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                  <text>February 23, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page 08 Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

Southern
defeats
Eastern

Waiting may (or may not) be coming to end _for GM wo_r,}{ers .
DETROIT (AP) - Workers at
some of General Motors Corp .
plants, especially m Te~as and
Michigan , were wondenng th is
weekend what Monday w1ll bring.
OM Chairman Robert Stempel
has scheduled a speech to workers
for Monday morning, but the company won't say what he' ll talk

about. At the same time, OM will
release its fourth1juarter and yearend 1991 financial results, showing
huge losses.
There's been much speculation
that Stempel may fill in some of
the blanks he left in December
when he announced that 21 assembly and component plants would be

shut down by 1995.
Assembly plants in Arlington ,
Texas, and outside Ypsilanti,
Mich., were the only ones Stempel
mentioned by name. He said production of the large, rear-wheeldrive cars they make would be consolidated iniOone plant
That's caused a good bit of anx-

iety.
.
DeU'Oit Free Press quoted unidenti"It's killing," said United Auto fied union and company sources as
Workers union Local 1776 Presi- · saying the Michigan plant would
dent Bob Harlow at OM's Willow be the factory that is spared.
Run plant near Ypsilanti, west of
"Workers are upset about the
Detroit "We're drawn like a rub- premature announcement, which to
ber band almost 10 the limit. "
them is only more rumors," UA W
It's !&gt;een tough in Arlington, Local 276 President Dave Purdue
too, and it got tougher Friday. The said from Arlinwn.

Ohio Lottery

The ~au on s largest mdustnal
corporauon was ~x~ted to repon
mor7 tha~ $3 bllhon ~n losses,
pushmg Big Three combmed losses
for last year near $7 billion. .
That would shatter the prev10us
record set m 1980, when GM, Ford
Motbo~ Co. an$4d Chrysler Corp.
~okm med for .5 billion m red

Pick 3: 344
Pick 4: 7203
Cards:

9-H; 6-C; 9-D;
2-S
Super Lotto:
4-6-17-21-34-42
Kicker: 066955

Page 5

m.

New resource conservation,
development area established

MYSTERY FARM • This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Gallia Counly, Individuals wishing _to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
tbe farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orf your
guess to the Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 pme from the

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or lener. No telephone calls will be accepted. All
contest entries should be turned in to the newspaper olrK:e by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
of a tie, the winner will be £hosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County farm will be featured by the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District.

...
CEI pays $3.3 million for Kentucky
Continued from D,1

share of nuclear plant
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Electric llluminating Co.
has purchased the 13.74 percent
share of the unfinished Perry
Nuclear Power Plant second unit
owned by Duquesne Light Co.,
CEI's parent company announced.
CEI paid $3.3 million, a price
based on the estimated salvage
value of the unit and its land value,
according to Centerior Energy
Corp., which owns CEI and Toledo
Edison Co.
Centerior said that the purchase
didn't signal a change in plans for
the unit, where construction was

halted in 1985. The purcha se
" maximizes the options available
to the owners," said Centerior.
The purchase gives the Centerior utilities 65 percent ownership of
the second unit. The rest is owned
by Ohio Edison and its subsidiary,
Pennsylvania Power.
Any dec ision to resume construction of the unit would require
unanimous approval. Duquesne has
opposed resuming construction.
Duquesne owns 13.74 percent
of Perry's first uni~ which IS operating. The other four utilities also
own a share of the unit.

tions, said the OU tower will be the
central tower for Cellular One service, although additional towers
will be established in other parts of
the region.
Agee said the system is expected to be in operation in less than 30
days. It will employ seven 10 eight
local people, including customer
service staff, sales consultants and
a technician, he said.
Project engineer Bert Lawson
said three or four towers will be
required, including one at Logan.
Although Athens-area equipment
has been installed, Lawson, said it
will be eight months to a year
before the entire system is operational.

Submitted by Patty. Dyer,
District Conservationist
GALLIPOLIS - State Conservationist of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's (USDA) Soil Conservation Service (SCS) Joseph C.
Branco Friday announced establishment of a new Resource Conservation and Development
(RC&amp;D) area in Ohio. The Miami
Valley RC&amp;D is one of the 27
newly funded RC&amp;D's established
by the USDA nationally.
The Miami Valley RC&amp;D
includes Butler, Clermont, Clinton,
Fayette, Greene, Hamilton, Mont·
gomery, Preble, and Warren Coun·
ties. Rural development and water
quality improvement issues are two
of the major needs identified by the
project sponsors.
Branco said this action qualifies
the new RC&amp;D area to receive federal technical and financial assistant for land conservation, water
management, community development and other environmental ini·
tiatives.
"We are pleased to provide

assistance for rural development
and resource conservation," Branco
said. "Interest is sU'Ong throughout
Ohio to utilize the RC&amp;D concept
to stimulate rural development and
enhance the effective use of our
natural resources."
USDA's Soil Conservation Service manages the Resource Conservation and Development Program,
which was established 30 years
ago. The newly designated RC&amp;D
area brings the current number of
active RC&amp;D areas in Ohio to 7,
which cover 68 counties.
Under the program , local
RC&amp;D councils set their own conservation and development goals
and identify agencies, groups, and
foundations to fund and carry out
specific RC&amp;D projects. SCS provides each area with a project coor·

Income tax school set
March 3 for tree farmers
CALDWELL - An income tax
school for Chrisunas tree producers
will be held on March 3, 1992 at
the East District Extension Office
near Caldwell, Ohio. The program
will stan at 7:30 p.m. A preregistration fee of $10 per person or tree
fann is requested by February 28.
Topics covered at the school
will include record keeping, preparation of income tax fonns and tax
management. The school will be
taught by Dave Miller, district specialist, farm mana~ement
For a registrauon fonn, contact
the Washington County Extension
Service, 205 Putnam Street, Mari·
etta, Ohio 45750, or phone
614/373·6623 Ext 275.

dinator 10 assist the council in its
work.
Council members represent
sponsoring organizations, including
county governments, soil and water
conservation districts, towns, water
districts, private conservation organizations and other nonprofit
groups.
Through their efforts, councils
have improved local water supplies, marketed local products, and
improved needed community facilities, including hospitals, schools,
and water and sewage treatment
plants. They also have accelerated
effons to control erosion, improve
recreation facilities, provide Oood
protection, and 10 develop industrial employment potential using the
natural resources in the respective
areas.

Vol. 42, No. 204
Copyrlghled 1992

Economists project
this year's economic
growth at 2.3 percent

Security, Safety, a
Guaranteed Income
for as long as you live ...
That's an Annuity
the
State Farm way.

AMVETS CHAPTER CHARTERED Pomeroy AMVETS Post 1942 was chartered in
ceremonies held Sunday afternoon at Smitty's in
Pomeroy. Carl E. Maple, Chillicothe, Depart·
ment of Ohio commander, right, and Worley
Perry, Athens, 21st district commander, left
front, were in Pomeroy for the chartering cere·

..

CAROLl SNOWODI
Corner of Third
A... &amp; Stale Sl.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Ph- 446· 4290
Homt 446-4S II
HAll f.t.IM

We a good neighbor, State Farm is tlterr.
IH~UIAHCI

Slate Farm Ulc Insurance Company
Home Oilier: Bloomington, Illinois

Anniversary Seii·A·Bration.~
FEBRUARY 22, 1954 TO FEBRUARY 22, 1992

America has seen many
changes since 1954 - But one
~ ~
thing has remained constant ~ .
You can still buy an American
built car at a reasonable price
from people who will back it up with
Dependable Service SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC.
. Thank you for your patronage from all
of us at Smith's.

~ t;

·j)c)c.·.:)11-J, 14

mony: Here Maple presents the charter to tbe
newly elected commander of the local post,
James Ingels, Middleport, center front. Other
omcers are Bob Smith, Pomeroy, treasurer, center back, and Mike Smith, Middleport, adjutant.
Charter membership remains open for 60 days.

Three Ohio plants among
·GM operations to be closed
DETROIT (AP) - General
Motors said today it will close
assembly plants in Willow Run,
Mich ., and North Tarrytown, N.Y ..
along with three plants in Ohio as
well as operations in Michigan, .
Indiana-and Canada

0~

An assembly plant in the Dayton, Ohio, suburb of Moraine was
spared. Ohio officials had feared
that the plan~ which employs 3,400
people, would be closed.
The announcement came as the
automaker posted a fourth-quarter
loss of $2.5 billion, bringing 1991
losses to a record $4.5 billion.
The Ohio operations scheduled
for closing are the Moraine engine
plant, the Delco Chassis plant in
Dayton, and a die construction
plant at Lords10wn.
The Moraine plant is scheduled
to close in 1995. It has 549
employees.
The Dayton plant , with 249
employees, is to dose at the end of
this year.
The Lordstown operation, with
270 employees, also is scheduled to
close at the end of this year.
Among other plants to be closed
is the St. Catharines, Ontario,
Canada, casting plan~ with, 2,100
employees. The plant produces
castings for blocks, heads and
camshafts. Operations at this plant
will cease in the spring of 1995.
Production wilLbe consolidated at
the Saginaw, Michigan Grey Iron,
an&lt;! Defiance, Ohio, foundries.

In Columbus, Ohio, Gov.
George Voinovich was notified
about OM's plans for the Ohio
plants in a telephone call today.
"The bottom line is that the
assembly plant in Moraine, which
employs about 3,400 people, is
going to remain open," said Curt
Steiner, spokesman for Voinovich.
Voinovich lobbied OM executives in DeU'Oit earlier this month in
an attempt to keep open the truck
and bus assembly plant Moraine, a
Dayton suburb.
State and local officials offered
at least $45 million worth of low
interest loans, highway, water and
sewer improvements, worker training, and tax incentives 10 attract a
$166 million clear-coat paint line at
the Moraine plant
GM employs about 57,000 people statewide, including almost
24,000 in the Dayton area and
20,000 in the Warren area. The
company invested at least $400
million in the state last year.
Among the other plants being
closed are plants in North Tarrytown, N.Y., and a V8 engine plant
in Flint, Mich.
Te~as officials had lobbied
heavily to save the plant in Arlington, near Dallas, and Michigan
officials had tried to do the same
for the Ypsilanti plant Both plants
make large, rear-wheel-drive cars,
which are seUing poorly.
The Willow Run plant, with
4,014 employees, will be closed by

Maureen Hennessy plans run
for county treasurer's post
Maureen Hennessy of Pomeroy
has filed petitions with the Meigs
County Board of Elections, making
her a candidate for the Democratic
nomination of county treasurer in
the May 5 primary.
Hennessy is a life-long resident
of Pomeroy. She is the daughter of
the late Tom Hennessy and of
Phyllis Hennessy Poulin . She is
married to Joe Wilson and they
have two children, Angela and
Jonathan Wilson.

treasurer's office are a family tradition for Hennessy's family. Her
grandfathers, Will Roberts and
Clinton Roberts, served Meigs
County as treasurer and auditor,
respectively, Hennessy thinks that
the county's economic situation
makes the position of treasurer
even more important
·
"In today's tough economy, the
effective management of Meigs
County's money is a vital concern
to all voters," Hennessy said.

Election '92 g

Low Mileage Factory Program Cars
1991 PONTIAC leMANS
Fro• 56995 .

1991 SUNBIRDS

1991 GRAND PRIX &amp;REGAL

1991 GRAND AM

5

11,990

From 57,495
5

8888

1991 CENTURYS
511,990

1991 SKYLARK
5

8,995

1 Socllon, 10 Pogoo 25 cenla
A Mulllmedlo Inc. New11p11per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 24, 1992

She is a graduate of Meigs High
School, and in 1979, she graduated
summa cum laude from Ohio University. She is now attending OU,
working toward a master's degree
ih $J]CCCh language pathology.
She is a member of the Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy, and is
president of the Sacred Heart
Parish Cpuncil. She is also a member or the Meigs County Hwnane
Society and serves on tbe Democratic Central Committee, representing Pomeroy Eirst Ward.
A licensed private pilot, 'Hepnes~y also enjoys reading, sewing
· and golfing in her spare time.
Public service and the county

MAUREEN HENNESSY .

'·

I)

J,

the summer of 1993, OM said as it
announced a series of cutbacks that
are part of its broad restructuring
announced in December.
OM identified II plants that
will be affected by the restructuring, which Chairman Robert StemContinued on -3

GM announces
plant closings
DETROIT (AP) - The plant
closings announced today by GM
include:
- the Willow Run assembly
plant in Ypsilanti Township,
Michigan, rour-thousand-14
employees. Will close by 1he end
of 1993.
- Tarrytown assembly plant in
Nonh Tarrytown, New York, 34hundred employees. Will close by
the summer of 1995.
- Flint, Michigan v-eig h!
assembly plant, four-thousand
employees. Will close in 1995.
- Moraine, Ohio engine plant,
54 9 employees. Closing in 1995.
- Sag maw , Michigan, Grey
Iron Foundry Head Castings, 600
employees, closing summer of
1994.
- St. Catherines, Ontario ,
engine plant, 165 employees, closing the fall of 1992.
- Detroit plants 55 and.57 with
435 employees. Plant 55 closing in
1993 and plant 57 closing in 1992.
- Delco Chassis in Dayton,
Ohio, Plant 20 with ~49 employees, closing at the end o~992.
-Delco Remy plant 'n Anderson, Indiana, plant 10 'th 375
employees, will close in 1991.
- St. Catherines, Ontario '~ast­
ing plant with 21-hundred employees, will close by the spring of
1995.
- Die construction at LordsiOwn, Ohio, with 270 employees.
Will close in 1992.

Man threatens
to kill himself
A Middleport man allegedly
attempted to commit suicide early
Monday morning following a
domestic dispute at his North Second Avenue home.
According to Middlepon police,
the wife of James Jones, 26, came
10 tile police departtnent at 4 a.m.
and reported that her husband had
cut both wrists with a razor blade
follQwing an argument in which he
lhrealened to kill himself.
When police arrived at the residence, Jones left in a vehicle at a
high rate of speed ~ The vehicle was
stopped at Super America on GenerarHartinger Parkway and Jones
was taken into custody for his own
safety' police said.
The Middleport unit of the
Meigs County Emergency ServiCe
was on the scene and ll'ealed Jones
who was then refenetl to WOodland
Cenlers. '
·

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sluggish economic growth this year will
cap the worst three-year period
centered on a recession since the
Great Depression, a survey of the
nation's top economic forecasters
suggested today.
The median response 10 the poll
by the National Association of
Business Economists projects economic growth at just 2.3 percent
over the four quaners of 1992. That
would be less than half the average
growth of 6 percent during the frrst
year of recovery from other recessions since World War II.
"But consider also that the year
1990 witnessed the slowest growth
since World War II in any year
immediately preceding a recession," the association said. The
economy expanded just 1.0 percent
in 1990 and actually shrank 0.7
percent last year.
"Taken as a whole, then, the
period from the end of 1989
through the end of 1992 will be the
worst three-year interval centered
on a recession since the Great

Depression," it added.
Still, 32 of the 49 economists in
the survey "agree that the reces·
sion is behind us and that economic
growth will tum positive in the frrst
quarter of 1992," the group said.
"Only 8 percent of those survey~. expect a 'double-dip' recesSIOn, down from I0 percent in the
November poll, the association
said.
But !he survey also showed the
forecasters had grown more pessimistic over the past three months
about the strength or the anticipated
recovery, the association said. It
noted the 2.3 percent growth projection is down from 3.0 percent in.
an earlier survey last November.
And while the consensus of the
NABE forecasters suggested for
0.5 percent growth during the current quarter, that is down from 2.5
percent projected by the panel last
August.
"Panelists do seem increasingly
concerned about the possibility of
what could only be called a growth
recession," the association said.

It noted the most cited reason
for the "lethargic recovery was the
high level of consumers' indebtedness." Consumer spending, twothirds of the nation's economic
activity, is expected to increase
only 1.4 percent in 1992.
But despite aggressively pushing down interest rates during the
last 18 months , the Federal
Reserve's "too restrictive" monetary policy that keeps rates from
falling even farther was cited as
another major reason for the subpar recovery.
.
The Bush administration is forecasting growth of 2.2 percent from
the fourth quarter of 1991 to the
same period of this year. The Federal Reserve is projecting the econ.omy will expand between 1.75 percent and 2.5 percent

The NAiiE consensus forecast
growth of 3.0 percent in 1993, the
same as the administration.
The survey was conducted in
late January and early February.

Pomeroy home damaged by fire
A three-apartment house on
Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy was
heavily damaged by fire Saturday
night.
Danny Zirkle, Pomeroy Fire
Department chief, reponed that the
fire started in the basement of the
structure owned by Thomas
McClung, Pomeroy , and quickly
spread through the walls and into
the ceilings.
Pomeroy and Middleport firemen were called to the scene at
9:42 p.m. and remained until 12:53
p.m. The Pomeroy ladder truek was
brought to the scene at 10:07 p.m.
when the 'fire moved toward the
third floor of the house. Pomeroy
had three trucks plus the ladder
truck and 14 frremen and Middle·
port had two trucks and nine flee.
men on the scene..
While the house was not gutted,
Zirkle said that it is not fit for occu·
pancy.
All of the families living in the
three apanments escaped without
injury. Some of the contents were
saved and it was reported that there
was insurance on the structure.

FIRE SCENE - Middleport and Pomeroy firemen fought a fire
in a three apartment house on Butternut Avenue for nearly three
hours Saturday night before bringing it under control. All of the
occupants escaped the blaze and some of their furnishings were
saved. (Sentinel photo).
How the fire started has not been
determined, the fire chief said.
Pomeroy firemen were in Bedford Township on a brush fire
when the apartment fire was repon-

ed. Zirkle said that he oolled for the
firemen and the equipment to
return to Pomeroy to handle the
structure fire and Chester firemen
were called in for the brush frre.

Spokesman: Protesters not
telling whole story on cuts
By MARGARET CALDWELL

Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -People protesting cuts in school funding are not
telling the whole story, a
spokesman for· Gov . George
Voinovich said.
Parents, children, teachers and
school administrators from across
Ohio assembled Saturday for a
Save Ohio Education Rally.
About 200 people demonstrated
at the Statehouse Ill urge Voinovich
to restore $88 million in budget
cuts 10 Ohio schools.
"We are here to reclaim the
future of our children and our state.
We are the education constituents
in search of a real education governor. Where are you, education governor?" said Gary Kucinich, a
member of the Cleveland Board of
Education.
But Voinovich spokesman Cun
Steiner said ,basic aid to schools
was cut 2.5 percent, compared with
6 percent for other government
operations.
"Groups complaining about this
continually fail to point tljat out,"
Steiner said. "So what we're seeing here is misleading political
~etoric rather than the facts being
given to the people of Ohio."
Steiner said Voinovich is looking for new soun:es of money and .
encouragin• increases in taxes on
beer and c1sarettes. That money
could help prevent further cuts in
education funding in the next fiscal

J,

year, Steiner said.
Kucinich was booed when he
reiterated Voinovich's campaign

promise to be the "education govemor."
Continued on 3

Coleman seeks commission
position on Democrat ticket
R. Lin Coleman, 40419 Landacre Road, Pomeroy, has filed for
the Democratic nomination for the
Jan. 2 tenn of Meigs County Commissioner in the May 5 Primary

Election.
This is Coleman's first venture
into local politics. A graduate of
Duke University ~ith a degree in
h~s«&gt;ry, he IS an mformation specialist and consultant, a substitute
teacher, and a tutor.
Coleman and his wife, Anne S.
Goss, who worts as direclllr of the
Health Sciences Library and is 8n
assistant dean at Ohio University,
hve on a small fann in Bedford
Township.

Election '92 II
They ·moved to Meigs County
from Augusta, Ga., in 1977.
In announcing his candidacr.
Coleman said that if elected he
work toward getting Slate and federal grants to help in the economic
development of the county.
· He .said that in that respect
eml!"&amp;sis ~ to he put,on geuiog
ass!stance m d.evelop.m 8 small
bus1uesses and tmprovmg educational and job ·oppor:tunities.

wili

LIN COLEMAN

\I

�~\
Monday, February 24, 1992

·'

Commenta y

0

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel : ;·
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·;
Monday, February 24, 1992

Tuesday, Feb. 25

111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~I"U.TIMEDIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
lbe American Newspaper Publisber Association.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
words long . All leiters arc subject to editing and must be signed with name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiU We published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Democrat party bars late
entries in primary race

Political labels become meaningless
In the wake of the New Hampsh ire primary, nothing is more
apparent than the disconnectio n
between our political vocabulary
and political reality. Words like
11
COnservative" and ''liberal" are
still applied freely to the various
candidates, but they do not ~orne
close to being accurate descriptions
of what is being said or done by
contenders from either party. Gropingly, slowly but inexorably, a new
lexicon is going to emerge from the
1990s political landscape, one
which will more nearly match both
the external world and the content
of what the candidates are offering.
Most illustrative of the point are
the current Wunderkinder of the
political scene, Pat Buchana,n and
Paul Tsongas. One is a Republican
and the other is a Democrat. After
that, they defy conventional labels.
Buchanan is at least briefly the
biggest story of the 1992 primary
scene. After humiliating a siuing
president of his own party with a
vote that was at least 50 percent
larger than had been generally predicted three weeks ago, he is undisputed holder of the title, "censer-

vati ve challenger." So what d~ front his adversaries and polarize
this conservative believe?
the electorate.
That the United States should
All that is conservative? Not
come home from most of its over- really. Pat is a right-wing populist,
seas commitments. That it should an America-firster whose policy
go face-to-face with our chief allies prescriptions are often totally off
of yore in the name of a new eco- the "conservative" reservation. If
nomic nationalism of today. That the politics of rage and alienation,
rebuilding the American economy of suspicion of large institutions
and contempt for democratic compromise, are the hallmarks of conservatism, then Pat Buchanan is a
conservative. Since in fact that is
is the No. 1 r.riority. That deficits how cons,ervatism has been defmed
basically don t matter. (The Iauer is up until now, we need to rip up the
a mauer of inference, since he is old knee-jerk script and come up
notably silent on the $3.5 trillion with a new one that more accuraledebt run up on the Reagan-Bush ly describes him and the millions
watch.) That big financial institu- who mirror his views.
If Buchanan ~ets a free ride on
tions, domestic and international,
are basically subversive of Ameri· the good ship 'conservative,"
thanks to anachronistic political
ca' s interests.
dialogue,
Paul Tsongas gets a bad
Pat Buchanan knows what is
rap.
Political
reporters, who want
making many people mad these
days, particularly working-class everything in neat little pigeonand middle-class whites. He knows holes, don't know how to categohow to punch the hot buttons, those rize him and so they carom from
social policy issues such as affir- corner to corner, story to story,
mative action that have grown even never lighting anywhere for long.
Sometimes he's called a liberal,
hotter in the current prolonged
largely
because he is a national
recession. He knows how to con-

Hodding Carter Ill

ByWALTERMEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGmN -Ready or not, the Democra1s' early spring-loaded
system for choosing a presidential nominee may snap shut soon.
The calendar fits a strategy that was designed for quick consensus on a
White House challenger, the better to mobilize for the fall campaign. Bur
the cast of candidates isn't quite what some congressional Democrats had
in mind.

New Hampshire installed former Sen. Paul Tiongas as the front-runner, Arkansas Bill Clinton as the challenger heading into his own territory, Sens. Bob Kerrey of Nebraska and Tom Harkin of Iowa, and former
California Gov. Jerry Brown as the catch-up candidates. For Kerrey and
Harkin, the next primary, in South Dakota, may be a contest for campaign
survival; the loser there could be the first candidate out.
Tsongas holds the advantage today as Maine Democrats hold their delegate caucuses; his New Hampshire victory is a boost and so is his Massachusetts accent.
AfJer those two contests, the schedule is packed, 25 more contests in
less tlian a month.
At the same time, deadlines for entering primaries have gone by in 27
states accounting for nearly 60 percent of the delegates who will pick a
presidential nominee in New York on July 15.
That's a barrier to late cnlries; any candidate who decided to run now
would have to base his campaign on an assumption that the field will
prove unacceptable, that the current candidates will divide nominating
support along regional lines and that the race won't be won before the
Democratic National Convention.
But that brokered convention notion has been a pipe dream of candidates who staned late or lost early for 20 years. And every time, a candi·
date has emerged from the primary dcctions ~ith the nomination won.
Every time save one, the Republican nomonec then beat h1m m the fall
campaign.
That prompted the short season strategy: Sclllc early, try to avoid a
long, divisive campaign among. D&lt;;mocrats and show.thc vote!"' a consen·
sus choice who can start camprugrung one on one agrunst Pres1dcnt Bush.
"Democrats want a winner," says Ronald H. Brown, the party chair·
man. "No more litmus tests ... no more ideological baltles."
This time, he says, it is the Republicans who face that kind of struggle,
President Bush versus conservative rebel Palrick Buchanan.
Brown said from the stan that he expects the nominee to come from
the current field of active candidates and that he looks for a swift decision
I am deeply cmicemed by the
on which one, by !ale March or early April.
pending removal of thousands of
On that timetable, the choice would almost have to be either Clinton or needy Ohioans from the Ohio GenTsongas, with an edge to the Arkansas governor because of the Southern eral Assistance Program.
accent to the primaries in the next round, in states like Georgia, South
On April I, 1992, many needy
Carolina and Florida. Clinton is better organized and better financed, too, persons will no longer receive their
althoogh Tsongas is reaping campaign conlributions on the suength of his small cash allotment of $100 and
New Hampshire victory.
medical care coverage for the next
On Monday, before the New Hamp shire primary, the top two six months. Such cuts are, in my
Democrats in Congress both talked of possible late entries, from a roster opinion, cruel and unconscionable,
of campaign holdouts that includes Sen. Lloyd M. Bentsen of Texas, Rep. particularly in light of our
Richard A. Gephardt of Missouri, the House majority leader and a 1988 depressed and job-scarce economy.
candidate, and the constantly prospective Gov. Mario Cuomo of New
On Thursday, February 20, I
York. A New Hampshire write-in campaign, which Cuomo did not dis- spent some time visiting some
courage, wound ~p with only 3 percent of the Democratic vote, hardly a folks that will be affected by these
summons to cand1dacy.
cuts. One lives in a cellar house, no
At a meeting of AFL-CIO leaders .in Bal Harbo~r, Fla., on Monday, windows, and measures 8 X 10
Senate Majority Leader George J. Mitchell of Mame sa1d competition feet. Heat is provided by a large 55
serves democracy, and "the more candidates the beuer."
gallon drum.
House Speaker Thomas S. Foley said new enlries were a possibility,
Furnishings were a broken
althoogh the wijlner was likely to be one of the current candidates. Foley down couch used for a bed, and he
also said he'd back Gephardt if he entered.
cooks on a hot plate. There were no
On Wednesday, Foley said he regards Clinton as the front-runner toilet facilities or running water.
althoogh he isn't endorsing a candidate yeL And the Artansas governor
Another lives in a, what I
ran his count of endorsements of Democratic members of Congress past would consider 10 be a large piece
of plastic, heats with a kerosene
40.
.
Clinton claimed to have won by running second in New Harnpshrre, heater, has no water and no toilet.
saying he'd overcome the conuoversy abQut his personal life and Vietnam These are but two examples of how
era draft status by gaining 26 percent of the vole. But those JX&gt;litical prob- our people arc living and suffering.
lems have not been erased, and even if rival Democrats don I try to revive
them now, Republicans will later.
With Tsongas, the establishment concern is not only electability, it's a
program that challenges the economic plan advocated by Democratic con- Dear Editor:
The Meigs County membership
gressional leaders. His most direct challenge: a campaign ~ow that he
of
Ohio
Young Democrats of
would veto a middle class tax cut as unwarranted and useless on the effort
-America are in complete support of
to revive the economy.
the proposed location of a state
prison in Meigs County.
.
We, as an organization, are
pledged to the economic future of
our community, and the location or
such a facility in Meigs County has
obvious, positive benefits. Wellpaying state jobs, ~ood benefits and
the inevitable sptn off commerce

PA.

