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                  <text>Page-DB-Sunday nmes Sentinel

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

Brucellosis in
U.S. cattle
herds down

Sea •'Ch
.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department says
efforts to eradicate brucellosis by
1995 have already decreased the
number of quarantined cattle herds
from 1,231 10 495 in just two years.
"After reaching rates of infection exceeding 120,000 herds in the
, 1950s, we can finally see the light
at the end of the tunnel," said Billy
G. Johnson, acting deputy administrator for veterinary services at
USDA's Animal and Plant Health
lnsp;;tion Service.
'The brucellosis eradication
program has been a real model for
how states, industry and federal
MYSTERY fARM • This week's mystery Ohio Valley Publishing. Co. Leave your name,
government can work together,"
farm, featured by·the Gallia Soli and Water address and telephone number with your card
he said.
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. AU
USDA launched a "rapid comGaltia County. Individuals wishing to particicontest .entries should be turned In to tbe news·
pletion plan" in 1990 in an effort
pate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
paper otriCe by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
to eradicate the disease by 1995.
the farm's owner. Just matt, or drop off your
or a tie, the winner will be chosen by lottery.
Johnson said credited greater
guess to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Next week, a Meigs County farm will be rea·
awareness among producers for the
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the GaUipolis Daily
lured by the Meigs Soil and Water Cooservation
program's success in pushing' down
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolls, Ohio,
District.
the incidence of the disease, which
45631, and you may win a ~5 prize from the
causes abortions, reduced fertility
and lower milk yields by cows. took at brucellosis almost as an herds would need to be eliminated
Humans can get the disease by exotic disease, and any infected immediately," he said.
drinking unpasteurized milk from
infected animals or from handling
the animals.
Johnson also cited a rule effec. I I
!
1
tive last April that raises indemnity
-I
payments for exposed, non-regis~
, ~ .;_ .....
tered cattle or bison when an entire
herd is destroyed. Technological
advances, including improved diagnostic techniques and early calfhood vaccination, have also helped.
"As we move down to the zero
point. we want 10 encourage owners not only to get rid of infected
animals but also those that have
been exposed to infected animals,"
Johnson said.
"Even when we reach our goal,
we'll need io maintain a topnotch
SHELLEY BLACK
surveillance system to monitor any
remaining cases and guard against
importing the disease from another
country. At that point, we would

-_;t

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Black joins
Gallery Hair Arts

Development
continues on
Hiland Road
POMEROY - Further development of an area on Hiland Road in
Pomeroy is right on schedule,
according to the developers, Greg
Bailey and Jim Clifford of Home
Creek Enterprises.
The area is now the site of a
DEVELOPMENT CONTINUES • Continuity or Care will
building housing the Soil and
oetupy
a new buUdinglocated.on Hiland Road in Pomeroy, conWater Conservation office and
s~ucted
an~ owned bJ' Home· Creek Enterprises. Pictured at the
related agencies. A new building;
s1te,
left
to
are Cont.illuity or Care owners Connie and Greg
now under construction by Home Kaylor andr1ght,
Home
Creek Enterprises partoers Jim ClifTotd and
Creek Enterprises, will house
Greg
Bailey.
A
second
new structure being buill by ClifTord and
office space for that fum as well as
Bailey
is
pictured
in
the
background. (Times-Sentinel Photo by
two 800 square-foot offices, which · Brian J. Reed)
wiU be available for lease upon the
building's completion in approxiPARKERSBURG UVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
mately three months.
Mineral Wells, WV
A second building now under
construction witt be the new locaMarch 14, 1992
STOCK
STEERS:
tion of Continuity of Care, a busi300-under
ness offering medical equipment
90.00-tt6.00
300-500
and supplies which is now located
85.00-102.00
500-700
at 507 Mulberry Avenue . That
76.50-84.00
800-over
building will provide 2,000 square
65.00-70.00
feet of space for Continuity of
STOCK HEIFERS:
300-under
Care, allowing for a wider variety
85.00-96.00
of inventory, a larger showroom
300-500
77.00-96.00
and storage area and a workshop
500-700
68.00-79.50
which will allow for on-site equip800-over
55.00-64.00
ment modification.
STOCK BULLS:
Home Creek Enterprises con300-under
90.00-98.00
structs energy-efficient homes, tog
300-500
80.00-91.00
structures and site work, as well as
500-700
68.00-82.00
Sunshine Room solariums. Bailey
Slaughter Bulls
55.00-63.50
said Friday that he and Clifford
Cows &amp; Calves BH
550.00-735.00
plan 10 develop the Hiland Road
Bred Gows By N
48.00-57.50
area further in the months ahead.
Bred Cows BH
•
400.00-675.00
Slaughter Cows:
Hi~h Dressing
50.00-53.00
Ut1lity
44.00-48.75
Canner &amp; Cutter
35.00-41.50
VEAL:
Choice
85.00-100.00
Medium
75.00-88.00
LAMBS:
WASHINGTON (AP) - LegisBlue
70.00-77.00
lation introduced in the Senate
Feeders
58.00-67.75
would boost export subsidies for
Baby Calves BH
75.00-240.00
processed agricutwral products.
HORSEScwt
5t.00-61.50
Under the bill, the Agriculture
Ponies
35.00-50.00
Department would be required 10
HOGS:
spend one-fourth of Export
200-250
38.00-42.00
Enhancement Program funds to
300-500
32.00-36.00
promote processed or value-added
Male Hogs
22.00-26.75
agricultural products.
Pigs BH
.
17.00-32.00
Under EEP, exporters receive
S ial Butt Sate March 28 Satur(Ja , 2 ,m,
cash bonuses that allow them to
sell U.S. farm products at a more
competitive world price in certain
forergn markets.
.
According to sponsors of the
bill, the U.S. share of the valueadded market remained at about 8
FAMR..Y PRACTICE
percent or 9 percent during the
1980s, while the European Community captured a SO percent share.
· . "Our competitors are gobbling
up the growmg market for processed, value-added agriculwrat
products while we trail fa.r
behind," said Sen. Tom Daschte,
D-S.D., a sponsor of the bill. "If
we don't reverse this trend and
incmae our share of world trade in
value-added agricultural J!!Oducts.
our rural communitiea w1U
like corn stalks in 11
dnluaht."

Legislation
would boost
export subsidies

ROBERT M. HOLLEY,

M.D.

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGH-T CONTROL

~=~~~!!~

Hlgh-value
wheat
flour, vegetable
meat, provide greater
10
the exponing nation that bulk commodiues because value-added processing creates jobs, boosts ceonomic development, and raises
aovemment revenues, spotiiOI'I of
the biD said.
.
.

a

CENTER)
.80l'f AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT,·WV.

·-· 675-1675

.:..-------_...;,-----·-

.~ ....

March 22, 1992.

POMEROY - Shelley Black of
Rutland is now employed at
Gallery Hair Arts, 118 East Main
Street m Pomeroy.
A 1990 graduate of the cosmetology program at Meigs High
School, Black specializes in permanents, color, manicures and haircuts.

Bush to nominate
Nelson for post
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
dent Bush says he plans 10 nominate Betty Jo Nelson as assistant
secretary of agriculture for food
and consumer services.

I'

Continued from D-1

•••----__.:__--~

production were. higher. following
earlier gains in retail sales.
Several economists said this
looks tilce a genuine rebound.
Of course, some experts have
been calling it wrong for some time
now, like they did about this time
last year when the economy started
looking healthier, only to stall a
few months later.
Again, it will take time to see
whether one round of encouraging
statistics is followed by more.
The good economic news was
accompanied by hints that consumer prices are oil the rise, led by
higher costs for food and clothing.
Energy prices have also been rising
in the futures markeL
MARKETS:
Survival of the Fittest
How much protection should
people have when they gamble in
the siOCk market?
The question came up again this
week, following a recent rally in
the rock-bouom price of Continen-

Miller...
Continued from D-1
grazing season is just around the
comer. Interest in rotlltional grazing is growing rapidly. This often
involves intensive grazing systems
which require a h~a[:et of management In New
d, where a
majority of the livestock is produced via rotational grazing systems, farmers gather regularly to
discuss the effec!S of changing conditions and the management practices used.
A couple of years ago a group of
farmers along with Soil and Water
Conservation and Extension personnet begail an informal group
known as the Eastern Ohio Grazing
Council. A few months ago, an
attempt was made to start a similar
group in this region of the state. If
such a group is going to be successful more farmer involvement
must be accomplished soon.
The next opportunity to get
involved will be this Wednesday,
March 25, starting at 10 a.m. (th.e
program witt end by noon). The
location will the District Extension
Center in Jackson. The speaker will
be Mark Bennett, County Extension Agent, from Knox County.
Bennett was one of the organizers
of the Eastern Ohio Council. He
will talk about monitoring and
managing the production cycle to
allow for adjustments with changing weather conditions, grazing
habits and forage qualil):.
You probably will want to
bring your boots, as he has been
known to walk a field during part ·
of his presentation. We encourage
anyone interested in intensive grazing to attend. Call if you want to
car pool.

tal Airlines stock, which wilt
become worthless under the carrier's plan 10 reorganize in bankruptcy coon.
Continental publicly acknowl- .
edged some time ago stockholders
witt lose everything. But some peo- ·
pte began buying shares anrway,
after a newspaper report indicated
an investin~ group may soon buy a
large stake m Continental.

Ohio Lottery

NCAA
tourney
results

Pick 3: 386
Pick 4: 1437
Cards:
2-H; 3-C; 6-D;
A-S
Super Lotto
4-6-16-33-41-43
Kicker
1-3-0-5-7-0

Page4

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"1111111

Clear and coid'tonight; Low
the mld-20s. Tuesday, sunny.
High 50·55.

GALLIPOLIS
MO,OR CO.
236 SECOND AVE.
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

446·3060
"Your New Downtown
Dealer"

At least 25 dead in USAir
Flight 405 plane crash

1990 CHEVY LUMINA
EURO 2 DR.
Gr.y, auto., air, crulae, tilt, p.
wlndowa, p. door locka, CIIHtte,
rear defogger, trunk releaae,
24,000mlles.

$8995

1991 CHEVY SIO
PICKUP
Rod, atop bumper, AMIFM atorod,
5-apd., air, 13,000 miloo.

$7595
1990 PONTIAC GUND
PRIX LE 2 DR.
Lt blue, cruioo, til~ caooette, roar
delogger, air, 50,000 milea.

$8995
1988 FORD TEMPO GL
4 Dr., rod, outo., oir, AMIFM rldio,
52,000milos.

s4595

1987 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE 4 DR.
Teol, p. wlndowa, p. door locko,
CIIIIHI, tilt, crui11, air, 75,000
mila.

I Section, 10 Pagoo 25 cent a
AMultimedia Inc. -llpllper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 23, 1992

ROBINSON HONORED • Dr. Nick Robin·
son, .past president or the Meigs County Chamber or Commerce WliS honored for his service at
the chamber's annual dinner/dance on Saturday
night. Robinson, center, served the cbamber &amp;&lt;;

president In 1991. Also pictured are Chamber
Director Paula Thacker and 1992 Chamber
President Lenny Eliason. (Sentinel Photo by
David L. Harris)

HUMANITARIAN AWARD· Tom Reed,',
center, was the recipient or the .Meigs County\
Chamber or Commerce's Humanitarian Award, •
eiven each year to a member of the chamber for
r.relentless devotion and dedication to the citizens or Meigs County." Presenting the award to

Reed at the chamber's dinner/dance on' Satur·
day Is Chamber Director Paula Tbacker and
Chamber President Lenny Eliason. 160 people
attended the annoat event, held at Royal Oak
Resort. (Sentinel Photo by David L. Harris)

•s995
1989 OLDS. CAUlS S
2 DR.

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Rescue
workers slogged through snow,
slush and rising tides IOday after a
USAir jet with 51 people aboard
crashed during a snowstorm and
skidded iniO frigid Flushing Bay.
At least 25 people died, airline officials said.
"l opened my eyes but there
was no plane over me," one passenger said "I was next to it."
At least 24 JlCOI&gt;le wene injured
and two wene missmg among those
aboard US Air Flight .405, said
Nancy Vaughan, an airline
spokeswoman.
Survivors swam, walked or
crawled to safety. More than 500
rescuers struggled into the night to
remove bodies from the mostly
submerged fuselage and continued
the effon soon after daybreak.
"We did a primary search and
saw the pilot strapped in his sea~"
Fire Department diver Bill Lake
said. "We tried 10 cut him out but
couldn't. We were working against
the tide. The real problem was that
the plane was upside down and
people were stiU strapped in10 their

seats because it was takeoff.''
All were dead, Lake said. USAir
did not immediately identify any of
the victims.
More than 30 emergency workers were reported injured in the
treacherous rescue. The water was
a numbing 38 to 40 degrees and the
air about 31 degrees when the
plane weni down at9:30 p.m.
The National Transportation
Safety Board began an mvestigation. Safety board officials said
they couldn't immediately tell what
caused the crash.
It was the second time in three
years a plane has skidded off a runway at La Guardia. In 1989, a
USAir flight bound for Charlotte,
N.C., slid into the East River and
broke into pieces in an aborted
takeoff. Two people were killed.
In Sunday night's crash, Law
enforcement officials and witnesses
said the jet had just begun to lift o!f
when it slammed back to the
ground, veered sharply to the left
and crashed over an earthen
embankmenL
The nose, a wing and an engine
snapped off and the rest of the
plane skidded in a fireball in10 the

Red, tilt. cruin, llir, caaaette, rear
dtloggor, aport whoela, doloy
wipera, 34,000 miles.

water with i!S top sheared off.
"It catapulted three or four
times before it went into the
water," said Patrick Silver, who
said he watc~ed the crash from his
nearby home. "It lit up' the living
room. It was a huge ftreball."
The olane. a Fokker 2l! Model
4000 with a capacity of 68, was
carrying 47 passen~ers and four
crew members, USAir said.
.
Fokker, a Dutch aircraft manufacturer, said it dispatched five:or
six specialists 10 provide "routine"
technical assistance during tbe
investigation, said company
spokesman Ban van Veen.
Twenty-one survivors waded to
land and walked 10 the nearest terminal, Port Authority police said.
Four survivors crawled onto the
nearby Grand Central Parkway,
where they flagged down a van for
help, said Emergency Medical Service worker Adelaide Connaughten.
Many of the injured suffered
bums, cuts and internal injuries and
were taken to at least five hospitals.
The crash occurred near the
beginning of a stonn that dumped
Continued on pa~e 3

1

6995

PLUS OTHER FINE
SELECTIONS

See Scott or Ralpll SHets
Mon., Tue.., Wed., Fri. 9-G
or Thura. &amp; Sat. 9-3

Livestock report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Friday by
the Ohio Department of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: steady to
mostly .50 lower: demand moderate to lighL
U.S. 1-2, 225-250 lbs., country
points, 34.00-37.00, a few 37.50:
plants 37.25-38.25, a few 38.50.
U.S. 1-3, 250-260 lbs., country
points, 33.00-36.50: plants 36.25·
37.50.
Receipts Thursday 8,600. Estimated receipts Friday 7,500.
Prices from The ProduceiS Livestock Association:
Cattle: steady.
Slaughter steers: choice 70.0077.75: setect68.00-76.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 67.0076.75: select 66.00-72.00.
Cows: 1.00 higher: all cows
54.75 and down.
Bulls: steady; all bulls 67.50 and
down.
Veat calves: Sheep artd lambs: steady 10 2.75
higher: choice wools 64.00-66.50;
choice clips 65.25-70.00: feeder
lambs, no quote: old sheep 38.50
and down.

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

the
State Farm way.
Call me.
CAROLL SNOWDEN
Corner of Third Ave. &amp; State St.
GoUipoUs, Ohio
Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4518
SIAII FAIM

Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.

State Farm Life Insurance Company
Home Office: Bloomington, Illinois

.

AFTERMATH· A New York City police
boat stands by the wreckage of tbe USAir plane
Monday morning that crashed into Ftushin2

Bay after takeoff from LaGuardia Airport Sun:
day night. The plane was carrying 51 people. At
least 25 people are reported llead. (AP)

Bush prefers 'doing nothing'
.
about economy to ratstng taxes Three escape injury in. train crash
By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush says "doing nothing"
about the economy is better than
raising wes, and he is prepared to

Patrol reports
three accidents

'

.

a, package" if the Democrats insist
on raising taxes.
Bush said, "I'm perfectly prepared to work with the Congress.
But we've got to be realistic about
politics."
"The best thing would be to do
something that·would stimulate
investment, but if that can't happen, then the next choice would be
do nothing, and the worst choice
would be to pass a tax and spend
bill," the president said

do just that unless Democrats quit
trying 10 raise the bite on wealthy
Americans.

Bush, after a truculent veiO Friday of the recovery bill fashioned
by Congress, said Sunday he still
wants the lawmakers to move on
his proposals to spur business
investment.
White House Chief of Staff
Samuel H. Skinner said flatly earlier Sunday "there's not going 10 be

Four injuries wene reponed after
a one-ear W.reck on State Route 124
in Minersville Saturday afternoon. .
According to a report from the
· 'Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Chad Taylor, 20,
Racine, was eastbound and went
off the side of the road while pass. ing another vehicle.
COLUMBUS - A state law- the plan because they said it dilutes
Taylor's car struck some mail- maker today presented her own minority voting strength in Cleve· boxes then went across the road plan to reorganize Ohio's congres- land and Columbus.
Republicans who opposed the
and struck a guardrail, the patrol sional districts in hopes of ending
plan
complained that it splits too
•reported.
differences involving a proposal
many
counties and is 100 generous
Taylor and his passengers, that is staUed in the Legislature.
· Richard Riffle, 22, Chris.topher
"I'm doing this because they're 10 Democratic incumbents.
The squabbling has pushed back
Murphy, 19, ~Christopher Stout, stalemated," Rep. Joan Lawrence,
21, all ofRaeinc:, were tnlltsported , R-Galena, said at a news confer- the scheduled May 5 primary. The
Hoilse approved a bilf to move the
by the Meigs County Emergency , ~nee.
· .
·
primary
tQ June 2. The Senate is
Medical Service to Veterans
'She said her plan pro~ably
scheduled
to hold hearings on the
Memorial Hospital where the)l would ·be dcfea,OO but that law- &lt;
move
Ibis
week.
wel'll treated and released.
,
male~ could pass one by Friday
Under Ms. Lawrence's plan, 14
· The pili'Oillsted damage to T,y. "if ~~one really wanted sanity 10
counties are split, compared with
lor's 1986 Chevrolet Nova as reign.'
· heavy.
·The state Legislature is respon- 28 split in the Senate-paSsed bill.
The new plan also divides only
Taytor was cited by the pauo
. I sible for reducing the number of
Columbus,
Cincinnati and Cleve·Cor failure to conttol
U.S. conBJ'CSSiOnal districts in the
land.
'
1'hl'co pepple ,eseiPCd injury in a 5~ from 21 to 19, as required by.
Sbe
said
the
plan
was
done:
with
two vebtcJe accident oo State resutrs of the 1990 census.
··
no
consideratioo
or
iiS
impact
on
·Route 7 ncar. tho in!Cneelion of
Earlier this month: the Senate
i~cumbents
but
acknowledged
it
Swa Route 248 in Cllesier Sunday passed a bill, but it stalled in the
might be "a little more Republial'lemOon.
HoWIC.
·
,Aeeordina to the pattol, a car
Some aou'se membeta, in&lt;;lu¢- can."
CoiltlPtied on page 3
· . ing 11 black DemOCfJIS, opposed

A Langsville man and two children escaped serious injury when
the.car they were riding in was
struck by a Conrail train on Saturday morning.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soutsby, Ronald
E. Starcher, 29, of Langsville had
just begun to cross the train !lllcks
at an unrt:~arked railway crossing on
Rutland Township Road 181 at

9:35 a.m. when he saw the train,
traveling southbound toward his
car.
Conrail Engineer William C.
Gaddis of Reedsville and Brakeman Edward A. Crooks of Middleport reported later .t~at they .
auempted to stop the tram but were
unable to do so, and the train struck
the vehicle.
According to S9ulsby, the car
rolled several times tseforc landing

on its top. Starcher, along with two
passengers, Adam B. Tillis, 11, and
Thomas J. Moore, 6, were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by private vehicle.
According 10 a spokesperson ror
the hospital, the three were treated
and released for minor injuries.
Starcher's 19.76 Mercury sustained very heavy damage, according to Soulsby. Investigation into
the accident is continuing.

Legislat(Jr introduces
new redistricting plan

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SUNDAY WRECK- No Injuries were
reported resultlna from tbis two-nhlcte .wreck
near the intersection or alate routes 7 and 248· at · ·
Chester. Aeeordlnt lbe patrol, tbe driver of ihe
car, Vlacente Corpuz, 40, or Rio Grande,

braked after a piece 01 metal from anotller vebl· .
cte struck his wlndlhleld. The truck, drive• by
Dale E. Davia, 42; •Parkersbara, wa5 unable to c
stop and Slflltk the rear or Corpuz' vehiCle.

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�Monday, March 23, 1992

Commentary
I,

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, March 23, 1992

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The Daily Sentinel
111 COurt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OJ' THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controlltr

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETrnRS OF OPINION are welcome . They should he less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telepbone number. No unsigned letters will he published. Letter.;
sbould be in good Wte, addressing issues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
An alternative for consideration
Dear editor,
As of April I, an estimated
!30,000 people in Ohio will no
longer receive any monetary form
of public help through the State's
General Assistance (GA) Program.
In fact an overwhelming majority
of these people will move from GA
10 NA (No Assistance).
. As the executive director of a
urban community action agency
and president of the Ohio Association of Community Action A~en­
cics (OACAA), which is compnsed
of more than 50 anti-poverty program directors in the state, I
believe that I am compelled to publicly ask these questions:
What will become of the thou$8nds of people who are dependent
upon the state to lend some form of
protection directed at eliminating
home!essness, illness and starvation? Is Ohio not constitutionally
mandated to "protect" its citizens?
President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
once said, "Beuer the occasional
faults of a government that lives .in
a spirit of charity than the conststent omissions of a government
fFozen in the ice of Its own indif-

ference."

With regard to that statement, it
is the belief of the OACAA membership that a failure to act by Governor Voinovich and the Ohio Legislature would only lend itself to
rises in the state's mortality, homeless, starVation, health impainnent,
crime, mental illness and divorce
rates.
For the uninformed-State GA
recipients were required to earn
their monthly stipend. Therefore,
OAAA is suggesting a form of
state protection through the expansion of the GA-type work-related
program via Public Worlcs or ~b­
lic Employment Program, Similar
to the old WPA or CETA programs.
One may ask the question, how
can governmental employment programs be funded? Here's OCAA's
suggestion: Target a portion of the
state's Discretionary Funds that are
set-a-side in such job training programs as JTPA and J.O.B.S. to
1hose able-bodied GA recipients
who are able to worlt:.
As a result of pn:vious programs
that aided economically dlsenfn\nchlsed citizens, there are major
independent evaluations of public
s&amp;vice employment programs
which conclude that the overwhelming majority of public service jobs programs were beneficial
and that they did replace the payments of welfare (and unemploymimt Insurance).

