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                  <text>Ohio. ·Point Pleasairt. W. Ve.

nmes-Sentinel

Meigs

corner

.

Meigs .
may pick up tax.
guide at oounty extension office .
..

MYSTERY FUM - ThtS week's mystery
. farm, featured by the Gallla SoU and Water ·
·e o-rw&amp;lon District, Is located somewhere In
Gallo County. ladlvlduals wlshln1 to participate
In the weekly contest may do so by guessln1 the
flll'lll'a owner. Just mall, or drop oft your guessiO
lite Galllpolla Dally Tribune, 825 Thll'd Ave.,
Gallpolll, Oblo, '1631, or the Dally Senllnel,ll1
.Court St., Pomeroy, Ohki; 457811,and you may win

a .S5 cub prize from the 01110 Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, addren and telephone
number with your card or Jetter. No telephone
calli will be accepted. All coaleat entrlelllhould
b·e tuned to tothenewapaperotllce by4p.m. each
Wednesday. Ia cae ot-·a tie, the winner will be
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Melp County
farm will be featured by the Melp SoD.aad W&amp;4er
Conservation District•

Farm Flashes

-Agriculture yearbook
theme is announced·

Tax regulations
change for fanns
witft ·employees

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -An
Ohio State University agricultuBy Edward M. Vollborn
tarlly cancelled by the manufac- ral economist says farl!l bookturer plus · 3 other uses the
County Extension Agent,
keeping has become more comregistrants had hoped to retain.
Asrlculture .1: CNRD .
pliCated with farmers now
The · four EBDC products most required to withhold Income
GALLIPOLIS - "Farm Man- comma!) Include: Mancozeb,
taxes lor their employees.
·agement: How to achieve your Maneb, Metiram and Zlneb. Ari · Richard Duvlck said starting
farm business Goals" Is the title extensive survey of the ·EBDC Jari. ~. agrlculhiral employers
;or th.e 1989 'i ear book of Agricul- residues Is scheduled for comple- must 'withhold, deposit, report
ture released Novemher,1989, by · tion lnSeptembei-,1990. EPA will and pay ·federal Income and
'the U.S. Department of Agrlcul- review the data and plans to Issue Social Security taxes for their
·ture. Each yearbook of agrlc'UJ, a final decision In the spring of workers.
.
ture Is on a different theme. The 1991. .
Ohio Income taxes do not have
focus throughout this years' book
Learn the skUI of Sheep Shear- to be withheld.
,
Is on a dlf!erent th!1me.
Ing! -A school on this topic Is
"This Is something farmers
: The focus throughout this yeplanned for February 9-10 at the have to be.aware of and get Slet up
ars' book Is on Individual Hocking Courity Fairgrounds· In to handle," said Duvlck. "Withfarmers making decisions on the Logan, Ohio. If Interested, call holding Is going to mean more
uae of their resources - land, Chris Penrose at the Hocking paperwork .and better record
labor, capital, and managerial County Extension Office (614- keeping and there's n·o way
ikllls. Secretary of Agriculture 385-3222).
around it."
'Clayton Yeutter says, that
jflstory made In 1989. PrecipiAny employee subject to FICA
· ''aeemlqly ~mall farm m'anage- tation for the 1989 calendar year taxes must now have federal
me,~t steps can make a big
was. above normal throughout Income taxes withheld also.
difference In profits, and that's most oft he slate. The average for
Who Is subject to withholding?
one ol the reasons U.S, farming Is the state was 42.57 Inches. This
Duvlck said employees who earn
rl!nks 1989 as the 17th wettest
so competitive Internationally."
$150 cash wages or tolal cash ahd
Each member of Congress has year during the past 107 years.
non-cash wages exceeding $2,500
a limited supply of free copies of 1989 was the wettest year In the
a year are subject to FICA tax.
tbe yearbook for public dlstribu- Southeast Region since records
Children under age 18 who are
began. ·.·
tlall. Copies are also a vallable for
.
eJ11ployed In the family buslnes.s
$10.00 from the Superlnteildent of
The Ohio Pork Congress Is
are the excepdon to this, but
,Documents, Washington, D.C. scheduled for February 8-10, 1990 i&gt;uvick said children of •a ny age
at the Dayton, ·Ohio: The Con;20WJ.
may be subject to withholding It
• The 19119 Southwest Ohio Corn gress theme this.. year -will be
employed liy a neighbor, a farm
'Growers· Just released their 1989 "Director for a ' New Decade".
corporation or most farm
'Comparison .• Plot results. Full The Pork Congress is a combina- · partnerships.
ieason cora average yields were tion of educational programs and ·
Farmers who withhold Social ·
172.88 bushel per acre. Top full a large trade show. Basic regisSeCurity and income taxes from.
season yielder was Pioneer 3241, tration at the Congress Is only $3 employees must have an emwhich had an adjusted yield of with optional meals extra . .
Identification number.
217.32 ·bushels per acre. Midseason averages were 163.51
bushels per acre.
Top mld-seaon yielder was
Kenworthy KLX ·448 at an adjusted yield.of 185.55 busltels per
acre. A complete summary oft he
plot yields are available by
. calllitg the Extension Office.
· ' Gross burley tobacco sales as
of the end of sales on January 19
have sold for $167.18 per hundred.
A majority of marketings sold for
$167 per hundred pounds. Only
201,510 pounds have gone to the
pool for the season.
EPA has proposed cancellation of EBDC Fungicides. 42 uses
of EBDC fungicides were volu.n-

n~perfect

· CHESHffiE - Freddie L.
Moore, asslslant shift operating
engineer, and Charles E. Fields,
crane operator, at the Ohio
Valley Electric Corporation' s
: Kyger Creek Plant, received
their anniversary awardll for 35
years service to the company, as
announced by Raymond H, BlOw.
· 1!1'1, Jr. , Plant Manager.
· Moore joined OVEC on January 17, 1955, as a Coal Handler In
. IJ!e Yard Department. That
'NIIle year he t,wnsferred to the
· operations deJillrtment as an
.auxlltaryequlpmentoperator. In
)958 be was promoted to EqulpIJII!III Operator and In 1968, to
1:1nlt SUpervisor. In 1979 he was
JIICIIDIIted to uatstant shift operlllq engineer. Moore and his
WUe, Della, llve at Box 250,

CII ?llre.

. fllldr joined OVEC on Janu·

JirJ 11, JJII5, u

a coal handler In
1Jitt)lnldepartment. That •me
lflllll' lie- p!caooted to tractor. . . . operator, and In 1981 he
tj) crane operator.
hll wife, N&amp;QCY, live

.

;

lpolb.

During these times of uncertain econoiliic co~di­
tions. don 't overlook your dry cows. They'll help
improve your profits if you condition them on Freshstart D&amp;H Chow.
..
Unlike milking rations , Purina's , Freshstart D~H
ChoW. brand dry cow ration is espec·ially tormula!E!d to meet the critic;ll reQUirements o(.your dry
cows. Where thestllrequirements are not met. metabolic problems may develop; like milk lever and
ketosis. These can cost you money. especially in
lost milk.

•

.

VISJTS

. . QUAYJ..E
DOWNTOWN PANAMA _
VIce President Dan Quayle holds a Panamanian

hoy. durla1 his vlsll to dowaa-D P~ City
Sund!IJ as the boy's father watches at right.

'

, By LEE LEONUD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - State legislators are trying to decide whether
mayors' courts have ouUived
their usefulness when It comes.to
enforelng the slate's law against
drunken ·driving.
A major overhaul of the
drunken driving law Is In a
Senate-HouSie conference committee, and one of the sticking
points Is howto remove jurisdiction from mayors' courts without
hurting city and vllJage revenues
from fines .
The matter will receive
another airing this week as the
conference committee meets on
Senate Bill 131, which toughens
pena)tles against driving .while
Intoxicated, and moves secondoffense DWI cases from mayors'
courts to county courts.

Both the senate and House will
be back In session this week.
Activities were suspended las t.
week following the death of
House Speaker Vernal Riffe' s
father In Scioto County .
The House has scheduled an 11
a.m. sesslon 'Tuesday, while the
senate will recqnvene at 1: 30 '
p.m. the same day.
A .move to restore mayor's
court juridictlon on the first
offense narrowly failed In the
.
House.
.
Guthrie said dealing only with
first of_fenders will reduce the
DWI docket In mayor.'s court by
abQut 2~ percent statewide.
Pfeifer has proposed .that special attorney-referees be appointed .to hear drunken driving
charges, or that mayors take a
short course In handling DWI
cases If they are going to be'

·Troops will withdraw fro~
.·Panama soon, Quayle ~ays-.
.

. was warranted.
"When you have people \flth
tears In their eyes saying, 'God
bless
IJJ
ot.prllmi!I' Witbd!ia~Y~~ "'' ,
r
, .!Aid ·; ,the ..zlgl).t
additional ti'QC!ps sent lJI·for ' thing I Quayle told reporters on ·
Cot~~~~:-,i~··~ on Its
the Dec. 20 lnvulo!l •.brlngJni the
the steps oft!JeCristo ~church
··
cQncludlng the second
level of Amerloarl soldiers bljck In Pan~I)'Ul City.
:'
peace-making mission to 13,600, but were unwilllrig to
Parishioners In the crowded
' church went so far as to cry,
for President Bush, also condiscuss a specific timetable. ·
ftontedlthe fact that while other
Endara, prompted no doubt by
"No! No!" when the Rev. Javier
Latin , American , leaders are the shOuts of opposltlon"Quayle VIllanueva- an buspoken critic
pressillg for t,lle prl)!npt withdra· · encountered himself Sunday In a
of Noriega who nevertheless led
wal l)f U.S. forces ll- )tnklng It In Rorrian'Cathollc Church, said the · him to the Vatican Nunclature,
some easel! to thejr official new security force was not yet orembassy,forsanctuary-sald
recognltjon of the new govern- ready to keep g,rder In the capital the troops will go "after we have
ment of President Guillermo but promise'a' It should be the ability to aoverrl ourselves."
Endar'a - many Panamanians equipped to replace U.S. troops
Quayle reiterated the pledge
do not want to ~ee them go.
soon.
he made Saturday to other Latin
One woman, selUng ·a T-shlrt to
Quayle, who was to·have afinal American leaders, saying Bush
Quayle at a stop during Sunday's meeting with Endara early Mon- was committed to paring the
wh!~lwlnd of,actlvltles, pleaded,
day at the presidential palace, American soldiers back to the
"DOn't Ieav, us unprotected."
. then was headed to'Jamalca for pre-lhvaslon·level of 13,600 frOm
Quayle, who over the weekend the final leg of his three-country . the 17,000 still very apparent on
alSQ heard 'the opposite. com· mission of diplomatic damage Panama's ~treets.
·
plalnt :frorn !Jem~pherle leaders · · cOntrol.
·
.
Though declining again to
Early Sunday Quayle said the predict when, Quayle said, "We
worried about·U.S. lnterveriilon,
· promised: .. "We'll stay ·wlth,Pa- responSie and comments of the certainly hope we cari do It
nama to .Siee democracy res to~ r people he had seen on his brief sooner rather than later ... , In
here. We wanl'to m~ke sure that stay proved ·the U.S. Invasion
Continued on page 6

6-GIAND 111· .JIIINS
1-SU-ID COIIIYIITIIU
2--GIAND AM COUPES
1-GRAN PIIX
~

,,

1987 BONNEVILLE

SE

WAsHINGTON (UP!) -Ohio employs almos!5.800 workers In
appeilrs to be In a good news-bad or near DCSC Is likely to grow
news sltuatlbn as President Bush · substantially.
prepares to Introduce his defense
Kaslch said he expects the
propos,a·ls Mol)day'.'
president to propOse consolidatFrom early Indications, the Ing 19 supply and 19 r;nalntenance
good news seems to be that the depots and 150 accounting and
Defense Construction Supply finance centers. DCSC, hesald,ls
model for consolidating
Center In Columbus could come
out a winner, butthelo8erscould activities. •. .
.
be the Army's tank plant 'In . "It Iiself Is a cons'olldaUon of
Uma, the Defense Contract many 'operations that once were
Administration Sevlce· In CleVe- scattered all over the country,"
'
land. · ·Wright-Patterson Air Kaslch said.
The logistics agency, ch'ter
Force BaSie near Dayton could
purch$ser of. many goods and
see a little of both.
suppl~ for the armed services,
Rep. John Kaslch, R·Ohlo, a
member of the House Armed bas started to consolidate Its
Services Committee, says the payments and . records In
Defense LogiStics Agency which Columbus. ·

a

1.984 .UICK
LeSABRE
Full
r•r wheel drive. One owner, lady drlvan,

$5995
''

FuD Ulle Authorized

Parlaa Chow Dealer.
•

BUICI·PONTIAC
.
•
.

•

1900 EASTEIII AVE. .e· GAWPOUS, OH:
'

..

FmST RIDERS - RJi~nda Collins, right, and Judy King were
the flnt peopte to ride the new elevator at the Melp County
Courthouse. The elevator officially opened at 8: 30 this morning
(Moltday). lt will be operated throus~,~Dut the day by Ray Parsons
and Homer SmWI.

January
Ohip ·may be in good news, bad
n~w~ . situatioD: on budget pn,posals ·

MUST SEE TO
APPRECIATE

This top of the Llna Pontiac ia a local trade-in and is
in showroom condition. X·tra low milea.

1 S.ctton. 10 Pogeo 26 Citnto
A Multlmodlo Inc. Nowor&gt;oper

.

· PANAMA CITY, Panama
you have a good future."
: (UP!) -. VIce President Dan
The conflict was underscored
. Quayle said U.S. troops sent In to
Sunday as Quayle and other
·oust Marnrel : Noriega soon Ill.~~~~:;~~~ ofqclal~ repeated

Mel&amp;• Couaty•a Only

w...

January 29. 1990

yors' courts· are
at· issue with -DWI·laws

.

1-lllnA
2-PAU AVENUES
2.:....1EGll COUPES
2-CENTUIY COUPES
· 1-SIYLAIK UMITED

Low near 38 IOnla'llt. Partly
cloudy TIII!Hay. Jllp aear 110.

•

•

Middleport, OhiQ, ·

S TII.E c·ENTER

WE ALSO HAVE PiJIINA
lAMI STAITENA

Jft
tft·I1M P•••"Y• ...
,.....
.
..........
.,.lull" ... '-'1........
....... -Arlm* .._.., .. ..

Super Lotto
12-13-25-35-37-44
Kicker ·536856

P~4

•Wheel
Alignment
•Brakes
Shocks
•Struts
•UH.d Tires • .
•Goody•r Tire.s

Order your Fresh start D&amp;H today and help your dry
cows store up nutrients for more milk and more income throughout the next lactation .

RH Fill &amp; SUPPLY CO.

6615

•t

By JOHN C. RICE
oping a lease, and how to market are too high, ,he says.
.
Melp .County Exlen&amp;lon
• tbls enterprise. This publication
· Yieldll from the ilrst 13 harv'
will be available In our o!flce at es ts of alfalfa grown with limes·
A1eat, ApiCulture
POM.,l,;RQY The 1989' p1inlmal charge. •
tone ·a veraged 16 percent hlghe~
Farmer's . Tax Guide Is now
Coarse slagcanbeaneffectlve than yields from alfalfa grown
· avallable through the Meigs and economical alternative to with slag. Yields fr~ the n~t
County Extension Office which Ume lor raising soil pH.
· five harvests averaged 18 per. ·
can be reached at-!192-66.96.
OhiO State Agronomist Paul · cent more than the limestone-; ·
There is a new wrinkle this Sutton says that .air cooled slag.' -treated soUs.
·
;,
year (}990)· on Income tax. from blast furnaces Is almost as
"The difference In perfor1
Beginning Jan. 1, farm employ' effective as lime Its first year of mance at any given time was
ers. are required tol withhok!' use and as good or better the probably due to the limes ton~
Income taxes from employees. second year. Sutton Is based at
being a finer grade than t~
Wages that are subje t •o Income the university's Ohio Agtlcultu- slag," Sutton says. Because slalt
tax withholding are th ·51 subject ral Research and ·Development
Is coarser thaqllme, Its· reaction
to FICA (Social Seounr ) taxes, Center In Wooster. '
Is spread over a longer period of
Farm wages are not s .bject to _ Slag Is a by product of · time.
'
F·ICA, If. the employee ~ wages• ·Jlinestone used to remove IronSutton also testell soU nutrlents, mlcronutrlents, and toxl&lt;:'
are less than $150 per y· ar or the ·ore Impurities in steel making. It
h
bee
d
1 · in
t metals In .slag and: limestone
n use as a 1m gage'?
treated soils and measured the
. total farm payroll Is .ess than . as
$2,500. If any employee earns for mOst of this century, and
mlcronutrlents and metals In the .
$150 or more annually, their total resea~h on its effectiveness has harvested alfalfa.
,
wages are subject to FICA and been conducted at dlllerent
AifalfaJirom limestone treated .
.Income tax withholding . .Like· times since 1960, Sutton says. The
wise, if total wages paid by the • materials conlaln metals such as
soils showed a higher ·calcium ·
employer for the year are $2,500 boron. aluminum, magnesium,
uptake but a lower magnesium
uptake. The calcium and magne.or more, then all wages paid are , and zi~c that serve as mlcronut·
. subject to FICA and Income tax rtents for plants and Jmporlan.t slum contests of slag and limes;
withholding.
minerals for livestock. ·
tone are not much different.
Children emplOyed by . their·
To compare .slag 11nd lime,
Soli texture seems to be a
slgnlflcantfactor tn 'theeftectlve! ·
parents are exempt from FICA If Sutton grew alfalfa In a greenthey are under. the age of 18. house in three types of acidic
ness of slag versus limestone. HI~
Wages paid to children employed soils. He applle.d zero, one, half,
study confirms li 1954 U.S:
by a farm corporation and most one, and two times the'doses of Departnient of Agriculture te- ~
farm partnerships are subject to slag and lime recommended for
port that founq air cooled slag as •
FICA and Income tax withhold· neutralizing the soil . So far, the effective as llll!estone on sandy
Ing. Farmers ,wllJ need to requesr results show th'a t the current loams but not as effective on slit
W.,-4 forms fi'om er.Jployees recomm~tnded dosages for slag and clay Ioams, which are much ''
whose wages are subj( ct to FICA
·
·
fliler soils. '
·
and Income tax IVlthholdlng.
They wllJ also need Circular E,
'·'Employer's Tax Guide,'.' for the ··
tables to use in r;alculatlng the
amounts to be withheld.
The extension office lias also
&amp;
just r~celved a 'pamphlet on
" Calculating Depreciation ori
Farm Property Acquired In
1989." The pamphlet bas many
depreciation examples and dis·
'
cusses whether to USie expensing
or not. It also lists many pieces of
.,
equipment .and the recbvery
period In year's. This · Is free as
long as supply lasts:
This Is the title of a · new
publication developed by SteFULTZ - J. lUICUS FULTZ .
phen Bratkovlch, a district spe-·
Pomtroy
OWNEIS
242 W. Main
clalist with the Ohio Cooperation
.. ft2-2101
Extension Service. It discusses
developing the enterprise, devel-

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY

OVEC employees
honored for 35
years of service

Pick 3
IM ·
Pick 4

in yletory

DEPEND ON

To Make
Your Dry Cows
Pay

Ohio ·Lottery

Montana

•

•

allowed to continue hearing
them.
"I think drunken driving Is too
Imporlant for a mayor's court to
turn It I'nto a joke, which Is what
Is happening In some paris of the
state," he said.
Pfeifer and Guthrie also are
Continued on page 6

Brothe.rs
injured in
accident
Two brothers, James . and
Terry Mlcha.el. both of Pomeroy,
remain hospitalized for treatment of multiple Injuries as the
result of an au tomoblle accident
Saturday afternoon.
Both were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy unit of the Meigs County Emergency . Medical Service.
From there James, 27: was taken
by Llfefllght tq Grant Hospital in
Columbus, and Terry, 24, was
tran!l{erred to the Holzer Medical &lt;:enll!rAccordlng to Pomeroy Pollee
who investigated the accident,
James Michael was drMng a
197\I .Qids Cutlass south on Nye
.--A .......
,
:~:e
•.-··tq;h,s
.;.,_ 'yp•-rt
v v~•••
curve.' we vehicle went off the
rigl!t side of the road and struck
a large rock headon. The accident which occurred at 2:57p.m.
remains und.e r Investigation.
In a second accident lnves ligated by Pomeroy pollee, a
pickup truck driven by W. G.
Farmer, 68, Pomeroy, was
struck In the rear by a car driven
.by Patrick Cleland, Pomeroy ,19.
The accident occurred at 2: 53
p.m. Sunday as Farmer was
stopped in preparation to making
a left-hand turn.
Farmer complained of back
Injuries and was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment.
There was m~lum damage to '
the driver's side rear on the
Farmer vehicle, with no damage
. to the Cleland car. Cleland was
charged with failure to keep '
assured clear distance.

going· out l~e a lion . ~

mld-20s to mld-30s Friday. Lows
By United Press International
Toledo-Findlay line.
will be 15 to 25 Wednesday, 20 to
By mid-morning, the snow had
Ohioans got re11cqualnted with
30 Thursday and 10 to 20 Friday.
winter weather Monday, with changed to rain south of 'InterOn the early morning weather
snowy and .slushy rQads slowing slate 70, while It was snow mixed
map,
low pressure was over
The finance center· now em- traffic In cities In the northern with rain north of I-7Q.
Mississippi
with a front extendploys 1,080 worker, and could be and central sections of the stat~.
11 was expected to change to all
Ing
'
a
cross
Tennessee
and VirgiTake away the 'middle three rain later In the day as warmer
expanded to as many as 2,000 In
nia.
Weak
high
pressure
was
1991 and eventually to 5,000, weeks and thiS month would have air move&lt;fin from the southwest.
over
the
mid-Mississippi
'Valley
been a typical January tor Ohio
HlghsMondayweretobelnthe
Kaslch estimates.
and over New Enkland. The low
Kaslch said 2,650 jobs at the weather. Before M&lt;lnday's win· mld-30s to low 40s, and lows
to move Into the Tennessee
was
Army's lank plant In Lima are In ·ter · storm . hit, the National Monday night In the mld-21ls to
Valley Monday morning with the
jeopardy, and so would be about . weather Service said this year's low 30s. Tuesday will be mostly
front
remaining stallollliry. The
300 jobs at the Defense Contract . first month was go.lng·to be o'\e of, · sunny In the morning and In·
low
will
then accelerate norAdmlnlstrlltlon Service In Cleve-· the warmest and ' driest ·ori creaslngly cloudy In the anertheast
to
Pennsylvania
Monday
Jand. · He said the CJeveland record.
·
noon, with a chance of snow or
to
southern
New
evening,
then
facllity may be eliminated.
The NWS had a wlnterweatl)er rain In the north. Highs will be lil
England
late
Monday
night.
Congressional and Industry advisory posted Monday morn- the 40s.
Another developing low pressources say the Pentagon's plan . tng for the central counties and a
Looking ahead ·through Frisure
system over western CanIs to build 162 M1-Al tanks and 62 snow advisory In effect for ' tbe day, there will be a chance of
ada
will move to Minnesota,
advanced Ml-A2 tanks at the north~,ast quarter of Ohio.
· • snow Wi!dhesday and Thursday
trailing
a cold front south across
plants In Warren, Mich ..• andAbout 3 · to 5 ' Inches were and It will be fair Friday. Highs
the Plains Tuesday morning,
Lima, Ohio, In i991. But after expectedtofalleastofallnefrom, will be In the upper 20s to .upper
approaching Ohio ·Tuesday
· that,$70mUllonwould ,b espentto Cleveland to Wadsworth, with • 30s Wednesday, In themld-30s to
evening.
about Ho 31nches to theWllst, to a: mld-40s Thursday and In the
ConUnued on pap 6

Of(iCials say Nqriega moved tO f~eral Prison for trial .

