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''
Monday, February 17, 1992 ,

•

Ohio Lottery
Meigs girls
advance in
tournament

THIS WEEK'S GAMES
EAS,ERN EAGLES
BOYS
February 18 - North Gallia•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A
February 21 - Symmes Valley•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A
February 22 - Southern•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H

GIRLS
February 22 - Division IV Sectional Tournament
At Meigs High School vs. Southern - 6:30

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

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

SOUTHERN TOR ADOES
BOYS
February 18 - Kyger Creek.................................~•••••A
February 21 - Southwestern•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H
February 22 - Eastern••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A

GIRLS
February 27- Division IV Sectional Tournament
At Meigs High School vs. Eastern - 6:30

1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE

JAN. 1O-AT OAK HILL •
JAN. 14-KYGER CREEK'
JAN.17-SOUTHWESTERN'
JAN. 18-AT ROSS SOUTHI=AC: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'

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

'-Indicates SVAC games

Cards:
Q-H; 3-C; 9-D;
K-S

Page4

Val. 42, No. 200
Copyrlghtocl t992

Pomeroy to seek Issue Two monies in March
enter into an engineering contract
By BRIAN J, REED
to make improvements at tbe water
Sentinel News Starr
Pomeroy Village 'Council will reservoir on Lincoln Hill. Funds
seek funds fo( two projects when targeted for that project have accuround five of Issue Two grant mulated, according to Anderson ,
money distribution begins in and should now be adequate to
March. Village Administrator John fund tbe reservoir projecL
Anderson also received counAnderson unveiled plans for tbe
cil's
permission to apply for a
application process when council
water main replacement project in
met in regular session Monday.
Anderson requested, and West Pomeroy. According to
received, council's permission 10 Anderson, the project, if funded,

would entail replacement of a
water
main
from
the
Middleport/Pomeroy corporation
line to the Monkey Run area.
Although no official work has been
done on that project, Anderson said
last night !bat he estimates that the
work will cost approximately
$120,000 to $150,000.
While the government deter·
mines where tbe funds come from,
Anderson said lhat he would antici-

MEIGS

Two Mason County men have
been arrested and charged with tbe

f M' h 1 01'
40 r
IVboder, ' o
kl' Y ;as
oun Ohau ay mrd. ran '"M· ur·
nace,
10, acco mg to ason
County Sheriff Ernie Wauerson.
.
h d be
· ·
·
01 1ver
a
en m1ssmg smce
November 1991
·
ed D ·d
Sh en·rr W:atte rson
repon
av1
Lee La ham so 0 r p01· 1 PI
1
d W&lt; nrtb ·0 's d ~ .r.;sanr
:rcnde~/ we~ ~~~~icJ· · for' ~e
murder. Lanham was picked up for
questioning Monday afternoon and
·
· ed
r · th
has smce
Sign a con esswn a1
he actually was the one who shot
01'
~~· Scioto County Sheriff's
Department presented fugitive warrants for !he two men Monday then
Watterson signed fugitive fro~ jus·
tice warrants obtained from
MA istrate John Re nolds
/iders was arresied at J:30 a.m.
this morning at tbe home of a
female friend in Gallipolis Ferry by
d

~~r crpf
IC a\
f 010~ S~~ 1• "!

ERS

BOYS
February 18 - Nelsonville·York•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A

GIRLS
February 17 - Division II Sectional Tournament
At Oak Hill High School vs. Rock Hill- 8:1 S

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. 3D-NELSONVILLE-YORK
FEB. 3-AT BELPRE
FEB. 6-ALEXANDER
FEB. 1Q-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 13-FEDERAL HOCKING

pate that the money, if granted,
would come from t~e Issue Two
program's Small Government
account.
Gear discussed
Fire Chief Danny Zirkle reported to council !bat the department
was planning to replace its turnout
gear. The turnout gear selected by
Zirkle, consisting of special coats,
pants, boots, gloves and other relat·
ed apparel could cost as much as

$12,000, based on an estimate or
$1,700perfU"eman.
According 10 Chief Zirkle, some
discussion has been held at the
department about tbe possible pur·
chase of a new fire truck, but Zirlde
said last night !hat he sees tbe new
gear as a priority.
"I'd rather be see lhese guys be
safe in an older, reliable uuck !han
drive a new truck and use the old
turnout gear," Zirkle said. "We're

talking about items that have been
neglected over tbe years. and I'd
rather see the department buy these
guys !he equipment !bat !bey need
instead of a new uuck,"
Mayor Bruce Reed requested
that the needed equipment be listed
so that an advertisement for bids
could be prepared for publication.
Finances updated
Reed updated council on the
Continued on pa2e 3

Two Mason County men are
charged with Oliver's mu,rder

MEIGS MARAUDER'S
JAN. 7-AT WELl,STON
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

1 Section, 10 Pog• 25 cenW
A Muldrnoclla Inc. Nowapopoir

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, February 18, 1992

'-Indicates SVAC games

1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

Cloudy tonight. Low In mid·
40s. Wednesday, high In low 50s

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE

'-Indicates SVAC games

SOU,HERN 'ORNADOES

Pick 3: 903
Pick 4: 3619

l&lt;lNISHING TOUCHES • Andersoo's of
Pomeroy hu begun putting the ''flnishincloucb·
es" on the new headquarters of the Meigs County Department of Human Services. Construction
on tbe $1 miiUon buildiag, which utilizes a part

or ·

Sheriff Watterson Sgt Gordon
' . ·
Clark and Trooper M1ke Roach of
the Point Pleasant Delachment
West Virginia Slate Police
Lanham and Siders .appeared
before Reynolds Tuesday morning
.
·
fm arraignment. Siders refused ar·
rrugnment on !he Oh10 charge of
.
aggravated murder, but s1gned the
papers for a court appointed attor·
.
ncy. Lanham was amugned
and
chose to waive extradition. Accord·
ing to Watterson, an appointment
w1ll be made for Lanham wuh
Judge Holliday on extrad1L1on back
to Scioto County since that is the
'
r
location tbe body was oound. There
was no bond set
The remains. of Oliver's nude ,
lattoocd body were found in an
open field in Franklin Furnace
Saturday by a subject who was
lookmg at property adJacent to the
land where the body was located.
The sumoct spotted the body in the
field, but at the time !bought it '!lay
have bee~ a deer. When the subJect
realized 11 was a body. !he Sc1o10

County Shcnrr s Department was
notified
AI h · h
. .
. .
l oug offic1al 1denuficauon
will not be detennined until the
autopsy is completed, authorities in
botb Mason and Scioto counlies
appear confid t that th bod
th t f ot·cn M c CY was
a o
1ver. ason ounty
Deputy J R
Mc
k
· · . c oy too
photographs of Oliver's lattons to
sc·I010 coun1Y sun da y, w here he
matched up_thrce laltoos on a v1dco
tape tbe Ohro department had taken
of the body. Also found on the body
were lhe St. Chnstopher medal _and
the double hean rmg !hat Ohver
wore at tile time of h. d.
IS
1sap·
(JC&lt;Irance.
Oliver had been shot in tbc. back
of the head five umes, accordong to
S~enn: Watt~on. The body was
a soThmlsspmg rce appendages.
e 01nt .Pleasant f!lan . was
reported m1ssmg by h1s SISler,
.J?anme Fell ore , whcr·st:atcd the last
umc he was seen was Fnday, Nov.
8: 1991 when he left home w11h
S1dcrs.

Two union officers disagree
New Hampshire's voters cast on company's latest offer
.
'
r·
t
.
b
II
t
.
natIon s Irs primary a o s ~~~~~-~~~~:.~~~~~a~~~

May," Ramey said. "While there
what transpires," Matchett said.
Two top union leaders say !bey are still areas of disagreement witb
would brief tbe I ,070 members on the company, the proposal is worprocessmg plant remam unre- tbe proposal today.
thy of a vote, and each member
solved, tbe union president said.
Local president John Knauff Should be afforded tbe opportunity
But another union official said said no vote was planned today and to have a voice in our future."
Another Martin Marietta
management's latest offer deserves said tbe company's proposal was
a vole of tbe membership.
spokesman, John Christian, said he
"not worthy of a vote."
Members of tbe Oil, Cbcmical
But Vice President Jim Ramey hoped Knauff would let tbe memand Atomic Workers Loca"l 3-689 disagreed.
bers decide.
began strilcing June II over issues
"This whole package means a
"Significant changes have been
including seniority, overtime and made to the contract proposal lot of money for the union memsafety.
rejected by the membership last bers," he said.
Last weekend, Martin Marietta
Energy Systems, which operates
the plant for the Department of
Energy, offered a three· year con·
PIKETON, Ohio (AP)- Major

MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) New Hampshire voted today in a
leadoff primary that will deliver tbe
fmt verdict from voters on George
Bush's presidency and serve as tbe
opening cut in a tumultuous race
between five Democrats.
As voters turned out on an
unseasonably warm morning, can·
didates were waiting to greet !bern
at the polls, hoping one last handshake would translate into one
more vote.
"It's always a risk," Nebraska
Sen. Bob Kerrey joked outside a
Manchester precinct. "I cqu ld
always be talking !hem out of it."
Bush's challenge in the state
that saved him four years ago was
to weather tbe pugnacious conservative punches of Patrick
Buchanan, who claimed symbolic
victory before the polls even
opened and promised to continue
regardless of today's results.
For tbe Democrats, New Hampshire voters ranked a lineup that
has seen two preseason favorites
stumble and a late surge by former
Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas.
New H'mpshire's results most
likely will determine whether talk '
or late Democratic enlries stops at
justbdt.
·
Witb Tsongas and Kerrey on tbe
Democratic ballot were Arkansas
Gov . 'Bill Clinton; Sen. Tom
Harkin of Iowa and fo~r California Gov. Jerry Brown. New York
GoV. Mario Cuomo was the subject
of a write-in effort.
·
For both parties, recession.·
slammed New· Hampshire was a
teSting ground of economic themes
sure to dominate the 1992 cam·
paign. .
.
,, As New Hampshire voters cast
ballots today, they hal! the economy In mind. ·
· .
"He's doing as good a job as he
possibly can," relired posl&amp;l worli:er Harold Wonben Slid .rthr voting
for Bush. But holel ICCI!rity guard
John Sreward said be hid switched
his party affllillion trom RopubUcan so 1te could vote for Democ..t
Clinton.
Polls Were open from 6 a.m. 10 8
p.m., witb about half the state's
electOrate expcctect. 10 pattleiiJII,e;
140,000 or so in the 1\epulllica"

primary, 125,000 on tbe Democrat- 35 perGent of the vote in New
ic side.
Hampshire.
"I'm extremely confident,"
"The president has said a win is
Buchanan said outside a Concord a win and that's our approach," he
pollin~ place. "We're going into said. Dixville Notch, a tiny reson
Georgta and Super Tuesday with hamlet witb 31 registered voters,
enormous steam."
opened its polls at 12:01 a.m. and
In Washington, White House closed tbem five minu1es later. The
press secretary Marlin Fitzwater surprise winner was Libertarian
was asked today if Bush would be candidate Andre Marrou - who
seriously wounded if Buchanan got garnered II votes.

Hartenbach seeks GOP's
·nomination for commission
Robert C. Hartenbach will seek
the Republican Party nomination
rot tbe Jan. 2 term of Meigs County
Commissioner in tbe May SPrima·
ry Election.
The former Meigs County Sheriff filed his !,!Clition of candidacy
witb the Me1gs County Board of
Elections Friday.
· Born and !Wed in 'Minersville,
he is the son of tbe late Otto and
Anna Hartenbach. He and his wife,
Viola, now live in Chesler Township. They.have two adult children.
Besides serving as Meigs sheriff
for several years, Hanenbach also
was chief deputy sheriff of Gallia
County for 12 years. He has had
experience in county government
in Meiss and Gallia Counties.
Hartenbach served in the U. S.

Navy during World War 2 from
1942 to 1946 and is a member of
the American Legion Post 39,
Pomeroy, and tbe Veterans of For·
eign Wars, Post4464, Gallipolis.
He is a member of tbe Buckeye
State Sheriffs Association, the
National Sheriffs Association, !he
National Rifle Association, the
Ohio Township Trustee and Clerk
Association. He also belongs to
Ducks Unlimited.
.
For three years he served as a
security guard for the Farmers
Bank in Pomeroy.
Hartenbach said "My interest is
in Meigs County and tbe future of
tbe county, and I want to work with
tbe Commissioners for bener government. This is my goal."

Ord re-hired Southern
superintendent by board
Bobby J. Ord was.re-employed
as Superintendent of the Southern
Local School District when the
Soutbem Local School Board met·
in resular session Monday
evening.
In othe~ action, the~ voted
to disconunue the J111duauon serylce for kinderganeD students. '!'hal
action was cleeined necessary I1IICe
the ldndrrprten ~ iJ an all·
day pwgram, making it diffteull to
carry out the ceremony. An awards
ceremony is belna; planned for
thOle children, dill! dellils wiU be

8IUIOURced.

• •'

Dorothy E. Bentz was employed
'

'

.

as a substitute teacher for the
remainder of the·school year.
Lorcnl'e ·Pyles made a $300
dOnation 10 the diStrict's computen
in education prosnun. on behalf of
her two granddaughters, Suzanne
and Kimberly, and !bat donati~n
was acknowledged and tbe board s
meetin~o
.
Present at the meeung were:
President Scott Wolfe, Vice President Sue Orueser, Board membQrs
Joeeph Thoren, Tcim Roseberry and
Denny Evana; Clerk/Treasurer
Denny Hill and Superintendent
Bob Ord.

tracl

Negotiations resumed Friday,
and early Saturday, the company
made an offer for a three-year contract The union came back Saturday afternoon with a counterproposal, which tbe company rejected.
The union's e~ecutive board
rejected the company's offer on
Sunday.
Company spokesman Tim
Matchett said the company made
concessions in the contract, )lut
declined 10 discuss specifics.
"We're just waiting to hear

