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                  <text>Page pa Sunday llm•

Pomeroy--Mid!fleport-Galllpolle, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

~entlnel

March 1, 1992

Questionable claims, shock value have
little las,ting effect on adult consumers
By KIM HARLESS,
Organizlltion Director,
Farm Bureau Federation
GALLIPOLIS - Public issues
concerning healtti, food safety and
the environment have been on the
front burner for several years: all
involve agriculture. For some special interest groups the motto has
been, "if you want to get the public's attention, scare them to
death."
.
The 1989 Alar incident, 1990's
"Big Green" initiative and 1991's
questions concerning biological
conwnination ia food are cases in
point. Misinfonnation focused on
everything from cows producing
gas which damaged the ozone layer
to unsafe food.
Scaring the public was the order
of the day. Movie stars warned the
P.ublic about mysterious diseases,
'poison applesauce," deadly meat
and higher cancer rates. The end
result - major .damage to the apple
industry and ·outlandish proposals
that would drastically affect farm
and food processor practices vilal
to produce all food available to

U.S. consumers.
Accurate information from
farmers, scientists, govemme.nt
agencies, the United Nations and
. olher groups have helped the pubtic
learn more about the ISSues. In each
case, their input helps correct misinfonnation.
Health, food safety and the environment • the public has the right
to lcnow, and systems to help them
have been in place for decades. To
safeguard the consumer six mem·
bers of the President's Cabinet, 11
. federal agencies, several hundred
slate departments and thousands of
local inspection programs have
.worked in unisori to guarantee that
food is safe, and the environment is
protected. Because of the public's
right to know, the U.S. prides itself
on having some of, if not the mos~
stringent food quality and environmental standardS in the world.
Questionable claims and shock
value have little lasting effect on
adult consumers. Surveys reveal
that the public has as much faith in
the apple industry now as they did
before the Alar incident. Farm

chemical use and food conlamination are concerns, but many feel
that they i1re being addressed, and
don'tsupportradicalapproaches.
Research shows that Americans
consider scientists, nutritionists,
dietitians and farmers more credible than special irit.erest groups, and
the gap is widening. National surveys conducted by commodity
organizations on a monthly basis
· reveal public confidence. Food
safety is not an active issue in the
minds of consumers unless someone calls attention to it, usually
with outlandish claims, scare tacyou may
tics and misinformation.
U.r.JlY;;.;Dv FARM . ·This week's ~~!~!:~
io
-\•aiit!v
PubllshiDg
Leave your Dame,
farm,
featured
by
the
Meigs
Soil
and-c
Cerlainly, we in agriculture need
address
telephone
Dumber
with your card
Conservation District, Is located somewhere
to main tam quality control and
or
letter.
No
telephoae
calls
will
be
accepted. All
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to partici·
improve as technology allows us,
contest"
entries
should
be
turned
in
to the news·
pale in the weekly coates! may do so by guessing
but where will the next "scare"
paper
ofr'ICe
by
4
p.m.
each
Wednesday.
In case
the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop orr your
come from?
of
a
tie,
the
wiDner
will
be
chosen
by
lottery.
guess to the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Take a look in your local
Next week, a Gallia CouDty farm will be rea·
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
library. While many adult books on
tured
by the Gallia Soil aDd Water Conservation
Tribune, 825 Tbird Ave., Gallipolis, Ohi.o,
food safety and the environment
District.
attempt to balance issues, children 's books do not. A random
sampling conducted by OFBF
examined books earmarked for primary readers. On average, there are
more children's books covering
special interest messages than
books attempting to explain both
sides. Given the fact that books for
this age group use graphic iUustrations, photos, and limited text to
get a message across,.are our children being targeted to automaticalmore of the growers vote in favor
ly accept misinfonnation? Are our
of the proclamation, quotas will be children being scared to death?
in effect for the next three tobacco
Take a look at the resources
available in your schools and •
cro~s and price support will be
libraries. If there's a need support
available. If growers disapprove
"ag ia the classroom" and other
marketing quolas he·said there will
projects that get balanced infonnabe unlimited production and no
tion on local agriculture into the
price support.
All you have to do is register - you may be the
hands of students, get involved.
In addition to marketing quolas,
winner.
·
Virginia's Burley Tobacco growers
will vote on whether they favor
JOINS SALES STAFF·
lease and transfer of burley tobacco
Name::------------Eric
Splete bas joined the
poundage quotas across county
sales starr of Gene Jobnson
Addl'lss:-------------lines. "If more than 50 percent of
Chevrolet
Oldsmobile-GEO,
the producers are in favor of this
Gallipolis. Splete is a 1987
City Z i p : - - - - - - - - - - - - proclamation, lease and transfer of
graduate or Gallia Academy
a burley quola from one Virginia
Phone: Horne ( ), _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
High School. He attended
farm to another will be pennitted,"
Baldwin-Wallace College in
ASCS official McKenzie said. If SO
Work ( ),_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Berea four years.
percent or more of the growers disAga: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
approve, he explained that lease
and transfer of poundage quotas
would continue only withiri counties. ·

5-H; 4-C; 3-D;

S·S
Super Lotto:
4-12-24-27-31-41
Kicker: 960214

Page4

samples is $5.50 each {lawn and
garden, $8.50 each). This cost is
not much more than !hat of one bag
of fertilizer but often reflects a·
good return in either a reduced fer·
tilizer bill or increased yield. Each
year Gallia County submits some
400 soil samples for analysis. That
is about double the average volume
of counties in ·this region. Call if
you need help.
This Monday will stan my seventh year at the Gallia County
Extension Office. There haVe been
a lot of long days but short years.
This past week was ftlled with a lot
of record breaking activity. Last
weekends' Preview Show proved
that Gallia County can attract and
conduct a major cattle show. The
Tuesday evenmg Tobacco Produc·
lion meeting at Hannan Trace High
School attracted some 220 partici-

Exhibitor Booths Avadabie

These "planmng" sessions are
always enjoyable for me.
Reminder: Monday, March 9,
7:30p.m., Columbus Southern
Power meeting room, Beef meeting
··with the main topic of extended
grazing season. Chris Penrose,
Extension
Associate
in
Hocking/Perry counties will lead
the discussion on work done in
those counties related to timing of
fertilizer application and special
crops to extend the season. A Gallia County Cattlemen's Association
Board of Directors meeting will
follow.

614-245-5363
EARNS AWARD· Mar·
vln Boxdorfer, a direct agent
for AUstate lasurance Co. has
received the firm's coveted
Hooor Ring for outstanding
performance In 1991. Boxdor·
fer joined Allstate three years
ago. He Is active in community
activities, including the Gal·
llpolis LloDs Club and Elks
Lodge No. 107. He Is a mem·
ber or the new Life Lutheran
Church.

RAPID REFUND?

GALLIPOLIS
SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE
446-0303

GAI,.LIPOLIS

Noted For
Excellence

B

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NEW FOR

PO. Box 773 • Johns Island. SC 29457

The Inn proudly displays
the AAA 4 Diamond Award
for the 12th consecutive year.

I~~entio~
this ad for additional 10% Discount.
Our tariffs include our lamous hunt
one! off
b~Uiast

street parking.

800-992·9666

'92

•

803-577·5900

r-ifu

NEAR HISfORIC CHARLESTON, SC

RETIREES HONORED • John Rice, Meigs
County Extension Agent, and Joyce Bowen,
office manager, for the local Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service, wbo retired Friday, were
honored at a retirement party Sunday afternoon
at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
Making presentations to the honorees were from

the left, Nick Leonard, livestock sale committee,
Bowen, Becky Johnston, extension service office
manager, Lynne Crow, Ohio Department of
Development Outreach office, Marietta, Rice,
Betty Reese, district director OCES, and Mar·
garel Parker, extension service employee.

ALL

HERE!
SITE OF THE 1991 RYDER CUP MATCHES
Three colorful guides featuring miles of
beaches, eight championship golf courses
tennis, bike trails, boating, shopping and dining'
All in asemi-tropical climate only minutes troni
Historic Charleston;

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UPPER

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WIID DUNES 1-800-346-0606

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'

OO'ENSION
. 368

'

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Bush
strategists · think
Patrick
Buchanan's pornography cannon is
misfiring in Bible Belt Georgia,
and with it the challenger's chances
of matching his New Hampshire
showing in Tuesday's leadoff
Southern primary.
President Bush was turning his
attention today to two other states
that vote Tuesday - Maryland and
Colorado . Aides said he was

expected to give satellite television percent vote of confidence came
interviews from the White House only after Bush backers dropped an
to stations in both markets.
attempt to secure a formal endorseBush and Buchanan hoth spent ment before the June 2 primary.
most of the weekend stumping
Bush, at a riverfront rally in
through Georgia as their truculent Savannah before at least 10,000
ads filled the local airwaves.
supporters, attacked Buchanan
Bush swamped Buchanan, 745- indirectly for opposing the war
92, in a straw poll of delegates to agl!inst Iraq.
"There were those who did not
the California Republican Party
convention ouLSide San Francisco support us then, and there are those
on Sunday. But the lopsided 89
Continued on page 3

Rice, Bowen are honored·
Sunday with retirement party
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
Proclamations, gifts and cards
were presented to John Rice, Meigs
County Extension Agent, and
Joyce Bowen, office manager for
the local office of the Ohio Cooperative Extension Service at Sunday
afternoon's retirement pany slaged
at the .Seniof-Citizens Center. Both
retired Friday.
Approximately 200 attended the
affair honoring Rice who served 18
of his 27 years with the extension
service as agent for Meigs County,
and Bowen who worked over 27
years in the office of the agency.
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs extension
agent, emceed the recognition program. Framed proclamations from
Rep. Mary Abel were presented to
hoth Rice and Bowen by Margaret
Parker, an extension employee. It
was noted by Oliveri that similar
proclamations will be forthcoming

from Sen. Jan Michael Long.
Betty Reese, Southeast Dislrict
Director of OCES, on behalf of that
agency congratulated Rice for his
27 years in the capacity of·extension agent and presented him with
a plaque.
Both Rice and Bowen received
retirement remembrance scrapbooks containing. among other
things letters of congratulations on
their retirements from Rep.
Clarence Miller and Sen. John
Glenn . These were presented by
Becky Johnston, new office manager. There was also a gift presentation from Nick Leonard on behalf
of the Livestock Sale Committee.
Lynne ' Crow · of the Ohio
Department of Development Outreach office in Marietta made a
presentation to Rice from Gov.
George Voinovich in which he
detailed Rice's contributions to
Meigs County, both as an extension

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
state senator who says his constituents meet all the criteria for
being treated as a minority business
', entetprise - except race - wants
to change the law to include
Appalachian residents.
·
· Sen. Cooper Snyder, R-Hillsboro, wants to make businesses
owned and controlled by persons
who !'iv.e in the 29-county
Appalachian region eligible to bid
on state COJ!tracts specifically set
aside for minoritY. businesses.
Sens. Robert Ney, R-Barnesville, and Jan Michael Long, DCircleville, are co-sponsors. Both
represent Appalachian counties.
Under current law, minority

business enterprises are defmed as
those controlled by persons who
are members of certain economically disadvantaged groups :
Blacks, American Indiaris, Hispanics, and Orienlals.
Snyder's bill, which he is to pre·
sent to the Senate ~conomic Development Committee on Tuesday,
would change the definition to
include persons who live in the
state's Appalachian counties.
He said Appalachia residents
represent,a mmority within the
state.
" I don't think race is the issue.
Indeed, we don't consider someonc
eligible for minority business
opportunity because they're black.

--Local briefs---.,
EMS units have busy weekend

THEY'RE

A MuiUm.dla Inc. Newtpapet

•

agent and in various community
and civic activities.
Oliveri introduced members of
the honorees families including
Rice's wife, Anna, and youngest
son, David, and Bowen's husband,
Bob, and daughter, Carolyn
McGuire of Lancaster.
There was piano music during
the afternoon by Jane Wise, -Becky-Baer, and Lenora LeifbeiL Refresh·
ments were served by the 4·H
Committee. Given special recogni·
tion for assistance with the event
were Parker, Johnston, Rachel
Downie, Katie Nally. Patty Cook,
and Faith Varney. .
Oliveri introduced Commission·
cr Richard Jones and thanked that
board for support of the extension
service program in Meigs County.
Prayer to open the program ·was by
the Rev. William Middleswarth,
president of the Extension Advisory Committee.

Senator ~ants Appalachians
eligible for minority contracts

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GALLIA CO.
CRA"SBOW

Low tonight In 40s. Tuesday
partly sunny. High In mld·60s.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 2, 1992

AWAY

JR. FAIRGROUNDS
APRIL 4 &amp; 5

101'1

Cards:

GIVE

Wrap up....___c_on_ti_nu_ed_fr_o_m_D_·l_ _ _ __

This was probably an attendance record for an educational
activity. At that session it was
announced that the Gallia County
tobacco industry has increased
gross sales by more than $2.1 million in the last two years. This is
one of the few growth sectors of
the local economy. Spring brings
with it a lot of telephone, office or
farm visit activity as farmer{ plan
for the comin~ g~~wing season.

Pick 3: 514
Pick 4: 2423

TRUCK

Tobacco growers
vote on referendum
GALLIPOLIS •
B u r Ie y
tobacco growers in Gallia County
voted in a marketing quota referendum February 24-27, according to
David W. McKenzie, County Executive Director of the Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation Service.
When results are labulated, the
referendum will detennine whether
marketing quotas on a poundage
basis will be in effect for the 1992,
!993 and 1994 crops of burley
toblcro.
McKenzie said referendum baiIOis were mailed to all eligible burley tobacco growers. "Any producers who betieve they may be eligible to voce and who do not receive
a ballot in the mail should eonlact
our office." About 1573 farmers in
Gallia County are etigible to participate in the tobacco referendum.
McKenzie said if two-thirds or

Ohio Lottery

Southern
advances
in tourney

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered II calls
for assistance over the weekend.
. On Saturday at 10:49 a.m., Tuppers Plains unit went to Long .
Bottom for Eulla Driggs, who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 12:36 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to East Main Street. Jim Holley was taken to Veterans. At 4:09p.m., Middlepon squad was sent
to Ove{brook Center. Sarah Corigo was taken to Veterans. At 4:25
p.m., Racine unit went to Eqle Ridge Road for Nancy Rose. She
was taken to Pleasant Valley.Hospital. At 4:45 p.m., SyracUse squad
responded fa Bashan Road for George Roberts. He was taken to St.
Joseph Hospital. .-\1 S:S3 p.J1!., Middleport squad went to Dye Road
for Jenny 'Williamson. She was lre8li:d but not uansponed.
On SundaY at 1:41 a.m., Pomeroy went to Mulberry Avenue..Jo
Tyree was 'taken to Vetdllls.
·
,
At 3:32p.m., Racino lrill were seni to an auto accident on Staie
.Route 338. Annie Maauel was' liken to Holzer Medical Cenrer. At:
5:58 p.m., SyracUIC unit went to Rowe Road for William Morris,
wllo wu taken Ill Vclcnnl. At 7:30p.m., Racine and Syracuse unill
went to State Route 124 for an auto aeeident. Callie Bradshaw,
R.ebec:ca Ours and Rtbebh Micbelle Ours were taken to·Veterans.
At 9lS6 p.m., Middleport unill went to the Kim Ann'troDg resiclenee on South Second ror an eleetrical fire.

Leag~e to organize

OHIO' .

, ·

S)TICIIIC Youlh Lea&amp;ue arpnizati~ meeting will be held on
Thuilllay at6:30 p.m. at S)TICIIIC Elernell!&amp;fy, School.

.'
I

\

·'

•

or

or because they're red, because
they're Asian. Rather it's because
that group of people have been
deprived or depressed," Snyder
said.
"We have exactly the, same circumstance with our Appalachian
community. They are deprived of
an opportunity to engage in economic activity, and s0 I'm simply
hepin~ to expwld the defmition of a
minonty to include Appalachian.
I'm proud to be one of/them," Snyder said.

PRESIDENTIAL FORUM • Former Mas·
sacbusetts Sen. Pauf Tsongas, right, gestures as
Iowa S,en. Tom Harden, left, and former California Gov. Jerry Brown listen in during the

Democratic presidential forum at the University
of Maryland in College Park, Md., Sunday
night. (AP)

Tsongas' economics draw
conc~rted fire in debate
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP)Paul Tsongas' pro-business economic ,views are the target of
unending banages from his Democratic presidential rivals as the.candidates face a series of me-orbreak contests in the next eight
days.
The fonner Massachusetts Senator endured the most hiLS in a weekend debate triple-header, his rivals
pain~ Tsoogas as a thinlpeiled ·
Republican supporter of business at
the expense of the middle class. .
Tsongas rejoined that his ideas
were best for the econOII\Y and

would attract Repubticans to vote
Democratic in the fall.
When Tsongas got a break, the
focus shifted 10 Arlwlsas Gov. Bill
Clinton, reDecting their leads in a
jumbled Democratic contest that
should begin 10 gel afltl Tuesday.
The debates were a gateway to
primaries in Georgia, Colorado,
Maryland and Ulah, and in caucuses in Washingion, Minnesota,
Idaho and American Samoa. Those
contests, in turn, prelude the 11
contests on Super Tuesday and a
smattering of contests in between.

Tsongas appears poised to
emerge from this Tuesday's contests with the most wins, and Clin·
ton is the favorite on Southerndominated Super Tuesday. If the
campaign unfolds that way, the
mid-March primaries in the industrial Midwest would be pivotal.
In the third leg of the debate
series Sunday, the Democrats
dropped their intraparty warfare on
several occasions to aim at President Bush, concurring that on
social. environmenlal ·and econom·
Continued on page 3

Estimate 1,300 attend
union rally Saturday
There was a "standing room
only" crowd estimated at about
1,300 by Woody Call Ill of Local
5668, Steelworkers of America,
Ravenswood Aluminum, at a rally
of union workers Saturday afternoon at the Rutland Civic Center.
Call and Max Whitlatch, Meigs
Mine, United Mine Workers of
America (UMWJ, were the orga·
nizers of the rally whic~ lasted
nearly three hours and featured
numerous lt&gt;eakers from several
areas of organized labor. ·
Cecil Roberts, international vice
president of the UMWA, was onc
of several UMWA off~~:ials coming
from Washington, D. C. for. the
rally held in support of lite ~lion
of Local 5668, Steelworkers.
Roberts spoke alOfti - ~th Donnie Lowe, Dfstric128 U¥WA pres·
ident, Whitlatch and Gene Oiler,
UMWA Local 1857 and 1886,
Meigs Mines: Dan Sticham, United
Steelw&lt;ners 5668 president; Chad
Yount International representative, Jilted Food Commercial
WOttera, WashiniiOn, D. C.; Bob
Turner, ,oW!ens, R:egjonal Dim:tor
of the Ohio Couneil 8 of ASSCMB;
and Larry Ward, District 6 presi;

dent of tlie UMWA.
Otller leadership of unions and
their memberships attending and ·
recognized were John Robinson,
New Haven and Jimmy Joe Hemsley, president and vice president of
the union 81 American Alloys; )oe
Edwards, presideni Local 6197 ·
Midwest Steel: Carol Ohlinger,
president, Meigs Local Teachers:
Mark Venoy, president, .imd Tom
Rous~ . vice president, Im~erial
Electnc: Gary Arnold•, pres1dent,
O'Bieness Hospital, Athens: Charlie Williamson, president, Loeal
17, OAPSE, Meigs; Floyd Sayre,
vice president, Local 644, Umted
Rubber Wotlters: Donnie Folmer,
president, Meigs Local 5300,
OCSBA·AFPCME; Orl~y Vore
and· Terry Erdos, District 6,
UMW A: and Whitlatch and Bill
Oilcro(UMwA Locall886.
Other unions represented were
Kyger Creek I:Jtillty, Local 430,
and Kroger of Pomeroy. Lee Pot!er of Was~inston, D. C., the
UMW A international organizer,
was also present at the rally. Also
recognized was DQn Nunley,
retired UMW A District 6 official.

NEWSPAPERS IN IDUCADON WEEK • Newa:'f" Ia Edu·
catloa Wee~ bepa 011 Slll!dlylllld cootbtua *"I Saturday.
The Dally Sendnel, Ia Clllljucdoll wltll the Natlooal Newspaper
AlsodatiOI, II eoncluc:tiD&amp; the G.R.O.W. (Great leldll&amp; In Ohio
Week} JII'GII'IBI Ill three area adlools. Here, Judy West, left, and
Lee CUne, bOth llxtilarllden at Jthervlew Sclloolln Reedsville, aet
.started 011 tile prO(rim. Tile pJ'OII'IIII llallo underway at ReJOk·
~fa~lfe Cllristl~a ,School Ia 'Middleport and ,SoutJ!ern Juqlor

�-- --··,

•

Pag~-The

•

'

Jack
Ande:rson
. ' the commiuec staff was fingerprinted, The one set on the safe that
shouldn't have been there belon~ed
to a CIA security officer whose JOb
was to shuttle classified documents
requested by the commhtee from
the CIA lteadquaners in Langley,
Va., to Capitol Hill,
Blakey stormed over to Langley
for a meeting with then-CIA Direc·
tor Stansfield Turner. His deputy,
Franlc Carlucci, later Ronald Reagan's defense secretary, was there
too.
"What's your g\Jy doing in my
safe?" Blaltey demanded. He is
now reluctant to talk about the
details from that point, but sources
told us that Turner and Carlucci
were aghast to learn about the
break-in, Relations between the
CIA and the Assassinations Committee were already slrained. Some
members of the committee suspect·
ed that the CIA was part of a con·

spiracy to kill Kennedy, and was
being less than forthright about
sharing what it knew.
One former committee staffer
told us that they weren't surprised
to fmd the autopsy photos were the
target of a CIA break-in. The.CIA
reportedly never had, the photos in'
irs own records and was Itching to
lay hands on thetn.
.
To this day, those grisly photos
have been kept a secret at the
request of the Kennedy family. But
they have long been the centerpiece
of a controversy about JFK's
wounds and the second-gunman
theory.
The break-in of the committee's
safe was shaping up to be a fine
con~iracy indeed, except that it
wasn t a conspiracy at aU. It appar·
ently was the wort of a curious
CIA employee who just wanted to
see what an the fuss was about
The accused officer spoke with
our associate Dale Van Aua recent·
ly on the condition that he not be
named. He didn't deny that he

Hodding Carter Ill

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'• .

•....

••'•
•

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-

·~

:"

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Berry's World

----

MAYBE

Accu·Wea~ forecast for

___

"""i~ii~iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiijii
·

Robert]. Wagman

IND.

Dear Editor,

I have been a customer of the
Leading Creek Conservancy. Dis·
trict for approximately 17 years. I
watched and waited patiently as
Jack Crisp was investigated and
finally placed on trial. Before I go
any farther, I must thank whoever
was responsible for coming forward wllh the infofl!lation which
brought about bis sentence for
receiving or soliciting improper
compensation.
"l·dori't knqw who it was, but
my hat is off .10 _you and I am one
, customer that II very aratefu);
What is troubling 10 ,me is the plea
~':2,~" arran1ement which was
I feel tflat he should 1101 have
been allowed to bargain his way
outoflhelecharges.
This ...... .,.-eement - not
to the beet interest of the CUitllineis

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On JutiiiY 26 0111 -.e wu

bni:ellitiD .adll!liiY ~ wwe
taken. We only clrried fbi inlur·
IIIICe (tileD) 10 we .. coun&amp;lna Clll .
tbllaw .... 1••• 111 raM' o.

