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                  <text>The

;.Knight birthday
A.R. I&lt;DIIbt was honored re·
a 1urprise birthday
• " " - by members of the XI
Mu Chapter. Beta
i Pili • Phi Sorority at hts home In
•4M'Ioy.
.
Refireahments of a decora ted
CU., bUed by Gayle Roush , Ice
cnem. and soft . drInks were
• Vi1Nt to Kathy Johnson , Niese!
Gerard. Lynn Shule~;, Jackie
•Ba D'lfr, Maurlsha Neloon, Kay
:Lopn, Kay Adkins, Mary
' !Woada, Carolyri Grueser, Ca. rolyn ColHns, Sharon Pratt,
· Olariotte Hanning, Linda Bates,
ud Barbara Welsh.
Kllllht was presented gifts and
~by the group.

Comrilunity calendar
•

c ,._. with

Cheshire.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT -, 'l'he Evangeline Chapter· No. 172, Order of . HARRI~ONVILLE -There
will be a revival at the Harrisonthe - Eastern Star will have a
chicken noodle dinner ·on Friday ville Hollne_ss Chapel on Friday,
from .11 a .m . to 7 p.m. 1,1t the Saturday aild Sunday at 7:30
Middleport · Masonic Temple.' p.m. nightly . Rev: Robert w.
The .$3 menu wllllnclude chicken Wltaon·wm be the evangelist and
noodles, green beans, rolls, Rev . • Earl Fields Invites - the
c berry pte, coffee or tea.
publlc.

•guam-

There will be a house )Warming
, sbower for Phyllts Morris on
• J'eb. 24 from 1-5 p.m. at the
Bradford Church or Christ.
, Mrs. Morris lost her home and
- · , belongs on Dec. 13.
All friends and neighbors are
' Invited to attend.

: Carmel news
•
. . Mr. and ··Mrs. Robert Watson,
· Kent, spent the weekend wjth
:· Mrs. Mary Roush.
. There were 53 present for
. Sunday School on Fe b. 11.
, Lula Circle was a recent guest
· of Mr. andMrs.RobertHardenof
: Morning Star.

.

CHESHIRE - There will be a
tree clothing da~ on Friday at the
Gallla Meigs Community Action
Jerry and Charmele Spra- Agency from 9 a.m: to noon at the
dling, Rock Springs Road , Pome- - old high school buDding In
roy. are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Kaylyn Renee, on Oct.
27 at the Ohio State University
Hospital ln Columbus.
The Infant · weighed ihree
pounds and six ounces and was 17
and one half Inches long.
Maternal grandmother I&amp; Dot•
tie Turner, Pomeroy. Maternal
great grandparents are Alka
Marllle, New Haven, W.Va.;
Willard and Jerry Lucas, Pomeroy; and Henry Turner ,
· Middleport.
Paternal grandparents are
Frank and Lorene Spradling,
New Haven, W.Va. Paternal
great grandparents are Ida Spradling , Chesapeake, W.Va., and
Goldie Allen. Beckley, W.Va.

Spradling birth

There wlll be a special meeting
of the Meigs County Mental
Retardation Board on Friday at 5
p.m. at lhe Board of Mental
Retardation, 1310 Carleton St. In
Syracuse.

Birthday party
The birthday party for residents of Overbrook Center will be
held Thursday at 2 p.m .
FamUy and friends are Invited
to atmnd.

Couneil to meet
The Racine Vlllage Council
. will meet Monday at 7 p.m . at
Star Mlll Park. .

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VOL 211 NO. 2

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Crutch Rental·
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Deposit Will Be Returned When the Crutches Are
Returned
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QUESTION AUTHORITY: Reformed LSD guru Timothy

"Timex
·Watches -·

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SUNBRELLA SUNGLASSES

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2-. 0OFF°/o..

30°/o·o••

·'EVERYDAY .,.

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.GOLDEN HARVEST
. .
.GLASS CANNISTERS

WOOD PHOTO FRAMES

WI~HLIDS

X

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7"
10"

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Wa_llets

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EVERYDAY

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· HURRY ·-:
QUAIITITIES .
~ AlE

LIMITED

PIICES
GOOD AT •
MIDDUPOIJ
STOll
ONLY.'

It's time 'to wde that book
we've

Deaths .... ... ................. A.-3
Editorial .... ....... ;••.••..•. A.-2

B-3

Farm ........ : .......... :... D·l-8
Sports

·Sunny and warmer. Hlp In the
408.

11 Sections. 96 PogM
A:Multlmediotnc. N--por

Middleport-Pomeroy-.Gallipolis . Point Pleasant, February 18, 1990

By NANCY YOACHAM
. Tlmes-8enlin¢1 Stall
POMEROY ....: At least some
area envlronmentallsts are
against the building of any
.landfill at , all within the slx.county solid WI\Ste district which
Includes Athens, Gallla, Hock·
lng, Jac.kson. l)lletgs and Vinton
Counties. Many environmental·
isis-from allover the district, but
mostly Athens County, attended
a WednesQay night meeting of
the district's policy council,
~ports .Meigs County Commls·
stqner Manning Roush, a policy
~ouncll member. The meeting
'
I
:was held at Jackson.
· "Tl)ey (theenviron111entallst's)
'don't even want a landfill," says
l«&gt;ush. Apparently, from what
Roush says, environmentalists
'want tp ·r ecycle the district 's
•so.lld 'Mf!Ste, and what can't be
.recycled they want compos ted.

'The district has already set
district, • In-state but out-ofrealistic recycling goals, Roush
district, or out-of-state.
At the Febr.uary meeting of !he
points out, but those proposed
goals do not satisfy envtronmen- district's executive committee, It
tali&amp;ts. According to · Roush,
was proposed that tipping fees be
during the first year of operation,
Increased to $3 for ln-dlstrlct, $6
lor In-state out-of-district, and $9
the district hopes to recycle 25
percent or It&amp; solid waste. ''If we
for out-of-state. The proposat' to
could meet that goal alone," said . Increase Upping fees is the result
Roush , "11 would be wonderful."
of the discovery that exls tlng
Upping fees are not enough to
Over ten years, the district hopes
cover ' operations expenses,
to. Increase recycling to 80
percent, with only 20 percent of
which· ls what tipping fees · are
the diStrict 's solid waste going
supposed to do .
Originally, llwas,belleved that
lnt.o the ground, Roush adds .
But besides the environmental . the Upping fees for out-of-state
Issue, the district also faces other dumping would create the
needed revenue for operations
difficult problems.
costs.
However, ln one recent
It appears that exlstlng·landflll .
month,
according to Goush, the
tipping feeS per cubic yard of
garbage are not high enough to district collected only $12 in
meet the district's financial out-of-state tipping fees. Apparneed&amp;. Tipping fees vary accord· ently, out-of-state haulers are
tng to whether garbage coming discouraged by the per cubic
Into district landfllls Is In-

yard tipping fees- since a semi days, Rou&amp;h says, at a March 8
truck holds a lot of cubic yards- mee ting of the district's execuand are taking their trucks tive committee which wlll be held
elsewhere .
at the Senior Citizens b.ulldlng ln,
For example, a local trash Pomeroy. If approved at that
haule r who utilize&amp; a landfill at ineetlng, the increases would go
West Columbia , W.Va. , reported · Into effect 60 days -later .
that when he left the facility one
Current engineers' estimates
day las t week, nine out-of-state to build a new landfill somewhere
semi trucks were wat ling to wltl\ln the district are _at $123
unload. Apparently, fees -at West million over a 10-year period.
Columbia are cheaper than · re~s · According to Roush, . the engiIn the AGHJMV Solid Waste neers " hope to have everything
District.
ln place by June 24" with regard.
So even lf the district Increases to the dl&amp;trlct's 10-year plan for
Its tipping fees, the problem may operations. The engineers were
not be alleviated, or If It Is, .it hired to develop a 10-year plan ,
would apparently be at the for the district, as required by
expense of local and In-state State law.
hauler's. and ultimatel y, at the
However, Roush pointed out,
e&gt;\pense of tlte t .ustomers of local engineers still haven't decided
and state haulers.
whether a new landfill Is needed, ,
The pr\)posed Increases In or whether to co ntinue opera.tipping fees will be voted on ln 30 tlons and make improvements at

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·second
. ~' •N'111i.a1,-, Ohli

existing landfills In· the district,
or whether to build a new landfill
with transfer stations ln each of
the six counties.
Some people serving on the
district policy and executive
boards feel the $123 m!Ulon
estimate ls too high, even though
the e&amp;tl mate Includes costs for
building, operating, buying
equipment and closing a faclllty
over the 'nex t 10 years .
A public hearing wll i be held
Feb. 22 , 7 p.m .. at Wilkesville ..
where engineers wlll explain
their reasons for the high est!·
mate, Roush says. Environmentalists are also e)Cpected at the
public hearing In Wilkesville to .
explain their feelings In the
landfill Issue. Other public hearIngs are al so to be held prior to
the final report of engineers,
which Is expect ed by June 24.

Meigs gets $120,000 from Issue II

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$299
8"

In Our Town:

The funds wlll oecome avalla·
ble to the county as soon as the
agreement with' the Ohio Publlc
Works Commmlsslon ls signed,
Roberts said.
According to Roberts, the
projects for whlch1the money wlll
be used Include:
-Resurfacing County Roa\117
(Cot.terlll Road) , runnl!lg from
SR 143.to County ~oad 10.
.-Replacing the Mount Ollve
bridge In Chester Township on
Township Road 114.
-Resurfacing County Road 76
(Children's Home Hill . Road )
from the Pomeroy Corporation to
County Road 22.
·
Roberts said that It Is anticipated the projects wlll be completed this summer '
Announcement or this $120,000
award came just hours after lt
was report~d that $425,000 In
State Issue II money had been
awarded for five other projects,
Those included road resurfac-

ing aroUnd the county. Mill Street
reconstruction In Middleport,
water tank Improvements on
Cherry Street and New Highland
Drive In Pomeroy, drainage and
paving or Seventh . Street In
Syracuse and street Improvements ln Racine Village.
Applications for the next ro11nd
of fund! rig, according to Roberts:
will be made in September and he
encouraged villages to begin
thinking about projects which
th!')' would like funded.
Roberts said that the Small
Government Commission. project money has not yet' been
allocate&lt;l. A member or that
commission, Roberts announced
that the first meeting on alloca tions ls scheduled for March 71n
Columbus. He noted that Meigs
County has applied for several
programs through that commlsslon .and he antlclpates some w!ll
be funded.

Evans is featured Chamber speake.-

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DECOREL
MAPLE STAINED

5"

Along the River ......... Bl·8
Bualness ................... D-1-8
Comles-- ................... lilaert·
Clulllfleds ................. 02--7

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times--Sentinel Slaff
POMEROY - Meigs County
has been awarded $120,000 for
three local project&amp; from Issue II
money In theOhld Local Transporatlon Improvement Program.
Announcement of the grant
was made Friday afternoon by
•Engineer Phil Roberts na Meigs
!eounty -' Commt~sloner Richard
Jones , both members of the
Dlstrl.ct 18 Integrating
Committee.
Roberts Is the Meigs County
vlllage representative on the
committee which is composed of
representatives from a 10-county
area. The Ohio Public Works
Commission administers the
funds from State ls&amp;ue II.
As explained by Roberts, the
money comes from the 1 cent of
the new gasoline tax , which was
_PUt Into Issue II money and Is
designated strictly for roads and
bridges.

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Inside

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Leary Is urging everyone to raise a little rabble. Leary spoke

this week at Fresno Stale University despite the protests of
several faculty members. "I am deeply sympathetic with these
!JI!Ople who were concerned when they saw that my lecture was
entitled 'Think for Yourself: Question Authority,"' Lea ry said
of the dissenters. • 'Their concern is typical of Americans ~ver 50
because t.he world changes too fast for their comfort." Leary,
who now makes a living with a computer software company and •
speaking tours, doesn 't promote drug use any 1110re but says
people shouldn't be too trusting and docile. "Don't just assume
that those running America have all the answers," he said.
"Force them to expand · their brains by questioning their
motives and Intentions. Not only I&amp; ttfun to question authority, It
keeps the establishment honest. "
TRUMP VS. TRUMP: Who gets the friends In a divorce? The
New, York Dally New&amp; drew up a list of how Donald and Ivana
Trump~~ ' rich and powerful pals might just choose sides If it
comes down to lt. In Ivana's camp, the News listed Prince
Cbarles and Princess Diana, designers Bill Bias and Calvin
Klein, Oprab Winfrey. Malcom Forbes, socialite Cornelia
Guest and Mardna Navratllova. On Donald's side are Don
.Jolmlon and Melanie Grlffllh, Mikhail. Baryshnlkov, Oscar de
Ia Bepla, Cher, Uza Mlnnelll, Frank Sln81ra, Elton John, Mlke
1 ) - and everyone In Atlantic City, N.J.
ASNER ON THE LINE: ACtivist actor Ed Asner was arrested
at a protest at the Concord Naval Weapons Statlonin California.
Asner and 26others were In custody about two hours Wednesday
while they were fingerprinted and booked Into a jall on trespass
cl)arges. The protest, organized by a group of Jesuit priests and
seminarians In Berkeley . was against the U.S. shipment of
weapons to El Salvador. "Peace is breaking out In world now,"
Asner sajd after being released. "It's shameful- where 'd eath
·1s Involved, we are the purVeyors of the tools."
·
MANOELA'S MERCEDES: ' Nelson Mandela may soon be
tooling around in a new Mercedes-Benz, courtesy of South
Africa's National Union of Metalworkers. The union asked
Mercedes- Benz of South Africa to build the car for -the recently
treed apartheid fighter and the company wlll comply. 'We
recognize the high esteem . In which the majority of our
eniployees·hold Mr. Mandela and ln the 's pirit of this we have
agreed to !be request," a company ·s pokeswoman said. " The
release or Nelson Mandela ls welcomed by Mercedes-Benz of
South Africa. We acknowledge the significance of this event for
all the.people of Sol!th Afi·tca and It marks an historic moment In
the II'BIIsltlon to a non-racial free society ." The specifications of
the car and the price are stlll to be determined but workers have ·
decided the car will be red. Asked whether the company would
- contribute to paying for the car. the Mercedes spokeswoman
aald, "It was obviously a gift from the union and the employees
but that Is still all under discussion."

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Deal of the Bend:
'President'8
wnlbe
B-8
oheerved

C-1

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TheAizhelmers Support Group
meeting scheduled for Tuesday
has beeri cancelled arid wlll be
rescheduled at a later date.

Eastern_cops ~VAC c~own

Environmentalists· oppose.building ·landfill

---.People in the _n ews__,

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B-1

IN MIDDLEPORT

Meeting cancelled

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recognized

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AT' FRUTH 'PHA

There will be a baseball card
show at the Old American Legion
Building hi Middleport on Aprll7,
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. .
The admission price Is $1 with
table rental $10. The day of the
show, table rental will be $15.
.For Information contact 9927055 ot 992-7341.

education

COI"Jtlgi*'&lt;J 1990 '

FOAM
DRINKING CUPS

· Baseball card show

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Vocational

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FEBRUARY
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50 cenh
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SALEM CENTER -'l'Jie Stat
Grange wl't· meet &amp;at~ at., .
6:30 p.m. at ·!he Salem Center •
j'lre Station. .A •potluck d~
will be served at 6: 30 p.m. All
members i.re Invited to attend,~
POMEROY ..,..be aei~_- Q!! ·,
Beaus Dance Club Is spilllsorlng .
an open dance on SaturdaY at tht'• SeniorCiti:zen&amp;nterlni"'mer~ ·-.
rrom8-llp.m;xlli!cailerwtllbe
Billy, Gene' Evans. ~.AA !lie da!"et:
Is open to all western square
dancers. Refreshments will bil
·served.
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SVNDA¥
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· CARPENTER -There Will be!
a hymn sing at the Mt ~. Union'.
.,
Baptist 'church on Sunday at. I ,
p.m. Singers will ...be Jen La-:·~
vender and.Kathy McDaniel and'
the Gabriel Quartet : Pastor J~
N. Sayre t.ilvltes the pllbllc-.
, ··

SATURDAY
PORTLAND -The Freedom ·
Gospel Mission Church, Basban-Stlversville Road tn Portland, .
will have a hymn sing on
Saturday at 7 p.rri. Russ and the
Southern Hills Singers will lead
the singing. The public Is Invited ·
to attend.
.

'PKG.OF50

: Special meeting

&gt;

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· HENDERSON - The Gallla
DANVILLE -Weekend youth Twirlers Square Dance Club,will
revival will .be held a.t the - · hold .a dahce on QaturdaY frO!ll
Danville Holiness Chapel Friday - 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
through Sunday at 7 p.m..nlglitiy Commimlty ·· center In Hertde·r ·
wlththeRev. RobHartman. Rev.
san, W.Va. The caller will be
Rick Maloyed Invites the P bile
J
0 h n. W
.
. u
·
· aug h an d · the d anCe Is
open to all square dancers.
POMERO):' - The Meigs
County Derhocratlc Executive
RUTLAND - There will be a
Committee will meet Friday at
round and slow dance on Satur7:30 p.m.-at the Carpenters Hall day at .the El!DenlsonPost4671n
In Pomeroy.
Rutland from 8 to midnight. The
public is Invited to at.tend. · · ·.

RUTLAND -There will be
sweetheart dance on Friday
from 9 p.f11. to midnight at the
American Legion Hall In Rutland. The admission Is ·$2 single,
and $3 couple. 'The public Is
Invited to attend.

KAfLYN SPRADLING

. House warming

-

11.11810

Friday.

Pomeroy-Mktd'sport. Ohio

Sentinel

,.

GALLIPOLIS
Daniel E.
Evans, chairman of the board
and chief executive officer of Bob
through Ohio. Miller, who wrote and directed the
·Evans
Farms, Inc .. will be the
adaptation, Is In the forelfOund, second. lrorit ,
featured,
speaker at the 53rd
rtrht, In the role of narrator Bill Brennan.
GalUpolls
Area Chamber
annual
Surrounding him ·are members of the "~ed
of
Commerce'
meeting
on March
Brush" louring company.
22.
· It will be held lh Rhodes
Student Center at th~ University
of Rio Granqe. A reception to
honor Evans will start at 6:15
p.m., followed by the dinner at 7
, .
p.m.
.
. According to Tom Wiseman.
cltamber 'president, Evans
g-Utaes a :food company , known
throughout· the Midwest and
beyond, for its farm -fresh sausage and family restaurants,
From· tts corporate headquarters In Coluntbus, Ohio, to tbe.
five sausage produ~tlon·plants, a
. family . atmosphere prevails, at
all levels of the company, he said.
Cpmpi'lsed of two complemen. tary ··11nes ·of business, sau5age
and res Jaurant o~ratlons, 1988·
89 sales reached $419 mUllen; a
figure more than ~ouble what II
was ju~t -five yeats ago. Bob
Evans Farms Sau1111ge IS sold In
17. states and ' tile District ' or
Columbia ; while Owens Couritry
Sausage, a s~bsldlary based In
Richardson, Texall, distributes
sausage ' ptoducll , 'ln etghl
sOuthwestern stat... ·
More than 220 Bob Evans
' Farms Reitaurlinls operate
through a 12-state area. Owens
·Family restaurallts, patterned
after the Bob Evans Farms
concept, operate 11.1 tJiree locations In Texas. ·
ban · Evans s(JrteCI with Bob
Evans Farms In January, 1956,
working In the company's sausage production plant In Xenia,
Ohio. In 1959 he was promoted to
manager of the production plant
In Bidwell, and five vears later
moved to tile corporate head. quarters; then locat~d In Galllpolls, as executive vice president.

Elected chairman of t he board
and chief executive officer ln
1971, he &amp;ucceeded hls father ,
Emerson E. Evans, the company's first board chairman and
chief executive officer.
Born In Gallipolis, he graduated from Gallla Academy High
School In 1954, and attended Ohio
Wesleyan ·University and Ohio
State Untver&amp;lty.
.
Evans and wife Charlene live
on a ranch ln Canal Winchester,
Ohio, where they raise registered
Quarter Horses, which he rides In
cattle cutting competitions.
In addition to his responslblll·
ties at Bob Evans Farms, Inc.,
Evans serves as chairman of the
board of Rod's W£stern Palace,
Inc., Columbus, and Ledaro,
Gallipolis. He ls vice president of
Evans Enterprises, Gallipolis,
and a board member of BancOhie National Bank, Columbus;
Motorist Mutual Insurance Company, Columbus and ls secretary
of the American Meat Institute.
Tickets for the annual dinner
meeting are available from the

DANIEL E . EVANS
Chamber office. Reservations
must be made no later than
March 15. Call the CHamber
office at 44&amp;-0596 for additional
lnfonn-atloit.

p---------------------------------~ ·

Man guilty of drug .charges '

GALLJPOLIS - .The first jury trial for one or tbe S8 people
Indicted by the Gallla County Grand Jury In December 1989 o.n
(!rug charges hu ended In a verdict or guilty.
Steve Novak, 38, Rt. 2, VInton, was declared guilty by a
. ·slx-1'11-an, six-woman Jury In Gallla County Common Pleas Court
· Friday after 45 minutes or dellleratlon.
. Novak waa Immediately sentenced to the maximum penalty .
• allowable by law- a 1~-year prison· term and fine or $2,500.
He' wu remallcled to lhecustndyofthesherl(f'sdeJ)artment to
. awal't 'traspo~tloll to prison.
Three others ot those S8 Indicted were also lb- court Friday.
-Bruce Galllamore, 26,·811!-ck Fork, pled guilty to traffiCking
lndrup;
. -CurUs Lambert, 23, Rt. 2, Bidwell, also pled gilllty to
traHickt.ng In dncs; and
-James Duty, 24, Uncoin Aven\11!, Galllpolls, pled no contest
to traCftckllla ID drugs. He was round aullty of the charge.
Each are fourth degree felonies, punlsh~ble of up to 1Y..·years
In prison, and Judge Donald Andrew Cox ordered pre·~~entenclng Investigations lor Galllamore, Lambert and Duty .

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Commentary.·alld perspect.Jve
i~av ~imts- Jeutiarel ·
A Dlvllllop of ·

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· 825 Third Ave., GUJ1poUs. Ohio
(614) «6-2342

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 9112-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl8her
HOBART WilSON iR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber-ControUer ·

A MEMBER of The Untted Press International, Inland Dally Press Associa,tlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
~

·

LETTERS OF OPINION are welCQme. They ShOl,lld be less than 300 words
· long. Alllette_rsa.resubject to editing ai\d must be stgnat wlthname, address and ·

~. telephone number. No un.stgnOO letters wUl be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addres~a ...l!.~s. not peraCI\alttles.

:Backstairs at·
the.White Houee
By HELEN THOMAS
•·
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON- Travel to Africa, perhaps late this year, appears
to be high on President Bush's agenda. ·
During the visit or Congolese President De'n!s Sasso-Nguesso, Bush
silid he hopes to go to Africa. He did not mention a date.
But the news over the release or black nationalist Nelson Mandela
prompted Bush invitations to Mandela and Souih African President
Frederlk df .Kier)&lt; to vlsl.t Washington.
·
. ·
. .
In turn, ·the president will likely get return lnvttatlo ns; but it Is
doubtful he could accept while apartheid remains the policy in South
Africa..
·
Still, the president is building up a lot of chits from African leaders
who are inviting him to come to their continent.

l

The president Is running Into a credibility problem, due apparently
to his penchant lor secrecy.
Reporters have learned alter one year that it is best to expect
s urprises from Bush, and that he has a tendency to be evasive when
asked direct questions. White House !51'ess secretary Marlin
Fitzwater insists that some or his answers that have been flagrantly
misleading are a " definition problem."
Bush, himself, does not understand why reporters thin"' lie has been
deceptive.
'
,
But th e evidence Is piling up that In order to keep his secre ts, the
president has often steered reporters in the opposite direction.
The president can say " no comment" or' 'tune in' ' as he often does,
but too often lately he has erased a denial wtth a confirmation within
hours.
·
Most recently at a news conference, he indicated that a rour·power
meeting of the Western powers who control Berlin, plus East and
West Germany, was premature. The next day such a meeting was
__ agreed on at a conference between U.S. and Soviet and other officials
, ::In Ottawa, Canada.

.U. S. officials travel fli'St class

Paga A=2-

WRmNG.
~Wv. .

AM,...

: :-overactive thyroid that has caused her to have perpetual bloodshot
eyes and often double vision, may eventually have to h'a ve surgery.
The returns are no( yet In on the various treiitmen ts ·s he has
undergone, the latest of which was radiation at Walter Reed Army
Medical Center over a 10-day span.
She is still taking predizOne, a steroid, but in smaller amounts.
Still th e valiant Mrs. Bush is carrying on with her regular activities,
which keep her completely Involved both In Washington and on the
road.
She is not let tlng the affliction get her down, and keeps up a sunny
disposition .
· The first lady has written to Ralsa Gorbachev lnyltlng her to state
her prefere nces on what she wants to seeanddowhen she makes her
second visit to the United States In the spring.
Mrs. Gorbachev will accompany her husband, Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev,. when he attends a summit meeting In
Washington in late June. Then~ was an expectation that Bush would
Invite &lt;:;orllachev to visit his summer home in Kennebunkport,
Maine, which Is being redecorated.
Mrs. c;;orbachev did not do much sightseeing during her visit to
Washington In late 1987, and she can state her wishes.
But if the past Is a guide, It probably will be a while before the Soviet
first lady reveals her preferences. She held off a long time before
· responding to Nancy Reagan's Invitations ror coffee, or tea, or
' touring the White House.
1
. · lt!s doubtful that there wlll be the same rivalry between Mrs.
, ' Gorl)achev and Mrs. Bush as existed with Mrs. Reagan and Mrs.
' Gorbacheve. The chemistry between those two worn~ was not good.
Mrs. Bush can hold her own in any company·. And It does not seem
likelY that Mrs. Gorbachev will be as Ideological as she was with Mrs.
Reagan. The profound ch11nges In the Soviet Union and the collapse of
communism probably will make the Russian first lady steer clear of
'
politics.

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Eastern to
On 5 ;mi

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•I, .••;• First lady Barbara Bush, who suffers from Graves' disease, an

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GOP still says the sky is .falling_ch_uc-.ks_tone_
What would happen to the
party system.
Schroeder, D-Colo., subcommlt:
Republican Party and its
Simultaneously, South African tee chair ror the Armed services
com m u n lsts - under·everyPresident F.W. de !Oerk has Military Installations and Faclll·
nation's·bed obsession If the
begun to choreograph changes ties Committee, "(Defense) seSoviet Union ever succumbed to
leading to the gradual dlsman· :cretary Cheney has pr.Oduced an ·
a democratic two· party system?
tllng or apartheid. As .Is true with unbalanced, partisan hlti!St." •
The first result might be a .events In Europe, Irreversible
Partisan rhetoric? Of the 35
change In the party's venerated forces have been set In motion.
domestic bases slated for clos·
insignia. Instead or the lumber·
George l}usb Is probably the lng, only SIX are In Republican
lng elephant, the GOP would be o.nly world leader who does not congressional districts. Defense
symbolized by In dinosaur, a
seem to understand the lnterna· secretary Richard Cheney con,
behemoth species wliose extlnc·
tiona! and domestic significance . tlnues to prove that the only
lion parallels . the Republican
of these.changes. .
difference between his operation
Party's foreign policies. _
His Reaganesque budget still and the Republican National
Arter the recent .l ilstoryreflects the Glpper' s view of an Committee chairmanship Is his
shatterlng -uphe11vals around .the
"evll empire" defined by that lame response to Schroeder's .world, looking at President . Little Orphan Annie punchllne, charges - that the four services
Bush 's mllltary·protectlve
"An'. the Gobble-uns' at glts you drew up the base-closings.
budget, one has to question
Tbe only hOnorable thing that
lei you don't watch out."
wheather or not anybody In "the
Only a sychophantlc GOP · can be said about the base
White House Is reading the
cheerleader ·belleves Bush's cur- · closings Is that they are .the first
newspapers.
·
rent military budget Is realistic. step In a more far-reaching
After the collapse of the
Only the most passionately budget·cuttlng journey that
communist ·network In Eastern
pilttisan Republican .can fall to George Bush must eventually
Europe and the anticipated disinrefute the partisanship of one take.
tegration of the Warsaw Pact, . ,proposed 'cost·Cuttlng measure
Some of the nation' s most
Russian citizens were Infected by
..:.. tbe closure of military bases. respected military experts conthe freedom virus and did their
"Instead of producing a compre- tend that the Bush 1991 military
version of America's civil rights
hensfve force-structure plan.'.' budget of $283 billion can be cut
marches by demanding a twOdeclared Re_p. Patricia byaneasyaddltlonal$19bllllon.

Time magazine In an editorial
that masqueraded as a news
analysis went even further bY
advocating another $42 billion In
.military cuts by 1992.
.
What Preslden,t Bush just
cannot ·get through his kinder,
gentler stubborn heed Is that:
1. For him to fulfill his desire to
be ·the "ed,ucatlon Pl'e$1dent,"
deeper military cuts must be
made If a balanced budget !Sever
to be achieved; and,
_
2. Tbe same level of mU!tary
spending can no longer be
defended ,ln the world no longer ·
threatened by International
communism,
Republicans have gotte" away
with .saber rattling · defense
budgets by shouting their aeopoJ,
!tical version of Chicken Little:
"The communists are coming,
tbe communists are comlllg."
Events In the Soviet Union and
Ji;astern Europe assure us that
they are not coming. It's time for
Chicken Utile Bush to · stop
shOuting.

,,

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POMEROY - Howard E.
Well, 46, State Route 7, Pomeroy,
died Friday at his residence.
· Born July 6, 1943 at -Hemlock
Grove, he ·was the son of
Emerson ;md Elizabeth · Ross
Well, Pomeroy, who survive.
He was, an operator at the
General James Gavin Power
Plant. He was 'a member or the
Shade River Lodge F&amp;AM 453,
Pomeroy Order of the Eastern

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David R: .Ayers, M.D.

.n.' Edward Ayers, M.D.
Pediatrics &amp; lntmt~~l Medicine

. .' FIUIIily Practice

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ftd PLEASANT VALLEY
IV1 The family of profeuional•

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Thla fixed ....

a(jverse driving conditions. such
as rain, darkness, fog or snow .
Also, said Woodford, avoid .
braking Instantly In front or large
trucks. Because of their weight
and size, truck drivers need
extra space and time to stop their
vehicles, he added.

Fatten VOlf walel
with awant Fit

and explore just how
much fun cruising can be. See your
AAA travel agent today about
the following cruises.
~clme

Emerald, Seas Super
April 13 -

16~

1990

Caribbean.Cruise
Apri128- May 5, 1990 ·
u ...,••

PREVENTING
.
.

YOUTH
SUICIDE
1KtY, rlrwtl: uor~ dlnctorof OASIS

1

Mlnlstrlts, who speeks oxttn!!l•ely In romillot 1nd

with uptcllll ......... on whit """"" ond ltothen
must knowlo
.......,,
..
~§1~~~JC~hool~~~~•n~d~•:~ho~rchffiOI~MJ§W~i"f.m~ori~C8~lwtl~l~le~l~d§y""
throu&amp;h
foct·Rhd
minilldolestenl ;t.n. Premu,
1

proYn Hft-c11Htlna for P"""ll.l..ns, pu!On, ond te~&lt;hm ollkt.

SEMINAR FOR TEENS • PARENTS • YOUTH WORKERS
PASTORS • AND ALL CONCERNED ADULTS

FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Monday· February 19, 1990
1110 First Avenue· Gallipolis, Ohio

25550

o..,.,.lt

. Of
Ia cornpcKJ~ilecl
8.32" end requlrea a minimum d1pD11t of
~ntlellnterut penllty for 11rly wlthdNwel. Cell 4415·
1·800-488·•182 for more lnformt~tlon
Don'l Forger You Ca~.'IVow Pay Your 1989 Collie County Real E1tale Tue1 At
,
·
Ohio J'all_ey Bank . ·
1!

•

·
e, Polnt Pleasant,

'

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HOSPITAL

Suite 12, Valla
!

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. BUT HURRY, THIS OFFER .
·woN'T LAST LONG.

·Cali (304). 675-6015 for an appointment today. And let us~ care of your frunily.

,

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Howard E. Well

Star 186, past member of the
Pomeroy Fire Department and
emergency squad, and an assist·
ant coach of the Chester Junior '
Girls Softball Team.
Other survivors Include his
wife, Texanna J. White Well; a
daughter, j\mber Lee Well; a
sister, Doris E. Snowden, Pomeroy; a nephew, Terry A. ·
Snowden, Norcross, Ga.; ana
aunts and uncles In Meigs ·
County.
He was preceded In death by a ·.
sister, Arts Well.
. , .
Services will be. Moriday, 11
a.m. at the Ewing Funeral Home
wl.th Pastor Duane Syden· ·
strlcker and Rev. Mark McClung ,
olrtclatlng. Burial will be In
Cherry Ridge Cemetery.
·
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Sunday 2·4 p.m. and 7·9
p.m . .
In · lieu or flowers, donations
may be made to the American
Heart Association, Meigs County
Branch, Bank One, P.O. Box 586,
Pomeroy.

·cD· Special Extended

Remember ,when the same physician who treated you for the
.~ sniffles also took care of your baby sister,and saw your Mom and Dad
-; for their aches and pains, too 7Then you remember the family doctor.
At Aym•F11111il!1 Hetdtlt, we're combining that old-fashioned
frunily approach to health care with today's technology. Underline
• .family. because our emphasis is on comprehensive diagllostic and
/.
medical care from infancy through geriatrics for your entire family.

.

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Conference Center

A fa~ily ·approach
·t:o \hea·zth care ....

go

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

P.M. .

A•••

George Plagen:i

.-. ~··-

evy

McCoys Best

. the church her parents now anthropomorphic deity wbo In·
attend and was active In the tervenes In the affairs of one
youth group . .What accounts for species on one planet. I don't
ber Indifference to the church share .that assumption and thereAfter beln.l married fo\lr years
today? He.r answers are remar- fore there seems to be no reason ago, "we gave four parllhes
kably candid.
·
for me to be engaged In a ritual fairly serious · tries,'·' says Rl·
"I would rather sleep on that goes along with that." ·
cl)ard, "but none of them atweekends than do almost anyTbe church, Tom says, seems tracted us. It was a little like
thing else," she says. "Tben we "more Interested In ritual than Ooklllocka: One ·c hurch was too
have a Iarae circle of lr.lends In Inquiry. For me to to a church '!ow, one was to hiP, one '!I'll ~0!1 •
Bostonandclon'tfeel the need for with a fixed 111!1 of dogmas cold. Tbe fourth was the ,last at
the social eleinent In the church. defeats my purpose. Even when tbe Blble-thumpln~, . aultai'·
Maybe I'd feel different If we the church enCourages discus- strummlne parishes. •
.·
lived. say, ,ln Botae, Idabo.
But Richard admlta that, besion, It assumes the outcome In
"I tuesa I'd have to say 1 don't advance."
cause· of their busY lives, othey
.
feel any need to 10 tocburch. Tbe
Tbe Peabodys' aon Richard, 28, preferred spendlne SUnday
ritual II comforting becau~e It Is graduated from Amherst and "peacefully an4 ~one _ with COl-'
so familiar to me, but 1don' t find worked· a few years for the fee tbe The H.- York Tim•. It
milch meaning for my life In lt.'' Federal Reserve Bank In New . seemed more •rtant 10 ou.r
Barbara's husband Tom, who York. He now IJ working on hll spiritual and me11..~ bealth." . ,
Is 311, wu railed In a -d evout doctorate at Yale.
But t11ere may lie llPt at the
Roman Catbolic borne and at·
·
.
While In hlp acbool, be was an end of the tUIIIIel.
· tended parochial ecbool and a acolyte and a member of the
"We have atartecl atiP!uftn1tbe
. Catboltc blgb echool. After a choir at his parents' church. He evenlq aervlce at the EpilcQpal
_short career In journallim, be 10t was allo active In the church Chu!eb at YaJe," be saya. ''TII,t
hll muter's degree In envlron- while In cone,e. He met biB wife community Lt blta'eltlq u It II
· mental concerns at Tufh Belly, 30,1n the cbolr at a cbuteh
laraeiY made up of people wttb
· University.
.
blterelta uct problemlalmllar ~
they both attended In Brooldyn
our own...
~
Tom tii!BI the church u aaaum- . ~lgbts. Betsy 11 a lawyer with ll
Sometime~ they come l:lack. ~
tng that God Is a "white, male, · New York firm.

.

services will be 2 p.m. Monday
at Brucker &amp; Klshler Funeral
Home, Newark, with the Rev .
Joseph Barr. officiating. Burial
will be In WilsOn Cemetery.
Friends may call the funeral
home Sunday from 2-4 and 7·9
p.m.

ABE students
benefit from
extra program

· · 9:30 A.M.-12:00

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Vol.e

·F ree
Free
SATURDAY, FEBUIARY 24, 1990

Why· do baby , boomers skip church?
We' ll call them the Peabodys.
They ar~ actlye In the Episcopal
Churcb In their neighborhood.
They have two grown children.
Both are married, What bothers
the Peabodys Is that neither
married couple shows much of an
Interest In the church, althOugh
1111 four otthe young people had a
:religious upbringing.
Tbe Peabody&amp; are not,alone In
their bewUderrnent. Many mainstream congregations are shaklng their collective gray heads'
·olier the absepee of the baby
boomers and their even younger
cousins at Sunday morning
sei'ytces..
'
What's the reason?
The Peabodys went searching
for answers. They asked each of'
their cbll&lt;!ren 8Jid their apou1e11
to explain the church's lack of
appeal for them. All were eaaer ·
to tell~
,
·
The Peabodys' daugbter Barbara, 30, baa degrees from
Welle~ley and YaJe and IJ now '
employed by a Boaton real etltate :
. 111vestment firm. She grew up In

. Kathryn B. Keith .

License training class
set at Buckeye Hills

I CAN1T ReAD .
N\ll OWN ·

-dJj ldern~ .

Pace AI)

Tailgating one of major
driving hazards: Woodford

IN CoNCLUSION ...

-boW-cotn@

.(Frorn MILLER,

A·3

- ,- ·Area·deaths----------

Miller ...

"I wanted to do something to
~EWARK, Ohio- Kathryn B.
Identify southea~tern Ohio,"
Kelt\!,
71, of New Port Richey ,
POMEROY - Both drivers ' Hampton, 21 .. Rt 2, Patriot,
MUter said. "There just liasn''t
Fla.,
died
Friday In Newark.
were Cited and one passenger driving a 1979 Chev.rolet Camaro, been enough done to preserve our
Born June ~. 1918, in Gallla
was Injured In a two car collision stop~ to make a left turn onto
history. And there are plenty or
County,
daughter of the late
at 9:09 p.m. Friday on County Burnett Road. Behind hlm, Ro·
reasons to he proud of our roots.''
Eugene
·
Watson aild · Julia
Road 26, 1.1 miles west of SR 7.
bert G. Stith, 25, Gahanna, was
This was the beginning of
Swisher,
she
was preceded In
Tro&lt;ipers said Deanna F. unabletostopandhls1987Toyota
MlUer's desire to spotlight the
death
by
her
first husband,
Haggy, 18, Pomeroy; drlylng a Corolla and · struck the back or
unique culture of southeastern
Woodrow
Hundley,
In 1981·. ·
1983 Buick, attempted to make a Stith's car. Damage was minor to
Ohio, a !heme he continued In
Is
survived
by
het second
She
left tum In front of and collided .both vehicles.
October 1987 when his adaptation
husband,
Harold
Keith
of New
with a 191!6 Dodge driven by . Tbe patrol cited Stith for
or "Out or .. the Red Brush"
Port
Richey,
Fla.
.
· Eddie R. Smith, 29, Syracuse. · failure to stop within the assured debuted. Based on a bestselling
Also surviving are two daugh·
. Damage was moderate to both clear distance.
· 1954 novel by Kermit Daugherty,
Barbara Stalling Of Neters,
· Another accident occurred Frl·
vehicles.
then superintendent of Jackson
wark,
and Jacquelyn Russell or
.. A passenger In the Smith car, dayonSR588,0.4ofamllewestof City Schools, "R~ Brush" was a
Mogadore,
Ohio; one son, Vernon
·!Omberly S. McClure, 23, Middle- milepost 6, but there was no series or heartfelt ·vignettes
Rl!ssell
of
Florida; 12 grand·
:port, suffered a minor visible driver at ther scene when the abOut the harsh lives and human·
!}hlldren·;
three· great·
)njury and was taken to Veterans patrol arrived. Officers said they
lty of the · hill folk of Jackson
grandchildren;
two stepsons;
Memorial Hospital by the Meigs round a 1979 Dodge In the ditch. County fn the e11rly 1900s.
one
stepdaughter;
and step·
County !emergency Medical' The accident Is still .under
"I first re.a d 'Out of the Red · children.
Service.
Investigation.
Brusl!' In 1981 and.I was rascl·
·The patrol lnvestlgatlbn a .nated by it because or a personal
The , patrol cited Haggy for
failure to yield the rlght ·or way . car·deer accident, Involving . a
sense ol cultural appreciation,''
an!l Smith for . no operator's Ga!Ua County man at 4: 45 p.m. Mlller said. "I found It to be a
ilcense.
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Friday on SR 160, 0.2 of a mile piece that was almost an arrec·
~ The &lt;!iaiUa,Melgs Post of the
south of mllepost3, in Wilkesville tlonate rendition or the documenState ·Highway Patro1 Invest!· Township, Vlnton 'County. Troop- tation of a cultural heritage, a
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gated an accident at 4 p.m. ers said tbe -animal was kllled specific culture, a specific herlt·
GALLIPOLIS - Studies havp
Friday at Kanauga on SR 7, just when It ran Into the path of a 1985 age that I share."
shown that tailgating, or assured
75 feet south of Burnett Road. No Dodge Aries driven· by Richard
Since Its premiere, "Red
clear distance, when viewed as
G. McDaniel, 37, Rt. 4, Gallipolis. Brush'' has· toured successfully
one was injured.
the possible cause or a crash, Is
. Troopers said Christopher C. Damage was mcideraie.
througliout the region. In 1989,
the most hazardous of unsate
driving acts, according to Lleut·
"Jesse Stuart Stories," co·
enant Robert Woodford, or the
written· ~ and co-directed by
Mtller, Jerry Martin and Jay
GaiUpolls · Post or the .Ohio
Highway Patrol.
Mullins, premiered at Rio
Grande and has been seen by
Assured clear distance Is deRIO GRANDE - ' Buckeye assist the commercial driver to audiences In Ohio, Kentucky and
fined as the distance t hat wlll
Hills Career Center Is currently successfully pass this test.
allow the driver or a vehicle to
Tennessee. A second children's
operating a training program
Registration Is currently un-_ play, " A Ride With Huey the
bring that vehicle to a safe stop,
that will arteyt all commercial derway for a class · meeting Englneer," .also adapted ·- rrom a
short of a hazard.
truck drivers, according to Pon· March 5 and 7,from 5 to10p.m. A Stuart story, was co-written and
In Ohio, more than 40,000
ney G. Cisco, Adult Services .
second class will meet March 17 directed by Miller and Is being
drivers were convicted In 1989 for
The State or Ohio requires all from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. The fee for. presented regionally to younger
no~ fa llowlng an assured clear
commerelal truck drivers to the class, to be taught by Jim -audiences .
distance. Lieutenant Woodford
obtain a Commercial Driver's Sheets, is S50 per participant.
sa-Id. This Is the seventh highest
In the interim, Miller has
License.
·
.
Interested persons may send played active roles In the Valley
orrense committed by drivers.
The seasoned trucker will only payment to Gallla·Jackson· Artists Series, a community·
Woodford urges area drivers to
have to take a written te&amp;t given Vinton Joint Vocational School campus organization which ex- always maintain a two-second
by Sergeant Elbert W. Kelly or District, P.O. Box 157, Rio poses area residents to the arts;
following distance In order to
the Ohio Highway Patrol. A Grande, Ohio 45674. These the Appalachian Children's
avoid rear end collisions. A full
similar test Is now required In classes wlll meet at BUckeye Theatre Series , or which he Is ,,two seconds should elapse from
California and the failure rate Hills Career, Rio Grande. Other artlstl c director and Jerry Mar·
the time a vehicle In frof\t passes
classes are now forming. For tin of Musklngum College,
has been 70 percent. ·
a fixed object, until a following
Buckeye Hills Career Center more Information, call Adult Miller's collaborator on "Jesse
vehicle passes the same object.
has designed this new class to Services at 245-5336.
Even more ·distance should be
Stuart Stories," Is executive
left between two vehicles in
director; and the Play Reading
Circle, In which original scripts
by Ohio playwrights are read and
,
critiqued.
.
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FromtheP!ayReadlngCircle,
three scripts have been chosen
·
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for production and directed by,
Mtller: Robert Smlddle' s "The
positions have been eltmlnated Original and Authe!lt!C 01' Coun·
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
or adjusted, there has been a try Store," William Hl!smler's
'nmes-Sentlnel Staff
RIO GRANDE - Students In
EAST MEIGS - Voter~ of the decline In the purchase of In· ''Dr. Nash and the Resurrection· · four Adult Basic Education
Eastern Local School District structional materials and eliml· Ists," and most recently, "Four
(ABE) programs In the Ga!Ua·
nation of funding forextracurrlc· Dead, Four Hurt In Two-Vehicle
will vote on a 5-mill emergency
Jackson· VInton Joint Vocational
levy for general operating ex· ular activities and athletics·.
Crash" by Clifton Spires Jr.
School District are benetlttlng
pe_!Jses to run for two years when
The voters of the Eastern
In between other ~utles, Mtller
this school year from an add!·
theY go to the polls In the May
District currently pay 20 mills In Is presldent·elect of the Ohio
tiona! program.
primary.
support of the schools, ·one of the Regional Association or Concert
The Displaced Homemaker
. A · resolution requeiiting that lowest, If not the lowest In and Lecture Enterprises (ORAProgram • (Surviving Under·
the tali leVy be . placed on tbe
Southeastern Ohio, and the very CLE) . He has served as the
Changing Conditions, Earning
organization's secretary since
ballot was passed by the unanim·
lowest allowed by the state.
Skilled &amp; Successful) Is presently
ous vote of members of the
In other actlon taken at the · 1986.
offered once a week to interested
'Eastern Local Board of Educa- .. special meeting Thursday night,
Mtller resides In Rlo .Grande
ABE students at Buckeye Hills
tion at a spec~! sesslori ·ThursArch -Rose was hired as boys' · with his wife, · Lee, who Is the
Career, Center sites, Hannan
day night.
track coach for the 1990 season, village tax administrator, and
Trace, Oak Hill, Jackson and
According to the resolu lion . and the superintendent was auth· hls two daughters, Minda, a nne
Wellston.
'pasSed by the schooJ ·board, tlje
orlzed to .s ecure a home tutor ror arts major at Rio Grande, and
SUCCESS Is designed for lndl·
revenue raised by all tax levies
the student with medical Amy , a sophomore at Gallla
viduals who are single parents,
·'!l'hlch the Board Is authqrlzed to
problems.
Academy High School. Minda
separated, divorced, widowed or
'Impose, when comblned'Mth the
Attending the meeting were has also been active In Rio
whose spouse Is disable or
state and federal revenues avail·
Superintendent Dan Apltng, Grande theater, having ap·
unemployed. However, any stu·
able for the operation, Is lnsuffl·
board members Bill Hannum, ·peared recently In the student
dent In the ABE program Is
dent to provide for the . emer·
Ray Karr, Charles Knight, 1.0. production of " The Diviners"
invited to participate Inactivities
gency requirements or the
McCoy and Jim Smith and and "Four Dead, Four Hurt."
which ·address personal developTreasurer Eloise Boston.
:£astern·Local School District.
ment, cultivate survival skills,
It Is tor that reason, according
..
C!lreer exploration and job read!·
'to the resolution, the board feels
ness skills. A total of 83 students
It Is necessary to lel(y an
,h ave already .participated tn·
addltlonal tax In excess of the
these activities.
.
•10-mlll limitation in order to
' i Dorna Smith, program coordl·
raise the amount of $154,689.21
··;nator, says the primary goal of
each fiscal year for two years.
the program Is to help an
·Tbe 'bbard Is asking for an
Individual recognize their lndl·
Westertl~S
emergency levy, not a continuing
vidual strengths, gain self con!!·
)evl(.
.
lipley, Watt Vlrtlinla
dence and establish a career
'
, Tax levies placed before vpters
direction . .
APPALACHIAN lOG MUCTUIIS wll hold an ' ladapth ••·
over the past several years have
Cooperation or the programs
lllin• for ptnena c-ldtrillllOG HOllE UVIfiG. Slide and
been defeated despite a decline In
provides students with ongoing
wldao pnaantation and Quaatlon and
-ion wll
the 'amount requested. Last Nocounseling and support through·
cow• financl,, -.facturlng, c-tructlan, cnl fl•·
vember. a 8.9·mllllevy for tbree
out this stage of their eduvca·
lahltl hom••· ftarnoon tour of model h_.. wll be
years· was turned down by more
ttonal process; and provides
t)lan a 2-to·1 vote:In several.prlor
awcilallle.
opportunities to reinforce skills
elections, the board has seen
For IIHnationl, call:
slich as writing., decision mak·
defeats on larger levies.
lng, problem solving and more.
1·100·451-9990 Otillida WY ar (3041 372-6410
The board In the reo::ent years
We h1p1 to •• yOu thertl
has significantly reduced expenP.O.
lox 614, liple , WV 2527-1
ditures . Teaching al)d other

J.ack Ander10n .
arid Dale Van. Atta

•

-ate-nrr--

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~ ··"···

Sunday Timea-Sentinei-Paga

One injured
-bi-2--car crash

Febn.IIIY 18, 1190-

The a udltors concluded that
· WASHINGTON- When most
setting per diem Is exposed. U.S.
It, U.S. style."
the
per diem rates were Inflated
U.S. officials travel abroad on
Embassy
oftlclals
around
the
We don't expect our public
by
13.5 percent and that the
government business, IIIey slay
world
take
ll;tformal
surveys
of
servants to double bunk a.t the
government
could save Ul.6 ·
In hotels that most U.S. taxpay·
the
hotel
and
restaurant
priCes
In
Motel 6, but we exll!!Ct them to
mDIIon
a
year
II It stopped
ers couldn't afford on a dream
follow the federal sl'andanl and their cities and submit thole to
public
t~ervants
like
treating
vacation. Yet taxpayers foot the
stay In "adequate, suitable and the State Department allowance
royalty.
They
cut
per
diem
In
24
bill so their public servants can
moderately priced" hotels. If starr. If they tell Washington that
cities,
Including
Pl!fis,
Loildon
travel In style.
that IS the standard, why do they the Okura Hotel Is the standard In
In Tokyo, for example, ·the
get away with lounging In Tokyo, then the Okura becomes and Tokyo.
The audit blames the embassy
hotel of choice for traveling
the .basis for setting per diem.
luxury?
staffs
abroad and the' alloWance
pencil-pushers Is the Okura,
In London, the embassy staff
That's exactly what auditors
Qfflce
.In, Wasl!fngton. llut one
recently ranked the fourth best . from the State Department In· said the elegant Gr01vernor
hotel In the world. The Okura,
spect.o r General's .Offtce wanted . House, overlooking Hyde Park. !illowance ~Iaffer told I!&amp; tha~
, with Its seven restaurants, fit· · to know. They surveyed travel was the hotel visitors used the embassy oftlclals deliberately
ness center, shopping mall and records from around the world most at about $180 a night, so that -distort 'the hOtel and restaurant
secretaries for hire, Is not just and found that dally travel was lacto~d Into the per diem. prices to booat the per diems.
the place for members or Con- allowances were too often based But when the lns~tor general . Their own living allowances are
gress, diplomats and . White on the ritziest hotels and restau- auditors checked the visitors' log· based In part on thOse per dlems,House staffers to lay their heads.
rants In the city, and In some at the London embassy, they And It doesn'thiU't the careerpia
The U.S. Embassy In Japan cases, In the · world. The smart found that less than 3 percent of diplomat to have ~ests ftom
routinely books planeloads of · travelers take the per diem
the guests stayed at the Groave· Washington staying In comfort.
low-level bureaucrats Into the based on the high-priced hotels. · nor. Instead, mos·t were at the That makes .the diplomat look
-'· ~·
Oku~:a foo.
·
Then they stay In -cheaper MandevDie Hotel which costs better.
The. Inspector general's audit
That Is why, until auditors accommodations and pocket the h!ss than half as much.
In Paris, the.high lodging rate&amp; may be one of the most Ill·
caught on, the taxpayers were difference. And It's all perfectly
paying $160 a night rot lodging for legal. Tbe State Department were based In part on a claim received In State Department
every U.S. government traveler requires few receipts for farelgn
that most visitors stayed at the history. It hits almost everyone
In Tokyo, plus another $64 a day travel, so It Is none the wiser
Intercontinental Hotel for at who travels, and traveling on the
lor meals and $23 a day for about how the monev Is scent.
least$135 a night. In reality, most taxpayers' dime Is one of the
walking around ·money. Call It
The waste Is all the more were bunking a~ the Pullman for most coveted perks of publiC
service.
"Japan on $247 a day: Roughing Infuriating when the system for almost half the price.

tW)'- report

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Febru=y 18, 199Q

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llj

Ohio~ey!!~

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Paga A-4-Sunday Ti~T~B~t-Sentinal

Pomeroy-Midd'IPllOt-Galllpolil, Ohio Point Plnnnt,

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w. Va.