•I Columbusl47' I

..
...@Ill\

Rain FlurriM

There are many, many more cases
that could be expanded upon.
Congress, and even President
Bush, have recognized the need to
help suffering persons through
recent extension in unemployment
coverage. Why can'tthe government show similar compassion to
our people who will be removed
from the general assistance lifeline
only to face lillie or no prospect of
a job. I can assure you , charitable
programs and local governments
cannot compensate for such losses.
.Caring people need to raise their
voices now and ask for a stop to the
general assistance cuts on April I,
1992. This safety net should not be
removed until another one is in
place.
I am talking about living ,
breathing, suffering human bein~s.
and they should not be tossed as1de
during this very uoublesome time
or ever.
Signed,
Sid Edwards
Gallipolis

Group supports prison proposal

Berryls World

would be a boon to oUr stru~ing
local economy. We urge all citizens
of Meigs County to voice their support or this proposal, and to work
with local offiCials and community
organizations in attracting this
much -needed fljCility to our community. We cannot, and must not,
let progress slip through the systern. Our community can no longer
afford to tum our back on progress.
Ohio Young Democrats of America
Meigs County

To the people of Meigs County

t"\LL

OU1l

Over the past few weeks, I've
been anxiously foUowing the issue
or building a new state correctional
institution in Meigs County.
I have be employed by the
Department of Rehabilitation &amp;
Corrections as a correction officer
since 1977 and I'm cumnUy worlting at the Chillicothe Correctional
Institute. I live approximately II
miles from Salem Center (One of
the two proposed sites •n Meigs
County being considered to build
the new institution), so thls issue is
vr:zy im~t to me.
A great opportunity awaits the
MeiJs County am~. If this new correcuonal institution is placed in
~County, it would be a mut:h
boost 10 the ecO!Kllliy.
Hundreds of new employment
opporwniUes would be opened up
These would be positions with
excellent pay, benflts and good
working conditions. The Depart·
ment of Rehabilitation cl Come-

tions has a training program for its
employees that is second to ·none in
the United States.
The positions are not just jobs,
but lifelong careers for both men
and women. There is little or no
chance of layoffs or shutdowns.
Escapes are extremely rare and
likely because new prisons are
equi~ped with some of the most
sophisticated surveillance equip:
ment in the world. ·They have tam·
etas that show every Inch or
perimeter fence, fence alarms that
are very sensitive, as well as
ttained correction officers constanlly patrolling the perimet« fence 24
hours a day.
As far as community safeiy
goes, it could very wcU Improve.
New jobs mean new money to the
CC~Ptty llld chances ot havi~ mm
money to spend an improVJn8 the
slteriff'a dqJarurtent and other piOjects would be possible.
This Ia a new and exciting

.,

Meigs County.
Please, contact some of these
officials and ask what you can do
to help. This is a once in a lifetime
opportunity. Don'tlet it pass us by.
Sincerely,
Donald E. Stevens
Wellston, Ohio

Supreme Court to reject this very
same rule more than 70 years ago.
Who among us would argue for
repeal of the Bill of Rights? But
this is precisely what is happening
in the criminal conlexL Habeas corpus is the only way to remedy federal constitutional violations that
are not corrected by the state courts ·'
- an all too common experience in
the field of criminal law. Our rights
are meaningless without a remedy,
and that remedy is now at risk.
A citizen's individual ri~hts are
a check and balance agamst the
.
otherwise unlimited power of gov- .. ·. i
crnment. That power is never more ·· · :
evident than when a police officer; ·'
rightly or wrongly, puts a gun to a· , . :
'
citizen's head.
If the people of this country so . •
truSt in government that they no . ' •
•
longer feel the iteed to check those
,
in power over them, then the : , :
destruction of the Great Writ is a · i
matter of no moment or concern. I, . !
however, do not so trust in govern- . ; I
men~ and I am conccrrtcd.
":
Sincerely,
•
Atty. Harry Reinhart, 0.
Columbus
.: i 1

Several brush fires were among
the 23 calls for assistmce received
over the weekend by units of Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services.
On Saturday at 11:45 a.m., Scipio unit went to State Route 684 for
a tree fire at the Greg Taylor residence.
At 12:13 p.m ., Rutland station
went to a brush fire on Salem
Street. Rutland squad uansported
the property owner, Terry George,
from the scene to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At I :OS p.m., Rutland
unit went to a rekindled brush frre
at the George property. Rutland
unit went to State Route 124 at
I :54 p.m. for a brush fire at the
Larry Harmon property . Tim
McDaniel was ueated at the scene.
At 1:59 p.m., Salem unit went to
State Route 325 to assist Vinton
Township units on a brush frre. The
owner of that property is unknown.
At 3:01 p.m., Bashan Fire Department went to Circle Road for a
brush fire. At 4:04 p.m., Racine
squad went to Township Road 63
for a brush frre at the Gary Wolfe
property.
At 7:24 p.m., Middleport units
were sent to County Road 5 for an
auto f~re. Jay Buskirk was listed as
the owner and there were no
injuries. At 7:48 p.m., Pomeroy
squad went to Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center for Carrie Whaley, who was taken to Veterans. At 9:18p.m., Pomeroy station went to U.S. Route 33 for a
brush fire.
Pomeroy and Middleport units
went to 139 Butternut Avenue at
9:42 p.m. for a suucuue frre althe
. McClung property. (See related
story.) At 10:07 p.m. and 10:22
p.m., more assistance was dis -

The Daily Sentinel
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through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
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.. '

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·•' I

'

Cloudy

01992 Aeeu-Weather, Inc.

..

Claims DH discrimination

Pt. Cloudy

Sunny

The Highway Users Committee of the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council has II priority projects targeted for completion
by the tum of the cenillr)'.
Planning is now under way for the two sections of U.S. 33
between Darwin in Meigs County and Athens, and the Meigs Corri·
dor between Rock Springs and the Ravenswood Bridge shows a
four-phase project with consuoction scheduled for 1994.
The agenda shows construction set to begin in I993 on the state
Route 50 improvement project between Athens and Coolville.

Spokesperson ...

Wednesday through t'riday:
_c_on_un_u_ed_rro_m_·I_ __
Wednesday, a chance of snow.
Lows in the 20s. Highs in the 30s.
"That's how he got elected. from education. Hey, governor,
Thursday, mostly fair except a
you can't have it both ways."
chance of flurries northeast. Lows Once ln office, he cut $88 million
Many demonstrators said
15 to 2S. Highs in the 30s. Friday,
Voinovich had lost his chance for
a chance of rain or snow. Lows in
re-election.
the 20s. Highs 35 to 45.
"Gov. Voinovich- remember
Veterans Memorial
for
every dollar you deduct from
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS education,
you lose one vole for reNone.
SATIJRDA Y DISCHARGES • election'' read one sign taped to the
Statehouse steps by representatives
None.
from Pickerington Local School
patched from Pomeroy and MiddleSUNDAY ADMISSIONS Distric~ east of Columbus.
port stations. They retuined to sta- None.
Darnell Brewer, a student from
tions at 12:53 p.m.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - Cleveland, said some of those hun
At 10:16 p.m., Chester station Roger Hill and Christopher Henby the budget cuts will be able 10
went to U.S. Route 33 and County drix.
vote for governor in 1994. Bre--:er
Road 20 for a brush frre.
said
he is working on a voter reg•s·
Holzer Medical Center
On Sunday at 5:54 a.m.,
uation drive to get students to vote
Friday Discharges
Pomeroy and Middleport units
and lake a hard look at Voinovich.
Feb.
21
went to Butternut Avenue. Tammy
Steiner said funding for several
Allison Barry, Beverly ChapWatkins was taken to Veterans. At
programs
for children - such as
man,
Patricia
Coy,
Brenda
Cre6:04 a.m., Middleport squad went
Immunizations
and Healthy Start
to Spring Avenue in Pomeroy for means, Mrs. Garry Huddleston and - was not reduced at all. He said
Audrey Arnold, who was taken to son; William Lewis, Diana McCal- protesters also ignore that the fundPleasant Valley Hospital. At 10:35 lister, Christie Reed, Edmond mg for Head Start was increased
a.m ., Racine squad was sent to Reed, Windy Rowland, Cory Satnearly 100 percent in the current
Southern High School for Jay terfield and Phyllis Wright.
Births
Feb.
21
budge!.
Bostic, who was taken to Veterans.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barcus, son,
At 12:57 p.m., Syracuse squad
Gallipolis
and Mr. and Mrs. John
went to College Road. Maggie
VanMeter,
son, Gallipolis.
Winebrenner was uansported to
Saturday
Discharges
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 6:22
Feb.,
22
Am Ele Power .................. .31
p.m., Pomeroy squad went to SkinBeverly
McManus,
and
Tonda
Ashland Oil ....................... 32 7/8
ner Road for Betty Roush. She was
Nolin.
AT&amp;T
.................................37 5!8
uansponed to Holzer Medical CenBirths
Bank
One
......................... ...48 3/8
ter. At 7:19 p.m., Racine station
Feb.22
Bob
Evans
.........................27 7/8
wentiO County Road 28 for a furMr.
and
Mrs.
Thomas
Gibbs,
Charming
Shop
...................28
nace fire at the Louis Anris residaughter,
Gallipolis;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
City Holding ................. ..... 17
dence. No injuries were reponed.
Edward
Hughes,
daughter,
Jackson;
Federal Mogul... ................. l5 7/8
At8:45 p.m., Tuppers Plains squad
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roben
Kinnamon,
GoodyearT&amp;R
..................63 7/8
went to State Route 7. Natasha
daughter,
Wellston
and
Mr.
and
Key
Centurion
.................
.. 15 3!8
Shields refused ueatment. At 8:50
Mrs.
Richard
Potter,
daughter,
Oak
Lands'
End
........................
34 3/4
p.m., Racine squad went to Hill
Hill.
Limited
Inc
.
......................
29 5/8
Road for Joyce White, who was
Multimedia
Inc
....
..............
26 3/4
Sunday
Discharges
transported to Veterans.
Rax Restaurant .................. ! 5/86
Feh.23
On Monday at I: 10 a.m., RutRobbins&amp;Myers .. .............. 17
Donna Barber, John Saunders
land squad went to Meigs Mine 31 and Mrs. John VanMeter and son.
Shoney's Inc...................... 26 3/4
for Terry George. He was taken to
Star Bank ... .. ......................26 3/4
Births
Veterans. At4:09 a.m., Middleport
Wendy lnt'l... ..................... l3
Feb.23
squad went to the police departWorthington Ind.............. .. 24
Mr. and Mrs . Tom Justice,
ment. Karen Jones was taken to daughter, Wellston; Mrs. and Mrs.
Stock reports are the 10:30
Veterans. At4: II a.m., Middleport Tommy Nottingham, daughter,
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
unit went to SuperAmerica in Mid· Vinton and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.
dleport for James Jones. He was Whimey, son, Couageville, W.Va.
treated at the scene.

Hospital news

Squads have busy weekend

Attorney speaks out
Dear Editor:
Do the people of this nation
really want to eliminate federal
habeas corpus?
President Bush asked Congress
to do this last year, b~t Congress,
by a narrow margin refused . Now
the Supreme Court has admiued a
case that could have the sa me
result.
Wright v. West will be argued
in March . The conservative
Supreme Court could so narrow the
scope of habeas corpus that it
would be no lon~er available to
remedy constitutiOnal violaJions.
This would mean that elected state
court judges would have the last
word about what the federal constitution means.
Federal ·courts could not correct
even the most blatant mistakes so
long as the state counts had fully
and fairly adjudicated the issue.
This would be true even though an
innocent person ·was convicted and
sentenced 10 death.
If your readers think I am exaggerating, they should recall the
tragedy that befell Leo Frank, a
case that ultimately led the

Dear Editor,
children cause uouble is because ' '•
In this great United States of other children are allowed !0 call · · :
ours you hear on the news and read them names such as "retard". Per- " :
in the paper about discrimination haps education in the form ofinser- . .: :
against races, women, street people • vicing so called "normBI" children ·
•
and on and on. Yo...,hear nothing · and teachers on just what D.H.,
:
about the discrimination of Devel- L.D., etc. is and what they are · · ..; :
opinentally Handicapped Children. capable of learning and what sort" .': :
These D.H. children are in the of help they need from the commu•
most out of the way cltssroorns in nity and their peers is needed to :. ·f :
the buildings. The desks, equip- help them reach their potential.
·. · .. :
ment, condition of the rooms are
These children realize they're
.:
deplor$1e. In one school there are different than other , children _
13 studenls in a room not much because they're reminded daily.
larger than a coat cl05et.
They bave feelings just anyone • As far as books they do not · and they hu.ri.
·
·
exiSt. The state sends the teachers
The D.H. children can learn '
guide lines on what and how to with the proper learning materials •
teiCh the!e "IIIW'iiJ"
-~"·-. How . and proper environmenL .Y0\1 may
..,..... "'"'"'"''
can they leach them wi1hau1 118y thiS Is not going on in our local
books? The teachers could make school system but you're wrong • •
copies of assignments but the copy It's happening in our Meigs Local
paper Is coun·ted and they are Schoof Systenl.
,•
allowed just 110 i111!'r.. ·
Signed,
-"·~:
These D.H. chddre~ are not
Naomi sioure, •
allowed to go on field tri)!l with 1be Molber of a developmentally hand- •
other cbildrcul because ,._, cause
·,___, hild ' ~
_,
·-~'!""' c
bl
P
r
th
trou e. an o c reason these
•···

Subanibcn not dctiring t.o pay Lh c carri·
cr may remit in advance direct to The
Gallipoli1 Daily Trib11oo on a 3.6 or 12
month ba1i1. Credit wiH be given carrior
each week.
No aubecription• by m1i1 pm-millcd in
area&amp; whore home carrier 1crvioo ia
available.

Stocks

0

• •

Atlantic states across the Tennessee
Valley, Kentucky, the central Mississippi Valley, New Mexico and
the Pacific Northwest
Snow fell over the cenual Rockies and pants of Michigan.
Key West, Fla., warmed to 84
degrees Sunday and tied the high
temperature record for the date, set
in 1990.
Snow or rain showers were forecast for New England and new
Mexico today. Rain was predicted
in Florida and in Texas.
High temperatures were forecasl
in the 20s in northern New England, the upper Great Lakes and
North Dakota; in the 30s in New

England and New York stale, the
central Plains and the southern
Rockies; in the 40s in the Nonlheast, the upper Midwest, lower
Plains and the Rockies; in the 50s
in Virginia, the Ohio Valley, northeastern Oklahoma, Texas and the
interior Western states; in the 60s
in parts of the mid-Atlantic, the
Tennesseee Valley, the South, and
protions of the Sierra Nevada; in
the 70s in the Southeas~ the southem tip of Texas, and Northern California; and in the 80s in SPuthern
Florida and Sou them California.
The high temperature for the
nation Sunday was 87 at Lakeland
and Melbourne, Fla.

views on phase-in of
utility increase request
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio wants to know what consumers think about phasing-in a
28.4 percent electric rate increase
so ught by Columbus Southern
Power Co.
Commissioner Richard Fancily
has asked consumers to comment
on the idea.
Columbus Southern, in filing its
proposed rate increase April 2,
offered an alternative, four-year
plan that would boost rates by II
percent the first year, followed by
annual increases of 6.8 percent for
three years.
The 31.4 percent increase would
produce about $250 million, compared with $202.5 million in a onetime increase.
The PUCO staff last fall rccom·
mended a three-year phase- in of
6.9 percent, 6.65 percent and 6.20
percent.
Columbus Southern spokesman
Thomas Holliday said the company
is receptive to a rate phase-in ,

Ora Sinclair

Charles (Margaret) Sinclair,
Ora M. Sinclair, 84, of Sumner Pomeroy; a sister, Alice
Road in Pomeroy, died on Monday, Houdashelt, Wilkesville; four
February 24, 1992 at Veterans grandchildren : Melody Roberts,
Memorial Hospital following an Mike Bowles, Chad Sinclair and
Robert (Robbie) Hawk; and two
extended illness.
great.grandchildren,
Nicholas and
She was a housewife and attend·
Jenny
Bowles.
ed South Bethel New Testament
Besides her parents, she was
Church.
Born on May II , 1907 in Meigs preceded in death by her husband,
County, she was the daughter of the Lloyd Sinclair; a daughter, Eloise
late Orlando and Della Shumway Hoffman; and four brothers.
Graveside funeral services will
Midkiff.
be
held on Wednesday at II a.m. at
She is survived by three daughters: Mrs. Paul (Mildred) Hauber, Cherry Ridg e Cemetery with
Long Bottom, Mrs. Robert (Mary) Duane Sydenslricker officiating.
Friends may call at Ewing
Bowles, Pomeroy and Deloris
Hawk, Long Bouom ; a son, Funeral Home in Pomeroy from 6
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesday.

--Meigs announcements--

Three Ohio..~o-at_in_ued_r_rom_A-_1

CORREC!ION!

BEEF

Round Steak................................... S1

69

BONELESS

Bottom Round Steak..............

depending on the amounts
involved.
The company wanted to impose
the full rate increase Jan. 13 but
was blocked by a lawsuit filed by
Ohio Consumers' Counsel William
Spratley and City Attorney Ron
O'Brien. Judge Richard Sheward
of Franklin County Common Pleas
Coun barred the rate increase Feb.
7, but the ruling is being appealed.
State Sen. Eugene J. Watts, RGalloway, one of 19 people who
testified at a PUCO hearing on the
rate increase Thursday, said
phased-in increases would be
preferable. He said the lump-sum
rate proposal is "anti-middle class,
anti-education, anti-small business
and anti·industry."
Watts has inuoduced legislation
to change the law that lets utilities
impose a full rate increase if the
PUCO fails to act on a rate request
within 275 days. The deadline for
the Columbus Southern request
passed Jan. 2.
The PUCO is expected to rule
on the increase this spring.

--Area deaths--

Program to be presented
A program, "Jesus Will Outshine Them All," will be presented
by the teen class and adult choir of
the Middleport Church of Christ on
Sunday at 6:15p.m. The public is
invited to attend.
Joint meeting planned
Tbcre will be a joint meeting of
- - - - - - - - - - - - the Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
9053 and Ladies Auxiliary on
pel says will result in 74,000 lay- heavily to save the plant in Arling- to be closed in the summer of 1993, Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Dinner will
offs and 21 plant closings by 1995. ton, near Dallas, and Michigan has 4,014 employees. The North be served prior to the meeting. All
Among other plants to be closed officials had tried to do the same Tarrytown plant, to be closed in the members are urged to attend.
are a V8-engine plant in Flint, for the Ypsilanti plant, west of summer of 1995, has 3,456 workDance planned
Mich.; the Delco Remy hom plan~ Dcuoit. Both plants make large, ers; the Flint plant has 4,036.
The Ttfppers Plains VFW Post
in Anderson, Ind., and the castings rear-wheel-drive cars, which are
"We're all just in a state of No. 9053 and Ladies Auxiliary will
plant in St. Catharines, Canada.
selling poorly.
shock right now," said Anthony sponsor a round and square dance
Texas officials had lobbied
The Willow Run plant, which is Caparisi, president of the Ypsilanti on Friday from 8 to 11:30 p.m.
Music will be provided be provided
Chamber of Commerce.
AI Vickery, a worker at Arling- by C.J . and the Country Gentle. ton, said more than 2,000 workers men . The public is invited to
inside the plant for a televised anend.
Chicken-Noodle dinner
address by GM Chairman Robert
The United Pentecostal Church
Stempel let out a cheer when he
said Arlington would remain open.
of Middleport will have a chicken·
noodle dinner on Friday from II
" You couldn't ask for anything
lh.
better," Vickery said. "It's a great a.m. to 2 p.m. Deliveries are avail·
feeling."
able for the Middleport and
Pomeroy area.
Logan man jou.nd dead
Trustees to meet
The Columbia Townsh ip
LOGAN, Ohio (AP) - A man
lb.
found shot to death over the week- Trustees will meet Monday at 7:30
end in the Hockin$ Hills State Park p.m. at the frre station.'
apparently committed suicide, the
Church Women United
county sherifr s department said.
Church
Women United will
The body of 42-year-old Bruce
Cogley of Powell was found during
a search Saturd!.t morning south of
Water boils at 212 degrees Fahren·
Old Man's Cave.
heit at sea It;vel. For every 550 feet
above sea level, the boiling point or
water is lower by about I degree.

meet for a planning sess ion for
"World Day of Prayer" on Friday
at I p.m. at Trinity Church. All key
women from Meigs County
Churches arc urged to attend.
OAPSE to meet
OAPSE 453 Southern Local will
meet Thursday at the high school at
6 p.m. All members are urged to
auend.
Evangelist to speak
Evangelist David Carpenter of
Belleville, W.Va. will be at
Stivcrsville Word of Faith Church
on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Pastor
David Dailey invites the"public.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

"

.. ' ·" "'"'

' T(

' -"!\ !

lW!GAIII "'TJIIEES SATLIIQU .. SU~T .
Mllli\IIIII!GHT TUE$0111~ .

Pl.auAIIY 2111wu U _ j
FR IDAT t ~N fHJRSDAn

$
249

.PawELL,

Lottery numbers

Somtt!Ung qootf's ~ways Cookjng .91t

MASON FAMILY RESTAURANT

lie

f3

Tbc record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 72 degrees in 1961. Tbc
record low was. I in 1914.
. Sunset will be at 6:17 p.m. Sun·
nsc Tuesday at 7:12 a.m.
Around the nation
Snow fell early today in the
upper Great Lakes. Rain fell in
parts of the Northeast and in Oregon, and drizzle dampened the central Plains.
Clouds dotted New England, the
Northeas~ the Midwes~ the northem Plains, the South, the Southeast
and the Northwest. Fair skies prevailed in most of the West.
Rain feU Sunday from the mid·

Highway group eyes projects

-----Weather-----

d-efin_l
·tion-alsoc_ks-dow_n._

opportunity for Meigs County. I
urge the Chamber of Commerce,
State Representative Abel, State
Senator Long, all county officials
and, most importantly, the people
of this area to pull together and do
all that is necessary to get this new
correctional institution built in

Ice

Via Auociated Pmu Gtaph'uNet

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, cloudy. A chance of
rain after midnight. Low 40 to 45.
East winds 5 to 15 mph. Chance of
rain is 40 percent. Tuesday, rain
likely. High near 50. Chance of
rain is 70 percent
Extended rorecast:

By The Associated Press
Rain is expected tonight.
A few sprinkles could linger
across eastern and northern Ohio
today, but the steady rain that
occurred over much of the state
early last night has ended.
Tbe weather system that brought
the rain to the state was moving to
the east coast, but another rainy
weather system is approaching
from the west.
Rain is expected across the
state by Tuesday morning. Colder
air will enter the state during the
day and a change to snow is possible over northern Ohio during the
afternoon.

----Local briefs-__, PUCO asks consumers'
W. VA .

Letters to the editor _______
Deeply concerned

and

MICii.