· MIAMI (UPI) _Fonner Pan- · not mingle· with other Inmates,
Davis d~rlbed .Noriega as
amanlan dictator . Manuel No-.. said prllon spokesman Charles "the most notoriou• prisoner"
rle a has been moved to · a · Davis.
. ever houllld at the facility .,
· rl~are, speciallY built 86- ,. Unlike other prisoners, No- southwest of Miami.
~uare-foot cell In a Miami rlega has the whole cell · to
Noriega had .been helc! In . a
fede 1 !son flnallyleavtngthe
hlmsail
'
basement cell at · the Miami
cou~~~ bQsement where he
''He· ~ lsolated'from the rest of federal Cj)urthouse -,IDee hts
·
nt the last three weeks.
, our Inmate population. We want arrival in Miami Jan. 4.
1
'Otnclsls at the Metropolitan
to make 1ure he's aolng ' to be
His attorneys had wanted to
Correctional Center confirmed · safe," Davis said.
move him to the prllon earlier
M'
!hit Norle a had been
NorleJaWUICheduledtomeet butwereawaitlngtbeoutcomeof
m~~edayj cellln8an i11oat1011 later M\lllday with his lawyers hlsbond.bearlni.OnFrlday,U.S.
wi~i at the prtson to a walt ll'lal and tt. warden tn hts cell, and i District Judge William Hoeveler
on cocaine trafflcklni charil!ll'
table wu 1et up there to denied bond for Noriega.
. Tbe cell u llulll by combln- aCCOIIIJIICidate the IJ'OUp, Davia
We~lq civilian clothing and
1q &amp;wo 1111ar cella and Ia said. Oilier Inmates are taken slumplnldowatnthebackll!atof
adjlcent to a jn1san lieUtenant'• from'tllelrcells to meeting rooms a van, Noriega wu moved to the
otllce. The deposed dictator will for such visits.'
·
prison atte~ dark Sunday.

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"MCC ts more than satlsfac-

tory,~· defenle lawy!!r ·Frank
Rul&gt;lll() ha~ said Saturday. "Th•t

wu .our tutaestlon, that -1 hey
send him . to MCC. The sovernment wanted to move ' him to
either ·Atlallta, or Marlon, Dl.
Needll!lll to say, we atrelluoully
objected to thts.
. ' ., ' ·
"Obviously you can't do a caae
like thiS witlt a lo!ll-d!stan~
relationship l't'lth your client, ·
.Rubino sai!J. ''It's aot · to be
somewhere acceasl.~le to us and
accessible quickly. .
Rublnosaldhlsclientwillhi.ve
more room and a "little sunshine" at MCC.

.

U.S. forces lnv!lded Pana~a any event, the Judge said he did
on Dec. 20 to oust Norlega ·s not have the jurisdiction to deal
government fll!d lnatall Gull· with the prisoner of war Issue.
lermo Endaraupresldentofthe
Noriega. and 15 othl!l's were
strategiCally located Central charged In
12-count drlli
' ~merlcan nation. Noriega was trafficking I 1ctrnent returned
given asylum on Christmas Eve Feb. 4, 1988, by a fecleral grand
• at the Vatican Nunclature~Jury In Miami. 11-coliVIcled, he
" embasay, In Panama City.
would face • maximum penalty
Rubino ani! c»eounsel Steven of 145 yean In ~rtson and • $1.1
KoUtn refused. to participate In mWionllae. ·
.
Friday's ball hearlni, Insisting
Noriega Is alao Cllarpd In a
that Norie1a Is a prtsoner ol war Tampa 1ndlctrnent Ulllltied o.a
who should be transferred to a Feb. 4, 1988 • with helplq arraaaneutral country, where he would lng to smuute nearly 1 llllllloa
beeltherrepatrlatedorreleased. pounds of martjuau Jato tile
8
The U.S. attorney's office United tales from 1!182 to 111&amp;.
rejected the argument, an&lt;l In

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Pomaot Mlt811lMI&lt; Ohio
Mo~Gt• ......., a. 1110
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The Daily ,.Sentinel
111 Coun Slreet
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVoTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEJGS.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubliSher
PAT WRfi'EHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/ ColitroUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M1111a1er

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tiley should be Jeoo tUn :1H
wordo loac. AU Jetter,wore oubjeclto edltt.c aad muot be olp!!d wltb
IWile, addreoo aad ldephoae • ..,her, No 118Siped lettero wW be pabllohed. Letlero should be I• pod tate,lddr..at.c looueo, not,..,....... ..

~~·=·N=·~--------------------------~~--------~1

RepublicansbJingto
tar Fisher as liberal ·
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Sla&amp;eho- Reporier
COLUMBUS ~ Republicans seeking to recapture the state
attorney general's ot!lce after 20years have begun the campaign with
a "Willie Horton" style smear tactic. ·
Whether It will work for state Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R·Bucyrus, against
fellow Sen. Lee Fisher, D-Sbaker Heights, as It worked In 1988 for
Gl!(lrge Bush against Michael Dukakls remains to be seen.
Horton, It will be recalled, was the convicted murderer who was
furloughed under Dukakls' watch as governor ofMassachusetts and
committed assault and murder. He became a symbol by which the
Jtepubllcans painted Dukakls as a do-good liberal, soft on crime.
No sooner had Pfeifer announced his candidacy two weeks ago than
he began branding Fisher as a long-time opponent of capital
punishment and called him "easily the most liberal member of the
Seriate."
This was a curious tactic In view of the fact that Fisher had not yet
officially entered the race for attorney general, and that both be and
Pfeifer must win their party nominations before squaring off. _
It was also curious In view of the fact that Pfeifer told reporters that
Sen. Robert Burch, D·Dover, would be a more formidable opponent
for him In the fall because of Fisher's ultra-liberal views. Why then
attack Fisher and help Burch? You figure It out.
But 11 was most curious because Fisher does not oppose the death
penalty tor convicted murderers. J{e did In 1981, when Ohio's law was
enacted, but he's changed his mind.
·
In fact, last year Fisher voted for death by lethal Injection tot
convicted murderers and Gov. Richard Celeste, who still opposes
·
.
capital punishment, vetoed lt.
So now It will be held out that Fisher flip-flopped on the Issue of the
death penalty, just as Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze Jr.
flip-flopped on abortion.
...
Celebrezze' s flip-flop occurred ·during a four-month period as he
studied a Supreme Court decision and took a stand he may have to
uphold as governor.
Fisher's flip, sometime during the last nine years, was more of a
gradual conversion during a time· when he was not running for
statewide office.
Even if Fisher changed In response to public opinion on the death
penalty, It seems unfair to inount a "WIU!e Horton" style attack on
him especially when the ammunition Is nine years old and faulty.
B~t the Republ~ans apparently feel that the term "liberal" still
works as a red flag to voters, just as It worked against Dukaklli In 1988.

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Appreciates contributions

WAsHiNGTON - Georce
Bush's Achlllea' beel Is Iran. A
foray Into Panama ·ctve~ him tbe
temporary aura of touch CUY •
But a dozen forays Into banana
republics won't change the fact
tbat when It come~~ to Iran, Bush
Ia a pushover.
. .
He Ialka concUJatlon with Iran
·while tb&amp;t country continues Its
retcn of terror. ·~t September,
Iranlan:aponaored terrorists
blew up a French plane kUling
171 people, Including seven
Americans", one ot: "hOm was the
wife of a U.S. ambusador.
That Is the most recent Iranl&amp;n
atrocity; but In terms of
numbers; It Pales'· beside the
explosion of Pa11 Am flight 103,
which killed 259 New York-bound
passengers and 11 people on the
ground In"Locke~ble, Scotland.
In t!le more tllan a year s!Jice
the tragedy, the ;Bush admlnls·
tratlon has amassed enough
lntorrnaUon to pin blame on a
terrorist hired by Iran. But Bush
Is waiting for more pi'oof. As a
candidate, Bush . pronilsed 40
bring terrorists to swift justice.

Aa Pfaltlellt. Bush baa let the
mon!Jia ·wear on wbJie 1e11111nc
' out the word that absolutely
conclualve evidence II needed
before he will even denounce
those responsible for the dowlilng
of Paa Am 103, let ·aloae bflng
them to jusUce.
- For the famDiea of the dead,
this fqot-draJiing Ia bt&gt;llnnlnl to
look lela like due pracesa a11d
more like political expediency,
especially when the United
States Is paytncmoney to Iranian
famUJes who loet someone In the
accidental downing by the USS
VIncennes of an Iranian alrl. .
In 1988.
OneanpllhedfamUy·memJier
of a Pan Am vtctlm wrote
directly "to Buah seeking
a11swers. We bave aeen Bush's
private retponse dated Nov. 22. It·
wu 8D expression ot sympathy
aJid a whitewash of Iran. , .
. "Unfortunately, the Pan Am
103Jnvesttcatlon has gone·on for
some time and Is, by no me8Da,
completed," Busb wrote. "How·
ever, new and Important Information continues to be fouiid. As

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a realilt, we are 11ot yet ready to
brJnc charges agalnat anyone,
and I am certainly not prepared
to otder government actloll
baaed on the Information we
currently bave. I wish It were
otberwlse, but iuch lnvesttgatloaa take time, and we mlli"t take
care In this Important work." ·
Then came the apology for
Iran, wblch hearkeal back to the
same excuses Ronald Reagan
gave for trading arma for holtages. Bush wrote, "Regarding
lr8D, 111 I bave said before, we
are worldDg to draw that country
back Into the community of
nations from which It baa ex·
chided ltaelf for the last decade.
This ~ a gradual and del!berate
pc)llcy, Howi!Ver, It can only be
completed'wlft!n Iran changes Its
behavior by securtnc the release
U.S. boatages and ending Its
support for terrorlsin."
Bush's big probiem Is that the
hundreds of living vtctlmB of Pan ·

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Re·@.Le&lt;:TION

North Gallia g..ounds
Ironton St. Joe 88-58

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In·praise of the·.cold war generation
William Rusher

equal footing. International af· ·
fairs boiled down to one Simple
question: Which side are yo1,1 on?
Now ·that the Cold War Is
militarily) .with the Free World,
ending, the wimps are already
Gorbachev
threw In the sponge
coming out Of the .woodwork to
and
applied
for admission to the
declarethatltwasunnecessary,
global
community
It has so long
or even (a,la Strobe Talbott)
been bis regime's ambition to.
unreal. Don t believe them. It
subdue and dominate.
was thoroughly necessary, and
When !be histories of the Cold
11 t
al It th Fr w ld h d
a oore ..
e ee or a
War are written, there wUI be .. .,
lost lt (and there were times
long passages In them describing ·
w.hen It was a close-run tblngl,
the heroic deeds and sacrifices of
mankind would have been sold
·many
Jndlvlduals"wbo gave their
Into scientific slavery forcentur·
lives
to defend the Ideal of
les to come.
freedom. Many others, who did
But most the men and women
as much or more, will never have
of the,Cold War
In the
their stories told .at all, . for
worlds tree natiOns held the tort
"reasons
of state." They died,
with grim determination. Better
face down In the back alleys of a
yet, they went on blllldlngtbelr
hundred cities, or In the filthy
own societies on the basis of
dltchl!ll of a tbousaJICi foreign ,. ·
freedom. Slowly, Inexorably, It · fields, or In tbe torture chambers
'
became clear that they were
ot any of a seore of communist ·' ,.
winning the competition with the
despots, clamping tbelr tee~h on
•·
slave SOCieties Of the communist
the truths their captors de"
world. At last, forced to recogmanded to know.
nlze that the Soviet Union simply
All honor to thef!!. I !lm proud
could not compete economically
to have been a member of their
(and therefore, In the long run •. generation.
I'

~eneFatlon

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iUSPSJtll-. .1
A Dlvlalo• of Multimedia. Inc.

I

Slavery's legacy d~mands . red•·ess
today, and theeconomtcdevastatlon of many blacks II a national
cancer . killing Its victims lll!d
eating away at the rest of 111.
Once aga,tn, I run Into the
comprehension problem: 1 don't
understand how we can Jet the
situation contlaue without trytnc
to do something about It, any
more than I could understand
lettlnJ cancer destroy a body
Without treating lt.
The National Urban League
recently called for ~ billion· In
jobs, tralnlnJ, edUcation and
houtnc programs for black
Americana ~ almllar to the
Marshall Plan uaecl to help
rebuDd Western Europe after
World War II. And the Jeacue
Isn't exanerat1n1 when they
compare the situation of many
blacks today to poatwar Western
Europe. However, the 1eape
cave no pmpools for llrllillnc
about their o~fue:lvel. After.
hearJn&amp; their ch
15th unuaJ
"State of Black America" report, black columlllllt W~
Rupbet ry ·cbarfid the Ur~

~h

I

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.f.,

Overstreet

I

aflernoon. Monday
through FMdaV. 111 Court St.; Po·
meroy. Ohio. b)r lhf' Ohio Valley Pub·
Ushln~ Company Multimedia, Inc.,

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League with the task of developI
Ing a pi'Ogrlm·." It's not enough
just to point out problema and ask
tor money, he says, "Your job Ia
I •
to develop ilnd market specific
Ideas for meeting the needs you
•'
outline so eloquently." ,
,
U we atop tll,ll clll!.cer, we will
•
I~ be plc1dnc up the tab for
forefathers IODJ dead. We can . ,·
curse them 8Dd curse the problt!llll they've lett, but tlle bill Is ' I
attn outstanding and the Interest
Is co.mpoundlnc.
we afford to
let It get much blaitr? ·
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TODAY'J•••
;
j
IY IIIII. PAOD.i
,
Our llllniR' S8yl ~ Cln't Win. " .
1111 alvch II OOld, 1111 CCIIIUtiUitlon
C0111111M11.
If lt'a to•l) WMn, - . .
ontiiMnlblrl. .
,---7 f
Some people wtllpllld houra
• clattlfl at llllllllltll epa llld 1111n try
to Ull . _.. - to Wlllk the dog '
wfll!l
ill home.
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~Ie8 belted 73-58 by ~us
Falcons in non-league .outing

R·avenswood slips
prut.SHS, 66-59

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The win gives the VIkings a 6-8
record over.all and ~~ In the 1'\:'C.
The loss gives tbe Marauders a
2-13 record over.all and 2·10 In the
TVC. Meigs will t~avel to VInton
County on TUesday night for il
rematch.
.
,
Meigs came out ott the blocks
and jumped out to a 3-0 lead on a .
Jay ·Humphreys bucket and foul .
shot at the 7: 33 mark of the first
quarter, from then on It was •
see-saw game with two lead
changes and three ties .In the first
quarter. After the first 8 minutes
the Marauders held a 1~14 lead.
Meigs kept the lead until the
4:42 mark of the first half wlfen ·
Tom 'R eed bit a three pointer to
give the VIkings a 2HB lead. Ja~
Palmer and Tom Reid hit three
pointers around a bucket In · the
BETZINGLOOKSFOROPENMAN~Melp'CaryBeniDJ(ll)
paint bY the Marauders Mike
GO FOR REBOUND - VInton's Jason Caudill rebound•durlng Saturday's" makeup TVC co ntest.
looka for open mu duriDgSa&amp;Ul'day's makeup liardwood Ull wllh
Van Meter and the VIkings held
(
42)
and Nick Kruger (40) battle Meigs' Cary The VIkings won, 53-48;
Vlnloo County. VIking defenden are Tom Reid (U) and Jay
their biggest lead of the night at
Betzlng
(11) and Jay Humphreys (41) for a
Palmer (110). VIIS woii In the final two mlllutes, SS-48.
.
28-21 wlth 2:08 remaining. The
Marauders cut the lead to five at
30·25 at. the half.
Meigs tied the game In the .
third quarter when Cary Betzlng
hit a three pointer with 2:021eft at
the teams were even at 36. But
the VIkings grabbed the three
point lead back at the end of the
Iri a battle for the bid for
slip away , and thai's a shame
EASTERN (58)~ Kenny Cald·
quarter when Tom Reid hit a top.seed of the Sectional Tour- pecause we can play with them
· Overcoming a 26-18 first quar •.
well ·2-2-6.Scott Fitch 2·1·5.Shaun ,
· three pointer with 8 seconds namamimt. visiting Miller . !Miller):·
ter detlclt, the l'tavenswood Red first buzzer.
Savoy 4-1·2-13. Mike Frost 9-5·23,
Ravenswood slowly picked up · rematnlng to give the VIkings a .g rabbed the upper hand by
Devils slowly got that' magical
Miller won the reserve game Jeff Durst 2·1·0·7, Mark Murphy
rhythym and marched on to a tempo In tile second canto and · · 41-38 lead heading Into the final overcoming a 14 point deficit to 48-29.
0-0-0, Mike Wheeler 0-2·2, Randy
handily defeat the Eastern Ea66-59 non-leaguer basketball con- hard-pressed Southern'.s Brad quarter .
·Moore 1 ~ 0 · 2. TOTALS
Eastern
next
plays
Southern
at
The Marauders stayed within gles 73-58 here Saturday In
test over the Southern Tornadoes Maynard, surrounding/ the tal·
East Meigs Friday In a cross . 19-2-12-58.
ented
post
man
with
t)\'o
men
tQ
four
points of the VIkings In the non-league boys' high schell
here Saturday In Racine.
MILLER (73) ~Jo hn Doughty
county
rematch.
Southern Is now 8·7 overall literally shutdown thr SHSinslde first half of the quarter. Buckets basketball action.
12-7-31, Tom Fulk 3-4-10. Chip
Score by quarters:
· 1
by Jay Humphreys (4:36) and
Eastern Is 12·4, 10·0 In SVAC Eastern ..... :....... 19 16 14 9-58
game.
while Ravenswood Is 10-2. .
Gossman 2-7·11, Tom Hettich
The
result
was
that
Southern
Robbie
Fields
tied
the
game
at
46
play,
and Miller Is now.12·3.
Scotty Dale led all scorers with
4·1·9, AI Siemer 4-2-10, Troy
Miller .............. .. 11 21 18 23~73
24 points and 7 rebounds, while had todependonltsoutsldegame. with 3:}15 left. Fields than came • John Doughty led the Falcons
Merkle 0-2·2. TOTALS 2~·23-73.
Box score:
'
Brian Dale notched 14 points and and with the ret\u-n of Taylor up with a steal and layup to give with a game-high 31 points,
7 rebounds, Southall had 10, and dished out a good/first half. In all · Meigs a 48-46 lead with 2:51 followed by Chris Grossman
SHS hit 8 three P,/&gt;lnters, all from
remaining; but Jason Caudill hit with n,Tom Fulk IO, and AI
,Mosser 9..
.
theTrloofthlsfJ.rmBaer-Taylor· a bucket to lie It at 48 with 2:34 Siemer wllh 10.
For Southern Andy Baer re·
·
remaining: After a ques.tlonable · E·astern's Mike Frost tallied
turned to form with 18, Chris and Murphy. (
.
After
South¢rn
led
39-37
at
the
out
of . bounds call gave the team-high 23 points, while Shaun
Murphy had 11, Chad Taylor 9,
half,
Ravenswood
took
advan·
Vlkl11gs
• the ball back, Jay Savoy had 13, and Jeff Durst 7.
and Brad Maynard 7.
tage
of
a
cold
SHS
third
quarter.
Palmer
gave VVlnton the lead
Eastern set the early tempo
One bright spot for . Southern
1. TOTALS- 26-8-12-88
North GaiUa's Pirates boosted
·
SHS
meqtor
Caldwell
said,
.
with
1:40
left
50-48.
In
the
flna\49
and
led 19-11 after one frame,
was the successful return of point
From the Ooor- 34-72 147.2%)
their record against their non-·
guard Chad Taylor, who received 'We dldn'J hit the shots we seconds Palmer hit ·three tree while yielding somewhat In the league opponents to 2-3 by
.
At the line - 12-22 (54.5'%)
to j make In the third throws and the VIkings were able secon quarter to lead 35-32 at the
a standing ovation upon his .·needed
.
Off
the glass ~ 33 ID . Smith 7)
registering an 88-58 knockout of
period,.and they hit some crucial to hold on (dr a 53-48 win.
half.
return, then satisfied the crowd
Blocked
shots - 7
visiting Ironton St. Joe Saturday
Palmer and Caudill paced the
In a close third round Milleby hitting three consecutive baskets on the return trip down
Assists -16
winners with 15 points each. The rledged to the ·lead 50-49, but a · night.
three pointers to tally his 9 the floor... ,
Steals~ 10
Shane
Sm
lth
J.unlor
forward
Ravenswood ·won the third winners were 18. of 51 from the 23-9 nine spread In the final round
points.
Turnovers
- 25
led
the
Bucs,
10-6
overall.
with
21
Coach Howle Caldwel said, round 13·7 to lead 50-46 going Into floor for 35 percent, and 12 of 19 delivered the final blow .
ST.
JOE
(58)
-Akers 10·0-1points,
which
allowed
him
to
John Doughty hit 12 of 18 from
·'You· re-never..sallsfled with a the flnal .round 1where SHS late t.n from the. line f9r 63 percent.
.•
,21;
M~tt
$rpJt)l
,8;0·2-)8:.,
Wopd~_,
share
,
marksman~hlp
honors
1
loss, but I can say that our kids thegame had·tofoul, 'butsaw-the Vlnton 'jp,abbed 24 rebounds, If&lt;~ 1 ' the field, hitting 9-12 the fourth
4-o-o:s;
Jones
3-0-0-6:
Latka
0·0·3·
with St. Joe's Mike Akers, who
by Tom Reed with 8.
quarter, while notching 7-8 free
played as hard as they could play West Vli-glnlans Ice the.game at
3·
Nlesel
0-0-1-1;
Mark
Smith
also had 21. Also scoring In
. •
For Meigs Cary Betzlng and throws, and 11 rebounds In an
tonlgllt. We never lacked tile . the line.
o'O·H. TOTALS - 2~·0·8·58 ,
double figures for North was
The
winners
hie
21
of
56,
Robbie
Fields
each
scored
14.
outstanding
game
tor
Miller.
effort. Losses are always hard to
At the line- 8·19 142.1 ~ )
senior postman D.J. Hammel
Overall Miller hit 23 of 30 from
swallow, but Its easter to take canned 3 of 8 treys, and sank 15of Meigs hit , 17 of 41 from the floor
and . junior guards Brian Stout
free ~rows. SHS hit 13 of 36. for 41 percent and 13 of 18 from the line, while Eastern managed
this way than to have a let down. I 22
and Chris Tacke! t.
.
hitS of 2 three-pointers , and hlt9 the line for 72. Jay Humphreys just of 9.
.
12 1
was also pleased with the fact
The
Pirates
.
who
led
by
20 at
13 at e line.
grabbed 7 ol the Marawders 25
Miller had 33 rebounds
that we made just 5 turnovers the of Behind
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
t he Dale brothers 7
halftime,
allowed
a
number
of
bo nds
25 f 44 t
entire game."
re u
.,
Doughty 11 and was o
rom
446 4524
" •. " .
their reserv£' players to get some
rebounds \each, Varney had 6 of
Meigs won the reserve contest the field .
The competitive nature of thlu
playing time, as reserves Rob
No other details or statistics of
game was Illustrated by the the RHS 3\l· SHS had 261n allied 49-47 behind James Howerton's
Canady, Brad Fuller and Kevin
18 paints and 16 rebounds. Trevor the game were submitted, how·
pre-game hype and complimen- by Maynard's 12 and Shuler's 6.
Hunt combined for seven points.
2
steals,9
turnovers,
Harrison
added
10.
Jason
Willi·
ever,lnaphonecallwlthEastern
·RHS
had
tary remarks by Ravenswood
coach Charles Riley, he sa lei, " I . The. Pirates will returri to
· Coach of the Southern team.' 'Go' and 12 pedpnals while Southern ams led VInton with 12.
followed
In
.
~
ult
with
7,
5,
and
I5.
Box
score:
was disappointed that we lost. SVAC action on Friday against
lng Into Southern Is Ilk~ reliving ,
Southern
.\
won
the
reserve
Meigs
....
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...........
15
25
38
48
Winning
has spoiled me I guess. Kyger Creek at Cheshire. ·
the ~ Movie 'Hoosiers . except
game
48-43
led
by
Jeremy
Roush
VInton
:
....
..
........
....
.
,
14
30
41
53
Tonight
I
guess the flu caught up Score by quarters
.
Southern Local basketball Is
14,
ScQtt
Lisle
with
12,
MEIGS
~
Robbie
Fields
7-0-0·
with
us.
In
the end the pressure St. Joe ..... .... .. :.. .. 9 16 15 18-58
with
real.·~
Russell Singleton with 8 and 14. Terry McGuire 0·0·0·0. Cary just wasn't there. we had a 14 North Gallla ..... . 18 27 25 18-88
In the nicely packaged Ravens- ·Michael RuS¥1l with 6. .Jason Betzlng 3-1-5-14, Jason Wright point lead at one point and· let It
NORTH GALLIA (88) ....; S,
wood pr.o gram Price further Mocyunues M,d 17 for Ravens- 0-0-7-7, L. J . Mitch 1-0-0-2, Jay
Smith 5-3-2-2l; Stout 4·3·1·18;
notes the similarities between wood : Chris Parson h.a d 8, and Humphreys 2·0-1-5, James How Hammel 6-0·0·12; Tackett 2·2·2·
Southern Local and the fictlclous Dan Williams 81
erton 1-0-0-2. Mike Van Meter
12; Staton 3-0-3-9; D. Smith
'Hoosiers' team, and enjoys the
. Southern P!a,Ys at Eastern 2-0-0-4. TOTALS 18-1-13-48.
1·0·3·5; Canady 2·0·0-4; Twym.an
friendly cross-river rivalry.
Friday.
VINTON ~ Rob Lindsey 2·0·0·
2-0-0-4; Hunt 1·0-0-2; Fuller 0-0·1·
For the most part both clubs
Score by quarters: ,
4, Artie Hammond 0·0·1·1, Tom
College
resuhs
played an excellent, somewhat Southern ............ 26 13 7 13-59 staley 1·0·0·2, Tom Reid 1·2·0·8,
storybook game as only 14 ·Ravenswood ,,. ... 18 19 13 16-66 Tom Reed 1·1-1·6, Shawn Speak·
u.,...,. 117, Tlfnn 11
turnovers were commlt.t ed beMatonr I II, Drb H
Box acore:
. man 0.0-0-0, Nick Kruger 1-0·0·2,
Shawnu Sl 1111, Wllmlncton liM
tween the two clubs.
SOUTHERN (~9) - . Chris Jason Caudill 5-0-5-15, Jay
Wome•'•
Murphy 0-3·2·11, Andy Baer Palmer 2·2+15. TOTALS
Bowllal Grttt~~IIS. EM1en Mlrh '71
!
Mlamlll Toledo Dl
Southern got of to a great start
5·2·2·18, Todd Grindstaff 3-0·6, 13-'-5-1!-53.
l '
Day1Qa1~. Dd-.11 M
(uncharacteristic of their pre,
Cahd Taylor 0-3-0-9, Kevin BurMark!Cta 71. mnun 1M
'
.
OUerbeln It, f"JJl&amp;al "1
vlous non-league losses) with a . gess 2-0·4, Brent Shuler 2-0-4,
Mu•l..,am 111, Ohio NonhHniK
blitzing 12·2 start, that prompted
Bgad Maynard 1·5·7. TOTALS
Earlham (llld.J II, CMf" Relw!rw 5e
Dealllon 14, Ohet. . 12:
a RHS time out. Southern then
13-8-8-19. .
.
MeuM Ht. ohtMphU, Oh~ We.lfo)'•nll4
went up 19-8 and led 26-18 at the
RAVENSWOOD (88)
Wal1h 81. Ollie Domlntc•14
st. Jo•ph'•.U••tlll, Allhlud Ill
Mosser 1-1·4·9, Scott Dale 9·6·24,
Urb&amp;MIII, Rio Oru• II
Brian Dale 4-1·3-14, Southall4·2·1 .
The Daily Sentinel
,o, Reynolds 0-1-0-3, Varney 3-0·6.
•
TOTALS 21-3~I1-81.