The studies also reflect that such
programs gave way to an increase
in individual Income tax paymeniS
which returned monies directly to
the state, city and county coffers
and, local economies experienced
stimulation through increased buying and seUing, along with, individuals receiving psychic satisfaction
Jhrough working and earning their
means of support.
Public service employment can
and should help avoid the losses to
society while utilizing the abilities
and talents of the unemployedwhether it's construct buildings,
roads or bridges; assisting with
consumer, health and education
related jobs; or, making contributions to the State's physical, cultural and intellectual weal !h.
Using the abilities of unemployed and disenfranchised people
for socially desirable purposes
makes sense even from a crass economic standpoint. One way or
another~ven when taken to the
extremes of spending $12 for the
purpose of building more state prisons to warehouse poor struggling
people-the state does protect people against starvation and homelessness.
Giving people work through
Public Employment Programs
would mean gaining something of
value to offset the cost of keeping
them alive. The offsetting value of
their contributions, at the very
least, could n:sult In lower net dol· Jar costs than those of sustaining
them in idleness or non-transferable job-related skills ·gained
through Imprisonment
Further, it is more likely that
society would be the beneficiary of
a net gain rather than merely a
smaller net cost. When less easily
measurable costs of unemployment-increased crime, deterioration of morale and skills. family
disruption, psychological problems,
increased su1cide rates, etc.-are
taken into account, a net gain
seems certain.
Given the prospect of the
national dilemma of an even heavier impending burden of unemployment m the years to come, !he decision to cut the state GA program
seemingly affords the governor and
legislators with an opportunity to
experiment with new forms of public services and new methods of
delivering them.
Sincerely,
Curtis A. Brooks,
Executive Director, CMACO. and
President, The Ohio Association of
Communi1y Action Agencies

( lllll)

preSsuring junior employees for sex
in exchange for promotions. There
was the agent who jumped out of
his car during a drug sting, forgot
to pul the brake on and accidentally

Jack Anderson
shot his fellow officer in the back.
There was the case of hpndreds
of guns missing from a Customs
warehouse in Georgia. There was
the daffy Customs program to
recruit washed-up pro football
players as ageniS because they are
beefy and know how to take orders.
Customs first reacted by denying the problems, and gave us a
bl istering lecture on how mistaken
we were. Next, Customs set out to
stop the leaks of information to us.
All along, there were attempts to
intimidate whistle-blowers who
were agitating for reforms.
In May, Customs Commissioner
Carol Hallett appointed a panel to
look into allegations of corruption
and mismanagement in the Southwest region. The panel's report was
a stinging .indictment and urged
Hallett to appoint someone to over-

see drastic" reforms. Then, in
September, the Treasury Department's inspector general reinforced
those findings with more bad news
- that Customs often botched
internal investigations of misconduct, that the Southwest region had
been badly mismanaged and that
some employees were given bonuses in the same years that they committed impropneties.
Hallett accepted the findin~s
and pledged to do better, but investigators have' had to ride Customs
to keep the reform process on
track, as will be evidenced in the
hearings before a House Government Operations subcomminee this
week. The comminee is chaired by
Rep. Doug Barnard, D-Ga.
Seven months after the special
panel appointed by Hallett recommended that she hire someone to
implement the reforms, the job is
still vacant. One investigator told
our associate Dean Boyd that the
delay "was a signal to the bureaucracy that (Customs) dido 't necessarily mean business."
Investigators say that without
their constant prodding, Customs

Accu·Weadle,. forecast for daytime conditions and hish temperatures

wJofai'$ T~e. PoiNT oF a ....,
Detvtac~aT;c. p~;Ma~Y? il&gt;le~e·s

NeV~R

aN iNCUMBe.I'IT

"t'o VoTe

aG:3iN$T.

would have whittled the new oversight office down to nothing. Customs officials originally proposed
sJ.afling the orfice with only seven
people. But Barnard fired qff a letter to the Treasury Department and
the proposed starfing is now at 38.
Another letter from Barnard went
to the House Treasury Appropriations subcommittee when he heard
rumors that Customs was trying to
get iiS friends in Congress to scrap
funding for the new offtce altogether.
Investigators have noted some
progre ss, bul they arc pesstmtsllc
that Congress can win thi s battle
with the entrenched bureaucracy.
"A culture like Lhut normally outlives their political bosses," one
investigator told us. "I think Customs will prevail in a lot of their
old habiiS."
BOUNCING BUSINESS The House Ethics Committee
office in tbe basement of the Capi·
tol looked like an Oklahoma land
rush the morning after the House
voted to release all of the names of
check-kiters at the House Bank.
The basement is tom up for remod- .
cling, so members of Congress and
their aides scrambled past garbage
bins and vaulted over planks of
wood to get to the .of.~ce where .a
guy named "Berme held. thetr
fate in his hands - the hst of
check bouncers. One congressman
was on hold on !he phone, another
was in line along with aides sent to
find out if !heir bosses had done
anything to apologize for.
Rep. Clarence Miller, R-Ohio,
got a thumbs-up. He wasn't on the
list he said as he headed for the elevator to take him away from the
chaOIS. Miller had trouble finding
the orficc in the first place. "I had
heard of it, but I'd never been
there," he said.
By the end of the day, Bernie
was still working the phones,
answering quc slions , dodging
reporters. "This office and the corridor ouJside is closed 10 the press
today," said a receptionist.
"Bernie's got two more people to
see and 35 phone calls to make."
And then, into the phone, "Hello,
Congressman? I'm sorry to have
thrown you on hold like that.''

IMansfie~ I 42• I~
IND.

W. VA .

Showers T-srorms Rain Rurrlss

,•

..
·'

'
I

I

.!

..••
..
•

.

•' • •

'·

WILLIAM TELL

Snow

Ice

Sunny

Pt. C/oody

Cloudy

C1992Aocu·Weather,lnc.

----Weather---South-Central Ohio
in the 30s and highs in upper 40s to
Tonight, clear and cold. Low in upper 50s. Thursday, a chance of
the mid-20s. Tuesday, sunny. High showers. Lows in the 30s and highs
50-55.
in upper 40s to around 60. Friday, a
Extended forecast
chance of showers and turnmg
Wednesday through Friday:
cooler. Lows in the low to mid-30s
Wednesday, fair and mild. Lows and highs in the 40s.

EMS units answer 10 calls
Meigs Emergency Services
uniiS answered 10 enlls for assistance over the weekend.
On Saturday at 2:I6 p.m., Rutland squad went to State Route
124. Lucy Chipps was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 4:19
p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Mulberry Avenue for Helen Miller. She
was taken to Veterans. At 7:33
p.m., Middleport unit went to
Hamilton Street. David Darst was
taken to Pleasant Valley. At 7:45
p.m., Racine squad went to Rowe
Road. Jimmy Withrow was taken
to Veterans. At 11:34 p.m., Syracuse and Pomeroy untts went to
State Route 124 for an auto acci-

Public Notice

Demogogues need their own ticket

Veterans l'yfemorlal Hospital
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS James Lyons, Long Bottom.
SATIJRDAY DISCHARGESVickie Boso.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS None.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Carol Russell, Eddie Schartiger,
and Sharon Hubbard.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, March 20- Lorrie Booten, Brenda Cade, Patty
Colley, Ernest Cornelius, Teresa
Kuhn, Mrs. Neil Morgan and son,
April Richardson, Bo Sands, Paul
Soles and Twila Trader.
Blrlhs, March 20 - Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Adkins, daughter,
Crown City. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Dotson, daughter, Jackson.
Discharges March 21 - Mrs.
Charles Adkins and daughter, Mrs.
David Barnes and daughter, Margaret Bundy, Mrs. Kenneth Fe us tal
and daughter, Christopher Hargett,
Mrs. Gary Sparks and son, Constance Thrapp and Bridgett Wells.
Births 'March 21 - Mr. and
Mrs. James Cotterill, son,
Pomeroy.
Discharges March 22 - Tara
Capehart, Mrs. Ronald Dotson and
daughter, Callie Duhl and M. Eve-

FOR

EASTERN LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
Soaled propoaala will bo
racelved by the Board ol
Education ol the Eutern
Local School Dletrlct ol
Reedavllle, Ohio, until12:00
o'clock noon on April 21,
1112, and at that Uma will
be ope,.ed by tho Tr-uror
ol iaJCI&lt;8oard 11 provided
by law lor ono (1) 72
pae..nger echool bua
according to apeclllcatlana
olaaid board ol adllcatlon.
Speclflcatlana and lnatructlona to blddera may
be obtained at the oHice ol
the Troaeuror, E111trn High
School Bullcllng.
A certHJtd ohack parlblo
to the Tre11urer o the
obove Bo11d ol Education
or 1 eatie111ctory bid bond
uecuttd by the bidder and
tha IUrlly comrany in an
amount aqua to live
percent of the bid ahall be
aubmltltd with -h bid.
Slid Board ol Education
r11orvM the right to waive
inlormalltlte to accept or
rtjeciiUIY and Ill or p11te ol
IllY and Ill blda.
No bide may be
wlthcll'awn lor atltllt thirty
(30) daye alter the
echtclultd cloelng time lor
rooolpt ol bkla.
. BOARD OF EDUCATION
OF EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
EloiM Bo&amp;lllll, Traaaurer
E11twn Local Sohooll
31100S. R. 7
Rtldtvlllt, Ohio 45772
(3) 22, 21; (4) 5, 12, 4tc

Martin Schram

S3 trillion is an appropriale billion-a-year intelligence appara- ~t of relatively early decisions
tus- ery out not merely for down- w1thin both part1cs' nomination
metaphor.
Monetary and infrastructure sizing but for operational reform.
process is that the candidates can .
deterioration ·is matched by a
Middle-class entitlements, par- begin to conccnlrate on them in laiC
ticularly those designed for older spring and summer rather than wait
Americans, arc a cancer that forthefall.
require intelligent control before
Which brings us back 10 reality.
they consume the federal budget The president has had four years to
The welfare system is a malfunc- Jlrovide a clear sense of direction .
human and moral one. For tens of tioning mess that offends both and has flunked the test. He has · :
millions of Americans and their recipieniS and taxpayers.
managed crises and transition, '
children, the traditional family
Finally, the role of the United reacting with skill and occasional ·
structure has disintegrated. For States in the emergent world of daring , but has run· from the · :
over 30 million Americans, health strong economic competitors and "vision thing" as though it were . ;
care is neither provided nor fman- weak military adversaries awaits the plague.
·
cially accessible in high-coste~- decisive formulation . It is not
If the president is the man in the :
gencies. Long-term econOmiC enouJh to surface slogans 10 suit emrty suit for many Americans, '
trends for roughly another 4S per- transtent octasions, slogans such as Bil Clinton is the Cheshire Cat. ' ;
cent of the population have been "new world order." The Pentagon Behind the big smile and eternally
stagnant. The sense of safety within has done its pan to stimulale a full- youlhful face is. what? He has
the home and ciVility in the public throated national debate by sug- proved himself a resourceful,
thoroughfare 11e shaken where they gesting ~~ Washington serve as forceful and energetic: candidate.
have not vanished. Race relations lone policeman of a Pax Ameri- By most reports, he has run a ;
are at a problemalic crossroads.
cana, simullanCOUs" encouraging small, poor state with ~ · 1
Gow:ittlnCC is a fmgoaea word everyone else to tnlll us ID • our and. occuional vision. But he is a 1
in w~. CompetenCe within power wisely. Euctly how macb , relative unknown even now for , ,
the f&lt;
bumtuctacy is deYaloed of thai power should be Uled uni- many Americans. Much of his · :
and underpaid. Running against laterllly llld bow much~ be campaign will n~cessarily be · •
WIShinaton Ills been the rule from used indilectly through a revatal- devoted to filling in the outline. •
Jimmy Carter to George Busb. llld ized United Nations is not an lnevilahly, mpcb of it will also ,
tit the end of that !6-year period, incollleqacnlial qtalion Neidlel' is have to be~ to RS()lntiqto :
those who do the basic slniCtunr lhe debate over bow lhe nation BleeCul Republicln upiMNim nf 1
.work of government - the civil sbould motJilize for eta•""'lic w. his well-clocuiBalted lllrital infi- . :
. . delily 1114 his equally wd-dclliled • :
service - are demoralized and • with Europe IIIII Asia.
cyaical. For tbll mallei', sbUCtuta · nese iuues should. be basac polilion oo miliilry ICIVice dming :
es1ablished to sene lhc needs of tamtJ!ipdlemelfartltu•c~benl the Vietnam War. Some lpiY l
one kind of world - from a 5300 ~~ 81111 ~ man who Wlll1l believe lte hal t1ten tbe totJ811CSt t
billion-a-year Pensagon to a $35 to replace him. The. fnrtunate Jl!IIICbcs 011 balh already.

i

lyn~ons .

Births March 22 - Mr. and
Mrs. Samuel Armstrong, son, Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holley, son, Gallipolis.

Lottery numbers

The Daily Sentinel
(USPIIII-1101
Publl•ht4 8YI1'J' aRemODn, Moftday
11m1t1P Friday, tn Com Ill~ ~oroy,
Ohio by lbo Ohio Valley l'lll&gt;lilbi..

Hodding Carter III

Compony/)(ollimedia

dent. Christopher Stout, Chris Murphy, and Chad Taylor were taken
to Veterans.
At 2:34 a.m. on Sunday,
Pomeroy unit went to Second
Street and took Roy Boggs to Veterans.
At 3:41 p.m., Pomeroy and
Chester units went to State Routes
248 and 7 for a car accident. Joe
Runyon, Vincent Corpuz and Dale
Davts all refused treaunent At4:23
p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Pleasant Ridge Road for Annelle Sherman. She was taken to Veterans. At
4:33 p.m., Tuppers Plains squad
went to While's Chapel Road. Jack
Lance was taken to Veterans. At
8:36 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to
State Route 7 for Robin Dugan,
who was taken to Veterans.

Hospital news

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF ONE
SCHOOL BUS

The smart money is spreading can't bring himself to sit still for goguery, follow the bouncing ball
Meanwhile, the conservative
the word and it's got the activists that kind of politicking. He pn:fers of his career: {I) as California gov- Gingrich liberally babbled accusaall a'twitter - never has the time instead the politics of self-promo- ernor, he benefiled grandly from tions of "corruption," claiming
been so ripe for a third-party candi- tion, sans principle.
special-interest campaign money; House Speaker Thomas Foley's
date for president. Why, even the
Most recently, we saw Brown (2) in his first prestdential cam- office "sat on" a cocaine-selling
Demagogues may field their own
paign, in 1976, Brown was funded scandal in the House post office
slate. They've already got two clear
by the labor union/special interest "for 10 months and told no one"
frontrunners:
effort to stop Jimmy Carter; (3) in - but Foley, who has his faults,
Jerry Brown and Newt Ginhis latest post, California Demo- quickly put the lie to that. Foley
grich.
cratic Party chairman, Brown was a said his office had contacted the
Brown and Gingrich - in their - who always claimed to be big champion raiser of special-interest U.S. Attorney's office after being
own special ways, they have on feminist issues and the righiS of money; but (4) nowadays, Brown told someone sold cocaine in the
demonstrated irrefutable qualifica- working women - launch ~n accuses his Democratic opponents post office and suggested postal
tion and unabashed inclination to unfair attaCk on Arkansas Gov. Bill of being tools of a "corrupt" sys- mspectors probe the matter, which
demagogue with their every twirl Clinton because his wife, Hillary, a tem because they get special-inler- was publicly disclosed last fall.
in the television spotlight.
nationally renowned lawyer, is a est money.
Gingrich and Brown - they are member of Arlcansas' leading firm,
Now consider the video-age
So dcma~oguery may be our
very bright, very creative, very which for decades did business demagoguery of Newt Gingrich.
one growth mdustry in this camambitious, and very similar in with the state. In a debate, Brown
We saw Gingrich pitch his parti- paign year. We await only the formethod and madness in their per- accused Clinton of " corruption" san tantrum about the House Bank mation of the party: Demagogues
petual, panicky pursuit of political and "funneling money to his scandal bn ABC News' "This United for National Government.
gain, real or perceived. No princi- wife's law fiTill," saying his info Week With David Brinkley": "! Under that banner, Brown and Ginple seems too dear, no accusation came from Ralph Nader, who just want to be blunt.... This is a grich can unite and even borrow
too irresponsible, when Brown and called and read him a Washington Democratic machine political scan- the idea that Ronald Reagan and
Gingrich arc in attack mode, which Post article . But the Post story dal. ... There is an institutional Gerald Ford almost made a Repubdidn't cite one instance where Clin- problem of corruption of power lican reality at the 1980 convention
is to say, when they are awake.
Consider Jerry Brown. This is ton directed business to the fum; it involving the Democratic leader- - a co-presidency ticket.
one of the most frustrating people said the issue of Clinton's job and ship." But he, too, wrote bad
After all, what was considered
in politics, because he has indeed his wife's career were aired in past checks - months ago, he said it good enough for Reagan/Ford to
shown flashes of caring, commit- campaigns; also, Hillary Clinton was two or three, then he conceded spread their GOP gospel will surely
ment, innovation and leadership has long declined her share of fees it was 20, now it's grown to 30. be good enough for Browii/Ginthat could have made him just what her fum ealned from the State.
(Three Bush Cabinet members also grich to spread the politics of
To understand Brown's dema- wrote bad checks.)
we desperately need today. But he
DUNG.

In politics, no election is over
until it is over. That said, barring
an act of God (sudden death) or a
vengeful history (new revelations
of old sin), the Democratic and
Republican presidential nominations have been decided. What we
see now is what we will get in
November. That means George
Bush and Bill Clinton.
Perhaps, tucked away in some
hidden valley, there is a lone
American who will profess satisfaction with both candidates and
mean it. Perhaps the earth is round.
Both are equally unlikely. Campaign 1992 may not tum into the
race from heU, but it is likely to be
closer to that than the civics.ideal.
Already mean-sl'irited and twodimensional, it IS unfortunately
probable that it has reached its ·
mtellectual and mota! hiJh point.
From ~ 00, the odds R Jbit the
road 1101 liken 'Niii be die bi&amp;h OIIC.
. That is not the way it IJai ID be.
It is deo: not the way it should
be. This
be • Wlla1hed elcc. tion, one lhat helps the United
SlateS redel'me its ~ at bome
8Dd ablold. Redefinilion is neQeS·
sary, because the familiar landscapc of the post-World We WOIId
is unalterBbly chanicd· No Ianser
facing a mona! adversary lbnlad,
llfC SIAI&amp;et under piled up, lonadefmcd problems • home, Cor all
of which lhc llllionai debt of over

By The Associated Press
Ohio's weather wiD continue to
be unseasonably cold at least
through Tuesday, foreusters said.
The National Weather Service
says a persistent trough over the
Great Lakes was funneling a steady
stream of cold Canadian into Ohio.
High pressure building in from
the west and southwest tonight will
clear skies over all but the eastern
third of the state. Overnight lows
will be the 20s but could dip into
the teens in some of the usually
cold locations where skies clear
and the winds become light
Partly 10 mostly sunny slcies will
be the rule over Ohio on tuesday. A
wide range of temperatures could
result due 10 a warm front that will
stall across the southern counties.
Highs will range from the upper
30s in the northeast to the mid-50s
southwest near the Ohio River.
The record high temperature for

northwestern Ohio.
New York City received snow
for the second time in a week.
Between 4 and 6 inches fell in the
city for a total of about 12 inches
during the latest storms. Before
that, about 3 inches had fallen in
the city during the winter.
Heavy rain fell in Southern California on Sunday. Police blamed
the .storm for a 20-car freeway pileup m suburban Los Angeles. There
were no serious injuries.
Port Arthur, Texas, hit 82
degrees on Sunday, breaking a
record for the date. Lake Charles,
La., tied a record with 82.
Temperatures were forecast in

lncS..~moror,

Obio 46~ I'll. 1192-21118.
oluo
• ....
ol """'"""· Old~
M - Tbo Aloocialad Piau, aad lbe
Ohio Now- Aloocialioo, Nollonal

Ab-"'r Bo,....lad", BraDham
NnlpaJ!'I' llolol, 733 Tilird, A-ao,

NftY«&lt;t,N&lt;ow-.rtlOOt7.

POimWITIIIi-- ·~

Pkk 3 Numbers
3-8-6
Pick 4 Numbers
1-4-3-7
Cards
2 ofHcarts
3 ofCiubs
6 ofDiamonds
A of Spades
Super Lollo
4-6-16-33-41-43
Kicker
1·3-G-S-7-0

five inches of snow in the
metropolitan area.
Federal Aviation Administration
spokesman Fred Farrar said of the
relatively small plane: "Something
happened just about at rotation that
caused it to come back down again.
We don't yet know what hap pened."
Agnes Huff, a USAir regional
manager, said the aircraft was in
good working order and had been
de-iced more Jhan once before it
took off.
One survivor - the woman
who described opening her eyes
after the crash - said the pilot told
passengers he was de-icing the
plane a second time 10 be safe.
The passenger, a 23-year-old

