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Page D-B-Sunday Tjrnes-Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Point Plaa11nt, W.Va.

Ohio lottery

·Southern
drops cage
tilt, 75-58
.,

Japan _
to .
buy:U. S.
jeeps

~~i 799 ·

Piek-4: 6797
.Cuds: 8-H; J.C;

Q·D; 7-S
3-20-22-3744-52
Kicker 922209 ·

built

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - An
Ohio Congresswoman said Frl·
day the Japanese government
has . agreed to buy 970 Toledobunt Jeep Cherokees as part of
Its commttbnent to Operation
Desert Shield.
The agreement between the
United States and Japan-roughly
represents a single day's outp!lt
at the two .Toledo pla.nts, where
about 5,400 people are employed.
. Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D.Ohio,
' whose • district Includes the
plants, said Japanese suppliers
were thwarted in their effort to
RECEIVES CERTIFICATE - LaiTy MIUer (right) recently
provide four-wheel drive vebl· ,
received
a cerilfteale for bia aeblevemenl al the Bank Operallons
cles because of pressure appUed
from
David W. Thomas, Chlel Examiner, Division ol
$Cbool
on -Tapan IIY the Co~s and the
Banu,
Slate
ol
Ohio, Department ol Com'!'eroo.
U.S. Ambassador, Michael
S5 cash prise from lbe Ohio Valley Publlllhlllir
MYSTERY FARM - ·This week's mys.t ery
Arniacost.
' Co. · Leave your name, addreaa and telet:bone
farm; featured l)y . the .1\felgs ,sou. 11nd .water
In a Dec.171etter she released .
Conservation Dlslrlcl, Is local'~d somewhere In
~ 11umber with you.r .c ard, or letter.. No telephone
Friday from Chrysler Chairman .·
Melp County. Individuals wlsblnl to participate
cal.ls wfU be accepted. All conlell enlrlea sbould . Lee Iacocca, the Chrysler official
In lhe weellly contest may do so by gliesslng lhe ·
be turned In lo lbe newspaper ofllce by 4 p.m. each
called Kaptur's effort "lnstru·
·farm's owner. Just mall, or drop oli y.o ur guess to
. Wedneaday. In case ol a tie, lhe winner will be
mental In seeilig that this bust·
nation
lhe GaiBpolls.. Dally Trlbpne, 825 Third Ave;,
.cl)osen by lottery. Next week, a GaiDa County
ness went to a U.S. firm, •not to
Ga!BpoliS, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, 111
farm will be featured by lbe GaiDa SoU and Water
Japanese suppliers which was
GALUPOLIS - LaiTy Miller,
bankers to be educated along
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may Win · Conservation Dlslrlcl.
the case with the first 800
II, auditor for Ohio Valley Bank
side the examiners to learn more
four-wheel drive vehicles."
In Gallipolis, ranked fifth In the
about the eJ~;amlnatlon and audit·
'"W.e hope there will not be a
nation during the Bank Opera·
ing process.
need. for further vehicle orders
tlons School for Bank Examiners
The Bank Operations School
•
and
that
Saddam
Hussein
will
explores
the 'tb~ory and concepts
sponsored
by
the
Conference
of
•.
puU back his forces out of
State Bank Supervisors. The
behind the different aspects of
·Kuwait, but we wtlj .be ready to
school spanned .two weeks and . ·the examination process. Stu. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) expected adjustnlent ·over No- ·ceiJiber,' up 35, ooo · from No· produce as required."
. · · · was belli In St .. Louts, Missouri,
dents .learn to analyze and
The unemployment rate in Ohio v!O'mber's rate," said bureau vember· while the number of
Kaptur said she was gratified October H2, 1990.
·
.
Interpret the results of thE!
workers .unemployed In De- ' that ''our efforts have insured
rose both in Dec~mber and for all administrator Ellen O'Brien
Tbe
Conference
of
State
Bank
examination
and are Introduced
ol 1990 with . a ·recent steady Saunders,
cember was 317,000, · up from that vehicles being u!!fd to
Is
the
primary
proto
the
.
Uniform
Bank PerforSupervisors
Increase In unemployment
The number of employed
297,000 In November.
support our troops In the Middle vider of education services to
mance
Report
and
bow to conIn other Ohio economic east are made in America." ·
claims creating a cause for Ohioans reached an all-time high
state
bank
el(amlners.
The
tech·
duct
a
bank
financial
analysts
concern, The_:EI,.reau·of Employ· in December but despite the developments:
using key performance ratios.
nlcal
schools
run
.
by
CSBS
ment Services has .announced. . record-setting employemnt, the
-Astudybya·Delaware,Ohio,
P.rovlde a unlq ue method for
The bureau said Ohio's unem· overall number of unemployed firm says the annual employ- 'C onoco buys interest
'
ployment rate was 5.8 percent In Ohioans was ·substantial enough ment growth In Central Ohio 1s
in truck stop chain
December, up from the No- to push up the unemployment
Ukely to slow to ha'lf the rate of
vember rate of 5.5 percent and rate for December.
the 1980's with the biggest
HOUSTON (UPI) - Conoco
Initial claims for unemploye- dropoff In construction.
Inc. has bought a 50 percents take
for 1990 the state had an average
unemployment rate of 5.7 per· ment have nearly doubled re·
:.Buckeye Steel Castings, a· in the Flying J cbaln of 33
'
.cent, up from 5.5 percentln·l989. cently rising from 17,020 In ' the subsldary of Worthington Indushighway truck stops andwilihelp
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI) ...: loan-and-lnvesbnent firms and
The national unemployment first week of November to 33,781 tries Inc., willlayofll09 workers fund an expansion of the chain, .
A top Rhode Island banking banks without Insurance, ther·
rate was· 6.1 percent for De· ·' for the last week of December.
because of a lack of orders • spokesmen for the big oU com·
·
official
· was suspended pending eby shut\lqg them down. ·
~ember; up from 5.9 percent In
.''This steady Increase lnunem- caused by a three- week strlkeiri ·pany said friday.
Into a statewide
an
Investigation
The RISDIC collapse was preNovember.
.
p)oymept claims forecasts con- June.
Terms of the deal wel-e with·
banking
crisis
that
shut
down
45
cipitated
largely by the iallure of
-Nationwide Insurance cO. held. Flying J truck stops are
"Given · national trends and · cern for Ohio employment In the·
financial
Institutions.
the
Heritage
· Loan and Investrecent economic Indicators for months ahead,'' Saunders said.
said It furloughed six computer located primarily In the MidwGov.
Bruceo
Sundlun
said
Frl·
ment
Co.,
whose
fugitive pres!Oblo, tlie rise In December's
The numbi!r of Ohioans with system~ analysts because of a
est, Southeast and Rocky Moun·
day
be
placed
.
Susan
Hayes,
the
dent,
Joseph
Molllcone,
al·
unemploymentrateforOh!olsan jobs was 5.18 mUllon In De- restructuring of Its lnforrt;~atlon
taln states. Each Includes gasoDeparttnent
of
Business
Regula·
legedly embezzled $13 million In
.
services deparbnent.
line and diesel pumps. a ·
tlon's banking superintendent assets. Pollee reportedly have
~
restaurimt, a convenlllJice store,
and assCiClate director, on a paid questioned a reputed New Eng.
t
nc., one
na
on s
showersandphones./
·
_
Flying J Is a private company . "administrative leave of land mobster about Molllcone' s
absence.
whereabouts.
basedlnBrlghamCity,Utah; and
She will rem~ln on ll!ave until a
a r g e s t .c a t a o g
owroorn ,
It has five locations In Texas.
probe Is completed into the
O'Neil said he convened a
collapse of the Rhode Island . grand jury Into the matter 15
Share and· Deposit Indemnity minutes after l,eavlng his meet·
Corp., which left 45 credit unions, lng with Hayes.
·
for bankruptcy
protection
.
'
Continued from D-1
gains for an extended period into
·leveraged buyout, cash flow Is .. uncertainty that has been hang·
RICHMOND, Va. (UPI)
the future . These Include: 1)
Best Products Inc., a 230~ store
all-Important," said analyst Ken lng over us." He said a deal for
lower bog prices; 2) additional
chain stralni,ng under a heavy
Gras_sman of Wheat First Securl· $250 million lu debtor-In·
positive effects from the organities. . "When consumers went possession financing would be
debt load from leveraged ~buyou t
zational reorientation; 3) the
expenses and reeling from
conser.vattve, Best suffered."
closed soon.
Introduction of several new proOfficial holiday sales results
slumping sales, sought Chapter
The layoffs- the!hlrd straight
ducts by the Sausage segment; 4)
11 federal bankruptcy protection
have not been released, but .the . January with job losses For complete, professional individual and business
the potential of the Bob Evans
Friday after debt·r:estructurlng company bas hinted sales could Involve employees at every level
General Store concept; 5) contax preparation assistance call
have dropped by 30 percent.
efforts fell through.
and represent about 2 percent of , tinued growth of the Restaurant
;
· Stewart Kasen, president and ·
"The decision to tile under Be~t's total workforce.
store base;· and6) thepotentialof
chief operating officer of the ·chapter ll Is always a ·attticult
Best was· an Innovator In the
adding to growt!J In both seg- .
one," Kasen said. "We were catalog &amp;hQwroom busiDI!SS, but
company that bad $2.1 billion In
ments through acquisition.
sales last year, announced $30 forced to take tbts action as a that kind of retailing bas lost
Given ·these factors and their
million In Immediate cost- result of the general . economic · market share to straight catalog
anticipated · favorable Impact,
cutting· moves ..,.. Including 350 decline, the ,tlghtenlilg of both outfits and high· volume discoun·
the evidence of decided Improve·
I 71~i :~C'cond Avpnue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45£31
tr;1de and bank credit, and the ters In recent years. The W. Bell
layoffs and a pay freeze for those
ment in the lat~st results, Bob
substantial slowdown In consu- catalog showroom company,
left.
.
O!X'n .
( 614) 446-8677
Evans strong balance sheet and
mer spenQjng. ~·~
·
Kasen, citing the chain's ex ten·
~ based in Rockville, Md., flied for
H~~~ Weekda)os, Evenings and Saturday by ~ppolntment
valuable ctmsUJher franchise, we
slve·real estate holdings and ~250
Chapter ll·protectlon last month,
"We made every . effort to
bave recently added thiS Issue to
mUllan cash on hand, predicted restructure our debt ou tslde of a
The New York lnvesbnent firm
our Model PottfoUo. Conse.'
Best would emerge from Chapter formal court supervised proof Adler &amp; ~In used Manu·
quently, we strongly urge.lnves11 a stronger company. H(\ said
facturers HanoVt!r Trust Co. as
cess, " he continued. "H&lt;Iwever,
tors to purchase shares of this
plunging holiday sales and vend· we and our major creditors
the prime lender ·In engineering
quality Issue.
,ors balking at shipping Items concluded that the best- way to
the leveraged buYOut. The bank
(Mr. Evans Ia an lnvealment
without getting cash up front protect the valuable long-term
was the agent for $319 mtlllon In · Broker for The Ohio Company In
prompted the·bankruptcy.
combined loans and letters of
franchise of Best's business is to
lhelr Galllpolla office.)
Best, cme of the nation's largest proceed with the protection of the
credit to Best and holds about
catalog shOwroom retailers, op- court.''
$~ million of the debt. .
erates 195 Best showrooms In 27
Bank officials said the loans
In a Dec. 14letter, Kasen asked
states, Including Ohio. It al.so suppliers for patience. In a Dec. are partly secured by various
Cmitlnued from 0·1 .
operates Best Jewelry, a chain of 21 letter, Kasen promised C!lSh .Best assets and senior toapprold·
the
Amex
Issues, !?ff % tQ 5',4 ,
35 fine jewelry and glfiwa re for Items shipped after Dec. 19
mately $250 mUiion of subordl· Analysts were said Thursday to
stores, and-Tete-Mall, a nation- Jlu I left payment for earlier
nated debt held by other downgrade the stock and cui
wide rhaU-order service. Institutions.
shipments In limbo. In a Dec. 28
earnings estimates for ihe com-·
In ·an August filing with the letter, he warned filing a Chapter
But untU bankruptcy is com- pany, as prospects for 1ts ·sale
.· Securities . and Exchange Com- · 11 pet~tloas possible.
plete, some $181 mUiion. in loans faded.
'
miSsion, Best reported $664.8
to Best would.- be listed as
Kas · sal the tulng - which
The ,National Association of .
mUIIon In long-term debt, much allow the company to .c ontinue
non-performing assets: A · $3
of. It stemming from the $1.14 opera tng while flnahclal reor- mutton line of credit that has not Securities Dealers composite tn:
'
dex lost·0.27 to 367.24..
billion buyout that took Best gantzatlonp~ns are established
bee drawn on does not count in
prtvate In 1988r
the d!!bt e1(posure.
- "will remove the cloud of
"In t~~ flrstcoupleofyears of a

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Source,says ,

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Iraq wants. ·
new deadline

Auditor.for OVB

ranks fifth in

BAGHDAD, Iraq (UPI)
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
and Palestine Liberation Organl·
zatlon leader Yasser Arafat have
encouraged France to call for a
meeting. of the U. N. Securl.ty
Councli to extend the Jan. 15
deadline for Iraq to withdraw
from Kuwait, a West European
diplomatic source said Monday.
The U.N. Security COuilcll set
Jan. 15 as the date wben Iraq
must leave Kuwait or face
possible military action by the
U.S.·Ied multinational force ga·
thered In the Persian Gulf region.
The message was delivered to.
French lawmaker Michel Vau- ·
. zelle, who spent more than four ·
hours In a meeting with SaddaiJI
In Baghdad on Saturday, the
diplomatic source said.
· vduzene met on his way back
to Paris from Baghdad In Tunisia
with Arafat, where be discussed
with him various aspects of the

Ohio~ jobless rate increases

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Top Rhode Island .b anking
Qfficial placed on leave

. . . . .] (8
PcuuUC

I
I ' Sh.·

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0f

ti•

fdes

r·:~-Eiect~ni~ Filing Available

'

•Oired Deposit of Refund Check

.L ynn E. Angell.

Certified Public Accountant

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Stocks ...

Co_n_lln_ue"-d-fro_m"-n"-.1-'_.

lmperUed financial · Institutions
Wltll Its ·own money or perhaps ·
liquidate them and pay off
depositors. He said the total
exposure to the state has been
estimated at $475 million io Sl ·
billion, though he felt the estimates were high.
The governor, who took office
thll week, said It could iakeyears
. tor depositors to get their money
If the state chooses to liquidate
the credit unlllns. ·
·
Sundlun ordered the credit
unions, loan and Investment
ttrms, and ·banks · closed to
'prevent a run on deposits. The
action cut off about 300, 000
depositors from $i. 7 billion.
He was rushing to complete an
emergency plaJJ to let Rhode
Jallnders withdraw money from
c~ financial lnstltutloDJ so
tillY could get by until the crisiS

.,.....

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"We're hearing about families
pltchinl in 19 help friends and

.

(You ,_, Quallly lor a Interest
Energy Co•ervadon
-Home .Improvement Loan
.

----,~---

neighbors get through this,'' collapse of one ofthe Institutions'
Sundlun spokesman David Pres- It Insured, the H!!rltage Loan and
ton said.
Invesbnent Corp. of Providence. '
The governor's spokesmen HerftagePresldentJosephMoUI·
said the banking crtsls bad even co~. 47, has been missing since
victimized people working for ) Nov. 8 and an arrest warrant bas
Sqndlun. "One woman came in been issued charging him with
(to the governor's office) with embezzlement.
just a quarter In her pocket," he ; The BQstrin Herald reported •
said, adding that "I'm dOwn to Friday the Rhode Island State
(my last ) $2. I'm about to sJ*!nd . Pollee had questioned a reputed
New England mobster about the
half of It on a cup of coffee.' "•
Preston has his savings In the disappearance of MoUicone .. But
capt. Brian Andrews refused to
Columbian Ci'edlt Union, on~ of
the 11 that failed to be appf0Vl1d 'disclose whether Luigi "~by
for federal Insurance.
Sbanks' ! Maneiechlo revealed
The president of Brown Unl· · any new lnfomu~tion on Molllverslty, Vartan Gregorian, has
cone or his whereabout&amp;.
agreed to Investigate the col·
Andrews eonflrmed there are
lapse of RISD,IC. Sundlun bas
rumors Molllcone ran afoul ofthe
mob IUid II dead, thoqb the
prom !Sed that any evidence of
Illegal activity will be turned
captain said his lnveetigatoril
over to Attorney General J11mes
believe the fugitive bank pretl·
0' N e II and "pursued
dent Is alive . .The most common
vigorously."
rumors In Rhode Island bave
The RISDIC decision to cl~
MoUicone hiding til Italy or
do~ was prompted by the.
:roronto, Andrews said. ·

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Bob Evans...

,.·Mon!' RliOde /sland... __

· PILOT DIES . IN GALLIPOLIS CBASH - The pUot of a
single-engine · airplane was killed Snnday wben lbe alreraft
·~ . crailhed ltilo a field near tile Gallla· Melp Airport and bUJ'I!t Into

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reta ers,

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C~ritral

$5900

Trust i.s a paniciparing lender in the
Ohio Energy Action Program. This pro2:ram ..
. enables you to apply for Energy Conse;.,.ation
Improvemel'lt
Loans
that can be interest free.
.
.
Items such as insulation and furnaces. are
digible for funding. ·call ·orvisit vour nearest
·. c~~tral Trust Offic-e today ro see (f you qualify,
.

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SALE

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GAWPOUS
3U Second

Ave.

' ····0902

MIDDUPORT
97 N. Second be. · ·
992·6661

CENTRAL
TRUSf
•

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APNCBANK

..

Mtmbrc FDIC

,.

OEAe

;•···«•l •&lt;ftll;'

4.;: .~ •.•' &gt;111lii&amp;!I()N

...

.1 Section, 10 PogH 25 C.ntt
A Muttlmodlo Inc. Newopopor

Pomeroy.:...Middleport. Ohio, Monday. January 7. 1991

.a

Be8

Fifty ~t ebaaee of
frealq rain or •ow tonllbt.
Low In mid ... TuNdlly, biP
near 48. Cbaace of rain Ia 10
percent.

Super Lotto

Dames. Above, Ga!Upo• firemen fl1ht tile blaze foUowln1 an
explOIIIon durtn11be crash. ( OVP photo by Stepllen Wilson)

FAA -probes fatal Gallipolis plane·'Crash
By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News Staff
" Federal Aviation Admlnlstra·
tlon officials. arrived at the
dalUa-Meigs Regional Airport
Monday morning to l)egln tnves·

1:30 p.m. when the. single-engine oglst was alone In the plane. ·
Whitney was en route to
airplane he was piloting crashed
Reports Indicate Whitney was
Ga11ipolls from Columbia. S.C..
near the Intersection of State apparently too high when mak· . when tlte crash occurred.
Route 7 and Airport Road and · lng his final approacb to· the • The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
burst into flames. Whitney be- · alrportandwasfiylngatapproxJ· Departrpent sent 29 firefighters .
came the first local airplane mately'aJO feet when be attemp- to the scene and a GVFD report

was k~. .
~..
.. . _
Or. William R. Whitney, of 297

aircraft went down east of the . cr&amp;~~hed o,nto ,i,~'' left side and·
airport. The 51-~ear-o!d psychol· burst Into flames.

.

::s~nfn ~~~~y~s J::~~~~~~:~ ~~~~~,.::::~~ ~~e~3h:~~~n=~ :d:~~ur~~ac:la~: ~u=n~~ ·=::~edri:: ~~:~~~~ p~~~:!

·.

0

Duly Road,
was kcllleod
·. a,
·
. ;de
·mns
·

B.

'rebel.

a t t a c.k s ·i n

aker

581 0

. . avr~u.anddthe cra~. slte..

Americans 'invent' chlldren

as

t8x

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·• -- · • b' , - ·
the vehicles had Uiiii•II8C ut that

feU in the county overnighL
Union ~- According to the
By 11 a.m. however, the snow- report, Christopher Hall, Midfall hsd stopped and the rempera- ~ was traveling west on
tme in doWIItown Pomeroy stood at Umon when he lost conttol or his
34 degrees under sunny skies.
vehicle and struck the driver's side
Schools in MeiSs Local, of a c:ar driven by Nancy Whit·
Southern Local, and Eastern Local, tekind, Pomeroy. She was traveling
as well as Rejoicing Life quistian easL 'lbere was heavy damage to
School and Carleton were all the Whittdtind vehicle and light
closed because of the snowfall.
damfe to the left n:ar and back of
. Pomeroy Jl!llicC were stj,U inVCS· Hall Sc:ar. IJall 'was cited for failure
ligating acctdents which' occurred to control.
during the morning but had no
repons available late Monday
•In
morning. A c:ar overturned when u
·
slid on the mad which runs beneath
The Junior Fair ~ Steer weigh-in ..
the Pomeroy-Mason bridge, · two will be Saturday at the Meigs
others struCk utility poles, one on .County Fairgrounds, 9 to II a.m.
Mechanic Street and another at the A114-H and FFA members living in
intersecti.on of Brick and Bu,aemut. Meigs Ciwlty are eligible, JOhn C.
while Jlllother slid into a wall on Rice, County Extension. Agent, an;
. Mulberry. It WM reported that all of nounced today.
.'