Middleport Council
to make decision on
Miller Monday night
Middleport Village Council met
in special session Monday night to
consider chafges against employee,
George W. Miller, Jr. and determine what action, if any, should be
taken as to his employment status
with the village.
· Miller has been indicted on rape .
charges. A pre-trial hearing has
been set in the case for March 3
and a jury trial on June 2 at·9 a.m.

~~~ec~~g~;~~~t~~~~~~

SEARCH SCENE· A report that someone was beard scream.
ing and seen golag down for tbe second time resulted in dragging·.
and some diving operations late Tuesday night and early Ibis ·
moraing in the area below lbe Middleport levee. Diver Keany
Byer, pictured here, was among lbe searchers at lbe site.
·
•

'Dragging operations resume
for possible drowning victim

Common Pleas Coun Thursday and
after .posting 10 percent of a
Dragging operations were .
$2S ,000 bond was released from resumed Ibis mcrming by the Mid·
custody.
. dlepon Fire Department and £merCouncil, on request from gen·cy perso~nel ~or ~ possible
Miller's attorney, agreed 10 contin- drowning in the Ohio River below
ue cpnsideration of the maner of !he Middleport levee late Monday
·employment until Monday night's nighL
re'-ular meeting in order to give
Emerfency Medical Services
Miller the opportunity to be heard personne reported that !be fli'C and
at that meetins.
.emergency squadmen went to the
Miller is cunendy on sick leave scene at 11:26 p.m. afttr a woman
from ,his employment with the vii- · reported that she heard screams 1114
lage ofMiddl~.
·
saw som~ go down twice.

Dragging and some diving operations beg!l" immediately and con:
unued .until2:0S a.m. this morning.
Dragg1ng was resumed Ibis morning at 9:S2 a.m. The Coast Guard
and Corps of Engineers have been
alerted to be on the lookOut for a
body. .
.
A spokesman Cot the Midd1 ' ·
Police Department said Ibis
ins thai there have been no lePOt'ls ·
of mis~n$ ·persons and no iban•·
doned vehteles ~ve been found. ·

0::

~I

�..

Co~mentary
'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Qblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/Cootroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Preu,IDilllld Daily Pre,. Association and
the American New•papa Publisber Association.

LETTERS OF OPlNION are welcome. They should be lm than 300
words long. All letters ""' aubjecllo editing and must be signed with name,
add!ess lUid telephone number. No unsigned lelle!i will be publ~bcd. Leiters
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not pe!ionalities.

Filing deadline ·
causing confusion
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Incumbents and challengers seeking election to the
Ohio Senate and House have been advised to me their nominating petitions in the new election districts adopted by the state Apportionment
Board.
..
The filing deadline is Thursday, and some members and candidates
expressed confusion because the plan is under challenge in a federal
court.

Ohio's Supreme Coun late last week upheld the plan , but that case
resolved only stale constitutional issues.
The federal case involves complaints by the two Democrats on the
apportionment board that the plan, adopted by the three-member Republi·
can majority, dilutes minority voting strength in violating of the federal
Voting Rights Act.
.
Secretary of State Bob Taft, House Speaker Vern Riffe, D-New
Boston, and Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, agreed that
even if the new disuicts are thrown out, the old ones are gone forever.
They have been thrown out of kilter by population shifts over the past
decade and cannot be used again, they said.
In addition, the three-judge federal panel that demanded corrections or
justification of the new districts has retained jurisdiction, and said that it
will issue further orders if one or the other is not done.
N. Victor Goodman, a Columbus attorney who represents the Republicans on the board, predicts that the new disuicts will be upheld.
But in response to a question, Goodman said the three-judge panel
could take over the reaportionment process and draw a plan of its own, or
appoint a special master to do iL
Meanwhile, however, the officials said the election process must go
forward. Any coun-()rdered changes in the disuicts would have to include
adjustments in election procedures, they said.
Ohio's members of Congress and their challengers arc in a similar situation, but they do not yet have new districts.
Unlike legislative apportionment, which is delegated by the Ohio Constutition to a state board, congressional redistricting is a prerogative of the
Legislature.
The Senate, controlled by Republicans, has passed its version of a biD
to reduce the disuicts from 2lto 19, reflecting a loss of two seats resulting from national population shifts.
However, the Democrat-controlled House has a bill of its own . The
House may vote on its biU this week, clearing the way for a joint committee to try to iron out differences.
Riffe and Aronoff have said they think a compromise is JlOSSible, but
that the bill may not be approved until late this month or early March. The
filing deadline for congressional candidates also is Thursday.
However, they said that whatever bill emerges will contain a new filing
deadline for congressional candidates. The law requires candidates to file
75 days before the primary, which is May 5 this year.
The Legislature could postpone that date, too, if necessary, they said.

Today in history

Tuesday, February 18, 1992

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, February 18, 1992

and political events of the times.''

recall continued even after defense
Josephson thinks that the 1980s lawyers offered them United States
"were a near disaster" from an Government documents to refresh
ethical perspective. So do I. But their mrmories.''
more than two years into the
Across the continent in Califor"kinder, gentler" 1990s, there is nia, there was some question about
no discernible renewal.
whether Gov. Pete Wilson's
Start with the president's budget speechwriters had invented comsent to Congress a few weeks ago. posite figures as stand-ins for peoContrast it with his State of the ple suffering from the recession.
Union address. Note the sly eli- After much public scrambling, peosions of fact, the half-truths and ple were found who fit his rhetoridownright deceptions. His Secre- cal description. But his press office
tary of Housing and Urbait Oevel- called the people in his speech
opmen~ Jack Kemp, bluned out the
"symbolic representations," their
truth . The budget is full of "gim- statements "a composite of the
micks." That's a nice word for lies. many conversations he has had
Recently, the president's chief with people throughout CaliforRepublican opponent, Patrick nia.'' In other words, deceptions.
Buchanan, recalled the advice of .
The problem is not confined to
his former boss, Richard Nixon, to politics, as recent headlines reveal:
White House counsel John Dean.
A federal judge ordered docu"Don't ever lie, John, but you can ments made public, which he says
always say, 'I can't recall."' To reveal that cigarette makers for
say "can't recall" in such a situa· decades systematically concealed
tion is to lie. It is what a small the health dangers of smoking.
Almost 100 banks and broker·
parade of U.S. drug agents have
said under oath during the trial of age firms agreed to pay $5.2 milGen. Manuel Noriega, the former lion in fines to settle charges that
Panamanian dictator. To quote The they routinely lied to get larger
allotments of government investNew York Times:
"On the stand, Federal drug ments. Included among them were
agents have said several times, they many of the biggest names in bankcan no longer remember specific ing and on Wall StreeL
An Illinois-based service bureau
drug operations in which the general was involved . That failure to said it had found overcharge errors
in 37 percent of all adjustable-rate

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MICH.

mortgages it audited, with an average overcharge to consumers of
$1,588. In a model of understatement, one of the firm's partners
said, "I don't think the American
public is aware of the extent of the
problem."
Dow Corning Corp. has just
released a number of internal documents that revealed a long history
of worries. not previously made
public, about the safety of its sili·
cone breast implants. The implants
have been removed from the market by the Food and Drug Administration pending further study.
"There isn't anything new
here," Dow's technical director
said. Not to him, oboviously, but
new to the public nonetheless. Who
knew that a Dow Corning salesman
had complained of his company's
decision to sell a "questionable"
product? This "has to rank right up
there with the Pinto gas tank," he
wrote. Who knew of complaints
from doctors as well as other salesmen about the implants' safety and
performance? The company did,
but women who might use the
company's product never did.
Which brings us back to the
younger generation . Not long ago a
Rutgers professor of ethics surveyed 6,ff17 studentS in 31 of the
nation's most scholastically elite
schools. Over two-thirds admitted ·
cheating at least once in college.
Stanford University's judicial
affairs officer is an optimist. She
told a reporu:r she sees " a height·encd awareness among students on
issues and standards." Perhaps she
is right, but if so, it representS the
triumph of inherent decency over
the environment. There is very little in American public life to provide a moral compass for anyone,
young or old, whether in the politi' cal arena or in the business world.
In other days, that might have
been a great campaign issue.
Today, what we get is the silence
of shared complicity.
(C) l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Hodding Caner lll. former State
Dcpanment spokesman and awardwinning reporter, editor and publisher, is president of MainStreet, a
Washington, D.C.-based television
production company.

Will third-party candidate hurt Bush?
WASHINGTON (NEA)- One
of the more intriguing questions of
Campaign '92 is how much damage David Duke could do to
George Bush if he launches a thirdpany presidential effon in the general election.
Duke, lhe Louisiana state legislator and ex-Klansman, is running
against Bush in key GOP primaries. He has pledged, however,
to suppon the Republican presidential nominee and not pursue a thirdpany campaign to November.
But now Duke says Bush and
the GOP are playing dirty politics
by trying to keep him off many
state OOP primary ballots. As a
result, he is considering reneging
on his promise, and making an
independent bid in the general elcc·
lion.
The Republican Party has officially renounced Duke and his
views.
Duke is focusing his campaign
on 12 large southern states that
have their primaries in March. He
is also targeting a handful of others
with proponionlll delegate-selec·
tion rules, which would allow him
to win convention delegates even if
he only receives a relatively low
percentage of the primary vote.
Two of Duke's·key StaleS were
to be Georgia and florida. In both
states, GOP officials have used
arbitrary party rules ID deny Duke a
place on the primary balloc.
In Georgia, after Dulce had q~-

By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 18, the 49th day of 1992. There are 317 days
left in the year.
·•
Today's Highlight in Hisury:
On Feb. 18, 1861, Jefferson Davis was sworn in as president of the
Confederate States o; America in Montgomery, Ala.
On this date:
In 1546, Martin Luther, leader of the ProteStant Reformation in Ger-.
many. died.
In 1S64, the artist Michelangelo die4 in Rome.
In 1735, the fust opera presenled in the Unilld Stales - "Flora, or
Hob in the Well"- was performed in Clwlcslon, S.C.
In 1885, Mark Twain's "Advcnturea ol Hucklebcny F'mn" was published in the Uniled StaleS for the fUll time,
In 1930. the ninth planet of our solar sySiem, Pluto, was discovered.
In 1953, "Bwana Devil," the movie that heralded the 3-D fad of the
19SO's,QIICIIed in New YOlk.
: In 1960, the Vnl Winter Olympic Games were formally opened in
Squaw Valley, Cliif., by Vice President Richard M. Ni~on.
In 1970, the ChicaJO Seven lief~ were found innocent or con'
spiring tD incite riots at the 1968 Democratic convention.
In 1m, 20 years IJO, the California Supreme Coun struck down the
Just like every shoe clerk and
stile's dealh penalty.
,
,
carpenter in New Hampshire, we
: In 1977, ~~shuttle Entetprise, sitting atop a Boei111 747, went ha"~ two Democratic presidential
on its maiden fltght, reaching altitudes of up to 1,600 feet above the prospects who've come calling in
Mo· e Desen.
·
our living rooms today.
Fn;984, Italy and the Vatican signed a revised concordat Wider which
Each has come, via ABC News'
Roman Catholicism ceaSed ID be the state religion of Italy.
"This Week With David BrinkTen yeln aao: President Rcapn !Did a nationally broadcaa news con- ley," hoping to impress upon us
ference that he had "no plans to send American combat troOps intq that he is the 11nly alternative to
aelion" in El Salvador or anywhere else in the world.
Bill ClintDn.
, Five yean ago: President Rea~an. responding to. qucSiions that his
One seems li8htly strung, rather
chier oC Slllf, Donald T. Rcpn, rrught be on the way 11111. !lid, "Thil il uncomfortable In our parlor. And
up to llill... {Repn did raif!.lliac cllylt.a-.)
tlw makel ua feel UII!XIIIIfOrtable.
One year
!Jaql ForeiJII Minisler Tllriq Aziz bc14 111b In Moscow When he is ialllldueed, he cracb a
with Soviet Praideat Mikhlil S. Qorllet:hev, who preiCIIred a ilrOPOial for quick smile ...... you can almost bear
ending the Pa1ian Gulr Ww. The lrilh Republican Anny c:laiined respon- it cracking. When he is ,ueltioned,
sibility for a .bomb lhal ~ploded in a London J'ailllalion, killinl a com- he seems to regard q - DOt just
mtla'.
.
.
earnestly, but intenaely, even
Today's Blnhdays: Actor lad: Palance il 72. COIIIlOpOiitan cdiror advenriy. He llmoa rboulllt 111. ·
Helen Gurley Brown i170. Ac1Dr C1eor1e Kennedy 1167. Sell. John Warn. He i1 Bob Keney. He was far
er, I-Va.. i165 •.Movle director Milol "Forman 1160. Sins« Yt*o Olio Is and away the front-runner on
59. Acaea C_ybill SJiellhcrd 1142. Sinp Juice Newton iJ ~- Actor John paper: Medal of Honor hero in
Travolta iJ 31. Oame ahow hollea.V11n Whirc is 35. Actor Malt Dillon Vietnam; Democratic governor,
then senator from Republican
1121. AclreU Molly~·
Ia 24.
1'11111111'1 rar Today: '
II IIIII eMitile oC the human will which · Nebrtl6, HiJprolllem came when
11e1p1 u ID mate a decla wllboullnfonnation." -1o1m Entine, he - llktA off J11P11f llld put on
Allicrlc:ln audlct and edlaror (1879-1951).
.
the tube; now he's in danger or

ified for tlie ballot, his name was
rejected by party leaders on the
grounds that he is not a "legitimate" Republican presidential candidate. Similarly, in Florida, state
party chairman Van Poole and the
GOP central commillee voted to
deny Duke a place on lhe ballot.
In both states, the American
Civil Liberties Union has flied suit
to try to force Duke, pro-life
activist Patrick Mahoney, the jailed
Lyndon LaRouche and Californian
Larry Agran onto the GOP primary
ballot.
So far, Duke has also been
excluded from the GOP primary
ballot in South Dakota, Rhode
Island and Maryland. State party
officials are also in the process of
blocking him in Idaho, Wisconsin
and ConnecticuL
Duke has not yet filed for several major primaries, including California, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. A campaign
spokesman says that while final
decisions have not been made, he
would expect Duke to file in most
of those states. Just as likely, he
says, is that the GOP will try to
block ballot access in each.
When he announced lhal Duke
was being excluded from the florida ballot, state party chairman
Poole said Duke was not being
denied his constitutional right to
run for r,resident. No indeed, said
Poole, ' We encourage him to run
as an independent.''

That is e~actly what Duke and
his top advisers are considering,
says Marc Ellis, Duke's national
campaign coordinator. "What they
are doing is making it much more
likely lhat we'll run independent in
November. It cenainly was not our
first choice, but the Republicans
are forcing it on us."
Despite the opinion of the Florida state chairman, having David
Duke on the general election ballot
as an independent worries quite a
few top-level Bush advisers.
While publicly taking the position that Duke is not a genuine
Republican and is of no worry to
the president, Bush advisers are
beginning to poll key states, trying
to assess how many votes an independent Duke candidacy might
siphon off from both Bush and his
Democratic challenger in November.
What is not well remembered,
except by the political pros. is that
in 1988 - against a weak and disorganized Michael Dukakis George Bush had winning margins
in the key states of Illinois and
Pennsylvania of less than I percent.
in California and New York of 2
perceni, and jn a number of other
stales of 4 percent or less.
At present, there is no one in the
Bush camp who does not believe
that Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton,
for e~ample, will run stronger that
Dukakis did in IP88. Thus, if
David Duke is on lhe ballot as an
independent, and puDs 4 percent of

Robert J. Wagman
the vote - a figure most believe
attainable for him - it could end
up shifting just enough votes away
from the president to tum the con-:
test into a real horse race.
There is one aspect of the current ballot access dispute that is ·
ironic to political insiders. Just as
David Duke is being denied access
to GOP primary ballots, so too is ·
conservative commentator Pat
Buchanan. As with Duke,
Buchanan is not happy and is cry·
ing foul. The irony in this is that
they are being denied ballot access
through tactics invented by .
Buchanan himself.
In 1971, Buchanan was in
charge of "opposition research" in
Richard Nixon's White House. He
has since admitted that one of his
chief responsibilities was devising
ways to keep liberal California
Republican Rep. Pete McCloskey
off ballots so he would not embar· ,
rass Nixon. Buchanan was successful in many states using, or misus·
ing, the same rules that are now .
being used against his campaign and Duke's effons.
. (C)1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
If David Duke runs as an inde·
it could shift just enough ·
votes away from the president to·
turn the general election into a real ·
horse race.·

penden~

All bets are off in New Hampshire

aao:

Aeeu·Wea~ forecut

Hodding Carter III

being put on the shelf.
The other candidate isn't as
bandSome as Kerrey, im't as tele·
genic - but somehow seems more
personable. He chuckles at the very
·mention of his unimpressiveness on
television - in fact. he's the one
who mentions it. We notice his
smile is a bit crooked, but wind up
thinking his integrity seem&amp; IUT()W ·
straiJ!t!:e speaks wilh a moulhful
of
chusetts and his phrases
strike the ear not as silver-spoon,
patrician-Harvard Kennedy but
•le-moulh, wocting-class LoweD. \/
He il Paul Tsongai. He began as
the worst candidate on M&gt;er and
worst performer· on the tube. But
he's grown 10 be a co-front-ru11ner
in New llampsllim, It baiJpenod in
pan because he Ia pi•(!:. ~ hia
own backyard, in l*l
the
fust front-runner, Bill Clin!DII, had
hil c"''JJ'ip m I' iarenuplcd
by biiiiS (rora bit paL Bta itlllo
bap~ened because Tsongu

1

remained ttue to himself. He neededhelp;amonthago,ataforumon
health, Tsongas was all slouches
and mumbles - even less presi·
dential lhan fri'nge candidate Larry
Agran. So he got some speech and
posf:~~:~r living rooms,
Brinkley tells our guest, Tsongas,
he's now first or second in the
polls; Tsongas resoonds with one
word: "Horrors:' Later: "W~ll,
when I lhink ~you all, you know,
dismissln,l my candidacy and I
want 10 get angry - I have to
remember that my friends had ihe
same reaction." (Laughter) "And
my relltivea. So t guea everybOdy .

--.··
_.::_:_-,-:

Kemy 1 demeanOr in our livina

Marlin Schram .
.'

•

~g'~!ing Gov. Clinton a draft"No," says Kerrey; but, as any ·'
handler should have predicted, the pit bull keeps snapping at K~y's· .
tale. ''You're just' calling him a ·
ltiar'l" asks Do1181dson. Kerrey just' ,
umbles.
·'
Of a\1 the problems of all the, ;
candidates, Kerrey' s are unique:
His are problems he alone can fix·'
. -fix easily, if he's as good as bis :
credentials indicate and his friends· , ·
insist. His ~ see him as warm. ·
and friendly, ·a P.OI 'who actually "
·~es ~-try; he sself·tau""L
Yet.'"
60
:OC:.UC vmg .~ms, he seems self·
wn.

In these last days of the New··

Hampshire prlmary, .one thing is-"

rooms Is dlf!erent. After Keire,y. ctillul: Nothitg is Wllin. Pez1iaDs ,,
~YI Clinton I exp~ about Clinton, the Little Rock ~t wlio , '
~Jde·•~pping tho Vtetnam
got the ·quick 'jump on the pact,.·"
doellt t lllve di,C riDg of truth,
1118)' llllke biJ meuqe head aplri"&gt;
Sial J:l! -+1aa : nhe lllow's della· in lime 10 win. If 10 he'll s,eep
lllled pit bull. • w111t • h•~ . the Soudl 011
Thead.y and be
dJa lbouJd 1laYe pmdicied; fs J{er. · bit ~'I OOIDIIIOC.

ttran

s.,-

•

'''' '
' '' '

IMansfield I 42•l•

PA.

•IColumbus I 44•1

...

W.VA.

~

-!)

.9Jl 4

~~---~--~~~R~um-~._._.__.,~.__.~.n-n~r~~~-~c~~u-cy~-0-w•ey~

By Tbe Associated Press
Some north-central Ohio resi·
dents say they spotted funnel
clouds during a storm last weekend
that knocked down barns, rolled a
house trailer and knocked out windows.
But a National Weather Service
meteorologist said Monday that
tornadoes would have made a path,
while that storm's damage was
seauered.
Weather service representatives
surveyed the area Sunday but found
no evidence of a tornado, said
Michael Ecken, disaster preparedness meteorologist in Oeveland.
Virgil Kennedy of St. Marys in

Auglaize County said he and his
wife saw a small funnel cloud in
Saturday's storm . The wind took
the donr off his bam and damaged
a silo, he said.
The srorm also-sttuck the Hardin
County village of Alger, about 30
miles northeast of St. Marys. It
rolled a house trailer, toppled a
garage and blew down trees and
power lines.
The trailer was rolled onto its
top, but only a dog was inside, The
dog was dug out of the rubble and
was not hun.
A few houses from the trailer,
the storm knocked over a gara~e

c1992Accu-Woath.., Inc.

Cloudy skies to prevail
through Wednesday

Pomeroy...

EMS units answer 7 calls

and tore storm windows off another
borne. 1am a Reynolds said she was
sitting in her TV room at the rear of
the house when she heard it stan to ·
rain.
"I went to close the back door,
and when I looked out I saw it hit
the garage. It looked like a big gray
cloud went through it," she said.
"!didn't stand around and watch it
very long_ I grabbed the kids and
ran into the basement"
In Crawford County, a section
of the front roof was torn off of
Donald Grau's home, and the front
windows were blown ouL Half his
outbuilding, which housed 50 rabbits and five calves, was flauened.

FICA tax roll-back means 39,000
newJ·obs' OUpro~"essor
says
Jr'

Dr. Richard Vedder of Ohio show that America's unemployUniversity predicts that if the fed- ment rate remains at recessionary
-----Weather--~-- eral government repeals its 1987 levels," he said, ''This study points
Social Security (FICA) tax increase out how to create a significant
Thursday through Saturday:
South-Central Ohio
on
tipped income, 39,000 new jobs number of jobs well above the minA chance of flurries north could
Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low
be created in the restaurant imum wage in the American econ40-45. Chance of precipitation is Thursday, fair south. Fair statewide industry alone. That is the conclu- omy. Moreover, this benefit comes
20 percent. Wednesday, mostly Friday. A chance of rain Saturday. sion of his new study, which was at a relatively inexpensive cost to
cloudy. High in the low 50s. Highs in mid-30s to mid-40s commissioned by Washington the federal government."
Chance of precipitation is 20 per- Thursday, the 40s Friday and mid- D.C.-bascd Employment Policies
Recent figures from the Bureau
40s to mid-50s Saturday. Lows Institute.
cent.
of
Labor Statistics show that the
main! y in the 20s Thursday and in
Extended forecast:
Beginning
in
1987,
restaurants
1991
unemployment figure for lhe
the 30s Friday and Saturday.
had to pay FICA taxes on tip restaurant industry was 9.9% - in
income above the minimum wage, short, one in ten people in the
up to the legal limit of $3,441. restaurant industry was unemPrior to 1987, the FICA tax was ployed in 1991.
levied only on wages earned up to
Vedder arrived at the $5,000
the minimum wage limit.
'
cost through projecting j9b and
One of Vedder's key conclu- income tax gains to the federal
sions is that through repeal of the government against any lost revregions expecting clear skies today. 1987 tax increase, the Federal gov- enues due to the tax's repeal. He
By The Associated Press
Rain in the Middle Atlantic ernment could create jobs at a cost also took into account reduced govOhio's weather picture remains
states
today was expected to spead of about $5,000 each - "an ernment outlays due to lower
dismal at least through Wednesday.
along
the East Coast. Northern extraordinarily low amount," he unemployment and slight increases
Fair skies could return on Thurs·
New
England
braced for snow.
day, the National Weather Service
said. Indeed, Vedder commented in corporate profits.
More
rain
was
forecast today for further, "At that rate, we could
said.
Vedder, who holds an endowed
