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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Indiana
rolls over
Minnesota

Pick 3: 588
Pick 4:0882
Cards:
5-H; J-C; 8-D;
Q-S

Page 5

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Low In mld·30s. Friday, sunny.&gt;
High near SO.
:

Super Lotto:
7-19-26-36-38-42
Kicker: 560405

·Vol. 42, No. 202

2 Secllona, 12 P•aea 25 011!11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 20, 1992

Copyrighted 1992

AMultlmecll1

Inc.~~

•

MR/DD Board to ask' :~
for 1.8 mill levy on
May primary ballot

EROSION CONTROL • No longer is there
a threat that the Ohio River bank adjacent to
Middleport's sewage lagoons will collapse and
allow sewage to now into the Ohio River. The

bank was rebuilt with sand and gravel and then
the slope was packed with stone for reinforce·
ment. This picture taken from the West Virginia
side or the river shows a section or the 2500 root
or reconstructed bank.

Lagoon
project
completed
Repair of the eroding Ohio
River bank at the site of the Mid·
dleport sewage lagoons, long a
concern of Middleport Village
Council, has been completed.
Soil along the bank was
removed and replaced with a mix·
ture of sand and gravel which was
then covered with a filter cloth to
keep the soil from eroding again.
Once that had been completed the
entire slope area was packed with
stone.
About 2500 feet of the river
bank was reinforced eliminating
the danger of the bank collapsing
and allowing the sewage from the
lagoons to flow into the river.
Total cost of the project was
Continued on page 3

Judge removes
himself .from
Johnston suit

---Local briefs-Man cited by patrol

·

A Gallipolis man was cited by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Highway Patrol after part of the load he was carrying in his pickup
feU out and struck another vehicle.
According to a patrol report, David J. Thaler, 30, of Gallipolis
was eastbound on state Route 141 Wednesday afternoon, ,wher(part
· of the load in his 1986 Ford Ranger feU and struck the front of a car
driven by Warren D. Meadows; 48, of GallipOlis.
No injuries were reported.
Damage to Meadows' 1991 Plymoutn Acclaim was listed as
light.
Thaler was cited by the patrol for having.an .~nsecure load.

Man safe after wheels-up landing
ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- A single-engine airplane landed on its
belly at the Ohio University airport after the plane's wheels mal·
functioned.·the Srate Highway Patrol reported.
Troopers said .pilot John Sweeney, SS, ,of The Plains, was
approaching the iiJpol't near Albany at about 3 p.m. Tuesday on a
trip from the Gallia-Meigs Airport.
Sweeney diseoverQd during the landing attempt that· the wheels
would not droP.
'
•.
Sweeney was not injured.
·
'

B&amp;E, theft probed .

·

.

Chester Francis of Smith Ridge Reed in Portland ~JDJCd to the.
Meigs County .Sherlff's Dcpenment on Wednesday 'that lometimc '
between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on Monday, his reside~ was entered
and a six-month old female Chinese Pug dog was taken. The q is
valued at $600.
The house had been left unlocbd, it was,reported.
•.
Coatbi• OD Jllle 3

LOGAN, Ohio (AP) - A
Hocking County judge withdrew
from a wrongful imprisonment'suit
filed by Dale Johnston, who spent
eight years on death row for the
mutilation deaths of his ste~ugh·
ter and her f1811Ce.
Judge Thomas Gerken of Hocking County Common Pleas Court is
the brother of County Prosecutor
Charles Gerken. The judge with·
drew from the case Friday and notified Ohio Chief Justice Thomas
Moyer of his reasons in a confidential letter.
Johnston, 58, filed the $1 million suit last year.
He was convicted in 1984 and
sentenced to death in the slayings
of Annette Cooper Johnston, 18,
and Todd Schultz, 19.
The conviction was overturned
and a new trial ordered py the Ohio
Supreme Court in 1988.
The lOth Ohio District Coun'of
Appe!llS r!Jled tha~ evi4ence the
. prosecution constdered crucial
·· could not be used in • new trial
because it :was obtained under
duress.
Charles Gerken in 1990 dropped
the case but reserved the rif2hitttoo
prosecute Johnston again i new
evidenCe surfaced.
Ms. Johnston and Schultz, of
Logan, were last .ecn OcL 4, 1982.
Their torsos were found in the
Hocking River 10 days later, and
othet bo!Jy ~~ were discovered
Oct. 16 buned tn a nearby com·
field. · ' '

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation and Develop·
mental Disabilities will place a 1.8
mill continuing levy on the May
Primary ballot, accordin$ to the
board ' s Acting Admi01strator
David Milliken.
The MRJDD board is required
by law 10 seek permission from the
county commissioners 10 place the
levy on the ballot, and the Meigs
County Commissioners granted
that permission at their regular
meeting on Wednesday.
According to Milliken , the
MR/DD board decided at their
February 10 meeting to seek the
continuing levy.
"We have looked at the program
in terms of client needs," Milliken
said at yesterday's meeting. "We're
now meeting minimum health and
safety standards, but (in terms of
programming) we're clearly su~­
standard."
Several levy attempts in the
recent past have been unsuccessful.
Smaller levies were placed before,
and defeated by, Meigs County
voters in the 1990 and 1991 general
elections, the 1990 Primary and in
a special election in February,
1991.
Milliken stated that the board
opted for the higher, continuing
millage for this primary election
because, if passed, a one-mill levy
would orily serve the district' s
financial needs for a very limited

period.
"If a one-mill levy were to pass,
we would be faced with deficit
spending as soon as 1994," he said,
"and if that were the case, we
would have to go before the public
with another levy next spring."
The 1.8 mill levy, accordin~ to
Milliken, would make it poss1ble
for the local MR!DD program to
operate "in the black" through
1997.
Additionally, the higher millage
would permit the board to restore
some of the services discontinued
in 1990 due to financial hardships
within the program.
·.
If the levy were to pass in May,
the board would use the additional
funds, in part, to restore a day of
child physical therapy and a day or
adult physical therapy to the program, as well as re-instatement of
an adult speech therapist and a
mid-level management position.
Bus replacement looms in the program 's future and Milliken said
that the passage of this levy would
make funds for those buses available, as well.
Milliken said the board hopes
that by the time the 1.8 mill levy no
longer adequately funds the pro·
gram, tax equalization legislation
will be in place, which would assist
small, poorer counties in operating
their MR/DD programs. A loan
fund, like that used to "bail out"
impoverished local school districts
docs not exist for MR/DD pro-

grams.
.
According to County Auditor
William R. Wickline, a 1.8 mHr
levy would generate $402,655.46
per year, based on present land valuations.
.
The commissioners voted' unanimously, upon the motion of Davi.d
Koblentz and the second ~Y
Richard E. Jones, to permit tlie
placement of the levy on the May :S
balloL
Other business
·.
An authorization allowing
Emergency Medical Services personnel to attend several confe(ences and seminars was approved
by the board yesterday. The requeSt
for permission was submitted by
Emergency Services Director
Roben Byer.
:
Commissioner Jones updated
the board on progress at the new
Department of Human Service~
building in Middleport. Phase 1 of
that project, consisting of the new
three-story addition, is now corlrpleted and furniture is being mov&lt;:il
1010 that portion.
·
Employees are expected to
begin vacating Phase II, or the old
Race Street building, at the end of
this week, and renovat!5&gt;n work on
that portion of thf;,fl uilding is .
expected to take 30-40 days for
completion.
Present in addition to Jones and
Koblentz, were President Manning
K. Roush and Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

Israeli force hits Shiite villages; .
two peacekeepers wounded
TYRE , Lebanon (AP) - A
tank-led Israeli force smashed
throu~h U.N. barricades and into
two v1llages in southern Lebanon
today 10 battle Shiite Muslim guer·
rillas. Officials said the Israelis
wounded two U.N. peacekeepers.
The attack followed overnight
Israeli shelling of the Shiite vii·
!ages that killed at least one civilian
and left seven wounded, police
said.
Israel said the raiding force,
backed by Cobra helicopter gun·
ships, was seeking out "Katyusha
launchers and terro~t nests" after
three days of Katyusha rocket
attacks on Israel by' Shiite guerril·
las.
Hostilities between Israeli forces
and fighters of the pro-Iranian
Hezbollah organization have been

on the rise since Israeli helicopters
assassinated Hezbollah leader
Sheik Abbas Musawi in southern
Lebanon on Sunday.
U.N. spokesman Timur Ooksel
said an Israeli armored personnel
carrier opened up with machinegun fire, wounding two U.N.
peacekeepers trying to halt the
Israeli advance. He did not give
their names or nationality.
Earlier, fist fights broke out
between Israeli and U.N. soldiers
as the attacking force advanced to
the villages of Kafra and Yater.
Goksel said.
He said Nepalese, Finnish and
Irish peacekeepers had been sent to
try 10 halt the Israelis.
The U.N. soldiers had parked
armored cars at the villages'
entrances but Israeli bulldozers

TENSE BORDER • lsraell soldiers patrol
alODJ tilt the lsrMU·LebaneM border WedMIday, In a elfort to Item 1111 Helbollall adlYity
frOIIIICI'OIIIIbe border.~ ..ree stnJallt days
rocket and artillery attaeks have oceurred oa

plowed them aside, Israel radio
said.
The armor that rolled out of
Israel's self-declared border securi·
ty zone included at least 21 tanks,
three armored personnel carriers
and a jeep, security sources said. ·
Four tanks took a hill from
which Hezbollah had firea
Katyuslias while others fired a~
houses and four Cobras strafed the
villages, said a U.N. source who
spoke on condition of anonymity.
An estimated 25 HezboUah militia·
men in Yater fired machine guns
and rocket-propelled grenades at
the Cobras without scoring an~
hits, the source said.
&gt;
Thousands of residents fled
Kafra, Yater and other nearby villages on Wednesday under barrage
from Israel's self-proclaimed bor·
der security zone.

both sides or the Israell-Lebuese border• .._. •
oa Suaday attacked a coavoy carrylq Slaelk
Abbas Musawl, leader of the pro•fr...a•
Hubollah, klllln1 Musnl, ·his wlf• ... - . · ·
(AP) .

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�Thursday, FebrLjary 20, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-.1

,.

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
1 q Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE

MEIGS-~N

AREA

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

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wolds long. Allleuers are subje&lt;:tlo editing and must be signed with name ,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

New Hampshire gives
President Bush a jolt

Page-2-The Dally S.entlnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 20, 1992

Friday, Feb. 21
Accu-Weather• forecast

'

MICH.

No need to cry over spilled
secrets
. - .
.
Martin Schram

We've been largcled by a speci.al operation that has all the makings of policy-by-leak. Call it the
. Washington Waler Tenure.
Headlines keep falling on our
heads- and it's not just drip, drip,
drip. We're lalking deluge, deluge,
deluge. And apparently it's the
government officials who've been
doing the talking.
Feb. 7, The Wall Street Journal:
"BUSH ADMINISTRATION
EXPANDS PLANS TO PURSUE
OUSTER OF SAD DAM HUSSEIN - ... In recent weeks, the
administration has secretly sent
Congress a new notification that it
will usc contingency funds available to the Central Intelligence
Agency to pursue coven activities
aimed at ousting the Iraqi president. The program would include
some military aid, intelligence officials said."
. .
Feb. 7, The New York Ttmcs:
"GATES. IN MIDEAST, IS SAID

TO DISCUSS OUSTER OF HUS- rage- act uresponstbly, even JlleSEIN - President Bush has dis- gaily - because of leaks. Rtchard
patched Robert M. Gates, the Nixon responded to a leak by crealDirector of Central Intelligence, on · ing his White House plumbers to
an unpublicized mission .... to has- commit black-bag burglanes and
ten the downfall of President Sad- illegal wiretaps.
dam Hussein, administration offiWe've also seen that when prescials said today."
idents want to keep an operatton
Feb. 8, The Los Angeles Times: coven, it stays coven for years --;''CIA AUTHORIZED TO TAR- nothing leaks. CIA directors don t
GET HUSSEIN; The Allministra- have their cover blown - unless
Lion Earmarks $30 Million ..."
that too is part of the plan. When
Feb. 9, The New York Times: Ronald Reagan sent Roben "Bud"
"PLAN ON IRAQ COUP TOLD MacFarlane and Oliver Nonh on a
TO CONGRESS; Bush Gave Noli- secret mission to Iran, we never
fication In Fall Of Covert U.S. read a headline the next day telling
Operation."
us: "BUD &amp; OLLIE FLY TO
Think about what's really hap- AYATOLLAH BEARING GIFTS:
pcning: "Intelligence officials" A BIBLE, A CAKE SHAPED
and "administration officials" are LIKE A KEY, A COVERT PLAN
leaking delails of a highly classi- TO SELL MISSILES."
fied plan of covert action- and
But after the latest torrent of
the White House is not screaming leaks Bush's wasn't apoplectic,
that our ~alional security has been mereJy ~lliptic: "Don't believe
compromised.
everything you read m the newspaWe've seen presidents erupt in pers."

PICKUP PITcH OF -mE WEEK

ByTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
MANCHESTER, N.H. - New Hampshire once again has administered a jolt to George Bush, this time by giving Patrick Buchanan a second-place finish strong enough to rrumpet as a victory.
For 10 weeks Buchanan's guerilla campaign urged voters to "send
Bush a message:'· Bush countered by asking them to suppon him instead
and "send Congress a message."
"I understand the message of dissatisfaction," Bush said in a slatement Tuesday night after he edged out Buchanan by an unimpressive 58
percent to 40 percent margin.
.
The Bush organization had hoped for at least a tw&lt;Ho-onc vtctory as a
GOP send-off for a second lerm; instead, it got a rebuke that promised to
keep Bush bogged down in a party fight and signaled serious vulnerability
in the general election.
.
.
That vulnerability was evident when both Arkansas Gov. Bill Clill!On,
the second-place Democratic finisher, and Sen. Bob Kerrey, the thtrd
place finisher, joked that Buc~anan was now the Repubhcan to beat m
November.
: Bush's weak finish , together with former Massachusetts Sen. Paul
Tsongas' remarkable win on !he Democratic side. puts the race for the
p,residency in a stale of flux that would have seemed ununagmable JUSt
two months ago.
Then, Bush was expected to win New Hampshire in a landslide and
tlinton was the Democratic party's clear front-runner.
: By now, Bush should be used to gelling the shock treaunent from New
Hampshire.
: In !980, llle momentum Bush gained from winning the Iowa caucuses
was stopped dead in its tracks with Ronald Reagan's decisive New Hampshire victory. But in 1988, New Hampshire turned around and gave Bush
an impressive come-from-behind victory over front-runner Bob Dole that
Some years ago there was a world, I decided to research this
show on television called ''To Tell subject a lit~c more fully. What I
~inoothed his path to the presidency. .
. .
.
. Although Bush loyalists arc poilllillg ~ul that a wm ts a wt~, no matler The Truth." A number of individu- found was not comfoning. What I
the margin, and blammg New HampshlfC s dire economtc strru~ for Tues- als would appear on the show con- found was a series of misleading
day's results, lhc White House was not undereslJmalmg the stgmficance tending to be a cenain person when statements coming from Detroit
of the Buchanan showing.
.
in fact only one was acwally who that tend to diston the facts. Appar"Whenever you've got a challenger that gets more !han 40 percent of they said they were. By asking ently, in search of scapegoats to
the vote, that's a challenge you've got to take seriously," said White questions it was the task of the shield their own inabilities as manHouse spokesman Marlin Fitzwaler.
.
.
show's panel to determine which of agers, they nave chosen to finger
. Indeed, no president m the last 50 years has survtved a gene~al elecuon the conlestants was actually teUing point and blame their companies'
when a challenger received more than 35 percent of the vote ill the New the truth. Perhaps it is going to poor showings on someone else.
Let's go back ten years to !982.
Hampshire primary.
require a similar show for our
Democrat Eugene McCarthy's 42 percent in 1968 was enough to force country's consumers to determine That was the year w~ first heard
President Lyndon Johnson out of the race, even though Johnson "won" which of today's automobiles arc what has since become a very
familiar call when talking about
New Hampshire with 49.6 percent of the vote.
in fact "made in America".
· And McCarthy had a burgeoning peace movement behind him, was a
We have heard a lot in the news trade issues, the need for "a level
senator and a well-established political figure.
la1ely about our nation's slumping playing field." American automakBy contrast, Buchanan ~as a c~ntrov~rsial columnist and TV commen- automobile industry. We have been crs extremely concerned with the
tator until he announced hts candtdacy m December. He has never held told by the heads of our nation's volume of Japanese imports had
elective office. He was a speech writer for President Nixon and served as three leading automobile manufac- succeeded in having a voluntary
President Reagan's communications director. .
.
.
turers that the problems con- restraint agreement imposed.
And Buchanan has lit~e suppon from wtthtn the Republican establish- fronting their industry are not probConcurrently, much to the
ment.
.
.
lems of their own making but prob- delight of America's auto manufacNot only must Bush now contend with Buchanan m the upcommg lems that have resulted from what turers, effons were undertaken by
Southern primaries, but begin~ing with llle March 7 ballot ill South ~­ they suggest to be unfair trade the Japanese government to
olina he also will be challenged by former Ku Klux Klansman Davtd practices on the part of their for- strengthen the yen vis-a-vis the
Duke of Louisiana.
eign competitors, principally the dollar. This led to a rnarlced drop in
''This has thrown !he race for the Republican nomination wide open,'' Japanese. I'm not going to suggest the exchange rate and a sleep climb
Duke said Tuesday night, complif!Jcnting Buchanan on his strong_ New that this conlenlion is tolally with- in the prices of Japanese vehicles
Hampshire showing. "And I'm gomg 10 deliver the coup de grace m the out basis bull will tell you that the marketed in the United States. Both
South."
.
comments coming out of the exec- of these factors were in1ended to
No one expects Duke to come anywhere close to domg that; and few utive offices of Chrysler, Ford, and give our domestic manufacturers a
Republican leaders expect Buchanan to actually caplUie the nomination or General Motors are oftentimes as competitive edge and an opponunifor Bush to step aside, as Johnson did in 1%8.
misleading as many of the utter- ty to restructure their production
But Buchanan's strong showing makes it unlikely that the Bush cam- ances we use to hear from conles- and marketing in order to catch up
paign will be able to be rid of Buchanan before the June 2 pnmary ill Cal- tants on the "To Tell the Truth" with their foreign competitors. At
Ifornia as it had originally hoped.
.
about this same time, American
show.
.
In response to a number of calls auto manufacturers were also colEDITOR'S NOTE - Tom Raum covers national Republican politics and letters I have received from lectively demanding that, if the
for The Associated Press.
constituents echoing many of the Japanese wanled to sell automobile
same accusatory refrains we hear products in the U.S ., then they
from the Lee lacocca's of the sh~uld build production plants in

ME;?

WHY I'M '!tJUR
~EN&gt;ITIVE

'90s KIND OF

(I KNEW TY~
WA~GUILTY
F~ lliE

START) GUY.