S teer
. Welg
' • h • Set

dodges

a

iers who are paid cash under the deduction. A child was worth
table, . The New York Times deduction of $1,080 In 1986 and
$1,900 in 1987, the tax agency
reported Sunday.
In 1987, whim the ms required . Said.
.
About 66,000 taxpayers who
that Social Security numbers of
all dependents over age 5 be · claimed four or more de~ndents
listed on •tax returns, 7. million
tit 1986clalmed none ln.1987, after
,\merlcan children- who had theSoclaiSecurityrulewentlnto
.1' '
-e~
been listed In 1986 - were. not effect and more. than 11,000
claimed on · annual tax state· families claimed seven or more
ments, t~e Times' said.
dependents In 1986 but none In
~
·
. .
•
The tax-collecting agency said . 1987, the agency said.
Mr. Nyc's funeral will be IJcld at the 7 mUlion figure represented a
''In any Individual family, you
·: Columbus Police Office' Robin
11
Lm.'
at
the
Resumction
Roman
9
percent
drop
In
the
77
million
might
Imagine that one or two
'Nye who was killed ~hen
Cat)lolic
Chun:h,
New
Aibaily,
at
~
dependents
claimed
on
the
1986
chUdren
might legldmate!y have
· .his cruiser was struck
by
11
a.mTnesday.
Priendsmaycallat
returns
and
$2.9
billion
more
jn
·
stoppedbelngdependentsln1987,
·a car. at
Ave. and Airport
.Drive was
in the home of his · the Hill Funeral Home, 220 S. State yearly tax revenues, the paper · but u:s liard to Imagine a
"
· legitimate situation in which a
grandpirents, the late Mr. and Mrs. St.; in Westerville, IOday from 2 to said.
4
p.m.
and
7
to
9
p.m.
,A
·fral.en)al
Those
·statistics
show
that
taxpayer had seven d~pendents
"'Hanson Holter, Forest Run. He at·
Order
of
Police
memorial
service
many
Americans
have
been
onif'
year and none tlie n~t."
tended the Syracuse Elementary
will
be
·
held
at
8
p.m.
IOnighL
claiming
deductions
for
children
(Szilagyi
said.
School several years 'ticfore,(IIOvihg
·tit Columblls with liis mother, Memorial donations may be sent to .who , do not exist or who were ! In 1989, It became ·required for
Charill' Newsies or the Police Alb- actually .with another parent In taxpayers taking the dependent·
· Beatrice St.elt.cr. ·
care credit to IdentifY who tliey
·• Besides his mother, he is sut· lelic· l.etgue, accan:ling to .· the cases .of divorce, the ms said.
flinenll
hallie.
·
·
Eighty
percent
of
the
.ch11dren
were paying. , In that year, 2.6.
tived by a sister, Diane Stauser, of
An
in'Veltlption
of
lhc
accidem
whO
were
not
claimed
In
.1987
million baby sitters effec!lvely
Cotumb~ who wu also ~ in
which
involved
tbnle
¥ehiclel
ancl
.
probably
~ever
existed,
said
vaniShed, with the number .of
111e Holter home here; his wife,
injured~··
panner
ancltwo
olhcr
•
John
Szilagyi,
an
IRS
retaxpayers claiming the credit
Norma Jean, two dlughren, tbnle
men
Is
·
Ullller
invelltiplion.
The
searcher,
wbo
designed
the
propdropping
by 30 percent, the
110111, ancl fOlD' grandchlldlal. .
Cllliler,
on
a
!w:kup
caD
involving
osal
to
,require
Social
Seeurlty
newspaper
said.
Othennrvivors include aeveral Jo.. •
a
~
IUIPDCI.
was
north
numbers
from
dependents
and
Cal relatives, an aunt, Edith Siuon,
.
Pomeroy, and two unclel, Dav¥1 bound 011 : »dy A-ue with the baby alttera:
About 20 percent of the van·
Holter, l"ornee'qy, ancl Harold Hoi· light !!nh!ng llld the 111m openlt·
ter, Long Bolllim. Other 1111111 wbo ing when the accidenl occurred. ac- tsbed dependents ~re ch1ldren ' The Meigs Coumy CJiambr:r of
report in The Colum- who bad been claimed by both · Comrncrce Will not holcllts
survive, both formerly ~ Melp
obllined from the · parents after a divorce, he said. meeting Tuesday. Nell Je1U11r
County, are Huel W]tl oop,
Columblia
accident
invdliplion . Uilder the law, only one parent
meeting will be held seaind
ColumbuS ancl C11111oae McsqUid.
may
claim
the
chllcl
as
.
a
'l'uesday
in February. .
CuUough. Richmond, Va.

· : NI;:W YORK ( UPI) - Stricter
Internal Revenue Service rules
for reporting child-care pay. ments have turned up 'evidence
·that large numbers of Americans.
.cheat on their taxes, claiming

·

=~~~li:o::rs
l'ommly
t1uee to five inches =:::::
of snow which the~wr;.':n~~~y
police investigated an accident
on · .

by two pathologists of the U.S.
"The Farabundo Marti National
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Se- off by Congress.
Armed,Forces
Medical
Examln·
Front, knoWn · by tis
Liberation
·
He
said
the
White
House
would
cretary ot State James Baker
er's
Office,
concluded
that
"two
Spanish
Initials
as FMLN, In·
ask
Coniress
to
release
at
least
a
el(pressed outrage Sunday upon
crew
members
...
apparently
sur·
ltially
claimed
responsibility
for
$42.5
million
In
portion
of
the
learning that rebel forces ·tn El
vived
the
helocopter
crash
but
downing
the
helicopter
but
demilitary
aid
that
was
frozen
Oct.
Salvador "murdered" two U.S.
nied eirecutlng tbe servicemen.. It
servicemen after down! ng their 19 to protest the government's were kUied a sbort time later by
rebels."
sald'ln
a communique tbat It was
helicopter Wednesday. The third Involvement in the· deaths of six
"We
shOuld
make
a
·
.
.Baker
said,
Its own "exhaus:
now
conducting
. serviceman, ·the p!l(lt, died from Jes¢t priests In November 1989.
effort
to
britlg
these
strong
live
lnyestlgation"
of the Inc!·
Baker, who departed for Eu·
wounds sustained 'from the '
people
to
justice."
dent
and
wou)d
make
the results
crash, a preliminary autopsy . rope to meet later this week with
On
SUnday
U.S.
Ambassador
public.
.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq
showed•· .' •
William
Walker
raised
the
possl·
"maintain
Tbe
rebels
said
they
A U.S. muttary forensic report . Aziz, made his comments about
our policy of respecting the
released Saturday confirmed the rebel lnclden t on the ABC l'lllty of trying those responsible
Geneva Convention" and "has a
In
the
United.
States.
that two American serv.lcemen News program "This Week With
"The
people
of
the
United
clear policy of assuming respon.
were shot to death, presumably David Brinkley."
States
will
JIOt
demand
retribu·
slblllty for all of Its acts."
by an armed unit of the Fara·
tlon,
nor
seek
further
violence.
Officials said the three U.S.
In
an
apparent
reference
to
the
bundo Marti National Liberation
ask
for
and
have
every
They
will
servicemen
were returning to
Jesuit
killings,
Baker
acknowl·
·
Front, after the rebels ambushed
right
to
expect
simple,
justice,"
base IIi Honduras
their
home
edged
·
"complaints"
with
El
and shot down the chopper.
at
a
memorial
after
completing
a non-combat,
Walker
said
Salvador's
government.
But,
he
''They were not kUied when .
administrative
support
miSsion
service.
.
their belllcopter was shot down. said, •'YOu have a bunch of rebels
PFC
Ernest
Dawson,
20,
and
in
El
SalvadQr,
where
the
United
here
who
are
trying
to
reverse
·
They were murdered by \h~ ~
Lt.
Col.
David
Pickett,
40,
sur·
bas
been
backing
succes·
States
the decision of the ballot box
FMLN, ·at least two of them for
slve governments In an 11-year·
·wiith bullets and bayonets and . vived lhe crash only to be put to
sure," Baker said.
~ar·
old
civil war with ,t beFMLN. The·
death
by
the
rebels.
Cblef
Baker added tbat the Incident now they're going beyon~ that
rant
Officer
Daniel
Scott,"'l9.,
was
war
has cost ' over 72,000 uvea
will bolster Bush adminiStration and murdering Americans ln.
·.
mostly
civilians.
from
the
beileved
to
have
died
attempts .to restore mU!tary aid cold blood. It Is outrageous."
crash
Impact.
The forensic report conducted
t.o the government that was cut

:IRs says

Blarne sn·o·w ICe
•
.·
•h "
J.or au1·0 ~~~ aps

·&gt;aided ·by the· • ' ,_ ·
·"' ~ • ~ ·
,.
state patrol in m~naglng traffic
Severalaccideliis were under U1·

I&gt;epalltment- -

gulf crisis, triggered by Iraq's
Aug. 2 Invasion of , the oU·rlch
emirate.
"Iraqi President Saddam Bussein could be ready to talk about
withdrawal from Kuwait, and a
peaceful settlement of the gulf
crisis, If the deadline set by the
Security Council Is extended,"
the dlplllmatlc ·source said.
But In Washington, White
House press secretary Marlin
Fitzwater, Informed of the latest
development, said, "The U.N.
resolutlon.ls firm. "
The Iraqi leader would contlnue to. Insist on a linkage
between the gulf crisis and other
Middle East Issues, with prlo'rlty
being given to the Pales'tlnlan
question.
· In an address · to the Iraqi
people Sunday, Saddam, said,
"The battle with the lrtildels
would be long," and asked his
countrymen to be ready for a
blOOdy war.

deductions for children who do · '
not. exts t, .a pulbllshed report
said.
In addition, evidence shows
Americans have been claiming
child-care credits for baby sit·

.:POrlll.er Meimi.'rest·dent' .·killed
·
in Columbus .auto.accident

c:::cr

Meeting canceled

reaw-

•.

FUN IN THE SNOW • Wltb all of the Melp COUDty Sdlools
cloled, daen DlatJ ~ dale ror JCilllll*n to elljo7 tile 8nt
.IIIOWtaJI ol'91. Willmilre dau ~ lndlil of mow oa tile lfOUDd
Md lble 011 bll .,.,..., JOIIIII SeaD PoweB ot Llneolllllll really lot
. Into IIIICIWballnl·
.
.

•

�··- .
•

•

Co:mmeDtary ·

.

.

.

'
M~;•

Monday. J~ 7, 1991

-

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Olllo

.

ashes..·fmally go home_Jac_k_A_mh_rso_n

.

