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Sentinel

Ohio

Community calendar
Coaaualty C1lead1r Item's
1ppear two days llelore u eveat
ud tile day ol t1111 neal. ltems
mlllt be received weD Ia ldl'UCe
to - r t pobllaldoa Ia tbe cal·
eacllr.
FRIDAY
SYRACUSE. The Meigs County Holiness Assoc;iation .annqal
sg;~ng in . door camp m
. eeting
t Ol!gh Sunday at the Syracuse .
Cbllldl of the Nazarene at 7 p.m.
nightly and 6 p.m on Sunday. Special millie and speaker with Rev.
"1111111 and Mary !(ay Mann. Public
invited.
·
· ·

:

\

.

..'

.

REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
High School Cheerleaders are
sponsoring their annual cheerlcading clinic for anypne in grades K-6
on Saturday beginning at 9 a.m.
Registration is $5 per participant.
Contact Debbie Brooks at 985 ·
4152 after4 p.m.
· POMEROY· A men's independent basketball tournament will be
held Saturday, Sunday and Murch
24 at Meigs High School. Cost is
$90 per team, 10 team maximum.
Contact Zan~ Beegle at 992-6626
or 247-4455 for funher inform&amp;·
lion.

HOBSON· Hobson Church of
MIDDLEPORT • The Meigs
Christ •.nd Christian Union will County Retired Teachers Associa·
hold n;Yival tJu:ou&amp;h Saturday at 7 tion will meet SaiUrday at 12:30
p.m. ni&amp;btly With No~an ,Taylor. p.m. at the· Middleport American
. ~ev: Theron Durham mvttes the • Legion Hall . Contact Mary E.
pub6c.
Chapman at 992-3887 for a reserROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
Springs Gral!ge Hall wiD meet Friday at 7:30p.m. I! the grange hall.

Sunda_,

Ylltion.

the Racine Kinclerpncn building.
Bring birth certifitate copy. Sipup fee is $12.50 fot boys and $7 .SO
for girls.

·Happy .

TIJPPERS PLAINS · There will
be a bake sale on Satutday at the
Tuppers PlaiDs General Store at 10
a.m. sponsored by the Eastern
SALEM CENTER · The Star
Women's Softball team. ·
Grange will hold fun night on Salurday .at 6:30 p.m. with a potluck
· SYRACUSE • Sign up for sum· supper 'followed. by aames. wmer bill tealns in Syracuse will be green. All members and potential ·
held Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon members are in'\'ited to attend.
at Syracuse Elementary.
·
SYRACUSE - Summer ball '
POMEROY · Pom ~roy Youth sign-up will be ~eld in Syracuse on
League will have summer ball Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon and
sign-up for llirls anil boys on Satur· Tuesday from S· 7 p.m. at Syracuse
day from 10 a.m. io 2 p.m. and on . Elementary. Binh certifteate copies
Monday from 6-8 p.m. Bring a must be piovided.
·
birth certificate copy. '
,
SUNDAY
RACINE - Sign-up for Racine
POMEROY ·· There will be a
Youth League and Pony League closed 12-step meeting on Sunday
will be Saturday from 10 a.m, to at JTPA offtce in Pomeroy at 7
noon and Tuesday,
from 6-8 p.m. at p.m.
.

Patrick't
· Day
March 17

••

\...

.

I:.OTTRIDGE · The Louridge
'Conimunity Center will host a chili
1upper on Saturday from 4-8 p.m.
COlt is $3.75 for ldults and Sl.SO
for cbllc!Rn under 12. Public is
invilal.
POMEROY • "Golden Fish"
and "Hamer and the W~eky Donut
Machine" will be shown at the
Meigs County Public Library on
Slllllday 11 2 p.m. AU ares children
are invited to altend. ·

RACINE • Soup Supper, Satur·
day, at S p.m. at the Sutton United
Methodist Church. Two kinds of
IIOUP; pies, cOffee, tea and soda will
beaerved• .
IO!NDERSON · The Gallia
Twlrlera Western Square Dance
Club will bOld a dance Saturday
fralll 8·1 I' p.m. 11 the Henderson
eo-nUDity Center. Caller will be
Hamer Mapel. Open to all western Style aq~~~R dancers.
MIDDLEPORT·· The Middle·

~

Pan ~011111 Leuue sign-up day will
~ be held Sllllnfa~ from 9 •·'!'· to
t IIOCJIL An'/ new pllyer must bring a

•,

Sporta.--·--"-•·~-C-t -8

13 SOC1iona, 120 Pogoa
A MultiiMdlo Inc. Nowopop.,

POMEROY • Meigs County
Common Pleas Court I udge Fred
W. Crow ordered the Meigs Boat:d
of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities.to supply
needed services to its siudents and
adult clients • w!Jatever the oosi- at
a hearing .on Friday afternoon.
The hearing was held following
Crow's execution on Marth 8 of a
tem~rary restraining order. That
?.r;:;~g~ff~epropoMRDsedD laboardyoff .
11 -·.of ~h~mC~':!rdcites three failed
levies. in 18 m
. onths for financial
difficulties leading up to the
c:.anned layoffs, which were to

.

TEAM'S RETURN - University of Rio
GtiDde men's ltuketlaall coaeb John LawbOI,'JI,
In rorearound at rllbt, comp~menta Rio Grande
students, racully imd statr r11r a "class act" In
afl'anJIIDI !I celebtadon for tile Reclmen on tllelr
, return from tile NAJA National Tournament In

•,

UP
TO
'.

·oF FURNITURE AND .FURNITURE-RELATED .ITEMS!!!.
'

'

TERM
a• • 0111iilll Cotm • COIIOUA

• SAIIDEI • CARLYLE ·
.

No

••a tpring and hard-od frome.

NOT 1299.97
SUNDAY ONLY

S9997

NOW, ONE

,
II' 0 ...
-

997 '
'

(Otlllr U!IIPI ....$100.00 for
S50.00 - 1150.00 Limps for
175.00)

NOON 'nL 10 PM
SECTIONAL
Loo10 pMiow boCk with bleck end oliver

cover. 3 piece in tho ultlmotoln contempo·
rary.
,

$99997
SUNDAY O*Y

lOT $1999.95 .

$44997 .
SUNDAY ONLY

NOT lnt.95

NOT.S2H.95 tulloo• trom

SUNDAY ONLY

S14997

.

124.95 I'ICTUIES

FLEISTEEL SOFA &amp; CHAIR

su•n · o~aY ·$ 997

.....
.
. $29997
SUNDAY ONLY
.

97
IJUI PIC1UIIS S
IJ9t.95 PICIUIIS-

...utllut ,...,.., HI•

FW SIT NOT $1399.95 SET

lnakldlng fllundollon
Modfl"''ond

$59995
SUNDAY ONlY

liT

....AY

.

.... HI

Din- .._. ••

NOT

'" lllgo. tilt awtvll
""""nd t.,. WOGCI

11JH.t~ ~= ::~

Firm quHted mottr111 •d foundlllcna

...,.,52999 7

~

'

UVING lOOM SIITE

=

lOTH

PIE~~DA\' ONLY $199 95

GLASS TOP DINmt

Clear glan top table, " ' - flnllh chal,. with

NOT 1599,95

navy

biUJ velvet.

SUNDAY ONlY ~29997 SET

NOT IIJH.95

SIIIIIU ONLY

IASSm liNG SlliiiDIOOM SUm

~NIAYOilY$143997

THE
LAST 10
HOlliS
SUNDAYO

.842 2ND AVENUE
DOWNTOWN

SWIVEL ROCIERS
(VELVET)

Medium lllue cov•.
lloob tmd IWivlil.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

' SUNDAY ONLY

$6997 ,

· VISA

..
I

PHONE
446-1405

--

,__

a

.

00~~1

The company also showed that
Picarella violated the injunction
Feb. 25 when he used a weapon to
. fire a projectile through the front door of .the home of an employee
currently working at RAC, the ·
release said. Piciii'Clla was apprehended immediately following the
incident by two Jackson County
deputy sheriffs, according to the
release.
The relw did not state if •any
action was liken by the court.
In a related story, RAC stated
that they bad filed a new charge of
unfair labor practicies with the
National Labor Relations Board
based on incidents involving
·Picarella.
Because Picarella was an·
appointed officer of the union (and
a picket captain), RAC asked the
NLRB to seek injunctive relief to
prevent the union from committing
further violations of federal labor
laws; the release said.
More than 1,700 members of.the
United Steelworkers Local S668
the event were (from left): Gallipolis City Audl·
NEW FIRE ENGINE- The GalllpoUs Vol·
who worked at RAC have been off . unteer
tor
Debbie Hughes, GaUipolls City CommissionFire Department recently received a new
their jobs since Oct. 31, 1990.
er
Louis
Pasquale, Assistant Fire Chief Silas
nre enJIIne, valued at more than $139,000. The
Ravenswood Aluminum Corpora·
Hamilton, Fire Cbler Illy Busll, 1nd City Man·
1990 Ford truck wiD temporarily repla(e a 1954
tion, bllsed in Ravenswood, has a
ager Dale lman. (T·S photo by,Mellada Powers)
model
that
has
been
out
ot
service.
On
band
ror
reduction and fabrication plari( in
that city with the annual caplicity to
produce 360 miUion pounds of ~ri­
mary aluminum and 600 millton·
pounds of fabricated producL
The other ·inSiihttions funded are
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande versity of Rio Grande, through the
community
college.
Owens
Technical College-South,
Community Colleg·e has been
The
regents
said
that
in
addition
Findhiy
, $50,0.00; Washington
awarded $140,000 in capital approto
each
instiruUon
receiving
a
s~are
Stare
Community
College, Marietpriations from the Ohio Board of
of
the
appropriation,
the
institution
ta,
$226
,500;
and
Youngstown
Regents for the construction of a
must
match
the
state
award.
.
State
University,
$83,500.
child-care facility , the 'regents
By United Press Iatemadonal
announced Saturday.
·
Rain is expected to gradually
spread over Ohio Sunday into Sun- . RGCC w~ one of ~our institu·
day nighL
•
ttons to .recetve fui)dmg fo~ the
High pressure was still in con- construcuon of a day-care facthty.
POMEROY · A Reedsville County Prosecuting Attorney
trol of Ohio's weather-ly Satur· · The four were cho!IC!' from a field man entered a guiltr plea to a Steven L. Story, is often referred to ·
day morning, with cl- sides the of 14 r~uests totalltng more _than reduced charge on Fnday for his as the "imperfect self-defense".
rule over the majority of the state. $1.6 mtDIOn, more than tJutA: ~~!Des role in the October, 1990 death of Story stated in. coun that he was
Early morning temperatures were the. amount of the appropnat1on, his next-door neighbor, Edmund willin$ to go along with the plea
in the middle to upper 20s.
, wh1ch totalled $500,000:
bargatn agreement because he
Shamp•
·
A storm system organizing over
A ~anel .of c~pertl m the conJohn M. Causey, S6, pled guilty believed that C.usey WIS attemptthe Southwest will move east and strucuon, ltcensmg and manage· to a charge of voluntary ing to protect himself and his sill
spread moisture northward from ment of day-care centers was con· manslaughter before Meigs County :ttM old grandcbUd, who. was in the
the Gulf Coast. Hence, clouds will vened to eva!~ the~ and Common Pleas Court Judge Fred room at !lie time of the shootina.
increase over the southwest third of develop fun!llng recom~D!'s. W. Crow III on Friday. He' was
'In addition, family members of
· Ohio Sabtrday night and llllltewide
The cap1tal budset btU wh1ch indicted in late 1990 on a charge of the victim, namely his widow, his
on Sunday.
establl~ed th~ !'flgher Edu~at!on murder, after Shamp was shot in mother and his brother, were in the
·Rain Is ex~ted to· develop in Day Care Facthty 1J!propnauo.n the face with a .20 gauge sho'IWI courtroom on Friday ancl voiced
southwest Ohto by midday Sunday ~.B. 808: 1990) !CCI~ that 1":1" · at Causey's residence following an their approval of the pies barsain
'ancl spread over all but the eastern only be gtven ~ !~!~Ututtons With· apparent domesdc dispute.
agreement.
third of the state by Sunday night. .~ut day-care factli~~· tu;td to pro·
Causey, who hid origiDally pled
That agreement includes a senRain will spread over the remain· JCCts where the fll:il~ty wiD be used not guilty to murder, was tepi eaent- tence to the SEPI'A Center in Nelder of the state Sunday night and . as a classroom 11'111111!g lab.for day· ed in court on Friday by Meigs sonville for a period of 5-25 years
perlisttlllewide into Monday.
care preschool centficatton pro- County Public Defender Charles H. and ~ ourt costa. Judae Crow did
Saturday night will range from grams.
.
.
not sen~q~ee C.uaey on Friday, actthe middle 20s over pans of eastern
An associate degree pro~ m Kni~untary manslaufhter is an ling the sen~encing instead for
Ohio to near 40 in the extreme preschool and day-care educauon aggravated felony o the first April26.
southwest.
was ·established last fall at the Uni· degree, and accordina to Meigs

ca'usey pleads guilty

No•olglc deltl king alzo bod. 2 night tables,
ormolre chill, dN-r with wing mirror,

.

"

Cabin shot acrossfirom.· RA.C

1

forecast

$69997

EMPIRE
.FURNITURE .COMPA.N¥

c-mA:rv ONlY $79997

Sot. end Chair. Mauv• Color.

4 colora of 2 plec:o -tlonolo with
reclining ends. ,

'

CONTEMPORARY DINING lOOM
Oek :.'\':;..;'"oi.!r':":..:,::~ro.IMito.
NOT S149US

97

.

.based on evide~ ' tBAA~ie ,
Good, 9f MiU!YOO
•Va~·. and
James Picarella of RiP.Iey, W.Va;
had vi&lt;1~ .die coul1s injupctipn
orders on 0Cc.' 7, 1990and,Feb. 8
was presented to the court.

'-&lt;
,
MRDD
the
_ Th~ comvany presen!ed evt-_ ' MeigsCounty .Cciiunisitio'itera; the
~~C.e to tl!e, .~.Q!.i~Ol,tng that
·""""·vldlited the
rob. 10 by
a~ng at the plant's closed constr11ction gpte and bY. using it
weapon to lire prc!jectile at RAC
employees who were driving south

.Rain in Ohio

SECnONIL WnNCUNIH

·

IIIIGSIU MAmiSS SIT

$149"7
:r
.

$19997
sutton Dill'

SI.-AY OlllY
DINETTE &amp; 4 ""AIRS

RavepswoOd Aluminum Co~
tion recently petitioJI~ West Viiginia Circuit Court to hold two
members. of tile sleelwoikers '
uni~n' i!l Oooten\p\,lic:Cording·fu .a .
company news releaSe.
·

·"&lt;••n
'"'•'-'L"""'SiiC.{r ;-apeution
'·
,
There-·

ranging from administrative staff

Meigs MRDD board, the St~te Superintendent Lee Wedemeyer
Department of Mental Rewdauon had discusse~ pendin~ cuts w_ith
and its director, and Judge Crow her on numerous occastons, staUng
signed the TRO preventing the lay· that cuts in any .department would
offs.
·
be harmful.
The complaint, sworn to by .
Eblin stressed the community
MRDD employee Melva Eblin, placement program for adults,
alleges that the layoffs and subsc· wherein clienta are placed in jobs
quent service reductions would outside of the MRDD's sheltered
cause "irreparable and immediate workshop. ·
harm and injury" to those served by
According to Eblin, . thos.e
the program.
. clients employed through this ~
Eblin, several other MRDD gram have been forced to resign
employees (all of whom would their positions due to the MRDD
have been laid off had J,udge Crow board•s inability to pay job coachCs
not siJ:'.,';d the TRO), MRDD · and suppon staff. Many of those
Board
ident John Lentes _(him· Meigs IndustrieS"Clients arc now
self an attorney): Joan Cottnll, an back to work in the workshi!R,
adult ,MRDD chent, parent~ and . According to Eblin, this has affectguardta~s of ~tudents and chents, · ed their self-esteem and disrupted
and a fmanctal offtcer from the the work environmenl at the workState MRJ?D Board all took the shop.
.
stand 0!1 Friday.
· .
· .
Jerry lies, a physical education
Ebhn, an employee of t~e teacher ai the school age Carleton
MRDp board for 9 ~ gave an School program. Betty Smith, a
o_v~tew of .the l'fllagllll ~: ~PD- • .,wo,uhop specialist, and Sue Kibstuo~, dclailtnB ibe·ilirCo ·teVeJs.of ble, 11 jOb coach, gave similar ~ti­
servtce ·pre-school, achool I&amp;C,!I'I 'mony to the effect the layqffs
. adult, According to I;b1!n, MRuD
, (See MIWD, pap A1)

Regents partly fund RG day-care unit

QUIEIII SIZE MlniESS sn

' ,,,.7 ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$699
. . -·

OlllY

$2 4997

Quilted mottrMI with motchlng toundlllon.
Modlum Firm,

S59997For loth

.,.,,.._.,

WINGBACK CHAIRS
SUNDAY ONLY ,

.

SLEEP SOFA/UTCHING QIAII
Blue _,ftay .....,... m . .hlftg 10f8 ll'ld ohM.
lm-lnt q...., ...,.,.,,

Dark brown velvet with OuiMrt Ann
lege in cherry.
NOT 1349.95

tronwWNDAY ONLY

S19997

d,riWIII

SITS
• AniiSS
.

·Dro-r with wldo tromo mirror, 4 dr-•
chit, full or qu10n aizo panel h.,dboord with

14

$119997 loth Po.
SUNDAY ONLY

NOJ '1611.00

I I - cushion pillow top bock aupportor. Tho ultimate ,
In _,. comfort ond support.
·
·

, · "JIMSON" 5 PIECE COLONIAL
IIHOOM SUm - -·

119,95 PICTUIES

lofo ond Mllahlnt choir. Colonlll IIYio with
.
Jpoonlbeigo/ruot plold pallom. ,

NOT '"" 95

$6997 .

UP TO 720fo OFF

. SWIVEL ROUERS

faL Sill '

SPRING AIR MATTRESS SET

SUNDAY ONLY

Wood Fromolwlnl lloctc.n, 3 colore ,

VANITY IENcH

CORNER HUTCH

Rualic bunk bedo Including buill on ladder.
Wood oido rollo built to U!kethe puniohmnt.

Sundloy, Moroh 17th, 1111 ond contlnuu for
10houraonlycomlngtoodouot10p.m,Sun·
dly night. This to • dl-111 ond 111 purchoud
ltoma muot lie orrongod for dollvory lnvnodill·
tolyll PurPC&gt;oo oHhta utolsto bolonco inventory
ond lncr- cooh flow. This firm is not going
out of bualnou.

Ook llnllh vonlty ond _ , , . bench, mirror

Olk tlnllh. 2 gl- doors top; 2 - · on bot111m.

BUNK BEDS

be

~of::IMpu,.bllc or .. to 72d%flo1frn Nollcoll
1111• 11 II . . n11 ol•v of uld
·--·
I I
lllo wll com-nee 11 12 o'clock high noon,

,... · 'l'he

PORTLAND • Deputies of the wall and damaged the inside wall
Meigs County Sheriff's Dcpan- and cabinets. The cord to a cloc;k
ment are investigating a report of a was cut by a ~ullet and the cloc:k
'shooting incident that allegedly stopped at8:SO'p.m.
.
occurred Monday ·evening across . A neighbor reported to deputies
:from ibe Ravenswood Aluminum that he heard shotS around 9 p.m.
Plant. ,
b~t heard no ~i':le. A spc:nt carThe report stated thai 011 Tues- tndge was fouollm the driveway
: day morning the department was andanother.alongtherosdway.
ootilied ~ a cabin along the Ohio . The owner advised that the last
River on Route 338 across from the• person left the cabin around 6 p.m.
p)ant had been shot up with what is on the day of the YIIDdalism. ' ·
·believed to have been an automatic
· Sheriff Soulslly advised that the
weapon . Tile' cabin is owned by information concerning this inci. Roger Keller, Route 7, Pomeroy.
dent was furnished to the Federal
Deputies report that the bullets Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The
appeared to have been full-jacketed . investigtition is continuing.
b,!91eis th" penetrated the outer

lAST AND FINAL DAY SUNDAY!

'

......~~~... THE LAST STATEMENT
LAMPS .
AR goods now w.,.houlld or dlapllyod cturnl·
•19. 911 LAMPS....
tu,.
Md turnlturo Nlotod Items I will
ottorod
'29.911 LAMPS.. ..
038 I&amp;' rsMPS
•
....

•••

Poachued nemo m'uot be paid for lfy cash, peroonol
chock, Yl•. Moot.Cord, or ICCIPI•bl• credit ""pllcotlon. FrM dolivery ond 8 montho umo oa colhllnlflclng
ovolllblo. No quontlty guoront- oxcopt for ono odvorlilld Item. Ev.ythlng lo offered on-o llrot come. llrot
od beals. FurnltuN ond lurniiiiJO rototill ltoma,

...anT • PLIXiliEi; •
&amp;II •
•
1111. . . • -IIIIL • UIIGII • .GUilD • 'ILACISIIIIH

·RECLINERS In cloth.

,

~AV)!~SWOQP-

,..,

Tufte~ bod&amp; rocll-. 3 colora

f.!

Kan111 City, Mo., Friday nl&amp;hl. Members or the
. team and tbe coaclling staff are seen in the back·
ground. The Redmen, c1!11111plons or District 22,
advanced to the second round· or the nationals
before belna eliminated Thursday. Additional
photos are on A-3.

·~RAC asks court to hold
ande~oo:i!~e~~~=:y~
·uswA members in contempt ·.·:~iiOr:~i.ao~~:
~ts~= ~ainst
.

. SlaP •

By QRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel Starr
.
'

I

PURCHASES MUST BE PAID FOR BY CASH, PEISOf4AL CHECKS, VISA, MASTERCARD
AND/OR ACCEPTAILE CREDR .
'
APPUCAnONS - ARIANG.MiNIS FOI DELIVERY OR PICKUP OF PURCHASES MUSt BE MADE AS SOON AS POSSiiLE

HOUR
· SALE

.

'

AVAIL~BL£

cop)' oldleir llirib certifiCate.

MIDDLEPORT · A pancake
brlltfeal will be held Saturday
aoonlll
the American
!Ill
Foanh
Street in
AJijl«eodl from the
II
f,OIOI•d the Meigs
~ Solp Bolt Derby Assoeia·
lion. '
'

Mosdy cloudy. Cllance of rain
60 percenL

Mlddl..,ort-Pomeroy--Gidllpolls-Polnt Plnunt, March 17, 1991

6 MONTH
FINANCING

'

· MID~RT · Wyan .Brown
:or t&amp;e"Kenneth Hagin Crusades
:will conduct speeial services Satur·
day at7 p.m. and Sunday atlO a.m.
at the Rejoicing Life Church in
Middleport. Call 992-6249 for
. men information. Pastor Michael
· l'lnliO invites the public.

---o....

Edllorl.t- - " - ---,A-2
F.arm--..
D· l -8

clients, judge says

• NO LAY-A-WAYS
*FREE DEUVERY

·

'

No·. e

UNPRECEDENTED-.

.•JICfJ Plaine VFW Post 9053 and

• t

Claaollleda..-"---D·l-1
DeathL-- - -- A·S

· Weallltr- - ..--..- ... A.&amp;
'

All MERCHANDISE.IN WAREHOUSE AND/OR ON
DISPLAY WILL BE PLACED ONTO THE PUBLIC
MARKET FOR RELEASE DURING THIS ....

ruPI'BRS PLAINS - The Tup·

'

----- D-1

MRDD.must serve

w·

'

BUll--

--------------------------

Run.AND ' The youth group
of t1Je Rutland Church of God will
hold a c:arwash on Saturday from 9
a.m. tci· 3 p.m. at Pleaser's in
·. Pomeroy~ QJI Jane Barber at 742.2060 for infcirmllion.
.. .CHESHIRE • The Cheer
,Olympics will be held Saturday at
It Kyger Creek High
.
Olmpeliton will feature 11
·elementary cblerleadinl squads.
. :AWIIdljiUeilted in cheer, dante,
'lqlirillllld IJIIId champion and all
.sw f!beerleader squad. Public
·invilal.

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Nature trail built at Camp Kiasbuta by Ohio

Copyrighted 1H1

dmlle1 at the Wilkes Grange Hall 0
on Sllurdiy ffum 4-7 p.m. Cost is
$5 lOt ldults ·and $2 for children
under ll. All proc;eeds will go
toward the renovation of the
Wilkes Orange Hall.

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AloD&amp; lbe rlver- - -8-1-8

Comlcs-- - - - -1-11

Civilian Conservation Corps • B-1

Vol.~

S.,_TVRDA'f .

· ,Au~H~ will have a round and
jlci.UIIe dance on Saturday from 8. " ;t l !30 p.m .. featuring the Alvin
t'
',Scbults Band. Babd goods' wiD be
Jsold and refreshments will be avail·
•· 'ablo. Admilsion is $2.50 for adults
.and Sl f« children under 12. Pro·
· coeds benefit building fund.

Inside

INVESTED PARTIES GIVE FINAL ORDERS•••.IT'S ALL ·

w.1LKESV~ • SJIIOJl&amp;Sbord

/1

29th annual Spring Coin show Sunday,
March 24, at Holiday Inn, Gallipolis • B-3

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MIDDLEPORT • The Return
JOIIIIhan Meigs Cbaptrr, Daughters
of the American Reyolution will
celebrate ,its &lt;;:harlu Day luncheon
on Friday at 12:30 p.m. at Overbrook Center in Middlepon. DAR
. Good Citizens Wi{lnet ·and the
Ameriean History Essay Winners
',Viii be llonored.

LONG BOTTOM • The F11ith
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will hold special singing and
preaching with the Dailey Family
on Friday at 7 p.m . Rev. Steve
Reed invites the public.

NCAA tourney resumes today- C-1

St.

.

TUPPERS PLAINS • There will
be a rOulld and square dance Friday
from 8·11:30 p.m. 'at the Tuppers
Plai~JS VFW Buildins featuring
"Fo11Jy Mountain Drifters" and
Alvin Chutes on the Iiddle Arthur
Conant will be the caller. Public
Invited.

' REEDSVILLE • There wiil be a
'i!ake sale on Friday at Reed ' s
Coonsry Store in Reedsville at ·10
l.in. sponsored by the Eastern
Women's Softball ream.

75 cents

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Commentary and perspective
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WASHINGTON. The newly .palace.and failed. AriStide ~ms'
~!s knack for blaming. at~ of
elected leader of Haili will have to determined to make sure thele uno Ham's problems on the Unned
do more than lead a wiu:h hunt for one else breathing down his neck. States has prompted some to call
his enemies if he wants to nun his
He even went so far as to fire the him ''little Caslro."lt didn't escape
country around.
upper ranks of the military and the notice of U.S. diplo':"ats that
Jean-Bertrand Aristide presides demand lhat the interim president the llrgest foreign conungent at.
over the most pitiful economy in who preceded him, Ertha Pascal Aristlde's inaugurali&lt;&gt;!' came from
the western Hemisphere. The Truillot, not leave the country, Cuba. Cuba is now pnvately offer·
diminutive fonner priest captured apparentl_y fearing she might ing to educate Aristide's political
Haiti's heart by coming from out of a&amp;scond Wid! government money.
operalives. ·
nowhere to win the nation's ftrst
Most Haitians credit Truillot
Aristide is considered unpr_e ·
free democratic elections last with holding Haiti IOgether in the dictablc and unstable. As a lefu~t
November. And he promised to turbulei;lt time leading up to the priest, he was. thrown out of h1s
ur e Haiti of all tiaces of the past election and· find il ludicrous that Roman Catholic order f~reach·
~pt dictatorships.
Aristide believes s)Je wants to ing what the church con red to
But so far Aristide has done lit· sneakoutofthecountry.
. be class warfare.
.
tie to lake advantage of his pivotal
Aristide was not the choice of
He can also be reclUSive - refus·
lace in Haitian histt.y. It appears the U.S. government.' and now the . ing 10 be'seen in public for a week
ge has little else on his mind but State Department and C~ngr~ss or more. and then suddenly emergthe elimination of his enemies and don't know what to do wath hup. mg to light !IJl a crowd. ~ ~
After years of waiti!l' and !"orldng al~o indications that he as thtn
potential enemies.
weeks before Aristide took toward a democrauc election, the skinned. He clauns 10 favor a free
of the brutal people of Ha.iti picked a raving press, but sn.aps at reporte
_ rs. and
Orfice, a "•ormer 1--d~
""""'
·
bl
secret police under dictator Jean anti-capitalist and notorious Ameri· tries to discredit thetr pu iCatlons.
Claude Duvalier tried to seize the ca-basher.

Ill Couti st., Pomeroy, Ohio
(814) IU·2158

ft8-!34~

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publlllber
· PAT WHITEHEAD
AaaiiiW.t Publlllber-ControUer

ROBART WILSON JR.

Exeeatlve Editor

.'

A MEMBER of The Ualted Pre.. Intematlonal, Inland Dally Pre., Auocla· '
tton and the- American Newspaper Pu.bUihft"l AIIOCI.ttlon.
'
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'lbf!)')' sbould be las than 300 w«dll i
IOJII. Allletttrs areaubJed: toedlttnc ud muatbeslped with nam~ addras and
telepbone ............ No unalln&lt;d ll!ttOI'II wdl be published. Letters sbould be In

ROod tute. addF•sl......... lot p.nr·"tlea. -·

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!Backstairs
at the
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Jack Anderson
AN'"
and Dale 'IT.an
rt
HU

Meimwhi!e, in spite of democra·
cy violence continUCII in the streets
or'Haiti and many of the dead bodies that tum up are consideled 10 be
innocent .vicums of an~i-Duvalier
factions. Hanging over Aristide's
bead is the trademark ~f past
Haitian dictatorS • a violent purge
.
. th
f
of their enemies 10 e name 0
eli~J!~ community is """'*eel. _If Haiu.· ever ha4 an)'
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Miami

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big money • II IS YUJg or
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and America~ bus;, interests are.
cu~~!.~by h:gr:!iicism
honesdy. He cares about the condiH ..
b t th
tions of poor alllans.. u ey
may soon resent the f~~~tf hhe
rode
offteetheir
on theil'
can'tinto
improve
qualitY of. I.if1e. e·

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.•• (](JR GOAL 15 To IMP~ TH8

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1Mf\6e oF YoUR P~T AS
hlUC H16 '~RATION ~RT
STORM' 1111PIVWD 1l\tt lM~e
· oF 1JLtt u.c;. MIUTAR'I.

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WASHINGTON
The
Persian
Gulf
War
is
over,
but the White
1
•House remains closed for the time being 10 public visiiOrs.
: The Executive Mansion was closed to tourists before the .swt of the
; war, and no da'te has been set fQr its reopening. White House press . ~re- ·
: ~ Marlin Fitzwarer said there is stiD the "threat of international terror· .
, ism.,.
·
·
: · There was some speculation that the tours would resume when Presi, dent and Mrs. Bush stage their annual Easter Monday Egg Rolj, April 1,
:on the south lawn, sure to be aaended by hundreds of children under 12
: with an adult escort.

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' President Bush is one of the few presidents in history to carry a wallet
:or even bothct to·have cash if the need arises.
·
' Press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said that Bush always carries money
:and once sent Fitzwater out to buy him some valentines for you-know::who.
· Bush displayed his wallet and credit card at a nearby Virginia school
,:recently ;when a youngster aslced him if he really was the president.

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· Maryann sievens; a staffer in the White House .VisitQrs Office, has
:written a survival .guide for parents with asthmatic childred. The paper:back book, "Breathing Easy," stems from Mrs. Stevens' own experi·
'enccs with her three asthmatic children.
.
: She has been teachi~g asthmatic control classes for the last eight years.

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: Whitt House p-ess secretary Marlin Fitzwater recalled an incident that

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Americans worried about competition

~new yice president for President Bush?

'.

Chuck Stone :

will remain indelible in his mind among his VIP ·world travels. He ' After the euphoric victory in heean still count to 10, he has duti- intelligence.
.
n;members visilinl the Vatican with George Bush and the American dele- which we have liii been wallowing, fully carried out his few assign·
In the first two years of the
E'th
ld be
"ual' ·
. 1. er one wou
an un., •·.:
gation when Bush was vic:c president ·
. Americans are now shifting spt7U· ments and he has been unimpeach· Bush administration, Quayle hasn't
yet had the opportunity 10 compile faed 1mpro~e_ment over Quayle ..
. Soon after they were ushered into the offace of Pope John Paul IT, lative concerns to more weighty ably l~yal to his president.
GeoJBe Bush understands lo al· a record of loyalty comparable to Both are ~J!ttary scholars. topFitzwater said smoke began spewing out of the recess lighting around the gossip. .
WjJI. G.eorge~Bush retain Dan ty and appreciates it more.~or - Bush's During his eight years"with ....notch..adJ_mmsttators and, best of.:walls.
.
all; very likable persons.
:
: He said he kept looking at the unperturbed cardinals wondering what Quayle as vice president? If not, eight years he labored in Reagan's Reagan. But he's working on ,it.
·
vine ards: supporting his presi·
Still, overriding all positive fac·
I thm~. however, that. Pc;&gt;well . .
· ·they would do liCit. Fitzwater swears that suddenly one of the cardinals whom he will anoint?
Right now, the odds over-. : denls Neanderthal conservatism tors in Quayle's behalf is the"V" ~as a decided ~e •.and thl~ IS not ..
lifted Ilia hand and the flan)cs died down.
.
The gesture evoked m observation from Bush's chief of staff, Craig whelmingly favor incumbent even when he knew better. The factor. The way things look right JUSt ethntc prop!f!quaty talking. He
Denny Dimwil. Not because he is Yale Pbi Beta Kappa also stoically now, George Bush CQuld pick has a more poh_ucally adept style ,_
Fuller: ''Thal'sa modem version of the burning bush."
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qualified, but because there is no suffered the foolisliness of his pres- Godzilla as ·a running .mate and and exudes a hJg~ co.mfort l~vel.
: Amllrii:an reporters have a SUlek in trade: .irreverence. And presidents compelling reason to dump the dar· ident who is living proof that a humiliate the.Democmts in 1992.
As a black man, has VIce !lfCl!lden·. .
That also means; of course, that cy wo~ld help ~he R.epubhcans ,:
uQCioubtedly would like to have more homage paid to them than they ordi· ling of the conservatives. After all, colle~e degree does not guarantee
omly receive from the press.
•
·
Bush can get away with reanoint- malce history • ht~tory from which. ~
~ . But sometimes President Busll may get the kind of royal treatment
ing Quayle. Still, gossip tantalizes, the Democrats maght never recovfrOm foreign journalisls that he cannot get from the reporters on the beat;
even when it becomes reductio ad er.
cBush recently gave f11 Interview to a group of Arab newsm~n while
absurdum. Americans are having a
Stormin' Norman has his nega- .
blsking in the atn of the l'a'sian Gulf War vieD)'.
the
odds
on
lives,
which include a temperamen-·~
field
day.
weighing
Contest Rules
"!'he P.!nialisl designated by his colleagues to ask the first question
potential Quayle replacements.
tal disinclination to suffer fools,ptetacec1 hiS Opening n:marb by telling BusTa:
Begin with a presidential recita- gladly. Yet, Schwarzkoef did not
The readers of this column are deserving a change of pace. You, Rupe tion:
• "! would like to lake the opportunity 10 thanlc you personally, the'
George Washington, Andrew reach a top rung of the malitary lad- .
Rupette, are requested to enter a contest and be eligible for one of two Jackson,
ailminiltralion and this great country and people, for what you have done. and
Ulysses S. Grant, Zachary d~r by ignoring methods of concili· · ·
I 'believe this is a historical Slllnd. And as our ambassador has said, you $50 US Savings Bonds. I am submitting a list of prominent .people in Taylor, Rutherford B. i'fafC?$. Ben- auon.
,
Meigs and Gallia Counties who have outstanding nicknames.
go into history as a great leader,and a great man...
.
jam
in
Harrison
and
Dwtght
D.
And
there
is
one
strong
reason.,
, Contest Ill: One $50 US Savings Bond wiD be awarded to the entrant Eisenhower. All of them were gen- to make a switch: If Bush does_.
who submits an entry in which be or she has identified five of these indi· erals, none of them were previously decide to stand fast with Quayle,· "
·. When he was told there was a nude beach facing the hotel where Presi- viduals
with the correct ftrSt name.
'
vice presidents, but most of them the 1996 Repliblican primaries will, ·
di:nt Bush would be meeting with French President Francois Mitterrand in
Contest
112:
The
other
$50
US
Savings
Bond
will
awarded to the were reasonably good presidents be a party-shredding donnybrook. ..
Mlrtinlq_ue, press secretary Marlin Fitzwarer quipped: "I guess I'll sltip person who identifies the largest number of individuals be
with nicknames.
me nlecbngs...
legislative achievements.
aut hack to ethnic propinquity ...
In case of a tie in either contest the Bond wiU be given to the person ' with
Following
in
their
lustrous
f&lt;?Ot·
.If the lightning of enlightenment
who 1) has the best explanatio11 as to how or why any one of these indf· steps are two of the more elt:4Rfy· somehow should strike Bush and:,
:-when Bush presented the Freedom Medal 10 former British Prime . vidwlls
received his or her nickname and 2) name of individual·in !his list ing generals in American history · he does choose PoweD, this Demo-. ..
Minister Magalet Thall:her recently, he recalled that before he decided to who does
not have a nickname.
IIQ to war in the l'lnian Gulf, she stiffened his resolve.
Colin L. Powell, ~hairman of the cmt will change his registration joint chiefs of stall'. and H. Norman assuming the Democrats don't
: In 1 tekpboRe can. she rold Bush: "This is no time to go wobbly."
NICKNAME
FIRSTNAME SURNAME
ADDRESS
Schwarzkopf, commander of nominate Virginia Gov . Doug
1. "Chink"
-----Haskins
Gallipolis
Desert Storm.
Wilder.
.
2. uweasel"
----~111
Pomeroy
3. HFrogH
-----Wayland
Middleport
4. "Moon"
-----CliHord
Gallipolis
5. "Whiskers"
-----nibble
Long Bottom
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6. "Pizzle"
-----Wolfe
Racine
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7. "Toad'··
- ---..JJrlckles
Middleport
. '
_ _ _ __....,wls
Middleport
8. "Rawdog"
'. ''
_ _ _...__,B,..astlanl
Gallipolis
9. "Panzo"
' ;
By United Press International .
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10. "Stomp-Down"
-----RusseD
Meigs County ·
: Todar is Sund8y, Malch 17, the 76th day of 1991 with 289 to follow.
11. "Turkey"
'
----Crary
· Pomeroy ·
· This IS SL Patrick's Day; .
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12.
"Rabbit"
--Craig
.
Syracuse
·
• The mom is waxing, moving toward its ftrst quarter. .
.'
13."Possum"
-----"rice ·
Rutland
'
The momiDJ Sill'S are Mertury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
14."Hog"
-'-~--~S~auvage
Pomeroy
· The evening Sill is Jupiter.
15. '"lma..
.'
-----Hogg
Mason Co.
Thole born on lhis date are under the sign of Pisces. They include Ger_....;..___,Guinther
Pomeroy
16:
"Turtle"
nilll engineer Gotdeib Daimler, inventor of the high-speed, gasoline bum·
17. "Rooster"
- - -- -Hartley
Racine
ii!J, iAtanal allllbustion engine, in 1834; children's author and ill~tor
18. "Red Dog"
-:----..Johnson
Gallipolis
Kele Greenlway in ·1846; golfer Bobby Jones in 1902; actress Mcicedes
1!1. "'lbumper"
.'
- - - -... ohnaon
Galllpolfs
McCambridrle in 1918 (age 73); jazz legend Nat "King" Cole in 1919; 20.
.'
"Light-bulb"
----""Wilson
Gallipolis
.,.aet 1 :cr Rudolf Nureyev in 1938 (age 53); actors Patrick Duffy in
21. "Country"
'
----'Caldwell
Gallipolis·
1949 (IF 42) llld Kurt Russell in 1951 (age 40) and actress Leslie-Anne
.
22.
"Monkey"
-----&lt;Box~:ster
Gallipolis
Vowa i,n 19S4 &lt;aee 37).
· 23. "Red"
----Halliday
Gallipolis
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_ __,_ _...,Buffington
Pomeroy ·
24.
"Eight·Biill"
.'
: On dlil- iR history:
25. "Skin"
'------Lehew
·
Pomeroy
'
. In 1776, the Continental Army under Gen. George Washington forced
26. "Tubby"
- - - - -·Wingett
Syracuae
\'
~ tmopiiD evacuate·BosiOO.
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• In J!HS, tilt bloody battle against Japanese forces for the Pacific island
Written entries are to be submitted by midnight, ApriiiO, 199lto The
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cl Jwo Jilllll tlllled in victory for the United States.
·
Tribune office in Gallipolis, Ohio or The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
CarryOn,
.
• In 1~, fie U.S. Navy SIICUSSfully launched Vanguard-1, a three·and·
a-llllr.,..S
Dile, iniD orbit around the earth.
FredW.Crow
: Ill im, iR - ol billory •s worst oil spins, the tanker Amoco Cadiz
, . .,aund 011 die cout of Brittany in France, eventually disgorging
111M 2:20.000 tons of crude.
(Long-lime Pomeroy Attorney Fred W. Craw; Jr ~ is a frequent
'
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coatributor or columns for publication In the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
•A
for the day. Goorge Washington, in his ftrSt annual address Readers wbbla1 to crltlda, applaud or voice u opiDIOD on uy sub·
tO Campa a prc:lidenl. said. "To be prepared for w.: is one ot the most ject • except polltla or nlllion • are Invited 'to write to Mr. Craw In
ef'n!ll .... ol JII1ICI:WII peace. ••
care of this DeWIIJIIIper.)
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•s •. a ·na
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?
What 1 10

will

Today in history

I

Berry's World ·

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WASHINGTON (UPQ - Iraq
represents perhaps the worst-case
model for the sort of threat the
United States will face in the
future, a "nightmare example'~ of
what happens with uncontrolled
weapons and technology proliferation, the Navy's top intelligence
officer says.
·
In a candid look b Congress at
a variety of global issues, provided
in public detail rarely seen from the
Pentagon, Rear Adm. Thomas
Brooks, the director of naval intelligence, said the problem of lrilq
was compounded by its abwldance
of hard currency.
It also represents in a single case
the variety of concerns U.S. officials have followed around the
world: the acquisition of incn~as ­
ingly high technology weapons by
aggressive, authoriwian states in
often unstable or volatile regions.
"Iraq today is the nightmare
example of what can happen in an
lltml)sphere of virtually uncon trolled weapons and technology
proliferation. Both East and West
have armed Baghdad to the teeth
and now have to pay the price,"
Brooks said in 100 pages of testimony prepared for a House Armed
•
Services Committee subcommittee
earlier this month.
"Where Iraqi acquisition of
weapons and technology has been
University or Rio Graade stu·
restricted by law, Baghdad has
dents, faculty aad staff, above,
gone 10 extreme and often successgreeted the Redmen basketball
ful lengths 10 obtain items illegally,
team Friday alght Ia Lyae Cen· · frequently with willing third party
ter upon tbeir retura .from the
.
accomplices," he said.
NAJA National TQura11ment In
In a report that spanned the
Kansas City, Mo. The Redmen
globe, Brooks also warned:
returaed with a 32-5 seasoa fin •.
-U.S. submarines may be
Ish after they were eliminated' in
endangered if an enemy obtains or
the second round . by Central·
Arkansas. Co-captain Gary Har·
rison, left, acknowled&amp;ed the
Jll'eetiag as the senior from Gal·
lipolis ended his colle1e playln1
career. The celebradoa was orga·
nized by members or the Lyne
Center starr and th residence life
LORAIN, Ohio (UP!) - A
program at Rio Grande.
Lorain policeman who allegedly
iold prosecutors lied in coun will
be suspended for 30 days witho!lt
pay through March 26. costing him
an estimated $1,800 in sqlary.
Lorain Safety Director Wanda
Tully said she has. decided 10 suspend Detective G. Michael Schrull
for 30 dars. retroactive to Feb. 23,
for violaung department rules.
He can appeal the suspension.
marketerS, for example, vehement- . autos actually prop up industries
The allegations stem from an
ly oppose the notion. And some that have lost world-class competi· April 3, 1990, incident in which
analysts believe WashingiOn ough,t tiveness rather than promoting Schrull, a narcotics detective, and
to be less concerned about saving industries of the furure.
Elyria Detective Scott Sargent
industries and more focused on
"What has elllCI'ged," said Day, stopped a car belonging to David
boosting the productive abilities of "is a hodgepodge of 'confusion and Lee, 29, of Lorain.
U.S. worlcers.
indifferednce. Thde o~ly wathy w~.~ilhl · Sargent. according 10 court tran·
Others believe the United States bring or er an c1anty 10 e r - · scripts testified he had a valid
already has such a policy, but that work mess of rules and regulations · search :.Varrant when he searched
it is backwards- that current trade is with .a carefully c~ natio~ the car and found two pounds of
.quotas protecting steel, textiles and expresston of mdustrial purpose.
cocaine valued at $35,1XJ!&gt;. Schrull
·
backed Sargent's testimony m

Officer suspended
for not disclosing
truth in court

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· Speakin1.of books, a new photo-essar book tided ''George Bush: His
-:World W11 U Years," wiD be publishe(t tn the late spring.
: ·The book contains narrative and over 300 photographs, charts and
maps~ ·showing Bush, who was a naval aviator with the U.S. Pacific
P'leet's Fast Clrriei' Force. .
.
·
. The Pictorial Histories Publishing Co. says the Bush war action photOsraP'W have never been published before.

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UPI White House Reporter

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ByHELENTHO~

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~-----Wekomehome----~~

March 17, 1881" ;

New Haitian leader m~y be more of the same

A Division ol

(814)

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811 Third Ave., Galllpolll, Ohio

Paa•

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CLEVELAND (UP!) - Even
after spending much of the last
decade sculpting leaner and meaner
companies, many managers of
American industry remain worried
about U.S. competitiveness.
The managers' concerns are
triggering renewed debate about
the need' for a national industrial
policy on the order of Japan •s
famed Ministry of International
Tmde and Industry.
.

su;~ :s;:.~;;·i:~~~ ~~~u:~:~~~-~Universi·ty

chooses those industnes 11 feels are
vital to the country's economic
future and then supports them
through persuasion, capitalization
and legislation.
The idr;a of an industrial policy .
is not a new one- Alexander
Hamilton proposed the notion 200
y~ago.
.
Industry Week magazine Editor
Chuck Day said that wl)ile such a
Jlolicy may not' exist on vaper, one
does indeed exist. and it ts an inept
policy.
·•
"It is quite evident in the laws
passed by Congress and state legis·
latures in mandates promulgated
and implemented by regulators, in
programs drafted and debated by
administrations and political parties, and in demands pressed by
interest groups," Day said. The
magazine examines the topic in
Monday's issue.
Nevertheless. the debate persists
about the wisdom and very existence of an industrial policy. Free-

(U8PIIH.l
Published each Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
l9:htng CompanytMultlmedla, Inc. Second clau postage paid at Galllpolla,
Ohio 45631. Entered as second clus
matuna matter·at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post
Office.

·

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Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio New..,.per Alloclatlon, Nallonal
Advertilblg Representative, Branham
Newspaper Safes, 133 Third Avenue,
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develops I~arm
~ertJIJzer
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. DAYTON, Ohio (UP!)- Uni- have left is a litUe plasticsh.ell with
versiry of Dayton researchers say nothing in it. And the shell is
they've developed a time-rel~e degraded in a matter of months,"
fertilizer that is safer for the envt· he said. .
ronment, provides better growth
The coating was tested successthan current products and makes fully by O.M. S~ott &amp; Sons, a
fertilizing the lawn a once-a-year major fertilizer company headquarjob.
.,
tered in Marysville. Scott has an
"The big advantage is that it's option to obtain rights to the tech·
tailored to the growing season, so nology·,·
you only need a single applica~cott prov.ided $56,000 for
tion," said Richard Chartoff, pro- research and testing, and another
fessor of materials engineering at . $50,000 came from the state of
the University of Dayton and Ohio's Edison Seed Development
senior research engineer at the Uni· Fund.
·
versity of Dayton Research InstiAfaonomists tested the coating
tute.
by Jl acing measured amounts of
Chartoff tea the research team · .fertilizer iniO flowerpots conla.ining
that developed the fertilizer.
grass. They added ftxed amounts of .
"You can tailor it to the crop water at given time periods then
you're growing so that it releases clipped the grass as it grew and
the nutrient at the rate at which the weighed it.
·
plant can use it," he said. "It not
"Ours grew uniformly, and the
only provides optimum growth but · growth continued over a long time
also reduces the amount of runoff period," said Chartoff. "And the
into the soil so lhat it minimizes the color was excellent. It was nice and
amount of nitrogen that leaches green over the entire time period.
into the water table."
The thing that happens with fertil·
To make the polymer (plastic) izer is that if you get 100 much or
coating. the researchers developed 100 little, the grass turns yeDow a process that involves covering it doesn't look good.
urea fertilizer granules with a liq•
High costs may limit the marl&lt;et
uid and then spraying them with a for such a product to lawns, said
gas that iristantancously turns the Chartoff. But the sohool is developliquid into a plastic.
ing new technologies that one day
, This plast_ic "all.ows t.i~e - "could make it cheaper, and this
release diffusuln of the fertihzer could easily be carried over to the
out of the sheD," Chartoff said.
farm market for agricultural pur·
"When it's all done, what you poses," he said ·

builds new electric torpedoes Such
as the French MURENE. The
widespread use of wake-homing
torpedoes ''could create a si~i fi·
cant threat" to U.S. surface shtps.
-"There is convincin~ evidence that Libya is continumg its
chemical weapons program and
may have begul\ construction of a
second chemical warfare agent pro·
duction plant in addition to the one
operating at ~bta. "
· :-syria, a partner .in the coali·
tion to defeat Iraq, has "an offensive (biological warfare) capabili·
.ty" and five other nations have
programs in varying stages of
development
-Another war between India
and Pakistan "could involve the
use of nuclear or chemical
weapons."
-Moscow has abandoned try·
ing to put an attack aircraft on its
new aircraft Cartier, which was
commissioned in January, but is
soon e~pected 10 deploy the Su-27
Flanker, the most maneuverable
fighter jet in the world, on the carrier Kuznetsov . .Its role appears to
be largely for national air defense.
It wiU carry far fewer planes than
U.S. carriers, just 20 to 24 compared to the 70-80 for U.S. carriers.
-Like the United States, the
Soviet Union is scaling back its
navy, and it is cutting back on non·
essential at-sea time. Cutting. operations, he said, eases the strain on
repair facilities ami increase the
number.of ships .available for short·
notice use, but less time at SCI\ will
mean lower crew prOficiency.
.-()lobal arms proliferation ·has
made the Navy's job more difficulL
Soviet surface-to-air missiles are
widely sold in the Third World,
with the SA-8 the most popular
model. It is owned by no less than
36 countries, including IraQ. It can
travel over 6 miles, go a high as 39,
()()() feet and hit twice the speed of
sound. ·
-The end of the Cold War will
spill more weaponry into the Third
World.
-A strilce by a key labor sector
in the Soviet Union, like oil fields,
mines or rail~ds, could spark an
economic collapse resulting in
massive civil unrest the govern·
ment could not easily crush.
On problems in the Soviet
Union, Brooks said that if the cen·
tta1 government were to fall and no
other coherent, strong central gov·
ernrnent were to talc!: over. political
and economic power would proba·
bly fragment. as republics, regions

and even cthes seceded from the •
union. He forecast lhat armed con· : ,1
flict could erupt in places.
:•
•' When all the snloke cleared, a •:
core of the Slavic lands, plus some : ·
of the central Asian republics , ,;
would probably coalesce ·into a : :
11ew union with a weakened cenaal ::
government" and some vestige of ••
the government would retain :;
responsibility for national security; ~ 1
he said, still holding on to a nuclear lj
arsenal capable of destroying the ::
We§t and with the larges.t standing ;1
army in Europe and the world' s ' '
second most capable navy.
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SENIOR
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DISCOU T

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BUICK•PONTIAC
1911 EASTERN AVENUE , .
GALI.IPOLIS, OH. . · .,,
Senice Dept.: 16141 446-2332 :.:

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PICKUP AND DELIVERY AVAILABLE
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For more information...:. and answers to all yot.;
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Thle certlflcete of depoelt h.. e floor rete of 8.11% end require• e minimum dePGIIt of $600.00. There i1 e subltllntiel interelt penelty for eerly withdrawer.