.:r m 'lfV 18. 1110

~~alnewsbrie&amp;--------~----------~----------------~~
Neighborhood Watch to meet

Marriage licenses issued

KANAUGA - The Kanauga.Nelghborhood Watch group·wiU
hold lis _Febnruary m!!etlng at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Gallipolis Holiday Inn. An election of officers will highlight the
·business agenda. All members ate encouraged to attend.

Alumni scholarship available.

·,

. RIO GRANDE - The Uhlversity of Rio Grande Alumni
(l.ssoclatlon Scholarship is available to the child or grandchild of
a Rio Grande graduate.
.
The applicant must be an Incoming freshman; and r;nay be
pursuing any two or four year degree program at theunlverslty .
It is reco mended that the ca ndidate have previously
completed the university's admission and financial aid ·
applications.
The deadlllne for the receipt of applications Is Aprll15, 199(L
Application forms are available from the alumni or financial
aid offices, or by calling 24S:5353, or toll-free In . Ohio at
1·800-282-7201.

Two sentenced in Common Pleas
GAI:;LIP.OLIS - Judge .Donald A. Cox has sentenced tWo men
in Gallla County Common Pleas Court to prison terms. . ·
He nry .M. Henson, 22, Rt . 2, Bidwell, was sentenced to the
Orient Correctional J.nstltutlon, Orient, Ohio, for 12 months and
ordered to pay a $1,000 fine . Henson pleaded guilty to a grand
jury indtctment of teceiving stolen property.
Rorillle E . Massie, 28, ESR, Gallipolis, was sentenced to 12
months In Orient Correctional Ins titution on a grand ju·ry
Indictment of theft by deception. He also 1\'aS fined $200.

Divorces granted in court
GALLIPOLIS - One new domestic case was filed Friday in
Gall!a County Common Pleas Court.
Steven L. Wright, Vinton, and Lisa L. Wright, Oak H111, filed a
petition for a dissolution of marrlage.
· .
Betty Lou Wrltesel, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was granted a divorce
from Wllliam 0. Writesel, Rio Grande.
.
. Tonda Renee Holt, Eureka Star Route; Gallipolis, was
gnmted a divorce from Elmer Oscar Holt.. Rt. 1, Lucasville.
'

.

'

Police -probe parking lot wreck
GA LLIPOL-IS- City pollee Investigated an accident at 3 p'.m.
Friday on the parking lot at the Gallipolis Daily Tribune 825
Third Ave. No one was injured.
'
Pollee said the accld.e nt occurred when Georgianna Ball, 68,
Rt. 2, Vinton, driving a 1987 Mercury Marquis, was turning
·a r.ound and struck a parked 1988 Chevrolet pickup truck owned
by Diane Lynn Hawthorne, Point Pleasant. Damage was minor
to bOth vehicles.
·.
. During a 24-hour period ending at 9 a.m. Saturday, police
cited Christopher Parsons, 19, Columbus, on a charge of failure
· to obey an automatic traffic signal and Issued a summons to
Letta Gardner: 38 Smlth·e rs St. , Gallipolis, to appear In
Gallipolis Municipal Court on a charge of dlsorcterly conduct .

Theft i_nvestigated bx deputies

.

'

'

'

GALLIPOLis,~ The Gallla

County Sheriff's Department was
called 'at 10: 33 a·,m . Friday to Investigate a theft at the residence
of Ed Mar)lp, Rt , 1, Northup, on SR 775, near Bethesda Church.
Deputies sa,!d sgmeone stole two tanks of proJiane'.gas Marlin.
had purchased this week at a cost of $11i9.09. Tile Investigation
continues. There have been no apprehen~ions.

~ALLIPOLIS -The following couples recently applied for a
marriage license In Ga111a County Common Pleas &lt;;:ourt:
· Eric Shawn Blackburn, 20, 298 Debby Drive, GalUpoUs, and
Melissa Dawn Davis, 20, Rt. 1, Rutland.
EariJuniorVanest, 36, Cross Lanes, W.Va. ; andSandraLelgb
Williams, 30, C.ross Lanes, W.Va.
Edward E. Simpkins, 67, Rt. 2, Crown City, and Sophia I.
Hively, 67, Rt. 2, Crown City.
·
·
James Allen Camp, 24, Rt. 2, Blwell, and Anna ,Marie
Simpkins, 44, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
Kenneth Edward Session, 25, Columbus, ilnd Crystal Dawn
Mlller, 19, Rt. 1. Bidwell.
. Carl Henry Smith, 22, VQ·2, Box 259, FPO, New York, N.Y.
and Sherria Ann Glover, 19, 701 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.,

Wellness workshop slated
RIO GMNDE - · ~·Women4 and Health Issues: A Wellness
Approach," wlll be the title of a new free workshop offered by
the University of Rio Grande Counseling Center and the Office .
of Contjnulng Education.
.
.
The four-session program begins Monday;March 5 at 8 p.m.
In Room 229 of Wood Hall. The serles,led by Terry Weiher, will
continue for four weeks.
·
The four sessions will be discussing women and alcohol. Some
of the Issues covered include'women and alcohol abuse; how t.o
deal with a friend or roommate who has an alcohol problem;
choices about drinking; how alcohol affects health and social
life and women.
·
There is no cost for the program. Pre-registration Is being
requested.
.
. For additional Information on the workshop amnd reglstra·
lion contaCt the Office·of €ontinuing Education, University of
Rio Grande, Box 878, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674, or ,call
( 614) -245-5353, extension 325 or toll-free In Ohio at 1-800-282· 7201.
.

Long t.o seek ·re-election C.OLUMBUS - State Sen. Jan Michael.Long, D·Circlevllte,
wi)l he announcing his reelection campaign for the 17the State
Senate Seat on Tuesday at 1: 30 p.m. at the Meigs County Public
, Librar-y lnPomeroy.
·
..
·
·
Long will be available for questions and comments
Immediately following his announcement.
'

Miller endorsed by Chamber

.

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Publlslled each ~u nday, 825 Thlrd Ave ..

Ga lllpoll.s. Ohio, by the Ohio Vall~Piib·
llshln g Company!Mu,ltlmedla. Inc. Se·

.co nd class postage paid at p a111po1is,
Ohlo 45631. Entered as second class
mailin g m atter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post

Office.
Me'mber: Un ited -Press i nternational,
. , Inla nd Dally Press Association and the
Olllo Newspaper Associat ion, Natlonal
Advertis ing Repres£&gt;ntatlve. Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Ayenue,
New York. New York 10017.

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPliON RATES

By Carrier or Motor Roule
One Week ........ .................... 70 Cents
One Year ................................. $36.40
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Sunday ··-.----- -·-- ·----; ·--- -......... 50 Cents ·
No .!iubscrlptions by mall permitted In
areas where motor ,carrier service Is

POMEROY - Seven calls for
assistance were answered on
Friday by units of the Meigs
Emergency )/ledlcal Services.
At 12:12 a.m., Racine went to
Eagle Ridge Road for Pearlene
Lee who was talien to Camden- ·
-Clark !'4,e morial Hosplt;ll.
Pomeroy at 3:31 p.m . was
called to Route 7 for Howard
Wells who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 5: 20 p.m. transported Jordan Buck from South
Fourth St. to Holzer Medical
Center .

.Lottery numbers

available.
The Su nday T.l mes-Sent!nel wUI not be

r esponsible for advance payments ·
made to carriers.
\IIAIL SUII8CRIPTIONS
SandiQ' Only

One Year ........ ....... ... ............. .. $37 .44
Six mo nths .. ......... ...... ............ .. $19.50

an•

· Dally
Sunday
MAIL SUBIICRIPTIONS

Inside County
13 Weeks ...... . .-.... ...................... $19.24
26 Weeks ... .... ... ....... . ...... .......... $37.96
· 52 Weeks ........: ..............., .. .. ..... $74.36
Rate~~ Outside County,
13 Weeks .... .... ... ...................... $20.80
26 Weeks ........................... .. .... $40.30
52 Weeks ................................. $75.40

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Friday 's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK-3
078.
PICK-3 · Uck~t sales totaled
$1,438,168.50, with a payoff dul! of
$103,022.
'
PICK-f
7828. '
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$265,829.50, with a payoff due of
$66,000.
.
.

.

HEAlERS &amp; GAS
Ferrellgas APPLIANCES
ON SALE

·'

'

OPEN 1:00 A.M.-4:30 'P.M.

614-992-5097
ST. RT. 7 &amp; UNION 4VE.
POMEROY, OHIO

1716 E81tern Ave.
Gallipolis, OHio 46631 · ·
16141446-1066
1 07 Chelltnut
Henderson, W.Va. 26106
1304) 676-3908

P_ reslde~tc

Day Special

SUNSTAI SEIIES GAaN TUCTOIS
Avlilalllo ill 14·16-11 I 20 H.P.
- .....
tlot6t•
101 - ·
•Airf
k ...........
. t - 110 lfl
•No ......... - · ..... choice
•42", 41" ............................
......ll..tMI.ntlft .......... ...

~

·-·

Umlt 4 Pw Customer

.... "'"' , .........,....i.. loci! ....

•
'

VMH

loodo ............. •ct.4 . . ..

-•t.• .......... for

. .. . -

Thl1 off• not accepted In conjunction with any other coupon or
dlecount.
.

-n.rtri PTO l11. .t •Ill ...... ...._
milts with ..., of • switch
•IIJ*.,lic Uft roioo -- 1owor ottochoo.,.
eflertlu4,·

90 Modell Now In StOCk

Friday admissions - Leora
Strom, Pomeroy; Clara Slater,
Middleport; John Six, Pomeroy.
Friday discharges - VIvian
Titus, Claire Boso, James
Heaton.

Pre-•1•••1'•- Day Sale I,

•Qualty Prescription
· ,Servi.ce At Compet·
itive Prices.

· lAIII GlOW WOMIII'S

HESS &amp; CASUAL

/2

1 PmCE

TENNIS SHOES

SlO

.

HOUSE

frl.,tly letvlae
Open w. .. Nlllri• ... •

l'aln•J&gt;r. OH.
'

ss

'

'

.,
I

'

Skirts
!Pleats extra)

•---

. 2·Pt. Suits
&amp; Plain

'

.

.... ,..,.,.
..,,.__
.,..,.

Ortues

'

Plain

&amp; Jac~ets .
Zip·Nt Nnings

I

11tra

L

... _..,..,
•

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*
___
.....
......
--·

Plain

I

Altaratlons
&amp; Rlpali·s

61.- ·n ·

•

PH. Mt·7113

•

JACI$011, OHIO
Pl. 116·7•U

CARDINAL.

DRYCLEANEIS

_"'_ .. _..,..

-e'b•MI-'r Leo••• Ill Tile Ohio "-lver Pl. . on hi·

•-o: 7:00 A.M .·I:OO P.M. M--f~.
,.

••

7:00 A.M.-1:00 P.M. -.av
12:00 -1:00 P.M. lwtdor

Cardinal. • . .Fo~ Your Drycllaning Nllds

•

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,..,..........
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Oflw ...... .

2111..

20°/o OFF

Y. INC •

167110AIWAY ST.

•
..
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-

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"'IO.ITM. :s.....llt FOR HO~E liE"

.' OAWNUS...0

•

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N1t VIIMI Wk~ a.,
Othlr Dltcwnt.
Pt..t hv,.n
With Or ... hi*•
313190

(loth Coats

11M Vollol Witt! j\oy

~'·

··-:

••

'

Blouses &amp;

YINI ST. &amp; HCO• AVE.
GAWPOUS, OHIO

••

Open frkl1y &amp; Mond1y •ni 8 P.M.

*

'Plain Slacks,

•Shower Slats •Tub Safety lalls •tolet Safety Fr. .es
.•Wal Cr.. Iars •lleell Preaure C.tfi •St•thoscopH
. '....;.MI'I . . to CIOOSI fiOM-

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SHOIS.......- .. Sl

441-0303

Sa\e\ ·'

·446-9495

1

JOHNSON'S
SUPERMARKET

OTHER GIFT ITEMS

l
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TAlliS Of

SECOND • SYCAMORE

febr11ar~

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lOWS ............ SJ
· GAWPOUS

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DRY CLEANERS

SUPPERS

PUlSES~......

AYIIUill

c,.,..

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Sweaters

·1/2 PRICE

..

In our circular in
' today' s paper the
,Nescafe IMtant Coffee
r.-ls..Xpires on
2/18/90. this should
. be 2/2./90 - we
are sorry for any
inconveriienc!: this may
have caUsed.

•Power Uft•Power Recline
•AU.rtecl Colors
·•1 YHr Warre~nty
•FrH D.ery
•Low Montly Paym111t1
••
Avalabl•

WOliN'S 010111!

DINGO
lOOTS

. ofdays
• no cash needed- all fees can be withheld from
yourcheck
.
• available Whether we prepare }1)Ur retum or not

NOTICE

J/1/-fO

t

. . . . .s.

• receive ).our refUI)d anticipation ioan in a matter

~"

r

RUNNING
SHOES

'

' I

STAND WITHOUT PAIN OR STRUGGLE

•'
•
'
•

WGEGIO..
liN'S I WOMEN'S

5 ,.

'

DI·LIFT LIFT ·CHAIRS

'••

4TH &amp; Main, Raadavlla. Oh.
PH. 378·111211 .

SJS. 130
140. sso

E. Mllin

I

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•'

IDD'S COU1111Y STOll

I'll. lti·:IHI

\

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.._,
•

OUCII.OU WI OF FACTOIY
DOlO~ AND ClOSIOm

NOW

'

Trusiees..,approve. b.oard
increase . . ~ ,
.
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.

OXFORD, Ohio ,(UPI) - Miami University's board of
trustees Safurday approved an Increase of slightly less than 7.3·
percent In room and board charges.
Effe&lt;:tlve In the' fall, room and board rates at Miami will rise
by $210; to $3,100 per year. ·
·
The increase results from Miami reducing the number of
freshriien, who comprise a major portion of 'students living on
campus, and from efforts to improve living conditions and
board offerings, said Edward bemske, vice president for
finance and business affairs. The residence and dining hall
budget calls for using about $500,000 hi reser\f1!S next year,
which has served to "moderate" the increase, .Demske said.
In other. business. the trustees set athletic ticket prices for
next year. Single-game reserved seat ticket prices for the
general public rose by $1 for football, to$8or$10dependlngupon
the type ,of seat; remained the same for basketball, at $6; and
Increased by 50 cents for ice hockey, to $5:

. ALL DAY

.....
~~.
.....':"; r··
•• .w...
.,...........
...-...

_............
-·-"'

~

Buy One Cherry Pie.
Get Second One For 1c

•lllht 26" ....,,...

Hospital news

'

arrested

;.,

,.,,

•:oo

h'··o· n' ew.s bn·ef:'.s·

StU(lent heads colLege grbup

"

c_...,.,..,
VAlliS TO ItS

PAESCR,TIONI

•Wheel
Alignment
•Brakes
Shocks
•Struts
tires
•Goodyear ·tires

oii

MONDAYI . FEB~ 19th ONLy

1&amp;5miAL1
SHOES

MeC~vlo•glt. 11.1'11.
Ch. . . 'lllltla II. I'll.
.
Ron lid HIM"'-o II .I'll,
Mon. tfwu SM. 1:00 •.m. I!' 1:00 p.m.
lundalr 10:00 • -•- to
p.m.

•ts lOOth heart' transplan·

oo:

'At 6:18p.m., Racine was called
to Yellowbush Road for Edna
Hunnell who was taken to Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 7: 49 p.m. trans·
ported John Six from the VIllage
Green Apartments to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 9:19p.m.,
Pomeroy and Chester Fire Departments were called to an auto
accident on Flatwoods Road.
Kim McClure was ta"en from the
scene to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Ed Smith, Deanna
Haggy, Amy Rouse, Shannon
. NeWsome, Julie Hatfield, Jenny
Buck and Heather Hovatter
refused treatment.
Rutland at 11:52 p.m. trans·
ported Earl Bartlett from the.
Salem shaft to O'Bleness MemorIal Hospital.

GIIOUP OF MIN'S

lp _

(

.

MO•AY OILY - LAST DAYI

:: • 3 Registered
",. .
Pharmacists
To Serve You.-• )(

ct· .

Hall seeks re-election

PROPANE NEEDS.

EMS responds to seven calls ·
I USP 5!5-800)

CleveIand

a

'

COLlJMBUS- The Ohio Division of Wildlife now bas a supply
of turkey permit applications available for the 1990 turkey

c.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

' ·•

Turkey season permits ready .

o·

. Alleged

FOR ALL YOUR

POMEROY - Arson Is apparently suspected In a Saturday
morning fire at the former Fred Priddy residence on Happy
Hollow Road In the Rutland area. The relatively new structure
was listed as a total loss . .
According to the report from Meigs Sheriff James M. Souls by,
Rutland Fire Department was called to the resldeace at 5:20
a .m.
. The unoccupied property had recently been seized by the ·
Internal Revenue ·S ervice for back taxes. . ·
.
An Investigator from the State Fire Marshal's Office was on
.the scene to assist in determining the origin of the fire . As of
Saturday noon, origin had still not been determined.
Sheriff $9ulsby indicated that federal officials will be askedto
assist .In the investigation -since the property was under federal
. control. ·

· Earlier br tile day the Rejl~·l·
~aay to lead 'o hio Into the 21st 'This election Is going to be common sense will be Instrumen- court in 1986 and Banks is a
Caiiii fl?led Ita alate and tuued Its
century.
tough, but we're ready," Cele· tal In making state government former assistant prosecutor and
first preprlmary endonement In
"OIIr ·tea.m Is experienced. We ·brez~ said. " All of our candl· . work. . ·
a practicing attorney who was
more than 20 years.
liave · strong records of public dates have had tough elections
He said Fisher has been a
active in campaigns of Supreme.
"I am proud of tbe depth or service to help Ohioans and we before and we've won. This year, leader In the Ohio Senate and will Court justices Allee Roble ResexperleiiCe that thil Democratic
stanljl ready to match our record
we'll outwork them, we'll out· ·carry on my record of fighting · nick and Herbert Brown.
tei!IJ) tirlnp to the people of
of accomplishment with ·the · campaign th.em and we'll beat against drugs , protecting th'e ·
"'We expect a good vigorous
Oblo;"safdstatepartycbalrman . Republican Party'.s · lack Of a
them."
·
environment, and 'helping . campaign," Rl\volo said of the
. James Ruvolo. "While the Re- . record any day of the week," he
Celebrezze said his ·running consumers.
.
Supreme Court race. "As Allee
publlcanPartyhadtostruggleto
said.
.
mate's integrity, batd work and
As for the incumbents, Ceie- Roble Resnick and A. William
brezze said Brown sets national Sweeney were a formidable
. find candidates to run for stateJ
...
wide offtce, Democrats can offer
·
InJC .per10ntl8
records for voter registration team, Judge Cacioppo and Attor·
an experienced leadership team.
·
. ·
.
·
· '
and pa.rtlclpatioiJ; Withrow
ney Banks will be a: formidable
earns record ref urns for taxpay. team. We look toward to cam · .
"Oiir Incumbent statewide offlceholders, by any measure the
I
ers, and Ferguson Is vigilant In
paigning on their legal and
people of Ohio want to use, have
CLEVELAND (l)PI) ·- A nat! and Cblldrens Hospital of his fight against welfare fraud.
personal attrlbutes and ta lking
had successful tenures," he said.
48-year-old Springfield man was Cincinnati. A total of 293 heart
Cacioppo and Banks ar~ !lewwith voters about why Cacioppo
"It will be these accomplish·
in critical, but stable condition t~ansplants· ha.ve been jkr- comers to statewide politics.
and Banks should be elected to
She was elected to the appeals
ments on which we will run and
Saturday after ·-:ecelvlng a heart formed at the five Ohio transthe Ohio Supreme Court."
on which I expect we will be
transplant the 100th.such opera- plant c~nters.
successful."
tlon per!o~med at the Cleveland
There are currently 57 Ohioans
Celebrezze appeared as the
Clinic Foundation. · . ·
walling for a heart transplant.
party's · cheerleader F~lday
Larry Herzog, married and the Nationally, the United. Network
night..
.•
.
father of two children, went Into for Organ Sharing reports almost
"Democrats are ready for the
surgery at 5:45p.m. Friday.
· 1,500 .individuals waiting for a·
1990 election, " he .sald. "We're
"Mr. Herzog's surgery went heart transplant. .They estimate
&amp;
real well last night, about two . that 30 percent of these Individuals wiU die before· a heart
and half hours,"
foundation
•~
spokesman
Gary said
Weiland
. "He's transplant becomes available.
in critical but stable condition,
EarUer this week, the founda·
which Is normal for a heart
tlon began Its tung transplant
•Used
transplant patient."
program when Philip Mendoza,
cocai~ ~aler .
I .
Hertzog was recovering Satur'
42, of Port Clinton, underwent a
day In a sterile Intensive care
single iung transplant on WedDAYTON, Ohio (UP!)"- A man pollee believe Is responsible
unit.
•
nesday. The foundation said
for a good part of the cocal"e sol«! In Mad River Township was
'
Heart transplant patients are
Is progressing well a.nd
Mendoza
l'rrested after allegedly selllng$35,000worth of cocaine to pollee
usually
hospitalized
for
about
a
officers..
. .
·
. ~~:~~~~~~ ' In . satisfactory
1 &lt; month . The 'first two to three
JOHN FULTZ - J. MARCUS FULTZ
·
Charges
ajllilnst
the
man
were
expected
to
be
filed
Sat11rday,
''
montl!s following surgery are
He
was
..
expected
to
be
out
of
242 W. Main .
OWNERS
Pomeroy
and charges against a second person are pending, Mad River
critical period during which
bed Saturday. His lung · trans·
.
' ' poU~ce said.
992-2101
about 75 percent of hear~ trans·
plant was the flrstto take plac,; ln
Investigators said during a month-long Investigation of the
plaut patients nationwide accept
the state of Ohio.
~uspect, they- purchased a total of 3¥., ounces of cocaine from
the donor heart. Weiland said . .
him. He was arrested during a raid of his house Friday
The transplant surgery team
conducted by the townshlp',s '"Four Amlgos'' drug tasldorce, a
,was led by cardiovascular and
cooperat.tve effort between Mad River and Dayton pollee.
thoracic surgeon ·Patrick
McCarthy,
M.D., and a team of
'
specialists
Including
cardiovas'•
I
cular and thoracic anesthesiologists, perfuslonlsts, nurses and
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) - Rep. Tony Hall, D·Ohlo, has
technicians. Herzog will be moni·
announced his bid for another two-year term as representative
'
tared closely In the cardiovascufor the 3rd Congressional District. ,
lar
Intensive care unit for about
Hall, 48, Is chairman of the House Seleet Committee on
live
days folloWing surgery.
Hunger and a member Of the P&lt;&gt;werful House Rules Committee:
Herzog
has been disabled and
"I get tremendous fulfillment working on Issues for the
since·a second heart
housebound
district no matter how large or Sl'l\all t~ey might be," said Hall
•
~ttack
.
In
October
1989,.when his
Friday. He was first electea tQ ,the House in 1978 after having .
'
heart
was
severely
damaged . He ·
served as state representative and state senator.
bad
no
health
problems
until
' '
'
suffering his first heart attack In
. 1986.
.
The
foundation
began
its
heart
'
'·'
transplant program in · August
, .
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI)- A junior ~oliti~al sclence .major at
1984. During the pastthreeyears,
1
the University of ·Dayton has been elected preSident of the
the
foundation's one-year survlNational Association of Students at Catholic Colleges and
\. val rate has been 97 percent.
·
_,.-~Universities.
The foundation Is partofOhlo's
KrlstliJa Kerscher:·. said the group's representatives will
·
Solid
Organ ,T ransplant Consorencburage students on· their camp11se's 10 )!Qid speak-outs and
.
tlum,
.which Includes five transotber' ,.programs
.'tlfe ·1.s sue of academic freedom. At the
plant
progiams In the state
grouP's flrst national meeting Fe~. 2~ at tlte.Unlversltyof Notre
located
at seven hospitals.
. Dilme, members, who come from 42 Catholic schools across the
In
addition
to the foundation.
· , · n at ton, deve?opecl a pbsltlon paper on academic freedom: '
members
Include .
'consortium
· "J;IIisli:allY, thi.S Is a scholarly.paper
academic freedom
University Hospitals of Cleve· -reJ!resentlng the 111ewpoints of many ·catholic colleges and·
land;
Ohio State University and '
' ,.. un-llle~sllles." Kersche~ sa,ld.
· .
.
· ·
Childtens
Hospltlll of Columbus;·
· · "Cathollf: lnstifudo!IS are geared t,o ward teacl!ing a certahi
the
Medical
College of Ohio In
morality and message, but students need truly lll!eral education
Toledo;
and
t:Tnlverl!lty
of Cincln:
l .
COUPON GOOD AT GALUPQUS AND POINT PLEASANT STORES ONLY
to preparp
other points of view."
. them to question and challenge
.

COLUMBUS. Oblo {UPI) : Tile Oblo Democratic Execudve
• .Committee Friday ni&amp;bt en'
; doraecl Its "experil!IICed leader·
: shlpteam" running for statewide
• office, hours after the RepubJJ.
· cana filled their slate and Issued
, endof&amp;emepts.
. Leading the Democratic team
; are Anthony Celebrezze Jr. and
. Eugene Branstool, candidates
. for governor and lieutenant gov; ernor .. State Sen. Lee Fisher of
• Shaker · Heights Is seeking the
; office of attorney general that
i Celebrezze Is :vacating.
• Auditor Thomas Ferguson, Se. .
: cretary of State Sherrod Brown ·
; and Treasurer Mary Ellen With·
• row are seeking re-election.
: Democrats seeking.seats on the
, .Ohio Supreme Court are Judge .
:Mary Cacioppo of the Ninth
i District . Court of Appeals In
, Summit County, and Young: stown Attorney Stuart Banks.
,

· COLUMBUS - The Ohio Department of Natural Resources,
Division Qf Forestry Is 1po1110rlng a special pr0111:am this year
to get )lJCal communities an.d organizations more Involved In
· tree plan tin g.
.
..
For every 500 white pine see4lings ordered from the state
forest n11rserles for Earth Day or Arbor Day ~elebrations, the
Division will add another 500 seedlings at no charge. The cost of
500 seedling Is $75 and tba~ will be !]le minimum order (whlcll
means you will receive 1,000 trees) . There will be no maximum
order. Trees will be sblpped via UPS,

Arson suspected in Priddy fire

Sunday T~~T~~~t-Sentinai-Paga A-15

Mlddhport ·4 IIPlllll, Ot;o Point_l:lfnnzrrt.. W. Ya.

i

Trees ·available from ODNR

'

Pot••ov

;O hio Democratic Party endorses its iearn of.candidates

season, which ts Aprti 23 tbrqh May 12, 1990.
Applications are J»lng mailed to all bunters wbcrapplled for
turkey permits In 1989. The appUcatlons will not be accepted In _
Columbus 'prior to February 26 or after March 13, 1990.
.
Contact !be Oblo Division of Wildlife at 360 Eut State St.,
Athens, Ohio, 45701, or call (614) ~221l ' to receive your .1990
turkey permit application.

WASHINGTON -The board of directors of the U.S. Cllaniber
of Commerce has endorsed 170 candidates for Congress -14 for
the Senate and 156 for the House of Representatlv,es .
The announcement was made dllr!ng the board's recent
quarterly meeilng at Washington.
·
·
·
,
Among those endorsed was Ohio Tenth District U.S. Rep.
Clarence E. Miller, Lancaster, representing both GalUa and
Meigs countieS .In So11theastern Ohio.
·
.
The endorsed group Included 165 Incumbent senat.o rs and
tepreseplatlves who are know as "Friends of Business." These
candidates have a cumlllllve voting reord ·o f 70 percent or
higher In support of Cbamller positions and have the support of
their local business communities.
Miller's voting record ln 1989 was 84 percent.
The U.S. Chamber promotes a candidate's pro-free
enterprise orientation t Its more. than 180;000 members
nationwide, Including approximately 900 poUtlcal action
committees.

,,

•

Fellrualy 18, 1910 .

HIWI'yl 51111 Ends

Manh 3, 1990

.J.

�Pilga A-6-Sundey Tmes-Sentinal

Pomeroy-Middaport- Gallipolil. OhiO-Point Plaaaant. W.

r

Vii.

PittSton contract goes to vote. Spring break students as.k ed to s~·
LEBANON, Va. (UPI) - St rik·
. ing coal miners studied Saturday
a u.nion contract •in preparation .
of a vote Monday that could end a
nearly year-old strike at Pit tston
Coal Grot~p in Virginia, West
VIrginia and Ke ntucky.
About 1,900 United Mine
Workers members struck April5
In a dispute over health and
scheduling. The prediction in the
Appalachian coaal field was the
49-page contract ·would be ap·
proved overwhelmingly.
Charles Yeatts, executive dl·
reCtor of the Virginia Coalfield
Economic Development AuthorIty, said industries considering
locating ln'the coal fields want to
see a solid contract that wUI
. settle labor unrest· and signal
that workers can adapt to changing economic conditions.
Miners will be considering a
clause In the proposed agreemerit allowing for so-c ailed "flex·
time," which will allow the firm
to operate around the clock, a
signal workers In the region are
ready to accept changes, Yeatts
said.
Pittston Coal Group, a subs!·
diary of Pittston Co., located In .
Greenwich, Conn . , argued
!hroughout the dispute that It
needed such flexibility -lnclud·
lpg a relaxation of th\! r~le that
miners do not work on Sundayto fulfill Its large foreign orders.
"It's a fact for sure we are
. dealing In a global economy ...
and we have to make whatever
adjustments are necessary,"
Yeatts said.
And settlement of the strike
against Virginia 's la.r ges t coal

Stornt heaps snow in West
drivers could not see the red or rollna man and two In Georgia to
A raging winter storm that
their deaths.
.
green signals.
piled up to 6 feet of snow on the
"
It's
just
beautiful
outside.
The
The Reno-Cannon Internamountains of California and
water
Is
all
receding,
"
Lavonda
tional Airport, closed nearly all
Nevada extended Its . fury Into
Friday, plowed Its runways and Bla~kwell, a sherl!rs dispatcher .
northern Utah ·Saturday, while
reopened at mid-morning. Inter- In Translyvania County, N.C. ,
floodwaters receded In the Sm1• state 80, the main link between said Saturday "All the roads In
!beast In the wake of thunderReno and California, was also the county are passable. Every.
storms that killed at least three reopened, but chains were man- thing's OK."
Gov. Joe Frank Harris's chief
people and sent llundreds fleeing.
datory In California and chains
Snow drifts continued to mount or snow tires were req ulred In aide was surveying damaged
in ,the foothills and mountains of Nevada.
areas of Georgia with state ~nd
northern California·and Nevada· ' . Further east, wind-driven federal emergency management
and In southwest Washington,
snow pl.led up at the rate of an officials to decide whether a
keeping holiday weekend
Inch an hour, creating drifts up to feileral disaster should · be
gamblers out of casinos and 3 feet deep and near-impossible declared.
forciJtg cancellation In Reno. The driving conditions in the Cache
North. Carolina also sent damgaming town was hit Friday witli Valley and mountains of north· age assessment teams to areas In
18 Inches of snow, the third:
19 counties hit with ·floods during
ern Utah, the NWS said.
largest one-day total ever.
The 'storm also extended Into the . torrential storms, to deterUp to 15 inches ot additional
Southern California, where the mine If the state should apply !or
snow were expected In some precipitation was falUng In the federal disaster assistance.
mo.untainous areal; Saturday, the form of up to 2 inches of rain in
Some 38 homes were destroyed ·
National Weather Service said. . Los Angeles County and more or damaged tiy a tornado Friday '
Up to 6 feet of JWW snow was
than 3 Inches near Ftllrhore, the In ~arrolltOn, Ga ., and 12 people
already on the ground in elevawere hospitalized. The twister
NWS said.
tions a hove 7 ,OOO Jin the Lake
Receding floodwaters .a nd only pulled trees out of.the ground In a
Tahoe Basin.
scattered showers were reported corkscrew motion, witnesses
'Wind gusts up to 70 mph In
In the Southeast, ·where on ' said.
sO!fle areas kicked up the snow
"Some houses looked like they
Friday severe thunderstorms
and blinded drivers in ~ 'whl·
roamed and tornadoes ripped at just exploded," said Capt. .Ro·
teout" conditions. In Reno and
least five towns in Alabama, bert Lee of the Carroll County
Sparks in Nevada, many tra!ftc
South · Caroline and Georgia. Sherl!rs Department. "It looked
lights were caked with snow and •Floodwaters swept a North ·ca. like a bomb hit rightln the middle •
of the subdivision."
·

Era of .monster hurriCane predicted
PEtERSBURG, Fla.
(QPI) - The severe tropical
weather .systems of the past two
Atlantic hurricane seasons and
changing weather conditions In
west Africa may ring !nan era of
major hurricanes, the director of
the National Hurricane Center
warned.
"If whafwe've seen In 1988 and
1989 are Indications of the future,
Indeed stronger and more frequent hurricanes are coming,"
Bob Sheets said Friday at a
conference on beach preservation In St. Petersburg. .
The past two Atlantic burr!·
cane seasons produced five
storms with winds of more than
130 mph, the greatest number of
~ere hurricanes since the
1960s. The worst was Gilbert, the
"storm of the century" that
devastated Jamaica in 1988 and
had the lowest barometric pres·
sure ever recorded tor an Atlan'
. tic hurricane.
. Hurricane Hugo, which battered the South Carolina coast
last year, was thecosUieststorm
l1i U.S. hlstorv.
,At some point In their development, both storms reached maxi·
mum Category 5 strength, gener·
aUng storm tides of more than 18
feet and winds over 155 mph.
·', Researchers found a parallel
between the moisture levels of
west Africa, where many of the
•irongest hurricanes are born,
and the frequency of tropical
storms, Sheets said.
Alter several years ot drought,
moisture levels are again rising.
The result, Sheets said, may be
an Increase til the siZe and
frequency of hurricanes.
Despite the enormous threat,
he said, e~gency planners
have done little to prepare for the
worst - when residents ot
coa~tal commuhlties art! unable
to nee approaching storms because roads or bridges are
blocked.
•
Sheets u..,ed planne!'l to give
more thought to ·'vertical ev'a·
cuatlon," the contrQverstal Idea
ot 'lheltertng
returees
In lilgh-·
.
.
,)

rise blilldlngs. New UrJeans, for
example, Is developing plans to
use downtown notels as shelter
because the city would be under
18 feet of water In a major storm.
Developers could be required
to construct certain areas of their
projects as "refuges · of J ast
resort," Sheets said.
Sheets said vertical evacuation
would help solve the problem of
trying to evacuate large Jljlpulatlons on short rtotlce. He said It Is
virtually impossible to give three
days notice and In the case of
Hurricane Jerry last year, residents of Galveston, Texas, had
only eight hours to evacuate.
"I just don't think it's morally

or legally responsible to . say,
.'5,000 of you are trapped, we're
sorry, but you're on your owil, "'
Sheets said.

.

BA"KRUPTCY
614-221-0888
l.W. CENNAMO
AnORNEY•AT.UW
336 S.

H~

St., Col....._ ON.

LOCAl CONSULTATION
KNIGHT, MUlliN LAW OFFICES,
POMEIOY, 992 ·2090
In

r-oy ~lth

ATTORNEY D. IIOIAII. MWEN

'

:

' '

Texas and stay at beach resorts.
Many not old enough to buy
liquor In \he United States go to ·
Mexico where the dr inking age is
18.

" We are recommending they do '
tt for statt.stlcal purpOse&amp;, and so ·
we have Information about wh~n
they come tn and leave. " ·
Ucona said students who sign
RobertPI~ertonJr. , mayorof
tn . wlll be asked to show some
South Padre Island, a major form of identification.
·
tourist destination, satd .he had
Mexican officials say there
not heard of the plan but doe$ not · have been inany cases In which
like it. .
'
parents and .frlends say students '
" It .just seems to me like
were missing ln.Mextco and later
someone t.s trying to recreate learned they never .entered tbe
what happened last year, In a
country. The sign-in program
manner of speaking ,. he said . "I· wUI prevent these Incidents · they
do not think too mu~h of lt. Why said.
' ·
just do it to students. why not do
''This Is for the protect·ion ·of
ever~bQdy? "
.
the teenagers coming !no the
Llcona said extra officers will COI!Dtry and, on the other hand,!!
be addad to register spring . ts . a ~onventent • way for the .
breakers during March and authorities. to know who is In .
April.
'
.
Mexico In the , event of an ·
"I repeat ,.. tht.s ts optional for emergency or any· lncldeilt," ,.
whoever wants to do It," he said. Perez said.

'

'

THE
MEDICAL SHOPPE, INC.

50°/o TO 60°/o

WHEELCHAIRS,
HOSPITALIEDS
.TRAPEZES
PATIENT UFTS
UFT CHAIRS
BEDSIDE COMMOD£5

OFF!

By Untied Preas International

ST.

.

.
'
BROWNSVILLE, Texas (UPI)
.producer may also settle the
A big boosttotheef!ortcamein
- Students taking spring break
nerves of some Industrial 1988 when the General Assembly
In Mexico next month will be
prospects.
.
created the Coalfield. Authority,
asked to sign In with Mexican
"I haven't been exposed to the unusual, hybrid organization
officials
as they cross tnterna·
•&gt;
much direct negative Impact directed by Yeatts.
tiona!
bridges.
(from the strike)," Yeatts said.
The group's board consists of
Carlos Perez. deputy Mexican ·
" But some of the marketing five people appointed by the .
consul
In BrownsvUle, said the
people with the sl;lte have told governor, represen1;1ltives !rom
voluntary
registration Is a reacme that some of the folks they 've the three largest coaf companies,
lion
to
last
year 's murder of
talked to have expressed concern leaders from the three largest
University of Texas studentabout labor relatlol!shere. "
coal producing counties, and
Mark Kilroy·
·
Despite the labor Image others.
. " I think this will be a very
cause&lt;t by the str-Ike, seven new
"For the first time we have a
co.nfident way to know who is In
industries settled In the Virginia group sollc;~tlng Investments to
coalfields during 1989, bringing come here1 Yeatts said.
· Mexico," Perez said. "As you
know, we had a very. unfortunate
the promise of 1,027 jobs once all
That's not a particularly easy
situation last r,ear with the case
plants are at !uU production.
task. Many outsiders tend to
of
Mr. Kilroy.
.
.
Companies such a.s Donkenny thin(!: of the coalfields as a place
Kilroy
was
abducted
a few
at Duffield, Fournier Furniture where transportation · t.s riearly
blocks
from
the
Gateway
Bridge
and ASA Technologies In Le·
impossible, and the workers as
during an evening of drinking In
banon have swelled non-coal surly union people hidebound by
Matamoros and was slain by
industry employmepl ranks to tradltiQJI.
.·
drug
traffickers performing a
ne!lrly 7,000 now.
.
The Coalfield Authority is
human
sacrifice I they believed
That's a huge economic change working on a $25,000 marketing
would
protect
them from pollee
In an area lol)g dependent on the campaign In an effort to counter
and
rival
drug
lords. ·
coal Industry, a switch made those stereotypes. Roads have ,
Kilroy's
body
and tliose of a
necessary by the ·loss of some Improved enormously In the past
dozen other victims were found
9,000 coal jobs during, the· past decade, and leaders can point to
in April, burled on a ~anch .nea r
decade. About 12,000 coal jobs a ready workforce with what
Matamoros.
remain.
they consider an excellent •'work
The sign-ln . program, which
"The leadership In most of the ethic, " Yeatts said.
begins
March 1, wm be carried
localities started to recognize the
In addlllou, people such as
out
by
federal
officers under the
. coal Industry was not going to Yea,tts have managed to condirection
of
Antolin Licona·
come back like It was In the late vince local officials to spend as
Lopez,
the
chief
Immigration
1970s," Yeatts said. "Some legit!· much as S1 million on developtor
the
lower
Mexican
officer
mate effort had to be maM to ment, even if that Investment
,
,
border.
attract other, non-coal related brings a buslnf!js to a another
"For the students who enter
county .
industry here."
the city of Matamoros, we are
That required some new think·
As a result, Yeatts said,
going
to have a book where they
ing among the Industry and local VIrginia's coalfields could be set
can
register
.when they enter or
government o!ftclals. · Because for a prosperous decade,' barring
leave,
"
Ltcona
said. "It is
the coal industry usually .perpet- a disastrous economic downturn
them."
optional
for
.uated itself by spinning off its nationally.
During the two-month-long
own related businesses, local
"We're beginning to see some
spring
break season. ai; many as
·
officials never had to recruit for things happen," YeattS said: •
150,000
students !ravel to South
new jobs before.

ALL REMAINING FALL
AND WINTER
MERCHANDISE
SHOES, BOOTS AND

SHOWER STOOLS
WAUIERS/CANES
OSTOMY SUPPLIES
UIINARY i INCONTINENT SUPPLIES
.SUR(jiCAl DIESSIHGS
JOIST HOSIERY PRODUCT$

•••~ERTIFIED BR~CE

SHOPE••• .

. Delivery .&amp; Set~ up Available ·
Medicare 8t Insurance Billing Dona

HANDBAGS

SALES AND RENTALS
565 Jackson Ave.
Dee Dillon, R.N .

446 ~ 2206

Gallipolis. Ohio

'
Herman L. Dillon, ·P.T.
Owners

.

'

·You :will soon have to make an

deci,,ion regarding t.he rollover optio-.s on .
the distribution of cash and stock from
yout company's retirement plan.
DON'T
MAKE THAT DECISION UNTIL YO ..:
.
• Get the Facts . .
•
• Review Your Options
• Understand the Ta.x Implications
.
• Get Your Questions Answered
..

l'

'

•

'

'

'

'

'

PAlMERS BANK and ADVEST, INC.
Cordially Invite You To Attend Qnt·of
·Two Free Seminars. .
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1990
10:00 A.M. and 6:30. P.M. · ;.
:MEIGS COUNTY PUBLIC ·LIBRARY
'

ANNOUNCES THE

GRAND OPENING ,
OF

BROOKSIDE
MANOR

,'

·•in StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio

RSVP
" '
.'; For More Information Contact Roger Hysell or iruce RHd at t92•!136
J

'

An Independent Uving Community
ON

.S UNDAY
· FEBRUARY 18; 1990 ·
FOR A PERSONAL TOUR CONTACT

KATHY HUNTER, Social Services

at 797-4661

THERE ARE ALSO 21 SKILLED/INTERMEDIATE
CARE BEDS BEING ADDED WITH THE NEW WING

,,

'

Farmers
Bank
'

I.

I ..., *-*.
~

.

'

Your. Community Owned Bank

i
.
' 19.92-2136
221 WEST SECOND
I OHIO

985-3385
STATE ROutE 7
TUPPEIS PLAINS; OHIO

Dim view on GM profit s~re
DAYTON, Oblo (UP1)- Some·
General Motors Corp. workers
are 11peet with the 1110 In profit
shariJII they received in pay
checks laat week, just a daY after
the a11tomaker reported its third·
hlcbelt earnings in company
hw~ .
.
General Motors on T)lursday,.
said profits reached $4.2 billion
for 1989, but most of the profits
came !rom units other than Its
Norlb American operlioas. The
company said profits In North
America were lower because of ·
S\BCk vehicle sales and higher
sales Incentives.. The $50 profit-sharing check
"really stinks," Cam! Francis of
GM's 'Harrison Radiator Div-'
lslon plant In Dayton, said In a
story ·published SatUI'Iiay In the
Dayton Dally News.
·
·
The profit sharing Jar · auto
workers at plants in the Miami
Valley and elsewhere Is tied to·
.the pro!lta blllty o!the company 's
'. North Amerlc¥ operations, A
GM official expressed salisfac~!ion that $50 chE\CkS woljld go to
f43,000 hourly and salaried
:employees.
• "We're pretty happy tpat the .
f'orth American opertions continue to be profitable to pay at
teas t the minimum (in profit
,Jharing) ," said spokesman John
Maclarz.
. But an official of the United
·Auto Workers said the' union will
be carefully examining GM
•proxy statements to determine
~ompensatlon given to top GM
exe(:utives.
,,
~ "What will compouni:l Insult
with injury is . ·u those who
actually have responsibility for
the dlsas trous mismanagem{;nt
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$30.1 .mlllion spll settlement approved.

of Getieral Motors now proceed
to reward themselves wltll rich
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - A
boauaes and stock dlall'lbu•
ladera! judge has approved a
tiona," Stephen Yolltch, a UAW
settlement not to exceed $30.1
vice president, told the Dally
million !or 'Class action claims
News.
related . to the January 1988
Some union members said
Ashland 011, Inc. spill at . the
· they would like to scrap profit
Floreffe termlnaJ ·in Jefferson.
sharing in favor of raises in this
U.S. District Judge D. Brooks
year's contract negotiations
Smith approved the settlement
wjth General Motors. ''It's lime
Friday lor Ashland, Skinner ·
for the union to wise up and get
Tank Co. and United States
rid of the profit sharing and go
· Fidelity and Guaranty Co. The
lor raises," said a worker at
agreemeiltdenled all liability but
GM 's Moraine assembly planf,
stated the companies wanted to
who asked not to be Identified.
a void !ur.ther ·expeqse . and .
"I don't like. It' a bit. either "
Inconvenience.
·,
said Georg~ Hunter, first vice
A representative . for Ken·
president. of Local sot' of tbe
lucky's Ashland Oil . took no
International Union of Elec·
position to the requests for
tronlc Workers. "I'd say It will be·
claims in court.
an Issue In the negotiatio,ns."

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The spill on Jan. 2, caused by
coUapse of a tank holdiJtg diesel
fuel, sent thousands of gallons ot
on into the Monongahela and
Ohio rivers, a!~ting water
supplies to surrounding • com·
munitles and those downstream.
The settlement covers re·
quests by Individuals, buslnes.s es
and the states of Pennsylvania,
West Virginia and Ohio. . It
provides !or distribution of five
funds to satisfy claim&amp;for wage
loss , business interruption. In·
creased business expense and
damage to real or personal
property.
.
·.
The fir st fund, for $500,000,
provides money to households

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wbere water service by the
Municipal A11thority of Robinson
Township or th~ Western Allegh·
eny County Municipal Authority
was disrupted.
The second, totaling .$617,500,
reimburses businesses wi th
profit losses of at least 50 percent
and employees who los t wages.
The th.lrd fund, for $13.9 mil·
lion, goes ·to the three states to
restore natural resources and
pay civil penalties.
· The fourth , totaling $5.25 mil·
lion, will cover the cost of
notifying the settlement class . ··
· The final (und, about $10.
million doUars, wtil satisfy businesses which suffered profit loss
through government-requ ired

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s,.e1411 Noa.: 1Mt, HaN AI Mil..,. FtU'IIiluN, Haw Hu "TJ. J'lu" And
Se .._ Our Dll~ Sales Jlqol'l! New W.'N .Dofnt S•mdhfnt AIHnd II!
AIr

PBIG" BIPUCIQ!

.· MJAMISBURG, Ohio (UPI) -

the Department of Energy says
II: leak o!tritium gas at the Mound
faclltty neai' Dayton last November has delayed tests of key
1\uclear weapons components.
• Thetestsareused!ordetecting
, iaulty nuclear weapons whose
~~otomtc fuel may have · decayed
below acceptable standards . The
Mound plant Sllilpended the tests
aft!!r radioactive trlt~um leaked
·
·
Nov. 8.
• A department spoitesmap said
·e ·"Siispeusion lias forced tile
wrnment to. suspend ·au test·
g·of'speclllc nuclear weapons
¢ompotlents in the nation's stock·
pUe. The suspension will not have
an Immediate effect on the
hallop's nuclear weapons pro-·
't ram, but an Indefinite shu t.down
could cause problems, said Jim
Morley, area manager of DOE's
Dayton Are~ Operations.
Tritium Is ' used to bOOst the ,
explosive power of nuclear wea- i&gt; •
pons. The Mound plant tested the ·
radioactive gas, which is used to
reduce the size of nuclear wea·
pons so that multiple warheads
oan be put on a' slrigte delivery
system.
' .
'. ''
A Department of Energy rePort released last week said the
¥ound program Is consldereq
· " essential to the continuing uplr~de" of nuclear weapon_
systems.
..
"No other site has 'the ,special
·facllttles and staff to conduct ·
!hese highly complex tests with
tritium· filled contaiDers," the
report said.
~ The monit~lng program was
suspended after the accidental
telelise of 3.7 grams o1 tri~um "·
into the environment. ,The, .•
department said the accident
caused by the Improper
ins lallation of a pipe fitting.
· The operator of the Mound
plant, EG&amp;G Mound Applied
· Technologies, has submitted a
' draft pl~h to the energy department on revising the monitoring
program. The department Is
expected to review the proposal
In the next month or so, Morley
said.
·
If the tritium·program "stayed
down Indefinitely, It would cause
lome problems" in the nation's
nuclear weapons program, he
said.
. · .
EG&amp;G spokesman Howard
Charbeneau said no one checked
the pipe filling to see If It was the
correct one to use. EG&amp;G is
,r~vlewlng Its management
~rocedures to reduce the chance
'Of future accidents, he said.
, The scientific director of the
~uclear Coutrol · Institute, a
IIOJI·proflt, Jluclear watcbdog
iroup In Wasb(JIIIOD, said the
accident renecttld unfavorably
•nEGiG.
; ~.'They are COOIIIdered to be the
"'t trtllllm-handiiJII facility Ill ·
the nuclear weapona complex," ' ·
llild Mllton Hoenig. "Somebody
(eally screwed up." ·

· Brina Thia Ad Into
Store And Receive
The Additional Liltecl Discounts Off
Our Already Low Sale Prices!

ras
was

POMEROY -

The Melp

Prlll ... ll' Da)t.

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(;as le* delays
$uke tests

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shutdown. AlSo Included are ·
businesses which lost profits
because public water systems
could not process water from the ,
Monong~hela and Ohio r ivers or.
their own water Intakes were
a!!ected.
"
As of January, about 1,400
claims had been received !rom'
Individuals and businesses. said .
Howard Specter of Specter Law ·
O!!tces, whose firm t.s one of
three Involved In set tling claims,·
The law firms will get a tol;ll of,
$5.25 million for their costs and
services . a figure exclusive of the
settlement. The deadline !of.
tu)ng claims Is April 9, Specter • ,
said.
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p,unty CourtbOUJe will be cloled
liD Monday . In oblervailce of

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Sund8V 11m II Sentinel-

,.,_Of . MidtiiiPGOl-G 1'1'"'11, Ohio Point Plaunt. W. Va.