Ryther, all of Pomeroy; four granddaughters, Beverly Chapman, Syracuse, Sandra Bretz, Columbus,
Sadie Catherine Chaney David- Candice Wellman, Gallipolis, and
son, 80, of Marietta Pike m Chilli- Sherry Roush, Racine; two sisters,
cothe, died on Sunday, March 22, Lola Bohlen, Sy~acuse, and Mil1992 at Marietta Place Nursing dred Spencer, Racine, and a brothCare Center following an extended er, Norman Terrell, Middleport.
illness. She was a former resident Also surviving are seven greatof the Nease Settlement area of grandchildren, and five great-great
Meigs
SheCounty.
was born on Ociober 2, gran dch'ld
' ren, a1ong WI'th severa1
nieces and nephews.
1911 in Bergholz, Ohio, the daughPreceding her in death besides
ter of the !ale George William and her parents were her first husband,
Lillian Elliott Pettit
John Hutton, and her second hus·
•••
Surviving are her husband, Bill b d W'll'
F
k
R
the
a
·s
Continued
from page l
Davidson of Chillicothe·, four
an • 1 tam ran Y r, st •
ter, Helen and a brother, Thomas.
c
40 R'
daughters: Caiherine McGraw and
Graveside services will be •held driven by Vincente orpuz, , to
Florence Nolan of Chillicothe,
Grande, ·was northbound on State
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Rock R
h
·
c
1
Dorothy Stewart of Manchester. Springs Cemetery. The Rev. Laura
oute 7 w en a p1ece o meta ,
Ohio and Linda Clary of London- Shreffler will officiate. Friends which fell from an unidentified
derry; a sister, Laura Park of Lonsouthbound vehicle, struck the
donderry; a brother, Eugene Pettit may CJll aht the EwingthFuneral windshield of his 1985 Toyota.
Homeservices.
one our pnor to e gravecorpuz bra ked h'ts car wh'tc h
of Mt. Hope, Ohio; 18 grandchil- side
dren and 26-grcat-grandchildrcn.
was then struck in the rear by a ColBesides her parents, she was Russell F. Shields
lowing tractor and semi-trailer
preceded in death by her rust busdriven by Dale E. Davis, 42, Parkband, Parker Chaney; two sisters,
Russell Floyd Shields, Sr., 57, ersburg, W.Va., the patrol reported.
Evelyn Oats and Violet Petty; and of 3094 Goodno Drive in Belpre,
Corpuz, a passenger, Joe Runfive brothers: Ralph Pettit, Dale died at his residence on Sunday, yan, and Davts refused treaunent
Pettit, Clarence Pettit, Art Pettit March 22, 1992, following an by EMS at the scene.
and Junior Pettit.
extended illness.
Damage 10 Corpuz' car was listShe attended the Pentecostal
He was born on August!, 193~ cd as heavy. Damage ·to Davis'
Church of God.
in Parkersburg, W.Va., the son of truck was listed as moderate.
Funeral services will be held on Florence Elizabeth Smith Shields
. Davis was cited by the patrol for
Wednesday at II a.m. at Ewing Mason of Vienna, W.Va., and the fa1Iure to mamlam assured clear
Funcral.Heme -in PomllJ!O·)\"~illi · ' 4aie.FioytfF1'81001n.Siiie1l!S: ,,_..""'..:!~· .
Rev. Robert Stewart offlc1atmg.
He was a retail sales consultant
Burial will be in Gilmore Ceme- for the Midland Grocery Company
tery.
in Vienna, W.Va., a division of
Friends may call at the funeral Cardinal Foods of Columbus. He
Three accidents resultin~ in
home from 9 a.m. until the time of was a member of the Belpre
vehicle
damage and one mmor
the service on Wednesday.
Church of Christ and a veteran of
injury were investigated by
James Owens
th.e u.s. Navy, serving in San Pomeroy Police Saturday.
Otego, Caltf.
At 2:42p.m. Saturday a 1959
Surviving besides his mother are
James Owens, 49, of Route I in his stepfather, Caroll Mason of Vil- Ford Thunderbird driven by BenCoolville, died on Saturday, March lage
Nursing
Home
in jamin Ewing, 49, Pomeroy, was
21, 1992 at Camden-Clark Memo- Ravenswood, W.Va.; his wife, struck in the right front by a vehirial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va. Anna Jean Lemon Shields; three cle driven by Kenton Ramsey, 19,
He was born in Philadelphia, sons: Steven Michael Shields, Pomeroy . According to police,
Pa ., the son of Pauline D. Fien Panama City, Fla., Ronald Randy Ramsey backed from a parking
Owens of Coolville and the late Shields of Tuppers Plains, and Rus- place into the side of the Ewing
Wilbert F. Owens.
sell Floyd Shields, Jr., Atlanta, Ga.; vehicle. He was cited for no insurHe was a veteran of the U.S . two daughters, Debra Lynn ance and improper backing. There
Army and a member of the Athens Holsinger of Little Hocking and was moderate damage to the Ewing
V.F.W.
Susan Kay Koenig, Long Bottom; vehicle, and light to the Ramsey
Surviving are his wife, Jodi five brothers : Roy Lee Shields, 1976 Ford.
Tara Clark was trealed and
Sayres Owens of Stewart; five Coal Run, Ohio, Richard D.
released
from Veterans Memorial
daughters: Connie Owens, Sheryl Shields, Woodstock, Ga., Louis C.
Hospital
where she was taken by
Owens, Tina Owens, and Lorrie Shields of Kennesaw, Ga., and
McDaniel, all of Athens, and Carla William S. Shields and Earl E. the Pomeroy squad following a
Owens of Nelsonville; two sons, Shields, both of Vienna; two sis- minor accident on East Main at
James R. Owens of Athens and ters, Reta Sims and Myrtle L. Sycamore. Police said that Marvin
James Owens of Nelsonville; a sis- Kenny, both of Parkersburg, Craig, 60, of Pomeroy had slowed
ter, Teressa McMullen of Parkers- W.Va., a half-sister, Carol A. his 1980 Pontiac to allow passage
burg, W.Va.; four brothers: Wilben Mason Balderson, of New England, of a vehicle responding to an emerit was struck in the
F. Owens of Coolville, Fred A. W.Va.; a brother-in-law and sister- gency when
..
..
Owens of Belpre, and Clarence L. in-law, Ronald and Katherine
Owens and Steven R. Owens, both Richardson, Vern Beach, Fla.; and
of Marion; and seven grandchil- 10 grandchildren.
dren.
Besides his father, he was preServices will be held on .ceded in death by an infant daughWednesday at II a.m. at While- ter, Susan Marie Shields.
Blower Funeral Home in Coolville
Funeral services wiD bl' ' ·d on
with Earl W. Owens officiating. Wednesday at 2 p.m. a. .ite111 Second St., Pomerot
Burial will be in Meigs County Ethridge Funeral Home i1 ,e!pre
YOUR INDEPENDEN
Memory Gardens.
with Rev. Don Severs and Rev.
Friends may call at the funeral Jerry Caplinger officiating. Burial
AGENTS SERVING
home on Tuesday from 2-4 p.m. will be in Core Road Cemetery in
MEIGS COUNTY
and 7-9 p.m.
Parkersburg.
Friends may call at the funeral
SINCE 1868
home after 2 p.m. on Tuesday.

Patrol

· Edith Virginia Ryther, 95, of
Syracuse, died Monday, Marth 23,
1992, at the Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Cenler.
Born on March 18, 1897, at
Pomeroy she was the daughter or
the late Thomas Terrell and Ida
Mac Roller Terrell. She was a
housewife.
She is survived by two sons and
daughters-in-law, Chester and Margaret Hutton and Frank and Ann

7

IJ'I

.,. -

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

"

• . •.. .
I

0

... 1

!ARGAIH MTJIICES 5ATUatlU &amp; WlfOAf.
BAKAIII NlliHT

ruuou .

MARCH 20 ttwu 21
FRIDAY t ~r .., Tlf.IRSOAY I

Kentucky Fried Chicken
You Can Eat
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY

'

(Dining Room Only)

served with whipped potatoes, chicken gravy, cole slaw; hot roll and

.

butter. Sorry, no substitutes except beverage with additional prices •

- to Tbo

:m~·~ t~~·J..'t':l.:
No

rear by a 1983 Mazda driven by '
Clark.
·
..
There was moderate damage to·
1he left side rear and quaner panel· ·
of the Craig vehicle, and heavy
damage to the front end of the ·
Clark car. Clark was cited for fai(- ~
ure to maintain assured clear dis- tance, and Craig was cited for oper-· ·
ating a motor vehicle while under a ·
license suspension.
There were no citations in all' ·
accident which occurred at Mulber-' ·
ry and Second at 7:04 p.m. Police .:
reported that Brian Justis, 16,
Racine, had stopped his 1987 Mer• cury at the intersection of Mulberry :.
and Second. It was struck in the· ·
rear by a 19S7 Ford driven by Paul' ·
Chadwell, 17, Middleport. Damage ··
was light to both vehicles

EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT AT CROW'S
You Get All The

PlliCII

......-

Am Ele Power ................ ..31
Ashland Oil ...... ................ .31 !fl.
AT&amp;T.. .............................. .40 l{l
Bank One ............................45 7/8
Bob Evans .........................26 7/8
Charming Shop.................. 31 1/4
City Holding ...................... l9 1/4
Federal Mogul... .................16 I/2
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 6S
Key Centurion ................... 18 1/4
Lands End........................ .36
Limited Inc.................. ..... 29 1{2
Multimedia Inc.................. 27 3/4
Rax Restaurant ................... ! 3/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17 5/11
Shoney's lnc ................. ..... 25
SJ.ar Bank .. ......................... 29 1/2
Wendy Int'l... ..................... I2 5/8
Worihington Ind................ 25 1/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi of GaUipolis.

Edith V, Ryther

n.o,. ......"''"''''....·....................
_.. C.tl
.
It ..... _ , . • .., ... - .
lllq " " " ' Ia -

Stocks

INSURANCE

IINOLICOPY

•

$3
'
65
ONLY

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE
DINNEI ROLLS

....lloil Ia

•-·----~~
'*

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from Solon, Ohio, who agreed to
the interviewed on the condition
she be identified only by her first
name, Laura, said the plane seemed ··
to be a few feet off the ground.·
when it tilted to the left quickly and·
hit the ground.
·
She said she saw a flash of light;
the next thing she knew, she was
floating in the water next to the
plane . She suffered minor burns
and was hospitalized in stable con- , ·
dition.
Dr. James A. Block, head of :
University Hospitals of Cleveland; '
called home to tell his wife he had · ·
survived with only cuiS on his face. · ·

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

ODo Wllk. ......................- ..................1.80
. ODo MC111h.............. ,........:.....................ll
0.. v.._........-.................._,,113.:10

1

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.

Police probe three wrecks

lo
Tho DailJ Sonlinot, Itt Coari 81.,
P . OJ.OIIio.S._.
lll..aiii'TION IIATU

IJC_w _ _lo

the 60s across the South, Plains, the
Pacific Nonhwest and California;
in the 70s from wes.tern Texas
tfirough southern Arizona and
northern and central Florida; in the
80s in southern Florida; in the SOs
from the Rockies to southern Oregon and from the northern Mississippi Valley to North Carolina; in
the 40s from the western Great
Lakes through the mid-Atlantic
Slates; in the 30s from the eastern
Great Lakes to southern New England; and in the 20s in northern
New England.
The high temperature for the
nation Sunday was 94 at McAllen,
Texas.

Flight 405... . Continued from page 1

Sadie Davidson

The Cheshire Cat vs. the Empty Suit

.·
.•

. •I Columbus I 42• I

•

The Dally Sentinel--Peg~.

UnseasQnably cold weather through Thesday ·

.illii'l

Monday, Matcb 23

Customs' problems finally go .before Congress

WASHINGTON· The U.S.
Customs Service has been bobbing
and weaving for more than a year,
parrying accusations of mismanagement and cronyism. In three
days of hearings this week,
Congress has the chance to knock
some sense into the agency.
The well-deserved blow has
been a long time in coming. We
first began exposing Customs' soft
spots in January 1991 with a series
of stories about the good-old-boy
system that fosters incompetence in
offices along the critical U.S.-Mexico border.
The deeper we dug, the more
incompetence we found. There
were the Customs agents caught
cruising the Mexican border in
their Blackhawk helicopter. "test
firing" their semi-automatic
weapons by strafmg jackrabbits on
the ground. There were the two offduty agents under investigation for
shooting up an empty restaurant in
Detroit when they had too much 10
drink.
There was the senior Customs
official in Chicago under investigation for allegations that he was

vv,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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•

�The .D,aily Sentinel

:Sports
1
By RICK WARNER
.•.
AP Sports Writer
· The Big Eight is down to the
. Big One in the NCAA tournament
• · The league sent stx teams to the
: postseason party, more than any
· other conference. After two rounds,
: Oklahoma State is the sole sur·
·: vivor.
: . Nebraska and Oklahoma lost in
tlie fust round, while Kansas, Mis·
souri and Iowa State were eliminated in the second round. That leaves
the ballyhooed Big Eight with the
same number of teams in the ftnal
16 as the Big West (New Mexico
State), the Western Athletic Conference (Texas-EI Paso) and the
Atlantic 10 (Massachusetts).
The Atlantic Coast Conference
: leads the way with four teams in
: th~ regional semifinals (Duke,
North Csrolina, Aorida State and
: ·Georgia Tech), while_ the Big Te~
· is next with three (Ohio State, Indi·
· ana and Michigan). The only olher
league with more than one team is
the new Great Midwest (Cincinnati
and Memphis State).
Kansas became the fust top seed
to lose falling to ninth-seeded
Texas-EI Paso 66-60 Sunday in the
Midwest Regional.
UTEP (27-6) used a new, fourcomer offense to pick apan Kansas
(27-5). The Miners worked_the ball
inside for 16 layups agamst the
taller. but slower Jayhawks.
.
"We held the ball longer and 11
: made getting penetration much easier " guard Prince Stewart said.
· "We kind of said, 'Let's get the
open shot and let the big guys get
into the game."'
.

Kansas coach Roy Williams was
impressed by UTEP' s slowdown
strategy.
'Needless to ·say, they had a
marvelous game plan and had the
athletes to utilize that game plan,"
he said.
It was the biggest victory for
UTEP since 1966, when the school,
then known as Texas Western, beat
·Kentucky for the national title.
Back then , the Miners were
coached by Don Haskins. They still
are.
But this is the first time since
winning the championship that
UTEP has advanced beyond the
second round.
"I think all good teams come
from a good coach," senior Prince
Stewart said. "He has confidence
in us to Jet us go out and play."
Kansas' Richard St:att scored
with 16.3 seconds remaining 10 cut
UTEP's lead to 62-60. But Johnny
Melvin then made two free throws
for the Miners, Kansas turned the
ball over and Ralph Davis hit a 15·
footer as time expired for the final
basket
UTEP's forward trio of Melvin,
Davi s and Marlon Maxcv combined for 44 points. Melvin had 18,
Maxey 14 and Davis 12 for the
Miners, who got only 10 points
from their backcourt.
UTEP will play Cincinnati on
Friday in lhe regional semifinals at
Kansas City, Mo. Fourth-seeded
Cincinnati advanced with a 77-65
victory over Michigan State.
In the Southeast, second-seeded
Oklahoma State beat Tulane 87-71
and sixth-seeded Michi~an downed

Page-4

East Tennessee State- 102-90 to
reach the final 16. The winners will
meet Friday at Lexington, Ky.,
where Oklahoma State's Eddie Sutton used 10 coach Kentucky.
Second-seeded Kentucky ·will
play thinl-seeded Massachusetts in
an East Regional semifinal Thursday at Philadelphia. Kentucky
defeated Iowa State I 06-98 and
Massachusetts beat Syracuse 77-71
in overtime.
Top-seeded UCLA b~at
Louisville 85-69 and New Mexico
State eliminated Southwestern
Louisiana 81-73 in the WesL They
will play Thursday at Albuquerque,
N.M.
Eao;t Regional
No. 6 Kentucky 106, Iowa St. 98
At Worcester, Mass .. Jamal
Mashburn scored 27 points and
Kentucky fended off a late Iowa
State rally . Trailing by 12 points
with 6:52 left, the Cyclones (21-13)
cut it to 93-90 on two free throws
by Brad Pippen with 3: 18 remain·
ing. But !hat's as close as they got
John Pelphrey added 20 points for
Kentucky (28-6). Justus Thigpen
had 32 points for Iowa State.
No.17 Massachusetts 77
No. 21 Syracuse 71 (OT)
Harper Williams made a desperation three-pointer as the shot clock
ran out with 30 seconds left in
overtime as Massachusetts won its
14th straight. The Minutemen (304) got the ball following a c~ntro·
versial out-of-bounds call with 35
seconds remaining, and Williams'
basket put them ahead 75-71. Syracuse (22-10) freshman Lawrence
(See NCAA on Page 5)

BU/.1.01

Slam-dunks, three-point shooting contests, and twil well-played
basketball games highlighted the
Ohio District 13 Coaches All Star
doubleheader Sunday afternoon at
· the University of Rio Grande's
Lyne Center.
Approximately 300 spectators
from the area were on hand to see
the Division 1·11 boys defeat the
Division III-IV crew 78-74, while
the Division III-IV girls earned a
split by downing their Division I-II
· counterpans 60-51.
Prior to the start of the girls contest, a three-way tie in the girls
three-point shooting contest in·
volved Chesapeake's Mindy Smith,
Southwestern's Renee Hale and
Symmes Valley's Jennifer Owens,
all of whom canned four of 10 at·
tempts.
In the overtime, in which each
player was given five shots, Hale
took top honors by hitting all five
three-pointers.
In .the boys three point event,
Jackson's Matt Walburn left 16
other contestants in the dust by hit·

c·;

FIFTH-GRADE CHAMPS - Harrisonville
won the firth grade championships with a 34-33
win over Salisbury in the Pomeroy Youth
League basketball tournament held at Meigs
Junior High School. In tbe front row are (L-R)

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ting nine of 10 shots.
The crowd pleaser was the
dunk-shot competition in which 15
boys showed a variety of forms in
slamming the ball through the bas·
ket. Fairland's Ryan Scribner
placed a chair in front of the basket
and jumped over the chair before
malcing his slam dunk. Not to be
outdone, Ironton's Ty Davis placed
a basketball rack full of balls in
front of the·bucket, and cleared it
with room to spare before ramming
the ball through the hoop. Davis received a standing ovation from the
fans and other players for his winning performance.
Norm Persin, Chesapeake's
Coach of the Year in Division III,
presented all of the all-District 13
girls and boys first team, second
team, and honorable mention with
T-shins prior to the games.
Girls contest
Led by Gallia Academy's Tan·
dra Adams and Dena Greene, along
with Jackson's Jennifer Hill the
large division girls posted a 15-7
first period lead and held a 24-17

Jeremy Morgan, Ricky Adkins, Clinton Hendricks and Chris D' Augustine. Standing team·
mates are Joe Vance, Jobnathan Dellavalle, Bill
South, Franco Romuno and Thomas Kopczinsky. Behind them are Dan and Sue Romuno.

Scoreboard
In the NBA ...
~STERN CONFERENCE
Atl1ndc Dhillon
Tum
W
NcwYcU. ..............42
801ton ................... J9
Miami .................... 31
Ntw1CDOf '""'"""30
ftUlldelphil ........... lQ
Wultinpn ............22
Orando ......•... ........ l7

.,,

L

Pet.
.627

2S

GB

30

.S6S

4

38

.449

12

37
38
47
ll

.448
.441
.319
.250

12
\lS
21
2S.l

Central DM1ion
•-Chic.gtt. .... ........ j6 13 .812
•.o ..land •• -.As zt .611
llclroil ...................41 28 .l94
lndano .......... ...... .34 36 .486
Allonlo ..... .............32 36 .471
Milwallkcc .............30 37 .448
Chorl................. .27 39 .409

9.5
15
22l
2ll
25
27.5

WESI'ERN CONFERENCE
Midwmt Dhillon
Ttana
W L
Pel
Ut.ah .......................45 23 .662
Son An1Dnio •. .........42 2S .621
HowiOn .......... .... .37 32 .536
Dco- ...................22 4l .328
Dtllu ..................... n S2 .2A6
Minnc:ICU .......... .... II S6 .164

GB

25
S.l
22l
28.S
33.S

Padno Dl.Ul..,
Panlond .................48 20 .706
Oo1dcn SLite ..........44 22 .667
Phoenil ..................44 2S .631
Scanl.e .................... 31 31 .551
L.A. Oippen ... ..... .37 32 . l~
LA. Lokcn ...... ..... .35 32 .l
Satnma!IO ............ 22 41
I.-clinched pll)loff berth

J
4.5
10..5
11.5
12l
26.5

.319

Saturday's scores
Now Yam lOS, Mlomi 83
OrianOo 111, Chiclaa 101

s_......too,u ...... .,
San Anlll'lia 101, Saulc 96
' LA. Cippas 114,DcnYttl1
Uloh 95; Podlond 71
Phccnili21 , Millnc.ou I~

Sunday's scores
Cltnfalld Ul, Adanll It
Indiana I01 , Philadeldlill 00
Milwallkoc 109, WuhinJlUII8
Bc.tm 114, Ooldm St.~te 97
Charlotte ll:J, Dcttoil 101
Miami 107, New Jersey 100
Scaulolll. Dollu lOS

Tonight's games

Cbariaaeal New Jc:ney, 7:30p.m.

San Antonio

•~

Philadclpiua, 7:30

p.m.

Golden SlaleatALI.n11, 7:30 p.m.
Dcnw:r II Mim.CIGC.I, 8 p.m.

Tuesday's games

Ori.IAdo at New Yea, 7:30p.m.
1....... CI&lt;Hbnd, 7:34 p.m.
[)err;er •• Ctaao.I:)O p.m.

Dll1al a\ Pmland, 10 p.m.
Houmn at Soaule.. 10 p.m.
Mi.lwa-.at Sacramal10, 10:30p.m.

.... In the NHL. ..
.....
CONFERENCE
..... WALESPatrkk
Dlwll~

T,_
W L T "'- CFCA
•-N.Y. Ronpn .. lf1 23 5 99 30:l23l
•-Wuhin.,.. .... 42 2S 1 91 311 2S2
1'1:-.n .......... 3l 2'1 9 19 31l280
New JaMr ........ 3&gt;121 II 79 264 23S
Pl:ilad.tp:il ..... .. 30 32 II 71 2Z1 ZAS
N.Y.lslandon .... 303310 70262210

•

•
•
•

Ad_DI_
r·Moo\Nl ......... ., 2S 9 91 2S4 111

,.•

..,.

• ·8 - ............ 32 31 10
1-Bullllo ....•..•... 29 33 II
Hanlon!............. Z3 31 12

•:•.

~-·············· 17 4S II

•.

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1:

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~ 221294

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
~

,'f_
1

~

;o

74 ZAilSO
69 267 774
51 223 1St

I

........ . . . . . ,..

W L T "'-GPGA
a-Doaoil ............ 312l II 1 11 29S ZA2
~~ ..-

...

;:J

3!2714 10231220

•-IILLoi:io ......... 333tto 742!72!1
Mb WO'I .. " """ 31 'S1 ' 67 22.5 :z.4'
T -............. 77 )I 7 61 2172641

.

-:;~lliiJIIIO,. · r-¥c
. · a .•... ~ 22 II 91 26!21, '
•' •·Loo """"" ..• :u 21 1l 11 771 m

w..,........
JWo

•••••.••• !4 31 I 76 274 273
11 :n

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70

s

64 26S213
)1191320

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, .

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m:w

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c.Ioar ---·····- 773610

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Sa.. rdiJ'IKOres

H.Y.-=,_2,do

Loo Anto!lo '·
Oool&gt;iO ... i' I

2

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lli.W.,._-J,do

C1i1o1p S. r - 1

'

CLINCHES THIRD -Clinching third-place
honors in the Pomeroy Youth League Tourna·
ment was the team from Pomeroy. Pictured in
the front row are (L·R) Ryan Pratt, Chris Darst

and Jeff Brown. Standing teammates are John
Ambrose, Shannon Smith, Grant Abbott, and
Juston Roush. Behind them are coaches Roger
Abbott and Kenny Roush.

Wheelersburg among fallen teams
in Ohio boys regional title games
By JEFFREY BRODEUR
Associated Press Writer
Lima Senior's Greg Simpson.
who is headed for Ohio State next
year, gave fans in Columbus a pre·
view of what they can expect in the
future as he scored 35 points to
lead the Spartans 10 a 78-73 victory
over Newark in a Division I hi~h
school regional championship
game.
.
Lima Senior (20-5) ~Ill meet
top-ranked Canton McKinley m a
state semifmal game Friday at Ohio
State.
In other regional finals Saturday, McKinley (24-1) advanced on
the strength of its inside game, as
center Bryant Bowden scored 22
points and grabbed 19 rebounds to
McKinley to a 67-56 victory over
Stow (23-3).
The mat~hup in. the other ~igschool semtfinal ptts Akron F1restone agwnst West Chestel Lakota.
Quinton Brooks scored 19
points as Firestone (23-2) defeated
Toledo SL John's (21·5) 72-62 Saturday in Akron.
West Chester Lak~ta (22-4),
paced by Scott Mueller s 15 potnts,
advanced by beating Cincinnati
Aiken 61-50 in Fairborn. Aiken

- - Sports briefs-Autoracln•
SURFERS I!ARADISE, Australia (AP) - Emenon fiUipaldi of
Brazil overll&amp;uled four rivals over
the futal seven laps Sunday 10 win
a chaotic, rii~-~ .Gold Coast
Indy Car Grand Prix.
·
Fittipaldi passed his Marlboro
Penske;.chcvrolet teammate Riel:
Mcaa on the 63rd of the 65 Ia~
and survived 1 sHde ICros&amp; a cbi·
cane for bls 14th lnd~ vic10ry
of hil Clreer. Flafllkh finisbed the
18S.54S-mile nee in 2 houn, 20
minutes, 32.477 seconds. Meara
was 2.81 seconds behind and
Bobby Rlbll wu tbird in the new
Rablf-Hopn Chevy. 8.11 behind.
MEXICO CITY (AP) - Nisei
Mansell of Brhaln recorded bis
second viciOry 'In cwo race11 this
seuon,_&amp;!~&lt;IDI Sunday's MeaiCIII
Graatii'I'IX with 1 tlnie of I bolw,
31 minute•. S3.S87 seconds.
(

finished the season at 21-5.
The Divison II semifinals place
Villa Angela-St. Joseph against
Cambridge and Van Wert versus
Columbus St. Charles.
.
Chris Callendar scored 15 pomts
for Cleveland Villa Angela-St.
Joseph, as they defeated Beloit
West
Branch
75-36
m
Youngstown.
.
T_h~ Vikings' opponent m the
semtfinals had to g_o to overtime
before sealing a trip to St. John
Arena.
.
.
Greg Bcll .hit a basket with five
seconds left m overume for Cambridge (22-2) to beat Columbus
Linden-McKinley 75· 74 at Athens.
Linden-McKinley finished the season at24-2.
At Fairborn, Chris Kitsmiller
scored 28 points to lead Columbus
St.- C:harl~s 10 a_71-45 victory over
Cmcmn~u Turpm. ~dam Hardew1g
led Turpm (17-8) with 13 pomts.
The Cardinals (24-1) will face
Van Wr:rt., a 62-61 overtime winner
over WiUard in Toledo.
Joel Mengerink hi~ a free _throw
w_ith one second left m ovcrumcw
g1ve the Cougars (21·4) the wm.
Willard ended the season at 2t-4.
In Division III, Matt Monmn's
three-point field goal with seven
.;e~onds to _play put Cassto:vn
Mtamt Eastmto the state scm1fi·

nals! as the '(ikings defeated
Cmcmnau McNtcholas (16-10).
Miami East (20-4) plays Hamler
Patnck Henry.
.
Kent Seemann scored 19 pomts
as Patnck Henry (19-6) defeated
Haviland Wayne Trace 65-to-59 .
Wayne Trace finished with a 21-4
record.
In the olher semifinal , Orrville
(25-1) will play Sparta Highland
(21-4).
Orrville made it to St. John
Arena on the strength of Kevin
Summers' 32 points, as th~ Riders
beat Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary,
74-70 in ovcnime at Canton. The
Fighti~g Irish ended up at 18-5.
In Athens, Jason Terry scored
22 points for Highland as the Fight·
ing Scots defeated Wheelersburg
59-51.
Malt Harsh with 10 points was
the only other player in double fig·
ures for Highland. Jonathan Ea10n
scored 18 and Matt Miller 10 for
the Pirates (16-10).
The Division IV semrinalists
were determined Friday.
Cincinnati Country Day (25-1)
will face Gates Mills Gilmour (20·
5), and Lima Catholic (21 ' 3) will
play Berlin Hiland (24-2) in games
Friday.
·
Championship games in all divisions will be played Saturday.