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Od«c 1111111 011" 2
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diO:We ~~~Joyed die adler dllilp
11i0 bit dille ob.lecll- 1111110-

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twobilllbetil$
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111e

••-.Nowk'a.....
Th• loot ,.. IIW If out liule
Tbla leltll: II • ialended.for ud H.R. 4013) '110
Pt'aeyea, wllone told lllrllld ' pity. We•aotaureMelpCounty hellth beaeftla
..
'
tlillia111Mc:MI6&amp;

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.
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Don Naiey, llednJd cdlhlltr.. )
Roule2. Oln•ar ·

1

'
who second gueS!l us now' but not
the good people of Georgia." said
the president
Bush surrogates have been less
reticent about criticizing Buchanan
by name,
Former Bush drug czar William
Bennett, on ABC's "This Week
with David Brinkley," said
Buchanan "cenainly flirts with ...
fa scism." Bush Press Secretary
Marlin Fitzwater said Saturday,

~

forecast in the Great Basin; tl)e
Southwest, Texas and the mid;
Atlantic states. Snow was pred.icte4
in the Great Lakes.
, .·
Tef!lperatures were forecast in
the 20s m Maine; in the 30s in.Ne91
England, New York state and th~
northern Great Laltes; in the 40S ill
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, "th~
north Plllins, the central Roc!cies
and the Great Basin; in the 50s ill
southern Pennsyvania and New lee.
sey, the Midwest. the northern
Rockies and the West; in the,60s ·
along the lliid·Allantic coast, the
Ohio Valley, the western Plains;
Southern California, the Arizon~
desen and the North Pacific coast;
in the 70s in the mid-Atlantic
stales, the South, the central Plai~
and the southern end of Arizona:
and in the 80s in southern Florida,
the South and Texas. .
·.
The high temperature for tile
nation Sunday was 85 at Manha(·
tan, Kan., and St Joseph, Mo. ••

across Georgia on Saturday, picked
up the endorsement of former Gov.
Lester Maddox , a Democrat who
made his way to political fame as a
staunch segregationist
W. VA.
While Buchanan was seeking
votes in such popular spots as the
Varsity Restaurant by Georgia
Tech on Saturday, Bush got a
hearty welcome·at a Georgia GOP
banquet and visited a suburban
~
American Legion hall where the
bingo game went on while Buslr
:7.::;:~:;==~::=::....!:.-!:::z..::;:;;:,;:~~ of
"Buchanan
aPJX:Bis
to
the
instincts
hate and diviSiveness."
shook hands.
1"'·
VlaA.-IIIedl'rNoGropNcsNSI
e 1992
Bush campaign chairman
Bush, before the Savannah
riverfront crowd, plesded. "If you
"lJIT
h ·
Robert Teeter said Buchanan has commentat~W.
e r - - - - - - - - been hurt by his sensational ad . While Bush attended a lelevised want to send a message to WashCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ,~
showing leather-clad gay dancers
ington, send this president back for
Fair on Wednesday arid a and accusing Bush of funding service at Atlanta's First Baptist four more years.'
Fees
for cabin rentals, boat docl4~
South-Central Ohio
Church -the state's largest South·
chance
of
rain
Thursday
and
Fri·
and
more
than I00 other activi~
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low 40pornography through the National ern Baptist congregation day,
Highs
mostly
in
the
60s.
Lows
at
state
parks
in Ohio increased laSt
45. Tuesday, partly sunny. High .
Endowment for the Arts.
Buchanan went to mass at St.
in
the
mid-30s
to
mid40s
W
ednesmonth
by
~p
to
250 pen:ent
,':
60-65.
"It w~ objectionable to a lot of Michael's Catholic Church in the
day
and
in
the
40s
to
low
50s
The
Ohm
Departfllent
of
Natural
E~ended forecast:
people, particularly religious peo· Georgia capital, and afterwards
Vetenns Memorial
Thursday and Friday.
Resources said many fees increased
W,~nesday through Friday:
pie, ' Teeler told reporters aboard spoke at a Sunday school class at
SATURDAY
ADMISSIONS
•
only
a few dollars, but some cabihs
Air Force One Sunday as Bush the suburban Mount Paran Church Lillian Werry, POmeroy, and James wiD cost
1
an additional $100 a wedc
headed home from a six-day trek to of God.
Hawley,
Pomeroy,
and
some
boalers will pay an a4dl·
- .-· .
California, Texas and Georgia.
Buchanan. a Roman Catholic,
SATURDAY DICHARGES • tiona! $250 for dock. space tlirs
"It paints him ... as a fringe called the ecumenical visit "a sign
summer.
'·
the Rock Springs United Methodist characler out there on the edge," of respect and affection for our None.
Leslie Carr
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS · Joe
Church and the United Methodist
R~tes at the lodges operated ·Gy
Christian brethren."
Leslie Boone Carr, 70, of Women. She was a Golden Sheaf said Teeter.
Neal, Pomeroy; Dennis Howell, concessionaires in eight state ~
Buchanan, cam~gning by bus Pomeroy; and Sarah Congo, Mid· . are
Teeter admitted "I'd be surPomeroy, Ohio, died Saturday, Feb. member of the Rock Sp(ings
expected to rise 2pc:rcent to:IO
29, 1992, in Pleasant Valley Grange and a Chaner Member of
percent thi!i year, officials said. .,
dl_eporL
Hospital following a short illness.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES •
Rock Springs Better Health Club.
At least some of the increake's
Born Dec. 4, 1921, in Point Mrs. and Mrs. Grueser celebrated
Clellan Siders. Grace Welsh and came after Ohio Campgrou.nd
W,Va., will hold a stroke support Lillian Werry.
Pleasant. he was a son of the !ale their 50th wedding anniversary in Cemeteries to be cleaned
Owners Association officials
group
meeting on March 10 at4:30
Alva and Gamet (Greer) Carr. He October, 1991.
The Lebanon Township
plained that state prices Were artifl.
was also preceded in death by a
cially low,
: ·'
Holzer Medieal Center
Funeral services wiD be held on Trustees will be cleaning cemeter· p.m. at the hospital on 6900 West
brother, two sisters, three Wednesday at I p.m . at Ewing ies .in that township and they Country Club Drive in Huntington.
Friday, Feb. 28
"We're
delighted
with
the
new
grandchildren and a great· Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with request that all flowers and con- The meetlng is open to all stroke
DischargeS
rates, but we think they could h8ve
grandson.
John Bethel, Virginia Cook, been even. higher, closer to priv.~
Rev ..Keith Rader officiating. Burl· tainers be removed from the graves survivors and their family members.
He was a retired member f
Tiffany Craycraft, Grover Hazel- rates," S81d Margaret Vild, exec:ual wiU be in Rock Springs Ceme- by March 15.
Sale
planned
Trustees to meet
Boilermakers Local 667
w· · tery.
wood, Tawnya Massie, Mrs. tiv.e secretary of the Ohio &lt;;ampA
basement
sale
wiD
be
held
at
field -with 49 years servic , a W ld
The
Olive
Township
Trustees
McDaniel and son; Robert McNer- ground Owners Association.
Friends may call at the funeral
War II Army ve1eran, m m of home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7 wiU meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church lin, Linda Midciff, Edwin Miller,
Glen Alexander, chief of i~e
in Pomeroy on Thursday from 9 Julia Pethtel, Donna Sayre, Joy Division
the Reedsville Fire House.
the American Legion Pos 3 of p.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesday.
of Parks and Recreation.
a.m. to 5 p.m. and on Friday from 9 Smith, Gary Spencer1 Ruth Stinson, said the fee
Racine Legion to meet
Point Pleasant and V.F.W. Post
increases Feb. 1 were
The American Legion Racine a.m. to 3 p.m.
9926 of Mason. He also was a Harold Hayman
Carroll Teaford, Dorothy Thomp· the fllSt significant ones in four .or
Harold J. Hayman, 89, Otterbein Post No. 602 wiD meet Thursday at Chicken noodle dinner
Point Pleasant High School
son. Ethel Wanen burg and Carl five years.
. ..
A chicken noodle dinner will be Webb,
Holl)e,
Lebanon, Ohio, and a for- 7:30p.m. at the post home.
graduate,
Alexander
said
some
increases
held Friday from 11 am. to 7 p.m.
Surviving are his wife, Ruth mer resident of Westerville. died Chicken barbecue
Births Feb. 28
were high because those fees hail
in
the basement of the Middleport
The Pomeroy Fire Department
(Downey) Carr; three daughters, Saturday, Feb. 29,1992.
Mr. and Mrs. Carper. son, Jack· not risen in years, if ever, He saiu
A retired member of the Ohio will have a chicken barbecue on Masonic Temple sponsored by the son; Mr. and Mrs. Victor Cook, that by being closer to private fees,
Charlotte Wolfe, Rita Stobart, and
Nancy (Mike) Griffith. all of State University Electrical Engi- Sunday beginning at II am. at the Evangeline Chapter No. 172, Order daughter, Pt. PleasanL
the new rates would bnng the slate
Pomeroy; a son and daughter-in· neering Department, Mr, Hayman fire station on Butternut Avenue. of the Eastern Sw. Orders wiD be
Saturday, Feb. 29
a
fairer return on its costs.
•
law, . Ronald and Brenda Carr. was a member of the Savior United Cost is $3.50 for the dinner which available for eat-in or carry-out.
Dis!:
barges
.
Alexander
said
al!
state
park
includes a half-chicken, beans and Cost of the dinner is $3.50. .
Pomeroy; one sis!Cr, Mrs. Jewell Methodist Church.
·roseph Beaver, Dallas Blevins, cabin reservations made last y~
Rutland Council to meet
(Grace) Dunlap of Point Pleasant;
He is survived by his wife a roD, or $3 for a half-chick~n.
Cari Caldwell, Joshua Peters, would be charged at the old rate.: :
The Rutland Village Council Cheryl Thompson, Shirley Watson,
16 · grandchildren, 13 great· Frances, one daughter, Mrs. Gerald Support meeting
Ron Kus, a Parks and Recrewill
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the and Amain Winn.
The American Hospital for
grandchildren, and several nieces (Ruth Ann) Conover, Vandalia,
ation administrator, said the new
and ~J~:phell(s:
Ohio; one son, Lawrence Hayman, Rehabilitation in Huntington, Rutland Civic Center.
Births Feb. 2!J
fees were expected to raise revCI)u~
The funeral will be Tuesday, Valriro, Fla; sill grandchildren, 12
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jones, Pt. from $12.08 million for the yellr
1:30 p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral great· grandchildren; one brother,
Pleasant,
that ended June 30 to $13.5 million
continued from page 1
Home with Pastors Leslie Hayman Rev. Paul Hayman, Marion, Ohio,
Sunday, March 1
this year.
"
and Paul Thylor officiating. Burial several nieces and nephews.
Discharges
ic policy, any ol them was prefer- campaigning.
Friends may can at the More· able to the president
Barbara May.
will be in the Lone Oak Cemetery.
Copies of the new fee sc~ules
Tsongas ~as spending the entire
with military graveside rites by the . land Funeral Home, SSE. Schrock
can be obtained by writing the
After spending much of the day in Maryland, where he's countRoad, Westerville, on Tuesday weekend together - debating Sat· ing on a victory to prove his New rr
Ohio Department of Natural
V.F.W, Post 9926.
Resources, Division of Parks an~
Friends may call at the funeral from 24 and 7-9 p.m. where ser- urday night in Colorado, noon Sun· Hampshire win no regional fluke.
home tonight (Monday) 7 to 9 p.m. vices will be held Wednesday at 12 day in Atlanta and Sunday night in He leads Clinton in late polls, as he
Recreation, F~untain Sqoar~.
Columbus,
Ohio, 43224,
·'
noon with Dr. Richard Mitchell Maryland - three of Tuesday's does in Colorado,
Am Ele Power .................. .30 7!8
OffiCiating.
Buena Grueser
biggest battlegrounds, the candi·
Clinton had morning eventS in
Ashland Oil ................ ...... .31
Burial will be in Letart Falls dates were going their. separate Maryland before 1\eading to GearAT&amp;T................................ .37
Buena Grueser, 89, of 35215
Cemeaery,
Pomeroy.
Bank
One........................... .49 1/2
Blake HiD Road in Pomeroy, died
ways today for a final flurry of gia. where be leads. Iowa Sen, Torn
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
on Monday, Marcb 2, 1992 at her William Clark White
Harkin planned events in South
Bob Evans ........................ .27
446 4524
. ' .
'
Charming Shop...................28
residence following a brief iUness.
Carolina with Jesse Jackson, and
William Ct', rk White, 85, of Six killed on Ohio
S))e was a homemaker.
California Gov. Jerry Brown head·
City Holding·...................... l7
Ewing~ and a former resident of
Federal Mogul........... .. ....... l5 3/4
Bqrn on June 26, 1902 in Buchanan, Va., died in Holzer roads over weekend
ed from Maryland to Gea"gia. then
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 63 1/8
Pomeroy, she was the daughler of Medical Center Sunday, March I,
Colorado. Nebraska Sen. !lob KerBy The Associated Press
Key Centurion ..... ....... ....... 15 7/8
the late Harry and Emma Toban 1992.
rey stumped in California, Wash·
Six
people,
including
a
subur'
Smith.
·
Lands
End........................ .32 1/8
ington and Idaho.
He was a retired coal miner, a
Limited
Inc....................... 28 1!2
She is survived by her husband member of the Pentecostal Church ban Toledo fire chief, died in lraf.
The two front-runners dominat·
fie
accidents
around
"Ohio
over
the
Of 5.0 years, William Grueser; her of Rowe, Va., and.the Odd Fellows
Multimedia Inc ..................27 5!8
ed most debate clashes, including
weekend, the Stale High\Vay Patrol an acerbic exchange in Colorado
daJ1ghter, Mrs . Harold (Helen) Lodge 17 of Grundy, Va.
Rax Restaurant.. ............. ,.. I 3/4
'
Blackston, Pomeroy; a son, Leo
Robbins&amp;Myers .. .............. 19
He was born April 20, 1906, in said.
Friday night over Tsongas' support
Jerusalem Township Fire Chief of nuclear power. They were at it
(Jeanie) Smith of Berrien Spring, Dickenson, Va., son of the late Jim
Shoney's Inc ...................... 25 1/8
Joseph
V~rb, 55, of eunice died
Mich.; a brother, Glen Smrth of and Lottie White. He WI!S preceded
Star
Bank... .......... .............. 27 5/8
again on Sunday, but the flurries
Normal, IU,; seven grandchildren; in death by his· wife, Sarah E. after his pickup truck collided were far less personal.
Wendy lnt'l... ..................... l2 1/2
headon with a car on Ohio 579 in
Worthington Ind ................ 23
.~ight grt,at·grandchild!en; and sev· While, May 29, 1990, and three
Ottawa
County.
Stock reports are lhe 10:30
eral nieces and nephews.
daughters.
"We do not need the best presi·
The patrol counted fatalities
a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt,
Besides her parents, she was
He is survived by: two sons, from
6 p.m . Friday to midnight dent that Wall Street ever had.
Ellis
and Loewi or GaUipolis. ·
prec~ded in death by her sister,
John, S. of Ewington, with whom
That's what Mr. Tsongas said he
Limited
ed ex-dividend today•
.Lottie' Leonard; and three brothers: he resided, and James Edward of Sunday.
Wjllts to be," Clinton said. Harkin
The dead:
Max,·Oscar and Dale Smith.
Abbington, Va,; two ~hters,
and Brown jumped in as welL
Mrs. Grueser was a member of Marie Stevenson of Ro
e, Va., SATURDAY
MCCONNELSVn.LE - Chris .
and Tnilo B. White of Abbington;
B.
Meadows,
19,
of
nine grandchildren, eight stepMcConnelsville,
in
a
one-car
acciThe Daily Sentinel
grandchildren and 18 great-grand·
dent on road in MQrgan County.
(UIP811S.I60)
children.
RAVENNA - Terrence 1.
Services will be conducted I
Publi1hed eveey aRernoon , Monday
Hurd,
23, of Newton FaDs, passenthm!lh l'licLoy, Ill CQUn st. Pomeroy,
p.m. Wednesday at the Buchanan
.
ger
in
a
two-car accident on.road in
Ohio l&gt;y lhe Ohio Valley PUbUohb&gt;11
County Funeral ·Home, Keen
Cump•ny/MuUimedia Ia.c. , Pomeroy,
Portage
County
.
Mountain, Va., with Revs. Ancil
Ohio 457fl9, Ph. 992·2166. Second clau
CLEVELAND
- Richard P.
poot.tp pold at I'Gmeroy, Ohio.
.Childress and T.R. Stump offteiat·
ing, Burial will be in the Street Deming, 23, and Gilbert Demin~,
Member: The AaoclaLocl .,.,.., and the
34, in a one-car accident oit I·77 m
Ohlo - ~ewlplpor tAioociatlon, National
Cemetery in R~J\¥e, Va.
AdVertiltnr Rapru.entative, Branham
Friends may call Tuesday after 6 Cuyahoga County.
Newapaper Sale1, 133 Third Avenue,
SUNDAY
p.m. at the funetal home.
· NIW Yort, Now York I0017.
IRONTON - Kenneth L. Tur·Local arrangements were by the
POSTMAHrER: Send adclreu chanau to
vey,
29, of Ironton, when he lost
McCoy-Moore Fimeral Home, Yin·
The Dally Sentinel, lil C011rt St.,
control
of his motorcycle on a
Pomeroy, Ol!lo 43769. '
.
ton.
Lawrence County road and
IIIBICI.IPTION IIATI8 ,
slammed into a tree.
87 Conlor or Motor Boato
OM w~ ......................................... r.eo
POR'I: CLINTON - Joseph R.
OM Mlliiii...... ........:......................... M.96
Verb,
55, of Canice, in a two-vehi· ·
One Year.......................;..•...,..._ .. l83.20
cle accident on Ohio 57? in Ouawa .
'
, IINOLI COPY
,1
',
PRICB
•i , Bob Evan8 Flrml' net sales for County.
Dall;! ..:............................:.......: ..u c.,10
•
•
, t~e third quarter ended Jan, 24 .
. s...........tdaalrlrwtopoyllle._m: were $141.4 million, • 1ncreue of
ar may nmllln ad•- dlnol Ia 1'ba
12 pen:ent!Mi' the $1::16.4 million
O.ntDOH• ~Tribune an1a din., ~••
.
I,
,..·11: - t h Nata. Cndll wiD be pen
reponed
a
year
1180Net
i11come
for
._mar,.lhwaek. ·, ,
the third Q1W1.et - $10.4 mll6on
.
.
No ~itoairl~,11ooia by matl permit~ tn
or
$.33 per share, conloared with
anu whtft home eartler 11rvice la
net income pin of $8.1 mWion or
aftilabll, I
$.28
p share a yw ago.
'
IIIII~JIIIo•
COUI11Y
IllS
, ll!llde Oalllo Oouq
'rile Increase in ~ sales for the
)8 Wiib ..................................,! U4
third quarter was due to ·more '
90
18WIIb-... ,.. ..,;_...._ ..,.... ,- .... ~.... .18
10 LIS.
restauranu in operation, an
uw._,
..
......
-...
-..........
11
'
.
O.IIWo OaDio Coo!DQ'
improvement in DIIIC-IIIn reaiiU·
11 w.............- ...................... .~.-o
• w...........-........ -:................. .ao . rut . . . and the addilioa In saleli
......................
,. 1-................... .40 from Mn. Gllel COIIIIJ}' Kitl:he"'N.IO\"It
0 ,;
'
. Inc., ln.the food Jllldticll aegmenL
I,
prised" if Buchanan matches in
Georgia his 37 percent share in
New Hampshire, but he was reluc·
tant to forecast a number because
of the vagaries of primary turnouiS.
White House Chief of Staff
Samuel H. Skinner said on cNN's
"Newsmater Sunday" that
Buchanan has been drawing economic proteSt votes. "They're real·
ly not serious Buchanan vo1ers,"
said Skinner.
Skinner also sug~ested
Buchanan may he running ' just to
promote his ratings" as a television

Cabin rental
fees increasing
at state parks·

-Area deaths--

-Meigs announcements--

com-

Tsongas' ...

...,=========;t
Stocks

..

residents are aware of the numer- ·NOW! We try toDetter ourselves
ous robberies that have taken place, and om children's lives by trying to
Yes, we have been told they were succeed in the work force only to
aU in the paper, but if yoli are like have IOIIICOIIC invade our lives and
us you're probably sayin$, "That tum h upskle down.
wouldn't happen where I live". Do
We've rtad some letters til the
you realize there have been 60 editor recently which were against
reported Breaking &amp;; Enterings in the new prison, but why 1101 have a
the last five months in little ole prison when we have 10 many
Meigs County. (Sept 8, OcL· 16, crooks. One recent letter saill"our
Nov.· 15, Dec.· 13, 1an.·8) This Children, woman and elderly would
does not include theft reports as be in danger if the prison was
those are different crimes. Bas any- located here. Guess wbat? They
one been convicted?? Bas any mer· already are!
chandise been recove:W??
SincerelJ,
We were told they had a sus· C.T. &amp; Tamlny Chapman
pect in Ravenswpod but .now be
has fled. Sornethin11 has to be done,

Ill............

BUSh. • Co~tlnued from page ~

.

Hospital news

Seeks,' public sup port

ror ..

a

ern California and Arizona.
Temperatures on Sunday. made
it feel like rarly May from the Ohio
Valley acrou the Rockies. More
than 50 records were seL
Milwaukee hit 64 degrees, the
highest for ~ dl!te in 110 y~. In
Huron, S.D., 11 was 74, breaking an
87-year-old mark of 69. Lincoln,
Neb., at 81 degrees; brote irs 1923
record of 78.
Rain, thunderstorms, hail and
hi~ winds were expected today in
Southern California. Rain was also

- - - - - - - - neat

Ea•=::;·'

uw"

49°

By The Associated Press
record low was zero in 1980.
Ohio will getting an early taste
Sunset tonight will be at 6:25
of spring this week with warm tem· p.m. Sunrise en Tuesday will be at
peratures and occasional rain. Fa-e· 7:01 a.m.
. casters say some record high tem·
Unseasonably warm weather
peratures may be broken.
continued over much of the eastern
Daily highs will be lllOStly in the half of the nation today, and rain
60s through Friday, the National feU in Southern California and the
Weather Service S8ld. There will be Northwest
a chance of rain on Thursday and
Clouds covered the Great Basin,
Friday.
.the desen Southwest, the Rockies
The record high temperature for and the Northeast.
this date at the Columbus weather
A winter storm warning was
station was 70 degrees in 1976. The posted for the mountains of South·

~

remember is that many of the com·
panics now struggling would not
have survived had it not been for
liberalization, and our country as a
whole would have been as
bankrupt as
Clearly, the
g of the
country has been accepted as a sue·
cess by the international economic
community.
One measure, according to Dr.
Donald Brash, Governor of the
Reserve Bank of New Zealand, is
the price of the nation's bonds: "In
1984, we were having a great deal
of trouble selling our bonds at 13
percent or mere. Tod!ty in~tion­
al investors who could put their
money anywhere are linmg up to
buy at 9 pm:ent"
As Eastern Europe embarks on
its own progiam of ecoromic lihcr·
alization, what lessons, if any, can
be learned from New Zealand's
experience?
'·'The principles of what bas to
be! done are no different in Hungary
or the Russian Republic than they
were here," says Douglas. "But
for them the going will be much
tougher and the downside much
greater especiaUy since these countries have no basis whatsoever in a
capitalistic system.

Gues ro '-''h.

PA.

•I Columbus I so• I.

ga

But the commiuee didn't let the
CIA off the hook. Former commit·
tee staffers and CIA sources told us
that the committee cleverly used
the incident to ensure the CIA's
enthusiastic cooperation with the
rest of the investigation.
"We hushed it up, and the CIA
was so grateful, a .veritable water·
faD of documeniS came our way,"
one staffer recalled. "PracticaUy
anything we wanted for our investi·
galion, we got without complaint"

of the Leading Creek Conservancy
DistricL Not only was fuU restitu·
lion not made by this agreement.
but what money he was required to
P.!'!,back goes into the coun_ty cof·
fer.
I realize that the county is in
poor fmancial shape, but the injus·
lice was against the customers of
the conserv811cy distriCL I guess the
yean of paying outrageous water
bills by the customcn of the Lead·
ing Creek Conaei'V•n.cy District
doesn't~ to tho county;
all their profitinf.: our overpayment 1doa't . what can be
done, but I feel u c11110men we
have a right to at least a portion of
this ·money, after aD it was us the
1080 I..eadmg Creek cuatomera thil 'ro the Editor:
·
needlealyovapild.
·
We've all been working liard many years lill·
Write
President
Bash
at:
The
Paul Damcll throughout the coal induslry to set
White,
Housel
Washini!On.
D.C.
Pomeroy oiQ' SCIIIioiS and repre~CJ~IIIiws to
20500. Write·your senaton It: U.S.
at,?
, . SU.PJI'm. the bills that will help ~eep Capitol.
WasllinJton, D.C. 20510.
,..
alive the bitalth benefit furicls for
•• untllive 1t: u.s.
people Mel tabll her tbinaa, Ia a UMW A pensioners ud orpbail Write
I
I I .... D.C. 20515.
'
look " will.IIIYW falpL It wu miners that tbe coal eompuiea
a11o diM odt wt.l ftllild cu: 101t ha¥11 dilmPed.
. ..._ JOIII'-. _, .« i1lpl II t?llldye
1·111111"0t...:ZS51.
'
ho couldn't watch bla Sesame
At risk is tho well being of
Street 11pe1 becllr• tbo llld people 120.000 UMWA relired mincn and
Please act aow before tbo
roat cu: vat. OW •• M anlilr W. their widowa wbo draw beltllts 120,000 11'1 wldloulllulda care. '
allo lltll!&amp;ltl. IIIII-. Jllft .,. liuJII . . flwda. If .... ,.... JD A*,_. tiladl,llrr!lly - · I
IJII 111111 calli&amp; I• 'I'll, 1111&amp; Jllll broke, wllere will thay tan ror , -.10 61 1M-. 1'111,-.-.. , ,
• tbl tllr lllfln wllld WNP help? They need all thll!elp iliiW ' IIICllc a dllca1110 lbelr JMB. '
aaow
kids
tbll wUIII pwiNy p¥1 ..... It boocla Ire at liMe. Aa4, If\ your .
we llld 111*1 dlls f« iaelloriel. could be 81 neat.
!' IOIIIIIlr or con~ sii)lpillll
Tbla pllllcidlr 11tp0 -11111 iD die
I urp'cbe ~ 10 IIIIPl!.OI' lilt the biD, Mi llkn.
'

.ncr

ga •
ga

ga
•

Letters to the editor_~-------.Custom~r gr4teful .

