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••

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Pomeroy-Midd'eport. Ohio

4-The Daily Sentinel

POWEU'S

· triumphs

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
. 8 AM-10 PM

Apparently, Meigs CommiS·
stoner· Richard Jones doesn't
appreciate the attitude of certain.
emploj'ees of the Ohio Department of Development towards
Meigs County project proposals. ·
One of the employees for which
Jones expressed dissatiSfaction
with during Wednesday's regular session of the commiSsioners
was Randy Runyon, who heads
the Office of Appala.chla which

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e.l .Oily At ,._••, $~per VIII.
IIMII S.. Ja 4 tl!rv s.t. a tO
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OFF

ANY lUNCH

BANANAS

the timing for a bond lsslle is
Ideal since residents w!Jl experience such a small increase over
the 4-mllls which they are cur·
rently paying.
In addition to' the questions
a bout consolidation on the survey
form, it asl\s respondents to
"grade" the Board of Education,
the school adminiStration and .
teaching staff, as well as general
.accountability, communication,
curriculum. transportation and
extr acurricular activities.
It further solicits positive comments on the system, Identification of problems, and suggestions
on what can be done to correct
the problems.

Bloodmobile receives 80 pints of

'

l COLBY CHEESE
lI FROM MEAT
DEPT•. .
,

0 .OfF
lS2°
I

GLASS ·.

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GoM !Wy Ai ;.•• :; !· 111;_..1
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1-LB. PIG.

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Residents .or the Meigs Local
Deadline for f!llnghwith the
Schoo! District areel!couraged to
Meigs County Board or Elections
return the survey forms on the
for the May Primary Is Feb. 22 .
proposal for elementary school
In December the 4-mlll bond
consolidation and cons.tructiom
issue which financed the con·
of'two new elementary schools .
structlon of Meigs High School
The forms were mailed out In
will go off the tax dupilcate,
late January to more than 4,000
providing ·a significant decrease
registered voters. As of Wednes· . in property taxes in the Meig~
day . morning. Superintendent
Local SChool District.
James Carpenter reported that
To raise money to construct the
less than 600 had been returned.
proposed two new schools. It will
He urged residents to take:~lme
require renewing that 4-mllls and
to fill out and return I he forms so
adding either 1.25 ml!ls for two
truit when the Meigs Local Board
new schools, one through six, or
ofEducat!on.meetsnextTuesday 2.50 m!lls for two new schools,
they will ha:ve an _adequate basis
one through ~lght, It .has been
on which to make -a dec.ls!on on
pointed out:
,
whether a bond issue should be
Supt. Carpenter has said that
put on the May primary ballot .

00 OFF

'

CAMPBELL'S-32

Urge Meigs Local District
residents to ·return sunrey

POWELL'scouPON

. 12 OZ. PIG.

I

at tltude shoulq be •'inclus!on'a~y.
not elaborate on projet;:t spec!!- . affected if. funding for the prop- pres sed an Interest In the to't , but
not exclusionary," Indicating lcs .. other than to say It Is an osal in question can not be said they could not purchase the
thatthat!snotalwayshowthlngs excellent proposal which would secured.
lot and building because of the
are when a Meigs County project . save a number of jobs in the
. In another matter, thecommiS· high costs associated with renostarts up the chain of command county.
· ·
s!oners met with Bruce Teaford, vatlngor razing the building. The
to get to Department of DevelopJones reported he has ex. of Teaford Realty, who requested building has apparently suffer~d
ment coffers.
pressed his views on the matter a meeting to again discuss the damages as a result of mine
The commissioners and
to State Sen. Jan Michael Long, posslb!l!tyofthecountypurchas· drainage In the hillside behind.
Shields had a particular project D.Chllilcothe, and that Long ing theJormer Pomeroy Masonic - Teaford said he wouid report
. In mind when they made their · agreed to do all he can to help Lodge building and lot' adjoining the commissioners' feelings to
statements In Wednesday's
save the project and in turn save the courthouse property.
· his client. the Pomeroy Masonic
meeting, however, they would
the jobs that would apparently be
The commiSsioners again ex- Lodge.

. ----------

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was created for the expressed
purpose of helping those counties
In the state which are a part of
Appalachia, which Includes
Meigs County.
·
"Instead of looking for reasons
why they can't help with a
project ," Jones said, "they
should be looking lor ways that
they can help."
Meigs Development Director
Kim Shields agreed that ODOD's

'---------· --·-·----~

. .

2 Sections. 16 P•ges 2 &amp; Centl
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomerov-Middlej)oi-t; Ohio, Thursday. February s. 1990

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'FRANKIE

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Low tonight In mid .
Chance of rain 40 'pel,centl
Hl~h Friday in mid 50s.

JOiles upset with at.itude of ODD officials·

1o.,4 111y at ,..•., s.,.,_ ..,
Gee4 '""' s.t...,. ,._ 10, 1tti

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•

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.Pick 4.

Good Thru Saturday
Ftbruary 10, 1990·
I
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Super Lotio

OUR EVERYDAY
LOW PIKES!.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.

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Jayh-wks,

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Limit Quintities

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. ,.

~lrlocl.- d~g Wediiesday's. . visi~ here
·Eighty units or' bloOd were
received during Wednesday's
•· visit of the Am~rlcan . Red Cross
B!oodmoblle to Pomeroy .
CONTEST WINNER - Four-year·okl Brandon . the Racine Gun Club. With Brandon II Eber
S!xteeQ units were given In
Pickens, , of Eller's Gun Shop, Racine, ,;.~deb
Werry Is ·. tile winner of. the Remington 8-71
appreclatl.on for blood received
Express . Co,Jilbo 12·guage. shotgun which was · supplied the !"'lnniDg gun. Brandon Is the son of . by a relative or friend . Two
Raymond and Joyce Werry, of Chester.
glyen away during a recent contest sponsored by
Meigs Cduntlans, William L.
· Bllckley and Charles W. Bush,
became three gallon donors, and
six. Henry Dalton, Ruth Karr,
Bryan Shank, Fonda G. ThOmas,
Brenda Cunningham. and John
S. Foster became two gallon
donors.
. '.
First
time
donors
were
L!m)a
, Three. Meigs County men ap- seven to 25 years In prison and a Jewell for Thursday, March 29,
Harrison.
Katby
Mora,
Connie
• peared .Wednesday morning In fine of uP to $10,000, Judge Crow at 9 a.m,
Enslen, Penny Knapp, and Ray
Bond was ordered In the
: common pleas court before · told the defendant.
Additionally, Jewell was ad- amount of $20,000. However,
Judge ,Fred W. Crow Ill, for
·: arraignments. on recent grand vised that the sentence on the according to law, the court was
: jury Indictments. Assistant .corrupting charge Is tor a termor required to permit Jewel! to be
· Prosecuting Attorney Linda actual incarceration of seven released upon hiS own recogn!z·
By United Press International
: Warner represented the State of years, which means that sent· ance because the prosecuting
High temperatures more typl·
; Ohio. Meigs County PubliC De· ence, if it were ordered, would attorney had Dill asked for an
of April10 than Feb. 8were o'n
cal
· fender ·charles H. Knight ap· have to be served . In fuJi and arrest warrant on the. charges
tap
for Ohioans Thursday, but
: peared on behalf of the Jewell would-not be eligible for but instead, had Jewell sum· colder weather was expected to
any probation or parole, accordmqned to court.
· • defendants.
move Into the Buckeye State on
Jerry Mar~ln, 36, of Darwin,
Menford Jewell, 59. of Route 1, · !ng to Paul Gerard, criminal
Friday.
Langsy!lle. was charged in a bailiff for the common pleas was charged with trafficking in
Highs Thursday were expected
drugs (sale . of marijuana 1, a
two-count indictment with drug court.
to reach the upper 50s In the .
abuse (cocaine), a fourth degree . Judge Crow also Informed third degree felony, as charged northern counties and the midfelony, and with corrupting · ·Jewell that because more than in the Indictment. . He was 60s In the south although a strong
• another with drugs 1cocaine), a one offense Is charged, any· charged In connection with an southwest bre~e will make tt
sentences might be ordered Incident which al!egedly oC- 5eem somewhat cooler
. first degree felony .
served consecutively, or onel curred in late December . last
Ju~ge Crow advised Jewell
Clouds were to beg!~ moving
.. year. Trafficking In drugs In the Into
. that count one, the drug abuse after the other.
the state late· Thursday and
Jewell was charged In connec- quantity alleged In the Indict· early Friday, bringing showers
charge, carries .a possible maxi. mum penalty or a determinate lion with an alleged Incident ment carries a possible maxi- with them. The precipitation
· sentence of 18 months in prison which occurred in September of mum penalty of a determinate should end from the west by late
last year In which he Is charged sentence of two years in priSon Frtc:lay.
: a1,1d-or a fine of up to $2,500.
_ Collnt iwo, corrupting another with possessing ani! selling co· and a fine of up to $5,000., .
Temperatures will stay on the
Judge Crow.set a jury trial lor warm side 'into Friday, but start
. · with drugs. carries a maximum caine to a person under age 18.
Judge Crow set a jury trial for Markin for Thursday, March 22, to fall off rapidly as the day ·
: possible penalty of not less than
·
at 9 a.m.
wears on. Lows Th~rsday night
b
. e
Bond was set In the amount of are foreca.t to be in the middle or

Hearings held 'for .three men
in,licted ·by Meigs Grand Jury

Williams.
Dr. James Wltherall and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield w"'re t!le doctors in charge, assisted by
.nurses, Belllah Ward, Lenora
Leifheit, Sharon Wright and
Naomi London. at the bloodmobile held at. the Senior Citizens
Center.
Clerical workers were Carolyn
Barton, ·Dee Shain. and Edward
Cozart. representative of the
Vietnam Vets Motorcycle Club.
Other volunteers assisting were
RSVP representatives. Marlon .
Ebersbach, Dorothy Long, Helen
Bod!mer, Wanda Fetty. Lula
Hampton, .Emma Clatworthy,

Peggy Harris, Gerrruce Robin·
son, Macel Barton, William and
Joyce Hobach, Florence R!chards, Vicki Morarlty, Evelyn
G 11m ore and G era I d
Wildermuth.
The canteen was served by the
United Methodist Women of the
Cheste,r Methodist Church.
·The donors by communities
are as follows:
Pomeroy: Linda HarriSon,
Don Cullums, William L. Buckley. Fonna K. Cullums, Scott A.
Eichinger, Lenora McKnight.
Janet K. Peavley, Denise D.
Mora. Kathryn Mora. Walter R.
Continued on page 6

Cold spell coming to Ohio Friday

· M. • d
·
·.:. e.gs eputies pro : Wedn
. . esd ay a·eel·dents•
.

Two accidents which oecurred
• Wednesday e"enlngwere invest!. gated by . the Meigs County
· Sheriff's Department.
__ The first accident was actually
. a fire, according to lnforlliat!oli
• from Sheriff James Souls by .
·: Brian N. Murphy, . Route 4,
GallipoliS, was traveling eas't on
~ Route 124 at Minersville when a
· fire bl-oke 0111 In the Wiring 11nder
~ 'the.dash ot his 1977 Dodge station
. wagon.
.
. · Murphy pulled off the road on
: the right and jlllrtped out. He
' struck hill head In getting out of
.the vehicle. There was an explosiOn shortly after Murphy go tout
and the vehicle was eRIUited In
names by the time deputies and
fire trucks arrived.
Syraculll Fire Department r"'
11p011ded.to the acene. Syraculll!
EMS treated Murphy for a bump

on the head.
The seco11d accident occurred
around 8: 15 p.m. on HemlOck
Grove Road just off County Road
20.
.
Sharon Werry, Hemlock
Grove, was traveling east in her
1989 Pontiac and as she rounded a
curve, saw a west bound vehicle
diagonally across the · road
driven by Rae Lynn Basham, of
Elk Run Road, Coolville.
Werry applied her brakes and
Basham cut to the right, but the
vehicles coDided. The left front
fender of the Werry vehicle
struck the lett rear fender Of the
Basham vehicle,
!:Jght to moderate damage was
listed ta both vell!cles. Beca11se
of the bad location on the road,
the vehicles were move,:! before
officers arrived,
No Injuries were reported . .
·r'·'

r~~i.b~e~~~~!~~aJrd~~~

ex~ept

from Alaska . where only
the beginning will be visible.
Overnight , the skies cleared,
_giving early risers a perfect
predawn v1ew of · v,enus. the
mornmg .star. There s quite a
crowd of planets In that part of
the sky these mornings, with
Venus, Mercury. Mars and Sa ·
turn all within about20degrees of
each other .
The early JllOrn!ng weather
map showed two features ·that
w!ll dominate Ohio's weather.
over the near future. The first
was a high pressure system that
covered the eastern quarter of
the nation . This system ought to
be over the Atlantic by liHe
Friday . The second Important
weather map feature was a cold
front .fonn Wisconsin to Ne·
braska, a front forecast to cross
Ohio Friday.

RecJ,uced emissio~ and higher
efficiency benefif~ of new facility

.request the defendant be arrested on the indictment, and the
court was required .. to permit
personal recognizance.
Sam McCloud, 21, of MkldlepQrt, wa. charged with vandal·
Ism, a felony of the fourth degree,
Rtduced emissions of nitrogen
In connection with an Incident at
oxide
and 'tulfur · dioxide, and
. the Middleport Jallln January of ·
higher
thermal eftlcienc:y will be
thlll year In which It Ill alleged
t1tc
benefiiS
of the l'nlssurized
that McCloud ~maged property
at the jail. Vandalism carrieS a fluidized Bed Combustion (PFBC)
rriaxlmum possible penalty of a unit, when COIIIIn1Ciion is comdeterminate sentence of 1.8 pleted lt tltc Philip Sporn Plant in
·
months In prison and a fine or up NewHaven.
to $2,500. .
Americln Bleclric Power Service
McCloUd wa.ln the county jail, Coipcntion llld the 'IJ.S. Depanon the charge, under the author· ment of BneraY siiDed a cooperaltyofthecountycourt,at the time Iive llleement to ibare tltc cost of
the grand jury returned Its
the commercial·ltCIIIe uniL
eaviroltmental featu~e or
Indictment la•t week.
p«• invohea SO 2
Jud&amp;e Crow continued the bond tltc
prevlouly set by County Cour.t removal, ~ Ml 90 peroent,
Judge Patrick O'Brien In the dunng combustion, and only almt:·
amount of IS,OOO.
tioa of .NO X emissions compared
A jury trial for McCIQud was witb conventional IIX:Imoi1J8Y..
set for Thursday, March 15, 9 Basically, SO 2 released when coal
is burned. reacts with a limestone
a.m.
I

-~--------

upper 40s. Friday wi!J have
morning highs from the upper 40s
to the upper 50s .
Due to the fact that tempera·
lures are expected to fa·ll sharply
as Friday goes by, there is some
possibility that In northeast Ohio
rain will be replaced with snow
as the day advances . Friday is
also expected to bring breezy
conditions to most ofthe Buckeye
State.
Looking ahead through Monday , it will lie fair Saturday and
Monday. and there's a chance of
rain or snow Sunday . HighS w!Jl
be •In the 30s throughout the
period and lows in the 20s or !ow
30s.
February's full moon, the
Hunger Moon, arrives Friday
morning. There will be a .total'
lunar eclipse, but it will not be
visible in the United States,

~

sorbent present in the 'jn'essurized proval of the program as a means t.o
combustion chamber. The resulting promote the use of coal in an en·
inert by-~roduct, a dry, granular vironmentally acceptable manner. _
material, ts collected and is paten·
Preliminary engineering and • ·
tially usable.
·
design for tltc PFBC Utility
The s~ific objeclive ·of t1tc Demonstration Project are under
project 1s to demonstratO tho way. Preliminary cagincenng in·
feasibility and cost elfeCllivencss of eludes a detailed evaluation of both
using
tecllnoloJY In a com· the Sporn Project IIIII tltc ~lion of
men:ial-ltCIIIe p~t of a least, 3~.. coosuucting a COIIIJIIetely new .
mogawaas capac11y. The plant w1ll facility.
be the 1a1pt f'FBC plant itt the
Commercial . operllion
is
world.
.
ICheduled for 1996 if the Sporn opThe cost · associated wilh the lioa is selected llld 1998 If 1 comcooperative~ is $660 mil· ~w flcility is selected. The
lion, or which tltc government
scheduiC uaociatcd with
would provide $185 million, a new flcilily is JeqUired to allow
tluough the Clean Coal Technology suftlciell dme for additional enProgram developed JlY U.S. Senator . vironmental studiel that woulll be
Robert C•.Byni.
requiled for alOIIlly new unit.
Byrd won congressional ap~ liee graphic on page SIX) •

me

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�Thuridav. februa.y 8, 1980.

.

me·
n
·
tary
Com
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•'

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l

. . Sentinel
The Daily

Plastics

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
~

.

~~ ,...,._........""T'",.......,.c:;:l,_
'qlv

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
•
, General Maaqer,

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslstaat Publlaber(Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are.welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subJect ta editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste. addresslng)ssues, notpersonall·
ties.

:Bush policy to
:China defended.
By E. MICHAEL MYERS
WASHINGTON iUPI) ~ Deputy Secretary of Stare Lawrence
Eagleburger says the secret missions to China he undertook for
· President Bush has helped stabilize a battered but finportant
' relationship that Is vital to the cause of human rights and U.S.
strategiC interests.
·
·
··
·
'"Overall, I hope ltcan be said that the Stl!ep declihe in U.S.·Chlna.
· re.latlons has been arrested, and that there is movement In a positive
direction." Eagteburger said earlier this week. · ·
. ·
"The administration knows that not enough has been done. We
never expected: to reverse events overnight."
Eagleburger was called before the House Foreign Affairs
Committee Thursday to defend Bush's policies that brought him and
Gen. Brent Scowcroft, the president's national security affairs
adviser, ·to Beijing on a secret mission July 4.
The visit came less than a month alter theJul)e3-4 army crackdown
of pro-democracy demonstrators In Tlananmen Square that Beijing
said resulted In hundreds of deaths. Independent observers put the
death toll In the thousands. The massacre caused revulsion In
Washington and ·prompted Bush to order polltlcal and economic
sanctions against China.
But Bush said lie dlcl not want to Isolate the world's most populous
nation or set back the reform movement backed by many offiCials In
,the Chinese government. He sent Scowcroft and Eagleburger to
·
Beijing to spell out the American position.
"In the president's judgment, It was jmportant to tell the Chinese
leadership how serious we took the events at Tiananmen Square, that
the relationship was not going anywhere If the situation remained
status quo," Eagle burger told the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee Wednesday.
"I happen to believe it makes sense for us to go there and tell them
that. I do not believe that was a gesture."
·
The July visit was ordered "to convey an undiluted message from
.the pi'I!Sident to the Chihese leadership abou America's horror over
'Tianapmen," he said.
•
' But the Chinese rejeased l(ideotape and pictures of Scowcroft
toas ling the Chinese leaders during the second secret visit, exposing .
the mission.
Critics such as Senate Democratic leader GeorgeMitchellofMalne ·
said Bush's emissaries and his pollcy amounted to "kowtowing" to
Beijing by seeking strategic advantages at the cost &lt;if human rights.
. In the toast, Scowcroft warned of forces trying to divldeChtna and
:the United States, but also called for respect for human rights In
Beijing.
" All the talk of clihkihg glasses , surprise announcements, an(l
warm toasts misses the point," Eagleburger said.
"The Chinese leadership needed to know how they could Improve
their relations with the United States, and we told them. I do not
believe it is proper to accuse us of 'kowtowing."'
Eagleburger said the United States has vital global political and
'economic interests with China, and that it would have no leverage on
human rlg!lts and other reforms there. If It has no real
communications with Beijing.
"In our view, we need to keep faith with the people and the
institutltons of China that can move the society toward reform. We
seek to soften the blow to the Chinese people brought about by the
crisis in China.
"The forces favoring reform have not disappeared," the veteran
diplomat said. "We owe them an approach that strengthens their
hand. not the hand of those who would welcome isolation."
.

''

Berry's World

thatthenumberhadjumpedto72
percent in 1989. ·
"At this rate we wtll soon reach
a point from which it will be
Impossible to recover our credl·
btllty," Thomas wrot&amp;. · ,
Tha,t'snothlngthat$\\lommlon
can't ·nx. Thomas ,. said the
Industry needs a "major program of unprecedented propor·
lions to reverse this fast-moving
tidal wave of growing negative
public perception." That translates Into spending, by Thomas'
estimate, $50 .mullon ·a year tor
the next three years on a public
lnformat[9n campaign to "dem·
onstrate the critical Importance'
ot plastic products and their
contributions to environmental
progress," according to the con·
ftdentlal memo obtained by O\lr
reporter Greg Moore.
,
That $15() njtfllon could go a
long way In researchtng·alternalives to plastics or recycling, but
that wolildn't be progress. "Bus I·
ness Is being lost ," Thomas
wrote. "Product growth rates
are being dampened. And stock
analysts are beginning to take

Page-2-TheDailySallinel

By O.I!IP£NCQ· ~BNE ,
lUIIe&amp;, tbe Bucs Will their last
Hannan '!'race can get some
To their credit, the Highland·
b\'P'Watf Wittee
· · twO' PIDel alld Racine wins two ·offense from Junior IJII&amp;rd Eric ers can also connect from the
After having swept the season · of Its last three contests.
Uoyd, who has four scoring perimeter, as all-world shooter
serieiJ with North Gallta and
E•llm Vlldap
.
efforts In th.e 20s t,hts season, but John Ehman, whose radar has
.spllttihg Its series with Meigs
The VikJnas have won four of
none In the new decade. ,Junior helped him score In double
County rlvaiS?ulhern, E~stern theirlastslxgames, bUtthemaln postman Craig Rankin, who figures lor the first time his
.. llllli the opportunity to win thiS thr.ust of their offensive attack currently has scored In double 32-polnt effort In the New Bas ton
year's.SVAC baSketball title.
has ~n from three-point land,
figures In his last six games, bas . game IQ mkl·January 1 Is slowly
HoweVer, there are two things as senior point guard Paul ·been a modelofconslstencyfora but surely returning to his ·
-th&amp;/ must IIIIPpen, which makes Hayes, t~e Valley's leading . team that this season bas won no offensively dangerous self. ·
thiJiis ,c onsiderably. less compU· .scorer with an average of l4 more than three straight (once)
Bobctlt..Oaks
ca!ed tban ' ll\St year·~ race, In, . , points per game. bas nailed 28 and bas lost two In a row on two
And 't he streak gqes on and on
Which five teat;ns ))ad a Chl!.ll&lt;;e t 11 bonus buckets In each of the occasions. '
and on...
·
'
share,- tbe , ~ltle with t~o .games
VIkings' 16 games. .
·
Tornadoett.IOplanders
. Just as llf41 at the top of the
. • .)eft, The Eagles need a vtctctry
; rile Eagles may get Into a
Soutllwesterll must turn the conference takes a little explain·
· over !!Ymme~ · Valley, a Southw· battle with the VIkings at the . potch to high on Its defensive play lng, we'll take a minute to
, . es ll)tn ~tctory .over second-place ·three-point arc, ar~d It's a conte~t against a Southern team that Is explain how Kyger Creek, who
· SQuthern and a ~annan Trace· tlley have a good shot at winning, still alive In the title chase.
has lost their last 10 games, can
... vlc;,tory · over , third-place North 1¥ senior guard Kenny Caldwell,
After coming out on the short avoid having the basement all to
GalUa to own the title outright.
who has 21 treys on tbe season, · end of a 66-59 decision to Federal themselves. "
. By the. way, .the Eagles need ' i:ould easily make spectators of Hocking last Saturday to finish
First, Larry Markham's Bobonly beat theNor!jemen ·toknock · 'Mike Frost and Kevin Nicholas, their non-league slate at 0·9, the • cats . will need a three-point
. North Galli a outoftl!e hunt, even the centers for Eastern and Tornadoes, whO have lostthree of expert to counter Oak Hill ·
if what the Pirates beat the $ymmes Valley.' respectlvely.
their last ·!our ~ames, will be forward Shane Maynard, who Is
Wildcats. At . this '. point the
Pirates·Wildcats
elat~d upon returning to league .still the league's leader In trlfec- ·
Ptra\es can . d~ no beiter. ,thl!n tie ,
North Gallla has the height, th~ play, where only Nortll Gallla .las with 42 . Well, Yon Ragland, a
for .the title, even If the Eagles three,polnter and the defense to and Eastern ' have so far been 5-10 junior who has 25 on the
lose both games an,d ..the.Torna· for~e the Wildcats to make some ·, successful at s!&gt;lltting thelr sea" · seaso.n, nearly twice the team
, does los!! any two (/tIts last three , 111Istakes. Hannan Trace has the soli series with them. But the · total for Markham:s BobCats
games.
··defense to take . the ball away elation may end If ~utbwestern ( 13), would be helpful In this
Should the Eagles suffer a. from the Pirates . So, who's going reserve center Jolin Sites pu.t his situation, but there's just one
repeat of las·t year's trip to to win?
'
6·1, 230-pound frame to use In little problem (okay,soKCgirls'
Lawrence County (the Vikings
Well, North should win, as the complementing the strong, quick coach Tom Weaver won't let
. posted a 75-69upset wlnon.:t:an.6, perimeter shooting of leading moves of regular center Chris Markham hilve her . Darn! )
1989) while Southern and Nortll scorers Chris Tackett and Brian Metzger; who should · ret urn to
Second, Cheshire needs to put
GalUa collect win·s (tor reasons Stout should add to their com- 1\Ction Friday.
pressure on the Oaks' guards~
to be explained. later), Eastern blned total of 71 three-pointers
However, the Tornadoes won't sophomores Brad Davis · and
,. will need a win at home against while forcing Trace to come out , wilt. in the post, as senior Alan Potter and freshman Benji
Oak Hill to take the .champion- and. try t~ stop them . That should frontmen Brad Maynard and Lewis. Bobcat guards Sean Den·
ship. However,,lf the.Eagles lose clear out the Inside for Pirate , ·Brent Shuler will use their own ney and the Villanueva brothers
both gameS (an unlikely pros· fn;m tmen D.J. Hammel (14 .6 · str~ngth and qulckn~s In taking .;.., senior Ernest and sophomore
pect as the Vikings and the Oaks pts.lgamel and Shane Smith (9.4. their positions inside to comple· · Marc~ will have this task. while
are .'
combined 8-15 · In .. the · pts./game) to.get their share of, . ment their hot-shooting perime- senior center John Sipp)e. must
leagu,e)l, ·Sputhern can ;.,.In the ,· . ,pqlnts against a' shorter Wildcat ter attack of junior guard/ for· use his formidable strength and
prize If It wins 1\s last three fron\ line.
ward Andy Baer.
rebounding ability to bump,

Jack Anderson and Dale Van ~tta
·

n•~

W!atb&lt;?,®~ti
IINTiRMATIONAL

I

Food and Drug Administration .
discourages -the use of rl~.cycled
plastic for food containers, but
the Industry claims there are
manv other products that can be
mad·e from . those recycled .
containers.
Environmental groups remain
divided about the future of
plastics. "In our view, there's no
wav thev can clean up their
prOduct,'' said Bryan· Bence,
recycling campaign coord.lnator
for Greenpeace. The use of
oil-based plastics for focxl and
. beverage containers,. be •added,
Is a " frivolous use o( dlvindllng

resoUrces."
Allen Hershkowitz, senior
scientist with the National Re·
sources Defense Council, says
his organiZation Is willing to glv!!
the Industry the benefit of the
doubt because the industry must
change or die. Recycling ",has to
work," he said. "or the plastics
industrv Is in deep trouble:
Certain products will be legis·
Ia ted out of existence."