Democrat from Massachusetts .who
believes in the social welfare compact. Sometimes he is called a con·
servative, because he believes that
a just society is only possible in a
prosperous society, and that a prosperous society depends upon the
efficient funcooning of the ca~ital­
ist system. Sometimes he is dismissed as indefinably weird,
though not so often after his triumph in Ne~ Hampshire, becau~e
his prescnp110ns for the nauon s
ills lie outside the canons of current
orthodoxy.
But like Buchanan, Tsongas has
i!l'peccably American antecedents,
in his case and most notably,
Franklin D. Roosevelt. FDR 's
National Recovery Act was an
early 1930s version of industrial
policy -the structured partnershtp
of business, labor and govemmenL · •
Tsongas' economic call to arms
advocates a similar cooperative
approach. That makes him a " con-· ·
servative"? Tsongas opposes gun · •
control and supports a woman's ·
right to legal abortion and gay
rights. That makes him a what?
Buchanan and Tsongas, each in
his own way, point the way to a
looming truth that the rapid
changes of the past decade have
managed to veil. The ground under
the old definitions has fallen away.
The social welfare and civil rights
accomplishments of the New Deal
to New Frontier era ·are now the
accepted floor on which everyone,
"conservative" as well as "liberal," walks. Eight years of the Reagan revolution, that "conservative" monument to fiscal irresponsibility and debt, codified that point
beyond recall or doubt. The Cold
War, the defining reality of the past
45 years, is over, and with it the
simple-minded division of .American foreign and m1litary pohcy mto
the province of "hawks" and
"doves." Gone, too, is America's
unquestioned international ceonomic leadership.
And so Buchanan, the "conservative" Cold Warrior interventionist of 1982, proclaims ·'America
First" in 1992. And so Paul
Tsongas, the model of a model
national Democratic senator 12
years ago, declares war on the thematic core of left-liberal economic
theory in the interest of restoring a
just society in 1992. And so the
pundit class and the political fraternity in general arc left with their

'

The Dally Sentrnei-Page-3 .

Rain forecast for parts of Ohio tonight, ·Thesday

OHIO Weath Ar
Aeeu-Wcather" fon:tast for

The Daily Sentinel

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

•

FINANCIAL REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For FlooaiYew Endng

DoiuniMr 31, 1HI

ORANGE TOWNSHIP

County Of~•
"Thlolt tn Ull811!1ilod
Flllll'loltl A-..ort"
8UIIIIARY OF" CASH

BALANCES, RECI!PTI AND
'EXPENDITUAE8'

GOVERNMENTAL FUND8

AECEtmi •

Tu•... - ............. .21,412.41

UotntM, P11mltt, Md

lnttrMI ond Fl•clll
Ch11goo............I ,084.82

o.s:.:::z. . .........

26,&amp;00.011
LIM Outlltndlng
TOTAL DIS8URSE·
R-'l*--·-···a,41UI MENTB•••,........ tt4,483.8t . Checb.................... ~l76.15
TOTAL '
ln..,..t. ..................... 1,122.43 OTIIER FINANCING
BALANCE......... 25,123.44
SOURCES {USES)
TOTAL
l certlty thlo report to be
AEC&amp;IPT8--.......tt, I12.22 Pro..- or
COfroct
111d InN! Ia tho boot
Not11 ...................2t,000. 00
DISBURSEMENTS:
or lcnowlodgo.
·
Gtn...
TOTAL OTliEA FINAN C.
..... Pulne, Cllfk
INQIOURCES
GovernmenL....... 11,1SU2
Ftbruory 17, ttt2
(U8EI).................2t,OOO.OO
Pulltla WCifb ..........to,530.27
42241
Allltd Rold
Fund
C..h
lllllnoo
1.4ti.JO
.Coolville, Oh, 411'23
Jill. 1, 1H2.......20,261.0S
Dobt lhlvlotl
114-HS-43t4
Note Prlnolpel
Fund C..h llltinoo
Die. 31, 1ti2..•..2S,t2U4 {2)24,110
. PIYMinL..........I,IOO.OO
F............................ 132.00
lnttrgciwmmMIIII

nw

HlllthoHOOOUOOOOiooOOOOoooOO

MONDAY ·Baked Ham Sand\\ich, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
TUESQAY - Hamburger, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
WEQNESDAV ·ALL-YOU·CAN·EAT SPAGHETTI (ALL DAY)

JHURSQAY . Turkey Club, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
- ALL-YOU-CAN·EAT FISH (ALL DAY)

tVItRY DAY DIETER'S SPECIAL.......•u9

TWDAT &amp;

11Dili21AT 11111101 OlllDIIN'S MINU.

lllllll Oll.D:::.:

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.'

Southern beats Eastern 75-48
to share S.VAC title with Oak Hill

Monday, February 24, 1.992
Page-4

Scoreboat. d
s....

In theNBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AU..tkDIWioo

y..,.
W L
Y................. 34 19
BOIUL ...........- ....;.30 2A

PtL
.642
.556

GB

.411
.463

85
9.5

.236

22

~..............~ ~~ ::~

I

u

Mllmi .................... u
Ptri!tHphh ........... 25 29

:m:~1

~=:: ::::::fall

Orbndo .................ll 42

lkath l7, Uddn&amp; Vlll. 441

Cinc&amp;mati 104, South Allblml78
Clanlan 12, !oWyland 70
COUll! Cuolim 41, W'111tlwo &lt;44
CoU. of C.""""" 91, Nolll&gt;eny l4
Coooin SL SO, Md.-E. Sho.- 63
E. k'cn1Uti.)l83, TenneueeSt 64
E. Tenneaee St. 99, MUlhall SO
Fla . lntcm~tional IS, Cm1t:rW')' (I}
Florida SO, So!Ah Carolina 48
Florida A&amp;.M 91, 8ClhW"~&amp;-Cootnun

4.5

Ceatral Dtvt~Joe

54

GtagU SG\llhtm 81, Mc:rcc:r 74

DetroiL ....- ............ .31 24
r1
2.!
31

.
.472
.446

17154

CJcorsia SL 72, Samfonl l2
CJcorsia T"h S:Z. VUJinio 49

19
20.S

J1cbon St. 84, A.labama St. 79

36

.333

26.5

A\luul ... -..............'17
Milw..W. ...... .....25
fndiaM ................... 25
a.riouo -.............. 18

.lOOS64

Mldw•tDI.WO.

Ta8

W L

UW! .......................37 18
s.n ""-··......31 23
Houlton ········ ........ .2&amp; 27
Ocnw:r .................. .20 33
o.u. ..................... 16 31
MinratU---·········.1 0 43

9

66

.302
.119

20
26

81

36 .m
Satunlay's srores

- - · ···········"

N.C.-Wilminston 94 , Will iam&amp;.

Muy64

s.s
16

Ncrth Teua91, McNcaeS t93
Old Dr:miniM 89, Eut Camtina 83

195

Mldwul
Akron 64, Valpuai.IO 60

Tonight's games ·
S•crunenro•t Philadllphia, 7:30p.m.
Dsl.v.r II A\Lanta. 7:30: p.m.
S..lllc 1t Mmnmoct. I p.m.
Goldea Stile al Dallu,l:30 p.m.
Ne• Yark It Aloc:niJ.. 9:30 p.m.
Ullh11Pmlond.IOp.m.

Tuesday's games

S. Illinois 74, Tulu 68
SE Miasowi 80, Mumy St. 75
SW Miuou.ri St. 58, N. lowa 47
Wicbiu St. 64, CteiaJnon 61.
W"IJ .-Gre.cl Bay 12,W. l.llinoi•47
WriJht St. 81, 8Llfftl(l71

basketball poll

13

Tho Top Twt:f!t)" Five IClmJ in The
Aaoci•ed Pn. 1991 -92 collose bukct btJl poU. with l'int·placo ..... in ptn:n·
lhou11, recorda throuah Feb. 23, tot• I
pointl buod an 25 poinu fer • rust pla.ee
w-OLe Wou&amp;h ono point for a 2Sth place
.... ond "" ...... ...wnp,

..

cs NO&lt;\Iuidsc 72, NE 1llinoio 66

Colcndo SL 74, San Dieao St. 66
Jbwaii 76, Air Fotec 67

I
7

Idaho 16, Idaho SL 74
LonJ Bc.ach St. 19, UC ltfinc?2
I.ouimllc 63, Arizona SL 62, 0T

3

2
l
9
12
'

Mcntana n, Mt'lr'ltanl SL 72
New Mu.ica 9S , BriJham Young 84,

O'T
~

PacificU. n,FrccnoSt.70
· Peppetdine 103, Loyola. Muymount

10

4
13
II
IS
8
18
14
20

89
S. Ul.&amp;b 79. S•cnmedO St. 73
San Diego 79, Portland 76
San FnncUoo 711, SL Muy'1, Cal. 75
S1111.11 Oani 61 , Gotwip SH
Saulham Cll73, S\anford 72, ar
UC Santa Bllbm 68, Cal St.-Fuller·

s,....... . . . . ..

lJNLV 69. Nc.- Mcl.ico St. 58
Uc.ah SL 14, S111 Joee St 79
WuJUn,;tM St.97, Orep82
Wtlla St. 62. BDIN St.60
W)'Omina 70, Utah S7

16
17
21

Ohio high school
basketball scores

0111.- l'lft:IYinl YOht : Muuchusetu
122. Oklahom• 122, Seton Hall 110,
Wal:o .._. 10, Tow·EI Puo 7l, LSU
4S. Wit.-Green B1y 42, Princ«on 34,
HoullOil21, Montana 16, Iowa St. 13,

boumc23
CoL Walnut Jtidp 41, Cot M.arim·
Franklin 33
Cuyahop FaiiJ 63, B.-..31
Day. I&gt;.anbu 58, W. CamJU1a1 31

Major college
basketball scores

Dclawue47, ML Vemoo 29

Gahanna SS, Marlen lhnlina2A
Oarficld Jill. Trlnily 17, Bodford 30
Howland SS, Kcmt ROOJCYc1130
Lrndhum Bruah l8, Geneva 42
MuaWon 60, Uniontown Laie43
Mauillon hcklon 44, Canton
Glen0Uo41
Milmilbo.Q 45, CcniCrVille :J4
New Alilacl!!fhio 63, E. umpool33

Sunday's action
Eul

c.m.p.Mdloo 94. Fmosy 76

Ddlwan7&lt;6, Northeutern 64
Dro&gt;.d 11, Booloo U. 71
Georp Wuhilleton U, Wen Vir·
linla 71

PainiDIVille Rivmide 41 , WillouJ.hby

s. 39

(Jaqdown 72, Syntu10 68

Lo Iillo 90, Niopn61
~· MIL 7•. Failfidd li
Well M, Xe.lka72

PickerinJ'on 71, Thomu Wo11hina·

""'20

Rewnoldsbwa 77, Col Wa11tt10n. 65
Solao 12, Shal:co Hta. 41

Soolh

Tooumacl167,1boborHo. Wayne 3S
Uppu Arliop 65, Fnnk1in Ho. 28

ArizGno 1!6. T,..p~e ro
Dd'aol IS, Aorido SL 7S

W&amp;m:a HarGitt1 S3, SlOW 47

-....
-

w......w. s. so. OnMpoa\32
Youna- Wilaon Sl, Chaidc:a ND·C..

K&lt;otudly 84, Ooarlia 73
Wab F~ 7l. D\ac 61
31

Zan..WU l3, Buckeye l.ooall2

~84,BnndoU74

llliooU11,lowi1l.Of

Dl.talonD

B•r Vlllapo47,Cl6. Sl Auparine 14
a..... ....,.. 42, Bcllaizo 39

JndiaAII6, a.JoSLIO

66, Ok1ohoma SL Sl

,

Bonjomiol ......, 56, Spaiaa. North_...,24

Onp Sa. 77, Wllhlop 67

c..lieldll. - 2 . !
Cortland Lakn-iew 41, Youn1 .
Chlncy28
Elyda WM•S, Lon;. 8-.uto 36
Oraklm ll,
Cllaminade-luli·
CMD:III
"""""' 46, Cle. s........ 39
Lenin Sa.uhviow 54, Panna Padu

SallniiJ'I actiOII

o.,.

C.Uop !l•. llllllli 49
BIIOiuaoil 9!,J.dlill94
CdlolllU 64, y ~· 60
C t * M, PwwiMnce73
c.....n 16, Bro"" 71
Dak...,.19.-U. 73
Dloul79.-l3

.,

, ..... II, """l.67

... ss

..

-~9, T_..SLI7

4l, Cle. c-!O.th. 43
Jta..SH71,L4B•!S
a-46.Talloooqol6
-~Y-U.-33

Holy c- 99, c.lpla 71
, _ W....ll,Naod- u. 65
IAfa-11. Nn7 61
'"lalloldU. 72,1Wia65
........ Wli.-Mil-!9
t'
?S, SL , _•• 41
M
'
• 104, St: hnaw.tmt

V:C..9':..~~&amp;:gr

lhbaul3,o-29
W. B-!3,c-S. 32

I

.

Md.·Bth'man Cclwq 11, C... Cca-

II.--

IS

Brooke, W.V1. 52, Sto.~bmville 46
Buckeye 60, Amn COvenby 59

Buckeye Trail 4l, Fen Frye 38
Caldwell 59, Parkenbu.rc (W.Va .)
Calh. 54
Campbdl S4, Wmm Kennedy 47

Canton ~Kinley 59, Mauillon Peary
38

36

Ccntc:lburg 82, New Albany 46
C~. ec.wry Day 72. Hooiaon 49
Cin. N. Collqc Hill 83, Cin. Finney-

town 10

Cle. BCII'ICidictine 80. Wickliffe 70
Cl• MmhaU 94,1!ut1Uo 90
Clintm·Mulic 68, Blanchatc:r 60

Col. Linden-McKinlc)' 74, Col. Muion-Franklin 67
Col. SL Clwlea 72, Col. Roady 61
Coldwater 89, Om:nvillc 65
Cfllonel Cnwt«d 62, Buc)'IUI Sl
Coh.mM Grove70, Oa.oville 69
Conouan Vall. Tl, Weirton (W.V&amp;.)
Madann•6S
Cridenville Perry 52, Cory·R1w1on
ll
Cuy•hoa• V1Uey Chr. 84, HtriLagc
Clu. 69
Danbwy Lllt..;de 60, G;boonbwz 48
Don.W. 63, Col WclliniJ1'ft 60
Del~ 60,
l3, O'T

Ev""""'

Dova (/J, New ftWadcWhi• .SO
E. Clnta~ 13, Rit.hmmd H11. 76
Findlay 12. CoL Eu\ 6l
Fildanck 67, Keystone 50
Fat Jcnn.ina~82, Panclon-Oilboa 60
Fe~~Loria 81, Mdhawk 48

Fremonl R011 67, Tiff111 Columbian

4S

Hantin Nonhem 73, Van Bun:n 49
Indian V.U. 68, l..wdmville41
honton 10, Aahland, Ky. 67
Kidron Ou. 61, f.lyria Opm Door S3
K.nerc.-k 79, Symm111 Vall. 49
LakcCath. 76, Cle. WeatTech 75
l...U.ewood St. Edward 70, Cle. tincoin-wtit 41
l.ancu\cl45, Ca. Eut 42

l..cbanll110, Sprinpm l8

Uberty· Benton 81, N. Baltimore 55
lima Bath 61, Bryan 62
Loa~nElm 67, Lim• Temple 48
Lonln 6l, Elyrio l6
Lonln &amp;...,..;de 67, Flyrio W. lO
l.ouiiVille Aquinla74, Revere 71
Lucurille Valley 93, Pomrnouth W.
6S

M.arien.a 75 , W~, W.V1. 55
Mulillon Wuhington Bl , Canl(ln

C.~ .

S6
McDermou NW 73, Portanoolh Qay

S9
Modina B\lcll:eyc 60, Akron Coventry

S9

Miclcllcoown 101, Sidney 88
Miller City 90, Ayen:ville 41
Miltm-Union 60, OWe S9
New Bnmen Sl, Runit 57
New Loru!m61, Pl)'nlOUih 61
N. Ridscville63, Lorain Kina6J
N. Unkln59,MI.t)'lvillc44
Non!unorl7, MaNfiold Cltt. ll
0a1: H.uboa-!S. acn.. s3
Oal: Hill6l, N. Oallio48
Oberlin 69, Ltnin Clt.arview !59
Ohio o..r 62. Michisan o..r 41
0......,1178, Buobyo V.U. 76
Oavi1lc 79, Balin lli1aAd 74
Ottlw1 Hi1lJI 54, Libetty Center S3
Oaowa-OloMarf 10, Paulm.s14
P.tric:k Hcary 60, McComb 45
ParyobotJ 15, Tol. Whitmer 66
Prob .. Shawnoc 9l, Ed&amp;cwood 41
RacW Southom 74, Roedavlllo llutcmll
SL lla1ly 66, MuiM Loc.ll1
.
SL Moryt 67, So......... Fw.iow 40
Saaduav 84, Loram SoutiMow 65
Shaker
19, Ccvclond Ho. 67
Southan IMo!IOl, Ediaon N. 49
Spon.a lliollland ll, CaL Acadany &lt;44
Spril)a. C"alholic 64, 3prina. Notth·

it;.

....... sz

t.on

:f"1- Nonb 71,

1Mmu WMhina-

Sttyku SO, llicb'rillo 64
Swltl«&lt;n 91. Otte&amp;o S1
llnono 49,C..,tincalul47
Tot. Ceau.l Sl, Sylvanil NonhW'iew

41
Tol. Ouwan 13, Ypailanti (Mi&lt;h.)
Cal"l)' 64
Tciod 11. s. 0w1ao"'" s...-....
60
Triwoy 11, Palal.ll
Trot--Moc1Uoo1l, Spain.. South
60
lJaloncowa Llko 64, C..... S. !3
Van w.. 7.~ El1da 61
Midvitw43
V-, 0... 16, AIWI1« Cllr. 41

v_..,

W-49, C.,~F.U.41

Waloii71,N-!2
W1,..e Trace 61, Dalplsol: Jeft'tnC~n

!0

-50, Cnoaknillo43
......... ,2,_!S

Wtlla1a1 64, MID. II

·-59.-Uaial&lt;l

W-12, Pi!Mow hit Sf

c..b•I,T-%7 ·
c.la.dy4d,W. - . 3 l
c.t Sobaol r... 01a1a 'II w..r.u26
~~c,. o....,.. 39. sw..y t.obm ..

S• - · NY 15, Plidof&amp;h Diddo-.

I• ,.,.....,

DI-m

B-10l,-lllomll2

•t

.... 76,-'t'l
-17,11anon1SO
1._7l,IC1111'64

VlJIMI74.-llaDst

w..... Cbompi-

N. loyohoo !5, 0.. 0..,..21

-I:I,Now......,...,.71

-77
Sa.-. Po. II,,._ IL Muy'~
Mt77
IL ldlo'a 71,1'11111 . . 611

'-'rillo 41, Canol fuMn NW 11
--64.0..-21

Mopd&lt;n Plold !6,

~12,RDtp~19

...... M
J'
r"tt,NJ. 66_Waper61

Bridaeport 67, McMcchen (W.Va.)

Boa......&amp; 42. N&lt;mhmaot29
CoL Brookhlw:n 62, Col Wett 27
Col.lndependcnce-67, Newuk 34
Col. NOid\land 53, Onwe City 31
Col. Soulb 72, Worth in113n Kil·

Ad1l'?, Waynedicld 51
Akron Fuatono 55, Akron E. 46
AJCII.anda 69, Nellonville-Ymt. 63
A11fat E. 74, Ktmon 64
Amhcat 74, Olmltcd Falls SH
A&gt;lingu&gt;n 1S, Bctt.Yillc 37
Atiulbull f.dacwood 83, Jc!fmon 61
A•oo 61. Wcllin- S7
Avon Lake 61, N". Olml:tcd 56 Of
B•y 73, Rocky Rivet 71
Bol!M 1!6, SICilbai.Wc C.lh. ll
Berne (lnd.) S. Adam 99, Parlway

Donahue 6S, OT

Dlwtllc.l

1o; Mcmphil St. I, B.U Sl 7, New Mexi·
.. Sa. 6, 1V• v..p.;.l, BJi&amp;ham Y01111
3 Iowa 3,1..ai.i1Yillc 3, Bc.ton CaUcac 2.
Delnrazt 2. Oo:qia Tech 2. Evmrvi.lle I,
N- Dame I, Riclmand I.

,

63

Girls-tournament action

Pc:lpperdiM 12, N.C. Oadotte 11, Tuu

~

Reaular-season action

ton Sl

i::=•-==:1~
~ ~
:zo.
St. Jobn' t ................ l&amp;-7 3S4 24

Dl•illon IV

W1)'ncsvillc66, Miami Vall. 503

Tcau-San Anu:nio 82, SW Teau St.
FarWtsl

L.ut
Pl&amp;. Week

Zll
170
170
ISO
139

Clklahtlna 99, Co2ondo 83
Teau 88, Sw\hcm Mcth. 86
Tuu 0Wtilo73, Baylor 63
Texu Swthcm 108, Prairie View 86
Teau Tech I05, Rice 9&amp;

Boys-tournament acdon
Ceduville63, T~ City Bcthc14 1
C.,;,p 76, Tn-Villoge 60
O.y. fdfc:non 83. Bndfool68

PitL·lohrutown 78 , Ywn,.town St.

AP Top 25 college

21. DoPIW ................... .IH
22. Florida SL .............• l~l
(tio)
.1&amp;7
24. C""""'"'"' ........... .17·6
lS. - . o ................ IH

-.

14

Soul h. . .
Alt.IJUU 90, AlaNim1 87
Alt~n~~• St. S9, Lwiliana Tech SS
bcbonwille 74, Tuu-Pan American

603

Rq:ular-season action

Neue Dune 84, UClA 71

801too 11 New )cney, 7:30p.m.
MilwiWkcc "nu:~ 1:30 p.m.
~0 It Occrail, 8 p.m.
MWni at San Antonio, 8:30p.m.
Ucah 1t LA. Clippen, lO:lO p.m.

E- Olnaoat 51, Cllouo-..... 41

w.-ss.wa,.,.... ..

- . : . 5 1 , Oallipo1!1441

.

Wh..UnJ (W.Vo.) ~1nolr 67, Clo.
Univonilr 65

WiJlo.lliU 10, Y0111~ c.r..., 70
WooololloldliSIIod-46

WCIIIlolqton

l!lpa O i l , - Aldlr33
C1noc1 Voll. 49, ,...,. 41

15

Onmlllo!6,--39

Union 57

·----

Limitalion of turnovers 10 !he
barest minimum and accurate
shooting at the free throw line lifled the Universily of Rio Grande
men's basketball team to an 80-75
win over Shawnee Stale Saturday
in Portsmouth.
The Redmen (22-7, 9-3 in the
Mid-Ohio Conference) used those
weapons and double-digit performances from Jeff Brown (25
points) and Brad Schubert (19) to
shake off the Bears' slrong defense
of their court.
Jim Arnzen's club (9-21, 4-10)
got off to a flying start by reeling
off eight unanswered points in the
first 1wo minutes of play, forcing
the Redmen to play catch-up on
Schubert's 13-poinl showing for
1he half, which included some
timely three-point shooting by the
senior co-captain from Bellevue.
The Bears went ahead 24-14 at
8:30 for their biggest lead of th e
game, bu1 the Redmen slowly came
back to seize the lead at 3:18 on
Brown's trey (29-28). The Redmen
held on for the res! of the period,
but Shawnee, which drew a total of
33 poims from its nearly unstoppable center Larry Tiller, crept up
and knotted the score at 34 at the
buzzer.
The pace picked up considerably in the second half as the lead
changed hands no less 1han eight

W""""gu&gt;n 0... 4R E. I(,,. 30

lbll St. 7S, Ccnt. Michigan 55
Bowling Green 61, Kent 56
Outlet 78, D1yton 73
Drake 70, Bndley 62
E. IllinW 65, N. Illinois 61
E. Michiaan 69, Tolod(l64
EvarliVilfc 82. Xavier, Ohio 73
W.-Chicaso 72, Oevcland St.67
lliinois St.44, lndilna St. 43
K.aruu S4, K1n111 SL !52
~yol•, m. 74, Detroit 10
Muqucue71, St. Louil48
Miami, Ohio 72, Ohio U. 64
Michigan 76, Northw01tem 63
Miclligan SL 70, Punluo 61
Mo.-JUntas City 63, Tc.us AclM 46
Nel:rub 80, Iowa St. 70

zone defense during Saturday nigbt's game at
Tuppers Plains, wbicb tbe Tornadoes won 74-58.

