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Pllga

D-B-Sunday Times:-_Sentinel

•

'

J..._.y 1~. 1980

Pomeroy-MidrJaport Glllipolil, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Windbreaks sene many purposes
BY CONSTANCE WHITE
GALLIA SWCD

trees because they wanted a
Research studies have shown
forested landscape like those left that windbreaks reduce the costs
behind back east. . Soon they o! home heating !rom 10 to 15% In
GALLIPOLIS - Windbreaks realized that the plantings of the north central .U.S. These
caa be used to control drifting trees prolej:ted the farmstead savlnp can be attributed to
snow, sand and soli; to reduce !rom the unflagging winds.
diminished cold air Infiltration
winddamagetofleld,gardenand
Windbreaks work by, refjuclng and lower heat loss at the
orchard .crops; to pro~t lives· wlndtpeed. When the winds~ 'buDding surface.
lock and residences from cokl·' drops It modifies the mlcrocll..The purpose of a windbreak
winda; lnprovldescreenlngtrom mateo! the sheltered area. The . system Influences Its dl!llgn.
'road du•t and noise; and to serve reduction In - winds peed varies Generally, wind~aks are posl·
as a haven for Wildlife.
with the density and height at tioned perpendicular to prevail·
field windbreaks were . first which the measurement Is made,
lng winds. But other positions
Uled by 18th Centuty Scottish and the location relative to the
may be desirable to slow winds .
agricultural workers In the de- wlndl)reak, ,
from other directions.
velopment of marginal lands.
In general, the prlltected area
Farmstead and livestock windDuring the early years on the extends -10 to 12 times the height
breaks are generally two or more
, Great Plains settlers planted of the windbreak on the leeward rows wkle and·'· dense. Dense
residential and farmstead sldeand3to5 timesthehelghto! windbreaks result In relatively
windbreaks.
.
the windbreak on, the windwar\i short, deep drifts of snow.
The pioneers at f!rst planted , side.
·
··
·
In residential areas, the moat
.
effective windbreak •plantings
are Incorporated Into general .
·
landacape plan~a particular
. WOOSTER, Ohio (UPI) - A . north~ast where common ~heat neighborhood.
I{IBCe lim·
little-known reed grain _ could · doesn t do well, says Lafever, at '· ltattona In reslden 1 areas may
become a premium-priced food the Ohio Agricultural Research require special designs windcrop.
and Development Center.
breaks can be very effective In
"Spell won't cure the w~rld's
Lafever says Increasing U.S. · controlling snow , reducing
Ills, but It has numerous advan· consumption o! pasta _and l)igh· energy costs, and provtdlnc •
tages and bene!tts for both the flbercerealscouldbrlngfarmers privacy. ·
.
•
Ohio farmer and U.S. cons.!'· a hlgher .prlce lor spell than soft
This year through the Gallla
mer," says OhiO State University. red winter wheat, the' \ype of SWCD Tree seedling sale White
agronomist Howard N. Lafever. whea~ grown by· Ohio farmers. and Scotch Pines, and Norway
pelt, widely grown In Europe, Soft rM winter wheat is used for and Colorado Blue Spruce are
l9l,erates poor.ly· drained, . lOW• cookie and pastry flour.
'available to uae in win'lll!reaks. '
fertility soils: In the United
Ohl&lt;?' S spell breedlngpro;ram,
For more Information about
States, It's used mainly as a a the only . one 'of its kind In the the seedlings and wlnclbreaica .
substitute for winter oats In country. began In 1~70 but' was contact our office at 446-8687 or
animal -feed. Spell can be grown abandoned In 1985 due to lack of · stop
· at 529 Jackson Pike,
In parts of Ohio such as the
Room
·

Ohio Lottery
. Pick 3

_Pomeroy
•

sesqtll•

379
Pick 4
3108
Super Lotto
16-19-23-25-31-42
Kicker 082920

'

centeimial

•

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery "
_farm, ·lea&amp;ureil by the Ga!Ua SoU and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
:· GaiDa County. Individuals wishing to participate
: In the weekly eontest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mall. or drop off your guess to
. the GniDpoUs Dally Tribune, .825 TJ!Ird Ave.,
GaiDpolls, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally SenHnel, Ill
· Court st. , Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you ma;vwln
•

a$$ cash prize from the Ohio Valley Pu~•ta,•nr
Co. Leave your name, atldress and telephone
number with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contelt entries should
be turned In to the new1paper office by 4 p.m: each
Wednelclay. ID case of a tie, tile winner will be
. chosea. by lottery. Next week.· a Melp County
farm will be fell&amp;~ by the Melp SoD and Water
Conservation District.

Dairy college program to be
held Jan. 22 in JCs building

Farm Flashes

BY EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT,
AGRICULTURE &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS - Dairy College
· comes to Gallipolis on -Monday,
Jan. 22. The OSU Dairy College is
a series of programs designed to
give dairy farmers an in-depth
program on various manage·
ment topics.
. The central theme for this year
Is "Controlltng the Environment
lor Efflclenl Milk Production."
"Health and the Environment"
will be covered . by Wllliam
Epperson, DVM. Dr. Epperson Is
an assoclale of Kent 'Hoblet,
DVM, at the OSU College of
Veterinary Medicine.
. "Animal Housing and Ventilation Principals'' will be taught by
Dr. Mike Veenhulzen, OSU Ag.
Engineer. Dr. Veehulzen just
came to OSU a few months ago
after spending a few years with
· the mid-west plan service. Dr.
Maurice Eastridge, OSU Dairy
Science Department, wlll cover
"Feeding System~ That Complement the Facilities " . " The
Changing Economic Environ-

ment" will be discussed by Dr.
Gary Schnltkey, OSU Extension
Economist.
The Dairy College Program
will be held at the Gallipolis
Jaycees Building on the Route 35 .
bypass. The program wlll start at
10 a.m. and conclude before 3
p.m. A registration fee of $5 per
person wlll be charged to cover a
Dairy College booklet and a cold
cut lunch. Advance registration
Is helpful in planning. Call the
Gallla County Extension Office
at 446-7007 or your local Extension Office.
There are a lot of free Power
Show tickets float lng around.
Both the Extension Office and the
Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce have a limited supply. The
event Is scheduled for Jan. 26-28
at the state fairgrounds In
Columbus. Stop !or a free ticket.
Tobacco marketing season
continued this week with prices
about the same as before Christ·
mas sales. The price of $1.67 a
pound dominated the· market. ·
There are some provisions in the
Emergency Program to allow
late leasing of poundage. In this
case, farme!'s who prc:w;tuced

more pounds than they . can
market could lease from farmers '
that had a severecropfallureand
may lose poundage going into
nextyear.
·
.The program Is very complt'
cated and I have oversimplified
how It works. As we get down to
the last lew weeks of market
season and you think this might
help you, talk to the ASCS office
or call the Extension O!!lce. It Is
·Important to the ~anomy or
Gallla County that tobacco poun·
dage not be lost.
A reminder of the public
meeting to be held Tuesday, Jan.
16, 6 p.m. at Ripley (W.Va. ) High
School to discuss the Rock·
iilghaln Poultry proposal. I am
trying to keep Informed on this
,project and Its possible Impact to
Gallla County.

Ch~k

CINClNNATI (UP!) - Polls
taken duriJ!g the 1980s In Ohio
show the Republican Party gain·
Jng strength ·and threatening to
overtake the Democrats as the
state's dominant party .
The findings In the latest Ohio
Polf reieased Monday show
young votefs leading the .turn
away from the. Democratic
Party, with Democratic support
greatest among older Ohioans.
"Barring shifts In current
trends, Democrats may soon.lind
themselves lhe minority party In
Ohio for the first time since the
New Deal," said Alfred Tuck·
farber, Ohio Poll director.
The poll, conducted by the
University o! Cincinnati's Institute for Polley Research, Is
jointly sponsored by the Dayton
Dally News, Cincinnati Post and
the University of Cincinnati.
Researchers looked at 29 sur·
veys conducted from 1981 to 1989.
Early In the 1980s, Democrats
held a 10· to 12-polnt lead over
Republicans among Ohioans reg·

. rJI!es above the defense of Southern's Andy Baer
. ·( 12) !'I'd .shoots " long jumper during Sa&amp;urday

:Dep~fties

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)
Farmers who grow produce with
Intentions of seiUng It at roadside
stands are being advised to first
determine If there Is a market for
what they are selling.

TWO

ONLY
I

S9788

'.

1989 PONTIAC
LEMANS 4 DR.
Automatic. air condition·

probe auto.accident

an'""'

After the Dexter resident
called the sheriff's department,
the Individual left and began
walking on the railroad tracks
between Dexter and J,.angsvllle.
·Deputy Boyd located the lndlvjd·
ulll ·oh '!lie 'track's' aiid ~when he
ques do ned him, the Individual
did not know Ills name or where
he was. He was transported back
to · the sheriffs department
where a representative from
Woodland' Centers committed
him to the Athens Mental Health
Center. He was transported to
Athens by the Meigs County
Shertrr s Department.

Ohio records IO weekend fatalities
.

.

'

BlAND NEW!
ONLY "2" LEFT

$8488
1989 PONTIAC
.GlAND AM

'

2 DOOR
BRAND NEW!
ONLY "1" LEFT

'

-

0

'

ing, AM/FM stereo, rear
defogger. _ .:

0

night;• ba&amp;tie of the SVAC un'bealens. When II
ended, lhe Earles won 92-87 to remain the only
!~!am unbeaten In league action; See other photos
and the story on. Pare 3..

. Depu,tles of the Meigs County custody, and that the adult was
·Sheriffs Department arelnvesti- released but the Juvenile admpt·
.gating an accldentth.at occurred ted to stealing the c;ar and was
on County Road 25 at 11:'15 p.m. lr!lnspOrted to Zanesville by Carl
on Saturday evening.
Hysell, juvenile officer. The
. Acconltq to the repoJ:!•:'~-el! . -~@:nile \;VIII face ·el'tradltion to
~-~
jlit; Ililt. , 1i•
f'Vfi'glnta.
-"' • '" ....
-1978 Chrysler In a ditcfi. the · On Sunday the department
vehicle belonged · to Margaret · took a report from a Dexter
Gresham, Chapmanville, W.Va. resident regarding a man who
There reportedly had been an
had come _to his door. According
attempt made to burn the vehl· to Deputy Mark Boyd, the
cle. The Pomeroy Fire Depart· fi!Sldentsaldthemanhadragson
J'(lent was called to the scene.
his feet and was begging for loud.
The report stated that two
The Dexter resident said he fed
subjects, one adult and one · him and gave a pair of shoes.
juvenile, had been taken Into

&gt;

Automatic, air conditioning, AM/ FM/caasette, 14" aluminum wheels. tilt
wheel. Brand new 36/50 Bumper to
Bumper Warranty.
List $11,524

1 Section, 10 Pog..
A Multlmodio Inc.

26 Cento

GOP numbers grow

80~ AWAY.- Eastern's Shaun Savoy (25) ·

public f11'8l ·

•

16, 1990

Little-known spelt COUld become bOon .

Low tonight In mid 4111.
Cloudy Tuesday. Hlp In mid
IIIIa.• Chalice of rnln 30 percent.

accidents In northwestern Ohio
to five within less than a week.
. Wood County sheriffs deputies
said the CSX train was !lrst
struck at a crossing In Hoytville
ar.ound 9 p.m. Friday by a car
driven by Mark Beegle, 29,
Findlay. Beegle was dead at the

underneath a tank car carrying
denatured alcohol. An evacua·
tion of the area was started
before rescu.e workers deter.'
mined a valve had not ruptured
on the raltro•d car. .
Last Thursday a Wauseon man
and his pregnant wife, Benjamin
scene.
and Peggy Perez, were killed
1'he train stopped near North when their pickup truck struck a
Baltimore about twomUes away, Conrail train near Archbold In
blocl!:lng a rural crossing. It was Fulton County, about 50 miles
struck at 9: 20 p.m . . by a car west or Toledo.
driven by John Vandemark III,
And on Tuesday, Troy Phillips
19, North Baltimore.
of Walbridge died In a car-train
accident near Curtice, 10 miles
Vandemark and three pas·
east
of Toledo.
sengers were Injured, but one of
The weekend vicllms:
the car's occupants, Cory Mills,
Sunday
19, North Baltimore, died at St.
Cleveland: Daniel A. Fischer,
VIncent Medical Center In
22, Cleveland, when his vehicle
Toledo.
left a Cleveland city street and
The Vandemark auto drove
struck a pole.
.T ~
brie~s----.
Mansfield: Michael D. Legge,
r---IAJC
•:
16, Mansfield, In one-vehicle
_accident wben his speeding car
struck a tree! along a Richland
County road.
Sa&amp;urday
'
New officers have been elected by the Chester Volunteer Fire
None.
Deparlment. .
· ·
·
Friday nlpl
.
They are Elmer Newell, president; Bob Woods, vice
Hillsboro: Richard L. West, 18,
president; Max Eichinger, secretary; Charles Radford, .
Hillsboro, when the car he was
treasurer; Bruce D. Myers, chief; Larry Cleland, captain; and
riding In hit a tree on Ohto 247 In
Marvin Taylor, Pearl Edwards, Eichinger, and Newell,
Highland County·
lieutenants.
London: Dennis R. Chantaln,
L. - ~· Koenig, Jr. has been named news reporter lor the
33, London, when his speeding
deparlment.
car crashed on U.S. 421n Madison
~urlna 1989, the department responded to eight structure
County·
·
fires, four ·brush !Ires, eight hay !Ires, 14 miscellaneous ,
New Pbllsdelphla: Davl(l M.
~yers Jr.,23,·Mineral City, and
Incidents, ~nd 18 rescue operations. -~ Randy S. . Materna, 22 , New
Phlladelpha, when Myers' car
collided with a, pickup truck on
snow-covered Ohio 1831n Tuscar·
TWo accidents were lnvesti&amp;ated ·!jaturday by Pomeroy
awils County.
PoHce.
Hoytville: Mark A1Beeale, 29,
The!trst occurred at 9:03a.m. Saturday on Weat f!!alnStreet.
Findlay, when hla car struck a
'train at a Wood County croutq.
Brinley Seth, 23 Gak St., Pomeroy, was aettiq out of his par~
· North BaltimtJre: Cory Mlill,
car when the wind caugbt the door and It-struck the wheel of a
19, North Baltimore, when the ,
truck beil\8' \irlven east on Main lJy Clyde Martin, Jr., Newport.
car In whldll\e wu rlcllna struck
There wu moderate damaae to the liriver'a side door on the
a par~ train at a Wood County
Seth vehicle, and no damage to the ltfarlin truck.,There were no
croallng.
cltat!Oni. ·
Lima: Dolores J. Haunhorst,
At 12:56 p.m. an accident occurred on WeatMaln near ~uper
60, Delphos, ' and Lelllll'il F.
· ' AmeriCa.
.
Kaberman, 56, Jellllillp, when
Charles LeWis, Jr., Point Pleasant, traveling east on West
their vehiCle failed to stop at a
Main, failed to atop Ina line of traffiC. H11 veh.leleatruck the rear
stop sign on Ohio 81 In Allen
of a car driven 1W Thomas Lowe, Little Hocking, pushllli It Into
County illld was struck lJy
Conlinued on paae 5
another vehiCle. ·
By United PressiDternalloll&amp;l
Two double-fatality auto
crashes and a pair of car-train
accidents· boosted Ohio's wee' ,
kend traf!lc death toll to 10, the
slate ijlghway Patrol reported
' •·
Monday.
A· patrol count showed two
deaths Sunday and eight Frida&gt;
night. ').'here were no fatal
crashes reported on !\aturday.
The count began at 6 p.m. Friday ,
and ended at midnight Sunday .
Both double-fatality car
crashes·occurred friday evening
-one In Tuscarawas County and
the other In Allen County.
Two of the weekend victims
died l.n separate collisions with
the same CSX train and three
other people were. InJured, rals·
lng the death toll from car·traln

'""ac•. news·

istered to vote. T)lat margin
narrowed to a 2.8 percent Demo·
cratlc edge last year.
Tuchfarber said th~&gt; Ohio
numbers are following a natlomil
trend that shows the two major
pardes neck-and·neck.
The greatest shift away !rorn
the Demcralic'Party Is occurring
among young voters. In the 1983
survey. 51.1 percent of those born
after 1964 ldentt!led themselves
as Democrats. In 1989, the
number of young voters that
Identified themselves, as Democrats dropped to 28.8 percept .
During the same time, the
percentage of young voters af·
fllatlng with the Republican
Party rose from 30.4 percent to
59.2 percent.
"But because younger voters
are the least likely to turnout and
actually vote, we have not seennor will we see until well into the
1990s ~ any dramatic turna,
round In the fortunes of the
Democratic Party," Tuch!arber'

sal d.
But Republicans are.heralding
the trend nontheless.
" What this means Is, as we go
Into the 1990 election, we ' re In a
much better position strategl·
cally ·than we have been In recent
memory because we basically
have parity with the Democrats
as we start the campaign," said
Republican James Ttlllng, chief
executive officer of the Ohio
Senate . and a former political
science professor.
Older Ohioans are still likely to
afflllate with the Democrats. In
1989, 48.7 percent of those between 45 and 60 considered
themselves Democrats, a slight .
drop from the 51.7 percent
recorded In 1981. the · polls
showed.
In comparison, 35 percent of
older Ohioans considered them·
selves to be Republicans . last
year, a shade above the 34.9
percent who reported Republl·
can allegiance In 1981.

Martin Luther King ·Day obsenred
By United Press International
Most federal, state, county and
city o!!tces across Ohio were
close&lt;! Monday In observance of
Martin Luther King Jr.'s
birthday.
Ohio Is among 46 states which
observes the national ·ho Uday
marking the anniversary or lhe
slain ciVIl rights leader's birth.
·Kiq, who was slain In 1968,
would llal'e tur;n!!il 61 Monday .
. Most l'JUiliiesses' lrillhe· sil.i'e;
however, operate as usual.
Glenn Ray, executive director
of the Martin Luther King Jr.
Center for the Performing and
Cultural Arts In Columbus, .said
he Is pleased wit~ the attention
paid to King's birthday .
Ray said the fact that most
businesses still don't gran I a day
of! to workers Is less a slap at
King than It Is a commentary on
American society's priorities.
"The pro!lt motive In our
capltal!Stlc society supersedes a
lot of other motives and. values
that we espouse," Ray said.
A spokeswoman for Hunting·
ton National Bank o! Columbus
said the bank was open Monday
because most o! its customers
also worked. ·
"We do have the highest
respect for Dr. King and the
celebration for his birthday,"
said Dorothy Brownley. "The
decision (to stay open) was made
becuase a majority of our consu·
mers and corporations will be at
work that day.'"
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D·
Olllo, said he looks at the hoUday
as an observance of the accompllshmenls made In the civil rights
movement and bowl! much Is left
unaccompUshed. ..
"Perliaps the most dramatic
example or how far we have
cpme, came last week when
Douglas Wilder was Inaugurated
governor of VIrginia, a s.,_te once

known for Its massive resistance come.
"But on this anniversary we
to desegregation."
are
reminded or how far we must
Wilder Is the nation's !lrst '
go
when
we see that our schools
elected black governor.
are
still
Inadequate, medical
"Wilder's election was a· per·
care
Is
still
out of reach of
sonal triumph for him but also a
triumph of the spirit of Dr. King, millions and more Americans
who believed this day would than ever are homeless," Metzenbaum said.

-G unshot wouad-

kills Vinton man
John Paul Jones, 40, of VInton, by Dr. Edward Berklch, Gallla
died of a gunshot wound to the · County Coron ~r. The report Is
abdomen area following an al- .expected In approximately two
leged dispute at'the residence o! weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Matthews on
The Incident Is still under
828 Jackson St. In Vinton early Investigation by the Gallla
Sunday morning, according to County Sheriff's Department'and
the Gallla County Sheriff's the BCI.
Department.
As of late Monday morning, no
Sheriff's Deputies round Jones charges had been flleCI. and the
wounded at the Matthews resl· Incident Is still under
dence. The_.victim was trans- Investigation.
ported to Ho.lzer Medical Center
Jones was a heavy construe·
where he died a short time latef. tlon worker and a Vietnam
According to Sheriff Dennis veteran, serving In the United
Salisbury. the deputies' investi- States Marine Corps. He was the
gation revealed that Jones had son of John Paul Jones Sr. of
gone to the Matthews residence, Jackson, and the late Betty Ilene
and there a dispute arose.
Stephens Jones. Unmarried;
In addition to Salisbury and his Jones Is also survived by two
Investigating deputies, Gallla brothers and four sisters.
County Prosecutor Brent A.
· Funeral services will be conSaunders and agents from the ducted will be 11 a.m., Wednes·
Bureau of Criminal ldentiflca· day, at McCoy-Moore Funeral
lion and. Investigation were also Home, VInton, with the Rev. Leo
called to the scene.
Connelly officiating. Burial will
The body was ordered trans- be Mt. Tabor Cemetery. Mllltary
ported to the Franklin County graveside rites will be by Vinton
Morgue In Columbus for autopsy American Legion Post 161.

0

Auto .• air cond .. AM/FM,/cassetta, tilt
wheel. cruise. 14" aluminum wheals.

LIST PRKE 513, l14 ..................,............,.

»·

. 446·4040

Call Domino's·-Pizza· now and ;save.

900 SECOND AYE.

GAWPOUS, OH.

992-2124
811 W. MAIN STREET

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Chester firemen elect officers

''

Warming
trend reaches
Buckeye State
II¥ United Pres• International
Ohio· experienced a warming
trend Monday as temperatures
climbed Into the 40s In northern
Ohio anCI were · expected to
h 60-d
k1
appr&lt;?&amp;ch t ~
egree mar . n
some southern Ohio )ocatlons.
And the National • Weather
Service said the mUd weather
will continue ror much. of the
work week, with highs of 45 toi!li. ·
There, however, will be a chance
of rain.
Skies were cloudy during the
night and early Monday. Molt or
the precipitation ended In Ohio
lJy sunrtae, but aome did linter In
the east during the morn in&amp;
houn.
Overnl&amp;bt lows were mainly In
the mid to upper 301.
Preclpltiltton In the Jut 24
hours was mainly over the
southern two thirds of the state.
Prj!Cipltatlon am9UDII were gen·
erally-a tenth of an Inch or less.

US. &amp;lNG GETS BUG J.IBOM SON- Cenlta loM*IIJII (C)
11011, Marla·tatiJao II.. ID (8), wltlle f81811
" ........ applaud~ ...... llllt• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Drum"

•• a liar lr-

~SUnday oa tile eve oltl!e utloul IIIU..,eelelnU•IIIIela
elvll rl11ita Ieider Mardn Luther llq lr. 'I blrtii!IQ.

�•
•,

Commentary
'The .Daily Sentinel
Ill Court· street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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,...

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Pilei• 2-The Deily Sutinel
Pcw••ov-;-Middlaport. Ohio
Monday,~ 115. 1880
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Bogus .POW rajsed and.. dashed
many hopes ____._' ...::,__J_ac_k_.A_nde_._~_so_·n_a_nd_D_a_le_Va_n_A_t_ta

~lb

t!i!m~ ""'-'._.....,~=·"""
~I'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publtsber
PAT WHITEHEAD
· As&amp;lotut Publlsber/ConltoUer

'

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manqer

LE'ITEKS OF OPINION are welcome. They lllloukl be leoolhaa 384!
wordo 1011. Allli!ltora are i ubjecllo ediiiDI aad m•lli be olped wllh
11.1111e, addrftls and telephone number. No anelped lellet's wUI be puiJ.
Ilohed. Lellers sliould be In IIOOd lasle, addreubt1laoues, not personal~

.
Republicans liniltg up
lleo.

.