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later told prosecutors they bed 10
court, a report su~mitte_d to .a
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Sargent was indic_ted on a falsi·
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Lorain County County Common
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Tully decid~d to . su.spend
Schroll after an mvesttgatmn by
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�March 17, 1991

Tlmes Sentinel

Area deaths

lraqi troops battl~ rebels,

Jobn R. Brown

Bush says U.S. will stay . out

. GALLIPOLIS - John Rutherford Brown, 86, Rt. 1, Patriot, died
Salllrllay ill Holzer Medical Center.
Born June 13, 1904, in GaDia
County, 1011' of the late Celia Jane
AIIbrlsht Fulton, he was a graduate
of Waterloo High School and .
attended Rio Grande College. A'
lifelong farmer, he retired froin the
Ohio pepartment of TransportatiOn
after 27 years of service- .
He was a member of the Mount
Zion Methodist Church near Mud·
soc, where be ·Served as Sunday
school superintendent for many
years. He recently attended Walnut
Rid.Re Church.
S'urvivlng are four sons, Wayne
Dennis Brown gf Sfringboro,
lames Daniel Brown o Lexington,
S.C., John Marshall Brown of San
Diego, Calif., and Donald Ray
Brown of Laguna Nigel, Calif.; two
daughters, Mrs. Melvin (Bonnie)
Tabor of Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Donna Niday of Gallipolis; and 15
grandchildren.
' Services wQI be 2 p.m. Monday
in the Chapel of Grace United
Methodist Church, Gallipolis, with
&amp;he Rev. Joe Hefner officiating.
Burial will be in Mount Zion
Cemetery, Mudsoc. Friends may
Call at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
l{ome Wetherbolt Chapel, Gallipolis, Sunday from 5-8 p.m.
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. By United Press lntenatlonal
"I fmd it very difficult to. see a Worid Health Organization ~ere
Iraqi ttoops continued to baldc situation under which we. would planning on sending vaccmes
rebellious forces inside the war- have notmaliz~d relations with against deadly diseases that are
ravaged nation Saturday 8nd Presi- Sadd!Jm Husseilrftill in power,'' he expected to hit Iraqis, such as
cholera, typhoid and' possibly
dent Bush said the United States said.
would not intervene militarily in
Secretary of State James Baker, meningitis.
the unrest, while the Red Cross in Ankara on the final leg offlis 10He also said the Red Cross was
. shipped tons of food and medical day peace tour, said his meetings sending back 13 buses from Iraq to
supplies to Iraqi citizens.
with Israeli and Arab leaders left Saudi Arabia to pick up another
Iraqi ttoops faced stiff resistance him convinced the two sides want 500 Iraqi prisoners of war to lake .
from Kurdish guerrillas in the "true reconciliation" in the Middle them back home. The Red Cross
north, but President Sl!ddam Hus- East.
repatriated 500 POWs on Friday.
sein said Saturday his forces were
Baker said the United States
In Cairo, about 20 members of
victorious over rebels in die south. will be "puulng specifiC ideas and Eg)rpt's Parliament Saturday urged
Saddam called on the Kurds to proposals" to the parties "to see the Emir of Kuwait, Sheik Jaber a1
resist separatist movements and whether old sunotypes can.be bfo- . Ahmad a1 Sahah to stop persecpt·
promised his country a "new ~en, . old rigid and in'Hexible posi- ing Palestin~an, Egyptian a~d
phase" in its political life. .
bons can be adji!Sied and compro- Sudanese natJOpals charged w1th
"The decision 10 build a demo- mised.''
collabora!ing with Iraqi occupation .
cratic country is irreversible. We
"Without that," he warned, forces.
have with God's help finished the "there won't be peace."
. The appeal came amid reports
- discord in the southern cities and
In Amman, Jordan, the Interna- that Kuwaiti authorities have beatwe are capable to uproot treason tiona! Committee of the Red Cross en and tonured large numbers of
and chaos," Saddam said in an Saturdapent its fourth and largest Egyptian, Palestinian and Sudanese
hour-long nationwide radio and humamtarian Telief convey to nationals:
,
AI Wafd, the mouthpiece of
· television address, his first since he Baghdad, which was · heavily
' was defeated by allied forces last bombed by U.S.·Ied allied forces . Egypt's Wafd opposition party,
. month.
during the Gulf War to liberate quoted "well informed" sources in
Saddam praised the performance Kuwait
.Kuwait as saying that 2g1 Egyp; of the Iraq1 armed forces and the
Thirty large trucks and·32 buses tians are being held at police sta·
: Iraqi people in confronting the carried food, medical supplies and lions in different locations, includ' uprising.
fuel to the capital city, said Red ing 60 Egyptians who managed 10
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Bush, in Bermuda to meet with Cross spokesman Michel Schroed- cross the Iraqi border into Kuwait.
·~ Bripsh Prime Minister John Major, er.
·
. "The Egyptians are facing tor• gave little weight t!l Sad dam's
Among the cargo was 200 tons ture inside the Kuwaiti police sta·
, promise of democratic reforms.
of wheat flour, 54 tons of-lentils, tions to force them· to make state, 'His credibiliry is zilch, zero, 100 tons of diesel fuel and 22 tons ments in admission of their aUeged
: zed,' • Bush said. He also said the . of medicine, 4enerators and three guilt against their own will," the
: United States does not intend to water purificanon systems.
newspaper quoted the sources as
· intervene militarily in Iraq.
•'We have to struggle against . saying,in a front.page Kuwait-date. . "There is dissension in parts of time,'' Schroeder said. "In a cou- line report.
' Itaq. That is a mauer we arc not pie· of weeks, the heat in Iraq can
A Newsweek poll released Sat. involved in .... That would be going reach 45 degrees centigrade and the urday meanwhile reported most ·
beyond our mandate," he said.
bacteria in the unclean water will Americans want to go back to war
But he again warned the Iraqi develop very quickly. So .we fear todriveSaddamoutofJ)ower.
: president about breaking the rules the outbreak of epidemics," he
About 57 percent of those
: set by the cease-fire, including the said
,
· polled by the magazine silid they
movement of aircraft in Iraq.
The al~ .bom~ent of~i su)!pDrl ha~ng U.~. forces resume ,
Bush also said he does not envi- left many c1ues WithOut electriCity m11itary action agamst Iraq.
·
An even ~er percentage -77 ·
sion the United States working and ~lean ,water. increasing the risk
.
pen:ent- sa~d ~y . would support
. with Iraq with Sad dam still in Qf epidemics. . .
Schroeder Slid UNICEF and the m1htary acuon 1f Iraq employs ·
.: power:
chemical or biological weapons
against rebel troops.
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M ovzng lottery

meetingS may
SaVe money
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio Lottery Commission board
member Jerry Chabler· of Toledo
wants to move monthly board
meetings from Columbus to Cleveland, saying it would save $25,000
a year.
With tbe meetings in Columbus,
lottery director Virgil Brown and
sevetaJ staff members have to drive
from the Cleveland headquarters.
Chabler said this costs about
$2,000 in expenSes for each twohour meeting in Columbus.
"The state right now, is ·facing
dire fiScal problems, and I figure if
we can save the state $25,000 a
year, we ought to do it," Chabler
said.
.
The board recendy voted 4~3 in
favor of Chabler' s proposal but
five votes are needed 10 make llie
change.

1.
ROLLIN', ROLLIN', ROLIJN' - Scott Marchi, of GaiUpo·
i .: Jis, took ad\'llnlqe rlllle ADDJ Watber Ji'rlday to woROut OD bls
:••, speclally-conatructed wbeekllalr. Marchi, who said be often gets
; : : "weird looks" at bll cblllr, lllkl be '11'1111 training for upcoming race
. : •: events. (T ·S photo by MeUnda Powers)

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People in the news----.

By United Press Internatloul
, . LEARNING FROM FATHER: Gunnar and Mattkw Nelson,
: the 23-year-old twin sons of the l.ale Rick Nelaon, said they are glad
• they were able 10 avoid die "teen idol" trap that caught their father.
; Gunnar said their father "had problems with teen idol stigma as long
' &lt;as we could remember. People were always coming up and ulring,
' 'Are you Ricky ~Melson? I grew up with you on your TV shows.'"
: · Gunnar, who with his brother now make up the rock group Nelson,
( said, "Those people never let go of that. They couldn't even let him
, drop the 'y' from Ricky, because it would have made them feel older.''
; The Nelson twins said they still foUow their father's advice 10 "believe
• in what you're doing, keep doing it and keep your sense of humor."
And there was one more p1cce of his advice lhe twins say dley follow:
; · "'Write your own songs! So we did."
r

SAD STORY: A Hollywood production C0111Jl811Y haS bought the
rights to the story of a woman whose husblnd was convicted of driving
his car into a lake to kill their four children. SuDDDt DeLisle made
the deal with Ron UDoa of HCinl Entmairunent Productions, which
wiD make the story into a television movie. Tenns of the deal were not
revealed. DeLisle's husband, Lawreaee, 30, was convicted on four
' counts of prerneditsled murder for clrivina the family swlonwagon in
the the Dettoit River at W)'IJldoa.e, Midi., in Auguat 19g9, He also
was convicted of ay!ng to murder SUZIIIIIC but bodl of them claim the
incident was an accident and DeLisle ~ ICCtinl a new trial.

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ACTRESS'S STORY: Former acuea Irene Mannina once worked
• with Hlllllpbrey 8otlart and Jt.my Capey and WIS friends with
: Laurrn B~eall and lda Luplno, but llle's fallal on hard times now.
• . Her last movie was a "A Yank in Tokyo" widl CuneY in 1946 and
after that she became a nune. Now In her 70s, Manning livea with five
dogs, 13 birds and a cat in a houae in Providence, RJ., that is up for
sale because she can no longer afford it. "Where will I 40? Who
knoWs? Wherever I can find a pllce," she said. Manninl Wishes she
could have llllyed in show .,..._ lolif•· "I would lib a reunion
' ~'' • with 10111C oC the gang I performed wldi, 'she said, "but they'd have
: to come here. It's too expensive for me to go to Hollywood."

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GUMPSES: Pop star Wbltlley Houltoll will put on a free concert
: Mardi 31 at Norfo8t Naval Air Slllion in Vilginla for local military

personnel and their families. In anoth« 1reat for the local military,
· Gnmm~ner Katlly Mattea and Gardllroob will appear at Nor·
: folk'l
la I ~- COIII.Wl b . I ill ttoapl ·- l.Jaa
,

/1 lllr.rSIDrY," ......
• . marie's director, lriiD G.._, lhnlt ce ... -.1 ....,. wen ...-~eel
; Wlilllllld,dla*ol

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Jail July. Their fUll child is due in August. But the relationlllip Slllrled
bldJY., Whitfidd ay1, adding that one of their meetings - almost
holtile.
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It wasn't
just garbage
CLEVELAND (UPI) - A grocery bag stuffed with more than
$70,000 in cash and picked up by a
garbage truck driver·was found at a
suburban IIliSh dump, and lawmen
s~l the money may be tainted
- 1f not fake.
Garbage workers say the bag
was picked up March 9, apparendy
on a downtown route. The money
was discovered two days lster
when a bulldozer broke the· bag at
the Broadview Heights landfill.
Several workers reponedly took
some bills.
"You saw a bunch of guys on
their hands and knees and you
could guess what they were
doing," said one worker.
Peter Dowling, assistam agem
in charge of the Secret Service's
Cleveland office, said investigators
went to the dump to try to determine whether the $100 bill.s stuffed
in the bag ,1111ere counterfeit.
' Dowling said he suspected that·
because of the amount of cash in
the bag, the money was either
counterfeit or connected to drug
ttafficking.
Lou Bonacci, an assistant prosecutor, said the finder of money is
not necessarily under a legal obli·
galion to return it, unless serial
numbers showed the money was
stolen from a bank.
"It's not a criminal violation tO
kee,P it, though I think the moral
obligation is there,'.' Bonacci said.
"If someone were to come' forward
and say It was their money, then
the finder would 'probably face a
civil lawsuit for not turning it over.
"But the person who claimed
they loSt the money had beacr have
somo really stron\:
. f that it
blloapd to thea),"
I slid.
Workers at the dump were
reluctant to talk about the find.
Dowlina undentood why.
"You could be tallring about an
organized gang that's out this
mon~y, " DowllnJt.said.

Sunday nmee Sentlnei-Pag&amp;-AS

Pomeroy-:..lddleport-Galllpolla, ~nt Pl•unt, WV

day at noon until tt.e 'time of the
services at the funeral home.
Pallbearers will be Joe Call,
Tommy Call, Marvin Ours, Jr.,
Brian Ours, Roger Brumfield and
Danny Rollins.

Pl'nky Myers

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GALLIPO

Honor roll

Trustees offer

Roscoe Roush
Roscoe F. Roush, @ , of Mid·
dlepon, died March 14, 1991 in the
Veterans Memorial Hos(ll· tal at
Pomeroy. ·
.
He was hom April 21, 1921, in
Mason, son of the late Roscoe E.
and Clara Franees Young Roush.
He was a retired accoun1ant for
Ideal Potash Mining Co. in
Carlsbad, N.M., as well as a United
States Navy veteran of World.War
II. A 1939 graduate of Wahama
High School, he was a member of
· the Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy, the Knights of Columbus
in Carlsbad, and the American
Legion Feeney • Bennett Post 128
in Middleport.

LIS -Memorial services for Pinky Myers, formerly of
Gallipolis, who died March 11 in
New Orleans, La., will be conducted Monday at 10 a.m. in St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, with die Rev. AI
MacKenzie officiating.
·
B!lrial will be in Calvary Ceme·
tery.
In lieu !lf flowers, contributions
may be mad~ to the St. Peter's
Episcopal Church Memorial Fund.
Arrangemerits are by the
SurVivors include two sons and a
Waugh- Halley-Wood Funeral daughter-in-law, Mark and Liz of
Home. ·
· Carlsbad, and Paul of Lubbock,

NORTH GALLIA
Texas; two daughters and sons-inNor.th Gallia High School
law, Kitty and Dennis Sneed of
'
announces the Honor Roll for the
Mulkeytown, lllinois, and '(Jcki
~
Fourth Six Weeks grading period:;
and Joe Jensen of Midland, 'Iexas;
9·AI Jeremy Belville, Byron
two sisters, Mrs. Pauline E.
CLEVELAND (UPI) _ Cu a- · Burlcc, Tonya Cremeens and Elaine
Greathouse of Middleport, and h · C
· Coli
y
Dunn.
. oga ommuruty
ege trustees
Mrs· Claire Llieille U ev in11°1f B· ar9 ....
m aeveland oo March 1 rll'ed 17·
u. Tony Gl'llman ' RM1· c~ard
".
· boursville; four grandchildren; and year school Presic!Cnt Nolen Elli· Heskett, Angel Hunt and e11ssa
several nieces and nephews.
th •
f' · t
Marcum.
Funeral
. will be
d
s~n; now ey re o .en~g o PI. Y
"-C•. Kris Newsome and Sarah·
1
·-• M daserv 1ce
s
S
eoJn
uch
,
h11n
more
than $160,000 1f he will Ph! .
.
""' on Yat 1 a.m. at t osep
drop a lawsuit.
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Catholic Church in Mason with die
That money represents the
~-D. Jess1ca Whne and Marika
Rev. Andrew Hohman and the Rev. amount he would have made had Wh1te.
., G
Wal~ Heinz officiating. Military he worked through the end of his
1~·A: Jenruoer eorge.
graveside rites will follow at the
. J ·
,
10-B: Ryan McCarley, Fayetta
church cemetary.
con~t m une 1992· .
Hunt and Brooke Lieving.
Friends may call Sunday at
I_Oihson allegedly h.ll a trustee
10-C: Teresa Oiler and Angie
Foglesong Funeral Home from 4 10 dunng a February meetmg.
Tackett
·
9 p.m. with rosary Sunday at 7 am.
Tensions grew after EDison last
ll·A: Kathy Hager, Larry
Velma V. (Lauclermih) Young, year announced he woul_d leave the HalfhiU and Kara Marcum.
ll·B: Bobbi Saunders, Heather
73 , of Mason. died Saiurday, Marcl\ school at the end of hiS co~tract
16 at Pleasant Valley Ho.sp.ita!. . . and the fJrustees belgan a nanonHal Sprague and Casey Staton.
.
search 0 ~ a ~ep acement. e
12-A: Jason Bennet!, Paula Cre· Foglesong Funeral Home is m changed h1s m1.n~, however, and meens, Matt Justus, Brian Keeton,
charge of arrangemen~, which are asked .to keep hiS JOb, and trustees Brian Lieving and Jared Moore. .
incomplete.
~ld h1m he would merely be a can12-B: Sandy PresiOn, Christcididate.
Skidmore and Cherie Weaver.

$160 000 tO
..
Jired preSwen
:
I

INVESTED PARTIES GIVE FINAL ORDERS•••IT'S ALL OYER AT ONE MINUTE PAST 10 P.M. SUNDAY!!!
'

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Edna R. Holsten

.

SCRUBBING DOWN - Eraeat Cutts, of
New Jersey, took advantaae of the sunny weatb·
er Friday to give his Dodge van a bath at the car

wash on State Route 7. Cutts aald 'be was Ia GaJ.
llpolls to visit relatives. (T -S photo by MeUnda
Powers)
·

AIDS tests offered to pati~nts
of dentist who died of disease
WILMINGTON, Del. (UPI) - ·
Free AIDS tests have been offered
to the more than 1,200 patients of a
Wilmington dentist who died of the
disease this month state health
officials said.
'
.
Raymond Owens, 61, was diag- .
nosed with acquired immune deficiency syndrome in 19g9, bur continued to practice until a few weeks
before his March I death, offiCials
said.
He did not tell patients of his illness, and state officials learned he
had AIDS only after some of his
acquainlances contacted them 'after
Owens died, said Lester Wright,
director of the Delaware Division
ofPublic Health. ,
Wright said the. state is sending
certified leacrs to Owens' former
patients advising them of the risk
and offering the free blood tests.
The letters were recommended
by the federal Centers for Disease
Control because of the case of

,

Florida dentist David Acer, who
infected three of his patients with
the AIDS virus, Wright said.
"In light of information from
the Florida practice, there may be a
very small risk," Wright said.
"Everyone in the country is sensi·
ti~e to that."
. Owens is only the second U.S.
dentist with AIDS 10 be studied in
this way, Wright said.
The CDC believes Acer may
have infected his patients by accidentally cutting himself and bleeding on open wounds in their
mouths during tooth extractions or
oral surgery.
Owens stopped performing oral
slirgery and tooth extractions after
he was dia~ose'd with AIDS, but
continued to perform more routine
procedures.
. The CDC has estimated that
1,248 dentists in the United States
are infected with the AIDS virus.

Ailtolla ldwwd1
446·0669

Call

.

360 Secentlln., o•polh

LIMA, Ohio (UPI) - Spec. like Tony and his fBinily do.''
Anthony Kidd of Lima will be ·
remembered by family and friends
as a man who sacrificed his life for
the peace of olhers.
Kidd, 21, was buried Friday, 14
days after being killed by an Iraqi
land mind while serving during the
Persian Gulf War.
.
His wife, Julie, and his pareniS,
Wayne and Deborah Kidd, listed
during the funeral as the Rev. Mar- .
EQUIPMENT· SALES • RENTALS· REPAIRS
ion L. Hanover discussed how the
"Compltte Uedk;JI Equipment For Homt
world needed sacrifices like those
of men and women killed during
the liberation of Kuwait.
"They gave themselves, and
you parents and spouses gave of
them, to the r,nnciples that America sUinds for, ' Hanover said.
Kidd was buried next to the
grave of his grandfather, Leslie
Raymond Davis, a World War II
veteran.
His mother said one reason why
her son joined the Army right after
high school was to emulate his
'
grandfather. ,She said "aU the time
• HOME OXYGEK
• AOUlT DIAPERS
• lifT CHAIRS
Anthony was growing up, he talked
• WHESI.CHAIIS
• UNOERPADS ICHUXSI . • WALKERS
.
Army with my dad.''
• '110$'1TAL8EDS
• 8EDSIOf'~S • DIA8E'IIC SUPPLIES
• SHOWER STOOLS • PATIEHT liFTS
• OSTOMY
Funeral home officials said
about 1,500 people visited with the
. W~ BILL MEDICAft£ • OTtER INSURANCE fOR YOU
family in the days before the funer~ 1
al in the western Ohio community
I'J '
t
THIRD
&amp;
PINE
ST.
of about 50,000 people.
GALLIPOLIS
"That's what living in a small
town is," said Dameene Fry, a
cousin. "It's having lots of friends

9JOW?JUUZ, ~

HOMECARE MEDICAL
INC. ·.
u-·

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446-728

ARE YOU A MEMBER OF THE
MIDDLEPORT CLASS OF 1941?

Diles HEARING CENTER
ATHENS. OH.
M-F 9-11, SAT. 9-NOON

814-694-3571

HOUR
SALE

.

SINCE

1949

HOLZER CUNIC-ENT. DEPT.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
WEDNESDAY P.M.

1·800-237·7716

UP
TO

.

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Bill ·
! Gazzarri, founder of a rock night·
~ club on the Sunset Strip that has
' hosted the Doors, Van Halen and
: (Juns 'N Roses, died at his West
• Hollywood home, his attorney.
• announced Friday. He was 66.
Gazzarri died ' Wednesday,
,apparendy of natural causes, Lau•Tence Ring said. Ring said the rock
·dub proprietor recendy was treated
:lit a local hospital for a skin rash
''811d apparendy suffered side effects
·l'rom medication, but it was unclear ·
·:,:.vhether that had any bearing on his
:'Cleat!\.
•: Gazzarri, born in New York
i1une 16, 1924, moved to Los Ange:1es where he opened the fust Gaz•zarri' s on La Cienega Boulevard m
:·t961. He and his sister Rose ran
'1he restaurant and nightclub while
:lheir mother supervised the prepa'j'ation of rich Italian dishes.
•. In 1963, Gazzarri opened the
·~unset Boulevard location that
:gave early breaks to Jim Morrison
· and the Doors, Sonny and Cher and
•l&gt;ther groups form~ in the I ?60s.
:He became known m mus1c cucles
·is "the godfather of rock 'n' roll."
~· Gazzarri's, in the middle of the
:neon-glowing Sunset Strip, conti~·
·:Ues to launch the careers of musl: j:ians, many of diem who play hard
: rock or heavy metal.
.
·: More established rockers often
; tetum 10 play at the club where lhe
:founder, m his trademark felt hat, is
: llepicted in a towering mural on the
·facade.
' . In addition to his sister Rose
:nazzarri, the club owner is sut•}'ived by a niece, a great mece and
' il great nephew.
,
.
Ring said a memonal service
: ·was scheduled for 2 p.m. March 20
: at the West Hollywood nightclub at
: 9039 Sunset Blvd ·

S700,000.00 WORTH OF FURNITURE AND FURNITURE-RELATED ITEMS!!!j
~AME

~Red,

white,

;}Jtue and green

:: B}' United Press lntematio~al
:· St. Patrick's Day is a traditional
:green and white, day everywh~re,
•but some red, wh1te and blue. m1ght
~ be an added sight across Ohm durf:ing celebrations Sunday.
·~ For example, a 40-foot float
;:honoring the nation's milill!fY ser·
• vices and decked out m m red,
; white and blue will ~e part of
,' Cleveland's St. Pamck s Day
•
j parade.
' ' red h'•a
• "It's mosdy patnonc , w 1"'
~ and blue," said John Zelinsky, a
, member of n.c, a suppon group
: for uoops. "But we'll have a little
, shamrOCk on it.' •
,
•• • • Plenty of American flaF.s are
; cliDCCled at ~er SL Patrick s Day
: _celebrali!fS thiS year.

'J

TE M OF

BRANDS TO BE SOLO ON THIS LAST OAY

CLASSICS • SANDEl • CAllYLE

RECLINERS

Tufted back ,.elinor, 3 color• in cloth.
No aag opring •nd hardwood frame.

NOT 5299.97

SUNDAY ONLY

$9997

•29.96 LAMPS ... .
*39.96 ~MPS .. ..

NOW, ON~ ·~997
DAY O..LY ...

(Other llmps....$100.00 for
$50.00 - 1150.00 Limps for
•75.00)

SUNDAY NOON 'TIL 10 PM
SECTIONAL
Loooe pHiow beck with black. end oliver
cover. 3 piece In tho ublmeteln contempo·
rary.

NOT $1999.95

SUNDAY ONLY

S99ft97
'7,

.

CORNER HUTCH

NOT '199.95

SUNDAY ONLY

$44997

SPRING AIR MATTRESS SET

SIMP cullhlon pillow top bock supporter. The ultlmlll
In liMP comfort end tuppon.

$5 9995 srr
SUNDAY ONLY

FUU SET NOT $1399.95 SU

WINGBACK CHAIRS

NOT

134~9~DAY ONLY

$14997

NOT 1299.95
SUNDAY ONLY

$14997

SINDAY OlaY

$1499.9~ CDMsfi~~fy ONL~

$7 9997

UVING ROOM ·SUm .

"\~JDAY ONLY $.199 95

GlASS TOP DINEnE

Clur gl111 top teble. br•u finish chelra with

NOT 1599.95 navy bluS2velv9et.997
SUNDAY ONLY
SET

. ._ _11111!1.- - - - •

i''9 ..

Mt

DINETTE &amp; 4 (HAllS ·

si".": ==~ $69997

IIHSID Ml1111SS SIT

. .

. SUNDAY LASt DAY

SIIIIDAY OIILY

519997
·

SECTIOIIAL W/INCLINERS

4 colon ol 2 piece ucllonala whh
reclining ondo.
·

Din- tolllo. llmoNI ..,, Oligo. tit owtvll
..,..,.. · -.. ....,..- IIIII - ·
11

-ttn•• and toundotlona

$249 97

Quilted mott,..l with matching toundotion.
Medium Firm.

llue IOUftU'Y ,...,.._ mnoh ... IOfl ll'ld chlir.
1
4
' " ' - ' " ' "".. - - ··

IIOY •utUS

ONLY

QURII SIZE MATTIESS SET

SLBP SOFAIMATCIIING CHAil

Fifm qulted

··" . , $299 97

IIOY '13tt.95

SIIIIDAY OfiLY

569997.

IASSm liNG SIZE IIDIOOM SUnE

Nootalglc darll king alzo bod, 2 night t1bl11.
errnolrt chett. dre,.r with wing mirror.

NOT l!ttUS SUNDAY OfiLY

5143997

MAICH 17, 1991
IASSm SLEEP SOFA
....ionll -~h '""' ....

~39997
FlEXSTEEL RECUNER

NOT '799.95

w• 11

THE .
LAST 10
HOURS
SUNDAYU

SUNDAY Ofi.Y

In 1oa1p oylon. ..

NOT 1999.95

So.. end Chelr. Mauve Color.

lOTH

!TamoSuiiDAY

N0,.,,..,,••,.,.,559997 ,., ..,h

-utllul mottrOII ollto
Including mlltti'IIM-•fir• and
foundetlon.
7

,!

chot, fuM or q11een 1111 p.onel hordboerd whh

$14
$19997

Ook flnlllh vonlty end motchlng benc:h. mirror
NOf$499.95 . end droworo

_ , OfiLY

$9 97

97
'29.95 PIC1UIES
'399.9 S PICMIS-

"s J~~~y··:LY $1199

''" SIZE
•anaEss
sEn

$6997

"JIMSON" 5 PIECE COLONIAL
IIDIOOM SinE
o,...., with wide frame mirror. 4 d11wer

S19.95 PICIUIES
S24.95 PICTUIES

FlEXSTEEL SOFA &amp; CHAIR

97
SUNDAY ONlY $299

SUNDAY ONLY

UP TO 720fo OFF SUNDAY

Sofa and Motchlng chair. Colonlol otyle with
roen/belgo/Not plaid pllttom.
0
97 loth'"·

Oek finllh with ohalro p.oddod In belgo.

NOT

-

SWIVEL ROCKERS

,...... ,_.,.,. - ...~ 1111111·••...

CONTEMPORARY DINING ROOM
Hutch, table, 1 1111. e ohalro.

BUNK BEDS

Ruotlc bunk bedo Including built on ladder.
Wood aide rollo built to taklltha punlahmnt.

Wood Fromto Swivel Rockero. 3 colore
to choooo from

-

Derk brown velvet with Queen Ann
lege in cherry.

LAST AND FINAL DAY SUNDAY!

All goode now w-oulld or claployld (furnl·
ture ..,d furniture reloQd 11111111 will be offered
dlroat to the public lit up to 72" offlll Notlcola
hereby glvon thot this loot end llnol dly of ..ld
ulo will commence lit 12 o'clock high noon.
Sundly, Morch 17th, 1881 ond continuo• for
10 houro only coming to 1 do .. ot 10 p.m. tun·
doy night. Thil Ia e dlop.orall end oil purcheold
1t11111 muot be """"god for ~MIIvery lmmldlo·
tolyll Pur- of thlo ulolo to bloloncolnvontorv
on.d lncrMN caoh flow. Thla firm lo not going
out of bualnoA.

VANITY BENCH

Ook flnlllh. 2 glua doo,. top. 2 dooro on bottom.

chock, VI... Moot..Cord, or -opteble crodft oppllco.
tlon. FrM delivery end e month• Nmo •• cosh finonclng
avolleblo. No quantity guoront- except for oneld-·
tiMd Item. Evwythlng lo olf-d on 1 lira come, lint
MrYed ....... F•nlture end furnltur. rBiated ltem1.

THE LAST STATEMENT

LAMPS
'19.915 LAMPS .. ..

LE •••

PurcllaMd ltemo muot be p.old for by caati, personal

eaassm • RllmEL io IIIICAID • LIA • .1115011 •
IESTOIIIC • .PEIIAL • 1-E • IIIGLMID • ILACISMITH
SHOP • SPIIIG All .• CIIA111AII COim • COIIOUA

'

.WIUAM S. DilES, THE~
Dllea Hurlng Center continue• the tradition of integrity and quality of 1ervlce
together with the cutting edge of technology. We are the only dlapen1er auth-·
norlzed In Ohio of the amazing In-the-ear digital peraonel hearing ay1tem ReSound!

HEAR

'

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Bill Dllea.is offering a apecial10% OFF ..II
amplification ay1tema to the claaa of •411
Be 1ure to hear the atorie1 at the 60th
Reunion
(If you are not a member, sorry ...
well, do you know one who can
refer you77l

HELPING . PEOPLE
326 W. UNION

PURCHASES MUST BE PAID FOR BY CASH, PERSONAL -cHECKS, VISA, MASTERCAiD AND/OR ACCEPTABLE
CREDIT
.
APPLICATIONS' - ARRANGEMENTS FOR DELIVERY OR PICKUP OF PURCHASES MU$T BE MADE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE .

of · · ·
: rock,' dead
at 66
~

6 MONTH
FINANCING
AVAILABLE

*NO lAY-A-WAYS
*FREE DEUVERY

! 'godfather

Soldier-remembered

I

UN.PRECEDENTED

iBill Gazzarri, L.A.

INSUIANCE AGENCY

1

ALL MERCHANDISE IN WAREHOUSE AND/OR ON
, DISPLAY WILL BE PLACED ONTO THE PUBLIC
. MARKET .FOR RELEASE DURING THIS ....

COLUMBUS - Edna R. Holsten, 84, of Columbus, died Friday,
March 15, 1991, at Mount Carmel
West Hospital in Columbus: She
was a private duty nurse (retired)
for 25 y~ in New York and was
a ward supervisor for the Columbus State Institute for 10 years. .
Holsten was a member of the
Order of the Eastern Star and
•enjoyed traveling.
·
; Born Nov.21, 1906 in Eureka, ·
: she was the daughter of the late
. &gt;William Rouse and the late Eva
· ; Finley·Rouse Glover.
: She is survived by one sister,
• Bonnie Williams, of Eureka, and
; sever&amp;l nieces and nephews.
• She was preceded in death by
~ two sisters: Helen Clemens and
: Ruth Trowbridge and two brothers:
John CaD and Ira Finley.
; Services will be 1 p.m. Monday
; at WiUis Funeral Home, Gallipolis.
• Burial will be at the Providence
' Ce111etery. Friends may call Mon-.

..a .!"!!!f~~.

ONLY

SWIVEl lOCKERS

1mvm
.
blu1

Medium
oover.
Rocko and owlveiL

SUNDAY ONLY

S6997

EMPIRE
FURNITURE COMPANY
•

142 2ND AVENUE
DOWNTOWN

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE

446·1405

I

�Page-A~unday nmes-Sentlnel

March 17,1881

,...rch 17, 1881 .

Pomeroy-Middleport--Galllpolla, oH Point Pl. . .nt, wv

Demonstrators call for
LA police · chief'~ ouster

James Hall
comes home .
GALLIPOUS • James Hall of
Gallipolis, son of James E. and
Wilma Hall of Crown City, was
one ~f n,tany Gall!" County soldim
servmg m Operation Desert Storm.
SSGT Hall, who has been in the
·service·for 12 years, was Slltioned
in Turkey with the 47th Supply
Squad, Incidilt. Hall's important
con lribulions to ODS was aircraft
recoyery duties which were 10 refu·
el incoming aircraft t))at were fight·
ing the war over Bagdad.
According to Hall, !tis unit saw
an average of 700-800 major air·
craft a day, each arriving approxi·
mately every 19 seconds.
Hall was activated for ODS in
August, 1990 and served his last
day of active duty the fmal day of
the war. He has a two-year-old
daughter. Sarah.

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SPECIAL MESSAGE • Pictlared Ia froat or
an F·l6 Is SSGT James HaD or Gallipolis, wb11e
he was statloaed In Turkey during Operation

Desert Storm. Hall refueled major alreraft dur·
1111 tbe war as well u sendlna his own pei'IIOIIII
Mt;SSaP to Stlddam Hussein.
.

Air Force chief says air

.............,•r·........
..,............
... ,.....
"

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....

--·-...
."":...........
..................
......... . . .

ORLANDO

.... $178
LOS ANGELES.~......... $2 78
. . . •••••••.••••.••......••
·.
$178
DALLAS
.
DENVER ...................... $2 2 8
.
$

Out 6Hsf Bsnsns Split Sps~ls/1

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SOLID WOOD
FURNITU

Buy One Get One Free! . ~-:::·~=

0..11 At .U 1'llna Lacotlells....
Glnnl Hortinglr Mwoy, Rl' pal, OH. 45760-(6141992-5241
479 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, 011. 45631-(11141 446·3137
354 East Main St~ Pomeroy, 011. 45769 - (11141 '92-629.2

Twice the. fun for the price of onel

-------------·
-------~-----Special Sunday, March 17 thru
Saturday, March 23, 1991.
FOR ONLY S135. YOU CAN CHOOSE A LARGE
ORDER OF ONE OF THESE ttiMS·AND SAVE .

r

UP TO

••oNION RINGS
••zUCCHINI

soc.

· ••MUSHROOMS
••FRENCH
FRIES
.
'

which RodDey Kinl was savagely
clubbed and kicked bv officers at
the Clld of wbat police say was a
high-speed chase. The episode,
.recorded ,on video tape by a wit·
•
•
ness, has created a national furor.
•••
At Saturday's demonstration,
•
the third in a week in front
downtown police headquarters,
'MRDD HEARING .· Columbus Attorney
Judy Rauch, 1 nnanclal omcer for tbe Stale .• ·
protesters ·clearly placed blame for
Mark Foley (stalidln') rep reseAled, three stu·
MRDD board, Atllstant Attorney General Jack •
the incident on Gates, the controdentslcllenll or tile Metp Count)' BOird or Men·
Decker, Attorney and MRDD Board Member
versial tij)ss of the Los Angeles
tal Retardation and Developmental Disabilities
John Lentes, Meigs County Prosecutor Steven
Police Department for the past 13
and tbelr parents In a bearing before Meigs
L. Story, Foley, and Meigs MRDD staffer Melva ••
years. , . .
County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W.
Eblin. See story on paae Al. (Times-Sentinel •
. At limes the crowd cbanted~
Crow m on Friday. A11o In auendance were, l·r,
Photo by Brlaa J, Reed)
1:
"Hey her,. ho hoi Daryl Gates has
By statute, the public schools (in ing such programming for school· ::
got to go." S1011e-fal:ed police offi·
•••
this instance, the Meigs, Eastern aged studentS.
·
.•:'
cers ~etly watched the protest
(Fro111 MRDD, page Al)
and Southern Local Schools) are
Another hearing in the case was ·
from . building's lobby.
wouid have on the students and · ultimately responsible for provid· set for ApriliO.
•
Baldwin, star of ibe movie ''The clients they serve.
Hunt for Red October," pointed
Judy Rauch, a financial officer
.aut that Gilles has a history of mak· for the State Board of MRDD testi·
ing remtub de!lmed insensitive to fied 10. the distribution of state and
minorities and a repullllion for con- federal funds to the 88 MRDD
.
.
doning ac.ts of alleged police bru· boards in the State of Ohio.
'
tality·
·
Rauch insisted that no other rev·
"I'm not anti-police," s.ldwin enuc sources were in existence for
said. "But Gates is a big mouth the Meigs MRDD prograffi on the
.For complete, professional Individual and
and gutless. Gates cannot do his state level, and stated that on .•
I·
job.'··
nilmerous oCcasions, her office had
business tax preparation assistance call
Also joinin~ the demonstrators advanced funds to the Meigs pro·
were actress Kim Basinger, star of gram before they were due to be
"Batman" and "9 1/2 Weeks,"
distributed.
l;
and Jesse Jackson.
Following almost two hours of
Richard Potter, 44, of Sepulve· testimOny, Judge Crow ordered that
da. shook his head as he watched the MRDD board continue to pro·
736 Second Avenue
Galllpolls, Ohio 45631
the gro~ing crowd in front of the . vide physical education, physical
police buildinll named for a former and speech therapy and mamtain
.
(614) 446·8677
police chief. "He (Gates) is the the community placement services.
Open 8:5 Weekda~, Evenlnp and Saturday by Appotnlmet~l
. leader of a gang of cops, and a lot to 'Meigs MRDD students and
of C9ps don' t follow the rules." · clients, regardless-of the effect such ·
. Potter, wearing a black T-shin . services would have on the board's
bearin2 the slogan "Veterans for planned layoffs or its immediate
'·
Peace,~'• said "I'm out here to get financial state.
Gates fired '... or to put as much
Lentes stated that the board had
pressure on him as possible."
determined that such a decision
Several community activists, could force the closing of the
including a City Council candidate, Meigs MRDD's programs by
Friday announced their plan to August I. Earlier this week, the
mount a campaign to recall the board announced that it was
embattled chief under a little· already considering the closing of
known provision in the City Char· the Carleton School • the MRDD's
ter.
school-age program for the mental·
The
deadline
for
adding
a
refer·
.
ly retarded and developmentally
·
endum 10 the city's June ballot has · disabled · due to the financial
passed. ·
,
crunch.

or

MRDD

.

LAS VEGAS................ 2 78
SAN FRANCISCO ..... $318
SEAnLE .........~ ............ $318
.
$ '
NEW_YORK .CITY..... 138
CHICAG0 .........................$88

ARRIV~ FOR ARRAIGNMENT - Los Angeles Pollee Sgt.
Stacey C. Koon anives for his arraipmeat Friday after a Los
Angeles Gnnd Jury Indicted him and three fellow pollee olllcers In
· connection with the videotaped beating or a black motorwt March
3. The four police ofrlcers were charged with assault witb 1 deadly
weapon. (UPI)
,

Gates' recall drive starts; mayQr denies set-up

,.

'

paign designed to exert so much
By ANNETTE HADDAD
political and public pressure on
and AUREUO ROJAS ,
Gates
that he eventually will step
LOS ANGELES (UPI) down
from the post he has held
Despite announced criminal indict·
'
ments against four ~~Clice officers since 1978.
Bradley
also
announced
the
involved in the beaung of Rodney
King, the public furor to oust Daryl appojntment of liberal' activist
Gates raged on Friday with the .Stanley Sheinbaum to serve on the
launch of a voter campaign to Police Commission, which has
recently began its own invesli$a·
recall the embattled police chief.
lion
of the beating and the Pollee
Meanwhile, Mayor · Tom
Department's
training pQiicies and
Bradley said he pe.rsonally called
procedures.
GateS Friday morning to "deny
categorically'' media reports that . It was widely expected that
Bradley would fill two vacant com·
B~adley's chief of staff has been
orchestrating Gates' ·ouster from mission seais with outspoken citi·
behind the scenes at the behest of zens in order 10 send a mes5118e to
Gates that he will be held account·
the mayor.
"I want to make it,unmistakably able for police misconduct ·
clear with regard to the idea of
However, the commission:
Chief Gates retiring, I have had no which is the oversight Jl!lllel for the
participation, no strategy whatsoi:v· department, has indicated it ·will
er 10 force, urge, or demand Chief not fire Gates over the King beat·
Gates to resign or retire," Bradley i~g. whi&lt;;h led Friday to criminal
. told a City Hall news conference.
indictments against four officers of
Bradley also denied that he · the 15 officers who were involved
. authorized anyone on his staff "to in the attack.
engage in any similar kind of con·
Gates met with a group of civil
duct" in the wake of the police rights and religious leaders for
brUtality scandal which erupted nearly 90 minutes Friday. Although
with the release of a: home video of he was again asked to resign, the
King's March 3 arrest.
police chief repeated he intended to
· The Los Angeles Times report· fight ID staf in his job.
ed Friday that Deputy Mayor Mark
Severa communitr. activists,
Fabiani is leading a coven cam· including a City Council candidate,

Far,mers Bank
Is Cutting
Interest
Rates.· ,
'

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•'

•'

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Poll:
'

WE'VE TAKEN THE FIRST
STEP IN LOWERING
INTEREST RATES!
,

I

When you·re ready to purchase a New or Used
Vehicle. you have a lot of choices. One that
you usually don't have is the Interest Rate ...
UNTIL NOWI
The Farmers .Bank of Pomeroy and Tuppers
Plains is announcing 1 0.25%" on New
Vehicles and 10.76%" o.n Used Vehicles.
Now you have a choice when you buy a new
or used car or truckl
Stop in and see us - You'll see why we're
called Your. Bank For Life.

.·YourBankfot~.'..
(FB) Farmers
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MEMBER FDIC
'
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221 WEST SE&lt;OND
POMEROY, OHIO

. STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO

to get rid of Gates," Kerman said
at a news conference outside Parker
Center.
. Although it is widely believed
Gates' job is protected under Civil
Service rules, Kerman said the
chief can be foreed 10 resign under
a section of the City Charter.
'The charter provision states
"that t.he incumbent of any
appointive office ... may be
removed at any time ... from his
appointment by the qualified elec·
tors of the city."
About 57,000 signatures of reg·
istered voters are need 10 qualify
the ballot measure. It is 100 late for
any recall referendum 10 be placed
on the June ballot but it could
appear on the June 1992 ballot
unless the City Council calls a special election, which is unlikely
because of the high costs involved
in sponsoring a single-issue elec·
tion and the councilt,majority 's

'

Duli to the inability of the
Manufacturer to ship, the
Boys' Pony Knot Tops ad·
vartised on Page 6 of Brand
Nama Sale Circular. Mar.
17-23, are not available.
We regret any inconveril·
ence this may cause you.

Congratulations
NICK ESQUIVEL

,~

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NICK ESQUIVEL
,
In recognition of Marcb Mental Retardation and Developmen·
tal Disabilities Awareneu Montb In Ohio, the Star Bank of &amp;be Silver Bridge Plaza
wW display a variety of artwork by Nick Esquivel, a student of the Guiding Halid
rSchool In Cheeblre.
'
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·s TAR BANK

Cooling

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Member FDIC

SILYEI BRIDGE PLAZA

..., ...

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compared to 85 percent. . NEW YORK (UP!) - Most war began Jan. I7.
And, whites gave him somewh~t
Men;
however,
tended
to
sup·
Americans want to go back to war
'higher
scores than non-whites': 89
port
Bush's
•
POlicies
in
the
gulf
to drive Iraqi President Saddam
percent.
compared to 80 percent.
Hussein from power, according 10 a more than women: 92 percent, as
Newsweek poll released Saturday.
About 57 percent of those polled
by the magazine said they support
having U.S. forces resume military
action against Iraq.
An even larger percentage - 77
percent - said they would support
military action if Iraq employs
che.mical or biological weapons
agatnst rebel b'OUps. And, 65 per·
cent said they think the United
Sta!llS should keep forces in Iraq
and n&lt;it sign a permanent cease-fire
if Saddam continues to use heli··
copter gunships against the rebels.
Furthermore, 67 percent said
they think it is likely that U.S .
forees will have 10. fi~ht again in
the Middle East agamst Iraq or
some other aggressor nation.
The Newsweek poll was done
by the Gallup Organization, which
conducted 763 telephone inter·
views Thursday and Friday. It has a · .
margin of error of plus or minus
four percentage points.
· Meanwhile, President Bush 's
· overall approval rating remained
. Financing Avail~ble
higlt, at 86 percent, with both men
100% t yr. Ports &amp; labor ·
and women giving him high
· Warronty
·
.
Dldes. according 10 the pol~ pub1
OO'Io
S
yr
Pom
I
loilor
an
fished in the March 25 issue of
.,~ fan Motor
Newsweek, which will be available
·
Out...,
on newsstands Monday.
Bush also contiimed to enjoy
strong backing for his handling of
the Persian Gulf crisis, with 88 per·
·&amp;
cent of those surveyed. supporting
- Rt. 2 Box 447, Gallipolis, Ohio
·
him - roughly the same le~el of
Call 1-800-872-5987 or 448-9418
S!Jilporl he has received since the

•

PC. WOOD GROUP

WE APLOGIZE
-

want to go back to war

Bennetti Mobile Honie .Heating

.-

sb'Ong support of Gates.
In a related development, the
Rev. Jesse Jackson'repealed his call
for Gates to resign.
·
"What we see is Mr. Gates will·
ing to employ tactics of' a police
state to stay in office," Jackson
said at a news conrerence.in Centu·
ry City.

•••enint ... (··- ""'

1

91S -331S

mostAmeri~ans

announced their plan to mount a
campaign to recall the embattled
chief under a liule known provision
in the City Charter.
Kerman Maddox, a council can·
didate noted neither the mayor nor
the City Council has the authority
to force Gates 10 resign.
"But we, the coneemed citizens
of Los' Angeles, will use our powe~

The mobile bane
· heat pump...the air
conditioner .
·
that also
heats.

'Annual Percentage Rete

••••

1:

Certified Public Accountant

Plus Other Florida cities

REEDS
COUNTRY STORE

McClure's Family Restaurant

••

Lynn E. Angell

-·

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,.".........................

Rader to participate
in world program

••

•Eitctronic Filing Available
•Direct Deposit of Refund Check

.power won gulf war

(iuard ro!e may
be revised

r

,--------------------~i

•

WASHINGTO~ (UP!) - The bility and command, and control
Air Force basked in glory, saying centers, or facilities used to direct
the enormity of air attacks against the operation.
Iraq marked the "first lime in bis·
"It was a heavy attack, very
tory that a field army has been precisely delivered and in my judg·
defeated by air power."
ment the Iraqi Air Force never
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. recovered _from this opening
Merrill "Tony" McPeak called the attack," McPeak said. "We took
HARD AT WORK - Roger and Elmer Spaulding or Dan
air. war a "remarkable succ·ess •" as the m1uaUve
· · · · at the beginning and
Sheets General Contracting worked bard Friday to put tbe finish·
he disclosed details of an operation we held it throughout the rest of the
log touches on .the old Norris Northup Dodge building at the cor·
that proceeded as planned, debili· war period."
.
ner or Third Avenue and S,tate Street. Sears bas taken over tbe
tating Saddam Hussein's offensive
Allied torces then' suppressed
bulldlnJ! and the Spauldings ire completing a new stucco and
capability and cutting short' a land Iraq's air defense.system and spent
cedar facade for the building. (T·S photo by Melincla Powers)
war that could have caused thou· ~days picking over Iraq's heavily
sands of casualties.
entrenched field army in Kuwait
The Air Force chief, appearing and southern Iraq.,
..
at a Pentagon briefing Friday.
All of these steps, McPeak
stopped short of discountinj! the believes, reduced the ground war to
need for allied ground forees m the a 1()(). hour rout.
th~te.r. , But his remtub suggested ,
McPeak showed silent videos in
a dimm1~~ ~for land b'OOps.
which fleeing tanks were hunted
Co~htton atr,power was ·so down by allied jets and obliterated.
supenor to Iraq, s strength that Some Iraqi soldiers veered their T·
U.S.·Ied forces controll~ the skies 72 tanks off main roads in a des·
·only
hours after Prestdent Bush perate attempt to survive. One
• WASHJNGTON (UP!) with newspapers.
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney is.
" We ought to use the guard declared war on ~e g11lf state, on video was so clear that it showed
soldiers fleeing a tank foUowed a
sOnding very sb'Ong signals that as combat units as a second or third Jan. 17, McPeak S8ld..
He
called
th.~
Pe~sian_
Gulf
few seconds later by explosive .
lite Pentagon pares itself down in echelon that you call up and deploy
depl~y~e~t
the.
equ1valent
of
a
smoke
ereated .when a bomb hit the
tl!.c 1990s the idea of hav ing over a longer period of time," he
Berlin
llll'hft,"
tn
whtch
the
m1h·
tank
National Guar:d and Army Reserve · told the Los· Angeles Times, "the
McPeak, clearly proud of the air
udits vinually at the resdy for com- .planning would take into account tary. flew ~ea,ly half.of all aircraft
stalloned
10
th~
Umted
State~
to
assault,
empha•iud ihal the air' war
bat may be~ thing of the past.
not that they deploy on.the first day
support
Operauon
Desert
Shteld
was
a
"massive
attack against
• In what could become yet of the war but rather that they get
strategic targets '' though he
aoother struggle between the 90 days, 120 days of work-up and Desert Storm.
McPeak used dozens of c~ acknowledged that itp to 10 percent
Department. of Defense trying to before you send them."
sti-eamline the military and the
While Cheney is thinking about . that demonstr~ted coah.u.on of the 6,250 tons of precision
pro~ess, along. With tWO .televlSlon bombs dropped may have niissed
. ~gress trying to flex its political keeping guard combat units in
muscle, the role of the guard and check for a " sq;ond or third eche· mom tors that dtsplayed vtdeo shots their targets.
ri&amp;erve forces developed following ton, .. he also must find a way to of so called "sman bombs" hitting
t* Vietnam War is under debate CU! down on the size of tlie armed their targets with the precision of a
.
aad Cheney has signaled the direc· · forces. He has pledge to pare down needle threading a hair.
Air Force fighterS and bombers
. lion in which he is headed.
the foree by about 25 percent by
accounted for 60 percent of U.S.
:.After Vietnam three brigades, fiscal I 995.
He plans at the moment to cut aviation deployed 10 the gulf and .
each with about 5,000 soldiers,
50 percent of all coalition planes.
eich were designated to join up in the force beck from 28 divisions
~ with two sister brigades and with 10 guard and reserve and IS By the linie the ground war com·
menced, there were 2, 790 allied
f~rm combat divisions. Each active, to justl8 total divisions, 12
fixed
wing aircraft in theater, nearb\'igade was expected to be combat of them active and six in the
ly
2,000
of which were fighters.
rc&amp;dy within 30 days. ·
·
reserve.
SUNSTAI s•s GAlliEN IUCTOIS
"In
my
judgment it will be a
• Guard and reserve units were
Although guard and reserve
A•ailoblt in 16·11 &amp; 20 H.P.
npt activated in wholesale. fashion officials have testified on Capitol generation before the Iraqi air force
)
dllring Vietnam out of political fear Hill - where they have a nuinl)er recovers to anything like it's previ·
ot increasing public concern about of politically powerful friends - ous strength," McPeak said . ..
- r•,• - • holloloo
_ - ....,
w· ,....,._.__
upi war. Pan of the reason for giv· that they think a 30-day training McPeak detailed a plan involving
ing them significant combat and period can be maintained now that · four stages over 30 days ip which
''lltlllll6'' ......,._
support assignments under the new the call-up lessons of the Persian allied air attacks would achieve
.....IIIIi ,...........
their
aim
of
rendering
useless
plan was to ensure that a president Gulf War have been learned
. . . . , . . . ........... .tw. . . . . .,. . . . .
ha,d strong political support for a Cheney does not appear to buy thai Iraq's military strength to force it
. . "'" · - •4 ... lol JOdi ....
from KuwaiL
·
viM before the step of committing · proposition.
.
The plan stretched to 39 days
J'bserve units to the effort was r But guard officials caution that
.........................tWill
~en.
relegating the combat units to the due to worse than expected weather
in the gulf and the prolonged mis·
;. The Pentagon, at least in the "maybe you'll get to the front"
sion
of destroyinJ. the fixed and
eyes of Congress, dragged its feet status could seriously impair
in ~activating the 48th Mechanized recruiting, leaving a return 10 the mobile Scud miss1le sites used 10
~1ft- •4 - · · Brigade to ~et readr ,to join the dra~ a poten~ally more likely sce- launch the missiles against Israel
24\h Mechanized D1vts1on, and the nano for getung combat power in a and Saudi Arabia.
"We spent three limes the effort
IS 5th Armored Bri~ade and the period of three orfour months
we
thought we would on this job"
2~6th Mechanized Bngade to even'
of
eliminating
the Scud threat,
tll\lllY join unspecified divisions.
McPeak
said.
They were not activated un til
4th &amp; Me1n, ReedsvHie. Oh.
The opening attack centered on
Npvember.
!,!to' 0:, I 0 C; :.!6
eliminating Iraq's offensive capa·
•'In the case of the 48th, they
w~ re declared ready for combat
Fifteen Ohio Northern Universionly on the final day of the ground ty students will join students from
wlr. Feb. 28.
more than 150 colleges and univer·
. : Cheney has made it clear he is s1t1es around the world March 23p~ with the job accomplished
21 for the annual Model United
uAdcr the "total force policy," Nation s program in New York
. wftich saw much of the combat City.
SUNDAY
support and combat service support
The students will learn about
positions allocated to guard and international
MARCH 17th
diplomacy as they
reserve units.
represent various counaies in mock
ONLY!
But the four months it took to sessions
of the UN. ONU students
gCI the 48th Brigade ready to go will represent Sudan, an African
Cheney said be would not commit nation
of 18 million people who
them to combat un,til they were have been
embro.iled in a sevenready - has prompted him to start year civil war
between the Islamic
rethmking the use of guard and
military
government
the main·
reserve forces as quick supple· ly Black, non-Moslemand
south.
ments for regular combat units.
!'-mo~g those .students partici· He discussed it last week with
patmg
w1ll be Jumor Shanin Rader
wire service reporters and followed of Gallipolis,
"For the 6th Straight Year in a 'Row"
an English and politi:
through this week in interviews cal science major.