•

IND.

~~~IW~~~l~
~~i~

W.VA.

~
..,6Th
-

Show.,. T-srol!lfs

"Don't give me that 'let's talk about substantive issues' baloney. "

Ice

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Sunny

Pt. Clouttt Clpudy

~~

0~992

.

·~"'.:

.A.

;-,,,

Aceu-Weather, Inc.

Low 25-30 north to the mid-30s
south. Highs 45-55. Sunday and
Monday, mainly fair north with a
chance of rain south. Lows from
the mid-20s nonh to the mid-30s
extreme south. Highs in the 30s
nonh and mainly 40s south.

South Central Ohio
Tonight, variable cloudiness.
Low in the mid-30s. Friday, mostly
sunny. High 55-60.
Extended roecast
Saturday through Monday:
SalUiday, a chance of rain, possibly slarling as snow in the nonh.

.----Local briefs...---.
Continued from page 1

Roush charged with shoplifting
On Wednesday afternoon, Kimberly S. Roush, 31, .of
Ravenswood, W.Va. was cited to Meigs County Court on a charge
of peuy theft. The charge followed a shoplifting incident at Big
Wheel.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, a deputy
from the department was in the store when the female left the
premises. The deputy was notified and spotted the suspect leaving in
a vehicle on U.S. Route 33. The individual sigr.ed a statement
admitting the theft of a brassiere and two pairs of curtains.

Johnston charged with possession
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed on Thursday
ll)orning that Darrin K. Johnston, 26, Langsville, was cited to Meigs
County Coun for possession of a controlled substance after being
stopped by a deputy on Briar Ridge Road on Thursday evening.
Johnston will appear in Meigs County Coun next week.

EMS units answer four calls
Four calls for assistance were answered on Wednesday and early
on Thursday by units of Meigs County Emergency Services.
At3:40 p.m. on Wednesday, Pomeroy unit went to Hiland Road
for Mildred Arnold, who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
At 11:53 p.m., Middlepon squad went to Stale Route 7. Edna
Crisman was treated at the scene.
On Thursday at 3:17a.m., Tuppers Plains unit was sent to a ftre
on Success Road at the Auvil propcny, and at 7:19 a.m., went 10 a
rekindle at that propeny.

The record high temperanu-e for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 68 degrees in 1891. The
record low was minus 9 in 1885.
Sunset will be at 6:12p.m. Sunrise Friday at7:17 a.m.
Around tbe nation
A new storm moving into the
Pacific Northwest early today
dumped rain on Washington state
and drizzle on San Francisco. Snow
whitened some pans of the Plains.
More showers were expected
later today in Nonhero California
and southwestern Oregon-. Snow

Thomas panicipated in the case
WASHJNGTON (AP) Clarence Thomas, writing for a before President Bush nominated
federal appeals court panel, says him 10 the high coun, and justices
the federal government must stop may finish work on decisions after
giving special preference to women they are promoted.
A legal newspaper reponed last
in awarding broadcast licenses .
Thomas, a member of the fall that the panel had reached its
appeals court before joining the conclusion but delayed announcing
Supreme Coun last November, said it to avoid controversy during
Wednesday that gender-based pref- Thomas' confirmation hearings.
erences aimed at giving women a Judge James Buckley, who joined
bigger role in broadcasting uncon- in the panel's 2-1 decision, called
stitutionally discriminates against for an investigation to find the
source of a possible leak.
men.
Fi{e of the appeals court's II
judges signed a brief slatemenl supporting that suggestion.
The Legal Times of Washington
The Meigs Soil and Water Con- in September reported, correctly,
servalion District Ladies Auxiliary
is offering for sale tree packets and
ground cover plants.
"'
This year they have quantity
Continued from page 1
bvundl~s ~f 25 seedlings for $7. $74!,300.
aneues ,or sa1e th1s year illclude
It was in !989 that the U. S.
white pine, scotch pine and Col- Corps of Engineers declared the
orado Blue Spruce.
erosion problem at the lagoon sile
Other packets available include an emergency. At that lime it was
Canadian Hemlock, 10 seedlings put at the top of a list of erosion
for $6: Japanese Snowball, 10 problem areas along the Ohio
seedling for $7 or five seedlings for River, according to Middleport
$4; while flowering dogwood, 10 Mayor Fred Hoffman, and the
seedlings for $6.
Corps made a $500,000 commitFruit tree packets are also avail- ment to corrective work.
able conlaining two each of ConThrough efforts of the Meigs
land and Smoothie apples for $20. · County Commissioners and MidFor those bare and sleep banks dlepon viUage officials, a $I99,300
that cannot be mowed, there is imminent threat grant was obtained
crown vetch ground cover. It is from the Ohio Department of
available in 72 plants for $2 I. Development.
Crown vetch is a perennial legume
Another $30,000 was awarded
with dark green foliage and pinkish to the village by the Commissionlavender to white clusters of flow- ers from the Community Developers. Plants obtain a height of 12 to ment Block Grant Program, and the
18 inches. It blooms from June to village put in $12,000 toward the
September and reproduces from tolal cost.
both seeds and underground roots.
Work on the project began in
Other ground cover plants avail- early December and was completed
able include English Ivy, this week.
Pachysandra, and Purple Winter
Creeper, 50 plants for $15.
The American Wildflower packet conlains one ounce of seeds for
$2.50, This packet will seed 250 Clarence W. Smith
square feet.
For -further information, or to
Clarence W. Smith, 73, of Midorder, contact the Meigs Soil and dleport, died Thursday, Feb. 20,
Water Conservation District Office 1992 at Veterans Memorial Hospiat 992-6647 or write 33101 Hiland tal.
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Arrangements
will
be
All orders must be prepaid and announced by Fisher Funeral Home
be in by March 10.
in Middlepon.

Packets fior Sale

Lagoon

Area deaths

Permits required to build a
court news-new home: health department --Rutland
Twelve forfeited bonds and four $49; Richard Hurt, $52; William
Area residents who plan to build
At the time the land owner is
were fined in the court of Harmon, $55; Ronald Fenton, $55;
a home, install a mobile home or made aware of the names of others
Rutland
Mayor Edward Martin and Anila Shaver, $51. Forfeiting a
move a home to a new location sewage system installers who are

have been advised by the Meigs
County Health Department to
check there rust.
Before starting to work on a
site, a permit must be obtained
from the health department to
install a private sewage system.
By purchasing a permit to inslall
a home sewage srstem, a land
owner is assured o a site visit by
health department person'nel for
recommendations regarding the
most feasible type of system for a
given location. The inspections are
done by registered sanitarians.

registered with the health department The depanment requires registered inslallers to be bonded and
the bond protects the property
owner against negligence and poor
workmanship.
Failure to purchase a required
permit before installing a .home
sewage system is a violation of
stale and local laws and may result
in a propeny being dis.ilpP.roved if
the owner wiShes to sell the properly. It may subsequently result in
legal action being initiated for violations, the health department
spokesman said.

House may vote next week
on long-studied health carebil.l

On balance, Clinton may not be so bad
1 don't have much of a fleshed- to avoid having to either lake his requirements, smoke cigareues
out opinion of Bill Clinton yet. I chances on being drafted, or to fol- painted with iodine hoping to damlike some of his policy positions, low his conscience and formally age their lungs, shoot toes or fiJ,
still ha~e no idea how it fell to
and 1 like the fact that he lets you resist the draft because he was bit- gers off.
stand in their shoes and I certainly .
. know exactly what those positions terly opposed .to the war.
Vietnam was a war that exhaust- would not presume to judge them ·
areand why.
"Alter I signed the ROTC 'Ictlcr ed h tho h
f
f for trying to -avoid the draft. I( ·
fintent I began to wonder whether
t e ug t processes 0 a11 0
O
I don-'t know if he had a 12-yw
us, especially men of conscription ' there's any dishonor tn n:tY eyes,
extramarital affair with Gennifer the compromise 1 had made with age. News accounts brought us it's for the guy who avotded the
Flowers or not, but I do thin-k it myself was not more objectionable what seemed like an endless march draft any way he could while the
makllS a difference in what kind of than the draft would have been,"
f
A ·
·
h
.nton wrote. "B""ause 1 had no o young mencan men mto t e war was going on, and then 20
Cll
leader he would make. If he did do
~
t grind th 1
v_·tetn am, and years later began to beller like the
•
'tnterestt'n· the ROTC program t'n rmeath
er a was
i~ even if he as m love with the
artt
'
1 ··•
1
0 r e vague, un
·
c~ a,... goa s gung ho-est Marine who ever
woman, he has the JUdgment
of a t'tself, and all I seemed to have 'that
changed to suit the
public rela- missed the opponunity to napalm a
shrub. Bur we don't know· a lot done was protect my'self from tions aims of the war's proponents. bazillion vc; and sure wishes he
about that story because the "jour- harm.'' Chnton dropped out of These were not young men who coulda been there but - darn th~
nalists" who related it can't be ROTC and took his chances.
·would have refused service in a luck! -he wasn't in the war.
'
truste~. Sometimes they c~me
Clinton~lucked out. When the conflict like World War 11. They
What'! saw in Bill Clinton's letclose -to the truth and so111eumes draft system was changed to. a loth
h·
d
th
vft
tery, he drew a h.igh number. And I. were men w o saw t etr young let wi!S the record of a young man
•
they don t, an 1 ey "''ow 'the
lives being sacrificed for • purpose who studied his conscience in a ,
: difference they don't care. , '
guess if this were an ethics class· qo one could make them ~nder- .· horrendously difficult time an4 ;
· But! do know this abotit·Bill where students were graded on stand '*ause tbe explainers didn't decided ro take his lulnps if be had ' '
Clinton: I lite hir/1 better
bow closely the'y adhered to the have any answers themselves.
to: lfl were him, I might've'leaked ; :
than I liked him last week
~tialions of philosophy, we'd have
It was horrible enouah to wait it to the press myself.
• :
of lite leiter thai's been 11 ·· ' birn to score him better than war with lite men we loved 10 see what
NEWSPAPER ;
. (C)1992 .
so much grief from· Olhcr comers,. protesters who refused to even reg- hand fate would deal them, but I EN'IERPRISE ASSN.
It's not !hall aarec or clila8Re with Jster for the draft. But·on a scale of
the position he took on tbe subject conscienco-follo-.yiQg, Clinton is a '
of the letter, the Vieinam Wu, bjit notch up on t_hose w~o decided,
.
. :
because during an IJOIIIzinl dme· · raJher thari acu~ly resllt the draft.
·
By The Aaocla!ecl Press
,
:· •
for young men he ullimlecly decid· . to do lllythinB thor, oould to get a
-T(lday il Thursday, Feb. 20, ~51st day of 1992. There are 315 days · :
ed not to take the easy way out.,
deferment - go .to ~bool ot ...ve left in the year.
.:
Wbat Clin1011 said in,thc lettc'lto c¥dren for no oiber re&amp;$1ln bUt to "·', Tollafs Highlight in HistorY:
.
, , .
his ROTC comibaadCr Iii ·)969 wlls wm .the defermen\, become tpo
Two hundred years *io, on .Feb. 2P 1792 Prcsiden't Wasliington· · •
tlta1 'he had enrolled in ROTC only skinny to meet the , physical Signcd· an .actc~e~Ung the U.S. Post'Offic~
'
• .

Sarah Overstreet

'

&lt;

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - . ed 1.2 million Ohioans who either
The House is expected to vote next can't afford it or buy it at any price.
Rep. Wayne Jones, D-Cuyahoga
.,eek on .a bill that ·could make
Falls,
gave that characterization of
health care available 10 an esdmathis bill's prospects Wednesday as it
emerged from the House Select
The Daily Sentinel
Committee on Health Care Reform
(USPS ~13-980)
by a 9-3 vote.
·
Publiahed every aft.ernoon, Monday
However, opponents disputed
t.htvUgh Friday, lll Court St., Pomeroy,
his assessment. They said the bill is
Ohio by Lhe Ohio Valley Pub1iahing'
seriously
under-funded and will do
CompanyfMultimodia Ine., Pomeroy,
Ohio 467691 Ph. 1192·2156. Second dau
little to conlain rapidly rising costs.
pottlp paid a\ POI'I'tC1"')',phio.
Jones said.while his bill relies in
part
for funding on a I percent, .
Member: The A11ociated Prela, Inland
Daily Prell A11odation and the Ohio
company-paid fee on insurance
Newapapar ' A11otiaUon, National
premiums, curbs on provider costs
AdverUalng Reprcaent.alivc, Branham
New1p1per Salea, 733 Third Avenue,
and other savings can make it
N"" YOrk, New Y0r1110017.
work.
.
"The hospitals already are
POSTMASTER: Sond oddre11 ch&gt;ngco to
Th'e Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
spending $600 million a year to
Pomeroy, OHio 45769. '
take care of the indigent," said
8UB8CRIPI'ION RATES
Jones, whose bill places fee limits
By Carrier or Motor Ro.te
One Week ................................ .. .........11.60
on certain types of care provided .
One Month ...... ........ ...........................l6.95
by hospitals to patients insured
One Yoor.................................... - .. ..18:1.20
· under the bill's provisions.
BINGLE COPY
PRICE
Rep. William Batchelder, RDoily......................................... -.25 Cento
Medina, said the insurance fee,
which would raise about $tOO.milSubocribm nol deoiring to pay lhc comer MIY remit ht advanc:o dirott 1.0 The
lion aye., is "grossly illlldequate.
C.ottlootlo Dolly Tribune on • 3.6 or 12
That's probably about 10 percent
month bill1. Cnldit will be liven taniar
each week.
of the amount needed."
. .
Batchelder, whose comments
NO aublcriptjon• by mail pcrmiLtL'Cl in
are• where horne c:anier aorvlce ia
Ccltoed the concerns bf hospital and
avaflable.
insumnee iqJiestlltatives who testiMo118uboerlptlono
fied Wednesday, also disputed
IMhle Gallla County
13 Wooll~ ........................................l21.8-l
Jones' claims of savings. .
1111 w............................................. l43.16
"I'm not IIUIC this bill docs anygw..............................................~S-~.76
lhins to conaol costs. It's going to
O.teldo Ooltlo c..nl)'
ta w.u.......................................... w.~ create demands on rop of demanda
il8 w.............................................141!.150
n w.a ......................................... ,l88.40. for services. Cosu will go upi' he

Tuesday nighL
Forfeiting bonds all on speeding
charges were Brady Gilbert, Jr.,
$55; Michael Thompson, $50; Darren Majher, $48; Martha Crawley,
$50; Sh~ron Smith, $54; Roger
Sours, $64; Ruby Coughenour,

Court news
Cases processed
An action for dissolution of
marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Coun by
Jl,alph Edward Cundiff, Cheshire,
and Shelia Darlene Cundiff, Rutland.
A divorce action has been filed
by Kimberly Lee Taylor, Rutland,
agai.nst Gregory A. Taylor,
Pomeroy.
.
Dissolution actions have been
granted in the court to Todd
C!:uistopher Johnson and Gina
Nicollohnson, and to Robert E.
Buck and Debra K. Buck.
Marria~e llceDces
A mamage license has been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Coun 10 William Grant Hysell, 28,
and Drema Joy Owens, 25, both of
Mason, W.Va.

$262 bond was David Lilly, II,
speeding and reckless operation.
Fined in the court were Walter
Haggy II, $75 and costs, expired
license plates; Manin Shuler, $200
and costs, FRA (insurance) suspension; Billy Doczi, $50 and costs,
traffic vtolation; and William
Durst, $51 and costs, speeding.

Hospital news
· Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- Tim Starr, Reedsville and Flossie
Moeler, Cheshire.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Frances Young, Mary Bentz and
Charles Blake.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Feb. 19 - Kara
Adkins, JiU Caroll, Daphne Gilkey,
Benjamin Grey, Terry Grogan,
Lewis Hommes, Jaderanne
Karcher Jessica Kearns, William
McManis, Thomas Phillips and
Vera Snedaker.
Births Feb. 19 - Mr. and Mrs.
Nathaniel Johnson, Garry Huddleston, son, Penland

was lilcely in the higher elevations
ofldaho, Mon1ana and Wyoming.
Soggy Southern California,
which has borne the brunt of recent
PacifiC storms, was expected to be
spared.

Sunny skies were likely across
the Southeast, except for some
thundershowers in southern Florida. A low-pressure system was 10
bring snow to the Great Lakes.
Mild weather was forecast
across the Plains and in the Ohio
Valley.

Highs today were expected 10 be
in the teens and the 20s across the
Plains and around the Great Lakes:.
in the 30s and 40s in the Nonheast
and the OhioValley; and in the 50s ·
across much of the West and across
the nation's midsection. Highs in
the 60s were predicted across the :
nation's southern tier and in the 70s
in Southern California, the desen
Southwest, much of Texas and
Florida.
High temperalUie for the nation •
Wednesday was 88 degrees at •
Homeslead, Fla.

\.

that Thomas and Buckley had
voled to invalidate the FCC's gender-based affirmative action policy
and that Judge Abner Mikva had
dissented.
There was no explanation for
the five-month lag between the
newspaper's repon and the release
of the decision.
The Supreme Court in 1990

a

upheld, by 5-4 vote, the FCC pol· •
icy of giving preferences to minori- .
ties who apply for broadcast licenses. But that decision left unanswered whether a policy giving a
preference to women also was con- •
stitutional.
The appeals coun panel, led by ·
Thomas, said no.

----Meigs announcements---Revival slated
The Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church will hold revival Feb. 24
through March I at 7 p.m . nigh~y.
Miles Trout will speak Monday
and Norman Taylor will preach the
remainder of the revival. Paul Taylor, pastor. inviles the public.

money must be ptcked up by fl p.m.
that day. Further information may
be obtained by calling Terry Hayman at 843-5137 or Rose Carr at
985-4161.

Preaching and singing
The Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom will hold preaching
and singing on Friday al 7 p.m.
with David Dailey and the Daily
Family as well as other local talent.
Pastor Sieve Reed invites the public. Fellowship will follow.
Dance planned
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 and Ladies Auxiliary will
sponsor a round and square dance
on Friday from 8 to 11:30 p.m.~~
the post home. Music will be provided by the Happy Hollow Boys.
The public is inviled to auend.

Dance class
The Middleport Arts Council
will offer beginning tap dancing
classes, taught by Barbara
Lawrence beginning Wednesday,
March 4. The fee is $20 per month.
The ftrst class will be beld from
4:30-5:15 p.m. for participants ages
five and six years old. The second
class will be held from 5:15-6 p.m.for ages seven and eight years old.·
The third class will be held from 66:45 p.m. for nine and ten-yearolds.
For further information or to
register call992-3282 or 992-5696.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

Workshop pl~nned
There will be a baseball and
softball umpiring class al Southern
High School on Wednesday, Feb.
26, at 7 p.m. The class is open to
the public and funher information
may be obtained by calling 9492448 in lllc evening.

" ..~: :;.:·

BAMGAIII AATIN(£5 SAT-Y. SU!IJAY ,

IARG.IIIN N!GIIi TUESDI'IY ,

Seniors to meet
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will hold their regular monthly meeting on Tuesday at noon at
the townhouse. All members arc
urged 10 at1end and there will be a
potluck dinner. Inclement weather
will cancel the meeting.
Prom dress exchange
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 and Ladies Auxiliary will
sponsor a prom dress exchange on
SalUiday, Feb. 29 from 9 to II a.m.
at the post home.
A fee of $1 will be charged for
each dress. Unsold dresses or

Domino's Knows
You'll Low Our
Pepperoni

Plua Feast

How You Uke Piua At Home.

WEST MAIN STREET- 992·2124

-------,
1 lARGE
1

_ _ ..,. ... iiiiio _ _ _

2 MEDIUM

PEPPERONI PIZZA I

PEPPERONI PIZZAS
AND 4 COLAS
:

,ITH 4 COLAS

·sa.99 :

8.99
:
I
....
............. _,
-- -..... __....,.__ ....-........ I
--------.1.---

I
,.............
~ ·-~~ ............................ I
....
....
....
.
.............
.
.
.._ .
... . .......... ...... ...... ............ . . .. I
-

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

. . ... .

..... A ... .

... . .

_,...., ...__.,

,

~

~ .::-~
, u..-::: :::::::: ;:~:...~.":"''-"

~

-

I

....

FRIDAY NIGHt' BUFFET
SPE£IAL .
4 ....... p....
This Week's Bufiet Special

SEAFOOD BUFFET

•a•• . .

'

PEl PERSON

•

Have your parties or get togethers catered.
Call 949-2324 for Information.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goldstar
Samsung
So11deslgn
Ze1lth
FunI

~lV'honlc

Phdco
Emerson
Shintom

Multi Tech
Scott
Sylvula

RCA

Craig

MagHYOll•

GE

'

Rhapsady
Hotpoi•t
JC Pe••Y ·

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES
I

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
391 WIST MAIN STREET

992·3524

said

''
I

-!)

------Weather-----

Now that car sales are down,·
now that the American automotive ·
manufacturers arc reponing record
losses and are laying off thousands
of workers, the big three arc colleclively blaming their fale on others ·
and appealing to our country's consumers to stop buying forctgn cars :
and start buying American made
cars.
While I can empathize with this
objective, here is the rub, how does
one know if they are rruly buying :
an
American-made
automobile ... surely not by the
name. Today's Buick Rcgals arc
made in Ontario, Canada; Ford's
Festivas in Seoul, Korea; Chrylcr's
LeBarons in Toluca, Mexico; Handas Accords in Marysville, Ohio;
Nissan's Sentras in Smyrna, Tennessee; Toyota's Camrys in
Georgetown, Kentucky; and
Mazda's new mid-sized sedan. the
626, in Flat Rock, Michigan. To
add to this confusion many of the
U.S. brand cars and rrucks assembled in the U.S. contain a majority
of foreign produced parts.
Perhaps it is time for the world's ·
automotive manufacwrers 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 the United
States and identify those vehicles
that are rruly and totally American
made b ull' o e car length for
ward. ,r~ ~ i~ today's mark.; _
place there would be few cars that
could do so.

110,day ID
• hI•Story

Rain Flurries

--

Via Associated Preu GrapDcsNet

i=

&lt;

By The Associated Press
A weak low pressure system
will pass north of Ohio tonight
causing a slight chance of rain or
snow in northern Ohio again.
Southern Ohio will be under partly
cloUdy skies. Low temperatures
will be in the 30s.
Friday will bring partly to mostly sunny skies along with milder
weather. Highs wiU range from the
low 40s nonh to the lower 50s in
the south. Normal highs are in the
mid 30s north to the lower 40s
south.

Thomas says female preference policy unconstitutional

·r

••

a a

•I Columbus I 48• I

Cong. Clarence Miller;
this country. When one looks at the
figures ten years later Detroit clearly got the results it was hoping for.
During this time the exchange
rate for the yen against !he dollar
dropped from 240 to 128, with the
prices for Japanese automotive
products increasing dramatically.
Likewise the voluntary restrictions
on the number of vehicles that
could be irnponed had the effect of
pushing the prices for Japanese
made cars·and rrucks even higher.
Las~y. the call for investment in
the consrruction of American manufacturing plants was more than
met by the Japanese. According to
a recent University of Michigan
study, during this time, Japanese
automobile companies invested
some 19 billion dollars in America
based manufacturing facilities and
presently employ some 102,000
Americans at these plants.
How were the American
automakers doing during much of
this ten year period ... apparently
very well. In 1983 the combined
profits of the big three (G.M., Ford
and Chrysler) were $6.3 billion.
This climbed to $9.8 billion in
1985 and peaked at $11.2 billion in
1988. Yet what did Detroit do with
all these record profits ... apparen~y
very little in the way of improving
their capacity to compele. Most of
the earnings· were directed at nonautomotive ventures, thereby fOregoing the golden opponunity they
had been provided to help level the
playing field .

PA.

IMansfield I 46° I•

Some officials contend the
coven plan merely provides food
and medicine for the Kurds and
others in Iraq. But, of course, such
mercy missions hardly need to be
covertly cloaked. What seems to be
going on behind the headli~es is a
fonuitous confluence of policy and
politics.
, . .
Policy: Iraq s dtsstdents - the
Kurds, the Shiites. even some of
the ruling Sunnis- no doubt were
skeptical of intermediaries llearing
word that Bush would suppon their
move to topple Saddam. They
heard that once before, only to discover Bush was more talk than
action . Now the deluge of leaks
tells the would-be coup-makers
(and Saddam and the world) that
Bush has formalized his intentions.
The leaks, thus, become part of a
policy - waging a War of Nerves
against Saddam.
.
Politics: Many Amencans who
voted for Bush in 1988 are unhappy that he let Saddam remain in
power. The leaks are a way of
telling Amencans that Bush.
remains on the case, workmg m
semi-secrecy to finish the job.
If Bush 's plan is to follow the
War in the Gulf with a War of
Nerves and lit~e more, chances for
success seem slim. Hopefully, he
knows more, and plans more, than
he's telling . For the world will .
know no peace as long as Saddam
slays in power. He thumbs his nose .
at the United Nations inspection :
teams just for the perverse spon of
it, in his barely disguised quest to
join the nuclear club. He'll surely
succeed someday, and live to
wreak nuclear blackmail - if he· s .
allowed to survive.
Somewhere, old Bill Casey
must be beaming. Surely, the
notion has crossed the late CIA
chicrs mind: that young whippersnapper, George Bush, may be
planning to give Saddam an October Surprise of his very own. ·
(C) 1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Will the real American-made car please pull forward

Berry's World

Mild weather expected to return to Ohio :

OH 10 Weather

"

..

\

POMEROY, 'OHIO

�Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, February 20, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 20, 1992

Will Southern, Oak Hill finish season as SVAC co-champs?
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
0 VP Stiff Writer
h seems filling that the final
Southern Valley Athletic Confer·
ence boys basketball title race, like
last week's girls run for the roses,
will be decided in the association's
fmal week of action. It could end
up being decided Saturday, the
final day of conference play.
Conference co-leaders Southern
and Oak Hill, winners over Kyger
Creek and Southwestern, respectively, Tuesday night, will swap
their Tuesday night opponents Fritlily night (those teams are a comb.jned 7-24 overall and 3-22 in the
eonference) before ending regulars&amp;ason action Saturday night
against a pair of teams - one playing above the .500 mart {11-7
Eastern for Southern) and one
below the mark (7·9 North Gallia
tor Oak Hill) - that sport 7-5
marks in the conference.
Southwestern vs. Southern
.. Southwestern 's Highlanders,
losers of their last 27 SVAC
illmes, are long shots to do this,
eut if they can beat Southern in the
temadoes' final home game of the
season, they w1ll avoid a second
svaight winless season in confere~~ee play.
· · The Highlanders' most effecuve
weapons in this encounter are
Jun ior postman Chris Mandeville
(16.6 pts./garne), senior pomt guard
Adam Simpson (11.6 pts./game)
and junior guard/forward Jamie
Morse (10.4 pts./game). But in

order for these Gallians to be seriously competitive, the 6-foot-1
Mandeville will have to remember
how to score in the 30s (he has
done it twice this season), while
Simpson and Morse will have to
crank out 20 points each (Simpson's season high is 24 m a 76-66
loss to Eastern on Jan. 28; Morse's
high is 15 in a 74-48 loss to Hannan Trace on Dec. 20, 1991).
Southern's philosophy is to put
eight, nine or 10 men into the scoring column, which means that no
team can key heavily on one or two
players for any length of time.
Senior center/forward Roy Lee
Bailey (16.1 pts./game) spearheads
the Tornado attack, and semor
guard Jeremy Roush (12.3
pts./game) and junior guard/forward Michael Evans (11 .1
pts./game) look to pose as major
factors in Southern 's offens1ve
game plan.
But a cast of several, including
junior guard 'Mark Allen, senior
forward Josh Codner, senior guard
Scott Lisle, senior forward/center
Michael Russell and junior center
Russell Singleton, will be counted
on to prov1de some offense and
many breaths of fresh air to the
Racine attack that will need to keep
a steady pace for Saturday night's
road game agamst Eastern, a team
that is 7-2 on its home court this
season.
Kyger Creek vs. Oak Hill
Kyger Creek, as the rest of the
conference knows qu1te well, has a

..--Area sports briefs---.
Boat registration renewals available

major problem in the paint - lack
of height. But the Bobeats, in spite
of their record, have somewhat
made up for that deficiency in
offense from three-point range.
In Tuesday night's 80.59 loss to
Southern, the Bobcats sank 12
treys, as many as they has they had
in the previous two games against
Southwestern (eight) and Ironton
St. Joe (four). Phil Bradbury, the
Bobcats' 5-foot-10 senior center,
saw his points-per-game average
(now a team-high 17.2) remain virtually unchanged with his 17-point
effort (which included five tnfectas) against Southern following a
team and personal season-high 30point performance in KC's 59 -53
win over St Joe Saturday night
Kyger Creek, which also go t
four three-pointers from sophomore forward Paul Covey (10.9
pts./game in 16 games; game-high
2 1 points vs. Southern) Tuesday
night in addition to 15 points (three
three-pointers) from sophomore
frontman Chris Crace (11.6
pts./game), will need to keep up the
good work from outside against an
Oak Hill squad that is capable of
doing it inside and out.
The turrets on most modem battleships and cruisers have three
guns each. In Oak Hill's 98-49
pounding of Southwestern Tuesday
night, the Oaks had three big guns
- senior Mike Turner and juniors
Gene Hall and Benji Lewis (16.4
pts./game) - boom ing out 20
points each. Turner, a 5-foot-11
forward, canned four three-pointers, and Lewis had on e, while
many of Hall's shots undoubtedly
carne in the pain~
Of course, the Bobcats can't
afford to forget about 6-foot-7

junior Chris Simpson, the conference's tallest center. But the best
way Bradbury, who will more than
likely be returned to his old center
position, can try to keep Simpson
(14.1 pts./game) out of the Oaks'
offensive flow is to do as the
Philadelphia 76ers' Charles
Barkley does to redwoods like San