·conditions and

IManstie!O I sg• I•

Is New Zealand new economic model?
ended. Douglas - now in private
WELUNGTON, New Zealand '
business - is able to say "today
(NEA)- Americans tend to think
of New Zealand as a stop on the .
we have probably the most free and
way to, or from, an Australian tion that the country was on the open economy in the world." ·
In 1990, mainly because of
vacation. In fact, New Zealand is verge of frnancial collapse. So it
iiSCif a wonderful place to vacation was left to one man to construct domestic political considerations,
- a small, friendly and relatively and implement afinancial revolu· Labour was replaced by the slightly
inexpensive country of staggering tion so sweeping it is probably more conservative National Partv.
beauty.
unmatched anywhere in the world.
If anything, the new government
On the international scene, it has
It has been said of Sir Roger has accelerated reform, tackling
become' a kind of economics !abo- Douglas, installed as Labour's areas such as labcx and the bloated
ratory offering vital lessons for the finance minister in 1984, that no social welfare system, which the
rest of the world
one man in recent times has so sin· Labour Party had 1!een unwiUing or
By the early 1980s, New glehandedly reshaped a Western · politically unable to address.
Zealand had one of the world's nation. But Douglas says that when
Everyone involved admits the
most controlled economies, Citi· he too1c offiCe he did not come with process has been painful. Where
zens enjoyed cradle-to-grave social a specifiC plan already drafted.
the state had· all but prevented
welfare programs; wages and
"It was obvious to everyone unemployment - albeit at a
prices were set by the government; that radical ehange had to take tremendous cost - joblessness has
all major industries were either place," Douglas remembers, "but risen to 12 percent as old, ineffi·
slate owned or state controlled; and what we .ended up doing just cient industries have gone out of
an antiquated, hugely inefficient evolved as we went from one thing business ~W been radicaUy trimmed
domestic industrial sector was pro- to another."
to become competitive, Many
tected behind a waD of import quoA comprehensive value added believe it will be another two years
laS and high tariffs.
tax was introduced, allowing before economic growth reaches
The price for all this was an income tax rates to be slashed from respectable levels and unemployincredibly high tax rate. huge for- a high of 66 percent to 32 percent ment begins to recede. . ·
eign debt borrowed at sty-high Complete deregulation became the
Bob Matthew, chairman of the
interest rates, low productiYity and order of the day: State-owned now-privatized Air New ZCaland
growth, high inflation and a stan· industries were privatized and sold · and chairman of New Zealand's
dard of living that had plummeted. off, tariffs and trade barriers came Business Roundtable says: "There
By the time New Zealand's . down, wage and price controls is still some pain to be absorbed,
Labour Party was swept into offiCe were eliminated, and state support but we have very obviously turned
in 1984, there was general rea!iza. of whole sectors of the _economy the comer. What's important to

.

broke into the safe, but he didn't

confmn it either. "They had no
grounds to accuse me of anything," he said "There was nodt·
ing missing and nothing stolen
from the safe."
He was hauled in at Langley and
put through an eight-hour poly;
graph examination. Ife figured the
committee was out' to get him
because he had complained that
they "had very pOOr security" with
the documents.
He was eventually fired, Blakey
confirmed that the CIA decided the
incident was "no big deal. It was
nothing more sinister than that he
was curious."

The Dally S&amp;ntlnei-Page-3

Ohio may get record high temperatures this week ·· :

MICH.

• IT'S IN THE MAIL~ The
U.S. Postal Service's Ex~ Mail
boasts a 9S percent succoas rate
with its next-day service. But the
Postal Service discovered that a
guarantee wasn't enoup, especially when something as unportant as
an expert-witness list absolutely
positively had to be in Dayton,
Ohio, overnight Attorneys defatding the Postal Service against an
employment discrimination suit
had until Aug. I to file their wit·
ness list. They sent the list from
Philadelphia Yia Express Mail July
30. Guaranteed delivery time was
noon the next day. But the list
didn't arrive until 10 days later.
The Pony Express could ha~ carried it faster. The lawyer represent·
ing the Postal Service filed a
motion with the court to submit the
list late, blamin~ slow mail service.
A Postal Servtce spokesman in
Philadelphia told us they're trying
to figure out what happened.

I WILL
RUN ...
N'AYBE ...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,.March 3

Will·CIA be forthcoming with Kennedy files?

It's time for us to
=timit entitlements

·•.--·.

~ ·-- --- -~- ------ --·-

Dilly sentt}lel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, March 2, 1992

WASHINGTON - C.eatral
Intelligence Agency Director
111 Collrt·Street
Robert Gatei says it'.s a new day at
Pomeror. Oblo
the CIA - time to shed some sun·
DEVOTED TO no: INTJtimsTs 011' 110: 10108-IIASON AREA
light on musty CJA secret files,
includin$1hose on the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy.
Proof of Gates' new-found open·
ness will be whether those files
include the embatrassing saga of a
ROBERT L. WJNGEIT
renegade safe cracker.
Pllbllsber
It began one morning in the
summer of 1978 in the offices of
CliARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
the House Assassinations Commit·
Genenl Man13er
Asslstlnt PllbUsber!CGntroller
tee. The committee ~ the job of
reinvestigating the Kennedy assasLI!TI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be tw lhin 300
sination and to determine il' a lone
words. Allletten are subject to edilills lllld must be sisned wilh name,
gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, did
oddreu and telephone number. No unsiped teuers will be published. Letten
it A committee staffer showed up
_•b_o_ut_dbe_in..;&amp;;..ood_w_te_._ad_dm_•_ins_is_sues_,_not_pe_rso_nat_ili_...
_._ _ _ ___. at work ·one morning to find the
L
door to the safe propped open and
the contents -particularly the
Kennedy autopSy photos -rifled.
G. Robert Blakey, then chief
counsel to the committee, and now
a professor at Notre Dame, caned
in some Washington police offiCers
to lake fmgerprints. Everyone on

This may be the year when the
United SlateS begins IQ wean itself
from iiS longtime addiction to enti·
·tlements, and weans some of its retard, our foreign Jl!llicy.
foreign and domestic clients at the
As for federal11d to the arts, the
same time.
recent forced resignation of John
. The dictionary says an entitle- Frohnmayer as chairman of the
ment is "a right to benefits ... a National Endowment for the Arts
government program providing has been widely interpreted as a
benefits to members of a specified victory for Neanderthals of the
.group." There is nothing inherent- extreme right wing. Viewed nar·
ly wrong with an entitlement as rowly, it is,
such. The Social Security program
But there is more to the matter
is an entitlement for which most than a tug of war over Frohnmayer
Americans pay somelhing and from or the president's soul. The day the
which most Americans sliould logi- fi!SI federal doUar was set aside for
cally he able to expect benefits.
support of the arts, the stage was
The problem with entitlements, set for a continuing, legitimate
as a concept and in specific debate about the rules of the game.
instances as weD, is that they often Elaborate procedures were set up to
outlive their original purpose or insulate the grants from "politics,"
outgrow their original limits. What an elaborale pretense that there is
was meant to be a tem~ sup- anything more fierce than an world
plement becomes enshrined as per· Jl!llitics. As the years went by, the
nianent right Wba! was understood 1dea that the grants were an entitle·
·originally to be a program of limit· ment beyond review by mere
ed scope is steadily expended into a politicians or the general public
cornucopia of ever-widening bene- took hold.
fits.
It was always nonsense, and
· Today, entitlements consume arrogant nonsense at that Artists
the bulk o( ... federal spending are entitled to freedom of expres•with Social Security and Medicare sion. They deserve protection from
leading the way. The share of the . state restriction and state represbudget devoted to discretionary sion. They have a right to sell in
$pending f~W domestic JlUIPOSCS has the marketplace to whomever will
shrunk dmmatically.
buy their product. Those are enti·
But the notion of entitlement is tlementS with an honorable history.
Teflected in ways other than the They defme artistic freedom.
enshrinement of budgetary cate·
But artists are not entitled to
J!ories as beyond review or mean· blanlt checks from the federal trea·
mgful control. To speak of ceo· surr, Just as conservatives always
nomic aid to Israel, taxpayer sup- mamtained, and liberals .denied,
part for the arts and election-year where federal funds flow, federal
, lu breaks for influential con· rules inevitably follow. What is
·stituencies is also to list entitle- more, they should,
That doesn't mean the "noments that fall outside the convennothings"
should be aDowed to set
tional defmition but wen within the
practical meaning.
the rules. It does mean, however,
At least they have up until 1992. that restrictions are inevitable and
.Suddenly, however, there !s hope suppon for the arts as an entitle·
of change. Even·as econorrusts and ment isn't. If both points are kept
politicians have begun· to under- firmly in mind, it may be possible
siand that mushrooming entitle- to maintain consensus for at least
menrs of the conventional sort wiD some federal suppon for the arts in
swamp the nation fiscally if they the years to come.
are not checked, Capitol Hill and
It is a stretch to put election•
.the White House are lurching year tax breaks into the entidement
'tOWard curbs on other kinds of enti- bag, but not much of one, As in
previous presidential years, both
:~men IS as well.
·; • Let us lake the most controver· parties have been falling over each
: sial first. The administration has other to prove their concern and
:-'lecided, apparently irrevocably, love for the voting majority that if Israel wants loan guarantees "the middle-class taxpayer." Cyni·
· for its resettlement of Russian cism is not coming as easily this
icws, then Israel will have to stop year, however. Both sides of the
•)Cttling Jews in the occupied rem- aisle understand that tax breaks in
, tories seized in the 1967 war.
the era of $400 billion annual
· : Applied to any other nation, that defiCits are utterly counterprodilc: would be seen as unexceptional. tive. Underneath the surface show
:We almost always condiuon for· is the hope, usually unstated, that
•eign aid. But Israel has come to the process will stalemate. The
; expect I:I.S. economic support as an House debate could be "the fl!St
;9f!litlement We pay, they play and act in a sumalistic drama that may
;tet the rules as weD. No more, say have no ending," as Rep, Leon
•President Bush and Secrewy of Panella of California put it.
.~tate James Baker. In the "new
Let's hope he's nght It's hard
·world order," our more limited to remember an election-year tax
:~aoun:ea are going 10 be aUocaled package that rilade ~
ill waya that advance, rather than

_..., ..

Monday, March 2, 1992

.: Commentary
The. Daily Sentinel

-

·-·- ,.

·BEF reports .

'

.

sa]es increase

AEP EMPt.OYEES &amp;RETIREES

CORRECnONI .
.

Sunday's Ad •o•ld
. lavtltad.a.

mu

$11

POWILL SUPER YILU

'

PHARMACY IN YOUR EMPLOYEE
PRESCRIPTION PLAN

�· Monday, March 2, 1992

The ·Daily Sentinel

orts

By The Associated Press
March Madness is here.
With the NCAA tournament set to stan in just 2
1(1 weeks, No. I Duke and No. 4 UCLA showed
S~nday what kind of wild finishes to expect. Tied
with 2:30 left, the defending champion Blue Devils
broke away to win 75-65.
''We thought of it as an NCAA game a Sweetl6
g_ame, possibly a Final Four game," D~e's Christian Laettne~ .said. _"We',re still very hungry for
another champiOnship. We ve got to keep improving
and it will bappen."
'

In Division IV sectional semifinals,

Southern pounds Kyger Creek 76-36
.,

MAKING IDS MOVE toward the paint and past Kyger Creek
foi'Wllrd Chris Crace (center) is Southern center Roy Lee Bailey
(31), who is about to conrr011t Bobcat postman Phil Bradbury in the
first quarter or Saturdlly's Divisioa IV sectional semifinal game at
the University of Rio Grande's Lyne Ceater, BaUey scored 11 points
111d bad six rebounds to help the Tornadoes wia 76-36. (OVP photo
by G. Spencer Osborae)

.

SH0011NG IN TRAFFIC - That's just what Meigs Marauder
Tricia Baer (13) is doillg alter getting airborne against the defense
offered by Jackson center Julie Coffey (behind Baer) and forward
Heather Exline (21) during Saturday aigbt's Divisioa D sectional
·title game at Oak HiU High Sebool. Baer scored 17 points ia her
~ farewell contest, but Jacksoa won 52-39 to advance to tbe district
·touraament. (Photo by Dave Harris)

Jackson downs Meigs
52-39 in D-11 finals
'
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel CorrespondeD!
Jackson won its third straight
girls Division ll sectional championship Saturday evening by defeating the Mei~s Manwders 52-39 at
Oak Hill H1gh School. It was the
second straight year that the Ironladies lcnocked the Marauders out
of 10111118111enl play. Jackson defeat·
eil Meigs last year 54-39.
It was also the second straight
oighl that a Jackson team eliminated a Marauder team from tournament play. Friday evening Jackson
$lipped past Meigs 60-56 to adnnce to the fmals of the boys sectional play at the University of Rio
Grande.
· Both teams struggled in the first
period with the fnt eight minutes
~nding with the score tied at six.
Meigs came out in the second periOd and went on top 14-10 but ice
~old shooting by the Marauders
cpmbined with the hot shooting
r.om Julie Coffey, Jackson scored
tbe last ciJht poiitts of the half and
'rent into the locker room with 27~lead.
'
c
· · Al~KZ Mei&amp;s held the talenrcd 6Coot-1 Coffty to only two fim-pedod poiniJ, Coffey exploded to
($lur 11 16 tetond-pt'riod points to
lead 111Cl&lt;s&lt;* to a seveit-pointlead

Ill halllime.

' Meigs Wl8 able to climb bact
iitto tile ~ in the third period
cut thellcboo lead to 31-30 at
ll,lo 4:21 • when Kim HamiDg
lit I 10.. akllg the ri* bueb,ButJclooe me-rthe lead
bucket by freshman
wldl 1:04 left in the
• tatod- Triela Baelo'l bucket widl
!liM t left cut the Jacuoulead
~ 39-35 heading into the final

.-s

Z:J3 ••

~. die final period the ~

.
.
E

'

straight sectional crown.
Coffey led all scorers with 28
points, the towering junior also
blocked numerous shots from behind and controlled the boards
against the much smaller Marauders. Coffey was joined in double
figures by Jackson's fine looking
freshman goard Brandi Munn with
16 points.
Senior Tricia Baer led the Marauders with 17 DOint~ in hP.r t•••
game for the maroon and gold.
Two other seniors also bowed out
for the Marauders, Kim Hanning
scored eight points and Mary Cremeans added two. The three seniors
were a combined II of 24 from the
floor.
Meigs shot 33% from the floor
and made a similar percentage at
the line. Meigs hit 16 of 48 from
the fteld and 7 of 22 from the line.
Meigs pulled in 16 rebounds, with
Baer leading the way with eight,
Lori Kelly and Haniting added four
each. The Marauders had four assists with Vcrna Compston and
Reva Mullen getting four each.
Meigs committed 10 turnovers and
was called for 14 personal fouls.
"We didn't play with any inten·
sity ." Marauder head coach Ron
Logan said after the game. "It was
not. the same team the played here
two weeks ago." (a 72-68 win over
Roclt HiU in ovatime.on Fc;b. 17.).
. t.fcigs closed out its season with ·
an 19-3 record and the Tri-Viney
Conference cham~p. Jackson
niaed its reccrd to 18-5 on the year
and will play Portsmouth in the district toumllllent Ill Cllillic:othe High
School on Thursdlly, March 5 at
8:15p.m.
In 1111 Thunday's pre-game story for the Jackson game, the names
of Miuy Sisson, Ginger Findley
and Ds1tielle Scott were unintendonally omiued from the story. We
ipOiosize for lhil overlook 011 our·

•• I ' I Mill coJd fnlm the field
J one of 10 lboU, and
Jllll,
aillcond Meiga 10 -

till 52-39 will . . tlteir dlinl

I

(See MARAUDEilS 011 Pitt 5)
I

off 11 unanswered points, including the game-tying layup by junior
frontman Russell Singleton (1:56)
and the lie-breaking three-pointer
in line with the lane by Roush with
57 seconds left to take an 11-8
lead. Roush took a pass on that
play from the 6-foot-3 Singleton,
who had the defensive rebound
several seconds earlier,
The Tornadoes started the second quarter by asserting themselves
more in the pain~ especially on defense, where they pulled down 32
rebounds (out of 42 total) to tile
Bobcats' 19 (out of 30 total). That
helped put the Tornadoes' fastbreak offense into motion, and as a
result, 12 of the 20 points they
scored in the frame came on
layups. That partially explained
Southern •s 14-point lead at halftime.
Another factor behind Southern's offensive push in the last
three minutes of the second quarter
and the Tornadoes' cranking out
two more points in the third quarter
than they had in the fmt half was
the shadow of foul trouble over
Villanueva, who picked up his
fourth traffic ticket at the 2:53
mark. That foul sent Roush to the
line for the one-and-one, and after
he made both shots, Southern was

in the driver's seat to stay.
Southern put every player it
dressed in the scoring column except senior guard Chad Wise, who
took the cotn1 in the fourth quarter
with several of his teammateS who
usually see action at this point in
the game.
Kyger Creek, which ended its fl.
nal basketball campaign at 8-13,
witnessed four seniors complete
their farewell season - Bradbury,
Kingery, J.P. Roberts and Villanueva.
Quarter totals
Southern ............. 11 20 33 12 = 76
KygerCreek ......... 8 9 4 15= 36
SOUTHERN (76)
Player
2s 3s FT Pts.
Jeremy Roush ..........3 3 2 17
Mark Allen .............. .4 I 0 11
Roy Lee Bailey ........4 0 3 II
Russell Singleton .....2 0 4 8
Joshua Codner ........ .3 0 I 7
Michael Evans .........2 0 I 5
Kenny Rizer .............2 0 I 5
Michael Russell .......2 0 0 4
Ryan Williams .........I 0 2 4
scou Lisle ................o 1 o 3
Billy Davis ... ............O 0 I I
TOTALS
22 6 14 76
Field goals - 28-49 (57. I%)
Three-pointers -6-10 (60%)

Free throws- 14-23 (60.9%)
Rebouads- 42 (Bailey &amp; Singlelllli 6 each)
Blocked sbots - 4 (Russell 2,
Bailey &amp; Roush I each)
Assists - 16 (Roush &amp;
Williams 3 each)
Steals- 14 (Codner 4)
Turnovers- 23
Fouls-16
KYGER CREEK (36)
Pla{er
2s 3s FT Pts.
Phi Bradbury ......... ..4 I 0 II
Marc Villanueva ......3 0 I 7
Paul Covey............... ! I I 6
Chris Crace ..... :........2 0 0 4
J.P. Robens .............. l 0 I 3
Craig Kingery ..........0 0 2 2
Shane Polcyn ........... I 0 0 2
Brian Davidson ........0 0 I
I
TOTALS
12 2 6 36
Field goals- 14-56 (25%)
Three-pointers - . 2-15
(13.3%)
\
Freethrows-6-13 (46.2%)
Rebouads- 30 (Bradbury 6)
Blocked shots - 0
Assists - 3 (Kingery 2, Villanueva I)
Steals -1 (Bradbury 4)
Turnovers ~ 22
Fouls-23
Fouled out- Kingery, Villanueva

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
North Gallia, leading Eastern at
halftime of the first contest of a
four -game basketball holiday
known as the Division IV Rio
Grande sectional tournament semifinals, had to get fighting mad
against an Eagle squad that mounted a serious· second-half comeback
before recording a 64-57 victory
Sawrday afternoon at the University of Rio Grande's Lyne Center.
The Pirates, which boosted their
record to I 0-10, will strive for a
winning record when they take on
Southern - a 76-36 victor in its
Saturday game against Kyger
Creek -on Friday, March 6 at
6:30p.m.
North controlled the boards on
both ends in the first half, and with
help from an Eastern team that shot
7 for 26 (26.9%) from the field in
that time, including one shot in
nine from three-point range (compared with the Bucs' 12-for-30
shooting from the field), the Pirates
were able to balloon the 11-point
lead they took into the second quarter to 13 in the fnt minute of the
frame. But Eastern, with a warmedup offense, outscored North 11-8 in
the quarter to cut the sailors' lead
to eight at halftime.
Pirate postman Kevin Hunt,
who finished with 12 points and
eight rebounds, had baskets in the
paint to twice in the fi!St minute of
the third quaner to restore North's
double-digit lead after Eagle forward/guard Tim Bissell trimmed
that lead to eight after Hunt's fi!St
bucket of the frame.
But the 67-second exchange of
three-pointers that followed saw
Eagle forward Jeff Durst sink his
lone trey of the night before Pirates
Ryan McCarley and Charles Peck,
who shared team scoring honors
with 15 points each, drilled deep
strikes to give their team an !!point lead with 6:00 left in act
three. Then Tim Bissell scored six
points to help the Eagles outscore
North Gallia 11-7 in the remaining
minutes of the frame to cut the
sailors' lead to seven at its conclusion.
The final quarter saw North Gallia's lead take double-figure propor.tions only three times, and the
first two times saw junior guard
Jim McClure, who came off tile
bench for a Peck that had four
fouls, pump the Bucs' lead to II on
layups coming between the fiveand four-minute marlcs.
The Eagles were establishing .
better position on the boards for
most of the second half, and this
point in the game was no exception. ·But after junior guard Chad
Savoy slipped inside for a layup
with 3:50 left to cut North's lead to
52-43, McClure sank a right-side
baseline jumper nine seconds later
and was fouled by Eagle guard Pat
New1and. McClure's bonus free
throw put the Gallians ahead 55-43.
Pat Newland made the Eagles'
next trip downoourt successful with
a heave-ho three-pointer from the
left wing to cut North's lead to 5546, and lhen qn North's next possession, Dunt comni~ his third
foul- a barely-there push that got
the refcrccs' attentiOil - against
Mc~ure. wbo went to the line to
shoot tile one-and-one with 3:18
left
AbnGit a brawl
Lined up to Mc:Ciure's right
were Pat Newland, Pirate forward
Rob Canady and Tim Bissell, in order from McClure to dte bucline.
Lined up to McClure's left in ll!e
same manner were Durst, Hunt and
EegJo ce111er ChlrUe Blaell.
Wlwa MI:Cltn mi1W die oneand-one, the bill bounced off the

rim and over Durst's head. Canady
streaked across the lane and went
after the ball, as did Durst and
Savoy, who stayed back to catch
the halfcourt pass should the Eagles get the rebound. As the 6-foot2 Canady beat Durst to the ~all,
Durst threw an elbow tnto
Canady's back as Durst and Savoy
dove after the ball and toward the
end of the scorer's table closest to
the Pirate bench.
Canady then swatted his left
arm in an attempt to get Durst's
foot away from him. Durst got up
at the same time Canady did, lowered his head and went after
Canady. At that point the Eastern
players not in the game at that time
left their bench and headed toward
the battle scene, which saw the referees, Eastern head coach Greg
Ullman and North Gallia head
coach Pat Stout move in quickly to
keep the confrontation, which had
already gone to the bleachers behind the scorer's table, from including the crowd.
The officials called a technical
foul on Canady, and Durst, who
was not called for a foul on the
play, went to the line to shoot a
pair. He missed the fi!St shot before
making the second amid a chorus
of boos, raspberries and other ex·
pressions of opinion from the Pirate faithful to cut North's lead to
55-47 with 3: 151eft
"The ref said he couldn't see
which Eastern ~layer it was, but he
was right there,' said Stool.
Eastern took possession, but
Durst missed from three-point
range, and Peck, who got the' rebound, was whistled for charging
after bumping Pat Newland in the

yond the lane by Tim Bissell with
56 seconds left Seven seconds later, McCarley's fi!St foul results in
senior guard Terry McGuire making the front end or a one-and-one.
But McGuire missed the second,
and Eastern senled for culling
North's lead to three.
Savoy, who had already been
ticketed with two of his four fouls
in prime time, got his exit visa with
36 seconds left. McCarley, the target of Savoy's final foul, made
both free throws to put the Pirates
ahead 62-57 before McClure created the final score 25 seconds later
on a pair of free throws - the Pirates finished the ~uarter shooting
8 for 14 from the !me - resulting
from Pat Newland's fourth fool.
''This was the worst three quarters we played all year," said Ullman. "As many t1mes as North
Galli a tried to give it to us, we
couldn't hit the big shots. We
missed too many layups," he added
in regard to the Eagles' shooting,
(See EAGLFS oa Pqe 5)

In the NBA .••
Atlantic Dhillon

New Jenoy ............27 31
PltiladeJpltiAL ......... 27 31
Wuhinpn .......... ll 39

8
8
8
16.l

Orlondo ..................l4 ..

.241

21

Central Dl•lalon
Clti&lt;oao................ ..48 II .114
Cltl'dand- - -.37 19 ·"I
DolntiL .................... 33 2l .l69

14.5

o .........................32 u

Milmi ....................27 31

Atlmto ...................~ 28
MUwottkeo .............U 31
lndim1 ................... 26 33
Otuloao ................ 21 36

.S09

GB

3

Sou ..
Americln lJ. 72,
Malon 66
Arlc.-UW. Rocll71 , loWonvillc 67
An:wu 14, Miaillippi St. 76

o...r

A'bum 110. Milll.uii'Pi 14

9.!