WARSAW, Poland- The tiody
of a legendary pianist and PoUsll
DEVOTED TO THE INTEBI!'JIT8
OF THE
AREA. .
·patriot, who died In New York In
..
'
. MEIGS-MAilON
.
~~~
.
:·
~941, will be go!rfg home this year
~m~ ,....._.L--.-IrTEIIc::ln=•
on the 50th anniversary of his
death. But his heart will stay In
qJv
·~
America, ll~rally.
.
ROBERT L. WJNGETT. .
Unusual
and
confldentialJiego.
CHARLENE BOI!;J!LICB .
Publll~r
·
tlonatlons recently resulted In an
General Manacer
agreement by the 'Unl~ed States
to return the remai!IS of lgilance
PAT WJOTEHEAD . ·
Jan Paderewsld to Poland. Pres!·
Aullltut Pablllber/Coatroller•
dent Franklln D. Roosevelt had
A M.EMBERo!T~e United Preeslnternational, Inlalid Dally Press
vowed that Pader,e wskl's body,
Association and the American Newspaper Publlshers AIISOCiation.
sealed In · a Zlnl casket at
Arlington National cemetary,
LETTERSOFOPINIONarewelcome. Theyshouldbe.leosthan300 .
would not be returned to Poland
words•Iona-. AU letters are subject to edltlllg and must be signed with ·
until the country was free again.
. _ name, addrees and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pubThe man who tipped us off to
. ::~ed. Letters should beIng~ ~te, addreoslllg Issues, not personall·
the secret "body talks" was
•------~----------.,----,----~ . .Tadeusz Mazowieckl, who recently resigned as Poland's
prime minister. lie was openly
puzzled at l&gt;elng stalled by the
White House on the hoped-for

The 1990 'census:
not all Sun Belt ~ins

return of the remains.
One of )'dazowteekl's. first actions whiln he became prime ·
mlnls.l2r in· 1989 was to Inquire
about the return of the planlst'.s
body. But be hit red tape In
Washington. Mazowi~kik vis·
ltked Arlington last March on a
state vtslt, but still hall received
no formal prom~ to return the
body to Poland.
. So a prominent American ot
Pollsh ancestry, Lt. Gen. Ed-· ·
ward Rowny ,' got -Involved ' In
July. He had been chief negotla·
tor for the Strategic 'Arms
Reductlon·'l'alks, and this was a
job that needed·a negotiator .
Rowny went to Poland as a
private cl tlzen and talked to
Mazowieckik and Solidarity
leader Lech Walesa. Both were
empllatlc that Paderewskl must
be returned. ·
. "For some,reason thatl cannot

explaln·to you," Mazowieckl told Department saying ..the Poles
us, "the American government could have their pianiSt back In
has to take a PQSltlonon this. We timefortheannlversary,butthat
would like to get his body back, sa a ·committee was being formed to
I wrote a letter concerning this to oversee the transfer "With futJ
President Bush ." That conflden- honor and dignity." Nothing ge~s
.tJalletter, sent Aug. 29, Is tactful, done In Washington without a
but firm: "Poland recalls with commft~e. .
.
gratitude that the remains of one
But since Paderewskl never
of her most revered iln.d cher- served In the U.S. mllltary, he
!shed sons ... have been under the could not be burled at Arlington . .
care of the United . States- of lnstead, hiS body Is In the
America (until) 'Poland shall be concrete base of a memorial that
free. • ...It would be most approp- · holds the mast of the battleship
rlate to begin planning for · "Maine," which .was sul)k in
Paderewskl's remains to be Havana harborlnl898, beginning
Interred In Poland on the 50th the Spanish· American war.
anniversary of his death on June
Paderewskl's he.a rt Is In a
29, 1991. These plans could be shrine built by the Paullne
made final In early May 1991."
Fathers In Doylestown, Pa.. ..
Mazowleckl heard nothing
For propaganda purposes, the
from the White House before he successive comm\lnlst govern- .
stepped down from office. But on ments of Poland during the Cold ' .
Dec. 14, ·the Pollsh government ' War demanded the return of the
got a miSsive from · the State bj)dy, but ~ere rejected.
·,

ByARNOLDSA~LAK

I

Berry's World
WEM.E IN A
RECtSSION.
.

\.

A~lNG

DEDUCTION.
HOLN\ESt

E\.EM£NTARY,MY

,

I

DEAR WATSON\

.

ReM.eMBeR How RiDicul.ous
'

·~

MiCHael .PuKaKiS LooKeD
RiDitJG -~lfqJtJt-ID ii-J . a TatJ~
DlJRbJG THe. 1988

f ONNY fioW T~itJGS
'

ed
•
c·
.
.
.
.
d
OweIImgs . &amp;m38 m mcmnau;
·
·
•
d•
.
·
·
·
·
88
open
1na
JSaster
centers
Red
Cro
·
·
---e
.

was

'

PReSiDeNTiaL CaMPaiGN?

..

• . 4'

•
·/.

.·

IIC'~h~cat~~~~T

--Area deaths--m

·I

Is it worth I 0,000 American liv~s?
It seems highly likely that,
sometime early this year, President Bush will order our forces in
the Middle East to go on the
offensive against the troops of
Saddam Hlisseln In Kuwait. The
ensuing war wUI probably not he
long as wars go, and with luck
American casualties will not be
high.
But there never has been, and
never Will be, I! war that doesn~t
result In at least some easualties,
and this one wlll be no exception . .
The Pentagon Is well aware of
thiS, and some eagle-eyed jour·
nalist discovered and reported,
not long ago, that arrangements
have already been made to ship
many thousands of coffins to
Saudi Arabta.
There Is no way, however, to
make such a perfectly sensible
and necessary step sound any·
tiling but macabre .when It
appears In the pages of our dally
newspapers along with the sports .
scores, movll! reviews and slm· .

William Rusher

liar trivia.
Every major effort Is collective,
Worse yet, though ... because It · and could not be otherwise.
Is deliberately calculated to Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., alentrap and embarrass - IS the ways the realist, put It bluntly:
he understoOd had lost all five of
question that reporters have ''Every society rests on the death her sons on the field of battle:
already put to President Bush, of men."
"I feel how weak and fruitless
and will put to him repeatedly It
Fortunately, most people real· must be any words of mine which
war does In fact break out: "Is lze this, and resign themsel~es to should attempt to begulle you
Kuwait woi'th the lives of 10,000 tbe cruel possibility that they, or from the Jll'lef of a !oss so
(or however many) American · someone they love, may Indeed' overwhelming. But . I cannot
boys?"
have to die In a struggle for goals · refrain from tendering you the
defined by others. '
consolation that may be found In
. But this quiet acceptance,
There can be, as the questioner
the tKanks of the Republic they
never easy, Is lliflnltely harder to died to save. l pray that our
well kno~s. no really satisfacachieve today, when our society heavenly Father may assuage
tory answer to such a question. In
an Ideal world, no human being
is deeply divided over fundamen·
the anguish of your bereave-.
tals, and when the media conought to have the right to order a
ment, and leave you only the
ceive It their duty to report In
single one of his fellow men, let
cherished 111-emory of .the loved
detail every private tragedy, war and lost, and the solemn pride
alone 10,000, to lay down their
and that their cameras can
lives for a cause, no matter how
that must be yours to have laid so
record .
noble. chosen by tbe one making
costly a sacrifice upon the.altar
how noble, chosen by the one
oftreedom."
.
making the request. If we must
In Individual cases, a more
But 359,528 Union soldiers died
die for a cause, let It be. one we
In that war, ·and I am sure
than ordinarily eloquent preslhave chosen ourselves.
d~nt may be able· to rise to the
Lincpln would be glad that he too
And yet, as any . thoughtful 6cca.slon. That was 'the achievedied before anyone cpuld ask him
person IS· well aware; the world
ment of Abraham Lincoln In his If the outcome was "worth'' their
simply Isn't organized that way.
famous letter to Mrs. Bixby, who
lives.

Is Bush. seeking new CIA head

WASHINGTON (NEA( - Ac· therespectofthemostattheCIA
· cording to White House sources, and of the lntelll&amp;ence commit· ·
President Buah would like hiS old tees on Capitol Hill. However, he
·· friend James Lilley to replace Is not liked at the Pentagon
W(lllam Webster as head of the because he has challenged their
lntellill!!nce estimates. ReportCentral'tntelligence Agency.
Bush
is
said
to
be
unhappy
with
edly,
he is not held In high regard
' '
the CIA's performance since he by some Influential staffers on
took office. He reportedly wants· the National Security Council.
an lntellJ&amp;ence professional at
The \Vlllte House bas a prob'
· the CIA's helm. Lilley, currently· . !em, though. Webster apparently
U.S. ambassador to China, Is a . likes his job and would be
career Intelligence agent. He reluctant ID leave. Given Webswas CIA statiOn chief In BeiJing, ter's standing on Capitol Hill,
when Bush was a U.S. represen- Lilley might have a hard time
tatlve tbere.
.
wlnnlna' conflmlatlon It Webster
Webster, a .former federal
Is obviously forced out.
appeall Judge . from Missouri,
One · possibility would be to
headed the FBI from 1978-87. He name Webster to a judieship.
B:r Ualed Prete lalernaUoaal
was named to his present posl· However, s\Jice he hat already
Today·Is Moilday, Jan. 7·, the seventh day of199}, with 358 1Q toif&gt;w. ·
tlon
after former CIA head served on the court .of appeals,
· · ·
. The moon Is In Its last quarter.
William Casey's detth as part of the only Judgeship he mlaht want ·
The mornlne star Ia Man.
·
·
. ·
an , attempt Iii control the CIA would be on the U.S. Suprenie
· The eventnr stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter. .
after some, of tbe covert opera· Cour.t. There IS somespecu)atlon
TJiose born on thiS date .1111! under the sten of Cap~lcorn. They
tlon excesses cit the Casey years. . that he could be named aealn to
Include Frenchman JacqUH Montgolfler, who, with his brother,
. Webster appears' have won . the cnurf of appeals with ·a
Invented the hot air balloon, In 1745; Millard Fillmore, 13th president
of the United States, lllliOO; Berlladette Soublrous, who became St.
Bernadette and whose vtslou led to the foundation of tiM! shrine at
Lburdes, France, In U.C: film executive Adolph Zulror In 1,873;
Washington as president and John Adams as vice prestdent.
cartoonist Charles Addams In 1912; and singer Kenny Loggins tn 1948.
1n 1931, as the Great Depression was getting under way, a report to
President Hoover estlmalell that 4 mllllon to 5 mllllon Americans
00 this date In history:
were out of work.
lrt 1610, Gallleo, usJne his primitive telescope, discovered the four
In 1990, Jeffrey Lundgren, a self-proclaimed prophet and leader of
major moons of Jupiter. - lo, Europa, Ganymede and Qtlllsto.
·
a breakaway religious ~~ wanted for the slaylngs of II~ Olllo
In 1789, the first nationwide U.S. presidential election waa held. The
followers, was arrested In California at a motel near the Mexican
border ..
electors chosen by the yoters unanbnously picked George

rooay in history

•

"

promise that he be gtven the first
available Supreme Court seat.
Even If Webster steps aside
Jll'aCefully, Lilley might !IIIII
have confirmation probleri!s.
Critics say he Is too close to the ·
Chinese leadership and has not
been sufficiently critical of. the
. crackdown on students and
dissidents.
'
..,.. Is a new Job also In the offing
for Britain's Margare"1
Thatcher?
.
According to White House
sources, while new Prime Minis·
ter John Major was. In Washington, the British sounded out
President BUJh and.Secretary of
State James Baker on whetber
tbe United States might consider
appointing Mrs. Thatcher to the
presidency of the World Bank.
T!ll! present Worlcl Bank head . ·
former RePI!bllcan coneressman
Barber .B. Conable Jr. - was a
compromise choice put forward
by now Secretary of State Jim
Baker In 1986. after GOP conservatives and moderates could not
a8l'ee. When his present terms
expires next ,year, Conable will
be 68. He has not publicly
Indicated whether he Is lnterl!llted In a new term.
The job pay1 $250,000 fler year
and Includes a . lavish entertain·
lng budget as well as a large

Hospi"tal·news :

Couple issued
marriage license

.

Meigs announcements

...

Open door session

CluiP.: .

D.

lVOrce granted

.

., .

The Daily Sa ttinii-Paga 3

'

B:r Unl&amp;ed Preu later-*lollal
nien urged motoriSts to use . of the state's panhandle Sunday - time of the crash. But It was not
Bitter cold persisted In the caution.
,
morning.
.lmmedlAiely known what caused
northern PlaiDs Sunday and the
The temperature · hovered
Foe was soupy In much of the Cessna 421- B to go down In a
m~ry fidgeted around the
around freezing In northeast southeast Texa•, too, cu ttlng ball of fire after tskeoff.
freezlq mark In the Midwest,
Ohloandwetroadaweredevelop- vlsll!lllty to near zero. Ships and
Glen Davis, wbo lives near the
log patches of Ice.
mlldngwith rslnandfloodwaterJ
boats were warned Of the hazard, crasll·slte, said he stumbled over
to make driving - and even
''Side streets and bridge~~ In and small'c raft and mariners not three bodies as he fought to reach
walking - a slippery hazard.
particular will be prone to belni ualq electroniC navteatlonal the burning Wl:eCkage. Part of
. • : Morning fog was thick In parts . sllppery,': the NWS uld In a equipment were advised to stay • the clothing had been blown off
of Texas, limiting visibility for
statement. "People dtJvlni or In port.
the bodies, he ssald.
mariners, pilots and niotorlsta. ' .even walking In Ohto'a lakesbore
Houaton lniercontinental Air·
Fog alsO blanketed sections of
sj!ould .be very cllll!ful since Icy port reported zero visibility In
" When I found the people, I
West VIrginia and · eastern patches. could appear with little the morning, Hobby Flelci 34 of a
listened for heartbeats, butfound · ·•·
• Kentucky.
·
·
• or no warillng."
.
mile aDd uro at Ellington F'feld. · none. " DaviS said. "The only I
A
cold
front
passed
througn'
O!llaha
posted
a
·
temperature
· The late-morning weather In was thinking was, 'Is anyone still
lf,;l';ll .,_ . 17.77/.': ....
j"T.nJ I','\ '\1 'til
[.:u
...,.
V///,
COlli 1'"/".L.il
. ,"*Q,l"'i .\!fJ
..._., 'L'· Lew
overnight and north winds blew · · ot 3 below uro at 9 a.m. while · Oklahoma City was foggy and 27 alive,?' and I've got to get them
.&amp;&amp; ,,...
.....,. ! FfGrll
...... ,.,.
'"'~....
out.of the wreckage.
Icy air Into southern . Dllnois,
Great .Falls, Mont., recorded 10 deerees. Freezing rain was tal·
"southeast
Mlssourl,
and
western
below.
·
'
"By the time I got to the plane,
WEATHER MAP- Til~ will be ral~ aad laow llllowen ia tile
l~g the night before when a
It
was
too late. I looked Inside but
Kentucky. Freezing rain and
Mld-AIIaaUc •la&amp;ea u a low preuve syatem moves lllrou&amp;b. The
small plane crashed 100 miles
A
cold
front
was
moving
lniD
couldn't
see anyone."
snow was making driving lrea·
away near MuskOgee, killing all
aortllenllld ceatral Bocldea wlll-scaUeretiSDOwDIII'I'Iell willie
north
Texas
and
weather
fore•
Davis
said
he was later told the
cheroua, the National Weatller
&amp;be Pacific N~rt11w1111t aad DCII1hera CaiUonda will have scatter!.!d
six people aboard.
Service said.
casters advised motoriSts to look
A Federal Aviation Admlnls· ·bodies of the five men hall been
llhowen. (l!PI&gt;
.
Rain over the past week out for sleet.
tratlon spokeswoman said the thrown out of the cabin by the
Freezing rain .and dense fog weather was "very poor, foggy, · Impact, and the woman's body
·rivers and left standing
-----~Weather......;...-""'!"""-- flooded
water 9n some roads. Weather- made driving difficult over most with a consistent drizzle'' at the was found In the plane ..
'
South. Central Oblo "
Wednesday tllraucll Friday
Monday night, with a chance of
A chance of rain or snow
.'
rain, freezing rain or snow, and a
Wednesday. Fair Thursday. A
low belween 35 and 35. Chance of chance of rain Friday. Highs 35 to
preclpitatiQn Is 50 percent. Rain 45 Wednesday an4_Thul'\day ...
The coufls found that while the
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The that -two veteran special educa· a com'btned . 25 years teaching
likely. Tuesday, with highs near · and 40 to 50 Friday. Lows 1n the
experience
In
the
Hallsville
lndestate
administers TECAT and
Supreme
Court
Monday
let
stand
tion
teachers
who
iost
th.
e
lr
jobs
40. Chance of rain Is 60 percent.
·20s Wednesday and Thursday...
pendent
School
District
sued
has
,
the
power to certify or •
because
they
failed
th_A
recertlfl·
a decision . that public ·school
Extended Forecast
and In the 30s Friday.
the
state
for
al~ged
violation
of
decertify
teachers,
Its Individual ·
teachers lnTexas are not consi- cation exam could notJ:!ring suit
the
Age
Discrimination
In
Em·
school
districts
are
the actual
dered state employees, even against the state.
ployment
Act
and
'htte
VII
of
the
employers.
The teacllers claim the Texas
though the state ·administers a
Civil Rights Act of 1964.
The teachers, Allene Fields
certification test ~hey must pass Examination for Current Admin·
A
district
court
and
then
the
5th
"
and
Earllne Daniels, asked the
lstrators and Teachers (TECAT)
Units of the Meigs Count.y transported to Veterans, and at to·work there.
_
·
Circuit
ruled
the
suit
was
moot
high
court
to reconsider the case,
Emergency
Medical
Service 12:58 p.m. the \mit was called to
The court refused to review a dlscrtmlnat~s against older
because the state. was not an , arguing the lower courts Ignored
responded to nine calls for assis- Brick Street for Cliffoftl Lambert, decision of the 5th .U.S. Circuit black educators. After falling the
"employer" or the teachers the "fundamental role state
tance over the weekend and Man- also tabn to Veterans.
Court ·of Appeals, ~hlch ruled exam tit 1986, the teachers- with
·within the meaning of the law.
government plays In Plal!nlng,
day morning.
At 3:18 p.JD;Abe ~Plains
Saturday, at 11:4~ a.m. the Unit Weill to Route 7 ID Tuppers
flnanclngandadmlnlsterlngpubPomeroy imit was called to Route Plains for .Liilda Larilner who was
examination,
33 at Darwin fa- John Martin Jr., transported to Veterans, and at 9:03
•
.
.
.
which l)as been demonstrated to
.who was triln9!X'rted 'to V~s p.m. the Racine Unit
called to
1
disproportionately Impact upon
Memorial Hospital At 12:56 p.m. Founh Street for Pete Shields, also
the unit went to Liberty Lane for . transported to ~terans.
teacllers whose educations 1tave
beeil tainted by the historical
Avanell Bass, also taken to
On Monday at 2:1' a.m. the Rutracism and discrimination of
·
land linit responded to Briar Ridge
Veterans.
By United Preulllteraatloaal was. In effect Mo~ay for the clearing skies and dry air gradu· Jim Crow schools and unlverslOn Sunday at 7:UJ a.m. the Road for Rulcaa RobMs who was
Flood waters In the Cincinnati extreme southern and southeast· ally pushes south Into Ohio from ties, and who have been excellent
Pomeroy Unit responded to Chester tabn to Velerans; and at 2:48 a.m.
area
damaged 211 dwellings, and
ern counties of Ohio.
the northwest Daytime temper· school teachers by all measures
for Mirl Ours who was tabn to the Pomeroy unit went to Long
A
cold
front
stalled
through
the
atures will only be In the 30s and other than a single standardl7,ed
disaster
centers
were
opened
.
Holzer Medical Ceater. At 11 :25 - Hollow Road whele Helen Me·
Monday
In
three
locations
.
Tennessee
Valley
wlll
allow
a
nighttime lows will range In the test, lslmmunefromchallengeln
a.m. tile unit went to ~oct Cleland was JRattd ·but not
Red
Cross
said
12
housing
The
steady stream of moisture to 20s. .
·
the 5th Circuit by a logic thatfalls
Avenue for Jed Will who was transpOrted
move through the Ohio River
Tuesday will start out uneven!· to account for the reality of Texas
units were destroyed, 21 sustained major damage and 178 Valley Monday. The precipitaful but by the en~ of the day the educators' employment relatloiltion will be a mixture of rail\ and same scenario Will onc.e again ship to the state," the teachers
sustained minor damage.
overtake the Buckeye State. wrote.
The Ohio River crested at 57 snow and at times freezing rain.
.
~
ot
Monday
morning,
the
line
Rain will develop over the south
gelist William B. Kughn ·officiat- feet last week, 5 feet above flood
Dr. WUliam Whitney
Ing. Burial will be In Gravel Hill stage, bilt was expected to be at ' ran from just South of Clriclnnatl and·posslbly miXIng \flth snow or •
47.5 feet Monday and 44 teet to Cheasapeake 'and through freezing rain over the central
Cemetery.
Dr .. William Russell Whitney
central West VIrginia. The ll}aln sections with snow in the north.
Tuesday.
Military
rites
will
be
held
at
the
III, 51, of297DulyRd.,Galllpolls,
snow threat In Ohio extends trom These weather conditions are
The Licking, Miami, Great
cemetery
by
VFW
Post
4464.
_VETERANS MEMORIAL
died Sunday, Jan. 6, 1991 In
just
east
of
Cincinnati
through
.
expected
to
continue
Into
Wed·
Miami
and
Wl!ltewater
Rivers,
· Friends may can at the funeral
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS
Ga!Upolls.
tributaries of the Ohio, were not the southern counties of Ohio and nesday. Hlgbs on Tuesday will be James B. Patterson, Racine;
p.m
.
home
on
Tuesday
from
2
to4
He was born Sept. 15; 1939 In
extends through Marietta and In the '30s. ·
expected to flood.
Michael Hewin, Pomeroy; Jean
Topeka, Kan., ·son of the late ·and 7 to 9 p.m.
Early morning temperatures Taylor, Mason, W.Va.; Avanell
The Re.d 'Cross reported that continuing toward Wheeling, W.
William Russell Whitney Jr., and
about 40 famll(es requested help va. One to 3 Inches of snow was Monday ranged from the lower Bass, Pomeroy.
Margaretta Clevenger Whitney. · Rev. Cecll W. Price
expected to accumulate Monday. 20s In the northwest to the lower
ln. the aftermath of the flooding .
SATURDAY DISCHARGES •
Dr. Whitney, who had practiThe heaviest snow was expected 30s In the south. Skies were Mattie Teaford.
The
Red
Cross
Is
passing
out
Cecil
William
Price,
63,
of
Rev.
ces In Gallipolis, Jackson and
f190d clean•up kits and vouchers to fall over West Vlrglnta, and overcast with partlsl clearing
SUNPAY ADMISSIONS • Jed
Ironton;:•beeam•" llcellled psy· . 2.78 . s~ ~ Rd.,. Chesblre•. for food and shelter and money Is
soutlietn Pennsylvania: ·
- reachtnl '' Into the ·northwest. · Will, Pomeroy.
,
died
SIJI!da¥,
Jan.
6,
1991
•
HolZer
chologJst In 1978. From 1976-78 he
. There was,a chance for freez. Snow was becoming heavier. In
available to replac,e furniture
SUNPAY
DISCHARGES
•
Ber·
'
Medical
Center.
was associated with the Gallla·
tha Wolle.
He was born Man:b 27, 1927 in and get furnaces and water lng rain or snow over the central the Marietta area.
Jackson-Meigs Mental Health
The extended forecst (or Wed·
third of the state Monday. Tbe.
heaters restarted.
Gallia
Count.y,
sOn
of
the
late
Cecil
·
Center In Gallipolis. Prior to
mixed precipitation threat will nesday through Friday calls for a
·The NatiOnal Weather Service
coming to . !&gt;hlo, he was a -E. and Genevieve Jones Price.
be ending during the day as chance-of rain or snow Wednes-'
A U.S. Navy and Army WOrld said ·a winter weather advisory
professor at the College of,
day, with fair weather Thursday,
Education Counseling and Reha· War n vetaan, Mr. Price retired
·· and .a chance of-rain on Friday.
bllltatlon Services, Florida State · from the Ohio Valley Electric Co.,
Highs will range from 35 to 45
Kyger Creek, and was a member of
University, Tallahassee, Fla.
A marriage license has been isWednesday
and Thursday. and
He received his B.A. from the Old Kyger Fm:wiiL Baptist
from 40 to 50 Friday. Overnight sued in Meigs County Probate
Harvard College, Cambridge, Churcll.
lows will be In the 20s Wednesday Court 10 Thomas Michael Rousll,
Trustees to meet
Trustees to meet
He is survived by his wife, Dar·
Mass., !lnd his Ph.D. from
and
Thursday mornings, and In 40, New Hllven, W.Va., and Debra
The Olive Township Trust«s
The Lebanon Township Trustees
Washington University, St. lene ROusb Price of Cllesbire,
Kay Bwngatner, 30, West Columthe
30s
early Friday.
whom lie married Jan. 23, 1947 in will meet Saturday at 9 a.m. at tile will llold a special meeting on
Lou!~ •. Mo. He was a member of
bia, W.Va.
Reedsville Fire House. . Ap- Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
....·
the American Psychological As- GaUipolis.
He is · also survived by one propOations for 1991 will be dis- · township building.
sociation, the 0hlo PsycholQglcal
Association, the American So- · daugllter, Cynthia Hoffinllil of cussed.
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
•
Dm~
A representative of Congressman
ciety of Clinical HypnosiS, the ClleShire; five sons. Robert Price
446 4514
·
Sorority to meet
The .Pomeroy Senior Citizens Clarence Mlller's office will conA.mertcan Academy of Psychoth· and Tunothy Price, boch of
The Preceptor Beta Beta
Dance Club will have a round and duct an open door session from 11
eraplsts ' and the Airplane Cheshire, James Price of Gallipolis,
ter,
Beta
Sigma
Phi
Sorority
will
square
,dance ~n Friday from 8·11 , a.m. to 1 p.m. W~y in tile
Donald Price of Rutland and Mark
. Owners and Pilots Association.
meet
Thursday
at
6
p.m.
at
the
p.m.
with
musiC by die Happy Hot- Meigs County Court House in