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·candidates, some lacking
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Some of the pieces are startinl( to fall Into place.ror
the Ohio RepubliCan Party as the filing deadline approaches for this
year's crucial election.
State Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, gave up ambitions for the
governor's contest last week and announced he will run for attorney
general.
· That glyes the Republicans a strong candidate to compete for the
·state's top legaljob&gt;butlt doesn't help them much politically.
They are still lacking headliners for the bread-and-butter positions
of auditor and secretary of state which, along with governor, i.vlll
realign the district boun!larles of the General Assembly next year,
helping paint the political complexion of the House and Senate for 10
years.
.
For governor, It appe!lrs the RepubliCans are going to have a scrap
between two good candidates - former Cleveland Mayor George
Volnovich and HamUton County Commissioner Robert Taft II.
The GOP would like to persuade Taft, viewed as the underdog, to
drop down and run for auditor or secretary of state. That would not
only elbnlnate the expensive and potentially divisive squabble for
governor, but would give the RepubliCans a topflight candidate for
·
another office.
But T.aft seems stubborn enough to stick In the governor's contest,
even though he lost the Franklin County RepubliCan Party
endorsement to Volnovlch by more than 3-1 ratio last week.
' That endorsement Is Important, because Franklin County
Republicans are known for following the slate cards put out by the
party organization when they go to the polls, and more RepubliCans
vote In that county than any other. ·
But Taft said the voters, not the political Insiders, will make the
rtnal determination, and that the polls show hbn doing as well against
the Democrats as Volnovlch does.·
·

... ·•·

Believe It or not, the RepubliCans may run Ted'Brown for secretary
of state. No, not the man who served as secretaryofstatefor28years,
but a politician-government worker from Troy, Ohio.
Brian Berry, executive director orthe Ohio Republican Party, said
the party's 32'member screening committee has Interviewed Brown,
a secretary's representative for the Department of Labor In Chicago.
:Brown c'lrrled 48 percent of the vote In 1976 against popular
Democratic state Sen. Tony Hall of Dayton, and he came even closer
'
to defeating Charles Curran of Dayton for the Senate In 1980.
Whether the memory of the real Ted Brown, who died five years
ago, still carries the old magic on the ballot, particularly _on the
secretary of state's line, may be determined later this year.

WASHINGTON - A small up the searph. ·
VIetnam POWs. He knew that the Omega was IJllrtgued enough to
Bible-study group was enjoying a
Invite the man to PhoeniX, AriZ.,
POWs made tattoo Ink from
. The tncldentshows how vulner·
beach outrng on M11u1 on the able the POW-MIA movement Is
to be Interviewed by Hopper and .
ground-up cold tablets. He knew
evening of Nov. 12 when a man to a glimmer of hope.
.
VIetnamese guards wore no .real former POWI. Zblclak went .
emerged from the surf and
The man who crawled out of
underwear. He named ·re111 prl- along as an escort. ·
crawll!d onto the beach with an
On the plane over the ocean,
tbe surf was taken to Hawaii' s
soners and said he had shared
Incredible story to ~II . He said he · Maul Memorial Hospital where
cells wltb them. He suddenly
the bogus POW slipped a note to a
had bopped a boat In Vietnam he was pronounced to be In good . remembered his name, and , It flight attendant. He told her he
and had been shipwrecked and health - too good for someone • matched with the name of a
was belq beld aga)nst his wtll.
washed ashore. He said he WilS straight from a bamboo cage a11d
milling American soldier.
When the plane landed In Los
. an escaPee! Amerlcan prisoner o.t a · shipwreck. He was about 20
The pretender ordered ·. a
An~les, siX pollee officers took'
war.
pounds· overweight and freshly . eheeseburger ·and then broke Zblclak and the man .In ·for
. Whlit happened next only shaven. Since he claimed amne·
downcrylngandpulblqltaway. questioning.
makes sense In the postwar sla and said he couldn''t reHe said be and his buddies tn the ·
The man then admitted his real·
wor~ of famUies tortured by the
member hts name, he was put In
POW camp bad made bets on name·. He was.LesUe Tatay from
·memory of 2,400 American Gis a psychlatr,lc ward for
who amoq them would eat the Orlando, Fla. And the s~ry he.
who never returned from Sou- observation.
.
first American c~~rger. ., \old pollee, and :later u$, was.
theast Asia, dead or alive.
almost as biZarre as theftctton he ·
Someone told Chris Zblclak he
Zblclak called Task Force
The bogus POW sparked hope was there. Zblclak Is a Maul
Omega, one of the many group. , wove In Hawaii.
In those hearts, and when his
Tatay said he was .approached
paramedic and a VIetnam vet
formed to uncover the truth
&gt;lory fell apart, fueled the who works on the MIA lasue and • about missing GtS. Earl Hopper,
last August Ill an Orlando shopmistrust between the families conselt,vets. He came to hear the
vice president of. Task Force . ping mall by a sandy-hatred man
and the federal government and man'siltory for himself, and It
who offered him $1500,000 If ·he
Omega, ran. t~ man's supposed
even between the diverse groups sounded good. During 22 hours of
would participate In a ,plan to
name through the group's comadvocating the 'ca11se of tbe questi!nlng, the skeptical Zbl- · . pute( The missing man was
help vets. Tatay says he agreed,
missing. Today, nota fewofthem clllk came closer and closer to · black, and the POW 1tom the surf
as long as he wouldn't have to do
are wondering If someone put the th.e conviction thattlie man was
anything Illegal.
' whlte . . ·
•
was
ma11 up to the stunt to embarrass telling the truth. He hild numerNow Tatay claims that Zblclak
. But Hopper told our reporter
and sUence those who won't give (lus tattoos of the type worn by
part oft he con- a clatm that
was
Greg Moore that Task Force
Zblclak denies .and other P0WMIA advocates don't believe.
Tatay Is back home In Orlando ·
Waiting for hl.s anonymous beliefactors to come up with lbe
$1500,000. So far, he hasn't seen
. anythl~g of them or the money.
Leslie Ta lay was no mlaslng.
"People are wide open lo believe
things like this," said Ted Sam·
PleY who runs another POW-MIA
lobby group cal)ed Homecoming
II. Last year's hot rumor was
that the U.S. government had
secretly sent a hospital ship to
ttie Philippines to care for POWs
who were being hl&lt;!den there.
· The rumors have a common
thread. They frequently put the
onus on the government for
hiding lnforma t ion from families
of the missing or for trying to
silence the homecoming
movement.
·
Task Force Omega's Hopper
told us that the movement would
have been discredited h!ld It paraded Tatay around as an.
example of an abandoned POW.
Any way qf embarrassing the
movement buttresses the governmeni' s claim· that 110 Onfl
was left behind.

Missi,o n. accomplished ____c_o_ng_.c___,la_re_·nce_M_ill_er

It Is almost as - If Manuel
account to pay for the use of the
Noriega willed his own demise. Canal; U.$. corporations had
Ins antagonistic, confrontational been given approval by our
State Sen. Cooper Snyder, R-Hillsboro;wants the square dance to
actions
taken prior to our coun- government to withhold tax '
be Ohio's official American folk dance, and he lniroduced a resolution
try's
launching
of "Operation payments to the Noriega con·
to that effect last week.
Just
Cause"
exposed
him to the
trolled Panamanian governBut it's possible there could be better choices, and maybe we'll see
as
the
wlldman
that
he
Is.
world
ment; and all ties wlih the
some of those In the form of amendments as the proposal makes Its
As
one
accused
of
trafficking
In
Panama
Defense Force (PDF)
way through the Legislature.
drul'(s,
It
appears
as
If
he
has
been
and
the
puppet.
government of
For exampie, ln this election year, the tap dance, the shbnmy or the
Involved
with
the
consumption
or
Manuel
Noriega
had been
soft shoe m lght be a better selection.
·
. drugs .as well. Why else would severed. ·
one take the provocative actions
· Since · the aborted. election of
that he did, actions certain to last May, when Noriega henchiead to the type of res,ponse that men, under the aegis of the
resulted on the part of the Un\ted Panama Electoral Tribunal.
States? , When YQU have · your voldeti tbe results of the PresiNational Assembly Issue a reso- dential contest that had just been
lullon declaring your countzy In a concluded, we have viewed No'flE ~ftE COt-1PUC,TIN6 A
state of war With the United riega and his puppet regime as a
P0\..1.. TO. MEASURE f'IJB&amp;.IC
States, what else but war could totslly lllegltbnate government.
result? When you have members In spite of all these actions,
IG"'ORANCE. YOU WERE
of your Panamanian Defense Noriega persevered.
RECOti\ME""OED TO LIS.
Force stop, shoot and kill a U.S.
r---1
' coalition of National
serviceman for no just cause,
Noriega's
what else but war could result?
Liberation had garnered only
His brazen batting of the 25% of the vot.e tn that election;
United States left President Bush . whereas, present President Guilwith little option but to do as he lermo Endara's DemocraticAldid. "Operation Just Cause" was liance uf Civic OpP&lt;lSitlon won
. undertaken with good cause; lt · the suppor·t of roughly 75% of the
was undertaken because, as voting public. Clearly, the people
George Bush said, we simply ran of Panama wanted Noriega out,
out of alternatives. We had . but due to the military grip that
frozen the funds that the Pana• the General had Imposed, his
mantan Government had In U.S. removal was not possible without ·
banks and established an escrow outside asslatance.
Although most of the countries

Berry's _World

.I

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-In the region have publicly
critiCized and voted In support of
resolutions condemning U.S. Intervention, I suspect that privately most of the region's
government leaders applaud the
actions we have taken. Politically It would be unpopular for
them to openly express sue h
support but from a policy stand. point, Noriega has been as much
a thorn In their sides as he has
been In ours. His defiant anti·
democratic attitude, along with
his gun toting and drug running
activities have been a source of
considerable embarrassement
and unrest,for the region, and·no
one I am sure, other than Mr.
Castro of CUba and Mr. Ortega of
Nicaragua, will be sorry to see
htm removed from the scene
once and for all.
MHitar lly , It appears we
learned som(' lessons from our
past experience In Grenada. This
tbne the strike· force moved
much more swiftly and effectivelya to disarm and seal off the
opposition. Furthermore the
warm reception our American
m.Uitary forces have been receivIng from the general public In
Panama Is an .e ncouraging lndl-.
cation that the objectives of this
action will be fully attained.
As President Bush stated In his

address to the nation on the
morning of December 20th, the
alms of our ·Intervention In
Panama were fourfold: 1. Protect the lives of the estbnated
35,000 U.S. CltJ7ens In Panama:
2. Protect the Integrity of .t he
Panama Canal Treaties; 3. Pre·
serve and restore democracy
·and 4. Bring Manuel Noriega to
justice.
At this point It appears all four
have been accomplished. The
only concern thaLremalns his ·
how swiftly will we be able to
bring the General to justiCe.
Personally, If It had been my call,
I would have considered turning
Noriega back over the the new
Panamanian government and
letting It try him for the crimes
he has committed against the
Panamanian people. By so doing,
we could have possibly avoided.
the costly and mucl) publicized
court proceedings that are sure
to result, -and sldi!stepped the
further questions and criticisms
that could be raised by- such a
hlgbly visible triaL ..
All In all. I'd give · President
Bush high marks for hl.s actions.
As a nation that has long tried to
walk softly while carrying big
stick, I'm glad that President
Bush Is willing to use that stick
when necessary.

a

·Watching the stars on stage left. William Rusher
• •

, One of the developments of
recent years that · has pleased
liberals tbe least has been the
proliferation of · conservative
publications, usually In ·newsle.t·
ter format, to monitor their
activities.
·
·
The liberal niedla have qutte
· rightly recelv'1(1 the most attention. Reed Irvine's AIM Report,
' '
By Ualted l'reM lateraatloll&amp;l
published
by A,ccuracy In Media,
Today ts Monday, Jan. 15, the 15th day of 1990 with 3150 to follow.
Is
the
oldest
of the monitors an~
It Is Martin Luther King Day .
stUI
one
of
the
best. Perhapa the
The moon Ia waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
llv:elll!lt
Is
MedlaWatch,
a publl·
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn. '
catiOn
of
tbe
Media
Research
The evening stars are Venualllld Jupiter.
Center, on wb01e board (fatr
'l1lole born on thla date are under tlie alp of Capricorn. Tiley
Include outlaw Cole Younger In 1844, Greek ahlppln8 mapate · warniJIII ) I alt. Then there Ia
Robert Lichtman's rather proArlatotle Onulll .In 1986, niiClear !'hYIIIclltEdward Teller In 1901 (qe
82), drummer Gelll! Krupa In 1909, actor Uoyd Brldplln Dl3 (qe feoaorlal Media Monitor (tbouah
771, folk mualc scholar Alan LoiJUIX In ltlli, El)'ptlan Praldent I am DOl sure Dr. Lichtman
w.ould conce'de any political btu
Gamal Abdel Nliter In 1918, civil rilbts leader Martlll Lutber Klq
to the r!Pt), and a comiN!IIve
Jr. In 1929, and a~• Mqaret O'Brlellln D37 (ap 53).
little publicatiOn called Between
The Uneo, published In Los
• On this date In bl1tory:
'
Angell!l.
In 18'10, a cartoon by Thomu Naat appeared In !Harper's weekly
But the liberals are busy on
wttb a donkey ayml!ollzlnr tbe Democratic Party for the flrlt time.
other
fronts besides the media, .
. The symbol stuck.
and these too are now beginning
Ill 1922, the Irlah Free State waa fonned.

Today in history

I

to spawn conservative publica·
Valerie Harper and Cher.
tlons devoted to reporting their
Every Issue I have thus far
antiCs. College campuses, for
seen has led' off with a round-up
example, have long been virtu- on the "Hollywood Left." At
ally the private deer park of the ever~ leftist rally, liberal
left, of both the liberal and nut "stars," and many lesser personvarieties. So, the aforesaid Reed . al'ltles who Just crave the publlcIrvine not long ago launched a lty,aretnevldence. TV,etc.dlda
new organizatiOn, ,a\Ccuracy In j)arttcui!lrly fine job of descrlbAcademia, whose monthly Dell:'· IJJi the role of these people In the
sletter, Campua Report, mont- "Houalng Now!" marcb In Wa·
tors lettlat activities on more shlngton on Oct. 7.
·
than 1500 campuses.
There are also reviews of
But It remained for the Media .motlol' pictures and televlalon
Research Center to become the proclucttollll designed to deliver
f!J:at or1anlzatlon to launch a leftist political me&amp;llllget. And of
publication devoti!d exclusively course, In every Issue there Is
to reportlnl on tbe entertainment The Geraldo Award, presented
world's large, notay IUid obnox· by TV, etc. (or "tbe most
toua community of leftists. outrageous example of sensaCalled TV, etc,. and published tionalism and/or factuai dlator(for the pre~ent) every two tlol) by those In tbe entertainmonth&amp;, It keeps Its readers ment Industry," One recent
Informed of tbe off-camera Invol- Geraldo, for example, went to
vements of aucb pualoaate lib- HBO, which charged Its viewers
eral activists u Paul Newman, for watchlq a· slanted piece of
Jo-anne Woodward, Duatln Hof- Junk that condemned the Rearan
fman, Lauren Bacal~ Ed AsneF, administration'• version of the

shooting down of KAL 007.
As you might expect, the
_entertainment Industry's loudmouthed leftists have DOt been at
all pleased by TV, etc.'s atten·
lions. Their first, lll·conaldered
reaction was to denounce It from
the roottope. The American Fed·
eratlon of TeleviSion and Radio
Artists, and the Screen Actors
Guild awung Into actlo!i: Both
organiZatiOns accused TV, ejc. of
trying to revive tile •'blacklist' •of
,the late 1940s and early 19e0s. But
L. Brent Bozell IU, the ·n ewsletter's publlsber, denied any &amp;IICh
Intention.
"I will uphold anyone's right to
free speecb," he told AFTRA's
• pre11dent Reed Farrell In a
letter. "(But) If HBO baa the
right to air antl-contril movies on
televtalon, I have the rlgbt to
urge (II'~H:Cntra supporter• to
chu~ the Chanlll!l.... 1 bave ·
enclosed for you a copy of the
First Amendment of the Coull·
Iutton, and some Kleenex. Read
It and weep."

SAVOY sCoREs - Eastern's Sbaun Savoy rets alrllome u be
ICOft!ll, 011 tb~ layup In Saturday ntrhl's SVAC pme apinlt
Southern In Racine. Savily scored 11 points In the Earles' 92-87
triumph. ·
·
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t

i'

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•

•

DRMNG UPCOURT- Eastern pard KenD¥,•.Caldwell (ll)
drives upcourt as . be trlee to ret away from !il.llhern's Johll
Hoback durlnr Saturday ntrhl's game at Racine's Cbarlea W.
Hayman Gymnas tum. Cal!lwell led the Eagles with 18 points to
pace them to a 92-87 victory.
·

THE OPEN MAN Is someone Eaatern forward Scott Fitch
(rtrht) Ia trylnrto find , as Southern guard Todd GrlDdetaff (20)
tries ~ limit his options during Saturday night's rivalry on the
Tornadoes' home court. Eutern took advantage of an
ever-decreasing output by Southern's offense to win 92-87.

11'

East~rn 'undisputed ·SVAC lead.e r after 92-87 cage ·victory
By SCOTI WOLFE
Eastern came, Eastern saw,
Eastern conquered!
Those were the thoughts of
. many, trying to sum up what
looked to be the "Impossible"
after the curtain fell on an
ultra-dramatic 92-87 come-from,
behind victory by the Eastern
Eagles, who defeated the South·
ern Tornadoes on their home
court for what Is believed to be
the first time Jn, 12 years. (That
victory being a 52,51 win over .
Soutltern on Danny,. Spencer's
. last SecOI)d shot froirLbeyond
inld-court In Janualj' o' 1978:)
Ultimately, Eastern grabbed
sole possession of firs! place In
the · · Southe~n · Valley Athletic
Conference with an 8-0 record,
while Southern drops to: 6-1.
Eastern Is 10-3 overall and
Southern 6-5. · .
Saturday's contest had ''atmosphere", one · that has longbeen missing from recent
Eastern-Southern battles as the
stage was clearly set with an
e~ltiJig 1 scr.tpt Iii pla~e. Two
undefeateds, arch rivals, and a
huge crowd c~Owd helped create
the tournament-like atmosphere

and electricitY was, , snapping
thrdugh the crow,d ; a crowd
which for the most part had
assembled at 5 p.m. to fill
Charles W. Hayman gymnasium
to capacity.
Final Moments
With 4:15 left ln the third
quarter the Southern Tornadoes
led by a whopping 16 points, not
far from being an apparent
·blow-out, and likewise Southern
led 71-61 going Into the fl!lal
go-round.
Southern maintained an 8-10
· point lead until about the 5100
minute . mark when Eastern
staged Its comeba'C k- bid.
Jeff Durst started the drive
when he hit a three pointer. to cut ·.
Into Southern's lead at 7 points.
then Shaun Savoy hit a key
jumpwr to drop Southern's lead
. to five.
.-·
From the 4: 30 mark to 2: 15
mark Southern did ·not score,
except for a couple of free throw
attempts on separate occasions
from senior Bradley !'Jiaynarq.
• Meanwhlll!, victorY was lri the
making for the Eagles who had
that "Look" in their eyes, and
had changed the tempo by

challellglng Southern, and later, minutes another starting guard · 16 at the line for the game, proved
beating the .Tornadoes at their Todd Grln&lt;;lstaft yl~lded with five
to be the . Tornado killer going
down the stretch as the softown game: a tenacious full court fouls.
The end result coupled East- spoken but hard-playing junior
press and wide open offense.
ern's
!hurst' for victory with drUied through 6·8 In the fourth
With 2:15 left In the game,
Southern's
lack of a point guard, quarter.
junior Mark Murphy drilled both
Brad Maynard followed Mur·
ends of a bonus to pull Eastern as several hustling Tornadoes
within two at 80-78, then after a were thrown Into the ballban- phy's cue with two jumpers for
•Southern ,m iscue Shaun Savoy dllng point guard slot ·after Southern for a 90-84 score. A
drilled the first of a bonus, normally mastering duties of Chris Murphy three pointer gave
Southern Its last glimmer of hOpe
prompting Co!!ch Howle Cald- . swing guard or forward .
The taste of victory became at 90-87 with 18 seconds left, but
well to call time and let his foe
sweeter with time for Eastern, the damage was done as another
think about the next one.
With nerves of steel Savoy whlle visual frustration was SHS turnover gave EHS two '
drilled the second charity toss apparent as the steam quickly more ~harlty tosses an!l tlie win.
Opening Momenta
and the score w11s tied for the spewed from Southern's sal.ls . .
Three straight times SHS lost
Southern grabbed the opentng
Jlrst time since the fltst quarter,
the ball against the Eastern tip and scored th·st on an Andy
80·80.
Eastern lost 6,6 se)llor Mike press; once on a steal by Bissell, Baer jum'per. but' big Mike
Frost to fouls early In the fourth who drilled a beautiful pass to "Snowman" Frost knotted the
quarter and starter Scott Fitch In Savoy for the go-ahead bucket. score at 2-2 . A beautiful Baerdispute of an officials call in the The next came on a wild pass -Grlndstaff-to Brent Shuler
third round, throWing sopho- from Southern, which allowed exchange saw: Shuler lay-In a
mores Tim Bissell and Jeff Durst Jeff Durst to .hit from the soft finger roll, but Kenny
Into key roles going down the baseline with 1: 39left (84-80) and Caldwell drove baseline to again
then came a steal which set up an
knot the score,4-4. Todd Grind·
stretch .
Southern too, suffered the uncontested lay-up by Kenny staff put Southern ahead on a 15
brunt ·of the blow in the foul · Caldwell at the 1: 35 mark for an fooi jumper that gave SHS
contr.ol of the tempo and kept
r;!epartment, losing first key 86-80 EllS lead,
'BOth clubs ' ln'terchimged turns SHS on top until the final
rebounder and anchor in the post
Brent Shuler, then with six at the foullJne .numerous times In ·moments . .
Southern steadily built and
minutes left lost point guard the last minute as SHS had to foul
for
a
chanc;e
to
come
back.
maintained'
a 5-8 point margin
Andy Baer. In the last three
· Mark Murphy, who canned 9 of

Wellsto~ :Whips Meigs, 69-50 Rock Hlll edges
NorthGallia 55-52
'
By, DAVE KAltRIS

for the duration. holding a 28-21
edge after one .period, then
shooting to a 47-36lead with 1: 30
left In the half. At the half ·
Southern led 51-43.
.
In an effort to keep close tabs ,
on the Intense play by both clubs,
many fouls were called as
evidenced by the fact that both
clubs hit the bonus midway
through the first period.
Here Southern helped establish·
Its stronghold, hlttiilg·nearly all•
free throws In the first quarter_
and ~lttlng 17-27 the first half.
Two technlcals were called In the
first half on Eastern as overzeal·
ous contact occured. In the third
frame, two more were called on .
Eastern: the first for having six
men on the court, then another In
a resulting heated discussion
that ensued.
This ma~es the Eastern comeback even more miraculous as It
overcame four two-shot technl·
cals, and four freebie possessions
on the lnbounds after the
technical,
Although Kenny Caldwell has
scored more points In his career,
Saturday's effort saw the senior
southpaw bubbling in enthusiasm and confidence. Caldwell
drilled six key field goats and the
even more Important two trl-vectors that were Integral In
the win.
Caldwell and Savoy both
riddled the SHS press with their
ballhandllng flnese. Caldwell led
the Eagles with 18, while Jeff
Durst came off the bench to knot ·
17 In an outstanding Individual··
performance. Seniors Shaun Sayoy had 15, Mike Frost 14, and
Mark Murphy 9.
Also coming off the bench In
one of his best varsity outings
was Junior Randy Moore, who
anchored the post while Frost
watched from the bench In foul
··
trouble.

