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                  <text>Paga D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinei

Pomaroy-Midcleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

Pl1111nt.

W. Va.

Febru81Y 11, 1910

Median home price continues to

r~

CHICAGO (UPII - Gains In period, the di rtereni!e between ~~wcut~~ruw·~
household ·income conUnued to Income gains and home price tho~IIJ homes lllu amp~~~.
lag behind increases In the ,price increases grew . a total of 6.5
~ populiUoa u a wlloJ.,'i
of homes In 1989 with two-income percent. Tbe economic Impact of Pflll!lf-.id.
,
famUies making up a , higher this Is th~t thOSe buyinJ hou.es
The atlldy showed tbe ave..._,
percentage of the total, acoord· today have noticeably ·fewer
monthly 111011&amp;•&amp;P payml!llt (llr
lug to the Chicago Title and Trust discretionary dollars to spend on buyers rose from $1.0011111198810
Co.
• .
things , other than housing than . $1,054 In 19119, lillie tbe avl!fl.The same pat tern has occurred their counterparts did 13 years . payment as • pt&gt;l'relltaae, of
each year since 1976, according ago."
houseb&amp;ld Income declined •1111!
to the nationwide survey of home
The incomes of home buyers lh percen!Aige point to 31.8 pei'OI!IIt
buying trends In major metropol- the 1980s might have lagged last year. The average moniJIIY
itan areas .
home prices even further were it mortgage rate In 1976' was $3211 ;
.
.
Although 1989 was a relatively not for the growing number o(
•
• benign year for housing inflation two-income lam lllei! in the homein the United States, the Widening buying population, Pfister said.
differences In income and price The study showed working couwere compoimded.
ples have been the mlojor factor
. Since 1976 median home prices Influencing affordabillty In this
have risen at a compounded decade. '
'
annual rate of 8.8 percent from
Among couples buying homes
$43,340 .tn 1976 to $129,800 last In 1989, two-incom~ families
year. At the same time, median comprised 86.8 percent of firsthousehold 'inoome rose at a . time buyers while two-income
compounded annual rate of 8.3 families made up 79.3 percent of
. percent from $20,840 to Sss,,700.
repeat buyers. Tbat compares
"While this may not seem like With 53.1 percent for ali buyers in
much, over Ume a discrepancy of 1976,. and '64 .percent · for . first timers,
·
lbls size adds up," said John
•COINS
~ ·
vjce
president
and
manPfister;
"Based
on
data
corroborated
MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
a $1 cash prize from the Ohio Valley l'llbl...lng
•JEWELRY
;
ager
of
market
research
for
the
by other sources. we've found the
farm, featured by the Gallla SoU and Water
Co. Leave your name, address and telephoae
title
Insurer."
"During
this
time
percentage ot two-income !ami•STERLING· SILVER ·
number with your card or letter. No telephone
Conservation Dutrict, Is located somewhere in
Gallla County. Individuals wishing to participate
call!i will be accepted. All contest entries should
•CLASS RINGS . • •
Continued !rpm D-1
In the weekly contest may do so by guessing ihe
be tumed in to the newspaper office hy 4 p.m. each
····-~==:...:....:....
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
Weflneaday. Ia case of a tie, the wlnaer
be
tbe GalUpolh! Dai~ Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Meip County · made fast. If not,,the cost of case
The oversight board, which
,Gillllpoll!i, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, Ill
farm will be featured by the Meigs SoU and Water · resolution is going to take'off like also includes Holfslng an.d Urban
Conservation District.
, a rocket.".
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may win
Development Secretary Jack
•SILVER DOLLARS ·t
D
Dlas
.
A: White House spokeswoman Kemp, has been hindered in Its
•COINS FOR
r'
' t
r1
I
referred questions about the decision-making abll!ty ·by the
- resignation . to the Treasury De- failure of the White House to fill
· COLLECTIONS _
BY EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
construct breeder houses, pullet The first class wlll be held at partment,. which had no imme- two public seats that have
•PROOF SETS .,
houses and grow-out hOuses. I Hannan Trace High School on d!ate comment.
· remained vacant since August.
COUNTYEXTENSION AGENT,
AGRICULTURE &amp; €;!'1!JlD
have tried to be kept Informed Thursday, February 15 at 7 p.m.
The White . House also anKearney joined the oversight
GALLIPOLIS- The Secretary
because of the possible positive
This class will be for those
nounced that President Bush board Oct . 3 after serving as a
of .Agriculture, Clayton Yeutter,
effects to Gall Ia County. I have a · persons who do not currently · intends to nominate John Adair principal at Aldrich, Eastman &amp;
I, I
S..T-Tope
announced the national marl&lt;et- file on some of the information, have a certification card and
to be· inspector general of the . Waltch Inc., a Boston pension
ing quota for the 1990 crop of
sample·contracts, etc. Stop by If wanttotakepartin thetestingon
Resolution Trus·t Corp., a _new fund adviser. Before that he was
Tope~s Furniture
burley tobacco on Feb. 1. lnforyou would like to review the February 26. Call the Extension ' position. Since 1984, Adair lias managing director of real estate
c...... s.c..,......ta~
mation provided through both
Information.
Office (446-7007) for a complete served as an associate director of finance for Salomon Brothers
.Ga
is • 446-0J32
the Ohio Farm Bureau FederaTwo experimental herbicides listing of classes and class th!" Audit OVersight and Policy Inc .. the Wall Street investment
for postemergence grass control locations.
Group at the General Accounting banking house.
lion and the Office of U.S.
in corn may receive a label in
•
Office.
Congressman Clarence · Miller
con f! r m the f o I I owing
1990. The products are "Accent"
provisions:
from DuPont and "Beacon"
.- ~
1. The 1990 Basic Quota level
froJ11 C!ba Geigy. Most special'
w!ll Increase about 2.5 percent
!sts feel the label will not be
.
approved ln.tlme for the 1990 corn
from last year.
•EI~~tronic
,2. Th~prlcesupportforthe1990
crop. Data collected by Mark
Loux. OSU Extension Weed
crop is $1,55!! per pound, up 2.6
cents from 1989.
Scientist. indicates that both
•
3. The effective quota is exproducts provide fa!i to good
I~
control of rhlzone Johnsongrass. ·
peeled to be about 743 million
For complete,professionallndlvidual and business
pounds, 82 m!lli 0 npounds above
These ·"postemergeilce" protax preparation assistance call
'
the 1989 effective quota.
.
ducts occasionally cause slight
4. Producer Association loans
injury to corn, b~(.severe 'Injury
wUl be subject to a 1.4 percent
may occur when "Accent" or
reduction under the deficit reduc- "Beacon" are applied to corn
tlon order:
that has reeeived "counter"
5. The no-net cost assessment
insectldde applications. The
,.
wUl be announced later.
Iaber will likely carry ·restric736 :secorid Avenue
. Gallipolis, Ohio 4.5631 .
One oUbe goals of the Gall!a
tlons concerning this interaction.
( 614) 446-8677
Corn price is a result of many
County Pride In Tobacco Association 'has been to secure this sort factors . Allbaugh December
Open 9-5 Weekdays, Evenings and Saturday by Appt'llnlment
olin formation as soon as possible corn stocks were basically ·un,
,I
· n. '35 &amp; 160
· GAWPOUS
after it has been released. This changed from a year ago, the
ownership was different. Onyear, Mr. Danny McKinney,
Executive Secret{lry of the Bur- farmc~rnwaslip!Opercentfrom •
ley Tobacco Gro~ers Cooperaayearago.Farmershaveheldo.n
. tlve in Lexington, Kentucky
tight expecting prices to move up
provided information on the date . in· response to expected export'
to expect the announcement.
demand. Need for cash has cause
Mr. Phil Strow, Aide to Con- some corn to start moving.
gressman Clarence Miller, gave Economists say that 11 the crop
some of the details of the d.o esn't come on the market too
anno11,ncement.by telephone first fast, prices can be expected .to
thing Monday morl)lng following hold. Some market experts see a
the. FI'J.d,ay (February 1) possible price rally between now
11nnounCJment. . ·
and wheri farmers start moving
By 11 a.m. Monday, Mr. Paul corn to meet spring planting cost
Slade of the Ohio Farm Bureau
Market analysis are watching
Federation bad provided a paper export poten.t!al .In Eastern Eucppy of. the announcement via rope and the Soviet Union: They
FAX at the request of the local feel that any major upward price '
Tobacco Association director movement of corn, soybeans or
Al!len Wedemeyer. A special- wheat would cause the other
thanks to everyone who helped commodities to follow.
Reminder-Some six different
secure the 1990 National Burley
Tobacco Marketing Quota infor- classes are being planned over
· matlon in a timely manner. the next couple weeks ror private
Having timely information is pesticide applicators in Gallia
very important in any farm County. One of the major cheml·
decision making process .
cal companies has been calling
I have· been Involved in a farmers to remind them of the
couple of the meetings in Jackson recertlfic.atlon classes. The
County, West Virginia relating to chemical company has nothing
the interest of the Rockingham to do with the classes . .
Poultry Company in locating
All educational classes are
near Ravenswood. The complex conducted by the Extension
processing Service and
the test·lng and
would consist of
plant, rendering plant, hatchery certification is conducted by the
and feed mill. Farmers would Ohio Department of Agriculture.

..

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'.

3

J:lage 4

I '.

.. "'

""II

h

arm

es

·

___

Top Prleesl ,· :

SELLING:

1990
8 urJey. .qU.otas announc
·
ed ..
.

..

MTS COIN SHOP'"

..

at

IN FRIDAY'S NEWSPAPER nMEX WATCHES
SHOUL~ HAVE READ 20°/o OFF
NOT SOOfo OFF.

W.y!Jfi:NGTON ,(UPJ)- P.res. "Nelson Mandela'~ release . South African society."
. ldentBushjo~~tbepresidentof • troni ll&amp;'lson y"'terday, which we . ' "From this day .on, the Congo
the Co!]ao Monday In lfalliJig the ". waited for and worked for for so . can look forward with optimism
relp of SQuth African black . long, Is. another. Important 'ign
to the future of Its own relations
nattq~lst Nelson Ma~dela from that South Africa may.soon begin · with Solith Africa,' ' he added.
priaOJI as a hojll!ful sign for all of ' Degollal!ng . a democratic nonBush ·said he also wanted to
IIOU~fi·,Atrlca,
racial society and a,t last be on
reas&amp;IJ1'l! the Africa11 people that
Blijli ,Jialled , the freeing of thewaytoendldgapartheldonce despite the distracting' events In
Malldela hy the Soutll African and for all," Bush told the south
Central Eurolll' where the COU!\·
aovernment 1\'hlle welcoming .lawn gathering.
:.
tries are overthrowing the yoke
Presldenl penis Sassou-Nguesso
In response, the African leader
of communism, the United States
on a,,, tate &lt;t!slt.
· ..
said that Mandela's release
will continue to remain,commlt·
·: . &lt;;&gt;n Sunitay. h~ persona,lly tele- Sunday after 27 years In prison
ted and Involved in Atrlca.
·
pho~ ~aQdela and lnvit~d him
"ushers In great prospects for
Tl\e 'Congo leader played a key
tq Washlilai!ID' the negotiation of tbe future of
roleJn helping the United States
j..•' • I

-

,.I

.

Filing Available
•Direct Deposit of Refund Check

CY

Performed ilefore a crowd of approximate~ 2$8
~'@pie., The pest ~onduclor for the concert wu
Roaald P. SocclareiU, conductor of bands at Ohio
University.

. BAND - The eiP*b an...a.

8iiDd Festival wu held,Sunday

.
&amp;Iathem,

Sludellta from Ea&amp;tei'JI,
Meigs High School eo·n cert bands

Inquiry continues on state
1·,

I "

•

,i

• '

'labor· relationS ..bo~d official
'

'

'

' COLUMBUS, Oh.lo (UPI) -An
Ohio Senate investigation Into
the behavior pf a top official of
the state's lal!oi' relations board ,
will coqtinue this week, ' but
.Witbout state Attorney General
Anthony Celebrezze Jr.
Senate Republicans running
the lnvestliatlon tried to draw
Celj!brezze, the apparent Democratic nominee for governor, into
the• hearlngs . ~dnesday, but be
sidestepped theiJ\.
'
·The attorney general was·
asked to eil:plain why be bad not
responded to-a request last July
hy Inspeotbr Cjeperal David
Sturtz· for· a legal opinion in the
case against Jacquelin · Davis,
vice chairwoman of the State
Employment Relations Board,
who has resigned effective next
Friday.

'

Celebrezze said his office Is spent $1,400 on telepl\one. calls
working on the opinion and It wlll from New York wliile conducting
SERB business long distance In
be ready "sh9rt1y."
The House reconvenes at 11 1987, 1988 and 1989. Sbe said she
a.m. Tuesday and the Senate at · took compensatory time off to
visit her fiance.
1:30 p.m. the same day.
Sturtz said he wan ted. to find
On Wednesday, Chief Justice
Thomas Moyer is scheduled to out If Davis bad been impr,o perly
paid for work. days spent In New
deliver ·the flrst·ever "litate of
York,
and needed the attorney
the Ju~lclary" address to a Joint
general
to define "full time"
session of the Lelrtslature.
employee
as In state law.
Moyer, ' who was Invited by
Celebrezze, In a letter Friday·
House and Senate leaders to
to
Sen. · Robert .Cupp, R-Lima,
deliver the message, Is exepcted
chairman
of the Commerce and
to talk about cooperation beLabor
Commlt.tee,
said more
tween the judicial and legislative
than
f10
requests
for
opinions
branches, particularly In solving
were
ahead
of
Stu.rtz's,
and the ·
the problems of drugs and prison
Inspector
general
did
not
say it .
overcrowding.
was
an
emergency
.
Davis was suspended for three
There are only elgbt of those
weeks by Gov. Richard Celeste
lefi,
including Sturtz's, said the
after the Inspector general's
attorney
general.
report determine that she had

HOMECARE MEDICAL
SUPPLY
INC.
EQUIPMENT. SALES. RENTALS. REPAIRS
~complete Medical Equipment For Ho!fl' 1/sf"

to broker agreements that will
give lndepen~nce to ' Namibia,
located on· ·the so:uthern itp of
Afr!~a· s west cQa~ t, .and. begin
the withdrawal ot Cuban troops
from Angola on Namib!a 's norther,n border.
The Congo', wblctl straddles the.
Equator and borde~s ..,z aire in
western i\rfica, hoste(l . seven
critical negotiating sessions. The
Protocol of Brazzaville, which
was sl~ed In the Congo on Dec.
13, 1988, was the basis for the New
York accords of Dec. 22, i988,
wherebY Namibia Is scheduled to
become indeJiendent on March
. 21, 1990 . .•

The United States is the Con· Bush added.
go's largest trading partner, .
"To a considerable degree
lrrtporUng an average of $400 many of thes.e happy developmUllan worth of Congolese petro- ments resulted from yout involleum annually. ·
vement," the preslclent told the
Bush told Sassou·Nguesso that Congo leader. "As chairman of
In the three years since his last the OAU '(Organization of Afrivisit to the United States, "South- can Unity) in 1986, you used your
ern Africa has. seen significant prestige and diplomatic skill to
progress toward peace and sta- convince those involved to come
b!l!ty. Namibia Is on the verge of to Brazzaville to resolve their
' independence and in Angola, differences through the AngolanCuban troops have begun the Namib! a accords: Just as our
process of leaving. ·
diplomats worked ceaselessly to
"And while our support for the see the accords were signed, you
UNITA freedom fighters con- worked ceaseiessy t.o assure the
tinues undiminished, we con- accords would succeed," Bush ·
tinue to hope for a negotiated .Said.
settlement' of that tragic war,"

CAPE TOWN; South Africa
(UP!) - Black leader Nelson
Mandela, showing no signs or
bitterness or wavering on his
political Ideology after ?:l years
In prison, said Monday be believed obstacles to powersharing negotiations with South
Africa's white government ·
would be removed ''very soon."
On his first full day of treedorri,
Mandela spoke with reporters
dur.lng a 45-minute news conference and fielded more . than 30
ques Uons in the garden of Bishops · 'CQurt•, 1 the ·offlclal--•l'ril• ·
dence of Anglican Archbishop
Desmond.Tutu.
Mandela, a global symbol of
the fight against apartheid, said
the African National Congress Is
aware of the fears ·of South
Africa's white minority · of 5
million.
Addressing a rally marred by
violence on Sunday . In Cape
Town, Mandela had sa\d South
Africa's 28 million blacks must
.not yet abandon the armed
struggle to end while domination. He defended·the struggle to
reporters Mollday, defining It as
. a "defensive act against the
violence of apartheid.'·
Ma.ndela said, however, that
once the poliUcill sltuatl!in was
normalized In ·South Afrlc~t, the
movement was "rea~ ·tomakea
positive contribution" .to reachIng a peaceful settlement with
the white minOrity. ·
''We will seize the earllest
opportunity to settle pur problems by peaceful means," MandeJa said.
·.
.
·
U PreSident Frederlk de Klerk
succeeds In convincing the country's ,ruling National Party that
reforms are vital, Mandela said,
"very soon the , otistacles to

FREEDOM - Black nationalist leader Nelson Mandela ralees •
his flat as he and wife Winnie go for an earlY morning walk today at
the Buhop's Court In Cape Town, South Africa. (UPI)teuterl

Huntington eyes
riverfront development

,Three charges

filed against
Quto

driver

EMS has 14 weekend calls
.

•IHOWEA STOOLS

• AOULTDIAPERS
• LIFT CHAIRS
• UNOERP~OS (CHUXS) • WALKERS
• BEOSIQE COMMODES • DIABETIC SUPIII.tES

• PATIENT um

•OSTOMY

'WE lULL MEDICARE I

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-Local news. briefs-

• HOME OXYGEN
• l'rliE~LCHAIRS
•'HOli'ITAl BEOS

I

Tens of ' thOusands of blacks
negotiations will be removed an(!
it will be possible for us to sit already had gathered at the
Orlando Stadium in Soweto.
down and talk."
Mandeia had been expected to apparently unaware of . th~
travel Monday to Johannesburg change in plans, while children
and the black township of jammed streets surrounding
Soweto, where he lived before his - Mandela's home.
Murphy Morob.e. spokesman
capture in 1962 and hls sentence
to life Imprisonment for sabotage for the anti-apartheid umbrella
in 1~64. But organjzers canceled United Democratic Front, said
a Soweto rally where Mandela aides were trying to make
was to speak Monday and resche- Mandela's arrival "as dignified
duled a rally for Johannesburg as possible'' and· were trying to .
on Tuesday.
'
Continued on page 6

activities. They weren't happenHUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPII
- Development plans including ing ·before."
Already on the dtawlng board
a walking 't rail, res tau rants and a
boardwalk could rekindle Hun- · are a new parking lot and dock
tlngion's love arrairwlthtbeOhio for the West Virginia Belle, a
riverfront walking and biking
River.
HuntlngtoQ officials are eyeing trail, restaurants and a board.
a number of projects for the ~rea walk and swimming pool.
"People are attracted to waIn and around Riverfront Park tQ
Three charges . were flied · lure tourists and residents and ter." said Delegate RickHouvouagainst Penny·Grlshy, 26, Colum- revitalize the . Cabell County ras, D-Cabell, wbo backs the
bOardwalk and swimming pool.
bus, following a·n accident about city's downtown. ,·
"Downtown Huntington's future
About
250,000
people
a
year
noon Saturday on West Main
Street near. the Pomeroy- now visit the park, opened In the is ·In entertainment and
recreation." ·
1980s.
.
Middleport corporation line.
!
· The walking and biking trail Is
•'Just think of Riverfront Park
According to Pomeroy Pollee,
CLEVELAND (UPI) - .State
propoSed rates with "sound actu- holders under age 65. The new
Grisby was traveling west on · since they developed It," said farthest along In development;
arlal principle!!" the rate· Is pljln will cost su~rlbers 18 to 27
Sen. Charles Butts, D-Cieveland,
West Main Street when the 1977 Marshall University professor because the Army Corps of
IS callmg for an Ohio Senate
legally reasonable and must be percent mQre than exls Ung
Pontiac she was driving went left Christine Barry, who bas ·pro- Engineers has found money In its
lnvesUgatlon Into a he~lth RJan
approved - no matter what is plans, yet coverage Is reduced.
Reimbursement for outpatient" of center and struck • a 1986 posed that an aquarium be built budget for the work. City officials
approved for Blue Cross,Blue· llild In p)ibllc. hearings, Butts
Continued on page 6
hospital care Is cut ·from 100 · Chevrolet truck driven hy Bll~ at the waterfront. "All these new
Shield bf Ohio: • ·
·
said. ·
'
percent
fo
80
percent,
and
materSCarbrough,
19,
of
·Shade,
1n a letter to ,senate President
. Grisby left the scene of the
Stanley AroOoff, R-Cinclnnati, .
''So with some fancy arlth- nity care Is eliminated.
accident
but was apprehended a
'1
complained
to
State
InsuButta said the Investigation Is
metlc, Blue Cross can charge
rance•
Superintendent
George
short
time
18ter by Middleport
warranted because · the 'plan,
more. yet cut be~teflls, and the
Faile.
and
he
wrote
back
saying
Police. Sbe was charged with
which bikes rates but reduces
Insurance department has no
leaving the scene of 41\ accident,
.
benefits, Is the, result .o~ a law, choice but to OK It," Butta said. hIs hands are tied," Bu Ita said.
"So the Insurance superintenddrMng left of center, and no
" chanae sought by Bltje cross. . "h'e not r!Jht."
Fourteen calls for m~lealasslstance were answered over the
lnlur8J10e.
.
The state Legislature ~stllld the .
At a Blue Cross rate hike ent's hands are tied, and Blue
weekend
by unitS of the Meigs Emergency Medical Services.
Jerry Aleshire 1 20, Syracuse;
· '. ~ , Iiearlq lleld In Cleveland last Cross Is holding the rope," Butta
law tn 1987. .
Seven
of
the
calls were on Saturday and seven 011 Sunday.
.
·
escaped Injury Monday .morning
"When the I,eglljature , ap- 'IIICllitll. teVerai elder)' people, 'charged.
.
At
12:30
a.m. Saturday, Rutland transported Patrick
'1 think Blue Cross Is beglnwhen lila 1988 PonUac hit an Icy
proved ~nate BIIJ.~,' Blue '· lt.le~b)'U.Aa81canAssocla­
McCarsey from tin auto accident on County Road 1 to O'Bienews
c • Iobbylltl were undlnl: tloll of fWtlrt!d People, protes led nl!lg to enjoy a nice return on the spot on . tas t Main Street and
Memorial Hospital.
Investments
made
wltb
Ita
fat
went over the rtverbank.toward
~:: fox. Now we k~ wbi,ll . what t1W co11,1ldered
untlllr rate ·
Middleport was cal lei! at· 9:26 a.m. to South Third Ave. for
1
campaign
checkbook,
and
subthe river. · ·
Butta said. ·
'· · :
lncre·
'
Marie
Steiner who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
sci-lbers.
are
getUng
stuck
with
Pomeroy pollee reported that
Butta elalms a "Blue CrOllOne Blat Cross proposal would
Middleport
.w as called at 9: 36 a.m. to Story's Run Road for
Aleilhlre, traveling - • · lost
authored , amendment to that have Increased premium rates an expensive bill," Butts ~ald.
Albert
Fife
to Holzer Medical Center. ·
'
The Insurance department Is
control of bla vehicle whl!ll he bit
law" acrtual~ ·cut the Ohio up to 51 percent. Thll rate hike
.At
U:
59
a.m.,
Pomeroy
transported
Lena
Hellman
from
the
,
scheduled, to hold a public bear- the Ice, It wttnt acrou the road,
Department of Insurance' next- wa• not approved by the state.
Amerlcare-Pometuy. Nursing Center to Veterans Memorial
bllity In 1111Ung on rate n!queslll.
However, on Jan. 30 the state Ina Tuelday In Cleveland on struck a sip, and then traveled
more
rate
Increases
recently
over
the
hill.
Tbere
was
minor
Accordltlll to the amendment, • approVed a new poUcy for
Continued on page 6
damage to the car.
If an · lnallfer . can back . Its non-group Blue cross policy · filed by Blue,Cross. ·

Senator r~ests probe into
recent Blue Cross rate hike

t.A'J()('.O?.'fta?l/ j

25 C.nto

A Multimlldi• Inc. New11Japer

Mand.ela believes· obstacles
to negotiations to ~~ removed

Certified Public Accountant

all

·

President sees hope, for all southern A£rica

.Lynn E. Angell

a

Cb~

•

THE NEWSPAPER REGRnS THIS ERROR.