He Is survived by hiS wife, Jean Price of Portsmouth; four sisters,
Grace
EpiscOpal
Cburch
in
low
Boys
.from Athens. tlicise at· Pomeroy.
Holway Whitney; one son, Wll· Alberta Ely, F11111(!ta Lou Rife,
tending bring snacks for the snack
!lam Russell Whitney, IV; and Phyllis Plymale and -Patricia Mu!· Pomeroy for a chili supper. f
· table. The public is invited to at·
tins,
aU
of
Gallipolis;
two
brotheri,
· two daugbters, Lynn Whitney of
tend.
New Haven, Conn., and Kara Lee Ray Price of Marion and Jack Price
of
Bidwell;
seven
~n;
· .•W})ltney of Bridgeport, Conn.
Soup supper
.
. A divorce has been ~ by
Memorial services will be and two step-grandchildren.
.
The
Burlingham
Modem
Three brothers and •. one SISler the Meigs Count.y Court of ·Comannounced by McCoy-Moo~ ·
Woodmen
will
have
a
bean
and
mon Pleas to Bradley Allen Young
Funeral Home, Wetherholt preceded him ~ death_. .
Funeral semces will be conduc- from Beverly A. Young. She has oyster soup supper.on S~turday at
Cbapel, Galllpolls.
In lieu of flowers, contributions ltd 11 a.m.. W~y at, qld been restored to her "'aiden name · 6:30 P·"'· at the hall. Bnng a pol·
luck dish. HotdofS will also be sermay be made to the. American Kyger ~will BapliSt Olurcli wtth of Beverly A. Neff.
ved. A short business meeting will
Rev.
Merlin
Teets
and
Rev.
Harold
Owners and Pilots Association:
be
lleld to elect officers. Guests are
Tracewell officialing. Burial will be
Air Safety Foundation, c/o Dr.
welcome.
in Gravel Hill Cerne=y.
William R. Whitney Memorial
Friends may call at Willis
. ~ .:,··-----"""""-Fund, Ohio Valley Bank, 420
Funeial Home Tuesday.from 2 to 4 .
Third Ave., Galllp61ls 45631.
The Daily Sentinel
.p.nf. and 7 to 9 p.m.
•
"Dally stock prlc~--Thilte will be a graveside ftag (As of 10:30 a.m. J
- (tlllnu...el
Sweesy
presentation by VFW Post 4464.
Bryce aad Muk Smith
A Dl•lllw olll-la,loe.
1n lieu of ftowm, donalions may of Blunt, Elllll A Loewl
U. Jack Sweesy, 62, of Rt. 1,
Publlahed every attom...,, Monday .
be
made to the American Hcan
'
Galllpolis, died Sunday, Jan. 6,
lhrcoolll! FrlciiJ', 111 Court s.t.. PoAm Electric Power .. ........ ... 27%.
Fund.
meroy, Oblo, by the Oblo Valley )'lob- , •
"1991 at Holzer Medical Center.
Ilahllllr Comp.on~ultlmedta, 1 Joe.,
The
body
will
be
talten
to
the
Ashland
Oil
..
,
.............
,.
...
...
27%
· He was a construction electriPomeroy, Ohio t
, Pb. Ilrl-21~. !leo . ·
church one hour prior to services AT&amp;T .... ..... ;.... ........... , ...... :30\ii
cond' clau
p.old at P9meroy,
cian for IBEW Local482, Eureka,
Bob Evans: ............ ............. 14%
Oblo.
AS LOW
. Calif., a member of Chapel- Hill . on Wednesday.
Cha(ll11ng
Shoppes
..............
10+4
.Per Mo .
Chureb of Christ, VFW ,Post 4168
Member: I!Jil!Aid I'Ntalalerilatlonal;
AS
'
City Holding Co..................14+4
Inland Dally Pr..a A•-tloa IDd the
.
Clinton, Dl., and American I.e- · .
,
."
Federal Mogul.. .................. 13\ii
Ohio Ns=A•oolatloa. Natloaal
•
glon Post 888, Columbus. He was
.. . . ·
AdvertlllDI
OMIIIai!W,
JlriiDIIam
..
Goodyear T&amp;R ... :...............17%
.
Nowapaper
... 73S Tblnl Aveaue,
a retired U.S. Air Fo~e veteran,
.
Key Centurion ........... .......... 11
N.., York, New York 111017.
......,
serving 20 years, Including World
•
Lands'
End
.........................
l3%
I ..,.
uYIIOO"'Cliill
Michael
E.
Rinehart.
llaclne,
~'
War II, the Korean conflict and
...
~'v
.
i'T'
Limited Inc ...................... :.18%
seeking a divorce from Shlroa Sue
:-(:
. •
the Vietnam era.
to 111e DaUY - · m ~ St;
I
':
..
Multimedia
Inc
....................
63
.
)
- ~ 1- o(,&lt;::'.
He was born Feb. 17, i928 In Rinehart, Racine, in the Meigs
'•
-cot:: Ololo - · '
Rax Restaurants................. +4
'·
Count.y
Court
of
Common
Pleas.
·-;
&lt;
New Castle, Pa., •011 of the late
IVIIICIIIPI'ION IIATD
'
Robbins
&amp;
Myers
...
:
............
18%
Shirley
A.
Roush,
Middleport,
is
'.
Earl Emery.and Harriet Melissa
One Weell ................................... SUO
Shoney's
Inc
.
......................
11%
,
seeking
a
divorce
from
Bailby
R.
·
DUE
TO
THE
WINTER
SELLING
SEASON.
Our
Hamllton Sweesy. ·
.
One Moath ................................. ts.lO
!;ltar Bank ........... .. ........ , .....16+4
Roush, ~meroy.
one y..,. ............:......,..........:.. m.ao
He· Is survived by his wife,
#1 mobile home manufacturer Ia reducing the1r
Wendy's lnt:l. """""""'"" .... 6%
' IINOU OOPl'
·. Janice Kay Saunders Sweesy of
price on atock unlta ordered during thla period •
Worthington Ind ....... :........... 20%
Nlc&amp;
Rt. 1, Galllpolls, whom ~ mar·
Dally .. ................... .............. :IS Cenll
•
peaalng the aavlnga on to you I Prlcea will
We
.
rled July 17, 1976 In Galllpolls.
Subocrtberai!OidMiriJWtop.oythenr·
·
never
be
lower ao come In and...
·
He Is also survived by three
rter may remit In - .... diNe! to
sons. Jack Sweesy Jr., Charles
Tile Dolly SentiDal on a 3,1 or 12 111011111
'•
See ·John or Dick Today
bull. Credit ........... •cb
Sweeay and Tom Sweesy, all of " cti:VE~D (UPI) ..,.·No one produced the n~ber 92220!i, and
chose all six wtnnlile numbers In no one chose that num,t;Jer. good
Dallas. Texas; • one stepYou'll Be Glad You Dldl
Saturday's Super Lotto jackpot for $100,000.
No .. baerlptlano by moll permlt!Aid ID
'• .
daughter, Brenda Hall of LoriiiJI
'Piuatu
• t .... ·,'"' down, 110 moMIIt, 13.71~ liKed.
.,....
""'"home
e..--~~
worth $6 mUllan. The winning . Six of the $674,964 worth of
Air Force Base, Umeatone,
available.
~
.numbers were 3, 20, 22, 37, 44, 52. . tickets sold , bad the first fiVe
Maine; one step-son, Robert
OUt ot · $3,601,~4 worth ·of nlimbers for $5,000 each; 56 had
'
.. Goucher of Gallipolis; and three
. lhlll'
lckell
sold,
Ohio
Lottery
off!·
'the
first
four
for
$1,000
each;
618
grandchlldren.
1.1 Weella .................................. 111-Jt
:lals uld 86 tlckellllad five ofthe the first three for SlOO and 6,034
!II w................................., ... .,...
One brother preceded him In
!!Z.W- .., ... - .......................... I'IUI
lumbers for $5,000 each and the first two for $10.
death.
another f,699 Winners had tour of ·
The jackpot for Wednesday's
Funeral services will be con·
u w-:..................................
!II
.10
.
tbem
for
$100.
·
Super
Lotto drawing will be. $8
dueled 2 p.m. Wednesday at
')
Rt. 60
Athena, 692·1972
52W.................
.
.
.................
411
; The Kicker. portion of tile game million
·
, WilliS F'Jineral Home, With Ev~n-

on

WoRI(eD oUT. ·

.

.

_,

·-

EMS responds to nine ·calls

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Supreme Court lets teacher decision stand

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.:c...

I

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- The 1990 census figures are In and ~hat they
show may require th~ demogrJ!phlc phrase makers to go back to
the drawing board.
We've been told for some years now that the story of population In
, the United States can be summed up In six words: "Sun Belt up; Rust
Belt down." That was taken to mean that the Southern parts of the
country were gaining population at the expense of the Northern
Industrial araes.
,
The new·census c!ld not knock that notion II\ the head, butltdld show
some other results that don't fit Iii the Sun Belt-Rust Beltformulation.
For example, can anyone · say New Hampshire, Delaware,
Maryland, Alaska and Washington state are In the Sun Belt? It
probably would surprise folks In Concord, Dover, Baltimore and
certainly citizens of Anchorage and Seattle to hear that, yet their
states all had population Increases of 10 percent or more during the
1980s. 1n fact, Alaska's Increase, 37.3 percent, was second largest In
the country.
There Is one characteristic of the states that gained 10 percent or
more that may be no more than a coincidence, but still Is Interesting.
All but three of the 16 hlgll-growth states are either on one of the
seacoast.boundaries of the country or on the U.S .•Mexlcan border.
Indeed, starting with Delaware and following the border of the
nation In a long arc all the way to Canada, every state save Alabama,
Mississippi, Louisiana and Oregon gained more than 12 percent. And
all19 seats In the House of Representatives that will change states in
the 1992 el~tlon are located in this crescent.
.
· ·
The next questilm, of course, is what do these changes In the House
- and, of course, In the next three presidential elections because of
electoral
vote shifts- mean to the shape of u.s. politics.
1
The brief answer Is nothing new.
.
. Polltical power In this country has been moving South and West for
30 years and this census will only confirm the realization that has
been dawning on presidential caml)lalgn strategists that quaint as
they may be, the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary
(sure It gained population, but It still has only four electoral votes)
may not be worth the exertions of the recent past.
.
It also puts a different face on the Idea of a bloc Southern vote as ·
expressed In a single-day presidential primary for Dixie states.
Obviously Texas, Florida and the Southern coastal states are worth
fightllig for, but the census results failed to make the ·likes of
Alabama, MlsslSJippl, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee
or Kentucky look more alluring to national candidates.
.
And California, already the Bigfoot of American politics, now will
command a stunning 2D percent of the 27Q electoral votes nei!ded to
win the presidency. It thus becomes even· more valuable to
presidential candidates and to sitting presidents who will lust for Its
52 House votes In major legislative contests.
:
Having a lot to. give In American politics also means being able to
demand more. Two of our last four presidents, Richard Nixon and
Ronald Reagan have been Cal ifornlans but no one should be surprised
If we see more of our national candidates from the state that~ot all
that long ago .)Vas dlsmts~ by Eastern polltlcians as the land df the
fruits and the nuts.

..

Midwest hit by bitter cold, snow and rain ...

pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.-l'~triot's

The Da.ily Soo.tiQel

~ ....

Pomeloy-MiCidleport. Ohio

Page 2-The Deily S1 ......

-.I

.

.

.-.,..y 7, 19$1 "

.

.Robert Wagnuin ··

Stocks

. BUY NOW AND SAVE:

Jack

home In Georgetown. It also
offers a major world platform for
an activiSt president. C01table
has been content to be an
adminiStrator. Mrs. Thatcller
would undoubtedly use tbe position more aggreslvely.
· .
-The departure of E.d ucatlon
Secretary Lauro Cavazos baa left · .'
a sour taste In many mouths here
and stU! h~s tongues waglllne.
The White House had been
upset wltb · C.viiZOI for some
tlm11Lunhappy that he was not a
more forceful advocate of ad min·
lstratlon education· policies, and
unhappy that he wu not more of ·
a team player. ·However, as the .
highest rankine Hispanic In
government, those opposed to .
him peeded an excuse to shove
·.him out tbe·door.
·
•
· Insiders say Cavazos w~ti
called to a meeting With White
House Chief of Staff John Sununu ·
and told to reaten. He retiarned to
.
hiS office and faxed back a terse
'
one-sentenct restenatloa. Told
that thiS was unacceptable, be
expand Ills note, but refused to
!Jlclude the traditional tbanlu to·
the president for allowing him to
serve.
By Washington standards, Ills
final letter was rude and angry.
It reportedly left Sun\inu
seething.

..

Br.-nd New 1991 14' Wide

poo....,

. 19 ... -

Divorces sought

is .

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Next Ohio jaekpot worth $8 million

I ·-...... .

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MOBILE HOMES

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IAUM

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Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

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The Daily Se~inei-Paga 5 ·• •"

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THIS.

Gallipolis .stops Southern five
•
m non-conference game·

1990 Local Schedules.

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WEEK'S
GAMES

Galllpollll placed four players
· In double fleure IICDrlna enroute
·to a ~ non-conference basket·
ball victory over visiting. South·
ern on the GAHS hardwood
Saturday evenlq.
· .
Tbe1triumph left GB'IUpolls 6-3
overall. Southern dropped to 9-3.
· Coach Jim O.bome's mue
· Devils led Coach Howle Cald·
well's Tornadoes 15-13 after one
period foUowing a last-second .
goal bY Shane Tackett.
Tbe score remained close
throughout the second period
before GAHS, behind Chad Neal,
Scott Jividen and Josh Wllllains
pushed ahead by six pointe, 33·27.
The Tornadoes fell behind 12
points, 49-37, with 2:561ett 111 the
third stanza before maklq a
comeback, outscoring the Galli·
ans 9.0 over the final two minutes
51-46,
or th!! period. It
Ga!UpoUs, goblg Into the last
eight minutes. ,
·
GAHS, beblnd RobbY Skid·
more, Scott' Moi'Ran and Ryan
LOOU FOR OPEN MAN - Galllpolll' Eric
ceater Bob Skidmore (51), aad In the center Ill
Smith, built up a 1(-po!Dt advan·
Boflmaa (U) loob for lbe opea maallllllde durblr
Soulbel'!l'l Andy a.er, · ( lS) wbo taiUed a
tage, 67-53, with 4:1)3left to play .
.Sailll'da, qld~a aoa-coafereace buketball rame . pme-blrb 18 polata. Galllpolll WOD 71-58 .
Both coaches be&amp;an floodlna the
, aralbllt vtalttar Soudlera. Oa left II Blue Devil
floor with subatltutes In the final
·'
mlnu tes of action. The , mue
Devlls outscored SHS 2(.12 In the
last quarter.
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Leading the Galllans' balanced
· scoring attack was Scott Jividen
witb .l5. Jividen sat out moat of
the second half with four per&amp;C!D~,.
.
.
'
als.
Skidmore· tOSij!d In 13, Neal
.
years ago you never heard of us.
Newberry.
By IOE ILLVZZI
12 despite Jpenjllng time ·
added
.,
"The last eight minutes the Now we'll b.e the school Kevin
Ufl Sports Writer
on
the
bench because of foul
coaches told me what the situa- Bradshaw went to."
.l{evln Bradshaw of U.S. Inter·
trouble.
Shane
Tackett came off
· Terrell Lowery led nine Lions
tion was," said .Bradshaw, who
hat lanai had only half a reuon to
the
bench
topoplnllmarkersfor
hit. two free throws with 1:27 In double figures with 34 points
celebrate after scoring an NCAA
the Galllans. Moi'Ran added .
remaining for 'his record· and 16 assists. Issac Brown ' eight.
record 72 points. Despite his
breaking 70th point. "That's added 20 points for theGulls,'l-16.
heroiCs, U.S. International stlll
The Galllans hit 30 of 58 field
In another big game Saturday,
when I started shooting for lt."
lost the game by 46 points.
goal attempts (51 percent) and
The Lions, 6-8, set the previous Vlllanova used a tight zone
, l.oyola Marymount, which has
single-game record of181agalnst defense and Laace Miller's 22 eight of 10 charity shots (80
taken run-and-gun basketball to
percent). GAHS picked otl 39
USIU on Jan. 31,1988. That game points and 9 rebounds to beat '
a new level, broke Its singlerebo""ds,
10 by Smith, and had 13
produced a combined scoring Syracuse .76-66, the Orangemen's
.. game scortng marl&lt;: Saturday
assists,
10
by Williams. Gallipolis
record of 331 points, Which !be fl,rst loss. Syracuse, with Billy
jtlght with a 186-140vlctoryln the
Owens held to a single point jn the had 18 personals and 16..
same two teams mlssi!d Satur·
tame at Los Angeles.
day· by 5 points.
·
first 118lf, fell to 13-1 and 1-lln the turnovers.
Bradshaw hit 23 of 59 shots
Southern was led by Andy
frqm the floor, Including 7 of 22
l).nhappUy for number coun• Big East game at Syracuse, ~.Y.
Baer's
18 markers. Jeremy Rose
from 3· point range and 19. of 23
ters, this may have been the last Vlllanova Is 7,5 and 1·2.
'This Is a really gigantic win ·
· free throws. He rallied his scormeeting between the schools.
for
us," VIllanova Coach RoWe
·
Ing average to 33.9 points a game.
USIU of San D.tego declared
Massimino
said. 'They were the
. His 72 .points broke the record
bankruptcy ·two weeks ago and
fourth
ranked
team In the counfor D.tvlslon I players against
Its athletic progcam Is being
(~erall)
try,
and
last
year
they were tbe
Division I opponents set by·LSU' s
eliminated after the seas.on.
TEAM
W L PF PA
first
ranked.
That
Is
·
not
bad.
I
pete Maravlch with 69 points
•'How do you think we felt when
Southern
..............
9 3 866 738
wish
we
could
have
that."
against Alabama In 1970. The
l&lt;evln got that standing ovaHannan
Trace
.....
8
2 726 528
The decision lett No.1 Nevada·
record for most points In a game
lion?" asked OSIU Coach Gary
Eastern
...............
?
3
674 685
Las
Vegas,
8-0,
and
No.
6
Ohio
Is 100, set by Frank Selvy of
Zarecky said. "That was for the
Symmes
Valley
...
6
4
618 603
Furman In 1954 against
kids as far as I'm concerned. Six State, 12-0, as the only undeNorth
Gallla
........
4
6
fe¥1ed Division I teams.
7&amp;'1 814
Oak Hill ..... ........ ,3 8 729 814
On Sunday, No. 2 Arkansas
Kyger Creek ........ 2 9 655 800
defeated Houston 95·79 and No. 25
Southwestem .......o 8 441 586
Georgia Tech downed Wake
Forest 101-91.
(Confereoce)
AI Fayetteville, Ark., Todd
llaytm at Loyola (Ill)
Day scored 27 points, Ron Huery . Hannan Trace ..... 7 0 557 351
Southern Indiana at Alhlilnd
Colle8'!
Central State at Male~~e
Southern .............. 7 1 614 498
added 24 and Lee Mayberry 21 to
- NEW YORK CUPI)- TheUnlted
. Findlay at ShAwnee State
Eastern .........
5 2 498 493
carry
Arkansas
In
a
Southwest
Press International Board ol
Mt Vernon Nazarene at Rio Grande
North
Gallla
........
4
4 646 618
Conference
game.
The
Razor·
Coaches' Top 25 colleae buketball
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I'I'I&lt;I.,,Jaalt
ratings, with flrst"place votes and
No games aeha:luled
Symmes Valley ... 4 4 479 472
backs, 13-1 overall and 2-0 In the
records thrwgh Dec. 30 In paren_.,..,,Jaal2
Oak Hill .. ,..... ...... 2 6 503 596SWC. bave won 11 In a row.
theses, total points ~hued on 15
Wisconsin at Ohio State
Kyger Creek ........ 1 7 473 597
Alvaro
Teheran
·
a
nd•Byron
Smith
p&lt;ints ror first place, 111 rorsecond,
Cent.ral M1chlean at Bow ling Green
etc.) and previous week's rankhlg:
Ohto University at Eastern
Southwestern ....... 0 8 441 586
had 18 points each for Houston,
Team
•
PoiDtl ,
MJchlaan ·
TOTAts : .......... :f1 Sl 4111 UU
9-3 and 1-1.
1. UNLV 1361 &lt;6-01 ....... ........ .5401
Miami at Kent State
AI Atlanta, Kenny Anderson
2. Arkansas (11).1( ...: ..... ...... ..476 2
.Western Michigan at Toledo
3. Arlz111a (10-1) ... ...... .. ... ......433 3
Western Illin&lt;is at Akron
(Reaerves)
scored 32 points to tead Geoi'Ria
4. Syra•cuoe .(12-01 ......... ... :.....428 4
Cinclilnatl at South Car dina
(SVAC
oaly)
Tech, 9- 3, In Its Atlantic Coast
5, Indiana 112·1) ,........ .... ..... ..363 5
Northern Iowa B\ Clevelaqd State
TEAM
W L PF PA
Conference opener. The Yellow
· 6. Ohio State (10-0) ..... :.... .. ....362 6
DaytM at EvansVIlle (lnd)
7. North Carolina (9·11 ......... .329 7 ·
WIIJConsln·Mtlwaukee at Wrl&amp;:ht
Jackets hit 10 of 18 shots from . North Gallla ........ 6 .2 473 345
8. Duke (9-21 .. .... .. .. .... .. ... ......282 8
State
Southern .............. 6 2 444 338
' 3-polnt range. Wake Forest, 6-3
·9. !JCLA (10·1) ........ ....... ... :... 216 9
Chicago State at Youngstown State
Hannan Trace .... . 5 .2 377 299
and 1-l, was led by Chris King's
10. St. John's &lt;9-01 ...... .. .. ..... 18710
Marietta at Ohio Northern
11. Oklahoma 110-21 ....... ... .. 12614
Ottetbeln at Baldwin-Wallace
Oak ·HIIl .............. 5 3 451 do
25 points.
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12. Louisiana State (7-21 .. .. .. 10313
Capital at Hiram
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Eastern ...... ....... .. 4 3 336 354
In
other
Saturday
games:
No.3
13. Connecticut &lt;8-1) ........... ...11815
John carroll at Heidelberg
Symmei Valley·... 2 6 364 462
Arizona beat Washlniton State
14. Plttaburgh (11·2) .............. 8411
Mount Union at Musktneum ·
15. Nebraska (12-11 ... ............ 60 1.9
84-69; VlllanoV'a downed No. 4 Southwestern ....... 2 6 284 400
Bethany (W Va) at~
16. Georgetown (7-21 ... ..... .. ... 4716
Kenyon at Case Reserve
Kyger Creek ........ 1 7 309 430
Syracuse
-76-66; No. ·s Indiana
17. Eaat TenneueeState (8-1!40 It
Oberlt.n at Wittenberg
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TOTAL8
...... :..... 81 S1 3038 SOS8
demolished
Northwestern
99-58;
18. Southern Mississippi (5-1)26 22
Ohio Wesleyan at Allegh
. cPa)
19. Iowa (11-11 .. .. .. .. .......... .. .. 24 ,21
Wooster at Earlham (lndl
No. 6 Ohio State defeated Michl·
20..New Mextro State (8·11 .,. .23 22
Kentucky Wesleyan at Ashland
. Sa&amp;w'day'l flaala
gan 67-57; No. 7 North Caroll~
21. Mldll&amp;an State (7-31 ......... 1618
Wllbel'force at F1ortd~ Atlantic
Gallla
Academy 75, Southern 58
crushed
Notre
Dame
82-47;
No.
22. VIrginia (7-2) ........., ....... ..13 24
Walsh at Tiffin
23. Solllh Carol loa '(9·21 ......... 1112
Urbana at Cedarville
Symmes
Valley 77, Port:N.D.68
22 VIrginia pounded No. 8 Duke
24. Georgia (7-3) .. ......... ....... .. 917
Mt Vernm Nazarene at Ohio .
81-64; No. 9 UCLA beat !Aulsville
25. Georgia_Tech (7·3) .. ........ 6 NR
Dominican
. 88-81; No. 10 St. John's topped
TuesdiiJ''• •~at!!
NR- notruktd
Defiance at Rio Grande
Others rect'tvlng votes : Ala·
f1ndlay at Wllmlngl111
Jackson at Hannan Trace
Boston College 75·68. ·
baina, Oklahoma State, Prlncet111,
Goshen at Blufftm
· No. 11 Oklahoma held off. Symmes Valley at Raceland
Purdue, Southwestern Loutsiana,
Dyke a ~ Lake Erie
.
(Ky.)
James Madison 64-61; Kentucky
Temple. Texas·EI Paso. Wycmlng.
Shawnee State at Central State
Note: By agreement with the
dumped No. 12 LSU 93-80; No. 13 Southwestern at Hannan
Naltonal Association of Basketball
(W.Va.)
Coll~soores
Connecticut
clipped No. 14 Pitts·
CoacttesoftheUnltedStates,teams
Friday'• acllon
burgh 81-76; No. 16 Georgetown
111 prd&gt;atlon by the NCAA and
s. Utah St. 77. Ollcaao St. 68
lnellljible tor the NCAA Toumabeat Seton Hall73-65; No. 17 East Southern at Hannan Trace
,.. ment are tnel tgtble ror Top 25 and
SW MJssoorl' St. 94, St . LouiS 8.1
Tennessee St. took Appalachian Eastern at Southwestern .
Toledo n, Ball St. 65 (OT)
national champlooshlp considers·
North Gallla at Oak Hill
St. ·89-70; No. 18 Southern Mlssls·
Urbana 79, f1D&lt;IIay 76
ttoit by the UP! Board ot Coa&lt;heo,
W. lllincll 63, Wls.-Green Bay 70
ThoR achools are IlllncXI, ~n·
Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley
sippi topped Florida St. 84-72;
Wlo.·Eau Claire 70, St. Mary'S
tucky, Marshall, Maryland, MlsSaturday'• ramea
No. 19 Iowa nailed Michl!lan
(Teic.) 53
swrt, Northwest Louisiana and
·
North
Gallla
at Federal Hocking
79-66,
.
anci
No.
24
Georgia
State
Wloconoln 74, Portland 50
Robert Moms.
• Wlsconotn-Gr. Bay 70,.W.IIIIncls63
Symmes·
Valley
at Ironton St.
trashed Tennessee 107-86:
Wright St. '98, Mlssourt·K.C. 90
Joe.
This week's
Southweat

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SOUTHERN
BOY.S
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Jan. 11-11••• Tr-, ·Away
lan. 11-Eaata,.; ......

GIRLS
lan. 10-Ha.lan ,,_, lleiWe
lan. 14-llelgs, lla1M

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MEIGS

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BOYS

lan. 1-Federal Hocklnt, lloiM
lan. 11-NIIIInYI., Away
lan. ·14-lalpra, lloiWI

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EASTERN
BOYS

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Jan. 11-Southwattern,. Away.
Jan. 1

s-•a••• ,,_, •-

GIRLS

Jan. 9...:.Trl•bla, HoiWI
Jan. 10-SHthwalt.,;., Away

-------BOYS'
Dec ..7-Southweltern,.,,,. ..... Awev

Dec. 8 -il ~lnt Valley .............. Convo
·Dec. 14-ltygerCreek ... ; ........ Home
Dec. 111-Symmea Valley ........ Away
Dec. 21-0ak Hill .................. Away
Dec: 22-SDU1heaetarn ..........,:; Home
Dec. 28-Athana ..................... Away
Jan. 4'""'North Gallla ....... , ....... A,way
Jan. li-Galllpolla ................... AWay
· Jan.11-Hannan Trace ........... Away
Jan. ·18-'Eaetarn .................... Home
·Jan. 22-Ravan-ood ............ Away
Jan. 2&amp;-SDU1hweetern .. ........ Home
Feb. 1-Kyger Creek ............... Away
Feb. 8-Symmea Valley .......... Home
Fab~ 12-Warren .................... Away
Feb. 1 &amp;-Oak Hill, .................. Home

·SOUTHERN · ·

Nov. 12-Nelaonville-York ...... Away
Nov. 19-MeiO• ..................... Away
NQv: 28-North Gallla ............ Away
Nov. 29-Hannan Trace ....... .... Away
Dec. 3-Eattem ............ , ...... ... Home
Dec. 8-SDU1hweltern ........ .. .. Home
Dec. 10-Kyger Creek .... ; ....... Away
Dec. 13-Symrna Valley ........,. Home
Dec. 17-Waterford .... : .... : ..... Home
Dec. 20-0ak Hill .................. Home
·· Jan. 3-North Gallla .... ........... Home
Jan. 1Q-Hannan T111ce .......... Home
Jan. 14-Meigl ....................... Home