eight with four mlriutes left but 17 of 51 from the floor for 33
missed the front erid of two percent and 14 of 19 from the line
The Wellston Golden Rockets one-on-ones and a layup that good for 74 percent. Melg.s
placed four men In double figures Wellston converted on the other grabbed 29 rebounds with Fields
Rock Hill spelled relief "miss" the Pirates' second quarter, In
and pulled away In the final four end to help make the final sco~ grabbing 6 and Mitch and
when
a game-tying three-point which they scored eight points to
Humphreys 5 each. Both teams
minutes to .defeat the Melgs much. worse than It really was .
attempt
by North Gallla point the Redmen's ~4 . but a stronger
Marauders 69-50 at Wellston In a
"We really played well on had 13 turnovers . '
gUard
Chris
Tacke! t hli the back first quarter by the Buc,s kept
·
makeup TVC hardwood game defense," remarked.Rusty BookMeigs will travel to Beverly on
Saturday night .
man 'of his Marauders.· "We Tuesday plght to play theW arren of the ~lm and l)ounced away In them two points behind the Hill at
·
the· game's last four seconds, halftime.
The victory enabled the Golden mlsed some free throws down the Local Warriors In a non-league
Heading
Into
the
fourth
quar·
giving
the
Redmen
a
55·52
.
Rockets ·to keep pace with stretch and thats when you hav~ tilt.
In the preliminary game, Well- victory Saturday night at Pedro. ter , North took a 42-40 lead, but
Miller's Falcons for the top spot to make them."
"If we had made half of our Kip Richardson; Rock Hill's 6·4
In the Trl Valley Conferei!Ce.
Rob Hardee led the way · for stonedged Meigs, 43·37. Brandon
free
throws, we would have tied center, who ruled the palntwlth a
Once again the'second quarter Wellston with 19 points. He was Sherman led Wellston's attack
game,"
said. North Gallla court·hlgh 26 points, and Brock
the
was Q!e downfall for the maroon joined Jn double figures by Mike with I2. Trevor Harrison had 16
head
coach
Tom
Rlccar&lt;:ll, whose Zornes, who scored. 17, pushed
and~ gold as the Rockets out·
Potts .with 17, Scott Lackey with for Meigs . ·
· the Redmen Into the lead, but not
sailors fell to 7-5 overall.
scored the MHS 23-11 to ,e nrase a 13 and Brad Brown with 10. The
Varsity box:
Southern was near perfect for
"The second quarter was the far enough away to keep the
11'9 Marauder lead at the end of Rockets hit 26 of 52 from the field
Score by quarters:
three
quarters, but the final one
kiss of death," Riccardi said of ·Pirates from making a come·
the first quarter and give the and 16 of 28 frOJll the line for 57. Meigs .... .. ...... ...... .... 11 22 34 .50
back bid In the last 11 seconds .
Continued on ~ge 7
Jackson County taerrt a 32-22lead Wellston had . 32 rebounds with Wellston .................. 9 32 45 69
,
..._
,_, ...
Rock Hill, ahead by three,
MEIGS Robbie , Fields
, Hardee grabbing 14.
at the half. ·
standi~
fouled
at
that
point,
and
North
·
3~1-6-15,
Cary
Betzlng
The Golden Rockets held a
Cary Betzlng led Meigs with 16
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
got the ball out of bounds at
45-34 lead heading Into !he final
to 110 aloog with 4 assists, he was 6·- 0-4-16, Jason Wright
(All games)
446 4114
.
mldcourt
Then
the.
Pirates
put
0-'-1-0-3, L.J . Mltch4-0-0-8,
eight minutes of p,lay. ·
. . joined In double figures by
TEAM
W L PF PA
ball
back
ln
play
again
~
the
The Maraudells cut the lead to Robbie Fields with 15. 'Meigs hit Shawn Hawley 0-0-2-2, Jay
Eastern .. .. ........10· 3 961 937
Humphreys 0-0-0-2, Mike
North Gallla .... , 7 5 839 784 giving Tackett, who nailed two
, VanMeter 2-0-0-4 TOTALS
Hannan Trace .. 7 6 792 734 ' three-pointers in the game, the
15-Z-14-110.
Southern ........... 6 . 5 808 705 chance for a game-tying third .
Guard/ forwards Brian Stout
WELLSTON - Brent Phillips
Southwestern .... 5 7. 901 816
and
Darin Smith led the Bucs
1-0-0-2, Chrjs · Graham
S-Valley ....... .. .. 4 6 625 ~0
2-1~0-7,
Scott. Lackey Oak Hill ......... .. 3 8 666 791 with 15 and 10 points, respec•'
5-0-3-13, &amp;hawn ' Beuscher
Kyger Creek. .. .. 1 11 649 921 tively. D.J . Hammel, North's 6-5
. senior center, was 'held to six
0-0
..:.
1-'1,
Mike
Pottsa
Hanna!\ Trace's starters
of Cralg.Rankln , hlsjunlorcenter
points and five rebounds, his
who chalked up 16 points over a 6-0-5-17, Brad brown
posted do.~~le-figure scoring ef,
(SVAC 1ames)
forts In the Wildcats' 78-48
two-quarter period to help drive 4·-0-2-10, Rob Hardee TEAM
• W L PF PA lowest point total of the season.
pounding of visiting Ironton St.
hl.s team to victory. But Rankin 7- 0 -5-1 9 . T 0 TAL S Eastern .......... ..8 0 590 517 . His previous offensive low was 13
wasn't the only Wildcat to roar 2$-1~~6-18 .
Joe Saturday night.
Southern ...........&amp; 1 582 422 points In the Bucs' 81·78 win over
"He came to play that night,"
that night, as fellow . starters
.nO'Ii
. North Gallja .....6 3 654 594 Southwestern. on J)ec. 22.
Continued on page 4
Riehle
Cornell,
Eric
Lloyd,
J
.J
.
said Wildcat chief Mike Jenkins
-~Hannan Trace ..4 4 496 452
Bevan and Todd· Bootbe also
'
Oak Hill .... .......3 5 · 500 577
scored In double figures.
(All Games)
Symmes Valley 3 5 489 535
W L P OP · Southwestern
.
. 3 6 645 627
The Wildcats led by seven TEAM
....
heading
Into
the
second
quarter,
Mlller
..................
8
~
733
676
.
Kyger
Creek
.....
o 9.. 474 706
The Southern 1'ornado freshand
while
the
Flyers
struggled
In
Wellaton
..............
7
3
m
605
TOTALS
..
.....
..
33
33 UJO taa
men basketball team held Wath.at
quarter,
Trace
kept
the
heat
Fed·HOOklng
........
7
4
813
768
•
hama to just two ~nd halffleld
On and led by 22 at balftlme.
'T rbnble ....., .........7 4 697 663
(lteHrves)
goals enroute to a 43&gt;-26 win.
,
Alexander
......
:
....
7
5
778
725
,
TEAM
W L l"F PA
Southern's defense was espe"All our kids got In the game,
Cially strong In tbe fourth quar·
and all of lbem played at least VInton, County ...... 4 4 462" 453 Southern .... .... ... 7 0 368 236
ter, not ·'•allowlnl a field goal,
one quarter," Jenklns said. The Belpre ........ :........!i 5 706 611 North Gallla .....8 1 453 342
while scoring 20 points In the
free substltutl!ln was needed, as Nels·York ...... ...... 2 9 569 836 Hannan Trace ..6 2 371 278
quarter to win going away.
Rankin got his exit In the third, Meigs ............... ...] 8 469 632 c Oak Hill .... ... ....5 3 375 340
Satlll'day nlpt'a reaulta:
Syrrimee Valley 3 5 329 342
For three quarters the game
quarter In becoming one of three
'
Belpre
70
Marietta
65
SOuthwestern
.... 3 6 349 ' 430
was close, butSoutj)ern•s·defenae
Wildcats to foul out. ,But In spite
was tile key.
of thai, a ateadUy more produc- Trbnble 56 Nelsonville-York 41 Eastern .... ...: .... l 7 293 377
1
Kyger &lt;;reek ... ,.o 9 23'1 .ao
Southern wai led In scoring by
tive offense In t,be secoad bal f and (makeup)
Weliston69Metgs
50
&lt;m4keup)
TQTALB
......... ua rm ma
Russell Slqleton witb 10 potna,
a game·hlah ~ points from St.
aut ot •••
Til• •.,•• pmea: .
• '
"
Mike Evans 8 points, and Eddie
Joe's Mike ·Akers, the Flyers
lahriu'
(IACI 01 - FA.)
Sawyen witb 7 points.
, coulda't' eafcb tbe Guyan · Alexander at Trimble · ·
Belpre
at
Ntlaonville-Yor~
Rock
Hill
115;
Gallla
52
Wahama was led In scorln1 by
cheetahs.
Portlmouth . _N.D. , n, Sytnmes
pYatt with l1 J)olns a11d J(Jng with
Hannan· Trace, 7-6 overall, will Federal Hotkin8 af MIJilord
Wellaton
at
VInton
county
Va11ey.57 •
. ..,, . '
l11d1.
8.
be Idle UDUI this weekend' I
Melp
at
Warren
Local
·
Hannan
TrJ.Ce
711,
lrooton'St.
Joe
Southern Is now 6-2 on the year
varsity.doublelleader with South·
Frldar'• , _ :
48
•
,
while Wahama dropped the first
ern, atartllli wtlh Friday nJaht's
Aleltander
Open
Eaatern
92,
Southern
87
game of the seam and Ia 2·1.
game at Racine and endtnr wtth
Nelaonville-York
at
Miller
.
~
Tll•d.,'a
aWe
Jimmy Caldwell's boys next
Saturday nlgbt's encounter· In
Trbnble at Melp
,
North .Gal !Ia at tbeaapeake
JA-~IY S,
play · at Federal Hoc'kln8 on
Mercerville.
VInton
County
at
.Federal
Synuneo
ValleY
a&amp;
Kypr
Creek
Wednelday and return borne
Score bJ quar&amp;en
o;
Soii~Wfttern at New Bolton .
Hocking
Tl,IUI'Iday to play Alexander.
For Morelnformatlen
COntinued on pa1e 4
Wellston
at
Belpre
'
Oa:k
Hill at South Weblter
Both
start at 5: 55.

. ... __

SVAC

H~

Trace thumps
lror;tton
.St.
Joe
78-48
..

Tvc ~tandl

·-Southem frosh win

• ·AnENTION ·•

MORRIS EQUIPMENT CO.

-.p• ·
-:Oftll

is moving their business
EFFECTIVE JAN. 15, 1990
Our New Location Will Be
SIDE HILL lOAD c• •1..
1,...,
We

w• Continue Yo "'ffer AI Of Your

lqti:lpment,
MOBIS I ....... •tillS YOI ·10

co• Ylsn oua . . SlOP Ami
1

1990

c.a 742·2415

ramee

'

~

..

•

'

'

'

�. ,.

'· '

..

I .

. Mondlly, J8111*¥ 16, 1180

Morda;,

Broncos, 49ers pOcket conferenc~ titles
IIJ 11011 UDI
have been well· bidden allseuon.
UPISpula Writer
He llljuretl.hls elbow In a victory
DENVER (UPI) -Atleastone · over Seattle Nov. 12 and bad
. Cleveland ran compllmente~J probl~e rest of the year,
Br-as quarh!rback Bernie especla)I)Tin the cold weather at
Kosar after the Denver Broncoa Cleveland Stadium. ln the
captured the AFC Iitle game.
playoff triumph over Buffalo,
"He's a great. rreat c:ompetl· Kour jammed fingers, on his
tor, that boy," Cleveland owuer throwing,hand.
··
Art Modell laid of Kosar, who did
He haC! not been Intercepted In
not play well Sunday. "You don't Cleveland's previous three
kn- b- much.he's hurling. No gaml!l, . and the three lntercep.
one will ever know."
tiona Sunday were a career
Kosar, who luffere4 elbow and playllff·hlgb.
flngerlnJurlesdiningtbeseason,
"Bernie Is Injured so much In
failed In his a( tempt to lead · all' f11lmeis to him, he's got ,to
Cleveland Into the SUper Bowl~ ,come o1n there and keep throwHecdmpletedJusttwoofhl.sflrst lng the ball and find a way to
10 passes and he was Intercepted tbrow It with the Injuries he has,"
once. Kosar mjsaed open recelv· Browns Coa:ch Bud Carson said.
ers several tlnil!ll and bad sev· "That's one reason you 5ee him
eral . other p88&amp;;1l'! dropped. He throwing the ball every second
finished the day 19 of 44 for 210 . (on the sidelines) ,
yards, with two touchdowns and '
"ffe's trying to groove himself
three lnlerc~pUoils. Denver de- ., with the Injuries that he has. He
feated Clevelan,d 37-21.
• obviously had. problems In the
The e111e11t ot,Kosar',s Injuries .. early going ~ (Sunday.), ·That's
··
·
'
,.

.T'J•tan
' ,._ 's· no'tch 7'1'· 5"j ..
•
,
' • ,. vik•mjJ'Q.
WID ·over
e...,

Missed layups and four
straight third-quarter steals that
resulted In a .J1ke number of
baskets spelled trouble for
Symmes Valley's VIkings, who
lost a 71·57 decision to Ports·
mouth Notre Dame's Titans
Saturday night' in Portsmouth.
·'We m{ssed layups, and It was
frustrating," said VIking head
coach Terry Saunders, whose
crew maintained a steady often·
sive outPut throughout but fell
behind by 10 al halftime.
Notre Dameputona press late
TAYLOR SCORES- 41cn' wider receiver Jobn Taylor comes
up wllh a Joe Montana , _ for a TD as the referee ldpals the
score In the second quarter Sunday. Taylor Is sitting on Rams'
James Washlnpoa. (UPI)

Rock Hill ...

Kell Mler 11, 8prllll" N 3!
l..akerldp II. M•mee ValliS
I..P;IMtr Calllll Sll. Cu Whdester 3t
Ll~»ertr u .... ,.,, Bloom f:•rrolloll
Urn1 Sr •• W...ka.d• II
Lopn .n, Ldcuier 45
Lo. . n 7!. M•)'llviiiP II
Louii"IIIP ~- . . N , Ak Kenmor! 43
Malwr•S4. Lakelaad U
MIDiflfll. st Peter 'It,
ForkS I
MarJUdta tto s.... ., r~rw... 41
MarkJa Hanllll -17, Newark •Z(ot)
M•m« 11, To! &amp;ow-.er n
N llnlon 51, ohllltllu Alter o11
New Lexl•ll•n 17, Mol1(an 40

lkJII&lt;Ohlo RIJIISeMol . . . . .ball
&amp;ulrdQ'III RH••
Atlr M !Uk&gt;ht!lller IS, t\11 S.rlalfleld tl
Aurora ss. Olyt.IIG~a Hab 11

AyerniiW M. ("MI•alal 51
S..chwoed n Rlcllmellll Jlcl•11
lkl.lffoiMl• 11, St Mar,. 55
llelprr 7t, M.rletlllll
Blot~m C.r.-II'JJ, CAl H•CIQ It
Bryan Ill, Norll Ce11lnd •
· Backt-)'f" SW II, Eifl.10• s 14
BuckrJie Trall17, 8kf....,. H
Crdar\fll•15, M. .CNI PlaluH
Cit Jahn Mar . . .llil, Ala Hobu 4S
( ;oal Gro"" M4, RHelud (IK.JJ It

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Newcomerlltown Sf, Wara~ RI'VVIPW

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Ore Clay II, F1ftlllay Sol
PIIUo 18, Ma,yiiVII~ 14

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Port Qlnton II, •ron to
Shit by II,' Galh)a HI

Day Wlllk- IH, Day ltfler110• 11
Dq Northrhl«t 11, 1W111 Val 8 It
Day Dumar Ill, Toii.J._,. 11 (ol)

Drlea 18'7, UbertrCe•r 11

·

TeiCenll'lliiS, TciiSeoltU
Uhrkha Claymalll 71, 81 Clair S1
Uppfl' .VUaatoa 41, fol WM&amp;f'r11011 U
W IW•IIll .... m IJ. Slillf't'ldal o11
W~terford H, ~1er O'«k Sl
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Wll ....d 1S. Btl ltv • .&amp;7
WoOI&amp;er 44, Ma. ..lkl• JacbonU

·

Hf" ..... n LakNMd II, Ntw11.rk r.all I'J
Hh:bviUr H. EdoaU
HIIUard 71, Dllhlla U
llo11111q Q, MIMIII!ull•wa Val ft
lhrfttl57 , Norwalk IS

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101 tn
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The Daily Sentinel

NY a.~~.aw••· w...lllllo•l
New IM~~W· I. 'toe bet •

e.n11o a. v.-..wr s

To,_. I. calptJ I

MlalftGI&amp; t, DetrGM 4
Hartford t. Lo• Alll!l~ S
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H1111ellla&amp; .....a,7:Q p.m.
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13 Weeki ..•. .-................ ............. .

26 \VHiul ................................... PT.II
112 WHiul .............................. :... t7UII

OlaliMe .... eo...,

DRESS SHOES

DRESS BOOTS

ARCTICS

. S7

,.,.,

$

l
I

DOUBLE~

l

I

I

Ii·

I.JN-421·1061

"

.

~

.,..,
ftft"

TUESDA
liGHT
SPECIAL

· The Women's Auxiliary of the
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
meet Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. In the
conference room at. the hospital.

On Rio horior roll

.,•

$32 5

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

..

.

I

IIIUaltOU

........ .,.

for Manuel Grady who was
transported to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
·
At 11 : 33 p.m. the PomerO)( Fire ·
Department was called to County
Road 25 for an auto tire, and at
'11: 51 p.m. the Syracuse unit went
to . Route 124 for Charlotte
Ginther . who was transported to
Holzer.
On Sunday at 1:33 a.m. the
Pomeroy . unit was called to
Ameflcare for Ross Norris who
was taken to Veterans.
The Syracuse unit, at 10:06
a.m. went to Cherry St. for a
structure tire at the Riffle
residence . .
At 12: 04 p.m. the Pomeroy Fire
Department was called to Welsh
Town Hill for a chimney fire at
the Robert Cline .residence.
· At 2: 21 p.m. the Olive Township !"Ire Departmen' was called
to trai.Jer ' fire at the Swagger!
residence. '
"
' The Racine Fire Deparlf!1ent,
at 2:26p.m. went to Bas han Road
for a brush fire , and at 7:24p.m.
,the Racine unit reslionded to a
call on Pine Grove Road for
Goidla Roberts who was taken to
·
Veterans.
Finally, at 11:51 p.m. the
Middleport unit went to V111age
.Manor Apartments for Ricky
' Plumley who was transported to
f):olzer. ·

Ohio 'w eather

-.:...----Meigs
. announcements
.
Clufa to meet
Auxiliary to meet

n~.S4''

.,

meo

tJ WHiul ..................................
:Ill WHiul .................................. .-.31
52 WHiul .................................. m.40

Pen Road at 12: 15 p.m. for
Amber Warner who was taken to
Veterans .
At 2:S2 p.~. the Rutland unit
responded .to a call on ~oute 684
In which Carson Deskin was
taken to Holzer.
The Middleport unit at' 6: 18
p.m . went tq' Overbrook Center

~

...

ALL FIRST OUAUTY

IOIISa
....... 11011......
t All·l PM SAl.
IOU • II APPIOACII

Meigs squads respond io"15 weeke~d call~

1

LARGE slucno•
OF WALLPAPER

1-MU- AYM IIIII

At 10:18 a .m . the Middleport
unit went to Ytonewood Apart·
rilents for Pauline Hudson who
was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The Racine unit, at 12:07 p.m. ,
transported Clair Boso from
Route 338 to Veterans.
The Pomeroy unit went to Wolf

piece Festival Band led by guest
conductor O'Ne!U Sanford, and
tile 500-volce FesUval Chorus,
directed by guest conductor,
Nancy Menk.
· A seleciii'OUP of 99 wllli!&amp;Y In
the Honors Band and 125 will sing
In the Honnor Choir.
The music festival events also
will Include a choral conductors
reading clinic and auditions fiir
0 h 1o We s 1e y a n
m us 1c
Scholarships.
'

...,.peel

I·

WALLPAPER ·

IOIDIIS
sualaa S199

Units of , the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service responded to 15 calls for assls"nce· ,
over the weekend. ·
On Saturday , at 9:', 47 a .m. the'
Racine unit was called' to Apple ·
Grove-Dorcas Road for Vonda
Wolfe who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center .
.