A slow-moving storm system parts of California, where storms bring unemployment down to pre- chair at Ohio University, used fedover the Ozarks was creating last week caused deadly flooding. recession levels for about $9 bii- eral employment, wage, and procloudy and skies and a combination The heaviest rainfall, up to 3 inch- Hon."
ductivity data to calculate job lossof drizzle and snow flurries in es, was expected in the north along
Richard B. Berman, executive es stemming from the 1987 tax
the Oregon line, 400 ntiles from the director of the Employment Poli- hil&lt;e. He confined his study to the
Qhio,
communites
most seriously flood- cies Institute, endorsed Vedder's
Daytime highs. on Wednesday
ed.
will be in the mid-40s to mid-50s
conclusions. "Figures out last week
A snow advisory was posted
and overnight lows will be in the
today for the northern Sierra Neva·
30s.
da
in California.
Veterans Memorial
The record high temperature for
Rain_was forecast in Oregon and
MONDAY ADMISSIONS this date at lhe Columbus weather
Continued from page 1
Roger Hill, Racine; and Ora Sinstation was 65 degrees in I 948. a snow advisory was in effect for
the
moijntains
of
Oregon
and
clair,
Pomeroy.
efforts of the water and police
The record low w~s 7 below zero
Washington.
MONDAY
DISCHARGES departments to collect delinquent
in 1936.
Snow
was
expected
in
MinnesoRichard
Finlaw,
Minnie Thompwater bills and old fmes.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:10
ta
and
Wisconsin.
Up
to
6
inches
of
According to Reed, a system hl!S son, Ruby Miller and Eloise Stiles.
p.m. Sunrise on Wednesday will be
snow fell Monday on parts of been established to notify cusat 7:20a.m.
northern Minnesota.
tomers with delinquent water bills, HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Around the nation
Tornadoes in Florida caused and to set up a payment plan for
Discharges, Feb. 17 - Maranda
Fairbanks, Alaslca, lived up to
minor
damage
Monday
near
Barnette,
Kassie Butterbaugh,
those
customers.
That
system
its name Ibis morning, among only
in
Gulf
County.
Wewahitchka
Brenda
Cade,
Jesse Dunaway ,
requires
that
delinquent
customers
a handful of regions in the nation
Thunderstorms
over
northeastern
James
Eynon,
Mary
Gilliland, Paul
keep their accounts current and pay
that escaped clouds and fog.
Florida
produced
high
winds
that
Houdashelt,
Lisa
Couff,
Vernon
$10 per month on their delinquenHawaii, Arizona and eastern
downed
power
lines
and
trees
near
Keels,
Mrs.
Aaron
Kerr
and
daughcy.
Texas were about the only ot~er
GainsviUe.
The collection system has been ter, Mrs. Darrell Sands and son,
"extremely successful," according Mrs. Michael Wernsing and son,
to Reed, and a "large part" of the and Harry Wilson.
$7,400 in inactive, delinquent bills
Seven calls for assistance were Road. Ora Sinclair was taken to is expected to be received.
answered on Monday and early Veterans. At11 :26 p.m., Middle$7,284.05 in old fmes have been
Tuesday by squads and other units port units went to North Front collected through the efforts of
of Meigs County Emergency Medi· Street for a water rescue.
Reed and Police Chief Gerald
cal Services.
On Tuesday at 3:58 a.m., Rut- Rought since January. Over 600 Orris E. Harris
On Monday at 11:49 a.m., Rut- land squad went to Meigs Mine 31
letters to people with old, unpaid
Orris E. Harris, 95, of
land unit went to Meigs Mine 2 for for Lawrence Shamblin, who was fines
have
been
mailed,
and
Reed
Minersville,
Ohio, died Monday,
Dennis Howell. He was taken to taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. said that the fmcs will be paid in 10
Feb.
17,
1992,
in the Veterans Ad ·
Holzer Medical Center.
At 8:10a.m., Syracuse squad went days,-arrangements will be made ministration Medical
Center, Hun·
At 7:22 p.m., Middleport unit to State Route 7 for Patricia Hall. for payment, or warrants for arrest
tington.
!'!Went 19 ~f!ldbury· Roild and took She was taken ID St. Joseph Hospi- will be issued.
Funeral arrangements will be an"Randy Stewan to Veterans Memo- tal. At 9:52 a.m., Middlepon units
Reed
commended
police
and
·
nounced
by the Foglesong Funeral
rial Hospital. At 8: 19 p.m.. Syra· continued the water rescue, and at water department employees for
Home.
cuse squad was sent to Sumner presstime, no one had been found.
cooperating with him in the collec·
lion of these funds.
Veva Searles
Other busiDess
Veva Virginia Searles, 70, of
Anderson announced to council Union Ave., Pomeroy, died Monthat the Washington County Build· day, Feb.17, 1992,atPleasant Valing
Permit Department, which is Icy Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.
EDITOR'S NOTE- The Associated Press asks the major presi·
under
contract with the village to Va., following an extended illness.
dential candidates a question each we~kday about their views on a
process
building permits, has
particular issue and assembles tbeir responses.
She was born in Kyger Townincreased
its fees for political sub- ship, Galli a County, on Feb. 8,
WASHINGTON (AP) - Here are the views of the major presidential
candidates on the question: "Should the licensing process for nuclear divisions outside of Washington 1922, to the late Andrew Sylvester
power plants be streamlined to allow quicker construction of new faciti· County.
and ODie Louella Allen Lemley.
The
increases
make
the
Wash·
She was a cook at Craw's Steak
ties?"
ington County office a more ex pen· House and a homemaker.
DEMOCRATS
-Jerry Brown: A spokesman said Brown opposes construction of any sive alternative to the Department
She is surv_ived by a daughter,
of Factories and Buildings in
new nuclear facilities.
-Bill Clinton: A spokeswoman said CUnton opposes construction of Columbus.
A list of fee increases is to be
The Daily Sentinel
new nuclear facilities. "We need a new energy pohcy to lower the trade
reviewed
by council, and discus·
deficit, increase productivity and improve the environmenl We must rely
(USPS 213-160)
less on imponed oil and nuclear energy and more on cheap and abundant sion will continue at the next meet·
Published every an.emoon, Monday
~hrough Friday, 1 U Court. St., Pomeroy,
natural gas as a transition fuel to renewable e~ergy resources," said Clin- ing.
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiehing
·
C
ouncil
.
President
Larry
ton.
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
-Tom Harkin: "No, we do not need to speed up licensing, because Wehrung stated that a list of propOhio 46769, Ph. 992·2166. Second da•
po1tage paid at PomCrey, Ohio.
we do not need and cannot afford more nuclear,power, either in terms of erties targeted for cleanup was
compiled
at
a
special
meeting
of
its rmancial cost or the environmental cost of radioactive waste disposal
Member: The AMociaLed Prcu, Inland
and plant decommissioning. Conservation, energy efficiency improve- the council earlier this month, and
Daily Preea Aaaoc:ia~ion and \he Ohio
Newspaper Aaaociation, National
ments, and increased use of renewable energy and natural gas can provide said that he felt propeny cleanup
Advertilmg Reprcaentativc, Branham
the energy needed for new economic growth ... at lower cost and with less and enforcement of the zoning
Newspaper SaleaJ. 133 Third Avenue,
ordinance
should
be
a
priority
for
New YOrk, New Yvrk 10017.
environmental degradation.''
council.
·
-Bob Kerrey: "No. I do not believe constructing nuclear power
POSTMASTER: Send addre.a changes 1.o
Council also: ·
plallts is the path toward energy independence - especially in light of the
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
- Discussed cemetery lot rate
Pomeroy, OHio .t5769.
nuclear industry's historic una~countability and poor econo~ic lecord.
increases
for
new
lots
at
Beech
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Instead, we need a comprehensive energy strategy lhal emphasizeS energy
By Canter or Motor Route
Cemetery, as proposed by
efficiency, conservation, research and development in renewables, and Grove
One Weelt.............. .............................Jl.60
the fmance committee; .
One MOflth .... ... .................................. $6.9li
reformed federal decision making.''
•
Approved
a
lease
renewal
for
One Ycar...................................--... $83.20
-Paul" Tsongas: (from Sunday night's Democratic debate) "My enerSINGLE COPY
office
space.
on
the
second
floor
of
gy Jl(&gt;Ucy is very clear: Maximized conservation ... maximized renew·
PRICE
Oaily....................................... ......25 Cent.
abies. So for me nuclear is pan o.f the last tier, but it wiD be pan of the the Municipal Building, occupied
process until ·we get into a position where reliewables and long-term by the Meigs Local School District,
Subscriber. not desiring to pay the Cam.
er may remit in advance direct t.o The
fUsion fill the biD.... When Seabrook (nuclear plant in New Hampshire) ·at a rental rate of $500 per month;
• Accepted the Mayor's Repon
OaUipolia Daily Tribune ori a 3.6 or 12
·was being built, one of the five of us (Democratic candidates) said it was
month baai1. Credit will be l(ivon canier
of fines colleCted in January in the . each
the wrong place... it was me."
·
week .
amount
of
$3,437;
REPUBUCANS
No eubamplion• by mail permitted in
- Agreed to close the Municipal
lfCBI whf!n homo unier aervice ia
-George Bush: Bush supports expanded use of nuclear power. His
national CIICZJY.strategy calls n:l:lear power "a plus for 'energy·security.' Parking Lot for the Oldies But a'vailablc.
Moll Buboerlptto1111
because it does DOt rely on (Uel whose supply is tlftatencd by depk:tion or Goodies CN Show on 1uly 18.
' lnotdo_Oalllo c.. nly
Presen! ,~.ere Mayor Reed,
cutoff." Bush has so\igl,t to reform lhe Nuclear. Regulatory Commission
13 Weeka.... 1........... , ................ .... .... 12~ .84
~ ~ to ''reduce the lead lime and financial risk associated
Anderson, and Wehrung; Council 28 Weeu..............:........................ ...$43.16
..........................................l84.76
with bulldini nuelell' power plantJ." The key to the reforms is resolving members Betty Baromck, Scott !52 w..uO..lllclo
QoU!o Cqgnl)o
safety queitl011.1 belen p1lll construcdon begins.
Dillon, John Blaettnar, Bill Young
t3 woou.............................:............l23.40
~de Btiebanaa: Yu.
and Thomas Werry ; and Clerk 28 weou ..........................................f46.150
!52Weeb..........................................t88.40
~David Duke: "Yes, but no shortcuts should be taken on safety."
Brenda Morris.
ViaAsso&lt;ialBdPtossGroph/csNM

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Officials say there's no evidence
of tornadoes in weekend storms

Wedneaday, Feb.l9

Ethics ail more than__ tJJe_ ~ecDnomy
No one is r.a,Jking about values
very much in this presidential elec·
tion campaign, fllOStly because
everyone IS talking about the economy. That's -partially understandable, given lhe state of the economy, but profoundly unfonunate,
given the state of public and private
ethics today. The economy will
inevitably 1mprove but there is
nothing inevitable about a
turnaround in our moral health.
One of the reasons is that those
who command the secular pulpits
in this country are often pan of the
problem rather than part of the
solution.
What that means is that from the
presidency to the schoolroom,
lying, cheating and dissembling are
practiced and accepted as part of
the conventional game. Virtually
all of us over a cenain age would
agree with that proposition insofar
as the young are concerned, but the
noted ethicist Michael Josephson
makes an imponant point. Oescrib·
ing the "I Deserve It" (IDI) generation coming along, he notes the
abundance of bad news about its
members. But, he adds:
"The values of the young are
not formed spontaneously. Young
people generate social forces of
their own, but they also echo and
sometimes amplify the themes
sounded by the major social trends

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Hospital news ·

restaurant industry, where tipped
positions include a large percentage
of employees.
Vedder has been writing about
economics and government policy
for more than 25 years. He has
authored three books and over 90
papers dealing with public policy
issues and lheir effect on the economy. His newest book, "Out of
work: Unemployment and American Public Policy Since 1900," is
due out later this year.

Nuclear plant licensing

Girl shot at
motel party
said serious

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A 15-year-old girl shot in the
The Employment Poticies Insti- head at a party was in serious contute is a nonprofit research organi- dition today and a former boyfriend
zation dedicated to expanding was being sought by police.
Schala Turner of Huntington
employment opportunities at all
levels. of America's economy. In was shot once in the head in a.
particular, EP! believes that entry- motel room near Barboursv"ille
level positions are often the best early Monday, said Chief Deputy·
job-training and education pro · C.A. Adams of the Cabell County .
grams that many Americans, espe- Sherifrs Oepanment.
A 9mm pistDI was recovered
cially young Americans, will ever from
the room, he said.
·
have.
A malicious wounding warrant
was issued for Andre Jackson, 18,
of Columbus, Ohio, Adams said:
He said Jackson fled the motel after·
the shooting.
Turner, who moved to Hunting,
Am Elc Power .............. .... .31 1/8
ton
from Columbus last September,
·
Ashland Oil .... ,.. ........... .....33 1/8
formerly
dated Jackson, according
AT&amp;T.. ................... ......... .38 1(1
to
Edith
Turner,
the victim's moth- .
Bank Onc ........ .................. .46 1(1
er.
Bob Evans .. .. .. ... .... ........ .... 26 3/4
Ohio authorities have been
Charming Shop........ ........... 29 1/2
to arrest Jackson .if he is
asked
City Holding ........... ... ..... .17
found,
Adams
sail!,
Federal Mogul.. .. .... ....... ..... 16
There were about 14 people in
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ............ .. 62 3/4
the
room, 10 of them juveniles,
Key Centurion ................. .. 15 3/8
when
the shooting occurred,
Lands' End .. .......... ........... .3 3 1(1
Adams
said. There were indicaLimited Inc . ........ ........... ... 31
tions
some
had been drinking and
Multimedia Inc ............. ..... 27 1/4
using
drugs,
he said.
Rax Restaurant .. ..... ...... ..... 1 7/16
Turner's
condition
was upgradRobbins&amp; Myers ..... ........... 17 1(1
ed from critical, said hospital
·shoney 's Inc.. ................. ...27
spokeswoman
Virginia Crowe.
Star Bank ....... ...... .............. 26 3/4
Edith
Turner,
who lives in
Wendy lnt'l. ....................... 13
Columbus,
said
her
daughter .
Worthington Ind .. .. ............ 26 3/8
moved
to
Huntington
ID
live with ·
Stock reports are the 10:30
her
grandmother.
She
attends
Hunt-·
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
ington
High
School.
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.

Stocks

--Area deaths--

The Issue:

Only one rabbit was injured.
Grau said a small bus-stop .
building was embedded two feet •
into the side of his house near ~
Bucyrus. about 45 miles east or:
Alger.
'I was sitting in the kitchen, my :
wife was in the bedroom and a 4- :
year-old boy we were watching ·
was asleep in a bunk bed," Grau :
said. "My wife saw one of our :
trees bend toward the h·ouse and ·
grabbed the boy. I didn't see any. :
thing because I ducked flying :
glass."
•
The boy slept through the stonn. :
The storm toppled the barns of :
Grau's neighbors, Tammy and Paul :
Robinson and Jim Meister. Debris •
was strewn in nearby farm fields. A:
four-stall garage also was leveled. :
Ecken said the damage probably •
was caused by straight-line winds. :
Temperatures about 60 degrees :
brought springlike storms, witll •
thunderstorms, high winds, hail and
lightning reported throughout the
Slate

Pauy Saunders, of Howard, Ohio,
three daughters and sons-in-law,
Cathy and Wayne Pauley of
Pomeroy, Janet and Marvin Flowers of Newark, and Irene and Keith
Kennedy of Rutland; two sons and
daughters-in-law, Charles and Sue
Searles and Martin and Tina Searles, all of Rutland; 12 grandchil·
dren, and four great-grandchildren,
several nieces and nephews,
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in dealh by two sisters,
Neva Lemley and Ruth Kennedy
and six brolhers, Homer, William,
Fred , Allen, Vaughan, and Alec
Lemley.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday, at I p.m. at the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, with
the Rev. Samuel Basye. Burial will
be in Miles Cemetery, Rutland,
Friends may from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
Wednesday at the funeral home.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524
IARGAI~

"

~ .- .

:: . :'

"'TlNtES SATUIICIAf/SIIII».Y A IIOIICII'Y ,
!AIICAIN MIII!T TUESDAY .

,.....,.,.,. M thnl

:ao

FRlDU tllru lliURS DUI

WINTER
CLEARANCE
Save Up To

0

0

SHOP FRIDAY
EVENINGS TIL 8 P.M.

,,

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

tiJdflpoU
'. _ _ _
.__

..;...;...;~--------1 :

'

~,~

Jl

�.

.

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

-

Tuesday, February 18, 1992
Page-4

Meigs beats Rock Hill 73-69 in D-11 sectionals
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Tricia Baer hit two free throws
with 12 seconds left in overtime to
break a tie, and Vema Comps!OO •s
steal with eight seconds left and
two free throws with three seconds
left gave the Meigs Marauders a
73-69 victory over Rock Hill in the
Division II sectional basketball
tournament Monday night at Oak
Hill.
The victory gives Ron Logan's
Marauders a 19·2 record and puts
Meigs in the championship game
on Saturday, Feb. 29 at 7 p.m.
against the winner of Thursday
night's $ame between Jacl:son and
Gallipolis. Jackson defeated Vinton
County 52· 38 to advance to Thurs·
day'sgame.
Rock Hill ended its season with
a 14·7 mark.
Meigs jumped out to a 18·10
lead at the end of the first period,
but Rock Hill went on a I0-2 run at
the beginning of the second period
and tied the game at 20 with 4:18
left in the half on a bucket by Car·
rie Haas. Myra Justice gave the
Redwomen a 22-20 lead on a short
jumper in paint with 4: II left .
Meigs came storming back ,
outsCOring Rock Hill 13·6 to take a
33-26 lead at the haJf when Mary
Cremeans hit an off balance jumper
off the offensive boards at the
buzzer.
Both teams traded buckets in the
third period with the Marauders
holding anywhere from a one to
five point lead. Tricia Baer hit a
Iay·up with 26 seconds left and
Meigs held a 51-46 lead heading

into the fmal period.
Rock Hill went on a run to be·
gin the fourth period jumping on
top 54·51 on a bucket by Haas with
3:45 left in the period. Meigs came
back and tied the game on a 10
footer by Compston with 2:08 left
and took a 63-61 lead when Baer
hit .a short jumper with 56 seconds
left. Haas answered with a bucket
with 56 seconds left in the game to
force it into overtime. Rock Hill
had a chance to win the game with
47 seconds left but Lori Gillenwa·
ter missed the front end of a one·
on-one.
Compston gave Meigs the early
lead in the overtime with a seven
footer along the baseline, but Rock
Hill came back and tock a 69·67
lead when 6·1 junior Beth Miller
hit a jumper in the paint with I :41
left. Once again it was Compston
that hit the big bucket and the game
was tied once again at 69 with I :23
left in the contest
Lori Kelly carne up with a big
rebound off a missed Rock Hill
shot and the Marauders worked it
in to Baer who was fouled with 12
seconds left. The senior calmly hit
both ends of the one·On·one to give
the Marauders the 71-69lead. Rock
Hill had one last chance and Comp·
ston came up the steal in the front
court and was fouled. Compston hit
both free throws to seal the win.
Baer led the Marauders with a
career high 27 points, 19 in the second half. While Compston added
21. The pair hit the big bucket all
night for Meigs and scored 31 of
the Marauders' 40 second half
points. Kim Hanning, who finished

the game with 12, hit the big buck·
et for Meigs twice in the first half.
The Marauders hit 28 of 64 from
the floor for 44% and 17 of 26
from the line for 65%. Meigs had
33 rebounds, with Kelly grabbing
nine. Meigs had 25 turnovers.
Haas led Rock Hill with 20
points, and Gillenwater added 16,
while Mullens had 12. Rock Hill
hit 32 of 66 from the floor for 48%
and cashed in on 5 of II from the
line for 45%. The Redwomen
pulled in 28 rebounds, with Miller
getting II , and committed 23
turnover.

By The Associated Press
It's more than a month until the
NCAA tournament, and coaches
already are angling for position for
their teams and conferences.
Sixteen losses by ranked teams
last week caused a shuffling in the
Top 25. The Big East, with two
teams in the rankings two weeks
ago, now leads all conferences with
five ranked teams, although none is
higher than 17th.
Coaches in the Big Eight, with
every team over .500 and four
teams in the rankings, said Monday
that the conference's postseason
tournament could limit the number
of teams in the tournament to five.
"The tournament's a great
thing, and very exciting," said

Lot Angcl01 at Edmonton, 9:35 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
A.llantk DIYblon

Twn
W
New Yo0. .............. 32
B......................... 29
Philadclpbio ..........24
Miomi •.................24
New 1eney ............21
Wultin&amp;too···········l7
Orllndo .................. ll

L
18
22
27
28
30
34
38

Pc:L
.640
.569
.471
.462
.412
.333
.251

GB

IS.S

19.1

~f~·d:=:ji ~~ :~
22
2l

.569
.510

7.5
ll.S
I S.S

26

.480

17

30
3S

.434
.314

19.1
25.S

Mldw•t Dlwilloa
Tum
WLPtLCB
Utolt .......................3S 18 .660
San Antonio ........... 29 22 .569
S
lloultm ................. 26 26 .soo
1.5
19 31 .JIO !4.S
Dollu ..................•.. 15 31 .300 II .S
... ............. .10 40 .lllO llS

o........................

PadRe Dlwlllon
1'ortLuld ................. 35 IS
Golda\ StaL0 .......... 33 IS
l'!t...U .................. 33 19
L.A. t..olun ..•......... 29 22
S..lllo ....................Zl 25
L.A. Oippen .........26 25
Sac:ramento ........... .l1 33

.700
.6&amp;8
.6JI
.569
.519
.510
.340

I
3

.6.S
9
9.S

Monday's scores

S.Ulc 98, Phoalix 96
LA. Qippa~I2A, San Antonio 110
Golden Sute 116, LA. Laien 100

Tonlgbl's games
S.cnmCI'IIOat New YeO. 7:30 p.nt .
Orlando atDr.troil, 7:30p.m.
Cltvtland at Milwaukee, 1::31 p.m.
Ph.illdclphllat O..UU, 8:30p.m.
Phomil II PM!and. 10 p.m.

Wednesday's games

Deuoia ac. New Jcncy, 7:30 p.m.
OlicaJO II &lt;Jrando, 7:30p.m.
Wllhinpln It AllanU, 7:30pm.
Sacnmcrlo at Jnditn.l, 7:30p.m.

Oc:nw:r at Owioue. I p.m.
8~1ea at Golden Stale, I p.m.
MinrC'a 1tSatl Anumin, l :lO p.m.
o.n.. otlltoh. 9,30 ~m.
LA. Was at LA. Clipper&amp;, 10:30

Turn
W-L
l. l&gt;..i.ke(63) ................ 20.1
3. K.msu ...... ............... 19-2
4. Nri Cuolin1 ...... .l&amp;-3
S. Ama.o .................... 19-3
'-OhloSt.------11-J
7. lndiono ..................... l84
8. Ok.llhoml SL ........... 21-3

2

12.UNL

Pllrklt Dl"'loo
W L T Plo. GPGA

w...._. . . .

N.Y. Rqal •... J719 4

J3 20

s

Nn 1aooy •...... 31 II 7
l'ltllburJII ....... .. :16 24 7
N.Y . . . . - ...• :14 26 7
~ -····· 21 2511

71236193

11 246197

69
l9
ll
. S3

A-Piwloloo
21 l
.............. ZJ23 I
Molo .............. 2J 26 10
Halford .•. _ ...... 1629 10
~ --·-···- 12 31 7

-

············ »

216171
243 222
21! 229
174190

75 205149
62 191200
56 21JZIO
42 171 t97
31 161233

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
T-

............ 22·2

ll.Kanuoky ............... l~l
14.Alobomo ................ l9·S

ll.S&lt;MIIhcmCol ........... l7...
16. Florid. SL ........ ......18-6

lui
Ptl. Wttk
1623
1
1154
J
1474
4
1358
6
1330
7
1210
I
1217
4
1193
2
lll7
9
1000
II
9'19
12
923
IS
717
19
613
16
594
ll
l6S
23

17. Syncuac ................. l6-5
IB.Tuione ......... .......... l9·3

562

10

19.Cincl•n•11-----19-J
20. Miohlaan ............... IH

S04
481
417

14
24
17

2l.Ccnnecticut.. .......... \6-5

382

18

22.Sct.onHall ............... IS-6

J~\

~

2J.Iow1St. ................ \8-6
24. St. JoM'• ...:............ J4-7
25. Gcotgclown ............ l5-6

120

~~GfGA

- ............... 32 II 9
ll&lt;l-············· 232112
SL Loilil •. ......... 26 :14 9
- . ...•...••. 25 Zl s
To"""" ·············· 21 J:z 5

73 254 t96

62117174
61 204 197
ss 117199
47 166212

Sm,U..Piwloloo

v........ .........

30 19 9 69 202171
JAAoplol ..... :14 :z:z 13 61 212211

'flottlpis .......... 24 :14 11

!9 111 ·111

- . . . .......... 2521 7 l7 :U0%29
Colpty .............. 22Zl 9

!3 212213

ll4t 4 30 15026l
MoodaJ's scores

lod)-............

y _ , . 3, N.Y.!~"'.~"' 3,1io

N.Y. . , . _ S, Winn&gt;pes4, OT
Lao Anoolat 6, ...... 3
Douvi1 J. SL Lot&gt;ill

_ . •. - o

Tonlcbt'• pmes

~·--·7 ,JSp.m.

r - otl'1allltqll, , ,35 p.m.

K
mat o-, 7:3l p.m.
........... ot Sat.Jooo,IO:ll p.ttt.

Wednnday'• pmes

. __. "Hatllord. H! , ....

SLI..otlilat...-1:35plll.
· -.. Col,ply:9:l.S p.m.

l'ortalftouth 77, McDermott NW 74,

OT

Portmtouth W. 41,.lronton JS
otw~o~oam

Dixie 57, MiddletoWn M1dison SO
Pn:blc Shawnee 63, Bellbrook 39

IM•illon IV
Ansonia 71, Day. Jcffersoo 39

Botovio 41, Williams""'a 16
Frll'lklin Mcnroc 64, Atcanum 16
Lockland 38, Middletown Cu-. 33
~pring. Catholic 86, Xmia W il~at II
Tri-County North 38, CcdaMUe 35
Tri.-Vill.tae 71, Yellow Sprin&amp;J 36

Regular·season action

Adl41, Pandon-Oilboa 34
Akron Manche~tcr 42, Grccn1bura
lli«n36
An:tdia SO, Elmwood 3S

Arlinltm 44, N. Ballirnor~: 31
Alhubuta H•rbor S5, !dfc:non 48
Ayenvillc 73, Miller City .59

Balberton 64, Nordonia 45

Bame.villc 62, Bclllvi.l1c 59
Bellaire St.John 79, Mingo 4S
Brookville 69, Ea10n 23
Canfield 86, Poland 41
Covington 80,J.Won Ccn1er47
Danville 70, L.ucu 16
E. Li•topooi S9, Edioon Ntmh 38
Fort !cnninJ161 , Uncob\vicw 30
Ot&gt;hun 41. Milton Unioo 38
Grand VaU. 49, Cortllnd-Ld.C\Iicw

81
69

Olhu recelvlna 'olet: Mu -

uchuuw 63, Te~a -EJ Puo 58, LSU 51,