Jan. 18-Nelaonvllle-York ....... Home
' Jan. 17-Eeltarn.................... Away ·
Jan. 24-SDU1tw!leltem ~ ......... Away
Jan. 28-Waterford ................ Away
Jan. 31-Kygar Creek ........ : .... Home
Feb. 4~0ak Hill .... , ................ Away
Feb. 7-Symmes Valley ......... . Away
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20-M~~e~!.~.~

Dec. 1 -Athena ...................... Home
Nov.
........ Away
. · Dec. 4-Belpre ....................... Away
Nov. 23-Feden~l Hocking· ...... Horne
Dec. 11-MIIIer ........
oo., ..... Home
~- ~v. 27-Kyger ·C reek ............ Awey
Dec. 14-VInton County ......... Home
N(!v. 30-Southwa.ltarn oo ....... Home
· D8!:. 18....:Aielllnder .... .'.ooooooooo Away
DEC. 4-Southern .................. Home
Dec. 21-WellltD11 ..... ;:.oo.,oooo• Home
Dec. 7-SymmeaVallay ..... ... : . Away
Dec. 28-,-Logen .. oo ................. Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia ............ Away
Jan. 4-Trlmble.oo oo ......... ;....... Away
Dec. 15-0ak Hill .................. Hl)me
Jan. 8-Federel Hocking ..... ·.... Home
Dec. 18-Waterford ............... Home
Jan. 11-1\jelaonvllle·York ....... Away
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ............... Home
Jan. :15-Belpre .. oo .............. oo. Home
Jan. 11-SDU1hwaatern .......... Away
Jan. 22-MIIIer ...................... Away
Jan. 15-Hannan Trace .......... Home
Jan. 2&amp;-Vinton County ......... Away
Jan. 18-Southem ................. Away ·
Jan. 29-Aielllnder ................ Home ·
Jan. 26-Symmea Valley , ....... Home .
Feb. 1-Walllton ....... , ......... : .. Away
- Jan. 28-MIIIer ...................... Home
Feb. 2-Athena .......... : ........... Away
Feb. 1-North Galli a ............... Home
Feb. &amp;-Warren ................ ....... Home
F.ab. &amp;-Federal Hocking ......... Away
Feb. 8-Trimble ...............: ...... Home ~b. 8-0ak Hill ..................... Away
Feb. 12-Federal Hocking .. .. ... Away
Feb. 12-Waterford ................ Awlly
··· Feb. 15-Nelaonvllle-York .... oo. Home
Feb. 15-H!!nnan trat:e ........... Away
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·--'SCHEDULES~---..------....
MEIGS .

Nov. 19-Southarn ................ Home
Nov. 28-Trimble .. ........ ... ...... Home ·
Nov. 29-Vinton County ...... .. . Away
Dec. 3-MIIIer ........ ; ............... Away
Dec. 8-Eaatarn ..................... Home
Dec. 1 0-NelaonvlllelYork ...... Away
Dec. 1'3-Belpra ............. : ....... Home
. Dec. 17....:Aie111nder ............. :.Home
Dec. 20-Welllton ·............... :. Away
" Jan. 3-Federel Hocking ......... Home
Jan. 7-Trlmbhi ...................... A¥Vay
Jan. 1 0-VInton County ......... Horne
Jan. 14-Southarn ................. Away '
Jan. 17-!l"iller ................ , ..... Home
Jan. 21-Eeetem ......... , .......... Away
Jan. 24-Nelaonvllle-York ....... Homtt
Jan. 28-Belpre ....... .............. Away
· Jan. 21-Aiexander ............. ... Away
Fel:f. 4-Welleton ...... , ............. l:lome
"ab: 7-Federai ·Hocklng .. .. .... . Away

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Scoreboard ...

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nlfnss

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EASTERN

Nov. 19-Fedel'lll Hocking ..... . Home
Nov. 28-Kygar Creek ............ Home
Nov. 2~-Southweatern .. ,, ..... Away
Dec, 3-Southern .............. .. ... Away
Dec.&amp;-Trimble ..................... Home
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley .......... Home .
Dec. 8-Meiga ....................... Away
Dec. 10-North Gallia .........; ... Home
Dec. 13-0ak Hill ...
Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ... ....... Away
. !Jan. 3'"'Kyger Creek .. , ............ Away
Jan. 9-Trlmble ..................... , Away
Jan.1 0-Southweatern ...... .. .. . Home
Jan. 14-federal Hocking ....... Away
Jan. 17-Southem ........ .. ....... Horn~
Jan. 2, -Meigs ................. :·.... Horn~·
Jan. 24-Symmea Valley .. . .,., .. Away
Jeri. 31-North Gallia·............. Away
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace ........
Horne
Feb . .•7-0ak
Hill
.....................
Horne'
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gune8

Arkansas St . 61, Louisiana Tech 59

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TlolaWe&lt;ic'o
Oblo Colloce lullelboiiSch&lt;dule
MolldQ, Ju 1 , .
Ak1'111 at llllnoi&gt;·OIIcago
Thiel (Pal at Kenyon
Tlttln at Deftanco · •

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Mldwes~rn

Texas

• Wa)'IIOibUlll (PI) at Rio Grande ·
Tile..,, lu B
~le at.Ohio Dominican
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Wtlberfon:!e at Rio Grande

·

Bowling Green at Ohio University

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Ohio Northern at Capital
'MusklftiUm at Mattetta

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Mount OniOn at John Carroll
Heldelbera at Otb!rbetn
'
Baldwin-Wallace at Hiram
Allflbmy (Pal at Caoe ~rve .
Earlllam (lnd) at Kenyon
Thamao . More (Ky) at Ohlp

0

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Georgia Tech J01, Wake Forest 91
Mllllollppl St. 84, Mlllllllppl 80 •

Wo- at ObtrUn ,
Urballlat Walsll
Bothe! at Bluf!t111
·
Way-.rg \PI) at Lake Erie

(OT)

NYU 88.

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liudweol

u. 011caeo 74
IIH-1

Arkail111 911, Houl!m 79
Now Orlean• 84, Coppin St. 77

.

0re1111 81, Stanton! 77

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Now Orleano 84, Coppin St. 77

HuaUnllilll ' (W Va) at Ttlftn
. .
..,.• ....,. lu'lt
Olilo State at NortbWHb!rn
Clnduatlat F1ortda State

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tossed In 12, Michael Klnt;;ald and
Michael Russell each had nine
while Roy L. Bailey folfowed with
.
,
six.
Southern connected on 21 of 50
·from the field lor42 percent. SHS
hit 13 of 22 freebies (59 percent).
Southern had 14 personals, 21
rebo~jnds, seven by Rose, and 14
turnovers.
The Tornadoes, who saw their
six-game winning streak fall by
the wayside,
play at Hanpan
Trace Friday In the top Southern
Valley Athletic Conference tilt of
the year.
GAHS, now winner of five
stral.gh\, ·hits the road again
Friday traveling to face trl·
SEOAL leader Jackson. Saturday, the Blue Devils host Point
Pleasant In a non-conferen~e tilt.
In Saturday's preliminary contest, the Blue Imps bounced back
from Friday's !Qss at Athens to
hand a good Southern reserve
squad a 64-29 setback. The-Little
.Tornadoes dropped to9-3 overall.
Coach •. Lynn Sheets' crew lm•
proved Its mark to 4-4.
.
The Imps led 10-3, 26-9, and ·
45-1.8 at the quartermarks. Na·
than Miller_led Gallipolis with 17
markers. Billy Armstrong added
15 and Bob Mabry eight'. Larry
Howell tossed In seven and Brad
Murphy six . .Michael Evans led
the Little Tornadoes with eight
points. Josh Codner, and Chris
Weaver each had four.

will

MONDAY THIOUGH'FIIDAY
9:00 AM-6:00 PM
SATURDAY ·9:00 AM-~:00 PM
CLOSED SUNDAY
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VBrSity box score:
SOUTHERN (58) ...,. Jeremy
Roush, 0-0-0; Andy Baer. 3·(3)-318; Michael Kincaid, 3-3-9; Todd
'
Grindstaff, 2·0-4: Jayson Codner, ·
0-0-0; John Hoback, 0-0-0; Roy L.
Bailey, 3-0-6; Billy Davis, 040;
Scott Lisle, 0-0.0; Michael Russell, 4-1-9; Russ Singleton, 0-0-0;
Jeremy Rose, 3-6·12. TOTALS /\. ,
18·(3)-18-58.
GALLIPOLIS 17') - Scott
Morgan, 2-4-B; Clint Oav1s,l-0-2;
Scott Jividen, 2- (3) ·2-l!i; Shane
Tackett, 3·(1)-2-1i; Eric Hottman. 0-0-0; Ryan Young, 0-(1).03; Josh Wllllams,l-(1Hl·5: Chad
Neal, 6.0-12; Ryan Smith, 3-0-6;
Rob Skidmore. 5· (1).0·13; Chris
Chestnu-t, 0-0-0; Jakim Lanier,
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0-0-0. TOTAlS 23·(7)-8-75.
By quarters:
·Southern .... ........ 13 14 19 12-58
Galllpolls ........... 15 18 18 24-75
Reserves - Gallipolis 64 South·
ern 29,
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Prep scores

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Ohio IDih Sehoclllalket6all
8aturda)', Jaa. 5
. Defiance 58, Bryan· 55

Fairview 76, Patrick Henry 37
Lancaster 86, Toledo Libbey 62

•

Mansfield St. Pete 86, LouclonviiCe
58
Wooster 103, AkrCI'I Firestone 60
Wooster Trlway 57, Waynedale 52

'
•'

FROM.·(ROW'S
Monday_:_Chick-n ·&amp; Noodles
Soup Of the Day -;- Pea' Soup
•

0

Tuesday-:-(Varies from Week to Week)
· Soup of the Day. - Bean Soup &amp; ·Corn Bread

Wedn,esday ·-Baked Ham
Soup of thl Day __ Braccoll Soup

·

Soup o( ~he Day-lean Soup ·&amp; Com Bread

Friday-Ham Loaf

··

..
.
•·

Soup of the Day--:-Potatil Soup

•

Saturday-Chichn &amp; Noodles
:5und.c1v-Roast Turkey &amp; ·.D_r~ssing

0

•

.•

Manhattan 65, Joaa 46

Wllrnllflllll a Dellatlce
Genova (PI) at Dyke

. ·--

.•_,
...

•ATTENION• .
NEW BUSINESS
HOURS .
..

11y U•lled Pro"" .. ltrutloDal

· Wltlenberc at Denison

••

.

Calles~ · ilaa-.t1
'

W•~n

•. '

tN, Baylor 77

CoJ&lt;roido u)5: ·rowa Sl . 81
,
Domlnauez HUll 86, Olr. Herllaae
. 71
.
Montana St. 115, Idaho St. 74
Oreaon St. 59, Calltomla 55
UCL.t. 88, Louisville 81
·

Cle'Yeland State at Younestown .
state

I

Soulhweu~rn

Texaa Tedl77, Texas AAM 72
Trlrllty (Texas I 62, RCp111 61
Wy«nJna 92, Now Mexico 79
W•t
·
Artto11a 84, Wi'lhlnat111 St.' 69
Arizona St. 68, Wuhlnatll1 60

·Kent State at Ball State '
· Toledo at Miami

•

St. 79,

cTex). 63
Rice 64, NW Loulolana 56
Tirlotll1 St. 76, E. Texao St. 63 .
Tex-San Antllllo77. SWTexas St. 61

IIVIJ)EN SHOOTS - GAllS, Junior lorward Scott ll.tden (10)
POIM In a lbree-polnter from Ihe corner. early In the tblrd period.of
8a&amp;arday olght's aon-leape game tolocreue the Blue Deylla' lead
over the visiting Southern Tornadoes. Southe~ defeasive player 18
Scott Lisle (35). GalllpoUs won 75-~. Jividen scored 15 pointe.

Thursdav-Meat Loaf

Lamar 104, Pan American 82

Wallh at Mt Vernoo Nazarene

.

,....

0

SVAC standin@s

SCHEDULE~$
MEIG'$.

SOUTHERN

Nov. 27-North GaUia ............ Home
Nov. 30-Hannan T111c1 .......... Home
Dec. 4-Eattem ..................... Away

'

''

Loyola MarymQunt breaks NCAA
.·~oring mark in .186-140 cage win

GIRLS
, _ 10-VIilton, A-y
Jan. 14-Southarn, Away

0

•,

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
253

992-6669

NORTH SECOND

·l..

-*EPOIT,.
OHIO -

KENTUCKY FRIED
HICKEN LIVERS DAILY

Crow's F.amily Restaurant
Pl. H2-5432

.

POMIIOY, OliO
Frlltl

.'•

.

�'

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... . ......

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Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

.

·~·

~

.... .. ... .
~

...._

. .... ""

....

. ... ......

- ..-

Redwomen post .76-60win
over Lake Erie
..
hard.
"Kathy Snyder had a great
game, both offensively and on
rebounding," he continued. "In
addition, Debbie F,redrlck had a
· great defensive game, which Is
something we've been· trytng _to
get her to do, and she delivered
for us today. Ann Barnltz had a
niCe, steady game and has
proven to be one of our more
consistent players."
Lake Erie had a strong game
from the shooting end, net tlng 21
of 34 attempts from the Ooor for
62.9 percent. Rio Grande, again
suffering from the Ooor, had 40
~rcent on 23 of Its 57 tries. The
visitors were also more success:
ful on tree throws with 69 percent
(18·26) while the Redwomen hit
18 of their 28 attempts tor 64
percent. Both teams worked on
limiting turilovers - Lake Erie
committed 15 to Rlo Grande's 17.
The R.edwomen enter the first
round of Mld·Ohlo Conference
play Tuesday when they travel to
Canton to face Walsh In · a 7:30
p.m. contest. Lake Erie (3-10)
goes to Pittsburgh Thursday to
face Point Park.
Halftime acore: RloGraacle47,
Lake Erie 31
·
RIO GRANDE (78) - Jennl
Couch 1·2.0-8; Debbie Fredrick
0.2·2·8; Kerrt Kidwell 8-().().16;
Mindy Montgomery 2.0·1·5; Ann
Barnltz 6-0-4-16; Stephanie Gu·
dorf 1·0·3·5; Amy Snyder 0.0·1·1;
Kathy Snyder 5·0·7·17. TOTALS
28-4-18-78
LAKE ERIE (flO)- Stephanie
Yugovlch 2.0-0-4; Amber Garnet
4·1).1-9; Stacie Chapman 3-().()·6;
Angle Kane 1·0-4·6; Shelly Shu·
plenas 4.0-0-11; Melke Veenhoff
2·0·5-9; Julie Staska 2·0.8·12;
Cheryl Burden 3-0.0.6, TOTALS
.. 21..0·18-8t

Unlveulty of Rio Grande for·
ward Kathy Snyder scored a
career high of 17 points Sunday In
a 76-60 victory for the Redwomen
over Lake Erie blifore. a Hlgb
School Days crowd at Lyne
Center.
Snyder, · a 5-10 junior from
Gahanna, also posted eight rebopnds, as did fellow toward·
Kerrt Kidwell, to shut down the
Storm's offense In the second half
and boost Rio Grande's season
slate to 8-6: ,
~ ,i he Redwomen opened
with a lead, an Improved Lall.e
Erie team coached by Richard
Andersilp exercised a strong
defensive game and a balanced
scoring ef~ led by Angle Kane
and Melke Veeilhoft with siX
points apiece to trail the hosts
closely and cut their margin to
one (28-27) at 5: 41.
,
Snyder, who scored 11 In the
first halt, and Ann Barnltz wltl110
sparked the Redwoml!n to build a
1&amp;-j,olnt cushion. entering the
s~nd period.
With rebounding being Lake
Etle's apparent strength, Rio ·
Grande Coach Do!lg Foote said
hlS team concentrated In the
re)nalnlng halt on getting the ball
oq~ of the Storm's possession.
T he strategy worked as the team
bi{llt highs of 24 points (57·33 at
15! 40 and 74-!50 at 3: 32). Lake
Eile only came as close as 16
(7J·5B) In the game's latter
portion. Overall, the Redwomen
pOsted 47 rebounds to.Lake Erie's

•

"oote tell the Storm "has come
. a Iolli way. Their size really hurt
us ·Ill the first half ahd their
strong play sUggested to us that
we: had to get them oft the boards.
Bo1h teams played very very

MOVING UPCOURT- Rio Gr~pde'a Geaa Norrlll (left) movea -··
lhe ball 1pcourt &amp;&amp;al•t aa aaknon Lake Erie carer darlllg .
alcJU'agame at Lyne Cenler, which the Redwomen won

Sat.ur

.

~· '

Heard
about
•

RAPID REFUND?

•Athens,

Chesapeake, ,

•

POliCIES
•
""'d• out..do Metgt.. Galh•

•

j

j·

t

'

place IInishes from Scott Bartoo
and Jake Kennedy.
.

1

.... ,

:
,

....

Team to

237

POMEROY
818 EAST MAIN STREET

pr1c8

'

poles Oa•ly Tnbunt:.

nt~tehlllg

P~PER

UGALNOTICE
Nolloele....,_ ....... tMI
tM ...... of .....lon of

1.,..

u- ...................

...._to
nul,......,.
""" far 18loph
far Veri-

trial. ...... County. Ohio
$

lllhooll 1ft ... dlllrlcl.
Thlnu.....,of,.,._..,.
bid In ..... bulclllllll .. to~=
OUt

'

·-·-·

.
Pomii'O\' E...,_Ury
pttone.
RuiiMd Elo"""tary -

..=....
4,.,._ .

.......ury

~·ry

-

Rio Grande sank17 of Its 24 free
He plead~ guilty to filing false
throw attempts for 70.8 percent
Income tax forms In 1985 and
and held Its turnovers to 16, while
1987, and admitted to hiding
W4tdsor lost the ball23 tbnes and
more than $354,000 In Income
shot 73.1 percent (19·26) from the
from gambling, personal appear·
foul line. Donaldson snatched 11
ances and the sale ot·memorabl·
rebounds for ~to Grande.
lla; Included In that figure was'
Now averaglpg ioo.6 points per .. $129,1100 he got for selling the bat
game, the Redmen open a beetle
with which he broke Ty Cobb's
week of home action Monday at
record for hits in 1985.
.
7:30 p.m. against Waynesburg
Rose arrived at prison Aug. 8,
State (Pa.). The · week's slate
two days before the court·
Imposed deadline. Fred Apple,
Includes games against Wilber·
force, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. :._M~unt · executive assistant to the
Vernon Nazarene, ThUl'S&lt;lay,
warden, S!llc! the former Clncln·
7:30 p.m.; and Defiance, Satur·
day, 3 p.m.
Halftbnncore: RloGraadetl,
Wlndlor 311
RIO GRANDE (100) - "Harrl·
.l\.1.\;./.....,,......,n·
son 2·1·3-10; Snyder 2·0;0-4; Ers·
Ian 2-3:-0.13; C. Brown 1.().0.2;
Sc.hubert H-0.14; Farley 1-0-Q-2; ·
Smith 1#2; Schroer 1.().().2;
Wllllams 0.2·4·10; J. Brown S-3-625; Christian 2.0.1·5; Donaldson
· 4-0.3·11. TOTALs II-1S-17-101 .
Pauley
WINDSOR (78) _4-1·8-19; Johnston 1-0.0.2; Astles .
1-0.0.2; Ogley 1+6; Elliott 1·0.0.
2; Hewlck 4·l·H2; Gipson 1·0.0·
2; Daly 5-0.1·11: Shak,espeare
5-0·2·12; Pepper 1·1·3·8. TOTALS

·•

•• ~

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,
"

•,

,

,;,·
••
~·

r•

··"'
"'
·~
....
••

family Q~taurant
Thursday ·N. 1S
·r'll. ..

••

~

,)
10

,7

•Spaghetti

24-3-19-78

"

................. '

1!'1

..

""'

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

W

•Lasagna

.....

-----

I

't

.

Ill . . . . . . . . . . . . d. ....

11

•I

..··s
...
•-:

All Diimers Served With Our ali-U-Care-To-Eat
Soup, F~t &amp;t Salad Bar &amp;Garllt Bread,
Or Try One Of The Other Fine Menu Selections.
Take Out.Ord,m Availtzble. ·
"Senior Citizens Receives 10~ Discount

'

Trus•l. Housing

for fur"- lnfo111wtlon.
(614) 992-6712

~

..

',
•,

Mason FamUy Restaurant

Strllt, ......r:t , . . Officii

.

Rt. 33

I
'

(306) 113-5321
(NEXT 10 MASON OOON)

..,_, .. Plllnllff ""' .....

wllh ....... ..... ......
..... be .............: lnd
IMthllni.IIIIIY ......N
1D live notlae of tM flllnl of
tM I'MIIIon ...................
08tlon, In IG aTrdanOI: with
Italian 1701-14: 111.07:
.17DJ.I4:· ertd CIVI Rule
4.41AI. Rlllllod Code.
. And llffllnl llllh
nat.
.
RIGhlniA.=
ftOt

....... Ia_...._ ....

-~

.

Muon, WV

••t .. :rL"':~r:

""'11111
1110. deY
. of- .... ·-·

)4~~~~~~~r.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~

'

. nunt rypll'tllltothfapro.
. lllllllntl ""' It further . .
...... ................d
· ,._af...W_.,...,.

•rr·n..t MIUizea;

•
•

Maiii ' WRIIe"" .,d

Mull Mill RoyaW ltld Ad·

,.,.,

I

•'' .

11/1,/Hn

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE

614-949~2734
or

614-949-2635

Hou•• 101 Aenl
Mobile Hom .. lur RtnH
F:•rms tor .R•Jlt
Apartmem tof Fhmt
45 - Furnished Rooms '
46 Sp1ca tor Rent
47 Wanted lo Rent
4tl • ~quipment for Aunt
49

Banks
Construction ·
' ' 992·5009 ~Gutter
~Helmet '

1

NEVEl ClEAN YOUR
GUTTERS AGAIN
GUARANTEED!
FREE ESTIMATES

12-11-'90-1 •

Public Notice

DIM-.

Dec-.

~~N=r=
'

....r

....,.....antlll-lldeof
"-" ltun, IIIII U. I. Har1011'1 Adrlllan Ia Pomlooy,
Ohio, the 01111 l t l d - mJ.
_ . GOIIIliln_, hlrllll.
with ~.= Ia ....... ....
-,
wllhiiWIYI
ltldrilhbof_..__
m..,... lilwlnl liMii
-•totDre • • . . , to I.
Wyltlo Pomii'O\'.

O.•IIINrllllnrlllhteafln·

.,_.,d . . . . to!IJidfrMi
..., ......,.. OtfMfl 1111111 tllll by 1ft..
•-r••d 1ft V•
..._ ........... 111.of
... Deed ltMDrdl of Mal111
County, Ohio.
llld lllfiDM IIDtlltll lllovl
thlllfurther...,.nOIIaiiMI
....... tilly, .. .... .....
fill!, file M A - NO LA-

Tilt THAN D DAVI lf1lr
... 181 ¥lelia I of till ...

vlllllrP\J"ntllll• ...,_.
lie d11111rt Ia lllvo wlllved

. . . rllllefaar•-.udtM
I'MIIIOil ... be ......

•ttu•

'.

..

Hay &amp; ·GrAul
Sule{l&amp; Fertrl••er ,

•
.•'

Tran sport at1on

71 Auta1 tor S11h1

..

72 TruCk a lor Stile
13 VMt1 &amp; • WO ' s '

7C
75
76
77

For Le . . ,

78

Mutorc:wcl•
.
8u•11 &amp; MDIOfl tor So.hr
Auto P•ts &amp; Acc•1101••
Auto Rept~r
C11mpmg Equ•pm~~nt

79 Cormpera &amp; Motor Hon1n

Mer chandrse

'

51

Hou•hotd Good.
~2 ~ Spotting Goodt
53 Anliqu.a
54 Mis~ , Mtrc:htndrse
65 Building SuppH•
56 Pets tor Slle
57 Mu .. clll ln1trurnents
58 Fruits &amp; Vegtre•bt.&amp;
,59 For ,SaleorTr,rte

lihfiiii4BII
. 21 Busin•s Opportun•tw
22 Monll¥ 10 lo1n
23 Ptof•slonal S~~rvrcttS

81 HOrne tnlproven'!.-.11
8Z Plumb~nu &amp; Helitng

'

...

8)
84
86
86

E ~Wilting
Elecaricll&amp; Retr'ilur.ahon
Gunltfll H1u1rny
Mobrle Ho"1a A"f)•i•

87

Upholstery

·,

r

'.

0. C.L. COMPUTE/( SOLU170NS, INC.

•VINYL-SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•ei.OWN IN
INSULATION

..
"ON-SITE SERVICE/IlEPAlll

BISSELL .SIDING CO .

•CUSTOM PROGRAMMINCi

N, S.IIMI Strlet
IMiDDi.EPCltT, OliO 457601
Offkl 614·992-2116
lloml 614-991-5692

Newll-lttllt
'~Free EetirMtu''

"SAUlS

"ON-SITE CUSTOM TRillNlNG

IOmiS.

PH. 949"·2101 .
or IlL 949-2160

JI'II.ING I'AUiiY PIJ.OFESSION.tL BUILDING
J06 }.tCKSON I'IKE • SUITE 101
G.tWPOUS, OHIO 4UJI •

110 UDAl

SERVICE AND IEPAII
ON ZETOI TRACTORS'
Pill Olhlr Namt lrands
ChKk Out Our low
Prien an "Ntw" Zttor
Tractors and &amp;.,ip1111n1

Public Notice
iond

iudgftllnt wHI
be
IDCDnlllllly; Civil
Rule 12(A((1).
BERNARD II. HURST,
Dlrectar of Tr•eportetlon
1117. 14, 21, 28;
(2(4, 11. ltc
tlll·1 120
Nlrojered

New In Stocld ·

MORRIS

IN THE
COMMON P'LEAS
COURT
PROlATE DIVIIION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO ·
IN THE MATTER OF
SITTLEMINT OF
ACCOUNTI,
PROIATE COURT,
MilOS COUNTY, OHIO
Aoaaunteend vaUOiian at
the fallowing nemed flducl·
.,... hiiVI llltin ltlld In the
""'IIIII C:outl, Malge Coun·
ty, Ohio, for 1ppoav1l ond
-llnwnt:
·
EITATE NO. 221117- Fl·
1111 .,d Plllt'ib~ Accaunt
ofM..,IIIJ.IIaallw-. Ex·
acutrl• of lht Eltltt of Wll·111m C. Ptall. O.CO.MCI.
IITATI NO. 21U1 - Fl·
Nl·.,ctDI....,~Accaunt
of a..ny c. Dtummand, Exo·
-I . Houak,
of .... 11of John
o...-....
i!ITATI! NO. 2S411- Fl·
1111 •d Dl...,u- Aacaunt
af Cerolyn I. Plllt. Execu·
tar af till Eltllt of M1ryOI·
In p1111, o - " ' ·
·
EITATI NO. 211164- Fi·
1111 llid Dl.....utMAocaunt
of N-y llobb. Executrix at
the ...... af Hull Cern•·
""'· o-tlld.
.
' EITATE NO. 24101 F1r1t A-nt of I. Coreon

at ....

IITATI NO. 111131 -

'-Y·I'Iflll Acoaunt at

H-fiiOti TIUII ComPIIIY.
N. .A.. , . _ of .... Trull
U - tM Will af Vllnw W.

""-· D-tlld·
If,.. uaopdon1 ,,.
tiled lhlllto, uld accaunlt
w11 be far ,_.... beto..
llld Caurt an the f11h cloy
ofP..,_.,,11t1,1twhlah
""" Mid -ma w11 bt

"il=

..,....,.,... end oontlnued

to dey ..,.. 11n111y
•
of.
IIW•n ..,_llld
'"'' file · - ..upllan•
1D IIIII - n i l ar 1D llllll·
.............. ta the llcacu·
lion of ... ltu. . -

742-2455
Sidthill lloat, llutland
12·24-90-1 mo.

COMPLETE

ELECTRICAL SERVICE
Residential and

Com1111rcial
IEWIIING AND

· TROUILE. SHOOTING
C...tllilll a.ctrld,,. llfl•ate.

BANKS
CONSTRUcnON
992-5009 .

12·11·'10- I mo.

YARDMAN.. &amp;
·ECHO DEALER
•

1tAny i1111gth
chain a and ac•Celr·l
IOrlea
•Koroaane Stoves
Wicka

1

We Do Wlek Repllr

MORRIS

742 2455
•

sw.ltlll

Irina..1~ In Or Wi

.

-'

.,

lutland on low
i.ln~!ll..

·· . Pick Up.
.
KEN'S APPUINCE

HOURS: Monday
thru Saturday

SEIVICE
992·5335 or 915-3561

10 amtD IS pm

Acr"' F,_ P0.t:Offlce

We Are A Deer

217 E. Sec~

''

74Z-2CZ1
21/J •• ouflide

'-•r

Cheeklng

POIIEIOY,

GUN $1fOOT

MOVING SALE
CAIPENIEI
GUNS .&amp; 1•0

· UCiffE
filE DEfT.

Iathan 1ura1ng

. 911 llyitll St.

MIY

Mltldloport1 Oh•

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M•

992-2034
1100 Remington
Slug Ouna

12 . . .
Strictly

870 Remington
Slug Ouna
Ithaca Slug Ouna
·

htliiMI

1'

Clitltl

.

Only

11·13·1 ma.

BISSElL· .
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGEI
"At:leaiOIHIIII1 Pm11"

IISSELL &amp;
CONSIIICnON

llo•lll
St11kll

.•.,....

alow HOllies

'

l,amotl..lnt
Stop &amp; C0111pare

Pll.. 949·2101
,, .... 949·2160

FrH lttlntates

915-4473 .·

Day« Night .
NO SUNDAY CALLS

GROOM
ROOM
ConiPie·te Grooming ,
.

,For Alllrat4s

.

EMILEE
MERINAR
·

Ownar &amp; Operator

614-992-6120
Par-'Oy, Ohio

·

All FURNAd·PARTS -

n--=--liiUftm"iMOHIIUUiiiciir-~'' · '

667-6179 .

Locatefl .. s.Hiftl Schell 111. •" lt. 141
16141 ........ ,. ... 1-110-171-1967

•Remodeling and

c•rlet••• c•••,

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

Home Rapalra
•Roofing
•Siding

•Painting

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAI
·coNnRucnoN
992-6641 or
691-6164

Han Changed Our location To
11/t Mills East 011 lt. 241 threugh
(htlfer, Oh.

W1

TRI·COUNn
IECYCUNG

Call 992·5114

and Eltlmale
Pl. 614·915·3949 IOHP DUll
47269 St. 11. 2U
lent
~-~~7·11

for Corrent Prlcos

.y. . .

Hand Tufting
. Cuatom Drepea

~

114·H2·JIII ..
litJ llertltlm••

992-2269. .

We lay What

'

w. Oo.

We Do Wlltri We lay

USED RAILROAD liES

.

~

'
:.

~:

.

::

lt.I..U&amp;

THE HARDY OUTSIDE
HEATER WITH INSIDE THERMOSTAT . ·•
(PATENTID)

J&amp;L

INSUUnON

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

'!..............

~n&lt;-=-~---::rr.

•VInyl Siding ·

' ........ ,lftll ....... _

--·IIMIIIold................

,•Replacement ·

usa APPUANCIS.

.,

....,.. ,...,..o-,ao,_ ..... ._

901tUW81JIIm

IAIIIS OISII

•

lOAD fiiiiY II 1101111

992-2772 742•2251
539 Bryen Pllco
Mlddieportl Ohla

.,
UN'S IPI'UAIICI

..

...

.

'

..

.~

. ;IOJIIflt Ill

, J ...

..

'••

!
-~

~:
:;.

.._.... .,......_ '
l
CALL.
VICKER'S WOOD HEA'INJ

~

,._(*)11N8111WI,.,.

•

.....

,.

I .

I

I

.U..JIIII _ _ _ _ .,..

· -~t--:.

f

•

UPHOLSTERY ' :

- BILL SLACK

•lniul8tlon

•

•'

*FIREWOOD

.•Roofing

.

CAIN'S
...
Of Ml••lepert

SHIUB ·&amp; TREE
TRIM. 9lld
REMOVAL
*LIGHT HAULING

. Window•

...
.,

SPECIALIZING IN....
.
.
•Cuatom Bent Exhauat Systoms
•Complete Line of Exhalllt Suppllaa
•Handla 1nd Install Monroar 8hock1 '
.;(lome aod See Ua Por A Free lujleetloa

• OPEN EVEitY DAY AT
POMEitOY LOCATION
7 DAYS I AM·7 PM
CLOSED CHRISTMAS
DAY ONLY

"2-SUS
• tiS·SUI
a... ,_,_..,..

..._c-.

,~

HEAnNG &amp; COOLING

SIIIYICI

t1118 111 fllr hllrlnt.
Rolltrll. lualr. Judge
Colh,_,
l'nllllll Dfvlalon
M.... County, Ohio
JAN. 7, 11t1
•·

.

"

4-16-86-lfn

1114/tfft

'"'

'

MOBILE HO. FURNACU - HEAT PUMPS

•Co111plott