ASSOCIATION OF ' I

·FORMER

I

SECRET POt..\CE
ANNUAL
COHVeNri0/'1
r 0• a 411" • ~

•

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1tl0 bv NEA. mt
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bother arid otherwise distract the log the upper-bracket tit le a nd
tallest tree In the Oaks' forest- moving on to the district tourna·
6-4 senior Chad Smith.
ment at Ohio University's Convo·
But the Hill has the height and cation Center agal.ns t the·Unloto
the · balllstlc mls.s lle launcher: lower-bracket winner .
which may be all the south
In the Rio lower bracket.
Jackson squad needs to pick up top-seeded Fran kiln Furnace
Its fourth win ot the season, end a Green wlll 1ake on Southwestern
six-game trail of . tears and on Feb. 27, with the winner ·to
extend Kyger's lease on the play the Meigs upper-br acket
basement for yet another year.
winner (either-Hemlock Miller or
Tourney Jilllrings
.. Trtmlile, who a lso play tha t
Hannan Trace
face Ironton night ).
St. Joe In the first round o.f the
Symmes Valley and Oak Hill
·Division IV .Rio Grande sectional will face eac h other In the lower
on Wednesday , Feb. 21 (times to bracket of tile Division Ill Roc k
be announced) at the Universit y Hill sectional at Rock Hill Hi gh
of Rio Grande's Lyne Center.
School In Ironton on Tuesday.
The winner of that game wl il Feb. 20 a t 7: 45 p.m .. with the
take on second·seeded North winner to meet No. 2 seed
Gallla on Tuesd'a y, Feb. 27, with Chesapeake on Sa turday , Fe b. 24
the winner of that contest claim· at 7 p.m .

will

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SVAC standing8 '
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AlL SEAlS 12-75

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446 4524

·

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(All rames) .
. t,
TEAM : ·, . W -,.. ., PF , P~. ·
,E&lt;!&amp;tern ......... , 13 5 &lt;1318· 1275
NQrth Gallia ,..·11 r ,6 1234 , 1~ .
Southern......... 9 8 1179 1067
Hannan Trace 9 , 9 1067 1051
S·Valley ....... ... 8 • 8 .1001 1019
Southwes~rn .. 7. 11 .1303 1278
Oak Hill . .. .. .... 3 15 1038 1265
Kyger Crl!ek ... J 17 991 1377

Tand-v®

1000_

'·

'

.

'

Senate Bill
We all have friends who sav
they want to help us out, then are
nowhere to be found when It's
time for the work to be done.
Well, much the same thing
happens In government. Well
meaning laws are passed In
Columbus, with promises to help
local governments solve prob·
lems. Then, when it'stlmeforthe
laws to be Implemented, the state
Is nowhere to be found, since not
enough money has been approp.
rlated to cover local govern·
ment's costs.
Hopefully, thlsprocesslsabout
to e'nd. Last week, legislation was
Introduced In the Ohio House and
Senate that would require the
General Assembly to finance the
new programs that are imposed
on local governments. I am

pleased to support this legtsl&lt;i·
lion, known as Sen11te Bill 307,
which hopefully will end the
financial havoc county and local
governments now . experience
from passage of many state laws.
The legislation arises out of the
recent work of the Ohio State and
Local Government Commission,
which In a report said mandates
can put an unfair burden on local
government. Currently, there
are about 350 mandates that
must be met by county govern·
ments alone.
Passage of this ·bill cannot
come too soon. The decrease in
federal and state money and the
increase In mandates to local
governments have left county .
commlsslone_rs. city councils and

•

mandated programs ccimpletely:
township trustees with the unpleasant choice of eit!Jer discon·
In Pennsylvania, the state gotlnl!lng services or raising taxes. vernment is required to fully
It Is unfair for us to continue to - support the tax exemptions It
ask local governments to pay for
mandates to the local
services that we are unwUilng to government.
pay for In the laws we pass.
What we reallv need Is some
Currently, 15 other states
restraint. Unless we as state
across the countp have some legislators understand the costs
kind of constlhftional amend· of mandates to local govern·
ment mandating relmbur.s ements, we shouldn't pass leglsla·
ment. In Maine, for example, the lion that puts the . financial
state must reimburse local goburdeQ on local governments.
vernments for at least 50 'percent
If you have any qu~tions , or
of state. mandated property tax comments on this or anv other
exemptions. Two 'of Ohio's neigh· issue of Interest to you,: please
ors, Michigan and Pennsylvania, contact me by writing State
also have reimbursement sys- Senator Jan Michael Long, Ohio
tems. In Michigan, the state · Senate., Statehouse, Columbus,
must fund existing rrandates at Ohio 43215, or by calling rne at
(614) 466-8156.
current levels and fund new

Friday's action
Southern at Southwestern
North GaiUa at Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek at Oak Hill
Eastern at Symmes Valley
Saturday's state
Rock Hill at Nortll Gallla
Symmes Valley at Southern

I

been

l

valved In packaging consumer
goods -a logical choice In an era
when almost everything Is over·
packaged, Indeed, the cost of
food packaging alone ap proaches $35 billion annually ~
all of It Incorporated the price
people pay.
When she Informally surveyed
friends and neighbors, Harbaugh
found that, "everyone had at
least one pet peeve about packagIng." Then she enlisted several
friends to join her In visiting local
superma,rkets and examining.
packaging.
Late last year, after four
months, she produced •'The First
Annual Packaging Awards and
Booby Prizes from an Environmental Point of VIew' • ~ hardly
tbe sort cit snappy title a public .
relations professional mtgh't
concoct.

require little protection but ~e­
vertbeless are sold in "bubble
packages" or rigid plastic
mounted on cardboard. (Numerous other tools and household
Items· are packaged In a simIlarly wasteful man net:.)
- Colgate, Crest, Aim, Aqua
Fresh, Ultrabrite, Check· Up and
Close Up toothpaste packed In
pumps. "When the paste Is gone,.
there's • pump - as big as when
we started," says Harbaugh . "If
we simply must have. tooth paste
pumps, how- a bout refillable

•. }

, '1'\ ., . \

ones?"

- A General Mills product
known as Squeezlt - Juice
packaged In brightly colored
plastic squeeze bottles . "This
prodlict Is all packaging- (but)
environmentally Irresponsible,''
says Harbaugh.
- Another General Mills proWhat Harbaugh's work lacks · duct packed In a plastic con·
In piZazz, however, It more than
tatnet, Bisqulck Shake 'N Pour.
compensates tor In substance.
Buyers are Jured by pancakes
~ong !he 10 product• she cites
that can be made Instantly
as shamefully overpac,kaged:
adding water, shaking and pour- Heavy metal wrenches that ·lng. Harbaugh notes that the

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promotional promise . ot "no
messy cleanup" rna~ be true In
the kitchen but is ·surely not
applicable to the Earth.
~ Stouffers, Le Menu, Healthy
Choice and Swanson microwavable dinners. Asks Harbaugh:
· "Why not dispense with the
disposable dish? How about
packaging frozen entrees In a
simple plastic bag and letting
consumers use their own microwave dishes at home?"
Harbaugh also foulid a half·
dozen ·products to laud because '
their packaging was · adequate
but baste and recyclable. Among
them are eggs packed In Old·
fashioned cardboard cartons ·
(but not In new plastic containers) and General Electric llaht
bulbs packed in lightweight corrugated cardboard.
In recent months, Harbauah's
work bas atiracted the Interest ot
Individuals and organizations
throughout' the country. She has
demonstrated tbt one committed
housewife can make a differenCe
In how our society functions.,

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Unwrapping the truth on packaging
BELLEVUE , Wash. (NEA) ~
Lois Harbaugh describes herself
as "a 'middle-class, mainstream
American a stay-at-home
mom" who takes care of two
children (a 5~ -year-old boy and
2'f.i·yeaT old girl) while her
husband works to launch his own
business.
A 38-year-old resident of the
fast-growing Seattle suburb of
Bellevue, Harbaugl» has never
a member of any conserva;
lion group or other do-good
organization - but last spring
she bec;ame conce~ned about
disturbing ''rumors" about the
destruction ot the environment
by uncaring people.
She went to the local public
library, read up on .the subject,
then decided up&lt;in a course of
action taken by too tew others:
Lois Harbaugh became actively
involved In making the planet a
better place to live:
"I decided tbat garbage was
something I could do something
about," she says. Harbaugh
decided tq specialize In pointing
out to others the excesses. in·

10-Channel Pro-grammable Action Scanner

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Robert Walters

•'

(Reserves)
..
TEAM
\\' . L ,PF. PA
Nortll Gallta .1.11 1 597 442
Soutllern .. :, .. .. . 10 ;I . 578 389
Hannan Trace 7 5 · ' "526 455
Oak Hill .... .... ... 7 . 5 ~55 .511
s-~alley .. .. , ... : ~ , 5 , 4.7J 449
Soutllwes tern .. ·.3· 9 , ~64 . 565
Eastern .......... 2 10 435 589.
Kyger Creek ... 1 11 328 554
.. T~ALS, ...........7 47 :)11M .38M.

307~-------'---S----.en_Ja_nM_._Lo_ng
"

SLI2"

. · (SVAC rames)
,.
TEAM
W , L PF - ~A .
Eastern ... :...... 11 1 889 775
Southern......... 9 2 835 652
, North Gallta .,, • 9 3 898· 773
~annan Trace , 6· ,6
728 679 .·
S·Valley ..: ...... 5 6 · 665 722 .
Southwes tenn.. 4 8 t 831 833
Oak HilL.: ...... 3 9 726 869
·Kyger Creek I .. 0 12 667 929
TOTALS ......... .47 47. 1:138 8239

' '

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r--....;--------------------------------~---------------------------1

games, which
arenight)
against
Southwestern
(Friday
and
Symmes Valley &lt;S&lt;tturday night
and,- Frod'aY,. Fell. 16). · 11 •· ·
The other pdsslblllty Is that
there will be a trl-champlonship
if the Eagles lose both their

'

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY &amp; SUN.OAY

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

a'

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I

'·

·•· Eastern ·will capture SVAC basketball championship .

.~=~~ ,c::,

notice.•'
Thoinas declined to talk to us
al:iout the memo. We understand
hts retlcel)ce to champion a
losing cause. His worry , accord·
· lng to the memo. Is that the
Image of plastics Is :'deterlorat·
. lng at an alarmingly fast pace. "
If only plastics would deteriorate
that quickly.
Instead, they hang around in
. the environment tong after their
original purpose Is served. The
Industry Is a long way away from
producing an effective biode·
gradable plastic.
.·
Substantial strides have been
made in recycling technology by
· some of ,.the industry heavy . welgM~. Including Amcoco and
McDonald's, who are working on
a joint project to turn plastic
foam containers into other usable products. Dow Chemical Is
developing a plastics reCycling
company. Waste plastics are
. being rolled over Into carpet
· fibers. insulation, plastic lumber
and many other products. The

The Deily Sentinai- Page-3

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I!

Porrllloy-Midllaport. Ohio

If'Eoila .win, oontende, lose,

grout_.p~· to spen·d bucks o.n ads

WASHINGTON-Theplastics
Industry Is gearing up for a
multi·mllllon dollar propaganda·
campaign to convince AmerLcans that plastic containers are
'environmentally benign.
In last December, members of
the trade group, The Society of
the Plastics Industry, received a
confidential memo from society
president Larry Thomas spelling
out the disastrous effect of a new
wave of public concern about
plastics. Everytlllng plastic,
from hamburger: containers to
. disposable diapers, · ts being
blamed by the public for fouling
beaches and ftlllngcltydumps to
capacity.
·
Thomas' . memo warned the
Industry giants~ all and cheml·
cal companies and plastics rna·
nufacturers ~ thatthe Image of
plastic has · "plummeted so far
and so fast, In fact. that we are
approaching a 'point of no
return."' The memo reminded
the plastics makers that 56
percent of Americans polled In
1988 thought that plastics were
harmful to the environment, and

'

Rlg.14U5

capacity per pair. 112·1708 .

Reg. st.l5

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Page 4 The

Sentinel

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Pomaoy-Midclepori. Ohio

8.1890

Febru.., 8. 1990

.•. .

Sentinel-PaD• 5
,,

.Mi~i edges Bo\fling . .G~~;

OU defeats Rockets, 76~7l .
.,.'

SEVENTH GRADE MEIGS GIRLSCAGERS~
Members of 198&amp;-98 Meigs sevenlh g'rade girls
basketball te.am . are (not In ord~r) "-mber
Blackwell, Bobble Butcher, Vanessa
Compston,
.
.

Mellslla 'Clifford, Erica Roble, Billie Butcher,
Jackie Swartz, Janna Dalley, Ma1gie Kennedy,
Kelle;r G~er, and Annie Je88ee. Ttie learn was
coached hy Cath~ Etlwards.

Scoreboard ...
petiiOD.el dln!dor aad Charley Wl-r
player penoanel .ateder.

Boys. ratings
.r.

COLUMBUS. Olllo I UPI) -

..

Thb

wet&gt;k'l'l Unitt&gt;d Pr~"" lt!rnal»ral Ohio
Hl~h School ftqant ol Coach~.-.' boyiJ

hibluotball natlnll' (wil• lr!ll-place \'Oie-K
and wo•lo!il ffi'ClOI'd!il In ~re'nlhHH ) :
Dh·l•lon I
Team
.
r'tJinb
I. Tolf' do"t'Oit(UI) (17-I J ..... ........... H2

KoclleJ

PhUadel~la-..\crtedloc.ltn.CIMIII

lree-arw cenw Len IJarrfe of lamkHtpK or tbe Wflltrril HOct:ey l.eapte.

College .scores

2. Canton McKialll'y (1$-0 ............... . ZH4
:1. Bell\ifl'fCI'f!f!" {I) (li-0) ~ .............. ,20'9

4. Toledo St . F'tiUidK (If. II .............. 1"13
3. M'e51tt...tllrSouth Ill IUJ· I ) .......... 150
t; , l'iiUI. . Iky (IHI ............................ IJG'
· i , Nf'wark i 15-fJ .............................. 1!7
M. MouN Ve rnon ( l~l) ..................... ll 3
9. MllRfllleld Se'nlor I I HI ........... ........ !17
lt~'ilronp\'tltf&gt; ( I~ 11-W) ....................t 3
!Wl'O.d
t•n: ll. IUe ) CIIK'Inllllll
\\'oodward and f1nc:lnnaa I Elder, il" eaLCh;
IS. Mulilllon Pt&gt;rry Ill; 1~ . C1nrlud St.
.Jo!lfph 17: II. HamUlon 15; 11. 1 tie) Kenl
Ho-welt and Akron Cl'nlrai· Hower, I.J

.'
·.

I' Meh: .JH. Tok'deSI . .Jolm'i'l U: 19. E)ac lld

':; 120.

~rain

Admiral Kin~~:~ Divbllon II

Polntr;
I. Kl'lterln• ,\Iter (!SJII 3,1J ............ 327
'l. Hltl!•ore , _., c 16-81 ....................... 213
:J . CaJileld J I~ - ( 1!4-1) ........... ......... ..'.. 213
4. W~tGeaua:~t!iHI .. .... .. ..... ......... 110
.\. 1'\'orth Bend T!QIOr (·l$-1 ) .............. 11,t
Tt&gt;am

.....
'•
•

I '

tt. StwhenvUie ! IHJ .... ....... .. .... ....... 1411
7. Bellttvur.: (13-21 ............................. 1311
H. F•r;tori~t { l:!-'! ) .............................. .118
t . Pahwsvlllf' Har\4!y ,(l$-0) ......... ......13

u

JO . Port~~mo•th Ill U4-t J ~ ..................
!'ieCOIII ten: ll . l.lnci...Uiljj'U... III

-18; lt. Alheas 33: 13. {tiel o.,••c.J. .I
Wllllfo and Cohnhu li Whn.ltoat, Zll

each; 15. M~U"IIVII'* 17: IS. Dt.)'ton
Chwnh•dNullenlll! U ; 17. lellrftltlallll! 13; Ill. Caaal FuiiDn Nort:llwe.l 11:
18. 1tiel Cuta• South and Ul.-kM\'11~
Claymoftll, II each.
DMalon IQ
T e am
Polntll
1. You•wnownUbrrty ( a!J ( 15-t) " ..

:en
3. Mt . He nr,· c! J f1HI ....... ;. .. ........... us
2. Orntl~ ISJ ( INI) - ........ .. :............ UK

- .·- ,

.-. Onlarlo I I) I 11-f) .......................... IH
a. SouU.rU..rn(Ro!IIJ) 111'-l l ~ ......... 132
I . •rtonllerkllhll'f' f i.W) ................ I38
7. FAMI Canton ( U ( 15-1) ·.................. 114

H.

BP~~oellwOod

111-11 ........ , ..... ............ .99

9. H!'IUII:~n ( Ii-I) ., .. , ................. ..........71
IO.CuloiW!I Cnwtord ( 12-3) ................ .!&amp;
Sl&gt;oond ten: II . llle) Dl!lta 11nd Wal
Mu Nlapm, II each: I Huron 18; 14.
Ute) Eut PaiHII• 1UW1 W~t Sll.lem
Nor1tlwtt~ .. rn, '' raclt: 11. Ulr) Peter• .
hul'll' Sprtnlfll'lll. .... Hamltton Badin, 8
e ach; Ul. (lie) GeoJ"'etQWnandW!tttlerAhul'J(, 3i nell: at. P..llli Cky olo•thon
Al6er3. '
Dl\'llllon IV
Tf'atn
Polnl11
I. ColwtlbiU! \\'IPhrit' (II) IJ$-3) .. .. .... l!J7
'l. Tr~VIIIIl~f' ( Ill IIK-11) ................... liS
:1. Van 8urt'n ( 15-1 ) .......................... 151
I . Vanlllf' Ill I 1-I-I) ...................... .... IU
.1. Spmcfl~d Cath•li•· ( 1~2 ) .. ........... 134
6. Tu~IU"liWaH CatlloUt• ( 1.1-1) ........... .K9
f. Berlin Hiland ( 1-1-l! ) ............... .........77
M. r..-dar\111111' cJ5-'lJ ......... ...................&amp;..
9. _lM:IIIf'-r Cllfll~l) ..................... .. .. ...-10 .
ID . U.pl'rS;dotoVaii~· JIH J ... :......... \!li
Seeolll lt n: II~ Mullldd Sl . .Peter• 11
24; IZ. t\Jihlahula St. J.hn' NUl: 1:1. {Ill"')
Alll-r p11ndSoudJ ChariHtonSolllhe•t·
Pfft. l7 i! ..•h; 1~ . C.DW)' CreNI\'Irw'lt: II.
Drlpholl .st. Jolin' • U : 17. l'liorttl laUI·
moll' !1: HI. M' a.rne.lleld·Go.olhtft II: 11.
Gille~ !'!fills Gilmour Audemy 7; 20.
Loekland 6.

a.

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Colle~e lhakethall ae...._~~o

By UnMed Pru11 lnt.er•Uonal

E.. I
,\mhenl 101, Tuft•K_.
,
·"n~n~ptlon 13, l\mrrtcanln11 71
Btnllry !K, S)lrlnKflfld 14
BoMton U. Ht, Hartford f7
Brld(r-p., ts. SIPW Haven M
ColbJ IH, Thornu $7
DIP ..ware • • Drexei a
Delawarr Sl . 72, Coppin St IN
FraaUI• Plen:eo 71,, Lowell II, OT
GI'O'Wft..,. t7: PUUbuiJ'h 81
Lal.l)'l'Ut' 1-1, Holht"' tS
Lehlrh '"· Bucklll!ll"'l
Merrimack TJ. Qttt. .. plac '11
. N•w Ham,..ll'f' 17. Mal• n
Norlllr•len,8S, CGiple 70

St. An~~elm 91. Bryant 11
St. Mic~l'8 IS; Slonrblilll
Tow~ron st. 102, Rldrr 14
·W· Coan. 101, Mt. St. Mary'" 61
W, N~•· D\Jiand IN; St, ,J~h 'K tiS
William~ '73. WoreMIIH Tf'ell U
•
SouCh
Alilhama 7.-. MI"N"~i.lppl64
Aldli. · Br&lt;mddu" n. M'. \'a. Statt' 85

American 81, Rlehinoad Sfl
MarJiud13
COMJital Carglha 81, Bapbt n
C.a,.rd It Salem-Tf'IQo Ill
Falrmoal liS; ••lleld 81
Geoll'la Tecll 11. Walle f'eral11
Greellllhoro Colle If! 1$, S .C. "'' e~leyan
Clemt~oD71t

"'

Keatw:ky lit. V aadf'rbiH 1'3
Loopood 'ft. \'lrJitiala statr 18
um u. A.at~u"' 11
MIIIPI"Awlllll' I$, She,tl..-.1 tG
No. Caroll• 81. M. Nora. Carelha 71'
1\'o. Carou . . AAT.U, Wl,..on~alt'III7S
Randoi ... ·Maooa 1'1. YII'JI•• Wnleyan .U
•
SouCh Alabama 14, Jaebolmlle 11
Soudlern Ml•~o: 93, VIJIIIU. Ted! 71
Sou .. Flor14at4, OldO.mlnlenH, OT .
TennnMI!e !W, MluMtfpplllll. Q, OT
Tite Clt . .el 83. So. car ..... St. 11'
UM'BC 11. IAJ'ftla·Md. M
"·.va. Tech 15, a.art......w.va. 1.1
"' t~~~rn CaroiiM 7t, Wellord IS
" 'estlJbertyfU, Glg\lllho 81, OT

Mlftest

.\I hi on It. Alm.a 112
Bradk&gt;y 5~. ladt ... St. Ill
Ct'nl. Mtt:lrwllsl' 81, " 'eatmln!Mer 110
Cal \linN, Adrlull
CaM" M'ster n RHerw Kt.. " 'o..ter 8f
C..enlral Mo. 11, Wullbum t8
DeP»~~ISI, FonlllamSA
Ewl~rn Mlr.hlpn 511, Ball State S7
Elmhurst 87, Aup.U.. 83
FranUin15. M'abuh II
Getlltn 78, Nazareth 71
Hanovt!r ~. An *r11011 88
HeldtltwJt7S, IUram $7
HoPf 98, 011\'d 18
01. ClllcltR'ol&amp;, Valpu-ah1o8S

m: Benedlctllte lot. Allron 18

DllnoiH:hlca~:oa&amp;. Valpan.l11oiS

,Judftoo 17. Trinity 711

,

Heal St. 1111, Wrl&amp;hf st.' 15
Miami IS, B&amp;wll111 Grern II OT
Mo " 'e'!lteullt, Uncoln71 '
Mount Union 1M. Martella 11

Ohio U. 11. Tat.-• 71
Ohio Northeralll, Capital S3

e.

Ohio M'tt~leyaa
Dealllan S4
Oklaboma IIi, lo..-a State 81
Otll'rbeln 117• .John Car .. l1111

Transactions
M' l" ~il,l' Spor1

Tr-4n!'illt11oltl
Ba8f'haU

Dflrolf - .-\J1;1"4'1'd to -l ·yt&gt;IU" conln~el
wllh pltC'hl'r ·lt&gt;ff Rohln110n.
Mlnii'M'II.Il - Slpd fC'l' ...ll&amp;t'!llt OU/ ·
fl••ld er .John ,"'o!lel&gt; to a 1-)'t'ar t·o•ract .