'CourthoUie closed

MEMBER FDIC

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a. Sundllv Tim•• Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS - With the end
of winter In slgbt, thoughts 01
spring Dowers and warm sunny
days enter our minds.
But,theendofcoldw\ntrydays
does not meflD that the need for
blood goes away, according to
VIcki J . Aleshire, American Red
Cross, Wesrern VIrginia Chapter, Blood Services, Tri-State
Re'gloa, Huntington, W.Va.
The' Trl.State Rel{lon Blood

Soul! Ceutral Oblo
' Sunny and warmer. High In the
mid 401.
ltxlellcled Forecast
. • M ,.,, tllroll«b Wednesday
: Mainly talr'Monday and Tues. · day. A chance of rain Wednes·
day. Highs ml!l 30s to mid 40s
: MoDday and Tuesday and 40 to 50
Wednesday. Lows mid . 20s to
: lower 30s Monday and Tuesday
: with mostly 30s Wednesday.

ROSwELL, Ga. (UP!) : Bombs exploded Saturday at two
:-subUrban Atlanta grocery stores
pollee bad ear ller emptied of
shoppers toUQWing threats that
: explosives would be detonated,
: authorities said.

Services, wblcb Includes Gallla
cOuaty, needs to collect at least
300 units of blood every working
day In order to meet the Deed&amp; of
57 regional hospl~~·
.
,Citizens of GaiDa County can
do their part wben the Red Cross
Bloodmobile visits Grace United
Methodlat Church, Second
Avenue and Cedar Street, GaiUpoU., fl'om noon to 6 p.m.,
Thursday, Feb. 22.

RAC delays restart ·
of fourth potline / . · .·

·: Stores bombed
WEATHER MAl\ - lleavy ahowers aad tllundentonns wUI
oocur acr- Ceatral Florida' wblle blib presaure and lair skies
will prevalllrom tlleeaatc~t. TemperatllftliwiUranplntlle:liOs
and 30s across much of tbe aorlhem half ol tile' na&amp;ton. (UPI)

.

~ ~unicipal .Court

Well log
. . •·
r.eqwrements
are enacted
:

. GALLIPOLIS - Ray Smith, atier warning. Her bond was set
· 36, 2306 Eastern Ave., was fined at $1,000. Her pretrial was set for
• S300 and costs tor driving under March 5 at 1: 30 p.m ..
Tony Armstrong, 24, Gallipo: the lnOuence In Ga111poUs Munlc·
· Ipal Court. .He also was sentenced lis, pleaded not guilty to a charge
: to three days In jail and received . of criminal damaging Involving a
• a 60-day license SI.\Spenslon. , . mobile home owned by Mrs .
Smith also was fined $12 and Delbert · Swisher. His pretrial
was set for 1: 30 p:m. March 5.
: coslll for failure to dim head. lights: A charge of no owrator's Bond was fixed at $1,000.
David J. Mooney; 22, Rt. 2,
. license was dismissed. .
Crown City, pleaded not gull ty to
: Wayne Rowell, 25, Rt. 2, Crown a charge of
violation of
:· City, was tined $50 and costs for probation. His hearing will be
· disorderly conduct.
March 15 at 10 a.m. ·.
.; • . Tina Lawrence, 31, 720'11 SeGeorge J;l. Needhl\111• 53, Oak
:; cond Ave., Ga!Upolis, pleaded Hill, pleacled n.o t guilty to a
"••not guilty to two charges of charge of !allure to yield the right
: criminal · damaging (Involving of way after stopping at a stop
• ~parate . pollee cruisers), as- . sign. His pretrial was setfor Feb.
: lault and disorderly . conduct · 26at 4 p.m.

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.~ Drug, alcohol seminar set

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COLUMBUS - Failure to
comply wltb · Ohio's well log
requirements Is now cla!lalfled as
a fourth degree mlldemeanor, a
crime punishable by ·u p to 30 days
Imprisonment and up, to $250 In
fines, according to the Ohio
Departrnen t of Natural Resour·
ces (ODNR) .
ODNR's' Division or Water
recently flied It first criminal
complalnt under the higher penaltles law. The charge resulted
In a tine, a suspended sentence
and ·a two-year probation period
for the driiUng contractor. This
favorable decision reinforces the
Importance that the division has
placed on ensuring that contractors comply with the well fling
requirements. .

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.- Ra·
venswood Aluminum Corporalion (RAC) announced today that
It was delaying the restart of the
fourth potllne at Its ·Reduction
Plant. Tbe decision was based on
continued very low pricing tor
primary aluminum and the contlnued high cost of alumina, an
essential raw material tor aluml·
num production.
"We are going to review and
evaluate our position con·
stantly," Donald W. Worlledg!!.
RAC's p~ldent ai!d chief operating offler. "We fully Intend to
restart the fourth ll')tUne. Untortunately, the steep decline In
metal prices and other high cost
ot raw materials prevent us from
slgnlflcan tty expanding our
primary aluminum production at
the present time."
The res tart had.originally been
set for February, but was resche,
duled for April because of ternporary production cutbacks resultlngfromasertoussbortageof
alumina In December's record·
breaking cold ·spell. Now It Is
delayeel Indefinitely. pending
more favorable market
cmidltions.
.
RAC has planned the fourth
·potllne as part of Its capital
. Improvement and cost control
strategy. The company's board

and college -age youths. Partie!·
pants will look at statistical
InfOrmation on the use of particular drugs and the trends ol drug
ODNR provides Invaluable
~se by students of various age
publiCations and answers count·
groups.
..
Jess .que~tions tor ground water
Open dlscusslbns will fo,llow,
Information regarding 'specific
led by Robert Orth; a certified
sites across. the state. The
chemical dependency counselor.
department
needs data on every
Additional Information on the
·
well
that
Is
drilled In Ohio to
workshop and registration may
ensure
that
this
Information Is as
be' obtained !rom the Office of
credible
and
accurate
as possl- ·
Contlulng Education, University
ble.
This
makes
each
and
every
of Rio Grande, Box 878, Rio·
well
·
Jog
priceless
to
all
who
Grande, Ohio 45674, or by calling
water
for
their
depend
on
ground
(614) 245-5353, extension 325, or
financial and biological survival.
toll tree In OhtO at l-800-282-7201.
,I

····~· AT

PAT

of directors dedicated more than
$6 milliOn In 1989 to prepare the .
potllne for production. Tlie board
also approved a $9.5 mUUon
modernization of the plant's
carbon facility to provide the
potllnes with Improved carbon
anode blocks. The overall capital
plans · call for an Investment In
RAC of $80 mUUon over the next
tlu'ee years.
,
Ravenswood Alumlpum Corporation, a new company, recently
purchased the Ravenswood
Works from Kaiser Aluminum &amp;
Chemical Corporation. The corporation's head&lt;~,uarters are In
·Ravenswood, W.Va., which Is
also the location for HAC's
reduction and fabrication plants.
Other RAC facilities Include a
metal reclamation center In
Bedford, Ind., and a . date processlng center at Columbus,
Ohio.

Burllle 011 Will be giving a
cerilttcate goo!l for $2 worth ot.
gasoline at Burllle Ststlons; two.
16 ounce non-returna,b le bottles
o( Pepsi, ·courtesy of Pepsi Cola;
. and Pizza Hut will be ilviDI a
coupon good for one personal P.an
Pizza to each participating
donor. ·
·
These merchants realize the
Importance of donating blood,
and this Is their way of express·
lng their appreciation to the
area's blood donors.
·Anyone In good health weigh·
lng 110 pounds or inore may
donate this IUe-savlng gift. The
, donation Is safe, simple and ,
relatively painless.

, FRI. THIU THURS.
CHARliE SHE£11

·MOUNTAIN
SHARE THE ADVENTURE.

4

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ONE I.'IENiiiG SHOW 7:30

ADIISSKII $1.50

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

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Effective Feb. 19, 1990

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GALLIPOLIS .TOBACCO
.
and CANDY
wiil be relocating from 76
, Vine Street to Upper
River Road in t"e former
John Deere Building.

HILL~! FORD :
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VALUE. f;O .ES STA . o· ~ D
1990

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SAVE

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$217000·

When You Buy Preferred Equipment Package
320A Special Value Package
11-lpeed r ..nemlselon
WW. VInyl Body Side Molding
AM/JIM Stereo
nneedOI••
Power St-Ing
loll* val Wipers
Window Oefro1111r
lnat..-tatlon Group
· DJgitei'Ciock/ Overhead
Conaole
Ught/a-.rlty Group
Duel Electric Mirrors
LUxury Whell Covert ·
'1.1&amp;. EFI 4 cyl. Engine
AM/FMC-·•

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SAVE

When You Buy Preferred Equipment Package
2261 Special Value Padcage.Equlp•nt:
Air Conclliioning

Po'wer Door Lock•

Sticker Prict .
Pack. . Dilmlolt
Pot Hll Dltceunt
Cathlocl&lt;

$9545.00
677.00
493.00 .
JOOO.OO

.$7375.00

Doliw•lll Prlct
ITax &amp; .n tlt FHI Not llldUIWl

,......rm.
Sticker

~

Pet . . . _ ,

c..w

•13~,.059.00
1137.00
677.00
750.00

hli••lll Prlct 59895~00
Ita a ntlt Net llodd••l

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7 ESCOm IN STOCK FOII. .DIATE DEUVEIY

practice JUanlk~. Pictured are, l'-r; Lisa Gray,
. Tara WoHe, Amber Eblin, and Sandy Landaker.

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SAVE $3039~

J)uel Electric Control
Mlrrora
nlt.WhHI
Polycaat .Wheeta
Aell' Window Defroe111r
Ught Group
Speed Con1101
Po-Windowe
AM/FM Cat111ette
Optional Equtpm.,t:
Auto. T,.na.

COSMETOLOGY -Tit- . students In lhe
co1111etology pro(l'am a&amp; Melp Hlp Scbool are
varlowl styllni teclmlquea o• tbe

1990 RANGER

S3l5300

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When You Buy Preferrld Equipment Package 864
With Mrinual Tran1111isslon ·
·-PACKAGE EQUIPMENT:
XLT Trim
P2111StMI OWL T1rel
Dlluu Tut- Plllnt ·
Power s-Ing
Chrome Rear Step Bumper
AM/FM lt.110 C.Htte
110/40 Split Bench 8eat
Slld!nt "-Window ·
Taohcirneter ·
Cln Aluminum WhHia
OPTIONAL EQUIPMENT:
2.1 v-e engine
41aotGVW
Air i:onclltlonlng
.Handling Pack~~ge

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, . . Dim nt ·

Pet •

. OFFICE WOali: EXPEaiENCE -Aaaa
Starcher, a Melp High School occupational work

'

Stic.tr Pr"lllcnat

experience student, Is pictured here operating the
IK!hool store.

·subOO.uv
..naJ.qo
651.00
1000.00
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.Micldltport1 Ohic»

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Nunlng
. The nursing program Is •new
·this year and It Is_ a one year,
cooperative employment, prOgram offered to senll!rs .only.
A typical day In tile program
consists of two periods of related
Instruction during the morning
and four periods of simulated
laboratory experience In the
afternoon: During the second
semester of the school year the
students participate In on-the-job
cooperative employment at local
health care facilities. .
Students In this program could
possibly find em~;&gt;loyment as
nursing assistants In hospitals,
nursing homes, or other health
care facilities. The program also
provides students with the basic
skills and a good foundation with
which to build a medical career.
The Instructor 1s Margie
.B lake, R.N.

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CHILD DEVII!LOPMBNT -.U.o Ulldlll pari Ia
Nallllal Yocallellll Ulc. . . . . . . I&amp; llelp
..... lleliotl .... lilt .llome "ll!lllllol . . .
Pld•ed 11«e .ve cldlll dewel • ••• allldellll
; wl&amp;ll lllllr Plllna abDU Ylll'lllil o1 cldlll

•

deveiOflllftt. Tldl Ia U.e lnl :re.v llllacJ.u bu
......... flclt.... are, llpllllll Reed, .....,.
Uld, 1-r, • - ·.... llell;r .Jph . ., ,CMitla Wolfe',
aadAIIple~.

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front Kenny Reynolds and Scott Brlaker.
Standtng, front, Dale.J .ohnslon and Mlck Seyler!
'c.

AUTO MECHANICS -Checking a part ol the auto mechanic!~
machlaery, some of the IJIOit modern equipment available,
Melp Hlp School are Jeremy Stone, back, and BW H;raell.

Weldllli
In this vocational program,
Ins tructlon is provided for a
centinuous three-hour block .of
time In the shop or laboratory, as
well as related Classroom
Instruction. ·
Tl!e laboratory .and related
Ins tructlon Is based on an occupa·
tiona I analysis ·Including the
skills, atlltudes and knowledge
required to achieve the lnstruc·
tiona! objectives lor the
program.
The basic principles of science
and mathematics, with strong
emphasis upon safety Instruction
are Integrated Into tbe lastructlonal units.
The primary purpose of the
welding program Is . to provide
the student with the necessary
skills and knowledge to obtain
entry ievel employment In the
welding trade. '
The Instructors are Richard
Fetty and Ken Eblin. ;

OWE

I TII.OS. STOCK fOII.IIDIATI DIUVIIY

461 South Third

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AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION --oloall Dunkle, seated, and
Paul VanCooaey are studen111 In the aiJ'!cullural educul!ln
proiJ'IUil a&amp; Melp Hlp Scbool. They will gain knowledae In
aiJrlcultural supplies and service, and In farm buiiDeiS
m111111aement:·

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Occupational Work Expe·
rlence Is a state sponsored,
two-year, work study program
tor juniors and seniors. It's an
Jeffort to bring together employers, whO are In need of unsknted
or semi-skilled help, and students, Who are . prepared to
accept the responslbllltlea of a
, job under school supervision.
The program Is designed to
· develop student motivatlqn, to
cliange student attitudes toward
education, and to develop
tbrQUih work experience the
nece~~,sary attitudes and ab!Utles
to enable tbe student to become
gainfully employed.
The Instructor Is Ron Loaan.

$9975.00

....... Price
ITa &amp; Tille !let lnd••'~

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In four classifications. Tho5e are Linda Yonker and Kay
classifications are Trade and Proffitt.
Industry, which Includes .auto
.mechanics, electronics, nursing,
Auto Mechanics· ·
The auto mechanic~ program
cosmetology, and office work
experience; vocational agrlcul· 1~ a two year program lor the
.lure; home economics, and junior and senior years of high
DECA (Distributive Education), schooL In tills program, students ·
All four categories were Included · spend six periods of the day In
during National Vocauomal Edu· this program.
Students are trained on all
cation Week.
'
What does each lr:dlvldual aspects of the automobile and
program have to offer, you they use some of the most
wonder? Each program Is unique modern equipment which was
In It's own right and each purchased through a $28,000
warrants l~dlvldualexplanatlon. grant to update the program.
ELECTRONICS -8tudeata from the junior and
This program Is, without a doubt,
senior electronjcs.class examine a circuit board
very Interesting and challenging.
. Cosmet~logy
from a microcomputer unit. They are, seated,
The Instructors are Bill WilliThe cosmetology program Is a
two year program for students In . amson and Thomas Werry.
knowledge of basic electronic
their junior or senior year. Upon
principles and theory, the appU·
Electronics
1,500 hours of training, students
cation of this theory to the
This two yl!ar program Is
must take the state board of
various components, circuitry,
cosmetology test under which Intended to provide students .-and systems, and the developthey become llc·ensed .through classroom and laborament of the necessary manlpula·
tory experience, the necessary
cosmetologists.
live and analytical skills and
Students who complete this knowledge and skills required for
safety habits required In this
program become eligible to successful entry level employfield.
obtain jobs In beauty shops and ment In the field of elecl'ronlcs.
Students In this program are
The emphasis Is on each
styling salons.
·
encouraged tohdevelop the attiInstructors for this program student obtaining a thorough
tudes, work habits, technical
knowledge, appreciation for the
care of tools and equipment, and
skills that will enable them to
advance In the electronics Industry according to their ab!UIIes .
This program Is accomplished
by group and Individual lnstruc· ,
lion, demonstration, and pracll·
.cal application.
,
Instructors for the program
are Gary Walker and Dale
Harrison.
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461 ·Squth Third·Avenue in Middleport

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By lULIE E. DILLON
Tlines-Sendnel Staff
POMEROY - Did Y0\1 know
this past week was 'National
: Vocational Education Week?
What Is Natlo.n al V&lt;icatlonal
Education Week, you ask?
The week Is ·so designated In
order to give the variousdepartments In a vocational program
the necessary recognition It truly
deserves.
Now lfyou'rellkemany.people
you may not lie familiar with
everything a vocational program
has to offer,
·
One such vocational program
Is offered at Meigs High School to
junior and senior students In
Meigs County. St,udents from all
~ three districts In the county can
take adVantage of this program,
and many do!
The vocational p~ograms offered through Meigs High School
are cosmetology, auto mecban·
! lcs, ele&lt;:tronlcs. nursing, weld; lng; office work experience,
' business education, and agricultural education.
The vocational programs exist

COU.RAGE

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Vocational EduCation Week
: shows ·off students' life skills

Cill ()tJY I ill ,·.I H"

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Febn.lerv 18, 1180

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AITENTION!

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river
Learning
a. trade

Red -Cross biOodmoblle to visit .

Weather

~mu.- jmtinel Section
B
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Pomeroy . Mldclaport-G ''palll, Ohio Poi1t Pltn1nt. W. Ve.

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See Learning

on 'page B2

. ....,..
j

-Perform

are llctU Gpla aa4 Trael Blrlela.
olfere4 aunllla proaram a&amp; Melp

aNIIad!l ....... ....,
8Clhaol ·

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B-2-Sunday lime~- Sentinel

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. F8btu-v 18. 1980

Pomeroy-Middleport-GelliDolis. Ohio-Point Planent. W. Va.

Bualnesa Education

-----

ATTENTION!

prepares to strike and arc. Others are, 1-r, Chris
Stotts, Angle Black, and Jamie Camminp.

WELDING -students in the welding proP-am

at Meip lOgb School look on as Derek Yonker

CRAFT

"'"'lcultai-al Education ·
In . this vocational program
students are offered experience
and training In the areas of
agricultural supplies and servi·
ces, and farm business
management.
.
The · agricultural supplies and
service 11rea of the program
students are given the opportun·
lty (o get acquainted ~th subJect
matter and learning experiences
which are concerned with pre·
paring students for occupations
which provide consumable supp·
lies used In a produCtion phase of

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CLASSES
TATTING
FEBRUARY 26

INSTRUCTOR-BETTY PLYMALE

OIL PAI'NTING
FEBRUARY 27
INSTRUCTOR-LOIS PAULEY

D.J.'S CRAFT SHOP'

1955 grads sought-

. SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
PHONE 446-2134

.

GALLJPOLIS - The Gailla
Academy· High School1955 dass
Is seeking addresses on several
classmates:
Nancy Miller Niday, Mary
Allee Fulks White, Ava McCann
Kennejly, Vera Mae Roush Freeman, Ernestine Lowder . Clark
Ronald McKnight, James Ma~
Nelson, John Short and William
C. Strait.
If you have Information on
these, call Allee Pasquale at
446·2939 or Jack Richards at
446·3461.

Value In SLR'sl

• BUSINESS EDUCATION - Lisa Darst, front,
' : and .J ennUet Tanner· are hard at work In their
- business education clus where they are learning

POPUlAR
DEMAND!

:Rollins' anniversary to be noted

valuable computer knowledge in word and. data
processing.

• Easy-to-use, buiH·in
metering system
• Shutter speeqs froni 1
\ second to an action
stopping 1/1000
• Available with a 1/2 50
mmiens
·
• Accepts fUll Pentax
system of
inlerchangeable bayonet
'
mount SMC lenses
• Amazlng features for an
incredibly low price

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TAWNEY
STUDIO
424 SECOND AYL

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Reunion meeting
set for Monday

OAWPOUS, OHIO

VOCATIONAL WINNERS -These students are
: the winners of the recent vocational skUIs contests
• held at Melp lOgb School. They are, 1-r, front,
Patricia .Helr.er for O.W.E.. Jerr:v While for

\\eight
. ..
New Fast &amp; Flexible
Prog•-a•n is smart..·.

welding, Kim Masters for C08111doloo, and
Richard Peyton for hand calcalator. Back, Dale
Jolluton lor elecltonlcs, Bracy·Kom for nunlng1
and·Jetemy Stone lor auto. mechanics.

'7n'mum becsuse tn Ftist:'
Vou1illceoll FASTtheveryhtMikni'-Prfghtqn 1o11ng wiictrtweekaftllr
- I Get going now ond you could- a ollmmor,...; YOU INa SPRING.

We '1e Not Betting Olde1.. ~
We 'te Betting Bsttst/

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"'t's mum bea.tuse it'S 'Jllexlbk."

...,y

DO You lille pdea? Do you
dining aut? We(go ah811CL.Weight WalChara New
Faat a Flexible Plan fila your llfeetyte perfectly. 11111meene you can Ill the food&amp; you
love, he your,_llar life with family and lrflndl nl ... lole ~. Ifa a wtiNERI

'7t!s smart bemuse It worlls."

Veterans Memorial- Your Hometown
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Hospital ......: has passed the quarter .
century mark.

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h~rne

area.

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Wa~W1! W1ltcl- hll ~ ,.._ ol people ju8t lille you 1oM millions of poundl.
Join the Snwuet.Jcln Walgh!Walcharl today lor only $12.
.

Our facility is consistently being upgrader,l. Our physical accommodations
are being enlarged and redecorated on a regular baais; the latest stata·of·theart medical equipment is added aa it is develOped and·our staff Is highly trained
and proficient in caring for you and your family.
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We offer you dally 24-hour Emergency Sevlcaa; Urgent Care Service, 12
hours each day; a Special Care Unit; e Skilled Nursing Fecllhy; Home Health
Nureing Services in your own reeidenca and Medical end Surgical units.
We offer you excellent care in our facility which Ia located right in your

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SD.VER ANNIVERSARY - Rober&amp; and Jlaliel llii'WBIIeld
Crown CIIJ wUI obllene lbelr 21111 weddlq aaalvenary on Feb. I'/.
They were married Feb. n, 1181 In CI'OWII City b)' the Rev. Bruee
Unroe. The couple baa two sona, Robet1 Bryan and Tlmotby Ryau.

Gee
Prlzm

right frotll the start..
•

We're Not Getting Older:
We're Getting Better!

Star Bank helps with student project
GALLIPOLIS - .S tar Bank,
. N.A ., Tri-State Is Involved In
education of students. Barbra
Coleman &amp; David Shaffer, Court
Street Of!lce, recently made a
loan to the sixth grade class at
Bidwell Elementary School, In
the amount of $50.'
The ' class participated In a
contest with the other sixth grade
class In a sales . promotion of
inventory they purchased for

0116•
061• Vtlltt

992-2104

resale to the other school
students.
Items for sale Included note·
books, !Iller paper, note pads,
pens, pencils, and erasers.
The class succeeded in repay·
lng the 90 day loan before the due
date, opened a business checking
account, and made a neat profit.
The class teacher, Karen Tho·
mas, was the recipient of the
Roman F . Warmke ·award for

SUNDAY
CROWN CITY - Rev. Kyle
Donnally will be at Mt. Zion
Baptist Church. Sunday, 7 p.m. ;
Stapleton family sings.

.

CROWN CITY -' Grubi,J Fam·
Uy Singers will be at Liberty
Chapel Church, Sunday, 6:30
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Vicfory Bap·
list Church has tlie Kyger Valley
Quartet, Sunday, 7 p.m.

7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS
Vinton
Friendship Garden Club meels
Tuesday, 1 p.m., home of Be a·
trice Bush .
THURMAN - Cardigan !Car·
dlff) Club meets Tuesday, 7:30
p.m.. Old Centerville School; .
program on school days, with a
special visit from Abra ham
Lincoln.
MERCERVILLE . - Guyan
Women's Club will meet 7 p.m .
Tuesday. Feb. 20 at the Guy an
Volunteer Firehouse. There will
be an election of o!flcers .

MONDAV
GALLIPOLIS - St. Peter's
Episcopal Churchwor(len meet
Monday, noon; speaker Henny
Evans on the early history of
Gallipolis.

MIDDLEPORT -Group 2 of
the Middleport Presbylerlan
Church will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Dorothy
Morris .

.GALLIPOLIS - The Amerl·
can Legion Auxiliary 161 will
.meet Monday, Feb.19atlp.m. in
the Legion Hall.
RACINE- The Racine Vlliage
Council will meet Monday at 7
p.m . at Star Mill Park.
TUESDj\Y
GALLIPOLIS - Overeaters
Anonymous meets Tuesday , 7
p .m .·. Wise man Insurance
agency.
GAL.LIPOLIS- Operation Llf· ·
toll meets Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.,
Columbus Souther·n Power.
GALLIPOLIS- American Le:
glon Auxiliary meets Tuesday.
7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS Lafayette
White Shrine meets Tuesday,

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CARPENTER -There will be
a hymn sing at the Mt . Union
Baptist Church on Sunday at 7
p.m .

Galllpoils
GALLIPOLIS Business and Professional
Women meet Monday, 6:30p.m .,
French 500 Room, Holzer Medi·
cal Center . Call cancellations to
M.a rlanne Campbell on Monday.
446-5005.

J;cawpt

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Community calendar

"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR .
STORE"
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COACHES SHORTS
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS :
BALL CAPS • BAGS
T-SHIRTS • &amp; MORE
-Custom Transfers
and Lettering-

RACINE - There will be a
meeting of the Sout11er n Local
MIDDlEPORT
qQ;: •6~7
Board on Tuesday at 7 p.m. In the. lllliiiiiiiiiiliiiii,;.__,.;,.;.;._.;...J
high school cafeteria.

Family Plannil1g
·It Makes Sense.!.•
. Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V. D. Screening
C11.ncer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
, ·Sliding f11 scale. No one refused services bKa.., 9f inabi6ty to pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

POMEROY:

. GAlliPOliS:

236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor

414 Second Ave., 2nd Floor
992-5912
446-0166
1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Clo11d Thursday
1:30 to 12 Sat...day
Clo1td Thu!'fday
AlSO: Jackson, Chtsapea'!t, Athens, (ltillicatht, Logan &amp; McArthur

Were Serious

YOUR TAXES .••

ut

LYNN ANCeLL. C.I=».A.
73e 2ND., AVE. GALLIFOI..16 -

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Economic Education. Thomas
has the honor of being the first
teacher In Ohio to receive this
award; which Is presented annu·
ally by the Ohio Council on
Economic Education for out·
sta nding contributions to economic education in elementary
or high school level.

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT OR SlOP
BY OUR OFFICES.

' .

1••••1.. Drive, , ...,,.,, Ohio

with a recent class project. The students ' are ,
pictured here. . ,

Personal &amp; Business Returns
·Electronic Filing
Fast FundsT· 3-Day Refunds
Student Banking Club Discounts

PIICID 10 SEU

MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

115 last

1990

•Auto. Transmission
•Air Conditioning
•AM/FM Stereo
•Low Mileage

If we can help you with a~y health problem cell us at 992·2104 andremember:
\

VETERANS·

. GALLIPOLIS - There will be
a meeting· 7: 30 p.m. Monday,
Feb. 19 ai the United Methodist
Church for anyone Interested In
helpll!ll' wit~ the planning of the
June"30,1890 Bicentennial Gallla
Academy High School reunions
to be held at the fairgrounds.
If anyone one has names and
addresses of graduates ·that have
not been contacted, they are
asked to bring them to the
meeting.
Those attending are to use the
Cedar Street en trance as well as
the dinning room entrance.
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CLASS PROJECT- Star Bank helped students
at Bidwell learn about loans and their repayments

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BACK BY
The Unbelievable

GALLIPOLIS- Tile telephone
decadel In new~• and ra·
I a appose you're wondering
rang the other day and the caller
dlo. I IIIPIJOR tblt would be what I'm going to write about.
asked, "What's thll I bear about ,lntere~Uq. I've many ato- ll'1 been my long time dream to
you q uittlng
rles, JIOOd and bad. But, tore~ll write about a Civi War general
them would be "old hat."
wbo spent not only his boyhood
your job?"
"Yeah,"!
~ManyyearaBiOiaotanurgeto
years In Mason County, W.Va.
lied, "I'm Jiang·
write a book. In the IUIIUI!er of (then VIrginia) but alSO hll
lng It up. This 11
'59, I began gatberin&amp;' materllls · twilight years there. ·
the final 30."
· for the book. lt'slalndormantfor ·
His name was General John
'Whatareyou
manyyean.IIQOicedat1beplleof McCausland (Jno, he signed all
going to do, rematerial tbeotherday. lt-med ·his military correspondence and
tire?'' he asked.
to have a dltferent meanin&amp;' that activity reports, which are a part
"Never," I sal&lt;), "that'sa dirty
it did the day htarted compUing of the Official Records ofthe War
word In my book. Retirement Is
It, sorts that "I'm reallY". klok.
of the Rebellion series) ,
when you Quit work. rm not
rve always wanted to write a
Mc&lt;;:auslilnd wa~ a soldier's
book. I remember teiUng my soldier. In his youth, he attended
going to quit working. "
."Whatareyougolngtodo?' ' he
high sbool English IV teacher, Buffalo Academy, Buffalo,
asked.
the Jai.te Anne Bradbury, that I W.Va., then Vlrglnlil, the same
"I'm going to write a book," 1 wanted to ·be a wrlter... that school attended by the great •
said.
·
SOmedayiwanledtowrlte... toslt "Coin" Harvey.
So there you have 11.
by an open fireplace, with a big
In 1857, McCausland gradu·
· The guy sa(d "Good luck, can 1 lazy dog snoozing and basking in ·ated flrstln his class of 23.cadets
have an autographecl copy?' •
the warmth of the open flames.
at VIrginia .M!I!tary Institute,
Well now, I think that's going a
I guess 'It's time I lived that Lexington, Va., where the superlittle too far. After all,! haven't
dream. I keeping asking myself. intendent was Stonewall Jack·
even started the book yet, but, 1 " Do you think you're smart son. McCausland attended the
intend to.
.
enough?" ,.here's only one way 1 University of Virginia to· study
.. The caller wanted to know If
to find out. Irememberthewords · law, however, after about one
;the book was going to be about
of my grandfather. who died at . year. he returned to his alma
my experiences as a reporter. 1 the ripe old age of88. He said, "If mater as Proffesor of Engineer·
, said no. He thought perhaps I was· you want to do something, and be .tng and Assistant Superintend· .
··golngtowrlteaboutmyexperlensuccessful, drop eveythlng else, ent, under Stonewall Jackson .
' ces durtng more than three - and do it."
· · Jackson and McCausland with
a company of VM I cadets along
with a companyo!Marlnes under
the command of Gen. (then CoL )
Robert E. Lee, witnessed the
hanging of John Brown on Dec. 2.
1859, at Charlestown, Va.
McCausland's Clvll War experiences began when Gov. John
Letcher of VIrginia sent him Into
the Kanawha Valley to recruit
troops for ,~he Confederacy In
early 1861. He was at the fall of ·
Fort Donelson, Te.nn., In Febru·
'&lt;
ary 1862 and escaped with his
entire . brigade, along with a
couple of other Rebel leaders,
Gens. John Hunt Morgan and
Nathan Bedford Forrest, when
the fort fell to Yankee forces.
But, the highwater mark of
McCausland's career came July
30,- 1864, when he and Gen.
Bradley T. Johnson with 2,500
cavalrymen, upon the orders of .
Gen. Jubal Anderson Early,
raided, ransomed and burl\ed
Chambersburg. Pa. McCausland
AUDRA and STEVEN ROLLINS
was indicted for arson by a
federal grand jury for that
daring feat, but, Ironically
enough, he was pardoned in 1867
by President Ulysses Simpson
• BIDWELL- Audra (sullivan) Whitehill, of Columbus; Debbie
Grant,
his adversary. during the
;· and Steven R, Rollins, of Route 3 Coffee in Pomeroy, Ohio and
War
Between
the States .
· Bidwell, Ohio will mark thei; Mary Lou Roll!ns in Northern
After
the
war,
-McCausland,
: 50th wedding anniversary Feb. Ohio:
who
never
swore
allegiance to ·
24.
Their sons James, Da v ld,
the
United
States,
never
returned
. He has been a long-time pastor Larry and Ronald Roll!ns also
to Mason County but fled to
, of the Valley Freew!ll Baptist live In the Columbus area.
Canada,
then to the continent of
• Churcp ir;l Porter.
They have 16 gl'andchlidren
Europe where he became a
·, Their daughters are Ruth and two great-grandchildren.
training officer under tile com·
~ Bond, Priscilla Bar lay, · Nellie
•
mllnd ot Gen. lsaacT. Shelby and
finally came back to the North
•
American
continent with Shelby
•'
In Maxlm.lllan 's Rebe~llon in
Mexico.
So there you have lt. I'm not
going to tell you anymore.
. Maybe, someday you'll have the
opportunity to read the rest of the
story. I sure hOpe so.
I've enjoyed my ·e xperiences
as a newsman, but, as th~ old
saying goes, • 'Every good thing
must come to an end."
So long, for now . lt was a tough
decision.
•

·- . . . . . Anniversaries--

. REGISTER TODAY!!

Sunday T1111811-Sentinei-Page B-3

Pan•ov-Mic'claPOi1.,..Gelllpolis. Ohio-Point Plaatent. W.Va.

In our·town...·:. . .---.--___. :.:.:By~Dic.:.:..:.;.k:....:.Y:...:...'homa_s

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(From LEARNING, page Bl)
uarn1ng
... _ _.:.._
____:_..:.:.::.:.:.:.:..----:~-:--:--::==~
agrtculhire,
Tile study of agriCUltural ~DII'I·
· In the farm business manage- ·neeriDg and plant and animal
This deparlment consists of mentarea .thestudentsareglven · sciences are also l~luded In the
two programs. a-cwuntlngcom· planned learning activities con· program.
puler and theexecutlvesecretar· cernlnll' farm resource analysis,
The Instructors are Kevin
lal programs. The goal of both accounting production, !Inane· Sheppard and Everett Holcomb.
programs Is to train students to lng, resource acquisition, pur·
fill clerical positions In the area chaslnll'. farm i!lputs, perfor·
As you can see, these programs
of business offices.
.
.
h&amp;ve
a lot to offer the students
l;lotll programs ha.ve recently ltl&amp;nce recor&lt;)s, contracts,
who
participate
In them. The
been updated with the addition of marketing, and matntalnance.
vocational
program
provides
a computer networking system . The resultJ of these learning
many
Meigs
County
students
which has 32 individual student activities are applied to formula·
with
the
foundation
they
need to
lion decisions Involved In manag·
CO/llputer work stations.
establish
a
desired
career.
In this program, .students gain ln.r a farm or ranc~ ope~atlo~.
valuable computer knowledge in
both word and data processing
that will make them employable .
In to&lt;)ay's Job market.
The instructors are Sue
McGuire, Carol Crow, ~ky
Cotterill, and Beverly Gaul.

~18,1890

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�Pon-M!roy-Middleport-Gallipolls. Ohio

--Engagements--

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Ohio.-Point Pleuant. W.Va.

Febru.-y 18. 1880 ' ;_

Poiut Plauant. W. "/a.

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lOOth birthday celebration Sunday
RUTLAND- FernS.tansbury,
loJiillme Rulland resident, wlll
observe her 100th birthday ann!·
versary Sul)day. For the past
several years she has been
confined to the Kimes Convales·
cent Center In Athens. Several
Rutland area · frt«!nds have
planned a party (or Mrs. Stans-

!

INry at the Center Sullday
atterooon.

Jury cancelied

Star writing exercise is memorable

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RIO GRANDE - In conjunction with National Vocational
Education Week, Feb. 11 through
17, the Adult Office Speclallat
Class at Gallla-Jackson-VInton
_JVSD hQ ~en busy writing to
several celebrity, corporate. and
politiCal figures.
The purpose of this proJect Is to
Increase the students' skills In
effective letter writing, 'typing,
proofreading, and to let other
people know of National Vocational Week and Ita slogan:
"Vocational Education: If
Works."
. The Office Specialist writing
project has been so successful
that their replies !rom their

POMERpY - _ Residents
called for JurydutyonTul!ldayln
the Metes County Court need not
reJI!ll1, court officials adviSe.

LOW CAStt PRICES

RENT
TO OWN
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AIM
Coh &amp; Entl Tabla

QuiOft

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' $191.00 '" .

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Final Clearance
Miller-Session

BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Grande.
Session Is a graduate of Mifflin
Glenn Miller, Bidwell, Ohio are
High
School and Is employed by
announcing the engagement and
Rob
Glo
Construction ·company
approaching marriage of their
In
Columbus.
daughter, Crystal Dawn, to KenThe open-church wedding will
neth Edward Session, son of Mr.
and · Mrs . Willie Session, · be Feb. 24, 6 p.m. at the Mt.
Carmel Baptist Church Bidwell.
Columbus.
·The couple will reside In
Miss Miller is a graduate of
North Gallla High School and is Columbus, Ohio.
attending the University of Rio

REV. LAURA ANN LEACH, RONALD A. SHREFFLER

Leach-Shreffler
POMEROY - Mr. and MJ;s.
Dwight Leach, Kettering, are
announcing the engagement of
their daughter, the Rev . Laura
Ann Leach, Pomeroy, to Ronald
Allen Shreffler, son of Uhla
Shreffler, Akron, and the !at~
Robert Shreffler,
Rev. Leach Is a graduate of
Kettering Fairmont East High
School, received a bachelor of
science degree in journalism
from Bowling Green State University and received her master
of divinity degree from Trinity
Lutheran Seminary In Colum-

bus. She Is pastor of St. Paul
Lutheran Church In Pomeroy,
and St. John Lutheran Church.at
Pine Grove.
Shreffler graduated from Akron South High School and
received a bachelor or science
degrl)e In · chemistry from_ the
University of Akron. He is
presently a senior at Trinity
Lutheran Seminary In Columbus
and will receive a · master of
divinity degree in May.
The wedding will take place
June 30 at Faith EvangeliCal
Lutheran Church In Dayton.

Computer seminar _set
for Buckeye Hills
RIO GRANDE - A series of
day-long computer seminars en- ·
titled, "How to Turn on- the .
Computer and More," is being
offered In March and early April
by Buckeye Hills Career Center's
Adult Services Department. Two
different types of seminars are
planned; "Introduction · to the
IBM-PC" and "Introduction to
DOS Commands."
"Introduction to the IBM-- PC"
will be held March 23, 9 a.m.-3
p.m. and will cover the l)asics of
computer operations.
Participants will be Introduced
to word processing and spread·
sheets In this hands-on class. The
seminar will be held in the
Business Computer Lab at Buck·
eye Hills Career Center.
The cost for the seminar Is $25
and pre-registration is required.
"Introduction to DOS (Disk
Operating System) Commands"
wUI be held on March 8. Participants will gain hands-on skills in
learning DOS commands such as
formatting, copying and erasing
files, setting up directories, ect.
The seminar will be held in the
Business Computer Lab at Buckeye Hills Career Center and costs
$25. Pre-registration Is required.
· The "Introduction to DOS
Commands" seminar will alsn"~

offered on April 6.
Participants may register for
any of the three seminars by
contacting Adult Services at
245-5336 or sending a check or
money .order made payable to
Gallla-Jackson-Vinton JVDS to:
Adult Services, P.O. Box 157, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674.

ITHACA, N.Y. (UP!) .:.. Creat!Jrs of a new syndicated radio
show will answer such pressing
questions as "W.ha:t Is the ugliest
bird alive?" and "Why are love
birds not so loving?''
The dally 90-second program,
titled "Birdwatch," draws &lt;;m the
Cornell University Laboratory of
Ornithology's Library of Natural
Sounds, which has the world's
largest collection of animal
sounds , said Todd Culver, .a
laboratorv official.
"There are so many crazy,
weird, Interesting things about
birds that, so far, we haven't had
any trouble coming up with ideas
for progra!lls, '' Culver Sllil:i
Thursday. "They are really
geared toward the general
public." ·
The program premiered Feb. 5
and has aired on !It least six radio

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stations, but the number is
growing daily, · said Paul Bartlshevich, execu tlve producer of
the program.
"It's going extremely well. I
started ,out personally with very
little knowledge about birds,"
said Bob Kantor, who writes,
produces and narrates the program.- "I've gotten to the point
where I'm just about ready to set
up a )lummlngbird feeder and
bluebird box in mY back yard."
Kantor already has worked on
programs a bout the South American hoatzln, which Is reputed to
be the world's ugliest bird
because of Its· blue facial skin,
stout legs. lind unpleasant mu~ky
odor. and love birds, which
other
in the
"cuddle
up" toe.
In order to

,.

ALL WINTER
MERCHANDISE ·

A radio show for the birds
.

I

PRESIDENTS DAY.
SAlE!

CRYSTAL DAWN MILLER, KENNETH E. S_JJ;SSION

.

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"Special Care f.or People
Who Are Special To You''

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Unloo Bap&amp;llt-Church Is located alon&amp; the Lawrence-GaiUa line.
Darla111te Ctvu Wu, It wu between two Jar&amp;e Afrklllt·Amertcan
setllement.- Poke Pat~h and Blackfork. 'l'hese communities and
othen la Southern Ohio had to UllmUate slaves freed by the Union
Army' In the yeiU'I from 1812 to ISIS.
·
· ·

_Settlements.~
... By lames Sands ·
.

Aeademlc~ -

Tbe UlliYellltyofRioGrallde oflett lo...,-eu ucl t_,ear dqre~ bi a wide rauae
of llbertii.IIJU, profe•lcnaaJ.. ud technfcel llelda, lllc......n&amp;:
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35 WESI lllhiiMI Foodhaldl
446-9210

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INTRODUCING
OUR ALL NEW

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.IDLIPOIT, OliO

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Grant, Joan Rivers, Mel Tillis,
Bob Newhart, Presldent George
BWih, Dwight Yoakam, Dan
Rather, Mary K,ay Cosmetics,
Rlcnard Simmons, Andy Griffiths, and the autographs, letters
and pictures are stU! coming ln.
The students gain valuable
knowledge · from their letter
writing experience ·and In return
have keepsakes for ·the rest of
their lives. The AdJ!lt Office
Specialist Class is conducted at
the Gallla-Jackson-Vinton JVSD
In Rio Gra[\de, Monday through
Thursday , 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. The
class Instructor Is David L.
Hodge or Jackson.

ALBANY - The 20-year reunIon committee for the Alexlinder
High School class for 1970 met at
the high school in Albany, on Jan.
29.
P)ans for a dinner/ dance June
16 at the Sportsman Club were
finalized.
Committee secretary, Becky
(West) Pierce repilrted all but
three of the 97 graduates had
been l.ocated . She requested
· committee members redouble
their efforts to contact Steve
Branda, Fra'nces Byrd and
Jeanette (Pullins) Young. .
Any Information on these graduates shouid be passed on to her
as sbon as possible.
The next meeting Is scheduled
for Feb. 19 at the high school. All
1970 graduates are Invited to
attend.
·

f

Life is too easy ·for
two lazy lu.ri1mox·sons·

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
" 1989. Lo~ An!Mn~

'

"LIFESTYLE DID COOKIE"
••• ,.•• coo• JUST ·011
IIIE MAUlT s•a IOYIM.I "19"•

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lOWEI 'ILOOD PRESSURE STAY IIUlm
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Only $4J9 A Day
· .

-1·DAYI-'30
3(1 DAYI-'115 .
~R MORE INFORM~TION-- .FOR SUE

e 1990, Creators Syndicate

Classmdtes sought
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Academy High School classes of
1948 and 1950 are seeking classmates whose whereabouts are
unknown._
From 1950, call Eileen Mink at
446-3775 in the evenings If you
have Information on the follow Ing: James Calloway, Betty Gay
Hertlein, Betty Insco, George
Lee, Jean Mosley Ragland , Irene
Pennington Newhard or VIrginia
Roach Lewis.
From 1948, call Jack Mink at
446-3775 In the evenings If you
have information on the follow ing: Charles Price, LoiS Jean
Rayburn Verwhelt, John Rutherford, Verne Marlin Berridge or

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GALUPOUS, OHIO

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Janice Catlng Smith.

There's no
need to
a fortune for a great haircut, """"
or color.
,
At Fantastic Sam's, you11 get
everything you expect from.~n ex·
pensive salon, except the pnce.
we're waiting for you now.

,.
'

•

(3o4) 67s-•67S

=====
I

•·

ANN LANDERS®

I

25TH a JUnRION AVEN'tJE
P.OUft' PL&amp;A8ANT

•

$4.45.)

'tbu don't need an appomtment,

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CEN"J'Ehl

:
·

ders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago , Ill.
60611-0562 . (In Canada , send

F.AMn,Y PRACTICE
PAIN CON'tROL CUNIC

.

.·

iaw will go o~t ot ncr way to~;
RIO GRANDE - Classes are
that her husband spends a little slated for February at Buckeye
private time with his mother, even Hills Career Center are Gunsmh
if it's only an hour or two. Ail that thing. 12 hours; Sweatshirt
is needed is a reminder. Perhaps thi s Painting, 9 hours; Small Engine
Repair, 40 hours; ABC's of Auto
column will ·plant the seed.
Dear Ann Landers: You've Mechanics, 30 hours; Appliance
printed many letters and offered Repair, 60 hours; Blue Print
much of your own advice on this Reading, 27 hours; Welding, 60
· ·
subject. How do you like this ap- hours. .
These
classes
are
slated
for
proach?
·
March:
Aerobics,
12
hours;
MedHere is a grandmother's prayer for
ali occasions: Dear Lord, please help Ical Terminology. .30 hours;
Introduction to Computers, 30
me always to know cxaclly how my
hours; Landscaping, 15 hours;
grandchildren should be brought up Plants for Pleasure, 15 hours;
-- and keep it to myself. -- THE Commercial Driver License,' 10
BUTTONED LIP IN ARLING· . hours.
TON, VA.
The following classes can be
DEAR BUTTOI'&lt;"ED: Beautiful. arranged when significant enrolThis prayer should be in the pocket lment Is reached: Small Busiof every granny when she goes to ness Entrepreneur; Job Choicessec her grandchildren. It will as sure / Career Counseling; Stress
her of a warm welcome and aq Management; Cashier Training;
invitation to come back soon.
Sales. and Customer Relailons;
Planning a wedding ? What's Sign Language; Basketweavlng;
right? What's wrong? 'The Ann and Plumbing.
If you have questions or are
Landers Guide for Brides" will
relieve your anxiety. Send a self- ln't erested It\ enrollment please - .
addressed, long, business-size enve- call us at (614) 245-5334orwrlteto
lope and a check or money order us: Gallla-Jackson -VInton
for $3.65 (this includes posrage and JVSD, P .O. Box 157, Rio Grande,
handling) to : Brides, c/o Ann /.an- Ohio 45674.

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FORMER PA'l1EN'I'S OF DR. AARON BOONSUE AND)
( ,
NEW PA11ENI'S
WELCOME
.

•

BHCC classes
announced

Tim"" S¥ndltsll" 1nd
f.rr1t~ S~· ndiue.-

-Wedding policy------

•

I

'

Reunion clau
committee seeks
member information .