.. p

ne.r •· Ta-

1 SoC.ion. 10 Pogos

.Porriaroy-Middlaport, Ohio, Mo~day; F•bru•rv 1 ~. 1990 -

.

CORRECTION

l..ow toqll$

day, blib near 80.
rain 30 percent.

•

•

COIN ·$110P

.Kea. rney ' .

Pick 3
909
Pick 4- .
8984
Super Lotto
11-19-21-24-26-42
Kicker 945658

- v~

M1s

GOLD 'AND $1L-YEI . -

I

nms past

•

We Nae4:To',.
Buy I,: .. , .

Ohio Lottery

Southem

)•
'

. _____ .... -··--- ---v-··-··-

'

�J

Colnmentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF mE MEIGS..MMON AREA

~(;b
ts:mlli,l

...,_,,_...,..,.,.c:~,o=o

'qlv
ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
·

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Maaacer

PAT WHIJEREAD
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer
A MEMBER of Tbe United Pres.sInternational, Inland Dally Press
Association and tile American Newspaper ·Publishers Association.

than

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less
300
words long. Allletlers are subject to editing and must be signed with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should he In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

. 't ong coun t', ~ ..Associations to revieW
'·

WASHrNGTO!'!- Despite the
Vatlc:an hard line on feminism In
the church, Roman Catholic
women arid tlielr male allies are
· turning up the pressure to wash
away age•old restrictions
. l\galnst women. .
Their efforts are as varied as
their goals. Some of the I!Ctlvlsts
are antl·abortlon, some · pro-. chOice, some against women as
priests, sonie for, some still go.to
mass, · some worship In women·
church communjtles.
All, or almost all, though
devoted to their faith , strongly
favor an J!nd to mandatory
celibacy for priests and nuns and .
. to strictures against birth con·
trol, both tenets of the Holy See.
All the pro~hange advocates

have th4HoaJ of more equality
and power for women In a church
that ,, dominated by mel! but
Inspirited by Its women. And all
agree that their efforts have
accelerated dramatlc:ally In the
·
last year.
.
A broad-based Catholic movement dernan,dlng more wotnen' s
rlgbtr as part of a wholesafe
revision of the American Roman
Catholic church will be launched
with newspaper ads and other
publicity on · Ash Wednesday,
Feb. 28.
But alreadv transformatlollls
In the wind." In recent inonths,
more and more women • have
been "deputiz!!d" jo . perform
marriages an!! other du Oes previously reserved for priests.

·I

Douglas is stunning upset
winner over Tyson in 1Otlt ·

•

Refonriers gearing ~p for ·major 'p ush·

Hypocrisy abounds
in ethics proposals.
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slateho118e Reporter
COLUMBUS - If hypocrisy were a marketable commodity, the
Capitol Square politicians could retire on their riches.
There was enough hypocrisy last week to paper the Statehou~ and
have some Jeff over as Republican gubernatorial candidate George
Voinov!ch told of "t0ugh new ethicS standards" he w!ll Invoke if
elected.
. .
·
Votnovich took dead aim at two practices that have ·cast a dark
shadow over the administration of Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste
- unbid contracts and the "revolving door," where people quit the ·
government and go to work across the street, making money by using
their knowledge and past position.
.
The combination of the two- unbid contracts awarded to Insiders
.:_ is especially objectionable. ·That's what Volnov!ch was talking
about when. he referred to · "the stench of cronyism, political
favoritism and taxpayer rlpoffs" in the Celeste administration.
The governor was overseas and not able to respond to this
broadside;· his deputy press secretary, Reuven Carlyle, instead
·
.
provided the humor of a reply.
· Carlyle credited Celeste with bringing Ohio out of the dark ages on
ethics since 1983 with a bundle of reforms. He did not bother to
mention that It took several charges· or dynamite, In the .form of
scandals breaking about his head and ' shoulder's, to motivate the
governor.
~ ..
.,
· ·
But maybe Voinovlcl) shOuldn' t be on such ahlghhorse. Democrats
·unearthed a 1986 newspaper article In which the then-mayor of
Cleveland was: quoted as saying of political fund-raising from
government contractors: "It's the American way •"
.
"People who contribute to your campaiJirl have got to understand
It's an Investment In good government," Volnovich said then.
.
In defense, Volnovlch also said "no contractor should expect to gain
favor for contracts or other consideration at City Hall."
Volnovlch's 'proposals about stopping the revolving door make
more sense than his Ideas about unbid contracts.
The gubernatorial candidate wants to double the amount of time a
state official or employee must spend away from the government
before'dolllg business with lt. InfiuencedlmtnJshes With the passage
·
or time.
Less advisable Is Votnovich's Insistence that all non-bid contracts
be outlawed; that'every single product and service be subjPCt to strict
competitive bidding.
.
Villnovlcli says that will result . In "the state getting the
highest-quality products and services at the lowest possible cost," but
he has been misled.
..
. , ,.
' Many services are evaluati!d:~ubjecitire!y bY, !he buyer, who has
specific n~s. Thus, a state agency Is not necessarily purchasing a
carton of pencils or typewriters. but a , service that cannot be
measured In raw numbers. - ·- ·' .
· .. , ,
..
.
· Government has devised a..! 'request for ;proposal'' In which It
designs the features It wants In a ®rvlce. .SOmetimes, only one lim&gt;
can provide that exact servtce; · l)~~ce striC.\ ·blddlpg Is out.
,
So It's not as simple as Voinovlch would have It sound. ·
For example, the Ohio Lottery' CommiSsion asked ,the state last
week to waive competitive bldljlng and approve a $1.8 million
advertising contract with The Advertising Connection of Clevelal!d.
One Controlling Board member howled about the absence of a
bidding procedure, but Lottery Director Ronald Nabakowskl said It
would have. cos.t the state more than It was worth to bid the project.
" Do you know how much staff time It takes to put oneo!these (bids)
.
together?" he asked. "Hundreds of hours." ·
Nabakowskl explained that The Advertising Connection has saved
the state · money by getting discounted promotional services.
Moreover, It Is a minority firm. Dropping It would force the
commission to hire a minority firm for some other endeavor, perhaps
at greater cost.
Volnovlch was right about one thing: In ethics, the governor sets the
standards and the tone for his administration. Perhaps he will get a
chance to do that.

'

Jack Anderson and Dale J':'an Atta
lo few priests are now married
through a rule that permits
prlelts of other fa!thl to convert
to Catholicism and remain In the
clergy.
More and more prtests and
members or women's ll!liglous
order,s are discreetly abandoning
their vows of celibacy for com..
mltted,. II unrecognized
relationships.
"No m!ltter what Rome says,
In 'America It's all over.,", one
militant, bUt dediCated Catholic
woman leader told our as.OC!ate
Les Whitten. "We pretend to
follow the rules, butlt's llkewhpn

THeY WANT To

KloW "IF IPU'Re
,

IN~D

IN

T~

D.C.h\A~

JOB?

.•

tbe drunk unele comeS In and .
everyone pretends he's just
ailing."
·
.
·
t Another ltl1luentlal Catholl('
woman told us, "The pope Is
pragmatic. He iays what be has
to, but we'w put his feet to the
fire and be l!ln' t asking very
much anymore about what goes
on behind hb bacl!: In the UD.ltad
States.''
, · ..
This attitude of American .
Catholics who are making .their :
own rules Is now prevalent .
among the YOU111!9' tpl'lests and •
women r&lt;Hlelous and Ia)'
workers. Many peopll! feel t.h at the bishops, cardinals and nun·
clos appointed by Pope John P~tuj
II will change little.
"However rigid the pope Is, he
really Isn't a major player
anymorr," said an lmpor,t ant
Catholic lav woman. "He Is ,
analogous to Reagan .. He has set '
u.p a ·structure that carrieS out
church policy. The problelh l,s
now the structure."
As with the revolutionaries of
Eastern Europe, the youn~r
American Catholics h11ve gone
too far tp be turned back. The . ,
bishops and cardinals II\ the
United States simply can't hold
the. Une
lor the Vatican
&amp;Q)'II\ore,
.
.I
,
the activiSts say. ,. -' . ,
·
As reform· m!Jickd Catholics
. step up tl!elr demanq. ·for ..lmmecUate reforms, they are trYI!I• to
get promises that, whenever a
new, pope :11,. selected, there -wJll
be more movement for cllaap.
·ane lone· time fllbter for the
rights of Cathollc w~en Is not
optimistic abo11t official tb,nc,e:
"The pope has put In ·tJie pewle
who
elect his. suc~sor. Tlie ;
people he's left behind wllllllc\t a '
clone/'
·
.

South Afa·ica talks wori't.:be

This week's
'

~

It seems clear that Nelson
Mandela will shortly be released .
bv the South African govern·
ment, In order to promote negoti·
allons· concerning the future
political structure of the country,.
That Isn' t quite the same thing
as saying that Mandela, or his
African Nation.11) Congress, will
participate In the neglitiations,
though they · probably will. But
various other Important black
pollitcal leaders - e.g.; Chief
Buthulezl, the. Zulu leader have made Mandeta's freedom a
precondition of their own partie I·
patton, leaving the government
little choice In the matter If It
wants to negotiate with anybody
at all.
MeanwhUe, there are rumors
of ·understandings already
reached between the Pretoria
authorities and Mandela . (who
has had private taiks with bOth
State President F.w .. de Klerk
and his predecessor,' P. W. Bo-tha) . More publicly, however,

both sides seem to be playing the absolutely appalllng In Its lnflexl·
old game of "gOOd cop and llad · blllty. In It, he says l!lul\tly: "No
cop."
. '
dedlcated·ANC member wlllever
President de Klerk .a nd his
heed the call to break with the
National Party warn that they
SAC.P (I.e., the Soutlt Afr!CBI).
are "refoq111ng" South Africa as
Communist Party) ... , What man
fast as It can 'possibly be done,
of honor . will ever· desert a
poillting to the !act that tile ' llfelollf friend at the Insistence of
official .opposition In tlie white
a common opponent and stlll
parliament Is the Conservative . retain a measure or credibility
·
Party, which Is tar to tile rlght·of a'mong hjs people?"
the Nationalists arid opposes any
As tor negotiations, Mandell!
concessions whatever.
says they must address " "the
1
Mandela, for his part, Is
demand (of blacks) for.majority
depleted In the Western press as .rule In a·unitary state," and "the
a relatively reasonablerepresen·
lnsister!ce of whites on structural
tative of the older and presuma·
guarantees . th ..t majority rule
bly cooler heads In the ANC, who
will not mean domination of the
are havng trouble restraining
white minority by blacks."
younger black leaders like Cyril
.In a separate s.t atement Issued
Ramphosa who allegedly don't
hours later, Mandela added:
want to negotiate with the whites
"The nationalization of the
at all, preferring to .take over
mines, • banks and monopoly
.·
South Africa by Ioree. ·
Industries is the policy of. the
.
'
ANC, and a change or modlflca·
On the other hand,· the most tlon of our views in this regard Is
recent statement by Mandela lnconcelvabl.e."
himself to reach the public Is
The black revolutionaries l.n
~

....

'

Letters to the editor

Against school. consolUlations!

among those who ran the Stuart
1
Investigation.
.
, O'Meara Is already at the h"rt
of a controversy overthe Boston
Pollee Department's handling of
another hlgli-proflle ·case- the
1988 murder or p()llceman Sher·
mari Grtffltbs. Griffiths'. partner
Carlos Luna; who has left the
force, told a hearing recently
that O'Meara had blm falsify
a!ttdavlts uled to obtain a search
.warrant for tbe residence of a
black suspect In the case. Luna
said be was also Involved In a
later cover-up wlien the search
warrant Information was ·quest!·

'

r.-...

'

.

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leri•IIUullll,

•

.~

,

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Copter ,.. 0.n111o 11

.....

Dixie 81, Mill Oft tJaloa '71
Gl--rJIH; llo.-oet"llle II ,
Gr~ndvlew If. New•.Utt.ny U
Oreen•Je n ; Colchw .. er 1t
HamUtoa14, Qb Elder It

Hu ..... llher •• SQWI H
ile'taroa

8outllera Utah st Ill t\o'rl~ St
'Ntal'lhern Klinhll:lcy·al Ashland
'C ealnJ &amp;t' at Tnu~e)lvank (Ky)

lefler•all, M....,an · . Jewttt~do n , CoMita• v a1 17
KeUorlaa.4.1tei' 81, DIQ' W.,.-ae 77
Lakelaftdll,ludprtoM&amp;I

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. Mal~r•11.

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Splarta ....... 'll. " • Ple..a• II

.

8prtarl ....•e n, Greenevletr. It
Tol c... 11. M - • Val a
Tro)'f1. FalrtlonU

1\r;IIQ CC M, Newcei'I'M!I'Itown i!

"'

Gamn

Twla V..,_ S 18. Preble SlaawiW!e 711
v• Wlert 71, sa Henrr n
VerWIIM 1t, ..... 01174
W •ucb Jll, Sllem •
Warru Wan Rav'JI, .\uttatown-lftt~h
1'1
...
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WMitiM Mem II, UtiCa 71 '

Games

WNtfall fl, Mllinl Trace II
Wheel. . . II' U. Oalll,oiiS 44
Wlllar4 1'7, lrlln• II loti

Clikap al MIIIRU, 1: Sl ,_...
New Yt1rl&amp;. at At..aa., 7:341 p.m .
Deawr at Deirt!M, .'l:M p.m.
Ch•loHe' Mla•ana. 'l; Sfp.m.
BGI&amp;GD a1 Ho..ton, 8 p.m.

WoOI&amp;er Trtway •·

Tu••• u

WJnfoid '7t, Swanton til

Su..t.lllllo .. Dallu,8:3tp.m.
Mln~ntita at tJt.la, t:JI p.m.
PorUMd at SUllie, II p.m .
· Phoenix. at LA Cllpperw,IO:H p.m.
W_..n~ton at Sal'11lmealo, 10: JO p.m.

. College 8COI'e8
Ohio Women 's Colttr~ Baslletball
fly tJnled l"reu .,lf'r tal tur.l
Feb. II ·
,
1\lle6:t 'It, kent State f4
Htldelb«llll, C..lal 41

NATION.4.L HOCKEY LE.4.GUE
Saturda,)' RM ..tA

DetnM 1. Calp:ry'

Sltawllee S&amp;a1e 11. Marilaall1i

NV lalanderH .&amp;, .BoliOa 3, OT
M(llltiiCU i, Ollc ... 4
Hartt'o nl I, Tonlllo ' , ..
Plt\II!UIIIh 1, Lo1 Anseles li

Marietta 1&amp;. ,.._Carroll 715
RI-.Orudt

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U

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b!wla (Ill.) 11, Aahlud 13
DfftMC'f! u: Fl ... af.&amp;3 •
~
Rh;am •· Ollerhl. .7
S,rtnr Arbor (Mil •· Lake Er~ ~1
Wllwllberl Ill$, Obedll '7 '

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Vanco•wr -1, Bo!lh1n I
. Calpl'f 15, NV Raapr ' ~
W•IIIDtto• S1 Mln~raata I
st. Lolli• ... ...... '
PMtftCII .J, Plllladel ... a I
Edmo.;Dn 'l. Wln~l*i ·4

01110 eouere llulttb.aro...-

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0111o u 11, CeMAJ Mltb 157
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EMIPrn .. t;btl, MlamiN

Game~

atT...-o.7:11p.m.
Jer.ej,I'J:II , .m.

The Daily Sentinel
..

.P,ort.EU.J'rukV.rGrwaft

8ptta ....... at. W Carnflioa It
S,rta1 HW 1&amp;, 0., Jtfft'l"'l!!all

~ehedllled

Molll!.,

71

•·

,SIIelbJ U, Nor. .lkla

EMt All..fttan I., WHI AU&amp;ara liS

Moatrnl ,, Que 11M I ,

~I on

Plci• II. 8t Mlar:t'll II

..... *r II, N IU._.IIIe H

....

SatlftqGamn
Nt pmet iiChedllle• ,
Sulllllv R••

St . Lollh '7, N"" Jtr.ey

Molses Alou opened the fourth
with a singk- and advanctld to
second on a sacrltlce .by Jorge
Brito. NeisonLirlanowaswalked
Intentionally, but was erased on
when Grissom. hit Into a force
play. Berroa drove both home
· with his home ruri, giving the
Dominican a 7-3 lead.
, The Dominican Republic
added four runs In the fifth
Inning, one In the seventh, two In
the eighth and On!\ In the ninth.
Sergio Valdez, the second
DQmlnlc:an pitcher, was credited
with the win alter allowing one
run·and one hit In 3 2-3 Innings In
relief of Jose Nunez.
.
The Domll!ican jumped outtoa
2-0 lead In the top of the second
lnnlng, but Puerto Rico answe~ed with three runs on cqnsec· utlve homers by Barry Jones,
Carlos Baerga and Hector
Vlllanueva.
.
Nunez became thefhistpltcher
In Caribbean Series history to
give., up lhree consecutive ho-mer$'1n an Inning.
·
A total of'nlrle home runs were
hit In the game, four by the
Dominican and live by Puerto
Rico: That tied the Caribbean
Sl!r·les record set In 1987 when
Puerto Rico banged out eight
homers In a game to one .t or the·
Dominican,

Newarua. O.blla A ·
Ncrwarii:CMUI, &amp;•Ut

O.ford Tllawaada Itt,

NATIONAL BASKETBALL AS80C

.

" :rt!h~·s th~ee-run home~tn the

·

ouawa BUlliS, No,._M 41

D)le at Ce•lraJ St.
,
..... Erlr at ...........
SUNDAY, FEll IS
MlehiiMI .. Ohio 8t

~at

'

N Gal- IL Bock Hill '78
' Na&amp;tTrall .7t, .UaOIIla 151
New Kil..:tllle •· t\rUa!llon II

'

Wallll J Fl ..,.,
lellarmlae (~)at Aalaland

Mo•~~r

n. Daii\Gie 14 n

8trullu11 Sl
Mar ..• ,~.Hal I'J, .-.n Loramie H
M••i'J, MIMetowa Ma4Woatl
111.-a WMII 11, Odt. ¥Pt111
1111.-nl E 71.1etllel n
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Euatrn Dl at Cl~lud 8t

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bckaon (Mil 71, To I flHI ~~
Jaekaoa Mll'-a'lt. Wam~a • .,..I., II ,

'S olllera VIall 8C at Akron

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1n•u Valley U, C.. HerKaa:e at

FRIDAY,. FElli I
DykeatUrbMTUitDAY. FEB 1'7
Ball Sl aM'otedo
Cntral Mlell at Bowlh111 Grtew~
, . . I at KeDI Sl
Ohio Unl\' at Eastern Mich.

.....,. . . . .illlltpm
M.neta. at OIIMo Nortltern
Capital at Mt Uakt•
,.
laldwi&amp;-W .... ce AI Olllerbeln
Hiram aUohn Car !'VII
Wotlller at Oberlin
~1!1. OIIM Wlille)'an
Dellllon .. ~lham (lnd I
f.Ue
at WIUenbefJ
CedanllltDeiiMte M 011• DomiDic ..

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Falib .... I7,CfthwtonM
FHiorla 11; Ottawa Gludorf 5t

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Call . . INWII, Nantre Falrlelil41.
Cultl••••, , .....
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d• WHiir• lt. 0., ii.lllar 7'1
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C.l &amp;MilaNI' II. C.l Nualuttl H
Col .,liP 14. M.-.tleld

' CoHiaW••Rawll, Ober FIHI .... U

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'Mt Ua ..n .. Hlra'm
.UI..-nJ (PaJ at w.o.aer
,OWiaat Cue a.tr.w
WIMtlbei'J at Ollte We.~yan
Dtnllon at Ke•)'On

WMtera Mlch at

Garaw~

'

.

ltiSP$ 1411-. .1
A Dlvll,toa o.f MalUmedta. l•c.

•

•'The punch was more or less a
surprise," said Douglas, who
some boxing .experts had !abe-

a;

Nort'.h G
·, alii.a· hands'
ROck Hill 81•76 loss· .

\TWO

DOWNING CHUS
MULLEN MUSSEl

INSURANCE

111 S.Concl.St., P_,oy
'OUII....,._In

AGEinSSDVIIG
IIIGS coam
SINCE 1161

.

nr

·-

•

.'
'

"Not the truth AGAIN/"

-·--·

laallleMelpC..•,
2f
13' Weeko ........ ..... ..................... fll.
:16 Weeka ................................. ISI.M

52 Weelca ........... ....................... I'IUI

13

Weeka~~..~~.~ ... Dl.8t

:11 Wetlli, ....;............................ MII.liO
It Weelca ................ , ................. l'l5.t0
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.

.

"'-Ifill

·Hawallall ozelrt Sali!vaa AtliiJ·
noe fol'Cied wt •l!lwake Kit·
lihlma In 1 playof! to win the
overall title Ill the lwD-diiY Qrud:
Sumo Tourna.lilellt Ia Tollyo.
Atllaaoe coUeetecU21,000 for the
~ctmj.

~)

.