New \ 'eric ci\Ll - SIJPIIf'd pitcher Eric
Plunk lo II l · ~lU"tOaltad .,
San Die~ - Slped pltther Calvin
St hlralcl to a l· yurenntract .
Col ill' II'
~ILil'n h1land - N.11.med Fran.Hirll('hy
bprbMII l-mtdl.

football
Atlanta. - Named Tom Ro111lry IU! Pllal·
ant t'Oil&lt;·h.
Miami - Sam,.-.d MoW flark pro

Rockferd U , C•DCQrdla (Ill. ) tl
St. Xavlr1" &amp;S. Punlue Cal.,.ft 7_.
st. Scholullca 71, ~111lluil8
Sl. . X llvlf!r IS. hnlue·Cal.ntt: 14

Vlnr.rnlft "· Ol~y C.fttral '74
M·. Mldll~ 111, r . Mlchlpn n . OT
WlttoPnbt&gt;rl!; U Ear11wn N
SouU!Wt&gt;l'll
"'"-••" let Tn:u Tf'l'b 17
•tpam \' oun~ 16. Tul&amp;a: i-1
Hnulllo,n' )1.4, Rict' li
KaniiiUI M3, Olda. St. 1'6
Mt~ITIIY II, Sui Ro1111 Stat,. SJ
Mt"trv. Slatf' tl, " 'esteral!ltatto II
St. f.AtwllNIII 11, Tex . lMitftU '7R
TCl' 'a, Tf'Us .UM i7
T~&amp;ll !18. a.,·lo r II
Wt11t
Sfhraska 91 . Colorado"'

Ba8eball
talks recess
NEW YORK ( UPI) -Baseball
negotiators met and recessed for
rtve days Wednesday, with management all but saying spring
training camps will not open as
SCheduled.
"We're not at an agreement,"
. owners negotiator Chuck O'Connor said. "The memorandllm
that went out to the clubs a couple
of weeks ago instructed the cluhs
that until ru~ther advised by the
PRC (Player Relations Commit·
tee) the camps were not to be
open,. And obviously a lack of an
al!l'eement in my view makes It
probable that the camps will not
be open."
O'Connor Is to brief owners
Friday In Chicago. He declined to
say what he would recommend,
but said nothing has happened to
· change the memo's Instructions.
Union head Donald Fehr said
he Will meet with players Thurs. day in Los Angeles and Friday In
Phoenix before talks resume
Monday in New York. He 'saidhe
assllmes the camps will not open
·
as scheduled Feb. 15.
"Not only are the players
tested each time, but each time
the owners decide that they have
a new basis upon which.tobelleve
that the players won't behave the
way they did the last time," Fehr .
said. "There area numberot new
faces at the table durl!lg each
negotiation. '
•
"Maybe ·they have to see for
themselves. It seems pretty silly
to me, but It Is what It Is."
Baseball has endured four
work stoppages In the last 18
years. The first occurred In the
spring of 1912. and lasted nine
days into the regular season.
Players struck April 1, 1980,
causing the cancellation of 92
• exhibition games.
In 1981, plliyers struck for 50
days, causing a spilt season . And
In 1985, a one-day strike took
place, with former Commls·. ·
stoner Peter Ueberroth )lelplng
forge a settlement.
The previous .labor agreement
expired Dec. 31, 1989, and owners
are seeking to resn:ucture the
contract with revenue sharing,
pay-for-performance, and a sa·
'lary cap.

Starting the week at seventh in
Erin Sharrock, who is at 17 points
Dlstrict22, the Universit y of Rio
a game, and center Nicolle
Grande women' s basketball
Bosworth, a 6-0 senior providing
team plays its final Mid-Ohio
14.5 markers and 10.4 rebounds a
Conference game of the season
game to the Lady Cougars'
- Saiurday at Mount Vernon
offense.
Nazarene.
MVNC Coach Jeana Howald Is
The Redwomen, who opened
expected to complete her lineup
this week with a' 65-46 victory
with Shannon Bell as the other
over Maione, are 17·9 and 5-2 In
guard and E rika Brown and
' the conference, placing them
Linda Ward as the forwa rds .
second behind Urbana. The Lady
Ali additional victory at t,1ount
Cougars, who defeatecl Walsh
Wrnon will probably booSt Rio
Tuesday, 72·55. are 6·13 overall Grande' s hopes for the piliyoffs
and 4·3 in the MOC.
later this ·month . The team will ·
Based on her performance last
play Its final game of the season
week, slartlng point guard Deb· at home Tuesday against topble Fredrick has emerged as the
ranked defending district chamRio ladies' leading scorer at 14.5 pion Central State, starting at
poin(s per outlng. Fredrick, a 5·6 7: 30p.m.
freshman from South CharlesSports briefs
ton. Ohio. also leads the way In
assists.
COach Doug Fo9te is e11pected
Golf
to
start with Fredrick and Jennl
. Services were he.id In Detro.lt
'
. MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH WRESTLING SQUAD- Members of the
Donnie May, BrJan Hottman., .Josh 'Jfeck, Eric Qualls, Jake
Couch as the guards, with Kerr! for Th.e ima Louise Cowans, a
Meigs Junior High wrestUng team are lront row from left· to
· Kennedy, Chris Swan!IOD, ancl Shannon Staats. This Is the first year
Kidwell and Kathy Snyder as the pioneer'black professional golfer
right-Pat Younc, Danny Reed, P. J. Chadwell, Adam Sheets,
for a wresiU!!I pJ'Oiram Iii JIDIIor JaJglt at Meiga Local.'
forwards
. Ann Barnitz remains wbo won the U.S. Golfers Associ.
·Curtis Storms, and Jerod Cook. Second Row- Coach Jim Sheets,
at the center, the position she has ation national championship five
held all season .
times In the 1940s and 1950s.
Entering the fray , Barnitz is Cowans, who died of a stroke
averaging 13.8 points a game, Sunday at age 77, was the first
while Couch is supplying 6.8, black female golf professional
Mount Vernon Naz&lt;~rene, the
The Redmen were ~2 in his two top; shooters, 6·3 small and J eft Brown and center Troy Kidwell 7.8 and Snyder 7.2 .
bu t was denied membership. In
.c urrent leader of District 22 and
conterenceplayuntiiJan . 9when · forward Ron lfolmes, Who is Donaldson. First off the bench ·
The leading scoring threats for the LPGA in 1951 because of her
the Mid-Ohio Conference and a
they defeated Mount Vernon on averaging 21 polnta a game, and will be Lyndell Snyder for thP Mount Vernon Include 5·8 guard race.
·. team as notable for its use of the
the road, 91·83. The loss snapped. Steve · Greiocy, a &amp;:5 junior guards. D11rius Willilims for thr
three-point field goal as the
a 13-game home winning streak · credited with- 19.3 markers per forwards and John Lambcke for
University of Rio Grande, does
for the Cougars and r.ert;~alns the outing, filling the other forward Donaldson.
battle with the Redmen tonight at
team's only conference loss. of s 10 1. .
' Ali.of toe starters are averag·
7:30' in Lyne Center. '
. '·
the seasaf\.
,
Rou'ndlng out ·!he iln~up are ing i!l double figures . after.
The g;~.r'ne will also mark Bob ' .
Since then, Bernie Baiikian s . guards . :Joe While . (6-3, senior, Monday's. 105-83 victory . over
Evans Farms Night and admls· · club went on another run of eight 12.9 points) 'a nd Aaron Reynolds Cincinnati Bible · - Harri'son
sian is free. · ·
straight victories until. it was ' _(5-9, sophomoff, 8.8 points), and 18.4; Schubert 17.2; Brown 12.5;
Coming off a beetle four-day
knocked off . 93-74 Monday by center John Church (6·5 senior
Erslan 10.8 and Donaldson 10.t
schedule of games that resulted
Ashland University. Enterlng ·,-.·1.3 points):
'
'·
"Bernie Ballkian does a goOll
•
in a 3·1 slate, Rio Grande (11-14 )
tonight's session, the Cougars
RedmenmentorJohnLawhorn job with his team, and believe tt .
looks to ·tmprove Its standing in are 19·6 and 6·1.
Is expected to counter with Gary or not, they shoot more threes
the MOC, where it is now 3·5.
Ballkian Is expected Ia send In Harrison and Mark Ersilin as the than we do," Lawhorn comguards, forwards Brad Schubert mented earlier In the week .
Created for women who ,demand style
The Redmen are on the road
again Saturday at Dyke, starting
and comfort You'll notice a
at 7: 30 p.m., and are at Cedardifference with the first step you
ville on Tuesday, also at 7:30
take. And others will notice
'
Plnlella has never seen some of
p.m .
CINCINNATI· (UP!) - When disputes:
their no-nor,sense styling.
"It doesn't look good," says the Reds' younger players per,
. the Cincinnati Reds go on the .
road this seasol!, they're golng·to Pinlella . "It's a shame that both ·' form and he was hoping to take a .
sides a,re still so far apart'. It"s !!Ood. loilg ,look this sp~ing ·
.play baseball. not golf, says new
SECURITY
(All Games)
dishearten lng."
training. .
manager Lou Pinlella.
In Black
W L P OP
TEAM
Plniella says pitchers need at
"The most Important thing for
Pintella doesn't want his play·
Wellston
.......
..
15
3
1316
1056
least six weeks of spring a new manager is seeing your
ers 0\11 on the golf course during
and Taupe
Miller ............. 14 4 1188 1293
training.
own players and evaluating the
the daytime If they've ·got a
Trimble ....... _.. 11 6 1048 995
" You 've got to stretch your team," he says: "You can
baseball game to play that night.
starters out so they can go six or 'a ssume or at least have an
Belpre .. ........ .. 11 8 1367 1003
,"It looks awfully bad for a
Alexander ... ... 11 8 1202 1127
seven innings the last couple of educated guess what the major
team to go on the road and when
Fed-Hocking ... 9 10 1366 1329
times our," he says. " Otherwise. leaguers will do. But YOIJ need a
you get off the plane you see eight
Vinton County : 8 9 1056 1005
ali you have is a bunch of middle chance to look at the young
or 10 or 15 sets of (golf) ~lubs,"
Meigs·,..... .. .... . 2 17 1025 1.196--1relievers when you head north." players In spring tr;llning."
. · says Plnlella. "The players are
Nels-York .... ... · 2 17 1006. 1360
' ... getting paid to play baseball. If
Tuesr,lay's resulto:
~ei8f:!
seventh·
grade
girls
linish
a1
golf is so important, they can join.
Wellston
85 ,Miller 66
·the pro (golf) circuit."
· The · Meigs Junior High 7th
Members of team are (not in
support sySftJm.
.
.
Vinton
County
72 Nelsonville·
Because Pinlella is a new gvade girls basketball team order) Amber Blackwell, Bobbie
York
62
manager In a new league, spring recently completed a successful Butcher, Vanessa Compston, Me·
.training ·this year figures to be season · with · a regular season Iissa Clifford. Erica Roble, Billie Alexander 56 Meigs 53
. very important to· him. And
record of 8-4 . The losses came Butcher, J~ckie Swartz,, Janna Belpre 73 Federal Hocking 66
Friday's carnes:
·
that's why Plnlella is disapfrom Athens 37·34, and33·20, and Dailey , Maggie Kennedy, Kelley
Meigs
at
Federal
Hocking
Nelsonville·York 32-28 and 33-31. . Grueser, and Annie Je~e. The ,.
pointed with reports that indicate
spring training may be Mlayed
Meigs lost In the first round of tzam was coached by .Cathy Trimble at Wellston
Nelsonville-'i ark' at Alexander
or shortened because of
Edwards.
22 5 N. Second
tournament play at l'v'
Miller
at
Belpre
management-player contract
Lexington St. RosE'. - J ·&lt;.l.

By United Preas laler~onal ·
Scott led Miami wltb 25 points run by Kent midway through the
A few rons of flytng toilet and Stewart added 23 as Miami first h•lf helped give the Flashes
paper, which found their way improved its MAC record to 7-3. · a 55-40 lead at halftime.
'
onto the Millett Hail floor, could
"We were at home and we
Mike Ki(Dzlng added 19 pOints
have decided Wednesday night's needed that win, " said Peirson. · and Tony Banks 13 for Kent
Miami-Bowling Green Mid- "I was proud of our kids because · State.
'
American Conference basketball the last couple of weeks we
Freshman · Bill Edwards led
game.
haven't been making the big W~lght State with 29 points, also
The Redskins ultimately pre- baskets and have been turning his career high, ·and M11rcus
vailed 93•91 in overtime over • the ball over.
· 'Mumphrey scored·24. ' ' ·
'.'I'm gliing ,to enjoy thts ·
Bowling Green, pulilqg them .
' The Ohio Athletic Confe~nce
back to within a game of game,'' added Peirson, "because '!list one of rts multiple lf4l'ders
Mid-American Conference It' was a big, big win for us."
" Wednesday· night with M~kln­
·leader Ball State, an upaet 58-57. . ' In other MAG games Wednes- 'gl1m's '6(l-56 road vlctoi'y "over
loser at home Wednesday night day night, Ohio University beat Baldwin-Wallace. The win left
to Eastern Michigan.
Toledo 76-71 and Western Michl· the Mu'skles tied for the OAC's
Officials called five technical gan edged Central Michigan top spot with Otterbein and
fouls during in the game. They 78-77,
Heidelberg, ali with 12-3 league
In a non-league contest, i&lt;enf marks. B-W fell to 11-4.
included two on Miami Coach
Jerry Peirson, another on Miami State outscored Wright State,
Otterbein retained ·its share of
player Jim Paul for Inciting the 108-85.
the lead with an 87-68· win over
At Athens, Dave Jamerson had last place John Cafrail, while
crowd and another on the crowd
itself after the barrage of toilet 33 points and Dennis Whilaker Heidelberg outgunned · Hiram
paper hit the floor after a 3·polnt scored all13 6f his in tbe ·second 75-57. In other OAC::' games, Ohio
goal by Tjm1 Stewart gave the half in OU's win over Toledo.
Northern ·downed Capital .68·53
Redskjns an 1 arly 3-2 lead. BG's
With five minutes left and · and Mount Union· thumped .MaSteve Watson also had a techni- Toledo up 62·60, Whitaker con- rletta iOG-73. ,
cal called on him.
verted a · 4·potilt play . with a·
In the North Coast Athletic
The Falcons' Clinton Venable,
3-point goal and a free throw to Confer¢nce, Wittenberg, playing
who led all scorers with 31 points, give the Bobcats a 64-62 lead. without 6-foot-9 Brad Baldridge,
cashed in on all eight of the Jamerson then followed with one still ali! witlt an ankle sprain,
technicals he attempted and of his 3-polnt goals andOU led the · whipPed Earlham (Ind.) 63-44for
made 12 of 12 from the free throw rest of the way.
the Tigers' 21st win in 22 games.
line for the game.
Whitaker hit four free tlirpws
In other NCAC contests, it was
But In the end, David Scott's in the·last 25 seconds, converting Ohio ·Wesleyan over • Denison
3-point play with 1: 11 left in
two one-and-one situations for · 65·-54, Allegheny (Pa.) overOber·
overtime gave Miami a 90-S7lead ihe Bobcats.
lin 104-66 and Case Reserve over
· and prQvlded the lift the Reds. .
Craig Sutlers led Toledo with Wooster .88'86.
kins needed , Cedric Vanleer. then 20 points.
.
· Kenyon -of the 1 l!J,CAC beat
hit just three of seven free throws
Kent State's Ric Blevins Bethany (W; Va) 76-65 and Tiffin
the rest of the 'way, but It was 'scored a career high 38 points iri ' downed Findlay 78-69 in Wednesenough .
·
. leading the Golden Flashes to day night 's other two games.
victory over Wright State. A 13-0

No major changes

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MOC ·leader·invades Lyne . ~nter tonight

u itions.
The.Original Stile Plus
Comfort Shoe

rePorted

in UPI's boys c~e ,rat~ ,

Piniella: Reds ·must play

~ss of the season, 7b-68 to Findlay, with Toledo St .
Francis . advancing from ·fifth · \o fourth and
.Westerville South from sixth to flftl). · '· ·
Sandusky moVt!d up two spot,s til sixth, faUowed
· by Newark,' Mbunt Vernon, Mansfield SeniOr and
unbeateq Strongsville.
Youngstown Liberty's lead over Orrville this
week was 17 pbints- 275-258- and the Leopards,
15-0, also had a 2U:5 edge in first place votes over
. the Red Riders 117·0) .
St, Henry, 15.0, remained a close third with
three firsts and 245 points, followed in order by
Onlario In fourth with 196 points and Richmond
DaJe·Southeuiern stili In fifth, despite losing its
first game of the season, ' 54-47, to Greeufleld
.McClain:
·
·
The rest of toe Division III list Included Burton
'Ber kshlre, East Can (an, Be;ichw&lt;!od, Houston and
Colonel Crawford.
Wehrle, which bounced back from its loss last
week a.t Ross Southeasll!rn with a 53-45 decision
over Columbus DeSales', ' led ' New Madison
Tri-Village 217-195· in the Division IV balloting.
Both teams received 11 first place votes.
The Wolverines now are 15-3 on the year, while
Tri-Village is unbeaten at 18.0.
Van Buren advanced from a tie for fourth to
third this week, .with Vanlue fourth and
Springfield Catholic down two spots to fifth.
Rounding out the small schooi list were
Tuscarawas Catholic in sixth, followed in order by
Berlin Hiland, Cedarville, Miller City and •Upper
Sciolo Valley.,
··
·

By GENE CAPDES·
_
UPISporls Writer
COLUMBUS- Only minor chlin~~:es occurred in
this week's United Press International Oliio High
School Board of Coaches' boys basketball ratings.
The four leaders - Toledo Scott in Division I, .
Kettering Alter in Division II, 'i oungs town
Liberty in Division III and Columbus Wehrle In
Division IV- remained the same.
In fact, only one of the runnerup teams was
different from a week ago with Hillsboro moving .
Into the No. 2 spot In Division II after Bellevue,
second last week, lost 71·62 to Shelby.
Alter, 15-1 and Idle last week, still held a
comfortable margin over Hillsboro, 16-0, 327-27,3,
and also had a 28-4 margin in first place Votes.
Canfield, West Geauga, North Bend Taylor and
Steubenville ail advanced one position from last
week, While Bellevtie's loss dropped the Redffien
from second to seventh.
Rounding out the Division li list were Fostoria
in eighth, newcomer Painesville Harvey in ninth
and Portsmouth in tenth.
Scott, 17-1 after Its 81-40 thrashing of Toledo
Bowsher Tuesday night, collected 28 of 35 first
place votes In Division I and 342 of a possible 350
points from the large school coach,es.
Canton ·McKinleY, 15-1 remained a distant
second with 284 points, while unbeaten Beaver·
creek US-0) again was third 'with five firsts and
279 points.
.
Newark, which had finished fourth the last two
wee~s. tumbled to seventh .following Its second

Redwomen face fina~
MOC foe on road

baseball~

nqt golf

TVC standings

8-4

htritagt hott$t
mt.e

·SHOE PLACE

.,
SkiJumplnl
Frantise.k Jez of Czechoslovakia had jumps of 290 ~ and 303 \7
feet to win the first leg of the
World Cup event at St. Moritz;
Switzerland.

II TWO
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Come see the. ·.

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DOUBU.
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AMERICA
.· -r.

Dr. Daniel
R. Trent

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ACCORD.

Family Practice

...
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
_,
9 a.m. • 5 p.m.
Wednesday
.... 9a.m. ~ Noon
.
Appointments and Walk-ins Welcome ,

Office Staff:
Lisa Thorne, LPN
Gail Hov.e atter
Linda Trent

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Formerly Bend Area Medical Center

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$999

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c . - .... - - _ . .

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...,......,o....,..,......,.. .. .,..,. ... Cir!Y-

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01.11'....,.,. Wl'¥ . . ffiii'IIIIUII. Ower-.-

,01 ...

n._.., 10.,..,.. . . MIWIQ . •(' lilt DoM!rw1 l'lm. one.

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because*

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· OFF: HILLS·ALREADY LOW.

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HONDA CARS

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~omotiOI~ni!CIUded.

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'llalll'l ... 111111 Til llli'Pinl At!Iiiii.

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. o~n Was~ington.'s. Birthday
Mond&amp;y, February 19th
9:30am
. . to ~Opm.
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. . . . . . .,iat:tll:anlpldiDI'ICIInlfll
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1M! III I dJN11t OIIIIt ll!'lllllm:limply bring In their ld. ,
Double IIIII 1ti1111 tcuponl dWreellld Ita! pmn!aQe off

10 E. State Athens, Ohio • 5.94-8555' .

Due to the neture ola clearance, Items may vary by store. Some Interim markdowns may already

hive been lll~n. .

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Nlll»dYBufJHIIIII ..

HAPPY.
HONDA
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Spring merchahdise is on the way 80 we're Spring Cleaning! W.ve
mal'kect down Winter-merchandise 20% to 60% and.'IOU CLEAN UP with .
Hills ~prices ot the yearllt's not a ~le
a . . Pric• 9o
back up. These price$ stay low until the goods are gone - and they'll be
gone.soonl ~come in toctay1
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.,.* .• .-.......
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..o.rr..r........... ....................a
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PlUU-16 oz. som~~•s

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1 Addltlonall-.n .15C Ea'ih 1

"f. 0...

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~········..--===z o:~ •••••.,
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FOI FOUl I
. ., ONI mMI. lAIII s m. PIUA I

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138 Main St., New Haven, WV + (304) 882-3134

882-2124

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PIZZAS
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Call 'Oomino's Plmf81now and save.·

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Ladies.: All fall and wiAter junior, misses' and fuller figure dresses,
blouses, shirts, sweaters, knit tops, robes, brushed sleepwear and winter
coats &amp; jackets.
·
Selected skirts, slacks, jeahs, socks and other hosiery.
Girls: All winte~ coats &amp; jackets, sweaters and robes.
Selected dresses, woven tops, knit tops, fleece tops, skirts, pants, slacks
. sets, winter sleepwear. skirt sets1and mix &amp; match.
Boys: All winter coats &amp; jackets, polar fleece, skimobile suits, ski pants,
sweaters, slacks sets, flannel shirts, long-sleeve knit shirts, mix &amp; match
coordinates, NFL Team tops, NFL socks, NFL pajamas, and NFL
accessories.
.Selected long-sleeve woven tops, corduroy pants, lleecewear, t-shirts,
fashion bottoms, pajamas. and robes.
Infants &amp; Toddlers: All coats, jackets, flannel shirts, pramsuits, corduroy
slacks. snowsuits and sweaters.
Selected.knittops,,pants, slacks sets, crawler sets and mix &amp; match.
Men: All fall sweaters. long-sleeve knit tops, hunting clotres
and wool &amp; co~duroy sportcoats. .
Selected long-sleeve sport shirts, coats &amp;·jackets, dress pants. denim
jeans, fleece coordinates, fleece tops, casual pants, robes, hats,
nightshirts a~d corduroy jeans.
Toyi: Selected boys' action figures, boys' &amp; girls' toys &amp; dolls.
Hardware: Selected track lighting &amp; accessories and
Stanley cordless screwdriver.

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• ... DAI~Y ..

SUNDAY'

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Peg( 6-The Daily Sentinel

Polnafoy Mldcleport. Ohio

I•

EJ .Burning oolll produc:ea

· haatlhatlurrep..~
Wal8f I
feldllial8f pipe

rom

intOttll&amp;m.

alle!ledly CO!IIiU~ted •tate busl·
ness
from hJr fiance's New York
1
• apartme'n t and Jaw office P.n
namerous occasions between
198'7 and 1989. .
"...
, • Davis, 37, who-resigned aarUer
t)lls week, etrecuve Feb: 1s1
retuSII(! to appear at the hearing,
·
clUng pressing legal business at
the SERB, which oversees"dhio's
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co Uect ve arga n Jig aw· Of
&gt; publiC employees.
· . : Inspector General . David
Sturtz, who Issued a report of a
• seven-month Investigation that

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found Davis guilty of excessive
absenteeism while · she was
SERB executive director In 1987
and later a member of the board,
told the corrimiJk'e he stands by
the report. '
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Davis said she would file a sex
discrimination complaint
against Sturtz wltli the Equal
Employment Opporturuty Com'mission; claiming the reportwas
biased and ' unprofessionaL
Sturtz said he has not received
- notice of the complaint.
,.
· Sen. Robert Cuvp. R·Lima,
sought through questioning
', StUrtz to·· show that Attorney
General Anthony Cele.brezze Jr.

granted.

