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•.

.

Friday. December 28, 1990

.Por-r.-oy-,.Midclaport. Ohio

.....--People in the ·news----~_.;·~------, Tot survives .hours
1.-.
in snow, frigid cold .

I

By WJLLL\M C. TROTI'
Unttecl Press lateraallooal

MARLA '8 SECRET: Mad&amp; Maples is bel'ng coy about what
DoDald Trwnp gave her for Christmas but admits she's been
negligent in shopping !or hll11. "I'm a very bad friend," Maples
told the New York Dally News by phone from her hometown of ·
Dalton I Ga. "I'm
still looking. I haven't had a cbance to go outIt
'
and shop for him. He asked for only one. thing - happiness ..
Trump had been seen around New York recently in the
company of model Rllwanne Brewer but Maples didn't address·
that, instead dwelllng on the mystery gift Trum{l had given her~
• 'It's beautiful, very beautiful," ,she said without revealing what
it was. "I better nonalk about it, though. Well, it is ~piece of
·jewelry. It's very elegant and very beautiful and, oolj, I better
, !lOt say any more." Maples sald,Tvump had been to Georgia to .
visit her during the holidays and .that they 'Yould be taking a ·
. vacation together sometime soon.·
.
. BEST DRESSED, BEST ROBED,: There's a Persl~n Gulf
Influence on the annual best dressed list drawn up by the
Fashion Foundation· of America, Saudi Arabia's King Faud,
who wears tradiUonal Arab robes rather tfian Western suits,
made the list as well as Lt. Gen .. Norman Schwankojlf, who ·
spends most' of his time iii desert camouflage togs as'
commander of the U. S. forces in the Persian Gulf. The
. best-dressed list, chosen in a survey of custom tailors and
designers, also included secretary of State James Baker,
Connecticut GQv.-elect Lowell Welcker Jr,, Chicago Mayor

.

.

College basketball roundup

The year

A · alert and rambunctious at Child· 4

PITTSBURGH ( UPI) 3-year-old Wes(Vlrglnla girl who ren's Hospital in Pittsburgh,
went outside in her underwear on talking with nurses and shoWing
Christmas Eve to play In the ~lgns .of recovery. Doctors '!~~ ·
snow is recovering after her · . she was clinically .dead wlil!n..
heart stopped and her tempera- ·brought In and a combln~!tlon of
turefell to 7fdegrees.
quick cardiopulmonary resuscl·
Doctors at Children' s Hospital tatlon and . gradual ' warmlng of.
said Brittany Eichelberger .was her body saved Brittany's 1Ue
"It's the best Chrlstmaa.-.-- ·
.rna klng ·a m 1racu Ious recovery.
They estimate .the child was ent I've had in all my -years,'' .
exposed to the. cold · for . about . Robinson said. "I just can't tell ·.
three hours.
·
you how It feels." ·. · ,
Brittany's . body temperature
Hospital officials said it Is
was 7~ degrees - 24 l)elow unusual for someone to survive
normai - wl\en her parents such a !C'w .. body temper;JI~
found ·her · in the snow . on The 40-pound, 3-foot-tallgirlmay ·~
Cbrlstmas Eve morn(qg in . El· losethe tips ot some fingers and :
klns, W. Va., where the tempera· toes to frostbite but shows .mY ·
ture was 27. Thechlld had sllp~d signs ·of brain damage or other :
. ·' ·
l'
outside in her underclothes and medlc'al problems.
was about 10 yards from the front'
Brittany's parents sald.she fell ·
door of their traller home. ,ln ·. asleep Sunday night while watch· ;
Elkins.
lng cartoons on televlslon, They :
'
sllp~d a plllow under her head ,
Her
father;Steve
Robinson,
~1.
and
covered her with a blanket :
'
..
hisdaugh(er
face-up
on
the
·
but
in
the morning site was gone ;
found
I
.
.
,
fro~n grol!nd. Her skin was .and the front door was open.
·•
white, her lips were blue and her . "We think sh•Hehoff the porch ;
legs were · almost entirely co- and didn't know liow to get i
vered .with snow. She had no · back," sa.Jd her mother, Melinda :
Commissioner Robert Cole ruled
BELLEVUE, Wash. (UPI) that Johnson could visit Sosha on to, that the couple Intended all
pulse and was not breathing.
Eichelberger, 20. "She loves !he :
along to sell Sosha for research, · that the Peters had lied to
A couple tha,t sold dogs to their farm any time he wanted,
But by 'l'hursday, Brittany was snow."
Johnson when !hey told him they
laboratories for medical re· he carried her out to their pickup but pollee and prosecutors ad·
vised him that he had little wanted the dog for·a pet and ·h ad·
search was ordered Thursday to and said his goodbyes.
failed to tell him they were In the
chance to.win a legal action. He
pay $10,000 to a I'IU!n who gave
He never saw Sosha again.
animal procurement ·business. ·
them his mutt in the belle! they
His calls and letters to the decided that .if he pressed his
Cole said the lies and omissions
case and lost that it would orily
were going to give it a good home 'Peters went unanswered. John·
constituted
'·' outrageous and ex·
encourage
other
peo):lle
to
enter
· . son later !.earned that a dog of the
on a farm.
treme
conduct
which was di·
the
animal-procurement
'In 1986, Don Johnson rescued a
sanie breed and weight and llste(j
...
rec.ted
at
the,
plalantlff
personmlstreateddognamedSosha, but as Shasha was among the anlm· . business. 1
ally" and that . it
"caused
But in 1989 Johnson filed a
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The congressional appropriations." :
a few months later he realized his . als sold to the University of
plaintiff
to
suffer
severe
anxiety
'
complaint against .thl" Peters, ·
federal •goverriment bQasted . It it said.
job was lteeping him away from Wa~hihgton laboratories the
·
and
emotlm\al
distress"
for
"Nonetheless .... delays In : ·
who were doing business as M.R.
has sent states nearly $4.5 bllllon
· home so long that he was notable same week he had given her to
which they should pay him a total in anti-drug block grants since blOck grant fllndlng transfers ;
Services and The Pet
to take proper care of her.
the Peters. Sostia was put to
• of $10,000 in damage~.
·
1987 and claimed victory in have been sharply reduced since ,
Connection.
He put an ad In the local paper, death about two · weeks after
The Peters did not attend the unplugging o)lstacles that ha,ve 1987," the . report said, adding ;
At a hearlng Thursday, Sno·
and when a jovial middle-age Johnson gave her up.
delayed the flow of money '-to states nave improved thrlr dellv· .'
homlsh County Su~rlor Court •hearing.
couple named Donald and Judee
Johnson felt he had been lied
'
ery of funds to local projects.
·states.
.
Peters res ponded and prom Ised
"This report demonstrates :
However, the tJ .S. Conference
that more federal resources are :
of Mayors was unimpressed with
the report by the Office of reaching more . local antl•drug ,
National Drug Control Polley; programs, more quickly, each :
year. The federal· state·lQcal :
contending T)1ursdl\Y that the
measure after proddi'ng labor
The legislation protects em·
worried" about possible legal money is not making its .way to · partnership created by these .
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) ·'
. local go.verrurients, which are
Declaring it as the worker s&lt;l!ety and business leaders to com· ployees in San Francisco who challenges to the measure:
programs is working," Walters :
promise' qn. amendments that spend more than 50 percent of
Under the proposed , amelld- hearing the violent brunt of the
issue of the 1990s, Mayor Art
said.
\
•
will make the ordinance less their work hours in one week ·menTs, to be reviewed by city drlig crisis. · .
Agnos signed into law the na,
· ·
Rep: Charles RangJJ, D-N. Y.. :
costly for businesses and extend working at a VDT.
supervisors Jan . .3, the two-year · John Walters, acting director · chal'rman of the House select
tion's tougl!est video display
to
filur.years,
from
two;
the
time
.
deadline for compliance would of the Office of National Drug Committee on Narcotic Abuse
It requires employers to pro·
terminal safety legislation.
they would have to fully comply. vide .a djustable worl\stations and
be replaced with a three-step Control Polley presented the and Coniri:&gt;l, said. the report "is
Union leaders Thursday prom·
process that ~.:ould take as long as . results of a elgh,t-month .exami- . a poor substitute for the
!sed they now would turn the
\'This legislation, and the ac· chairs; sets minimum design
four years to complete.
battle for regulation of compucompanying am~ndments, will standards such as lighting and
government not being respon'
nation of the federal govern·
One . year from the effective ment's three large anti-drug slve'' to the drug-related Ills
' ters In the workplace to the state · insure that San Francisco's use of anti·glare screens; r~­
and federal arenas.
·
workers . are protected from qulres 15-minute alternative date of the ordinance, any new · block grants to states. The grants hitting cities. .
,
The San Francisco measure.
painful injuries in a way tha't work breaks after two hours of . equipment would have to comply are for law enforcement efforts,
"When it comes down to it, the · ·
which w!U take effect ln 30 days,
with the ordinance ..,
won't drive business out of the ·continuous VDT work, arid re·
front . line in the war is in our ;
distributed by the Justice De·
quires that workers are trained
Within two ·and one ha:Jf years, partment; treatmenl, dlstrlb·
affects 56,250 San Francisco
city," Agnos said.
.
urban communities," · Rangei .
workers in private businesses
VDT safety regu Ia lion "is the on health and safety concerns companies would have to up· uted by the Department of Health said. "This is the real war on
that employ more than 15 people.
'
grade old equipment to comply and Human services; al)d' prev· drugs, and the federal govern·
worker safety issue of the 1990s," associated with VDT use.
The
law
has
attracted
national
·
The figure does not include city
with the law. However, they ention, distributed by the Depart·
Agnos said.
.
men! is not fighting on this front.
workers, who are also affected.
attention
because
it
is
the
coun·
would not have to spend· more ments of Education and Health
Paul Vlracelij, a Servic~ Em·
So what are they bragging
The Jaw is intended to reduce
ployees International Union spo: try's only municipal ordinance .than $250 ~r work s ta tlon.
about~"
and Human Services.
regulating the use of computer
· the · risk of ailments caused by
Full compliance, regardless of • The report Said the three grant
kesman who pusped for the law.
.And Patrick Murphy of the
prolonged use of a computer
terminals in private business.
cost, would have to be completed programs hiiVe prm;lded nearly
said It is estimated the changes
u.s: Conference of ·Mayors
terminal. Medical problems
A 1988 Jaw enacted by Suffolk
in four years. The amendments $4.5 bllllon to state and local
mandated by the ordinance wlll
argued block ·grants "are not
have lnclud.ed eye strain, muscle
also exempt certain workers, anti-drug efforts since 1987 and
cost private business $14 mlllion County, N.Y., was struck down
being · allocated in ' the most
such as architects, who use that the annual funding level has · e·lfect!ve, most efficient . way"
fatigue and carpal tunnel synby a state court. which ruled such
over the next 30 months and
regulation was the business of
drome, an injury that can Inca·
computer·asslsted design terml· more than trlpiE!d since 1988 to because the money· is not trlc~
increase to $19 million to fully
pacltate
the
hand
;lild
that
often
state
or
f~eral
governments.
nals, and stockbrokers, who use ·$1.4 bill!Oh In 1991 .
comply
in
42
months.
•
kUng down to the cities. The
·
·
requires surgery.
San Francisco City Attorney
terminals to check stock pri~es.
The cost to the city is expected
conference has urged the federal
It also said federal block
Agnos agreeo,l to sign the .to be $23!,550, he said.
Lo·uise Renne said she is "not
grants to local projects "has government to funnel anti·· drug ·
become slgnl!lcantly more effl: money directly to cities.
"The states get the money and
elent , and timely" in recent ·
they use.ll for state purposes and
years.
to establish some regional proTwelve to 18 months could go grams, but very little gets te
by between the president's where the worst aspects of the
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The cerned that exposure to antlblo- lin and pen!clllln·related drug volved in the routine testing of budget request to Congress and drug problem is," Murphy said.
milk for residues.
tlcs, such as tetracyclines, may · products, the FDA said.
actual awards to states: And
government next year wlll begin
"I don't know of any indicator
collected
wlll
be
Information
delays
also are caused by state of how well we're doing other.
a nationwide program of testing ·cause humans to become resist·
Although the FDA has monl·
ant to the drugs, rendering. the tored that testing and has con· used in federal, state and local legal and fiscal requirements, than the murder rate, anq
milk for traces of drugs that
farmers use to treat sick cows, medicines ineffective.
dueled its own surveys, the new dairy farmer an!! industry educa· the report said. "And by far the murder is worsening in' the inner.
"We don't think the risk is program marks the first time the tion and compllance efforts, the longest delay in the process of city,,That's what the mayors are
the Food and Drug Adininlstra·
FDA said.
large enough to urge consumers agency has been directly In'
block grant expenditure involves saying," he said·.
tion announced.
The agency wU! randomly not to drfnk mllk," Lefferts said,
select five of 250 target locations "but we think it's an unnecessary
lri major "dairY states" to test risk" to allow any use of the
unpasteurized mllk, the FDA unapproved drugs.
While criticizing the scope of
said Thursday. Initially, testers
wllllook for the presence of eight the FDA program, Lefferts said
so-called "sui!~ drugs'' and three even n\ore thorough testing
would be ineffective unless the
tetracycline diugs.
.
"These drugs are of most FDA phases out its "extra labei
MOSCOW ( UPI) - India, · arriving. ·
concern because they have been drug policy," which allows vete·
"The Soviet Union has re·
which
has dlfflculty feeding and
widely misused," the FDA said rlnarlans to prescribe unap·
'celved
more than 17.000 tons of
'own
mlllions,
caring
for
its
in a statement. "As . newer proved drugs under some
Friday
joined
the
growing
list
of
medicines,
medical equipment
analytical ·methods become conditions.
food,"
. Tsarengorodtsev
and
nations sending relief aid to the
available, milk wlll be monitored
One of those conditions is a Soviet Union. '
said.
for addltlonal drugs."
determination that no residues of
Tass said the !lrst Indian aid
The of!lclal Tass news agency
While the FDA did not specify the drug be found in the mllk of
said a special Indian Air Force flight contained lndlvldually
which drugs it is targeting, most
treated cows, but Lefferts sai!l ' flight carrying 24 tons of medl·
packed food packed such as rice,
· . such drugs are not approved for
tests have not even been deve· cines and food landed at Mos· canned vegetables, milk powder
use In dairy cows and health
loped to detect many of the cow's Sheremetyevo Airport on and jam.
officials and consumer. groups drugs.
·
India's charge d'affaires Shrl
Friday in what. will be the first of
have raised concerns about the
The FDA s'ald It plans to widen a series of aid flights .
P.
K. Budwar received the relief
effect residues of the drugs might
Its random testing to include
supplles
and handed them over to
In
all,
at
l~ast
24
nations,
have on humans.
other drugs as technologies be- .Including Israel · and Sri. Lanka,
the
government's
humanitarian
Usa tefferts. a staff sclimtist
come avallable to do so.
have
sent
helptotheSov!etUnlon
aid
commlslon.
at the Center for Science in the
The FDA In Aprll said tests of
Tass said that India will send
. Public Interest, a Washington mllk samples collected in 14 . In a relief effort that is .
aircraft with rellef supplies to
consumer group, criticized the cities found trace levels of snowballlng.
limited sco~ of the F:DA ·sulfamethazine in three of 70
"Every day brings news of the different parts of the Soviet
Union througftout January.
program.
.
samples while 58 samples had arrival of aid supplies, and we
It also said that on Dec. 13
''SOtne testing is better than no
,traces of other unldentlfled sulfa decide in advance where they are Indian Ambassador H. E. Gon·
tes ling," Lefferts said, :'but drugs.
needed most of all," Soviet
,
tes dng five samples of mllk each
Deputy
Health Minister Alex· ·salves presented the chairman of
. Whlle the levels were too low to
week from five locations isn't pose a health ha;zard and indicate ander Tsarengorodt sev told the Supreme Soviet Anatoly
I:tikyanov With a check for an
enough. That's like staunching a abuse by dairy farmers is rare, Tass.
equivalent
of $16 tnllllqn toward
flood by handing out boxes of
Although MoScow's mayor and
the findings "nevertheless show
purchasing
medicines, medical
Kleenex."
that a few dairy farmers or deputy mayor and officials in equlpments and assistance from
~
'
.
veterinarians have improperly other cities have said there is no India.
Allergic reactions to drug
danger of famine, the aid keeps
residues in mllk are .the major used the drug," the FDA said at
concern· for humans, Lefferts , the time.
CA&gt;mplimcnr•ry cahha~e served wilh •ny meal New Year's Day
The FDA statement said the
said.
•
"Mllk Is the most common new testing program will '"add
t.
caull! of food aiJ!!rgy and in some another layer of protecllon for
consumers''
of
mllk.
products.
cases the reaction. m(lht not be
The new program; called the
the milk lt&amp;elf, but some residue
National
Drug Ri(sldue Milk
found In it," she said.
Monitoring
Program, wlll sup.
Tesll have also shown that one
sulfa drug, suJfamethazlne, can plement the customary, routine
cau&amp;e cancer in Jaboratol')' rats tests of raw and processed mHk
·and mice. Sul!onamldes can carried out by the states through
cau&amp;e allergic reactions in some the National Conference on Inter·
hunians. Experts are also con- state Milk Shipments for penlcll·
•

I

Richard Daly, men's fashion tycoon MortlmerLevll~. fl~an~!al
commentator Louis Rukeyser, Ed Bradley of CBS s 60
Minutes," real estate developerCbarlee Cohen and actor Eddie
Murphy. f'r'ank Slaalra and New York Mayor David ~nklns
were elevated to the fou11dation's Hall of Fashion Fame.
CRUISE INTO MAARlAGE AGAIN: Tom Cruise and Nicole
Kidman managed to pull Off a secret weddlngattendedon!yby a
few members of, their famU!es anc;I .DusUn Hoffman, Cruise's.
"Rain Man' • co-star, The wedding took·place Chrlstmas .Eve in ·
Colorado (Aspen accordhtg to . some reports, Telluride ·
according to others). Cruise. 28, divorced actf\!SS Mimi Rogers
earlier this year and soon took up with Kidman, 23, a red-headed
Australian who appeared· with him 1n ''Days of Thunder." The .
couple won't be able to take a honeymoon until Kidman llnlshes
filming "Bllly Bathgate."
.• · .
.
·,
GLIMPSES: Jeri')' Lewis wlll be lilducted into the
Broadcasting Hall &lt;if Fame Aprll17ln Las Vegas. The National
Association or Broadcasters, which also chose the late CBS
newsman DOugla!l Edwards for the hall, described Lewis as .
•;clearly one of the most effective fund-raisers In television
histol')'" beca)lse of his Labor Day telethons for muscular
dystrophy .research ... Singer Wayne Newton ~lllperform at the
Inauguration of California's new governor, Pele Wilson, as a
favor to an old classmate. Newton went to high school in North
Phoenix A,r\z. with Wllscin's wife. Gayle. Also scheduled to
appear ~t the jan. 6 ceremony in Sacramento are another pair
of celebrity Republicans, Charlton Heston and Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
·
·

75 cents

Sunday

Man wins $10~ooo damages·for dQg loss

Feds boast of funds'
for anti...Jrug grants ,

'

.

•
m

Holzer Medical Center

•

pictures

.On page BI ·

.

Breakfast Bar Open Mtdnight ~ 3 a.m. :

. ·~0·~

. BREAifASl' BAR \

I

Com~cs- ." ....... p .... ~ . .. . Insert
Classlfleds ... ,, ........ ; .. , 05-7
Deaths ................... ...... A4
Editorial , ........... .... _. .... A2
Farm. , .......... .... ..... . :.... Dl
Sports ..... . ;.......... ... ;.. C1·8

Buddy Bears:
200 emergency 'friends'
placed in Gallia: page A5

Showers and cooler weather
move in Sunday .

,.

Vol. 26 No. .44

Middeport-Pomeroy.,....Gllllipolis-Point Pleasant December 30 1990

Copyrighlld 1990

.

Bicentennial ·top .
By LEE ANN THOMPSON
and ·
MELINDA POWERS
Times-sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The year 1990
was and exeptional one in Gallia
County, when towns)ieople· wet:
corned the. Vice President and
was .the seat of state government
for a day.
.
. . .
The blceniennlaf of the found·
lng of Galllpolls provided a
number of significant news sto·

rles, ahd also brought statewide
attention to tM City of the Gauls,
situated on the Ohio River.
Vice Pre~ldent Dan Quayle visited Gallla Col!nty, and a new,
relocated U.S. Route 35 was
begun during 1990. In addition,
the governor of Ohio and its.
Supreme Court Justlcs visited
during the bicentennial year of
Gallipolls, as did . the Con$ul
General of France.
·.
Quayle ylslls
. .
It was an over~ast day Oct. 15

,

I

I

.

14 Soc:tlona. 108 Pagaa
A Multimedia InC. Newsj)ap,r

1990 Gallia Cot.lllly news

when Vice President Dan Quayle brief tour of the Bob Evans Farm
visited Ga!Ua County to stump Festival and unvelled the statue
for the Voinovich-DeW!neguber· La Vue Premiere as part of the
natorlal campaign. He was runGallipolis Bicentennial.
ning behind schedule, but the
Capital for a Day
people of Galllpolls and Rlo
The state came to Gall! polls for
Grande didn't · seem to n\lnd,
a day on Sept. 14, as Governor
patiently waiting for a glimpse of . Richard F. Celeste declared the
the Vice President of the Untied city Capital for a Day.
States.
Celeste and his cabinet
During his. whirlwind tour of
members met with townspeople
the area, the se-cond·ln·
ln. an open forum to answer the·
command attended a rally at the
public's questions aboui state
University of Rio Grande, took a

government and its pollcles.
They also fanned out across the
town to work with their local
counterparts in government.
· The skies threatened rain all
day; but Celeste said it would_
hold off untll afll!r the town
dlnne·r in the city park - and it
did. No sooner had the dinner
wound -down · than the skies
opened up and rained .
· S~prem,e Court
The Supreme Court of Ohio

held session in Gallipolis on April
18, with the justices taking over
the courtroom of Common Pleas
Judge Donald A. Cox. They heard
several cases, and briefed local'
s\udents on the inner workings of
the court.
It was quite an honor for the
city, as the court does not ieave
the confines of" Columbus trequimtly, and the event was the
flrsf of many to celebrate the
. (See BICENTENNIAL, on A5)

Gallla, landfill operator.reach:
agreement on ·future of facility
By MELINDA POWERS
Tlm~s.Sentlnel Staff

··s ends six
presentatlve of the sherl!f' s
GLENWOOD, W.Va, - A
department.
The passenger
Ravenswood woman is. in sta·
side
of
Shield's
car was then
ble condition and five others
struck
.
by
a
southbound
1989
were hospitalized after a two· ·
Chevrolet Can\aro, driven by
car accident Friday evening on
Tonya . Williamson , 18, of
West' V!tglnla Route , 2 in
·
.
Gall1polls.
Glenwood, just north of Cabilll
County. . . .
Susan M. Parsons, 27, of
According to Mason County
Ravenswood had to be cutout of
Sheriff's Department reports,
the Volkswagen by Valley Fire
Don 'C. Shields, 58, of RavensDepartment rescue workers
wood; was traveling north in a
using the "jaws of llfe" rescue
Volkswagen when he attemp·
tool. She was transported to St.
ted . to avoid an oncoming
Mary's Hospital where she was
pick p-up truck that had crossed
~;eported in stable condition in
the center line.
the Intensive care unit \vlth
Shields drove off the road,
facial and head injuries, acsteered back onto the roadway ,
cording to a hospital
but then lost control of his
spokesperson.
vehicle, said J.R. McCoy, reParsons' 6-year-oid son, Rl·

GA,LLIPOLlS - The Gallla
County Commissioners Friday
agreed to give future operations
of the Gallla County Jandflll to a
Columbus-based company after
more than two years of
deliberations.
Mid-American Waste Systems,
Inc, of Canal Wlnchesterw!Unow
run the landflll with a county
contract after o[lerating it since
sept. 1989 · ·without · such an
agreement. The two-year wait
for a contract approval had
begun to wear on the county's
relations with Mid-American.
Don Graves •. landflll o~ratlons

hospitals
chard W. Parsons, Jr., was
't aken to Pleasant Valley Hospl·
tal where he was reported in
stable condition Friday.
Shields and 2-year-old John E.
Shields, a passenger in his car,
were taken to St. Mary's
Hospltat where Shields · was
released and his son remains in
satisfactory condition.
Wllllamson was also treated
and· released from St. Mary's
emergency room Friday night.
Wllllamson's passenger, · Me·
Iissa Harbour, 18, of DeFuniak
Springs, Fla., was Us ted In good
~ondl!lon Saturday mortling.
Times-Sentinel photos by Amy
J. Leach

Community group seis future goals

director with Mid-American, ex·
analysis by Doug Briggs, solld
pressed some frustrations at
waste director. Theaddltion of.a
· Friday's meeting:
clay liner .u nder the faclllty and
"Today is Dec. 28. If we don't
scales to monitor daily intake are
have a decision by · Ja.n. 28,
some of the items that must bf
Mid-American wlll remove itself
added to be in compliance with
from ' · the premises," · (;raves
Ohio House Blll 592.
said. "I think two years is long
In accordance With the conenough." Commissioners Kall
tract, Mld-Amerlcan will provide
Burleson, Dan Notter. and
adequate space for free disposal
George. Pope concurred as they
of residential waste from Gallia·
passed the r~solution of intent
County, and wlll pay the CQunty
unan lmously.
,
$1 for every ton of out-of-county
Mld-Anierlcan will n(&gt;w absorb
waste brought In under 500 tons
the costs of bringing the Morgan
per day. Mid-American will pay
, Township (aclllty up to newOhlo $1.50 per ton of out-of-county
'E nvironmental Prote~tlon waste over 500 tons per day.
Agency standards - improve- · . Further action wlll be taken
ments that might have cost the pending finalization of 'the
county more than $7 million to do contract.
themselves, according to a cost

Meigs County .in stable shape,
Commissioner Jones declares

India joins list .
sending food aid

.

Buslnes......•..•... :•.•••••. Dl~ 8

'

I andmark VDT safety .law.signed.

., &lt;;&gt;.

Along the River ......... 81·8

Employee of the Year: p_age Dl

.