&lt; •

•'
'

for

Of

Get There

J1~i -~ "'~ c~· "J-

Bpnhl u-tkna

University

...You Can

,

IIUJtary 8cleDOe

I have always look forward to rpy birthday because it is on
Valentine's Day. My mother called me her "Comic" Valentine! This
is my second birthday at Overbrook as I have lived here over a year.
I really like it here, everyone is so good to me.
My husband always got me a bi~ Heart Box of Candy; he and I
would eat the candy and I would keep the box for a long time ..We
were married 57 years before he died and we lived all of our married
life in Charleston. I like the City, but now I like my "little apartment'' that I share with my roommate Ona, here at Overbrook. -

letters are well over 75 percent
from all polltlcllllll, corpora·
!Ions, and celebrities. The aver·
age for a return letter from such
Is around 25 pen:ent.
,
People and com(ianies who
overwhelmingly have responded
to the "Stl\f Light, Star Write"
writing project are: Carol Burnett·, , Anne l'o'lurray, Ronald
McDonald, Cotlway Twitty, Dick
Clark, Pee·Wee Herman, ~enny ,
Rogers, Bill Graham, MI:M
Mars Inc., Barbara Mandrell,
Randy Trl!vls, Calvin Klein, Rick
:oees; Hank Williams, Jr., cliarlle Daniels, Richard Nixon,
Franco Harris, Terry Bradshaw,
Tim Conway, Alabama, Amy

Dear Ann Landers: My problem , to a professional (doctor, lawyer, enis "The Full Nest Syndrome.'' I've. gineer, tax consultan~ etc.), you .pay
been divorcejl for 16 years, raised for what he or she knows. When you
· GALl.-I~LIS- Quite a loi ~ . derit. There is need lor help."
been .wrJt~n about ihe ''UnderNeedless to . say there was two sons alone without any alimony asked the dennatologist to look at
ground ; Rallroad" In American great social tension In Gallipolis or child support and consider tJiyseif your toes, you obligated yourself to
his tory but there
during the Civil War. These to be a loving and devoted mother. pay for his professional opinion. He
was also a lesser
liberated slaves escaping to town My sons are 24 and 27 and ·still liv- had a right tQ bill you, but a really
known ..,, 'Over·
on the · "Over ground Railroad" ing at home. To be perfectly honest, nice guy would have said, "No
ground Railwere often the ones who bore the Ann, I want them out of here, so f charge."
road" from 1862
brunt of the tension.
cantakethingseasier.
Dear Ann Landers: Shame on
to 1865. It must
There was one of these slaves
There is so much more work be- you for not checking with your ex be remembered
by the name of Gregg who had cause of the boys, and they malic no perts on snakes before you told Hanthat as Union
been arbitrarily accused of some effort to give me a hand. It seems ford, "Pythons don't bitc like raulcsoldiers secured a former slave Indiscretion.· In retaliation for that one or both are always running . snakes and cobras."
holding territory and released abuse Gregg had received, he low on cash, and they think nothing
Snakes have been my hobby for
·those slaves; the government . took the law Into his own hands at
ofaskingtoboiT()wmoney.
· ·
many years. I can atte~t to the fact
had no real means of securing an
the saloon near First and Spruce
When they get sick. Jfeel guilty if . that pythons are good-natured,
existence for these former called the Blazing Stump. Cregg
1 don't stay home and take care of friendly reptiles, but they DO bite
sliil(es. Some -who liad family In wounded 3 men and killed one
them. If "Johnny" gets a tnl(fic ticket, when they are startled, underfed,
the north could rely on that help,
(all white). Gregg In turn was
heB! about·it..Every little thing that mishandled or tonnented.
1
· but many more had to exist as
bludgeoned . by a number of
happens
to these grown men affects
Clne of my favorite pets is an 8best as they could In their whites with . clubs. For some
me.
I'm
tired
of
waking
up
at
3
a.m.
·
foot
Burmese python. In seven
."homelj!Ss" condition.
hours It appeared that this white
and
worrying
myself
sick
if
the
boys
years
,
he never caused any probThe problem of settling former
mob would continue Its fury on
aren't in yet.
!ems, so when he bit my hand, I
slaves came to Galllpolls in a other blacks In town. The Journal
Am
I
wrong
to
feel
that
I
am
enwas stunned. Pythons' teeth are very
crush In September of 1862 when
wrote that a race riot was feared.
titled
to
be
free
of
this
responsibil~harp, and that bite was intensely
LightiNrn's Uriton troops were
None came.
~
ity?
When
will
it
be
my
tum?
Wben
I
painful. But it was my fault, because
driven from Charleston,. (West)
Of course, there w'ere a
discuss moving out, they tell me that 1 let him out of his cage before
Virginia by the Confederates.
number of unscrupulous whites
with rentals the way they are. they feeding time, and he was hungry.
Former slaves from the Kana- who preyed oil the weaknesses of
wha Rlver 'plantatlons had been both whites and blacks during the
would have to work two jobs just to The bite was not life-threatening. I
able to eke out an existence In Civil War. There Is one episode
pay the rent. They also tell me that simply applied some antibiotic salve
doing odd jobs for the Union printed by the Journal that took
their 30-ycar-old friends down the and a cold pack to bring down the
troops. Many of them ~lept In place In August of 1863 on the
block are still living at home and swelling.
·
tents provided by the army. But Ohio River two miles north of
their parents don't complain.
Here's some advice· to all snake
when the Union ~rmy was In · Gallipolis, It seems that a flat'
Plea~e . Ann, I need your advice. -owners: Make sure the cage is csretreat, these former. slaves had boat of freed slaves were ordered
A BURNED-OUT MOTHER IN cape.-proof, Allowing a snake to
to fend for themselves.
to land by an Abram Edwards,
N.Y.
roam unsupervised is dangerous.
For instance .we read in the who said that by the laws of Ohio
DEAR BURNED-OUT: You've Most people know nothing about
September 16, 1862 Gallipolis every black entering Gallipolis
made life so easy for these two !urn• snakes. If one should suddenly
Journal: "The first exodus of the had to pay a $7 tax. However, If
mo&lt;cs they would be crazy to leave. appear •. the natural reaction IS to
children from the land qf bon- · the blacks paid Edwards dlreetly
Unless you are prepared to put up destroy il. This is not necessary with
dage reached this point on they could get through for $5.
with
the present arrangement for the pythons, in fact it almost always is
MOnday last, In a fleet of skiffs When the former slaves arrived
next
20 years, you'd better jmple- · a grave injustice. No name please,
aqd bateaux. They number 500 , at Gallipolis they iearned of the
mentsomechanges.
.
just·' PENNSYLVANIA READER
and many more are yet to come It , scam. Mayor Damron, whose
eath
son
pay
something
.
DEAR PENN: Thank you for the
Insist
that
Is :repor~d. How these people are presence and respect throughout
for
room
and
bQard
-·even
if
it's
only
short
course in herpetology . I bcto live over winter Is hard to tell. the whole community did much
$25aweek.Assignhouseholdchores
.
lieve
the
natural reaction of a perHumanity will not allow an to make a bad situation from
and post them on their bedroom wall. son who encounters a sna.ke in a
at)lmal to perish, shall the cotor getting worse, had Edwards
Don't ASK them to help, TELL them residential area would be uuer terof a m;m's skin be the excuse for arrested. He wa~ convicted as,a
they are going to help or out they go.
ror and an instant wish to head in
excluding him fl·om the right to "highwayman robber".
exist? There are a number of
The str;1ln on black communiIf none of the above works to your another direction.
whites with the blacks who were ties and black churches to find an
satisfaction, move. Yes, that's what I
Snakes have a lousy public imdriven out by the secessionists." existence for these "runners" on
said. Find another place big enough age dating back to the Garden of
By the fall of .1863 the problem ' the "Overground Railroad" was
for just little old you, and let the sons Eden. If you snake fanciers ·wan~ to
had Improved very little as we great. The church we picture
find out what the real world is like. improve on it, your work is cut out
again read from the Journal:
today, the UhlonBaptlstChurch,
It's time they learned. .
for you.
"the county Is filling up with was located between two !alrly
Dear Ann Landers: Bless you
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
strolling · vagabonds of both large black set!lements, Poke
going to a dermatologist for collagen for printing the letter from the
sexes. Our town is overflowing · Patch · In Gallla County and
injections that help smooth out the mother who said she would give
· with refugees from the other side , Blackfork In Lawrence County.
wrinkles in my face. He charges me anything to spend just an hour alone
of the Jordan who have already No doubt at least a few of the
$85foreachofficecallplus$168for · with her son. I know millions of
found It .a hard road to travel. Afrlc.an-Amerlcans liberated by
theoollagen.
'"others saw themselves in that
Coming among us total strangers_ the Union army settled near
On a recent visit, I mentioned that woman's letter. For sure I di_d.
wjthout any meaqs of support here. Union Baptist Church was
i had athlete's foot and asked the doc·
I'm thankful that "Kevin" is marthey must, of necessity suffer . organized In 1819 with the present
tor if he would prescribe something. ried to a wonderful girl. We get
greatly In procuring even the bulldlng erected In 1919 under the
He
looked between my toes and wrote along beautifully, but I have not
most scanty subsistence. Rents leadership of Rev. R.P. Jackson.
a
prescription.
This took all of two spent one minute alone with Kevin
are going up beyond a\1 preceminutes:
since the day they married. He is
. When· my bill arrived, I discov- thoughtful and sensitive, but I
ered that he had charged me an addi- wouldn't dream of mentioning this
lrbe .• Sunday Tlmes-Sl!ntinel edltortal department by Thurs- tiona! $50 for looking at my toes. I for fear of offending his wife. He
~~gards weddings of Gallla,' day, 4 p.m., prior to the date of
decided not to pay that bill but to has, on occasion, invited his father
·
·
'!'VIelgs and Mason counties as publication.
discu.ss. it with him the next time I for ov~might trips with other male
Photographs of either the bride
news and Is happy ' to publish
went in for the oollagen. After all, he friends, but of course a mother
wWdlng stories and photographs or the ' brlde and groom.may be
did nothing more than look at my doesn't fit in at such outings.
published with wedding stories,
without cbarge. . ·
•
tocsandwritethcprescription. When
We had a daughter who died in
However, wedding news must If desired. Photographs may be
I complained, he said, "Sorry, the infancy. Kevin is our only child. I
meet general standards of timeli- either black 11nd white or goOd
athlete's foot had nothing to do with am ·reminded of that old saying," A
ness.' The newspaper prefers to quality color, billfold size or
the collagen. It was a separate mat· . son is a son 'til he takes a wife, but
larger.
publish accounts of 'weddlngs as
ter."
a daughter is a daughter all of her
Poor q~atlty photographs will
soon as possible alter the event.
My'
friends
were
not
shocked.
They
life.'' Need !hi~ be? -- TORONTO
not be accepted. Generally, snap·
To be published In the Sunday
specialists
do
that"
· DEAR TORONTO: It nood not
said,
"All
shots or Instant-developing pho·
edition, the wedding must have
If
this
is
true,
greed
has
really
taken
be,
dear, but that's the way it is in
tos are npt of acceptable quality . .
taken place within 60 days priOr
over
the
entire
world.
True
or
False?
the
majority of cases.
Questions may be directed to
to the publication.
A sensitive, generous daughtet-inAll material for Along the the editorial department from 1 ··DISGUSTED IN MICffiGAN
DEARMICHIGAN:Whenyougo
Friday
to
5
p.m.
Monday
through
River must be recleved by th~
at (614) 446-2342.

'

Pictured from left to rlgbt, Overbrook Center roommates Ona Artx· (100) aad
NeUle Carney (97) who have celebrated 19'7 Yalentlne Days!

B-6 .

f&amp;t!astic 8anl,'s'•
tlteOollltllll Family~erso .

·-.

446-SAMS
MON. ·TIIRU 1'111 1 TO 9P.M.
OHIO llVD PlAIA
SAT.9o , JPJI.
' "II'IWBI -.s &amp; IIG IIAI
SUNOAY 12'10 5 P.M.
~MUPOUS, OliO

•

•

�\------ _

,

-;-- - - - - - - - -- -

Pas•

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Pomeroy-MiddlapOn-Gell~il. Ohio-Point Plmant. W.Va.

B-6-Sundey Tm• Seminal

.••.

.••

-People in the news;....·--------~--w Senior schedule set .
By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Pres~ lllternatlonal

•

QliiNN OUT AGAIN: Anthony Quinn. wlio had heart bypass
surgery Feb. 8,ls going home from the hospital just as his latest
movie Is opening. Quinn, 73, was scheduled to check oil( of New
York's ·Mount Sinal Hospital Saturday and his publicist said
Quinn's recavery has been "very, vety good" so t~r. "He's
going to recuperate at his New York home tor a week or two,"
she said. ''He has no Immediate plans to return to work."
Nonetheless, doctors have told Quinnhe'll be able to get back on
the job eventually. Quinn's latest movie, "Revenge," starring
Kevlll Costner, opened at theaters across the nation Friday and
he recently completed a 'rV version of Ernest Hemingway's
"The Old Man and the Sea" that will be broadcast by NBC next
month.
·
HISTORIC DEAD: lti rpay not be as significant as th!l
discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls but a Lodl. Calif., musician is
quite. excited about finding the missing Grateful Dead tapes ..
Steve Hensley had the 36 reel·to-reellapes stored In cardbOard
boxes for some five years, not knowing they were master tapes
recorded by the Dead from 1969 to 1972. He bought them for $850 .
from a frlim(J, thinking they were blank. Dead publicist Dennis
McNalty.conflrmed the band had been looking for the missing
tapes for quite some lime and Hensley and his friend, Modesto
disc jockey Dave Young, plan to catalog the tapes and then turn
them over to the band, rather than try to cash In on them. "A lot
of people get the Impression we're getting a lot of money (for the
tapes)," Young said. "But we're not. it's a moral issue. (The
band) sllould have them. (The tapes) don't belong to anybody

14 Rio students in Who's Who
RIO GRANDE - The 1990
edition of "Who's Who Among
Students In American Unlversl·
ties and Colleges'' wlll Include
the names otl4 stu,dents from the
University ·of Rio Grande who
have been selected as national
outstanding leaders.
Campus nominating commit.
tees and editors of the annual
directory have included names of
these students based on their
academic achlevemen t, service
to the community, leadership in
extra curricular activities and
potential for continued success.
They join an elite group of
students selected from more
than 1,400 Institutions of higher

learning in all 50 states , the
District of Columbia and several
foreign nations .
Outstanding students named
this year from the University of ·
Rio Grande were:
Michele Campbell, Beloit,
Ohio; Angelo Forte, Gahanna;
Sharla Gross, Mlland, Ohio;
L'!ura Haverkos, Urbana; Sheila
Lynn, Circleville; WiJn\.a Ma·
nuel, Shiloh , Ohio; Patt
McLaughlin, Columbus; Michael
Miller, Gallipolis; Jon Nolan,
Marlon; Angela Packard, Baltimore, Ohio; Mimi Rentz, Millers·
burg; David Ridgway. Thur·
man; Nancy Russell, Wellston;
and Phlllp Savage, Northup.

••

sister. She's coming Into our
lives. We will love her for what·
she is, not for what slie Is going to
do. for me."

.

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Wednesday

nme"·

POMEROY - Tickets for the
1990's Celebration Ball to be held
Feb. 23 In· the ballroom at Ohio
University's , Baker Center are
available locally from Gerald
Powell. Advance tickets are
being sold for $10 per person or
$17 per couple. Tickets will be$15
and $25 at the door.
Communlversity, Ohio Unlver·
slty's continuing education program, Is sponsoring the event
which will be held from 8 p.m. to
midnight and feather the Gentle·
men III, a popular dance band
from Huntington, \V.Va.
Prizes 1\'111 be awarded during

.

.

- Armchair
, travel; 10:•5 a.m. (France);
Health Dept. blood pressure, 1
p.m.
. Thursday -Bible Study, 10:45
a.m.; Herbalist class, 1:30 p.m.
F,rlday - Art Seminar, tOnoon; Craft Class, 1·3 p.m.

oupo"

Menus coulst of:
. •
Monday - ctoHd tor HOJI4ai;
Tuesday - Cubed steall: wl(la
gravy, whipped potatoell, gfel!d
be.ans, bread, butterscotcl)
pudding.
•
Wednesday - Baked Ch!Ckef,
pareley butl!!red potatoe11, hi'OI:;
coli, bread, p!Jieapple chunlal.
Thursday - Beet stew, cottage ·
cheese ~ biscuits, applesauce In
Lime Jello. .
Friday- Ham toafwlthglaze,
butfere sweet potatoes; kalewtt!l
• vinegar, bread, cherry cobbler.
Make reservations by calltllg
446-7000 before 9 a.m. the day yod
wish to attend. ·
·
~,

We Reserve The Right To
L1"'il 9uantities

;.,.(\.~l b.'

Savings
---------------·

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STORE HOURS

!RC COLA
m.

8, AM-10 PM

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.:
"FLU ·&amp; COLD RELIEF CENTER" .:'.

Mahari~hi

moving
to Florida home?

.

consideratiOn.. They plans to
pitch their plans to Gainesville
developers and architects next
week.
The company plans to build 50
"heavenly" communities across
North America to provide erivlr·
onments free of pollution, stress,
noise and crtme, said Jim Bag·
nola, a company vice president.
The coml?"ny Intends to' be a
partner In some projects, while
In others it would earn from local
builder$ a percentage of a
development's costs and sa!es.
The company says it has
signed more than a dozen con·
tracts to build Immortal cities In
Los Angeles, Denver, San Diego,
Washington. D.C., and elsewhere. Only one community near Austin, Texas - has been
built.
,
A typical community would
have 100 to 200 single family
homes built with non-toxic mate- ·
rials on 200 to 500 acres. McDo- .
nald estimated the homes would
cost around $120,00o.

U.S.D~A.

Sliced ·Bacon ••.~.~K:•• 89 &lt;

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hotl OniJ AI l'owtll'1 $oojl.- Y.

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PRESCRIPnON SHOP

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RECLI~ERS

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1031 CAJARRER STREET :'
311UIOII!Idg., Chulotalm21M ,

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B~Jbouosyjlo, IW 73&amp;&lt;1132

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YOUR DENTURES IN ONE D~Yi,;

the evening and a photogr'apher
will also be on hand.
Powell, a professional dance
Instructor, has been named ho·
norary Grand Marshall for the
event and will lead line dances
and mixers throughout the
evening.
Tabl~ reservations may be
made for groups of 8 to 10.
Advance tickets for the ball
may also be purchased at the
Office of Continuing Education,
located In the basement of
Memorial Auditorium on the ·o.
U. Campus,i or by telephone,
1-800.336·5699.

2 LITER

1

298 ·SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH~ ·

I We offer complete tuxedo rental service
1

I
1
I

GOOD SUNDAY •
FEI. 11 ONLY

I

Monday thru Sunday

SPECIAV:
:\ For That Spacial Oooatlon :;

Tickets remain for
1990 .Celebration Ball

Forman said the baby will be
GAINESVILL,E, Fla. (UP!) tested again after birth to conCalifornia company wants to
A
firm the Initial results of tests on
build
a residential community in
ainnlotlc fluid the verified the
Florida
devoted to the teachings
compatible tissue type . .
of
the
Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi,
Forman said bone marrow
former
mentor
of
the
Beatles and
transplants :rom siblings under
founder
of
transcendental
age 2 are fairly common and the
meditation ..
procedure Is not dangerous. ·
The Maharishi Heaven . on
He said M11rlssa will be able io
Earth
Development Corp., a
donate some of the life-giving
fluid momentS' after .she is born. 2-year·old Malibu development
.Her umbilical cord will contain firm, was started by four bus!·
fluid very rich In the cells needed nessmen who met In lndlli with
to regenerate Anlssa' s diseased the Maharishi, whose method of
relaxing the body to ,relieve
marrow.
. The umbilical fluid will be · stress swept the nation In the
frozen until Anissa Is ready for early 1970s. '
Company officials sa.td the
the transplant, following a series
..
Maharishlhflli
nothing to do with
of chemotherapy and radiation
the
development
company,
treatments to kill the cancer
whose founders ·believe many of
cells .. If additional marrow is
needed, It will be 'taken when society's problems can be at !rib·
uted to poor planning. But they
Marissa is about 6 months old,
·said
they hope the communities
when the risk of complications I~
will
be patterned after · the
reduced, Forman said.
master plan to
Maharishi's
Forman said the transplant
create
heaven
on Earth.
procedure, similar to a blood
"Mosr
communities
have not
transfusion, would take about 15
probeen
planned
to
promote
minutes and OnlY 3 % ounces of
gress. As a result, the creativity
the fluid would be taken from the
and achievements or the resibaby.
dents are blocked," said Curtis
Forman said other City of Hope
McDonald, a company · vicefamilies have considered having
president.
a baby to provide a donor, but
doctors have not supported that · · "Lack of Intelligent planning
decision.
·
has created c.rowded conditions
·'We never encouraged that to stress, poliutton, gridlock and
be the reason to bring the child ·crime," he said.
Into the wor(d," he said, "Our
Company officials targeted
hope Is that the national registry Gainesville as one of 50 commun.
(of donors) will grow and ellml· Illes to build a "Maharishi City of
nate the need for this sort of Immortal's' ' because of Florida's
thing,"
growth rate, and that Tampa and
Palm Beach are also under

,,
(

G,o\.LLIPOLIS- Activit~ and
menus for the week of February
19-23 at the Senior Citizens
· Center 2:10 Jackson Pike, will be
as follows:
Monday - Closed tor Holiday
Tuesday - STOP/ Physical
· FitneSs, 10: 30 a.•m.; VIdeo mall·
nee, 12: 30 p.m. ':'Somewhere In

••

.·

.Newborn holds key
to teen's life
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A
middle-aged couple appear to
·have beaten the medical odds in
their desperate gambit to save
their leu~emla·strlcken daugh·
ter by h!iving a baby who can
donate vital bone marrow to her
sister.
Marla and Abe Ayala's baby,
due in April, will be a compatible
donor for her 17-year-old sister,
Anlssa, which m~ans the bone
marrow the baby provides will
have ·a 70·percent chance of
defeating the form of leukemia
afflicting the teenager, doctors
at City of Hope National Medical
Center in Duarte, Calif., an·
nounced ·F:rklay.
"It was just an Impossibility to
·,say that this baby Is going to
match but ... we are all very,
very blessed," a tearful Maria
Ayala, 43, said after learning of
the likely match. • 'I feel that my
baby Is a ble~slng from God.
When they told us, I couldn't
believe it."
"ThiS is our baby, our miracle
baby," . the 45·year·old father
said at the same news
conference.
The chances for a bone marrow
match among siblings Is about 25
percent, while there Is only a ·
Hn·20,000 chance of finding a
matching donor In the general
· population.
. "I never thought I'd be preg·
nant at my age,." Maria Ayala
said, "but whe11 you're faced·
with the possibility that your
child is going to. die, you desper. ately seek, and. whatever you
need to do, you do it."
Tests have determined the
baby, due April 13, Is a girl. She
will be named Mar is sa Eve.
No other memoers uJ. Lue
Walnut, Calif. family . matched
Anlssa's bone marrow, and a
search by tbe National Marrow
Donor Program of unrelated
donors has failed to find a match.
"In this particular case, the
tes ling has been performed and It ·
shows t)le babY Is a match to the
patient," said Dr. Stephen J ..
Forman, director of hematology
and bone marrow transplantation at City of Hope.
Legal and medical etntcs ex·
perts expressed concern about
the ramifications of the mother's
'decision to bear a child for the
purpose of helping her daughter.
Alexander Morgan Capron, a
University of Southern Call(or·
nla professor, of law and medl·
' cine, said there are important
Issues to consider. ·
''There Is the psychological
Issue that the baby Is her sister's
organ bank," Capron said. "If It
turns out that _~;he is not' wellmatched to the sister with
·leukemia, In what way will they
regard her: That she has failed In
her mission?"'
Anlssa Ayala, whose leukemia
was dlagnpsed In 1988 and
currently Is In remission, ans·
wered critics of the pregnancy.
"We don't even know If she Is
going to save my Ute." sbe said.
•'She's going to be my baby

but the Grateful Dead and that's how we f~!."
YOUNG CUOMO WILL MABRY KERRY: Don't let the
trouble in Trumpland make you tblnkromance Is dead. Andrew
Cuomo, son of New York Gov. Marti Cuomo, proposed to Kerry
Kenaedy, daughter otBobet1 Kelllll!dy, on Valentine's Day at a
restaurant and presented her with an emerald-cut diamond
ring. Cuomo, 34, dismissed quetitiona about a pre-nuptial
· agreement as "tacky" and said he cona_ldered htroself a "very
luc;ky man" to be marrying Kerry. the wedding to certify the
merger ot t~o powerful political families, which some have ·
already dubb4id ''Cuomolot," w!ll be sometime this spring at the
. McLean, Va., home of Kennedy's mother, Ethel. Cuomo heads a
housing-for-the-homeless program he started while Kennedy,
30, guides the Robert F. Kennedy Cen~r for Human Rights In
Boston.
.
·
TAMMY SINGING FROM HEAVEN~ Imprisoned preacher
Jim Bakker thought he'd died and gone to heaven when he heard
the voice of his wife, Tammy Faye, wafting through his
headphones the other night. In a letter to supporters, Tammy·
Faye said Bakker, who Is serving 45 years for defrauding PTL
followers, had recently written to say that he had purchased a
small radio (rom the prison commissary and uses it to listen to
Christian stations late at night. One night last week, Tammy
Faye said, BakkPr fell asleep with the headphones.on and she
says he woke up hearing her voice. "Tam, I didn't know where I
was," Bakker told her. "I thought maybe I had died and was In
heaven. The most wonderful peace filled that prison cell and
there was a feeling of glory all around- and Tam, it was you on
the radio singing 'Don't Give Up, We'.re On the Brink of a
Miracle."'

Plnrsnt. ·w. Va.

Februlr'f 18, 19!0

26

I.

. BOLD DETERGENT
'moL

$599

Goo4 Only At Powtll'a S... v•

. . . . S11tL, F•. II lin Sot~ F•• 24

1

$14·91I

Good Only at Powell's
Supermarket

1

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GOOD SATURDAY
1 FEB. 24 o•y
1

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FRANKIE

WI12 01. PIG.

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Good Only .. Pawlll'a

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Pllga 8-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Febru-v 18, 19sQ

Pomeroy Middleport-G..Iipolie, Ohio-Point Pleaaant, W. Va.

.s m Increases 'unacceptable,' in young adults
•

Beat of the Bend

Ah, to.be president. ..

POMEROY Recent In·
available resource or face poten·
people about how to prevent the
creases In sexually transmitted tially disastrous consequeQces,"
.
spread of these diseases.
diseases are ' 'Unacceptable" , Fletcher said. "These Increases
"We need the )lelp and coopera·
according to State Health Direc- are unacceptable. If HIV (AIDS)
tlon of families , schools,
tor Dr. Ronald L. Fletcher who finds its way In to these same churche~. and community-based
today called for a 11nlted effort to routes of Infection, we might be
groups to Inform and educate .
reduce the rates of Infection, In danger of losing an entire young people that the only 100
particularly among young general ton. "
percent safe way of preventing
adults, ages 18 to 24.
Fletcher.called for a partner· sexually transmitted.diseases Is
"With syph"ls .up 70 percent;
ship thitt tnvolves families, or- · to abstain from sex .
aild gonorrhea·and ch~mydla up . ganlzatlons, and Individuals us"But the Ideal world doesn't
almost 35 percent during the past Ing all available means to exist," Fletcher continued. "We
year, we have to· utilize every educate sexually active young can't end our efforts there. We
;
must also teach the next line of
defense, which Is how to properly
use a latex condom:"
National Condom Week, which
runs through Feb. 21 and targets ·
sexually active 18 tp 24 years
.

By BOB HOEFLICH
jewelry around the ·neck. George
Remember when one of the
doesn't smile much - but who
hl&amp;:h .points In talking about the
could with false teeth made of
virtues · of the
wood - smUlng could have had
United States
such a splintering effect.
was that any"llt·
· And, of course, we know Abe
tie. boy could
was honest. During hIs career, he
grow up to be
became .known as Honest Abe.
President?
He was eager to learn, reading
Well that
books by firelight and Is one of
hasn't changed
· the few people I know about who
except In this age of liberation ever returned borrowed books.
It's probably safer to say that any My mental picture of Abe and his
little boy or girl can grow up to be wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, Is
. President.
·
almost one of despair. I visualize
My question Is why would any
them as glum, unhappy people little boy or girl want to grow up always dressed In black - and
to be President? or course, If you
neither of them smile much like living In a goldfish bowl wlih overall pretty depressing. And
your every cough, sneeze, and
somewhere out there !sa little log
even your hanky pank reported cabin. .
·
across the naflon three seconds
Of course, you remember
later, then It's an allrightdeal. If having to memorize - we did a
you like to be cr ltlclzed every lot of that didn't we- the names
minute, or every second, you of all or the Presidents of our
might just shll!e as a President of country . and the years they
the US of A As President, you served. But, again, the names of
can announce that · It's raining the two, Washington and Lincoln,
and you're Into controversy.
are ~!bout the · only ones which
Some say It "aln' t" and others really stuck. Sure there was the will complain that you didn' t say Adams Family - not to be
how much, for how long, or how confused with TV's Addams
hard. ·
Family - and somewhere along
Since most of us these days the line there was a VanBuren, a
appear to value our privacy - . Cleveland, a Johnson, and a
you know. we even file invasion whatever. What. else did they do?
of privacy lawsuits - &amp;nd God Durned If I know.
knows most !lf us don't take too
It's interesting too that while
kindly to criticism - the number we think of ourselves as a peace
of trees representing Preslden· loving nation, we have never
tlal timber is reduced. Person- been backward about electing
ally, I'm for letting George Do It. mUltary leaders to the Presld·
be II Washington or Bush.
ency. Wow! Seems like that could
Tomorrow we observe Presl· have been a dangerous comblna·
dent's Day. Since my calendar tlon. Fortunately, none ·of the
does S&amp;Y President's Day and not Presidents had dictator ambl·
Presidents' Day, apparently we tlons. You remembE!r It hasn 't"
are honoring one President. been all that long since
all
-· Seems to me like we ought to liked Ike.
change the apostrophe and honor
There are some fringe benefits
them all In one fell swoop.
that come with having served as
However, George Washing- President of our country. howton's birth date Is Feb. 22 so I .ever. Many times, they make the
figure he must be the man of the birth place a national monument
hour for the holiday. No. Maude. or they put up statues. I think an
II doesn't matter that we're going especially nice par"'ls putting the ,
to mark his birthday three days face on money. J.know- money
In advance ofthe actual date. We passes through our hands so
have to be flexible about these quickly these days, we forget
· things and especially If it means that · It does have those like·
·
a long weekend. nesses . Again, Abe and George
Now as an average person as have made the big scores. Their
· you take a backward glance In pictures are on coins and foldln'
time, who are the two "Biggies" money. Seems like Abe in some
when · you think ·President? corners ranks a little higher than
That's rlg!lt -George Washing· George when It comes to fold in'
ton and Abe Lincoln. Now is this money. George made the front of
· because George was into revolu· the dollar blll but Abe Is on the
tlon and Abe Into civil war or Is it five. On the other hand, we
because In that bygone era In
probably handle more ones than
elementary school we spent days fives so perhaps, after all, It Is
and days In class honoring these equal billing. And just tllin!&lt;,
two presidents?
whole bunch of Presidents ha·
We came to look upon George ven't scored at all in the money
as the Father of His Country deparlment.
and rightfully so - he was the
I often wonder how Franklin D.
first President. Through the Roosevelt ended up on the dime. I
years we thought of George also like to think that he was Pres!·
as being an honest person. After dent during the Big Depression
all, there was that bit about the when one of the common exprescherry tree and he couldn't tell sions of the times was:
his father a lie. · Somehow: I
"Brother, can you spare a
perSQnally, have conjured up a dime?"
picture of George and wife,
But that couldn't be1 could it.
Martha, over the years. I feel Naaaaw.
that they realty weren't ready to
So whether you have a holiday
give up thecourtlife and I picture - tomorrow or not, do take a few
them living In a hpge white house seconds to have a pleasant
with b)g white pillars and lots of thought of George - and don't
servants. Martha loves parties forget Abe. And, lfyou'rerearlng
and is striking when she appears your child to be President- give
In a lavish. light blue satin gown him a break. Hlst0ry proves he'll
over huge hoops, her hair piled live longer without that. Mean·
high apd oh yes, lots of sparkling time, do keep smlllng.

Pomeroy merchants
}tyle revue·slated

POMEROY - The annual Dollar General, Corner . Collecstyle revue.of the Pomeroy Area tion of Middleport, The Fabric
Merchants Association has been Shop, Chapman Shoes, Hood's
. set for April 6.
Family Shoes, K and C. Jewel·
Susan M: Clark will again this ers, and Clark's Jewelry Store.
year serve ·as cHairman of the
Joe Struble will emcee the
show Which will be held In the show with Ann Marie Chapman
Meigs High School auditorium. · giving the narration. There will
As In previous. years, numer· be . special entertainment _by
ous door prizes will be awar&lt;!ed · Paulette Harrison . and some of
and· dl"scourit coupons her Shady River Shufflers, and a ·
dlstrlbu ted.
·
fashion demonstration by Cindy
The emphasis of the style Oliveri, Meigs County Extension
revue, however·, will be on Agent. Boy Scouts under the
showing residents what's availa· direction of .Dale Thoene will
ble in the way of clothing, conduct the flag ceremony.
fabrics, shoes, and jewelry from
Planning sessions in prepara·
local merchants.
tlon for the style revue are being &gt;
held on a weekly ba.sls and the
Participating merchal)ts will theme of the annual ev.ent will bE!
be Buttons and Bows, Corky'·s
announced next week, Mrs.
Classics, Dan's of Middleport,
Clark reported.
. .

oids, Is an opportunity for this '
process to begin, Fletcher said.
He noted the health department
has already contacted health
professionals about reaching this
target group by using educa·
tjonal methods appropriate for
their areas.
Fletcher also _said the state
· health ·department has es tab. llshed a public-private ohealth
partnership with · Ansell Amerl·
cas, a national condom tnanufacIJirer. Ansell donated. Lifestyle
condoms to be .distributed by
campus groups tosexually.actlve . ·
young adults during Nationa't
Condom Week.

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.

Eastern Wins SVAC. bOys' baskeiball title

By ~AVE HARRIS .
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
EAST MEIGS- The Eastern Eagles outscored
the Oak Hill OJ!ks 59-221n the middle two quarters
and coasted l'O a 97·60 victory over the Oaks
Friday night.
The win gave the Eagles the SVAC champion·
~hlp. The Eagles captured at lel\st a tie for the
crown with a 81·72 victory over Symmes' Valley
last Friday night. The crown Is the first .for the
Eagles since they won the last of four In a row In
the-1970,.71 season.
..
Eastern jumped out to a 18·14lead·at the end of
the first quarter and exploded to outscore the the
Oaks 29-llln the second period to hold a 47·25lead
at the half.
:
:
The third quarter was a repeal performance of
·

the ,second as Eastern ou~cored the Jackson
County school 30-llln the quarter and held a 77-36
lead heading Into t11e final eight m lnutes of play .
With Coach Charlie R,lley clearlng ·hls bepch In
the final quarter Oak Hill outscored the host 24-20,
but the Oaks ·fell well short of the newly ~rowned
champs.
.
.
· Shaun Savoy and Scott Fitch combined for 52
points for the champs. Savoy scored 27.1ncludlng
15 from three point range, while Fitch added 25.
!'oint Guard Kenny Caldwell scored 14 and post
man Mike Frost added 10.
·
.Eastern hlt 39 of 74 from the floor for 53%. The
Eagles shot a red-hot 67%from three-point range ,·
hitting 12 of 18. Eastern hit13 of 21 from the line lor
62%. Eastern. grabbed 38 rebounds, with Fitch

.
getting 13 and Frost seve"' The Eagles came up
with 19 steals, with Savoy leading the way with
four. Eastern as a team ha'd eight assists, Savoy;
Tim Bissell and Jeff Durst each had two: Eastern
committed seven turnovers and was called for
nlrie fouls .
For the Oaks, Chad Smith and Shane Mayn!lrd' ,
combined for 44 points, with Smith 'leading the
way with 23 and Maynard adding 21. They were
joined In double figures by Allen Pot\e'l- -wlth 11.
The Oaks were 24 of 57from the floor for42 % (2for
. 5 from three Jx,tntrange), and:6for9 from the line
for 67%.
Oak .Hill won the reserve game 45-43. Chris
Simpson· led the Oaks wtth 24, Chad Savoy led
Eastern with 17.
•
Eastern IS now off until the 28th of February win

EAST RU'_l'HERFORD, N.J., added 14 points as Arkansas
J UPU - Dwayne Bryant scored maintained Its lead atop the
' 17 of his game-high 24 'IJOints In swc.
•
.
. .tile.second half Saturday to help ' The Razorbacks, 21-4 for the
· No. 2 Georgetqwn hold off Seton · seasq~~ and 12-21n theleague, had
· Hall for a 68-60 Big East victory. lost consecutive games to Baylor
: :· Bryant scored 11 of theHbyas' and Texas Christian. The loss t.o
first 18 second-half points and TCU may knock them out of the
. ; then contrU&gt;uted four free throws top 10 ir) the national ranklngs.
· In the !Ina! two minutes when the
SMU, 7·16 and 2-10, had only
• Pirates t)A'Ice drew within three - one ,. player In douliie · figures.
' points. · · . .
1.
Reserve forward Tim Mason hit ' '
• . Seton Hall closed to 61·58 on 10 for the Mus tangs and reserve· .
· Terry De here's jumper wlth'l: 18 center Greg Kinzer, who hac;l1f
•lett bE!Iofll Alonzo Mourning and rebounds, contributed eight
· Bryant hit two foul shots each to· points.
, put the Hoyas ahead 65-58 .with 42 .
SMU. stayed with. ,Arkansas
· seconds remaining. The Hoyas through the flrstll minutes oft he
.. scored their !lnal17 points from game before its shooting turned .
; \he foul line. They . rrtls~ed only lee cold. After .taking a 19·16lead
· two free throws In 'the flnal6: 30. on a follow shot by· Mason with ·
. · Georgetown, which lost Tues- 9:.07 left In the half, the Mustangs
j lay at Providence, Improved to went more than eight minutes
20-3 overall and 9-3 In the Big without a field goal.
·
.. East. The 'Hoyas led 31-26 at
Reserve guard Troy·Va len Uno
· halftime and by as muoh as 10 canned two jumpers In the final
·five mtiiUtes lnto·the second half ' minute of the first half, slicing
before Dehere and Franz Veley the Razorbacks' advantage to
led a Pirates charge. Dehere 40·26 at the buzzer.
SCored seven points and Volcy
The Razorbacks · scored the
five In the last 10 minutes of the first 13 points of the second half to
game.
push their lead to 53-26 with 12:33
Seton Hall, 10-13 and 3-9, has left.
lost six straight and Is en routre
The Mustangs hit another cold
to becoming ·only the second streak at the end of the game.
team since 195'7 to play In the Valentino had a three-point.
NCAA championship gatrie and basket for the team's only points
!- have a losing record the follow- In the last 3:30 of play. · r •.
Ing season. Michigan State fet'l to
E. Michigan 79, Ohio 63
12-15 In 1980 after· winning the
At Ypsilanti, Mich. , Brian
NCAA title the previous season Nolan tallied 20 points and Carl
with Magic Johnson.
Thomas added 16 Saturday to
Mark Tillmon scored 14 points . lead Eastern Michigan to a 79-63
for the.Hoyas, Mourning added 13 Mid-American · Conference Vic·
and ·Dikembe Mutombo finished tory _o ver Ohio Urilverslty, ex·
with 12.
tending the Hurons' winning
Volcy. led the Pirates wtth 16 ·streak to five games.
points as all five · Seton Hall
The Hurons (16-10 overall, 7-6
starters scored In double figures. MAC) took ·control of the game
Oliver Taylor had 13 points, · early. After trailing 3-2, Eastern
i:lehere 11, while Michael Coopet Michigan outscored Ohio Unlver·
and Anthony Avent scored 10 slty 25-3 to build 27·6 cushion
each. No Pirate reserve scored.
with 6: 23left In the first half. ,
Arkall888 77, SMU 46
Eastern Michigan led 42·24 at
At Fayetteville, Ark., Oliver halftime. The Bobcats (12-12
Miller scored 19 polnis Saturday overall, 6·7 MAC) used a 14-6
to lead No. 8 Arkansas to·a 77-46 spurt to close within 48-38 with
Southwest Conference victory 15: 12 remaining. Dave Jamerson
over Southern Methodist and .cap(X'd the run with a three-point
help the . Razorbacks snap a field goal. ·
two-game losing streak.
The Hurons responded with a
.· Marlo.Credit, the other center 10.0 run togoahead58-38andheld
in .Arkansas' two-post lineup, on for the win.

a

Eamhardt wins third Goody's 300
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
finished second, followed by
(UPI) -DaleEarnhardt.onelap
Greg Sacks In a Chevrolet,
Jimmy Hensley 1"-'fn Oldsmo·
down earlier in the race, drove
the final 50 laps without a pits top
bile, and Elton Sawyer. In a
and held off Harry 'Gant ·on the Buick.
·
final lap to win the Goody's 300
Earnhardt started·the final lap
stock car race for Busch Grand with Gant and Sacks In hot
pursuit. On tl!e ·backstretch,
National series cars Saturday at
Dayton a In t e rIta t ion a 1 - Gant ~ rled to get by Earnhardt;
Speedway.
but the three-time Winston Cup
Earnhardt, driving . a Chev- champion would not let Gant by.
-relet. won the race for the third '
Lapped traffic In turns three
time, with theotherwinscomlng and four prevented Gant from
)n 1982 and 1!1116. Gant',ln a Buick, attempting another pass.

as Rice drove to the basket two
Jamerson led the Bobcats with
seconds
remaining.
32 points. Chad Gill also had 11.
Wittenberg 96, Case Reserve 68
. Michigan St. 70, Dllnobi 68
At Springfield, Ohio, Brad
At East Lansing, Mich. , Matt
Baldridge
scored '24 points and
Stelgenga scored 17 points and
Wittenberg
led all the way for a
Steve Smith added 15 Saturday to
96-68
North
Coast Athletic Con·
power Michigan State to a 70-63
terence
win
Saturday
.over Case
victory over No. 17 Illlilols.
Reserve.
The Spartans, 21-5 overall,10·3
The Tigers, 23·1 overall and
Big Ten, extended their winning
10.1
In the NCAC, jumped out to
streak to five games and snapped
art 11-0 lead, and Case did not
a seven-game losing streak to the
score
untll16: 28 of the first half.
Illlnl. Illinois, 18·6 and 8-6, was
Xavier 74, St. Louis 58
playing Its first game since the
school anllounced the NCAA was
At. Cincinnati, Tyrone Hill
Investigating the 1Jllnlbasketball
scored 14 points saturday afternoon to lead 19th-ranked Xavier a
program for major recruiting
75-48 win over St. Louis In the
violations. · ·
Stelgenga's dunk with 1: 15left
MIdwestern Co 11 e g I ate
gave the Spartans ·their largest
Conference.
Hilllaklln a short shot at 7:38
lead of the game at 70·51. Marcus
Lll5ertY closed the gap by conof the first half to take the lead
necllng on four three-pointers In · 20·18 and the Musketeers, 21·2, ·
the last 1:07. He finished wlth25
were nev·e r headed, although St .
points and Kendall Gill cglpped
Louis had tied the game several .
In 21.
times. Hill's 14 points tied him for
'foledo 68, Ball State 47
second on Xavier's all-time scor·
At Toledo, Ohio; Bobby Taylor lng list with Anthony Hicks at
scored 19 points and Toledo 1,&amp;15 points.
pulled away early' In the second
Kansas St. 93, 'Iowa St. 911
half for a 68-47 Mid-American
At Ames, Iowa, Steven Henson
Conference wln Saturday afterscoted 41 points apd Askla Jones
noon over league-leading Bail
hit an off-balance three-point
State.
.
.
.
shot with one second remaining
Toledo never trailed after · In overtime to lift Kansas State to
a 93-90 victory against Iowa State
breaking a 17·17 tie with 7: 36left
In the first hall and went on top
Satur!l,ay.
32-23 at the ' Intermission bY-' '·" The Wildcats, ·who serit' ihe
scoring the final six points,
game Into overtime at 79-79 on
The Rockets, now 10-13 overall . Henson's three-point basket with
10 seconds left, went ahead 90·87
and 5-7 in the MAC, then opened
the secon(l half with a 14-4 run to
on Henson's eighth· three-pointer
of the gamewlth 50 seconds left In
take a 46-27 lead with 14 minutes
to play and the closest Ball State
overtime.
· got after that was 16 In the final
Ohio Wesleyan 65, Kenyon 55
minute of play .
At Delaware, Ohio, Mark-SlayBall ,S tate, which fell to 17·6 man, whose jumper In the lane
gave Ohio Wesleyan the lead lot
overall and 9-31n the conference,
shot 29 percent from the field the good five minutes Into the game.
· second half, hitting just eight of scored 20 points to lead the
28 attempts, .and was 35 percent Bishops to a 65-55 win Saturday
for. the game (19 of 54) to 53 ,9ver Kenyon In the North Coast
· percent (26 qf-49) for Toledo.
Athletic Conference. ,
Paris McCurdy led Ball State . · Kenyon· lei! for the first five
with 15 points, but had all six of minutes of a slow game until
·his field goals ln the first half. He Slayman's juniper put the Bl·
was the only Cardinal player In shops up 7-6. OWU went on a 10·2
dc;&gt;Uble figures. J .C. Harris run. in the flht half to go up 25-12
scored 11 points and Craig and the 'outcome was never In
Sutlers hatllO for T9ledo.
doubt.
,. Notre Dame 66, Syracuse 65
Maryland 60, N. Caronna 76
At Chapel Hill, N.C., Mary·
At Syracuse, N.Y. ; .Elmer
land's Jerrod Mustaf scored a :13ennett hit a three-point shot at
,game-high '1:1 points, Including the' buzzer Saturday to lift Notre
the game-winning basket In the Dame to a 66-,65 victory over No. 3
last minute Saturday to 11ft the Syracuse in a nationally tele·
:rerraplns past North Carolina vised game.
.
80-76.
Notre Dame, 14-8, had three
. Teyon McCoy added 22 points seconds remaining when Keith
for Maryland and Walt Williams Robinson lnbounded the· ball to
made a game-saving steal as LaPhonso Ellis, who tossed It to
time ran out as the Terrapins Beimettat thetopof3-polntclrcle
beat t~e Tar Heels twice In one fpr the winning basket.
BJllyOwensdrovelnsldetonall
season fQr t)le first time since
1979·80.
a left-handed sho' and put
Mustafs offenslv,e rebound . Syracuse. • -18·5, ahead 65-63.
basket with 42 seconds left broke When Notre Dame called time·
a 76-76 ttle. Williams then out, the ~reboard clock showed
stripped the ball from North tw~ seconds remaining, but the
Carolina point guard King Rice officials changed It to three

9:30 AM to 8:00 PM Monday &amp; Friday .
9:30 AM to 5:00 . PM Tues., Wed., Thur. &amp; Saturday
.

GALLIPOLIS

USIC· I

.,Travel~
·

OFFICE HOURS:
Mon.·Frl. 9 am to II pm
881. 9:30 em to 12 Noon

.•I

,.

will

play the winner of the Southern-Kyger
they
Creek game for the sectional flnJlsat Meigs High
School at 7:30. The Southern·KCHS game wlll be
played Thursday at 7: 30. Oak Hlll will play in the
sectionals at Ironton. facing Symmes Valley
.Tuesday at 7: 45.
Score hy quarters
Oak lilll .. ...... ..... ... ....... .... ... .. .. ... 14 11 .11 24-60
Ea5tern ...... .. ..... ... .. ....... .. ......... . 18 29 30 20-97
EASTERN (97) - Caldwell · 2·2·4-14, Fitch
11·0·3-25, Savoy · 4·5·5·27, Frost 5-0·0.10, ·Durst
1·0·1·3,' Wheeler 3·0·0·6, M(lore 3.0·0·6, Hager
2·0·0·4, Flnlaw 1·0·0·2. TOTALS- 33·6-13·97
OAK HILL (80) - Maynard 9-1-0·21, Morgan
0.0·1-1; Potter 3-1·2·11, Smlth.l0-0-3-23, M. Simpson
.
2-0.0'&lt;1. TOTALS- 24-:1-6-80

Notre Dame, while · Robinson
added 13. lVIonty Williams and
Joe Frederick each scored 12.
Coleman scored 16 points and
added 11 rebounds and 5 blocked
shots to lead Syracuse. Owens
and Thompson each . added 14
points.
·
The gam~ · was played before a
national televlson audience on
CBS and a Carrier dome crowd of
32,747.

seconds.
Ellis, who had 11 points and .15
rebounds, .sank one of two free
throws to knot the score at 68-63
with 43 seconds to play. Stephen
Thompson scored on a breaka·
way after a steal by Derrick
Coleman to 111ve Syracuse a 63-62
lead with 1:02 remaining. It was
the first Syracuse advantage
since the opening basket of the
second half.
Bennett scored 18 points to lead ·

'

.

• INSIDE BA'M'LE- Maryland's Tony Mauenberg (right) and
N~rlh CaroUna's Rlcll fox ( 44) battle Inside as Massenbergtrles to
score during· Saturday's ACC contest at Chapel Hill, N.C. The
visiting Terrapins beat the Tar Heels 80·76. (UPI)

Gallipolis to face
Northwest Monday
GALLIPOLIS- Gallla Acadepoints vs. Kyger Creek), her.
my's Blue Angels and . McDer- value comes to light In the paint,
mott Northwest's Mohawks wUl
as Is true for 5·11 sophomore Amy.
battle for the Division II Oak Hill
Reynolds, who wlll come off the ,
bench to spell either Young or
lower-bracket sectional cham·
pionshlp Monday at 6:30p.m. at
Hamilton.
Oak Hill High School.
· Advenlty tough on Mohawk&amp;
The winner of the contest wUl
Adversity has been the toughadvance to the district tournaest enemy of James Arnold's
ment .g ame at Chillicothe High
Mohawks, ~ho finished the regu.
School on Tuesday, Feb.' 27 at
Jar season with an 11·9 mark In
6:30p.m. to face the- the Unloto
the Southern Ohio Conference's
· upper-bracket winner.
Division II.
Gordon Baker's Angels·(ll6-4)
Northwest lost the services of
.have the veteran scortng firm of
point gUard and catalyst Shelly
Thomas &amp; Hamilton, which has
Farmer, who s.uffered a knee
stayed healthy and have been
Injury In mld-.December. Sue·
· one-two In scoring in most of the ceedlng her at the poJnt have
Angels' games this season. Krist!
been sophomore Janet Brannen,
Thomas, a 5-10 forward, has
who suffered an ankle Injury ·
averaged 25.5 points per game,
later In the season, CUITent
forward Amy Mlller ..a 5·8 junior
while Lod Hamilton, a 6-0center,
has averaged 19.65 points per
who Is the Mohawks' best shooter
game and has reglste~d In · at 40%, and the current floor
chief, Ellen Pasturzak, a 5-7
double figures In rebounding In a
senior.
·
majority of the Academy's 20
At tl!e other guard spot Is SuS&amp;n
contests.
White, a 5-6 Junior who shoots 45% .
· While Thomas and Hamilton's
offense have earned them a good
from the fioor and about 72% .1
share of respect throughOut the
from the line. The other forward
SEOAL, a few of their other
Is Mindy Tackett, a H Junior
forward, while the low post
players - notably guard Dena
Greene (5·7; lljl.) and forward
beloqs to 5·10 junior Tracey
Bellamy. First off the bench Will
Jennifer Young (5·10, Jr.)- haye
be senior Teresa Lewis, a ·5-3
made solki contrlbudons to the
guard, and sophomore Davonda
. team.
In 19 games Greene, third on
Rayburn, 5'4 guard.
·
tbe team In scoring witb an ·
"We're short-handed right
average of 9.f potnts per game,
now," said Arnold, who said hls
hu combined fon:es with jlinior' crew will probably sUck wtth .a
!~~~ant GWell Elliott to aet the bell
1·2·2 · defen~e and vartat10111 on
where 11 needa to be, trenerally In
that scheme.
.
the hands of either Th0111as or
In early December, the MoHamilton. Young makes use of
hawks had powerhouae Wheeher Impressive wlnppan to help
lersburg on the ropes before
Hammon and Thomas on the
losing a cloee dec:Won at the end
boards. And even though Young
of that &amp;arne, and later 1n lhe
has scored In double figures In
season handed GI'MII Local one
only one game this season (11 at Ita follr lolaes.
·

a

Wi HAVE MOVED: WE. ARE .BETWEEN HASKINS-TANNER AND CARL'S SHOE STORE
360 Second Ave. .

.

No.·.2 · Georgetown beats Seton Hall68-60

tion.

j

febru.-y 18. 1990

••

On E·very Guitar, Bass,· Banio, Mandolin, Drum Set,
Amplifier, PA System, Monitors &amp; Much,
Much
:More.
i
•
----

Section ·. C

~imes- Jentintl

ST·IC EDU.CT·IO S

STORE
HOURS:
-----

8

Come to
first
when you are planning ·
your next trtp, or vaca-

ports

I

- Tile North Ollila J'IIHI'Ve buke&amp;ball

wltlla&amp;s.ll.. perecordtoUer.rtlle
1M frtDt rcnr are ..-aut coaeb

a,lel)ee), 8Jaa Mc:Carley, KIYII R•t,
and head coach Grell Deel. Beblad

•·

•

•

··',, '

tllem are 111.....- Lulller Mayo, ,Juon BartWte, Bob CuadJ,
DavN aa..,, Cllrll
and lollb Mc:Carley. Playen Dot
ptetar,tl are B,..l'llller ud Jim lob McCI•re. (Tiinei-Seallllel
photo
&amp;p-

wo.

waa•
o.borae&gt;

\1'

.-

�....
.

NBA roundup

:P~1=111=wy~~18~,~1~8~81~0~=~==========~P~DI~m~-=~OV~~M~id-~dl~ap~-~o.~rt~G~II~I'JI~&lt;I~·ii~,~Ohio-~:;~Poi~int~~P~I~II~II'It~~W~.~V~a::.======~S~u~nda~~y~n~m~BI~S:ant~~in~ai~~P..~~gi~~C-~3 ,

~18.1110 .

Ohio Poilll

.

r:.

.