Otlahan1 45, N.C. Dlarlauc 37, Ncbrll.ka 36, Wi1.-Grcc:n B1y 2.11, Mont&amp;n1 2J,
Princeton 21, Stlrlford 21, Ariz.tm St 20,
DePiul\7, New Mcx.iooSt. 17, B1U St.
16, Briaham Youna 14, Pcppcrdine 13,
Rhode f•lln.d I 3, HOUlton 10, West Virginil9, Wake FCRit 8, TeuJ OuUtian 6,
Loui1 i1u Tech S, Bo1ton Collcac 4,
l.ouilvillc 4, Tuu 4, Georail Tech 3.
low1 3, Ddaw~ 2, MiMCIOII 2, Mcm p&gt;W St. I. !Uohmond I.

Major college
basketball scores

34

Hubbard 53, Struthcn 31

Mcdtoni&lt;:lbwa 71, Rid&amp;cmonl 31

Norw1ync 31,1lillldalc 35
P1ineavillo Rive.n:idc 59, A1httbul1
St. John26

Solan 64, Compbell Monorioi 63
Skywol6. Caldwolt 48
Soulhin&amp;1G&lt; Sl, Minon1 Ridgo46
StrubwK ~~ Jo,..· S&lt;io 47
Temple l.lu. 47, New Crcatioo 19
w...., !Ca&gt;ncdy 42, au..! l4
Wdlnillol9, Cotliz 50
Ycwta. Mooney S4, Youn1. Chaney

EtLSt
"" 70

Holy Crou &amp;0, New HampWJe 70
Loyola, Md. 70, St. Pcsct't 65
Penn St. II, Md.·Biilirnorc County

77
Ridtt6S, Brooklyn Col. 62

s..... IW1 12, Pilllbwoh 6J
SL FnnciJ, Pl. 7S, Col.81tc69
To'II&gt;'IOI'I St 98, Buffalo 6S
lubJUU SL 72. CmL F1orid1 71
Bcthunc-Cookman 96, Mci.-E. Shore
9l,Of

Ciudd 73. N.C.·Omotoboro 60
Cout1l Cuolin1 74, Coli. of
OlarlC11ml 6S
E. Kmtuciy r7, A Ullin Puy 75

B. TcmCIIIoc S1.. 96, W, Carolina 16
Eatt Cuollna 74, Gecqe Muon 68
F1Mida A.tM 90, Dclaw"" SL 81
. Funnan 55, Somftm142
Jldtlat St.n. 0tam11Utt1 s. 76
Libmy 77, Compbell S8

or

t.ouWtto Toch 91, ll&lt;hllnYille 6J
Middlo Tenn. 61, TCMCIIOC St. 49
MiN. Vlllcy St 105, Allbmla SL 96
l&gt;l&lt;nbood SL ... SE MMoowi 10
M"""y St !OJ, T - Toch 99.
N. Comlino A.tT 107, M"'"' St. 9l
N.C.·Wllmio.... II, Amaioon U. 87
Radfood94. Wint!trop67

Ridvnood 73, Old Dominion 69
S. C...tino SL 61, H""ud U. l9
s-13, Sottthem Moth. 63
Tn.oChiUlnOOf,a 61 , Appllachian S1..
19
.

Midwest
A1aon 75, W. Illin.U69
Btadle)' S4, N. lowa.Sl
C.Vol.wl SL 62. E.lllittGU !2
CtcWUOfl 76 Dralle !il

m..auu.. 9s, N.IWnoi190

llliaoio :II; 61, St. Loui162
Miaootoll7, Ntlnulto 61
Mo.·Xwu City II, OUclao SL 74
S.IWnoia 69, Wldiilo SL ll
Wlo.·Oreon Boy 76, Voiponioo 41

SouthwiSt
" ' - St. ~. Pllilio 'lltw 61
Tuu SotothOm 99, Soothttm U.ll
1\olu '71, On! RolioN 62
Far West
LonJ B..... St. 73, FlOIIlO SL 61
UNLV.76, Cal SL·I\tllottat 47

Ohio high !1Chool
girls basketball scores
Moad•y'alo!lmey ll&lt;CII'el
PI•- I

Cln.HuUio 46, Cln. Toll!!

,· a-t¥!D.J!,TIOj123

Greenfield McOUn $0, N. Ad~m~4S

lndWl V.U. S2, CoohO&lt;lOn 4S
Kcacrina Altcr49, w. Cumito:n 43
tiWna \'aU. 71, E. Kno~~: 49
~wt.lfrillc 35, McDonald 30
Mlricao 47, Wmatl.ocil40
Muaillon Qa. 71,A twlter0u. 37

Goorp Wuhinpn 75, Jam~N Midi·

South

WALES CONFERENCE
T-

ucu. (2) ......... ....19·1

1D. Aibnlat ................. I9-S
I I. MichiJ"" St ........... ! H

pm.

In the NHL ...

Jacklon 51, VlnlDn Counly 38
Lonon· Monroe 46, Edr.wood 43
Mtlp 73, Rock Hill ' , or

The Top Twenty Five tetml in The

Auoci&amp;led Prw 1991 ·92 college basketbill poll, with lim-place VOid: in puen·
thc1c1 , records through Feb. 16, toll!
poinu hued on 25 poinll for" firlt place
VOIC th.rough one point for I 2Sth p!ICC
"ole 1nd Jut wed.'• nnkins•:

18

Atlonto117, WuhinJ1401 110
New Yod.l04, Miami 102
lndllnll28, Charloae 117
Cl.,.laod 113, Ch!c.oto I U
Minncldl 124, H01.111on 122, OT
thohii, Booton83

Dl'illan D
Hamiltm badin S9, Cul.isle 38

Uliaaw! .................. l7·3

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Cin. Mount Notre D1mc 42, Cin .
Walnut Hilla V
Sidney 53, Spina. Sm.~th 49

AP Top 25 college
basketball poll

J.s

8.S
9
l i.S

Centnl Dhillon

DouoiL ..................29
Atlonlo ..... . .........26
Milwa~ce .............24
tndiono ........•........23
Clwl... ................ 16

Lop1 n, l..aKUitr 411

Buffalo at Vmoouver, 10:35 p.m.

.

'

..

Big East puts five teams
in AP's Top 25 cage poll

Scoreboard
In theNBA ...

Quarter totals
Meigs ............. l8 15 18 12 10= 73
Rock Hill. ...... IO 16 20 17 6 = 69
Meigs (73) - Tricia Baer 10·0·
7=27, Mary Cremans 1,0.0:2, Kim
Hanning 5-0-2= 12, Vema Comp.
ston 9.0-3·21, Lori Kelly 2.0.2=4,
Reva Mullen 1-0-3=5. Totals 28·0·17=73
Rock Hill (69) - Tracy Mul·
lens 5-0-2=12, Myra Justice 3-0·
0=6, Mandy McFann 0-0.1= I, Lori
Gillenwater 8-0·0= 16, Carrie Haas
9·0·2=20, Beth Miller 7-0·0=14.
Totals- 32·0..5=69

41

Transactions
BasebaU
Amollcu!Mpoc

BALTIMORE ORIOLI!S - Tndod

Cr1i1 Worthin~, lhlrd bucman, 1nd
Tom Martin, pau:hcr, to lhc San Dieao
Padza ror Jim Lcwit, piiCba-, and Stcvc
Monla. outtieltlor. Allipod SIO\&gt;o Mlnin
to Rocllalor of tho la,_.tion~ LooJUO.

BOSTON RED SOX - AIJOCd to
tctml with Ellil Bwb, ou.tficlcfcr, on a
onc-)'fllr comne&amp;. lft4 JoM Ccruai. pllcb·

er, on 1 minor klpe oontl'IC:t..

KANSAS CITY ROYAL! - Apood
to temu with Jeff Montt,omery, pitcher,

on a mo-ycu COIIIftCl.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS Apec4 ID wnu with Cal Eldred, Mike
IJNOialr. and Mull Kiefer, pitdton; John
!ah1and Patl.J.II.Ic:h,lnfieldcn; and Dave

Niluoa md Joe Xmai. e~IC:hcn, ca •oycucen....._
Sl!Am.J! MARJNI!RS- Apood to
loami with Eric Hanlon, Mike Schooler
ond Roody 1alwoo. pildtots • .., _,..,

-

TBXAS RANOERS - A1rood

10

la'ml with Jobn kuAel1. e~tdur, on amiont1
con~tttt.

....lat,.. -

em

;..

fielder, and Donald Huda, outfielder, m

-~;BLUB lAYs -

s...,...

A.,...t

LG leftftl widt D'll.u~.• Ward, pbchei; Bd
caldler, DatttiMo M&amp;ttinoz, finl
bt..aD, awl l)mk Bell, l'a!lfte'dv, Gil
(Wo,_-ooa&amp;adl.

Iowa State coach Johnny Orr,
whose team broke into the national
rankings Monday at No. 23. "But
as far as getting teams in the
NCAA ... if we'd go without the
tournament, I'm sure we'd get six
teams in the NCAA.
"But unless somebody knocks
that top team out or there, we're
not going to get it. The Big Ten,
with no tournament, will get six
and maybe seven in there."
"It depends on what happens
from here on out," said Oklahoma
State's Eddie Sutton, whose Cowboys lost two games and sank from
No. 2 to No. 8. " Also. it depends
on what the other conferences do.
There's nothing you can do about
it It (the conference tournament) is
such a revenue·maker for all the
schools, and it's a ~ood thing for
the fans. There wtll be years it
could hurt semeone."
Success by the horq,e team in the
Big Eight is scrambling the confer·
ence standings. No. 9 Missouri's
87·61 victory over Nebraska Mon·
day night was the 17th by the horne
team in the last 19 conference
games.
"It's hell going on the road in
this league," said Orr, who lost by
31 points at No. 3 Kansas last week
but beat Oklahoma State at home.
Duke (20·1) remained No. 1 on
Monday as it has every poll since
the preseason. UCLA (19 - 1)
moved up one spot to second, setting up a possible 1·2 battle on
March I in Los Angeles.
There will be one more poll
before that game is played, and the
Blue Devils have Maryland at
home and Wake Forest on the road.
UCLA has home games with Cali·
Cornia and Stanford before visiting
Notre Dame.
Duke received 63 of 65 first·
place voles and 1.623 points from
the nationwide panel of sportswriters and broadcasters, while the
Bruins were No. 1 on the olher two
ballotS and had 1,554 points.
Only Duke and Missouri have
the same spot as in last week's poll,
and three teams rejoined lhe rankings as five ranked teams lost two
games last week.
Iowa State, St. John's and
Georgetown are back in the Top
25, while Louisiana State, Texas-EI
Paso and North Carolina Charloue
fell out after two losses each.
Following Duke and UCLA in
the Top Ten were Kail'sas, North
Carolina, Arizona, Ohio State,
Indiana, Oklahoma State, Missouri
and Arkansas.
Michigan State led the Second
Ten and was followed by UNL V.
Kentucky, Alabama, Southern Cal.
Florida State, Syracuse, Tulane,
Cincinnati and Michigan.
Connecticut and Seton Hall
were 21st and 22nd and were fol·
lowed by the three new teams Iowa Slate, St. John's and Georgetown.

Sports shorts

REACHING IN- Pittsburgh's Jermaine
Morgan reaches out in an attempt to strip the
ball from Seton Hall's Luther Wright during the

Seton Hall beats Pittsburgh 82-63
for fifth straight Big East victory
By TOM CANAVAN
AP Sports Writer
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - Some teams play run and
gun. Some teams live and die by
the three·point shot. Some teams
stress the half·court offense.
The name of the game at Seton
Hall is defense. and Monday night
the No. 22·ranked Pirates played it
to perfection.
Seton Hall's clinging man·tO·
man pressure forced Pittsburgh to
miss 22 consecutive shots during a
15·0 first-half run and the Pirates
rolled to a school-record fifth
straight Big East Conference victory with an 82·63 decision.
"These kids really take pride in
their .defense," Pirates coach P.J.
Carlesimo said after his team won
for the seventh time in eight games.
"I don't think we can play much
better than we did in the first half
defensively.
"But honestly," Carlesimo
added, "Piusburgh missed a lot of
good shots. It's tough to play when
the ball isn't going in for you."

SENIORS HONORED- Ann Barnitz,lef'l, and Kathy Snyder,
senior co-captains or the University of Rio Grande women's bas·
ketball team, were honored at the conclusion of Sunday's Rio
Grande-Lake Erie game at Lyne Center. It was the final season
game for the Redwomen. They are seen holding roses presented to
them by the team, Coach Doug Foote, his wife Nancy .and son
Derek. Barnitz is the daughlef of Gary Bamitz and Ann AUoway,
both of Belpre, and the granddaughter of Haymon and Dean Bar·
nitz or Pomeroy. Snyder is the daughter of Bob and Beverly Sny·
der of Gab anna.

Bloom-Carroll's Wallace headed
for state swimming tournament
Buck Wallace, a senior at
Bloom-Carroll High S'hool, partie·
ipated in the 65th boys swimming
and diving championships in Banin
Natatorium Saturday.
He earned the right to compete
in the state tournament through his
accomplishments at the district
contest
Wallace, the son of Gloria and
Bruce Wallace of Canal Win ch·
ester, earned an automatic bid into
the state tournament in Canton and
aU-district accolades with a second·
place fini sh in the 50· meter
freestyle. His time in the freestyle
was 22.21. a little more than half a
second short of first place, which
went to an Upper Arlington stu·
dent.
Wallace aJso swam in the 100·
meter free and fmishcd fifth in the
district, which earned him all-dis-

trict honors in that event also.
At the state tournament, Wall ace
swa m against not only the best
swimmers in the state, but some of
the best in the nation. Among three
other Bloom-Carroll swimmers
was Natalie Wallace, his sister.
Although she posted a career-best
time in her individual event, the
100 meter breaststroke at the dis·
trict meet, she did not qualify for
the state event
Wallace has competed with the
United States Swimming Association for several years in both
regionals, where contestants were
from se ven states, and on the
national level.
Buck and Natalie Wallace are
the grandchildren of Dwight and
Faye Wallace of Middleport, and or
Addie Buck of Pomeroy and the
late Gail Buck.

By DAVE CARPENTER ·
AP Sports Writer
ALBERTVILLE, France (AP)
- Alberto Tomba refused to be
upstaged by his suddenly famous
training partner today - it would
not have been La Bomba-esque.
Barely two !lours after Deborah
Compagnoni snatched the gold
from the favorites in the women's
super-G, Tomba capped a sensa·
tiona! debut in the 1992 Winter
Olympics and became the first
repeat Olyl}lpic champion of an
Alpine ski race by powering to vi~·
tory in the men's giant slalom.
It was the greatest day ever for
It.alian skiers. And it made it three
gold medals in three Olympic races
for the sport's reigning superstar.
He needed a speedy second run
to do iL
Luxembourg's Marc Girardelli,
a four-time World Cup circuit
champion, made a strong bid for
his long-sought first gold medal by
flashing down the Val d'lsere
course into ftrSt place on his second
run.
But Tomba, skiing last among
the top-seeded skiers after posting
the fastest time in the morning run,
overcame an early slip to do it
again in the afternoon. He won by
.32 seconds in a combined 2:06.98.
Girardelli won his second silver
in Albertville, and Norway's Kjetil
Andre Aamodt took a bronze to go
with his surpriso gold from the
super-G.
Italy now has won a record three
skiing gold and can make it four in
Saturday's slalom. Josef Polig led
that country's 1·2 finish last week
in l)le Alpine combined.
ComP.a'poni temporarily stole
the spolligllt from Tomba by cruis·
ing 10 a surprisin.$IY wide victo(Y
over French favonle Carole Merle
in the women's super-G.
Merle, the career leader with
nine World Cup victories in the
event, appeared i61lave won when
no.one in the IJI'IlUJ' of top 15 seeds
could match her wne of I minute,
22.63 seconds on a frosty day on
tho "Roc de Fer" course. ·
But Compaponi, who won the
Jasi super.O before the Olympics,
itied neil and crossed the finish
lit~e a whopping 1.4~ seconds
faster, llaahing a huge smile when

IT
FILE

BasebaU

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set
lor public hearing .Case

ponent, and related mal·
tars. This hearing Is
sc:he&lt;ll(led to beQin at llle

Commission offices at
10:00 a.m. on March 16,
1992.
All Interested parties will
be given an opportunity to be heatd. Further lnlor·
matloit may be obtained
by contacllnO the Commission at 180 East
Broad Street. Cctlumbus,
Ohio 432t16-0573.

Surprise .. .3 out
of 4who file ataX
return get a refund!
Chances are that
means you. So the
sooner you file the
sooner you·get
mOney back!

In other games involving ranked
teams, No. 9 Missouri routed
Nebraska 87·61 and No. 12 UNLV
beat Cal State-Fullerton 76-47.
Pitt (15-11, 7·6) hitS of 32
shots from the field (15.6 percent)
in the opening 20 minutes and went
to the locker room trailing 35·16.
The 22·shot drought lasted 11:07
and wasn't broken until Darren
Morningstar hit a driving layup and
added a foul shot to cut Seton
Hall's lead to 26-10.
Terry Dehere had 13 points and
Arturas Karnishovas and Bryan
Caver added 12 for Seton Hall.
Jerry McCullough led the Panthers
with 16.
No. 9 Missouri 87
Nebraska 61
Anthony Peeler set a school
record with six three-pointers and
scored 34 points as Missouri
breezed at home.
Peeler was 4-for-4 on three·
pointers in the first half and scored
24 points as the Tigers took a 53·
31 lead at halftime. He finished 6for·8 from Ionge range and broke

the record of five three-pointers by
Lynn Hardy against St. Bonaven·
ture on Jan. 5, 1987.
Missouri (18-3, 6-2 Big Eight)
scored the game's flfst nine points.
Nebraska (15-6, 3-5) got 13 points
from Derrick Chandler.
No. IS UNL V 76
Cal Stale-FuUerton 47
1.R. Rider scored 23 points and
UNLV extended the nation' s
longest winning streak to 20
games. The Runnin' Rebels also
stretched their home winning string
to 46 games, also best in the country.
UNLV (23·2, 15-0) clinched at
least a tie for the regular season
Big West championship . The
Rebels, however, are ineligible for
both the conference tournament
and the NCAA tournament because
of NCAA violations.
Dexter Boney added 16 points
and Elmore Spencer had 15 points
and 10 rebounds for UNL Y. Agee
Ward led Fullerton (10-12, 6·7)
with 14 points and seven rebounds.

Italy's Tombafirst repeat Olympic
champion in men's giant slalom

TORONTO (AP) - Right-han·
der Duane Ward and the Toronto
Blue Jays agreed to a one-year con·
tract for $~,425,000. Ward, 7-6
with a 2.77 ERA and 23 saves in
81 appearances last season, asked
for $2.9 million in arbiuation and
was offered $1.8 million.

No. 92·01-El·EFC, to
review the fuel procure·
ment practices and
policias of Ohio Power
Company. the operation
of its Eltclrlc Fuel Com-

first half or Monday night's Big East match up in
East Rutherford, NJ., which the Pirates won 82·
63. (AP)

.
'

:.

-.f'·
.
·
=·· ·~
I

her time was posted. That left Germany's Katja Seizinger with the
bronze and bumped Austrian Petra
Kronberger, the two-time defend·
ing World Cup champion and
Alpine combined gold medalist,
out of a medal by a hundredth of a
second.
Eva Twardokens of Santa Cruz,
Calif., was the top American in
eighth, exactly one minute behind
Scizinger.
Compagnoni became the fifth
long·shot winner of an Alpine race
at the Albertville Garnes.
"I thought I could be second or
third, but I never thought I could be
flfst," she said. "I never thought I
was winning, but then at the end
everything was good and I was
much quicker."
A French woman has not won
an Olympic Alpine race since
1968. when Marielle Goitschel
won the slalom at Grenoble. But
Merle said she was happy to win
her flfst Olympic medal.
"A silver medal is fantastic,"
she said. "Of course, I would have
preferred to win, but this is not a
disapoointment. For me, it's
great..\
Another Italian, Josef Polig, led
that counll"fs surprising 1·2 finish
in the men s Alpine combined last
week.
The unbeaten U.S. hockey team
had less than 24 hours to recover
from an important but brutally
physical tie against Sweden hefore
opening medals-round play tonight
against France.
Love conquered all on another
rink 25 miles away in Albertville,
where a Russian couple skating
sensuously to Bach beat French
stars Isabelle and Paul Duchesnay
for the Olympic ice dancing title.
Marina Klimova and Sergei
Ponomarenko·, competing for the
Unified TF8ffi. won the free skate
with a steamy prpgram cleverly
designed to score artistic points
where a brother-sister duo, even the ·
world charnpioos, cannoL
"It's very difficult for Isabelle
and Paul 10 skate love, so we fmd
the) program and we know lhat ~
we'll do It well because we love
each other and we're married to
each other," Ponomarenk.o said.

The Norwegians tOday picked
up a seventh gold, tying their all·
time best. by easily winning the 40·
kilometer men's cross·country ski
relay. Ycgard "the Viking"
Ulvang became the leading male
medal -winner at the Albertville
Games with three golds and one
silver, and teammate Bjorn Dahlie
won a second gold and third medal.
Italy was second and Finland third
in a near-photo finish with
snakebitten Sweden.
The Swedes have been one of
the Winter G ~ mes' biggest diap·
pointmcnts, with just two bronze
medals so far. They had four golds
in each of the last two Winter
Olympics.
Germany remained atop the
medals table with 22, including
eight golds. Next were the Unified
Team with 17. Austria 16 and Norway 15. Italy moved ahead of
France with 10, and the Americans
fell into eighth place behind Finland with six.
The U.S. hockey team (4·0·1)
blew a 3-0 lead in the finall4 min·
utes, but still earned a top seed and
the right to play France (2-3) in the
quarterfinals. Goalie Ray LeBlanc
was super again despite the late let·
down.
By tying the game on Mikacl
Johannson's goal with 21 seconds
left, th~ Swedes (3-0-2) avoided the
mighLy Unified Team and will play
Finland on Wednesday. But their
own version of North AmericanStyle hockey rubbed the North
Americans the wrong way.
One crunching hit less than
three minutes into the game
demonstrated graphically that there
was no love lost between the two
foes.
The Swedes had pointed to the
game after a 3·2 pre.O~mes loss in
Chamonix in which they i:Om ·
plained of U.S. bullying tactics.
When a nying check by former
NHL player Mats Naslund against
the ·glass KO' d American defense·
man Greg Brown for several min·
utes, it literally smacked of
R:venge•..
U.S. coach Dave Peterson called
it a dirty shot and refused to shake
!lands with Swedish coach Conny
Evensson aflerward.

"

TRAPPED - U.S. hockey player Steve
Heinze (11) of Nortb Andover, Mass., is trapped
by Sweden's Thomas Rundqvisl during ~on·

..

day's Olympic game in Meribel, France, which
ended in a 3·3 tie. (API

..'

...
~·

...

U.S., Sweden skate to 3-3 deadlock
in Olympic hockey action Monday
Especially since it has players
den would play physically - not
By HOWARD ULMAN
like
Naslund, Borje Salming and
after
the
3·2
loss
in
Charnonix
on
AP Sports Writer
MERIBEL, France (AP) - The Feb. 5, three days before the others hardened by long years in
theNHL.
Swedes were beaten on the score- Olympics.
board two weeks ago in Charnonix
and, they complained, beaten up
physically by the U.S. Olympic
hockey team in an exhibition game.
On Monday night in Meribel,
they charged back.
Mats Naslund's jolting check
that sent Greg Brown into the
boards, then to the ice and evcotu·
The Division IV girls sectional basketball tournament, to begin
ally to the hospital showed that
Thursday, Feb. 27 at Meigs High School, will feature Eastern and
Sweden's reputation as a land of
Southern playing the 6:30 opener. Miller and Trimble will play in
sweet skaters who shun contact
the 8:15p.m. nightcap.
was outdated.
The victors of those games will advance to the district tourna"I felt like it was a very good
ment,
slated for March 4· 7, at Jackson High School.
hit at the moment," Naslund said.
"He cleared the puck, and I just
followed through with the hit, like
North American style."
It's also the style the American
team uses, although not with such
gory results. There was plenty of
David Grindstaff. a member of the Southern Athletic Boosters
hitting, but no fighting, throughout
Club, announced that the Southern High School boys basketball
Monday night's 3-3 tie that ended
team will be sponsoring a men's independent basketball tournament
the preliminary round with the
scheduled for Feb. 22 and Feb. 23. ·
United States in f trSt place in Pool
The entry fee is $100 per IO·man roster. Trophies will be awardA and world champion Sweden in
ed to first- and second-place teams. and there will also be first- and
second.
second-place sponsor trophies to the champion and the runner-up.
It set up tonight's medal round
For more infonmation, please call949·2025 (Racmc).
pairing between the United States
(4·0-1) and, France (2·3). Sweden
would have gotten that favorable
matehup had it beaten the Ameri ·
The Division of Watercraft is offering a one day Ohio Boating
cans. Instead, it plays tougher
Basics class covering the fundarncnlals of boating, navigation and
Czeehoslovalcia (4-1) Wednesday.
safety. Successful completion of this course may result in savings of
There was a lot at stake.
10 percent or more on boat insurance premiums. Students complet"It got rough right from the outing this course will be invited to attend an on·the-water session
set·there when Brown got hit pretty
which will cover launchmg, trailenng and docking procedures.
hard," U.S. fotward Jim Johannson
This class will be held Saturday. March 7, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
said. "Emotions run high when
at
Ohio
University in Athens. Those interested in registering may
something like that happens. A $UY •
contaCt
Ohio
University at 1-800-336-5699.
gets hurt, but that's part of phystcal . ,
Questions
concerning this or other boating safety classes should
hockey and it was pretty rough out·
contaCt
the
Division
of Watercraft at 614-439-4076.
there.''
With 2:40 gone in the game,
Brown suffered a coocussion, a 12stitch cut and a broken nose when
Naslund left his feet as he charged
The Southeastern Ohio and Hocking Valley chapters of the
into him to the left of - and
National
Wild Turkey Federation will host the Ohio State Turkey
behind- the U.S. net.
Seminar, Calling Contest and Banquet March 7 and 8 at Hocking
Naslund was ejected and, after
Technical
School in Nelsonville.
several minutes. Brown was helped
Featured
speakers will be Dan Stuckey, 10-timc Ohio stale call·
off the ice.
ing
champion
and past grand national champion; Wayne Bailey, the
U.S. team general manager
"Dean"
of
America's
turkey hunting; and Rob Keck of the NWTF.
Larry Johnson said the Americans
For
more
infonmation,
contact Dave Grabor at 373·9613 after 5
would ask the International Ice
p.m.
Hockey Federation to throw
Naslund out of the toumamenL But
Naslund said he didn't try to hurt
Brown.
The Swede was an unlikely perpetrator of such a check. In e1ght
NHL seasons from 1982 to 1990,
Naslund had just 107 penalty min·
utes. In 1987·88, he won the Lady
Byng Memorial Trophy for sports·
manship and gentlemanly play.
It wasn't as surprising that Swe·

r--Area sports briefs_,
Division N girls sectional
tournament dates announced

Southern basketball team
to sponsor men's cage tourney

Boating class set for March 7

Turkey hunting seminar slated

Domlno·s Knows

You·n Low Our
Pepperoni
Pizza Ftast

-Sports shorts - Basebau

SEATILE (AP) - Left-bander
Randy Johnson ·and right-hander
Erik Hanson agreed to one-year
contracts with the Seattle Mariners.
Johnson, 13-10 with a 3.98 ERA ,
last season, settled for $1,392,500
after asking for $1.65 million in
.arbirtration and being offered $1.05
million. Hanson, 8·8 with a 3,81
ERA last sauon, will make $1.345
million. He uked for $1.6 million
in arbitration and was offered
Sl.O:ZS. million.
·

WEST MAIN STREET- 992·2124

-----i..-2MEDIUM .

PEPPERONI PIZZA$
AND4 COLAS

1 LARGE
PEPPERONI
,ITH4COW

8.99
___ __
--------.&amp;.--sa.99

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�·syTheBend

Th'e Daily Sentiriel
Tuesday,

by Bob Hoeflich
WANTED'--One good soapbo~.
The one I have is wearing a bit thin
and small wonder- lately I feel
that I've been on it too often, Will
I stop? Probably n01.

losses and are laying off thousands
of workers, the big three arc collectively blaming their fate on others
and appealing to our countrfs consumers to stop buying foretgn cars
and to start buying American made
cars.
, "While, I can empathize with
thts obJecltve, here is the rub how
does one know if they are 'truly
buying an American made automobile ... surely not by the name.
Today's Buick Regals are made in
Ontario, Canada; Ford's Festivas in
Seoul, Korea; Chrysler's LeBarons
in Toluca, Mexico; Honda's
Accords in Marysville, Ohio· Nissan's Sentras in Smyrna, 'Tennessee; Toyota's Camrys in
Georgetown, Kentucky. and
Mazda's new mid-size sedan, the
626, in Flat Rock, Michigan. To