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I'D liKe, Jo ;;.
TAKe 'rwtS , ·.·
,.·CJPR,RTUNITY
..-.
To DISCUSS MY .

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AJfl. 103 wUI not go away. The
famUies won't. be iUeoced. Ail ;;
hour-lone ~am · on their ~
.piJallt wiD lie' alred tbll week on ,
PBS's "~line" (Check local
lliltlnp). In It, lnvestlptlve
reporter Sciott Malone follows up.
on Impressive evidence he ca·
thered on the terrorist culprits ·
for a "Frontline" special Jut
November.
·
Our own lnvestlptlon bil
turned up more reuon for the •
Pan Am famUiel to mlstnut· •
tbelr own gO\Iii!I WilfUl. We re- •
cently repOrted !bat Bub and &lt;
British Prime Mlnll1ier Marpret
Thatcher made MCret deal Jut "
IP!:Inl to publiCly downplay tbe ·~
eVIdence polnflng to fran be·
cauae both agreed they,c:Ould do
nothing about lt. They agreed to
keep . mum, and use as their
excuse that the Investigation
wasn't completed.
For the famUJes, that excuse II
wearing thin.

·cAMPAIGN

County~~:Cp~~ ~view,

By DAVE IIABRJS
. Jay Palmer scored five points
In a 1: 40 spaaf of the fourth ·
quarter to lead tbe VInton County
Vikings to a hard-fought 53-48
vi tory over the Meigs Marauders
Saturday night 111 a makeup
Tri·Valley Conference hardwood

Jack Ander$0n and
Dale VanAtta ;·
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Ihadthebadjudgementtoturn nations have dared to dety
18 just five months bi!fore Pearl communist orthodoxy.
Harbor, so you know which war I
Frankly, I never expected to
was ln. When It ended, 1 ~ as a Jive to see this. We have reached,
young conservative and Republl· and are now crossing, an historic
car\ - enlisted enthusiastically watershed In the hl.story of
lnwhatsooncametobeknownas . mankind, It would take a bold
the Co!d War. 'For the next 44 persontndeedtopredlctwltbany
years, I dl.d. what I could to help confidence what lies ahead. But
stiffen Am:erlca's resolve to It Is very clear how history wll,l
resist communism, both domes· ' regard anddescrlbethemen and
· ·tic ally and Internationally. In women of my time. We wUI be
payabletoTbeAmerlcanCancer 1956 I "left my Wall Street law known as "the Cold War
Society·
. firm to serve as associate coun- · generation.·~.,..
From 194if untO (almost) 1990,
Thanks for your support, . sel to the Senate's Inlernal
John R. Hunnell, President Security Subcommittee. In 1957 I the victors In · World War II
Lillian Moore, Executive .. became publisher of National -squared off against each other In
Meigs
and· lived. happily ever an apparently unbreakable staafter.
.
lemate. At the war's end, the
American Cancer Society
In the last six months, since United States was unquestlona692
P.O. Box
turning ~ In July 1989, I have bly abead of the Soviet Union,
457
Pomeroy, OH
69 watched one after another of the boll\ politically and technologlsatellite states of Eastern Eu· cally. But the communists' 1949
'
rope cast oft their communist victory In the Chinese clvD war,
shackles and lunge for political Stalin's acquisition of the H. Dear EditOr:
thing, none of our trustees live on and economic freedom. Even In boinb, the. development of mJs.
An answer to the letter to the a township road, they all live on · the Soviet Union Itself, the winds sUes to deliver It, the launching of
editor on Jan. 18, 1990.
State Route 338 and none of them of democracy and free-market Sputnik In 1957 and Castro's
We, the people of Letart have to travel the township roads economics are beginning to blow conquest of Cuba In 1960 put the
Township, have not turned our to get when th'l)' are going and
~Indeed, that astonishing fact Is two superpowers on a far more
tbe reason why the satellite
backs on own fellow man. We arc they are very seldom on these
standing together! Our commun- roads.
Ity, that Is. Our fire department
You say that you think they
has always been Racine, not would have worked out this
Syracuse Fire Department. If problem among them selves, but
they need help, then let them put I don't agree. The trusree. had
a levy up to their people next fall. already signed 50 percent with
Despite almost 40 ye~rs of
It Ia almost as dlffl.cult for me
Yes, Racine bas a fine fire Syracuse-;- so what did that leav4l living, 12)1ours of college blltory
to grasp that our forefathers
department, thanks In part to the Racine, but 50 percent? Without and considerable reading on the~ seem to have thought that the job
money Letart toll'llshlp has paid our concern we would have been . subject, It' a still bard for me to
was flnlllled once slavery 'WIIS
for fire pfotectlon ·and we lnte·nd paying higher Insurance rates. . comprehend that slaVery exllted
finally abolllhed. But allch a
to help keep It that way.
Yes, I make mistakes but In North Amerlcll for more than
hu,e natloll81 evil, one that
I haven't heard or read hurtful admit when I'm wrong and I . 200 years.
devaatates peopll!on every level,
things about our trustees. I have don't n~ to re-think my poet- ,
AI I grew up, I couldn't
doesn't limply go away once we
heard and read the hurtful thing tlon, this time I'm right! This Is reconclletheextatenceofalavery
bave atopped actively dolnl the
that our trustees were trying to not spite, greed and hurting In the United States with the
evn. Leavlaa the Je.gacy of
do to Letart township.
others. It' a our rights and our separa~ hlator)' of- the world's
slavery uatrlleted hal had reperYou ask why do they need money!
grandest experiment In J)er801181
CliQlons that have tom at our
checkeQ,oon? We aren't "check·
In my opinion my.backyard, as freedom . and opportunity. At
nation ever since.
lng'' on them, we are lust . you say, and my front yard are least the hlltory seems separate
Almost as difficult to Underwatching more Closely where our very clean! Tb8Dk you!·
, . · In my memory; l don't res.t and are whites who polnt ·to ille
monies go.
Luda (Sug) Anderson member belnc taught from . a
u,latterlng of SOCial progra~
Yes our roads our well kept,
242119 Apple Grove-DOrean Rd.
perapectlve that Included every- . tbat ·d,dn't solve · blackl' probbut I do have to point out one
·
Racine, Ohio f5771 · thtaa gotng on at one time. In
lema, then throw up their banda
textbooka of the 19ft!la and '60s,
and call It proof that social action
"alavery" ivu handled In tts.own
won't help. U n charted black
•
chapter, or In a chapter on
Amertc8D history on a tbne line
"EcoliOiillc Growtb In 19th Cen·
that bqan wltb the advent ot
tury
Amerloa.
''
alavwry,
&amp;lid loolled at the aoclal
BJUIIItecll'..-btena&amp;IHII
I
don't
k
If
.this
toptc.
action
In
relation to the great ·
Today Is Monday, J8D. 28, the 29tb day o11990 with 336 to follow.
sell'eptlon
wu
JIUI'polefuJ
or
1pa111
of
time
when blacks had
The mooa Ia wutq, movtaa toward Its fll'lt quarter.
·
not, butltdldallowuato~Joythe
eltbm' no rlCbts or aeverely
Tile momlaaatara are Mei'CIIry, Venu, Mara llld S.tum.
exploits
ot
our
national.
hllroetl
abridged rlChts, tbose few yeara
Tile "evealna atar Is Jupiter.
.
.
untroubledbytheknowJedcethat
ofiloclalactioJiwouldn'ttakeup
'J'bole born on thlsdateareunclerthealpol Aquarlu. Tiley Include
our forefathers condoned
muclupace.
Swedllll acletllt and pl!llolopber E~~~JJ~uei Swedeabora In 1W·
, l~very.
Movtnc clown the time line to

Today in history

..

·&amp;sb's ~land on Iran to6 Wishy-washy

This Is "your" American
Cancer Society and you contrlbutors make It happen.
You buy the medlctn·e, gasoline, public educattol) materials,
prosthesis and medical equipmentneededforus.tooperate.
For those of YOU who.could not
come, we will gladly accept your
donation at P .0. Box 692, Pomeroy, Ohlo ·45769. Make all checks

Responds to letter

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Letters to lite editor
Dear Editor:
We would like to thank everyone who contributed In anyway
to the Meigs County Chapter of
the American Cancer Society's
Wine and Cheese Taste an!l
Toast, Sunday.
We would like to thank Powells
Super Valu, Krogers, Vaughn's
Cardinal, Foodland, Whitehouse,
Bob Marchi, 733 and Shammys
tor their cash and food donations,
which were superb.
Pomeroy Flower Shop, Kings
Hardware and Farmer's Bank
tor the door prizes.
But most of all thank you to al
of you who came. The board
members the Executive Commit·
tee, but most of all you fine
patrons and supporters of our
cause.
·
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TVC standings

(All Gama)
TEAM
W L P OP
Pomeroy. Ohio t5769. Ph. IMI2·2ll!6. Se·
..........
:
..
12
3 1022 915
Miller
cond claSs poslag~ paid at Pomeroy,
()!Ito.
Wellston .... .. ... 11 3 980 826
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Trimble . ........ . 10 5 934 888
Member: United Presslnternatlona ,
· Inland Daily Prets Association andthP.
Alexander ... , .. 10 6 1006 i949
Ohio Newa;i, AIIOC!Iatloll. National
Fed-Hocking .. : 8 8 1144 119
Adv~rttstna
~ewll•tlvr. ~~ILham
Belpre..........
.. 8 7 1076 737
Now spa pet SA .,: '!'.IS' 'I'hird A"""~'
N~ '\'ork. New Y0ftl0017. ,
'
Vinton County. 6 8 818 818
r,' r''' • •
Meigs ............. 2 13 817 1073
POSTMASTER Send addr.., chanll"'
Nels-York ....... 2 14 840 1160
to 11&gt;. oollt •'sent~. ·~ '~enali st.. \
Pomeroy, Ohto45M.1.• , "· · •
Sa&amp;UI'day 'a resulta:
.
. . . , .r.~~
Logan 64 Nelsonville-York 59
8Ui18CihPI ION R.\1'1111
lly CarJ'k111or 1MOt-.w 1BHle
&lt;makeup)
Oaf' Week .. .. .. I "' II:'T'' ' h""'''' ''"''l:·~
Miller
73 Eastern 58
Oae Month ........ ~ ........, ., .. .~· ~ ....... ·
VInton County 53 Meigs 48
oae 'year ...... ::... ;"':.:.;...... .......... 172•110
&lt;makeup)
sJNoL£ 'o on ,
Belpre
73 Warren .Local 61 .
)
PRICE
. Cents
Dolly ..••.............. ················· 25
, (makeup)
Subscribers 1101 delllrlnjJtopaY tbecar·
'l'lletida;r'a ram•:
rler may remit In advance dlrtct to
Melp
at VInton County
. TJuo Dally Sentinel on a 3. 6or U month
·buts. Credit wUI 1M' 1(1ven C'lrrttr Nch
Miller at Trimble
-k.
Belpre at Alexander
No sublerlpiiOII* b)l maU p!flllllled In
Feder..·HocklDJ It Welllton
aras wnert&gt; homt&gt; carrter II'I"Y'Iet' ll
Athens at Nelsonville-York
available.
ll'i'lda,:r'a , _ :
Belpre at Melp
Motp too•r
Alexander at Miller
JJ Weeb ..... .. ................. ,.........
Wellston
at Nelaonvllle·York
2t wee~~a .................................. tacJ&amp;
52Weeb ............................. .... .
VInton County at Trimble
. -· llolp
CeollliJ
&amp;aiUI'd&amp;J'•IamM:
JJ
................
········
······.....,
•..,
..
:IIW..... ,
..
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Southem at Federal-Hocking
'2W,.....
... m,tu
Melp at .Athl'DI.
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Mallia,_,.._

ftt·:

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DOUBLE. /.

''Basics of Appalachian
Clog Dancing''
FOR ADULTS or CHILDREN
CLASSES START

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4-2:30

p.m.

And Run For The Next 5 W...s
IN THE DISAILED AMERICAN VETERANS
IUIDING ON UIDTY mEET IN UNAUGA
IllS COUISI WU aMADI AVAIUILI
· - 11111-AfKI OF fiAIIIIWIS AID

Call Domino's Pimr811now
and save.
W. Mllln St.
992 • 2124

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~
1l&gt;r!".,
S1&lt;f'~
/:
Fun ·
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12 MED. oNE mM 1
UIGI 16" s na "uu
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PIZZAS
I With , IP .... · - · · .... I
I
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PlUS · -.. OL SOfTIIIIIS 1
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·TlllYJQmON-

Pom•ov. Ohio

·---····----·..-·····-·····-·,
r
o••n •o• rou•1

i&amp;i IIAISOII, DIIICIOIS OF

. FOR ltFo.ATIOfl CALL••
" - UWIS - 304·562-6436
304-743-auo
JOY. Y- 614-367-7605
PATIKIA EWOn- 614-379-2705

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Ponwoy-Midcleport. Ohio

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49ers pound Broncos 55-10
for fourth .~uper. Bowl title.

I

B7 DAVE RAfT()
UPI 8porta Writer
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) ...,; 'I:he
San Francllco 49ers Sunday
made their case they can stand
beside any team In NFL history.
The 49ers left a trail of brolten
Super Bowl records In their wake ·
and tied 'the Plttllbul"ib Steelers
for four · Super Bowl chll!llplonshlps with their 56-10 rout of the
Denver Broilcos.
"I'd llke io match thiS. team up
with some of those great teams In
his tory," said safety ROnnie
. I.ott. one of five 49ers to play 011
four champlOJIShlp clubs. "After
this g~~ ·. I'd like 't o matcJI this

.

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a

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Sndor Bue-NII
St . Pf'te rJIIMtfJ at Bn4t'lttoa, l :llp.m.
· WINer Ha~ea at or~·· 7:11p.m.
'

8IIUa1

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\ ' al d'here, FriUice- mn's W.rld Cup

t

tlowe~,..ll,

auper 11•1 ""'om.

s-teer
. MaJor llldoor S.Ccer Le~JW

No
'

JJAmf!l~thedlled

···~···

Cal pry, Alber• - ca...ao.p
·
Tu•
ToiiJe - UN... r..., P • Podfte

.....

8ulof Pre lluett.U .4M&amp;

a._..,.,._..

O.kl c..t _. IJ&amp;.

IMietled.Jaa~

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st . Pelf!rDII'JI, OrM•t
I

Wl•r HaYen S. .........
a . l..w!le 1, 0.111 C.Ut I

hri Me,erelf, W_. Palm
8111111" .......
Orllln•IJ, 11. PeWr•ra•

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• • •, . . .f . . . . . . . . . . .

Go .. ~ 1, 8C. IAcle 7, I Inti. , ,._

111111
W•l Pllm lldclli I, POrt...,..,. I

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KeiiCJ collllt"• rltlll wl•l O..de
VII pal a and . ce~~~er ~·• Monts tram ·

~~art

Utlca.r••AHL

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Reai .Estate Taxes·Will 81'
FEBRUARY 9, ,1'9-90

!Quirks in

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l0°/o 'PENALTY Will Be Charged After The
F,b. 9th Date on Real Estate Taxes

I

MEIGS COUNTY .TREASURER
GEOIGE M. COLUNS,.

In hospital

.P,ASTRAMI
A

AA to meet

the ne.wJ ·

Auditor won't aearch for 'ddde In . could owe real estate toes since
·a hole'
·
1985, as ·well ·as an annual 50
NEWARK, OhiO (IJ'PI) - . percentpenaltyonthebacktalles
·· About five ye_a rs aeo. the Ucklilg and Interest ch!lrees.
:County r.SII!IItor · ~lvecl a· IIi· '
· :...-· zarre pno• ceJHrom a man who A ptr named Sae
,
··claimed , Ill tliias ~ living In an .. SIOUX CITY, Iowa (UPI) uilderground house that could And this little piggy went to
, ~attle..
.
. ,
. neyer be~\fd. . ,
• · AudltonGIOrge BUchanan says
·A.p)J!t·slzed porker. niCknamed
' the call sllll;j)lquetl.hts curll)slty, ''Sioul! City Sue'' found wander· .
;but he has never ordered an lngaroundanlowalnterstatehas
:1'11-ou I search for the m~stery a
home thanks to a Seattle
man In the ceritril Ohio county, resident. •
,who may .dWe(real estate toes
Slolill City Sue was foulld' Jan.
.• 'and penjiltles. · .
llllear a meat packlilg plant on
! Buchanan and his staff . Interstate 29, otnctals said. AI· ·
members, wblle ori routine though he . wu found · near a
cpunty bullness, have looked ior ... packlilg plant, offtclala say tile ·
· amoke coming out of the ground, . 75-POund ~ waa too amall to
but have not Seen anythlilg.
· be headlna t~ slaugh•~ .
. "He told me \ve'd never find It ,
AniJnal ' coatrol oltlcer CladY·.
:.nd he was very aerlous,':
RarratsaldSuewtlUlytoSeattle
tliluchanan ,says. "I' do not know
this week ~of cnarae courtesy
~hy aayone would want to live of United A!rUn81.
.
~atloiiWide publicity about the
'iiDderll'Ound. .
'' '1 aril not going to spend Pll • plight bro111ht an adoption
i!fnmty inoney loolt:lilg for some OffM' by aa anonymous Seattle
~de In ·a bole," he said. ·
benefactor who lives on an Island
: · U tiie man dell aurf4ce, hi contalntne th~ an!J 1'-mas..

'I• lb.' burger topped with
. grilled pastrami, swlu chftM,
lettuce, tomato • 01!1' tamoua
McGyver s&lt;luce In a grlllect

ANDEI$0N'S
STOREWIDE ' . .
'

sesame oeed bun.
' '

,·-J-n·uary 'Sate! I

698 West Main
~omeroy,

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CURIOS,
BEATA, SOFAS, LOVESEATS, ·
BEbAOOMS, SYLVANIA TV'S, TABLES, '
LAMPS, DINING ROOMS;

SAVE S1.00
I

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San Ona Doll1r on tilt

Pll'clllse of 1 Plstr11111 a..r.
One CC!UPOR per CUIIOIItr, per
· visit. llot vllld with IRJ otlltr·
.
dlscOtltlts.

· ·

GOODTHRU 2·21·90

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aml4:oo ••·

PGIIIOY

SIOII .ONLY

2 PIECE
(IICICEN DINNER

•Roll .Colt Slaw

•Pot!'t• W. . .

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v.

Ohio

new

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$2.29

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Last Day To .Pay .First.-_ --~l'f

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attack drug may be ·tested. in the field

1

EXTENSION .GRANIED,

Walsh Edges Redmen
·Backed by balanced scoring
and effective work on the boards,
the Walsh Cavaliers handed the
Redmen a 96-88 loss Sshirday In
Canton, dropping Rio Grande's
Mld·Ohlo Conference standing to
2·4.
. However, the Redmen gave the
hos IS · il run for tl!elr money
throughout the game, building a
32·25 lead In the first halt before
deadlocking at 38· at the
IntermissiOn. ·
·. "
Erslan hit two J.polnt field
goala for Rio Grande to open tbe
second half, but t!)e Cavaliers·
bounded back to build a fivepoint cushion and remain In
control. The · Redmen shot 50
percent frof!! the floor (32·64) and

news~·
..,..
i

'

.,..,.a......

Au~kllltd ,

Rio releases· fall ·honor roll

Dance set

CROW'$ FAMILY RESTAURANT

manwf' aHb G•me.

Thomas birthday celebrated·

Club to meet

TUESDAY ·
NIGHT

.......

..

for Ernest Carr on his Meter, Deali and Evelyn Webltn
aJrd·blrthdayat the Scipio SeniOr Jr., Clarence Ivan and Ne!Ue .
Casll, Rella Longstreth and son,
Citizens building In Pagetown.
Hastes~ were Nancy Phllllps Corey. Curtis and Teresa
and Evel)in Weblln·. A large Spencer and son, Damlen, Donna
decorated cake with the colors Wilson. Paula Back, Grace
· yellow and . white, made by :Price, David Carr, Brian Carr.,
Nancy Phillips·, was serve() to Marla Graham, Lori Grueser,
forty guests. A potluck supper . Kevhi Dalton; Camille Stanson,
· Paula Dalton. Kevin Dalton,
.was also served. .
Attending were Sadie Carr. Michael Carsey, Robert E.Seco:Y
Orville and Mildred Phllllps, . Sr., and Elmer w. Alth!luse.
Eugene and Nancy Phillips, Lee . ~oll!lwlng the r!"freshments,
· and Rachael . Lefebre, .J immy 'J unlorWeblln and Robert Se~y
and VIolet !&gt;Ilion, Harold. and entertained with guitar music,
Janet Graham, Louie and Ex· singing, and dancing. ·
mae Christian. T.K. and Mildred

.

.

New "'ersey - &amp;ecall)ed . . . . emer·

.

People in the

I.