.456
.441
.361

Mldw•l Dl•lr!oo

W L

uw. ......................31

GB

Pd.

.644
.596

21

S111 An10nio...........34 23

"""'""' .... ............. 31 Z1

.l34
.3ll
.298
.196

o-. ..................20

37
o.u.. .................... l7 40
Minn&lt;o... ............. ll 4l

n-u. ..................37

Seallle ...................!Z
LA. t.Wn ............ 30
LA. Q;ppen ......... ~
SICnmatiO ............ lO

26

Z1

.ll2
.ll4

28
3?

.S09
.3l l

Nwc Dunc79, St. John'a70
Ohio St. 78, Midtipn St. 6S

6.5

Purduc6J , Wilconain !!il

17
211
ll.l

.1.rr

22

SW Miaouri SL 66, S. Dlinailli

(SVAC reserves • ftnal)
Team
W L PF PA
Southern ............14 0 802 475
Eastern ..............10 4 644 575
Symmes Valley ...9 S 617 626
Oak Hill ..............8 6 636 600
Hannan TIIICC ......4 9 547 632
Kyger Creek ........3 10 501 574
North Gallia ........3 11 505 661
Southwestern .......3 11 501 610
TOTALS
55 55 4753 4753

3
7.l

Xnoiet, Ohio 72. DaytM !i6

9
10
19

Southwat

Ha.uton 79, Texu A.t:M 69
NE I.wiliuto l l, Tc.uo-Adini'Oft 48
Noollt 'IbM 9l, NW l.olrilianal6
Oklahoma 96,lowa St. 70
SW Texu St.82. Sam HOUltOn St. 63
Tuu 97. Baylor 67
Te~.at OuiJtitn 64, Rice !i9

New Ieney 90, New Yadt 7l
B-IOI,Oollu91
LA. Oippen 101, Orlando 96
Sullt 11:1, Cleotland 117

bold - sdllla tonmament
Sallli-day'a tonl'liiiDellt ICOftl •
At Ualv. or Rio Grande - ·
Nonh Gallil64, Reedsville Ell~
S1; Racine Soulliern 76, Kyger
Creek 36; Glouter Trimble 74,
Hannan Tnce Q; Hemlock Miller
6S, Symmes Vallcy 45
At Atbeu H.S. -Belpre 57,
Oak Hill .51
'
UpCOIIIIqlllanuleat
idloa
FrldiJ' - Nortb Gallla VI.
Soutllem 11 6:30 p.m.; Gloulter
Trimble VI. Haaloclt Mlller 118:15
p.m. (all• Unlv. of Rio Gnnde) ·

43

Major college
basketball scores
. Sundiy's a&lt;Uon
Eat

Lo Solie 7l, Foididd 60
Muo-12, Duq..... 61
Sclalllall77. ~· 64

Soulh
Kentucky 10, Vandabilt S6
MMytand 12. Nonb CaJOlino 80
WwP-13,Ttmple7l

Mom! Ridaedolo41, loltnltown 36
Obetlln ll.Wdlinll'ltl6

ltoctlonl Padtwoy'32, Umo C.th. 40
Sh......S FUI'Yicw 64, An:ltbold 41
Stnilhville ll, Muoillaa Tualaw 53
Spau Jli&amp;hland ll, Marloo Pleuant ·

l.oyoh M&amp;ry.oount 93, Portland 86

which resulted in 21 missed shots
out of 35 overall (10 misses in 14
tries from three-point lrutd) in the
second half and· had a part in the
Pirates' collecting 28 of their 37 rebounds on defense.
The Eagles, who ended their
season at11-10, completed the last
prep game played by seniors Tim
Bissell, Ours~ McGuire and Mike
Newland,
Quarter totals
NorthGallia ....... l9 817 20= 64
Eastern ......... .........8 11 18 27 = 57

Vcnaillao 46, Bndvillc 41

Boys-tournament action
Dl ... lonl
Aohlutd 78, T;JJ"m CoW..bWt 32
E. liv"J''OO6&amp;, boteMllo l4
Huni1ton 74, FWfidd 61
Middletown 62. Hmia:m 36
Newuk 67, Col""buo South ll

Dtotlloo n
Bdlefoolline 69, WiJmin&amp;ton 32

Cin. !tot« Bacan 49, Norwood 41
Col. Bdao 12. Mamvillc 61
Cot Drc!i'k. 61

NMA!a I 04, N. Arizono 69

New Me.noo 70, Air Force 55

Pacillc U. 79, UC Irvine 66

l'\ooa&lt;tine7S,OonuJ•63
S. Uu!t 19, CS Ncmltri&lt;lp 7l
S..IJieto lO, St. Muy'' Col. 41
Son Pnncilcoll, Sonto Clm 69
Te~:u-Bl Puo 86, Colondo St 68
U10hl9, Hawolll3
·

Akron Sprin&amp;fidd 62, Akron E"t 42
Autinlowrl Piu:h j3, Yo.ma- WWm

Bnonmdt s1, m,... 21
an. sycamon sa. w. Ote~~cr W:ota

Sl,OT
Clcvduxl Hto. II, Oadidd IIi&amp;. Trinity&lt;M
Cot lndcpcndeaco 62. Col. Walnut
Rid 30
BCot_ Nonhlond fil, CoL W...U.d 53
C..L Sauth 41, WOIIOtYilleNoollt 31
Ddawuo 56, WctterVi11c South 44
E. Cleveland .Sh•w 76, Clc. Ad.anu

48
Findlay lO, Pmyobtq 44
Chhuuta62;Coi.ENtm00&lt;31
Mona. MldiJon 40, A&amp;ltlmd 31
Monofiold 56, """"'' Rca 41 .
Mldriowll,-..,.;ue3l

Mw-t
lndlutl76, DllaoU 1V .
M - I l , llam!thil SL 67
Mo.-X.... City 12; NE tlliMio 61

Millaol $2, C1n. Olio EM 4l

New Orlow 69, T....p, Amori·

AL
72. Hl1Hird 13
Ro.....-,o; Woma Ho.tina 47
ReJIIold&amp;llwJ 49, Cal. Broath•ven
I

30

25

•""

S)'ivanla Nathvjew !9, Tol. Whicmcr

T-66,Boo-41,
Tal. Cillo. 64, Tot. Bowober 39
Tal. N- n.mo 14, Tal. 511!1211
u- Miflton Sl. llultiJa 30
WijtQAmoll .-!, Celina 41

-n

(Continued from Page 4)

M.- 62, Oooha&gt; ll
Sprinj. Sluwn• 61, O.yt&lt;01 C&amp;m&gt;ll

Quarter totals
Meigs ....................6 14 15 4 = 39
Jackson .................6 21 II 14 52

60,ar

5....... North- 6.S,Indiln Lal:•

=

63

.......... s7, Sodla.Cabollo5l. ar
Belllloc* 65, ~.ni1 V'teW 50

Dlvlllon I
AkJoo Ccnt.·Hower Sl, Akron Ellec

Marauders fall ...

T"l'. 43

Dlvlo!oom
Alauder "- Croobotllt 13

Gtrls-toumamentacdon

lO

col.Wall&amp;:r'lm St

CoL S1. Cl1d01 94, Oelawans Olenlln&amp;l'61
Clmnan ll, SL Puio Onium lO
llelnon t..ltewood 62, Col llamiltDn

Ohio high school
basketball scores
41

I

...... 57, Oolt 111151
Bndville6l, Notional Tnil44
CAPE Ill, Citt. D•.Pm ll
Cio. McN'tcbohl67, Cia. F'truteytown
ll
'
H.umib..t Ri:v« 61, Toronto 46
MaMm 73, S1&lt;01batoillo Cotb. 63
Mucb-M,N.A-57
Miami Eo11 69. Sprla. Noodtcuttm
47

Mloln u,,.,._.. Eoo153

Preble Sh1wnee 11, Middlolown
Mldioctn70
Spriaa. Kenton Rid&amp;• 54. Sidney
l.altmOn 43

DlololooJV .
Glouater Trlmbla U, H1nn111

Tract41

Ht~alock

Miler ,5, Spnna Vall.

Meigs (39)
Player
2s 3s F'T Pts.
Reva Mullen ,........... I 0 0 2
Vema Compston ...... 1 0 2 4
Lori Kelly ................ 3 0 0 6
~ Cremeans .......0 0 2
2
Tricia Baer ...............7 0 3 17
Kim Hanning ......... ..4 0 0 8
Totals
16 0 7 39
Jacksoo (52)
Player
2s 3s FT Pts.
Jennifer Hill .............3 0 I 7
Brandi Munn ........, J 0 2 16
Julie Coffey ........... 12 0 4 28
Annie Blankenship ..0 0 1. I
, Totals
22 0 8 52

n

y..,_

CoalloW 69,
Sotlb42
Clo. VASI69,-LolteC.IIt.22

Blldo 63, .. Moa,o ,
Ootioo 61, B - 21

-

IOOCJI. U

,..._ n,

M.Cllle 31, Wulolot-

,_..,.M....

If

N.. lollM 51, rtalkll11 Funace

'

G,_37
N. Gtlla '4.1t.......lo- 57
51

w.

P.-11. ClaJ 64, ~... rolrlllll

'Z.30T
Radao _ , . . 76, Knor Cru!t

"' Sld!Y7 PolJ!aWif,l4,11Mt41ot

CALL: ,

Jotr Wamor !DOUraaoe
113 2ad
Pomeroy, Oldo
614-992-5479

Potoi Volh)' II, Lotloa• W•IOra

.............. c....., .... -..c...-.
... OIIII:o..-......,.,~Ot-11

lluoololi,De0nlflti-l2

l2

.

. ......... ._r,.,..,

JOHN WADE,

W.4t,Y-""-:17
., Sllolby6l,l I 31

'

I

'

SUJTE 112 VALLEY

•'

. J)

.,

ll

EASTERN (57)
Player
2s 3s FT Pts.
Tim Bissel1 ...............6 2 3 21
JeffDurst ................. 6 I 2 17
Pat Newland ............. ! I 0 5
Chad Savoy, ............ .! I 0 S
Charlie Bissell ........ .! 0 2 4
Terry McGuire .........o 0 3 3
Jeremy Bucldey ....... I 0 0 2
TOTALS
16 5 10 57
Field goals- 21-61 (34.4%)
Three-pointers 5-23
(21.7%)
Free throws -10-14 (71.4%)
Rebounds- 39 (C. Bissell IOJ
Blocked shots- 0
Assists- 10 (T. BisseU 3)
Steals- 8 (T. Bissel15)
Turnovers - 12
Fouls -19
Fouled out- Savoy

UCINE
DEPART
STORE
Save
.

NT

20%-0FF ·

l'lltter-for Door Prizes
Microwave Owl• &amp; Glh CertHicate
Shop Dilly 8:30 a.m. 'til 5:00 p.m.
Mondaya 'til 8 p.m. ·

949·2642
•

-Tal·
-

n,or

--------

D., INC. REGULAR PRICE STOREWIDE

•ED~ IIOSE &amp; IHRO.T •AllERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECI.SURGERY
Cert Ftt Year

percent from the floor (30-73).
Cedarville hit 38 of 66 attempts
and connected on three of seven
tries (all by Callahan) from the
three for 42.9 percenL At the line,
the hosts were 80.8 percent (2·126).
.
Box score:
CEDARVILLE (100)- laden
Callahan, 6-3-0-21; Dominic
McKinley, 6-3-15: Ron Piette, 4-311: El Seabra, 3-6-12; Ken Rucker,
7-4-18; Matt Wireman, 1-2-4;
Tracy Stringer, 4-0-8; Davjd
Barnes, 4-3-11. TOTALS 35-3·21100.
RIO GRANDE ('4) - Brad
Schuben, 3-4-20: Jeff Brown, 0-24 -I 0: Troy Donaldson, 7-4-18;
Kyle Schroer, 0-1-2-5; Mark
Erslan, 3-6-1-25; Matt Powell, 2-17-14; Brett Coreno, 1-0-2.
TOTALS 16-14-20-94.
Halftime score: Cedarville 54,
Rio Grande 47.

(Thru Saturday) At

............................ d

wwu.t!7J,P'arllo--41

t.o-..lllo'I1N~•'
._oil
011¥1lto.-!,
.,._
,.
Pwt ........
41
11.. vtoorl9,
Voller

••

NORTH GALUA (64)
Player
. 2s 3s FT Pts.
Ryan McCarley ....... .3 2 3 15
Charles Peck ............3 3, 0 15
Kevin Hunt ............. .5 0' 2 12
Jim McClure ........... .3 0 3 . 9
Darin Smith ·.............4 0 I 9
Rob Canady .............! 0 0 2
NathanAdams ......... l 0 0 2
TOTALS
:ZO 5 9 64
Field goals- 25-52 (48.1 %)
Tbree-polaters 5-14
(35.7%)
Free throws- 9-17 (52.9%)
Blocked shots- 0
Rebounds- 37 (Canady 13)
Assists -15 (Smith 6)
Steals - 3 (Peele 2, Hunt I)
Turaovers - 12
Fouls-13
Fouled out- Peck .

FC\i HCY.'f(]\'U,f qc, lrl',Ufl.'I.'KF

WomalloWiaod 54, Nlloo 31

A_SI,_Lal.....,47
&amp;!Jill 69 u.... oo~~t n
Bytmlll...,t wbtwk 77, Morpa

The Redmen, who placed five of
their scorers in double figures, narrowed the margin to seven at the
beginning of the second period. ·
Relying on their expertise with
the three-point sbot (14-39 for 35.9
percent) and accuracy at the line
(20-26 for 76.9 percent), the Redmen stayed on the hosts' trail
throughout the remaining half of
the game. Cedarville, led by Jaden
Callahan's 21-point performance,
suffered 20 turnovers, while Rio
Grande also had 20, The hosts narrowly outdistanced the Redmen on
the boards, posting 41 (nine by
Dominic McKinley) to Rio
Grande's 38 (10 from Troy Donaldson).
Mark Erslan, Rio Grande's 6-2
senior guard from West Alexandria, scored the game high total of
25 points, hilling six of II threes
for most of his output
Ovemll, the Redmen were 41.1

4.!

Marion Plun.al 91 , Worthintton
Olr. 64
Ridpdalo 67, o-m. 31

I'

Eagles lose .. •---'--&lt;c_on_tin_ued_f_ro_m_Pag""e-4'-)- - --

lO ·
Tin.M 59,1Jbafty CCIIIa' 55
llailed t..oc.l-ll.M.Doaold 31
Utiu 61, Foirlidd Uma. 48

70, 0T

Tuesday's games

"

Marlon Elain Sl. John1town
Northriclpl6
Milan EdiJon 64, Sanduaky PcWnt

Briftom Youns 91,SonDi'l" SL 78
Cal St.·Fullcrtm 12, San J01e St. 15
Idaho 73, - · 63
I.onJ Bc:ach St. 72. UC Santa Dubin

Woaltioiton ot DolntiL ?JO p.m.
Golden State at Sacnmento. 10:30
p.m.

Dt.llu 1t New York, 7:30p.m.
w~... ., Orimd'!- 7:30p.m.
LA. Cippen ot Miomi, 7:30p.m.
San Anwaio 11 MiMCIOtl, I p.m.
Houltm It P'hocniA. I p.m.
lndiano .. Clti&lt;o1o, I :30 p.m.·
L.A. Liken ll POrtl.nd, lO p.m.
DMYW" at S.ale. 10 p.m.
Utlb 11 Go&amp;dal Stalll; 10:30 p.m.

42

phio63
ltc)'llol&lt;labwJ 67, M.ori"' Hudinj l4

Alizono 70, Orca"' SL 62
Boilo St. 90, Mont.ana St. 75

Tonight's games

I

'-""'~"'ville 76, Akron C....,ay

Mmuotta 102, s....... Eut ll

Rl)'land Bud:eyo 67, New Philadel·
FarWat

LA. t..lt011 97

-

Kut"' Lakotl !IS, Sycamoro Mohawi.4l

Tuu· S111 Antonio 6S, Stephen
P.Auatin 64
1\llN S7. Bndloy 45

Sunday's scores

... s1

He~th &lt;M, Oranvilla 40

u..... 63, New Latdon 38

W. Midtipn 101, C:...L Michi&amp;on 94,

ll

Clti&lt;oao Ill , Pl&gt;rtl&amp;od 91
Milw•ttkeoi09, Ailartta 106.ar

We are sorry for the inconvenience
that
. has been created In th.e
MEIGS COUNTY TITLE OFFICE
due to renovations to accommodate
computers.
·Our employees are attending..
computer school and we have bean
short handed!
We hope to be into normal
operatl•s
by
·
M
arch
30th.
.,,
.
.....

Eutwood42. T.......,y Cues• !7
Elmwood 44, Genoa 39
o.tioo Norlhmor l!,N. Union ll
Orond Voll. Sl, Briotd 45
Orondviow 66. Col. Seltool ror Oir~ I

Wichita St. 71, Drake 53
WiJ .• MiJwaukee 71, Yoonptown St.

Saturday's scores

DURST T AKFS AIM - Eastern forward Jelr Durst aet1
teammate Tim Bissen (lower center) aad North Gallfa's
Smith (30) aod Ryaa McCarley (:ZO) to take aim tor two fl bll 171
points during Saturday's Dlvisi011IV lledionalltmllltlal CODtest at'
the Uaiverslty ot Rio Grallde's Lyne Center. Tbe Pirates 'IIOii 64-57
to advaace to the upper-bracket tl~ game against Southern·Friday
night. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborae)

Coldw!tlltf97, Columbuo O...•ll
Co1onol Cnwford 64, A1hl1nd
C..miew36
D1y. Oakwood 41, Sprina. Kenton

W. Illinoil511, Wri&amp;htSt IS

ar

New Y..t IOJ, lo!i.neo... 87
Pltiladelptl.o 101 , W~92
Cbarlotl&amp;o 121, htdi&amp;no II J
New Jar~ey 99, Deuoit 90
Sm Antonio 11!1, Denver Ill
Golden Suta 136, Miami 110
Sunmcnlo ll!I,Seattle 110

PF PA
1493 1242
1509 1256
1409 1460
1258 1339
1300 1397
1144 1282
1219 1353
1127 1504

49

ll. - · 47, OUoJd 21

Nebruka 14, Colorado 70

3

Pocltl&lt; DI&gt;IIIGn
Cloldon s............. 3&amp; n .691
Pl&gt;rtl&amp;od ................39 I i
.614

Dtololoom

Brookfield l5, Klnlmon Dodger 30
8""*1)'1141, Lomn CleuviOw 41
Buc)'lla W)'llfool l6, Cleu Pult 4l
Col R.. dy 77, Am•ndo-Ct.am.ok

Rid&amp;e41

Evannillc 74, Debolt 62
lll-CIIloaao 86, Volponilo 77
Indian• St. !S,, N. low• SO
tc.n.u SL 13, Miaauri 69
Kont 78, Tolodo ll
Miami, Ohio 67, Bowlin&amp; Oru:n 39
N. Dlinw 96. Tcw T«J; 90, 20T

l4

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Team

Wm..t 72. POll aimon 4l

Mlohnol
BtU St 61 , E. Michi&amp;an S4
a•7s,Lo,..to,l![ 76
lld'aul81, St. LGuiJ 71

II
21
22

High scoring and a close margin
marked a typical meeting of the
University of Rio Grande and
Cedarville College men's basketball game Saturday at Cedarville,
but the Yellow Jackets prevailed
for a 100-94 win over the·Redmen.
The regular season finish for
both teams, and the last Mid-Ohio
Conference game of the campaign,
left Rio Grande at 22-9 ovemll and
9-5 in the conference. Cedarville
exited at 25-4 and at 12-2, in possession of the 1992 MOC crown.
Following tile District 22 and
MOC coaches' meeting in Columbus Sunday, it was determined that
Rio Grande will host Urbana
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. in Lyne
Center in the opening round of the
Division I ~layoffs. All seven
teams in DiviSion I have qualified
for the division postseason.
Cedarville, which shot 63 percent for its fi!St half field goal performance, advanced to the lead,

W, 0..UJO II , Jleoiao 31

Si&lt;oa 63, Nilpra 61
St BonavaatuM 76, Rutaen71
SL FranciJ, Pa. 74, St Fnnc:i1, NY 71
St. Peter'• 12, Caniliu172
Vcrmmt 79, BOilM U. 67
Villanovo 71, Pilllbur&amp;h 61
W•• Vlral•l• t!, St. J•tph'all

deficit. Arizona moved within a game of Pac-10 coleaders Southem Cal and UCLA.
·
Kansas St. 73, No. 6 Missouri 69 - Wylie
Howard made two free throws with 35 seconds to ItO
and Gaylon Nickerson blocked Anthony Peeler~s
potential tying shot with four.seconds left as~
State (15-10, 5-7 Big Eight) stopped the visitirig
Tigers (20-5, 8-4).
No. 8 Ohio SL 78, No. 12 Michigaa St. 65 Jimmy Jackson's 20 points and Chris Jent's 19 lei:!
the Buckeyes (19-5, 11-3) to a victory at Michigan
State (18-6, 8-6).
:
No. 9 Arkansas 84, Mississippi St. 76 - Todll
Day scored 27 points 311d the Razorbacks (22-6, 11.
3) won on the road. Arkansas and LSU, tied for~
SEC West lead, play Tuesday night in Fayetteville. ;
Loulsiaaa St. 73, No.
Alabama 65 ...;.
Shaquille O'Neal scored 28 points and had 18
rebounds as the host Tigers (18-7, 11 -3 SEC) bellt
Alabama (21-7, 8-6).
No. 18 Georgetown 76, Bostoa Colt 60 ..;.
Raben Churchwell sparked a 19-0 surge in the ftr1i
half and Georgetown (15-10, 7-9 Big East) improved
to 11-0 against the Eagles at the Captial fentre.
No. 19 Cincinaati 63, Ala.·Birmingham 58 Reserve Tarrance Gibson scored II points and made
a tiebreaking three-pointer with 3:49 left for visiting ·
Cincinnati (22-4, 7-2 Great Midwest).
Notre Dame 79, No. 20 St. Joba's 70 - The
Irish (13-12) beat another ran1ced team as LaPitonso
Ellis made all 16 of his foul shots and scored 3Q
points to top visiting St. John's (17-8).
.
No. 21 DePaul 88, SL Louis 71 - Reserve Jeff
Stem scored a career-high 20 points and DePaul (19;;
6, 8-1) won the first Great Midwest Conferenc~
championship.
.
No. 22 Syracuse 68, Miami 63 - Lawrence
Moten, who did not shoot in the ftrst half, scored 20
points after the break and visiting Syracuse (18-7,
10-6 Big East) sent Miami to its 12th consecutive
loss.
No. 25 Nebraska 84, Colorado 70 - Derrick
Chandler scored 17 points and Nebraska (18-7, 6-~
Big Eight) made 21 of 26 second-half free throws.