Antonio's David Robinson and
New York's Patrick Ewing - use
his lower center of gravity on
Simpson's legs and his quickness
to force the big man to put the ball
on the floor.
In this circumstance, Simpson
can help himself by kicking the ball
out to senior forward Bill Potter
(11.1 pts./game), who can drive
inside or pull up anywhere outside
the paint to shoot, Hall, Turner or
senior guard Devin Hale.
North Gallia vs. Hannan Trace
Hannan Trace center Dave Pol·
ing had a beuer night on the boards
(IS grabs) in Tuesday night's 5653 win over Symmes Valley than
he d1d willl the net, as each of his
three pOints in that affair came
from the foullme.
Considering that North Gallia
pivotman Kevin Hunt (17.4
pts./game) racked up 37 points in
Tuesday ni ght' s 84-69 win over
Eastern, Poling (11.7 pts./gamc)
had better maintain his consistency
with his reboundtng while improving offensively, or it may end up
being a long night for him and the
rest of the Wildcats.
The Ptrates, who are 0-6 in contests following victories this season, have yet another chance to discard the albatross of not being able
to put two wins together, but Trace
guarantees to make them work for
it.

Both trams are fairly eve nly
matched on the front line, where
Pirates Rob Canady (6-2, jr.) and
Darin Smith (6-0, sr.) will set up
shop with Hunt (6-4, jr.) against the
Wildcats' combo of Chad Swain
(6-2, sr.), Brace (5-11, sr.) and Poling (6-2, jr.). The team that takes
control inside will be the one that
wants to win the most
Ln the backcourt, juniors Charles
Peck (15 .8 pts./gam e) and Jim
McClure will be matched against
traffic cop Brian Unroe (7.5
pts./game) and sophomore shooting
guard Shawn Cox (7 .6 pts./game),
with Smith (11 .8 pts./game, 10
games) playing point guard/power
forward.
The Wildcats need continued
production from the outer limits
from senior forward Jimmy Brace
(12.1 pts./garne), who canned six

PF
1229
1278
1240
1184
989
983
1058
1041

(Conrerence)
Southern ............ 10 2 910
Oak Hill ............ 10 2 865
Hannan Trace ...... 9 4 875
Eastern ................ ? 5 813
North Gallia ........ 7 5 807
Symmes Valley .. .3 9 101
Kyger Creek.. ...... 3 9 646
Southwestem ....... O 13 700
TOTALS ..........49 49 6317

PA
1038
1134
1255
1240
1092
1089
1155
1349

from beyond the arc against Valley
Tuesday night to expand h1s lead m
the three-point shooting race to 12
shots. Kyger Creek's Bradbury and
Southern's Roush are tied for second with 34 each.
Unroe, who has hit for double
figures only six times th is season,
including a 13-point, 12-rebound
effort against Valley Tuesday
nigh~ will need to do 1t in consecutive games- something the 5foot-11 senior hasn't done this season. As expected, North's defense
will have to find a way to contain
llle slippery Swain, who will enter
the final varsity game on the Wildcats' home court w1th a 17.2
points-per-game avcrnge.
Eastern vs. Symmes Valley
Can Eastern forward Jeff Durst,
a 5-foot-11 senior who has been
(See SVAC on Page 5)

homa State, then No. 2, and IndiBy CHRIS SHERIDAN
ana, lllen No. 4, were upset.
Associated Prt$s Writer
Two Wednesdays ago, No. I
Here's good news for the
nation's top I 0 college basketball Duke, then-No. 2 Otlahoma State
tea ms: There's only one more and then-No. 5 Arkansas 'were
Wednesday left in February.
defeated.
" It 's exciting to get three
Wednesdays have been brutal so
far lllis month for the top I0 teams straight Wednesday upsets over
'n the AP basketball poll, and this three ranked teams," said Colorado
week was no different. No. 3 coach Joe Harrington after his team
Kansas, No. 4 North Carolina, No. upset Missouri 77-60. The Buf·
8 Oklahoma State and No. 9 Mis- faloes' other upsets were wins over
Oklahoma State on Feb. 5 and
souri all lost
Just one Wednesday ago, Okla- Oklahoma on Feb. 12.

By The Associated Press
fouled with 12 seconds left and hit
Ohio University put the ball both shots.
back in Lewis Geter's hands and he
Neither team led by more than
helped put the team back in the six points the whole game, and the
running for the Mid-Am erican game was tied nine times.
Conference championship.
"OU played a great game, "
Geter scored seven of his 32 Ball State coach Dick Husacker
points in overtime Wednesday said. "They were very inspired.
night as Ohio beat Ball State 73-70 Geter's a great player. He hit the
in Athens. Ohio.
game-winner and that's what great
"We were not efficient late in players do."
the game, but then we got Lewis
In Kalamazoo, Mich., time ran
Geter back in the offense," Ohio out for Western Michigan.
coach Larry Hunter said. "We
Western (17-(j) led 10-4 before
were fairly efficient in the over- Miami scored 13 straight points to
ume. We wanted the ball in Geter's go up 17-10 with 8:48 left in the
hands. No one else seemed to want half.
it."
The Broncos tied the score at 40.
Geter hit an 18-footer for a 68- with 11:13 to play . Western went
66 lead with 2:05 left in overtime. ahead lllree times, the Last on DarBut Jeermal Sylvester and Keith rick Brooks' bank shot to make it
Stalling hit free throws for anomer 48-47 with 6:50 remaining.
tie. The Bobcats took the lead for
But Miami scored eight straight
good 71 -68 on Geter's three-point to go up 55-48 with 4:55 left. The
shot with 18 seconds left.
Broncos scored four points over the
The loss left Ball State in a first- final1 :15, but Western's Last point
place tie in the MAC at 8-3 with was a Jim Havrilla free throw with
Miami of Ohio. Ohio U. moves to no time on the clock.
"Western's kids played hard
8-4, tied for third with Western
today, and so did ours," said
Michigan.
Miami also won a close game Miami coach Joby Wright "Some
Wednesday, beating Western of our young men stepped up, like
Michigan 64-63. Bowling Green Mike Williams and David Scott."
defeated Toledo 78-64, and Kent They shared the !three-point run.
beat Central Michigan 83-76.
Scott finished with 13 points
Nate Craig hit both ends of a 1- and Williams had 12.
and-1 to tie the game at 64 for Ohio
Western coach Bob Donewald
(16-7 overall) in regulation.
praised Williams' all-around play.
In overtime, Jamie Matthews
" I thought (Mike) Williams did
pulled the Cardinals to 71-70 with a great job for them, offensively
two free throws . But Geter was and defensively," Western coach

(Reserves· SVAC only)
Team
W L PF PA
Southern ......... ... l 2 0 693 412
Eastern .............. 10 2 568 468
Symmes Valley ... ? 5 533 547
Oak Hill ........ .. ....6 6 515 522
Kyger Creek ....... J 8 422 485
Hannan Trace ......3 9 501 593
North Gallia ....... .3 9 432 545
Southwestem...... J 10 470 562
TOTALS .......... 48 48 4134 4134

698
Weekend action
699
Friday - Kyger Creek at Oak
808 H1ll ; Southwes tern at Southern·
804 North Gallia at Hannan Trac e;
797 Eastern at Symmes Valley
769
Saturday - Soulllern at East759 ern; North Gallia at Oak Hill;
983 Symmes Valley at Kyger Creek (all
6317 makeups)

Tomn.to at Detroi.t, 7::B p.m.
N.Y. Rangen 11 N.Y. lslandcrs, 7 35
pm

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AllanUc Dlvlllon

Ttam

DaVId Grindstaff, a member of the Southern Athletic Boosters
Club, announced that the Southern High School boys basketball
team will be sponsoring a men's independent basketball townarnent
scheduled for Saturday, Feb. 22 and Sunday, Feb. 23.
The entry fee is $100 per IO-man roster. Trophies w1U be awarded to lirst- and second-place teams, and there will also be ftrSt- and
second-place sponsor trophies to the champion and the runner-up.
For more infonnation, please call 949-2025 (Racine).

New Yod

Ch.le~go

M-G-M membership banquet
scheduled for February 27

647

23
'I7
28

.551
48 1
.462

30

.423

34

.346
2AS

40

New Jersey at Chica ao. 8:35 p.m.

4l
85
9S
II 5
iSS
21

Friday's games
Minncsot• ttN.Y..Rangm, 7 35 p.m.
New Jersey 11 WiMipcg. 8:35p.m
lol Angeletat Ctlguy, 9:35pm
801tm at Edmonton. 9:35 p m.
Vancouver at San Ja&amp;e, 10.3S p.m.

Central Division
.........43 10 .811

Cleveland.--.... .J3 17

.66t

Detnnt .... ,

..... 30 23

.567

13

Allanoa ................. 26 26

.500

16 l

Milwaukee ... .. 25 26

.490

17

Indiana .............. 24 30

.444

. 17 35

327

195
15 5

Tu m

Uuh .............. 36 18
San Anwruo ...... .. 30 22
Hou.um. .. ...........26 26

.667
577
SOO

DcnYCr ... . ........ .19 32

Minnc&amp;ou ..... .. .. 10 41

DaUu ....... .. . IS 37

288
196

Paclnc Divblon
IS
IS
20
23
L.A . Clil'J'C" .... 27 2l
Seaule .................... 27 25
Sl(:rammto.... . 17 3.5

106
694
623
558
.519
519
327

Portland ... ... ... 36
Golden State ........ 34
Phoma ......... 33
~.A . Lakm .......... 29

20
2A5

: Turkey hunting seminar slated
The Southeastern Ohio and Hocking Valley chapters of the
National Wild Turkey Federation will host the Ohio State Turkey
Semt~
· • Calling Contest and Banquet March 7 and 8 at Hocking
;rechn SchoOl in Nelsonville.
,
.
.
F
speakers will be Dan Stuckey, !().time Ohio state calling champion and past grand national champion; Wayne Bailey the
"Dean" of America's turkey hunting: and Rob Keck or the NWTF.
For more information, contact Dave Graber at 373·9613 after 5
p.m.

.
. Point Pleasant league to sponsor
;, spring softball tournament ·

The flfSI David Bass SoftbaU Tournament will be held on April
II ~ 12 at Ordnlllce Elementary'' 10ftball field in Point Pl~t,
W.VL, according to information froln the Pobu Plaant Girls Softbell League, the event'uponJOr. ·
'
~ will be a $60 fee ~ ~ .egulation 10ru.DI required for
• re~. The doublo-elimmanon IOUIIIIIIIellt will have a mini·
m111 of 12 tt.ams ]llftici]llting. The l'lin date f&lt;¥ tile eveat will be

A 'I 25 llld 26.
.
""For'more ,_,
.
uuOI'IIIItiOn, caD Rick Hllllllld ll67S· 7618, Fred Sur. '
bqb at675·7441 &lt;¥Jim Steamaa67S-IS98.

,

;, .1? .....

Colorado 77, Miuawi 60

Ohio high school
basketball scores
Girls tour1111menl action
DIYI.IIon J
Benercrcek 51, Piqut 36
Cm. Mt He~lthy 64, Cin. Woodward
ll

Cin. Princetoo Sl, Cin . WiWow 41
llami\IM 68, Cin. W"""' Hilla 26

Mjamitburs 43, Trotwood-Madilon

36

WALES CON~RENCE

....
.,..,_ . -

.....'17

M......t ............ 3l 21
27 :14
Bu.tTalo..............,. 23 "JJ
lhnlmL.........! 16 29
Q»oboo ............... 13 ·31
ij01r&lt;1n ........ .... : ..

lilt liM! wnRRnHIY

-.7
8••

I

I

GAWPOUS

!&lt;
' W' L ' T, l'tL .r;FGA
\12.11 ' 7l :154196

9 , 63 201200

s· ss

v - . .......

31

tJ '

• .'

11 ~JUI3 '

!14 ~ ll 61 lU 2:t:l
•• 1 .......... 116, } 59 223232
WI [ .......... :M ,1 59 tl4112
Ca~pJ .:

, -~~-

. . . . !. 2U7

••1.
....- .......... 'u .a

-....-lilly.

llort -1::10 ..... "'7 ....... ......,
tolp.m.....,

9 !5 211211
• !0 1522'9

No!UIII2.

""'*"" 2. ..

,_,_,............. ,
..-.
.
St. !A 41!1llillll!&gt;ll 3

•i

...
I

u..... 69,1la1011 20
\l'arnn Lo&lt;ll33, Sberklln 21
'Wllntlnp "'\.Franklin 35

-~- ~

v-6.WIIDS.

..

•• • r •

•• .,. r
'·
Dl.... m
• , E.
Utllo Mlaml27
-villo0nb. 62,B.....W.!I
VollojoViow4l,Blanchol,..l9 ~
· 'I'

cro-ss.

.'

'

~

'
,

'

•.

iJI-IV

..

ofWbanb 61, MaDia Caoh. 37

,

1o

Basketball
NaUOft.IIBukttball Alloc:latlon
CHARLOITE HORNETS - T&lt;1dcd
RCl Chapman, 1\l&amp;rd. \0 the Wuhinatcn
Bullcu: fer Torn llammond•, farwud.

Football
Natlout FGOiblll Luaut

PmSBURGH STEELERS
Natned Owa Fulmnan conditioninJ coor--

dinaiOr•

Hockey

!'lollooll H..U, Leatua

MHL -

S\llptr~ded

.

Miko Oanncr,

New Yolk Ra"len Jiaht wina. Cor 1hrw
a•ms fer • ~Jor alaWna ptnalwy in •
...... Fob.l.
HARl'FORIJ WHALERS - Re-

eallcd ~ Yato, CCAIOr, Milk !lftia.
""" . and MioJ..t Plcanl, lei\ .....
fnrn
ri lhe AmOiiw! Hockey

;-;:;afiel4

Lea~

NE)V I.Bl&lt;SHY DBVILS

Rl&lt;lllcd

, am ~L!: wina. 11om ifli&lt;a .r lhe

"""""""
'I' LoOp. S... O.ad Erli:t-, pllo, "'Ullca.

'

PITI'SBURQH PIINDIJtNS - Troclod hoi CoirO)', d o f - "' lbo Lao
Aaaolol ~·•• I• Illf a.,chNo, • ,_..... Tndod Mot 11ocdll, ript
tolllafllih'"
~-R1ct
~ dab• ....~ Kjlll , ..........
dol m•; 11:.
,..ttood•,
II

w,.....

-·~- .. be-111«.

\

Wedanday~~

i l''

Miflllol49, Budtoyo Vall. 39
Macpnl6, W. Holm,. 53
N"' Laloal&lt;ill SO. Atwflder ~
Philo 4l,lndian Vall. 42
RivttV.U. 42, Col C.Salca l9 .
SPrina. Northwe1tem 43, B_eUc· .
foniiUio•36
' Union Loct153, Cmo1110nl6

Nl!n'II,J11•laloo '

Lao An~M......

ycu conUMlt.J;.

'

KJn&amp;l49, Lebanon 38

••'

lloJillt~

HOUSTON ASTROS - Aareed 10
wilh Stcn Finley, outfidler, on a
onc·ycer conblct.
NEW YORK METS - A8«&lt;d 1o
tenn• wi~h Joe V1tko, pilcher: Brook
Ford)'Ce. ~ICha; OlriJ DoMclt, infidd er; and Pst Howell, o~ tfi elder, on one·

I.CfmJ

Cin. St. U..W. 43. Clcnnm1 North·

La.ilowood 62, CoL Hlllley l7

Cbioaao. ........... ~ 21 ~2 1521f 174
- ........... 2l:ll
to•m
T.....to ............. , 21 ·3J ; 5 /(/ 167219 '

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK

, ..,.,o .....

'

DI"IIIOII D

....... 35

~· )~ 207lll
I I 62 ~ 206
10'~ 56 12112.26
II • 43 173199
1, 331n2l3

o...u................
St Ll&gt;ula _......... 27 ~

.......

l2

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Tuot

minor loaJUC CCiltriCl

Bcll.Uao 54, S&gt;&lt;ubonvillc 37
C111. Not\hWNI 67, Weltcrn Btown

.

.'
'

I

Nonhmont tn, Xenia S6

W, Ctrrollt.on 41, Mldcilctawn 39

s

... I. _

N"lonal Lei&amp;IH!
COLORADO ROCKIES - Aped
t.o tenns wilh Jamie Arendt, oudielder. on

Tocumach 67, Day. S&lt;ebbina 38

Ptlrkk Dlvlllon
Team
W L T pta. CF CA
N.Y. Rin&amp;M ..... '1119 4 78 236193
. W11hina1011 ........ 34 20
7l2lOI99
New Jmey ,_,.... 32 11 7 71 220 174
Piloablqh .......... 27 2A 7 6l 2l0 2Zl
N.Y. lallll&lt;!m .... :ll\26 7 5521 5229
Ailladclpllia .. ..... 21 2611 53 1711114

Umlt18

ft '$)

Te.u• 99, Tc.xu OuiiUan 77
Te1u A&amp;M 63, Baylor 61

In theNHL ...

11.99 sale P""
·S .25 per ptuq mlr's rebalt

17:~w

Southwest

HOUitm 11 Utah, 9·30pm.
PoRhnd 11 LA. Clippc:tl, 10:30 p m
PhoeniJ. II Golden St.aLC, 10:30 p.m

..

Baseball
Amtrlun Leaa~Jt
NEW YORK YANKEES - Acq~m cd Charlie Hayu, th ird bucman,
from lhe Philadclph11 Phillia 1.0 eomp!clC
the 1111. t uade inv olY1t18 Durin Ch•pm.
Dett&amp;Ji l~ Alan Milll , pitcher. for urignmcrn.

Oklahr;,na 70, Oklahoma SL 67

Far West

A.!- Dlrii\On

Auto racing
CHAMPIONSHIP AUTO RACING
TEAMS - AMoun~ official name of
nang series will be changed from CART
to hldyCat.

Wu.-Milwtukee 90, E. Michigan 74

Philadelphia at San AnlOrl.io, 8 p m.
MinnatU It Dallu, 1:30 p.m

UHIIMI wnRRAHIY

Transactions

Miarru, Ohio 64, W. · · an 63
Michia~n 9S, MiMelota
Ncbrask• 81, Kanat 79, OT
Ohio U. 73, Ball St. 7t, OT

Chatlono n llOMn at Hm!ord, 7:30
p.m.
lrnhana a~ New Jcney, 7 30 pm.
Dcnvtt a l WashlnJ1011. 7:30pm
Detroit II Orlando, 7:30p.m.
ChiCIJOilAtlanu, 7:30pm.
Sacnmento at Cleveland, 7:Je p.m.

......

Zanesville Rosctm!S &amp;0, Ft.Sher Calh.
61

Midwest

Friday's games

Rll.

Loveland 79, Cin Indian Hil164
N. Bend Ttylor 54, Cin. CAPE 45

BowlinJ Gnon 78, Tolodo 64
Day10n 73, Loyola, W. 59
Detrott 9S, Buffalo SS
Indiana I Ol, MidU&amp;an SL 73
Kmu• St. 64,Jow• SL s~
Ketn 13, Ccnt: Mitsan
76

Philadelpu&amp; at Hwtton, 1:)0 p.m
LA . LU:enat Seanle,IO p.m.

84~.
....

Oe. Univcnity 66, Garfield Hu 59
Fclicily 86, Bethel-Tate 45
Hudson Weatcm RCRtVC SO, Gilmour

Wabforcat 76, OIYl(iJOn 62

• Tonight's games

$1 09 sale pr!ce

Cin. Wyoming 67, Cm. Finneytown

45

N.C.·Ashcville 71, Mc:m:r66
Tcnneuec 98, Miui.aippi 86
Vi ' 'a 86, North Car01ina73
W~amiina 102, Gudner-Webb90

I
4
75
9.5
95
19.5

Cin. Rcadias 61, Cm Mtdeut 67,

Gahannl70 , WatkiN Memonal 48

Floridt 92. AubW"n II
Kcnwcky &amp;9, Miuill.ippi SL 84
LSU ?4, South Carolina! 56

Clenlud al Nett Yorkt 7:30p.m.
Miami at Milwat.ikoc, 8:30p.m

.........

56

Soulhem 69, OT

Uuh lii,Dallu96

Nil RILl IIi'

OT

CoU. of Chuleaton 72, Chulu.ton

L.A . Oil'!"" 12l, L.A. Lakm 94

um•

ll

Alabama 15, Vanderbilt 64

OoldenSta~ll7, 80&amp;lm !12
San Anlenio 113, Minne~&lt;U 103

Vour COS\

Boys-regular season
Cin. Ma nc:monl 62, Cin. Deer Park

Cilldcl 73, Samford 67

15 s

lndiana 129, Sacrammto l i S

tfter reba\e

WCAl&amp;ko 57, Fairview Puk 4J
WOO&amp;t.er 51, Alliance 44

South

Chatl.ouc 106, Denver 104

c"

Tomto49, EdiJon N. 42, OT
Vcnnilion 46, Loratn King 23

SLJohn'1 63 , SJIIcuse 62

New ]ency 106. Dctrtitl02
ChlcaJO Ill, Orlando 99
Walhin&amp;l&lt;lll I 03, Allanu 102, OT

·1,25Iper pUQ4
mlr's
1

s-

Temple f/J , SLBonavmwn: 60

Wednesday's scores

1 69 sale price

Ncwlmy 48, Pony 39
Obellin 38, Brooiaido 20
Orcaon Stritch SO, Tot Rogcn 47
Paineavillc Harvey 41, Conneaut 33
46, A"""' 42

Anny 62,Navy 54
Bucknell90, Colga,. 84
F«dho.m Sl,lloiy emu 75, or
Ooorgerown 60, Connecticua 58
L1 S.Ue 65, SL Pecer't 52
Maino 66, Hanford S4

S
9

373

Madam 67, Alhtabult 44
Medin• 56, Ocwuleaf 49
N. Canloa 71, Cand Pullon NW 42

East

GB

Oe Enevtew 67, Rcgina4 6
Oe. Kennedy !58, a c. Eut 2.4
Cleo Kina40, Clc. Science JS
F'udand• 68, Lorain Cleamew 64
Omev• S6, Ashu.bula Edgewood 36
Orand Vall. 47, Pymatuntin8 Vall. 31
Ke)'ltonc49, Wr.llinpn 45
Lodaemonl67, Flirport Ha.rdmg 31

Major college
basketball scores

I.S

Mldwst Dlvb)Ofl
W L
PeL

26

Quebec at Pinsburgh, 7 35 e-m

GB

WESTERNCONFERENCE

Division IV girls sectional
tournament dates announced

'

PeL

Ctwlotte ..

The fourth annual M-G-M membership banquet has been scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 27 at the American Legton Post23 in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
Mario Liberatore, the new M-G-M president, announced plans
for the banquet to include Marshall head football coach Jim Donnan
as the guest speaker.
The banquet will begin willl cocktails from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.,
willl dinner 10 follow from 7:30 to 8:30p.m.
Tickets for the event are $15 per person, and only 160 tickets are
· available. Those interested in making reservations are urged to contact Liberatore at 675-4480, Cliff Bellamy (675-2280), Mark Grove
(675-1121) or Jim Wilson (67545 19) (all Point Pleasant), or Terry
Chapman at 773-5830 (Mason, W.Va.).

:
:
•
:

W L
.. . ... 33 18

&amp;..lm .... ........... 29
PniladelFftit ....... 25
Miam1 ................. 24·
New Jc:ney ............ 22
Wuhillgtan ..........18
Orlando ............ 13

O.am¢on li,Deloho&lt; Jeffenon 49
Clc. Addam• 27, tic. Hcallh Cam:n

Tonight's games

In the NBA ...

The Division of Watercraft is offering a one day Ohio Boating
Basics class covering the fundamentals of boating, navigation and
safety. Successful completion of this course may result in savings of
10 pen:ent or more on boat insurance premiums. Sllldents completing this course will be invited to attend an on-the-water session
which will coves Launching, tra.ilering and doclcing procedures.
This class will be held Saturday, March 7, from 8 am. to 5 p.m.
at Ohio University in Athens. Those interested in registering may
contact Ohio University at 1-800-336-5699. ·
Questions concerning this or other boating safety classes should
contact the Division or Watercraft 31614-439-4076.

Bob Donewald ·said. "He got three
steals and baskets (on single plays).
Along with Jamie Mercuno, we
couldn't handle them. We tried to
fight our way all night." Mercurio
scored I0 of his 15 points in the
second half.
Bowling Green moved to 6-5 in
the MAC with its victory at hom
over Toledo (6-16, 3-9).
The Falcons took the lead for
good at 9-8 with 13:21 left in the
first half. They advanced to 18-9
with 9:55 to play on a 7-0 run and
led 36-23 at halftime.
Bowling Green (11-11 overall)
led by 63-40 wiQl 8:34 to go. The
closest the Rockets got m the sec.
ond half was 71-60 with 2:14 left
after they scored 20 of 28 points.
Kirk Whiteman had 16 points,
including three three-pointers. for
Bowling Green.
·
Tony Banks and Harold Walton
scored 21 apiece to give Kent State
its 83-76 win in Mount Pleasant.
Mich., and a 4·8 MAC record.
Central Michigan closed the gap
several times. But Kent (7-16 overall) never gave up llle lead and was
up 53-41 at the half.
The Chippewas (11-11, 5-7)
closed to 79-76 on a three-pointer
by Darian McKinney with I :13 to
play. But Mike Klinzing sank two
free throws, and Banks and Walton
each scored from tlie line before
the fmal buzzer.
McKinney led the Chippewas
with 18 points.

Scoreboard

Southern basketball team
to sponsor men's cage tourney

Boating class set for March 7

In games involving top 25
teams, Nebraska upset No . 3
Kansas 81-79; Virginia surprised
No. 4 North Carolina 86-73; No. 7
Indiana defeated No. I I Michigan
State 103-73; Oklahoma upset No.
8 Oklahoma State 70-67; Colorado
defeated No. 9 Missouri ?U:IJ; No.
13 Kentucky downed Mississippi
State 89-84; No. 14 Alabama beat
Vanderbilt 85-64; No. 24 St. John's
defeated No. 17 Syracuse 63-62;
No. 20 Michigan topped Minnesota
95-70; No. 25 Georgetown-edged

OU edges Ball State 73-70 in OT

The Ohio Deparunent of Natural Resources today announced
1992 boat registralton renewals are now available and can be purchased from registration agents located throughout the state. Regis·
trations purchased in 1992 are valid until March I , 1995.
ODNR 's Division of Watercraft is reminding boaters and agents
that the boat registration must be completed in full including title
number, boat length, and propuls1on information. Boat owners
should check their regtstration carefully. Inaccurate information on
registration form s should be corrected at the nearest watercraft
. agent's office.
The local boat registrahon agents are the park manager at Forked
Run State Park near Reedsville and W1lliarn C. Quickel at Davis
Insurance, located at 114 Court St m Pomeroy.

The Division IV girls 'sectional basketball toumarnent, to begin
Thursday, Feb. 27 at Meigs High School, will feature Eastern and
Southern playing the 6:30 opener. Miller and Trimble will play in
the 8: IS p.m. nightcap.
The victors of those games will advance to the district townamen~ slated for March 4-7, at Jackson High School.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-0_

Nebraska hands No.3 Kansas 81-79 defeat

- - - - -.SVAC cage standings----(Overall)
Team
W L
Oak Hill ............ 13 5
Southern ............ 11 7
Eastern ........ ...... 11 7
Hannan Trace .... IO 9
NorthGallia ........ 7 9
Kyger Creek ........? II
Symmes Valley ...5 13
Southwestern .......2 17

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Connecticut 60-58, and Kansas
State upset No. 23 Iowa State 6455.
The four Big Eight teams
ranked in the top 25 all lost on
Wednesday. The most exciting
game was between Kansas and
Nebraska, where Jamar Johnson hit
a three-pointer at the buzzer in
overtime to gave the Cornhuskers
an 81-79 upset win.
Virginia lUi
No. 4 Norlh Carolina 73
In Charlottesville, Va., Bryant
Stith scored 30 points and freshmen Cory Alexander had a season·
high 24.
.
Virginia (12-10 overall, 5·6 in
the Atlantic Coast Conference) limited North Carolina's leading scorer, Hubert Davis, 10 nine points.
North Carolina (18-4, 8-3) was
held to 45 percent shooting.
No. 7 Indiana 103
No. 11 Michigan State 73
Damon Bailey made up for his
poorest performance of the year by
scoring 24 points as Indiana
regained ftrst place in the Big Ten
by defeating visiting Michigan
State.
The Hoosiers (19-4, 10-2 Big
Ten) avenged an earlier 76·60 loss
to Michigan State (17-5, 7-5) by
hitting 20-of-29 field goals and 13of-15 free throws in the ftrst half to
put the game away early.
Oklaboma70
No. 8 Oklaboma State 67
Oklahoma State had its 28-game
home winning streak snapped as
Brent Price scored 12 of Oklahoma's finall5 points.
Price made a jumper with 42
seconds left to give Oklahoma (16(See HOOPS on Page 6)

,•....,

CONGRATULATIONS, SENIORS - Brad Schubert, lert, and
Mark Erslan, senior co-captains or the University or Rio Grande .
men's basketball team, congratulate ooe aootber rouowiog Rio ·
Grande's 121-98 win over Walsh Tuesday. lt was the fmal regular
season game at Lyne Center. Coach John Lawhorn praised the
pair ror their efforts. ''They have been good ambassadors ror the
University or Rio Grande," he said.

SVAC preview ...
held to single digits only twice this
season before scoring a season-low
two points against North Gallia
Tuesday night, rediscover how to
recover his old scoring form?
He'd better find the answer
before taking the court Friday night
against Symmes Valley in the
Eagles' final regular-season road
game, because Eastern boasts a 104 record in games in which Durst
(16.7 pts/game) and fellow senior
Tim Bissell (conference-high 18.5
pts./garne) have scored in double
figures. In games in which one did
and the other didn' t (one game is
excluded from this total because
Tim Bissell had the flu and didn't
play), Eastern has gone 1·2.
Charlie Bissell (11.1 pts./game,
17 games), the Eagles' 6-foot-2
freshman center, had 10 of his 12
points in the ftrSt half of Tuesday's
North Gallia game. He needs to
make himself more of a force
throughout the game, especially in
the second half, if Eastern is to
make headway against the most
dangerous 5-13 team in southeastem Ohio. But Valley can't afford
to forget about senior Terry
McGuire, the Eagles' 5-foot-11
blue-collar forward who wiU enter
the contest with a 10.9 points-pergame average.
The Vikings have a strong
inside game spearheaded by Andy
Lester, a 6-foot-1 senior forward,
who is tied with sophomore guard
Jerome Fuller for the team lead
with a 14.6 points-per-game average, and Chris Blake, a 6-foot-2
senior center who will sign in with
a 9.9 points-per-game average lowest among the conference's
starting centers.
·
But if Eastern pays too much
attention to these three, the Eagles
may find a pair of surprises in
semor guard Jimmy Jenkins, who
owns a 7.1 points-per-game average but has racked up double ftgures in six games, and junior guard
Rick Dillon, who averages five
points per contest but can shoot
threes on occasion . Eastern's
as~\·gnment is to find out when
whi e trying to contain Lester and
Fuller.
Toumament action
to start next week
The Division IV Rio Grande
sectional toumarnen~ to be held at
the University of Rio Grande's
Lyne Center, will have all bill one
of llle SVAC's teams in addition to
a pair of TVC entries.
This hoopfest will open with the
North Galha-Southwcstern game
on Thursday, Feb. 27 at 7 p.m. The
winner will take on No . 2 seed
Eastern on Saturday, Feb. 29 at
3;30 p.m.. and the winner of that
Saturday game will wait f~r the
Kyger Creelc·Southern wmner
(Feb. 29, 5:15p.m.) on March 6 at
6:30 p.m. to battle for the upperbracket championship.
The lower bracket will pit No. I
seed Trimble against Hannan Trace
on Feb. 29 at 7 p.m. That game will
be followed by the Symmes Valiey·Miller matchup at 8:45 p.m.
The winners of those games will
.take the court on March 6 at 8:15
p.m. for the bracket title.
The bracket champions will
advance to lhe district tournament
at Ohio University's Convocation
Center on Marth 9 and 14.
The Division ill Athens sectional to be held 11 Athens High
S~hool, will have Oak Hill and
Nelsonville York opening the cagefest on Feb. 27 at 6:30 p.m. The
secood game of the night will see
Fedenl Hocking and Crooksville
taking the court at 8:15p.m•
The Oak Hill-N-Y winner will

_cc_on_tin_uect_r...,..rom_r_a&amp;_e4_&gt;_ _ _ _ __

move on to face Belpre on Feb. 29
at 6:30 p.m. for lhe upper-bracket
title. The Federal HockingCrooksville victor will advance to

lower-bractet game at 8:15p.m.
The bracket winners will
advance to the district tournament
at Athens High School on March 3,
FORD

MERCURY
Ll NCOLN

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INVOICE...............................................14,507.60
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+..................................................................49.00
REBATE ....................................................400.00

PRICE......................:.............SJ4, 156.60*

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�.·
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 Tlie Dally Sentinel

Thursday, February 20, 1992

By The Bend

Parisien takes first in initial run of women's slalom in Albertville
By DAVE CARPENTER
AP Sports Writer
ALBERTVILLE, France (AP)
- Let's be frank ;lllout it American men aren't pulling their weight
at the Winter Olympics.
Ray LeB la·nc or no Ray
LeBlanc, women are carryin~ the
U.S. team. Julie Parisien conunued
the trend today by claiming first
place after the fll'St of IWO runs in
the women's slalom.
And with two American women
now poised to claim gold and silver
Friday night in figure skating, it
figures to continue that way.
Go figure.
Women have won five of the
seven U.S. medals in Albertville,
and all three golds - Bonnie
Blair's two in speedskating and
Donna Weinbrecht's in women's
freestyle moguls skiing.
Two of America's terrific trio in
figure skating. Kristi Yamaguchi
and Nancy Kerrigan, have good
chances to join them after graceful
and error-free performances in
Wednesday night's original program put them 1-2 in the standings.
"I knew the U.S. had a strong
team coming in," said Yamaguchi,
who along with Tanya Harding and
Kerrigan swept the world championship medals last year in Munich..
So did U.S . women skiers, and

they have proven it with one of
Coincidence? Perhaps. But it not done the triple axel well in
their best Olympics ever and silver raises questions about the depth of practice," Ito said.
There was no such stumble from
medals from Hilary Lindh and U.S. amateur talent in winter
Yamaguchi, who drew seven 5.9
Diann Roffe.
sports.
The Canadian-born Parisien,
The U.S. Olympic Committee scores for presentation of a prowho lives in Auburn, Maine, prefers to point to American men· s gram she said was designed to be
showed off the Americans' depth highest-ever placings in luge and "flowing and nice to watch." It
this morning by swiftly navigating bobsled in Albertville, and notes was.
The cheerful skater from Frethe 54 slalom gates in 48.22 sec- that its revamped, multimillion-dolmont,
Calif., hugged her coach
onds to lead Spain 's Blanca Fer- lar training program didn't envision
when
she
saw the high scores. She
nandez Ochoa by .03 seconds and direct results until 1994 or 1998.
Austria's Petra Kronberger by .06.
"The most important thing is couldn't help but note later that two
Parisien, 20, the world's third- that in most every area the level of skaters known more for grace than
ranked slalom skier, was bidding to competitiveness is increasing, the jumping skills, she and Kerrigan,
become the fll'St U.S. gold medalist momentum is building," USOC got the best marks.
" We both did triple-lutz combiin skiing since Debbie Armstrong, executive director Harvey Schiller
nations
and I wouldn't say that was
Bill Johnson and Phil Mahre in said this week. "We look to 1994
just
artistry
out there," Yamaguchi
1984.
and beyond."
American men have captured
Harding was a rare exception said.
The true jumper among the
only one ~old medal since then a~ong the tol' women when she
Brian Bottano's in men's figure d1sappomted m the original pro- women skaters, France's Surya
skating in 1988. Despite outnum- gram, missing a triple axel and Bonaly. didn't try her celebrated
bering the women 2-1 on this plummeting from a co-favorite's quadruple but nonetheless took
third behind the two Americans
year's 181-strong team,. they have role all the way to sixth place.
with
an energetic program that