Shop ith These Po•eroy ere ants
During t eir:~ale tine Sa~ings
Spree!!! .· ·
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''We think this is an outrageous
Bryan S. Shank, Maureen E .
shell game," Spratley told a
Hennessy, Dale S. Thoene, Tra·
news conferen~e ,
, ,
cey L. Odell, Dan E. FoUrod,
No Ohio' \Jdlity, Including Co·
Gregory W. ·Cunningham, John
lumbia Gas in 52 previous cases,
F. Snyder, Janet R. Letfle, Harry
has ever before invoked the law 's
L . L effIe, B r e n d a S .
275-day provision. he said.
Cunningham. ,
"This action is an attempt to
Gerald E. Rought, Tammy K.
Intimidate the parties·, and this Wright. Ray William Williams,
office will not be Intimidated,"
Pen nee Knapp, VlrgllK. Windon,
said Spratley, pounding his lists.
Gerl Walton; Donald R. Smith,
Columbia Gas, which serves
John S. , Foster, William W.
more than 1 mHiton customers,
Radford, Pamela J. Miller,
was just granted a $15.5 million · . Nancy J. Aldridge, Paul F. Marr,
Increase .tn October, said ·Carolyn A. Charles, Mar$ha L.
_Spratley.
Banwart; and Keith Phalln.
Racine: VIrginia Bland. Dal·
"Our position is their rates
ton Henry,. l\1arle A : Bush,
should be reduced by $17 !Jlll·
Charles W. Bush, William H.
lion," he said.
H!&gt;bark, Dorothy M. Sayre, Fred·
Only 14 days of hearings have
erick R. Thompson, Connie
been held so far, Spratley said,
Enslen, Chari~ F_._~les, Jr.,
adding . that hearings In· Ports·
mouth, . Mansfield, Marion,
OC S
Athens, Steubenville and Salem
are all scheduled after Feb. 16.
.... Dally stock prices
'·consumers have not had their
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
South Cen.tral Ohio
· day in court," he charged. "We
Bryce
and Mark Smith
Becoming mostly cloudy and a haven't even put our witnesses
of
Blunt;
Eilts &amp; Loewl
chance of showers late Thursday on.''
Commission spokesman Dan
night. with a low between 45 and
A El tri p
30 .,
74
said the $42 million case
Fugate
50. Chance of rain is 40 percent.
m .......
ec ...................
c ower .............
AT&amp;T
....
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.40%
Showers likely Friday morning was complicated by the fact it
Ashland 011 ........................ 36%
and windy with highs between 55 came so close on the heels of the
Bob
Evans ......................... 12%
and fill.
$15.5 million case.
Charming
Shoppes ............... 8%
·'Unt il that 1$15.5 million) case
Extended Forecast
was decided. it was di((icult to
cFiryHoldtngco .., .... ...... ....... 14
Saturday through Monday
ederat MoguL ................... 18%
Fair Saturday, with a chance focus on the seCQnd case," . he
Goodyear
T&amp;R .. :......... :....... 36
of rain or snow Sunday and fair said ' ih explaining the delay .
Heck's
.............
... ....... .......... 2%
Monday. Highs wHJ be in the 30s Also, the PUCO did not expect .
Key
Centurlon
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each day, with overnight lows in Columbia to invoke the 275-day
Laf1ds'
Et:~d
.....
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............... 17
provision, said Fugate.
the 20s or the lower 30s.
Limited Inc, ....................... 35';6
Multimedia Inc .. :: .............. .. 78
Rax Restl!urants ............. ........ 2
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... .... ... 15%
three granddaughters, Ruth Aim Shoney's Inc ....... .... ........... ,10%
.Chloe Fick
Star Bank ... .. :.................... :183;4
Dowler, Florida, Pamela Sage,
Wendy's Inti ..... ............. ..... .4\1;
Wisconsin . and Donna Esteron,
Chloe B. Flck, 95, of Pomeroy ,
Worthington
Ind ....... :... ...... .21%
died early this. morning at the Hawaii; six great grandchild·
ren; five great great grandchild· '
Veterans Memorial Hospital Ex·
ren; a sIster, Erma Turnbull, o(
tended Care Unit.
Mason, W.Va.; a daughter-l n.
She was born at Graham law, Geneva Flck. of California; ·
Station, W.Va., Sept. 4, 1894, to
Veterans Memorial
the late Charles and Lula Roush several nieces and nephews; and
two special nephews, Jack Wal·
Wednesday
admissions- John
Clarke. She was a homemaker
lace and Glen Wallace, both of McKenzle.'Pomeroy; Helen Aug.
and a member of the Trinity Florida.
usttne, Middleport; Linda PerChurch, Pomeroy .
sons,
Racine. ·
• Survivors Include a daughter ,
She
was
preceded
in
death
by
Wednesday
discharges - BerIsabella Powell. of Middleport;
her husband, Arthur, In 1959; a tha Rlghil)ouse. Ethel Reeves,
son, Arthur Jr.; andason·ln-law. Lloyd Johnson, Patsy LauderNeiss PowelL
milt, Bernice Fry,
Services will be Saturday, 1
· Seven persons were fined and
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p.m. , at Rawling-Coats-Fisher
two other forfeited bonds in the Funeral Home with Rev .- Robert
Action
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court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Fetty otnclatlng. Burial will be In
The Meigs ~onimon Pleas
Hoflman Tuesday n lgbt.
Riverview Cemetery. Friends. Court action of William A~ Nutter
Fined $425 and costs and
may call at the funeral home and Terri L. Nutter has been
sentenced to three days In jail on
Friday afternoon from 2 to 5 p.m. dismissed.
charges of DUI were Timothy W.
.,
Smith, Gallipolis and Lance T.
Hermann, Middleport, who was
also lined $50 and costs for no ,
operator's license.
Mark Rathburn, Robbie
Clonch, Char Jes Walker, Jr. , and
Benny Harris, all of Middleport
were fined $25 and costs each on
charges of disorderly manner.
Also fined In the court were
Trldl Jean Pinson, Point Pleasant, W. Va." SIP and costs,
improper backing, and $10 and
costs for parking In a no parking

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--Area deaths--

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Middleport court

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11 she's too special for o paper Valentine we
hove a suggestion One of these 14K Valentines is
sure to get her attention. They will speak to her in ruby red
or garnet pink or whatever language you choose. II you
ore ·serious. this Is a ~olden opportunitY,

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IW&amp;KT/K£NJ.fi/IIJI£Pf181/1W!PatN&lt;tlflflf~ llfH...

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14 KT cHAINS
ENTIRE STOCK
OF RINGS

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40°/o OFF

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5°/o
OFF
All WOMEN'S CONNIE DRESS

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and MEN'S DEXTER DRESS
and CASUAL SHOES

2QO//0 OFF

. THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY

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C. I 011 J'OUr OWII. VaJeatlne
Meaqe
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· --udal oar Cupid'• Coapoa below...

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ent•ane f S· D.·~
I

And For llhn

Now!!!

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. Surpri• your, Valentine with :
a.·' VAI,ENTJNE LOVE LINE!!!
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SALE

Regis.er

z-.L-.~ar-u ·
lfl,w;.pr
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mEET
~AVT .

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ment, advises that prospective ~
buyers should ch""k
the,'
·• wl'h
&gt;
''
Heal.th Department before mak· ~
h
••I If th
ing a pure ase to ascer,,.. n . eo
pr,o perty Is served by a sanitary~
sewerage system, and If not,l
whether it can be approved fori·
the Installation of a private home ·
sewage disposal system.
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DAWING WILL BE HELD ON
FEBRUARY 14, 19,0 AT 4:00P.M.
No Purchase
Necessary.
Need Not Be
Present To.
Win • .

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Forfeiting bonds In thhe court
were Vincent Stone, Rutland,
$60, alloWIII8,ali Ullltcensed person to operate'hli mbtor vehicle;
and Corbitt Radliff. Mlddlepott,
SllO, disorderly mallaer, and
$210, resisting arrest.

..,

BE SURE TO REGISTER AT
THESE .MERCHANTS FOR ONE
NIGHT AT THE CLARION HOTEL
IN DOWNTOWN CINCINNA Tl,
·OHio· PLUS $1 00.00 CASH!!

Squads ~eive ,5
Wednesday caDs

Minersville: Kenneth E.
Wiggins.
.
kMason, W. 'Va.: Sharon L.
An advisory has, been issued by
Leffle and Brian E. Johnson.
the Meigs County Health Depart·
Syracuse: Darla N. Thpma~.
h
b
David - F. Lawson, Delores F. ment to persons w o, may e
Whitlock, and. Richard &lt;i. Ash. . planning to purchase real estate
in Meigs County on which to build
Rutland: Marta H. Blackwood, a. home or install a mobile.home.
Dinah M. ·Stewart, Gregory ' M. · Keith Li.t.tle, Registered San)t·
Stewart, Mary·· E. Davidson, arlan, ·and.J&gt;Irector of Environ·
Donna M. Davidson, and Sher· mental . Health for the depart·
man D. White.
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country

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You'll Find Super ,Savings For' Y.our
·valentine During This ~ Event!

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Spratley· attacks gas rate hike Bloodm
·
0 f. e. ••----------- .
Couch, Lawrence D. Leonard,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio Consumers' Counsel William Spratley lashed opt at
' · · ' Columbia Gas of Ohio Wednes·
' ' day for playing "an outrageous
:, shell game" and implementing a
· $42 million rate increase without
waiting for a decision by utility
; ·regulators.
State law says that if the Public
'
Utilities Commission of Ohio
falls to dectpe a rate-increase
'
request within 275 days of when
l
· It's flied, a ullllty can implement
the lilgher rates , subject ·to
refund If and when the PUCO
'.
rules against the increase.
Thf 275-day deadline on Co !urn·
bia's request for a $42 million
rate increase is up Feb. 16. The
utlUty Informed commissioners ·
Tuesday It Intends to put the
, . higher rates In effect Feb. 17.
' ..

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Five calls were answered on
Wednesday liy units of the Meigs
Emergency Medical Services.
At 1o:03 a.l)l., Middleport went
10 . South Fourth Ave. for Helen
Augustine to Veterans Memorial
Hospl\al.' At 10:37 a.m., Mlddle·
·
F 11
o1 f
port wen 1 1 a r ane r ve or
Phyllis Blake to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
and state Auditor Thomas Fergu·
,Syracuse was called at 12:42
E'-~
'·
p.m. to Fifth and College Sts. for
.r.ilflh Day workshop
Oris Hubbard who was taken to
set at OU Feb. 24
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 4:56 p.rri., Racine trans·
The Appalachian Peace and ported Linda Persons from Por·
Continued from page 1
_ Justice Network Is sponsoring tland Road to Veterans Memqr·
.•
Eartll Di!Y 1990, a workshop fo~ Ia! Hosplt al.
Paula A, , Brown, Barbara ·F'. reachersandparentstobeheldat
Syracuse ·Fire Department
Beegle, . and Jeal)ette M. Ohio University on Feb. 24.
was called to an auto fire at
Rad'!oril".
,
:·
·
The workshop will be held from "Minersville at 1:20 p.m. Owner of
Langsville: Patricia Morgan, 9:30a.m to 2 p.m. in Morton Hall the vehicle was Brtim Murphy.
Eilts Myers,; Karen S.- Clark, ~ and will deal with the global
Plan
TaraS. Clark, and Alva B. Clark. crisis and offer solutions to
Reedsville: Mac~ I Barton, Ca· alleviate the problems.
music night Saturc,lay
rolyn Barton, Joseph D. Ma·
Paul Knoop, Jr ., graduate of
rlnko, Fonda G. Thomas. ,
Ohio State University with deCountry Music Night will be
Long Bottom: Paula ·Wood, grees in dairy technology and
held at the Lottrldge Community
Ruth r;. Karr, Ralph H. Ballard, biology, will present a program
Center Satlirday from 7p.m.'tcr12
Bruce Hawley, Laura L. Hl\wley. called "A living Planet" which
midnight. AU bands are Invited to
Middleport: Linda Haley, looks at the earth and how people
participate. RefreshJ;nents will
Roger ·s. Clark,_Jean A. Durst, and technology are affecting the
be sold and there will Ilea 50 cent
C)) aries P. Gerard, WUJiarr1 H. ' ability of the pllmet to support
donation for admission. The
Moody, Dian, L. Ash, Nortna life.
·
center Is located on. Athen~~,
Wilcox; Glor(~· J. Peavley, Tam·
The registration fee is $15
County R,oaq 53 South, five miles'
ara J. Nelsori:
which Includes lunch and child
west of Coolville. Tbe 'publlc is·
Ravenswood: Vanessa M. care.
invited IO attend .
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SidwelL ,·
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Dolomite •~ 90 perc~nt of thel3 Atllltlvei)' low 1emperature· (1 ,580'
sulfur oxide air pollutants Jll'lld!ced by
Fahrenhe~) of combustion proc:eS$
ooal oombilsti!)n; resultant solid waste
prodJj:es hall the amount of nitrogen oxide
ash is_ ,.movable from ,bottom of
air pollutant$ ~ by c:OnlltnliONI
COntaJner.
bcilers.
Ught-wtlght fly ••h particles from
Carbon dioxide iln'llsllonl, the chiei
combustion process are captured by a
greenhouse-effect gas, are cut by 16
lklll collector and a precipitator.
percent because of greater efficiency.

IJ

sbn bad been slow to l'ei(IOIIII to
th+ 'Inspector reneral's requests
for Information.
Celebrezze Is the apparent
Democratic nominee for governor this year and FerguiOn also
Both
1 t'
ts . runn(Jjg for re-eec,on.
have ~n subjected to Republl·
ci.n attackS that they •wept
under the rug'repeated wronadolng In the Celeste admlnlstr.atlon.
Sturtz said It took Celebrezze's
office tWo months to respond to a .
request tor·a legal opinion about
what constitutes a run-time state
·
• employee.
,' .•
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The response, said the lnijlec·
tor general, said the attorney
general's office would "give II
conslderatiQn as soon as possl·
ble.'' He has yet to recelve ·the
opinion.
' ·.
.
"ut Fergu
- son's office, said
'"'
k
Sturtz, already Is starting wor
on his request of Jan. s· for an
audit of expenses ~nd leave time
at SERB to see If Davis' com pen·
sa tory · time was ,. properly

The Dally SentiMI-P.ge 7

Pomeloy-Middleport. Ohio

COLUMm!S. ,Ohio l UPI) Ohio Senate'-Republlcana worlied ,
. hard Wednesday to gain political
mlleageoutofthesuspenslonand
resignation of a top official of the
state's labor relatlonl; agency.
The Senate Commerce and
"LaborConunUteebeganapubllc ,
lnQIII"Y Into' the three-week sus·
pelillon of Ja~uelyn Davis, vice •
chairwoman of the ·state Em·
ployment Relations Boar!!, who

1

and the oormnalion ol gas 1urbinas and steam turbines.

B1netlls to the envlroNnant

'

11Mndlly. Februay 8, 1990

Ohio Senate GOP makes
•
hay on susf)ension ~-

A ~rizld fluidized bed combustion power generator at a detnlrwlration site in Brilianl, Olio, wlbe UHd
lo cren eleclricity In 1990. n joins 1Wo pl'lllliously unrelated Pow•-generating syiiiiTI8: the «uidized bed

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992

· SHOP .WITH
THESE :
POMEROY ···
MERCHANTS

,

:K&amp;C
JEWELRY
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POMEROY, OH.

BUnONS
. .
&amp;. BOWS
CORKY'S
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CLASSICS .
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CHAPMAN
SHOES
CLARK'S

· ~ JEWELRY

GALliPOLIS • POMEROY

1

lOK GOLD

,.

12

SHRIMP
RING

DIAMOND
RING .

14K
GOLD HEARTS

5199.5

New $
Me~oh•ndlle
Now A,lrinf D1llgl

S2S'95

ALL 14K GOLD

FREE SIZING

ASSORTED STYLES

STOP IN AND SIGN UP FOR
THE "FREE" NIGHT AT THE
CLARION HOTEL AND
, Sl oooo CASH •

14K GOLD

TO BE GIVEN AWAY FEBRUARY 14
No Purthose Nectssary. Need Not le

,.

. · Prtttnt Tq 'NinH

NOW '300/0

OFF
CHAINS-BRACELETS

14K GOLD

DIAMOND
EARRINGS
NOW. $19_~5

~

ALL

il

l· .

PARCEL POST &amp;
• DRY CUA...G

. PICie' '

aunoNs
AND ·
BOWS

992-5177

'·

NOW THROUGH VALENTINE'S DAY

220 USYMAII
POIIIIOY,OIIO

~3595

WATCHES

NECKLACES
113 COURT
POMEROY, ON•
992·1054

NUGGET and
HEART SHAPED
RINGS

BULOVA, SEIKO, CITIZEN

HEART SHAPED

2 5°/o OFF

SELECTION .OF

·sAVE
•

30°/o
SAVE 30°/o
ALL IN STOCK MODELS
.
342 2nd AVE.

GAWPOUS, ·OH.
446-1691

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Februlry 8, 1990

I ,

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STOIAG~ BUILDING
PliNY GlADE

B,. Unlled Preu bterutlolllll
the Razorbacks.
Auburn. Cbrts Jackson wa~ held . Including seve11 three-pointers, ' has lost nine strai&amp;llt coaterence
In oilier l&amp;me$; It was Ala~
. Kansas, Arkansas and GeorgeThe Red Raiders, 5-15 overall to a careet-low nine points, all In to lead GeOrgia Tech over Wake . game$ datlnaback to last season. bama 74, MIQiulppl M: Clem!
town, allloo!clna to move Into the. and IHO In the league, received 16 the first haU. . . ·
. . ·. 'Forest In an AUantic &lt;;,oast
Rodlll!'Y Moaroe scored . 22 son 75,, Marylud 73; Kentucky
No .. 1 spot should Missouri sUp, points from Will F1emons.
Brian Oliver. scored 31 points, Conference game. Wake ;Forest points as North Carolina State . 100. V.n«~erbl!t73; Tennestee8t,
have added another notch to their .
Arkansas led 49-41 at halftime,
'
·
defeated North Carollna 88-77. It Mlsslll8lppl St. 83 In overtimeImpressive list of credentials.
· then outscored Texas Tec'h 14·3
· marked the first tlnle the Wolf·. ; Brigham Young 66, Tulsa 64;
B9ththeJayhawks,rankedNo. durlngtl)eflrst.5:07ofthesecond .
·,. pack,l6.f!, hilS deteated the Tar Houston St. Rice ~7; TCU 72, ·
2 In the country, and )!'o: 5 ·half.to take a 63·44 lead . 1 •
Heels, 16-8, hr Cbapel Hill since . Texn A&amp;M 67; Texas 96, Baylor ,1 ·
· Georgetown won on the road · At Landover. Md., Alonzo
1976.
91; Nebraska 91, Colorado 82.
Wednesday night. Kan~as Mourning scOred 20 points and
·
stretched Its record to 23·1 with · senior Sam Jefferson, averaging
an 83-76 victory over Oklahoma · just three points per game ·
Slate while the Hoyas moved to entering the conlf!st, added a
18·2 by blasting Pittsburgh 97-81 career-best 16 points for
In a Big East game.
Georg\\lown.
. ·
PUBLIC NOnCE
Thilrd:ranked Arkansas re- . The lloyas, sparked by Jeffer·
mal ned unbeat-en In the Southw- son and freshman guard David
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY
eslf!rn Conference with a 100.77 . Edwards, wentona24·6runover
Puttuant to the Company's March 18,. 198( the Company
victory over Texas Tech, bring- a span of 6: 151ate In the first half
c.pacity llld Energy Emtr· hereby apprt.- the , public
lng Its overall record to 20-2.
to take a 52-30 lead en route to a
gency . Control Program Of the lllate ol ·IUpply
The only other member. of the 54·36 advantage at halftime . .
approved by the Public. Utili· in its HM~I .,..,
t;,&amp; Commilllon of Ohio on
·
Top 10 tq see a.ctlon Wednesday
Georgetown, 8·2 In the Big
was No. 10 Oklahoma , which East, took over sole possession of
ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACIUTIES
posted an 86·81 triumph at Iowa first place In the conference, a .
The Company' s electric mately 21 percent (or more) of.
haJf.game abeadofldleConnectl·
State.
power supply, fac ilities- Capability. Mergirw of IIINII
Kevin Pritchard 5cored 17 cut. The Panthers, 9-11, had a
including pgwer ·generating thla I.,.. are eKpected 10 be
points to lead four Kansas three·game winning streak
plants. · major transmission available throughout the year
players in double figures. at snapped.
·
facilities
ancl interconnections and Into the peak load ·period
Stillwater, Okla. The Jay hawks,
At Ames, Iowa, Skeeter (ienry
!"ijh heiQhll!&gt;ring electric uiillty of .... wlnier (19111]..18111) .
631 In Big Ejl'ght play, got ~ 15 scored 25 points and Wllll.am ·
syatema ..., edeqUIIte to proGet\ltaung "It• "Y llllriJina
points from Rick Calloway and 10 Davis made three free throws in
vide reliable electric S8fllice to are 111qUired in orctei' to , _
points each from Mike Maddox the final 10 seconds to lift
its customers. During 1989, uneopected loo I I Ill In syolam
and Mark Randall. Randall also Oklahoma over Iowa State.
excluding temporary power · load, to provide lor an elleclive
pulled down 14 rebounds.
The Sooners, .16-3 overall and
sales to oth.r utility sYsteml. ~ of preventive l!llln..
generati~ margins of
Oklahoma State, which fell to 5·2 In the Big Eight, also got 19
nance of ~nef81ing laciH11es
the
American Electric Power and to allOw lor random 'lhut·
13-8, lost for only the third time in points from Damon Patrerson.
(AEP) System, ,of whiCh Ohio. downl' and loedlng curtailmenta
· its last 27 home games . Byron Iowa State, led by VIctor Alex·
.
Power is a pan. w'!'e approxi· o1 generallng units.
Houston and Mattias Sahlstrom andet' s 20 points, fell to 7-12 .
led the losers with 17 points each:
Oklahoma, after trailing 42·40
ELECTRIC ENERGY SUrPLY
A 13·2 r:un by the Cowboys at halftime, took theleadforgood
' Appro•i"'!!lely' 8~ ot ,the · bell..,.. that Hl coal IUp-.
brought them to within 75-69wlth at 75-74 on .Patterson's 15-foot
AEP
System's power gene- pliH are adequate to enable
2: 16 left to play, but Kansas was jumper with 5:35 111malnlng.
SLAM DUNK - G~rcetown UnlversltJ center ~kembe
rating capacity Is coaf.fired,
lito mMtthe anticipated tlec·
able to hold on.
Twelfth-ranked Louisiana
Mutornbo slams home a basket over the head C!f Pitt Pa11thet
9% is 'nucle,r and the 1ri~ energy. 111qulrements of •
. . Todd Day scored 22 points at State (18-41 and No. 15 Georgia
remainder Is oil·tired or its custom8rs during .the
BobbJ Matlin during first half actloa at .the Capital Centre Ia ,
· Fayetteville as Arkansas, at 11·0 Tech (15·4) also produced home
hydrOelectric. The eom·pany year. ·
·' ·
Landover, Md., Wednesday nllht. (UPI) . .'
· in the Southwest Cotlference, court victories. Freshman Sha·
remained two games ahead of qullle ·O'Neal scored 19 points
second-place Texas. Lee Mayb· and LSU overcame a flve'mlnute
· erry aild reserve swlngman Ron scoring drought In the second
· Huery added 15 points each for half for an 82· 71 victory over

~

-ONLY AT .
TOM PEDEN'S.

Smith to attend ·OSU

EUCLID, Ohio (UP!) - Run·
: nlng back Robert Smith of
· Euclid, named the national high
: school player of the year by
: several organizations and widely
· regarded as the top running back
: in the country, announced Wed·
~ nesday he will play at Ohio State.
The announcement In a news
: conference at EuclJdoHighSchool
; meal)s Ohio State coach John
· Cooper has snagged the top two
: players In th'e state for the
· Buckeyes . Quarterback Joe
: Pickens. l).foot-4 and 212 pounds,
: wtlo led St. Ignatius to two
consecutive state titles and a
national .high school champion·
ship (ast year, announced last
week he would attend Ohio State.
Commitments are riot binding
until national letters of Intent are
signed beginning next
Wednesday .
• Smith. a 6-foot -2, 190-pounder
with 4.4-second speed for 40
yards, rushed for 2,322 yards as a
··, senior . Hegajned5,31Syardsand
· averaged 9.4 yards per carry
• during his prep career.
:. Ohio State won the recruiting
war for Smith not because of Its
storied football history but because of Its highly resi&gt;ected
medical facilities . Smith plans to
' take pre-med sequence as an
undergraduate and go on to
medical school.
"The !)'lain lhlng that I based
everything on was the education
that I would receive, " said
Smith, who carries a 3.1-polnt
grape average and scored 1,200
oil his Scholastic Aptitude Test.
"There' s no question about jt.
They have the support group
dQwn there and the academic

a.

Valentine§

......... , .......................... 11.49
3/.e''x•'xl' .......................... 13.•39

AC FIR PLYWOOD

,.

IJ4"•4'x8'

DRYWALL ·

369
12"x4'x8' 369
h"x4'xl2' S69

. 3/a"x4'x8'

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•

GOldBond
!hoot

=ymix
. compound

IWhito IG'""
lllack •lrown
•Pastot· Gntn

st,oot

.

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.15°/o OFF
$ 7.98

[

REGULAR PRICE 891.00

I'

749
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PRE-FINISHED

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6

II. I'll.

...

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.

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Atrium · oor·· ,. . . .

SHEET

DUINTITH \ liMIIED
00
..

. FULL LOUVER
•

IF YUU PLAN DR BUY1RG AJi·AtrroMDBILE,
.

·

·

DDITNDwl ·

.a·ifold

~

1989 CADILL~~ BROUGHAM

.

! SUPREME ·,

/4="'&gt;

- ~~- ~-

'·
a-l - :W
* t\1

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LoadedwithLealher!

I

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1
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l

Cj(;ii§tl

· 6·
999 .· ·
4.;o·:.X6'att. ·····~···•;•
. ,

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BUICK REGAL . l

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.-:/•:&gt;
~-

•

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1
I

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$
17J!9I$9,aaa
~:..'-:"'"1
$7,222
..
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·-··--·-.--::-:-::-:-------------------L-------------------------------·---------,-------

1989 BUICK LeSABRE

1989 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

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11· 1989 PONTIAC GRAND AM
1
Auto .. llirCQnditioning

i
i1

........

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Loaded with extras!

.

IJ).

EVERYDAY
. PRICE .

t990

Crossbuc:k

CHEVROLET
LUMINA

IN WilT£ ONLY

$8,888

I ··

23900
H101974 9'x7' 21 500

HI 01931 9'x7'
~iberglass ·

21900

Wood

EVUYDAY
LOWPIICE

23900

ptwirdows, plloci&lt;s, loadOd l

l;)il~l.ld l

Ollllvered'

Steel
·· Raised Panel

•Electric •Gas •Kerosene "Check Our Price"

PVC PIPE

ALL IN 'STOCK

SCH::,~~l :~...;.................................. . 3 89

'

15°/o OFF

2'1x10' "".................................,.·~...... 4.89
3''x10' ............................................. 9.99
4''x10' ........................................... 1-•-•••

'

21 '900

FLOOR TILE

cust()m van lnvent()ry In StOCk!
su £unversl()n vans In stock!
• Lealher Seals
• Power Seats
·Power Tri-Fold Beds
• Coolers
• Radar Detectors
,
IJUIIIIY- ~uxiJ"f Price. We've Got TMm Alii· ·

··

Hl03942 9'x7'

· ALliN STOCK HEATERS ·
DRASTICALLY REDUCED .

S2.UUU.()()() ()f

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"'-

Garage Doors

LOW

!. ~
~ . ! AU1o.,awcordition, ~.
1
~= ~· ~- ~ Aulo ~oo~o~i~. ~~~e~ine .l $10,999

1989 DELTA 88

Doors

" . ·. '"l999
2· 'o~rx6'8.
, .t·~·~r--·~
I '2-'L'"
:·",.' •••••
,i.'" 4.4 ''
·.
uX 6~8'· ,·••
·. ·~ 4'699
2.,,,:" X6'8, , •4!•••••.
•• .
· 4899
3'·0 ''x6'8" ••••••••

..