FDA announces :a. milk testing program

Inside:

· Bradbury chosen as ho8pital

·

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
dow displays in empty storefrol1t more, is what a stage or place for
Tlmes.Senlinel Staff
buildings to make a more attlllctive groups or bands to perform might
MIDDLEPORT • Goals for 1991 appearance and talce away the look help recapture.
The Chrisanas parade sponsored
were ' discussed at len$th when the of a declining economy
.
by
the group was discussed and cer·
Middleport Communtty. ~ocia- ·
Bob Gilmore, presidem, also
tificates
were awarded to the parade
lion met 'Thursday evemng m the proposed that a stage be built ·in
committee
consisting of Brian
M!ddlepon Village Council cham- · Pave Diles Parle and that some
JohnsQn,
·
chainnan,
Dr. Nick
...
weekly entertainment be brought in
~rs.
Robinson,
Ron
Raymond,
. Carol
Bob Fisher, Dan Arnold and to draw people into the village. He
Chuck Kitchen are on the goals alsa proposed that the entel'18in· Baker, and Dottie Turner. A certificommittee for the group which was . ment be on a night when stores are cate was also presented .to Emma
organized in late fall as a promo· open so .that people can have a dual Paugh, manager of Centtal Trust,
for use of the. drive-thro~gh at the
tiona! group for the village. That purpose in coming to town.
committee listed goals for 1991 of
He SUSjlested that merchants bank for Santa's distributiou of
improving the friendliness of might consider extending hours one candy due tO the inclement Weather
downtown, doing something to .fill night a week to encoura$e "at on the night of the parade.'
·Next meeting was set for Jill!. 31
the empty storefronts, repamng home" shoppin$ since as it ts now
at
5:30 p.m. at Village HaD. Gil·
sidewallcs in the. downtown' area, most people wtth money ·to shop
more,
haison between ihe new
and encouraging the village to tear are worlcing when stores are open.
grqup
and Middleport Village
down or force owners to raze H~ reftected on the days when the
dilapidaled houses.
·
.
village was • Saturday night town Council, Will discusSed the goals
It was suggested that merchants and shopping included a social out- and proposals with eouncil mem·
be encouiaged to use or set up win- · ing for "the family. 'That, said Gil- bers in January.
·

system, in tum making our area un- agencies, will have to· make a
By BRIAN J. REED .
. attractive for new·industry. As long dedicated effort to get small
Tlmes.Sentlnel Staff
as we have that, we aren't going to businesses located in the county in
POMEROY • "We're never in move forward ...
'the year ahead."
great shape, but we are in stable
Upon reflection. Jones sees the
Jones said, "We need jobs • ·not
shape," according· to Meigs County ·welfare. Ecooomic · development solid waste issue a topic that will
Commissioner Richard Jones, who creates jobs, jobs create taxes, taxes need to be continually addressed by
discussed the financial condition of · provide increased revenue, which the boanl of commissioners in
Meigs County for the year behind
.
in tum provide new and better ser- 1991.
and the year to come in a Friday vices for the people and that is
Meigs County, in J!l89, joined
morning interview.
Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson
what we need."
Across the board cuts in spend·
' "I'm encouraged by the and Vinton Counties in the. ·
ing will be required in . all county chamber of commerce and AGIUMV Solid Waste District, a
departments serVed by the county's
requirement under House Bill 592,
general fund for 1991, according to what appears to be their desire to which requires all ·counties in Ohio
spend
time
on
development
in
the
Jones, to accomodate rising costs to
county. I have thought for years to participate in such a district, in
county offices while maintaining
an attempt to control the garbage
the balanced budget that the ·Board that a full-time development direc- problem.
tor
has
been
needed,
and
this
board
of Commissioners maintains each
"I think it's a tremendous
has been wiUing to put money into
year.
.
· problem. I don't think the public
that area"
"Cenainly Meigs County has
The position. of full-time realiZes how serious this is and how
been more fonunaJe over the past development' director, hired by ·the much it's going to cost to solve it,"
few years in that we have been Meigs County Chamber of Com· Jones said.
able, through sound financial merce last week, Jones says, must
The consumer's. cost of traSh
management, to keep this county in immediaJely play a majo~ role in hauling services will certainly in·
the black," Jones said ou Friday. Meigs County's development pic· crease, Jones stated. ''Those cilst
"We have not had to ask our people ture.
increases are going to be staggering
for levies for local county opera· (See 1\IElGS, on A4)
''That director, working witli all
tion. We have been able to work
with what we have by controlling ·
our expenditures."
Those general lunds, which
provide operating monies for all
county offices (except for those
fu11ded by •levies, like the Tuber·
culosis omce, Meigs Board of
. Mental Retanlation and Developmental Dfsability, and Emergency
• Medical Services), are generated .
from property laXCS collected
with!n the county.
Increasing the· tax base in Meigs
County is seen by Jones as crucial
for the 'continuation of county-level .
services in Meigs County, and that
development, he says, wiD
probably coQ"IC from improvement
and expansion of the county's small
business climate.
"Develop!l)ent is sorely lacking:•,
Jones said Friday, "not only m
Meigs County but in all of
Southeastern Ohio,"
.
''That is brought about mostly by
a lack of highways and a lack of in·
terest on the part of state officials,
boih Democrat and Republican
alike, . oyer the last 20 years in
totally neglecting this part of the.
A GOOD YEAR.;_ U wun't a bad year for Melp ConOly, when.
state," Jones continued.
ever)1hing Is pul Into perspective. Melp County Commll81onet
"Meigs County," Jones exRichard Jones look ttme on Friday afteraoon to review the
plained, "has special problems be·
accomplllhrnenls of lhe counly and the offices the commission
cause we lack an ~~uate highway . overaeee.

------'

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

December 30. 1990

Commentary and perspective
iunhq

•

~imes- ientintl
· A Division of

•
.•.•
•

••

••
... .

.:.

~J25 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

....•...,.

.: :: .

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 99Z.2156

(614) 446-2342

~

• •

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

•

.•.
,.

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

•li:OBART WILSO!'I JR.
; jxecutlve Editor

...

::: A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press Assocla: ~on knd the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
; :; LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
,. ~Ong. AU letters are subject to editing and must j)estgned with name. address and
•tt€-Jephone number. No u·nslgned lEtters wUI be published. Letters should be In
_good taste, addressing lssues, .not personalities.

T'was the Christmas
Qf 1990, part 2

Iraq on or shortly after Jan. 15.
The Congress of the United
States, controlled by opponents
whO will most certainly try to lm·
peach Mr. Bush for going to war
without Is permission (see the
Constitution- Article I, ~tlon
8) If the attack falls altogether or
lags badly, seems to have been
the first to blink In Its eyeball-to·
eyeball confrontation with the
president.
Mr. Bush has offered the De·
mocratic leaders close consultatlon, and has Indicated that he
would welcome a congressional
resolutlon authorizing him to use
force against 1raq If necessary.
If he gets·the.latter, however (as
he may), the possibility of lm·
peachment will vanish. Preclsely for that reason, ·t herefore,
Democratic congressional strateglstswUI try Instead todonoth·

lng,andawalttheoutcomeofthe
war In the desert.
Congress and the president
have arrJvEid at their. respective
positions because they have both
reached the same conclusion
about the basic attitude of the
American people on the subject.
Mr. Bush has not lieen conslstent, or wholly persuasive, In
stating the grounds for war
agalnt Iraq. The need to prevent
Saddam Hussein from domina!lng Middle Eastern oil productlon Is not a legitimate "vltallnterest" of the United States, but
It Is easy for war protesters to
caricature 11 as "dying
for
Exxon., The need to deprive
Hussein on the potential capablllty to conduct nuclear. chemical ,
and/or biological
warfare Is

'

,..

By Fred W. Crow

·,, '

I

•

Page-A-2

,__Weal News in Brief:

December 30, 1990

Local drivers cited in crashes
GALLIPOLIS - A Bidwell man suffered minor Injuries
Friday In a one-car accident on State Route 141.
James E. Borders, 46, was not treated for his Injuries In the
accident In Green Township. According to a report from the
GalUa-Melgs post of the State Highway Patrol, Borders was
westbound when he apparently lost control of his car. His 1981
Oldsmobile Cutlass went off the left side of the roadway ,
striking a guardrail, two mailboxes and two trees before
coming to rest In a field.
-·
He was cited for failure to control and d.rlvlrig under the
lnfiuence.
.
A Crown City woman was cited tor failure to malntalp an
assured cle!lr distance ahead after an accident on State Route 7
near the Gallipolis Boat Club.
Kimberly J. Miller, 32, was cited after she failed to stop for
anqther car waltlng In traffic, driven· by Emmit Bostic, 65, of
Crown City, according to ;~ report from the G;llllpolls Pollee
Department.
·
·
Neither drive was Injured.

·
For Bush vs. Iraq, 'The die isBy casi'
Wil'liam A. Rusher

On July 10, 49 B.C., Julius Caesar led his troops across the little
Rubicon River, the boundary
between his province of Cisalpine Gaul and Italy proper.· The
latter was territory
directly
under the control or the Roman
Republic, and Caesar's Invasion
otlt was tllerefore an act of war.
His famous remark ar the time
- "The die Is cast" -Indicated
his recognition that now there
could be no turning back: He
would either wlnev erythlng, or
lose everything.
George Bush, contrary to all
the chatter about his allegedly
Indecisive personality, seems
about to embark on a gamble
equally bold. Ji'our hundred thousand Amelcan troops, armed
wllh every gadget that modern
science can suggest, are poised
to attack the armed forces of

By Fred Crow

' 'The following is a chronological
li-st.·of happenings from Dec. 16
tmough Dec. 26, 1990.
.

company were first class.
Monday, Dec. 24: I learned
something new: One ~r commercia! educated me that cb1ckens have
no lips. Strange that I did not notice
--Monday, De~. 17: Rain, rain ..
:..Tuesday, Dec. 18: More ram. this before. I got word from Dr.
U.R. Wright that 50 percent of all
Flood lhreatcning.
·Thursday, Dec. 20: Flood women have gizzards. Dr. Wright
waters stan to appear on road at stated that women with gizzards eat
Minersville - able to drive through. a lot of com. Ladies, ask your docWent with Frank Vaughan to see tor about your gizzard, especially if
Dr. •K. in Columbus for a checkup youeatcom.
on my eyes. Dr. K. told me lhat I . Monday evening, Christmas eve,
could still see after recent I attended Ted and Nancy Reed's
glaucoma operation.
party. I received an outslanding
Arrived back in Pomeroy at 3:30 present from Ted. It is a modem
p.m. Told that water had blocked OSU football player statuette mState Route 124 at Miilersville. Left scribed wilh 23 and the name ·
oTfice to go 10 Syracuse by way of "Crow, 1937." I gave an antique G.
S\i!{e Route· 7 and found this route Wildennuth brewery ~r boule
blOcked with floodwater. Had 10 and Ted a 14-karat gold .balhmb
return to Pomeroy and find another soap dish. Mostly Crows and Reeds
route to Syracuse. I returned 10 my presenL
'OfjiU for a camera and left my
I couldn't get Mayor Seyler his
k~y~ in the office door. When I four seats on the fifty-yard line for
rcrutned 10 the office, my keys the Chicago Bears game. Later I atweie missing from lhe door. Ques- tended a church service. Later, our
tibil: How to lock door and get 10 family and close friends exchanged
Syracuse?
Talked
10 Cathy gifts.
HELSINKI, Finland- ExciteBerkhimer and she stated that she
In addition to Ted's gift, I
ment
over glasnost and pereswould be my guide to Roy Jones received the 'following assortment
troika
stops at the coast of
Road 10 Syracuse. I followed her of gifts. Quite a few frogs (seven at
Finland
where the Finns aren't
through a maze of county roads to last count) - one waS a toilet bowl
assuming that their neighbor, the ·
my home. Some of lhe rnotonsts cleaner \\lith a frog handle. I will
wen: upset I was going too slowly. have to have ~ial insuuctions on Soviet Union. Is down and out.
The United States and the
1, w.ould never have been able to how to clean toilet bowls. You want
Soviet
Union have · signed an
fmd' my way wilhout Cathy. AI- to beL 2. A smoke alann to install
ambitious conventional arms reriv.ed at Syracuse at 9 p.m. com- in my hedroo!l), but I can't figure
duction agreement, but neutral
pletely e"hausted. The day was why. 3. I received a welcome sign,
Finland is buying more arms
hard-on "old Fred."
painted with a picture of a frog on than ever. Next year, defense
-.Friday, Dec. 21: Lady returned 1L The name "Crow" was also
spending In Finland will Increase
keys 10 office. Gave her reward for painted undemealh lhe frog. This
by 17 percent.
retllming keys. Her husband saw could cause some confusion. Is lhis
The Finns. In short, are taking
keys· in door and kept lhem for Mr. Frog living on Crow
no
chances.
slle·keeping. Attend office ~­ Boulevard, or is it Mr. Crow living
It
is Ironic because, for de·
Matty gifts exchanged. A good bme on Frog Boulevard? 4. A one-half
cades.
Finland has endured
was had by all, I hope. Agam ex- duck T-shin with the inscription
criticism
that It was the lackey of
hlllisted with excitement, etc.
"Not playing with a full due~."
Saturday, Dec. 22: Went to dog This made me wonder. 5. I was dis- its giant neighbor - the price It
track in CrosS Lanes with George appointed in no.t receiving a record- paid to keep from being forceas,irooe, Bob Wingen, l..arry Powell ing of Julia Child's recipes. If one bly annexed by the Soviet Union.
aild Todd Powell. George refuSed 10 is depressed, it malces you feel bet- The Finns have quietly resented,
get in lhe "consortium." George ter to hear Julia's voice. 6. A but seldom protested publicly,
njade a mistake as 10 what "consor- "moonie" to hang from rear win- their manipulation of the
tiUm" was . . "Too expensive," dow of my auwmobile. Moonie Kremlin.
From their point of view. the
drops pants when functioning
George said. Delightful day!
Finns
have maintained their
\:Yerrible news: friend called and properly. 7. A pair of beautiful InIndependence
and neutrality
s4Jd received call from Papa - Papa dian moccasins by a friend who
wllh
little
outside
help. It hasn't
made a terrible mist;lke - Mama stated that I looked like Siuing
been
easy
or
cheap.
For examhall received Cuddles' present and Bull. I appreciate lhe gift, but not
cllctdles got Mama's flannel the comment. 8. A booklet listing ple, the Soviets charged them
nl~htgown. Papa wanted my friend young women available for mar- $300 million for World War II
td tell him what 10 do. Friend told riage who live in Korea, South reparations, which they paid off
PaPa 10 get Cuddles' gift from Viemam, China and olher foreign over the years so they would not
· Mama. He was told by Mama that countries. The anonymous donor be economically beholden - to
it'' was too late • Cuddles' silk must lhink I'm having trouble. I do Moscow.
The Firms managed to make It
panties were hanging on lhe choo- not need any Oriental squaw.
through
the Cold War so successdelier. Friend told Papa 10 hang m
Wednesday, Dec. 26: Barbara,
fully
that
the end of It has thrown
tMre and remain near the phone Morgan and Carson brought
Finland
Into
a furious debate
and he would call him shortly.
Crockelt McKay Crow to my home
over
the
future.
·Friend called Preacher John. for brunch. I was pleased ' boy
The Soviet Un ton has long been
Friend was told by Preacher John 10 looks like a future athlete to me.
Finland's
major trading partner.
caij the first aid squad or 911.
Final summation: This past
Fnend called Papa - Mama Christmas season was hectic but The Soviets have raw materials
and the Finns have consumer
a~wered, "Too late, Papa's now in exciting, although there was an exthe'ltOSpital." Preacher John called cessive and premature playing of goods that are far better than
fr.iepd to get hack Mama's flannel commercials an.d carols. Rain, anything available Soviet Union.
Now the trade relationship Is In
nl)!htgown. Guess lhe ouu:ome???
flood, travel, and loss of keys - I
doubt.
, friend was in a quandary • won- nevertheless survived.
dered why Preacher J.ohn didn't gel
Perhaps next year we can get . For the last year, Finns have
tbii nightgown. EditOr's note: All Coach Earle Cooper to cbme to been engaged In a lively debate
nadles have been changed 10 Pomeroy and be our Santa Claus. about whether or not they should
PtuJCCI the innocent.
Nothing is impossible. My thought · join the European Community.
•:/iunday, Dec. 23: I attended an for lhe day is "all's well lhat ends Some Finns are nervous that
exgilisite Chrisanas pany hosted by well." I believe that !his has ~n their manufacturing economy
Rfll' and Ron Reynolds. The accomplished this past Christmas has grown lazy after years of
having the Soviet market handed
Clfrisunas table decorations, food, season.
••
to them on a platter. They're not
·
sure they could compete with the
revitalized Western Europe.
More , recently, another concern has emerged In F!nlan
about the survival of the Soviet
·~ay Is Sunday, Dec. 30, the 364th day of 1990 with one to follow.
Union. Finnish officials virtually
::rile moon Is wa"ing, moving toward Its full phase.· .
never comment In public on their
· The morning stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
foreign affairs, especially with
tlie evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
the Soviet Union. But In an
1'hose born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
Interview last September, Fintnelude British author Rudyard Kipling In 1865; Canadian economist
land's Prime Minister Harrl
anl:l humorist Stephen Leacock In 1869; Japan's World War II Prime
Holker! expressed grave doubts
M(nlster Hldekl Tojo In 1884; former Miss America Pageant master
about the Soviet Union . "If we
oh:eremonles Bert Parks In 1914 (age 76); rock 'n' roll pioneer Bo
leave these people (Soviets) to
otildley In 1928 (age 62); actor John Hlllerman In 1932 (age 58);
their own devices, todescrlbethe
former Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Sandy .Koufax In 1935 (age 55);
consequences as chaos Is perand two members of the pop group The Monkees, Mike Nesmith In
haps putting It mildly."
1942 (age 48) and Davy Jones In 1945 (age 45).
There has even been some
discussion about whether neutral
Qn this date In history:
.
Finland should join NATO. But
tn !853, the United States bought 45,000 square mUes of land along the prime mlnllster rules that
th~ Gila River from Mexico for $10 mllllon. The area Is now southern
out, for now. He believes neutralArlzona and New Mexico.
lly Is · the safest course If the

.
equally urgent, but seemed to
have been brought Into the Gulf
debate as an afterthought. "Deterrlng aggression" may be noble, ' but cannot, without more ,
become a permanent plank or U.
s. foreign policy In a voi!Uie
world.
Nevertheless, the American
people seem tohavea thOroughly
realistic view of Saddam HIIS·
seln as an adventurer who must
be· stopped, and punished, both
for his own misbehavior and as
an example to others. They remember VIetnam, however, and
they wantto be very sur.ethat the
coming battle In the Middle East
doesn't stretch out Into an endless nightmare like that fiasco.
They much prefer shOrt, overwhelming assaults, ,like Ronald
Reagan's bombardment of Trl·
poll and te Invasion of Grenada,
or Mr. Bush's equally brisk Invasion of Panama.
And that (on a larger scale, to
be sure) seems to be what Mr.
Bush believes he has arranged In
the Middle East. If all works out
as planned, Iraq will be destroyed as a military power and
Saddam Hussein will be deposed
or dead, In a matter of weeks, or
at most months. There simply
won't be time, or legitimate
grounds, for the usual "antl.wat
activists" to launch. an effective
campaign against the operation .
Once victory was achieved,
George Bush's ratings as a successful preslden t
would go
through the roof. The United
Stales would reaffirm Its status
as "the only superpower," and
could rearrange the world more
or less to suit Itself. No doubt we
would choose towork through the
United Nations whever possible,
simply out of courtesy. But there
would be no question about who
was calling the shots.
But .. .Impeachment, or total
triumph -what a gamble! :'The
die Is cast."

Bakery reports cash stolen
GALLIPOLIS - Several thousand dollars was stolen from a

Heiner's Bakery truck Thursday, according to a Gallipolis
Pollee Department report.
·
Timothy A. Scarberry, a driver for Heiner's, reported that he
believes a sandy-haired man In a small white vehicle took more
than $5,000 from the back of the truck Scarberry was driving at
SuperAmerlcan on Second Avenue. Scarberry stated In his
report that he had seen the white car follow him around town.
The Gallipolis Pollee Department Is currently Investigating
the Incident.

Subsidy payments made
to Gallia
.
.

GALLIPOLIS- Gall! a County's two school districts received
. $682,145.82 In the December -state subsidy payment. the state
auditor's office reported.
·
.
Gallipolis City Schools received $456,039,21, from which was
deducted $12,161.for school employee retirement and $61,042 for
teacher's retirement, resulting In a net payment of $382,836.21.
Gallla County Local Schools were awarded$194,738.79. Oflhat
amount, $21,564 was deducted for school employee retirement
and $78 589 for teacher's retirement. The net payment was
$94,585.
· The County Board of Education received a direct allotment of
$31,367.82. The net payment to the county was $477,422.

i9.

.

.

.,

CHECK PRESENTED • Faltb Dicke111, ri&amp;bt, assistant manaaer :I
at SuperAmerica in Pomeroy, preseated i check In tbe amount of. $237 10 tbe Meigs County Infirmary on Friday for use wherever.. , •
· needed. The money was ·raised through a shared project betweeq •
tbe Middleport and pomeroy SuperAmericas. Accepting tbe check :
Is Mary Lee, acting matron at tbe inlirmary.

School subsidy payment made
The December State School
Foundation Subsidy payment to
· Meigs County in basic educalion as
well as transportation allowances
totaled $820,670.40, according 10 a
report from lhe office of State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
The Eastern Local School District received a total of $150,482.~
wilh ·$5,488 being deducted for
school employees retirement and
$17,080 for state ~hers retirement leaving a net payment to the
district of $127,914.~.
The Meigs Local School District's total amount of basic and

Exhibit

Finland .in quandary over Soviet relations

...

foday in history:

----

•

,.

'

Soviet empire breaks apart.
"Even though Russia Is weak,"
he said, "It Is still sufficiently
strong to be a superpower" meaning It still has nuclear
weapons.
T)Je Finns cannot forget, as one
told us, that they have fought 60
wars with Russia - "and lost
every one.''
So they're upgrading · their
military, Including communications, commando forces, army
weaponry and the air force.
There are plans to buy 40 more
jet fighters and to Increase the
draft to keep troop numbers at
maximum strength, just In case.
NO BACK DOOR - President
Bush privately believes that no
matter what happens, he cannot

leave an escape route for Saddam Hussein to slip out and
remain In power. Bush does not
want Saddam left In a position to
Intimidate the oil sheik~oms with
ni!Ciear weapons. BusH r~cently .
announced that Saddam should
be able to test a· crude nuclear
device within a year. II will take
him a few more years to develop
full-fledged nuciear weapons.
His willingness to let international nuclear officials inspect
his nuclear facUlties is a ruse. All
of Iraq's. known enriched uranium was accounted for at those
facilities, but Intelligence sources say he ))as acquired more
under the table from Europe and
IS hiding it.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The to-

By Jack Anderson
·
and Dale Van A tta

CERTIFICATE WINNERS - Jan Brown, left, promotions
director of the Ga!Upoll8 Retail Merchants' Association, presented
gift cerllflcates to the winners of tbelr HoUday Shop-0-Rama.
Pictured with Brown.are winners, Faye Coughenour ($250); Patty .

bacco industry has announced
new measures to discour&amp;ge
children from taking·up smoking
before the .legal age of 18.
Apparently it's OK to endanger
the lives of adults, but not
children. Apparently the profits
of the Industry won't suffer too
much from the loss of its teen-age
customers. Apparently being a
·good corporate citizen will win
the industry more points than
selling to the kiddie set. Apparently the Industry is cultivating
enough victims in foreign countries that it can afiord to be
selfless at home.

Pfeifer wants November
ballot nullified
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Sen. Paul E. Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
has asked the Ohio Supreme
Court to overturn the election of
Sen. Lee Fisher as attorney
general because or "multiple
vlolatlpns of the law" In Mahonlng County.
.
Pfeifer claimed Mahonlng
County Democratic Chairman
Don L. Hanni worked to Intentionally swing votes to Fisher,
0-Cieveland, who beat Pfeifer by
1,234 votes out of 3.3 million cast

-Letters to the editor--------Ravenswood workers' holiday...
As a citizen or Meigs County
and a member of not only United
Steelworkers Union
but an
hourly employee of the Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation, I
have a matter I feel I should call
to the public's attention.
On November 1st of this year,
our employer, RAC, locked us
out when our contract expired.
This was bad enough as It affected not only us but our ramlUes as well. Then to add In suit to
Injury. and at Christmas time,
RAC decided to forget a tradition
for our children.
In previous years, RAC held
Christmas parties especially for
our chUdren and grandchildren.
The children greatly enjoyed

these parties and looked forward
to attending them year after
year wllh their parents or grandparents. But this year. due to the
contract dispute between RAC
and our union, RAC forgot the
children and no party was mentioned. How can young children
understand why this was done?
RAC evidently dldn'tforget their
salaried employees as a party at
Salt Fork Park In Cambridge,
Ohio was held for them.
The union realized the children
would be very
disappointed
without a Christmas party this
year and through the help of
many local businesses and the
use of their own money, they held
a. nice Christmas party for our

More about RAC and Christmas
Dear Editor:
Nearly 500 children or lockedout members of Local #5668 U.
S.W.A. of Ravenswood Aluminum were entertained
at ·a
Christmas party supplied by
businesses, ·companies, groups,
and Individuals of the Mid-Ohio
Valley. Tbe outpouring of concern, gifts, cash, food, and services were overwhelming. We
hope that you will help us express
our gratitude by printing this letter In your newspaper. The task
or thanking each one or dozens of
groups and huJI(Ireds of Individuals Is not posalble In our present ClrCUIIIItanCI!I, but they
must be recoplzed for provtdlna
such a wonderful celebration for
our children.
Lal'll! gifts of cash, food, and
toys, valued at more than
or
more were furnished · by over
twenty aourcea. A bank furnished hot doga with all the trlmmtnp for over 800 people and
Glno'a provided 40 pizzas. The
Coea-Cola ~pany furnllbed
beveraret and
·many otber
groups 111d Individuals helped

moo

· satisfy the appetites of the boys
and girls who attended. We are
grateful for their generosity.
We wish we could name all
tbuse who contributed gins and
cash. Over 150 groups and lnvldlduals would appear on that list
from West VIrginia: Ravenswood, New Haven, Mason, Pt.
Pleasant, Parkersburg, Ripley,
Belleville, Washington, Letart,
Mineral Wells, Lubeck, Larkmead, and Spencer. In Ohio we
found friends In Cheshire, Galli·
polls, Middleport, Racine, and
Pomeroy. In addition to food, en-·
tertalnment, and toys, we were
able to give children a five dollar
bill to use for Christmas shopping.
MI\Y God bless all those who
helped provide an unforgettable
Christmas party for our children. A thousand
Thanks!
MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A
HAPPY 11191 FOR US ALL.
Judith G. Cowan, Chairman
Chldren's Christmas Party
Committee
Local #:1668 U.S.W.A.
Ravenswood, WV. 261~

..

Sunday Timei-Senti1ei-Pege A-3

children. ·
People may say things against
unions, how they are violent and
cause trouble but It seems to me
that we are driven by heartless
acts to react In these ways. After
all we have to think of our fam Ilies. And I'm sure If you were In
.our shoes, In such a situation,
you'd do the same.
Me, I am In this situation and I
thank God for the union and all It
represents because when we
needed It, It was there for not
only us but our children. It kept a
lot of Innocent children !rom havlng an empty Christmas In a time
of uncertainty. I, as well as the
others caught up In this situation,
would greatly appreciate your
prayers for a speedy resolution
of this problem.
Thank you and God Bless.
Oscar T . Sw••·
33870 T.R . .tU5
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

(UIP SIUII)
Publllbe((each Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
Galllpdll. Ohio, by lheOido Valley Pub·
UatUna Company/Multimedia, Inc. Se-

colid elau JDtage paid at Galllpolll.
Ohio 45631. Entered as second claa

malllnl matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post

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·

Member: United Press International,

Inlnd Dally Press Alloclatlon and the .
OhloNewapaper Auoelatlon, National
Advertllbll R~r,omenrattve, Branham
N"'spaper Sa es, 733 Third Avenue,
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8UND!IY ONLY
StJJI8CIIJPTION II!ITE8
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One Week ............................ 70 Cents

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A job well done ...

The Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel wUI not be

reepan-fble for advance payments
made to carrl«t.
.