The Pally

Small-school, big-school squads
split District 13 all-star twinbill

Monday, March 23, 1992

·~ osus, Cincinnati advance
:~ to NCAA regional semifinals

·.•

Monday, March 23, 1992

PROGRESS HALTED- Kentucky frontman Deroo Feldhaus
(left) finds his progress halted by Iowa State forward JuUus Mlcha·
Ilk (right) and Brad Pippett (to Feldhaus's left) during the first hall
or Sunday's NCAA second·round East Reglooal contest at Worcester, Mass., whichlhe Wildcats won 106-98. (AP)

NCAA tournament action ...
(Continued from Page 4)
Moten shot an air ball from three·
point range with 18 seconds left
and Jim McCoy made two free
throws in the closing seconds to
clinch the victory for the Minutemen.
Southeast Regional
No. 11 Oklahoma St. 87
Tuhine71
At Atlanta, Byron Houston and
Corey Williams each scored 27
points and Oklahoma State shot a
NCAA toumamcnt-reconl 80 per·
cent from the field. The Cowboys
(28· 7) missed only seven of 35
shots to break the previous mark of
79 percent by North Carolina in
1988. G.l. Hunter led Tulane (229) with 17.
No. IS Michigan 102
E. Tennessee St. 90
Freshman Chris Webber had 30
points for the Wolverines, who
dominated inside and outside. East
Tennessee cut a 20-point halftime
deficit to eight with 13:05 left. But
the Buccaneers (24-7) missed their
next six three·JX&gt;int attempts and
. . Michigan (22-8) used an 11-2 run
. 10 put the game out of reach. Greg
• Dennis, East Tennessee's all-time
:~ leading ~~~r. ~lid 31 in his final
:· ~e.

·;
:•
.

.

Midwest Relional
No. 12 Clnclnnatl77
Mldtlpn St. 65
At Dayton, Ohio, Anthony
: •Buford scored 21 points and
:Cincinnati finally beat Michigan
: : Stale after blowing IS-point leads
&gt; In two previous losses. the
. Bearcau built a 17·point lead this
·' 'lime before Michlpn 'State rallied
: and cut It to four in the SCCOPd half.
'.Aflp the SJ111W1J pulled ID 60-56,
· the Beareali scored five straight
poinll and Michigan State never
lOt clo• than •ven asaJn, Herb
·Jones added IS pgints for the
· 11e1rca11 (27-4). Sbawn ReSPC1t led
JJ

Michigan State (22-8) with 27
points.
West Regional
No.4 UCLA 85, Louisville 69
At Tempe, Ariz .. Tmcy Murray
and Gerald Madkins gave UCLA a
big lifL Murray, who finished with
26 points and eight rebounds,
scored 10 straight points in a 12-3
spurt that gave the Bruins a 23-10
lead midway through the first half.
Madkins, who had 14 of his 16 in
the second half, led a 9-2 run early
in the second half. Don MacLean
scored 23 points for UCLA (27-4)
and became the leading scorer in
Pac-10 history. James Brewer led
Louisville (19-11) with 13 points.
New Mexico St. 81
SW Louisiana 73
William Benjamin's game-tying
three-pointer started a 9.0 run that
carried New Mexico State. The
Aggies made their last 16 free
throws . After Benjamin's threepointer tied it at 65, Sam Crawford
made two free throws to give New
Mexico State a 67-65 lead with
2:50 remaining. Cliff Reed scored
21 points for the Aggies (25-7).
Todd Hill, Marcus Stokes and
Michael Allen each had 15 points
for the Ragin' Cajuns (21.-11).

--Sports briefs-Swimming
AUSTIN, "texas (AP) . Olympian Summer Sanders. who
set two American records and
played a part in two record ~lays
this weelccnd,lcd Stanfcxtl to viclO·
ry over twO-time defending cham·
pion Texas on Saturday in the
NCAA meet. Stanford finished
with 73S.S points and Texas had

6S!.

lead at intermission as this trio accounted for 17 points in the first
two frames.
In the third quarter Coal Grove's
Jenny Co~;J,;cored all 10 _of her
points in I · g the small division
team to a 37-361ead after three pe·
riods. Stephanie McLauglin of Nelsonville· York accounted for all six
of her points in the fourth quarter,
but the real story was Symmes Valley's Jennifer Owens, who scored
four points in the third, and added
10 in the fourth to claim game
scoring honors with 19 markers.
Fairland's Kelli Fuller joined in
double digit scoring for the winners
with ll .
Hill of Jackson and Rock Hill's
Carrie Haas each scored 12 for the
losers with Greene adding II.
The Division III-IV girls were
coached by David Moore of North
Gallia, while Jackson's Chuck
Dorsey guided the Division I-II
team.
Quarter totals
Division III-IV .... .7 10 20 23 = 60
Division I·II ...... .15 9 12 15 = 51
Division III-IV (60) Stephanie McLaughlin (N-Y) 2-03=7; Jenny Conley (Coal Grove) 4·
0-2=10; Jennifer Owens (Symmes
Valley) 8-0-3=19; Tricia Holmes
(CG) 3-0-2=8; Angie Bush (Kyger
Creek) 1-1-0=5; Kelli Fuller (Fairland) 1-1-6=11. TOTALS -19·2·
I6=60
Non-storing players - Renee
Hale (Southwestern), Tina Myers
(North Gallia), Trena Schneider
(SV) and Mindy Smith (Chesa·
peake) .
Division I-II (51) - Tandra
Adams (Gallia Academy) 2-0-3=7;
Dena Greene (GAHS) 4-0·3=11;
Jennifer Hill (Jackson) 5-0·2=12;
Loni Gillenwater (Rock Hill) 2-1·
0=7; Carrie Haas (RH) 2-1·5=12;
Myra Justice (Rock Hill) 1-0-0=2.
TOTALS -I6-2-13=51
Non-scoring player - Jenni
Carey (South Point)
Boys contest
In a seesaw game that saw at
least 15 lead changes, Gallia
Academy's Jim Osborne, District
13' s Division II coach of the year,
guided his big-school team to a 7874 victory over the smaller-school
team, coached by Persin.
Chesapeake's 6-foot-8 Rick Ed·
wards scored nine points in the fust
period in leading his team to a 19·
16 edge. In the second quarter Ironton's Ty Davis tallied stx and Fairland's Ryan Scribner added five
points as the large school took a
35-29 halftime lead. In that quaner,
Southern's Roy Lee Bailey accounted for six of his eight total
points for the contesL
In the third periOd seven different players scored as the smallschool team outscored their counterparts 27-20 to slip into a 56-55
lead after three quarters. Edwards
had six, and Chad Swain of Hannan Trace chipped in five points 10
lead the assaulL
The final period saw Logan's
Joe Hanning score eight and Fairland's Nathan Hughes get six for
the eventual winners. For the
smaller schools, it was Edwards
and Swain with six and five points
10 lead the scoring.
Edwards 100k game honors with
21 points, and his teammate, Jon
Thacker, added 12. Swain finished
with 10.
For the big schools, Davis led
the offense with 17 points, and
Hanning had 12, while Scribner
had II and Fairland's Nathan
Hughes had 10.
Quarter totals
Division lli-IV ... 19 10 27 18 = 74
Division 1-11 .......16 19 20 23 =78
Division III-IV (74) - Rick
Edwards ('peake) 8-1-~=21; Jon
Thacker ('peal:e) 5-0-2=12; Eric
Royse (Alexander) 2-1·0=7; Roy
Lee Bailey (Southern) 4-0-0=8;
Chad .Swain (HT) 2·2·0=10;
Charley Gatchel (Trimble) 2·0·
0=4; Matt Harris (FH) 4-0-0=8;
Rob Wilson (Alex) 2-0-0=4. TO·
TALS - 29-4-4:74
Non-scoring players - Phil
Bradbury (KC), Bill Potter (Oak
Hill), Darin Smith (N. Gal.)
Division 1-D (78) - Ty Davis
(Ironton) 7-1-0=17; Joe Hanning
(Logan) 6-0-0=12; Scott Jividen
(GAHS) 1·2·0=8; Ryan Scribner
(Fairland) 4-0-3=11; Willie
Woodard·(Jackson) 1·0-1=3; Eric
Burris (Logan) 4-0-0=8; Travis
Wise (S.P.) 1-0-0=2; Tom Rule
(Fairland) 3-0-1=7; Nathan Hughes
(Fairland) 3-1·1=10. TOTALS30-4-6=78

PYL GlRLS CHAMPS - Pomeroy Wright
won the girls championships with a 27-21 win
over Blackwell. Pictured in front are (L-R) Sara
Craig, Jackie Buck, Michelle Watkins and Jen·

Cleveland Cavaliers one of sextet
of new NBA playoff qualifiers
and 5-foot-3 guard Tyrone Bogues
The Ccltics, who have won 10
had 18 points and 12 assists for the of their last 11 games at home,
Hornets, who surpassed by one broke away from a 12-12 tie on
their club records for vic10ries and three consecutive baskets by Reghome victories by defeating the gie Lewis that triggered a 14-2 run
Pistons. Charlotte is 27-39 overall en route to a 30-17 lead after one
and 18-15 at home.
period. Leading 54-41 at halftime,
Elsewhere in the NBA Sunday. Gamble led a third-quarter surge
it was Cleveland 123, Atlanta 80: that put Boston ahead by 24 points
Indiana 108, Philadelphia 100; Mil· going into the final period.
waukee 109, Washington 88;
Cavaliers 123, Hawks 80
Boston 114, Golden State 97 and
Cleveland clinched a playoff
Seattle 113, Dallas 105.
spot as Brad Daugheny and Mark
Joe Dumars led the Pistons with Price combined for 31 points in the
23 points.
first half, helping the Cavaliers
Heatl07, Nets 100
build a 23-point lead against
Miami improved its home Atlanta.
record to 24- I I as Grant Long
Daugherty finished with 22
scored eight of his season·h!gh 29 points, John Battle 21, Lwry Nance
points in the final 2:02, kcymg an 20 and Price 18 as the Cavaliers
11-0 run against New Jersey.
won for the 27th time in 32 home
Derrick Coleman, who scored games.
32 points for the Nets, hit three free
Pacers 108, 76ers IOO
throws during a 7-0 run that gave
Dctlef Schrcmpf and Rik Smits
them a 98-93 lead with 3:04lcft.
each had 23 points and !Orcbounds
The Heat then scored the next as Indiana sttetchcd its home win11 points for a 104-98 lead wilh ning streak to a fmnchise-reconl 10
1:01 remaining.
games by defeating Philadelphia,
SuperSonics 113, Mavericks 1_05
The 76crs led by as many as 11
Eddie Johnson scored 31 pomts points in the third quarter before
as Seattle came back from a 26- lhc Pacers lOOk control with a 15-0
point deficit at Dallas, handing ~c run, giving them a 90-84 lead wilh
Mavericks their 13th consccuuvc 9:35lcfL
Charles Barkley led Philadeldefeat.
Rolando Blackman scored 30 phia with 37 points and 16
pomts for Dallas, which tied a rebounds.
Ducks 109, Bullets 88
club-record with 46 first-quarter
At
Milwaukee,
Alvin Robertson
points, but couldn't hold a 53-27
lead with 9:43 left in the second tied a season high with 29 points
quaner. It was the biggest lead the and keyed a second-period strealc
Mavericks have ever blown, sur· that carried the Bucks past Washwin."
passing
a 23-point advantage they ington, which lost its fifth consecuLarry Johnson scored 22 points
.
allowed Denver to overcome m tive game.
Robettson,
averaging
11.8
--Sports briefs-- 1985.Celtics 114, Warriors 97
points this season, had two threeSkiing
Kevin Gamble scored 16 of his pointers to start a 10-0 run and finCRANS-MONTANA, Switzer- 25 points in the third period and ished the streak with two free
land (AP) - Alberto Tomba of Boston held Golden State 21 points throws as the Bucks ~bbed a 66Italy powered through a steady under its average.
461ead with I :09lefl~n the~~~
snowfall Sunday to win the World
Cup season's closing slalom and tie
his 1988 personal best of nine vic·
tories.
Tomba led after the fust run and
finished with a two-run time of 1
minute, 48.14 seconds, 0.64 seconds ahead of Paul Accola of
Switzerland Accola edged Tomba,
who won the season 's slalom and
MQNDAY-Ttrkey Mamattan, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
giant slalom titles, in the overall
IUESPAY • PhiHy San&lt;ttlich. French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
standings.
WEQNESPAY ·ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT SPAGHETTI (ALL DAY)
CRANS-MONTANA, SwitzerJHYBSPAY -ChiCken Sandvoich, F.rench Fries, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
land (AP) - Carole Merle of
ERIPAY ·ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT FISH (ALL DAY)
France capped her best season ever
Saturday by winning a World Cup
Ordtr 2 Egg1 Afrt Stylt Willi HGmiiNdl Bulllrmllk S!ICU!ll,llld Cotfll II'
giant slalom and her first season
HAM, BACONoriiAUSA~E II'EXTR.\
-~-~--!lilliE,___.._ ~-1-lii!IWIBat
title in the event.
By The Associated Press
Six teams are within three
games Jf each other for three playoff spots in the NBA's Eastern
Conference. The Charlotte Hornets
are malcing a strong bid to make
lhat seven teams.
.The Hornets won for the IOth
time in 13 games overall and for
the IOth time in 11 home games
Sunday, beating the Detroit Pistons
ll3-IOI.
With the victory, the Hornets
are just 2 1!2 games behind Miami
for the eighth and final conference
playoff berth. The Heat, which beat
New Jersey 107-100 Sunday night,
and the Hornets are bidding to
become the first of the four most
recent expansion teams to play in
the postseason.
Charloue, averaging 108.6
points when the streak started, have
scored 112.8 per game during the
current hot strealc. And the Hornets' defense also is doing its
share, with 10 or more steals in 14
of 21 games, including Sunday
when Charlotte had 10 against the
Pistons.
Although the Hornets shot 60
percent from the field against
Detroi~ coach Allan Bristow called
Sunday's victory Charlotte's best
defensive effort of the season.
"We were switching and jumping and making them make the
extra pass," Bristow said. "Our
defense was so active today. When
you play defense like that, you can

REVIVAL

'

••

MARCH 22·27- 7:00 P.M ~
HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH :
St. Rt. 143 -Just off Route 7 • POMEROY, OH. l
GUEST SPEAKER: Dr. Marty Holman :
SPECIAL SINGING NIGHTLY . .

IARL'KEILER Ill, C.P.A.

Singers Include The Children of God, The
Redeemed Q!Jartet, God's Little Lambs,
The Joyful Hearts, Linda Jo-:tas, Hillside
Baptist Choir

Register.. Representative
IRA's • SEP IRA's
MUTUAL FUNDS • UIT's
MONEYMARKETS

Sanders, a sophomore who was
614Pf92•7270
named the meet's outstanding
~~~:! SeMI-..,
swimmer for the second ltrailht
;.i
TX 75019
year, aet national madts in the 2()()..
and 400-yanl individual ~cdleya. . . ._ _ _ _ _.-llllllit

.,

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

Merle, who captured her fourth
straight suger-gl3nt slalom title
Thursday, had a two-run time of 2
minutes, 32.27 seconds, 2.13 seconds ahead of Blanca FernandezOchoa of Spain. Merle won four
giant slaloms and three super-Gs
this season. She finished second
behind Austria's Petra Kronberger
in the overal!. standings.

H.D. VEST FINANCIAL
SERVICES

.

nifer Shrimplin. Standing are coach Bennie
Wright, Jessica Wright, Charla Roach, Wendy
Shrimplin and Candee Miller.

NURSERY CAREPROVIDED
VAN PROVIDED-Call992..6768
lac.

·:.~

·

Bring AFriend, and ''Come and Se~" what
God bas for you!

----~~ }" ~~--------------~"~
,,
~I

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

~

•The Arears Number I
Marketplace

Monday, March 23, 1992

Page-S

•

Poet's corner Meigs County 4-H news
Old times past

· .· GOOD CITIZENS • Tara Gerlach, second
:rrom right, was the winner or the Good Citizen.
: sblp essay contest sponsored by the Return
:Jonathan Meigs Chapter or Daughters or the
American Revolution. She represented Meigs
High School. Pictured, left _to right are Mary

~~~ ~~

•

,1

·'

rI
l

ESSA VISTS HONORED • A Meigs County
. firth grader and sixth grader were honored on
. . Friday at Overbrook Center in Middleport for
· their essays in the Good Citizenship essay contest, sponsored by tbe Return Jonathan Meigs
- Chapter of the Daughters or the American Revo·
: lotion. Pictured, left to right are June Ashley,

Skinner, Good Citizenship Chairwoman; Amy
Well of Eastern High School, and her mother,
Doris Well; David lhle or Southern High School
and his mother, Donna Ihle; and Gerlach and
her grandmother, Peg Gerlach. (Sentinel Photo
by Brian J. Reed)

r
i

Keith Ashley, Emma Ashley and Rachael Ash·
ley, sixth grade winner, and Jesse Little, fifth
grade winner, with his parents , Connie and
Douglas Little. Also pictured is Anna Circle Cie·
land, Chapter Regent for the D.A.R. (Sentinel
Photo by Brian J, Reed)

DAR announces 'Good Citizens'
The Return Jonathan Meigs
: Chapter of the Daughters of the
: American Revolution held its char. ter day luncheon on Friday at Over: brook Center in Middleport.
. .Thirty-six members and guests
· enjoyed a luncheon, followed by
: tl\e meeting . The meeting was
: opened in ritualistic form by the
regent, Anna Circle Cleland. Prayer
. by Pauline Atkins was followed by
:a salute to the nag and the Ameri. can's Creed was given in unison.
No secretary or treasurer's report
given.
: The Good Citizens committee
: f.las established by the DAR 1n
; 1.~34 and has rendered a valuable
·service for over half a century to
: sci&lt;:iety and to the youth of the
oation by recognizing and award' ing the qualities of dependability,
·service, leadership, and pa1rimism

.was

.

in high school students.
The contest is open to young
men and women who are seniors.
The faculty chooses three seniors
who best exemplify outstanding
qualities of dependability, service,
leadership and patriotism in their
school, home and community.
From these three, the senior class
chooses the school's Good Citizen.
One student per school is selected.
The following represented the three
high schools in Meigs County:
Tara Gerlach, daughter of Mike
and Debbie Gerlach and granddaughter of Mrs. Wendell Gerlach,
of Meigs High School; David Ihle,
son of Charles and Donna Ihlc, rep·
resenting Southern High School;
and Amy Well, daughter of Deryl
and Dons Well, from Eastern High
School.
· The awards to these students

were presented by Mary Slcinner,
chairman of the Good Citizen committee.
The regent presented awards to
two elementary school students
who wrote essays. The topic:
Famous Women of the Amencan
Revolution. Essays were judged on
hi storical accuracy. adherence to
subject, organizauon of material,
originality, interest, spelling and
punctuation.
Jesse Little, son of Doug and
Connie Little, is in the fifth grade
at Racine Elementary SchooL
Rachel Ashley, daughter of Keith
and Emma Ashley, is in the si~th
grade at Bradbury Elementary.
Mary Skinner e~p re ssed her
th anks to the officials in all three
hi gh schools who cooperated in the
selection of these students. She also
c~tendcd her thanks to the teachers
who
the papers.