Margie Bartee, choir director.
Selected for the Honors Band
were A:aron Wilson, snare, and
Robin White,• euphonium, siU·
dents of, William Hall, band
director.
· The students will spend 'the day
on the campus of Ohio Wesleyan
rebear'!lng, and then will present
a publiC concert at 7 p.m In tl'le
Gray Chapel.
.
·
They will perform with the 119

S · ks

.--------------+~---•

The Meigs Marauder fresh·
man basketball team, under the
direction of ·Gene Wise, Is cur·
rently 11·0 after wins over
Federal Hocking and Wellston
last week.
In the 51·32 win over Federal
Hocking. Bobby Johnson led the
Marauder charge with 17 points
and 11 rebounds. other Maraud·
ers 1n the scoring parade were
Jay Cremeans wlth4 points and 7
rebounds. Bllly Glaze, Kyle
Simpson, Kevin Lambert, Gary .
Adams and Jimmy PulUns each
scored 2 while Scott Whltla:tch
added 1.
John Bently, despite being held
scoreless had an outstandlng ' ·1
floor game.
1
Bentley'led the way In a 36-27
I
win over Wellston with 15 points.
Jay Cremeans added 6, Shawn
Hamon scored 5. Johnson "and
Mike Welch had 4 each, anil
Glaze added 2. Johnson and
Hamon led the battle of the
boards with 8 each, Cremeans·
had 6 and Adams 4.
· '

faculty or Ohio Wesleyan. Selec:
lion was made on the basis of
audition tapes submitted by the .
students.
• .:
Selected from here were vocal
students, ·Crystal Kaylor, soprano and Susan Wolf and Sherri
Bissell, alto, for the honor choir;
and Amy Murphy and Sherry!
Smith, , soprano . and Debbie
Brooks, alto for the Festival
Chorus. They are' students or

Colulnbia, he was·a .On p( die late
. Daniel and Clara ButCher Varian.
'
AnsU, M. Prunty, 78, Bidwell, ··' ' He Wll!! also~ in death by
died early Sunday morning at St. ·three brothers and one Sistq, •
Francis Hospital In 9harlestoli, ' He wan coal miner, truclnlriver
.:.. ,~ W.Va. .
"
uf&lt;orStheAnn
. Raven-Hockif·~;oadl' O&gt;u.,
BornlnBraxtonCounty,W.Va.
·.
yveterano .
"ar •
on Aug. 9, 191l, he was the son or member of die American Legion
thelateAbbyM.andZumaRiffle Sll)ith-Capehan Post 140 of New
Prunty. He was coal miner.
Hallen, V.F.W. Stewart-Johnson
Mr. Prunty Is survived by Post 9926 of Mason,' and D.A. V.
·three sons, K!!nard Prunty, Bid· Chapter2 of Huntington.
,.
well; Charles Prunty, Lawrence ' Sumving are his wife, Joan L.
SUbmitted By
vance to tlie play-offs. It Impossible to get Into tl\e
County; and Glen Prunty, Cinco, Varian; \WO daughters. Jennifer Sue
Arcb Rose, EHS Coi!ch •
passed, the legls1atlon would playoffs." ·
W.Va.; two daughters. Maxine Michael, Middleport, Cora Jayne
Wrllten By Scott Wol•
reduce this number to just two
The OHSFC Is asking for public
COLUMBUS -The Ohi!J High · teams Jier re111on. ·
Buck, Sunbury; and Elizabeth · Varian, Mason; one sl)ll, David
support of ' Its proposals and
Honaker, Charleston, W.Va.; a Richard Varian, Las ·'Vegas, Nev.;
SchooiFoqtbaiiC~~;~chesAs~la·
Berry indicated tl!at this past especially support from among
; ~Isler, Ll~a ~elJer, Ham,lton; ten . one sister•. Mrs. Ire~ E. Roush,
lion Is makllig a' strong stand, seas 80 schools and communities the ranks of Hlgh ,Schooi prlncl·
,o;'grandclllldren and .16 . great Racine; and four grand~hildren.
against proposed .legislation by. were very supporUve and proud pals,, admlntstrators, and ·'feilo)'l
.•, grandchildren.
'
Sea-Vices will be conducted
the ' Ohio l{lgh School .Athletic to have t heir football teams coaches.
'In addlton to his parents he was Tuesday, 1 p.m., at ihe Foglesong · Association whlch ~he former • Involved · In the playoff systj!m ..
The O}JSFC Is also considering
group s~;~ys, ls against tbe future · Attendance was large through· th,at member flehOOis boycott the
'preceded In death by his wife, Funeral Home, with the .Rev.
F1ossle, In 1989; and two brothers George Hoschar officiating. Burial
of .footbQilln Ohl'1.
' ' out the playoffs and more at~!· football playoffs If teams are
and two sisters.
will foUow in the Gravel Hill
·ReportedlY. the OHSA:A . wm letes are Involved In football than reduced; that ten divisions be
Services will be Wednesday at Cemetery, Cheshire, Ohio.
·
vote on January to cut · lbe any other member sport of the · formed It teams lire cut back;· or
1 p.m.· at tbe Rawlings Coats .
Friends may call 81 the funeral
number or playoffteams from 80 OHSAA. The football coaches have all ~ports with equal
F1sher Funeral Home In Middle- · home this eveninl!, 6 1D 9 P.m.
to 40 teams, reduciD¥ by halt the association feels that 11 Is only number ot' teams In the tournanumber of tea~ that can make · rlgbt to continue the· football ment system as to not to
port with the Rev , W.E. Curfman H 1 F 11
officiating. Burial wUI be In the · e en, e
the state playoffs, 'J'he end result playoff system as Is with 80 dlscrlmlnate'among the sports.
:. Gravel HUI CeiJielery.
Helen Alma FeU, 90; Pomeroy,
Is th~;~t football season, !is far as teams .
··'
Frlendamaycallatthefuneral Ohio, died Sunday, Jan. 14,1990, playoff games go, w!ll ·· be cut
Berryonbehalfofthecoaches
), home on Tuesday·frornJ.5 p.m.' at her daughter's residence in New
shorter by one we,ek. · ·
association further· states that Lottery numbers
a, and 6·8 .p.m.
Haven.
.·
. The Board. ot Col)trol of the 'We .c ommend the OHSAA ·and
:
'
CLEVELAND (UPI. - Satu~·
Russell Manison
Bom. Feb.. l7, 1899, she was li · OHSAA apJ)dlnted an Ad Hoc theworkofnianypi!Qpleoverthe
, Sou lh Central Ohio
,
.,
·
·
daughter of the late· Ghriltian and Committee on JuJ9 20, ·1989. The past two decades io Improve our day's · winning Ohio Lottery
Mostly
cloudy Monday night,
•
R
ftA M
F~ Scljneider.
'!"-:
, committee addressed the con- playoff system to Its ,present numbers:
with a low in the lower 40s .
73 8
:
11sse . · arrlson.. ,1 llE . · ,• Sumvmg
· are daumhter
, , Alma cerns · .expressed by OHSAA status. Ohio ts agreat fQotball PICK,3
Cloudy Tuesday, with 'a slight
47th St., Ashtabula, died Satur·
:..
be
hool
taint
t
. 379.
Malshall, New Haveri;
two mem r sc
s per
ng · o state. We bave 716 schools
chance of rain and highs betw~n
• day at the Ashtabula County granddau~~ten. judy Thmer •!Jur- the,D':'fllber of contests, lenght of playing footb'a n. With the proPlCK-3 ticket sall!li totaled 55 and 60. Chance of rain Is 30
.'
Medical Center.
'
6"
..
1a ·' 1n
"
'
deue, Delaware, Ohio, Patricia'Jane seasons, over PP g seasons
posed cut only 5,, and one half $1,505,595.50, with a payoff due of percent.
Born In Ashtabula, M~·
Marrl·
con
er
1
II
t
d
t t
·
.
c n ng a spor s, an oo · percent
of participating schools $395,451.
·
Smith Haynes, Nicholsville, Ky.;
' Ex.l ended Forecasl .
; son lived In Racine In his early four .,._, __ n..,.hikben
three ball contests prior to Labor Day, would be Involved In the playoffs.
PICK-4
Wednesday through Friday
• years and later moved back to
.,._
t
·
·
3108.
greal-great-trandchildlen.
e c.
Many; deserving schools would
A chance of showers each day.
• Ashtabula. He was employed by . Services will be conducted WedThe report stated the foUo\VIng never get to experience lbe
P1CK·4 ticket sales totaled . Highs mainly wiU be between 45
: McKinnon Iron Wor~ and Gen· nesda 1 p m at th F 1
, regarding football: Football p'a~offs."
$280,063.50. with a payoff due of li nd 55 ~ach day. witb overnight ·
eral.' Tire in AshtabUla for 40 ·
y,
· ·•
e og llSQIIg
will b
d
.,.,,
" '
~ years. He retired 1ft 1915.
Funeral Hcillle, with the ,Rev. Rex · • tou~naments
e re uced
U.nder the new proposal PI,~ ; $114,900.
lows between 35 and 45.
Mr: Marrtson Is slirV!vedby his Young offii:iating. Burial will folfrom four weeks and 80 teams to !stan IV State Champion Mlns\flr
wife Dortha M~ Diddle Marrison, ·. low in die Beech Grove Cemetery, three weeks and 40 teams;
would not have qualified.
.
.
Pro::~dbecl~l\gLes~rDamlts 0 ~
.Berry added, 'I'm sure Minster
' whom he married o.n July 30, Pomeroy.
, inay 'cajl at th~ funeral . con 5
ore .a r
y; an
was happy that they did Have that
1933• AI so survl v Ing are a daugh· · h Friends
Tui:sda 6 9
that ·all teams ,begin practice on chance "
ter. LaVonne Bradshaw, North
orne
y, 10 p.m.
the same day (August16) regard·
Eastern coach Arch .Rose
• !Qngsvtlle; a brother, John·Mar·
1
f th d t 0 f th 1r fl t
·
0
ess
e a e
e
rs
Indicated, "I'm In favor of t~e
• ' rison, three grandchildren', ·and · (OC
. )o
scheduled contest.
'tater starting date of August 16. 1
three great granclcl\lldren.
..
·'
·Jim Berry, presltlimt of the .be\Jeve thli would be a good td~a.
Preceding Mr. · Marrtson In Dally .'lock prlcl!l ,,
OHS Football Coaches a~socJ,. because beginning Aqgusf 1
death were h~ . parents, ··a son,. (As ort0:38,Lm.)
,
tlon says that his organization iakes away a tot or the kids'•
John . Marrlsoa; a: r daughter, ·Bryce and Mark SmMh
had not been contacted todtseuss summer and during that Ume Its
Shirley AnnMarrlson; two broth· of Blunt, Ellll&amp; Loewi
their concerns.
usually extremely hot and )lard
ers, Harry Marrlson and James
" · · '
The coa~hes '.assoelaUon say~ to get everything you need to
Ross, and a sister, Mattie AJ.Ison. AIJI Electrtc ~power ......... ~... 31\l,
that they are In favo~ ·of a later accomp~lshed. If everyone .
FOI
JUST ·
Services will bEi today at 8 p.m. AT&amp;T : ............................. ::.42%, starting dafe, b!Jt want to ~on; started on the 16th of Aupst this
. (Dining ltom Oltlyl
.
•
at. the Jack· W. Ross Funeral, Ashliuid OIL ....................... 38Y.
tln'ue with thecu~nt80.teamsln would be fair." ·
Servod ,with
potllloea. chlck1111
Home IIi Ashtabula where calling ·. Bob Evans .......................... 131,~
the football tournapuint._App~?X·
Ro~ contlnuf,!d, "I also believe ·.
.,gravy, cote elew, hot rolla~d l&gt;ulter.
hours will be')leld from 6-8 p,ni. • Charming Sf!oppes ....... ... , .. ..:9¥.
lmately 6,000 footbalt players · that the current 80 team playoff ,
Sorry, no aubllltutM ucapl, •••11•
with acldltlonal prl-:
,
. Graveside ser~ces will be, held' City Holding Co ................... 14
statewide would be affected.
system should remain lnta~t. It
•:. Tuesday at 2 p.m. In the Gr.i!en· Federal Mogul:.. ....... ::-. ....... 20,~
Football!~ the onlY Spoftw~re gives more teams an opportunrty
NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL
;· ·Wood Cemetery In Racine. ·
Goodyear T&amp;R .... ;.............. 42%
member~hools!IQ11,ot~oheadto•. :_to par'tlclpate and besides the
'; . Memorial contributions may Heck's .. !..............: ........ ....... 3'h · head battle In tb'6, 'ioarnament. ; 'Pll!yoffs are already hard enough
; :· ~ m~d~ to the American Heart Key ClmEt~rl9n ... ~...,... ,::.: .. .:.13'h
Jnstea~. compu~t~: ranklil~ de-. · to eet Into as they are. Reducing
PH. 992·5432
PO.IOY, OH.
,;
soc a on.
Lands' nd&gt;........ :....... J...... ,19% ctde, wllo will particiPate Bll¢tl)e , the DIIJIIber ofteams would make
·
F"turl"tt Kentudcy Fried Chicken
' Dalias
Varian .
" l;lmlted Inc .......~.. :.:&lt;: ... ;...,. ..33¥. top four frbm ea!:.~ ·reglo.n' ~d: tt much more difficult,. nearly
,
Multimedia Inc . .,, ................ 88
..
,',
.
.
Dallas Richard Varian, 62, Rax Rl!staurants ... ,: ..... : :: ..... l'Vs
Mason~ died Saturday, Jan. "13, · Robbins &amp; Myers .... :.... ...... :i5'14
. · Vieterans .·Memuow
-"·' Shoney
·
•s lnc.. .............
· •.,
t
1990•. m
.. ......,,lOY
8
Hospalal, Pomeroy.
, . •.
• Star. Blink...... : ........... L ...... ... 20 ·
'
·' ·&gt;·
' '
1". :r .
;
Born May 20, 1927, , in West Wendy's Inti .... i ..... ::~ ...... ,.... 4'h
i·
.
'
'
.
1i ·"
ln.~P;orsuanc'4t
Of
~at'i,
1
•.
George
M.
Collins,
Treasurer
of
Meig~Countv.
Ohio
in
c.
o
mpliant?
with
revised Code No. 323.Q8 of State of Ohio~
1
Worthington Ind ........... : ...... 22%

&amp;·--

S7 &amp; Sl 0 SlO .&amp; S12
MEN'S 4 &amp; 5 IUOOE

Eight Eastern Hllh. School
vocal and lnatrumental students
have been ·ll!lected to partpcl· ·
pate In . the 40th Annual High
Schoool Music Festival to be held
at Ohio Wes~an University on.
Jan. 27.
The eight students from here .
are among 843 ln the ~·state
representing 92 . Oh!o High
Schools selected to parUcipate In
the m
, uslc fi!Stlval by the m, u. sic '.
J

festival

a

DRESS HEELS

GIRLS' BLACK

p~cipateJn

students .to

i: ·

.LA!IIES'

S7 &amp; S19

1,

I·

E~S

The Deily Sentinei-PIIgr &amp;

Ohu;i irid coaches-take ,strong
stand Ugainst. proposed.action

$

S7 &amp;Sl 0

rrew flags . .

,Anso .Pnanty

$3 &amp; ss

LADIES' CASUALS

Continued from pal!~! 1
..
'the rear of a car driven IJy Danny Ru~lL 'l'llere was moderate
damace to the rear of the Lowe veblele, and heavy to the rear or
the Ruuellcar. There was alsoheavyd811)81etotbefront~dof
the Lewis 'Vi!hlcle. Lewis was cited tor failure to keep assured
clear distance. There was no injuries.
•

- -.· Area deaths,.....:.
·:.·.........---

LEATHER

.

·· ., ..··Eight

..

GIRLS' SNOWIOOTS
LADIES'·SNOWBOOTS

"

briefs:.~

New A~erlca,n and Ohio nags have been donal~· b). the
American Legion Po-t 602 and Boy Sco11t Troop 244; both of
Racine, to the Melp Board of Mental Retardation for· th~
Carleton School, Syracuse.
. ·
'·
.
·
Fred $carberry, scout tro6p leader and ;membi!l- oi the ·
· American Legion, noted the. need at !lie school a!Jd arranged for
the donations ..He has also arranged for the proper retirement of
the old Oags which have been In service tor the ~t year.
Scarberry Is the husband~f ~n Scarberry who workS as a J~d
worker. for Meigs Industries; Inc. In the Meigs MRDD Adult
Services Program. ,
· 1
'

•

MEN'S

$

'

Pomen»y-Midd'rpOn. Ohio

LegiOn, scouts· donate-

BLIND SHOP
JANUARY SALE

NATIONAL •MIIII'J'aALL AIIIOC

GlrkOti.. HIIIIIIIc.... Ba~llll

~

AND

DetnllMIW ........ •IIIIt

.....
rTrhfq11. Palr,.ar P•kn
vw••
a._,.-.
......_..,,

Clll~a-..eM.CtiWQIIell '
011 ........ ............ ..

·

Newapaper
... 733 Third AWIIue,
New York, New York 10017.

c.J..., .............•I&amp;M

lloelleoi ......._

,

Member: Unlled-Preulnt..,.donol,
Inland Dally Preoa Auoclallon lllld the
Oblo N.,..pa5 AIIOdatlotl. Nallollll
Adverllltnc
resentallve, Bntlblm

v......,.N\' ............ 11!&amp;

. . . . . . 17, Det...,eU

Col-·~·-·
CoiW-a.
Col Utoilt

Ohio.

-··-

d.tt... atTHMt., '•II

.................. ,...41
WWa(WYI en . . ..... WRiwra

Cel~ • • • , . . . . . . .

Publlahed every aflernOIXI, Monday .
lbrOIIIlb Friday, Ill Court Sl., Pomer&lt;if,. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley PubUahlnc Company/Muttlmedlo, Inc.•
Pomeray, Ohio t57till. I'll. !192-2156. Se·
cond cl~;tl• pclltalt patd at Pom•oy.

NY R...,rt4. PllllladllpWal. OT
WIMIIPI!at.SI.Lo-.1
CaiP17 I, Ollcqo I

£\',....... •

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ltl8P8It......
A lllvloloe ol-a...Ua, lac.

PltiM4WpWat, Montft' .. l (Ur J

Utira 7l. Uftbl&amp; v.ue, 11
Ver•ll• M, All...aa11
W•rn 11, PI ll'rre II
W-'111• Mem_..a 7S, Grawllkll

BciWre 11, .......111111111

tn
Ill
lSI
187

All.nt~J&amp;nlft•

hi Val IW\'a) 11,8 p.....

.............. o....,., 41

IU
Itt
Ill
111

NV RuiH-1. ..... t

T•l Fr..cla 71. Ot •••••••I

'

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Ill
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'II' I Vllkae It, •oohllle II

'

171

Ill ItS

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W L T Plll. Gil' GA
Chtrap .....-......."'J I~ .. 4 5t 1lil:l Ill

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w........

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ISS IU
Molireal ......... tl 11 1 51 liZ 111
Hartford ..... ..... !! •
S 45 1st Ill
Qllebee ..............&amp; •
t H Ill •a
campbell Coldei'Htce

RollA SE 13, Wmliall-11
1
S ChriN&amp;o.SE 11.SprSIIaw~f' 11 (01.
S..ey Valief A!, •ck"" N •
!oihHWo.d Faint- n, PM .. q11
SIJMey l.ellmu 71, NNtoll 4S
Hlillflft'niMal 58, Edlan N H
Speacer"'Ur U, Ntw Breme• a (.t)
S,rtapro 51, W.,...aWl leo g
Rprtn1 NE II, St P&amp;rtl Grallll*l'! II
S,rt•1 CMII11, Tlpp Oly Betltelll
Nl He•ry 71, Fl LGnmlt II
SIHh~aWite Ill, f:arribrtdp,lft
Slow Wal• ll ,_IM II, C••'-• CC 11
T~ar• Valley lB. C.I' Waater101141
, .............. 1
Talsta;rt 'Jt, S,J Norll~tew •

.

or
1111

" ' L T Pia.

Ntw JeriiP)' ..... ~i W .&amp; .&amp;II
Hr lslud!ra .•. tll 21 I U
N1' Ru ..ra ~ .. 18 21 R -II
. .,.llhlllll ....... tl II 3 U
Pt!U.clelplllll .... llil 21 7 43
l8 M .. 41
Ad an. DM•toa
Bo.ton ............. JI 11 I IS
a.rral. ............ 21 II I $ol

•.rtt•

"

·Continued from page 3
Ironton St. Joe ... .J6 7 11 J47'~8
Hannan Trace ... 23 22 17 ·t6-78
HANNAN mACE (78) · Rank.tn 5-0·6·16; Cornell 5-0·3·13;
Uoyd 5·0.2-12; Bevan 5-0-1-11;
Boothe 3·0.4·10; Watson 3-0.0·6;
S. Sanders 0·1·2·5; M. Sanders
1·0.1-3; Black 1·0.0.2. TOTALSIIH·IB-78
F1eld JOals- 29-72 (40.3%)
Foul Sbotll - 19·34 (55.9%)
Reboanda - 33 (Boothe 7)
AsldsiB - 18 .
Steals...: 24
Tumo'Vi!rs - .15
' ST. JOE ( 48) - ,Akers 5.0·10·
20; Smith 5·0.1-11; LatkAJ.Q.f.lO;
NieseI Q.0-7·7. TOTALS -lJ-0..2248
'FoulahoiB- 22·M (64.7%)

NATIONAL HOCKE;Y LEAGUE
Walm c..rere.,~

LEATHER

MHS frosh ll-0

Hannan ...

Pro standings

London 711, SCent U

New Knoxvlllt ig, Falrll•nll
N- L.llloa78. Gr~ .. di~Ce.IH
Newark 51, MltM Verr,• $1
OilkwOOII IS. Trt CJo N I
Ohtfoln 11, LotaJ n O••Wew Sl
ottawa Hllbl 'tt. OIHJO fl
Oxford Tali.wandl lol, Ham
Pfttrllhull s,rt•• tt, Lewell~1 11
Pld&amp;erlftlloa 78, RlfiO...,.IIIt
Por1Am0111h lt1, Col Mar·f'ru k 11
Preble ShaWJieefl, Newftt111111• (!4( •
Rockkud Par"'-1 11.
If
lklck)' Rlvn IAfleran W 71, .... .....,.

m

Worthll!lloa U. Growp_.lll
Wortlllftllu Dr liS, ll•kln(allt-13
Zant'll RoMH..'I"U~ 1%, Zanenl.lle 03

lndt'~Wnde..C• st. Colwnhta 41
Jalii'Mott-Mlllon ~t. ~ Ranr $1
.Jo•than Alter IS, Olenlllno II ,
Kf'tlrr.._ All~r 7-t WeslerYIIko S n
LMiidand U, olt&gt;Writ44d• St
'
UdajEtoalll, Sparta Hll(llland 511
Unw. liD, W•kOIIHIIJ:S
'
Lopn Elm 111, Clrtlrvllle II
La lila nvllle It, A. Wad 11
M•11 On Ill, Crt'ICII• IS
Man !\ st Pf'l•r 7!, Frederkkltwa II
Muu.lt'ld Peter~ 7L FreMk'kt-llli II
Map~ta.ll , Collh•W••RftiJI
Mario• Pl.,.nt U, fa1'111,...oa411
Mar,pvllk-lt. llukf')'f" Valt., SJ
MM• " 'IUihi . .on1S. All BuebeeiM
MPd Backf')'f' II. Mrd .. pl .. d It
Mlller•port 111, Cot&gt;•Wrhulll!
Miner \'II K2. f a • 31
Moudoni' Ill, Garft'tlsrille Grnd lit
N Union II, Mt Gllea411't

Eastern wlll make up Its boys'
SVAC basketball contest with ·
Oak Hili on February 6·, while the
girls will make up their away
date with Federal Hocking on
January 31.

+

gettheballtohlsd~recet:vers.