'

•

scowl and black trunks, !ell
behind early and was In ·the
unusual position or having to
scramble madly to stay .In lt .
oauglas, a virtual unknown
dealing with personal tragedy,
faltered and then floored his
fearsome oppo~ent though.! to be
. virtually Invincible. Douglas was
such a Jongshot that odds makers
reflised betting.
He emerged from his corner
after the elghth·rOUI\d knOCk·
down and •delivered punishing
blows In rounds nine 'and 10 to
rtoor Tyson, champion since
November 1986. Prior to that
round, Tyson had never been
knocked down during a professional fight.
Douglas broke down In tears
while draped with the title belts
that have belonged to Tyson
since 1986. "I'd like to dedicate
this fight to \ny mother," said
Douglas, referring to the Jan. 18
death of Lula Pearl Douglas .
The apparent victor was re·
cently separated from his wife,
also Is estranged from his father
and ex-trainer Billy Douglas .
Finally, the mother of his 11,
year-old son, Doris Jefferson,
recently was diagnosed to have
leukemia.

up for his pass at the top of the
Ten, Is 12·0 In WIUiams Arena
By Vnlted Presi International
key
seconds earlier ihat
The strings tightened another and has won 26 of Its last 27 at
Purdue's Tony Jones Intercepted
notch In the Big Ten standings ho~fie .
and
laid In lor a 72· 71 Purdue
17-4
and
9·2
In
the
Purdue,
Sunday.
lead
.
league,
lost
Its
first
Big
Ten
road
Melvin Newbern, wlfose bad
After Newbern redeemed him·
pass had enabled No. 9 Purdue to · game after five triumphS ,and,
self,
Jones missed a 20-foo,t try
!lad
Its
conference
lead
sliced
to
take the lea&lt;!, cam~ back with a
·
that
Newbern rebounded with
driving jumper with 32 ~nds one game over Michigan ali~
rwo
seconds
to play ,
Michigan State.
.
left that gave No. 11! Mlnpesota
told
me Coach (Clem
"They
"We're going home for three of
73· 72 victory over·the conference'
Haskins)
dove
on the floor after
our next four," Purdue ' Coach
leading Boilermakers.
.
that
pass,"
Newbern
said. ''l'just
The victory kept Minnesota Gene Keady said. "I don't care If
tried
not.
to
get
discouraged.
I
clinging to lite In the Big Ten race · we were tied or even If we were
· and preserved the Gophers'. down one. I'm just glad to be part didn't want to get where I thought
the game was over. I wanted to
perfect home record this $1!ason. · of the pack."
remain positive."
·
Newbern's
winning
shot
made
Minnesota, 16·5 and H In the Big
No. 8 Michigan also picked up
~ound Sunday with a 93,79
victory over No. 13 Illinois at Ann
:
Arbor, Mich. Rumeal Robinson
,
.
scored 29 points, Including ' six
foul shots In the~ final . three.
.,
minutes, to key the triumph.
·
..
'Michigan•. 18-4 and 8·3 In the
·
North Gallla' s . Pirates sur·
The Pirates will end the season
conference, hit 15 of 16 free
vlved a sizzling display of shoot· at home Friday night against throws In the final 3: 18. Terry
tng after tipoff by Rock Hillin , Southwestern.
Mllls contributed 20 points for
Saturday night's regular season Score b)' quarters .
Michigan
non-league finale to hand the . Rock Hlll ..... ...... 21 19 10 26-76
· Redmen an 8J..76loss.
North Gallll\. ...... 16 17 18 30-81 .
"Th~ hit their first nine In a
NORTH GALLIA (8l) -:" Stou~
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
row, 17 out of 20 from the field and 3·2·10·22; Tackett 0·5-4·19, Ham.
446 4\14
.
7 out of 8 a.t the line In the first mel 7-0.2·16; S. Smith 6·0·H3.
half " said North· Gallla skipper Haney 0·0..,·6; D. Smith 3-0:.0·6.
To,;· Riccardi, whose sailors TOTALS- 18·7·!3-81
.
finished the season against non·
From the Door- 26·64 (40.6%)
conference teams with a 3-3
Beyoad the arc- 7-19 (36.8%)
record.
, .
At the line- 23-29 (7,9.3%)
,.
Junior guard/forward Brian · Rebounds - 32 (Hammel12)
Stout led the Biles, 13·6,. with 22
AMI.ota- 12 (Tackett 6)
points, followed by junior point
Stella- 5 (Tackett 2)
guard Chris Tackett, who nailed
ROCK HILL (78) - Zornes
live three-point baskets tor the 9·1·8-29; Besco 5-0.8·18; Rlch~rd_bulk of his 19 points.
son 6-0.0·12; Blankenship 1·1· ·7,
The Redmen were led by Brock Herrell 2·0.2-6; DePriest 2·0-0-4.
Zornes who ruled the court with TOTALS - 25-Z.IO·'Ii
29 po~ts, followed by Scott
At the IIDe- 20-28 (71.4%)
Besco, who .scored 18.
In the reserve contest, the
Redmen won 46-38. Josh Barr
and Mark McFann· ra.cked up 10
points each 1 for the Redmen,
while North's Kevin Hunt ·leci·all I
scorers with 14. · ;,
•
' I
·- · · , - -

YOUI S.IYU, ALL lUll
WHILI YOU'n HDI.

' I'

Jeied a quitter. "Tyson was a
· strong champ. He came to fight
and he !ought hard. I was hitting
hlm·wlt)J 110111e gOOd shots and he
took them pretty well. "
Boxlilg association officials
showed videotapes that purport·
ediy revealed Sanc.hez beginning
to count Douglas outfour seconds
after the official timekeeper
. gave the mandatory signal. The
ol!lclals said the count appar·
en tly las ted 13 seconds.
Under boXIng rules t!J.e time·
keeper Is required to notify the
referee at the point at whl~h to
begin the cou11t. "I made a
mistake," · Sanchez said. · "The
count lasted longer than 10
seconds."
"I wlll say no one holds the title
until February 20 wben the WBC
will rneet In Mexico City to
. review the decision, " said WBC
preslden~ Jose Sulalmall. "A
re-match Is absolutely manda·
tory. Tl)e ring shows who Is the
king."
An official of the boxing
association also said he viewed
the title vacant untO his organlza· ·
tlon reviews the situation next
week.
Despl\e the controversy, the
drarna was superb.
Tyson, wearing his customary

Gophers knock off Purdue·

------~~s~briBs----------

Soccer
Yacbdn1
Milan defeated Napoll3·0 in the
:J;he NeW Ze4land boat Fisher
battle tor first place In the Italian a!lfl Paykel held the lead position
Pul:llished every· arternom, Monday ' ·League's First Division. Danjele , .on day' seven of the fourth leg thrwgh Friday, lU. Court St., PoMassaro gave Milan a 1·0 lead In ~· AUckland to Punta del Este,
merw, Oh.lo. by the Ohio Valley PubUruguay - In the Whltbread
lllhl... (Ampany/ Multlmedla. Inc.. I·· the secol)d half to llelp his team
Pomeroy . Ohio mll9, .P it . 992·2156. s..
take the lead In the standhip by- · Rdund the World Race. ·
cond dan p~age paid at Pomeroy:
eoal difference. Both tea1111 bave
Ohio.
36 'points. ·.,: Bordeaux defeatlld
Member · United Pres• lnternauoaal :
Caen 2-11n· the Frebch League to
Inland D~Uv Prfla AuOCiatlon and the
maintain Ita three-point lea~
Ohio Newsliaper Association.. National
, ove~ Marseille In . the .Firat
Ad~rtlllng Representatlve ...Sranbam
New spa pi!(_. Sales·, 733 Third Avenue ,
Division. ,Pieter Den Boer scored '
New YorK. "New York 10017.
bis second goal or' the matciUp
PoS'NASTER: Send' adchtl chanJIOI
the 7,9 th minute .to l!re,a k a 1·1 tie.
to The. Dally sentinel, lll Court St ..
Marseille
beat Paris Raclng4-l.
Pomeroy. Ohio 457fiJ.
... Greek League co-leaders AEK
. IUIIIICIIIPTION BATB8
and Olymplakos ,defeated La· .
•rc..n•~·-·iissa 3.0 and Volos 4.0 respec·
one Week :....... ,............. J... ...... ...IUO
One Month ...: .............................141.10
Uvely to Increase their lead to
One Year .. ..... ............... .... ....... 172.80
.two points over Panathlna.lkos
.
. SJNGLII COPY
and PAOK In the First Division.
PBICE·
T8llldl .
Dolly ................................... 25 Centa
Ivan
Lend!
n~hed his second
Subscribers notdeotrm.topoy tilt eartouraame11t Victory of 1990 when
lier mav remit In advaDCI dlled to
The Dally S.ntlollloa aS, 6Or 12 month .
lie defeated Tim Mayotte, 6-3,6-2,
bUll. Credit wUI be II••• corrlll' each
the final of the~ Italian
·Ia·
week.
lrldoot' Champlollllitps' In ll(nn.
No .....,.lptlo.. ~ mao pormlt!fd Ia
Lend! won the Auatrallan Open
area• where home ,:1rrter IM'VIce ill
WatmoJith,
·· 1
avaUable.
,
.

Ir!io hindsight, the apparent
extra lime saved Douglas !rom
'defeat as the bell ended Sanchez's verbal count at nine:

WE All lOW EQUIPPED ,
TO MAll IADOIS AJID
Ill ClAMS '10 m

a

Today in history

. .llaln St Jo,_IT, IIIIDIO In

ll•telta at Olterbeln
011.. Nurlherui.Jo .. Carroll '

'

.

Afers\the II, Weellmere .lt
llollrook llf. WIO'OO!,l'tle •

'

•••..-n•Capl&amp;l

oned In court:
Given the high level of aglta·
tlon ln. Boston over.the·liandllng
of the Stuart case, It Is widely
expected that major reforms will
be coming to Boston'$ pollee
department.
Anot~ area sure to be r:eforrned Is a strange, 19th century
Massachusetts law - stlll on the
boolls - that gives blOOd rela·
tlves immunity from pFOIII!CUtlon, · •
II they . learn about ,a crime
committed by a relative and then· ' :
do 'not..come forward. However,
unrelated people who aid a
criminal after a cr,b ne may be
puJI\shed as accessories ..

Berry's World·

8eyAOido Blpleltoel . .lletball

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

;.

._ ........ sa

.a c.. tral Mlclllpa
. .II .. Grtetlat Dblo Vntverlity
..._,•Wallace M Hel*lherJ

MIAMI (UPI) · - Geronimo
Berroa homered twice and drove
In five runs , Sunday and the
·Dominican Republic pounded out
17 hits toclinchthechamplonshlp
o! · the . Caribbean Series .with 'a
• 16·5 vjctocy over Puerto Rico.
· The victory assured ,the Do·
mlnlcan Republic the top spot In
the double.round-robln standings
with a 5-1 mark. The team's only
loss came In Its first game
against Puerto Rico. ·
In Sunday . night's second
game, Venezuela was to face
· Mexico.
TJ!e title was the seventh .won. by the Dominican Republic In the
32-year hlstory·of.tthe champion·
-ship o~ wln~r base,ball and the
sec&lt;ind for a team from Esco·
gtdo 1 which also won In 1988. The
other five titles went to a team
from Llcey, which won In 1971,
1973; 1977, 1980 and 1985.
The Dominican Republic overcame a 3-2 .deficit In the third
Inning on a single by Marquis
Grissom and a trlpJe by Berroa,
' the ' blew the game open on,

I

Boys scores

·: .

'I!

lAke El'le a&amp; n,b
.,
'
WBDNESD.4.V, FEB 1&lt;1

.

''

·

~~

I

Wagman
.

ca~c...,, .,...,

.'

'llolo•••. .
llll••e Ill AI Cutral 8t

.

''

MONDAY, FD It

v--•ca-._ .....
..........

ftiiD .. Ob.. DoMinkan

the ANC wlll 11ot at;cept -:- will .
not, If It comet! to tbat, be aJIQWed ,
by their backers overseas· . to .; ·
accept . ..;.. milch .tess ~han .w hat
Mandela has demanded: "rna·
jorlty rule In a unitarY state."
Tbey, mteht,' matpl&amp;lllmously, 1
offertodelaYIII~I!tM~
tlon for five or 19 years, but 'thlt !
Is all.
,
• · ' .
The South African wlilt~. tor
their part - with coitsld!!r&amp;ble
support !r.om the ''colo~red" and
Asian communities - Will never , .
agr~ to iubmlt to- the black !
majority. The only conceivable t
~lutlon would be the cr~atlon or ' ;
several separate sovereignties;
But tbe . blackl, wltb Western .
advice, will reject .any such
settlement, gambling .that In the
fullness of time the whole nation
wlll fall into their hands.
So the outlOok Is f9r deadlock,
enlivened by violel!i!e,, with
further .economic sanctions by
foreign nations: Not a pretty
prospect.
..

Did·BoSton cops bungl~ _the case: ,

BOSTON (NEA) -The racial leaked that 'they belleved they
hysteria that enveloped this city had their killer.
ln. the wake ~f the· sensational
.However, things quickly began
·Stuart murder case has given to unravel. Stuart's brother Mat·
way to some troubling revela· thew -who says he was deeply
tlons about the Bosto.n Pollee · troubled by the fact that Bennett .
Department. ·
'
was being charged - went to the
Criminal defense attorneys In pollee. He told them that his
Boston have. long charged that · brother had given , him · Carol's
the · pollee - particularly In
jewelry and a gun to dispose of
high-profile crimes - often after the crime. He said he
q utckly find suspects and then . thought Charles was Involved In :
tailor the facta to til the new some kind of Insurance scam.
defendants. This appears ·to be Pollee called Charles Stuart In
exactly what ·happened In the· and questioned blm. The next
Oear Editor
not like It one bit!
Stuart case.
. .
morning he committed suicide,
Am I the only one agalns t the
President Bush is against
On Oct. 23; Charles and Carol jumping from the Tobin Bridge
consolidation of the elementary busing and consolidation. Even Stuart left, a class In prenall!l Into Boston Harbor.
schools?
he can see ·that over the past
care at Brigham and Woman'.s
Investigations are under way
I thought I would see many years It does not work. And It Hospital. About a hall hour later, over the handling of the Stuart
letters against this proposal!
funding stops !or busing, will you Stuart called emergency dis· affair by the Boston pollee.
I was led to believe lower let your youngster walk miles.as
jlatchers from his car phone
It now seems clear that there
enrollments meant more lndlvld· our g~andparents did for saying that he and his wife had were enough holes In Char le$
uallzed attention to the student. schooling?
been shot, Carol Stuart died the Stuart's story to .Immediately'
The fact that our students need
I'm just old enough to have next morning. Her baby- a boy have made 'blm a suspect. It ,
more basics (reading, math,
gone to a one room school in West delivered eight-weeks prema· appears; though, that pollee
etc.) Is plain to see by their test VIrginia, and I can tell you my ture by Caesarean section- died almost reflexively believed
scores.
grades In high school never 17 days later.
Stuart's story about a black man
How many of you relish the
suffered because of that.
The seemingly senseless crime In joggl~g suit a~d spent all
Idea of your first grader being on
Please take a second look at , galvanized · Boston. From his their time trying to find a suspect
a .bus for more than an hOur? we · this proposal. It may not be as hospital bed, Stuart gave il vague and mold the fact' to ill him.
bought our home 15 minutes from
good as you hope.
description of a black assailant.
Boston pollee defenci their
the school by· bus only to have
Sincerely,
Boston pollee began to stop and actions. They. say tbere ~e
them bused·away from school for
Delores Long ·' frisk at random black men fitting elements of the crime that" Jiad
an hour. My high schoolers did
the description. Within days, It not been publicized that Ben.
was 'r umored that the pollee had had · apparently .braeged ·a oou(
a prime suspect.,
and that Stuart had picked
That suspect was William Bennett's photo out blifore he
Bennett, 39, 1 II career criminal knew the maa ·was a suspeet.
who had spent 13 years of his ll!e
However, sources close tp the •
In jail lor · assorted crimes, lnVl!stteatlon aay that thole whQ.
·
By V•Jted PnN IDieraa&amp;ll¥1
Including shooting · a pollee gave evidence qalnat Bennett
Today Is Monday, Feb. 12, .the 43rd day of 19!10 with 322 to foUow.
ottlcer.
are repudiating their stateThis ts Abraham Uncoln's birthday. .
Pqllce let It be knliwn that meDII, UY\111 tblly were coerced
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
Bennett bragged about commit· Into maJrtni them. Further, there
Till! morning stan are Mercury, Venus, Man and saturn~
tlng the crime to bill J.5.year·old Is now evidence tllat Charles
'J'bH evening star II Jupiter.
·
nephew, and !hey uled that Stuart may have been' coached
Tbole born on this date are under the sip of Aquarlua. They Include
tnforma~loD to obtain a search
before picking out Bennett's
phllandlroplst Peter Cooper lll1791; Abraham Uncoln,16th president warrant for Bellnett's house.
picture. .
ot the Vatted States, and biologist Charlet Darwin, both In 1809; a~or
Then, on Dec. 28,.Stuart picked , Sources say one man at tbe
· Lome Greene In 1915; o~~nd bueball player •ad sports commentator Bennett out of a lineup as helng canter ·o f the case . Is Francis
Joe Giraglola In 1926 (age 64) .
the •:cf011e1t" to.looklngllke the O'Meara, homicide cbletwlth the
kUler. Bolton pollee quickly district attorney's office. He was

.

.

•8&amp;, IAIIIaaaMI ........ ......

elgh~.

•

CU .... A!NY _ _ ......

~4'1. . _. 81 a1 Vall*nho (lncl)
' Mie-MIIWMIRt al YOMIP._.D II
·
TIJESD~Y, FEB U
~
aa. GIUde IIi tedanollle
~ ,' '
llrb. . lit Jft \'er•q Nuare1e · , ·

l

Republic
•
•
Wln$ senes

. ~ . _ ... "'.........t...

n•w.-..

.. Referee Octavia Meyran San·
chez admitted at a packed news
conference that he was late In
starting the m11ndatory 10~ount
after Tyson, now 37·1, decked
Douglas at the very end or round

·Dominican

ga- · ·-·-

OldoCeUepBulelb.Uie...,.._
~ ·
Bf Vntkd PIWI .. ~r~loMJ ,

. .

easy. ~u~~~ Rmher

TOKYO (UPI) - In what Is
surely one of the most stunning
and controve"lai '.upeets In boX·
lng history, Jam~ "Byster"
Douglas lulocked lllll' the previously undef~ted IIJeavywelght
champion Mike Ty&amp;on Sunday
with · -a combination and left
uppercut ·in the lOth round of
their title bout.
Tyson's title· belts were on the
line, but just hqurs after Douglas .
flattened Tyson at 1: 23 or the
lOth, tlje World Boxing CouncU
aild the World Boxing Assocla·
lion decl•red their champion·
ships vacant pending a review .o f
an elghtb-round' knockdown of
Douglas. The status of Tyson' s
International Bpl!lng F~eratlon
belt was· unclear.
. ·

,.

will

.

The Deily Sentinel-Page 3

Ohio

,.

IIY CHAINS
IOYII.n

.$115

., ••.

-Will PIIOIO
•

IACINI
CIT
IAIE
......,
~··!lt4t
...... ...

I;
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•

�Paga 4-The Daily Sa1ti1el

Pomaov Mldclaport. Ohio

Monday. Februay 12. 1880

•

Grindstaff 11nd Andy Baer fll·
tered Into the lineup.
. Seniors Chad Taylor, Kevin
Butgeas.Brent Shuler, Brad
~nard, and Chris 1\fUrpby got
the starting nOd frorri Tornado
skipper Howle Caldwell.
One of the leape's hot threeP!ll!lt sjlooters, Paul Hayes found
the iotng IOUJh 'u did : hiB
teammates, u l1e miNed four
perimeter Julfpera· beiore get· .
tlng (/De .tO falJ (1-!1). J{ayes has
led the VIkings much of the year
with outstanding perim.eter
shooting.
.
,
Although ,!I lot of points went on
the board tn the seeond half, the

NBA East All-Stars top
MIAMI (UP!) - Pat Riley has
won fourworldchamptonshlpstn
six tries. His Los Angeles Lakers

won back-to·back titles in 1987
and 1988, and currently have the
best record in professional

W~·t,

action was somewhat slow and
shoddy, but Slluthern held composure and got good supplemental efforts from Its bench.
. SHS led 63-32 after three
rounds, then held on for the finale
88-49.
SHS btl 27 of 52 for 52 percent,
while , netting . 3 of 17 · tllt'ee
pointers and bit 25 of 36 from tbe
line tor"69 percent ..
Sym~ hit just14of341ind.4of
9 from trey-land, wblle conn~t­
tng on 9 of 18 from the line.
Every To rna doe bit the scoring
column, 12 In all.
SHS had 47 rebounds led by
Shuler's 12 an.d Maynatd'sll,

'By The Bend

.. wl!tle ' having

face Kyger In .f~t round play of
7 turnovers, 10
the Sectional ~t.
steals,8 assists, and 19 fouls . SV
8oole bJ qaa• tefiJ:
.
had 30 rebound&amp;, led by Mootz's 5
Southern
..........
..
16
20
'II
25-88
and Renfroe's 4, while havln&amp;·17
turnovers, 1 steal, and 3-asslsts, . S·:V .................... 7 1f 11 1;7--49
80t.JTIIII:BN (88) - Murphy
and 25 foulll.
2-2·6,
Baer ~1-5-16, ·M ichael Kin·
Southern won the reserve
caid
2-~.Grlndstaff2-G-4,
Taylor
&amp;ame 39-28 led by Jeremy Roush
1:1.5-10,
Jolin
Hoback
0.2-2;
Ml· .
With 11, Scott Usle and Michael
chael
Ru11ell
0.2·2,
Kevin
Bur·
Evans with 6 each. Blake bad 9
&amp;eu
1·1-3,
Jayson
Codner
0.1-0-3,
and Criswell 7 for Symmes
Rose 3-~·lt, .Shuler 6-3·15, May·
Valley .
nard 6-3-15, TOTALS fl...,.U-111 ..
Southern Is' 11·8, · 11·2, and
SYMMES V~ ' (ft) ·Symmes 8-10, 5-8. ,
Renfroe. 4-0-8, Mootz 3-1-1-10,
Southern goes to Symmes
Pierce 04-4, Hayes 2;3-1-15, Jus'
Valley next Friday to complete
ttce l -1·5,Ntcbolas 0.1-l, Culeel
its schedule, then ·travels to
3-0-6.
TOT.\U lf+t-ft.
Meigs on Februa;y 22 at 7: 30 to

,.

Meigs girls topple SHS

Redwomen
.finish second in -MOe;
.
.

The University of Rio Grande
• women's basketball team netted
second place in the Mid-Ohio
Collference ·for the second con• secutlve year Saturday when the
: Redwomen defeated Mount Ver·
.. non Nazarene, 72·55, on the road.
...
The Rio ladles finished confer·
ence play for the season at 6-2,
while undefeated Urbana has
claimed the MOC crown. Over·
: all, the Redwomen are 18-9 as
·· they face their last regular
; season game at home against
Ce11tral State at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.
Starters Ann Barrittz and Debbie Fredrick each fired in 17
points as Rio Grande batUed Its
.•

.
•

Southwestern girls
defeat SHS, 41-29;
Vikings trip Eagles

• A dlsasterou~ fourth period
;. allowed the Southwestern High·
· landers to walk away from a 29-25
: fourth period \ead enroute to a
; 41·29 SVAC girls basketball vic·
, tory over the Southern Torna·
: doettes here Thursday In SV~C
• girls' cage action.
:
Lisa Hall, a dominate factor
• for Southwestern all season long,
• tallled 1~ points, while Amy ·
' Metzler added 13. SWHS Is now
• 4·15 overall and 3-111n the SVAC.
•
Sarah Duhl al\d teammates
• Tanya Ingles and Michelle Ca·
•. rauthers led the Tornadoettes
:: with siX points each.
:- Southwestern took a 12·6 first
;: period lead, then saw South~rn
· tighten the score at the half to
. . 20-17.
• A close third quarter ended up
in only a four point spread, but
Southwestern blitzed through the
final round for a big win.
Southern was playing without'
the services of leading scorer
unle Beegle, who IB out for the
season following a serious knee
. inJury against Eastern, and was
•. scheduled for knee surgery this
• week.
Jane Ann Williams had 8 of
Southern's 25 rebounda.
SHS hit 12 of 58 field goals and
• 5-'1 at the line. SWHS hit 17-49 and
" 7-15 . .
:
SHS had lO steals,26 turnovers,
and 17 foulS.
;.
Sou tllern IB now 2·17 overall,
.; playiDlf at Melp yesterday, then
• enterlnlf the sectional tourney
: TlletdiY against Nor.th Gallla at
: . Melalt Hllfb School. Southern Is
• J.l' ancl2·12 in the SVAC.
• 14 1 by quarters:

'

• "11axtcOre:
~
8CRJ'IIIWDTEBN - Hall 5-6-

:• · 1., Mltzler 6-1-13, Bond 3-0.&amp;,
• Potter 0.0.0, Hall J.0-6. TOTALS

;·
'!

way to a seven-point halftime
margin over the hosts. ·Kathy
Snyder rebounded 11 times to aid
the \1sttors' offense while. the
bench provided balanced contrl·
bu !Ions to the win, including a
pair of timely three-point field
goals from Renee Ward.
Fredrick, last week's District
22 and Mid-Ohio COnference
P1ayer of the...Week~-chlpped In
three assists, as did Kerr!
Kidwell.
Leading the way for the Lady
Cougars were starting guard
Erin Sharrock with 19 markers
and center NtcoUe Bosworth with 1
17. BOsworth, Mount Vernon's .
leading . rebounder, also had 10

.,.,....