~~~;;;::::::=;;:~ lL--_......:__,.!.:!!·110 ttl I
THE

,., 1M diJI prior 1D lht

'

r.aas

STEWliT'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPUIS

,,;

EQUIPMENT

Public Notice

c..w.
Plllnlftg,GUirdlen
1 mlnar.

ALL

..

.,

446-6000

OVEN IEPIII

..

11-Zl·'O.I ••-

The Daily Sentinel is in ur·
gent need of 7· copies of
the ·newspaper dated No· .
vember 21, 1990. Please
call 614/992·2155.

:"•lit•

of:

Y. C. YOING II
9924215
,._,.,,Ohio

DEER CUT,
WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED

'

I'OR fiUliUCATION
Unkna- Hllro.
Eaecut... Adml11lat11toN.
ar Aultlno,of the Elllll of
MoNit Wl•rna. DMIIIId.
ond Unknown Helrl. Dev·
1-. b_to.._ Admlnl•
trltore ar Allllln• of U. Et·
, ... of Mlxll AdiiiRoy•er. ·
DIDnnd. M4 Unknown
Helrl, Dwlnn. Executora.
Admlnlltrllare, ar Alllgno
....,.Fry,Tr~~eurer
of the E - of Adlll Roya·
1121 17. 24. 31: (117. 4tc
ter.
-like nothllt they ,.,. blln
by lhl Di-rofTren·
Public Notice
opartlllon of the lUll at
Ohio, wha hie l n . - I
peacu•lll In the Cam.,_
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLIAI OF
"-" Coult of
Mll111
County. Ohla, to op""prl·
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ete certain praplriV dt·
lllmlfd I; Hurtt
oorl- "-ffer far high·
Dlr- of TrMoparllllon
1 - of Ohio ,.
.
. Wrf purpa-. 111mlly lhl
PLAINTIFF· rntldng, canllrUctlon ar lm·
.
provt"*'t of: :,
VI . . .
Suu Routt 33/124,
Unlma- Hllre. Devi-l,
,_ . , . _ . , Admllillltl llarl,
22.711,
Seollan 12.11.
Mtltll Coufily, Ohio, 1nd to
ar Alllan* of tM 1 . - af
Malle Wltlllme. .,._...,,
II• ihe nluo of uld proP'
.
lrl\l. The pr aptrll -ght to
DEFENDANTS be-"'""1•marup•
dfiDIIIy d11 lled u fal·
c.. Na. 10-C¥·211
AFPIDAVIT
lowe:
lltuo,_, In the Vll".r. af
1 - afOhlo.
CountyofMIIp
PD_a,, c ... n~y of a1111
RICHARD A. SZILAGYI, 111d ..... of Ohio, end mare ·
...... . . .ly-... -de·
-ndod •n~t .....,......
poillllldiiYI .......... 11 lawro:
PARCEL NO. 1 1-WO
duly IPIIIIole!d. ' quallflld
ltld oatlnt A I t•t Attor(HIGHWAY!
'
ALL ltiOHT, TITLE AND
ney o-ral af ... s - of
. Ohio; .... till PIAiodfl, hr·
· INTEIIEIT IN Fll
IIMI'LE. !XCLUDINO
. ilerd 1. Hum. DINalal' of
Tr•opartlllon. SlllU at LIMITATION OF ACCIII.
Dhlo....... by hllll'htltlon,
IN THI fOI.LOWING
DESCRIIID l'fiOI'IRTY.
to
the proputy
doo-llood ......., ltld to fill
INCLUDING THI
ITRUCTURI iHIRION.
till """' ...101': It •.
hlnelhenlirthhlttofLAII
...... thll the Unkliotill wholl of LAII 1I
H... Dat 11111, n~CMrtora, 17

A.ltmlniiiiW.,._ orAultna

•Chicken
CacciatQrie

-Raaflng
-Interior • bllrlor
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATESI

··THESDAY, JAN. 8
6:30 P.M.

tu"l,.

4 P.M. - 9 P.M.

CAifENTER SERVICE

-Raam Addllklnl
-OutterW....
-Eioctrlcol • Plumbi~g

DOWNSTAIRS
CONFERENCE ROOM

.....

•

576 Appht Grove
773 Muon
.
882 New Haven
896 Le,art
.
937 Buftillo

64
65

41
4Z
43
44

1!J
16
11
· U Want•d fo Do

PI Pl,ttM.ant '
Leon

6 75
458

YOUNG'S

BIG KIDS and
BABIES
PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL .

Iii_,

·~

13.
U

I
I 1

I

61 f•rm Equ.pmuot
·62 Wante-d to Bul
6J LW~ltock

w;mM

HelD W.wit Dd
Situation W1nted
ln1ur•nce
Bus in•• Tr•inwlg
School• ·• lnsuuc:t10n
Radio. TV II C8 Rt!p;m
MIIC:ellaneous

I

I

Bus-iness Services

-f·

~

Aru Code 304

992 Muklepot1
Pomeroy ,
985 Ch•ler
843 Po~111f'!d
247 LM•n falls
1 ·4 9 R1cine
742 .Ruli.Pd
667 Coolville

.

a- ,...1

n

natl Reds star "did an adequate
job," at II!~ prison., -•.•• . , • .. :1
Rose, who worked In the
machine shop; watched on televl·
stem as his beloved Reds swept
Oakland In the World Series. ·,
Rose's stay was routine and
prison officials denied he recrelved preferential treatment
The only Incident came when a
free-lanee re(iorter and his wife
from Mississippi, working for the
tabloid . "National Enquirer,"
smuggled two cameras Into the
camp and took piCtures of Rose:
Prison Warden John Clark was
expected to make a statement
regarding Rose's stay after his
release from the camp, located
adjacent to a federal penlten·
,tlary, which Is the most secure
,'prison In the nation.
' Ironically, the results of baseball's Hall of Fame election will
l!e released Tuesday . On Thurs·
day, a special committee will
meet In New York to review the
election procedures. The purpose
of that meeting Is to adopt a new
ld
gu ellne regarding players sus·
pended from baseball, suc.h as
~:~~~/rom being Included on the

prison camp Is to come at 9:30
a.m. EST. At his ;reques,t, the,_
media will be kept 50 yards from ·
the prison gate and a car walling
tor hbn. He Is expecll!d to be
headed for Cincinnati.,
Rose still must serve a 1,000.
hour court-Imposed probation,
workbig at a boys center and five
Inner-city Clnctrmatl schools as a
teacher's aide beginning Jan. 14.
He will be assigned to physical
fitness and health teachers.
Rose, 49, was banned from
basebal In 1989 . foUowlng an
. lnvestiga)lon that disclosed he
1
be~ on baseball games.,

w..nut

Mason Co , WV

-Concrete Work

992·3382

3

..

. ' J, I) 1l' ' 1, s
Lt . \:.)'ut.k
I

~~

Jl Homn 101 Sale _
32 Moblltt Hom.. tor Silll~~r
Jl Fa'l'ms lor Sale
31 ~uainMI-u.tdlngli
35- loll &amp; Ac:re-.;~1
36 Rul htele Wented

..

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379

II.

2.1nlI. Memary dill...
. 4. ColileoiiiGIIIIIT DIPiblllly
II. PhDM Dill hald IJutiDn
1. l.lnl.-ellghll
7. Dl d
rint11111
I. Hllidefi'MIIi-beck
I. Hald llnl .........
10. l.allnu11. AH 0111 Plgkig oy... m
12. PriuiDY an liMe
. lkl pr1oe 1e Ia lnalude In·
......-, wiring Md • two
(21 yeer WM!'III!Y·
· In onllr'tll blli aaneldored,
all _..., bldl ...... be . .
.....,lntM-T-urer'tOf·
fiGI. uo Eat Main s~ne~.
P. 0. 1k111 272,
Ohla 41181. an ar before
12:00 a'alack- an Tu. .
dey,J........,1.1111.
Al-'"'--can•
...... bldo - I a be .... rly
an tM DUtlldl "TEL·
EPHONE IIOS".
The baird of .....~ ....
· Ia ~
thethe
lOwell
riiPDilllbll
bkt for
t ....
phonlley. .me. but rl11rve1
the rftlhttareJeotiiiiY end all.
· ar ,..... at 1ny .lnd Ill lllde.
ly corder of tM . - - . . ,
Edualllan. Mal111 "-1
lahaal Dlllrfct. :120 hll
Mains-. P. 0. Ia• 272,
Pot-oy; Ohio 41711. , ..
lephone (1141112·111110.

Rose to .be releQSed from jail todOy -•

388 Vinton
245 Rto Gr•de
256 Gu,.n Din
643 Ar1bia Diu

Monday 5:00~ Pive Points
Tuesday, 6:00, Mason
Joann Newsome

ID .....:
1. 4 -~1181ephaneca­
pllllly- -nolan Dl·

II.

Galipolis

3t7 Ch•IWe

.· -SLINDERELLA ·

•• ..,..Hiclllane
whlah tM lftltlll..,oyllom 11

c,

446

B'ULLETiN BOARD DEAD:J.INE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

2

11
· 12

-

"-4etgs County
Atel Code 614

BQLLEliN BOAII.D_

garded

(UPI)

G•llia Countw
Are1 Code 614 ·

2 .00 PM . WEDNESDAY
2 '00 PM . THURSDAY ,
2 00 PM . fRIDAY .

'

..•

C11d ol Th•lls
In Memo•y
AnnOUGements
G•ve..,ay
6 HAppy Ads
6 loll ilnd found
1 V•d S.Je(potld In OdvJIJI Cel '
_8 Public S.ae &amp; AuctiOn .
9 WMt..t to Buy

Sr:r vr::r:s

fullowilll{ 1 t•lt•l'huw• t•xclwll!fr's...

2 .00 PM TUESDAY

.......
The fallowliig I .. ID be,.

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1
2
·3
•

ElemlftUry-

r.o::. ... -

.

.60

Cla.~.~ifit•d fiOJ:W~ c·m•t•r tl11•

2 00 P.M. MONDAY ·

twa (2)
.,-liMe wllh tM • dan of PomlfOY Elenwntary
Which .... .,_ (31 phon~

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f

E111 :Jirr y1111: 111

ovttt 1 1!. 000 hon18'1

Hirrilollvlle
Elementery .
4phonll
Middleport E.......,ury - 3

.

of·~ cost

It

lndbury Elem1ntary -

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59.00
$13.00
S1 .30 / day

.' .

11 00 A.M : SATURDAY

1-HillAY PAPER

SUNDAY

lhe AFC wlld-eiU'd game. Brooks, wbo dlslocai!lll
bls thWIIb In the game, Is a probable for aexl
Sunday's playoff game agalut the L.A. Raldera.

.

DAY BEfORE PUBLICATION

TUES.DAY PAPER
W£0NfSDAV PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

l

. 30

tor • • d_. •' Ulpllrate - ' '

• A claiSJhed OtdwttlliMft'ont phJCl.'d m lh~t Dillly SmthnHI (t!l.
t:lrl)t
cl•suftud (htpliff . Bt~IIIIUU Catd •nd lugill nQhcd)
will ~tlsu appvow "' 1iiu Pt Plu••nl Avgl51er 1111d lh• Q01lh .

Iowa:

$4.00
t6.0Q

Monthly
. 05 / da~
Rain Me IOf•Con•Culrwe run1. bfot.en upd.,-swrllb• ch•gad

tor errUtS hrll dl¥ ad runa 1n JMPUtl • C;lll btlfote 2 .00 p.m
d., •11ei pubhc..Cion 10 rMk" corr,ctton
· 'Ads thM must be Pl•d m ad¥•nc.e ••t
Card ollh••k~
Happy Ad~
In Mumon•n
V•d Sr.lt:s

'&lt;'

GAINS YARDAGE - Clnc.l anatl Benpls
running baek James Brooks tWIIbles to the
.JI'OIIIId,. but nol before piCking up some yardage
du~ag Silnday'a 41·14 roul of lbe Bouton Oilers In

15'
15
15

10

Ov9r 16 Words
.
.20

R1te

15
15 •

1
6

must be pnt

tn advomcu:·

Words

el (lot rnponalble lOt et"rors ""u' '''"'d., !Chuck

CO, ~~EoAfvl~NAEPER

MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS
Would you lire to purcha11a 50.100 ft. building lot fn I good location for only SJSOO?
Would you lie '• ·build ·a new hame and pay
no real eitato taxes for 1S years?
Would you like •• han up 11 •sooo FIR
for lite 1...,......,, on your'IIUIIdlni loti
.. _... NW II

~d

C011Phfl$

:;i:,.:•.: -.,~~~Mu~~:!!.•••• •,• d~bltl

., •&amp;entinul

•

Redmen heat Windsor
in I()().76 decision

1 1

Muun

• The .,Area's
Number 1 Marketplaci
.