add to this confusion many of the
U.S, brand cars and trucks assem, bled in the U.S, contain .a majority
of foreign produced parts.
"Perhaps, it is time for 'the
world's automotive manufacturers
to stage a show similar to "To Tell
the Truth", Perhaps, it is time we
ask them to line up all of the various cars and trucks sold in th e
Uqited States and identify those
vehicles that arc truly and totally
American made by pulling one car
length forward . I'm afraid in
today's market place there would
be few cars that could do so."
So from the Congressman you
now have it. just the way it really

The saga of high gasoline prices
continues.
George Grate of Rutland who
had been in touch with state officials about the fact that we WERE
paying 20 cents a gallon or more
for gasoline than other not too distan ce localities reports that he
recetved notice from Sen. Jan Long
that the matter has been turned over
to the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio. George is confused as to
why his complaint went to the
PUCO which governs utilities. So
am L
Channel 13 Action News personnel were in Meigs Connty Monday to look into the pricing differences. They say that gasoline is
now comparable to what they pay
10 Huntington, W. Va, You may
have noticed that the prices have
co me down - one station in
Pomeroy Saturday was $1.10 while
at Tuppers Plains the price was
SLOS at a couple of stations. Is the
price drop only temporary until the
subj ect cools or can we expect
some more permanent relief? Tune
in ncx t week.
The entire plot is interesting and
especially since all I asked in the
first place was for the e•planalion
as to why our gasoline prices have
been that 20 cents or more higher IS.
than other locations , If there' s a
logical explanation , fine- let' s
On the more pleasant side and I
hear it Need I mention that the can get off the soapbox to mention
explanation has not materialized?
this.
Pomeroy's popular Helen NcutA couple of times recently. I've zling- you'll especially remember
talked to you about the big "Buy her from her employment at th e
American" campaign especially Swisher-Lohse Drug Store-will
when it comes to motor vehicles, I be marking a birthday on Feb. 27,
mentioned that this certainly
No doubt pleasant Helen wtll be
appears a difficult camprugn to fol- happy to hear from you . Her
low.
address these days is Hopewell
I'm encouraged. Congressman Health Care Center, Room 5, 1761
Claren ce Miller in his regular Pinewood Road. Sumpter, S. C.,
"Washington Report" column to 29151.
constituents has this to say:
"Now that car sales are down,
I was gomg to send you a Presi.
now that the American automotive dents' Day grcctmg card. but I formanufacturers are reporting record got Do keep smiling,

Page-&amp;

Lydia Council pians for
upcoming revival, banquet

RATES
Days

given to Tillie Rowley.
Gerry Lightfoot has communion
for March.
The March meeting will be held
March 9 at the church and hostesses will be Gerry Lightfoot, Suzie
Will and Cherie Williamson.
The church cookbook should be
avallable on April 24. There will be
between 150-200 recipes in the
book and the cost will be $1
A planning meeting for Ladies
Retreat will be at the Middleport
Church of Christ on May 4 at 7
p,m,
Ladies Retreat will be held Sept
18-19 and the theme will be "Tune
Up Your Heart." Special workshops will be given by Ruth Seevers, Paula Pickens, Sharon Stewart
Anyone wanting to help should
attend the May meeting,
Following prayer by Delores
Frank, refreshments were served to
Suzie and Christi Will, Charlotte
Hanning, Carolyn Snowden, Krystal Bolin, Becky Amberger, Brenda
Bolin, Cherie and Kaitlin
Williamson, Janice Fetty. Jane
Hysell, Carolyn Nicholson, Diane
Bing, Bonnie Warner, Gerry Lightfoot. Nancy Moms. Karlita Stump
and Delores Frank,

The February meeting of the
Bradford Church of Christ Lydia
Council was held at the home of
Delores Frank.
Hostesses for the evening were
Mrs. Frank and Karlita Stump,
The meeting was opened with
prayer request and prayer by Janice
FeU)&lt;. president
Devotions were given by Karlitta Stump, Scripture was from II
Corinthians on the topic "How Do
You Smell." "A Church Garden"
was also read.
Officers reports were given and
plans were made for the motherdaughter banquet to be held May 8
at 6:30 p.m. at the church. Baked
steak will be purchased for the banquet with members bringing the
rest of menu. Visitors lists were
distributed.
Announcements of activities
were Women's Fellowship on Feb.
27 at the Dexter Church of Christ
with Bradford having devotions.
An Easter musical program,
"Risen to Save" will be held during
the Sunday School hour.
A revival will be held at Bradford on April 19-24 and Kevin
Yeager will be the speaker.
The sunshine basket IS to be

Call992-2156
MoN. thru Fnt. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ad1 ouUide Callia, Ma1on or Meip countiu mUll be prepaid
• ReceiWJ diacount for ad1 paid ln advanee.
• Free Ada: Giveaway and Found ad. under 15 worda will he
run 3 day• at no eharge.
• Price of ad for aU upitallelten ia double price of ad eoet
• 7 point line type only uted
• Trihune il not re.ponaihle for erron after f.rat day (check
for error. fwat day ad runt in paper). CaU before 2:00p.m.
day after publication to make correc:lion
• Ada that mwt he paid in advance are~
Card of Thanb
Happy Ada
In Memoriam
Yard Sale.
• A elutifa~ adverli.ement placed in the Callipolil Daily
Tribune (except Cla11ifted Di.aplay, 8Uilaat Card or Legal
Notice•) will abo appear in the Point Plea1anl RegiiLer and
the Daily Sentinel, reaching over 18,0()0 tM.mea

TAl CHI CH'UAN - Eric Chambers practices the meditative
posture ca.lled the ''Tai Chi Ruler" used lo improve principles of
breathing, balance and stretching.

TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE · The Eastern
L·oca l School Board will meet
Tues day at 7 p.m. at the high
schooL

meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m: at the
tire station, All members are urged
to attend.
THURSDAY
RACINE - The Racine Ameri can Legion Post No. 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home.
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun ty Democratic Executive Committee will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
at the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Middleport
RACINE · The United
Literary Club wtll meet Wednesday
Methodist
Men of the Racine
at 2 p.m. at the Meigs County PubChurch
will
serve
a pancake supper
li'c Library in Pomeroy . Mrs,
Thursday
at
the
church
from 4-7
Robe rt Fi sher will review
"Onslaught" Roll call is "some- p.m. Hotcakes. sausage, scrambled
eggs and coffee will be served.
thing famous built at great cosL"
Contributions will be accepted.
MIDDLEPORT · The MiddlePOMEROY - The Meigs Counport Arts Council will offer another
ty
group
of Ohio Young Democrats
beg inner's class in Texas style
of
America
will meet Thursday at
dance beginning Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. Cost is $7 per couple . 6:30p.m. at the Carpenter's Hall in
Call Mary Wise at 992-2675 for Pomeroy. Orticcrs will be elected.
All Democrats between the ages of
mformation ,
18-36 are invited to attend.
SYRACUSE - The Third
ROCK SPRINGS · The MiddleWednesday Homemakers Club will
port
Child Conservation League
meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
usual place. For the doll, bring a will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
two- inch Styrofoam ball, small Rock Springs United Method,ist
dowel, two packages of black or Church. Tammy Tibbits, O.B.
brow n rug yarn, For the towels Nurse, will discuss programs for
bring a kitchen terry-cloth towel, needy mothers.
lace and material.
POMEROY · The Episcopal
RUTLAND - The Rutland Fire Church Women will meet ThursQcpartment Ladies Auxiliary will day at 12:30 p.m. at the Parish
House. Bring a sack lunch.

MElGS J.H. WINNERS - Phyllis Clark, right, eighth grade,
was lhe winner or the spelling bee at Meigs Junior High School.
Libby King, tert, seventh grade was selected as allernale. Clark is
the daughter of Edith Clark, Rutland, and King is the daughter or
Tim and Edie King, Bradbury.

Spelling bee winners named
Phyllis Clark was the winner of
the spelling bee at Meig s Junior
Htgh School and Libby King was
the alternate.
Other partiCipants in the bee
were Rachel Bush , Amy, Cleland,
Meli ssa Barrett, Paul Robin son,
Stacey Stewart, Taryn Doidge,
Bobbie Kinnison, J.R. Blackwell,

Adam Riffle, Shawn Fife, Gary
Canterbury, Lee William s, Becky
Ackerman, Ryan Smith, Ricky
Curtis, Bryan Colwell and Willie
Johnson.
Oark will compete at the Meigs
County Spelling Bee on Feb, 25 at
7:30 p.m. in the music room at
Meigs High SchooL

Thomas birth is announced
Gregory and Christine Thomas
of 247 King St. , Ravenna, are
announctng the birth of their first
child, Zachary Todd, born on Dec.
30 at Robinson Memorial l'{ospitJI
in Ravenna . He weighed seven
pounds, two ounces and was 20
inches long,

Paternal grandparents arc Mr.
and Mrs, Don Thomas, Pomeroy,
and maternal grandparents arc Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Arquilla ,
Youngstown. Great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Graves,
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Arquilla, Youngstown, and Mrs.
Michelina Sabatino, Poland, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs . Thomas and
Zachary made their first visit to
Pomeroy on Feb. 9· and in addition
to visiting grandparents and greatgrandparents, several aunts, uncles
and cousins joined the family here
to welcome the infant into the fam' ily.

was

i.
'

'

and Emily Sprague.
Dcvouons for tbe January meeting of the Heath UMW were by
Euvetla Bechtle using scripture
from the book of Psalms. Piano
music was provided by Emma
Clatworthy.
A silent prayer was given for the
new year.

Supper planned
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a soup supper at the Tuppers

Plains VFW Post No. 9053 on
March 7 beginning 114 r..m.
Vegetable and chi! • hot dogs
and deuerts will be aVailable. ·
A euchre tournament will be
held followin&amp; the dinner at 7 p.m.
The evenu are tiPlliiSIRd by lbe
Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
9053 and Ladle1 Auxiliary. The
publk illnvlled 10 auend.

SAN DIEGO (AP)- Roseanne
and Tom Arnold are donating
$50,000 to the San Diego Center
for Children, a residential treatment
center for emotionally disturbed
and abused youngsters.
The couple visited the facility
and met the children, ages 5 to 15,
last summer. A shon time later, the
star of TV's "Roseanne" disclosed
that she was abused as a child. Her
parents deny iL

POFTHEWEEK
Cen you doducl or like 1 llx
credit for nverel hundred
expena• Including:
•coat ol medlcel lnourance
progrlllfl
•out-ol-pockel oxp1n111 while
doing cherlllble volunteer
work.
'
•expenoll colleollng rental Income.
•work·releted oducetlonel ex-

ZACHARY THOMAS

Raphael returns
NEW YORK {AP) - To a few
sniffles and a standing ovation,
Sally Jessy Raphael returned 10 her
talk show two weeks after her
daughter died.
. "I coul~ not possibly be standmg ltcce wtthout the love and romfort you have expressed· 10 me
through the cards and the letters,"
Raphael told viewers Monday.
Allison Vladimir, 33, was found
unconscious in bed on Feb. 2 at a
bed-and-breakfast mansion owned
by her r.are.nts in Erwinna, Pa. A
coroner s report said sbe died from
a combination of alcohol and preatribed ljlld over-dte-&lt;:ounter drugs.
The coroner ruled the death an

pen••·

•coat of meklng your buoln111 .
-•tlbll to the cloeblod.
•lnveoiMtnte In low-Income
houalng.

a...,...·

-k-..l.llod child cere
Tb- ere julie lew ..,.a• thll proVIde pottndal tax 'rtllol- the
Uof gHI on. To.lurn which ol your expen- cen be deducted, talk with
YOIW HAA Block lnoomt Tax ..tum prep~rer.
.
In f8CI, whenever you f111W
eout how lhl to lawe elfecl your
retum, 0111 your local HIR Block office. Better yet, atop by the office
, _,you.
'*• to help you.

.,..lion•

w.·..

H&amp;R BLOCK
61t E.I ST'UII• 992-6674 •.POMEROY, OH. ,
'

accident.

.I

.

Depending upon where each
man was standing, each one had
only a very narrow perspective of
the elephant Feeling the trunk, one
said it was like a great python;
another touching the ear described
the elephant as a large leaf; still
another touched the animal's side
and said it was like a wall; and
finally, clutching a leg, one blind
man said an elephant was like a· .
trunk of a tree. Thus it is with Tai
Chi Ch 'uan . It is a larger phenomenon than a single experience
or observation.
No e~perience in tbe martial arts
is necessary; neither is one required .
to be athletically inclined nor have
an understanding of oriental philos- ,
ophy or Chinese culture. A nominal .
fee of $15 will provide admission
for all three sessions. For further
information call 992-2675 or 992- ;

7731

Eric Chambers has studied various mania! arts and philosophies
for over 20 years including fullcontact Bando-ryu kickboxing
under Dr, Maung Gyi, Tomiki
Aikido with Sensei Marritt
Stevens, third Dan, Wu Style Tai
Chi with Sifu Patty Rudiger and
Yang Style Tai Chi with Dr. James
Tong. In addition to his studies in
America, Chambers has traveled to
Beijing, China to study Wushu
Sword Techniques under Prof.
Feng, Bao-Shu.
He regularly teaches Tai Chi
Ch'uan for the Ohio University
Communiversity, Marietta Meta- ·
physical Society, and lectures on .,
"Applied Principles of Tai Chi
Ch' uan an Taoism" for Dr. Gene
Blocker with the Philosophy ,'
Department of Ohio University.
·

--

AUTO

E

State Auto's already
lowpremiurnscanbe
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
and home with the St~te
Auto Companies.
Let us tell you just
how much your savings
can be:

'

ROGAN

ER

~

1Diuauce services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992·6687

.J!t

•

•
"

-·
-.'
t

I

I

I

l

·'
i

·--· ··

New Homes • Viayl Siding
New Garages • Replace•tnl Wiadows
Roo• Additioas • Roofing

II

l

'

f'

INo Sundar Calls!
2112192 tfn

COUNTRY IIOIILE HOME
3 Nlco Moltllt HOliK far Rltll
Just Nortlt of r-oy
Stilling II '225 P• 110.
614-992·5528
or38W227

c•

t ...

2/3

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roolln~

•Insulation

~JAYMAR
Quality

I 11\\1 ~1 1'1'1 II~
S I I \ I ~ I I It J,
&amp;1'1111 qu piMft
Wanted 10 Buy
Live~ welt
Hay &amp; Crain
Seed &amp; Fertil;zer

Iii\ \'1'11 1~ I \Ill 1\

11- Au too for Sale
7%- TrueD for Sale
73- VaN&amp;: 4 WD'a
74- Motareyek.
Boatt &amp; Moton lor Sale

AuiAI Paru &amp;

1111-- C11mpi'"' Equipmenl

po
P1umbine: &amp;: Hea.tine;
Excuatlns
Ele&lt;:lrical &amp; Refl,~cr.uio~
General Hauline:
86- Mobile Home Repair
87- Uphot.tery

11It 411fn

I Will DELIVERY
M.JCol.s
CCIIIIOllbal TriCk ......
A111sllrits

BlUM
LUMBER CO.
CHESTER

12-5-tfn

2114fl2/1 mo.

MICROWAVES
VHS CAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614-992-3524
1·22·'92-1 mo.

539 Bryan Place
Ohio

Middlopor~

ut To Length

PH. 614-992-5591

H.E.C.

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742·2097

POLE BUILDING
MATERIALS
l,trlal R• Metal

Specializing In Cus1o111
Frame Repair

NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES
&amp;MODELS
992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOLL FREE

1·800-848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

7131ft111fn

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614·992-6637
St. RI. 7
Cheshire, OH.
112/tln

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes
•Garages
•complete ,
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

•LIGHT HAULING

985·4473
667·6179

USED-RAILROAD TIES

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269

Filii ESTIMATES

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
New Homes,
Additions, Siding,
Pole Barns, Painting,
Garages, Porches
IRU ESTIMATES

614·742·3090 or
304-773·9545
NO SUNDAY CALLS
2114f9211 mo.

11

Help Wanted

~======:::::;

.-

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
MEIGS COUNTY
COUNCIL ON AGING

2-7-92-tln

6·12·90-tfn

TROLLEY nATION
CUFTS
Feb. 10 thrv 14

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER_ 1 BACKHOE
end TRACKnOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
, TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

Special Valentine
Hours -tO to 8
fEB. 18- Adult Buket
Clatoll~&amp;:30p.m.

FEB. 24- Begin- Acrylic
PolnUngCI-

For More lafo Call
614-992-2549

FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

Oponllcii.-Sat. 10 om-5 pm

SUN'S UP
TANNING

MEIGS
GOLF CiOURSE
MEMBERSHIP FEES
Mea........,......'27S ea.
Women ..........S225 ea.
CoaDie.................s450
Famlly ....._.....S550 (4)
B•sitess.........S650 (4)
Students..............S1 00
College................ s150

GUN SHOOT
, RACINE
FIRE DEPI.

Bashan Building
EVERY .
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

Factory Choke ·
12 Gauge Shotgun Only
Strictly lnforcod ,
9-13·'91-Hn

MARCUM

CONTRACTING
-New Homes
-Remodeling
-Garages &amp; Room
Additions
985·4141

11·22·92·1 mo.

SUndty 1-5 pm

1-13-'92'-1 mo

AnEEOEmployl&lt;

QUAUFlCATIONS:
Bocholor Degree In
Public AdmlnfetroUon,
Gerontology, Social Work,
Nurolng, cr rllolod field,
pluo two yu.. experience
In 1 proleulonal capedty
In the field of humen
nrvlc11, plennlng, or
relelod field, or equlvlllel)t
ex-perience In edmln-'
lotretlve oopoolty wllh
community bualnen or
government proar1111.
Full lob dHcrfptlon lillY
be ob olnod from Joyce
Bunch, Ph. 112·2161 or
write Melge County
Senior Clllzeno Colilar,
Box 722, Pomeroy, Qhlo
4571t. Dudllne lor
applylnglo Uerch 2, 11~:

••• u•••••
In htlollll

CALL 742·2778

15 Sestltts---'25.00
12 Sestltts.---'20.00
6 S.ltltts..---'12.00
I S.•tltt----'3.50
FREE SESSION WIIH MIT
·
arNEWAL
S.V•al ... tf lttioll
SCA WOUEimS

1/31/92/1 mo. pel.

211711 mo.

REWARD

SSOO for lnformatlo~
leadln!liO Iht ,rrtst and
ronwkflatt al t.flt per~
or p.:soas IIWoiYIIIItt
·eeaklng
anti tlttrt.
I RIKlnt Gut~ Clult "i
I t thtft of St¥trl
prtklts fr9111 ,.. tsl••· ,
Bsh11tnl. All llfo111111foa

will .. ktfll ronfldwtlal. ·
Call 614·949·2671
2-3-'82·1 1110

___....__-l-...,.......,~=..,.
SALES OPPORTUNITY

AHIY lOllY Ar1lllli'S IUIO CEmR
264 UPfll RIVIIIOAD
UWPOUS,.OHIO
Pti011446·H71

RACINE GUN
CLUB

Now In

Stock
AIR CONDinONERS • HEAT PUMPS aad
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp;DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22

BENNETT'
M::~~N\0:1
LOCIIIII • s.Hw• Sdttoll.. eHit. 141

1~ Gauw factory
QobOaly.

1614) 446·M)6 tr 1-&amp;oo..72·S967

8-6-11

H6otl
0

'•

•
tJ

-

...

' •

i

r/

Acc.,..,ri,.l

Auto Repair

Stone Co.

SAUS WfllfiKf II A/170 SALES •I &amp;I riUIIIED.

I

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME Sl'fES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Licensod and Bonded

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

We have an Immediate opening for a
salesP&amp;rson thai wants to work tor one ol the
largest and fastest growing used car operations
In !he lrl-county area.
EXCELLE,NT EARNING POTENTIAL AND BENEFITS

992-2lanJ'//7'J
I

55- Building Supplie.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMA'II:S

11 , Help Wanted

~rR

54- Mi1c. Merchandde

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

A

Alld, ytu aa put that ellra
c:uh te ptd use by chedin&amp;
..e clullftecle ror Ita! ~~
•lea, Rea lllrketa aad ~
11 yeuructilthe Wfllds.

to Buy

5~ Antique~

For Sale or Trade

-

Public Notice

Public Notice

Want~

\II !lUI \\DI~L
51- Hou,.hold Coodo
52- Sporting Good.

ln1urance
14-- Bu1.neu Trammg
IS- Schoolt &amp; ln~truc:tion
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- M.Ucellaneou1
18-- Wanted To Do

:. .·. ...

'

j

I

41- HoWM for Rent
42- Mobile Homet for Rent
43-- Farm• for Rent
44-- Apartment for Rent
45- Furnilhed Room•
~Space for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
43-- Equipment for Renl
49- For Lea1e

MU1ical lntlrUMenll
r ...iu &amp; vet~ctohioo

Business Services

moMi/i ...itbJo. Tho pia has beon

.

'

I

lnauranee Coaipllltl••

9-

3&amp;- Real Eota!&lt; Wanted
Ill \T\1 :'

1~

Auction

667-CoolviUe

IN MEMORY
In mtmory of my
•
hutband,
j RICHARD JUNIOR
,
JACKS ·
•who 11ft
ue •lx yura
'
Tt .PUI tlte CW.IIIdl tt Wtrk fw Jill,
i 1go tod8y, Feb. 18,
·
atll eur 111-YIIm, Mtll411y-F- It
'
1887
ur hNrtl •till ~~ehe
whhudnnl
nd eecret te•r• atlll
! fiow.
·
It meant to loee
Whit
I
you
·
,jo one wtll-r know.
• Wlft, FNdl J111ka;
;
Chllchn lfKI

I

34-- Buolneo• Buadinll'
35- Lo~a &amp; Ae,..s-

11- Help Wanted
12- Situations Wanted

7- lolt and Found
8---- Publae Sale &amp;

.r

.

'

I

..,.Auto

r.u.

3- AnnouncemenLI
4-- Giveaway
5- H•ppy Ado
6--- Lo.t and Found

576-Apple Grove
773-MMon
882-New Haven
895-Utart
937-Burfalo

When You Tum To
The Classfieds,
Ml The ~oun~ Is Yours!

I

H

Pomeroy
985-Chetter
843-Porlland
247-l.elart
949-Racine
742-Rutland

67S-Pt. Plea.. nt
456-leon

---·leaf-The iewards...

------ "
I

367-Che.hire
388-Vinlon
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dilt.
643-Arabia Diat.
379-Walnut

992-M;ddloporli

-~

tm arvest

a' .r •' I ,

WHAT EXPENSES CAN I DEDUCT
ON MY INCOME TAX RETURN?

f/eath UMW gather
:, Bernice Carpenter gave a book
review on Susanna Wesley, mother
df lohn and Charles Wesley, at tbe
rl!cent meeting of the United
li!ethodist Women of the Heath
!1nited Melbodist Chutch, A piano
prelude, "Sweet Hour of Prayer"
presented by Emma Clatworthy.
Pauline Honan, vice-president,
conducted the meeting and gave a
~ng "A Thought for February"
$II devotions.
• Hostesses were Jane Regan and
$ue Smith. The Lord's Prayer
Closed t!Je meeting. Virginia Hoyt
was a guest
1
January meeting
~ Kenny Wiggins was the guest
speaker for the January meeting of
tlte Heath U~. He suoke about
¢cycling and us importance. He
gave each member a packet conning infonnalion on n:cyeling.
Hilltesses were Pauline Horton

Arnolds to make
$500,000 donation

446-GaiUpoUo

f'""''

Chinese symposium
featured during March

33- Farm• for Sale

GET RESlJLTS • FAST:

PRICE REDUCEDI

OWrtfi

21- Bu1iDG11 Opportuaity
22- Money to Lean
23- Proleuional Service.

Ga!Ua County Meigs County Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

PUBLIC NOTICE
To
all
lnterootod,
ESTATE NO. 26235 - public perocns
notice
to
hereby·
'"'""" ~ ~. m:mt. $13,!00 '"' Second Current Account of given:
&lt;1.,
1o 80'A c1 ""'""' a111111111 may be~
Shirley A. Stephenson,
bl io&lt; quaMyilg PI"" lo bw VOI'f nic1 Joma on 3~"'
t, Thlt on the 22nd day ol
Guerdllln of the Peroon and January, 1992, pursuant to
11 oi•ila. 4 81, 31Jrtls1,i goo!:,onlol I Bi q;,
Eatate of Donald G. Ohio Revised Code Soctlon
Pr'l"rly iKWM 4,800 1~ n. fiim ,
Stephen•on, 1n lncom· 6119.01 at soc., there was
Cai61Hn7104f• ,
ptlenl Peroon.
ntod In tho olflce of the
ESTATE NO. 26413 - Flrol Clerk
of the Common Pleas
Current Account of ol llelga
Ohio, tho
Candice Carleton, Guardian Petition County,
of
the
Public Notice
olthe Peraon end Eotato ol Townahlp Trusteee lorOlive
PubliC Notice
the
Deldra Ann Carleton, a ootabllehment of a Regional
aafe drinking water Jowo. Minor.
PUBLIC NOTICE
I
Chsplar 3745-81 olthe Ohio ESTATE NO. 16606 - Sewer Dlolrlcl to be known
FOR SALE
1983 Plymouth Yen for Sele, Admlniolratlve Code Thlrty-Firol Account of at Tuppers Ptalno Regional
Sealed blclo will be rectlvod requlrod 1 Community weler Huntington Trual Company, Sewer Dlotrlct. Said Dlatrlcl
until Februery 24. Right II oupply uolng a ground Truetee ollhe Truot Created Ia to be eatabllahttd lor tho ·
r11ervod to refu11 oil bldo. water aource, to monitor Under the Will of Thomao A. lollowlng purpoees: To
provide for the collection
within the apoclflod thr11 May, Dec111od. ·
Contact Wando Vlnlng at
unitary dlopooat ol
year
time
po1iod
lor:
Groll
992-2161 for more
ESTATE NO, 19105 - and
sewage and olher liquid
Alpha.
lnlormaUon.
Slxt- Account of Lou Ia B.
produced within th,p
(2116, 17, 18, 3tc
Prier to being notlllod ol Voughan, Guardian al the waalo
thla violation by the Ohlq Eo bite ol WilUom RMVIt, on p1opoaed Sower Dlotrlcl
and to addroot-the building
Environmental Protection Jncomp-1 Peroon.
ban Imposed upon the
Agency, the water aupply
ESTATE NO. 23791 - Tuppers Plains area by the
Public Notice
had the drinking water Second Account of Joan
analyzed for the above Wolfe, Truotee of the Truot Stele and Federal
LEGAL NOTICE
mentioned parameter, end Under the Will ol Eloa Environmental Protec:tlon
Notice lo given thai an teolad peremelaro of tho Klm11,
Agency.
Dec_.,_
Amerlcon Telecommunl- drinking water met the Ohio
That the land eoughtto
ESTATE NO. 26914 - Flnel be2.Included
csllone Corp., dba Admlnlotrotive Code StandIn the District
AmoriCharge hoo lilod two ardo. The woler oupptler will end Oletrlbutive Account ol compileo Ianda In tho Olive
appttcallono with the Public take otepa to onoure thot Roger W. Dtvlo, E~ecutor of and Orange Townohlpo In
Utlllliea Commlulon of adequate monitoring will be tho Eellte ol Glenna H. Melga County, Ohio,
Davit, Dect~ood.
genorally deocrlbod aa the
Ohio. ~n the llro~ Cue No. performed In lhaluture.
Unteee exception• are Tupporo Plains area and as
88·V78·TP·ACE, the appli- (2) 18, 19, 20, 31c
ftlod thereto, uld account• being genoraliy bounded on
cant It oeeldng authority Ia
will be for hoorlng belore the North by line numbers
provide lntroallll lnterexeold
on Merch 18, one-hall (1/2) mile lrom the
chlnge eltornotive operator ___;P..;u::b..;ll,;.c_;N;.:ot..;lc:..:..:.e__ 1892, Court
11
which
lime oald lnlelaecllon of Slate Route
aervloea on 1 alalewlde
eccounta
will
be
conolderod
bulo In Ohio. In the
IN THE
7 and State Route 681 and
continuod lrom day to parallel to Slate Route 681;
oocond, Cuo HO. 91·537· COMMON PLEAS COURT end
dty until nnolly dlopoud ol. boundod on the South by 1
TP-AAC, the eppllcent lo
PROBATE DIVISION
Any pereon lntereatod line that Ia one-quarlor (114)