·Redmen elude SSU offense

Minso47, Walerfotd 35
Nc.... Colh. li,FiohctCoth. 3l
N..bwy l1, KWmd 23

Bnwwick 68, Lonin Kina 43
Fremont Rou S6, Findlay 49
Molinolfi&amp;hlond S1, C&lt;O&gt;Icy l3. or
OranF Chr. -46, Can1a1 hcritaac 17
Shelby 52, M•ruficld 31
Tol. Cc:nltll63, Tot. St. Unula 59
T111Cln1Wll Cath. 66. Fr!lepon Lab·
lond46
W. Gauga57,0.udon44
W•dlworth 65, Hudl(lft 39

Suaday's SCCJRS

623

Lodpnocx 38, Lu......, Eut Z7
Liberty Union 72, Bcmc Union SO
Milknport 38, uw.8 H•. 29

TcnnCIICCTcch 100, MoRhcad St. 89
Te:m·Atlins,ton 66, Nicholls St. 65
Tn .-Oatunoo&amp;• &amp;0, Fwmrn 75
Va . Com.monweallh 69, N.C. Chulotte66
Vanderbilt 89, Tcnnctu.e 84
W. CuoJin-119, Cit.1dd 69
W. Kentucky 103, Lcnu &amp;8

MOVINQ UPCOURT - Eastern's Terry
McGuire (14) moves upcourt against Southern's

28

Portsmouth Chy 48, Portsmou th
Notre Dune 39

Sacnmcno 124, Wlllrini'£G 111
lndWia 102, Booton 9l
Clewtland ll1, Mlhnuketl9
Houlka 90, s.n An\CI\io 13

1S9S
1489
1488
1413
1287
1217
1149
liN
lOll
1029
976
918
ill
762
6V

OOm S9, Loram Coth. 29

DanYi!lc ~~ C.L Wcllingml1
Elyda Opcnllocn 33, Woodridge 2J
FaitblnU 68, Trea of Lifo 38
Faidawn 41, Br~dford 46
llouawn ll. W. Ubocty·Salcm 33
K.yacr Creek 48, Patriot ScMhwatcm

Radford 89, Davidson 7S
Richmond 83, Gco1Je Muoo SO
SW Louitiana 70, New Or\CIIIS 60
St'Aith F1orid.a 75, Virginia Tech 62
Stct10n 80, SE Louili.111a 7S

4
8.S
8.S
lO.l

S~ Northcutem l9, VcnW101 Z7
UU..ll, Bhxm-Cam&gt;U41,0T
W. Sdcm Nonbwene.m 56, Rittman

Dl•blon IV
Aden• 6&amp;, l.ta!:wa Fli!field 31
Clnll Wincheala'42, New Albany 25
C-"'"12. ColAoodany 0
Covington47, 8otkW 2I1

NW Louiaiana 83, Sam HOUII.on St.

York 91, Deriver 81
MWni 107 , lloaoi! 98
C1w1oao 130, O.londo 110
Atlanta 119, New Jeney 10'1
au.. lOS MiMoo&lt;&gt;U90
~ 130: LA. CU.,.... Ill
S..ulolll,l'ol1land !04
Golden Slate 126, LA. Laken 12A

z.

32

NE Louilian1 74, S1ephen F.Aulin

Nt~w

Team
W-L
1. Duio(41) ................21·2
Jndi ... (1) ............... ~
J. Konou (7) .........• ....2Q.3
• · UCJ..A ....... .... .......21 ·2
l . Ariz&lt;loa .•••...•••.....•..•.204
6. ~ .................. 19-4
1. UNLV (3) ..........•....24-2
I . OIOIDSL---.27.!
9. Azlt......................2Q.6
t0.Nord!Carolill• ....... l8·5
11. Kaiuch ............... .l0-5
lU&amp;hipnSt. ...........l~l
13. $oWioi!ICal ........•.. 19-4
10. ~ SL ..........21-l
1!5. Tullna ................... .l9-3
16.Alobtma .................2Q.6
17. Michipn .............• 17-6

W.U....lO
Ridpdolo 46, Mt. Oil cod 20
River 43, Ncwcomon&amp;ow~~ 39

11.ar
N. Carolin• St. 99, Ncwtb Clrolina 94

GB

Padfk Dlvblon
GoWan St.~tc ..........36 15 .106
~ ...............37 16
.698
Pbocnix ..................34 21
.618
LA. LWn ............29 25 .m
S..ulo ....................29 25 .m
LA. ail'!""' .........%7 Z7 .lOO

Midoll""'"' Fanrick 43, DWo 31
N. Unim l7. ~"" 43
Norttrnor 39, Fredaicktown 32
Plcuartt 82, Col. C.........W 39
Richmond Dale Southcutem 61 ,

LSU 99, Aubum 82
Mcmpbil St. 63, Ala.· Birmingham 58
Mila. Valley St93, Onmblin&amp; St 81
Miuisai . 86, MiuiJ . . St. 71
N.:::% A&amp;T 7S."r.Caroiina SL

PtL
.673
.S74
.S09

.m

lndion LoU ll, Twin VaiiJy S. 29
Ubocty Uruoo 12. Bane UfticnlO
Miami. E. 415, National Tn.i140

Howud U. 82, Morgan St 64

WESTERN CONFERENCE

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent .
Hitting 14 of 16 free throws in
the final round, the bard charging
Southern Tornadoes scored an im·
pressive 74-58 come-from-behind
victory over rival Easl.em Saturday
nighl in the SVAC boys regularseason basketball finale before an
overflow crowd at Eastern High
School.
Southern has now won six in a
row to push iiS record to 13-7 overall and tie for the SVAC championship wilh Oak Hill as both ended
with 12-2 league marks. Eastern,
af1er contending at midseason,
dropped to 11-9 overall and finished at7-7 in the SVAC.
Southern was led in scoring by
junior swing-man Michael Evans,
who nelled 23 poiniS overall, in·
eluding three three-pointers. Senior
point guard Jeremy Roush played
nearly every minu1e of the game
and did a great job of running the
SHS offense (four assists) in addi·
lion to scoring 18 points.
For Eastern, Jeff Dursl led the
way with 17 points, including a
fine 7-8 nigh! from the line, while
senior guards Tim Bissell and Terry McGuire each added 12.
While Southern struggled
around the .500 mark, !he often
spoiled Southern fans stayed home,
but !he though! of six straight wins
and a respectable (13-7) record
brought a vocal crowd to support
the purple and gold al Eastern Saturday. Likewise, the thought of an
Eastern victory filled the Eastern
side of the stands, giving the game
the aunosphere that it has lacked in
recent years. When the fireworks
had stopped both sides had seen a
greal game from both squads, however, Soulbem prevailed in the decisive fourth round.
Southern hit 20-22 from the line
for the game, a ninety-one percenl
clip; including 14-16 in the finale.
Roush was perfect with 8-of-8 as
was Michael Evans, who made 6of-6. Joshua Codner was also 3-for3 for the game.
As a resuli of its fast breaking
game, Southern quick.ly went up 80 in the first minute. An opening
bucket by Evans followel\ by a
three-pointer by Roush and another
trey from Evans accounted for the
score. On the other end of the
coun, Eastern's perimeter game
was off as several early lon,~t-shots
came up short, foreshadowing a
void in the EHS arsenal.
Realizing the absence of the ouls ide game, EHS hammered ou l a
hard-nosed inside game. EHS uti-

llillldaloll, AJa.o Mondlatcr 39

Alan St. 14. Sou&amp;br:m U. 82
Appollchian Sa. IS. Vldl6l
Allltin Pay 7J, Middle Tenn. 73
C~ 86. Ooaricotoo Sou-ll

l:h;. ~. llorioa Coth.

ZantrrUle loeemn. 65, Fairfield

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

WHO'S OPEN? - Indiana guard Damon
Bailey (rigbt) looks for tbe eternal basketball
question wbile getting past Ohio State's Jimmy

Jackson during Sunday's Big Ten matcbup in
Columbus, Ohio, which the Hoosiers won 86-80.
(AP)

Wake Forest beats Duke 72-68
doubleader at the Florida Suncoast
By The Associated Press
Mike Knyzewski had been lalk- Dome. Temple (14-10) led 30-27 at
ing to us for awhile, and it seems halftime, bu1 Olhick staned the sec·
ond half by hilling four straight
we weren'llistening.
The coach of 1he top-ranked three-pointers, giving Arizona the
Duke Blue Devils kept forewarning lead for good. Olhick finished with
of his learn's February schedule 23 points, while Aaron McKie had
whenever talk of an undefeated the same for the Owls.
No. 7 Indiana 86
NCAA championship defen se
No. 6 Obio St. 80
would arise. Thai was before he
The Hoosiers (20-4, 11 -2) did a
lost his starting point guard 10 a
lot wilh the win. They swep1 the
broken foot.
K.rzyzewski has 1wo games left season series from Ohio Slate,
on that part of the schedule he so opened a I 1/2-game lead over the
often referred to - Virginia at Buckeyes in the Big Ten standings
home Wednesday nighl and a1 and ended the Buckeyes' 30-game
UCLA on Sunday, technically the home winning streak. Indiana hit
day afl.er February. His team now I 0 straight shots at the end of the
has two losses - both during first half and stan of the second for
THAT part of the schedule, the a 49-381ead. Ohio Slate (17-5, 9-3)
second on Sunday a1 Wake Forest, rallied to lie al 62-62, but Calbert
Cheaney, who fini shed with 28
72-68.
"There is no question we are points, scored five straight and
not al the peak of our game righl Damon Bailey added two more to
now," Knyzewski said. "It's been break it open. Jimmy Jackson led
a long month and without Bobby the Buckeyes with 24 points.
No. 9 Missouri 6li
it's a longer month."
No.
8 Oklahoma St. 52
It still hasn't been decided when
Jevan Crudup had 19 points and
Bobby Hurley will be able to return
to the lineup, and the absence of Jamal Coleman 18 for !he Tigers
the junior point guard has bee n (19-4, 7-3), who beal Oklahoma
State at home for the 15th year in a
magnified in recem games.
The Blue Devils (21-2 , 11 -2), row. Sean Sutton had 16 poims for
who still hold a 2 1/2-game lead visiting Ok.lahoma Slate (21 -5, 5over Florida Stale in the Atlantic 5), which went 6 1/2 minuiCs withCoast Conference, struggled past o~l a field goal a1 the stan of the
Mary land at home on Wednesday game.
by 1wo points and then lost to the No. 13 Kentucky 84, Georgia 73
The Wildcats (20-5, 9-3) trailed
Demon Deacons (16-7, 7-6), who
outscored Duke 15-1 over the fmal by 13 when they went on a 15-1
lead for a 54-53 lead with 14 min5:19.
In other games involving ranked ules 10 play. They then used the
teams on Sunday it was: No. 5 Ari- pressure defense for a 14-2 run to
zona 66, Temple 60; No. 7 Indiana seal the road win. Jamal Mashburn
86, No. 6 Ohio S1a1e 80; No. 9 had 26 points and seven rebounds
Missouri 66, No. 8 Oklahoma State 10 lead the Wildcats. Lilterial
52; No. 13 Kentucky 84, Georgia Green led Georgia.(12-ll , 5-7)
73; DePaul 85, No. 16 Florida Stale with I 7 points.
DePaul85
75; and No. 25 Georgetown 72,
No. 16 Florida St. 75
No. 17 Syracuse 68.
In games involving rank ed
Sicphen Howard had 27 points
teams on Saturday it was: Notre in the second game of the doubleDame 84, No.2 UCLA 71; No. 3 header at !he Florida Suncoast
Kansas 54, Kansas State 52; North Dome and the Blue Demons (18-6)
Carolina State 99, No. 4 North Car- won their seventh in a row.
olina 94; No. 10 Arkansas 90, No. DePaul's leading scorer, David
14 Alabama 87; No. II Michigan Booth, left the game with an ankle
State 70, Purdue 68; No. 15 South·
em Cal 73, Stanford 72, OT; No.
19 Cincinnati 104, South Alabama
78; No. 20 Michigan 76, Norlh·
weSiem 63; No. 21 Connecticut94,
Providence 71; Villanova 74, No .
22 Seton Ha1159; Nebraska 80, No.
23 Iowa State 70; and No. 24 St.
John's 71, Pittsburgh 65.
D~te, which commiued 15
turnovers and led by 10 with nine
minutes to play, led 68-67 on a free
throw by Brian Davis with 1:45
left. Anthony Tucker put the
Demon D~cons up for good 20
seconds later with a 12-foot
jumper. Chris King made three of
four free throws In the.f111alll sec·
onds 10 secure the win.
· Rodney Rogen added 18 points
for the Demon . Deacons, while
Thomas Hill had 20 points for
Duke and Christian Laettnet added
18.
Suaday'li pmes
No. 5 ArlzoDa U, Temple ~
Mall Oddct tied a1Choo1 record
with seven three-pointers as the
Wildcats (20-4) prevailed in the
second game of a made-for-TV

injury with 16 minutes to play after
having scored 18 points. Howard
picked up the slack with 20 poiniS
in the second half. Doug Edwards
had a career-high 34 poiniS for the
Seminoles (18-8).
No. 25 Georgetown 72
No.l7 Syracuse 68
Alonzo Mourning had 27 points
and Joey Brown added a careerhigh 23 as the Hoyas (17-6, 10-4)
held first place in the Big East by
one -half game over S1. John 's.
Brown had 10 of the Hoyas' last 14
points and he made eight of 10 free
throws in the final 3:30 as Georgetown won iiS fourth straight and
handed the Orangemen (16-7, 8-6)
their fourth loss in a row. Dave
John so n led Syracuse with 18
points.
Saturday's games
Notre Dame 84, No. 2 UCLA 71
Daimon Sweet had 25 poinls
and LaPhonso Ellis added 22 for
Notre Dame (11-11), which has
(See HOOPS on Page S)

JOHN A. WADt M.DaiNC.
EAR-NOSE·THROAT
ALLERGY
BOARD CERTIFIED
SPECIAUZING IN

•Adult &amp;Pediatric Allergy
•Hearing Aids
•Recurrent Ear Infections
In O.ddren
•Asthma
•Headaches
•Runny Nose
•Snoring
•Management of Skin &amp;
Facial lesions
MEDICARE ASSIGNMENtS ACQPTED

675·1244
s.Jtt 117.

v•

7 Dr. Pt. Pitas•

We are sorry for the inconvenience
that has been created in the
MEIGS COUNTY TITLE OFFICE
due to renovations to accommodate
computers.
Our employees are attending
computer school and we have been
short handed!
We hope to be into normal
operations by March 30th.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page.-5

times in the first five minul.es. The
Bears encountered foul 1rouble
which pul Rio Grande at the line,
where Brown connected on all
eighl attempts for the game and
center Troy Donaldson was six of
seven to put the visitors up by six
on two occasions, which would be
Rio Grande's largest-ever lead.
Ty Barnes' three for Shawnee
with 10 seconds left saw the Bears
come to wi1hin 1wo (77-75) of Rio
Grande's lead, but fouls called on
Travis Merry and Erek Perry again
pul Brown and Donaldson a1 line,
where the Redmen were able to
gain some breathing space. Barnes
launched a trey within the final five
seconds in an auempl to again tie
the score and force a possible overlime situation, bu1 the sh01 failed.
"They controlled the tempo and
played the game in ·their styl e.
which didn't allow us to gel inlo
anything," Redmen Cach John
Lawhorn remarked. "Let's give
credil where credit is due, because
Shawnee is a competitor and beat
Walsh by 16 down here Thursday
nigh!.
"We didn'tturn it over and we
were big at the line, and those were
ihc keys to our success," he added.
Rio Grande committed five
turnovers, its best showing yet this
season, and was 24 of 29 from the

line for 83 percent The Bears controlled the rebounding, neuing 33
(II by Tiller) to Rio Grande's 25
(eight by Brown, seven from Donaldson).
The Redmen were 37 percen1
from !he field (24-65, eighl of 25
from the three for 32 percenl),
while Shawnee was 53 percent on
shooting (30,57. five of 14 from
the three for 36 percent). At the
line, the hosts netted 10 or 14
auempts for 71 percent
Rio Grande, which has
improved ils conference standing
wilh two wins for last week,
relurns to action Tuesday against
MOC leader Urbana at Urbana.
Shawnee will host Findlay Tuesday.
Box score:
SHAWNEE STATE (75)Travis Merry, 0-1-1; Dusty Salyers,
0-2-0-6; Clint Bunon, 1-0-2; Ty
Barnes, 0-2-1-7; Erck Perry, 2-1-07: Bryan Dyer, 2-2-6: Chad Fast, 20-4; Larry Tiller, 15-3-33; Randall
Pennington, 1-0-2; Jolm Dailey, 02-2. TOTALS 25·5·10-75.
.
RIO GRANDE (80) - Mark
Erslan, 1-2-2-10; Brad Schubert. 24-2-19 ; Matt Powell , 2-1-4-11;
Breit Coreno, 1-0-2; Jeff Brown, 71-8-25; Troy Donaldson, 4-5-13.
TOTALS 16-8-24-80.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
34, Sbawnee State 34.

College hoops .. .

_&lt;c_onu_·
nue_
dr_rom---'Pag:._e4---'l_ _ _ __

won four straigh1 at home and six
of eighl overall against the Bruins
(21-2). UCLA was led by Tracy
Murray's 20 points.
No. 3 Kansas 54
Kansas St. 52
Steve Woodberry hit a 12-footcr
at the buzzer to. give the Jayhawks
(20-3, 8-2) their ninth straight win
at Manhattan and their third
straight 20-win season. Rex Walters had 18 points to lead Kansas.
which has a I 1/2-game lead over
Missouri in the Big Eight. Askia
Jones' 19 points led the Wildcats
(13 -10, 3-7).
Nortb Carolina St. 99
No.4 North Carolina 94
The Wolfpack (10-15, 4-8
ACC) ended a nine-game losing
. streak. Kevin Thompson had a
career-high 29 points for the Wolfpack. Hubert Davis matched his
career high with 30 poims as the
Tar Heels (18-5, 5-4) lost their second in a row.
No. 10 Arkansas 90
No. 14 Alabama 87
Todd Day's 10-fool shot wilh
23 seconds lefl broke the final 1ic
as the Razor backs (20-6, 9-3) took
over first place in the SEC',s West
Division. Reserve Warren Linn
scored a career-high 22 as
Arkansas managed a splil of the
season series with the home victory. Latrell Sprewell led the Crimson Tide (20-6, 7-5) wi1h 27 points.
No. 11 Michigan St. 70
Purdue 68
The Spanans ( 18-5, 8-5 Big
Ten) trailed by 16 in the first half
and II at balflime but won when
Mark Montgomery stripped Woody
Austin of the ball and scored with
50 seconds lefl. Senior Dwayne

Stephens had 20 points for Michi· Wildcats with 15 points.
No. 21 Connecticut 94
gan Stale, while Craig Riley's 22
points led the visiting Boilennakers
Providence 71
Chris Smith scored 32 points
(13-12, 5-8).
and became the school's all-time
No. 12 UNL V 69
N. Mexico St. 58 .
leadin~ scorer as the Huskies (17-6,
The Runnin' Rebels won 1he 8-6 B1g Eas1) broke a four-game
Big West regular-season Iitle for losing streak. Rod Sellers had 19
the lOth straight year; extended the points and 16 rebounds for Conna1ion's longest winning s1reak 10 necticut Michael Smith led the vis21 and extended th e nalion' s iting Friars (13-14, 5-10) with 19
longes1 home winning streak to 47 poiniS and II rebounds.
games. J. R. Rider had 27 points to
Villanova 74
lead UNLV (24-2, 16-0), which is
No. 22 Seton Hall 59
ineligible for any postseason comLance Miller's 25 poiniS led the
petition . Sam Crawford led the Wildcats (10-13, 7-7), who
snapped the Pirates' school-record
Aggies (17-5, 9-4) with 14 points.
No. 15 Southern Cal 73
five-game Big Eas1 winning streak.
Terry
Dehero had 19 points to lead
Stanford 72, OT
The Trojans (19-4, 11-2 Pac-10) visitmg Seton Hall (16-7, 8-6).
Nebraska80
trailed by eight with 1:30 lefl in
No. 23 Iowa St. 70
regulation and Harold Miner scored
The Cyclones (18·8, 4-6 Big
their final five points in the extra
sess ion for a total of 33. Adam Eight) had their 15-game home
Keefe led the visiting Cardinal (14- winning streak snapped and lost
8. 6-6) with 27 points and 18 !heir second in a row since rejoining the Top 25 last week . Eric
Piatkowski had 23 points and the
No. 19 Cincinnati 104
Cornhuskers (17-6, 5·5) made 10
Soutb Alabama 78
of 12 free throws in the final 1:47
Herb Jones had 27 points and for their second consecutive win
Nick Van Exel added 20 to lead the over a ranked team. Justus Thigvisiting Bearcats (20-4) in the first pen's 17 points led Iowa State.
meeting ever between the schools.
No. 24 St. John's 71
Derek Turner had 20 poiniS to lead
Pittsburgh 65
the Jaguars (13-12).
The Redmen (16-7, 10-5) led
No. 20 Michigan 76
40-20 at halftime and needed
Northwestern 63
almost all that lead 10 hold on for
The Wolverines (17-6. 8-5 Big their sixlh s1raight win, leaving
Ten) won for the fifth time in six them one-half game behind
games, while Northwestern (8-15, Georgetown in the Big East Malik
1- 12) lost its fifth in a row. Chris Sealy had 22 points 10 lead Sl.
Webber scored 12 of his 14 points John s, which made just five or 10
in lhe second half and led the deci- free throws in the final 1:24. Orlansive 17-4 run for !he visiling do Antigua had 13 poims 10 lead
Wolverines. Charles Howell led the the visiting Panthers (15-12, 7-7).

SVAC cage standings
(Overall)
Team
W L
Oak Hill ............ 15 5
Southern ............ 13 7
Easl.ern ..............11 9
Hannan Trace .... IO 10
North Gallia ........ 8 10
Kyger Creek ........8 12
Symmes Valley .. .6 14
Soulhwestem .......2 18

LAS VEGAS (AP)- UNLV letl.er to UNLV legal counsel Brad
head basketball coach Jerry Tarka· Booke Friday saying an agreement
: nian is ready 10 fight again.
be1ween Tarkanian and the admin. Challenging a school adminis· istration had been breached, giving
: tralion he has sparred with for Tarkanian the legal option of
months, Tarkanian said Sunday he rescinding 1he resignauon. The
is rescinding the resignation he attqrneys claim there was a clause
submitted last June.
,
that neither side would "bad
. Tarkanian said he was with· mouth" the other, and lh.at admin·
drawing the resignation because istration leaks of problems in the
administration leaks about prob- UNL:V program had violated that
:Iems in ·his program had left a provision.
cloud over himself, his family, his
Maxson disputed the contention
:players and his~Sunday nighL
. UNLV president Robert Max·
"Je~ Tarkanlan ·submltted a
•son resJlOlliled that the resignation legally btnding resignation, the uni:is binding.ll!ld it's a dead issue.
versity accepted the resignation,
· With Tarkanian scheduled to and the matter is closed," Maxson
·coach his fmal UNLV game March said. "There is no need fonny
:3, the question remained whether · additional discussion."
(he COllld ~gaily rescind the resig·
Tartanian's ,nnouncement
came at .the"end of a 2 1/2-hour
;nau.on.
,
At!Orneys for the coach sent a hand-claJllling, hymn~ 5!nging rally

a1 a chun;h on the city's predominantly black west side. Most of Ibis
year's players and assistant coaches
were in the audienCe.
Tarkanian, 61, is completing his
19th season with tbe Rebels, who
arc ranked nationally with a 24-2
record.
"We got torn up from the
inside," Tarkanian said, referring
to rumors of a conspiracy by Maxson's administration to oust the
coach. "We got dismll!ltled from
the inside. It's totally unbelievable."
1
Tarkanian said he wanted to find
out why his program had been targeted by the school administration.
This year's team has been .
banned from television and post·
season play as a fmal resolution of
a 14-year baUie betWeen Ttukanian
and the NCAA.
..

PA
1132
1220
1396
1323
1225
1206
1288
1430

(Conference-rmat)
Southern ............ 12 2 I065
Oak Hill ............ I 2 2 998
Hannan Trnce .... IO 4 943
North Gallia ........ 8 6 938
Eastern ................7 7 925
Symmes Valley .. .4 10 817
Kyger Creek ....... .4 10 771
Soulhwestem .......O 14 728
TOTALS ..........S6 56 7185

784
793
891
930
945
902
876
1064
7185

(SVAC reserves· final)
Team
W L PF PA
Soulhcrn ........... . l4 0 802 475
Eastern ............. .10 4 644 575
Symmes Valley ...9 5 617 626
Oak Hill ..............8 6 636 600
Hannan Trnce ......4 9 547 632
Kyger Creek ....... J 10 501 574
North Gallia ....... .3 II 505 661
Southweslern ...... J II 501 610
TOTALS ..........55 55 4753 4753
Saturday's scores
(varsity)
Southern 74, Eastern 58
Oak Hill 65, North Gallia 48
Kyger Creek 79, Symmes Valley
49
(reserves)
Southern 61, Eastern 32
Symmes Valley 38, Kyger Creek
35
Oak Hill 70, North Gallia 34

:Tarkanian announces withdrawal
:of resignation submitted in J 991
.

PF
1362
1433
1352
1252
1120
1108
1174
1070

Tournament action
Tbursday - Oak Hill vs. Nelsonville· York, 6:30 p.m. at Athens
H.S. ; North Gallia vs. Southwestem at Univ. of Rio Grande, 7 p.m.
Saturday - Southern vs.
Kyger Creek, 5: 15 p.m.; Glousl.er
Trimble vs. Hannan Trace, 7 p.m.;
Hemlock Miller vs. Symmes Val·
Icy at Kyger Creek, 8:45 p.m. (all
at Univ. of Rio Grande)
--· .
.-

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
!