----·

Memorial.toumanient April 6

•••

Sixers blank ·Sonics lri 0T for wiit
By IOE CLU.INJ
got the break&amp;."
Miami its fifth stralpt loiB.
UPI8portll Wrller
Chariell Barkley led PhlladelTbnb&amp;wolv•lll. P_1..
The Philadelphia 76ers man· phla with 23 points and Derrick
At Minneapolis, sam Mitchell
aged only tour points in overtime McKey bad 22 tor Seatl]e
scored 24 points, tncludllll the
against the Seattle SqperSontcs. .. Derek Smith seored on 'a dunk .· tylq and lo-&amp;head buketjln the
But When you hold your opponent 'to tie theseore at with llbt secondi tlnal ,1: 40, to lead MIJ111e50ta.
, scoreless, lour points Is enough tp . lett lu the fourth quarter atter
Spun ••· laa M
win.
Mahorn bad forced a Seattle
At San AntoniO, Terry .cumRlckMahornandJohnnyDaw- turnover: McDaniel missed a m1Qcsscored27pointsandpulled
. kins each hit two free throws jumper a,t the buuler to force down 11 rebounds to lead San
Friday night to give Philadelphia overUme.
,
.Antonio. David Robinson liatl 21
a 100.96 victory over Seattle,.
In all, McDanJel mtssed 10ol13 points and 10 rebounds tor the
which became the third team to shots after lntermtsslcm, .thanks Spurs.
go scoreless In overtime since the largely to Smith's defense.
Su• 115~ Warrlonll'c. ,
institution of the 24-second clock.
''TIIat's what I dream about "
At Phoenix, .Jeff Hornacek
The. four points scored by the Smith said. "When I go to bed' I
two teams in the extra period dream about being Isolated o~&amp;
also was a new NBA record,
on-one with a gifted scorer and
topping the old low ot sjx, set by sropping htni." '/. ·. .
Philadelphta .and Washington on · Mahorn's follow shot had
Nov. 15, 1975.
brought the 76ers within 96,94
"It was a 'defensive struggle
with 22 seco~ds to play.
'
from start to finish," PhiladelThe victory was especially
phlacoachJimLynamsaid. "We , sweet for Philadelphia because ·
missed a lot of shots, but they did the 76ers begin ti" ftvl!-games
a good job with thei,r defense/'
seven-night road trip.Sunday at
Mahorn, who finished with '16. . Portland.
points, hit twotrom thelinetoput
"It gtves you a boost," Lynam
Plilladelphla . ahead 98-96 wttll said. "It you' 1~ a game like
. · 1:38 to play in the extra period. - that, it's not' the easiest thing to
Dawkins, who scored 20 points, bounce back from and then start
added .two more with seven a long road trip."
·
seconds to play.
Elsewhere in the NBA CharSeattle, whichbadafour-game lotte ~lipped Denver .it3-107,
road winning streak . broken, Cleveland beat Atlanta 109-101
missed all eight shots It took in Chicago ousted Miami 119-105:
the overtime, Xavier McDaniel Minnesota defeated Indiana 111·
misfiring on seven of them, and ·105, San Antonio defeated Utah
co~mitted , two turnovers.
100-86, Phoenix routed Golden
I had a good opportunity but State 131)-114 Washington beat
the balls just rolled out," said
the LA Clip.;rs 118·112 tn over"
McDaniel, who finished with ,25 time · and Portland beat Bosron
points. "I didn't get the elevation 120-1lll. ,
·
'
.
on the shots I wanted and I dldn' I
· Homels 113 Nuneta 107 · ·
shoot the ball very well. It.is just
At Charlotte', N.C., · Armon
that Ph lily kept lighting and they
Gilliam and Robert Reed scored
19 points each to help Charlotte
snap a 12-game losing streak.
Cavallera 108, )fawk.l 101
(All Games)
At Richfield; - Ohio, Larry
rEAM
W L P OP Nance scqred a season-high 30
Wellston ......... 17 3 1461 1111 points and Srad Daugherty
Miller ............. 14 6 1277 1458 added 21 and 14 rebounds to
Trimble .......... ll 8 1158 1136 spark Cleveland.
Bel pre ............ 12 8 t442 1078
Chicago 118, MlamllOI ·
Alexander ...... 12 8 1.273 1197
At . Chicago, Michael Jotdan
·Vinton County .10 9 1214 1134 scored 26 points, including 18 in
Fed-Hocking ... 9 11 1366 1329 the first lla!f, and Scottie Pippen
Meigs ............. 3 17 1091 . 1452 added· 23, ·helping Chicago harid
Nels-York ....... 2 18 1076 1431
Frlday!a result:
Vinton County 73 Waverly 55
.Last nlght's's game:
Trimble at V_lnton County
(makeup)
~day's ganies:
·
Jackson vs. Meigs at Rio, 7
p.m.
Vinton County vs. Sheridan, at
Crooksville, 7:30p.m.·

'

GALLIPOLIS - . The third
annual Scott Connelley' Memorial Basketball Tournament, feat uring the Cincinnati Bengals
traveling basketball team, will
be played on April 6 at the
University of Rio Grande's Lyne
Center. ·
All proceeds from the hardwood doubleheader, played In
memory of former Kyger Creek
·football player Scott Connelley
and co-sponsored this year by the
Holzer Medical Center and
Holzer Clinic; will go to

KOred 30 polllts, lneludiDC four ''
thrM-polnlioal&amp;,aad ·IP'DbbedlO:
reboundl to lead PbOI!IIIx.
•
klleU 118, Olppen1U (0'1') :
At Los AQelel, Jeff Maioae:
scored seYen {)f bil game-hl&amp;h 39. :
points tn the final two minute&amp; of. ·
overtime, and Bernard . King .:
added 32 points to lead
Washiilgton.
Trllll B'nrra JJO, Celtlca111
At Portland, Ore., Jerome..
Kersey scored 24 points. and Buck,
Williams added . 23 to lead
Portland.

ualta of the American Cancer seniOr aiJ.star teams !rom varSocll!ty for research education lous southeaster n Ohio schooll.
and service for patlenll living In South Point skipper and fonner
this area.
Marshall University coach Rick
Theflrstgame,whichwillstart Huckabay will pUot the South
at7p.m.,wiiJteaturetheBengals squad, while Columbus Wehrle
a1aln$t ·a senior COllege all-star c'hiel Jerry Francis, who finished
squacr manned by players from Ills collegiate cage career at Ohto
the tri-state area. There will be · State last year, will guide the
11n au rograph session scheduled North team~
athalttlmeofthtsgame,followed
Tickets will be available In
by a college slam dunk conte.s t.
early March, with the location of
The second game, slated for 9 ticket outlets to be. announced ·
p.m .• will spotlight )ligh school later.
'

•••••••••••1111!••••••••-

PIULBUIYOI

; OUTREACH PROGRAM- Utah's Mike Brown (rlcbt) reaebes
.out to block the shot of San Antonio'• WUUe Anderson durtnr
Friday night's NBA contest In San AnlcJnlo. The Spurs won 100-86.
(UPI) , ·
'
' ,
~

'

'

, IIC.

ll9!Jglas tide bout
'Ohio '90-1
.in.
•
shot' Gennaro
.

We Offn ·Pr•11alam Prfees wltla
•

Qufelr,
. J'riendl' Service
.
.
.

Located Just 3 Miles South "'

tvc standings

· 01 Readerson On Rt. :5s · ·
Stop ln AtUI CJNelr Us Out ~ .
··Or Give Us A Call At
rl

\ .

•.

(304)

I

'

8qllllllh

Ned Edwards of New York and
Alan Grant or Toronto captured
the $10,000 San Francisco Pro
FLIPS PASS- Chicago guard Michael Jordan·(23) Dips a pasa
Squash doubles championship
over lbe head of Miami guard Rory Sparrow during Ihe first ball of
downing John Nlmtck of Bos 00 ~
Friday atcJR'• NBA came In Chicago. Jordan scared 26 points to
and Clive Caldwell .or Toronto,'
pace lbe Bulll "to a lljl-105 victory. (UPI) , .
.
, : .15-11,12-15, 18-17, 154!.
Auto Raclllc ·
Rich Burgess held off Robert
Huffman and Shawna Robinson
over the final 18 laps to ,win the
Florida 200for NASCAR Daytona
Dash series cars at Daytona
International Speedway .... Ayr'ton Senna of Brazil, the 1988
Formula One champion, was left
off the list of drivers approved by
the International Automobile
Sport. Fed'eration. Senna has
been in a prolonged fe1,1d with
FISA President Jean-Marie Balestre about remarks he made
last fall suggesting the cham:
pionship had been fixed.
. Baseball

'

'

Cincinnati radio station
WCKY has hired Pete Rose as '
a baseball commentator. Rose,
' a former player and manager
of the Cincinnati Reds, was
barined from baseball for life
for gambling.

WANTED

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tlons·that over5e01 .the sport. ,
.,
,•
By DAVID HARDING
·
Rep.
Bill
Richardson,
D·N.M.,
'
.; COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
;'J'he chairman of the Ohio Boxing said he would seek establishment
:commission said Thursday the of ;1 quasi-public body known as
!ildds are Weighed.heavily,against the U.S. Boxing Corp.
Modeled after the U.S. Olym-;James "B~ster" Dougl~s defend: lng his heavyweight champion- pic· Committee, the corporation
would apply minimum health
•ship In th~ BucJteye State.
and safety standards to boxers
·: As for 'recent callS for federal
:regulation ot the sport, Joseph and would ,certifY boxing promofGennaro Jr. of Youngstown said ters, trainers, matchmakers and
•he would be in favor only If the managers. ·
"I would be In favor if they ,
Iatory body were staffed by
rJ&gt;oxing people, "not senators and appointed boxing people and not
:'congressmen who It now nothing" senators :and congressmen wlio
know nothing a bout boxing,"
. \about the sport. ' ·
Gennaro
said.
,
,. "It's a 90-1 shot ' "Genilarti said
.
He gave himself as an example
of a .heavyweight title llout in
Ohio. "Who's going to proniote of someone who is qualified.
" Not just anybody off the
it? I'd love for it to' happen, but
street
'who they'd pay for doing
where the money is, that's where
nothing," said Genn11ro.
they go." .
Meeting In San Diego last fall,
· Gennaro spoke before thi' start
a
national association of state
of the commtssion•s· regular
boxing
commissioners was , unmonthly meeting.
"Everything' s in the millions animous in opposing federal
'
today," he said. "It's not like the regulation, he said, ,
cild days. All the fights 'nOw go to . ."Now if It were manned by
the casinos. I'd like to see boxing people, that would be
(Douglas, defend his crown) different," Gennaro said.
anywhere in Ohio, but'who have ,
I''
we'gotinOhiowho'swillingtoput
up that kind of money?"
Douglas of 'Columbus won the
cham~ionship this past weeken!l
with a stunning' 10-round .knockout of previously unbeaten Mike
Tyson. '
"If somebody Is willing to put
up the money , there will be a ·
-is lilt,...
fight here," said benna'f b.. '.'But
as long as Don King ,Is the
florpoillllt, ror., liml.l i l t _ , Ill'""",..
,.,., ow kllfJWifllglllld _ ..,..lit ,.,.~or
promoter, he'll go wherever he
wants.
lilt Ill(....
Nollllttg to buy wMI tvtt 01 ... , . . , . . .. '
"If Don King called me and
IMrWy
lftlllumtnf. 111 /Wf'tiiiH ..,,MIS lhOul/tt
said he wanted to go with' a fight
1011~- Sfl.-yftJOuy. VII/IIJit_,· '
(In Ohio). I'd be delighted to
.., """ lib • """""' rlii(Jjrf, llld """
meet wltb him," Gennaro said.
Douglas's victory was. not
""
...
·~.. ,..,.,a
wlftlin~.
trnmedla,tely recognized by two
of the three major bodies governdif/lllr.
Wtwl Ill' lht .,,.,..,
"""'.-! QUI'IIIIIff , _ ., . ,.
Ing t~ sport because of a
claimed slow count by, the
referee w~en TySOJ;I knocked the
•challenger down in the eighth
round.
·• ' ,
Responding to public pressure,
the World Boxing Council finally
MEIGS COUNTY
recognized Douglas as champion
DISPLAY
YARD NEAR
Monday and the World Boxing
POMEROY·MAION
BRIDGI!
Association followed suit
LEO
L.
VAUGHAN,
Mgr.
Tuesday.
,
. PHDNIII882·2AI
Wednesday, a congressman
VINTON, OHIO
from New -Mexico said he would
DISPLAY YARD
Introduce legislation aimed at .
, InERT. 110
eliminating the "incestuous relaJAMI!I A, lUSH. Mgr.
, tionshlp" between boxing promoPHONI! na-1103
·' ters and· international orgariiza·

HOCKING VALLEY
CREDIT UNION

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Sp611s briefs

SportS 'briefs

ueiBIIUit· admlnilltralor. for Hotzer atnlc, u
· Marianne B. Oampbell (far left), public relatiou
dlreclll!' lor Hotzer l'fecllclll €enter, and · Mary
Kropka (far rtcbt), representing i\dvaCare, look
'on. ·
·,
,

• RECEIVES CHEcK- fat Boyer (second from
fert), executive cllrector of the Amerlean Cancer
$oclet_y'a Gallla ~uaty unit, receives .lbll check
·for lbe seC)Ond aqnual Sciitt Connelk!y Mem.ortal
~ketball Tourname"t fr~ Jim Blevins,

•.

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19.11

�•
Page C-4-~ Tunes-Sentinel

Pomerov-Mkldleport-G..ipolil, Ohio Poiut Par ii ll. W.Va.

Feblu8ry

18, 1180

Bobcats lose 12th straight

Ftl

,

Hannan Trace hammers KCHS ' 85~ ·.e

PRESSURE DEFENSE - Hannan · Trace defenders Jaa~n
·Black (left) .a nd Eric Uoyd (rlghl) apply pressure defense to
¥yger Creek guard ·Sean Denney In the third quarter of Friday
., night's season finale on the Bobcats' home courl. Such pressure
.allowed lhe Wildcats to force harnovers and score later, resulting
In an SUO victory. (Times-Senltnel plaoto by G. SpencerOtbonae)

By G: SPENCER OSBORNE
Tlmes-8entloel Staff
CHESHIRE - ' 'They pressured us and
got us going too fast, and we can't handle It
at that helter-skelter pace," said Kyler
Creek head . coach Larry Markham or ·
Hannan Trace' s defense, which took the
Bobcats by the tall and flung them to the
canvas for an ·11$-60 decision Friday night In
the season finale for both teams.
·
Wildcat junior center Craig Rankin ruled
the court with a game-high 22 points
(matching his seasoJihll:h In January's 74-59
win against Southwestern), 12 of ,which
came on three-pointers. He was closely
foUowed by a hot-shooting Eric Lloyd (19) ,
an Inside force In lronman forward Todd
Boothe (13) and a nrst-ever double-figure
scoring effort from sophomore Chad Swain,
who had a varsity season-high 12 markers.
Kyger Creek Junior forward Shane
Swisher. made himself known by leadlrig the
Cheshire five witli 14 potnis. Freshman
forward Bryan Hall dlshfl! yp 11 points, and
senior postman John Sipple added 1Q.
The Bobcats took the lead early by scoring
the ' fl~t fciur polrits In the game's first
minute, but nine unanswe~ed points (Six by
Lloyd and three by Swiiln) by the Guyan
squad put a dl!rriper on Kyger's enthusiasm, .
especially since the Bobcats' defense
started out by taking advantage of early '
Wildcat jitters and goofs. "(Not executing)
the little things (ball control, accurate
passing, et. a!.) are what's keeping us from
becoming a great team," said Hannan
Trace chief Mike Jenkins.
But once Trace got over Its earlY jitters,

Kyllfl' Creek bUlletball gamll In tbe luI 21
yean, wu presented wltll a check by Millie
Ccmkle, pretldeat -of the Kyger Cl'eek.
Athletic Booatera Cub, followllll the an-,
nouncement tlaat Scott was selectecl.to tie an
pftlclal timer 111 IIIIa year's boys' state',
tournament at St. Jolul's Arena, on tbe
campua of Ohio State University,
Tcnuumlllll traekl - Hannan Trace .
(10.10, 7·7) will take on Ironton St. Joe ,
Wectneilday at 7:30 p.m. In tile DiviSion IV ·
secUonal at the University of Rio Grande's,
Lyne Center. Kyger Creek ' (Fl9, 0-14),
which dropped ·Its 22nd straight league · ,
contest, will play next Thursday at 7:30p.m.
In the Dl~lon IV sectional at Meigs HI~
School agaln.st Racine Southern. . ·
.
Score !Jy quarters
·, ..
Hannan Trace.................... 16 25 .27 17-8&amp; ·
Kyger Creek ....... ...... , ........ lO 19 10 21-00 '
BANNAN TRACE (81) -Rankin 54-(1.22;
Lloyd 7-1-2·19; Boothe 6-0-1-13; Swain
4-1-1-12; Watson 2·0.1·5; Bevan 1-Q.H; ,
mack 2-0.0-4; Cornell2.()-1).4; Unroe 1-1).0.2.
TOTALS - .su-7-85
· From tile floor - 36--59 (61%)
Beyond tlae
6--8 (75%)
1
:6
.· ·
Bloekecl llaots - 5
AMIIIII- 22
Sleala -18
Tunaovers - 29
KYGER CREEK (88)- Swisher 4·2-0-U;:
Hall 3-1).5-11; Sipple 5.0-0.10; Birchfield,
2-0-3-7; Denney 3-0-1-7; Bradbury 3-11-0-6;
Polcyn 2-0-0-4; E. VIllanueva 0-0-1-1. TO-,
TALS- H-2·1WO
At the Jlae -10-19 (52.6%)
'

theWIIdcall started to take control, tbolilh
KC made their guests aweat a little wliell
after Swain got the roD em a jumper from tbe
right side of the key that put HT abead 24-18
with 5: 54 left In act two, tbe Bobcall aot
back·to-back layupa from Sipple to cut the
lead to 24-22. Then Rankin's new-found
weapon - the three-pobtt shot - went on
, line.
After Rankin sank the bonus bucket from
the right wing tp expand Trace'a lead to
27-22, the Bobcats kept nlppbtg at the
Wildcats and holding Trace's advantage to
four and
pobtll. but Uoyd, who.canned
nine of his 17 flrst·half points In the second
quarter, was Instrumental II! giving the
Wildcats a 12-polnt halftime lead. ·
. Hamuin Trace used Its newly-discovered
. running 1ame to reel off 12 stralpt pobtts In
the first 2:40 of the third quarter, while KC
was held scoreless 'until Swilher hit a long
jumper from the left wing with 4: 59 left In'
the frame. The Bobcats would score eight .
more points the rest of the quarter,
compared with 15 for the Wildcats after that
jumper, a feat atll'!buted primarily to an
ag~essi"Ce defense that created opportunities· to run the fast break.
.
..
This was the final home game for senlqrs
Chris Clagg, John Slppie and. Er~st
Villanueva.
·
In the reserve game. tile Wildcats erased
an elght-pola!t deficit halfway through the '
fourth quarter to win ~-42. HT's Brian
Unroe led all cagers with 15 points. Chris
Slone paced the Bobcats with ntne. .
Scotl honored - Between the reserve and
the varsity games, John Scott, who has been
the scoreboard keeper for more than 1,100

five

.

arc ~:t':t'e'::.. 2: (~~kl~)

.

.

Southw~stem upsets· ·N orth
'

GaUta 81-7l

. '
.
Midshipmen won 44-38 to ,secure
a lie for the SVAC title. North's
Charles Peck led all scorers with
17 pobtts. Adam Blair led the
Hlghlander.s with 11.
North GaiDa (13·7, 10-4), the
second-seeded team In the ,_DIY·
lslon IV Rio Grande sectional,
has the foUowing week to prepare
for the game on Tuesday, Fe b. 21
at 6:30p.m. against the winner of
the Hannan Trace-Ironton St. Joe
game. which Is set for Wed.nes·
day, Feb. 21, So11thwesll!rn (8-12,
5-9) .will alsa have the ccimlng
weeil to prepare for Its game
against Franklin -Furnace
Green, slated for Feb. 27 at 8: 15
p:m.
Score by quarters
Southwesll!rn ..... l9 23 2118-81
North Gallla : ..... 14 15 17 25-71
SOUTHWESTERN (81)- Pot-

'·"· .

'

VINTON - Sophomore guard/forward Bill Potter was one of
four Southwestern Highlanders
to score In double figures witli a
teain-hlgh 27 to lead ·his mates to
an 81·71 upset victory over North
Gallla Frida~ night.
"We defended them well, but
they shot _bet(l!r when we were all
over them," said Southwestern
boss Jim Walker of the Pirates,
who nailed 10 three-pojnters to
mark only the second, lime the
Biles have hit doul)le digits In
treys as a team. The only other
occurrence of this nature came In
a 101·75massacreofKygerCreek
earlier this month, \\'hen North
shot a season-~lgh 15. ,

. Thl' Pirates, who -played with·
out 6--5 postman D.J. Hammel,
who was Ill. ~ sent . 6-2 juplor
Richard Haney Into the ' paint.
Haney got twice as many rebounds (12) as points (six), but
picking up the offensive slack
was the junior backcour~of Brian
Stout and Chris Tackett~ who had
all the Bucs' trlfeetas and combined for 55 points.
However, Nor'ih Gal'lla skipper
Tom Riccardi expressed his
thqughts on his sailors' slloollng,
"You can't shoot 33.3&lt;)1,. frQm the
field on your liome court and
expect to win,·' he said.
In the reser,ve game, the

·Southern defeats
Symnl~ Valley 7~.-51
By DAVE HAUlS
For Symmes Valley, Shawn
T.S Correspondent ' ·'
· Mootz led the way Willi 23, while
AID - Andy Baer led trio of Paul Hayes had 13. The .VIkings
Souther~ Tornadoes In double. hlt'19 of 47 from the floor for 40%,
figures \vlth 25 points as the and 11 ofl8 from the line for 61%. .
Tornadoes defeated Symmes Symmes Valley had 31 rebounds
. Valley 73-51 Friday night. Senior with Justice leading the way with
. postman Brad Maynard added 18 11. the VIkings had two steals and
points, and senior guard Chad 10 turnovers.
· Taylor, sho'VIng signs that his
Southern-finishes the regular·
foot injury Is healed, scored 11.
season·at 12-8 overall and 12-2 In
Southern jumped ou·t to a 20-14 the SVAC, good enough for
lead at theendofthe.!lrstquarter second place one game behind
behind the scorbtg of Baer· and league champion Eastern. The
Maynard. Baer hit two three- Vikings finished ., the regular
'· pointers and a couple of free season at 8-11 overall and 5·9 In
throws ' In t.h e quarter while the SVAC. Southern will play In
Maynard· added five poi!lll! of his the sectional tournaments this
own.. .,, _
·
Thursday night &amp;t Meigs High
Southern continued to pull ·· School against Kyger Creek. ·
away ·in the second quarll!~ as Gametlmelsat7:30. The VIkings
Baer scored eight points In the will play Oak Hill on Tuesday
quarter and Maynard added five night at Ironton with game lime
as the Tornadoes held a 39·22 at 7: 45.
advantage at the half.
Score by quarters
SouthernoutscoredtheViklngs Southern .. ........ .. 20 19 2113-73
In the third quarter 21-16 In Symmes Valley .. 14 8 16 13-53
building up a 60-38 lead heading
·SOUTHERN (73) - Murphy
Into the final eight mlnull!s. The 0-0-1-1, Baer 5-3-6-25, Grindstaff
Vikings stayed even with South- . 1-0-0-2, Taylor 2-2-1-11, Russell
ern a~ d!e Tornadoes went to the 1-0-0-2, Codner 0-0-2-2, Rose 2-0-2bench i'l ,the final Ql!llrter, but n
6, Shuler 3·0.G.6, Maynard 5-0-8was too iatl'.
·
18. TOTAU·- tt-s-20.;..73
SYMMES VALLEY (Si) .Southern hit 24 of 54 from the Renfroe J-0-0-2. Mooiz 8-0-7•23,
floor (5 of 15 from three point Pierce 2-0.0-4, Criswell 1-0-0-2,
range) for 44% and 20 of 28 from Hayes 2-2-3-13, Justice. 1-0·1·3,
the line for 71%. Southern . Nicholas 2-IJ.0-4. TOTALS ·grabbed 42 rebounds with May- 17·%·11-51
nard get tlng 10 alld Brent Shuler
RESERVE SCORE - Southand Jeremy Rose eight each. ern 43, Symmes Valley 39 ·
$outhern had 10 steals and 15
Top scorers- Roush (Sou.) Iurilovers.
10; Criswell (SV) · 11

ter 11-1-2-27; Metzger 6-0!4_-16; :
John Ehman 4-H-15; Hammond
4-1·2·13; · Bryant 2-0-4'8; Jesse'
Ehman 1-0-0-2. TOTALS - 28-318-81 .
.
· Field goals- 31-77 (40.3%)
Foal shots -16-28 (57.1%)
Rebouad&amp; .:... 47 (Metzger 17)
. Aaalllll - 6
.
steals- 6
.
Tumowrs - 12
NOfi,TH GALLIA (71) - Stout
5-6-1-29; Tackett 6-4-2-26; Haney.
2·0·2-6; D. Smith 2·0-1-5; S. .Smith.
2-ll-1-5. TOTALS-17-10·7·71
Field goaJs - ·2'1-81 (33.3%)
Tlire~polnlers -10-28 (35.7%)'
Foalabots- 7·1\ (41.2%)
,
Rebounds - 45 (Haney 12)
BIO!lked shots - 2
Aaalllll- 9
steals- 2
Tumovers - 14

SCO'l'I' HONORED - Timekeeper J .... Scotl (right) Is
congratulated by Mike Conkle, preslde.l of lhe Ky1er Creek
Athletic Boosters Club, alter the anaoalll!emellt to the crowd at
Friday night's lf.an·nan Trace-Kner Creek basketball game thai
Scott had been sel.e cted as an official llmekeeper at this year's
state tournament In Columbus. (Times-8eiatlnel photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)
·
'·

·SVAC standings
'

'

(All games)
TEAM
W· L
Eastern ....... ... IS 5
North Gallla .. . 13 7
Southern .. .. .. .. . 12 8
Hannan Trace 10 10
S-Valley ....... .. 8 12
Southwestern .. 8 12
Oak Hill ....... .. 4 · 16
Kyger Creek ... 1 19

PF · PA
1497 1406
1454 1302
1412 1229
1204 1179
1178 1239
1446 1421
1179 1425
1114 1543

Southern ......... 13 1 704 494
North Gallla ... 13 1 688 ,10
Oak.HIII ......... 9 5 657 583
Hannan Trace 8 6 601 544
S-Valley ...... ... 7 7 595 571
Soutliwes tern .. 3 11 540 653
Eastern .......... 2 12 · 518 691
Kyger Cr!!f!k .. .' 1 13 399 656
TOTALS .......... H H 4702 &amp;702

Wayne hands Hannan
-Wildcats 87-82 loss

. .

wayne

gone
ill the
period
DeBolrd
bit first
a free
throwu, toJ.'ilbba,
give
J:Jannan a 1.0 lcld. That wOuld be
the Jut dme the WUdcals would
,__, til a.t...o.. .~.....
havo ....
u ...... un m-w 007 uuuu...
the fourth period. The Pionccn
came biiCit wilh five ~~ poillts
until Lloyd Plul Holley hit for two.
A~
leCOIIds 1a1er 'Ibn y, - hit
ew
y OUIIJ DJl
his first llueo-pointer IDd the Call
were only down by one. wayne
then lllrUCk for nine UII8IISwered
points live of theril ciJmillg from

Jl'rlday'l llnall ' .
(SVAC sarnes-flnal)
Hannan Trace85, KygerCreek60
TEAM
W L · PF PA
Southwestern 81, North Galllll 71
Eastern ......... 13 1 1068 913
Eastern 97, Oek Hlll60
Southe_rn ....... .. l2 2 1068 814
Southern 73, Symmes Valley 51
North Gallia ... 10 4 1037 906
Neal week's.1-1•
Banr)an Trace 7 7 865 807
Tueadq Oak Hill VI.
Soutbwe8!ern .. 5 9 974 976 · Symmes Valley at Rock HIIIWalley ........ . 5 9 · 836 965
M.S., 7:45p.m.
Oak HilL,.... .. . 4 18 867 1029
Wedaae8dq - Ironton St. Joe
Kycer Creek. .. 0 14 790 1095
vs. Hanrian Trace at Unlv. of Rio
TO'l'AUI ........... H H 1IOS 7101
Grande, 7 p.m.
'
Tlauntlay - Racine' Southern " the c:hlrity stripe.
.
(Reaene.flnal)
vs. Kyger Cr~k. at Meigs H.S.,
Unfortunalely for Hwllo
TEAM
W . L PF PA
7:30p.m.
·
.
,
agressive defense wu Clllllllg
'

many fouls to . be called against
them.
kept hitting with near
perfection for an ldtlilionil., four
points from the c:hlrity Slripe. Hailnan's Marie Jenkins IDd Tony
Young hit back to beclt "'sllds llld
were able to CUI the dcllcil to 3832. John Sebastian ·c:annec~ one
from about six feet out only to have
Charlie Hagley follow with his own
: ~~r with 1:45 re~ning ·in

By JERRY BARKEY
T-8 Correspondent
ASHTON, W.Va.- ''They shot
great night. No matler what we
did, ·they put )I In the hoop.;,
That's how Coach Rick Handley
slimmed up hili Hannan Wildcats' 87-82 loss to thl! Wayne
Pioneers Friday nillht. .
The Cats put the first point on
the boanl wit1J just Six seconds

¥r

After

For the Vmsily pme," Yoianj led .
an iCCACiii witll 27. Holley bit for
21 llld 18 rebounds. 1\vo olhtr
Wlldcars
in double :till·

were
~had 12, and DeBoard

Wlldcals wiD take to the
road Monday u ~ look for Mil
14 of the ~""Walton.

1

,.

is DOW 12~ with
Both plllel will be
a&amp;alnst Walton at Walton.

Tho Call

~

11J
IILUN
VPJipDI'tl Wrlta'
A No. 14 ranking and the
aatlon'alollfeatwlnnbtastreakll
leaving La Salle grasping for
Incentive as It 101!1 thrCIUilh it&amp;
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference schedule.
.
Doug P.varton aoored 21 pobtts
and Lionel Slmmo01 added 20
Friday night to lead the Explor·
era to !heir 13th straight victory,
a 95-78 !rlumph over lana.
The Explorers, 21-1 overall and
11-0 In the conference. ·are tied
with Murray State for
longest
'winninJ atreak tn NCAA Division
J. .But COa£h . Speedy Morris

the

wof

belliM!I hll teaftl
have to
become more CODiilleDt before It
·is ready to challenge In the
upcoming NCAA 'l'ollf!Ulment. '
"'lbe etrort was tbere', but the
entllutasm wasn't there and the
dt!fenae wasn't there," - Morris
said. "We can loae to anybody.''Simmons, the se~~enth·leadlng
scorer bt NCAA history, agreed.
"We didn't play nearly as well
~ we're capable of playing," he
said. "We didn't shoot well or .
rebound well. Buttortunately we
got our de(enae going:
"We tend io play a little lax at
times. Then we tend to pat t!ach
·

oth~

on the back and- tell each
other to pick 11 up a little and play
the type of ball we're capable of
playll!i.."
Iona scored the first eight
points ot the game but La Salle
battled back and t~k a 22·181ead
with 11:25 ten In the half. rona
countered With 11 12-5 run to
'ie1aln the lead 30-27 With five
minutes before Intermission.
,
The Explorers finished . with a
flurry, scoring the flnal10 point~
of the hall to lead 37-30.
La Salle opened the·second half
111 a trapping three-quarter press
that propelled them to a 12·4 run.
Six of those points came as a

W&amp;hama slips ~pas~ ~
SistersVille 68-65' ·

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p\plishing tho milestone before
tbe flollie · fans. Banliu linisbed . · Store by QuarterS:
1 .l 3 4 Tot
With·a game higb 30 points On tho
SistersyiJ1e
9
14 13 29 65 .
~ ·to , give him 9!14 caretS .
Wahama
·
.
26
IS IS 12 68
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Colorado to pull within 67·62 with
4:37 to play beforl.' ending the
game with a 19-2 run . William
Davis tallied 14 points and 7
rebounds fo r the Sooners, while
Damon Patterson gathered 11
rebounds .
The Buffaloes, 10-H and 2-9.
war•led by Shaun Vandiver with
22 points and 10 rebounds. Reggie
Marlon added 16 points.
In_ othe r games , Co r n ~ll
thumped Dartmouth 72-63. Harvard hi!ndled Columbia 77.72, ·
Princ.e ton burled Br own 74-47 ,
Yale to.pped P ennsylvania 79-72
and Northern Illinois . edged
Illinois-Chicago 51-50.

*

.·;

game in double ligures.
; 1\ Cree throw 'by 1Coon and a
.bucket by Brent Fields in the first

on the a1J-t1me list.
''I think (Simm~?J) has 3.000
poiDts .on his mind, Morris said.
"Ithlnkheshouldforgetltandgo
out and play and be Lionel
Simmons. It's kind of taking Its
toll on him."
In the only other game lhvolving a Top 20 team Friday night,
No. 10 Oklahoma routed Color.ado 86-64.
At Norman, Okla., Jackie
Jones scored 30 points and
Skeeter Henry iidded 21 to lead
the Sooners to their 43rd conseculive home victory.
.
The Sooners, 19-3 overall and
7-2 In the Big Eight, allowed

.·_

*
.
A mer1ca's
Tachnology.StoraSM ·:

lhimt!hlc:h

MORE ENERGYSAVINGs·

result of Iona turnovers.
Tralllilg 60-44 with 10: 17 to
play. the Gael's surged within 10
points as Worthy scored six
consecutive points.
But Iona cOuld get no closer
than eight points with jl!st over
· seven minutes to play 115 La Salle
ran off 10 straight points to put
the game away .
Sean Green·and Joey Johnson
led lana with 17 wlnts. Shawn
Worthy added 16 for the Gaels,
10-14 and 5-8.
Simmons finished the game
with 2,939 career points, moving
within 12 points of Kansas'
Danny Man "jOg for sixth place

*

· minurt of the fourth period gave . "'{:(
ByGA.RYCLARii
Wlhama iiS. bigJest lead of the
,
T-8 Correspondent
MASON, W.Va. -After lead- · night at 59·36 liut 'ihe .Tigers
wouidn 't succuinb 10 the Bend Area
lng by as inany as 23 points early
onslaugbt as S~ville bepn_lts
In the fourth quarter, Co~ch
lcng journey back Into contenuon.
Lewis " Hall's · Wahama White
Falcons tound lhermelves forced . Bthind Grimm and Ol8d Shupe the
visiton ou!SOred Wablma 29~ to
to sustain a gallant fourthpUll to within one ~ 66-65 with'_ :2l!
quarter comeb!lck by the visiting
seconds re'maining. Coon nailed
Slsll!rsvllle Tigers Friday night.
The 'White Falcons' once comforccnsecutive free lluOws to make it
table advantage quickly
68-65 with :II secllllds to play with
dwindled to a mere one point
Grimm's t1uee point aa.empt at the
before the Bend Area team was
buzzer hilling tho front of .tho rim
able to escape with a 68-65 Little
~ ~o~ to give Wahama 1
Kanawha Conference win.
68 to~:._,~, 30 . . IS
.The viciOIY, in tho White Falcons . .thrilling
In· 1111diiion -- · pom , .
final homO tQDtest of the 1989·90 Ml:~ , cOIICI!Kied· hi~ ·senior
seuDn ~ the home fanS with, •.
season, insQred Lewis Hall's ,:slier$
of its llnt Wiming campaign on the · 18 lll$te(i while COOII contributed
b8rdcourt in fOlD' years and also en- 12 ~ S,isleaBviiiC rilceivcd a 24 ·
hances the locals chancos of attain·. point effort from Grimm while
ing the most victories in ten yean
Shupe c:ollectecl 12 tallies and
Kendle
10 for the visitors. ·
at the Mason County school. ·
Wahama improves its overall
· Wlhlllla shot an even SO% from
season teCOlli to 12-8 on the year
the lloor on 27 of S4 field goals:
while winning the rebQunding batwhile increasing its conference
slate to 7-6 in the final season of Ik: 36-35. Sistmville connected on
LKC cage play for the local cage .23 of· 66 from tho Boor for 35%.
squad.
McDennin led all rebounden with
11 while Grimm netled ei~t for
For the majOrity or the 32 minute
the
Tigers with Coon IIOIChing six ·
e011test ' the question was not
saea1s and Phili U
diShing out
whether Waliama would gain its . ' five assisiiJ for
Wf.fte Falcons.
12th win of the seaoon but whether
WAHAMA(68)
at not the White Falcons' leading
John Bamitz m7-1-3,30; '1:0111
scorer, John Bamitz, would reach
McDermitt 8-2-3-18; Craig Coon
the I 000 point scoring plateau _o f · (1)3-3-6-12; Philip Upton l..Q.0-2;
his · high school c:mer. Banntz
Chris Zerkle 0.2-4-2; 'Jamie Burris
needed just 36 points going into the 1..().().2; Brent Fields 1-().()..2; PJ.
conference encounter to achieve tho
Gibbs ().OM; Chris Oldaker ().().
coveted -1000 point milestolle and ' 0-0; Shannon Barrett 0-0-0-0; Rod·
lifter ~ 22 points in the first
ney Bwnpmer 0-I).().(J, Totals
ljalf die ~ ieemed to be
(6)21-8-1~.
.
.
-.Within reach, ~ly since WHS
• SISTERSVILLE (65)
~ in ~plet.e conuol of the
Brett Grimm 10-4--4-24; Chad
II!IIJie with ain 18 point advantage at Shupe (2)1--4--4-12; Matt ~
die inteimission
(1)2-3-4-1~ Pat Cook (1)2-1i2-8;
• ; ' Hawe¥er the Tigt;rs . scaged a
Bobby Kehrer 2.().()..4; David
' ~ fourth period rally with
Smitli (1)0..().().3; Andrew Hart 1-·
; )Vahama · suffering tfl!ough a mild 0-1-2; Marie Ankroni , M-3-2;
~· half sboodllg
Jamie Lucas ().().().(), Totab (5)18~ ifie 5-9 junior guard ~
IC· · 14-18-65.

break:

Tot Fouls: Wab 1S, Sistersville IS
Fouled Out: Cook
Officials: Rick Beck &amp; T. Greaver

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·~ftuntington· . ~t beats
~oint
Pleasant 67-61
.
'

. By,KICK SIMPKINS ·
lead at the beginning of the second
'
T-3 Correspondent
quarter as Huffman scored the first
' HUNTINGTON, W.Va. -The
three points of the period to give
·lfuntington , East Highlanders
them a 21-IS lead. Morrow.connec.
a 10-0 run 1n the fourth
ted on a field goal to cut the lead to
• quarter ofFrldaynlght'uameto
4, but East scored the next six
':down the Bl g macks by a final •. points to inc:rease their iead 1o I0
'~Core of 67-61. · ,
. · with 5:44 remaining in the half.
• The B,ig Blacks beld a S6·53lead Point.cutthe lead to 8 with 2:4S lefl
[with S:26 remaining ·in the game and theil after an exchange of bas(When the Highlaildcrs went on their kets, tho Big Blacks went on a run
-scoring spree. Wben Huntington of their own, scoring the last 8
$ut wu through, !hey had a 63- S6 ~~ts of the ~f to tie the game at
~ead and the game cklc:k was down
' to 1:10. The Highlanden scored
· Local fans had to be thinking of
•Jheir last 8 · points from the foul
Jan~ 16 pmo with tho Hun1)ine, as the Big Blllcks wore forced II1JiiOII High Pony Express ~ ·
;~ foul with time rumling out in the the Blacks were down by I 5 late in
:ilame. .
·
the second quaQ!r only .to come·
.• '1 thought . we played pretty back and pull to within 2 points at
,(weU," said ?PHS head coach Len- the half. Point wmt ori Iii win that
•llii: Bamotte. "We missed a couple game, also played in the' ~
:-ofonoslateinthegameandhumed ~dedHwuifse_
....~y
· ~
.41 couple o( shots, but other than """
u~&lt;&gt;
&amp;Oinl.
·)hal 1 thought we played pretty repeat that peaformanco ai they •
. ;'Well." ~slant coach f&gt;ave Bod- carne out scoring in · dlo third
added, "Wo gave them 13 of- quarter Dd took a six jlolat.Jr.i.d
·1CIIIive rebouaids. You can't do !hat .witb 5:43 retlllinina· But; Bait w~
· and win " ·
lap to tbo
and fouabt back
•,': Tho mf:...~ outtebounded . to tie IJ1e'p!IIO M 48-48 '\Vltb Only
•:the Big B
30-21. Sean Hof- SI seConds lCCt in the IJIIIW. The
:·fman pu})ed down 12 caruns for .Big Blll:b repined tbe 11M with
•tho l:li~hlanded to take jliiiO 3 I sec:ood• reanaiDlng when Bryan
: honors m that dq&amp; bJICillt. Bryan Faber rang up 1 mighty 01111 handed
:Morrow lalched ilnto six to lead dunk oa a nico pus form ~ryan
•.Point while Bryan Faber and MoliON. That Wll the last liCOi'e in
! Jeremy Blain each had four.
the'qlllllel IIIII N'Bie Bllclt:lwero
; · The first quarror wu a conirast in cn rop 50-48 • tho end of three
' styles u the Hlghllliden took the qlld!n.
i;blll insidt to . tbelr bla man,
The loa dropl tbe Bi&amp; B•'
"HoughtOn ind be ltllpOilded wijh 1I!COid to 8·111111 tho ICIIOD. PoiDI
t eight poiDis
to !Cad them. 1be &amp;I&amp;
I Blicti
'coanrered with
!loiitb to
~liCirimoter aiJoodnj, with Jeremy
tho
·In 1 Plonm Alfl.
1
· &amp;~. 111011 Swain, IDd Bryan letlc Coalnncuame. .
, MlioiOW each llltdq flllm tho 0111POINT PLEASANT

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Rick Pcrduo l!lldbd the Deriad just
aS he had beiD!I it, wfth I three
pointer. wa;ne look a coinfonable
43_34 1ead into the locker IOOID . .

lona 95-78 to push win streak to 13 games

~o

a

'
Mi\KING HIS MOVE- Kyger Creek
center John Sipple (right)
· makes his move to the basket against the defense of Bannan Trace
postman Craig Rankin In the firsl quarter of Friday night's game
at Cheshire. Sipple scored 10 pobtls In the Bobcats' BIHIO loss.
(Times-Sentinel photo by G: Spencer Osborne)

Sunday Timea-Sentinei-Pege C-5

----

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•

I

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C-6--Sunday Tim• Sentinel

.,

FllbruarY 18. 1180-

.....
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(;alliWiis tops JacJmon:m:s in seaSOJl fmal~ ~

JACKSON - With leading game, sco.rtng only tWG poUlts,
lake a
lead. The Gallians
play. In the final period, Jackson)
_ . Strait on the his lowest output of the season.'· maintained anywhere from a
was 12 of 17 at thellneand GAHS J
scorer WilHam
bench recovering fnm a bout Strait fouled out with 4: 53 Teseven to 15 point advait,tage the . 14 of 21.
• .
~
with the nu, Gallipolis' junior malnlng In the game.
remainder of the contest. ·
In the preliminary contest, the
guard Josh W1111ams came
Williams connected on nine of
Jackson made a deserate
JHS Ironboys blew a 10-half first~
through with a career-high 27 11 field goal attempts and sank
comeback bid In the final period
point lead (27-17). then camepoints Friday night to pace the 'e ight ot 13 freebies, scoring four
with GAHS up 41·29 and 5: 39 back In - the tina! period or.;
visiting Blue Devils to a 61-49 ' In the first, 13 of Gallla's 16 'sho:wtng on the clock.
regulation play tie kpot the count ;
Southeastern Ohio League tri· markers In the second, six In the
Behind the foul shooting of at 47 -all.
;:
umph over Jackson.
third and four In the final stanza.
Walburn and Valentine and
In the overtime period, Jack·•
It was the conference and
Only other Blue ~vlllnclouble goals by Valentine, the Ir~nmen son came from beblndagalnon a f
season filUile for , Coach Jim figures was Shawn McNeal who
pulled :within nine, 49-40, with
tapln ·by Brad Pltti,nger with 13_
Osborne's crew who tln!Shed finished with 10. Chad Neal
2: 0llett but a key goal by $colt seconds lett and thenBradMunn,
league play all even at 5-5 and added eight and Ry~n Smith
Morgan (1:.52) who carne In for
addet:j two Insurance markers.-.
8-12 overall.
seven. . .
. .
Strait and clutch roill shooting by
with no time on the clock !o score;,
Coach TOny Bor~orst's Iron·
Mike Moore and Clayton Val·
WJIIIams McNealandChadNeal
a 53-50 victory over the Blue,,
men, who visited Columbus etHinepaced theirOJII'I'len with 14: sl:aled lh~ Blue Devils' victory.
Imps.
!:
Westfall for their season finale and 12 points respectively . .
Gallipolis cOnnected on 18 of 31
GallipoliS. h.!Jwever, won the 1
last night, tlnlsbed conference · Williams, playing one_of his
fleld goal attempts for 58 per- undisputed reservE:. title · wh!!n:•
play 1-9. Jackson dropped to 2-17 better floor games for GAHS cent. TheGalUanswere24of-36at last place Warren Local upset ~
on the year.
/•
(three turnovers) llmlteel Jack·
the linefor66percent. GAHShad M'a rletta, 57-56.
:
.:
Strait played less than halt the _son's tough little gUard; Steve 20 personals 23. rebounds six by
. Highlight of tl)e reserve gamer
·
· Walburn to eight points, pressur- Smith and rive each by McNeal
was a 55 to 60 foot desperation ;,
·
·~ •
lng theJHS ace from the opening · and Neal and 13 turnover's .
· shot with no time on the!!lock In ,
·
&amp;lin l!ntll the subs flooded the
GAHS 'had 10 asslssts, ihree the second ·period by Gallla's ·
floor late In the final period.
. each _by Neal and WUiiams, and
Clint Davis which started the
(SEO,Opponenta)
(All-Games) ,
Gallipolis kept !he .huge Jack·
nine steals, five by Williams . The
Imps on their comeback .trail.
TEAM
w L' p OP son parentsnlghtcrowdoutotthe Ga111ans had five blocked shots
Munn paced the lronbOys with •·
Athens .............. , 19 11443 1124 game by completly .controlling four by ~cNeal · and took· n~
14 points. Pittinger acid~ 12 and
Portsmouth ...... !17. 2 1370 1204 the game's . tempo frqin the charges.
·'
· ···
Eric Trago had 11. D11vls lmd
' Wellston ............ 17 3 1464 1171 opening whistle,.taklngonly good
Jackson hit 16 of 44 field goal
Scott · Jividen each _had 12 for ,1
GAHS, F.J. Hastwell and Mit·
Wheelersburg .. .. 15 41334. 967 percentage . shots, controUlng attempts for 36 percent. .JHS was
South Polnt ...... l. 15 5 1523 12~ both boards and stopping Jack· 16 · of 24 at the line, had 24
chell Pace had nine. The latter ,
Warren
..........
:
...
t5
5
1437
1210
son's
fast
break.
personals,
23
rebounds,
seyen
by
fouled
put late In regulation play .
ANO'ftiER STEAL - Besides playlnr bla best offeulve rame
Greenfield
.........
15
5
1160
965
The
Galllans
ju'!'-ped
oft
to
an
Chris
White,
and
was
guilty
of
15
Gallipolis
wlll meet Wellston 1,
ever (2'7 polnla) Galllpollll' Jolll WIIB81118 (81) races doWD court
Friday at Rio Grande, at 8:15 ,
Logan. .. ............:.13 7 1399 1255 8-2 lead. JHS tied 11 at 8-all after turnovers, nine In the second
wttb one of biB five steals durin&amp; Friday's U-49 vidory over
13
7
1209
1066
one
period.
It
was
the
only
tie
JJf
period.
·
p.m.
In the semi-finals the Rio :
Waverly
...........
-..
Jackaoo. wmtams al111 bad tbree uslsts and two rebounds, and
Southern
.........
,
..
:1_2
8'
1403
1226
the
g_
a
me.
.
Of
the
44
personal
fouls
called
Grande
Division II Sectional
held JHS ace !Ueve Walburn· to ellftt points. Giving chase If
Jackson's Mike Moore, wbo I~ JUS scorers with 14.
Chesapeake ... . 1•.'10 10 1338 1290 po~~~~~~:h!c:!·n~hepe~~:J ~~ against the two teams. 35 were
To~rn~~e:!.
1
Vinton ........... ... : 10 '9 1214 1134
·
committed during second half
ar Y x:
Pt. Pleasant :..... 8 11 1162 1267
GA:LLIPOLIS ·(61)
Strait , '
Ga!Upolls ........'... 8 12 1023 1136
1·0-2; Wllllams, 8-(1)-8-27;
Marietta ...... .. ;... 3 17 1203 1369
McNeal, 2-6-10; Neal, 2-4-8; 1l
Jackson ......... !.• . 2 11. 1068 -1268
Sheets, 0-2-2; Smith, · 2,3-7; ·
1
...;.""~
McCleese, 0-0-0; "Morgan, 2-0-4; ·
SEOAIJ VABSITY ·
Elliott, · 0-()-0; Murphy, · 0-0-0;
ATHENS - The Athens BulFrtday night · AHS led · from
(Final) · · ·
Haynes, 0-0-0; Fallon, '0-0-0; :
ldogs rode ·a career-high 33 point three to five P9ints In the first
TEAM
' W L , P OP
Pace, 0·1·1. TOTALS 17·(1)--24,81.
effort by senior Scott Stricklin to · period enroute to an 18-13 lead,
Athens .... ..... :J 9 1 693 580
JAC~N (49) - Walburn,
the 1989-90 SEOAL basketball and early In the second stanza
Logan ........... : 7 3 7~ 598
1-(1)-3-.8; Jewell, 0-2-2; Valenchampionship Friday night In a lncreased the spread to 10 points
Warren ........ ; 7 3 682 . 638
tine, 4-4-12; Smalley, 1·0-2; :
78-64 triumph over arch-rival before reaching halftime with a
Gall1polis ......1 5 5 515 558
Moore, 5·4-14; White, 2-1-5; Bll- '
Logan.
33-29 lead. .
Jackson .-........ 1 9 ,525 683
Ienger, 0-0-0; Prater, 1-2-4; Doty, '
The Chieftains needed a vicEach team swished 16 points In
Marietta ....... , I 9 587 653
0-0-0; Poetker, 0-0-0; Woodard, ,
tory to tie Athens for the the third before a dlsasterous ·· TOTALS
~ 30 30 3710 37IO
1-0-2, TOTALS 15-(1)·16-41.
championship, but after pos tlng fourth quarter that saw ·Logan . . Friday's rtiSults: ·
Score by quarters:
a 2-0 lead LHS was never really In suffer a three minute scorin'g
GalUpolls 61 Jackson 49 ·
· Ga1Upolls .............8 16, 15 22-61 ~
'command throughout the
drought.'
.
Athens 78 LOgan 64
JackSOJ). ............ : ..8 7 10 24-49 1
cQntest.
Early In the final quarter
Warren Locai84.Marleita 64 :
Reserve score - Jackso11 53 .
Athens concluded regular sea- Logan's Chad Shuttleworth
SEOAi. REsERVES
GaiUpolls 50 (ot) 1
son play with a sparkling 19-1 canned;~ jumper that,broughthls
(Final) · ·
.overall mark ·and clinched Its team to within tw(\.,49-47, bu tthe
TEAM
W L
P. OP
·second straight league title with Chiefs could not sc!te-agaln until
•
Gall1polls ....... 7 3 447 448
a 9-1 reeord . Logan concluded Athens had built a 66-471ead with
'
·Marietta ........ 6 4 531 480
'
·season play at 13-7 and Its 7·3 three and a half mln4tes left.
Athens ........... 6 4 515 504
league mark tied the the Chiefs · While· Logan's shooters were
Jackson .... .'.... 5 5 488 484
,.
with Warren Local for second Iced In the fourth quarter the
Logan ...... ...... 4 6 467 468
place.
~uUdogs nailed seve!) of eight
Warren .......... 2 8 46_2 526
field goal attempts and con·
TOTALS
30 30 2910 2910
verted 15 of 21 free throws down
Friday's results:
the stretch In outscoring Logan
Jackson 53 Galllpolls 50 (ot)
·Starting
29-19. · •
·
Athens 60 Logan 57
Gallipo~is, . Ohlo
The only downer for Athens
Warren Local 57 Marietta 56
FOI MOll .fOIMAIIOII CAU.
ca!De with 3: 49 left In the tl)lrd
Friday's no..-SEO 'scores:
Vinton County 73 Wjiverly 55
quarter when guard J9n Re~.
' 446-0699 .
leading a fast break, turned a fllp
Coal Grove 65 Chesapeake 63
' 18
VINCENT - Seniors Curt
and landed .on his head and
Ceredo-Kenova 91 South Point
SMITH FOULED- GaiUpofls• Ryan Smith (12, dark unlfonn)
Plummer imd Jeff Ontko each · shoulder. Mute sUence settled
81
fouled by Jackson's 8h1111e Prater (84) during Frlday~s SEOAL
tallled 24 points Friday night In . over the large crowd while the
Greenfield 70 Wilmington 66
hardwood finale at Jackson. Smltb, wbo led the GaiDans on the
leading the Warren Local Warunconscious Reed was attended
Ports~rjouth _.75 Columbus
boards with six rebounds, flnlabed the rame with seven polata. Be
r iors to an 84-64 . thrashing 'of
by medical personnel.
Brookhaven 54
.,
had a blocked shot and was credited with two as8111ta. GABS won,
;arch-rival Marietta.
He was transported to the
Southern 73 Symmes Valley 51
61-49.
-·.
'
Warren's victory combined hospital where his Injury was
Huntln~ton East 67 Point Pleawith Logan's loss at Athens, diagnosed as minor. He was
sant 61
,enabled the Warriors to gain a treated and sent home.
Boyd County 62 Wheelersburg
second place tie with the Chief·
In claiming their 18\h SEOAL 48
YS
.tAlns In the final S~OAL stand- championship, the Bul)dogs'w ere
Last night's results:
Good
shape
Ings . Warren finished 111 15-5 and led by Strick)tn's 33 points and 20
·Jackson at ~lumbus Westfall
,'f-3.
Portsfl)Outh at Columbus Wat·
from senior Scott Decamlnada
: The Tigers closed regular while senior Jim Redd fired ln20
terson (makeup)
.,. '
·season play. a I 3-17 and tied the for the Chiefs.
·'
S o u t h We b s te r a t
Jackson Ironmen for the league
,
Life
insurance
now
fOr
your
children
guarantees
coverage
Both teams ·shot Well from the Wheeler~hurg
·cellar a~ 1-9.
for life. No matter what.
.
·
floor with Athens hitting on 25 of
Trimble at Vinton County
: Warren connected on 54.7 per· 47 tor 53.2 percent while Logan
(makeup)
-' Junior Protector Plans -One of the
12 h.p. Kohler engine. 8
:cent of their field ~al attempts canned 26 of 50 for a 52 percent Tuesday's games:
'
speed; ~8" . mo~er.
MODERN WOODMEN SOLUTIONS
·(29 of 52) whlleMarletta_made21
evening.
(Sectional Tournaments)
·of 59 for a 35.6 percent average
Logan was called for 29. perJackson vs. Meigs at Rio
·while at the line WLHS swished sonal fouls, enabling AHS to
.,i£;;si.,,.M.,_. ,
Grande, 7 p.m.
.
,
..
-..,..-.,...~:tla;
23 of 32 and MHS 18 of 20.
Vinton County vs. Sheridan at
conver-t 27 of 37 at the line, while
· While Ontko and Plummer led Logan made 10 of 19.
Crooksville, 7:30p.m.
MODERN WOODMEN
the Warrior attack with 24 points
In the preliminary reserve
South Point vs. Northwest at
OF AMERICA
each Josh McKitrick paced Ma- game Lonnie Fields drUied a
·11 h.p. Briggs &amp;. Stratton
South Webster, 7 p.m:
AFRA.TERNAL ur£ INSURANCE sOCIETY
•tletta with 22 markers and Jeff · 20-foot three point goal at the Friday's games:
engine, 4 speed. 38" mow}lunsaker added 12.
HOME OFFICE • ROCK-ISLAND . ILLINOIS
er.
buzzer to lift Athens to a 60-57 win
Fairland vs. Jackson-Meigs
'
.. ~ Bo:x score:
over the Chiefs.
winner, at Rio Grande, 6: 30 · ; MARIETI'A (64) Pete
Box score:
GalllpoUs vs. Wellston, at Rio
;suerken 3-f:10; Jeff Hunsaker
NEIL MORRISON
'
LOGAN (64) - Shawn AI·
Grande, 8:15p.m.
P.O
.
Bo•
3411
•3-6-12; Josh McKitrick 3·3·7·22;
UFE
•
ANNUITIES • Ill'S
lender 1-2-1-9; Chad Stiverson
Wheelersburg vs. Coal Grove,
Rio Grlndri, OH. 46874
Matt McKenna 0·1·0.3; Mike 0-2·2; Joe Downs 2-0-4; J :R. · at South Webster, 7 p.m.
Phone: 481 4) 248-9319
•FIATDNAL PIOGIAM~
;llutrman 3-0-6; Mark O'Connor Cordle 4-1-9; Ian Rlddlebarger
Portsmouth vs. Rock Hill, at
8 sp .. 10 h.p .. Tee., 42 in.
·1-0-2; , Rich Slley 1-0-2; Jeff Smith 1-1-3; Chad Dennis 4-4·12; Chad
South Webster, 7 p.m .
~1-7. TOTALS 17+18-t4.
Saturday's games:
mower
.
Shuttleworth 2-1-5; Jim Redd
: WARREN LOCAL (84) 10-0-20. TOTALS 24-Z..11-6f.
Chesapeake vs. WheelersburgSteve Knowlton 0-1-0.3; Scott
ATHENS (78)- ScottStrtcklln Coal ·Grove winner at . South
Mitchem 5-Q-10; Rick Rhodes 9-1-12-33; · Jon Reed 1-0-2; Brock
Webster. 7 p.m.
.,3-0-6; Curt Plummer 6-1-9-24; Toadvlne 1·0-2; Scott Decamln11 h.p., Briggs &amp;. Stratton
Warren Local vs. Vinton- 2-19-to
Jeff Ontko 7-1·7·24; Kirk Huf- · ada 6-8-20; Kevin Scurlock 1·0·2;
angina.
4 •PHd. 38" mow·
Sherl~an wlnner ,at Crooksville,
While
fman 1·0-2; Kevin Fausnaugh! Shad Patterson 4-6-14; Brent 6:30p.m.
er.
.. .
·SUftplles
7·5-9; Sryan Bowe 2'·2-6. TOTALS H;rrtman 1·0·2; Nate Scl;laller
Athena vs. New Le:!j:lngton .at
2-24-90 .
' Last
:16-3-23-84.
1-1-3. TOTALS 24-1-27-78.
Crooyvllle, 8 p.ll).
Score by quarters:
Ironton vs. South PolntScore by quarters:
'Marietta ...... . .... 12 24 14 14-64 Logan ............ ;... 13 1616 19-64 NorthwestwlnneratSoulhWebsWarren .............. 19 21 I8 26-84 Athens ......... .. .... 18 15 16 29-78 ter, 7 p.m.
10 h.p., Brigg1 &amp;. Stratton
Reserve Score - Warren 57,
ld·nglrte,
4 speed, 38" mowReserve Score - Athens 60,
Logan vs. Chllllcothe at
Marietta 56
Logan 57
Athens, 6: 30 p.m.
•

..,.