Makfups announred

F1eld goals- 22·61 (36.1'11 )
Three-pointers - ·4-14 (28.6%)
Foul shotll- Hi (36.4%)
Rebounds- 31 (S. Smith
Blocked shots - 3
Assists _ , 11
Sleals- 4
Tumoven 7 13

T...-um.e• 41, Plq1alf
.
TlppCity'lt, Sift)' ldr.nan U

fu!'f'l !Pill lA, Vo• Moolli!t 51
Folltorla 1t, pt Clllltoa II
·:.
GaiU,abl 71, l't Plf'._..l t WVa).
Harnul ... 114, SprfliJ s 5t
' H11m11 ... RoM Tj, MIMII!t... Md.
Htalh 14t, ............ n

5~

8 1 - 12, v -··"· 41 .
9t P • • Grah.-n 11. 8prtn1 Ne Iii
T~.,a\' alley u. ArnMdaaearcrteUI

· Dlxlr 71. N.ll TraU '71
E (:anton Rl, Torlllilo H

happened to him before, parllcu· , . yards~ nllle-flnt clowna.
la.rly&amp;Jnce he'shadthelnJury.He
''We ve bad all sortJ of thiDgll
said he was all rlgllt, but hell;
come up. ~· Everett laid when
Bernie always . says ·he's all
asked If the .mud · slowed the
right."
offense. "They had to play on It
"It's Just SOJlll!thlng you deal
as much as we did. There are no
with at this time til year," Kosar
excUiel. They play~ a whOle Jot
said of the Injuries. "It's · not
better than we did.
something I've. used as an
Everett, who spent the past
excuse, nor do I plan to. I've been
week reacting to comparisons
trying to adjust with It and live
'Yith San Francisco's Joe Mon· .
with It."
, , tana, threw three Interceptions.
Kosar's Jammed fingers prot&gt;,
H~; was 16· of 36 for 141 yards.
.
ably contrl()uted to his troubles
, I was· huiTied. ·on a lot of
Sunday more than the elbow
passes," he said. •:(Defensive
aliment. · The ball sailed lin
end Charles) Haley was bringing
Kosar, causing him to mJ.ss
It and those, Gther ,INYS · were
recelversandleadlngtoallofthe great. Iteltw~wereup. We were.
Interceptions.
'
ready. · .
.
Kosar was still able to lead the
"WI1en you play- the 49.ers, you,
Browns back Into the game,
bett.erplayaperfectgame.Uyou,
hitting Brian Brennan with a pair · don'!, you can't expect to' )"ln..
of third-quarter scoring passes . There were a lot, of passes I
.as Cleveland rallied with , 21 . wanted back, but Its nota yo-yo
,jiOints In that period by using a
-It's a footbldl." '
.hurry-up offense.
Everett, who, led the Rams to
Nlnen .r etlll'lllo Super Bowl'
448 tOtal yards la~t w~k against;
At San Francisco, Calif. the .the New York G!ants; could not
Los Angeles Rams, Whose' last
appearance In .a n NFC tlue game
Flipper Anderson, who had two
produced no points and numb TD recepUons last week, caught
limbs. were nearly as Inept one pass fat 14 ·yards. Henry
Sunday In wet Candlestick Park. Ellard had just two catches for a .
!'A loss Is a Joss," quarterback total of 18 yards and speedster
Jm Everett said after the San Ron Brown was shut out.
Francisco 49ers earned another
Running back, Buford McGee·
Super Bowl berth with a 30·3 rout was the leading receiver with
"
of the Rams. "These are our se~en cat~hes for 53 yards.
rivals. These ;~re the b1Jll1es or\
. I don t remember gettlq~
the block. we got bulUed again manygoodplaysontheoutslde,
today.
Everett said. "They just exe. "NeXttlmeweseetpeseguys,I cuted so well. They just have •
hope it changeS. Right now, they great players .. (Strong ·Sijfety)
own the street...
.
·
Ronnie Lot! is a great player. He
The Rams, who fell 24·0 to the lives In ,_the shadow of Joe
Chicago Bears In the frigid 1985 Montana.
,
.
conference championship game,.
Loll broke up the Rams best
were the owners of a potent opportunity for a TO. Anderson
offense. But the team which brokefreedowntherightsldellne
averaged more than 30 points in In the first quarter, butLottcame
their last six regular season by at the last instant to knock the
games was limited to 156 total ball away·

Continued from page 3
North Gal Ita will play its
Second straight non-conference
game Tuesday night against
Chesapeake before returning
home and to SVAC action Friday
against Oak HUI.
1 .
'&amp;ore by quarters
. , '
111
6 8 18
· 10 52
N. Ga a ... ;........ 1
Rock Hlll ........... 12 14 14 15-52
ROCK HILL (S$) - Richard·
son 11-Q.4-26; Zornes 5·1·4·17;
Besco 2·(). 4·8; Blankenship 1 ·0·0~
2; DePriest 1-0.0·2. T9TALS 211·1-12-51
Foul shots -12·15 (80%•
Renfroe 8·2·1-23; Mootz 2·0·8·12;
. NORTH GALuA (5~) _Stout · Nicholas 3-0·1·7; Hayes 0·2·0·6;
3·2-3·15; D. sintth 5-0·0-lO; s. •. Justice 1·0.2-4; Casteel 1·0·1-3;
Smith 4-0·1·9; Tackett 1·2·0·8: · Plerce0·0·2·2. TOTALS-1~·15·
Hammel 3-0,0.6; Farley 2·0·0·4; 57
.
Haney 1·0.0-2. TOTALS_ 18+4·
Free .l hr(/ws- 15·28 (53.6%)

Sco reboard ...
Prep scores

In the third quarter tbat netted
them four consecutive steals, all
of which were converted into
baskets that served to put the
game out of the Vikings' reach.
Notre Dame's Jeff Furnier and
Valley's Chad · Renfroe held
target ·practice to tlie tune of 31
and 23 pOints, respectively. Ren·
froe' s offensive performance, his
tillrd and the team's third such
effort In the 20s, was a team and
personal high.
VIking center Kevin Nicholas,
who was held to seven points.
played In spite of sutrering from
bronchitis, while teammate
Danny JusUce labored in spite of
a groin pull.
Symmes Valley. 4-5 overall,
wHI travel north to play Kyger
Creek Friday night.
Score hy quarters , ,
·
Symmes Valley .14 17 12 14-57
Notre Dame ...... 17 24 i6 14-71
NOTRE DAME (71) - Furnler
12·0·7·31; Greene 7·0.2-16; Bolin
2·1·0-7; Sparks 2.0·2·6: Wilson
0·0-4-4; WHIIams~ 1·0·1·3·, Burke
0.0·2·2: Morgan 1-0·0-2. TOTALS
- 25-1·18-71
Free thrOWB _ 18- 25 172,it)
SYMMES VALLEY ($?) -

l .

.-...v 1&amp;,.1990
Local news

Sixteen Me~s County student$
were ll.sted op the University of
Rio Grande's fall quart~tr honor
roll, according to the Office of
Records.
To achieve hOnor roU status.
atudenls earned a 3.15 · grade
point aver.age on a 4. scale during
t!le q\Ulrter.
· On the list were Jennifer L.
Coucb, 'Kimberly L. Dent, Gina
D .. FoUrOd. Charlotte A. Hart,
Todd C; Jollnltm, Kellin Donal~
KJag, Michael!(. Muuer, Ralph ·
H. Werry, Darla K. Wl)ui,nson,
and Wt!llley Roger You111. all of
Pomeroy; I&lt;eaneth s. arue.er,
Kellee Jo Burdette Nease, Lisa
M. Pape, Kelly b. Rizer, all or
Racine; · and CherYl Halley, and
,., Carol A. Smith, Middleport.

'

Hospital news
Veteraa1 Memorial
Satul'!iay admissions- Amber
W11rner, Pomeroy.
Saturday discharges - Goldla
HendreD aDd Bernice Fry.
1
SUIIIIV admllalona - Guy
Priddy, ~mer()y.
$llnday dljcharges - none.

·

T;O-SHIPS

.-·.

At+- L.$0:,'

UEBANON '

,

•
LETART

··:.. . .
............

-

..',

"

lond
!f'wp,

5cnool

Rio

.

M .A.

119 Otae•l Yac. , Corp ,

T.B.

l't

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Bd. Of

....,...

Ellectln:

EHecll••

All . • Atr .

A ala
01ner

All

R,lld.

Olttef

HIJIIh ReawC:IIOn ~eduction,

Total

2.70

33.70

.50

.

'

.10

'~-I

1.00 · 3.wl

2.00

'1.SO

1.00

.

:223624 .199933 '50.10

38 .896438 40.083379

*'' . ·.~·~~30&lt;. ;•_P'3~.60·~~lz~o.&amp;Oi!1-J..5~o~l.~.1~'o+~1.~00H--+-+~2.oo~+.1!-'!.50~·+'~.00~·p·.~o684~7~3:-r;.o;;32~0...~t;:34~.40;;;-'~3;;2~.o~44~5~38~;;33~.29~7;;96;;
176
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3.60 123.10 1.50'

(4'io

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10

..

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. '

1.50 • 1.00

I

.143t94 .062252 37.40

"'

I

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32.0445411 :l!i,44&amp;780

430

4.20

23.60

I .50

.10

1.00

2.00

1.50

147868 .0587&amp;0 38 10

32.466220 I :l!i,B&amp;1232

4.:10 '

3.70

20.50

.60

.10

UO_

2.00

1.50 l1·oo · .08111&amp;1 .044- ·134.60

31.773728 33.044080

2.70

20.60

,60

.10

1.00

2.00

1.50

1.110

.002782 .031405 33.60

31.4110523 32.644800

1330
12.00

24,00

.50
24.00 . .10

.10
.10

1.00

2.00
' ' 7,00 ' 2.00

f.&amp;n

1.00

1.50

1.00
1.00

.062867 .032198 37.10
.107ti36 :054028 43.40

.50 .10

1..l!!t

2.00

1.60

1.00

.0&amp;2206 .02&amp;840 :11.10

1.00

OLIVE
•• 00

, RUTLAND

'

.

· I

MolpL.S.D. ,

4 .~ ·

Rutland VIII._

4.30

,~AL:Iul.~:O.
SAL!~UAV_

'

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'',

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430

1.l0 124.00

!

1,

38.732917 41 .056131
'•
34•216393 36.131307

·I ··• ''

'

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. O~~~t4~1.3iC0:!1~.7tO~
4.30
.20 ' IM.CIIi
I~MI.OO==~'):COt
.10 ·, &lt;10
~·I~0·~·, 1.00
1~~~==~~~2.
1.70
l!.lio
00~t~111.BD
..10it~l~
11.00
.~if' i.1111174
!DU~21oti~0==~~-~31~.~10tp34!1±2'1!:~it:·~··1ii.»
43.30 39.13ile&amp;4
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su~lhom L.~o.

I-IlLA- AYMINI

4.30

Elll(am L;s.o. l • :

•

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·-------------·

COII~tY

•&gt; ·,.1'.c.

•. COLUM!IIA/

,----------~~
I
COUPON .
' I

. I· IIADY IUDI iu•S• I

I ·•

~

SCIP\0

I
I

· '

ANDCORI'ORAT ,..NS: .,..+...~,;..
· '+-t=+=~+-+_:...-+-=1=--:-t=~r·~1-=
~·~·.j,...~=~-1-~=I=~~F-~~~ -t
· ~~--!·~~1
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'
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1. :~, Meigs l.S.D. •'
\uo 1.70 24.00 .50 ' .~0 100 1
2.00
1.50 t.OO .052205 .026640 36.10 34.215393 35.138307
Eastam L.S.D. •.
430
1.70 20.50 1.50 .10 .1.00
2.00
1.50 1.00 .0578t0 .029500 32.60 30.715393 31 .638307
CHESTER
•
'
1.50 1.00 .064980 ' .036381 34.50 32.258190 33.244848
2.00
Eo~oml.S.D. .
430 ·',· S.60 20.50 .50 .10
1.00
1.50 1.00 .058995 .033030 38 '00 35.758190 36.744848
,1 • MtliiL.S.O:
,
. do
3.60 24.00 . .50 .10
1.00
2.00

~....

$300
. Off ·• •'
•

·

'·

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AU CISt08' ....., : .

·

•

l

·sCHool DISTRiCTS ·

IAvo'
IO.. BlinJ(s
..

~ '

I

'

.CO.,AIE OUI
QUAUYJ, PRICE &amp;.
SO VICE
WH. IUYING

, .650fo: ,. ~.\:.,.,.

....

do he'reby give nOtice of the Rates of Taka\ion for the T•x Year of 1989. Rate5.exprcssed 10 dollars and cenls on each one thoysancJ dollars

'tax v"eluatiOn.

WALLPA!ER·
.
. AND ·
,1
BLIND·SHOP

,.

j

'

The Middleport Literary ·GJub .
will meetWednesdayat 1:3Qp.m.,
at the home of Mrs. Cliester
Erwin. · "City of Joy" Will be
reviewed by Mrs. Roy Holter.

.

Rates· of ,Taxation for .1 989

, ..;laL.s.o

R
SV

'

MIMIIL.II.D.

9Ail-SMI41•

•

1

:

IM.IIII

.10

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1.00

•

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3.io IM.OII 1.10 10

4.30

3.10 IHM
1.20 lzua
1.10 123.50

.10
.10
.10

10
.10

1.00
1.00
100

luo ' I 3.10 I M.OO

1.10

'JO

1.00

4.~ ·

VILLAGE '

sunoN . _

.20

430

:1~

'r.oil

I!

1.80

·2.00 ,

1.10

11.011

·

2.00

I;M

1.011

'

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39 1 -

.

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4.80

2.00
2.nn
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1.10

11111
•.&amp;n 11.00
UO 11.00

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1.10 lt.oo.

141UA Lati2301l37.00 31.
.10- 44.20 ·34.Dlli41
.1315711
40.30 34
37.60

M.

•

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35.2515121M4117h

Raal Esltltt 1001 which " - no1 '""" paid ot tho dolt of ooch qolloction _,., 1 -lty ~ton ptrCant' Tu11 m., W paid II tho olli..
of lhl cjoutlty,....... 111 by 111111. ,..... brl111 yaur t11111x rocOlPt:.ond ~ you pay by mall, bo "'" 10 locale your -•1Y by lallint
dlmlll and onalaHIIanlpld sall-oddr- ...........
,
AlwaY1 tlllftiiM y0111 Ux ..c.ip110 IHihlt It COHrl all your pr-"f, Ollico Hou118:30 A.M. 10 4:30P.M ., Monda\' IIIN Fltday,1
, ctoaadonlat~.. IY·
·
· .
, ,
I
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:11681il3l .11311&amp;&amp; I :11.10 ·31.141173 -

•

'

�'·

•
•

'

.

•

'

•

Bradford Church of Christ -People
elects .officers at meeting

~n

•

Soutllern

• POLICIES

~

· ·, ~., -nl).!

TIIURSDAY PAPER
•HIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY rAPER
,,r

•.

i

''':..
•. ,

,.
··

I

~

•

~-

•

(,

r-----~----------~----~---------------1,
I

joi.,.

.A. WADE,' MD., Inc,:·.

PUASAIT VILLR HOSPitAL .'

EAR, 'NOSE &amp;THIOAT
GENERAL ALLEIIGIS1
"WE
. HAft HIARINO AIDS"
.
(304) 675-1'244

•

••ne

sot• .._/

•

' Wegi1 .......... .... 130.000

Employee
'
a..ellto ..... ......... 41, 300
Unlfonnond
Clothlng ..... :........ ..3.200
Contractural ·
S..rl
................ 4,2110
Supplloo ond
Metorllll ..... , ....... 20,2110
.
Total PoliO&lt;! Law
. Entor-t ... 1203,1100
. TOTAL·Progrom J'-lecurlly
,., · ' of,.,• ..,, and
Priii*JY .......... 1203.100
PROGRAM V-BASIC
UTILITY SERVICES

Et-lc Utility

i

'·

.'

Income Taa

w

'

Adrilklio-n&gt;
•
lei loo/Wl!ll• .... 117, 1100
Emllk!¥ee ·; '
Ben'tlho ................ 7,420
Canl,.ctunol'
·
Servlceo ................ 1,800
.uppltooand
Materilla. .............. 1,000
tDIIIt Income T.. Ad·
" mlnilt18tlon ....... 127,720
l:teri&lt;.T-Nr: ·
....../W........ I11.800
.........,.. ...ellt...... .. 110

311 245251643-

VInton
Rio Grande

-

Ma~on Co., WV
Ar.. Code 30•

992 • Middleport
Pom•oy
986- Ch••r

17&amp;- Pt. Pte. .nt
451 - leon
571 - Apple Grove
773 .,....Mnon
'
BIZ - New Hnen
886- letert
$37 - lulhlo

843 - Put11and
2•7- lttert Falls

Guv-n Olat.
Arabia Oist: , 9·9- R•ctn•
371- Walnut
742- Rutland

117 - Coofvilla

/', ll ve~tut:k

31-H.om•forSMa
32- Mobile Homes tor Sale

61 - F~rm EQuipment
&amp;2: ....,.Wanted to Buy

33- Farms for Sale
3 ' - Bus!n•• 8uildin91

&amp;3 - Livastoc:k

·36- Ldta &amp; Acreage
36 ~ R•• Eltate Wanted

6'9 - Hay • Grain
. , 66 - Seed &amp; Fertili1er

I;IQUidd
41 4243444154&amp;4748-

12- Situation Wamed
13- lnsurence
14- Bulin•• Tr1inino
15 - Schoala &amp; Instruction
16 - R.tto , TV a Cl Repair
17 - Milcelllf\toUI
11 -WHted To Do

..

FM111 SlltiJJili•S

Esta te

•

Tran ~ porI aI1ort

Hou• tor Rent
Mobile Humee for Rent
Farms for Rent
Apertment for Rent
Furnilh.d Rooms
Sp'ace for Rant
Wantld to Rent
Equipm.nt for Rent

71 - Autoslor Sale
72- Trucks for S1la
73- Vena • 4 wo ·,
74 -- MotOfcyC:I•

75 ...,.-- &amp;oats &amp; Motors for Sale
76- Auto PM II 6 Ac:c:•tori•

77- AutoR,..aM
78....,Camptng EQuipment

•9 - Forle•e

79- CamJ*S • Motor Homes ·

..

'51 - Houtthold Goods .

' 52 - Sporting Goode
53 - Antiqun
15~ .- MIIC . Merchandite
!56- Building Suppli• ·
68 - Pau for Sale
.,
157 - Mu•c• Instruments
58 - F.ruiis &amp; Vegetabl• ·
·&amp;9- For Sale or Tfldt

.2.1 _.; ~;t;usiR•• oPpOftunitv·
2:2 - Monev to Lo•n
·
~3 - Pr~!~lion1l ~trvlces

Servrces

81 ..-Homalmprbwments

82 - Plumbing &amp; Halling
83 - E.ctwltlng
· 84 - Eieculcal .&amp; Aeh;g•ation
86 - Gunerll ~au ling
86 --Mobile Home Rep1ir
87 - Upholstery

•

•

...._.m-

ISp·dM ..-,

t

wt.:

'BII•I•IW.C,• ...... 11,000
Emplov- lenellto ... , .. IOO
ConMctUol S.rv ..... : ... ,100
'
lupplloo ond ··
Matorll4o . ...... .'.......... 700
Ret"-t of
.
Debt ......... , ........... 4.000
Totll RecrMIIon
Praarom ......... :.. e10,100
Totollor l'llrko end
R-lon Fund Proii'Om
ttt-l.ollure Time
ActlvNiei .......... ,.,O,IOO
FIRE EQUIPMENT FUND
ISpedll Revonuot:
Solet:loo/W- ...... 13.001)
Peroonnll Benellto ....... 3115
•TI'IIIHII Trano .............. 2,000
Co-uet
12,2150
Other Operotion &amp;
Mllntononce .......... 2. 710
Coplllll OuttoY .......... 4,000
T,..sflrs ............ :........ 700
Talii Flra
' Equ[p.-.t ........... 21,01&amp;
FIRE TRUCK FUND
Spedll Revenue(:
Controctuel Serv., ... l1,100
Retlromont of
Oobt ..... :.............9&amp;,000
tnt_, .................... 1 ,1100
Total Fire Truclc ... .,08, tOO
SANITARY SEWER
ESCROW
clpedol ll ....nueJ
Contrac;Juel S.rv .... 11,249
Coplllll Outlay .......... 1 ,200
Total lonrtory Sewor
12.449
ECONOMIC D~ELOP·
MENTFUND
(Spedol R-nue)
Seloriilo/WIItl• ...... t9,000
Employee llellofito .... 1. 400
Contractual 8erv ...... 1.000
Suppll• ond
............ .... ..1.000
Total Economic ~op. •
mont Fund Spaclol
R-ue ............ l21,400
PUBUC TRANIPORTA·
TION (lpeclol Revenue)
Selorioo/Weg• ...... 17.1100
Employ" Benellto .... 3.000
Canlrectuot
•
.............. ......... 110,010
8uppllel eno;l
.
Mallriiii ... .......... ..... &amp;IIO

eerv,....

E--.. . . . . . .

Board
of CommiloiDn
ComPin•tlon
........ .. 400
Controctuat S.rv .... 18. 1500
Suppll• ond
·
Mat.lllo ............. 21,.1 00
Debt Service .......... 17,000
Trenolero .. ................ 4.000
Sanitary ..... '141, 716 .
for . .nh.ary Sewer

Appraprlotlon
V- 8ulc.Utlllty •
....... '146.716

Services
Business
1-------------.,..---------.:..--.,------------------r----:-----------,----------------BISSELL
BUILDERS

"At

Total awtmming

llaasDRI~Ii•

or ln.

.

Pool.. ................ '31,2110
OTHER ENTERPRISE
FUNDS ·
CEMETERY:
Set•loo/Wog• .... 114,1500
Emptoyeo .Benetllo .... 7,200
Contractual Serv ...... 3,250
lupptl• ond
Mlllllfllo ............... 2.2110
Total Cern~ ...... 27,200
ORAND TOTAL ENTEII·
PRISE 'FUNOS APPAOPRIATION ....... I383,015
METER DEPOSIT
Refundo ........... ..... .'19.000
Total. Meter
.
Oepoolt ............... l9,000
Orand Toto! Truot and
Agoncy Funclo .Approprletlon ...... ,........ 19,000
TOTAL ALL AC'PROPRI·
ATIONB ....... ., ,371, 701
And the Vlllllfle Clerl Is
hereby outhoriled to draw
werranlo on the VllllltiO Treeourw tar paymonto from ony
of the forogolng epproprlotlono upon ......,ln9 prapor
certltlcet• and vouch••
therefor, oppraved by the
bo•d or officer• outhorilod
fly low to opprove the'"""'·

.

,!&gt;-Ta-..,_ •..•..•• 1•• 113, 710

_,._,...
t:=';w.........u.~

, , . .................... 123,000

soo

J!'m-·=
· dtor
haetlll
tOul
................
•uoa

S
...
, oi:Ji'-~-'. . . .ebo
~··

•

Walwfuncl:

......,~ ....174,001

-a;;;~·1a,001

IMIII

·

...:
·.............. 2UBO
Coutraalaool 8erv ....21,001

. .. . . . .

·-==....~
30.001
,...,.,...,." vn-a.n... o.bl
1erv1oe ..... ...... te.OOI
~.....went

...... 170.700

==-·........
.....U..ofl'ulljll:

410
• ., ....... ........... '11,410

CIRMO TOTAL GIN•
~ 1M&amp;. PliNO API'IIO.

~ ............. ,.. ~41t.110
J'

SHEET

MORE

ACCOUNTS FOR I
I. SPECIAL
NON-PIOHI GIQIJPS .

949~2160

Dey or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

HUURS: MOn.-Frt: 12:00 to II p.m.
Saturday I o.m. to 12 noon

.

FOIINFODaA11011 CAU 992-3194
t2·t

4-16-11-tfn

Public ·Notice .

a:

LISA M. KOCH; M.S.

Li~ Clinical Audio!Oiist
~ (614) ~-7&amp;19 ar (614) 992·2104
417 Sltond Annue. Box 1213
Glllipolls, Ohio 45631 ' ·

z

·

. or 1t

Veterans Memorial. Hospital
Mulber,ry ttcts. Pomeroy,

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al11 Tr•••l••l••
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

CHIPWOOD
WANTED

...,.,..
.......
•-•¥•

W. v•. Chipping, Inc.
Clfllo

.

EVElY
6:30P.M.
foctory cholto

12 Gaugi ,Shot..... Only
Strklltly EnforCIII
10·9-lf•

•,.

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

EVElY SUNDAY
St1rt1 •t 1:00 P.M.
Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only

ISA
AD
,

Tnnafws .................. 4,800
T.... WIIter
l'und ............... U77,110
SANITARY SEWER
FUND

WI ..., Ste•l•l 0•
VIIYL SIDING

VINYL IEPI.ACEMENT
WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

992-2772
12·11-'19-lmo.

7·2-3011
•Tire .....
•Front End
Alignment
•Oil Change 8a Lube
•11'8keWork
1u111n.. ~

•Mobile ltome

•GRAVEL ·
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING

R_.a
•LD1 Rentals

,......,.

1t.

n

..r~~a

CIISIL. OliO

ATAU

985-4422 ·

1-11·10-ttn

LIW

OM

SAW LOGS

'160
...t·...
..,..10

-

u ...IW........s1 ..ooo

&gt;

'"

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS
4-H.Hn

f-ACE

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVIa
992·5335 or 915·3561
.......
217

Office

•osES'
IICAYATING
ITIIC...G

TOP SOIL
FOR SALE
949-2493

3r4 Stnet, 11 rill, Oh.
I·W.:IMO.

eVtNYL I.,INCI

OliO PAWT
CO.ANY

l'ftOCJRAM V - IMIC
UTI.ITY IIRVICU

*LIGHT HAULING

FURNACE

•Mobile Home

l'lnl

*SHRUB 8a TREE
TRIM end RE·
MOVAL

INSULATION

•o•u

HO.PAR

6-~l·'lf.~n

FUINACE

I. L HOLLON
·TIICIING

CO.TIY

RUTLAND liRE
SA&amp;IS ·alid
SDVICE .

PH. 992-3922

J&amp;L

9-6-19-tfn

1·13·tfC

en lin•

*FIREWOOD

SAT. NIGHT

haatar cores. We can
alto •kl boll allll red
out radiators. Wa also
repair 0.. Te..s,
PAT IIU FOlD

.._.... _. , . ., luu L r
.. "IUiepert, 011.

Btodl Porto tor
Homo! ito. WeedNter,
Tecumoeh. 8rlggo &amp;
Stralton.

lalhan luldlng

GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

DAVE'S
SMALL 'ENGINE
IJPAII

$JSSO per tott
Buying Hours;
7:30-8:00
Mon. 1hru Fri.
7:30-4:00 Saturday

IACINE
FlU DEPT.