Redmen fall to Cedarville 100-94;
will host Urbana in playoff contest :

S111ttticn 26, Y.,... Ro)&lt;n :!A
Vemtllion 64, NOJWollt 37

RobertMmril 103, Loo.&amp;ldand U. 94

l'tl.
.603
.ss2
.466
.466
.466
.316

Team
W L
New Y«&lt;c ...... ,. ......35 23

Houo~a~l!l5 ,

784
793
891
930
945
902 ·
876
1064
7185

Pictured In tbe front row are (L,R)BIIIle Butch·
er, Jaclyn Swartz, Amber .Blackwell, Heather
Hudson, Joy O'Briea and Bobbie Butcber. Ia
the second row areMelissa Clifford, Danielle
Scott, Giager Holcomb, Erica Roble, Vanessa
Compston, Mindy Findley aad Schneider,

Rid12 79, To'NIOI'I St. 78

EASTERN CONFERENCE

SVAC cage standings

(C011fereace-ftnal)
Southem ............ l2 2 1065
Oak HiU ............ 12 2 998
Hannan TIIICC .... IO 4 943
North Gallia ........8 6 938
Eastern ................7 1 925
Symmes Valley ...4 10 817
Kyger Creek ........4 10 171
Southwestem .......O 14 728
TOTALS
56 56 7185

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

In other games Sunday, No. 21ndiana beat Illinois
76-70, Maryland beat No. 10 North carolina 82-80,
No. II Kentucky beat Vanderbilt 80-56 and Seton
Hall beat No. 24 Connecticut 77-64.
On Saturday, Arizona beat Oregon State 70-62,
Kansas State beat No. 6 Missouri 73-(f}, No. 8 Ohio
State beat No. 12 Michi~an State 78-65, No. 9
Arkansas beat Mississippi State 84-76, Louisiana
State beat No. 16 Alabama 73-65, No. 18 Georgetown beat Boston College 76-60, No. 19 Cincinnati
beat Alabama-Birmingham 63-58, Notre Dame beat
No. 20 St. John's 79-70,.No. 21 DePaul beat St.
Louis 88-71, No. 22 Syracuse beat Miami 68-63 and
No. 25 Nebraska beat Colorado 84-70.
· No: 2 Indiana 76, Dlinois 70 - Damon Bailey's
three foul shots in the final 28 seconds helped the
Hoosiers (21-4, 12-2) win at home and hold onto a
one-game lead in the Big Ten over Ohio State. The
lllini closed to 73-67 with SO seconds left, prompting
Indiana coach Bob Knight to yell at his team to get
back on the coun.after a timeout
Marylaad 82, No. 10 North Caroliaa 80- Walt
Williams tipped in a miss with 1.3 seconds left and
Maryland sent visiting North Carolina to its fourth
straight loss.
The Tar Heels (18-7, 8-6 ACC) trailed 51-29 at
halftime before chipping away. Maryland's Ever
Burns missed a shon lurnper, but Williams, who had
28 points, scored on h1s second tip-in try.
No. 11 Kentucky 80, Vaaderbilt 56 - Jamal
Mashburn hit five of six three-point shots and scored
a career-high 34 points as the Wildcats (22-5, 11-3)
clinched the SEC Eastern Division title ..Kentucky
won its 16th straight at home against Vanderbilt
Seton HaU 77, No. 24 Connecticut '4 - Bryan
Caver, excluded from the staning lineup because he
violated team rules, scored 11 straight points in the
second half and fmished with 18 for Seton Hall (187, 10-6 Big East). The Huskies (17-8, 8-8) have lost
seven of eight.
Saturday's games
No. 5 Arizoaa 70, Oregoa St. 62 -The visiting
Wildcats (22-4, ll-3) scored 12 straight points midway through the second half to rally from a 54-51

Scor·eboard

Pbocni.1ll4. Uuh 109

(Overall)
Team
W L
Oak Hill ... :........ 16 6
Southern ..- ...... 14 7
Eastern .............. 11 10
North Gallla..... 10 10
Hannan TIIICC .... 10 II
Kyger Creek........8 13
Symmes Valley ...6 15
Southwestern,..... .2 19

Coach Mike Knyzewski wanted his team to get
ready for different styles and difficult settings - and
winning in Los Angeles served both purposes. Duke
(23-2) sent UCLA (21-4) to its third straight loss in
front of 13,023 fans, the largest crowd ever at Pluley
Pavilion.
Laettner led Duke with 29 pOints and 13 rebouads.
His three-pointer with 2:32 left began a game-closing
14-4 run as the Blue Devils broke open a 61-61
game.
Tracy Murray scored 22 points and Don MacLean
had 20 points and 10 .rebounds for the Bruins.

TVC RESERVE CHAMPS - The Meigs
Marauder girls reserve basketball team, uader
the directloa or bead coach Beth Schaeider,
made It a cleaa sweep In Klrls basketball for the
Marauders by clammg the Trl-Valley Confereoce championship. Tbe teani rmisbed with a 131 mark overall and an 11·1 mark Ia the TVC.

North Gallia hands Eastern 64-571oss
open court halfway between the
halfcoun stripe and the hoop with
2:57 left. McClure came in for
Peck at that point.
In the next 38 seconds, the raptors got a layup from Durst (2:45)
and a pair of free throws from
Charlie Bissell (2: 19) made necessary because of Hunt's fourth fo~l.
With Eastern down 55-51 at this
point, the Pirates could ill afford
missed free throws, which is what
happened when senior point guard
Darin Smith failed to cash in on
Durst's third foul on a one-and-one
situation with 2:16 left But North
Gallia, which played man-to-man
defense throughout, put that defense to maximal use when Hunt
picked off Pat Newland's pass with
2:08 left. That set up McCarley's
layup 11 seconds later that gave the
sailors a 57-51 lead.
The Eagles made things interesting when they followed McCarley's layup - a basket that gave
North Gallia a 60-53 lead with 1:09
left - with a three-spot frQm be-

Ohio

Top-ranked Duke posts 75-65 victory over No.4 UCLA

Monday, March 2, 1992
Page-4

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
Howie Caldwell ' s Southern
Tornadoes, who barely clung to a
three-point lead at the end of the
first quarter against a hustling
Kyger Creek squad in the second
game of Saturday afternoon's Division IV sectional tournament game
at the University of Rio Grande's
Lyne Center, took charge in the
second quarter and went on to post
a 76-36 victory.
'
· The decisiOn gave the Tornadoes (14'7) the right to face North
Gallia in the upper-bracket sectional finals on Friday, March 6 at 6:30
p.m.
The Bobcats put the game's first
six points on the board on a pair of
free throws by senior shooting
guard Craig Kingery (7:19), a baseline jumper by senior center Phil
Bradbury (6:33) and a 13-foot
jumper from the right wing by. senior point guard Marc Villanueva
(5:35). The Tornadoes got on the
board 10 second~ after Villanueva's bucket when junior guard
Mark Allen took a Jeremy Roush
pass and scored on a layup.
Bradbury answered with a leftside baseline jumper with 4:43 left
in act one to give Kyger Creek an
8-2 lead. But the Tornadoes reeled

Pomeroy~lddleport,

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·T he Daily Sentinel
Monday, March 2, 1992
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Pag&amp;-:-S

Drunk driver tells his ;
story, from a wheelchair .

Your Social Security
Social Security benefits that may
be payable 10 a spouse or widow. It
requires that a direct offset be used,
which essentially prevents a person
from getting a hefty government
pension AND a dependent's benefit
from Social Security. Spouse's
benefits were meant to be paid to
people financially dependent on
their husbands or wives, not to people who worked for a government
. agency and earned a pension.'
As I noted earlier, most workers
affected by these laws are State and
local government employees who
paid into pension systems that were
not pan of the Social Security system.
Interestingly, it also includes
federal government workers, such
as myself, who were hired before
1984 and who are part of a pension
plan that is not pan of Social security.
If you faD into these; categories,
you need to know more about lhese
laws.
For more information about
either law, contact our toll-free
number 1-800-772-1213. Ask for
the fact sheet entitled ''Government
Pension Offset" (for government
workers who will also qualify for
Social. Security benefits based on
their husband or wife's work
record), or for the fact sheet entitled "A Pension from Work Not
Covered by Social Security" (for
workers in jobs not under Social
Security who also qualify for
Social Security benefits on their
own work records).

I read the other day that some·
thing like one in every six Ameri·
can workers is employed by either
federal , state or local government.
That fact brought home to me the
importance of two special provisions in Social Security law.
Both provisions apply mostly to
federal, state and local gov&lt;;mment
employees who did NOT pay
Social Security taxes in those jobs.
And it's important 10 know about
these provisions because anyone
who is figuring on getting both full
Social Security benefits and a government pension might have to figure again.
One law, the "windfall elimination provision," affect Social Security retirement and disability benefits. It req~ires th.at we use a modified formula that results in lower
benefits for government employees
who also qualify for Social Security. Timt's because the formula is
geared to giving more generous
Social Security benefits (when
compared to pre-retirement earnings) to lower-paid workers. Due to
a quirk in the formuLa, government
employees were treated as lowerpaid workers and received the generous benefits in addition to their
government pension. The provision
eliminates this windfall.
The other law, called the "government pension offset," affects

Mackay is along Australia's
northeast coast in Queensland.

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) : Gloria Estefan donned a sombrero
and belted out a Colombian dance
standard during a concert for
. 60,000 fans in a soccer stadium.
"Never before has an artist cap·
· tured the hearts of so many
Bogotanos," El Tiempo newspaper
. said Sunday. "This was the best
show ever presented in Colombia."
The concert Friday night was
sold OUL
. Singing in English and Spanish,
: the Cuban-American star and her
· Miami Sound Machine played for
: three straight hours. The crowd
: went wild when Estefan broke into
: the bouncy dance tune "Yo Me
Llama Cumbia," or "My Name is
Cumbia."
Estefan ' s back was broken in
: 1990, when her tour bus was rear: ended by a tractor-trailer. She canceled a year-long tour to recuperate
. and her latest album "Into the
: Light" focused on her recupera·
uon.

LONDON (AP) - Prince
Edward, lhe youngest son of Queen
Elizabeth ll, left Sunday to camp in
the jungles of Brunei and learn
about a rain forest projecL
Edward, 27, plans a four-day
visit to the sultanate, which was
under British protection for nearly
a century before declaring its independence in I984.
The prince will see the Royal
Geographical Society's rain forest
project at Kuala Balalong, a palace
spokesman said. He will travel by
boat, see a field study center and
waiCh logging.
Ed ward also planned to go to
Singapore for enga~ements as
trustee of his father Prince Philip's
Award International Foundation.
NEW YORK (AP) - James
Brown pLans to appear at a benel\t
to raise money for lhe city's beleaguered schoolchildren.
The godfather of soul said Saturday at a news conference that he
hopes other performers will join
him for a "Stop the Violence" festival.
The show, tentatively scheduled
for June, was proposed because
two students were fatally shot
Wednesday at a Brooklyn high
school and a 15·year-old was
arrested.
Brown said he might visit
Thomas Jefferson High School
next week.
"First, I'll tell them to do something with their minds," he said.
"Then the guns won't be around.
Their minds are very important.''
Brown greeted about I 00
youngsters at the New York Hilton.
"I love you because your parents and your grandparents showed
me a long time ago what love was
about," he told them . "They
helped me get out of the ghetto and
make iL"
Brown was paroled from prison
a year ago, after serving two years
for leading police on a car chase
near his home in Beech Island, S.C.

MACKAY, Australia (AP) ; Tammy Wynette collapsed from a
: digestive ailment just 10 minutes
• before a sold-out concert.
The country star was in good
condition Sunday after falling ill
. Saturday, said Wal Bishop, a
: spokesman.
• "I called the doctor but when I
: . ~ot to the dressing room she was
'.JUSt in incredible pain so we
phoned an ambulance," Bishop
said. "I wasn't there when lhe doc~or examined her but they wheeled
1Jcr out with a drip in her ann and a
!(oxy~en) mask, on her way to has·
pita!. '
: Bishop said Wynette's husband
: and manager, George RiiChie, told
· him Wynette had been diagnosed
: with a bile-duct bloclcage and was
: resting comfortably in Mater Hos~ pita!. She was exp~cted to be
; released from the hospual Monday.
• Wynette, 49, was set to perform
~ 36 shows on a five-week tour of
·Australia. There was no immediate
word on the status of lhe tour.

: Harrisonville area news

Lois Christian, NashviUe, Tenn.,
: attended her father's funeral and
: spent a. week with her mother
·
Going to tbe cUpel
: before returning home.
· Lonnie Bolin, who had major
: surgery, is slowiJU! improving at
In 1890, the estimated median age
; home.
at first marriage was 26.t years lor
• Mr. and Mrs. Bob Afkire visited men and 22.0 years lor women. At
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Dan that time, a decline in the median age
•' Sydensnicker.• Mason,, W.Va. .
at first marriage began that did not
end until 1956, when the median
i . Mrs. Paulme Atkins entertained reached 'a low of 22.5 years lor men
::the lflnd-A-Hand on .Wednesday and 20.1 years .(or women. The 66~venmg. There were nme members year decline was reversed between
: and one guest present.
1956 and 1990, as the median returned
' Mr. and Mrs •.Gary Foley and to the t89lllevel ol26.1 years lor men
grandson of Syracuse were recent · and an even higher 23.6 median lor
gues~ of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mahr. · women.

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!Community Lenten.services slated

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i• i POMEROY- The Pomtioy 11te1 preaching; March 26 at 7:30p.m. at
•churc(lel will be fathering for a Sacred Heart CatOOlic Chun:b wit)t

ls,

Rev. Roger OniCe preachinJ; A~
2 at 7:30 P·'!l· ll tbc l'omc:IOy Umted1fi:tethodtst Church .wi'h R~v.
Willitln Hobar.k llf'*hin1; April. 9
at 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Churc~ with Rey. Gl~n McCiuiiJ

seriei of Communtl)' Lenten Ser-

vim beginning Thunday; March
at·7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
' atun:b of tbc N~ with Rev.
~ Shreffttt preaching.
· . ·~~ cond.Jiues March 12
~ 7: ·p.m. at TriDity CcmiJcga- ~g.
: ' , ··
CbllfCb wilh Rev. Laura · Tbe communi.ty umvlted to
pru:bina: f!Wc)l 19 at • observe the Lenll'll season with the
• ,,f ;lll. It Oraee Bpls.copal 11te1 churches In - wonhip IIIII'·
un:fl with•Rev• .Kril Trcmtong vices.
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TAl CIH CH'UAN - Eric Chambers, loternatlonallnstruetor,

practices tbe Tai Chi Ch'uan posture called "playing the pipa."
Tbis is ooe or tbe postures which will be taught in the Middleport
Arts Couodl Symposium on Chinese Tal Chi Cb'uan to be beld
during the month or March.

Middleport Arts Council
offers special symposium
MIDDLEPORT • During the the elephanL Feeling the trunk, one
month of March, the Middleport said it was like a great python:
Arts Council will be offering a another touching the ear described
unique symposium on the cLassical the elephant as a large leaf; still
Chinese movements of Yang Style another touched the animal's side
and said it was like a wall; and
Tai Chi Ch'uan.
On Thursday evenings, March finally, cluiChing a leg, one blind
12, 10 and 26 from 7 to 8 p.m., man said an elephant was like a
Eric Chambers will offer an intro- trunk or a tree. Thus it is with Tai
duction into the basic postures of Chi Ch 'uan. It is a larger phenomenon than a single experience
Tai Chi Ch'uan.
or
observation.
The world often misunderstands
No experience in the martial arts
Tai Chi Ch'uan, says Chambers.
Even its name is often improperly is necessary; neither is one required
interpreted. Its translation is the to be athletically inclined nor have
"Supreme Pole Fist" which leads an understanding of oriental philos·
people to believe Tai Chi Ch'uan to ophy or Chinese culture. A nominal
be solely a martial art practiced fee of $15 will provide admission
only for defense and combat. Con- for all three sessions. For further
trary 10 occidental belief, the "fist" information call 992-2675 or 992in Chinese ideology is a symbol for 7733.
Eric Chambers has studied variknowledge rather than for conllicL
Many people have witnessed the ous mania! arts and philosophies
practice ofTai Chi Ch'uan and per- for over 20 'years including fullceived it as a healthful form of contact Bando-ryu lcickboxing
exercise for the elderly. Still others under Dr. Maung Gyi, Tomiki
see its slow, rhythmic movements Aikido with Sensei Marritt
as a form of "moving meditation" Stevens, third Dan, Wu Style Tai
or chi kung. Tai Chi Ch' uan is all Chi with Sifu Patty Rudiger and
of these things and much more, say Yang Style Tai Chi with Dr. James
Tong. In addition to his studies in
Chambers.
To say that the practice of Tai America, Chambers has traveled to
Chi Ch' uan is merely any one of Beijing, China to study Wushu
these characterizations is to be like Sword Techniques under Prof.
the "blind Hindu men" who were Feng, Bao-Shu.
He regularly teaches Tai Chi
asked to describe an elephant
through the sense of touch.
Ch'uan for the Ohio University
Depending upon where each Communiversity, Marietta Meta·
man was standing, each one had physical Society, and lectures on
only a very narrow perspective of "Applied Principles of Tai Chi
Ch'uan an Taoism" for Dr. Gene
Blocker with the Philosophy
Department of Ohio University.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah and Matthew, Texas Road ,
By CLARICE ALLEN
were Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Haning and Ronald.
Jerry Cleland, Walters, Okla.;
· Mr . and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Davis
and Elfrieda
Langsville; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Covert, Gewitch
Lawton,
Okla.; have
Knapp, Mrs. Kevin Knapp,
to
their
homes
having
returned
Michelle, Amy and Ashley, Karl
been
called
here
by
the
death
of
Knapp and Tonda Salser were FriV
em
on
Cleland.
Others
here
from
day evening visitors of Naomi
were Rev, and Mrs. David
Smith. They enjoyed a birthday away
Tys10ger
and son, Joshua,
supper with pizza, chips, cake and
Kingsport,
Tn
.; Aniber McCain,
ice cream. Mrs. Smith celebrated
Parkersburg,
W.Va.;
and Mr. and
her 72nd birthday.
Mrs.
Dieter
GewiiCh,
Columbus.
Melissa Darnell and Naomi
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Horton and
Smith were Sunday visitors of
daughter,
Elizabeth, Columbus,
Dorothy Reeves.
Ashli Davis was a Friday spent a weekend with Opal
overnight guest of her grandmoth· Eichinger. Joining them on Sunday
for dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Don
er, Ida Murphy.
Eichinger,
and Justin, VinMirinda Davis was a Saturday cent; and Tiffany
Mr.
and
Mrs. Dennis
overnight guest of her grandmoth- Eichinger and son,
Dane,
er, Ida Murphy.
Reedsville.
Afternoon
callers
Sunday visitors of Ida Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Tom Nice, local. were
were Barbara and Joshua Davis and
Roy Christy has rotumed home
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole.
after spending several weeks with
his sisters, Mr. and Mrs. Don Matlack, Lake Wprth, Fla.

Dear Ano Laaders: Today I
read the leuer from the 18-year-old
who drove home drunk and couldn\
even remember it When he sobered
up he vowed never to drive drunk
again.
How fortunate he was to have had
the chance 10 make that decision.
Several years ago I left a bar so
drunk I had difficulty walking. On
the way home, I rolled my car and
broke my neck, severing my spinal
cord I'm thankful I was alone and
didn't have any passengers. I'm also
thankful that I didn't hit another car
and murder a carload of innocent
people.
I spent my 21st birthday in
surgery. The surgeons took two
inches of bone from my hip and
fused it to a vertebra of my neck.
My family spent the next six months
visiting me at the rehabilitation
center. I am now paralyzed from lhe
neck down and am confined to an
electric wheelchair. My fingers and
legs will always be paralyzed no
matter how much rehab I have. I am
typing this letter with an adaptive
device that helps hold my wrist and
hand in place. On the end of the
device is a wooden stick that I use
as a finger:
For a very long time I was
depressed and miserable. Life had
absolutely no meaning. It took
several years before I quit planning
my suicide. My life and the lives of
all my family members have been
changed beyond the average person's
comprehension and it happened in a
split second. One minute I was
healthy and whole and then all of a
sudden I find myself confined for
the rest of my life to a wheelchair -unable to shower myself, dress
myself, curl my hair, put on my
shoes, prepare a meal or hold my
darling niece. And all this happened
because I was drunk when I got
behind that wheel.
The only advice I'm qualified to
give is this: If you see a friend who
is intoxicated, be a real friend and
drive him or her home. That's the
grealest gift you can
.. D.S.,

CAIRO, Egypt - Hoping to
avoid U.N, sanctions, Libya has
· agreed to allow a "neutral country" to J,JUt on nia1 the two Libyans
wanted m the bombing of Pan Am
Fl!g.ht 103, tbe country's foreign
miiUSter

'neutral country' can have terrorist suspects

Last month, the U.N. Security
Council backed U.S. and British
demands for the mens' extradition.
The council told Libya it could face
trade sanctions if it defies the resolution.
·
Russian

Andrei Kozyrev, whom met
Libya's foreign minister in Cairo
over the weekend in a mediating
role, suggested the two suspects be
handed over to the United Nations.
The alleged Libyan intelligence
agents were indicted in the Dectm-

Days
ADEL,IOWA
DEAR IOWA: Your letter is
powerful and moving. I'm sure you
l!lade a· heavy impact on a great
many readers today. Thank you for
the time and effort il took 1o write
this letter. Believe me, it was worth
il
Dear Ann Landers: Some time
ago you printed a letter from a
woman who was upset when
someone used a key to scratch
her new car while she was out
shopping . The woman said she
couldn't understand why anyone
would do such a thing.
Well, here's a possible explanation. I went shopping today and the
parking lot I usually use was fulL I
noticed that several cars were parked
across two spaces. Apparently these
idiots were afraid that someone
might nick their precious paint jobs
by parking too close and they didn't
care how much room they took.
In the next parking lot I found
four cars parked horizontally. By that
time I was tempted 1o use a key
on all these space hogs myself.
Although I didn't give in to tbe
temptation, I certainly un~
how a person could be so angry f
the piggishness of those drivers that
he (or she) was detennined to 'gfi
even." Please don't print my narn&lt;,
Ann. Just sign me .. A POX ON
THE HOGS IN DALLAS
~
DEAR POX: Plenty of molorist$
will identify with your letter. Dalla)
isn't the only city that has parlcinf;
hogs. Wouldn't it bC: wonderful if a
goodly number of them saw youi'
letter and decided to shape up -- if
for no beaer reason than to keep
their cars from being scraiChed? •

Call 992-2156

Tuesday Paper .
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper '
Sunday Paper

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

POUCIES
• Ad. outlide Callia, Maton or Meig• counlie.t mall be prepaid

446-CeiUpoUo

Jn Memorialh

Yud Sate.

367-Cbeobire
388-Vinlon
245-Rio Grandt~
256-Guyoo Diol.

• A cl... ifted acherti~ement placed in the Galllpolil Daily
Tribuoe (except Clauifoed Dioplay, BuoiDea Card or Le,al

643-Arabia Di11.
379-Walaul

Notic:ea) will abo appear in the Point Pleuant Regi.ter and

the Daily Sentinel, re~chint: onr 18,000' hornet

'

992-Mlddleporlf
Pomeroy
985-Che•ter
8•13-Portland
247-L.lart FoUo
949-Raeine
742-Rutland

675-Pt. Pleaunl
458-Leoa
576-Applo Grove
773-Muon
882-New Jla.,ea
895-I..IOrl
937-BuiTolo

1 667 -CoohiUe

le heraby iuntllded to rNCI
Bldt will be rocolvacl by ulollowa:
the Vlhgtl otllcldltport In
The C011tr110tor'a Ioiii
tilt office of tile Mayor, monthly clwgt thlll be the
Vllhtge Hall, Middleport, equiv1lallt of the number ol
Ohio until 4 P.ll. ...oh 23, r.. lclenUel dwelling unite
1112 lor tho following ..rvloed inultiplied by
·• - equlpm111t
$8.15. The number of unlll
1 - 1141 8Mgr1Vt Fire tervacl ehll be at IHat the
Pu111par, open cab, 500 e1me 11 thi number ol
QPII, Serial No. C 1030.
active r•Iclentlll Wiler
. lllnlmum bid t2IOO.
eorvlce
within the
• For lurthor llllarmlllon; or corpor1te II mill of the
·to mike 111 ..,oontment to VUiage ot lllddleport 11 the
·IMpocllllt vehicle, ph- botllnnlng of lht month lor
. Ftro Chlaf Jeff Olrat II 1· whfch ohergt II mad&amp; E110h
114-tt2·7112 or t .. t4·il2· ....lclenll•l unit ahall
. 7118. Phone llfttr 5 P.M.
coneUtute a ouelom• lor
The own• r•orv11 tile billing purp- lnclutlng
right to . . lllf or .. bldt any dwelling unft l001tacl
and to w1lvo anv within the Vlll.ge truot mav
lnlonnelldee or lnegutar- be on walw other th1111 llat
ld• In bldl.
• euppllad by the vUIIlge.
·
~ Holfrnan,lllyor Sea. fl. The! thlt I
Village olllldclopcrt, Oh. ordln1nc• 11 hereby cle(3) 2, t, 2lo
ataracl to be 1111 1111•ganay
In order th1t the roefdtnll
of Middleport may hne
Public Notice
continued tr..h pickup
e.-vloe clue 1o lnorNeacl
•
•· ORDINANCE NO. 12$4-12 tandllll cotta llld lo prollal
'An~ 10 Anltndthe lht health and welfare ol
. Bolclw.lo Dlllpcelll

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DENTAL PRESENTATION • Students at Cbester Elementary ,
were treated to a dental presenllitloo on Friday. Pam Diddle, lel't, :
dental. assistant, and Amy Harrison, studylog to be a dental ·
hygienist, spoke to tbe studealll about proper Rossing, brushing
and the causes or tootb decay. Toothbrushes were presented to stu·
deots or the rourtb grade class.

ANDERSON'S

t ,... . Contnlctwllh

WALLPAPER
SALE

rMkllnlll oil I I ' 1 art
Sec. IH. Thlt Orcln1111ce
lhlll lib IIIICt Md be In

; lllllla(e Tnth IIIYice
• Bo It ·ordained by tho lorcolrorn and 111tr Feb. t,
(:o..,oll of ltlo VlllllfiO of 1H2.
llldcl1part• tat~:
Paancl the 27th cloy of
• .... L Thllloallon IX ol JllRUifY, 1tt2.
ihe Sollcl
Dlepoeol AltHt Jon P.lluclc, Citric
Servia• Contract betwNn
Dlwov M. Horton
lht VlllllfiO of Mldclleport
Pnaklont ol Counoll
flnd llllllay'e 'II'Mh Sorvlce (3) 2, Ito

w...