-

111 Second St., Pomero/
YOURINDEPENDEN
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

lized the quickness of Tim Bissell,
Durs1 and McGuire off the lane and
elbow drivers, 1hen dipped off to
Charlie Bissell on the blocks for a
16-IOscoreatthe 1:55 mark.
When Southern initialed iiS fas1
break, it was very successful, but
found the going tough when setting
up in a half court game against
Eastern's variations of a 1-3-1 ~nd
2· 3 zone defenses.
With Roy Lee Bailey in the
paint, SHS tried to penetrate, but
was most successful on the comeback pass to the weak side where
Marcus Allen, hit successive
jumpers for an 18-10 score. Tim
Bissell scored the next five points
on a field goal and three free
throws before Roush canned a long
lhree-poinl.er, then Eastern's Jere. my Buckley hit a back-door lay-up
for the final score of the frame, the
score 21-17.
Roy Lee Bailey missed the lasl
part of the first frame with two
fouls, then exiled early in the second with three fouls. Amid complaints registered from 1he SHS
fans, Southern was whistled for 10
first-half fouls and EHS jusl one. A
complete reversal of those slats
came in the second half, when EHS
was whistled for 19 and Southern
for just six.
At the 4:55 mark SHS went up
28-21 on a pair of free throws from
Codner. Eastern turned up the wick
defensively, forcing Southern to
make bad passes or shoot contested
low-percentage perime1er sh01s.
Tim Bissell, McGuire and Chad
Savoy put so much pressure on the
ou1side 1hat Sou1hern, minus lhe
experience of Bailey in the middle,
could nol eslablish an inside game.
Lisle also was on the sideline with
1hrce fouls.
Eastern opened up its offense,
cleared !he lane, then reeled off
seven unanswered points 10 tie the
game 28-28 at the 2:29 mark.
SHS went up 31-28 on a three
poim play by Roush, but Durst tied
the score at31-3lin the same fashion on the next ·EHS possession. A ·
bad pass se1 up an EHS fast break,
allowing McGuire to drive i1 in for
a 33·31 EHS lead.
With 35 seconds left Southern's
Singlelon went baseline to tie, EHS
missed iiS nex1 sho~ and SHS went
for the last shot. Roush hit a three
pointer with seven seconds left. but
had it nullified when Russell Singleton was whistled for a foul away
from the ball. EHS missed the free
throw, bu1 Durst was fouled on 1hc
rebound and put EHS up 35-33 at
the half.
AI halftime, the huge crowd was
treated to two very fine cheering
routines f1 "m both the Eastern and
Southern cheerleading squads. As
a result of winnin~ regional competition, Southern will be going to the
Nationals competition in March.
Beginning the second half, SHS
picked up the tempo wit~ a full
court press and eslablished a fast
breaking game, which quickly nclled them four points (by Evans and
Lisle). 37-35 SHS.
Durst canned a jumper, 1hen an
SHS player drew a charge in Coach
Howie Caldwell's mind. The bangbang play resulled in a s1aged
protest by Caldwell, who drew 1he
technical foul in an apparent attempt to charge up his troops.

Durst sank the technicals and
Savoy hit a short jumper on the ensuing possession and Eastern led
42-37. SoUihern did not wander
from its game plan, increasing the
l.empo even more, outscoring Eastern 10-2 in the next five minul.es to
take a 47 -44 lead. Evans, Lisle,
Roush and Codner contributed to
the offensive scheme.
Eastern never again led, but
Durst and McGuire sandwiched
scores around an Evans' three
pointer as the frame ended 50-48
Southern.
On a bang-bang play in front of
the Southern stands, which saw an
EHS player draw a foul, a protest·
ing Southern fan was ejected. On
goals by Evans (three-pointer),
Bailey, and Allen, SHS reeled off
eight unanswered points for a 5848 lead. Bailey picked up his fourth
and wen1 to the bench at the S: SS
mark, sending McGuire 10 the line
where he hit two, then Charlie Bissell came up with two steals and
ensuing scores to put EHS back in
the hunt, 58-54.
Easlcrn had hun SHS in the
paint with the drive all evening,
where Bissell, Durst and McGuire
amassed 30 of Eas1ern •s total
points. Southern switched to a 1-31 zone at the 5:23 mark and virtual!y eliminated any scoring from the
lane. SHS also elected 10 slow the
ball down after going up 62-54,
content to shoot only the back-door
Jay-up.
EHS then fouled, but Southern
hit a great percentage of its charity
tosses to preseiVe the win.
Southern hit 18-32 from the
floor (10-16lhc fmt half and 8-16
the second halffor 50%) and hit 616 three pointers, and 20-22 at the
line. EHS hit 19 for 48 from lwopoint range, 2 for 20 three-point
range and went 13 for 18 from the
line.
Southern had 37 rebounds, led
by Evans with nine. Bailey and
Roush had six each. Eastern had
33,led by Durst and Charlie Bissell
with 10 each.
Southern had 23 turnovers, seven steals (Roush 4), 12 assists and
16 fouls. Eastern had 11 turnovers,
16 steals, six assists and 20 fouls.
Southern won the reserve game
61-32 led by Ryan Williams' 15
points, Andy Grueser 's 13 and
eight-point efforts by Robert
Reiber and Kevin Turley. Jeremy
Cline led Eastern wilh nine points,
and Pat Newland and Robert Reed
had eighl and six points, respec tively.
Southern and Eastern are both
idle until next Sa1urday, when th~y
play in the Div. IV toumamenlal
Rio Grande. Eastern plays at 3:30
p.m. and Southern at5:15.
•
Quarter totals
Soutbcm .............2112 17 24= 74
Easl.ern ............... .l7 18 13 10 =58
SOUTHERN (74) - Marcus
Allen 2-0-0=4, Michael Evans 4-36=23, Jeremy Roush 2-2·8=18,
Scan Lisle 1·1-2=7, Roy Lee B:iilcy 3-0-1=7, Russell Single1on 2-00=4, Joshua Codner4-0-3=11 . TO·
TALS- 18·6·20=74
EASTERN (58) - Tim Bissell
3-1 -3=12, Jeff Durst 5-0-7=1~.
Terry McGuire 5·0·2= 12, Chad
Savoy 1-1-0=5, Jeremy Buck.ley 10-0=2, Charlie Bissell 4-0· 1=9.
TOTALS- 19·2-14=58

Rio to host Northwood tonight
The University of Rio Grande
women's basketball team will hosl
Northwood Instilule (Mich.) at 7
p.m. Ieday in Lyne Cenler for the
second round of the Division I
Playoffs of District 22.
The Northwomcn (11-17)
defeated Urbana 66-55 Saturday in
the lower bracket competition in a
game played at Northwood's Mid·
land, Mich ., campus. Rio Grande
(25·6) had a bye from the weekend
competition because il is ranked
second in Division I.
Northwood, coached by Mary
Vielbig, was led in SaiUrday's

game by Jennifer Fosler with 12
poinls. Urbana's Cindy Frere had
21 markers. The Lady Knights,
coached ~ Cindy Sperry, ended
their season with a 10-18 record.
In other Division I action, fmt·
place Shawnee State is 10 host the
winner of the Cenual S!ate IUPU/Indianapotis game from Saturday tonight. The winner of
1onigh1's Rio Grande-Norlhwood
contest mee1s the winner of that
game Wednesday for the charnpi·
onship and a berth in the Division I
national competition set to begin
March 4.

CONGRATULATIONS!
TO SUE LOWERY AND TO KIM PHILLIPS FOR
WINNING THE VALENTINE WREATH AND
WALKMAN RAFFLE.
.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT.
•
SOUTHERN'S
SOPHOMORE CLASS

H.D. VEST FINANCIAL
SERVICES
KARL KElLER Ill, C.P.A.
Registered Representative

•

IRA's • SEP IRA's
MUTUAL FUNDS • UIT's
MONEYMARKETS

•

'

· KEIUR BUSINESS SEIVICES 614·992·7270
Sectritln tfftnd ::.; H. D. Yed IIYIIIMt Statll"" lie.
. 43.3 E. Las coe.., ;':t_ s.Jtt soo ·,~ 1X 750lt

•

�'

By The Bend

Page-6

at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in
Pomeroy.
The organ at Grace was given 1o
the
church as a memorial gift by
The pipe organ at Grace EpiscoMrs.
G.M. Plantz in 1905 and was
pal Church in Pomeroy has underinslalled
in the sanctuary. Followgone its fl!St of several sessions of
ing
the
1913
flood the organ was
revoicing and major repair.
relocated
to
the
balcony with all of
The organ is one of two of the
the
original
pipes
still in use.
only remaining organs in the area
The last time the organ had any
manufac tured at the Barckhoff
repair
was around the 1960's,
Organ Factory which operated in
accordi
ng to Cline Dailey, who
Pomeroy around the turn-of-thenow
serves
as organist at the
century. The other organ is located
church. P.J. Harris, assistant organBy JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Starr

•st, says the revamping is necessary
as the organ has been neglected
somewhat over the years. The
entire process, says Harris, could
possibly take five years due to the
amount of money necessary to
complete the work. The work is
being done by Julian Bulley of
Toledo and an assistant, Larry
Stofer. They finished their first pan
of the process late last week.
The organ, as well as the
church, is rich in hislory and members of the church want to preserve
that whenever possi ble . Many
churches of the area at one time
were equ ipped with Barckhoff
organs but noocts and other disasters saw the installation of new
organs.
The Barckhoff Organ Factory
was a lucrative business in
Pomeroy at the turn of the century
when Carl Barckhoff of the Barckhoff Church Organ Company of
Latrobe, Pa., carne to Meigs County to view the nearly completed
church of the Sacred Heart
Catholic congregation which had
contracted with him 1o build a pipe
organ.

Barckhoff was so impressed
with the area that it took little persuasion from a local piano dealer,
Wilhelm Bramlagh, to convince the
organ manufacturer that he should
relocate in Pomeroy.
In the spring of 1900, with the
backing of local capilal, Barckhoff
built two three-story buildings connected with a covered walkway just
off Spring Avenue. A portion of
the structures still remain and operate as Associated Fabricators, Inc.
Hundreds of Barckhoff organs
were built and shipped by boat
from coast to coast. The factory
operated until the disastrous flood
of 1913 which financially ruined
Barckhoff. Barckhoff relocated
again to Basic, Va., and the rest, as
it is said, is history.
Long -time organists at the
church include Esther Clark, Clara
Lochary and Mildred Fowler. In
addition to Dailey and Harris, Rita
Lewis also serves as an assistant.
Grace Episcopal Church, complete with an organ from the Barckhoff Organ Factory, will celebrate
its sesquicentennial (I 50th anniversary) later this spring.

A TRAlNED EAR -Julian Bulley or Toledo is in the process or
completing necessary repair to the pipe organ at Grace Episcopal
Church. The last major repairs were completed in the 1960's and
the years or neglect have taken their toll. The first phase or what
could possibly be a five year project were completed late last week.

D.A.R. Magazine, the current issue
includes an anicle about the ancestral farm and home of Mrs. Clotinc
Strothcrs Blackwood, one of the
chapter's members. Thi s farm,
known as the "Ferry Farm" was
purchased from the Strothers by
Augustine Washington, the father
of George Washington. George
was fiv e years old when they
moved to this farm and he spent his
boyhood at this place. The house is
now bei ng restored to whi ch th e
Strothers family has given $10,000.
lL is also noted that the Strothers
descendants hold a family reunion
there each year.
This farm is located across th e
Pappahannock River from Fredericksburg.
Prayer for dismissal was given
by Eileen Buck.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Dwight Milhoan, Mrs. Gary
Moore, Mrs. Michael Elberfeld ,
Mrs. Clm ton Fi sher, Mrs . John
Rose and Mrs. Linda Russell.

Ladies society
holds meeting
The Nazarene Ladies Society of
th e Reedsville Fellowship
Nazarene Church held their recent
meeting at the fellowship hall with
hostesses, Marlene Putman an&lt;\ Sue
Suttle.
~

Robin Puunan gave the opening
prayer and Marlene Putman gave
devotion s from the book of
Matthew.
There were 100 shut-in calls
reported and 18 cards were sent.
Plans were made to attend the
annual ladies retreat in Columbus.
The group will visit the Meigs
County Infirmary and present an
Easter program on April 16.
Games were played and refreshments were served.
The nex! meeting will be held
March S with Judy Elkins and
Wendy Wilfong as the hostesses.
There will be a teen rally at the
church on Thursday through Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly with Jeff and
Kathy Edman of Parkersburg,
W.Va. The p~blic is invited to
auend.
Members attending were Barbara Master~. Cathy MasterS, Carolyn Whaley, Mattie Teaford, Marsha Elswick, Bonnie Jtichards, Kay
.Jett, JiiiJett, Lucy RobertS, Dian
Bise ~ Sue Suttle, Kristie Boston,
Gloria Dec"r, Kate Ladd, Robin
PuPil•. Marlene Puunan, Lisa Putman, Llitda·Pupnan and Tami Putman.

Days

Remember how pleased you gram operating with about $200
were the last time someone told million a year? Last year, McDonyou that "you're one in a million"? ald's got $465,000 from the
Even if they didn 'I mean it, a little Dcparunent of Agriculture for ads,
flattery goes a long way, doesn't it? paper tray liners and counter dispromoting
Chicken
Well, technically speaking Glo- plays
ria Kathleen (Kathy) Gardner of McNuggets to customers around
ncar Middleport is one in two mil- the world. The Campbell Soup Co.
lion. Two million other contestants reportedly spent part of the
are what Kathy had to beat to be $450,000 it got from the governselected as one of I 00 finalists in ment to remind the people of
the Pillsbury Bake-off Cooking and Japan, Korean, Argentina and TaiBaking Contest being held at wan that they could have had a V8.
Seagrarns and Sons touted its Four
Orlando, Fla.
The daughter of Betty and Wal- Roses whiskey in Europe and the
ter Wilson of Middleport, Kathy Far East with $146,000 from the
competed today in the contest. deparunent.
According to published reports
And-the story of the recipe which
took her to national competition the three companies are among
and how she solved the problem is dozens of well-known corporate
an absolute nighunare. Neverthe- giants which have collected money
less, Kathy· is at the national under the Department of Agriculcookoff and she is one of six con- ture Program to find new overseas
testants who have been selected to markets for American food, candy,
be interviewed by Willard Scolt on bourbon, wine, ginseng, cotton, and
CBS (Channel 13) between II a.m. mink pelts.
and noon on Tuesday. So you
What were you saying about the
might want to tune in and catch budget being cut and how about
Kathy on television- you might that Buy American campaign?
even get word on how she's making out in the contest Win, lose or
Wow! An impressive list of six
draw, she has done exceptionally Republicans have filed for the
well to even get into the finals. nomination to run for Meigs CounOur congratulations.
ty Commissioner, the tcnn begin ning Jan. 2, 1993 with incumbent
And congratulations to Luther David Koblentz declining to file
and Elizabeth Bartoc. Mr. and for the nomination. Six candidates
Mrs. Bartoc will quietly observe will certainly split the vote-it will
their 50th wedding anniversary at be interesting to sec just how. The
their home on Wednesday. The winner, of course, will have to
address is 52302 Mt. Olive Road, move back into battle a·lmo st
Long Bottom, Ohio 45743.
immediately following the primary
elections since there apparently
We 're moving right along witb will be a Democratic nominee (two
income tax time fast approaching.
have filed) seeking the post also in
While you're getting the facts the fall election.
and figures together- ! hope you
don't have to pay too much in addiI 'II just pass on what the booklet
tional taxes-! have some food for said. "It's nice to be important, but
thought.
more important to be nice". Now
Are you familiar with the gov- you keep smiling.
ernment's Market Promotion Pro-

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weU in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
SUNDAY
POMEROY- The dedication for
the new piano for the Meigs County Infirmary will be Sunday at 2
p.m . Open house for the infmnary
will continue until 4 p.m. Plans for
future projects will be announced
and refreshments will be served.
POMEROY - AMVETS will
meet Sunday at Smitty' s on Main
Street in Pomeroy at 2 p.m. The
group will rccei ve its state charter
at this meeting.

Freewill Baptist Church will hold
revival Monday through Sunday at
7 p.m. nightly. Miles Trout will
speak Monday and Nonnan Taylor
wi ll preach the remainder of the
revival. Paul Taylor, paslor, invites
the public.
MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club will meet Monday at the
Burkett Barber Shop in Middleport.
A trading session will precede the 8
p.m meeting.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
will meet Tuesday at ·7 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
All members are urged to auend.

RACINE - The Racine Ruritan
POINT PLEASANT - Area Club will meet at Dale's of GalOstomy Association will meet Sun- lipolis with a sweetheart dinner at
day at 2:30 p.m. at Pleasant Valley 6:30p.m. on Tuesday.
Hospital in the downstairs cooference room. Public is invited.
POMEROY - There will be an
organizational meeting to make
POMEROY - A 12-s tep AA plans for the 40th alumni reunion
meeting will begin Sunday at 7 of the 1952 class of Pomeroy High
p.m. at the JTPA office in School. The meeting will be held at
Pomeroy.
Pleaser's Restaurant. AD graduateS
of the area are urged to attend.
MONDAY
RACINE - The Racine United
HARRISONVILLE - The HarMethodist Women wiU meet Mon- risonville Senior Citizens will meet
day at 7:30 p.m. at the church. In Tuesday, weather permitting, at
addition to the meeting a skit will noon at the townhouse. A potluck
be presented. All women ~~~t invit- dinner will be held and all memed.
bers are urged to attend.

COPY DEADLINE

• Receive dllcount fo r ade paid in advanee.
• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found. acb under lS word1 will be
run 3 day• al no charge.
• Priee of ad for 11111 capitalletten i• doL&amp;ble prate of ad c01t
• 7 point line type only u1ed
• Trib~me Y not re~pon•ihle for errora after f•r•t day (chect.;

for errore firat day ad run• in paper). Call bcfonl %:00 p.m.
day after publication lo make correction
• Ad. that mwt be pa•d in adnnce are:

Cud of Thank&gt;
Happy Ado
In Me111oriam
Yard SaiM
• A clu•ificd ad~erliaemenl placed in the Gallipolll Da1ly
Tribune (except Clauified Dilplay, Bwine., Card or Legal
Notice•) will alto appear in the PoinL Plea1aal Regilter and

RlJILAND - The Rutland Gar·
den Club will hold its regular meeting on tMonday at l :30 p.m. at the
home ,of Mrs. Margaret Belle
Weber, with Marcia Dennison and
Margaret Parsons, hostesses.
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun·
ty Veterans Service Commission
will m~t MOiiday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Offic~ in
Pomery .
RU~LAND

The Rutland

POMEROY • The Joca1 chapter
of MADD wiD meet Tuesday at 6
p.m. at the Health Recovery Services office on Second Street in
Pomeroy.

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - There will be a baseball and sol'tblll umpiring class on
Wednesday II 7 p.m. II Southern
High School for 111yone interested
in attendine. Further information
may be obtained by calling 9492448 (evenings).

FUNGI NAIL®

BULLETIN BOARD

I

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

••

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245-Rio Grande
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Olllo,fortpproYIIInd..W.
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3- Announcemenll
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7-

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8- Pub!~ Sale &amp;
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33.- Farml for Sale
34- Buineea Building~
l:J.- Lou &amp; Acreage
1---------==--=--=====::----~ 36- Real !:.tate Wanted

937-Buffalo

Real Estate General

IU .\T\1'
41- Houu for Rent
42- Mobile Homu for Rent

II- Help Wanted
12- Situalioru Wanled
I~ lniUrance
14- Ruaine.a Tra1ning
I ~ School• &amp; I n•truction
16- Radio, T V &amp; CB Repair
17- Mi1cellaneou•
18- Wanted To Oo

Farm• for Renl
44-- Apartment (or Renl
45-- Furnilhed Room•
46-- Space for Rent
47- Wanted to Renl
43- Equipment (or Renl
49- For Le.•e
~~

1:1\&lt;11 \\()lSI·.

51- Hou1 ehold Good•
52- Sporting Good.
53- Antique•
~ Mi1c. Mer chand••e

55- Buildins: Supplie.

Wanted lo Buy
Liveuock
Hay &amp; Crain
Seed &amp; Fertilizer

.. !

Aulol for Sale
Truck• for Sale

Vana&amp;4 WD'a
Motorcydet
ijoatl &amp; Moton for Sale
Auto Pa.u &amp; Acoeo,.,rieol
77- Auto Repair
78- Campln~ EquipWlent

:-11-:H\ ICI::-1
•
8
p
82- Plumbing &amp; Heating
83- E:.:cnating
84-- Ele&lt;triu l &amp; Refo·;genatio~

--'•.
-.

85- General Hauling
Mobile Home Repa~r

•
•
•

Up hoiltery

Business Services
TRBY-B/£1'