SER~ICE

4-25-Hn

PARTS AND II ERVICE
For Moot 2 ond 4-cyde

GUN SHOOT

We can ,repair ellll re•• redlaters •nd

lt. 124, Pemorey Ohio

PH. 992-3561

1-2·'91).1 ••.

•

·Ill A
'

Roger Hysell
· Garage

J.ll-'19-1111

Televlsjon Listeninl Devices
· . Dtpendlble Hll!lrinl Aid S.les &amp; Senti~
H11rihlt
EviiUIIi!IRS For All Aa;es
.
J

CJ
Z

DOZER
SITEWORK - ROADS
CLEARING

DUMP TRUCK
Send·Stone·Dirt

.

w~:,:~~~:o

Supptleo on\f
Mltoriols ........... t21.000
T,..oflarl ....., ........... ,ti.OOO
Talll ,_..., ...... 130,000
ORAND TOTAL CAPITAL
PROJECTS FUND APPRO·
PRIATION ......... 130,000
SICTION7. Tllett...... ioe
l8d
frOm ...
ENTI!IIPNE

r~~~GLASS,

Pric11"

Retlremont of

~.:::.:~............. 1.000

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

~" •••Poln~ 0110

PH. 949-2101

URE
s.t.rootw...... .. .,s.soo
EmployM a..ofito .... 3.600
Conl...:tuel S.rv .. ; ... 4,660
Suppll• ond
Motorlolo ............ .... 8,1150
Coplt81 Outlay .......... 1,000
Tronor...o .................. , .. 150

CENTER

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Doll! ..................... 8.000
Int-I .................... 3.000
T-1 Public Tran•
j....________..;.;.....;.."'!'". .-~-...:.;.~.,...;;.;;.~
pGUI!on ......... 1202,1 DO
.........
&gt;
Grend TDIIII Sp...ol
~ r~ ..~ ....... IOO
, "-lie Fund Ap.
8011.,801Urel
.f
'
prletlon ............ 470.114
~ ~la1a ......... ........ :.100

CloUMUUii_. .... 1111.210

•'

Rt~&lt;ll

11 - HelD W.nted

Meig~ Cqunty
AreaCoda6141

Employ"
.
.......... .......... 111,816

Counlf Auditor' nnd

. SERTA, SOFAS, LOVESEATS, '
BEDROOMS, SYtVANIA TV'S, T,AB(ES,
DIN.NG ROOMS.

441- G•IIipolis ·
367-. Ch•hire

- 2 ·00 PM . FRIDAY

foul~

'BK:s. CURIOS,

Galli• County
. Ar.. Cetde 614 1•

SECTION 4:TIIet-ebe
• ..,.,....,_ from the fol·'
lowing SPECIAL REVENUE
FUNDI.
PROORAMVI...,. TRANSPORTATION
8t,... Molnt•once and
Repolr CSpedll R-nuel;
Bllorloo/Weg• .... '28.000
Employ• ·aenellto .... 4,11110
C...,uoctuol
S.rvlceo ............. ,111.010
luppll• ond
Molerllll ............ .111.211.0
Tatll 1 - Melnl......,.
nd Ropolr ...... 1102.110
Tatll for l'logn1m IV-T,...•
porwlon ......... l102.810
PARKS AND · .
RECREATION FUND
PROGRAM ttl-LEISURE •
TIME ACTIVITIES
R-lon
Mlnletu,. Ooff Fund

Otfl-:

... STOREwiDE .

SPECIAL VISIT - Nicholas Bowles, wllit eeleb'rllted IIIli alx&amp;b
birthday Cllrlllmu Day, had a vial&amp; from Santa Claua and a avt a
cllt, aiODJ with lee cream, calle and Hap,IH!rved bJ' Ren17 'l)rapp,
ri&amp;ht, of Gill Pep•l of Athena. WateblnJ waa .Joe Clll\'ert,
GaiUpoJIIi Foodbuld !!ton muacer. N.roholas Is the son of Mr. aad
)llrs. S,.berl K Bowls of Pomerily. ·

AnII Iill II Cl' 11: 1'11 IS
1- C•d of Th.nlts
2 - ln Memory
3-Annoucementa
4 - Gi'&lt;I ..Wa't
6.- Happy Ads
6 ~- '-o•t aRd Found ,
7·- V•d &amp;ala(paid in adVanc•l
8 - Public Sal'&amp; Auctton

SI:IVI'.I::;

ORDI~ANCE

!IJolerleO/Wog• ...... 19,000
EmlllovM Bonellto .... 1.110
TreVel 'rrono................ 100
Contractui'IIS........... 750
Suppll• ond
M - o·............... 3 .210
T-1 Movo.,.lnd
Admlnlialliithte
·
Otfl-.... l.....~, .. e:t 1.110
t.ealoletlve Actlvrtloo
CCouftC!(It: " " ''
. . . .roolweg. .... :. u.6oo
Total Loglolatlve
Actlvltleo ............. U ,IOO

· .ANDERSO'N'S

Old ldealoriMIItaltakeaonaew at Myers Park Presbyterian
Ute: CHARLO! IE, N..C. (U~I) Church. or as elaborate· as St.
-' Both church · officials and John's landacaped garden with
envlronnientalllts are pleased marble altar and memorial
that an old Idea tor dealing with tablet.
.
the dead Is makln&amp; a revival.
Church members · who have
· People preparing for life's bought COJumbarium niches told
Inevitable endlllg have started The Charlotte 0~ S~Jnday ,
purclulllag nlchel In brick "co- they are more meaningful lor
Jumbarla," s!J'IIcturea with burial . and more· accessible to
1111all vaulta clellped tn hold loved 011e1 left beblnd.
cremated asbell forever.
Susan Justice said abe did not
"They're very popular," IBid · want to be b\arted llllder pial tic
tile fteov. Tlni Croft oiCIIarlotte's Oowersln a forlorn cemetery far
Myen Park Presbyterian · fromiiOme,ll!lbebouahtanlcbe
Chu~h. "lt enablel the urban
In the brick columbarlum at St.
church to return to the old John'a Episcopal church 111 Char·
country aetUna with a cemetery lotte u tile repo~ltory for her
next door."
ashes.
A columbarlum may be u
"I grew. up ID BliJUmore, and
•tmple u tile 1tone wall tucked both 1J!Y parenta are butled
Jato a tree-alladed swath of la.wn there," she IBid. ·
·

Ovtr 1 0 W9rt!J
•
.20
.30
ee.oo
.42
e9.oo
.80
$13.00
.06/ doy
t1 .30/doy

R•te
.4.00

flllpll'yilll~lil

Public Notice

Cont,.ctuol
...................... 23,000
Total Etec. lorv .... t23.000
T-1 ..._.m V-laolc
Udtlty ............. t23.000
PROCJRAM VI-GENERAL
'
GOVERNMENT
Mayor end Administrative

'