RATES
Days

"Free ld5 Give May and Found 1cb und• 15 words will bu
'"" 3 d~• •• no ctl•ge.
..

•

Marauder heavyweight Aaron
Sheets was named lhe "roumaments
MVP.
MARION, Dl. (UPI) - Pete
Meigs will wrestle next in the
.
Rose,
who spi!nt his days In a
Ravenlwood lnvialtion81. The next
home meet will be Janl&amp;)' 19.
prison machine shop while his
Thp individual Jecorcls fer the Cincinnati Reds played In the
Marauders are PJ. Chadwell, 8-4, World Series, will be released
. no pins; Pavid Swanson, 7-3 with S from jall -~onday after serving a
pins; Eric Heck, 9.:0 with '1 pins; five-month sentence for tax
fraud.
~oe McElroy, 10-4 with 6 pins;
The release of baseball's all·
Bmt Kennedy,12-2 with 8 pins;
Aaron Sbeets,13~ witb 10 pins. ·
time hit leader from federal

.

Of

. pMd"AtttiJWn I . SO dl1c;:ouM tor •elf

Point

J"

If,

\

,

TO PlA&lt;E AN AD CALl 992-2156
MOHIJAY tJiru fRIDAY I ·a.M. to S P.M.
• I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUHDA Y

,
:

l

If you do,· Contact J11111

'

~

...••

Pleasant, Soutb Point and lnmble.
Meigs had first place finishes
from Dave Swanson, Eric Heclt,
McElroy, . and Aaron Sheets.
Meigs had a secood place finish
from Bmt K.ennedy, aild two fourtb

'

,

the answers."
In Saturday's games, Mark
Ryplen threw for two TDs and
Washington shut down Eagles
quarterback Randall Cun·
ningham lo lift the Redsklns to a
20-6 victory In Philadelphia and
Dan Marino bit Mark Clayton for
his second fourth-quarter 'I'D
piss wltll 3: 21! left to Jlft the
Dolphins to a 17-16 triumph over
the Kansas City Chiefs In Miami.

•.

Classifi

'

~

Public Notice

Jeff Brown, 6-5 forward for the
University-or Rio Grande men's
basketball" team, was respons!·
REDWOMEN NOTES: Foote
ble
for one-quarter of the .Red·
praised. the efforts of athletic
men's offensive output Saturday
director Tom Perdue for making when he posted 25 points In Rio
High School Days a success. The · Grannde' s 100.76 victory over·the
game, which drew girls' basket· University of Windsor (Ontario).
ball athletes· from around Ohio,
Brown also netted 13 rebounds
Including halftime promotions
for the game, Rio Grande's
and lnfo!JIIatlon on the Redwo- second appearance of the weemen set up by Perdu.e and the kend In the Domino's Pizza
Lyne Center staff.
Classic at Tiffin University. The
win took the Redmen to 10-3 on
.t he season, Including their 118-64
defeat of Seneca (Ontario) Frl·
day night.
Windsor placed ·rour players In
double figures, which accounted
In part for Rio Grande's 10-polnt
halftime lead. · But the Redmen,
shooting 34.3 percent (35-102) and
outboardlng Windsor 57-4:!, took
off In the second period to net the
win.
·
' In addition to Brown, · Brad
' Schubert netted 1• points; Mark
Erslan 13, Troy Donaldson 11'
and Gary Harrison and Darius
W~lllams each had 10 to complete
the high scoring for Rio Grande.
Windsor was led by Pauley with
19, and the team was 39.7percent
(27·68) on field goals.

•

Til~

.
field goals of 47 and 38 yards for
New Orleans. l
"We didn ' t do much on of·
tense," Fourcade said. "We
certainly ,tried, but they _had .all

I

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentillel Correspolllleat
• The Meigs Marauder wrestling
team defeated Fedelal Hocking 48· ·.
16 in a W~y nigbl m~ Bl
Meigs High School. ·
· ·
Individual
wins. for
the
Marauders came from P; J. Chad·
well in the 103 pound class, Dilve
Swanson Bl 112 J)OUIIds. Eric Heck
at 130 pounds, Mike Call Bl 135
pounds, Joe MI:Ehoy at 140
pounds, Jake Kennedy 189 pounds,
and Steve Woods beavywcighL
Last Salurday at the Gallipolis
Invitational Toamament, Meigs
finished a very cloic lhini behind
Gallipolis and Jackson. FQllowing
Meigs in the toumameru were

,.......

·

player; and we have to give him a
lot of credit."
New Orleans . quarterback
Steve Wallh. Ineffective early.
left the game Ia te wl th a sprained
rlgbt shoulder In the second
quarter after being sacked by
Steve McMichael. Backup John
Fourcade finished, completing 5
of 18 for 79 yargs with two ·
'interceptions.
·,
' The Saints, who reached the ·
playoffs with arr S.i!·record, made
their second postseason appear·
ance In franchise his-tory and fell
to 0·2. Morten Andersen kicked

top lancers
in wreStling

.

s~cesses."

way. Butler addtid field goals of
21 and 22 yards.
. '
· Andei-son carried 27 times for a
Bears playoff record; and · com·
pleted a 22-yard pass· to Ron
Morrta on Chicago's second play.
Fullback Brad Muster added 72
yards ruahing. Tomczak com·
. pleted 12 o! 25 for 166 yards.
"If you think back how we got
here. you've got to uncterstand
we've got to get theballln Neal's
hands," Bears head coach Mike
Dltka said. "I bad a little dream
last'nlght that I gave It to him 40
times. He's a great football

,•

Maraude~

'

'The last five minutes of the
half was the whole game for us,"
AIJderson said. •'we were down
_b )' one P:Oint and then Rio Grande
raised if a few notches and went
ort; from there: I .feel we had a
grfal defensive game and I was
h~py with our _effort, because
with a young team like ours, you
baNe to look at the small

·• .

•

By DAVE RAFFO
ran for another, while his defen·
"We' ve seen enough of Hous·
VPI Spona Writer
slve teammates shut down the ., ton's run and shoot that we're
Two division champions Oilers' run and -shoot offense.
starting to read their receivers
decked wild-card teams Sunday Houston WI!S held to oile ,first
just like theY're. reading us,"
when the Cincinnati Bengals and down and 36 yards In the opening Wyche said. ''We think we've
Chicago Bears iidvanced to the · half and trailed 34.0 l:t the third
found some answers to c&amp;ntrol·
second round of the NFL quarter . before picking up Its
ling II. We think we know what's
playoffs.
second first down.
coming at us.
The Bengals crl.lshed Houston
Cody Carlson; who put the
"Our defensive coaches came
41-14 In the AFC and the Bears Oilers In the playoffs by shred·
up with a good game plan for the
dumped New Orleans 16·6 .l n the ding Pittsburgh's top-rated derun and shoot today. I think that
NFC, setting the pairings for fense last week, floundered In his
next season, other teams are ·
next week's games.
second start In place or Injured go big to be s tudylng ffbns of this
In the AFC, wild-card Miami Warren Moon. He completed 16 game to fbid out bow·we stopped
vlslts East champion Bllffalo of 33 passes for 165 yards. Most of the run and shoot. There's going
· Saturday and Central champion ·hiS completions, Including two
to be a lot of teams Interes ted In
Cincinnati visits the West cham· IDs to Ernest Givens, carne getting !Urns or this game . ..
pl&lt;in Los Angeles Raiders Sun- after Houston fell hopelessly
At Chicago, Neal · Anderson
day. In the NFC, wild-card behind. ·.
rushed for 102 yards, Kevfn
Washington visits West cham''It was a long day and a prett;y
Butler kicked three field goals
pion San FranciSco Saiurday and bad one," said Carlson. "We just
and the Bears defense held the
the Centtal champion Bears visit played lousy. I thought we were
Saints without a toucbdown.
· the East champion New 'York prepared tor the Bengals deChicago built a 10.0 lead In the
Giants Sunday. ~ .
fense, bull didn't throw well. It's
first quarter. on a 19-yard Butler
~ncln!lati and Chicago ad·
my fault I didn't get us go big. We
field goal and 18-yard TO pass .
vanced with strong defenses, but kept our defense on the field
from
Mike Tomczak to tight end
··
·
th~ Bengals were far more . much too long. "
· James Thornton, and the defense
Bengals · head coach . Sam
su9cessful on offense. . _·
"
protected that lead the rest of the
At Cincinnati, Boorne!' Eslason Wyche said his stqff Is catching
threw for two ·touchdowns and on to the run and s'loot offense.

"34' "

'

.

.

Bengals, Bears -~ove to: second round of NFL playoffs

.

l

Monday. January 7, 1991 ~

Pomeroy-Middlapoft. Ohio

With wins over Oilers, Saints,
.
....
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,,

7. 1991

Monday.

8-The Daily Sentinel

· • Paga

LAFF-A-DAY

-----·---=-:=.
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(l1t90 TV Loll&amp;fW;I 1r1c Ft Wortr\, TX

EVENING

44

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

a

far Rent

..,...

10dl lfto8lle home. 2 . . .
rootM. atr, fumMa. tot.oao. ....

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THE MA.aiCIAN, l!!eEN
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Do you have anything in your ·
house that can tum into

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• whO can halp her client.

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CANCER (June 21.JviJ 22)'Try to keep .
your priqrllleo In order today. It'• not
Important how lut you get thing&amp; done;
_ , re8lly coun11 11 how
tl\ey'to
accomplllhld.
·
LEO (oiUIJ :D-Aut. 22) Having lola' of ,
BERNICE
91428, C-111\d. OH 44101-3428.
good ldea .lt commendable. provided
BEDE OSOL , AQUAIIIUI (.len. 20 Fab. 11) It could you IICI upon lllem In conttructlve Wttyl.
. PnMI Wlae today to leave well enough ~alee mfnciiii\CI
10&lt; a unl. -alone. II crillcal liluatlona are ovnillng lied~ today.
,
'\
. , ...,ool,hly, don'llnll~ute chitnge merely VIIIQO (Aile. 22 l1pt. 22) Yau mutt
lor change'• like.
.
guard agalnat your own axtriVIIgenca
• • • • • • • • •; IIIICII
(Fait. ~" oh 2111) Evaluate today, • Willi u that o1 a frland who
·
' •, yaurflnanceerellatlealfyendspendac• could Involve rou In eomelhlng costly.
cordlngly today, Don't be extravagant In el!her lnatence, bolh could be "bud•
WJUU
. and, IIIKMI all, don'l borrow lo gralll)o vet ~."
CD&amp;rt~
. -• . cur..,.
whlmo.
laM (lapt. za.oot. D) YOUI perlOI'·
-u1
uu.'V
ARIEl (llololl Z1,Apr11 , 11) Be extra , _ will Improve today If rou do only
. mindful of your btha.tor when In the onalhlng; but, don IWOI*1r rather than
· pliblk: eyatoday. lt rou male. . bad l!n· lllernPI _ . , thlnQI to whiCit you
prw111on, 1n -..ry might distort cannot 01" lldlqOIIe time end
.len. I, 1~
whit you do -more unrr.orably. · llltentlon.
T.hlre it a llronG likelihood that g~ . TAURUI (April • liar 2111) FlxHy ol' IOORLliO (Oat. II Now. 22) E and ob~ which ttno of.,._;t IIQ- purpoM end determination ere two o1 IIIOugh you may ,.,. lultlflcltlon, n 11
nlflcance Jo you w111 ..._,...,_. wmu your greateat today, but rou · not to let • Old grudge lnfluenc:e,
'"'"" Ml of - . Your , _ 111111 will ·might not -them to your ldvln11Q41. your INnltlng today. You wt1 blnelllthe
gl..., you greater gratlflcallon than your Yau may lock ., on a bad Idea which -lromlolalvlnm.
• old ona
.
you'R be ntluctantto dlacard.
IAGITTAIIIUt (Not, a DIG. 21) On
CAPNco•• (Dac. 22-Jan. 11) You =
IIII-JI1..,..11) If you.,.,.. oacnlon, you . . -liMn tad lm·
SOmetime~ -.rpriie ..-!at• with gotlallng a matter ollmporlanoe today, practical'"'- your flnltnclllllflllrl . .
YOUr determination end tenacity, but, if .HIa bell not tolakelhlngaal I - value. COI-IIId.. Thla OOUid be 0111 01 I ' ·you
wllh ...,._today, Y1"' What 10ok1 promlaln{ on the Mlrlaae · daya,IIOkeapatlghtgrlponrourwallal.
COUld 11t1t1 to llack off lnatead ol ~- ' could merely be a lhln · ·

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sertlng yourself more Yigorouoly. KnoW
· - • 10 1001&lt; lor roinanco and you'll
·lind it. The Altro-GrltPh Matchmaker
Instantly r~ wtileh llgnure roman·
' tlcally perfect lor you. Mall$2 to Match·
maker, CIO 1hll _ . . , _ , P.O. Box

ASTRO-GJL\PH

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Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
Soollt

Weot Norllt
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Allpou

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Opening lead: • K

-

East would play low, not ~ng part·
ner to auume that be held u much as
the queen.) With that knowledge, West
led biJ singleton diamond at trick two.
When declarer forted out the ace of
bearts, West underled his ace of ..
spades to East, wbo promptly " l'e- •
turned a diamond to give West a ruff,
thus settinll four bearts.

'

CROSSWORD
by JHOMAS-JOSEPH
.

'

ACROSS
1·-asa
lack
6 "I cannol
tell-"
10 Country
singer
Tucker
11 Baplismal
basins
13 Broadway
backer
14"Waler·
fronr
1$ Moriarty,
to Holmes
.16 Vichy
' waler
18 Vinegar's
mate
19 Cursory
look
22 Devoured
23 Incline
24 Sugar
source
27 Usher's
workplace
28Tel29 Sphere
30 Clairvoy·
·ance
35Pop-•
36 Pasloral ·
poem
S7Swiss
river
·38Tties
finger·.
painting
. 40_Wilh
dignily
42 Concur
43 Malinee
·Siars
44 Congers,

e.g
4!i Insertion
signal

DOWN
1 Employee
group
2 Vietnam·
ese city
3 Fury
4 Deli
choice
5 Palnler's
need
6 Enlangled
7 Aclor
Chaney
8 Chanls
9 Moral·
relaled
12 Moon
goddess
17 Epoch
20 Artillery
discharge
21 Suspect's

Yeaterday't Anaw~rclaim •
32 Albert:s
24 Israeli
"Green
fortress
Acres'
25 Run-of·
coslar
the-mill
33 German
26 "The last
c~y
-Show" 34 Aendez·
' (1971

i

.

'

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film)
39 Actress
27 Broadway
Barbara
poison?
29 Peculiar
Geddes
31 Snoops
41 Harem
(around)
chamber

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A.XYDLBA.A.XR
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One leiter stand!! for another. In this .sample A is used

Qllportll Tonight
11:3111) a-a Q
.

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+J975

Prolific writer.expert · Mike Law·
renee has come up 'l!'ith a new Idea for
thole wllblng to hone their proficiency
at tbe 11ame. "Topics ·On Bridge' is a
senes of 15 bookie,_, each, dealing
with an Important aspect of play or
bidding. Although .a bit pricey at $5
each, aU .15 ordered simultaneously
are dllcounled at $40 (Michael Law·
131 Alvarado Rd., Berkeley, CA
94705). TbiJ week we will examine
deals from "Signals on Defense,' one
ol Mite's topics.
After partner's takeout double and
F.ltst's raise to two spades, South baG.
too aoocl a band to merely compete
with three of either red suit. ltelylng
on the likeUhood that North had four
beara for biJ takeout double, South
jumped.to ~In that 3Uit. Unfortu·
nately the proper uae of accurate SIC·
naiiD&amp; provl~ the too!B for the deleaden to beat the contract. .
Welt 'ted the spade kiD&amp;. and East
played the ntne, an eocoura81D1 card,
which bad to promile p
ion of the
spade queen. (With 10·9-~-x
of
spades,
.

w .!.,~Joumal

-mow

EAST

WIST
.AK164
.A IT

. DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTEs- Htre,'e how to 'Work It:

Stereo.
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Sending news
of the queen
By JIDIH J•coby

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SUppiiM .

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King

TOIII!Iht Ste..o. "

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BRIDGE ·

lpori8Center

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35 Lots &amp; Acreage

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clluckle quot.d

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
ET ANSWER

Stereo. Q

art. c.ll Tom Ancllrwn

·

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by fllllng In the milling -.h
you diYilop
No. 3 botow.,

. SCUM LITI ANIWIII
,. 'I
. . D6flne- Vista- Locsl- Killer :.. REFL!ECTS
There are lwQ ways of spreilding light. "The principal
told his staff, "You can either be the can91a or the mirror

' !D C!J acNeii/Latuer
NeWIHour

Now-14•?1--ln

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Complete

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
. THESE SQUARES

DUpCioes
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for the three L's, .X for. the two O's, etc. Single lette~.
apCIIItrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diffel'ent.'
.
.
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, CRYPTOQOO'I'ES
. 1·7

QS

QG

RHEZUY
AUMUW

-. ·t

EAY
SH

RHGS

KEMU

KEMU
SKEA

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RHEZUY

ES

ER ·a . - OENUG
SKVWJUW
c...t..•~•t IF YOU DON'T HAVE
ENOUGH TIME TO ACCOMPLISH SOMETHING, .
CONSIDER THE WORK FINISHED ONCE IT'S .
BEGUN. - .JOHN CAGE

Yot•••'•
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Angry fans take over theater
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)- Alter
a prqjectli&gt;n room malfunction
rubbed out the sound In the final
10 minutes ·of " The Godfather
m, ••angry moviegoers occupied
the theater ·for an hour until
pollee arrived .and made them an
offer they couldn't refuse, a
newspaper repOrted.
A broken "exciter bulb"
knocked off t1Mi film's sound at
Hoyt's Cinema In a suburban
Albany mall Friday night as 75
people prepared to watch the
film's climax, the Albany Times
Union reported.
An unidentified theater employee offered the patrons free
passes to another shOWing, ·but
the audience responded with
shou Is of "Rewind It! "
The employee finally agreed to
rewind the film and promised
free passes. But after the ending
was sbown again. as a talkie this
time, the· employee and the free
passes could not be found.
The moviegoers headed for the
unoccupied . concession stand
looking for passes, and banged on

' door of the projection room.
the

Lallden: I was a

happy, comenlied WOIIIIIII unlit five
~~ ago., This is old fl!"ri~ now,
.tiut u .conunoes 111 .cause pam .00
Clilba!'rassmenL
1 found out dial my busblnd was
exposing himself )II ow .next-door
IICighbor while 1 wu JRIIllllt with

under7 Me. DuriJ1g·thecourse of our

· separalion my story beCiiine known

to family members and professiona1s; I· now knoW dlat this problem
req~ intense therapy and some.. limes even ihat fails 10 set things
righL ;
·
.
My husband refuses to have
therapy. 1lle more I'm iround him,
the mon: lfeel that something isn't
rigiL My pOOiml is that I can'tto ,......,
-·'-· :.
__ ....,__ , wt'"--·•
...,. .
• .........,.....y
.....,.. .....
man even thouah I don't bave ..y
real feelings for him. I believe
SliOngly in family life and he is a
wonderful fi!lber.lf 1 can'tliw: without him, how can I live with him?.DESPERATE IN . A SOUTIIERN

our second child. She became frightened and repcxted him 10 the police.
I was shocked and IDCally dcvastalied.
I 11m two small chikllen and "•ell
that I had no choice but Ill forgive

himandgo®.Noonetoldmeabout
the potential da11gers of this
sickness. O;ur relationship was badly
damaged and I have been an
emotional WJeclc ever since I found
ouL ·
I try to forget, but we ·still 'live
next door to these peaple and it's a
cont!~u~ iource of anguish and
hunulialion for me. I cannot look
the woman in the eye and try to
avoid her whenever posstble. It does
not seem to faze my husband in the •
leasL He flatly refuses to inove.
We fmally separaled last year but
we've been ~ and forth with each
other six times. Guess who buckles

CITY

why you are so dependent on a man
you do not love and c:annoc respecL
When you fmd oot mote about yourself you will be in a betler pllsili9n
to either kick your husband, out
permanently or make an~
dation and learn to live with him

Eventually, another employee
told th«:~ crowd that since they had
seen the end of the film, no free
passe~ would be given out
•
The crowd refused to leave and
. OW OU
W
pollee were ' called about 1: ilO
peacefully.
.
a.m. Saturday.
. By UnUed Presa inlernatlonal
.
Dear
Ana Landers: I am 30 years
· ''The officers arrived and
old and have bad a cardiac paceworked It o~t sq the patrons got
The hlgbest-llvtng mammal In
free passes, and everyone wound the world Is probably tbe yak of maker for II yeaJS. My husband and
up happy," Jack Tanski, a Tibet and China, which occasion- I love to iravel but bccanse of the
Colonie Town pollee dispatcher, ally climbs to an altitudeof20,000 · lack of cOnsidelation lmd downright
rudeness of airport security
said Sunday.
feet.

N

Y

.
Kno

devolapmon-

..... tiJI ......... odell- '
- • tN of 1.1 milo It 1

dalllr af wluetlan, to flf·
--foriiCihonl
hundrld clollrl of.....,ltlon.
forth--~

The ..... for ..... !llallon

- I l l - I t 8:30 o'clock
e.m .. 8nd remeln untl
7 :30 o'clock p.m. Df Nid
. ly-ofthe

Bawd of E.._e Df
Molgo County, O.hlo
Evlllyn Cll... Cllllrman
Jone M. Frymyw, Dlreotar
Dltld: Dec.•• 1180
(1)7, 14.21,21, 4tc

NOTICI 01' ILICTION
Oft fiX looot In E Dt tlw·T., MIU UmltlltiOn
Ncltlcololllreby"""~

, . In punu..,.. Df I R..olutlon
... tile 1-.1 of EdUOitlon af

...