Dear Editor:
Now that. Christmas 1990 has
come and gone, because of the
caring attitude and generosity of
many Meigs and Gallla County
merchants, fraternal organizations and Individuals, 91 children
In our two counties realized their
dreams of Santa Claus. That Is
the number of children that this
agency was able to deliver
presents to this Christmas.
Our efforts were a resounding
success, soon behalf of the board
of !!I rectors, the staff and myself,
I would like to say many thanks
for the contrlbutlon or toys and
money to tlre- ·Gallla Meigs Community Action Agency that made
this Christmas such a success to
many children that would have
otherwise gone without. Thanks
for a job well done and for your
unselfish cooperation. Happy
New Year to all.
Sllloerely
Sid Bdwardl
Execullve Dlredor
Gallla Melp C:AI\

M!11L 8llii8CBIPftON8
....... , Oaly

On• Y.. r .................... , ............ $37.44
Slx month&amp; ............................... $19.50

I

,,

d

for ~he closest margin In Ohio
history.
"There were multiple violations of the law," Pfeifer said.
''Clearly there was an Intentional
effort to cheat and. where It's this
close, to steal an election.''
Pfeifer said Hanni "blatantly
violated Ohio law In order to
-manipulate , the election outcome, castlng a shadow of shame
on an otherwise proud tradition."
"The guy's graspln_g at
straws," Hanni said.
Pfeifer said torn and tattered
ballots, broken optical ballot
scanners and a "sawed-off"
· pencil concealed to alter paper
ballots played a role in "a pattern
of Intentional wrongful conduct."
Pfeifer also said that his name
and Fisher's were not properly
rotated on Mahonl!lg County
ballots so that Fisher's name
appeared on top 13,533 more
times thal'dld Pfe!fers.
Fisher won Mahonlng County
with 57,726 votes to 37.143 to
Pfeifer.
"The whole thing Is pretty
outrageous," said Fisher cam·
palgn manager Kent Markus.
"As far ·as secret sawed-off
pencils, I think we're looking for
conspiracies where there aren't
any. There's lots of Innuendo in
here, and the burden of proof Is
on them."
·
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer
said he would announce Wednesday whether he would hear the
challenge himself or assign
another justice. Moyer said It
would take 20 to 30 days to decide
the case.
State elections officials called
the court action very rare at the
state level.
Don McTigue, elections counsel to the secretary of state, said
he could not recall the last time
there was a s tatewlde court flUng
contestlng 'an election.

White ($1,000) and Chip Young ($500). The gilt cerllflcates may be
redeemed at participating Merchants' Association members,
Brown said.

Sheriff investigates accidents
POMEROY • A Rutland man of Racine.
was cited to Meigs County Court
Haggy's 1987 Mercury and
following a two car accident near Shreve's 1989 Ford were hoth
Syracuse on Friday afternoon.
heavily damaged. Shreve and two
· According 10 Meigs County passengers in her car, Jasper
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Haggy, · Bonecutter and I oyce Farley, were
who was eastbound on State Route bolh transported to Vete~s
124, went off the roadway on the Memorial Hospital by Racme
right, lost control of his vehicle and . squads. Bonecutter and Farley were
started sliding hack across the cen: treated and released, and Shreve
terline. He then went off the was · examined before being
roadway on the left, struck an em- released, as well.
·
bankment, bounced baclc on the
The Syiacuse fire department.
roadway . and struck a westbound also responded.
vehicle driven by Della M. Shreve

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
FRIDAY
ADMISSIONS
Richard Finlaw, Pomeroy; Ernestine Williams, Rutland; and Charles
McKown, Racine.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES _ Goldie Lawson, Perry Hughes, Kenneth Green, and Lena Baxter.

o~ns

Ohio University's College of
Fine Arts and School of Art will
preSent lUI exhibit of drawings,
paintings and prints by Professor
Emeritus of Art Donald Robens in
Seigfreid Gallery on the Athens
campus, Jan. 7-25.
.
The exhibit will open on Monday, Jan. 7, with a public reception
for the artist from 7 · to 10 p.m.
Thereafter, gallery ·hours are from
I 0 a.m 10 4 pm. Monday through
Friday.
Roberts will show works completed between 1983 and 1990 and
describes them as "works that ~­
plore the inner qualities of nalure
and the artist's subconscioqs."
Many of the drllwings were com-

at

oy ·:

pleted in Roberts' swdio on an iS: :
land off the coast of Maine and
reflect the inlluence of that enr
vironmenl
' :
The artist's work has been jn=.
eluded in numerous national amf ill;
temational exhibitions, . and his ;
paintings. prints and drawings cari .
be found in public and private collections in the United States and .
abroad.

Accident
investigated,

EMS Runs

POMEROY - Seven calls for as·
sislance were ooswered by units of
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services on Friday ood early on·
Saturday.
·
At 9:07 a.m., Syracuse squad
was called to State Route 124 for
Ella Quillen, who was transponed
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
10:45 p.m., Olive Thwnship Fire
Deparanent responded to Bigley
Ridge Road for an electrical
problem at lhe Young residence.
At 1:14 p.m., Rutland squad
went 10 Slate Route 124 Welt for
Ernestine Wlllilml, who WIS
Walter Schartigcr, Middleport transported to Vetclllll. At 3:20
was arrested on Friday night on a Syrll:use fire depanmentllld squad
charge of domestic violence. Ac· and Racine squad went to Slate
cording to the Meigs County Route 124 in Minersville .for a
Sheriff's Department, Schartiger is motor vehicle accident, and
being housed in lhe Meigs County transported Joyce Farley, Della
Jail pending a hearing in Meigs Shrieve, and Jasper Bonecutter 10
County Court.
VeterBns Memorial Hospital. At
7:12 p.m., Middleport squad went
to Short Fourth Street for Gayle
Miller, who was transported 10
Veterans Memorial. At 8:05 p.m.,
Pomeroy squad went 10 Lil\coln
Hill for Dan Morris, who was taken
to HMC. AI 12:21 a.m., Middleport
squad went to the police depart·
ment for Charles Walker, Jr., who
was transported 10 Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Schartiger arrested

UALITY

US RT. 35. HENDERSON. WV
PHONE (304) 675-1948 • 762·2789

Best Prfee.s Por Veneer Lois
And .,.,..,., Timlin
TRY OUR BUYERS:
'
LEE STARKEY a CHARLES CLELAND

,,

'

·~

'

transporation
allowances
was
$463,341.56 less $14,887 for
school employees retirement and
$53,687 for state teachers retire-.
ment, with a net payment to the dis' ·
trict of $394,767.56.
The Southern Local School Dis·
trict received $165,087.26 less
$7,114 for school employees :
retilement and $23,628 for state
teachers retirement leavin$ a net"
payment to the distnct or.:
$134,345.26.
..
The direct allotment to !he ·
county board was $41,758.74. . ..

'

CARDINAL

DRY CLEANERS
OHIO RIVER PLAZA

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GALLIPOUS-MIDDUPOD•POMEIOY AliAS
SWEATII CUANED FIR w/SJO otDEI ·
Pickup &amp; Delivery o•y- Call Today
446-9495
Eap. 12/31/IQ

�NEWARK, N.J . (UPI) - A Rhode Island native's New
England accent led to his arrest as a N'ew Jersey bank robbery
suspect, pollee said.
Russell Sweet, 32, who moved to New Jersey In 1989, was
piCked up Friday as he left a Parsippany-Troy Hills apartment
to clean the snow off his car. A federal magistrate in Newark.
ordered him held without ball.
Morris County Prosecutor Michael Murphy said the
Investigators began targeting recent . arrivals !tom New
England after someone cal)ed In false crime reports to police
before two robberies In August and October. The caller spoke in
the R-iess, "pahked my cah" tones of Massachusetts and
surrounding slates.
·
Detectives believe the suspect was almost arres ted.durlng a
July holdup when pollee responded quickly to an alarm and
decided to send pollee to locations some distance away from hls
target banks.
Sweet faces up to 20 years in prison If convicted of all charges.
He has been charged with two holdups.
Pollee seized a pellet gun resembling a .22-callber pistol and a

NEW YORK (UPI) - Time
magazine named '"The Two
George Bushes" as Its annual
Man of the Year, noting In Its
announcement Saturday that he
"seemed almost to be two
presidents."
''One was a foreign policy
, profile that was a study In
resoluteness and mastery, the
other a domestic visage just as
strongly marked by wavering
and C9nfuslon,'" the news maga.
zl ne said· In the cover story of Its
Jan. 7 issue, due on newsstands
Monday.
The cover c arrled the headline ·
"Men of the Year"· rather than
Man of the Year, and a Janus·like
portrait made up of two photographs of the president was
captioned "The Two George
Bushes."

The publication's choice ol the
person ''who, for better or worse,
has had the most Impact on the
year's events'' was announced at
a news conference at the TimeLife editorial offices. Last year's
choice WI!S Soviet Union leader
Mikhail Gorbachev.
The two faces of Bush, Time
sald, "were not just different but
also had . few features ln

common."
The magazine praised Bush for
"midWifing" a new world order
that has had a decidedly favora·
ble ·i mpact on the course of
events. In painfully sharp con·
trast, Bush has affected domestic news decidedly for the worse,
lt said.
"What could have been more
baflling, at times ludicrous, than

Bush's performance on taxes?''
It asked. "His domestic policy, to
the extent he has one, has been to
leave things alone until he could
no longer avoid taking action."
Time explained Bush's split
personality Image' as partly a
matter of ln~rest.
"Global diplomacy Is what he
has trained for and what absorbs
him; domestic mat~rs are just
not as much tun,'" It reported.
"But It Is· also that he has
mastered a technique of policy
formation- hatching backstage
deals with a small group of
leaders whose confidence he has
carefully cultivated over the
years- that works better abroad
than at home. '"
The Man of the Year edition
also carried an Interview with
Bush In which he blames the

Iraq says it is defmite: 'We won't go'
Voinovich'
·0f smay
ke. S see .
Ouster
Y
........,.....""""'" ..""'"""'~ro""'"'k

By GAYLE YOUNG
New Yea.r's holiday .visit with
United Press International
troops In Saudi. Arabia.
Iraq again Indicated SatUrday
K11walt's exiled crown prince
it would not withdraw from
said Saturday there is little hope
Kuwait by a Jan. 15 deadline,
that the gulf crisis will be solved
case.
saying the Idea of withdrawal
politically by Jan. 15.
·. ,It is very possible thai we
was only contemplated by oevll
The Kuwaiti prince, Sheikh
may. seek Mr. Sykes' resignation
forces and that the Iraqi people "Sa ad AI Abdullah Al Sa bah, said
or termination," Steiner said.
believe the tiny all-rich emirate .Kuwait's exiled government
Franklin County Municipal
is a province of Iraq.
would not accept any com prom·
Court Judge Deborah D. Pryce
The ruling Revolutionary Comlse proposal with Iraq that called
found Sykes gutlty of the ethics
mand Councll, after a meeting for the surrender of power or
violation and fined him $1,000 on
attended by President Saddam
territory.
Dec, 19. She suspended a 30-day
Hussein,issuedal)riefstatement
BritishArmedForcesMlntster
jail sen~nce but ordered Sykes
saying "the idea ofwithdrawalls Archie Hamnton said In an
to perform 40 hours of commun- · only In the minds of those who Interview with the British Broad·
lty service.
·
Intend to do evll," Cairo radio casting Corp. that Britain. had
Sykes says he cannot comment
reported..
begun to prepare for an unconon the order or his status until he
"All IraqiS believe Kuwait Is ventional war of chemicals artd
talks with his attorney, Alex
Iraq's ·19th province," the radio blolglcal agents, stockpiling .
Shumate, who was out of town
quoted the statement as saying.
medicine for the possible lnnocuthis week.
The statement echoed earlier latlon of troops.
"I will need to talk to him about
comments by Saddam, who has
The Pentagon in Washington
everything," said Sykes.
maintained In television Inter- said Friday· it would begin
Celes~ had indicated earlier
views that Baghdad will not bow lnnoculatlng some troops ln the
that the violations were more of
to demands It withdraw from region against biological weaan oversight.
Kuwait by Jan. 15.
.
pons that Intelligence sources
However, Steiner said Voino·
The United Nations has give belleveSaddamhastheabllltyto
vlch does not see it that way.
Iraq until Jan . 15 to withdraw Its use.
"The allegations against Mr.
"It's very difficult to have a
troops from Kuwait: which It
Sykes are 'lery serious, and the
Invaded Aug. 2, or possibly be clear idea what his biological
misdemeanor he was found
forced out by U.S.-. led multlna· capability Is," Hamilton said.
guilty of Is a ·very serious
tlonal troops ln the region.
''There have been stories around
· misdemeanor." Steiner said.
With less than three weeks to for awhile, and therefore as a
go and no lndlcatla·n Iraq will precaution we started ordering
abide by the deadline, countries large numbers of vaccines and so
Involved In the 5-month·old crisis forth, and we are now In a
seemed to be preparing for anew position to use these."
war In the new year.
Hamilton warned Iraq would
ABrltisholflcialwarn"edSaturface
severe retaliation If it used
In the week had put a crimp In
day
that
Saddam
would
lace
the
weapons
In a war, echoing
operations at other airports.
massive
retaliation
lf
he
used
earlier
warn.
i
ngs
from the United
Temperatures wer~ well below
biological
or
chemical
weapons,
States.
·
zero In the northern Unl~d
while an Egyptian defense olfl·
"I believe If he's going to use
States, and the wind made the air
cial
said
Iraq's
ability
to
launch
.
weapons
.of mass destruction It's
seem even . colder. pne small
chemical
war
is
limited.
got
to
be
made very clear. to him
Minnesota town lost its electrical
Meanwhile, 17 ships In one of that hewlllhavemasslveretalla·
pow,er late ·Friday and some
the
largest U.S. Naval deploy- tlon and I think 'e verything
people spent the night trying to
ments
since the Vietnam war should be 'done to deter him from
keep warm.
.
salted
toward
the gulf Saturday, using any of these weapons at
"They're coping pretty good,"
and
VIce
President
Dan Quayle all," the British mlnls~r said.
"Big Stone County sheriff's diswas
to
head
to
the
region
for a
British officials have said
patcher Lonnie MOen said of
residents In the town of Ortonville. ''Some of them are down to
40 or 50 degrees in their houses."
The "Arctic Express" blew
into Washington state Friday,
bringing 6 Inches of snow and
knocking out power to 100,000
customers Its western sector.
Temperatures dipped Into the
teens early Saturday In Seattle. ·
Readings In the 20s had been
forecast In central California's
San Joaquin Valley. heart of the
state's agricultural Industry, but
the Icy blast seemed less severe
than expected. Low temperatures at 7 a.m. were 30 In
Bakersfield, 29 In Sacramento,
and 32 in Salinas.
.
Robert Krau~r. a spokesman
lor the California· Farm Bureau,
This beautiful double monument is of autumn rose
said Friday the cold weather
1ranlte.
earlier this month represented
the worst freeze to hit the state
since the 1936-37 growing season.
The state has yet to provide an
POIEROY .OHIO
VIIITOI, OHIO
estimate on losses to California's
$8-blllion-a-year fruit and veget•. lailsu.t
l'o••lason Bridp
able crop. However, some ex·
112-2511
per Is have said the damage could
reach Sl billion.
"The prices for navel oranges
has already doubled on the
wholesale market, and It could
triple (as a result) , " Krauter
said. ''With the severity of
damage, prices have been fairly
quick to react."
Krauter said the freeze was
par.ticularly Ill-timed this year
since the orange crop was late In
maturing, partily because ol the
EQUIPMENT· SALES· RENTALS· REPAIRS
state's four-year drought.

Cold air chills
West
.
.
By United Press International
More cold air poured Into tlie
West Saturday, threatening to
add to the damage from a freeze
earlier this month in California
that experts say will drive \IP
fruit and vege\able prices across
,the country.
Air traltlc was delayed badly
because of fog that socked In
Atlanta's airport lor the second
time In a week. Snowfall earlier

Meigs ...
(From MEIGS, on Al)
. as much as lhree or four times
wllat !hey are now."
.
DeSpile !he problems facing the
county in "1991, Jones claims many
viciOries for the board in the year
past.
The new Department of Human
Services facility, expecled to be
compleled in late 1991, is a source
of pride for !hose involved, both in
county government, and in the
DHS.
The cost of the project, which
will provide a lhree-story addition
to the depanmenl's -Middlepon
headquanus, will cost over a million dollars - paid by the stale.
1be commissioners are also
planning ·major renovation projects
m the historic Meigs · County
Courthouse - in !he offices of the
Probate Coun, the Auditor's office
and !he Recorder's office.
These plans, according to Jones,
are a continuation of the board's
plans 10 renovate portions of the
courthouse each year.
The Meigs County Highway
Depanment also performed to the
commissioners' satisfaction ibis
year.
,.
"''m extremely pleased with the
policies of the Meigs County
Highway Department," Jones .said.
"Anybody wbo drives on the roads
that have been blacktopped in the
last few years will agree with !hal"
Jones said that at least 15 miles
have reen blacktopped with hot
mix during !he past summer.

MEMO
NOnCE TO PRESENT,
PAST, AND FUME
HOLZER HEAlTH
CENTEI . . .IS
Hollll' lllaltlt Center
pulllk n.au luJiulp r1t11
wil incna11 lliPtly
... Jan•ry 1, 1991.

. lnnoculatlons of British troops in
the gulf will begin "shortly,"
following official statements that
U.S. !Of!!es would begin vacclnalions soon.
Egypt's former defense mints·
ter, Lt . Gen. Abdel Halim Abu
Ghazale, told the BBC Arable
service Saturday that Iraq's
ability to launch chemical we a·
pons via conventlal missiles was
limited, as was Its ablllty to
attack IsraeL
Saddam said earlier this week
lt_wa~; broke out In the region , the
Israel! city of Tel Aviv would he
his first target.
"Iraqi missiles are not accurate and are not long range
eriough," said Abu Ghazale, who
Is now a senior aide to Egyptian
President Hosnl Mubarak.
Egypt Saturday renewed Its
call for Saddam to withdraw
from Kuwait, which It occupied
Aug. 2, saying ,to do so would be
an act of courage.
More than 16,000 U.S. Navy
personnel said somber goodbyes
Friday and headed for the gulf
regton with two Aircraft carrl·
ers, which lead the 17 .ships
joining Operation Desert Shield.
Families gathered under gray

;:

skies at the COt&lt;ntry's largest
Navy base, in Norfolk, VIrginia.
tearfully waving farewell and
expressing their concerns about
young men and women leaving
under the threat of war.
"I don't trust anybody in this. I
don't trust our side and I don't
trust theirs," said · Sharon
Decker. ''I don't think we're
going to get out of this without
body bags. "
Quayle is to arrive ln Saudi
Arabia Sunday . The American
vice president. who has been
criticized for not serving In
Vietnam, wlll spend the New
Year's holiday with U.S. troops.

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24866 St. lt. 7 South
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1

Russell Fillinger

Emest Kems

GALLIPOLIS- Russell Flllln·
ger, 69, ill I.,lncoln Pike, Gallipolis, died Saturday, December 29,
1990 In Veterans Administration
Hospltal'ln Huntington, W.Va. He
was a retired farmer and a World
War II Army v~teran.
Born July 1 31, 1921 In Gallla
county, he was a son of the late
Ferry Fillinger and EmUy Sanders Fillinger.
He is survived by a foster son,
Billy Myers at home; three
brothers, Edward Fillinger of
Orient, Ohio, Ferry Flllinger Jr.
of Columbus, and Floyd Fi llln~er
of Crown City; five sisters, Mrs.
Paul (Francis) VanPelt and Mrs.
James (Viola) Slone of Galllpo·
lis, Mrs. Eugene (Janie) Gladman of Columbus, Mrs. Glenn
(Bonnie) Rose of Worthington,
and Mrs. Helen Brown of Athens,
Ohio.
,
He was preceded In death by a
brother and a siS~r.
Graveside services will be
Monday, 2 p.m. at Ridge lawn
Cemetery In Mercerville, the
Rev. Alfred Holley officiating.
Friends may call at Willis
Funeral Home Sunday, 6 to 9
p.m.

MORGANTOWN, W.VL
MI, · formerly of Hartford, died
Friday, Dec. 28, 1990, at the River· Lenora Katherine Murray. 77,
Morgantown, W.Va., formerly of
side Hospital in Trenron, MI.
Dec. 11. 1904 in Hartford, Middleport, died Friday Dec. 28,
he was !he son of the late John and 1990 at her home.
She was born in Pomeroy on
Nora (Johnson) Kerns. He was also
preceded in death by his wife, Alice July 3, 1913, the daughter of the
late Elmer and Alma Zweifel Diehl.
M. Kerns. .
.
She was a homemaker, a memKerns was a ·production wortcer
for the Great Lake Steel Corpora- ber of the.Trinity United Methodist

Lenora K. Murray

Ernest Kerns, 86, of Wyandott,

aom

Church in Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
tion.
·
·
Surviving are five daughterS, and a member of Evangeline ChapClarice Kerns, Mary Kerns, Mar- ter of OES. She was active in
cella Sladewski and Norma Mul- community affairs·when residing in
lins, aU of Wyandott, MI and Bon- Middleport.
She is survived by her husband,
nie Fields of New Haven, 10
Charles
0. Murray of Morgantown;
grandchildren, ·
25
greatC.
Kenneth (Sharon) Murray
a
son,
grandchildren and five great-great
of
Morgantown;
a sister, Pauline
grandchildren.
.
Spencer,
Vincent,
Ohio; three
Service will be at 3 p.m., Dec.
grandsons,
Todd
of
Kinston,
N.C.,
31, 1990, at the New Haven First
and
Grant
and
Scott,
both
of
MorChurch of God with the Rev. Dave
gantown.
Fields, Jr. officiating. Burial will
Serviees will be Monday at 10
follow in the Graham Cemetery.
a.m.
at Fisher FW1eral Home in
Friends may caD at the church
Middlepoit,
with Rev. Sleven DQrone hour prior to !he service.
sey
officiating.
Burial will he in
Arrangements \lfC being handled
Riverview
t:;emetery.
by the Foglesong Funeral Home.
· Friends may call at !he funeral
home today from 7 to 9 p.m.
Franklin L. Nicinsky
Memorial contributions may be
made
to the West Yuginia Chapler
CHAPMANVILLE, W.Va.
of
!he
American
Heart Association.
Franklin Louie Niclnsky, 51,
Covert Branch Road, ChapmanFreeda Hall
ville, died Friday at Charleston
Area Medical Center Memorial
Freeda L. Hall, 71, of Point
Division following a lengthy George 0. Smith
Pleasant, died Friday, Dec. 28,
lllness .
1990 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Feb. 9, 1939, at Omar,
POMEROY • George 0. Smith,
Born Oct. 15, 1919 in Point
W.Va. , son of the late John 49, of Pickerington, formerly of
Pleasant, she .was the daughter of
Nlclnsky, he was retired from the Pomeroy, died Thursday, Dec. 2_7,
the late Jolm and Clara (Reedy)
Omar Mining Co. at Madison,
1990 at Mount CarmeI Hospu al
Hannon. She was preceded in death
W.Va., and ·was a member of East, Columbus.
.
.
by a grandson and her .husband,
United Mine Workers Local5925. · . An Air Force veleran, Mr. Smith
Pearl Hall.
Surviving are his mother, Eva was 'a .member of the Telephone
She was a member of the First
Vujaklija Nlclnsky of Chapman- Pioneers;
Church of Nazarene and a retired
ville; four sisters, Mildred MayHe is survived by his parents,
housekeeper from Lakin Stale
nard of Chapmanville, Dorothy Melvin and Olive Smith, Pomeroy;
Hospital.
Keevlll of Susquehanna, Pa., a daughter, Kim and _her husband,
Surviving are one daughter Opal
Mary Jane Talbott of Tuppers Mike Appel~ Columbus; and a son,
Steams of Point Pleasant; one son,
Plains, and Sylvia Ann Donohue Steve Smith, Colwnbus.
Charles "Pete" Harmon of Henderof Cumberland Gap, Tenn.; a
,Also surviving are a brother,
son· five sisters, Ruth H. YoWlg and
brother, John Nlclnsky of Ru· Donald Smith, Grand Rapids,
Elsie Meeks, both of Gallipolis,
!land; and several nieces and Mich,; and two sisterS, Thelma
Ohio· Clara Belle VanDyne andEsSmith, Reedsville, and Barbara
nephews.
ter Brlght, both of ZanesviliC, Ohio
He was also preceded in death Bums, Logan. He was preceded in
and Edna Beman of GaUipolis Ferby a.brother, George Nlcinsky, in death by a brother, William Smith.
ry· one brother, Clarence Hannon . 1989.
Friends may call at the
of Ft.
Myers,
Fl.;
eight
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday
5360
grandchildren and 20 great- · In the Evans Funeral Home, East Livingston Ave., Columbus,
Schoedinger East Chapel,
grandchildren.
Chapmanville, with the Rev. today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Service will be at 2 p.m., Sun·
Funeral services will be held at
James Lucas officiating. Burial
day Dec. 30, 1990 at !he First
11
a.m. Monday at !he Chapel with
will be in Forest Lawn Cemetery,
Ch.irch of !he Nazarene with the
the
Rev. Richard Ellsworth officiatPecks Mill, W.Va . .Friends may
Rev. Larry Bums officiating. Burial
call at the funeral home from 6-9 ing. In1ernrnent will be in Glen
Rest Cemetery, Reynoldsburg.
will follow in the Zerlcle Cemetery.
p.m. Sunday.
Friends may call from 7 p.m. to
Contributions may be made to
In lieu of flowers, donations
9 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 29, 1990
may be made to the American !he Colwnbus Cancer Clinic, 65
Ceramic Drive, Columbus, 43214.
at the Wilcoxen. FWleral Home.
Heart Association. '

,,

process. Desert Shield
Their photographs and ad·
dresses filled two cQlllplete
pages of the December 2 Issue of
the Sunday Times-Sentinel- the
local men and women of Operation Desert Shield.
Gallla and Meigs Counties
have contributed greatly to the
overseas eUort, sending nearly
100 of Its young men and women,
active and reserve duty, to the
Middle East to stop Saddarn
Hussein's occupation of Kuwait.
While It Is not a local event, the
sheer number of lives lt Impacts
ranks it among the top stories of .
h
t e Year.
· .
.
Bob Evans plant fire
Touching the lives of more than
30 families, the Bob Evans
Sausage· plant on Texas . Road
burned, leaving employees
wondering about their job status.
The Dec. 14 fire destroyed the
building and its contents, and
corporate officials have sent the
employees to other packaging
facilities for the time being. It Is
uncertain whether the plant wlll
be rebuilt in Gallia County.
flooding
., December brought record
heavy nlins, and consequently, ·
flooding. Several county · roads

were underwater.,.· school was
dismissed and those living along
the Ohio River anxiously
watched the water levels, mak·
lng frequent calls to the National
Weather Service to get cresting
estimates.
Youth murdered
A Gallipolis man, William A.
Mathias, 23, was accused of the
brutal stabbing death of 12-year·
old Stacey R Lucas, also of P!lf:OIB:!!If:OI!If:OI!If:OI""' MIMII'l::!K¥1
GalUpolis. The story sent shock
waves through the community
and concern for the safety of all
local youths was expressed. W With Every Roll of
•
Mathias' trial Is scheduled to
Film Developed!
begin Jan . 28.
School levies
'After a long dry spell of levy
By
failures, bOth the Gallipolis City
School District and the Gallia
County Local School District
passed schOol levies In No·
vember. The city schools passed
w
a six mill operating levy to meet
~
costs, and · the county schools
passed a 3.75 mllllevy to keep the
schools locally controlled and to
keep the district out of state
414 SECOND .AVE.
. i
receivership. ·
GALUPOUS, OH. .· . ¥i

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I "1 SET FREE! I
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Processed
W
Kodak!
W

Iw 1 Day Service'
I TAWNEY STUDI()

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L••••""'~~~n~~.:tl'.:o&gt; """• .··:.