POM.~~~Y, OHIO

a,. ·

.......
•

.L

I

.
fMIIOl ,

I .

'

.,

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE ·
FOR SALE
Call 614-992·6637
St. Rt. 7
C.es.ire, OH.
1

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M•.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory

Henry E. atl...t...............................................IH ...111
Tracy ~n.-.•.,,,_,,_,_..,,...........,_,,............148-2438
J11n TrueaeiL..~ .... _,,,,_,,..................- ........Mt.2110
Offtc&amp;..............................._ ...............................lt2·2251

I

Cho~e

.

Read the Best Seller

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

..........

eGarar.•
····•••lttg
Sto~ &amp;Co=art
, F EE ESTI
ES
985·4473
667·6179

•Co•p tte

EXCAVATING

Read the

qup
Wanted to Buy

1\1 · \1\1&gt;
41- Ho..., for Renl
4%- Mobile Ho1nu lor Rent
43-- Farnu for Rent
44-- Apartment for Rent
4$- Fun~ilbed Room•
46-- Space for Rent
47- Waa&amp;ed to Rent
48-- Equipmeat for Rent ,
'49-For Loa..

u.u....

Hoy&amp;Gr..,
Seed &amp; Ferllliler

Au,.. lor S.le
Truck• for Sale
Varw &amp; 4 WD'a
Motorcycle.
Boab &amp; Moton for

Sale

Auto Peru &amp; Aece.&gt;oori•"l
Repair
C.mpia1 Equip-ol

1- •\ulO

\Ill\&lt; 11\\IJI,I·

1~ ln1urance

14- 81.Uine11 Trainins
JS- School• &amp; hutruction
16- Radto, TV &amp; CD Repair

17- Miat:ellaneoUI

COUNTRY MOilLE HOME
S llce ..... lloMS ler ••
.htst Nor1lt of ,..,.., ·
Stllllillll '225 I* •o.
,. '14-992-5521
trSIH227
23

51- Houtohold Good.
52- Sp&lt;&gt;rlia! Good.
5:1-Anliq...
54- Miac. Mel-thandlae
55- B..ildi"'J Suppli"

TRIY-11£1
Our SJ&gt;rlniiiWfoo- Of

Ov S..... II&gt;J,oa... Of

rn-.,.ndt "1\Den Naw Ia !koek.

'noay-Bik '1\Den Now Ia Sloek.
ro 1&amp;1' Local 'l!.!%·• o..ler

It lO Wost, llloor, Olio •lll-311!

It lO Wtst, Alltll. Olio •ll3-3tll
2I20IV2I3 mo.

r....mmt~~·

WArfflflJ'$

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashatt Buildi•g
EVERY
SAt NJGHJ
6:30P.M•
Starting Sept. 28

OR
3N15 Gold Ridge A~
Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;$

Welcome Slates
$20.00

FaclorJ Choke

12 Gauge Sllolgu• Onlr

Cuatom Plllndngt
614-HZ-2242

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Specializing In Custom
Frame Re~alr
NEW &amp;USED ARTS
MAKES
• FOR&amp;Ail
MODELS
992·7013 or

992·5553

OR TOLl FREE

1·800·841·0070
DIIWIN, OHIO

Strlctlr Enforced
9·13-'91·tln

2-3·'92·1

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New liomes • Vi1yl Sidiag
Hew Garages • Replactmeat Wittdows
Roo• ldditioas • Roofiag
COMMDlCIAt and RESmENI'JAL
FREi: ESTIMA'nS

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(lo Suttdar Calls)
21121112

7/31f91/dn

SUN'S UP
JANNING
llewU•Iolll
In lltl1ntl

CAll 742·2771

'25.00
15Stsllo1L
12 Ststlllt.---'20.00
6 S.stllls..---'12.00
'3.50
1Ststlll "

Fill SESSION WITH MRY
IENEWAL
SnerllllHsell.ttlols
sa WOlfE tms
21t7/l mo,

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAl
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD.TIES
6·12·90·tfn

J&amp;L

INSULATION
IUIEIKIESU

RDS

rRDY-BI£1'

GUN SHOOT

•VInyl Siding
•R:/:Iacement
In dow
··Roof=e
olniul on

"

'

(alf·~·····
2-1•

WHAT DO YOU DO IF YOU WANT 10
LIST YOUR HOllE?
FIRST: C1ll Clol1nd RNity. We hne prolnalonal
people to han ella the Hadngllld •• or your home.
SECOND: W. wiU lldvortlae, ahow end 1nowor 111
qu•Uon• oonOtmlng your property, ·
THIRD: You tlmply tel b1ek 1rid let ue h1ndte
Vtl)'thlng 1nd blot of 1fl. , .You don't pay ua 1 cent
unite• the property It eoldl Sound -vi It lei Give ue
1 Clllll vou •• ...touellllout ulllngl

~

•,,•

r....-...

POMEROY -2 slory block homo, 3 BAs, large Iron!
.pcrt:h. Homo In good condition.
StUOO.

"
~

M11;!itl... '"'

MIDDLEPORT - Ramodelad 1112 slory homo. Good
location, fenced yard, 3 BRs, storage building, closet
space.
Sti,!500.

•'

·'

18- Wanted To Do

Eq..W""• rA.

PLEASANT RIDGE - 1112 story homo 3-4 BRa, on two
lob of 50x100 each.
Aaklng $21,000.

""

•"

9- Wanted ~ Buy

. . . ,.........1.

POMEROY - 1% story heme 3-4 BAs, on two lots of
50x100 each.
Asking $14,540.

·~

f

12- Situation~ Wanted

Hrs. 1-10 ... tlru Sat.
NEW SCA WOLFF lED 24Sl

LETART -Remodeled 2 otcry home, 3 BAs, 2 act~~• ct
level ground, large stra\Wtny palch.
S2t,IOO.

'

KARL .KEllER Ill, ·C.P.A•.

II- Help ll'ented

4--Gi.,eaway
5- Happy Ado
6--lmt and Found
7-lmt and Found
8- Public Sole &amp;
Auction

POMEROY· Handicapped accessible home with 3 BRa,
firaplace, basement, l~~~g~ kilchen.
$34,100.

".,

IAL

I 11:\l&gt;l 1'1'111"
,\ I I\ I " I I II 1,

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
===::-=----1 36- Real Eotale Wanted

3- Announcement..

v.p.u1oo

511- For Selo or Tredo

742·2341
15 Sessions.- '25
Plus 1 FREE

NEW LISTING - Portland-Wells Run Rd. 1 floor frame on
2.81 ecru
S8,500. MAKE AN OFFER!

Public Notice

sa- r..

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

Business Services

992·2259
608 £ASlft1AIN

Peb for Sale
57- MuiealiDilrUJMrd•
ib &amp;

33- Farnu for Sale
34- 8 .,.i_, Buildinp
35- Lo1a &amp; A, .....,

I Ya MI. out New
ll•• Rd.
Rutl11d, o•lo

_..,II

'

.

Bishart .did not mention what
counnies Libya prqiOSCS 1o handle
tbe case.
Kozyrev, who met earlier with
Bishari, said he urged Libya to
with UN. resolutions.

$ .20

$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

PUBUC NOnCE

,'\.

$ 4.00

15
15
15
15
15

ttOWOPEtt

DOGWOOD LOFT
GIFT SHOP
10 E. Horton St., Mason, WV.
Open window collection of
miniature houses have arrived.
Hrs: Tues. -sat. 1Q:30-5p.m.
304-n3-5037

Public Notice

I
3
6
10
Monthly

Real Estate General

BU LLETt~ BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

NEW USTING - ForHI Run Rd. Older 1 floor !ramo
home 4 rooms, 2 BAs, on 2.29 llC!liS of land.
Aaklng S24,t00.

Registered Representative
IRA's * SEP IRA's
MUTUAL FUNDS * UIT's

Abdel-Me~d.

Over 15 Words

GaUia Counly Meigo County ~!aeon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

day after publication to make correction
• Ad. that MUll be paid in advance are:

Happy Ad.

Words Rate

GET RESULTS ~ FASTr

CLusifU,d pages cover the
foUowing telephone exchanges ...

• Reeeift diacounl for ad. paid in advanc:e.
• Free Ad.: Gilleaway and Found ad. uDder 15 wordt will be
rUII3 day• at no charse.
• Price olad for all capitalletten it double prM:e of ad e01t
• 1 point liae type only uted
• Tribune il not reapontible for error• alter lirtl day (check
forerrora full day ad runt in p.per). CaD bofore 2:00p.m.

Cerd of Thanlu

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1 :00 p.m. Saturday
. 1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Th\111iday
1:00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper

SIT,!500.

111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGlNTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

and hopes that the U.N. Security
Council will not make any resolutions aP,iJtst Libya," Libya's for·
eign mmisw, I1nbim Bishari, said
Sunday after meeting with Arab
League Secretary-General Esmat

RATES

3 BAs, 2 baths. Many, many added featui8S.

INSURANCE

bcr 1988 bombing cif tbe New
York·bound jediner over Lockerbie, Scotland, which claimed 270
lives.
•
"Libya is ready to hand over the
two suspects for nia1 in front of a
neutral court in any neutral country

"lt91, LotAaa:ele~~
Thn'"SyodiCreakn Syndicate.''

NEW LISTING - Beautiful log homo on 4 acras. Includes

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

H.D. VEST F
SERVICES

··

.

Ann
Landers

Chester area news

MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
port Arts Council will offer ballroom dance classes beginning
Wednesday, March 18 at 7:30p.m.
for advanced dancers and at 8:30 ·
p.m. for beginners. The cost is $7
per session. To register call 9922675. .

~Libya ~ays

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

•The Area's Number I·
Marketplace

Wolf Pen area news

Ballroom darice
lessons offered

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

'

By The Bend

By Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens

Monday; March 2, 1992

992· 772or
742·2097

Sst Bryan PIHe
Middleport, Ohio '
1I

·ft::srBf.
.,.,...,~

Air Conditioner&amp;
&amp; Heat Pwnpe

•1 00% 2 year parts &amp;labor warranty .
•1 0 yr. heat pu1f41 coiJllresser warranty
•Free estimates

Bennetts Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
13915aflln SdH U
G hl1, Oltlt
(II

446-9416 wl-100-172-59~7

POLE BUILDING
MATERIALS

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

Cut To Ltng,.

New Home1,
Additiona, SI!!Ing,
Pol.e Bams, P1Intlng,

I~RIIIMital

1 WIEI DELMRY

c..!:l....
c.Iors
tHai
AaittMifts

BlUM
LUMBER CO.
CHESlER

Garal"•
Porch11
FR ESnMATIS

614·742-3090 or
304·773·9545
mo.

NO SUNDAY CALLS
2114f9211 mo.

.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS &amp; · •
HOME SITES
HAULING: Umellone,
Dirt, Gmel and Coli
Ucen~tcl~nd Bo'*'l

'"· 614-992·5591
12-6-tfn

TROMM
BUILDERS
-New ConltrUctlon
-Ramoclelng
-Ciblnll Work .
-carnmwclll- ,
Aeelctentlll
FREE Efn~TEB·
20YMN

6

�·Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
21

Announcements

3

Opponuntty
Comt&gt;~«or g-llod portroll
buol,... 1ai ulo: Sllto at tho
ort II(UI-nl, Including: Ink Ill
printer, COlor vklao c•me111, 6

Announcements

UE~ SINGLE GIRLS
In Your l.ocol Anta. 1·800-407·
1004, $2.9!5/mln. Uu11 Bo ovor
11, Fonpololrvlno CA.

Olur~~lle,

Pharmacy.
Unottochod? MMt Aroa Slngloo
Throuah OUr Slnglll !IIWIIOI•
1M3, Golllpollo, Ohio 4S631.
Wldo-, !loljro old, rod hoi~

Rntaur11nt Equipment, Table
And Chalre. let Machine, 8 Ft.
Wllk In Coolor, Goo Grill,
Athigtrator, Prtp. Table, Plut
lt~m1. 114-446-e157 Aflar 5p.m.
VENDING ROOTE: Gil Rich
Quick? No Way! But Wt Have A
Good, Sloody, Affordobla, Buolntll, Won't Last. 1-800-284·
8383.
Vending Routt: Local. We Htvt
The Ntwelt Machines, Making A
Nica StNdy Cath Income. 1·
800-985-0364.

ttr. Write: Slnglee, P.O. Box

nttd• a man compinlon

&amp;5to8~

yrs old. I hlvt I 10X45fttr1UII',

2rmllbalh

4

Giveaway

6-pupplel, part Chow, 614·742·

3062
FrH To Good Home; Famale

Dog, Half BloHI Holf B11glo,
Runa Rabbits. 614-24S.t2SI.

"Ma'am we're rodeo bronc busterS. Wll you ask
11\e taPtain to fly through severe turtJUence?"

MagiZines, At1d1rs DlgHI, Na•

•

!lonal Gtographlca. &amp;14e446-8329.

Good Wllh Kldo.l14-258·1713.

11

11

HelpWantad

Mad. Sltt, black/ wtthel tan

male, approx 1yr old, mixed
S3ISOIOAY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE
brood, 61;'1-BV2-3571
CALL YOU.•
Puppies To GIYAWiy: 112 Collie, NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
112 Block Lab. 814-318-9033, At·
1-800.255-G242.

11r6p.m.

White Malt Miniature Husky, $350J01y ptotftsing, phone orApproiC. 2 Y11r1 Old. Phone:- clara! Ptopll Clll you, No IX·
614·256-6028.
g;rfence ntc8111ry. 1-800-25542 ·
Young Brown, Shy, Outdoor Cat,

Hoo Shoto, Jul1 Spojod. To AVON • All 1r111, Coli Ulrllyn

Bood Aural Homo Only. 614-446- Woovor 304-882·2145.

Uool: Addison Vlclnlly, Blazer

Po-oy Nurolng &amp; Rohab.
Contor lo Aceopllng Apo
pUcollono For Pott-nmo LPN.
Rolallng Shift Avallablo. Salory
Baud On Y11ro Of Exporlonco.
Excollonl BonoiH Pockogo. Coli
Corol Konowa!alcy, RN, DON For
lnlorvlow Al814-i92-6806. EOE.

1\llniolura All Torrlor, Whlla Wllh

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

!fll7.

Lost &amp; Found

~~:::::;:-;::~-:;::-::::;;:;:-;;;:I

fusT o;eol ring, rvoolblo Big
I lot R WARD 304B
8~2~7 o:'l7s-1540.
'

:;:.::7-77,;;:::-;~:;;::--;;;=
~oad

Area. 112 BHglt And 112

Slack And Brown Patch.., 1 Excelltnt
Pay,
Baneflts,
Year Otd. Very Sm1ll F1male. Tranaport1tlon,
407-292.,.J17,

814-367.a131, 114·317o0324.

Exl. 571. 9o.m.·10p.m.
:;;:•:..=::...;:.:.:::.::..:.~::=~:;:;;:~ 1 Rotundod.

Toll

Help Wanted

Cl.. nlng
HouMkeepers, Nm lo $550wk.,
all ahlfla, pan- time and full·

time, 1~00..22'1.-9207
CONSTRUCTION ALL TRADES
ALL SKILLS
M•Jor lntamallonal Projeets
Must AIIOCIII. Housing And

Tr1vellng Expen ... Paid. Excel·
lent Stllriea And Benetlta. Call
Wookdayo 9 A.M. To 7 P.M. Sun·

do~ Noon To 5 P.M . VICA CORP.
305-93HOJO.

[)rivers

to $550 wkly., PT- FT, all shifts,
ttvll'll openlnga now available,

1-801).327'6389

Euy Work! Exctllant Pay! A•

Hmbtl ProducJa AI Home. Call

Toll Froo, 1-800-467-5566, Ext.
313.
Exparlanctd Carpet Installer,
mutt have own vehicle, tool1,

WV contracttra

llcan~t,

Rat.

26164, "rloualnqulrlaa only

+):,;,;OO;.;P,;;.M;;;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ AVON gooln on lho ground floor

KUWAIT,

1

Yard Sale

~~~,:;,~;rmlng oorucluro.

7 - - - - - - 1 Avon it chlnglngl Mort WIYI to
---:------1
mab morwy! Rapraant•tlvaa
7
wanted, frH gift with sign up,
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

coli Koy 614-99'2-7180
Bo on TV mony noodod lor

't:-:C7.'....,;:-,..~;--:~-;::::~ I commercial•. Now hiring all

tdvonoo. DEADLINE: 2:00t.o p.m.
tnt day

LL Yard Sllaa Must Bt Paid In agn. For eal1ing Into 615-179before the ad Is

7!11 oxt T-237.

run.

Sunday odillon • 2:00 p.m.
CLEANING
fCrlday. Monday edition • 2:00 Housekeepers Light Work, Eam
,..ol.m
::.::,:
· S:.:•:::•u~rda::::!.:y.-::=:=-;:= I To $550 Wit. All ShiHo, PT-FT. 1·
:-:
800-221-9207.
Moving S.lt: Furniture, Mini·
bHnda, Curtalna, Lampt, Home
lnlorior ClolhH, Toys, Win- 8
Public Sale
dow., G1usware, Etc:. Routt'T, 7
Mllet Below Eurwktl Dam. Mon&amp;Auction

31

I ~ "'''U 1!£11¥. I'OCll ~
~~TEN~ IJITlt. TH&amp;
A(,£ ~ SS'••.

PJ.it, 1-800.221-9207.

~adt~

needed. S.nd resumes to PO
Box 801 Ravenswood, WY

l'Ll Fl~ nt~AAc.IIIL
5EGORITY '?

Television
Viewing

NO ... IIIJT lrf 'niEH YOU
WILl .G6T USEO TO IIEIII6
f'OOit ...

I . MON.. MARCH 2 I
C11N TV Li111n11

tnc. t:t '1¥0111, 111

0 Rearrange
. lttl.rt of
four acramblod ward• be-

low lo form four olmplo -dJ.
'
.

I BYDHIR
2

1 I I I I

I

EVENING

. .,. Y" "T:r~1-ill
r

·

-r-l

"""ll

·u

Ifyou really loved

me~

she said, "you'd

buy me a doq ."

.
J
1--.P..--O,..R""TD_O...,..-r,:,r

Woman "'"in,.li.ne·a""l"bank: "I'm
still giving money lo my grown
• · children . When does 11 end?"
• "Don't ask me," the man be·
.---~~..o..-..., hind her said, "I'm here cash·
., M U G T E N
ing a check'lrom ........ ,.

So he bought her
a doq .

I

~~~....;,..I;;...,;l,..;;r,:ll.;...,-1-l 8

C:ompl.,. lho chuckl• qUOIO&lt;t
by filling In tho mlaslng -cit
you dovelop from stop No. 3 below.

L.....I.-.L.-L..--1..-.&amp;..__,·

To Sell: $49,900,
Chnhlro, Ohio. 904-932'6959,
904-932-7570, 614-387.()649.
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Home, Upptr
$50's, Located Naar Centenary,
Green Elementary School,
{Gallla County). 614-446-2908.

CLRSSIFIED RDS

Want to:
.PIN down EXTRA
-•

CA8H?H

SCIIAM-LITS ANSWIRS
Hyphen - Basin - Whelp - Nuzzle - ZIP her UP
two fellows were talkin9 about the office romeo. "I
don 'I know how he does it, sighed one fellow, '1he only
thing I've done behind my wife's back is ZIP her UP!"

Flatwood Arta, Pomeroy, Large

Country Home, New Kitchen,
Bath &amp;: Carpeting. Low $30's,

Qualified Buyar. 614-446-2359.

BR.I DOE

Both Skilled &amp; Untkilltd For
Into. Call 615-719-5505 Ext . K·

699 .

PHILLIP
ALDER

We'll poy you 1o 11po nom• &amp;
1,000.

TOOL .
$Hop\

73

63
mobil•
home, 1 mila below town, over-

Complllly

Furnlahtd

looking river. No Pets, CA. 614-

446.0338.
One
and
two
bedroom
aptnmants tor rent. 304-6752053 or 675-4100.
Tara Townhouse Apt. : 2 Br, 2
floor!~,1,160 sq. fett, 1·1f2 bath,
CA, """'• dishwaehar &amp; dlapoeal.
Playground, 2 poola, ltartlng
$309. Eloctrlo n04 Included. 614'
387·7850.

Call ahtr 2:00 p.m., 304·7TJ-

5651, Mason WV.

18

fln1nclng tt $101.46 per monlh

~. til

46 Space lor Rent
Bualnna property, pnvloualy
busy physicians office, 501 S.

Third Avo. Ulddlopor1, Lg.
offlcn &amp; yord, 814-1185-4231

49

For Lease

Second Floor Apirtment For
Leatt: L.A., One B.A., Bath,

thr11 lots. 304-675- KHchon WI . Stovo &amp; Rolrlg.
Water Fumlthld. No Pats. Cor·
nor Socond &amp; Plno" Galllpollo.

Wantadto Do

Trailer lot tor rent. Wtttr, ttwtr
tnd Slnitldon Included. $110 $230. Ptr Month; uepoalt A•
Will BabyoH In U1 Homo. Rod· monlh. 30Hl'5-1806 or 575-5037. qulrod. Coli 614-44e-1249, 614·
448·2325, Or 114-448-4425.
ney Ar11. Rtftrtncea Avalltbll.
Coll114o245-5817.
'
Tobacco poundago, Uolgo eo.,
Rentals
E I R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
calll14-992·5533 oftor lpm
Trimming, Trtt Removal, Hedc:it
Trimming, Fr11 Utlmattsl

387-71151.'

Tum your clutter into cash,
Sell it the easy way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
'' Plac'e your classified ad today!
15 word&amp; or less, 3 days,
3 paper1,,$6.00
Call our office for paid ill odmn'"' ratetl

1...__..:..--~---

'l·------{

10-----1
2.---- 11
---.:....,...--1
1

s. - - - 4.-------

•-

li4·

41

Expertenctd Mothtr Will Cart
For Your Chlldrtn In Htr Home.
Friendly Almoaphart, Hat Mule
And SnockJ~An1 Shih; O.op-lno
Walcomt, Hia Grandi Ohio
Araa. 114·245-9216.
Goorgn Portoblo Sawmill, don'l
haul your toga to tht mill Just
coll304-6?6-1057.
Have room In my home tor el·
dirty or taka cart of your lov.d·
""" In lhoro homo, doy/ nlghl
lhlfto, 201" nporlonco, coli
onytlmo, 614-MI-3014
Mlaa Pault'a Dly Cll"' Center.
Satoo, otfonloblo, chlldcoro. U.f
6 o.m. • 1:30 p.m. Agoo 21'P10.
Blloro, oftor IICIIcrol. Dn&gt;polna
wolcomo. 614-448-8224. NeW In·
lonl Todd!or Core, 114-441-6227.
Par1enahip dane. lnatrucUon
specializing In one on one lnltructlon, ballroom, country

-om. 1111n, con1omporory,
lroo oljlo. Coli aftor 7:00 PM
130W75-39M lor Anna or Jim.
Rooting, Aomodollng, Room
Addft~, Coli loloro I A.M. Dr
Allor I P.• . l14-2111o411Q.
Wll1 build or - l r flnco, IX•
l*'lenced lftd hiVt rtfttt1101111
M4-4U.1m.
Will Do Bobvallllng In My - ·

In Polrtol Aroo, Dlllo. 114-m'

21121.

Gan_.t

1Niu~ng

Nutrhlon

Producta

elusively at Rita Aid Ph1rmacy.

Hay

Tha aaf• way to dill.
Gr11111~ mowtr tor aaltl, 114-902·

992-2156
446-234
675-1333

for

Salt,

SUS,

call

tYtnlngt, 614... 2-6515

7&amp;53

Transportation

Kenwood
Rtct~lvar
With
Remote; Kenwood C.D. Player,

Merchandise

Houses for Rent

IIOVI1

rt~tor,

wuher I drytr, dlntttt all, 304-773-115116 or 773-5434.
!lOW $1,200, Cluoon, Chony, 10'11

Wavelno Wolorbod; Plilowa,
Sht1..1• Comforter, Man,.u
Covw, ttNttr, Dr~wera. Beat Of.
lor. l14-245-5328.
Aacondlllonod wooftOro &amp;
drytrw, uch t100 •nd up. Wt
llfYico Ill mlkn. Tho WUhor &amp;
Oryor Bh-.114-448-2944.
Surpl~a;, rtnlll, dlnlm tnny
clothing. Frl, Sa~ Sun, NoOfi •
1;00 PM. Slm ~ornarvNio'l, 5
mllll Eoll oll·nr.,Rovonawaod,
WV. by Sandyvtl Pol1 Dlllc_o,
othllr houre-cf1y1, 304·213-61~
Union
odvorilolng
opooloftlu ond mot-.
WATER
WELLS
DRILLED:
WATER CWJRANTEED. 114.aafl.

1983 Buick LoSobro Llmhod,
4dr - n . booutllul lamlly cor,
Ill II(UI-nl, 307 VoO, $19115,
114-1112-61'11

Cougar, Auto, AC,
514-446-1111.