Salall

----------------.• ·The Area's Number .1 Marketplace

9- WII1ttd 11? Buy

PubliC Notic1

NO. 1220·90 ·
· ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION.
ORDINANCE
An ORDINANCE to mike
llppropri8llonl for Current
E - ond
E1'JI'!II·
dltu,.. of the Vrtt111• oi ~'(aid·
ilt.Pcirt. Stote Of Ohio, dur- .
rna the floCII y- enljlng
DeCIIJ'blr 31, 1180. · ;·
llectliln 1. IE IT RE·
SOL~· 'lly .t he Council of
the Vlleoe of Middleport.
St81e ot l()bto, thet. to prowide "" the .......t •••
...,._ ond ot'- ••pondlot.the uld Vlltege ot
Mlckltprtrt during the tlocot
year
December 31,
1190, theto-rng.,mobe
ond t!ltoY ore honby 1111t . . . .
=~~I'Ojlrllted .. ~~
SeOUon 2. Tllet there be
~~~~from the (JE.
Nt!RAL FUND:
'
..
· PROGRAM I-SECURITY
OF PERIONS AND
·,
PROPERTY
PaliCIIII.awEnfol....,ont:

t-

\

sMOTOKAN KARATE

~· January

3·
8
10
Monthly,

Public Notice

o-

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

.'

Words
16
16
16
. 1'6
16

1

followin/{ telephon(! exchan/{('.~ ...

2 :00·P.M . THURSDAY

EASTERN (tt)- Kenny Cald·
well 6-2-0-18,SCott Fitch
2-0-4, Shaun Savoy 5-0-15,
Mike Frost 7-0-lf,Tim B18aell
0-5-5.Jetr Durst 3-2-5-17,
Mark Murphy 0-!1-9, Mike
Wheeler 1-0-2, RandY Moore
2-4-8. TOTALS tl-4-11-11.
SOVTBERN (81) . Chris
Murphy 0-1-2-5,AIIdy Baer
4-1-12-23,Micbael Kincaid
0-0-0,John Hoback 0-0-0, :
Roy Lee Bailey 3-0-&amp;,Kevln •
Burgess 1-0-2,Jeremy Roae
2-1-5, Brent Shuler' 4-,1-9, :
Bradley Maynard 6-11-23. TOTALS ft-4~8'1 .

&lt;

Community calendar

Quirks in the news-

-

play that way . Eastern deserved
to win this game."
In the cainpanion reserve
game Southern whipped.Eastern
52-35. Jamie Prof!lttledtheway
with 10 points and 7 rebounds.
Jeremy Roush 111d Scott Llale
rolled a pair of nine's, whlll! Billy
Davlshad8,andJoshuaCodner7
tn a well-balanCed attack.
Jason Hager led Eastern with
11, Matt Fin law had 9, and Chad
Savoy 5.
Score by quarters:
Eastern ....... ....... 21 22 18 31-92
Southern ............. 28 23. 20 16-87
Box ICOn:

•

Cla.~sijif•d pa/{PS cover thf•

:: ~gg ~=: ~l~StsyoAv ·

WEDNESDAY P~PER

.

.

18

Do yo

.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
-- aoo ~ . M . SATUAOAY
' 2:00 P,M . MONDAY

COPY OEAOLINE MONI)AY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

~

.

.

..

Harrisonville .OES
recognizes ·membeF ·

.

·

·A. el•lifl~ edvertiMment pl1ced in The Deity Sentfnellu·
c..,l clauifi_. dis pl..,. 8usin•• Card and leg• notices!
will also app. . in the Pt. Pla•ant Register and the GallipOiit Daily Tribune, ruching over. 18.000 hof!!"·

·"

.

•

d., all• publiCilion to m1h cor,.ction.
'Adl th* ...,..., bJ PIMd ift achance ••
C•d of Th,..lts
Happy Ada
In ~~morilft"'
Y11td Selea

.

an

•

' •Adl· ouJjktt Meigi, a.•Jie or Malon .:ounti• mu'1l .be Pre: ,
' p ... ' . ,
....;.
· R~cllive • .10 ...count tor •~ . p1id in adWanca.
'ftMid•· ~ GiateiWIW .nd found 6 und• 15 wordt will be
~n 3 dalft at P9 fhfll'l•·~
· 1
"Price of ad tar -_.. c ... ilaiiMtlfl ts double pric. of ad cost :
"7 poi'lt line &amp;ype onJy UHd .
•Sentin .. ia not respoqsible U. errou after firat d., . tChedl
tor •roralint d-v ad •una in p..-1 . Call before 2:00p.m.

.

n.(

''

court we had tochaqethetempo
of the pme. We told them (the
kldll) to gel a little more
aegresatve and cut off the pus·
In&amp; laneund they did that well."
A dejected Coach Howle Caldwell said foUowlq the game.''Eastern deserved to win
tpnlght!'I don't want to take a
thing away from their victory,
but when you have a team down
16 polnla you have to take
control. lnlltead of Eastern win·
nlng tonight, Southern gave It
away. We played not to lose,
Instead of playing to win. Teams
don't win m~y games when they

RATES

TO l'llCE AN AD CAU 992-2156
MONDAY .thru FRIDAY aA.M. to 5 P.M.
. :;-., a A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
• . ClOSED SUNDAY
-

.:

-·

33 of 55 for 65 percent.Southem needed to pick It up a noteb. We
bit 21 of 56 from tbe noor and 3 of9 new why we came here. Ton)Jhtl
triples.
had someone special on my aide.
Ot the 61 foull whistled, SHS I thank God for this win. Tonight
had ~ EHS 31.
,
we said our prayers as we do
SHS had 1 a teal, 2 charges, 13 before every game."
turnovers, and 32 rebounds led by
· ''What we have out there Is 12
Maynard's game h)Jh 16. EHS kids working together In unlllon.
had 8 steals, 15 turnovers, and37 They all play a!ld they all have
rebounds led by Frost· and tun. ThiS win IS a credit to the
MurphY with 7 and Durst 6.
whole Eastern community."
Baer hit 67 percent from the
When asked whjlt his club did
floor 4-7 and 12·15 at the line, differently In \t comeback
while Frost was 7·9 for 78 and charge, Riley , replled,"When
Caldwell&amp;-9 for 67.
Frost came out with five fouls,
Eastern Coach Charlie Riley we changed our strategy. 'With
said, "I t?ld them at half tlm~we . ··- our different line-up on the

Classi

Long Bottom news

HBO to-ns
r winners~ list at ·t·t
Cable excellence aw4&gt;rds
'

. were

wbo bad . p-eat dual 23 point
efforts lor game-blgb honors.
To&amp;l Grlndltaff bad 14, Brent
Sbull!r 9, and John Hoback 6.
Eastern bit 26 of 56 for 46
~cent and cBIIIII!d only 4 of 10
frOrii the three-point range tor 40
percent. At the line EHS hit 28 of
4f for 63.6 percent, while SHS hit

~ws. ~-.;-.;...:•· ' ...;.._;....;.,_~----..

By WIU..IAM C. TROTT l •
didn't appear pn "Saturday Night Live's" 15th anniversary
Un1&amp;ed Preu lnteraatlonal
~ow Ia~ year becausr Crystal would be there and, despite his
. . IIJ,t1r'FLO~I!;R MANNERS: Sydney Biddle Barrows, New
klller.lmmltatlon of Sammy Davia Jr .. Crystal was left Qff the
Otfic;ers were el~ted at the and Clara Gilkey are at borne .
York's "Mayflpwe!f Madam," Imparts some Qf her carnal
guest list for a television tribute to DaviS because Murp"y was
recent meeting or the Bradford after their Illness.
.knowledge in her new etiquette book, "Mayflower· Manners:
hostiJ;Ii tile event.the magazine says.
· · · ·.
Church of Chrbt.
·
. It was decided that the group
Etiquette for Colll!l!ntlng Adults." Barrows, who was caught
RED STAR: MlkJia.ll Go.fbaebev's "harrowing chlldbood"ls
Elected were Jackie Reed, . will purchase soup bowls for th~
running a hlgh·clalls prostitution ring In 1984, addresses a few
detailed IJ! Vanl!li Fair's February cqver story- a prQflle of the
president; l4adellne Painter, church kitchen.
• non·sellual ma!t~rs In th4 book, such as being properly '
Soviet leaaer. The lengthy report by Gall UeebY delves Into
The meeting date of the group
vice president; Gerry Ughtfoot,
Impressed when parents display pictures of their kids, bu.t the
Gorbachev's relallonslilp with his wlte of 36 years, Ralaa, and
treasurer; Frances Hysell, se- has been changed to the second
crucial points are the ones that she says most etiquette books
describes her as a crucial element 1n his rise to power and
cretary and news reporter.
Frl&lt;lay of the month. At each
.don't consider. Barrows touches .on sensitive topics such as
ambitions. Vanity Fair notes that Sheehy discovered Ralsa was
Devotions were given bY Fran· meeting members are to have
where to stow your condoms, how }O conduct exJra·marital
the "prophet of perestroika" and that the Soviet leader refers to
ces Hysell entllled.""Unaccepta· different activities for the
affairs, how to deal with escort services and proper behavior In
her as "my genellal. " Sheehy labels the couple's relationship as ·
ble." The scripture was taken meeting.
.
,
· domination .and submission sex .clubs. "''A master-mlstress
"a partnership between two equals." ·
from John 5:40-47, prayer was
At the February meeting,
never lnltlat~ eye contact with. another:&amp; slave," she says.
THOUGHTS ON Mt-J[ DAY: Hosea WIDtanas,o whO march~
also given.
·
Charlotte Hanning and Madeline
~ately. Barrows has been making S10 an hour as a dresser at
with Martin Lutller King Jr. during the 1960s civil rights
Reports of the sick and shut In Painter are to have the program
fashion shows an'd answering phones at an ae~oblcs studio, Ute
movemen\,-lsp't pleased with the way the King holiday ~
were given and It was reported and also devotions. ,Jim ·and
New York Dally News says.
.
tul'l)ed ..OJ.II. ':I think Dr. King's birthday Is being prostitute&lt;!,
that Dwight and Mildred Hysell Jackie · Reed will furnish
THE KILLER ·AND THE DEVELOPER: J~rry Lee Lewis Is
second Dilly totqat·of Jesus Christ," Williams said. ''Staying ofl
are still at their. daughters In refreshments.
suing billionaire Donald Trump claiming ~he..l&lt;aslno owner·real
from work a.nd being iullf·productlve has riotlilng to do Wlih what
Thurman.
A1ten~Jilg the meeting W.ere
estate.magnate wrongly can~eled his contraclto perfoi;m !none
qr:King. stood f9,r and doesn't do ~nybQ,d,v,a~y good. 1 ~!'loughi ,
It was noted that Jlni Spencer Jim and Jackie ·Reed, E1ierett
of Trump) Atlantic· City, N.J., caSiltOS. In- !lie suit, flied In
we .would use his birthday to re-evaluate where-we are In the ·
InJured his hlp and Is In Over· and Gerry Ughtfoot, Wilbur and
Superior Coilrtln Hackensack, N.J,., by Dick' Fox Productions,
• clvllrlghts struggle and then rededlct~te oqrselves'.to fight si&gt;qte
brook Center In Middleport. Also Tillis Rawley, Charlotte':. ,Han·
Lewis claims Tri\DlP tossed his contract to play the Trump
of tbeevil .that he died for." .
'
,,
reported Ill was Tillie Rowley's ning, Larry and Paula Pickens,
Castle Hotel an4 Casino after Lewis became sick ln.September.
GLIM~: Retired boxing champ Mulj'amme~ All at·
brother, George Hunt, who Is In Nancy Morris, Madeline Pain·
Lewls had been scheduled to rD£k tlill •Cas ile on selected
tracted throngs of au tog1'1Aph seekers Saturday night, at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Pearl ter, and Frances Hysell.
·
'wee!lends In June and September o(19lj9 and next month. Lewis
Inaugural celebration for ·Virginia's .Douclu , Wilder, the
Is seeking $135,000 for the canceled shows.
nation's first elected black governo,r. All gave Wilder a
BIU.Y VS. EDDIE: Apparen tiy there's bad blood between
championship ring when he won his election In Nove""ber ... The
Eddie MurphY and Billy Crystal. The two former ;,Satqrday
small town of Harlem, Ga., will honor native son Oliver Hardy
Night Live" stars, who both moved oii to bigger things In the
on Thursday with the unve!Ung of a historical marker near his,
,.
movies,
don't
talk
to
each
other,
People
magaz!Jie
says,
because
birthplace. The guests )1'111 Include Hardy's niece, Marpret
By MELODY ROBERTS
Roberta Larkins Hill and bus·
of
some
things
Crystal
said
about
Murphy
lfian
Interview
wltl!
Sage
of Atlanta. Hardy' attended Georgia MIIIIS:~y Academy,
For The Dally Sentillel
. band, of Columbus were In for the.
·Playboy
magazine
ln.l988.
"I
don'qhlnlt
he's
a
good
comedian,"·
thE1
AtlaJ!ta
Conse~vatqry ,of Music · and the University of
VIsitors of Pearl Powell !lave weekend visiting h\!r parents,
said.
"When
he
cariu(
b,llc!t
and
hosted
'Saturday
Georgia
•before
leaving for Hollywood and teaming with Stan
Crystal
had
· been Bernice Deem and Sharon Mr. and Mrs. RObert·Larklns and
Nigh!
Live'
durlng
my
·season,
It was an uncomfQrtable week:"
Laurel'
11!.
one
of
' the niost popular ·teams In entertainment
Gilbert, VIenna, W.Va.
Jerry.
.
Murphy wa~ angered
the remarks and Wouldn't'accept when
history. . . ·•.. C•
Georgia Moupt spent th.e hoU·
Judy · Holier Is doing much
days with Mr. and Mrs. Lando better after learning that she has l_;c~ry~s~ta~l~f~.r~IPd~
. ~~~o~~~~~~~~~~~~~· ~r~~u~lt~,~~~------~------~~--------------------~~~~------~
Mount of Lancaster.
diabetes. She Is strong willed and
Betty Young recently returned has been since the beglnnJni of
home from Florida.
her kidney failure and evt!fttual
VIsitors of Mr. and Mrs. Martin kidney transplant surgery.
Nesselroad were Phyllis Larkins
Brandon Fitch has had the Ou
1· •
,
and Ernestine Hayman.
and a sore throat. He attends
Sympathy Is extended to Mr. nursery school in Middleport. .
and Mrs. Harlan Ballllrd and
Weekend guests of Mr. and
LOS ANGELES !UPI) antholo~ series,' ' ;•Ray Brad,
Garth Smith on the death of their Mrs. Dorsel Larkins have been
Hoine
BOx
Office
·emerged
the
bury Theater,'' tied with the
· loved ones.
.
Steve and Shirley Salisbury alld
clear
·winner.
a,riong
cable
net·
WiesenthaL
r),ovie With·.. four
Mrs. Doris Deeter deserves a children; Kim and Mike'Larklns
,f
works
Sunday,
taking
home
14
awards,
includirlg
best
dramatic ·•
pat on the back for helping and children,
of Ga!Upolls:
J
"
' ;
' ....
awards from 't he televised pres· series.
. . ·
neighbors in need.
Calnng at the home or Paul and entation
of
the
11th
annual
Other awards .tssued , to "Ray
Mildred Hauber have been I:aw·
Academy
of
·
Cable
Excellence
Bradbury
Theater" Fdday . lnMrs. . Mary Newlun is em· renee and Denise Johnston,
Awards.
·,
''
art
direction, costume
clllded
ployed at Americare-Pomeroy. Tuppers Plains; Doug and
HBO
also
received
17
ACE
design
and
bes't
actor award to
She says she is enjoying her work Brenda Hauber, Bashan; Mrs.
awards
In
the
non·tele'v,lsed
Harold
.
G
ould
;
for
his pertor·
and that it fills her time.
Ora Sinclair, ·Sumner Road;
awards
presented
Frl~.
a
y
n1ght,
mance
in
the
episode
"To the
Carey Newlun will celebrate Dave and Debbie Dailey and Rae
bringing
Its
total
to
31.
·
Chlcaj!o Abyss."·
her 11th birthday on·Tuesday.
Lynn, Llckskfilet.
Sunday's presen tatlon of 2'6 top' · "It's Garry Shandling's
awards, given by the National Show," the·comlc's weekly half·
Academy ·of Cable . Progr11m- · hour sitcom on Showtlme that
mlng, was televised live from the' also · Is carried by the. Fox
Wlltern Theater on 12 .c.atil e Broadcasting &lt;;o,, cr.rrled away
networks.
three awards, inc udlng best
A record number of cable comedy series.
networks, 19, received 1990 ACE
Writers TQm Gammill, Max
awards.
In
1989,
14
networks
Pross,
·Alan Z\Velbel and Garry
Ruby Diehl was recognized as
,Rosalie Story, the ca.ndldate,
wer!!
winners.
•
Shandllng were. awarded ACEs
a 60-year member when the was Initiated Into the order.
·
HBO's critically acclaimed for the episode "What's Happen·
Harrisonville Order of the East·
It .was announced that the
movie, "Mui'derers Among Us:
lng to Me?" and Alan Rafkln took .
ern Star met for Its January school of llll!ttuc!lon will be held
Th~ Simon Wl~enthai -,Story,"
beSt directing in a comedy series
meeting with Golda Reed as In the Masonic Halla! In Marietta
tool( awards for the best movie or honor~ for "Ttie Natural"
worthy ·matron, and Bob Reed as on Jan. 30.
miniseries, and its director, , episode. .. ·
.
worth .patron, and 30 members
A thank you card from Joe
Brian
Gl~son,
won
fordlrecflnga
·
But
~handling;
speaking
with
present.
.
Bolin for the fruit sent to him
.
movie
or
miniseries.
s•ld
his
reporters
backstage,
•
J·
.•
All those having held grand while In the hospital was read.
The
four·hour
drama
about
t11e
ground·breaklng
series,
In
which
PALS - Model Cheryl Tl'egs, who preileated the-ACE award to
appointments were recognized
It was announCed that Laura
life of the famed Nazi hunter also he, dfrec)s personal comllJj!nts to
"Eureka's Castle," on Nickelodeon In the catel(oey of chlldm's ' ..
and welcomed. ·
Krebb was out of the hoSpital and
receiv~d awards for editing an'd
a studio audience each week,
programming, elghl anil younger, em braes Batley, tbealilr of the
The worthy matron read a presently residing with her
art
direction during Friday may soon be history.
, shqw, during the televised presentation of the 11th JUiiluill
poem to welcome the group In the brother, slnce,her house burned.
"~rs ,probably the last season
·Academy of Cable Excellllncl!. Awards at the Wlllern IJ'heater'ln
new year.
Charles King gave the blessing : night's segment, bringing 'Its
unl~·s ' tllere',S a surprise out
Los A,ngeles last n~Jiit . (UPI)
' ·· '
, ,
Janice DeBord was installed as befo·r e the · group ·entered the • total ACEs to four.' . ' '
USA
Network's
·sclence
fiction
m~re;
·
,
Shandllng
said
without
electa for the year. The Installing dining room ~here they were
'·
,.
bf thl! day's heacUines an\1 the
further elaboration. 1
officer was Gracie Wilson and served refreshments by the re·
· Former House· Si&gt;eaker Tho· newscasters who deliver them.
the .. lnstalllng marshall was Ava· freshmen! committee, Pauline
Ruben'Biades.won best actor In ,
mas P, O'Neill presented· the
nell George.
Atkins, · Sharon Jewell, Stella ·
·a moVIe or miniseries honors for.
"Golden ~ A&lt;;;E":.awan! to· Cable
Atkins, and Ruby·Diehl..
' New~ . Netwo•k for lts"-'c ompre.' · his role .as a Death Row Inmate
.
henslve .cover.age .of the ejlents whose K)'OWing Insanity compll·
leading to atld- following 'h!S\ cates his Impending execu):lon In ,
HBO SHowcase, "Dead Man
s11mmer's bloody protest 'In the ...
Out .
BeiJing.
•
t,.
MONDAY
MlDDJ,.EPORT -Gr,oup ' 2 of.
CNN foupci'er Tec:J T~mer ac-•
REEDSVILLE -The Olive the Middleport Presbyterian
cepted the 9&lt;Jiden ACE, the
Township Trustees 'will. meet Church will meet Tuesday at 6: 30
highest prlze_awardejl to a cable
Monday at. 6: 30 p.m. at the p.m. at the home of Mrs.
llgi'!llHI!fi 1Classes Starting "
networl! for .o utstanding
Reedsville Fire House to discuss Katherine Brown. Faye Wallace
programming.
.
. ·
T.y. Jan. 16_th·at ·
appropriations.
will have the book study and
• .CNN's Bernard ·' Shaw won
7:00 I'.M. At Carleton
Martha Anderson will have
recognition as best newscaster '
·Schaal in SyracU...
POMEROY ' -The Meigs devotions.
for his' coverage of th\) China
County Salon 8 &amp; 40 will meet
f• lnfon.tilft Call 992-6139
story. .
Monday at 1 p.m. at the home of
After 6:00P.M.
WEDNESDAY
' Comvdy series awards for best
Loretta Tiemeyer. Dues are lObe
SYRACUSE -The Third Wedactoiwent to 1,1ark McKinney for
Or 992-6170., 992-9920
paid at this meeting. nesday Homemakers Club will
HBO's "The Kids in the Hall"
INSTRUCTORS:
meet at the municipal building on
.and for best actress to Lucy
Micll
Howell, Blii!k Beh
TUESDAY
Wednesday at 10 a.m. Members
Webb .for "Not Neces!!arUy the
'tim
Jenkin1,
Black Beh
POMEROY -The Ladles Aux- are to bring sweatshirts, mate·
, News, "f'BO~s live telecast spoof
Iliary of the Fraternal Order of .rial, scissors, e1c.
Eagles wl!l have a catered
Christmas party and $10 gift '
RUTLAND . - There will be .a
exchange' at the Tuesda)' meet· regular meeting of the leading
lng at 7 p.m. The regular meeting Creek Conservancy District In
will follow at 8 p.m.
Wednesday at 9 a.m. at 34481
Corn Hollow Road In Rutland.

mal~tays

Andy Baer and Brad Maynard,

Pia• • '

the

•

d.tlctt.

Monday, .......,. 1&amp;. 1990

I

Ea.tern
...
CODtlnM from pap 3
lad to their demlae; a 16-31

·-

'

•.
. '

'

~

•

Ponwov-MiddiPQft. Ohio

lllllld!IY. Jlnulry 11. 1980

.. The ~Daily Sentinef

•

.•

.,•

--

.L. . -----·---------------- - -

1--~·-- ..- -- -- - - - - - - -· ~---· -" ·--- - ·~ ,~~

•

¥LUM-atDJNG

.........
..................
........,
CCL

''

�·F'MG•

-•

8 The o.ily Sentinel

33 Fanna tor S.lit
-

--.

Coollo . -.

~.~~·c,:g.. ~
~.,
Tue• or Fri. 1:30 • 4~30.

...

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

~ - P'YJIF'n, very:::, 1 brown, 1

-

, 'You can
leo! 114-411·

1loo -

1111.

Maroday• ........, 11, 1110
72 Tnlalct tor .....

Apertmiilt
lor Rent
ltlcclonor,

l'wcclol_.

$1U.

-

.......
- · ............ 'IOi
~Ciollljccollo,l111.111i

J4

I

•

.

~

..._...., ••
441'1111.

Apl;

ln-

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. 114-

....,, ~ rMuced, alao toc1
wlh ~- trontoao. C1ydo
lt;Mn~~,

Clog.l14-712-ll141.

-1171.

Jorw ....

e don't have an annual

.
- -'· :J04.t7&amp;.

per(~ehtage

--n . . .

Lost &amp; Found

6

PVer

l'ccolicd: DcW..... - ;;;;;;;;;;;;! ·-lrolnod. 11wii~fii:
LOST: SncoiiiiiiW'*- IIIIo ,.,..
rllr-typt q . OIQilgM CrMk.

~dtllun Aroo. COli • ......._

114 441 1212.
IM I og pllow ot~p cot with
~illlor camp Conley - .

I&lt;
11

OWP&lt;I

..

Help Wanted

21

Stewart.

s,.,

ow,.r-opend,. and fJNta wttfi
drive., io run out of our tocll

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

twmlnll In Columbut, OH. WI

ot!Or: II Stat• A,.hcthy, 2220

1-.to notlonwldo; WMktr
Vonl Sot•o llull II Pold In - - • ; , Trolling oqulponont
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. ovoltoblo: .,.~o~y ond porilcr·
: lho doJ bolore lho od II to nin. mance ewarda; No oom,.nr
tr~ctors. tt you IN 23
. Sundoy odltlori .. • . 2:00 p.m.
· Fttcroy; llcndoy· Millon • 2:00 YMIW otd with 1 year vertflable
AL~

:9

0014.

.

olunlc cor. with or without RN CoM Monogor noodod tor
pPdlot~l &amp; NUll .... - · Coli Lccnr Llvoly 114- care nuralna. I ,..o. to t yr.
3110103
. _ uro Ncnlng Erportonco
.

al

41 Hou~s lor Rent

1 112

dlo-.

pl.,_... z JI!Oio,

wolor, I gorblgo lncluclod. -

QITopCan:l

II Utt. ~1. 4417-71150. .

8:31

HOT lo Mnc:l money
lh""'tth "" mol untU ,... .....
ln-OpiNihl olloring.

CALL TODAY- ...,million
..... - c t y tor ...
phalog..,...,.. :ISrnln comn •
.mull, Dhcltogtlphy 11~ilna. o
p&amp;ual ilullt Iii abll to work u,..
clor clocccl-llne pr-r.. ~ ..
or 1.-.311-Dool, IIONDAY

cmot,..

ONLY.

2br, - · 2SI. reor Flcwt

Unfia'nWMid,

J!c~,

1br,

. i

wlatova,

.

CompleJe tho chuckle qUoiRd
by filling in tho mtoilng - d•
yov d....,lop from Hp No. 3 below.

,,

446-11011"3~.

,

1271/mo. 51~46-4425.

31 Homes lor Sale

'77 ...... Coli. '71 ...... ........
,.len. 2 - utiiiY ....... , . 75 .Boata I Motora
LTDI'cnll-. 11~
for slle

--

l l n l l -. M g o o d - -

AUCTION I FURNITURE. IJ

Olivo 81., Ooillpcllo.

. .....,_,

'

~-

!o:J 3,171.

Schoola &amp;
lnatNctlon

llove I ,.~or provtdad.
No poll. O.pcolt ond ret•rorocoo
r.qulrod. 11 .......... 241, 114-41&amp;2
bt*oorn•,
14170,
central
air,
ApproxlmatlfV 2112 ICret, older
4121, 114-141:2325.
otyto hcrno, Cocotod out Lucu Sond Hill Rood, 304..75-3834.
Lana, low 20'11 304"'75-3030 or 21w, )2165 mcblll " - for ,..,, For lAcoN: Socond 11_1_unlurnl.,_. lpilrtrMnl, 12ou per
175-3431.
"4-l~Se-0789.
month. OYorlcoklng cHr ~rk,
Oolllpctlo.
Two - - •
· Ooo,
1 t~frtgorolor
pro•ldod.
polo. Dopcolt ond ....... rocoo

-a

~

Wlito-. 1 Ou-. !lb!c. lull olD
molt- I box i1N1nao. Nko
n. ., Full 1lzi~ metlf bei NmL

114-4-11.
Willi~

'

Houoo 22cu.11. oldo ,

~:: d'lt.f::.-=-~~~

2301.

Antiques

Bur "' 1111. R'-'no AnllqiM,
1124 E. Moln Stroot, P-ror.
Hcuro: II.T.W. 10:00 Lift. 1o 1:00
p.m.,
1 :00 lo 1:00 p.JL

""=

114-192:

==:..:..c==----1
Merchandise

1121,114-141:2325.

Household
GoOds

76 Aut.o Parte I
·Acceuorlll

61 Fann Equlpmel)l ·

....
1011

.,

With

.

HIS EGO lW'oT

.,.._""-'-.Mill;
171

iilr -

dloc, • -

$1,1110. OwnOr wiN .,.,_,

hca,
It~

-- -·-Jim'a Pann~lp1111111 8ll H.
111 , •• lmj
tmatOfll • lnlplllfllltea. • ..,.
Mil, ...... l:.a:oo wul ters.
Sot. till-.
Well

a

00T 6RUISED!

I

Nhla..

- .........
porto
cor. 1m1ctcovy " - ·

""·-.- _..
1-

Ono of l i n - luttanholt,

·=·-...
64

1112 Chlvr&lt;ltol I • Flootoido
trucll ~. no - . ..._ -

171-1111.

POOR BOY TIIIU, .104471-

""'Ill,

, , - . Ilk lor lliJllllilllr.
Fluewoed tOr ..a., 11.,...244.
-

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18 Chutch 8trHt StalltM
1:01 ()) MOVIE: TIMe Sun AIIO
R-(2:00)

~

a:3Cie (J) Ol Hogan Family Marlt
school bully. D

1111e0 l'atntlua Tedcly z AJ

nlco ~.up - ·
colo, illh I blctcort

Don w.,.h, ....

WOrries wltln he II
nomillled for the Agent Of

. eam~•
'.

cl""",·-J',

MotorHoiMI

The Year Award. 1;1

127 or 7'71-1110.
Ctoon lllncl Hor lUI por ....
114-24HI11.

Hor lor 1011,

QIWMictllr

.

9:00

,.....l'S-llt81

171-1001olll S:GO. -

e

(JJ
(J) MOVIE:
•un~p••k•llll Actl'

PoutiWr, c:Molor, OH.I14-116:

:1131.

Home
lmprovemems

new aound II heard In the
Civil rlghll 1119Yement. a call

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

for ~r. Q

I

111&gt;.1121 Muipht llrown
'•l•crp~y Ia caughlln ltle

' YOU !( NO#, ~!: i.OI"'ae5T

· . :dfa

.JOt. : ~:t~6Y e.EatNS WITH
,.,_ ,:,tNE;I..E STEP.

Transporlalion

~I

a sibling rivalry. (R)

;;i,IIJ) Allen Nation GaorQe
and Sikes uncover a Purl51
~ot

71 Autps for Silt

0 Prime Tlma Wrlalllng

gociil lim, giNI body, cflln,
:IOW7H7IZ ollor 1:00 I'll.
1171 Ford T.at rd. 302, IIIlO, olr.

18 Elvia: Tile lcho - Newt Die The people who
· knew him boat end loved him
moat llkl 1 rafrealtlnglook
at the King of Rock &amp; Roll ..

Cotll11-llt2·7302.
1m TriM Am, TUM ..,,
Nil, llctcty 4 opood olon,I1,S00,304-IIZ.z241.

flO

._..,mtooilod.z_,...,__

1 - .Dido Oofto ·II

ooncl,

lloJII

$1,SOO, l~M'm·

:11Diool104-171-a11.

.· 1:30 (!) CoiiJII BUketMII
eo DniJIIInO w-

!

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

Rotory ., coblo toot *llfl!it.
.................. clri.

""""'
1114801.

CtMviiiL 4 ...2_4

' •.I'ILE TAT-ER

c:r·
''AKE:;
. o•· ·....:.·;
..... c
• AFfER
I:II~~~AW !!
I

YIP••HE
SHORE
DOeS!!

~ :l-~

AN' HI AIN'T .
TH' I'NLY tJNI II

as his peraonlltrtbula lo
· i.111lln Luther King, J r.

'"

'

(J) CIN Teleillon
J'l ·l) M•r11n Martin Ia an

·.,.gina!, •iva-n IO'IIment ballot
compoa8J by aordon Parka

.. ;' eo NeWhocrt Mcdl!tef
•cd Stephanie bring """'

-.IIIIII. Oiou.

wa.u

lor an electiOn sabotage.

U Llcrry King Uvel

1171 Folrmcnl llotlcn
W.p, I cyl, PS, PI, ILIIO,

ao ........1,14-.7111.

==r'
1
.w.t
:::=1.......

..,.... 114-

Heating
f

...

84

z-

• IIvia:
1'- Tho Ehrla
phenOinenOn II axamlnld,
through the eye1 of hla fane:
hiS COIIbOril.... file II _ ,
through l...,le.,. with
frtenda lnd llllow .

'Piumblnglc

EIICtrlcll I

jMtlormerl.

.,
·

!0:30aleo Doctor, Doctor Alii
·~ 1111t his• 11

.

BERNICE
BEDEOSQL

~iC:.:!rr· PronW,.

+B
•u

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•a74

+AQH ,
.Qt8643

+Jill
72

SOUTH
+Q2
.AKJIOUZ

+in

+AK

-s• ,.
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North ·
-

2•

tNT

Nwlll

Pus

2+

Pus

3+

P-

5..

INT

All•two key cards
Opening lead: • 2

'I

llltlllda, IIIII · bad followed to two
bearla. Tbe overcall wu ecrawny
_.p, but surely East would not
have rlllted beiDI peuiiJed II!Yel'ely
uul- be bad favonble dlatrtbution.
Tbat meaat a lllaC)etoa epade. So deelarer cubed tbe lplde ~ aad I~
a low spade to dummy's 10. Tbat was
all 1J tricks, a result East brought on
blmaelf by an lll~ived two-level
oven:all.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Cessation
5Baby
powder
9 Lamb's
pen name
10 Hunler
constel- .
Ia Iion
12 Prima donna
t3 American
Indians
t5 Command
