,
nlct location, dtposlt required,

$475/mo. Deposit Raqulrad, 614-

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year . yoo. a degree ot incon-lence, It's lm·
mllllng$1 .25pluulong,HII· porlanl you honor your commllmenls
ad.d reued, slamped .....rope !O Aalro- loday. A llllure lo do so could leave a
Grlfih, c/o thla new~P~Ptf, P.O. Box lUling 8Ctll'.
91428, C-and, OH 441D1·3428. Be VIRGO (Aug. ZS.Bapt. 22) Your proba·
lure to slate your zodiac llgn.
biiHies lor 11UCC888Iool&lt; very good today
·BERNICE
PIICU (Felt. 20a.c11 :IID) .Today's In slluatlon5 where you are working ·1n
BEDE O~OL
dtmlopmenls could take en uriexpecl· clote conlunctlon with olhtn. Con·
ed 1um ll1d pul yoo In apolhibn where versery, IOio anempta could .be
you'll hive lo. choose belweeo• a tamlly groonded.
member end an oulslder. Remtmber: LIIRA (lepl. ZS.Oct. ZS) Being able 10
Blood lslhlclter lhan water.
!llluallons reallllleally Is nol yoor
AJIIII (Min:II21·Aprtl1t) Your views prOblem loday. The trouble C()uld 11111
and opinion• mJahl not be- received -you dellberalely ignore your bel•
by thOM you'll be InvOlved with loday. •ltr judgment
.
BeinG loud In order to make your point •. ICOIIPIO (Oct. 24-NM. 22) You may
Won't gain you any converta.
, ·
have 10 decide be'- two bullntll
TAIIIIUI (April :IID-IIiJ :liD) ~- propoaalaiOday. One mlghl nat be very
tiona could II'IM todty l'tl(la(dlng eome- glamoralla, while lhe atl* could have
lhlng lor Which yoa; .,. to b. com~·· more aparlcle lhan lltlbelance. Oon't be
Felt. 12. 'Ita
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R....cral trends lOOk lnCOUraglng ror, you
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lloul
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wtthOul flrat a.ltlnil the belt advlcej you'" not apt ~ be tllectNt tOday. i dtct 1111 adwtnllgtl rllher lrlltn In· '
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CAI!IIICGIII (Dto. !Win. 1t) You
IIIQDIIIIe IOdlr with In aoqualn- ~ CAIICIII (.luM :n..,..... II) "-Pte ; lllauld do rllher Well in
""- "'IUfflllan It qutlllonable. II&amp;- ttnd 10 be a bit a.~y ptOieCINt ollhtlr ,
ol your matlrlll allalratOC!IY. but
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FISHER BIG W EL * BIG BEND FOODLAND * CONTINUITY OF CARE *
MIDDLEPORT.TROPHIES * P.D.K. CONSTRUCTION * G&amp; J AUTO PARTS
* KAY'S BEAUTY SALON * HYSELL'S USED CARS * FOR THE ·BOTH OF YOU
* MIDWEST STEEL CORP. * GALLERY HAIR ARTS * McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
* DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER * PORTSMOUTH BEAUTY SUPPLY *'FARMERS
·BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO. * GILMORE'S GOURMET DINING * VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL FOODS * McCLURE'S 3 IN ONE * POWELL'S SUPER VALU *
ANDERSON'S FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCE * HAIR HAPPENING STYLING
SALON * WMPO RADrO STATION * CHATEAU BEAUTY SALON * THE DAILY
SENTINEL * CLASSIC CUTS BY PECKY * RICHARDS &amp;SONS INC. ·* SUGAR
RUN FLOUR MILLS * VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL * ·PLEASERS *
McDONALD'S * SUBWAY * SEARS* KRO~ER'S * DRAVO CORP. * PIZZA
HUT * BANK ONE * DAIRY VALLEY *.O'DELL LUMBER CO. * MEIGS
COUNTY E.M.S. * THE ADDED TOUCH * MOTOR PARTS CO. * DELTA
METALS * DON TATE
R·LE
ILE/CADILLAC/GEO *
* GENERAL TELEPHONE
* GEORGE WRIGHT
* INGELS FURNITURE
* IMPERIAL ELECTRIC
* SHEAR ILLUSIONS
* HAIR HIGHLIGHTS
* THE VIDEO TOUCH
* STEWART'S GARAGE
* OVERBROOK CENTER
CARLETON
SCHOOL
*
* FANTASTIC SAM'S
OHIO
VALLEY
BANK
*
* BOB'S ELECTRONICS
DEPARTMENTAL ADVISORY
EE
BERS * APPALACHIAN
POWE·RCO. * TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELD.ING * SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
.~~~co. * HEADQUARTERS BEAUTY SALOON * RIDENOUR'S TV &amp; APPLIANCE
* FIESTA HAIR FASHIONS * SMITH-NELSON MOTORS INC. * JEFFERS COAL
&amp; EXCAVATING * POMEROY NUR·SING &amp; REHABILITATION CENTER *
.PARENTS &amp;COMMUNITY * SMITH -&amp;ASSOCIATES ACCOUNTING * LINDA
WARNER, ATTORNEY·AT·LAW * MEIGS COUNTY·HEALTH DEPARTMENT *
MEIGS COUNTY COUNCIL ON AGING * DAVIS-QUICKEL INSURANCE
, AGENCY * BERNARD FULTZ,- ATTORNEY·AT·LAW * O'BRIEN &amp; O'BRIEN,
AUORNEYS·AT·LAW, JOE'S COUNTRY· MARKET * ·MEIGS COUNTY
'EXTENSION OFFICE *)DOWNING CHILDS·MULLEN MUSSER INSURANCE *
STEVE" ·sTORY, ATTORNEY·AT·LAW * CROW .·&amp; CR9W, ATTORNEYS-AT~ ·
~W * PORTER, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; LENJES, ArtORNEYS·AT·LAW, JEFF
·wARNER INSURAN~E .