only one more reasonable chance
She had company when Japan's
included
superb spins.
this year - if goalie LeBlanc can tiny Midori Ito fell after substitutEvgeni
Redkine of the Unified
uphold his "Le Blank" reputation ing a triple lutz for the more diffi Team today denied Germany's
against the Unified Team's hockey cult triple axel.
squad and one more team after that.
"I am sorry," the 4-foot-9 Ito, Mark Kirchner a third gold medal
Male favorites such as Dan Japan's most celebrated athlete, by winning the men's 2().kiJometer
Jansen, Christopher Bowman and told Japanese reporters after plac- biathlon. Kirchner was 6.4 seconds
Todd Eldredge have bombed. Most in!) fourth and before making a behind for the silver and Sweden's
Mikael Lofgren took the bronze.
of the highest-profile women qu1ck exit a Ia Harding.
Josh
Thompson of Gunnison,
Blair, Yamaguchi and Kerrigan "I did not think I would fail the
have performed like champions as triple lutz. I chose it for safety. I Colo., a disappointing 32nd in the
expected.
was under the pressure of having 10-kilometer race, was 14th today

L.A. Clippers hand_Lakers 125-94 defeat
By TOM COYNE
AP Sports Writer
Suddenly, th e magic in Los
Angeles appears to have moved
across town.
It's been four seasons since the
Lakers won an NBA title and two
since they' ve won a Pacific Division title. And after being routed
125-94 Wednesday mght by the
Los Angeles Clippers, they could
lose the city championship for the
first time.
The Clippers, who have won
five suaight under new coach Larry
Brown, are tied w1th Seattle for
fifth place in the Pacific, two
ga mes behind the Lakers, and
Wednesday's win was the Clippers' most lopsided triumph over

theLakers.
But the Clippers, who have split
four games this season with the
Lakers, aren't gloating.
' 'To me, it was just another
game against a great basketball
team," said Ken Norman, who had
22 points and 13 rebounds.
Also Wednesday, it was Utah
118, Dallas 96; San Antomo 113,
Minnesota 103; Golden State 117,
Boston 112; New Jersey 106,
Detroit I02; Chicago 112, Orlando
99; Washington 103. Atlanta 102 in
overtime; Indiana 129, Sacramento
115; and Charlotte 106, Denver
10·4.
Loy Vaught added 14 points and
15 rebounds and the Clippers

than 97-78 in the fourth quarter.
Spurs 113, Timberwolves 103
David Robinson scored 15 of
his season-high 39 points in the
fourth quarter a~ San An_tonio
stopped Minnesota s road wl_llnmg
streak at two.
Minnesota, 4-2 1 on the road,
was led by Tony Campbell and
Doug West with 21 points each.
Warriors 117, Celtics 112
Tim Hardaway scored a careerhigh 43 points. Hardaway hit 14 of
25 shots and·l3 of IS free throws.
Reggie Lewis scored 30 points
and Kevin Gambl e 20 for the
Celtics who concluded a six-game
road trlp with only one victory.
Nets 106, Pistons 102
Reserve Tate George scored I0
of his 19 points in the fourth quarter and 7-foot-1 Sam Bowie stole
the ball from 6- I Isiah Thomas in
ball," he said. "But our guys did
the final seconds, helping the Nets
this in the second half."
preserve the victory.
In the Mid-American ConferDrazen Petrovic had 25 points
ence Wednesday night, Miami of and Derrick Coleman 20 for th e
Ohio beat Western Michigan 64-63
Nets, who have won eight of their
to move into a fll'St-place tie with
last nine home games.
Ball State, a 73-70 loser in overThomas scored 29 points for the
time to Ohio University. Bowling
Pistons.
Green beat 1'oledo 78-64 and Kent
Bulls 112, Magic 99
State defeated Central Michigan
Michael Jordan scored 22 of his
83-76.
27 points in the first half and
Luke Ragan scored 17 points for
Chicago rallied from 10 points
Wittenberg as the Tigers moved
down in the second quarter to raise
into a tie for the North Coast Contheir league-best road record to 20ference lead with a 60-51 victory
7. Jordan also had 10 rebounds and
over Kenyon in Gambier.
eight assists.
Wittenberg (14-1 NCAC) is tied
Anthony Bowie led Orlando
with Wooster. which defeated
with 19 points.
Thomas More 82-61 in a non-conBullets 103, Hawks 102, OT
ference game.
Ledcll Eackles matched his
Chris Donovan with 13 points
career-high with 40 points and Perwas Kenyon's only double-figure
vis Ellison had 30, including six in
scorer.
overtime, as Washington survived
Rick Washington had 35 points
blowing a 14-point second-half
to lead Oberlin to an 85-67 NCAC
lead.
victory over Case Western
Washington's victory came
Reserve. Arnold Huffman led the
despite Kevin Willis, who had 33
scoring for Case Western with 16
rebounds and 20 points for the
points. Ohio Wesleyan overHawks. Duane Ferrell led the
whelmed Earlham 99-76 in an
Hawks with a career-high 25
NCACgame.
points.
In the Ohio Conference, Jerry
Pacers 129, Kings 115
Dennis scored 27 points to lead
Chuck Person scored 18 of his
Otterbein to its 16th straight victoseason-high 41 points in the first
ry, 102-83 over Heidelberg. Nick
period for Indiana.
Gutman added 20 points for the
Mitch Richmond led the Kings,
regular-season champion Cardilosers of seven straight road games
nals. Darrell Russell led Heidelberg
and 24 of 27 on the road, with 28
with 18 points.
points.
Elsewhere in the OAC, BaldHornet~ 106, Nuggets 104
win-Wallace beat Mount Union 89Johnny Newman picked up the
82 in overtime, Hiram stopped
loose ball and banked it in over 7-2
John Carroll 80-64, Marietta needDikembe Mutombo with 1.1 seced overtime to beat Muskingum
onds left to give Charlotte its fifth
70-67 and Ohio Northern defeated
victory in seven games.
Capital67-52.
After Mutombo made two free
Wilmington beat Mount Vernon
throws with 20.6 seconds left to tie
93-90 in an Association of Midit at I04, Mugsy Bogues brought
East Colleges and game and Tiffin
the ball upcourt and passed to
outlasted Urbana 117-104 in a Larry Johnson. Johnson, who finMid-Ohio Conference game.
ished with a career-high 34 points,
In small-college non-conference passed it hack and Bogues fired a
games, Ashland routed Point Park shot up from the comer.
141 -96, Findlay beat Bluffton 78Mutombo s\tlltted the ball down
74 and Wilberforce defeated Dyke because it fell short of the basket,
84-80.
but Newman scooped it up. ·

enjoyed season-highs in rebounds
(57) and field goal percentage (54.5
percent).
The Clippers led 63-42 at halftime and put the game out of reach
with a 38-23 third-quarter scoring
spree.
The Lakers were led by Sedale
Threatt with 16 points.
Jazz 118, Mavericks 96
Karl Malone scored Utah's first
II points and 23 points overall
before sitt.ng out the fourth quarter.
Jeff Malone added 17 l'oints and
John Stockton had 13 pomts and II
assists as the Jazz improved their
league-best home record to 25-2.
Terry Davis had 14 points for
the Mavericks, who got no closer

Dayton beats Loyola; Marietta also wins
By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press Writer
Dayton coach Jim O'Brien used
the occasion of halftime to have a
chat with his players. It was a loud.
one-sided conversation.
Among those responding to the
coach's words was Derrick Dukes,
who scored 19 of his 23 points in
the second half to lead the Ayers to
a 73-59 Midwestern Collegiate
Conference victory over Loyola of
Chicago Wednesday night in Dayton.
" We have to play intense all the
time. We played sound ball m the
second half," O' Brien said after
Dayton improved to 13-12 overall
and 4-3 in the MCC.
Loyola (I 0-12, 1-6) led by as
many as nine points in the flfSt half
and 32-29 at the intermission. But
Dayton opened the second half
with a 15-2 run to take control, and
never led by fewer than four points

College hoops ...

J

6, 4-5 Big Eight) a 68-65 lead, then
sank two free throws with 18 seconds left to make it 70-67.
Oklahoma State is (21-4, 5-4).
Colorado 77
No.9 Missouri 60
Donnie Boyce scored 13 of his
21 points in the second half to lead
Colorado.
The Tigers (18-4, 6-3) went cold
in the second half, shooting only 34
percent from the field while the
Buffaloes (12-10, 3-6) hit 63 percent.
No. 13 Kentucky 89
Mississippi State 84
Vis1ting Kentucky used threepoint shooting and free throws to
hold off the Bulldogs. The Wildcats (1 9-5, 8-3 in lhe SEC) shot 11of-26 from long range and 26-of-41
from the foul tine.
Richie Farmer's 6-of-6 free
throw shooting in the final 50 seconds preserved the victory after
Mississippi State (14-8, 6-S) rallied
from a 13-point deficit to close to
84-81 with I8 secoods to play.
No. 14 Alabama 85
Vanderbilt 64
In Tuscaloosa, Ala., Crimson
Tide coach Wimp Sanderson
coached his 916th game.
James Robinson scored 23
points to lead Alabama (20-S, 7-4
m the SEC). Vanderbilt (11-11. 38) kept the game close for about I 0
minutes.
No. 24 St. John's 63
No.17 Syracuse 62
,
In New Yorlc, Chucky Sprnling
scored St. John's last seven points,
including a IS-foot jumper with 11
seconds 10 play.
. The Redmen (15-7.'9-5 in the
- Big East) won their fifth straight
: game. Syracuse (16-6, 8-5) fell
from a fll1t-place tie with Oeargetown.
No. 20 Mkblpa 95
MIDnaola 70
.
Michiaan C()!llinued its domina. liClll of Minaesoca in its home l!fCIUI
as Chris Webber scored 14 of his
23 JJOlnJS.in a torrid f11'1t half.
Tbe Oolden Gophm ( "·11, 76 .BIJ Ten) have only one win in
CiWer Arena, 1 61-SO aiumph in
, 1982. They have gone 1-23 since

the rest of the way.
Dayton shot 74 percent from the
field in the second half and 58 percent overall for the game, its best
of the season. Loyola shot 41 percent.
Dukes made 10 of his 12 shots
overall. Chip Hare added 20 points
and 10 rebounds, and AleK Robertson had 16 points. Loyola was led
by Grant Moehring, who had 12
points, and Kcir Rogers and Eric
Dolezal, who had I0 apiece.
"Dukes deserves a lot of credit
He ignited a team that we had
down by nine, and he single-handedly ignited them," Loyola coach
Will Rey said.
O'Brien said it will take more
than his anger to make the Flyers
contenders for the conference ti~c.
"If I have to jump up and down
to get the guys to play hard, then
we are not going to rise to the challenge and play championship
(Continued from Page S)
the building opened in 1967.
The Wolverines (16-6, 8-S)
avenged a 73-64 loss in Minneapolis on Jan. II .
No. 25 Georgetown 60
No. 21 Connecticut 58
In Landover, Md., Joey Brown
stole the ball with three seconds
left and went the length of the floor
for abuzzer-beating layup.
Georgetown moved into sole
possession of first place in the Big
East. The Hoyas (16-6, 9-4) are a
half-game in front of St. John's.
Connecticut (16-6, 7-6) has lost
five straight.
Kansas State 64
No. 23 Iowa State 55
In Manhattan, Kan., Askia Jones
I scored Kansas State's final 13
points - eight on free throws.
Jones scored 17 of his gamehigh 21 points in the second half
for the Wildcats (13-9 overall, 3-6
Big Eight).
The Cyclones (18-7, 4-5) made
just 31 percent of their shots in the
second half.

with only the back-of-the-pack
skiers still on the course.
Germany tops the medals list
witb 25, 10 of them gold, and still
could match the old Soviet Union's

Winter Olympics highs of 29
medals ( 1988) and 13 golds (1976).
Former East and West Germany
won a combined 33 medals in Calgary four years ago.

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

L.A. Kings lose despite
Coffey-Gretzky reunion
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
Skating with Wayne Gretzky
again brought back a lot of memories for Paul Coffey.
But it couldn't bring the Los
Angeles Kings a victory Wednesday nighL
"We've been playing pretty
well lately, but Edmonton played
really well in the second period and
took it away from us," Gretzky
said after a 4-3 loss to the Oilers,
the team that he and Coffey once
led to Stanley Cup championships.
Coffey was obtained by the
Kings from the Piusburgh Penguins
in a blockbuster, three-team trade
early Wednesday. He flew to
Edmonton on one hour's sleep so
he could start in Wednesday
night's game at the North lands
Coliseum, hi s old stomping
grounds.
There to greet him were Gretzky
and several of his other former
Edmonton teammates - Jari Kurri,
Charlie Huddy and Marty McSorley - all now with the Kings.
" That made it a lot easier,"
Coffey said.
In other NHL games, it was
Montreal2, Hartford 2; St. Louis 4,
Winnipeg 3; Calgary 6, Boston 4;
and Vancouver 6, Buffalo 5.
Coffey and Gretzky both scored
in the first period 10 help the Kings
take a 2-llead. But the Oilers came
back with the help of two goals by
Anatoli Semenov to win and move
within two points of second-place
Los Angeles in the Smythe Division.
The Oilers came out strong in
the second period and scored three
goals. Martin Gelinas, Greg Hawgood and Semenov, with his second goal of the nigh~ gave Edmonton a 4-21ead at the end of the second.
"
Canadiens 2, Whalers 2
Kirk Muller scored a sixthattacker goal with 31 seconds
remaining as Montreal rallied for a
tie.
Muller connected from the right
post as Russ Courtnall's pass from
the goal line struck Whaler
defenseman Steve Konroyd and
bounced to Muller, who was able
to beat goaltender Peter
Sidorkiewicz.
Montreal was leading 1-0 on a
second-period goal by Shayne Corson when the Whalers gained the
lead on goals by Zarley Zalapski
and Bobby Holik within 4:15 of the
third period.
Blues 4, Jets 3
Brendan Shanahan scored one
goal and assisted on another to lead
St. Louis.
With the Blues clinging to a 2-1
lead, Shanahan scored the only
goal of the second period and
assisted on Craig Janney's goal in
the third. That helped the Blues
withstand two late goals, by Ed
Olczyk and Luciano Borsato.

Familr
Medicine

The other St. Louis goals were
scored by Dave Christian, Jeff
Brown and Craig Janney. Randy
Carlyle had the other Winnipeg
goal.
Flames 6, Bruins 4
Ronnie Stern's first career threegoal game led the Hames over the
Bfuins. Stern capped the' victory
with his third goal at 14:32 of the
third period.
On the goal, Carey Wilsun
dumped the puck off Boston's end
boands where goalie Daniel Berthiaume played it but left the puck
lying to the side of the crease. Stem
raced in and banged it into the net
to clinch the victory.
.
Also scoring for Calgary were
Sergei Makarov, Robert Reichel
and Gary Roberts. Bobby Carpenter, Andy Brickley, Ray Bourque
and Brent Ashton scored for
Boston.
Canucks 6, Sabres 5 '
Trevor Linden scored two goals,
including his 25th of the season, as·
Vancouver beat Buffalo.
The Canucks led 4-3 after two
periods and 6-3 early in the third
before the Sabres rallied to cut the
deficit to one on goals by Bob
Corkum and Kevin Haller in a 41sccond span midway through the
period.
Geoff Courtnall, Jim Sandlak;
Greg Adams and Pavel Bure also
scored for Vancouver. Tony Tanti,
Pat LaFontaine, Christian Ruutu
added goals for Buffalo.

john C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
PENICILLIN: NOT THE SHOT
FOR THE COMMON COLD
Question: My doctor ha s
always given me pen1cillin for my
cold or sore throat. The last time I
saw him he told me that I didn't
need it for my cold. Why?
Answer: Antibiotics, like penicillin, have made a wondcrful difference in our lives. Prior to the
development of sulfa and penicillin, infections were the leading
cause of death. For instance, during
the Civil War the inability to control infections led to the deaths of
many soldiers. Seventeen percent
of the men with hand wounds died
as did more than 50 percent of
those suffering upper leg wounds.
Tod~y, you and I can fight bacterial mfections. Penicillin and
other antibiotics have the ability to
kill some bacteria without causing
any serious problems for the person
taking the drug. Eliminating or
reducing the number of illnesscausing bacteria enables your
body's defense mechanism to get
the "upper hand" in the fight and
return you to health.
Unfortunately, not all illnesses
arc caused by bacteria . Viral illnesses, like measles, mumps. nu
and the common cold arc not
affected by penicillin or other types
of anubiotics. Taking an anubiotic
when you have a viral illness usually docs no harm, but it will also do
no good. Your doctor did not g1ve
you an antibiotic because what you
had was a viral, not bacterial, illness.
In the '50s, '60s and '70s, doc tors used to frequently give penicillin for any sore throat or cold.
The appearance of a viral sore
throat is much like that of a bacterial sore throat. Since penicillin 1s
relatively inexpensive and safe , it
was common practice to give it
when there was a reasonabl e
chance of the illness being caused
by a bacteria instead of ordering
the then expensive and slow tests to
tell for sure.
The widespread usc of penicillin
resulted in an interesting problem.
Bacteria grow and compete with
each other for the available nutrients. There are slight differences
between bacteria, just as there are
differences between people. Penicillin originally could kill almost
all bacteria. Those few which could

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survive in the presence of penicillin
had their bacterial competition
killed off by the drug and, therefore, reproduced rapidly.
This process, over the years, has
produced a number of "resistant
strains" of bacteria that continue to
multiply and thrive in the body
even after the person has had a shot
of penicillin. Because of these
resistant bacteria, the pharmaceutical manufacturing companies are
constantly developing new antibiotics, but, unfortunately, the new
bacteria will develop resistance to
these medications in time.
We doctors have learned our
lesson. We only prescribe antibiotics when you have a bacterial illness. This will reduce the number
of bacteria which become resistant
to the new and old antibiotics.
There arc now a few medications
for VIral illnesses that may give a
httle help, but there are no "antiviral" drugs yet that are as effective
as antibiotics.
Question: The last time my
doctor did prescribe penicillin I
asked the pharmacist to give me the
generic version so that I could save
a little money. Are generic medications as good as brand name ones?
Answer: Most generic medications are safe and effective and, in
some cases, are actually made by
the same company that manufactures the brand name product.
However, there arc some medications for which the government
standards for generic versions are
not as strict as the brand name
companies choose to employ.
Lanoxin, the brand name of the
heart medication digoxin, 1S one of
the medications like this. I do not
recommend generic substitutiOn for
this medication, and indicate that in
writing on the prescription blank
when I give it to the patient.
If you have a concern about the
use of a generic medication, ask
your family doctor and your pharmacist. They want the best care for
you. If a generic medication will
not work as well for your problem,
they will tell you.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio, 45701.

OGS sponsors
essay contest
A genealogical contest is being
offered by the Ohio Genealogical
Society and the Meigs County
Chapter for students in grades three
through 12 with an interest in family history. Cash prizes will be
awarded.
For the .past several years, the
OGS has sponsored an essay contest where participants trace their
family, then write an essay about
an ancestor at least four generations removed from themselves.
For the second year an an contest is also being included. Entrants
are required to trace their family to
the same pint, and then submit an
original work related to the the
theme, "Working Hard for a Living: Occupations.": This may be in
the form of any medium including
drawings, poems, videos, sculptures, or needlework, Sue E. Hager,
local president said.
Deadline for entries to the
Meigs County Chapter is March I.
More information may be obtained
by writing P. 0. Box 346,
Pomeroy.

Ohio Arts and
Craft Guild offer
art scholarships
The Ohio Arts and Crafts Guild
is offering scholarships to high
school seniors or art students
enrolled in an Ohio Institution or
College. This year there will be
four scholarships of $1,000 each.
Applications are available at
OACG, P.O. Box 3080, Lexington
Ohio 44904. The student musi
obtain and complete the applicauon. The form requires they submit
three to six slides of their work,
proof of a 2.5 grade average, and a
letter of recommendation from a
faculty member of the school they
attend. Applications must be
returned to OACG by March 30.

The Daily S,entineJ
Thursday, February 20, 1992:
Page-7 .

OU seminars slated for teachers
Ohio University's College of
Arts and Sciences has been selected by the Ohio Board of Regents to
conduct tuition-free, three-week
seminars for middle and secondary
school mathematics and science
teachers in Southeastern Ohio.
The seminars will held in three
areas: discrete mathematics, biological and earth sciences, and
physics and chemistry. Forty math
and science teachers in grades
seven through 12 are eligible to
participate. The seminars will be
held from June 15 to July 2 at Ohio
University's Athens campus.
Classes will be designed to suit
the needs of teachers in the region,
and they will be taught by Ohio
University faculty members and
local school teachers.
The federally funded program is
administered by the Ohio Board of
Regents' Eisenhower Mathematics
and Science Education Program.
Oh1o University received a $38,000

Preceptor Beta
Beta members
hold meeting
A game about Presidents was
conducted at the recent meeting of
the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter.
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, held at
the Grace Episcopal Church in
Pomeroy.
Joan Corder, vice president,
conducted the meeting with eight
members in attendance. Officers
repons were given.
The next meeting will be held at
the church social rocm rather than
a shopping trip as originally
planned. Maida Mora and Clarice
Krautter will be hostesses.
The group worked on favors
which will be used for Founders
Day on April 30 at the Sportsman
in Athens.
Refreshments were served by
Vera Crow and Rose Sisson.
The nex t meeting will be held
Feb. 27.

Your Social Security
Anyone who receives Social
Security benefits and who continues to work has to repo t his or her
earnings to two government agencies - the Social Security Adminstration and the Internal Revenue
Service, according to Ed Peterson,
Social Security Manger, Athens
office.
Earnings must be reported to the
IRS for tax purposes and to SSA
because they may aff~ct the
amount of benefits payable.
Peterson ~d that the fact that
both have an April 15 filing date
apparently causes some cqnfusion
allout the need 10 me both nepons,
Peterson said. ·
"Sometimes, Social Security
beneficiaries think ming an income
taX return takes care of the Social
Security earnings report requirement," he said. "Aod while the IRS
does share tax return information
with SSA, the taX return does· not
provide all the information that
SSA needs."
. A second confusing area, Peterson said, occurs when Social Security hefteficiaries think that they do
not need to file a fl!X return if their
income is under the Social Security
earnings limit which in 1991 was ,
$9,720 for people 65 10 69, and
$7,080 for t11ose under 65. But, he
explained there is no connection
between the Social Security earnings limits and the requirement to
ftle an income tax return.
A third confusing area arises
when Social Security beneficiaries

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ltriiN (I!U Q\t Nli:rNIIIII Pilla. CGUitul, QH 43211 .
,.....,..ii.~JedltiiMQ

.TMOINIIOI'IIflillll . . . ...._.~

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby given that on Saturday, February 22 1 19921 at 10:00 a.m., a public sale will be held
at 105 Union Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for
cash the following collateral:
1989 FORD.TEMPO
S# 1FAPP36X2KK107080
1990 CHRYSLER NEW YQRKER SE 4 DR
S#1C3XC46R3LD737097
The Farmers Bank and Savings Com~ny, Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the right to bid at this sale, and
to withdraw the above collateral prior to sale. Further, The Fanrters Bank and Savings Com'pany
reserves the rlghtto reject any or all bids submiHed.
Further, the above collateral will be sold In the
condition It Is In with no expres• or Implied
warranties given.
For more Information contact Scott Shank, at 99~3293.
.
.

request an extension of the filing
date for their income tax return and
assume that they will also get an
extension of the filing date for their
Social Security earnings report,
Peterson said.
He emphasized that the two
reports are not related and any
·action taken by one agency does
not affect what is required by the
other. Questions concerning these
matters may be directed to Peterson
at the Social Security office in
Athens, 592-4448, or by calling the
national toll-free number, 1-800772-1213.

VICTORIA FREEMAN

Parish to sponsor

New arrivq,l

garden seed program
The United Meihodist Coopera-

tive Parish will apin sponsor a

=ccws;!~~~~~

durinL the week of March 10·13
only. Tho•llllud are 9 a.m. 10 12:30
p.m. Tbo office Is located at 311
Condor SII'Cet in P!lmcroy. AppUCIIions will be taken 11 lhilllmc
aqly:.JThil wiD cilttb1c lite pnb to
set IIIC pnlen aees OUl ~ this

r

yar.

,/

'I

I ~

o

&gt;"

'

Jim and Mary Freeman or Gallipolis-announce the birth of their
~ter, Vi~ Leigh, on Jan. 7,
. She weighed 8 pound•, 2
ounces, and WIS 20 inches IOIIJ.
Maternal grandparenta are
Steven Blldwin, Racine, and Calhy
and Richard Young, New Haven .
W.Va.
Paternal grandparents are
C~n~e and Evelyn Freeman of

Racine. .

.

VIctoria haa one older sister,
Chelaea Marie.
~.

'

. .......

..

~~

.... •

' 1"

..

grant to coordinate the seminars.
The math seminar will focus on
discrete mathematics and its importance in the curriculum . The
physics and chemistry session will
explore astronomy and will emphasize individual micro-scale chemistry experiments and the use of
technology in the classroom. The
natural sciences seminar will examine fundamental problems in earth
and biolo~ical sciences and their
relationship to historical perspectives.

Admission to the program will:
be based on completion of a written:
application. Deadline for applying.
is April 2S.
·
For an application or more ·
information , contact Program
Coordinator Harold Molineu, associate dean of the College of Ansand Sciences, ar 614-593-2854, or:
write to the Eisenhower Malhemat,ics and Science Education Program, c/o Phil Richardson, Ellis
Hall, Ohio University, Athens
45701.

People in the news
MISSOULA, Mont. (AP) Life in the country suits actress
Andie MacDowell.
She drew a standing-room only
crowd at a Kiwanis Club luncheon,
where she raved about her newfound rural home west of toWn.
"When I go out there, I can't
believe that this is where I live,"
she said Tuesday. "It is so beautiful. ... This is k:ind of like the last
place to Iive in America that has
wilderness."
MacDowell , best-known for
lead roles in the movies "sex, lies
and videotape" and " Green
Card," has purchased a ranch in

the Ninemile Valley west of Missoula in western Montana
The actress said she "really
hopes to slip into this community
and just be Justin's mother and
your friend, not a celebrity."
Dowell has two young children ;
including 5-year-old Justin.

Mac-:

DOVER, Del. (AP) -Gov.:
Michael N. Castle is ending hi~.
long bachelorhood. .
:
The governor said.Tuesday he·
picked Valentine's Day 10 propose:
to businesswoman Jane DiSabatino:
and the couple will be married inMay.
.

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Sund~ tO~ o.m. to 4.00 p.m

PRESCRIPTIONS

E Main

Frl.,dly

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PH 112-

Pom•oy. oH.

�Page

.

~The Daliy Sentinel

Thursday, February 20, 199~

Community calendar
ofFFA Week.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - A public hearing
RACINE • The Racine American Legion Post No. 602 will meet concerning Issue 2 Round Five
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post project will be held Friday at I
home.
p.m . in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Courtroom in the Meigs
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- County Coun House in Pomeroy.
ty Democratic Executive CommitRIPLEY - The Liberty Mountee will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
taineers will perform Friday at
atlhe Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.
Slcateland in Ripley, W.Va.
RACINE - The United
Methodist Men of the Racine
HOCKINGPORT - There will
Chlllth wiD serve a pancake supper be a round and square dance on
Thursday at the church from 4-7 Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at Hockp.m. Hotcakes, sausage, scrambled ingport at Kenny and Milli e
eggs and coffee will be served . Reynolds. Music wtll be provided
by "Don. Buddy and the Smokey
Conoibutions will be accepted.
Mountain Drifters." John Russell
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- will be the caller.
ty group of Ohio Young Democrats
SATURDAY
of America will meet Thursday at
POMEROY - The movies,
6:30p.m. at the Carpenters HaU in
Pomeroy. Officers will be elected. "Charlie Chaplin, the Cure" and
All Democrats between the ages of "Bearskin," will be shown at the
Meigs County Public Library in
18-36 are invited to attend.
Pomeroy on Saturday and Sunday
at
2 p.m . and at the Middleport
ROCK SPRINGS - The MiddleLibrary
on Monday at4:30 p.m.
port Child Conservation League
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
KANAUGA - The Liberty
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church . Tammy Tibbits, O.B. Mountaineers will perform SaturNurse, will discuss programs for day at the D.A. V. Center 1n Kanauga from 8-11 p.m. Public is invited
needy mothers.
to attend.
POMEROY - The Episcopal
POMEROY - The Belles and ·
Church Women will meet Thursday at 12:30 p.m. at the Parish Beaus Western Square Dance Club
will sponsor an open dance at the
House. Bring a sack lunch.
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy
ROCK SPRINGS - Pomeroy on Saturday from 8 to 11 p.m.
Youth League will meet at 6:30 Caller will be Dave Stuthard,
p.m. on Thursday at Rock Springs Reynoldsburg. The dance is open
to all western square dancers.
United Methodist Church .
Refreshments will be served.
POMEROY - The Pom eroy
LOITR!DGE - Country Music
Group of AA and AIAnon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Night at the Lotoidge Community
Center will be held Saturday from
Sacred Hcan Catholic Church.
6 p.m. to midnight. Refreshments
will be available and all bands are
FRIDAY
RACINE - A lawn and garden welcome. The public is invited.
show will be held on Friday from 9
RUTLAND - There will be a
a.m. until 3:30p.m. at Southern
High School. Morris Equipment. round and square dance at the RutBaum Lumber, O'Dell Lumber. land American Legion Hall on SatR&amp;G Feed and Supply and Valley urday from 8 p.m. to midnight with
Lumber will be among the local music by C.J. and the Country
dealers represented. The show is Gentlemen. Ray Fitch will be the
sponsored by Southern Future caller. The public is invited to
Farmers of America in qbservance attend.

'Bugsy' leads -nominees

ROYALTY • Herman Martin and Amber Warner were named
Valentine King and Queen at tbe Extended Care Facility or Veterans Memorial Hospital. Tbey were selected for tbe honor by olber