Busy Beavers
·
Teni _Carsey and Jessica Smith,
The Busy Beaver 4-H Club met News Reporters .
. Another meeung of the y?~1I
How many Old Timers, would like on February 8, 1992 at Delma
Karr's house, with eight members Rulers was ~eld at the home o
to recall,
Cornell,_wtth 13 members and
Their youth, which is far in the and four advisors present.
The
group
discussed
candy
bars,
three adv1sors present
·
past?
elected
officers,
discussed
a
club
The
group
diSCussed
parts
of a
The roaring twenties, which they
project,
and
d~es.
The
project
Jeshorse,
parts
of
a
saddle,
~d
how
to
were a part,
But like today, went by much too son. was talkmg about projects groom a horse. Th_e projCCtl.ess&lt;!n
avrulable.
was every member parUCtpaung tn ,
fast
There were no demonstrations naming saddle and horse parts. For
Back, when most all were on equal,
a recreation members got to set on
And your neighbor was part of or reports given.
Becky Karr, News Reporter
a horse.
your clan.
Kountry
Kids
Refreshments wer~ provided by
When it was social life, and not TV
The Kountry K•ds 4-H Club met Terri Carsey, and Jan• Burke.
And each day, came and went
recently with I I members and two
Jessica Smith, News Reporter
without plan.
advisors present.
Go-GeHers
The group discussed cookThe Salem Center Go-Getters
When wallting was the main way
book 's, talked about Beth met recently at the home of Bonnie
of travel,
Reynold's cat and how she cares Scott with 20 members, Sill parents,
Horse and buggy, for ooly a few.
.
And if by your wealth, you were for the cat, and they also checked and two advisors_present
to
see
if
anyone
wanted
to
sell
The
group
d1scussed
projects,
called rich,
candy bars. The project lesson was and decided which mem~ would
It was a car, or llivver for you.
When movies were just then begin· to see if anyone had their projects bring refreshments each urne there
started, and Reynold's gave details was a meeting. The proJect lesson
ning,
about her caL
was on sewing lessons by video, in
And you read the next scene to be.
A report was giving by Beth, in which they were showed how to
Talkies were still unheard of
And with the seating, you could which she did a good job. A make designs on T-shiCts and
hardly see.
.
demonstration was given by Beth sweatshirts.
also, she brought her cat in and told
Bonme, Becky, and Michelle
Scott served refreshments Plans
When radio was enjoyed by the about how to take care of cats.
A game was played inside, made for the next meeting is to
family,
choose members to bnng refreshAnd when neighbors ·were as close because it was too cold outside.
as your kin.
Refreshments were provided by ments.
When a bam dance took place on Tasha Jude, and Kim Janey. Plans
Crystal Vaughan, News
Saturday night,
were made to see who would bring Reporter
And on Sunday, you all were done food and pop at the ne~t meeting,
in.
and to see who was going to bring
When your favorite girl gave you a their candy money in.
Alfred Uvestock
smile,
Chastity Jude, News Reporter
The Alfred Livestock 4-H Club
And your heartbeat increased by
Meigs Creek
recently held its meeting at the
the minute.
The Meigs Creek 4-H Club met home of Riki and Chris Barringer.
Never knowing then, what the recently at Tuppers Plains, with 12
Nine members, two visitors, and
future beld,
members, four parents, and one four advisors were present
Or how much that girl would be in advisor present.
The group discussed· setting a
it.
The group discussed activities date for a bake sale, the swine
for 4-H week, including the fair show at the fair; pro's and con's,
When the family went to town on sc hedule, upcoming events, and and made a motion for members to
Saturday,
candy bars were passed out. Mem· pay for the books. The project lesTo buy groceries to last for the hers also discussed how to keep son was going on a field trip with
your animal healthy, and looked swine kids, and to look at baby
week.
Even back then, with pnces so low, through animal project books.
pigs.
Bargains were still there to seek.
A safety and health report were
A safety report was given on
And with everything all sacked and given by Jeremy Cowdery and poisoning of small children, and a
Amanda Upton. Cowdery's report report was given by Jessica Barpaid for,
From the change, you were given a was on the effect of smoking, and ringer.
Upton's was on barn safety.
dime.
Refreshments were served by
A dodgeball and basketball Riki and Chris Barringer. The next
You bought peppermint sticks and
game was enjoyed by members. mceting'will be March 29, at3 p.m.
caramels,
Something that would last a long Plans were made to have candy bar at the Powell's home. Plans will be
money turned in and to get a guest made for Melissa Guess to give a
time.
speaker if possible.
dcmonSIIation on "How to Show
Tim Epling, News Reporter
When AI Capone was the counl!y 's
Swine."
Young Riders
top gangster,
Mendy Guess, News Reporter
A meeting of the Young Riders
Pretty Boy Floyd, John Dillinger,
was held recently at the home of
and more.
Shootouts were common, for the Bill Cornell, with 12 members and
Pleasure Riders
four advisors present.
underworld rule,
The
4-H
Pleasure Riders met
The
group
discussed
several
And everyone tried to keep score.
recently,
with
seven members and
money
making
projects,
western
Chicago, was the scene of much
two
advisors
present.
show shirts to be made, and going
violence,
Sara Gruescr recited the Pledge
to the Miniature Horse Farm. The
New York had a share of it to.
Moonshine was the main cause of project lesson was on different of Allegiance, and Sm Craig said
fond pertaining to horses was set the 4-H Pledge. Roll call was
trouble.
With the thought, I'm more power- out in baggies , and labeled for answered with parts of tack. They
handed out projects books, and
everyone to observe and discuss.
ful than you.
Donnie May gave a report on materials on Horse Industry
Yes, we grew up through those Hippology , Dee Canter gave a School.
report about 4-H Awareness week,
years,
The following officers
We survived with what each of us Sandy Smith reported on OJQHA
Trail,
Jayme
Miller
on
OJQHA
were
elected:
President, Susan
had.
Grueser;
Vice
President, Kenny
Style
show
and
Western
Pleasure,
Bank failures and depression, each
Napper;
Secreuuy,
Sara Craig;
and
Pamela
Neece
reported
on
of us saw,
Treasury,
Sarah
Grueser;
News
OJQHA
Showmanship.
And the times that really were bad.
Reporter,
Holly
Milhoan;
and
Refreshments
were
provided
by
But we had then, what time has
Jayme Miller and Donnie May, Health and Safety, Tracy Shaffer.
claimed,
The program was on the O.U.
A closeness, for aU those we knew. they brought in Horse coolcies and
pop.
The
next
meeting
will
be
Equestnan
Team and a discussion
Not like today, when most everyfollowed.
Members
also discussed
March
26,
7:00
p.m.
at
Bill
Corone thinks,
nell's
residents.
Plans
will
be
made
freestyling
form
by
the Quarter
Why should I care about you ?
to discuss Horse projects, and dis· Horse Congress.
Holly Milhoan, News Reporter
So once again, I think of the Old cuss 4-H qualifying show rules.
Times,
As I myself, am far up in years.
I think of them, and then of!Dda¥,
And the eyes start to blur with
A baby shower in honor of Mr. and Anthony Moore.
tears;
Sending gifts were SaUy Ebers·
and Mrs . Roger Eblin was held
But I stiU can go back, with memo- recently at the home of Ira Eblin, bach, Elizabeth Roberts, Judy
. ry in time,
Syracuse, by Dawn and Diana Stewart, Crystal Hood, Mr. and
For I was a part of back then.
Mrs. George Bricldes and Jim and
Bnisb, Centerburg.
'And tl)e heart, it still skips a beat
Cake, ice cream sandwiches, Jean Brush.
or two.
potato chips, nuts and mints were
Each time I remember back when.
served to Myrtle Grover, Edith
Barton, Betty Reed, Nellie and
(ALL:
Olen D. Harrison, Pomeroy
Karen Grover, Lorraine Veney,
Jell w......,r ln~ul'llllce
Joshua and Jake Veney, Iva Stew)13 w. !lod
art, Eileen Snyder, Jean and
Pomeroy,
O~lo
George Moore, Jo~n and Dolly
614-992-54
79
Motley, Geraldine Hanel, Bonnie
and Debbie Krautter, Iris Baker,
.................. r...,q .... -.eo.,..;.
IMII*a Oil _ _ ..._ CW...,OMQ1.
Judy Pape, Patty Barton, Elaine
,.........
Cockran, Amy Howell, Michelle
........-.. .... c...,
Scmkins, Hope Eblin, Hester Eblin
Elizabeth "Lisa" Stewart Crump
recently graduated with honors
NEED TO LOSE INCHES, OR JUST TONE UP?
from Ohio University in Athens,
Ohio, where she earned a Bachelor
'
HAVING TROUBLE EXERCISING ON
I'
of Arts degree in Political Science.
YOUR OWN?
I
A 1980 l!rduatc of Wahama
HiKh Schoo , Crump re~ides in
HERE'S YOUR ·ANSWER!
Atiicns with her husband, Paul, and
children, Nikki and James.
We have seven toning tables working to trim
The daughtet of Evelyn Stewart
away inches, relieve stiff bones and muscles, 1I
of Mason and Jack and Opal
I
Stewart of Walton, W.Va., Crump is
or
just
tone
up
that
winter
body.
iI
the granddaughll:r of Frances
ARTHRITIS
SUFFERERS
find
great
relief
after
Stewart. Mason, and Addie Cum·
mins, Letart Falls, Ohio.
I
jus~ one visit.

• • · POSTER WINNERS. Winners in1be dtlltal
poster contest, held ill eonjunctloo wltb Natlolill
' .- Citlldrens' Deatal Health Month and Larry D.
; Keenedy, D.D.S. Middleport, have been select·
: ed. Top winner was Tasba Spencer, Har·
, 1'1101Yillt, with $30. Second place was Mluy
Crme~u, Middleport, with $10. AD otben are
' tltlnl place willnm, all or Middleport, witb $5
( ed. Pidtlred, J.r, are, rroat, Michael Good·

i

i

man, Johnny Herdman, Ashley Burton and
Michelle Painter. Second row, Zach Meadows,
Renee Stewart and Missy Cremeans. Back row,
Betb Cremeans, Bridgett Johnson, Tasha
Spencer and Amy Oblinger. Cremeans and
Oblinger are employees or Dr. Kennedy wbo
traveled to area grade schools to make educational dental presentations.
.
----------'Japanese climber -Junko Tabci
became in 197S the ri!St woman to
reach the summit of Mount EverChurch will sponsor a building est
'
fua4 dinn« on April 4 at 4:30 p.m.
at the PYthian Sitler HaD on Main
Sb'eet. Menu includes bamloaf,
me~tJ=', IIIII liied cltk:ken plus the
Jrimmings. Tlte church is raising
fundi 10 bailcl a kitchenette and
&amp;
balbroOm and remodel the Sunday
school room. Sanctuary renovations
a~~~~pleted. Vliiiiin C1r1
Tbo 171-yw-old church iJ Pill
of dll Vlntat Ala Mlnillly w6ich
it~elacles McArthur Preabyterlan
and Trinity Episcoptll churches.
Offlctl are 202 West High,

iwPC joins national campaign

IL~ The Wilkesville Presbyterian
l'C.IIurcb II Joinina the Nalional
"'IMle a Friend" t:llltplip crtalt.d

S

!JJI Is

ill Amelican Ufe.
ipeeiallllid-lcnten evening
Mln:h 29 ll 7 p.m. will

11*111 mUIIC IIIII conare·

fq':~:£j~ith
Rev. SunKay
T1te founlt

..,_,_of,...,....

- allAIItlu
f« a IRik in
11te eln•
Jtt. I« die p ' tM' IIIII ll.esunlc·
-oil-. A time ollellowlblp

.. Jells•••" will follow the
•• '·Tile•••Ice.
Wllteevllle Presbyterian
•

I

0

~-S.UITE_1..
12·Y,-~LiiiiliiiiEYitiDiiiRiiitiViiiE...PT....itiPLiiiiEAiiiSiiiAiiitNT._...

(

MoN. thru FRI. 8A .M.-5P.M, - SAT.8-l2
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
• Ad. oullide CaUia, Ma•on or Meig.l countiea mwt be P'"l'.;d
• Receive diKounl for ad• paid in • dnnee.

' r,.. Adt :

Real Estate General

992·2259
608 QSU&amp;AIN

-

•
......,

:.

......,......

·~··-·

•

.FIT&amp;TRIM
Comer of Main &amp; Butternut
POMEROY, OHiO
992-3033 '

NEW USnNG- 1lloor trame c:Bbin type home. 4 rooms, 2
bedloomo, 1omecarpet&amp; paneling, gas space heat. Anice
fixer-upper.
S8,000
NEW usnNG- A2 unit apartment btJilding. Gteat renlal
lnvetlmenl bath W1ils currenlly rented. GoOd monthly Income.
Aoklng $13,000
HEMLOCK GROVE· I 112 110ry log look homo. 3 bedrooms, carpel, equipped ki!Chafi, paich I dacf&lt; on 100 x
200 lot
$21,100 Molle on offer!
•