111king euthorlty to provide
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
may Ill• written exception• mile south lrom the
lntroolale lnterexchenge IN THE MAmR OF
to uld accounla or to lnterooctlon ol State Route
aervice, ao 1 r11eller of long SETTLEMENT OF
mellere perlllnlng to the 7 end Slate Route 681, and
dlolance nrvlce, on • ACCOUNTS
execution ol the lruol, not perallel to State Roull 681;
elatewlde baolt In Ohio. PROBATE COURT
len th11n five dayt prior to boundod on the Eut by 1
Any pereon, firm, cor- MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
oet for h11rlng.
thai Ia one-half [112)
pcraUon, cr enUty who can
Account• ond voucher• lhl doll
Robert
E. Buck, Judge line
ahow good couoo why- ol the following nemed
mile
out lrom the
Common Plou Court Intersection
of Stete Route
either eppttcallon ahould flducl.lrlot have bltll fllod
Probate Dlvlolon 7 and State Reule
681, and
net be granted ehould file In lhl Probata Cour~ Mtlgo
with the Ccmmlulon a County, Ohio, lor opproval (2) 18, ticMelge County, Ohio parallel to Stale Route 7;
and bounded on the Weal
written otatoment dolalllng and Hlllement
lhe reeaono on or belore
by a line thllls one-quarter
(114) mila lrom tho
March 5, 1112. Unlou the
lnloraecllon of Stole Route
Commlulon rectlvu 1
7 and State Route 681, and
wrlll~n •latemtnl to that
pa1111~ to State Route 7.
eHecl ond on occompenylng
For a more delolled
roqueot fer on orel hotrlng
deac1lptlon of the reel
In !hie molter, each of tht
utall contelned In the
, twa c•eo will bt cleclded
proposed Tuppers Plolna
on tht baolo of the r
Regional Sewer D'atrlct tnd
lnlormallon ccnllintd In the !
tho actu.el property ownoro
reoptollvl appllcadon and
effected. All lntereetod ,
lhe offldllvlte aubmltlod by
the appllcent. Further
people cen contoct Llndoey
Lyons, P. o. Bo• 133,
lnlormetlcn mey be
obtainod by contacdng the
Tuppero Plalna, Ohio 45783.
3, A public heo1lng on
P,ubllc Udllllto Commloalon
said Petition shell be hold
ol Ohio, 180 Eatl Broed
In M1191
I County Common
Street, Colunibua, Ohio
4526&amp;-0573.
Ple11 Court on the 2nd doy
(~18,11pd
al March, 1882 at 10:30
e.m., by the Court of
Common Pt111 of Melge
Public Notice
County, Ohio, at the
Courthouoe In the clly ol
Pomeroy, Ohio.
PUBLIC NOTICE
All person• and public
RE: Mtlilt County, Tuppero
corporollono owning or
J'lolne • Cheater Woter
lnlertoted In reel 11111o
llletrlcl Comunlty PWS ID:
within the terrllory
5300612
Now that the weather fw cooled
ducrlbod ebove will be
The Tupporo Plein•·
given an opportunity 10 be
down, why not heat thin&amp;• up a bit
Chiller Wtter 018trlct weler
heard at the lime and the
o~pply did not manlier for
by dearln&amp; yeur closets, ajtlc or
pieco 1 bo ve •pee(nod ·
rodiologlcll aaUvlty In the
drinking wetor oupply ••
buement those uawaoted Items
Llrry E. Spencer,
riqulred under the elale'o
Clerk ·
and mertlsl~~&amp; them. ror sale In
Mtlgt County Common
tbe CW.IftecleP
Pleae Court
In Memory
(2) 4; 11, 18, 25, 4tc
PortoJ

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

-----~

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

FILL THE

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

$1.30/day

11\\\1 1\1

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

BULLETIN HOARD CLA~~IFIED AD~

-..

During the month of March, the
Middleport Arts Council will be
offering a unique symposium on
the classical Chrnese movel)lents of
Yang Style Tai Chi Ch 'uan.
On Thursday evenings, March
12, 10 and 26 from 7 to 8 p.m.,
Eric Chambers will offer an introduction into the basic postures of
Tai Chi Ch' uan.
The world often misunderstands
Tai Chi Ch'uan, says Chambers.
Even its name is often improperly
interpreted. Its translation is the
"Supreme Pole Fisi" which leads
people to believe Tai Chi Ch 'uan to
be solely a martial art practiced
only for defense and combat. Contrary to occidental belief, the "fist"
in Chinese ideology is a symbol for
knowledge rather than for conflict.
Many people have witnessed the
practice ofTru Chi Ch'uan and perceived it as a healthful form of
exercise for the elderly, Still others
sec its slow, rhythmic movements
as a fonm of "moving meditation"
or chi kung, Tai Chi Ch'uan is all
of these things and much more, say
Chambers.
To say that the practice of Tai
Cht Ch'uan is merely any one of
these characterizations is to be like
the "blind Hindu men" who were
asked to describe an elephant
through the sense of touch,

t:OOp.m. Monday
t:OOp.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00.
$13.00

15
15
15
15
15

3
6
10
Monthly

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1 :00 p.m. Saturday

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

Rate

Words

I

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of tbal event. llems
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

The

•The Area's Number I
.Marketplace

February 18, 1892

,

Beat of the Bend.~.

Ohio

.'

..

.

'

'

\•'

I

..

,.

�Ohio

Page 8 The
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements
3

18

"Frtt Slngl• Bulletin, Per10nal
Ads. Box 184, Massillon, O"'lo
44648, "
I will

nOt

be responsible any

dtbta other than my own, slg·
ntd LH H. Aora.

Financial

Melt Singles : Guya • Girts. 1•

900-407·1004, $2.85/mln. Muo1
B• Over 18, Fonpillllrvlne CA.

21

Unallached? Meet Area Singles
Through Our Singles Ntwslel-

Giveaway

4 Cute Puppies, Mixed Breed,
614-256-6348.
40 round batas of hay.614·446·

1142.

About 40 round bailes of hay.
call 446-1142Firo Wood-ready to
go 614-446·1142

" We thought this WOuld be a catchy way to

----·I

Firewood: roody lo go. 614-446·1...----d-is•p•la•y•o•u•r.e.ar.th.,qr-u•a•k•e•m•o·v-ie_s_:_·
1142.
r
Frto pupplas. 614-3lis-9844.

Fraa: Ta A Oood Home For Employment Services
Crans• Tom C1t, Had Shots,
Ou1s1d1 Cat, Moving Can1 Take.
614·24S-9m.
11 Help Wanted
F1.1ll stock beagle, short let. To a A;:;V;;O:::N:-·-A;:;II.;.a':"r':"oa:':s-,=ca-:11:-::-Ma-r"'"ily-n
good homo. 61~ -446-7075.
Weaver 304-882-2645.
Pan G11tat Canal part DoberAUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
man , Bmo old, 614·742 -2754
Exc.,lent
Pay,
Beneflls,
Transportation,
407·292·471t7,
Ext. 571. 9a.m.-10p.m. Toll
Refunded.
6 Lost &amp; Found
AVON ! All Areas ! Shirley
FdUND: Female puppy, part Spaars, 304-675-1429.
chow &amp; collie. 4 mos. old. 614m -3100.
A\ION gatln on tha ground floor
of Avons new earning structure.
Found : on Pine Grove Rd., long 1-800-992-6356.
hai red, black, mate dog wi!FI
bright green collar, 614-949·2655 BE ON T.V. Many Needed For
Commercials. Now Hiring All
Lost : in l.ong Bottom area, Ages. For Casting Into. Can 6,S.
blac k Labrador puppy, red col· 779-7111 Exl. T·1507.
tar, family pet, 614-985-4340

11

Wanted:

Doctor's

benefits.

asslsta~l.

Outstanding

career

opportunity. Send resume to:
Doctor's ~ssistanl, P.O. Box
282, MlddlepM, OH 45760

WE'LL PAY YOU For Easy
Tabulating Work From Homo!
Up To $106.00 Paid Dally. Call 1·
900·976·7377 ($1.49 Min 18 Yrs.
•I Or Wrilo: PASEE. 33B, 161 S.
Lmcolnway, N. Aurora, IL 60542.

12

Situation
Wanted

Business
Training

Yard Sale

Retrain
Now!!!Southoastern
Business College, Spring Vallev
Plaza . Call Today, 614-446-4367f!
Registeratlon 1190·05·12748.

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEAC&gt;UNE: 2:00 p.m.
tha da y before thu ~ is to run,
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition - 2:00
p.rr\ . Satu rday.

8

Help Wanted

Must like working with people,
be efficient &amp; have Insurance
uperlenc:e. Excellent working
conditions, good salary &amp; fringa

Lo~l : ora nge, male, shor1 haired
cal, got oul of wehicle on Sa lem
Sl., Rutla nd, 614-992-6277

7

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

9 · wanted to Buy
Drivers Wanted
earn to $620 wkly., small pack·
age delivery, all shifts, par1·
lime, full-time, 1-800-452-6881

Wanted To Buy : Junk Autos
With Or Without Motors. Call
Larry Lively. 614·388-9303.
Wanted To Buy: Large Round
Bales Of Hay, SS A Bale. 614·
446-1052.
Top Prices Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, Silver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Galli polis.

42 Mobile Homes
INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
lor Rent
rwcommtndl lhlt you do bull•
n111 wllh people you know and 2 bedroom all tlec, Ashton
NOT to send money through lht Upland Ad, Hud accepted, 304mtll until you have lnvestfgated 675-4088.
tha offering.
2 bedroom mobile home com·
11 Opportunity In USA Today pletely furnished, washar &amp;
O&amp;B Llatad Vend·A.fon Route, dryer, air cond, 304·1T.3·595fi.
Caii1-8QO.';III1-2293.
2 bedroom unfurnished Hoi·
Local Snack Vending Route lypark 12x60, halt milt past
Roceaolon Proof Income Call HMC, depopsll &amp; relaronco ro·
1
quired, 614-446·4369 or 304·675·
Now ·800·234·2651.
MEDICAL CLAIMS PROCESS·
2br,
2330.Located In E~argraen, After
lNG
4p.m. 514·446-3697, Or 614·245·
Start Full Or Part-Tlme. A Few 5223.
Hours Per Week Can Provide Up 4br UnturnlsMd On Cora Mill
To $5,000 Extra Income Monthly. Road Off Rt.325, No Pets,
We Aie A National Company Deposll Roqulred. 614-245-5622.
Oolng Billing For Physicians
And Othillr Realthcare Profes· Mobile home lor renl, $225.
slonals. This II A Sound Busl· month $100. deposit, unlur·
ne11 Opportvnlly And Requires nished, 304-675·1137 after 8:00
A Software Purehasa Of $6 995. PM
~o Experience Necessary' As
·
We Train You. SPANGLER Mobile Homes For Rent:
AUTOMATED MEDICAL SER· R I
• eranca And Depos1I Re·
VICES,INC. For Info Call
qulrod.
Call ANar 614-446·0527
1·800·n2·SAMS (24 Hn~) .
ahar 2 p.m.
Nice 14x70 Mobile Home, Near
MIKE-SELL'S
Porter, Central Air, $250/mo Plus
DISTRIBUTOR OPPORTUNITY
Security Deposit 614~46-6189,
Buslnass Is Good • Present In- 614-446-6865.
dependent Distributor Would
Like To Sell Established Rovte
In, The Gallipolis Area For Tho 44
Apartment
D1stribulion Of Potato Chips
for Rent
And Other Related Snack
Foods. Must Be Financially
Stable With Store-Door Delivery 1·bdrm apt In Mlddlepon
Experience. Sand Rasumt To: utilities turn, dep req, no pets:
Mike Johnson, M&amp;A Distribut- 614-992-2218
Ing, 31J27 State Road 1 1br EHiclancy, Utilities Paid, Ex·
Pomarov, OH 45679.
' cept Electnc, Deposit And
VENDING ROUTE: Gel Rich Reference, $165/mo. 614-446Ouick? No Way! But We Have A 7130.
Good, Steady, Affordable, Busi· 2 bedroom apl, ulllitles paid,
ness. Won't Last. 1-800·284- Hud approved, 304-675·2122.
VEND_
2 bedroom apls In Point
Wolff Tanning Beds
Pleasant, modern, clean, Mud
New commercial-Home units accepted, 614-446-2200.
from $199.00, Lamps, lotions;
accessories, monthly payments 2-bdrm, part turn apt, newly
low at $18.00, call today, free redecorated, WID hook-up,
new color catalog, 1-800·228· Pomeroy, 614·992-6886 aher
6292
6pm
22

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auct ioneer, complete
a1.1ction service. Licensed Ohio ,
West Virginia, 304-m-5785.

Used bathroom lavatory sink or
used vanity. Mus1 ba in good
cond, 304~75 · 1224 .

.Business

3br, 2 Baths, Double Wide,
Southwll1trn School Dlatrict.
114-245-5588.
Nice 2 bedroom Moun across
from Goodyear Plant, Apptt
Gro\11, 304-675-1972 attar 5:00
PM.
Pol""
nt""P:::I-a-sa
, -n-,.
1"'
A-ro-a:-:2::01-:o""M"'-a r·
queue, 3br t-loust, Carpeted,
Newly
Redecorated,
Nice
Neighborhood And Close To
Schools, $400/mo. References
Required.
614-446-3537
Evenings .

Easy Work! Excellent Pay! As·
semble Products At Home. Call
Toll Frea, 1-800-467·5566, Ext.
313.
Possible $400. Week Slulli'nH
Envelopes At Home,Get Cred I
Cards , Loans Evan With Bad
Credit Or No Credit. Rush $1.00
Salt-Addressed Stamped Envelopes M10 To: D&amp;A Suppliu,
8olt1443, Falrborn,OH 45324.

Paula's Day Care Center.
affordable, chlldcare. M-F
a.m . • 5:30 p.m. Ages 2'h-10.
Before, after school. Drop-Ins
welcome. 6i4-446-B224. New Infant Toddler Care, 614-446-6227.
Partnership Danca lnstruclion.
Professional young couple
teaching Country Westem,
Ballroom, l.atln and Modem
rt
,,. d 1
Sf
pa ners ip anc ng.
ngles,
Couples and groups welcome.
Info please call attar 7:00
ask tor Anna or Jim, 304-

Want to:

PIN down EXTRA
CA~H?H

Money to Loan

GET A MAJOR CREDIT CARD
THAT CHARGES 8 112'4 INTER·
EST.
Stnd A Self Addressed En·
velopt, No Money To: W.T.P.
5852, 141h Street, West BradenFL 34207. 813·751·3300, Or

Homes tor Sale

3 bdrm. house for salt, 5 acres,
deck, garage, truiltrNs, garden
apo1, ~14-742 ·2326
3br Fr11m1 Mome, Largo Kitchen
With Appliances, Central Heat
And Air Conditioning, Back
Deck, Ftncad Yard, Newly Added Front Porch And Root On
Large Lot, In Jackson Ohio.
145,000. 614·286-4399, ANer 5
P.M. During Tha Wealc.
In town, two story, three bad·
rooms, full baaement, 1·1/2 bath,
attached 1-1!2 ear gartgl.
Contra! haat and air. Evenings
Call6t4-446·8707
Reduced To Sell: $49,900,
Cheshire, Ohio. 904-932-fi959,
904-932-71;70, 614-3117.Q649.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Tn And Tlttt Down. Preowned
Mobile Homu, UH Your Tax
Refund. 50 Homes To Choose.
Elsea Home Canter, 1-800-589·
5710 .
1979 Sunnybrook 14x70 moblla
home, made by Hollypark, 2
btdrooms, 1 bath w/gardan tub
&amp; shower, lireplace, all electric,
outside deck Included, very
good cond, 304·675-3471.
1987 Clayton Ridgewood, 3BR, 2
full baths, par11aliy turn'ed. Now
on rant ad lot. 614-446-1847.

-'!ll· J"'

- :..':!1._ ·~·-.

rl'u rn you,. du tf e,. into •~ash,
Sell it I he eczsy~ way••• by phone,
~

neetl to leo1'e yortr home.
Place you,. classified ad hlflay!
I 5 wonls m· less, 3 days,
3 paJJers,$6.00
1w

1991 14x60 Sunshine Mobile
Home, 3bJ, 2 Baths, Pay · Oft
Remaining Loan, 614·446·6325.
S~ort

Time On Job? Past Credit
History A Problem? Many
RepossasMd Mobile Homes To
Choose From. Small Down
Paymanl. Call1 ·800·589-5711.
Easy As 1, 2, 3. File You're Taxes
Hora And Buy Hare. Kiss Vou'ra
Lend:nrd Goodbyei Elsea Home
Center, 1·800.589·57'10.

33

34

Farms tor Sale

Business
Buildings

For Sale: Commercial Building
And Lot 1n Eurtkl. Contacl
Owner: 614-258-1243, Ahar 6 P.M.

35

'

9. _ _ _ _ __
I .__________
2, ________________ 10-~-'----­
.~t .---- ---------- , l.----..---4·. _ _ _ __ _
12. _ _ _ __
,,,,
/':
J:J. _ _ _ __
6. _ _ _ _ _ __ 14·•. _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ _ __
l !)..___ _ _ _ __

____________

"·-----LJ4,6-2342 675-1333
9·9 2-2156.

Lots &amp; Acreage

Lois for sale, trailers accep·
lablt. 304-675·2722.
Trailer lot for rent . Watar, sewer
and tanltallon included. $110
monlh. 304-675-1806 or 675-5037.'

36

Real Estate
wanted

NHr Holzlr Mtdical Center 3
bedroom, 1 1/2 baths, kithctn
living &amp; dining rooms on 11
lull 3 or mort acrtl moslly
1111 wltl'l maln road frontage.
304-.171-2831.

Rentals
41

Complelly Fumlshed Small
House, $250/mo. Plua Utilities,
And Deposit. 614·446.0338. Call
Before 7p.m.
Furnlshod aHiclency apartmant
with kitchenette and bath.
Deposil and reterancas raqllned. No pels. 614·446-4879.

Real Estate
31

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson . Pike
from $192/mo. Walk to shop I
movias. Call 614--446·2568. EOH.

Houses tor ~ent

2 bdrm. hoult, no lnekla pats,
d~pooh roqul~d. 614-ill2·308o
3 Bedroom 1 112 Solho Form
Ho~o~u, On 2 Acr~~ Whh B1m,
Rio GIWndo, $400. Aok For
114 441 4410.
..

Anir.

I lA g11 No1 2 block1 ltom
lho iiloaa Mill. COli 114-441-1408
btwn. 4-1 p.m., or 1-3Q4.'M3o
43H.

Etf ic ien c ~ apt . tor rent, beautiful
carpel, mce couch and bar, 304·
675·6042

Furnished 3 Rooms And Bath
Upstairs, Clean, No Pets,
Raference And Deposit Required. 614-446·1519.
Furnlshod Apartment, 1br, no.:t
to Library, parking, central heat,
air, roterencn. 614-446·0338,
Bat ora 7p.m.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Vlllaga
Manor
and
Riversiaa
Apartments In Middleport. From
$196. Call 614-992-7787. EOH.
Middleport, Beech St, 2 bed·
room lurnrlshed apt, utilities
paid, references &amp; deposit re·
quirad, 304-882-2566.
Newly dacoril~ etik:lenc:y, ret
&amp; dep required, no pets, 304·
675-5162.
Comple!ly Furnished mobile
home, 1 milt below town ovtr·
looking river. No Pets, CA. 614~
446.0338.

71

Ohio

18, 1992

Autos for Sale

OH.I~ ~'(

1978 4070 COE, lnl'l 290 Cum·
mlngs, Big Com, 10 Spood,
14,500. 304-273·3447.

li!&gt;T .

~IIIC. '100 Alt ...

VOORED
EVENING
8:00 (2)8 (I) (J) .. ill) 1121 •
IIJ)Ntwl
(JJ Video PoSquate One TV Stereo

~ t!:~~V.ourt 0

.1906 Dodge Dmnl, Rud Good,
Auto, 64,000 MillS, S1,650i 1985
S.10 Pick-Up, $1,750, 614-256::62::51: :.:=----:;:;-:---7":'-:1986 Toyota MA·2, new palnl l

~~ IJ,jl/

cond, red,
~-="':':":':••:"':·:·'~====~~==~====::j speed
rated$5,000.
Uret, 304-6754331
very good
before 10:00 PM.

Apartment

54

Me rc handlse

for Rent
Single Efficiency, Partially Furnlshad, Water lncludld, Oeposll
Required, Call 6, ...446•8720 .

45

Furnished
Rooms

Miscellaneous

~""·-· P;~§

1987 Chovy Novo: high mll11go,
needs repair. Good tranaport.alion car. Reduced: $1,000. For
moro lnlormlllon Call 114-4412342, Ask lor Poul.

To put the ClusiHeds to work for you,
rail our ad·YIMrs, Mtnday-frldly at

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

Jim's Farm Equipment, SR. 35,
W011 Golllpollo, 614-446-9777;
Wide selection new &amp; uud ftrm
tractora &amp; lmptemente. Buy,
aaH, trade, 8:00-5:00 Wllkdaye,
Sol. 1111 Noon.
MF 285 Troctor, Shorpl $7,850j!·
1130 IIF Troclor, S3J.IMIO; 35 M
Trldor, $2,995. uwnor Will
Flnonco. IJ4-~522.
N1w Hollllld Hay Rokll, And
~"'" Bolera, Mow-. 2 And 4
Row Com •Pflnl.,.. Cullplck·
111, CuHivllon, Wh01l Dl1k11
Mtnure Sprt1d.,1, Other Filla
Roady Equlpmont. Howo'o Fonn
Mlchlnory, Jocklon Ohio. 614·
286-61144.
Wanted: Used tann equipment,
onvthlng you wont lo Nil. Coli
&amp;1~-2Y.:1301, 256-e040 afttr I
p.m.

63

Livestock

2 H - Trolllr.~, ~""'· am;
1118 AOHA uoralng, Youth
Horu 01 Tho Yolf, 2 Sllvlr
AoraJ Show Sadcl•, Brood
M•- 114-281-6522.

64

Hay

t',JtC t~AN.f11' Gt.ORtA '' ME'AN?
"f&gt;ON'T .fiT NfXT'

,.- G/..O~IA 01'1 1'Hf
fC/.1,''

--

ALLEYOOP

XVI Olympic

en:

a

EEKANDMEEK

0

a

o

9:00 C2JD ~Liw Order
Stereo.
(I) (J)
R0111nnt
Roseanne is elated when
Bocky finally breaks up w1th
Mark. C
crl Froiilllne
(!) Nova Rating the. audience
for TV shows Is a problem in
pltlistical analysis . Stereo.

a

MORTY MEE.KLE AND

0

MY 06D MAr;;1'a ME SlOP 6tVIHGMY F;!06 11-tAT NE.W VITAMIN

/

Tt-116 MORNIN6 He CHAseD
OUR ~N DCM/I&lt;J
THE ORI\IIaWAY.

/........._

•

0 Tuatday Night Flghll

Continental Americas
Featherweight
Championship: Kevin Kelly
(25-0. 19 KOs) vs . Troy
Dorsey (12-4-4, 10 KOs),
from New York (L)
Naohvlllt Now Stereo.
0 Fllther Dowling Myattrtta
Stereo.
9:30 (i) (J) 8 Colch Christine
and Hayden try to help •
woman who is belittled In
public. Stereo. J;J
D College llaolietllltl
Arkansas at Georgia (L)
10:00 C2JD 0 Haw Htunpt~
Prlllllry (1 :00) Stereo. t;J
(JJ Newt
(I) (J) D Homtlront Jeff is
alrald of what Ginger will
think about his fooling
around. Sloreo. C
(Zl That DtllclteBallnct II:
Our am of
(!) Fronttlnt
fll)
Hunllr
0
Club '
Pat
RobtrtiOII
10:051D MOVIE: The Llot
Slarflghttr (PG) (2:00)
t0:30QJ Crook and Chloe
11 :00 C2JD Cll Cll .• ill 1121D

a

...._,.. ........

0

~

BARNEY
I JEST WON
$30.00

PLAYIN' CARDS

SIX

$30.00
CASH?

WITH OL'

$5.00

KITTIES

SNUFFY!!

.

''"'k'•

PR IN T NUMBERED
LETIE RS

I

r-=--:.__-----,
NORTH

BRIDGE

Z.ll-ll

+K J;
.Q10976
t A 81

+KQ
•Q2

9;

EAST
+98743
982

+1097632
+10632

.AJ9

WEST

PHILLIP
ALDER

tKQJ

SOUTH
• A 10 6
9AKJI3
t;
87 5I

A convention
for all countries

+

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: East

By Phillip Alder
Your partner opens one heart or one
spade, and the next player passes
How do you play a jump to two notrump' In North America, the Jacoby
Forcing Major-Suit Raise has been the
most .popular interpretation lor over
20 years. Nowadays it is also in the as·
cendancy in the rest of the world .
When an excellent fit is found , the
lO&lt;'ation of a side-suit shortage can be
critical lor a slam. The Jacoby convention concentrates on that feature,
as highlighted in today's auction.
Three diamonds showed a singleton or
void in the suit: music to North's ears.
He launched into Roman Key Card
Blackwood. South showed zero or
three key cards (three aces, or two
aces and the trump king). North,
knowing it had to be three key cards.
bid the small slam .
However , it's no good being able to
bid beautiful slam contracts if your
card-play doesn't show the same expertise . South won the diamond lead
with dummy's ace and drew trumps.
Being a rubber·brid~e
.
. player at heart,

Soutb

West

Nortb

East

I9
3I
;•

Pass
Pass
Pass

2 NT
I N'l'
69

Pass
Pass
Pass
All pass

Opening lead I 10

declarer led a spade to dummy's king
and finessed the spade 10. West won
with the queen and switcMO)o a club: .
one down. South compl'~· that the
queen is usually over the jack, but
North was unsympathetic. He had noticed a better tine of play.
At trick two, declarer ruffs a dia·
mond. He draws trumps and leads the
club king. Suppose East wins with the
ace and returns a club. South wins in
dummy, ruffs dummy 's third diamond
and ruffs a club. At this point, South
will have seen 11 points in East's hand .
Because East passed as dealer, be
spade
as well.
couldn't
have
@1 _
_the
_
..... _queen
........

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Magnitude
5 Drinkl olowly
9 Ovtr (pre!.)
12 Group ol
lamllleo
13 Cut with
ICIIIOrl
14 Unclolt
(poll.)
15 llo't (II.)
16 Maktl rt·
cording ol
17- Chanty
18 Tavtrn drlnkt
20 P1111onatt
22- Ono
24 Graphic
layout
25 12, Romtn
28 Wilking
limbo
30 W11tt mtHtr
33 Beginning of
WHk
35 Not
•
comtortablo
37 Bring Into

Anoworlo , . _ Puulo

harmony
38 Mtthod
39 Shirt
40 Actr111
Arlene42 Vttch
43 Comparative
IUHIX
45 Grilling twig
47 Act of clipping hair
Napt of the
ntck
54 Cricket
potltlonl
55 Glut
57 Part offan
sa Agnua59 Not Iaiit
60 PoHtlcal
IIIOCIIUon
8 t Sea mamm11
82 ldtntlcal
83 Abomlnlblt
snowman

so

2 Ttnnll playtr
- Nattllt
3 Aulhor Grey
4 Act ol going
In
5 Flit aircraft
(abbr.)
6 8tluddltd

DOWN
1 Wound m1rk

R[ 0

ftc!

Dovlt
Slw·V.C
Slfvlco,
Goorgn C - Ad. Pont, ouppilll, pickup, ond dtllvory. 11444e.0294.
Wlll build patio coven, declca
ecrHned roome, put up ~
oldlng or trlillf oklnlng. "IM:
245·9152.

l!l Night
1121
· Court 0

B

CZl NtWIWIICh •

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
---:~..;;:;;:,;::,.._ _
Carter's Plumblno
Fo1H1h ond Plno

D AruniO HaA Stereo.

I ~s't;s'?.reo.

...... Hampohinl Primary
Co
(Cont.)
.

Golllpoi~:.lo

0

114-44

: : C . . n, Stereo.

t;J

11:30~~=2....

Electrical &amp;

ABC News: The '12
Vote: The Ntw Hampilllh
Prlmtl)' uve -~ of the
reaulta from the ~I
primary lltction; lntllllilwl
with candldalll and polltlcll
1nalylll. ~li..

··~ · -- -~ -· ~

Ill D

Refrigeration
or • OOiftiiiOfCill
wl~ng. llrVfco .. rapoln.
Mill., u..~,... -~·'•n.
Ridenour Eltclrlcll, 304-1?111786.

87

l

Winter Gllmea Alpine skiing,
men's giant slalom; spee&lt;l
skating, men's tQOOm; short
track speed skating; speed
skiing
highlights of
hockey quarterfinals. t;J
fll) II MOVIE: SumlrtntaliPGi 12:00)
i1! MIA'dtr, She Wrott t;J
On Stagt Stereo.
a New Hamplhlra Primary
Coverage L!ive (3:00)
0 Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo.
8:051D MOVIE: lnvedera From
Mira (PO) (2:00)
8:30 (I) Home Improvement Tim
upsets Jill's Valentine plans
by givln[
·n to his sponsor.
Storeo.
(!) Ate Y Being Served'~
Church ~~ StilliOn
Wllntn to Surfl¥al t;J

=~o:M~ ~~nd I ""''"'" .1 Rnldonllll

Transpori3110n

.

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Wrirer - Knell - Ouora - Inward - OLDER
Las1 summer I noticed an elderly neighbor on her
knees in her garden. "Whal are you growing?" I asked .
Gelling up slilfly she replied,"OLDERI"

t;r

aMoneyllne
OThe WaHono
7:051D Addamo Family
7:30 C2l D IIJI Jeopo~rdyl C
l!l Now II Can Be Toil
(I) Entlftllnment Tonight
Stereo. J;J
(I) MacNelll!:.ehter
NtwaHour t;!
ill WhHI of Fortune t;J
IIJI.I I Family Feud
1211 Be 1 Star Stereo.
D College Belketball Ohio
State at Iowa (L)
·
acro11flte
7:351D Senlord and Son
8:00 C2l D IIJ)In the Hilt of the
Night Althea causes a riff
with VIrgil ovor hJ!Iing a
student. Stereo.
(JJ MOVIE: Amt
n Ninja
(AI 12:00)
(I) Full Hoult C
crJ Nova Ratingthe audience
for TV shows is a problem in
p!ttiStlcal analysis. Stereo.

!I @ e

Aon'o TV StNico, -llllzi"Q
In ZonHh 1110 - I n a mool
other bl'llndt. HouN tth, ll.o
oomo opplllnco rapolro. wv
304-5?11-2381 Ohio 114-4441-2454.

84

TCJ

,,

Improvements

Renovations, Add en, Repair,
Polnllng, OuoNty Work! Clll
Aoglf AI: 114 446 B!MII.

&amp; Grain

15001b. round blloo of hoy,
o1ortdlnoklo, $20, 114-8115-3848
Hoy lor ltlf, 304-5?11-2238.

II . 1..:
~

SUPPLEMB-IT 1 GGr HIM.

Cur111 Horn• Improvement•:
Y11r1 Experience On Older l
Newer Homts. Room AddiUone,
Foundation Work, Roofing,
Kllchono And Bolhl. Fr.. Eallmatell Aeterenc11, No Job To
Big Or Smolll114-441-0225.

.

.

Stereo. ~
il! MacGyvtr t;J
D SportaCtnter

Home

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNQ
61 Farm Equipment
Uncondhlonal llfttime guaran·
tH. locll referencn tumlahtd.
1884 530 Cl11 bllck~. good FrH Hllmoln. Coli collld 1·
lhlpl. 614-4411-7750.
614-237-o488, doy or night .
90 gallon gavlanlzld water tank, Roge,. BaHrnant Wallfpoobarrtll wood stove, 1 horH llng.
sleigh. All A·1 condition. 614· Comploll Mobllo Homo Soi·Upo,
258-6410.
A•rlra; eammerat, Rntden·
Dozor TO· 340,_ 6 woy blldo, Ill lmprovomonto. Including:
vory good conclnlon, $4800, 614· Plumbing, Eltelrlcol. ln111rtnc1
Clolmt Accoplad. 814-251·1611.
385-3065
.

.

We were especially busy at
work when I heard one em·
ployee say lo anolher, "I can
do only one thing ala time. but
·there are many lhings 1 can

I I I I I IATI I I I I

(J) 8 Callll!lll Beoketball
Marshall at Southern Florida
(L)
(E L'l!illlllvt UP!!IIIe
ill Cul'l'llfll AHIIr ~
«JJll Star Trek: Tlie Nell
Gentrallon C
1D II El!!frtl'rnmtnt Tonlghl

Services
81

8

CZl MacNelll!:.ehter
NewoHour 1;1