residents or the facility. A belated valenline party was staged for
residents Tuesday afternoon by the hospital's Women's Auxiliary.

Cotterill honored by grange
Raymond Cotterill was presented a 50-year certificate from

National Grange by Master Norman Will at the recent meeting of
the Harrisonville Grange. A
potluck meal preceded lhe meeting.
A letter of comm~ndation for 50
years of continuous service to
grange from the State Master
Howard Colwell and a life membership card were presented to Cotterill by secretary Pauline Atkins.

Pauline Rife and Christine Napier, delegates to Ohio State Grange,
were guests and reponed on their
visit to state grange.
The CWA Chainnan announced
the baking contest for the next
meeting.
The grange banquet will be held
April 10 at Salisbury Elementary.
Harrisonville will be host to the
Pomona meeting on March I.

SPELLING BEE WINNERS - The winner of the 1992 spelling
bee, held recenlly at Salisbury Elemenlary, was Sbera Patterson,
len, sixth grade, daughter or Bobby and Sherry Patterson. Runner-up was Myca Haynes, sixth grae, daughter or Sonny and Jan
Haynes. Bolb are students or Ed Bartels.

Davis birthday celebrated

\

f
~

FIVE GENERATIONS - Making up Ibis five generation family
are Bernice Hawk, 93, Hemlock Grove, seated ten, tbe mother or ·
Sarah Cullums, Rock Springs Road, Pomeroy, who is holding her
great-grandchild, Alexandria Nicole Cullums, Lancaster, with
Terry Cullums, lert back, son or Sarah, and his son, Todd Cullums,
· father of Alexandria.

Glada Davis was honored with a
birthday dinner in observance of
her 94th birthday recently at the
home of her daughter, Mary
Kathryn Holter. There were 21
people present and Greta Riffle
Mrs. Davis' great granddaughter'
gave a blessing before the meal. '
In the afternoon the family
members visited and reminisced of
years gone by. Pictures were also
talc en.

Attending were Robert and Bea
Davis, Glada Davis, Middleport;
Clyde and Alice Davis, Rutland;
Sharon and Greta Riffle, Eagle
Ridge; Neil Fowler, Athens;
Ronald and Pauline Davis, Dexter;
Carl and Dolly Nelson, Irondale;
Gary and Brenda Holter, Portland;
Rebecca Evans, Reedsville; Carrie
Morrissey, Chester; Gordon, Jill,
Wesley and Martie Holter and
Mary Kathryn Holter.

By JOHN HORN' '
AP Entertainmeat Writer
BP:VERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
- Warren Beatty's "Bugsr" led
with 10 nominations and Dtsney's
"Beauty and the Beast" became
the fllSt animated film ever considered for best picture in the 64th
Academy Awrud nominations.
Beatty tonk a best-actor nomination for his ponrayal of the Las
Vegas visionary and criminal
B~gsy Siegel. Ben Kingsley as
cnme boss Meyer Lansky and Harvey Keitel as mobster Mickey
Cohen in "Bugsy" were nominated for best supporting actor.
The film was named in lhe best
picture, screenplay, cinematography, costumes, art direction and
original score categories, while
Barry Levinson was nominated for
best director.
"Bugsy'' co-producer Mark
Johnson attended the pre-dawn
announcements Wednesday at the
headquarters of the Academy of
Motion Picture Ans and Sciences.
"I'm ecstatic," he said between
calls to Beany and Levinson.
"What more could I possibly have
asked for?"
"Bugsy" approaches the record
set by "All About Eve" in 1950.
The feature starring Bette Davis
was nominated for 14 Oscars and
won six.
Second to "Bugsy'' was Oliver
Stone's "JFK," which received
eight nominations. The film that
reopened national discussion about
whelher President Kennedy was the
victim of an assassination conspiracy was nominated for best picture,
best director and best supporting
actor for Tommy Lee Jones.
"The Silence of the Lambs."
.the taut thriller about an FBI
trainee's pursuit of a serial killer,
won seven nominations: They
include best picture, best actor for
Anthony Hopkins; best actress for
Jodie Foster; best director for
Jonathan Demme; and best screenplay for Ted Tally.
bartn Sl!eisand's "The Prince
of Tides," abo was favored with
seven nominations, including best
picture.
"1 can't deny that I'm disappointed, but I'm thrilled to get
seven," Miss Streisand said from
London in a telephone interview.
"I'm ecstatic about that. Even
though I was disappointed about
myself, I wasn't counting on anything."
Also put up for best-actor
Oscars were Roben De Niro, who
played a vengeful stalker in "Cape
Fear," Nick Nolte as a football
coach wid! a aoubled past in "The
Prince of Tides" and Robin
Williams as a homeless man in
"The Fisher King."
Other nominees for best actress
were Geena Davis and Susan
Sarandon for their parts in the

female buddy movie "Thelma &amp;
Louise"; Laura Demas a wayward
woman in "Rambling Rose"; and
Bette Midler as a World War II
entertainer in "For the Boys."
"Beauty and the Beast" also
took three nominations for original
songs, and two more for best score
and sound
"Fried Green Tomatoes" drew
only two nominations, and 1991
box office champion "Terminator
2: Judgment Day," picked up six
nominations.
"Boyz N the Hood" director
John Singleton, 24, surpassed
Orson Welles as the youngest
director ever nominated for an
Oscar. Welles directed "Citizen
Kane" at age 26.
Singleton also is the ftrst black
director to receive an Academy
nomination. "If somebody had told
me three years ago this was going
to happen, I'd have said they were
crazy," said Singleton, whose
screenplay was nominated for an
Oscar. "Bu~ wow!"
Another big winner in the nomination stakes was Japanese-owned
Sony Pictures, which had six films
receiving 36 nominations, one of
the highest totals ever for a studio.
The Academy Awards ceremony will 1Je broadcast live by ABC
March 30. Comic Billy Crystal is
the scheduled host
Diane Ladd, mother of Laura
Dern, was nominated for best supporting actress in "Rijmbling
Rose," the fust time a mother and
daughter were nominated the same
year.
Other supporting-actress nominees were Juliette Lewis for "Cape
Fear," Kate Nelligan in "The
Prince of Tides," Mercedes Ruehl
for "The Fisher King" and Jessica
Tandy in ''Fried Green Tomatoes.''
Best-supporting actor nominees
also include Michael Lerner in
"Banon Fink" and Jack Palance
for "City Slickers."
Palance, last nominated for
1953's "Shane,'·' set an Oscarrecord of 39 years between nominations.
Other original screenplays to be
considered for Oscars are for "The
Fisher King," "Grand Canyon"
and "Thelma &amp; Louise."
"Thelma &amp; Louise" also
received nominations for director,
Ridley Scott, cinematography and
ftlm editing.
"Europa Europa," a German
ftlm about a Jewish boy during the
Holocaust. was nominated for best
adapted screenplay.
_
Other nominees were "Fried.
Green Tomatoes," "JFK," ''The:
Prince of Tides" and "The Silenceof the Lambs."

By Ruth Powers
The Meigs County Public
. library is offering tutor training
· classes in the Laubach method of
: teaching reading, beginning in
: March.
There will be 4 three hour classes for the completion of the course.
They will be held at the Pomeroy
library Monday, March 2, Wednesday March 4, Monday March 9,
and Wednesday March II from
; 9:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
: Those signing up for these
• classes, should plan to attend all
sessions to be adequately pre~ed
to teach reading to an mdivtdual.
Parents are encouraged to sign up

for the classes. so they could help
their children if lhey have any reading problems.
These classes rue for people
who really want to help an adult
learn to read. Think of the possibilities if you could not read ...DANGER, CAUTION, or NO SMOKING signs, if you arc a parent with
a sick child, suppose you could not
read the labels on a medicine bottle. If you would be willing to help
with this problem please sign up
for the classes and help make a difference in someone's life. More
information and sign UP, can be
done by coming to the library or
calling 992-5813. Help make the
difference.

· Club instafls officers

•

Officers were installed at the
recent meeting of the Past Councilors Club of Chester Council No.
' 323, Daughters of America, held at
the home of Marcia Keller with
~ JoAnn Baum and Laura Mae Nice
. as co-hostesiiCS.
New off!CCIS are Bulall Maxey,
president; Laura Mae Nice, vice
president; Betty Young, secretary;
Charlotte Grant, treuurer; and
Qciltlie Fnldelick, Sentinel.
, Jlulab Muey C!.':ided at the
: ...aiDJ lltd R&amp;d
the book of
• Ltdr.e. Tile Lord's Prayer and the
: Pledp tD the Amerian Flag were
r JlYeD in •min
A Vllentini card - signed for
• JleUy Roulb by die members.
1\e death of Erma Cleland's

son, Ycrnon Cleland, was reported.
The hostess commillee and
Betty Young presented lhe mem.·
bers with Valentine cards.
Refreshments were served and
door prizes were won by.Jean Fredcrick and Thelma While.
Attendin2 were Ella Osborne,
Margaret Amberger, Sadie
Trussell, Charloue Grant, Beuy
Young, Inzy Newell, Thelma
White, Goldie Fredtriek. Etbel Orr;
Lora Damewood, Bllzaberll Haf~:~,
Mary K. Holter', Jean Fiedenck,
Faye Kirkhart, Marc: Ia ·Keller.
JoAIIII Baum, Bulah Maxey, Laura
Mae Nice, Opal Hqllon. and two
JUCBIB, Sandy White and ROIICIIIII)'
Keller.
.•

Ho~se seats next year~ a result of would favor a Democratic candinallonal populallon shtfts revealed date.
.
.
by the 1990 Cens1u. Democrats
Rep. Scott Nem, R~Middletown,
outnumb~r Republl~ans 11-10 m urged defeat of the btl! because of
t~e state s congressiOnal delega- the pamn~ of Bochner and Gradillon.
son. He wd Boehner should not be
Ms. Scherer's bill would place jeopardized because he has staned
U.S. Reps. Willis Gradison Jr .. RCincinnati, and John Boehner, RWest Chester, m an enlarged
'
&lt;;incinna~-B!C3 2nd Disoict, .effecCIN~INNATI (AP)- A series
u~ely ehmmaung Boehner s 8th of Hamtlton County Courthouse
Dtstnct
•.
JOb changes has Republicans and
. It would parcel off the lith DIS- Democrats debating the ethics of
tnct of Rep. Denms Eckart, D- ~lcct.ed officials switching offices
Mentor, to ~arts. of the 19th, 17th m midterm.
and 16th dtstncts of northeast
The latest round of discussion
OhiO.
.
.
was set off by Prosecutor Arthur
. Eckan .'s not runnmg for re-elec- Ney Jr. •s announcement Wednesuon, ~or IS Rep. Dl?nald Pease, D- day that he won't run for re-elecO)Jerhn, whose realt~ed 13th DIS- tion because he expects to be
tnct would have no mcumbent but

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The .Househas approved a Democra~tc ve_rs10n. of a co.ngresstonal
Jedtstncung bll~. cleann~ t)le wey
for the dellbef!Wons of a .JOIDI ci)Tlf~rence commtttee wtth the Repubhcan-controlled Senate.
The 10-member committee,
with Rep. Judy Shee~er, D-Shaker
Hetghts, and Sen. Rtchrud Fman,
R-Cincinnati, serv_ing ~s co-ch~rpersons, plan~ed Its frrst mee~ng
for Monday mght and wtU consider
public testunony.
: Ms. Sheerer won 62-37 House
11pproval We~nesday o~ her b~ll
.rf!!ucmg Ohio s congressmnaldistncts to 19 from 21. She satd 11
·lceeps a _leadership a$f00ment that
each poliucal pany will surrender a
seat.
.
Ohio will lose two of its U.S.

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

bipartisan ethics reform~ in

Con~ss that have caught natJonal

attenllon.
.
Rep. Robert Corbm, R-Day~n.
~ailed the Boehner-Gra1hson parrmg a mtstake because southwest

Oh!o is one of the fastest growing
regtonsofOhio.
·
Corbin said Republicans hope
that these and other concerns will
be considered by the joint committee.
Rep. Thomas Johnson. R-New

Concord, was one ol several
Republicans who voted for the
House bill. He said the House bill
is better because it k
tbe lOth
District of Rep.
MiUer RLancaster virtually intact
'
'

one office are gomg to serve in
another. The difference is this year,
the public is watching."
Common Pleas Judge Norman
Murdock said earlier this month he
will resign by March 31, possibly
to run for the Republican nominauon for the U.S. Senate seat held
by John Glenn, D-Ohio.
If Gov . George Voinovich
appoints Ney to Murdock's seat on

the bench, Republicans can appoint
Ney's successor, probably Clerk of
Coons Joseph T. Deters
Deters' chief assisWtt Michael
Allen, and City Councim;an James
Cissell, have interviewed with
county Republican officials about
moving into the clerk's job. If Cissell is chosen, that would inean a
Republican appointment to City
Council.

c1are:f

Democrats Repu bl•lCQnS wrang le over
- COUnty ]0
• bS
appoi~ted t~

a Common Pleas
CounJudgeshtp nex.tmonth: .
''The term 'mustcal chatrs' IS a
little trite but that's the best way to
describe it!" said Thomas A.
Luken , chmman of the county
De~~tic party. . .
It san exerCISe m tJ:le _arrogance of power. The publiC 1s _not
bemg consulted as these appomt·
ments are being passed out. The
people who have been elected to

•The Area's Number l
Marl{etplace
RATES
Days

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

POLICIES
• Ad1 oulaide Gallia, Muon or Meip countiea mulL be prepaad
• Receive dilcountlor ada paid in adYance.
• Free Acb: Giveaway and Found adl under 15 worda will be
run 3 day a at no «:huge.
• Price of ad for all capitallctten ia double price flf ad coat
• 7 point line type only uaed
• Tribune il not reapon1ible for errora after liut day (chef: It
for error• firat day ad runa m paper). Call before 2:00 p.m.
day after publication to ma.ke correction
• Ada th.t mual be paid in advance are :
Card of Thanka
Happy Ad.
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A cluliflcd. advcrtiiCment placed in the Callipolil Daily
Tribune (except Clauifted DUplay, Bwinetl Card or Lesal
Notice~) \!rill abo ap~ar in the Point Plcuant Rcgiatcr and
the Daily Sentin el, reaching o~r 18,000 home.

BULLETIN BOARD
BULlETIN BOARD DEADliNE

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBliCATION
AR!;A OSTOMY ASSOC. MEET
SUNDAY, FEB. 23. 2:30 P.M.
AI Pleasant Valley Hosp~al
Downstairs Conference Room.
Call 675-4340 Ext. 387 for more
information

Po~ill

PRICE REDUCED!

reduced to~- lTt.m $73,900 and '"""
fmoncio1 d 'II ro 80% cl r:u•host afiiMII 11111 bo ~
blo to. qUollyq- ro bw 'Ill nie lome ., 3~ fKI'
11 il i~ile.'l 'it, 3 lxilllk. i go~nolod I Bi fli.
Pflll'r!y indrdoll,BOIII~ .lorm

Cal&amp;i4·91HIIMIOI .

Using the Classifieds
Is as Easy as ...

,.· · ~
1~1
'. ~: Announcements
DANCE CONTEST
8:00 to 12:00
Friday Mite Dance
• ·
Marlin's
WWte's Hill Band
:At Rutlanrll.egloa Hal
. Sottp 1..1 W~ bt SUil!J
. 1rt: Good Ht1rttd
WoiM1, C.C. IW.~ Scttltt
Shets, Mo••• Trlttl,
Doll'l It Cnt~ Oa Th
. Oner Hud, Don't Yn

Ju tl

~

llt11t dnu9h can mallt

,,... • lnl olllr.. ld "''""

WANT ADS
~

~ ,.,.-,-,...

1 card of Thanks

The Family Of
VERNON CLELAND

wishes to express
our heartfelt thanks
to the many friends
and relaUves for
their kind
expressions of
sympathy; lor the
flowers, food, cards,
phone calls, words
of comfort, prayers
and many; other acts
of kindness.
Becky Cleland, wife;
Erma Cleland, mother;

. Ewer Gti llrtd Of H•rtlttfl
Me, folso• Prison BIHS,
; ~· Slopped Loving Her, Lany &amp; Jeny, Brothers
· llttlts Alr!pl, Oat w...n
: Mal, Htll'tldtts By Th
: ll•lter, Htlp Mt Mitkt It ;:5=H=app~yA;::d=s:::::;
: Th• Ut Mil~'• II"
: Mot• of lelheky, Movl•
· 0.. Flllttlttg SIN Of Mt,
: Cui MIHr's D11gkter,
: DllllttiUpltHs,IWls•
. ltKk 'Wu Still Sllvt~
. 1912, Totl1y I Sltrttd
· ltvlll Yo•, Hello
· Jtup 111, SwiiJIIg

• hen, liM Stlldt Slllls,

Werkltt . . lflts,-..1
' IItie, Gnt1 Gr• Gtlss
tf lllllt, WWt Sill• of
ilt.lll CJtr, Set AlnW .,
l.ni.. YOI, .lid ' •••,

~-~-;3,

' : !W:ji.s1

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

1 .00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m Thursday
I :00 p.m Fr1day

&amp;

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

44~ol~po~!

992-M;ddlepor!l

367-Cheo!Ure

Pomeroy
985-Cheller
843-Porlland
247-Letart FaU1
949-Ra cin(!
742-Rutland

388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dllt.
643-Arabi• Di..at.
379-Walnul

2-ln Memory
3- Announcementa
4- Giveaway
5- Happy Ada
6- Loat and Found

6 7 5-Pt. Pleuanl
458-l..eon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882- New linen

7- Lost and Found
8- Public Sale &amp;

895-Letul
937-Rufl'alo

667-CoolviUe

PUBUC NOTICE
RE: Melgo County, Tuppera
Plaine - Chutor Water
Diotrict Comunlty PWS tD:
5300612
Tho Tuppero PlalnoChN1er WaiM Dlotrlct water
oupply did not monitor lor
radiological activity In the
drinking wator ouppty ao
requlrad under the olete'o
oalo drinking water lawo.
Chopter 3745-81 of the Ohio
Adminlotrallvo Code
requirad a Community water
oupply uolng a ground

wllhln tho opeclliad throe
y11r limo period lor: Grooo
Alpha.
Prior to being notlllad of
lhlo violation by tho Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency, the wator oupply
had tho drinking water
analyzed lor tho above
menlionad parameter, and
all !Hied parameters of tho
llrlnldng wa1er matlht Ohio
Admlnlotratlvo Code Standardo. Tho water euppller will
lake otape to onouro that
adequate monitoring will bo
performed In the luturo.
(2) 18, tt, 20, 3tc
1 card of Thanks

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

21- Buain1111 Opporlunily
22- Money lo Loan
23- Prolauional Service~

32- Mobile Home.. for Sale
33- Farma for Sale

34- Bu.~ineu Bu1lding.
35-lol! &amp; Acreage
36-- Real Eatale Wanted

I

57- Muttcalln•trumenta
511- Fru;l! &amp; VeJetablet

59- For Sale or Trade

I \B\1 ~ 11'1'1.11 · ~
,\ 1.1\1'.:- IIH I'
6
q P
62- Wanted to Buy
63- Liveat.o&lt;:k
64- Hay &amp; Crain
65- Seed &amp; Fert.iliaer

71- Aulol for Sale
41- HowM for Rent
72- Truck• for Sale
42- Mobile Home~ for Rent 73-- Van~~ &amp; 4 WD'a
74- Moton:yc~
~ Farma for Rent
7~ Boata &amp; Motors lor Sale
44- Apartment for Rent
76- Auto Pari! &amp; Accetoo•r;.,l
45-- Fumiahed Rooma
77- Auto Repair
46- Space for Rent
47-

11- Help Wanted
12- s .aualion• Wanted
13- ln1urance
14-- Bu110e11 Tra•n•ng
15- Sc hool• &amp; ln1lruct1on
16- R•dio , TV &amp; C O Rcpa•r
17- M&amp;acellanco u&amp; ·
18- Wanaed To Oo

sr- Peu for Sale

W•nted to' Rent

78-- C.mpinr; Equipment

~Equipment lor Rent

49- For l.ea•c

m :l\&lt;:11 \:'illiSI·.
51- Houaehold Goode
52- Sporling Cooda

53- Anttquea
~ Mi~e .

Merchandise
55- Building SuppliCfl

8

po
82- Plurnbinr; &amp; He•ting
Excuatin8
Elef:lrical &amp; Relo·;go,.ot;,~

General Haulin~
Mob1lc Home Repa•r
Upholalery

Business ·services

II~-:;~;;;;~~~~;:;:;;:;~;:;~~;::;T;::::::::::;;::;:::::::::::;r;:~:=::::=~;;.~~:;lr===;::~==::;

SHOOT

POLE BUILDING
MATERIALS
Imperial
Metal
(ul To Length

GUN
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
:Jashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

R•

I WEEII DEliVERY

•'tiJ-lilllk
Colors
•d all

C111n011

6:30P.M.

Acttnorlll

Starting Sept. 28
Factoa Choke
12 Gauge olgun Only
Strictly Enforcod
9-t3-'91-1fn

BAUM
LUMBER CO.
CHESTER
21141'9V1 mo.

TROY-BI£r·
O~~t !prt~c S~tJ.,....,lH'
'llDera Now Ia !koek.
Your Loeol
Dtolrr

~oy-Blh

f;f·BU.

WAiff ftJ'S

II. SO Wost,l*m, Olio •SII..!Il S

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Re~alr
NEW &amp; USED ARTS

FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992-7013 or
992-5553
OR TOLL FREE
1·800·848·0070
DAltWtN, OHIO
7131f911tfn

COUNTRY MOBILE HOMf
3 Nl&lt;t MoWle Ho-fer IIIII
Just Hortll ol P-•r
Slll'lla~ at '225 ~~~ ••·
Call 14-992· 528
"385-8227

The Family Of
PAUL "Gene• VAN
2392J•L
METER
would like to thank Dr. E.
S. Villanueva, Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church,
Rev. Paul Taylor. Betty
owswpm• or
Williams, Veterans
Troy-Bllt '1\Den New I• .!k•ek..
Memorial Hospital,
Your Local »n·B;J, oeo~.,
WAll 111'1
Rutland Emergency
It
SO
w..t,A""
Olio •li!-311S
Squad and crew.
:II2GID2I3 mo.
Birchfield Funeral Home.
We would also like to
thank all our friends and
neighbors who sent
Public Notice
cards, llowers. food, etc.
during the time of the
loss of our loved one,
PUBUC' NOTICE
and for their prayers.
NOTICE
Ia hereby given
The Van Meter that on Saturday,
February
Family 22, 1002, at ,t 0:00 1.m., a
public lilt wilt ba held at
105
Union Avenue,
Pomeroy, Ohio, to oall for
cuh the following
oollatorlll:
UttFORDTEMP
SI1FAPP31li2KKI07080
IUO CHRYSLER NEW
YORKER BE 4 DA

f'ROY-BI£1'.

s,....

HE'S451
' HAPPY
BIRTHDAY!

Aucti on
Wanted to Buy

9-

Public Notice

1-'1\\'i( 1\1.

$
$
$
$

Gallia County Meigs County Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Lordy,look

From: Unm
Pam, ~••na

Over 15 Words

GET RESULTS • FAST!

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

fi

· Crystal! ·

15
lS
IS
15
IS

Rate

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separale ads.
f-"-- - - --;;,.-a;""";w:;;:;w;;;; ::-c::::-----1

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
-New Homes
-Remodeling
-Garages

985·4141
11-22·92-11110.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER -LINES
BASEMEN~&amp;

HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmeetont,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucenood and Bonded
PH. 614·992-5591
12:.5-tfn
.

The Farmer• Bank and
Bavlnga Comp1ny, Pomeroy, Ohio, rooorvoo tho
right to bid elthlt ..... 111d
to withdraw the above
collateral prior to, tale.
Further, Tha Farmere Bank
1nd Savtnga Company
,..""' the right to reject
or .a bide eubmlllad.
urther, tho lbOYI
collat.ral wiU be aol~ In tho
ooncltlon It Ia In with no
expretttl or .fmplled

'

MICROWAVES
VHSCAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

"1

.......

H,E.C.

~

For mort Information
ooniiiOt loott lllri at ttl·
lata.
(2) tt,ID, 21,11o

•

.'

&amp; Room

Additions

Sf tC3XC4i~LD717ot7

Who's.401
Happy Birthday,

Words

1
3
6
10
Monthly

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

water aource, to monitor

'""' r..ncilg ll'lllioblo. Tho pit hol bo..

f -

Library Lines

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Joint cOmmittee to study Congressional redistricting ·

New arrival
Amy Molden and Tony
Starcher, Rutland, arc announcing
the birth of their first child, a son,
Jonathan Dean. on Jan. 26.
He weighed seven pounds and
six ounces and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandmother is Joyce
Frye, Rutland. Maternal grandparents are Keith and Kathy Molden,
Rutland.
Paternal grandparents are StanIcy and Doris Starcher, Rutland.
Great grandmothers are Macie
Priddy, Rutland, and Haz~l Morford, Hebron.

l

Thursday, February 20, 1992

391WEITIWN
POMEROlOtiO
'

814-0112 124
1·22-'92-1 ...

SHRUB

&amp; TREE

TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

KING'S HOME
IMPROYJMENTS
New Homes,
Additions, Siding,
Pole Barns, Painting,
Gara~es, Porc:hes
FR f ESTIMATES

614·742·3090 or
304·773·9545
NO SUNDAY CALLS
21141'9211 mo.
HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BUtLDOZER,BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME siTES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS IHSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

TROLlEY STATION

cum

Feb. 10 thru 14
s'pecial Valentine
Hours -10 to 8
FEB. II- Adult Baakot
CiiiiM- 6:30p.m.
FEB. 24- Btglnntr Acrylic
Painting Closs
For More Info Call
614·992-2549
Opon Mon.-Sot. tO om-5 pm
Sund.ly t-5 pm
REWARD
$500 for Information
leadlnf to the t•st and
1onvl1 lon of I ~erson
or persoM lnvolv In the
bCakln~ and entering oJ
I Ra1 ne Gun Club an
the theh of stnral
arlldts trow
tstab·
IIshman!. A In ormallo•
will be kept confidential.
Call614·949·2671
2-3-'92·1 mo

'ro

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Fadory
Choke Only
9-6-H

1-13-'92'-1 mo

SUN'S UP
TANNING
lltw U•a load
111 lltl111d

CAlL 742·2771

I5Senltu----'25.00
12 $ossloaL---·'20,00
.6 S.ulols-----'12.00
I S.•sloa-----'3.50

FREE SESSION WITH MRY
IINEWAl
Stvoral ldrtlll ellttlolt
SCA WOUIIIDS
1711 mo.

l:::mBA1

••ru,....,.

J&amp;l
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•RWllacement
indow
•Roofln11
•Insulation

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742-2097
539 Bryan Place
Middlepor~ Ohio
111t4mn

MEIGS
GOlF COURSE
MEMBERSHIP FEES

Men...............~75 ea.
Women ........ ..S225 ea.

Couple .................s4SO

..ssso

Family ..........
(4)
bslness .........S6SO (41
Studenls ..............1100
College ................SISO
l/31/92/l .mo. pd.

BISSELL &amp;BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Honies
•Gara9es
e(omp ete
Remodeling
Sto" &amp; Co=re

fS

F EE UTI

985·4473
667-6179

2-7-92-tfa

Air Conditioners
&amp; Heat Pumps

•1 00% 2 year parts &amp; labor warranty
•1 o yr. heal puf11l coiT'j)resser warranty
•F ree estimales
Bennetts Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

1392 Safl.-dSdtotiiL
Cal

=s,

• HD0-172-59 7

Oltli

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
'Q uality
SIZED LIMESTONE

New Ho•es e Vi•yl Sldl•1
New Garaps • lepl1ce•••• Wi•dows
Roo• Ad.ltlt•• • l"fl•1

FOR SALE
Call614·992-6637

COMMERti.U. .... RESmENTIAL
Ji'BEE ES'I'IMA'RS

St. Rt, 1
Ges•lre, OH.

Cll• S.dlf Cllllsl

Stone Co.

614·9C9·2101 or 9C9·2160
2112112

�Ohio

3

Bruce Beattie

SNAFU® by

Announcements

14

Announcements

44148."
I

Lilli Chllnco 5 mo old puppy,

I

ney Aree. References Available.

miles from Point Pleasant, 304·

I

Colt614·24S.5887.

:675-66:.:..::::7:.:5::..- - - - - - - - -

~

:tl

Fruth Ptt.nncy, 186 N. Second

Certified Oaycare Provider In
Plantz Subdivision, Gallipolis.
Acetpling Infants .. Children.

I

St., Ulddloport .
...,

I

llblo. 304-tY!-2722.
18 Wanted to Do
Will Blbysh In My Homo. Rod· Dno ocro lot, Rt. 2 Soulh, 3

I

sl..pl Takl OPAL, available at

Unattached? UHt ArH Slnglll
Through Our SingiH Ntwsltl·
ttr. Write: Singlet, P.O. Box
1043, Gallipolis, Ohio .t5631.

367·79!7.

dian from Nimrod and Gloria

call304-t75-1957.

4

Sat., aHord1bl1, childcare. M-F
6 o.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ago• 2~10.
Bofors, oftor ochool. Orop-lns

The sneeze that cost Hans a gold medal ...

Old

11

hand hlwn log house or Cosmetologisl Netdad: Geuran-

good home, 614·992-6555

cond,

304~75·1224 .

FOUND: Female puppy, part
chow &amp; collit . 4 mos. old . 614·
4'46-3100.

Employment Services

Found: on Pine Grove Rd., long

haired, black, male dog witfl 11
H I W ted
bdghl green collar, 614-949-2655 :-:::::-::---:e::-p'-_a_n-,:-~,...,­
LOS'T or stolen very special AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn

family pet. Female dog, blk &amp;
while, wlpink collar. Answer to
Hannah. Last seen Horse Lick
Ad oft Crab C,.ek, Gallipolis
Perry by her homt. 304·675·
~3a9.

Waavar 304-882-2645.

' AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

Will cleen and paint garag•.
basement, attic, haul away
trash . 304-895-3644 or 895-3062.

DRIVERS WANTED

Will Do Babysitting In My Home,

Excellent
Pay,
Benefits,
Transportatl9f1,
407·292-4'M7,
Ext. 571. !:la.m.·10p.m. Toll
Refunded.
1

AVON get In on the ground .floor

L;ost : orange, mala, shor1 haired ol Avons new earning structure.

1·800·912·6356.

Avon Is changing! More way1 to
make moneyl Representatives
7
Yard Sale
wanted, frH gift with 1lgn up,
ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In call Kay 614·992·1160
Advence. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lhe day before the ed Is to run. CANNERY WORKERSIALASKA
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. Hlrl~ saoo. Wkly. Ovor 8000
Male/Female.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00 Opemngs.
Transp.JHouslng. Call E.I.C.
p.m. Salurday.

Now!

159488.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
RummagefYard Salt . Household
items, antiques, quilling frames,
clothing, canning jara , 304-675·

6979.
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

1·206·736·7000

E~.

Carrier needed Immediately to
deliver Charltslon Gazelle to
customers on MI. Varnon Ave,
Jefferson Blvd, Lincoln &amp; Mon·
roe Ava. Perfect lor extra in·
come lor adults or youth.
Serious Inquiries may call Clr·
culatlon Dept, 1·800-888-5140.

City of Point Pleasant now ac-

800-452·6881.

ORIVERS WANTED, oorn lo

N"d· 5 HP Gas Kemp Shred·

Frldoy Fob. 28, 1992, bltwoon
hours 8:30AM o 4:30PM, Mon·

day lhru Friday.

Anytime.

age delivery, al shifts pantime, full-time, 1·800-452..6881

Belora 2p.m. 614-446-3948.

Envelopes At Home,Get Cradil

Cards, Loans Evan Wllh Bid
Credit Or No Credit. ~ush S1.00
Salf-Addrnsad Stamped En·
velopes 110 To: D&amp;A Suppllu,

Boll443, Folrbom,OH 45324.

S.nlor Chizan Naida Ping Pong
Practice Partner. Call 614·3~
2651, And Laava Mtssaga.
Stylist Wanted For High TraHic
Salon. Cllanlale Helpful, But Not

Necessary. Wa Can Hetr, Build

Wanted:

Doctor's

assistant

282, Middleport, OH 45760
WE'LL PAY YOU For Easy

Tabulating

Wo~

From Home!

21

NOT to send money throu9h the

mall until you have Investigated
th• offering.

MEDICAL CLAIMS PROCESS·
lNG
Stan Full Or Par1·llmt. A Few
Hours Per WHk Can Provide Up
To $5,000 Extra Income Monthly.
We Art A National Company
Doing Billing For Physicians
And Other Atalthcart Profts·
sionels. This Is A Sound Business Opponunlly And Requires
A Software Purchase Of S6,995.
No Experience Necessary As
We Train You. SPANGLER
VICES, INC. For Info Call

MIKE-SELL'S
DISTRIBUTOR OPPORTUNITY

Buslnass 11 Good - Present lndapendent Distributor Would
Uka To Sell Eetabllshed Route
In The Qalllpolll Area For Tha
Distribution Of Potato Chips

And

Olhor

Rolaled

Snack

Foods. Must Be Financially
Stable With Sto,.Door Delivery
Experl•nc•. Send Resume To :

Mike Johnson, M&amp;A Distribut-

En·
valopa, No Money To: W.T.P.
5852 14th Slraet, Wesl Braden·

lon, FL 34207. 813-751-3300, Or
813-751-3200.

Real Estate

,,______
2.---------------

. I ,__ ______

9, _ _ __ _ _

~·r.----·---·---

.1 .1.---.----

4· - - - -- -

12. _ _ _ __;__
/,'J. _ _ _ __

·

·'·---------------------6,
_ _ _ _ _ __
7·---~--

14-•. _ _ _ __;,__
15...________

ll,, _ _ _ _ __

~~t~lt6-234·2

&lt;

675-1333
992-2156.
'

'

I1!D 1D®II
CBS Ne.,. 1;1
Andy Qritlllh

~uette, 3br House , Carpeted,
ew/y
Redecorated,
Nice
Neighborhood And Close To
Schools, S400/mo. References
Required.
614-446·3537

Ev;_;•.:;nl.:;ng:.:•:.·- - - - - - - - - :.
42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

PICKENS FURNITURE
NewiUsid
Household furnishing. 1!2 mi.
Jerrlcho Ad. Pt. Plaaaanl, WV,
caii304-675-14SO.
SWAIN

log 317192, Call 614-446-1864 For
lnfOfmallon.

57

~·

rooms, luu basomonl, 1·112 balh,

ettached 1·112 car garaga.
Central heel and air. Evenings

I

I
.

•

304-B7!-t979.
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

10d0 mobile home liveable but
nMd1 worit on outside or .would
make good ltor~ge bldg, $200.

304-615-3110\

lex And TIUe Down . Preownid
Mobile Homas, Uta Your lex

Rotund. 50 Hom11 To Choooo.

4 piKe bedroom Ht; dining
1·bdrm..l. utilities fum, nlca river room table I chair, $20· 2
view, ~70Wk, $250mo. Room's metehing chalre &amp; elool, $20;
SIO.OO night, $50.00 wuk, 614· plus mora, 814·992·2949

/)0,1$

wf'nA
PAY /.ATf

I

\1111

/j) MacNeiiL!.ahrtr

ANPA

NtWIHour I;;!
all Wheel of Fortune 1;1
® D Family FeUd

C&gt;ILLi-~

73 · Vans &amp; 4 WD's

7130.

676-4!48.

122 College Belli1elballlllinois
al Wisconsin (L)

a Croaaflrt

1984 Jeep Cherokee Chief
Wagonttr, Cdr., 4wd., fullr.
loaded, good cond., 80,000M ,

7:35 (I) Sanford and Son
1:00 (I) D ® Coaby Show Clair
and her old lrlends reunite
and reminisce. Stereo. C
1D MOVIE: The Brtvoa (2:00)
(I) (I) D Columbo Columbo
&lt;orcas a spurious murder
confession !rom a gigOlo. (A)