-------~---~ ----------------------------.----1989c-H-EVROLEfcoR1iCA
1989 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE
I CUTLASS ·
1989 · G~~~~~~IX I
we" Equipped/

liGULAI PIICE

" '

'

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Chevrolet • Oldatoblle • Poatlae • B.a lek • GEO Inc.

Rt.lllSoa&amp;la ·Ripley
4768outlaCiavcla &amp;beet

~.

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"Not Re1110n-'ble for Typographical Errorw. · ·

&amp;.SUPPLY. CO •

Mon. """ lit. 1:10 "'"" te 1:10 ....,._
lu,.._ 10:00 a.oo. • - ,..,..
PIIUCIIPI'IONI
.
'"' ·2-2111
E. Mlin
"'""""- - · OH.

(

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JJiiDDC
QQ l[J]J l00H
'o'

Tom Peden has an inventory ot over 400brand-newChevroJets, Oldsmobiles, Pontlacs, Bulcks, and General Motors-s,lonsOre.t vellicles lhit must be sold. Tom Peden will
clear Jut his inventory ·at substantial discounts, up to $5000.
·
·

. . . . cod

Ciolfi• - ·

1

IN WIIThTE..

.

-•0111 MoCuloolgfl. 11......

lOll

~nl·•:ij nnn - h

SU=~A~~~:-:::~HE
Atrium Door
6'uNn

AS LOW AS

I"Cl?.~o:(;ri·'Vf~~&amp;"&lt;Y~•"'?i~i~r&lt;P~i~i"'f~

• Astro Vans
• G-20 Vans (Full Size)
• Raised Roof Vans (Thai Will Fit In 7' Garage)
• Standar~ Vans
. • CotorTVs
• Video Cassene Players

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advisers to handle any academic
, program, and I think pre-med is
the toughest."
Smith, UPI's Division I player
of the year. arso was named 1989
· Gatorade Circle of Champions
' National Football Player of the
Year, the Dial Corp. Male High
School Athlete-Scholar or the
Year, the Atlanta Touchdown
Club High School Back of the
Year and the Cleveland Touch·
down Club Football Player of the
Year.
The key point In Smith's
decision-making process came
when he talked to former Ohio
State tight end John Frank, who
convinced him It was possible to
play major college f90tball and
go on to medical school. Frank,
who also played for the San
francisco 49ers, was a pre-med
student at Ohio State and went on
to medical school.
"John Frarlk convinced me It
was worth It," Smith said. "That
was the dectd'tng factor right
there."
Smith, .yho also visited South·
ern California, UCLA and Ml·
ami. said his final choice came
down to Ohio State and USC.
"I felt from the beginning that
USC would have todo something
extraordinary to get me out of
state." he said. "There was a lot
of pressure on me, being an Ohio
boy, but that had nothing to do
with my decision. There's no
doubt about It, they iOhlo State)
have everything I need down
there."
Some college scouts silgges!A!d
that Smith would be an Ideal
college receiver, given hls..slze
and speed.

'

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.Kansas, Arkansas, Georgetown .C8pture, hardwOM. ~

I

The Daily Sentinti-Page 9

614-992·6611
555 PAll ST.
.Dil.POIT, OH.

........
HOUIS

7r00-SICIO
SAf.
7r00-3r00

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Literary Club meets
Mrs. Richard Owen reviewed
ihe book, " My Russia" by Peter
Ustlnove, at. the recent meeting
of the Middleport Literary Club
held at the home of Mrs. Dwight
·
·
Wallace.
In her review Mrs. Owen ·noted
that the author tries to eradicate
some of the misconceptions
about Russia. Mrs. Owen stated
that Russia has 11 time zones,
occupies one-sixth of the world's
s urface, had been Invaded· more
times than ~t has Invaded, and
has lost more people on lis own
soil that on foreign soiL

Mrs. Owen pointed out that the
United States recognized Russia
In 1939 after Hitler's ascension to
power In Germany. Communist
Russia aridNazt Germany signed ·
a pact or nonagressloll but Hitler
Invaded Russia In June of 1941.
Russia Is encircled by Turkey,
Iran, China, and Afghanistan.
The meeting was conducted by
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter and roll
call was answered by members .
naming a Russian American or a
current event of Russia.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

The annual commemoration of
President Lincoln's birthday will
be observed by the Gov. William
Dennison Camp No. 125 of the
Sons of Union Veterans of the
Civil War:
The dl nner meeting will be held
at the Bonanza Restaurant on
Route 931n Jackson on Tuesday .
. Guests or Interested lnvlduals
are welcome to attend . .
The speaker for. the evening
·· will be Mrs. · Gordon "Bury,
Orrville. She Is the past national
: president of the Ladles or the
: Grand Army of the Republic. ·
She will be dressed In a Civil
: War gown and will discuss
: clotblng of the Civil War. She

ROCK SPRINGS -there will
be a meeting of the Rock Springs
Grange on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
POMEROY -The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet Thursday.
7:30 p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
Church.
·

' ·.

AU county
band concert set

VOICES OF DEMOCRACY -These students recently partlcl~
. paled In the Voice of Democracy Conleltsponsored by lhe Tuppers
Plain• Veteran• of Foreign Wars 90G3 and Ladles AIOO!Iary. 'l'bey
are Elizabeth Bryant, Greta Rltne, Robin While, all of Eastern
Hlrh School, and Dee Canter, Southern Hl«h School.

Leading Creek
meeting slated

:VOD winners
·announced
The first annual Voice of
Democracy $crlptwrltlng Con. test was held. recently in Tuppers
· Plains. The event w'as sponsored
. by the Tuppers Plains Veterans
: of Foreign Wars Post .9053 and
· Ladles Auxiliary.
· Robyn White. a senior at
Eas tern High School, placed first
In the contest. with second place
: going to Greta Riffle, and third to
Elizabeth Bryant, both seniors at
· Eastern. The winner from So 4th·
ern High School was_~e Canter,
a sophomore.
· To participate in the contest,
. the students had to prepare three
.: to five mln11te speeches on the
- topic, "Why J Am Proud Of
· America."
· The winners speeches will be
: recorded at WMPO Radio Station
: and then forwarded to district
· competition.
· At the national level of the
_Voice of Democracy Contest, an
· $18,000 se holarshlp will go to the
: winner.
· Judges for the contest were
· Dorothy Bishop, Chaunceyi VIr. ' gle Baumgardner, Nelsonvll1e;
: and Teresa Courtney. Coolville.

. Louise Chaffee· lost the most
·weight and Cindy Lambert was
: the runner up In the recen-t class
; or Sllnderella held at Five Points. •
In the Mason class of Sllnder:ella the best loser was Barbara
:Hudson and Venls Roush was the
•runner up.
: The grollp Is accepting new
;members an&lt;\ It meets on Mon•day evenings at Five Points and
~Tuesday even lng In Mason,
·:W.Va.

SP.f Harry R. Lyons Jr. and
'Wife, Tammy, and SOlll, Jona.tban and Steven, vlsltedrelallves
·tn the area dul1ng the Christmas
;boUdaya.
·
• The Lyo111 family returned to
"Georg!.~~, where be Is stationed,
durin&amp; the early part of January,.
4

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a

HARIJ'FORD -There will be a

benefit go$pel sing on Saturday
at 7 p.m. at the Father's House
Church .In Hartford, W.Va. tea·
turelng the Grubb Family, Reflections, New Gabriel Quartet,
and New Ufe Singers. Pastor
Clyde Fields Invites the public.

SATURDAY
CHESTER :..,_The Shade River
Lodge will have Its annual
Inspection on Saturday at 7: 30
p.m. A diMer will be served ai ·
6:30 p.m . and all masons are ,
Invited to attend.

t---~----_;;.,;.;.;.;.;;.:;.;~~

Vel~ntlne 't

Deg $peei11 · As·Low As.
Samsonite·· · · · · · · _·:

0

The Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. Members are urged to
attend. Refreshments will be
served following the meeting.

The gospel sing scheduled for
Saturday at the Fellowship
Church In . Racine has been
cancelled due to Illness.

Trustees to meet
The Chester ToWnship Trus-

tees will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at (he town hall.

CORRECTION!
,r
WEDNESDAY'S f'tO\?Jzj(•i• ,AD ·
SHOULD HAVE READ:

.

2 LITER TUBZ SODA....................;..69e

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FOLDING_FURNITURE
5-~~

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Parking
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Discover

Mon. I Jri.
tl I P.M.
. 446-3045

Ray Morgan, 41, Invented a
device that raises and lowers
toilet seats by use of a peda l
located at the base of the bowl.
"The wome n will buy It, and
the men will appreciate u.:·
Morgan said Tuesday.
The automatic seat lifter,
called "Ladles' Friend," sells for
about$20 but may no t blow the lid
off the toilet Industry.
Still, Morgan, feeling a flush of
success, believes his gadget may
catch on.
·
·.
"You'll be surprised how .
Inventor may brlnfl peace _to'- . quickly you get usee) to It," the
bathroom war· ·
Inventor said.
ROCK HILL, S.C. (UPI) _: An
Morgan admits It may sound
Inventor has come up with an
like a joke at first, but the device
actually becomes a useful tool.
o
·· p
A push of the pedal, through a
..:---~·r,_ .f!
system or levers, rai ses the toilet
'· •
lid to-a vertical position tor the .
'• .. ByWILUAMC.TROTT ·,
the best support system !lor women.','
.
' ' United Preaslateraailoaal
FAMILY· POLITICS: Walter Mondale' s son,
IDOL TIME: Billy Idol's motorcyle accident T~d, 32, Is going to run lor the Mlnne~ota Senate.
, will disrupt his acting career. Idol, who su!ferell a Young Mondale, a lawyer who worked on his
· 'serious broken •leg and' rracturM arm wlien his · father's campaigns for the vice presidency and
m&lt;itorcyl~ ran Into a car In HollyWood TUeSday," the presidency as well as Michael Dukakls's 1988
hlld been cast In Oliver s t -·s upcom.lng movie campaign, will seek the endorsement of the
~ about the ,Door~~. BuHdol will be Cedars•Sinal . Democratic-Farmer~ Labor Party in challenging
Medical Cenier tor ,at least two Wf'!!ks a'ld the· Incumbent State Sen. Phyllis McQyald.
movie Is scheduled to start shootlrig the neJO;t ' .WINNm ,ON THE-LINE• WIMie Mandela may
week Idol, 34. was In serious but stable co!lllltion have reached out and touched too many people.
Wednesday after a team that lncludfi(l three Mandela, wife of jailed apartheid lighter Nelson
orthopedic surgeons operated on his leg for seven · Mandela, had her telephone service cut oft
hOurs. Idol wasn't wearing a helmet when he ran a because o'! an unpaid $1,700 bill . and a
, stop sip and crashed Into 11 car with his Harley Johannesburg newspaper quoted a spokesman lor
• and pollct-plan to ticket him fo~ running the stop the ·Department of Posts and Telecommunicaslgn. Idol just finished recOrding a new album, tions, which handles South Africa's telephone
"Charmed Life." .
network, as saying Mandela's phone bill had not
,.
,TURNER'S MAGGm: Kathleen Turner Is been paid •Since November . Mandela regularly
trying to play dOW!) apy comparlso11s between her. changes the number o( her home phone In the
pqrtr.ayl)l of. Maggie In the revival of "Cat on a. Hot . upscale Dlepkloor suburb of Soweto, the black
Tin ·Roof" and. Elizabeth ~aylor's, "We l!ave a tol\'nshlp outside of JohanriesbiU'g.
,qu!te . dlf!erl!nt body' bull,d ," Turner. says. The
Kl'ITY'S TOPICS: . H:ltty Dukakls's doctors
S:ct.ress .ajso backs away from being compared too have advised her not to discuss her addiction
!l . closely w(th the shrfwlsh Maggie. "But I like a lot problems In her public appearances . "Her
· of the.elements I see In her," Turner said. " -I like therapist and she agree that It Is critical that she
, her optimism, I like her b!!llheadedness, I.like her . not be so upfront about her problems," said a
en!!rgy." Tennessee Williams's Cl!lsslc play close friend. "It appears that her speaking might
with the long-lost third act restored -opened In be over. Or very limited." The Massachusetts
Boston Tuesday night In preparation lor a first lady recently returned home from an
Broadway_~un. Next Tuesday's performance of alcoholism treatment center and Tuesday night
the play wll_l be .a fulll\-ralser for th~ Planned Mrs. Dukakls, In one of her· first public
Parenthood League of Massachusetts and Turner appearances since returning home, joined her
Is on the boa~.d of directors of Planned Parenthood husband, Gov. Michael Dukakls, at a ceremony
·Jn New York. "I've supPQrted them fpr a long formally forging. a sister state relationship
time, since working at their clinics when I .w as In between Massachusetts ~;~nd the Japanese state of
· college," she says .. '.'l grew up In a trac11tlon ·or Hokkaldo, She also has resumed work on her
'-, yolunt~er -)l'ork, I WQrked Ill Baltimore at a center. memoirs, "Now !.Know."
I just th.lnk It Is the best health care available and
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.Man ·beats 2 blUion-to-1 odds to
win second Jackpot ·
A-LBANY , N.Y. &lt;UPI) - A
Bron&gt;~ man who used the serial
numbers In-a new pair of shoes to
pick his lottery numbers beat
2-bllllon.to-1 odds and won the
state Lotto game for a second
time.
John Martin, 77, overcame
odds estimated at almost 26-

mUJion-to-1 and corre ctly
match'ed all six numbers In
Saturcjay nig ht's S4 miiUon Lotto
game, state lottery officials said
WedneSday.
Martin will take home $800,000
because four other players al so
held winning tickets for the
drawing.
In what Lo ttery Director Pe te r
Lynch called an " Incredibly
lucky event ," Martin also won
part. or th e April 30, 1986, Lotto
drawing; collectin g a $666,000
prize.
.Lottery offi cials said the odds
of one person winning two Lotto
jackpots as 2-bllllon-to-1.
" Obviously, to win !he lottery
once, at odds of 25· :26-mllllon-to·
1 Is lucky," Lynch said. " But to
do it twice In fou r years Is
lricredlble . Every drawing Is a
random event, and he kept
playing-knowing he had as good a
chance as an ybody to win ."

VALE.NT .I N E'S

PAUL SEBASTIAN GIFT. SET •••••••• ~ ............................sasoo

SAVE ON
FINE
WEARING
APPAREL
FOR MEN
AND
WOMEN

.,
,
Wednesday •·empathizing with
all athl'etlc and academk; teams
In Indiana who have failed to
win ."
.
TheresolutlonnotedtheHouse
has honored numeroU$ champions, but also stated, "It Is·
better to have tried and failed
than never to have tl1ed, .. "
A copy of the resolutloQ by Rep ,
Marc Carmichael was ordered to
be sent to the Indiana High
School Athletic·Association.

convenience of men. When the
l&gt;edalls relea$ed , the seatlowers
back Into Its normal position.
The 1nvent9""S'SId he llrst got
the Idea 18 years ago when he and
· his wife got Into the familiar
argument about leaving the .
CO!llmode lid up or down, bu t .
Morgan did not take the brainstorm seriously UIJtll about 2 'h
years ago,.
The lifter Is not available In
stores but is being sold as a mall
order Item by Morgan·.

le • th e.
. ' ne
.· ' ws

•n

E'' L. LIOTT'S

PRESCRIPTION SHOP #4

. INSTEAD OF 99' AS PRINTED·

_Our Winter Clearance
Sale Contlnue.s

The Daily Seritinei- Page- 11

i~ t~ n~ws_--:__________. .;. . :~ue~!;:a~o ~:ll '::t~r~~

' ·
·.
Wild turkey c - ltlr
of a house. Thhe frustrated
MORGANTOWN , W, V a,
pftteer grabbed a stick and
hurled It at the . turkey, ·which
&lt;UPI) ..,. A .. alngle wild turkey
then new oflloquleter surround·
c au~e&lt;~a major traffic jam when
1I wudered onto a..maln street
lngs, ln nearby woods. •.and refu8e4, to budge for nearly
Tibbs said his frantic chasing
15 minutes.
of the bird back and forth across
" Concerned motorists who spot- Spnice Street Wednesday was a
ted · lbe turkey called pollee,
first for him In his 21 years on the
·e xpressing fear tbat-a car might
poUce force,
knOCk the stuffing.out of it.'
Armed with an ·animal bar- Lotten pt 111elr day
ness, Sgt. Gary Tibbs,chased the
·INDIANAPOLIS IUPI) -Los·
1 turkey across SpruCe Street
·etshave !lnallyhadthelrday...:.a
several· times - w,hlle awaiting , moment, anyway In the
1 n d 1a · n a
H o u s e· o f
animal conl!'ol officers.
Representatives.
,,
· E~entually, the,bird.flew.from
·the street and landed on the roof
The House adopted a resolu lion
'
. •, ., ,,
·

' .''

POMEROY -The Senior· Cit!- ,
zens Dance Club will be having' a
round and square Yalentlne
dance on Friday from 8-11 p.m.
Music will be by the · True
Country Ramblers. The public Is
Invited to at tend and those
attending are to bring a snack for
the snack table. ·

Sing cancelled

· Lodge to meet

:StindereUa meets

'

Thursdly. Febru.., 8, 1110 ·
Paa• 10

at 4 p.m . The menu will include
vegetable soup, chill, and potato
soup, hot dogs, and sloppy joes ,
and homemade pies and drinks.
The public Is Invited to attend. .

MIDDLEPORT -There will
be Valen tine Dance on Friday
from 7;_1ip.m. at the American
Legion Annex In Middleport.
Glenn Aldon from WMPO will be
the DJ and the cost Is $2 per
person.

The annual Meigs All County
. . Band Concert will be held Sunday
at 2 p.m. at Meigs High SchOol.
The concert, held every year,
features students from Meigs; ·
Eastern, and · SOuthern high
schools.
. The guest director this year
will be Ronald P. SocclareiU,
conductor of bands at Ohio
University. ,

The Leading Creek. Conservancy District will hold a special
meeting at Its office on ·Tuesday
at 9 a .m .

,'.

~Visitors

of this free service.

works In the clothing preservaTUPPERS PLAINS -The
. tlon department or Kent State
.
VFW
Post 9053 will meet Thurs·
University. The Ladles ofG.A.R.
day
at
7:30p.m. at the post home.
Is an auxiliary to the original
veteran's group of the Civil War
POMEROY -The Ladles AuxFRIDAY
and still honors the memory of
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle- . illary Fraternal Order .of Eagles
Union soldiers t9day.
.
·Plans will be discussed for the port United Pentecostal Church 2171 will have a district meeting
upcoming parades that the camp Will be serving chicken-noodle on Saturday at 5 p.m. ai the
soup on Friday from 11 a.m. to 2 carperter's hall in Pomeroy . All
wpll participate In wearing re1t1embers are 11rged to attend.
.
p.m.
,
production Civil War uniforms
Meals
can
be
.
eaten
at
the
and cannon$. Also, plans for the
WILKESVILLE- The Wilkes·
1990 annual cannon shoot off will · church or delivered: The cost Is
ville
Pythlan Sisters will be
$4.
Call
992-3824
for
delivery.
be discussed.
having
a "Sweetheart Dinner"
For more Information on this
on
Saturday
from 4-7 p.m. at the
MIDDLEPORT:....
The
Return
event, contact Keitll Ashley at
Pythlan
Hall.
the public Is
992-7874. Ashley also reminds Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DaughInvited.
members that dues for 1990 need ters of the American Revolution,
will meet Friday at 1 p.m. at the
to be paid.
BURLINGHAM -The BurHeath United Methodist Church
In Middleport . Mrs. Elmer lingham Modern Woodman will
Grueser will be the guest speaker be having a potluck on Saturday
at 6: 30 p.m. at the hall. Those
and hostesses are Mrs. Roscoe
Wise, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, ' attending are to bring a covered
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Mrs. · Nan Moore, Mrs. Pearl dish.
Mora, and Mrs. Daniel Thomas.
RACINE - There will be a
soup
supper on Saturday at the
POMEROY -There will be a
Sutton
United MethOdist Church
free blood pressure .. cllillc 'o n
Friday frQm 10 a.m. to 3 p:m. at
Rite Aid In Pomeroy. The public
·Is encouraged to take advantage

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THURSDAY
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Group of AA and Al-Anon will .
meet Thursday, 7 p.m., at the
Sacred Heart Catholic· Church.
For more Information call1-800333-5051.
.

CHESTER -The Shade River
L9dge wm have Its regular
meeting·on ThUrsday at 7: JOp.m.
· All master masons are Invited to
attend.

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Community calendar

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· Dinner·to commemorate
:Lincoln birthday

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Pomeloy-Midrl~. Ohio

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From

REMOTE-2 lfEADS
ON SCIEEN DISPLAY

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�PaJI 12-The Daily Sentinel

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WASHINGTON CUPI)- State
offl~lals called on the president
and Congress to· clean up all
polluted federal racllltles within
30 years and rtve the EPA and
states greater enforcement powers over federal agencies.
In an unprecedented joint
report, the Na.tional. Association
of Governors and the National
Association of Attorneys General
said Wednesday that the cleanup
of thousands of federal military
bases, weapons plants &amp;I'd oth.e r
facUlties would require a national commitment equal to
NASA's manned mlsslon to the .
moon.
"In th~ early 1960s, the United
States set a goal of putting a man
on the m®n by the end of the
decade," the report said. "This
goal required development of
, new technologies and a subs tan.Ual financial commitment by the
government.
"To reach what should be our
national goal of drinkable water,
uncontaminated land and clean
air at federal facUlties. there
must be a similar national
commitment In time, technology
and money.
.

WASHINGTON (UPI I - Legislation. designed to ovl!rturn a
series of Supreme Court decisions that limited the scope of civil
rights laws In employmentdlscrlmlnatloncases was Introduced
In the House and Senate.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., and Rep. Augustus
HaWkins, D-Callf., introduced the Civil Rights Act of 1990.
Wednesday In both the Senate and House and promised quick
action and pr ompt passage.
•
Kennedy , joined by civil rights leaders and some Republican
members. said at a newt conference that In the'jlast year the
"Supreme Couri has Issued a series of rulings th11,.t mark an ·
abrupt and unfortunate departure from Its historic vigilance In
protecting civil rights. ·
"The fabric of justice has been torn." . he said. "Significant
gaps have been opened In the existing laws that prohibit racism
and other types of bias In our society .".
Kennedy said he was ''hopeful of gaining the president's
support .''
" The Bush administration has expressed a walt-and-see
attitude about the need for !his legislation," Kennedy ~ld. ' 'Bqt
our case Is .strong and our cause Is Just. As our bill moves
through Col)gress, I urge the president to join us In enacting It
this year. This Is no time for Congress, the White House or .
America to retreat on civil rights."
·
Hawkins added that it would · be , "very difficult for (the
president) to ve to" the measure.
·
· Caretta Scott King, wife of slain civil rights leader Martin
Luther Kl!li Jr., said that "we will not allow ourselves to be
denied."
·
"We will secure Martin Luther King's dream or a
discrimination-free workplace," she· added.
The legislation Is designed to overturn a series of decisions
issued by the Supreme Court last year. The court, flnnly In the
control of conservatives appointed by President Ronald
Reagan, has scaled back on a number of Important rulings.
While some of the decisions dealt with what may be viewed as
technicalities, taken as a whole they make it much harder for
victims of discrimination to bring and win lawsuits. Another
ruling allowed whites to challenge dlscr 1m !nation· settlements
even though they took n() action while the suit was In progress.
' 'As a result of these Supreme Court decisions, victims or even
· the most humiliating racial harassment In the work place.
cannot obtain a meaningful legal ref!ledy," said Sen. Bob
Packwood, R·Ore..
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He added that the bill is "necessary to protect the gains made
in the last 25 years toward eliminating employment
discrimination.' '
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WASHINGTON (UPII -The
. Senate approved a five-year $1.5
billion program to spur excellence in American education
despite concern among some
conservatives that one project
could lead to eventual federal
certification of teachers:
The bill was · approved 92-8
Wednesday and sent , to the
House.
The only point In dispute,
during two days of debate, was a
$25 million grant to the National
Board for Professional Teaching
Standards to develop a voluntary
program of board certification
for elementary and secondary
school teachers.
Conservatives unsuccesfully
attempted three times to ellml·
nate or change the project, but
the Senate, by vQjce vote, agreed
Wednesday to an amendment
making It clear the standards
could not be"1mposed on private
school teachers or parents who
· teach their children at home.
Sen. Jesse Helms, R·N.C., who
led the fight to eliminate the
· project. charged the Senate was
"content .. . to let a uniondominated board set the stand·
ards for the t ·eachlng
profession."
Helms said the teachers unions
were attempting to establish
.standards as "de facto state
· lic ensing standards."
,
Other senators expressed slm·
lllar concerns. lncludl!li Sen.
Orrin Hatch; R-Utah, who said In
a statement, "I !lnnly belie'le
that the licensing functton ' must
be kept at the state l!!vel. This
provision should not be·c'ortstrued ,
as an entree to mandatory
national teacher standards or
certification."
Supporters. of the project said ·
any standards deyeloped would
be voluntary and Sen. Arlen
Specter, R·Pa. , added, "This Is a
pre! ty representative board ... It
Is not an allocation to a special
Interest group."
Voting against the bill were
Helms, William Armstrong, R ·
Colo., Jake Garri, R-Utah, Phil
Gramm, R-Texas , Gordon
Humphrey, R-N.H. ; James
McClure , R · Idaho, Steve
Symms, R· Idaho and Malcolm
Wallop, R·Wyo.
Before putting off a final vote
until Wednesday, the Senate.
adopted by voice vote an amendment that would provide $5
million for drug testing of school
athletes and another amendment
provldl!li $7.6 million In awards
for outstanding teachers.
The five-year S1.5 billion program ls designed to reward
schools. teachers arid students
whO have "maintained ll stand·
ard of excellence or made
subStantial proeress In ~orking
toward tbe goal of exce lienee. "
Tile bin also emphasizes ~xcel·
lettce In math and science, as
well as the prevention of drug
abuse In schools; designates
money for thedlsadvan taged and
Jnllkes numerous changes In the
Jaws governing student loan •
default I.
Among the major provisions

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"The president sll9uld request . elgn Immunity protects the go- tiona as neetllng cleanup, at an
and Congress should adopt a goal .vernment agalnat state legal estimated coat of between $10
of not more than 30 years lor action.
·
billion and $15 blllloll.
completion .of all envlr~ntal
Andrus called on President
It said cleanup problems were
compliance and restoration at Bush to unchain the EPA, say- even more daunting at ~he
federal facllltles," said the re- lng: "The president can solve Energy Department's ,nUl:lear
port, titled ·"From CrisiS to that problem between EPA and weapons plants, where thouCommitment: Environmental the Justice Department with one sands of acres are contaminated
Cl~nup and Compliance at Fed·
phone call. I hope . ~e . will do by !llixtures Qf nuclear aad.toxlc .
eral Facilities.'~
that.''
. ·
waliti!s · w!llch cannot be adThe report . also urged the
Andrus said Congress should dressed with conve11tlonal cleapresldeflt and Congress to give enact legislation fonnally walv· nup technology.
the Environmental Protection l!lg the · ,sovereign Immunity
. It said at least 3,,700 polluted
Agency and state envi.r onmental defense In regard to federal sites •had been ·detected at the
officials greater oversight pow· facility cleanup.
weapons plants and the . estiers over federal agencies to
The report was personally mated price tag for cleanup was
ensure they follow through on received at a news conference by between $95 billion to $130 billion.
cleanup promises .
·
House Speaker Thomas Foley,
In his proposed 1991 budget,
It said while government pol- D-Wash.,~tndSenateDemocr•llc Pre~l~~nt 'o , Bush .acknowledged
Icy generally required federal
leader George Mitchell of Maine, • the government's 40-y!!ar legacy
agencies to meet . all federal,
both of whom promised full of environmental . neg~t and
state and local environmental consideration of the states' asked Congress fQr a $778 million
requirements, the Justice De- recommendations.
·Increase In c!ea.aup money ft?r
Plll"tment had blockf!d efforts by
Mitchell noted he alry!ady .has next -year. , .: .,
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the EPA and the states to enforce httroduced legiSlation to expand
Overl\11. Bush es!lmated the
those rules.
EPA and . state environmental government fac;ed cleanup cos~
enforcement powers over federal ranging from $140 billion to S2j&gt;o
agencies and he said, "I will push billion, . but the state fl!port
Idaho Gov. Cecil Andrus. lead
Jor
eiiJICtment.'' .. ,, .
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questioned that estimate, ,. n~ting ,
governor on, the repon. said the
The report said the scope ofthe the·· Energy . Department envlsl·
Justice Department .has taken
federal . pollution problem still oned spending be~ween ~ bll·
the position that the EPA Is not
was not clear, but It noted the lion to $65 billion· on just .one
au thorlzed to pollee other federal
Def~n&amp;(! Department alone listed
facility, the llanford nuclear
agencies and that federal sover8,l39 sites at 897mllltarylnstalla- reservation In ~ashlngton.