Pick 3: 669
Pick 4:6352

Cards:
10-H; 3-C; 6-D;

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.

Vol. 42, No. 196

Copyrighted 1992

Columbia Gas unveils new
program at Meigs Chamber

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT FUNDING • Paul E. Kloes,
president or tbe Farmers Bank and Savings Co, presented a check
· ror $1,000 to Paula Thacker, Meigs County's Economic Develop·
. ment Director. The check represents the bank's second installment
on a three year pledge towards runding the new position.

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By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
"With smokeless tobacco,
you're out!"
nThe message from a.new program of the American Cancer Society and Health Recovery Services
is plain and simple, and pre-teen
students in Meigs County arc hear·
ing it loud and clear: don :t use
snuff and ch~wing tobacco.

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"Spittin' Image", a program ment programs through the nonoffered through the American Can· profit Health Recovery Services.
cer Society is being introduced to They have also been trained at the
youngste~~· throu~l)out the c~unty expense of the Meigs Unit of the .
m the form of a VJ_deo and dtScUS· American Can'cei"Sociely lo"jne· •
sion session, conducted by Dan and sent "Spittin' Image." In addition
to training the Romunos, the ACS
Sue Rom uno of Harrisonville.
The Romunos, volunteers for has provided a video tape for use
the Volunlccrs in Service to Ameri- by the Romunos when they visit
ca (VISTA) program, conduct vari· area schools.
ous addiction pTCV£ntion and treat·
Continued on page 3

SPONSORS PROGRAM • The Meigs
County Volt orthe American Cancer Society has
underwritten "Spittln' Image", a program
directed at elementary and junior high school
children. VISTA volunteers Dan and Sue
Romuno have been trained by the ACS to lead

. the project, and tbe local unit also purchased the
videotape used and the brochures that are distributed to children. Here, ACS Unit Director
Ferman Moore, center, and the Romunos are
pictured with some or the material used.

Everyone talks tax cuts,
·but millions .could pay more

SPimN' IMAGE .'A program developed
to discourage pre-teenagers rrom U$ing smoke·
less tobacco is being completed In Meigs County's tbree school districts. Under the direction or
VISTA voluntee·rs Dan and Sue Romuno, the

program combines •a video presentatloa and a
discussion period. Here, Mrs. Romuno .leads a
group at Chester Elementary School in a run
exercise•.