.

JOVI'IIERN - ' Jones 1·2-4,
• i)UII) ~. Wllltarw 2-1-l!, Ingels

'

2-2-6, Cross 1-0-2, Caruthers 3-0-ii.
TOTAIB 12-5·29.

,..--- .

Vlklnp lop Ea~
League champion Symmes
Valley Wl)S given a scare Thurs·
day as lower division Eastern
kept pace with the' SVAC fran·
trunners for three quarters, only
to have the Lady Vlldngs out·
score them 12·7 In the final
stretch to clatni a 47-38 win.
SV Is 13·6,13·1, while Eastern is
3-17 and 3-11.
Eastern played the way it is
capable of playing Thursday,
rather than finding excuses for
ways to lose.
The young, talented Eaglettes
held tough the first q111rter at
11-8, battling to 'a 6-6 tie ·Jn the
second round for only · a 17-14
Symmes lead at · the halfway
points.
'
The third frame as baa been the
cue many tlmi;!S thiS season was
Eastern's downfall as they were
outscored 12-7, but recovered
nicely for a strong fourth quarter
(18·17~ that saw the curtain fall
on a 47-38 defeat. ·
·
Brooke Smith led Symmes With
29 points, while Jennifer Owens
led with 13 rebounds.
For Eastern. Suzanne Clay had
12 and Lee Glllltan 9.
Symmes playa a ·non:teaille
game wttb Coal Grove Monday.
Eastern Is Idle until Its Sec·
tlonal tolirney bout with Kyger
Creek at 1\.felp Hiib School on
ThurSday, 7:30p.m.
Score by Quarten:
Box Score
SYMMES VALLEY
Schneider 2-o-4, Roche 3-0.6,
Smltb 11·3·~. Kranc:z 0-2·2, Ow·
ens 3-0-6, Conley 1-0-2. TOTALB

Monday, Febfuay 12, 1990

The names of a~~a residents
listed on the Mduntaln State
College president's liSt and honor
fOil have been' announced. All of
the honorees are full,tlme students in either 't he day or evening
.
school.
Jncluded on the president's Its!
where students had' to earn a
grade point average of 3.5 or
·above were Carol Clem, Cool·
vUie, ex!!Cutlve secretarial with
wood processing; Stacy Hysell,
Pomeroy, higher , accounting
management; and Angela
Damewood, Reedsville, 'travel
and tourism with accountlnfl.
Listed on the honor roD where
the requirement lB. for a 3.0 or
higher grade potllt average was
Janelle Hysell, !"omeroy, In .
medtcat transcrtptlonts t.

Missionary Circle •meets ..
The February meeting of the
Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
Circle was held at the Baptist
Church.
Barbara Gheen opened the
meeting by readingEpheslans5:
14-17. She also led a discUssion
oil managing time and balancing
life's demands.
Mtldted Shuler had prayer and .
· Nancy Carnahan then had devotions, "The Art of Putting Off
Pray~r," with prayer by Dortha
Salser.
It was reported thai all bust·
. ness quotas are all ·paid and It
was decided to meet at the
church to roll·bandages fQr India.
'
It was decided to have light

.

'

refreshments fpllowtng the mts·
stonary at the church.
The Rio Grande Assoctatl~n
meeting wtll be held ·at the
church on May 12 and regtstra·
lion wtll begin at 9: 30 a.m.
A letter of thanks was receive!!
from Holzer Medical Center for
the ChriStmas favors that were
TQ ade.
Love gifts were taken up and
Florence Adams had the d~lca­
tlon prayer.
Circle coun t was taken and
several cards were signed fo r
people who . are itl ··tn the
community.
Refreshments were $erved by .
the Ruth Circle and·they followed
a Valentine theme .

Eastern
lunch menu

COSMETOLOGY JUDGING - Students In tbe
vocational programs at Melp High School held an ·
open house on Thul'!lday for tbe public to see them
perform their sldlls In prepar.Uton for the
regional VICA skUI contests. Contests were beld
.

I

in auto mechanics, cosmetology, electronics,
hand calculator, nursing, and weldlns. Pictured Is
a part of tbe cosmetology contestwttb Becky Rife,
standln1, who Is judging the haircut ol Anile
Klela (not pictured) on ber model, l(,lm Bailey.

.

Officers.to be ·eleeted by . Sorority
·~

It was announced that officers
will' be elected at ihe March 1
meeting at the recent meeting of
the Xi Gamma Epsilon Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held at
the senior citizens center In
•
, Pomeroy .
1
Thank you notes were read
from Debbie Haulier, Christie
Lynch, and Ann Rupe.
..J
A -donation was made to the
Beta Sigma · Phi International ·
Endowment Fund.
.
Necklaces were . distributed
that needed to be made and they
should be returned ·as soon as ·
possible.
Watkins product books were
distributed to members and the
money made from this project
will go to Special Olympics and
Car teton SchOQI.
.
' A discussion was held and It
was ·decided tQ give to _the needy

'

family at Easter.
'the next meeting will be held
on Thursday. This will be the
Valentine Dinner In honor of
Shelly DuBose at Sebastian's In
Parkersburg, ' W.Va.
Memt&gt;ers
.

.

are to meet at the upper Pomeroy
·p arking lot at 6 p.m. and dinner
wtll begin at .7 p.m .
Hostesses fQr the meeting were
Connie Dodson, Patsy Ogdtn, and
Mary Mora.

The lunch menu for the East_ern Local School District has
been annou~ced for the week of ·
Feb. 12.
Monday: hamburger, pe~s •.
rice puddtrig, fruit, and milk.
Tuesday: grilled cheese sand·
wich, tomato soup, pickle spears,
fruit , and mtlk.1
Wednesday: spaghetti with
cheese, homemade roll with
butter, green beans, applesauce,
and mUk ,
Thursday : chicken patty,
pasta salad, reliSh tray, fruit,
and milk.
Friday: cook's choice.

BE MY VALENTINE -Children f.r om Tiny Tech Day Care an,S
residents from Overbrook Center worked together In making
Valentlnes for the residents of the . Meigs County Infirmary.
Pictured ts Roscoe HoUon, resident at Overbrook, and Curtis and
Jo'rdan Lldel, from Tiny Tech. ·
·
·

Faith -Gospel Ladies meeting held
The February meeting of the
Faith Gospei Ladies Circle was
held at the home of Vivian
Humphrey with Pauline Baker
and Cheryl Eddy as
co-hostesses.
The meeting opened with devo- .
!Ions entitled, " A Valentine
From Heaven'" by Sandy
Cowdery. She 'also played a
guessing game, "Love Is ... " with
the prize, a heart necklace,
awarded to Bobbie Reed. The
door prize was won by Audra

Ruckman.
Tlie group reported 39 shut In
calls for the previous month.
A yard sale and bake sale has
been planned for early March.
Attending were Audra Ruck-'
man, Dolly Reed, Verna Rose,
Pat Martin, Diane White and
Lynn and Thomasina, Erika
Boring, Emma Durst, Debbie ·
Barringer, Pearl Baker, VIrginia ·
Walton, Tammy Cowdery and
Christopher, · Sandy Cowdery,
and Bobbie·Reed.

WOMEN'S COLOGNE
. ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW GIFT SET ....................s22so
ESTEE LAUDER PRIVATE COLLECTION GIFT SET ......sssoo
ESTEE LAUDER CINNABAR GIFT SET ••••••• ~...............s3soo
CALVIN KLEIN OBSESSION GIFT SET .......................S6090
CALVIN KLEIN OBSESSION GIFT SET.......................s22oo
LIZ TAYLOR PASSION GIFT SET •.!.' .......................... $4000

Ishii claims Hawaiian Open

EASTERN RESERVE CHEERLEADERSMembers of the Eastern reserve cheerleadlng
squad this ·season l\l'e Carrie ConnoUy, Suale
Francli, and Tracy Murphy. Amy Well was
absent. The quartet hu been cbeerln1 all _y ear

---

TUUDAY ·
NIGHT
SPICIAL

~congoleum

KINNEY

Vinyl
Floor Coveri-.g

Wallpaper

20°/o

long at All-Eastern games and will be honored at
Parents Nl1ht February 16 at lnterrnillslon
between the varsity and reserve games between
EHS and Oak Hill. .

~

.IWIUin

.-ot,OI.

,..,..._ ........,., PrW _
a hi n
'

MEN'S COLOGNE

·PAUL SEBASTIAN ·GIFT SET .....................................S35oo
, LAUDER' GIFT SET .......................·••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••• ~S3QOO,
GUCCI 'Gin SET••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~··········s4aoo
GIANT
HERSHEY KISS
99 7 oz.

. · SiCUT
SCENTS INVILOPIS

·.

AS$011'11

FUIUIKIS
"

25'

..

Russell Stover

•

OFF

OFF
100'5 OF PAnDNS

VALENTINE
CANDY I
front; 1-r, Setllor ~ Mcintyre,

HOLIDAY
M&amp;M'S

.$2

IACII

IN STOCK

$199 '

CLASSROOM
EXCHANGE
VALENTINES

·99C::

a four ;relll'

member, BopiiOmore Monica .,.. .; two ;rear

HOI\IEMADE DINNER ROLL

LAUREN GIFT SET •••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••• s3soo
ANAIS ANAIS GIFT SET ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••S2QOO
WHITE SHOULDERS TRAVEL KIT ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'$ 1500
..

'

SBiCTED
mLES
,

GIUU.. 3-3-9,

Clay 6-0-12, OtiD 2·1·11, Gardner :
3-0.6, PhllUpa 1·0.2, Roush 1-2·4.
TOTALS I...... f'

Daily Sentinel

.
SVAC standings

IN-41. .

EASTERN -

~he ·

'

On honor roll

Redmen topple Dyke, ·85~7 ·
Brad Schube rt's emergence as
Corabt's club. The Demo11s also
one of the University of Rio .played without the servtt:es of
Grande's top shooters received a
forward Frank Reed, who along
solid boost on Feb. 2 when he hit
with Williams scored 22 points
28 points, 24 of them on threeagalll$t the R:edmen last month.
point field goals . in theRedmen's
Rio Grande; whose slate went
record-setting 140-85 home vic·
to
13·14, benefitted from high
tory over Lake Erie.
scoring by: Gacy HarriSon, Mark
Not .o ne to be content with that
Erslan and Darius Williams. Jeff
kind of standard, Schubert, a 6-3
Brown chipped In with 11 re·
sophomore starter from Bel·
levue, Ohio, took it upon himself
bounds to cement his position as
the team's top man dn the boards
Saturday to top that career high
whe n he poured in 33 points to
(8.3 per game) and Harrison had
12 assists, boosting his per-game
help Rio Grande to an 85-67 road
ayerage In that area to 8.6. ·
victory over Dyke.
From the floor, Rio Grande
Schubert, who had eight of nine
was 44.7 percent (30-67) and
trtfecta attempts in the Lake
Erie game, connected on six of made 15 of 18 free throw attempts
for 83.3 percent. Turnovers were
eight tries against the Demons,
in part boosting the Redmen to a
kept to a minimum of seven and
14-potnt halftime advantage.
the Redmen hit thE;" boards for a
Dyke, whtcl1 had lost89-81 to Rio high of 43.
Grande at Lyne Center on Jan.
Dyke, which went to 10-19,
15, relied upon top scorer James connected oil 28 of 84 attempts on
field goals for 33.3 percent and
Williams to narrow the !ieftctt.
Williams led Ills teammates . had only 12 tries from the line,
With 28 markers, bp t aside from frorri which It was successful on
guard Spencer Latimer, he was nine (75 percent). In another high
the only o~e to score in double game for rebOunding, the Demdigits for first-year Coach Sam ons.netted 42 boards and suffered

.

•

13q-117 -

buketball. ·
_ ·,
. Including Sunday's 130-1171oss to . 1
But when It comes to All-Star
the East, Riley Is 3·5 In the
games, Riley has •loslngrecotd.
midseason classic. The West has
lost three of the last siX contests
.
,
and eight of the last )1.
"We had everything going
against us today. We losi seven
straight games played In even
12 turnovers. Dyke hosts Lake ·. years," Riley said. "I think that
Erie Tuesday.
. the East played very well, and
The Redmen. who play at · they were really in sync today."
Cedarville Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m.,
One bright spot for Riley was
were the ortly Mid-Ohio Confer·
tbe play of his star guard, Magic
ence learn not playing a confer·
Johnson, who was named the
ence oppollent over the weekend.
game's Most Valuable Player.
in MOC garnet. from Saturday,
"Magic Is such a great player,
Cedar.vllle edged Urbana, 84·83, ·· he really takes control out on the
Tiffin slipped past Walsh, 75-73,
basketball court. What else can
and ,Mount Vernon Nazarene
you possibly say about him?"
burled Ohio Dominican, 117-76.
Riley said. "It ·ts a tremendous
Box seore:
honor for himself, as well as for
DYKE (87) - Spencer Lati·
everyone associated with Laker ·
. mer, 4-4-12; Brian Arth, 0-2-0-6;
basketball." .
James Wtlltams, 12·4-28; David
Wolfe, 1-0.2; James Johnson,
Johnson IB only the third player
4-0.8; Gerald Embry, 2·0-4; Der- In the history of the event to be
named MVP from the losing
rick Hal~ 3-1-7. TOTAUI 2&amp;-=-8·
·
team.
87.
The 6-foot-9, 220-pound playRIO GRANDE (81) - Gary
maker from Michigan State led
Harrison, 3-5-11; Mark Erslan,
the game with 22 points, a(jdlng6
1-3-6-17; Brad Sch1,1bert, 6-6-3-33;
Jeff Brown, 1-0.2; Troy DOnald· rebounds and 4 assists. His 4
three-point field goats are an
son, 1-0.2; John Lambcke, 2'0-4;
Darius Williams, 5-l-11; Lyndell All-Star Game record.
ROUSH CONNNECTS - Meigs' Amy Roush (10) fires short
"I was here to try and give the
Snyder, 0-1-0-3; Tim Christian,
Jumper over Southern defender Trlcla Wolfe (14) In Saturday's
crowd a show, and I think that we
1-0.2. TOTAUI20-1tH5-81.
non-conference triumph.
Halftime ICOre - Rio Grande all did that," Johnson said.
"They (the East) got a 20-polnt
tO, Dyke :16.
lead on us early and that ts hard
lo ·come back from . We chipped
away at the end, but the ImporJar season with a. mark of 15·5,
By Dave Harris.
tant thing was to have a good
Meigs will begin Sectional play at
The
Meigs
Marauders
opened
.
time."
boards.
Oak Hill on Monday Febr1,1ary 19
up
a
21·
7
halftime
lead
and
-vent
Reserve center -·David Robin·
The Redwomen shot 44.8 peron to defeat the Southern Torna· against the winner of • the
son
of San Antonio, participated
cent from the field (28·64).and hit
,
dQI!s 56-22 In girls action Satur· Wellston-Jackson game.
13 of its20free throw attempts for In his first All-Star contest.
Southern finJshes the season •t
·day
afternoon at . Meigs High
65 percent The visitors held their Robinson battled Patrick Ewing School.
2·18
they wtll play Kyger Creek In
·
turnovers to 11 and net ted 33 and Robert Parish all·afternoon.
Sectional
play on tu~day Feb.
The first quarter started out
"Having to play against one of
rebounds.
13,
at
7:
30
at Meigs High School.
slow as both teams seem to have
them is tough enough, but having
Mount Vernon wu derailed by
·
Box
score:
·
problems putting the ball in the
poor shooting from ·the floor wtth to play agalllst both of them Is
hoop. Trlcta Baer scored 3 of the Southern ............. :..3 4 .7 8·22
36.6 ·percent (22-60) and at the almost Impossible," Robinson
Marauders
6 first quarter pQinl' Meigs ....................6 15 22 12-56
·
foul line, where It was 38.4 said.
SOUTHJj;RN - Mlka Jones
and the Marauders held a 6-3
percent (10-26). Although the
1-0-0-2,
Michelle Caruthers 0-0·1·
lead.
..
Lady Cougars outbOarded Rio
1,
Trtcta
Wolfe 2-0-0-4, Wendy
Meigs started to pull away in
Grande with 35, they lost the ball
Wolfe
0-0-0-0,
Tonya Ingels 3-0·0·
the second quarter outscoring'
a total of 17 times.
.
6.
Melanie
Lyons
2-0·1·5, Sarah
the purple and gold 15-4 to hold a
(All lame•~
Mount Vernon (6.13) travels to
Duhl
2-0·4,
Heather
Me Phall
commanding 21-7 lead at the
TEAM
W L PF PA
Ashland for a non-district game
0·0·0·0,
Jane
Ann
Williams
0.:0·0·
half.
· · Eastern .......... 14 5 1400 1~6
Tuesday.
0,
Angie
Swiger
0-0.0-0.
TOTAIB
· Meigs outscored the Tornadoes
North Gallta . .. 13 6 1383· 1221
Boilseore:
22·7
hi tbe third period and 12-8 tn 10-0·2·22.
MOUNT VERNON.&lt;:':· AZA· . Southern ......... 11 8 1339 1178
MEIGS - Shannon Newsome
the final period to coast to the
Hannan Trace 9 10 lll9 1119
·RENE (55) - Nicolle e:?. orth,
3-0·0-6,
Deanna Haggy 0-0-0·0,
victory.
S-Valley ...... ... 8 9 1075 1101
7·3·17; Erin Sharrock, ·1·2·19;
Kim
Hanning
0-0.1·1, Missy NelKelly Smith and Jennifer Tay- .
Southwestern.. 7 12 1365 1350
Sus! Burke, 1-0-2; Melissa Booth,
Ke11Y
Smith 4-0-5-13,
son
0·0·4·4,
lor paced the Marauders with 13
Oak Hill ..... .... 4 15 1119 1328
1·1·3; Erika Brown; 2·3·7; Lori
Jennifer
Taylor
3·0·7-13,
Trlcla
Kyger Creek. .. 1 18 1054 1458 points each, Trlcla Baer added
Coon, 1-0.2; · Linda Ward, 1-0-2;
Baer4·0·4-12,
Kim
Ewing
1·9·1·3,
12. For Southern Tonya Ingels led
Lesley ~tiBon, 1-0·2. TOTALS
Amy Rouse 1-0·2·4. TOTAIB
the way with 6.
(SVAC games)
21·1-10-15.
18-0·14-lll!.
The Marauders close the reguTEAM
W L PF PA
RIO GRANDE (1!~ - Jennt
Eastern .......... 12 1 971 853
Couch, 1·0-2; Cindy Ridgeway,
Southern
....... .. 11 2 995 763
0-2-2; Debbie Fredrick, 7-3-17;
North
Gallta
... 10 3 966 825 '
Kerr! •Kidwell, 3-0-6; Mindy
Trace
6 7 7~ 747
Hannan
1'4ontgomery, 1·1·5-10; Ann Bar·
S-Valley ··· ····' · 5 8 785 ·892
HONOLULU (UPI) · David
nltt, 8·1·17; Angie Packard,
Ishii started the day one shot
Southwestern
,.
4
9
893
9os
Ishii
of Hawaii, an Irregular
1·0-2; Renee Ward,.J.-2-0-8; Kathy
behind two-time· winner Hubert
Oak Hili . . . . .. .. . 4 9 807 932
participant on the PGA Tour,
Snyder, 3-2-8. TO'i'ALStw-18-'72.
Green. Each birdied holes early
Kyger Creek. .. 0 13 730 1010
f.tred an even-par 72 Sunday to
in the rounds - Ishii on the first
Halabrie ICOre - Rio Grande
TOTAIB ........ :.. . $2 52 11m 1m
Win the $1 mtllton Hawaiian Open
at, M~.U.t Verao• Nuare~~e 25.
hole and Green on the second by one stroke over Paul Aztnger .
before both dropped a shot with
.,;-'
(Reaerves)
Ishii finished the tournament
bogeys at No. 4.
IQI:DWOMEN NOTES: The
TEAM
W L PF Pi\
With a · four-round total of nineRio -ladles began last week at
under-par 279 at the Walalae
seventh place In Dlltr·lct 22 and if North Gallta ... 12 1 644 472
Ishil.' t~e leading money
Southern ....... .. 12 1 661· 455
Country Club. He Joins Ted
they remain In that spot, they
winner on the 1987 Japanese PGA
Hannan Tr·a ce 7 6 556 502
Makalena,"who finished first In
•appear to be likely candidates for
Tour with $671,000, took sole
Oak
Hill
.......
..
8
5
612
540
1966,
as
the
only
Hawaiians
towln
the District Playoffll starting
possession of the lead at 10-under
Feb. 28. The district-was led last S·Valley .. ........ 7. 6 556 528
the event.
when he · birdied and Green
Southwestern .. 3 io 502 609
. "I'm just blank. I've thought
week by the College of Mount St.
bogeyed on No. 9.
Eastern ..... ... .. 2 11 475. 646 ·about winning · the Hawaiian
Joseph, wttl! Urba,na in second
"I didn't play particularly
Open for a long time. I can't
place and Central' State, Rio Kyger Creek. .. 1 12 357 611
well, but I'm fortunate the scores
Grande's Tut!sday op)ionent, in TOTAU ........ ..JZ I! ~ . 430 believe It,'' said the club pro from
were nottoo low,'.' said Ishii, who
· Oahu's Pearl Country Club .
third . ... On their way to Mount
earned $180,000 with the victory.
s.tunt~~¥'• ftnals
Vernon Friday, the Redwomen
Southern
88, Symmes. Valley 49
stopped tn Baltimore, Ohio, the
North
Gallta
81, Rock Hill 76
hometown of the team's onlY
Friday's
1ames
senior, Angle Packard. Tbe team
Hannan
Trace
at
Kyger Creek
practiced !bat nl&amp;ht In the ID'in of
Pacltatd's alma mater, Uberty Southwestern at North Gallla
Oak Htll at Eastern
Ulllon kip SchooL
Southern at Symmes Valley

.

.l

Tornadoes crush Symmes Valley 88-49ln makeup contest
·Outscoring th~ opponents 52·28
with 15 points, Mootz had 10, and
· 1n the second half, the Southern . Renfroe8.
.
:- Tornadoes kept their slim SVAc·
In the opening r ound Southern
· co-title hopes alive by defeating
glided to a 16-7 lead after no one
the Symmes Valley VIkings 88-49
had scored In the flrstrillnute and
here Saturday In a make-up
a 'half. Southern then roUed to a
SVAC boys basketball contest In
28-9 count early In the second
Charles W . Hayman
r ound and was never serloUily
gymnasium.
.
· headed the remainder of the
Southern was led by point
game, however, Symmes did cut
guard Andy Baer's 16 points,
that margin to 28-16 before SHS
while Seniors Brent Shuler and
got rolling again.
Brad Maynard had a dominating
SliS went on to le;id 36·21 at the .
inside game with 15 points each
half.
and a combined 23 rebounds.
Coach Howie Caldwell started
Chad Taylor added 10 and
his seniors before the parents
Jeremy Rose 8.
· night crowd, and saw them build
Paul Hayes led Symmes Valley
up a 12-4 lead before juniors Todd

•

t

member; Setllllr Debllle .Bnobl four :rear
member; and back rtW, lllree year J..ltr
member, Allpe Murphy; four Jelll' Millor AmJ·
M•rpliy ,sophomore Carrie Glll.lh\D, and two-,ear
sopbomore Tina Connolly. Uitbble Brookl Is
varllly captwln 1111d &amp;,m Mcintyre, oo-eaptaln. ·
Junior Vanity captain Is Amy Well and
co-captain Bulle Francia.
1:'

rescription Shop
•

992-6669

.