~~~lic;or;s;sa~lo~:~O~af,k,-;a;;shh,,l&amp;ij

p·~~·

,.:1
T-1
lh•
quoled
.
.
.
.
.
.
•
by filling in the mi"ing words
L-...J.-.1-...J.-.1-...J.--l you develop from step No. 3 below.

t;J

(I) lntlde Edition

Bassinet!, cradle, crib, playpen, CSX, 2.2 lurbo, lnttrc~edl...?
high chair, dressing table, cus- spud, AMfFM cass., AC, ~~
tom made oak crib and cradle. PB. Serious Inquiries only
Sears microwave with cart. 304· Evenings 614-992-612!5.
675·4548.
:
: : - - - - - - - - -·1 1991 Musta"g GT Red, Loaded
Firewood lor sale' Big loads, With Sunroof, Will Take Good
$45. Del. &amp; stacked. Also, haul Used Pick-Up On Trade. 614·
llmeslone. 614-446·9329.
446-3485.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

ij

1Ji The JeHeroono___c

1987 Dodge Shalby Shadow

Bundy Clorlnll, 614-446-8720.

Now that the weather has collled
down, l'lhy not heal things up a bll
by dearing four closets, alllc or
basement • those unwanted Items
and adYertlslng them for sale In
lhe Clas~lDedsl
And, you c:an put thai exira
c:ash to good nse by checktn~
the ClasslDeds for local Pl'l8t
saln, ne~ markets and barpl1s
In your neck of lhe woods.

.

TR A D F

1 1
-r-ei
..: ~: -. . ..:E..;IgE~I-l\ei ~~~~~;~
~

8:30 C2JD iiJI NBC Ntwl
(JJ Sived by the Belt
(I) Cll
_ D ABC NII:B,I
Wild Ame~ GJ
ill 1121• CBS Ntwl
«D• Andy Clrllflth
il! Scoaby Doo
D Up CioN
0 Ntw ZOfi'O Stereo. t;J
8:351D Andy Grllltth

m

\I

5

1

6

.

7:00 lljD IIJ). WhNI ol Fortune

For Salt: 1982 Otds Omega
Rooms tor rent • week or month.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallia Hotel. hickory. Deliv111d locally $40 a Good Condition: Call 614-44&amp;.
load or 3 lor $100. 614·367·7013.
11195, After 4p.m. M·5. All Doy
614·446'9580.
For
saleCraflma11c
bed,
good
Saturday.
Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Also trailer space. All hook-ups. cond., 1650, 614·992·3367
72 Trucks for Sale
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304-7'73·
For
Sate:
Good
Used
Doors,
E.·
5651, Mason WY.
lerior Doors And Patio Doors, 191'1 on• ton Oodge flatbed, 318,
Reasonable Price, 614·446·2303. $1200, 614·1112·25'1 onor 5~m
46 Space for Rent
Full charter Royal Oak Coast to 1876 Chovr, Love 72,000ml,
Someone to share my house Coast membership half price. 15 $300, trade or approx 5~p boal
wllh, Gallipolis Forry, 304·675- old Case pocket knives. WIU molor. Ping pong labia $30, 614·
1239, 8:00AM 1111 11 :00 PM.
take guns on trade. 304-675- 992·5188
,564.
,977 F-150, 4x4, 614·992·6983,
ask for Jetf
Ice
Cream
Parlor
Table
&amp;
Chair
Merchandise
For Sale, 614-446-8720.
1978 Chovy Scoll5dalo, 88,000
Lavondar bedspread, curtains, miles, $1,000. firm, good cond,
51
tabla skirt, London Fog coal, 304-675-2808.
Household
bag of slacks, gr.. n draperies, 1981 GMC 1500 Sltra Grande,
plclurn. 614-446·3375.
Goods
4sp. on the floor, duallanks, V·
Steetcase
ExecuUvt Desk, 8, good cond., $3200 firm, 614·
Big Savings On All Carpet In
Stock. Cash And Carry, Mol- 36"x70" $100; 19" Color Talevi· 985-4276
sion Wllh Siand, $50. Call 614· 1981 XLT Rangor F·150 pickup,
lohan Carpets, 614-446·i'l44.
446-11599.
AC, PS, PB, V-8 auto, lopptr,
Full slzt bedroom tulle $200
304-675-3099.
•
. Surplus army camflauga, denim, bed liner, will take gun1 on
Carhart, rental tlothing. Jr. trad •• 304..&amp;75-1564.
Gas Dryer, 2 Yeare Kenmore sizes camflauga, Sam Some$150; Round O.k Toblo 4 rville's since 1964, beside San- 1986 Bronco It, 6&lt;yl., standard,
Chairs, $100; Midtaway Bed dyville Post OHice, Jackson 4 wheel drive, sunroof, $3500,
614·245·91n.
• County, W\1. 5 miles East 1·77, 614·742·2357 after 6pm
Ravenswood. Fri. Sal, Sun, ,988 Chevy 1 Ton Delivery
Gibson freezer, 16 cu. ft., noon-6:00 PM. Other days for Truck,
350 Engina, 12x8 Ft. Box,
uprlghl,l175. 614-446-4189.
hours call 304-273·5655 before Good Shape, $5,700. Mark Bet·
GiltD USED APPLIANCES 11 :00 AM. (Union made Political· ween 5-7 P.M. 614-367-0411.
Washers, dryers, refrigerators, Business Specialities-Matches). 1989 Chevaroltl truck, 2500 ·
ranges. Skaggs Appllonc11 Wood Chips For Baddlng And series, club cab, 350 cu. ln., ·
Upper River Rd. Beside Stoni Mulch For Salt. 614·2r.&amp;-6H9; IUIO, air, $7600 Obo, 614-992·
Crosl Molol. Call 614-446-7398.
Aher &amp;p.m. 614-256-135~.
6681
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Building
Comple1e home fumlthlngs. 55
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Hours: Mon-Sat, 9-5. 6t4-44~
Supplies
1979 CJ7 Renegade, auto
0322, 3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.
Frn O.llvary.
transmission, PB, PS, tilt whlel,
Block, brick, nw•r pipes, win· Ltvl pkg, hard top, 38,000 actual
Maple round/oval dining room dows, lintels, tic. Claude Win· mllao, 304·675·1564.
table, hutch, 4 chairs 1425; 3 lers, . Rio Grande, OH Call 614·
piece tvll size bednom suit, 245·5121.
76 Auto Parts &amp;
while $100; whitt d11k I chair
sao; woodon opoco 11vor crib 56
Pets for Sale
Accessories
$15.00. Coli 1·304-675-7127 or ::---..,.-.,.:..~.:..._:_ _
304-675-2954.
Groom and Supply Shop-Pat Budget Tranemlsslol'll, UHCI •
ICKENS
FURNITURE
Grooming. All breeds, styles . rtbultt, stanlng at $i9; A~o
P
lams Pal Food Deater. Julie Ports. 614·245-5677, 614-379New/Uted
Webb. Call614-4~6-0231.
2263.
Houtthotd tumlshlng. 112 mi .
Jerrlcho Ad. Pl. Pleasant, WV, Dalmation Puppi•sl 6 Wnks Four 0·15 BI.ICkshot radial tires,
call 304-675·1450.
OldJ. Had Shots, Been Wormed. now, $425, 614·985-3941
Af(o.; Roglalared. Bl &amp; WH. 614·
SWAIN
Two 235x15" naw recap studded
446·26011.
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
radial winter treads on whMI1
Olive St., Gallipolis. New &amp; Used Floh Tonk, 2413 Jockoon An. will Ut JMp or Ford. One 4 bon
lurnllura, heaters, Westem a. Point Pleasant, 304-675-2063, camaper whftl 15" six ply tire
Work bool&amp;. 614-446·3159.
full line Tropical fish, birds, never used. 304-67S.1564.
small animals and eupptilt.
53
Antiques
79
Campers&amp;
~~-:-.~,.::.::,::..:.,....,,__
Roll Wtllor Pup Gonnon Bred,
Buy or 1111. Riverine Anllq~Jts, Perente O.F.A., Mall. $300. AKC
Motor Homes
1124 E. Moln Slr111, Pom1roy. Roglo1tred. 614-245-5161.
15 h travel tralttr, furnace, ainlc,
HouiW: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. lo 6:00
rango, 2 1&gt;1&lt;11, $500. firm. 304Musical
p.m., Sundav 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. 57
675-2o08.
614·992-2526.
Instruments

arvest ABargain...
Reap The Rewards...
len You Turn To
The Classfleds,
Ml The Bouncy Is Yours!

_, / tl-? ,,iJ ,, '11;&amp;

I·

0

I I I' I 1 :_!

DNBATo6,
a World Today
0 Rln Tin Tin, K·l Cop
Stereo.
8:051D Beverly Hlllbllllea

0

\I

N(

~ Math Ltamlng Hour

Nissan S.ntr1 2dr,
Automatic.
Very
Clean.
$2,500.00 Call614-446-6262.

44

.

\Zl

1985

¥-l(r~

PIZZLII p~

low to form four simple

1984 whllt Floro1 luggo_i~ rock,
auto, AC, PW, PL-t AU-FM cau,
CB, grotl condll $3,000. linn.
304-675-3888 or 676-HS4.

lA~f1.1

WOlD

0 four
Rearrange lttterl of
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1984 Dodge AriH, 4 door, black,
AM!FM, caantte, 4 cyl, new ••·
haust, 614·992·7236, evenings

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4

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Will clean and paint garaga,
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Announcements

Tuesday, February

Upholstery

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18

�Sentinel

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.

.

Raspberry nominations announced
By~CHAELFLEEMAN

Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Vanilla Ice's " Cool As Ice" scooped up
seven Golden Raspberry Awards
nominations Monday and Sean
Young j!Ot two bids for playing
twins bailly as Hollywood prepared
to saute the worst of 1991 .
Bruce Willis' "Hudson Hawk"
and Dan Aykroyd's " Nothing But
Trouble" both picked up six nominations for the Oscar-spoofing
Razzie trophy, a golf ball-sized
gold-painted raspberry with an estimated street value of$1.79.
The Razzie nominations come
just two days before Wednesday's
announcement of the Academy
Award contenders.
The 12th Annual Golden Raspberry Awards, determined by more
than 350 voters from 26 states and
five countries, will be meted out
March 29 at a " Press Conference
Cum Performance Piece, " the
Golden Raspberry Award Founda-

lion said in a statemenL
Geuing the biggest raspberry
reception for 1991 was " Cool As
lee," nominated for worst pictare,
worst actor (lee), worst director
(David Kellogg), worst screenplay
(David Stenri), two worst new star
nominations (including one for Ice)
and worst original song.
, Other worst picture nominees
were " Dice Rules ," "Hudson
Hawk," "Nothing But Trouble, "
and "Return to the Blue Lagoon."
In an unprecedented double
nomination for the same film, Miss
Young was nominated as worst
actress in "Kiss Before Dying" as
the twin who survives and for
wor.&gt;t supporting actress as the twin
who's kiUed in the first reel.
Razzie officials cited Mi ss
Young for her "pathetically puppet-like portrayal of two twins
stalked by a psychopath in the risible murder mystery."
John Candy was nominated for
worst supporting actress for

CHH discuss retreat
Virginia Wyatt hosted the recent
meeting of the Circle of Helping
Hands.
Peggy Boles presided at the
meeting and members responded to
roll call with a Bible verse using
the word "hearL"
Marge Purtell had devotions on
the functions of the hean, and the
bean members have for the Lord.
A discuss ion about Women' s
Retreat and the decorations to be
made which will be Sept. 17 and
18.
The mother-daughter banquet
was di scussed and will be held
May 8.
Ladies Day at K.C.C: on March
26 was noted as wa s County

Women's Fellowship at Dexter on
Feb. 27.
A program was presented on
stenciling sacks and fitting with
cookies, candy and Valentines for
the Meigs County Infirmary.
The next meeting will be held at
th e Zion Church of Christ and
hostesses will be Ida Murphy with
the Bible word "wind" and the program will be stenciling bags for
favors for Women's Retreat.
Aucnding were Peggy Bole ,
Kathryn Johnson, Ida Murphy ,
Dorothy Reeves, Hazel Stanley,
Virginia Wyatt, Evelyn Thoma ,
Marge PurteU and Suzanne Warner.