J

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Calls "Gates Must Go" and '"Peace ·
for the ouster of police Chief Daryl Here and Abroad."
Gates. over the ~ police
J&gt;ameta Canton, 23, Of Thousand
beating of a man
for speed· Oaks, a student at California State
ing continued unabated Saturday
University, Nortridge, carried a
with scores of demonstrator~ cardboard sign that read: "Get tbe
marching on police headquarters.
bad cops out so tbe good cops can
''What we have here is a guy do their jobs...
wbo is a rilcist and a hate monger,'' · "I feel very strongly about
said mm star Alec Baldwin, who · this.' • sbe said. "Anyone who ·
attended tho rally to lend suppon would beat a man like that, they
for the' dump Gates movement. should not be on the strceiS."
"Gates is .bad for the community , Four Los Angeles police offi·
cers, including a sergeant, were
and he mates us look bad. ••
Several demonstrators chanted arraigned Friday 011 felony assault
and Cllried hand-mlde sips saying charges for' the March 3 incident in
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Sunday nrwes Sentinel Page A7

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

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Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, ott

Point Pleaunt,

wv

...;. -------Local briefs

Realtors hold board meeting

..' .Man citedfollowilig crash

JACKSON -The Southeastern .
Ohio Board of Realtors held its
mondy mcetin1 at the Ponderosa
Resi8Urant in 1actwm-feb. 25.
The mcedng - called to order
by .Pn!aidalt Allen Wood. The secrclllry's181d treasurer's 1q101t wen:
read and appoved wid! ooe conection.
.
Jan Gettle&amp; gave a report on the
upcoming two--day SCAREB mini
convention at Shawnee Stale Pan:
beginning July 26. Members were
encollrged to contact Oettles at ·
(614) 286-1370 or write to P.O.
Box 230,Jackson, Ohio 45640.
Wood introduced Nea Henry,
who iii turn i1ttroduced guesiS Jim

Macintosh who \VIS taken to VClei'BJIS.
At 6:56p.m. the Poineroy rii'C Depaitment responded to an clec·
trical fire at Uberty Lane at the Humphrey residence.
At 10:21 p.m. '::.!!~~rt unit went to Overbrook for Lee
Williams who was
10 Vetcrans.
F'mally, It 11:29 p.m. die Tuppers Plains unit - called to the
Arbaugh Addition for Katie Wilfoog who was transported to Cam·
den Clalt Hospital.

GALLIPOLIS - A Cheshire man was ciled for irnpropi'Z backing Friday foDowing 111 accident in front d 12 Stale SDWL
..
Kennedl M. Flash, 19, of Gravel Hill Roed, wu cited after be
: attempted to back out d a parting space. Fnsb su~dy backtd
into anOther Cll( waiting in traffiC, driwen by Lori J. Axline, 19, of
~ BidweU. The crasb resulted in moderate damage to bolh velticles,
'' according to a report from the Gallipolis Police DepenmenL
'"t .. Neither driver was injured.
"'

· Man cited for failure to yield

POMEROY • Several accidents are being investigated by the
Meigs County Sbmff's DeparllllenL
.
On Friday evening around 9:30 p.m. Belba Fisher, Racine,
reported that she was lraveling II the intersec!ion of Routes 338 and
124 in her 1989 Dodtle Van when spmeone threw something at her
vehicle. Light damage was lisled to the driver's docc.
·
Around 7:07 p.m., Francis E. Shaeffer, FlatwoOds .Road,
Pomeroy reported that he was traveling south on RoUte 7 wl)cn he
struck and killed a deer that ran into the path of his 1986 Ford. The
front end of the vehicle sustained moderate damage. ·
Deputies were notified Friday evening .that three juv~ had
pried off a hasp on a lrailer Rea' Star Hall m Salem ToWJ!SbiP. The
three juveniles admitted the damage and charges are pending 011 the
matter.
On Friday morning around 6:30 a.m. William Rutherford, ~out;b
Point was traveling south on Route 7 near Sumner Road m hts
1988 'toyota Truck. He struclt and killed a clcer that ran into his
path. Ught damage was listed to the right front of the vehicle.
·
Michael T. Burke, MiUer Road, Pomeroy, reported to the depart· .
ment that on Thursday morning a suspect was spotted in the milk
house at his fami . Burke reported that during the Jlllll month some., one had been contaminlling his milk. He also reported that be had a
person watcbing the milk house. The suspect is described as bejng
5'8", weighing 150 pounds and wearing a tan jacket, blue panls and
a red scarf. The suspect reportedly ran when confronted by the
watchman. BUI'ke was Qdvised to contact the prosecutor's office
regarding filing charges.
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that Jeffrelc!!;
Roush Chester Road, arrested Thunday evening on charges
Perry County, was released to Perry County an aggravated burglary
aild theft charges.
·
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GALLIPOLIS - A Rudand man was cikld for failure to yield
Friday JIIOrtling after be sii'UCk 8IIOiber c..- at the intmectioo of Second Avenue aild Olive Slleet.
Todd M. Price, 19, of 33410 'Crouse Road, was cited after be
failed to stop at a stop sign on Olive Street and nveled into the path
of a crossing car, driven by Shirley S. Cummons, 44, Gallipolis.
Price's 1980 Plymouth Horizon inflicted modcralt damage to Cummons' 1987 Oldsmobile Tornado; according to a repOrt from the
Gallipolis Police DeparlmenL
,·
Neither driver was injllftd in the crash.

,. '

Teen a"aigned on assault charges
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallinnlis youth was arraigned on assault
charges Friday in the GallipO&amp;-Munic~ Court. .
·
.
James Drlek Armsaong, 19, of Gallipolis, had been charged with
two oounts of assault Slelllming from an alleged auaclt on three Gal·
lia Academy High School male S1lldents Monday evening.
· AnnSirong pfcaded not guilty Friday 11 his arraignment and Gallipolis Municipal Court Judge Joseph L. Cain set his bond at $2,500,
10 peltCIIt secured.
A pre-lrial hearing was scheduled f&lt;l" April 8. •
.

EMS answers seven calls Friday
PQMEROY • Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service responded to seven calls for assistance on F.riday.
At 8:45 am. the Middleport unit was called to Stonewood Apanments for ZeUa Taylor who was taken to Vela'ans Memorial Hospital, and at 10:03 a.m. the unit went to Zuspan Hollow Road for ,
Clarence Gilmore, also taken to Veterans.
· ·
· The Rudand unit at 12:31 p.m. responded to Meigs Mine No. 31
for Chuck Mecum who was transported to O'Bleness:HOS)iitaJ.. ·
The Pomeroy unit went to ~ at 2:24 p.m. for Elizabeth

By Unlled Press IDtemllllonal
A late winter storm moved
t~rough the southwestern United
StateS Saturday, d~mping snow in
·mountainous areas and rain in
desert country.
Between 3 and 6 inches of snow
fell Friday in the vaHeys of cenlral
Nevada, while more than a foot of
snow blanketed the state's mountains.
. ,
i' Heavy snowfall was re)X1rted
11so in Utah, including 8 inchCs at
Duck Creek. Snowfall totals In the
mountains of Southern California
ranged up to 11 inches at Mount ·
IJasuna, tho National Weather Service said. ·
.
'•' Two in'ches of snow fell at
~ngman, Ariz., causing a number
of traffic accidents.
-~ Thunderstorms swept the
desertS of the Southwest. About
two-thirds of an inch of rain fell at
Imperial, Calif., while a third of an
iDch was·JqlOited at Needles, Calif.
., The weather service posted a
snow advisory for Saturday over
die upper Arli:ansas Valley of Colorado, and a whiter storm watch

.

, The lockJ at Sault Ste. Marie,
Mich., are slated to open at 8 am.
Thursday, the same date as last
year.
.
U.S.-fla&amp;ged fleets are expecled
til move ncarly 1 million tons of
iron ore and coal through the locks
before Aprill, once the traditiOIIII
opening date for,trade between
Lake Superior and the lower Great
Lali:es.
The Lake Carrien' Aasociation,
a shipping trade grou~ in Cleveland. said early projccu0111 for the

1991 season call for a repeat of
1990 in terms d ojlerating vessels,
with 64 of the 69 serviceable ves·
sets opc'ZIIIing,
'

The Lake Carriers' said that
with roughly the same number of
vessels in service this year and
water levels rising slighdy, U.S.Ilagged CBIIJO should at least equal
1990's 112.1 million tons, which
\VIS up I percent from Ill million
tonS in 1989.
Iron ore, the leading commodi·
t)l, was up 4 percent last ycar to
.59.6 million lOllS from .57.1 million
tonS In

1!189

0

Srone and aypsum shipments,
hc&gt;wever. were dOwn 7 pereent to
23.3 million lOIII from 25.1 million
tons. The Late .Carriers' llllributed
11111 decline.
10 the closing
of Port Inland, all$ SIOIIC quarry
on the northern shore of Lake
Mlchip!.
Coal and coke ·slllpments
incrcued 2.3 percent last ycar to
19.9 million tollS from 19.4 mil·
Ji!!n. primarily bec,use of record·

in.-,

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March 17, 1811!

.••

.

CCC AT WORK· The Cl~:
laD CoDServatlon Corp1 provell
Itself this winter at Cam.p1
Klatbuta uar Chester. Tilt'
CCC, now under the dftctloti ~
the Ohio Department ol Na~:
Resources, helped clear 1 3 mUe·
nature trail at the camp. The:
trail will be open tn the publle:
bealnDiDg In April. (Tima-Sen. tlnel Photo by Brian J, Reed) . .1
,
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·VETERANS MEMORIAL HOS·

'0

PITAL

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FRIDAY ADMISSIONS :· .
ClarenCe G~ Middlepon; and
Winnie White, Racine. FRIDAY DISCHARGES
;Wanda Lyons, Timothy Triplett, ·
Ocel Sears, Coralce I;laUey and
Minard Jones.

by

Gnlld

n

p

d.

Mooday,MIII'Ihtl.

.

12:30-2:30 '
IIIIIOtt breadcalf

on

WJ~-AM.

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Weather

•

.,, . , lt•l•"l l•t J(JtJIIlTIIIII
LOCAL OFFICES

-,

GALLIPOLIS, 63 Court'St .................. 448-8178
PT. PLEASANT, 328 Mair,~ St ............. 676·4020
Vl,elt the Galllpoll1 Corporation H..dqll8rter8
No Fl18 Salel Jutt Rafl8ehmanbl and Glft1
'

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......

WEATHER MAP. A surface low pressure will produce
widespread mow 8CI'OIIII the Ohio Valley. Fartlaer tb the south, the
same s,-stem wiU produce showers and th•nderstorms through the
Tenmee Valley and Southellst. Rain Is Uket:r In California while •
partly cloud;f fO mostly aunayo skies Will dominate the Northwest
arid northern PlaiDs. (UPI}
. ·
·was in effect Saturday and Satur·
day night for the state's southern
mountains, the Palmer Divide ares
and the southeastern parts of Colorado.
A winlel' stonn watch was post·
ed Saturday foc the Oklahoma Pan·
handle and for the northern half of
the Texas Panhandle,
Winter storm warnings were in

·c amp Kiashuta gets facelift for camp.ers
1991 FORD ESCORT PONY
Denblgh·Ganett Prlce ........ ;..$7,828,00 .
Le88 Factory Rebate ..•.•..•..•....•.• :1100.00
'

'

"""1'0-TAL DEUVERED PRICE:

$7,126.00*

effect Friday night for the higher
elevations of Arizqna, the mountains in SOuthern Utah and parts of
Nevada.
On Friday rain and snow fell
across much of the central United
States. Showers extended from
East Texas into westem Missouri
and eastern Kansas. Snow v;as
faDing over the cenual high plains.

1991 EXPLORER 2-DR 4x4
Stock #S1T83

Manufacturer'• sua. Price ............ '21,591.00
Special Factory DI.Kouat ................ 1,400.00
Denblab·Gairett Dllcouat............... 1, ISOO.OO
TOTAL DEI..lVERED PRICE:

$18,691.00*

.

breaking shipments of western coal 477,430 tonS.
. from Superior, Wis.
Cement and potash cargo totaled
SPRING VALLEY
3.4 milliQn tons, up from 3.3· mil446 4514
lion tons; liquid bulk 3.3 million,
up from 3 rmDion tons: salt nearly
unchanged at 1.1 million tons:
grain at 1 million tons, down
sharply from 1.4 million tons: and
sand 494, 7S3 tons, up from

By BRIAN J, REED
Times-Sentinel Staff
.
··
CHESTER· A three-mile nature
trail c&lt;tn&amp;tnlcled by the OhiQ Civil:
ian Conservation Corps at Camp
.I'!iashuta is .being described as "a
dream come true" for the Boy
Scouts of America and will
improve a site already · steeped in
'history.
The camp was built in the late
1930's by the Works Project
.Administration.
:
Serving Ohio, People
• Mention of the CCC and the
'WPA tends to conjure up images of
1'&gt;resident Franldin Roosevelt and
:the Great Depression. Many people
)Ire unaware that the CCC program
· •is sliD in existence.
: Indeed, the Ohio CCC continues
,to o!)erate as a branch of the Ohio
•Department of Natural Resources,
'proviqing service to the community
'and work experience to unem·
ployed young adults interested in
·.working outdoors.
The CCC is described as a
")Vork, earn and learn program" •
open to men and women aged _IS to
24, Services provided by the CC.C
include restoration of historical
structures, sites and artifacts, fighting forest ftreS, deveklpin~ wildlife
habitat, installation of p1cnic and
recreational sites, revegetating for·
mer slrip mines, roadside plantings,
)md constructing and improving
biking, hiking and nature trails
'
1
c
,such as those now in p ace at amp
'J{iashuta.
•
- CCC ~cipants who worked
hn the Kiashuta project are houstd
tm the CCC residential camp in
2aleski, although certain posts of
'the CCC are non-residential. At the
Zaleski camp, food , lodging and
recreation are provided to the corps
4'nemben.
: According, to CCC Project

,.

&amp;toCk #RIES11

1991 MERCURY COUGAR LS
Stock #RlC02

CIN~MA

.

llallufacturer's Sq. Price .... •19,245.00
DenbJgb·Garrett Dl.c:ouat .... ,.. 2,000.00
TOTAL DEUVERED PRICE:

,$17
,245.00*
•onza

GOOD TIIIW IIAitCB 31, 18111

COlONY lllfA1HE

FRI. THRUTHURS.

DENIRO
1991 Ford Tempo GL
4 door, auto .. crulac, Wt wheel,
air, po~~~~Uwlndows, power locks,
6 , 100 mlleo

1990 Ford Probe

1989 Ford Tempo GL

Automatic: air, tape

Auto., 4 door. PS, crulae, alr,
26,000 mJlea

Low Mileage

$9.995

OlE nut• SIIOW 7:JO
ADIIIAIOI S1.50

44Ut23

1989 FoJ'd
~onvenlon

uso

Van

Fully loaded, rear air,
16,000 ml1ea

'CRUISE
to the BAHAMAS

1989 Ford Escort
Stauon Wagon, 5 speed. air

$

.

7,'795

1988 Ford Ranger 41:4

.1988 Chny 8-10
5 spj'ed, air, AM/FM,
25,000 mJlea

June 14-17
Hosted by Tim Amrine
'

tee

with. However, an advisory board
for the project was formed ·• consisting of Powell,' Arms, Shade
River.Forest Manager Jim Milliron,
and Wildlife Officer Keith Wood.
The Tri-State Area CQuncil gave its
approval for the project and plans
were underway.
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District
became involved in the project in
mid·l989. Plans for the ~oject
were submitted to the Ohio
•
ment of Natural Resources wi the
desire for the Civilian CQnservation
Corps to develop the project. In
Falf, 1989, the Parks District
received ODNR 's approval, and
the nils were placed on the CCC's
work ~hedule for Summer, 1990,
Rainy weather in 1990 put all
CCC projects • including Camp
Kiashuta • behind schedule, and
ground on the project was broken
on January 23, 1991. 700 hours
~ent into the "trailblazing" work,
.which put four men and two

..
,,

,

women to the task of clearing away
brush, cutting trees and making ·a
passable trail.
·
A Bright Futlire
.,
· (%ccording to Powell, forestty,
students from Hoelting College will ·
spend the spring months. developing a nature study for Kiasbuta' s
new hiking trail. This wiU involve
marking all vegetation of lntaeat to ·
' hiken for the pUIJl08C of idcnlificalion, Prior to the April dedication.,•
the entrance to the trail will beo
marked for easy identification.
,;
Future development of the camp:
is also in the works, with discus;:
sion now in progressaboul rebuild;
ing the third room d the cabin, and.
possible trail developmenL
'•
In addition, Powell staled that
the parks district and scouts arc•
investigating .the possibility of
placing the cabin on the National
Registry of Historic Placet.
The lrails now in plal:e ll'e to bo
maintained by the scouts and the
parks districL
·

' 5 • peed. air. 33,000 ml!ea

Umtted
~door.

1984 Bronco u

auto., PS, air,

Auto .. air, 4x4

38, 71!6 mtlea, bW:k

$7 995

Cruise 'from Miami, Florida to Nassau, Bahamas abqard the
Carnival's newest SuperLiner, the magnificent Fanrasy. On ,
board enjoy all the recreational activities, delicious meals and
spectacular entertainment Carnival has to offer.
... f!lld all at a cost that nusy surprise you!

•
"Driue A Uttle · Saue A Lot"

today!

GAIJ.IPOIJS - 448-0889

n,n!) AgenCy S.,W,g tJJ. _.,p..io

U-

• ' a'

•
• .:•14 South Church Street
Ripley, WV

UOIII' m,mb.n,

I-=\

Bank Ffnancing Auclflable

Carnival a:uJ.iie Unes
Call or stop by

Coordinator Noel Lemons, who Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249, into shape.
According to Arms , The Tri ·
wotked closely with crews at says that the cabin is in almost conKiashuta,•the CC~ progt11111 works Stant use on the weekends between t S~te Council and several local volclosely with Hocking College in October. aild April, and that anyone unteers have D)ade a yearly fund
NelsonVille '• many corps members is welcome to use the facility at a .drive work to the camp' s 1\dvango on to study forestry or related · nominal fee , Scout troops, 4-H tage. Between three and four thoufields there. The CCC program also · ·clubs and similar organizations are sand dollars have gone back into
assists panicipants without a high gjven priority, Arms said, and the camp for capital improvemel)ts.
The volunteer effort that has
school diploma in getting their reservations are arran~ed throul!h
GED certificate, and provides · the Tri-State Council s office 10 been so important to Camp
Kiasbuta came through again
training in the areaS of job search Huntiilgton, w, Va .
·and outdoor safety.
The two-room cabin at Camp .. -recendy. An anonymous business
Aside from the age requirement, Kiashuta is augmented by 138 and J &amp; F Contracting assisted vol- ·
CCC applicants must be Ohio resi· acres of cool and lush forest land. unteers in stringing new support
dents. must be unemploved and in The camp includes real estate on cables on the swinging bridge. A
need of employment. In addition, both sides of Shade River, and new floor was added at that time,
applicants should have no history camp users can use the "famous" as well, making a badly deteriorat·
of serious criminal or antisocial swinging footbridge to access the ed bridge safe once again.
behavior and be physically quali- land across the river.
Mei~s County Parks
DIStrict Joms In
· tied fOI' the hard physical labor that
Camp Killshuta
. is involved with the CCC's pro,
·Is ~ich in History
It was the rich history and ~u­
jects, ·
·
Built in 1936, the cabin at Camp larity of Camp Kiashuta wh1ch
crews have been on .the KiaShuta conjures up memories of prompted the Meig_s County_Par~s
site of Camp Kiashuta regularly campfires and summer days under District to see a v1able proJect m
since December, clearing brush , the stars for boy scouts and girl trails at the camp in 1989.
According to Powell, the district
cutting trees and cutting the ·earth scouts, both past and presenL
·
away to construct the trails,
· All of the logs and stones used !tad "virtually no money" to work
Planning for the project, on the to build the lodge came from the
other hand, has been underway · site itself. In fact, the stone "quarsince 1989, according to Meigs ry" can still be seen a few steps
County Pan: District Director Mary from the cabin.
Powell. The planning stages of the
The cabin, which consists of a
project not only involved the Parks lodge and kitchen originally had a
District and the CCC, but also the third room , Wben or why that room
Boy Scouts of America's Tri-State was removed is unknown, but the
·Area Council (which owns and fireplace that was in that room can
mail!tains Camp· Kiashuta), and the still be seen on the outside' wall of ;
Shade River State Forest
Now nearly completed, the trail the building.
will be open to the public for hikIn 1940• the cabin was sold by
the private owners of the property
ing, and an opening ceremony is 10 the Boy Scouts of America for
slated for April6,
$10, but maintenance on the build·
Camp OtrersMucb
ing suffered in the late 1960's,
ror Nature Lovers
when the MGM District lost their
Many people in Meigs County professional scouters, The priva~,
and the surrounding area may not sector, however, came to the rescue
be aware that all of the facilities at • businesses in the area donated the ·
Camp Kiashuta are open to the necessary materials to refUI'bish the
public.
structure, and individuals donated
Camp Kiashuta Ranger Bob their time 10 get the propeny back
Arms, who is also the leader of

,,

$

372-FORD

&lt;&gt;;

(372-3173)

Alk For DoUIJ CG.to or Milrs McCormick
\I

';...,

B

Hospital news

Dan Tax

'

Sooth Central Ohio
By United Pr-lnlmladonal
Sunday, mosdy cloudy with rain
likely in the afternoon. High in the
mid .50s. Chance, of rain 60 pertcnL
Ohio extended forecast
Moa~y tbfougb Wednnday
Monday, rai'n likely . Highs
mosdy in the 40s and lows mi4 30s .
to near40.

.

lapd.

'

1rintes .., ittdittd ·Section .

Income Tax

for driving under the inlluence and no operator's license by the Gallia County Sheriff's Department Saturday,

Great
Lakes shipping sea_son under way
...

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
1991 Great Lalc:es shipping season
i~o officially under way with the
cement carrier Medusa Challenger
ell route from Milwaukee to Clevelaid,
The Medusa Challenger, openlt·
ed by the Medusa Cement Corp. of
Cieveland, left its winlel' berth in
Milwaukee Thursday en route to
Charlevoix, Mich., to load cement
fOr deliveiy to Medusa's terminal
ot1 the Cqyahoga River in Clete-

'

Chris A. Jaramillo, 32, of BidweD, was arrested and incarcerated

NA110NALWEATltEII FORECAST FIIOM7 All :J.t74110 7AII~tl-lt

Late.winter
storm strikes
the Southwest

Ticket sales: $1,456,132. Pay' off: $322,797.
Plck-4
4619.
Ticket sales: $269,118.50, Payoff: $103',900.
·
Cards
Kil)g of hearts.
Ten ofclubs.
Queen of diamonds.
King of spades
·
Ticket sales: $S4;S7S: Payoff:
$4',910.

~!,!.,

Lawmefl a"est 1 overnight
'

648.

-.•

.

Along the River

Sbank and Gary D. Shpfer II.
Shank and Shafer pvc aalnfonna·
live program on Rec:oiDI Qn·Line
Systems and the use and coovenience of the Multiple Listing Service and equipmenL
·
Nineteen members and the two
guests attended the meeting. The
members attending were Sonny
Garnes, Cassie Bowen, Donna
Summers, Patricli: Cochran, Ruth
Barr, Kim Hadey, Nea Henry, Jan
Gettles, Alice HiD, Fred'Hjll, Gary
Gillium. Maureen Kreider, Roger
Hammond, ·Cathy Wray, Jeannie
France (Tolliver), Russell Wood,
Roma Wood, Jeanette Moore and .
Allen Wood.
·
The next .meeii!lg for the board
will be in Gallipolis 011 March 25,
Lottery numbers
beginning at 6:30 p.m. at Dale's
Smorgasbord in .the Silver Bridge
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Friday's Plaza. The meeting will consist of
winning Ohio Lottery numbers:
further discussion on multi)ile list·
Pld:-3
ings.

[deigs deputies probe crashes

J

.

March 17,1891

I

•

''
.,

i
"·

CAMP KIASHUTA • Louted on Scout
C81Bp Road near Cbater, Camp Klubuta Is a
sceDie nd IDvltlq camp. Used In the summer
byKOUt
lroopllor day camps
IDd other
ac:thi·
.
.
.

ties, the caml_ and Its ·racUitles are also open to

the public. (Timei-SeatiDel Photo by
Reed)

•'
I '

o

Brla~

•·

J,

,•

•

LOTS OF PLANNING :Several months of
plaDDill weat lato a Dew nature trill 1t Camp
Klasbuta Dear Cllester, aDd IDvolved sneral
local orpalzatlons. Pictured at the site are, l·r,
Mary Powell of tile Melp Cou11ty ParkJ Dis-

:.,__....J ·,,

trict, Paal Martin, Project Slipervllor

tor ClvO-

'

ian ConsenatloD Corp1, Noal Lmoaa, CCC '
Project Coordinator, 1ad Bob Ar1111, Klallllda
Raaaer. (Times-Sentinel Plloto by •rtaa J, '.'
Reed)
.
:

�..
Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH Point PINunt, wv

. Page B2-Sunday Times Sentinel

LEON, W.Va.- Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar lllifle Sr.• of Route 2 Leon,
W.Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Orville
Johnson of Slate Route 554, BidweU, announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of Paul I.
Riffle and Orvilette Johnson.
Miss Johnson is a graduate of
North Gallia High School and
attends the University of Rio

Wedding policy

•CRAFT SUPPLIES
•HOMEMADE CRAFTS

,.

1

~·coME

MR. AND MRS. FRANK

McGuire-Neal

•
••

•'

VINTON - Mr. and Mrs.
~Franklin E. McGuire of Crown
: (:ity and Mr. and Mrs. Lon E. Neal
~of Bidwell, announ~ the engage~rne~t and. approachmg m31ria8e of
~thetr Children, Cathy Jean and
;christopher Earl.
~ The open church wedding will
:"be held on Satwday, May 11, 1991
;at 6:30 p.m. at Vinton Baptist
~Church, Vinton, with Rev. Jeny L.
3ileal offiCiating.

McGuire is a 1989 graduate of
Hannan Trace fligh School and
Buckeye Hills Career Center. She
is currently employed with Toler &amp;
Toler Insurance Services, Gallipo- .
lis.
.
Neal iS a I 989 graduate of North
Gallia High School and Buckeye
Hills Career Center. He is currently
employed with Poor Boys Tires, ·
Henderson, W.Va.

·' '
..:

.

.'

~

''

•

'·

•

•
•
•

•

''
'

'
••'

.' ,

Frush-Edwards
'

.

Youth League
sign up·slated

Hills honors
~its empoyees

'ood

is

OhioValley
Meinber FDIC ·

Wells-Roessler

ka.

· · Mowery is employed at Hills
Deparlrnent.Store in Gallipolis:
Pallesen is a senior field engineer with Surgical Laser Technologies in Tampa Fla.
A summer wedding i~ being
planned.
.

.

ElECTRIC or GAS

$449

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·t:"r..::;-

S60 ·

....-....... ______
. ·-·....
.... _'"_"

WRH &amp;NY PUI!HISI Of IJ99.9i
· ·~

.- .....- ...........o~·- , ....,,.. _,., ...... _,.,.

.......

K;M SIIHIIO lours"

REG. '699"

'lb.l .. er'foli4U"I~d¥
and 3 ....l.klg ~ .. ...,.

NO"

COIIWnertf~IM . orAy3a

I'I'WIIAOs I'IWI'ft' kMI h rT'IIIIt1
01 Sea Wolftf Oi$nliv

.,.,.w
..
'NJricP. EPCOr• WIG 11-..

-----..-___
---·_ --...,,.--·
·----·-··
,

wol lr.M! Wri(J OUr C.·rbr, S.ntgl• f1onc11 ~ n
YIW')IIon ht(}l1cm Be orr r1 !he lirlt to "'PftitnCe !he ntW

••~o""JJIC ll!llllun 'f'l) t

Atilt!~ '

..

~-

S499U

...

Selectk)n

ne.¥

Olsncly MOM Sl1~- ·

.......
Whlte-Wesllngholl••
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ONlY

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$49995

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tHush Puppi.~s

Zenith

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SPECIAL
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florida or Bahamas

REG. 536.00

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53100

Summer Cruise
Specials I
RESERVATIONS ARE GOING FAST! .
Departing June 8 for
1 rights •.
Sailing to Cozumel,
Mexico • Grand Cayman
Islands/ Jamaica.

WAS SJ380

NOW

Good For

.. ..

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- · - - .-,a.

Angelll

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how many jelly beans are in the jar and
win •&amp;0-'25-'1 0 Gift Certificates .

$24995

Mon. I Fri. til I P.M.
Tues. Wttl. Thur. til 6 P.M.
• Sa'-"'dar til s P.M.

'•
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;'

••

NOW

$771!

Deporting Junt 29.

Color TV

--

Departing June I 7 for 4
llightl. Salling ta Nassau
and Fretpart in tht
Bahamas •f'ln a whit to
- own Privoto Island in
tht lahamas.
WAS 1939

$896!

19" diag.

.I

·,

••

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,

446-6446 or 1·100-172·2292
417 SICOIID AYL, GAWPOUS

Zt~~ith
w•Nm

children find the shoj)ping can seat
belts a useful addition to the shOP."
ping experience at KmarL .
:

Video reviews

CONTEST WINNER • Ben Pope, (center), Bidwell-Porter ntth
~rader, was recently announced as the winner of the Better Hearmg and Speech Month Poster Contest for the month of May. Diane
McVey, (left), president or the Southeastern Ohio Speech and
Hearing Association, presented Pope witb a $:ZS wlaning cbeck.
Also 011 hand was Janke Rl~penbo", (right) county schools speecbo
languagr pathologist. The winning poster wUI be submitted in state
competition.
·
·

25" dlag.

3-Way Recliner

S999
-.... .,.._
___ _
...__..

.

S299

•Reel lag Sale Items Do Not Apply
BEOURGUESP
Enjoy a fabulous

Jewelry Sales

GALLIPOLIS • According to a and needless trauma for parents
repon released by the Consumer and young children.
People who shop with small
Product Safety Commission, falls
from shopping carts are now one of
the leading causes of head injury to
children under the age of five.
As concern mpunts over the
high number of accidents each
year. the Kmart siore in Gallipolis
1s providing Safe-Strap shopping
cart sear belts on all of 1ts shopping ·

S549
U)VESIAT

Ruby Vaughan, treasurer. Pictured, 1-r, are,
seated, Ruby Vaughan, Dave Edwards and Jim
Witherell. Standing, John Bryan and Ed Bur•
kelt. Not pictured is Etta Jo Furst.

Kmart moves to fight accidents

will

•FREE DELIVERY
eCREDIT TERMS
•SERVICE DEPT •
•90 DAY TERMS

FlEE onOMAN

COIN CLUB OFFICERS - Current officers
or the OH KAN ·com Club are Dave Edwards.
president; Ed Burkett, director; John Bryan,
vice•presldent; Etta Jo Furst, secretary; and

According to Jim Nolen, Gallipolis Kmart manager, the store
has already installed I00 cart seat
ByJACK E. WILKINSON
belts, and they have also purchased
Unitl:d Press International
50 more in case the original belts
"Pacific Hei,bts" - For a are damaged.
young San Franc1sco couple, it's
Last year, approximately 17,000
the house of their dreams. But, how children nationally under the age of
quickly it can tum into a night- five were treated in emergency
mare. The ultimate landlord's rooms as a result of falls from
nightmare, that· is. In John shopping carts. Of these, two-thirds
Schlesinger's slick thriller, Patty · were serious head and facial
. (Melanie Griffith) and Drake injuries. Many of tl!ese accidents
(Matthew Modine) buy an elegant result in life-long disabilities and
hilltop home and restore much ·or most,' if not all, could have easily
its original luster, planning to make been prevented.
.
lll'penses by renting out ~art of iL
Despite the growing number of
Enter Carter Hayes (Michael injuries, the decision to install the
. Kearon), who seems like such a belts by retailers remains a volunnice guy that no one notices until 1ary one, liS there is currently no
it's too late what a manipulative legislation regarding this safety
sociopath he is. Hayes talces over item. Although Kman has reported
the downstairs studio apartment, no such incidents of this.type, they
literally, refusing access to the have implemented this child safety
point of changing the locks, while d11vice as a genuine show of comall night long there are sounds of m\lllity spirit and customer service.
The Safe-Strap Company pichammering and sawing from
inside. When Drake !angles with neered the shopping can ·seat belts,.
him, Hayes has him arrested, forces a device similar to the straps found
PENNY MOWERY AND NELS
him to move out 'of his o\vn home in high chairs, strollers and car
PALLESEN
and then shoots him when he seats. These belts are made ftom
comes back. But, Patty manages to durable woven textiles and high
mess up Hayes' next scam, bring- impact bucldes. They aaach permaon a final confronlation. 1990. nently into the shopping cart and
____w.l minutes ._CB&amp;Eox. Yideo.-Bte.availableJor.use by.people who
Ra~d R. $92.98.
shop with small children.
· Of the 16,962 accidents that
"Desperate Hours" - In the oci:urred in 1990, not one involved
third dramatization of Joseph the use of a Safe-Strap shopping
Hayes ' novel, Mickey Rourke~ cart seat belt. Retailers using the
lakes over the old Humphrey Boga- device have reported none of these
types of accidents, thus saving milrt role as an escaped ldllet who terrorizes a suburban household while boos of dollars· in accident claims
awaiting an accomplice with get'
away money. Anthony Hopkins Fun riight scheduled
plays the head of the family who
Star Grange will hold its fun
ultimately must deal with the dan- night on Saturday at 6:30 p.rn. at
gerous intruder in a war of wills the grange hall located on County
that becomes a battle for survival. Road I near Salem Center.
A sleek, updated story, but doesn't
A potluck supper
be held
ecplise the 1955 version. 1990. 105 followed by games. Wear green .
minutes. MGM-UA Horne Video. All members and potential memRated R. $92.98.
bers are invited to attend.

HENDERSON, W.Va.· Ola
Thompson of Henderson, W.Va.,
announces the engagement of her
granddaughrer, Penny Kaye Mowe~y of Point Pleasant, to Nels H.
Pallesen of Tampa Fla.
She is the daughter of Janice
Wears of Tarpon Springs, Fla., and
Virgil and Mary Wears of Danville,
Ohio. He is the son of Dick and
Ruth Pallesen of Homer of Nebras-

~
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GALLIPOLIS • The 29th Annu·
al Spring Coin Show, hosted by the
OH KAN Coin Club of Mlddlepo11,
will be held March ·24 frOm 9 am.
to 5 p.m. at the Holiday Inn in
Kanauga. near Gallipolis. ,
Coin. coUectors of all ages, coin
dealers, and the public from Ohio,
West Virginia and Kentucky will
have the opportunity to exhibit,
sale or trade with upwards of $1
million worth of rare coins, paper
currency, precious metals, and
related items.
·
Edward Burkett, show chairman, reports that 14 coin dealers
from three states have reserved
lable display spac!l and (lave a vast
assortment of coins and other material for sale or trading purpose.
.· Dealers will offer free appraisals
·and will accept in trade old pocket
watches and other items made of
gold, silver or platinum.
Exhibits will feature coins and
paper currency of the United States
issued during the past 200 years.
Hourly door prizes of U.S. dollars
will be given to the public. Souvenir wooden nickels and free coin
publications will be given. A grand
prize of U.S. gold coin and paper
currency will be awarded at S p.m.
The public is invited and locked
security cases will be provided, All
e~hibits will be non-competitive:

Mowery-Pallesen

.H.illl chain.

,,

HAROLD WELLS JR. SUSAN ELAYNE ROESSLER

SYRACUSE . Harold WeDs Jr. Kelly,andsrep-daughrerofO'Quin
and Susan Elayne Roessler are' Kelly -of Syracuse. She is a 1990
. anl)(&gt;uncing th11ir engagement and graduate Qf Ohio University .and is
; upcoming marriage.
employed by Baltimore County
: He is the son of Harold Wells Public Schools in Maryland.
• Sr, Bidwell, and the taie Phyllis
An open church wedding is
: Wells. He is a I 980 graduate of planned for March 30 at 5:30 p.m.
! Kyger Creek Hig!t School and is . at the Pine Gap Church of Christ in
: employed by the United Brother- Peebles.
.
• hood of.Carpenters.
A reception will follow at the
~
She is the daughter of F~ed Peebles Coml!lunity Building.
; Roessler, Peebles, and Mrs. Elame

This certificate of de~oait has a floor rate of 8.5% and requires a rninimum deposit of $500.00. Thera a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal.

. "1!1 Cu. fl \loUnl

daughter, Monica Frush, to Roben
G. Edwards Jr. of Point Pleasant, .
. W.Va. He is the son of Roben E.
..
Edwards Sr. of Gallipolis Ferry and
The Pomeroy Youth League is
ViclrJti G. Edwards of Point Pleas- · h~ving summer ball sign-up for
anL
g1rls and boys ages five to I 6 at
· Edwards is an employee of Pomeroy Elementary School on
Wackenhut Corporation at the Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Mounlaineer Plant in New Haven
and Monday from 6-8 p.m. A copy
A June wedding is behig of participant's birth certificare
GALLIPOLIS • "When the planned.
must be provided.
: going Nets tough, the tough get
· going, said Millard E. Barron,
: senior vice president of siCre oper: ations of Hills Department Stores.
· "Our employees are doing a terrific
: job In coping with the pressures of
: a difficuireconomy. We strive to
• show them how much we appreci •
Order
: ate their efforts."
·
This sentiment was behind the
your
: company 's recent "Employee
~ Appreciation Night" where Hills
Name Cards,
; Department Store honored their
~ own on Sunday, March 10, dwing
Graduation
~ a edebration. Employees shopped
; at lllbltantial discount savings and
Announcements,
; Jlirdc.ttell in award drawings.
: Tiley
preVIewed the new brand
Memory ~ooks,
. name fiiShlons and latest styles for
' the ~~)ring and summer.
Jewelry and
:· Hltll of Gallipolis General Man: ager, Wa)'l'!e Benson, commented
· on the event. "Hills has a lot of
Party Supplies
: benefiiS and they'~e
ones, but
; Em~yee Appra:iauon Night was
from us.
. a !IItle more special. It seemed
·more personal because it was just
for 111110 employees." aaid Benson.
~
AD Hills IIIOI'eS dlroughout the
~ ...-111 ~in the Sunday
•.evut, Mich included over 700
: people per store and more than
93 MILL Sl.
! 100,000 people throughout the
992-6657
• · GALLIPOLIS • Mr. and Mrs.
' Stephen L. Frush of Gallipolis
: announce .the· engagement and
: fpr~bcom ing marriage of their

•
•••

.. •

;

Fro1t Free Rtlrlgeretor

ROBERT EDWARDS AND MONICA FRUSH

~

~,

'

will

•
•

n.

CD VARIABLE RATE SPECIAL

Four
Convenient
Locations

-:

.
7

Apple Macintosh
intro class set
RIO GRANDE· The University
of Rio Grande will be offering an
introductory class in the usc of the
Apple Macintosh Computer. The
class will meet for two Tuesday
evenings, March 26 and April 2,
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. in Allen
Hall, Room B-1.
Cost of the seven hour class is
$40. Pre-registration deadline is
Monday, March 26. Participants
will earn a continuing education
certificate for .7 CEUs.
This is a fltSt class in a series for
new users of the Macintosh computer.
Students will be given a full orientation to the sysrem operations
including: slattup procedures, organizing and copying system folders
_and files, Macmtosh utilities, and
the usc of drawing and word pro·
cessing applications.
·
The class
be taught by
.Larry Ewing and Jean Ann Vance
of the university relations office,
who use Macintosh computers
exclusively in their office.
For more infonnation and ~egis­
tration, contact the OffiCC of Continuing Education, URG, Rio
Grande, 45674, or by callinf 2455353 ext. 325 or toll-free, -800282-7201.

.

VISIT WITH US"

.. 992-6109'
JUST BELOW liiDDLEPOIT ON

---'~

coin show
scheduled ;

JO'S CRAFT SHOP

GALLIPOLIS - Robert and
Theresa Price announce the marria~e of their daughte~. Rebecca .
Elaine, to Frank James Overstreet,
son or Tom Overstreet of St.
Mary's, Ohio and Jirn1md JoAnn
Haskins of Gallipolis.
The couple was married Saturday, Feb. 23, 1991.
Price is a ·graduate of Kyger
Creek High School and the University of Rio Grande. She is currently
employed as office manager of
·Kyger Creek Credit Union.
Overstreet is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School an~· is
serving in the United SlateS Nary.

..

Engagements-- Annual

Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to the \late
of publication.
PhOtOgraphs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
publi$hed with wedding SIOries if
desired. Photographs may·be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Genetllly, snapshots or instant-developing photos
are not of acceptable qUality.
·
Questions may be directed 10 the
editorial department from 1 to S ·
p.rn. Monday through Friday at · ·
(614) 446-2342. .
.

TUESDAyI MARCH 19

PriceOverstreet

.

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaunt, WY

• March 17, 1991

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards Weddinj!S of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason counties as news and is
happy to publish wedding· stories
and J&gt;hotol!rallhs without charge
However; wedding news must
meet general slandards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the evenL ·
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
laken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Malerial for
Along the River.must be received
the editorial

Grande.
Riffie graduated from Pt. ~'leu­
ant high School and is employed at
Kanawha River Towing.
The open chun:h cenm~ony will
talce place March 23 at I p.m. in
Creston Methodist Church on Swe
Route 87 in West Virginia.
A reception follows at Leon
Baden Community Center.

..

..

March 17, 1891

--Engagements-- --Weddings-] ohnson-Riffle

. .

**

~.
PLUS!

Sailing to San Juan
• St. thomas
• St. Marten.
. WAS sf290

NOW

$952!

**
*)

SUMMER BLOCKBUSTER II
AIR FARES!

CALL NOW FOI NEW LOW PIIQS IIIOUGIIOUI Til
HOURS: MON.-Fitl. 8:30-1; SAT. 9-1

"-5.1

If you'r e 'gctlinf: married soon, our bridal conmll anl will take
Ihe tirne to learn about your penonal preferences and · pr Oj~ci l·d
lirestyle. She can help you ~lect tht patte rns and tt.in~ that you
genuinely want and will alway!i enjoy ,

...........
.W RCOHO AVWMJI

;

....

Mcmht· r National Rridal ScrviCl'

�•

&lt;

Page 84 SUnday nmn Sentinel .

Pomeroy-Middleport a-lllpolla, OH Point Pleasant, WV

•

March 17, 1991

March 17,1191

re~ted

veliiclcs. Tli&lt;: waivers
already have drawn rue from consumer grou~ state attorneys genera1 and s~ msurance regulators.
. ~ the IS~ has touched off a
CIVIl war ":'ll.hJn the rent~l car
industry, puuna heav_ywe1g~ts,
such as Hertz and Av1s, ~gamst
many of '!le ~aller compan1es '!~at
make _therr livm~ by undercutun_g
the pnces of theu bigger compeutors.
.
.
.Rep. Cardus Colhns 1 D-~11.,
ch1ef spon~.or of the le,Jsl~uon,
denotJOCe'! fast-~~ck ~ts.!n. the
rental CIJ! ind~ for this high·
a~.us1ve anti-consumer pracuce .. T,wo states, New YOJ!c Jl!ld
Colhns home state of llhnms,
alr~dy have banned sales of the
wmveiS.
.
.
. R;~tal car companu:s ass1gn the
habJhty for damage Incurred by
re~tal cars to the .customer. The
WBIVers, usually pneed from $9 Ill
$16 per day, are supposed to-~~
teet the cus10mer from iesJXl!ISibil~ty for damage to the car while 11 JS
ren1ed, but COJ}Sull!er groups say
they often proVIde little real coverage as a result or a maze of fineprint loopholes. .
The waivers are optional and the
protection they provide is frequentJy included in a customer's person-

.Ir

poi~y c~vered

al car insurance
or
however, has voluntarily ceased
by one &lt;;K several maJor credit card selling the waivers.
'
compantes.
Paul Tschirhart, Hertz senior
. But COilSWI!er groups and ~me ¥ice president and general counsel,
10dustry o~fie~s say the wa1v~rs told the committee rental compaare sold WJth high-pressure tacucs nics deliberately overprice the
and threats by sales clerks. ~ho waivers and sell them With "ram·
themselves g~t ~small comm~on pant consumer deception and coerfor each colhsJOn damage wa1ver cion'' because tbeir sale spurs
they sell. . .
.
''excessive profits."
The w11verf can take a b1te out
"We believe that tl)is bill will
of most follcs wallets. For exam- protect consumers from excessive
pie, a customer who ~ks a car for pric:i~g. deception and abuse .in
$99.95 per ":Veek but JS sold a. $12- (waiver) sales, promote greater
~r-.day wa1ver ends up paymg a competition in car rentals and bring
mm1mum of $183.~5 for thew~ the actual cost of renting an autoAnd rental companies can ~verttse mobile much closer to that anticia car at $39.95 per day, while many pa~ by the consumer," Tsc~
cusromers end up paymg more than tesUfled.
SSO per day.
But Stanley Bregman, an offiBetween one-fourth and one- cial of the Car Rental Coalition, a
half of. all car rental customers buy gro'!p re~resenting small- and
the w&amp;vers.
.
medJUm-sJzed rental f~rms. spoke
Industry _officials say the sales out against the legislation and sugof these .wl!lvers genemte be~w~n ~ested Hertz and Avis are support$500 mJlhon and $600 m1lhon mg it in an effort 10 put small car
annually (~ne cons~er group _says rental companies out of business by
the fig~ JS mo~ like S1 b~bon), · depriving them of revenue.
rep~nun~ an Important S!Jce of . "I find it rather incongruous to
the mdustry s I!Jtal revenue pie.
have our friends from Hertz and
Represenlatlves from Hertz, the
· ·
nation's largest car rental firm, and
Avis, the second largest, testified
before a House Commerce subcommittee in favor of the waiverban legislation. Neither company,

Springtime of despair
looms for·Persian Gulf ·

-

'

\

By GEORGE LOBSENZ ·
Uaited Press Interaatloaal
The dawning of spring will
deepen the already grievous ecological wounds from the Persian
Gulf war, butlol)g-term dama~e
from the much- publicized oil spill
will not be as severe as initially
fea!M, environmentalists say.
The annual rituals or natural
renewal - the SJTival of migralory
birds, the planting of fields and the
. burst of reproductive activity
: among wildlife - will be badly
•:disrupted by the massive spill in
: the gUlf and the nighllllarish clouds
: 'o f oily smoke now darkening the
· region.
.
; However, scientists working
• with Saudi offiCials say the likely
, long· term impact of the spill has
:, been greatly overblown, largely
-: due to the pervasive television
• r~e of oil-smeared birds strug. gling 10 syrupy black surf.
:. While the northern Saudi coast
: ,has been· heavily poUuted, environ. mentalists note the spill has
; stopped spreading, meaning con~ tamination should not reach biolog~ ically richer areas in the southern
. gulf
: Tllef aloo say lliat d~pite the
: near-10tal absence of cleanup oper. ations, oil residues inevitably will
:· be broken down and neutralized by
· the same natural processes that
: have allowed tile gulf to recover
: from past spills.
· "There has been a lot of exag·
; ~emtion, a lot of talk that the gulf
• JS now spme sort of dead sea. ••said
Robin Pellew, director of the
World Conservation Monitoring
. Centre in Cambridge, Gre&amp;\
· Britain, the main clearinghouse for
; information on environmental damage in the gulf.
·
"The fact is, the amount of oil
spilled is less than during the imn·
• Iraq war, and the gulf was able 10
; survive that," he said. "In ten
: years, you will have to look fairly
• hard to see anv remaining damage
: rrom this spill.''
• 1bere is more concern about the
• impact of the raging oil well fues
' that represent an unprecedented
: environmental wild card that could
deposit persistent toxic soot
: throughout the region.
• Other key environmental issues
raised by the war include:
·
-The possibility of significant
• radioactive, chemical or bioloeical·
ly harmful releases from bombed
: Iraqi militarY facilities or destroyed
· Kuwaiti refineries and petrochemi: cal plants.
.
-The massive quantities of
waste and debris left in the desert
: by both sides' military, ranging
" from the depleted uranium cores of
tank shells to used cleanin~ sol• veniS 10 prgantuan sewage pus.
: -The deep ruts carved in the
' fragile desert floor by tanks and
: Oilier heavy vehicles. Environmen~ talills say scars can stiU be seen in
· North ·Africa (rom the l8llk baUles
: ofWorldWarll.
Whatever long-term problems
; emerae. environmentalists say the
: gulf reaion faces a springtime of
' delpli• in which the animal death
t 100 II Jltely to riae markedly and
' 110111111 qricultunl rhythms will be

: dlrown in&amp;o chaol.

spots.
mental health sciences professor at
Female sea turtles making their the I ohn Hopkins School of
pilgrimage to favorite nesting spots Hygiene and Public Health.
on small islands offshore Saudi
"Particles produced by combosArabia will haul out on beaches tion l?rocesses tend to be very
coated with tarry residues. The chemically reactive," he added.
same poisonous barrier loJms "They are likely to be rich in bad.
before turtle hatchlings as they things."
make their life-or-death scmmble
Fiom an environmet~tal perspecfrom nests back to the sea.
live, Frank said the soot particles
The dispersal of oiliO the bot· were problematic because they will
tom sediments, corai .reefs and sea- prolong the lifespan of toxic hydrograss beds of the ·gulf promises a carbons that otherwise would be
lethal environment for the spawn- released from the rues in vaporous
ing of fish that congregate in form. As a result, toxic contamina· ·
coastal waters most affected by the tion will persist longer in soil and
spill.
groundwater.
More importantly, there could
Depending on how long they
be widespread reproductive failure burn, the fires also will spew out
ofJlankton, algae, shrimp, crabs thousands of tons or sulfur dioxide.
an other small animals and plants a primary component of acid rain,
that form the foundation of the as well as long-lasting toxic metals.
marine food web.
In contmst to the oil well fues,
On land, the billowing smoke .the widely publicized predictions
clouds from hundreds of burning of long-term ecological devastation
Kuwaiti oil wells could blot out from the gulf oil spill are not lilceiy
enough sunlight to ruin the agricul· to be borDe out, said Pellew of the
tural planting season for farmers World Conservation Monitoring
living hundreds of miles downwind Centre.
of the fues. "Black rain" already
The centre is a joint venture
has been reported in southern sponsored by the United Nations
Turkey. more than 600 miles away. Environment Programme, the
The,.ell-rues-are increasingly - WorldWide Fund for-Nature ....,.tseen by environmentalists as the the World Conservation Union. It
key threat to the long-term human has been the main clearinghouse
and ecological health of the region, , for information being gleaned by
mainly due to the enormous Saudi environmental officials.
amounts of very fine soot being
Pellew said the slick has been
pumped into the aiiiiOsphere.
confined to a relatively small area
Beyond coughing, wheezing and of the gulf and even there, most
general respiratory dirficuky, medi- residual oil will be degraded by
cal experts say the smoke could naturally occurring bacteria 10 the
pack a toxic punch that would.sub- point where only subtle effects will
stantially raise cancer risks for still linger a deCade from now.
.
tho~e exposed over a prolonged
"The balance of species may be
penod.
slightly different. You'll see tarThe oily smoke is particularly balls in some localized areas. But
worrisome because it probably is to the avemge person, it's going to
laden with ve~ small particles of look pretty much okay," Pellew
soot that are 1deal agglomeration said.
points for the many toxic hydrocarSaudi officials report the main
bons generated by burning body of the slick has Shown virtual·
petroleum. combustion experts say. ly no movement over the last two
"These soot particles are more weeks and has been corralled in
likely to be coated by tars, and several bays along the northern
thf:~Se tars are somewhat toxic."
Saudi coast, Pellcw said. A big
sa1~ Joh.n Longwell, a chemical · chunk is in Musallarniyah Bay just
engmeenng p~fessor at the Mas- north of AI Jubail, where booms
sachuseus lnsutute of Technology and sand barriers hold in a morass
and a fanner researcher for Exxon.
of oil that is five to six inches thick
Once airborne, smaller soot par- in areas.
.
ticles tend to stay aloft longer,
Pellew said many of the ISO
increasing the likelihood that they miles of affected Saudi coasUine
will be inhaled.
supponed extensive wildlife, but
And when a person breathes in that the oil could have wreaked
fine particles, "they are more like- much more harm if it had moved
Jy to be deposited in the lungs south to the biologically richer
where as larger panicles would be waters off Bahrain and Qatar,
filtered out in the nose or throot," where the gulrs largest dugong said Dr. Roben Frank, an environ- or sea-cow - populations are
IQCBt.ed.