··~-~·"

Go,_
N~w Zul..cl - . XIV Conl-

~cently

Asbury _UMC hosts ·skit-off

'

I"

.

. • A ' surprise party was held · Workman, Paul and NaJ!CY Van

Brown 'birthday is celebrated

Scoreboard ...

'

.

Jordann Ann Thomas, daugh·
ter
of Tammy Landers and Tim
CONTRmUTION . - _Jack B. Lewis, manager of Votf!
Thomas,
i:~eptly celebrated her
&amp;Janufactureres Sales Company, made a contrlbu!lon on behalf of
first
birthday
at tier borne.
bls ,coJDpan;r to tl!e Earl Neff Pediatric Televllllon Fulld al; Holzer
"Dlsney"
theme was carried,
A
··
.·
·Medical Center.
'
.
out wltll cake, Ice cream, and
· refreshments. being served.
Those at\endlng besides her
parents
·were older brother.
Samantha N. Brown, daughter
· Michael, maternal . grandpar·
or Terry and Paulli Brown;
The Of!lce of Records at the Darla K. Williamson, · Pomeroy;
ents, Tom and . Judy Porter,
celebrated her first birthday
and Wesley Roger Young,
University pf Rio Grande -has
paternal grandmother, Charlene
:recently at the homeofgrandpar·
released the University of Rio
Pomeroy.
,
Thomas.
Robbie, Margie, Beth
ents, Harry .and Brenda
Grande's fall quarter 1989 honor
Ann,
and
Matllew
Landers, Cha·
Cunningham. ·
roll. To ach.leve honor roll status,
rles, Bonnie, ,Jessica, Clluckle,
A "Strawberry Shortcake"
s.tudents must earn a 3.75 iP'ade
and Wllly Landers , Ashley Tho·
,theme Was carried ouj With a. ·
. point average (oli a 4.0 seal!!)
mas, Adam Thomas, Tony Wit(, .
:theme . cake·· and ot~er retres~­
during the quarter. ,
·Trustees elect chair
Shawn Petrie, and Matt Stewart.
.ments being served.. ·
The following stude!lls from
Others sending· gifts ·were
:; Attending were Dorothy
· Meigs County were listed: .. ·, .
The Sutton Township Trustees
Dave, Teresa , and Travis Hub·
l3rown, · Harry and Marie ThoJennifer L. Couch, Pomeroy;
elected Forrest ~an Meter as the bard , Teresa Haley, and Don
jnas, Gene Cunntngbam, Vlrgl· ·
Kimberly L . Dent, Pomeroy;
board chairman at their organ!· . Hartung.
JORDANN A. THO~AS
nla and Tyler Lee, Greg Cun· ·
Gina D. Follrod, Pomeroy; Ken·
zatlonal meeting for 1990.
nlngham. Lisa Darst, Bonnie
neth S. Grueser, Racine; Cher,yl
Otis Knopp was elected vice
bailey, aild Leo and Lillian
Halley, Middleport; Charlotte A.
c.halrman, and Delbert. Smith Is
:Walker.
Hart', Pomeroy; ' Todd C. ·John·
the .third member of the board . .'
Other $ending gifts and cards
·son, . Pomeroy; Kevin Donald
Regular meetings will be held
.were Ann Cozart, · Larry . and
. :'The . Great American . Skit· Sayre, Mary Chaney, Mary Belie
King, Pomeroy; Michael K. · the first Monday of every month
Off'' was ho.s ted recently by the Warner, Dianne Hawley, Kenny
Doima Thomas, Mr. and Mrs,
SAMANTHA BROWN
Musser, · Pomeroy; Kellee ,Jo
beginning ilt 7:30 p.m. In the
Syracuse
Asbury United Metho: and F"aye Wiggins, Sarah HawLinden Dunn and Evan, Mr. and
(Burdette) 'Nease;'Raclne; Lisa
Syracuse Municipal Building. Ali
dlst
Church.
ley , Sam Hawley, Alfred and
·Mrs. Glenn Brown, Kindell; Mr. and• Mrs, Wendell Ervin, M. Pape, Racine; Kelly D. Rizer,
meetings regular and special will
A carry In dinner was also held Hilda Yeauger, Sarah. Rebecca,
KrtStln, and Kelby, Mr. and Mrs. Stacey and Dustin, and Bo and Racine: Carol A. Smith, Middle· . be announced In the Dally
with Denr\ls Moore In charge.
Usa Wiles, Ames Mills, Judy
. ·Robert Smith, Jamie and Andy, Ruth Young.
Sentinel.
·port; Ralph H. Werry, Pomeroy;
Each Sunday school class and Pape and Kristin, Bruce John·
the Un lied Methodist Women· son. Doris Grueser, Jim and
presented a skit. The Minersville Barbara Lawrence, Jennifer and
'
and Forest Run Churches also Jason, Mlck and Cindy Wine.
'
participated .
brenner anC: Shelly, Bill and
· .B;r Ui!ltl!d' Presg lnteraallonal
Eacn skit was judged by the ·Peggy Crane, Billy, Ben, and
get killed by a car. You can't get paranoid. 'It makes your life
congregation ·a t a penriy a ,-ote. Donia, Ann Sauvage, Rev. John
miserabie. If I'm destined to be killed In a hellcop~r. so tie lt.
COSTNJUl IN ROLE OF DIRECTOR·INVESTO~: Kevin
The Seekers Class, taught by Bill Sauvage, Dick and . Betty A~h.
I'
in
terribly
depressed
and
sorry
about
the
deaths
of
my
friends
eo.tner sbowed.'ft\s dedication to his first directorial effort, the ·
.
Crane,
was the wljmer and ·D emaris Crawford, Shauna. and
and
fellow
workers
In
the
crash,
but
there
Is
not)llng
I
could
ha.ve
·
.. upci&gt;m)J!g film, "Dance With Wolves," by putting up some of his
done."
..
'
received
a traveling trophy·.
Lindsey, Cora and Car4ssa Ash,
own money. People magazine say·s at one point latelastyear the
sang
several
The
congregation
Trlna Davis iind Amy. Jo, Va·
.
~TLI;l'o!'.
SPE,I\KS.
ON
)lEAKING;
·
Osca~·wlnhlng
actress
moYie waS''tWo weeks ·bel'lllld schedu~ In 'South .Dakota and .$2
songs
and
Rev.
Wesley
Thatcher
nessa Blevins, Joyce Crabtree,
M'
l
!l'lee
Matlin,
who
Is
deaf,
says
she
Is
often
asked
If
she·would
.-million over bUdget. But rather than ask his studio, Orion, for
had
the
closing
prayer
and
al$o
Beulah
Ward, · Martha Moore,
like
to
be
able
to
hear
;
Her
answe~
IS
mixed.
·•rve
always
more money, Costner took the $2 miiUon out or his own pocket.
the
dinner
grace
.
.
Irene Parker, Mary Cundiff, and
wanted to hear music, to talk on the phone" Matlin says In an
Costner say• It was money well spelit. ·" .There were noeliCes!!es
Interview
In
the
February
Issue
of-Self
magazlne
...
"But
that's
Mary
Lisle.
·Attending were Hope and Russ
on this film, I)O limos, no jets," he said. ''Every &lt;!Ollar In budget
abOut
II.
I
don't
want
to
hear
the
noises.
People
talking
Moore, Rev. Wes and Mary
will he1 ~1) on the screen." Costner also Is editing the moYie,
nonsense, beeping horns. If I woke up one day and I became
Thatcher, Carland Hilda Weaver •
wlilch will coine out In the fall. , - ·
.
.
hearing, I thlilk I would freak."
.
.·
..
and Amy, Dennis Moore, Amy,
NO FEAR OF n.YJNG IN CH()PPERS: Chuck Noms says .
GLIMPSES:
"Chameleon
Street,"
a
look
at
b!ack
life based
· Andrea, and Jerod, Brian Freehellcopte~s a~e a ser.lous occu patlonal hazard In the making of
The Middleport Llt~rary Club
on a man who Impersonated doctors and lawyers, won the
man, · Ruth and Dlnty Moore, wlll meet Wednesday at the home
action moV,tes. Nine people have been killed .In chopper
drama award Satruday night at Robert Redford's U.S Film
Mark Taylor, Shawn · Baker.' of. Mrs. Dwl8ht Wallace. Mrs.
accldentg In the makmg of (wo Norris movies. '&lt;'Half my movies
··Festival.
Wendell
B.
Harris
Jr.
reeelved
a
$5,000
prize
for
the'
Dana and Bernice Winebrenner, Richard Owen will reylew· the
have ' Involved l)ei!Copters," the IJ'!Ilrtlal 'a rts star said. "I've
which
he
wrote,
directed
and
starred
In
...
Geena
Davis.
,
movie,
Franklin and Wanda Rizer, June book "My Ru ssla." Roll call will
dangled beneath them and ·s at with my feet hanging out, but I
who
won
an
Oscar
laSt
year
{or
her
work
In
"The
Accidental
am always 11ware they can be ·treacherous• Helicopters are ·
be ~answ~red by members nam·
· Tourist,'' Will help announce this year's nomJn.ees Feb. 14. The
unpredictable machines. They are flying rocks. Any little thing
lng a famous Russian American.
announcements will come from Hollywood In the,. early
can go wrong and you're down.~· Nonetheless, Norris says he'll
morning, so they can be cbvered live by the network morning
.'
keep working In,helicopters When the script calls for them. "I'm ·
news shows.
'
·
·'
Tl)e Gallla Twl~lers Square
11 fatalist about sueh t!)llilts." he said.' 'I can cross the street and
. ''·
Dance Club will . hold a dance .
Satur.day from g..;.u p.m. at the
Eiizabeth Horak Is confined to ·
· Henderson Community .C enter, the Intensive Care Unit in St.
Henderson, W. Va. The caller will Joseph Hospital, Cards may be
be Blil Skidmore and 'the dance . · sent to her at St. Joseph Hospital,
••
1
will he open to all western square 19 and Murdoch Ave., Parker~­
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI) medics try out the Intravenous
have been narrowed by fatty heart attack.
dance. .
·
bury, w~va. 26101.
Cardiologists may have found a
The res.t of the typical dose, 80
·~push" method, In the field to
bulldqps.
·more efficient way to administer lilcrease a heart attack victim's
Administering the drug mg. could be . given at the .
"a clot-dissolving drug to heart chance of survival while en route quickly Is es~;entlal because the- hospital.
·
&lt;
'•
•
over
the
past
year;
the
Rhode
·attack ·victims, pe~~s lmprov. · to a hospital.
faster patients receive It, the less
lng their chances of rvlval, a
"Heart damage begins once likely they are \O suffer perman· Island cardiologists have tested
J·esearcher said.
·
the 20-mg Injections ·In the
the heart attack begins, and the ent heart damage.
· DoctorS at Jthode Isla d Hospl· goal of any treatment Is to limit
· Researchers have achieved a hospital emergency room. The
tal found \h&lt;!t j!IY!ng 1;1 ge Initial the amount of heart a,ttack 75 per_cent success rate adinlnls· large doses cleared. blocked
doses Of'th~.drug TPI\ to patients damage," McKendall said Sun- · terlng· TPA to, hospital patients arteries In 91 percent of heart
Is. more effective than the es tab- day. "'The sooner the. better' Is over several hours.
;ittack victims tested.
lllhed met~nd of pumping It Into the phllosophy .'.' ·
·
McKendall and Dr. David o.
the body over several hours, said
Williams, chief hospital cardlolo·,
'
.' '
·Dr. George R. McKeqdall, a
IJ"PA. or tls~ue plilsmlnogen , g~t and director of the project ,
cardiologist at the ·hospital and activator, Is a natural substance wondered If It would be better to .
The Pomeroy -Group of AA and ·
co-Investigator for the project.
that dissolves potentially deadly have rescue workers simply
AI· Anon will meet Thursday at 7
The. researchers are ~;eeklng blood clots that trigger heart · Inject 20 mg ofTP" to a patient In
p.m. artheSacredHeartCathoUc '
·federal approval to have para- · attacks by d~glng arteries that the field to hasten treatment of a
Church. For Information call
1·800-333-5051. .

--...~~

·Rio Gr8nde ·splits&gt;
.weekend contests .

.

.
Monday. Jenu.., 29, 1990
Page 6

'

Carr birthday is observed

. For tbe 17th co~~~~ecuttve ).ear, · Vot,o, made the contribution on
;Voto Manutacturen Sales Com·
behalfothllcompany. Tjlelnltlal .
•pany. located at 3!!8 Jackson
donation to establllh the Pedlat·
Pike, hal contrlbutecl to tbe Earl
ric Television fund at tbe aolzer
Neff PediatriC Televllion Fund
Medical Center 1n October, 1972;
!II HolZer Medical Center.
was made by ·Voto Manufactilr·
Their •ponaonlllp makes pOS· · ·ers Sales. · ..
· · · ··
slble an·el!pandlng videocassette
Don Richter; general manager
Ubrary ' durlilg the month or Qf the Gallipolis Plant, part of the
January for all children hospital- .Motion Control Group of Robbins
·lzed on the Pediatric Unit. · · ·
and Myers, Inc., arra11gecj f(lr
The Robbins and Myers Foun- . .this year's annual gift from hls
dalton made their 12th annual · compa!ly's Foundation til ' the
contribution to the NeftPedlatrtc
Pediatric Toy FUnd. · · .
Toy .Fulld at the hospital. · ·
The Televlllon 'Fuild .Is now 111
. The toy donations are used to · . Its 18th year and the Toy Fuiulln
·purchase toys, games and bOoks · Its 14th.
·
·
.f or the pediatric playroom, along
·Any Individual, business or
with Individual ltell'il for child· organtzatlons Interested' In parren confined to their room!l·whlle. tlclpatlnglnelther, rund.maycilll
they are hospitalized. .
the Community Relations -De·
of
·
partment
at 446-5055. ·
"Jack B. Lewis, · manager
. ' . .

Urbana edges ·Redwomen, .68-63

~

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Elway•ready
for another
.try next year. '

'

The Daily . Sentinel

'

·Contributions -made for
·.,pediat~ic ·video, ·toy
fund
.

'

'

•

li

'By The .Bend

team up with any of those . Terry Bradshaw for rqvr Super
Bowl titles.
· ·· ·
Steelers teams.''
. All week, the 49ers were .
"It's hard to compare; they're
reluctant to compare their cur· , all special," Montana said. "But
rent team with previous SliD It's hard to take any team over
Francisco Super Bowl wlrlners. this one. We put everything
After winning the"_inost lopsjd!!d togetber offensively and
Super Bowl, tbe 49ers decided defensivelY." .
.
some congratull!tlOns . were In ·
Minutes after •tbe victory. the
.o rder. ·
49ers already tailctid of wlnri~g
"I guess I have to finallY talk an unprecedented fifth Super
a.bout It," said linebacker Keena Bowl alld third In a row. But t)ley
Turner, another foilr Super Bowl took ·t ime to savor Sunday· ·
veteran. ''We have unbelievable
"I, always said lt;d!dn'l mean
focus · and . talent - so many that mucn . to me," Lott said. ·
people going In · the right dlrec- "Now that II'&amp; over, It njeans a .
tlon. I have to say .It Is us (the · lot.'' · • .. . ·'
·
·
greatest) .
.
.. Loll said Bill Walsh - who ;
''That's no knock on the other stepped down · as 49ei:s coach
teams, but with such an unbellev· after last year's NJ;L tlt.Je~ flr~t '
'
able drive and focus ... and for us claimed these 49ers were better •.
to be upset because we gave up · than ever.
I
.
touchdown- unbelievable."
"When Bill Walah •said It on .
one
HELPED OFF FIELD - Denver Broncos
Orleans. Tbe San Franct8co 4&amp;ers cr1111hed the
.
.
Joe
Montana_
,
..
who
completed
television
I didn't want to believe
linebacker Karl Mecklenbui'J Is helped off the • Broncos 55·10. (UPI)
.. . .
'
22
of
29
passes
for
297
yards
and
It,"
Lott
sal!l.
"But It II true." ,
. field bY tral~rs In Sunday's Super Bowlin New
five
touchdowns,
won
his
recOrd
·
W8Jsl)'s
replacement
George_·
.
.
third Super Bowl Most.Valu~ble Seifert set a record for victories
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) ~ Player Award. He also estab- . for ·a rookie coacb, and became·
. John Elwayhad one of the worst llshlid every major SUper Bowl the first rookie coach to win ·a
.
.
.
.
.
.
performances of his career on a career passing mark he did not· ··super Bowl since Don McCaf.
Urba na University's women's · . runs on us, but we hung tough," · turnovers to 18. Urbana sank 29 . day when ne needed one or his· already f1Wn· while matching ferty did with the Baltlmd~ Colts
basketball team cinched Its hokl
Orbana Coach Cindy McKnight of 55 attempts on field goals for
best.
I 19
.. ..
on the championship of the rematked. " Weplay~sowellas 52.7 percent and was 43.5 percent
Elway, who had played superMid-Ohio Conference ·Saturday ·a team. Rio Grande took us out of from the· foul line (10·23). The bly In leading the Del)ver Bronat Lyne Center when Sarita our off!!nse at times, but our two visitors also had 36 boards and cos to a victory over the Pit ISBrown . hlt 19 points .a nd eight
big peop(e knew they had .to S\lffer~. 22 turnovers.
burgh Steelers In the AFC
rebounds to lead the Lady Blue score, ·and theydld.''.
championship
game two weeks
· Now 14·8 overall, the Rlidwo- .
ago,
hada
miserable
perforKnights to a68•63victciry c)ver the
"We were beaten by 8 beiter men host Ohio Domlnlcari Tues·
Un lverslty of Rio Crande. '
mance In Super Bowl · XXIV
The_wlnputUrbanaatfi.Ointhe team -there's no lfs, a'nds or day at 5:15 p.m•. Urbana (16'4)
as the San Francisco ·
Sunday
plays
Mount
Vernon
Nazarene.
·
. buts abOut It/' Redwomen men·
&lt;l!lers crushed. the Broncos, 55,10.
conference, while Rio Grande, tor Doug Foote commented. "It -Tuesday,
"We will go right l!ack · to the
which saw a five-game winning was very simple: we had key. Box score:
streak snapped, went to 3-2.
peo_pie who didn't come pre
_ pared
. RIO GRANDE (63) .:.. Jennl drawing board," · said Elway,
The battle for dominatiOn
now 0-31n Super Bowls. "I'll go to
began as expected, with the to play. although I think Kathy Couch, 2-0-4; Debbie Fredrick,
bat any day. I _struck out again,
teams either leading or trailing Snyder · played 40 minutes of 7-4·18; Kerr! KidWell, J.0-6; ·but I W!)uld still go to bat. I know
Mindy Montgomery, 0-1·0·3; Ann
great basketball."
by no more thl!n one or two points
Rio Grande starting center Barnltz, 6-7-19; Kathy Snyder, If I keep coming, I will win one of
these days."
throughout the early part of the Barnitz led her teammates with 6-1-13. TOTALS 24-1·12·63.
first half. With six minutes to
Elway completed 10 of 26
URBANA (68)
Jean
play, the visitors broke out for a 19 points and a career high of 16
P,Bsses for 108 yards. He was
22-121ead and never looked back. rebounds to keep Urbana's mar· Twehues, 2·6·10; Denice Martin, Intercepted twice and fumbled
5-0-10;
Kim
Fields,
4·3·11;
Sarita
Kathy Snyder, who scored. 13 gin In the latter part of tne game.
once, all three.turnovers result·
points and hlt the boards six · Debbie Fredrick hit 18 markers · Brown, 9·1-19; JuUe Mayhew, lng In three 49ers' touchdowns.
times, took charge of the. offense arid Jennl Coucll supplied five · 2·0·4; Cindy Frere, 7-0-14. TO- He also was. sacked ·four times,
TALS 29-10-68.
assists. ·
as the second h~alf · opened,
Urbana's Cindy Frere poured
Hai'*IJDe score: Urbana 3~, Rio losing 3~ yards.
•
Elway said the Broncos.' of·
scoring siJI'polnts ~o trall37:30 at In 14 polrits .and 11 boards, Kim
Grande 22.
18
fense ·never.found Its rhythm ..
•
~f~dy M()ntaom
. ery hl.t
_ Fields added 11 points and five
3
ceo
.
assists, and Jean Twehues and
·'
pointer, Ann B$rnitz a pair of Denice ' Martin brought In 10
field goals and Snyder wen tin for each.
'
a basket at 11 : 38 to help knot the
. Rio Grande, suffering from
•'
score 'at 45. But Brown brought poor shooting I.n the' first .half,
'
the .ball In for two points 27 managed 34.7 percent from the
seconds later and initiated a 'loor (25-72) and connected.on12
,'
modest lead Urbana held ,for the of 15 free throwa ttempIs. ror 80
Lake Erie, down 33 points at
netted 10 of 14 foul shot attempts
rest oft he game.
.
percent. The Redwomenalsohad
•'
halftime,
bounded
back
to
c!)al·
for
71.4
perCfi!l!l.
The
visitor~
held
'
"Rio Grande made some gooo;l 36 rebounds and held their
lenge the supremacy of the their .turnovers to 13· anll ·re., •'
University of Rio Grande men's bounded 21 times.
Walsh sank 37 of 62 field :goal
basketba!J. team Sunday .in Pal·
'•'
. nesvllJe, but the Redmen pretries for 59.6 percent and racked
valled,.137·105.
oip 81.8 percent on free tl)rows
•
(18·22). The Cavaliers lost the
The game set a record for the
··:..
number of points ' scored in · ball 19 times, but recor9ed 40
TWs week's games
St, Peterlbu r1 at lll'adeniOfl!
Lincoln Gymnasium on the Lake reboullds on the Redmen.
.
'
'
.
B'lnlet H.vtn at Orlando, nlpr
Thill Wnk'k
'• .
_. ·
Tuetld IQ' Game&amp;
In Individual scoring, Harr-Ison
Erie campus ·a nd resulted 'In the
Obit Collelt~ BaMWlhaU Sc~lr
S&amp;. Peterllbuq at Bradaton, I : ISp.m.
Ry Unlte'd Pl'fts bp,terlllt~nal
Storm's 20th consecutive loss of had 27 points and Sill assists and
' ll:ll
. MONP.\,., •• AN. "
West PaJm ~-ach at Gold..C.Ut,
the season.
Schubert recorded 24 markers
Northern lawa .1111 Cli'WIIUid Sf
p.m.
NE Ullnobi M You~~~~:Mtowa St
Jeff
Brown
.
launched
'
t
he
Rio
·
and five assists. Erslan .bid 15
Fort)' Myerl!l at St. Lllcl r, 7:61p.m.
TUESDAY • .IAN. 38
Wlllk!r HIWen af. Or ... dll, 1:D:Ii p.n).
Grande offense with a 26-,polnt POints and Darius Wllllan:ts 10.
,
Daylon at Not .. Damf'
Wtda!Mia.f Oamn
A.drlan IMicltl M Oherlln
performance. In a game that
L~ading the way for Walsh
Wat Palmlle•h at Gold Cout
Mounl \'Prma Na:t at' Rluff10111
sa. Pner.au11 .......,.••
again
were
saw
the
entire
Redmen
Zedrlc McDonald with 21
WaiM ~t Olllti Doml.ut ..
Wln&amp;E'~ Hana at Or.. ndD, nllltl
Urh&amp;U~a It Rio Grandr
points and five rebounds and
bench
enter
the
fray,
double
Fort _Myers at St. Lucl,, nllflt
Flntllll)· ·a MaiOftl'
figure contributions were made Charles Glenn with 19 markers
' Kent~a:ky WPSieyan at Shaw•e St
NATIONAL BASKETBALL A.SSlc
MONTANA RELEASES BALL - . San FranciscO quarterb~k
WEPNf+'iDA.V, UN . Sl
Sllurd._y Ket~ulhl
by
Brad
Schubert,
Troy
Donald·
and
111ne
boards.
Joe
Montana releases the ball as Denver defei)Aive lineman SIJDon
( 'ent .. l Mlchlpn at K•nt St
n.Ua,delphia I!$, W..WqtoniOI
son, Lyndell Snyder and Darius
Walsh, now 174 overall and 4·2
Ohio Uah' ali Ball St
F1elcher
rushes the play during Sunday's Super Bowl In New '
" 'e.Wrn Mlchl,;an at Miami
· Sat:nun..,.o •t. Charlotte AS
Wllllams'that
helped
the
~lo men
In
the
MOC,
plays
at
Q!Jio
Orleans.
The
Uers claimed their fourth title by roping tbe Broncos ·•
Eu..dera Ml cblpn ~ Tolt"do
Atknta 114, 01-liadl II
withstand Lake Erie's late rally.
Dominican Tues!lay,
Mron •t Bowlin« Grtea '
55-10. (UPI)
.
ClevtiMCI II, . . . . . . H4
CindnJ;Mt-1 M Xa\'ler
Detnlt 85. M!ilieiOU. ll3
In
other
MOC
games
from
The
Storm's
Matt
McElwain
\\'IM·GI'f't&gt;n Bay al Clnelll.cl st
, Chlcap Ill, N.w .lr.r*!)' 101
Saturday, Mount Vernon Nazaled all scorers with 37 markers.
C~ ntnd Stat Wri,;W Kt
Dal• •· Ho..ton t2 · .•
.Jot. Carroll at HeldelherJ
N"" York Ill, De•ver M
Backing
him
up
were
teammates
.rerie
fought ·ort Cedarville. 73-69
Ohio Nordu•ra at Ouerheha
Vlt.b lf.ll, Ml ..... kee. IIi
Mo.-1 Union at 8aiiWh1-Wtdill~t'
Doug Irwin with 22 points,
and Urbana dumped Tiffin, 87·71.
Seatlle IM, Bu Anionlo Ia
Mu*ln~m at Muletla
' PorQaad Ill. lA Cllppt!rlll:l ,
Shannon Rucker wlth 14 · and
Ohio Dominican, playing a non( '11pllal' at Hiram
Stlndii)'Rft ...
WoO'ittr at OeniKoh
·
David
Whittington
with
11.
conference tilt with Bluffton, fell .
Boston 121. PIINtllx Jlg
Ohio Wf'llll•yan at ~lhllm tin d)
. Molllll)' Gamn.
76-65.
.
The
Redmen,
now
7-13
overall,
H.e n,roli 1&amp;1 "'lt&amp;enb.ra
Sacnimil'llto at Mlnanota, a,.m.
Alle'IIM'ny 1Pa) at C'a~~c Retwrw
·hostUrbana
Tuesday,
7:30p.m.,
Box
score:
Atkafi .. thk. .o. 8: M p.m.
l 'l!'danllk' at Tlftln
New ,ffrll'J at Dal .... H: se p,m,
for Gallla County Insurance ·
WALSH (96) - Elliott DeVan,
TrJ.Sta h• fh1d1 at Dt&gt;llancr
Su Ant . . . at LA Lakers. II: 30 p.m.·
\\'llmln«ton al 1'hamu Mol'«! IK)'I
1-1-3;
Corey Fields, 1-1-0-5; Jason
Agents
l'!lght.
Lake
Erie
(1·25)
'heldllf Game~~
THURri)A\', FIEII. I
Ia . . . . "'o......... .
faces
the
Redmen
again
this
Frederick,
2-2·2·12; Greg Gelg,
N O rlh•· t"K~·n ill Otllo Sl
Clnelu•at Ml&amp;mL alpa
Shaw1W1•SI at Ohio Domlllkan
Delrelt ai Atluta, •lllht
Friday,
7:30p.m
.•
In
Lyne
Center
Hl-3;
.Charles
· Glenn, 5-9-19;
lnclarur.pollllllt ~hland
S.Cra,metlletat Mllwaullee.IIIKhl
for
Holzer
Clinic
Night.
Zedrlc
McDonald,
10·1·21; Carl
FKill.4l', t' EB. 2
New .Jer.ey U 'Phoettb, alp&amp;
{' ~·RII".-1 Slat Flartda Mll'murtlll
LA L.._.al LA t11pprrs,aljht
Box
score:
Rogers,
0-1·1;
JetrYoung;
5.J.13;
Lakr Erlt• at Rio Grandt
lllah .................
SATURDAV. FEB. J
LAKE ERIE (lOS) - Dayld Corry Appllne, 9·0-18. TOTALS
COMI"Ni1110t 111NNER ONLY
Miami al ('entnll Ml e tdA"•
FOI JIST
NATION..\L HOCKEY LEAGUE '
334-18-86.
.
Whittington, 4-1-0-11; Mike Calla·
!Dining Room Onlrl
811.11 Stat &amp;wlln,; Grf'f'n
sa~n.,Reat~t•
han; 1-0-2; Shannon &lt; Rucker,
RIO GRANDE (88) .- Gary
" 't'llk&gt;rn Mldtl(liUI at Ohio Uah!
Served with whipped potat-. chicken
llesteta 2, Phlla4elpllia I
K ent stIll EWflrr n Mlchlll'aa
NY bUderst, Plllabu 1111 J
4·6·14;
Terrence
Greene,
2-2-6;
Harrison,
.
7·3-4·27;
Brad
Sch\1·
gravy. cola alliw,' hot rott end butt•.
l ' oun,r;~~ot Own Slat .Ur•
Hartford 1, O.lcap 4
Chidnlll'ti!IC M•mphh1 Sl
· Chris Fleming, 1·3-5; Doug Jr .
Sorry, no 1ublltltutaa except beverage
bert, 4-5-1-~4; Jeff Browli, 0-H;
Detrelllll. Quebee I
Clf'"Yrllt.nd Stat IIIIMIIII· CIII~a,;o
Mo•real I. Toronto :1
·
wllh eddhlonet prl_,
.
win, 7·8·22; Matt McElwain,
John L!lmbcke, 1·1·3; MarkErs- .
Da)·ton 1.1 Xa\'ler
(:at pry I, Mla. .ata I
Nordlt"rn Dllaob4 a&amp; Wrl«fliSI
13-11-37; Eric Janke, 4-0·8. TOIan, 0-5·0-15; Darius Williams,
NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL .
Ell moM on I , V IIIICOawr t
Ht!'hlt&gt;lht&gt;rJ at l'brWtll
WINipel l, 1St Lo.n I, Ut
TALS
36-1·38·105.
3-1·1-10;
Troy
Donaldson,
3-2-8.
.Jolwt r~rnlll at MoUIIIIl!ntan
NV 'IlMII!raS, Los AIIJt!M I
Ot~rht&gt; lnal Mu•ld~m
,SUiidq R'e -ulal
RIO GRANDE (137) - Gary TOTAlS 18-14-10-88.
Ba ldwl•Waljal:r at C•plbal
WMWnaton1, Pllla4el ... a2
.
Harrison,
0-2·0-6; , Mark Erslan,
Halftime score: Walsh 38, Rio
Ohio Nordlrrn at Hiram
, New Jerlf)' t, NY ..IPdeu t, le
PH. 992·5432 .
. .
POMEIOY,· OH.
Kt&gt;nyaa Ill Allf!&amp;hPn)' ( Pa)
•
8uflllolo1,Pll...,.llht
4-1-9;
Lyndell
Snyder,
0·5·2,17;
Grande
38.
Ohio W e~~ tr,an at Cllllr Rfterw
Mo .. .,.. Gamt!ll
fl!lt•il!l Kentucky friH Chlcllen.
.
Brad Schubert, 3·3-4·19; Joe
Ohl"''llft at Earn.t.m (lnd)
Bo... n .. Mo.trul, 1: h p.m.
" 'ldP...,t'fl II Dfoailtoa
Wloalpea: at lila ....... 1: II p,m, .
Edwards,
0·2·0·6;
Gregg
Frlst;
Dyke II WOOIIU
'
St. .Ja~pll ( la•) Jd A.r.llland
1·2-4; John Lambcke, 4-1-9; Da·
811. LotH at Nl' r.-.-., ni&amp;N
( ' t"diU"\'lllf' .. DefiiUM!t
Edmo•oaatH.v••,.,.apt
rlus Williams, 5·2:2·18; Jeff
Wlllllh at Mou• Verr.11 N•
•ffD(Io at Qaf!bet!, ntllll
Ohio Domhdt·&amp;n .at um ...
Brown, 1·7·3·26; Tim Christian,
Plt~pliaatPttt.bll .. lt.•IJflt
Rle Grandr al THin
0-5-5; Troy Donaldson, 9·0·18.
SUNDAV , FEB. -1
C'alp.ry al \'iulcoawr, niiM
Loui• \'lllt&gt; ..t Ohio 8t
TOTALS
27·21·20·137.
··
.New ler1r7 at Lo1 All . . m. nllfll
WUmlnA"(on at Rio Gr•MI•
Halftime
score:
Rio
Grande
72,
......
, ..... ., 8•-1• Tnn.ct ...
Lake
Erie
311.
·
M, .. .,. Sportll Calftldar