MICROWAVES
VHSCAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

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

PH. 614·992·5591

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614-992-3524
1-22-'92-1110.

~~~~!~::an
attic
porch 4

49 900
.'!{EAN,OFFEFI ... V.IE'll MARK IT "SOLO'I
$ '

~~

LAUREL CUFF RD.- Pomeroy- 1988 Skyline 24 ' 52, 6
rooms , 3 BR's, 2 baths, CIA, Fireplace, Insulation, Rart!Je,
Retng. skylight. $29,900

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory

Choke

COMMERCIAL BUILDING- Pomeroy- Largo fronl room
w/display window, abundance of storage space, excellent
riverview wilh Ma1n Street enlrance $15,000
SPLIT LEVEL- RIGGS CREST SUBDIVISION. Frame
construction, ceiling radienr hear, 9 rooms, 5 BR's, 2 baths,
deck, woodbumer, garage on 45 acre. AREAL BEAUTYI
$69,500
LOOKING FOR A VACANT LOT? Wa have 6 of them
located in Racine Village all have 50ft. frontage w1lh m1n .
depth of 157ft. sewer &amp; water available $2,500 each. Your

choicel

APPLE GROVE-DORCAS RD.- Small I story block home
w/B.G. fu rnance, appliances. carpel &amp;drapes on 4+ act'es.
2 septics and an extra mob1le home hook-up, 2 sheds &amp;
screened porch. Alotto oHer for only $26,900
WE WANT TO LIST YOUR PROPERTY TODAY!
HOWEVER WE CANNOT UST YOU IF WE DO NOT
KNOW YOUR INTENT TO SELL! IF YOU WANT TO
SELL OA BUY GIVE US A CALL WE'LL BE HAPPY TO
WORK FOR YOUI
HENRY E. CLELAND........................................... 99H1111
TRACY BRINAGER............................................94i-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL ..............................................94i-2660
OFFICE..............................................................892·22511

SUN'S UP
TANNING
New U•• load

R•tlllld
CALL 742·2778
In

IS Sossltas.---·'25.00
12 Sosas.- - -'20.00
6 Stuloas..-- - ·'12.00
I Stsslel--- -'3.50
FRIE SESSION WITH MRY
RENEWAL .
Stnral kfsH!ttf ltll••
sa WOLFIIEDS
2117/1 mo.

1ROY-B//,1'
s.,..... Slsl,...., or

'hoy-Bllt 'IIU.... Nowla Stoel

y,.,~fniflvt"
lr.lo Will, Ahl, Ollto•l!l-llll
Public Notice
Public Notice
ilnOIHI3 mo.
Ethel F. Bentz, Executor of tton oflhetruot, nolleoa than
the Ealate of Michael Andrew live daya prior to the date ttl
COUNTRY MOillE NOMf
for hearing.
Bentz, Jr., Dtcetttd.
Robert Buck 3 Nice M.W. Ho.ts far Rill
ESTATE 'NO. 241108 -Final
JUDGE
Account ol I. Caraon Crow,
Ju11 NartiJ tf P-ay
Common
Pteaa
Cour~
Guardian of the Eotale of
s
..... ., '225,. ...
Probate Dlvltlon
Stan Fleming, 1 Minor.
i 14-992-5521
Melga County, Ohio
ESTATE NO. 27033 -Final
or
31H227
and Dlolrlbullve Account of (2) 24; 1TC
2 3 92 l•t.
Donald L. Brlcltltt and Cecil
0. Brtcltltl, Co-Executor• of
Little things
the Eatate of Mabel Bricltlta, ;2==1n:::Mem:::o;ry:::;::::::;
Deceaatd.
art Worth Alot
ESTATE NO. 26524 · Final
and Dlatrlbutfve Account of
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
rn
Freel w. crow, Executor or CHAIL£5 WM. 'BILL' CIIAPMAN
lht Classified Section!
tha Ettateol Mary Crlckman,
WHO DIED FEB. 24, 1990
Deceeatd.
"-mcrmare
·
"ueosures lh aI
ESTATE NO. 28451- Final
...
and Dlotrlbullve Aooount at
no-one can sieal;
2
.In Memory
Karon Thacker, Admlnlatrt·
Deolh is a lrearla!he ihal
trlx of tho &amp;tate of Jock R.
nolhing can heal.
In memory of
Mfii~T=~27o43 . Final
Deep in our heol1s you wil
CLAIREBOSO
who paoad IWIJI' 2
and Dlatrlbullve Account of
•-·edaanlwayd~red
Karon L. Brawn, Executrix of
'"'
ytara ago todiJI', Ftb. 24
the Etllttof Everett L Bach•
l'ltry day.
Sadly mltttd by Wilt,
ner, Dtcotttd.
Sally nissid bY wile, Connie
Chllcnnl
Unttoe exception• art
nd lo and Mo
Granclchlldrtn
flltd thereto, aald account•
a son~ naJ
nl
wit! be lor htarlng bilort uld
Court on the 28th day of
March, 1912, at which time
ttld account• will be oonald·
tltd and continued "•m day
Ia day unlit finally dilpottd
of.
. Any ptrao~ lnttrtlttd
may ftlll written axoeptlona
to tald tooounta or to mattart perttlnlng to the exec.u-

c•

"SIITRACT.. THOSE TillS

GATIIRII DUST,
. . DOllARS

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

985·4473
667·6179

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
6-12-90-11 n

2-7-92-tln

.•'

•

•

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614-992·6637
St. Rt.7
Cheshire, OH.
1

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LAND CLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

1- -'9 ·- mo.

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
New Homes,

o....

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

12-5-tln

H.E.C.

bldt.

.,

58- Fruill &amp; Ve~l'!tahle.
59- For Sak: or Trade

GalUa County Meigs County Maoon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Are a Code 3 04

Public Notice

Plana and apeclficaUona
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
are on ftltln the llep.......,t
STATE OF OHIO
of Tranaportatlon and tht
DEPARTMENT OF
of the Dltlrlct Deputy
TRANSPORTATION
Columbut, Ohio
Dlreclol.
Tha Director , _ _ lht
February 7, 1HZ
eontr..tsa
right to reJect any 1111d all
Legal Copy No. 82-174
JERRYWRAY,
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
STG-GOOP (I)
Director of Tran1portaUon
Staltd proponlt will ba (2) 17, 24, 2tc
rectiYtd II tht Olflct Ol tht
Director of the Ohio
Department of Tran•
Public Notice
portaUon, Columbua, Ohio,
until 10:00 A.M., Ohio
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Standard nmt, TUMCiay,
PURCHASE OF ONE
March 10, 1882 lor lmSCHOOL BUS
provtfMOII In:
FOR EASTERN LOCAL
Athtna, Galllt, Hocking,
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Mtlga, Monroe, Morgan,
Sultd propouil will be
Noblt, Vinton, Wllhlnaton recelvtd by tha Board of
CounUot and olhtr verfoua Education of tht Eltttrn
roultt and uctlona by LoCI! School Dlatrlct of
applying rotro-~aftectlva loti Retdavllle, Ohio, by 12:00
dry r,•vament marking o'clock noon on February
motor al for center linea; 25, 19112, and 11 that tlmt
Jane lin• ond tdgt lin•. . opentd by tha Trttturtr of
ProJect Length: 0.00 feet oald Boerd •• pravlded by
or 0.00 mllot.
taw lor ont (1) 72
Work Langlh: Variouo loti p~aatnger achoot bua
or vtrloul m11...
according to tpeclflcattona
Pavement Width: varltl.
of uld board of tducaUon.
Bidding on thla project 1a
Speclllcttlona and
reatrlcttd to OlaadvM!ogtd lnotrucUona to blddtrt may
Bualntaa Enterprlan be obtained at the olflco of
(DBEa) cartilltd aa DBEa In tht Trotaurtr, E..ttm High
accordance with tht Sur- School Building.
!oct Tranaportatlon UnlA certlfttd check payable
form AtloCillon Aatlatanct to the Treaaurer of tht
Act of 1187, and 41 CFR, above Board of Education
P•t 23 ond qualltltd to bid or a aatlalactory bid bond
with ODOT under Char.ltr eueuttd by the bidder and
5525 ol tht Ohio AtY atd the aurety company In an
Codt.
amount equai to llvt per
Tht Ohio Department of. cent of tho bid ahall bt
TranaportaUon hortby noll- aubmhttd with ucii bld:fiH all blddere that II will
Said loard ol Education
alflrmaUvtly lnaure lhllln ,...,... tht right to wain
any contract ontartd Into lnlormatltiH to accept or
pureuanl to thla ad· rtJootanyonctauor,-or
verUaemtn~ miiiOI'Ity bual- any lflllal bldo.
nHa tnttrprlatt will be
No ·blda may bt
allonltd lull opportunity to wlthd
1
1 thl
aubmlt bldt In rtlponat to
mm 111 11 0111 rty
and will not 1'01 daya after the
lhla lnyl•·tlon
'"
achtdultd alotfng tlml for
bt dlecrimlnalad agalnat on roctfpl of bldt.
the groundt of ,..,; aolor,
lloard of EductUon ot
or notlonol origin In
•
e.~..,n r:..11
conaldtrotlon lor MIWard.
School Dtttrlc1
"Minimum WIJtlt ra~ .lor
EtoiN Botton, Treatwtr
!hit project havt bttn
Eaittm Loctt Bolloobt
dtlarmdlntd • 1requlrtdth
lhby
· UIIIOI.R. 7
IIW 1111 .,. " 1or 1n e
J:ltedtvlllt, Ohio 45n2
bl~~~opo:'i: ttl lor
3, 10,17, Z4, 4tc
completion of lhla work 1---Pu_b_l-lc_N_ot_lce-lhd
HI forlh
blciJinabtpropoell
• In tha '
,. - - - - - - - Eaafi bidder ahtll be
IN THE cotiMON .
requlrtd to flit with hit bid
PLEAS COURT,
a ctrtlfltd . check or
P!IOBATE DIVISION
cothltr~a check lor 1n
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
omount equal to !Iva
IN THE MATTEA OF
p.-1 of-hie bid, 1Mlt In no
SETTLEMENT OF '
tYtnl mort . tflln · fifty
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
thou-d dolln, or a bond
COURT, MEIGS

Mwicalln•lrumenll

$ .20

~

6 n.x 10 ~ - $15
16 fl. X 20ft. 425
lnlarostad displayoro contact
Kathy Cumings
(614) 992-5117
or Carolyn McCoy
(6 14) 992·5062

Public Notice

,, I

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

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

Clossified pages cover the
JoU0111ing telephone exchanges ...

.·

,,1
gus. Fu11gi Nail*flghJs thick, split, disco!- ·'" "
orcd nails.Two powcrfulanli-fungalagcnts . ~ lr.
fi ght infection on toenails and fingernails w ..

.......:.

•

Over 15 Words

GET RESULTS • FAST!

SPOTSAVAILABl£ FOR
DISPI.AVS

the sy mptoms of embarrassing nail fun - •--..

~:~'warn••
ln•uran•• l )
113 W. 2nd

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1 :00 p.m. Saturday
t :00 p.m. Monday
1:00pm Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
I:00 p.m. Friday

10
Monthly

Rate

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
SR 124, Racine
MARCH I , 1992
tl:OO AM.e:oo PM

Try this safe, simple, cffcotivc remedy for

FOR 1-&lt;U,L TH IN ',lJR ANCE:

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

.,

NAIL FUNCUS
The Solution

Wednesday Paper

lhe Daily Sentinel, reaching over 18,000 homea

The Problem

The Middleport Garden Club
will mee t at the home of Mrs.
William Morris at 7:30 p.m. on
Monday , March 2. Mrs. E.G.
Schaekel will lead the program on
lawn care. Roll call is to tell of a
lawn problem solution.

Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• Ade ou.Uide Callie, Muon or ~eip countiet mwt he prepaid

Club to meet

Gardeners to meet

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M • • Su.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

The Meig s County Women's
Fellowship will hold its monthly
meeting on Thursday, Feb. 27 at
7:30p.m. at the Dexter Church of
Chri st. A program on genealogy
will be presented by Vada Hazelton.

The Middleport Literary Club
will meet at the Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy on Wednesday, March 4. Mrs. Daniel Thomas
will review ''The Man Who Loved
Mata Hari." Roll call is 1o bring a
relic of World War I.

Call992-2156

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper

POLICIES

Fellowship to
gather Feb. 27

An arts and craft show will be
held at Southern High School on
March I from 11 a.m. Lo 8 p.m.
under spon sorship of Southern
High School Cheerleaders.
The cheerleaders will be using
the proceeds fr0111 the show 1o help
defray their expenses to national
competition in late March.
Spots are available for displays
at $15 for an eight by 10 foot
space, and $25 for a 16 by 20 foot
space. Kathy Cumings at992-5ll7
or 992-3722, or Carolyn McCoy at
992-5082 is the person interested
displayers should conlaCL
A chicken noodle dinner will
start at noon with adults to pay
$4.50 and children 12 and under,
$2.50. Refreshments will be sold
all day.
A special feature of the day will
be a 14K gold show.

Pomeroy, Ohio
614--992-5479

15
15
15
15
15

6

'·

Yeauger.
First grade - Cassie Braun and
Joshua Eagle.
Second grade - Heather Baxter.
Third grade - Chasidi Biggs,
Erin Harris and Rose Schrock.
Fourth grade - Joseph McCall
and Aaron Schaekel.
Fifth grade - Shannon Enright,
Jacque Hall and Rachel Pangio.
Sixth grade - Sue Ellen Barnhart
and Aaron Pangia.

Arts, craft
show slated
PIPE ORGAN TUNED • Larry Stofer, who is working with
Julian Bulley or Toledo to repair the pipe organ at Grace Episcopal Church, is pictured as be checks the tonal quality after the rll'st
phase or a major revamping for the organ. Tbe organ is one of two
remaining organs in the area which were manufactured by the
Barckhoff Organ Factory or Pomeroy around tbe tum or the century.

Words

1
3

by Bob Hoeflich

K-6 honor rolls announced

DAR honors Leo Story

Sentlnei-Page-7

RATES

Beat of the Bend...

The honor roll for ReJoicmg
Life Church and Christian School
has been announced.
Kindergarten - Emanuel Caslo,
Timothy Leamond, Andrew Philson, Brandon Williams and Jeremy

The

•The Area's Number I ·
Marl{etplace

Monday, February 24, 1992

Pipe organ receives some spring cleaning

/

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

•

Leo Story, World War I veteran,
was honored at the recent meeting
of the Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, held at Grace Episcopal Church m Pomeroy.
Story was honored by receiving
a plaque and a basket of frUJI from
lhc chapter.
Five members of hi s family
were presented fo r the ceremony
and Eleanor Sm ith , vice- regent ,
read a paper reco un ti ng hi s
warum c ex pwences which had
been wrutcn by hi m and his daughter, Peggy Story McDonald . He
enli sted the sa me day war was
declared by President Woodrow
Wilson. He said there arc just three
vete rans soII rcmaming in Meigs
County from World War I. He
rcCCived his discharge on April 14,
1919.
Karen Butts, a Cadet w1th the
Ohio Un1versi ty ROTC Prog ram ,
presented a program bf her trainIng . She IS a JUDI Or and 1L during
th1s year that cadets s1gn a eonJraCt
to serve eight years in the United
Stares Armed Forces.
Cadet Bulls' prese ntation was
based on a research paper she prepared on th e role of women in
national defense. She stated women
have been in the service as nurses
and wate r ea rn ers si nce wars
began. Those carrying water carne
to be known as "Molly Pitchers."
In 190 1 the women became members of the aux iliary corps. In 1942
lhc women in the anmy were called
W.A.C.S . and those in the navy
were called W.A.V .E.S. In 1943
there were women 10 the marines
and in 1948 there were women in
the air force. In 1976 th e army,
navy and air force academies were
opened to women.
During Desert Storm in 1991
women saw combat duty, stated
Cadet Butts. She told of a woman
driving a truck in a convoy across
the desert that lasted four days.
Cadet Butts also received a gift
from the regent, Anna Circle Cleland.
There were 17 members and
seven guests when the business
meeting opened in ritualistic form
by the regent. Prayer was given by
the chaplain, Eileen Buck, followed
by a salute to the flag. The American's Creed was given in unison
and Frances Robert read the minuteS of the previous meeting. Phyllis Skinner gave the treasurer' s
report.
An announcement was made of
the Charter Day Luncheon to be
held March 20 at 12:3 0 p.m. at
Overbrook Center in Middleport.
Mary Skinner of the hosttss committee urged that reservations be
made for this occasion as soon liS
possible.
Of interest to readers of the

Monday, February 24, 1992

Additions, Siding,

Barns, Painting,

Garages, Porches
FRIE lSIIMATIS

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

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

MEIGS
GOLF COURSE
MEMBERSHIP FEES
Men...............~7S ea.
Women ..........s225 ea.
(ouple.................s450
Family............ssso (41
Business ....... ..S6SO (4)
Students..............sl DO
(ollege................sl50
I I 31 /92/1 mo. ptL

GUN
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

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

faclorr Choke
12 Gauge Shotgun Only
Slrlctly Enforced
9-13-'9
'---___;;.,;,;;,..;;,;,...;;,;J . . .

REWARD

POLE BUILDING

leading to the Qfrest and
conviction of till parson
or persons lnolvltlln the
breaking and entering of
the Raclne Gun Club and
the theft of several
articles from the estab·
lishment. All lllformallon
wnl bt kept confidential.
Call 614-949·2671

l•rlal Rill Metal
Cut To L11191h

SSOO lor lnlormatlan

2-3-'92-1 mo.

TROLLEY STATION
CUFTS
F... 10 thru 14
9'pecial Valentine
• Hours-10to8
FEB.ta-AclultBatket
Clntot- 6:30p.m.
24 - Beginner Acrylic
Painting Clttt

For More lafo Call
614-992-2549

Open Mon.-Sat. 10 om·S pm
SUnday

MATERIALS
I WEEK DELIVERY
MIIIJ Colors
Ctllnotbol TradJ 111d mJ
Ac~euori11

BlUM
LUMBER CO.

J&amp;l

INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
•Insulation

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

539 Bryan Place
Ohio
11114/tfn

Middlepor~

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

-New Homes
-RemodeRng
-Garages &amp;Room
Additions
985·4141
11-22-92-1

110.

"··

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

OR TOLL FREE

MARCUM
CONTUCTING

..

21141'1211 mo.

New Ho•es • Vi11yl Sidi11g
New Garages * Replaceme11t Willd!)ws
Roo11 Additions * Roofi11g

1·800-848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO
7131f91/tfn

'

CHESTER

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES
&amp; MODELS

992·7013 or
992-5553

- .•

..
'.

COMMERCIAL and RESmENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATI'.S

(tlo Suadly Calls)
2112192

Air' (.;oJtdition&lt;ers, ...
&amp;Heat Pwnps
•1 00% 2 year parts &amp; labor warranty
•1 0 yr. heat puJlll coJlllresser warranty
•Free esti~tes

Bennetts Mobile Home Healing &amp; Cooling
1392 SalhniSdtoalld.
Gtlttls. OltJi
c.l
.. 1-800-172·5967 .

.. ,
(II

�-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally S.ntlnel

Announcements
3

11

SNAFU® by Brute lleaWe

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlgbt

34

Wanted

1992

Monday,

• Monday, February 24, 1992

Pomeroy~lddleport,

BORN LOSER

71 Autos for Sale

m._

Announceinents

"F"" Single Bullolln; Poroonol

Adt. Box 184, MluUion, Ohio

44641."
BAHAMA CRUISE
5 D.tyo, 4 Nlghlo, Ovorioouahl
Travel Pockagoo, Holol Pilc!J
Good FO&lt; t Yur, ONLT
$ZZM:ouplol Lllnl1od Number At
Thlo Pric&lt;il 404 311 1233.
I Will Not Bo R-lblo FOf

0

tlt1 1 5 tpMd, CO pleyll', tltnn
tytllm, lookt &amp;harp, take over
paymtnlt, 304·57'6-2218.

Any O.btt Olhar Than My Own.

JoHory S. Krojno~ .
MEET SINGLE GIRLS
In Your Local Aroa. t•ll00-407-

PO Box 344 Gal·

Loll for ta$t.t.J.~IIers acctp-

Home. Mon't Thru Frl'•·
Call 614·2~1n1 For More In·
formation After 5p.m.

month, any one of four Jolt

111' Clinic

In OUr

Reduct: safe I flit with
GobeN llblltt &amp; E·Ytp
Diuretic, av.llablt at Fruth
Pharmacy.

Unattached? MHI Aru Slngl•
Through Our SlngiH N-tltt·
ttr. Wrlta: Stnglll, P.O. Box

14

NO, NOT
OFTEN ..JUST
SOMETIMES

g&amp;pn&amp;-,;
a World Toilly

(IJ) Aln Tin Tin, K·l Cop

614-4411-'1&amp;04

Slareo. E;J

8:05 (I) Beverly Hillbillies
8:30 (}) D !Ill NBC NIWI E;J
(!) S.ved .., 1111111111
(I) (J) D ABC News E;J
(!] Wild America C

Giveaway

c.J.~Squere 0t111 T'TSteroo.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
M1D11 round/oval dining room
tablt 1 hutch, 4 chalre $425;
WOOGifl lpiCI taver crtb $15.00.

Pi IItts tot' tppointmtnt Clll 304·
675-1612 tlk lor Bruce, Man-Frl,

$2,!00 CREDIT CARD!
Guarantied Samo Coy Ap.
8:00 till 4:00.
pnovall Aloo Cluollty FOr NO
Will Give To A Good Homt Only: DopooH YISAIMC Ancl Cnh Advancta. 1-800-264-8789 Ext
Part Chow, Pan Gtnn1n 2524.
Shaphtrd, 1 'fear Old, Ftmtlt,
Goad With Chl!dron. 614-446$3ii0/DAY PROCESSING
!1429.
PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE
CALL YOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
Lost &amp; Found
6
1-800.255.0242.
Found: Malt Puppy, Ttn Wllh
GrHn Cellar. VIcinity Found On
Graham SchDOI Ra.~d, Gal·

AVON • All 1re11, Call Marilyn

llpollo. 614·446·9256.

Weaver 304-882-2645.

Lost : orangt, malt,lhon hal...c:t
cat, got out of vthiclt on Salem

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Exc-''-nl
Pay,
Btntfits,
Tranoporladon,
407-292-41117,

St. Rutland, 614-992-62n

Elt.

571.

ll.m.-10p.m. Toll

Refunded.
AVON I All Areu I Shirley
~LL Yard Saloo Muot Bo Pold In Spoaro, 304·675-1429.

1

Yard Sale

Advanct. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day bttort tt11 ad 11 to run. AVON gtlln on the ground floor
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. of A.vOM new taming ttructurt.

Friday. Monday odltlon • 2:00 1·1100-992-11356.
p.m. Salurdly.

Fuii·Timt

9

Wanted to Buy

Hartly

Davidson,

,. .IOf'lablt

pric., att.r 5pm 614-143--5271
Ilk tor Jim
Uttd Mobile Homet, Call 6t4446-0175.
Want to buy two axle trailer,
304-47S-5948.
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
With Or Without Mot011. Call

Larry Llvtly. &amp;14-388-9303.
Top Prien Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, Silver Coins,

Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,

151 Second Avtnu., Gttilpolls.

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hiring $800• Wkly. Ovlr 8000

Poaltlon

O.vtlopmental DINblllllts In
Bidwell. Hours: 11p.m.-8:30a.mil
Sun-Wtd; 2-Hour WHkiy Sta

-109; 0. Aa OthlrwiH
Scheduled. High School Doaroo
Valid Drlvw'ollconoo And &lt;'IOOd
Driving Rocord, Goad Com·
munlcatlon And

Organlzallon

Skillo, Punctual,_ Ancf Abto To
Worlc AI Pori ur A T01m A•
qulred; Exporlonco Worltlr19
WHh Perocino With Mental

r.abo,.rs,

International Prottcltil
Mutt Atloeatt. Housing An
Traveling Expen.- Paid. Exctl·
lant Sallrlu And Btnelila. Clll
WNkdaye 9 A.M. To 7 P.M. Sun·

Fumlshed Ont Bedroom Cottage, In Town. No Pttl, DIDolil,
Will Do Babysitting In My Hamt, Rtfarenct Required. 614-446Anytime. Allponaiblt Adult. 2543.
6t4-446·2652.
Hou11 for rtnt In Pomtroy,

dopoolt

Financial
21

Labortfll Wanted

$150,

rent

2 bedroom apt, 2101 'V2 Jefttr·
son Blvd. 304-875-1385.

Business
Opponunlty

rtcommtndt that you do

busl ~

tht offering.

2

2br Mobile Home, Rettrtncn
And Dtopos.it Rtqul,_, No Pttt.

44

800-!155.Q354.

M!KE.SELL'S
DISTRIBUTOR OPPORTUNITY

Apal1ment
torRent

1·bdrrn apt. In lllddlopori,
ut!IHIH lurn, clop roq, no poto,
614·992·22'ta

Busln... It Good • Pr111n1 ln-

1br EHM:Itnc:y1 UtiUU• Paid, Ex·

Lib To Stll Etlabllshld Routt

Rtftrtnee, $165/mo. 614-446-

Sfaba. Wilh Store-Door Delivery
Experience. Stnd Rnume To:

2-bdrm,

dopondont Olotnbutor Would copt

Electric,

DopooM And

to $15hr., no txptrlenct, will In Tho Golllpollo Aroe For Tho 7130.
day Noon To 5 P.ll. VICA CORP. lraln,
par1·tlme, tullotlmt, tight Dlotrlbutlon Of Potato Chlpo
305-!I:M;-tiOlO.
factory wort, 1-801)..572-5203
And Othtr Related Snack 2 bedroom opl, uiiiHin paid,
Fooda. Must Bt Financially Hud approved, 304-675-2722.

Want tc:
P-IN down EXTJU

CA&amp;H?H

per1 tum 1pt, newly
rtdtcor~ted,
W!O hook-up,

Mlko Johnoon• II&amp;A Dlotrlbut· Pomeroy, 614·992~ aher
lng, 31827 otato Rood 7, 6pm
Pcim~~ror, OH 45111.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackaon Plko
Real Estate
lrom $1921mo. Walk 10 ohoD I
mov!... Call614-448-2581. EOH.
Complotly Fumlohed Small
31 Homes for Sale
Houoo, $250/mo. Pluo Utllnloo,
4 bedroom, htal pump, 2 car And DopooH. 614-446o0338. Call
gar101, 12acrn, 2 wlllt, bamt, Before 1p.m.
out bldgo, 304-1182-3750.
Furnlthtd 3 Rooms And Bath
$-Am houN with river fronlage, Upotolro, Cloon, No Poto,
614·9411-2430
Rtterence And DtpotH R•
qulrod. 614-446·1519.
Buutlful bitck front, 3-bdrm

ranch, carport, 112baHment, Furnished Ap.ar1mtnt, 1br, next
carpet, loclttd •r,prollmattly )... to Ubrary, parking, central htal,
mUtt from Ho ur Hotp, on air, rtftrtnen . 614-446-0338,
SA1&amp;0, prlco roducod to $36,000 Beto,. 7p.m.
tvenlngt, 614·'742·2728
2 Bedroom, Kanauga, A~
Flatwood, Pomeroy, ~rg• pllancta, Water, Trash, Clost To
Country Home, Ntw kltchtn, Shopping,
$230/mo. Plua

Bath &amp; Carpeting. Low $30'e, DopooH . et4·245-92111.
Ouodllod Buytr. SfC-446·2359.
In town. two story, lhrte btd· Graclout living. 1 and

roome, full baNment, 1·112 ~th,

ttlached

1-112

car

garage.

room apirlmtnll
Manor
1nd

II

2 bed·

YIM•r.

Alvarsl 1

Apartmonto In lllddloport. Fnom
$1116. Call614-992-7787. EOH.
5 lllddlopori Nooth Third, t bod·

Central hut and air. Evenings

Caii814-44H107.
lluot Mil lltato

propo~y.

&amp; blth , comtr lot
$21,000. or will coMidtr oHer.
311 Hendtraon St, Henderson,
I'OOIMI

room fumlahtcl apt, rtf &amp; dep

roqulrod, 304-882·2561.
lllddlopori,
Booch Sl, Z bod·
wv. 114-446-7523 Of 304-1175· room lumriohod
apt, ulllltloo
1488.
pold, rollroncoo &amp; clopoah ,..
Aoducad To Soli: $49,900, qulred, 304.fl82.2566.
Chnhlr'!L, Ohio. 104·932-6959,
104-132~m70, 814-387-0648.

Ntwty dtcOt"ated tfflcltncy, ref

&amp; dep required, na

Soctlonol Homo For Solo: Abo•• 675-5162.
Average Condhlon, 14 Ytars
Old, S18,000, N.gotl1blt. 614·

388.a4tt.

1in., you,. dullm· inlo cash,
Sell it tlw easy rvoy... by plwne,
no need to leove your !tome • .
l'lace your classified ad today!
15 words or less, ,3·daya,
3 papers,$6.00
'

Cnllour o/Jicc for paid in nrfmncl! ralt!Rl

32 Mobile Homes
for 5ale

.-r.,

*·

Fumlthtd mobile
homa, 1 milt below IDVf!~t OVIf•
looking rtwr. No Pels, t.;A. 114·

Camplatlv

446.03311.

One

and

two

bedroom

spartmentt tor rent. 304-175-

homo IIYOoblo but 20.!13 or 175-4t00.
,.... work on ou181• cw would Smal fum!- oPI on lit. Vor•
moo good otorago bldg, $1,2()0. non Ave. upttalri.V1 bedroom,
304.atl5-310t.
.
$2:16. pluo oloc, ral &amp; clop, 304Tar And Thlt Down. Prtown~ 615-2651.
101150

~llo

Mobllll Hamn, Uu Your T11

t9711 Ono ton Dodga dump

BR, Mlddlepo~, Ohio. hitch, 5-pltcn of tquipment
Reference &amp; depoeh required . $3500,
Evenings 614·71112~2721
304-tla2·3267.

AAA Ratod Vtndlf19 Opportunity c61..4..
·2;;,;56..1;;;9ZZ:;;;..- - - - -

Local Snack Vending Routt
Must Sell Cheap Call Now, 1·

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

toal Na , very good cond, II·
king 1400. 1179 Otulz tractor, air
cooltd, dltHI eng, :J.pdnt

for Rent

Vtnd-A-Fon Rautu Must S•ll -

Call Now, t-&amp;00.111t·3333.

54

truck, I"'IW tirn, very good
cond1 ·~king $2600. 9ft. utllltr

42 Mobile Homes

Aofllnd. 50 Homoo To Choou.
El- HOfno Cantor, 1.000.58115710.

45

199'1 Extn Nice 14180 Surtthlne
Mobile Home, 3 Large Btd·

Aoomt for rtnt • wtk or monlh.

Furnished
Rooms

~=~':f 11 $120fmo. Gallll Hotll.

=-- ===------

roomo, 2 latha, $17,300. 114· 6
1560.
44&amp;.a325.
Sleeping raamt whh cooking,
2 acJft whh 12dli moblll homt, Alia lrollor · AH hoa-upo.
S~IOO . 304-171·2550 antr 5:00.
can after 2:00 p.m., 304·771Shon Tlmo On Job? Poll crectn 11651,111100 wv. .
Hlotory A Problem? Many
A.- - llobllo Homoo To 46 Spaca for Rem

C - From. Small Oown lomeont a. •tw.
Paymont. Coil t.aoo.56t.a71t.

my hOUII
with, OIIIIIIIOIIo fony,, 104-171Eaay AI \ 2, 3. Fllo You'ra Tun 12311,1:00 AIIIII11:DII Pll.
llono And luy llono. Kloo You'ro

old.

small anlmalland aupplln.

$250,

rafarence required, 614--992~265
IVenlngs

SAUDI WORKERS
NEEDED:

LABORERS WANTED
To $15 HR No Exp. Will Train PT·
FT, Llaht FactO&lt;Y Wor~. 1-ti00572·521&gt;3.

Boogloo-ARNA Aoalotored, Z•
AKC roglotorod1 iomoll 1 tl2yr
old, 814-'14:Z.2011o.
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jac~n A••·
Polnl PINNnt, 304-1175-2063,
lull Nno Tropical lloh, blrdo,

Babyalt In My Home,
Patriot, Ohio Arta. 614-379-2428.

n"t with people you know1 and
NOT to atnd monty lhrougn the
mall until you have inv11Ugated

drywall,

Pel Food Dtaltf. Jullt
Webb. Clll14~&amp;.0231.

lamt

main, 2·ftmalel al 1yr

Will

maaont &amp; htlptrt. 1-800-551-

pilntert,

$35.00 &amp; Up Ptr Hour. Tn Frtt.
Ctr11fltd
Nursing
Auistant Bath SkiHad &amp; Unskilled For
Nttdtd, Private Homa, 30 lnlo. Coli 615-TN-5505 Exl. K·
Mlnutn From Gallipolis. Day 699,
Shift, Monday Thru Friday.
References Required. can 614· Labortrs wanlld to 115. hr no
np. Will train PT.fT. Light lac ~
682-3010.
tory wor11.. 1~572-5203.
Major

Worlc booto. 614-4411-3t59.

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

t594B6.

CONSTRUCTION ALL TRADES
ALL SKILLS

Oliva St., Gtlllpolil. New &amp; liNd
tumlturt, healers, WHttm I.

72 Trucks for .sale

Ia] 18lndy
a • CBS
News E;J
Orlflllh

t966 ChoYJ' Ton Truclt, Excallont
Cob And Ch-loJ..!l"ll Whulo,
$1,300 0. Boot unar. lt4-t18fl.
3508.

!DUpCioM
(IJ) New Zorro Stereo. E;J

1971

1975 International Dump Truck.

1.
2.

.1.
4·.
5.
6.

7.

9._ _ _ __
10..___ __ _

11·---....---

•

for Solo: Coiro- lulldlna
And Lol In ....... c.tlacl
Ownor: -1243, Allor I P.ll.

I

•v

John's al Providence {L)
acroatflre
·
7:35 (l) Slnfortl tnd Son
8:00 (}) D 11J Freoh Prlnca ol
Bel Air Will Is suspended
aner he stages i:otastal
school. Stereo.
(!) MOVIE: The
ekloal
Club (R) {2:00)
(l) Cousteou Special
Cousteau and his son bring
to light the ma!esiJ olllie
ocean resources and lhe
mlaconcepllona ollhelr use
and potential. (1 :00)
(I) {I) • FBI: The Unlold
Storlet Chrlslopher Bemerd
Wilder goes on a bloody
cross~nlry rampage.
Stereo.
(!] Live rom Uncoln Center
Slereo.
Ill II)) D EVIttlng Sltacle
Fontana calls the weddt
off.f :2 oj 3) Stereo.
!ID II MOVIE: Nin/1111:
D0m lion (R) {2:001
il) Murdlr, 81111 Wrote E;J
On Stage Stereo.

EEKANDMEEK
'Tl-1£. Q.)I;:STIQ..I 6 .. AI&lt;E &lt;.,())

HAffi£1&lt; mr.&gt; UKTIO'I &lt;,{AI&lt;
THAN 'oQJ lUJ&lt;'f A '&lt;fAR Pi20 ?

Elactrlcal &amp;
Refrigeration

NORTH

!-!HI

+96 2
.AJ

+94
+AQJ 7 6 3

PHILLIP

WEST

EAST

.10 75 3

+Q 8 5
• 9862

tKQ I0 52
•• 4

4 K 10

+14

t A 763

+AKJ 103

.KQ4
tJB

Sidetrack South
from success

+9 8 2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

By Pbitlip Alder
When a contrac t looks as if it is
guaranteed to succeed, usually it will .
But a resourceful defender still hunts
for a play that might deflect decla rer
from the winning path onto one that
leads to defeat
One of lhe greatesl producers of de·
ceptive defensive plays is Gabriel
Chagas. who has won alllhree major
world titles: the Bermuda Bowl. the
Team Olymp1ad and the Open Pairs.
But in today's hand, he was on the re·
ceiving end of a brilliant coup from his
fellow-Brazilian Eduardo Martins.
Chagas, Soulh , might have rebid two
no·trump . but. holding no diamond
stopper , he preferred to emphas ize his
excellent spade suit.
Four spades looks like a certainty.
Decla rer will take finesses in both
black suits. When he can play the
trump sutt for no losers, he is home.
Whal could possibly go wrong'
After winning trick one with the d1 a·
mond king, West continued with the di·
amond queen. Now Martins found a

,.

Soutb

W.st

2+

Pass
Pass

East
Pass
All pass

Opening lead: t K

grea t play : He overtook w1th the dia·
mond ace and switched to the club 10.
To Chagas. that looked for all the
world like a singleton. Now that he .
"knew" the club finesse was working.
declarer had only one worry . If he took ·
a losing trump finesse. East would re- .
ceive a club ruff to defeat lhe con·
tract So Chagas won trick three will&gt;
dummy's club jack and played of! his
A·K of spades. Tru e. the queen didn',t
drop. but declarer wasn't worried. He
fine ssed dummy's club queen . lmag·
me South 's su rprise when East pro·
duced both the cl ub king and the spade
queen from his hand.
•:
Ru ders .are inviled to send c.ard·plllf ques- •
c.are of thtt MrnJ»per. 1
Tbey c• n be .answered only lhrouxh Ute column. •

tinm to PtliWp Aldtr. in

'

a
a Priii'IINIWI C

0 Prince VeiiiRl Stereo. E;J
1:30 (}) D 11J ll!o110111 Blo~~
lhrows a sleep-over; Joey
dates the football coach 'e
daughter. Stereo. C
m (J) • American
Datectlve Now Jersey
officers go undercover to
battle dnJg deall~ among
leans. Sterao~
II) Are You
Servecl1
a11
M*' 111 The
McGIIIIsas enter the Family
~lhe Year contest Stereo.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
'T'a.l aueee HON
MAI'N 6EI2M6 ARe
ON 'TH/5 PIN~

a•

COUNT1N&amp; iHE 19.lNNY-

C~.N

L.COKIN€i ONE ~INa

n-u: ooweov HAT:?

·

iOn Slagl Stereo.
(IJ) lllack Sta&lt;Non Sleroo. 1:;1
t:OO (}) D 11J 'Grell I I - (PI 1
ol 2)' NBC Monday Night II
IIIII Movln 12:00) St~:b£
(l) MOVIE: A lPG) {2:00)

MOVIE: 'Cralh Llncllng:
The .._
of l'llglll232'

(I)

(l

AIC Monday !!/~"' Movie