~~~r:::::~: $4600, 614-949·2585

~
1 1986 GMC ven customized, low
90 gallon gav1anlzed water tank, mlltage, fully automatic, musl
blrrtll wood etovt, 1 horll Sill, $8,000. will negotiate, 304·

SINCE TltiNGS AIU!
SLOW AROUND ~ERE,
I WAS .JUST 'THINKIN'
HOW MUCit Tit' 110\S
MIGHT r.I'PI!ECIATE A
GOOO BARBECUE!

olod. AU A·l condition. 814·258- 882-3473.
6480·
19a7 · -:c:-u,-cl-:
om lz-ed
-:-:c
Dod
~
g,-:Mcclnl
Dour TO~ 340 6 way blade, Van, Exc111101 Condition, $6,000
:~ ~ condition, $4aOO, 814· Nogollablo. 614·256·1061.

3

gTht Atlronomars Stereo.

1990 DodAt Careven LE, 1 Pas·

tractora &amp; lmptemtnts . Buy,
sail, lrade, 8:00.S :OO WHkdays,
S.I. till Noon.

capt

a Be I Slar Steroo.

•

ElectriC, Deposit And tom mede oak crlb end cradle.
Reference, $165/mo. 614-446· Saart microwave whh cart. 304·

BISIInoll, cradle, crib, playpen,
1br EHiclency, Utilillll Paid, Ex- high chair, dressing table, cut·

~
liZ e XVI OlympiC
Wlnttr Gemet Alpine skiing ,

~;:-:-;::::::-;:::::~~~-==­
1976 Harley Oevldson, 304-67517fi2 eveningt.

woman's slalom; short track
speed skallng; biathlon ,
men's 20k; speed skating,
men's 10,000m (T); ladies
long .PrOQ!!m figure skating

MF 2a5 Traclor, Shatpf $7,850; 1986 tionda 4 wheeler 200 SX
1130 MF Tractor, $3~950; 35 MF $1,400. 1881 Yamaha 650 Maxim
Hud approved, 304·675-2722.
Homol $29,995 &amp; Up. Buln On Tractor, $2,995. uwnar Will $950. 304-675-6675.
Your ot. Stlt Our Model, 814· Finance. 614-286-t522.
2-bdrm, part turn epl, newly 686·7311.
1987 Yl Yamoho 12!, $1,2QO.
redecorated,
WID hook·up,
. MF-150, diosol, $4500; 806 lntor- 304-576·2611.
2 bedroom ept, ullllllt!ll paid, Big 4 Bedroom Dakota Dreem

614·99:2-6886

Gpm

after Blk!SIIver prom gown eize 8,
$175. Red alrapleu ball room
gown size 5, $65. Blue malellc

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jockson Plko
trom $192/mo. Walk lo shop &amp;
movln. Coll61+448·2568. EOH .

olrttpllll gown liro 3, 125. 304·
675-2057.

Furnished
Small
House, $250/mo. Plue UtlliUet,
And Deposit. 614-446.0338. Call
Befo,. 7p.m.

388 ..354.