.

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'

post 5-3 .victory over ._Caitadiens

By JOHN SWENSON
UPI 8porla Writer
.
The Buffalo Sabres were star·
lng doWil the barrel or a loaded
Montreal Canadlens shotgun Frl·
diiY nl&amp;llt , but they ~nd~ . up
turning tbe tables on tlielr
northland rivals .
Though down 3-0 midway
through the ·g ame and facing one 1
ot the league's best defensive
teams,
Sabres scored five
unanswered gOals to top Mont· ·
real 5-3 and push four points
ahead of the third-place Cana·
dlena In the Adams division.
· Boston remali)S In first place,
one point ahead of Buffalo.
Pierre Turgeon was the hero.
for the Sabres, scoring a goal and
adding three assists.
"You don't score. you don't
win," said Turgeon, who leads
Buffalo with 27 goals.
·" I think the team showed It's
.fQ!:us ·and sl.lowed It's character;" ·said -Sabres coach Rick
Dudley. "It's a buge win because
oi where Montreal was and · because of where we were and ·
because of the fact that we were
down J.O.
"When you 're coming back
against as good a defensive team .
as there Is In the NHL, when you
can come back and score five
straight goals on them, It has to
give you coptlderice. "
With .Montreal nursing a 3-0
lead, Turgeon · set . UP Doug
Bodger on a power-play at 15:97
of the secdnd period. Then. with
42 seconds left In the period and
the Montreal detense surround·
lng . the net, Dave .Andreychuk
grabbed Turgeon's shot from
behind the net and scored,
cutting the deficit to 3-2.
Turgeon's shot at 1:16 ot the
third period sailed past Montreal
goaltender Patrick Roy to tie It
3-3. Turgeon also set up De(lll
Kennedy. who assisted .on Dave
Snuggerud's rebound for the
game-winning go,l al' 6: 27.
·
· "We were forechecking really .
nice and that was the dl~et'­
ence," said Turgeon.
Benoit Hogue tipped the tina!
goal Into the corner of the riel at
9:17. .
.
"I said the first goal was going
to get us going, " recalled Hogrie.
•'As soon as we got the first goal it
got tbe guys going. We wanted
' more and more goals. I told my
llnemates: 'We've got to keep
· working, something's going to
bappen' ."
_The victory snapped Buffalo's
two-game losing . streak and
broke Montreal's two-game win·
nlng streak. ·
.
In -their final regular-season
meetlng, Montreal took a 1-0 lead
only 75 seconds Into the game on
· Guy Carbonneau 's 15th goal of
the season. Mike McPhee' s back, .
bander at 1: 37 or the second went
unc;ler tile arm of goalie Daren
. Puppa, giving the Canadlens a
2·0 lead. Defenseman Mathieu
Schneider tipped In Petr Svobo·
da's slapshot on the power play to
up the lead to 3-0.
. .
"We have nobody to blame but
ourselves," Montreal forward
Shayne COrson said . "II was a big
game. definitely. We're really
disappointed, but It's over now
and we have to get ready for
tomorrow night."

tne·

...... a..e..... ....... ..

...._..lt ..

Xenl11 ts, W Car rolltooiO
'
Vou EMI 14, Lat..ae 10
Yop a. MeJ It, Cortllnd Lakeview 5%

NFL pen1tits juniors
to
.. ·e nter 1990 draft
NEW YORK (UPI) -The NFL
"He (Tagllabue) felt It was
announced Friday the Implemen- time - In light of both developtation of' three changes In Its ments on campus and the real!·
draft-ellglbllty policy. paving the ties of ellglb!Uty rules for other
way for college juniors to enter professional sports - to lnltlate
the 1990 draft. ·
changes In our draft-ellglblllty
' Commissioner Paul Tagllabue procedures." NFt. spokesman
had planried to walt until the NFL Joe Browne said. "It Is somemeetinp In March to announce thing that-he has discussed with
modifiCations to the long-time numerous parties. Including
pol1cy of allowing only seniors to coaches, pJ'a:yers and .college
be drafted. He decided to make · administrators."
the move sooner because 10
Keith McCants of Alabama ,
fOUege underclassmen alf!!ady believed by many to be the No. 1
have declared themselves· eligl· piCk, declared last month he
·ble for the AprD 22 draft.
would bypass his senior year to
,. The NFL was In danger of enter the draft . ·
ix!tJ:ntiallawsults by players It 11
i:Ontlnued Its seniors-only policy.
Tile league had ')lermltted some
ull!1erelassmen to enter previous
llrafts , citing specific
cltcumstances. ·
. ·~
· Barry Sanders, the 1988 Hfllslltan Award 'winner from Okla·
11orna State, was allowed to enter
last- year's dr1ft as a juillor
because Ilia ' school was on
probation. .
Tbe changes revise the
"ague's ·d raft pol1cy to Include
juniors and establllll a )irocedure
to declare eUalbiiiJY. ·•
- An underclas1111an applying
for the~ NFL'Pratt muatbave
'
entoUed lD eoDep' tor Qat 1987
'

WI sem•ler. .

.

' .

' ..;. Un~ appl)otqtor
JIC.'OinDII dr~ muat c1o by
Much 32. with u lffidavlt
IrreVocably retioucln&amp; bit refaalnln&amp; colleae football
elflibllly.
·

*'

' - T1lere Will be no I!Qiptemen·
~ draftl foreolll&amp;e unilerelu•
llltll. '1'be Muall !2 .,.ur.uon
clati 11 the ODJy IIM1'0 1ne illOM&lt;I

.... file IIIWI'IIIII. I
•

.

'

-

Elsewhere In the NHL, NY
Rangers edged New Jersey '2-l,
Detroit blastedPhlladelphlA 9-6,
Pittsburgh and Winnipeg skated
to a 3-3 tie, and Vancouver ralUed
to tie Edmonton 2-2.
Rugen 2, Devils 1
At East Rutherford , N.J., John
Ogrodnlck scored at 1: 22 of the
second period during a power
play to llttN ew York. The victorY
enabled the Rangers . to move
three points ahead of the Devils
In second place In the three-team
battle for the runn~t-up spot In

t ile Patrick Division.
Recchl scored two goals. lnclud·
Red Wlnp 8, Flyera 6
lng 'the game-winner, to pull the
At Detroit, Steve Yzerman
Penguins Into the tie. Recchl'a
· scored two goals and ass!a ted on
23rd goal of the year, a powerfour others to stretch Detroit's
play score, came at 11: 1~ of the
unbeaten streak to four games.
third pertod and sent the game
Yzerman has scored five goals · Into overtime .
and added five assists In hiS last
Canucka Z, Ollen 2 (OT)
two games. The win pulled
At Vancouver, British Colum·
Detroit, 22-30-7, within four
bla, Doug LidSter's third-period
pQlnts of fourth -place Minnesota· goal pulled the Vancouver Ca·
for tl)e final playoff spot In the
nucks Into the tie. Lidster's sixth
Norris DIVIsion.
goal of the season capped the a·
, Penguins 3, J eU 3 (OT)
rally from a 2·0 deficit by the .
At Winnipeg, Manitoba, Mark
Canucks.

GOING FOR GOAL- Mont-..
real ~enter Guy Carbonneali
( rlgbt) tries to get a
bounded puck Into the net Iii
Buffalo goalie Darren Puppa
prepares to prevent the entry
' of lbe puck IQ Frldar nl&amp;lit's
NBL contest In Buffalo, N.Y.
The Sabres won 5-3. (UPI)

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MONDAY, FEIIUAIY 19th
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Cage standings

Waniors
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~econd place

w. v•.

Pouwoy-Mk:dleport-G a!!lpo'W. Ohio- Point

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GALLIA COUNTY

CHESlER · I
A
Gil
•
Daltlautz
915·3131
...
'
•

Tim
· 379-2785
• ........ ····7299

PIONEER.
BRAND · PRODUCTS

1111 sa1t1.,. subjec! to !ne terms of lobeline

and,..._documents.

"'l""istered tradtmork o1 Pioneer HI-tired l~nationtl, ·Inc .. Del Moines. - · U.SJ\.

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Sea&amp;tk M Clllrioil.t
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DAY'IUN.4. BEACH, FIL (UPI) fr11n tile F1orlda . . . u !It-lap
rue ler c.-. Ia till' NMC.4.11 0., IbM
Dull Kr... bel. Fr11119" ,at DIQ' ilt•

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Pro results

bome-

NATIONAL HOCKEY LE.tGll£ .
FrNQRet.ll
BMifalo I, Molllreal J
Nl' ltulll'l !, New .leUI!J I
Del roll. I. P~lla•elplllat
Ptilobartlil S. Wl••l" I, le
Edmolloat, Vueo•wr I. lie

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s.c ., Poildae, It,
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hlltlaoe, •• z.UII. It, Malt lll'WIJ ,
llak ....; F1o.,·Oidatnoblle, 88, !,450. ·
11, a.n.· Brew .. Cllartou~. N.C ..
Po.aac, 11, Uti. II. Lar,. Fu:.:MrthJ ,
Pia I 1* II• N.Y., Poldac, 11, !,IN.
II, lof ......-. W•t Lal~te. Ind., ,
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a..,- l'ela&amp;, N.C ., Polltlac, 'n, l,IM. II,
Plelt Ct'f!'Ws, He.derao .. N.C., Polldat:,
Tl, 1,111.
11. Geers" Creaahaw, LUeiUid, Pia.,
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I:I•OIJ, N.C .. ••••· n, t,"'tt.lll, Lee
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r..llac, 'JI, 1,... tl, GarJ ' Moo~.
. . t o, N.C .,
741, 1,511.
tl, Pftd Pll'llllu. We
~lie, Mich..
r...-c, 'rf., l,ltl. tl, M:llilt .UIJIII,
A.ilp .... Ga., Po lilac:, 11, I,IH. %1, Stott
Wr...,., SINibf, N.C., Poall.r, 11, I,UI.
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N. Pftt ,..tow. (;tl_..ne: N.C.,
...... ac. • ..... n, Jefl Colber,
Cnawtfl, N.C ., Perd, IK, 1,571. !II, .Jerry

Cltf'V":C;,

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J.lll. •· De• ...,aN, Oweaftre, If.,
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Pl-., N.C., PeltJ&amp;c, U, 1,151.
SL Ttrrm)' Marda, Aalle. La.. Po,..
tl•.
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a...- l&amp;a•, ...over, AIL, Po lilac, 12,

... •· Date

Rowdylllletl, fltiln::h.,..,k!,

Va., ,.,., I. Ill. U, Laro Coui'ICII,
WlllarM ...... N.C .. Ford, II, • .
U, .a.uN . .e,IUAII ..Gft. VL,Fonl,il,

CHAMPAIGN, D1. (UPI) tile TU!e's Inception 1.1 Soutbern
University or Illinois Chancellor Metbodl&amp;t, which had Ita football
Morton Weir said Friday he was PJ'OII'am shut down In 1987 and
"&amp;hocked" by NCAA allegations returned to competition last
or "major" recruiting violations season.
.
that could lead to the death
''The one I~~St!tutton that has
penalty for tbe school's basket· suffered the deatb penalty had
ball pr01fam.
complicity through on up to Its
The charges Involve the reown board," Weir said. "I don't
crultlng of at least two top see anytli!Jlg like tbat here and
high-school prospects, believed that giveS me some cause for
to be LaPhonso Ellis and Deon hope. ·
Thomas, tholigh the names were
"Even ti these Infractions are
deleted from the formal NCAA found by tile committee- and I
letter, whiCh was faxed to the hopetheywon'tbe-lftheyare,l
untverslty Thursday and re- have hope that penalty won't be
leased Friday.
.
assessed."
·
The letter lists a series of
The llllnols football program
allegations lhatlncludes offers of · was placed o·n probatlo,n by the
$25,000 and $8(1,000 In cash and NCAA In 1988 tor violations that
autos to students. Six allegations occurred In · 1~. The death
were described as "major" In the penalty can be applied to a school
letter signed by NCAA lnvesttga- with a second major violation In
tor David Berst.
any sport within a five-year
"Jt appellrs the university . period.
,
.
would be subject to the provision
Th~ NCAA's major allegations
of the ~peat vlolalor legislation Include:
If one of the ldentWed allegatloi)S '
- Offering $80,000 to one
Is found," Berst wrote, referring prospect If he would sign a letter
- to the.. NCAA "death penalty" of .Intent and a Chevrolet Biazer ·
·,that would shut down the basket.' upon enrollment.
·
ball program for · at least one · .- Offering an automobile to
year.
' one prospect and help for flnanc·
The letter also said "It ··Is lng a new home for someone
reasonable to expect" the school coMected to the young man.
will be found guUty of violations.
-Offering $5,000 to a prospect
"I'hese- are serious allega· If he would sign a letter of
tlons," Weir said. "We must be lntentind an additional $5,000 for
careful not to reach conclusions each year he played In the
prematurely. Allegations cannot basketball program.
be judged true or false until all . - Offering better housing to
the facts are at hand."
·
som'eone connected to a
Weir said he was famUlar with prospect.
botll 't he NCAA probe and the
- Giving $140 to a prospect .
· university's own Internal ':~)vest!· · while be visited theunlversltyfof
· · gatlon, bUt was moved liy the entertilnment and clothing,
magnitude or the NCAA's official
- Giving $200 ,to $300 to a
·
prospect so he could attend a
Inquiry.
"It was a real shock to me," friend's high school prom.
Weir said. "I Juif can't Imagine
Less serious alteiatlons In·
us getting ·the so-called death volve gifts of clothes, an offpenalty."
campus breakfast, contacting
The only school that has been anotller prospect while still was a
subject to the death penalty since " high· school junior and visiting

-----Sports briefs ·· · · · ·

Sli•rd•O•ml!ll
Chlcap AI NY lalalldltl'l, 2:11p.m.

llarifoi\t at MoDiae.a.l; tlp.m .
New .Jer.ey M Toro.ao.t;tlp. ...
Oetioll at 8L Lo., II: II p.m.
Qlleber It Lo&amp; Aapl-.11:11 p.m.

Hockey
Three former NHL pii!Yers nltely out for physically abusing
wer~ suspended In the Swiss a referee and Frlbourg's A-nton
tea'lw. Dusan Pasek of Lugano St¥,1nY was lnileflnll!!IY sus·
rede!Ved two games fofflghtlng, pended after · drawing a ·gross
Slerre'.s ~b Mongraln Is lndefl· misconduct penalty.

.... .,o.,_

T.,,....,

••••1111.

Ro~key

NHL - SUIJII!IMied Wlaiii,OI forwM'd
Laude . Boecb.-n for 8 Jam• fer a
hiP.Nicld• lacld!lli IMI week.
&amp;. LD* .-.. Slpecl defetl.un&amp;ll .leff
Brown to a m"U-Jell co•ract.

lewa, c.-,l ..si:Ompleted, prbe moll!)',
wla..,•s "era1e •peed In ..,ph.
I, &amp;leiii.J'Inl. Dever Plmu. N.Y ..
hatiiPC, . . llt,!U. IIUtl. I, Rokrl
........ Oartl'mo-., N.C,, Pellitac, M,
1,... I, 8~-- lkiiMII•Il, Dn MolaH,
..... r ..a~ LIN. •· LlU"I')' c.c~au.
Nerll MIIHborG, N.C., P611ht, II,
41,111, S. David Prablt, Slidell, La. ,

le•er•
•.I,

. ,......

Pea• liMe - N IYMd Dick Alldenan
U. eoacll. ·

elle~~llve

SI!IUI'dllfG&amp;ma
Clifl\'el_. at New Vork, i':.Sip.m.
Deawt' u New.l,r~~ey, i': Jap.m.

...

..........

d.e.

Ml . . . ota ·-:- Acttnted CHter steve
.lollalon'. ,

Ill. AI . . IA Ill
Cllkl.... Itt, 111_..1 tiS .
• ....._Ill, IHI._IfS

w.r•to• &amp;pee-.,. Driver,

.-ew

Lo•-

a .... ntn:

Daytona results

- ..._. -. • •·re•

ca~.....-a

eeiiP'ad .... pie ... &amp;Irk Jk£'!11101.
lila..- - ..... file._ Tim
Dr_..... ,. •. ,. ••l. .tlad. '
• 'NewY.,t;CAL)-IIpNII'Ik ... W'Uie

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Padlk: Dlv•ID•

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!llldwft.l DMAio.
Te\\' L Frt. . GB
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..... Y•rll....................ll It ... ........................... .St II
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'ft-.: II ftC« I -.., 6a • ' - • I

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..

Weir 'shocked' by . alleged recruiting violations

Scoreboard .. .

•

Febru.-y 18, 1810

pry....... '.

NYI1Iudlr11.11 Plllladelpllla

Plu• rsh at Oileaao

cal
llardel'll Ill • • • , alpt

Mla. .aU. IIIE411D..... nlpt
...... atv.... •~•!

..

one prO&amp;pecn nl(l'n· scnool more edly admitted to Iowa assistant
Bruce Pearl,. wbo secretly taped
than once In a slqle.week.
the conversation, that be )lad
The NCAA uked tile untver·
been offered 180,000 and a Chevy
slty to asaeu wbetller wtutul
Blazer by DUnoll u-.tant
violatiOns of NCAA · regulations
Jimmy Colilna, wbo repeated!)(·
occurred, to pass aJong ·tntorma·
tlon about any oilier violations
has denied any wrongdotna .
Thomas was delared by the
tile uollverslty may ·have uncouniversity to be Ineligible for tile
vered ' In Its own Inquiry and
describe all dlsclpHnary action ' season and Collins has been
limited on to on-carnpUA recruit·
taken .
lng only.
Wetr said the university would
Basketball coach Lou Henson,
try to 1respond by the April 16
deadline set by the NCAA. butdld speaking as he team left' for a
not rule out ~eklll(l' an extension. weekend game at Michigan
The p~llmlnary Inquiry fo· State, said he. was "happy to get
cused on Thomas, who Initially the allegations. We want to •
planned to attend Iowa but later cooperate with the NCAA and the
·switched to Illinois. He report· university and find the truth."

.

Yourfialclalsecuky depends on your malq the rijlldeclslon.
The options are many, but you Mld1Qaak youraaH one blslcquastlon-whan do I need to usa'the money? Hyou do not need to usa all ol
your l8lilament ciatlbAklns now, an FIA Ftlbw can be 111 allec:tive
lilancial tool lor )'OU;
.
.t . . . Tax deferred growth, ilvastmant ~~ and distrbll~ ftaxlllllty
· :· are justsomaolthaadvantagaiOfusingan,IRARollowr.
.
For afree peisonalled computer analysis• of Yolr reti1911l8111 situ·
ation, or lor mOr8 llbmation on IRA Ftlliowlrs,retum the cxx.,an today
or cal Bryoe or Mark Smith. 61~.48 88118 or 80III44H'D.8
·
'Complier ..._ n

I

I,~

\

81111- ..P----'

lllunt EIIII&amp;LJoowt: 418 s-od lwl., Gdlpalla, OH 4¥31

.

-II'IIIE

-IIPC

.,
~~----------------­

CoUege 84!01'es

a..-.

Colkp a. tlldlld
Baal
. ." ... 8t. 87,
p
CCNY IU, Albert• ,....._IJ
C.r.rll11. Dar. . . . .
a. eon. n. •~ ........,. CoiL u
a. N_,elllti.V.., hfle'71
............ J.arolo-114. .. (lrf ~
Fre....all. Ill. ............. at. 11

Southeast Ohio ru
ea ers
-:Advertisin·g ·P Associ~~io ~ !_!~;; .,;. ~. . . ,~•·.,·~
.......,.

c.- ...

·

a

o............ _..
a....-.n.c.l.....
a7t
1

IUII'I (lolL (NY) 11, N)'ICIIII
~falleii.ID• 11

Mue.: It&amp; aN!ll'tall

MIM...rr1tnom.•
OnHa l!!lit. 81, Mereh•l MariiiH II
PlaU. . llllll. It, Geiiii!'HO Bt. 'n

THESE LOCAL DEALERS ARE LOADED
. UP WITH LOTS ANO LOTS OF EXTRA
. FREE INCENTIVES FOR THOSE
IN THE MARKET FOR A TRUCK:

Pot . . . ., •••, ..........

Pr•••"· ••• •.,

Roe . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

.1••• (VtJ Tl

St.M... IM•) US. 81 .

81. Vllll•l'••· Dannn 11
.
nw If.
Melin '7t
New ...... Ill,
ft. Kut tl

Car•• ._.af•.

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

Vale 11, l'e••Jhut.11
VI.P• WnlrJ••

ll'.clllhl~ II

'

C. 11111111 ..1 U. .ltllt ·~ N lOT)
N. llllaollll, DI..Oiaio II

tlrtJ . . SJ. DJke 81

FREE

•

Wlt .·S. Oaln! II, "'ls•.JKe\'eas Pt II

W....O.Iik-. 11, 'Wls.·La'CI'OMit II
So•hHt
Olr; .........
WNI

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GMC TRUCK HAT
WITH ANY
GMC TRUCKS
•
TEST DRIVE

.

·,

We'll Give You
An After Tax Break.

Sierra Sportside 4 x 4

WITH THE PURCHASE OF
NEW
·TRUCK!!
,
,. ~ANY
!FHEE TV DOES NOT 1\I'I'ECT

GetAll1be Fun From Your Refultd
With SarellireTv. ••
·
' t(

i

'

:

PAID FOR BY

~DVERTISING

ASSOCIATION)

~F~~TORY
REBATES$1 · 500
UP TO
·.
,
..

:·· .

~15 Piei&lt;up 4 X 4

.

BUT' HURRY IN!! DEALS LIKE THESE ONLY ..
LAST SO LONG (FEB : 19-28, TO BE EXACT!!!)
.

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'

......
......
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••ta.ure
If AftON

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Etaetronlel . :
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IAUIPOIIS, qiiiO

--~~

IUICI, I.DS, PIITIAC,
GMC TRUCKS, IIC.
830 E. Stlte St.
AthenS, Ollio

1111141

GMC:TRUC:K
Jt's not just
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~~~~~

. PIII11AC, ·US, BIIICil

PIIIIIAC,
·BUICK, IMC.
'
I

500 E. lliin St.
Ohio

,..,..OJ,·

~·2·21747

- --

135 Pine St.
·Gallipolis, Ohio
~1-2132 '·

• •s. IIC.

-

---

I

i

:l

Money Ideas

Equity

'

J

•'

market

1

•

·ovenralued

·''•
'

MONEY IDEAS
BY STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS- As pointed out
In our analysis In the lnlllal1990
Issue of ;'Around Wall Street",
the equity market appeared
•
· overvalued
based on var·
lous valuation
and earnings
momen.tum
measures. This.
CONNIE MITCHELL
JACK SHIFTLE'l'
research sug·
ges ted thaI the
S&amp;P 400 stock. Index would trade
ln range similar to 1989 (411·319).
In addition, we contended that
stocks were not likely to benefit
from a furtller deCline In Interest
rates In the rtrst half of 1990. Less
than expected earnings and
hlghe~ Interest rates were Important factors leading to January's
DISPLAY CEBTJFICATFS ~
we~k performance for equities.
For the month, the S&amp;P 500
J
'
declln~ 6.9% (unless noted, all
returns exclude dividends) as
only 19% of the market's Issues
advanced from their 1989 closing
prices .
Stocks with Increased prices
tor January generated a mean
return ot 11.1%. While the
GALLIPOLIS - DHI (Dairy
market's performance was dis·
Herd Improvement) Coopera·
, , ,
appointing, .we are encouraged · . tlve, Inc, recently presented
certificates In recognition of top
~OMAS
TttQR
.
NTO~
·
by the number or Issues that
RONALD CLAY
c
bettered the S&amp;P 500. This Is In
llerformance dalr'y , herds
throughout Ohio.
considerable contrast to 1989
01
.I' I
~
• when
only one-third of the
A little over 100 herds were
r
.
market outperforn\ed this Index.
recognized In Ohio. French Hill
Farm or
was one of
Equities outperforming 11\e
,
, .
.
S&amp;P 500 averaged a 1.6% In·
. Four em- Jackson Plk,~. Galltuolts.
crease In the year's opentna ·
• CHESHIRE
• ployees have been promoted at
Shlftlet joined OVEC In 1955 as month. The ability of many
; the Ohio Valley Electric Corpora· a barge 'attendant In the yard" F stqcks 10 outperform the S&amp;f 500
. tlon's Kyger Creek Plant, as department. That same year he " during a period or adversity
announced Saturday by Ray· was promoted to auxiliary equip· helps rebuild the foundation tor
~mond H. Blowers, Jr., plant ' ment operator In the operations the next sustained stock market
. department. 1n 1972 he was advance.
,
' manager.
' ·
, Effective February 1, Connie· promoted to uplt supervisor and
In large measure, 1989 s
t S. Mitchell was promoted from · In 1979, to assistant shift operat.
strongest· stocks became the
acting purchasing assistant to lng engineer. Shlftlet and his weakest stocks In January of the
purchasing assistant In the wife, Elizabeth, reside at Route · new year. In a n~table number of
stores department; Jack H. 1. Rutland.
cases, last year s weakest Issues
· Sh!ftlet from assistant shift oper·
Clay jolneq OVEC In 1957 as a showed a moderate ability to
atlng engineer· to shift operating laborer ln . the labor/janitor de· resist the decline In the general
engineer In the o(M!rations de· partment. In 1960 be transferrecj market. Continued concern with
tJilrlment; Ronald L. Clay from tothe·operatlonsdepartmentasa · disappointing earnings reporta
unit supervisor to assistant shift utDity worker, where be ad· remains the dominant !nfluence
OJ!!!ratlng engineer In the opera' vanced through tbe various job . on the trend ot stock prices.
llilns department; and Thol)las classifications within that de- ' With each passinl week, the
R. Thornton, ~r., froin equippartment. In 1980 he was pr~ general outlook for corporate
DR. WILLIAM SHULAW
men! operator to unit supervisor moted to unit supervisor. Clay earnings In 1990 Is being trimmed
in .the operations department.
and his wife, Gayanne, live at as 8 ~ Increased number of
companies announce lower tllan
. Mitchell joined OVEC in 1972 Chester.
:as a cterk·typlst In the account· · Thornton joined OVEC In 1976 expected results. Xet, the full
~ttlemen's
·lng department: The following as a laborer In the labor/janitor magnltud~ of the cuts has not
GALLIPOLIS :...• The .Gallla
year she was promoted to plant department. In 1978 he was reached the level that we believe
County Cattleman's Ass·oc!atlon
promoted toauxlllaryequlpment Is possible - we forecast 12% and the tiallla County Extension
clerk In thestoresdepartrnent.In
1987 Mitchell was .promoted to operator In the operations de· earnings decline for the S&amp;P 400
Office are planning an event on
senior plant clerk, and In 1989she partment and In 1981, to equip· Index. ·
·
.
Monday, Feb. 19 at Columbus
was appointed to acting pure has·
ment operator. Thornton resides (Mr. Evans. 18 an Investment
SQu tbern Power's meet lng room,
!ng assistant. Mitchell and her
at Eureka Star Route, Gallipolis. Broker for The Ohio Company In
7~ 30 p.m .
daughter, Nicole, reside at 536 ·
lhetr.Galllpolls office.)
Dr. Wllll~m Shulaw. D.V.M.
.
r
•
..
.
wUI be the guest speaker. Dr.
. '
Shu law Is a veterinary extension
specialist for beef cattle and
productive clear yellow cherry
By Constance White
sheep with the Ohio Cooperative
and excellent pollinator. One of
Gallla SWCD
Extension Service. His area of
the hardiest of all sweet cherries.
interest Include Infectious diS·
GALLIPOLIS -The Jonamac The fruit qualltyls exceptionally
ease control, especially Johne' s
apple and the· Gold and Galaxy good · and flrni flesh~, but
disease.
sweet Cherry are the varieties In smallish. Grows to about15 feet.
Topics of discussion will be:
The Cavalier Is a terrific Black .
the fruit pack this year.
long Incubation diseases, BVD
. The Jonamac .Is a Mcintosh Sweet cherry. The fruit Is Ius·
persistent shedding, and Johne' s
type dessert apple ripening just , clous quality, medium to large In ·
disease . ..
before the regular Mcintosh. It Is size with deep, rlcb color and a
All beef producers are invited
sblny .tlnlsh. The tree Is very
a Jonathan and Mcintosh cross.
to attend. For additional lnfor·
hardy; medium vigor, upright,
It will color just ahead of
matlon, contact the Gallla
maturity wl!,h an' average two- spreading and somewhat slow to
County Exl!!nslon Oftlce (446thirds r~ blush. over greenish ·Come In bearing. It should bear
7007).
ground color. , The fruit Is within 4 tp 5 years. It wUl also
medium· sized. The texture of tile grow to.about ~5 teet.
Other Items offered this year
apple is firm and crisp with high
are
wlldtiOwer seed. This was
quality. ,Trees are o! medium
vigor and productive . These are mentioned In tile first article and
By Co1111lance While
some of you have been asking if
seml·~warf. '
GalllaSWCD
The Gold sweet Is a very
Continued on D.S '
.KELLY MURPHY
GALLIPOLIS - The No·TIIl
Meeting thls year 18 being held at
the Buckeye Hills Career Center
In the Coral Restaurant on Feb.
28 at 7 p.m. The meeting Is being
GALLIPOLIS - Kelly J.
coordinated by Glenn Graham
Murphy was recently promoted with the Adult Agricultural Bustdirector or general public group ness Proeram at Buckeye Hills.
tours and travel agency serviCes
At this meeting Jack Walker,
with AAA Soutll Central Ohio.
,Regional Director of NorthupIn her new position she will be King Seed Company will address
coordinating public group, moalfalfa ·production. If you have
torcoach, cruise and air tours.
and concerns or questions please
She wUI be viSiting each AAA
let Glenn know nexi week so that
office periodically working with Mr. Walker can address these
the manager and travel agents· spectnc·conceriiS;
acquainting them with the club's
tours.
Murphy, a certified travel
counselor and a destination speto
cialist, hal been employed with
' AAA IInce . 19M ',and was most
,COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) -An
recently a manager o( one of the
experimental
system to remove
club's oftlces.
duat
and
bacteria
from, awtne
· Kelly hu traveled throuahout
bul'lll
may
BOOn
help
tarmera
the Caribbean · and Bahamas,
bribe
eater.
Great Britain, Europe, The Con·
Veenhutzen, .qrtcuitural
t!DetaJ United Statn, Hawaii and .• Mike
.,,
at .Obla State Untvenlty
Bermuda. Her travel experten·
cea 11 wellu put mana1ement ..yatbeayatembombanllabarr
with n..atlvely charged elec·
experlellce wUI be ulled In all
trona
that electtlcllty cbarae
-Dave Wl&amp;lon (rilldl ud BockJ Bupp,
8ERVICI!l ·
aspecta of public lfoup tours
du1t,
aerlliQII
and other partl·
repl'llllllllati'Vea frt8 the Gllllpell Df8col of Allle11cM Otaenl
development and operatlaDI.
cles.
Thea
the
negative
partlclea
UtiAAcoWeatluanaeeCompuJ,"ereNClC'p..e4forll ... ll
Alona with these new duties
are
attracted
to
II'DIDided
or
Y4!. . of 1181'Vice, l'elpeGd\relJ, to tH GDmJIIIIQ'. ('l'lmea Bealllel
abe will alao be eacortlq various
pqcltlvely
charged
&lt;:OUectors.
tours' tor AAA thrOII(I'hout 1990.
pile~)

•

I

. ''
j

1'
•,

'•

!

•'

•'I
•
•
••
••'
•
Charles, John,

Lora Lee Carmichael display
cer&amp;ltlcates presented by Bob Fox.

and

.

•

award :
~

£

.French Hill Farm of GalliaJCounty 1·
among.Ohio dairy farms .. recognized i

·
·

Murphy named
to post by AAA.

, CONSUMER COST BECAUSE TV IS

.

Febru.-y 18, 1880

No-till meeting
scheduled Feb. 18

'

I

----------

Section(),

ieutintl.

Fruit varieties· selected for flavor

FREE
COLOR
T.V.

Satoll lc;o&lt;nmerclall

~ --

~hne• -

Name speaker for
meet

"

S.E. OHIO

8otlle 81. ·11, ....... II ,
Olr.,l.
llertlale •• Crud .CUIJOa
Ill
'
~

- - - - - - - - - - - ----------------·--

ivour Ky er Cree·k plant·
(ertt,ploy·eeS are .promoted.

biNd on IIIMI' we Will Hlld you 111 COI1Ijlllll.

Cl-a.";;;too;;;;.,-: Cl-Stnd;;;;;,;;.,-onIRARo.;;.;:-

I
I
I . ~.

.Farm/ Business

High-tech.method
remove dust

,I

•

'

.

those recognized. In the · year
ending December 1989, their
rolling herd average was 20,421
pounds of milk and 761 pounds of
fat.
Award certi!!cates were pres·
ented for being In the top 10% for
the Holstein breed In fat produc·

!

tlon and being In the top 10% for
all herds on test for fat produc· ·'
tlopln Ohio.
;
French Hill Farm ls owned and ·;
operated by John &amp; Lora Lee :
Carmichael and Charles &amp; Mag· •
dalene Carmichael with Andy ( ·
Adams as Assistant Herdsman.. l

l

l

Crown vetch plants being
sold by S&amp;WCD auxiliary

.,.

MEIGSSWCD
both underground roots and !'
BY OPAL DYER, DPA .
seeds. Roots spread under the
POMEROY - Early spring Is soil to place and start new plants, 1
the time or· year when bare, Seed is produced each year In '
eroding areas are q u lte evlden t pods which mature about three :
around the home or on the farm. weeks after bloom. Crownvetch :
Bare.areas of soli' along lanes chokes out weeds, resist S\'
'
and roads contribute high drought, disease and Insects.
If
you
are
considering
planting
~
amounts of sediment Into road
some
ground·
cover
plants
on
a
r
ditches and streams. Getting
bare
area,
some
site
preparation
1
these bare eroding areas covered
•
I
w!lh some type of VJ!getatlon not will be nec~Sl!rY.
Following are the·steps to take
only adds to the appearance but
:
also helps to keep ditches and for planting:
1. Prepare a firm seedbed and :
water courses open.
:.
This year, the Meigs Soli and work to a depth of 3 Inches.
2. Lime and fertilizer - for ,
Water Conservation District La·
dies Auxiliary has available tor bes I results take a soli test. 1
sale Crown Vetch plants tllat are Instead of a soli test you can use
specifically suited to plant In the 150 p(lunds per 1000 square feet 1
agricultural (ground) limestone 1
small hard to manage areas.
The following Is a brief descrlp· or equivalent; and apply a •
lion of crown vetch: Crown vetch minimum of 15·20 pound/1000 :
Is a perennial legume with dar!t square foot of 12·12·12 fertulzer: ;
·'
green foliage and pinkish la· or equivalent.
vender to white clusters of . 3. Work lime an fertilizer Into ~
,
::1
flowers. Each growing season soil.
4. Plant ground cover plants :
new foliage shoots from the
multl·branch creeping root according to planting guide. . ·:.
The deadline for ordering the •
system.
.
crown
vetch Is March 15, 1990. If :
Plants obtain a height of 12 to 18
you
would
like to establish hardy, •
Inches. The Indeterminate
growth produces numerous clus· lasting plants around the home,
·ters of flowers on long stalks now Is the time to get started. ·
For more Information, contact I
from June until September. Each
cluster of flowers produce a the Meigs SWCD Ladles Auxll· :
group ot fingers like pods, , lary at 992-6647 or stop by the :
second.floor of the Farmers Bank ·
containing one to many seeds.
·
· Crown vetch reproduces by building.

j

Eastem trip planned -by Fann Bureau
JACKSON- Atrip to BostonCape-Cod Is being planned for
July 30 thru August 6, 1990. The
trip wUI be escorted by Mary
Kalhern Smalley, and although It
Is being sponsored by the
Jackson·VInton County Farm
Bureau, anyone Is welcome to
come along. whether or not you
are a Farm Bureau member.
The tour will depart from
Jackson, early on the morning of
July 30th, and wUI Include such
places otlnterest as; a city tour

of Bostoy and Cambridge, the.·
Mayflower and the Plymouth I
National Wax Museum, Kennedy 1
Memorial, Hyannis Harbor, Nan- :
tucket Island, and a tuU day ot :
sightseeing at Cape Cod.
i
For more Information, and a 1
brochure, If you are Interested,
call the Farm Bureau office at 1
286·4598, (1·S00.333-i944) or es· ;
cort, Mary Kathern Smalley at :
614-988-4111.
•
Reservations should be In by::
AprU 10.
'1

I

. ..,.

("

I

.'

�Pllee--D-2-Sunday nmes-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midcleport-GIIIipolis. Ohio-Point Pleaunt, W. Va.

18.1880

Febru.., 18, 1910

the ability today to pieroa t h e - ~--------------------------_;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,
and see things lor what they ac:lually
81&amp;. This glh will be used to your lldvan·
tage In C81- llt...rlona.
.. _ !lleJ 21-.lune liO)II yau opet•
are independently of othet'a tod., your
allor1o might not be too alfac:live. How·
e...-, the results llhoukl live up to your
in
Plllnerahip
expectations
ACIIOII
f7!1Uftlpf¥
arrangemeQts.
n Pllltlt
tTl...,..._..
""~"'*
lt
''MJTwtDIII"
1 Stptllh; coAoq.
1101' .........
177 . . . .
CANCER (.hiM 21-.IIIIJ Zl) Be reuon•
·llr.IIIIMI.
T~luld ,
171
Uftlt 01 CHnllt '
'
able r&amp;g81dlng the size of returns yau
10 0 . 13
p
......
pa-1111'11
anticipate from your efforts today. What
10 I Mlrctllrlt
' 17~ . . . .
111'1. . . .
104 · ~of ~
you do may be acknowledge in only
20 OiMd ..
UT......,y
small waya.
•
'-"""'*aut
t05 Allner Of LOWI
22 PieCe -*1 ..,
LEO (JuiJ ZI-Aug. Zl) Your preaenoa
13-F.-IfliMtl
101,-.~
will enhlnoa social gatherings tOday,
2 4~elly
~
25 -gwde
because you'll know how to make oth-.
....... l!llgluln
·1 0127 , .... -"'"' -..nbol
era feel comfortable and get thet'n to
7 Crldltr 81'.
, . OlrlfMWI Of
241 .I..,.,_ CIIM18
talk about themselves.
,.,.. ~
111f~
30 UOr•doc*
VIRGO (Aug. Zl-lepl. Zl) The little
tov..-.,..
10Ct "- lNIID tl\11''
31 P~.. 11111r"""6n
\
'tttC....
things you'll do lor loved ones today will
-32 '11•tod
t
tW .,..,...liOn t' "
'""'
101'1 br
12
- .....
ta2 PwiDd., . . .
tiiHIIIfti. . .IM
make a big Impression, becauie it'll
.
'
Wortd"
1M . . . - !Mnefd
117 Drel*rl
31~0fg .
show them how much you really · care
13 .... ilnd ,..
toiC.,GfTY
ttl~ ­
and how you have their best Interest at
14!idlll
122 P«t OIMYP
heart .
' Its Twlol: llf...~
tllrNIII;tllld
123~ ........
«t
llton 10 .
UBiiA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your strong
11 Word Dl' IGOOW
124 ··- God''
ttl '"'-' wrtllno
17 TIHid ,
111"125 Pf ...................
SUit today Is your talent lor working on
.u
~lymor"
f'
··~111
" - lll'illlu.r1l"
11 " l'hl .L Cuckoo"
12711...,.,..
-~god ..
things that require lots of imagination
123 "F-'Y - ". '
•r
,.,...,.._.
' " SfMIIIt
..,noun~ ,.. 13 PtftCI NbNr
124 lulwkla..
. 1318
•
.....,,
and a creative touch. You have an am~
121 .MollniJIMifl
21 Blrd'l holM
tt
, pie oupply-ol both.
a i!lplnrliAg 'or
1f41'Mtn: Pl'etlll
50 "- WI. W.S."
SCORPIO (Ool. .K-Now. Zl) Be satis-~
I:JI S...tum
:tlt ~Matf¥1
. SIK~oro.nton
33 PKIIIWfied With small gains today, Instead ol .
35
..
_
CAd"
121,.,... .
~Actor· ~
t37 At*"'!
being happy only wHh the big hit. Pen·
M ,._ tn Glt.rll
13f 1Mr1twift'l
130 81Jd ., llrdl
, . Golf lnCUid
nles stacked back to back can quickly
371MIIwh0
57 Allftlld eOI'IIIct
IUTY'fO,..d
51Pr~
.
'ldd up to dollars.
142 AI holM
Jlr. . . . .
80For"*~
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-Dec, 21) Just
t43 v....-, CUnied
134 FortrHI
grul -~
as Tom Sawyer was able to get others
«t Fondle; 1)81
13&amp;WIId . _
.. of
&amp;1
dltlty
1&lt;1$ SCoftilh•ctp
~2 ArrNdllo
.to pay him to, do his work, you have a
147~dllhel
43 Spot!~
04 a.clgtrlllte
IHY-'P
similar gift today. Chores In which
t5 f POIMIMd
141 Iori Dl' .IICOO
you're Interested will ettrac:l supporters
1528ched . ~.
.. c...
144 Otd ptOftOIA"'
153P•..,_
411hll-811
Ill Till• llf rnp.:t
, ... StMw•
and aSilstance.
155 O.... lt89
141 Efteounltrl
CAPRICORN (Dec. ZI..Jan. 1t) This
58
a.ctteu
.....
157
Jt:lnevMe
72 Cont.nd
t4t ··- Aft'III'Dn In
• 158Coww
Slll.:l bird
could be the right day to gently remind
7,3 Otllln
p .....
t5t
Anllrld
"*"-'
74 ~lith tel«t
, ISO RMr blri.
someone who owes you something that
180 8ocllum l)'mb6l
11 N1ttv. met-'
151l..... .
It Is long over.due. Your chance ol finally
111 , . . . IIIIWid8
18 s.Jeleeptng at
152 t,.attn oon;..nct~or~
t2 ltW!g belr!gt
being paid back looks encouraging.
154 Chr.iii'NII carol
113
PortiOn
·
83
"A
C6medy
of
·eo Shred•
1$1 Pr.wM~
tee
Br•v.rv
12
Pllylhlng
@ lttO, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN,
151 Mlnev.ln

11

~

Ohio-Point Plealant. W. Ve.

Sunday
44

Hllp WW1C1

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

Aplrlment
for Rlnt .

SUNDAY PUZZLER

,_

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

·v-1*

,._

,._..
,.._,.

'

.'

.

'

.

.,_

,,.,_

,._

., _.._

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

"""'

"""...

-

,

111 Fortune-t.~~ng

to - Lri·

112WIM!'aw.y

II liOIIIII'IMiflf

;

"

W4. ALIIIIIICI4 BE DROOlS - NOT JUSr AGRACIOUS HOME - AWAY

-J. _

wanted

GETAnART

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Ohio Townohlp Truotees
will hove 1 opoclol meeting
on Fob. 20 et ?:00 p.m . ot
tho Town Hall.
Ohio Townohip Trustee
Jonll Corilwell, Clerk
FEB. 18, ,19, 20

tranaportltion tervica
tho, elderly and hondl·
copped within Meigs

.:
'
,
,
•
•

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Eootorn t;ocoi School
Board lnvltoo oealod bidt on
~ (900x20) ulod recappo'bla bill tire coolngs md 10
j900ll201 uNCI bill tubes,
·lido wHI be opened in tho
,,..._u...,.·o office at 12;00
)'I.M. on Morch 1, 1990.

' . etoile Bolton,
; ... ·
TrMSurer
· Eootem Locoi Board
• of Educotion
j 38900 SR 1
· Roedtvilo. Ohio 46772
(21 18 1tc

Public . Notice

~

PUBLIC' NOTICE
• The Molgo County Council
Aging. Inc.. which io 1
-pl-lvoto nonprofit corpore-

:on

: tlon

intendl to submh an

I

The family of Cecil
Caldwall wiah 'lo - thanks to Ewing Funatll
Home and to our mwry
trientll for ftoworo. food.
canla and ldncl warda at
:coo:nfort.
· Spociollhenks to Tup-

•
;

i

)&gt;oro Plaine Emergency
.&amp;quad, Rev.
An:har,
~11-oro
and tho•
who - • there whan
needed durlng.the loaaat
our towel ono. Wortll
oione cannalexpr•o our
appredotlon.

Public N otiC~~

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
County. The grant applicaSTATE OF OHIO
tion will requoot ona (1 1
DEPARTMENT OF
converted van with wheelTRANSPORTATION
choir lilt (VCS-10-11 and
· Columbuo; Ohio
one whealchoir pooltlon.
Februairy 9, 1990
It io projected thot 70 Contrect Soloo Legal Copy
oiderly ond handicapped perNo. 90·228
.,.., will u•thlltMrvk:efive
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
d•ya per week for various
IRGOOOI ( 1031
activities, Including tronoFG·OOOF 111111
portttion to modical 'ond
RIG·OOOR (3111
aocial Service egendes In . Sealed propOIIio will bo
Mol go and · adjacent recelvotj at the offlco at the
counties.
Director at tho Ohio Depart·
The Miiga County Council mont ol Tranoportetlon, Co. Aging. Inc. invhes com- lumbuo, Ohio. untl 10:00
mentlend proPo•l• from all A.M ., Ohio Sbindard Time,
into-ted public. private Tuoodoy, Morch 13. 1990,
and pantrenait operatO.._ for Improvement• in:
including tllxi Opet'ltora, for
~"'-"'· Gallia, GuorJIIIY,
the provlalon ot transportl- Hocking, Molgo, Monroe.
tlon aervlco to tho oldorly Morgan. Noble. Pony, Vln·
and handicapped within our ton and Wallington Coun•rvice area.
1111, Ohio, on ooction ATHOperators who are inter- 33-20.40 on U.S. Route 33
Hied In offering propoula in Atilano County and ather
to provide Mrvice should Verioua routa and aectiOMi
conWct El•nor ThomM. In Atlwla, Gollia, Guemoey,
Director, at he Meig1 Hocking, Malgo, Mon-.
County Council on Aging, Morgen. Noble. Perry. VinInc., . aox 722, Pomeroy, ton and Wa1hlngton Cou~·
Ohio 46789 to obtoln tuH tl... Ohio, by applying retrodetoilo of tho typo of trona· roflectlvo foot dry wotor
portation MI'Vice that ia baed paint lot conterlin11,

epplicllion for • capitol'
gl'lint under the provision of needed prior to preparing a
Section 11ibl 12) of Urbln propoool.
Maoo Tranopcll18tion Act ol
Written comments or
19114, 11 emended. to pro- propoula mullt be aubmltted within 30 dayo to tho

1 card of Thinks

agency It the above addre&amp;a

with o copy to tho Ohio
Department ()f T,.nsportatlon, Dlvlolon of Public
Tranoportttion, 2&amp; South
Front Street, Room 718,

Columbuo, Ohio 432180899; Attention: Deputy
Dlr-or.
(21 18, 2&amp; 2tc

.

---- -

The family of Jennie

D. Tipton willa to
thank frlanclo and neighbora from both Hunicene. Well Virginia and
Galle County for their
klnctn•• shown during

edge lin• and • - linea.