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WASHINGTON (UPI)
Scientists reported · they have
zeroed ·ln ori a genetic defect that
appears to un~erlle life·
threatening reactions to anes the~la. flndjngs that may lead to
better tests to avert anesthesia·
related deaths.
Two research teams, working
Independently, said Wednesday
they . have narrowed down the
location of the gene for Inherited
malignant hyperthermia - one
.of the major causes of death from
anesthesia -to chromosome 19. ·
Between 1 In 12,000 children
and 1 In 40,000 adults have the
disorder, researchers said. When
such people are given many

. James :Brown may be freed

are establiShment of the Presidential Merit Schools Program,
which provides cash awards to
school$ that show progress In
raising educational '·achievement, creating a safe and drugfree environment and cutting the
dropout rftte.
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The bill also creates new
magnet "schools of excellence;"
provides federal assistance to
develop creative alternative
teacher and principal certiflca·
lion; .authorizes ·a new meritbased national scholars program
to provide college scholarships
lor studies In the sciences, math
and engineering; and adds mo·
ney for the drug-Ire~ schools
program,
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AUGUSTA, Ga. (U.P l) - A
Georgia state judge cleared the
way for soul s111ger James Brown
to get out or a South Carolina
prison.
State Court Judge Gayle Hamrick cut 90 days off Brown's
Georgia •sentence, making him
eligible for work release In South
Carolina. South Carolina . offl·
claiS could riot say when Brown
would be freed from prison or
where he, would be employed.
. Community Services Director
Tollf Strawhorn · said Brown's
release would depend (\n the
avallablllty .o f ~ed spa~e ·'and a

lob.

- - - - Lottery numbers----PICK-a
519.
PICK-3 . ticket sales 'totaled
$1,445,719, with a payoff due of
$977,996.
PICK-4
9801.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$27G,499. with a payoff due of

$121,500.
Super Lotto

· 2, 7, 9, 14,, 18, ·:an.d 39.

,.,,

Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$4,586,874.
Kicker·

994129.

Brown Is serving a six-year
sentence ln . South Carolina on
multiple charges stemming from
a 1988 Incident that started In
·Augusta when Brown burst Into
an ·Insurance seminar wtth ~
shotgun. He then led pollee on a
chase that crossed the South
Carolina-Georgia border.

found genetic · markers that ap· whether It C\intracts In response
pear llrtked to maUgnant hyper• · to certain chemicals; Mlller.sald.
thermla susceptibility, or MHS.
· The test, which costs ·$2,000 ·to
The findings were based on $3,000 per ·person. ' Is ·generally
genetic studies or more than 20 done only in people who have a ·
·families known to have a history . family history of life-threatening
or the disorder. AlthOUgh the . reactions to anesthesia, he said.
precise defect responsible for
"J\nyihl!li that · could si8Jll·fi·
MHS Is not known, the Canadians cantly: reduce ·.the number or
found evlden~ Indicating · the patl.ents that ha:-re to undergo
MHS markers lie In the same such tests wo.ukl be extremely
region as the gene coding for a
worthwhile In terms of cost, 'p ain
key skeletal muscle receptor.
· and simplicity. It would also
"These· results ... provide a
allow more people to be tested,"
potential accurate and non- Miller said.
·
Invasive method of diagnosis for
· Other possible Indicators of
MHS," wrote Ireland's Tommie malignant hyperthermia, such
McCarthy and his coUeagues . · as the jaw becoming rigid when a
Dr. Jordan Miller, an associate person Is given a muscle relaxprofessor or anesthesiology at
ant,' are not exclusive to that
University of California-Los An·
condition and can be' found ·In
geles medical school, agreed
some people who call' tolerate
there !sa "great need" for better ·anesthesia, he said.
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tests to screen for malignant ·
Miller said wldescale screen· hyperthermia . before patients Ing tests for · the Inherited dis·
undergo general anesthesia.
order ' prpbat5Iy ' wllf not be
Currently, the only conclusive avalla ble until researchers pin· lest for the disorder Involves · , p6bit the exact-genetic ~teet or
surgically removing a piece of defects.'! 'But this Is an 'lmportan t
muscle ttssue and teSflng · fli-st step,:· be:said. , .' &lt;',
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Brown received a concurrent
six-year and 90-day se11tence In
. Georgia on charges Involving the
'Same Incident. South Carolina
officials did · not wan I to release
him until the two sentences were
equalized.

ROUND TRIP AIRFARE
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Brown's attorney, Albert I&gt;allas, said he would like to see
South Carolina officials line up a
radio or television job for Brown,
preferabi;v In Aiken County.

SERVICE WILL PROVIDE' RoUND T.RIP AiR
.
FARE CERTIFICATES TO ORLANDO, FLOR~
IDA OR FREEPORT/NASSAU BAHAMAS FOR
&amp;*n* NIGHTS. • . ·.

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Brown lives at Beech Island,
S.C., In suburban Augusta.

1

a.•ettWaD
Ylrron

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tO
. Monthly

"Ads•outside Meig5. G1llia or Mason counties must be pre·
.. patd.
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"Receive $ .50 discount lor ads Plid .n ad'llance.
"Fre11 ads , G•veawa~ and Fo1,1nd ads under 15 wordl will be
run J dil'/s a1 n9 ch•ge.
'Price o~ ad tor . al~ capital letters !I dm,fble price of ad c;ost.
·
, '7,painl line •vpe only used .
'Santinat is nQI responsible for errors atter fir.t.day . !Check
tor tHOf$ fiflt d-v ad runs in paper) . Call befOre2 :00 p.m .
d"t' •Uer pubhc.Hon .to make correction .. ·
· "Ads thllt mult be paid An ad.,ancelut
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Card of Thll"lkli
Happy Adt
In Memoriam '
· Yard Sales , •'

DEADtiNE •
MONDAY PAPfR
TUESD:AY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPEa
THURSDAY PAPER
t-HIOAY PAPER
SUto4DAV PAPER

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Public Notice

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992 - MidcMIPOrt
Pom.oy·

.985- Ch••r
843- Ponl.. d
256- Gu.,.n Dist. 24 7 - htan hlls
388 - Vioton
246- flio Grande

6.-J - At abi a Oist.
379 - W .. nut

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949 - Rac:ine
742 - Rutland

.SUMMARY.OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS ANO
EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNQS '
RECEIPTS:· ,
Teaa ...... ... ...... .tJ1,27&amp;.o4
licenMI, Permits

I. lnteraovernrnlntal
, '
.. ....... 55,261
I tnte
... t ...... .. ...... .... 935.84
AU Other
'
· end Foo, .... .. .... .....27 .91
Recel~to

Revenue ....... .... 2,954.89
TOTAL .
RECEIP.TS ... ...78.446.60
EXPENDITURES:
General '
Government ... 14,244.38

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odge:

Name __~----------~----------~~~-------

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We WID lfot Mwattll
Olle Item, Tbea 'T if

Sell Toa A•oth=t
WewtnlfotPnuan
Yoa IDtci A Parehuel

W'e WID Kot leD Toa
PnMI1111t1 Tllat CUI't
ltllrgd The T•t Of

We Will AiweJ'11 Be

ten•U, Owaecl All4l
Opaatedl .
,
• We Will Olrer Toa

. _ . . IllltaDa~.

MKeC'" ,.,

1 :songoe Certificate-Orlando only ·
tor 8 nlghta) ....... .... . . .. ·' · .'. $33
Double C&lt;!rtlticete-Orlando
(2 adulta lor 7 nights) ........... . ..... $86
Double C&lt;!rtlticat~~:-Freeportlf!ahamaa
adulta tor 7 nighll) .................. $86

. Ouetllonutrv ,..'...
wtt1o Cotllioa)t(•l

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. Plyment by: Personal Check, Cashier's Checlo or~ Ordert Only·
Payable to: National Air Safety (10 certilla.te tm,lt!
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Dorothy M, Col-ly
Clerto. 1-31-80
4211~ M...octl Rd.
CootvHie. Ohio 41723
114;114-4113
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'121 8, 1tc '

36 -· Aeal Estale Wanted

l;i§Ufijll
46- Furnished Rooms
46 - Space for Rent

4 7 - W•nted 10 Rent
48 - Equipment for Rent

49 - For Le•e

Merchandi se

81 - Mome lmprovem~ts
82 - Piumbing &amp; lie•ino
83 ~ hc..,ating
84 - Eiec;tticil &amp; Retrig•atton
85 - Guneral Hau11ng
86 - Mobile Home Rep~~t
87-- Upholsterv

54 - Misc. Merch~tndise
56 - Building Supplies
56 - Pets for Sale

57 - Musicallnnruments
58 - Fruih II Veg ..abl•
59- For Sale or Trade

.21 - lusin•• OpPonunnv
2~ - Monll't

to Loan
23- Prot•aion1l Servicn

Public Notice

Services

S 1 - Housahold Good•
52 - Sporlinli Goltds
53 - Antiques

IIH8Uihijil

671 -· Apple Gtove
173 - Mascn
112 ~ New Havan
8H- LIItarl

71 - Autos lor Sale
72- 'Trucks for S1le
73 - Vans &amp; 4 WO's
74 MotOI'cycl•
75 - Boats &amp; Motors tor Sale
76 - Auto Parts &amp; Atc•sor••
71 - Auto Repair
·78 - C•mping equipmenl
79 - Campers 6 Motor Homes

43- Farms for Rent

44- Aplrtment tor Rent

67&amp; - Pt. Pl . .ant
451 - Leon

Transportation

- Ho1..11&amp;1 for Rent

42 -,.. Mobile Hom81 tor Rellt

1 1 - Helo Wanl.d ,
12- Situatlori Wan1«1
1 J ...,. lnsuriln ce
14- lulin•s Training
15- Scho'ol$ • Instruction
11 - Aadto, TV 6 CB R"e pau
17 - Miteellaneous
11 ·Wanted To Do

M"oo Co. ; WV
Area Code 30•

6J ....-Farm Equipment

, 62 - Wanta~ lo Buy
63- Uveslock
64- Hay &amp; Grain
66- Sead &amp; Fertiliorer

Public Notice

Public Notice

otice

Public Noti.c e

RESOWT!ON t • 1!i ~90 ' . 324. Albany, Oh. 457iO: rized to be fully lielzed of tho weoka. Tho tut 'pubtlcetion relief demended in the coin·
NOTICE OF
eatoto of Roy Edw•rd ProfBE IT RESOLVED, tho\ IVA JANE DALTON. P. 0, entire fee lntoroot in thloub- wHI be mede on 11io 8th day plaint.
. APPO!NTM ENT OF fitt. doeeooed. tete of Bo•
we, the memben of She 8o• . 324. Alb111y. 'O.h: 'iect re1l eetete.
Doted: January 2. 1990
FIDUCIARY
of Februl"f, 1980. .
128, Racine. Meigs County,
Pomeroy · Villogo . Council, 467t0; . DANIEL E., WIL- ' You are required to aniLorry E. Spencer.
On January 19, 1990, In Ohio, 41771 .
!~ caoe of your lollure to
duty authorized to ~ conv~.Y LIAMS, Boa ,$72 A.P.O..
Clerk of Courts, the Meigs County P_ro.,.te
oower tho complolnt within enswer or otherwl•• reaRobert E. Buck,
intereat In the Vltlog 0 real eo- Sari .Fra.nciaco. CA. 9$665;, 28 dayuftor. !he t~t pubti· pond 11 ,equlrod fly tho Ohio
MeiQS .C ounty Common
Coun, Cote No . 2&amp;4119,
Probete Judge
tltll hereby·abandon any in· The Unknown Heirs, .• De·
·
Pteu Court JomOOi E. Diddle, Box 687. lena K. Nooooolrood, Clerk
cation of thll notice which Ruloo of ClvK Procedure.
Jfr..t the Vllloogo of Porn· vi1ael. U.gateet aftd A• wHI toe 'pu~llal!ed once eoch judgment
Racine, Ohio, 46771, WOI (1)26; 1211. 8. 3tc
doloult wH! be (114.11,18, 26:
t.a, mey hove hod in net eo· olgna of John L. ~lork. Ot· week lor alx
appointed Executor o~ the
rendered
for tha 12. 1. 8
tate, whathor right-of-way, ceued in 1948: The ·on-mento or'" in tot~weot known Heirs, Dev!a. . . L'"
·
· ·
·
ol ·#1&amp;1, lnludlng tb'e un·
numbered lot 37 f -1 more
or·lett in width. lot# 1 &amp;2.1o)
#163. and ·olot west of lot
Tho . UnknoWn
~~~~j:--.~;_--~~~::-:_::::;:~~:;~==~~::--~:=_.::;::_~_::_::~~~~~~~~~--~~~c
N113 being ' poi... ood by Oh.
Heiro.45718:
Devio....
Loti~ . ltho MeiiJI County Boord of and Auigna pf J~~n J~t 1
·County Commi•lion•• on
C~t FFORD •1;1;. r:::~~=:-~-,
!oehelf of Moigo _County ond Deoeaoed;.
BRYSON. 4!9 ll..o.omo ·,
SIDING
*SHRUB 8t TREE
tho Pomeroy Unhed Metho· Avenue. Plttlburgh• . PA.
••UMINUM
SIDING
.
.
dial Church.
' 162~11;
BETTY '·BLACK, · •-~
·
TRIM
and
RECARPENTER SERVICE
H thl Melgo County Com- WOOD. 31945 Mln-Kte
•BLOwN IN •
-Room Additions
MOVAL
miuionero fell to buy tho El· Road; Roc,ne, Oh. '46771;
INSUI!ATION
-Gutter Work
berltld properf'l within 90
CHISTII, OHIO
.
DEFENDANTS
-Etoctri~i • Plumbing
•Mobile Home
d1y1 thll! above property will • To the unknoWn ~elra,
*~IGHT
HAUI.ING
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GRAVEL
Work
-Concroto
Perto
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revert bock to the Vltligo devia.... and next of ~in of
•
- Roofing
and thia ogreoment wit be John L. Clark. David Rod·
•LIMESTONE
*FIREWOOD
•Mobile
Home
-Interior &amp; Exterior
null 1nd void.
Renuolo
ford,
and John Jewoll
Relr ....... Wt
Peinting
.
•FILL
DIRT
·PASSED: Jon. t 5, 1990
whose
namet
and
addria~e~
•'free
Eitimetea"
,
•Lot
Rtfltlllo
(FREE ESTIMATESI
ATTEST: JANE WALTON. ·ere ·unk!lown @'nd cannot

~t::r:~~~~~::.

.. i ~.·~

.

s
•
B._u
. ·s iness: ·e rvices
YOUNG'S

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

V. C. YOUNG Ill

985-4422

Pameror., Ohio

,_,.,,Ohio

ElWIN

Howard L Writ....

CONSTRUCTION

ROOFING

.BILL SLACK

Clerk· Treet ."

with reaoonobte ijitlgenct be
APPROVED:
aocertoln .... you ~rt hereby
. Flicherd"Soovler. Mayor ·notified thet you hove-

. .'

.

Larry Wehrurlg,
President of Council

121 1. B. 2tc
'

Public

·

II! otice

named defendant• in a legal

action entitled Tho Vinton
County Nationa,l l!ank vo;
C!etla Oatton, at ol. Defend,'
anti. This action hod been
• ..igned Cote Number 89·
CV-147 and is panding.ln
the Court of Common Pleas

IN l'HE
COMMON PLEAS COURT of Malga County. Pomorby.
OF
Ohio 46769.
· MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
The object ·of thlo col)!·
· NOTICE BY
plaint i1 to give the above
PUBLICATION
named Plaintiff the author·
CASE NO. 89·CV·147
ity to quiat title and poo-o
THE VINTON COUNTY
the entire inte~est in the di·
NATIONAL BANK .
scribed real e~tete, and the
112 Weot MOin Straet
prayer lo that t~e rlghta. In·
McArthur. Oh. 46861
tereat and liens of ell partill
'
PLAINTIFF be fully determined, . od·
-vs.~

CLET!S'DALTON. P. 0. 8o•
•

ju.wd end protected and

that the Plaintiff be. autho,

"PH, 94,•2101 '
'
or lei. '9"9·2160
NO' SUNDiy

.

'

..·

ATTENTION OHIO WOMEN AND ·
, • '
OTHER MINORinES. ~ · ·
Hocking Technlcel Coli... 11 cur:rently ,._
crultlng Ohl.o IIWOmtn and othet mlnorltiU, .
,for • liPeclally deligned cooperative bet.-ft. the United S.t atu Dept. of Atrleuf·
ture/Fore.t Servlc..nd HTC. Thlalu·two
. v•r Pf98ram ,With !Mid prac:tlcuma, tuition
flnanoltiile.,...._ end gunnteed plecement upon completiOn of the progrem, Ap- ·
pllaa,.. lftlllt d-..maw •• lnteraJt In ·
the outd-., nat\lrtl r~uur•a. aml'tlle

environment. Suecu•tul cendkll•• Wll
be trlilned to be Fore.t 8ervhle Technlclena.
.Fot more informadon plea.. cont.ct Mra. ·
Myr1 loldan by Februery 12, 1180, from
e-5, It 1-800-182-4113, ext. 2157.
Thte te..

::::."" - t i l e
oily;

EVENINGS

·

SITEWORK ~ jtQADS .
. .
CLEARING

~·prl!il• (d,

-NEWLAND

7:30-8:00

. Mo'n.

thru Ftl.
7:30-4:00 Saturday
' . 1·2-'!10-1 110.

Grant A.

IIIII'S APPUAIKI

'

.

SIIYICI

H2-53S5., 915-3561
Acr- ,,_ Pwt Offlra
POIR~Y,

otiO
ID/3r/'19 Hn

·

BISSEll
· BUILDERS
CUSTOM IUI.T
...rs &amp;GAUGES

"At. l1tsn
II Prien"
'

.

.

.,,,.

DAVE'S
SMALL ENG.E

SER~ICE

L•ted 1t Yallly L_....
......., •• t, 011•
!AR:r&amp; AND SERVICE

f&lt;&gt;r Moet Z ond 4-oyde

enolnoo
St- Jt•rt• for
Homot"". W.edutor,
TecumHII. lriggl•
St..Uon.

•.

'

949-2168

FREE ESTIMATES
2·1-'!10-111!). pd.

ALLEN'S
HAULING ·

LIMESTONE
AND DIRt
SPREAD
10 Ton Minimum
1600 Gallo11 Water
DIIIW"J

PAT HILL FOlD
992-2196

992-527

Middleport,

1·24-

I'll·

PI.IIMIING I HEATING

New LM811Ht ·
. 161 Nlrtll SeCind
.......,. Ollie 4576,0

TOP SOIL
FOR SALE .

wo

...........

Oli .... Mt·2160

949-2493.·

NO.Y

3rd Str11t, 1«1.,.. Oh.

.

"

IIII.AID 1111
~us

...

,.......
Sl-'10

-!P ....

•F-...Ind

.A..~IiiJnt

• Lube

toOH

..

FURNACE

EXCAYAnNG
&amp; TRUCKING·.

· SALES &amp; SERVICf

'

36629 517
POMEROY, OHIO

·

ROSES~

llll'n

NJW -IEPAII

985~3365

We con rer.air and reCIII'I rad otars and
hlatll' corn. W1 ~an
aha ocid boil and rod
aut radiators. We also
rlpl!ir Gas l anb.

PH. 992·3922 .

1·12-'R-ttn

Gutters
. Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
· Painting

2·6-'90-1 mo.

' ' "'; '••,.JI01
.
'

CHESTER, OHIO
Custom Built
Homes,
Remodeling &amp;
Repair Work

lYEIY
SAT.-NIGHT
P.M.

Buying· Hou,.;

992·7479

lt. J3 Nertll of

·30-'89-2 ....

Bashan lulding ·

S1JSO ,.,.ton

(6141 667•3271

' ltCIO OllNI-$79 IP

.

PH. 992·3561

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

ORYER5-S61 up
.REFR18£RAT0115-SIOO•u_p
UWGES-tlls-Eiac.-$125 up
FRUZU5-Sl25 ~P

IACINE
.FilE DEPT.

·-•Y• Ohle

ENTEIPRISES

90 DIY WAIIAim
.IJASHEI$-$100 UJ

SHOOT

W. Ya.Chl!llllng,lnc.

'

'

992-6215

1-t t-90-tfn

WANTED

USED APPUAIICIS

11

_ _....;.;;.:..~......;..;.;;_ _

EOE

992-2269 '

·

CO..NTIY
MOBILE
HOME PAIIC

R.
.. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

BIS'SELL
SIDING 1:0.

Dec. 31, ·u ..... :.3.827.18
I certify the prOceding .r•·
port to be 011rrect ond true.

to the Hit at my , knowl·

.'

lhe

Suppi;P.s

&amp; L;veslock

Sal ~

35- Lots S. Acr•eo•
a~ancel

E111 plrJ Vill 1~ nI

937 - Bulhlo

66 ~ - Coolville
'

· 2 DO P .M . FRIDAY

s ... •

F~r111

3 ' - BUsiniiln 8uilding1.

Auc:tion
9- W.nt«&lt; to &amp;uy •.

.

Area C04e 11•
'

446- Gallipolis
367 - Ch•hire

- 2 00 P.M . W!DNESD,._V
- 2 00 P .M . THUASOAV

For Fiscal Year Ending

Pec,mber 31, 1989
ORANGE TOWNSHIP
COUNTY OF MEIGS

8 - Public

..

I

~ Me1gs Counly

.Galli'a Cqunty
Area Code 614

• - 11 \00 A .M . SA,TUADAV:
2·00 P·.M . MONDAY
- 2:00P .M . TUESDAY

.

FINANCIAL REPORT '
OF TOWNSHIPS .

3 - Annexteem.,ts
' &amp;- Oive.,.,..,
.5 - Happy A~ I
1--Loit and Found
7-- Ywd s... ~paid in

/t~llowiny; f~li•phon(' l'xchan!{e.~ ...

DAV BEFORE PUBL)CATION

: out.-dlng

"'..:Jl..

poor

31 - HomH tor Sale

32- Mobile Homes for
33- Farms tor Sale

41

C'IJLW

t;:S.N,

~

lost ground to the resistance In
fighting . since Vietnam an·
nounced rhat the last of Its troops
withdrew from Cambodia In
september last year.
T~ere are frequent complaints
that the wealthy are able to bribe
their way out of the military
draft , while the sons of
families are forced Into the
army .
The Khmer Rouge previously
has reporteC:I target mutinies by
government soldier~. but this
was the first that was observed
by foreigners. It has not yet been ·
reported by the Khmer Rouge.

Real Estate

Sr!l Vlt.es

Public Notice ·

·
I

MAIL TO: National Air Safety Advisooy Service
Capitol Hill
. 1
•,
325 Pennsylvania Avo., S.E. DeP!. ~ · ·
Waohington, D.C. 20003
In1?'matlon Canter: (812• 935-2002

I.

1- Card of Then1t1
2-:1" Memorv
..

.~

Cla.~sif{~'J POI:fl.'S

tre

COP~

·'

REGISTERED NURSES

or agency. '6 night certificates are tor
available to the Bahamas. 'Two

•

officials said that by Thursday
all had returned to Koh Kong and
trade was returning to normal.
The Thai newspaper Thai Rath
·reported that Tanlt Tralvudh, a
Thai member of Parliament who
frequently trades with KohKO!Ii,
was captured and held hostage
by the mutineers.
A. worker who answered the
telephone at Tan It's house In Trat
s.ld the politician was In Cambo·
dla, bu 1the family I) ad recelv~d a
message that he was safe.
, There have also been reports of
growing dls!¥1tlsfactlon within
the Cambodian army which has

II n11 ounce nw nIs

Ratet are tor con•cutive r!,oiRS. brdkten updlllf'lwill btch•g'«&lt;
tor each d.., as s,ep.,ate adt.

"A ~las,fled ad\lertisement placeCI in The Daily Sentlnet \._. ·
c.,Pt clasSified ditpll','. BListn•s C•r,d and legal notices\
w•ll also appe.w m
Pt . Ple•ant Rugister 11nd the G•ll•·
. poiiJ D•ity Tribun.fl. ruchmg over 18. 000 hom8'1.

!.

R•te
•'civtr 1J Wpr~•
• tr4.00 . .
.20
•a.oo .
· .30
T!i •
•e.oo '
.42
15
· •13.00
.80
15'
•• ~1 . 301&lt;!,-Y
.05/
day
'
1
...
.

Public Worklo
~tty .....
... : ...
e. 788.23
t35 .14 11·1'1"-...;.:----~-.:...---------t
Public
62.
Heelth ..... ........ :......562.85
C.pmot Outloov .. :.. t.808.33
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS ........ .. 77,331.93
Immediate openings are available for
' Touot Roeolpto Over I
r!IQistere.d
nura.ea to work in the Special
(Undort Dlab ..... 1.109.17
Care Unit and tha Opera~ing Room. Sa•
Touot, of Rec. • ·Other
Souicl'l' o..r !Undtrl Dlab.
lery
commltnaurate with experience.
. • Ot~or Uaoo .,.t,1p9.11
·
·
Fund Cuh lletance
.. Exi:ellan~ fringe benefits.
Jen. 1 .• , . .... .. .. 13.222.12
Contact:
·.
Fund Cuh l.ota~ce .
.
'. '
Dec. 31, '81 ..... 14,332.49
Rhonda dailey. R. N..
1
· R"ol'lrelor Encumbrencoo
. ·. DJrec;'tor of Nui'Mng
.. Dec. 31, 'II ..... ::.. 361 .63
SUMMARY OF' '
..
Veteran• Memorial Hospital
_ INDEBTEDNESS
116 E. 'Memorial Drive
Outo-dlng
•
,Pomeroy, oH·. 46769'
.
Jon. 1, .'81 &lt;....... :.6,231.31.
• (814)'992-2104, Extension 213
Retired ... :............ 1',808.33

of air travel certificates. and · not

.

Words
1'5 . '
16

a

•oucoes

I ,

NOTICE - PLEASE READ: 'The National Air
(NASAS) makes survey reaulto available to
consumers and ot~llr ioteo'e!rted
.
held tlrm derivin9. Ita genera!

.curto CUIDeta

Days
,

Fin1nciel Report" .•

11

authorities, he said.
Some of the soldiers, however,
seized fishing boats In the' harbor
and fled out to $ea, apparently
headed for Kompong Som, about
100 miles to the southeast, the
officer said.
"A detachment o! loyal soldl·
ers has gone Inpursull." hesalp.
Earlier, . Tra! governor Prldl
Tantipong.. confirmed there had
been fighting In Koh Kong, but
was unable to .provide deta
. lis.
The mutiny ·sP!Irked a frantic
exodus by foreign merchants and
residents from Koh Kong, many
of t)lem fieelng to Trat. But

'

'

, -TO PLA.CE. AN AD tALL 99.2·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M:
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

'1'hi1 lien Unaudited

Your Request M~st Be Postmar~ed No Later fhan Wednesday, 2it4i9o ;
'
~~~~~ Simply answer our short queStionnaire when it
your air fare certificates.'
~~~~ ·• tn Ori(\ncio-'--1o .nationaj ho)et/n\otel chains, to select
location~ convenient to Disney/Epcot/~GM) ;. ',
• The Bahamas-Select from 4 world class re!iort/casinos
• Round trip ' l!ir fare from virtually 'any 'major u.s. city
one or• two people on regular scheduled airlines • Stay 6'
or 7' nights at standard room rates (no lnflatEid charges)
Certificates are transferable and can boj given as gifts (usable
upto18
. . .
· · ·. ·' .. ,

'

Koh Kpri&amp;, only about 10 miles.
from 'l'ril/ by se:a,ls the country's
second largest port· after 'K om· pong Som, and the main access
route· for ·consumer goods from
Thalll!nd.
.
,'I'he Thal ' ln~llgence officer
s;ild the trOI&gt;pS&gt;wenl disgruntled
. at the conirast· between their·
harsh lives in the Jungle fighting
the Khmer Rouge and tlie easy,
hlghly profitable live$ of traders
and pfllclals In !Jte port town.
· .Provincial officials ne~ated
:with the mut111011s sol&lt;!l!!r&amp;:Wed·
nesday, with some o( them
.agreel!li to sun'ender tp the

.

..

$3' ~~rpers~n
0 ·'·

Kicker ticket sales totaled
$781,01-2........,_ __

,.

·.-The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

ft!ftlE NATIONAL AIR· S'AFETv·· A'DYiSOR

I

•GIBSON
• KELVINATOR
FRIGIDAIRE

•

-Limited nme OfferFor All Consumers Anaw.ering Pur Quest,ioo~air~

· For Only

'

'

_,_,_

--·-·

t

.'
Trat province. ,

BANGKOK, Thailand (UPI) ~
· ·
About 250 mutinous Cambodian
· "There was lootlqg, shooting
soldiers, apparently fed up with and •destruction of gove~nrnent
the . rigors of jungle fighting, , . and civilian property but there
seW!d and looted Cambodia's
have been no reports of deatlis,"
second largest port for two days said the officer, :whO spoke.' b~
before some surrendered and.the condition he not be Identified. He .
rest n~ ..Thal m.ilitary sources . said the extent of the damage
aald ~
· ·
.
was not knoWn. ·
· Tile Incident beg!ln Tuesday
the mutiny appeared to con·
night when approidmately 250 of firm Increasing reports of low
President Heng Samrin's troops morale and lack of discipline
surr!Junded ·government offices. among poorly paid government
at Sap Tong distr-Ict and the Pak troops Who are fighting a three-.
Klong port ·of KohKong province, part guerrilla coalition that In·
said a military lntel!lgence of· eludes the tough Chinese-backed
flcer · ln Thai~lld's neighboring ·Khmer Rouge.
'

'

common types of general anes·
thetics, their bodies overheat,
their heartbeats speed up and
their muse!~ esse.n tially burn
out from repeated contractions.
13efore the Introduction of a
drug to offset the symptoms In
the early 1980s, up fo 70 percent of
patients stricken by the adverse
, reaction died. Even with the new
therapy, about 5 percent of .
affected patients die.
·
In two articles p.u blished In the
journal Nature, one team from
Ireland's University College,
Germany's University of Munl~h
and London's St. Mary'sHospltal
and another group from Unlver·
slty of Toronto said they have

The Deily s.ntinei-P'9• 13

Govenunent ·soldiers ·oiutiny, seize Port city for two days

Genetic tie to anesthestic reactions found

•

.

l"""l....~~~

~· Ftbrua.r 8, 1990
I

Februllv a.·uaeo

~.

State officials urge facility cleanup

Civil Rights Act
of 1990 introd~ced

;

...

Porraov Middleport. Ohib

..

.. 1-l-lt-lllit

FURNACE ·
FURNACE

PARTS AND SERVICE&gt;
ALL MAKES
GA$ OR ELECTRIC

liEN'S APPUAIIICE
. •· SEIVICI
992-5335.915-3561

acr...
- ....
Office
217 L·S.C.
P••n•y
.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVElY SINDAY
Starfl at 1:00 P.M.
Fectory Choked
12 Oeuge Only

IVU/'19 lin

H·lt-111

Roger Hysell
· Garage
lt. 1!4, .... ., Ololo

AUTO. &amp; TRUCK
RfPAIR ...