1984 ChovroloC,
auto., air. tiH1
now IIIH, llay
lhorp. Mull -

mt

55
,

v.., 12,200.

::B:-::Ioc~k~.-::br~lc::::k~.~...~w::o~r:::pl::po::a:-,::wl;::n·
doWI, lintels, 1te. Cl1udti Wintill, Rio Grande, OH Call IM-

ALLEYOOP

a

11111
,~· Trl Haoil,
H.P. Johnoon II04or NMd1
Lllllo Repair. SilO. 1i+ZsH111. .

- ·pup,-

76

Auto

ACROSS

==

-•·:e

.,_.-..a

Parts &amp;

Budaot T-lollono Uood a
robulll, llltllng II
whool drl1ro lllrUna oi-Ni.OO"'
114-245-5877, 114-HUZIS.
I•

Pus

Pw · Pus

Opening lead: t 2

79

36BIIItt
mtmtnto
37 Expose to air

for lhort
12 SMile tree
13 Rubllllft
14 StlfofttHm

1-tont"

campers 1o
Motor Homes

.,,

MY UNCt..E NED
1-tA&amp; A NI!.W JO&amp;.
He &amp;.'1'9 He5...

31 Poltnllll
41 Opera prince
42 Age

1s.._ac

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

43 DfbeHir

rock: Vlf•

quality

17 Belonging to
·
him
18 P11ot~r•

CHIEF FOET IN Q-ll.i.RSE
OF EUL..CaiZ.I~

45Munci1M

··~:-e-

r:,;-

MEl-TINa SNOWMEN.

,.

501hmor.t~M

1'111*11
54 llciiMn

18 811111
21
Fllrlf''""
..
23 Goblet part
-241n one'•

Serv1ces

.........
bloiiH

55 FrtqUiflt
58 Br blrlll

rtlklence

81

57-

(2wdl.l

27 Clllm

Home

33 Cllilomll
county

WHAT HAPPENT .
OVER AT TH'

TWO
ILlSSET·
EVENTS II

tSLDRY IE tf
WHAT WAS
THEY?

8 CllooMt
I ForctfuiMta

41tllrn

b1l1ver

DOWIII

34 RldiiiCIHft

7 - FriiiCIIc:O

3 Dec. 110114ar

5I Elploll •

Iaiiier

(flllbr.)

na .eolfegt

belngl

.31 Lllllb'l

BARNEY

2 Nortll Cllotl-

58 lltllpllplcll

30 lofhlend

Improvements

10 Prottc:llon:

5 FrtqlllfiUy

VII.

(PGtL)

1 ConeteiiiHon

1Htur1
18 Cllllln.....

8 FIJingiiUCII

20=111
- _,

ONE WAS A

2211ore

BOY, AN'

TWO--

~I'II"TT~

23 Reprt...lll-

24n=

blllooD't lftlt
25Toi1V
2tFurrlnttl
21 .... - ... ,
llollll-

28 Chtl WI'Oftt
32 Exltt

36 TW1111ng
force

.

.....

'

40 Tflll Of ltork :

43 LoJII
I
44 Two wordto of •
llllfltro

47=
48 J1p1 Ill

Dovta
-VIle
11n1oo,
GmtIW. """" .....
Dlilo.:*kup, WM1 dollwory, IM-

c-

~.

=Q

Wll build pad
. ::::-:..
11114112.

lo

-.

'

.
' ,

411Mttknlft
IIIIIVIIIDbr.
'12 Dowlllnd -

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

.

1i

·
·
82 ' PIIM'ftblng lo
10.

5311111-

tcocktlll)

I

Htltlng

'""' 5AIIIo, "'...""*"

:!!!

Carlor'l ,.... . .
Faullh and P1M
·O;:&gt;UfJ.:"

......,. ,__o_or.
................. . . .
...,·iiooir••--·-·

..

CEUIRITV c•IIER

~CliiiM'·--

84

Ellctrtc:allo
Refrlgii'IIIOn

' K· I D P C J

PG

::..-:.."1:==·
~":::..~~A1
-~

KCU

DIKD'I

I
, . . . . . . . . I ....... - . .
UOO ~ "· Ctmoo;a* ' - homo, UIO. "" - h , Wllor,
..... lid, HI TIJdllo Alii. l'w &amp; 111ift lftOIUdoil, 3M'
...................: 114 ... 1117. m-Mtl,
•I

.,
'r

I

(,

•

II'

!'

"

YiiC,

'

PD

PD

JTDDPCJ

IZeOPCJ

OlllD

LCIO,'

IICU

Y II C

P G

"XTIID

IDKJT

AalllwiOI
.......

"""

u

35 MIIChltVOUI
child

8 llorM doctor,

AI:CIIIOriiS

do- No=:..= •

. - ..h ..... , . . _ and

,.

A•wer to PrftlaYI hlltl

Image

l~::,

p.m.

- -

••

Pus
Paa

Eul

Nor"
INT

The World Almaaac• Croasword Puzzle

IIOATIAS
Guinn• Mw&lt;:U~Y Ulnno Sarvtco.:
Mercury, Merlntr, u.rcnHtr ,
opoollllot. U.rcury cllllflod• .
Mobl'!...,Wo como fo you, 114- .
2!51-61/V,

$4,1100 n1f0o

0

Well
Pus

Sot"
It
Pus

1911 11ft.
- loodod,
- .:
115hp,
Uon:ury
motor,
114-1112·221ton• ...,.

drlvon, oldro

1-

Vulnerable; East-West
Dealer: South

.
. at lnck thn!e. But thai would bave
. risked a fourth round of doamoads roesuiting in a ~rump promotion if East.
baSoud
queethshn·tbirdld lof stpadest . I II
t
ou ry o ge a u coun
of the balld. After the first four tric~
South draws trumps and cashes Ilia
Jut top heart before leading the club
·qu~n; king,.ace. Now the hear~ jack Is
: ruffed in band. Here East s hand
. counts oul He Is known to have started with two spades, ' hree hearts and:
seven dllllllOildJ - therefore only one
club. South leads tbe club ~Yen, fore-..
s~des
·
ing West to cover with tbe etpt. Af1 ·
As tbe cards Jay South could have returning to band with a tntmJf,,Sou,r:
won 10 tricks by dbcardlng a low club fm- dummy's club slz.
Alwavs Ret a count qf the hand.

. ·~

118411odgo Mol, 4 - · block,
AMIFMica-1, 4 cyl, now II•
haYII 1 14-112·72311'!'Minp
1084 Ford LTD Crootnt Vlclorla,
4dr ......., llkl , _1_111 oqulpo
mono, 302- v. a, S21w, 114-1112·
1118

a,,,

"~

75 Boals &amp; Motors
for Sail

AMIFMIIttreo,

2 Ulloo South, Aouto 7, 3 Or 4
245-512t
Bod-mo, 1 Aero, Dockh Now 51
Household
Spoclo~ 1Wo
car gorogoa,
ApP!IonCHy Sc oolo,
24x24da
$3995
24112Tda
Rotoronco, bopoan, $490/Monlh .
Goods
Ply moth Rollonl, no nrl1,
S41H 2'h32xh l4eH, Prnl· ,1184
IM.o446-4to0.
nrno good, porlocl lnlorlor,
lion
Pool
Fromo
Bulldoro,
114;-::-::::--;:-:::==:-;-=:::::-=· 11 ploco Duncon Phil• DR ouHo, 1112-3541
22MPG, . nklng 1850, 114-1112·
2·bclnn hou11, lum, Lincoln Hill, 5 II~ ook DR toblo, 3 ploco
3141
oftor 4P,ft1
Pomeroy,
Pr1VIIt · 1ettlng 19301 LA sulla, call Joan Wolfe,
Utlllly Building, 301401110 10x12
S250mo, 814-985-4256
doy-614·992·2133 or nlghlo014- llldlng
$1199.00, 24140110
2br In Cloy LlmHa. $240 p., 94e-2153
10110 llldlng door $411110.00,
Monlh. PI,. Utlllfloo. 114-446Proclolon Poil Fromo Bulldoro,
Big Sovlngo On All Carpel In 114-lll2·:1541.
01124.
Slock. Cosh And Co1ry, Mol· 1,;.;.;..;;~.;....-:--:-:---19111 Cutlaoo, (442 PK,!!),
3 Bldroom Ronch ·HouH In lohon Corpoll, 114-44&amp;-'11144.
56 Pete for Sale
Loldld, Power, SUnroof, 41,uw
Muon, WV. 1 112 Balh, Fomlly
USED APPLIANCES 1-::--~~====:::: UIIM, Ukl-11,.._7002.
Room WHh Fireplace, Privata, GOOD
dryers, retrtger1tora, Groom lnd SuPI)Iy ShOD-Pel
$380/mo. Wllh 1 Uonlh Dopoolf, Wllht,.,
rangn. Sklggo ApP!Ianaoo, G,_ng, All IM'oodo, olrloa. 1111 Dodao Vlota Mini Yin, oct
1 Roll ronco, 114-441-2a4.
Uppor Rlvor Aa. B111do Slone lamo Pll Food OMlor. Julio · 13,000 mlloo, $3,100. 11117 Cut·
1111 Cloro $3,711. 1HI Ford EIWebb. CIIII14&lt;Mfi.0231.
3 BR ranch, 112 eara llwn. New Ciaot Uot•!. eon 114-441-7311.
COII 11.~ 11117 Joop 4 .-1
homo. Excollonl condHion.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
AKC pupploe, roody to t111111 ...,700. 1m .oiMfl CJ.I
Socurhr dopoalt &amp; rotoroncn Comploto
homo lumlohlngo. 1:if00, F.A: IO!Mium, IMoM7- $3,1100. 1111 C...llor $3,1100.
roqulroil. 30H7H7111 or 3M· Ho41ro: Uon.Sot,
N . tlo4-44fl.
1983 Fonl lla9' 414 bl..
1124111.
...
0322, 3 mllll ou1 8ulavllo Rd. AKC Chi- Pugo, PoldngoM 12.111. 11114 FOrd U
3lor HouM 112· Ullo From Clly
robulll motor outo $3,100. :.;
Froo.::.:.;Doi:,::;::I&gt;-=;•IY,::·====-a
Cockor
lporilolo.
8piclll
Llmllo, G1M11 lchoOI . Dlotrict,
Ford P-210 12.100.
F·110
P1CKENI FURNITURE
~L 304-17W207
Rolllonoo And Dlpoolt Ao1111111 12,1110. ,.., Fonl ..._,
qulrod, 1,....._141 _ollor &amp;p.m.
Houoohold~ng. 112 mi.-~~ lluo
... bod~.1fll
Jorrtcho Ad. Pl. P1-, WV, 1714127·
~h v.,
42 Mobile Hom11
call304-1'71-1410.
l'1lh Tlnll, 141' .,..bon Ave. lyiUoodCori,
torRent
. Pofnl "
~ ..,.,...., 1HI ..........
Solo -,..,, •LI11o """· CMw1 lui 11ne T - 11111 1111111.
·or,
llllllllnim*llllll' it
2 llodroom mobf1o 1tomo com- 81-. flhDril: ..........1401.
11117
..,.,..
.
. ·LI.IIIM m=1,_
pfololy 1umlohod, WI- l
SWAIN
...
-.loNod,
~~ oond, no .polo. 304-. AUCTION a FURNITURL 82
Ottn 11., QOIUpollo. """ a l*d
~
lumllln, hooion. w......
2 lA, lllddlopOot, Ohio. Worll booio, 114-4(Wl..
Aalll11101 t dopooll rll(uirod.
: . . _ 1,700 ... .....,-

t73
tQ7U

Samuel Johnson recommended thai
if someone of uncertain virtue comes
visiting, it Is wise to count the spoons
after be leaves. Jobnson would bave
made a good bridge player, if be could
counl a band too.
West led lite diamond two, East
playing three I'OIIDds of the suit. South
ruffed tbe last, and West overruffed.
Back came a heart. Declarer drew
trumps in two rounds and led the club
I~~:~ekin~ g, ace, five. The club jack
II
but East discarded and West
had 1o score a club trick 1o defeat the
game How could South bave done
belle;?
North's sequence, a forcing one-lt()o
trump response followed by three
spades showed three trumps and 10·
12 pouits. With such sterile dlltribu·
lion and three jacks, this wu an over8tale ent. He sllould bave responded

:w:-

Avellablo. 114-4111-IIIM.

Camoro, rod,

llablo.l~ aftor I

Building
Supplies

()U/../..f'l&gt;

&lt;r-

.

hK

By Pldlllp Alder

WI Buy, Boll, T~ Uood ~\,

llya. Partl And MD

.1983 Mllldo G~ llfOIII, runo
good, 11100. 304-i rJ-Siot.
1183 Z·21 Comoro, Nlco, Aulo, T·
Top~, AC, .EW, CC, $3,800; 1885

""'*

-·SE'N.ff.t

Motorcycles

aa.. -·

1977 Ford LTD, Good Work Cor,
351, V-8, A~om1lle, Air Crulat,
114·245-5697.
1979 Ford T·Bird tiOO. 1979 holf
ton
~vy
11117
Quod
S
4k-u~
w 1~i~·$1,310.
3M·
09.
1979 Omnl noodo oronomllllon,
$300. con - on Gill Aldgo,
look for olgn.

Moving muot Mil, 2 llodroom
IUttM,

--J21'1. •.

,o11

74

~:,"~~lor:'.!.:. =~~~~": ~=~,.,...
64"""':_H_a~y:-&amp;:-G"""':ra::ol-::n:---::

·-------1
ru:mooondelllll

Livestock

Bull Far ~•It: 614-388-8152

Amino Acid Bodl

12••------1
2-bdnn mobllo homo In Mid·
~d~lo~pa~~·~l1~4~112~1~-~~~:-:-':-:-:-:
5'--:----- JS,._______11
14•.
21
Bull..-•.
2t1r Noor Clollpolla. Aatrlno•
6.--,--•A!l1l DopooM lloqulnll. No Plla.
114o4*3107.
15~-----r
Opponunlty
1--...;...."""":'""_
INCJI1Cil
4br Unfumllhod, ilbr Purntahld.
8......__---OHIO VALLIY PUIUIHING eo On Coro Mill 011 AU21,

------f

+s

tAJIU

Keeping count
of the spoons

1188 8·10 B-r 4 · - d~ve;.
PB, AC, Alj Vorlox Y-t motor, ·
3M-675-611o or 3114-115-$116. '
;--;;::-;:-:=::-:=:--=--:-:For Sail: 1183 Ful Slzo llronc:o, ·'
4 WhMf Dlt¥1, Runa GDod, •
$2,200, O.B.O. 114-21N2!!. .;

Wllh Romoto; OBI Spookoro W
15" Woollro; $!500. Coli 514-4411- 71 Autos tor Sale
2100.
'116
CalobrHy.
2.8LoFIIOD.
Loodod. $2850. 114-311'0122 ·~
Upstalrw apt, •bove Gallary Hair Largo ploll glau: llntod, 711. 7 lor5pm.
Ant,
downtown Pomeroy, ln. long by 3 ft. 11 wldo. $10(1. Ed
.Brown. 614-318-K73.
ff75mo, 114-9112-2290
1978 Uonlo Corio, 350 OUlo,
L.twn Chlo1 Aiding Mower Eo· runs, needs Npalr, $300 neg,
614-1112·2958 Npm
collonl CondHion, 614-25fi.10M.
Furnished

($1.49 41 Aero, a Slory House, Btm,
Rooms
mlnl18yrst) or wrltt: PASSE- ~700 lb. Tobacco Base. Balow
517W, 161 S. Llncolnway, N turaka Dam. $32,500. 614·256- Rooma tor rent • weak or month.
Aurar•, IL 60542.
1953.
Slarflng al $120/mo, Golllo Holol.
614-446'9580.
12
Sltu811on
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Slttping rooma with cooking.
wanted
Also tralltr apace. All hook-upa.

l.olo joining ~oint • 100'11 owner

)HA{lpfNfl&gt;

1978 Dodao Vl~8 motor, "'"" .
!good=·~3:.:.:,0U82:::.:
..~'"··~,-,:-;:::-: :.
1182 4 Whool Drlvo, Eoglo For ·
Salo.l14-4411-71109.
0'
11116 GUC Van, 1utoy ouco. c..;
tomlud, low mll..p, great
oho~. II~. wMI nogotlalo;,·
3M-6..o34rJ.
.·

1o9D0-891-1666

Atll'llln
Nowii!Southuattm
Bu1lne11 Colllgt, Spring Valley
Plaz.o. Coli Todoj, l14o446.o431711
Roglotorollon f90.05-1274B.

vans &amp; 4 WD's

mllll. $1800. 304-1711-1214.

Refund. 50 Homes To Chooso.

Wlat'a Guna, 7158 112 State owner financing at $98.64 per
Routo 7~ North, Chuhlro, Ohio. month, any one of four Iota
IYIIIoblo, 304-675-2722.
Ordoro unlj. l14-317o0438.
Loll In New Htvtn • 100%.
14
Business
owner financing tt $101.46 per
monlh buya all lhrH lots, 1304Training
171-2722.

-·/fNIVE$

'79 CJ-5 JMp. !lOW lop, 53,000

for Sale
Tox And nolo Down. Praownod
Mobllt Homts, Use Your Tax

Lola In Gallipolis Ferry • 100%

.QIS
tAKQIOIU
SOUTH

Mobile Homes

Farms for Sale

EAST
+Qt

t10 8 7
.t08832

+Kt82

Tupper Plains, 1-story 2·bdrm
hou11, utltlty rm, auachad
gsrage, 1.1 acre, atoragt bulld-

33

WEST

u

Sectional Home For Sale : Abo"e
Average Condition, 14 Years

32

U.ll

tJ94
tAJI08

fng $28,500114-989-2719.

MLT (ASCP) Or Equlvalom For
Holzer Clinic, Proctorville, Ohio.
Fuu.nme Position, Monday Friday. Compatltlv• Salary, Ex·
ctllent Btntltts. Send Ruumt
To: Ptrscnntl Dlp~nmtnl, Hoizer Clinic PO Box 344 Gil·
llpollo, OH 45631. No Phono
Co!lo.
MLT For A Fully Equipped

NORTH

tKU

.J74

flrtplaet, IIOVI, frldgt, dllhWaahtr, microwave, cental air,
porch11, $35,000. 304·675·nn
I-IOUM In Htndtraon, WV. 311
Henderson St. Corner lot.
$18,000. or make otter. 614·446·
7523, 304-675-1488.
In town1 two ltory, threa bodrooms, Nil basement, 1·V2 bath,
atlachad 1-1f2 car garaga.
Central heal and air. Evenings
Call 614-446-8707.

SAUDI WORKERS Old, ffB.OOO, Nago1iablt. 614·
NEEDED:
$35.00 &amp; Up Per Hour. Tax Frn. 388-6491.

1ddrn111 from home! $500. per

•

·'

WHtN !'If. 5S'

Rtduced

Read the Best SeHer

Cleaning, houttkHptrs l!ghl
w.9rk tarn to $550. wk. Allshrtts

'

YOU Q

TUf llAII.Y
PIIJLII

Homes lor Sale

Ef11o Homo Conlor, 1&lt;100.5895110.
1984 two bedroom mobile
Physicians Otflct Lab. Good home, 2 bdrm., 614·992-6722
BonoiHa, No Shih Work. Apply 917 Fl 1 141 ~ 3b 2 F 11
In Pt-"'n: Medical Plaza, 203 1
em ng
"'' •
r,
u
·Balha, CA,
Underpinning,
day, Tuesday, W...nalday.
Rlc:k Pearlon Auction Compilny, :Jo:.:c~k:.:oo::.n::.P::.Ik.::•·..:G.::.ol::'llpo7-llo;_.___ Storage Bultdlng, Washer And
full time auctlon•r, complete Ntld tl1ra cssh? Earn monty 1 Dryer. Mual Sn Immediately.
auction 11rvlce. LlcenHd Ohio, procnalng mall 11 homo. Be Takt Ovar Ptymant, No
Pomeroy,
Wnl Vlrglnlo, 304·773-5785.
your own boss. For frH lntor• Atatonllbla Offtr Refused. 614~lddlepon
matlon and application, send 446·1037.
9
Wanted
to
Buy
SASE
to: Mutklngum Arta 1it1 14x80 Sunshlnt Mobile
&amp; VIcinity
Publishing, Box 816t, Zanesville, Home, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths,
Uald Mobile Homes, Cell 614An Yord Salol Uuot Bo Paid In 445.0175.
OH 43702
Take ovtr payments, $234
.
Advanco. O..cll,.: 1:oot&gt;m tho
R.N.
monthly. 614-446-8325.
dly bo- lho od Ia 1o nrn, Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos Now Acctptlng Applications For
4~
bod
bl1 h
3
Sunday odhlon· 1:oot&gt;m Fndoy, Whh Or Without Motors. Call AN's Who Wahl To Utilize Thera
room, 1 xn, mo 1 omt,
1
acra,
ntra
room
Mondoy
odhlon
10:00Lm. Larry LIYIIj. 614-:)lla-9303.
Vtluabll Clinical Aaansmanl wi'Woodbumtr, covered porch, 2
Stturday.
Top Prlc11 Paid: All Old U.S. SkUll In A ~ Ttrm Clrt ltval dtcka In b1ck, woodshed,
March 3-4, llm..5pm, Yard .. ,, Colna, Gold Ringa, Silver Colna, Facllllloo Whorl Rohob Sarvlcu groat cond, 304-576-2783.
inside house, Charlet Manuel's Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop, And SkMiod Nurolng Coro Ara
Emphlllzod. Pl1111 Contocl: 84 Schullz 14x65, 2BR, 1 112
residence, Manuel Ad Racine, 151 Second Avenue, Galllpolla.
Scenic Milia Nursing Center, bath. CA, $10,000. 304-675-3276
OH
614-446-7150 For Mort Dttalla Or after 5:30.
1 - - - - - - - - - - j Apply In Poroon.
For Solo: 1989 Rodman Danvlllo,
Employment Services
Teltphone tallutrs nHdlld, Tol:al Electric, Set-Up On Rented
ovonlngo 5:00-9:00 PM, will l.ol. Excollonl Condition. Call
Irain, 304'675-1599.
814-387.a131 Aftor 5 P.M.

-11--H-el-pW-a-nt-~~-l

BORN

Gallipolis Ferry area, ltvat acre
lot, Hetlonal homt. Lots extra a,

'ost: Large Mala Rtddlah =:::-:--:-:-::--:---:-:::-:-:$rown Dog In PatriOI Area, AVON I All Areas I Shirley
ehlld'o Pt1, 814-379-2562 Ahar Spears, 304-675-1429.

7

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lllrry Wright

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Real Estate

Mala BHglt, To Good Home,

~

March 2, 1992

44

P110 $14,000, W!lf ucrlllco lor
$1,100. Grool lor mollo &amp; flu

markot. I14-25M182.
Locol Poy Phono Aoulo, SS Mull
Soli ChMp SS Coli Now 1·1100'1111-4453.

Monday, March 2,1992

Nice 12r60 2 bedrooms, lg. yd.
city achool diatrk:l, Kanaugt.
814-446-11173.

compUter. 0Der111 your own
bualhtal m1king t•hirtt, poatt~1 I coffet muga. 1 yur old.

sate &amp; tut with
labllta
l
E·V.P
svallabla al Fruth

Rtduca:
GobeN

42

Business

1

~··

IYY.
Mill

SC

II

I

1

' ''
''

�•
· Page 1~The Dally Sentinel

Monday, March 2, 1992

Fundraiser
for trip set

·Beat of the Bend...
. by Bob Hoeflich
Since the hostility towards the
Japanese is running so high, perhaps, we should divert a liule of it
.to the homefront and clean up our
·own counrry-"the land of the
free".
Is it really the land of the free?
The streets of our towns and cities
are unsafe during daylight many
times let alone after darkness.
Many of us spend the night hours
· in our homes behind locked
doors-and too often even that
isn't safe-as crime runs rampant.
Isn't it sad that we live practically
as prisoners in our own homes
because we're afraid to venture
out? This, in America, the land of
the free.
I commend Sheriff James Souls. by for reponing numerous breaking
and entering offenses that are lak'
ing place across the county. Somehow I don't cotton to officials ·who
would fail to advise us that these
offenses are happening. For our
own self-protection we need to be
alerted. We need to be aware, we
need to "get involved" and we need
to be more watchful in our own
neighborhoods.
The winds of change have
blown us too far off course-seems
lilce it's going to take most of us to
·get our ship back into smoother
waters.

ation party for Debbie on Feb.
21- a surprise gesture- with a
carry-in dinner and a graduation
cake. The "gang" presented her
with a gold chain-a keepsake with
which to remember the celebration
held at the store. Se»-there is still
a lot of good around.
Kas Bissen of the Bashan Road
recently spent a week in Florida.
While Kas was there, various
relatives gathered for a reunion.
Qui-of-town relatives on hand
. besides Kas were Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Feldman, Massapequa Parle,
N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Jim Keen,
Newark, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Hayman, Tolone, Jll. While
meeting in Florida, the group made
plans for their annual chili supper-another Bissell reunion-to
be held in Meigs County come next
October. You can bet there'll be a
lot of family members on hand for
that get-together.