Randall F. Hawkins, M. D.
Internal Medicine

'

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Office Hours
Monday through Friday
9 a.m. - S p.m.
Suite 13,
PVH Medieal Office Building

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(304) 675-7700

IJLI PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

llrJ The lami~ ol proltuicinals

.,_
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Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiji.j!ilijiif!ij~i~P,!iij~j!~~iiliiii

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1991 FORD ESCORT PONY

GALLIPOLIS - Add the car- · remaining 125 at Holzer's emering of a community to one gency room, to be given to
determined mother, and what do children utilizing those services.
She said more than $1,500 was
you get• Buddy Bears.
The GalUpolls community raised to purchase the stuffed
opened its hearts and pockets to bears, and after .the purchase,
Mary Alice Robinette and her there is a $600 reserve to begin
idea to put Buddy Bears in the replacing the animals next year.
Robinette, who is fairly new. to
local emergency room and on the
Gallipolis,
took the Idea from an
ambulances. ·
Through her efforts of speakemergency service . In Florida
ing to organizations and Individu- which gave her small son a bear
als, 200 soft, cuddly stuffed on his final trip to the hospitaL'
anl,mals were placed wf th the The child, who suffered from
Gallla County Emergency Medi· ·tumorous sclerosis, died this past
cal Service and at Holzer Medl· summer. a.nd the Roblnettes
·moved to Gallipolis a few months
cal Center.
Robinette sald there are 75 . la~r, where her husband has
Buddy Bears at the EMS. and the family.

Thank You For
Your Patience!

Denblgh-Garrett Price ....'7,428.00
Leu Factory ~ebate .........•ISOO.OO

'·

TOTAL DELIVERED PRICE:

,..
·.

$6,926.00*
1990 FORD F-150 XLT LARIAT

NORRIS
"NORTHUP
DODGE

STOCK t1 RXT246

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Manufacturer's Sug. Prlce .... •l&amp;,l22.00

."

Special Factory DJtcount..... .. •l,834.00
Denblgh·Garrett Dlscouut ..... •2,298.00

,.

. TOTAL DELIVERED PRICE:

NOW OPEN

AI
252 UPPD liVER RD.
STATE IT. 7
GAWPOLIS, OHIO

LP GAS

1991 MERCURY COUGAR LS

446-4119

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$17 ,245.00* .
•OFFERS oOOD niRU DECEMBER 31, 1990

.' .. :

FOR MORE DETAILS

BURLILE LP GAS

.,

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STOCK # Rl C02
Jlallufacturer'l Sq. Prlce ...•19,245.00
Denb!p-Girrett DIICCI11Dt•.•••'2,000.00

TOTAL DELIVERED PRICE:

•BULK HOME DELIVERY •COMPETITIVE PRICES

'
GALLIPOLIS - A fanner
Hocking County sheriff's deputy
Call
was sen~nced to six days ln .jall
for Interfering with the civil
rights of a girl who wanted to
report she had been raped .
Joseph McGatha was accused
1-800-423-4399
of touching her In an lnapprOp·
riate manner when ·she went to
the sheriff's office In Logan· In
Dec. 1989. He originally was
APPLIANCES - CYLINDER SERVICE
charged with child endangering.
Sharon Barnes, a deputy clerk
in the Gallipolis Municipal Court,
said Friday that McGatha also
KANAUGA, OliO
JCT. RT. 35 &amp; 7
was lined $500 and sentenced to
eight days under house arrest.
He also was ordered to perform
40 hours of community service
See Puzzle on Page C-2
and to undergo ctiunsellng. He
was put on probation for 18
·
months.
Gallipolis Municipal Court
Judge Joseph Caln sentenced
McGatha Thursday. ·
McGatha pleaded no con~st to
the civil rights charge.
The case was moved to GalliPOlis after a mistrial In Hocking
County Municipal Court.
. The girl and ber mother sued .. JLl-...,_1-'::McGatba and Hockin&amp; County
Sherltf Jim Jonea on Dec. •·
aliegtna McGatba infringed upon
the girl's civil rlghta.

$11,990.00*

- OH.
.,

1991 CAMARO RS
'
AIJIO., PX. A./C. 3.465 MILES
T·TOP, BLUE

5 SPEED, AM/FM TAPE, A./C
11,070 MILES, RED

AUTO .• PS, A/C, F. WD.

·.

.·• .'
1990 8-10 CHEVY
PICKUP

1990 FORD
TEMPOGL
D. LOCKS, 9,1100 MILES

5 SPEED. A./C. AMfTAPE,
5,257 MILES

$10,500

$7 795

$7 895

1988 BRONCO D

1987 BUICK REGAL

9,835 MILES. WHfiE

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1990 TAURUS GL
LOADED

..

1990 GEo STORM u~:.o

$12,900
DR., Al11"0., PX. CRUISE, A/C,

XLT

"Drive A Little • Scwe A Lot•

LIMITED

.

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RANGER
4 SPEED. L.W.B.
48,000 MILES

BanJc Financing Auafla.ble

·.•

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244 SOutll Church StiNt
Rlplly, Wv

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VINTON - Thomas W." Davis,
Milwaukee School ol Engineer·
lng ( MSOE) senior vice president · of academics, recently
announced that a total of 434
students compriSed the college's
1990 fall quarter. Dean's List.
Among those students recelv·
lng high honors was Michael
Reid Carhart of Vinton, a Biomedical Engineer major.

STOCK # RIES 11

200 Buddies ·in
place, easing fears

Former deputy
sentenced

town's bicentenniaL
U.S. 35 construction
After decades of waiting,
ground was broken on the $61.2
million relocatlon ·of U.S. Route
35 In Gallla County. Governor
Celes~ broke ground on the
project at the Rio Grande end of
the undertaking on April 25.
Construction is expected to be
complete by the end of 1991;
according to Ohio Department of
Transportation estimates.
.
Ariel reopens
.
The Ariel Opera House again
resounded . with musiC as the
Ariel Centre lor the Performing
Arts reopened Its doors officially
on June 9. The 1895 opera house
h·a d been unused for decades, and
a group of local arts patrons
decided to renovate and restore
the facility In 1989. The restoralion was done by volunteers
according to Artistic Director
Lora Snow, and Is an on-going

Earns high honors

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Sunitay limes-Sentinel-Page-A-&amp;

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleaelnt. W. Va.

__..·:-Area deaths ________.;. . ____, Bicentennial-.!.:.&lt;F::::rom~B=tc=£:.:..:NTE=NN=IAL::...:._on_A-'-1)

Suspects accent ,
leads to arrest

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) · Gov.-elect George V. Voinovich
may seek the ouster of Ohio Civil
Rights Commlsson Chairman
William G. Sykes for violating
ethics laws involving state
contracts.
·
State Auditor Thomas Ferguson · ordered Sykes to repay
$237,155 after the auditor ruled
the contracts void.
Sykes was appointed to the
Civil Rights Commission by Gov,
Richard F. Celeste, five months
after Sykes resigned from his
cabinet post as state administra·
tlve services· director and
founded a consulting firm.
Sykes. as a consultant, received contracts from various
state agencies. He did not comply
with ethics laws that required
him to file a disclosure statement
concerning his COf1lmission post
and remove himself from hearIng cases Involving the agencies
that were paying for his services.
Curt Steiner, Spokesman for
Voinovlch. said lawyers have
been assigned to review Sykes

December 30. 1990

December 30. 1990 .~

Paga A-4-Su..-v Tm11· Sentinel

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372-FORD

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�December 30, 1990

Ohio-Point Pleaaant, W. Va.

Page-A-6-Sunday

Along the River

EASTMAN'S

'ilrimes- ientin.el
Section
•

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December 30, 1990

ODLAND
lo, I

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President Dan Quavle

.,

Goorg&lt; Voi•1ovk b

PRICES
SHOWBOAT

POST
TOASTIES

PORK &amp;
BEANS

oz$ 00

180Z.
BOX

s·

REG. ONLY

KRAFT
!!.-t il MAYONNAISE

2 ·9

$ 49
RIGGS CHARGED - Jason Riggs, left, was sentenced in August
to at least five years In prison on charges stemming from the June
death or Victor Wil~ an elderly Canal Winchester man wbo was
struck and killed by a truck driven by Riggs. Will's body was
.located tbe day after bis deatb in Chester Township, wbere it bad
been thrown over a creek bank. Riggs wao; indicted on charges of
aggravated vehicular homicide, tampering witb evidence and gr«;'SS
abuse or a corpse. A passenger in Riggs' truck at the time of the mcident Doug Harris, was sentenced to 18 montbs in jail after he
pled g~Uty to a charge or obstructing justice.

ViCe President Dan Quayle visits Gallipolis

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CONDITIONER OR

NORTHERN
NAPKINS

· V-05
SHAMPOO

29

HUNT'S

TOMATO
SAUCE
I LB.
BOX

PACKER'S PRIDE APPLE,

CHERR·Y

PIE FILLING
21 oz.
CAN

PKG.

ROll

~

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•
•
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HUDSON ·CREAM

FLOUR

oz.

46
CAN

A fitting reminder of Ohio Capital for A Day

project was consijlered an emergency and in
September ODOT awarded a $1.4 million contract for tile work of replacing tile culvert and
tbe relocation and improvements at tbe intersection of State Route 124 and U. S. 33. Twenty-two
properties are inVolved, including tllree business .
buildings and four homes wbicb wUJ be razed to
make way for tile new blgbway sec.tion.

CULVERT CAVE-IN CLOSES ROAD • Tbls
was tbe scene In tbnarly mornin&amp; hours or Feb.
2 when a section or State Route 124 pve way ~
a large stone culvert 1111derneat11 tile road coDap·
sed. The coDapse expedited piau or tile Ohio
. Department or Transportation for replacing tile
culvert and doing road work In tbe Kerr's Run
area or Pomeroy. As a result or the collapse tile

•
•

ON THE OHIO - Fioadlng dominated the news In December,
and a barge acc.l dent at theGaiBpolls Locks and Dam only added to
the situation. Here, 12 coal barges slammed Into the roller dam, '
but were pulled away later In the 'd ay . The Ohio River remained
high most of December, as the frequent rains kept dumping more
water Into the channel. In other matters at the lock and dam,
construction continued throughout the year, and by December, the
canal was ready to go to concrete.

·nigh court
• ••

VISits

Gallipolis

·SesqUicenJennial

University of Rio Grande
vs.
Mt. Vernon Nazarene

'

year of Pomeroy'• Suquieenten·
nial. the /50th year of incorporation. The
celebration "'"' hi,hliglated by t.laree WHkend
fellivab: Founder'• Day W~elcend in April,
H~ritage ll'eekMd in Ju,.,. and Ethnic Setdero
Feot in October. Pktured. above are m-bera of
tile lntun~&amp;lu!aal o.- Troupe, whkla entert,,necl diU'In61M October weelrend. Hera they
/9'}0 Will the

'

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are performing die "Maypole Dance." A variety
of ouutandin6 entertainment will executed
durill6 the three weekend.. Souveniro were sold
by the Sr!lqicentennial Committee and·a •pecial
llevJIPfl_pe¥' •upplement altabloid w111 printed by
The Daily Sentinel to commemorate the
celeb,.., ion.

__

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ACCUSED OF MURDER-:
John Causey, above, was
accused of munler In Melp
County Common Pleas Caurt
this fall, following the October
. death of his next door nel1h·
bor, Edmund Shamp, at Causey's · Reedsville residence.
Causey bas since pled not
guilty to the charge. He Is
expected to 10 to trial Ia early·
1991•

Ohio Supreme Court Chief
Justice Thomas J . Moyer spoke
• toagroupolareastudentsdurlng
the hlgb court's visit to Ga!Upolis
In April. The court, which orcaslonally conducts regular ses·
slons In other Ohio cities, was
Invited to meet for a day In the
Old French City while the com·
munlty observed Its 1990 blcen·
tennial. The visit also served as
an educational experience lor
students and community resl·
dents, whQ received an up-close
look at the court's operations.

�·- .............. . . ........ ....... . . - ..
Page B-2-Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport . Gallipolis, Ohio

December 30. 1990

Point Pleasant, W. Ve.

By James Saads
. GALLIPOLJS - The big news
stories of 1962 were: John Glenn
becomes the first American 10 orbit
space; Marilyn Monroe dies of an
apparent suicide, former president
Eisenhower visits Gennany; 29·
year-old James Meredith is registered at the Universily of Mississippi with help from U.S. marshals;
the Soviets agree to remove rockets
from Cuba, and U Thant becomes
U.N. Secretary General.
Some of the news items of 1962
in Gallia County included: the ~los­
ing of the Landmark Town and
Country Store and Hollis McConnick's Dairy Sales Association,
the purchase of the old Alcorn
home by Shell Oil; Gallia Academy
wins the SEQ AL in football and
there was a hubcap theft ring .in
Gallipolis.
It was in 1962 that the f't&amp;P
opened on Second Avenue in their
newly completed s10re. Persons
preparihg for New Year's the last
week of 1962 could purchase at the
A&amp;P - pork chops at 79 cents per
pound, spare ribs at 49 cents per
pound, chicken fryer at 29 cents per
pound, Sauerkraut at four large cans
for 49 cents, Swiss c~eese at 59
cent&gt; per pound, rye bread at two
loaves for 35 cenis, and Banquet
pot pies at five for $1. The A&amp;P
sold three brands of coffee that
year; Bokar, a vigorous and winey
coffee at 61 cents per pound, mild 8
O?Clock brand at 55 cents per
pqund and Red Circle at 59 cents.
:The Christi Ann Resi81Uant offci:ed ham siCak dinners at $1.35.
In,cluded in the meal for one price
was: mea~ two vegetables, ~d.
h&lt;5t rol1. tea or coffee. Other
specialties that year included fried
cliicken, Swiss steak, filet of sole,
RQCky Mountain b'Out, lobsiCr tail
and N.Y. strip steak.
;The only major New Year's Eve

the Elks. The
Church of Christ in Christian
Union on Eastern Avenue held
Watch Night services from 8 p.m.
to midnight Connie ~ of
Washington C.H. was the guest
evangelist. She spoke from a baby
stroller.
The news sto~s of 1963 nationally included the sinking of the
nuclear submarine Thresher with
129 aboard; two blacks were enrol·
led at the University of Alabama
despite the protest of Gov. George
Wallace; Pope Paul VI became the
262nd Supreme "9ntiff; ~ident
Kennedy spoke tn Berlin; the
march on Washington, D.C. enlis·
ted 200,000 participants who heard
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s famous "I
Have A Dream" speech; John F.
Kennedy was assassinated later that
year.
Some of the news from Gallia
County in 1963 included: Vin10n
suffering its worst ftood ever on
. March 6; Dr. George McCoy
family died in a plane crash, worst
a11to accident in Gallipolis' hiSIOry
occured at Second and Spruce involving five cars arfd an ambulance
(one person died) there were a
record number of traffic accidents
in the county, and Gallia began 10
feel the effects of Gov. James
Rhodes austerity program.
The A&amp;P at the end of 1963 offered spare ribs 10 ,cents cheaper
per pound than the year before, but
pork chops were 20 cents more per
party in 1962 was at

Barker for boycott
MILWAUKEE (UPI) - Bob
Barker, who knows when the
price Is right, is calling for
economic war against the Mil·
waukee County Zoo. The host of
"The Price Is Right" Is a strident
animal rjghts activist and is
upset ~hat zoo officials sent a
40-year-old elephant named Lota
to a facUlty in Illinois because
she had ,become a discipline
problem. Barker, who wlll be In
Milwaukee Jan. 5 for a demonstration on Leta's behalf, says
that returning the elephant to the
zoo would ll!t "the black cloud
that's hanging over your city. "In
the meantime, he's calling for a
boycott ofthe zoo. "The one thing
these people understand Is money," Barker said.

CHESTER - The Ken Amsbary
Chapter of the lzaak Walton
League will have its final muzzle
loader shoot of the season on Sunday at 1 p.m. They will also have a
rifte shoot.
, ,

·Pat's Dosie Patcb

30°/o
OFF
CHIIRMAS IYEMS INCWDING:
SAVE

TAMPA. Fla. (UP I)- Jeffrey
Kinner couldn't pe~su;~de Marie
Glinka to walk with him down the
ai~ l e, so he's dragging her Into
court.
,Kinner has filed a' $25,000
lawsuit against Glinka inHI!Isbo·
rough County Circuit Court,
ctting "extreme humiliation and
aiigu ish" since she broke off
tneir enggagement.
!.&lt;inner, 32, said the breakup
cost him thousands of dollars In
wedding preparations and also
aggravated his ulcers.
"I paid her phone bills, bought
an engagement ring and tons of
flowers," Kinner said Friday.
"Now, I want my money back."
Glinka , 42, said she owes him
nothing.
" I think he has mental problems, .. she said. "I can't believe
he's doing this to me."
Such cases were common until
the 1940s, when breach of prom·
ise lawsuits were outlawed, said
Chief Circuit Judge James Lenlesley, who will not be presiding
. over the Kinner lawsuit.

LONG BOTIOM -There will be
a New Year's Eve Sing on Monday
at 7 p.m. at the Mt. Olive Communily Church in Long Bottom.
Pasior Lawrence Bush inviteS the
public.

'

RACINE - The Racine Baptist
Church will have watchnight services on Monday with music at 9
p.m.; fellowship at 10 p.m . . and
worship , service at 11 p.m. Rev;
Stever Deaver invites the public.

. . RUTLAND - The . Rudand
Freewill Baptist Church will have
watchnight services on Monday at
7 p,m. Pas10r Paul Taylor invites
the public. The Grubb Family Singers of Gallipolis will perform.

NE

Ki nner, who says he Is not a
lawyer but is handling his own
case, denied misleading Glinka.
He said he waited three months
alter their breakup to flle sull
because he hoped fo r a
rec&lt;inciiiation .
"I wanted us to be best friends
but it's like she doesn't care," he
said. "She was the only person I
could talk to. It still hurts."

,

LONG BOTIOM - The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long BottorD will hold a New Year's Eve
Service on Monday at 9 p.m. with
music, preaching and refreshments.
RACINE - There will be a new
year's eve party sponaored by the
Racine American Legion on Mon. day from 9 p.m. 10 1 a.m. at the
legion hall. Music will he provided
by the Country Blend Band. Cost is
56, single; and $10, eouple.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

MIDDLEPORT- There,will he 1.
New YCIIr'l Eve Dance II the
American Legion Annex in Middleport on Monday from 9 p.m. to
1 a.m. Admlalon il $5 per penon

The family of professionals
·-'-'-

and Includes refrellunenll. Hourly

Valley Drive, Point Pleaaant, WV 25550 (304) 875-4340

••

. W

"

·,

)

• Except Seafo,od u"'v"'

.Any Party Tray*
20.00 or more. Your party will be a hit
when you choose a tray from Big Bear
Limit I Per Family With Coupon And Any Other Purchase (excluding
items prohibited by law) Valid Thru Monday, Dec. 31, 1990

Cubed Meat &amp; Cheese Tray .

Chunks of Colby, Americun and Swiss Cheeses with Turkey Breast, Cooked
Ham and Salami Arranged on a tray with spicy mustard in the center.

t:::f~ 3299

Small1999'
ses-~os

20-2.5

Vegetable .Tray With Dip
Carrol stick, cauliflower, broccoli, cucumber slices, celery sticks, radish,
cherry tomatoes, green pepper strips and dill dip.

Large2799 Medium1899
serves
30-40

serves

.

15-20

Hot Wing Tray

.

~!'!~·}399
10-12

.

}}99

Combination of hot and spicy chicken wings with your choice of Blue
Cheese or Ranch dressing.

..

doll' prilca will he a_.,_ Music
wiU lio IIIOYidod by "CcMMIry-Wol1«11 Delli. Bind.. The' public is
· invileld' to attend.

••

.
'' l

,,

.Cut From The
Pork Loin ·

Country Style

Pork
·Rib
Mega Whole Boneless Hams 7-91b.
lb.

nvv_

SEAFOOD Shopp e

••• ·•• J79lb.

Aldil.ti&gt;lc at ~tore'

.

\\ith Se.tfood Shoppt·

..

·Neptune's Treasure ·

I

Run.AND - New Year's Eve
Service at the Rudand Community
Church on New Lima RD,Id will be
held Monday at 7:30p.m. Speakers ·
wiD he Rev. David Hall,
Washington Court House, and Rev.
Jolin Stepp, Charleston, W.Va. Rev.
Dewey King invites the public.

•

Holly Halsted Balthis finally
received her crown - 60 years
late. Balthls, 83, reigned as queen
of the Tournament of Roses In
Pasadena, Call!., In 1930 before
parade organizers began offlclally crowning the queens but
things were straightened out
Friday at a reunion of Balthls
and 28 other former Rose queens.
·'The association and friendships
of tbe Tournament of Roses and
queens through the years have
given me so much pleuure,"
Balthls said.

DEll (8)

LEBANON TOWNSHIP - The
Lebanon Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 4 p.m·. at the
township garage.for the end-of-the
year meeting. An organizational
meeting for 1991 will follow.

Lapa!'08COplc Cholecystectomy at Pleasant Valley Hospital. Yet another reason for you to
look to us for high quaDty, state-of-the-art technology In healthcare.

Queen given crown

,,

SYRACUSE - The Swton
Township Trustees will meet Monday at 1 p.m. in the Syracuse
Municipal Building for the final
business meeting of 1990. The organizational meeting for 1991 will
foUow. ·

If you are among the one out or evel)' 10 people In the United States who suffers from
gallstones or gallJ)Iadder dtseese, one or the most common digestive dlsorqers, you ~ be a
candidate for I.aparoscopy. 1be procedure has !&gt;eell shown to be effective In more than 90
pen:ent of gallbladder patients. ror Information, consult your personal phy!lldan or cell our
skllledsUlllfcal team at (:504) 67~340. ext. 246, and let them explain how you may benefit from
·
.
·
Laparoscoplc Cholecystectomy.

is a horror."

'

BE~FORD TOWNSHIP - The
Bedford Township Trustees will
hold their year-&lt;lnd meeting, on
Monday at 1 p.m. at the town hill!.

Pleasant Valley Hospital Is proud to be at the forefront In bringing new technology In
healthC:are to our community. We were the first to offer residents or the Tri-County area Kidney
Stone Uthotrlpsy, MagneUc Resonance Imaging and Ultrasonic Removal o( cataracts. Now we've
brought you Laperoscoplc Cholecystectomy, a new surgical technique that eliminates the need
for a large Incision, ellowlng for a shorter hospital stay- usually a day or less- and dramatlcelly
!'educed ~ and recovel)' time.

" I was coming from a bad
relationship, and he seemed like
a perfect guy," she said. " I
shOuldn't have done It (become
engaged) but I was confused.
" He presented himself as
something he wasn't," she said.

•

GALLIPOLIS - Dan Hayman
and the Fonner Coun1ry Hymn
Timers will appear at the Faith
Temple Church on Debb~ve in
GalllJXllis on Monday
7:30
p.m. to' midnight. Joe Gwinn, pastor, invites the public.

f

marriage.

•

I}{INGSBURY - The Believers
Fellowship Ministry, fonnerly Poor
Man's Grocery on Kingsbury Road,
will hold a new year's eve service
on Monday at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Margaret Robinson invites the public.

GALLBLADDER
SURGERY

'

•

Open New Year's Eve Until 9pm. ·
Open New Year's Day Regular Hours!

TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and sguare dance on
New Year:s Eve (Monday) at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Building from
7:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. featuring the
Rocky Mountain Bluegnss and
Specks of Bluegrass. Arthur COnant
will be the ealler. Bring a covered
dish. Cost is $2.50 for adults and
$1 for children under 12.

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP - The
Board of Trustees of Columbia
Township will hold their end-of-the
year meeting on Monday at 8 a.m.
at the tire station. An organization!
meeting for 1991 will follow.

" Anyone, any time, can !ile
suit against anybody," the judge
said, "You could sue the mayor
tomorrow lor $6 million, but the
trick is to prevail."
Kinner says eve r yt hing
seemed perfect when they first ,
met in August. He manages a
Tampa store. She handled the
store's account at Barnett Bank.
He wooed her with roses.
After three weeks, they became
engaged· at a pancake house in
St. Augustine.
"Everything was so perfect,"
he said. "When I came up, her
eyes would twinkle."
, But Glinka started having
second thoughts about the

.. -

,

'\

MONDAY
HOBSON - The Hobson Church
of Christ and Christian Union· will
have watchnight services on Monday at 7 p.m. Speakers will be Bill
and Alice Wl!ill, Bob Manley,
Theron Durham and CC(;il Wise.
The public is invited 10 anend.

HOLECYSTECTO

THE

-

Prices ,Effective December 29, 1990
Through January I, 1991

CHESTER - The Chester United 1&lt;
Methodist Church will host lii1 end- ·
of-the . year hymn sin!! featuring
Russ and Southern Hills Singers
'and the Chester Children's Choir
on Sunday at 7 p.m. The public is
, invited to attend.

Door .Wreaths &amp; Swags, Tcible Arrangements,
Ornaments - Country .&amp; Victorian, Garlands,
· Candles, Pot' pourri, Grape Vine Tr.,s,
SIICis, and much, much more.
Bears &amp; Dolls, Wood Items, Afghans.

.

.

Communl.ty Caieadar items
appear two dayw before liD eveat
and the day of that eveat. Items
must be received Ia lldvaDCe to
iD!iure publication Ia IIJe allendar.
SUNDAY
POMEROY ·- The Meigs County
Better Beef 4H Club will hold an
organizational meetipg oo Sunday ·
at 2:30 p.m. at the home of Sam
and Loretta Brown. For more information on Joining; contact the
Browns, 985-3540. New members
welcome.

APAKOSCOPIC

Man sues for
lack of love .

&lt;~This

POPULAR STOP - The ~p opened in this building In 1982,
operating here for about two decades. The place wu a popular stop
as peni&gt;ns prepared for New Year's Day In 1962 and l1Nl3.

-:

Sentinel
Calendar.

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Div·
lslon . of Watercraft reminds
boaters to check their boats over
the holiday season.
Make sure the boat Is stored
properly, covered and protected
from the taln and snow. Drall all
of the water that may ·have
accumulated In the bilge and
remove rodents' nests from your ·
boat .
Double check that all storage
areas are locked, all equipment
Is removed and the trailer Is
secure.
For .further boating tips, contact the ODW at 10556 MCKelvey
Rd., Clclnnatl, 45240 or call (513)
851-1755.

''

r

I

poWld. Deeter's Sausage sold at 4
pounds for $1.
The Tribune natned the firing of
Paul Brown from the Cleveland
Browns as the top spons story of
1963. Symmes Valley won the
Hannan Trace Basketball ToumamenL H-Twas last. losing the consolation game toBiackfort 72-42.
The weather was a linle unusual
in the last week or so of 1963.
Then: was a big snow and ice stonn
on Dec. 24. Then right after
Christmas the mercury shot up to
60 degree's. On New Year's Day,
another ice stonn hit with school
canceled until Jan. 2. There was
and 11-811()-one-half-foot snowman
named "Shorty" built in front of the
Remo Rocchi house at 102
Mabeline by Tun, Marion, Theresa,
Lilia and ·Sandy Rocchi, Debbie
Lewis and Andrea Davidson.
Smith Buick had some nice bargains: 1958 Buick Tudor with only
34,000 miles for 5800; a 1962
Monza for $1,695 and a 1954 Pantiac for $50. Potential buyers were
asked to bring their own rope for
that last car. The movies at the
Colony included "Beach Party"
with Frankie and Annette and "A
New Kind of Love" . with Paul
Newman and J0111111e Woodward. A
new Ford sold for $2.S04 and the
mongage rate on a new home was
5.25 percent, The popular songs for
teenage New Year's Eve parties
were "Suf!!: Shack," "He's So
Fine," and 'My Boyfriend's Back."

~

December 30, 1990

Stored boat check

Gallia County news in 1962-.63

-

Select, jumbo peel &amp; eal cooked shrimp wilh bitesize crab
sticks artd Big Bear's Special seafood sauce.

A tray full of cooked tail off shrimp, wheatable crackers
and a tasty shrimp cheeseball in the center.

Swiss, Baby Swwiss, Colby, Yellow American Cheeses, Garnished With
Green And Ripe ollbes. Perfect for snacking and sandwiches.

32-35

,,

Treasure Chest Party Tray

Sliced Cheese Tray

~::f~ 2399

Serves 15-20

Serves 12-15

M;'!!!!m 1799.~!'!~I 1299 r.-----------------------m
I
I

~~r~~!!!e~~!!~holce

22-25

14-16

of ftavon ooooooooooooooooooooo

3

:
·~

29

I
I

[

.'