~~~~;:::;~Center

'"'.,Oil ....

Stereo.

BARNEY
DID YOU
HOLLER,
PAW ?

ill IIJ • MurpiiJ Brown

I JEST HAD ME A
TERRIBLE BAD
NIGHTMARE II

l WAS' WORKIN'
DOWN AT TH'
SAWMILL II

Murphy Is In hot waler wtlh
membelt:f
the Sonata.
Stereo.
0 WWF
Timl
Wreatllng Texas Tornado vs.
Rlelt The Modal Martel.
Nalhv!lle Now Stereo.

GO BACK TO SLEEP
QUICK··AFORE YOU
GIT FIRED II

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Sign al 1tll·
out (abbr./
4 Amorouo
look
8 Fairy tale
CrtiiUrl

12 Nogatlvo
aniWtr
13 DllloHd
14 Identical
1lbllng
15 S.foro
(pool./
16 Actres•
pleywrlght
Gordon
17 Take cart ol
18 Wins
20 Tlmt unlto
22 Comedian Phlllpo
24 Aatronaut'o
ferry
25 Stalk· Ultd
lorplto
28 Tidal wavo
33 Tltu1
34 Aotronoul -

An••• to Pr.Yiout Puzzle

Arm1trong

38 Tack

37 Con1ttllatlon
39 Aoterlok
41 Doclrlnt
42 AlllgiOUI
potm
44 Actre11 Gene
46 Soui(Fr.J
48 Firearm

ownere' org.

49 Tholl
53Wt'ra - IHihl
wizard
57 HlghiJIIalontd dllh
58 HIWIIIIn
loland
60 Long Um1
61 Appell
62 ShOrt ploy
63 Secret 1g1nt
64 FOIIIIIIn
drink
65 This (Sp.)
66 IIIII or
lomalt

DOWN
1 Largo knlle

2 - lVII
3 Court hearing
4 Rower
5 Largo
onltiOPI
6- go!

a

a Llny King uw1
(IJ)

Fllht!..Dowllng Myllelllo

Siereo. ljl

1:30 all

11J. Dtlalgnlng W01111111

Julia's temper liares after
mall secutt1y guards harass
Anlhony. Stereo. C
D Coll1g1 llelkiiliall
· Okltlhoma at Kansas {l)

10:00(1)Newa
all IIJ Norlllllm Eltpo1ure

e

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.which signs are romantic"ally perfect for

possi bilit y your priorities m ight be out

you. Mall $2 plus a long. sell-ad·
dressed , stamped envelope to Malch·
maker. clo lhis newspaper. P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland. OH 44101· 3428.
ARIES (March 21· lpril 11) You mlghl

ol kilter loday. You're ap1 to accomplish
a 101 of lillie things bullail to gel what Is
big and lmporlant oil dead cenler.
LIBRA (S.pl. ZJ..Oct. 23) Several lm·
porlanl objecl ives can be achieved to
your !1811slacllon to'daJ. Yel, 11 you had
slud led molters more caralul!y, you
could have dona even beller.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 You'll deal
with lhlngs qulle elfecllvely today within
your own sphere dl operation, bul you
could run Into a problem If· you try lo
functlon in an area Where you t1ave no
conlrol.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dac. 211 There
might nol be any llnkageloday bel-n
prliH an,d profit. You're likely lo. do
qulle Willi In your malarial endeavors
bul don'lexpecl any pals on lha ·back.'
,CAPRIC~ (Oec. 22-.lln. 1tl Con.
tacla caMot 1&gt;t depended upon. today
to help you do lhlnga you can do lor
yourself. In lruth, you don't need lhem,
bul you mlghl have convinced yoursell
lhat you do.
.
.
AQUARIUS (.1111. 20-1'1111. 1)1 Financial
matters could be rather lrlcky today.
You must be carerul that you don 'l get
Into IOIIIelhlng lhal hu otringa al·
loclted wllllte you'll end up giving back
more lhan you get.

be inclined to view situations from both

rl.lfl'hlr
Fib. 2$,1112

84

1.5.:,..___ _ __

1D CohgallelkllbaH St.

ALLEYOOP

~'Birthday

P.M. 114-211 U I •

E;J

NewoHour 1;1

MONty?-.

24UII2.

Good•

..

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
~- tl
Bakery - Haunt - Quilt - Geyser - ASKING
Our new neighbor watched as I cleared the snow
Irom his drive. "I wondered who you were." the ne1ghbor
said , "but I decided to wait lill you where done before

SOUTH

a Wheel ol Fortune Q
II)) D Family Feud
a Be 1 S1ar Slareo.

You~

,up:

Household

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S
TO GET AN SWER
·

ALDER

~ MecNelll!,lhrer

,

INI'rH .

=--=:;..=:.:.
Helling

.l2. _ __ _ _
1.1 .._________
14. _ _ _ _ __

"··..--------

CA~fFV/..

--.Add

&amp;

e

BRIDGE

\liD MliTIId ...With Children

IM!wow•••,.•= -::

Plumbing

5I

MO~f

w-.

don--

8 PR INT
NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THE SE SQUARES

c

Siereo.

I

...•"

Complete the chuc kle qucled

ASKINGt"

(I) E-lnment Tonight

Some Body Worlc, $1,750; tl85

LandiOnl OoOdbvol Elaao Homo

Cantor, t-!IIG.a710.
For Solo OniJ: tm t:lltiO, ~
FUlly Carpotld, Gao Hut Ana
!Move; wrg.otor And Dloh·
....- Vri Oooc! Concl11on
llolut An Oft..:l Coli Aftor 1:00

TO IE

....

by f11i ing in tke missing wor ds
vou d evelop from step No . 3 below.

-·

7:30 &lt;2l D 11J Jeoplrdyl C
(!) Now It Cln Be Toil

-oom

-l . . ,

G)

aMoneyllne
(IJ) The Wallona
7:05 (l) ltklema Femlly

you

2165 •"" 6:00.

=:-:-:=====-::::::

I:JZl

5
L.-'--''--L-.JL....J.....J.J.

Slereo. C

HOW {)If)
6fT
YOUfl g~O/cff

loadtd, prlctd to 1111, 304-875-

k-

..

, ,

I 1I I I

o M•cOrver 1:;1
ID llportiCinm

FRANK AND ERNEST

$5,500. 614-441..0731.

61 Farm Equipment

I

CD ~'lftment Tonight
(I lftl~TNU, Oot

75-3324.

, NHds

I!~

R0

Slllr T...: Tlie N111t
Otnlntloll

199'1 Dodgt Dakota nlet lruck,

0

..

\11) CurNnt Allllr ~

cyl, ahort bed, clvomt bum·
ptrs,
gaa mlluge, 82,000

10 Plck.Up Runa

. ,..

Grandpa and I were watchmg an exerc1se program on
. . . . .
o TV. He says the exerci se that
really can change a persons
ri--:-H:-:-1~N~T-W-E-...,1/ite is the walk down the .....

Scoobr Ooo

a] D

lng 3111V2, Coli 8t4-446-t8&amp;4 For Spud, 11,000 IIMto, A-g

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

simple words.

KL Y N A

mLegt.~~~tve u~

1m Cho.,., 350, Ntodo Rur
End, $350. 614-387-7534.

For Solo: 1918 Dodao II-SO Pic~·
Up, 4 C,llndor, 5 'llpooci, Aoal
Nlco CondH!on, Only 28 000
lll!n1 • $4,200~:7 OOciJO 0:50
Plc~·up , 5
d, 4 Cylinder,
Goad Condition, $~ ~ t985 S.

z :R

(l]Mec~rer
NewsHour
(J)DC.
Clllllfll

Frldty.

The Right Paw Trslnlng Center
Dog Ollodltnct CIUIH Sto~· 199'1 Ford Rangtr, 4 Cyllndtr, 5

lnformaUon.

four

• 1 1 1 I

(I) In- Edition

io 5:00 p.m., Monday Thru

\Ot.e
mlln,

I

00 The Jeltenons...D
E;J'

Body Atptlr Contacl: Harok:l

Goorgo, 614::C46-5345, 6:30 a.m.

1112·3020 oftorlpm w•dayo
•
Wonted: tODD To 1111 Full Slzo
4x4, Mull 8t In Good Sha.-1
6t4-256-tlt60.
1986 Nlooon pickup, 5 opood, 4

letters of the
ocromi&gt;led wordo b..