-that you join me

1 know
in
extending big congratulations to
Gloria Kathleen (Kathy) Gardner
of near Middleport for her excellent showing in the Pillsbury Bake·
off. Kathy won some great prizes
and represented Meigs County
well. Nice gain', Kathy.
While our gasoline prices have
come down a bit, we still need
more re~ef.
One reader suggests that if the
situation were reversed- that is,
Columbus riiotorists were paying
considerably more than Meigs
Countians at the pump, the media
would publicize it so much that the
situation would soon be corrected.
He probably has a good point there.

The band didn't play "Pomp and

Circumstance" and there was no
cap and gown, but ail-in-all it was
quite a graduation for Debbie She!·
ton, an employee of Swisher-Lohse
Drug Store.
During her freshman year in
high school , Debbie had to quit
school because of illness. However, well over a year ago she
resumed studying and recently
passed her G.E.D. test with Dying
colors. The accomplishment didn't
go unrecognized by her employers,
Charles Riffle and Kennetl\· McCullough, and her co-workers at
Swisher-Lohse. They held a Sf3d•-

Liz held a party for I ,000
friends at Disneyland to mark her
60th birthday. "Wuz you there,
Chollie?" Me, neither. Do keep
smiling.

Hillside youth group makes visit
the children followed by them
making a craft.
There was special singing by
Heather Hood, Kandis Humphrey
and Valarie Clonch. The children
recited the bible verses they have
been learning.
At the end of the evening
refreshments were served, prayer
was led by Rev. Milce Willett.
Those attending were Kandis
Humphrey, Valarie Clonch ,
Heather Hood , Jacob Jones, Jon
Humphrey Jr. and Alexandria
Jones.

The youth group of the Hillside
Baptist Church were recent gnests
of Rev. Mike and Kay Willett in
Mason, W.Va. Willett is assistant
pastor of Hillside Baptist Church
and Mrs. Willett is the young youth
leader.
The children were taught the
story of David and Goliath and
bible games were also played by

Folmer, Reed
named winners
Dolly Reed presented a program
on "Love One Another" from the
Book of John at the recent meeting
of the Faith Full Gospel Ladies Circle.
Mary Folmer led the group in a
word of prayer and also songs of
praise. Everyone read their favorite
bible verse for a devotional.
There were 17 shut-in calls
reported and two cards were sent
Names for secret pals were
~lectcd and money making projects were discussed. A white elephant sale was set for Thursday.
Mary Folmer and Rowha Reed
were the winners of the door
prizes.
Kelly Eichinger asked the blessing for the food and the meeting
adjourned.
Attending were Dolly Reed,
Rowha Reed, lCclly Eichinger,
Mary Folmer, Dianne, Tomi and
Lynn White and Mary Dailey.

New arrival

License granted

Shelly Wolfe and Ronald Bachtel arc announcing the birth of their
daughter, Kayla LaRae, on Nov.
26, 1991.
The infant weighed eight
pounds and 14 ounces and was 21
inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Brenda Hiclde, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
and John and Pam Wolfe,
Pomeroy. Maternal great grandmother is Gloria Michael, Syracuse, and great great grandmother
is Susie Fischer, Racine.
Paternal grandparents arc Ronnie and Diane Bachtel, Chester.
Great grandmothers are Mae Mayle
and Audrey Arnold, Pomeroy.

A marriage license has been
granted in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to Thomas Leslie
Gates, 27, Racine, and Tara Marie
Woods, 22, Pomeroy.
ACCOrdlnl

to

the American Heart

AaociatiOD, 68,090,000 Americans
ba,.o one or more forms of heart and

blood _ , dileue.

A IUIIken munitiODSihip off OkinaJapaa, exploded OD April 18, 1958,

wa,

killlDI
. 40 people.

100' X 4"

. . - . -All·YQU~-EAT SPAGfjETII (ALL DAY)
Tips &amp;Noodes, ~ &amp;Salad Bat '
~.ALL-lOU-CAN-EAT FISH (All DAY)
~!!!~IJ!Hamw• 1 luti,....lk:_BIIICUIIII,and Cofllllll'

JlllliiiiAI .....
-,....... -.,

1

the students' trip to AmeriFiora. Pictured with
Boline are class omcers, Kristin Brown, Stacy
WU!Iamson, Alysoa Patterson, Matthew Justice,
Tonya Miller, and Robert Diddle.

Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at the lownship building in Page ville.
POMER,Ij'Y • The annual
Lenten breakfast will be held at the
Trinity Congregational Church in
Pomeroy on Wednesday at 7:45
a.m. A brief program of meditation
and spiritual renewal will follow.
Call Pauline Mayer, Marie Hauck,
Joanne Wildman or the church at
992-3I72 for reservations.
POMEROY • The Middleport
Literary Club will meet Wednesday
at2 p.m. at the Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy. Mrs.
Daniel Thomas will review "The
Man Who Loved Mala Hari." Roll
call is to bring a relic of World War
I.

TOPS meets
Peggy Vining was the best
weekly TOPS loser and Linnie
Aleshuc was the best weekly
KOPS loser at the recent meeting
of !he Ohio TOPS Club No. 570
held at the Carpenters Hall in
Pomeroy.
Cindy Faulk was the best loser
for the month.
Juanita Humphrey was the winner of the fruit basket.
The group meets every Tuesday
from 5-7 p.m . with weigh-in at 5
p.m. at the Carpenters Hall. Call
992-5638 or 992-7464 for information.
Offices will be elected at the
next meeting.

$5Q95

8'x8'..............s495.00
~~y :~~:NN 8'x1 0' ..........$595.00

MONTEGO......................so. FT....2~
TRINIDAD ........................so. FT....35•
CAYMAN...........................so. FT...35•
BARBADOS...................so:i-r••:.35•

CORRDUftD

ROOniG

.....

'

26"x1 0'...........~'7.1 0
26"x12~ .............•8.52
26"x14'...:.........S9.89

,42 GAL. ELECTRIC.............,$149.95
30 GAL. ELECTRIC............)1S2.95
·52 GAL. GAS...........................S239.95
42 GAL. GAS.............................S179.,95
38 .GAL. GAS...........................S169.95
•

I

By BRIAN J, REED
. Sentinel News Stair
Pomeroy Village Council will
cancel a conl(act with the Wash·
ington County Building Permit
offace, and at Monday night's regular meeting, authorized Mayor
Bruce Reed to proceed with neces·
sary action to cancel.
The viUages of Racine, Middleport, Syracuse and Pomeroy now
have contracts with the Washington
County office. Under that conuact,
all building permits obtained for
construction and modification
within those villages must be processed through the Washington
County offtee.
Onginally, convenience and

shorter-turnaround time for permit
processing were the basis for contracting with the Washington
County office.
The Meigs County Commissioners canceled their contract with
the Washington County departnient
last year following problems with
enforcement
In addition to those enforcement
problems, recently imposed fee
mcreases for conrracted governmenial bodies outside of Washington County have made the Washington County office more expen·
sivc than the Ohio Department of
Factories and Buildings in Columbus.
However, Pomeroy Council's

attorney, Patrick H. O'Brien, cited
enforcement problems as the reasoning for his recommendation to
cancel the contract
When · the Columbus office
issues building permits, the slate is
responsible for enforcement of violations.
However, O'Brien told council
members in a letter, "because of
the agreement (with the Washington County office), it is the responsibility of the village to enforce
building code violators and those in
non-compliance."
"I do not believe there is any
significant benefit derived by the
village from the agreement with
Washington County," O'Brien

said. ':Initially, it was hoped that
citizens would save administration
time and expense in processing
their building permits through
Washington County."
"However, from experience, I
do not think that this is the case,
and in fact permits can lake just as
long or even longer as in the
Columbus office."
Council authorized Mayor
Bruce Reed to mail the department
a certified letter, notifying them of
the village's intention to cancel the
contract. The cancellation would be
effective 60 days after the depart·
ment's receipt of the letter, O'Brien
said.
"This would
relieve
- the VilhiRe

A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

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UNIVERSAL RUNDLE

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of Pomeroy from entorcement aiid
the expense and costs incurred as a
result of legal action," O'Brien
said.
Guardrail installation
Council voted to install and
replace guardrail in several areas in
the village.
Guardrail will be installed by
PDK Construction on Union
Avenue and replaced on Mulberry
Heights and West Main Street near
the Pomeroy/Mason Bridge.
Council members will discuss
other areas in need of guardrail at
the next meeting, and guardrail
removed from West Main and Mulberry Heights will be repaired and
re-used.

Specifically, the village plans to
use its own crews and salvaged
material to install guardrail on Liberty Lane and Naylor's Run.
The Ohio Department of Transportation will install guardrail on
Slate Route 124 near Minersville.
Other business
Bid adverti sement for turnout
gear for the fire department was
approved. Coats and pants will be
purchased, as well as optional
equipment such as gloves , boots
and hoods.
A proposed ordinance establishing fees at Beech Grove Cemetery
was given the first reading, with
councilman Bill Young casting the
Continued on page 3

Races expected to shape
up after today's elections
By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
Voters in seven states could
begin to shape the confounding

a! lines for national stature.
It's the biggest day so far in this
year's campaign, an often confusing venture for both parties as an
electorate anxious about the economy and angry with government
protest with their votes, which have
already stirred Democrats and
Republicans alilce.
President Bush was the expected
day morning.
winner in all four GOP contests
Smith, a Republican, has served today - primaries in Georgia,
been employed by the board for 10 Maryland and Colorado as well as
years, serving first as clerk and a caucus in Minnesota.
then as deplll)'-direetor.
. But Bush's stren~th .w.ill be
Tradiuonally, the Director is ]uilged: by bfs mafgms against
appointed by the board based upon Buchanan. The conservative comthe political party affiliation of the · ·mentator embarrassed Bush in New
Secretary of State. Appoinunents Hampshire and is counting on a
are made for two-year terms.
repeat in Gtorgia, where he has
The department •s fcirmer direc· sounded the religious and patriotic .
J M F
Dem
themes of the right.
tor, ane
rymyer, a
ocrat,
The Bush-Buchanan slugfest was appointed deputy director yes- highlighted with nasty attack ads
terday, and Barbara Smith was reappointed to serve as cleric.
- has tom the Republican Party as
Director Smith and her husband, conservatives and other dissatisfied
Homer Smith, Jr., reside in Middle- Republicans rally to the chatport with their daughters, Whitney Ienger's side. Buchanan camped in
and Megan.
Georgia, while Bush sought to
Board member Henry Hunter, a draw conservatives' support by
Democrat, was appointed to serve winning the endorsement of the
as Chairman of the Board to anti-abortion National Right to Life
I E I Clark B 1 th Committee.
rep ace ve yn
· Y aw, e
A new CBS-New York Times
chainnan of the board of elections
cannot be a member of the same poll showed Bush's approval rating
po~tical party as tbe director. Clark at 40 pen;ent, but only 19 pen;ent
will continue to serve as a member on economic issues, the lowest for
of the board.
a president in the New York Times
poll since Jimmy Carter.
Bush gave a series of television
interviews
in Maryland
and"The
Colorado
on Monday,
saying,
economy's going to wm around....
When people are hurting out there
people are going to be concerned. But I think I'll be all ri'ht.
I think I've been a good leader.'
Buchanan held a final rally in
seats to reflect national population Georgia, where he was heckled by
shifts recorded in the 1990 Census. a group called the Coalition for
Riffe and Senate President Stan- Jewish Concerns, which accused
ley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, said late him of bigotry and anti-Semitism.
last week they hoped the confer- · Buchanan also launched a new
ence commiuee could agreed on a ad Monday, this one on racial quofinal report that could be presented tas in hiring. The ad took a more
for Door votes today in both cham- direct and positive tone than the
hers.
nasty attack ads both Republicans
The leaders agreed that the bill featured last week.
would call for each political pany
The Democrats were holding
to surrender one seat but refused to primaries in Georgia, Colorado,
speD out fllllher details.
Maryland and Utah, and caucuses
Ohio's present delegation in Washington, Minnesota, Idaho
includes II Democrats and 10 and American Samoa. In all, 383
Republicans. Two Democrats delegates to the party's July conReps. Donald Pease of Oberlin and vention were at 'stake; it takes
Dennis Eckart of Mentor- are not 2,144 to win the nominatioo.
running for re~lection.
The race has ni&gt; clear front-runContionued on page 3

1992 presidential race today as
Patrick Buchanan seeks a Southern
boost for his GOP insurgency and
the Democrats battle across region-

Rita Smith named board
of elections director
Rita Smith was named director
of the Meigs County Board of
Elections when the board met for
its
meeting on Mon•

I&lt;•

•

1.

•

••••

t

~

•

,..,_ ... '

•
•
•
Re..dIstr·ICting
may b'e delayed ..

TOILET BOWL
26''x8'.....................$4.95
&amp;TANK
26"x10' .................'6.25 ~~~O~,.~~~~~
~--~ WHITE ONLY
26'"x12'..................*7.90
$49.95
26"x14' .................$8.95
52.GAL. ELECTRIC...............s169.95
n
'

1 Soctlon, t 0 Pageo 25 con to

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday; March 3 1992

RITA SMITH

WOOD BUNS

CEILING TILE

&amp;II.I IIliD

.c:Ndllti SIIIIWdl, Ftench Frtes, ~ &amp;Salad Bar
IWJoom Swill Bilger, Franch Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar

GOING TO AMERIFLORA '92 • Janet
Boline, a volunteer ambllllSlldor wltb AmeriFlora '92 in Columbus, receatly spoke to the fifth
grade class at Rutland Eleinei~tatry rl!llltrdirtll

$2499 r-=:-:::;:=:::;--c-::--E-L-O"""T"""E'""'x-1-2:"-x-1..2:-:-,:-,_,
250' X 4"

Low tonight In 40s. Wednesday
mcstly cloudy. High In mid-60s.

Pomeroy to cancel building permit contract

PRICES EFFECTIVE NOWTHRU MARCH 14,1992

SOLID OR PERFORATED

2-H; Q-C; 9-D;
K-S

Vol. 42, No. 210
Copyrighted 1992

meeting. Officers are urged to 7 p.m. and meeting at 8 p.m.
attend.
MIDDLEPORT • The MiddleCHESTER - The Chester PTO port Youth League will hold signwill meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the up for the 1992 ball season on
school. All parents and teachers are Tuesday from 6:30-8 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m . to noon. All
encouraged to anend.
sign-ups will be held at the MiddleMONDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS • The port Council Building and the cost
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet Mon- Orange Township Trustees will is $10 per child, not to exceed $25
day at 6:30p.m. at the Rutland Fire meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the per family. Any child not playing
last season will need a copy of their
Station. The public is invited to home of the clerk, Susan Pullins.
birth certificate Membership cards
anend.
SYRACUSE - The Sutton will also be available at this time
POMEROY - Meigs Local Band Township Trustees will meet Mon- fora costof$1.
Boosters will meet Monday at 7 day at 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
RACINE - The Racine Youth
p.m. at the high school band room. Municipal Building.
League
will hold its sign-up for
New officers will be announced.
AI I parents are urged to attend.
LETART · The Lelart Township baseball and softball on Tuesday
Trustees will meet Monday at 6 from 6-8 p.m. and Saturday from
10 a.m. to noon. If this is the first
PAGEVILLE - The Columbia p.m. at the office building.
sign-up for a participant a birth cerTownship Trustees will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at the ftre station.
HARRISONVll.LE - A house- tificate copy must be furnished.
hold shower for Mrs. Babe Butcher The cost is $10 for girls softball
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- will be held at the Mt Union Bap· and $I5 for all others.
port Garden Club will meet at the tist Church near Harrisonville on
WEDNESDAY
home of Mrs. William Morris on Monday at 6:30 p.m. Mrs. Butcher
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddleMonday at 7:30p.m. Mrs. E.G. lost everything w a ftre and anyone
Schaekel will lead the program on having any household items they port Arts Council will offer beginlawn care. Roll call is to tell of a would like to give should bting ning tap dancing classes begintting
lawn problem solution.
them or call 742-2194 or 742-2138 Wednesday. Barbara Lawrence in
for pick-up. Food wiU be provided the instructor. Class times are 4:30POMEROY • The Meigs Coun· by the Bonnebelle womens' group 5:15 p.m . for five and six - y~ar ­
olds; 5: IS-6 p.m. for seven and
ty .Board of Elections will meet for from the church.
eight-year-olds; and 6-6:45 p.m. for
the purpose of the biennial organinine and ten-year-olds. Call 992zational meeting on Monday at 8
TUESDAY
3282
or 992-5696 to register or for
a.m. at the board office, followed
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
by the regular board meeting will Athletic Boosters will meet Tues- further information. ·
be held.
day at 7:30 p.m. in the high school
MIDDLEPORT • The Soap Box
cafeteria.
Derby committee will meet
RACINE • Racine Chapter 134,
Order of Eastern Star will hold a
POMEROY - The regular meet: Wednesday at 7 p.m . at Middleport
regular meeting on Monday at 7:30 ing of the American Legion Drew Trophy Shop.
p.m., practicing for annual inspec- Webster Post No. 39, Pomeroy,
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
tion. Refreshments will follow the will be held Tuesday with dinner at

FLEXIBLE PIPE

Cards:

•

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

0" X 20' ............. ..'65.00
2" X 20'.................*75.00
X 20' ...............195.00

Pick 3: 315
Pick 4: 9198

PageS

Theiss named
interim director

CULVERts
KAYLA BACHTEL

St. John's
defeats
Georgetown

Janet Bolin, a volunteer ambas·
sador with AmeriFlora '92 in
Columbus, and past slate president
of the Ohio.Association of Garden
Clubs, recently spoke to the fifth
grade class at Rutland Elementary
regarding the students' trip to
AmeriFiora in Columbus.
AmeriFiora '92 - America's
Celebration of Discovery is an
excellent educational experience
within reach for all of Ohio's swdents, parents and educators. Fundraising projects dedicated to furthering student education through
an AmeriFiora '92 field trip has
been conducted. The largest fund
raising drive wiU begin Monday.

Beth A. Theiss has been named
interim executive director of the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center by the Meigs County Council
on Aging, Cindy Oliveri, president,
announced today. Theiss can be
reached during business hours at
992·2161. Meanwhile, applications
are being lakcn for the position of
executive director.

Ohio Lottery

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A
joint conference committee trying
to create 19 new Congressional districts.in Ohio has run into difficulty
in preparing a plan for a scheduled
vote.
The committee had hoped to
a~ree today on the long-studied
btll, but a spokesman said that was
doubtful.
William Pfeiffer, legal adviser
to House Spealcer Vern Riffe, DNew Boston, said late Monday that
the bill drafters were having problems and that certain policy questions had been resolved.
"It may not be ready until
Wednesday," Pfeiffer said of the
bill that reduces Ohio's U.S. House

LOOK WHO'S HERE! • Democratic presidential candidate, Arkaasas Gov. Bill Clinton, is
met Monday by Sbara Banks or Columbus, Ga.,

during a campaign stop in Columbus. Banks is
the daughter of Arkansas State Rep. Art GiYins.
(AP)

State has new map ready for motorists
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Forget the full-color photography,
the lists of Ohio facts and firsts,
and the easy fold of the state's
newest highway map. What
impresses Gov. George Voinovjch
is the case 17 cents a' copy.
Voinovich said the 27-by-39
inch map produced by the Ohio
Department of Transportation is
one of the most comprehensive
anywhere in the nation.
"It's a good quality product for
the least amount of money ,"
Voinovich said at a news conference Monday. "This is value."
Voinovich compared the percopy cost of 17 cents with a price
tag of 26 cents a map for the I990
version produced by his predecessor, former Gov. Richard Celeste.
Jerry Wray, ODOT director,
said the price was lower partly
because more copies were pnnted.
"It's a ri\ore standard size, and
the paper is a little less expensive

quality paper ... plus we also
ordered 2 million instead of the
normal I million, so there's a savings there," Wray said.
Total cost of producing the
maps was pegged at $337,000,
while t()e 1990 version cost about
$235,000.
Voinovich said introduction of
the new map carried a bit of histor·
ical significance.
" It was 80 years ago this year
that Ohio's fltSt map was printed,"
he said, pointing to a copy of a
black-on-white drawing.
' 'We have a print of the original
negative here ... since that time
there have been many format
changes," Voinovich said. "The
first multi-colored map was printed
in I914. The first two-sided map
was made in '28. The fltSt art use
for the map was in 1935, the first
full-color map was in 1942."
The new map is larger than the

Pre-school children and their
parents are exposed w programming on health and hygi~e, nutrilion, and educational oppoitunities.
Litei'IIC)' program .
According to Carol Young,
Mcias County Coordinatot of the
program, the new literacy program
will be funded thrOugh a Federal
Head Swtlfteracy pt. Sessions
be held at die MeiJs County
Public Lilnry and wiD .be free w

Coordinator for Gallia/Meigs Head iion information are available from
Start. said that 'au local Head Start the office of Meigs Head start,
programs were encouraged to apply 992-3088. The office is open Monfor the literacy grant funds.
day through Friday from 8 a.m.
She added that illiteracy is an until4:30 p.m.
increasing problem for local fami·
,
Service e~~panded
lies served by the program.
.
In addition to Heild Slart's new
"Adult illiteracy is an increasing literacy ptogllllll, funded through a
problem in Gallia and Meigs Coun- Fedenl grant, Gallia/Meigs Head
ties, and is an issue that Head Start Stan has also announced that 12
pr~s nationwide are working additional Meigs County fam ilie$
on Rowe said. "This year, all ·wm be added to the rolls of those
gr~tees were asked to apply for saved by the prosram.
monies and implement literacy ~
The tarseted ~ includiilg por- _
grams roc diose families served.
lions of the Reedsville and Letan
Tbe litaacy piOII8IIl will be led COOUIIunities, are now unserved by
by a staff member of Buckeye HiUs the program due·to their distance
Cenicr, and will be held on from the Head Stan office in the·
MOndays and Wednesdays from 4 Melas County Multiputpase BiJild.
p:m. to 8 p:m. Dates and registraCoatiaur ~ ,.. 3

last one produced before Voinovich
took office in January 1991. It fea.
tures a phow of downtown Columbus on the cover, and a picture of
Voinovich and Lt. Gov. Mike
De Wine on the back.
Inside the opening fold s are
photos of a farm scene, the Oh io
nag, slate
seal and other sym bois, pitches
for statewide toll-free telephone
numbers that connect callers with
the State Highway Patrol or the
Division of Travel and Tourism,
and other information.
Voinovich said the map, which
will be distributed free, is easier to
read, has fmproved indexing of
cities, highlights more points of
interest, and contains more facts
about the state.
It also misspells, in a 'isting of
famous Ohioans, the name of
author Zane Grey, identifying the
novelist as "Zane Gray."

.----Local briefs---. New programming, expansion planned at Head Start
Five charges .filecfagainst man
Five charges have been ftled against Timothy E.l&gt;avidsoo, I747
Chester Road, Pomeroy, as the result of an incident on tbe Pomeroy
Kroger ~g lot late Sunday nighL
DavtdsOO was arrested as he allegedly was in the proeess of
brWing into a ~bolt on a ~ truck,owned by WiUiam Fry,
Mason, W.Va., With a jack. He was arrested bf Pomeroy {&gt;Ql!ce and
charged with destruction of ~Y, possesston of criminal tools,
attempted theft, public intoiUCatlotl, and possession of a controlled
substance. Davidson will appear in Meigs Cqunty' Coun on the
. charges.
.

No one hurt in two accidents
. TW!&gt; accidcnll, both with vehi:lo daraa&amp;el but no iajuiies, wen:
_mvesligUed by Pomeroy Ponce Monday alfcrnoon lind ~vening.
. AI 3":21 p.m. on Mafn Snet, 1 1985 iiiOIIOICyCle driven by Gregory Davia, 33, SYQCUse, wu lllniCk in the rear by a I988'0lds
driven by Elizabeth Roberta, 74, Syracuse.
Coatlnued oa pip 3

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Upcoming expailsion of services
at Gallia/Meigs Head Start will
include a lite!*:y program and full
intervention service to an additionai12Iow-income families in Meigs
County.
Head Start is a child development program that serves a haff.
millioo American c!Uldreu, providing educational elt{ierience and
heillh and IOCial
I3S f1111ilies are now aerved. by the program
in Meip County. Each cllild
receives 1 cluaoom Cllpericnce •
eitbelat the Pomeroy cen1er or oa tho Head Slllt mobile llllit • alonJ
with home visill each week by a
trainedstaffmember

semces.

.. "

•

... : .....

"'~'

will

waliCYin&amp; l!ftiCi)lants.

,

• ''This WI eDible IJIRW to help
their school-aacd children with'
their roadina ancl bomcwort,"

Y011111 llid.

"'t also will ho1p par- c.er

en11 io the Job marlto1, writing
resunaes and 10 fonh.~
.
Kay Rowe, Famlly Serv1ces

.

\l. .

.

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