Project length - 0.00 feet
orO.OO mill
Work IOJ!glh · voriouo feet
or variouJ mil•
Pevoment widlh • vorloo
Bidding on thlo project It
reotriqtod to Dladvanteged
Bullnooo Entorprlles (DBEII
certified 11 DIEt In accordonce with tho B u Tronoporlltlon Uniform Relocation Aoalotenco Act at
1987. ond 49 CFR. Pan 23
and quoilliod to bid with
ODOT undor Chapter 1111211
of tha Ohio Revilld Codo.
Tho Ohio Dtlportment at
Tronoportetion hereby not~
floe oil bicldofl It wMI
offlrmativaly lnoure tllet In
any cont,.c:t ent•ed into
pursuant to thio edvoniHment, minority buolneu en·
terprlles Will be afforded lull

their.,...
~

The Bill Roberts family
•. would like to exprns
their thanks to the followinl people w1to were
, so kind and helpflll durina the illness 111d death
of our mother and prid·
. mothe1. Goldie lie-me)
· Roberts.
: Durin&amp; he1 illness and
' trospitaliDtion ourtllanks
&amp;o to Dr. Doltll• Hunter
• and staff, Dr. Lititz and
• the surpry team. the E.R.
r stiff llld RUIIIS II Vt·
' 111'1111 llamorill Hospitll,
the Extended Cart Unit.
llotM lltalth Clrtlui'IIS,
tilt
llld lacina
, ,EIS, Cotlllnully of Cart
~ IINI • • Weal Sup• -plitl ""' Sltvica..
'· . lllriti1Uit ti1111 of our
...,....... • wish lo
. . . . Ollr aprnciltlon

sw-·

........... Gnct.

•·

~

Vloltt lllfard, ......
.10111... Wadi Telford,
tilt Elllnl F11111111 Home

111d Ill Ollf friends and
nliiMOrt IIIIo sh•• our

'
•

aom..

Ul end Kay

Roberta
lftd family
Reolno, Ohio

Mr. and Mrs. Bill

an~~i~~~:~

Dorothy
Snow
and
Mr. and Mra. Jamea
Peralriger and Family

I

1

their heartt.lt thinks

121 Amarlcln Laglan
IIIII 1M Unit' a Audlary, tO Mi~Dit Mft.

Card of Thanks
THANK YOU
To all the
people who
contributed to
the flowers for
Jennie npton
from Turkey
Run Road, our
sincere thanks.
Rose Pel'singer
·
8&amp; Family

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Welter
W . Bunca
axtendt
to friendt. neighbors,
and
rellltiVft who
M!nt beautiful flower~
end cordo, food. and
acta of kindn•a dur·
ing our looo.
Special
thanks to
Bruce Filher .,d Tony
Hlwlc. to Mr. John
Wright tor the lnaplr•'li
words It the ..VIal, to
F-.y-a.nn.t Poot

In Memory

2

myhuablnd.
Richerd Junior JHiut

whop

•«-av3

.,.. . . . . .b. 18.
Your PIIMICPry
io our

unlntention811y forgot.

WithlhatMwll-

ten. .

God h• you In Hlo ....,._

•

With Our Thana and

Appreailrtlon
The l u - Family
._.rrv end Reve • ._.na,
•nd Grandchildren

k-aalca

pan.

Int.

.

And. - ...... you In our
hawtL
Ml..ed

opportunity to oubmlt bido in
roopon11 to thio Invitation
and
nat bo dlacrlmlnated
1111alnot on tile groundto of
race. color, or national origin
in conald•ratlon for. en
award.
"Minimum Willie rates for
IIIII projeCt hove-.~
llrminecl 81 required by law
end ore JMI forth In tho bid
propo•l ...
"Tho date HI for compt•
lion of thlo work oholl bo let
forth in tho bidding
propo•l."
Each bidder aholl bo reauired to fllo with hit bid o
a.tlfled chock or -hier'o
chock for on amount eqUII to
flvo por cent at hit bid. but in
no event more then fifty
thou11nd dOIIo..._. or a bond
for ton cent of hit bid.
P"Y!Ible to tha Dlrictor.
Bldtlor mutt opply, on tho
p r - forme, for -llflcation at ieMt .., d.,o prior 1o
tha dati aet for opening bido
in occordonco with Ch.,...
111211 Ohio Reviled Code.
Pleno ind lpoclllcetiono
arai on fila in tho Department
of ,Tran- bit ion ond tha
offloa of tha Dlltrict Oeputy
Director.
Tho DireCtor r~~eMIO tho
right to rojoct any and ell

w•

3 Announcements

9

Let lho ......., · - .......
your ronronlic tltlf conn-lot.
F- lnlo. 8ond nome. Acto, od-

dron, ta: --rct:!cP.n. 8ox
1043, Clalllpalt., OH 4oo3t .

Wanted to Buy

O&amp;der Furrill••, Etc. f1800'a to
1150). 1pc. or houoolu . 114-245M-18,

Froo
puool•
BhtDhtniiA-er miX, a· 112
woobold, 304 4581ezl. ..
1-

1.11111 -

old, - -

lllld,304-t~.
6 Loet &amp; Found ·

o:=.
_.,,n.. A"Sc.r-

.1.____ .

LAo!: S month old Block Brindle
FMUI&amp;e. No oollar.
••

LAo!: Collll, 1a111o ond whno,

Mo-.nll "'"· Chlldro,. Pot.

Help wanted

EARN MONE'( R11ding - 1
E x - lnCcHne · potantlll.

====i-::====
ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY
• _ , ; "" • -lllnglnt ....
.. _ ....... -ion -Odlng
• vortetr ol - r i l l 1111110.
Ann ..l 111ary: S11,171, pluo
ompioyor paid IOCIII oocurtty.
EaCoilent a m - pold fringe
_ , . packtiltlnoiU&lt;IIna:

pan.

IIDn pion, vooalion, hoilid"''•·
._...IIUIIon, major modlcol,
-ption d'!'G. vlolon, clint.~ oncl lllo lnil...- . COn·
...._ m&amp;at have at ._. thrM
of

P I - Clll Poroone, 114-251-

1580.

pu'fli. -1.

bide.

BERNARD B. HURST
DIRECTOR
Feb. 1 a. 2&amp;. 1990

8

-Ilion. you
-

t-, Coli Ainy ~rt, la.m.-

EcDno lodgo tcCorrtlna .,..
plicotlono "" !ftldnlght , ollift I
ctorto: Mondor •
Tuoaclly ...... 71 ......,....

Loatdng far -pao.tl* edult,
Chlohlro to da bobplttlng.
Fll•lbll doy ahlft - . 114-

w-ncto-

lp.m. 114-'111-011.

3117-711811.

••

8

Public Sale .
&amp;Auction

•.

ON RT. 35, 3 MILES EAST OF 808 EVANS FARM
ON AUTUMN HILL ROAD. WATCH FOR SIGNS,

&amp;~ron

FARM EQUIPMENT· WILL SEll. AT 1:00 P.M.

In Memory Of
This Ia for you, deer
Dad and Mom
You have both been
· gone ao long.
We all wlah you could
be with ua
,for one more birth·
day.
You ere both In God' a
· care now
And we ell know you
ara bo1h fine
But ell of Ul Ire miaalng _ you todey at
birthday time.
DAD'S BIRTHDAY
FEB. 171h
MOM'S BIRTHDAY
. FEB. 20th- .
The Kuhn Children
Don, Fren-. Helen
Nellie

1981 FORO 3eOO dleMCtractor. 768 hours ,
)971 AUIS CHALMERS 175·d8MC tractor, 3125 hours
JOhn Oe«eB Model Tractor. New idea Manure Spreader.
N.H . 256 Hay Rake, N.H, 310 Boler, N.H, Dolly Wheel Hay
Vlcon 410 Dllc Mowa(Conc111oner, Vlcon 4-\Nheet
HavTedldar . Bush Hog Slf. 8rulh Cutter,John Deere 101f
1:wt1eilli
JoiY! o-a 3-14 flloiNI, lnternanonal Model
7ft. Sl.clde Dyna Belt
(!50 Golon Tank Wheel
Mounted Boom Sprayer with Pump .. Maasey Fergu10n
Hay Wagon, new bed; N.H. Hay Wogon, Ford Gloder
Blade. Boom Pole.

Mo-..

In . - of land. buyor far
tiS oc- or mora. Would Hu a
on -Col rrtv.
bo!l .nat
n
II'J.
century
21

-

R•::~:r
.4 4211 •••
.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

legwalnljltoble. Duncan Phytectum table. 2pc. carved
llvilg room lUte. soto. oak player plano - completely
rebuilt. mahogany delle. 31tock mahogany bookcose. 4
pc. 1930's PQIIer bedroom IU~a. vety toney maple 1v.4n
bed. dr!IIMr, rocker, 1930's table. maple ch&amp;JI, EOI!y 1
ctower woth ltond, bookcose. oak 19W!ng machine,
beoullful slag gtc.a lamp, plctues and fram11, 2 brau bll
IamPI. U.S. Coins of 20th Century Colecilon.loll,ot ca.
tume,Jewelry.ltone jars. croclta, copper boller,lron pol,
scaes. a~ compreaaof, 2 Bogen A.M.P.. go1 heater .lights.
Wire, Two Man AUger (Steele)
1

lhrubo,

I

-

......... P!unlnt HodQOI. 114· 441 84el.

OICII'DII Portable Slw Mill.
Don'f Houl Your Loao To Mill,
Wo'n como to youl 304-1751857.

HP!ut · - ·~Y troth, bnlah, !-

.""""'"'" ltema. Aanon•DI•
. ,ratM. ttlaalllble. Call •nytlme
114 211-MZ1' .

c.. Conti&lt;.
...., lfforlllbll, alllldcare• ....,
-

- - . Doy

I o.m. • I::IG p.m. A1101 2&gt;1-tO.
- . lfllr aclroDf. Drap-1..
wtl: cme. 114 441 1111

:=me

WIP l!lbytN , In
Bullville Road,
Mil R I wtl:ll. 11
Wll da -

on
M'Mted,
2141.

cleaning In Ooi-

Hpalt. • -- 11......._.222.

born Feb. 17, 1890,
died Dec. 3, 1979.

From Gallipolis. tlke Rt. 141. turn left onto Rt.'77S,
tum ript onto Patriot Road. W1tch for si&amp;ns.
Loo~nt lor merchllldist7 Try tha Patriot Auction Berni
We hM all types of new and used mtlchllldist.lppli·
IIICII, lumlturt, 1ntlqun 1nd coli actors it11111. Somet~lnc lor neryon1l
·
. ,

Just 1 thotllht of SWMt
-lllbraiiCI,
Just • 11111ory. fond and
true;
Just a., token of •ffac-

to= ----off

Itt. 2au
. .Dtlllt1
-orr CMPIII R&amp;. Wll•

now

114 ••m4orl1......,....

lf.quali!M:i:l. the Mont~ery Gl
Bill c:an pnwide ~'Oiol wtth up 10 S5JJ4tl
for' tumnt colle11e erpen~ea.
If ynu nbcun ~ qualifyin'l Sl:udent
loan. rou c-an lltt it p;ud ott at the rate
of lSt:f per }'t-ar rx- $50\J. whichever

· Business . ''

Opponunrw

is ltft••~ -up to 1 n\aximum of
$10.000. Selectii1JC certai• spec1alty
ttaln1n1 dn retult •n 1 $20.000
tn:~Ximum .

• And here's how you c.:rn ~ eYH

skiUtraining at an Army S!.: hool.
You 'll earn 0\'ef' $l.:!SO for 9ulc: and
even mo~ tor skill tr.ininJt . Then

youlltrain wtth ~'OUt .vtny Reserve
uOit ntar mllep, usrullyone week·
mel a mnnth plw t'lo"o wt'tlka&amp;,)eU.
You1t~im n\'t!r:SIISa 'A'l!diend to

ltlrt.
Th•sl!flUid.be th~t smanHI Wl)l to

11et the mllfle}' rt~u ne-ed for collere.
Think abobl it. Tltenthink

·. INs
abOut u.: 'Then call ut toda~·:

446-3343

..... ......

H yoit co... work qny•..r•,
woulihl't you w•t to work In

a ho.ltal that oHen yov the
opport..Uty to practlu In a
wide variety of ar~ast .
3 Announcements

Jnt • •ilh for the 101. den mollltnts.

.Jnt 1 smi111 of lovt

llct.

anew;
.
Just 1 tt1r in silence flf·

'

.

IUctlon.

tha

•&amp;mily~t3:W evenu;

..•
•

..

•

I~RLIN

tancc;

•diotlay and pbamlacy diax&gt;unts;
•dilcounud UPE
~bmhips;
•IIIII much IIIIR.
Satd your _,.. ID l&lt;aml w.fbum,
U·.S. Health CorpoaMion of Southern
Ohio, 1248 XiDneyl Lane, Ptlltlmouth,
Ohio 456CSl, or all (614)35}·2131,

cmta'

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'

t:n. tH7.

----

AUCfiOI SERVICE ALSO AVAILABLE AT ESTATES, RESI·
DENTS AID BUSINESS. Now boo~n&amp;sprin&amp;lnd 111111mtr

Sadly

-

. •taX-defuaed annuity;
• &amp;ec Pllkinl!;
.
•m stilt ONA approved rontinuing
education
;
.

dise.

llna.

1111!:

At U.S. Health Corp&lt;xation of South=
Ohio we have many dilferc:nt mas liom
which ro choooc, theoc: include:: Critical
Care, F'.lncrgcncy Sema:s, Swgial
Servica, Hdmc Care, Pediatrics,
Matanai/Chlld Care, Medial/~,
H~, Hemodialysis, Psychiatric
Scmca, Worm:n's 'Health, and
.&amp;habiliattion.
.
.
We o8'a- RNa 10 and U hour shift
optiarw in many !pCcialty UJlits,
Benditl include:
•.
.live salaries;
health .00 dental plan;
·~ ~ indMdualiud orientation;

•twtJon r

22, plata! Ml(2,

Coat1ct lncluda haulin&amp;•nd transportln1111 merchan-

And 1 yarnina just for

•

.:c;

QUNS: Ruger 223 Daisey case less model; V.L. 22 Blownlng
12 gauge, Remington 870 12 gouge, Wlngrn&lt;u18r wHh
~ug barrel. Ruger mlnl22, SAWmOdell9, 367Ruger marie

DOOI PRIZES GIVEN WEEKLY
ConslpiiNttucceptld fro•l:Oil-5:00 P.M. on Saturday.
HIYe 10111etltln1 rou,- t to sell7 Contact llrlln Wedell!tr•· Alltllllllfl\1 for piclil!lllrvlct Millblt. .
lim 1nd auctllnHr "'lillbltlo~ public 1utlon1 on con·

· you.

mz.IYE·APPEALINGBR!ctt RANCH w/3BR:£&gt;

carpeted. eat-in kitchen on grou nd level. lower I
.
room, utr t•~ rm .. 2-3 BRs. washer/dryer, 2 ranges, 2 ref ..
deck, 3 car attached gmge. all new ptuntrng. I ac. mil grassed and I
plus 6 car barn. Who could ISk lor anything more!~ Call tor locatiOn and prtce .
IS II. NEW LISTING--LOOK lilt AT 16,500 CAll BUYI! - 1973 Kor•wood
mo b~e home w~h lR. 2 Bfts. bath, eat·in krt , range, ref:. outbtdg.Call for more
into rmatton.

..

{ LS fu7H COO'!JRIIJU'J

AUCTIONEER

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.'

1)

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Nil, WOULD YOU 1111 TO LIVE 1ft A1WO STOIIY HOUSE Ol GEORGES
CREEK wMh I IIIIo, LR , OR . blth, ~11th01, ott .. ~n11 . diol!rrnl!tf, 111tu,.l
ps. Kyaw Crllt tchools. Chlel ttlls out.
jt540. AHO.Ait.E HOUSE: hr~e t wo stOfy. hardwOod !loors. new·vltiyt s1d~
ins, garaae Mtd lots of room tor ~1ds to play. Located in Waterloo. Call lor ap-'

" lmtnl 0

~

1211 000

ARMY.
BE ALL;Y,0U!cAN BE.

Position now open for an
automobile salesperson. ·
Commission sales. Excellent
working conditions•.Send a
complete resume in
complete confidence to
Box 193,
GallipOlis, Oh. 45631

monn· •itile in cul·

~ge. Take Ba~ic Trillninll o~ wmlfltr. 'The next su m~• ..:omplete

SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00P.M.

And 1 lttlrtache still for

-

446-3343

;AUTOMOBILE
SALES

AIMYRUIRVI

21

w-

~U,..Qdaldl

•

HereS
lhe Army Htter\-e
Alttnlllte Traminll[ Protl:nm can help
yoUP'Y tOr coli~~ .
·

.

and the,hia!h-tec:h A~. we ~r
""' Anny Recnocet loUy.

.._tot, 2 m1101.,.141.
- - l l h o m o a r plolwp
anll'lllle.l144tltoll '

pay

~»are ~n·iime

OlASSWAR£: FOIICIIa pitcher, geblell, plotel, butt• dllh,
etched glaases. vosea. cups. Bovorta. ,Milk GiaA, mugs,
pitcher, pitcher Qnd bovo1.181 of Pewter.set or Franciscan
w~e.several piece• oiValellne. Oeprealon GIOA, plates
and etc , Blcentemal Plate 1n6 Canton. Ohio. ptUI
sel\llng pieces.

·3smart ways
for

~

In memory of our
dear father.
CHARLES N. KUHN,

you.

l
. 304..71-2111.

ANliQUES: Drop leal table and 4 rose bock ctiotrs, gate

far-

8

lob"• Lawn Cere, gru1 cuttlng1
troo
_
work.
trtmmlng,
llndocaplna. !roo ootimolol,

blmnrlna,

LOCATED 6 MILES WEST OF HOWR HOSPITAL

Public Sale

dmodemtect•MJklt). And rudy to
Jet started 011 the 21st cenlLU)'.
To 101 all !he deW!o """" IOU

' EIR Till S.VIoo. Tapping,

PUBLIC

and appotnlment call to inspect.

~tU9. EVERYlHING is NEW. Has been completely remOOeted and rs vacant.
You cout r1 take _Immediate possesSIOn. 3 lg. BRs. neVt cabrnets. new carpet,
mce lg_. lot wtth garden space. Located on St. Rt. t60 A.s~1n g m $30s.
•m. H BDRM. HOME IN CIT! SCHOOIOIS1~C'T: 3bolhs. lUll basemen!
tg. 2car garage, n ~ee lot, nat. gas and cent a•r. pr ~~:ed to sell f1 the uos: • ·
11-479. LAND CONTRACT: Call today or you m~r b~ trio late. W1llland contra ct. - .
so te ll us what joo can pay , 3 bed1oms. M.. DR .l R, bath. basement Good to·
catiOn, goOd roads. City school dtstr iCI. 4 ac, m/1. Pnced 10 S20s
~525 . '00 YW likE SEClUSION: We th rnk yoo will ~ke thiS home. 3 bed· • ,
rooms. lowelv ktl.. b~mg room,'bath. has new barn wNalls, h!s gas turna ce.
20 .•c.• ~/1 cou kl. be valua~ehmber. Call1or appomtment today_Pnced rn 40s.

uIOUQUiiify.lheAnnyolfen
IOU , _ IJan 50 cletipla!ed liP&gt;·
tedt IP"'d*w . And we •'-YI neeil
briJjlt and rnourcefuJ101d.er1 ready
to tUre on tbe demm::Unp; challerlie•

.

.

t~eulars

; iaooedcllwn. cantlir tvua

n

hno -

Dlttllto. (1) 10&amp;-117-1000 Ell. Y·
411412.

HILLS lSTAT£: -4 cho tte lots w~h spec)acula r la~e v~w . You may want one,or
more e•ch containing 5ac. m/1. The oak. mliple. dogwoo dand everreen trees
make.t~is a subu rban p~r.apise. Two (21 desnabl elots w/ lrontaQeonWhile Rd.
contamrne 4 ac. mil. Ut1l~ .es available to all lots. All !he above tots new Char·
ola~s Hills lake SubdNiSion. Sec. 9. SpnngfleiO twp., ~u~al:o ., on ro shall oe
subject tothe reslrictrve covenants which shall run with the tan d. For lull par- .

•Sll. THE MINI FARM: For Gentleman Iarmer and hiS famll~ . lovely contem·
porary home tm 3 to 5 bedrooms. famrty 100m, 21treplaces. ollice, \g. ullhty,
mground pool, lenced 10. 17 1~ ac. mil w~happroK . 10 ac. lenced. New barn
lor all your eQurpment, old barn wl statls. Pond and many more amen~leS. Call
to r your appointment. Over $100,000.
mz. NEW liSTING _: LOO!ING FOR AN lftYESTMEN1, ~ wou~ make a
comfortable home lor retired coupe or starter home. located mcrty IImAs. 2
be(llooms. llrtchen. LR, 1_1,? lots. tenced m, 1outbldg, Pnced to sel1 mthe S20s.
M41. This NEW liSTING located.•n Green Township w•ll surprrse you when
ou see Inside. H3S open beam cethngs wtthw es ternced ~r . has 3 bedroo ms,
r.oft. lo~ely stone ~ r ep lotee in ltv. rm , carpet_,in bdr ms.. and hardwood floors,
271h at. MI L

· kat.., toward auc:cm many Ql'ftr.

· --1-ftolcl.tnhourly rato, ' .....

_ . - . If

the extra lot for $6,500.

~45. Wl OFFER YOU 5 BUILOiftG LOTS. NEW BEAUTIFUl CHARO!AIS

1be valllble skills )'Oil learn in
tht Army. a well H ft 1t1W! af
Jl'idllfld.Jaiz»GIW .. Army

lull I CPorl-tlrnolttytlll, to lolii
our · llfmlng. 1"'"1 W8'N
~
lor t-ed,
enlh.. iutic Otylilt who ..... tho
dlelre to Mln:t In aclvanoe. W.

SATUIDIY, FEB~ 24, 1 -·
10:110 A.M.

LAo!: bllok. ton, and whno ....
Booglto
Around Tu•
Rd. -.11

Moll Btu. Tick houndJ...na - r,
llouthoiclo .... 304-tlD-1414.

==-:::::::..:;:=::::::--::--::--::-:-,

Of LIFE: Charming all brick ranch. lg. living rm. w/ d1ntng11ea. 4 Ded1ms.• 2
fu ll balh!,-new car pet, krtchen, uUity mt , also 2car attached garage Vr/ auto.
matic doOJ. l ocaled mSuokrst Villaae. Vou may see thrs home today and buy
to r e.erlasbng comto·n. Crty h1gh school. We can arrange lavorat;je IDnRterm
financing. By tne wa_y, ~oo can hlvt possession immediately. We • •II se n you

_,..,.

Heir · F11hl- o loOt

tllol - .
N_..~, I =:t'.:l*,....,'!iC':·

Employment Servtces
11

~. orlnernngellndm. or even IICellite c:annuaica·
tionll}'ltemi. bl can. in the A~.
8ecatle todiy's Army 11 an tbe
loodintedied hi!llo-udlweer
opponunilies. And we can tr'lin you
b I~ and exdtin11 Cllftt',
_ , . - ... """' top/littiat&lt;d
.

---In=
-1
-

EARN -EY Roodlng
$30,GOOI,r Income potonllal;
Dittlil. 1-aos-e87-too0 Ext.Y·
10118.
'

n. A growtng - - Mlklna

LAo! Or ltolln: iliilokl,ll 2004
112 Chat..m Ave., Aowonl lor
NIUm. ....,.. Ferguoon. 11444W237.

On
............ry...

'

uIOU'"' hich-le&lt;hrrll)'bt you'd like to try your hand at

AVON , I All Afooo I
· Speira. 30M71-1421.

OVIIIIII Qulnoll OVIItlll t14-Z4$1-4&lt;1B,' Wttno, AI. 3, Rodney, Ohio
4MS1 .
2 frOI kltto,., t - · grey, 1
mo~ block. t whllo bock nbblt.
Oultll
114 Ull31.
Pn 11140 quilbi. lurJ .-.dillon.
Cooh Pold. con 114 112 1117 or
114.af2.24e1.

OM THE
I1ST CENTURY.
IN THE ARMY.

Help Wanted

11

Giveaway ,

4

.tlan.

,_olyof

. . ~ 3.1Dthe
Nlldln18 IIIII 1W1 ot
Olow bioalt Center. 8ncl

to ...,01• w. may have

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•

Public Notice

..

114 Iron IYI'!bof

7!1~·1

·11

·~

.

VIRGINIA SMITH. BROKER . 388-8828
RUTH GOODY. REALTOR. 379-2628
DIAN CALLAHAN , REALTOR , 2511· 826 1
EUNICE NIEHM , REALTOR , 448-1897
RUTH BARR. REALTOR. 446-0722
LINDA SKIDMORE, REALTOR, 379- 2686

1117 Spetll

110 -

t
d pltlo. ctoM Jo
-fer, ~wllor,
· - • lhopplnttrooh
oMcovldld. Ulllmo. .... 1141-o:ztl.

~

LOCUST ST.

446-6806

•

:
'
•

RE~LTOR'·

· lltiUTMEIM · C&lt;iMMEACIAl ' , , _,

~ 73

• w...... 2 br., 1 bolh, privet•

:

m·

PROfESSIONAl SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

114 a..crlc "'"""'
ttl Sftlp'l rteOfd

71 Countrtet' fleett

•

ftf.~JW.

I

Raal Estate General

...tell

........

11MM&lt;•tl8ble

t·•173T...,

ifw41.

- ~~~J/44-,

,112 """"'
B11W

e5Apw~pt.,.i

..........

H " MflfMI -··
11 RM:Otd

'fl.

Ck~

..,_,,

117 ful!l'
. ...
Ill O.C. - .. ~h•

t3 EcNtiiiWdl
t5 0nt Mbllu•

IPirl- II Vlltoao

Raal Estate General

, .......

.........

~rtmwoto.

Ill. IIIII
Rlvtrelio
Aportmw&gt;toln M-. From
1114. t h - ........ tl.
Ant
-.th - ' h e to • who quollty.
Colt 114-812·7717.
EOH.

...
,,_

.........

T...,_

OIKIOUI living. 1 ond 2 bod-

""""" ....

.......

'"""'*
'""""'
m'""""

Ton

E
2br,CAICH,
2 - -di~'!,!:i,!·,
t t 72l bath,
d._., pi"'''AIU1111. 2 pooll,
Wlllf, I p - I n e . -, .....
• .... C"1.wl7-7110.

··~

133.,..._,...

Read the Best

'•

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,.,....._.,...

"""""

·.•

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

.......

"""""""""

The year ahead shquld be an exciting
~ lor yau - · yaur social Hie is concerned. You wiN ettrac:l a number of
. - lrienCia who, .In turn, Will help get
you~ in MWinterelll.
AGUA!Iua (.len. ao-Feb. 11) When en- ·
gaged in eonYW~~~t~ with lrilnda tQo
· day, try to do more llelenlng than tillki!lg. becaiiM yOU COUld pick up aorne
informatiOn. Aquwius, treat
yourMif to a birthday gin . Send lor your
Allro-Graph pnodlctlona for the year
llhead by malting S1.25to ,O.Itro.Gr~,
c/o thla - · P.O. Box 91428,
~d ,-OH 44t01 · 3428. Be sure to
state yaur zodiac lign.
' PISC;ES (Fell. 2D,-IIerollll0) An lmpof·
tant objeCtive can be achieved today,
provided you're methodical and do
thlnge one step at a lime. Be cerlaln ol
your footing before making each move.·
ARIES (llerch 21·Aprll11) A compllca.
tlon that pr-tly confronts you Ia very
simHar to one a friend of yours recently
,. reaoived sallalactoriiy. Get hlo&gt;/her to
• show you how II was done.
• TAUIIUI (April :Z.IIIar 20) You have

.,,.,..,__

-. ,_ - · .l. .. . . .
.......·- ·- - ·-.,.,.....
..... ·-... _
...
...
... _
.........
--_·
·..-_· .............._
-· .. _ ....... ..
......
. __ ....
,_
"........

,..,_ ••o-t

Feb.11,1110

........,

tor_......

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M501. ATTENTION INVESTORS! M,ob rle home on lots oveJiookmg th e mer.
Great monthly returns. Call tor apporntment today .
.S22. LO'S.TAlk QUlUTY. Brand new home. ·~ bed1ooms, 2 baths, formal
hVIAI room, bu in-in ste reo s~ stem, llreplace. at1rum dO OfS, 2 car garage, out·
butldrng and 3.9 ac, mi l. located rn the PatriOt area. Cal l lor an appornt ment
now. Reduced to S75.000.
HS!I. NO DOliN PAYMEN1. EftCHAII1M!NT FOR SALE - 2 bedroom home
w1th 1..-ge upstairs dorm. recent ~ remotleled. 1urmsl'ed, lull basement: near
Tycoon lake. Owner wrll help inance. crty schools, 1.1 ac. '11/1. Prrced •n the
30s Don't et thiS one get awa(See II toda~.
i!l!. ftEW liSTING- VERI NICE IAftCH HOUSE.and 25ocres mil 12 acr,e
of pasture and 13 acres oftimber. can Iravet entre acre.age with tractor. ThiS
one won't be on 1~ market len&amp;. Make an appt . _, see it now. Cht5hlte lwp.
Only $60,000.

•371.1N TOWN LOCAfiON: Lovely home to ret tre in or starter home, 2 bedrooms, lg. LR, kl1 .. bath, garage, with tg. back yard and all fenced. P11ced rn
$40's. Call tor showin i.

�• - · - ··-· ---.,:r-r---

-~ -~

7'r"

'1.

.

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-· ....

~

-

-om'" ·· ............

,~

~

..

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;-..

......

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Fellrully 18, 1880

.._..,

___ .,. __

.....,
II f 1 -. Oollil
....... , • • • •10

---All-II

w.-. ...... 'St:'" •.
,.,...,
""""' Alvw IIi. 1M
110000

.._. with oooklng.

Jl •

Col lllllt 1:00 p,m, 3J04.'17J,

IN1.-WV.

USED APPI.wlca1
d.,.., relrlgoooton.

-=

PICKENS FUAN1TUA£
NtwNMd
Hoe•ahold furnlthlng. 112 mi.
Jerrtcho Ad. Pt. Plnunt, WV,
...11304-t711-1410.

........

Coo 1111 r - l o Hcono Port!,
" - 33, ol Pomo&amp;OJ.

11

Klnt olio wotor bod lor oolo.

p.m.,l1~

La&amp;ao Oval Dtnl'!ll Room Toblo,

witli hholro,178. 11~3111107.

For Llilase

2

Iampo, S250. 11441!1-1125. . .
llall-&lt;lofnlol Nlriel'ratOf, whho,
$150. Gold rofrlgorota&lt;k$15. 30

,.,_enc. ,...

Work-··

. 54 · Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Household
Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Soloo ond cholta prtcocj ll'orn
I3H to .Still. Tabloo 110 ond up
Ia $1211. Hld•a-boU $310 to
$585. Roctlnoio $1211 to $375.
Lompo Ill Ia $125 .. Dlnottoo

REG.
Farmers ".............................. 'l.OO .tb.
Heidi Ann Swiss .......... ".... s3.40 ti..
Baby Swiss.......................... s3.55 tb.
Colby ..................................... 12.75 tb.
Marble ................................... sus tb.
Mozzarella ........................... s2.1s tb.
Hot Pepper .......................... 12.as tb.
Smoked Cheddar .............. 13.00 lb.

w~

tabla ...a cholrw $285 to $795.
Dooko 1145 up Ia $375. Hutchoo
1400 a up, bunk boda complolo
with lnllttre• $215 •ncl_ up 'o
nn. bat., bodo sno ~~a~~ ....
... box oprtnga tun .. twin

$71, firm $88, ana $111. aua up, King $350. 4
dnWer ctte.l: $11. Gun Ceblnett
!t.!· a 10 aun. Babv mattrwoaoo
... • $41. Bod Ira- $25,
au- Stu $35 &amp; klnt ll'amo
$50. Good ooloctton of ....,..,
.... $178

-.

-··

.

50 carpol Dlld, Lobor,
ssar,
- k uo out lor quolfty •

....,.....

low - . . Mollohan Rt.7N. II~

Countr Apptlonce, Inc. Ooocl

uood opplla- T.V. OMa. DDon
I a.m. lo I p.m. llon.-s.t. tl14-lllf!,_ 117 :lnl. Avo. Clol-

. . . . . . w---

Third. Avo., Golllpollo

1

71.

t..o.der,
............
1974 Midi
R- - ·
1974 MHl T-Ic 18715
Fonl 9000 LT; 1878 040
Col '*'-· Wind&gt;; 1911
120 'limber
1sn
Int. 111nc1or ......,.
lrUdc 1978 Fonl 4x4 cbl
1H7 L8Cnlooo 211
ton IDwbay; 1988 Wh. .

""'* ..-.

-gont.. -or.

311-9031 or
311-9949

..

D. C. •tal Salts. Inc.
Cann~bu~lna . 47119
Spealolla~a In
Buldlng~.

Deolgnot11o -

your
..... Anyoito,
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATE on

,&lt;

....,. blclao, and pacllde•. lava hundrodo,

..• .

..., 1houoondo of
•
dolllto.
loct&amp;l Sole .__111¥1
DONNA CRISENIERY
E.S.A .. Box 1M
Golllpotlo, Ohio 411131

'

ond

IM. i' ,_ ldti8M, Chow Mud

. . . .. 114 4411144 ...., 7

Fllh T•'*- 2411 -.haan An.

oom,
••••and
MUS.
.......,

-

=!.~:·

I w.w•.

=I:;

wiCt I I I

lloa, pta I
- A l l . . - . A l l - oullvolon. $4,110; OWrior will
- - .... Food Ooolor. ;)ulo flnonco.l14 211 ' ' " .
Colll14 4410211 .
1110 ca.,._.,, f1,150, runo
JACK TIIIVIIIIIICIDE: ~· .... !p.m. 114-145n I aniiMI
.... I tfttaiiWI ltf 1112.

t•-••
In
!!!'.!T!LL -

PH. 6i4-256-6511

e·

-gal ool
Ploflol!l,
304-tTWON,
10 1
- - C..
up 114.11
Ond 10 filii
lhop Pol ·

U.B• ......., o l - l n l ogoltwt hook,""""' &amp;

lloao I

-.
. FEE,D J, D

~'" PIIDDOCI .

31 ,..,._.,-.PI, -

~tng, , _ - , ~~~­

DOlo Foot1 ~or f-.,
fuR llno,
bl"'!&lt; lull Hno,
-lmo
tlotMIJ· lair
......,,.,4 441 ana

"""'*

Dopollldhojd.t1 4..1WM1.
,..,..._ AKC. Cho,. JMDEII'I FARM EQUI!IIIilrr
Ilion biOoif Hnoo. ~lo, 114-4411-1171. Sortna Kfalt.OII
Ohio. 114-1174404.
lolol " - • Zolai, -

CALL CHERYl L£MLEY Full Time

i':-.~e':C:: J::·

Pomoranlari, l.hooli Apoo, Shih $4$; II' $41.

4

T ZUO, ~~- - . p , 304- -:,JimC::'e~Form:..;.:;-::-Eq-uulpt-:-o•-r:-,-::-:R;:-i-:31::-,
171-21113 or 11~7u.e'tla. .
Woot Gantpotll, II
m;
···-·····-- ······- ..

w......

to but muot
- ·bo malo
-Jon
now a uood '"'"'
· llborlan HlooUY;
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rwglalorod, _30Wil:l-2111 a; · .
0011, trltlo, l:oo.a:oo wookdayo,

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lat. IIIINoOn. ·

..

ASSUME LOAN. lAND CONTRACT .....WHATEVER! - Ow.n·
ers are willing to work with you on this 3 bedwom. fam&amp;lv
room. I bath, laundry, nice fenced in backyard. Priced re· .
duced.to $34,000. Call for more Info. .
#liS

•

· Musical
~ F0111 uoon 124 !lqttaN
"-ents
Balor, 1800 """"" -nc1 batoo
lnst
_ __;.;,;.;;,;,'"="'.:..;,.;.:.,.."- .,.. . $10.
111 cloiiYarod. 114-311S1

2 ,...., S,.koro, Modol 410,
colUmn b
dance. 10 HUI,

-lor S1G1i. 114 311 1101.

NEW LISTING! Ai'PROX. 30 ACRE FARM border·
ing Raccoon Creek. I !.\ story Ira me 3 bedroom re·
mQdeled home. Large barn. Pond, fenced.
$44,900. Call today for a showing!
#2818

NEW LISTING! TWENTY-TWO THOUSAND DOL·
LARS is all rt takes to purchase this premanufac·
lured home, approK. 24'K60' which includes 3
bedrooms, baths, formal dining area, family
room, li~ing room, kitchen with built-in range and
double o~ens. Utirty room. SituaCed on easy to
maintain lawn. Rural water, gain equrty by doing
some repai"r. Call today.
H2814

I'll Fl

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I RAKQUE I
TO.NNIO

farm pond for ·
and recreation. barn is in goCid
stables for horses or room for cattle,
This house is not to be overlooked. Dutch victorian
~lyle . 2 story with all the beaut.iful, varnished orig·
· mal woodwork, not painted. Well landscaped lawn
and above ground swimming pool. Please call us
· for a showing anytime.
·
#2804

JUST LISTED! - LQCATED AT Sl 511 APPIOI.
IIIIL£ FROII TOWN- 7 acres plus a3 bedroom
vinyl sided home. Li~ing room, krtchen, family
room basement. hcellenl bu~ding sHes. ·
.
.
412115

NEW LISTING- OWNER WILL SELL ON LAND CONTRAC.T
with $3,000 down on this 3 bedroom. I bath. fam&amp;ly room,
wood burner, city schools. Call and make appomtment to see
this one. $32,000
Hl86
LOTSFOR SALE - NICE LOCATION- 51ots in Tara Estates.
2 front lots have utilities and rural water available and are on
a paved street.
HllO

-·
~
Now lloCiand 310 art- Mlxor,
good canol, :IJI4-I7S-4211.

...•,

IT WILL SOON BE TIME TO RELAX BY THE POOL and w~at
better place than your own backyard. You also get the conve· .
nience of a 3 or 4 bedroom home, I car garage, fenced
backyard Satellite dish and more. Call now. $43.500.

.

.· JUST
a house, this 3 bedroom ranch is a true home.
Spacious eat-in krtchen, family room. l'h baths,
living room, attached garag~ decking. In-ground
pool. Storage building. Nice ·landscapin~ Call to-'
day to make an appointment to view th1s excep·
lionally well maintained home.
#2808

NEW LIS1111GI -A MONEY IAIIIIIG FAIIII 83 acres approx. Twenty acres approx.levet til able land in proiluction level of fertiHy. 53appr011.
acres pasture. most·of Kimproved and w~lappetll
to your eye. 10 acres tillable and pasture acres50 fenced. Large tobacco b'ase and good land to
· raise it on. large pond with two (21 roond cement
watering troughs. Average barn and cou ntry
home. 6 rooms and bath. Owner needs quick sale.
Our staff~ farm oriented. We areabletohetp you.
Please call.
H2805

Payfllen•C~

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-...1.-...1.1.....-L.-...1.-..1...--J. you develop from srep No. 3 below .

11

L..

JUST LISTED- THINKING Of' BUILDING?Get a lump start on building ~our new home by
finishing this recently GOnstructed 28'x70' frame
home shell- 40 acres partially wooded, tillable
acreage. Several feet of road frontage. Call today
lor location and more details.
· •#2810
RESIDENTIAL BUILDING SIJES - Each tract,
ranpjng ~om 6 to 6!.\ acres. Excellent location.
Restricted to protect property values.Little, if any,
eK ca~ation needed. Rural water and electric avail·
able. Green Township. If you're looking for an
ideal home site wrth acreage Jlive us acall

JUST LISTED! 152 ACRES/ IMPROVED LANDRe cently constructed fence around 100 acres.
2, 750 lb. basic quota tobacco allotment. Large
bam. cellar. spring fed watering trough. For location and additional inlormation call today.
H280:i

lOI:UNOO 10 1n0
lnNlVM
.,jOOI lOI:UNOO jO lnO ~eo Alqil
wn'US'V
·qOJd II!M IOd JnOA ' 46noua UBijO J9110
41auunJ J994:&gt; poo6 10 dn:&gt; mo.\ 11 ..
·pas111pe dUJeJE) · ~ed s,puetJI e 1e
1401U liB 1n0 DUIABIS UJOJj lf:&gt;IS SBM I

l:l01000
l:l3&gt;rvno

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l:lOVfvlE)
S.L3l·lf'IVI::!OS

Nows the best
time to sell
your home.

NEW LISTING! - WHAT A BUY!- 112.2 acres
with one story kame home. 3 bedrooms, bath, eat·
in kitchen, living room, utiiHy. Home needs repair.
Land has been reclaimed. Only $39,000.00.
Kyger Creek Schools.
412809

YOU WONT BELIEVE YOUR EYES when you step
into this 2 story home in excellent condition! 3
bedrooms, I \! baths; family room. formal dintnp,
nat. gas furnace, vinyl siding which was recently
added, City schools. Call today for more information an d appointment. You'll be impressed.
#2787

LOOKING FOR A HOME IN THE KYGER' CREEK
SCHOOL SYSTEM I - If so, then call us about this
listing, 4 bedroom home, living room, eat·in
kitchen, garage, and more. all sHuated on I acre
approx. lawn. Priced at $32.000.00. Call for tQday
for an appointment.
412793

·*

BEAUTIFUL FARM SETTING- Seven room btick
home with 211 baths. Ap,artment building used for
caring for elderly and handicapped people. Large
modern barn used as feeder pig business, located
in Guyan Township. Approx. 50 acres le~eltillable
land surrounds farm buildings. Call today for
showtn~
· #2758

PRICED IN TH~ MID $20's -4 1h acres just out·
side of. Gallipolis Grty limits, SR'I41.5 rooms and
bath, 3 bedrooms,' tHy water and natural gas. The
land needs to be developed. House needs some
tender iving care. This is one your can own as rea·
sonable as possible. Call us tQday if the tempera·
. lure is above zero.
H2792

·POSSIBLE LOAN ASSUMPTION! 2 story home in
nice neighborhoQd. Mom will save countless steps
withthis cozy breakfast nook. 3 bedroom~ formal
dining. Must see to appreciate.
·. #2782
REDUCED! OWNER WANTS THIS PROPERTY
SOLD IMMEDIATELY! ONLY $26,000.00. - 2
bedroom ~ame home sHuated in the village of Rio
Grande. Natural gas heat. full basement. Large
lawn. Call today.
.
412796

LOOKING FOR ACREAGE? - This ranch style
home includes 211 acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
kitchen equipped wrth range and refrigerator. Full ·
basement, attached garage. .Heal pump/centtal
a&amp;r, rural water, pri~ale treed setting. Pricecrto
sell!
·
#2795
$33,500.00 - PRIVATE - Vinyl sided ranch,
nice approx. I acre lawn. Very mce 24'x24' two
car garage. Call for more information. 412784

• PRICE REDUCTION! NOW ASKING $15,900.00
- Approx. 42 acres of land. Huntington Town: .
ship, rural water. Call tQday for more details.
#2802

access for larg~r boats),
sHe
.
acre walnuc
studded lot.and'the home has 2 bedrooms, 2 car garage and
more. You must see. $45,000.
#144
COUNTRY SETTING &amp; 1988 24x56 CLAYTON HOME situated
on 4acres m/1. Thete are 3 bedrooms, family roomw1lh fife·
place, 2 baths and much more. Secluded located m Green
Sc~ool District. $30s.
·
#150

· ASH STREET. MIDDLEPORT - This home is situated on 2
level corner lots. Close to General Hartinger Park A brick
home with 3 bedrooms. full basement. and large altic.
$2).500.
.
. 41117
GENTLEMAN'S FARM.:..Eieganl country l i ~ing on 131 acres
m/ 1with a lo~ely cedar 4 bedroom home. Over2,000 square
Ceet of li~ing space includes 4 bedrooms. fireplace, formal
dining, equipped kitchen and much more. Land is level Co
rolling and includes a beautilu l pond, a 2 car garage and a
barn. You w ill l o~e it. Call for an appointment. $110,000.00.

Hl21

- ,.......
••,,

CANADAY
25 LOCUST STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•

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qnu.,..21
BIG BEND REAlTY INC.
446-7101

"'_...,

.

I

!

.

'

l

$22.900.00 - OWNER JUST REDUCED THE
PRICE of this remodeled I\\ story home'Srtualed
at the edge ·of towp. 3 bedrooms, bath, living
room, krtchen, natural gas heat. Carport · 211
•cres. Call today.
82101

. FIRSfTIIIE BUYER- NOW IS THETIME TO MAKE YOUR
·MOVE! 3 BEDROOM RANCH HAS EQUIPPED KITCHEN,
WASHER AND DRYER IN U11LITY ROOM. NICE OPEN DINING
AREA, GAS FORCED AIR, CENTRAL AIR COND.. NEWLY
PAINTED LIVING INTERIOR, ATTACHED GARAGE. NICE
lAWN. LOCATED ON JAY DRIVE. VERY AFFORDABLE AT
$45,000.

SO"METHING DIFFERENT: L-SHAPEO RANCH HAS STEP
OOWN FROM FOYER INTO MAIN LIVING AREA. COMB.
KITCHEN/DINING/FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AND
SLIDING DOORS OPENING ONTO PATIO. 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE. CONVENIENT TORT. 35.
HOllER HOSPITAL $65,QOO.

'·

'

.'
• ... ',
••

GEORGE'S CREEK ROAD - 3 BEDROOM RANCH, FULL BA·
SEMENT, ATTACHED GARAGE, PULLMAN TYPE KITCHEN
E3UIPPED WITH RANGE, . REFRIG. AND DISHWASHER,
F LLY CARPETED, ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP, CENTRAL AIR
COND.. LARGE LAWN. $49,900.
.

50 ACRE FARII- RIVER FIOf!TAGE- This sman farm has
over 17 acres of river bottom and 30 acres m/) of pasture.
Tobacco base. The tog home has nearly 200 sq. ·ft. of hv1ng
area on main floor. Includes 3 bedrooms, HI baths, large
family room, solarium, large decks plus basement ~ith ftn·
ished ret. room. There's mom, so call tQday. Pnced at.
$110,000.
41147

I

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'

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•

.

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1-

REALTOR'

~

- CBilo~ell

'

'CHECK THIS CUSTOII RANCII. 4 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS, EAT·
. IN KITCHEN, FORMAL DINING ROOM, LAROE LIVING ROOM
' WITH FIREPlACE AND FRENCH DOORS OPENING ONTO SID£
PORCH. COZY DE~ WITH FIREPlACE, LARGE LOT WITH RIVER
VIEW. $85,000.

lr

'

J. MERRILL CARTER ............................ 379-2184
'

•
I'

THIS HOllE IS WAITING FOR A FAIIILYI"FEATURES 3 BED·
ROOMS ON MAIN FLOOR AND A4TH IN THE BASEMENT. I ll
BATHS, EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH LOVELY DINI~ AI!EA.
lARGE RECREATION ROOM ATTACHED GARAGE PWS DE·
TACHED GARAGE/WORKSHOP. GAS FORCED AIR FURNACE,
CENT. AIR COND:, LOW MAINTENANCE BRICK EXTERIOR,
ACRE lAWN. CITY SCHOOLS. $65,00!J.

PRIIIE BUilDING LOTS- Three 5acres m/1 tracts. Rural
WIIIIIVIillble. Frontage on hlldlop road. Green school dis·
trid. can lor dtill~s.
.168

I

CA·THY WRAY ...................................... 446-4255
•

5.06 ACI£S II/( VACANT LAND in Greenfield Township.
Rulli water available. Wildlife abounds. $4,500.
Hl80

'

THIS IS o•E BIG HOUSE! BIG KITCHEN,.BIG LIVING ROOM,
BIG F~ILY ROOMJ BIG DININGROOMJ BIG BEDROOMS. BIGi
PORCH. ONLY THt PRicE IS SMALL ~38.000. LOCATED IN ·
MIDDLEPORT.
MOVING TO THE Ctm THIS HOME ON UPPER SECOND
AVENUE IS WITHOUT ADOUBT.THE BEST BUY ON THE MAR·
KET. 2STORY FRAME HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS'-KITCHEN IS
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE ANO REFRIG. :.Mrl£ DINING
SPACE. (lAS BUilGET IS ONLY $41.00 MONTH. NIC£ LEVEL
BACK lAWN. JUST $35,000. CHECK 11 OUT!

~

LOOK ~TTHIS - I HI. OLD 2 BEDROOM; 1 BATH RANCH
SlYLE HOllE- 8x16 buil~in&amp; 1.52 acres m/ t. Country set·
llni $17,000. Call lor more info., •
•155

l~t.
' .
with colonial home overloo~ng Po·
Executive style home with lormal entry, family room,
dining room. Basement has rec. room wdh stone fire·
place. There's an in-eround pool. Many more amenHies. Askmg $155,900.
41104

I ~'~!C)~ 24

APPIOX. I ACRE LEVEL ~OT with 3 bedroom, 2 bath A·sh'
aped home. Located Qn New Lima Road. Askina $33,000.

*166

7.23 ACI£S 11/l VACANT i.AIID In Greenfield Township.
County Wlla' n1ilable. Grell for hunters. 14,500. 1171

FAIIIETT£: OVER 9 ACRES, 12 YEAR OLD 3 BEDROOM
HOME WITH A COUNTRY KITCHEN. DEN HAS WOODBURN·
lNG STOVE, 1,316 SQ. FT. LIVING AREA: 2 CAR GARAGE.
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS. $52,000.

;

'

""(o'..

WHY BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME when il is already built?
This lovely home is iusll year old and is srtuated on approx.
3 acres with a ri~er view in the Syracuse area. Includes a
wooden· cathedral ceiling stone fireplace. a self-approved
kitchen dining, 3 bedrooms down and one in the loft, 2
baths lull basement and 2 car garage. Call for appointment.
'
Nl42

iEDUCED - REDUCED ·- The owners have lowered the
price to $30,000. 837 3rd Ave. The home offers_3 bedroo~s,
I bath, large utility room, n1ce backyard.lndudmgoutbu&amp;ld·
ing has goQd potential lor rental property or starter home.
.
#143
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING CLOSE TO TOWN AND AFFORD·
ABlE? Make an appointment to see this 3 bedroom home
located on 1pprox. 4acres just I 10 miles west_ofGallipol~ on
Rt. 588. HISS maintenance free siding nice siZed roomsand
"c•port, Green schools, priced 11 $41,000.
Hl81

I

.'•

. 't;_

~~~~~ofeasilyac·
~!
Ri~er feasv

l

THE PRICE 1$ RIGHT - Discover the love·and
be111ty in this home. Treed lot, I !.\ story construe·
lion, 5 rOOins, 3 bedrooms, I\! story construction,
5 iooms, 3 bedrooms, I\\ bathS,_drilled well, su!J- .
meJgibfe pump and a circle driveway. ONLY
$22,000.00.
.82713

Iiiii•· to &lt;lo it. Call your t._·,l CENT! lilY 21orfi&lt;'l' i&lt;Kiay.

1

~essabfe creek Cronta~e i

RIVER VIEW- Relax by the fireplace and watchthe beauti·
lui Ohio from this 3 bedroom home near Pomeroy.lncludes a
fireplace, full basement. 2 car garage, and double lot.
$27,900.
41125

The First Sign
Of Spring ....

···- ~·······.

WAITING FOR THE NEW OWNER to have'the en·
joyment of. owning this ~inyl sided frame and
brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, family room wrth fire·
place. kitchen with dishwasher. bath, 2 car garage, only 3years old.A~orox. 2 1/3 acre lawn. Separate mobile home space. Kyger Creek schools.
82799

·li s 1l um • llulll&lt;'S tlliul ;my lllllL'r n •:1l t ·stall' s.Jil's {,rgmlii'. Hi iuJJ i1 1•
tl1e world. So if you'n• plmming on st'llinf.! your hom(.'. now's tlu.·

~'1 ·

483 BEECH.ST. - 11h story 3 bedroom home on 21ots in
Middleport. Has nwer ~as lurnace. Camity room, dining room
and bath. Priced at $32,000.
*121

PATRIOT - This new listing is a spacious 7 room 2 story
home on approK ..3 acre. Includes _3 bedrooms, lam&amp;~ room,
dining room and more. Has low ma&amp;nten ante ~my I Sldmgand
newer carpet. $35,000.
Hl40

' 446-3636~
-~AUDREY
REALTOR. -~~
L!!!.r

S(

SOLD

APPROX. 20 ACRES.with spac&amp;ous ran ch home. 3bedrOOI/IS;
11h baths, Camily room and onecar garage. Additional trailer
hOokup..As~ng only $48,000.
*151
.
' '
NORTH SECOND STREET- This3bedroom homehaS beuti·
lui hardwood floorsthroughout. Large90xl20' lot. Conveni·
ent to stores and shopping. $37.500. .
•109

Realty _

I )uriiJ g SIMi ug, I1u •J'( • will h&lt;· IliOn · IX•oplt• buying IJOllll'~ tl mn
during ;~ny olher till It' ilfthL•Y&lt;'ill', /\ntllht· CENTl JI(Y :.!1'1 s)':O:In ll

'

-

REDMAN SECTIONAL approx. io yrs. old. 3 bedrooms, 2
bath s situated on approx. I acre in Hemlock Grove. Askin g
$39,9oo.oo.
·
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I I I IoF I .I I I -I I I I

.