,

•..

i'

~:

.,

.

'

.

�_,

•.

Pomerov Mklrlaport. Ohio

Mayor's ... conunueq from page 1

Monday, J• 'MY 28. 1980
•

Winter storttts move to:East Coast
states
.

no ·new taxes

.
trying to work around a maJor lor housing COII$trucllon or
dllrerenee between lbe House assistance.
forecasters Issued a winter thunderstorms soaked portions the winds darkened hOuses and
By United Preu lnternatioul
and Senate on (tnforclng the OWl
Sponsors want to get the Issue
Winter storms dumped snow, weather advisory from Terre . of southcentral Louisiana. The businesses In many areaa, In·
law.
·
on the May 8 primary ballotlor a sleet and rain from Missouri to Haute, Ind., to St. Louis.
rain was heavy enough to cause eluding Snobomllh County north
The Senate authorized pollee public vote.
flood!~
Sunday ·In the Golden or Seattle, where utility officials
New York state Monday, wblle
. Rain and sleet were reported In
of!lcers to suspend the driver's
Leglslatltm raising the state's temperature$ dipped aiQDg the . parts of Indiana, causing hazard· Triangle area of southeast Texas said about ,3,500 homes ·lost
license of a suspect on the spot, . minimum wage frOIII $2.30 an upper East Coast and rain ous road conditions and numer- and southwesi Louisiana.
electricity.
·
based on a breatbalyzer test of hour to $4.60 over two years will soaked already saturated areas ous traffic accidents In some
In tbe West. weekend ·winds
In Oregon, a "Sujler Sunday"
0.10 percent blood alcohol, the be heard In the House Commerce oft he South.
lashed W ashlngton state with storm with wind gusts to 70 mph
areas, the NWS reported. .
.
legal lln)lt. The House removed and Labor Committee Wednes·
A storm front moving nor·
The storms Interrupted what gus Is up to 80 mph In some areas swept ashOre and utility crews
the provision on .Guthrie's day afternoon.
· theastfrom the Tennessee Valley .forecasters said h.as been one or while heavy snow fell Monday In rushed to restore downed power
recommendation.
A Senate task Ioree on cam· through· the mid-Atlantic states the warmest and driest Januar·
the Cascade Range, and lines In tltne for the Super Bowl
The House Aging and Housing palgn finance reform Wtll meet
Olympics.
·
game, while skiers headed for
pushed snow, rain, sleet and les on record In Ohio, where as
Committee may report out a Thursday afternoon to hear a colder-than-normal tempera· much as3 to 51nches of new snow
The weather service said the mountains to enJoy the fresh
constitutional amendment Tues- pair of House-passed bills regu· lure$ Into the region Monday were expected before 8$ warmer
winds of 80 mph were reported at powder.
.
day evening allowing the state to latlng lobbyists apd llmltlng morning, the National Weather air moved In from tbe southwest Ratdesnake Ridge and 71 mph
"The ai'k .woilldn't have made
.sell bonds and use the proceeds ·donations t0 polltlcalcommlttees Service said.
and changed the precipitation to . winds bias ted through Hanford In ltln this," one Lincoln City, Ore.,
and candt.dates.
·
the ·central basin of easter!! resident said In •Iter an espe- '·
Winter storm warnings were rain.
W
ashlngton.
clally heavy downpour hit the
·posted In much of the region, with
A cold front brought scattered
Power
outages
resulting
!rom
coastal
city.
·
as much as 9 Inches of snow r!lln to parts of the SOuth from
forecast for northwestern Pen· · Arkansas to Florida. Another 0. 7
NATIONAL WEATHER SI;AVtCE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1.·10 an
nsylvanla
and
up
to
7 Inches Inches In Jackson, Miss., late
Tuesday.
Graveside
services
ror
·Helen Cavender
family member and closelrlends expected In northcentral and Sunday and ellfly Monday sent
will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m northeastern Pennsylvania and the month's rainfall total over 12
Helen Elizabeth Cavender
Inches,. making this the city's
at the Letart Falls Cemetery northwestern New Jersey.
Burkhart, 81, of Middleport, died
By
8
a.m.,
Pltllburgh
already
with
the
Rev.
Kenneth
Baker
·
second
wetf4!St January. on reSunday at her resfdence;
had
at
least
3
Inches
of
new
snow
cord.
A
cold front was pushing
officiating.
Servl ces will be annoupced by
and
other
cities In western and
the
rain
out Jlf Mississippi Mon·
Rawlings-Coats-Fisher Fun!ral
central
Pennsylvania
reported
1
day,
making
II prol!able that the
Home.
to 6 Inches.
record of more than 14lnches will
Dennis Woodgerd.
Rain, sleet and snow fell from St&amp;J1d.
.
, .
Marie Theiss
the mo11ntalns of VIrginia 'to the
The
January
rainfall
has
sa
ttl·
Dennis W. Woodgerd, 39, 30244 coast or New Jersey as the front
rated
Mississippi,
pushing
rivers
Marie E. Theiss, 84, of Racine,
Dyesvllle Road, Pomeroy, died
died Sunday at Veterans Memor·
early Sunday morning at O'Ble- moved through the area · early and streams near bankful. Some
lal Hospital following an· ex·
ness Hospital In Athens.
__
· Monday. The front preceded a have already spilled over onto
tended Illness. ·
Born In Carpenter, he was the low-presure .system · cen.tered prlme forest and agricultural
lands In low-lying areas.
.
Born on Feb. 24, 1900at Racine,
son of Carrol and Fernie Perry over Mississippi. ' .
Morning
temperatures
In
the
.
Clouds
covered
inuch
of
New
she was the daughter of the late
Woodgerd, who survive.
Charles Grant Wilcoxen and
Also surviving are four broth· Middle Atlantic states ranged F;ngland early Monday as a
Dora Mae Smith Wilcoxen.
ers and two sisters-In-law, Kevin from the low 30s In the Inland high-pressure system developed
She Is survived by two daugh,
and Bqbble Jo Woodgerd, mountains of Pennsylvania and In the region. Skies were over·
tersand sons-In-law, Pauline and
Athens; Joe and HoUle Wood- VIrginia to the low 40s along the cast In Massachusetls and Rhode .
Island, where temperatures
Clifford Hill, Racine, and Marlogerd, Columbus; Frank Wood- coast.
Winter
weather
advisories
or
were
In the upper 30s.
'
rle and Lawrence Guthrie,
gerd, Jacksonville; and Brian
warnings
were
posted
In
much
of
Winter
· storm warnings were
DsNow
-RAIN
DstlowERs·
Bonners Ferry, Idaho; and one Woodgerd, Pomeroy; orie sister,
the
Midwest,
the
NWS
·
s
aid.
posted
lor
parts
of
Vermont
and
FRONTS: "Warm "Cold
. . Sta,tic .. . Occluded
son and daughter-In-law, Roger VIckie Fraley, Albany; several
and ·;Janet Theiss, Racine; eight _nieces, nephews, aunts, and Minnesota braced for a blizzard, . New Hampshire, where' an .ap·
r.1.::p 5hcwS mir'lim. um temperatures . At least SO% c' any shadttd area is fc•ecast
accompan Jed by 45 mph winds proachlng storm threatened to
grandchildren. and 20 uncles.
' ! ':~'":'':' ~ : . n r '":'': :O;'alion indicated
'J ·
UPI
great-granclchlklren.
Services will be Wednesday, 1 and dangerous wind chills, that dump as much as 8 Inches of
Besides her parents, she was p.m. at the Blgony-Jordan Fun- was centered over soutl)ern snow, while temperatures
WEATHER !WAP - During early TueedQ inomln1, snow Ill
preceded In death by her hus· eral Home In Albany with the Saskatchewan early Monday and ranged !rom the 20s to the mid
foreCBIIt
for parts of the nortbern lntermo~mtaln repon, parts of
~.
band, Paul In 1975; three broth· Rev. Arlhl!rCrablreeofflclatlng. headed toward the U.S. border.
the
nortbern
Plalnll, parta of the extreme upper,.Hiululppl Valley
Slow-moving storms coated
Widely scattered thunder·
ers. Guy. Fred and Jed Wilcoxen, Burial will be In the Bean Hill
and
parts
of
the north Atlantic Coaat llta&amp;ea, with rain aiODI the
parts of Missouri and Illlnots storms, some with very heavy
and one sister, Jessie CemeterylnVlntonCounty.
coast. Snow Is posllble In m011t of the centrallntermolllltaln repon
with a mixture of light rain and 1 rain, fell over southern Texas
Houdashelt.
Friends may call at the funeral to
and parts of the upper Great Lakes, Wttb 1howers aad
3
Inches·
of
snow,
while
..,..
and
a
large
·
a
rea
of
rain
and
a
few
Friends may call at the Ewing home on Tuesday from 2-4 p.m.
tbunderstonns possible In par II of the' lOUth Atlantic Cout
I
Funeral Home from 7 to 9 P:m and 7·9 p.m.
(UPI)
,

WASHINGTON '(UPI) -Pres· space exploration. research and and the level ot defense spending tlon of Sll.i bllllon lor nuclear ' Is disputing those claims. ·
ldent Bush proposed a $1.23 ·development, the environment In a new era of a reduced Soviet warheads.
'
"There Is going to be a peace
t~llllon fiscal 1991 budget Mon·
and tbe fleht against drugs.
mUitarYthreat. .
While higher than that sjlentln dlvidendbutll'snotgotngtobeas
day that contains no n~ taxes,
For the second year. Bush has
Also at Issue will be what many fiscal 1990, Bush's defense re- large.as some naively think at the
cuts defense spending, ellml· proposed no new taxes, allowing congresslonalandoutsldebudget questls actlljllly a 2.6 percentc,u t l)loment," Darman said on NBC.
nates about 20 domesllc .pro- him to keep his 1988 campaign analysts see as the admlntstra· In buylna pPWer becauae It ~I' 1 In the long run, It could be as
grams aad adds money lor pledge against tax Increases to· lion's overly aptlmlstlcecc:~omlc not keep pace wltb Inflation. •
much as· $200 billion, Darman
several education, envlronmen· cut the deficit or meet pre~slng assumptions , about Interest
Congress this year apprdJli . said. "but what unfortunatley Is
tal and anti-dr~~&amp; proerains.
domestic neecls.
. rates, the growth of the eQOnomy rlated $291.4 billion In budgl!~ the case Is everybody Is assum·
Bush's spend! rig ·plan for the
But, as promised, he did cal) . and .and the rate of Inflation next authority tor the Pentagon fori a lng that that's right this moment
flscalyearbeglnnlngOct.l-the for a blgcut In the capital gains year.
total defense budget or S~U: and they've planned to spend 1110
first to reflect solely his priorities tax . on profits from the sale of
The administration's .as sump- billion when combined with the times over."
- anticipates, revenues of $1.17 assets such as stocks, bonds and tlons Gall for 1991 growth of .abo~t money . for nuclear warheAd
Bush's bl!dget also Includes a
trtlllon,. outlays of $1.233 trllllon re.ai estat.e . .Under .Bush's plan, 3.3 percent - better than t~e production by the , Energy colorfully written Introduction
and a deficit of $63.1 billion.
. the tax rate would be cut from as ·economy has performed recently Department.
•
by Darman that urges Congress
. That's jusl_uPder the Gramm- high as 33 percent to as low as 15 -:- and inflation of 4.2 percent.
The Pentagon would repont· to· get " serious" about budget
Rudman balanced pudget law's percent
·
They also anticipate Interest edly achieve Its savings through . and deficit Issues. '
rf9uired - deficit . target or $~
rates on 90,day Treasury bl.lls to bas~ . closings amj, Darman sa~d ,
And. referring to a popular
''billion for fisc~{ 1991.
That tax cut would yield abo~! be only 5.5 percent next year- .by eliminating two full Army video game, Darman warned
Thepresldentwouldreachthat $5 billion In revenues next year about 2 points below the current divisions. That would cut acthre that the country faces up to $50
lower deficit target through a but, critics claim, would cost rate. Critics say tb_ese ro.sey duty Army personnel by about b!Ulon a year In unfunded llablll·
combination of ·. revenue In· biUlons more In later years and , ·assumptions underestimate the . 30,000.
· '
ties such as health care procreases, extensions or exlsdng benefit mainly. the wealtlly .
. huge federal Interests co's IS on
Published reports also saldtw,o grams · and hazardous waste
taxes due •to expire, new or ·
"The president has made It the national debt and make the Navy battleships, the USS lo~ clean' UP co.sts. He calls them
.Increased pser fees for federal absolutely clear that he does not deficit appear smaller than Ills. and the USS Missouri- would e "hidden Pac men" waiting to
services and large spending cuts want to· solve this (deficit)
mothballed .
gobble up scarce federal dollars.
In a variety of domestic , problem with new taxes, and our
Bush Is seeking en ln~rease In
.Other highlights of Bush's 1991
programs.
•
budget Is. consistent with that,''' . .
funds .. ne.xt year for the "s~·
budget:
·
Congressional sources famll· · administration budget dtrectcr ments, such as ·Medicare and wars'' missile defense system s
tar with the budget have ·said It Richard DaFman said Sunday on Medicaid, and eliminating an- well as funding for five steal
proposes eliminating about 20 NBC's "Meet the Press." "We nual .cost·of.llvlng.lncreases for bombers which, at more thllfl
domestic programs; Including have no new. taxes for a second federal and mllltary retirement $500 million each, are the 'ma•t
.
federal subsidies ,for Amtrak, t)le year now."
programs . But Social Secur!iy expensive airplanes ever bullt. 1
nation's rail passenger service,
And one congressional source benefits will be unaffected.
Congressional Democrats reand the Crop Insurance Program · familiar with Bush's budget
In the five-pound, 1,592-page portedly will push to cut ~r
for farmers.
added, "There are no new taxes budget lxiok, Bush proposed 1991 eliminate funds for those tw.o
Many programs targeted for In here oi any consequence that defense spending or $306.9 billion programs and lor Pentagon cuts
elimination again this year have aren't already on the books."
In budget au thorlty- the amount totalling 5 percent or m?re. j
solid support on ·Capitol Hill,
Bush's budgetls sure to spark a the· Pentagon can obligate next ·
They cite the dramatic devel·
where law.makers have repeat· heated debate with the.·Demo- year to obtain weapons over
opments In Eastern Europe that
edly rejected the proposals.
cratlc controlled Congress over several years.
have reduced the Soviet mllltary ·
Bush's budget also 'Includes his· spend,lng priorities, the do· . That figure Includes a Pen:
threat and that permit a "peace·
spending Increases In domestic mestlc programs he would re' ta.gon budgeter $295.1 billion plus dividend'.' of much lower defimse•
programs such as education, · duce or eliminate, his tax policies - an E,nergy Departmentcontrlbu· spending. But ihe adminiStration·

--Area deaths-.- -

Ohio may.•. Continued from page 1
start phasing out !he Warren
plant In 1992 and transfer some
machinery to the larger site In
Lima.
Don Gilleland, spokesman for
General Dynamics Corp, 's Land
Systems Division, said the firm
has been told the federal govern·
ment may shut down production
for three to five years at one or
both plants rather than closing
both permanently. Land Systems
operates both tacllltles.
The Warren plant employs
1,400 workers. Hundreds of oth·
ers WQrk lor suppllers who
service the faclllty.
Rep. Michael. Oxley, R·Ohlo,
says closing the Lima plant
might jeopardize foreign sales
· and Increase the cost of future
tanks for the Army. He says by
speedlrig up the timetable for

Troops will...