MIDDUPOIT, OHIO

J71 IIOITII SECOND
.,

�Monda·t.~---J'
&amp;-&amp;....-. 12 1880 '
I

,..--Local news briefs... ---·".~
• Co!lttnued from par;e 1
Hospital.
j •
Middleport at 12: SO p.m. was called to Laurel St. for Ray
Garllnr;er wbo was takeD to Holzer Medical Center and at 1: 33
p.m. to the Beech Street Apartments for· Robbie Clonch wbo
• refuled treatment. At 9: 59 p.m., Middleport went to South
.. Fourth Ave. for Teresa Becker to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
' On Sunday at 4: 10 a.m., Middleport transported Ernest
: Brewer from the Overbrook. Center to Veterans Memorial
· Hospital.
' ··
• Syracuse Fire Department was cal!lid to a minor furnace fire
at the MD ton Roush residence on Dusky St. at 5 a.m.
At 7: 42a.m., Pomeroy went to Spring Ave. for Audrey Arnold
who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.
At 10: 33 a.m. 1 Pomeroy transported VIvian Tltw; fro!ll the
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nu.r slng Center to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
. ·
Racine at 3: 14 a.m. was called to Trouble Creek Road for
James HinkleY who was taken to.Holzer Medical Center . .
Middleport at 4:09p.m. transporred Leona Sti'Onl from Bailey
·
Run Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital .
· At 9: 54 p.m., Racine was called to Route 338 for Clair Bose
·who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Seven die in Ohio
weekend auto ~ks
'

By United Preaa lllterna&amp;lonal
Se~ people were kUled In
acclden~ on OhiQ roadways
durlnr; the weekend, the ·· State
Highway Patrol reported
Monday.
.
The count showed one death
Friday night, four .S aturday and
tW.o Sunday. One victim was a
pedestrian and · another was
killed In a car-train crash. Tbere
was olle . double-fatality crash
during the period which began at
6 juri. · friday and ended at
midnight Sunday.
The victims:
· Stuiday
Rl!venna: Donald Jones, 78, ·
and Olivia Jones, '72, kDled·ln a
tWo-car crasll on Ohio 5 In
Portage County.
Saturday ·

,

•

Bright Monday to be foUowed ·by gloOm ·.
'.

.

~

U.tled P,... la.-1111111
except for about linch of snow In
Ohioan• will need to enjoy . the youngstown area.
. Monday's sllll8hlne ~auae the
Conslderab~ sunshine reremainder ot tile week loob as If turned to the entire stale MonII will be mostly r;ray and wet,
day, as hlr;b PJ'I!Uure built over
Clouds cleared overnlihl as
OhiO. Hlgbs were to ranae from
the low preuure system that
around 40 deaJCCI alq Lake
moved acrou the .state yester- Erie to near 55 alq the OhiO
day moved to the eut cOast. The Rlwr.
·
·
·
low did produce 1 to 2 lncbel o.f
But the nice weather was to be
snow over ~ntral Ohio yes ter- short-lived.
da~ ~nd areas of rain Ill !xed with
A fast·niovlnr; cold front wiD
sno~ In IOU\bern Oblo.
·
move toward Ohio Monday ntrht
Snow showers developed over and move Into the state on
northeast ohio late In the after- Tuesday. As the tront aP:
noon that generally . produced pioaches, clouds will be on the
.
.
onjy
trace amounts of snow.
'

lnc'reue and Jhowers should
Friday.
,,
arrive .durillg the day Tuesday.
Hlgbl should be .In the mJd-301
Lows MoDday night will be
to upper 40s Wednesday and In
tempered by Increasing clouds
the mld..1ls to mld-40s Thursday
and a perllstent southwest wind.
and Friday. Lows wW be In the
Minimum temperatures 1hould low 301 to low 401 Wednesday.
ranae from 35 to 40.
. ,
and In t,he mld·20s to mld-30s .
Despite lhe c:loudl and.ahciwers ' Tburaday and Friday.. ·
.r . ".
Tuesday 1 temperatures' should
On tile morning weather map,.
be well above 11G1'111&amp;]. .Many bl&amp;'h pre~sure was located from
arpswlll'~ee!IOdell'ee'temperathe Gulf COut nOI'tb thro~~eh ·
t!U'ft and
&amp;Is could be. 'wes11!rn Ohio. This high was to
reglslered n4!ar- the Ohio River.
move off the East COliS I by
·'The coIll front Will usher In · ,Monday night.
,
colder tempera!~ _Tuesday
'Low pressure was located
night and WPC!needay. Temperanorth of North Dakota with a cold :
tures may cool enough, over . . front extel\diJ!g southwest
northern OhiO. by Wedne8day to . throllgh Moiltana Into northern
\·
any preclpltstlon to snow California. The low ' will inove ;
chanr;e
._Ql_n_ll_nue_d_fr_om_pa.,...ge_r_ _ __
or possibly even f1'eezlng rain.
east to near James ' Bay by
The front will remain In the "I:uesday moming and then north
must now decide what kind of
GoOdno II also working on .
proximity
o~ OhiO )hrougb most
of N:ew England by Tuesday 1
trail they want.
plans to expBJid the park by
of
the
week.
In
addition,
a
storm
night. The cold front will move
cu ttlng an opentng In the fiood
Ed Goodnil, chlefof the evaluasystem
oVer
the
western
United
·
s
outheast and by Tuesday n'lgJlt ,,
tion branch · In the Corps' Hun-. wall at 8th Street·and building a
States
will
begin
moVIng
eut
by
will
stretch from New E;naland,
tlngtbn office, said a gravel trail parking area and dock to accommid-week.
Hence,
precipitation
southwest
through centJ:I\1 OhiO
at the foot of the floodwall would odate tbe West VIrginia Billie.
Is
expected
·
to
be
Widespread
to
a
deVeloping
low ()Vet
The Belle) presel)t docking
have to Cleaned aftet each
across
the
region
tbro~~~th at least · COlorado.
·
" '
site causes croWding at the park
Incidence of high water.
·
'
'
"You can maintain a natural at times.
NAnONAL WEAtHER FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 2-13-tO
'
"The preliminary estimate or
trail with traffic, but you sometimes have problems 'With mud cost -It's only preliminary - Is
and water," Goodno said. "I $3.1 million," Goodno said. "II
would think that paVIng would be woUld be a so-5o cost 1hare with
Huntington. It would need a
the answer."
congreaslonal appropriation."
'

'

Hunt,i ngton..

some

~

Mrs. Leslie Fraak and Matthew were Wedner'ay vial tors cit
Mr. and Mrs. Evpne Haning.
Mr. and Mrs.. ,Jack Peter10n,
New Lllila, ~ 'receat visitors
ot Mr. and Mn. Charles Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. wtntam Dummitt, Mlddlepori, :were Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson.
· ··

Mr. And )(r•. Jolul Williams,
Albany, were l'lllellt vlsUors of
Mra. Iva Jobnloa and . Ida

·

Mu~.

will

There
be Ladies Breakfast
on Saturday at 9: 30 a.m. at. the
ReJoicing Life Chur:ch In Middleport for Interested lndMduals.
The cclst of the breakfast will
be $3 per person and wlll'be held ·
In the Christian School
lunchr&lt;iom.
r

.

~-----Area· deaths· _.____

.The . guest spea)cer will be
Becky PoUs, whO lS pastor o~the
Light of Ute Church In Fairmont,
W.Va. Praise Temple Open Bible
Church was pioneered by Mrs.
Po Us and !ter husband. She has

\

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.,,

"·

R&amp;G
FEED
&amp;
SUPPLY
CO.
399W. Main '
992-216•
Pomeroy, Ohio

..

Thi~ Store With "All Ki.n da of Stuff" For Pets. Stablea,

Small A11imala. Lawna 8&amp; Gardena .=::--=

GALI.I'OIIS

....
....

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ntan. 1

11 1

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• The Area' s· Number
1 Marketplace
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MandeJa contln~dfrompagel

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Authorized Purina Chow Dealer.

16141 U6-5131 ...1adiation/Chemathtrapy ·
161

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Meigs County's Only FuD IJne

...,sici.., sPIIialisls

,.E.

•

"fE ALSO HAVE PUIJINA LAMB SAmNA

Ask Tour Phfiki• for a (on..,ltnlltf•ral

385 JACKSON

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. . -r"•

RADIATION ONCOLOGY
SURGEIY
, CHEMOTHERAPY '
ly 1-d Corlifl..

•

'

OFFER STATE-OF- THE-ART

' By WILLIAM C. '1'BO'fT •
,. . United Press lnt,ei'J!IIIIci!IB!
EX-WIVES SPEAK OUT: . •Speaking of divorce, Geraldo
Rivera will be doing just .that Tuesday. with ··a shO'\V called
" Ex-Wivestyles of the Rich and Famous," The guests Includes
Carol' Lawrence, ex-wife of Robert Goulet, as we.ll as the
ex-spouses of Dustin Hoffmllll, hair stylist VIdal Sassoon ·and
·football st&lt;trs Mark GaaUJieau and Joe Mo
a. • • • • •

~

THIS· IS A TAGGED CAnLE PRODUCT AND
SHOULD. BE ESPECIALLY EFFECTIVE FOI
4-H
.•. CLUB STEERS.
•
•
. AlSO GOATS AND SHEEP CAN FEED O~F
THIS PRODUCT
140fo Protein
.s';. t Calcium
21f20fo Fat
.30Jo Phosphorous
150fo Fiber
Vitamin A 2000

"OLZEI
MEDICAL
CENTER
.
.

n~ws .

',j

I

.e

. and

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~w'"{ PURINA COARSE' 1'4N
~~ COMPLOE CAME PIODUCT

WHY TIAVa 1EmA llllES FOR
CANCER TIEATMENT WIEN lOVm
ONES CAN IE TlrATED lOCALl Yl

HOLZER CLINIC

l••

NOW AVAILABLE

The group reported 41 shut In
calls and cards were signed for ·
the sick and shut ln. The group
also .decided to provide special
programs tl)roughout the year
for residents of the Meigs County
Infirmary.
Attending In addition to those
previously named were Cathy
The . meeting · opened with' Masters, Marlene Putman, Judy
Elkins, Nancy Douglas, na West'
'prayer and Sue Douglas gave
fall, Tam! Putman, Krlsty Bosdevotions, •'Greatest Love,'' l!nd
the story of :Jesus' cr uclflctlon ton, Robin Putman, Carolyn
Whaley. Sonnle Richards , GarfromMatthew27. Wendy Wilfong
cia
Ad11ms, Gloria Decker, and
read a poem entitled "Reaching .
·
.
Barbara
Masters.
Out."
'

helped. In coordinating the Light
of Life School for grades kinder·
garten throUgh 12.
As an ordained open Blbte
'minister, sh!!l&amp;aliiOaconference
and retreat speaker;' She Is the
mother off9ur children. .. •
Anyone Interested In attending
the Ladles Breakta~t shQuld
com tact the ReJoicing Life
·. Church and ' Christian School
office Moilday through Thursday
·from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m . It Is
requested by 'Pastor Michael
Panglo that.children not attend.

People_~n ·the

.

Plans for an Easter program at
the Meigs Couniy Infirmary
were discussed at the reeent
meeting of the Reedivllle
Women's Ministries held ;il tile
churcll with Sue Suttle as hostess
and Carol Kanawalsky as
co-hostess.

Ladies Breakfast planned

Circleville: Clayton E. Whltehurst, 34, Chillicothe, killed when
his car went oft a Ptckliway
County road and hit a culvert:
Mount Vernon: Diane t.. Den·
nls, 19, LoudonVIlle, killed when
her car ran Into a !~Itch and then a
building along 01)10 3 In Knox
County.
·
Cleveland: Henry A. Davis, 35,
Cleveland, killed when his
hit
· great great grandchildren; a
Homer Easaman ·
a tree along a Cleveland street.
sister-In-law, Bertha Evans; and
Youngstown: Mary .• M . Wanseveral nieces and nephews.
Me~. ·county .native, Homer . · · In' addition to her parents, Mrs.
die, 77, North Georgetown, killed
when her c:ar collk!ed With a train 'Avery Eastman, 73, o( · New Rite was . preceded In death by
Brighton, Minn. , died Sunday at
at a crossing on a Maboning
••
her first husbillld, Lester E.
the ~eVIll Nursing Home, New
County road.
.;
.,
Brooks, In· 1922; and husband,
Brighton, ~',finn . , following, an
.
Friday 1111ht
~
Harley RJfe, In . 1~; two sons,
·'
, Cincinnati: Cbarlette Thomp. . extended llbless.
•·
Lester Jr. and Rlch8rd. Broolisj
•
Mr. Eastml!D was ~rn Feb. 20,
son, 35, Cincinnati, kUled when
two
daughter•,
Lorrane
BroolCS
;
1916 In Bedford To~hlp to the
•
struck by a carl\&amp; shewalkeilona
and Lavine Rite; brothers, Carl,
.,•'
WEATHER MAP .:... Radical temperatiU'e swings will
late Sam A. ancl Ida Smith
Cincinnati street.
Clay ana Harold EvllJis; and
characterize tile next couple of daya u the celdest air of the year
Eastman. He was reJP'eQ Iron
sisters, Grace Brogan, Louise .
lnvailel the United states. The nation's mid-section will ll!'JoY '. 'i"'!'
worker, and li World ~ar ~I nav:v. Stal\1. Lena Sanborn Nelson and
recerd·breaklnl warmth with bJrbl In tile II'a and 70's today. "
veteran; having served wjtlt the
Allee and Anna Mae Evans.
Col4er
air dropplllf southward will shade some 30 deJ!n!es off the
.. · .
Seabees.
. ·
· SerVIces for Mrs. RUe will be
' .
hJsh
for
:I'aesday. This cold al~ will produce SOllie snow for the
SurVIvlilg_ Mr. Eastman are Wednesday, 1 p.m. • at the· Brad·
" relieve the pressure" of lbe
Mandela said that, during the
·
Great
l.akes;
tile
central
Rockies,
and
the
western
Plalna.
Expect
people surrowidlng the l4andela · Pas 1 th1'ee years; .he had been . two sons; 'Robert Ea11tman, ·of
ford !::burch of Christ with Pastor
soow In the Northwest as a troucb of low pressure moves through.
house.
,
Involved In discussions with the' GalUpolls, and Dqnalcj Eastman,
Derek Stump and :Rastor Charles
lr.
Mild
and SUIIJ!Y tcr partly cloudy weather tor the East and
·of
Galena;
a
brother,
·Charles
"I think our main concern Is government , that. lead to the
Russell Sr. both officiating. Bur- · 'Southeast.
where he Is going to sleep release of his ANC comrades Eastman, ·of North Lewisburg;
Ial will be In Bradford Cemetery.
Jailed Wtth him In 1964, Including ·three sisters; Elsle ·Phllllps, of Friends may call at Rawlings·
tonight," Morobe said.
Shortly before his news confer· Slsulu. More .r ecently he had .( :ambrldg,e, ·Velma Stout, of Coats-Fisher Funeral Home
. ence, Mandela Wjtlked down the acted "merely as ll facilitator" to Albany, and Elma Epple, of from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on Tuesday;
CLEVELAND (UPI)- No big another5,4Sohad fouroflbemfor • •
steps of a terraced iarden filled bring together the · two most ' Chester; · four gra,uichlldren,
and at the church for one hour
Brent,
KeVIn,
Jeannie
and
,Brlail
powerful
forces.
in,
the
country'winner In the Super Lotto draw· $75 each.
with wild flowers, hibiscus and
Eastman; and one great grand- prior to the funeral.
lng Saturday has pushed the
The Kicker game pr~uced the ,
tall conifers behind Tutu's resl· the government aild the ANC.
"Now that I am released, Ills daughter, Adriane.
Jackpotto $6 million l9r Wednes.
number 945658, and one ticket ·•
dence and posed for dozens of
· In addition 'to his parents, he
day night's gaZQe.
has that combination, giVIng Its •
photographers. Obliging •their for the ANC to determine what
was
preceded In death by a
Numbers chqsen were n; 19, holder $100,000. Lottery officials
requests, Mandela raised a ' role I will play;" Mandela said.
Stepping out of prison Sunday sjster, Ett&lt;t Gale; and ' four
21, 24, 26, and 42.
said $671,995 worth of tickets
clenched fist.
George,
Fred,
Wilbur
brothers,
~
ffl
1
Is
aid
were sold far that game.
.
before
a
crowd
of
cheering
Ohl
Lot
South
Central
Ohio
Near his side were his wife,
0
0
..,ry
c a- • s
·
Five of them had the first five
.ind
Frank.
supporters
and
spectators
outMostly
clear
Monday
·
night,
Winnie, wearing a long white
worth of tickets were
numbers fo'r $5,000·,· GO. had the
Graveside serVIces tor Mr. . with a low near 40.; Becoming . $3,673,663
sold, but none had those six
kaftan adorned with a trlba.l side Paarl, 35 ·mUes northeast of
Eastman wll!. be held Wednesnumbers. However, )02 had five
first four for $1,000; 595 had the
mostly cloudy Tuesday, wltb a
pattern and a colorful turban, his Cape Town, Maildela said he
day,
3
p.m.,
at
the
Kee!Jaugh
ofthem, good for $1,000each, and
first three for $100, and 6,007 had
chance of showers late In the day
daugbter, Zlndzl, and ttu:ee believed he had entered Into a
the first iwo for.$10.
and highs near 60. Chance of rain
grandchildren. Mandela · was "totally different ~uth •Afrl'ca" Cemetery, with Rev. Robert
. I
1
Sanders
offiCiating.
F·rlends
may
Is 30 percent. .
.
flanked during the news confer· than the one he le(t when pe was
at
the
Ewing
Funeral
·Home
'
call
Ex&amp;ended Foreaaat ·
elice by his wife, ANC colleague captured almost 28 years ago.
on Tuesday evening from 7 to 9.
Wedaeaday throucb Friday
Walter Slsulu and Slsulu's wife, The moment of emerging from
. Baaqllel pluaed
.
. or. pbtatoes, and eighth ,grade
prison and 5!!1!lng lbe crowd took
Snow or rain likely In the
Albertina.
boys, desaerts.
'
A basketball banquet will be
northern pari of the' state and
Speaking In· a firm, strong. his breath away. he said . .
held Thursday at 6:30p.m. at the
· Meetloalchl .
.
rain likely In liOuthern Ohio each
voice In answering qu~tiQns,
Bertha~~
Melp
Junior HlBh School. The
Residents
of
Letart
Township
· .·
day.
Hlr;hs
will
range
from
the
Mandela said he was 1'absolutely
Mhletlc Department will furnish
hold
a
town
meeting
tonight
will
..
mid
30s
to
the
upper
40s
Wednesexcited to be out" after 27 years
Bertha Elizabeth Evans Rife,
the meat and beverage. Seventh
(Monday), 7 p.m.: at the, D&amp;R .
day and from the mid 30s to the
and seven months of Lottery numbers
93,_ of Middleport, died today at
grade girls are to take vegetable Tackle Box In Antiquity. Resl·
mid 40s Thursday and Friday.
Incarceration.
Veterans Memorial Hospital af·
dishes, eighth grade. girls, sal·
dents should bring their own
CLEVELAND (UPI)- Satur·
Overnight
lows will range from
He believed the orlglnalln~n­
ter a short illness.
ads, seventh grade !Joys! bread chairs. .
,,
"
·1'
the
lower
30s
to
the
lower
40s
t!On o' the government was· 'that · day's · winning bblo Lottery
Born 'Nov. 26, 1896 in Meigs
· CounJ;y, she was a daughter of the
early· Wednesday and from the
we Should' be forgotten" In numbers: ·
mid 20s to the mid 30s Thursday
PICK·3
prison, but that continued Interlate. Sheridan hd Louise Gilkey
909.
and
Friday mornings.
nal and International pressure
Evans. She was a homemaker
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
played a· part In his !'111ease, ·
"
and a 77-year · member of the
''
Mandela said, however, that II $1,609,176, with payoff due. of Bradford ChUrch of Christ.
was "too early" for nations to $832,416.50.
!'.Jrs. Rife Is 's)lrvl\red by a.son
HOSPITAL
PJCK-4
consider lifting sanctions against
and daughter-In-law, William
8984.
South Africa.
(Ben) and Ruby Rife; a daughter
...
PICK·4 ticket ,sales totaled
Mandela also reiterated his·
'Marriage. liCenses have been
and son-In-law, MarVIn and Eva,
calls for the government to ' $296,642.50, with payoff due •of Ml Utron; and a .daughtef', Bonnie Issued In Meigll County Probate
H'
Court
to
Michael
Shawn
Henry,
completely lift Us 43-month·old $57,000.
Rife. all .of Middleport; a
Super Lotto
state of emergency and release
daughter-In-law, · Marjorie 24, and Qebora [)awn Hlyely, 16,
11, 19, 21, 24, 26, and 42~
alt:pouucal prisoners,
Brooks, of Hllltai'd; two grand- both Portland; and Steven Ray ,
Super
Lotto ticket sales totaled . soilS and seven gran~aughters; Brumfield, 17, and Cathy Ann
On his future role, Mandela
said It would be determl!led by $3,673,663. .
675·1~44
twelve great grandchildren; five Lyons,17, both of Pomeroy.
.,
Kicker
the ANC and that he Intended to
945658.
go to the movement's
Kicker ticket ·Sales totaled
headquarters-In-exile In Lusaka
'
'
$671,995.
soon to receive his Instructions.

car

Reedsville Nazarene Women
plan Easter infirmary program .

Ida MUrphy attfnded a blr'!l·
day party at Mr. and Mrs ..Jospeb
Evans birthday .
Carmel Evans visited with Iva
Johnson on Thursday afternoon.
Mrit. Barbara Davis, Ashil,
Joshua, and Mlrlnda were Tues·
Dorothy ·Reeves and· Gladys day evening visitors of Iva JQI!n
Tuckerman recently visited Mrs. · and Ida Murphy . Harley Johnson
Iva Johnson and Ida Murjlhy. . was. a Sunday evening vtsllo~.
'·

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W91f Pen perSQnal notes

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TO PLACE ·AN AD CALl 992 •2156
MONDAY fhru 'FRIDAY 8 A.M. ta ,5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY , .
•.
CLOSED SUNDAY · ·
.

.:

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' A cl•••hod advarrlisMintJnt pl.ac 1:tl HI Thel!&gt;o•lv·Stm!lnellell. .
tt!pt , .. clas1111~ dt~plifY . BusM1uu Coud ,mri I'"Jfll•n.o tn::es)
· wdl ali u· ot~pvilf •• thv ,f't Pfcl••nt Ali!Jisltff:,arui ll'!e G.Ut
~

pu~'

o·ailY Tflbun".
'

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rl' Jthlll!) Ovl't 18. OOb homes

COP~ DEADliNE

.

THURSDAY PAPER "'

---Meigs announcell)ents_......,....
, """

' t-HttiAY PAPER '.
SUNDAY P.ArER

.

·

11 00 AM . SATUAOAV
2 .00 PM MONDAY
2_. 00 PM TUESDAY
2 .00 PM ~ED,NESQAY ,.
2 .00 PM THU~S()AY.
2 00 P. M FA tDAY
1

Q.v er 15 WordsRate
.
120
. ·S4.00
.30
$6.00
.42
$9.00'
. .60
$13.00
.05 / day,
$1 .30/ day

Ralftolrv ICM COflMCUUYe tuns. broken upd--v s wlll b eC: hMged
lor etch d81t n !iepilrate itds .
'

Announceme111s
1 Coa;d of lhanks
2

In Memory

'
.
·, ./'oltt~ wi"~ lt•lt•phtim • l'xdrmr~t'.~ ...