.

lEADINGH.AM REAL ESTATE
PH.
or 446-9539

=
_ -

NEW LISTING! NICE CORNER LOT enhances this
3 bedroom, 2 bath bi·level. Includes I car garage,
2 fireplaces, large deck leading to above-ground
pool area, surrounded by a chain link fence. Start
the year ·out ri ght with an appointment today'
#2806

THIRD AVE. I_ Nice 3 bedroom home.ldealtoraise a
family . Living room; familY room, new kitchen. Priced
. 40's.
..
.
.
CITY LIMITS- 3 bedroom home. I 'h -bath~ eat-in
· kitchen. Home .has ·new carpet, custom drapes,
24xl2 back deck. Nice lot. 2·car garage w/storage.
· Possible loan assumption: Priced $40's.

oJ ,$317,60/monlhly
.
l~is 6 room home in i
Gallipolis. Aperox 3
modern kHchen,
2or 3 bedrooms,
for an appointment now. Just listed.
.
. '
'
11681

APPROX. 30 ACRES of gently rolling land with a barn style
home. Hom e is only 12 yrs. old and has 3 bedrooms, l'h
baths and full basement, pond, orchard and buildings. Coun·
try setting. Asking $77,500.00.
HI 57

'

BUHL MORTON RD.- ACREAGE- 4'h acres more
or less. Soine woodland, excellent ~iew of St. Rt. 35.
\'later &amp; electric available.. GoQd building site. Wash·
ington Ele!f1enlary. Owner/Agent.

ROOCTD

I .was sick from sta~ing out all
--l..-.1..
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,..--:. _....;.._ _......., advised, "If your cup of good
MU S A L Y
cheer runneth over often
:....:Yire
enough, your pot will probably
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. .......~. gel ••• of ••••••• too'"

#112

SPRING IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER- Now is
the time to take a look at this wen kept home. 3 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, living room, family room, complete
kHchen w/appliances, 2 car garage. Nice flat yard,
easy to mow. Also top of ground swimming poo.l. City
schools., Priced 60's.
·

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52.90 tb.
53.00 tb.
52.50 tb.
52.30 tb.
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992-6910

Pomeroy ·

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Elbow Macaroni .......... 51.80 tb. 51.30 tb.
Shell Macaroni ............ 51.45 lb. .95 tb.
W.W. Noodles ............. 51.40 tb. .95 tb.
Lasagna-..................... 51.60 tb. 1.10 • ·
Spaghetti..................... 52.23 lb. 1.80 lb.

auh•, 7 montht aid, 1 Wing ..... .
choir, JOW75.7181.
.

llpollo, ""
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"His life achievements cpuld
fit into a shoe box ...without
disturbing the shoes."

Whole Whsst Ps1fs $pe~l•l

hi I . . . . $30. tnd up IO til.
110 clop oomo oo ..,oh wlh at&gt;praved crodft. 3 ml. out Bulavlllo
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thru Sat. Colllt4-44&amp;-0322.
2 pc Eorty American living tocm

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AUCTION a FURNITURE. 82
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Otio Point Planant. W. Ve.

C!WIIIIolol. Coli 114-4411-nM.

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w. Va. ·

February 18, 1880

~rv·ar­

Pon-.6ov-Midtlapert-G..,._, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Sunday Tlm8l- Sentinel-

ANI htate General

I

Jul.- tl-1o4101f.
75 Boata • Motorl
for Sa'82
1m 11
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CIII14-211'1JII -7:1111 ......
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441,1G4,1~.

liD A PI£CE OF THE 8~1 NEW Lllll118 ... IIDOLEPOIT - Are you looking for a
rally nlll holl!l w~h low heating bills at a small price? This
2·~ bedroom, II\ story home is wa~ing for you. Call for ap·
pojntment~ Just $19,500.00. ,
.

"""""'""• ·-f.
.

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

Setvtces

For Bolo: Molot ........ 2o1ft,

1m' Dodgo, fully oqutppod,
tp.lll. tiWN-1110. Coli Iller

.

ST. RT. 33- Righi on Kinpbury Road, 2acre buildingsijes.
Wat111 &amp; electric available. MAKE OFFER- TERMS AVAllA·
BLE: $6,500.00. ,
'

MIDDLEPORT- 2 story brick home ·on 2 lots, with 4 to 5
bedrooms, 2\1 baths, wood floors, N.GJ .A. furnace. Garage.
Carport and 15' x25' storage shed. $49,900.00.

NEW LISTING- REEOSVIU£....:. 2 bedrOom, I bath, ranch
type home silting' on 'h acr~ carpet and screened in rear
poreh. I car aaraae and a building for. prod~ce.
. $19,000.00.

.

.

REDUCED _:_ RUTIAN D~ On.efloor plan wijh 3 bedrooms,
I 1\ baths, dining area, large I!!'lei yard. garage. and wood
shed. $35,000.00,

MIDDLEPORT- Here js a lot 60xll3: You can set 2trailers
on and have a good rental income. Has electric. water and
sewer. $11.000.00.

- ·a
....,...,
Co·
-•..,· Cllnol"""

SYRACUSE ~ Nice modular ·on corner lot 3 bedrooms, I
bath, carpet. laundry room. Patio and .close to school.
$21,900.00.

POMEROY- COM_
MERCIAL LOT...., Appx. 108 foot fr!Jillage
· on Matn Street. Ntce corner lot on heavy traveled street
Appx. 200 leet of depth. MAKE AN OFFER'IJ

85 General Haulfng

POIIEROY - 2 story frame house w~h 2 ·bedrooms and .
bath, with wood floors and some vtnyl coverin~ ASKING
$4,800.00.
.

Rtsldi.W

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OOINIIINIII

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AIIMr Wit• Doilftr¥. tz,OOO
..... a·pr lty. 81.4-111·1t20.

IIDDLEPORT- 2 un~ Apartmimt Building in Middleport .
Good rental income. Good neighborhood. OWNER WANTS TO
SELL NOW. $24,900.00.
Witt-· . -

1171

Honcho

110

wtualar, automatic,

IIIDDLEPORT- I ~ story frame home w~h 4 bedrooms, se'
.parate 2 car garage, wrth room above, and extra lot', satellite
dish and more. $37,00D.OO.
·
,,
REEDSVILLE - Would 'make a good huntin'g lodge for hun·
lers. 23 acres with 2mobile homes. 3to 4 bedrooms. I bath,
carpeting, woodb.ur~er &amp; FAB.G·. heat. With extra hookup
tor camper. ONLY $18,900.00.

Hluft!!l,

N I -I lilt ,...._. -~urne

...

oounta, 2,000 to 4,01111 o•r a':~:
clua ,., 11001e. Will, ....
·

JMP, 4
d:Z·

huvy

~.,...,,

.

30.000 11011111 mllll, S1,000.

Fw Bolo: 1182 Ford E-.
goodcond,l14 UIOOI1.
OOVEANIIEN7 SEIZED Vehlcl11
fnlm 1100. F - . M..-L
COI'Ytllll. Cl!evyL SurpluL
Buyoro OUide, (1) - Ex1.8-10111.

~:mi.
'
1115' Yamllhl YZ. 210. good
'c ond, rune Willi, $800. 11~
1131.
.11111 Yamoht. Virago, mUll _ ,
N.. tlr• &amp; Mttiry, eervlced
11,100 0.1.0.114-245-1137.

'

CARPENTER - .4 bedroom. HI story home wnh garage on
appx. I acre lot Shed, workshop, and root cellar.
$16,000.00.
WAS THAT A DEER I SAW7 - Capture the wonder
and beauty ol nature 12 months a year in this 3 bed·
roo~ ranch located 1ust a few mtles from town. Nrce
starter.home that needs a little T.l.C. Over 6 acres of
wildlife habitat will give you hours of enjoyment, and
the cozy family room will be agreat place lor family
gatherings. An investment in your future lor only
$43,400.
#610

Buyoro Guide, (1) aoe-ea7
Ert8:101H.
.

SPOILS YOU _
FOR ANYTHING ELSE!- Historical resi·
dence w~h grand entertain ing spaces and cozy hide·
ways. Plus luxuries like atully equipped krtchen, sunporch and practically tnainfenance tree exterior. Call
to see this outstanding M1ddleport home today:
Priced to sell al $59,00.
N508

8Z ACRE_SOF ROLLING HILL LAND- No butldings.
located 1usl off Pleasant Valley on Rick Ridge Road.
4'h miles to RtoGrarrde, 2 miles to Thurman and U.S.
Rt. 35. Ideal location lor home and parl·time farm.
Good grow_in~~: wooded area, crop land and pasture.
Good hunltng area on thts land and surrounding area.
water line on adjoining property. Road frontage.
for $34,000.
NJOI

'

Chevyo. s=.

CorYttt•.

11111 Cll250 - · IIC concl,
$1,100. ~'IS--.

Estate
·~.

BEDROOM HOME FOR $49.900! - What's.
it's just· on the edge ol town. Nice large
~~~~yat·d. full basement. screened in porch. Couldn't
much more. lots of improvements have been
made to this home.
·
#209
•

PRICE REDUCED! -II you have been looking
for a home that will give you room to sttetch
out, this is ~. Features in this home are•
equipped k~chen, formal dining den, lovely
living room with lireplace, dinette, bath, 3
· BRs. The full basement is finished and offers
bath, laundry, roomy, attractive lamily room.

HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED A BEAUTIFUL
HOllE ON FIRST AVENUE? - Make plans to
view this home which oHers 2 baths, large LR
w.~h . fireplace and view of river, ~.shaped
kitchen, formal entry, FR. summer porch
lovely lawn on river.
·
'

...

••
RUSTIC CONTEIIPORARY - Tired ol the regular
· ranch? This 3 bedroom, II\ story cedar home will
please you. VauKed ceilings, skylights, open oak staircase, custom-built oak cabinets in kitchen and baths
give this home lots of appeal. ·3 bedrooms, 2'h baths,
living room, dining room and faily room: large 2 car
garage. Energy savmggas/he~pump furnace. Green
Township, 3 miles lrom town. Nice neighborhood.,
. ~99,500
•.
#106
,·

acres, approx. 8 miles, 1151 1
Gallipolis city school district.
sale... $48,000.00.

.

A REAL CHARMER- 1.87 acres mil, and an
attractive country style home lUSt a couple of
miles from HMC on Rt 35. Features include 3
or 4 BRs. bath, LR, kitchen, DR and FR. lireplace, gas heat, 2 car garag~

ATTRACJIVE OLDER HOME IN THURMAN $34.000 -1650 sq. ft homeoffllfs 4 BRs, LR, ·
kijchen, bath, 2 FPs, unattached aarag~ satellije dish, vinyl sidin~

'

WANT TO BUILD BEFORE SPRING? - Before you
build, even if you already own a lot, please look at
these outstanding 5+ ,ere sites, We have three of
the best lots in Green Township. Flat, I!Nel lots in a
quiet country surroundin&amp; City schools.
N128

.. .

BLACKBURN ;REALTY
COIIII(RCIAL LOCATION ALONG ST. RT. 35, near Holzer
Hosp., I acre, M. or L, wrth 2-bay bid~ Owner may assist financing for approved purchaser. Buy now for $115,000.00.
ACREAGE!!! 4i.9 wooded acres, s~uated within Perry Twp
Estimated timber value: $10;000.00. Oeer countryll Buy now
for $18,800.00. ·
. ..
.
CONOOIIINIUI: 1st Floor. 2-bedrm. Condo; 2 baths, cent.
A/C, heal pump, custom cabinet~ dishwasher, disposal, util·
~y rm .. carport Call. for more" information.

NEW LISTING- 59 acre I arm located on Rt. 775approx. 6 miles from Rt 141. Attractive I 1\ story
has new vinyl sidin~ and new roof. 3
baths, den, new cabmets in the eat-in ·
in the util~y room. Partial basement
buildin g plus barn, garage and storage ·. -..i .... ,,._."
must to see at $87.500. ,

t·

YOUR PROPERTY COUlD BE IN THEN EWS!! PROSPECTIVE
BUYERS READ THIS AD. WE CAN'T PRINT IT IF WE DON'T
HAVE IT. LIST WITH US!I!
·

Vacant acre lot in Harrisonville.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED V.hlcl11 , _ Yomoho 310, 4 - " ' ·
from $100. Forde. ll•rudta. S1110,1104-171-28U•.

WE'RE GIVIIIG AWAY lONEY! !I- How many times
do you get $3,00 for buying a house? Owners will give
you $3,000 lo use however you see Itt when you
purchase this spacious 4 bedroom home in city
schools. Features include large living room with fire·
place, attractive k~chen and dining area, den or play'
room and 2 baths. Over2.5 acres including large gar·
den spot. I car garage. Price has been reduced to
$53,900: Owners want tt sold! Call us now, don't hes t:
tale, this great deal won't lastl • .
N40Z

MIDDLEPORT- Nice street, 2 story home with 3 bedrooms,
· dtning room , vinyl siding Concrete front porch and storage
..· building. PRICE REDUqO $18,500.00.
~

Henry E. Cleland ........................................... 992-6191
Jean,Tru sseI ................................................ 949-2660
Jo Hill ......................................................... 985-4466
Office ... ......................... ......... .............:....... 992-2259

.

NEW LIMA ROAD $3,500.00.

IF YOU THINK THE lANDSCAPING IS _
ADORABLE. "CHARI" wit11 1 capilli "SEE" - Colorful flower
wail until you see the new, tastefuUy decorated mte- garden~ stately evergreens, stone walls peeking
rior. The main floor oHets 3 bedrooms, I full bath, for- lhrouch the ivy, large maples ~enetously shading a
malllvtng room andeat- 1~ kttchen dh pantry. Pat to well kept lawn and an attradtve covered flagstone
door leads to ascreened·m porch. Full basement has walkway creates the proper setting for thts cnarmlarge family room, I bedroom and complete bat h, ing 11\ story loaded w~h character. Includes 3 bed·
huge storage room and spactous utility room, Forced rooms, formal din in&amp; 11\ bath~ fireplace, family
air heat and central an. One car garage wrth door room, 3 car garage. E'ocellent locati on, very conveni·
ope~er-. This home has a warm, cozy and attractt~e ent yet very private. $89,500.
.
.Z30
envtronment for any stze famtly. Kyger Creek Schools.
·
$59,900.
N80 1

ANTIQUITY- ST. Rl. 338- Ho.use and lot- Sm ~~~ HouS(I,
Small Price- riv~r view with potential of a cabin. ASKING
$5,900.00.

RUTlAND- I acre shady lotto build your dream home on.
Electric available. PRICE REDUCED $2.000.00. Will consider
a land Contract.

Motorcycles

You can walk all
over town to sh,oP or ex erase and you won't spend
much t1me behtnd a lawn m.ower. 3 bedroom home
has plenty ol space for r~1s1ng a family, yet the
~armth and. _
comlort requtred for ret11ees. Eat-m
kttchen and dtnmg room, large room on second floor
could be used as chtldren'_s bedroom or play room:
Must see to beltl!'le and pnced at only $59,900, and
ava1lable tmmedtatel!.
,
11603

GRE.EN TOWNSHIP HOllE -loo~n~ tor somethino'WANTA.HOUSE &amp; SMALLACREAGE7- Here It is111
out m the country but stil not too far from schools? you're bred of livmg 15 feet lrom your netghbors,
Here's nice property only 5 miles from town' 1mile you'lllove this new vinyl ~ided 3, bedroom ran ch on
from Green School, but with plenty ol privacy and a 7.4 acres. Home also has 2 baths, eat-1n kitchen. util·
mce vtew. Over 1400 sq. It includes 3 bedrooms liv- tty room and 2 car attached garage. You can decorate
ing room and family room nice eat-in kitchen 2 acre inside home and landscape outstde in your own style.
lot. Priced to please at s54 .~o
· #201 Priced at $52,000.
N500

NEW LISTING - APARTMENTS- Excellent rental
property receptly remodeled wijh gross income of
$1,000+ monthly. Consists of three I bedroom apari·
ments and 2 bedroom mobile hotne. Close to college.
Ideal for students and faculty members. '59,900.
N404

IN THE MIDDLE OF EVERYTHING! - Small home
one-half hour from Huntington and Gallipolis. Within
walkmg dtslance lo the supermarket and post office.
Needs some work, but ij would be anice starter home
for a young couple or a single person. 2 bedroom s, I
bath, located in a nice quiet neighborhood. Best of all
IS the pnce of $12,000. Gall Chris lor more informa·
l ion.
#701

MIDDLEPORT:.._ Turned off by "Tiny Affordables"'
It's lime to get excited wrth this 2 story brick located
on Rutland Street. Beaumully tailored with 2 bed·
rooms upslatrs and -2 more on the main floor. Textured
plaster walls in both the living room and dining room
help make this one of the truly finer homes mMeigs
County. And with a fenced 10 play area lor the chil·
dren, tt's perfect for a growing family . A lot of extras
buill m w~h tender loving care you mu st see to be·
liev e. fall m love all over again for just $54,900.
'
N604

,.
•

HEAR ME OUT ON T"IS ONE!- Read unth.you come
to the pari abput Summer Cabin on the River! If
yau're one of those families that would like a nice 2 ·
bedroom home with 2 extra bedroqms in the half
story, a really nice, very attractive livinR room and a
. mooern custom built kitchen, come on in!? In addition
you get a s~cond 2 bedroom home which you can sell
or use as a rental. Watch out now, I'm going to ZAP
you with the bonus1 Tell me you like to jish off your
own pier, plant a garden and grow all kinds of thin115,
have a horse or two for the kids. How about everyth ing above located in town on 2 acres that runs to the
river and already has the cabin down at th.eriverside1
You can buy il all for $69,900.
#123

.

PEACEFUL LIVING ON RACCOON CREEKsetting for relaxation and enjoyment ol
Creek. 3 acres. mil with good-access
plenty of room for recreat ion. log home
rooms including basement large deck overlooks
wonderful settin~ Perlect lor weekend get
or full time country liv in~ $39,900.

CHARMING VICTORIAN 2 STORY has lots of ch..-acter in every room. Very well decorated home thru·
ghoul includes formal livin g room and formal dining
room with corner fireplaces, large eat·in kitchen with
loads ol cabinets, full baths, l amily room w~h wood·
burner. Upstairs is complete with 3 nice bedrooms
and second bath. House has vinyl s idin~~: new plumbing and new wir ing. 174 ~- deep lot $79,900.

I

.

' $5,500 BUYS A LOT- Flat 100xl50, township road.
county water in lront, sewage plant 'facilrty available ,
in a· growing subdivsion. Just a few minutes from
town. Ready to start building? Call us!
. #406

OWNER OFFERING GREAT FI~ANCING PACKAGE!
Attractive country ranch wilh spacious surroundings.
I mile south ol Rto Grande on Rt 325. This 3 bedroom
home offers large iiving room-dining roo(ll combina·
tion, custom made cabinets, l'h acres, breezeway
and I car garage. Situated on a I acre lot with extra
lot available. $62,500. Call for details on linancing.
#601

'.

.zoo

LOCATION- LOCATION- LOCATION- Ask any·
body' "location is most important when selecting a
home." Here's a 6 room home on I acre with a great
view of the river and only 5 mil es fr om town. Includes
3 bedrooms, fireplace, full basement, gara~e and
barn. You'll have access to the river .It's pnced at
$59,500, and should not be on the market ion~
#116

COUNTRY CONVENIENCE STORE - There's a
healthy business opportun~y for you. Gas service
plus convenient food mart plus many other possibilities. 3 bedroom apartment over store lor additional
income or for owners/manager's residence. lots of
storage space. Established busmess lor many year~
Only store in the area ..:.. lois of potential. $80.000.

BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION -located on Rt 160,
this home is wait ing for rts first owners. large master
bedroom with bath. large great room tncludes fam1ly
room, dining area and eat-in krtchen wrth cherry cabt·
nets. Home has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garag,e •
and heat pump. 100x300 lot For $59,900, you can t
afford not to look. •
#Z20

mo

was
here.
wi·
s
ema
~------~---------r--~----~
,SOLD
.. ,-

: 51.4 Second Avenue
··~···~·...
GallipoUs, Ohio 45(;)31
..... ''Phone: (614) 446-0008

.

ALL BRICK,+ 2.15 ACRES+ SMALL POND
and just 5 minutes to downtown - · lovely
home at the edge of town oHers LR w~h wood·
burning fireplace, very nice k~chen, dinette,
bath, carport gas heat. cent air. basement,
many more teatures also. Cllllor an appoint·
ment and details!

3 BEDRII. HOllE WIHT CARPfl - Approx. 1.4. acre.
Situated along Africa Road . Price was $25 1000. Quick sale.
Price $21,500.00.

Blackburn, Broker
DUE TO THE SALE
OF SEVERAL •
HOMES, WE NEED
NEW LISTINGS.

...

NEW LISTING - 2 bedrm. house with upstairs dorm., I ~
bath~ tully furnisped, newly remodeled. new carpet, wnh
new range and ref rig. Full basement Near.Tycoon lake. Buy
now for $36,900.
'··
.

GIVE US A CALL IF YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED
IN SELLING YOUR HOME.

PRICE REDUCED- I acre wrth older mobile home, county
wat111, no septic system. located along Rt 160 near North
Gallia school. Price: $13,000.

.

NEW LISTING: 10 acres, Perry Twp. Some timber. Buy now
for $10 000.
6.5 ACRES. WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS situated
along Garfield Ave. Site in dudes 2 building lots. w/city wa·
ter-sewer. Buy now for $30,000.00.

·(..·

....
30.382 ACRES, TAYLOR ROAD ~ This small
farm also has a 1966 Vindale 12x60 mobile
home, small barn. Green Elementary School.

1913- 1.2'x50'- 2'bedrm. mobile home. with rear deck.
Call Allen Wood for more info.

VILlAGE OF RIO GRANDE- 6 room home
and .7666 acre m/1. Features include LR, m,
kitchen, laundry rm., gas heat, vinyl siding

100 ACRES 5 IIILES FROM TOWN- Overlooks
Woods, open pasture and large pond.
·

'

36.ACRES- Good road frontage, Lals well It SA\E ts·
ture land. Excellent for huntin~ $2 ,000. fENDING

111 ACRES LOCATED IN GREEN TWP.• Graham School Rd.
Super view! $44,000.

UCRES RIVER FRONTAGE- Prime residential buil~;i\lD
wrth 400' ol water and highway lrontage.
~·

DOWNTOWNINVESTIIENT PROPERTY: Brick structure w~h
3 rental apartments: Also. adjacent metal storage/ulil~y
bid~ Est gross rental income. $820 pet mo. All priced for
$65,000.
.

W,E HAVE SOLD, SOLD SOLD AND ARE'. EXPECnNG TO SELL 'EVEN MORE, BUT WE NEED LISTINGS!

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II and Mills Vii·
lage. Call for more in formation.
LOOk AT THISI JUST $34,9001 -Very nice
home near Green Elementary School. Allrac·
tjve leatures include LR, Uchen w/stove and
refrigerator, 2 BRs, bath, 2 car attached 1ar·
age. Call today.

2 LOT5-WOHIN GREEN ACRES SID. One is 84'xl48' and the
olhef 75'x148'. Purchase eijher for $5,500.00.

21.5 ACRES. NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures.
Locllled along Frank Rd. $18,900.

3 LOTS LOCATED NEAR TYCOON LAKE (50xll5'1. Can
purchase on land contract. $2,000 down. 10% interest, pay
$J29.69 for 6 yrs.
·

. 3&amp;.5 ACRES Ill, ClAY 1WP.- Fronbge, on

Ridp Rd. 01~ hou• on l111d.
. .
.

UCRES lORE 01 LESS- Harrison Twp. Call
lor dllliiS.
·

1.02 ACaf LOT 'along Klicker Rd. near Centenary. $8,000.

141 ACIES 11/L. HUITifi8TOII TWP. - Approx. I mile of frontaae on Raccoon Creek.
Some bottom lll)d, l!leck wtlnul

LOT FOI SALE - Morgan Sisters Rd. and
Cheatwood Wagnet R~. Call lor deta~s. ·

~ri111dly

.'

$18,000.

!••·'" hlp.,
ACRES 11/l, Stctlolll7 I II, HunfrontJp on .llclison Rd. 111d Lit·

LOCATED 011 RT. 689 In Mei115 County this
pr~ conllins 21.04 acres, m/1, and a
smal hotnt. Own111 anxious to sell.

2.4 ACIE TRACT - COIIIEICIAL SOE I.Dcated on Upper Rt. 7 across from the new
shopping center.
$15,000- 19.143 acres m/1. Approx. 'h mile
from city litnrts. All utilrties available.
·
4 SALE -Lots on Rodney-Cora Rd. Very close
to St. Rt. 35.
,

SMALL HOllE W~h extra lots. 3 BRs, bath.
$21,000.
'
LOTS FOR SALE ON DEBBY DRIVE- Call lor
location and more details.
LOTS OF POTENTIAL- 67.496 acres mil, on
Grouse-Beck Rd. Nice wooded building srtes
rural water available.
'

Creefl.

•

.

s0\.0•·

I

'

'

.·

'

.

.,

Wiseman .Real Estate
.

.

'

(614) 446-3644·

E. M•. Wiseman, Broker ·.

•

.

Tom Russell, 446-2675 ·

David Wiseman, 446 -3796
B.J. Hairston, 446-4240

. I

•

•

Loretta McDade, 446-7729
Chris Ellcessor, 446-3621

. I

�' Febrwrf 18. 1990

~~=~~~~~~D~-8~~Su~~~~-~TI~•~~~S.~n~t~in~M~====~~==:dp~~~m~•:ov~-;M~~~4~~~-~~~rt~G~~~~~-~~ono-~-~~P~a.:·n~t~A~n~s:-~~~W~.~V~•·~==~==========~~====~~~==~===

Industrial production
doWn during January
By VI!IICENT DEL GRID ICE
.
VPI a...... Writer
WASHINGTON - Industrial
production dipped by 1.2 percent . .
in January with . autQmotlve
plants produ~ing fewer cars and
trucks and power plants produc·
ing less electricity during a
warm spell, the government said

Fr.f.~!Y·decrease

fell about 10 percentage poinls as
lmRasonably warm temperatures in January displaced especially cold weather during December," the Fed said.
In its industrial production
report, the Fed said utility ouput
plunged by 10.7 percent, while

OSU upsets .
sixth-ranked
..

forms of painting and bere works on one that will
be used for display on ihe front of her school.
(.Times.Sentlnel photo)

TRADmONII- FJien Saundel'!l will be oae of
35 lutruct01'8 at FJlen's Academy of the .Arts In
Sprln&amp; Valley Plaza. She will be teaching all

Underwood receives .
child :care credential
BIDWELL
Orlena Under·
wood of Bidwell, has been
awarded a Child Development
Associate (CDA) Credential in
recognition of outstanding work
with young children.
The credential was awarded by
the Council for Early Childhood

()RLENA UNDERWOOD

Professional Recognition In Wac
shington, D.C., which represents
the early childhood profession
through Its affiliation with the
National Association for the
Education of Young Children.
Ms. Underwood ts an assistant
teaclier with Gallla-Melgs Head
Start. The local Head Start
program Is funded 'through the .
U.S. Department of Health and
. Human Services and operates
locaHy under the auspices of
Woodland Centers, Inc.
CDA Is the only major national
effort to improve child care tiy
evaluating and recognizing the
skills of Individuals providing
care. Although the first creden·
tlal was awarded just 12 years
ago, over 33 states already.
Include CDA in child care licensing regulations. Others .a re considering similar action.
Child care staff and parents
wanting information on CDA
should write: The Council for
Early Childhood Professional
Recognition, 1718 Connecticut
Avenue N.W., Suite 500, Washing·
ton, DC, 20009, or phone 202-2659090 or 800-424'4310.

New arts
academy to
open Feb. 23
By ~E ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- In an attempt
to preserve traditional aris,
Ellen Saunders of Gallipolis Is
opening a place where people can
learn more about passing on
their heritage.
Ellen's Academy for th.e Arts
will open Feb. 23 with a reception ·
lor area residents to visit the
facility In the Spring Valley
Plaza, and the open house will ·
continue through that Sunday .
Saunders said there will be 77
class offerings weekly, and .h as
hired 35 instructors for various
areas.

•

a1
. Vol.40, No.188

Saunders said she doesn't
be live In paying a lot of money to
find out if you like something, so,
the Investments wlll be small,
depending on the class.

Shopon North Second Ave. Several yean ap tile
buDding on that lot which housed Empire
Fumlture was destroyed by fire.

•.

CINCINNATI (UPll -A statewide survl'y released , Monday
finds the early leader In' the race
to be Ohio's next governor is
fqrmer Cleveland Mayor George
Volnovich.
The Ohio Poll, conducted by
the University of Cincinnati's
·Institute for Polley Research,
gives the Republican Voinovlch ·
48 percent, to 35 percent for his
Dell!ocratic rl~al, Ohio Attorney

mayor of Cleveland before step·
ping down last fall. Celebrezze is
finishing his second term as
attorney general an\1 previously
served as secretary of state· and
in the state .Senate.
Both candidates are·unopposed
in their respective party primar·
les May 8 and ' will rrieet In the
general election Nov. 6.
In an Ohio Poll last October
bef!l~ It w.alb~the ,

Til?nrst head-to'head survey
by the Ohio Po U on the possible
outcome In November's election
also finds tha.t 17 percent of
~espondents favored other candidates or· would not choose.
Poll director AI Tuchfarber
said most of respondents did not
have strong opinion~ of the
candidates so early in the
campaign.
The reason given most Ire:
quently for supporting Volnovich
· was his good performance as
mayor of Cleveland, while thl'
reason mentioned mostfor favor·
lng Celebrezze Is that he's a
·Democrat, Tuchfarber said.
Voinovich served two terms as

brezze led Voinovlch by a ratio of
43 percent to 40 percent.
At the time, Voino,ich was
being challenged for the Republi·
Celebrezze 'dom!Jiated among
can nomtnatlqn by Hamilton
black voters, with a 73 percent
County Commissioner RQbert
share, compared with Voino:
Taft II. Taft was forced out of the
vich's 9 percent.
race last week by GOP leaders,
Few voters mentioned abor·
who persuaded him to seek the
lion as a primary reason for
party's nomination for secretary
supporting either candidate.
of state .
Celebrezze's decision last fall to
· In the recent poll, a telephone
change from anti-abortlon to
survey of 544 registered voters · pro·choice was not mentioned by
Feb. 2 through Feb. l2 . Voinovich
voters as a reason for making
led Celebrezze in ali sections of
their choice.
the state · except central and
Both candidates had high
southeast Ohio, where Cele .. name recognition, 94 percent for
brezze led 43 percent to 41 Voinovich and 93 percent for
percent.
Celebrezze.

who.

"~·- .... ~I A~lllAAII "Jeh'197a..,....,.~ty . nom1ne94 ;1W!i~·

Future appears bright for canola

Celebrezze's ·a retread

on

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NEW 2 5 HP SHENNIU TRACTOR

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· . CARTER
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Voinovich

Celeste," said the former Cleve- knows more about the problems ·
land mayor. "How can anyone
than a big city mayor," he said.
that's ··part and parcel of the
"I've had IT)Y nose rubbed In
problem be a part of the every problem that you can
solution?"
. Imagine."
Voinovich was lnd,uced to
Vo lnovlch has virtual iy locked
makE&gt; comparisons of himsl'lf up thl' Republican nomination
with the Democratic attorney
for governor now that Hamilton
general despite his Insistence County Commissioner Robert
that he will conduct a positive Taft II has been convinced to run
campaign for governor.'
for secretary of state.
Voinovich has been shown In
Voinovich cited his 10 years'
experience as mayor and said independent surveys to be about
Celebrezze is "just the law 13 percentage points ahead ·of
Celebrezze, , but he said . he is
director for the state of Ohio."
"There isn't anybody that about $2 million behind In raising
money.
.
"We're going to try and see if
we can't catch up in that area, "
he said.
Votnovich said it would be
impossible for Celebrezze to
clean up the state goverrunent.
"The same ones that are there
By LEE ANN WELCH
according to ODOT. Construcare
the ones that are helping
tion will be mainly away from the
, OVP New1 Staff
· Tony," he said. "When he gets
'Bids will be advertised for two existing highway .
there his hands are going to be
The only expected Interrupphases of thl' U.S. Route 35 .
tied."
tions will beat the State Route 160
relocation project In Gallia
Voinovich said Democratic
County on Feb. 26.
•
.where the existing highway conState Chairman James Ruvolo
Work on the sections at the two nects to the proposed highway, · "has been using the state of Ohio
ends of the relocation will be and some to cars traveling State as a punching 'bag for
advertised In the Feb. 26 edition Route 325.
patronage."
of the Gallipolis Tribune and
A total of 2. 76 miles will be
'
March 4 IssUe of the Sunday constructed from Centerville to
Times-Sentinel.
Rio Grande; 4.5 mUes will be
Sen.
to mal(e
Bid openings will be 10 a.m. on built from Rodney-Bidwell Road
March 231n the office of the Ohio to Rio Grande, and three fil)lll
announcement Tuesday
Department of. Transportation section Is 5.6 mites stl'et.c hfni
J)lrector Bernard Hurst.
from Rodney-BidweJIRoadtothe
State Senator Jan Michael
.. The total projeci ' Is in three exlating four-laae at State Route
Long (D-Circlevllle) ' wilt be
phases, according to ODOT off!· 160.
aonouncing his re-election cam·
cials, spanning nearly 13 miles of
Work for the project actually
paign for the 17th State 8ellate
Gallla County .with four-lane began in the early 1970's. The
Seat on Tuesday, at 1:30 p.m.,flt
location public hearing was May · the Meigs Public Library in
hiJhway.
While ail three phases will be 1, 1970 and the design hearing
Pomeroy.
Senator Long will be Introconstructed simulaneousiy, only . was condilcted'Dec. 13, 1972.
Announcement of the $61.2
duced by Sue Mallon.
advertlsementa for the firtt and
Tile public is invited ·to attend.
last secilons are being published m filion fl!nding for the project
wu made by Celelte Oct. 23 in
Senator Long will be available
now.
The project Is expected to be Cohunbus, before making ·at trip
for qllestlons and comment•
completed in 2\2 years, and little to GaiUpolli the follOWing day to
Immediately followtnr his ·
disruption to traffic ill expected, meet with local officials.
announcement.

CLEVELAND, Va. !UPI)
"more than I thought.' ' The
s tarted making plans for the
Striking miners voted Monday on union compromised on sweeping
return to a normal paycheck.
a compromise-filled pact with work rule changes - including
" I think I'll take my family out
the Pittston Coal Group and unprecedented rotating shifts to dinner, and take them on a
predicted the contract would and In return, Pittston agreed to
vacation this year," Gibbs said .
pass by a large margin and end a keep the health care benefits
Even though less than. 2,000
10-week walkout that caused available at Other union mines.
miners are on strike. union
thousands of arrests and millions
Pittston wanted rotating slll!ts
officials estimate about 4,000wlll
of dollars in fines. ·
,., ,
so It could operate mtnes .around
be eligible to vote Monday
"I'd say 1eu pass 2·to-1 here On the clock, seven days a week,
because laid-off miners in good
VIrginia )," said striker Jack although no actual mining wlil be
standing with the union are
Jones of Coeburn shorlly after he allowed on the Sunday day shift . covered by rehiring clauses in
voted.
·
.
Odom said it wiii help the
the contract.
"I believe it'll be ratified, " company meet spot market for Odom said the new rotating
chimed in Paul Fleming, a miner eign sales; Pittston Is the largest
schedule would Increase union
from Hanging Rock. "There's a . U.S. exporter of metallurgical
employment by 30 percent befew things in It we don' t like but coal to Japan.
cause a fourth shift will be
you can't get everything. It's
Strikers said they had heard
needed. If the contract Is ap·
something we can live with."
grumbling about a plan to keep
proved, a return to normal
The dlspu te - more over on the replacement miners production will take several days
scheduling. · job .security and "scabs" to the strikers - who
at least because of safety inspechealth care than wages - In· have been working at mines., tions and refresher courses for
volved some 1,700 Vitginia, West opeped since the strike started.
the strikers.
VIrginia and Kentucky miners while a handful of strikers
The bitter dispute saw numer·
represented by the United Mine . convicted of violent crimes must ous confrontations between strlk·
Workers.
go to arbitration to find out If they
ers, replacements and a small
Union of!tclals heard grum- will be rehired.
army of state troopers. There
blings from Kentucky miners
Despite those provisions of the
were 2.400 arrests In civil disobethat they did not like the idea that contract, electrician James dience protests designed to block
13 fellow miners could be fired Gibbs Is so confident the contract
Pittston shipments. and 71 Injurfor alleged strike-related vio- will be ratified, ending a. strike
Ies allegedly related to unionlence and that some planned to that began Aprll5, he has already
orchestrated .violence.
vote no In solidarity with their
comrades.
Jones said some VIrginia min·
ers were not happy about the
plight of those 13 miners either,
b\lt added they have faith the
, ui\iori will wq_r)&lt; jd. Jl.ro ect tJlW
jobs when the .
'goes ' to
the snowbelt counties.
By VnMed PreAs International
arbitration. There aren't enough
The Scioto River continues in
Typical mid-February condl·
Kentllcky miners "to make a
flood
stage in parts of central and
tions
are
In
store
for
Ohio
over
dt!(erence In the vote," Jqnes
Ohio. but a furtlier rise
southern
the
next
couple
of
days.
said.
In
the
river
is no longer likely
At
dawn
today,
·it
was·sunny,
A tentative agreement was
until
significant
precipitation
and
the
clear
skies
are
to
remain
announced on New Year's Day,
..
returns.
through
Tuesday
over
most
of
the
but translating general bargain·
Highs
Tuesday
will
be
mainly
lng table agreements into spe- state. Temperatures at sunrise
cific contract language proved were In the upjJer 20s to low 30s, between 30 and 40. Looking ahead
and today's highs were expected through Friday, It will be fair
an arduous task.
to be in the mld-30s In the· . Wednesday and Thursday, with a
Miners who adopted camounorthwest to near 50 in the chance of 'showers Friday. Highs
!lagefatigues as a strike uniform
will be in the 40s Wednesday and
extreme
southern counties.
have appeared weary of the
44
to 55 Thursday and Friday .
The
colder
air
will
continue
to
financially draining and some·
Lows
will be In the 30s Wednesflow
Into
the
state
tonight
as
times violent strike, and have
day
and
3!&gt; to 40 Thursday and
clear
skies
and
lighter
winds
·predicted the pact represents
Friday.
allow
the
maximum
cooling
to
enough union victories to ensure
On \111' early morning weather
occur. This wiii cause temperaratification.
rriap,
a cold front was along the
tures
to
drop
to
the
teens
Voting Is scheduled for 8 a.m.
Ohio
River
In southeast Ohio and
Tuesstatewide,
Temperatures
to5 p.m. Mondaybutnototalsare
Is
to
continue
moving east. Large
day
should
remain
mostly
In
the
expected before tuesday. Pitt·
high
pressure
was centered over
30s.
ston Coal Group President Ml·
the
high
Plains
and was building
With
the
cold
air
flowing
over
chael Odom Is 'withholding any
southeast
toward
Ohio. By dawn
'
the
relatively
warm
Lake
Erie
detailed comment until after the
high
pressure will
Tuesday,
this
watprs,
northeast
Ohio
will
likely
vo.te.
see lake-effect flurries and be centered over Illinois and will
AV.lrglnla striker, Randy Hall,
squalls tonight and Tuesday. dominate most of the eastern half
said the contract gives the union
Accumulations are possible in of I he nation.

case

'•

i.ons

'

VALENmfB QVII:EN CROWNED - Alllle
Malael . . crowneol Valentine Queea i&amp; a u.ee
•tal~ Sa&amp;lria, nJPt at Soutben Rtrb Scllool.

...... q _ _ _ _ ___::___

,,

•

Typical inid-February weather
eipe~1~4 jor Ohio tiJ:is week

Rt•.35 bid openings
scheduled March 23

PRE~SEASON , SPECIALS

SPECIAL!

Ce!e··

Voinovich was ahead 56 percent to 34 percent· in northeast
Ohio, which includes his hometown of Cleveland. He also led 43
percent to 35 percent in southw·
est Ohio, the home turf of his
lieutenant governor running
mate, Rep. Michael DeWi.ne of
Cedarville.
.
Both candidates ~ared well In
their own political parties, but
Voi!Wvi~.~- ~at &lt;;:ew~ .al- '
mo.st :!-tjiil 41,11llllli .. . . . . .ilts
who described them~elves as
independents.

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPil Republican gubernatorial candl·
date George Voinovlch said Monday his Democratic opponent, .
Anthony. Celebrezze, is nothing
more than a retread of Gov.
Ric pard ·Celeste and would be a
tool of special interests If elected.
Voinovich met with reporters
and fired what appeared to be the
first shot of a long general
election campaign by branding
Cell'br~ze as part of a "getalong, go-along syndr.ome" at the
Statehouse.
"We don't need a retread of

Fruit ..•

COMPLETE WINTER OVERHAUL·

2&amp; C.nta

A Multimedia Inc. N8WIPIIP.r

.Coal miners expect to
end 1.0 -month strike

Voinovich leads statewide poll

~-

1 SoC.ion, 10 PogH

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 19, 1990

; coepehled 1810

UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Mitch Meado~
hu ander COMIJ'ue&amp;lon a new two story building
Ia downtown Mlddi!Qiort. The new bulldhig will
occupy the vacant loi adjacent'to the Prescription

Among. the offerings are ali
forms of painting, dolimaklng,
woodworking, computer design,
knitting, cross stitch, · afghan
making, Amerian and Indian
Ohio Valley Pullllllhla&amp; Co. Leave your name,
style jewelry, herbs, paper cut·
MYSTERY FARM- Thill week's myatery farm,
By Gall DeGarmo
insects and diseases .and brows·
address, and telephone number with your guess.
tlrlg, drawing, wheatweavlng,
featured by the Melp SoU and Water Conserva·
Earth Team Volunteer
ing destroys yo~ng trees by
No telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
leatherwork, pretty punch,- hatlion Dlsb1~t Is . located somewhere In Meigs
girdling and physical
entries
should be turned Into the newspaper office
boxes and fans, photography.
GALLIPOLIS - Everywhere deformation.
County. Indl~lduats wishing to participate In ~e •
by
4
p.m.
each Wednesday,. In the case of a tie, the ,
chair caning, quilting, tatting,
we look and read today there
weekly contest m!\Y do s,o by guessing the farm s
You, as the woodland owner,
winner
will
be chosen by lottery. Next week, a
.
cloth baskets, some glasswork,
owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to The
seems to be an Interest and should take measures to protect
farm will be featured by lhe GaiDa
Meigs
County
dried llowers, rug hooping. ceDally Sentinel or The Gallipolis Dally Tribune and
concern about our natural re· your woodland from fire. UnforSoU and Water Conservation District.
ramics, , t-shlrt painting, can·
you niay be the winner of a $5 cash award from the
aou~es. And rightly so. Those of
tunately, In our part of the dlewlcking, macrame, rug braid·
us wbo own private woodlands country, most of the forest fires
ing and crochet, ·
have at our disposal an Imme- we experience are caused by
"I want to see the crafts of the
diate opportunity to use good man, whether directly or ·lndi·
•
past saved," Saunders said.
forestry and cons(/rvation practi· rectly. Therefore, It Is important
· canola oil will probably increase
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
· Many young people didn't grow
ces that· wnt greatly affect our that everyone observe the forest up with the kinds of family Ohio farmers are cashing in on when manufacturers respond to
lives In many ways. With 53% of fire laws as recommended by the
involvement she did, and Saund· · consumer demand for low-fat consumer concerns and start to
· Gallta Coilnty considered fore- Ohio Department of Natural
foods by leading the nation hi phase outolls ltlgh In saturated
sted, ills necessary for all of us to Resources. During the sprtng ers said It's a shame that some
fats .
canola production.
be practicing good forest fire season (the months of youths doll't have grandparents
"Something will have to fill the
Unlike many cooking oils, oil
or aunts· to teach them the
management.
March, AprU and May) and traditional arts.
gap,"
she says. "The trick·will be
· made from canota seeds is low in
Good forest management beg- during the , fall fire season (the
saturated fat. Saturated fat tends to meet the new demand with a
The open house will be Feb. 23
ins with a detailed look at what months of October and Noto Increase C·holesteroi level~ in steady supply.''
and
24from
10a.m.
to8p.m.,and
.
you own. The tree species, vember) they advise no open
Walter Schmidt, northwest dis·
the blood, which may increase
on
Sunday,
Feb.
25
from
1
to
6
stocking (size of trees and the burning from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
the risk of heart disease. Fond trlct agronomist for the Ohio
p.m.
·number of trees per acre) , Some localities are enacting
manufacturers need alternative Cooperative Extension Ser\1ce,
eondltlon, the slope and aspect of e'&gt;:en st~icter regulations than
·ous such as canoia to meet says Ohio farmers are already
the land are only a few of all the these to outdoor and/or open
reaping the benefits of canola.
demand .
pieCes of Information that are burning.
There Is statewide interest In
"Canol&amp; oil Is high In mono·
necessacy.
In your management plan, If
the
crop, Schmidt says. In 1988,
unsaturated fat," Lydia Medel·
The establishment of a forest your woodland Is a sufficient
Continued from D-1
Ohio
harvested about 2,500 acres
ros, !Dod and nutrition specialist
man!lgement pian for your piece size, you can plan firebreaks. A
at Ohio State University, says. of canota . .This year Ohio has
of property then is formulated by firebreak is merely a strip of · we were offering this one again
·.,some researchers think mono- 15,000 acres for harvest. "That
putting this information t01;ether open land ,that has been cleared this year.
unsaturates may even· lower makes us the number-one prowith what you as the property of flammable material, with an
The two groundcovers are
ducer In the nation," he says.
blood cholesterol levels.''
owner want from your woodland. average width of 8 feet, to break myrtle and crownvetch. Ever· Canoia is grown during the
·Denise King, nutrlt.ion special·
Thll could range from dl'siring a up large tracts of timber Into greens include White and Scotch
ist at Ohio State, says most winter, so It fits well with winter
continuous Income by way of smaller blocks. The firebreak
Pine, Colorado Blue Spruce and
people don't know that vegetable wheat production, Schmidt sayS.
.harvesting timber or firewood or under normal burning conditions
Norway Spr~e. and a shrub
oUs contain satura~ed fat. Canoia It can be planted In early
Christmas trees to establishing Is used to control the spread of a
Mugho Pirie. The hybrid popular
oil contains only 6 percent September and is harveSted with
and maintaining viable wildlife fire by simply being a break In Is our hardwood.
saturated fat. making It the a combine about the same time
habitat to. Improving the wa- . the flammable matertal. Under
For more Information and a . lowest among vegetable oils. In . early winter wheat matures .
tershed to simple aesthetics and . severe conditions, such as fire description sheet, please contact
comparison, coconut oil contains
the enjoyment of a gond hike with high winds, the fire could be our office at 529 Jackson Pike, . 92 percent saturated fat.
around the property. Most people expected to jump the firebreak.
Room 308C or call 446-8687.
Medeiros
IIDd they want some combination However, if there are breaks
Of all of theR objectives and good · located well ahead of the spread
forest management can provide oJ t~e fire 't han the firebreak can
all of them.
be use.d as a safe boundary for the
Forest management also in· start of a backfire.
Another section of your man·
valves commitment and.responllblllty. Once you ·have your agement pian can provide the
manaeement plan established best possible lay out of a road
Handle yeur small farming and gardening with
you should be committed to system . This is another lmpor·
ease. A new Shenniu 2/26 diesel tractor at·
.following through with the lmme· tant part of fire protection In that
'
taches to any 3/P hitch equipment.
diate recommendations and the a good, well-maintained road
...~!
system
makes
your
woodland
loiiJ raDJe plans. You need to be
responsible for the protection of accessible to fire-fighters should
l $7995.00 VALUE
NOW ONLY
your woodland. Don't allow cat· there ever be a danger of fire
FULL UNE OF PAm a• SERVICE
tie to J1'11Z9 to your woodland. from a neighboring property.
1here Is very ilttie beneficial Many times access roads serve a
We have a fuR lnt of ling Iutter Equipment• .
toraee for cattle In a woodland dual purpose. They can also
lOt to mention the damage cattle serve as a firebreak.
With a management plan de.
un do to the woodland Itself.
signed
especially for your propGraziDJ can cauae soU compacerty
and
your needs and a
tion rnulting In water run off and
SR 35 W.- GAWPOLiS; OHIO
e'Oiion and Interfere with proper wllltngness to folipw through
2204 EAn• AYHIUE
446-9777 01 446-2414
root at»orptlon, the elimination with the plan; your woodland can
be all you would like It to tie. And
of tbe underatory (young aeeGAWPOUS, OH.
We. have salvage .parte for eome older model
dllql), boot damage to tree maybe even more.
·farm tractors.
·
6
bllttllaiJowiDg entry of damaging

..

Super JAtio
ll-14-22-31-40-44
Kicker 868836

tram• m•g,

Forestnaan~enaent

I

8450

•

Classes. will be for beginners,
with some intermediates and
advanced, she said. The courses
will not require a lot of monetary .
investment, either. Class fees
are $7 per lesson, and materials .
used, which can he as little as $3.

·

Pick 4

1

•
•
recerti•fj Cation,
testing
8}a1e d

'

030

Page 4

put down 0.9 percent in January,
according to a monthly report by
I
. the Federal Reserve System.
"We can't blame all the factors
Two sessions ar e planned for
By Edward M. Vollbom
on what goes on with the weather
people
needing to .h ave their
County Extenslo11 Agent,
·
and In the au to industry," said
cards renewed. Those. sessions
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
·Aliel{ Sinal, chief econom~
will be Thursday, February 22 at
the Boston Co. , from his office in
·
1 p.m. or Monday, February 26 at
New York.
GALLIPOLIS -Private pest!· . 7 p.m. at the University of Rio
Overall production was flat, clde applicator training, recerti· .Grande. Two remaining sessions
"showing an industrial sector flcatlon and testing will be are planned lor people who what
that Is not If OWing ... and led to.a cOnducted · over the next few to become . certified as private
very slow start and a very weak days. A couple yeats ago, methyl pesticide applicators for the first
start" for the new year, Sinai
bromide, a pesticide used in the .time. Those ·sessions are Thurssaid.
preparation of tobacco plant day, February 22 at ·7 p.m. or
In another report, the Fed said
beds became r.estricted. Some Friday, February 23, at 1 p.m. at
the utlltzatlon of manufacturing,
other products such as "Lasso" the University of Rio Grande. All
mining and utilities fell to 81.9
and "Biadex" commonly used In testing for private applicators
pertent ·or- capacity In January
who want certtltcation for the
from 83.1 percent in December, . row crop production have been first time and those who want to
with auto plants at the lowest designated as restricted use. add categories will b'e conducted
Recently, the EPA announced
operating levels since the 1982
by · the Ohio Department .of .
~he 11pproval of an atrazine
recession.
'
on Montlay, Febrll·
Agriculture
management . program. One of
"Vehicle manufacturers exary
26
from
1·7
p.m. (arrive by 6
tended their holiday shutdowns ·the provisions Is that Atrazlne be p.m.) at . the University, of Rio
given a restricted use classificato reduce excess inventorieS,"
tion beginning In the "1991" use Grande. All sessions will be held
the report said.
. ,
season. For these reasons, the In room 138 of the Davids
As with industrial production,
Technology Building on the Unlthe weather during the warmest Private Pesticide Application ' verslty of R)o Grande·Campus. If
Certification Program ·has be·
January on record was also a
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