BEAUTFUL SPUT LEVEL, lrame consliUcled home! 9

~: ·~~~I
~~~~·~··
$81,500
I

'

(WI hiYIIxlendld our hount to UI'VI JOU blltlr)

Moncllr th!"' Frldlr, 1:00 A.M. to '7:00P.M.

REDUCED- MiddlepOrt• An elegmtt home on _a .level lot
~gltt. VOI'J wei

I'
I

j

]:
1

WE'RE THE HOIIETOWN COHNECllOH FOR OUT OF .
TOWN IUYERI AND LOCAL IIBOS COUNTY SELL·
!Ill.• YOU WANT TO OET THE WORD OUT... LIST
WITH Ull

1

,_ ,}

f.

· . t. l

;, ;

' ~-------~~----------~
•,.ll . . . .

lnsullltd. OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELLI
145,000 .,
.

llobl.. iloiM only·l975 14 K 70 Nashua home with 3
, bedloomo, carpet &amp; paneling, total eleclric heal. Include~
a tO' cklclt
.
AI king t7,000
MAKE AN OFFER!

; I
.t'"

•

with a 2-ctr Q111198, large Iron! porch, anJC owdio With oky

I

• I.

POMEROY, OHIO

Jl

''

'

..

$
$
$
$

.20
.30
.42
.60

446-GaiUpoUt
36 7 -Che1hire
388-Vinlon
245-Rio Grande
256-Cuyan Dial.
643-Arabi• Dial.
379-Walnul

992-Mldclleportl
Pomeror
985-Cheater
843-Portland
247-~lart

r.u.

949-Ra&lt;:ine
742-Rutland

675-Pa. Pleaeanl
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove

773-Muon
882-New Haven
895-l.etarl
937 -Buflalo

667-CoohiUe

Public Notice
righlto reJect any and all bid a.
Jerry Wray
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
(3) 16, 23;
2TC

CLASSD'IEDS
GET RESULTS • FAST!

2- ln Memory
3-- Announcements

4- Gaveaway
5- Happy Ade

12-

6-l.mland Found
7- Loll and Found
3-- Publ1c Sale &amp;
Auction
9- Wanted lo Buy

14- Buaine~e Traaning
15-- Schoole &amp; lnllrudion

Situationa Wanted

If-. Rad1o, TV &amp; CB Repa1r
17- Miacellaneow
18- Wan led To Do

I· IIi I I ~ I I' I 'I I I '
,'\ I II I '1111 J,
W•nled to Buy
LiYealock
Hay &amp; Crail•
SIICCI &amp; FertHiaer

~"~

Wanted to Rent

75- Bo•ta &amp; Moton for Sale
7&amp;- A•to Parta &amp; A&lt;:&lt;o-lrietl
77- Auto Repair
78- C•mping Equipme••

•

......

1\lll ~ l ·.

51- Ho ..ehold Goodt
52- Sporting Gooda
53- Antiquea

54- Mi•c. Merchandiee
55- Building Supphea

"'

Plumbing &amp; Healins '·
Excnatin!
Electrical &amp; Refr~rolt;O.j
Ceneral Haulins
Mobile flo me Repair
Upholelery

Business Services

'~-------~~-------"'1'"'--------T""-------..,.-------,;_

I"'

CAL:~

ADS}

.GUN SHOOT

TANNING

TRDY-Bl£T'
o.. SJiri:il Sblpm:m or
1to1·BU1 'lllen Now In Stoc••
Your Loc-al 7't-2f·Bill D.alrr

WAKf11ElD'I

II. SO Wtsl, A••a. Olio •S93·381 S

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
fREE ESTIMATES

985·4473
667·6179
~~------------~

o•1o

742·2341

15 Sessions.... 5t5
Plus I FREE

-r.., ........

T&amp;HAWN SERVICE
awn Malntlnlnot

o Lonclocapeng .
Top Sot! I Mulching
loiiRooldoltill

a.,._..
(111372-1697 •
1-IOO.Sll-1440

"FAEt:U~Tn~-u-...

.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Motorcyciii·Eic.

X..atli.ryn
tMeaiows

Hawarcl LWrltesel

ROOFING

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

NEW -REPAIR

FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODElS
992·7013 or
992-5553

FREE ESTIMATES

NEW &amp; USED PARTS

OR TOLL fREE

1·800·841·0070

DARWIN, OHIO
7131f9t/ttn

Homti•PIII·WIIdllt.

COUNTRY CLUB

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cf!l.lnlng
Painting
.,

949·2168 ·,

3Nt2l1 mo. Pet.

TROMM ··
BUILDERS :•
-New Conatructlon .. 1..
-Remodeling
,;
-Ciblnet Wolk
... ,
-Commerelal·
Realdentlal.
FREE ESnMATES' ,.
20 Yeara Experlance

"SPECIAUZING IN SLAT!!
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Welcome Slates

$20.00

614·742·232t:

Custom Pointing•
614-992·2242

2·26-1-,
" 1

UP

TANNING

New U•a Road

In Rutlan•

CALL 742·2778

15 Susloas.- --'25.00
17 Suslou-----'20.00
6 S.ssloas---·---'17.00
I S.ssloa------• 3.50
FR!E
IVERY

HAULING

•Jltl:t IN Pllill Orr 01 '*1.1¥
-Ill Us Do II f~r r.·

REASONABLE RATES

614-985-4180 too.. .....,.
Altw 6p.&amp; · ..
Cal 985-4192 ·' .

3-15·'92-1 mo. pd.

A&amp;B AUTO
IUSCIN, WY.

Specializi•l 11
Co•plett Auto
Up.oktery.

IT.., .. tie It .11.1
ALSO COMPtm AUTO
REPAIR SERVICE 1M 24
HOUR TOWING.

1·304·773·95,0

3-S--'92·1 mo. pel.

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Rep lacement
Wlnd~w

•Roofing
oJnaulalfon

JAMES KEESEE

992·2772 or
742·2097
539 Bryan

Middlop~r~

If YOU WEAR IT HEAR
1!, ADMIRII,!, WlfCI
lr, PUT ITt:. uSE IT or
NEED IT
Ywln.Jitt.

EMilY'S AniC

We turn yow now and
ll'!od utiid llrliclto lnlo
caoh and eave you 1r1C1Mf
on wllai}'OU MOd.

Cllltt2-6120

102 :.·

.1:1.,tl'llt

'-'!C!r·.~•

''""s-NtL..

LINDA'S . •
PAINTING &amp; COi•

COAL
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME

742-2138

Y.

=-•·--·-. .

59- for Sale or Trado

42-- Equipmenl for Rent
49-ForLeue

\ll.llf II

13- ln1uruce

ss- r ..;, &amp; v...la.btoo

71- Autoa for Sale
41- Houaea for Rent
72- Trut'!lu for S•k
42- Mobile Home. for R~nt 73- Van• &amp; 4 WD1•
~ Fuma for Rent
74-- Motoreycle.

4711- Help 'II' anted

~ PetA for Sale ·
S7- MU1Ml•lln•trWHDt.l

'I"P

45-- FurnUhed Roome
46- Sp•ce for Rent

p bll N 1
U C Ot Ce
T&amp;M BUILDERS
Beol Prlceo &amp; Service for
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Pooll-rame Garall" •
CARPENTER SERVICE
Barno
ESTATE OF VIrginia Swill
..floom Addltlona
Cholet of 12coloro -41ttar
Work
Burke,· Deceaaed, Caoe No .
sliding or rollup dooro
-Eieolrtcal and Plum! .\g
27394, Docket 13, Page 368. ..floonng
Standlrd Ia unllmiled IIZ81
NOnCE·OF APPOINTMENT -In- I Extarlor
&amp; Slylto
OF FIDUCIARY
301&lt;50 orocttd lor
Polndft!l
Revloed Code, Sec. 2113.08
(FREE ESnMATES)
Inspection
"On March 6, 1992, In !he
llatarlol &amp; ....,.,
V. C. YOUNG Ill
Meigs County ProbaleCourl,
GUir.,_
Cue No. 27394, Joyce
992-6215
Ph.
Local
Salesmaa
Schuithelu, 26005 Chapel
Pomeroy, Ohio
742·2072
Ridge Road, So. Bloom·
.
3-13-92-lln
3-16-1 mo pd
lngvllle, Ohio, 43152 and
Gerald W. Burke, 40501
Sumner Road, Roedavllle,
Ohio, 4Sn2, wao appoln!Od
Public Notice
TROLLEY STiriON
Co-Executors oflhe estate of
Virginia Swill Bulka de- Toll! of Roc. ond Olhor
CUFTS
Sourceo Over/(Undor) .
ceued, tale ol Orange Town·
10 ....... II., ......,_,
ship, Tuppero Plains, Meigs
Diob.ond Olhor Uoeo.. 700 MAR. 23, 7:00 pm - Tole
Fund Cooh Balance
County, Ohio.
Pai'\!".S.!•bblt Family
Robert E. Buck,
Cen
Jan.1, 1991....
..6,100
Prob1te Judge, Fund Caoh Balance
MAR. 24, 6:00 pm - Boabt
Lena K. Noooelroad, Clerk
Doc. 31, 1991...... .1,800
~N30, 7:00 pm - S.ath
MAR.
(3) 16, 23, 30; 3TC
(3) 23, 11c
ShoapP1MJUI
MUST PRE-REGISTER
Public Notice
HRS: Mon.-sot 10 om-5 pm
S..nclly 1-5 pm
MEIGS COUNlY SOIL AND
ForMato ln.. Coli
WATl!R CONSERVAnON
614-992-2549
. II THE
DISTRICT
31419211 mo.
STATl!MENT OF RECEIPTS,
DISBURSEMENTS, AND
CHANGES IN BALANCES
FOR THE YEAR ENDED
DECEMBER 31, 1891
1 Card of Thanks
DISTRICT FUND
RACINE
RECEIPTS:
Glfta, Contrlbullono, ·
FIRE DEPT.
CARD OF THANKS
and btq-11............ 1,251
Bashan Building
I would like to thank Dr.
S.le of ProducW
EVERY
Materllilo................... 1,050 Simon and Holzer Hoe·
Rentalo..........................5,308 phallor th~lr excellent
SAT. NIGHT
All Oll1er Revenue........4, 189 care during my recent
6:30P.M.
TOTAL
.
cancer treatment
Starting
Sept. 28
RECEIPTS ................ 11,798
Gary
Jenkin•
Faclorr·
Choke
DISBURSEMENTS:
12 Gaugo Shotgun Only
Supplloa...........................239
EqulprnenL. ................... 3,116
Strlclly Enforcod .
The Family Of
9-13-'91-tfn
lnlormation Education
J. c. WYATT
(Scholorohipo).............695
would llke to
Travel and
Expenoot................... 2,339 express thanks to all
Produclalllotorlllo
those who
SHRUB &amp; TREE
for Ronlo. .................... 843 remembered them In
O!her.............................. 1,046
TRIM and
their time of sorrow,
TOTAL DISBURSEespecially the
MENTS ....................... I,278
REMOVAL
Tolll Recelpta Over
neighbors tor all
(Under) Dlob..............3,520
•LIGHT HAULING
their love and
Total of Roc. 1111d Other
concern,
along
with
•FIREWOOD
Sourceo Overi(Under)
those who sentlood,
Diob. 111d Olhar
BILL SLACK
flowers and cards,
u............................. 3,520
and helped in other
Fund Cooh Bolanco
992·2269
Jill. 1, 1181...............7,372
ways. II is
FundC.hBolanco
USED RAILROAD TIES
Impossible to name
Dec. 31, 1lltl......... 10,8t2
everyone.
6·12·90-lfn
SPECIAL FUND
A
apec:lal
thanks to
RECEIPTS:
the EMS, Vetlrnns
GRANTS:
Memorial Hospital,
State Govornmonl 25,800
TQTALRCPTS............ .25,800 Rlversldl Methodist
EXCAVATING
DISBURSEMENTS:
Hospital, Lltetllght,
s.tarlte......................30,678 Dr. Wetherell and Dr.
BULLDOZING
SUppllte............~ .......... 1;323
Newmark,
the
PONDS
Equipment................. t3, 143
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
mlnlstern, Eugene
Conb'll:ta:
LAND'CLEARING
Servlae ........................... 45
Underwood and
Servlae F-....................911
Roger Watson tor
lnlormtlon Education
their comforting
(Schol..hlpe) ............. 681
words, and Jln
Tr~veland Expenuo ...3,391
Birchfield tor being
Advortlllng ..d
·there.
Prlnllng........................... 49
Publlo EmployPerhaps you "nt a
AoUromenl............... 4,204
lovely card
Work.-.'
Or aat quietly . Jn a
Compenutlon ..........~.731
chair.
attt.-..............................3,816 Perhaps you sent a
TOTAL DISBURSE,
ftontl pltce,
. MENT8.." ................ .sa.en
H SO, WI HW It thll't.
ToW Rcpta Ovor/(Unclor) ·
Dleb.................- ...(33, 117) Perhapa you spoke
the kindest words
Operating Tr.,ofln
-ln••- .....................221,750
As any friend would
Tolai 'Othtr Fln.,clng
Hy;
~ (UIM)....... 28,750
1 ML out New
Perhaps you wll'll not
Total of reo. .,d other
. thll'll It all
Ll111 Rd.
. -•• ov'!lf(..,dor)
Just
thought
of
us
DIUI• .,d othtr
Rutl••tl,
that clay.
UHa..................- .. (1,421)
Whlttvtl' you did to
Fund Cooh Bolaconaollour
..... 1, 11111 .............13,431
Fund C.h Balanot
haarta, '
Dec. 31,
7,0Cit We thank you ao
IIFR FIN)
.
much, whatever 1111
RECEIPTS:
Hrs. 1-10 loll. dtru Sat.
part.
.
All Ollw AoJ* .....,.......4,GOO
NEW SCA WOlff lED 2451.
VlrGnll Wyatt Mid
At 1 llf
daugliter,
aon-ln-IIW
Tolal
4,GOO
0118~..... -IIENTS:
&amp;gniltdson, Kly, Joe
l:qorl.ne• 1M
and Jey P'rofrlt
..,1~·· In 1'aouollv·
and JDCilhlrl.ln-llw,
ttl fw ~lttftllll.
MlbiiOIIvtr
2-1•

'"1. . .-.. .

21- Bu•inMa Opportunity
22- Money lo Loan
23- Profe.aional Servicu

44-- Apartment for Rent

YOUNG'S

I

1 1\ \ \(.) \ 1

$.05/day

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

CONTR:CoTOnCRES

"SUBTRACT''
THINGS
DUSt
·-oo·· DOLLARS
TO YOUR POCKET
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD

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

Galli a

Public Notice

TE OF the Stale Equal Employment
OppollunllyCoordlnalor and
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
qualllted to bid wllh ODOT
TRANSPORTATION
underRevised
ChapterCode.
5525 ollhe
Columbul,
Ohio March 6, Ohio
1992 Contract Soles Legal
"Til&amp; date oet for com pieCopy No. 92·257
lion of thlo work 1holl be as
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT sal forth In the bidding proStilled propoulo will be poaal."
rec;elved litho ofllce of tho
Each bidder lhall be reDlreclor ol the Ohio Dopan- qulred lo lila with hlo bid's
mont of Tr11noportallon, Co- certified check or caohler'o
lumb,.
..., Ohio, until 10·.00 chec k1oran omount equa1to
A.M., Qhlo Standard Time, five per cent ol hll bid, bulln
Tuttday, M1rch 31, 19921or noeventmorethlnftftyll1ou·
lmprovementa In:
lind dollaro, or 1 bond for
Melga County, Ohio tor len per con! of hla bid, pay·
Improving varlouo oectlono able 1o tlt'e Director.
ol llnlled Stale Route 33, VII·
Blddero muol apply, on
Jago of Pomeroy, by pave- !he proper forma, for qual Ill·
men I planning and resu 1• calion at lent ten dayo prior
facing with uphall concrete. to lhe dale ael for opening
P•olocllnd Work Length: bid a In accordance with
14,09811noor feet or 2.67 mile Chapter 5525 Ohio Revised
Pavement Width: various Code.
Bidding on this proJect Ia
Plana and opeclflcatlono
rttlrlcted lo Minority Buol· are on file In the Department
neu En!Or!ll'loei(MBEo) cer- of Tranoportotlon ond lho 01 •
lifted 11M tiEs In occordance nee of I he Dlolrlct Deputy Dl·
with Section 123.t51 (B) 1.2) rector.
of the Ohio Reviled Code by
The Director rtterves the
r-------....;,.J-....;.:.:;:.;.:;.:::.::::..:.;;:::.::;:;:,:::;

15
15
15
15
15

Over 15 Words

Rate

33- Farma for Sale
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days Will be
34- Buaine.a Buildmp
charged for each day as separate ads.
35-- Lo1.1 &amp; Acruge
[-------~~a,;:;;::;;;;;:;:ww;;;u;-----1 3&amp;- Real E•tate ·w anted

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges,,,

wal

Public Notice

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Mo~day
I:OOp.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Fnday

3
6
10
Monthly

r---~~=~~==-=-=::::~----j

'lpo;ntl;netypeonlyuted
• Tribune il not retpontihle lor erron alter fiut d•y (cbeck
for error• fiut d•y ad run• in paper). CaD before 2:00p.m.
day alter publication. to make correction
• Ade that mwt be paid in advance are:
C..d ol Tbanb
Happy Adt
In Memoriam
Yard Sale.
• A claaified adverli.tt"ent placed in the C•llipolil Daily
Tribune (e:tcept Cla11ified Diaplay, Bualnea• Card or Legal
Notice•) willal.o appear in the Point Ple••ant Regiater •nd
the Daily Sentinel, reaching over 18,000 homea

I:
I,

t:.

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Papor
Thwsday Paper
Friday Paper
SWlday Paper

c;,eaway ond Found adt under 15 wonla
be
run 3 daye .t no cha11e.
' Price ol•d for •U capit•llenen i1 double price of ad coat

'

-•EAR, NOSE THROAT •ALLERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY

Mc:Adbll'• .

an ad
Call 992-2156
J.JUlii,;IV

I

JOHN WADE, M.D.~ INC.

..-been

1

......................

Spring into Shape!

Words

Days

Several attend baby shower

Crump graduates
with honors from
Ohio University

...

RATES

~JAYMAR
Quality

INTER lOR &amp; EITERI«m
37632 West Shade Roa4
r-oy, Ohio 45769,'

,., .., mo pel

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

Call614·992-6637
St. Rt. 7

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK'
AVAILABLE. •
SEPnC SYSTl!MS,
HOME SITl!S ond
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKJNG
FREE ESTIMATES ·

Cheshire, OH.

992·3838

Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

1/2/dn

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Yi1yl Sidi11
.:
New Gara1•• • ltplacellell Wl1dows

Roo• ldditio•s • Roofi•l
COMMDUUL and RESmEN'DAL :
t'REE ES'I'IMA'I't:S

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(lo Sunday Calla)

�~e

8

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March

Monday, March

23, 1992

23, 1992

BORN LOSER

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

11

41

Help Wanted

SALES
Throo rope. tor Galllo Molga,
and Athono Countlos. iloatl""''"

groomed~ mature lndividua s tor

Nl .. poeltlon1. Abava average
Income. CaM Mr. Conlty for I
c:onal lnltrvitw at 614-446-

HOU$89 for Rent

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Television
Viewing

If ~ FWIOIII6 00'~ THOtX.HT

1 Rooml And Both, At 44 Olivo
StrHI, Gallipolis. Inquire AI 918

ThX!IiiON WITHOUT ~nOtl
Wol6 EW)••.

Second A\ltnut, Gallipolis.

HoUii.for rent In Syracust, 614·
992-7689

'

.

I

42 Mobile Homes

z

yr1. of age &amp; prevlosly had 1
child, contact Stave Utz, Atty.
317-9110-2000

t75!i anytimt.

C 1eH tv lol~ng Inc; _Ft Worth. fx

'I

BR trailer tor rani on
nolghborhood road. 6t4-146-

EVENING
8:00(2). (1). ()) • • •
~·
IIJNewl
(!)VIdeo~

3 bdrm., pl l11y tumlshed, New
Haven, 304482·2466

Wanttd : Optometric Assistant ,
11p41ritnce prtNrrtd, basic

bualntsa offlct educaUon requlmt. S.nd r11ume1 lw Much

30, 1992 to: DaUv Sant(ntl, PO
Box 729J, Pomeroy, OH. 45769

12

Slluatlon
Wanted

Nltd somtont lo live In : frM

room &amp; board, mutt bt clean

truotworthy. 614-446·3419.

14

&amp;

BuSineSS

Training
Rotroln

B 1

NowiiiSouthoootom

Col..

S rin Vall~

MON., MARCH 23 •

tor Rent

Surrogate Mothtr wanttd, tr•
plua txpeniM tor carrying 1
oouplo'o child, m..t bt 1fo 35

\tl &amp;qu.e One TV Stereo.

43 Farms lor Rent
Farm tor Rtnt. No house! 614-

WRtadlrtg Rainbow Q

DID '(OU SEE Wlo!ATT~AT DOG DID 7

446.0924

44

)

Apanment
lor Rent

l-IE WAS A HERO I

)

Do

Wiler

Included

8:051Illl4verly H-..
1:30 (I). 0 NIC Newt Q
(J) llitvact by Mia IIIII

$100

(I) II ()).e ABC ......
(I) Wld'4merlca ll

ie
oec•,.....Q
1!1111 Andy Grittltlt

Pi~~~~~
T.J:.'&amp;t:~-13671 ~~d"'~r:,u~~~~4.:J~~3':.llu~.~l
Roglstoratlori fi0.05.12741.
Befort

~R ~~
U L 0 I ~~~
t--,-lF ~~
~,.;;,..,,-1~ .~
r.f
2M....,(.....,_j

•

•

•

~

•
"Why did you pierce your
ear?' Granny yelled to her
grandson . "You should be a
leader lor the othBrs!' "I was,"
grinned the grandson, "It was

.

_

_

.

•

.

1he chuckle quoted

by filling in the missing WOJds

•

No. 3 below.

7:00131• IIJl WhHI _ot Fortune
/1i The Jetlanona a_

..•
•

••

•
•
•
•

-

"...

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
J ·to
Dilute - Nobly - Baron • Haunch • BALL and CHAIN

DUpCkiM

ID New Zono Stereo. Q
8:35([) Andy Griffith

••

~

•

II) Scooby Dao

p.m.

•

•
•

13; - 1

r-1

Q

Sm111

Fumlshtd

I rylz I\~ I I

•••

..._...___.~.._......_..__. you develcp lrom Sftp

IJI.IIqqara Ona TVStereo.

Complttly

bt-

low to form four tlmple words.

.

from 11i21mo. Walk to thop &amp;

movlu . can 614-146-2568. EDH.

rho

'::;:~~~:;:._~
, . R 0 MM 1 E
l---il7s~~;,;...;rl.;li-6-rl--11--~:mplete

Wolfd T . Y
1D Rln Tin Tin, K·8 Cop
Stereo. Q

....

lUll

0 four
Roorrongo Ionon of
ocromblod · word1

.

0

1 614 44"3617
pos 1 • ~
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Piko

....

TIIAThtLY
PUUIII

I

~=~1;1
D Sparta R

, BR unfurnlthtd apt. with stova
&amp; Rolrlg. no pots $189/por
month

The Dally Sentinel-Page t~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Classified Ad in local paper : "For Sale. Executive
Suite Furniture and Secretanal Desk. Along W1th BALL
and CHAIN ."

0

(I) lllnakle Ectlllon Q
(I) (f) MlcNeii/Lthrer

NtWIHour[]

1111• CuMnl Atlllr []
1!11• Stir TAk: The litxt
Announcements

6

11

Lost &amp; Found

Lost : Ftmalt Dog On O.J. Whitt

3 Announcements
Coming 100n In Rutland: Cer·
llflecl Gay care lot' IQH 1-9, Clll

Jopantoo High Scflool Ex·
e~ngo Stuclantl ... Ar~vlng
A gust .... HOST FAMILIES
N EDEDI Arnerte.on lntorcuhiM'II
St•dant Exchango. can Botlnda
&amp;14-94~71114 or can t.ai)().SI·
BLING.
Mako a lrlond ... For Lllol Sclndl naw~n.

•=

Europtan,

SoUih

Yug_otlavian,
6
Ja~ntN high tchool exchange
tt~denll ,
Auguat, Holl
Famllltt N
Amer. lnterAmerican ,

II) MICG

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA

Road Galllpolil, 112 Norwtlgn,

Hiring $600+ Wkly. Ovtr 8000
Opanlnga.
Malalfamala.
Tranap.lHousing. Call E.I.C.
Now!
1-206-736-7000
Ext.

112 Gorman Shephard, Short

Arid Fat ; Very Frlandly. 614·446·

2713.

Big 4 Bedroom Dakota OrNm

Homo, $29L995 &amp; Up. BuiH On

15io!B4.

614-742·2874, 1-iprn
MAKE A FRIEND ... FOR LIFEI _7___
Ya_r_d_S_a_le
_ __
Sc.andlrv.viln, Europun, South
Amerlcln,
Y.,gotiiYiln,

~len
~nmtnt Tonight
Stereo.

Help Wanted

Your Lot. ae Our Wladtl, 614868·731l

Cosmetologist Nttdtd : Gauran-

tH&lt;I $170 Per Wook, Paid

Financial

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In Vacations, Call614-446-7267.

Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

DMvors
the day before tht ad Is to run. now accer,tlng applications,
Sunday edition - 2 :00 p.m.
Fridal. Monday edition • 2:00 Domino's P ua, Pomeroy area,
·614-992-2124
p.m. aturYay.
,
- - - ,..,-.,-- ,.--:-;-:-

21

Business
OpponunHy

Evening Shift Supervisor - HolClink Is SMklng A Mature,
::9=7-:Wan:-;:t~ed~IO::-B-::u::!y:-:::-:- zer
Responsible Person With suDon't Junk It! StU Ua Your Non- pervlsory Experlanct To OverWorking Applltnco, Color TV't, nt Certain · Personnel And
, Mlcrowavu, Powtr Clinic
Faellltlts
During

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rocommonds that you do bu•l·
nna with people you know 1nd
NOT tosond monoy through tho

UMd Mobile Homea, Call e14• Full Time Position. Applicants
Shc:~uld Be Dependable, Hne
6
,44,.-.,.
.0...,
17,-5.::---::-- :--:--o- - l Good Knowtodgt 01 Custodial
Wanttd To Buy : Junk
And Hounketplng Ttchnlquts,
Wilh Or Without Motors.
Abllhy To Tratn lnd Mollva11

tha offering.

;"~~~614~·~2!WI~:;;
·t2~38=;·,..,-,-,- J Evenings And Wllkend Shlt1s.

mall until you have lnvestiglted

Pluanl upatalra Apl, 50tll2 S.

3rd Stroot ll~loport,Ohlo­
llvlng rm1 2-l&gt;dnm, ldtchon, both,
10/ord, l ·300mo &amp; utiiHIH, 614A -1231

45

Furnished
Rooms

1::'--'"7'---~-::~-::::;::­

Rooms lor rent • w..k or month.

Biro Moll Band Saw Good Con·
dHion, $375. Colllt4·3711-2t71.
COMPUTE RIPRINTER
FOR
SALE • Tandy 1,000 SL Whh
640K RAil I Sma~wllch 120 liB
Hard Ortvo • Tancty ROB CMt1
High R_.utlon Color llonltor
WHh Or Whhout Tandy DIIP132
P~ntar • Inch•• 1 Yur Tandy
Warranty. Will lncludo Softwaro
Paclcogo. Upgrodlng To 3111
Muot Solll Coli 114-146-3537

Enninp And W•kanda. ·

Starting
ot $120/mo. Gallla Hotel. Concme &amp; Plaauc Stptlc
614-146-9580.
Tank1, Jet Aeration Tankt. Ron

Family Grocory Ell. 11115, phone
614·1185-3300 or 614·985-3945
Evan• EnltrprlaH, Jacklon, OH
aoo .. lbllng.
Private Pay Phonn SS For Salt st..plng room• with cooking. 1-800.537·9528.
$$ Mull Call 1-800.1111· Also tralltr Spice. All hook-ups.
Porsonnol And Work Woll WHh Chup
Rtduce: salt &amp; t..l with Lorry Lively. 614.:J88-93ll3.
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304-7'133333.
Others. Send Re1umt To Holzer
Gobooo tabloto &amp; E·Vap
5651, Mason WV.
FREE INSTALLATION
Diuretic, tvailablt at Fruth Top Prlctl Paid: All Old U.S. Clink Pereonntl Dept, P.O. Box Rollourant Equlprnont For Solo:
SWIMMING POOLS
Coins,
Gold
Rings,
Silver
Coins,
344, Galllr.:ls, OH 4!WI3t No Taylor Soft Sonro FrHzoro, 2 49
Pharmacy.
For Lease
Only $62.91111o. • For 1211ontho.
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop, Phone cal 1 Pltast.
DOor Frwzerw; Dlsplly ffMZer; ~--~:---:-:-::-::::::-;::: 19r31r4 Pool lncludoo Flnw,
REDUCE: Bum 011 Fat Whllt 151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
Cooler, let Machine, Stcond Floor Aper1mant For Lad-, Hugo Dock Elc.
Food Service Wor ker~ Mtdecl: Step-In
You SIMp, Take OPAL Available
Manu
Boald;
3 Bowl Sink, Llaoo: L.A.. Ono B.R., Bllh, I"BHod On SOiling Prlco Of
grow and ~01per with ona of Tables And Chtlra,
AI : f ruth Pharmacy.
And Mlac. Kitchen WI Stove &amp; Refrig. SIDD. $14.45 APR, Tolol Dolorrld
Employment Services lht na11on 1 largest food or· Equlpmenl. 614445-1033.
Water Fumlshld. No Ptls. Cor- Prlco: $754,12) Dan'l Botlovo ~?
Un1nachld? IIH1 lrN Slngln
ganlzatlona! Morrie Cuatom
nor Socond &amp; Ptno, Galllpolla. Coli BPI
Th{OUQh Our SlngiH NIWIIII•
Mana~ment at thl UniVIrJIIy of Vondlng Routo: Local. Wo Hovo $230. Per Month ; Dopooll Ro1-800-a4foll23
1tr. Wrltt: Singles, P.O. Bot
Rio Grandt. Previous IX· Tha N-ot llochlnoa, Making A qulrld. Call 614-446-1249, 11411 Help Wanted
t043, Galllpotlo, Ohio I!WI31.
piirienc• desirable but not n · Nico Study Cosh Income. 1· 4441-2325. Or 614-146-4425.
Wor1t can ltad to other 800-955-0351.
maple tabtt, 4 caplaln chain:;
::$1:-:,ooo=-:T::-ho:'u:":'sa~nd~:-tm=m=o-:::dl::ot7
olv Hnllal.
obs In othar are... Full or part·
Giveaway
4 ·
white Hwing machlna, ctblntt;
Stutllna
EnveloPM.
Aueh lme nMdecl. Apply In person
Merchandise
rowing moc~lno: anllquo cllorry
11 Wka old full-bloodtd t.rnalt Stompod Add-lid 110 En· to: Richard Haft or Glanna Davis
Real Estate
dook with luther top. 8714.,.._
Chow. 614-245-9428
velopa To: DU Supplleo, Bor from 1-3 p.m. Monday thru
0431.
Friday at tht Unlwerslty ot Rio
1143, Folrllom, OH 4&amp;324.
6 Black And Whlto Pupplos To
51
Household
Plastic And Madel Culvert &amp;Inch
cantor at tho Calotorla. 31 Homes lor Sale
GI¥Hwly. 614-446-6013.
$350.1l0/Doy ProcHolng Phont Grand•
Equal Opportunity Employer.
Thru 60 Inch In Stock. Ron
Ordorol Paopto can You. No Er·
Goods
Evano, Jack-. Ohio. 1-81)().
Cute Puppln In Tlmt For perienct NKatsary. 1-800.255- lmmodloto Oponlng For Part· Roducod To SoH: $41900,
537-9526.
Eootorl 614-245-1211, Or Como 0242.
Tlmt RN Supa,.,loor, Day Shift. Chuhlro, Ohio. 904-1132:6959, Big Savings On All Corpot In
By · 1511 Grttn Valley Drive,
CompatHivo Wogoo, Dlttorontlll 1104-932-7170, 614-387.()641.
Stock. Coth And Cury, Mol· R65 Ditch Wl1ch Tronchor Whh
Bldwtll, Ohio.
$35010AY PROCESSING
With Etparlance, Equal Opporlohan Carpttl, 614-t46-JII44.
Hoo AHochmont I Cooa tJitO
PHONE ORDERSI PEOPLE tunity Employer. Contact Olrte· 3 BtdrDDm Homt On 1 Acrt Of
Unl- Skid Stoor. Coli 114FPM Calico HouR Cat ,
CALL YOU.
G.E. Rtfrigtralor Freutr On 894·7142.
tor
Of Nuralng, Plntcrtl1 Care Lind. C.II&amp;'M-256-1526.
Doclowod, Spodo &amp; LIU•r NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
Top
$125;
WhiMpool
Dlohwothor
Center, 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gal· 3 Btdroom, z Bath t1omt.L. Upper
Trained. 614+446-7644.
1·1100-255-G242.
Orig. P~co $450, Sacrollco For R-lontd woohoro &amp;
llpollo. &amp;14-146-7112.
SSO'o, L.ocolod 2236 urahom S150;
Emerton Small Microwave d..,.... LKtlo Pupplot Mlrod lxH&lt;I ,wlll
$100 lnd up. Wo
McCiurt's Family A11taurant In School Rd., N11r Centenary, $35, All In Erellltnl CondHionl -.111
malcat. Thl wa- &amp;
be small dogt. R..dy now. 614· Accounting lnllructor Noodod,
•
1
tl
Groon
Elemonllry
School,
Mlddlapon I now ICclp ng (Gallil County). 614-14fo2908.
Gauranlood To World 614-367· Dryor Shoppo. 614-446-21144.
446.Q130
Mull Havo B.S. Dlgroo In Ac- applications.
11109.
n-.
counting. Send Aeaumt To: P.O.
~~:;::;:::--;;;~=::-;:;::::; 1 Rolrlgorllor,
&amp; ~ ,_,
=
=="
'
1
3
Unit
Apanmont
Rontal,
Ercol·
6 • Lost &amp; Found
Bar 213, Golllpotla, DH 45631.
G.E. Wuhor, $95; Whlrtpool Co1oi T.V., VCR, Eloctrlc
lent Condlt.ton, Bulavlltt Plkt
$150;
Kttvlnalor TypewrH«, 114-256-'1231.
Surrogate Mothll'l Wanttd, FM Road. Roducodl Clll For Apo Was h•,
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Refrigerator 2 Door, WhH1,
I.DI!: !loa-Black Chow wHh Eacollont
Pay,
Bonollts, Plus Expentn For Carrying A polntmont. 614-146-8568.
$125·\ Hotji'O/nt Ralriglrotor, $95; WATER WELLS DRILLED:
chain I Stake. In centenhary Transportation,
407·292-4"17, Couple's Child. Mutt Ba 18-35
6t4-14foll672 _ _ _ 1 Eat. .71.
•
9a.m.·10p.m. Y.oII And Provlo,.ly Hod A Child. BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE Kolv notor Rolrigoralor, Froot WATER OAUAANTEED. 614-881:.::..:::.::::..::.:.:..._
:Area.
Almond, 1175i Admiral 1311.
Stovo Lhz, Atty., 317-996-2000.
Hllloricol Aroa Cornor Lot • 816 Frte,
Rolundad.
Refrigerator, Coppertont, $150;
lllln St. Pt. Pt11sant1 W. Yo. Wtotlnghouoo
Small Wuhor 55
Building
Compllloly Ronovotoo: 2 Full And Oryor, Llko Now,
$250, G.E.
Botho, 3 Largo Bodroomo, Now Dryer, Whitt, Ukt New,
Supplies
$150;
HVAC, Now Clrpot. Avallablo Sklgga AppUancn, Upper River
Juno 15 614-44t-2205.
Block, brick, Dlpoo, win·
Roa~. Gtlllpotlo. 614-146-7398.
Brick Homo 3 Aero Lot, 1 112 GOOD USED APPLIANCES doWI, llnttll, etc. Cl.Ude Win·
Mlloo From Niw Symmoo Yolloy Waahll'l, dryers, rtfrigtratort, tors, Rio llfando, DH can 114·
245-612l
School, ehlo. 814-643-2130.
ranges. Skagg• APIMIIncta,
Flalwood Arsa, Pomeroy, Largo uppar Rlvor Ra. Boolclo Stono 56 Pets for Sale
Country Homo, Naw KHehon, Croat Molll. can 114-146-7398,
Groom and Supply Shop Pot
Bath &amp; Corpotlna. LA&gt;w l30'o, t.aDD-4911-34111.
Quailllod Buyor. 6f4-146.2359.
'S
FURNITURE
Grooming. All
otyloo.
LAYNE
lama Pot Food Dollar. Julio
In Mercerville tor All or leaN Comploto homa lumls~I~C; W bb Coli '14 ~·• ~~•••·
by owner: 11 roomt 4 or I BAs Hours: Mor&gt;oSot, !1-5. 61
2 bllths wtw c.ntralllc • heat, Z 0322, 3 mlloo out Builvlllo Rd. ,..,
Musical
Khchtna wlp hook-up 2 dlah· FrM Dtllvtry.
"'
wa1htr1. 200 Amp electric aer- Like newt Love Mit and chair
Instruments
vlce will COIWidtr lind contract
$200. 614-446-1707.
Phon• 215-414-1301
Oraon Baldwin OrQI- Spoclal F•tuN P..rDmlo SCKftl
PICKENS FURNITURE
Whh Slat, Exclllotlt COncltlon,
NawAJsod
32 Mobile Homes
Houoahold lumlohlng. 112 mi. Two Koyboonla, 11 -~~
for Sale
Jarricho Ad. Pt. PINNnt, WY, loardl
For Clturch Or
eoll304-675·1450.
Homt NOO, 114-• •n.
Tax And Title Down. Proownod
Mobile Homoo, UN Your Tax
SWAIN
Rofirnd. 50 Homoo To Choooo. AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Farm Supplies
Ellll Homo Contor, 1.aD0-5fl!l. Oliva St., Golllpolll. Now &amp; Uood
5710.
f\lmlturt, hetttrl. Wellem &amp;
&amp; L1vestock
11114 10X50 v.., Good Cond. Worto booto. 614-441o3tH.
Mlnr new Htma. $2,800 ahtr
YI'RA FURNITURE
8:PMI14-245-!1181
BAR~':.~:REI
1983 llonolon 14r~2. 2BR.
Stove, ro~la . lncludod. Utll ~ y LIVING ROOII : Sola And Choir
clout, gu fUrnace, new carpet, $179 And Up; ~ And End
grut cOndition. Muot Sill. 114· TobiH $1!1 And Up; Swlvll
889-6245.
Rockoro 179.
19111 Ercettont Condltlonlt4r80
Sunshlno Mobile Homo, 3 Bod· BEDROOM: Bunk Bodo SH
(2d); 4 Dnlwor Chait Of
roomo, 2 litho, 614-146-8325.
Droworo $44.15; Twin llaftrosa
For Salt: 1881 Redman DlnYIUt, l99 Sot.
14r72, Totol Etoctrlc, SII.Up On
Prlvoto Rontod Lot. Excollont DINETTES: Wood Bor 810011
,,.
CondHion, COli 114·367-0131 AI· $14.116 (21") Tabla And 4 Poddod
tor 5 P.M.
Chilli $121.
cuMural Stud•nt Uchangt, call
Btllnda at 614-9"!J.trlot or call 1·

l

w.-

:want to:

PIN down EXTJU.

-;.;;;;;;-;;;;r-:;;;;;i;""Sh;;:ii;

bi-.

°· •

Ci\~H?lf

o,...

1ru·n yom· clntter· into cash,
Sell it the easy way... by phone,
no n.eetl to leave your lr.om.e.
l'lace yoru· classified ad today!

35

15 wor·ds or· less, 3 days,
3 JIUJJers,$6.0Q.
Ca.ll o11r

Lots &amp; Acreage

Loto · On BldwoH Mount Olive
Road, lldwlll, Ohio, 614-3888'1M.

36

in atlvancc rated

Real ~state
wanted

Wanlod: R.-.tlol Building
L.Ot Or ~ For Ovollty
Homto. Mull lo WHhln I lllln
Of Holzer Hoot&gt;ltot On Blecktcp
Rood. 1~2140.
,

1.
2.

10·----~----1

.J.
4

11. ------'---111-:-~--:--:--:-12·--~----~ 41 Hou818 for Rent

.

. ,.
~

9-----------1

f)

- ------

6._ _ _ _ _ _ 14. _ __ ___ 1
7,_ _ _ _ _--::- ' 1

8.

OPEN: 7 Dayo AWook. I A.M. • 8
P.ll. Sunday 12 - . · I P.ll.