to a horse
16 Plethora
t7 Conceil
18 Becharm
20 "South
Pacific"
role
21 Othello's
enemy
22 Grafted
(her .)
23 Apprehend
250ulmodad
·:6 Formerly
27 Spanish
dollar
28 Time
ol ye11r
29 Pallid
3211ove
(Lal.)
33 Eyelid
swelling

39Greek
mountains
40 Engrossed
41 No.
in
Russia

DOWN
1 Quibble
2 Foreign
3Had
it made 14 Eminent
4 Chinese 18 Wise
pagoda 19 Artist's
5 Bulllighler purchase
8 Region 20 Hire
7 Cover 23 As of now
8 lnheril 24 Tooth
weallh
substance
11 Void
25 Disclaim

27 Luslrous
lealher
30 Seelng red
3t Goldsmlltr~
· term .
33 Swill
38 Call -- day
37 Angular
(sufl .)

34 .. _ pro

nobis"
35 Ber.ate
37"Snarl
38 Pretend

UAIL V CRVPIVQUOII!:s- Here'• how to work It:

";;;:·~·1AINI
~
&amp;l 8eos

" 1111

•

AXVDLBAAXR
iiLONGFELLOW
One letter standi for another. In this sample A is t.lllfd
for the- three L's, X for the two O's, etc:. Single letters,
apostrophes, the 1qth and formatloo of the words are all
· hints. Each clay the code letters are different.
.

.....-DUSt
-WRHA

.

AIC
Mondlv Nlgl1t ...... (2:00)
Cll (!) t!,.. On Tile l'llu MA

or

1179
DcdaoEf-Cimino.1110,
iiUIO. 1f?f'
110,"
olr,'
iiUio. 1171 Iuick Orondo lljoort.

1DD"DOIIIJS
TO .YOII POCKET

e.._,
(J) Ill MOVIE: .....
NIC Moncley Night
At Tile lliovln (2:00) 1;1

hoy, $1.00 bolo,

llrlllOh

ortgliuclly "" 111111, IIIII loko
po-o, or por of
bal8nce ILII of, 1117.70. C.. be
-n ,_,fly, coli toll fNo,

Flow=
SIO .= ......
4....

I ttl ..

. facea an ulilmatum from the

...... 1c Grain

::.:71o-=:.

By Jamet Jaeolly

i

~

·-·

~=·-=-·=-=-=~~=

n• faner
dnla1111, undlll' WW'fMty, eolil
, .,...CIIt,

•

.... - · ChiYr 1.....
.... Doll:&amp;-',....
,..
1111

Her tor-114-712-2013.
--.11~
DUE TO DIVORCE:_ A~ ... thUd Cilltlng her. 81 '
Clod 81- F'*'ra _ , . ... Aloe colo ""· •uo '*' 'boto.
to I!M!doll, -

I

EAST

WEST
+J76S

l

1001
.... - ' .....W4
IIIMCI a....
truDk nut;
~clutch, 4 S I _ k _

~II:M

+

U North bad made the standard
Blackwood respoaae to show one ace
~==CoiW(Io
diamonds), East would bave
• YldeoCOUnllf
made a lead-directing double, and
Ibm would "no etory. But North and
7:05 Cll JafNiaona
South
were u11ng k~~rd BlackwOod.
7:30 Iii (J) Ill Ftiilll, Feud
In t»t method, tile
of Ute agreed·
(J)CaloJIIIIUio_.
upon trump suit II counted as an e~trli
·
(JJ · - - T o n i g h t
ace. Tbell, to gl.e tbe respooaes room
e (J) Mlml'l Fucllr
e® M*A'rH
111 tbe bidding ecbeme, five clubs
IDle-lite
• lbowl either no key canll or three,
fl.e diamonds llboWI one or four, five
"'~"~·:.•'rd"'~" 1;1
beartl tlboWI two key cards without
7:31 wa.tlanl And Son
Ute trwnp q - aad five spades
1:00' ()) MOVIE: Arrolllhlld (2:00)
IJbowl two key cards Including the
G (J) Ol ALP ALF stows
trumpquMD. Whettlbetesponderlla't
away on Neal'alrlp 1o Veg~s
sure 1rlilcb luit II meant as trumt-.
10 .11op hla marriage. 1;1
beaven belp tile partaenblp!
(JJ e (J) Mlc:QyWr An
.Not ~~ which lllam to bid,
Illiterate oonatructlon workar
South
tried six no-trump. He won the
Ia enda~rod by a corrupl
openln1
club lead and quickly rattled
loreman. D
Oll 11x beart trlcu and Ute second
Cll (!) TIMe"lcllrlele Planet (PI
1 01 I) The puzzle oC the
club. Tbe dllcanil by tbe defeoden
. ear1h's beginnings Is
showed that West bad started with J.
exptorea. g
7-2 of cl11bl, IDCl East bad hiP-lowed
eiD MiiiOr Decl D
In
tliamOadl witll tbe 5-4 as eocourageIIJ) if1 .Jump Sn,l Holt
meat
In tbat lult.
and Fuller go undercover 1o
In
a
vacuum, tbe spade suit divides
locate a wllneas to a crime.
&amp;-2 68 peiceat of tbe Ume. But East
PrlnMJN... I .
bad made a vulnerable overcall oo a
CHI .....r Awenla Tribute To
club lull beaded by Ollly tbe queeu.
Martin Luther King, Jr.
East prObably held Ute A-Q· of dia·
IIJMu-,SheW-

Toclc, . . . . , . _ ,

~rtt~~-.114-IIM711.

-

rLL l'l~ HIM SOME IIOUP AND:
Ll&amp;lliN 10 HIM CXIMI'I:AIIII AIQJT
HOW MtlliiiiROUS fHII.T SAATE·
f'OI&gt;IU&gt; IS.. ..

.

'I'QS
• K 107
10 s

Ill-fated
overcall

eTNii'c.Urt
·o
•••,..,... 1;1

Point Pluo ,_hoi loddloo oncl

21 fl. Craoloy "' co•....-.
--~~old,
11M ,..
Mali ..,._
,.,... 4 ,..,. old, •10t1.J04-1711.
M11. .
I .......~,~

Cub Cadit . .h lrrpl

NQ ... l T)iiNJ&lt;. IT

W"S M06TLY

rop CUh pold. ad - - 63·
u·-OCk
:IU1 ...
cubolnlo,
qullo,
- · _;...,...,,...,..,....,.....;-,.,.;,'---,..,,........ 11ik
4,aoo
--...
poinlingl, top..._~onllro 111111 "F h -oln u • •,. 1 ,.._
..nMhii.
.....
colt COIIICI -1171, or
·~ ro ---. .
304..23 1111. .
~ r~ D.HJ. - · .....

54 MlSCI118naoua
MIFChandl18

ALLEY OOP

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

410...,., OliN ...- . .....
oonci.IIIIIIIOII. ·

roqutl'lll. 111 ue1211, 114-41&amp;-

RE·TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN
8USINE88
COLLEGE, 5211 Jockoon Pllco.
Coli 11 ~II-4:Je7. )log. No. . .
11·10558.

SOME MAMMA&amp;.,S" •••

t=l:'::oc~=:u.a~ •
w......
llctnlng 1100.
Phone ,.....7HM3

53

""'
"'h. ecrw Soccncr • WOtor,
pr,.,
Oollfpcllo. ono

1-tod, 814 '

- - . ........ 4 .......
114 HN710\Ii4411-1011.

SWAIN

Fot IAccM: Socond 1~ unfur·
5 per
nlahM 1pertmanl,

EARN IIONEY Roodlng Bcokol
Wanted
$30,000/yr lncorM -tlol.
011111. (1) IIOH87.eo0G E&gt;ct. v. Woukl llkt IOMCH.. to lily
101..
.
wllh oldo~y
It night. II ln-

TtfE AMPH''''-"'S ,owr~, .
ANP THEN :t GOT
;

11111CIIIWJ4_tlrM,_

For Leasa

Situation

•···$0 x G0 r
TO ~EfP THI
- pDVIN, ANP THftl :r GOT
SOlliE ~ffTILf$ TO tcEEP

Forslle
orll'llde

NORTH

+A KlOtH

~

?. eo,tp WhHI 01

_,
=

.-------- --,

BRIDGE

(J) PM 1~11 11....

Newiii,:ILW

room, unfumllhed apt., tor
IIIH,
ovtrtcclllng
pork,
Oollloctfl,- otl .. ,...

114..,..,7471.

Md. Ktng

Cll.(!) MIIINIII LIIINr

Yorr nlco Hccnd llocr, Iorge 5

1 ,.,..,; onlcO lor ...... 1100 por
,_,, All utllltloo lftcludod. Clot!
Llcllyottolloll. 11~-222.
Country llolcllo H..,. Pork,
R - 33, North ol POJM,.,Y.
Lota1 _~nti .., parte, .aa... c.u

how many tim9s he has already TOLD YOU.

.

'1l SfJOIIICtl1llr
(JJ e (J) Cunwnl Allolr

corpotd="'.':·

w/lllow 6 r.trtg. *'PII• I
....., 1211, $100
1
.. ~!g. ·
· .... ~.
utllllloe,
rot.114-441-4128.
· UIUMioo pold. 2SI Stoll ,_,
· 11441114117. tor
· 3 rcomo I both· ...,ptollly rur. Suftoblo
nlohod ~h o lcirvo prd. 114-

Avenw,

ng, r.ngo ' r.lrtg. no polo.
I I - I clotloOit roq'd,

Real Estale

wAntlr Qrlltlllo

7:0G~BCINChiW I

46 Space lor Rent

12

I

I· Q
_.__.

l -11.
SCIAA"··'.ITS ANSWERS
Odious- Folly- Known- ~nify- TOLD YOU
Mf uncle Is graat at cet'!"eel'cb8ring a jOke, but he can1 "'rat"'m"'19t"'tnleltbar

To It
IIJ He-Main

- - wltlt.....,.. you know,

Employment Servrces

·-7217.

Campany
-CHI My WOIId And Wlicame

"-h. CAICH, d - ,

Ul31 .

Oulronlood'
Wogoo.
Pold
VICI11cmc. Fontutlo Som'o. 114-

1· · 17 .

'::"' 1;1

·11"' ThfH11~:.21;1

T_.. TownhouM AllattmMitl.
E l - 21w,' 2 floor, 11M oq. ft.

eo,., ..

:·Cool!

CumoldOQID

I
I

(IIR'0:30)

1Pnc 1110 qultto. Any condhfon. Ktmborlr Cluolttr
Pold. Coli 114-tl2·50117 « 7112 .... .
. 114-·2411 .
Rllplrotcry ThoroPr Toch: Wlinlod To Buy: Plno · Dyor nlclln, bf'lrloncod In Artorlol
Full•114-411·1117 lo.m. to Puncturo Blcocl time or ~rt-tlme. Bend NSUIM
to P.O. lei 33, OoUfpotlo, OH

.....

o

~

GLEPEO

-

1:30·(J)· NBC Nlllltlr Howe

roqukN, p1o1M colllllchltlo, 11

Qulftl

B 0 RT 0

: I 15 · I . I

· L-1--'·'----''-·__,_

1:01(1) ••••..,I'!?! . . .

1141 oft• S:OO Pll.

BuSiness

IHOTlCEI
0Ht0 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
riCDRIIMndti lhlt you do

IXpet lence lnd I Ufe ddvfna
rNCHd call Lll now at 1 .IOCJ..:Jztr.;

wanted to Buy

I
I

A good example of the power
of pos~ lhinklng is when a
~-~~·=~·::;·::;:~~·, slorm closes school on lhe
r- dayofa··--····
·

Jr; 304~7fo2338.

Aenlals

0ppol'tt!nHy

ow'*'

: p.l'ft. leturdly.

I
I

L E I XE

c...

Building let ""..,. Hlckorr Hill
Eototoo, -rialod. 304-171o

lind

OWNER.()IIERATOAS FLEET OWNERS
INWAY, po~ ol tho LJcndolor
, _ Group II now loufng

Yard Sale

I

ARM A-CE

1!11 Cll

"-d

.7

...... TX

,_

rate. Nnhody's
us money that

-,..
-.-._com
_..:....-.,-.,..--n-n-do
_
Top .,_gomW 1 Soloo flop.,
»W7J.71111.
~.ooo to 175,000 por yoor.
110. S._lng Collor, Potontlll oomlngo. 514-41&amp;111. 2 ond 12. Phone 304-lllo 21101 tor lpt., iok tor llr.
2147.

homlngo """' al tho
0 to..r
..... mblod -d• ""
law 1o lorm lour llmple -dt.

I:ODit:J:~ CIAIIII .

'(ES,SIIf, .. lllb.VE TWO I'IECES .
OF CARR'f-QN, AND FIVE OTHER .
PIECES HERE WMICIII'LL 8E
C!4ECKIN6
.

POUAII

.

!Y!HIHG

Alht9n llrge l:tulldlna ·lots,
mobflll haiMiil permhtecf, publlc

-um -dog' 1-112
I'N. old. 0111111, good Witch .

u.a MI. "

OfiiO N

.c,..,

I old puj,ploo, Callll,
lhopMnl, ll!lnd, 114UI 0111 ,.., lp.m.

- - - - - fWIIH t.y ClAY

MQN.. JAN. 11 •

•

....... -.,.,.,............
............

-

l AIII
'=~=' S&lt;e1l.!\~~4~~s·
a.

Televisfon
Viewing

·-· ~"'t.1·
.,,
.........

..

Pomeaoy · MiddhPcn_~ __.

11.1980

4 112 .. -londlcoe1001
lond.
-·
coolv&gt;c'
ccWnal.
114-712·
2050.
10 acre•, au mlntnll Mar Hemlock orow, lflolao County.
11,,7150 ct moko cfror. 114-717·
2714.
'
Apprax. :a,
3 miiN on
Siclldhfll Rood, - · pond; 30117W11tatler4:00 p.m.

Giveaway

--.. mlDd

44

211-. . _,...

111 .1 " ' " ! , 1 . 1 - oiPalnl ...on Ill. IJ.,..

4

'

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

-

CAYPJOCIIJQIE

•

••••

' FJLELZCGLNI

--~~

33 Fanna IOF&lt;Sale

FH

-

Upllol8lery

-

....................... 11 ....... .

-

.

"Next time I Ilk you to bring a coat hanger
10 I can gel into my car, don't bring one
made out of wood! "

·-

NQD .• C.IN

TFZTDCGLZE IFAJ
CANQF.I

WFA.ITJ)W.

AZXZFRZ

wc:;:dili:M••

u11111 OF ALL 1HE TASKS
OF
......,_
-'liE MOlT IMIC IS 10 fiRO. ,
TECT ns cnBNB AOMeT VIOU!NCE. - .,. ..

'¥1 l'om: 4ocl. ,.,..,,
Hloo -~~-. ..~~.

::::r-=.-...:1.::.~~

LW

FOS I ER DtJLLE8

••

·,.

,.

.'
'

�Pomeroy-Midllaport. Ohio

· ~Your Financial

;ee.te.r"

THIS
WEEK'·S
OA ES

·. . 97 .JIOITII SECM ·

..: ~IT, OHIO '.
· LOANS ·
'

.

.

511

~ick

Low IOnfCIIt aear N. QuUie4! I
of rain .. percent.
day, hiJh mid .... Chaace of
rain 50 percent;

w•.•·

7674

BOYS

,
1 Section. 1 0 ·Pogn 215 Cento
A Muitimodlo Inc. Nowopop• •

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. January 16, 1$90

'

GIRLS

Jan. 15-Eastern-HoiM
Jan. 11-Trimltlt:-Away
Jan. 22-Ntls·Yorlc-Home

EASTERN
BOYS
Jail. 19-Southwestern-Home .
. Jan. 26-lyger (rHk-AWAY

GIRLS

.$55 PARIC $1.

·.' . MIDDI!J9~ .·;
. iA

4

c-•• ..,,

'"' . ' 992,30l1'
':\

'
Pick 3

•

Jan. 16-Warren-Away
Jan. 19-Tri..W.-Home
J_.. 20-:-BIIpre-:-Away

INSTAUMENT
.f.

Pomeroy .
&amp;esqui- _' .
centeimial

MEIGS

992-6661 .

,,,.,. "'"'"

Ohio .Lottery ·

·. •· 99:2~~41 ,

,..;;

\ ··

Jan. 15-Miigs-Away
Jan. 11-Southwtst..-n-Away
Jan. 20-Fed. locklng-HOiilt

SOUTHERN
BOYS

·Firemen
wUl accept .
65-35. ·split

Jan. 19-llannan.tract-Homt
Jan.20-H. .an-lraca-Away
'

, .... up)

.

Jcln. 26-lllerth Gallla.- loma

GIRLS

Jan. 18-Hannan trace-Away
Jan. 20-Ntlt.-Yorlc-Hctme

Nov. 24-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away ·
Dec. I - Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville·York .;......... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co..................... Home
Dec. 22-Belpre .,.................... ,.... Away
Dec. 29-Logatf.......•..... :............. Home .
Jan. 5-Aiexander ........... :........... Home ,
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-lliller ........................... Home
Jan. 16-Warren .......................... Away
Jan. 19-Trimbla ................. ........ Home
Jan: 23-Nalsonville-York.. ........... Away
Jan. 26-Wallston .: ..................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ............._.. ;...... Away
Feb. 2-Belpra ............................ Home
Feb. 3....:Athens ............................ Away
Feb. 6-Aiexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ............. .. Away

!!AsrERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989· 90 80YS BAS~ETBALL

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
. . 'The proposed , 65:35 split of
Letart Township's revenue from
·a one-mill levy for fire protection
'will apparentlY be accepted by
Racine and Syracuse Fire De·
partments,' with Racine to re. • cetve the.greater percentage ·of
funds .
·
.
This was announced at ~onday
night's public meeting at Antlq· • :
. ulty by Racine Fire Chief Hank
Johnson. Approximately 30 rest·
dents turned out for the second
town ·
as
w~ks ,

Nov. 21-Miller ........:.................... Away
Nov. 24-Federal Hocking .......,.... Home
Nov. 28-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 1-Hannan Trace .................. Away
' Dec. 5-Kyger C~eek". .'.................. Home
Dec. &amp;-Southwestern .................. Away
Dec. 15-'Southeril ...... :................ Away
Dec. 16-Synimes Valley .............. Home
. Dec. 22-0ak Hill ... ; ..................... Away
Dec.29-30-Holiday Toum. at Pt. Pleasant
Jan. 2-Federal Hocking ............... Away
· Jan. 5-Hannan Trace .................. Home
Jan. 12-.North Gallia ................... Away •
Jan,. 19-Southwestern ................ Home
Jan.26-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Jan. 27-Miller .... ,...................... H.ome
Feb. 3-Southern ........................ Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ............. :... Away
Feb. 1600ak Hill ......................... Home

SOUTH.ERN HIG~ !&gt;CI:IQOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 25-"Southwestern ........ :........ Home
Nov. 211-Kyger Creek .........,......... Aw.Y
Dec. 1-0ak Hill .............. :........... Home
Dec. 5-North Gallia .................... Awry
Dec. 8-Hannan Trace .................: Awry
Dec. 15-Eastirn ........................ Home
Dec. 16-Eastern Pike ... ................ at O.U.
Dec. 22-Symmes Valley.............. Home .
Dec. 23...:southeastern ................. Away
Dec. 29-Athens .................. ....... Home
Jan. 5-0ak Hill ........................... Away
. Jan. 6-Gallipolis................. , ...... Home
Jan . .12-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. 19-Hannan Trace ......... :...... Home
Jan. 26-North Gallia ....:.. .... ....... Home
Jan. 27-Ravenswood ..... ............. Home .
Feb, 2-Eastern ....................... :... Away
Feb. 3-Federal Hocking ............... Away
Feb. 9- Southwestern ................... Away
Feb. 16-Symmes Valley ............... Away

----------------~-GIRLS SCHEDULE~--~----------. MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 20-Southern ............................. Away
Nov. 30-lliller ................................ Home
Dec. 2-Eastem .................................Away
Dec. 7-Trimble ................................ Home
Dec. 11-Nelsonville-Yort .................. Away
Dec. 14-Wellston ............................ Home
·Dec. 18-Vinton Co............................ Away
Dec. 21-Belpr" .............................. Home
Jan. 4-Aiexander .............................. Away
Jan. 8-flderal Hockina ...................... Away ·
Jan. 11-lliller ................................. ,Away
Jan. 15-Eastem ......................... :..... Home
Jan. 11-Trimble ................................ Away
Ja. 22-Nelsonville-Yort .................., Home
Jan. 5-W.IIston ............................... Home
Jan. 29-Vinton Co........................... Home
Fib. 1-Belpre ................................... Away
Feb. 5-Aiexander ............................. Home
Feb. 8-Federal Hocking .................... Home
Feb. 10-Southem ...,................. ,...... Home

and slip oil Locust Street In the noted that the purchase of the
,Monkf Y Run area. It was noted this property. ;.viii not affect the
that steps' are ~lng taken to par klnl:l are a -'of 'the Pomeroy
remedy the situation.
United Methodist Church.
. Brian Shank, counc il member,
Reed also complimented ·the
also discussed the need to block street department lor Its job of
off an area of Monkey Run where snow removal this winter, adding
the ground has softened. Mayor that he had heard comments
Seyler stated that area would be from several people that felt the
blocked off until spring.
depar tment was doing .a great
Council member Bruce Reed . Job.
reported that several members
Council president Wehrung
of council had met with the brought before the council the
County Commissioners earlier request of Jim Anderson for.
Monda:Y to discuss giving liP a another parl\lng space In front or
section of the village owned right Anderson's adjacent to the al•
of way p~oper ty between the ready existing loading zone. This'
sheriff's department and the old addltlonai space would alloW:
Elberfeld's parking lot. It was Anderson to park the. store's,
voted 'to relinquish the property delivery van parallel to the street
to the·commissioners but It was rather than backing up to the
stipulated that If the purchase of loading elevator or double park ..
the parking lot property from the .ng when deliveries need to be'
Elberfeld , Realty Company made. Mayor Seyler suggested
doesn'tgo through within 90days that ·rather than designating
then the right of way property In ·another space to Anderson, that
qu~s lion would be transferred
he simply ''bag'' the meter when
back to the village. It was also
Continued on page 10 ·

'·

----------------------BOYSSCHEDULE-----~---~---------­
. MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETSALL

Mayor Seyler stated that the
parking plan will be Implemented on a tttal per.lod and If it
doesn't work out it can be
changed and amended. This plan•
Is Intended to offer an alternative
to people who work In Pomeroy
and need · a place to park
everyday without feeding the
meters every two hours . It Is also
hoped tha t it will "free up" 'the
parking sp~ces on the streets so
shoppers coming Into Pomeroy
will have adequate places to
park.
·
··
· Council voted to raise the rent
of village owned property on
Butlern~t and :artck Streets from
$35 per month to $50 per month
for the trailer lot. This raise will
take effect Feb. 1.
It was also voted that $87,843
will be transferred from the
general fund to thestreetfund for
the operation of that department.
In other matters, council
member Baronlck, discussed the
problem ofthereportedlandsUde

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
· · 1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 27-North Gallia .................. :.... ~ Away
Nov. 30-Hannan Trace ................... .':'Home
·Dec, 2-lleias .................................. Home
Dec. 4-Ky&amp;er CreeL ......................... Away
Dec. 6-Trimble ................................. Away
Dec. 7- Southwestern ............,.... ~ ..... Home
Dec. 11-Southern ............................ Home
Dec. 14-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Dee. 16- Federal Hocking............... ,... Awey
Dec. 21-0al! Hill :............................ Home
Jan. 4-Hannan Trace ......................... Away
Jan·. 10-Trimble ............................... Home.
Jan .. ll-North Gallia ........................ Home
Jan. 15-lltils ..... ,............................ Away
Jan. IS-Southwestern ........................ Away
· Jan. 20-Federal Hockin&amp; .................. Home
Jan. 25-Kypr Creek ........................ Home
Feb. !-Southern :.............................. Away
Feb. 5-0ak Hill ....... :........................ Away
Feb. 8-Symmu Valley ..................... Home

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 Gl RLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 20...:11eigs ........ ,....·.............. ~ .... Home
. Nov. 27-Kycer ·CreeL ..................... Home
Nov. 30-0ak Hill .............................. Away
Dec. 4-North Gallia .. :...................... Home
Dec. 7-Hannan Trace ....................... Home
Dec. 11-Eastern ............................... Away
Dec. 14-Southwestern ..... ~ ................ Away
Dec. 18-Waterford ......................... ~ .. Home
Dec. 21-Symmes V1lley .................... Away
J1n. 2-Nelsonville-York .................... Away
J1n. 4-0ak Hill ................................ Home
Jan. 11-Ky&amp;er Creek.. ...................:.,. Away
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York .................. Home
Ja. 2S-North Glllia.:............ ,............ Away ·
Jan. 29-Witerford ..................:......... Any .
Feb. !-Eastern ....................,........... Homt
Feb. 5-Syn~mes Valley ..................... H01111
Ftb. 1-Southwestem .,..................... Ho•
.Feb. 10-•ei~s.................................... Awry.

trustees gave the
at a
meeting last Wednesday that it
was either 65:35 or nothing.
They'd give It all to Syracuse. So
we went back to our membership
. and they agreed to take the 65
percent," he said.
.
Johnson Indicated tl)at Racine
; ;;· ... :
f)remel) were not satisfied 'flth
the deal but felt they ha,d no
choice but to accept. It Is
Johnson's understanding that
once the proposed 65-35 deal Is
C()VNCIL MEMBERS SWORN-IN - These
official, Racine and Syracuse .
who was al10 elected president, Betty Baroalck,
·Departments will respond Jointly · four Pomeroy council meot!Jers were sworn In for
Tom Werry, and Blll Young. Swearing In the
four year ll!rms at Monday nllbt's meeting of'the
to " all fire-related Ci!lls In Letart
members Is Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
village council. Plctured,l-r, Ia Larry Wehnnlf,
·Township." Racine VIllage SolicItor Bill Porter Is preparing the
three-year contract for Racine
which must then be signed bY the
Letart trustees and representatives of both Racine Village and
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
come from lottery funds . .
Walker while they were outdoing
the flte department. In the mean
Sentinel News Staff
Payment from Title II funds of the Intervention work.
'
time, · before the coptract Is
A general fund operating $402.31 to Carolyn Smith. $418.06
Morgan
Mathews
was
ac·
signed, ·"Letart Township has ·budget for the 1990·91 fisc a! year to Karen Walker, a11d $344.84 to
as a tuition student for the
fire protection;'' , Johnson as· projecting reven11e of $7,520,595 the Meigs Local School District cepted
remainder
of the sChool year .
sured residents.
·
and expenditures of $7,856,600 to pay for substitute teachers
The
grievance
of cooks at tl)e
The 65:35. deal means · that was adopted by the board of was approved by the board. Supt.
lllgh school was dented by a vote .
Racine Fire Department will education of the Meigs Local Carpenter explained that Smith of 3-2. Voting " no" were board
· !rise ·about $11,000 a year during ' School Otstrlctat Monday nlght's· and Walke( had spent several members JeftWerry'and Robert
tl)&amp;'next three years the contract meeting.
-''1'
· ·days going to buildings In the Snowden.
with 'Letart Townsl!lp Is In effect ,
Treasurer Jane Fry' after re- district assisting teachers In
An executive session to discuss
Johnson said. Already, the loss In · porting on the figures to board preparing for Intervention teach- personnel followed the meeting.
revenue · has C9.used the fire members noted that the pro- Ing programs and this was their
Attending were Supt. Carpendfl\atnnent to re-evaluate plans jected budget shows a d~flclt of pay for that .. The money to Meigs ter, Barton, Werry, Snowden,
to purchase 'II new tanker for the $336,005, but that .the district has Local was for hiring substitutes Lar ry Rupp, and Richard
:·· continued
on page 10
a "spending reserve',' on hand of for the classrooms of Smith and Vaughan. ·.
·
1
•
$179,000.
. ~·
It was' also. reported by Fry
that on the revenue side there !sa
projected Increase In state foun. .
dation revenue but no change In
lo.cal tax receipts figured tnto the
budget. ' · ,
'
'
She further noted that accord·.
Frank E. Young, Pomeroy, was cited on three charges by •
lng to the contract with certified
Pomeroy PoUce following an accident on Ch8!1ter Road at 5: 12 .·,
employees, any Increase In founp.m. Mondall.
• ·
dation montes must be figured
· According to the report, Young was parking his car bel)lnd a
Into salary Increases. She said
parked vehicle O)lllled by Teresa s. Riffle, Chester Road,
that the same percentage of
Pomeroy; when the Jnddent occul:red. He told pollee that the
Increase must be applied to
gas feed pn his car stuck. There was modera~damage to both
salaries of certified employees
vehicles, tbe lett back side of the Riffle car-and the front of the
and tb8i has been factored Into
Young vehicle.
,
the andclpatfd expenditures.
Young was Ch8J'ied with failure to control, no operator's ,
Fry also noted. that the bond
license and driving under suspension.
.
retirement fund pays out after
the first half of the next fiscal
year which Is ,In December.
.
Bob Barton, new president of
The Eastern Athletic Boosters will sponsor a single
the board, ~onducted the meeting
elllnlnatlon flttll' and sixth grade basketball tournament, Feb. 3
dunq which the restpatlon of
· and f, at Eastern High SChooL
.
Effie Murphy as a aubltltute
Registration fee Is $20 and advanced registration Is required.
teac._, was accepted. David J .
At the same tllne cheerleadllll competition will be held.
Kaufman, with · degrej! In busl·
Residents may call. Wea Arbaugh at 667-M27 to repter for
ness education, 7-12, wu blred as
either event.
a aubldtute. teacher tor the
·•
remainder of
the 19se:90 lchool
t
' \ ...
year. .,,
·. ·.
-paallcl .a tilt me II r 11J llftp•n lti.n .
Tbe board voted to' renew Its
s~:.g:
~~- contract for servtc:es from the
· Eight calls for assistance were anawered bY ~U~ltaoftbeMelp
PNI*'InJ_,.
................ ...
County E'""ency Medical Service Monday. ·
Educational Media. Resource
............... b
twlllkllet... allll&amp;o
,,
·At 11: U a.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to AlnerlcareCenter for the 1!189-90 echool year
report the hll fttlllt ef thela' vellatear ,...._
1
at Sl.90 per pupil for 2495
Pomeroy Health Care Center for Bertha Rlahtboilie wbo WU
I"
Ia contracted . , . .
Towa81alp.
students. The funding for this,
Conttnued on pare 10
r:.
Supt...James Carpenter salcl, will

Meigs board 'adopts budget

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

.

--Local news briefs-..
Driver cited on three charges

Boosters plan fund raiser ·

'

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

........ • ...... ·.

EMS lias eig~t TUe&amp;day calls

••Letart

l' •
(

r

•

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