~~~~ Tt~~•llllt~

PH. 99J·5612
or 992·712l

POIIEIOY AND •IDUPOIJ'S . , ·
LOCAUY OW. PIZZA SHOP. • •
Pizza-Subs·SIIE~I~Iily

fti·HII

Specitlh

�Sentiniil

LAFF-A-DAY

An r101 rnc? rqp r1i..,

4

~~~~~,~~~~~~~----~--~~~~~~a.·

Ohio
72 ·Tn.lekl tor

h-·r I 1·-

s..e

Television
Viewin~

Giveaway

-"

- 11, hllllf;l'tllor,

br•• -

....... . L l - Rllrlo-.
ms:~ .-·od ..........

....,.n. -n...,...

•

P'HPP'• bl8ck.

ou111

1/Z ' Iab,
11. 114-2164733.

Shophord.

' old. llalo.

1

.....

Oralldo,

114-

...............
-....
:=t., ........ --.

:~~~~~~~;~

a -. d xuce ..._ In Hll'lfonl,
depoe~~ r 1

eM, 304-175-

II I 1 1 I I
I
I,1 I I.
RIMEEN

1:00 Ill lllrU I til Mel
•
McCarmt;lt t;!

:IN6\ 104 112 :loti.

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

"-

• Ill • •

.'·

(I)

Ill
,Pint114
- t .• "'IAI,
•• !"-·
l11&amp;'nt0.
11 ......

:1114.

•

l'/ENING

':~:t.C=~·

Fttondly,
"""'- doO· 114,14t-2203.
-

THPAS., FEB=

•

111r,- 1ft AIQ

-~•oaooc~-.s

.....,, folj

'The Dilly Sa ltlnel P?g r 115

I
CAU.ED TO APOLOiiZE ..¥00 WER.EI

. IT1~ EASV TO APOLOGIZE

TO AN ANSWERING MACI-IINE

Rt6HT. . I

SIIOVLD HAVE WRITTEN
M'&lt; "TioiANK '(Q\1' t«tTE SOONER i

• Cll Ill .1121

2

LIGAY
3
1~

lp UdWaJ lo.mertca

· ~ llilt*'l , _ Slalloto Q ·
...... OneTVQ
(1]1 AndY Ortlfllh

1111.

14ELLO, 6iWM'IA?

1

•

~

. -i:Pr-:iRi:-O::.,.:Y:_,A~·~

Flight attendant: . "Pay attens
$
tion to this safety video. There
1.-..r..__._..._~,._--~o. ....J ;. may be 50 ways to leave your
.--- -- - - - - - , lover ltut there's only 6 ways
EJ ET RS
to leave this --------."

IDI Wotltl todar

0Jat10

ID Cltallea tn Charge
1:05 (I) levellY tlllltoiMiaa
'

l 1'. 1 l

I

I

1---,1,=-.;I~'T~.;.,-...;.;,11,..;...."1.1,.....-l C)

1:30~= Nlglltlr Nawa

•
_
•
_
•
L......J........I-~....L-!-.J

!t:=NawaQ
Ill :1-2·1 ConiiCI Q
Ill
CIS IMwi Q

•a

eliD ThrH'a Company
OHe-Man

7

Yard

aD Top card

Sale
~ned

~

PoiMcl

UtiCfS&amp;d

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Ylld lloloo 111101 ,lo Pokl In
lo.dVInce. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
"the doy bo""" the od ,. 10 run.
· SUnday odhlon - 2:00 p.m.
: Frtdn. - y odltlon • 3:00
,p.IO .......y.

wanted to Buy

NoW company In

a... -

only
to IP!IIy.Rhoonldo
Solaty
buod nood
on corllltc.tlon.
u.rt
At 1
from K
31
- clo-or.
fllrolghtI M:rt~lt14-441'-2~~-m:
and- nMifiCI,- W Inch
0274
113 R.long. I1WI2-2410.
'
43....,.. -.r llotlgo tonk lor Oroonlll andlor plonllf wonlod,
w o f - CoU11Wtz.3010.
fulf or part limo. Far Si. John
· ....,k caro whh or whhout Luthooron Chur&lt;:h, Plno Grovo.
PI- c-ct Pallor Lluro
- -· Coil Lorry Uvoly 114· LMch II 114-9!1:1-2010 or 114-

-·~·
Clulhl
P,. 1140 -quiMo. Any conclllon.

912-HN,

•n

~

.

Couneolor

to

_... CoU-na. oduelllon,

--nH

Opponunlty
.
IN011CEI

$30,000 yr. Income potenllll.
Detalle. (1i 80U87-6000 bt. Y·

4512.

quoot lol' inhonnlllon b)' moll
only. ..._, County W-

Toura, h"tC., P. 0 . lox 243,
Hortlonl, WY 25247.

CASH IN ON IIULTI-IIILLIDN
DOLLAR MARKET RESEARCH.
Frwlnto. - o topo ~ ..u.
Wile P. 0· lox 354 0o1 polio,
DH 45131.
Ellabtlohod Corry out I doll lor
oolo, 111 oqui_., In llock, lncl•""·
111.SOO

.,t;;,.~.;:..':!""ror

===··

;...,o

Into, 11

7241 oftor &amp;p.m. :
Vondlna Routo Piofhobto I

Eaey. llakH 1110 your,..,, Mil
c-11-411 3221.
·

WANTED Llconood Boll Pflol
Ollllont - ..... Ouollflcotlono: -..a At-. dlnnor buckll
IMhalar'l oeg,.., •ctv•nced - · .12 hr ohlft, 4 to 5 do,- por
dogrw pooletoOd. E•portonce - . lioot&gt;ltollzol~, apply P.
o. lox 7~. Crooolono, WY
-2123180 ·10: Sond
A
b)' 35351 or call304·n.-3021.
F.A.C.T.S,
At.-2 Box
~-~~-. OH 45114. 11/FIH,

r'\;,_ ••

or

artndlna eon
. oqul_.t
11~
orw 1:00 304-11S-UN14,
=ll l;;;,lor;::...:,Ron.=-·- - - 55 . Building
-

.

Suppl
' les

Iuiie,
;

11000 USID APPUio.HCIS
1111'11,... ....,..., ...............
rongooo. 1111111111 Atoilu
,

3 bedroOm apl, MWty dHomlld
ca1110:oo till 4:00. 3CJ4.111-2131.
3 rooon opt. portlllly lumlol!od,
nw corpol, nw point, n.r

-r

31

'

dod"roH $2110. 104.-11-1110
I:OOPII.

.

•r

WE'~f.

AL£

7:D5 (I) ·Jallaraona
7:30eC2J Famur Feud ·
II Gil En-lnment Tonight
a (J) Mama'a family ·
ill •1121 1BJ JIIOfllirdJI Q
IBI!D M"A"I"H
(f)J Croaaftre
0 Night Caurt
7:35 ()) Sonlotd And Son
8:DO (]) MOVIE: JeaM Owena

79

1 - - · · -. 3 lloidtop. J!l!,.-r glldo•. IIGO.

...... .

Campers&amp;

Motor -Homes

1M2· C ,.., . . . . Home,
Eoc. canol, 114-441-1115•. 114- 11

borrows the laundry money
to bu~h• latest fashion .
rave ..

:

'

IJCM&gt;d

• 8tGrJ (PI 1 Of 2)'=
-· eaJ e Colbr
Rudy

11

Gall otieMietketlllrAQ

ill84 28-113 ft., RoiHft l,
Mount olr conclhlonor, onlonna,
Au.FIIn,.,
-~11.
· -opore
1111•buiH·Ift,
llnk,O, \
IOnllng llc!kl. , l1WIW2..

CZJ

1111. '
1111 Flat x-1 t 1500. 304-ITS1t1_Daftor.I:OO PM. ,
'
wenfl)gl.$1100. ·• "
1111· Lollono . iotort, . - 1t81 Aoclnoooll F.oldaaoL Uko
luna-up, ~_tlr~~•r new ltMtttr, nw,"otoopo! I. f!"'l!lf ond OX• l
brokoo, ind 1tJC compr-r, lrn lnclolilod. ooiiO. 114-743· 'I

(f) Tllla1Md Hou.. TIHng
continues in the guest
bathroom. Q
(J) Ftnhai' Dowling
Mratarfla DOwling and Sister
Steve Investigate claima of a
haunted mansion. Q

~

a

!'

.11,114-4~. ~

•·

.

2710.

'.

011 •1121 41 Hourt1 Q
IBI!D MOYIE: AmetiC8n

,

:::-:-7-:--:i-:---;-:-:-=-::--::;:- I
Fot Slfo: ~0104' - . 2411, ••
1' " ' IJodte, ...., ' l!llllippllcl, '
o

-to

•
~

- " " • otooioo I . Coli oftor
lip.m. 114o211-i81D. ,

., ohopplng .....

1:.11

71 Autos for Sale

CGrldfllarl. 1800. CoN 114'1112·

- · ' ., 00

.

THE FflOtlT, ANP
. ~P'Pit46 IAt:IC'HAfti&gt;S:.

Tra nc port Jt 1011

1170 VW Comper. V.ry

w. opt. 3 lor., 1 booth, prlvolo
.._

reo,

-5134. .....
' lor• - · :IOwTS-

114·743·2750.

~ 114-441·1100
pitlo. · CloM

- · ~­

· op.
1813..,...,.
3
......
35D, s lplod.
1180-

U-AhoWRI. ..... IIone
0

Jennings takes an inside
look at lhe modern day
cowboy. (1 :00)
0 Abbot And Coatello

~· 11:-:011

OIIIod. Nice Ollllna. laundry Cilll -··Coli~-.,..
lleiiMieo onl-. Cill11 .....
3111 EOH.
Kina ...
lied wllh pod-

n a..m.-tp.m,

12

P-'"·

llobtlo Homo
....... 114-441-1101.
2 bldroom· .,... ror Nl'lt. 1 Clr-

MCIIDMd

-~ -Polcl
·
- -· FoniiiiiC Som'o.
114-1317.
'

MW

'

P I - r - Com, 143 por boa

Rt-.711.

IIJIOIIa,
1br, -••• r Wiling n - . Fot tele: Dining lum-. Ill utlllllei pold, ln- 114 ... 2141.,
aludlng oobto. lcleol lol' ono por-

llll'lohlngiOit-

10

:f5.s1.oo PI!'

:::..'*!..71':!..'~i3~. ~-. 114-4--..

""'ll. .,..,......

0 Miami VIce
Ill My ~· Hove Alwera
IIHn Cawboya Waylon

.. ;. TrM a Stwnp Ro._ot I UJ&gt;. Yo!- dr-nt - ni
to Feblllth. &amp; Noel T-,
- and
ook muteh,
I ltlokOfY,
- . 1141432211,ori1W43-22f4. · ·
dining' room de, flllw Ud,
1JS0 pick..
•

1, 2,
3br, - . $300
PI!' County •PP'II- 'Ina,, Geed·
All utlllleo pold, Dopaolt .-.....,.-,T.V. 1010. ODoR
re~ Ired.
Contact LAfaptte 1 c.m. to I.P:III· lion:..... 114Ill~ 114-44f-1TU, 1 1 -1~ wr 3nl. aor422&gt;.
.

=·

Real Estate

Br1nd

••oa

..T
...
IIJIMoollfllne

""!'&gt; u-n F.,..., At. l51 PlinY.

loW

for Rant

IBJ WhHt Of
~ Court Q

l:,...tz·: e lion lnni S11, 304-

-?444.

Apartment

lor earn lor IOie, 30W'/5-4SGI.

~ . . ID

BRIDGE

Nantto.•

ft4-74Na1 .
GnMifiCI- _ , 11.00 por 100

::ar...:.kc::..
·r:q.;o~
ortcw. Mollolwl
J1444

lllljl elll C - 1 Altair
CZJ (f) MacNall Lehrer

131-2011.

"Why," stormed the womah. "does everyone else get a
warning and I get a ticket? Is it my face?" "No," smiles
the cop, "It's YOUR FOOT!"
,

(J)

C:oudltlooo6d ..., lor oole. •1 .
por Coli .14oi4N154 M

114-

........._

Servtcrs

~-

.

lillnja IRi (2:00)

IIJI PrtOMIIewl
iiJ Munier, Jlht Wrote

a

Chyoctt
OMovll

atraat at.uon

e:O&amp;(I)JaiiWeOrtl
8:30 (J) IBJ 01118..... Wotltl

e

Clair Huxtable ratums to
campus lor a'career
coun~ellng

Hmlnar. C

ClJ Sneatcl'Nvtewa CJoa1
VIdeo

Ill Wild Amartca The most
lamiNar and bell loved ot
wild animals is taalured. Q
a Crook I ChaM
· 8:35 (I) NBA leakalllall
I:DOGW e~Woody' s
.
girlfriend's mother rnakes a
(:18&amp;S at him. Q

0 luttwal- I'NMnta:
Thulldly Night 1'111'"-

a IMihvilll Now

9:30 8 (%) IBJ Orand Tom tries to
keep his runaway son a
secret from CireSI Mne. Q

1D:DO (]) 7DO Ciull With Pat
RobertM~

a (%) 1BJ LA. Law Van

Owen Is stunned by the offer
of a career-milking

f."';";"!il~onellrne Uve

ll Nawawatoll

HE WAS CHUNKIN'
ERASERS AN' SHE
BARELY MISSED
GtTTtN'

(f) Lagillllivtl Update

HIT f I

101/J2ncl St. Midd!lepotrtl

• @Maw

Appt. Coli
992-6717

for

Tw._. z-

ONawa
,
111i30 &lt;li Ma.tarium .,.-.,.

1· 16·'90· 1

Here is another ~eal from Mike
Lawrence's "How to Play Card Combinations." The first problem is the action by South. Two no-trump is best
becaUBe it . ~escribes the general
strength and shape of the hand. Atakeout double would be less effective becaUBe it would leave SOuth ·guessing
after a minimum response · from
partner. ·
.
After North raises to game, South
must devise tbe best way of taking a
ninth trick. If declarer had enoup
.time, he could simply play for a 3-2
club split to set up a long trick in that
suit. But tbe opening lead has stolen a
tempo. Give up a club. and the defend,en knock out· declarer's ~th4r hJch
beart. Give up another club, and East
cashes out, setting tbe contract two
tricks.
•
So declarer must try to make a second trick iD spades. Tbere is no 4-3 division of spades that helps declarer, so
South mtiSt hope that spades are f&gt;-2 or
6-1. Tbe it-2 division is of course more
likely, illid if the doubleton spade includes. tbe king or queen, declarer has
,a chance. And who is more likely to
'bold a doubleton spade? Of course that
player who bas already announced a
six-card heart suit.
. Therefore,
.
. declar.

Succesl as a playwright
allows Michael to escape '
from Fleet Street. (2:DO~ Q

•

OFFEIS 3 LOCAnONS TO SEIYE ruu __

POMEROY, OHIO: At. 7 llo B.A . 1.43
ALBANY, OHIO: At. &amp;0 llo I.A . 143
HENDERSON. WV.: At. 3&amp; Adj. to IIden Equipment
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 e.m.-7 p.m. 7 Oeya
ALBANY: 10 o.m.-6 p.m. 6 Deyo, Cloood Su•odory
HENDERSC)N: 10 o.m.-5 p.m. 6 Doyo. Cloood "u''··••&lt;&gt;n,.o
PAYING AS· OF TODAY, JAN . 30, 1
# 1 Copper 70C per llo ,;
.
CINn Dry Aluminum Cana, 38¢ per lb.
WE IUY ALL NON
SCRAP, lATTER lEI,
ITAIITEIIS,
ALTERNATORS, ETC.

" vou In lite
encea WhiCII 1te governing
year ahead. Send lor your Aatro-Gr!lph
predlctfOna loidav by IMillntl SUS to

BERNICE
BEDE;OSQL
:. '

'

t '

•

.., &lt;

1·31 -'tcJ.dn

•

trifle more domineering than usual.

H.,.._, let him play her game unltla
vou t.l lhe'a plldng you In aaublenll·
MlroG'..,tt, c/o th!J -·~· P.O. . ent poeltiOn kii ufterlor motW..
, 8Gx 81421. Cfevelli'ICI, Ott 44 101.·3428. VIIIGO (Alii· 23 SapL 22) Your pertor.
8e !lure to lUte your zodiac llgn.
m.,_ level II Hklly to 1M cfeperident
PISCIS (. . . 30 " ell a) 01 Ill the lifiOII the amount ol Mopet vllkln you
'neg8livtllhlngayou dolodiOY. ~1811- ltevetoday. You'lwork bill If you C!On't
nation coUld 1M the 111011 counterprO- l t e W - contllnlly peeking o' ' ~uctlve. Don't ... Ill.. lime w-. put your IIIOukllr.
you lilllilnCitlte B-b.a.
.
·
~
aa aot; . , ,. friend w1111
Alllll ...... 21·Aprll .,,, Ullng lite ' ' 'whoroi you .... a rtpaelll
hard 1111 could gain you comptlanca mlglll blln 111111 of
frOm your pe1111 IOCIIOY, bu1 the .-..ulll
Ewtn
he
Y!On't,IM wqrth II. Comtng on loci atrong
II might 1M kind tO
COIM ,,_ long luting , _ ~ the '
\
.
.
'

c-.:

Cong0'1H111an Hartay 0 .
Staggers, Jr.
eii!l Crtmewatctt Tonight
Gl0n818ge
1D:Ii0al Clalh Of Till Chan plana
X: T-lltutaut
11:00 Ill Hanlaaala 'Mel ,

MDCD 81IDI (R) C

......
•

(2) •

•

•

playwright

river

5 Previous

SOUTH
10 5

.AQ

• K Q 10 4

•t.l073

Vulnerable: North -South
Dealer: East
Soath .

W..t

Nortlo

2NT

P~

3NT

Opening lead:

~

4

er wins Uie'IliioTiieari and cashes faur
rounds of diamonds ending in the dum•

my. Then a low spade is played away
from tbe ace. If East plays low, t1oe
jack loses to West's king. Sublequeatly
tbe ace drops East's queen, and the
spade 10 is the game-going, trick. U
East rises with tbe doubleton spade
queen, declarer later plays tbe jack of
Spades throup West, fiaealng. Yes,
bridge is an euy game ... sOmetimes.

,

DOWN
1 Lingerie

life

Item
2 Seraglio

times

12 Muslim

3 Aw~struck

decree

13 Quibble

·s PraHne nut

15 Boxing's

6 Rooney's

4 Marry

17 Owned
20 "'pen. -

Is

34 .Kept secrel Jr...-1-+311 Crtttctze
37 Shake31

speare's
!healer
Japanese

City
. 41 Basetiall's

Sla~hter ·

.

DAILV ~YPTOQUOT~- Here's how to wort\ II :

211

AXYDLBAAXR

8port1C1 ••
e(J) «&lt;I
ANanlo HaH

0=""·
0

VICf
' • Clltotoll ..... 81811011
8 Cot oadr Tanlglil

11:JO

•

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is IL~ed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the word~ are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
·

-

,,,._,,1...._

'

QtriCliQUOTE
T F D '·.A 2 F N

N8 WX

l&gt; 8.

Gl.UV

N tJ W

S I. A 0 ·

l D 'r B C Y . - S I. G G L f C

VVFA' OVX

.

........"!!btl I

-.r

a-.11•-••

'-- -111111
....... l IIIOirli
' ........
t14.ioiiih'i. .....

,,

Y•t•r•••'• ~.,.,..all: THE S_ECRET Of

I ld Anpa

,... _ _ _ IdS
Tlalo,-.

'

.,

Is LON(;FELLOW

Pttvote-..............
-· .... .....

!

.J

+K9

44 Fenced In

9 Beer
11 AI all

l D

llll'llllod: I to I .... -

.QJ 5

1 "Pygmalion" 43 English

VKEVTA

1112.

•u

.KJ10952
•• 3 2,

b., lHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Bishop's

l V • N B' W

'
or
·~~ttnorill H"pltal
I(lv.tirllls
Jlulberry, lflls, PDmeroy,

EAST
+Q7,

(I) 1111 .1121

.

fll!illy -.caw
1

wrsr
.K9863
.7 6 4

CROSSWORD

(!) Waahlngton Aaporl

TRI•COUNTY RECY

· +U42

33 Extremity

.ex-wile. Q
·
·
IIJI La"Y King Uval •.

'

•• 3
• AJ 7 5

By .Jamn Jmlby

IIJ)Iventngllawa

suspicious ot a seemingly
natural death.
a (J) Young Riders An Infant
ia found, abandoned at the
riders' bunkhOIJM, Q · ,
Ill eO Island Iori Daniel's
life Ia C0111pilcal8d by the '
unannounced visit of his

'

Z-t,H

Ill • lUI Knots Landing
Greg's lr)VeatlgatiOn Into hiS
daughter's death andlngers
his own life. t;! ·

Colaga ltillloatball

(l) (f) Myataryi Polrot Is

I

NORTH
.A42

Y"terd.y's Ariawer
28 Medieval
Willie
first
Fr. poem
16 Asian sheep mate
Policy '
30 .. _- .
HI Oil-yielding 7 More than 23 Bucket
Fooltslo
tree
a couple
handle
•· Things"
19 Freeway
8 Official
24 Small
31 Gnmdi
divider
In anc.
sturgeon
loqui7P
21 _ the
Rome
25 Accorl'l 32 Arou~:"
gauntlet
10 Take ·
28 lnfle 38 Role
22 Unusual
quarters
quenlly
38 Goorl
23 Whack
14 Huey
27 Type
(Fr )
24 Loafer
· or Shelley
of party 40 Drink
ooe
28 Closeout
event
27 • :- Trek"
28 Floral
piece
29 Three
times .
(Lal.)
30 candle
wax

(!)

•

t·1

Outfit - Rally ~ Hutch - Notion - YOUR FOOT

i&lt;ll Cal1ga
PM Magazine •
lelllatball

.

I I I ·1 I I I I

SCIAMUTS ANSWtRS

7:DO Ill Scaracrow a Mra. King

Good nlllod hoy lor ..... - . .

room,
, buill on
, •~
llool.
50, por
montll. Lobonon T_,.hlp, 114211o.t.,.,

Wlall

hom Point P'-nt, on the
Ohio ond Konowhl Alwro. A•

peaa ..... ~ Me. In ·an out

=-""-=

12K'IO, 3
remodtltd

OHIO Vlo.LLIY PUILISHING CO.
lhll you do
_ . _ - poopll you k,_,
ond NOT to oond . money
lhn&gt;ugh lhoo moll Unlll you ....
lnvootlgll~ the oflo~ntl·
AHontlon . llaoon
Counly
Roeldonto: A public olfwl"'l· ot
llock le botntl modo b)' llalon
County WIIIB Tou,., Ina. to
IICUI'Sion

.,......

-- 1urn1~-• AC ~- · · ~.
• Al.. r Vlow In Konollflll. F-r
11o1111o Homo Port&lt;, 114-4411102.

Busln•••
.....

. . . . . . In

PHARMACIST NEEDED
$50,-YEio.R PLUS $2,500
Colh Pold. Coli ltA-et:l-1157 or
SIGNING BONUS)
11WII2-24a1.
O~ng Fhoo stor.lndoponclom
tlllllntod To Buy: Pine Poll, Dyer Chaln, P'u• Home IV Cent• 11
. _ 114-441-1117 lo.m. to S.oldnjj o Ph..,.cllf. hie ,..,_
do,-, hie Holldo,-, paid hoooMh
41!·'"·
bonotho, continuing oducotlon,
'- 1 E
•
1...no.,.
xcollont
-·
onvlronment" · with
ohlrmocy
Employment Services t-nlclan. All otoreo locllod In
South Elllom Ohio around
Dlllo Unl,.,.lty In Atilano, Ohio.
Coli, ltoi-812-IIM or moA
11 Help Wanted
,....mo to: Preocrtpllon Shop,
AYDN I
Areoo I Shl~oy 211 N. Socond Avonuo, llld·
lpoooo, JOI.47&amp;.142t.
dtepolt, DH 45750.
·
AYDN • .ouo o.--, eon Marilyn EARN MONEY Aoodlng Boollal
- - 3D4 113 2145.

Evti!INM~, 1144Tt-2111._

Potontlal oomlnga. 114-4413115 tor opl., ook lor llr.
21
Sl-rt.

-MortM-:.:'.\"a~c-'Ex'"!'....~
•n a. ,...,~~

co-. Tavtot a TIJIOr, 11W(3.
ms, ., 114 1 a 2214.
Hay&amp; Grain
'

211r, _,,. Homo lol' ·rwn~, In

Top llonagomonl &amp; 5o1oe R.p,,
115,000 to 135,000 por r -.

Hangln' In

by fi ll i nV~ . in th• miging word1

you develop from otop No, 3 below.

I'

6 ANSWER
UNSCRAMBLE Fot

8:35 (I) lo.ndy Grlttltli

MooiAIA-ImbrwD

·9

·

. . PRINT NUMBERED
V LETTERS IN SQUARES

Complete ihe chuckle quoiod

SUCCESS IN Ct&gt;N\tasA110N IS TO BE ABLE TO

IIIII

~=EEu:.=r ,ILllfG QISAGRE!ABLE.

'\

1

~ 111110 b)' tltftq Foatu""' Syndil':lllo!. In&lt;. ~

•

..-•
•

·A.

•

.

•'

�'

1a-n. Delv Sa tlintl

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

.J ackson to de Klerk: 'Go all the way' on democracy

.. . .·

Mandeta· while Jackson Is In the Mlnlater Margaret Thatcher In aeatut South Africa despite ' made by Jackloa to the Sovtb
iJOHANNESBURG, South timing of his visit wu poor,
LoDdQn Monday, Jacltson advo- .I Friday's reforms. Botha said African arnbauador ln .
Africa ( UPI) - Civil rights fueling speculation the govern- country.
In
talks
with
British
Prime
cated
continued sanctions ' that contradlcted statements Wublneton.
·
.
ment
Is
unlikely
to
release
actlvllt Jesse Jackson urged
Praldent Frederlk de Klerk
'l'bunday to ''go all the way" and
replace four decades of apar- ·
theld rule with full democracy to
prevent further turmoU In racially divided South Africa.
· Jackson began his flrstrullday
In South Afl·ica .since 1979 by
attending a prayer' breakfast
With senior South African church
leaders, then prepared to tour the
black satellite city of Soweto
SOuth of Johannesburg.
The two-time presidential candidate said de Klerk's reform
package unveiled last Friday
was "marvelous" butpoilitedout
that black nationalist Nelson
prison and a
Mandeta ·is still
43-month-Old state of emergency
Is -still partially in place.
· "He offered hope to those who
have been disenfranchised. hope
by unbannilig various organiza· .
!Ions, hope by repealing restrictions on the press, hope in the
release of political prisoners
even It It affects only 5 percent,
and hope for the release or Nelson
Mandela," Jackson said.
·. But he urged de Klerk, Whose
National Party has ruled the
C!JUntry since 1948, "to seize this
great moment in history and go
1\11 the way" by abolishing the
country's racist laws and implementing multi·raclal democracy
to bring th.e ·country out or
international isolation.
· ·"South Africa cannot go back·
•.
wards," Jackson said. "It will
f4nd chaos. It cannot stand stl)l,lt
wm find tension. It must go
forward to a filial, peaceful and
j.tJst solution."
Jackson is on a 10-day tour of ·
South Africa as a guest of the
South African Council or
Chuifhes. On hisarrival Wed!leSday, anti-apartheid cleric Allan
Boesak hailed the American as
"a campaigner, a comrade in the
struggle in .his own right ."
•
· "We are living in exciting
times tn· this country, times or
great change, wehere we may
even find ourselves on the verge
of a historic breakthrough in the
political situation," said Boesak,
_STOCK NO,
whO embraced Jackson and
9865
called him his brother.Jackson, .
UP TO 60 MONTHS
whose only other trip to South
Africa was in 1979, said the world
TO QUALIFIED
ts· waiting with "bated breath"
for Mandela' s release.
APPLICANTS
Asked whether he wanted to
visit Mandela in prison, Jackson
said he hoped to see him free
walking down the streets of
Johannesburg, but added he had
•
received no commitment from
MANUFACTURER'S
SUGGESTED
RETAIL
the government he would be able
to see Mandela "in his present
SVPFORD
status.''
STOCK NO. 106
M!lndela, jailed since ~962 and
TURNPIKE DISCOUNT........;.................."'.............................•
convicted or acts or sabotage
against the government In 1964,
is being held In a suburban-style
WAS
house on the grounds or the
minimum-security prison in
*11,50SOO
Paarl, set in the_ Cape winegrowing region.
De Klerk lifted a 30-year ban on
'DEALER TO RET... REBATE, TAX, TITLE AND FEES EXCI,.UDED
the African National Congress,
suspended judicial executions,
· lifted restrictions on more than
370 activists and eased the state
or emergency In a bid to lure
black leaders to the negotiating .
table and .persuade the ANC topublicly abandon Its guerrUta
war tactics.
Since 1961, a year after Its
1990 PREMIER...................8TOCKtll7 1990 TBDNDERBJRD.. ,....srocs: t 292 l990 WRANGLER. ...............arrocs: t
banning. the ANC has waged a
1990 SUMIIIT...........•........•STOCK. t 124 1990 TBmfDERBJRD.......srocs: t 297 1990 RANGER~...........ST0Cit t
ltmit'ed guerrilla war of sporadic
bombings and S(lbotage that
1990 COUGAR. ...................STOCB: t 282 1989 RANG81
4 .........&amp;TOCB: t 90.81
1989 PROBE......................STOCs: t
cttmaxed In 1988 with numerous
COUGAR. ....................STOClU 224 1990 RANGER 4X4...........STOCB: t
bombings in white urban areas.
1990
srocs: • 22s 1990
1990LTJ:SDWL;.................STOcs:tsol 1990 F·USO 4X4................STOCB:t
Jackson would not comment on
.
1989
MUSTANG
....
;
..........
STOCs:
t 99411
·whether he had applied for
F-150 4X4.................STOCB:t
1989 MUSTANG...............STOCB: t 98815 1990 GRAND MARQUIS..STOCK~ 257 1990
official permission to see Man·
1990 F-150 .&amp;X2.................STOCs:t
deJa, and refused to answer
1,9 90 TEMPO •••.......•.•..•.•.......STOCK 1201 1989 TAtrRUS SHO...........STOClU9702 1989 AEROSTAR. ............STOCB: t
repeated questions regarding
statements made TuesdaY by
1990 'I'EIIPO.......................STOCK t 218 1990TAURUS......................BTOCKt361 1989 AElt08TAR. .......,.....STOCB:t981
Foreign Minister Roelof "Plk"
TEIIJtO•.........•............STOCK 1 ·202 1989 SABLE......................STOCK t 9317 1990 AER.OSTAR...............BTOCB: I
Botha.
~~~~~~·9369
Botha accused Jackson of
taking both sides on the issue or
economic and cultural boycotts
of South Africa, and said the