Compltlly

Brawn Eggo For Solo: 1.23
Mount Olivo Rood, Bldwoll. 114·

Exorcloo
oqulpmonl,
D.P.
Uogslln odomlnol miChlno
now $250. will 1111 175. Rowing
Furnished eHiclancy aper1menl mochlng 125. 304-t75-tl75.
with kitchenette and bath. Arowood lor 1111: Big IGodo,
Deposit and rafer1nces ra- $45. 0.1. l olockod. Alto, houl
llmlltont. 6'14-446-8321.

EHiclencr. apt. tor rent, beautiful
carpet, n ca couch and bar 304·

Reference And

D•posll

R• H11vy duty tralllr tr~ma, 2 ax~
IH, 4 II,.. lnd rima, $150. AIIO

Furnished Apartment , 1br, next
to Ubri ry, parlclng, central heet,
air, referenc11. 614-446-0338
Batora 7p.m.
'

nallonal diesel, $5500; MF disc,

New Holland Hay Rakes, And
Square Balare, Mowtrtli 2 And 4
Row Com Plenter~ cutlpack·
ers, Cunlvators, Wh111 Dlsksil
Manurt Sprtldtre, Other Fial
Ready Equipment. How•'• Farm
Mechlnery, Jeckson Ohio. 614·

286·51144.

Wantad: Uaad tum equipment,
anything you want to 1111. Call

45

Roomt tor renl ·weak or month,

Royel Show Sackln,

e

Two 235x15" new r.cap Mudded
r~dlal wlnttr treads on whMII
will fM JHp or Fond. Ono 4 bon
cemaper what! 15'" 111 ply tire
never used. 304-675-1564.

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Hay &amp; Grain
:-:H-.y-;fo-r-so-;l,.:o,"'304=·5"'J6.=223=a.- -

Lnendar bedtpr11d, cYf1aln1,

1m Oldsmobile Cutlus, 36,000

81

Transporlalion

Origlnol Milos, 350 Rockel, 4
C1rborator,

Excellent

Moving aaJe· couch, ,lova ...t,
good cond., $225; 2 otjd llblel, 305,oU1o _~71lO, 114-1192-734a or
1
$50; tllctrtc 11o¥e, 1 1J2rr. old, SM-IltN1o11
$250; ratrlgerelor, Mtdl ..11,
Broughman,
$75; Wllhar, good cond., 1100; 1181 Cldlilsc,
O.Eiopneo, Flootwood, Gooo
614-992-6555
S
.:.I_II.:.IC::I.:;II=-E-xoc-UI-IV_I_DH
_ _k, Condlflon, Gorogo Kopt, 1
OWnor, $~,100 . IM::!S&amp;-6520.
36"x70" $100; II" Color Tolovl·
slon Wllh Sllnd, $50. Coli 114• 1t82 Collbrity $250. Alto I 1979
4.4::6.:-t5::99::·~--------­ Grand PrlK, i2so, 614-1112-2581
oftor5pm
"'
Twin btd, br111 h•d board,
bollprlnge &amp; mlttrtel, -$50; an-- 1183 Ford Eocorl. 270 ft. chain
uq,. ooi lobi• wh~ 4 cholra, link lonoo. 304-885-3078.
$300· Hoolor llyll cupboond,
Olomabllo
Cloro
$75; fM-112·8112 oftor 11pm
Brougham, loldad, ••c. cond.,
Twin looir y..._ Ulto New, good llroo, $2800, 1-1-3084
2 Y11ro Old. $80.114-141.0020.
111M Cltryolor Afth Avonuo, AoUtllhy ll'lllor modi from Cltotry ~1~700. 114-28&amp;-1252, 114Luv lruck bod $4110. HuffY
Slgms 20" blcycll i-10. ~
1114 Dodgo A~n. 4 door, block,
8875.

MY ~oe EiOINS TO JOIN

THE NATIONAL RIFLE
ASSOCIATION.

Home
Improvements

THAT HE: ,AND PRE61DENT
6U6t I BE !.ON&amp; '10 ~E
84.ME CLLIB.

I

I

J

614·237-0488,

day or nlghl.

Rogert Saument Waterproo-

fing.

Complete Mobile Home Sat-Upt,

Roratrs; CommerlcaJ, Rnkt•n·

tia

lmprovernenla. Including: .

Fo101dollon Wort&lt;, Roofing, ·
Khchono And lolhl. Froo Eitlmotnl Roforoncoo, No Job To
Big Or Smaiii614-411.Q225.
Aepelr,

Polntlna. OuoHiy Work! Coli
Rogor AI: 814-44&amp;-8518.
Ron's TY Sorvlco, spocloi::J •
In Zonlth alto ..vlclna

HOWDY,
SHERIFF!!

RID OF
THAT CHICKEN,
SNUFFY!!
GIT

Newer Homes. Room Adclitione,

One.

a

BARNEY

Plumbing, Eloclrk:ol. lnluntnco ·
Claims AOeoJ!Iod. 814-258·1111.
Cuttll Hoii)O lmpoo-s:
YNrs ExporllfiCII On Oldor &amp;

Renovations, Add

.

•

•

..

by filling in the miaing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

8 PR INT
NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
A
V

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

t·''

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Morbid- Fluke - Nomad- Jur1st- BUNDLES

The couple buying a new puppy at the pet store
asked the clerk if the puppy had papers . "Certainly,"
the clerk answered, "how many BUNDlES do you
want?"

cf

(

Goorgn Croolt Rd. Potto, ·~
plloo, plekup, ond doiiYory. 114-

ASTRO·GRAPH

441-0:JM.

Will bulid polio oovoro, d"f~
tcreentd room8, put ..
oldlng Of trsllor lkilllng. 1
245-tl52.

84

NORTH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Plumbing &amp;
Healing
Clrtor's Plumbing
FowthondPino
Golllpotls, 0t11o
614-448-3888

~'lOur

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

~'Birthday

111M wh~o ~lullllgo roctk,
oUio,AC,PW,, .....

.

'

.: ...~oa;t~· ftrm.

Fell.21, 1112

41 AeM, ""' Homo. Clor.,.,
.... Troallli, Toltocco a-,
CIIIIM-288-*1. ,

45111CI'I firm, !~our mlloo 0111 Rt.
12 an KIIIIWno Alvor, 30W75'

"

A slow but con&amp;lstenl financial growth
pallern could be In lhe oiling for you In
the year alttad. Don'l ttecorne Imp•
llant, beCIUII H you lry 10 apead up
·prograa, you mlghl'ltalllllnoteacl.
P18CI8 (Ftb. m " ch :II) You might
be lempl~ to Cllll1ge your opiniOn Ill'
~1y d,. 1o lite preasure of a blued
~pa~IOn · Your Initial .......,.,.1 Ia
llktiy to be ~er than your altered
yiew. Gel i jump on ... by untlerttanclihg' the lnftuanceo governlna you In lhe
I

.

year ahead . Send for Pisces' Aslro- VIRGO (Aug. 23-&amp;.pl. 22) It's lmporGraph predictions today by ·mailing lant lhal both you and your mate are of
$1.25 plus a · long, sell-addressed, Hke mind today reQardl~ a crlllcal Is·
siampecl envelope to Aslro-Graph, c/o sue. If your alms vary, do not e•pect a
lhls newapaper, P.O. 80191428 , Cleve- desirable end reouH.
•
land, OH 44101-3421. Be sure to 11818 LllliA ISetll· n.oct. 23) You mlghl be
your zodiac sign.
lncHned to do a lillie but expect a lotioARIES (MtiCh 21·Aprll It) If you pul day. Dluppolntment Is likely, because
·your fool in your mOU1h by blurting oul your reward&amp; will be commensurate to
something you shouldn't today. lel ll lhe HIVICn you render.
real. Allempllng to ractlfy what you Mid ICOIIPIQ (OcL 24ollow. 221 Small 110could make ll woree.
Clllluncl.lot1a art likely 10 be much more
TAUR\18 (April 20-MIJ 20) To gratify pleiSUIIble for you today than lhoee
your lnlaretlaloday, you might try to al· t~JI ~ate a crowd . If you're reler SOCial arrangements that aftec1 olh· qillred lo make a chOice, keep lhla In
ero as Wlill as youraelf. You'd beller go mind .
along wHh lhe original plans and not an· SAQITTAJIIUI (Now. 2J.Dtc:. 11) If
ger frlenda .
. , .
you're hottlng an aftalr at your pt~eelo·
OIMIII (lltJ 21-.lune m) If you are not ' day, be very Hiletlve about the g-1
methodical and purpoteful loday, you 1111. Wllhoul careful planning, You mlghl
aren't apt to achieve your ·Objtetlvet. malell up lhe wrong PIO!lle or lnvlll
You might come cloee, bul mlaalng by a - w h o jult doel!l'lllt ·
foollo nol beller lhon mlulng by a mile. CAPIIICCIIIN (!leo. 22.Jen. 1t) You
CAIICIII (.U. 21...,., 22) .Don'l lei might~beMWIIII·iunedtoyouraudl·
your ego put you In an emlllrrllli~ . enotladl)' It you UIUilly are. There'e a
potlllon lodoy by pretending lo com- .,-!bill)' you may gore 1 aacred cow
Pflhlnd eomethii!Q you don't Some- or o"-"«1 - , . wll~ a lhoughllell
one might Ilk you tor 1 dllalled rtmlll&lt;.
txplanallon.
· .
AQUAMII (olin. ..,..,_ 11) Your
LIO (.luiJ IJ.A... II) ~you func:IIOn u ~I ' r~g~rdlng mv.tmarllt ,or
lhe una-11.- of 1101111111 CIUMI to- eotnmtrdal vtnilnt might !101 be up to
doy, lhere't 1 Cllanct you may gitt In• par loday. Don't lei your !mpu.._
volved In something COotty with get you Iiiio a bum deal - and keep you
one WhO,II I Very poor r(ak.
there.
'

+.

•

1-lt·tl

t963
,1075
• 8 42
t9 8 '2

EAST
tKJH

WEST
ti08t2
'AJ6
tK7
tKJ 6 3

PHILLIP
ALDER

,912
• 10 9
tQ 1014

SOUTH

tAQ

'KQ 8 3
tAQJB3
tA

Some inferences
are negative

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Wesl

By Phillip Alder

S..l~

Bridge is a difficult game to play
because it isn't ali positive. True, you
lake note of what another player actu·
ally bid or played. bul you must also
remember whal he didn't bid or play.
And often that line of thought will lead
you to the winning solution.
Every year the llclls liqueur compa·
ny sponsors a Bridge Tips competition
in which leading experts and journal·
isiS offer snippets of advice. Chip Marlei 's tip is: When analyzing a hand, be
sure your reconstruction is consistent
with the bidding and play of both unseen hands.
Cover the East and South cards in
the diagram.·Against three no-trump,
you lead lbe spade two: three, king,
ace. Declarer continues with the A·Q
of diamonds, partner playing (irsl lhe
10 and Uien the nine to show a doubleton. Whal do you lead at trick four'
You know dedarer has seven tricks:
two spades and five diamonds. If he
has the A-Q of clubs and the heart
king, you must continue spades. But if

Obi.
3 NT

West
lt
2t
Pass

f •

..,.
•
\

iiJI NeWI
1D Night Court r:;J

1+
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • 2

South has the club ace and K·Q orhearts, you must switch lo clubs; oth•·
erwise declarer will dislodge your
heart ace and have nine tricks. Which
Is lbe right play•
Think back to the bidding. You know .
partner has only four spades. There- ·
lore, he must have fewer than four
hearts or he would have responded one:·.
heart. not one spade. This marks de-;
ciarer with 2· 4-6·1 distribution. The
club switch is the winner.
.
Unfortunately most llclls tips arelor experts only. But Martel's may be
applied by everyone. Don't make
play that does nol make sense when
you consider what someone didn 't do . .

:a.

1!)----·- .

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

An•-••·- • Puule

erGordlt34 SaiWII
35 Empty
37 Require
39 Actroaa
Luplno
40 Vigor

I Cricket
. pollUona
4 Become
lndlallncl
8 Sky color
12 Popoyt'a
r11ond Olive

I!JL!Jl!lU!JU t!JL!Jr.JU!JW

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iJl!lOI!(]lJ []EJ[J[][J[]
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m.mu
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Ur.llJ !Jl:II.J
UlJ(!]lJl:ll!l lJ(jlJrJ
[]l!ll!llJ :.:Jl!l(!] lJU~I3
!Jl!l!J 0(1~ [J(jrJ
I!UEJU(]I! Dl!JEJDlJB
(j lJ IJ u IJ(j l!l £J 1J lJ r~.m

42Help

13 Of alrcrall
14 Kind of
lncomt
15 Now (prol.)
16 Calchtl
17 Ltafo&lt;:ulting
enl
II Cornered
{2 wdt.j
20 R1ngt of
hearing
22 FIVOrllllm
24 Ughl-ltalhor
25 ltlll high
28 'Strango
paraon {II.)
3 1 - - Clear
Day
32 HOCktY play·

44- and h1w
45 Tamtrlak ull
tree
46 Exem
oupervlaor
49 Trot animal
53 Chill IWIY
54 leo cream
dllnk
56 Yoko57 Church part
58 Culllwalor
59 Harem

[Jl'I£:JU[:J[•]

~partmonl

l'J U~Ol'II.;:J

O'NtiU'I
daughter
2 Sowle!
refutal
3 Sloppy
paraon
4lnfanUie
5 Pllture!and
6 Prod•

60 FlHing return
81 Surrounded
s2 gfw1ne being

DOWN
1 Eugene

7 Sub(HCrtlly)
8 GoHclub
o Sletpr
10 Do - olhoro
11 Coup d'10 Uncoln't
nlcknamt
21 Acll'
ChorloHI- .
23 Lick of
muacle lone
25 Part of the

...

......--1--1---4

26--tven
kttl
27 Storage

placl

28 Smlllttl
•
28 hllncl blld
30 Gravtl rldg11 ·
33 You and l
:
36 BuNt
381dlol
~~+-+-1 41 UK llmt
Fllr Glldt .
...-+-t---1 43
45-- wllha ·
View
46 81by

a

11:ooC1Je CII til • a11

East

Nortb
Pass
Pass
Pass

e

other brandt. Houtt cals, alto
aama eppllanca rtpa:ira. WV
304-5ll-23tl Ohio IM-441-2454. :
Davia
Stw..Yac
Strtk:t, '

82

American Mualc Shop ·
Stereo.
0 You Asked tor I~ Ageln
Stereo.
9:00Cile «J)ChaertWoody's
brush wi!ll Kelly's lavish
lifestyle turns him Into a
snob. Stereo. C
(I) (!l M)rtteryf The owners
of lhe rival diamonds receive
threalenlng letters. C
liD Beurly Hilla,lii21D
Dylan moves Into the Walsh
home after being hurt while
surtlng . {R) Stereo. C
0 MOVIE: Rilling AIIZ(1'013) (2:00)
12!1 Neohvllle Now Stereo.
L.ny King U111!
0 Fllhtr Oowllng Myttertlt
Stereo. t;1
9:30 (I)
11J1 Wing a Joe and
Brian have to fly an old man
anywhere he wants due to a
tyJ)C1. Stereo. C
122 College a.1lla111111
Arizona at Arizona State (L)
10:00 Clle i1J LA. Lllw Sifuentes
asks Van Owen to testify .
against tjrunken driver.
S!areo. L,l
(!) Newl
(I) (I) ~Prlmenme Uve
S!ereo.
(I) Advl urea ot Robin
Hood
(!l Under Fire
I!D • Hunlar C
World NewT
1D 700 Ciub Wllh Pat
Robtrllorl
10:30 (!l Wallllnglon Report
12!1 Crook ancl Chill
10:35(1) MOVIE: Red Son(lt (PGI3)
{2;00)

e

Uncondltlonel lifetime guaranIH. Local rtfarll1Cft furnished.
FrH astimllll.· Clll CORee! 1•

11JC Flora ~ 4 Cyllndor, 4
8pood, , /IC, AIIIFM C.-to,
PW, 114-25&amp;-1771 Evonlnao.

.

~INST&lt;SLlNS,

E3LIT HE W.ANT610 BE
A6l.E: 10 SAY. ..

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

AMIFM, CIIIIIUI, 4 cyl, new tl•
hiU11,,114-It2·7'231, avanlnoa

..

i

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Services

S4

Berra!

a
a

Brood

71 Autos for Sale

'

a.

1l1rtlng at S99; Auto '

Moros. 614-286-6522.

11711 Z·28 Clmero, 350, 1uto,
ti150,1M&amp;
lroc
Camero,

Furnished
Rooms

VJH4r C!XS H£ ({JI}EJ? .. .
f'Of(EfG~ AfFAIRS OR
CO\IIfi&gt;TIC ?

:6-;3;::::-;L:::Iv;::e::-st-;o;::c-::-k:-:--::::::2 Hom Troller... Doluu, $995; 15 tt triVII trailer, furntct, sink,
1988 AQHA &lt;Ooldlng, Yaulh rango1 _~ bedo, $500. llrm. 304·
Hortll 0t Tho Yoar, 2 Silver 875·2101.

epartmente tor rent 304-175- walher For Salt. 114-441-0,.1,

2053 or 675-4100.

rabulh~

The SlmpiOIII Major
laague baseben players
ensure a victory at !he
companr game. Stereoc.C
I!) Murder, She Wrole E;r
On Slage Stereo.
PrlmeNIWI t;l
illl Tltll'a M)r Doll Stereo.
8:05 {l) MOVIE: Cl..h ol lhe
Tlttna (PG) (2;30)
8:30 (I)
® Olfllrtlll WQI(d
Owayne gets !lie cold
shoulder from Whitley. (Pt 1
of 2l Stereo. C
(!l Are You Be1ng Served?
liD D Dre1all't Clen Otis
lakes a cruise and mee15 a
lllevislon teen IdOl . Stereo.
I!J) •

P11t1. 814·245-5877, 814·992·
6283.

114·258-1308, 256-6040 after 6
p.m.
79

• 283 Morine onglno, l'lbuln wflh
dlrttel drivo, complolo, $200,
IM-IIt2-1121
leo Croom Porlol Table • Chllr
For Solo, 814-oi48-1720.
table skirt. London Fog co1t,
bag of alecks, grHn dreperitB 1

Budget Transmlulons, Ulld

~8Vl8~: ~

EEKANDMEEK

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

$250; 5~. bush hog, $450; 814· 76
985-3373

plc1urn. 614-446-3375.
Condlllonl $4,000. 814-441·1903.
Newly decorated 1fllclency, ral uwn Chill Rldl!'9 Mowor 12
&amp; dop roqulrod, no pats 304- HP, 39 Inch Cut, Usea1 2 1979 1070 COE , lnt'l 290 Cum·
mingo, Big C!'!'J 10 Spaed,.
675·5162.
'
Soaoono, Llko Now, 614-446- $4,500. 304·273-J4'17.
CompleUy Furnished mobile 11627.
1979 Bonnovlllo, 4 Door Good
home; 1 mill below town OVII'· lklhtad gllll show c•• for Condlllon, $1,850. 114-448-9243
looking river. No Pelt cA. 614- ooTo, $200. 304-175-2848 or 11'5- Evonlngo.
44&amp;.0338.
'
4084.
1979 Clvyolor Newport, Runs
Ono ond two bodroom L.ovo Soli, Couch, G.E. Olatt- Good,
$100. 114-441.0731.

T-, I""'

'

pHyLLI.f

$5,500. 614-441.01'31.

949·2526

••c

.'

A~P

LOOFf /..1/(f

CAN'T' CO/VIf.

1991 Ford Ranger, 4 Cylinder, 5

Farm Supplies
&amp; livestock

HAJ liiN

()ft.AyEIJ

Speed, 19,000 Mllu, Asking

Jlm'o Form Equlpmonl, SR. 35, nngor, 614·3'19-2122.
Wool Golllpollo, 114-448·9777; .,.
Wldl ooloellon now &amp; usod farm r'f
Motorcycles

Slartl;1.11 $120/mo. G1lll1 Hoiii.
hom1, made by Hollypark, 2 814 4 9580
-4
'
bedrooms, 1 bath w/gardtn tub
&amp; ahower, fireplace, all eltclric, SIHplng roomo w"h cooking.
outtlde deck Included, very Alto tral111 opaoo. All hoolt·upa.
good cond, 304-t76-34TI.
Csll oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·773- •
5851, Ma10n wv.
lttn Ellrtt Nlco 14180 Sunshlno
Mobile Home, 3 Large Bed· 46 s.pace for Rent
roomo, ·2 Bolho, $17,:100. 814·
441-t325.
Somoono IO oltoro my ltoull
Shorl Tlmo On Job? Poll Credit whit, GoUipoilo Forry, 304-175Hlotory A Ptobtom? Mony 123,, 1:00AM 111111 :00 PM.
Roponoslld Mobllo Homoo To
ChooH From. Small Down
Merchandise
Poymonl. CIII1~589·5TI1.
a145 2-bdrm moblto homo, now
paint ond corpot,,$3000.00 114· 5I
WATER WELLS DRILLEO:
Household
iel-2521
.
'WATER GAURANTEED. 114oflllll.
GoOds
eooy AI \ 2, 3. Fllo You'ro Tun
1'311,
'
Hero And Buy Hol'l. Klso You'ro 4 polltr suptr aln;le water bed, Wood Chlpo F0&lt; Boddlna And
L!lndlord Goodbvol El111 Homo
cond, 304-t7r·72T7 or 171- Mulch F&lt;&gt;&lt; Solo. IM-2M'tl1t;
Conlor, l.aCI0.88f.6l'IO.
Ahor tlp.m.l14-251·1313.
1887.
For S.lo Only: 1172 12180, 2br1
Fully C.~od, Gn Hoot Ana ~ T.V., lmllll Frwzor, lot· 55
Building ' I
81ov1, Ri~lll' And Dish· tory Cltl1gor, ..
VCR, Sooro rofrla-ar, Clothol
suppnat;
'
::':~v~~~~ ~dll:o':; Drpr, 11448lolifll.
P.M. 114-HMZJT.
,
o-h And Choir, .fiiiO; 2 ·End
Tobloo, UO.IM-441-G232. '
33 Fanna for Sale

If79.

.

BRIDGE

E~nmenl Tonlghl
S"!ereo. 9
0 MocGJVer Stereo. 1;1
122 SporltCtnlar
8 Moneyllna
l:lll The Wellons
7:05 (I) Addams FamMy
7:30(%)11 0 Jeopardy! C
(!) Now 11 can Be Tala
(I) Enlell81nment Tonlghl
stereo. t;l
Mairlecl... Willi Children

ask for Jeff

Yamaha Clavinove, CVP 50,
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62 Electronic
Keyboard. Purchase
Olivo St., Gallipolis. Now &amp; Used price
$6,300. will ooll $3,000. 1991 Dodge Dlkote nice truck,
furniture, he1tar1, Weatarn &amp;
304~7U991
oher 8:00 PM loaded, priced to taU, 304-675Work booll. 614-446•3159.
2165 after 5:00.
e304-t7S.8877.

___.:_;:.____________ l19a3 Oodgo Olplomal, 6 Cylln·
44
Apanment
der, 4 Dooi, S3oo. &amp;14·256-8554.
for Rent
3 Ring Wedding Sotc 14K, Whlto
'}.~~;;-i~~idi;p;,;~ I Gold, Engagement Hlng, 12 pt.
1-bdrm epl. In
Diamond, $'250 Or 8111 Ott•r.
Ullllll11 turn, dip roq, no
814·258-M34.
614·992-221a

Elua Horne C.nter, 1-80G-S8Q..

5710.
1m Sunnybrook M•70 mobile

•

Oenerallon C

SH0~TI

Coli 614-446-8707.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
Roducod To Soli: $49,900, room apartments at Village
Chnhlro, Ohio. 904·932·6959, Manor
and
Rivertlda
904·932-7670, 614·367-11649.
Apartments In Middleport. From
Two brick homes, tour mllas $196. Coil 614·992-7787. EOH.
from Point Pleuent on AI. 62,

I
I

"Did you miss me? "I asked
0 y UGE
t-....-"'1':'-r--.-~· 1 my husband as he hugg!ld me
4 1 1
: ~ when I returned lrom work at
I
1
"'--''--..t.-.L.....J~. o the diner. "Yes," he smiled,
. - - : - - - - - - - - . "but you smell so much like
T AL CC I
pancakeslhateto ·-·you--!"
1,5::-rl_.;.;..I..;;:.T-I_:rl.:..._rl--l Q Complete lhe chuckle quoted

®.

1979 Chovy Scollsdolo, 86,000
mllos'r 11,000. linn, good cond,
304-6 5-2808.
1988 Chovy S·10 414, 614·379·
2820.

Musical
. Instruments

Antiques

qulred. 614·446·1519.

In town two story, thr11 bid-

,--~p

I!D ID Slar Trek: Tlie Nelli

The Right Paw Training Center 614-256-6494.
Dog Obedience Cln111, Stan-· 1977 F-150, 414, 614-992-6983,

Flrowood tor oolo: Ook, uh, &amp;
hlckory. Dollvorttd locolly $40 o
675·6042
'
losd or 31or $100. IM-387·7013.
spot, ~14-742·2326
Furnished 1 br Apartment, $225 Full chl~or Aoyll Oak Collllo
3 milat out Crab Creek Ad, pool, Month, Plus Ulillllu. 614-446· Coast memt.rahlp half price. 15
satellite, cenlral air, $54,900. 1788,
old C111 pocket knlvoo. Will
304~7Hr.J5 or 675·1612 Bob.
guno on trado. 304-11'5Furnished 3 Rooms And Bath .1lokll
4 bedroom, htlt pump, 2 car Upslalrs, Clean, No Pets, 564.

3 bdrm. house tor sale, 5 acres,
deck, garage, fruit traas, gardan

out bldgs, 304·882·37!0.

t:nll IIIII' t~JJir:P. .for- ,,,;,1 in ntliiiiRI:t! nrii!N!