low ro form

IJID

dar, 41 000 Mlln, 6 Spood Ston·
dard, Dual Roar Whoolo, NHdo

1885 Ford Rang.,, V-t auto, low
miiH, elctptiOnll cond, 114·

_ _

Rearrange

8:35 (I) Andy Orltlllh
7:00
!Ill Wheel of Footune

Ford I Ton Truck, I Cylln- ·

Chryalor LeBaron, Goad Condl·
lion, 74,000 Mlloo, 4 Cylinder,
tnt
John
liMn
llodol
D,
Alllll
t9a3 Oodgo Olplomot, 6 C.lln·
Turbo, AutO&lt;notlc, $2,000. 614·
Chalmora,
H.D.
8
Dour,
Hyotor
dtr, 4 Door, $300. &amp;f4.256-1"4.
256-11251.
Electric Forie Lift. 114-446-2359.
3 Rlr19 Woddlng Sot t4K, WHHt
Gold, Er191Bimlnt fling, 12 pt. tiM 130 ea.. t.ckhot, good 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Diamond, f250 Or 8eit Offer. ohopo. 114-446-7750.
1m CJ7 ~..... atOo
614-261-1434.
Dour TO- 340 e way blade, trtn1ml11kw'l, PI, PS, tiH whHI,
4 ploco
oot; dining ~ condition, $4800, 814· Llvl pkg, hard top. 38,000 ectual
room toblo &amp; choir, $2G· 2
mil•, 3D4.a75-1564.
matching cholro &amp; otoot, $20; Ford 340 Bobcat, Edloon llaJoo,
1184
.loop Cltoroi&lt;N Chlol
plus rnor11, 114·012·2141
31M-t17S.t151.
Wa-r, 4dr., 4Wd., flllll
Amgard Homo Socurity alarm lntomotlonal Cub Tractor With loodod, good cond., ao,OOOM ,
system, tr~nsmitters, Nntors, cunlvotora,
Plow•• Dlolto, $4600, 6M-949-2585
outtidl altmt included, exc Grador Blado, CU1t1&lt; oar -or.
1117 Cuotomllod Dodge lllnl
cand, new col1 $800. now all far Runo Goad. 614-446-3316.
Von, Excollont CondHion, H,OOG
$176. 304-6'75-8884.
Jlm'o Form Equipment, SR. 35, Nogotlobto. 614-258-t081.
Ba11lnttt, cradle, crtb, ptaypen, Wnt GaiNt&gt;OIIII, 614-4411-8777;
high chair, drnt~ tablt, cu•· WJdl 111ectlon new &amp; ulld farm 1HD Oodao Canvon UE, 7 P...
tom made oak crib and cradle. lnetors &amp; lmpltmtniL Bur, - · 8~3711-2122.
Stars microwave w"h car1 . 304·
11011, trodo, 8:00.5:00 ••d•y•, 74
Motorcycles
675-4541.
Sat. till Noon.
~=-,_,..:......:..:......,.,....­
Big 4 BodrOO&lt;n D.tkoto Droom IIF 2111 Tractor, Sharp! $7,650· 1117 Yamaho Cltamo. 1D11 CC, 4
Homo 1 ~.V95 l Up. BuiH On tt30 IIF TractOf, $3~1150; 35 IIF
5960. 814-2'!a-1410.
Your 1.01. " " Our llodol, lt4- Tractor, 12,111. uwn~r Will
818·731t
Flnonco. 8t4-214145Z2.
76 Auto Pans &amp;
Brown Eggo For Bolo: 123
Accessories
=~I $4!00; 81161ntor·
Mount Ollvt Road, Bidwell. 014- 111'-150,
natlon11
, $1500; MF else,
388-e354.
$250; 1ft. buoh hog, $450; 614· 1177·t1111 Lincoln body porto,
d-. hood. trunk, IInder, bum·
1165-3373
Ctramlc Sa• going out of bull·
por, $35. oftlt 6:00 Pll 304-1175·
Hollonrl 471, 7ft hoyblnd. t981.
neu. All gi'Mnwart, paint • Holland 410, 1 n hay bind.
ouppll.. 30'11. oH. -Y Cot· trlll, 304-4175-43011.
Holland SUper 717 forego Budgat Tranomloolono, Uood I
harvntor. Clohl grlndlr..,lxor. robuln, llarilf19 at $99· front
Elactrlc Whollcholr WHh Char· Ollv•r 10 ft transport dltc. AU whaot drive otlrllfl9 It 1149.00
aor, Far Mora lnlomlatlon, 614· good cand. 304-273-4215.
614-245-11177,114-992-11293.
448-3040.
Holland Hay Roku, And Ford 3SI motOf l lranomlulon
Elvlo Aoconlo, $10 Eoch. 5 AI· Squaro Bolon, llow..~ 2 And 4 comploto, good cond, 30W75bum Sola. 135; Ehrlll Avon Row Com Plantora l.iutipoc~· 5941.
Flaurlno, MI. Ca11814-tl2·7194. ora, Cunlvotoro, Whool Dloko,
Mtnure Spreaders, Other Field TWo 238xtl" rww racap oludclocl
Flrwood lor oolo: 0o1t nh. I Rudy Equlpmont. Howo'o Farm radial wlntor
-•
hlcltory. Oolhorad .;;;o,.· &amp;40 • llachlnory, .lackaon Ol!lo. 8t4· will lit olup or Ford. on
0no 4 bolt .
-or S 1t&gt;r $100.1144~1!113. 281.a944.
camapor whaot t6" olx pty flro
.... . -. 3D4-tl'l5-1564.
Fot u1o tm Volltlw_., 41 Wonted: Uood 111rm oqulpmont,
~~~- Harrio Traolor, 18M anything you want to ..u. call
Nova porto or oolo -·thing, 114-256-1308, 2 - 0 ahor 1
Service s
tHI 3117 ChoYJ' motor 814-1'12· p.m.
21111
Livestock
Full chortor llapl Ook Cooat to 63
81
Home
Cooot momborOhlp ..II prlco. t5 ~-:----::-::~':"":-~=
old Cooo pocltol knl- WMI 2 Hafu Tralloro:luxo, SillS;
Improvements
taka guno on trado. 31J4.4175- 1118 AONA
lfl9, YNh
t584.
Horaa 01 Tho Y01r, 2 SII¥Or
BASEMENT
Royal S'- Soddln, Brood
WATERPROOFING
Uncondklonal Nf11tlmo gwtn~~t­
Llahled a- "'- •- lor llarao. 814-2N-tll22.
ul•, $200. 304-871-2141 or 175tH. Local retnnc• lurnlahtd. 1
4084.
Frao ootlmatoo. Call collocl t· ·
Transportation
614-237-. day or Nghl. .
Lo¥a SUI, FOf Solo. 614-448A..,. Baaomont Watorproo- "
01111.
Dng.
•·
llovlf19 ulo· couch, loil-1, 71 Autos for Sale
Comptotellobilo HOfno Sat.IJpo, .·
good Cond., $221; 2 ond labloo,
Rep.alrt; Commer~, Rll'ldm· ;
ISO; -ric .-. t 112yr. old, tHe lluotong Fut Bac~ : tlltl till lmPIOYomontl. Including: •.
$250; ro(rlgoratar, - . S.tO Chovrolol, 614-37f.:te45.
Pl ...blr19, EIICtrlcol. lnowanco '·
$16; wuho!. good cond., $100;
614-11:1-•
.
me Lincoln ConiiM.!!!'J good Clal. . Acooplod.l14-256·1111. :·
Cur1tt Home
U'llng room ou- (oouch ohlpo, $196. ......
chair, rocu~. 2 wood Oiid tm Cho¥.- CatlrlcOI4dr., 1 Yura Exporlonco On ON« I ,
· ,_,, Room Adllllono, 1··
tobleo, aaiiH lablo, blue I . lamlly owned, 1111,00011, IIIIIY Worlc, Roallrlg, ;
mauve,
1800;
Pro-form to go enywhiN, t710a •.·14-llf. F-lon
KMcltono And Bothe. F- Ei- ,.
atalr81epper, $300, 114-.,..2·2012 2471
tllnllll1 Rttwence~, No Jail To I'
oftor 3prit
t171 Catlllac Phodopon Coupe llg Or 8molll114-4.,o0221.
..•·
Drtlllo, IIIIo
Olllkin,
Ono, ~ ,.
nowllrao, t1111, •--11111
PolnllnG, ou.•r wor1c1 COil •·
t171 Camero,..- -or Rotor lit: lt4 4- ·· •
;
Plftoburgh laloa oo!U"9 polnl· I lnno~.AIIi .-1111 lloli'o
TV lonloo, -"'llllna
$1D.II~Ian. · Wolf I lrlm many oltlroo, ~J!DII• In-!"'
1111 lalox
nt· tn.ft por tillr.nllh .... - · · - . . .
malut
Ill - · -l'IW244 ·~ In
ollwr
brantiO. oilo, - .
ion.
laiiX polnl• lor
4:30PM.
$14,81 por ildOft, I R. wood
..... -·ltl.ft........ Ill'· tm c~vyo~or Howpoot, lluno
Good, $800. 114-44t-073!I
oil .llcbon
....r
Dnfl
- ·V.C ' prloo. Palrtl Pluo, 2411
on.,
Cl'lllk Rd. Parta.
1171
z.:a
eanwo,
a&amp;G,
I,ulo,
, ... 304-41-.
$1810,t..
lroc
Comoro, plloo, pickup, and doi!YorJ. 1143tlll,oulo,
$1700,
114-992·'1341
or ~.
AilniiOW I filllllr, aN aft.c:h114-11:1·301t
mortlo, now t1r1c0 St,ZGO. wll All
WIM build patio ca..,., -~
$800. uoocl 4 llmoo, 304-4175- lAO Cutlooe NoOdo Wotlt, Auno ..
. - roomo, put .. "'
2921.
$400.1M-31J.7m.
. lllllna or u - Nlrtlf19. 1
3 Acrta: Houtt And Bam Jul1
Oft Swan CrHk Road, $5,500;

il)

dowa, llnltll, etc. Claude Wln- Dl".'.! 1 Tri·AIIo, Goad Shapol
ttrt, Alo Grande, OH Clll 81._. 614·--11494.

call304-tl75·t450.
245-5121.
Solo U~o No"!, $300 Firm. 61444t·122'1, After o:OOP.M.
56 Pets lor Sale
SWAIN
=-Groo:......m..;_;ond-7-SU-:--,pp-:IJ""'::Sh~Of&gt;'-::-;::Pot::
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62 Grooming. All brlodl, otytoo.

AI A Community
Group Homt For Pei'IOnt With

Utiii'Ftmala. 0183.
TrtnapJHoutlng. Call E.I.C.
Now!
1·206·7'36-7000
Ext. KUWAIT,

Openlngt.

Jerricho Ad. Pt. PIHunt, WV,

A~allable

Is changing! Mart ways to A.tardttlan And Devtlopemenmt kt montyl Rtprntnlatlvts ltl DIAbilllln Preferred. Sllary:
Public Sale
8
wanted, frH gin wtth sign up, 14.50JHr, To Sllrt. Stncl Rttumt
call Kay 614·99"2-1180
To Ctc:lllo Bo~or. P.O. Box 604,
&amp; Auction
Bt on TV many nttdld for Jackaon, OH 45640. Dtadtlnt
Rick Pearson Auction Company, commercials. Now hiring all For Appllconto: 312192. Equal
lull Umt auctionHr, complete agtt. For casting Info 61S·7'79- Opportunity Employer.
auction Mrvlce. Licensed Ohio, 7f11 txt. T-237.
Construction
w1nted ntw
Wtot VIrginia, 304·773-5785,
rojtct at $22. hr. Carptnttrs,
Avon

Coli 1·304-675·7127 or 304-1175- Wood Chlpo For Boddlna Ancl
Mulch FOf Solo. 614-25i-tlt11;
2954.
AHor 6p.m. 614-256·13113.
Moving Salt Qood furniture . &amp;
mloc houuhold Momo. Call 6t4· 55
Building
446-111144 Anor 5:00 Pll
Supplies
PICKENS FURNITURE
NtwAJIId
Houlohold fllmloltlng. t/2 mi. Block, brick, -or olpoo, win·

Rentals
WANTED:

Twin Sulr MIHrta, Ukt Htw,
2 Yuro 01~. $60. 614-44t.0020.

:::: -

1--r;-1'+-rjl...:.,_.....jl

a]:.~=:QE;J

LIKE MAY6E,
SELDOM ?

1043, Golllpollo, Ohio 45631.

4

IIJD

ill)

~Square One TV Slereo.

675-2722.

Business

0 four

~,

.... _

8

MON., FEB. 24

8:00&lt;2JD Cll CIJD
ONewa
(!) Vlcleo POWIIr

4dr am-tm casHtte 5• 50 mpg.
Very dePtndab'- car 13,500 call

Loti In New Haven • 100%
owntr financing at $101.46 per
month buyt alllhrte lote, a304-

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

EVENING

miltagll, IXC. cond, 1-owntr, Cll -

nallablt, 3D4·675-2722.

scc~~lA-~t~s·
ldltod
C!AY I, POII.AN ....,.;__ _

TIIAT DAILT
PUULII

1Ct9ll2 T'o' l otltrog lrll:. Ft llfiolonn, TX

6t4-992·321111 !" 992-3867 .
11117 Olda Iloilo II, 11,1100 lllloo,
All P - Air, Excollont Conti~
tlon. $1,5'00. 114-44tlo4ZII, After
4p.m.
1MI G09 llotro LSI 55,000 mlloo

llpollo. OH 45631. No Phona toblo. 304.f171.;mz.
Colla.
Loto In Golllpollo Fo..y • tOO%
Nlodod: Anponolble Bobjolttor owner financing .t: $98,14 per

1004 , $2.15/mln. Mult 81 Ovtr
1a, Fonpolo Irvine CA.

8

11187 Oodao SholbJ Shodow
CSX, 2.2 T'urbo, lntoroootod..l'
AMIFII lnqula•
caoo, AC,onlyl
""
·Pll.
- !J.ir1ouo
Evonl.ngo 114-!192-11125.
11117 Ford A1ro Star ¥10. low

MLT (ASCP) 0. Equivalent For
Holzer Clinic, ProctetrYIIIt, ·Ohio. 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Fuii·Timo PooH!on, llondaJ • Double lot In Bollomud com·
Friday. Compotklvo Salary, Ex· blnod olu IIOxtOO, $5,000. tor
cellent Benefltt. Stnd A-.ume both. 304-1176-11884.
To: Parwanntl O.po~~rtmenl, Hoi~

The Daily Sentlnei-Page-9 ·

Television
Viewing

ru-.

till Plymoulh
1ow
mlloo, oun rool, $'1,000. t1117 ·
Horizon 40
gol, $1,550.
:ICM-1175-2440.
11117 ChoYJ' Cavalier Z-24, olr, ·

Ohio

You mlghl try aomethlng as a hobby In
lhe ~ar ahead lhal may have greater
potenllill lhan you lnlllally rHIIZe. II
could turn oul 10 be IIIII lall lhal wags
the dog.
PIICII (Feb. :iiiHiatcll' 201 A well·ln·
lentloned .lrland may lurn oul fo be
more of a hindrance than a hllp In your
soclallnv-lllociiJ. Oon'llet lhll
lndlvlduallntlrctele on your behlll wllh
otlter pal8. Know w1111te lo look lor romanot and 'you'll ,lind II. The . Aatro·
Grlpll Matchmaker Instantly reveall

. ..JL

an Idealistic and a logical perspecl!ve
loday. You're on lhe righllrack , evan II
some assoclalas mlghl nol agree.
TAURUS (lprii20-MIJ 20) You mighl
receive an invitation to join an affiliation
at th is time which could be an egoboOIIer. However. II would be wise to
lind oul whelher Ihe f~M~mbers thin&lt; as
you do.
QEIIIINI· (Mer 21-June 20) Major
changes ohould nol ba made Impulsive·
iy today. Give yourself lima to sleep on
lham, beeauae. upon review. you may
dlocovei your decisions - e unwise.
CANCER (Juile 21·July DI •An agreemen! you mey enler lnlo loday mull
aervelllll besllnleresls of all parliN In·
vol¥011 . II there Is nol parlly. you'ralhe
one who iniJ IIUI!er the moat
LIO (.-aiJ :ll'lug. 2211n a bulinllss ar·
rl~l lodiJ, locus on long·lerm
gollo ralher Ihan lmmedlele . ~111 .
You rnlghl pul aomlilhlng logelhor
lhll 'll qulelt fix bull poor survltlor.
VIIQO (AUi. za..a.pt 221 Tl\«&amp;'1 a

. - ..... . -- .. JI

An angry neighbor
challenges Holling for his
seat as m:ytereo. E;J

iii::*
7011 Club Wlllt Pat
(IJ)

Robertlon
10:30 8 Ct'OCIIIIIICI Cllll11

11:00&lt;2JD Cll (J)D
II)) Newl

Ill)

aD

~ C'8'Yl~•1 Raid (R)

(2:00)
(!] NtwtWIICII
(ID D Atlltllo NaH

:::rc
: ::::..:::rtereo.Q.
il) MICGy~r~r C

• On

11

Sjreo,

~1&amp;\T

.

=·~~e:·
~·

!==r;.
........
...... c.....
!1:30)

11:JI (J). D Tllllght . _

lllilnlntloloiiMr c..on

rl

..

.

'R

•
CHRHJK

IIDFJK

J

c

xz

II

.

BVXAYICC
.

FJAOJFJHQ .
XIH

ROP~YIIF

MI'IX

PXHJXV.'

YJKMRYO

•

•

oovo.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "You're only gi¥Ort a llltlt medneae. You mul1n't
II." - Robin Wllllllll.

·- --·-----·-- -·-~ ···· t!- -··""-"'-"'--

''.

'•
'

\

~·

•

' \

-

�Monday, February 24, 1992

Ohio Lottery

Kansas
defeats
Oklahoma

Pick 3: 451
.Pick 4: 3705
Cards:

3-H; 5·C; 3-D;
7-S

THIS WEEK'S GAMES

40s.

BOYS' SECTIONAL AT LYNE CENTER
UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE, RIO GRANDE, OH.

EAS7ERN EAGLES
BOYS

tonight In tow 30s.
Wednesday, rain. High In mid·

Reedsville Eastern (2)

February 29 - Division IV Sectional Tournament
at The University of Rio Grande vs.
North Gallia/Southwestern Winner -3:30p.m.

Sat., Feb . 29-3:30 p.m
North Gallia
Thurs., Feb. 27 - 7:00 p.m.
Patriot Southwestern

Winner advances
to district at
OU Convocation
Center, Athens

Kyg er Creek
Sat., Feb. 29- 5:1 S p.m.

Racine Southern

GIRLS

Fri., March 6- 6:30 p.m.

Vol. 42, No. 205
Copyrighted 1992

Middleport Council
supports prison site

Trimble (1)
Sat., Feb. 29-7:00 p.m.

Hannan Trace
Symmes Valley

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

SOU7HERN 70RNADOES

1------ -

-29-- 8-:4_5_p_.m_.jl-----~-~

_H_e;._m;.,;lo;.:c;;,k:::M::;:ill::er:.__ _ _ _
sa_t._,-Fe_b_.

Winner advances

to district at
OU Convocation
C~nt e r, ,1\th~ns

BOYS
February 29- Division IV Sectional Tournament
at the University of Rio Grande vs.
Kyger Creek- S: 1S p.m.

Fri ., March 6 - 8:15 p.m.

GIRLS' SECTIONAL AT MORRISON GYMNASIUM
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
ROCK SPRINGS (POMEROY), OHIO
Reedsville Eastern (1)

-A_ac_i;._ne;._S;._o;.:u~th~e~rn:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _T~h~u:rs:.,~F~eb:·~2~7--~6::3:0:p.~m~..J~ Winner advances
Hemlock Miller (2) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, Jackson
Ia districtUigh
al School
.;.;.:.;;;._;;.:;;,:::::;:.:.:..;:::_

GIRLS

Winner advances
-T_ri_m_b;._I•-----------------T~h~u~rs~.,~F~e~b.~2~7--~8~:1~5:p~.rn~. _t------------­
to district at

•

Jackson High Shcool

BOYS' SECTIONAL AT LYNE CENTER
UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE, RIO GRANDE, OH.

MEIGS

UDERS

BOYS
February 28 - Division II Sectional Tournament
At The University of Rio Grande
vs. Jackson - 7:00 p.m.

GIRLS
February 29 - Division II Sectional Finals
At Oak Hill High School vs.
Jackson-7:00p.m.

Tues., March 3 - 6:30 p.m.

Proctorville Fairland (1)
Tues., March 3 - 8:15 p.m.

Wellston

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) Democrats Bob Kerrey and Tom
Harkin dismissed predactions that
today ' s South Dakota primary
could be their last stand in the
wide-open presidential race that
has yet to tag a clear front-runner.
"I'm not worried about a 10-

t------Winner advances
to district at
OU Convocation
Center, Athens

GIRLS' SECTIONAL AT OAK HILL HIGH SCHOOL
OAK HILL, OHIO
Thurs., Feb. 20 - 7:00 p.m. ...__ _Ja_c_ks_o_n_ _ ___,

Meigs (2)
Rock Hill

Mon., Feb. 17-8:15 p.m.

Winner advances
Meigs
to district at
t------------JChlllicolhe HiiJh School
~~

.,
'

'· PHON!i!
16141 992-e.4&amp;1

.... ·:,
.· ·. ':.

point victory or eight points. I need
a lift out of here to carry me into
Colorado. I expect to get i~" Kcr·
rey said.
" I don't expect 1hat tbis cam·
paign's going to be over" for several weeks, he said.
Harkin planned to spend most of

Virgil P. Phillips, 736 South and holds a teaching certificate. He
Third Ave., Middlepon, is seeking is a substitute teacher in the Meigs
the Democratic nomination for the Local School District and last year
Jan 3 term for Meigs County Com- taught as a substitute teacher in the
Morgan County school system ,
missioner in the May 5 Primary.
Phillips is married to the fonner
A native of Meigs County,
Phillips graduated from Meigs Gina Phalen of New Haven, W.
High School in 1970 and was hon- Va ., and has three daughters,
orably discharged from the U. S. Tabitha, who resides in Chester,
Army in I971. He graduated from Nicole Ashley and Danielle Renee,
Ohio University in 1987 with a at home.
In announcing his candidacy,
bachelor's degree in general studies
and is a licensed social worker, a Phillips said that if elected he will
serve as a full-time commissioner
mental retardation ~~~~· and "work hard to bring Meigs

Sat., Feb. 29 - 7:00 p.m.

.

Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Waterways.
The bids were from Alan Stone
Co. of Chesterhill, $84 ,875; C. J.
Contractors and Trucking, Gallipolis , $83,254; and D. B. Weber,
Reedsville, $58,758. A bid on the
project will be accepted at the
March 9 meeting, Mayor Fred
Hoffman said.
The work at the levee will
include stream bank protection,
asphalt pavemen~ guardrail, stairs,
and a public boat launching ramp.
The mayor reported that an
application will be submitted this
week for Issue II funds through the
District 18, Ohio Public Works
Commission. for work on a new
street through the proposed housing
area on Fifth, location of the Betsy
Ross building which is to be razed,
Park Street widening and paving,
and repair of a section of Broadway
Stree!. Cost has been estimated to

be $31,789, with 90 percent or
$28,610 to come from Issue II and
$3 ,179 in local matching funds.
He also said that an application
for funds to clean the sewage
lagoons will be su bmiued in the
competitive project program of the
Ohio Public Works this week.
Total cost of that ~ject has been
set at $303,000 wath the $272,700
to be applied for from Public
Works and the balance of $30,300
to be provided in local monies.
Council gave the third reading
and adopted an ordinance re~ulat­
ing the planting of trees on vallage
right-of-ways and along village
stieets. By resolution the mayor
was authorized to submit an appli·
cation for a Tree Planting Grant in
the amount of $13,450 to the Division of Forestry.
The resolution states that the
village will take care of removing
Continued on page 3

State was told about escape plan

Phillips seeks commission
post on Democrat ticket

Gallipolis
1
~J-ac_k_s~on~(1~)~~~~--,
Mon., Feb. 17-6:30 p.m. Jackson
Vinton County
~.;;.;.;,;;.;;.;,___....J

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A resolution of support for
locating a proposed I ,200 bed state
prison in Meigs County was given
unanimous support by Middleport
ViUage Council at Monday night's
regular session.
Meigs is one of three counties
being considered for the prison
which would provide several hun·
dred jobs while the $24 million
dollar facility is being constructed,
and later 300 starr jobs and an
annual $5 million payroll. Council
member Paul Gerard proposed that
the village pass the resolution of
support. The location selection is
expected to be announced within
the next few weeks.
-~Three bids on the project to
improve the Middleport boat ramp
were reviewed by Council but none
were accepted pending review by
the project engineer and the Ohio

South Dakota residents vote; Kerrey, Search continues for three killers;
Harkin dismiss do-or-die predictions kidnapped victim released unharmed

Winner advances
to district at
OU Convocallon
Center, Athens

Fri., Feb. 28 - 7:00p.m.

the state capitol in Littie Rock Monday. Clinton
is in the state lor a special legislative session.
(AP)

GREETED AT TilE CAPITOL· Arkaasas
Gov. DiU Clinton, second from left, is greeted by
Rep. James Jordan, D·Monticello, and others, at

Gallipolis (2)
Jackson
•
Meigs

1 Section, 10 Peges 25 cent.
A MuHimedla Inc. New.,.per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 25, 1992

,.·

Election '92 II!:;y;.:J:!

»!'A~:««.:.." :.:0

VIRGIL I"Hl.LLIII"&lt;'&gt;

""' ,,,,'

'

,,W ',_..,_.,, VC&lt;

County out of economic stagnation
which has been created by old
money and old politics".
Phillips said "We need to be
more aggressive and search out
businesses that will provide meaningful employment and that will be
held 20 years down the road. Meigs
County has been left out of the economic picture too long and it is
time to let the state house know
that we want quality in the distribution of federal and state monies
available to create jobs. We have
the resources and willingness and
as citizens of Meigs County we
need to unit."
.

--Local briefs---...
Household items sought

Lisa Lilley who lost all her household furnishings in the fare at
139 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Saturday night, is appealing for
household furnishings.
.
·
She and her four children and a friend resided in one of the apart·
ments. Lilley said that the American Red Cross has provided her
with $700 for clothing ·and a $155 food voucher but her major need
now is for furniture and appliances. Currently the family is residing
with friends,
Anyone with something 1Q give may conlact LilleY, a! 992-6927.

Racine man hospitalized after fight

A 23 year old Racine man is in a Columbus hospit8I followin~ a
fight in the Taekerville area, and a suspect is in custody pending
investiption of the incident
·
Metgs County She!iff James M. Soulsby reported Tuesday that ·
Jeff Connolly wu transported to Veterails Memorial Hospital and
later to Grant Medical Center by Life Flight helicopter.
According to a Grant t-fedical Center spokeswoman on Tuesday
morriing, Connolly is in the lniensive Care Unit, listed in serious
condition. Soulshy reponed this morning that COMOlly was para·
lyzed at the time he wu IIIJISpOf1ed.
.
Felonious assault charges are expected to he filed on Tuesday
against another Racine man, whose name is being withheld pending
the filing of the ~es, according to Soulsby.
CoatiDDed on A·3

primary day in Maryland; his
spokesman said the dire expecta·
tions for Harkin were premature.
" There has to be an element of
reality here. When SouJ.b.~Q.ta
has voted, we will have elected less
than I percent of the delegates,"
said Harkin aide Barry Piatt
Nevertheless, today' s primary,
the first real contest for the
Democrats outside New England,
was widely seen as critical for Ker·
rey and Harkin - senators from
bordering Nebraska and Iowa,
respectively - because both needed a rebound after poor showings
in New Hampshire and Maine.
South Dakota was also a chance
for front-runners Paul Tsongas and
Bill Clinton to regain momentum
after Maine's confounding results.
Sunday's caucuses rewarded Jerry
Continued on page 3

MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. (AP)
- The search for three killers who
tunneled out of the state prison
expanded after one of them kid napped a man at gunP,oint and
drove more than 150 males before
releasing him unharmed, police
said.
Meanwhile Monday, a fanner
warden said state officials learned
seven months ago of the plot to
escape by tunnel and were warned
that the threcowere among the most
likely to flee.
Fred Hamilton , 34, abducted
Richard Porter, 60, on Monday
about five miles from the West Vir·
ginia State Penitentiary, said State
Police Sgt Matt Clark.
Hamilton, originally from
Greenfield, Ohio, stole a gun from
Porter's home and forced him to

drive with him to Pennsylvania said it must have taken months to
before freeing him, police said. dig. All three were serving life senHamilton then stole a car at gun- tences for murder and had escaped
point in.a.Mill Creek, PJ!., sl!upping frQm jails before ~
Earlier Monday, Donald Borcenter, telling the driver and her
family "it was their lucky day," _denkircher, warden from 1972 to
said Sgt. Pete Lake of the West 1975 and from 1980 to 1984, said
state officials were told seven
Virginia State Police.
"He jumped in the car, backed months ago where the tunnel would
it into another car and then sped be dug and who probably would
nee.
off," Lake said.
''What was done with that infor·
Pennsylvania State Police
searched for Hamilton early today mation I cannot begin to tell you "
near Mill Creek, just outside of said Bordenkircher, now poli~e
Erie, Lake said. The U.S. Border chief in Moundsville.
Sheriff Robert Lightner said the
Patrol was told to watch for Hamilton at crossings into Canada, he possibility of an escape involving a
tunnel and Mollohan was men said.
Hamilton, Tomie Mollohan, 49, tioned at an August meeting of area
and David Williams, 34. escaped law enforcement officials . No
from the prison last week through a prison officials attended, he said.
32-foot tunnel so elaborate officials

President using 'rifle-shot' strategy on U.S. economy
WASHINGTON (AP) - A will.have much impact on the econ·
boost for small business here. A lift omy as a whole. But put them all
for veterans there. President Bush together, Bush says, and they will
calls it a "rifle-shot" strategy for help rouse the nation from its ecorevitalizing the economy . But nomic torpor.
Since the president's State of the
economists say the scattering of
Union
address .in January, the
new programs and initiatives won 't
administration
and independent
be enough.
regulatory
agencies
have put
"It's really just a buneh of non·
sense, bells a nd whistles," said together a package of initiatives, all
economist Paul Gehnan of Region- designed to give just a little more
al F inancial Associates in West oomph to the recovery.
Some examples:
Chester, Pa.
$1.1 billion for the Small
" I think they're designed ... to
Business
Adm inistration to
take credit, as much as possible, for
the (recovery) going on even increase its authority to guarantee
though it would have gone on any- loans. The pro~ was started in
way," said economist David Wyss New Hampshrre just before the
of DRI-McGmw Hill in Lexington, state's primary election.
- The Department of Veterans
Mass.
Affairs
is accelemting payment of
The administration acknowl ·
$560
million
in life insurance diviedges that no proposal, by itself,

dends to 1.6 million veterans rather
than waiting for the policy anniversary dates.
- Regulators are exploring new
approaches for assisting rather than
closing sick banks and savings and
loans. That goal is to prevent the
dumping of loans .and foreclosed
real estate on already depressed
markets and free up money for new
loans.
- The Securities and Exchange
Commiss ion is proposing rule
changes to make it easier for small
companies, which create most of
the nation's new jobs, to bypass
tight-fasted banks and raise money
by selling stock to the public.
These have been added to earlier
Bush initiatives including a 90-day
freeze on new regulations not
required by law and reduced

Meigs prosecutor will help evaluate candidates
The Ohio State Bar Association

has begun its evaluation of the can·
dida tes in this year' s three Ohio
Supreme Court races, and Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney
Steven L. Story will play a part in
that evaluation.
The Association' s 1992 Com·
mission on Judicial Candidates,
which held its organizational meet·
ing on Friday in Columbus, will
investigate the qualifications of the
eight announced Supreme Court
candidates and announce a rating
of "highl,r RICOrnmended", "recom·
m.ended or "not recommended"
for each candidate to help voters
make informed choices in the primary and general elections.
Troy Attorney Robert A.
McCarthy, a past p~ident of the
OSBA and chairrnm-of this year's .
judicial rating panel, said each of
the candidates will be evaluated
according to eight non-political
standards recommended by the
American Bar Association: intc~·
ty, legal knowled~c and abihty,
professional expenence, judicial

temperament, dili~ence ,' hcalth,
personal responsibrlity, and public/community .;ervice.
Because lawyers undergo the
same specialized education as
judges and work with them more
closely than other citizens, the
Ohio Code of Professional Respon·
sibility imposes a special duty on
lawyers to "aid in the selection of
only those Oudicial candidates)
who arc qualified ...," McCarthy
said. He pointed out that the Code
also calls on lawyers to "protest
earnestly against the appointment
or election of those who are unsuit·
ed roc the bench .. ."
The state bar's rating commission consists of McCarthy as chairman and one representative from
each of the Association's 18 geographical districts. By rule, the
member rrom each district is that
distric1's most recent past member
of the OSBA Baud or Govemm
who is able to serve. Membcn of
the Board of Govemm are elected
by local attorneys to represent their
respective geoppltic an:3S.

McCarthy said this method of
selecting the members of the com·
mission insures that the rating
panel will be broadly representative
of OSBA's 22,000 members • who
include plaintiffs' and defendants'
lawyers, judges, law professors,
corporate counsel, sole practitioners, govemm.ent attorneys and large
fmn lawyers.
In addition 10 Prosecutor Story,
the members of the 1992 OSBA
Commission on Judicial Candidates are (by distri~t): Stephen
Cohen, Cincinnati; Robert N. Far·
quhar, Dayton; John W. Weaner,
Defiance; Alfred J. Cooper, Fre·
mont; Keith A. Kochheiser, Marl·
on; Robert 0. Hamilton ,
Marysville; John A. Carnahan,
Columbus; Jon C. Hapner, Hillsboro; James M. Cullers, ML Ver·
non; William T. Oxle'y, Ashland;
Richard ·T. Cunningham, Akron;
David Arnold, Cleveland; David C.
Comstock, Youngstown; John D.
Lindamood, Canton; Casimir T.
Adulewicz, Steubenville; William
L. Evans, Kenton; and William R.
\\_,

j•

income tax withholding, amounting
to $1 a day for the typical married
couple.
But the cen~iece of the president's proposal mcludes tax cuts
which must be approv~d by
Congress. He wants to cut the capital gains tax and increase the per.
sonal exemption for children
younger than 18 years. He also
wants to gave a $5,000 tax credit to
frrst·time home buyers.
The proposals are getting mixed
revaews. Frfty top economists surveyed this month by the newsletter
Blue Chap Economic Indicators of
Sedona, Ariz .. ~ave the package an
average gaade of C.
Their evaluations included such
comments as " Robs Peter to pay
Paul" and "Too little, too late."

Hewitt, Warren.
The candidates who have filed
to run in this year's Supreme Coun
races are:
• Cbief Justice : Incumbent
Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer of
Columbus, a Republican , and
Judge Robert H. Gorman of the
First District Court of Appeals in
Cincinnati, a Dcmocnit.
• For the seat currently beld
by Justice Herbert R. Brown:
Judge Lesley Brooks or the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Coun
and Judge John T. Patton of the
Eighth District Court of Appeals in
Cleveland, both Democrats; and
Republican State Senator l!)lul E
Pfeifer of Bucyrus.
·
• For tbe seat currently held
by Justice ~Obert E. Holm~s:
Judge Francas E. Sweeney of the
Eighth District Court of Appeals in
Cleveland, .a Democrat, and 1wo
Republicans, Cincinnati Municipal
Court Judge Mark P. Painter and
Gates Mills (Cuylhoga County)
Attorney Thomtis R. Frutig.

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