!flaking tanks lor Middle East
counties might save . some of
those jobs.
Oftlclals at Wright-Patterson
Air Force _B ase near Dayton
expect there will be some budget
and Job trimming for the base,
bu 1 major commands will remain In place.
The Air Force Logistics Com·
mand at Wright-Patterson em·
ploys 11,400 workers at the base.
The command's largest unit, the
Aeronatlcal Systems Division,
hadaboutll;OOOemployeesatthe
base. Most' or the bases's other
35,000 workers have connection
to hoth commands.
·
·
Officials expect reforms for
the Logistics Command co'uld
Include cutting a layer of man·
agement and various reductions
could cut about 3,500 jobs.

Continued from page 1 .

-.es.

EMS has 17 weekend calls

Units of the Meigs County to Gr~nt Hospital by Llleflight.
~s
Emergency Medical Service re- The Syracuse ' unit assls~ and
sponded to 17 calls for assistance transported Terry Michael to
CLEVELAND (UPI) - No .
over the weekend. ·
Veterans who was later trans· winner In Saturday night's Super
On Saturday, at12:43 a.m. the terred to Holzer.
),.otto game pushed the jackpot
Pomeroy . unit was called to
At 6:29 p.m. the Middleport for Wednesday to 'at least $13
Peacock Ave. for Eleanor Davis unit went to Page St. for Wilbur . mUUon . .
who was taken to Veterans Theobald' who was taken to
Ohio Lottery officials said .
Memorial Hospital.
Veterans.
_
Sunday that out of the $6,106,725
At 12: 53 a.m. the Racine and
At 7 p.m. the Syracuse unit worth of tickets sold for the game '
Syracuse Fire · Departments transported Ruby Eynon from with a $10 million jackpot, qone of
w.ere called to J;ioute 338
. In Letart ·the station to Veterans.
the tickets had the numbers 12,
lor a .chlmne)lllre at the Fred
Finally on Satllfday, the Ra· 13, 25, 35, 37, and 44.
Stewart residence.
clneunlt, at11:46p.m. responded
However, 168 or thetn had five·
The Pomeroy unit, at 1:38 a.m.
to a call on Route 124 In which of the numbers, making each of
went to Riverside Apartments
Marie Theiss was taken to those tickets worth $1,000, while
for Jennifer Hendricks who was Veterans.
· 8,259 had four of the numbers,
.
transported to Pleasant Valley
On Sunday at 2:43 a.m. the good for $75 each.
Hospital. At 2:39 a.m. the unit Pomeroy unit went to Mulberry
On the Kicker side, the number ·
went to Condor St. for Harold
Ave .. for Mlnla Boggess who was 536856 came up, and one of the
Gibbs who was taken to Holzer taken to Veterans. AI 5:13 a.m. tickets . had that combination,
Medical Center, and at 9:56a.m. the unit was called to Pomeroy good for $100,000.
.
the unit was called to Amerlcare Pollee Department for Judy
Lottery officials said 948,785
Nursing Center for Garth Smith Tyree who was taken to Vete- .
who was transported to rans, and at 5:56 a.m. the unit
Veterans. ·
went to Union Ave. for Shari
The Mlddieport unit, at i2: 18 Eblin who was treated but not
p.m. responded to a call on Pearl transported.
St. for Gertrude Wise who was
The Middleport unit 1\t 8: 02
taken to Veferans.
a.m. was called to South Front
At 2:50p.m. the Pomeroy unit and Garfield for Helen Berkhart.
went to Route 143 lor Iva Johnson
At 3:02 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
who was transported to Holzer.
responded to a call on Main St.
The Pomeroy Fire Depart· for Warren Farmer who was ·
ment was called at 3 p.m. to
taken to Veterans, and at 4:40
Rouie 7 and -33 for an auto p.m. The Racine unit treated but
accldentln which James Michael did not transport Candy Mllllron.
was taken to Veterans and later

weeks, rather than months."
the region, long apprehensive of
Pananamanlan VIce President Yankee gun)loat diplomacy.
Ricardo Arias Calderon said he
Endara, Installed during the
too thought "at a point In time, Invasion,- was not Invited ·tp
which I see as relatively s·hort, participate In' the Inauguration
we will be In a position to assure Saturday of Honduran President
Panamanian securtty · and lull Rafael 'J.eonardo Callejas at·
· tended by Quayle, and only seven
responslblllty for our rights."
B\lt Endara sounded a more nations In the region, four of
cautlowi note.
·
,·
them U.S. allies, have officially
''We would like to see It as soon recognized the Panamanian
as possible," the president said. govertunent.
' 'At this moment, the pollee, our
On Saturday, Quayle assured
forces, are not quite capable of those gathered that the 31600
protecting the lives, properties remaining U.S. Invasion troops Dally stock prices ·
alld' public order the Panaman· would be withdrawn as soon as (As of 10:30 a.m.)
ian people want. That's why we possible and declared the action Bryce and Mark Smltb
need the U.S. forces In Panama had not harmed relations. In the . o'f Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewl
hemisphere.
at this moment."
·'
At the same time, he conceded Am ElectrlcPower .... .. .,_.... 30%
An adm!J!lstration official Ira·"'
vellng with Quayle said t!le that "concem was expressed" by AT&amp;T ............... ,................ .40';l
United States Is trying to assure Latin American leaders and Ashland Oll ........ ........... .. ... 38';l
the Panamanians now that U.S. acknowledged- the troop wllhdra· Bob Evans ......... .. .... ... .. .. .... 13%
troops at the old levels can help wal would prompt more coun· Cha;tnlng Shoppes ....... ........ 8J'a
them just as well with securlty, tries to officially recognize the · Clt)l Holding Co ....., .. ..... ..... . 15
by attaining waivers allQwlng the government of Endara, who Is . F~ral Mogul.. .................. 19';l
U.S. troops to carry out dulles accused by some of being a Goodyear T&amp;R ...... ............. 35%
Heck's .... .... .... ............ .. ....... 2%
beyond those allowed by the puppet of the United States.
·
,~
.Key
Centurion ........... .......... 1374
Panama Canal Treaty.
Lands'
End ..... .................... l7~
'rhe official refused to set a
Limited
Inc. .,, ..................... 33 ·
more specific timetable for with·
'Multimedia Inc......... ......... .. 77
drawal, acknowledging the tlgh·
Rax Restaurants ....... ........... I%
trope the administration Is walk·
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15%
lng In trying to repair relations In
' Shoney
. ' s 'I nc . ... ...... ,....... .....10%
Brenda Randolph, Pomeroy, Is Star Bank ...........................19%
seeking a divorce froni'Marvin Wendy's Inti. .. ..................... 4%
Randolph, Racine, In the Melp Wofthlngton Ind.................. 2074 .
County
Court of Comrrom'Pieas'
Sciulli Central Ohio
. t
Timothy
Patrick Glllllan, Mid· '
Clearing Monday night, with a
dleport, Is seeking a divorce from Hospi~
low near 30. Becoming partly
Luanne GlllUan, Middleport.
cloudy Tuesday afternoon, with
Veteraaa Memorial
Divorces have been grante&lt;lln
highs near 50.
saturday
admissions - Gartll
the Melgll County Co11rt or
, Extellded Foreeut
and -Wilbur
.
Smith,
·Pomeroy;
Common Pleaa to Julla Allee
Wedllelda)' lllroalb Frldq
Monk from Marvin L. Monk; and Theobald, Middleport.
A chance of snow Wednesday
Saturday discharges - none.
Ruby Ruth Yarrington from ·
and Thursday, with fair weather
Sunday admissions - Gerald
Arnold Lee Yarrlngt~.
on 'Friday. Highs will range from
!)ellers, Pomeroy; and Anna
the upper 20s to the upper 30s
Nixon, Rutland.
Wedill!lday. from the mid 30s to Disllolutiona granted
Sunday dlschafles .- none. ·
.
.
the mid 40s Thursday, and from
In the Meigs County Court of
the mid 20s to the mid 30s Friday.
Common
Pleaa dlssolutjona have
Overnight lows will be between
been
granted
to Jocly L. Gum and ~wamed Juc18meot
15 aad 25 early Wednedlay,
George
G.
Gum Jr.; VIcki
between 20 and 30 Thursday
Nlclnsky
and
John Craig Nlc·
mernlng and between 10 and 20 lnsky; and Valeria
A judgment of $11,344.85 has
M. Bailey and been awarded In the Melp
e~rly Friday.
Brian K. Batley.
County Court or Common Pleas,
to the·Central Trust Company of
Southeastern Ohio from Freder·
Tile Middleport Uterary Club Wallace. "My Rullla" wlll be lck W. Klein, et al, In a
torecl0111re action flied by the
will meet Wednesday at 1: 30 p.m. reviewed by Mrs. Richard Owen.
Central
Ti'uat&lt;:ompany.
at tbe home ot Mrs. Dwight

No · one

Ki'cker tickets were sold. Seven
of them had ·the first five
numbers •. each worth $5,000; 94
had the first four lor $1,000; . 822
the tlrst three for $100 and 8,498
the first two for $10.

111 Second

TO PLA(f AN AD CALL992-2156
MoNDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to ~ P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON.SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

~
•

POLICIES
"
'Ads outSide Meigs. GaJiia or MAson Counties must be pre-

~
~

paid.
,
·
. ·~eceftte $.60 discount for ads paid in itdYance.
:Free ads Give.-.., ar\d Foun~ ads under 15 Words will be
run 3 days at no charge
'Price of ad for all Capital letters is double price of ad cost
• 7 pa.l\1 line type on~ used .
,
'Sentinel is ~ot responsible l!:n ~:~rrors after• lint day . (Check
for errors first dav ad runs in paper) . Call before 2 :00p .m.
· d~ after publlc;Mion to melle conection.
'' Ada thet muit be pa1P in edvence er~
Cald gfTMnkll ..
Happy Ads
in Mllflmori.n
Yard Sales

•
'

JOHN A. WADE,

..

•.

' A ' cl•slfied ~erti~ement pieced In The DailY' Sen'linel (Blt-

cttpl
cl~ilfied display , 8u51nllls Card and legal notices!
will also ·• P.P•• in the Pt. Pleuant Aegi1tar 1nd the Galli-

\.

pulis Daily Tribune, nt1ching over 18.000 hOmes.

. COPY OEA6ltNE' MONDAY PAPER
TUESO'AY PAPE~ ·
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THU~SCAV PAPER

•
'

t-HIDAV PAPER

SUNDAY PAPER

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

A .M . SATURDAY
. 2 o00 P.M MONDAY
- 2 o00 P.M . T(lESQAV
- 2 o00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
-: 2 :00P.M . THURSDAY
- 2 00 P.M . FRIDAY

3
6
10
Monthly

E~R, NOSE .&amp; THROAT .

Cla .&lt;i,~iji1•d pa}{e.~ Wt.'l'r

following
Gallit County
Area Code 614

An~aCode614

446- Gallipolis
317 - Cha~hire·

388245266643-

Vinlon
Rio Gr11nde
0uyan Din
AtabieDist.

379 - Walnut

9.92 - M•ddlapor1
Pomeroy

675 - Pt . Ple•ant
458- laon

986 - Ch•rer

576- Apple Gro~ot~e
773 - Meson
·
J82- New H11111n

843 - Portland
247 -.. Let•rt Falls
9&amp;9 - Aac:ine

742 - Autt.nd
667 - COohlille

895- Letart
937 - Buffalo

GUN SHOOT

Stricktlp hforlld
'10·9·tfn

··~

ROSES'.
EXCAVATING
&amp; TRUCKING

flllJBII
HfRE!A·CAU
YOU.

I Til

Weather

UCIIID

A Special Secti.~n
Coming February 13, 1990 .

·2

LOCAnON •• QUALITY
ALL THE EXTRAS .
We have Just lilted the property of Mr.

and Mri.

E-'1 tan. 1'hll nne quQIIty. al brick home o11era
all the exlral and Is located In a lamlfY oriented
nalgllboltlood. 1he apacloul llvtng room and
brealdall room have a apectaeular view of lhe
river. 2 ~... f!:lmlly room, formal dining
room, 2 car garage and heat pump. Shown by
appollltment.

Me~iem

In Loving Memo'¥ Of
LlOYD "--RtGHT

..•'• .

'

Gontact Your Advertisi.,g Representative
'
For Detailsll

•••

..•
•'•
•

II.
•

''

I•
•

................................................~................~......... i
•

In

TOP SOIL
·· FOR SALE

•'

AD D.E. ADLINE
FEBRUARY 6, 1990
.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

S•leS. AUction
9 - W.,ted to &amp;uv

..•

•

61 - F.,m Equipmenl
62 - Wanted to Buy
63 - livestock
64 - Hav &amp; Grain
66 - Sead &amp; Fartilizer

33 - Farms for Sale

. 3 ' - Busin•• Buildinp
36 - Lots • Ac:rtttjle
:;l6-·R881 ht•te Wtw1ted

6 ·-Lost and Found
7 . ~ Yi!itd S .. et~Yid in 1~1nce)

"•,.

..'

1

'

41 - Houses for

i ....

71 - Autos for Slle •
72- Trucks for Sale
73 - Va.n s h &amp; WO ' s

44-Apartmtnt tor Rtnt
46 - Furnished Rooms

14- Bu•in•s Ttaining
15- Schools a. lnltr~.K:tion
16- Radio, TV &amp; Cl Rep1ir

Merchandise

17- MiscaUtnaoul

&lt;

• I
~

.2.1 .~· o utin•l' Opportunity
22 - Monev to LHn
.
23 -- Prof•tion-,1 s.,..,ic•

'

Sr.rv1ces

' 51 - Hou•hold Goods
..)

.,

74 -- Motorcycl•
75- Boats &amp; Motors tor Sale
76 - Aulo P.,t1a. Acc•aori•
77- Auto Repair
11- Cam,tng Equ""'*"
1
79- Campeu 6 MotOf Homes

46- Space for Aent
47 - Wanled to Rent
48 - Equipment for Rent
49 - For &amp;..ae

11 - Helo.Wantad
12-- Situation Wanted
13 - ln••nance

.'

Tron sporta t10n

~ent

42-- Mobila Homes for Rant
43 - Farms tor Rent

52- Sporting Goodl
63- An'iiqueJ
64- Misc:. M.,chendtse
56- Building Suppli111 ·
66-hu tor Sele
·
&amp;? ~ Musical lnttrumenls
58- Fruilt &amp; VegMebt•
59- For S1l1 Of Trade

81 - Homelmprovamants
82 - Piumbing &amp; Hul"-9

. 83 - EacMIIIing

84-:-Eieclricet &amp; Rehig•elion ,
86 - Guh••l Hauling
86 ·Mobile Home Repair
87,-- Uphol.-ery

llh

~

Who died
;)anuery 28, 1989
One aad and lonely
year h.. gone elnc:e
you left u1.
You Ire · retnlng In •
muoti blttwr p~Re.
Our • - for you will
llwaye lie In our
hurtl.
Till - meet •gain,
my d•llng,
You mMnOry will live
on. ·
hdty mined by
Wife, Ja111 Wright,
c1111•~n~

a....-.

Ch.lldrM 1nd Frfllldl

949-2493

PIMH~contect:

Ceaelll Lille, Laborltory Supervleor

Yilt- Mlfllorlll H011P.ltal
111 E. Memorial Drive
Pome~.OH . .S719

.

.. 11$141 H2·2104. Ext-lon 216

EOE

$1550 per ton ~

Buying Houra;
7 :30-B:OO
Mon. thru Fri.
7:30-4:00 Sltunlay
t-2·'!10-1 •o.

RUTUND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE
742-3088
•Tire Sales
•Front End
Algnrnent
•01 ctuinge • Lube

•BJ-.keWork

•Mobile Home
l'arta
•Mobile Home
Rentall
•Lot Rantala

AND DIRT
SPR15AD

1·12·'11-1111

P1rt tlma po1111on 11 aY1111ble for • Medical
LaborlfiOr'( Teofml1lln ta work rotating
shlftl 1•11 lhlft•l· RequlrM Independent
worker with •pabllltlaaln ell lftll of ollnlcal llb!ll'etory. .Excellent fringe begflta.

PH. 992·3561

ALLEN'S
. .
HAUUNG

Pa•aroy, Ollie

MEDICAL LAIOR4TORY TECHNICIAN

=:re;.'~:·

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PAIIC

Nri ef

~

1-15-'IJI.Ifll

UME8TONE

10 Ton Minimum

1600 lllk• Water
ltlllnry

DOZER

SltEWORIC • ROADS

..

•VINYL SIDING

N.WLAND
lr.tERPRISES
DU1MP TRUCK
Slljnd-Stone·Dirt
~

(61' 4) 667-3271
G....t A.

"SHRUB &amp; TREE

T;RIM and RE·
PfOVAL

.

•upHT HAULING
"FI~EWOOD

J&amp;L

::~=~~M ~totNG

CLEARING

W. Ya.C=ng,lnc.

IWN ST., IIILAIID

. 992-7479

Help Wanted

CHIPWOOD
WANTED

3rd Stnet, lodnt, Oh.
1·1-U-11110.

. Rt. 3J

11

';.s

1-:=::t::::~;r.:::::~;;:;:::;~::;:::;:::;;;::trt===::::;r.::====:::; . .
It-

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

ClACifiD

992-2156

32 - Mobile Hom• lor Sale

5 - Hi1ppy' Ads
8 - Pubti~

'·'

Farm Supplies
&amp; Llvestuck

31 - Hom• tor S1le

3- AnnDUCements
4 ..,.. Give.w-v

Bus·

aashan Building

1990
TAX

.

Are• Code 304

IACINE .
FilE DEPT.

SUPPLEMENT

~r

the

6:30 P.M.
F•tory challo .·
12 Gaugt ~'filii Only

~

1- c ... d Ot Thenk•

18 · Wanted To Do

;

_ _ _ Meigs announcements _ __

_06 / day

I d1•phom~ exchang&lt;·-~ ...
•
. County
'
Me1gs
Mason Co.. WY

(304) 675-1244 .

.

'$13 .00 .
, J1,30/day •

.,

..

Real Estate

2- ln MemOfr .

Servtt:t:s

"WE HA~E HEARING' AIDS"

news ·

.42
.60

$9.00

Anntlun ce 1111; nIs

Emp loy tiJPnl

•.

GENERAL ALLERIGIST

•

$4.00.
$6.00

Ovtr 1 ~· W9r~J
"
.20 -.
I .30

Ra1es are lor-coniiecutNe runs. brokanupd!lyswill be ch•ged
for 1uch d~ u H~Jarat 'e ads.

((ClAB.BIFIID _,5
a,ura
to
aat
raau118))
,
I

I

Divorces sought

.,

BEF~RE PUBLICATION

~ · 11 : 00

16
16
15
16
. 15

1

Rate

.'

\.

MD~, . lllce:

-Stocks

..

OAV

Words

D•ys

...

'

Number 1 Marketpla'e

• The

'

Pomeroy
YOUI INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SDY•G
MEIGS COUND
SINCE 1168 :,

...' •

IN THE'
.. ClACCIFIED ADC ·

•

St.,

..•'.

YOU

MUSSER

INSURANCE

.

HERE'C ACAlf

·DOWNING CHILDS
MU~LEN

,.

- A new plan to use the Social - •
Security trust lund surplus after
fiscal 1993, when the budget Is ' , ·
supposed to be balanced under ,, ·
Gramm-Rudman, to trim the ·• ·
national debt.
.. ·
-Cuts of $5 billion In Medicare •· ,
costs, most of It tn payments to .&lt;.
doctors aitd hospitals, plus a ~
revenue hicrease .of $2 billion "
!rom a proposal, Rrevlously
reJected by Congress, toputstate
and local government workers
under Medicare.
-A new family savings plan
allowing those with Incomes up to
$55,000 a year to earn tax·(fee
Interest on savings held at least
seven years.
-A new ''America the Beau II· · ''
ful'' Initiative to clean up'hazard·
ous waste, add national park ·
lands and plant more trees .
'
-An extra $~. 5 billion lor the
Federal Aviation Administration
to modernize air !raffle co.ritrol · · '
systems.

wl~~~~s!a~~g' ~~~:·,~ ::gr~~

'

Ohio Super Lotto jackpot

..
;,

INSULATION

, · BISSELL
SIDING CO.
·~~:.·==·

PH. 949-2101
or ln. 949-2160

IN$ULATION
Wllfer Spe~lel 0•
VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPLACEMENT

··

WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

.•.

992-2772

NO SUNDAY

Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 124, P-.y Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

81LL SLACK·

~I"' Tr••••l••l••

'992-2269
'EVENINGS

PH. 992·5612
or 992-7121

..
..
'

4-25-tfn

4-Wt-1111

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HOlliES &amp; GARAGES
"At •••lllil1 Prien" .

PIL 949·2101
or

1ft.. 949~2160
Dayorllilht

SER~ICE

Wtcan~lllllfrt·
• • rlllliaton and
...... COIIf, Wa .a.i
else acid lloll and rod
eutr•tan.Waake

....,.....
992·21N

...
..
"---.:;:=;:::.a ..

F-.ACE

UCINE .
CLUB,
a• SHOOT

S168,.11,_

Stem at hOO P&amp;

0110 paun

a•

na1••u

Factory Chollld
12Geu.. Only
M-lt-tfl

..

PAl IILL fOlD

992·5275

4-1..16-1111

..

,

NO. SUNDAY CAllS

liN'S ·AIPUAIIa
SIIYICI

.

'

Middleport, Ohio
l·ft.tlc

WA.IID

LOWtuiiOM

SAW LOGS

.... ,..

,

..

'

••

-

�•
1.

Page 8-The Deily Sentinel
Announcernenls
4

'

Morntlly. January

35 Loti &amp; Aci'Mge

LAFF·A·DAY

21 lnoh ...._

Coo&gt;-

-

~4}.¥~1.
61

... -

-

Cloee . . . . .

........

'

Part Enalllh lhephwd pJJpplll
Ooocl . finn tlag: 114-74N1:1S
oft11I:OO p.m.

J

6

__
_._
"*•II•• •1
tor Rent .

.....,

Giveaway

on-.

LotaJKNage, 2.1 .,... ........

..,.. o11111. a
""
Chopol
- · ...u...
114-111-1314~d..
.. 11MM4'1J4.
Po1n1 -

L011 &amp; Found

~-

28, 1880 .;.

...· ~.

at :;pl .......

Television
Viewing

•

•r'
r
••

"t ~

or a....-. ,,._

1117crulll,
Cliotoololl
Z 14. "·
....
.,.,.,,
.......

oondllon. · I14-7U474 ollor

MON., JANO B

•

1:001]) 1111'
lhCI

•**!;!!
•(2)
!ll e!ll • ea
@Howl
•
our moet ont!!!rtncl "-'· tho!
E...-gt ... II. Q

Yard Sale

PRO&amp;AB~'(

R1611T
AFTER T~E ­
INVENTION

I

w•

I

.(2) G

Ill 3-2·1 Collla,l t:;1

·

1

•

;

••

come In Mon.frl, .. 121nd 1-lto

12

'""·

18 Wanted to Do

... 3363.

Employment Services
Help Wanted

AVON I All Are•• I Slllrler
Sptara, 304-e75-142i.

LAIOAATOAY-IIodlcol Tool&gt;
nofo9111 01 Ml&lt;lool Lob Tochnotogl11 CASCP) or oqutnllnl
llporlonco
poolorrod,.
:1
lull ilono Ina , _
ponory port limo, mUll be to - ' t all lhlfto ond -lono.
PI..IInl
•
Voloy
HoophoV_..,..,
304-1714340. Eo&amp;IAA.

pooH-.

I

Gener11 Malntel\lnca • rtpalra,
electric, plumbing &amp; Cllrpe,.ry.
Insurance ct.li'nt walooma, 814311.0581, or 614-251-1611.
Goorgn Portoble Saw 11111.
Don"f Hout Your ~ To IIIII~
Wo"ll como to youl 104-1751157.
•
_ , ewoy 1ny 1ruh, bruotil l
unwa..-ecr hem1. ReuonlOte
rotN. Nociolloblo. Coli ony!fmo
614-2~21.
'

42 Mobile Homea
for Rent

2
·auJeoom tr~rte; tor ~.,:tM
~ Ctoto) lor rwn1,
75-

Individual looking tar hoult •
trailer to rent In Routt 33 or

J bodroonl trollor, Golllpollo

Jlm,l14-112·2141.

Routt 181 ...... Rattr.ncea.

,..., :104-1,..1201.