~~ ~ ':,'::::~

_.... on lhe 11th doy of
.......,. , 110..... Will
be lUll nlnldtol-ofthe

11"1'!1 Df ..W oubd._., It
1 lp 111111 Elootlon to be held
In tile loutllem
~·
........ Dl..... of Molgo

- COUIIIY. Olllo. It the._ ...

*'

...........................
.......... _., .... _
.....,..ofootlolltlllrein, on
the lth
af ,....,_,,
1110. tile • I lion af .....,.

lit of .......... I..- lor the
........ af . ountnt ....

,._.·
.... tu ......... lddl·
..... t8JI Df 4.0 milo It 1

_____ .........

- noit.n . cls4 4.0 milo
lor ..... _ ...............
tiMI. wlllslll•a• 111 eo forty

"'ntla •·· for

filii ,... f1lr _..Ita d m

-

. . . . . . . . . . . . 0 ......

a.m. .-InN.-.,._.
7:10 o•.- ,..._ of 11111s1
lef

...... COI&amp;Lif• CHilo
l•iii.-~~~&amp;Cfl.M-n

.... •. ,,,,., •• Dtt~
Dltld: Dee. •• '110

1117. t.t, Jt. H • .._

'

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT:
GENERAL ALLERGIST
~ (304) 675-1244

.
REVIEWING APPLICATONS • AmerkaD
Red CJ'OII pe.-aaellllla Me1p C0t111ty to _ ,
~~..=
.
f t aac1 provide t-rpacy a"""aoce.
to
lamillell w11o aeed food, dotbing or
sbelter. To date e!Kbt applications for usistance
· bave been reeelved. Here from tile left reviewing

applicadoDI 11ft C. J, Howelc!ed Crcas
Vobmteer , _ tile llaiiiiDatlla
, Bob Bye11
Melp C01111ty Db ector oiEmergeacy Services;

name - oil and gasoline trom the

_Avenue.
Acconling to Klein and another
resident - who did not give her

c.-

Rita Fieldl, local Red
representative; md
Phyllis Carry, ·asak*ID~ dlredor of. Emergeaey
Semces, Westem West Vlrglaill Chapter,
American Red Croa.
·

Jan

\!

c::;:

rree

busineSs

commissioner.
Also named Monday were
Ucklng Courtly .engineer Jerry
Wray ail director of transportation, and Charles Shipley as
highway safety director.

'

SURGEON GENERA~'S WARNING: Smoking
Causes Lung ·Cancer. Heart Disease.
Emphysema. And May Complicate Pregnancy_.

attempting to land at Ga)lla. By MELINDA POWERS
Melgs when he ran Into some
OVP Newa Staff
'
· An lnvestijl&amp;tlon Into Sunday's problems.
"He was on a non-directional
fatal airplane crash may take
beam
approach, his sight was
1110re than 12 months to turn up
clear,
and
he could be seen on the
evll;!enceas to why thecrart'\Vent
.
grourid,"
Yunilan
said of Whl.tdown; officials said Tuesday.
ney's
attempt
to
land.
"However,
Alan '(unnan, Investigator
• with the National Transportation he told the tower that he thought
S!ifety Board, _said Tuesday It he was too high and he decided to
could take 9-12 months or more tQ go back around. That's when the
sift through eyewitness accounts · crash occlirred."
Yurman and Fletcher had
and airport records to determine
searched
· Monday throng~ the
why the plane went down .near
wreckage
of the slngle-enilne
the Gilllla-MelgB Regional Air-.
Mooney
stttlne
nea~ the Intersecpor.t and burst Into nunes, kWin&amp;'
tion
of
State
Roule
7 and Airport
Dr. WI!Uam R. Whitney, 51, of
and
said
they
were unable
Road
t:lalllpolll. .
.
to
detennlne
tf·
anything
could '
.: · Yurmant alone .with Bob
have gone wrona with the plane's
tietcber 01 the Federal5an lnstrumenll.
A;dminlltratlon, have p . , o' "We went over the aircraft and
~her what they believe ar be
eventl that happened before the didn't fladanydtaere~ncles, but
craah rrom \heir preliminary . all the laatrumenta and cockpit
are burnt up. There's nothing we
Investigation. could tell from that." Yurman
Whitney and his wife, Jean,
had
to Florida over the said.
Yurman and Fletcher, who will
Clirtatmas hoUdaya 'a nd ,had
be
leaving the Gallipolis area
attempied to fiy back .to GalHpotOday,
were scheduled to speak to
111 wben Whitney wu (orcecl to .
WhitneY'•
wife 'l'lleaday mornland bll p1aDe 1D South Carolina
She
was
awalUna Wbltaey's
Ing;
due to a mAtntenence problem,
at
the
airport and · was
arrl\lal
Yurman sal4. Whitney bad KOne
Iookln&amp;'
on
when
her husband's ·
to Colllmbla,
to piCk up tile
plane
craahed.
·plane and bring tt borne and was

nown

s:c.

'

,~1·

regular basis.
Klein, who threalened to notify
basement and lawn during last sevMII lelevision stalions if the
week's high warer, causing possible p!(lblem was not resolved bnhealth and safety problems. ·
medialely, was · told that the
Klein said that "seven or eight vehicles · were already in the
months ago", he was assured by the process of being - removed and
council that the Pomeroy · Police should be gone from lhe JKOPC!ly in
Department woUld. resolve the . · a matter of days.
problem, and when KleiQ reminded . Mila WOQd Of Lincoln Hill,
council of thai. last night, Mayor alollg with her son and daughler-iliRichard Seyler assured Klein. ~t law, Mr. and Mrs. Chris . Wood, ·
action had been laken by Police related a drainage problem 10
Chief Jerry Rought a1 ~onday to council.
According to Mila, a ponion of
remove the vc:hicles, which are
moved on and off the property on a
.Continued on page 10

I 19th.Ohio General .Assembly
to face ·ntJJnerous ·problems

1

.

·."Probe of Sunday's
prash may take mpnths

Public Notice

'

PLEASANT VALLEY ·HOSPITAL

topics

cars seeped into the woman's

Problems with junked cars on
Butternut Avenue and a ~
problem on ·Lincoln Hill were dis..
cussed with residents at Monday's
regular meeting of Pomeroy Village
Council. ·
· Kenny Klein reilerated a complaint that ht; refstered with the
council several months ago regarding an excess of junked cars at the
Lemley residence on Buaemut

•

, JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc:.

"WE HAVE NEARINI AIDS"

c~uncll

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentlael News Staff

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Gov, -elect George.Volnovich has
named three more cabinet dlrec•
tors, Including fonner Franklin
County commissioner and audl·
tor Roger Tracy as state tax

dly.

I

issues

Gov.-elect Voinovich .·selects
three more. cabinet members ·.

......... 1.I milo

for...,., -

I

,~

busiMss-siu enW!lope and a chtd: \1,&gt;'
or mollty order for $4.15 (this ill- · '&gt;·
eludes postage and lrandli11g) to:

vou:h· ;s-

•for-no-ment81re-

.., .......

Lonely." Sendaself-address~d.lollg,

J'

of .......

c.-

..__ . . .

ed cars, drainage

Ann ~rs' new boofcltr, "How ro
Mafct Frie11ds and Stop Being

eRr

..,_of the ,., mHIIImltotlan. lor t i l e - of Mellll
Ccaonty, lor 1M p u - of
...., _ , . end .,.,ltlon
of
School lnd
Melp lndu- Wa,.lhop

•.

Val.41, No. 180
11111

irilfe' '

lilly of .........,._ , ••,. the
_.ion Df lovytnf I tu. in

Ill

1 Section, 10 Pogq ·25 C.nto
A Multlmedll Inc. N-op1per

c....,......,

c

OIIID.IItthe._llr ........ of
voting tMNin., on the lth

...,.

yelled, "OK, WHBRE'S THE
PACEMAKER?" Naturally; every·
one turned to stare and I felt like a

•'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The 119th Ohio General Assem··
bly co_n vened Monday for a
~0'
two-year session expected to be
Meigs County witll Mrs: CUrrv is
be paid for a month thrOugh the especially trying because of
By. Charlene Hoe81eb
J Howell a · volunteer trom . emergency service prosram. She mental health mandales, con- .
_, An American Red Cross Disaster H~tington, who has been driving said that in instances where lip. . gresslonal redistricting, general
around tbe county and meeting plianCes were damaged many health care and school financing.
Service team is in Meigs County to with Iocal oflicilils to do actual on- times the Red Cross can •pay for
"Add all that together, and
assess damase resulting from last sile damage assesssmenL
tbllir repair or replacemenL
could present quite a problem,
week's Ohio , 'River Hooding and
Mrs.
is also bemg
' assisted
Need is always a factor in deter· said state Senate President Stanh;.,n~~:;nlJIOI11Y beadquaners
•~•
,.,___
··
mining
'
,_,
•
·. --:Aad· • • ley Aronoff R-ClnciMatl. "This,
'g-.CaiiUofthe-Mtigs -- j)y, ......,..
,....- lCjMAin'ftW!O, '"'
· 111-IICI'YICCSqlet-•n~, -· •. .. r· · ' •· :,lJi!' partf - ! " iy
Ciil'lil
. :w 'Ill
. nlel&amp;eJICV ~~ 5er7 , Rita FjeldS, as well as Bob.. _.y~. ·¥1:1, .~ted ouL She said session ,;wtll
1
cu ar
"1'
~ ....... - ""-'-~
Meiatt Couaty clilec:tor of' Bmer- thil all
. ' lh
and that difficult
'
vices, Mulberry He'~~""', ~Y·
.Services and volunteers, ihere iS no "'pay blck" requirement
Aronoff added the .•'trtcky
Phyllis C~, assistant director luthyCarseyand Debbie Cundiff.
Cleanup kits including mops, subJ~!s of the environment and
of~ ervices f~Jtthe WesThe Red Cross repeSientative brooms, buckets and sponges were crime also will be on the agenda
tern
Virginia Chapter, said that tbele is more daJna&amp;e,in paned out earlier to ·those who. of legislators elected and re~rican Red Cross. Hunlington, Meigs County lhan many residents needed them, she.said.
elected Nov. 6, 1990.
.
is in clillgc of taking appic:ations realize. In ' jbcine a number of
Last .,week when the cleanup
Amid much glad-handing,
for assistance from individuals who ttailers wm moved by firemen began in Pomeroy the Mid-Ohio back-slapping and plcture:::erne~ fc:,:::;.;~· : during tbe !Ieight of the flooding Chapter of the American Red Cross . taking, lawmakers took their
-...le
f and many 0::..:-'' exteMive damage. came in to povide faod for firemen oaths of office, swearing to
While
of the displaced and other volunteerS assisting in the "discharge and perfo~allofthe
handle the imm~ ... ~ ms 0
geaing back into theii' homes.
families·are wilh relatives or are al- cleanup.
du tie~. Incumbent upon them,, ~s
She noted that while no cash is read beck ·in tbeii trailers. some
FigUreS on actual damages an:
they shal,l answer unto God.
actually given to an applicallt, with rem~n in need gf housing assis- not available at lhis u.·me, according
Monday ssesslonalsolncluded
the exception of reimbursement ~or tance
,
•
to Mrs Cwry who also noled that housekeepiJig votes, resolutions
some pun:hales,
~
~ Cwry said that these cases . while
damage has been and the election ot officers.
sued .to. a merchant c OJte or are stili bein&amp; assesSed to delerlnine · assessed, there is no. indication ·lhat ,L egislators are scheduled to
needed ltt.ms.
onc!a' the Red, the need. Replacement of the actual assistance· tO merchants who had return In joint session Tuesday !o
· Sunday llld M
Y
· ••
•
•
flood
. 'd th .
.
hear Gov , Richard , Celeste s
Cross IIIIi: eillbt .applic:ations for,, liVInJ quarters 1s not an option, acwaters ms1 e eu stores IS farewell address.
"
eiiiQgency ~. mostly from cOrding to the Red Cross worker, needed.
Separate Senate and House
the Roule 124 and Racine areas. In · who did StaiC, however, that rent
sessions are slated fQ,r Jan. 15.
Committee hearings begin the

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

...... ,.,..

•

'

In purMs-. of lll....eutlon
... tile ..... af ............ af
tile County. of Melal. Ohio, ·
............ 14tll lilly of
Nouanbez. 1110. tMre will
.............. to.-of ....
,...._.,....,.,. .•i•lanM
I lpeaiol Ellctlontotlw Mid

me -

l

or·

crowded lirpClrt, the aec:urily penon

LOw tonlaht Ia mid :sa..
Cloudy Wednetday. IDp In
mid 40s. Cbaace ·of raJa to
percent.

•

•

'

.. 1989, .............
personnel, lravel, has become a
nmMSyn.dl(..rud
nerve-wracking ex!Jaience for us.
c:n..... Sylldlt•f'
I re{CQO the X~ray machioeslll!d
di:IC(;IOJI pislciligcn must Jllll8 Sutter the embamssmeiu
being
through befilrc boan1iJ1a; Pacemaker pulled aide lind hand searched while ,
palients are now allowed to show an · everyone looks to see if you are
J.D. card and be hand searched.
concealing a gun. :- DREADING ·''
111e ·problem is the attitude of · 1li:E NEXT 1RIP IN L.A. ,
DEAR L.A.: Your point sounds
many or· these security people.
~, while wailing in a long valid to me. Does anyone in the airline, I told the IICCUrity penon that I line industry wish to respond to this
"-'
-·"
-. 1 ·. ,___ __. wcrnan's letla? I wiU be del!ghtm
,_, a .
.w- • - " " " " '
to •go wail over ihere. •. I dicl as I to give you eql!il time.
wu told and waited anotber IS
Lonuome? Take clwge of your
minu~ Then, in the middle of the ·li/t .and runi. it around. Wrile for

mew

..

•

Landers
ANN LANDERS

Red Cross Disaster.Seroice
• fil. 00· d , ' ·'
.t eam as·sesses MeJDS

Df ~ TM Mill Umllllllan

tlllcl..aHKt....

Ann

.

On Tu Lew In E•-•

.tlrdltlon -

Pick-3: 088
Pick-4: 3106
Cards: A·H; Q-IJ;
4-D; 3-s
' ~

76ers

DEAR'SOU11IERN CITY: Scny,' criminal.
· '
1 have no magic wand handy, dear. . . Wouldn't it be limpie for airports
What you have described will to set up a separate screening IIR8 Frittub, c/o AM Lalldei-s, P.O. Box
require a lot of hard work on your for passengen with handicaps lll!d , 1,562, Chicago, IU. UJ611-Q562 . (1n •
part.
disabililies? This way ,no one would CtJNJda, StNJ $5.05 .)
---......,
Get into counseling 8nd fmd out

· NOTICE OF ELECTION

•

·

W
.
'J

Public Notice

In .... CounJv

·

J

· Ualted Preu laler-*lonal
ROSE SPaUNG: Shamed slugger Pele Rose will be released

~ear Aaa

.Spurs

Ohio Lottery

·,

defeat

BATER

from federal prison In Marlon, lll., Monday a fter serving a
five-month sentence for tax evasion. Rose, 49, was banned from
baseball in l989 following a major-league basebaiHnvestlgatlon
dlsclj)SI!Ig he bet on baseball games. Rose pleaded gutlty to two . ·
counts of fiHrig falSe Income tax' returns In 1985 and 1987, and ·
admitted to hldlne more than $354,00() In Income !tom personal
appearances, the sale of memorabllla and gambling. Included
In thattlgure was $129,000 he gotfor selUng the bat with which he
broke '1) Cobb's all-time record for hits In 1985. Rose still must
serve a 1,000-hour court-Imposed probation, working at five .
lnner:.CIIy Clnclllllatl scbools as a teacher's aide beginning Jan.
14
ii£LMET IN THE RING?:· Football great Roger Staubacb
says he Is not ready to run for public office In Texas. The former
Dallas Cowboys quarterback has been mentioned as a potential
candldateforTexasgovernor, U.S. senator, or mayorofDallas.
Speaking In Dallas Saturday, the legendary signal-caller said
he lias been busy running his commercial real estate firm since
retiring from football In 1979, and hasn't had a lot of spare time
for politics. Staubach, who says he llelleves the ghosts of slavery
and segregation remain, was recently .Involved In an
unsuccessful campaign .to e~pand minority representation on
the Dallas City Council. "I'm proud to have been Involved and
would do It agatD," he said. "I wish I had done more. "
·

Sentinel

•t

Peopk BFF
-in the news-:-....,.--Dainaged relationship needs counseling .
1brea
. k on the ifie S p(/,rt
or a com-htete
r
By

•

Da~ly

.

'

next day,
.
.
unanimous vote.
Rabbi Alan Clner of Columbus , . Levey called Aronoff " a long- .
led senators In prayer. asking time friend and political ally"
God's guidance as lawmakers- who has more energy and stam61 Democrats and 38 Republl- Ina than anyone he knows.
cans In the House and 21
"He has- the stamina and
Republicans and 12 Democrats In energy of a camel, " said Levey, •
the Senate - "determine the adding Aronoff exemplifies the
fabric of life for all the citizens of fact that legislators can debate
Ohio."
and be partisan and still do It
Ohio Chief Justice Thomas
'"with dignity and fairness to
Moyer. calling !t " historic, and
all."
.
impbrtant moment," admlnisAls o e lected unanimously In
tered the oath of office to
the Senate \Yere President Pro ·
Republican senators. and state
Tempore Richard Fliian of Cln·
Supreme Court Justice Allee
clnnatl, Assistant President Pro
Resnick swore In Democrats.
Tern Eugene Watts Of Columbus
In the House, Democrats took . and Majority Whip Roy Ray of
the oath of office from Columbl- Akron .
ana ·County Common PJeas
.The GOP leadership team was
Judge John Shivers and Republlsworn In by HamUton County
cans were sworn In by Ohio Municipal Judge Mark Palnler.
. Secretary o.f State-elect Bob • Senate Minority · Leader RoTaft.
bert Boggs of Jefferson, AssistIn their first roll call ofl991-92,
ant Minority Leader Alan Zaleski
Republican senators unanim-· of Elyria, Minority Whip Robert
ously accepted the appointment Nettle of Barberton and Assist:
of Clark County Commissioner ant Minority Wblp Jeff Johnson
Merle Kearns to replace fonner of Cleveland ~re elected unSen. David · Hobson, R: anlmously to their leadership
Springfield, whO ·wi!S elected to posts.
,
Congress.
·
The Democratic leaders took
Aronoff, nominated by Sen. the oath of office froni Ashtabula;
Barry Levey, R-Middletown, to County Common Pleas Judg!!
again preside over the upper Alfred Mackey ,
chamber, was re-elected by a

a

Snow is blamed for 4 accide_nts
Snow-covered roads c0111ribuled·
to four accidents investigated by
Pomeroy Police Monday morning.
None of the drivers were injured
nor issued citations.
1\vo-of tbe accidents occwred at
about the same lime on the road
under the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
with bolh vehicles having to be
towed from the scene. Pomeroy
police received the calls just before

Tracy, 52, will berome the
state's 12th tax commissioner,
·succeeding Joanne Umbach,
who has held the pos tfor all eight
years of Democrat Gov. Richard.
Celeste's administration.
Tracy was Franklin County
auditor from 1979 to 1984 and
county commissioner from 1985
to 1988. He alii!) served as state Sa.m.
The fiist involved a car driven by
superintendent of savings . and
loan associations and two terms
In the · Ohio House of
Representatives.
, For the last two years, he has
•worked In the Columbus law firm
of Schwartt, Keirn, Warren and
"Rubenstein, He will earn $75,000 .
annually as state , tax
commissioner.

'

Paul Morehead, Jr., Gallipolis. His
1979 Ford slid off the .road and was
hangin$ on a retaining walt There
was mmor damage to the car although a wrecker was required to ·
pull the vehicle off the wall and
back onto the road . .
The second car, a 1977. To,yota
driven by Joe EdwBrds of Cheshire,
slide on .the snowy road. over a
three foot wall and landed on its
top. There was heavy damage to the
roof and side o( the vehicle.
.
Tel~phone poles were clipped off

in the other two accidents mvestigated by Pomeroy police Monday.
At 9:33 a.m. near' the intersection
of Butternut and Brick, Brenda
Darst · of Pomeroy struck a pole
causing front end damage to her
1985 Buick. Ben Ewing, Pome~.
slid backwards into a pole in h1s
1978 Chevrolet There was no
damage to his vehicle.
·
Middleport police reporlied thai.
despite the slick roads lhere were
,.
no acciden~ in the villag~.

Wray, .5. who has served as
Ucklng Count)\ engineer since
1981, said he was fiattered that
Volnovteh picked him over several other "fine people'' under
consideration. .
The transportation depart-·
ment !las' about 7,800 employees
and an annual budget of nearly
$1.5 billion. Wray said he hopes ' ·
the .department can take care of
needs bef9re they become
problems.
.
"When a transportation system Is working well, we'd like for
It not to be noticed," Wray said,
concedllll that II unlikely when
orange ~rela go back up for the.
resumption of cons tructlon and
repair projects In the spring.
He willbepatdl85,000ayearln
·hisSblpley,
new position.
~--the '
48, will IUpervile

RASH OF ACCIDENTS. SDOWcovered I'OIIdl
M-"'·•
.,...., -~-·
...,. .._ created a l'8llt o1 acddenll
State HIJbway Patrol allli the , .· 11r011nd Melil-nty. "'" a wrecker&gt; pullsa car
Buteau of Motor Vehicles. He
owned by foe~ ol Cllesbln back 01110 '
Will be paid

m.ooo annually.

'"

tile J"CCICL Tile ftllde slid on tile 110WJ nacl andel'illltb die Pumeroy-~ Brldae, aad It
· weal over 1 tkee foot wallud landed on IIIIDp•
Tbe driver not lnJIU'ed but tben '11'81 men.
tlve dam11e to die velllele.

·--

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