33 Fa ~ ms lor S11le
3 1 Bus•ness 8u•ldmgs
35 lob &amp;. Acreage
36 Re.,11 Eita1lt Wmt ecl

4

Gtve.-lv
&amp; H~ppy Ads
6 !-ost and Found .
1 Yard Sale I pard 1n ad\lau ce)
8 Pub II c Sale &amp; Auc1 10n
9 Wantudto .a 'uv .,,.

.

Me.tgs Coumy
Are• Code 614

Gellia Counly

•

. AreaCode614
446

C..IHpohs

7 992

367 Ch•hlre

, ,

M1ddl~rt

Pometoy
985 Ch•ter
843 Ponlilfld
247 let;u1 falls

388 Vtnlon
24b
256

Mason Co , WV

· Antoa

Rio Grande

Guyan Dlst.
143 Arabfa Dis I.
· 379, W..nul
·
.'

949

Racrn e

742 Rutland
667

.'
615
4S8
S76
773
882
895

937

~ude

304

Pt PleM&lt;tnl
Leon
Appht Grove

M•5on
New Haven
Letar t
'
Butlalo

ljhtiUIBfill
21
22
23

BusinMs Oppmlu!llty
Moni!Y 10 Lo.1n

Prola51onal Setvi.:t!i

-~

,t,

II

1 ,. ·

. '
&amp;1 ' Farm

t

.e;mm1 ·
'

Heto Want tid ·
SitUatiOn WantBd

lnliur cmce
8us1n..ess Tramn•g
SchoOls &amp;. lnst ruclron
Radio. TV I. CB Rcpom
MrscellilfrWu JO
WanledT6b o

\

31 ~om vs 1or Sat e
,
32 · Mr.Jblt ~ Honun; tor Soilt!

.,

3 Annoucement\

11
12
13
14 '
15
16
17
18 ,

Farm
.,(

'

M obile H ome~ tu r R ent

43
44

Farms lor Rent
AlfttrtJnent hu Runt

LIVI~sluck
E qu~pnu..•nt

62

W ant.:d t o Buv

63

liV ItUOCk

64

Hay &amp; Gratn

6&amp;

Seed &amp; Ferhli1er

71

7i

.,

Autos tor Salu

l w ck5 lor S01le

v ..m&amp;4WO 's
74 . Moto.cycl tlS
,
7S . 8(lllls &amp;. Mo1ors tor S&lt;tl ~
76 Auto Pans ·&amp; Acces!iOitl!:!i
77 ilouto Rep11t1
78 Canlptng Eqtupnu101

73

fu~nished R bon1s
Sp•ce tor Rent ,
Wanhtd 10 R8rlt

EqUtpnwm f or Rtm t
J:pheillle

•

79

(

Mt:l Lhand1se
'

4 o

Transportation

HouHt •for Rent

42

49

Suppl1~s

'

t '

41

45
46
47
48

••

·"

Real Estate

Emoloymr:nl
S~r VI :;e~

DAY BEfORE PUBLICATION

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WlONF&amp;_OAV fAPER

15
15
15

Mon•htv

.

run 3 d-ts a't no charge.
' P• •c~ of .ct tor all CitPtliilleUwni ., doublu pup: ot ad cost
'1 IJOIIII hnc type onl-w usl!d
."Sentntel ~~not rt!spons•blt! !01 etrou iolhcr lu st tlort IC_
h\.ock
tor eHoU hrst dav ad runs 111 paporl . Call bt!fore 2 .00 P m
diiV ilflltr pubhc0111on to rnaktt co .necll~n
'Ads· thafmust btl pa•d !11 iidvancu ••1
~ , Curd otlhoankli ·
· · Hiol'p py Ad1i
dn M•mo11aru
Ya~d Sillt:s

Weather

15
15

3
6
·10

• Ad s Ou tstdc Me1gs. Gallli or Mil5lm countuft must b1: pre
p~d
~
•
.
' fhcuwu $ ,50 d~scounl tor ioldS pond In atN cuu::c
'f.um ads , Gl'lfHIWiiY and Found arts undt.'f Hi wo~l.ls w~u bu

No big winner in the Super lotto game;f;

Words

Dav s
'1

i.

POliCil:S

• \1

\

Coampeu;. &amp; Motor

H o~ 1 es

Services

51 HoJMhold Good10 .
62 ·: Sporllng Goods
53 Anhqu•s

54 Mifc Metctiand•s e
55 Buil'd ing Supph•
56 Pe•s f or Sile
57 Muueallns numttnts
58 Frun 1 &amp; Vegutiibles
59 F or~ Saleor Trafie

Coolville

81 ' Homelmprowinent s
82 Plumbing 1!1. Hutmy

,.

83

E11Cillla1ing

84

Elect•~cal

8~

Grm tlfil l Hiiuhny

86
87

MobrleHume Repa11
Upholst orv

&amp; Relugera lton

.'

-

.

.JOHN A. WADE, MD.,

a

licences ·i88ued

a

Inc~:

PLEASANT VALLEY

EAI, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENEIAL ALLEIRGIST
.

"WE HAVE HEARIIIO AIDS" ~

I

(304)

I

Common Pleas Court news

I

A $35,444.36 summary Judgmeni has been awarded In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to
James E. Lucas from Wallace L. ·
Reuter.
In the Sta~·s case. against .

Stocks .

Dall7 atocll pl'lees
(.taotte:aa.m.l
.,.,, aH Jlhrll8mllb
., ..... 1011,. ._.
Am Electric Power ............ .30~
ATitr ....... :......................... 39~

AlblaDd Olt ................. ~ ......36~

Bob.Evau .......................... 1~
Cb.afiDID8' SbosJI,)el ••••
I 8~
City Holdlllc Co. .................. u
Fedeal Mop) ....................18~
0. 0 • • • • • • •

Goodyear TlR .................. .35Jt
l*lc'l ................ ·· ···~···· ······ · 2~

ICI!r Cattyrlon ••.• ,., ..............13~
t

m '?'......
.a;--.. ........................ . 17

... ....... ··•·•·••• ..•...... 35
lllc................ ~ ···~

ReM'•

• I

~
I

.,

ATTENTION.

(

t..,~

. ................
. . . . . . . . 1"
;~

l''l .......: ................1096

.................. :........... 18%

. .............
r

................. ...... 4% ,

lad,. , .. ,,,,,, ,,,., ,._.22, 1

,

Michael P . O'Neil, the defendant
has waived !tiS right to a sPeec!Y
trial. The actiOn has been con·
. tlnued for Jury trial on Aprl119. ·
A default Judgn1enl, has been
orderd against de(endants Ray·
mond K. Ginther and Jacquelyn
A: Ginther,. In the case of Ross
Erwin Grimes, et al, versus
Charles Ray Lawrence, et al. A
hearing to determine the amount
of damaaes Is aet for April 23.
First National Bllllni SerVIce,
et al, has been ordered to pay
Judgment' of $11,()59.66, In an
action filed · agalpst tllem by
World Class Resort lllc., doinr;
business u Royal Oak Resort
Club Inc.
.
·
The Melp County Common
Pleas Court has r;ranled Mar·
. r;lll'et M. Bollllir;er and. Delbert
H. BolBnr;er a dls10luUon of their
marriage.

Hospital ~WI
· V....._lllimorlal
Saturday admlstlou - Lola
M. Steiner, MlddlftiOl't; Berllla
Rice, Middleport
Saturday dltchari• - None.
Sunday admlsliOIII - VJvlan

TIIUI, Pomeroy. .

.

Sunday diiCharief - GDbert
Fitzwater.
{
· ~

I&lt;AISER.EM/!LOVEEI/11
'

.

•

Co.nfused by all the 'talk about where to put
your,ca•h ilnd stock from your Employee Stock
Ownerahlp ·Pfan? At Ohio Valley Bank, you'll.
like our· excellent. Hrvice and easy to understand an.Wera to all your ESOP question•~ Call
u• if you ha,;e 8 question or wish to mlike an appoi~tment ~here we can review your particular
situation.
.. . ·
..
·
'

.
Call elth.e r Bryan .Martin or Richard Scott
.

..

at Ohio Valley Bank
TOLL FREE 1·800-488-8882
or (614) 448-2831
••

'

Ohio Valley &amp;nlc wil/.le• 1o 1honl&lt; Mr. l&gt;fln SJidhom and, membe"
o/!~l 566IJ.for Ult&gt;ili,., w 10 ilu~ua lhelr ESOP plan lllilla
1hem.

Ohio \hlley Bank·
GaiiiP.Ha, Ohio
.
Member FDIC
Y•llometowa, home oWDed bank, •ce 11'71

.

WANTED

IEI,IYIIID TO

Roger Hysell
. Gal'age ,
lt. 124, P-.y Olio
AUTO &amp;TRUCK .
REPAIR

01110
,PAlLET
'
COMPANY

· AI•
PH. 992-5682 ·
or 992~7121

'LOW GUDE OAK

SAW lOGS

S160.1'ha'::'...

' GIMMICKS
l

POMEROY, OH.

Tria••'"'''

.....

*SHRUB It TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL
,.

SMALL IIGIIE
Ytilay l

• .,

.........rt....
MIITI AND IEIIVICE
FOr M~ Z ~~~ 4-Gyale.

11..:f:: far '
Homellt..W.....er,
TecUmHh,lriltll•

,.

lhlltcwt.

Pll. 992·3922
'

•

IP

ICIJI'S APPUANCE

SEIYICI

992 -S335 or 915·3561

A•- ,,_ l'elt Offtc.

*UGHT HAUUNG
*FIREWOOD·
.

'

•
•••

'
'I'

l

en)

- • requlremena.
Pllll• eenclaR

PIL 949-2101
.949-2860
Day or Night

.; 'ae..
NO

TOP SOIL
FOR SALE
949·2493

Jnl Str•t,

Oh.

~DAY._~~~Ifn . : ~i

FURNACE
FUIIIACE

---

Z~Yn.IJOP.

PARTI AJIID ..VICE

f*OCI

...; '

GMAAJi.'=IIIC

. ...

Oil'S APPUAICI

99!-6173

209 s.th 4th St.

' Ml•&amp;11art, Oh.

....

.'""'"

"At ••unllla Prim"

•VINYL SIDING
eAi.UMINUM llDINGI
•BLOWN IN ·c. ,'~

••uaw •7nr _.,
1·11·'tDo1

'"

SIIYICI
~ ~ ~~
';I
991-SUS or 915-3561 .......~
acr- ,,.. ,... Offtc.
217 t

s.c., t\Vitft.

.•o&gt;,~
· 1'.'
II' I

~~~---~~~~ .II;)
)~i

•

'

CUsTOM IUI.T
HOMES' &amp; GARAGES

· Buying Hours;
7:30-8:00
Mon. thru
7:30-4:00

BILL SLACI
992-2269
EVENINGS
...:

.,,

·II

~

,••.,.,,Ohio
Pll. 992-3561
,s1ss•,., ...

.-••r

~·

'

WANm
w. Va.Chlppina,l•c.
. ...spr~.....!

4-25·Hn

1/ 1/ '11/ 1 mo.

DAVE'S

BISSELL .''.•.
BUILDERS . ...

CHIPWOOD

•UMI!STQNE
•FlU DIRT

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

'!{ .

-·

':'- of
fl•

,.,. .. ....

...

IMitw cer&amp; Wt IIIII
. . ackllltll ... rN
out
w.....

,.tan.,

Plf.LLfOD
112·21

Mlddllpa.1,

IYIIY su•n
Stwleet hOIP&amp;

�-··----~--~----------~--------------~---

__ ..,. __ _

......

~to:._.....,

ar,

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

""""at-.:.:- ""&amp; ·
adiar

-··-utOI
Cit!

11p.111. ItO:. .

Qluxaar .. puppln, I ...._
ofCt, 1M worn:ed ~
Shaphord, 3IIM7WtOI.
.

..

(

Iloilo
DolliHorld, S yr.
old, ........ good .... hi kinin.
11 4-246155.
P'1'
7 ..... old. Hilt ....
I

;.; :.:.:,;.; ,. ______

· . 114·7~. or 1147G~441

Lost &amp; Found ·

6

-!51
,.::ow ~tar.
"onnt AmlnM
• ..., ....,...
1

11211.

.

Help W11nted

--!11!1a

.-

Yan:t Sate

Hair lllyiiol -

.lot growing

•on. . guarantHCf

ealarj,

tmmodloto -tng tor Hat&lt;
lll,:tot. Praiofabdy llilih lla,.gor
~. Apply I n -· Shiar
:Uuotonal..~~.utt.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yanl - - . . Poled In
Adnnoo. DIADUNE: 2:0D p.m.
,,. day J,. ad ill to run.

..

==z.~
""""
,. ·~- ~;;;
~Y
Jundt oono with or wllhoul
l;oll Larry t.tvoty 114-

s. -.:,

1116-

~~=r~mad~=
loill ond witttna to work

31111"'

LoW ......... -1180
per tliOuaand. Dotivlr.cflo Ohio
Pol!ot Co. Pomlrojl, OH.

lor

"-let

Marino - . ,
CI~
only lo llfl!IIY. Satary
baNd on -'IHcotiOi&gt;. R llartno, AI. 7, ocraa tram K·
~~~~ . 1111-441-2424, 1--7211-

11274.

ar.n1o1 ondlor p!onlol -ad,

dulf or po~ limo. !'or 81. ~ohn
L-...
Clluroh.._
Pino - · ·
P I - contact
Nlltll' Llura
~ 11 114-lt241110 or 114-

--.

Employment '),•rvlces

,
=

Part-diM help . , . . no ••·

In

poMnco - - r y. Ajlply
Lorobl'o Pllza; -

11
AVON I All I ilillrlly
8piiN, :1104-1711-1421.
AVON • AI - . CoN llarttyn

w--·214&amp;.

--1!!1--:
- ·Send-A~
~
prlnlillla~

Cotneelor

to

eou.-.o, _ion,

•o.

In an out

IIMMior'o DigiM aclv•

t

..... p;elarild. 'Expere.nc.

212M0 to:

F.A.C.T.S.

m.A,
·-·
..... EOE.

AI.

OH

w-· -•·

•

•

VISAIIIA$TEACAAD.
U.a: CHAAOE OUAAANT£EO.

AEOAAOLESS .OF

12

.,.n.,

r.:4.:-

wlc arne. '14 411 1224.

Willing~.. ~ Hold ~.
Wlehfoi....,.hH
oaa
Jobe
people. •,. ·
... do
3111.

oorpot Old, Labor,

llabl.. hornM fDr ....... Nnl:.
Call 114-112-7471.

I a.m. toe p.m. Mon•.aat. 614441-1111. 127 3rd. AM. Oo~
Npolill, OH
•

2br, lumlohld, _yord.
dlot~l. 210 Pouch
81. Konougo.I1-S.7473.

0000 USED APPLIANCES
Waohoro, dryft, ralrdgoo.._

City -

Wilt ~ In my - . . Flat· ·44
-Ad. 114-ll:il-341111.

udid. Booltlo
lllono
rona•-AI·-·
-

Apartment
for Rent

CrHI -1. Call 114-441-7311.

1torilt. 100 112 ,8-nd Avo.,
Ul leo pd., 1230/mo. Oopooil
~Ired. 114479-2171.

F1na nc1 al

10 -

-~.
Counly Appllanco Inc. OOod
uoadlll&gt;flllo-, T.V
. 1011. ODin

a.m. • 5.» p.m. AaM 21,.i-10.
.._, oflor ac""'"' ~no

1br,
.... woodiluo'ndntr
tumlohld,
otl Ulllhloo pofd,··
Including coblo. ldNI .Ior ono poro
~~
Mobile Hofnl,
Pork, 11-1102.

~-"'1.=:-

..:=:

tor , 1811.

Heap

1111.

FIIIWODd

IININTiii!DOII
AnWito'll HOTTEST 1n
- . . ~- '-lono. 100%
mum of
OUAAAN-

1.-"*"
TEEDII--741-1000.

!NOl!CEI
OHIO VA~LEY PUBUSHINO CO.
tho! YGU
youknoW,
do
bul'r 1 wtth peoptt
and NO'T lo oond money
thro&lt;lgh .,_ mall until you hlvo
lnVIIIIOIIad 1111 olto~ng.
AIWndon
llaoOn
Couniy
_ , . ,, A public -~~~ ot
otock '- being modo by M•-

Touro, lhc., P. 0. loa 243,
Hlrtfotd.jWY 211247.

CASH IN ON IIULT1-I!ILUON
MARKET RESEARCH.

Frwlnfoi - . l o p e bv maU.

WJtlo P. :0. lox 254 Ooilpol'-o
OH4513 .

1

'lea l Estate

1omlll ptOrll,
( - n g . - tt30C!).
.1C:C41-714CI.
FuN liGon -

w. ""'·
both. pr1va1o
CtoM to
~~......
· - '....,1.
ohoppdng.....
......
f•.
31
2· br., 1
..KI lid pltlo.

llaYIOJ
.w~nalt' IYJII - ·
l1&amp;o. 14-9112=2104.

PICKENS FUANI1UAE
Now/Uoad
Houllholcd turnlohlna. 112 mi.
Jerricho ~ RJ. Pl. Pleliunt, WV,
ooii304-17S.1480.

Four b11itcccn home. 1 112 bath.

0111 ot hlah
-·- OOI:illlcn.
Dn IOJC230
lol. AIM

oomdliiX.' 114-1112-21121
,.nladll-.-monlh.
Conlact
lor ....
polnlfutnt

1171 P'-t X-11 SlOG. 304-117111110oft•l:00 Pdl.

eiocll, brick, olpoo, winlinllil, IIC. Claudo Win·
- Rio Onlndo, OH Call I14:14Ut2't.

.417 Second Avld!Ue, 8ol 1213
jGitlipalis,.llhio 45631 '

- .
.
orat
Veterans Memorial Hospital
.Mulberry Hcts. Pomeroy,

F~

-

Til-COUNTY ·RECYCLING

7.
!iO.

114-

1)'oplcon.. 30ft. Inlier
with lip· out t ! v l -. . - .
CAli .. , 112 3117:

HENDERSON, WV. : Rt. 311 Adt. 10 Bldoro Equlpm•t
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 a.m.· 7 p: m . 7 lllyo '
ALeANV: 10 a .m. -6 p.m. 6 O.yo, Cl-d Sunday
HENDERSON: 10 o .m .·&amp; p.m . II Oayo, Ciolld Sun.·Moi!.
1

99~-151'14

41,000 - · ve.

11180. 114-~~:i~-~711.

'

1111 Cadllllo
·- -•dillon.
CAl -814-742-(day, llon-Frl.) 114-ll:il·-

1110 ljolly """' 14ll70, . .
....,_, lnaludad, 112.000. or
._. ~r. :IDW7MMI.

1•1, 12d0 two bldroom au

---trim,

a.

.

Motors

-~~

'

:;

"

=·
.Tl1-Hu11:

)P!Er;:tt .
TrAottfR :
~

·~·

Auto pans &amp;
Accessories

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials
992-22!8 2-1-'90-1 IIIG-

f7WI1,1 .

-:.
:
:
!2 ... ""
lr- l'llf ofllca

... ....,
IsM ....

Cosby family looks back an
some of ttoell favorite
moments.
GilD II Ill M•c!iYY•r Mac
helps a young women ...,ch
for lncan treasure in the
Andes.

-"'---·
___ __
Se1 v1ces
:..._

81

-·-111.
t-

~ Murphy·Brown Murphy's
mentor, now a retired
JOurnalism teachar. opens a
school. t;1
Jump Street A
college basketball star dies
ot a drug overdose. Q

11J Waatmlneler Kennel Club
Dog Show Opening_ night,

EEK AND MEEK
"'•

Home
Improvements

~f'df.&lt;0'.lSll100lT GFin.f'S

1:30 e

see his movie idol. D

under the stops of City HaiL
Q
t:OO G (]) Ill Qolclln Olrtl
Btancha mHII a man who

::La
57

·

Will_,.,-

.. -.

•ON'IHI5~YIN Hie'TORY'IN

1114 - · c:.lo, 1104-1711-7111.
, ... v...
aooc1 - . u-.Prtor,
14,400.

black AmeriCI. C

-· --.ft-

-- &lt;

• «J1 Allen Nation Sikes

seta out to provo George's
inno&lt;:ence .in a ctrug case. Q
«JJ Larry King Liver

-

1:30 e

club mamblrs etart 10
eartor"o Pl,..blna
OoHipollo, Ohio

sen

1:50 (I) MOVIE: The Legend 01
Ull&amp;le . . . . . INA) (2:1 0)
10:00 (J) 700 Club Wilt P1t .

· eRo--

-ng, AIC and ;
-rtoat hilll and lotvloo, '

Crooh

Cll Ill Empty Nalt Harry
~· he'e ,.
lor a aerious ,

commerlcal ...................... '
~-MIIn, ~1'110.

l_

·'

84

•
'

DOMrMLG~

•

m

'.

.
HRNICE
-··

..
I .

maker Instantly revaal!l which ligna are
romantlcatly perlect lor you. M811 $2 to
Matclllnak.,, c/o IIlia -•paper, P.O,
Box 81421, Cleullllld, OH 44101· 3421.

PISCII C'*- 8 " Ill . ) llui!MU
lituatiOna COUld 111 • 1r1t1t lllclty to IJI.
gin with today. TMy COUld debliltale
turtller H people get Into the 8C1

=

forming dlll[ltlll . . .

-run ·

lddntl!••··
·.
AIAQia..JI4YJ_IM_ (.Iii. .. P&amp;.., Wdlln 1m-

v-..

qu1111cn•·or.to dllca..d en .cc:au :&amp;tng
lithe ....... IDak tuotnv.
.
·
por1lnt at crttrr.1 tn1aim111pn • ,. ,CAIICM (.... l1olt/lf B) II you ...
¥llllld lO ,oil ' ICJda;, Hn'l nillle Idle llllltfllt .. flilp I 11ft . . . .t.. lltodfJr,
rnlllllllot'"VIIIgiOOOinlloUIOi ....IIO- •auft ........ ~ICIIIIIIIIOIIIIO gift liP
ry. ,... ......... llltvrt ........ _ . ....
end!UII•
~ wliiN It tlpiL for IIIINIIOI lnd · !'::'...,~~~~~~~
you'l!llild
,.._ . _, . H. .n..
. Allro4rll!h
. . Mawo-.- ·.... -. . . ..- ., Put ~

ton.
u•lltfMICI....... 11.._...1. ·

Lot ... ••In IIJCat1. C1111

i:W........

r

~

__

,...-..;__

1011811 be ...

._trlfM!y CDQ I rt of delllll It . . bl 1•
Be Ylt"f palfl!ll wtlll . l/QIII' ln!POr1art .Idle llillt
liMit ooutclllo you In lftd
platl In 1M ,_. ....... Tlllnp rnlgill not IIIII
......
lui
111r1 o11 rMhtrllllllly 111e1 you IIIIIJ ,_ a TII!IJ It t
81 Do no1 1111e
ina111141C110 C1111ng1 thlm. 1M
.,,flllltiO IDr Qlllllld In V0UF 11Uitln111
illllr 001 1'111 IIICI • lllOl4ld 1J0111 out' d 11 1'1(111 fOMII. Dan'1 biiiNid to fdlk

...__~-

_....._, __ f

l&gt;

.

.,'

relattonshlp,
. (lJ

•

CIJ llacll ..,. in OJblt
• «ll Twtllgdll zIIJ l!vantng ......
1D lllwe
,
10:30 e Cll Ill "-" Members of
the congregation perform In
an amual blnefit variety
ahow. D
Cll No F'athlr, No - · No
Uncii .... Q
=•atch Tonlgdot

.:g.

•

11:00 ()) Hal d: .... And·

.

~~......~-&lt;"'

• «JJ Anlanlo Hal

tor wldouu of a drug Chlelllln.