'·:
•

: ·.
I

Mild Chedar Cheese
Great ftavor, perfect for 8118Cks·or entertaining o oo oo oo oooo o oo
.

Hickory Farms Beef Sticks

Party favorite, made with ~ finest Ingredients o • • • o o o o o o • • • •

479

I~

1.
I

*Limit One Free With Coupon and $}S Additional Purchase : ~
Excluding Items Prohibited By Law.
PUJ(2) . · ·

L------------------------

�CLEVELAND (UPI ) - A Prosecutor Robert Coury, who
tried the case, said the Issue was
Cleveland woman convicted in a
not about flag burning, but about
flag burning incident has been
the
safety of others at the ra.lly.
sentenced to a year in prison and
"If
sne· (Lessi n) wants to laugh
the judge says she Is not a
.
at
the
system, which she did
candidate for probation.
Cuyahoga County Commorr during the trial, at tbe prese ntence report ~nd now, let her
Pleas Judge Patricia A. Cleary
laugh in Marysville (priSDn),"l!e
sentenced Cheryl Lessin, 46, who
said.
was convicted of inciting to
Cleary told Lessin she was not
violence in the flag burning
Incident Aug. 10 in Public a candidate for probation, especlally because she was " rude and
Square.
As Lessin was being sentenced Insulting" to the probation ofFriday, some of her suppor ters fleer who prepared her presentand fellow members of the ence report.
"You gave three different
RevolutiOnary Communist Party
sa t in · the courtroom, gagged addresses, two Incorrect telewjth pieces of a flagtMy had torn phone numbers, refused to provide information on your family
at a rally.
Assistant Cuyahoga County and gave information different

[BAZ ·.

from your testimony," Cleary
said. "Probation is for people
who are Interested In a change In
their lives and you Indicated no
Intention of obeying the rules."
Two Cleveland policemen test!fled during the trial that Lessin
ran through the crowd throwing
punchesandshoutlngobScenltles
and an elderly ··woman W'!S
knocked down.
Other witnesses said the sltuat!on was not riotous.

~\~·~· ~~ ..

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•

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'

WIDE ' FROM
ANY SIZE 23"-36"
64" LONG
.
n

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- r,"f

~

\)

-

-.....

5 88

Iii$

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

/ '

'

$39
M

.

4-Pc. Full........ camp. SlOO... from $59
4-Pe. Quc;eLL..Comp. Sl20... from $69

LOWllRLEVEL

LOWER LEVEL

The shooting of the guard, who worked for a subcontractor of
Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation, occurred at approximately
11:00 PM on Sunday, December 23, 1990. The unarmed guard was seated in
a van parked near the plant's construction gate, which is on plant property.
West Virginia State Police are investigating this incident.

r---------------------,
I

Coupon

COLUMBUS ..:.. Hypothermia
water below 70 degrees. Cold
Is the lowering of the body's core water conducts heat away from
temperature. It can occur In two our body 25 times faster than air
ways, quickly or slowly.
of the same temperature. Many
Acute hypothermia Is caused iloating fataltt!es occur In the
by a sudden falllnto cold water early spring or la te fall due to
and hap(iens very . quickly . hypothermia.
Chronic hypothermia sets In over
If you are near the water
an extended time period and is · during cold seasons, prepare
often noticed In backpackers and yourselt by wearing a ltfejacket
the elderly.
and several layers of clothing.
The Division of Watercraft Preferably wool or synthetic
advises that cold water Is any materials that retain heat even

Calls will be taken 24 hours a day
and will be held in strictest confidence.

·

25 %Off~~;:,.

One Item at Regular Price I

I Present coupon at time of purchase. One coupon per item. One coupon per I
I customer. Coupon may be used only oDce. Cannot be combined wilh any other J

ALUMINUM CORPORATION .. ·

I discount. Not valid on sheets, blinds, comforter sets, do,ltcd mcrcbandise, yellow I

. tlcketed merchandiseortower level. VALID1HRUIJ5,91

when wet.
. If you do tali in, remain calm

and protest the critical heat loss
areas. These areas are the head,
neck, sides, chest jlnd groin. Get
out of the water or float In a fetal
position with your head out of
water.
For more Information about
cold water safety contact the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources at 10556 McKelvey
Rd., Cincinnati, 45240 or call
(513) 851-1755.

Voluptuous Army cartoons covered up

I

wi!b

sick or
children. Shown here (L toR) are:
Waverly
club treasurer; Cindy Saunders,
club pret~ldent; and Mary Ellen Robinette, Buddy
Bear coordinator.

Hypothermia, the silent killer

1-800-642-9076

3-Pe. Twin
Comp. $80

ln white, beige and 3ssoncd colors.
Other sizes available at savings also.

TAKE AN
EXTRA

CLUB DONATION - The Gallipolis Junior
Women's Club recently made a donallon to the
Buddy Bear program. This ~nice provides
.teddy bears for the local ambulaitces lo give to

..

ramous aker
Comforter Sets

Clip &amp; Save

I

. " :'' ' y

1" Slat Vmyl
Mini Blinds

I

•

West Virginia State Police
Criminal Investigation Section

Sel includes comfoncr,
sham and bed ruffle. In
prints &amp; solids.

i

•

•

11'1· :

5 / 6

L--------------- -----~
PHONE: 522-ll305 FREE PARKJNO

' '.

.' '

Usc your Visa, Ma.slercard or Disc:ovcr or you can use cur easy layaway.

JOIN US IN A SAVINGS CELEBRATION! SUNDAY·MONDAY··TUESDAY ONLY!

.9

MONTGOMERY, N.J. (UPI)
-Two voluptuous cartoon characters dispensing Ups on weapons in an Army technical
magazine have been covered up ,
given breast reduction and made
more subservient to men .
The new image for Bonnie and
Connie will allow the magazine
"P .S., The Preventive Maintenance Monthly" to be shipped to
U.S. troops In Saudi Arabia.
Diane Backes, co-owner of
Backes graphics, which lllustrates the magazine, said the
October issue with Connie in a
cavewoman outfit was barred
from the country.
"We were given a whole set of
rules and regulations .that came
down from the Pentagon - no
sexual innuendoes, no references
to ,alcohol, no cleavage," B~ckes
said.

The magazine, like U.S. troops
statione d In Saud! Arabia with
Operation Desert Shield, must
bow to Islamic views on women.
Connie and Bonnie are covered
from neck to calf and no longer
give orders to m en.
"We reduced the size. of their

·

PIICES nAIT AT

ONLY$688
ONLY $333

811" COlONIAl SOFA

ONLY$295

Open

OtUY$389

5 PC. TRADtnONAL CHERRY BEDROOM w/high tester post bttl, S
$6
drawer chHt, 6" drtlltr. ·
ONLY

I

DINING ROOM IS
ON SALE!

4 PC. CONTEMPORARY OAK lED·
ROOM, modern styling w/brass
trimming, panel hH.,aard w/5
drawir chest &amp; 6S" dresser.
ONLY

$ 39

llE w/6 .....,..tchalr~ po4otooll•• toltlt

$ 69 7

7 PC. COlONIAl DINETTE w/42" mar
w/2

$3

7 PC. NOSTAlGIA DINING lOOM TA·

9s

wllo... dow 1og1, 41"

u. u,...oo 72". ONLY

rulstonlloltltiOfllhat uton.to66"
lonos, • til .... lhalrL

s

ONLy

5 PC. TRESnE TAli.E with 2 choirs and 2
lo.Khis, II•• blvo patld..t soat1, 60" Ia·

blo.

.

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..,,

....,.

.'

71 . . . . .

. It

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NOW OPEN
AT

252 UPPER RIYIR RD.
STATE RT. 7
GAWPOLIS, OHIO

C..llipolu • Po . Ple•••n&lt;.

•

I• l1nnl't61M: 446a0090, lit. J06
Dl- Sonico 6 f.ll. lo 10 f.M.
hr Sonico to 12:30 A.M.

II

52995

STRIDE RITES
$1200

25 % Off

ONLY

40% ro50%

Off

LA. Gear, Aslcs

1991.2991.$3991

Off
Off
Off

GROUP MEN'S

GROUP MEN'S

DRESS SHOES

WORK BOOTS
AND DINGOS

D1Xter, Nun Bush, Top Siders

$19 91

·ViLUI EIT¥

. . . ., . . . ,

....

ALL WOMEN'S &amp; MEN'S HOUSE SLIPPERS 1/2 PRICE

OFF

All WOMEN'S

OA

Handbags 20 o::

•

GROUP OF CHILDREN'S

House ·
Slippers

•

$191

-~~
.-.~·

LAFAYETTE MALL • GALLIPOLIS, OH. e446-2477

OPEN ~ND~ YTil 5 P.M.
TUES., WED., THUR. 9:30 Tit 6 P.M.

Furniture

... ,

S19 91

BETTER HURRY- THEY WON'T LAST LONG!

•

$1 9 5

TENNIS

Pony, lids, Brook,

.ALL FURS

98

.'

LARGE GROUP MEN'S

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SALES &amp; SERVICE

LARGE GROUP
CHILDREN'S

/3

BUY NOWI NO MONEY DOWNI*

USE OUR CONVENIENT
CREDIT PLAN, VALUE
CITY FURNITURE CREDIT
CARD. VISA. DISCOVER
OR MASTER CARD.

GEORGE HALL
For yot1r enlert.alnmenl and
danrln1 p~-euure. Puty·t.von.

Connie, Auditions, Naturaltzen,
Hush P11ppies, Soft Spots

to40% Off
A terrific selenion of coats,
including long and short wools,
leathers, suedes, Thinsulate-lined,
down-filled, rainwear, outerwear
and more.
•Dresses ........ ................. ,..... 1
Off

EVERY!

BEDROOM IS ON SALE!

J •

'

DRESS &amp; CASUA_LS

Mondor til 8 r.M.

•25%

MASSIVE 94",j 0FA .,.,.,,.. ,,. b•~

EVERY!

(per person)

· LARGE GROUP WOMEN'S

•Jones of New York ...... 14 to 'h
:Jones of
New York Sport ........ 14 co 'h
· Fay (wool) ....... 14 to 'h
p of ·
·
Diana Gilman ................ 14 to 'h

89" DECORATOR SOFA ., ,

pint wa.cl trim. wing bock styling. lo'"'ot
'379.00, Oui.r &amp; Ott&amp; 1119.00.

NORRIS
NORTHUP
DODGE

•

those special momento. You wut have over
190 styles of'luxedos to choose !rom. We
bave a large seleclkln of the latest style~
and complimentary acce~sorles to make
this your special night.

. SPORTSWEAR:
.·

2 PC: CONTEMPOIARY ,_,..., 71" •ola

wlwwd or;,.,lolut
plaid Htrculon fokic: and bvH• tufttd b.... l•·
"stol 1211.80, (heir &amp; Otto. '211.00
.

Thank You For
Your Patleneel

MENU
Salad Bar
New York Strp Sirloin
with Mushroom Cap
or
Broiled Lobster Tail
Twice Baked Potato
Broccoli Polonaise
Rolls and Butter
Sherbet and Cookie
Nineteen Ninety-Five

Let HASKINS-TANNER help you make

•Warm Lin_gerie
and Robes .............~ .....

LIVING ROOM IS ON SALE!
muhkol"
100% cower w/solhl weod triln. t.tftlt•
$2...00, Cluir I Ott&amp; '291.00

•

Celebrate
the New Year ••.
and spend the
Eve with us!

$1991.$2991.$3991

. EVERY!
w•cl triM.

•

MOMENTS TO REMEMBER!

CLEARANCE
SALE!
wtft j•q.ord coww with attrodift

GALLIPOLIS - Four are.a
shrine nobles were recently
commissioned J:lonorable Order
of Kentucky Colonels by the
governor of the state of
•
Kentucky.
They were: Blll Rutherford,
Bill Johnson, Tom Crossan and
Gordon Roth. Colonel Oon Harrl·
son presented each their commission certificate at the GallllpoUs Shrine Club.

bosoms and made them a little
bit less sexy," Backes said.
Connie Rodd, a blond bomb·
shell, was born during the
Korean War, with actress Ann
Sheridan as a model. Her coun- ·
terpart, Bonn'ie, dates from
Vietnam.

BERNADINE'S WINTER ·

a SS'' l••-ot 1M a Fltl m•dtNtt rtdi ..r. Wo·

Page B-5

Special presentation

Two computer seminars wm seminar Is $50 per person .
To register, contact Adult
be offered during January by
Adult Services' Business and Services at 245-5336 or send a
Education Partnership · check or money order to Adult
Program.
services, P.O. Box 157, Rio
Day-long seminars are being Grande, 45674. Cancellations
- offered on WordPerfect Softwar must be made three working
and on the Disk Operating days before the seminar date In
order fc;or participants to receive
System (PC-DOS, MS-DOS).
"Introduction to DOS Com- a refund.
mal)ds," (or: " What the heck ts
DOS?") explains the main Disk
Operating System Commands. It
Is scheduled tor Jan. 18, 1991.
Cost of the seminar Is $25 per
jlerson. ·
·
A WordPerfect seminar (beginning level) Is scheduled for
Jan.10,1991,trom9a,m, to3p.m.
Topics Include creating/editing
documents, advanced cursor key
movements, formatting, and file
management. Cost of the day

•

Anyone with such information should call ...

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Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation is offering a $10,000 reward for information
leading to the arrest, prosecution and conviction of the individual
.or individuals who shot and severely wounded a security guard.

YEAR-END SALE &amp; CLEARANCE
- =&gt;•

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Div- roll away In the samed!rectlonas '
ision of Watercraft reminds lee you just came. Donottrytostand
anglers to be extra safe while Ice up until you are on solid tee. Seek
warm shelter Immediately , refishing.
· The lee on the lake must be at move wet clothing and replace
'
least four iches thick for you to · with dry clothes.
You
should
also
seek
emersafely walk or fish on it. Dress
warmly wearing several layers, gency medical attention due to
a hat, gloves and boots. If you fall hypothermia and the el.fects or
the cold water on your body. For
through the jce try to remain
other
safety Ups contact ODW at
calm and do not remove any
10556 McKelvey Rd., Cincinnati,
clothing or boots.
45260 or call (513) 851-1755.
Try to crawl out of the hold and

Lessin read a statement that
cjealt with the approaching con·
frontatlon In the Middle East.
."! ' am being sentenced for
daring to be among the !Irs! to
call out and resist their war
moves and for being bo ld enough
to burn their symbol, their flag,"
she said. "I am also being
sentenced for being a thoroughly
unre(ientant woman and revoluUonary communist. I wwill con·
tlnue to be all those things ."

w. Va.

#

3RD AVE. &amp;.8TH SffiEET DOWNTOWN HUNTINGTON
~hop Sunday 12-5, Monday 9:30-5, Tuesday-Saturday 9:30-8:30

[

Pomeroy-Middleport:....Gallipolis, OhiO Point Pleasant,

Day computer courses slated

$10,000 REWARD

]

HOMEFASHIONS

December 30. 1990

ODNR reminder for fishers

Ohio woman convicted of flag burning

.

o8cember 30, 1990

PomM'Oy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W.Va .

Page-B-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

M I fl 1'1 I S I S I Alii ol \I IIIII N • I 'I ill Ill I n 11 111

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8-6-Sundly Tsmx Sa ltinel

Editor's
NaR:
Mllrw.-el used only 10 assist in fuiUI'C J)llbliParker bas beet~ p1 unt cl tile catioos IIIII for museum de'VCiopMeigs Couaty ft1 tzT ud m.. menL
torkal Sodel,y ror tile pelt six
The museum ~ two
years, and lilso sene~ as tile part-time wortas durJ113 open
volunteer
dlrec:tor. UD- boln Tuesday tbrouBh Salurday, I
der her leadersblp die ••111111 to 4:30p.m. These m the only paid
has increased erqals""""' a- personnel The supervision of
panded its dlsplly - ' ud emplo~ees and museum operllioo
refUrbished
ud
1 ewodeled
is carried out by a Wlunlller dllector. A .olllllleer oo.nl of 15 lrUSiees
several rooms iD tile •&amp;It •, •
weD as publisbed. ane1lll hlllurl- is raponsible for establishing
cal rererence boob. Tllil Is tile polic:y . and rqulatioas of the
first of three aJ:tjcleS by Mn. society and museum and seeing
Parker on the theme, ''Gettiag to tbat they lR caniecl OUL
Know Your . Historical Society
Officers a trus~eeS of the
and Museum."
society 1ft ~~ Palta', president; Rev. W'illiam Middleswarth,
first vice president; Karen Werry,
By Margaret Parker
second vice president; NIIICy Reed,
Meigs Mpseum Diredor
third vice president; Helea F.
POMEROY - The Meip COIDity Smitlr, recording secretary; Joyce
Pioneer and Historical Society, a Davis, corresponding secretary; and
quasi governmental_ body, is the lloyd Blackwood. treasurer. Other
non-profit orgaruzatton that owns UUSieeS are June Ashley, Victor
and opemtes the Meigs C01mty Brown, Pall}' Cook, George FranMuseum.
cis, Sue Hager, Betsy Horky,
A county historical SllCjety is Eleanor Smitb, and Gina Tillis.
mandated l:lY law to see that the hisThe museum depends heavily on
torical documents ilnd hisiDly of volunreers. The recent renovations
the county are preserved.
within the ·building have all beCII .
BecauSe the Meigs C01mty done with volunteer labor.
Pioneer and Historical Society is a Voluuteer hours for ·1990 averaged'
quasi governmental body, the 250 per month, equivalent to a
Meigs County Commissioners allot monetary value of $950 per month,
an annual apptojriltion that helps based on minimum wage.
pay for museum operation. This
The mUseum does not pUrchase
greatly appreciated approprialion artifacts, but relics on the donation
amounts to about 30 percent of the of anifacts to leU • the story of
· total general operating budget of Meigs County throug!J exhibits.
the museum.
Persons having items to donate are
. The 1990 Historical Society urged 10 oontact the museum at
budget shows that 20 percent of the 992-3810 and di~uss with the
total general operating budget is director the possibility of donation.
raised by the sale of publications. The ttus1ees have ~opted a collecThese are publications that the tion policy for the musewri IUid arsociety publiShes on-site, themsel- ticles are accepted within the
ves. Memberships make up sevea guidelines of this policy. Proper
percent of the budget and donations documea11dion and JeCOrding can
five percent. The other 38 percent is only be made if items are acecsraised through special fund raising sioned dim:dy within the museum.
projects, copier fees, room reutal
Donations should not be givea to
and interest
anyone to bring to the museum, unThe society has established an less prior acknowledgement has
endowment fund ftom money paid been made with the museum direcfor life memberships. The principal . ior or staff. This, or dilect museum
cannot be used, but interest is ad- presentation is the only
the
ded to the general operating fund. staff and board can accept respon•
Profit from books the society sibility for acceplallee of an item.
publishes through a publisher is
Gift and release forms are re-

m-

way

tour

Kenneth Ru!&amp;ell

*

WIC pickup dates
POMEROY - J&gt;k:k..ap dilel for
WJ.C. have been _
_. bJ the
Meigs Coun;!;l: D ; 1 w M
Dates are
IIIII Fliday
from 9 to lJ a.lll. IIIII I to :! p.m.
Make up days ar.elllll. 1, 14 8114 22
from 9 to II a.m 81111 118:3 p.m.
Shot darl:ll for Jalluary aae Jan. 8
and 22 fJQm 9 10 11 LDI aad 1 10 3
p.m.

Bobbr

NOW.

TO HOLD

OUR LOW
DISCOUNT

1810 PRICES!

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LARGE SELECnON

'·

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.

Kathie and Laura Wheeler
cousins of the groom, registered
. guests. Mary Wheeler, cousin of
the groom, played a piano solo.
The bride is a graduate of Cross
Lanes Christian School in Charleston, W.Va. and West Vll'ginia Stare .
CoUege with a bachelor's degree in
accounting. The groom is a
graduate of Southern High School
and ·Marietta College with a
bachelor's ·degree in accounting
. and computer science. Bother are
employed by Columbia Gas
Transmission Corporation in Charleston, w.va.
After a Caribbean cruise, they
are residing in Ripley, W.Va.

Mon., Tua.. Tllu... • Fri. 8:00a.m. 'd 4 :00 p.m.
~ Hou.. br Appolntment--44&amp;-2327 or 1113-111811

GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth Russell was recently deployed to
Operation Desert Shield In the
Middle East.
Anyone W[shlng to send mall
can send It to: E-4 Kenneth
Russell; 269-78-5903, Operation
Desert Shield, First Infantry
DivisiOn , HHC2/ 34Armor (Medical Platoon), APO New York,
09310.
He is 'the husband of Dena
Russell and the son of Paul and
Mary Russell of Galllpolls.

Quote of the Day
By United Press International .
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq
Azlz on the prospects for war:
"If the United States does not
attack us, sooner or later Israel ·
will."

PERM PLUS SPECIAL
•Shampoo
•Precision Cut
•Helene Curtis Perm
•Complete Style/Finish

THE WORKS PERM

•tttr.. C:•rt•. hnrl

•Sh.nlpM •Pr~eilien Cut

•c.,ltt• ltylt Rnltfl

.

s3 595

·:r:.:!e!:n•tioning .
•2 PTtllucts S,.Ciahy
S.Md .. lor Yct~~r. Hlir

.~I PIRES l/5/91

$

2 495

........

SPIRAL PERM

-~"eclslon

C..t
•Ntlfnl C•rtil Pwm
•Compllte Styli finish
•CompWe ilt 75 .00

S39~5
~PIRES

•1 •• t

·.. ·

..

446·SAMS

• !he Ollyliwol Family Haircutters •

•

I

THURSDAY

. GALLIPOLIS - Big Brothers/ Big Sister~ Board of Directors
meeting, 7 p.m. Tltursday at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church. ·

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CROWN . CITY - ML Zion
Missionary
Baptist Church
will
.
.

New., Year's Eve aaivities set

GALLIPOLIS - Dan Hayman
and the former Country Hymn
Timers will appear at the Faith
Temple Church, Debby Dr .• (off
Route 141), New Year's Eve from
7:30p.m. to midnight. Pastor Joe
Gwinn Invites everyone .

'

NO N&gt;POINTMENT
NfC(SSAI7Y

a!Cllll

GALLIPOLIS - Bethlehem
Church, Rocky Fork Road,
Nlghtwatch on New Year's Eve
at 8 p.m. Associate Russell
Taylor Invites everyone.

EACH SALON .INDEPENDENTlY OWNED AND OPERATED,

''

JACKSON -Square dance and
New Year's Eve party, 8 p.m. to
midnight , Wagon Wheeler s
Square Dance Hall, SumitStreet ,
Jackson. The Rarely Herd Band.

My Sister's Closet's

GALLIPOLIS Calvary
Christian Center has special
services Monday, beginning 9
p.m.

WINTER

MARKDOWN
..

KANAUGA- Silver Memorial
Baptist Church has watch night
service, Monday 1 7 p.m.

SALE!
-..
:?-...

RODNEY - Faith Baptist
Churcli will have Ito evening
service Sunday. Monday from
8: 30 to midnight there will be a
watchnlght service. Focus on the

RUTLAND GARDENERS
A Christmas dinner at" Crow's
Restaurant was held rcceatly bv
members of the Rudand Garden
Club followed by a meeting at the
home of Mrs. Vernon Weber in Rutland. .
.
.
~ Atkins Jl!CSided at the
meeung and devotions were by
Mrs. Weber with three poems and a
prayer from Ideals. ~oU call was
answered by presenting a handmade. tray favor for residents of
Amencare to be delivered by Mrs.
Eva Ro1l£!&gt;n.
·
A .ChriS!JTUIS letter from Mrs:
Marvm Wilson, ED!malena, Ky.,
was~ and a card Signed for- her.
A wmter anangemeat lu1d beCII
placed . at . Overb~ Cea~ by
Mrs. AtJtin;i.. Stahl s Chrisunas
Shop was VIStr.ed by Eva Robson,
Octa Wani, Pauline Atkins and
Dorothy Woodard.
Open house at the Pomeroy
FlQwer Shop and Francis Florist
was attended by Margaret Weber,
Pauline Atkins, Margaret Parsons,
Eva_Robson and 9&lt;:ta Ward. Hubbard's Greenhou~ was attended by
members 10 view the poinsettias as
weD as the Aoral Bouquet in
Mason, W.Va.
Attending the 30th anniversary
of the Rutland Friendly Gardeners
were Pauline Atkins, Marcia
Denison, Eva Robson, Octa Ward,
Neva Nicholson, Pearle Canaday
and Binda Diehl.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallta.
Meigs and .Mason counties as
news and Is happy to publish
wedding stories and photographs
without charge.
·
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published In the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior
to the publication. and may be up
to 600 words In length. Material
for Along the River must be
recieved by the editorial depart- .
ment by Thursday, 4 p.m., prior
to the date of publication.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories,
If desired. Photographs may be
either black ·and white or good
quality color, billfold size or
larger.
Poor quality photographs wlll
not be accepted. Generally, snap·
shots or Instant-developing photos are not of acceptable quality.
Questions may be directed to
the editorial department from I
to 5 p.m . Monday through Friday
at (6141 ~6-2342.

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

~...

MrnDDLEPORT - A planning
session for .the First Annual Meigs
County Soapbox Derby to be
staged in Middleport on June 22
and 23 will be held Wednesday at
7:30 p.rn. at Middleport Village
Hall.
.
Roger D. Williams, recreation
director for the village of Middleport, and Jim Pape pf S~cuse
are heading up the derby whtch wiD
be open to all Southeasiem Ohio
area youth, ages 9 to 16.
Since it is a county-wide project
the chairmen are anxious that all
areas of the county be represented
on the various committees that are
expected to be fanned next month.
All iniercsted individuals are encoilraged to attend the Wednesday
night meeting.
•
This year's race, according to
Williams, will be kit car only.

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Brown

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
POMEROY:
.H 6 E.Moin St., 2nd Floor
992-5912
i1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed Thursday

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. REEDS
COUNTRY STORE
PH 378 - 612~

; Breed •
:
If : Paid
. Short ; Known ;

Yellow : Lona

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4th &amp; Main. Raedovilla, Oh.

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We value your continued business.

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992-2136
221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

Farmers

Bank
985-3385
STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

MEMBER FDIC

·~

.,

GAWPOLIS:
414 Second Ave. 2nd Floar

8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
8:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thursday
,
ALSO: J11&lt;kson, (hesaptake, Athens, Chillicothe, logan &amp; McArthur

.

..........rwct.. .

HAIR

:

Sliding fee sale.~ one refused •vices because of inability to pay.

*'

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Township - - - - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - - ' - - - - - - - - COLOR

Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Sreening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

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. ••••••••r••••••• •• ··································•··········~·········••••••••••••••••••:•••••••••;

·

in with the elderly? If you do, the
Job Bank may have a person 10 li1l
your needs. Call 446-7000 and ask
to speak to the Job Counselor.
The Job Bilnk is opea Wednesday ftom II a..m. to 3 p.m. IUid
Thursday and Friday from 7 a.m. 10
3 p.m. We are in need ·of new applicants as we still haven't filled
two job openings on the Title V
program (homemaker and job
COIDiselor) Please come in and see
about these two job openings.
Make sure you are 55-years-old or
oldyr to qualify for these t\¥0 jobs.