Bill1 targets· welfare reform, school dropouts
.

WASfUNGTON (AP)- While
families and investors a wail word
on how big a lax cut they will get
from Congress and President Bush,
millions should be watching
inslead to sec how much their taxes
are goinf 10 rise.
Bush s budget, with its proposals for a reduction in capital-gains
taxes, an increased exemption for
children and a new credit for some
home buyers, would be financed in
part by tax increases exceeding $21
billion over the next five years.
Among the targets: State and
local government employees:
boaters; pay-phone users: securities

rnC:~c:~~~il:.rs of certain life

A Democratic plan to give a
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ing benefits 1hrough the General that punishment is often·not a good temporary credit of up to $200 a
1'he sJ)onsor of a bill that would Assistanc'c or Disability Assistance way to help improve people's life year to wage-earners would be
slop high school dropouts under programs. Recipients would have . possibilities."
financed by higher ta~s on cou~! 22 from collec1ing certain wei- to hold a high school diploma or its
Mot~ said the Ohio Department pies with incomes in die $200,000'M benofits'Siiys .the ·measure isn't equivalent, or be working toward of Human Services was unable to plus range ($100,000 for singles)
' rtleant to bash the General Assis· graduation.
determine how many dropouts and a new surtax on millionaires.
·,lalKleprogram orrecipiCilts.
General Assistance provides were receiving such benefits.
The House Ways and Means
• Rep. ,Ronald Mqttl, D-Parma, benefits of $110 monthly on ~vcrHowever, he said an analysis Committee will begin deciding
s'ilid the bill instead is a way to age to about 140,000 adults . A prepared by his office showed the Wednesday what kind of tax-cut
CJICOurage some people on welfare change in.the law which lOOk effect measure could save $500,000 to plan is called for and how it should
to complete their education.
last Oct9bbr limits benefjts to si~ $1.5 million annually. The study be financed.
: "I JUSt feel that we've got to - months;.
.
was based on the -percentage of
the Democratic-controlled
break 'the welfare cycle, and the
Rep. Tom , See~e, D-Akr9n, General Assistance recipients of panel is likely 10 reject Bush's proway 10 do, it is through education," rai~ questions about linking ben- high school age, and average posal, which the president billed as
ltfot~ said Tuesday after .ICS(ifyitig "efiis to a grading system, arid about school dropout rateS.
.
desirab)e to boost the economY..
before the · House Hum.an those who refuse to abide by ·the · The estimate assumes that at But the committee probably wtll
Itesourees Commiuee.
. terms. "What if they don't want to least 20 percent of recipients are send the president's biU 10 the full
: ·"We've got _to hold ·out some go?'' he said, referring to the high school age, and pegs the aver- House for a voto, along _with a
oarrot approach that says, 'Hey, school requirement.
· age dropout rate per year statewide 'Democratic substitute aimed at
y,bu can get General Assistance like
David McCoy, director of pub· . at3 percent.
· ·
. pleasing the middle class.
you always have, but you're going lie. policy for. the Ohio Council of
"'u~t as government is cibl~ged
Bush, like Ronald Reagan, relIc do orie thing for the taxpayers. ·Churches, sat~ _the group ~ad not • !O· ~rovtde a saf~¥ net for soc.ety: ishes a repu'-tion as a tax-cuuer
You're going to continue your edu· yett.aken a post~on on ihe btll.
mdtvtduals recetvmg welfare have flatly opposed 10 any tax increase.
cation,' ·'' he said: ·
"This one certainly doesn't .an obligation to taxpayers to edu- But Just as Reagan si'"ed a dozen
Mottl's bill would prohibit seem to go in the direction we · cate themselves in order 10 avoid tal( mcreases in his et&amp;ht ¥ear! as
dropouts under age 22 ~rom receiv.· · ought .111 be ~oin~:" McCoy sai,d · long-term welfare dependency," . presidcnl, Bush relented m 1990
after the heanng. Our concern ts Mottl said.
·
and agreed to ~igher taxes to

.