Willing Workers meet
The Willing Workers of Sl Paul

United Methodist Church met
recently for an ail-day session.
Lap robes were sewn and quilted for nursing home patients associated with the church.
A Valentine lun cheon was
enjoyed at noon and secret sisters
were exchanged.
The meeting was conducted by
Glenna Sanders, president, who
read a proverbial instructive on
wisdom from the book of proverbs.
The prayer was given by Mae
Vineyard and reports were given
by Mildred Brooks and Patricia
Hall.
The group voted to make a
donation of $25 10 the Meigs County Jrumnary for the piano they are
buying.
A card was signed for Hazel
Barnhill, a member, who is now in
Florida. A new member, Beulah
Zumbach, joined the group.
The program, "Time for Love"
was read by Edn a Harmon and
Evelyn Spencer.
Twenty-two sick call s were

reponed by those presenL
Others attending were Bulah
Maxey, Mary Jamison and Joanna
Weaver and Rev. Sharon Hausman.
The March meeting will be an
all-day meeting on March 10 and
the group will learn how 10 piece a
Dresden Plate block.
The meeting clo sed with a
prayer circle ending with the
Lord's Prayer.

Michael Lynn Childs of Middleport received his master of arts
degree from Marshall University at
the completion of the fall semester.
Childs is a teacher at Meigs Junior
High SchooL

Champion named
Jennifer Morris, daughter of
William and Sandra Kay Morris, is
the spelling bee champion at the
Letart Falls Elementary SchooL
Runner-up to the champion in the
bee was Jennifer Roush , a sixth
~rader, and daughter of Roger and
~ --QI!SIL 'l1lc champion will
compete in the county- contest
w)lich is scheduled for Feb. 25.

ANN VANMATRE

Ann VanMatre
to be honored
Ann VanMatre is representing
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, as Valentine
Queen thi s year. She has been a
member of Beta Sigma Phi for four
years.
She resides on Pomeroy Pike
with her husband, Kevin, and son,
Ryan. She is a teacher at Pomeroy
Elementary.
The chapter will hold a Valentine pany in her honor on Saturday
at 8 p.m. at Holly Hill Inn in
Pomeroy.

by Lorrene Goggins, president. She
also distributed bulk mailing from
the department.
Tbe "Firing Line" pamphlet was
ordered and a round robin card was
sent to Mary Frances Baumgardner
in Columbus.
Margaret Bowles, Americanism
chairman, presented an article on
the history of the American flag.
She stressed the importance of the

........,,..,..,.._

PageS

a1
Yot. 42, No. 201
Copyrighted 1992

PREPARING BREAKFAST- Tbe sixth
grade cl~ss of Julie Randolph at Rutland Elementary was busy Friday morning as they prepared a Valentine breakrast for their pat·enlts.

CHAND10NSELLERS-Gwi~ITnMp

Class offered
MIDDLEPORT - The Middlepan Arts Council will offer beginning tap dancing classes beginning
Wednesday , March 4. The first
class will be held from 4:30-5:15
p.m. for ages five and six; seven
and eight year -olds should repon at
5:15 p.m. and those ages 9 and 10
should come from 6-6:45 p.m. For
information or 10 register caU 9923282 or 992-5696.
Barbara Lawrence is the instructor and the fee is $20 per month.

flag.
Lula Hampton stated the second
session of the I 02 Congress had
begun. The Legislative conference
was held Feb. 9-12. Many issues
concerning the Veterans will be
discussed.
Closing ceremonies were carried
out and the next meeting will be
hosted by Edith Ross, Pomt Pleasant.

JobUOil, ~=~ule Roberti ud Mellua Hoi·
mu, ud
Cudace Wtn'J'hStacey Brewer,
Krllltea Hill, Nu~ Marlow, Melallle Blevlas,
Jealea l!:nna, .aad Ashley Vau1b11. Glaaer
Danl wu aoC praeat'for the pk:ture. Laders
are Dtallle Hoi.,. ucl Pam Jl!'luoa.

I •

'

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Consumer prices rose just 0.1 percent
in January, the best inflation performance in six months, the government said today.
The Labor Department credited
falling energy costs and a drop in
food prices for the good showing in
its Consumer Price Index.
The January advance, whi ch
matched a similarly tiny 0.1 percent rise last July, followed a
revised December gain of 0.2 percent. The December gain had originally been reported as a 0.3 percent

increase.
If January's increase held steady
for 12 months, it would result in an
annualized rate of inflation of just
0.9 percent. While economists are
not forecasting that good a performance this year, th ey do expect
consumer prices wlll rise by only 3
percent to 3.5 percent for the whole
year.
That would mark little change
from last year's 3.1 percent
increase, when the recession and
falling oil prices combined to give
the country its best news on prices

since 1986.
" We believe that inflation has
stabilized and it is not ;~n immediate problem," said David Wyss, an
economist with DRI-McGraw Hill,
a consulting firm in Lexington,
Mass.
The Bush administration, worried about a sick economy in an
elec tion year, has continually
pointed 10 the ~!ood news on inflation 10 suppon 1ts argument that the
Federal Reserve has plenty of room
to cut interest rates further.
But Fed Chairman Alan told

Congress today that a reduction in scin's invasion of KuwaiL
business and household debt levels,
Home heating oil costs declined
coupled with interest rate cuts for a second consecutive month ,
already engineered by the Fed, dropping 5.5 percent in January.
should be enough to guarantee a They new stand 31.3 percent below
sustained recovery later this year.
their 1990 peak. Natural gas and
The small 0.1 percent January electricity costs also fell in January
rise in prices reflected the fact that by smaUer amounts.
energy costs fell for the first time
Food prices dropped by 0.4 persince last July, declining 1.5 per- cent, their first decline since last
cent.
August. The decline was led by a
That drop included a 1.9 percent sharp 7.I percent fall in the cost of
fall in gasoline costs, which left fresh fruits and vegetables and a
pump prices 18 .1 percent below 12.4 percent decrease in egg prices.
their peak level reached in Novem- Beef and pork prices feU as well by
ber 1990 following Saddam Hus- smaller amounts.

The price declines were enough
to offset increases for cereal and
dairy products.
Excluding the volatile food and
energy sectors, consumer prices
rose OJ percent in January following a modest 0.2 percent December
increase.
The various changes left the
Consumer ,Pri ce Index, before
adjusting for sbasonal variations, at
138.1, compared to 134.6 a year
ago. That meant that a market basket of goods costing $134 .60 in
January 1990 would hav e cost
$138.10 last month.

Bush gets grudging win;
Tsongas tops Democratic
field in pocketbook vote

VALENTINE BREAKFAST · Parents or
students in JuUe Randolph's sixth grade class at
Rutland Elementary were treated to a breakfast
on Valentine's Day (Friday). The students pre-

"'

.JI.

pared the breakfast with food provided by donations from lbe parents. Thirty-two parents were
served and aU seemed to enjoy the affair.

shower
Couple announces birth of son Card
Waid Spencer, Chester, is
Scott D. and Lori L. Kimes, nal grandparents are William and
Homestead Ai r Force Base, Fla., Nancy Kimes, Racine.
are announcing the birth of a son,
Materna! great grandfather is
Justin Ryan, on Nov. 27, 1991.
Ross Stewan Sr., Bradbury. MaterHe weighed nine pounds and ' nal grandparents are Rollie Stewseven ounces and was 22 and three- an, Pomeroy, and Linda Stewart,
quarter inches long.
Homestead, Fla.
Paternal great-grandmother is
The couple has a daughter, AshHelen Kimes, Mason, W.Va. Pater- leigh Meghan Kimes.

Long Bottom area happenings
Mrs. Mary Newlun is a grandmother again. Her daughter,
Christy and Kenny Riggs, had their
second child, a son, Devon Ray
Riggs, on Dec. 31 at a hospiral in
Fon Myers, Aa The couple resides
in Pon Charlotte, Fla.
Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence Gluesencamp, Portland, and Mrs. Jeannie
Theiss, Vinton, have called on the
Paul Hauber's recently.
Mrs. Dorothy Thurston is recuperating as is Ernie Griffin foUowmg triple bypass surgery.
Jack and Mary Carroll recently
received "WSAZ's Hometown
Hero" award for· their work promoting Christianity.
Mrs. Leota Ferrell, Medway. is
visiting with her sisters, Mae
McPeek and Ada Bissell.
Mrs. Debbie Young, Success
Road, is recuperating after an ili-

ness. She and her husband, Gene,
have operated the D and G Bait and
Tackle Concession at the Forked
Run State ParX for several years.
Mrs. Georgia Mount has visited
family in Lancaster recently.
Whitney Larkins, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Mike Larkins, Gallipolis, spent the weekend with
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel
Larkins. She also visited Brandon
Fitch.

undergoing tests at Grant Medical
Center in Columbus.
Cards may be sent to him at
Grant Medical Center, Room 845B,
Columbus, Ohio 43210.

Dance class offered
The Middleport Arts Council
will offer another beginner's class
in Texas style dance. Due to the
popularity of this dance the class
will begin Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
and the cost is $7 per couple.
For furth er information call
Mary Wise at 992-2675 .

Literary club to meet
The Middleport Literary Club
will meet Wednesday at 2 p.m. at
the Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy. Mrs. Roben Fisher will
review "Onslaught." Roll call is
something famous built at great
COSL

You can write a
check to the IRS·•••
or to your IRA..
'

Harrisonville

community news

You have until April lS to open your Individual ·
Retirement Account and you may qualify for a 1990
ta x shelter.

Roger and ·samantha Cotterill
announce the birth a son, Krislopher Roger, on Jan. 5. The infant
weighed seven pounds and 10
ounces. Paternal grandparents are
Don and Faye Cotterill. Maternal
grandparents are Robert and Grace
Richmond.
·

1039 101t1 %,136 boul or Jllr!ICOIIt coaldes d•r1•1 tile 111. .1 olea ca•pall• earlier tlllr
•• 1111, tilt 11JPest or 117 troop. TIMIIOP Miler
·Ia tile eo..t:r wu lrldaet Jilll- wltll 600
lloatl, plchlred MCIIIId fNII left, front. Otllll-.
. or tile troop are, front, 'Brucly StewtU, Brldpl

The breakfast was complele with eggs, sausage,
toast, French toast, coffee, juice, milk and tea.
The breakfast was followed by a series or skits
and a
the students.

Spencer personal
LONG BOTTOM - Waid
Spencer has returned home from
Grant Medical Center in Columbus
following extensive testing.
He is now confined to home for
three month due to his iUness.
Cards may be sent to him at
Route I, Long Bonom, 45743.

Dance class offered
MIDDLEPORT· The Middlepan Arts Council will offer another
beginner's class in Texas style
dance. Due 10 the popularity of this
dance the class will begin Wednesday at 7:30p.m. and the cost is $7
per couple.
For further information call
Mary Wise at992-2675.

2 Stcllono, 12 Pagn 25 cenlt
A Mutlimtdla Inc. N-•p.oper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 19, 1992

Consumer Price Index up 0.1 % in January

Meigs announcements

Legion birthday
POMEROY - The Ame rican
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39
and Ladies Auxiliary will celebrate
the post's birthday on March 17 at
6 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center
in Pomeroy. All Legionnaires and
their wives are invited to attend.

Cloudy tonight. Low In nild·
30s. Thursday, high near SO.

•

The United Methodist Men of
the Racine Church will serve a pancake supper Thursday at the church
from 4 to Tp.m. Hoteakes, sausage,
scrambled eggs and coffee are on
the menu . While there is no set
price for the dinner, contributions
will be accepted.

Lewis-Manley makes contribution to HHI
A contribution wa s made to
Habitat for Humanity International
when the Lewis-Manley Unit No.
263 of the American Legion met at
Dale's in Gallipolis with Florence
Richards as hostess.
Blank report forms were distributed to the chairmen by Mrs.
Richards, secretary.
A bulletin from Eighth District
President Sharon Squires was read

Pick 3: 022
Pick 4: 0349
Cards:
6-H; Q-C; 10-D;
3-S

Pancake supper set

Meeting canceled
POMEROY - The February
meeting of the American Legion
Drew Webster Auxiliary Unit No.
39 has been canceled.

Receives degree

Meigs boys
post 74-57
TVC win

appearing in drag in "Nothing But
Trouble."
.
Last year's worst actor winner,
Andrew Dice Clay, was again nominated in the same category for
"Dice Rules." Another past winner, Sylvester Srallone, was nominated for the eighth consecutive
year, this time for "Oscar."
Competing with Miss Young for
the worst actress award are past
Razzie winner Madonna, for
"Truth or Dare," Kim Basinger for
"The Marrying Man," Sally Field
for "Not Without My Daughter,"
and Demi Moore for both ''The
Butcher's Wife" and " Nothing
But Trouble."

Prom dress exchange
TIJPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 905 3
and Ladies Auxiliary wiU sponsor a
"Prom Dress" Exchange on Saturday, Feb. 29 from 9 a.m. to II a.m.
at the VFW HaiL
Anyone having prom and formal
dresses who would like to sell them
is encoura&amp;ed to bring them to the
evenL A fee of $1 will be charged
for each dress. Unsold dresses or
money must be picked up by 6 p.m.
Tbe hall is located just off Route
7 north of Tuppers Plains. After
passing the last gas station in Tuppers Plains, tum on the first road to
the left - Vanderhoof Road. Drive
up the hill 10 the left and the VFW
building is on the right
For further information contact
Terri Hayr1an at843-51 37 or Rose
Carr at 98J-4161.

'

Ohio Lottery

Call the IRA Experts at Peoples Bank today! We're making IRA's simpl e to understand and easy to open. In fact,
we'll take yo ur applica~ion by phOne and have the
paperwork ready for your sign ature at the Peoples Bank
offi ce most convchicnt to you. .

NeUie Lowe has returned frllm
'
California where she ~isitcd her
brother, Arlie, and attended the
wedding of a granddaughter, the
daughter of Corky Lowe. '
Alan and Kenda Annstrong, ML
Vernon, spent a weekend with her
patents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymoad'
Donohue.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Phillips
visited l!er daughter, Marilyn Will
Marietta
Belpre,
Athens
Lowell
and fliRI~Y In Lancaster recently.
373-3155
593-7761
423-7516
896-2369
Duane anc1 Hazel St.lllley spent
a day visilin$ Ia s u .and llolhMiddleport Nelsonville The Plains
er-in-law, Bill and Lorene-&amp;cou,
992-6661
753-1955
Nellonvi!Je.
· 11
797-4547
Manha Clawly and IWO ~· ' l Fcdellll resulatton&amp; iequire Mtbttantltl tax and inu: rt~t penakica for' early wilhd,.wat1ol .l
ters have moved from Rio Grllldc
~ '.
·
rRA depoorw.
·
)
to Harrisonville.
I

!

.

DRAGGING OPERATING DISCONTINUED - Middleport firemen discontinued dragging operations for a possible drowning ~ictim
after puttln1in another four hours on the Ohio
River Tuesday. The search jltsl below lbe Middleport levee began abou"l midnight Monday

when an unidentified woman reported to pollee
thallbey bad beard a person screaming and saw
someone struggUng in lbe water. Police have had
no report or a missing person. Tuesday's rescue
team· Consisted of Skip Johnson; Shawn Baker,
and Kenny Byer, I to r in lbe boat, assisted by
Jay Buskirk on shore."
·

One remap plan due for House
vote, another returns to court
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
vote on the Democrat-sponsored
biU in the House creating new congressional districts in Ohio sets the
stage for negotiation s with the
GOP-controUed Senate.
But the fate of a separate proposal that realigns the state's 33
Ohio Senate and 99 House districts
remained in the hands of a threejudge federal panel that ordered
changes made.
Reali$nment of legislative and
congressiOnal districts are required
because of population shifts noted
in the 1990 Census and constitutional requirements for all districts
to remain virtually equal in population.
The state Apportionment Board,
at a meeting late Tuesday, adopted
some of the changes and said the
plan will be sent back to the coun
for further consideration.
The House Stale Government
Commiuee on Tuesday recom mended passage of the Democratic
version of a Senate-passed bill
red!Jcing Ohio's congressional districts from 21 to 19. A floor vote

MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) New Hampshire gave President
Bush a victory and a stern warning,
but also gave spark to Patrick
Buchanan's conservative uprising.
Tbe pocketbook-driven presidential
primary crowned neighbor Paul
Tsongas the Democratic front-runner.
Bush won Tuesday's GOP balloting by 58 percent to 40 percent,
a victory with a surprisingly narrow margin that left the White
House uncomfortable.
The GOP candidates said they
would focus on ·the South and the
Demo·cn1ts headed to Maine for
~~~s~ca~u~cuses and South

was expected today.
]oint commiuee has been appointed
Chairman WiU.iam Healy , D- to work out House-Senate differCanton, stressed tfiat while the pro- cnces.
posal is likely to pass the House, a
Continued on page 3

Howard seeks commission
seat on Democrat ticket

Janet L Howard has filed her employed at Kroger since Novempetition with the Meigs County ber, 1982. She is a member of
Board of Elections, making her a United Food and Commercial
Democratic candidate for Meigs Workers Union Local 347.
County Commissioner.
Howard is a member of the
Howard has been a resident of Meigs County Democratic Party' s
Meigs County since 19n, and cur- Central Committee, representing
rently lives at 37850 State Route the East Rutland voting precinct,
143 in Pomeroy with her husband, and has served in that capacity for
Ray Tackett, and their son, Kevin. six years. She is also a member of
She is the daughter of Gtispie and Meigs County's Ohio Young
Edith C. Howard, also of State Democrats of America club.
Route 143.
Howard also ran for a seat on
She is a 1974 graduate of Meigs the board of county commissioners
High School, and has over-si x in 1990, but was unsuccessfuL
years of management experience.
"!enjoy working with the public
She is employed by the Kroger and look forward to helping the
Company in Pomeroy, where she people of Meigs County whenever
works both in the dairy department possible," Howard said.
and as a cashier. She has bee n
"! feel that the county government needs to work on obtaining
federal monies that are available to
assist the county in attracting new
business here," she continued. "We
have all of the natural resources
needed to attract businesses."
Richard "Rick" Hysell , 38, Middleport, was arrested Tuesday
"There's no reason that Meigs
morning and charged with falsification and vandalism as a result of
County can't grow as rapidly as
ran incident at a Route 7 residence on Tuesday morning. A house
surroundin~ counties, like Gallia
window was broken and tires were slashed on a vehicle.
County, whtch is growing by leaps
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Hysell
!llld bounds. Meigs Countr should
alJI)C8ted in Meigs Coanty Court on Tuesday and pled guilty 10 falbe right there with them." ':
sii'lcation. He was fmed $100 and eosts and sentenced 10 six months
in jail, which was suspended. The vandalism_charge was reduced to
criminal damaging. Hysell also pleaded gutlty to that charge and
was fmed $100 and costs and received a 90 day suspended sentence.
Hysell was plac¢ on two years probation and a restraining order
wasissued.
·

--Local briefs---.
Hysell a"ested, charged

Soulsby explains policy
Meip County Sheriff James M. Soulsby said Wednesday mom·
ing that it is·his policy to report breaking and entering incidents and
tltCfts 10 the news medi~ for three reasons.
'
.
Firstly, they are released to make the iesideniS aware that criminal activity is taking place. Secondly, once resillents are aware, they
lJ
~MiN meuura to pr(llfiCt their propcny, m:ord serial
'num anti bO more alen to suspicious activities, persons aild
vehic:lel.
.
·
Finally, the information is released in the hopes that· someone
migbt repon seeinJ the stolen items.
·
·."We aecd the tUe of c~es and ears of our residents 10 obtain
·-lnl'ormallon to help c~l the rash of breaking and entcrlngs,"
. Saullby said. "'ur ~~just does not have !be manpower 10
be everywhere in the C!llllll)'. W.e niust depend on residents for their
·
Condailed oil a 3
·

I:'

JANET HOWARD

PIDLIP M. ROBERTS

Roberts files
for post in
Gallia County
Philip M. Robeits , Patriot,
announced Tuesday his plans to
run in the May 5 primary election
for the Republican Pany nomination to the office of Gallia County
Engineer.
Roberts served as a project engineer for the Ohio Department of
Transportation for 13 years. Hi s
major projects included the Gal lipolis bypass, the approach interchange at the Silver Memorial
Bridge, the Pomeroy bypass and
many bridges in Gallia and Meigs
counties.
Robens, who has served for 12
years as Meigs County Engineer,
has operated a private engineering
and surveying practice in Gallipolis
for 20 years.
In 1988, Robens was appointed
for one term as a srnall government
commissioner for Issue This
seven-member commission decides
which small government projects
are funded throughout Ohio.
He is a member of the County
Engineers Association of Ohio
where he serves on the Salary and
Technology Transfer committees.
He is also a member of the Ohio
Township, Trustees ~nd Clerks
Association;
Roberts bas been a licensed ham.
radio operator (I(.SUNV) since
1960. '
An active member of the First
Baptist Church of O'allipolis, he
SClVC$ on the Ohio Valley Christian
School Bcllrd. .
He lives in Pllrlot with his.wife,
the former Karen Dailey, and his
son, Stephen.

Dakota before a March 3 regional
smorgasbord.
" America , here we come, "
Tsongas, a former Massachusetts
senator, pledged, promising to
break free from expectations of a
regional candidacy.
Arkansas Gov . Bill Clinton
dubbed himself the "comeback
kid" after polling a strong second
despite weeks of controversy over
character issues. Clinton enters the
next round with more _money and
organization than Tsongas, who is
counting on New Hampshire ' s

boost 10 fill out his war chest.
Nearly complete returns show\)(!
Tsongas with 35 percent to Clinton's 26 percent.
Behind them was a muddled
second tier.
·
NeblliSka Sen. Bob Kerrey took
third place with 12 percent of the
vote. Close behind was Iowa Sen.
Tom Harkin with 10 percent, and
former California Gov. Jerry
Brown trailed with 9 percent of the
vote, but. enough to claim moral
victory after being hugely outspenL
Continued on page 3

Lavender eyes commission
post on Republican ticket
Larry W. Lavender, 2481 Lee May with a bachelor's degree in
Circle, Syracuse, has announced accounting and a minor in computhis candidacy for the Republican er scicnqJ.
nomination for the Jan. 2 term of
The candidate said that his goal
Meigs County Commissioner in the if elected will be 10 "help develop
May 5 primary.
~owth in Meigs County by seekLavender filed his petition of mg industry to establish here which
candidacy Tuesday with the Meigs will create a larger job market and
give our children the opportunity to
County Board of Elections.
In announcing his candidacy, remain in Meigs Courity."
Lavender said that he has always
had a strong interest in the welfare
of Meigs County and is willing 10
make the commissioner's position
a full-time job 10 better serve the
residents of Meigs County if he is
elected.
Lavender has been a resident of
Meigs County since 1952. He
served in the U. S. Army from
1960 to 1963 and belongs to the
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, Pomeroy. He is affiliated
with the Syracu se Nazarene
Church . He has been an active
member with the Syracuse Volunteer Fire and Emergency Departments having served as president
and chief of hoth departments.
He is married to Chri sy J.
Lavender and has three step-daughters, Raberta, Keri , and Cynth ia
CaldwelL
Lavender attends the University
of Rio Grande and will gradllilt.: in

z.

RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE • Pomeroy postmuler Tom
Reuter! left, was reeoanlled for 35 yean service wltb tile U. S.
P01111i service. Lou Jilrdu, IIIIOCiate olllce coortllutor, ZU..tlle
olllce, presealed Realer *1111 • 35 year pill. Rellter's ntlre career
1w been Ia the Pomeroy olllee wbere be started 11 a tempora11
clll'rier aod advanced to postmaster ftve yettn ago.

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