49

G•r Llooorli. U .OO/hr. 1 112
how or hour k11anad NCh

un liOrtoy I l l Sponattr, »W7W217.

lndlvlduot

1tll Honda, CR 2101, lilc. aond. ·-lol
.;.-·
114-311-8358.
. ~·

F..-, orea.._ 1150. 11101111\ no

z-

-

!Ill ..IIIIIH

rid·

114-4~.

lor ,..,, 1325

514-44f-7501,

Zbr, mobile home, In Porter, you
poy ..IIHIH l ""-'!, 1111/mo.
1143 • •04. '
ar.t-lor'""' neo .-h,
.._ tumtlure. 114 311 M45.

0

ar, lroller In ""'::~ ~~
dlpoolt, 1100.-11
.

a bedroom,

1-112 both, nlco,
ollon, good oondhlon. 114-11112·
5111.

=Fo.,...r-=-L..-..
-,-:S,-oc_o_n..,...,dllo«-::l-"u-:nlu,..-rnlohod oport. .nl, l;ao por
month. Corntr Second &amp; Prne.
Golllpollo. Ono bedroom. Wotor.
ltove &amp; Nfrlgerator fRVWed.
No peta. Dtpotlt •net r.._.nc•
roqulrod. 11 I Ill 42411, 1 1 - 53
Antlqull
1121, 114-441-:ml.
=~::::;::;:=~=::­
For Lu11: Second l'"!'".unlur- luy or 1111. ,.,..no Anllq...,
nlilhod opartmonl, • - por 1134 E. Moln 81-,. -roy.
month. Ovorlooklna c~y ~II. M.'r.W. 10:00 un. to I:GO
Golllpollo. Two bodi'- Goo, ~
1:00 to I :GO p.m.•
81ave &amp; Nlrlgeretor P!ftlllld. 114-fll 2S21.
No polo. lllpooll one!
roqulrod. 614-441 42411;11- · 0111 o1o11y CUpboo~
HooHr trPI oup~alfd, aaoo;
4425,114-44•:ma.
wa adin 3 hln oil~ Mit,
120; Call MIU 111 111 0111.
114 ttl 1110.
Merchandtse

Business Services

I

INOliCEI
.
OHIO VALLEY PlJBLISHINQ
NC&lt;!Inmondo 1hat ~ ,~':;'
- - Wllh poople .... k
'
thlhl mall
ond
NOT
to umll
10nd,...- lion

"'-Dgllod 1"""""~"aReal Estate

Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Serv•ic•
Hearinc Evaluations For All Ages

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
i Licensed Clinical Audiologist
~ ,(614) 446·7619.or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue. BoK 1213

z

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
· .Mulbercy Hgts, Pomeroy,

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

97 BUCH STIEO, IIIIIDlEPOin, OliO
liMits W.w S.,... '-rial lloort

located , ....

8UYCNG ALUMINUM CANS. GLASS.
"PLASTIC, COPPER. BRASS. SHEET
ALUMINUM, .RADIATORS AND MORE

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

, .,"

.,,

1m 17 I. SIIICtlfl TrWIUII
Bol4. 125 HP, Evl~

,,

C.llltot-251·1311 o._ 7:GO p.m.

•

·IIJ CioNtiN
Ill Nlglll Cour1
7:35 (I) Sanfol!l And Son
1:00 I]) MOVII: A ,._ For Every

::S"'"· ;::
M.S

u~-1ry.

..... (2:00)
(JJ
Cll MecG,v. A
bOunty aida Mac In eavlng a
j!!;etty Bulgarian aclenlllt. (R)

e

•m;

ai til Tho MCqi:le PlaMI

(PI 3 Of tl Ancient
organism&amp; In the sea crteted
tho! atmosphere loi Nrth life.

Top Colh pold. Old lumfture

cuboordo,

qulfto,

otlontol,

"'·~·-·.,

OIH........
polnll. . .
.... ~ •• 54.

iaurprllld
eo Meior Dad Mac 11
vm•n he learn&amp;

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltvt'ilock

I

54 MIICIIIaneoua ·
Marchandlee
44

that he moy
21

1, 2, or 3br, IJ&gt;I. 3300.1400 por
mo. All utiiHIOe pold, lllpooh
!'l'caulred. Contlct Llf•rett•

. I II VQCIII 111rp - lor 1111. CIH 11 4-9112·
30norl14-181-1113.

f2·

114-445-m3,
422•.
.

i

fumlahed, .U utllhlaa paid, Including cobll. ldNI lor ono por·
.an, l=oeter'a Mabile HOme
P•rk,l14-441-1102.

251-1331.

&amp;14-44f.
.

1br,· ra•l woodburnlna llrwp4aca,

2 bedroom !11&gt;1 Now Hoven,
kllch., lumlohod, corpotod,
ploy ground lor chlldron boolc
ronl 1111. por month. Hud
accepted.

3G.......U..

tor....... Cor·
Nlco lilting, laundry
t•cllltlaa avallllblll. Cill11t-ttt.
:1111 EOH.
2 bodr- apto.

l&gt;l!ld.

Alwlyo lho lowo14 ..,-1p11on
prlcoo, 11 K-Mor1'o· Pliormocy,
colt todoy tor prlco qUOII. 114-

Crodil Sorvl..., 1g90
F•rm aperat'"g l011n1 aveii•IM
l Ohio llnkod dopooh progrom
~ppUcatlona, C1il our Jackeon
onlce, 1.-.2211-15117.
Fonnoll C. Vory condition.
Looko good. a- t14-247·

4"$.

'

lnl'l Cub Tractor, Wllii9Wing mt·
chino, plow._cuMivator, 11115;
2000 FOrd, ;m~rp, h,711; 3010
~ll DI::~JrNm PuN, $4,350.
114-J
.
~lm'o Form EQulpmonl, SA. 35,
Welt G•lllpoiJa, 41:4441-lmi
Wide alllectlon new I ...... farm

oond, 104-171-210:1.
50 yordo corpot pod, Loloor,
$525, chock uo out lor qualfty l
low on-. llcllohon RUN. 114-

Hll, trade, 8:00-1:00 wMkdaya,
Sa1. dUN-.

441·,444.

A gOOd Ulod h..vy duty Konmoro Wolhor, •121. 114-317·
7117.
.
Auto Woohor'oJ.. Ml.iO:octrlc
Dty01'1, $15; Ull
like
ntw, $65; Electric Ra9'1 tiOi
Goo
Rongo'o
PO;
Dlolto
Aolrlgorotor"o,
wnhlr"o, $10 oich. AN Applilrlcll hll I 30 do~ QUI,..._
too. llllbort Swl-'o UOod Applloncoo.t. Comer of Rand ond
Porch "'· Klnougo, 114-4417473.

Mo;

u-

USED APPLIANCES
drylll, rolrlgorol-

othlr """'"· $78.

11320 Donno Grllo.

eon

114-1112-

·

Cub ~ Wllh ~~-o.
~ble.
1180 Folrmonl
po~o oor. 1177 Chivy Wog0r1.
K1101ono Hutor.l14-fl2·3773.
F l - l o r 1111. 135/IOid. 114-

~231~1~301~-~
· ~~~~~
Flo ow od lor 1111. 114-112.,244.

Flaw' a c d1 nice plclc-up loed,
- - ook~ ooh1••l hickory.
1150 POl lood, _ , JJIUgh, 114-

Ill - .
·
Floirol dlvonfiOrl ond choir. Ell·

oollonl

oond~lon.

114-84..2153.

Frigldolro wo- a clryor, 40ft.
IIYI'II. Ultntlon llddlr, warm
=~ wood ..ove, ... 1141, 11uu 112:10.

w..-,
rongoo. Ski-

New, never UMd wattr fln.ra.
Rlduced price. 814 411 4111.

C-IIotot. C.lll14-441-l'SII.

Wotorbod lor Salo: 100 Ronoh

Aoolllncoo,
Rlvor Ra. looldo SI-

Moytog dryor, -u woM:
Alllonoble.I1W7N517.

PICKENSI'URNIIVRE

NlwiUoiid

Houaehold turnta~. 112 mi.
Jarrlc,.o Ad. Pt. Pl .... nt, WV,
0111:104-1715-1450.

S1rtit, Kantup. 111 ••• 8222.

55

Building
Suppllel

Block, brick. ...., . .e, win·
- · llntllo, ole. Cl•ucto Win- · Rio Grondo, OH Coli 1142411-1121.

tractOI'I I

~--~----- ···~.,

1:011(1)~

'~

81 .
Home
_Improvement•

1:30 all Cly A devaiOprntnt

:·.

projlc1 crNtn havOc when H
levels 1 graveyard. t:;1
· IUl Cologo llnkelbeU
illl Hogan l'ltltlly Sandy
aecldentll1y bumpa her head,
lollng f)er lhor1·term

..

'

ai~'iCita..
1:35 (J) N1A llaaklllllll
1:00 e (2) illl MOVIE: 'Wiilfe

lmplamlnta. Buw,

MIIIHY' Ferguton

1522.

Ono """ ld" coin plcklr,
oxc cone!. 304-115-4151.

63

Llveltock

- - - -c.-25 hood Ill Durac
Rlody to go. Wolghl
lb.I14-H7-M11.

Plgto.

OfiPIOL

41

Pllnl ,.,. hoo loddloo one!
TIOII. 30H71-4014.

4114--- _..,_ ""'·
64

Hly&amp;Graln

lnoldl.
M.00.81tttlf ~~I
·

•1.10 lilr- 111 •

-

~E

FOI IIIIFOIMAIION CAU 992·3194

71 Autoe tor Sale

'

DOE.&amp;J'r
l-OOK VE:RY

MUCH LIKE

Ron'o TV" Sorvlco. opoolollzlna
In Zonllh OliO Nrvlclna moot
athar branda. HauN·caiT•, 1t.o
oomo oppllonco ropolro. WV
304-171-2318 Ohio 114-441-

APARPOT.

..,,

2454.
Aolary or c1bla tool driUing.
Mo8t wella compleltd aame
~:'~802.
IIIH and lilY~,

AHANDeOME"
PQINCE W!Tl-1
AWITCH'e
CUR6EON
HIM.

Bf!lek upirationa are
ch&amp;MIIod Into tho! ~tfor
convnunlty control.

1111 MUflllly lkown M I
· asku tho! crew to becOme ,
role modeltt tor sornt young

reporter~. t:;1
ellll Allen lletlon Slkn and
Oeorgo follow,the 1ra11 of a
1!!/aterloul Tanctoneae box.

t

&gt;':

Davie
Saw·VIG
lorvlco, . ::
G-an Crook Ad. Plrto, oupo ,,.. '
ptloo, pick... """ """""'·
~~;;

!

I.

BoJ&gt;IIc Tonk Punlllna.-o~l'J,I
Co. AON EVANS ENnAP"'"",

BARNEY

.'

A~f'fA~JJ ~E .

Jeelloon,OH1·~37..a

Plumbing &amp;
Heating ·

PLAYIN' A

''
A'

•

GAME

10:00 I]) 700 C!Ub With Pet

Carter'• Plumbing
on~ Hlllift!l
. Four11!1ncl PTno ,
Golllpollo, Ohio .
114-441-3881
•

Rabartaaon
(!JNowiWIICh

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration .

.

(JJA81ngitog81rMm
Featu~ Itt tho! l.andla family
whO combine their unique
muotical allis, '!lllgiOUI laltt1

wiring, new ..,... or ,.,..,.,

:

S1::f.1&amp;.,~~

117UI""•-oo.,... """'·

84
·•

IUio. 1171 - k lport.
431 englno. 11..a-nM.

Llconiood llec1rlclon. R - r
Ell!clrlcol, :104-175-1711.

and

iRIII;;iddOI;;nl~l~ll.;.;::;.,f"~ooo;,.;..;;;,..,;c;;ilolii ' 1

IIX7, - . . . oor,

~~~'1::m:

t•ra21

C'

• !IIi L

IILCifiEIItt-114417-1?20.

\

,.

........
Uoeo ••• ...,-- Home- '
Gorwol """""''

"""llelatoh.
·- .. _-

•i

.._lllttt.
.....

......
.
.,=. .

alllr WGIId And WI IDime

VIol
Clll'tllt lllwl IIIII
I .....

'roll

h4...... ;1UCilllllfl1 .....

7111.

985-4422

;~~~~~~;=~ :

,.11::::::101

...

. -~'

"I don1 reilly teilllke 1had a WMI!end. 1
spent lt .lhOvellrlil the .dr!Wway."

r

.

e&lt;JI Cll ee11 • ea

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

ar• •
.• .

,
33 RebuH
34 Sharpener
'
35 Brazilian
r•
tapir
. '
37 Break t
bread '
38 Way back
then
39 Czech
river ·
41 Needlefish
' •.
42 Babble
.'

about
33 Shinto
temple

.

37 John
or Jane
40 Like some
records
43 Archl·
tectural
piers
44 Dragoon's
weapon ·
45 t-tarbOr
to
remember
48 Equal

.

j

'

''
•

'

''

DOWN
1 German
greeting
DAILYCRYPTOQUOid-Here'l ... teworklt:

11ft

·,

AXYDLB.UXR .
IILONGFELLOW
•

HLZB

AGUP

·

· liir·
·
.....,5! \.

TUPZ

HLZCG

C.KZWDCFHF

~

CaNtil!

.
'

JLZJ

•• c till fR)

1114 0 . Tonnadl, ......_.,.

• I

. ·t

...,

.

11-.10 Cll MOVIII ... I a Oldllll,
. . . . (II) (2:00)
.
11:00(J) IIIIi. I I Alllll

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

ACROSS
2 Actress
1 That's
Jackson
· funny!
3 Ugly
·s Palm oft
emotion ·
· 10 Legislate
412 Walter's
hlmmell
writing
5 Strong
13Hep
suit
8 Venice's
f5 Mr.
Cad'lacocca
18 Negative
7Much
17 Dutch
loved one 21 Epoch
8
Wine's
· 22 Come
river
delicacy
In flrsl
1.8 Thick soup
'
(Fr.
I
24
Days ol yore
20 Watch It!
23.Scornful · 9 Journey 25 Draper's
11 Term
measure
smile
27 Get to
. of oHice 28 Bread
one's
14 Novelist
or whiskey
VIdal
28 01 a
feel
18 Italian
joyous
28 Mare's
staple
celebration
mate
29Bombasl 19 Slur over 30 Survey
20 Exclude 32 Hold oft ·
30HaWk
31 Came

·~

a.lilr, o.- Tho

a

C..Eml, 01110

by lHOMAS JOSEPH

priCIIOIII ._..1111 when
Orant and Mllcl'a aunt hU
an effllr.

~.•un.a

eoeo1± llltiTIIIIIIII

~~::::lii ·~J

I. L HOLLON
TRUCI(ING

.I

' .

four~rd

One letter itarida for another. ln.this ~ample A is used
for the three L'., X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoetroplies. the left8th and formeUan ol the words are all
hints. .Eich day the.code letters a~ dilfthnt.
.
caYPfOQUO'n

8

'

•.

10130 (!) Dawn'ell8jtr Ugltl Ralph
McOII--.aad during.the
,.,. and 1101 u - Of 1111 .
ptlll!tlnlniii1CI
lnftulnlllll8oulhlrll oppotlll 111 ol racial

'••

!!...r;.,.•r rtalt91\ unllla ~11ad

Twlllflht x-

o•..-.NIWI

ell!, lnd~~~~~-111;- "'
wlrlna. ..........,.. Ripon, 114- .
245-ATL
'

~ General H.-.lf'lll
Alhly Wol• Do11Wrr. ti,OOO

family lraclitiona Into two

diatrulld whl!n an onnoytng
-~ 10 move next

'

....., tlan
s'""""""
Eloot~col con......
l Malnllinance, Comm.;..

1171 -

NalltYMII NOW

1:30 (JJ Co logo llllkllllll
!Ill ea Dealgome wTho Sugarbakar ladill
ntgOtlate for a new van. t:;1

.

104 11NU1.
1171 lloolao ......_ liD, 11 I.
aule. 111f' lfc..lno. uo; air,
1171 Lillo.. aoto~.
tu~ aood llru. MW lt•rtw,
lirakoo,
liiC - -'
.....
111ind
411 0577.

.

project creates havoc when It
". vela • Qr8Y8yard. t:;l
0 Primo ,._ WNOlllng

"HOOTIN'
HOLLER
CRIBBAGE!'

bold

·.

38. Por~er

i ·L.Mr King LNol
e G City A dlveiopmlr1t

i

.1... . . . I

82

I'MP~E!oL..Y

:~

::l

an

TrJ11spotla1•0r1

PlgiDM Go To Dlo' NIC
Monu, N!&amp;At Tho
Movllt (2.
(JJ
Cll
• 'Rich Men,
Single WWoooonnio111dri AIC Molldlr
Nlglll Movie (2:00)
(!) Eyu On Tho Prln n Out
Of The Aahail (1987-8) Q
(JJ Eyu On Tho Prtu n

e

rae-

tor, 1harp, Wlplaw, lldjuatabla
dloc, 5ft """" hog, f4g50;
Owner win flnllnc•, 114-281-

,

IIJ Mu-, lito W_roll
Ill Cllun:h S1Nlt ltatlon

.

'

John Deere, 3010 tractor; wide
front, lhorp, w/John Dooro 3
bottom plow, 2 row com planter,
tr11nopon dloc 1 200 filii""
.,.,.,, W/CIIrt • booln, IUIO.
owner will llnonco. 11...,..
IIU
... ...,. F..rgu.on 110 Dietel
Troclor. DUOiwhloloDt~!::ot· 150

HUUAS: Mon.- Fri. 12:00 to 6 p:m .
Saturd•y 9 a.m. to 12 noon
12· 14·81·1 mo.

Servtces

.,

l·lt-M
NORTH
+A 107
. • J!Ot&amp;$

defeaciossw8Ro a

illl ALP Newly
ordained
0"-"'a
""'--··-·
Melrneclan mlnlater All must '
officiate 11 a ceremony. Q

Finn

~~--~~~~~~l =441~..~311~~~------~
3 ook occaalonll tobloo, II'•· loby bed with .,.,,... ond

SPECIAl ACCOUNTS FOR
N

{

A

alhtmptl to rovlve.the old
Jump Sir• t:;1
IIJ PrlmiNIIft

· 2Runa
gl- uaed
oommlcol
-·
aood,
In oonventent
lltor., "1450. 114211 ..... 11+

311L E.o.E.

a lather.

yNr 2015

pollee

1 bod""'m lplrlmonl In Mid·
dlopon. Toto! otocirlc. Wotor ond
khch•oi lurnlohod. 114-11112416'1
ori14-H2-1131.

¥OUcherw

becoiTia

i liD cadetJumpIn theIII:Wt

Apartment
for Rent

llal~

Tonight

e &lt;Jl Mlllll" Famnr
~~~A''~Q

lundo!

.-nc..

GDDO

'MANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTER

(JJ In~

··:::::;::::=:.____ ..··r.,

-

comDI•e tap, new

59

7:06 (I) Jollerlolll
7:30 (j) Colo It llaaketlleU

.an~p

Buslneu
Opportunity

:::---~--..:.-.1..:~;;;;;;;;;====:..1

gunor
llooono,
loealnnooo, Nrlouo gul111ril1,
Jefl Wllmalar lnllruclor, 114-:441-1077, llmnod oponlngo,
llon-Th .... Sal

Ill·II~

-!

I"'"""

Financial

"":

·-·~~78. '

eoun_Q

o ..miYico

1000 '•,

I•U

When North transl~rred lo hearts,
South's cards appreciated in value,
tJ8 7$
justifying the jump to three hearts.
North was happy to accept the game
EAST
invitation, but making same was no WEST .
+KH
+J8642
cakewalk. Declarer had to choose well.
.Q
•au
in the play.
tK9Z
East won the spade king, cashed the tQ 10
+AQ 82
+J7654
club ace and returned a spade. South
SOUTH won the queen and imm~iately
cashed the ace of diamonds. Then
+Qs.
'!'AK73
came tbr~ rounds of ~arts, followed
tA613
by . king o( clubs (a diamon4 was
+K 10 9
pitched from dummy) and a club ruff.
Declarer threw a diamond on the ace
Vulnerable: East·West
of spades and played a low diamond
Dealer: South
from dummy. The defenders were
dead in -the water. If East played the Soudo
Weot Norllo . Eu!
Paa
king, that would drop his partner's · I NT
Pass
2 t•
All pill
queen. If be played low, West would 3 •
Pass
I•
win the queen but have to give declar'Jacoby transfer bid
era ruff and a sluff to take care of his
in
d· +
remaining diamond loser.
. 0 pen g 1e~ · .4
Declarer misht have tri~ lor a ·dif, low dtamond.at tr1ck two, before cash·
ferent type ohlimination, playing out mglhe dub ace. But that would be the
the black side-suits and drawing , ~rong play If ~darer held A·IO·z of
trumps, then leading a low diamond diamonds and mtended playing low to
from his hand to dummy's jack. That the 10 later.
would succeed whenever West started
Lesson: Don't be afraid to jump in
with K-Q of diamonds.
partaer's known long suit after a
As the cards lay. East could have transfer bid if your band sell better

IUl AIIIIOII And Cottollo

.

For Lease

WIU bobvoil I~ my homo I""
lulavillt tlaad,l14-441-2141.

Sawing, Somoono To lloko Tope
6 Slocu In my homo! 1 14-387•
7452.

-=

'

Wonlod to Buy: 0ooc1 tJaod111
••:,::1·- - - - - - - ,,
llilno, 1140251'1251, 114-441- ,1...
.
74 Motorcycle&amp;

Mill Pouto'l Illy Clio Color.
Salo, oHordabll, chlldclro. -F
e a.m. ~ 8:30 p.m. Agn 2 10.
Bttarw. aher achoaf. DroP-Ina
welcome. 114-441-8224.
;

"Will .,... Out !KIIIdlng
&amp; baHmenla, bur 01
Iron. 114-31t-1711.

1111
·II, XLT
. .11
-4
441-1331
oflor
5 caM

·.

·No. 3 1belaw.

you develoP frOf" :step

BRIDGE

NewiHour

:::r •

47 wanted to Rent

'

f t C6mplo1o lho chucklo quotod
• V by lilting In the milling words

. . Legion- Usurp - Dim.ly-Zircon- POLICY
·
A lnvtal memo had gotten lnto a.group of important
papers. 'Better gel rid Of this one," smiled a co-worker,
"before It becomes POLICY"
·
·

·= ·-01
1T=!..

'•.

.

I

SCIIAM-i.ETS ANSWIIS

IIJ
1(2) Col1ga l!lauetlleH
(1) ". . . - c : (1) . e Cll Current Affair
(!) Ill Meollel L8ltNr

.

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Situation
fill o,. appllcotlon. Pill" brlna
raeuma at thJ. tlma to 311 VI. .,__,.._wanted .
Junk Clrt WHh or wHhout Union 51., Athan•, Ohio or call·
f . 1 moto,... Call Llrry U"el~ 614-- B1HM·»&gt;1 lor lurthor lnlor- C.re for Slnlor CUizena. Home
-lon.
aw•w from homa. Silting room
3,88-8303.
-Ina, Coollna, with T.V. G•m• t•ba•. 114-112·
Prlv•t• lnvtltor will bur alngle Ell!'!-.
A~~etlan
ServiCe T_.
'
family homes or tmall r.nl•l
units, G•lllpolla Are-. 814.f46- nlclett Haded, Eatablillled Hove oponlng "'' Z oldooty """
Complny, Exc. Bonollo l Good cupent1, rn~le or lem•l• In ~V'
6362.
Poy. Sond AHumo 1o HVHC home. 614-667·,3402.
Poolllon, P.O. Box 101 . . _ ,
OuiHI
HIVe prtvale and Hml-prl'l•te
Pre 1940 quilts. Any condition. OH45140.
roon'll In our home tor alderlw
Cash Paid. Call 6t4.S92-5657 or
Froo Cologne! Flrl4 5 10 men or women. Bedllll or
614-592-2461 .
algn up ta Mil A~. b.l.Avan otherWIH.' Country atmosphere.
wa.-.od To Buy: Plno POll, llyor 11 _ .. 114-11112·7110.
Plenty ot clun air. Have
rwf•rence. 20 yHrw axperlanctl.
Bros. 614-446·1167 8a.m. ta
4
Holr Stylill Won1odl Holr Hop. 114.. 4..3014.
'
p.m.
pMing, Silver Bridge Plul,
Man1gar Ucanu P,.,.,... 11+
Good UNd pl•no, 11 ...256-1251,
61 4-441-31511.