· Community Calendar

ci~um­

in~Mtytopay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTE. OHIO

SUNDAY
POMEROY' • There will be a
closed I2-step meeting on Sunday
. ~t JTPA office in Pomeroy at 7
p.m.

;

THE

or

port Child Conservation League
will meet TuesdaY, at 6:30 p.m.
Husbands night wdl be observed
with a potluck dinner at the Rock
S!Wings United Methodist Church.

MONDAY
RACINE - The Southern Local
Board of Education will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the high school.
POMEROY ·Pomeroy Youth
J.,eague will have summer ball
sign-up for girls and boys on Monday from 6-8 p.m. Bnng a birth
certificate copy.

TUESDAY
RACINE • Sign-up for Racine
Youth League, junior and senior
~ POMEROY · The Meigs Coun- girls and Pony League will be
. ty Genealogical Society will meet Tuesday and Saturday from 6-8
.' Sunday at 2 p.m . at the Meigs p.m. at the Racine Kindetganen
:· Museum.
building. Bring birth certificate
copy if Ol)e has not already been
• · : BAS HAN • There will be a provided.·Sign-up fee is $12.SO for
;' Smorgasbord dinner on Sunday boys and $7.50 for girls.
.; from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
, • Bashan Fire House. Cost is $4.50
SYRACUSE • Summer ball
~ for adults and $2 for children under sign-up will be held in Symcuse on
. • 12. Sponsored by the ladies auxil- Tuesday from 5· 7 p.m. at Syracuse
;- ~ .
Elementary. Birth certificate copies
must be provided.
'
· ' MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
' Port ~nic Lodge No. 363 F and RUTLAND · The Rutland ·
t\M will meet for practice work in Freewill Baptist Church will have
.'the master mason degree at 2 p.m.
revival Tuesday through Saturday
with Robert Stewart. Paul Taylor,
·. MI.DDLEPORT • The Middle- pastor, invites the public.
port Masonic Lodge No. 363 F and
AM wiD meet Sunday for practice
POMEROY · The Drew Web-·
work in the mastet mason degree at ster Post No. 39 ·will celebrate its
2p.m.
72 birthday of the American
Legion on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS • Unroe Family with progmm at 7:30 p.m. Legionand Dan Hayman and the Faith naire of the year trophy will be preTrio will be singing at the Faith sented along with membership
Temple Independent Church on awards. Ruth Crutcher, second vice
Debby Drive m GaUipolis on Sun- commander of the eighth district,
day at 6 p.m. Rev. Joe Gwinn will be the speaker.
invites the public.
ROCK SPRINGS · The Middle-

t fS..S":J

HARRISONVILLE • The Harrisonville Past Matrons Club will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Donna Nelson with Goldie
Reed hostess. All past matrons are
invited 10 attend.
POMEROY • The Xi Gamma
Mu Chapler, Beta Sigma Phi Soror·
ity will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
at the home of A.R. Knight in
Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE • The Racine
Methodist Church will have a soup
supper on Wednesday at 3 p.m.
Sandwiches and pie will also be
available. Proceeds will be used to
purchase a new power mower.
LONG BOTTOM • Jerry Cottrell will be at the Mt. Olive Community Church iri Long Bottom on
Wednesday at 7 IJl .m. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invilds the public.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Literary qub will meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Library with Rae
Reynolds hostess. Mrs. Richard
Owen will review "A Distant Mir·
ror."
RUTLAND · The Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
meet Wednesday at 9 a.m. at the
office.

Alzheimer's drug fails approval
ROCKVRLE, Md. (UPI) -An
advisory panel ruled the government should not approve a controversial drug for Alzheimer's disease because there is not enough
evidence the medicine can alleviate
the disorder's mind- destroying
effects.
The Food and Drug Administta·
tion advisory committee Friday
urged more studies to evaluate
Cognex, made by Parke-Davis
Pharmaceutal.Research Division.of
Warner Lambert Co. of Morris
Plains, NJ.
.
"We simply found the data as
presented msufficient," said.
Steven Ferris of New Yorlc University Medical Center, who headed
the eight· member panel considered
a crucial hi:rdle for drug approval.
In a last-diJCh effort to sway the
panel following a grueling 14-hour
meeting, Ronald Cresswell of
Parke~Davis reminded members
that there is no other treatment
available for the devastating .disease and it would take at least a
year to produce more evidence supporting Cognex's effectiveness.
Alzheimer's disease is a devas·
tating brain disorder that affects
between 2 million and 4 million
Americans and is expected to
become more common as the popu·
lation ages. The disease already
kiJls more than 100, 000 people in
the United States each year, making it the fourth leading cause of
death after heart disease cancer and
strokes.
Although he acknowledged the
pli$ht of Alzheimer's J?atients and
the1r families, Ferris Slld: "I don't
think we should be1influenced by
w()aL I would sar, is ali emotional
side of this issue. '

Two company-sponsored shldies involving pbout 300 patients
showed about 40 percent of
patients improved after taking
Cognex , also known as tacrine
hydrocholoride and tetrahy·
droamininoacridine or THA, ParkeDavis officials told a packed meet·
ingroom.
'.'We recognize that tacrine is
not a cure for Alzheimer's disease
... (but) we believe it is the first
'effective treatment," Cresswell
said.
But the committee said the U.S.
study involve about 200 patients at
16 centers produced only weak evidence that the drug might be somewhat effective for a relatively shon
period of time. The study found
patients improved significanUy on
only one of two key measures pf
mental ability, and panel members
noted thill patients were not tested
for their ability to function in their
day-to-day-lives.
The second study involving
about 90 patients in England provided even less convincing evidence, partly because it involved
the adminiuration of a second
drug. the panel said.
· Members of the FDA's Peripheral and Central Nervous System
Drugs Advisory Committee also
expressed concern that the drug
may cause liver damage.
Congex fJrst created excitement
in 1986 when a srudy reported the
drug produced dramatic improvement in patients, but later studies
cast doubt on the ·drug's effective-

~-

ROCKVILLE, Md. (UPI) There currently is no evidence thai
mercury- laden fillings in teeth
pose a health threat to humans, a
Food and Drug Administration
advisory panel concluded.
By an unanimous vote, the Dental Produc.ts Panel said Friday its
review or human and animal stud·
ies 'found no data to indicate that
mercury from dental amalgam constitutes a "direct hazard" to
humans.
.
However, the nine-member
• panel agreed that the studies pre·
sented did raise questions that warrant further research, and recom •

panel that there is ·no valid data 10
demonstrate clinical harm from
amalgam to patients or that having
them removed will prevent adverse
health effects or reverse the course
of existing diseases," said Susan
Cruzan, an FDA spokeswoman.
However, Cruzan said the agency also believes that additional
information is needed ''to resolve
unanswered questions about amal·
gam safety,"
At Frldsy.'s meeting, Dr. Robert
Baratz. a spokesman for the American Dental Association, questioned
the methodology and interpretation
of studies that suggest mercury in

fillings produces adverse health
effects.
"The daily amounts of mercury
to which someone might be
exposed through dental work are
the same as what you normally get
a day in a regular Ameri&lt;:an diet,"
said ·Baratz, an assistant research
professor of oral pathology at Tufts
University Dental School in
Boston.
However, Dr. Alfred Zamm, a
New York-based doctor, said he
believes removing amalgam fill·
ings has improved the health of
some of his patients.
In a letter submitted to the advisory panel, Cynthia Hughes, who
was diagnosed in September as
, having a degenerative nerve disease called amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis, said "there is no doubt in
During the 1930s, Freeman "The Eel" and "Crazeology," my mind that the amalgam in my
played with a number of swing which became the title of his auto· mouth contributed to the cause of
bands including Ray Noble, biography published in 1989.
· the disease I had."
While his career was interna·
Tommy Dorsey, and his childhood
Hughes said she staned feeling
friend and fellow Chicagoan Benny tional, he wrote with special affec· stronger, could talk better and
Goodman. By the end of the tion of his early days in Chicago.
could walk without limping after
"We had wonderful clubs on she. had allller 13 mercury-laden~..be ~tablished himself .
as a soloist appearing prlmiiiil y in the black SoUtll' Side where lne fillings removed in January and
likes o(Louis Armstrong, King February.
Chicago and New York.
After Army service in World Oliver, Jimmy Noone, Earl Hines
And when she went to see her
War II, Freeman resumed his solo and Baby and Johnny Dodds gave neurologist Feb. 26, he ''told me
career and spent many years per- us the greatest mus1c lessons we the symptoms were gone," said
forming in Europe and Asia. He could ever ask for," Freeman Hu~hes, 30, of Las Vegas.
returned to Chicago in the early wrote.
'I actually do feel as though I
He is survived by a sister, Ao· have been given a new lease on
I 980s where he gave occasional
renee Charles, of Los Angeles.
concerts and lectures .
life. It may sound melodramatic,
A service will be held at the and to others probably unbelievFreeman made countless record·
ings and wrote many songs. Two of chapel at Graceland Cemetery in able. But it did happen til me " she ·
•
his best known compositions were Chicago on March 21. ·
S8J'd•
mended that the FDA set up a special working group to determme
what shldies are needed 10 answer
the question of amalgam safety.
Some studies have suggested
that mercury vapors from amalgam
fillings are absorbed into the body,
possibly impairing the immune system and brain function. However,
no difference was found between
the immune function of 21 people
with mercury fiUings and 16 people
without such fillings in a Medical
College of Georgia study publishedin the latest issue of the Joarnal of
the American Dental Association.
''The FDA agrees with the

.CHRISTIAN DIOR
•BILL BLASS

.PIERRE CARDIN
•TUXEDO&amp; IN STOCK AT ALL TIMES
FRI . 8 :30A.M. ·8:00P.M.
MON .·TUES .·WEO.-THURB .• SAT. 8:30A.M, · 5:00P.M .

Zl446-1416 t~
•

~·

~Stride
Rite.
childtood.SI:p ""1'.,
by

CUPID

·Jazz pioneer ~:ud Freeman dead
. CHICAGO (UPI) - Lawrence
·,"Bud" Freeman, considered one
, pf the foremost jazz tenor sax play·
• ers, died Friday of cancer. He was

84.

+-~1-

Freeman began his musical
--'car~r-as_a_teenager..with _the Jeg·
endary jazz group known as the
, Austin High Gang . The group
Included Jimmy McPartland, who
·; died Wednesday, Jimmy's brother,
: Dick McPartland, Dave Tough, Jim
: l;anigan, Dave North and Frank
··1'eschmacher.
· :: The Austin High Gang, along
.~ ~th frie~d an~ legendary cornet
• player B1x Be1derbecke, helped
; develop what became known as the
• Chicaao style of jazz.

-

GREAT
FOR

EASTER
White Leather
Black Patent ·
Sign up lor Jelly IMn Contnt Guns how many jtlly bMnt are in
tht jar and win 150-'25-'1 0 Gift
CortillcaltL

Mo. I Fri. tR I P.M.Tun., Wttl. ThiW. til 6 P.M.
Sat~Wday til 5 P.M.

.

:-: Quirks .in·the news

Figurine size 3 14 ' tall by 5' wide

I

ness.
Earlier in the day, several representatives of patients' groups said
t:reallllents are urgently needed for
Alzheimer's disease, but they did
not specirlcally endclrse Cognex.
Creswell acknowledged the
Parke-Davis studies "are not perfect," but added that "a large proportion of demented patients do
benefit" and for some patients
"the benefit is dramatic."
,
After the committee's negative
decision, E. Peter Wolf, a ParkeDavis spokesman, said the company would continue to pursue the
Cognex 's approval.
'
The drug inhibits an enzyme .
that breaks down a chemical messenger in the brain called acetylcholine, increasing the amount of
acetylcholine in the brain and per·
haps relieving memory impainnent.
Alzheimer's gmdually and inexorably destroys brain cells that control thought and memory. Victims
usually begin with difficulty
remembe.rin~ simple things and
regress to an 10fant-like Slate, needing round·the'Clock attention.
Although scientists recently
have made headway in understand-,
ing the genetic basis of the debilitating disease, there remains no
effective treallllent or cure.
Hydergine, the only govern ment-approved
drug
for
Alzheimer's, has come under fire
because of a recent study indicating
it is ineffective. The drug is made
by Sandoz Pharmaceuticals Corp.
of East Hanover, NJ.

Panel: No threat from mercury fillings _ _ _ __

•

The1991
Crayola- Bunny Figurine

•
•
•

.