Family Planning .
It Makes Sense •.. .

tr• .,

~~SS--------~------------------•- • S ! .
·
nr : 11 :
Yr.
II. F.: BliCk Whitt

GALLIPOLIS - The Job Bank,
located in the Senior Citizens' Center at 220 Jackson Pike, has fulland pan-time help or temporary
help to fiB local residents' winter
job needs.
These 50-year-old or older applicants have a betier stability and a
better recOrd of continued acceptance by employers once they ·are
hired.
Do you need someone to do your
winter painting inside, cleaning of
homes, fixing a brokea stonn door,
leaking pipes, babysitting, or
someone to live in, or part-time live

A male emperor moth can
detect the sex attractant of a
virgin female up to 6.8 miles
away .

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1-3 p.m. -craft class
Menu
Monday,Dec. Jl
Cook's choice. plitatoes, cooked
cabbage, rye bread, vanilla pud·
ding.
Tuesday, Jan. 1
Center closed.
VVednesday,Jan.2
Baked steak with gravy, noodles,
broccoli, bread, and sliced peacbes.
Thursday, Jan. 3
Ham and beans with chopped
onions,
spinach/vinegar, · apple$auce,
cornbread, oatmeal .
cookie.
Friday, Jan. 4
Cheeseburger, tater tots, green
beans, cole slaw, bun, pears.
Pl.ease make reservations by calling 446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the
day you wish to attend.]

]ob Bank offers winter jobs

By United Press International

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Owner's Nam• '' - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - ' - - - - - - - -

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VVedoesda~Jan .2

II a.m. - Armchair Travel
"Columbia"
I - 3 p.m. -Cards.
Thursday, Jan. 3
10 a.m. - noon - Volunteer blood
pressure
10:45 a.m. ~ Bible Study
I p.m.- Herb class
Friday, Jan. 4
10 a.m. - noon - art class

Now You Know

SUNSTAR SEllS GAIIDEN TRACTORS
Av,.IIablt in 16-11 '&amp; 20 H.P.
.... ,...s............. ,• .,,

:!'
j

The following is a schedule of
activities and menus for the week
of Dec. 31 through Jan. 4 at the
Senior Citizen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike, GaUipolis.
Monday, Dec. 31
11 a.m. - Shan Subjects "Protecting the Ozone Layer"
Chorus is canceled.
1\lesday, Jan. 1
Center closed.

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Soapbox derby
in the works

1

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Senior center activities slated

~·

VINTON- Vinton Full Gospel
Church New Year's Eve watch
service at 8 p.m., Monday.

IS PURCHAKD AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THIS HANDY APPLICATIOii BlANK AND IIAIL TO
THE COUIITY AUDITOR AT THE COURTHOUSE NOW. FEES ARE FOUR DOllARS ($4.00) FOR EACH DOG.IIALE OR FEIAL£. (KENNEL LICENSE PENALTY $20.00). DOG TAGS Will ALSO BE ON SALE AT THE HUMANE SOCim LOCATED
AT THE CO.NER OF NORTH SECOND ST. AND WALNUT ST.. IIIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760.
Kennel License S20:00
Female S4.00
Spayed Ftmale $4.00
1111$4.00

:t...

Arrangements were taken to orbr. Janel Bolin, Pearle
Canaday, l'aJlline Atkins, E.va Robson and Margaret Parsons.
The traveling prize ftom K;lthy
Dalton was won by Dorothy
Woodard Eva Robson conducted
the gift exchange.
Mrs. Weber had displayed a table
center 'Christmas arrangement with
candles. She served Christmas
cookies. candy and punch. She
gave favon of handcream and mini
boxes ()f candy.
Favors of handmade potpourri
bags were given by ra,uline Atkins
and l,)oothy WOOdard.
For the program, Mrs. Robson
read from "Flower and Garden," "A
Legead of the Christmas Tree." She
.stated that when Christianity came
10 Northern Europe, faith, hope and
charity were sent ftom beaven to
find and light a tree that was as
high as hope, as great as love and
·as sweet as charity, as well as one
that had the sign of a cross on every
bough. The search elided when they
.fo.und the fir and it.became the first
Christmas tree. ·
Mrs. Canaday read ''Concerning
the Aloe Vera Plant and its Many
Uses." It is a biblical plant and is
retern:d 10 in the book of John 1939. It is useful in the treabneat of
sunburn, insect bites, disper rash,
acne, poison ivy, boils, bruises,
chapped lips, corns, scars, fungus,
hemorrhoids and peptic uclers.
· Mrs. Woodard read 'The Keeper
of the Inn", "A Chrisbnas Message,"
by
Bishop William
Remington, "A Slice of Life" by
Edgar A. Guest, "Concerning the
Inn Keeper," "If Only I Had .
Known," and "The Legend of the
-. Cat," stating that the cat came
withother creatures to see the holy
babe in the manger. The cat did not
leave with the other animals but
stayed near the manger aAd Mary
said, "Dear cat, from this hour you
shall stay when: man is, fond and
free." Mrs. Woodard concluded
with "Yes Vrrginia, There Is a Santa
Claus."
The January meeting will be held
at the home of Binda Diehl in Rutland ~~ 1:30 p.m.
ganizati~

Page 8-7

Sunday Times-Sentinel

'l,.,pllcilg,-....,

family film, "Norman" will be
shown.

THE 1991 DOG LICENSES
GO ON SALE DEC. 3rd
· DEADLINE FOR PURCHASES Of 1990 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 20TH. FOUR DOllARS ($4.001 PENAllY.IF LICENSE

1..

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ttave guest speaker Brent Unroe,
Sunday at 7 p.m.

SUNDAY

1/ 5/ 91

OHIO RIVER PLAZA
Between Hills &amp; Big Bear
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO
MON. &amp; FRI. 9 TO 9 P.M.
SAT. 9 TO II P.M.
SUNDAY 12 TO 5 P.M.

Q~a~~.tastic 8an7.'s•

(Community Calendar Items appear tw.o days before an event
and 'lhe day of th'at event. Items
m~t be recel,ved In advance for
publication In the calendar.)

~

I . . 1111,' OIL
•

Community calendar

•••
J'

sta..EY •• SAU.EIS MONUIIEIITS
PIL 446·1117

Serviceman deployed

Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio

Wedding policy

Mr. and Mrs. Brian (Susan) Johnson

LAFAYETTE MALL
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
(614) 446-4448

Roalc of Ago ott.a you s choice of 8 different colored
grenltH. ...,_your requlnunenUIIIIY be, complete
utisfHtion II a__. with Rook of Agee.
·

151 Wnl -..,

PORTLAND - Susan Lynn
Vineyard and Brian Arthur Johnson
wen: united in marriage Dec. I in
Charleston, W.Va., with Pastor
James Efaw officiating.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. · Jon Vineyard, Scott
Depot, W.Va. The gtoom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Johnson,
Portland.
··
Matrolllof honor was Beth Gunter, sister of the bride. Maid of
honor ·was _MeliSS!I. Vmeyard, sister.
of .the bride: Bndeamaids were
Sherry French and Connie HaD.
Best man was Bruce Johnson,
brother of the groom. Ushers were
Lenny Potochnik, Jim Kennedy and
Ed Kirt:hdoerffer.

other. I need some seasible advice..
-- FRACTIONATED IN PENN- .
SYLVANIA
.
·DEAR FRAC: I'm not going 10 · .
tell you to play lousy and lei Kevin
win. The only honest solution is for
both of yw to give up golf and stan
a new sport together. And, if you
beat him at that, accept the fact that
you are more of a natural athlete
than your · husband and refuse to
eaga~ in competitive sports with
him . (How's your gin rummy?)
Gem of the Day (Sent in by Jo
Ann Peek in Kilgore, Texas): Make
a pact with yo,ur adult children:
Agree not to take credit for their"•.
achievements if they will refrain ;
from blaming you for their failures.
. Do you have questioiiJ about sex.: : :
but no one to talk to? Ann Landers ·:
booklet, "Sex and t~ Teen-ager," is :1
frank and to the point. Send 11 self- ·.;.
addressed, long. business-size enve- •
lope and a check or money order :
for $3.65 (this incl~s postage and ::
handling) to: Teens. c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
606/1-0562 . (In Canada, send
$4.45.)

•Pajamas and Robes
25°/o OFF
•Select Group of
Sportswear 1f2 Price
•Jeans 25°/o OFF
.•All 'Coats 1/3 OFF
•Dresses 1/3 OFF
•"E.N.U.F." Sweats 20°/o OFF
•All Sweaters 2 5 °/o .OFF
•Fall and Winter
25°/o OFF
California Ivy
$895
•Turtlenecks
•Bugle Boy Pants
2 5 °/o OFF
·•Mickey Mouse Clocks &amp; Watches
. 20°/o OFF

LAY-AWAY

'&gt;

·Vineyard-Johnson wedding

HOliDAY PERMS

Co~er

.~ ·

Pomeroy

---Weddings:--.Rutland gardeners meet .

Dear ADn Landers: I've never prison guards showed reckless
wriuen to you befm but after read- disregard for his safety.
ing 111 item in our local DCWipllper, · I wish our government would
I am outraged. Hc:n: goes my rust protect the average citizen as well
as it proteCts its prisoners. When I
letter to Ann Landers:
According 10 this AssociaiN! Pn:ss . read about babies being shot in their
report. a federal grand jury awarded carriages in Chicago and a talented
$45,000 10 a man wbo was found y01mg choirboy in New York killed
guilty ofldlling
California high- in gang war cross rue, it maku me
wonder how much government
way palmi offiCCIS in 1970.
This oonvicred felon brought a suit pro~tion the average law-abiding
against the U.S. goyemment because citiZea is getting.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
Folsom prison officials failed to.
and
I both work 40-plus hours a
proo:ct him againSJ another inmate
who fired a crude IU'II}yol iniO his side week in cities that are far apart We
in 1986. It bums me up that this . see each other late at night and early
Marcaret Parker
murderer is aUowed to sue the U.S . in the morning. The only real time
goverrunent He was originally givea we have is on weekends.
"Kevin" loves to play golf and so
a death senteace but received a
quired 10 be signed giving owner- reprieve when the California 'do I. Here's the problem: I sboot in
ship to the museum. Donations, Supreme Court decided that the the 80s. He shootS in the 90s. I've
presendy or in a will is encouraged. death sentence was "cruel and been playing golf all my life, and
Donations to the museum are tax- unusual." So the taxpayers musi now Kevin is fairly'new at the game. This
deductible, and one can be assured support this murderer for the rest of has created a major problem. When
the articles \viii be well takea care his life and pay him $45,000 on top we're out on the links, he says that
of and will be JeSCfVed for future ofiL
it's embarrassing to be beaten by his
geaerations.
wife.
Unfortunately, he has a bit of
.When will our justice system wake
GiftS of money to the. museum
a temper. When be hits a couple of
are appreciated. The board receatly up and get tough on the criminals in bad shots or lands jn a sand trap, he
this
country?
Sign
rile
-HAD
IT
gave permission to actnowledge ·
can tum ugly. After a particularly
.
memorial gifts of ·$100 or more on IN FAIRFIELD, CALIF:
DEARFAJRFIELD: That story is poor round, he refuses to speak· to
a plaque 10 hang in the museum.
This will be a lasting memorial for indeed shocking, but some of my me for the rest of the day.
Are there other women out there
loved ones and the ~ wiD help the lawyer friends have a different
with
this vroblem? I love this man
museum carry out Its function and perspective. They point out that
dearly,
and if I gave up playing golf
everyone iri this country, even a
operation.
with
him
we would never see each
Membership in the Meigs convicted felon, is entitled to
CoWlty Pioneer and Historical constitutional rights, and this man's
Society is another way to support rights may ha~ been violaled if his
the society and museum. Member. ship is open to anyone who has an
interest in hislay and wishes to become: a member. Cost is $5 for individuals and $10 for family. Ufe
memberships are also available.
Membenhipnms from January 1 to
Dec. 3r each )'C'M.
·
Members receive The Historian,
a quarterly newsletter published by
the society, the right to nominate
and YOte for II'IIStees of the society,
eligibility to serve as a trustee, a
voice in the proceedings and operation of the society and museum,
and the satisfaction of knowing that
membership contributes to the
preservation of Meigs County History. Memberships may be seru to
Box 14S, Pomeroy.

nurses training at Hocking Technical CoUege, Nelsonville. 1'be entire
family attended services at the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
Making the holiday bright for
Pat Thoma was having her son and
daualuer borne · for Cbristma.
Kelfy who is employed in North
Carolina hlld a short wcekmd visit,
while Suzan, in her third year at the
Columbus School of Design, wiD
be home until mid-January.
FoUowing a tradition of many Feb. 22. After that he will be going
years, Mrs. Ruby Burnside eater- 10 the Nuclear Power School in Ortained on Christmas Eve with a llmdo, Fla. Also joining ber family
family gathering at ber home in for the holiday was Raeleen Oliver,
Pomeroy for all ber childrea and a ceremic eagineering student at
grandchildren. In the group were 'Hocking Tech.
Mrs. Ethel Shasteea, Lincoln
Thm and Marietta Burnside and
Heights,
entertained with a family
Gail Thoma, all of Nord! Carolina;
dinner
party
on Chrisunas. Joining
Grace and Glea. Thoma of Chester;
Marcie and Kenny King, Mid- ber were ber sons an4 daughters-indlepon, and their son-in-law and law, John and Joan Shasteen of
daughter, Mike imd Debl&gt;ie Grate Jackson, and. Ray and Garnette
of Colilmbia, Tenn., and Pat Shasteea of Gaithersburg, Md.,
Thoma, Kelly and Suzan, Pomeroy. · daughter and son-in-law, April and
Olristmas dinner guests of Mr. Tom Smitb, Pomeroy, and their
a Mrs. Robert Crow of Symcuse son, Todd and his wife, Nancy, IUid
wen: Mr. and Mrs. James Crow, their two children, Amy and Molly, ·
Meredith, Wesley and Carrie, Ches- a Paige and Corbett Cleek, now
ter;
IIKI Rueua Crow. Rob- of Reynoldsburg. The Oeeks who
bie and Lori, Christi and KeUie have been in Adanla, Ga. tor the
Collins, Dorothy NeuiZling, and past s!!': years, moved this fall to
Reyno~ after Mrs. Cleek beShawn Amott, Syracuse.
. 'Ryan Oliver, now in officers' came a rcponal distributor with
·
tmining seh&lt;iOI at Newport, R.I., The Limited.
carne borne for the holidays with
And bow about sharing the highhis parents, Susan and Ray Oliver,
Morning Star. Ryan, a 1990 lighrs of your holidays with us. Just
graduare of Ohio University, will cali992-215S.
Happy New Year!
· be commissioned as an ensign on

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel news starr
POMEROY - Christmas. 1990 is
over, but the memories linger on fun ti mes with family membelli, all
lhOSC warm fUZZ}' feelli)gs pf the
season, the excitemeat of exchanging gi fts, and all that holiday food.
But now the house is quiet
Things are somewhat awry, the
Janndry is piled high, and thea
· arc all those leftovers.
Bu t, gee, wasn't it great.
Th:rc were highlights for all of
us.
111c nicest thing about the season
for Mr. and Mrs. John Rice of Tuppers Plains was having all three
sons home for the holidays. Malt.
stationed with the U. S. Anny
Medical Corps in GM11811y ·n:tllrned there Friday after a tWO week
leave with his family )len:. He arri¥ed in time for the wedding of his
brother, John, on Dec. IS to Amy
Louks. John who gtaduated from
Ohio University, CoUege of Engineering in June is an Ensign in
the U.S. Navy presently recruiting
in the Athens area until early March
when he goes to Nuclear Power
School ·in Orlando, f111. Mr. llld
Mrs. Rice's youngest son; David,
was home from Ohio State where
he is in his second year in the College of Engineering. It was the lint
time the' entire family had beCII
together since July whea Mr. and
Mrs. Rice, John and David llew ID
Germany for a visit with Ma!k.
Another highlight of Christmas
was a family · gathering on
Christmas Day at the Rice family
homestead where both John Rice
and his mother were born. Joining
the John Rice family for the
celebration were John's brother and
his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Rice
whg live nearby, and their sister,
Wilma Robinson of near Alfred
along With several members • of
their families.
Christmas was a special lime for
Harry and Margaret Bailey of
Minersville. Mrs. Bailey came
home for the holidars with her
fam ily from University Hospital
and will return there on Jan. :J for
open heart surgery. Tbeir·son, Keith
Bailey, and grandson. Scolt Hy.U
of Pensacola, Aa. were In, along
with their son-in-law and dau&amp;b~«,
Chuck and Debbie Mullen, 111!1
children, Ian and Robbie, Akron,
another grandson, Todd Hytdl of
Akron, and his friead, Kany, SDIIlcy, and Brenda HyseU
II iD

December 30. 1990

30. 1990 :

Fed up with the system

Preserving history

Community

December

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

•

l·

•

�December 30, 1990

Plaaaant, W. Va.

Tlm&amp;S-Sentinel

ports

MAXWELL HOUSE
MAS.TER BLEND

34.5

STORE HOURS
Monday tiH:u Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Mourning re-injures arch·
.
.
'
out for thlrd strm.ght game

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ByROBERTJ.MURPHY
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UP!) - Steve
DeBerg threw for 276 yards
Saturday, setting up five Nlck
Lowery field goals and keeping
the Kansas City Chiefs alive lor
the AFC West title with a 21-10
victory over the Chicago Bears.
Kansas City finished the regular season 11-5, and wlll finish
first ln the division and gain a

By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Spprts Writer
In today's m atchups, th e Dal·
las Cowboys a nd Houston Oilers

BEEF

DeBerg, playing the second
,Straight week with a broken left
pinky, completed 25 of 32 pass
attempts before giving way to
Steve Pelluer midway through
the f!naLquarter.
Lowery's fourth lleld goal, a
32-yarder, came with four seconds ' left in the half and· gave
Ka nsas ·c ay a 12-10 lead. The
Chiefs domlanted the half but fell
behind 10-9 when Bears rookie

will try to follow a trend nobod y
in the NFL set by design. That
trend is to enter the playoffs with
a backup quarterback starting.

ByLESKJOS
ques tion going into Tuesday
UPI Sports Writer
night's Orange Bowl game with
MIAMI iUPij - The Notre the No. 1 Colorado Buffaloes.
Dame defense features three
No.6 Notre Dame, 9-2, is giving
All-Americans, all in the tradi· up 390 yards a game. which
tlon of the Fighting Irish heroes proba bly accounts for the two
of the past.
· losses. Last year, the Irish were
Nose tackle Chris Zorich . Line- 10-1 and gave up 290 yards a
backer Mike Stonebreaker. Def· game before defeating the Buffa·
ensive back Todd Lyght. A loes 21-6 in the New Year's night
threesome that any quarterback, classic. Colorado was ranked No.
ball carrier or receiver can fear 1 going into that game, too.
without worrying about being
" We 're going to have more
called a chicken.
trouble defeating Colorado· this
Then why can't they stop year than las t, at least on paper,"
anybody?
head coach !,.ou Holtz said.
The Irish themselves would
Most of the accusing fingers
like · to know the answer to that point at Not re Dame's secondary

BULK

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$1390

The Buffalo Bills, New York
Giants and C)llcago Bears will be
doing that, a'i though those clubs
clinched while they still had t~elr

as the cause of the Irish prob·
!ems: Opponents have been gaining 267 yards a game through the
alr.
" It 's a matter of togetherness," Holtz said. "Against Ten·
nessee we had to move two
running backs over to the de'fensive backfield because of injur ies
and the'y were in on some critical
plays.
"You just have some years
where lt all doesn 't flt. I'm
disappointed in myself. We have
good players ."
Notre Dame s tarts Lyght, a
(See IRISH on C-2}

GROUND

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· PREPARING FOR BATrLE - Colorado
tallbacll Erie Blentemy, shown atretchllll out
;dur1D1 workoulll earUer lAst week, will be amon1

thole Buffa!- prepared to do battle wllh No. I
Notre Dame In lhe Orange Bowl on New Year's
Day, (UPI)
'

••

•

,

•

the playoffs the next year. The
Cowboys also would have the
worst record of any Wild-card
team ln NFL. history, and could
become the first team with a
losing record to make the
playoffs if they and New Orleans
lose.
If the Cowboys fall, the Saints,
7-8, will earn the last NFC
post-season spot with a home
victory Monday night.
The other NFC playoff s pots
are sealed- San F rancisco, New
York and Chicago are dlvlslon
c hampions and Philadelphia and
Washington are wild cards. .
In the AFC, Buffalo has the
East title, Miami ls a wild card
and either the Los Angeles
Raiders or Kansas City will wln
the AFC West with the runner-up
settling for a wlld -card spot.
That leaves the AFC Central
and the third AFC wild-card spot
to be settled today.
Pittsburgh. 9-6, leads the AFC
Central by one game over Houstori a nd Ci ncinnati. Seattle joins
the Oilers and Bengals at 8-7 and
rema ins in contention for the
wild -card spot.
Houston, with Carlson replacing injured Warren Moon, plays
home against the Steelers tonight. Pittsburgh clinches the
division with a victory. If the
Oilers wln, Cincinnati finishes
first in the AFC Centra l If the
Bengals wln at home against
Cleveland.
"We've got it right in front of
us," Steelers quarterback Bubby

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Today's "Bat tle of
Ohio" could be the start of something good making the playoffs- for the Cincinnati Bengals.
It definitely will be the e nd of something bad - a
horrendous season - for the Cleveland Browns.
Cincinnati, 8·7, must beat the Browns to have a
crack at the playoffs . A Cincinnati victory,
coupled with a Houston wln over Plttsburgh,g lves
the Bengals the AFC central division title. Or, a
Cincinnati win, )Inked with a Detroit victory over
Seattle, gives the Bengals a wild ca rd be rth.
However, without either ·a Houston or Detroit
victory, the Bengals don't make the playoffs. And,
ll Cincinnati fails to beat Cleveland, the Bengals
eliminate themselves.
Cleveland, 3-12, has lostnlne of its lastlO games,
not to mention two coaches - head coach Bud
Carson, who departed at mid-season, and interim
head coach Jlm Shofner, who already knows he
won't be back on the sldellnes next year.
Things are so bad in Cleveland that not even the
Browns' public relations offlclals are trying to
paint a good face on a bad team. This· week' s
Browns' news release began, "The Cleveland
Browns conclude the 'season. from hell' this
Sunday ... "
' 'That's a pretty good description of our year,"
agreed Shofner. "The whole thing has come

TONY'S

Lunch Meat •••••••••••

starters healthy . The Cowboys
wlll call on Babe Laufenberg and
the Oilers on Cody Carlson with
playoff berths on the line.
DallaswillclinchthefinalNFC
wlld-card spot with a victory in
Atlanta. If the Cowboys lose, they
·can still get in with a 7-9 mark If
the New Orleans Saints lose
Monday night against the Los
Angeles Rams.
The Oilers are assured of
making the playoffs with a home
victory against Pittsburgh.
" We'd rather lock it up ourselves," says Laufenberg, · who
has only six previous starts in as
tnany NFL seasons. "I view it as
an opportunity, but it's a mlsno·
mer lo say I'm going to take this·
teain to the playoffs . Everybody
is going to have to take up the
slack."
Laufenberg became a starter
when Troy Aikman suffered a
separated shoulder last week in
Philadelphia.
Carlson, ln his fourth season,
has thrown just 26 passes all
season. He takes over for Warren
Moon, who suffered a dislocated
thumb last week ln Cincinnati.
"I've always felt I could
compete in the NFL," Carlson
said. "But just being in the·
league, you hope lor games like
this. It's a great challenge with
the playoffs at stake and we're
going against the bes t defense ln
the league . l'm excited about it."
Dallas would become the first
team In NFL history to follow a
one-victory season with a trip to

Brister said. "All we've got to do
ls take it."
For the Oilers to take the
division, they must wln and
Cincinnati- must lose to the 3-12
Browns. However, Houston
clinches at least the wild-card
berth with a victory over
Pittsburgh.
The Bengals are heavily fa·
vored, but the Browns, 3,12, can
take some of the sting out of a lost
season by knocking off their Ohio
rivals.
" It . would be gratifyi ng to
knock the· Benga ls out o.f the ,
playoffs," Browns defensive I ·
tackle Michael Dean Perry said.
"We're not able togo any further. ·
so to spoil someone else's season
would be nice, es pecially
Cincinnati."
The Seahawks can make the
playoffs if they win at home over.
Detroit and either Cincinnati or
Houston loses. Sea ttle also
ma kes U if Cinc innati and Houston lose.
In other games, it's Buffalo a t
Wash ington. Indianapolis at Mlami. San Diego a t the Raiders,
San Francisco at Minnesota, the
Giants at New England, the New
York Jets at Tampa Bay , and
Green Bay at Denver.
The Bills, Giants and Bears
can use the final game to give
their new star ting qua'r terbacks
- Frank Reich .of Buffalo, Jeff
Hostetler of New York and Mike
Tomczak of Chicago - more
work.

Bengals, Browns in season finale
that will decide· Cincy's future

. ..

2

ARMOUR TREET

Lowery missed the point-after
Barry Word went over the
attempt, leaving Kansas City
1,000-yard mark for the season
a head 18·10.
with 73 yards on · 13 carries,
Lowery's 38-yarder with 9: 12
giving him 1,015 for the year. His
left made it 21-10. The score ·
fumble early in the third quarter
followed a fumble by Bears
gave Chicago possession at the
Chiefs 39, but the Bears were . quarterback Mike Tomczak deep
in his territory .
unable to advance the ball.
Tomczak, starting only his ·
De Berg then drove the Chiefs
to a three- yard TD run by
second this season in place of the
Christian Okoye, only hls second
injured Jim Harbaugh, struggled
and completed only 5 of 23 passes
carry after slttingoutthe last two
games with a shoulder injury. for 85 yards.

10 LB. PKG.

.Fried Chicken ••••!.o;.$ 229

12 PAll

1360Z.

CHUCK

BANQUET

Snack Cakes •••••••••

STARKIST TUNA

129

Johnny Bailey returned a punt 95
yards for a touchdown.
Lowery, who also nailed kicks
from 19, 30, 38 and 43 yards,
s urpassed · the previous Kansas
City single-season records for
points (129) and field goals (30},
held by Jan Stenerud. He also
now has kicked 21 straight field
goals, surpassing ihe previous
club reco rd of 16 ln a row held by
Stenerud.
Kansas City running back

.

Notre Dame's soft defense to face
running Buffaloes in Orange Bowl

GRADE A

3 LB. BAG

Kentucky 93, Louisville 85- At Louisville. Ky .,
Sean Woods scored 20second-halfpoints Saturday
- and got long-range support from Richie Farmer

:i.nd Jeff Bras sow, leflding Kentucky to a 93-85
nationally televised victory over Louisville.
Woods, held without a point in the first half,
scorea almost at will on the inside over the final20
minutes after Farmer and Brassow had loosened
up .the Louisville defense With th eir three-point
. shooting.
Farmer scored all 14 of his points in the first
half, making four of nve from three-point range.
Brassow finished with 18· points, hitting six of 11
three-pointers, and Reggie Hanson a lso added 17
points lor the Wildcats, 8-2.
Kentucky look the lead tor good on back-to- back .
three-p9inters by Deron Feldhaus an.d Bras sow, ·
breaklrig a 15-15 tie, a nd held a 39-28 lead at
halftime before 19,589 in Louisville's Freedom
Hall.
• The Wildcats, who finished 13 of 26 on
three-pointers for the game, led bY as many as 22
points three times in the second half, the last at
78-56 on two free throws by J amal Mashburn with
6:47 remaining.
LaBradford Smith, who scored !OoiLouisville's
first 11 points; finished as the game's leading
scorer with 26. Cornelius Holden added 22 and Klp
Stone 11 for the Cardinals, who slipped to 5-2.

Cowboys, Oilers battling today for parts in plf!-yoff epic

GROUND

$1390

Whole Chicken~~ •••• S9(
1/4 Pork Loin ••••.~•• $1 69

first-round pla yoff bye lf the
Raiders lose to San Diego today .
II the Raide rs wln, Kansas City
will .play a wild-card game at
Miami next week.
The Bears, 11-5, suffered their
first home loss of the season, and
limp into the playoffs alter
winning the NFC Central. Chi·
cago plays either Dallas or New
Orleans next week in the
playoffs.