At. 141 41111H 011 At. 71n Contonary.

53

Autos for Sale

11178 Cadillac Eldorodo, tully •

quipped, low mltuae, nry nice

car, will ucrlllct, 114-912-3657
.or 614-192-21111

11178 llorcocloo, 2400, Ono
OWMr, Garage Plrked. exc.tlonol conclhli&gt;n. coli aftor 614446-1185 aftwi:PII
1m Pontiac Gnnd Prir, 301
ORfllno, radiator, $450,
114'192·5620 onytlma
1m Dodao Dl~t 2 dr.
Sodln, $1,200. 614-448-7833 or
446·1833.
t9111 carnero, v.e, air, •to-.
opollor, aoocl tlroo good concl.
$1100, 080; t9n COrnero, ';;;!
llroo, runo groat, $600, 680;
614·94!1-2585
1983 Flroblrd, v.a, 5 apood,
sharp car, 79,000111, $2200 OBO,
614-1112·2357 lftlf 6prn .
1184 Florro SE, orcotlonl condl·
lion, auto, 814-992·5170 .....
m111101

111641!odgo Moo, 4 '*&lt;, -k.
AMIFII, ca...na, 4 cyl, ntw ••houot, 114-192·'1236, OYontngo
1114 Ford Elcorl, 4dr., 4 apood
otandlnl, aood cond., maka o~
......-~2M1
1114 Ford LTD Crown Ylctorle,
4dr IOdin, boaonllul cor, all opo
tiono, :102 v.a, $11115, 614-992·
6711
1114 Ford Tompo GLX, 2dr.,
aport coupo, llkt now, now tlrto,
5op., $11115, 614-9112-87tl
11180 Ford XLT tNCk, 302 111•
gino, 1ft. bod l loppor, aoocl
cono3 $2300i._. 11117 Nlioon
200SJL, IAIOOi DM-ID2-3M3

1115 Eacort. 4dr., 1111~,
aono, 720001111, otoroc, IUaaogo

rack. MW *-• blue/ bluelnler~
l_o!,_
dlrnogo,
....h•::~htl
,I
!1-2800, !lo5prn

-

19811 Fonl LTD aooc1 Condttton
12,000 mltoo S2,QO; 11165 Chryslor LatlatGfl $2,000; 1m Dodgo
l425 nrno good 614-241-

:;:r

19811 Lincoln Town Clr Cartlor.
33,0Q0 mi. Now tlroo, $12,100.

OMoneyUne

New

Tlrtt, Brakn, Tlmlnsa
Chain, Paint. EJ:c:tlltnt Cond•·

7:05 (1) I Love Lucy
7:30 &lt;2le 11J1 Jtop11'11YI []
(J) Now tt can 114 toil
(I) II Ei!lfrtllnmtnt Tonight

tlonl $2,500. 614-146-4514.

1187 Chovy 314 Ton 4r4, Auto,
Dull Tonka, Tool Bor, $6,800.
614-146-11110.
1987 Dodgo D-50 Plclc-up aoocl
condHion $2,900. 1983 Fuilolclo
Ford Branco 4 whHI Drivo,
Runa good; $1,900. 614-25~251

~ter8o . 1,1 _
~
Mli'rtt&lt;l... Wltlt

e

; 1D Wheel of Fortui!t
(2111 F1mlly Feud
1211114 a Star Stereo.

.'

1987 GMC V.f, Automatic, Lod·

-- -·-torm

11 lllh

IMpllflllllll. ·1uy,

1111, trade. a-..:oo

Whlto"o antlalo Frunltu,. &amp; loLtlllAtllnlolllntl. :zl yooro oxporlno

tdlw•.

...,.J

-·.--~
-'tlltl
,.., 10 loll.,"""
~14-a~-1. .,

I!" 1040

•

e

ALLEYOOP
V'MEAN YOU DON'T

"AVE No! loRMV WIT"
VOU1? WE THOUG~T
VOU WEllE SCOIIII!

(2:00)

460 onglno, lift kit, . .., utroa,
muot - . 614-9112-6t101
1Htl S-10 ltozor. ~ Auto, AC,
65,000 lllloo, S4,ow. 614-2566434.

school. Stereo. Q

12!1 on Stage Stereo.
a P~mtNtWI ll
ID Prince Vollom Stereo. 1;1

Honda 250X 4 Whollor, Have
Acen-IH. Ercotlont Condl-

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
Sitvorllno - · 18ft.,
&amp;ftbolrd IMf'CNMr

:r..:~~~~i4;;;Manrtlme
nlco ~~~

$2000, I

11111 16R boord Ski Boot 15- _:
HPII $1,400 tftlf 5:PII 61425617!14

a

BOATERS
,
Gulmollon:ury lla~no Sorvlco.
MercNIMr

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

opoclaNII. llon:ury cortlllod ..
llabli!.r....Wo como to Y""· 814251-6•1¥.

76

MY

Auto Pans&amp;
Accassortes

~ 5-\'15 PLA'5TIC

79

Hi: eA'IS YOU ~'r KAYE

":a.~ ~'r '

TKAN REAL 0Ne5 ...

HAYS'

Stereo. C
Cllll (JJ"e MOYIE: 'Nell

10 5.MEU. 1'1-1~\ E:ITHE.R.

Simon'• Broldwar Bound'
~ TheliN (2:00) Stereo.

TO WATER

THEM.

~ (f) Weepona of Mia Spirit
Tht human spirit triumphs
over evil, as a French vijlage
hides 5,000 Jews during
WWII. (2:00) ll
11111111
IIUrphr Brown
Phil regrets having taken e
loan from Murphy 1o keep
the .bar open. Sl8reo. Q
II) WWF Prime Time

ce

campers &amp;

Motor Homes

=-:::::-.;,~~~~~
20ft . 1m 'Ilion mclor 11omo ·
311000MI, aood cond:, ";;,:;;j •\
tlroolor 614--.3545 o~go~ ·
ask
HOrter
••

'

eu ue •OSt.

1 JEST PUT ON A

WHAT ARE

APERN AN'
DANG IF 1 DIDN'T

ME FER?

SPILL GRAVY

Home
Improvements

ON

IASEIIEHT

'

UncondMionll llfltlnts _ . , .
too. L.ooot roloroncoo lurilllhod.

r

WATERPROOFING

w..~~~~ng

BARNEY
FRASH

Serv1ces

YOU TELLIN'

SAGriTARIUS (Nov.2:Hiec.21
HOW yoo
yoursell In
ptblic will be closely scrutinized
by your peers today. Focus on
havenl lholoughly explored. .social amhles and, above aD,
They could be comprised of siz· dcnl be a ~aggart.
zle rather than substance.
'

.

.Don't ove~ook any oppor·
tunlllu In 1111 yur ahud fo GEI.INI {Miy 21.Junt ~) Try
add to your bank of i\ol to put yoursel In • poslion
knowlldgt. Tit• mort you &lt;oday that aloWI IIIDiher to
know lt1d 1111 gtllllt exptr· maka declsiotw tor you lhll you
UN you pollltl, Utt bitter lhoukl be making tor jOIIIIII.
your chltiCII 111 lor 1 pro• Thlllndlvl:lull'l judgmll'll Is not
u good a YOIJII.
llblecycll.
·

IIW I

ARIES (Mir. 21·A!Jr. 18) You'tt. CANCER (Jww2l.Juty 22) Do

..'I"
••

West

good 11 OO'"Itlli•lnlg today, l nat dt8cull ~ cataer
1M
might align dtl 1m- mlll811 wllh IS50Ciales platna~ o1 yoir' p11111 10 turely today. Theta's a cllance
u- who 11111'1 qllllllld io som~ you l8llc to m~hl us•
catry them !M. Yow good ldtl )'Otlr Ideal and takt ettd~ lot
.oould QOt.Wtl lot notlq. Mljor lhem along lht ~·

I'
3
I'

+

2+

East
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

3•
Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead

••

=i!.:=11 .•• u:.--.......

n.==
.'.
l=-~•laa•
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.

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·-

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.'

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.,

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L-- ---- ---- -..J,.. .
South always has a spade loser. He._·,.
should be happy to lose it earlier rafuo ·•
er than later. If South discards a low •
spade at trick two, he cannot go dowtr. ~
If West leads another club, the ruff is"
taken in the dummy. If West switcbes,: .
declarer can draw trumps before driv-ing out the diamond ace. In either ~
case, South will still bave one heart-;-.
left in his band.
·•
The real secret is twofold. First, an. -.
alyze the hand at trick one, before :
playitlfl from the dummy. Seco,!d, eott· ;sider the alternatives. 111. trick tw~ .:
you could ruff or discard. Think about: :
both possibilities.

14 ltolltld
15 Unconvln·
clngiJ
16 Aetor-

EattYIZ
51 CtWIII 54 BodJ org1n1
55 Alpine
colttgt
56- fty
57 High
building•

Hottman

17 Shinto

lt111plt
18 GrtWII ridge
20 Yltw
21 Artlll TouIOUit-25 F1m11r ot
rultrs
28 Ettelaourt tor
picture

DOMI
1 Sldnnyflllttl
2 Slangy
ttllmtiUWI
3 Columnllt Bomlltck
4 Untrulll
5 Snlktlkt
tlllt

32 Slngor

Bonnlt -

33Sa¥egl
34 Proprietor
35 Chlnltl
wording ot
38 Sptctl tilled

7 SeniOr

grid

10 -go!
11 Tennla pllyer
- Nllltlt
12 Foret untt

AuctiUon

6

,g PIQPtn
21 Hlddtn
22 Oft the triCk
23 Declldtftt

8 - lnd 1111
I Annlf)OIII

•

24 CollegteOtlrltunll
25 FlllltldcleniJ

26 Two-muted
......

·-

J

27 Clttl hlwt -

:

ll"ftt

2$ Solo
30 Mlrlltat

Dillon'•

oa-+-+-+-+--t-t

nk:k31 tfnot
37 INtloWJ

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38 Pllllt

400rdlury

i'

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41 Unllnnld

;

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42 Autllor

j

Ktnge~e, -

43 fltuntt
45 Tllttlrlak 1tft :

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l

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47 - ll1d cr11t1

41 Allow to
50 TtlttcJ.
52 Eltclrlcal

·

•
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:fc
(2:00)

... .

·,

48 Pttron

CAPRICORN {Dec. 22.Jan. 19) 10:05([) MOVIE: SltiM (R) (2:00)
Chatly should. begin a1 hcma 10:30 &lt;2l • 0 Nlgltl Court Da~
today. This doesnl me111 you
campa out In the be-'·
should be indillerent to the
tPt 2 ot 2) (R) SW.O. Q
Ill Crooll lnd ClteM
needs of others but thai you
should keep your priorities i1 01· 11:oo&lt;2le we &lt;lle • •·
c•
o,....
dst and take cars olthose who
())
lllglll
Couil 1;1
(I) . . . . . . . .
UBRA {StpL 23.0CL . 23) It's depend on ~ lilsl.
ArMnlo 1111 s..-.
VII)' lmpollanlthat you .... able
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 18) If
to clsllnguish belwe:en legitimate you have atmmtrclel daai'lllgs
MIIOOJ..,Il
optimism and wlsiWI tlplda- with alriend today, be sutt what
On
Sirto.
.
llon today. Hanging yot.r hopes Is txptcttd of tacit party Is
Q
on the 1att1r oould ltad to dtsap- dearly !plied 1M In ldvltlCt. A
polrunwl.
·.
mitl1derltandlng Is lkely 11:30~
without a IOIId game plan.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) H
you n ~ 10111t gains PISCES {Ftb. 20.Mir. 20) Contoday. Qpld thlm to Cllllllt Cfftlons look fliOilllslng ioday fan
CriiM T1llll
tlvol9t • IDabtl llqUIIlC8 ol pll1llfllltlp. HowaVII, you mlghl
~. Don1 1oo11 tor the ioN thlllldvantagt tlvoilgh !he
tooth lilly to ICCtlenle the poor judgment ot tkhlll' you 01 ·
procesS..
youraly.

•'

Nortb
It
Pass

Rolllrlaon

'
'

Sau1b

Flgllla (L)

1111700 Club Will Pit

-·· . ,~

44 Strtkt llghUy
45 - Kllln
48 Actor-

Expotura Ster.rf· Q

'-Ei::n

'.'

Answlf t o P - l'llule

c. Norllltm

a~ w011c1

•r

..

eulhlon

unc1nny

women Stereo.
D Colltgt Bilk
National "siiOCIIItlon ot
lntercolleglale Athletics
Toumament, champlonlltlp
trorn K1n1ts City, Mo. (L)
10:00 &lt;2le 0 Night Court Harry
and Christine 1ry to break up.
~ ~)(R) Sttreo. Q

1111.

+10986

.' ....
"·

41 Smlll

13 llort

i•o•o.r

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22.) Resist
lhe inc!ilallon today to i\NIIP inlo
speculat~e involvements you

+AKJ713

74 2

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

9:30 ())e 11J1 Selntllel The group
looks lor their car in a maN's
~e parking lot. (A) Stereo.

IT!!

•at92

with matter
37GM
39 Prtptre tor
printing

covorlng

EAST
+Qs 4

+;

There are certain types of hand that
always seem to catch the unwary. Today's is a good example.
South's three-club cue-bid set UP. a
game-force. North's three hearts
promised only three-card support.
With four, he would have bid two
hearts on the previous round. The idea
that this would be a free bid promising
extra values has - I'm glad to report
- died out.
West led the club king and followed
with the club ace. South ruffed and
drew two rounds of trumps, getting
the bad news about the 4-1 split. Now
he turned his attention to diamonds.
But West ducked the first round, won
the second, and, in answer to his part·
ner's echo, gave East a diamond ruff.
Later the defenders collected a spade
trick to defeat the contract. Where did
South go wrong ?
The bad trump break shouldn't have
been such a surprise. A 4-1 division
will occur, a priori, more than a quar·
ter of the time.

1 Small hol8

•

t A&gt; 4

By Pbiltip Alder

1 Optic

...

.3

Keep an eye
on trump control

ACROSS

J.IJ.II

SOUTH
+K 8 2
.AJ 1096
t KJ 8 3

Stereo. Q

0

SOCKS?

lllgOrl-1
Hick'o floot!ng, -lng l 'Dock
lulldlott. , _ •to t
10
ye~l'lex......,w:e. IU • • t ,_

1-

0

WORK IT IN
BETWEEN

:rs

..,._,,

0

COULD YOU .

Froo .. lmatoo. Call ,.
114-237-G481. dey or night. '
Raa.o a - n t Wottlng.
'
ollabllo Sot.Upo, '
R ra: ComiMficll, ~ tla lmprov-MntL II lading:
Ptumblrlf, Eloctrlcal. "-tonce
Clalmo Accoplod. 114-211-1111.
Curtta Home tn.pouaeal'llt:
Y•ro Eaporlouce On Otdo1' l •
Neww Homn. RCNIIII ••tnrana. ~~

oiET
Aorotlon ......... ropalrod. Now
&amp; rMuiR mocoro In otoolt, RON
!~!!.IJ JACK-, OH.
.

1211 Naahvllle Now Stereo.
a uny King Uvet
1D F111tt!..Dowllng Myaterlll

•

:IIIII

11,

e

BECAUse

Fl.OW'ERe&gt; Ale 6ETTE:R

Budgot Tronoml11iono, Ulld I
robuln, otartlng 11 $99L )tont
whllt d~v• starting 11 .,.9.00
114-245-5177, 614·192-1281
Good pick-up bod Eacoltont
shopa t'or 65 Long - 1 baH.
114-245-1232

-oy.--

For 111o • Rod -IIMHIII llotlo

1:05([) MOYIE: Mlglc (R) (2:00)
1:30 (I) • 11J Blouom Blossom
helps Six deal with her
parents ' Impending divorce.
Stereo. []
Cllll Wll Amerlc8n
Detective Deloctlve Dan
Tonini finds time lo play
football. Stereo. 1;1
llllD 1121e Maloi Old Gen .
Craig seeks t11e right soldier
lor a mil~
' ry calendar. (R)
Stereo.
On s
Stereo.
1111 Bilek Hion Stereo. 1;1
1:00 (I) IIJ Cheers Carla tears
Celtlcs star Kevin McHale Is
going down lhe lube. (R)

tlonl $2,500. 114-141-1144.

Mercury, lbrinlr,

.

I]]). MOVIE: THclltrl (A)
(2;00)
II) Murder, She Wrote Q

14 Motorcycles
,.,.......,....=,_,....,;,-.,.-"":':"-

120hp.,

•

Cllll ()) Ill FBI: The Untold
Stories A FBI agent
successfully inliltrales the
Bonann~rime family . (R)
Stereo. !o;l
(I) (f) Tra.... 1;1
lllliD 021• Evenlrtg 511.Taylor vents his frustrations
in a play he writes tor

1 bdrm. IIIC. In P-..,, f!SOo'
monlll; ' bdrm. 11ouoo In
- h . 114-tH·

oomp'Jie wlhlln JMIIt
Lll1o now, odiM-2411117.

NallonallnvHation
Tournament, 2nd round (L)
acroaanra
7:351Il Sanford end Son
8:00 (I) 11J Frallt Prince of
1141-Air Will and Carlton invite
two French girls over when
Phil is away. St8reo. []
(J) MOVIE: The Trill Of L..
"'"''Y 01w11d (PI 1 of 2)

73 vans &amp; 4 WD's
1ml Ford Bnlnco, -'J robultt

1972

Q

D College Baakttblll

der Rackt And Tool Bo1n, Nlct

$5,515; 1987 Ford PU, $3,095;
1911.11 Nl11an PU $2,995; 1988
Samurl 4x4, $3,H5; 1986 Ford
PU $2,895; 1987 lsuzu PU
$1,495; 1987 Ford Rangor PU
$2,595; 1184 Toyota PU $1,495;
t984 JHp ChorokH 4x4,
$2,~95; 1985 Doclaa PU 6 Cylln·
dlf, Automatic; 1m Ford PU
$11495, 11180 Ford 414 PU $1,895;
B•D Auto Saleo, Highway 160
Norih, 611-146-6165.
1989 Chivy C.ISOO, V.f, noods
drivers door, $5400, 614 ·14~
2800, !lo5pm

Chllelltn

NORTH
+A7U
.KQS
+Qt076
+Q2

WEST
+JI09

ID The Watton•

6--

a•• , 1M

Rrntals

71

1m chiivroiat Hoavy Hall Pl&lt;k·
Up, Full Sin, 350 Automatic, '

=..

Buy or 1111. Ant~
1124 E. Main ltroot, Pomoroy.
HoiHo: ki.T.W. tO:OC! 1.111. ta 1:00 w..
I :GO lo 1:00 ,..,, treot. . I

r:.::::J.

Transportation

PHILLIP
ALDER

"

D SportaCtnler

~=~
f.:f1'::'
tlmllool A11&amp; - . - No Jolo To

Antiques

- .114-.'1411ot441

•

1 •7··-

Fluhr 11811lfoy ADHA Filly by
Raynolda Rap. Roohy Sorroll
11110 tilly by tho Intimidator a I
ulld 2 horoa Bumpor Troller
lt4-2JI.M22
Good lair plao, l45 to S50 oach.
6t4-368-968tl:
Spacial Foodor Call Salol
Athono Llvootock Slloo, US 50
Will Alborw, Ohio. Soturday
March 28, tH2 At t:OO P.M. Wo
Will Bo HOving A SpoOial Rod
Cow Coil Solo. AM c- Will Bo
Prognancr Chockod, And Tntod. All Contlanmontt Wotccrmol Ll-ock lccl!flod Start·
lng At 4 P.M. Every Friday. HOu~
lng Avalilblo. 114-fllll-353\ Or
614-1592·2322.

•

BRIDGE

Ill • candia c a -

unit

-1--IH 113 Anll11tl tool

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "" lot of peoplt pemapt wrote mt ott, but I lUll d&lt;lrmant ... not dead,'' - Alr011 Sptlllng. ·

,.

~·

'

-

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day or tbat event. Items
must be reeeived weD in advance
to assure publication In tbe cal·
.endar.

RACINE . Southern Athletic
Boosters will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the high school to discuss
the winter sports banquet and
upcoming activities.

REEDSVILLE - OAPSE Local
MONDAY
448, Eastern Local, will meet Mon·
. RACINE • Southern Local day at 7:30 p.m. at Eastern High
School Board will meet Monday 7 School. All members urged 10
'Jl.m. at the high school.
attend.
MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN
Coin Club will meet on Monday at
Burkett ·Barber Shop in Middlepon.
Social hour and uading session will
precede the 8 p.m. meeting.
Refreshments. New members are
welcome.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
will have its Ritual of Jewels Tea
on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Susan Clark. Bring a covered dish. Meet behind Pomeroy
Fire Station at 6:15 to park and
ride. AU members attend.
HARRISONVILLE - Har·
risonville Senior Citizens will meet
Tuesday at the townhouse. Quarter·
ly birthdays will be observed with
potluck dinner. All members urged
to auend. Bad weather will cancel
the meeting.
POMEROY - American Legion
Auxiliary Unit 39 will meet Tues·
day evening at tk post home in
Pomeroy.

ASHLEY SPENCER

First birthday
Ashley Nicole Spencer recently
celebrated her first binhday with an
open house at the home of her
paternal grandparents, Larry and
Kay Spencer.
Cake and punch were served by
her parents, Mike Spencer and Lois
Frank, to maternal grandparents
Howard Frank and Ruth Frank;
Steve and Brenda Kimes, David,
Linda and Selena Spencer; Tom,
Judy, Johnathan and Meghan Avis;
Anna, Tara, Jennifer, Vicki and
Amy Norman ; Billie and James
Cunningham; Mildred and Starling
Orr from Gahanna; great-grandmother, Dorthy Spencer, and greatgreat-grandmother, Clara Powell.

POMEROY - A planning meeting to organize a reunion of Sugar
Run School graduates will be held
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce/Park District Office on
Second Street in Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
pon Ans Council will hold a begin·
ners Te&lt;as-style dance class at its
chambers on Tuesday at 7 p.m .
Cost is $7 per couple. Call 9922675 for funher information.

Monday, March 23, 1992

elta Kappa
Gamma attends
joint meeting
Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta

ter JOint meeting at Grace United
Methodist Church in Waverly on
March 14. Hostess chapter was
Beta Tau. Other chapters attending
were Beta Alpha and Delta
Epsilon.
Beta Tau president Janet Matney, welcomed the visiting chap·
ters and gave the invocation before
the crescent sandwich luncheon·.
Favors were hand·paintcd .woodeh
apples.
Jason Boothe, local eighth grade
student, san.!( four songs.
Ruth Brooks, second vicc·presi·
dent of Alpha Delta State, was the
speaker. She spoke on "Doing It
All," making these points about an
officer's work. Do paperwork fJTSt;
plan ahead for adequate preparation
time; older members help younger
members; and if possible, say yes
to assignments.
Each chapter also held an indi·
vidual business meeting.
Susan Will presided at the
Alpha
Omicron business meeting.
and Meigs will compete for tbe title at the April
SCHOLARSHIP FUNDED • The four Bank
Nellie
Parker,
secretary, read a card
4 pageant at Meigs High School. A check was
One branches, Pomeroy, Rutland, Gallipolis,
of
thanks
from
Serenity House. The
and Coolville, have funded tbe $200 scholarship
presented to Pam Newell of the Meigs County
state
meeting
in
Cincinnati, May 1to be awarded to tbe winner of the Miss Ohio
Chamber of Commerce, pageant director, Fri·
3,
was
announced.
River Valley Iitle in tbe preliminary Miss Amerday by bank representatives, Joan May, Millie
Membership chairman Fern
ica pageant. Contestants from Athens, Gallia
Midkiff, and Joan Wolfe, left to righl.
Grimm conducted voting for new
members. Margaret Benson presented the slate of officers: ~andra
Nodruff, president; Fern Grimm,
first vice-president; Carol Eberts,
will be starJ second vice-president; Nellie Parker, secretary; and Deborah Hamloser and Teri Hill the best TOPS Nellie Grover and Dottie Johnson nc&gt;t week.
loser at the recent meeting of Ohio won a charm for a si&lt;·week weight
The group meets every Tuesday mond, treasurer.
Mrs. Parker announced NecroloTOPS Club No. 570 when that loss.
at 5 p.m. for weigh-in and meeting
gy
services will be April 27 at the
group met at the Carpenter's Hall.
at 6 p.m.
Presbyterian Church in Wellston.

BernieDurstwasth~?K~~' T2~~~ ~?a~?a~:Y 'lo~::s:ontest

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY · Wildwood Gar·
den Club will meet on Wednesday
at I p.m. at the home of Evelyn
Hollon. A white elephant sale will
be the program.
RACINE - A meeting to plan
the Southern Junior High School
athletic banquet will be held on
Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. at the
junior high. Anyone wishing to
help is asked to attend.

The 1983 Social Security legis·
Wion that stabilized the long-term
financing of the Soeial Se&lt;:urity
trust funds also gradually incrtaSed
the age at which workers can
receive full retirement benefits.
BeJinning in the year 2000 (lilly a
s)lort eight years away), illorkers
bot'n af1cr 1938 wiD have to be 65
and two months to receive
full retirement benefits. And by
2027 the age for full retirement
benefits will have gradually risen

peteellt:

.

Since the 30Cial security retire·
ment options will be different for
workeu retiring after the year
2000, you may want to begin plan·
ning your retirement now. We can
help you with your plans by t"O·
viding you information on JUSt
Yo( hat you can expect 10 receive
from Social Sccunty. You ·can call
1A11p67.
.
toll-free 1-800-772·1213 and ask
(II is im~t to JIOie, howev- for a personal earnings and benefit
er, that chaibility for Medicare \ estimate staremen~ or you can call
beneftiS wur ranain at age 65.)
592~8.

'can

(

1 Section, 10 Pogn 25 ..,,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, 1\tesday, March 24, 1992

A Multimedia Inc. Nowopoper

Solid waste district plan
available for public review

Revisions of the Solid Waste
Management Plan for the
AGHJMV District (Athens, GaUia,
Hocking, Jackson, Meigs and Vin·
ton Counties) have been completed
and the plan is now available for
public review at the Meigs County
Library and in the Meigs County
Commissioners office. .
Kenny W1ggms, a Sohd Waste
Di.strict po~cy committee member,
satd coptes of the plan arc also
available from any of the five comm1tlee members.
.Af~r a public co~ment period,
W1g~ms srud there w1U be a pubbc
heanng m Wellston, the ume and
locauon ~be announced later.
He sa1d that the plan mdudes ~n
agreement between the DIStriCt s
board of directors (three commissioners from each cou.nty) and l;lrivate landfill ope.rauons, wh1ch
guarantees waste disposal. space for
20 years at a guaranteed uppmg fee
of $13 per ton.
.
He noted that the current rate 1s
$20 and _up per ton. In addition to
the Galha County landfill, others
currently operating in the district
are Mid-America ~asu: in Vinton
County, Sands H1ll Coal Co .. m
Jackson, and the Athens-Hocking
Reclamation in Athens County.
According to Wiggins If the

By BETH J. HARPAZ
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Federal
investigators are looking into why
a USAir jet that crashed on a runway and slid into a frigid bay,
kilhng }' .7 people, was not de-iced a
third time after waiting a half·hour
in a snowstorm to take off.
John Lauber, an investigator
with the National Transportation
Safety Board, said that in addition
to,loolcing into the plane's vulnerability to ice on the wings, officials
are studying whether its flaps were
lowered for takeoff.
At least 17 Ohio residents are
among those killed in the crash.
Another 14 from Ohio survived.
Witnesses said Flight 405 to
Cleveland had just climbed into the
air at La Guardia Airport Sunday
night when it crashed in flames and
skidded into Flushing Bay. Besides
the 27 killed, 24 others were
injuied.
Some people were burned, others were trapped underwater and
upside down, belled into their
seats.
" I was amazed so many people
survived," said Fire Capt. John
Kurtz. "There were bodies burnt to
a crisp and bodies cut in half, and
then there were people walking
around.''
Among the evidence the NTSB
will examine are a IIO·foot skid
mark, debris on the runway, dam,
age to the plane a11d the pattern of
deaths, Lauber said.
The NTSB also asked Canadian
officials for a recent report that

260

106

Wednesday
April

1992

Your Social Security
I believe that if 100 people were
asked what is THE reurement age
in the United States, at least 99
would say "65."
· The only problem with that
answer is that it will not be true for
the 76 million baby boomers who
will retire after the year 2000 - and
in many ways, it has never been
true that 65 is THE retirement age.

VoL 42, No. 230
Copyrighted 1192

plan is ratified, funds to operate the
district will be generated from a
three-tier district fee per ton, in
addition to the tipping fees . Fees
will be $1 .60 per ton for wasu: gencrated within the six county districl, $3.20 per ton for waste from
outside the district but within Ohio,
and $4.80 per ton for out-of·state
waste.
He. explained that the plan m~st
be raulied by government agenc1es
represe~ting si&lt;ty perc~nt of the
populauon of the d1s1nc1. If the
plan is not approved, Wiggins s:Ud
that the E~v•ronmental Protection
A.ge~cy will m~rul~te a J?lan for the
d1stnct, the d1str1CI wtll lose liS
power to. collect the d1stnct annual
fees wh1ch could total about $2
million, and the funding would
then come from an assessment on
e~ch. 1mprov.ed parcel of real estau:
w1thm the d1stnct and/or a user fee
wh1ch would also be backed by a

(Gallia/Meigs, Jackson/Vinton,
Athens/Hocking), seven curbside
pickup programs, 15 drop-off stalions, limitations on out-of-state
waste, test wells at landfills, moniloring by health departments,
money set-aside for protection of
water supplies, which if not needed
could later be used for a public
owned landfill and criteria for sit·
ing of any future landfill facilities.
In addition a transfer station is
to be built in Meigs County for use
by everyone Wiggins said
He stres~ed that no hazardous
toxic waste will be permitted and
that everything will be handled in
an environmentally safe manner.
"We believe this to be a very
workable plan and have tried to
address the concerns and have
given consideration to all of our
citizens," Wiggins said. "We are
asking Meigs Countians, individu·
als, business leaders, organizations,
pr~peny tax..
. . mayors, council members, trustees
We don I feel any of our cm- and others to wriu: letters of supzens w~ul~ be ple.a~d with lhts pon to the' AGHJMV Solid Waste
altcrnauve, srud W1ggms.
District, 213 E. Broadway WellHe went on to explain that all ston, Ohio 45692."
'
areas of proper solid waste rna~·
Meanwhile, he said that any
agement have been addressed m member of the policy committee
the plan. These mclude three pro- will be glad to answer questions or
cessing facilities for recyclables take comments about the plan.

or appreciation and plaques from Council. Here
CouncU President Dewey Horton, center, makes
the presentations. Buck did not seek re-election
to the position.
.

RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE • Jon Buck,
Middleport village clerk-ireasurer for tbe past
12 years, and bis wife, Tami Buck, assistant to
the clerk-treasurer, were presented resolutions

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr

New arrival

65, 66, 67: The "aging" of the
retirement age

Page 4

Mild and sunny loday. Highs

In the 50s.

Middleport council discusses
extending
contract
with
CSP
NTSB looks at de-icing in La
.Guardia crash that killed 27

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - The
Academy Awards ceremony is like
bobbing for apples, said new dad
Warren Beatty, one of the top nom·
inees this year.
"I go for the enjoyment of see·
in!( the people ... that I've worked
w1th and know. With the understanding that it ' s all slightly
masochistic," he said in the March
28 TV Guide.
"It's sort of enjoyable in the
way that bobbing for apples is
enjoyable. But when you bob for
apples you get wet and ruin the
party. You can't take the game too
seriously," Beatty said.
Beatty, who just had a baby
with actress Annette Bening, turns
~5 on March 30, the night ABC
JORDAN TAYLOR
uroadcasts the 64th annual Acade·
my Awards. He 'II be there.
Beatty's movie "Bugsy" is up
Chad and Becky Taylor, Racine, for 10 nominations, more than any
announce the birth of their first other film. He starred and was
child, a son , Jordan Lewis. on Jan. nominated for best actor.
.20.
DALTON, Ga. (AP) - In case
· The infant weighed eight
anyone
is awaiting word, Marla
:pounds and three ounces and was
Maples said she and the Donald are
21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are "doing terrific."
Ms. Maples paid a visit on her
Denny and Linda Evans, Racine.
Paternal grandparents arc Larry small, Georgia hometown Saturday
night and had developer Donald
and Joyce Taylor, Syracuse.
Trump
in tow at a fund·raiser for
Great grandparents arc Henry
an
Alzheimer's
disease organiza·
and Carolyn Salser, Carl Taylor,
lion.
Anna Taylor, and Betty Taylor.
Asked whether they have set a
Great-great·grandparents are
Jackie-boy and Pearl Adams and marriage date, she groaned and
laughed.
Lillian Proffitt.

The trend since 1960 has been
toward earlier and earlier retirement. And, in fact, about 50 percent of workers now claim their
first Social Security retiremeqt
check at age 62 rather than age 65.
The option of earlier retirement
will stilT be there after the year
2000 - only changed. It, too, is
affected by the 1983 Social Security legislation. Currently, workers
who retire at age 62 receive 80 percent of the full benefit they would
have received if they wailed until
age 65 tb retire. That percentage
will be 4f11dually reduced. Workers
who reure at age '62 in the years
2005 to 2016 will receive 75 pet·
cent of !heir benefit; and by 2022,
any v.:orter retiring at age 62 will
have the percencage reduced to 70

Pick 3: 182
Pick 4: 6604
Cards:
9-H; 6-C; J-D;
4-S

KaJl.PI! Gamma, met in a four-chap·

People in the news

By Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens

Ohio Lottery

NIT
tourney
results

m.

UdriS J .l lllmdlt ~oi.CI J,rJf.n. MNC ONE CORI'OMTION

•.

(Of courSe, consult 11 tax 11dvisor to see how this coupon and mail it in to Bank One or just

specific Conditions may affect you.)

call toll-free 1-800-372-8888. We'll help you

What's more, you can spend the developyourhomeintol!shelterfrorntaxe$.
money ~ou b~rrow on anything you like. 1 To ge~ free copy of Bank Q; ibne EQuity Loa;]
And smce eqUity loons are very secure, Bank 1 Guide, send this coupon 10, BANC ONE CORPORATION, 1
One is able to offer lower interest rates than I ~ St.. Columbus OH 43214. Ann: MONEY I

onotheriformsofcredit.

·

I

GUIDECOOER.

Well oo w~JaM it W&lt;es to help you
take ac1van1age of benefits like these. So weve

Nmle _

_ _ _ _ __;__

_

I
I

hk!rtss

~twodifferentkindsofrome~ I Gt):~Zip
loans. !~eluding one that was specially
1

.=·

Oesigm!forrecent~tSwhohaven\
I:IA£.,:tJ:.i'U.~
had tim! to buikl much equity.
·
~~~ ~~1:.
For details, get your free copy of the
·
vv '~it Wf(Q. .
Bank One Home Equity Loan Guide.just clip L::: __ ~ __~ D&lt;C _ _ _ _