It'~ Crayola®Bunny,

along with his friend, Candy Cotton
Tail, and an Easter basket ready to fill with all kinds of
goodies. The beautifully detailed figurine adds a bright,
spring touch wherever it goes.
Supplies are limited, so get
with any $5
yollffitodayataparticipating
~~~
Hallmark store.
.

•

$39S

Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
.Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Teatlng

SNng ....... No- l'lfUHd ...........

Commuolty Calendar Item&amp;
appear two days before 1111 eveat
and the day o1 that event. Items
must be received well In advance
to aaaure publlcadoo In tbe calendar.

Avift ... argue on behalf of the con- liable for damage for renlals\ f 30
suriler, .. Bregman said. "It's days or less except in
almost like if Yasser Arafat and stances such as damage caused
Saddam Hussein sent re resenta- ' intentionally by the customer or
lives to argue on behalf lthe Unit- when the driver was legally drunk,
ed Jewish Appeal,..
impaired by drugs, speeding or
Bregman said the " most oner- committing a crime.
ous" part of the legislation is that it
eliminates the principle of '"renter
responsibility, .. under which a cusromer has the obligation 10 return a
rented ilem in the same condition
in .which he received it, thereby
"SWEETHEART"
inviting reckless driving 'and more
White. Smooth.
damage. Smaller rental companies
_
.b Scuff-Proof
would be financiall "burdeJJed"
if they had to assu~e these repair
costs, he said.
Bregman also said the cost of
MARYANN
the waivers is "not unreasonable"
Whitt Po-.
conSidering ·the expense for a conBlock Potont
sumer to replace a wrecked car.
. . ..
But consumer lawyer Sikes points
out that, for example; $15 jier day
for a waiver measures out 10
$5,475 per year, dramatically higher than conventional car insUIBDce
SHOE
that provides much better coverage.
Under the JegisJation, rental
~ompanies cannot hold a customer
·

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••

Tllouuada of dead 1eabirds
: aJnlldy llavo becla found along tbe
: oil· caked lhorel of the northern
PO.IOY:
GAlUPOUS
~ gulf, bul diOie numbers are likely .
236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
414 Sta~~lll Awe., 2nd floor
• 10 ~over the tlelt 111011111 as
992-5912
446-0166
~ an ealimated 1 mi111on mallard
· ducb, curlews, 1811dploven and · I1JO •• 5:00 Mo•dar·Fridar
I1JO " 5:00 ••r-Frlclar
: odla' •••.., biniiiiOJ) ott. the
Clorttl Thunday
·
1:30 to 12 Sotur•r . .
: fellon'• llal'lllally IIOipillble mud.
,._,
l'hundtp
, flail and marlhoa on thoir flight
AlSOt lllibun, Ot11 p I b, Alhlnl,. 0 • • iaFn &amp; McArthur
: north from southern winterina

I, .

Sunday nmes Sentlnei-P~B5

J

Ban sought for shady rental car practice .
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Anyone who has eyer rented a car
knows the scenano.
.
An apparently low da1l~ or
week~y rate lures a cusrom~r J~to
book10g a .car. But, upon p1cking
up the vehicle from the ~ntal car
C'!Jilpany, the c~;~stomer IS socked
With_ a large ~losed and unad·
y,e~ expense m tl!e f~ o~ a
colli~on damage Wll~, which
often Jacks up the pnce of the
rental by one-fourth, one-half or
even more.
.
~~· worse yet, officials of ~e
nat1~n s top ~ntal car compames
rea.dliy admit the sales o.f these
w~vers are larg~Jy coerc1ve and
des.1~ to rake m more tbJ1!1 half
a billJO!I dollars~ year to the ~ustry whde allowu~g compan1es to
ci~ng to decephvely low b#Se
~·,
.
.
•!t s .a clas~Jc COJ}Sumer npoff, sa1d .Luc10da Sikes, a consum~r aff81rs lawyer for the U.S.
Public Interest Research Group.
But ·the stop~1ght 11J!PC11fS ready
to tum~ OJ} thJS_pracuce.
.
Leg!slauon mtroduce~ this
month 10 Congress would ban the
sale of !he waivers and would fo:ce
rental car companies, rather than
customers, to assume financial
responsibilitY for damage caused to

. Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleeunt, WV

.•

'

Only at this Hallmatk retailer
Gallipolis
Full House of Cards
Ohio River Plaza
446-7330

.•

•

., •

trash to most people but officials
are on the lookout for seven sam·
pies of historic wallpaper that are a
treasure to their owners.
The wallpaper samples from
buildings in Colonial Williamsburg, Va., were accidentally left in
the parking garage of the.Philadelphia airport this week.
Margaret Pritchard, curator of
prints for Colonial Williamsbur-g,
said Thursday the samples including four dating 10 the 1760s
- were left at the airpon by a Jljlint
analyst hired to study the material. She said the analyst returned to
Philadelphia Wednesday, leaned a
3· foot·by-4-foot carboard package
containing the wallpaper against
his car as he loaded other luggage.
and then drove off without it.

NOW
There Is Absolutely ~ Reason To
Drive Miles To Buy Your Prom Gown!
Brittany's has the Top
Prom Gown Lines in the
Country.
(6141 446-7733

.'

For That Special
Occasion ...
Special occeaion1 require sp~~eial pre·
peratlona. If you are planning a wed·
ding, enniver81ry or prom. then you
1hould come 1ee u1 at Heaklns· Tan·
ner.
You will have over 190 •tvl•• of tu~~;. edoa to chooee from. We have a large
aelectlon of the lat11t atyl11 and complimentary ecctaaorlea for thle epeciel ·

·-

• r .....

AS SEEN IN SEVENTEEN
MAGAZINE

Quality Fermalwear at AHordablt PrlctL
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 8 OR
MORE IN WEDDING PARTY

TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
On the French Square !- Gallipolis

(614) 446-0542
University Mall -

: Historic wallpaper samples miss.I
.
.
01
, PHILADELPHIA (UPI) : .They may look lilce a bundle of

.,

•AL YCE •LORALIE
•LIZETTE •FLIRTATIONS
•MEMORY LANE
•CLIMAX

OCCIIIOn.

•• said•

© 1991 Halmlrl&lt; Carda.

•

Gult crisis reuoites brothers after
25 years
MANILA, Philippines (UPI) Two brothers who grew up in the
Philippines and hadn't seen one
another for 25 years were reunited
by chance in an unexpected place:
the Persian Gulf.
Dr. Inocencio Oballo, one of
some 200 medical personnel sent
by the Philifl1Jines 10 tl!e gulf, said
Fridar that he was reumted on New
Year s Day in Saudi Arabia with
his older brother, Felino, a U.S.
Army reservisl
·
The two brothers met again at
the close of the war, he said.
•
"What a place to meet my
brother," said Inocencio, who was
assigned to the King Fahd Hospital
in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.
"We were both excited and
scared the first time we ever saw
: each other. But after the war, we
· saw each other again and .we were
: happy we both survived the crisis.
• We were fortunate .and proud that
. we have served," he added.
Inocencio was among the first
• batch of 49 medical volunteers to
: return to Manila. He spoke to
; reporters Friday at the airport, say• ing he linked. up with his brother
; after a friend told him of another
: Philippine doctor in Saudi Arabia
· ·with the same name.
• He discoired the doctor was
i Felino, 50, li s older brother who
~ had left the
'lipPines in 196S and
I acquired U.S. ciuzenship.
Pelino, a surgeon assigned to a
hospital in San Antonio, was called
· to active duty in the gulf and was
assigned 10 the U.S. Sth Military
· Ambulatory Support Group near
: the Iraq-Saudi border. Inocencio

~

(614)

IIPW -lAY &amp; PIIDU' til I P.M. 'lUIS., .... - · 11. 5 ·, ....

Athens

594-3472

�•
Page-B6-Sunday nmes

nmee Sentinel

'

Sentinel

Pomeroy--Middleport-Galllpolle, OH Point Pleasant, WV

March 17, 1991

March 17, 1991

In the service ...

NA class graduates

SHELBY J, PICKENS
' . Ann'/1\lllional Guard Pvt. Shel·
b.y J. Pickens hs completed basic
training at F9fl Leonard Wood,
-Mo.
: ouriD&amp; the training, students
·r"CJ;eived instruction in drill and
~weapons, map reading,
~ae!iCJ, milil;lll'y courtesy, milil;lll'y
j diltlce, first aid, and Anny history
IJ'IIclitions.
~· ' He is the son of Ruby R.
Shelby N. Pickens,

RIO GRANDE · Graduation
ceremonies were held Jan. 24 for
14 members of the Adult Nursing
Aide class at Buckeye Hills Career
Center.
The group each completed a
300-hour training course w.hich
included basic medical terminology, anatomy and basic nursing
skills and an introduction to disease
processes. They were also certified
in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation.
'The fmal 1S hours of the course
was the state NATP which is

:J'i

=::?:::

T~UR; SCHOOL • AprU Duncan: Clay Elementary prl•clpal,
(left) as pactured giving Zacllary Bentley and his parents a tour or
tbe school. Students from Clay collected pop tabs for recycling to
· help the Bentley family with traveling expenses.
·

I
'

Clay students give their help
GALLIPOLIS ' Just ewer a year
ago, the Holzer Clinic volunteer
recreation committee began a project to help Zachary Bentley who
has leukemia.
In an 'effon 111 defray the cost of
travel to Children's Hospital in
Cincinnati, the group asked each
department to save aluminum can
tahs for the Bentley family to recycle. A committee member routinely
collected tabs from each clinic
department and delivered them to
Zachary's family.
In lime, family and friends of

the clinic began to save POP. can
tabs and most recently, the ch11dren
of Clay Elementary school became
involved.
Mrs . Spees, a Clay teacher,
informed her students of the project
and they started saving, collecting
approximately 20 pounds of pop
tabs.
.
Committee member Peggy
Fields recently took the Bentley
family to Clay Elementary to pick
up the load of tabs and to meet with
the children who worked hard to
save the tabs. ·

Clinic 1ndustrial
Medicine gets
occupational
therapist
GALLIPOLIS ·Holzer Qinic's
Sports, Industrial imd Rehabilita·
. live Medicine Depattment (SIRM)
has added Tracey L. Deam as an
occupational therapist.
·
Deam's adds to the expertise
and patient service already found in
the ever-eltpandin~ department,
according to a chnic official.
Employers and injured workers
will benefit from the increased
availability of industrial rehabilita·
lion and work hardening pfllgrams.
Deam is a 1991 graduate of
Ohio State Unive(Sity with a bachelor's degree in occupational therapy, and passed bOard examinations
m January.
· ··
·
. She has completed internships at
SL Elizabeth's Hospital in Dayton
and at ML Carmel Medical Center
in Columbus. She also worked at
the Veterans Administration Hospital in Chillicothe.
Her work experience gives a
background in both the physical
and psychological aspects of rehabititation and worlc: hardening.
Occupational therapy is not
widespread in this area, but the
clinic is positive about its advantages to injured workers, stroke
patients or other neurological rehab
cases, the spokesman said.
For information on the occupational therapy program at Holzer
Clinic, call the SIRM department at
446-5244.
.

Hoeflich recuperating
SPECIAL PRESENTATION· Students from Clay Elementary
recently donated approl!imately 20 pounds or pop tabs to the family Zachary Bentley to be recycled. The money will be used to help
with traveling eKpenses to Children's Hospital. The project was
started by the Holzer Clinic Volunteer Recreation committee.
·
Pictured from left are: Lindsay Kingery, Tasba McWhorter and
Erick Je"ers, Clay students; Zachary, Virgil and Taml Bentley.

POMEROY· Bob Hoeflich
retired general manager of The
I:!ai'Y. Sentinel and popular columnast, 1s recuperating in Ohio Sta~
University Hospital in Columbus
following aneurysm surgery on
Tuesday.
Cards may be sent to him at 929
Doan Hall, Ohio State University
Hospital, Columjlus, Ohio 43210.

~.

diture as poSSible.
Registration for the training session and suppon meeting will be
held at 1:15 p.m. followed by the
train ing session at 1:30 p.m.,
refreshmenJS at 2:30 p.m. and support meeting at 2:~5 p.m. The day

CONTEST WINNER • As a part or Campbell
Soup's ''Labels for Education" program, Foodland's or Ohio, Kentucky aad West Virginia,
sponsored a drawing for 25,000 label points tllat
can be redeemed for school equipment. Washlngton Elementary was the winner in the four
state contest. Prestntlng the certificate to
.

Matthew Addla, whose Moi•er t•rued Ia tbe
winning entry hlaak at tbe Gallipolis Fooclla"'l,'
is Brent Eastmaa, ( - d from right), Foodi•M
director or sales al)d promotlo• and David
Roach, retail spedallst for Campbell Sales Coa:a·
pany. On band for lbe presentadon was Robin
Lane, (left) \Yasbln1ton physical educatiQ!I
teacher.
.
·

Love and tenderness
shown by a special man

Ann

Dear Ann Landers: I'm going to
tell you about a love story that I
witness every lime I go to the
nursing home to see my husband
who has Alzheimer's disease.
Unfortunately ,I know firsthand how
this terrible ·illness affects family
members, but I would like the world
to know wha! love re8lly is.
I see a man who, I untlerstand,
has spent the last eight years caring
for his wife who has Alzheimer's.
They have been married over 50
Y~· He cooks and feeds her every
bate of food she eats. He has bathed
her alld dressed her every day all .
thes:e years. They have no ocher
family. She lost a baby at ~irtb and
they never had ~Y more childten.
I cannot descnbe the tenderness

Landers
"1989, Lo. A.n!IJI"' ..

and Jove that man shows for his wife.
She is unable to recognize anyone,
including him. The only things 'he
shows any interest -in are two baby
dolls. They are never out of her
hands.
I observed him when 1parked m'y
car beSide his the other day. He sat
in .his old pickup truck for a few
minutes, then he patted down what
little hair he had, straightened the
th!eadbare collar of his shirt and
1ooked in the mirror for a final check:
before going in to see his .wife. It
was as if he were courting her. They
have been partners all these years
and have seen each other under all
kinds of circumstances, yet he care- .
fully groomed himself before he
called on his wife, who wouldn't

Tl .... Syndlftlr ~~nd .
c,.......... Syncflr. .

even know him.
.' ' ..
This is an example·of true lo~
and commitment the world ~
today... FORTWORTII
DEAR FORT WORTH: i don't
know when I have read a more
touching Jetter. These days, when
~f of the marriages in this country
fad and the average marriage lasts
seven years, it is reassuring to read
a leurz like yours. Thank' you so
much for ~ling.
Is life passing Y.,u by? Wlllll to
improve your social skills? Write for
Ann I..anders' new boolclet, "How to
Malct Friends and Stop Being
Lonely." Send a ~lf-MdrtswJ, long,
bKSint!ss.size envelo~ and a check .
or moMy order for $4.15 (this includes postage and h(Uulling) to:
Friends, c/oA1111 LwtdUs, P.O. 8()1:
11562, Chicago, 11/. 60611.()562. (tn

-·

HEAP deadline nears
MEIGS-oALLIA • The ilpplicadon jleriod for the 1990-91 Emergency HEAP program is drawing
to a close. The fJJlai date for applicalion is March 29.
Assistance for this program is
limited to once per program period
whach began Oct 29, 1~0. . . r
. Emergency HEAP as a. cnsasmtervcntaon program wh1ch c.an

C/IIIQI}Q; ~nd $5.05.)

1 DAY

PROCESSING ..· .
ON SLIDE FU
By

...

.

KODA WI

Tawney Studio
. 424

Second A,.,aGallipolis

Selby
In Bona/White

·

·w/Matchlng Handbag

THE
SHOE CAFE

~atarett•

I LOST
42 LBS.

:~

' ~~~

AT FORMU-3

WEIGHT. LOSS.

SIDING AND WINDOW

!.

CALL NOW

446-4664
SILVER IIIDGE PlAZA

WE HAVE MOVED TO
IFtrnterly 502 2nd Avt.l
.

CAU (614) 446·6260

NEXT DOOI TO 10 ANN FAae:S

21,343 LBS. LOST IN GALLIPOLIS

fOR FREE ESTIMATES!

•'

j,l

,.
\

'

Linda Johnson, Carol)'ll Lambert and Crystal
Wrltesel; bliCk row, Angela Allen, .-atty Rogers,
Dorothy Brooks, Freeda Chandler, Carolyn
Miles and Dottle Saxton.

RESTORE YOUR
HEIRLOM

a.m.

County honor rolls announced

Wordprocessing
class scheduled

Amy .Rotgeb,· Njkki Setirls, Chris Ashwor\h, Jessica Barker, Joseph
Spradlin, Heather Stinson, Beth Johnson.• Jason Perry and Joe
: ...
'White.
RIO GRANDE • Ail all·day
Vinson and Melody Weaver. ..
,-.,
THIRD GRADE: Amande class in WordPerfect 5.0 and 5.1 7th .GRADE ·Angie Barry,
~:~·· VINTON • Vinton Elementary
·: apnounces the honor roll students · Charlefo Curnutte, Kristi Fowble, Brown, Rebekah Frans, Jennifer . Introduction to Word Processing
:··for the fourth six weeks;
Mariana Mitchell, Eric Mulford, Gordon, Jessica Vickers and Erin will be offered by the University of
Paul Polcyn, Amy Williams and Walker.
Rio Grande Office of Continuing
::: .'
FOURTH GRADE
FOURTH
GRADE:
Daniel
education,
Wednesday, March 27,
Matt
Williamson.
·: · Thomas Ball; Jessica Braden,
Sizemore,
Lacy
Harnm,
Lisa
Bow-.
from
9
a.m.
to 5 p.m.
··
:;Roger Bush, Danielle Carlisle,
OHIO
VALLEY
CHRISTIAN
man
and
Emily
Hall.
Classes
will
meet
in
the
College
•Amanda Davis, Brandi Davis,
FIFTH GRADE: Chris Bryan, o( Business .Computer Lab, Room
Chasidy Edwards, Keith Forbes, SCHOOL
The
following
students
made
the
Donovan
Davis, Deanna Martin 108. Deadline for pre-registration
Julie Hall, Jamie Harless, Jonathon A Honor Roll for the fourth six
and
Leah
Hall.
is Monday, March 25. ·
Heskett, Kyle Lawson, Sarah
SiXTH
GRADE:
Micah
weeks:
Participants will earn a continuMeade, Kim Preston, Michael
FIRST
GRADE:
Amit
AgrawLanier,
Leisa
Walters
and
~ob
Wil.
. ing education certificate for . 7
Stephens, Dean Ward and Jennifer
al, David Baker, Hannah Beaver, son.
CEUs. Instru~tor wiD be Larry HigYonts.
Dawn Chamberlain, Michael Jenks.
SEVENTH GRADE: Kristen gins of the' College of Business fac. FIFfH GRADE ·
Dailey, Deidra Hall, Ginny · Iiassylva, Jami Gianechini and N,.an ulty. Higgins holds a MBA, CPA,
Kevin Blankenship, Mike Chad
Miller
and Rachel Tucker. ·
Williamson.
.
·
and COP degrees.
Coughenour, Don Holcomb, Jatnie
Tommy
SECOND
EIGHTH GRADE: Jessica
For more information and regisIsaac, Angie' Keeton, Jeremy Kidd, Dayton, 'KentGRADE:
Haley;
Charity
Cochran,
Darren
Harris,
Abigail
.
tration
contact the Office of ConMary Beth Lively, amy McCoy,
McQueen,
Nathan
Williams,
Brad·
linuing Education, ORG, Box 878,
Brandy Metheney, Don Newsome, Bowman, Erica Massie, Nicholas Henry arid Melissa Morgan.
NINTH
GRADE:
Jeremiah
Rio
Grande, !l5674, or by calling
Brait Petrie, Wesley Smith and Tim Mulholand, Jordan Shaffer, Andrea
Brown,
Adam
Meek
and
Sara
245-5353,
e.xL 325 or toll-free, !. Wellington.
Sims
and
Amanda
Wilcox.
Miller.
·
8()()..282-7201.
SIXTH GRADE
THIRD GRADE: April
TENTH GRADE: Jerry Back,
Eli Alban, Mary Ball, Eric Bur- Agustin,
Meredith
Clark,
Courtney
Christy
Mock and Nikki Saunders.
ris, Tamme Gilben, Kenny !son, Gooch, T.J. Frasher, Victoria
ELEVENTH
GRADE: Darin
Crystal Norman, Ian Smith, Alisha Lance, Laura Pollard, Jonathan
Peck
and
James
Black.
Starlcey, Richard Stephens and Jes- Taylor, Eli Wilson and Christen
TWELFTH GRADE: Amy
sica Wood.
·
· ZiriUe.
,
Brumfield
and Mike McCleese.
SEVENTH GRADE
FOURTH
GRADE:
Alan
Karl Alderman, Heather 'comp- Haley, Becky Birchfield, Jessica
'
Ston, Erin Dee! and DanieUe Neal.
Walker, Andrew Williams, Stephen
EIGHTH GRADE
GALLIPOLIS · The Job Bank
Robens,
Natalie Pyles, Amanda
SOUTHWESTERN HONOR
· 'Allison Farley, Stella Harless Kohlhoff and
located
in the Gallia County Senior
Dani Jenks.
ROLL .
and Robin Kidd.
Citizens
Center, .220 Jackson Pike,
FIFTH GRADE: Vandana
GALLIPOLIS
·
Southwestern
iJeed
new
applicants to come in and
Agrawl, Brandy Bahr, Lisa Vol!School
announces
its
Elementary
put
fill
out
applications for work.
. born, Bo Pollard, Suzanne Clark
fourth
six
weeks
honor
roll.
Spring
workers are needed to
Daniel Hall;
HIOH andSIXTH
CREEK
KYGER
FOURTH
GRADE
help·
people
in their homes, such as
GRADE: Melissa
SCHOOL
Tina
Hall,
Julia
Armstead,
window
cleaning,
yard work,
Brown, Joy Chaksupa, Billy Miller,
Rashal
Fallon,
Staeey
Franks,
Krisout
basements,
repair
cleaning
Nathan Smith and Benjamin Tayten
Harrison,
Natalie
Miller,
Sasha
and
painting.
Workers
also
work
Kyger Creek High School lor.
Beth
Walker,
Joshua
Shriver,
needed
to
Jive
with
the
elderly
or
announce the Honor Roll for the
SEVENTH GRADE: Shellie
Baker,
Pat
Adkins,
Jonathon
part-lime live-ins and babysitting.
4th Six Weeks grading period:
Henson, Aarc;m Holley, Nathan
The Job Bank is open on
SENIORS • Stacy·: Surns, Lusher, Gabe McQueen, Jill Mock, Lawrence and Billy Shato.
.
FIFfH
GRADE
Wednesdays from 11 a.m . to 3 p.m.
Amanda Cox, Allison McQuaid, Amy Pollard and Anesa VanMatre.
·
Tasha
Sloan,
Marisa
Snodgrass,
and
Thursday and Friday from 7
Qebbie Mingus, Cindy Nibert,
EIGHTH GRADE: Cai"a Babr,
Tony Stiffler, Jeremy Thornton, a.m. to 3 p.m.
loanna Polcyn, Yon Ragland, Jenny Hager and Robin Rice.
A· job counselor is also needed
Stephanie Scoll, Bobbie Jean
NINTH GRADE: Dan Chaksu- Kendra Walker,. Steve Blakeman,
Paul
Hutchins,
Stephanie
Jenkins,
.
to
help keep the Job Bank open
Joy
Skidmore
and
Amy
Shaver,
pa, Jason S::heng, Jodie Hager,
Jackie
Simpson.
Nicbole
Smith
and
five
days a week rather than two
Anna Hamrick, Amy Wood and
Sprague.
Jeremy
Webb.
imd
a
half.
• JUNIORS • Scott Boster, Jenny Elizabeth Wooten.
SIXTH
GRADE
Gardner, David Hammond, Susan
TENTH GRADE: Sandra
Kathy Arrowood, Mike Bass,
Moore and Marc Villanueva.
Adams, Meredith Pollard and Brian
Jerrrod
Ferguson, Erin Prose, Scott
SOPHOMORES • Chris Coen,' Rice.
Wiseman,
Clint Ashwonh, Chris
Bryan Hall, Emily Moore, Tara
ELEVENTH GRADE: Hollie
Blanton,
Kristy
Carter, Jamie
Pennington, Kim Riggs. Sally Bartel, Beth Blevins, Pam Holley,
Edwards,
T.J
..
Lambert,
Melanie
Saunders, Luciana Scott, Cindy Cindy Sheets, Jenny Hughes and
Nance
and
Jennifer
Queen.
Stinson and Mark WilliamsOn.
Amy Icenhower.
SEVENTH GRADE
TWELFTH GRADE: Jonathan
FRESHMEN • Melissa Cain,
Tina
Stover, Danny Miller,
Tanya Drummond, Jason Eblin, Turner.
Katie
Camden,
Amber Hill, Kelly
Charity Eblip, Jodi Hobbs, Josh
The following students made t~e
Stanley,
Jake
Schuldt,
Kim Rucker,
Moles, Christa Moody and B Honor Roll for the (ourth s1x
Teresa
Hopkins,
Sara
Hutchins,
DahieUe Wills.
weeks:
Cullens
Goddard,
Krista)
Webster
FIRST GRADE : Lauren
: Sib GRADE • Ryan Ashworth,
and
Mary
Mohler.
S~tve Beaver, Heather Cookie, Ivy . Browning and Matthew Price.
EIGHTH GR'ADE
SECOND CRADE: Donnavan
,· Davis, Misty Erit, Rachael Polcyn,
Alicia Chambers, Kelly Thompson, Shelly Williams, Jason White,
Mark Johnson, Monica Adkins,
'
. Cindy Armstead, Abe Haislop,
" RIO GRANDE· The University deadline iS Monday, March 18 for Monica Ehman, Jeremy Ford, Jerry
of Rio Grande will be offering a both evening and daytime sessions. Lambert, Jason Dunlap and Tera
one day workshop in Usi~g Com·
The course will cover the basic Hanson:
puters-MS-DOS Operatang Sys - computer functions and highlight
terns March 19 and 21 from 6:30 the MS-OOS commands which are
to 9:,30 p.IJI. and March 21 from 'most important.
10:30 a.m. to 5:30p.m.
Participants taking this continu·
.Evening classes meet in the Col· ing education class will rec;eV.e
lege of Business Computer Lab, certificates for .6 CEUs.
Room 108. They daytime class will . For more infom'lation and regismeet in the Davis Career Center tration, contaCt the Office of ConComputer Lab, Room 105. Cost for tinuing Education, URG •' Rio
the class is $60 and includes a Grande, 45674, or call 245-5353,
work disk, instructional h!l"douts ext. 325, or toll-free in Ohio at I·
and a CEU cenificate for sax hours 800-282-7201.
of instruction. The pre-regisuatiQn
..viNTON
HONOR
ROLL
.
.
.

..
~

THURSDAY- Aerobics with
Christy Wilcoxen, 10:30 a.m. ;
Bible study, 10:45 a.m.; board of
trustees meeting; 1:30 p.m.; herb
class with Vilma Pikkoja, 1 p.m.
FRIDAY - Art and craft class
with Jan Stapleton, 10 to noon and
1-3 p.m.
Menus consist of:
MONDAY. • Spaghelli with
parmesan c!Jeese, cheese cube, garden salad, Vienna bread, peach
halves.
,
TUESDAY· Creamed chicken
over biscuits, hominy, spinach, bis.. .
cuits, lemon pudding.
WEDNESDAY · Cheeseburger,
oven rries, broccoli, bun, tapioca
pudding.
THURSDAY • Ham loaf, sweet

Instant
Passport
Pictures While

You Wait!
DON'T LET YOUR FAMILY
HISTORY' FADE AWAY!
Bring your origlnel photogrepha co
Ul for FrM coniUtteclon end eatl·

metu. No obligaclon. of cour•.

See the professionals at ...

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH .

426 SECO ND AVE
GAU.IPOLIS.OH

Job Bank helps
seniors work

446-ARTS

GOSPEL ·MUSIC
WORKSHOP and CONCERT

SATURDAY, APR-I-b-6
With ...

ETHEL
CAF FIE-AUSTIN

WORKSHOP
9:30-3 :30/'4

Includes Lunch

CONCERT
8:00 P.M) Admission S6
Tickers Available ar Peddler's Pantr y.
Brunic.:ardi's Musk, Criminal Records &amp; The S tow ~w ay

, __

, 4b./ Vfri';..-_--

. / :·~
I

i..

,.

!tiO GRANDE • A visual ~
~hop o~ sculpture at ~ Unav~Jty or Rao Grande, WhiCh had
. beii!n sclieduled for. March 15, has
been postponed unbl ~h 22.
.The workshop wdl be held 9
a,J!!. ,to 4 p,.m. an the scu~ptur~
budding•. adjacent to the t;Jnaversa·
ty 'a maantenance bu!ldangs o~f
State Route 32S. ~e anstructor as
Bob Bmser, auocaate professor of
an at Eure1a1 College.
.
Emser will mOdel a figure m
clay and dem~ how tom~
moldi for the .c~blll ~s. hiS

---,·c....
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. . . ---'$'7J:'. 0/'ro
'
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&gt;'9o,_
. c,._ I
AI "ran tast'IC 5am .s.
1 i~ - ::.~~~Jr1 -,~
you'll get everything you expect from / ·~:rJ;;.;,~i· /
an expensive salon. except the price. I·~~ -. .rQ'(;.::: ,
You don't need im appointment. 1.-;·~·,.....,·s
7
we're waiting lor you now.
..,,::-..;.£
;:,
·
5 /
-..._ "' 'I
(
j

Visual arts workshop rescheduled

YOU CAN TOOl

Would like to extend our
''THANKS" to our many
valued customers.

Ga~lia

lroRSING AIDES • C0111plet1Dg the Buckeye
Hills Adult Nurse Aide program were, front
·from left, Kim Jamison and Barban Holcomb;
middle row, Pamela Wood, Darlene Dewees,.

potato, kale, bread, bread pudding
and sauce.
FRIDAY - Fish fillet with tartar
sauce, whipped potatoes, carrots,
bread, chocolate refrigerator
des sen.
Make reservations by calling
446-7000 before 9 a.m. the day you
wish to attend.

MS-DOS
workshop planned
.

....Galipols

7

•

"

~

• ANN LANDERS

BUCKEYE

ST. IT. 160

RODNEY ·There will be an

ior the County Church Softball
~·Monday, March 2S at the
'ROdney Church of God. The meet·
ing begins at 7 p.m., and is open to
teams and members wishang to
play.

'

Arthritis self
help class set

will .conclude at 3:30p.m.
Don and Betty Maurer will conduct the support meetinll and
respite workers will be avatlable.
Those attending who bring their
loved ones are to contact Linda
Friend for respite services.

. GALLIPOLIS • Activities and
menus for the week of mai'ch 18-22
·at ·the Senior Citizen Center, 220
Jackson Pike, will be:
.
. MONDAY • Short subjects,
"Silver Linings," 11 a.m.: aerobics
with Christy Wilcoxen, 10:30 a.m.
· and chorus, I p.m.
TIJESI)A Y • STOP/Physical fitness, 10:30 .a.m.; blood pressure
taken, 10 a.l)'l. to noon; video matinee, "A Cry In the Dark" 12:30
p.m.
.
.
WEDNESDAY • Lenten service
with Rev. Grew Swan, 11:15 a.m.;
volunteer income tax service, noon
to 3 p.m.: armchair travel, "Faces
of the ''Orient" 12:30 p.m.; garden
club, I p.m.; cards, 1·3 p.m. and
pretty punch with Juanita Wood, 10

.~anizai!Oilaland sign up meeting

Training session set for cTa~e gl~ers
POMEROY • A training session
and support meeting will he held
Thursday at the Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy sponsored by
the Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc.
Speakers for the topic, "Good
Body Mechanics," will be Karla
Hunter, R.N., and Sally Gloeckner,
R.N. flunter is a registered nurse
employed at Overbrook Center in
Middleport where she serves as
assistant director of nurses.
Gloeclaler is also a registered nurse
at Overbrook Center where she
serves as direcl« of nursing.
They will ta1t llbout the imJ?Or.
tance of good body mechanacs.
Good and basic body mechanics
can make a difference in safety.
The importance of knowing the
proper technique for lifting, turning
and transferring patients becomes
increasingly obvious with the progression of the illness. Good body
·mechanics are accomplished when
you perform a taSk efficiently, llfe1y and with ¥ little energy expen·

Senior schedule planned .

Softball org~zation
ineetjng scheduled

Written proof of total household
income for three months preceding
date of application is required. Also
social security numbers for each
household member is needed for
the application.
-Applications are taken at the
Gallia County Outreach Office,
220 Jackson Pike, and the Meigs
Wednesday, 2 to 4 p.m. mthe fifth
County Outreach Office, 39350
floor classroom of Holzer Medical resol~e heat-rela~ed emer~enc1es Union Avenue, Monday thru FriCenter. For infonnalion, call 446- · resulung fro~ u'!hly termmauon, day 9 a.m. to noon and 1·3 p.m.
5247 or 446-5313.
~t. of termanauon, threat of ter·
The Cheshire office accepts
manauon, or a bulk fuel supply of applications Monday thru Thurs.
GALLIPOLIS · SL Peter's Episdays during the same hours, but no
.copal Churc~women (ECW) will less than 10 days.
applications
are taken at the
hold ~ meellng, 7 p.m. Monday in
Cheshire office on Fridays. For
the pansh hall. Rev. AI MacKenzie
more information call the Gallia
and Dot MacKenzie will speak on
'
office
at 446-0611, the Meigs
their trip to Scotland. Refreshments
office
at
992-5605, or the Cheshire
will be served, and the public is
office
at
367-7341.
invited'to attend.
POMEROY · A. new arthritis
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis self help course designed by the
Busmess and Professional Arthritis Foundation and co-sponWomen's Club will meet at 6:30 sored by _the Ohio University Colp.m. at the Stowaway Restaurant. lege of Medicine Arthritis Program
Program w1D be the Lola Mae Suit- and the Meigs County Health
Department will be held at the
er Federation Foundation.
health department on March 25
from
1:30-3 :30 p.m. The classes
KANAUGA · Kanauga NeighwiD
be
held each Monday through
borhood Watch meets Monday
April29.
,
7:30 p.m., Holiday Inn. Newcom:
This
program
will emphasize
ers welcome. No fees or dues.
exercise and control of each indi·
viduals arthritis. There is no charge
TUESDAY
for
the six-class course and each
VINTON · Vinton Friendship
participant
will receive a free textGarden Club will meet 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Opal Dunn. book.
To register for the course or.for
GALLIPOLIS • American more information, call the health
Legion Auxiliary Unit 27 meets deparunent at 992-6626.

Community Calendar
Items for the Community cal- Dinner will be seived following the
endar appear in the newspaper morning worship service.
two days prior to the event, and
GALLIPOLIS · Bell Communion the day or it. Notices ·for the
.
ty
Chapel
has Rev. Warren Woodcalendar should be received sevyard
eral days in advance to allow for
speaking, Sunday, 7 p.m.
publication. .
·
SUNDAY
CAPMUS · Revival at Cross
. KANAUGA - Evangelist Gerald Harting from Columbus win Roads Church near Cadmus, March
begin a few nights' revival at the I7-20, 7 p.m. nightly, with EvangeVoice of Hope Apostolic Church in list Charles Klapp of Williamston,
Kanauga. Services will begin at 7 Mich.
p.m. each evening. The pastor of
MONDAY
the church inviteS all to attend.
GALLIPOLIS · Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS · Evangelist Health Department Advisory
Wyatt Brown, former director of Council will meet Monday, 7 p.m.
Rhema Bible Training Center , in the basement of the courthouse.
Prayer and Healing School, wiD be
EWINGTON • American
ministering Sunday, MatCh 17 at 7
p.m. at New Life Victory Center, Legion Auxiliary 161 meets I p.m.
Gallipolis. For more inform~tion, Monday.
call Pastor Bill Turkovich at 446GALLIPOLIS · Poplar Ridge
8613.
Church begins revival services
. GALLIPOLIS • Triedstone Bap- Monday, with Alivs Pollard; Tuestist Church will hold a 39th day through Saturday nights with
anniversary celebration, Sunday, Dennis Parsons. Services 7 p.m.
March 17 at4 p.m. The Rev. Frank nightly; special singing.
Murphy, Pastor of St. John Baptist
Church, Montgomery, W.Va., will
GALLIPOLIS - Diabetic educabe giving the afternoon message.
tion classes are Monday through

: ' RICHARD D. BERECZKY
~', Marine · Pfc . Richard D.
Berec~ky, son of William B. and
:.rim N. Kelley of Route 2 Vinton,
:lllis been promoted to his present
'!ilflk while serving at Naval Tech'
'Jiical Training Center, Corry Sta·
.t1on, Pensacola, A a.
··· A 1990 graduate·of North Gallia
.I:Jigb ~1, he joined the Maline
.;ctops mMay 1990.

required prior to the state 'testing.
The students received clinical
experience at Scenic Hills Nursing
Center and Holzer Medical Center.
According to instructor Elva
Davis, several of the Nurse Aide
graduates are continuing their education by enrolling in the 300-hour
MRDDclass.
Earning the highest grades were
Dorothy Brooks and Freeda Chandler, and recognized for perfect
attendance was Darlene Dewees.

,

own figures will be cast in m:nze
the Saturday following the workshop. .
'
Emser is a recipient of degrees ·
in art from Eureka College and
Bradley University. An accomplished scui!J!Or, his work is widely
eKhihited. AdmissiOn is free, and
refreshments will be provided.
Fqr more information, call the
Fane and Per!onnina Arts Center at
the University of Rio Gnnde at
24S-S353 elttension 364, The toll
free number in Ohio is 1-8()().2827201.

.·

I'":~-. ~./l

A 'Parztastic 8anfs• /

V.lheOoiiiJIIII FamityHalrCUtt~• .

, ,•• SAil$
_,-PlAZA
li l t - ... &amp;.. ._

UWPOUS. 01110

UICMMDNX

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SIIJilillr 12 to 5 P..M.

'

m.YOWNEDAHD~C,.._IMI.. awu..,lll.lfiC, 1110. • •

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wv

llln:h 17, 1811

-------------

ports

POWELL'.SCDUPOI
GOOD SUI~ Ul. 17, ltt1 OILY

CAMPBEll'S

CHICKEN
NOODLE SOUP

ST~E

HOUIS
Moneh•y thQ, Sunday ..
I AM-10 PM . .

COLLEGE PARK, Md. (UPI)
Mark Macon scored 20 poiniS
and Temple wilhstood a thr_ce-point
field goal assault from Quis Fleml ng Satur~ay ~o eliminate Rich·
mond 77·64 m a second-round
NCAA East Regioq game.
,
·N!J. 10 seed Temple, 23-9,
moved into a lhird-round regional
game Friday in East Rutherlord,
NJ., against lhe winner of Saturday's second game 11 the Univenity of Maryland, either Oklahoma
Stale or North Carolina Srate.
. Richmond, 22·10 and seeded
I Sth, fell out of the tournament
~espit~ Fleming's 25. points,
mcludmg 7 of 10 shootmg from
three-poim range. Fleming hit four
three-pointers wilhin 6:30 to rally
the Spiders from a 48-37 early second·half deficit
.. .
Terry Connolly racked. on a bas·
· ket·with ~:33 l~ft, pulling Rich·
mond wtthm 59-57. .
· . But Temple rebullt lhe lead to
64-57 with a Macon' three-pointer
an~ two free throws from Mark
Stncldand. :remple sank 13 of 16
free throws m the final2:49 to lock
up lhe win.
Mik Kilgore scored 18 points
and Donald Hodge added 15 for
Temple, which has won four of its
last five. Connolly scored 12 and
Kenny Wood added 10 for the Spi-·
ders, who Weill coming Off an upset.
over secohd· seeded Syracuse.
. Temple and Richmond have met
in post,season three of the last four
years. Temple ousted Richmond
from lhe 1988 NCAA tourney and
the Spiders returned the favor the
next year in the NIT. ·
Tmiling 14-12 nearing the mid·
way point of the half, Temple went
on an -18-6 spurt Macon finished
off the outburst with a three-point·
er, for a 30.20 lead with 3:211eft
Rich~ond rallied. behind three
consecuuv~ three·pomt baskets -

17&lt;

298 SECOND ST. ·
POME-ROY, OH.
PRICES
EFFECTIVE MAR. 17 THRU MAR~ . 23~ 19ft
'
.

-

I'
I
1
Umit I Please
I Goed Ooly At l'ow••• Supil;ola
I Geo4l S... Mar. 11, I ttl 0111y
I
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.. ____________ _

I~-------------"'
POWRL'S COU POll
I GOOD 11011.. liAR. II, 1991 DilLY
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I . EVAPORATED
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MILK
TAll CANS

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18&lt;

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I Goed Oolr At Powell'• SuptrVal• I
I Goed Mon., Mar. 11, 1991 Only

•

•------~-------­
--------------I
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POWELL'S COUPON
GOOD TUF.S., IIAR.19; 19910NLY 1,

FLAYORITE

YELLOW
ONIONS

.

Wieners .............. l~ •• 99 &lt;
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.CORN KING 6-9 LB. AYG.
CHICKEN

Leg

Boneless H.am ••• l·•· ·

..
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Qu~rters •••••••••
.. l l '

8
9
1

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Limit ,1 Pltase

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: .. !"

GALA I
TOWELS

II
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Lunch Meat ••••••••• ~

Limit 1 Pltase

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20, 1991 Dilly I

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Seedless Grapes ••~. 9 9 &lt;

THOMPSON WHITE 'OR ·RED FLAME·.

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GALLON$

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GOOD Fll .•, MAR. 22. 1991 ONLYI

MIKE-SELL

POTATO

,. HANGING ROCK GRADE A·
"

'
Lar.ge Eggs ••••••••••••

CHIPS .

DOZEN

Pineapple ..••••:i:~.2f$' Ice Cream •••• !~~~~A!L. $2 99
PURINA FIELD MASTER

Dog Food •••••• ::~.
, 39 OZ. AIK w EP or

36 OL fiiN(II IOAST

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE

$399

Reg. 11.09 Pkg.

$299

BANQUET 10-12 OZ.

TV Dinners ••••••••••••
101

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lilllt I " ' c.t1•1r

CHARMIN

TOILET.nSSUE

12 lOll

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$2. 99

.Geotl Otllr At , ...,, ,.,.,.. Volu
Geotl .... 17 ...... 23, I ttl
lillllt I l'er C•t•••

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23, 1991 ONlY

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Umit 1 Plea 11
Dilly At,...,, looper¥•

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l~~~l!!:l.!:.!.'!'-"!!t..J

9-0 nm to pull in front for ood
Williams also rab\ed' 11 . the Cougars . were called for 26
rebounds whUe Kh~lid Reeves ~~s~d Arizona made 30. of 36
added 11 ints for UA were fol- ""~'
w at~I11Pts. BYU htt only
lowed by ~hris Mills' ~ine points 8 of 13 free throws, as th~ Cougars
and eight-point efforts by Ed U:7a::Jfored by 22 P,OIDts from
StOkes and Man Othick. .
. me..
.
Nathan Call 1ed BYU with 12 th ~o:::,r~&amp;;d ;J'YUead 1~-4 m
points while Bradley and· Gary toe 2 3
odre
swnche4
Trost had IO each But Brad1e ·
a • zone~ .a ll181Chup zone
fouled out with 5.39 to go In 81{ ~d Jll!lled to wtlhm 30-27 at half·
·
' ume.

PLAYING TWISTER Is wbat BYU cenler
Shawa Bradley (center) and Arizona postman
Brian Williams (lert) seem to be doing .as tbey
battle ror the loose ball durln1 Saturday's

NCAA second-round tournament game in Salt
· Lake City, Utab, which the WildcaiS won 76·61..
(UPI)

CONTEST OF WILLS • Temple-s Donald
Hodge (lert) and Rkhmond's Chris Plemlngare
locked Into a contest of wills as the two have
solid and simultaneous IIJ"ips on the basketball

during Saturday's NCAA second-round game at
Collqe Park, Md. Temple posted a 77-64 victory In the encounter. (UPI)

Mets, White .Sox notch victories
in Satur~ay _exhibition contests

A TIME FOR TEARS • lbeae Canfteld play·

en • Belli PlemiDI (10), Carla ROM, Kim Haber,

Becky Brayer and Jenny Kulk:s (L-R), who bad
a part ID bandiDI SEOAL cbamplon Lopn Its
nrst Jqss or tbe - I D.lbunclay's state semi·

nnals • sbow their disappointment In
turD or
events foDowlnl Saturday's 73-59 lois to Dayton
Duabar Ia the Dlvlsloa 0 1tate cbamplonablp
game at Oblo State University's. St. John's
Areaa. (UPI)

TORONTO (UP!) - Kevin
Renyolds belted a. two-run homer
and Howard Johnson and Charlie
O'Brien conUibuted solo homers
Saturday to lead the New York
Mets to a 7-1 victory over the
Toronto Blue Jays.
MciS starter Wally Whitehurst
piu:hed four innings, giving up one
run on four hits and sUiking out
two for the victory.
Toronto's Dave Stieb allowed
three runs over three innings to
record his second loss of the
spring.
New York jumped into a 3-1
lead in lhe second mning. Johnson
led off with his second homer in as
many games in the SkyDorne and
his third home nm of the exhibition
seasdn. Gregg Jefferiea doubled
and scored one out later on Daryl
Boston's ground out. O'Brien fol·
lowed wilh his ftrSt home run of
the spring.
.
The Mets added a run in the
fifth on Tim Teufel's RBI double
and another run in the seventh on
Darren Reed's sacrifice fly. New
York fin.ished the scoring with
McRenyolds' two run shot in the
. eighth.
,
Toronto opened a 1.0 lead in the
'

•

'

.'

..

After BYU took its one-point
lead 4:56 mto. th~ sec
.. ond half, Anzona w~nt to •ts·•nside power )lame
and Wtl!iams score~ 13 of the
Wildcats next 21: pomts. Stokes
also had. seven points in that run to
help Anzona pull out to a 61·47
advantage.
BYU shot only 40 percent from
t~e field, and Arizona had only
etght turnovers.

/'

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I Good 011yLimitAt Powell'•
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MORTON SALT

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FLAYORITE

two by Fleming lllld one br Cunis
Sean Sutton, son of Cowboys
Blair- to'shrinlt the Owls lead to head coach Eddie Sutton, ran the
3~29. Macon add"!~ a field goal offense and sco.red 14 points.
wtth 44 seconds left m the )lalf, but Coach Sutton has W:en an NCAAFleming's two free throws widi 7.2 record four different schools into
seconds to go reduced Temple's the tournament
.
half~e advll!ltage to 32-31.
. ~ouston 's 24 points made the
Rtchmond was 6 of 11 from Jumor forward Oklahoma State's
three-point range in the first 20 all-time leading scorer wilh 1,677
minurcs.
·
in three seasons, topping Bob Kur'Oklahpma SL 73, NCSU 64
!arid's 1,669,
AI College Park, Md., Byron
The only time the Wolfpack
Houston scored 24 points and stored fewer points this season was
grabbed 12 .rebounds Saturday and in a 60·59 vtctory· over Connecti1
Oklahoma Stale held Norlh Caroli· cut
·
·
na Stale to iiS second-lowest point
Monroe hit 9 of 9 free throws,
toea! of lhe ~non the way to a extendin~ l)is school-record sUing
73-64 East Regton victor)'.
to 43 straight He has also made 64
The Cowboys moved into Fri- of his last 65.
day's .third-round regional ~arne in .
Oklahoma State scored .the final
East Rutherford, NJ .. agamst Np. eight points of the half, six from
.J0 seed Temple, winner of Satur· the free-lhrow line, to go into the
day's first game over Richmond at break with a 37·34 ICijd. Five Cow·
the University of Maryland. Okla· · boys scored Oklahoma Stale's ftrsi
homa State, 24·7 and seeded third, five field goals and eight Cowboys
.has not advanced this deep into the got on the board in the ftrst 20 mil!toumam~nt since 1958.
uies. Houston tallied eight, and
The Cowboys weilt on a 19-0 Sutton had seven.
.
surge bridging the first and second
Monroe sc~ 14 points and hit
halves to take control. Houston aU seven of hiS free-throw attempts
capped the outburst with a basket at to pace the Wolfpack in the ftrst 20
15':30 of the second half, giving minuteS. Corchiani picked up three
Oklahoma State a 48·34 lead.
fouls in the frrst half.
The Wolfpack, seeded sixth,
Arizona 76, BYU 61
.
!'loved within 56-54 on 13-6 run,
At Salt Lake City, Utah, Brian
mcluding a basket by Bryant Feg- ~illiams scored 16 of his 24 points
gins off teammate Kevin Thomp· m the second )lalf Saturday and
son's missed free throw. ·
,
Arizona scored 30 points from the
With N.C. State fooling in an foul line for a 76-61 victory over
attempt to ignite a·rally, the Cow• Bri~ham Young in the West
.boys made 15 of !heir lilst 16 free Reg10nals.;
throws.
The Wtldcats, 28·6, advanced
Rodney Monroe led the Wolf- into the NCAA West semifinals
pack, 20-11, with 19 points. The Thursday at Seattle against either
stando.ut senior guard made just 4 Seton Hall or Creighton. BYU finof 16 from the f1eld. Backoun mate · ished its season 21·13.
Chris Corchiani added 15, but his
After the Cougars took their
usual aggressive style was stymied only lead in the game when they
by foul trouble. Corchiani fouled led 36-35 early in lhe second half
out with 22 seconds 'left in his final on back·to-back baskets by Shawn
coUege game.
Bmdley, the Wildcats then used a

onship Saturday afternoon 'wilh a 53,50 win over
By GENE CADDES.
Rocky River MagnifiCBt in the title game at St John
,
UPl Sports Writer
Arena.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - Atina Harris scored
The unmnked Bulldogs, who had to beat No .. 1
28 points, pulled down 1.1 rebounds and had six
•
ranked
and defending champion ·~ckerington .in the
assists to lead No. 3 Qayton Dunbar to a 73·59 win &lt;'
regional
finals and came from far behind to defeat
over No. 9 Canfield Saturday morning in tlie cJtampiBeavercreek in the semifinals, had no less an easier
onship game of the girls' Division II state high
time in the championship game.
·
school basketball tournament at SL John Arena. ·
Celina
led
29-25
after
ttailing
the
ftrst
10 minutes
The LadyWolverincs, who finished 27-l; broke a
of
the
game.
28-28 tie on a· basket by Jessica Spencer with 2:20
Magnificat, which lost in last year's semifinals,
left in the ftrst half and led the rest of the way.
scored
the first 4 poiniS of the third quarter to tie it at
Harris, a 5-foot-9 junior forward, hit 13 of 20 field
29-29.
But Poo('s two free thrQws with 5:35 left in
goal attempts and came up with' big baskets each
the
period
put Celina up 31-29 illid tfie Bulldogs
time the Lady Cardinals made a run. '
never surrendered the lead.
.
Canfield, which closed out its season at 26·2,
Celina held its widest margin at 51-43 wilh 1:21
remained close in the first half on the three-point
to play. but a flurry of turnovers almost got the Bull·
shooting of senior guard Jenny Kulics.
.·
dogs in trouble .
Kulics hit 5 of 8 three-point attempts in the first
Magnificat's Rose Weisenseel hit four consecu·
half and scored 17 of her 23 points. She hit another
tive
free throws with 43 and 37 seconds remaining to
. pair of three-pointers in the final quarter and was 7 of
cut the margin to 5147 and another free throw by
17 for the game.
Elizabeth Tigue made i! 51-48 with 26 seconds to
Canfield played wilhout the help of senior Kim
play.
Huber, who suffered a bruised knee late in the semi·
That, however, was the final point for the Blue
final win over Logan. Huber, Canfreld's second leadSuealts until Weisensee! scored at the buzzer to cut
jpg scorer at 21.5 points per game, played just five
the final margin to three poiniS.
minutes and didn't score.
Celina, whose four losses all came to Division m
Dunbar ·led 15·9 after the first period, 37-31 at
or
IV teams, committed 25 turnovers to just 16 for
halftime and 53-48 after three peribds. It was still just
Magnificat,
but made up for that problem with better
57-52 with 6:15 remaining in the game, but Harris
field
goal
shooting.
The Bulldogs hit 55.2 ·percent
led a 12-2 run that gave the Lady Wolverines a 69·54
from
the
field
(16
of
29},
while Magnificat was 17 of
lead with 3:15 to play.
. ·
57
for
29.8
percent.
They
also
were 21 of 28 from the
Dillard added 12 poiniS for Dunbar. Spencer had
free
lhrow
hne
to
12
of
14
for
the
Blue Streaks.
II and Latasha Glanton, the Wolverines' all-Ohioan.
As
in
its
semifmal
win,
Celina,
which finished at
had 10, along with nine rebounds.
244, sfJ!J'ICd slowly, falling behind 8-2 early and
Andrea Slaina took up the scoring slack for the
trailed I 3·8 at the end of the first quarter.
.
injured Huber, with 20 poiniS. She hit 7 of 8 from the
Celina, which lost in the semifinals in its only
field and all 'six of her free throws.
other state tournament appearance in 1988, took its
, The title was the fnt for Dunbar, whose only loss
ftrst lead at 16-15 on two free throws by Jill Froning
was 1161-59 decision to Tipp City Tippecane the 17th
with 5:30 left in the half.
game of the41eason.
·
MagnifiCat, led in scoring by Sue Zidanic wilh 13
Celina 53, Magnlllc:at 50 • Celina, led by Carey
points,
Tigue with 11 and Weisenseel with 10,
Poor's 17 .,mniS, completed its unlikely march 10 the
wound
up
its season at 24-4.
girls DiviSion I state bigh school basketball champi·

I

I

March 17,1991

Dayton Dunbar hands Canfield .
73-59 loss in D-11 girls' title game

I.-------------. POWELL'S COUPON ..I

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I Good Onlr At Pow ... SuporValu 1
1· Good Tu11. Mar. 19, 1991 Onlr,. I

.

CHICKEN

I

3 lB. BAG

C

Temple, Oklahoma State wiD second-round ga~es

1Olf4 OZ. (AN

'

1rimts ... itntitttl Section

first on Kelly Gruber's sacrifice · Cangelosi scored to malce it 4-0.
fly, Tl.e Blue Jays wasted 10 hits. Frank Thomas then doubled, driv:
and left 10 on base.
ing in pinch runner Bobby
Wblte Sox 7, Yankees 0
Meacham.
·
At Sarasota, Pia .• Cory Snyder
Howe, 33, who has not pitched
hitilsolohomerandFrankThomas in the majors since Oct. 4, 1987
hit an RBI double to hi~hlight a now has given up a total of 10 hi~
fiv~run seventh inning, bfling the and six runs in three innings this
Chicago White Soit to a 7..0 Gmpe· spring in three games. The left-hanfruit League victory Saturday over der also has walked two, and
the New York Yankees.
served up two home runs.
Four White Sox pitchers comNew York reliever WiUie Smith
bined for the five-hitter. Starter walked the bases loaded in the
Melido Perez held New York to eighth, and Meacham gave Chica. two hits over four innings, his go a 7..0 lead with a two-run single
.longest start of the spring. and to left.
,
struck out five. Jeff Carter, 1-0,
In a 61/2 inning "B" game ear.
picked up the~win in two innings of lier Saturtlay,lcnuckleblller Charlie
relief.
·
' ~o~gh ~ave up 10 hits over five.
Snyder led off the the Chicago mnmgs m Chtcago's 8-S victory,
seventh with his ftrst home run of over the Yankees. Shortslop Crai '
lhe spring, driving a 1-1 piu:h from Grebeck went 2 for 3 wilh two RB{
left·hlnder Steve Howe, 1-I, over for the White Sox, including a cJou.
the right Held fence. One out later, ble. New York's Mel Hall was 3
Sammy Sosa doubled to deep right for 4 with a solo homer.
center and scored on Steve Lyons·
OrlolellO, Raaaen 7 (10 lanJ '
single to malce it 2-0.
At Port Charlotte, Fla., Sam'
One out laler, John Cangelosi Horn's second triple of the day
drew a walk and Robin Ventura drove in his fifth and lixlh nms of
followed with a sillgle, driving in the game in the lOth inning SaturLyons and advancing CanJelosi to day 10 bring the Baltimore Orioles
lhird. A balk was called against a 10-7 exhibition win over the
Howe, his second in the iMing, and Texas Rangel!!. ·
'

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.

March 17, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

In NCAA first-round action Friday night,

.

.

..' .
.

Ohio State tops Towson State; Penn St~te, UNLV also win
ao

·DAYTON, Obio (UPI).- Topsooded Ohio Stale, which lost Its
fiaaltwo rep1alfUOII pmes, had
to'llnlgle ~a boltom-llled to
win ill OfelliDJ NCM touriiMient
game Friday Di&amp;bt.
With AU-America Jimmy Jackson pouring in 24 points and five
other Buckeyes scoring in double
lipres, Ohio State outfasted gritty
Towsoo Slate 97-86. ·
·
-: Ohio Sllte. ranked No. S in the
nitioa, will play eighthrseeded
~pa Tech in Sunday's second
reund. The Yellow Jackets
whilliiCd DePaul· 87 •70 in a first
roWid maU:hlljl.
., In Friday 1 other first rouod
gimeS, SL lobo's held offNonhem ·
IIUnols 75-a, while Texas defeat·
ea SL Peter's 73-65. The 4th-seede'd Red men and 5th-seeded
Longhorns clash in Sunday's sec·
ond IOIIIId.
·
Ohio Slate had a much tougher
time wilh TOWIOII Slate than a top
seed should have against a 16th
· seed. The Buckeyes methodically ·
. ran up an 18- pomt lead - 64-46

with 12:35 left- oaly to
Slag·
let the Tigers llack in the
game.
Towson State outscored the
Buckeyes 22·9 over the oext six
minutes and pulled within 73-68
wilh 6:23 remaining. However, the
)iring Tigers could never &amp;a clola'
than five points die rest of die way.
"Having a 1lrge margin and not
puttin¥ them away, .that's a concern,' admitted Ohio State head'
coach Randy Ayers. "Towson
State did a good job of lceping us
small. J;ly .that, I mean they li:ept
our big guys in foul trouble.
"We had a little trouble shooting free. throws, but overall I
thought it was a good game for
us, •• added Ayers. ''If we make our
free throws and we rebound, we
win by a canfortable.margin!'
The Buckeyes missed 17 of
their 39 free throws and, despite
being taller and huslder than Towson State, only out-rebounded the
Tigers 44-43.
·
"Our team got a little tired,'.'
said Towson State head ·coach

Terry Truax, "To play 40 minutes seiZe a 25-point bulge, 57-32,. with
againSt a learn like Ohio Swe real- 14:25 left. During a five-minute
ly takes itSioll.
· •
span, Andenon scored eight points
· "We could haw bcalen a lot of and Barry hit seven.
learns IOniJht. but not Ohio Slate.
"This was a test of character,"
They certaJDiy showed why they're Oeorfia Tech head coach Bobby
co-champions of the Big Ten. They Cremms said. "We had ·lost three
had individuals that really stepped in a: row and !lOt played well.
up."
.
Tonight, we played about as well
Chris lent scored 17 for Ohio as we can play.
State, while teammates Perry
"Keony Andlnon played lille a
Carter 8!1d Iamall Brown added 15 true great player," adde4 Cremins.
apiece. Mark Baker had 12 and "I'd love to keel' up this level of
Trcg Lee- 10 . . Towson State's play, but I can't leally say. We've.
Chuck Lightening led all scorers been an up and down team.''
. with 26.
: 'I'm shocked," said DePaul
GeorKia Tech, !villi All-America head coach Joey Meyer. "I never
Kenny Anderson scoring 31 points expecicd that to happen. I thought
and Jon Bmy adding 22, had a sur· · we had prepared well. I thlok it
prisingly easy time ot;it in an 87-70 blows the theocy, about how well
romp over ninth-seeded DePaul.
you're playing going into the tourThe Yellow Jackets broke the nament, because we were playing
game ·wide open in the first six wellllld they were slnl~g. But
minl!l¥9 of the second half thanks they put it all together torught."
to the sizzling shooting of AnderJason Buchanan scored 20
son and Barry.
points and Malik Sealy adlled 19 to
After holding a nine-point half· pace SL John's to its 75-68 victory
time margin, Georgia Tech over fast~losi~ Nathem Illinois.
St. John's enJOyed a 59.34 bulge
outscored the Blue l&gt;en)ons 22-6 to
with 14:24 remaining. Butlhen the
Redmen seemed to lose interest in
the game, turned sluggish and it
nearly cost them.
·
Over the next 12 minutes,
Northern Illinois outscored St.
John's 25-6 to pull within· 65-59
which ine8Rs they wlllked all sum- Miami University (men only); with 2:16'to go. The Husldes were
mer and haven't quit running, April 27, District 22 Cham pi- still only six' down at 67-61, with
meaning they should be prepared
Malone College, Canton; I :40 left, but could get no closer
•or hat e will face this season
· "
Ma
lnVI·tallO
· nal, Marthan that the rest of the way at the
" w w
•
Redmen l!nproved tb 21~8.
Willey will be 11$oisted in coach- sh I
May 11, Billy
"Naturally, it would have been
ing by Eddie Atkinson, Reedy, Hays
Bloomington, nice if we had a knockout, but a

23-year veteran St. John's head
coach Lou Carnesecca. "Yqu
never have enough. Our offense
was clicldng in the flfSt half. In the
second half, we hit a lull."
Donnell Thomas led Northern
lllioois with ·23 points and Donald
Whiteside added 20 as the Huslcies
ended their season at 25-6.
Northern Illinois, seeded 13th,
virtually put itself out of the game
right from the srart. The nervous
and cold Huskies went without a
field goal .the first five minutes,
· trailing 10-2 and then 21-7.
"The thing that hurt us most
was we came out very tight,'' said
Northern Illinois head conch Jim
Molinari. "It showed up not only
in that we missed some shots, but
in our competitiveness level. We
respeCted .SL John's, but maybe we
didn't understand how luird we had
to fighL" .
Pesky St. Peter's, making its
first-ever NCAA tourney appearance, trailed Texas only 32-30 at
halftime bul perm•tted the
Longhorns to score the firSt seven
points of the second half and could
never catch up again,losing 73-65.
"I've always felt the first four
or five minutes of the second half
are crucial," said Texas head coach
Tom Penders. "I think any coach
will tell you that's the most important part of the game. We did a

.nant lind

·Quality outweighs numbers in Rio's
plans for 1991 outdoor track season
'· RIO GRANDE - Although the
number of athletes out this year for
spring track at the University of
Rio Grande is down, Coach Bob
Willey feels the quality factor will
malce up for die shQr!age.
·.The team. competed in its first
.· . meet of the 1991 season Saturday
in th~f Early Bird Rela:t;s at Mlr•
slla1l Univasity.
' ·
.The men's team won the Mid. Ohio Conference champiopship in
1990 111d placed third among all
:WSiric:t 22 team I. Last year, the
womeo 's team was fourth in the
clistricL In additioo, the men also
l::~ed fint io the Berea (Ky.)

·

: ~r- now in his aixth season

~ coeching track since his reiUm 10

llle Rio Grande faculty in 1985;
~ be loolrlng for the experience

pined by his u)iperclassmen in
lil$ldng 1991 a .-cessfulseuon.
::·Those U!'P._Crtlassmen include,
OJI tile men s team, Mark Cline
(Ienior, Chillicothe), Blaise Reader
(sophomore, Waverly), ·Tim Murphy (junior, Zloesville), Travis
llambo (jullior, CohunbiiM), Kurt
· Tyson (aenior, New l.exinpJn) and
10eJ Spencer Owior. Olllipolis).
.• Back on die women's learn are
Sherry Cooke (senior, Sunbury),
Vonda Stiles (senior, Shawnee),
Bonnie Evans (sophomore,
~ingston), Renee Peele (sooholllore, Baltimore, Ohio), Debbie
G11y .(SC!lhomore, McConnelsville)
flld Leslie Lauvray (sophomore,
Coshocton).
.
: New to the men'steam are Tim
Vandebcl'lle (aophomore, Dellroy),
Brant Mclaughlin (freshman, Litfie Hoelting), Hugh McLaughlin
(freshman, Little Hoelting), Marc
Michigan (freshman, Kettering),
!Irian Brelsford (freshman, West
l-aJ'ayette), Aaron Oriffin (fresh111111, Wellston) and Iason Weeks
(freshman, Port Clinton).
· • Joining the women's team this
ieuon • MicheDe Crouse (fresh011111. M'Artbur),.Nancy Keller
«resslman. Mantua) and Teawana
Milllll (lalicr, Chillicothe).
:
penall will have .to give
their beat u we will be dealing
With more .CJIII)ity 111111 181tity this
1•." ·Willey'
MMost of
these people 1J11 cross country,

~

:.:::J.

'•

RG rui!,ner nets

All-American
at NAJA event

Olenville
College
whofrom
also ·
V(.Va., a State
tran.sfer
student
worked with Willey .during the
recent indoor ttack season.
·
The re"'ainder of the spring
schedule is as foDows:
Man:h 23, Mountain State Invitational, Laidley Field, Charleston,
W.Va; April6, Ohio Wesleyan triangular meet (Ohio Wesleyan,
Oberlin and Rio Gnmde); Aprilll13, Dogwood Relays, Knoxville,
Tenn. (women only); April 13,
Mid-Ohio Conference Championships, Walsh College, Cllllton
(men only); Aprill9, AII~ Ohio
Championships, ·Miami University, ·
Oxfad, Ohio (women only); April
20, All-Ohio &lt;;:hampionships,

.

87
85
87
86
85
88
86
85
88
86
87
.88
89
86
90
88
90
90
88
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romped past Northeastern 101-66
and Villanova edged Princeton 5048.Lance Miller .made a short
jumper with 1.3 seconds left to
push Villanova past Princeton .
· h
~ler, who scored a game-hi£ 19
pomts, took Sean Jackson one-on:

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Funai
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and Mississippi State.
.:.'
James Barnes had 19 points and
eight rebounds to pace the Nitlanf.
LionstotheirupsetofUO.A.
-:.
Althou~h neither team had a·~
double-digit lead, UCLA led 36-28
with 3:08 left in. the flfSt half, but:
could not pull away.
·; ·
Penn State trailed 60-59 with•:
5:32 left and the score was lcnotted''
at 61-61 before the Nitrany Lionlf•
went on a 7-0 run to move !lhead
68-61 with 1:29 remaining:
·..•
Penn State held off a finat ·
UCLA barrage, including four bas.. :
kets in the fmal I: II, by making 9
of 14 free throws in the final1:57; :· .
·(NCAA ends on C-4)
·• ·

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one into the lane and pulled up to
hit a six-foot shot.
After three timeouts with 0 .7
seconds left, Princeton ' s Kit
Mueller inbounded the ball to Chris
Marquardt for a final shot at the
buzzer, but the long heave was far
off the mark.
Viiianova, 17-14, the No. 9
seed, meets North Carolina, 26-5,
in the second round.
Rick Fox and Hubert Davis each
scored 16 points to lead a balanced .
North Carolina attack. North Car- ·
olina, ranked No. 4 nationally,
quickly made sure it would not be
the third consecutive favorite to fall
in the &lt;;arrier Dome after UCLA

'•.

·'

"Wh1le we have a number of
fresh-:nen. there~ ~e iuniors.to
r.rov1d~ leadership.. Forte sa1d.
The g1rls are workmg very hard
and I'm ver; proud of that."
Forte SBid the 17-doubleheader
schedule (10 home, seven away)
will pit t~e Redwom~~ a~ainst
some d•fflcult compeuuon m the
co~ference. IJ!ld distnct, -~cularly
Oh•o Domm•can and Wllmmgton.
"A lot of people don ~ealize
ihe conferenc~ ~ the distnct ~e
very challengmg, the coach SBid.
"If we slay in the ball gam~ !!"entally, we have a·chance to wm.
UNIVERSITY OF RIO
GRANDE
1991 SOFTBALL SEASON
Man:h 19-~eston, A
Man:h 21·~·~· H
Man:h 26-~ilmmgton, A
Man:h 29-Fmdlay, H
~h 30-Mount Vernon, H
APf!12-Shawnee State, A
April
H

-'•
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(Continued from C-2)

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ac·n·o· n· · · -- - - - _ _ , . - - - . - . ,

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Southwestero H.S. From lett to right are Amy·· :
. Metzler (100% Award), Lisa Hall (MVP, Best '•'
Field Goal aod Free Throw Shooter), Lyon Gill
(Most Improved) and Sarah Wiseman (Most':·'
Potential).
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caicher; Becky Fullei" (sophomore,
Pedro), second base and outfield;
and Renea !-undy (sophomore,
Ia_ck~n), thlfd base. Stull Wl!S a
Dtstnct and MOC Player of the
Week during the scaso!l ~d w~
honored by both orgaruzauons m
'!le postseason.
Th~ freshman ~em~r~ of.the
team mc_lude Robm ~uzpatnc~.
Canal Wmchester, outf•eld; Ang1e
Joseph, Groveport. pitcher; Beth
Ploy~. Midland, outfield; Al~ce
q.uddl, ~amden, o!ltf•eld; Tma
L_mdsay, Logan, th1rd base ~nd
pitcher; Angela Peck, Stoutsville,
outfield; and Wendy Litteral, St.
Paris, outfield and pitcher..
Also new to die team IS Debby
Dixon, a junior from ·wellston who
transferred to Rio Grande from
Lake Erie CoUege. Dixon will play

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I

: RIO GRANDE- A positive
attitude, coupled with hard work,
will spur the University of Rio
~rande softball team on to a suecessful season this spring the
team's new coach believes. '
: The Redwomen open the 1991
C!lmpaign on the road at the University of Charleston (W .Va .)
l)lesd8y at 3 p.m., and play their
ftrst home gatne on Thursday at 3
p m against Capital
:' "W~ will be worklng mainly on
a positive atmnsphere because the
program h.aS been down for anum11er of ~- So with some positive
~~einforcement and hard wort there
will be improvement." A~gelo
Forte said as he shoulders his fiTS!
Gonege coaching assignmenL
' "At this time I'm not concerned
about wins and losses,. but with
iinprovement of s1tills," he said.
. Forte is a 1990 Rio Grande
graduate in communications and
education, and has been employed
qs a counselor in the university's
admissions offiCe since last June.
Se is a graduate of St. .Francis
~ales Higb School in Columbus
where he played football, coached
jlmior high softball and stewarded
~ity level softball for two years.
• "I'm very excited about this
Position," Forte said. "I look at it as
~other challenge and 1 plan to
wort very hard on accomplishing
my goals."
. The Redwomen were 5-23 in
1990, 3•11 in the district and 1-7 in
tfte Mid-Ohio Conference, but even
~en represented an improvement
over previous seasons. Helping the
team on to better things this season .
~ the return of four players from
last year and a healthy infusion of
fieshman talen~
The returnees are Kathy Lute
(iun!o'. Wheelersburg); first base;
Robin Stull (sophomore, HiUsdale),

l A A
.t1i'1

give iiself a goOd shot at advancing
to the Sweet 16.
Penn State head coach Bruce
Parkhill stressed the importance of
the 74-69 victory over UCLA, 23-9
and ranked 14th nationally.
.
"It's just terrific. To get in (the
tournament) is a major accomplishment for our program. To beat a
marquee team like UCI,.A, a Top
20 team, a team that was seeded
very .highly , in the Sweet 16 last
year - it's just a tremendous
accomplishment," said Parkhill.
"I think it will have positive
implications for our program, pri· ·
marily in the recruiting area."
And the best might be yet to
,come for Penn State, 21-10. The
Nitrany Lions, the No. 13 seed in
. the East Region, meet Eastern
Michigan, the No. 12 seed, on Sunday for a chance to advance to the

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New RG softbaJl·coach, team eye
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ATTEMPTS BLOCK. Oblo Stale center
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LOGAN
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: "YCIIIIIO. II we brought back
we'd be excited,

ffiGHLANDER GIRLS HONORED • These
Southwestern basketball playen were handed
various awards tor tbelr accomplishments on
the cogrt lo the past seasoo at the Southwestern
wloter. sports banquet, held last Mooday at ·

~n=d=.;=~===~=N:A:IA~~d=ec:i:si:on~co=un=ts~j=us=t~is~m=uc=h~,"~s=ai~d

Pekin

•

Jllllnhlrewa

good job getting that eushion.' '
Still, Penders praised' the spunk
that St. Peter's showed.
"We probably spend more on
stationery and s18111ps than they do ·
on recruiting," he said of tiny college in Jersey Ci7, NJ. "I respJlCt ·
that. That's why wouldn'tlet my
ldds get overronfidenL I have a lot ·
of respect for a ~ lille that... :
Texas dommated the boards,:
out-rebounding St. Peter's 41-26, ·
with 6-8 Guillenno Myers pulling : ·
down 11 rebounds.
• ' . .
"Texas beat us veey bi&lt;lly on ·
the baclcboards, they just punished ;
us on the boards," said St. Peter's ·
head coach Ted FiOI'C). ''Myers was '
a beast on the bOards. I think per- .
haps that was the most significant part of ihe game. They were big .
and strong and had the n11mbers. :
That was the secret to the gatne." ·
TelWI, ranked 25th in the coun- •
try, improved to 23-8.,St. Peler's,
seeded 12th, closed at ~-7.
. The Longhorns were paced by
Dexter Cambridge with 18 points
and Benford Williams with 15.
Tony .Walker of St. Peter's led all
scorers with 21.
East ~eglonal
At Syracuse, ·N.Y., Penn State
returned to the-NCAA TQUmiUIIent
Friday for the fint time since 1965
and upset UO.A, a No. 4 seed, to ·
(See NCAA oa C-3)

3

DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POMERDY·MASON BRIDGE
JAMES, A. BUSH. Mgr.

: RIO GRANDE- Tim Murphr.
'junior. at the Uoiversity of R10
~de and a member of the uniwnity's !~~door track~. earned ·
~-Arnericu SlaiUS when he comD-.! in die 60-'Yft hurdles in the
llrAIA Indoor track Nationals in
Iew City, Mo., March 1-2.
: Murphy ran die hurdles in 7.90
leconds in the preliminaries, 7.84
1)1 the semifinals and 7.93 in the
fiMls.
: MuJ1,hY, who bails from
Zanesville, was one of five Rio ,
Gllllde athletes who IJualified for
die lllionals during Wlnler COIDjKI·
!Ilion. n. othen were Mllt Cline
(seaior, Chillicothe) in the 1000jlnl dub; Bllise Reader (sopboIPOfl, Waverly) in the high jump;
lteoee Peet (sophomore, BaltiJiore, Ohio), two-mile run; and
oaaie Evans (sophomore,
Dzc;~&gt;·
dace-mile run.
.:
lllo placed lOth in the
. . jlilp, wlllk Reider - nillth
till .,_ fYCIIIt. Evans placed

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Page C4 Suncley llmee Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott Point Pl....nt,

wv

March 17, 1991

March 17, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, Ott . Point Pl....nt, WV

Sunday Tlmee-senalnei-Page C5

~: Oklahoma City romps over St. ·M ary's in NAIA quarterfinals
.

.
:···
:: •

·&gt;
:·;
:: ~

v

.-". . .
""

·Til-

."'·

ketball players Lisa Hall and A•y Metzler.
BebiDd tbelll are basketball players Jobn Sites,
Chris Mencer, Richard Haney, Melvin Massie
and J&lt;eviD Kiser.
.

: .- ,. SENIORS RECOGNIZED· Soutlnratera's
•: •; seven seniors, who parllclpated In blllletball
:
and cheerleadlnc. were ~ at tile SWHS
:
winter sports banquet held last Monday. In
:
front are , (l,~R) cheerleader Anile l~~~t .ud bu-

SOUTHWESTERN AWARD WINNERS
ftve South·
westen blllletball playen recei•ed varlou awards at a winter
sports banquet lteld ID tlaeir boaor 1ut Moec!ar at Sonthweatern
H.S. From left to rJ&amp;ht are Aaron McCIII'ty (MOlt Assists), Joltn
Sites (Most hnproved), Clarls Metzger (MVP), Ricbrd Haney (Best
Free Tbrow Percentsge) and Melvin Massie (Best Trbee-Polnt
Shooter) .
,
·
.
·

•

games...

Barnes sank a free throw with
I 0 seconds left to complete the
•
scoring, while teammate Monroe
:
' Brown went to the line 1hree times
• .and was 3 for 6 in lhe final 1:07.
: .. "This is icing on lhe cake,"
: :• : Brown said of the vicrory. "Going
• . .. to the line I just kept thinking about
:
al.l my life I have been dreaming
:
ahout playing in the NCAA touma·
• · ment The ones I missed, I might
•
have been over excitild''
• ; :. UCLA center Don MacLean,
who spent much of lhe second half
:'
: •: in foul uouble and was he:X~ilst
• - 1 rebound in 33 minutes,
12
• . - points in the tint half to pace lhe
:
Bruins to a 36-32 lead. MacLean
:
was disappoiol.ed wilh both the loss
•
and the otTaciating.
•
"It's just a shame that you wcdc
:
your whole life to get to the touma•
ment, and !hen lhree guys (offi:
cials) take it away from you," said
• •.MacLean, a 6-foot-10 junior who
• - picked np his fourth foul with
:
14:45left. .
"The best job was done by
Coach Parkhill. He prepared his
•
team tremendously, and played us
•
,•
just perfectly," said UCLA head
•
coach Jim Harriet. "His Jcids took
•
•
what he had for them, and did a
: • fine job:· ·
:
DeRon Hayes scored 16 points
for Penn SIBle, while B!OMI, Dave
•
Degitz and Michael Jennings added
•
10 apiece. Brown also had 10
•
assists and six steals.
:
"I mentioned the Richmond
• · game this morning. I said to the
: .. , · playm, 'You know you·can do it if
;
Richmond did it,"' said Parkhill,
• - referring to Richmond's 73-69
: • · upset of No. 2 seed Syracuse on
:· • Thursday.
•. :
TIIICy Murray scored 17 points
:
to lead UCLA. while MacLean had
:
15, Madkins SCORd 11, and Owens
•· • added 10 points and 14 rebounds. ·
: :•
\ Soutbast Realoul
;: '
At Atlanta, Ga., Georgia State
•: wound up a big loser Friday. just
;.
like everybody expected. But tbe
•: r Panthers provided the day's bioelt
:· ' SUI]lrUe at lhe NCAA-Soutlieut
:: games in Atlanta when !hey got off
.;•, • to
.......a fast
... start against No . .2
.

•

•

__

·~

~

~~~.

:: ; : The Panthers, seeded lut in lhe
.; .· Southeast, Jed the top-seeded
:· · Razorblcb IS-6 after the first six
:: minllleS, and lllill 1'-1 nine
•• • minulel belen the half.
:: ·
But their *-n of IJecominllhe
·: ·• tint No. 16 teed to ewr bell a No.
:; • ' 1 seed in die NCAA roumament,
·• went UJI i~ smoke as the Razor:; bleb linally Jill their ICt lOiether
:. and went OD to win 117-76.
::
In other first round action in
•• Atlanta: No. 16 Alabama built a
:: 26-point lead and then coasted to
: ·an 89· 79 victory over Mur11y
:; • Sllle; Arizona Sta~ pulled away in
:• the final minute o( a 79-76 win
• over Rutgers; and Wake Forest
:: almolt let I late 14-point lead Jet
.• away before subduinc Louisiana
: ·Tech 71-65.
:: ·• Ali:ll IE , which had six playas
:• in double fipre~, was led 6y Ron
·~ ,• Huery and Oliver MiUer wtth 21
:; .::~nd 20 points respectively. The
:·
Rawrbaclts lOOk the lead for keeps
~
with eight minutes to play in the
.;. flfSl half and led S2-3S by intermit-

;

••

;
•

~

•

·=
:
•

tournament:

bi:tween them in the

"It might be unfair," said Johnson. " But it's also ·
illlfair that we have (bia other players). Bverynody is
so unselfish and plays together so well.''
Chambers, who doean't have to be quire so diplomatic, is more targeted wilh·his praiJc. ·
.
"Eric takes us all to anolher level," Chambers
Said. "He's such a great_passer and sueh a great scor-

1991 SCM&amp;Ill
FRENCH 500 FUA IIABET
AND GUNSHOW

.••..•

GACawtr.....,

. er !hat ho makes everybody else on the colin look
better...

Manuel, banned £rom the NCAA because of irregularities on hia college entrance tests, is surprisingly
team-oriented in botli his speech and on the court. as
his 19 tournament assists attest
"We've played beaer now lhese last two games,"
he said "The fii'St game, they held !he ball on us, but
that last twO were more uptempo, more to our M)lle."

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MAKE ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM
These Ohio Valley Cbrlstlan cagers - .seniors
Greg Wray, Dax Hill and Mike McCleese (L-R)
• nash big smiles as they bold their all·tourna·

ment team trophies following the Defenders'
recent victory over CI'OIIi Lanes Cbrlsllan ID tbe
WVCEA championship game at Appalachian
Bible College in Bradley, W.Va.

WILDCATS IN R-D TOURNEY· Hannan
Trace's girls' basketball team participated in
the Hannan Trace Rlt~ky·Dink Tournament. In
the front row are (L·R) Vanessa Sbort, MiS&amp;y
Saunders, Jessica Par50ns and Breezy Roberts. -.

Standing are Coach Tony Saundera, Slnb Wat•
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man and Coach Cathy Parsons. Not pictured
were 01118 Davis, Laura Queen, Stacy Saunders
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ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

.24 Pleee Slu1llp Bluer

FAMILY PRACTICE

.: '*

24. They alSo have 83 rebounds

~1&amp;-

goal lhe remainder of the game. America, ·scored each of Michigan size advantage.
Louisiana Tech, led by Anthony State's final eight points as the
Vander -Plas led the Fighting
Dade, who had 25 points and 14 Spanans battled back from a four- Phoenix, 24· 7, with 17 points,
rebounds, pulled wilhin 66-63 wilh point deficit with five minutes including 12 in the second half.
a minute to go. But Randolph Chil- remaining.
dress and Anthony Tucker made
In olher tournament action Fri·
Smilh Jed the Spartans wilh 19 .
clutch free throws to preserve the points, while Steigenga and Mike day in Tucson, No. 1 Nevada-Las
DeaCons' lead. Childress scored 18 Peplowski added 12 each. Vegas blasted Montana 99-65,
IIDUU.I-...6 .....
points and Tucker added 17.
Peplowslci scored 10 of his points Utah stuffed Soulh Alabama 82-72
"We made the game tougher in the second half, as Michigan and No. 23 Georgetown overthan it should have )&gt;een,_•• said ·State was able to make use of its whelmed Vanderbilt7Q.60.
'
Wake FOrest mentor Dave Odom.
son Tide.
·
"But we made the plays we had to
•'I thought our basketb811 team make down the stretch.''
.' wu ready to play mentally from
Odom says the Deacons' are
the very beginninJ," said Alabama looking forward to playing Alabahead coach Wimp Sanderson. "It rna because they want to try to
showed in the defensive inrensity make amends for a 96-95 overtime
we had. We played hard, forced loss to the Crimson Tide last
See Answer lo Pwzle on Page C3
turnovers, and got easy "'skets.
November.
Murray State star Popeye Jones
"But we'll have to play a lot ACROSS
87 ldentk:al
175 Wheel teeth
84 Native metal
was never a real factor in the game better against Alabama on Sunday
88Angar
176
Prophets
1 Travolta/
87 Ocean
u he was held to 11 points.
if we have any hopes of advanc90 Mil. wtee1
177 Babylonian hero
89 Flnllhes
Newton-John
film
"We did a really good job ing," he aaid. "Alabama is a team
91 N.Y. time
178 Fondles
92 Nul's partner
7
Aeriform
fluid
defensively on Popeye by doubling that has gotten ~Iter in the latter
92 Wager
10
Brim
DOWN
.
93 Tooth crown
down on him and llllking him kick part of lhe season, much like teams
93 ConVIncing
13
Protective
device
94 BuiHight a96 Congers
the ball back out," Sandei191Uaid. that~ on to win the NCAA."
1 Ape .
19
Browned
some
95 Instrument •
99 Depreaalon
"The whole key was our mental
West RecJonal
2 Mrs. Gorbachev
bread
97Vegas
101 Wandered
preplfllion. It was important for us
At Tucson, Ariz., Michigan
3 Actuat 'belng
20 Food scrap
104
Ginger98 Quarrels
111 be mentally ~y.lf you are not State's lllp gun outshot Wisconsin4 Conaumed
21 High card
105 Canine
99 Low, heavy carts
ready to play, you are not going to Green Bay's in a game of last-bas5
Compass
point
22 Football positions
107 MuSic variety
100 vast age
6
Redact
beat a team like Murray State." ,
tel-wins. ,
·
24 Get up
108 Decay
101 Wedding band
7 Proceed
Rutgers led Arizona State, 36Steve Smilh hit a jumper from
25 At home
109 Wire measure
.
8Joan
van102
BasebaH stat
30, at halftime and was up 74-72 the top of the circle as time expired
27 TV's Rebecca
110 Go astray
9 Actor TllrllllC8 wilh less thin two minutes to p!Jy. Friday, allowing_No. 22 Michigan
103
Arid
Howe: lnlts.
111 WrHe
10
TOil
106 Merry
But the S111 Devils, which received State to ese&amp;JK: wtlh a 60-58 "!ctory
28 Exist
112 Auction WOtd
11 Frozen water
25 points each from Isaac Austin o.ver W•sconsm-Green Bay m !he
109
Aftar-&lt;!lnner
29 Tantalum symbol
114 Mephiatophekts
12 Hebr- latter
and Tarence Wheeler lOOk the lead fmt round of the NCAA West
candy
30 Shooting star
116 Raveling&amp;
13 ~arlclelt by
on Wheeler's ftflh ~pointer of · 'Re~:
.
·
31 Workbench
113 - lrae
117 Negative vote
wound
the second half with 1:27 to play,
. Michtgan State, 19-!0,
118
Agave
plan!
1
15 TV's Felix Unger:
fixture
14 Hellu,m SYMbOl
then made four crucial free throws advanced to second-round meeung
120
Den
32 Pack away .
Inita.
15 Bus111118!1 org,
in !he closina 31 aeconds to hold ~ainst No. 10 u~. ~hich defeat122 Attempt
34 Cow cry
116
Learning
16 Short Jac;ket
off the Scarlet Knights.
. Cd South Alabama m tiS fii'St-round
123 Lengthy
36 RanM garment
119
Hostelry
17 Citrus fruit
"I told everybody yestenlay that game.
124 Guido's low note
38 Face part
121 011- or Rex
18 Article of
125 Above
we weren't Just happy to get into
Smith's winning shot came after
39 Guido's high note
123 NOisy
furniture
40
..
_
109"
127 Neon symbol
the NCAA, ' said-Arizona State Tony Bennett missed an opportuni124 Employ
19 Saloon
129 "Mr. - Goes
41 Mild
head coach Bill Frieder. "Ev.ery- ty for UWGB when his falling 10.
23
Cooked
slowly
125 JOins together
44 South Bend sch.
to Town"
body back in Tempe were excited footer clanked off the front of !he
-~-- 26 Memorandum1211
46 New South
131 Pastime
we are here. But we - not aatis- · nln witb the score tied 58-58.
29 ChiMM currency
128 Dawn goddeas
133 ExiSts
Wales: abbr.
fled, we W11111.ed to come here and
"We have a go-to guy and they
32 Norm
130
''American-··
·134 Y•: Sp.
47 LHtle 10
make 1 good account of ourselves.
have a go-to guy and our go-to guy
33 Dampens
132 Forecast
136 Bond nemesis
48 Chi~ pagoda
"We thought we could beat had the ball at the end," Michigan
35 Faroe Islands
137
Hill
·
133 Electrified
49
FHght
Info
Rillpn, -but we knew it would be Stste head coach 'Jud Healhcote
whirlwind
so
Blue
Hen
St.
(San
FrllllCisco)
particle
extremely difficult," Frieder said. said. "(Smith) put us iri a position
36 Let It stand
51
GraluHy
139
Indian
weight
134
ChOOHS
"Down the saeliCh, ~·re just for- to win it and he won it"
37 Advantage;
53 Estrada 10
140 Regret
135 Urges forward
lililate when you WID a pme like .
Following a Michigan State
benefit
54
Sodium
symbol
141
Sorrow
-' •
timeout, Smidl drove .the baslc.et as
138 Genus of cattle
that." .
40 Mother or father
55 Sea eagles
142 Ptfnt..,•a measure
Frieder noted Friday's NCAA time wu running down, stepped
141 Marry
42 Small rugs
57 Pigpen
143 ChicllgO'I II.
A- 43 Hebrew month
victory came tWo years from the bact and popped his jumper 'wilh
144
French artlc:le
59 Obese
145 Dlstr-llgnat
date Michip1 refused to allow him less than a aecond left to save the.
146
Pierces
45
Most
terrible
60 Simple
147 Mocked
to coacb the Wolwnncs, who went Spartans from the poaaible upset.
148
Disturbances
48
Goller's
need
61 Best Actor of
151 Range of
on to win the NCAA Cham pi- ·
"It was a hesitation move wilh a
52 Footllke part
149 Negative prefix
1983: lnlts.
know?ldge
onsbip, because he had already left-hand dribble," Smilh said. "It
58
Continued
story
150 Thick
62 Wanted
152 High mountain
acCCIIIed the Arizona State job.
was more luck than a ~ shot.
58
Shouts
151 Country of Asia
84 Cut
153Cr-•
"it's Jcind of ironic," Frieder
"We werejust trymg to run the
59 Regaled
152
Article
66 Actor Whitaker
155 MUSic: aa wrHten
said. "lt'~JIIIIliD win."
clock down. I ran one of my best
eo Not boaatrut
68 Solemn wonder
154 Antlered ~lmat
157 Ventilated
62Remiu
Wate;Fcnlt led Louisiana Tech moves and we are happy to still he
70 The nostrils
t56 Toward Shelter
158 Seed container
63
Invent; contrive
63-49 wilh just over six minures in lhe tournament."
72 PermH
159 Arrow polson
158 Sean of film
65 Brother of Odin
left, then made ODly ooe more field
Smith, a third-team UPI All73 Aaslatantil
160 latin conjunction
159 Small Island

"I thought tbcy ltlrtCd bumina
out at the 1S·mn\ute marr and
•L••'
-:A
.,_ s part of our pt ogr1111, ., .....
Arkansas head coach Nolan
Richanbon. "As· you know, you
wort lpinst the press all yau
Willi 10, but yau JCtlircd.
"I~ lhe tumina point lhe last four minutes or the first
half," said Georgia State head
coach Bob Reinhart. "We were

:
'•

__;_..:...&lt;Conti...,...·_nued_rro_m_c-...:...3&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,....-

trailing by one point and they
turned up the heat on bolh ends of
the court."
Alabama, which won the Soulheastern Conference chamc:nship
fCK the lhircl year in a row
Sun·
day, took command right at the
start. bulldi!ta a 28-10 lead in lhe
flfSl 12 minutes. Melvin Cheatum
had 17 of his 23 points in the first
half and ROOert Horry had 16 of his
21 in the second to pace the Crim-

lion.