With backup quarterbacks in spotlight,

10 LB. PKG.

Ch~ese ....~•. $189

way we play defense,~' Thompson sal d. "That's
our objective- to be sloppy. We're not trying to
be pretty, we're trying to wln."
Houston head coach Pat Foster credited the
Hoyas defense for slowi ng the tempo.
"We won't play many games that slowly ,"
FOster said. ' 'But it was p robably good to expose
the team to a situation like that.
"We were kind of ln a holiday lull. We seemed to
panic when we couldn' t hit. I've never seen us
shoot that poorly."
Stanford 70, Cent. Florida61- At Orlando, Fla..
Adam Keefe scored F points, John Patrick 16 and
Kenny Ammann 15 Saturday to lead Stanford to a
70-61 victory over Central Florida ln the Red
Lobster Classic.
Today the Cardinal. 7-2, wlllplay the winner of a ·
second. game played Saturday between Nor th
' Carolina and DePauL The loser will play Central
Florida, 5·3.
Denny Hinson and Ken Leeks each added 11
points for the Knights.

DeBerg, Lowery push·Chiefs to 21-10 wm·· over Bears

U.S. D. A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Sausage ••...•..•••.'!-..

help of a 12-2 run over the last 7:18 of the hall. The
Hoyas also scored the first six points of the second
half, and Houston never pulled within nine points.
Prior to Saturday's loss, Houston had enjoyed
its finest start since the 1983-84. season. The
Cougars lost that year's NCAA tournament final
to Georgetown ln the last time the two teams met
before Saturday.
Saturday's game drew 9,617 fans: More than
25,000 showed up at the Suncoast Dome fo.r a n
NBA exhibition game between Chicago and
Seattle in October.
Thompson noted that lt was good for team
confidence to win without Mourning, an\1 praised
his freshmen.
Bui at the same time, he expressed caution
about hls youthful team.
"They're the nucleus of a very good team," he
said. "It's going to take time, and we've got to
experience some hurt and apprecia te the past.
We're going to suffer a lot this year ln terms of
consistency."
Thompson ' said the game's tempo - which
appeared slow a nd s loppy at times- favored the
Hoy as .
"Anytime we play, it looks sloppy because of the

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPI) - Freshman
Robert Churchwell scored a game-high 21 points
~atu rd ay to Hft No. · 16 . Georgetown to ~ 63-51 :
victory over Houston.
The Hoyas, 7·2, snapped a two-game losing
streak- their longest in three years. Houston fell
to 8-2.
Charles Harrison, another Georgetown freshman, added 14 points and center Dikembe
Mutombo had 19 rebounds and four blocked shots .
Mutombo' s play helped c_9mpensate lor the
·absence of injured Alonzo Mour ning.
Georgetown head coac h John Thompson had
planned to use Mourning In Saturday's game,
which he described as a "much needed win," at
the Florida Suncoast Dome. But Mourning
re -lnjured a sprained arch in practice and was
sldeliJied for hls third straight game.
Darrell Micke ns' 13 points led the Cougars, who
shot a season-low 26 percent from the fl~r.
including a -woeful20 percent ln the first half.
Georgetown took a 28-17 halftime lead with the

I

·PRICES EFFECTIVE DEC. 30, 1990 THRU JAN. 5, 1991

C

No. 16 Georgetown defeats Houston 63-51

oz.

$399

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Section

December 30, 1990

COFFEE
.

~imts- $entint1

•

.

,,

"

Las Vegas oddsmakers have made theBengals
whopping 14-point favorites over the Browns, but
then, this isn't the "Battle of Nevada," it's the
" Battle of Ohio" where Buckeye Football Fever
runs rampant.
·
''I don' t recall any Bengals-Browns games that
weren't good games," says Cincinnati head coach
Sam Wyche. "Cleveland still considers Cincinnati
a blg rival.
.
"I think the Browns are still playing hard. They_

haven't quit . Sunday is their last ga me and 1
expect they wlll want to play well."
Today may the last game Ozzie Newso me ever
plays and the 13-year veteran Cleveland tight
ends vows the Browns wlll not roll over lo r th e
Bengals.
" It's our playoff game," figured Newsome, who
says he probably will retire after today's co ntest.
" We' ve got a chance to knock Cincinnati out of the
playoffs. If they lose, th ey go home like we do. So,
· it's a playoff atmosphere for us. ''

Adds Cleveland defensive tackle Michael. Dean
Perry, " It would be gratifying to knock the
Bengals out of the playoffs. We're not able to go
any further, so to spoil someone else's season
would be nice, especially Clnclnnatl's."
If the Browns are going to beat the Bengals,
they're going to have to quit fumbling. Last
weekend, Cleveland lost a n NFL-record tying
eight fumbles ln a 35-0 loss to Pittsburgh.
Cleveland quarterback Bernie Kosar. who
m issed the Pittsburgh game, also. is out for the
Cincinnati game and will again be replaced by
Mike Pagel.
''With Mike, we're able to do more things with
him moving around the pocket," notes Newsome.
"He's more of a inlddle-range passer - 10, 15, 20
yards - than Bernie, who goes longer more
often."
Cleveland, however, has the NFL's worst
rushing offense, while Cincinnati boasts one ofthe
league's best runners - James Brooks, coming
off a Bengals' record 201 rush'lng yards last
,
weekend ln. a 40·20 romp over Houston.
"There's a lot of people who haven't learned
how to tackle me," says Brooks. "I figure I can get
20 yards any time I get the ball."
Two months ago, Cincinnati rushed for a club
season-high 233 yards against Cleveland in a 34-13
vlctoty.

·...

�Pse

Pomeroy-Middleport Galipolia, Ohio-Point Plmant. W. Va.

C-2- Sunday Tirne.Sentinel

December ,30. 1990

Gallipolis pounds . Greenfield· McClain in 60-31 decision
loss this winter. On the year,
Greenfield dropped to 5·3 while
Coach Jim Osborne's lads, with
their third s traight victory, im·
proved their season ,mark to 4·3.
Gallipolis turned In its most
Impressive defensive game of
the year while handing the Tigers
their worst home los s in 10 years.
The Tiger s scored only eight
bas kets (out of 38 attempts) for
2I percent . Galllpolls connected

Worst defeal at lwme
/or. Tigers in 10 xears

'I

GREENFIELD VIsiting
G~lJi polls jumped off to a quick
10-Q· lead e n route to a 60·31
ncm,conference · basketball vic·
tory ove r Coa ch Rick Va nM a·
tre 's Greenfie ld Tiger s Friday
night.
lt was the Tiger s first home

on 27 of 41 (Including four
three-pointers ) for 65 percent
from the field.
The Blue Devils, behind Rob
Skidmore, Scott Jividen , Ryan
Smith, Jos.h Williams and Chad
Neal, led 10.0 before Greenfield's
Ritchie Bunner popped In a
three-pointer from the corner
(3: 45 ). GAHS led 18·7 after one
period.
'
Neither team played well in the

second period, especially GARS
· as the Blue Devils committed -11
of their 21 turnovers. The Tigers
pulled within seven Points once at
18·11, but trailed 22-11 at
halftime.
GalUJ)olis doubled the score on
Greenfield In the third period,
and led 43-25 going Into the final
stanza. The Blue Devils outscored GHS 17-6 In the final
stanza,

In.Sh···__:_-----,-------'----------(Co ntinued fr om C-1)

sehfor , at the cornerback on the
wt J e side of the field a nd junior
Rod' Sm lth on the short side with
fr~Sbma n Willie Clark and junior
Greg Dav is a t safety.
P~r t of the problem is Lyght,
wht&gt; played through a hamstring
in jury during most of the season.
' '\ t was kind of dlsapJ)ointing
!or'me this year to be injured and
not- to be able to play up to my
ex;Jecta tions," said Lyght, a n
All' Am erica n despite his injury
problem s . " I really haven' t felt
as good as I do now all season. It's
good to be going out there 100
percent."
Colorado head coa ch Bill
McCartney sai d Lyght r eminds
him of Deion Sanders , the for rn.'er
Florida State star .
" He can bac kpedal , backpedal, backpeda l. and when other
player s have to turn and run with
the recever s, he can still backpedal a nd watch both the receiver
and the qua r terback," McCart·
ney said .
Despite Lyght's talents, Holtz ·
sai d he has not seen much of an
improvement in his secondary
during the season and doesn ' t
expect to see much in the Orange
BowL
. " I don' t think we 've made that

much progress," Holtz sasld. . Improve on that all year."
"Our seniors had a very bad
"We've done a better job stopping the big play , but what did senior year, " said Zorich, a
senior. "For us , lt '.s been a big
USC gain against us ln the air?
Three hundred yards? "
·
· disappointment. I don't think the
Actually, it was 273, but that 's players think we're half as good
as we were last year. We're 9-2
still more than Holtz would like.
a nd the defense isn 't playing
linebacker Scott Kowalkowski
does n' t have any answer s, ex- very well. All we'retrylngtodois
cept to work harder.
· save face right now. We don't
want to be 9-3. At least I don't."
" We .can do nothing but to try
and Improve," he said. " Third
Against Colorado. Notre
Dame's problems defensively
downs have been killer downs for
could be severe. After losing to
us . We haven' t been able to

Jackson hammers Oak Hill 94-71
OAK HILL - Oak Hill cut
Jackson's lead to five at 18·13 by
scoring tl\e first basket of the
second quarter of Friday night's
Route 93 encounter, bu t Jackson
reeled off nine unanswered
points after that and pulled away
for a 94-71 victory.
·
· Lackluster shooting from the
field spelled trouble for the Hill,
and the fact that none of the
Oaks' top three scorers crossed
the 20-point barrier didn't make
up for the multitude of missed
shots that allowed J a ckson to run
away .and hide.

..

'

--------Cagestandmgs----~-(SEo,opponents)
(All-Games)
TEAM
W L
P
Porti&gt;mouth ... .... 8 0 713
Chesapeake ...... . 8 0 639
Southern ........... . 8 2 723
J~j&lt;SO!L ............ 5 2 384
Gi,eenfield ....... .. 5 ' 3 377
Gallipolis ........... 4 3 452
',1\~ver ly ............ 4 3 478
V!pton. ...... .. .... .. 3 2 350
L~a n ........ ...... .. 4 4 547
!'.1arietta.. .. . . . ... .. 3 5 · 492
Atflens, .. . . .. . . . .. . .. 3 6 485
Wheelersburg .... 2 5 444
~; Pleasant ..... . 1 4 293
W~ rren . ... ... .... .. . 0 7 421

~

Tr,AM
Glrllipolis
Afllen s . ...... ....
Jatkson .. .......
LO$an .. : .. .. .....
Marietta .... ....
\\14rren ....... ...
TQ'l'ALS

•••

Friday's games:
Gallipolis at Athens
OP
Marietta a t Logan
503 · Warren Local at Jackson
467 Buffalo at Chesapeake
598 · VInton County at Alexander
374 Washington CHat Greenfield
391 Southern at North Gallia ·
136 , Milton at Pt. Pleasant
463 Northwest at Wal(erly
294 Boyd at Portsmouth
544 Portsmouth W e st at
482 Wheelersburg
580
Jan 6 games:
467 Southern at Gallipolis
332 Circleville at Waverly
481 Wheelersburg at Ironton

f~~~~~)

SEOAL VARSITY
W

2
2
2
2
1
0
9

L
1
1
I
1
2
3
9

P
226
186
IOS
179
130
IGS
997

::

SEOAL RESERVES
T~AM
W L
P OP
GWlipolis
2 1 143 127
'At3r ren .......... 2 I 118 126
J-Ogan ... .. ....... 2 1 156 147
MQrietta ..... ... 2 1 143 126
· Jackson ....... .. 1 2 120 147
Athens .. ...... ... 0 3 119 126
Tql' ALS
9 9 799 799
~hursday's result:
.
Hurricane 62 Pt. Pleasant 55
· :r"rlday's results:
G)tllipolis 60 Greenfield 31
C!Wsapeake 77 Ceredo-Kenova 72
•
I c.t)
Lbgan 90 Meigs 70

~~:~~ ~~ ~~~~~ ~1

JQckson 94 Oak Hill 71
B&amp;rboursvllle 76 Pt. Pleasant 56
\\taveriy .76 Ross-Southeastern 65
~tsmouth I03 Akron Hoban 39
o(.ast night's games:
vlnton County at Wheelersburg
'
a t Lan~aster
Local at Frontier

~

!~~2~~~~at
Greenfleid
ly Holiday
Classic

Holiday Classic

at

Vinton

County

Sophomore Matt Walburn led
the Ironmen, 5·2, with a gamehigh 22 points, inclduing' three
three-pointers to boost his total (o
24 . Also stoking coals ,In Jack·
son's offensive furnace were
Munn, who scored 20 points,
Clayton Valentine, who had 15.
The Oaks, 3·7, were led by
sophomore postman Chris Simpson, who had 19 - only the third
time he has scored more than I5
this season. His season high Is a
23-point effort against South
Webster on Dec. 8. Also chipping
in for the hosts were Bill Potter
(17 ) and Mike Simpson (13).
On this Friday's agenda, Jack·
son will host Warren Local, while
Oak Hill will begin the 1991
portion of its season at home
against SVAC front-runner Han·
·nan. Trace.
Score by quarters
Jackson ............. 18 29 25 22-94
Oak Hill ........... . 11 15 15 30-71
JACKSON (94) - Walburn
6-3-1-22; Munn5·1-7-20'; Valentine
7-0-1-15; Woodard 2-0-7·11:
Dempsey 3-0-0-6; Morgan 2-0-2-6;
Poetker 3-0-0-6; Douthett 2-0·0·4;
Jewell2-0·0·4. TOTALS- 32-4-1894
Field goals- 36-71 (50.7%)
Foul shots- 189-27 (66.7%)
Rebounds - 40
Turnovers - 19
OAK HILL (71) - C. Simpson

OP

187
179
112
175
142
202
997

the Irish 21-6 in last yeat.'s
Orange Bowl, the Buffs have
taken great pains Improving
their passing game.
Accordingly, quarterback Dar·
ian Hagan improved his passing
yardage from 1,002 last year to
1,538 In 1990.
"We plan to throw, " McCartney said. "There Is just too much
evidence that you can't come into
a bowl game with a onedimensional offense and expect
to win.' ' '

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

All CHRISTMAS ITEMS

50°/o OFF
DECORATIONS, CHRISTMAS CASSEnES ·
CHRISTMAS CARDS &amp; GIFT WRAP ,

All 1991 CALENDARS.
NOW

40°/o OFF

8-0-3-19; Potter 5-1-4-17; M. Simpson 6-0·1-13; Hale 1-1-0-5; R.
Morgan 0.0-5-5; Davis 0·1-1-4;
Gre·e n 0-1-0-3; Hall 1-0·0-2; B.
Morgan 0.0-2-2; Turner 0-0-1-1.
TOTALS - 21+17-71
Field goals- Z5-6ll (36.8%)
Foul shots -17-29 (58.6%)
Rebounds - 37
Tumovers - 25

B

30°/o OFF

93 MILL STREET

MIDDLEPORT

NORRIS
NORTHUP
DODGE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.NOW OPEN

See Answer to Puzzle on Page A-5
ACROSS
~··-Dogs"

6 - Winningham
10 Jog
14 Frolic
19 Abounded
21 Kind of cheese
22 Impolite
23 Progress;
passage
24 Orlen1al
26 Endurance
28 Merchandise
outlets
29 Viper
30 "SIIII Waters
Run- "
32 Supercilious
persons
33 Solicitude
34 Mop abbr.
35 Hawaiian wreaths
37 Judge
39 Consumed
40 Time gone by
41 Household pets
42 Stupefy
44 Signify
46 Foreman
47 - de fole gras
(liver paste)
48 HerOic even!
50 Most SOlitary
52 Arrl~ on scene
53 Scolari ID
55 Peruse
57 Father
58 Let it sland
59 Undergarment
60 Japan62 High mountain
64 EpiC poetry
66 Proceed
68 Near
69 Kind of collar
70 Transfix
71 Cavil
73 Shot at from
cover

~­
~

Thank 'tou For
Vour Patlenee!

SUNDAY PUZZLER

measure

1 GROUP OF

Nathan Miller led the Imps
Williams, with 15 points and
with
11 points. Bob Mabry added
eight assists and six rebounds ,
seven.
Jack Hutchinson led the
led the Blue Devils attack.
Little Tigers with 10 points.
Skidmore added IO points and
Neal eight. Smith picked off nine Score by quarters
of the Blue Devils 31 rebounds , Greenfle ld .......... . 7 6 12 6-31
.Gallipolls .. ... ... ....18 4 21 17-00 .
while Skidmore had six .
GALLIPOLIS (60)' Josh
· ))pug Moon led the Tigers with
Williams 6·1-0·15;. Rob Skidmore
eight points. Marcus Coleman
and Eric Spanger each had six . 5-0·0-10; Chad Neal 4-0·0-8; Scott
Jividen 3·0·0-6; Jakim Lanier
GHS played without the services
of lis sixth man, Robbie Snavely , 0-2-0-6; Ryan Smith 3-0-0-6; Clint
Davis 1·1-0-5; . Eric Hoffman
whose grandfather died earlier
1-0-2-4.
TOTALS 23+2·60
In the week.
·
GREENFIEW
(31) - Doug
Greenfield was 14 of 23 at the
Moon
3-0-2-8;
Marcus
Coleman
line (GARS was 2 of 6) and had
3-0·0-6;
Eric
Spanger
1-0-4-6;
only eight personal fouls . GAHS
had 20 personals. The Tigers had · Ritchie Bunner 0·1·1·4; Chad
Fairley 0-0·2-2; Chris Taylor
13 rebounds, eight by Marcus
Coleman. Greenfield had 13 0.0·2·2; Jim Vanzan 0·0·2-2; Scott
Will is 0.0·1·1. TOTALS H -I4-31
turnovers , six in the first period.
Greenfield played Alexander
at home Saturday night and will
host Washington CH Friday.
Gallipolis plays at Athens on
Friday and will host Southern on
Saturday.
In Friday's reserve game , 'the
Little Tigers held on for a 30-28
victory for their fifth win in eight
games. GARS dropped to 3·3.
Greenfield's' Scott Anderson
and Bobby Williams tallied the
last three points in the closing
minutes of play for Greenfield.
The Blue Imps missed several
chances to ·knot the count, but
several questionable calls, turnovers and two missed free
AT
throws with one second remain252 UPPER RIVER RD.
Ing left them on the short end of
STATE IT. 7
the score.
· Greenfield led 8·7, 21-18 and
GAWPOLIS,. OHIO
27-22 at the quartermarks.

75 South American
- anlmata
77 Wild plum
78 Precipitous
60 Habituate
81 Strong desire
82 Havtng made a
will

84Calm

86 Type of bean
87 Forestall
89 Slender finial
92 Proportion
95 Rugged mountain

.

crest

98 TV's Auberjonois
99 Cultivator
10t The East
103 Goes astray
104 Perform
10~ Small amount
106 Sun god
107 Calcium symbol
108 Cloak; mask
110 TransgresS
111 Three ft .
112 - Tyler Moore
113 Location •
115 TV's "American
Dreamer" star:
in lis.

117 Hard of hearing
119 Hebrew leiter .
120 Reveal
121 Mlllgate
124 Walk
126 Go by water
127 Baaebail Blais
128. Belgian seaport
130 Congers
132 Tumble
133 Formally precise
134 Everyone
135 Ctaislfy
137 Watch face
139 Sick
140 Lump of earth
141 Competllor
143 Withered
145 African antelope
146 Wanton;
profligate
148 Made broader
150 "Stormy-"
152 PrleJ sneakinglY
153 AlcOholic
beverage
154 Platform
156 Steeping·
sickness fly

157 Temporary
shelters
158 Goals
159 Barracuda
160 Trials
DOWN
1 Take unlawfully

2 Fluffs the hair
3 Resl
4 Danish land
division

5 Unwanted plant
6 Myself
7 Paid notices .
8 Rodents
9 Issue forth
10 Aggregation of
peOple
1t Hurries
12 Harem room
13 Tellurium symbol
14 Center
15 Diving bird
16 Church digni.tary
17 Landed property .
18 Remains at ease
20 A Scolt
23 Vehicle
· 25 Wanl
27 Roadside holels
28 Church service
31 Pare
33 Hurl
36 Eats
38 L-0 linkup
40 Markle of "Night
Court"
41 Collection of
tents
43 French resort
45 Wild ass of India
oj6 Bailey of the
comics

47 Ache
49 Tooth crowns
51 Rome's country
52 Shut
53 Moccasins
54 Narrow, flat

board
56 Nonexistence

59 ~signed to a
post
60 Disturbance
61 Arrow poison
63 Roll-&lt;:all reply
65 Trlgonometlc
function
67 Poem
69 Printer's measure
70 Cast of
characters
72 Irritate
74 Ustlnov ID
76 Article
77 Cubic meter

79 Before: prefix
83 Nahoor sheep
85 All
86 CepHal of the
Ukraine
87 Beg f~r
Imploringly
88 Acquired: abbr.
89 Spanish article
!\0 Dangers
91 Angry
92 Fabulous bird
93 Biblical mountain
94 Agave plant
96 Journey,
97 Anglo-Saxon
slave
100 French article
102 Cravats
105 Clayey earth
109 Tardy
112 Post
I 13 Bridge term
114 Derive; deduce
116 Shoshonean
Indians
118 Give food to
120 Lighter-than-air
· vehicle
121 Dry
122 Virgin123 Baseball's
Slaughter
125 Proinises;

belroths
126 Sally
127 God of love
129 Altracted
131 Most rational
132 Initial
133 Additional;
extra
134 Assistants
136 Allowance for
waste

138 Entices
140 Policemen: slang
141 Fruitskln
142 Jump
144 "- of Eden"
147 Small child
148 Emerge
victorious

149 Expire·
151 Goller's need
153 " - the People"
155 "- Elmo's Fire"

December 30, 1990

Su!ldaY Tirne.Sentinei- Page C-3 .

Pomeroy- Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

With 31 points from Baer,

•

Southem downs Athens·-69-52 for fifth straight VICtory
By SCOTr WOLFE

6-4 and 6-5 Athens' big men,

T-8 Correapondent
·
THE PLAINS- Storming to a
26'9 advantage In the opening
min,utes, the Southern TQrnadoes
made It five wins In a row Friday
night with a 69-52 victory over the
Athens Bulldogs .
Southern's · soulhpaw guard,
Andy Baer, tossed in a season-high
31 poiniS and nine rebounds to lead
the Thmadoes, while senior
postman Jeremy Rose anchored
Southern's sttonghold on the
boards with a season-high 18
rebound$. Soulhem outrebounded
the · visibly taJiec Bullclotls 43·33,
including Rose's dominanon of the

Southern is .now 8-2 overall and
6·1 in lhe SVAC, while Athens
drops to 3-5 overall:
Behind Baer's 31-point effort,
which included a dazzling aerial
display of five three-pointers, came
the fine efforts of senior Michael
Kincaid, who again played a consistently good game.
Matt Jollick, who led Athens
with 14 poiniS, was closely followed by Bob Bailey wilh 13.
Establishing lheir man-to-man
early, Southern utilized its full
court press to perfection and forced
12
early
Athens
turnovers.

. Southern ·executed lhe jump-andvery well to take advantage of
the upbeat tempo that left the
:Sulldogs gasping on all· fours, and
\)ltiliUllely gave the Tornadoes a19·
7 first period lead.
Veteran head coach Howie
·
Caldwell said, "The press worked
really well in the first half and we
forced several big turnovers early.
We mostly went with a man·toman. but wanted to mix things up a
little wilh a 2·3 zone. One thmg
that boosted · our confidence was
that we shot the ball well in the first
half. Everyone worked together·
well and Ibis marked another good

run

Texas, Miami to battle for:shot
at national tide in Cotton Bowl
on

snow
the ground, . it was 18
By MIKE .RABUN
degrees and the wind was blow·
VPI Sports Writer
DALLAS (UP!) - The Texas lng 30 miles an hour. And we
Longhorns and Miami Hurri· won."
canes combine Ibis year to make . Miami brings a 9·2 record Into
up a piece of the college football the contest, Its losses coming to
national championship puzzle Brigham Young and Notre
and by the time Jan. 2 rolls Pame. Texas has lost just once,
around one of those teams could that to Colorado In the second
be the last of the contenders still game of (he season.
And while the Hurricanes were
standing.
expected
to be in a position to
Miami and Texas meet New
challenge
for the national crown
Year's Day lri the 55th Cotton
Bowl, an annual attraction that this year, Texas' return to the
in recent .Years . has been an higher echelons of coUege foot·
also-tan when It comes to choos· liall w&amp;s a surprise,
The Longhorns were coming
ing the nation's best team.
This year, however, the third· off two straight losing seasons
ranked Longhorns and fourth- and head coach David McWillirated Hurricanes have created ams' job was on the line. But with
one of the best of the bowl a dramatic Increase in team
matchups. If the No. 2 Georgia speed, a .Jack of Injuries and the
Teclr Yellow Jackets stumble development of freshman · run·
against Nebraska In the Citrus ning back Butch Hadnot, Texas
Bowl and top-ranked Colorado suddenly rushed to the top of the
falls to Notre Dame In the Orange Southwest Conference;
It Is · Texas' firs.t trip to the
bowl, the .Texas-Miami winner
will likely move to the top of the . Cotton Bowl In seven years and
list.
·
McWilliams admits his team still
"It's a great matchup," said has something to prove.
· "Miami was the team of the
Miami head coach DenriJs Erickson, whose team Is trying for its 80s," McWilliams said. "This is
second straight national title. It's our first time In this position in
No. 3 vs. No. 4. Whoever wins It quite a while. The one good thing
has · a great chance to win . the about respect is you have to earn
national championship. Whoever it. Nobody gives Jt to you·. You
wins this game will have to play can't buy it. That's the way it
·
awfully well. Whoever wins It ought to be.
It's like tradition. You have to
should impress those who vote.''
earn that tradition. That's what
The spectre of bad weather,
however, hangs over the contest. Miami has done. This Is a gr eat ·
A powerful winter storm is matchup. The teams that have
beaten Miami are near the top.
expected to strike the Dallas
The team that beat us, Colo~ado,
are;~ about 48 hours before
Is No. 1 right now.
~;:ametime ·and the temperature
There Is no question that
will likely have a hard time
Miami has done It over the past
climbing back to the freezing
mark by Tuesday's kickoff time · several years. This Is our first
year to be in this situation in a
of 1: 30 p. m. EST.
long
time. So we still have to earn
"We will just play In It,
what
Miami has got and the only
however cold it is," Erickson
way
to
do that Is to go out and
said. "As we've practiced (in
beat Miami."
· cold weather), I have noticed
The Hurricanes employ their
that we have executed better as
typical wide-open style of oifense
time went on. We're qot going to
have control of what is going to featuring quarterback Craig Er·
· lckson and a defense vl!ry much
happen.
. "I remember my last regular like Texas' - one that features
speed and aggression.
season game when I coached at
"To me," Dennis Erickson
Washington State. I think it was a
said,
"Texas Is a football team
Nov . 15. We played the Univer·
with
·
tremendous momentum.
· sity of Washington In Pullman, ·
Wash., there were three inches of

SVAC standings
. (Overall)
TEAM
WL
Hannan Trace .....7 1
Southern ....... ': ......8 2
Eastern ...............6 3
Symmes Valley ...4 4
North G'allla ........ 4 5
Oak Hill .............. 3 7
Kyger Creek . .... ...2 8
Southwestern .... ... O 7

PA
418
594
623
480
733
733
736
386 507

(Reserves)
(SVAC only)
TEAM
W L I;'F PA
Southern .... ; ......... 6 1 397 283
North Gallla •. . .. ... 5 2 418 298
Oak Hill . .. .. . . . . .... . 5 2 408 359
Hannan Trace .. ,.. 4. 2 326 256
Eastern............ ... 3 3 284 317
Symmes Valley . .. 2 5 318 412
Kyger Creek. .. . . .. . 1 6 272 378
Southwestern ....... 1. 6 234 354
TOTALS ............ 2'1 2'7 Z8l'l ZU7
FrldiQ''I ICOI'I!I

In Wahama Tournament
·Kyaer Creek 6?, Hannan 64.
Southern 69, Athenl 52
Jaekaon 9t, Oak Jnll 7~

By United Press International
Harold Ballard, 86, hockey
Vern Buffey, 63, hockey .
Spud Chandler, 82, baseball
Tony Conigliaro, 45, baseball
Bo Diaz, 37, baseball
Hank Gathers, 23, basketball
Rocky Graziano, 71, boxing
Tom Harmon, 70, football
Charlie "King Kong" Keller,
73, baseball
Eugene Klein , 69, footballhorse f acing
Cookie Lavagetto, 77, baseball
Alice Marble, 77, tennis
Rob 'Moroso, 22, auto racing
Bronko Nagurskl, 81, footba ll
Lawrence .O 'Brien , 73,
basketball
Joe Robbie,. 73, football
Joe Sewell, 91, baseball
Fred Shero, 65, hockey
Frank Sinkwlch, 70, football
Ed Steltz, 69, basketball
Horace Stoneh;~m, 86, baseball
Ted Tinllng, 77, tennis
Fred Washington, 23, football
Lev Yashin 60, soccer

Caldwell said, "We .played extremely well in lhe lhird quarter.
We really . pushed the ball up the
court and executed well."