Point Pleasant Araa: 2010 Mar-

qulfld. No pets. 614-446-4879.

31 Homes for Sale

garage, 12 acrae, 2 wells, barns,

Place your· cltJssified ad totlay!
15 wm·tls m· less, 3 days,
3 paJJel's,$6.00

Stereo. 1;1
6:05 {l) Beverly Hlllbilllet
6:30 (I) II 0 NBC Newt ~
ID Sltved by the Bell
(I) (1)11 ABC Ne.,.
(I) Wild Amllk:a C
r;11 Square One T'I'Slereo.

.

'"T"'EN..,..,__,B
'

all Current Affair ~

1975 lntemetlonal Dump Truck.
Diesel, Trl·AIIIe, Good Shape!

PM.

Pomeroy,

22 Money to Loan
GET A MAJOR CREOIT CARD
THAT CHARGES 8 1/2% INTER·
EST.

'

'litrtr your dutlm· into (:nsh,
Sell it tire easy~,wtry... by 11hone,
rw neetl to letwe yonr home.

Tour

8 Wo~dTodey
l:lll Rln nn Tin, K-9 Cop

t;r

At·
qulred. Call Altar 614-446..0527 3 Acres: Hou11 And Bam Just
attar 2 p.m.
Off Swan CrHk Road, $5,500 ;

VEND .

,,

.--

- ··--

.

(I) MacNoll~ehrer

Ratarenca And Deposit

1-800·722·SAMS (24 Hrs).

Situation
Wanted

CA~H?H

)

'd/ .

122 lntldt th"t Senior PGA

®The Jeflaraont_D
(I) Inside !!dillon

:c:..::,.:.,-----,.,--~---l54 Miscellaneous
AUTOMATED MEOICAL SER·
Mobile Homos For Rent:
Merchandise

Oulck1 No Way! Bul We Have A
Good, Steady, AHordable, Business. Won't Lasl. 1-800·284·

3956, 2·8pm

_.

alf:U~W"" t;l

OScaoby 0oo
122 Up Close
J:ll) New Zorro Stereo. 1;1
8:35 {l) Andy Grlftllh
7:00 l1j II 0 Wheel at Forlllna

Nice 2 bedroom house across
from Good~aar Plant, Apple
Grove, 304·675--1972 after 5:00

Business
Opponunlty

•1

Male or female to tla~ full· lime
with elderly man avery other
Wltk, 614·94g.2306 or 614·985-

..

2

It-..i3.

NewaHour

Up To $106.00 Paid Dolly. Call I· Ing, 31827 Slate ROild 7,
900-976-7377 ($1.49 Min 18 Yrs. Pomeroy, OH 45679.
Or Wrilo: PASEE · 33B, 161 S.
L ncolnway, N. Aurora, IL 60542. VENDING ROUTE: Gel Rich

12

BOHlEN

ill LeQIIIative Upc!ale

Your Future, For Appo ntmant
Call Carol King, 614·446-6922.
Must like working wit" people
be efficient &amp; have lnsurancR
experience. Excellent working
condillons, good salary &amp; fringe
benefits. Oulstancling caret~
opportunily. Send rnuma lo:
Doctor's Assistant, P.O. Box

all IIJ •

(J) e

the:~~~~~~~~;::;;:-

letters of

four Krambled wordo boo
low to form four omple word1.

(J) C1 Candl C1mer1

INOTICE!
semble Products AI Home. Call OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Toll Free, 1·800-467-5566 E~ . recommends 1.ha1 you do busi313.
'
ness wUh people you know, and
Need BahysiHer In My Home,
For 16 Month Old, Garfield
Avenue Area, Gallipolis. Call

\. "'' (//.-... ,/
~

Adult.

Easy Work! E•cellent Pay! As-

.Want to:
;PIN down EXTRA.

~

THE DAV I WAS BORN ..

I

Financial

452~881.

OriYII'I Wanted
earn to $620 wklr·· small pack-

Responsible

Send A Self Addressed

•

TI-IAT'5 M'f 6ROTHER .. ALTHOU6H I
WONDER IF THERE WASN'T A MI)(·UP AT M

614·446·2652.
Will do Income tans. Phone
304-t75-3939.

$620. weekly. Small package
delivery. All shifts, Pt·FT. 1·000.

cepting epplicallont for part·

time
Recr11tlon
Dirtclor.
Rkk Paarson Auction Company, Qualified
eppUcanta should
full time euetionaer, complete
euctlon service. Licensed Ohio, hava experience In suparYislon
&amp; management. Salery &amp; hours
Wootlllrglnlo, 304-773-!78!.
ere negotiable. Submit r11umn
to Mayors Office, 400 Viand St,
9 . Wanted to Buy
Pt. Pit, WV 25550 no later than

der- Chlppar, 814·992·3325

Earn To $620 Wkty. Small Package Delilltry, All Shifts Pt-Ft . 1·

Possible $400. Weak Stuffing

Lost : In Long Bottom area, AVON ! All Areas ! Shirley
black Labrador puppy, red col· Spears,
304·675·1429.
l,r, family pel, 614·985-4340
cat, got out of vehicle on Salem
St., Rutland , 614·992·6277

cond, red, 15,000. 304-675~331
bafore 10:00 PM.

Wonl lo do housecleaning &amp;
office cleaning. Have reftrln·
cos. 30H75-5413.

$170 Per Week, Paid
Vacations, Call614·446·1267.

Used bathroom lavatory sink or

To Giveaway: Old Furnace, Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
Used Stove, Box Springs, And Wllh Or Wllhoul Molors. Call
Mattress, 25 Inch Floor Model Larry Lively. 614·388·9303.
T.V. Set, Appliances Need
Repair. Call 614-441·1036 Arter Wanted To Buy: Large Round
Balas Of Hay, SS A Bale. 614·
2p.m.
446-1052.
To good home male Pit BUll,
Top Prices Paid : All Old U.S.
304-lla2-3495.
Coins, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
6
Lost &amp; Found
151 Second Avanut, Gallipolis.

8

Help Wanted

barn, for taar down &amp; removal, teed

Gr11a1 house dog, looking lor a used vanity. Must bt In good

QReorrange

1

/j) Reading RainboW t;1

1966 Toyota MR-2, new paint &amp;
speed rated Ur11, vwy good

Rentals

t=======::::T-::::::::::::::::::1 welcome.
614-44&amp;-8224. New In·
fant Toddler Cara, 6~4-446-6227.
will pay cesh, 614·843·5453

Frat puppies. 614-388-9844.

mille, sun roof, $1,000. 1987
Horizon 40 miln gal $1550.
304~75-2440.
' ''

Mill Paula's Day Caf'l Canter.

Wanted 10 Buy

WOlD

I 1 1 I I

®Newt
IDVIdeo Po\Zj Square Ona TV Stereo.

41 Houses for Rent

Fridley, 304-t75-6979.

1142.
9
und
bailes
of
hau.
About 40 ro
•

....

M

THU., FEB. 20

&amp;:00 12) II Cll

1886 Plymouth Turismo, low

Georg11 Po11ablt Sawmill, don't
hul your logs to the mill just

chased upright bill and accor·

call 446·1142Firl Wood-ready to
go 614-446·1142·

Television
Viewing

'

EYENINQ

Trimming, TrH Removal, Hedge
Trimming. Free Estimates! 614·

Want to locate person who pur-

614·256-6348.
40 round bales of hay.614-446-

'

8

Trailer lol tor rant. Water\ sewer
end sanitation lncludea. S110
month. 304·675·1806 or 675·5037.

Cell Suzie AI : 614·446-B415.
E &amp; R TREE SERVICE. Topping,

I

Giveaway
4 Cult Puppies, Ml1ed Brood,

Autos for Sale

B~ildlngs

I

I

OhiO

Pomeroy--M

Lote for 1111, 1rallers iccep-

I

Ill-' lllngln: Quyo • Girls. 1·
*-407-1004, $2.15/mln. Mull
lo O..r 1a, Fonpalo lmt&gt;o CA.
Rtduce: Bum off tat whllt you

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Business

201 1992

Rotl'lln
~IIISo.Uih,.otorit For Sale: Commercial Building
Buolnoll Coll•go, Sf•ring Volley 'And Lot In Eureka. Conlacl
Ptoza. Coli Todoy, 81 -446-438711 Ownor: 814-256-1243, Aftor I P.M.
Aogtotorlllon t90o05-1274B.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage ·

"FrM Single Bu!lttln, Per1onal
Ads. Bo• 114, MaaaiUon, Ohio

bllo &amp; whho, loo!ko llko part hunl·
·~ dog, 30W75-5203.

34

Business
Training

Thursday, February

1992

Clrrllgt

47 Lllrill
il8 Slllly agey.
50 llutlc·
!f!lhetlltr
51 Tak'::'part
52 llolllt¥erd
55 Aonus·-

oe

a•

(ZJNtwawalch
Antnlo Hal( Stereo.

I~~~
s9.reo.
llllporll onlghl

1D llordtt1own Stereo. t;l

11:30 (I) llalllt

c

CD Jolin MCuUOhfln't One
011 One

l!t:!~t:arouncl
D
lhl '92 Wlnler Games.

~Mutlc:Shojl

·~ ·
. lrllllalla8lgnai
11 :HIJie i1J Tonlglll8how
lllntng Johnny Cll1on

s.-.o.

.

'H X X

JIXCKCNAV

QNXIJHGIZ,
RFVG

KIG

w c v

NDA

INJ

RF V G

t' M I J T
WIHMIA

ON

LI

RHA
CA

D H T.

Q WI
KJIHG.
IJIZIJCYU
, PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ''MC!Vilo
one of the bad habnt lhel ha111 • .,
corrupted our C&lt;lfllury." - {s.r.twrllir) ilett Htelll.
. : ~:

ere

'

··'

'

'·-

�2-The Dal

Sentinel

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
BOSTON (AP) - People who
9veruse a common kind of inhaled
drug used to relieve asthma attacks
face a greatly increased risk of
death, a study concludes.
The researchers don't know
whether the drugs, called beta agonists. are themselves to blame. But
they said asthmatics nearly triple
their chance of death with each
..canister of the spray they use each
month.
Beta agonists have long been
the primary drug used to treat asthma, but some doctors are now recommending that other drugs be
used first and beta agonists
reserved as a backup to rei ieve
acute auacks.
The researchers said they
believe that occasional use is prob-

ably safe, but heavy, long-term
reliance is a substantial health risk.
Some people use them many times
a day, far exceeding recommended
amounts.
"The paper has a very straight·
forward message," Dr. A. Sonia
Buist said. "If a patient is using
more than one canister of beta agonist a month, they are using too
much, and their asthma is probably
out of control and needs to be evaluated."

About 10 million Americans
have asthma, and 5,000 die annual·
ly of the disease.

Group to meet
A 12-step AA meeting will
begin Sunday at 7 p.m. at the JTPA
Office, 117 West Second Street in
Pomeroy.

FRIDAVI

Ohio Lottery

news

Asthma medicine linked
:to deaths when overused

Boy Scout Sunday was observed
at the Alfred United Methodist
Church on Feb. 9. Steve and Joe
Weeks and Matthew Boyles led the
pledge to the American flag by the
congregation. They then gave the
Cub Scout Promise.
Pastor Sharon Hausman present·
ed the children's sermon and the
regular sermon from Luke and
communion was held.
Following the services members
shared a soup, sandwich and
dcsscn meal.
The church and community
extend sympathy to Bob and Jerry
Burke and thetr families on the
death of their mother, Virginia
Burke. Many community members
attended visitation and funeral.
Out-of-town relatives allending
services were Betty O'Brien,
Scottsdale, Ariz.: Evelyn Regan,
Rice Landing, Pa.; Leonard Swift,
Columbus; Robert Swift, Marion;
James Swift, Oak Harbor; and
Charles Swift, Antioch, Tenn.

..

Duke
edges
Maryland

Pick 3:743
Pick 4:2041
Cards:

2-H; Q-C; 4-D;
6-S

Page4

Low In mld,30s. Saturday,
partly cloudy. High In mid-50s.

;

l

Vol. 42, No. 203
Copyrighted 1992

DONATION MADE·
the first or 12 donations to Letart
Elemen·
tary in the Southern Local School District on
Wednesday morning. The check, in the amount

SATURDAYI

2 Sectlono, 14 Poges 25 conlo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 21, 1992

. A lluiUmodll

Inc. Nowoplper

Meigs lineup complete 'or' May 5 primary

SUNDAYI

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Thursday afternoon was the
deadline for partisan candidates to
file petitions for the May 5 prima·
ry. Meigs County voters, both
Republicans and Democrats, will
have an array of candidates to
choose from when they go to the
poUs for the primaries.
County commissioner
Six Republicans are seeking the
seat on the Meigs County Board of

election that office, for the teun
commencing January 3, 1993. He
is challenged by fellow Republican, Jim Hayman.
See.king the Demorcratic Party's
nomination for thal race are Janet
Howard and Virgil Phillips.
Sberilr, treasurer
Meigs County Sheriff James. I\!.
Soulsby, a Democrat, will seek a
second term as-sheriff, and is unopposed in the Democratic Primary.
Republicans Paul Gerard and
Gerald Rought will face-off on the

Commissioners which wiH be
vacated by the retiring David
Koblentz. They are: Gary Dill,
Ronald Eastman, Denny Evans,
Raben Hanenbach, Fred Hoffman
and Larry Lavender.
Two Democratic candidates, R.
Lin Coleman ·and William Snouffer, have flied for that position, the
term of which comme~es on January 2, 1993.
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard E. Jones has filed for rc·

Republican Primary ticket.
Two Republicans, Edward Durst
and Howard E. Frank, are seeking
their party's nomination for the
office of County Treasurer. Frank
was appoinled in early 1991 to
serve as treasurer upon the resigna·
lion of George Collins.
Democrat Maureen Hennessey
will run unopposed for that position on the Democratic baUoL
Prosecutor, engineer
Meigs County ·Prosecuting

Attorney Steven L. Story is unop- mary.
Current Engineer Philip M.
posed on the Republican Primary
ballot in his quest for a second .Roberts has decided to seek that
scat in Gallia County. His name
term.
Pomeroy Attorney John R. will not appear on the ballot in
Lentes has filed as a candidate for Meigs County.
Others
prosecutor on the Democratic bal·
. Clerk of Courts Larry E.
iot.
No Democrats will seek the Spencer, Recorder Emmogene
position of County Engineer, but Hamilton and Coroner Douglas
two Republicans, Eugene Triplett Hunter, all Republicans, will run
and Raben Eason, wiU face off for unopposed in their pany's Primary
that office in the Republican Pri- Elecbon.

Former Rutland teacher remembered
with plaque, Norman Rockwell print
'

HURRY IN

FRUIT OF THE LOOM®
UNDERWEAR FOR MEN,
BOYS, GIRLS &amp; WOMEN

MEN'S &amp; BOYS COLLEGE
AND PRO ACTIVEWEAR

WHILE THEY LAST!

200/o

250/o
OPP

OPP

Sale 5.2410 18.74 REG. 6.99 to 24.99
Tops, shorts and pants . Schools &amp; teams vary
by location . Collegewear not in Salamanca, NY.

Sale 2.39lo 7.99 REG . 2.99 to 9.99

ENTIRE STOCK
FAMILY T·SHIRTS

ENTIRE STOCK MEN'S
SPRING OUTE~WEAR

25o/o

250/o

OPP

OP.P

Sale 13.49 to 26.24 REG. 17.99 34 .99
Choose from sheeting, chintz. nylon. more.
Selection varies by store. Sizes s.m.l,xl.

Sale 2.24 to 12.74 REG . 2.99 to 16.99
•Men •Women •Boys •Girls
Print tee's, pocket tee's , more!

ENTIRE STOCK
METAL BAKEWARE

LADIES VINYL
HANDBAGS

250/o

2 .50/o
OPP

..OPF

Sole 4.49to 11 .24 R!:G. 5.99 to 14.99
Select from hobos , buckets, satchels. blazers
and other styles in assorted colors.

Sale 75' lo 12.74 REG. •1 to 16.99
Includes Baker's Secret. Great Cooks 11.
Airbake and EZ Foil.

COORDINATING
BATH TOWELS

250/o

42" 3 SPEED
CEILING FAN

OPP

·KTV® 13" COLOR TV

5ole1.041o11 .24 REG 1.39to14.99
Coordinating bath, hand and wash cloths in
an array of colors and sizes. No rain checks.

'2999

-;:;:;:;;::~ PRESENTED • A ramiliar Norman Rockwell
print 'lf.ll5 presented to•Rudand Elementaey S~ool on Thursday
.. by Tim Flesher, in memory or his late wife; DOJI!Iil.~!lr.~e...Tbe
Flesbers··were Juitb ' tfa~bers at Rutland in the early 1980s; aild
FleSber/resenttd the prfnt, and a plaque, at a special .as5embly.
Picture witb Flesher is Mrs. Flesher's former student, Kenny
Napper.

Meigs County Prosecuting Court. He is a member of the
Attorney Steven L. Story has ftled American Trial Lawyers Associahis petitions to run as a candidate tion, the Ohio Prosecuting Attorfor that office in the May 5 Repub- neys Assn., and the National Dis·
tricl Attorney's Assn.
lican Primary.
"! am very proud of the accomStory is a sixth-generation
plishments
my office has made in
Meigs Countian and a 1972 gradu·
the
last
three
years," Story said.
ate of Meigs High School. He gradon
3
uated from the Ohio State University with a bachelor's degree in
economics in 1976 and from the
Ohio Northern University Law
School in 1979. He has been continuously in practice since 1979.
Story served dn the board of
lJ'UStees at Veterans Memorial HospiUII for seven years, and served as
that board's vice chairman. In addi·
lion, he has served on the rubercuIosis board of Meigs County.
He has served on the Ohio State
Bar Association executive commit·
tee, and was the youngest member
in the history of the association to
serve on that committee. In addi·
lion, he was vice chairman of' the
Young Lawyers Association for the
State Bar Association and is
presently serving on the State Bar
Association's committee to evaluate and make recommendations on
candidates for the Ohio Supreme
STEVEN STORY

With light. No. CAM42WB1C . REG . 39.99

EXERCISE
EQUIPMENT

With remote control.

250/o

a5°/o '-

OFP

OPP

5ole14' to 9.74 REG. 19' to 12.99

Sole 29.99·107.49 REG. 39.99·249.99

.

,MONDAY THIU SATURDAY 9·9; SUNDAY 9·5

.... 41 _300 'LAUREL CLIFF ROAD •.POMIROY, OHe
'Items may vary by store.
·we
In advance tor
\

stock only. No rain che,cka.
errors or

• We rellet'Ye the right to limit quonllllea.
out ol our control.

'

.)

'

omCDSIL.CTID '· Melp County'1
lfO•P t1 Oldt Ynaa Democrats bf America
' tlectld ul'flan It Ill rtpllr IDeetlalf Tbursday
lllpt. Pictured, frotH, l·r,lre Couaty Democrat·

band, Tim, was also an educator in
the Meigs Local District and he
presented the school with a specially-framed picrure and plaque which
wiU hang in her old classroom.
Flesher was a guidance counselor at Meigs High School from
1976 to 1981 and at the junior high
from 1983 to 1984. He is now the
principal at Fairfield High School.
The couple were married in 1984,

and had a son, Evan, who was present Thursday.
Three of Mrs. Flesher's former
students were on hand for the pre"
sentation, and remembered her
fondly.
"She was the best reacher a student ever had, and she married the
best friend a guy could ever have,"
said Kenny Napper, one of Mrs.
Flesher's students who now anends

Meigs High School. "Every time I
would go into Mrs. Flesher's class-:
room, I would see that pictur~.:
Thank you for making this. possi·
ble."
The picture is immediately ret'
ognizable to those who enjoy the
image of Americana portrayed iri
the art of Norman Rockwell. II
depicts an elementarv school teach·
Continued on page 3
:

·Delinquent
tax sale?,

Story files f~r prosecutor's
post on Republican ticket

·9 9

ALL ARTIFICIAL
FLOWERS

'I

B} BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
A former Rutland Elementary
School teacher who died in 1989
was remembered in an assembly at
the school on Thursday afternoon.
Donna Marie Flesher:· who
taught developmentally handicapped (DH) students at Rutland
from 1980 to 1985, died on June
30, 1989, at the age of 31. Her hus-

e

The biggest delinquent 18J1 sale
. of Meigs County propeny .in recent
·. years was scheduled to take ·place
Thursday morning on ·the 11bps of
the courthouse.
The sheriff's sale was ·to have
netted $31,240.59 in hack taxes,
assessments, charges, pen.lties,
interest and costs accuf!!.ulated
against Homer and Oneita Ci)le and
the Ohio Valley Manufacluring
Co., Tuppers Plains, coveting a
period of about 20 years. •
While about a dozen interested
persons gathered on the oouithouse
steps, there were no bids on the
five parcels in Orange, Olive and
Rutland townships.
There was interest in individual
parcels by those attending, bul no
one made the minimum bid of
$31,240.59 for all of the propcny
which had an appraised value of
$84,950.
Since there was no sale, the five
parcels wiU go up for bid again on
Tuesday, March 3, at 10 a.m. on
the Meigs County Courthouse
steps. Again aU five parcels wiU be
offered for sale at the same time.
If a sale is not rna~ in March,
then it will be up to the prosecutor's office to decide whether the
propeny will be readvenised and
sold as a whole or offered in individual parcels.
Treasurer Howard Frank reported that about 75 percent of the
amount of the delinquent taxes on
the Cole properties - about
$23,000 - will go into operating
funds for the Eastern Local School
·District once the sale is made.
All but one parcel is located in
that disttict

NO SALE TIUS TIME ·Lisa Roush or Meigs
County Sheriff James Soulsby's ofrJCe read the
deHnquent land tax public notice describing five
parcels owned by Homer and Oneita Cole and
·the Ohio Valley Manufacturing Co. appraised at

Mining official: No way to judge
length of delay from Bush moratorium .

. WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Office of Surface Mining wants to
do something about surface darn·
age from underground mining, but
the agency's chief isn't making any
promises about what will be doile.
Long-awaited action' on compensation for damage caused by
mine subsidance remains on hold,
OSM Director Harry Snyder said
Thursday.
"It's impossible to say" when
OSM will issue a ntle covering the
subsidence issue, Snyder said.
President Bush has put a 00-day
hold on all regulations moving for·
ward in all fi:deral agencies, includingOSM.
The administration has allowed
for some exceptions to the morato·
rium, but Snyder said he doesn't
think the subsidence compensation
proposal qualifies for an exception.
Snyder wouldn't say how soon
action could be taken once the government-wide review of proposed
rules and regulations has been finished.
. "We obviously will have to
revisit the draft that we have written in light of the president's new
directives," Snyder said.
The president v.:ants proposed
rules to minimize burdens on busi·
nesses · and .promote economic
growth. '
Rep. Nick Rahall, D·W.Va. and
chairman of the House Mining
Subcommiuee, said he was frustrated with the slow pace of
progress on the subsidence rule.
He released copies of internal
OSM documents showing that the
draft of the subsidence rule was
halted in February 1991..Instead of
moving ahead with a rule, the
agency put out a requ~t for more
lc Party Cbalrmall .Mary Hullte~ and YDC
i~formation and held public hear·
Treasurer Janet Howa·rd. Pictured, back, l·r,
ings.
.
are Brian Reed, vice p'r esldut;. Jobn Lentes,
Rahall said that move was a
legal advilor; and JeffTbomton, president.

,.

.r·--·

$84,950 but did not receive, the minimum
required bid ol $31,240.59 owed in taxes, assess·
meats, charges, penalties, Interest and costs. The
property will be offered agalD on March 3 at 10
a.m. on tbe courthouse steps. (staff pboto)

•

delaying tactic.
"It is incredible that the nation's
chief enforcer of our surface coal
mining and reclamation laws needs
to engage in this type
of.. bureau.

cratic exercise in ofder 10 figure out
the obvious: that the homes and
water supplies of coal field residents should and must be protected," he said.

--Local briefs---..
Two accidents reported
Moderate damage was incurred to two vehicles in an accident on
West Main Sb'eet, Pomeroy, Thursday morning.
Pomeroy police reported that Norma Roush, 43, Letan, W. Va.,
driving a 1986 Plymouth, pulled from McDonalds parking lot into
the path of an eastbound car, a 1990 Buick, driven by Carl E. Mitch,
53, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
·
The ten front and side of the Mitch vehicle and the left side of
the Roush car had moderate damage. There were no injun"ts. Rous!l
was cited for failure to yield.
No citations were issued in an accident which occum:d Wednes·
day morning on·the Meigs_Multi-purpose'BuUding parking lot.
According to police, Cash Zimmerman, 96, Rutland, backed
from a parking space into two parked cars, a 1987 Mercury owned
by Tanela Fry, Middlepon, and a 1983 Volkswagen owned by
Edwina Bell, Middlepon. There was light rear end damage to all
three vehicles. No citations were issued.

Tombstone mystery probed
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repons that Alan Bish·
op of Harrisonville notified the sheriffs depanmcnt on Thursday ~
evening thathe found on old tombstone in the new section.ofWells
.Cemetery.
·1be stone bears the marking of "Marie Gladys Creighton 18961899."
.. Bis!IOP advised the depu:tment that he checked local cemetery
records IOd cannOt find the name listed for that cemetery.
The sheriff's department is now seeking information from anyone who might know the origin of the stone so that it can be
returned.

Deputies investigate burglary
. Meigs County deputies were called to the Carl VillOver residence in Minersville on Thursday n~t to investigate a hurshwy.
Acclording 10 Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the residence wu enlmll sometime after noon, A VCR, two hantlpas, t·
shins, and several women's sweaters were reported missing.
Coatlnued on PIJit 3
•

.

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