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Irate mom to teen, 'Your room
is a mess. I should charge~
high rent!" The teen replied,
"What? For this ······I"

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

IIJ Ho·Men
IIITopc.d
1:31 (I) Andy Qllffltlt
7:01) lcli...C.OW • Mrs; King

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PRINT NUM ERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

cae NeWt 1;1
lIll Mrea
TI\IM'I c:omp.ny
w• And Wollome
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To It ·

Wanted to Buy

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Echoing Mo-o -ldontlli
Contor ond 1CF IIR·DD 31 bod .
VISMIASTERCAAD.
locillly lo currently occo~tlng U.S. CHARGE GUARANTEED,
~.
r1 11
RN"1 REGARDLESS OF CREDIT
opp IIca II ono "" PI
mo
RATING. CALL NOW! 1-102-142·
ond U?N"o. Siortlng wogo~ LPN 1087 EXT. U2524 _
.
$1.25 por hour one! RN"o &gt;10.00
per hour. lnttrelted partln

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Al l Yard Salol llu11 Bo Paid In
Ad vonco. D~AOLINE: 2:00 p,m.
the day befare tM ad Ia to run.
Sunday edition
2:0G p.m.

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Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

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Fo und· Port Collll 14
Corrnoi Churoh. Coli 114-M•
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Ohio

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BEEN G£111NG A LITII.E I.OWER F.V£R SINCf. .
WRJ.ROGERS

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�Porneroy--Middlepot"t. Ohio
,

THIS-

.The
Golden

WEEK'S
OA ·es·- ·
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-Years•••

'

Qhio Lottery

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Piclk 3
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Pick 4

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1635

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Insert··
'

Clearing lonlibt. Low In ·mid ilia. Suany WedDMclay.
mcha In mlcl 408. '

•

MEIGS
BOYS

,'· Jan. 30-Vinton Co.-Away
·Feb. 2-ltlpre-Ho
...
'
Feb. 3-Athens-Awily

Vol.4o: No. 11.i

P~meroy-Middlc,port; Ohio, ·Tuesday, January 30. 1990

Copyrlthted 1110

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i

GIRLS

.

By·LEE LEONARD . The House reconvenes Tues·
UPJ8talebouae Reporter
day at 11 a.m. and the Senate at
. COLUMBUS . - State Sen. 1:30 p.m.
Richard Finan, · R·Cinch\natl,
Under current law, the Manswants to 'apply Ohio's death field doctor accused of murder·
penalty for the first time to lng his wife and hiding her body
cold-blooded murderers who In his newly-purchased house In
pJtn their crbnes In detail. ·
:Erie, Pa.. would not be subject to :Fina!l alsb·wants capital pun· the death penalty eyen If
lshment tor anyone who kills convicted.
while stealing qr selllilg lllegl
The death penalty Is available
drugs.
. - ..
only In eight aggravating clr·
. Expansion ofthe death penalty cuinstances, Including murder
Is the subject of a bill sponsored for hire, mass murder, murder to
by Finan, ' now before the Ohio· escape arrest or 'Imprisonment,
Senate Judiciary Committee.
murder w.hlle committing

EASTERN
BOYS

Feb. 2-Southom-HoiM
Feb. 9-SyM_. Vahy-Away
Feb; 16-0ak IIII-H01110

GIRLS

Feb. 1-Southom-Away
Feb. 1-Sy-.. Vahy-H.ne , .

SOUTHERN

.

Fob. 2-Eastorn-Away

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GilLS

-----------------BOYSSCHEDULE~
. --~----~----~
MEIGS HIGH' SCHOOL
BOYS BASKETBALL .

Nov. 24-Athens ......................... Home
_Dec. 1-ll!ller ............................. Awiy
Dec. 8- Tnmble .. : ........................ Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonvllle-Yorll ........... Home
Dec. 15.,-~tllston ........ : .............. Away
Dec. 19-Vmton Co..................... Home
Dec. 22-;-Belpre.............. ...... ........ Away
Dec. 29-Lopn ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hockin&amp; ............. : Home
Jan. 12-lliller ............... :........... Home
Jan. 16-W~rren ................ ...... .... Away
Jan. 19-Tnmble............... .......... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonvitle-York.. ........... Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. 3-Athens ............................ Away
Feb. 6-Aieunder ....._. .................. AWI'f
Feb. 9-Federal Hockm&amp; ............... Away

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL -·
. 1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALl

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Miller ............................: Away
Nov. 24-Federal Hocking ............ Home
Nov. 28-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 1-Hannan Trace .. ........... ..... Away
Dec. 5-Kypr Creek ........... .. .... ... Home
Dec. 8-Southwestern .................. Away
-Dec. 15-Southern :...................... Away
· Dec. 16-Symmes Valley .............. Home Dec. 22-Dak 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-Sout~western ... ;.. .......... Home
Jan.26~K,,er Creek .. :............. ..... Away.
Jan. 27-MIIIer .... , ...................... Home .
Feb. 3;-Southern ........................ Home · ·
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Feb. 16DOak Hill ............. , ..... , ..... Home

Nov. 25-Southwestein ........, . ....... Home
Nov. 28-Ky~r Creek.. ......... ........ Away
Dec. 1-Dak ill .......................'.. Home
Dec. 5-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 8-Hannar) Trace .................. Away
Dec. IS-Eastern .................... ... . Home
_Dec. 16-Eastern Pike ........... ....... at 0.11 .
Dec. 22-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern .~ ............... Away
Dec :· 29.- Athens ·..................... .... Home
Jan. 5-Dak Hill ........................... Away
Jan. &amp;-Gallipolis ........................ Home
Jan. 12-Kypr 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

Local news briefs- --

------~---------GIRLS SCHEDULE,--------------~

Nov. 20-Sc!ut~rn ........................ :.... Away
Nov. 30-lldler .......... :..................... Home
Dec. 2-Ea.sttm ....................... ,......... Away
Dec. 7-Tnmblt ................................ Home
Dec. 11-Nelsonville-York .................. Away
Dec. 14-Wel!ston ............................ Home·
Dec. 18-Vinlon Co............................ Away
Dec. 2-1-Belpree ........ :..................... Home
Jan. 4-Aieunder .............................. Away
Jan. 8-Ftc!ml Hoclfinc ..................... Away
Jan. 11-llller .................................. Away
Jan. 15-Eistem ............................... Home
J11. 11-lrh•bl~ ................................ Away
Ja. 22-Ntls•rnvlllt-York ................... Home
Jan. 5-Wellston ............. ·.................. Home.
Jan. 29-VInltn Co .... :...................... Home
fell. 1-Belpre ....... :........................... Away
'fell. 5-Aitundtr.. ........... ................ Home·
Feb. 8-Fedt111· Hockinc ....... ............. Home
Feb. 10-Southim .....................:...... Home

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 27-North Gallia ........... :............ Away
Nov. 30-Harlllln Trace ..................... Home
Dec. 2-lleics .................................. Home
Dec. 4-K~pr Creek.. ...: ... .... ......... ..... Away
Dec. 6- Trrmble ............................ ..... Away
Dec. 7-Southwestern .......... ..... .... : ... Home
gec. U-Southern ............................ Home
ec. -Symmes Valley ................ .... Away
Dee. 16-Feder~l Hocking ........... ........ Away
Dec. 21-Dak Hrll ............................ . Home
Jan. 4.- Hannan Trace ......................... Away
Jan. 10-Trimble ............................... Home
Jan. 11-North Gallja ...... .................. Home
Jan. 15-leics .................................. Away
Jan. IS-Southwestern ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Fecleral Hocking ..... ......... .... Home
Jan. 25-Kypr Creek ..................... ... Home
Feb. 1-Sout~rn ........................ ....... Away
~~~- :-Oak Hrll .. ....... .. ,, ................ ... Away
e . -:Symmes Valley ..................... Home

-Public transit grants awarded

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-lleigs ...................... .......... !lome
Nov. 27-Kyfer ·creek ........................ Home
Nov. 30-0a Hill ..... .......................... Away
Dec . 4-;North Galli a ................. ........ Home,
Dec. 7-Hannan Trace ...... .... ............. Home
Dec . 11-Eastern ......... ..... :...... .. .. ....... Away
Dec . 14-Southwestern ...................... Away
Dec. 18-Waterford ........................... Home
Dec. 21-S~mmes Valley .................... Away
Jan. 2-Ne sonville-Vork ............... .:... Away
- Jan. 4-0ak Hill .................... :........... Home
Jan: 11-Kycer Creek ......................... Away
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace .................... , ..Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York.. ............ ::.. Home
Ja. 25-North Gallia ... :•. :.. .......... .-....... Away
Jan. 29-Waterford .............. ........... ,.. Away
Feb. !-Eastern .... ............................ Home
Feb. 5-Symmes Valley ................... :. Home ·
Feb . 8-S011thwestern ....... :...... ,..... ... Home
Feb . 10-Mei~s .................................. Away

will

Board
employs
drivers,
teache-rs

More emphasis will be placed
this year on training citizens In
.Red Cross CPR and fir st aid, as
well as training more ,
Instructors.
While a project was s tarted
last year to Improve the radio
communications network, .the
plan this year Is 1ii' get two new
towers In Columbia and Olive ·
Townslps which will give better
Ty;,o s ubstitute teachers and
two-way radio coverage for the
three substltut~i',bus drivers were
co1~~her ·emphasis will be on employed ~~ · Monday night's
meeting of the So~ thern Local
School Dls!Tlcl's Board of Educaes tabllshlng the EMS office as an
Emergency Services Office,
tlon 'at the high school.
Hired as substitute teachers
coordinating necessary lnforma·
lion on fires, ~MS, hazard
were Nancy L. Basye and David
materials, disaster serVices--and
Kaufman. The new substitute
.....
.,b
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"' •··' Roblnosri,
·• -·
other related emergenoles,•·
.
·
us ' dr 1vers ·~are "arl
Max Hill, Jr., and Ronald Wood,.
The demahd for services Is
reflected In the number of calls.
.The board alsO employed ,Lots
Ihle to provide homebound tutorEmergency runs In 1988 totaled
2311 wllh transfers totaling 60l. _ lng for a student. and Bill Hensler
In 1989 the system handled a total
as the junlot-senlror prom advlof 2489 emergency runs and 689 sor. A speech service agreement
transfers.
was signed by the board with the
A highlight last year Insofar as -Meigs County Board of Educaestabllshlng the EMS afflce as a
tlon. This provides for therapy to
central clearing point for lnfor· Southern students from th
matlon, training and communi· county therapist at a cost unde~
TRAJNII'IG lii08T IMPORTANT - Having all reference
_cations with various agencies, Title 6B of not to exceed $3 600
materials and books a!onc with video equipment In one location for
was going to a one number annually .
'
easy acceaa In tralnln&amp; programs Is lmporlailt to EMS lnatructora.
all
fire
The
board
adopted
a
policy
system
for
the
county
for
Here Bob Dyer, Melp EMS administrator, left, and Joe Struble,
department and squads.
chalnnan of the Board of Trustees, the governing body for the .
statement about training for .
Also last year the basic and
custodians of the district. It
Melp EMS, begln,flllln&amp; the new library cabinet which has been
conatrucled In the EMS Training Center.
·
advanced
training
programs
prqvldes that there be annual
.
were redesigned to comply with
training for custodians In the
stale regulations and guidelines .
knowledge and use of products
In terms of progress at lhe
for cleaning with the tralnln t
be provided by the firms wJiic~
local leve l, the hard work arid
dedication of the volunteer persell the products to the scb00 1
sonnel that make up the system
district.
·
•
•
was
In
m;my
cases
over
and
The
Athletic
Boosters
were
Public transit grants In the amount of $106,982, have been
beyond -the call of duty • Bye r
given approval to build a bar·awarded to the Village of Middleport to provide operating
concluded.
becue pit at the high school. In
assistance to tl)e public transportation system (Blue Streak
,
Cab) for 1990.
D
other action, the Racine Home
Announcement of the award was made Tuesday by the Oblo
NallonalBankwasdeslgnatedas
the depository for school funds ,
Department of Transporatlon, Bernard B. Hurst, P.E.. ODOT
and Charles S. Norris, board
director, Sen. Jap Michael Long, and Rep. Mary Abel.
ershlp for the people of Sou- president was ·au thorlzed to
Former Athens County Repub- ship, city and county officials.
The awards consisted ol$47,3561n federal funds administered
" I also want to be an active theastern . Ohio," Payne
lican Party Chairman Larry
attend the Feb. 9 and 10 meeting
through ODOT and state funds of $59,626. "These dollars will
contact person ·In Columbus for concluded.
Payne
says
his
goa-l
as
a
of
the Ohio High School Boards ·
en&lt;1ble people In Middleport and neighboring rural areas to
He Is a graduate of Ohio State Association to be held . In
non-government agencies, such
candidate
for
the
Ohio
House
of
have a dependable and affotfable public transportation
Representatives Is "to become a · as volunteer !Ire departments,. University where he received a Columbus.
system," Hurst said.
·
strong voice for the average unions, rural water district. bachelor of science In education
Attending the meeting were
He explained that state funds are available through the Obo
and history . He Is a past vice Norris, president; Denny Evans,
etc.," he says.
working
man
and
working
Pl!bllc Transporatlon Gr~~t Porgram. Funds are 11warded to
president of the Athens Cqunty vice president; Gary Willford,
woman of Southeastern Ohio."
match a share of approved federal grants administered by 'the
· · Payne, 41, seeks his · party's
He went on to say that he "will Cooperative Extension Office Scott Wolfe. and Sue Grueser,
Urban Mass Transportation AdmlnistraUon.
.
· nomination for the House seat In work'closely with lclcal chambers Advisory Board, president of the board members, Dennie Hill,
the 94th District comprised of of commerce, small businesses Athens County Farmers ' treasurer, and Bobby Ord, superAthens, Meigs and Gallla and labor. In order to compete Market, a member of the Alex· Intendent.
.,
, Counties. ,
succe$sfully with the rest of the ander Lions Clull, a past chair· '
No ·one was Injured In a fo~r ·veblcle colllslon _at 5: 15 p.m:
·
He has been an employee of the state, the 94th· District must man of the Athens Architectural
Monday .on SR. 7, 0.1 of a mile south of milepost 6, near
Sl'l'\l"
Athens .office of Columbia Gas of retain Its present businesses and Preservation Group., and . a
Pomeroy, according to tl)e State Hljtbway Patrol.
. ,
0
- .J .,
develop new job opportunities for membi!r of the Qhlo Repul)llcan
Ohio since 19'78.
Troopers' said the accident occurred when Carl E. Qualls, 81,
Payne, who ser\ied as GOP . Its residents.
Party and the National Replibll·
Pomero:Y, driving a 1981 eadlllac, went lett of center, colllcllng
I!&gt;....,.
J"
county chairman from 1983 to
''Ha'llni beeil a village -m ayor, can Congressional Committee.
with a 1979 Dodge Powerwagon driven by Richard A. Bowen, 44,
His wife, Susan, lias been a
1988, and as mayor of Albany I know what It Is like to operate a
Pomeroy, then hit a 1985 Chevrolet Impala, driven by William
from 1984 to 1987, says "special local government on a ilmlled teacher and elementary superV!· '
1
-B. Ryan. Jr., 52, Belpre, Ohio and finally a 1977 Olds Cutlas
.'
sor In Vinton County schools for
Interest groups have clout In budget:
.•
·
driven by Daniel W. Young,39, Pomeroy. Damage was
. Columbus, but who speaks up for
"Consequently, as • member the past12years.ThePaynesare
HUNTINGToN, W.Va. (UPI)
.. moder11te to the Powerwagon, Cutlass and Cadillac and minor
the average working man and pf the ()hlo ~gl~lature, I will the parents of three daughters, · - , The fatal shots aimed at
to the Impala.
_
·
bring tq · It · a common sense ages, 10, 5 and 3.
women?"
.
· · Huntington pollee officer Paul
The patrol cited Qualls for failure to yield one-hal! of the
Payne says he will work approach td government. And I'll
Harmon were fired from less
. ·roadway. ·
_ cloaely with local, village, town· proVide positive, energetic lead·
,
than four feet away, an FBI
· Another Meigs County accident occurred at 11:30 a.m.
weapons
specialist testified Mon·
Monday on SR. 7 at milepost 9, also In Salisbury Township. No
day
In
the
m11rder trial of Bobby
.one was Injured. ·
_
Dean
Stacy.
·
Troopers said CharleS Lewis, 66, Pomeroy, driving a 197~
Agent
William
Albrecht tesU·
Ford LTO, was making a right turn when Timothy L. Kincaid,
fled
that
l)e
conilucted
tests on
32, Stockport, Ohio, drlvlne a 19'(7 International dump truck,
the
bullet
boles
In
Harmon's
'
attempted to pass on the right and struck the rlcht aide of tbe'
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) classified as low Income.
bloodied llllrt and Jacket.
Kincaid car. There was moderate damage to the car; minor ·
One of every five Ohio children
The atucb', co~ by the
He said at leutoneottlveshotl
damage to the truck.
·
·
·
under age 6 was not covered by Health ~rtmeat'a Office of
wu
fired from leu than a foot .
The patrol cited Kincaid for failure to stop within the astured
public or private health lnsb- Jiealth P,ollcy all!l Analyals,
awa)', three were fired from leaa
alear _dlstance.
·
·ranee during 1987 and· that's ' · preaentl tile m01t recftt CvrreDt
· thaa four feet and the fifth from
hlcher than the national average, PopUlation Survey retultl from
'
.
an undetermined dlltance.
nya the Ohio Department , !)f, the census Bureau altd IIICludee
pr~be
He said br! ~pared the
Health:
' · ' state and naUollal retponaes to
amount of lead relldue on the
A study tbe department re- the IP'owint problem of the
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department are .
clothln(f to the IIIIOIIIIt producecl
leuecl Monday alao sbowl tbat unlnlured.
Investigating the :break.lq and i!nterlne of the Dennis and
by a pn almuar to the murder
more tban 1.23 mDllon Ohloalls
'1t'sdllturblqtof1Ddthatoue
Debbie McKinney I'Hidence on Painter Ridge ijoad In Sllem
weapoa trom vartou dlltancea.
bad no health eoverw. 75 of the 1f011111 il)oat atfectecl by
T~h~.
,
,
,
Harmon wu tlaln with hll own
pereat beiOIIIed to a family lack of bealtb coveraae neecll Accordll!i to the report 1\eltlll stolen Included pictures and a
~rvlce revolver, and beaten
bladed by aomeone who was . and uaes - theae' tervlc:es th'
stereo.
Nlth what prosecutors believe
employld or lll!lf-emptoyed. One moat,L' said Oblo Health Director
.Continued on paee 10
&lt;;onUnued on page 10
LARRY PAYNE
fourtb . of therle famUiel were
UlDtinued on pa&amp;e 10
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MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

other. states, and we're not husband had been beating her for
plowing any new ground ," said months so -s he stabbed htm to
death," said Finan .
the senator.
"People don 't want everyone
Finan said murdering a convenlence store clerk during a who commits murder to get the
holdup draws the death. penalty death penalty," said Finan.
while poisoning one's spouse "They want those people who do
does . not, because one Is cons I· violence .and really offend their
dered a vlolentcrbne by society . sensibilities to get the chair."
Finan's bill also permits the
Domestic relations are regarded
dealh penalty to 1M: Imposed by a
as Jess clearcut, be said.
"The public understands why jury or three-judge panel a
you km an Alton Coleman (con· second time If the first recom·
Victed of a multi-state murder mendallon Is thrown out because
spree) but It doesn't understand _of a technicality . .Upder current
why you kill Mary Smith, whose law, -the second panel could
reecommend only up to 30 years
. In prison without parole.

'

'

'

Fob. 1-Ealfom-ilomo
Feb. 5-SynnOI Ya·y-Ho...
Feb, 1-SouthwOitom-HO...

19~9-90

another felony, or the the killing vtolerit felonies. ·
.
of a trial witness, poUce officer; . ·-Finan, who .wrote Ohio's 1981
prison guard or high public dealh penalty law after the
official such as the president or earller one was declared uncon·
governor.
·stltutlonal, said he feels the most .
Finan's bill expands these Important part of his new pro~&gt;c
aggravating clrumstances to In· osalls applying the death penalty'
elude kllllng "In a cold, calcu· to murders In drug deals .
lateil and premeditated manner
He -said he Is not concerned
without any pretense of moral or about tinkering wltli the law even
though after nine Years. It still
legaiiUstlflcatlon."
It also adds murder while has not been tested with an
dealing drugs , Including . marl· execution.
· 'Basically·, ever~thlng here
Juana, and murder lithe offender
has previously ~n conVicted of · (In the bill) . has al~ady been_
_m urder or at least two .prior d.ecided by the !;upreine Court In

·. New state rules making it more
.difficult.for· volunteers
to
function
'

BOYS

'

.

Sen. Finan .proposes expanding death penalty

_Jan. 29-VInton Co.-HolM
_Fill. 1-ltlpro-Away
Feb. 5-Aiex....r-Homo

Feb. 3-Fed.Hodci..-Away
Fob. 9-SouthwOitorn-Away

.

2 Soctlono, 34 PogH 26 Cento
. A Multlmedlolnc. Nowopopor ·

'advanced EMT class
begin. ·
By Cllt\RLENE HOEFLICH
This, he pointed out, Includes
Dally Set1!1ne! Staff ·
Better trained emergency · training In starting of IV' s and
squad personnel to Include ·a filii ' tralnlnJZ In l!lvln~~: inlectlons for
· sports medicine program for the reactions to bee stings for EMS
.CO!Jnty's high school and youth · personnel.
leagull groups, along with a . Plans are also being made to
•broader radio communications Implement' more . ·."first re·
; network In the ccounty, are sponder groups"- In communi,
among the 1990goalsoftheMelgs iles. In 1989. according to the .
County Emergency Medical _ administrator, such a group was
formed In Columbia _Townshlp.
Services.
In reViewing the EMS program Byer said It was Very successful
In 1989, and looking to 1990, Bob In that It cut response time 15 to
Byer, EMS administrator, cited 20 m'lnutes In some cases .
the-Increase In Services and the · He described the first respond·
new s~te rules and regulations ers as men and women with a
which ~re making It more level of first aid training able to
for volunteers to assist a victim before the squad ·
arrlves-•·on •· the · scene,. but notOperating on two one-mill transporting serVice.
In 1990, Byer hopes to establish
·tevles gimeratlng $318,000 a year,
the' Meigs EMS, according to "first responder groups '.' In both
· Byer, Is the last truly volunteer Scipio 11,nd Chester Townships.
Another area which the EMS
EMS system In the state.
He said there are several administrator hoix-s to expand In
Individual volunteer EMS squads In sport medicine. Currently
In the state but they are not EMT's arj! on the sidelines with
backed by any type of county· the team physlplan at Meigs and
wide assistance, and the volun· Southern .games. Plans call for
teers are paid on a per run basis, the EMS to expand that to all
a practice not done In Meigs three hpgh schools · as well as
youth league groups; grade
County.
Byer said that currently there school -basketball and midget
are 170 men aad·womeq on .the football. The emphasis will be on
EMS roles, Including 140 trained training the coaches and EMS
In one .of the three levels of personnel to assist In •handling
certification, EMT, advanced ,. sports Injuries.
Byer reported that In 1989 the
and · paramedic, and about 35
updating of primary squads to
designated drivers.
According to Byer. there Is a larger module types was comcontinuing training program for pleted and a program started to
the volunteers. Currently a new. refurbish programs for older
basic EMT class Is underway ' primary module squads . This
with 18 new men and women year the Rutland ·unit Is scheenrolled and - on Feb. 15 a an duled to be refurbished.

• Ho. use
.r_1ayne candida
• te j or_ Oh..W

.

No one ·hurt in Monday wrecks

A u;en t ·

ml.n f;red at

close pange

Ohio's ·rate of tmiJlsured .

.~hildren

_Meigs deputies

t

t

hipter than' average ·

B, &amp; E ·

------·---

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

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