16 rebounds as Oklahoma City, 32-3, romped over
StMary's (Mich.) 112-94.
In lhe other quarterfinals, No. 1 Wisconsin-Eau
Claire was knocked out witb a 64-57 decision to No.
9 Taylor (Ind.); fifth.seeedecJ Central AJkansas elimi·
nated Athens State (Ala.) 95-64 and No. 3 David
Lipscomb was toppled by No. 6 Pfeiffer (N.C.) 'lOS·
95.
. Olclahoma Qty is 33-0 Ibis season agai!ISI NAJA
team. In the Tournament, which brings the IISIOCiation's best teams to Kansas City, the Chiefs own a
. 14.3-poitlt average margin of victory. Chambers has
averaged 27 points in this tbree Jlll5lie8 and ~uel

u.s. aom ,.. &amp; Js

•

~ -~ . NCAA

By JOHN HENDEL
.
UPI Sports Writer
. KAN~AS qTY, Mo. {UPI)- Even DarrelJohnson adml7s !hat It's unfair.
Otlahoma Qty (Okla.) has showcased two of lhe
premier players in the NAIA this week in Eric
Manuel and Mar:lc Chambers, a dua that has boosted
the second-aeeded Chiefs into the NAJA ToiD1l8Dienl
semifinals. It almost upsets an idea of balance !hat
Chambers and Manuel are teammmates. ·
Tho quan.ert"tnal game for Oklahoma City was a
perfect ellample, Chambers stored 26 points and
jp'lbbed 17 rebounds and Manuel had 26 points and

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Plge-C6--Sun_day Times sentinel

March 17;_ 188

•

••'

.Old spring training ballparks going the way of the dinosaurs · l
By JEFF SHAIN
· traininrf: Arizona, there has been
Hi Co t Field.
liPI Sports Writer
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI)- For as
Bob Feller trained there. So did
long as baseball has held spring Lou Boudreau, Rocky Colavito and

Early Wynn. LanY Doby, the fmt
Home of the Indians' spring
black player in the American train ina since 1947 ,.Hi Corbell
League. made his first spring · Field is the grand old lady of tho
appearance at Hi Corbett. ·
Cactus Leape. Alas. the malriarcb
has only one more year of spring
left.in her.
Two hours up Interstate 10,
ScoiUdale Stadium has even less
time. Not the gnmd dame Hi Corbelt Field ia, Scoasdale Stadium is
a petite, classic besuty, with its redwood facade and green foldina
chaits in the p:andstand.
.This is Scottsdale Stadium~s
final season. The day after the San

Francisco Giants leave, tho wreck- · Tuckcd inside Seottsdale's
ers will be brought in to level the downtown district, SCOII*Ialo SUIstructure. A new state-of-the-art dium isn't easy 10 find. t1nlike the
facility will be built on the same modem structures that command
site.
attention as one drives by, the ~ta­
Their obituaries won't be dium is dwarfed by the surroqndinAI
spashed all over the sports pages, Scottsdale Genter for _the rts,
the way Comiskey Park's final ScQttSdale Memorial Hospital and a
days wm last year. But like Gbica- nearby hotel.
g. o's
~
"Baseball Palace or tile
That was part of its charm,
World,'' Scousdsle Stadium _and Among these modern buildings ~
Hi Corbett Field are a vanishing a baUparlt that has held on to ttadibreed or classic sprina ballparks · tion for as long as possible. ·
'~ whose character and' charm will be
Behind the green wooden fence
missed.
are a handful of young kids andh
college students, 'peering throug
the slats at the actic&gt;n 8nd hoping
for a homer to be hit their way.
Their gloves qome in handy, too,

50th Anniversary Sale!
OWENS~CORNING

. ;S h_·Ip
• COndition
· may·
J 3Ck SOn
perman~ntly

.
ExblbitiOD pmes
At Plant City, Fla., Billy Hatcher inti ~hr)s Sabo homer~d and
Jose RiJo allowed one hJI'over
three iruiin s to lead the C.incinnati
Reds to a ~-3" victory over the St.
Louis Gardinals.
.
At.Clearwater, Fla., Matt NQkes
to die•.
homered and Pon Mattingly and
The newspaper cited a source Kevin Maas each drove in two rilns
close to Los Angeles-based medi- to send the New York Yankees to
Beaver, Jamie Thomas, Brett B11rcham, Brad
caJ personn~l who know of Jack- their fourth straight victory, 7-2
Rose, Matt Henry, Chris Walker, Mark Wamsson's condition, which has prevent(See TRAINING oa C-8)
ley and Bobby Rogers. Standing with them In
ed him from taking part in the
the back row are coaches Dwayne Beaver and
Kansas City Royals' tia1ning camp.
Bob Erwin (ldt) and Harold I
Dr. Gary Losse, the San Diego
(right), owuer of
Barber
· Chargers team physician, had no
direct knowledl!e of Jackson's case
but told the Tnbune that a person
can be born with the condition a it ·
can be brought Cili by an injury such as the one Jackson sustained .
Jan. 13 during an AFC playoff
game for the Los Angeles Raiders.
"Usually it is brouf.!t on by a
trauma," said Losse. ' The injury
hinders the blood supply to that
pan of the bone.''
The Tribune said its source
reported that-the injury was at the
top of the femur bone where it
joms the hip.
.
"If that is the case, that is not a
good place,.. Lo~ said. . .
446·5137
992-2188
The condition is not considered
life-threstening, but it could require
a hip replacement.
The ROyljiS and Raiders have
not acknowledged JacksC)n has the
van, Nlc:k Rocchi, Jeremy SntOn, Joe Justle~,
conditiop. Jackson arrived in ltoyNathan Stanley, Matt Toler, Cbad StUI, JesSie
als camp more than two weeks ago
Saunders, Aaron Adams, Kevin Wood and Jay · and has been tol(l to remain on
Stout. Behind tbe row of cheerleaders are coachCrulches.
es Bill Shaw and Tim Stout.
Royals General Manager Herk
Robinson told the Tribune he was
not familiar with the term "avascular necrosis,''· hbt diat Jackson was
scheduled for a bone scan and
Magnetic· Resonance Imaging in ·
Kansas City, Mo., Friday. Those
results were 10 be sent to Dr. Jim
Andrews, a prominent' orthopedic
surgeon, in BirihinghaJJj, Ala., for
further tests MondaY.
·
"By Tuesday we should !!ave a
better idea,'' Robinson said from
Haines City, Fla., where the Royals
train. "Dr. (Steven) Joyce (the
team doctor) said ifwasto put him on crutdles 10 take
the weight on or the joint so there
would be a better chance of heal-

; CELTICS GRAB TITLE - The Washington
; Celtics grabbed the fifth/sixth-grade division
title of the Hanaan Trace Rin~y-Dink Tourna; menl. Their champion's trophy was sponsored
: ~y Montgomery's Barber Shop. Shown (not in
&lt;order) are players Isuc Saunders, Aaron

•

...'

·w.

c...~s-IV4:.,.,.

17 97

ina' windshield repair.
·
ruside, the dugout ~teps are
steep, just like the old days. The
fences along both lines are close
and low, allowing·fans the
to hand a ball to a playel
instead of flipping it over some
foot-hip cage fencing like.at mod•
em facilities.
,
.
It wasn't until" a few years a~o
that Scottsdale Stadium repl~ 1ts
old hand~rated scoreboard with
an electrcmc one. The clock the
old scoreboard was one with'!."!~-·:5
(See BALLPARKS on

ing:·

4FT· X &amp;FT.

...,.,._,.,,..,. Special

sideline him . · '::!~ec:o~~~~v~s;:~

By United Press Interaatloaal
The hip injury Bo Jackson sustained playing·football in I anuary
could end his careers rather than
simply de"lay hi$ baseball training.
The San Diego 1'ribune reported
Friday Jackson m11y bave avascular
necrosis, a loss of biO(KI circulation
. to the bone which causes the bone

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WARRIORS FINISH THIRD· The Washingtoa Warriors took
In the fifthlsixth-(ll'ade division of the Hannan Traee
Tournament. Their trophy was sponaored by Deel's
and L&amp;J~s Grocery. Shown (not In order) are players Seth
Andre Howell, Ben Sheard, Jason Johnson, Drew Dunkle,
Hudson, Nathan Cremeans, Paul Siders, Donovan Davis,
Jer-emy Cremeans and Adam Green. Standlne behind them are
!0-~~h_!S Truman Johnson and Dave Johnson. Not pictured Is player
Coburn.

J

~~·

FAMILY PRACtiCE

- Tbe Bldweli:PoJrter Plraies fialshed as runaers-up In thedivision of the Hannan Trace
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OH Point

March 17, 1991 ,

'•

BRAVES WIN CROWN • The Wulllaatou
Braves, coached by Dick Roderick (left, rear)
· aud Dick Siders (right, rear) wou tbe fourth·
:grade dlvislou champlousblp or tbe Hauuau
, Trace Rluky·Diuk Touruameut. Their trophy
.• \fll8 sopnsored by Bam Inc., Scott Bailey, Carl

.•
1

GREEN TAKES SECOND· Gl,'ftD took sec·
ond place ·tn the fourth·arade dlvlslou of the
Hauaau Trace Rluky·Dink ,Touruament. The
tei!D's trophy \fll8 spoiiSCII'ed by Hilden's Laud·
,Hng and Irvin's Glass. Showu (not ID order) are .

Beaver llld Doll CCIX. Shmm (IIOt ID Qfder) are
players Kevlu Walker, A.J. Jobuou, Rob Smith,
Tim Siders, Levi King, Craig Sauders, Steve
Roderlc:k, Aarou Bickle, Brett Cnla, Joey Daru·
baugh, Patrick Sudecs and Jan Fenderbosch.

players Chr~ Lewis Jr., Andy Morris, Jason
Massie, Nathau Hemby,"Cory Hart, Matt White
and Brian Workman. FlankiDI them Ia the back
row are coaches Cluls Lewis Sr. aud AJren
WbJte.

•'

•

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Unl· after 22 yean. Eck wu the head decline in the number of people at .
venity of Tolodo besbd!e!J coach · coach of the Unlvenity of Wlscon· our games, but the etnhtwl•m level :
Jaf.c';Jk· under ~ bec:au110 of sin at Slovens PoinL
of those who are in IIIIIIDdlmco." .•
a
uster sea1011, raiped with
His ovmll collegiate record is
Toledo's attendance in the.:
one yearJellllining on his live-year 107-70.
9,()()()..seat Saft8C ,Hall often wu :
contracL
·
"Jay and his lliaff have worked less th8D half capacity.
Ath1clic directt AI Boh1 spoke hard over the past four years and
The decision to file Eck places
with E.c k ·early Friday and have recorded scsne successes dur· Toledo in a position of rcvvl'lcting
announced tile resignation In a ing thai time,'' BobJ said.
another national SC!UCh for its two
news release. Eck was not available
''However intereS_t in our pro· top coaching Positions. Last month
for comment. ·
pam has stoadily decreased, which football coach Nick Saban quit
"Coach Eck has taken the pro- 1s most clearly reflected in the after one seasoh to beco~ defengram as far u he possibly could at declining .attendance at our borne sive coordinator of the Cleveland
this time," Bohl said. "I realize baSketball games," Bohl said. "As Browns.
An announcement resarding a ·
that coaching on the Divi&amp;ion I·A athletic director I have to be
level is extrrmely competitive and responsive u, the feelings of our . new head footb811 coach IS expectthat is the reason I have stood faJis. There has ·not only been a· . ed shortly.
behind Jay during the past four
·
. years.''
.
The Rockets compiled a 17·16
recoi'd and lost ill the chimpionship
game of the 1991 Mid-American
Conference touranment in Detroit
Eck's record at Toledo was 61·
59. including two forfeit vicrories. '
Eck, 40, was appointed in April
1987 to replace long-time men's
coach Bob Nichols, who resigned

Spring training...
_(Continued from C-6)
over tbe Pbiladelphia PhilliCs. ·
At Fort Myers, Fla., Brian Harp·
er' s pinch-hit single with one out in
the ninth iQning drove in Chuck
Knoblauch and gave the Minnesota
Twins a S-4 victory over the Balti·
more Orioles. Randy Bush homered for the Twins and Kent Hrbclc
had two singles. Mike Devereaux
doubled and drove in two runs for
the Orioles. ·
At Vero Beach, Fla., Deion
Sanders tripled and scored to lead
· .the Atlanta Braves 10 a 2·1 victory
over the Los Angeles Dodgers in a
Cc"!e shortened to seven innings
uSe of rain. Los Angeles starter
Tim Belcher pitched five scoreless
innings.
At Kissimmee, Fla., Luis Gon·
zalez homered twice and drove in
three runs to give the Houston
Astros a 5-4 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. Gonzalez, who hit a
solo homer in the sixth, belted a
two-run shot in ninth after the
Pirates had taken a 4-3 lead on
Orlando Merced's pinch-hit, tworun single in the top of the inning.
, At West Palm Beach, Fla. Mick-·
ey Pina hit a two-run homer and
Tony Pena went 2 for 5 to give the
Boston Red Sox a 6·3 victory over
the Montreal Expos. Red Sox
starter Danny Darwin yielded one
run in four innings. Marquis Gris·
som bit a two-run homer for the
Expos and Andres Galarraga went
2 for 3.
.
At Lakeland, Fla., Kirk Gibson
and Sean Berry combined for six
hits and seven RBI to power the
Kansas City Royals to a 14-5 victory over the Detroit Tigers, _Gibson
had three hits and drove in four
runs and Berry cOllected three hits
and three RBI. Mark Davis of the
Royals allowed four hits and two
earned runs in three innings. Tony
Bernazard homered for Detroit as
the teams combined-for-30-hits;,,-,~t

~intts "' itntitttl Section·D

.F arm/Business

Eck steps down as Toledo basketball coach

March 17, 1881
---- --

~arketsufferssecond ·

decline irt nine weeks
'

MEIGS
TIRE
CENTER
JOHN FULTI - J. MAICUS FUlTl
OWNEIS
992-2101

.

By ALAN GERSTEN
Profit taking sent the market to market might have a "corm:tion ''
UPI Business Writer
its fourth straight loss Tuesday. , of about I 00 points on the Dow.
· Edwar~ Shopkorn', partner in
NEW YORK - The stock Experts said the ttouble staried
market managed a midweek surge when the Dow failed to hold above charge of institutional equities at
after breaking a four-session losing th112940 level.
·
Mabon, Nugent &amp; Co. in New
streak, but failed to maintain its ·
Sidney Dorr, vice president of York, said, "The lll8lla)t is a little
momentum and closed just below institutional trading llt ·Charles tired. The euphoria of the w. vic·
where it started.
Schwab &amp; Co. in San Francisco, tory in the Persian Gulf hal woni
The market suffered only its was sanguine aoout the decline, off, and now the market will be
second decline in nine weeks. Ana· calling it normal behavior after the driven by the economic numbers
.
lysiS said the victory glow from the rally of January and February, . and the firSt quarter earnings."
Philip Roth, chief technical ana•
Persian Gulf War had faded, leav- when the Dow gained 450 points.
· ing some grim economic
· A powerful buying surge lyst at Dean Witter Reynolds in
reminders.
Wednesday broke the losing streak New York, said "without the expi·
The Dow Jones industrial aver- . and sent the Dow ahead 32.68 . ration flllagling, this was a consoliage dropped 3.96 Friday to end the · Traders said prpgram trading, bar· .dation week. We had a sharp sell·
week at 2948.27. For the week, the gain hunting and a rally in the bond off in some stocks - healihcare,
technology and foods and bever·
Dow d~clined 6.93, or about 0.2 market propelled the market. ·
ages.
percent.
·
Stock prices gyrated during
The market's corrections were
Broader market indexes also Thursday's session and once again
"expectable,"
he added.
declined for the week. Standard &amp; threatened the 3,000 mark, but late
On
the
trading
floor this week,
Poor's 500-stock index feU 1.36 to profit talcing sent the market spin:
RJR
Nabisco
when-issued
stock
end the week at 373.59,- and the ningtoanotherloss.
Ne~ York Stock Exchange comOn Friday, the "triple-witching was the most active issue for the
posne mdex lost 0.87 to end the hour" expirations of stock-index third straight week, dropping 5/8
.
week at ~04.08.
futures, stock options and stock· to 10 1/8.
Blockbuster Entenainment wa5
Dechnes led advances 1.•218· index options created volatility.
717 among the 2,177 NYSE ISsues After some initial losses. the mar· next, off 15 1/2 10 12 3/8. Analysts
_traded this week . Weekly Big, ket recovered and closed with a said sales at video rental sures had
fallen due to an interest in the Per'
Board volume. totaled 978,259,430, broad loss in heavy trading.
Donald J. Wagner, vice presi· sian Gulf War.
compared wtth .1, 109,482,140
Laidlaw Inc. B was third off 4 to
shares the prior week and with dent of Dain Bosworth Inc. in
773,233,070 a year ago. ·
Omaha, said the market's overall_ 12 3/8. GTE Corp. finished' fourth;
The Dow opened with two .los· - situation "looks toppy,'The market ·up I to 32,3/4. The fmn completed
ing _sessions, following two down had a tremendous recovery, but that the $6.6 billion takeover of the
sessions from the prior week. The was due to overseUing."
· Contel Olrp. in the largest merger
market halted its losing streak
He added, "It wasn't a bear or a ever in the telecommunications
industry.
Wednesday, but fell back Thursday bull marlcet, just overreaction."
Avon Products was also' active,
and Fnday.
.
.
Now, investors are ·returning to
The market dnfted hstelessly look at the "normal economic dropping 3 3/8 to 39 3/4. Chartwell
Monday unlil a late surge of profit issues like the budget deficit Associates L.P. sold a 10 million·
taking sent prices l~wer. Analysts unemployment and difficulties with share Avon block this week to
had expected a dechne as the end the savings &amp; loans," Wagner said. Salomon Brothers Inc., whicb wus
Continued ou D-8 .
of the frrst quarter approached.
In that atmosphere, he said the

•BRAKE JOBS 'eOIL CHANGE ·.
. •WHEEL ALIGNMENT
242 W. Main

.

-

t1

' Pomeroy

•.
·.

•

.NEW LOCATION • Cleude Daulell, presl·
dent or' DANTAX Corporatiou, anuouneed Fri. day the nrm hu relocated at 53 Court Street,
1 _Gallipolis, (Ia the old VFW bulldlulllear
Oscar's) followlag last Sunday ulght's l)laze
, -which gutted Its quarters ou 4S Court Street.
Every~hing Ia the DAXT AX office was
, destroyed by the lire except current and prior
yeilr tax returns, Daniels !IBid. Mem ben of th'e

DANT AX staff were called In earUer in the week
armed with hair dryers to dry out equipment
salvaged from the $135,000 fire. Daniels said
starr members were ·able to salvage aud/or
reproduce all til~ curreut tax returns except
three, .one of wb1cb was his. New computers,
printers and copy machines were delivered and
installed Wednesday and telephone service was
restored early Thursday.

Money Ideas

Interest
rates

I
'

By STAN EVANS
GAlliPOLIS-Militarysuecess
in the Persian Gulf combined with
easier Federal Reserve monetary
policy increased
mvesiOr confi·
dence in a pow·
erful fashion,
sharpley loweriQg the level of
interest rates.
. ·· Over the last
52 weeks, the de'
cline in both shonand long term rates
bas been substantial with·an impor·
tant pan of that decline liccuring in
the past six months.
We continue to expect a further
decline in long term interest rateS in
1991. However, given the significant
DARLENE STEWART
BRENDA JEFFERS
progress toward lower rates already
realized in the early weeks of the
year, we would not be surprized that
any further reductions may be on
hold until invesiOrsassess the current
DRIES OUT EQUIPMENT· Carla Jell'enon, DANTAX office
economic environment.
MiDDLEPORT • Darlene Stew· a beautician in Columbus and has
manager, Gallipolis, uses hall' dryer to dry out equipnleat that
_· The eight percent level for long an, Brenda K. Jeffers and Sheryl worked as a bookkeeper and trea·
was salvaged during last Sunday night's $135,000 ftre on 45 Court
tenn Treasuries appears 10 be a for- Walters have received ·their Ohio surer.
Street: The· firm has relocat~ and is now open for business at 53
midable barrier. Given the Fed's Real Estate Sales Licenses and are
She resides in Bradbury with
· Court Streel
·
'
current monetary easing posture, we associated with Dottie Turner Real· her .husband Rick, and two sons,
find interesting thal the long term ty of Middlepon.
Richard and David.
·
bond· yield ~as not penetrated the
Mrs. Stewart graduated from
Mrs. Jeffers completed courses
lows made in the faD of 1989 when Meigs High School in 1973 and in real estate law, real estate
the Federal Reserve, albeit it mod· recently auended Rio Grande Uni- finance, principals and practice,
estly,last eased credit conditions.
versity where she studied principals and appraisal at the Southeastern
This divergence in trend relative and practice and real estate law. Business College in Gallipolis. She
to economic conditions prevailing in She then completed courses in-real also attended the Hondros Career
each of these two periods, suggests. estate finance and appraisal at the Center in Columbus.
that eight percent ts ali the investor · Southeastern Business College in
Before new position, 'she had
'may expect for the illtermediate term. Gallipolis. She also finished a numerous duties in secretarial, cler~
By John C. Rice
including the 0-92 provision, pro·
(Mr. Evans is an Investment course at the Hondros Career Cen- ical and cashiering and for a while .
:'
Co. ExL Agent,
ducers
must
apply
their
own
cost
Broker
for The Ohio Company in ter in Columbus.
1
· owned and operated her own tan·
!
Al!l'lculture
estimates, price assumptions, and
their Gallipolis omce.)
Mts. Stewan previously had her ning business.
~· . POMEROY • Sign• up for the - other factors specific to their il\di·
· She resides in Middlepon with
cosmetology license and worked as
•:1991 CO!D progrBlll is now!
vidual situations.
; :.. Sign up for the 1991 Com Pro• Producers electing to partici• gram will run throu2h April 26th at pate in the 1991 com program must
•Ithe ASCS Office. fhere are many comply with the Acreage Conser";options in the. l991 Corn Program vation Reserve (ACR) of 7.5 per: .and the ASCS will have work- cent, and must also decide what to
·' sheets. We should have computer plant on their Normal Flex Acres
• program for you to be able to deter- (NFA, 15 percent) and on their
: mine returns with each option.
Optional Flex Acres (OFA, 10 per· To be eligible for the program cent maximum). Other crops such
the Ohio forest products industry
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) •· you must have a farm plan. On as soybeans are permitted on "flex"
. The forest products industry has con~ists mainly of small compa·
;' highly erodible land you must be acres, but Deficiency Payments are
room to branch out'in Ohio, says a nics. More than 65 percent of the
•' controUing erosion; and be sure to not made on such acres. Thus the
; have approval when dredging or planting decisions on fie~ acres
forestry specialist at Ohio State companies employ fewer than 20
University.
• draining land. Vegetable producers depend directly on market.prices
Steve Bratkovich says the $5
cannot grow vegetables on flex and individual production costs,
billion industry can sran by turning
' land or on zero cenification land. ' and in. the case of OFA on the
its residue into marketable prod, They cannot increase vegetable amount of Deficiency Payment
ucts
. He says some firms are
• acres.
foregone to switch away from the
already makmg good profits by
Approach to 1991 Corn Pro- prograin crop (corn).
using compressed dry sawdust to
gram
• Zero Cenification. Producers
make fireplace logs or wood pellets
• • The examples in this publica- may. also decide to plant no com,
for SIOVes.
• tion are meant to illustrate the report to ·ASCS no planted corn,
"Many companies sell green
CINCINNATI · Star Bane Cor· mechanisms contained in the riew and plimt entire corn Ci'op Acreage
ROBERT
LUCAS
Ohio
lumber
to
manufacturers
in
poration
announced that the Board
1990 Farm Act and the 1990 Bud- Base (CAB) to another crop. If so.
other
regions
of
Ohio
or
out
of
of
Directors
today voted to increase
-get Reconciliation Act.
producer earns no Deficiency Paythe
quarterly
dividend to $.25 per
• To decide the merits of being ments, but com CAB is protected
state," Bralkovich says. "Then the
share.
This
dividend
is payable
lumber
comes
back
in
the
finished
. in the 1991 corn program or not, for future years.
April
IS,
1991
to
shareholders
of
CHESHIRE • Rohen L. Lucas form of cabinets or furniture. If the
1991.
The
record
March
29,
hasbeenpromotedfrommaintenance products were made where the
, Denvil Cook nani~d new 84 Lumber Co., manager
mechanic-a 10 maintenance supervi· trees were harvested and the lum· . announcement was made by Oliver
'•
sor in the maintenance depanment ber was miUed, more money would W. Waddell, chairman and chief
; _GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va.· He and his wife, Deborrah, and · effective March 2, 1991, at the Ohio stay in the local economy."
executive officer of the Cincinnati·
• 84 Lumber Company announced children, Timmy, Ashley, Denelle · Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger
.
More money in the local econo- based holdina company.
~ the apj)ointmcnt of Denvil Cook to and Steven, ore residing in Gallipo·
The Corporation lllUI its princiCreek
Plant,
as
announced
by
Normy
means
more
jobs,
which
would
~ MAnager of the 84 Lumber Store in lis Ferry.
man H. Tarr, Plant Manager.
he a boon in soull)ern Ohio: It's the pal subsidiary, Star Bank, N.A;,
• GaUipolls Ferry, W.Va.
. As manager of the s10re, Cook
Lucas joined OVEC in 1954 !Jean of the state s forest products Cincinnati, have paid a dividend
: Tho new manaaer araduated 1s responsible for store operations
owing construction of the planL In mllustry and home to some of each year since the Bank's found·
·:cram Spencer High School in 1975. including sales and inventory con~ 1955 he transferred to the mainte- Ohio's highest unemployment fia- ing in 1863.
·
":He is tho son of Denvil, Sr. and trrl.
Star
Bane
Clirpcntion
commo'n
deportment as a maintenance ures.
:.•Treva Cook. who reside · in
84 Lumber Company is the nance
stock
is
traded
on
the
over-the·
helper. In 1956 he was promoted 10 ,_ About . 4 7,000 people ~re
·:Spe~K:er•.w~v~
nation's ~est priYatcly-held lum· mamtenance meehanic-b; and in employed 1n firms n:'anufacr.un.ng counter NASDAQ National Market
:-; Coat; a 11111vc of S~. start· ber and bwlding supply retailer
1972, to maintenance mechanic-a. forest products m Oh1o, Bratkovich System and is reponed in the
:.ec~ with the 84 chain m August of ·with 365 storesllationwide,
'
"National Market Issues" secdon of
Bob and his wife, Janice, reside at says..
.
•, 1988 at their Elkview, WV store.
·
Route I, Cheshire, Ohio.
Like many parts of agnculture, · the newspapers.

'

312·H anla38'~dod&lt; .

TOBO

........

'

lla\en't )Ul done without a'IOro ~enough? •

B~UM·
STAlE 10m 241

LUMBER

·
915·3301

,

CHESTEI

,

OUR
VINTON CAPTURES THIRD· Vhitou's
i fourtk-grade boys' buketball team captured
third place Ia the Hauau Trace Rluky-Dink
l Tournament. The trophy tbe team won -was
: 1 sponsored by Bladen's Laudlu&amp; and Irvin's
· Glass. ShOWD (Dot Ia order) ~re pl!lyers R02er

Old ballparks...

'made...

'

"FINAL FOUR''
IN THE .1991
NCAA BASKETBALL
-TOURNAMENT AND
SMITH BUICK PONnAC INC. ·
WILL GIVE YOU•••

degrees, while the game-time temperature in Cleveland is 30 degrees
with snow in the forecaSt"
Hi Corbett Field won't be out of
work completely, as the facility
also is home to the Tucson Toros
of the PacifiC Coast League. But Hi
Corbett is at its best in the spring,
when the Tribe takes the field with
the eternal hope of bringing back
Cleveland's first pennant since
1954.
Both Hi Corbell Field and
Scottsdale Stadium will fade into
the background quietly, and few
pe'?P!e will fe~l the. loss. Spring·
trammg trad11Jonahsts wi II miss
themboth.
·

· ~Rosen said.

v_

PICK .THE

,.
(Continued from C-6)

other places.
not digital.
·Scottsdale_Stadium has become
Even the field is the same one
a martyr 10 the ec:onomics of base· patrolled by Feller, Boudreau,
ball and the light to save the Cactus Colavito, Doby, Herb Score, Sud·
~e. To keep the Giants train·
den Sam McDowell, the Perry
ing m town, Scottsdale officials brothers, Ken Kelmer, Bob Lemon
agreed 10 ~lace the facility with a and hundreds of others. The out·
new $7 million Sllldium.
field is asymmetrical, and the dirt
' Despite its charm, two words remains the best in the Cactus
'bften associated with Scottsdale League.
.
·'Stadium are "old" and "antiquat· .
Thoujth the capacity Is around
ed." The stadium has a seating · 10,000, 11 stiU retains its intimacy
capacity of only about 5,700 - if One can stil_l waDe up 10 Feller, sta:
1~e don't mind squeezing in.
tioned in front of the left-field
~· "From a baseball perspective,
bullpen, and ask for his autograph
' the IQCker rooms are very inade· between innings. Public-address
-Quatc because they are small, the announcer Bill Roemer doesn't
Showers are small - things of thal hesitate to remind fans that "game.nature," Giants General Manager time temperature in Tuc.son is 61
.:. Hi Cor:bett Field won't suffer
'llle same fate as Scottsdale Stadi·
'lim. It will he put illto spring moth·
·~Jails, 10 panphrase a Navy term.
?lfter the lndiins move .their camp
1oCi~COunty, Fla., in 1993.
:· Nestled in behind the Randolph
·Part Oolf Oldne, Hi Corbett Field
has been home for the Indians ever
•iiace the l e i : : Bill eeck
e bueball's ini·~~a~ fcny inlll
.
.
·:- Tboup the ltnJCtare bas been
~ and Jellllldeled over the
'yean, HI CorbeU 1ti11 retains the
feel olu old-time Jlllt.
Bedlded in red ltld yellow. the
ballpiit ilsuel a brilht Invitation
1fo &amp;bose who drop by • .The
·~nltlllCOI are protected by iron
·satel, not dlo chain-link fences
lopped ~th bnec! De 11., many

~j Sign-up · for 1991 corn
~~program · underway

SECOND ANNUAL
Bush, James OHer, Jerroci Oiler, Jeremy Forbes,
Michael Stephens, Dean Ward, Jennifer Yontz,
Deletta Hale and Asbley Roberts with coaches
Larry Stevens aud Bill Oiler, who are standlug
behind their team.

SlOOOO

-RULES-

onehlp 1core
(Ill One entry per pereon

(ll ,

declares increased
quarterly dividend

,

,.I -------------------------------------.
.
,

Star Bane Corp.

.

I

•ZENITH SALES. &amp;
SERVICE
•USED TV's
•SATEiLITE SALES AND.
SERVICE

WALTERS

her husband, Dave, anfi children
Ryan and Melissa.
Mrs. Walters completed courses
in real estate finance and appraisaf
at the Southeastern Business Col·lege in Gallipolis. She bas fmilhed
courses at Rio Grande University
in real estate principals and Prill:·
lice and real estate law. She also'
completed a course at the Hondrot
Career Center.
She has worked in many posi.;
lions including secretarial, clerical
and is presently a singer with.
Crossover Band
She resides with husband, Mike;
and children, Jamie, Joey and
Angie in Cheshire.

Forest/products 'industry
could be big in Ohio

N• II••W•I
N• c,, 0111

11 I u.. new1pep• coupon ·
121 Mail or drop off your coupon to 1911
E..temAve.
!31 All entry form• mu•t be received before
'. 3/20/91
(4)1n ca.• of e tie- will u1a total champl·

I

~HERYL

Three receive real estate licenses

eigs County agent's corner

,

•

.

- - -

-

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I

CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
TOTAL SCOIE - - - - - - -

Lucas promoted

12lr-----'----~--Name---------'---'-'
131·------'-'-----Address - - - - - - - - -

14J,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Teltphon•'· -------~--~----------~---------------------~--------·

'

•

f

\

workers.
This fact may lead to underestimation of the economic imiJIICt of
the industry in Ohio, Bratkovich
says.
,
Ohio State researchers foun~
that the number of employee~ and
pa).'!OII for the sawmillltld planinj
mill sector of the forell procluc:ll
industry were Ulldelatimated In the
1987 census by as much as SO per.
cent.
Bralkovich says that Bureau of
Census estimatea for paper mills,
which are large operationa, are
pr&lt;?bably accurate, but many otbCr
mdustry sectors may he underali·
mated. If so, the wood producu
industry may be potentllilly IIIO(e
im~t 10 the Ohio ecGIIOIIIy llld
he r;eceiving fewer OCOIIOIIIic devol·
opment dollars than it d111nea. ,
To help the forolt produc1a
industry maintain and expllld lllei
and profits of wood-buod prod- .
ucts, Bratkovich and otbera
desi&amp;ned the workshop. • 'Wood
Product Marketing s~r~~e~~ea and
Value-Added Opport1nilioa,i •
April 19-20. It' I at Lake Hop'e
State Part: l.odgo in Z•Irdd. . '
The workshop wUI he ~
by Mater Bna1necrlna Ltd., '
nationally recognized fONil JIIOd·
ucts consulting rum.

,,

�..
Page

D2-9unday nmes Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt-Gallipolis, OH

Point Pleasant, wv

March 17, 1991

Yeltsin to vie for Russian presidency in Sunday· vote
~

MOSCOW (UPI) - Boris said in his radio address. "I think
"'eltsin said Friday he will run for the time for such a choice has
president of Russia if the giant come. It is up to the people themrepublic's voters in Sunday's Jllfer- selves to decide who will hold lhe
elldum create the post that would highest post in the n:public."
.
gi ve him a new eower base for
Yeltsin, who has made a stun-.
ning political comeback since Gorchallengin~ Mikhail Gorhachev. .
,
Yeltsin s candidacy for the P\'0- bachev removed him from the
posed post of Russian Federation Soviet Communist Pany's rulipg
president had been widely expect- Politburo three yeaiS ago, put hime4, but his announcement on radio self forward as a candidate for RusvJas the first concrete confumation sian president but said he expects
of his intentions.
. competition.
The burly rival of Gorbachev
"If the referendum says yes (to ·
went on the republic's radio in a creating the post), I shall run for
broadcast carried over three-quar- the presidency," Yeltsin said. "But
ters of the Soviet Union after it is up to the voters to decide who
L.eonid Kravchenko,. the Gor- will he elected to the post, me or
btlthev-installed head of state-run somebody else. I am sure !hat mOJe
Soviet television, offered him only than one candidate will be nominat10 minutes to speak about Suned. Russia has (many) worthy peoday's plebiscite on keeping the ple capable of properly fulfilling
country together. ·
this difficult mission.
:. As part of its challenge to cen" But the important thing is not
11'111 rule under Yeltsin's aggressive
who will be elected, but that Russia
ICadership, the Russian Federation will no longer have its higher leadhas added two questions to the ers picked by a narrow group of
Soviet poll, asking its citizens to people. From l)!is time on, the prescreate a presidency and to vote for ident of the republic will be eleeted
the republic's sovereignty. Opinion only tluyugh a general poJ!!!lar vote
Jiolls showing wideSpread .suppon carried out by .us; our chtldren·and
for such a post indiciue it is all but our grandchildren."
Yeltsin, however, declined to
· cenain to gain approval Sunday.
take a clear position in the Soviet
Yeltsin is already leader of Rus. sia as chairman of its Parliament, referendum, which asks: "Do you
but he said the republic that is consider it necessary to keep the
home to hal( the Soviet Union's U.S.S.R. as a renewed federauon of
2PO million people needs a bona- equal sovereign republics, in which
fi!le executive president elected by the rights and freedoms of people
of any nationality will be fully
the people.
" "Never before in the entire guaranteed?"
Gorbachev is promoting-.,a pro1,000-year history !If Russia has
such a thing (as elecuon of the Rus- union vote to suppon his centrist
sian leacier) taken place," Yeltsin policies, but nationalist govern-

c-me

.

· ~- ~·--- - -...~

•

J

SNAFU® by B~ Beattie
PUblic Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
REYNOLDS, IN.C., 11411
Clorm.ntown Rd.. Middletown, Ohio 411042 .lo roquootlng MBE lftd WBE perllclpflon on Weltlweter
Syetem Improvement Project Controct C - S.nltery
• - • 8y1tem - Rutilnd.
Ohio. Molgo County - Bid
Dote Moreh 21. 1111.
~AR . 11 , 17, 18,
18. 20. lte

PUblic Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo. Ohio
Merch B. 1991

Mllgo, Mon&gt;'oo, Morgon.
Noble. VInton end Woohlng-

teet or verious· mll11.
Pevement width - V1rie1.

No. 11-2B
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
llelled propooelo will be
NOIIwd ot the office of the
'Dincitqr of the Ohio Oopenment of Trenopoltltlon, Co~
urnbuo. Ohio, untl10:00 A.
M.. Ohio ltlln.._d n ....,
TUMdly, April 2. 1991 In
At~o.
Gellll, Hocking.

ton Countlee. Ohio on

MC-

tlon ATH-33-G.tl2 on U. S.
Route 33 In the City of Login, in the Citiel of Belpre
1nd Moriltto, in the .VIIIIgeo
of Jockoonvlll, Centerville,
Murrey City, Belle Volley
ond Coldwell. Low1r Solem ·
1nd othw v•lou• routaa end
Mctiono by furnlohlng ond
inltllllng rotHd _....nt

--

..._..•.

l'raliOI ..... - 0.00 , .

orO.CIO mil.
Worlc length - Vorlouo

"Tho dell oot for completion of thl1 wort&lt; ohell be 11
oot forth In the bidding propaul.'"

HelpWBntad

11

..

Help Wanted

..... per-

I

$VENDING$ Loco! ROUio FDf
IIIII. Not lnoclo Or lode. 1101 S'
Fw Lo ln"IL Work Pl. Time '2k
Per Wille. All Cuh. 1111 1 -· .
. 11111-11844.

YoutoocanMm-•io

-FDUNOheoond,
"-" "11•
' - -Dog,
··
-II
Darwin oOM, t14-H:I-71t7.

fooon ... oom- '

fort of ...... ~ rtlll .....

..

I
. . -"'
- IwfthDo!ll-f47
-

Atthur'o Clooln Link l'loo;o. 1
Rwlilonlill, Com-, ill;,·
oloolltlotl, F- EIII-MI C - •

SitUation

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ploto l-Ion. P -: tM- •
:JM-1277.
:

W8ntad
Would UU To 8IWo

Oldor -

Claorotto nndlng- • ;
toiillhlld 30 mo. Good!_,.
Troller Pork on otvor. Yory nice: ,

"""- Or Apeotmn In llao1lo. ~ lootomoellon
To: 11 eoun •-· Ollllpello,
OH 4!831.

II. I haalo-upo. lllotouo lnqlllt1ri

"""'·
' ;!04-TINM!

•'
WOI.FP TANNING IEDI
·
Nw ComNrclal, HoMt Unlta;

u·o ""'"'~ Win .. AGMpting 14
AIIPIIcoflonO.
lp.m.·

-y.

·~ '

INTELLIGENCE

.JOBS.

All

Bualneaa
'nalnlng
::~::--~~:=:==.=
Altl'llln
Nowttt'm n
,.,.

From St811.00, Lomt" Lotlono, •
Ace
rial. Month "~•
' - Ao 111.00, Coli OoiiY FREE :
NEW c- Coillog. 1._221o'.

8 - " ' - Caltgl, 8IM'Ina Yaller

- · US CUot01n1,1 DEA, Pl-. Coil T...V. tM-44I-4M7Il
oto. - Hiring. Coli 1 ) - . Rtglllt otllu.ttlll.oii-1Zlllll.
112-8000 ~- K-101811.

1212.

18 Wantad to Do
18 . Wanted to Do
D I I OIL c:HANGI8EIMCE
tao.oo Oil' Cholntil • wtn core tor oldlrly or noody
Filter. ONeal~; ChN.

lonpi'OV1tlll'ttlln:

Atloen1, Gellil. Hocking.
Melgo, Mo"roe. Morgen.
Noble, Vinton end Woohlngtan Countleo, Ohio for Improving IICtlon ATH-783.38 on Stoto Route 78 In

........

Wliltcllhltld
.......
Fktldo. And Olllliotollooi.Wtt Wll
C..'TotE--R IJ ...

· Atheno. Clollil, Hocking.
llllllgo, Monroe, MOI'll!ln.
Noble, VInton ond Weohlngton Count leo. by ·epplylng
retro·r-ive polyeot•

IIIII,
· 11-F
e
o.oa~~
• 1:30 p.m.
~ 2 -tO.
WIIDDIM,
. - . - 1~124.
- · Dropolnl

llolhlr or 2 - d like to
bebJOI1
In "" -..-Fri.,
In KM!uga.l~71211.
1M!!....~

Tren-rtotlon h... by not~
flee ell blddoro that It will offlr..,.tively ln101ro thot In ony
contract onte..l 'Into pur-

Sc-..

to five per cent of hlo bid. but

Slllfll 6, -'oolls OCUli.
PrMte pool. 01e1r rest1ur1nt
rtiW &amp; IOif COUI'SH.
Sprinc (3/1/91 to

certified check or caahier' 1
check for an amount equal

in no event mort thlln fifty
thouund dolllra.. or a bond
for ten per cent of hit bid.

Memor1al Day) $400
Weekly.
Summer (llomorial Day to
Labor Day) $550 Weekly
July_41h Week-$600
Still Anilalile: Juno 29July 6 &amp; month of Auaust.
Discounts affmol for nrly
bobloini wltll 50'!1 dopasll.
Dl~oom oJtonolod to .,reh
20th. On summ• rontJisanly.
Call 448·2206, 9-6

Announcements

_:4~=-:G:::I:-:-veaw:::-;::-:=::ay~;::::­
=
314 Block Chow To Ooool -

614-2!18-15111.
4 rroo old molo Pit Bull, - 2203.

of Traniportetlon and the offlee of tl!o Dlotrict BopLity

OiNctor. ·

The Director relll'\let thi
to totject eny ond oil

right
bide.

'

Vory triondly, Iavely puppy
JERRY WRAV, needs a good . home, 304-675.
DIRECTOR OF 2208.
TRANSPORTATION
Moreh 10, 17, 1891
In Memory
2
1 Carel of Thanks
In Laving Memory of
CARD OF THANKS
CHARLES R.
In the midst of our
HYSEll.
who pauecl away
sorrow we wish to u.March 17, 1983 .
press our
heartfelt
1
often
all and 1hlnk of
thanks and appreciation
you _
to relatives, friends.
When I am all alone.
nei&amp;hbors for, the kindFor memory Ia the only
ness and sympathy they
friend
That grief can call Ito
hive shown to us in the
own.
'
loss of our dear husSadly mlaoecl by
blnd. George Dillon.
wife, Kathryn, and all
.To Holzer Hospital,
the !emil ..
nurses, County Health
Nurses, for those who
sent
flowers. cards.
food . To Brother Leland
Allman,
Bro. Geor&amp;e
Menshouse, Willis Funeral Home for their
kindness and management of service.
·
Clarice Dillon and
family.

Wt thank everyone

who lltlped us and may
God Bless you all.
TlltfMnllyofJot W.

Lindamood Sr.,
dau&amp;hlll11 and sons.

-· .

"

AI Tho Al-

Houra:

.,

BRIDGE
JAMES

BERNICE
BEDE QSOL

JACQBY .·

CHANNEL MARIER
CONDOS

N. MYRTLE BEACH, S.C.
Now boounc rtMMtlons
!Of sprin&amp;f1Uni11111' SlaiORI.

military rites.

1011..,. ..

\

Eoch bidder oholl be required tc file with hio bid •

1

•

SCRAM-LETS
• Would you like gOOd seats for the
SUPPLE
. game?" the .ti&lt;*et agent smiled.
WINTER
Angry at the long time he stOOd in
FATHER
line, the man sarcastically replied, "
NUDISM
No, I want to sit right BEHIND the
HARBOR
POST."
QUAINT
BEHIND the POST

. BEDE OSOL

ponl."

Eoch bidder 1holl be required to 1111 with hlo bid 1
Clftilled chock or _h..,'o
choak "for on """"'nt equol
to llvo per cent of h11 bid, but
The DlriiCtor rtiiiWa the ,·
In no event more thin fifty right ·to Nleot My illld Ill '
thou-d dollra. or l~ bond blda. '
lor ,., plf _ , of "'' bid,
JERRY WIIAY, •
peyeble to the Dlnctor.
DIRECTOR Of
llddera mu• IPPiv· an the
TRANII'OIITATION
..,_ form•. for autllflclo- MARCH 17. 24, 1ft1

•

ANSWERS TO

BERNICE '

low end orw 111 fonh In the
bid propoool."
·
. "The oilte 101 for completion of thlo worlc ohell be ••
HI foMh In the bidding pro-

Chopt" IIZI Ohio f!evllld
Code.
Plene end IPICifkfltlone
oro an fll In the Dll*1mlnt
of TrMIPOi 18llon Md the offlee of .... Diltrlot Deputy '
Dl-r.
,

Outelolo ao 1111101

.

det•rmlnad 11 required by

dityo prior :

Clrondo. (Addlllonol Chot~~o II- '

ASTRO-GRAPH

thlo project heve bMn pro·

to the' doll Ill for opening
bldo In IC..,rdonce with

8roko, Wlndohlllcl -hir'
Fluldo,_And --lol.Wo Wll
como To E- Your llooldonco
Or Your "'- 01 Emptor"*"'Coii1114-:MWNI
II No An-il CotiiM-245-atll.:
'Wiihln 20 llo Rodluo 01 Rio

~~ Tlvu Foldoy. 8 To I.
C
Sotuooily,IM-441-e188.

agalnlt on the ground• of
race. color. or natlonel origin
In con.,.ration for an
award.
_
'"MinimUm .wege rate• for

The family of Joe W.
Lindamood Sr. would
like to thank our families, neichbors, church
members and workin&amp;
staff for their kindness,
thoupts, food, flowers.
cards. prayers and symPIIhY durin&amp; our time of
sorrow.
To the McCoy Moore
Funeral Home for their
help and servlcesand to
Pastor Jim Lusher, to
the Plllbearers and fei IOWIIIIn of VFW Post
11161 who conducted the

lllol.,......

l - lhop. -

prl•o will be afforded full
opportunity to oubmlt bldo
In reopan10 to tlllolnvitetlon
end wll not be dlocrlmineteol

to
tho dote oot for opening
blda In eccordancit with
Choptor 552&amp; Ohio Revllld
Coole.
Piln1 ond opeclflcetlono
• ,. on fllo In the Deportment

or

:.~or 11r $n :rrlng,

auant to thle edVertll8ment.
minority
bu1loo011 entor-

proper forms. for quallficetlont at leaat ten daya prior

21

ltlloto Poulil'l Doy Couw Conlor.

feet or veriout miles.
Pavirnent width - Veries.
. The Ohio Deportment of

poyeble to the Dlroctor:Biddlfl mull epply, on tho

iotll IO the mow lull

0111~1117.

linea. . ·
PlaJoct length - 0.00· ·orO.OOmle.
Worlc ·length - Verlouo

-

r::."".• ~::.::O::.""'~

&amp;20.00 lncludw 011 C!t!t"tl. •'·
Flneri
Oratl~;
~ ·
Tranamla.lon, POwer s~j •

G o o - - IIIMOIII'-.cion~

looul -

..

DUOILCHANCIEIIRYICE .. :

"""*

Athens County and various
1nd nctlon1 In

rout11

Professional
Services

Financ1al

Business
OpportunHy
w.M llko to do blbyllltlna In --===~-'"' or hoo!OOci!Mnlng.
INOTICEI
Or Y- P - 01 limJiktr- HoVIIMiiliiOII, ~811.
OHIO VALLEY PUIUSHINQ CO.
"*""CCIIIIW4MIIt
NCOm. .ooolo that yaoo.do buoiII No- Coolli14-24WII2. Woukl Kko to do blbpltllng, .._ wfth
you kMW aM
oxoonenco. NOT to ooood monoy through tho.
-In 30 il11o - .. 01 Rio , . _ _ l
Gtlntll. (AddNionol cto.Jp · N ~~~~ UOroooolo 8(vd. 114- mell until yaoo hovo lrivoetfgllod
OUtotolo ao 11111o1
·
.._1111.
tho ollotrlng.