Missouri·

Ohio Lottery

upset by
Kansas State

Pick 3
544
Pick 4

2770

Page 4 -

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) President Bush told Ohio Republicans Thursday evening that the
Buckeye state Is most critical for
GOP political fortunes, both this
year and for the entire decade.
The president addressed a
$2,500 a plate fundraising·dlnner
tor the Ohio Republican Party,
which is struggling to assemble a
ticket for this year's statewide
elections.
''This Is critical year, and Ohio
is a critical state," Bush told an
-~tfniated 500 people. " What
· happens here is key to . tl)e
Republican majority. Wewant1o
build all across this country." ·
The president told the Republl·
cans he wants them to work hard
to elect not only a governor In
Ohio, but to take control of. boft!

This Annual Event WID Save You
Thousands .on Select New
· Demonstrator
Units.
.
Choose From Ford, l,ln~oln,
Mercury And JeeJ' Eagle.
Rura 1 In Now!

NOW

10,31

8

SAVE OVER • •

9eso

ESrF.tfL.................

One winner in the
· Super lotto game
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
Super Lotto player has a ticket
bearing the six numbers chosen
In Wednesday night's drawing,
making that ticket worth $6
million.
Numbers are 2, 7, 9,14,18, and
39.
The holder or that ticket. can
redeem It and become eligible for
$300,000 a year for 20 years,
before taxes.
Ohio Lottery officials Sl!ld
Thursday morning that out ol
$1,586,874 worth of tickets sold,
168 had five or the numbers lor
$1,000, and 8,362 had lour the
numbers for $75.
The Kicker game produced the
combiliatlon 994129, but none of
tbe $781,012 worth or tk:kets had
the aumber.
.
LOttery officials said three had
the nnt five numbers for ~.000
each; 63 had the first four
numbers for $1,000;_68() had the
first three for S100, and 7,129 bad
the first two for $10.
saturday night's Super Lotto
jackpot reverts to $3 million. :~

•

1986 CHEVY C..10

1983 CHEVY c-20

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P8, ~·windows, power lodls,
til whool, &lt;;NiH, AM.f'M sloniO

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NOW

1985FORD
· TEMPO

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PS, P8. M&amp;fl.l radio.

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MARQUIS
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J

ACCEPTS AWARD - Oa behalf of the Meigs
County. AgriCultural Society, Ed Holter, left, and
Bill Radford, ~lght, accept a "Certificate of
. Achievement" lor succes!jluUy planning, organlz·

· 1985FORD
'RANGER
Block 13811, 8•. 4tplld I lind.
lrllll, AM.flllldio.

------ --·--·-·--------------------.....,-"------- -----·---·--------~-------~----7"'"'' "'----·-~"""--·-- ~,....;..-

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..

chambers of the General Assembly . · This. he explained, would
permit the legislature to draw
new congressional boundari es,
which would affect the complexton or Congress for the balance of
the 1990's.
"I want to come back and
help," he said , promising to
assist the GOP in this year's
campaign.
Both gubernatorial candidates, George Voin.ovich and
Robert Tilft II, were .at the
dinner, but neither s.a t at the
head table.
It had been speculated that
Bush or Republican National
Chairman Lee Atwater would
attempt to intervene and con·
vince Tart to run for a lesser
statewide otrlce. Apparently,

they didn 't.
The Republicans at the dinner
sat beneath a colorful ceiling
ador ned with red, while and blue
balloons and streamers. They
listened as the O~io State Unlver·
sity alumni band, clad in red
jackets and berets, played 1 a
spirited medley of !ootball
music.
..
The head ta ble included Ar~hie
Griffin, the two-time Heisman
trophy winner, who led the
Pledge of Allegiance.
In · his speech, Bush refered
·several times to Griffin's coach the late Woody Hayes whom he
described as "one of the great
field marshals of the 20th
century ."

'

:Meigs fair board .recognized
The Meigs County Agricultural
; Society was awarded a "Certlfl. cate of Achievement" for sue. cessfully planning, organizing
·and presenting an outstanding
fair In 1989. Ohio Department of
AW,,.11%itlj&amp; tQ.9M O.®!lt\lr
St en . aurer p~ntelt' the
award on behal! or · Governor
Richard ,F. Celeste and ODA
during the 65th Annual Ohio fair
Managers Convention held Jan.
3-5.
", ~~;
·.'
. ·The award was accepted on
~Jjalf ql the .fair board by B111
Radfor.d and Ed Holter.
The annual convention. at·
tended by fair board delegates or
Ohio's 94 county and independent
fairs, was held at the 'Hyatt in the
Ohio Cente~. Columbus. Maurer

honored the fair ·boards for their
hard work and d~dlcatlon during
a special luncheon on Jan. 4. ·
County fairs · began as the
ultimate showcase o! Ohio's
agriculture, , bringing neighbors
together to exhibit their .Products .
and show off their hard work and
skills, Maurer said. ' 'Today that
tradition · continues with the
added" emphasis of educatilig
.people both young and old, a bout
the Importance and wide spread
Impact of Ohio agriculture."
"I applaud and commend
everyone involved in the fairs
this year for their tremendous
efforts lri overcoming the last
couple of trying years brought
about by bad weather," Maurer
said.

Fred Arnold, ODA .Falrs DivIsion Chief, said, "! found every
one or our 94 fairs to be running In
top notch form at a very high
emotional level. Many or th.e
stands and concessions were
bdi:l!tl)t pa,tnted,. Jarsa -crow!)&amp;
roamed the barns and midways,
· and outstandl~ examples .of
produce, homemade goods,
flower arrangements and lives·
tock filled tll,e exhibit area."
Both Arnold and Maurer also
praised young people involved In
the Junior Fair prol!ram.
Maurer said, "The future of
Ohio's agricultural industry is
secure in the hands or dedicated
young people who are learning
the significance of discipline,
leadership and sportsmanship.''

~~Jd.

snap .causes whotes·ate
•
pnces to surge in January
"wASHINGTON ('UPI)
'" cent Increase In energy prices said automotive and other major
WholeSale prices surged by 1.8
was the steepest since the go- categories ill the report shOwed
percent in Janu~ry In the biggest
vernment star ted tracking ''there was very little to indicate
jump since the 1974 energy crisis,
wholesale gasoline and oil prices that inflation was heating up,"
Fuel oil 'prices zoomed 25.3.
fueled again by a huge increase · in 1974. The overall increase in
in oil and gasoline ·prices, the 1 \he producer price lndex was the percent and gasoline prices
government said Friday. .
largest since 2 percent in No· jumped by 16.7 percent In JanuVegetable prices also took a
vember or that year in the wake . ary, accounting for most or the
energy price surge. Natural gas
beating, but analysts placed the .of the Arab oil embargo.
blame on the brutal winter .
The Index stood at 117.5. which was up 3,2 percent. ·
A 2.1 percent jump in food
weather this time- not lnternameans that an item that cost $100
prices
also contribute~ to the
tiona! tensions - and predicted
wholesale In 1982 cost$117.50 last
·
January
surge, following an
moderate Inflation for the year.
month.
overall
0.6
increase in the index·
The Labor Department said
· B1,1t economist Robert Diell, or
in
December,
0.1 percent in·
the "unusually large" 13.6 per- Northern Trust Bank in Chicago,
crease in November, and 0.5
percent increase in October, the
department said. Those numbers
were revised to reflect updated
•
data.
If America's wholesale prices
- which Influence prices consu'The amount of Income taxes collected during 1988 in the 501.
mers pay - continued to gain at
municipalities or Ohio in ·which a tax was levied totaled
the current rate, the producer
$1,732;675,054, according to a report released by the Ohio
priCe Index would finish the year
Department of Taxation today .
with. a behemoth 24.1 percent
The list shows that. in Pomeroy where the tax rate Is 1 percent,
increase, the Labor Department
a fatal or $194,323 was collected while in Middlep~rt where1he 1
said.
percent tax did not go Into effect until July 1, 1988, the collection
' But the January surge ap·
totaled $30,401.
peared to a one-time shot.
Muntciapl income taxes are generally imposed on wages,
"We had the cold weather hit
salaries,. and other compensation earned by residel)tS and on
and nobody In tile northeast was
non-residents who work In the municlpa1ity. The Income tax Is
prepared for It," said professor ·
also' applied to business net profits which are attributable to
Donald Ratajczak, director of
. activities In th~ municipality. Many municipalities allow a
the economic lorecas tlng center
partial or full credit to residents tot taxes they have paid to the
at Georgia State University.
municipality In which they are employed.
"All the homes llad low (all)
Rates in Ohio r11nged from .25 percent to2.5percent. State law
tank levels. They thought we
· requires t~at the rate must be uniform within a municipality
were goilig to have another mild
and cannot exceed 1 percent without a vote of the people.
winter," Ratajczak said. "They
all scrambled to buy fuel oil and
the price roCketed."
The coilS also wiped ou tcraps In
'
critical winter growing reelons
The senior class at Eastern High School will sponsor a donkey
iii Florida and the Rio Grande
basketball game on Monday at 8 p.m. ·at the high school.
.and caused equipment failures at
The event Is a senior class activity that will help.ratse funds
aeveral refilierles, he said. A
for the class's graduation lind senior trip to klng't Island.
cr,lppllng fire at a maJor fuel on
Opponenls featured ·will be the WMPO disc Jockeys; the
refinery also· hurt production.
·Jaycees, and the Young Farmers from thll,area.
.
Aside from the traditionally
~d11a11ced tickets may be 1\UI'Chased up until 3 p.m. on
volatile
energy and food prices,
Monday at the high school at a price of $3.50 pee person with
the Index for other fililshed goods
elementary students and senior citizens, $3. Tickets at the~
edged up by only 0.1 percent In
will cost S4.50 for the general public, and ~-50 for elementary
January, 'following a 0.5 percent
. students and senior cl tlzens,
Increase In December.

Local news briefs---..

Donkey cage tilt set Monday

I

.•

. lng and preeeallng an outstanding lair In 1889.
Presenting the award at a recent convention· Is
Oblo Department of Agriculture Director Steven
D. Maurer.

Tax collection totalS announced

1983 BUICK
CENTURY

A Muttimedie Inc. NtWIP8Pttr

President Bush exorts·
Ohio GOP ·to victory

:It's Fantastic February •••

1881 ·MUS-rANG GT

2 Sections, 14 Page• 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday; February 9, 1990

In

JEEP·

Low tonight Ia mid BOa.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Saturday, high mid 40s.

BUSH MAKES A POINT- Bush mlikes a point
dUring the grand klck·off of the Ohio Republican
Party's 18811 campaign efforts in Columbus
Thursday. This fund raising stop was designed to

raise Sl mUUon. Seated left Is State Chairman
Robert Bennett, GOP Finance Chairman W.R.
"Tim" Tlmkin (R-C) and Mrs. Bush. ( UPI)

Taft will remain in governor's race
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Republican gubernatorial candl·
date Robert Taft II met privately
Thursday with Republican Na·
tional Cl!alrman Lee Atwater,
and afterwards declared he's
still in the governor's race.
However, Taft left .a tiny
IOO!lhole, and speculation continued to mount in GOP circles
that he will abandon the governor's race' In favor of seeking a
Jesser statewide office, which
many party leatlers want him to
do.
'
One Republican with top connections predicted that . Taft
would drop out or the governor's
race "within 48 hours."
Former Cleveland Mayor
George Voinovich is viewed as
having the betterflnanclng and
organization, and is ahead of
Taft, a HamUton County commissioner, in the polls.
Taft and Voinovich and their
wives sat at the same table
Thursday evening at a $2,500-aplate fund-raising diMer leatur·
lng President . Bush as . the
speaker.
.
,
As Taft bo Ited toward his car to
evade reporrers afterwards, he
revealed thai he had met with
Atwat!!f, at his own request, for
about 25 minutes earlier In the
day. ,
'· ·
"We had a good meeting," said
Taft. "I'm In the governor's race
to stay at this time."
•'He bliliked, '' Sllld one Republican when read Taft's quote.
Taft hu until Feb. 22 to decide
whether to drop down and run for
secretary or state, u Republjcan
State Chairman Robert Bennett
would prefer that he do. .
"There's stUI time to derail It
(the move to get Taft out of the

governor's race)," said Rep. Bob
McEwen, R-Ohto, who spoke at
the GOP dinner and who under·
stands the pressure Taft has been
receiving.
McEwen, a conservative like
Taft, was an earlier victim of the
Voiliovich forces. In late 1987 he

.

dropped out of the race for the
U.S. Senate and left.the nomination uncontested lor the thenmayor of Cleveland.
Taft told reporters he has had
"a lot of encouragement" from
Republicans to stay in the
Continued on page 5

I

I

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