'

results will be evalualed this sum- through.&amp; local insurance agen1, be located has been postponed for
and Thacker said that she was in six months. A depanment
Chamber President Lenny Elia- the process of meeting with local spokespersqn reported to Newell
son introduced Paula Thacker, the agents to detennine specific premi- that the department' s work is on
chamber's new executiv e um s, deductibles and other specific schedule and that the delay does
director/economic development details.
not apply to the corrections dcpanPrison discussed
director. Thacker distribuied informent.
mation concerning a proposed
A brief discussion was held
A meeting is also being schedhealth insurance plan for chamber regarding the chamber's progress uled for later ibis week with Buck·
on attracting a proposed state eye Hills/Hocking Valley Regional
members and their employees.
According to Thacker, Gallia prison to the county.
Development District. The purpose
According to Executive Secre - of that meeting will be to ob~;~in
and Jackson Counties have fanned
an insurance group for the purpose tary Pamela Newell, the Ohio funding for a sewage treatment
of providing low-cost health insur- Department of Rehabilitation and plant at the proposed Salem Center
ance to members, and Meigs Coun- Corrections has refuted a report . site, so according to Newell ,
ty's chamber could join that group. frqm the Governor's Office that the "sewage is no longer a problem at
The plan would be administered decision as 10 where the prison will
Continued on page 3

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News-Staff
A new program designed to
assist public schools was presented
by Columbia Gas at Tuesday's regular meeting of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, held al
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
Jake Koebel of Columbia Gas
introduced the video presentation,
entitled "How to Help your Child
in School". Koebel stressed the
importance of quality education in
communities served by Columbia,
and encouraged parental participation in every aspect of the educa. tiona! pra&lt;:ess.
The "Education 2000" program
is now a pilot program. An employee coordmator has been named in
each of Columbia's districts to
over see the program, and those
coordinators are permiued four
company hours a month to work in
a community' s school system. The

Message is loud and clear: Don't
use snuff and chewing tobacco

'

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2 Sectlono, 14 Pogeo 25 cen,.
A Multimedia Inc. Newopoopw

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 12, 1992

.

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Freezing rain tonight.
Thursday, high In mld-40s.

Page4

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Ohio Lottery

Seton Hall
upsets No. 10
Syracuse

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reduce ·the budget deficit.
The president's proposal shies
away from any general laX increase
- but millions would feel the sting
anyway. Among the proposals, and
their five-year costs:
-Two million slate and local
government employees who have
held their jobs since before April I,
1986, would be required to pay the
1.45 percent tax that finances
Medicare hospital in surance .

Workers hired since thai date
already pay the lax. All but about
300,000 of the 2 million already
are covered by Medicare because
of previous employment or their
spouse's coverage.
The change, which Congress
has repeatedly refused to approve,
would cost workers more than $8
billion , which their employers
would maleh .

•

,.--Local
briefs-___,
-.
More B&amp;E's reported
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Wednesday
1hat his department has received reports of three more breaking and
entering incidents.
Mark Miller-of Swindell Road reported that he had left his residence around 7 p.m. and when he returned at 9:30p.m., he discovered 1he house had been entered. A videocassette recorder was
stolen.
On Sunday evening, Fred Green of Horse Cave Road reported
that the rear door of his trailer was kicked in. He reported a black
and white television, a stereo, gun rack and a pair of binoculars
were stolen.
. James Circle reported Tuesday evening that his house on Bashan
Road had been entered. A video camera; cordless drill and a shotgun were t.akcn. ·
Entry was made through the rear door.

Shields reports vandalism

,

Randy Shields of Tuppers Plains reported to ihe Meigs County
Sheriff's Department on Sunday that sometime the previous
evening, the windshield and hood oh his 1988 Chevrolet uuck were
damaged.
·

Preparing for aerial photos
Local citizens may be wondering about tile white arrows painted
on portions of Main Street in Pomeroy in front of Kroger. The
arrows will make the way for aerial photography of riverbank emContinued nn page J

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