Tranem' tan, PciWer ........... ,

•

23

ment of Trenaportltion. Cot-

Public NoiiC.

ilooio ot lleot -

Loat &amp; Found
11
FOUNO- Block l Ton to.. lo

umbuo. Ohio. unti110:00 A.
M.. Ohio Btondorol Time.
Tuoldtoy, April 2, 1991, for

U.S. delegation to see destruction in.
Persian Gulf War area first hand

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
ITATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
, . Morch 1, 1991
Controct Seloo l.ogol Copy
No. 91·283
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
FG·OOOF(B71
RSG-00011(343)
Seollld propaoolo w!ll be
rocelvod ot tho office of tho
Director of the Ohio Oepon-

AMERICAN-ANGLO MEETING - U.S. Presideat George
Bush (L) holds ooto bis jacket IS a stroag wind bul1'ets he a.nd
.Britlsb Prime Minister Jobo Major IS tbey PliUSt outside Govern·
meat House outside U.mlb, Bermada Saturday. (UPI).
The feeling of increased optimism is shared by Bush, who says
the greater credibiliry of the United
States in the region wiln by its
defense of Kuwait and other
changes in attitude wrought by the
seven· month conflict, opens the
door wider to fmding peace.
KUWAIT CITY (UP!) - Com- Bush in doing anything to get this Geren said, noting with pride that
merce Secretary Roben Mosbacher guy, Saddam Hussein, a war crimi- two Texas firms, Red Adair and
led a 140- member U.S. delegation nal at large,'' said Rep. Bob Dor• ·Boots and Coots, both of Houston,
'
of politicians, past and present gov- nan, R-Calif.
have signed coniracts to help put ,
·
· •,
ernment officials and business
"Gruesome," said William out the ftres.
leaders on a chilling fact-finding Ruckelshaus, a former Environ"The best tlting we can do now '
trip across war-tom Kuwait Friday.. mental Protection Agency adminis- for the Kuwaiti environment and
They visited oilfields torched by trat~ho also served briefly as the economy is put out those
Iraqi soldiers, toured a house of ter- acting FBI director in the Nixon fires," said Ruckelshaus. "God
ror where Iraqi troops tortured
knows .what type of damage is
administration.
· Kuwaitis and rode by schools, hosMosbacher said the trip was to goingon." .
pitals and homes destmyed by Iraqi
More than 500 oil wells are in
look at Kuwait's problems and to
troops who stole, raped and mursee how the United States co.uld flames, spewing hazardous smoke
dmd. ·
help, not to sign contracts for that turns the sky black. American
They also visited a blood- "American business, But some exec- companies are to lead the banle to
stained highway north of the
utives admitted that they looked for extinguish the ftres over the next
coastal city where scores of Iraqi
them, and Rep. Pete Geren, D- two years. Some of the equipment
soldiers were killed by U.S.-Ied lib- Texas, said U.S. companies deserve arrived Friday.
Mosbacher .said he will present
eration uoops. Many of the $lilted them.
Iraqi tanks sit idle, grim reminders
"I would like to believe that his overall findings and impres:
oflheGulfWar.
Kuwait, because of the leadership sions of the one-day trip to Presi- '
"I've seen four wars, but never role we tciok in liberating it, will dent Bush, who may visit Kuwait ·
anything like this," said former
feel some sense of obligation to himself at some undetermined lime.
Secretary of State Alexander Haig,
hire Americans" for the recon•'We want to be of asaiSiance," ·
who also served as commander of struction program, expected to cost the commerce SCC:llltary said. "But '
NATO forces.
up to $58 biUion, ,Geren said.
I'm not ready to categorize. What
"If the world saw what we saw
. "Besides, we are the best in the does he say, 'Stay tuned."'
today they would suppon President world at.oilfield infrastructure,"

bel rn-lltetf b)' CCJqJ ••• Curt Welda. Ia
Kuwait Mudll4. Tile tecretalj wiiiiUt I da)' tollr otKnalt. (UPl)

'

Classifie

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

piivement nwrldng m•terill
for cent• linea and lane

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) be free, but until then, know that
Family members of Terry Ander- your fellow Amtlricans salute you
son, the longest-held U.S. hostage. and pray ev~day for your strength
1
in Lebanon, marked his sixth and courage,' S8Jd Say.
anniversary of captivity Satu~day
She said a ceremony sponsored
by sending him letters of love and by No Greater Love, an organizasuppon. .
tion she has founded, was held Fri"We ~ontinue to miss yqu as day tp pay tribute to all hostages
much as a husband and a father," still held in Lebanon.
said Anderson's Arabic compan'
The ceremony was attended by a
ion, Madeleine, and their daughter
Salome, in a letter printed in Arabic number of celebrities, journalists
and English in the independent An and members of the Congress who
gathered on Capitol Hill. . . .
Nahar newspaper.
"This year we are calling 11 trib"Six long, separating years ha&gt;&lt;e ute to co.urage and it is our way of
gone by only to bring you closer to le\ting all of you !'JtoW how much
my heart and mind and to have we admire the f81th, strength and
your dat!ghter love you as much as dignity with which :(OU have Sll!'·
any girl who has had her father all vived these long, painful years m •
along,'' said the letter.
captivity," said Say.
.
Anderson is one of sill Ameri-~
Anderson; chief Middle East cans believed held by pro-Iranian
correspondent and' Beirut bureau fundamentalist grou(IS in secret
manager for the Associated Press, hideouts somewhere m Lebanon.
was kidnapped March 16, 1985 by They are Thomas Sutherland,
the Islamic Jihad. His daughter was Joseph Cicippio, Edward Tracy,
born a few months after his abduc- A1ann Steen and Jesse turner.
tion.
' 'These six years have become
The other· hostages Include
OuT key to an ever lasting ooiiil and Britons Terry -Waite, John
happiness. We dil love you very McCarthy and Jack Mann, Germuch. No lime could ever take that mans Thomas Kemptner and Henaway," said the letter to which was rich Struebig ~d Italian Albeno
attached a picture of Madeleine Molinari. :
holding Salome.
Friday, Muslim Shiite sources
In a separate message, Peggy told United Press International that
Say, the hostage's sister, expressed S~a and Iran have agnied in prinhope .that all I2 Western hostages Ciple tq seek ·the release of all
including Anderson could regain hostages 'nd their efforts mig~t
freedom soon.
result in setting free one of the cap"Soon, God willing, you will all tives, probably a U.S. citizen.

controct s•• ~.er' copy

SECRETARY TO VISIT KUWAIT- U.S.
Secntllr}' Ill
Robert Molbacber and
Jail wile Gtoraette art ..owo a mlolablre liberty

'

Family marks Anderson's
sixth year in captivity

'

HAMILTON, Bermuda (UPI)
But at the second meeting with
- President Bush wound up an Major since he succeeded Margaret
intensive opening drive of postwar Thatcher last November, Bush was
· consultation Saturday , meeting likely to hear nothing but support.
with one of his closest allies, The allied consultations and resultBotish Prime Minister John Major. ing hackin~ was a stmng factor in
Closing out a. week that also Bush's ability to build and keep
took him to Ottawa for talks with together the 28-nation coalition that
Canadian Prime Minister Brian forced Saddam Hussein from
Mulroney and Martinique for a Kuwait
From the beginning days after
meeting with French President
Francois Miuarand, Bush sat down Iraq's Aug. 2 invasion of the tiny
with. Major for the 'brief morning emuate, first Thatcher and then
talks on the storm-swept island.
Major stood frrmly behind the U.S.
Major gteeted the American efforts in the United Nations and
president at the palatial official res- Middle East.
idence of the queen's representa- ·
Bush now is relying on that
live on the British island." After a same partnership to help revive
military salute, the two noted how diplomatic efforts io solve longthey were pleased that British .and standing problems in the troubled
U. S. II'OOps had begun returning region. Britain bucks the U.S. call
from the Persian Gulf.
to focus coalition energy on such 1
"It must be a relief, sir, for you problems as the Arab-Israeli contO have them coming home, ' '
flict, the civil strife. in Lebanon, as
Major said to Bush, who has a stop well as fmal and full resolution of
lJlanned Sunday in South Carolina the gulf crisis itSelf.
· to welcome some troops back 1 The meeting also takes place
borne.
while Secretary of State James
: At the start of the meeting, Bush Baker wraps up a I 0-day diplomat·
also promised more such sessions ic mission overseas focusinl! on
:With the new prime minis~. who bringing peace to the Middle EasL
ProVed to be one of his staunchest
Major also is just returned from
allies throughout ~-gulf crisis.
his own trip to th(l area, including
· "It's going to be a freque'"'n'"t----'t:::::T.
o K"'uwaif Ciiy, where he witnessed
ihing in m~g with Prime Minis- first-hand the devastation wrought
ret Major. It's 'very, very important by Itaqi troops. Major can repon,
to the U.S. side- very, very fruit- too, on his talks last week with
ful, "Bush said.
Soviet President Mikhail Gor• The quick talks over a working bachev during which the two talked
lunch at the Government House primarily about a permanent post)were not likely to produce any dis- war setllement.
cord between the longtime friends
Major said Gorbachev had
aad allies like some of the policy assured him the Soviet Union
differences that surfaced between would continue to work with tlte
Bush and Mitterrand on Thursday. other four permanent members of
The two continued to diverge on .the U.N. Security Council to come ·
when and if a full-scale intemation- up with a permanent settlement of
81 summit should be convened on the gulf war and the Palestinian
'the regional questions and over homeland issue . Both felt the
who should R:present the Palestini- prospects for resolution of that
ans in any ensuing dialogue and if question welll ''brighter today than
,,_,should be acconled their own they have been for some lime," he
U-J
'said.
state.

Sunday nmee sentlnei-Page--03 -

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH P:olnt Pleeeant, WV

••

ments in six of the IS ·Soviet
republics are boycotting the
plebiscite to proteSt Moscow's rule.
The Kremlin has directed that
votes be held at Communist Party
brancbes, factories ·and army bases
in the deflBDt Jllgions - ,Moldavi!l,
the Baltic republics of Estonia,
l.alvia and Lithuania, and the Tran"
scaucasia11 - and some voting had
begun by Friday.
Visiting U.S. Secretary of State
James Baker said Gorbachev
assured him in talks Friday that the
Soviet·president has not abandoned
the reform path he began after
assuming power six years ago.
Baker told reporters: "(Gorhachev) s.aid he began tltis process ·
and he was committed to this process, the process of reform, that
there are obvious difficulties and
.problems ... but that he and the allunion government of the Soviet
Union are committed to continuing
on the reform course, both with
respect to perestroika, democracy and political pluralism, and economic reforin toward a free market
at some point."
Yeltsm, however, criticized the .
plebiscite, saying it is worded
vaguely and willii'Oduce inconclusive results that Gorbachev can
exploit for his ·own political aims
HASHING IT OUT - Muscovites. argue
the sbape of the Soviet Uoioo lo a referendum·
without changing the sratus quo.
about Sunday's refereadum in central Moscow
tbat could also effect the f11ture of Presideol
"The referendum is being held
Saturday. The Kremlin bas summoned 200 ~il­
Mikhail Gorbacbev. (UPI)
in order to get support for .the prelion citizens this weekend· to vote on changmg
sent policy of the country's leadership," Yeltsin said. "It is aimed at
But he refused to issue clear
The Russian leader acknowl- week to "declare war on the leadpreserving the imperial unitary sub- edged that "the majority of citizens ership of the country, which is directions for the vote Sunday, say:
SlBOCe of !he nation and allowing it are for the union, this is clear with- leading us into the hog, ·which is ing that "every citizen should
to be renovate!! only superficial- out a referendum."
again leading us onto the path of determine his positien for him- .
ly."
self."
Yeltsin called on Soviets last . anti-democracy." .

hush meets with PM Major
••• J

March 17~ 1991

.. Pooltlon for ... Goolllo
loll Anot Wotor c--llon

Dlllrict. MiniMum IWIIUI-•
111 ~ =1111 dlgrM
In ~- Appllolrol - · lo
good Wrttt., oood vooltol
-munl- oldlll, - to
JfCft lndlplnOMIIY and hlve
aood _,.lullollol oldlll.
Dutloo lnoilude -"'ng wllh
-Nfn-oolngare a two~

lftiRIIIIMIII ~ ·t\rnMr Mle

- · · ....
ploiiL
Educotlon
ond-lng
lnfOrmotlon
doolloo would lncluoil ~

-por
ottlcloto,
Nllleel, newM~t~•

LARRY K.
FRA$HER

'

March 11, 19116'
March 28. 1983
"GONE BUT NOT
FORGOTTEN"
It's been 8 yMra now
And our memory of you
lloogaro.
You loft more then ..,..

. . " -·iol ..... olllco 01 I1H

Joto-.

.

PI~

=t==~·~

4:30 p.m. Coiollcl Connlo Whlltt,

" ' ... llfl Setary ~. . .
on odoooollon end •·
porlo-.
FlEE JOI TRAINING OHIO ANO
w
.v.. YOUTHI. Are""" lod In lrllooloog In hooillh
tllln MOOh 11 LPN, Honing ooelrltln, llecllcll ...... '"II and

1-

-~-·-·-·

loolnlng
In - OMn - 11-2:1 YOIIII!I
n ond
,....

t-

old. OUI orocloool d"'f'!MMo or
atotduotM liilo Pl. P.M. Job
......... 221 Sixth It, Pelnl

PI-nt, Wod Moreh 20,
te S:OO pm, H lor Job

Cerpe rop.

In Memory

ttlrth,

Tho! - wll be toge1hor
egeln.
Loveclondml-by
Family illld Frlondl.

If

Ill

•t.lll•tr•t hi• 111ff.

.•.,....•,

ll•ttY BlrtUtr

.In Memory of Our
Daddy, FRED LARKINS, on hl1 93rd
birthday. Merch 17th.
MI-d end Lovlld,
Oaughtero. Vlfl •
Donno; oon. Ho-rd.

In memoriel of you WI
find
.
.
ThM tpec:illl love you
ltfl btltlnd.

lonawlldgo

To Dale:
Cry baby, Cry baby
tlttlng on a fence;
trying to meka a dollar out of fifty cents.
Jolynn Smith

flllcl Iauro
tlonol ....., _ Atrtrllcatlono

mar••·

And far 11M comforting

---.!-:~---­

-

MEMORY
In ourhearuwewould
hold you dear
It' I not the tam1 with·

You loft 1 little ploce of
IOOnohlne.
Tllot loako Jult lloe
I lhenk Clod lor the
Wo hod lo11othor h.,. on

Happy Ada

lrllclel,
oood ocl..,..

ooooducl

2
Laving Memory of

5

aut you hero.

EDWARD L. KIRBY
5/30/36 to 3/17/89

Sadly missed br
Family and Fri111ds.

••d Holdl•t·
H1ppy Blrt~d1y
IC1t~yl

NORTH
+Q74

today. Those you negatively
rule upon might actually be just the
opposite.
lionshlp~

~r

March 17, 1GII1

'Birthday

You may become closely Involved with a
very unique individual in the year ilhilad,
someone who Isn't overly popular but
who selects you to be a special friend.

.662

tt09765
+52
WEST
+J 10

EAST

.KQJB 3
tJ2
• Q 10 9 3

+ K 8 52

.,0 7 4

tK3
+K 814
SOIJTH
.... 9 6 3
• A9
.... Q 8 4

More opportunities than usual may be

This relationship .. could produce avaHable to you In the year ahead. However, you must be careful not to dilute
bene(lls.
PISCEI (Feb. . - c h 20) A friend your posolbllltles by jumping from one
who Is a good pal but a poor paymaster thing to another.
·might try to stick you today with the II- , 1'18CEB (Feb. 20-Morch 20) There I' a
on's share of a bill, regarding some- possibility thai you might be overly negthing In which you're jointly Involved. Be . alive or unrealistically optimistic when
on guard. Pisces. treat yourself to a assessing various developments today.
birthday gift. Send for your Astra- Either extreme could be counlerproGraph predictions (or the year by ductlve. Major changes are ahead 19r
mailing $1.25 to Astra-Graph, plo this PIS&lt;:es In lhe coming year. Send for PIneWspaper, P.O. Box 91428, CIIIVIriand. sces' Astra-Graph predictions today.
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state your 11,1all $1.25 to Astra-Graph, .c/o this
newspaper, P;p . Box 91428, Cleveland,
rodlac sign.
ARIES (Merch 21-Aprlt 11) If you suffer OH 44101-3428.
from a lack o( accomplishment today, ARIES (Mon:h 21-Apri119) Try to keep
It's not likely to be due to an abostrnc:e of a tight lid on your expenditures laolay,
Initiative. You'll have the drive, but your especially those dedicated to non-esprocedures
could
. be sentials. If you are undisciplined, things
could get a bit out of hand.
counterproductive.
TAURUS (Aprii20-Mar 20) It's bell not TAURUS (Aprii20-Mop 20) Placing too
to take situations for granted today, much emphasis on your own requireeven those In which you fee( comfort- ments while Ignoring those of assoable and lamlllar. Thera's a chance lhal ciates won't make you very popular at
uncertainties could prtH18iillhemselves thlo time. Poor behavior could leave a
bed luting Impression.
in various developments.
GEMINI
(Mor 21..Jilne 20) If you are reGEMINI (Mer 21..June 20) Even I( lhe
overlriendly behavior of ~ you quired to make a serious presentation
know only casually arouses nagatlve today, be care(ulthat you do not embelpero;eptlons, this should not be lgnorod. lish the facts. It could darken your ImYou may be dealing with someone with age, as well as cost you the deal.
CANCER (J- 21-Jutr 22) You might
ulterior motlvaa.
CANCER (June 21..JoiiJ 22) Don't let bli In need of fln180clal or business
companions or aBIOCiat..,makelmpor- counseling and, Instead ol seeking oul
tant decisions for you toll'ay; Uoey coolld experts, there's a chance you may go to
Impair your Image If they ... poor judg- friends who don't know even as much
ois you do.
ment. Think for yourse(f.
LEO (JuiJ 23-AJoa. 22) Even though LID (.luiJ 23-Aug. 22) Lady Luck could
your performance level might not be up be a trifle fickle today and, If you deto par today. you may not be vary tolar- pend on herJoo heavily, she may let you
ant o( those· with the same problem. down just when you need her the most.
Don 'I mentally block out yours while Be sell-ouffl~lent.
YIIIGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) Usually,
emphaalring theirs.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If pollible. you'r~ reasonably well-organized. bul
steer away !rom the complex financial today you might be inclined to lei
or business problems of a friend today . chance manage your affairs. This could
If you don't, you may Hnd yourl8ff )Din- be a big mistake.
Ing this Individual beyond the loolcloog L1811A (8apt. 23-0cl. 23) Someone with
.glass, where things can 1Ji1t dlstoMed. whom you're closely lnv,olved RJighl
IJ8RA (llopl. 23-0ct. 23) Be extremely draw you Into a situation today that
selective regarding whom you go to for could Incur unplanned expenses. Don't
advice today. An Ineffective couroaelor be altaid to say "No" If you're Imposed
may get you so confused that you're upon.
ICOIIPIO (Oct. 24-NoY. 22) Adhering
worse off than when you began .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-llolr. 22) U1Ually, to 180 agreement about which you're
you're e rather lndu1trloue person. But, doubtful could prove to be unwlae toyou may spend more lime laolly ratlo- day. Don't enter Into any arrangement
nallrlng about the things you have to do thai mekoo you (eel insecure..
rather tha" rolling up your ala- and UGITTAIIUS (HoY. 23-Dec. 21) Your
imaglnollve mind ohould be able to progetting the job done.
.
8AOITTAIIIIII (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Your vide you with ample rauons for goofing
judgment regarding the lntrlnole • - off todey. None will be valid, but you
ol thinga Ia a bit q.-tlonlbla todty, onay convince yourlli!lf they ara.
and there's a pooolblllly you might pay CAPIIICOIIH (Dec. 22-.lan, 11) In order
more for something than II Ia worth. ol• to Improve your financial position at this
111'10, you might be lempted to take
thlf financially or IIIIOIIonally.
CAJIIIICOIIN (lito. 22......_ 11) OIUp- torn1 tipecutatlve rlaksthat you normalpointnoont 11 likely tOlley If you olll*l ly WOUld rotect. Thla l111't a good day for
•
th01t1 with w1toon you'relnvOIWd to IUO- iOnfllhotl.
AGIIMIUa
(,.,_
20-Folt.
11)
If you are
pend what they're dOing In ora to
gratlly your wtolnoo. Try,to be ollllltlci. too lndoc:lalve tOlley, you are not apt to
AOUAIIIUS C...,_ 20 Pelt. 11) Rulhloog have too much to .,_ lor your efforts;
to judge the lnt.,tioM of otheN OOtilcl nllu. wltlt- who ere Involved with
lntrod!I08 compllcallorla 1ntci your ,.._ you In apiCial arrangements.
::..

3·11-tl

"'

+AJ6

Vulnerable: North-South
De~ler: ~uth

West

North

&amp;.11

Dbl.

I•
Pass

Pass
3t

2•
Pass

Pass

3•

4t

Soulb
I •

·'·All pass

Opening lead: • K

.'

Use your
key spots
By James Jacoby
Yesterday's deal featured declarer's need to unblock diamond spots
from the dummy. Today's hand also
involves a key unblock, but it is more
difficult to spot, il you will excuse the
pun.
The auction is typical of pairs tournaments - no one slops b' 'ding after
finding a II(. But North should have
pa'ssed over West's three hearts. South
would have. doubled for a penalty of
300 (provided that North gets a clab
ruff).
&lt;
.Declarer won trick one with tCje
heart ace and led a spade to the jaok,
queen and king. East continued hear'\$
and declarer r~lfed the third rOlllld.
Now South played the ace and queen of
diamonds. being relieved to see the 2·2
break. East returned a low club. After
winning with the ace, how would ytltl
continue?
;
If the spades had been 5-I , aurejy
East would have given. his partner -a
ruff. So declarer correctly cashed tile
spade ace, dropping West's 10. Btlt
now .South look his eye off the ball: On
his spade ace he played dummy's f -sllOt. He overtook his diamond el-t
with dummy's nine and called for Ute
spade seven, but East pillyed tbe lilt.
With no hand entry remalnlng, oleclwer couldn't avoid a club loser. He bid
lost a trick In each suit: one down. ' •
If South unblocks dummy's seven of
spades on the second round, he can triumph. He cr01111e1 to dummy with a ell"
amond and leads the spade lour, fl.
n-in1 the six when East playa tJie
five. Dummy's club loser Js discarded
on the ·spade nine. and deelarer Is
borne. · ·
Scrutinize those spots. When did yciu
last finesse a 111 succeufully?
J•- J«&lt;by~- 'J«&lt;by ... ......,. -

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

•Jocoby"" Cord G.....' (orrltlftl w/.. 1o1o l•rller.
•

,.,, (Jnqlfl

,.,,

JM:Obyl .,. ... ....JIMHe ,,

-({) - - "" poblirll«&lt; by,...., BootU.

�-~

Page

D4-Sunday nmes

Sentinel

1\cW A CAT

Homll lor Sale

-.

....

-~.

44

F-

-

wv

March 17, 1991 .

LAFF-A·DAY

Apartment
tor Rent

51

.

-

•

4~·

54 Ml-*111. . . .

HOUHI!Oid
Goods

2
......_
, ._...,D,
Solo,

r;~. tiiO
...lei, 7111
..... .

Mpola. tlf

C..I1H41 .....

-

·•·

=-~•a••,.

•

Cll"

.1t10 Chol- A - . 2 bedCA.
.... -ion,

·~---

Ertlalancr ....,......... No peiL

111211..,·----·
~
""'""' 1/0 -

..... --··-

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaeant,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wript

31

--

~-a.

--

...-,---·

Mlrchsndlae

1._.,.,.., Ylfi
...........
_ .
- · No •

THAT DAILY
PUZZLER

plaid . _ , . , . .

121nchc....,.-,._;. •

-.n Collec&gt; 4-.

C.. XX -

OH-Polnt Pleaeant, WV

54 llacellaneous

Merchlndl..

52 Sporting Goods

......... 1p.Jn.

March 17, 1991

Q R·earronge

·- - Col-·· .

Antiques

53

a.tt.ry ........ .,.....
Cholto,1-brand - · 1,....1...
•
3io Cubic lnclt Ct...,
110.•
2

- -- .........
-............
....
"'"'"'

Buv or 1011. - . . Anllquoo,
112'4
lloln 10:00
·-·
Houn:E.II.T.W.
o.m. to 1:00
p.m., -~ 1 :00 to 1:00 p.m. Tonnlo TIIH....

,_roy_

114 112 2121.

O..llo
-Sond jlholoo
... - ona
aood
-lon.
-pllon
to
1 PattOn.~-. Ohio 4m1 or
0111 8MitiWI87 or II14JIIt;2.
24f1.

1-

n-. 1114-:MMII21ftor ~.m.

p

v..

lw 110.

I

wfiC~III f1ni8D. ~.

IMullful •• bnonl ol

h - 'bon I

lo!doY

I

:
.

'

uL s

Ep

2

glo!e. aulllo,
-monlho,. . .d
..,. -,
0...11
llutllol

,_

...........

• ••

~IIIUidow

11:00 LIIL

'

I tundly.

11pr1ng Toolh - · t2 - •

-.-

... Dloo, 111 Dr1vw1

-...,..,;,will!'!"....,......._
DoiiJ - · 711.
111J ~ ...W, Flold

RoidY &amp;qul_,t. ~'a Form.
-lnarJ. AI. tzt I llo1Rood. olllclcoon Ohio. l14-21t1144.
11111on M.iar n ~r
~ With S Unlbo, I
ton Food lin, tO'
Coli

I

TWENJR

- · lnoido-- Ah
far ......... -

IJioce-

.

-

1240, Plol-, With

Ill PTO 11-""

.

.

-end u.od ,.,.. EqUip-:
ovor 10 Uood TMO!oro to

And lonloo, Aloo F/nonolng
Avd!ab'' er.. 6 lona. Jaok•
eon, Ott i14 • ttlt.
d•,ti:"'~~,
P I - 11
Ford 12 Inch - . ~-up
Dllc1 Qdi..PaaUre1 ~~~

the 6 scrambled
words below to make 6
simple words. Print letters of
each in its line of squares.

.... Knlvoo, Onlv llodo. 14 " - ..... ~Nna:
- o l f d o l i o - .... .._, - · a - Cui, Willi •
,
llloe,
1 - I CUI- •
llnMe,
Tho Gun
AI
WI" ,., ..........
.,......1'011.

81 Farm Equipment
4-

JD Calm

or.=,

""" B:OO p.m. l14-l

Prom en 1 t:eo. eiCh: liz•
1110 a 11112. LMo d....... 314

63

P-M'!,~, dll:

a.- ...

s

........

llwpor Solo, wllh
...-.a· ...,._,,
Brown,

..

tm Pontile T•no Am, rod. ooo.
ongl!!!, ~- _.t, H- ohlaor,

Hay &amp; Grain

84

1M7 Comoro
1_14-_11_5.4_ 21_a_. ----~

..!:;.• ·.

1n1_.1ono11100
42n.

-;;::;::-;;:::=-==::::;--;;;;7.
Jim'' F11m Equlpmont1 .8R. :Ia,
Will
GoiiiiiOIIo, t14....t-1777;
-·-lon-auoodllnn
troctoro a lm......-.. Buy,
1111, Indo, I:D0-8:00 -~··
1.:N°.:""ox'= ==::-::=
;:
lo;;,;.I·.:111'::
John oo- 1217 Havblno, Gohl
Orinclor mblor, flolllnd 701
Chopper, John-.. o row cui·
1lvllor, -273-4215.

----~---63
Livestock

2 yr old loY
FillY. le li1 tho lnconllvo lUnd.
Oul. of
and lila
Fonnll 8
. 11,800. 30.-,

:!:t,B-Doc

HATREF

2

o-ly t - 1 0 " - · oe· 100 blloo Dl hey, .71-114- :104·r~44ohor4:00.
,
blldl. 8100. ~~. SOW71- '-M"::Ct-2~171:-'-'-.=::-7=--:-=..11
uti or come •nd . . M.
:-:
1 ~~~ltiC;·
FTwo1100 lb. boloo o! 11oy 1n- r:
·a.. a p1. hitch - . crudo proColn 1:1.1 tii.OO 1671.
ond - • ..,..,..._ .__., por bo
. II. Oorr lllchool .,,._
- "--. ll•-ulo. Ol&gt;od Conond runo gooa $ta00. 114-201' 3ltit
•••• -~ - ·

AQHA ...,..._

125.
and - • · tabloo
$310. :JDW71.7151.

----:---::--:--·!
71 AutOI tor Salt

LlviSIOCk

~n ......, 2 -·~·
!lor, old llilglon ootto,l-

11-.zo.'::•_,
,1210.

- - -~..... . S'IOOi. Allo
-""4!'!'!
~ ~ Rldlna •.._,
Hoa ~pmonl
,.., 114417-7114

- - - . . . . - - , _ _ - Edltod by CLAY R. I'OLLAN

~

j

S©"RQ{llJ\-~."BtfSe

WOID 1
GAME

81 Farm Equipment

111J far SolO. C1ovw I

TlmolhJ.
~IIIII In the Flolcl. 114-

~-

71

Autos lor Sale

.1m Old• cut!Mo 8 ..,_,

Ortalnal I Elcollonl Condll'!'!!.
:M,CioO - • mlloo. M,IOO. 1..1
Full s1.. IJoclao 4r4, 311,
outornollc, 4
dnvo, nOll·

v,.

,.r.o..

1on1 .-uon. Ja,IOD. 114-40'1·
0208.

dtUon, 11.400. or AMnnlblt ~ :
1«. 114-2iil-1.
1110
4 -· 4
d~~ · - •m
..-. ·-~·~
. ·
:

"::t.

wfl!ool :

tll1 CUIIoOI Su...-, IIIIth V.., &gt;
motco on.., 114-246-1113.
:
1112 Ford E - ...._ ie.OOD .
11oo nd~_..., good
f100. · -. Kor:....
aMI '
b1 lw. bod, as.oo 114-1142~.:.
320OS.
1ft2 Ford LTD. --ion.~

"Ct.,

All - r , c,_n Vlotorlo 1700. ·
11111 PontiOC Grind Prlr. T·Tapo, ·
polm . - bonlrY. 11310,!
Clllolt« 4:30p.m. 1~·11411. •

:mt.

6

..... lllrlpl, Good ~ion.
-~

Rt

rdftlonod _._,., D,..o .
G....,ood .....,pt ..viol lor
ol mo-. - · Tho. Woolllr

Sl '

__
,_
-. --

~orA--,

F

Ftoo, 1121;

~rotor

. . , _ Gold, F- FrooHoo':i
Coldlpal~

;~

F- Froo, IJU ...... 1271;
- · _..,
.-;·Gi$11·Woii111r
Cllool Kon...; 111v1ot1 Dryoo .... OE

Dmr
. .lnOii
;- Chon
br;W,
..
.; 110
A-do

::=.UpPer

S.rlo All... 1111. 8l!olgo ,..

Rlvor RoOil. 114-

f7.7l

-~~.

Olnllto

ol
... ~~.~~~ ~- Al. 141,
• 011 AI. 7 In C.ntonory.
HOUIItl: llondoy thru s.lunloJ,
........,.... ; Suncloy, 12 -

.......

11

Cou!11J
~-- !no. Good
uood ~.T.V. lOb. .,_

41 Housu tor Rent

-

•••
:·-'

-

Mon.-. t14-

CJol. .

""'D . APPUAIICII

w.-., .....
"'-' rlllii!OII«o.
ADill •••
1br op •••• In Rio Orondo, oh .._
utlllloo pold, I2JI/mo.•,.._. liPiior lllvM RoJ. llloololo ......

-rio.

CNII_Coll.,.__,

2 bod""'"' ronl. tbr, . . , _ aport-.1104-17141130 or 17W411.
1111!1. 1o1o1
111 mlo loll
2 bod,_, ond bed- ol Portor on liM. 114
II II
3 .....-hod . , . _ ,
opl, o
- l - -"""'·
-ond
no pot8, ·- - nice ~bortl =ad, utlllll•
171-1:1H.
pold,Phone30t-171--.
.
33 F•rm• tor S.le
2 !jed,_. an Sond HIQ Rood, BI!AUTIFUL APARTIIEHTI AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JIICICIOH
t - . 11 110'!0..O'!'llfollow :104.f75.3134.
!'-~7W!fJ holt mJie . off. ~ Rd, ,~41biNtOii*;;;-;;,.;;-:;houooi;'UiO"'iilni'FPoli;;iiii
·nt EST.c!U; 1M , . . _ Pl ...
from 11t21mo. Wall! to ot.D I
. _.... :JDW71.11•.
· Con IM 441 2tA.IOH.

s•

o,_,
.......oliving.
1 ..... 2 p o - II VI._
Manor

and ·

'LAlliE'S FURNIIUIII
Compllte holM fumWIInge.
Houno: .......... .... f14.44f.
111:12, I out Bull¥111 Rd.

Froo DlllvorJ. '

Lillo ......... _

..... _

ofdiawai. J04.111.7111.

·
llollohen Corpotlo AI. 11 Norlh,

-Corpot
· b11
IIDoonCotpol
MO;
Kh.II_JIIrd.
....10 Jllrd, ClndJ llrlpo.
PICICENI FURNrTURE

_,....

Rlva'llile Hoo II hold hlmlo!llftll.

112

ml,

Rd. Pt. P I - ; WY,
~~-~­
lfll. Colll14ott:I•TIIt
EOH. . 0111--1410.

A!MirtmontOin

Reel Eltlte General

Help Wanted

Modem Woodmen ot
America

Cllool

ana c•w MMIMII'.
Itt ,. ttll pu about 1ho ••·
. . . . . . ._ ...itiel f•
• - • aM - .. maWiJh
....... _.wit- growing
or..,notlw.

r

NEI. MOIIIII$0!1, "~
Dittrlcl . . .

P.O. lor 33

lia Grandt, Oh. 45674

Goods

GOOD

-

.......

Household

flentals

11

lllt«•tod In o bllllr iiiCOIM
w futuro p.,.ntiol? Then
you're l••itH tea lift insur·

Allcllnlr

3nl. -

-I

Sofa ond Ollllr, $1.1$ per - I t
e Poloo Woodaroull.. f14.01 111r

. .h 4 ChoiN, 11.!0 por - · 4
loci, 112.20 por

-1"!.. t2T
Mpollo, un

SWAIN

AUCTION I RJRNITURE, t2
Olive .... Qolllpollo.
Uood
hlmM- - . . . Woolom I
Warll-o. 114-0111-3151.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

- .................
porI Lm. to I p.m.

!:,.":e':'&amp; ::,- ttoo. Ex·

~ ··.
,.... 1.-41~ tun~-·
lloddli!Jind Choot ol Oro-.
lnolu~ $18:14 per - I t

r.lerctwndr se

Household
Goods

Help Wanted

" ' - IVL

(6141 2t5·9319

LONGWALL MINING SERVICE ENGINEER
·AMERICAN LONOWALL MINING CORPORATION.
o lotdlng menufectu• of underground mining
-hlnllfV, lo -kino Clfldldateo lor tho pooltlon of
Longwllll MIJ!Iftll · lefvlce Eng-. The pooitlon It
lull-tlmo .,d will provldo opportunity for travel.
Condidltl wHI be .-qulrld to perform ln11olllltlon.
- · oumlnotion and malntenonco of Lon-U Face
con_.,,. ond aoooolotod underground mat•lalo
handing equlpmont.
Requl,.,.. .o - oa folo- 6 ~· lmgwon meintao 421 looiW. 3 ~~ MJporvioory IXporilnce (F.,.
... mlnlmuml. high ...,.. of writton ond oon'lll- .... end., lllllllty to trawl.
AMERICAN LONOWALL ofMo 1 compotitlve oalory
and blnefito packago (lnclutlng 1 comp~~ vehlclol
and dynamic growth '""lronmont. lntMootitd candi·
datil ohould forward 1 hillnd written raoumo (along ·
with compllte -ry hlotooyl to Kenon J . Kern. Hu·
mail Raoooiraeo Man-. American LDf!IIWIII Mlni"'l
COfllorltlan, P.O. Box 1118, Abingdon, VA. 24210.
AMERICAN LONGWAI.L io•n equal opportunity om·
ployor. No tllophono cello pleooo.

Real Eltlte General

...
r-------_.._~---"" ··
~-

ACTIVITIES DIRECTOR ·

.•

, ••

A part-time position is open for an ,...•
activities director for the long- ..•
. term care unit. Flexible schedule. ' "
If interested, contact:
.
Becky Janovec, SNF Director

..
...
-'
"'

115% East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
(614) 992-2104, Extension 214

"""I
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::j I...... """' ....
~
pointmonl-ly, coli bofaro
11:110 Pill.

-Plano, Unclor yu~ Did•
Sid.
I pleOI -laNII oolo.

oa.

Solh ...... -·""· 1,._37!1.

55

Building
Supplies

, :Hwa1.
56

Pets tor Sale

AHention R.N.'s

·•

Your car.e er and personal satisfaction
can match your goals in health care's
·fastest growing market - Long Term
Care.
·
Pomeroy Nursing has an htlmediate
opening for a part-time and/or fulltime R.N. desiring day shift. Flexible
scl:teduling, competitive salary and be·
nefits offered.
Our Nation's demand for long-term
care will extend well into tha 21 at can·
tury. Join the future ...
Join the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab
Center
•
' , CONTACT:
LaRue Hill, R.N .. O.O.N ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Pomeroy Nursing &amp; Rehab

(614)992-6606
36759 Rocksprings Rd .
E.O.E.

Real Estate General

At MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
lt. 62 North of Pt. Pleasant, WV.

SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1991
.

10:00 A.M.

-NO MOTORIZED nTLED VEHICLES
-NO ANIMALS
AU FA. IELATID CCIISI8..IJITS WRCOME
.
CONSIGIIIERS ACCEmD

FIIDAY,IMICH 21, 1991-12 NMn • 6 p.m.
w SAi'ulltDAY,IIAICII IS, 1991, I a.IIL • W. Tna

,., .., ..,._,... c.

I:IIMI 671·546:11 er IJMI 77:11·16"

Mutt Pr annl Tu Eqmpt Number or Pay Tax11
(No E~GaP~ional

CA8H or CHECK WITH I. D.

NOT REIP0118111LE FOR ACCIDENTS

AUCTIONEERS:
lick PHrson - UceM. #66
Edwin Wintm -:-...~~~-L:....--1
AU.I'I&amp;OCBBDII GOTO THE
ILUON COtlNTl' FAIR

'

'

'

N AQ I

l

.

T
0

.

Priced ID sell.
$7,000 PIICE AEDUCTIOII on 2
acres m/ 1. Beeut~ul country home

.~H,

.

in lanesville, private. Won't liSt long
at ttis pri::e. Call for appci ill tment.
POIEOT Mulber ~

'
C-Omplete tne chuckle quoted
by filling In the misslng words
• you develop from step No. 3 below.

P1~1

Roduco! -

Hgts. Ranch style bu1n

home. Uke new -

t~ ll

me.

HEIE'S TOUI CHAliCE TO !AYE ~T
HEILOCl GIIOVE - 10 min. 110m

Pomeroy. $3,000 Pri:e Reduction_
Ranch style house, 3 BR, 2 baths.
LR, DR, kil., 1 lull acre in country.

Calllodoy.

FARM FOR .SA~E: ....:GUYAN TOWiiSHIP
86 acres, m/1, older farmhouse with 2/3 bedrooms,

'

t) screrriblt
Un·

bath, LR, kitchen, several oulburldings,large barn, to·
bacco base. Call for directions.

an ip";l~i'ment'P~ ~i;d -lo

PORTLAND - ACRl - Eltra nice
home i r~ Co1.1ntry . LR DR. f_R, Kit,.
sev. BR. Reduced al .$28,500.

sale.

NEW LISTING - lu~~nd-= Exl11
nice homo 3 BR. bllh, LR. kilthen.

riRhl

Clrpet. level larae lot. Pri:ed for
quick sale .

NEW LISTING -

lul~nd

- Busi·

ness tor sal e. 2 nee ~kip . Priced

IIDOUPORT - Severel homes.
~om $7,000 lo $34.000.

..' .

..,, .
.'•

-.
•

.'
.
.'

.
•

.. •'

...

.

..

AKC - I r a Tom.r Pup~.
SlilutiM llorldngo. 81048J.

OIII. .

.

DragOIIW~nd

SOUTHERN H.J LLS
.ft'E . L EST ,.E,INC.

Coii'J Pe•lln,
Mtono.
114-401-310• ollor 7 p,m.
Filii. Tank, :M13 Joolloon AvL
P9lnl P-nl, 1104-17f1.2ots,
lui llno Troploll lloh blnlo,
011011 """""'" ond oupplloi.
Hlmoll~on

Ill-

Fer Sole: /III.C Roa
_
Colm
'Torrlor Pupo, $1011' • tiiO. CUta
Eallor Pi4o. 114-311'71UO.

UltlmiiiiY Fino Konnol. AKC R a g - eoour

8ponlol
SOollllzed.

"'$

Fomlly

D : •••
- · Tho Ulllmllo ller lilfll
Whol'o Bo D - About Tho
I

" - ,Jock J.X Floo Collar? h
WOrkill Contolno NO !Yftlhotlc

-lh....do. For doa8 a cotol J

D'North Prodlloo114'.04&amp;-11133.

Whot'o oo dlllortnt obout lhe
HiDtw Joe~ J.X Fill Qollor? IT
WOAkllll Conlolno NO OJ'!'
thellc Pl'l'llilroldl. For clogo &amp;;
colo! RaG Food ,I Supply 1141124110.

ST

Raal Estate General

I

Slo.- ond

:nn

Real Estate General

Raal Estate General

Real Estate General

Musical
Instruments

738 2nd AVE. GALLIPOLIS

IN nv••~"" VAC.rTION
Here is your chance to
weeks - a
month- 3months- 6 months. or as.tongasyou wantto.
In your mobile home in SUNNY FLORIDA. Fully equipped,
even with a color TV. located approx. 20 miles N.E. of
Tampa. Buy this, then pack your car with the clothes you'll
need and go. spend the warm winter in Florida. Phone now
for details.
H260AI

JUDY DEWITT, BROKER ..... ..... .. 446-8147
J. Merrill Carter ........................•......... 379·2184
Jeannie Tolliver ...... ......... .. ........... .. ... 446-8006
Cathy Wray ................. ... ... .. , ........ ..... 446-4255
Sa~ Hoffman ........................ ... .. ....... . 379·2449
Tammy DeWitt ............................. .. .. 441-0703
Patt1 Hawk ............ ... .. ....................... 446-1967

PH. 446-7699 or 446-9539

LEADINGHAM lEAL ESTATE

.

\

Don

C44&amp;:fi·z~r·

Real Estate General

Plono CMie c-010, oxoolllnl
condition, mull oolll 114-3711-

2230.

ForSale
orTr•

For Sola: TurlloJII &amp; Robblto.
Would IIIIa to IIOdolor chick-.

IIWIIII2•.

,.,.

f ~1m Suppltes

Farm Equipment

Tt= "'

PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS ONE! Large
log home can be purchased wrth 162 acres or 2
acres. This home offers 4 BRs, 3 baths,
equipped kitchen, LR, FR, 2 fireplaces, heat
pump/cent. air (backup system), oversized 2
car attached garage. Frontage on Raccoon
Creek.

MINI FARI - Located on Bulavtlle·Porter
Rd. - 13.44 acres and a nice one story home
With 3 BR~ 2 baths, LR, kitchen, FR, Dr, carpet,
oil and electric heating, 4 car unattached ine·
tal garage, barn, approx. 4 acres fenced pasture.

oolllnl oondhlonloi'!,IOO; 81,11

. _ 11 lnoh
"L~IO; h.
..... lfll0.110-441-lll04.

Jolin Dooro o110 look Hoo,
$1000 o r - - · 1'14-001-

~.

4110 John Dooro 12,f0!1. 120
Jllhn .,_. 12,100. ""'" .....
tildo llvo PTO ond PS.
3j)4.0A-11157.

.,.

...... Hoa: good - · 11110.

54
lAY
WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR Newer all brick home iust five minutes from ALL REMODELED AID WAITING JUST FOR
liCE HOlE FOR THE &amp;lOWING FAMILY·downtown. 3 BRs, 3 bath&amp;. great room, fam~y YOU- Five minutes from town on St. Rt. 588.
Green township near Centenary. Bi-level home
room, 2 car attched garage, heat pump/ce·nt. Very nice home offers 2/3 BRs, LR, k~chen ,
offers 4 BRs, 2 baths, LR. kitchen w/range, re·
Call for trig., IM, dispt., oven, FR, gas hea~ attached ' air. city utilrties.
bath, new •inyl sidmgand insulation, city uhli·
more information.
garage, situated on approx. one-hall acre. ·
$'.!!,5001 -This A-frame home oners 3 bed· ties and city schools.
21l 'lCRES. lORE OR LESS, HUNTINGTON
rooms, II&gt; baths, LR, kitchen w~h sto•e and
OWNERS HAVE DONE A LOT OF WORK AIIO
TOWNSHIP - Brick home offer$ 6 BRs, 2 AnENTfON INVESTOISIII Nice home located 10 relrigl!l'ator, electric heat, part basement. NOW YOU CAN GO THE BENEFITS - Five
baths, eat·in kitchen, LR, FR. elec. and wood town on 2nd Ave., owner has mo•ed to a new Hannan Trace School District. .69 acre.
minutes to lown, 3 BRs, 2 blths, lR, kitchen,
hfat cellar house, log bam, sheds, frontage on home and wants this one sold. 3 BRs, LR. Kit., $25,000 - Approx. 1 acre along St. Rt. 588
nat. gas hea~ vinyl siting. $39,900!
DR, bath. garage. Priced 10 the 20's.
Raccoon Creek and Little Raccoon. ·
1400 ~. of frontage). Smau home offers 2 BRs,
PRICE REDUCED TO $65.0001- Beautilull·
AFFORDABLE LIVIIG..'.$31,000 - 3 BRS.
bath, LR. k1tchen. mobrle home. pad on pro_P shaped bric~ All rooms large. Eal·in k~chen
I~ baths, LR, kitchen, DR, gas lumace, car· $19,900- HOlE AND 1.686 ACRES, 1/L in
erty.
.
formal dining, LR w/FP, 3 BRs, 1~ baths, at:
pet. 24x24 unattached garage, just oulsife of Springfield Twp. Home offers 2 BRs, LR.
13.2
ACRES.
1/L
NEAR
IIEIGS.MINE
N1!ached
garage.
,
kttchen, bath.
town.
Older two story home with •inyl siding. Storm 1$9,500-17.5 ACRES VACANT lAND- Perry
119.7 ACRES, HARRISON TWP. - Home on 2.4 ACRE TliACT - COMIEICIAL SITE windows. Two small barns.
Twp., Symmes Creek bottom land. Some hill. To·
properly w~h 3 BR, bath, lR, kftchen, FR. located on Upper Rl. 7 across from the new
bacco base.
.
large blrn.
.
_ .. . . !!hopping center.
NEAR GAGE.. .. Perry Twp. - 26.624 acres 15 ACRE LOTS FOI SALE..GrMn Twp .. c~~
lEW LISTING- KIIIEOI DR.•- Ranch style ATTENTION HUNTERS -. 35 acres in Cia~
m/1, barn and 2 springs on property.
schools, Fairfield Vanco Rd. area,.
home, 3 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, lull basement. Twp. Small frame house on property, 2 water
!Jps. $15,000.
BUILD A NEW HOlE OR PUT YOUR IOBfLE
HOllE
HERE - 29.8 acres m/1 vacant land.
..
3 ACRE UIT FOR SALE - Located along SR
Fronta~e
on St RL 160. Rural wlfllavailable
vr..an
lAID
011
IT.
511
CLOSE
TO
TOWN
160 in Charolais Acres.
$16,900.
.
.

~..

OFFICE ·992·2886
HOME 992·5692

-IF,.,..,., 1100 Howw
II.IIIO.,;.,:o MF Dlooll $2,8115;
1000
J ---.
1011. l'ord U, • owDlac. 2 -Wll
Plllnlw
Fllionoo. 1-.4122.
11111 Ford mo. 110 hoUra. n·

MEMBER FDIC

SPRING
MACHINERY AUCTION

· - t h e -.

central he.t l air, ebove •ver•Re.

.,,'Y

N. 210, IIOOLEPOIInt e
3 BR, LR. DR, ijl. , l ~ bllh. uli l~ !Ill..
lull buemtJ11. 2 1:11 ga rage, fenced
yard, 2 lots. See it today.

.•

Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab Center

61

location: DAY BuildltW on Rt. 35 Bypan
Conslanlllltlls llk111 fro111 10:00 to ':GG day of salt.
NEW AID USED MERCHAIIDISE
Tns: Cash or Clltck with propw I.D.
DOOR PRIZES
AuctionAr: Dnld a-. Lie. 4596
illlllpolis, Ohio 614-44&amp;-nSO
LiCIIIslll and Bonded II Stitt of Ohio
Not Responsible for Accidltlls or Loss of Property
Wou141 You Llkt to Han a S.lt
Callllct Dnld Boas 614-446-nSO

.
I
I:.=1::· =~==t=:l':,=I:.
u
I
e
I
.
II! II

S. !10- .IOOL,! POII- &amp;lilly,
3 BR. LR, OR. M., 1~11 1&gt;11ement

RAN NY BLACKBURN, BROKER 448·0001 '
RUTH OOOOV, ASSOC. 379-2828

STAR

BOGGS AUCTION SERVICE
PUBLIC AUCTIQN CONSIGNMENT SALE
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 7 P.M.

game?~

t,cncrs

&amp; Lrvestock

Public Slla
&amp; Auction

li~eg~

EOE

Examine our
.. two-step" mortgage
before you buy.

1

I I' I· I

.

8locll, brick, olpoo, wln...~_ntolo, ·lie. ·Cloudo WinlifO, - Orondo, OH Col e14-

59

8

1·

."Would you
seats for
SUrpl..ilaArm~. Donlm, Ro!rtol,
the ·
the ticket agent
camou ~. Corllorl clothing. . I
Jr. Dooorl C.moutlogo, Dooorl ...__._...__.___.........__....._......_..,. smiled. Angry at the long time he
Slorm AnnJ Potclloo, Booldo ,---.....;_ _.....__ __,· stood in line, the man sardastically
Sli~llo Pool Ollloo, ~ Sol,
-.t:JO Pll,
;m.
,A B H 0 R R
replied, " Nr;,&gt;, I want to sit right.

'

..•••
Rhonda Dailey, Director of Nursing .
VMH Skilled Nursing Facility
',.....
or

' U .N M I D S

DrY*8hoppl. 114 ... 2144.

····1~

Miscellaneous

Merchandise
IUI.DINDS, INC.
""""""" ....-"'''" 1903

13233

u . 180

Alltlan( Ky. 41101·1939

Call Tall Fr• Morton, Ill.
1

.............. ,,_1_1
206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTTIE S. TURNER, BROKER
MIDDLEPORT-BRADBURY RD.- Countthe Extras- "Just
a glance and you will know rt's a commun1tv where oeoole
care." A newer ranch style home with 3 bedrooms, above
ground swimming pool, lighted basketball court, 2 storage
buildin~ dog kennel. and a woodburning sto•e.
All FOR $48,500
..
MINERSVILLE- Spectacular view of the River- Would be
great as a rental property or astarter home. A3 room home
w1th a balh and 2 lots.
$10,000 .'
LANGSVILLE- A lour car garage on SR 124. Was used be·
lore as amechaniC's garage and alittle over one·fourth acre .
ONLY $1.500
PEACH FORK RD.- Showcase krtchen, built-in dtshwasher.
Jenn·Air range. oven. and mtcrowa•e. Three bedrOf!mS. full
basement. and lots of big nice trees lor shade s1Hmg on 2
prett~ acres.
$34,000
POMEROY - Lincoln Hts. - "Cule asabuHon -Neat as a
pin" - describesthis lwo bedroom home with an equipped
kilchen. carport, and part basement Has afloored aftiC and
50x288 loot lot.
$25.000.
MIDDLEPORT - H1storical looking corner slore. Has 6
apartments ~P and another store down. Start your own busi·
ness. Has lotsto room and has an income. CALL FOR MORE
DETAILS.
FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION- Unusual ·.Unique · DifferentOiscribes this octagon shaped house that has 3 bedrooms
that opens to the outdoors. llas 10 sels ol sliding glass doors
lhat opens onto either an upper deck or lower deck. The
woods in back are cool &amp; private in the summer. Has alull
basement and 2 baths. MUST SEE TO BELIEVE 159,900

D. C. MltaJ Soles. Inc.
Connlli:lurg. Inc. 117518
S!*lilllzlng in Polo
euMdlngo.

GIGANTIC PRICE REDUCTION!
124 ACRE FARM
·very nice remodeled 3·4 bedroom home, lull ba·
semenl. living room. eaHn kitchen, FA gas heal·
/cenlrai air. 57'x120' melal building, barn, tool
shed. tie house, 4 ponds,lobacco base. Producing
gas wells which pro•ides gas to dwelling. An extre·
mely nice !arm. Owner means busmess has low·
ered price over $50,000.00. Clll at once!
·
#2902

RT. 33- About half to Alhen~- Brand new co~struclion .
Has a spac10us. beaumul 2\4 acre lot krlchen w1t.h Island.
din10g roo(ll with atrium door, and a large ll•mg room. Has 2
bedrooms and 2 balhs downslairs, and could have 2 bed·
rooms and one bath upstairs. Owner willlinish upstairs lor a
little more money.
lUST S£E THIS ONE $70;500
LETART - llaintenan" FrM Exterior- 4 bedrooms, 2
baths 3 silting porches. and a dimng room. Nice big level
yard. 'Fenced area with barn lor animals, and aIitle hou!e for
children
'
·
. •
$42,500
LETAIT- lilt You'll Love II- Just righlfor a family. Has 4
bedrooms dining room, neo~ knchen cabinets, new range.
and entire home has·been remodeled nicely - inside and
out. Also has a view of the nver.
$23,900

HAVE YOU BEE~ OVERLOOKING
THIS ONE? ·
Then call today lo see this extremely nice 3 bed·
room. 2 bath ranch. full basement, famtly room,
electric heat pump. Approx. I acre lawn. And so
much more. Call today lo see this one! 12908

YOU'LL KNOW THIS IS A GOOD BUY!! When ~ou
see this well Ia ken care of mobile home nestled on
2 acres more or less ollreed surroundrni!SI P•iuale
setting. 2 bedrooms.! iVill$ r00111. bath w/ garden
tub and eat·in kachen. WON'T LAST lONG!
$14,000.
#2885

HOME + 70 ACRES M/l
I \\ story o~er home, partially remodeled. 3 bed·
rooms, li•ing room, balh. Some markelllble tim·
ber. Priced below $45.000.00.
12889·8

SNUGGLE UP
With the warm feeling of home with this cozy·!
story remodeled home. 2 bedrooms, living room.
partial basement, extra nice kitchen. In CIIY con·
venience. Call today!
~2872
RIO GRANDE AREA
Remodeled 3 bedroom very anractive home tn·
eludes fnll basement. approx. 30 acres land that
borders Raccoon Creek. Small wooded lot, pas·
ture land, tobacco base and good size barn rn
good condition. Please call for more delatls!