.•

• Ctlurcft•Shi•:MI:.=IIIon
11:30

o Cam111JT'

Sot..

Well

t .t

s•

St

N.-..

It •
Pus

4.

Ell!

Pus

All pall

Openin&amp; lead: • 2
mond ace and ruff a diamond, and lead .
to dummy's spade ace ~nd ruff anoth-...
er diamolid. Nat wotlld come a clubto dummy's ace aDd i ruff ol Clummy's ·
last diamond. The red suits woUld now
be gone, and ibe cleleodln' trumps
also eliminated. Sot&amp;lb would forao tbe
possible overtrick and simply play a
low club from his halld. m this instance, West Would will· the club and ·
have to either lead back into the K-J
or give declarer a ruff and a sluff lor ~
his contract.

~:"Ia
1 Intrigue
2 Knowing
·3 Gum · u~

Yeaterdlly"e Ana-r
.
·
4 Famous 14 "You may 26 Musical
engraver ·
fire
inslrument
5 Glossy
when-, 27 Renatalealt!er
Gridley" 30 Woody vine
6 Olfactory 16 Hurl
31 Acquires
sensation 11 He loved 33 Boxing
7 Drink up
Beatrice
. great
8 Condition 20 Indian
36 of neatness tribe
T11nguay
(sl.)
23 Somber_' 37 One 11 Wobble 24 lmpot1une
lime
the~s

canon

..•

25llke.
O'NeiH's

ape
_26 Trying
period

.-

•

•

•

I

. •'

28 South ·
African fox
29Cooklng .
style
32 "Quincy"
co-star
33 Glllelpte's
music
34 Inlet (Sp.)
35 Triumph
over·
37 Jewish

-·
.'

'

'.

'
&gt;

month
31 Metal
fastener

DAn.Y-CitYPIOQUOiiS --:- Here'•bowlowerllt: .

2112

AXYDLIAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

eiar

!IJI=IIRI
IIJ
VIal Crockell
· oounllll hla 1011: Tubbl 111~
81411'10.

·+KJH ·

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: Norlb

27 Sapient

w

DOYOU .KNOW
WHAT DAY IT ISTODAY, DOC? '

and-Ina
· -andPfno

814 441

raminleca. D
Cottage laek-.n

-

: Lei ..
of Vlft.
end- ..

(]) Ill Dear John John

realata joining In when the

tho •""·'

1111M 1107.

··

a ·Nalhvltll Now

of .........

1 l)lullclngs

push tor unity galvaniZe

GJ) aiiJI MOVII!: 'Lo..
llollt A v a - vo;aee•
.cas s-~a:- (2:00) Q

Bullnn• ·

~~--·

L,JP ~ADOPTION."

wllolhouldn'l Ill::...
Allll8 (I' Ill 11:Aprll 1t) To be on
the ur.- tod8y, Ill prtper8CIIo han·
die on your 011111
t g . _ wt1ere you .
uoullly I I C I N I I , _ lrom
o!Mis. Ald.IMl' not Ill~.
TAUIIIIS (Aifl 8 ... II) Wliln !*'·

. . . . :_. . . . . ltullnlll.

....

LeiSER PurRL.tOOL.F

Cllryllor l.obonon, 1
•""'"'
toildld,1110ne.P GOnd,
S.OO. Aleo,
h

~-~.at-. AIM a -

·ofiiD&amp;IJ

'

Monet~ Night MoviiiPGI
(2:00)
Cll (!) yea On 1111 Prize tt
A call to pride and a renewed

' THE: NEXT OA.Y. HI:RR

1111

....
iOll: ·
- - .........
~""
t ladon1.11
. 1DC

' •

.

'

............ 1 1 - -

.'

1·

-' THAT VSI:V'e.4ME Oolo.Y
HISec:N, RLIOOI...F, 1-DeT
THREE:
t=lo\IRS
a= 'THEM.
•,
'
.

iSijj;, FR'.N2 LEII!&gt;ER INVeNTED
'f'l.1E NOIH05ABLE: I'll iTTEN .

.,

34

•J.....
• a01 Ill
M0\'11!: '1111
The Nile' AIIC

MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP .

liltlon

Wogon. CaN 114-·7411.

~IOSO.L

4p.lll. I

claims to ~ her husband 's
iltigitimate son. D

, _ aoodlnoido,' out.

Eacm

12 Cook
13 Cary
Grant
film
15 Exist
16 For each
17 Traveler's
rider
18 Heavy
20 Greek
mountain
range
21 Grain
22 Hastened
23 Done In

am City A transient diis

---11.
1111 Pard a-t llllak ...... 2dr,

Fold

1 ~ =~~t

Ill ALF ALF sneaks

Into a retlremanl home to

......

a......,.

(2)

•su

Bailey's 40 Poi source :
"Swampy• 41 River In
5 - Negri
Turkish

Empty Greve (1:45)

AI ak~lf, ....,.; 114-ri.

I

1/alenllne Day Dinner
ID MOVIE: Qeraidlnl (2:00)
1:05 (I) MOVIE: llta Olrt in 1111

'?

••

SOUTH ·
tKQ9743 Z

by THOMAS JOSEPH
•
ACROSS 3t Neighbor
1 Beetle
of Ky.

live. from Madison Square
Garden
121 Holiday Goul'lnl'

~ SEIJA"Ia5 SllU: ~ 10
CCl.l£.CT ~- ~ ~ Sf'EAI=:l~G

.AKQJ9H
IKIOH

CROSSWORO
.

@PMIINewl

i

.c.,-~-

EAST
t!O

18 «JJ 21

1tt2 ~ Loboron - Pl.; PI PW, 1ii1. .......

11100. 11 t

·

Examines the effect the
climates toevo on the planet.

f: llnlto,
.,_, 12-:o:

1oo1oo.

D ·

Cll CIJ Tfie Mi,.cll Planet

1114, lhHtl: •112 tl., Room ''
Mount al~ oondlt~, antenna, '
AII-AI ....... lolllll-ln, '

=

11t411

7:35 (2) Binford And Son
1:00 ()) MOVIE: Mall Me AI The
Fllr (2:00)
• (2) Ill Colby ShOw The

ANYTHING.

·or _.,..
Lh:1wad alubl 'an. Rkllnour ·
II I lul.~1711.

' -.ilia Uti

. f

CONf'tlfCTfp TO

''

drtoad Conoinloltals.._"'5
C II*·
••• lnllu:iilllll ..._ idll; ,...

111,100.

IIJ Cnlllflrl
1D Night Court

1170 VW &lt;;ompor, Y.,Y good!'
-Ilion. SlOG- CaH •14-112-,
1171.

tJon I

1111 Ill. in Uw In!- end -

~~~~:P:·'WIQ

79 • Campers &amp;
'.
'
Motor Homes
___....,.;;.:;.:.:.;_,;.;,;.,;;~'

· -

•011

II 8 !,..,..,_, Ton!trhl

·a Ill Mama'l Family

TOO lAP IT 1$N-'T

IAJ 73
4AU2 '

The run-of-the-mill player would
quickly see tllal he was right to co to
live spadet rather than doubling the
oppoaenta in live hearts. Allbough live
hearta doubled might be Bet two or
three tricks, that would be only 300 or
500 as opposed to making live spades
vulnerable lor 650 or even 680. Mak·
ing 12 tricks in spades would require
only lllat clubs split l-2 with the club
queen in the East band. So that run-ofthe-mill player would rull the second
heart, draw trump, and then play ace
o! clubs and a club lrom dummy.
Wben East showed out on the second
club, there would be weeping anq
gnashing of .teeth and bitter com·
plainta about luek.
An expert would take a different
view. He would ·ask himself what
might cau!e live spades 10 be !let. The
answer is that lbe contract is threat·
enecl · if clubs are concentrated in
West's band. So a competent declarer
· would give up the possible overtrick to
cuarantee making· his contract. He
would rull the aecond heart, play king
of spades, then lead to dummy's dia-

a

R...... or
"'-"""· . , . -

mlill ._.., .... Hll Ad, I iolldto
M,780.-

35 ~LOts &amp; ACNI!ge
WIH!IS-2 ....

: ,

•

'

-.MAIN STREET
PIZZA .

I

' '

For Lease

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

LOWDT PIKES
IIGHIST QUALITY
flEE LOCAL DBIVIIY
POMEIOY AND MIDDlfPOIT'S ONlY
' LOCAU. YOWNED PIZZA SHOP.

$'HE $~1P I ti.A.VE
A GREAT ~PIA#tlf'IG
VOICf, 'UT _IT'S

1111 T - Clllca, -'""", aood
oonc1. AC, S1000. 111 11t~

2 lift cholro, ciOih oovorlna, 304.&amp;111-2471·
S7aO. caoh, coot SI,GOG. 0"""11-1 Umlild iiAI!tlon Or·
Fumllhed
45
-11. Llll lhln yoor olcd, gon wHh lA tw - · Ex·
871-1173.
Cllllnl OCIHII!on. 114-441-:1772
Rooms
24 bulb woltl tiMing bed, dlyl.l11 ttl 1111 atllllll'fL
Roome tor,.,·- or month.
gullar
.lllortlne ot _ 1120/mo. Ollila 12500 &amp; 32 lollib wolho laming lndivlduol
bM, 13,000, or bMt afftr. 114- beallli--. .....,. gultaMI,
Hotel. l1t 4411810
:ta?-11274.
.Jell W I - iniiNCtor, 114e
P'ece
livln"orri
lUIIe.
$171.
-..o77, fmftM apanlngl,
·
-wlth$t"ld
..
Allo"traliet'- o
All
• • Chow OT, .......,..
W-n Iampo 125. 114-112· -~.IlL
ln!orlor. ...... ooNnli,
Call 2l:o""'p.m., :t814.
-CAlli
1151,-WV.
- - tape, v.e, &amp;1,200. Alwayo tho ~lon ilagulw
pdono ........... ba
prton, at K·MIIn'a
P1
.t ' I'MIIII a1 r .._,
46 Space for Rent
- 0U
· .:&amp;11
Ptono
-.
co II todo y lor .......
,.._ quoco. 11
3
- · 304112
1oftlca "" ..... 1100 Jllr 441-1311.
2321, . . Word; Itt 441 4110
room, AlluiiiUialncludJd. caM
FMih looUi 11 t 112 Mlf, Mil
Llloyoftollo!L 114-441-4222.
1 - Oido- II, M,OOO.Parb Plonor, 12 Inch otend. Ldloo now. 1510. 114-441mueo
Counlr)' Park, 11/51.
a, .. ,_...,,
~-II,~.. .Cidl
114-ta-7471.
.

---.can-2

11

'

· 125 HP, lvlllruda
CaU14-211-1311olor
7:0D p.m• ,_.
- · lop,. Rld:wlda Marini, Rt. 7, Qal.. •
IIDoMa. ICI'HI trom K....rt, 11 ..~

. . . . . . ond - --

Top Cuh poicl. Old tumHuro !oid"' do~ uh do&lt; AKC
cu-Rio,
quiHo,
oriontol
CoeUr 8r:::llot Pupo, 114177
PIIIntlntlll, ao,., • entire • • • ;:;::=~•ft~•:==:::ODp.=7m:::.·-=-~
call OOKict JIM.IB-3271, or Sl.nM&amp; ldttana. I wb. old.
304 ..2MU4.
or Llillo PDinl. Short hair
m,
1..ont hllr 110. .,._.
54 Miscellaneous
1201 .
·

WE IUY AL~ NON FERROUS SCRAP, lATTER lEI,
STARTERS, TAANSMISIIONI. ALTERNATORS. ETC.

614

oq-.

1114

PhanM:'l:

1m

OffHS 3 LOCADOIIS TO SD¥1 TOU- ·
POMEROY, OHIO: Rt.
S.R. 143
,\LIANY, OHIO: At.
S .fl. 143

PAYING AS OF TODAY, JAN. 30, 1990
#1 Copper 70C: ""'lb.:
Cleen Dry Aluminum Cena, 311C: ""' lb.

woadblmer,
1131, 114- • •.

tm

.

.

All

=

tar-.

1114 - . 1:1Jq0, good
__
!t"-.~
_
12x11 odd on br.

75 ,Boats &amp;

illoiotlna

1111 · - Umttad. 2 - · lnunaoulolo -Mion:

114-M-2101.

· Mirchandlse

FRANK 'AND ERNEST

1-!J.M

,71

By Jamu Jacolly

two years ago

vanishes. Stereo.
1111 VldloCountry
1221 Abbott And Coa7:05 CD J.ltaraona
7:30. (]) Fllllidy Foucl
I!J CalliOI Ba~IIIMIH

.,.,. Uro, WOgol.

Musical
1011.
oon:~~~= 2 uorciao - , 1 dual ooc11on
Instruments
oortalolo. "" 110. 1.-. "ii';;n-p;;;;jj~~-- 1 - Culio11 VI, - .
~-:,':~4-:l;::; -12111.
1Up.m. 7UO
Amplliior, 171-1331 aftw I :OD Pll.

12110, 2 •• , 00111, ...... .......
newl1 ••• :JJiad. Fuefoll fur.
MOe. S¥00· ftnn. ,14..M11.
1101141171 wllh add. llclomo, In
K.C. 8chac11 112.000, on tend
· Evonglno 114-742·
2387. '

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

outornOtto,

55

Buy or ltil. Alvor:..
1124 E. !loin 111-.
To,. Townllqu11 AparlmO&lt;M. Hou,.: II.T.W.IO:OO o.m. IO
Efoalni 2dlr, 2 - · 1111 oq. ft . p.m., ~ 1 :JIO do I :OD
1 1/11 bath, CAICH, d l -. 114-·
.

.

.

lomlly car. 11100. 814-112-5311
"-4-7-doyo.

Building
SUpplies

disappeared

NOIITH

,to\15

Forget
the overtricks

body ot a man wdlo

:.o:42":

Wovon ruga lor - · Wll do
-vlng.l14-112 3010.

Antiques

lion " " - · 11000. - . 121.
1115- oiMI. · ......

'

BRIDGE

o Milnil VICe The newlound

SOD, :110

condlllon. EilloUIIdul, Will kiDl

-r.

441 0331.

.

-xy

(J) PM Megr'1M

egc-..~e~~~-

1111 Yllmahl, ytrogo, muo1-1
Now 11r11 &amp; bolliry, ...,.load
lt,IOO 0.8.0. 814-241-1137.

78

VCR Dloc Ployor w/180 movloo,
PliO. LArva 811igo llorol '
doolgn, llvlna room ouho, UOO;
Ono A_,, 125; au- oizo

Suloblo lot 1 or 2 _ . . 110:.

.......

tor .... 30W711-

1m Font LTD. 4 dr. In ntllllnl

__;,,;;.;,;..;;:.::.:..;_ _ , _
111S.1110 Iorge IIPIP co!II0-

Two rvom apllltrnent. Private
bath. Slooplng ,_,. olooro
bath. Ono - n g room wtlh
ortvoto bath. R........blo. 110:.

74 Mot
;..;.._,.;;;,;,;.;o.:;;rc;,;.:..yc;;:;
·fee
.:..;..'- =:

I tor Sale
•
~~~~~~~~~ ·

Corn, 1143 I* baa

Induct '- Basin - Curio - Yonder - CANDY
First coed: "If you've been jogging how come you gained
weight?" Second coed : •t don1 know, but fNBry day t
jog to the SIOI'~ to buy CANOY."
·

I ~O:::.;ouot Q

How I1.0D
Pll' ba'-, - ·
33fl,
,

1170
SIOG. 304-11

Soiled Oak Dlnlna Room Tobia
wl2 •vee 1: 4'" chairs. Exc.
oond, $300. ~14 311 1101.

V., ntoa - . largo 1
noom, untumillhod opt., lor
·•-Ina
Jllrk.

Listenina Devices
Dependable H11rina Aid Sales &amp; Serlri~
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages
32 MOblla Homes
, forS&amp;Ie

~ 1(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

z

2_ IJIIrtmonl

·-··-7-.

:

Complo1o tho chu&lt;klo quolld
by lil ling in tt'i• missin_g worda
you develop lroll1 ,.p No. 3 below.

.,.•

am 111-0I.F - Q

171441'1.

='-'=
..
"':~4
CutiWb:e"

Fumlohld Oorago Apl. Including Wlehor Drvw, olr, cillln,
no ~, ouhablo lor IWo, 110:.
441-111•or.otouo livlna. 1 and 2 bod-

a111. plargrouna. 2 poole.
aort&gt;aldll--. ··~
ot -;:..'. 1'14-311·7110.

::= !.:.~1.10:':.1~
i*,

- . IOXR, good Cond, -

· ·

Q -

Cll c..,..m Altllr
Cll CIJ MlcNIII Lehrer
Newlltour

~

I

='.5'.
Tfi-·· ~·

~~

a• •

, . . S.tO BiuorA .u 1ft•, ve,: .

oonct,

M0 6 E S I

onlyyou
aak,"
're ·
"because
going into lhe ••••• ·-- t•

the

Cl)llody Electric

II)~

OOod lllllad hay lor . . .. Phone
114-742-2221. .

till Fond

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. Ill
0118 St., Oollpoldo. - · Uoad
tumn.... -~•- Wootorn I
Work ~1-114-4-3151.
S.ara
Ktnmor.
lteekaW.
1 dryer, wloho, In oxootilnl ohlpo, 304-171-5124.

YIHage

ma, orlf414S.:I214.

~

• • elll ABC ..... 1;1

i

71 Autol for $ale

- h Sl-. Mldclloport, Ohio.
1 ond 2 bodl&lt;lOIII tumdohod
~ olio 1 room ofdlctoncy,
utlhiM poled, ..- . . ...
qulrod, 304-182·2511.
FCU' I"DDOft
tumiMid
or untumlohad. umh~oo Jllld.
Twa. omall children occoplad.

at

Ragii1:Nd Polllcl He:&amp;faad
lluiio,
AI &amp; lmbr¥o
Ca!no.- , . _
' Toytcor, 114-I(S.

=·==-: :_·!:.., he woman
grinned,tourist. "I

I

()) SportsLook .

PITCioiES ..

"Are you having trouble with
our languager the man .ked

1.,,..,.;.1:..::;..1.:.,1;:,...:;_1,...:..,1'~ Q

8:35 (2) Andy ~rillf!h
7:0G ~ ilci_IICfOW &amp; M,., t&lt;liig

~424, ·--271-0274.

1131 -*bon Piiol
-movloo.
SIWmo.
Walk 10 ..
Calil14-4*2511. EOH.

One bedroom, upm.IN. Nioe.
4G2 112 --~h II., Palnl
Pi-nt. 114-0N-aul.

w::.

TIIREE 5TAA161ll

I

N AI I S

=·==·

1:30• l2l ,e NIC Nillilllr - ·

10100D mil-. &amp;I,SOD. n 1n-;

i!724.

ESTATU

ap1rtmenta

home. ' ~ 114 441 3321,
11Wet-1112.
·

IO Fob 21th. loll 1 .T-,
114 ...'-22M.«I1-4 . .

BEAtmFUL APARTIIENTS AT
IUDOET PRICES AT ~ACKSON

814--.

Lool . .

'""'--... -~

con-

llonor
and
il!vwoiCitl
-·
ballroom
'
125;
A!lll'lllllnilln llldd-. From ·
largo
living
ouHo, .
1184. lh,...gh March 1a. ,._.,.~~, $50; loa F!rot monlh rom 1111 to • - ..... 1 n..- ; 1 oold ·
who quoU!y. Call 114-112·7787. 614-2...-.

EARN MONEY Rm!111 - 1
Ellootilorr 1 - PDIIIIIIII.
Ootlliill. 11) - - lxt. y.

a:

STRIKE.OUT ON

:111: ' - lui,.-""""'""-'

Pi-r -

1124025.

Ntoaiy lllml- omo11 - · 53
aID now ohopplna - · · ,;;.;;_

~ : LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

SOMEONE 1 CAN

..,:n.,

I,

provtdad. t2Qimo. Clll 11,._
441-0213. .

..,.i"'IMnt

..

c==. •••

EOH. .

Business Services

·ro 61\'E A

1111
11,..

dlllonor, olngto bod. Coil 114-

3 , _ , opt po~l.olly dumlahocd,
,.._ carplll, rww paint, ne~r
-nglon
Scioool,
1100
•:::·.~114-441·1700
11111
n lo.m •.ep.m.

=~~.~·

King II,. wo'-r bod wHh poddo&lt;f,.II 1200. 304"711-1510 Iller
5:00PM.

MuM Hill Qu· tton, air

room

31 Homes for Sate

In IIIII:

~OU601N6

_,

I

1--,1;.:-:.;,1'·,.:~lr:-_...;r:"""!· i

11J WOIIcl f'*r
IIJ .rem
1D Chii'IH In Clwllll
. &amp;:011 (2) levellY HIMtililal

I I!ATE TO WA5TE
A VALENTINE ON

I

.I
~

The 111011

IIJ tl]j
HI-Man
1111 Top caret
1D Hangin' In

::... 8aill: ~T.V. lllllld1ud
oabln.t • ..U. I14 4413.1 .

l=ott.,..

awn

!-------...L----------1
-

,S!R,AAE

Clll_

$521, - k Ul out lor ....lilY '
~ low IM'k&gt;U. Mallolwl Rt.7N. i14-

I

c::."

EomPODloSIOGpor-lng at ........ Call
115-473-7440 Ext. 303.

I !)ON T t&lt;HOW ..

Trallor,
oond, 1221/mo.
Nl. • .....
.. depod,
can ren1: -wtlh
opllon ....... 114-441-4-.

2 badraom tralillr tor
~ (loll) tor ""'· .

'M,Exool-lnADI FIR

I

VALENTINE
TO CI!AALES?

Eotablllijod Carry out'&amp; dolll tor
- Ill """'-"' In otooto. lncdudlng~~ ,_,, .11,800,
. . .bl. for IIIGf'1l
11
7241oftwlp.m•

Situation'
Wanted

"""'"'

, ',

tldoo PouiO'o Day Cora Colltor.
Solo, •ddol"•blo, childcaro. 11-F

CREDIT DOLLAR

AATINO. CALL NOWI 1 - .1421017 EXT. U21124.

- b l y l porto,
- craoilwo
II ~·

c:ometaot 1•

-·1.

--eooo

'by
2 lox

41114.

t' afoo

County ,...,. Tour., Inc. to
opM111 en ucur.lon v-.1
ctgo Plua, Ooiiltlo!'-o Olt
tram Point PIIIMant, on the
EAIIN !lONEY Alllddntl - 1 Ohio lnd Kanawha AI_... lloquoot lor I n - by mol
130,000
yr. Dotaldo. 11)
Ext. y. only. Mlleon County W.ter
411Z.

. - ,· 1·

73 vans &amp; 4 WD'a

Jluslneaa
. Opponunlty
-epang optlltcotlonl

... XLT, Undlr -

- r, -~ -

ttutblo Coli 114-112or IU tt2 5427 iof tnlonnlltlon •nd Intel lllw.

-

't

· - · ~~~14747.

18 Wanted to Do

Wanted to

•

R0 T UT

belt :ov.cr of
wilelll\lmale ~ featured. Q
C1J lquaN OM TV 1;11
• «JJ AndY ar-.

IIJIIUillr ai1d

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

'

~ lpaclll

8New8
Cll Wild -

-' -··--dian-·a:··

fuMime pilrt~lme come grow
wtth ..{ 114 Ul ~1.22.

'•

el2l • • elll a eo

.

'

to aled in
and otcdorly ..,.,
c.:: 114-ll:il-tln. .
.

Bult, - R..ard.
·· 411
iloo
.'
home.
114
3325,
114-2...1112.