N.J.

I

.I

1

1

I

I

1

_

_j
•

Meigs County Commissioner
Richard E. Jones will seek the
Republican Party's nomination for
another tenn in the commissioner's
orfice in the June 2 primary elc;ction.
Jones, who is seeking re-election to the term beginning Jan~
3, 1993, was first elected to that
office in 1977. He also serves the
county as chairman of the Melgs
County Republican Executive
. Committee.
A Meigs County native, Jones
resides in the Laurel Cliff community. He and his wife, Donna, have
three childrep: Kim, who lives in
Hartford, Conn.; Brett, of
Pomeroy; and Susan, also of
Pomeroy, a senior at Ohio University.
·
"It is my Intent to continue to
work on behalf of all the people of
Meiga County," Jones said, ''8nd to
retain tile sound financial manage-

twice, at 8:26 ·p.m . and at 8:59
p.m. , USAir President Seth
Schofield said. Flight 405 left the
gate a minute later but had to wait
in line 30 minutes to take off, the
airline said.
The flight was running two
hours behind schedule when it was
cleared for takeoff.
Asked why the captain didn't
ask for a third de-icmg , Lauber
said, "I can't respond to that, we'll
be looking at that."
The captain decides whether to
order another de-icing, the investi·
gator said. The pilot was killed; the
co-pilot survived but was injured.
Investigators sai:l they will inter·
view him as soon as possible.
The Canadian rePOrt, compiled
after an Air Ontario Fokker F28
crashed in 1989 after takeoff in a
snowstorm , killing 24 people, said
the de-icing fluid used at most air·
pons, including La Guardia, is not
very effective in wei snow.
Ice can form in as little as three
minutes after that fluid is used, the
repon said.
The half·hour between the sec(Continued on J)

· E&lt;tension of the village street
light contract with Columbus
Southern Power was discussed at
length during Monday night's
meeting of Middleport Village
Council.
Meeting to discuss the matler
with council were Ron McDade,
Gallipolis area manager, and Ron
Carmichael, customer service representative.
The current contract e&lt;pires on
May 28 . The village now pays
$1836.10 a month, but the rate
under the new proposed contract
would be $1848.76, the increase
being due to installation of new
equipment.
The new contract would be sub·
·ject to whatever rate increase is
granted by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio . Columbus
Southern Power has requested a
28.4 percent increase.
After the discussion, council
gave a first reading on a street light
ordinance. It passed by a vote of
live to one, with councilman Paul
Gerard votiog "no". Gerard ques·
tioned the automatic pass-through
to the village of whatever rate
increase is granted by the POCO.
Before the contract can be

rehabilitation, and two unitS which
are considered too dilapidated for
rehabilitation .
Part of the funds·, if awarded
will go for sidewalks, catch basin'
and street repair on Beech Street'
sidewalk repair on Pearl Street, and
street repa1r on Pearl from Laurel
to Lincoln .
Rental units can be included in
the rehabilitation program, Trussell
said, on a shared cost basis of 50
percent and an agreement by the
owners not to increase rent for a
period of several years. The
Department of Development
requires that the greatest amount of
grant money be spent on low and
middle income households.
Trussell also reported that the
Community Action Agency has
made a commitment of $15,000 in
weatherization funds for the hous.
ing program.
·
Council voted to adve rtise for
an experienced firm or individual
for technical assistance , inspection
services, and preparation of bidding specifications so that the ser·
vice can be listed as available on
the funding application which is
due May I.
The Betsy Ross housing project
is progressing, Trussell said, noting
that funds can be "drawn down"
(Continued on J)

Taft warns of Friday redistricting deadline

Richard ]ones seeks re-election
as Meigs County Com.missioner

you
Few loan options are
liS popula,r as home equity
loans. In f11ct, one in five
homeowners has one.Do
they know something you
don't? Could be.Here are
some.pointstoconsider.
First. illld probably most important, is
the way Uncle Sam fiMri !nne equity loans.
Changes in tax laws inrecentyearsrnel!n
you can no longer dl!im interest on most
instrumentloans.asataxdeduction.
But horne equity lo11ns are different. If
~loan is foc $JOOPOO or less, yoo can
l!!J usually deduct all the interest you pay.

concludes that the type of plane the twin-engine Fokker F28 - is
susceptible to ice forming on the
wings, Lauber said.
A plane is de-iced by spraying it
with a mixture of water and an
alcohol-based liquid. Ice on a
plane's wings can prevent it from
getting the lift needed to take off.
A light snow was falling and the
runway was slushy as the plane
took off at 9:30p.m. It was de· iced

extended, Council will have to give
1wo additional readings and then
adopt the ordinance in regular
meetings.
Housing Rehabilitation
A second public hearing on the
proposed Comprehensive Housing
Project was held in conjunction
with the regular meeting.
Council will apply for a
$600,000 grant from the Ohio
Department of Development's
Small Cities Community Development Block Grant Comprehensive
Housing,Neighbortwod Revitalization Program.
Jean Trussell, housing specialist, reported that Mike Strolh , a
consultant from Jackson County,
has been working with her on a
review of the proposed target area
where good visible impact would
be made with the use of revita)iza.
lion funds.
That area, Trussell reported ,
includes Pearl from Ash to Grant,
Beech from Ash to Grant,
Sycamore from Ash to Laurel, Lau·
rei from Pearl to Hysell, Oliver
from Beech to Grant, and Hysell
from Broadway to Oliver.
She said that a, survey of the
area shows I52 households including 138 single family units, three
multi-family units, 26 mobile
homes which are not accepted for

ment ·that the county has enjoyed
over the
few years."

I

'

By RODD AUBREY
Associated Press Wri)er
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Secretary ~f Stale Bob Taft has
warned Ohm lawmakers that they
must ~~;pp.rove a new co~gressional
redistri~Ung plan by Fnday or the
state w1U need~ second pnmary at
a cost of $6 m1ll1on.
.
Vater~ must go ahead .w11h a
June 2 pnmary 10 ~lect pres1denual
dele~ates and dec1de local school
d1stnct bond 1ssues, Taft told law·
makers ~n a letter Monday.
But 1f the debate over bound·
aries isn't settled by the end of the

week, another will be needed for
congressional seats and state central cornmiuees, he said.
"!urge you and all members of
the Ohio House to enact a congres.
sional redistricting bill in .time for
us to stan 1mplemcnung tt by the
~h 27 *'te necessary for a June
2 pnmary, he srud.
The lelt~r w~ addressed to Gov.
George Vmnov1ch, House and Sen·
ate leaders, a~ the state Democrat1c and Republican parues.
The Legislature is responsible
for reducmg the number of congressional districts from 21 to 19

because of population shifts documented in the !990 U.S. Census.
Earlier this month, the Senate
passed a bill that redrew the districts, but it stalled in the House.
Some House members said it
dilutes minority voting strength in
Cleveland and Columbus. Republicans who opposed the plan said it
splits too many counties and is too
generous to Dqf!tocratic incum·
bents.
The political' maneuvering has
pushed back the scheduled May 5
primary. The Ho~ approved a bill .
to move the primary to June 2. The
Senate is scheduled to hold hearingsonthemovethisweek.
1'1'
Also Monday, Rep . Joan
Lawrence, R-Galena, introduced
her own congressional redistricting
plan and scolded lawmakers for
bid was .aC:cepted, despite the fact their bickering over drawing new
that it was .a higher bid. The bid districts.
She said she used "objective
from the Racine liank was a fixed
criteria"
and was11'1 drawn to prorate, while the other two banks
tect
incumbents
or keep the partiquoted variable rates, adjusted
monll!ly. The loan is for five years. san character of the Ohio delega·
Council also passed an emer· lion.
Ms. Lawrence said her plan was
gency ordinance
· the
more Republican" but
Board or Public Affairs
"that's the.way the
money to repair a well.
are ·also being asked to
water since only one well is

• councz'/ annroves
Raczne
Purchase Oif tanke.r truck
Additional money was added to
the 1992 appropriations for the purchase of a new tanker triWk when
Racine ViUage Council met in regular session last week.
· At an earlier meeting, council
had au!horizQd Mayor Frank Cle·
land and Cleric Jane Beegle to bar·
row $42,000 from the Home
Natioital Bank and to place it in the
debt service account for the pay·
ment of the tanker, which is to be
opera~on.
delivered later this month.
Repairs on t~e well should
Bank One and Piumers Bank
and Savings Company bad submit· completed early this week.
ted qootes for the Joan. ·Aftar con- adjol!flled until Monday.
sideration, Home National Bank's

.

.l

('

said
the proposal and generally

does not comment on them before
they reach the House floor.
Under Ms. Lawrence's plan, 14
counti es are split including
Delaware County, where she lives.
The Senate -pa ssed bill split 28
counties.
The new plan also divides
Columbus, Cincinnati and Cleveland, as well as II townsh ips.
Ms. Lawrence said the plan is a
good one hccause the districts arc
compact without distoned shapes
As many as four of the ne~ di;.
tricts might offer an opponunity fo
a challenger, she said.
r
The plan was devised by David
Horn. executiv e director of the
non-profit Center for Research in
Governmental Processes Inc.

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