112871

THE PRICE fS RIGHT ON THIS
3 bedroom. •inyl sided ranch. l 1h baths lull
di•ided basement large co•ered palio, carport. 2
car garage. approx. \! ac. lawn. Crty water and
sewer and gas. Priced at $44,900.Call today for an
appointment.
# 2197
NEW FARII LISTING!
49 acres olland including lwo developed home·
sites. One. 1979 mobile home 14'x70' purchased
by present Qwners. The o)her homesite has elec·
tric. running water and aerobic septic system all
1n place. Farm consists ol approx. 17 tillable
acres, 15 pasture acres. 17 acres ol woodland, to·
bacco base and stocked pond for recrealton. Let
us show you this one.
j2903

YOU CAN BRAG ABOUT THIS
Gorgeous bnck home. Juslassoon as you lake one .•
look, you'll be sold. 3bedr!!Oms.lormal dinin_gand
liv1ng rooms, 3 baths. family room. fully equrppoo
kitchen. 2 car garage and separate 24 x36'·
garage, pond, pri•ate setting. Exceptional!~ nice
home with alot of amenities plus over 4acres. C~y
schools.
N2857
NEW LISTING!
EXECUTIVE RETREAT!
1.975 acres m/1 provides privacy and seclusion
lor this magnificent quality custom home. 3baths.
ii•ing room, family room, formal dtntng. master
bedroom w/dressmg room, walk·ln closets,secur·
ity system and so many more amenrtr~s too.larJe
to mention. located wrthin the c1ty pf Gal~~~~

CUTIE PIE!
$24,900.00
A·lrame consisting of I bedroom. bath. living
room, kllchen and balh. Situated on approx. 30
acres. Just pertect for weekend getaways! Ideal
hunting area!
#2889-A

SPACIOUS 2 STORY BRICK HOME
OVERLOOKING OHIO RIVER
4 bedooms, I\\ baths, above ground pool and
much. much more. In fact..another small house
that could be used as.a rental. Small and cnzy 2
bedroom and bath, kitchen, li•ing room, dinrng
area. Both for less than $70,000. Cali loday for an
appo101menl.
H2900
SCENIC SPLENDOR
Elite lrame and stone chalet located at Charolais
Hills lake, beautifully situated on o•er 2acres. 3
bedrooms, living room, dininf area. lamily room.
full basement, deck overtoo ing lake. Anached
garage + separate 2 car garage. Atruly gorgeous
home with a lot of exira amenities.
12191
ACREAGE - 35 WEST AREA
Ideal development property. Over 100 acres.
Land lays well. pa~iall~ wooded. Call for complete
listing!
·
N2812

BEAT THE RENT RACE!!
With Ihis 2 or 3 bedroom home. Remooeled, vmyl
s1dmg, slorage building. I ~ acres phis excellent
garden area. Tobacco allotment. Raccoon Town·
ship. Unbeatable price. $29.000. C.tl'today!
12195
OWNER WOULD CONSIDER
SELLIIIG ON IANO CONTRACT!
Approximate)y 42 acres srtuated m Huntmgton
Township, rural waler.
N2817
BUDGET PRICED! $22,900.00
Well maintained I story home and .9 of an acre
lot. 2 bedrooms, living room, bath, eat·in kitchen.
newer shingle roo!. Call for complete listing!
N2114
RODNEY PIKE AREA
You'll find this 4\\ acre mil tracl of vacant land.
Rural water available. All land ~ cle~red and Iiiia·
ble.
12174

.,

�•

' f

•

~~

Autos for Sale

71

Autos for Sale

1812 lluda RX7, rod, ounroor, 1... Topoz, . 4 eyllnd«,
air, AMJFU Cll...ttl , lutt.r In- automade wH.h air, t7,000 mlln,

tenor, power wln®we, 5 speed. $2.100. 11+2!1eo1270.
614-1149-2130.
11e1 Yofvo.. eun-root, 111 Jeatt.r
1885 CUtillO Suprorno. Eocol. lnlorlor, I ' opood, 1 - . 11:1,000
mlloo_._$5,500. nogo4ioble, 304lonl Condlllon. 114-2-117.
882.;:Jtrt,
1HS Bukk Century, auto, 1lr,
1111 F~ Touruo, · Laoded, ,
tin,
""'!HI AM·Flol, ""'.~!;: $3,100.
, _..552:
.
41,000 mi H , $5,100. ~

2110.
181111

VW Ouontum Bluo, 4dr, lfGnl
whool drlvo, AC, c.-MtoLElcollor!l ccnllllon. Sotlouo 11uyon,

Cond. J5,000. 614-446-4311.

Call-e.a:!CI.

Buick !lOlJOI, 2 dr., HD~
8,
auto,
PS1P
,
AM!FII,C,oo., 44,000 mlloo. EJ&lt;c.

71

Autos lor Sale

ncet..,.

~ Dcdge 100 PS, AC. Ctuloo
Control,
oonclllott.
Good VO!' ........ 13,200; 1110
Dodgo .-_,, -.._ aood, I
cytlridor, . . . ~ .

Sccltye Uood C.., wv. '1111 I oU,... 'IIHoF.;;j
E1&lt;:oot t2,681. '15 CololiltiY
Clullc 12.1N. '15 Ford El·
$1,1 .5. 'II ·LTD Ford

!Jtltlonwagan 12.315. ........,..
cuoY 11,111. 1:00 till

1:00, Sundip 1:00 till 41:00, !04la-11'152.

71

11170

Autos for Sale

2 Sl- -

11111 ~

72 TruCks for Sail

=·~=-=···yt.

*· -

71
Colal!no. 4 mlloOae:
ond- runo good.-

woWd OOillldlr QUI'I on t ....ln.
$710. 114-R1·7170.
Catweo 11 11100.

...... -10.

a- ......

;

March 17, 1991 :.:

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

Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel
71

.

.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport~lllp)Jia, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

holt .........

......... · - 1113- o;arlo,

n · Trucks for Sail

-

1Ne -

oilalno. -

$1,100. ~

-~~.

tm OociDo 111an d':fGo.O"""
· 1000
.......
814.,..
li a.m.•
I p.m.

75 aoat. l Motors

ror sare

R.ongor, ..............

~

Homa

Home
lmprovementa

lnJoallon; ·
=-~---Jon.

&amp;e -

=l'ick-up wllh

T7302ond
'*·
,,......

- -·

Improvements

:::--:--~---76

~ (?/md~a?1fM7M­
.

Co. AON EVANS ENTER,.,ISES;
Joe.._, OH 1-.a:rT..IZI. .

Auto Parts &amp;

f!On'o TV SIMco, "-'"'lzlna
In lonlllt -rog lltOiil
alhor
·
collo,..,._ -lro.
wv

Acceaaorles

Nogoll-,

Ho:m:e~· =====r====~R~e~ai~E~......
-~-~e~Ge~ne~ra~l==:==::=:=:=:=~::::~~~===
Real Estate Ganeral

Soplio Tllllc Pull'llll.ntl hO_..llolllo

luOI

Real Estate General

~

S1,1nday Tlmea-Sentlnei- Page-07

Far 8010: 1N7P'onl T...,.. 2dr,
loodod. .......... o~~~p~nv, zv.ooo
·ccndltfan,
$3,100."""'·
1--41411.

84

Electrical &amp;
~lrlgegnlon

RES IDENTIAl · INVESTMENTS · COIIlRCIAl · FARIS

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806 .

;104-f1W:IIIII Ohio 114-141o2414,

tully

'lEALTOR'

:n~IONeL $uV.U MAliS THE DlffiiiiKI
VIRGINIA SMITH , BRO KER. 388·8826
DIAN CALLAHAN , .fiEALTOR . 266 ·6251'
EU NICE NIEHM, REALTO R. 448· 1897
RUTH BARR. REAl TOR, 448· 0122
LINDA SKIDMOR E, REALTO R, 379·2'881
OE&amp;..J~(IH ICITJS , R EA~ TO R. 4U &amp;BOa

~neral

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

~~tf@!~A, (#,u;~
32 loc111t Street. Gallipolis

.

446-1066

@
....,...'""
'"'""·"''

'

Real Estate General
Real

·l:B·

. LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR. 448·680a
MICHAIL MILLER, AA OCIATE. 448·110t .
KJO . • Ill I.AIIO CONTRACT lo nah l buy", lnv!:tlmenJ

m
IU\IOOI

PfOil'rty, IPJrtment bulkfiO£ hn liwe uin ~s. good cuh
I tretl l tlcatiOfl. Clll for 'i etii ~S ~
I I
.

"" Von
..... lor lnfor·
.........
~71111.
. 1m .._ 4JO. 314 ton, 4 . ......, llh hftch, ti,IOO.

, Ken Morgan, Raaltor/Brokar- 446·097'
Allen C. Wood, R..ltor- 446·4623
,.
Mote Canterbury, RHitor- 446· 3408 ·

.
~·--

.

1Ho ....... Ccomlnolll 1100

. ~~~&amp;t.'lou
SPRING
AREA ....
3 BRs, I Y.. baths; living room , dtmng area, full basement; gas heat, carport, city uttl itie~ and ctty schools.
Call for more mformation.

1111 Honclll CBIOOT, 14,000
ntiiM, dual onrt.d e••

spt.l~

.

1117 ........ loo, 4 ..... rock
lfGnl ond - . tuoo. 30411241117.
'
CillO _
... Groot Condition
... 441 0104.
'

oa

REDUCED - REDUCED - REDUCED - NOW YOU
OWN THIS COUNTRY HOME AT THIS REDUCED PRICE-~
story brick home nestled onapprox. 1.485 acres ol pn~acy.
You and th 1s gorgeousfireplace. Noworry about space etther ,
- this beauty has 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, famtly room WJth
woodburner and
features that can make thts
•A"'" &gt;uorc• HOM[ " fat you. CAll FOR AP·

'

..'

EXTRA NICE HOME -2 , I bath, unfinished up·
statrs bedroom, garage, carport, storage building.

BARGAIN AT 139,500
CALL 992-3014

Real Estate General

'• . t '

ER

RA~NY

RUTH GOODY,

Real ES1ate General

•

379·2628

Real Estate General

' .

NEW LISTING: 3 bedroom brick. Situaled on I acre, 5 miles
from Gallipolis on Bulaville Road. Kyger Creek School DIS·
trict. 1,440 Slf. ft. Priced in lhe 60's.
3-4 RDROOII BRICK RANCH, sHual&amp;.. .
. .
view of the Holzer Hospital. 24'x36' ba1or f. acres,.,.dhln
utilized as a2 car garage and storage. 2 olher oUIIICt"-be1ne
QUALilY HOME wtth many amenHies. 2 lull baths and 2 h~r
baths, den, formal living room and dmmg room, 2 WBFP, en·
tertainment kitchen ...QUALITY THROUGHOUT.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN VINTON - 6 rm. hoose loc.ated
along Main Sl Rent or live in . Presently grossing $2,100.00. •
Buy now for $14,000.00.

SPRING IS COMING!! View this awakening ol Mother Nature
from this barn style home in Dexter, Ohio. Surrounded b!
Natural Beauty and fresh country atr. MANY OTHER GREAT
FEATURES' $56,000.00.
NEW LISTING - located on landaker Rd. this property has
it all! 49+ acres ol ground with a 1987 ..,.. l4'x80' .mobtle
home. Here arejust a few of the added fealures to th1s prop·
erty- Dishwasher, rehig., range, fireplace, atr condtttomng,
All furnitute tncluding TV, VCR. You can have tmmedtate
possession of this extraordinary place!! So call for your show·
ing TODAY! ASKING $54,900.00.

Living room, dining room kitchen, bath, with enclosed
front and back porch with 1.9 acre. Callfor more infor·
mation .
GREEN ACRES- Two lots. !large level home ite . 140ft. x
148ft., city water. Green School. Good localton. Pnced nght
at $10,000.00.

2 LOTS located al the junction ol Route 1'60 and Ewington
Road. Reduced to ~'all price. $5,500..
.

HENRV E. CLElAND ..................:.................... 992·~~:~
JEAN TRUSSELL.. ................ ........................... 949·
JO HILL ·;·... ,...... ,.............. ............ .. .............. 985: 446
225;
OFFICE ........................ ...... ,,, ...... .. .......... .l.. .. 992

STOP

Real Estate General

· Realty

'446•3636

. ROiluT D.

BR- .

ASSOC. 446- 2174
twlr p, PLOrJI

assoc.

BY OUR OFFICE FOR A COMPLETE
BROCHURE OF OUR LISTING.S.

Real Estate General

·canaday
446·· 3313

PORTEIBROOK SUBDIVISIOII - THIS 3 BEDROIJ'M, Ill
BATH HOME HASLOTSOFCHARM, FIREPlACE WITH WOOD·
BURNING INSERI IN LIVING ROOM, ATTACHED 2 CAR GAR·
AGE, IN-GROUND POOL WITH COVERED PATIO. $68,000.
PERFECT FOR HORSES - PASTURE AREA IS lARGE EN·
OUGH FOR RIDING RING. MODERN 3BEDROOMS, COUNTRY
KITCHEN FAMILY ROOM WITH WOODBIJRNER. 2 CAR CON·
CRETE BLOCK GARAGE. OVER 9 ACRES. $49,900.
ntiS COlY CGnME IN EUREKA HAS TO BE THE BEST BUY
ON THE MNIJ(£T! 3 ROOMS PLUS UTILITY IIQ{lM AND BATH.
JUST REDUCED TO $6.500.
'

"EW LISTING - Fix it up and re~ell or rent out this 3 bed·
room home. Latge lot Paved streel.' $19,900
#327

WANTING TO BUILD? NEED LAND· FOR MOBILE HOME? OR JUST GOOD HUNnNG
We hove several tracts af lond to suit most any need.
Just call one of our ogeitts today for help in locot~ng land that's righUor you • .
LET IIATUIE BE YOUR GUIDE -lo lhJS country
1,-·.~•vnoo on 13.9 acres. Privacy, four bedrooms,
: -n•m•"l room and one car attached garage are just
of the fealures thai you will enjoy. Pnced at
: :$50,000.
#501

· 101 ACRES - HANNAN TRACE ROAD, $29,000.
ACREAGE - ROUTE 218 BARN, $28,000.

YOUR TIME ..:. You hav.e to go in to
: ati1orec:i'ate this lovely 3 bedroom ranch. ·living
fireplace, d1ning room, eat-in k~chen
2 car garage. I acre lol
'
'
1304

MOBILE HOME HOOKUP,

67 ACRES- ROUTE 325 - 3 BEDROOM HOME , 2 BARNS,
NICE lAND! $38,000.
78 ACRES- ROAO FRONTAGE, TOBACCO BASE, OHIO TWP.
EXCELLENT BUY AT $32,000.
NEAR RIO GRANDE - 45 ACRES, BARN, A·FRAME CABIN,
SHOLTZ 2 BR MOBILE HOME. BEAUTIFUL LAND. $50,000.
(lfl acr1111 approlillllle)

KYGEI Cl££1 AIIU- NICE MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOME.
LARGE·COUNTRY KITCHEN, DEN W/WOOOBURNING STOVE.
2 CAR GARAGE, 9 ACRES, H~RRY!n THE PRICE IS $49,000.
LOTS Of lAID -LOTS OF HOME AND ONLY $58,000-4
BEDROOM 3 BATH HOME HAS FORMAL OINING, COVERED
DECK, 2 cAR GARAGE AND OVER 9 ACRES. FENCED PAS·
.IURE, POND. SMALL BARN..
:

011 IARKET - 2 bedroom mobile home
: with covered toncrele porch. located on a large
- corner lot in Rio Grande. $23,500.
#402

NEW LIMA RD. - Ageill owned. Double lot
tanch home, family room with fireplace, equipped kitchen,
full basement, 2 car attached garage, l6'x32' mground pool
with privacy fence. Asking $55,000.
.
#308
'
NEW LISTING - Butld great childhood memories for your
children in this spaciou s ran ch home siluated on apptox. 2
acres where fruit, nuts. berries abound. Attached 2 car gar·
age, full unlinished basement with afireplace. Portland
Asking $55,000.
'

THE· PICTURE OF HAPPINESS!! - You'll find it
: h,.e when you make this house your home. Ideal
· lf...,borhood for lhe whOle family - close to
! sljoppin£, hospital, elc., and perfect for the kids.
• Very well kept and decorated 3 bedroom bi·level
; wjt!J a very nice family room area. 3 ballls will help
· YDII from bumping into ·one another every
: morning. Deck/brick palio in back make relaxing
a breeze. Nearly 2200 sq. ft. of living space
; C!lmforted with gas heal and . central air. 2 cat
attached garage. Give us a call loday because
, we'd love to show you this one! $82.500. 1207
INVESTMEIIT PROPERTIES ON STATE STREETThis is your· opportunrty to purchase 6 rental
· properties ·near downtown that conststently has
• 100% occupancy. This is thelirsltimeontheop.en
marllet in many years. Generally, the properties
consist olaltact of 4 single fam1ly houses, and 2
• dupleKes located on comer lots. As His impossible
• lo provide aU the benelrts in an.ad, please call for
; complete information.
11408

SUMNER ROAD -Is
.. ~h bath, living and
age, storage building. All
only $46,900.
'

.
'

flEW LISTING - New' modular home. Family 10om, dining
room 3 bedooms, 2 baths, sttuated on 1.54 acres m/ ltn 01·
ive Townshtp. look at this one today. Asking only $49,500.

#309

AlMOST COUNTRY- Happy living starts here in
· this well-cared for three bedroom brick ranch.
There are 2~ baths, a 2 car garage and a large
healed workshop lor the craftsman in the Jamily.
Take a look loday. $64,000.
·
#507

, ..
PRICE REDUCED!! OWNER WANTS IT SOLD I - II
country is the place for you, then don'l miss
seeing lhis 1988 "Mansion" sectional home.
Nature is your neighbor onthissecluded one acre,
nicely landscaped yard. 1500 sq. fl. of living
space. 3 bedrooms, master bath features ·a
"garden tub" with shower. Dining area and eat·in
kitchen. Patio doors open onlo a large wood deck. ·
Your opportunity to get back to the great ouldoors
for only $40,000. Southwestern schools. #807
EXCELLENT BUSINESS POSSIBILITIES!! - lo·
caled in high traffic area on St. Rt. 7 with 80'
fro~tage and )80' deep. Includes a residencewith
2 or 3 business rooms and 2 mobtle homes. Drilled
well and 2 septic lanks. County water available.
Owner is veryilnxious to sell. Asking $54,900, but
would consider any reasonable offer.
#203
VERY PRIVATE &amp; WOODED! - Perlect setting to
enjoy lhis newly constructed log home. largeIron~
porch to enjoy cool summer breezes; attractive
woodburner and hearth to warm your soul on
lhose cold winter nights. Approx. 2,300 sq. ft. of
comfortabl e living space includmg 3 bedrooms
(room for 4th), very attractive country kitchen,
livtng room with pine ceiling, newly linished fami.ly
room and 211 baths. large 2 car garage wtth
overhead storage. Approx. 5 years old. $89,900.
#215
80 ACRE FARM - Guyan Township - Wells Run
Road &amp; St. Rt. 218- Beauliful home site. l6·18
acres tillable. Mineral nghls. Some timber.
Outstanding barn for lobacco, cattle, horses. some
bays with concrete. Concrete drive through. Good'
water supply' $60,000.
#804
flEW LISTING IN GREEN TOWNSHIP - Resling
on a knoll overlooking Raccoon Creek Valley, lhis
1.75 acre lot provides an outstanding view year
around: Here's whars included: 4 bedrooms, 2
· bathS\ living room, family 1oom w1th fireplace,
eal·in kilchen, 2 car garage. PLUS inground
swimming pool. PLUS separate 2 car garage with 2
bedroom apattment over top. Priced to sell at
$89,900.
.

mo

PRICE REDUCED- MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE
- You'll agtee with the owner that th is is an
outstanding place to live, once you see all il hasto
offer. We're offering approx. 2900 sq. ft. of very
well decorated and livable living space wrth more
room available should you need it. 3 bedrooms,
cozy den .,.illl warm fir,eplace and oak lloors,
oversized kttchen wtlh ad1acenl screened·mpatJO,
large hving room wtith very attracttve fireplace, 2
lull and 2· ha~f baths. Garage parking lor 3 cars
plus load s of storage and several outbu ildings. 5.5
acres of ground that provide excellent pnvacy
once you see it. Price .cut.to $155,000. Own er
moving lo town. Wants 1t sold! Gtve us a call!
)
#212

THIS OPPORTUNITY WON'T I,AST LONGI- 118
acres, m/l ·,n Ohio Township. Potenlial home .
snes. ~nvacy ·assured for your own home' A
beautHul panoramic v1ew of the Ohio River Valley.
Access from old Rt. 7 and Hannan Tr~ce Road.
Own your own hunling ground al $148 an acre
- $17,500.
#803
COUNTRV ATMO,SPHERE - 2.8 acres, m/ 1. .
Ranch style 3 bedroom home in Rio. school
district. Owner will finance to qualilted buyer.
Very neal home, ~real for st~rter.s: Livtng room,
dining room, family room wtlh fireplace, eat·m
kilchen , I ll baths. Carport N1ce flallot wtth lotsof
privacy. 50's. Please call today.
#204 ·

We Need Listingsffl
Wiseman Real Estate

NOTICE
·
HASKINS TAVERN ON OOURT STREET WAS RECENTLY DA·
MAGED BY FIRE. WE ARE STIU OFFERING THE PROPERTY
FilR SALE. PRICE HAS BEEN DRASTICALLY REDUCED FOR
QUICK SALE!
BIDW£ll - $21.000 - THISOO
. UlD BE AN EXCELLENT IN·
VESTMENT PROPollY. 2 BEDftOOM HOME WITH 3 NICE
LEVEL LOTS. RTTER LOOI&lt;, THIS AREA IS GROWING FAST!
:

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL- We have a ,
bedroom , 2 bath home localed in a oes,tralll•
neighborhood. This comfortable home hasa large
sunroom, garage, 100x160 Jot. New on the
market. $59,900.
#403

•

•,•
REDUCED TO $37,500 ~ On Kerr Bethel Road. 2 bedroolll. •
home wHh family room, lots of furnishm£; large 2 car gar&lt;
age, separate apartment that rents for $250.00 a month. All
this on l·plus acres. Owner needs to sell!
11306
.

FARMS AND VACANT lAND
25 ACRES- HANNAN TRACE ROAO, $1 5,000.

IUUTIFUL COUIITRY SIDING - NICE 3 BEDROOM
RANCH HOME HAS FORMAL DINING ROOM, FULL BASE·
MENl, 3 CAR GARAGE, LARGE TOBACCO BARN, EQUIPMENT
BUILDING. APPROX. 56 ACRES. $60,000.

' AND
ACRE LOT

WOODlAND DR. - Owners have purchased anolher home ..
and wantBold this nice starter home or fixer-upper, with 3
bedrooms, family room, utility, unattached garage. $39,900..'•
Open to offers.
·
11279,

68 ACRES II/LIN OHIO ,TWP. Frontage on St. Rl. 7 wrth
some timber. Priced at $10,000.

79 ACRES MORE O.RLESS located in Ohio Twp. The property
has some timbet .Call for more infotmation.

HEADS WILL TURN to take a
bedroom recently ' redecorated home lhat is
brimming wHh comfort. Dining will always be
pleasant in the attractive formal dining room, 3
bedrooms, nearly new carpe~ lull house attic fan,
enclosed ~bath with shower in full basement. Gas
hea~ central air. Don't be disappointed by a sold
sign. See this one now! Kyger Creek schools.
$60,000.
#815

124 ACRES lfl FARM w~h 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs, living rm ., '
dming and k~chen wrth some farm equtpmept located on
Lincoln Ptke. Asktng only $69,900.
. #2n

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodn ey Village II. Call tor more
information.

BUSINESS IS SO GDOD - WE'RE RUNNING OUT OF
STOCK! WE NEED LISTINGS. If you want to sell, call us
right now. Our ads aHract aHentJon. Our sales staff 1s ex·
perlenced. For best tesults call 992-2259!
INTEREST RATES AS LOW AS 6.875% Variable and 8.625
fixed - we can sell your property and we have buyers.

TRADE YOUR RENT RECEIPTS :-- for the deed to
lhis 3 bedroom ranch situated on a shady 2.42 .
acre lot 911 adead end streel. On e car garage, new
roof and deck. $27,500.
#509

•

GREEN TWP. - Is lhis brick aild vinyl sided ranch with 3
bedrooms, bath, kHchen, living room willl fireplace, gas heat. ·
rural water. All this and more on .73 of an acre m/1. Call for
appoin!trnlnl.
#282 '

NEW LISTING: 10 acres. Perry Twp. Some timber. Buy now
for $10,000.
•
6.5 ACRES WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS situated along
Garfield Ave. Site includes 2 building lots w/ city water,
sewer. Buy now for $30,000 or purchase house with lot for
$15,000.

SYRACUSE - IT'S~ DOG!! But a few bu shels of natls and a
couple ol gallon s of paint can transform thts barg11n tnto a
beauty! POSSIBILITIES GALORE! If you have a strong nght
arm - maybe lhis is for you? 2 bedrooms, bath, on a
90'1100' lot. Close to the grade school. MAKE AN OFFER
$12,900.00.

NEW LISTING- located Rt. ,
.
town, lllis is a very nice
i
.
bedroom s, 2 baths. vauked ceilings in the family
room, living room and kitchen. Flat lot, fenced in
yard. Outbuilding. $45,000.
· #205

LOCATION IS .GOOD - Close to town, 3 bedroom home,,
needs some work. Price reduced to $62,500. But owner is ·~
anxious to sell and will entertain ofter,s. ·
#289 ··:-

TWO BEDROOIIS. 2 baths, living room, dining room, krtchen
and utility room 11.012 sq. ft.) condominium. GOOD LOCA·
liON, choose your carpel color and MOVE IN NOW!! Call for
more information.

RACINE - Vacant lot - Close to schoo ls, park and
churches. Has city sewer, electric , water and gas avatlable.
$1 0,000.00.

. :.;.r'"·V4;,~· ,

CITY SCHOOLS - This JS one you have to see. A5 bedrmm,
3 bath vinyl sided ranch wilh family room, dining room, full
basement. lots ol room 12x20 and BxiO .decks. All th is and
more on 1.5 acres m/1. Only $46,000. Call today lor your ap·
poinlment.
#324

2 BEDROOM HOME LOCATED ON.WATSON ·ROAD -

POMEROY - HERE IS THE HOME YOU'VE BEEN WAITING
FOR!! Newer bHevel home m great cond~ton . 2 car gatage, 2·.
3 bedrooms, equipped kitchen, centtal heat and AIC, base·
ment and has a basketball court. 3'h acres of ground located
in one of Meigs County's most desirable areas! Owner wants a
quick sale and will consider any reasonable offer.
$69,900.00
'

~raiU~&amp;~~* 16!7i.'J/-197S-1991

COUNTRY HOME - Here is 's fine a home
as you'll find . Very quiet and peaceful .setting.
Large spacious home with very large comfortable
rooms. Quahty buill brick ranch features 4 farge
bedrooms, 3 full balhs, 2 fireplaces plus indoor
BBQ. large kitchen wHh dinette plus formal dining
room ·with hardwood floors, Full, partially finished ·
basemen!, oversized 2 car garage. Huge wrap
around deck, inground pool.
11201

(614) 446-3644

David

446-9555

··

McDADE. 448·7729 . CLYDE B. WALKER. 245-5276 B. J. HAIRSTON, 446-4240

-·-

COIIto CALL '"IS AcouNTRY ESTATE - y,.,.,
-hn_d ch•m and convenience plus pre stile and pi!Jsure inan all
~.:k 3 bedrrn. ranch home~ tllp~ livint. La. LR. equippl!d
kitchln1 1~ blths. hull! fam11'¥ rm. w/woodb~t~r ninf lirMa.,.,.
entertammem: centet w/ wet bar, CO\'ered PIIIO, wood backup

fum~ce and eltc. lleat p~.~np w/ CA, attached aartce. detached
· Prtae w~a· ~. bri::k blm, in fOund
w/privacy lenct
•nd ~ unty !•attts.Privtte locltion plus 7 ec.of lind. Somethine
.!pee ~a I. See tl now!
·
•.
1546. LA•E VIEW LOtS- Cboict lots w/spectacullr view. You
will want mor.ethln one. Oak, maple, dOtwood and everrr~n
trees make this 1 suburban pat"adise. Also lob frontinl on White
Rd. U,lr lull pertCultrs calllo insQtct.

po"'

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•

':&gt;,'• ,. '

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.
I&amp;H)Inf LISTIJIB: This bet uiW
ulhomeislocaled in one ot the
most presHcious areas in Ga!j polis.LR. 4 BRs, kit w/ bar,dini.nc
aree off kit., 3 Dlths, FR, tafpet except blths and k ~.•Jenn-a~re
ranee. dishwasher •. utility rm
., 2 car,. ,.~, ~P w( instHI. elec.
heJI pump, CIA. Ctcy schools. Also 20 •30 sw1111mr1g pool. You
will w1nt to sl1n 1 con111ct right away. CAI..l. FOR AN APPT.
'•

"

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�Page-DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel
-·~ --

Pom""' IIUIIport--Galllpolle, OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv
- -- - - -

March 11, 1981

r

Manure handling rules
concern poultry iridu~try .J
•

&lt;

;•

.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) rus needed.
.
. · it's going th cost producers mOI'O'~..
Changes to Ohio's manure hanThe goal of House Bill881S to moneytomakeuseoftheproduc:L ,.
dling regulations now being con. speed ·up and strengthen the
" Some producers are able 'tQ :·
sidered by the Ohio legislal~ aim enforcemenr procesa Sll cases of sell it u fertilizer now, but iii•:
to improve the state's 'waler quali- livestock manure pollution can be questillnable as to whether ·the)"'fe, -~
ty.
corrected more quickly, Vance breaking even or not," Heaven ~ :'
But Ohio's poultry industry says. Also. the bill would offer ric!f.: says.
worries the proposed regulations expanded educati~nal, technical
'As liveStock producers, w~ try &lt; ·
will affect producers ~ abilities to and financial aSSI_stance to h~lp to be~ siC~ ofdte ~vaoo- ·
get rid of manure. .
producers meet Ohio water quality ment, Heavenridge adds. A few
" It's issue that's not going to laws.
.
abuse this and make a bad name for '
go away," saya Laity Vance, chief
Ma!lure application g~ideli~es those trying to do a. good job to'
of the Division of Soil and Water are bemg set by agronomists With protecl the Slate's waiCI' quality by
Conservation with the Ohio the Ohio Cooperative Extension properly using their manure."
:·
Department of Natural Resoun:es.
Service. The result'should deCrease · Heavenridge says the poultry ·
"We want producers to recog- the amount of nutrient. runoff, in~ustry would like to soc Ho~se ·
nize lbe nutrient value of manure improving Ohio's waler quality.'
B11l 88 addres~ other potenlta1
and SIDJl treating it as a waste prodIt should also help farmers save sources of pollubOII. such u chem- ·
uct," Vance says.
money by sbowing,ihem ~ tbey leal fertilizers and single·familyl
Vance 'says chan~es outlined in can balance manure applications septic sy~s,as well as.manure._ '
House Bill 88 are 8lllled at reduc:- with nptrients already available in
"As 1t stands now, Houae Bill
ing non-point sources of pollution. tile soil and top off any sho{lfalls 88 re~teS one part of the prob"Water pollution used to be with chemical fertilizers, Vance lem wuhout re.gulahng other '
blamed on waste from industries says.
.
parts," Heavenndge says. "We··
and municipalities," Vance says.
But poultry producers' are con· need to I~ at wlllel' quality in a
"But the majority of those sources cerned, says Jack Heaven.ridge, broade~ rash!on."
; , .
Heavenndge and Vance agree ·
have been cleaned up. Now the executive secretary of the Ohio
. focus is on landscape runoff and Poultry Association.
that poul~y producers have on.e
1
other soun:es'that can't be traced to
"With dte regulations being dis- adyanl88e m that poultry 11181!UI'C ~ ­
a tube or. pi~, and can't be treated cussed now, it looks lite we'll have dr~r than IJ!anare from ~!"me or·
as easily as point• sourees can~ ••
to use three to six times more land ' ~ operations. and so tl s more,
Currently, much of the manure · area to spread manure than we have easily transported and C'"!JJ!C!S!cd·. ,,
. from poultry and other livestock been using, " Heavenridge says.
Vance even sees ~iliues .m
operations is applied 10 crop land This means moving tile manure far- pout~ ~ucers 1eallllng liP W)th .
as fenilizer.
ther distances or increasing pro- municipalities that compost ya'rd
Many times, however, farmers .cessing to compost the manure into waste. The two types of compost ·
don't take that into account when a more stable product Either way, . could bleild well to form a better.
figuring how much chemical fertilproduct, ~ S:BYS,.
izer to apply. The .result is over- ·
'
·.
fertilization, causing nutrients such
\.
·. ·
as phosphorus and nitrogen to build
1
~
..,__,..
' up in lbe soil, which can wuh into
.
~VnR&amp;.
waterways through erosion and
,\
. You're probably well aware of your
runoff.
·
That, in turn, can cause algae
family's life insurance needs. And .
.
\
blooms and otber pollu.tion probyou probably have questions.
. ~ .....,,.....,......_\ \
.··
'~ \
lems. In extreme cases. fJSh kills
I've got a lot of answers.
'·
have occurred, Vance says.
Here at Allstate we've got
"Not enough producers lest
protection for you, your family,
their manure to determine its nutriyour children, your
ent coniCIIt." Vance says.
future,
·
··
In a 13-county pilot project, the
\ .
Why not drop in. or
Division of Soil and Water Consercall. Let's talk.
·
vation conducted more tilan 2,000
soil tests and more than 250
manure tests. Eighty percent of dte
J
MARVIN BOXDORFER
'
soil samples contained more phosAccount Agent
phorus tban the crop needed. In 16
448 S-nd Ave., #103
Allltate Life lnt ur&amp;DCe Compuy
percent of the samples, there was
Oelllpolla, OH. 45831
four times the amount of phosphoau•. &amp;14·441-1104
,,

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
rarm, reatured ·by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. lndi~lduais wishing to participate
in tbe weekly contest may do so by guessing the .
farm's owner. Just maU, or drop orr your guess
orr to the -Daily Sentine~111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
third A~e., Gallipolis,
Ohio,-45631, and you may
-

Ned....,

WaaerC..........._

· .

Farm Flashes .

Gallia Extension Office to be open
March 24 to .receive
soil
samples
·
.

BYEDWARDM. VOLLBORN ·
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
AGRICULTURE &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS .- The Oallia
county Extension Office will be
open next Sunday, March 24 from
1-4 p.m. to receive soil samples. I
hope. this will be a convenience for
those who have work schedules
that conflict with the normal office
hours of the Extension Office.
Cost for Agronomic (farm field)
samples is $5.50 each and Lawn
and Garden is $8.50 per sample.
Samples are sent to lhe research
laboratory in Woo~ter, Ohio. The
tum-a-round time has been good
this year with less.than a two week
wait. Soil samples are exceUenr
management tools that help determine need for lime and fertilizer:
Often nutrient levels are out of balance.
ln. some cases, recommendations will be less expensive that traditional programs and at the same
time increase production. Gallia
· County has a strong tradition of
using the soil sample service.
· The number of samples submitted through our office annually is
more than double the average of
other counties in southern Ohio.
With spring planting season just
aroundJthe comer, now is the time
to get this job done!
Mr. Dave Samples, County
Extension Agent in Jackson County
invite$ Gallia County farmers to
attend the Jackson Farmers' Club
meeting on Monday, March 18 at 7
p:m, at Trippie's Restaurant just
west of Jackson. Dr. Allan Lines,
OSU Extension Economist will do
a "outlook~ program. Reservations
ft!r the dinner meeting should be
made by noon Monday by calling
286-5044.
According to "Doanes's Agri cultural Report," U.S. Senator
Patrick Leahy is sponsoring a bill
that would mandate fluid milk
prices to farmers at the $l3.28
level for the rest of I991. Under'
tilis proposed bill the $10.10 price
support would hold for manufacturing mill'- Milk price stress resulted
in a 27 percent price &lt;lr&lt;ip at the

'
thlt a well-dewlaped.colony is in
the ia11aedi1te ..-.. Subterranean
tennilea -u,.·IIIM their colonies
in the IOillllll-... 11111 material that
cootaia eellulole.
Extension
"Home, Yard aad Garden Fact

farm level as of r:iecelllber 1990.
Six livestock conference~ for
Ohio youth will be llctld in J - at
the Ohio Stat~ Uninnity. Tile
·o.s.u.
Beef, Dairy, Poultry, Shoep, Swine
and Livestock Evaluation Youdl
Conference will be held simu111ne- .
ously on June 25-27. This in aood
opportunity for 4-H and P..P.A.
C111tbluecl , _ D-1
member to get a ~ of collese reselling tbe s1wa 10 institutional
life and learn more. about aaimal , investon.
.
industries. Applications are cNe by
AmonJ Olher blae -chips, Unisys
April IS. Memben who have com- wu doWD 3/8 to 5 7/8. Pepsico,
pleted their fresh104111 ,.ear of bi&amp;h which 'Mill the CICIIK 'S'ion for soda
school .or beyond thia year are eli- fownlain $CII'Yice 11 Marriott Corp.
gible. Call the ExiCillion Office for from Coca· Cola, I'OIC 718 to 33
details.
·
311. McDonald's, which said it
Warm spring days briDI tile plaYed a"-'
. ~that was 91
emergence of termlle swarmon. percent fat _ , MYIIIced 1/2 to
The presence of SwauleiS iNJi llw 34 1!2. .
.

Marlcet. •.

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WoJD811 S qUvc:twvDS

Page3

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at
t-i

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1 Seodona, 10 Pogea 25 cenia

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, · Monday, March M; 1991

A Mulllmedle Inc. Newspaper

Q.hio counties work on recycling plans
tam to district planning.
McCullough said. "Put it on the
By United Press lnlematlonal
·however, are under revision.
Tbose issues include treating fly curb and tilat was the end of it
Some 48 solid-~aste manage"One of tbe problems was that
ment districts - a new goyern- the districts had not come to any ash from incinerators, s41Ddards for · . "A.ll .the publicity. that has
mental division in Ohio - are fmn conclusions. They suggested a waste-tire dumps and iules for cer- OCCIJ!Ted with solid-waste planning
made a lot more people aware Qf
working on plans to come up with lot of al~ematives and lcind of left it . tifying landfiU mspec(9rs.
"I don't like to whine about problems with the ways we have
their solutions meet a 1988 state up in the air," said Michael
law requirement to recycle 25 per. McCullough, head of the Ohio this, but (lack of manpower), is managed our waste," he said. "It's
cent of their waste by June 24, Environmental Protection.Agency essentially the problem,'' McCul- also highli~hted the things we'll
lough said . ."Everybody who . need to dO m the future - separat1994.
division reviewing district plans.
In addition, yard waste such as
"If they can't nail that down, works on roles has a lot of other 'lng out recyclables and producing
less waste in the first place."
leaves and gras~ will be banned then the plan isn't meeting its responsibilities; too .••
The districts have authority to
from landfills after Dec. I, 1993. objectives," McCullough said. Due
Thirty-two counties are their
Also ·being prohibited will be tires, dates vary by, district, depending On build ttash-dispossl sites, including
car batttries and motor oiL
size, but six-month extensions are lapdfills, and they can raise mil- own solid-waste management dis-.
lions of dollars by levying. ~-ton !Jicts: Ashland, Auglaize, Brown,
There are 32 single-county dis- available.
tricts and 16 multi·county districts .
Some districts, however, are fees on traSh dumped in the1r land- Butler, Clar-k. Crawford. Cuya- some including up to six coun- upset with the Ohio EPA for failing fills.
hoga, Darke, Franklin, Greene,
ties - and many have already sub- to meet deadlines for adopting new · . ···It's an old cliche, but appropri- Hancock, Ha!ililton , Henry,
rnitJ.ed plans. Some o( th.ose plans, rules on a number Qf issues impor- ate- 'Out of sight. out of mind,"' Holmes, Lake, Logan, Lorain,

·-

&gt;

.

Allstate·

'' ...'

-l ·

Lucas, Mahoning, Medina, Mercer,
Miami, Montgomery, Pike,
Portage, Preble, Putnam, Richland,
Summit, Van Wert, Wood and
Wyandot
Here are the 16 multi-county
distric!§:
-Williams, Fulton, Defiance
and Paulding;
- Ottawa, Sandusky and
Seneca;
~Erie and Huron;
- Allen, Hardin, Union, Cham· paign, Madison and Shelby;
- Warren and Clinton;
-Clermont and Adams;
- Scioto and Lawrence:
- Highland, Fayette, Pickaway

and Ross;
- Hocking, Vinton , Jackson,
Gallia, Meigs and Adtens;
- Licking, Fairfield. Perry and
Coshocton:
- Muskingum, Mcrgan, Washington, Noble, Monroe a n,d
Guernsey:
·
- Belmont and Jefferson;
- Harrison, Carroll and
Columbiana:
.
- Tuscarawas, S1ark and
Wayne:
-Geauga, Ashlabola and Trum bull:
. .
,
- Marion. Delaware. Morrow
and Knox.

We sam firm awarded
bid on DHS project
Bids were awarded on the new · late 1990. Prior to the collli'niuMeigs County Department of sioners' awarding of the bids on
Human Services building at Fri.- Friday, the bids were examined by
day's meeting of the Meigs County the project architect, Burgess and
Commissioners.
Niple of Parkersburg, W.Va.
Wesam Construction of
The $1 million project will add
Pomeroy was awarded the general a three-story addition to the existcontracting bid on the project in ihe ing Middleport DRS building ,
arnount'of $669,887. The electrical allowing lhe department to consolicontract was awarded to Advance date all of its offices under one
Electric. That bid was in the roof. Currently, the office s are
amount of $129,900. Parkersburg located in b.oth the DRS ' Race
Heating and Cooling was awarded Street building and in the Coates
both the heating and ventilation Building in Middleport. The money
contract and the plumbing cpntracL spent by the county on the proje'Cit
The heating
was in the will be reimbursed by the State of
, and the .Ohio.
,
amount of $1
, _ 1n Qtlae~ . llllsines!L ~mi&amp;­
SJoners' appointed Linda R. W~t
do not
· any of ihe to the Citizens ' Advisory Board of
alternate, or extra, features that will the SEPTA Center. Warner's
be added to the building cost as appoinlltlent flUs· a vacancy left on ·
finances allow.
the board after the resignation of
The bid awards follow the re- Carl Hysell from the board.
advertisement for the bids earlier
Finally, the commissioners
this year. The commissioners approved bond for Interim County
rejected the first group of bids in Treasurer Nan~y Russell.

' ..

...--------~:--...:.;;.;;.;.;...;;.;.;...;.;.;,...;,.;.;~-..J·

•

1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM
4Door
Warranty

•Air
CondHionlng
•AM/FM

Caaette

---------'+

.

. WHITEHOUSE COMES DOWN - The Whitehouse Ta~ern,
located on Main Street at Kerr's Run, was burned to the ground
by lbe Pomeroy Fire Department on Sunday morning. The demolition ·or the building, which dates bac~ to 1904, was carried out in
preparation for state highway construction at the intersection of

........ .

CliOil.IXM

C..lf'IIIW .... &amp;St.t.St.

~

The State and Local Government C0111mission met in Marietta
on March 13 to hold an open forum
for local government officials in 16
southeastern Ohio counties.
The meeting, prompted by CommisSion Chairman and Lieutenant
Governor Mike DeWine, was organi.zed to give an opportunity 10
local government officials to voice
!heir opinions and concerns regarding community issues, .
Representatives from Gallia
County were County .Commissioner George Pope and Jack Fowler of

lfAH fM.

A

PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

tMI••AtiC~.

fALL ME.

SI ~Uc:

4 Door Demonstrator

Farm

FACTORY LIST *17, 100
White With Sport
· Reduced To

, lnsufaoo.•· &lt;:oftlpOlflic.::"'
IIIHlk' ()ff'K.'l 'S: ttltMtmil1f(hMl , lllill!ll;to

Appearance Package ·
· 3.000 Low Miles

Ukc a ~:••Kl ncif.thhur. State farm is tlx:re.

s.,

.,

$12 888
· ,

.

'

·
Established in September, 1971, the servi~:e has gr~wn in leaps ~nd
bounds in the past 20 years. This January the service hit an all-time rewrd with 2,0,48 home visits being made in that one month.

1990 CADILLAC
SEDAN DeVILLES
Low Miles
Factory Program Cars

Home health care is availab\e to all persons residing within a reasonable distance of Veterans Memorial Hospital and is provided only
under orders from a patient's physician. It is appropriate only fc;&gt;r~
patients who are homebound.
·

$19 900
1990 BUICK
PARK AVENUES
•

Loaded - Low Miles
Were $17,900
REDUCED TO

$15,888

'I

'
Perhaps, this effective service can
one.

be beneficial ro you or to alov~d

VETERANS -IIIIIOIW HOSPITAL
115 L •••nl.. ••••

P1nu •r

tft4114

zoans to observe
safety tornado week

.

Routes 33 and 124. The Whitehouse Tavern is one or l2 properties
affected by the state highway construction made necessary because
orthe Feb.·2, 1990 culvert collapse which ran under the Route 124
roadway lothe Ohio Ri~er.

..

Local officials :discuss SE Ohio concerns

..,_ 446-41fl. . . . 446-4S11

The Home Heath Nursing Service ~:oordinates well with today's
viewpoint of permitting people co remain in their ow.n homes for as
long as possible. Visits into the homes of residents by nurses and nurses
aides of the servi~:e , plus work by the hospital's physical therapy department are making the remain at home philosophy work.

.'C5J

VaL 41, No. 230
Ca;J•Iul•ted 1881

Low tonight in mid 30s.
Tuesday, partly cloudy,
.High in mid-50s. ·

•

\

Congratulations are in order for the Home Health Skilled Nursing
Department at Veterans Memorial - Your Hometown Hospital.

Ill Nolpllll

Super Lotto

~-

•Automatic:
Transmission

CONGRATULATIONS
.
IN ORDER!

\leilf- 8'

Pick 3:474 .
Pick 4: 5744
Cards: Q-H,9-C;
2-D;S.S
10-12-16-26·31-39
Kicker 840813

an

wlw a $5 prt. ,._ ... Ollie VlleJ hhllsbing
Co. ~ .Jlllll' . . _ IMr• ... &amp;eltphooe
number wldl ~caN • lelelr. Ne telephone
calls wDl be ~. All
allies should
be tu..... 18 to tlle ww ,,..,. e8b b1 4 p.m.
eacll Wd r 'Jyi lw- of~ de, ... wbiaer will
be ell- 'Y .,..,.
a Gella Couoty
farm will 1te ftatwr::.:Tct.IM Gdll Soil and

Ohio Lottery

Ohio State
outlasts
.Tech, 65-61

•

See Don Carter, Harlaritl Wood, Marc Cannan, or Creg Smith

the Community Improvement Corporation. Those in attendance from
Meigs County were Commissioners
Manning Roush, David Koblentz
and E,ichard Jane~ and County
Clerk Mary Robs tetter.
Commission Vice-chairman,
Charles A. Calhoun, presided over
the meeting and was impre&amp;sed
witil the attendance and parpcipation of the varipus community leaders.
"There were a lot of good comments and excellent suggestions
made that will be relayed to the

Lieutenant Governor and the
Administration," Calhoun said.
Over 75 officials frorit counties,
cities, villages and-townships participated in the regional forum held
in the Marietta City Council Chambers. Marietta Mayor Naricy Hollister, who serves on the State and
Local Government Commission,
hosted the gathering.
"Being an elected official takes
a lot of work, and sharing knowledge and information between loCal
governments and levels of government helps add to the success of

every community," Hollister said.
SLGC is a bipartisan commission that serves as a forum for dis·
cussion and resolution of issues
affecting all levels of government.
Lieutenant Governor DeWine and
the State and Local Government
Commission will sponsor four
other regional meetings throughout
the state within the next few
monlhs.
• Officials who were unable to
attend are encouraged to contact
the State and Local Government
Commission at (614) 466-2108 for
additional information.

Soviet referendum narrowly passes
MOSCOW (UPI) - A referen- its kind in the country, was condum on keeping ·the Soviet Union ducted on paper ballots and countintact passed by the narrowest of . ing was conducted by hand across
margins in the Soviet capital and the vast country, delaying any sigwas approved by a larger percent- nificant vote totals for several days,
age in Other areas of the country, election officials said:
There was little doubt about pasthe ftrsl unofficial results showed
sage
of the question on preserving
Monday.
The national referendum, fust of the Soviet Union as it was built

during 'io years of communism, but
the significance of tile result was
lilcely to be di~uted since six independence-minded republics boycotted the ~oting. Opposition leaders also complained that the wording of the question was 5o ~ague it
was nearly meaningless.
President Mikhail Gorbachev

New PUCO chief has support
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio PUCO, and · helped develop a
(VPI) - Craig Gla.zer, Gov . PUCO reform proposal passed by
George Voinovich' s selection to ·the General Assembly in 1983.
Shari Weir, spokeswoman for
become chairman of the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio next Ohio Citizen Action, said she
month, hu support for his back- views Glazer as pro-conswner.
ground. in working with both con"One thing that's encouraging
sumer groups and utilities.
abou,t the appointment is that he
Glazer, a New York native now has a very $ood working knowlliving in the Cleveland suburb of edge of utihty issues," she said.
Shaker Heights, has worked for "That's somethinF, \\le're used to
both sides.
with PUCO chairs. '
His experience witil Voinovich
Fred Lange, a legal affairs vice
includes serving as chief utilities president for the Centerior Energy
counsel for the Cleveland Law Corp., said Glazer's. familiarity
Depanmcnt from 1979 ro 1985. He witil the utilities and his past expeworked on behalf of Cleveland rience before the PUCO would
ratepayers in electric. natural gas allow him to "hit tile ground runand telephone rate ~s before the ning."

-

"

•l

~ 'The greatest challenge he faces
is changing from being an advocate
to,a regulator," Lange said. " Now
he must balance the interests of the
utilities and lhe ratepayers. I think
he'll do his best to be fair. He wiU
have to act as an impartial regula,
tor. It may be tough at ftrsl ' ' .
Glazer said liis job will be to
balance the interests of utilities
seeking profits with consumers
seeking inexpensive service.
"I've been on both sides of the
floor. reJnsenting both utilities and
consumers," the lawyer said. "I
li~e to view myself as someone
who will be fair, open 'and willing
to lisien to all sides."

rota reporters after casting his bal·

lot Sunday there was no question in
his mind .about the referendum
being approved, saying, "I don't
think mir people are suicidal."
The first unofficial results
released by tile Moscow eleetoral
commission, however, showed just
a fraction .over 50 pen:ent of those
who voted in the capital said
"yes" to the question: "Do you
consider essential the preservation
of the Union of Soyiet Socialist
Republics as a renewed federation
of sovereign republics with equal
rights, in which tile righ1S and freedoms of a person of any nationality
will be"'iiuaranteed in full measure?"
Forty-six percent voted against
the referendum in Moscow, the
official Tass news agency said.
Turnout in the capital was reponed
at67 percent of the eligible voters.
Radical reformist politicians led
by Russian Federation leader Boris
Yeltsin, who enjoy their strongest
support in Moscow and Leningrad,
had encouraged a vote against the
referendum as a prolest against !he
policies of Gorbachev's Communist central government.
Coatlnued on page 10

By United Press International
Each year severe thunderstorms
and tornadoes threaten lives and do
millions of dollars in damage in
Ohio.
Little can be done to minimize
damage, but National Weather Service official s say deaths and ·
injuries can be limited if you know
what actions to take when severe
weather is sighted or a warning is
issued.
To help communities test their
readiness for severe weather. a
statewide tornado drill wiU be condueled Wednesday atiO: 10 a.m. Ai
that time, test warnings will ·be
issued, communication and warning siren systems will be tesJ.ed and
safety drills conducted.
Tornado safety week in Ohio
runs through Saturday. ·
,
Last year 24 tornadoes struck
Ohio, lcilling one person and injuring 29 people.
The yearly a~era$e sin,ce 1960 is
16 tornadoes in Ohm. Most of the

tornadoes struck during the summer months but the last pne of
1990 touched down on Dec. 23 at
4: II a.m. in the Guernsey and
Noble counties in eastern Ohio.
The National Weather Service
said statistics over the past 30 years
showed Ohio ranks high with
respect to tornado danger.
Ohio experienced 457 tornadoes
from 1960 through 1989, ranking
21st in the nation. There were 151
fatalities and 3,577 injuries, tank·
ing Ohio sixth and third, respectively. Damage in 1989 dollars for
the period was $895 million, ranking fifth.

Gov. Voinovich

signs first 2 bills
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Gov. George Voinovich has
signed into law the first two
pieces of legislation since he
became governor in January. .
One measure allows town·
ship trustees to advance money
to regional water and sewer dis·
tricts under tile same conditions
u cities and counties are pennit·
ted, That bill was sponsored by
Sen. Charles Henry, R-Burton.
The second bill, sponsored
by Rep. Thomas Johnson , RNew Concord, validates the
issuance by a school district of•
bonds which were, ~proved at
the Nov. 6, 1990 elec:llon.
11 also applies procedures
saving the nomination of independent candidates to the election of the Akron Municipal
Court clerk, and appropriates
$500,000 from .the Senate Reiml!ursement Fund for use by tile
Ohio Senate.
'.

NEW EXECUTIVE CHAIR·
MAN • Meigs Couoty Commls·
sloner Richard E. Jones was
appointed IS Chairman or the
Meias County Republlcu
Party'i Executive Co•mlttee
when tbe commluee met on Sun.
day. Jo-· ll!ppoinhllent 'olloWs
the reslanatlon of Gear1e Colll111,
who reslped after his appoint·
ment to a position at the Ohio
Department or Transportation.
Jones ser~ed In the capacity as
chairman for 12 years - preced·
fng Collins in the position.
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