9

1

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·(All OF

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INStitANCE
·' NEEDS
DOWNING-OIUs··
MUUEN, MUSSER .·
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. BOYS

·Moigs High School

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GIRLS

Completed l'l!ular Seasan

Eastern "·

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SOUTHERN ,

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E~ing·Dir.:tor

mariner for several months ~nd
has shown a good potential for
the work. He further explained
that M1Uer w111 continue working
full time. the other half tn·water
department supervision. The final steps to annex the
property below Hobson to,Story's
Run Road on the Ohio River side
of State Route 7 was taken at the
meeting. The third and final
reading was . given and the
ordinance adopted by council. It
wlll now be submitted to the
secretary of , state .'(or final
approval an'd Mayor Hoffman
reported thai this should take
just a few weeks.
•'
Again discu ssed at the meeting

BOYS.

·''

'"· 992-2121 ·.
101·..LIEIRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

.,

FIL 16-SyRiiNi v..,-A.,
Sectional T - t l At Molt•
High School
,
FEI. 22 -vs. ly..r Crook
FEI. 21-SoutMrn/lly..r Cruk
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MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
'1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov: 24-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 1-Miller .; ........................... Away
Dec. 8- Trimble .................... :...... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co .......&lt;..... ; ••• : ••• Home
Dec. 22-Belpre .......................... Away
. Dec. 29-Lopn ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Aiexander ~ ...................... Home
Jan . .9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12::-liller ........................... Home
Jan. l&amp;.:...warren .......................... Away ·
Jan.. ,19-Trimble ......................... Home
.Jan. 23..,.Nelsonville-York ............. Away
Jan. 26 .....WIIIston ....................... Home
.JiJ~ 30'-Vinton .Co .... ,.. ,.............. Away
Feb. 2;Jitlpre ............................ Home
Feb.' 3--Athens .........:.................. Away
Feb( &amp;--Alexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ............... Away

.-THE
CENTRAL .
·~ TRUST

·cOMPANY
".Your Finaneial -~
Center:"
97 N01T11 SECONO
IIDDLE.OIT, OHIQ
' 992-6661
~- .. ~
lt$T&amp;IIMM

LOANS · •
992-3077
"

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Miller ............................. Away
Nov. 24-Federal Hocking ....... :.... Home
Nov. 28-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 1-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec .. 5,-Kyger Creek ............. ,...... Home
Dec. 8-Southwestern .................. Away
Dec. 15-Southern ....................... Away
Dec. 16.-:Symmes Valley .............. Home
Dec. 22-Gak Hill ...•.....................Away
Oec.29-30-Holiday Toum. at Pt. Pleasant
Jan. 2-Fedaral Hocking ............... Away
Jan. 5-Hannan Trace .................. Home ·
Jan. 12-North Gallia ............... ,... Away
Jan. 19-Southwestern ..:: .......... :. Home ,
Jan.26-Kypr CrHk.. ... ;............... Away
Jan. 27-Miller ....................... :.. .'Home.
Feb. 3-Southern .................:...... Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Feb. :&amp; ·Oak Hill ......................... Home

SOUTHERN HIGt! !ICI:IQOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov . .25-Southwestern ................. Home·
Nov.' 211-Kyger Creek .......•....... ,,.:. Away
. Dec. 1-Gak Hill ......................... Home
Dec. 5-North 'Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 8-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 15-Eastem ..................... ... Home
Dec. 16-Eastern Pike .................. at O.U.
Dec. 22-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ............... :. Away
Dec. 29-Athens ......................... Home
Jan. 5.-..oa~. Hill ..................,........ Away .
Jan. &amp;.;....Gallipolis .......... :............. Home
~an. 12-Kypr Creek.. ................ Home
Jan. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Home
Jan. 26-North Gallia ....,.............. Home Jan. 27-Ravenswood .................. Horne
Feb. 2-Eastern .......................... :Away
Feb. 3-Federal Hocking .....•... ~ . : ... Away
Feb. 9-Southwestern .......:........... Away
Feb. 16-Symmes Valley ............... Away

..

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Nov. 20-Southtrn ....................:........ Away
Nov. 30-Miller ................ :.,............. HC)IIIe
Die. 2-£utem ................................. Away
Dec. 7-Trimble ................................ Home
Dec. 11-Nelsonville-Yort .................. Away
Dec. 14-Wel:ston ............................ Home
Dec. 18-Vinlon Co ............................ Away
Dec. 21-;Belpree .............................. Home
Jan. 4-Aieunder .............................. Away
Jan. S.:...Fednal Hock inc ..................... Away .
Jan. 11-Miller .................................. Away
Jan. 15-Ea!tlrn ............................... Home
Jan. 11-Trimble ................................ Away
Ja. 22-llels;lllville-York ................... Home
Jan. 5-Wells•on ............................... Home
Jan. 29-Vintoq Co........................... Home
Ftb. 1-Belpre ................................... Away
·feb. 5-:-AIIxander ............................. Home
Feb. 8-Federal HockinJ .................... Home
Feb. ID-Southem ...........:......... ,...... Home

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nav. 27-North Gallia ........................ Away
Nov: 30-Hannan Trace ... :................. Home
Dec. 2-Meics .................................. ~ome
Dec. 4~Kypr Creek ........................... Away
Dec. 6-Trimble ..................:............... Away
Dec. 7-Southwestern ........................ Home
Dec. 11-Southern .......................... ,. Home
Dec,. 14-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Dec. 16-Federal Hockinc: .................. Away
Dec. 21-0ik Hill .............. :.............. Home
Jan. 4-Hannan Trace·......................... Away
Jan. 1D-TrimbJe ............................... Home
Jan. 11-Noi'lh Gallia ........................ Home
Jan. 15.:...Meics .................................. Away
Jan. 18-Southwesttrn ....................... ~way
Jan. 20-:-Federal Hockina .................. Home
Jan. 25-Kypr Creek ......................., Home
Feb. 1-Southtrn ............................... Away
Feb .. 5-0.k Hill ................................ Away
Feb. 8-Symmes Valley ................ :.... Home

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138
136

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• fdlll"have &amp;en jl»ii or otherwise

disposed ot, four •are subjects of
proposed agreements and three
,L.,_.______....,____________'Tu7&lt;p;'1;'(G;";r::;:np::ih't.ic -. are awaiting trial,.·
._
Addltionally,theofflcerepres·
en ted a West VIrginia juvenlle In
·
·.
.
Juvenile Court with regard to an
·e
extradition on felony charges.
Using 1988:s COSI figures avail·
a'
able from the State Pi!bllc
Defender's Office of $750 per
WASHINGTON !UP!)- JanuJanuary,auto sales zo6med by
felony
and $225 per misdemeanor
ary retail sales · increased i.6 5.4 percent - the largest in·
1or
Meigs
County, lhe county .
!Jercent to $146.4 billion in the crease s.Jnce a 6.6 percent jump in
wake of a we~k holiday buying October 1988- followed by a 2.5
season. led by a surge in the percent rise in sales al gasoline
automotive sector. the Com- stations. Aulo sales were off 2.6
merce Department said percent in December , .
Letart Township residents are
Tuesday.'
''The auto sales a·re clearly the continuing their town meetings
Analysts said · rebates and response to incentives," said which .began, in January when
other bargains lured consumers DOnald Ratajczak'. an economist · lhey became concerned over tire
into buying cars, trucks and at 'Georgia State University. protection for the township.
vans.
"Buyers are just waiting. They
The problem with ftre protecThe increase, was the largest won't buy unlll . they get a · deal. lion was resolVed, but residents
since a 2.1 percent jump ln They got their deals iriJanuary." decided II might be beneficial to
October 1988. and followed a 0.2 . But Mickey Levy, chief econo: continue wilh monthly town
percent plunge . in · December. mist for Firs I FidelltyBancorpol meellngs. Also, groups of res!·
Excluding au to.sales; ret a ii sales : Newark, N.J. , observed, "Even dents are to attend the regular
rose by 0.6 percent in January.
In autos: the economy Is sluggish. ·meetings of Letart Township
The department's Census Bu - This number does" not porlend Trustees and lhengl\'ereportsof
reau revised its December sales strength."
lhe trustees' meetings at lhe
estimate after initially reporting
Levy said the American econ- town meetings.
a 0.2 percent increase. In No- omy is "touch and go" with a
Mae Durst, Carrie Roush, al)d
vember' retail sales increased ' ·recession, and that auto dealers her daughter·ln-law, Carrie
0.7 percent. officials said.
Continued on page 5
Roush, attended the February

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I
retaJ
sa
es.' ·.
anuary
J
mcrease le6 .pe•ce·nt

[.

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 20-Mei&amp;s ................................ 'Home
Nov. 27-Kypr .creek ................ ,,...... Home •
Nov. 30-0ik Hrll .............................. Away
Dec. 4-North Gallia ......................... Home .
Dee. 7-Hannan Trace ..,..................... Hollie ,
Dec. 11-Easterp ...................:........... Away
Dec. 14-Southwestem ...................... Away
Dec. 18-Waterfotd ......................... :. Home
Dec. 21-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Jan. 2-Nelsonville,York ...:.,............. Away
Jan. 4-0ak HilL ............................. Home
Jan. 11-Kypr Creek ......................... Away
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York .................. Home
Ja. 25-Nort.h Gallia :...................... ,... Awey
Jan. 29-Waterford ............................ Awey
Feb. 1~Eastern ................................ Home
Feb. 5-Symmes Valley ..;.................. Home
Feb. 8-Southwestem ....................... Ho1111
Feb. '10-ltei\S:.:: ..........:.:................. A.w.ay .

Taft said ready to drop out of race
. CINCINNATI IUPii - Hamil·
ton County Commissioner Robert Taft II reportedly has
decided. lo drop out of the
governor's race and Instead run
for secretary of state. .
The Cincinnati Post, citing
unidentified sources, said Mon,
day Taft will announce his
deeislon at a news conference
Wednesday in Columbus.
Dan Schnur. a spokesman for
the Taft campaign, said in
Coi~mbus he could neither con·
firm nor deny the report
''Bob has Indicated he will give
a least a full day's notice when he
decides to announce something,"

VALLE¥ '/

said Schnur.
legislative districts are redrawn
Republican party offiCials next year. Congressional district
have been urging Taftfor sevl!ral boundaries are . set by the
weeks not to run , for gove~IIOr legislature.
because former Cleveland
The Post said Taft decided to
Mayor George Volnovich Ill· give up.the governor's race after
ready Is a heavy favorite to win meeting last ·T hursday with
the. Republican nomination national Republican Party
and has a large lead In fund- ·Chairman Lee Atwater.
raising.
'
·
'·'The meeting wjth Atwater
Slate GOP officials also have . was really the key to the
pointe!! out that If Voinovlch
declslon-maklng · process," the
becomes governor and Taft ousts newspaper . quoted · an unldentl·
Democratic Secretary of State
fled "source close to the cam·
Sherrod B~own, Republicans
palgn" as sayfng. .
lhen would have a maJority on
·'The candidate made the deci·
the Apportionment · Board, a
slon on his own, but talking to
political advantage when state
Conllnued on page 5

· E:Jastern .bOQf,d
A
.. p l ing reh.lred. by

. I)r. Dan Apling, superintend- teachers tor tile balance of th~
.· ent of Eastern . Local School 1989-90 ~ehool year.
-Employed. Sonia Circle as a
: District, has been rehired by the
· Eastern Local School Board for . sublllllute secretary tor the bal·
· ah • iddiUonal three years. Dr. ance o( tile· t9st:90 year: ·
.;...Einployed Sheila · .June
· ApHng'• new contract will run
· : from Aug. 1, 1990 throqhJuJy 31, Spencer as a sublltitute cook for
1993. The reblline of the supetln· Ute balance of the 1989-90 year.
- -&amp;ftlployed Pam Douthitt as
. tendent was amana Items of
.: business at Monday night's regu· girls aoftball coach for the 1990
season.
·
· . · lar meeting of the IChool board.
-Employed Don Jackson u
· The following other business
Items were alao c.onducled by Ute an unpaldvolunteerglrllsottball
jloard. · ·
coach tor the 1990 season.
-Employed Scott WoUe as .
. -Employed Kay Ringer and
· Charles Riley as sabllltute boys baseball coach fori990:
.

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He said thai the project would
probably be com)lleled In the fall
since the study of I he required
work has already been completed. The mayor said Ihat while
.the Corps is responsible for the
construction, they need some
commitment from the vlllage
before beginning the design
work.
Council, on recommendation
from the mayor, passed a resolu tion requesting the Corps of
Engineers to begin the project
design work, and · au thorlzed
Hoffman to me for IssQe 2
application .for thP village's por·
.tlon of the funding.
Mayor Hoffman was also auth·

orlzed by counclllo enter Into a
contract with the Ohio .()epart·
ment of ·• Natural Resources.
Division of Waterways, for con·
.struction work al the.Middl.eport
levee. The village earlier recelved a $25,000 grant fr~m
ODNR and that combined wtth
$12,500 In local monies will
provide the funding for the
project.
Mayor Hoffman also reported
to council that a property owner
in the leyee area has expressed
an interest In setting u~ a service ·
area for boaters. Batt , snacks,
and perhaps fuel would be sold
from the service, he reported,
noting that the entire area near

the levee falls within the
business zone.
The village will now charge $10
instead of ~6 to reconnect fo r
water service. An ordinance
providing for that increase was
given a third reading and
adopted al last night's meeting .
The change was · made on the
recommendation of the Middleport Board of Public Affairs.
Council approved a resolution
fo r the village to participate in
the Ohio. Department of Transpbrration Cooperative Bidding
Purchase Plan in order to secure
some pieces · of equipment at a
better price. Mayor Hoffman
Continued on page 5

could normally have expected a
cost of $4,150 for this work.
However, since the public de·
fender Is paid a set yearly salary
to represent all indlgenl defend·
ants In criminal matters, actual
costs to the county · reflect an
"initial savings of which we can
all be proud,'" according to the
report from Knight.
.- In a related matter, the Meigs
County Commissioners or their
representatives, have been
asked to meet with representatlves from eight other Southern
Ohio counties to discuss the sky
rocketing costs of court-assigned
counsel fees for indigent cllen\s.
Tbe meeting, .to be laler this
monlh In Cblllicothe, Is being
''het&lt;l.;•t•.!l:le:):!!q~~tof·Raqda)J ~· •.
Dana, Ohio Public Defender.
,
According to the leiter ,from
Dana to the commissioners. Ihe
tncreaselncourt·assignedcoun·
sel fees is the resuilln large part
to the "so called war on drugs''
and also beCause "prtvate altor·
neys are n'ow charging more to
,provide represenlallon than In ·
. the past so fewer people are able
to attofd to retain private
counsel."

As a resull of "tremendous
increase in cost," Dana has
contacted the commissioners of
Plckaway, Ross, Jackson ..
Meigs, VInton and Highland
Counties about ways to ·reduce
lhe costs of Indigent defense In
these counties.
. Meigs and Highland Counties
have already addressed the
problem by contracting with the
office of the State Public Detender to· provide this serVIce
through a county public
detrnder.
.
In Meigs Coqnty, the public
defender's contract ls,wlth Attar·
ney Charles H. Knight .
''I have spent the last two
months studying this problem,"
Dana-1lated •In his letter. "·a ad l
have determined how much
money has been spent In each
county during the last calendar
year to provide thIs
constitutionally-man'dated
service."
.
Dana. with assistance from the
Athens County Public Defender's
Office, which has been In exist·
ence tor some time, has deve·
loped a plan to address the
problem. The plan involves turn·
tng the Athens County Public

a

Defender's Office into. branch·
office of the State Public De·
fender. to be responsible for
providing indigent representa:
tlon throughout the nine-county
are;~ which Includes. In addition
to the above mentioned counties.
Fayette and Washirigton Coun.
ties . The representation would be
provided by 14 or , 16 private
attorneys living wl~in the counties under contract with the State
Public Defender. These attarneys would be supervised ' and
given support services, such as
Investigation and sentencing speclal'lsts, . thro\lgh the Athens
County office. .
If this system works, accord·
. lng to Dana, it would mean ·financial savlnjrs~·tor 1Jo111 tbe
state and the counties; and by
having an. expertenced p,ubllc
defender supervising lhe system,
high quality representation for
Indigent clients wouid also be
ensured.
At the meeting in Chillicothe
Dana will present the plan lh
detail and tell how much money
would be required from each
county to fund lhe proposed
program.

Letart ·Township· residents hold town meetings

'

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989·90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

140

'8!) ..

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was the Ohio River bank erosion
problem near the vlllage's sewage lagoons below Hobson.
Mayor Hoffman reported on his
last meeting with U.. S. Corps of
Engineers and that the total cost ·
of the construcllon project to
correct Ute problem has been set
at $742,00ft
Of thai amount . according to
Hoffman, $500,000 w111 come .
from federal funds , with the
remaining $242,000 to be from
village funds. The mayor's prop·
osal was that thevlllageapplyfor
Issue 2 emergency funding to
finance the project since there is
a prtorlty of water and sewage In
this district.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Seallnel News Stall
The newly created office of
Meigs County Public Defender is
apparently already saving lhe
county money. According to a
report lo the Meigs County
Commissioners, a review of ·
January's agenda for Meigs•
County Public Defender Charles
H. Knight reflects a financial
savlngs for lhe county.
According to the report, which
was prepared by Knight's office,
Knight was appointed to eight
felony cases during the month of
January. Of the eight cases, four
have been disposed of by · plea,
. and four have been continued. ·.
The office, was appointed to 11

Seasonally adjusted in billions of dollars

. ~ ,c....loted logular Seaion

;

1 Se:ctlon. 12 Pogoo 2&amp; Cents
A Multlmedlo Inc. Newopopor

Public defender is saving county money

Retail ·sales

. GIRLS

',fl. l)~_:?•· North Gallio
'ne.•u:...·southorn/Jforth

a1

Pomeroy-Middleport·. Ohio, Tuesday, February 13; 1990

By CJtABLENE HOEFLICH
Senllnel New's Stall
. An economic development di·
rector was hired anq f)nal action
was taken to annex approxlmately 600 acres to Middleport at
Monday nighl.' s meellng ·af Middleport Vlllage Council.
.
On recommenda'tlon of Mayor
Fred Hoffman, council passed a
resolution to establish the postlion of economic development
director, and then agreed 10 hire .
Bill M1ller who is already a
village employee on a half-iiine ·
basis for the job.
. M1ller, according to the mayor,
has been assisting lri develop·
ment programs In an unofficial

FEI. 16-0ak IIHI-HoiWO
Sect'-1 Teum-lnts at
FEI. 21-Winnor of

•

No.114

•

MiddlepoJ1 .· · Village hires development director

EASTERN

•

.. ',

• Copyrtgfitocltl_ilo

'SectiHal Toum-onh at
Moigs lllgh School .
FEI. 15-WI. ly.... Crook
FEB. 17-Winnor of lygor/

"DIGNITY AND
~SERYid ALWAYS"
len H.

e
Vol.40.

...

.

IOYS

Secti..al Toum-Ht at Oak

HOME

757
Pick 4
4484

Chance ol
It pei'Ce!K.
Wedueeday, hlp In mid lh.
Chan~·e of rain 71

COMPliTID BGUUI SIASOtl
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FUN.ERAL
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MEIGS

GIRLS

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.

FEL 20-ws. Jacksen
nl. 23-lleltll/ JackiOII winner
n. Falriallll

CAU 992-3311 or
992-2342· /'

Ohio Lottery

ViDanova
tops Syracuse
.again, 60-5~

.. !

.

- ...

--

. .

-Employed George Gaga!,as
gtrl• track coach for 11190.
-Employed Corey Carnahan,
Roland Eastman and Rlclqr
Freeman as regular sublltltute
bus.drivers.
·
. -Authorized the superintend·
ent to offer employment for the
pu.lttoa of coach ot the .~y•
track team, subject to.the a»roval of the board at Its next
meeane.
· ·
.
-Eateredintoamtmorandum
of IUICierltalldlng with the Eaatern Local Education Anoclatlon
Conlin~ oil page 5
· •

trustees' meeting and reported have copies of lhe contracts.
hopefully In front of the Kroger .
on that meeting at Monday
The trustees also reportedly Store in Pomeroy, with proceeds
night's town meellng which was discussed the possibility of res- from the sale logo to the Racine
held at the D&amp;R Tackle Box at ,toting the Letart Falls Commun- Fire Department. Anyone wish·
Anllquity. '
·lty Building for use by the public. ing to make donations for the
The appropriation of certain The building has not been used bake sale shoUld drop Items off at
funds for the township was . for some time and apparently Kroger abOut 10 a.m. that day . If
among Items discussed by the there has In the past been ·talk the Kroger location . does not
trustees, according to the report about razing the old building. work out, another location will~
Also according to lhe report, However, trustees and many announced through the
the trustees stated that contracts residents would rather save the newspaper.
for fire protection have l&gt;een
building and perhaps through
A birthday, cake was served ·
signed with bOth Racine and . donations and any other availa- last nigllt in honor of the
Syracuse Fire Departments, alble sources, restore the building · birthdays of Luda (Sug) Anderthougl\ the trustees do not yet for publiC use.
son and Lois Wolfe.
Jan Wolfe and Luda (Sug)
The nexl township meeting will
Anderson will allend the next be held Monday, March 12, 7
regular meeting of the trustees.
p.m., again at D&amp;R Tackle Box.
· In other Items discussed last Residents should remember to
night, residents made plans to bring chairs for the meeting.
have a bake sale March 2,

Local news briefs---.·· ·
No one hurt in Meigs wreck

'

.,

CECIL GW.OOLY

Gillogly to seek
oommissio~ ·post
CecU

E. GilJOIIIY of

Col~imbla

Town~lp

announced today that
tor his party's
nomination for Meigs County
Commlsaloner In the May
he will run

' i&gt;rlmary.
·
. Gl11o81f; a Democrat, filed his
. petition ill c=•cy with lhe
Meil* Collnty
ofEiecllons
· late Joli)Jihy
A llf•
10111 resident of Meigs County,
Gillogly worked for 30 years with
the Ohio Deparunent of Trans·
wrlatlon. He Is now a fuU·time
farmer snd active· In Muoilic
work. He at one time served on
. the Cen,tral Committee.

an.r_...

No one was injured In a one-car accldenl at 6 a.m. ~ondayln
Salisbury Township, on CR. 5, .0.2 of a mile easl of SR. 7, the
Galila-Melgs Post, State Highway Patrol reporteil.
Troopers said Tommy Simmons, 60, Rt 1, Middleport, lost
cntrol on the lee. Hls 1980 Toyota Corolla wen I off the road,
striking an embankment Damage was minor. There was llo
citation. ·
The driver was cited In a one-car accident at 9 p.m. Monday In
Salisbury Township, on SR; 7, 0.4 of a mile south of milepost 9.
No one was Injured.
· ·
The patrol said a 1978 Datsun driven by Thomas R. Sievers,
32, Rt. 1, Shade, Ohio, went off the road strlklnelhe guard rail,
on oae side ollhe road then the other and finally overturning.
· Steven was cited for failure to maintain control.
Another accident occur'red at 3: 25p.m. Monday on CR. 25, one
mOe lOUth of SR. 7, In Chester TOWIIIhlp.
Troopers said Lel&amp;ll A. Redovlan, 11, Pomeroy, was headed
lOUth when her l!MI&amp; PlymouUt Reliant alld off the road Into a
No one was Injured..There wati'
ditch,
'
. no citation.
'
J

Meigs Chamber .to meet

I

The newly formed Melp Cqunty Chamber of Commerce will
meet Thul'llday, 12 noon, In tile library at Meigs High School.
State Sen. Jan Mlcbael Lollg, D-Chllllcothe, will be the llllftl
lpeaker. Resei'VIIIions for lhe luncheon meeting should be made
In advance by calling the Chamber office at 992-5005. If no one Is
· 011 dUty at Ute office, leave the names ofthe persons who will be
attending on the answering machine.

•

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