Thank. You For
Vour Patleneel

mn

Soutllara at Qallla Academy
Port. N.D. at Symmes Valley

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-'

CAROLL SIIOWHII

· Cor.., of 1hir4 ArL I State St.

NORRIS
NORTHUP
DODGE

To
DEATH OFA

Here's Wt"Jt new.&lt;: :1 hrl"Jkthn&gt;uf\11. pnn'&lt;lurc-bp:iA 1.«:&lt; 1pic
jl:llll~adder suq,oery- dimin:ll~., .
1he k&gt;n!( sc::1r anti ihc-IIL'&lt;'k
rtmwry th:11 u...~l tu mtw 11 ith
~lll~:tdder ;111),'&lt;1'1'. \1&lt; ~~ p:11k1lls
Gin Ill' in and ,_,, of thl· hn,pil:ll
in 2~ huu&gt; or It"'·11 ilh full

and 17 foul$. ·
,.
· Southern won . the reserve game
66-52 to improve to 8· 1. Michael
Evans again was the leader with 19 .
points, with reammates Mark Allen
getting 13 and Josh Codner ·.
scoringll . A.W. Matters, Tom-··
Kiger, and Kyle Lonas each had 11 ·'
for the Little Bulldogs.
·
Southern will play Friday at ·
North Gallia before traveling to
Gallipolis on Sallirday.
Score by quartets
Southern 19+15+19+16=69 · ,·
Athenj7+14+14+17=52
• '
SOUTHERN (69) - Jeremy .
Roush ().().2-2, Andy Baer 6-5-4· .
31, Michael Kincaid 5-0-0-10; ·'
Todd Grindstaff 3..()..1-7, Jayson
Codner 1..()4.2, Roy Lee Bailey 4·
0.8, Russell Singleton 1..().2, 8nd
Jeremy Rose 2-3·7, TOTALS -22,
5-10-69.
.,
ATIIENS (52) - Chad Kemplin
().]..().3, Man Jollick. 6..().2-14, ,
Reid Schaller 0.1-2·5, Bob Bailey
5..().3-13, John Hannon 3-()..().6, ·
ScottHillkirk4·1·9, Brent Hartman
1-0-0-2. TOTALS ·19-2-8-51.

"See me for all
your family
·
insurance needs."

Htrs A Stls, Htppg I. Hult6g Nsw

Suite 211
PVH Medieal OfDce Building

Souihtrn at !'forth Gallla
Kypr Creek at Eutlel'n
Soulbftttera at 5)'11111111 Valley

....,,.

Sports legends
•
•
m
memonam
.•.

DR. JACK M. LEVINE

Tiley piQed 8Muni11J
Hannan Trace at Fal~land
TldiW..k'a adlla
FriiQ .
Hannan Trac:e at oak

do.,

Southern ended the frame up 53- ·
35, but did not score in the linal
round until the 4:30 mark with
Athens closing in at 5346. 'That
was as close as Athens came.
Soulhem buclded 'down and
regained conttol of momentum
when Baer grabbed a steal and
drove it in for a layup, then did a
l):llClll when Baer again stole the
ball and drew the two shot foul.
Baer canned both ends of the
charity tosses and SHS was again
off and running.
· From the 4:30 mark to the 1:15
mark Athens scored just one point
as the score had risen to 65-47.
SHS then mopped up on the 69-52
win.
Southem hit22·51 from the line,
was 5 of II from three-point range
and went 10.15 at the line. Athens
was 19·53 inside the .c and 2 for 6
behind the three-point line while
canning8of10freedtrows.
Slllllhem had 43 rebounds, 19
tumovers, 11 stm1s (Baer Six) and
14 fouls; Athens had 33 rebounds
(Hillkirk 12), 21 turnovers, 8 steals,

rrame.

"I'M

PF
584
727
610
462
714
6ll2
593

(Conference)
Hannan Trace ·... :. 6 0 476 304
Southern ..... ..... .. .. 6 1 533 429
Eastern ...... ......... 4 2 434 431
North Gallia ..... ... 4 3 577 537
Symmes Valley ... 4 3 400 417
Oak Hill ... ........... 2 5 456 515
Kyger Creek . .. ..... 1 6 411 533 .
Southwestern ... ... . 0 7 386 507
TOTALS .. ... ....... 27 2'7 367S 3673

Defensively, they are outstand. ing ..They have great team speed
and that has been the key to their
turnaround.
:'Defensively. they a re ver y ,
very similar in a lot of ways to
Florida State. And offensively ,
they are like Notre Dame in th at
they are very basic in whaf they

team win for us."
Fi'om its initial lead in the first
quarter Southero rolled to a 26-9
advantage in the second quarter
but "we softened up," as Caldweil
put it. "I can't understand iL We
had a chance to really close the
door in the first half, but like other
games we played we just eased up.
Fortunately, we came back and
played a good third quarter and
we've been puning wins in the win
column, but we've got to mainlain
our intensity."
The remainder of the half Athens
outscored Southern 12-8 to gain
some momentum gomg into the intermission.
The opening part of the third
period told the story for the Thrnadoes as the }'O!Ing Whirlwinds
Jllade a very sttong stand, that sent
morale killing shack waves the
length of the Athens bench.
Soulhem, b!:hind lhe net burning
effort of Baer, with equally spar.kling sideshows from teammates
Todd Grindstaff, Michael Kincaid,
-Roy Lee· Bailey, and Rose out·
scored Athens 15-4 in the strel(:h
preceding the 3:15 mark in the.third

•

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!1'81~~11:;•~C~4~~SI~.Jnday::~~li~IITI~~~~~Sentinal=:·
=======?::::Pol~m~lll=o~y~M~idcl~~epol~t~G~al~lipol~ia~,~O~h~io~-~Point~·~PI~e:••:a~nt~.~W~.V~a~·~==========~Dec~~c~=s~m~ber~30~,=1~9~90~,~
In Waharruz Tournament FriMy night,
~-

December 30. 1990

in ronsolotion

~e

by Gary Clark
The Sharples Srags placed all
five starletS in double figure scor•
ing Friday . night to spoil the
Wahama White Falcons bid for 1
second consecutive WHS holiday
tournament title as the visitors
utilized a well balanced offensiveattack in defeating c011;h Lewis
Hall's cagers by an 88-80 margin in
the finals of the Wahama Christmas
Baskelhall Toumameru.
In the consolation pne Kyger
Creek defeated Hannan 67-64 to
claim third place honors in the four
team tourney field with the I!Qbcats' Phil Bradbury, Hannan's
Uoyd Paul Holley, Wahama's John
BamiiZ and Chris Zedcle and.
Sharples' Joe Bias. Frank Early and
Danny Moo~e being named to the
AU-Tournament team. .
.
Sharples, led b~ sharps~ting
point guard Joe BillS who npped
the nets for 30 points on the evening, tonk advantage of a third
period scoring slump by the Bend
Area cagers to escape with the
tournament crown as Wahama
reverted back to the ice cold .shooting problems that has plagued the
locals thro\Jllhoul most of the 199091 hardwood season. The tourney
win improved Sharples' season
slate to 3-4 on the year while
Wahama fell to 2-4 as the Mason
Countians six .game ·h9me stand
came 10 a close.
·The White Falcons all-state
guard, John BariliiZ, nearly brought
the Bend Area team back from a 16
point deficit_in the final I :~2 of the
championship contest w1th four
straight three point goals but time
ran out on the locals with Sharples
holding an eight point advantage
when the final second was erased
from the clock. Bamicz finished
with a game high 33 points on the
evening to extend his consecutive
double figure scoring total to 50
straight games and was the
tourilaments leading scorer in the
two day affair with 63 points.
Junior point guard Cnlig Coon tallied 19 points for the local cagers
with Chris Zerkle adding 12
markers for the White Falcons.
''They just out-shot us and that's
all there was 10 it." a dejected WHS
coach Lewis Hall said following
the tournament finals. "We had 100
many defensive lapses w~ we
failed to cover the back Side and ·
Sharples -moved the ball well
enough to find the openingS in our
defensive alignmenL 11 didn't l'nal·
ter where they shot the ball from it
just seemed to find the basket and
go in added Hall."
Wahama, after seemingly shak·

game shootiilg slump

WAHAMA (80)
Craig Coon
FG 3pt FI'M-A1T T Chris Zerkle
John,Damitz
8 5 2-4 33 John Johnson

9 0 1-1
6 0 ()..0
3 0 0-0

19 Robbie Board
1Z ~:~k~::ri~
6 _ Phillip Batey
Troy Oldaker •
John ZuSpan
Chris Thomas
Brent Larck
TOTALS

following Thursday nights 87-80
win over Hannan, reverted back to
its shooting inconsistencies at what
would become a most inopp(l1une
time. The White Falcons failed to
convert a number of uncontesled
layup chlnces during the early
going and then suffered an ice cold
spell following ·the intermission
break which allowed the Stags to ·
.· build a - 16 point advantage from
which the Falcons never recovered
· WHS, despite uailing ty as
many as 10 points in the opening
stanza, rallied to rake the lead
thanks 10 a 28 point explosion
durin' ~d quaner action but
the sltm WHS edge would be siK&gt;n .
lived once lhird period play
resumed. The White Falcons enjoyed a 43-41 advanrage at the half
only to see Sharples regain ihe lead
for 'ood in the third canto by out·
sconng Wahama 22-11 in the
period for 63-52 edge with eight
minutes remaining. · .
·
The Stags' advantage ballooned ·
10 16 points at 84-68 with 1:51 to
play before Bamitz put on a !Me
point clinic to cut the lead to 86-80
but that was as clbse a the Bend
Area team would gel as Frank Early
converted .a pair of free th(Ows to
close out the scoring on the evening
and give Sharples an 88-80 winning margin.
Bias proved to be the big thorn
in the Wbite Fal.cons side by connecting· from just about ~ywhere
' UP FOR TWO - Waba10a's Chris ~erkle
~ !!P
on the floor. The Srags' pomt guard against Sharples JaiDes Klsh (42) during the cbaiDpiOnShlp game or
dropped in 10 two point goals the Wahama Holiday Tounament. Sharples won the contest 88· 80 to
while adding three buckets from , take the title. (Register photo by Gary Clark) I
three point land and one of two
from the charity stripe to pace the
Sharples offensive attack. Frank
Early nailed down 17 markers
while James Kish scored 15 points,
Danny Jural 13 and Danny Moore
11 for the winner$.
Sharples recorded 27 field goals
on the night and seven three point
attempts while converting 13 of 23
from the line. Wahama totaled five
, three -point goals and 30 two point
tries while making good on just five
of nine from the free throw· line
which is where Sha!ples gained its
eight point winning margin.
. The White Falcons, after playing
its 11rst six contests of the 1990-91
cage season at home, wit~ now hit
the road for four success1ve away
dates 10 open the new year. WHS
will visit Buffalo Putnam next
Friday in the first of three straight
SWAC conference encounters with
Van and Charleston Catholic awaiting the Bend Area team in sucression. A January 15th oonleague af.
fair at Kyger Creek closes out ~
four game road swing before the
locals return home for a lealrile con· test with Vinson on January 18th.

I O 0-0

·0
0.
0
0
0
30

0
0
0
0
0
5

0-0
0.()
0-0
0·0
0-2
S-9

SHARPLES (88)
Joe Bias
10 3 1·2
Frank Early
5 0 7-8
6 0 3-5
Jame5Kish

0
0
0
0
0
0
80

Kevin Terral
TOTALS

1 0 ()..2

2. ,

·:

Tot. Fouls: Wahalfia 16; Sharples

10

30

17 Fouled Out: Bamitz
15 -Officials: R. Reel &amp; G. Wilkerson

'Mason Family Restaurant
•

•

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI)- . over the middle from Jordan to
Terry Jordan · threw for one Jurgens.
The Wolfpack used a turnover
touchdown and ran for another
and Manlor's long run In the
Friday night, ieadlng North
Carolina State to a 31-27 victory fourth quarter to pad their lead to
over No. 24 Southern Mississippi 31-21. David Merritt Intercepted
· a Favre pass at the Southern
In the All-American Bowl.
Jordan 10 yards for N.C. Mississippi 41-yard line and· on
State's first score of the evening the next play, Man lor rambled 41
and threw a 12-yard TO pass to yards for the touchdown.
The Eagles pulled within 31-27
Bobby Jurgens In . the third
late
In the fourth quarter, driving ·
quarter.
86
yards
In 11 plays for a
Thhe end .of the first half.
touchdown
on
Favre's five-yard
Brett Favre threw three touchpass
to
Michael
Welch. However.
down passes for Southern MissisFavre
was
sacked
nn the attempsippi, 8;4. The Golden Eagles
were playing their first game· ted two-point conversion.
(See WOLFPACK on C-11)
under new )lead coach . Jon ,
Bower, who replaced Curley.
Hallman after he left to become
COlONY THEATRE
coach at Louisiana State.
FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
· N.C. Stale, trailing 21-17 early
In the third quarter, scored twice
midway through the second half
JOHN
KIRSTIE
and held off a late Southern
TR AV0 LTA ALL EY
Mississippi rally for the victory.
On the Wolfpack' s first possession of the second half, Southern
Mississippi's James Singleton
sacked Jordan on third down that
left N.C. State at Its own 12-yard
line. On the next play; Pat Wynn
blocked a Preston Poag punt to
give the Eagles possessiOn on the
N.C. State one.
Tony Smith then went over the
right side on the first play for a
touchdown to put the Eagles up
21-17.
But the Wolfpack came back
late In the third quarter with an
11-play, 68-yard drive that was
capped by a 12-yard aeortn1 pus

41

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NCSU tops Southern
Mississippi 31-27

~4~

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Lunch Feature

'61111f'

',PF,ING VA:· f v Nlf MA

... -~

where the Hawks had something "We have to play a great game In
Thorpe scored 21 points, Buck
Je.rsey cut a 15-polnt deficit to. straight. Mookle Blaylock and
UPJ Sporta Writer .
to play for."· Ford said. "We order to beat .these guys. A win
Johnson had 20, helping Houston
three points Inside the last Reggie Theus added 17 points
The Boston Celllcs ~dth.t_m~mbarrassed them up In Boston. like this Is just unexpected."
hold off a tate Nets surge New
minute, but stU! lost Its third apiece fo r the Nets.
selyes In an llna_!!A!Ustomed rot
T i'Dlayers have a tot of pride.
The Hawks got 31 points from
J1r/
·
·
Friday night, when they p~yed
Th
are the things w.e dis· Wilkins, 14 apiece from Spud
W
__c_;&lt;C::o:::n::ll:::n::ue::d:.;f::.r::om:::...:C:..-4.:\~--------------...:...stralght man for the Atlanta
cussed before the game.'.'
Webb and Moses Malone. Kevin
·
;/ .J
· . '••
Hawks.
·
·
"When you come out and win McHale scored 17 points for
The Southern Mississippi deSmith fumble for the Wolfp&lt;tck on again on a 13-yard scoring strike.
''It was deflnltel~.a cream-pielike that, It's a great win," Boston. and Larry Bird and . tense forced N.C. State to punt on
the. Southet!l Mississippi 25. Favre completed a pass to Welch
In-the-face tonight, Celtlcs cenAtlanta head coach Bob Weiss Kevin Gamble each had 15.
the ensuing series and began
Seven plays tater, Downs went for the two-point conversion.
ter Robert Parish said after the
said. ''Wewereallovertheplace
In other games In the NBA
driving again, but time expired
over the top on a two-yard TD
ShorUybeforehalftlme.GlnnaHawks embarrassed Boston with
tonight. We did 11 with steals."
Friday night, Phoenix defea(ed
with the Golden Eagles. ln Wolfdive.
more again recovered a Smith
a 131-114 drubbing.
The Hawks stole the ball from Philadelphia 115-96, San Antonio
pack territory. .
Southern Mississippi drove 69 fumble after a N.C. State punt to
"We justdidn'thaveanyeffort
the Celtlcs 10 times, ted by whipped Sacramento 104-88, DeSouthern Mississippi took a 6-()
yards In seven plays to tie the give the Wolfpack possession at "
out there tonight," said . Boston
PDtnlnlque Wilkins who had 4. trolt held off Mlnnespta 97-85 and
lead on their second drive Of the
game on the first series of the the Southern Mississippi 23. N.C .
head coach Chris Ford, who saw
Atlanta also outrebounded Bos- · Houston edged New· Jersey 101- game. Favre found Michael
second quarter . Favre threw 35 · St_a te drove lo the five. but had to
his team's eight-game winning
ton 49-44.
99.
Jackson with a 52' yard pass on a
yards to Montgomery to the N.C. settle for Fowble's 22-yard field •'
streak end.
''Tonight our defense . was
Suns 115, Slxers 96
flea-flicker, then threw 10 yards
State 25, then found Montgomery goaL
Tpe victory must have been great," Rivers said. "We got
At Phoenix, Kevin Johnson
to Mark Mo!ltgomery for the
score. However, the conversion
especially sweet for the Hawks,
every loose ball and we were scored 21 points, leading seven
wh6 were throttled In Boston
diving on the floor. That's what Suns In double figures lo offset a
attempt by Jim Taylqr failed.
Su~day, 132-104. Glenn Rivers we have to do to win ..''
season-high 45 points by PhllaN.C. State put together two
565 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, OH.
helped Atlanta make. amends
The score was tied at 30-30 delphia's Charles Barkley · and
consecutive touchdown, di-Ives to
Call Toll FrH 1·100•445-2206
Frlllay by scoring a season-high early In the second quarter break a four-game Slxers wingive theln a 14-71ead at the end of
36 points, dishing out five assists,
before Atlanta took the lead for nlng streak. Xavier McDaniel
the first quarter.
SALES • SDYICE • RENTAL
grabbing five rebounds and makgood on two free throws by had 17 points for Phoenix, Dan
The Wolfpack tied the score on
Power a Pr~~scrlption Manuel WheelchaiR • St•nderd
lng;three steals.
Rivers.
Majerle had 16, Tom Chambers
Jordan's 10-yard scramble to cap
Wheelchairs • Hospital Btdt • 3 Wheel Scooter• • Oxygen
"I'm not a 36-point scorer
Atlanta s urged toa67-53 1eadat 15, Jeff Hornacek 13 and Mark
a seven-play. 65-yard drive . .
Equipment • Canee. Crutch81, Walker~, •end Much More.
evP,ry night," Rlverssiild. "One ihe half and entered the fourth West and Cedric Ceballos 11
Jordan managed to keep the
~
' ":' ..
n!gfit I can .score 26 and other quarter with a 102-80 bulge. The each.
drlveallveoneplayearlierwltha
F~aturin1 Qualitv
nights score as few as six. I'rn not Hawks held their biggest lead
Spurs 104, Kings 86
20-yard pass over the middle to
Product.• Frnm
worried about points. Tonight, when John Battle's two free
At San Antonio, Texas, David
Todd Harrison.
I!NICN ' .
446·2206
tho!lgh, scoring helped win the throws with 5:55 left put them up Robinson scored 27 points,
On the ensuing kickoff, Greg
In Hrttltft c.,.r"
game."
'
121-92.
grabbed 13 rebounds and swatted
G!nnamore recovered a Tony
Rivers was on fire, shooting 12
Atlanta, 13-14, hit nine of 13 away 11 shots, sending the Kings . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -......
of 16 from the field, four of five three-point shots, while Boston,
to their fifth straight loss. The
from 3-polnt range and eight of 23,5, hlt two of seven.
Spurs held Sacramento to 32
ninl! from the llne.
"The Cettics are a smart team
percent shooting from the field.
'Jt was one of those games and well coached," Weiss said.
Pistons 97, Tlmberwolves 85
At Minneapolis, Minn., Joe
Dumars scored all21of his points
In the second half to lead the
Pistons, snapping a four-game
road losing streak. The Timber"'
wolves, who lost their seventh In
a row, were led by Tyrone
Corbin's
26 points . .
Akrm East 94, Ken( 66
Findlay 66, Newark 65
Rockels
101, Nels 99
Anna 74, New Bremen 61
Alkaline Batterl"
Fort JennJngs 47. Uncolnvtew 41
'•
Arcanum 63, Frank11n Monroe 51
Fort Loramie 67, Minster 35
At East Rutherford. N.J., Otis

ol'pack ,-·__

3 4 Tot ",
21 20 22· 25 88 . ~,
15 28 11 27 80 :l

Sharples
Wahama

C-5

By DEAN SCHABNER

27 7 13-22 88 ,~,

Scor~ by Quarters:.
1 ~

Sunday limes-Sentinel-Page

-Hawks beat ·Celtics 131-114 to end eight-game win streak ·

Sharples posts 88-80 win over Wahama in title game ·
~ g ~~ ~ g~~ ~~re ~ ~ ~l a
KCHS edges Hann(Jil
ing a !Me

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasaot. W.Va.

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Indiana pounds OU 102-64 in Hoosier ·Classic; OSU wms
By JIM SLATER
•
UPI Sports Writer
Playtime is over for No.5 Indiana. Now the Hoosiers begin to find
out how gaod they a re.
Calbert Cheaney and Eric Anderson each scored 21 points and
Indiana won its lOth straight game Friday night, overwhelming Ohio
University 102-64 to win the Hoosier Classic and remain unbeaten in
t~e nine-year history of the tournament .
.
• The Hoosiers, 12·1, have 18 triumphs and nine championships in
t heir holiday tournament at Market Square Arena. The victory
margin was a record for Hoosier Classic championship games,
breaking tlie mark Indiana set in 1985 by beating Mississippi State
74-43.
The game was Indiana's final tuneup before Big Ten play opens
n.ext week. The Hoosiers were 10-0 last season before conference
competition. They were 8-10 In the. league and became tlje flrstteam
with a losing conference mark to reach the NCAA Tournament.
California eliminated IJ\diana in the first round.
"I'm pleased wit.h where we are, but we were basically at this POint
a year ago and didn ' t do real well after that," Indiana head coach Bob

Knight said. "We' re playh1g consistent and fairly well. Now we get
Into a different situation. We get Into a schedule as demanding as
there is in the country."
· Ohio pulled within 12-11 after Lewis Geter sank a free throw 5:27
into the game following a technical foul on Knight. The Hoosiers
scored 19 of the next 21 points and the Bobcats nevercamecloser th.an
16 after that.
"They took· us out of our of!ense tn the first half,' ' Ohio head coach
Larry Hunter said. "We had five turnovers after the technical and
that was pretty much the ballgame."
·
Anderson scored stx points In the 19·2 run while Cheaney and Pat
Grahameachaddedflvelnthespurt,whlchendedwithindlanaahead
31-13 following a Cheaney three-point shot with 8:45 remaining in the
·
.
.
first half.
The Hoosiers built their lead to 50-30 at halftime and Ohio came no
closer In the second half, with Indiana leading by as much as 41 to the
final seconds.

Scoreboard ...
.

.
•

.

Eater• Confmeoce
Atlantic Dlvlsloo
W L Pet. GB
Bostcn .... ... ... ; .. ....... 23 5 .821 Phllaaetphla .. .. ..... ,.19 9 .679 4
New York ..... .' .. ... , .... 1214 .46 10
New Jersey ... ........ 10 17 .370 12\1
Was hlngton ........... 10 17 .370 12\1
Miami ...................... 6 20.231 16

Team

Central Division

Prkl&amp;)''l mula .
Buffalo 5, Ch.imgo 0
Pittsburgh 5, Detroit 0
N.Y. Rangers5, WashJngtoo 3
Winnipeg 6, Boston 0
Edmontoo 5, Vancouver ~
· . 111ey played Saturday
Washingtoo at Quebec. 7: 35'p.m .
Chicago at N.Y. Islanders. 7:.35

p.m.
.
Buffalo at New Jergey, 7:45p.m.

Hartford at Calgary, 8:05p.m .
Pittsburgh at Tormto, 8:05p.m.
Boston at Minnesota, 8:35p.m.
Philadelphia at St. Louis. 8: 35
p.m .
Montreal at Los Angeles. 10: 35

Milwaukee .. ........ ;... 19 8 .7M

Chicago ......... ........ .19 9 .678 11
Detrolt .. ............. .. .. 1811 .621 2
Atlanta ................. . 14 13 .519 5
Clevelana ........ ......1! 17 .393 8\1
lncllana ..... .. ........... IO 18 .357 9\1
Charlotte ............... 818..308 10\1

p.m.

Today's1ames

Hartford at EdmootCI\
New Jersey at N.Y. R8ngers

Western Conference
andwes&amp; Dlvllloa
' Team
W L Pel. GB
SanAntmlo ............ 19 6 .760
Utah .. ............... ... .. . l8 .9 .667 2
Houston .......... .......1612 .571 4\0
Dallas , .. ....... ........... 9 16 .360 10
Minnesota ..... .......... 718 .2~ 12
Denver .................. 6 20 .231 13\1
Orlanao .......... .. ..... 6 22 .214 14\1

Paclnc DlvlslOII
Portland ................ . 26 3.896
Phoenix .... .... .. .. ..... 17 9 .651
L.A. Lakers .... .. .... . 15 9.625
Go }den State ........... 1512 .555
seattle ............... .. ... 1213 .4110
L.A. Clippers ........ 10 16 .385
Sacramento ......... ... 6 19 .240

7\1
8\1
10
12
14\1
18

Fl"lday's resuls
Houston 101, New Jersey 99
Atlanta 131, Boston 114
il!&gt;troli 97, Minnesota 8S
San Antooio 104, Sacramento 88
Phoenix 115. Phlladelpl)la 96
They played Sol~rday
Milwaukee at New York. 1 p.m.
L .A. Clippers at Utah. 3:30p.m.
Denver at Washtngtoo, 7:30p.m.
Orlaildo at Charlotte, 7:30 p.m.
Golden State at Atlanta , 7:30p.m.
Portland at Cleveland, 7: 30p.m .
Houston at Detroit, 7:30p.m .
New Jersey at Indiana, 8:30p.m.
Seattle at Chicago, 8:30p.m .
Sacramento at Dallas, 8: 30p.m .
Miami at Phoent;K, 9:30p.m.

Today's games
Denver at Orlando, night
Seattle at Minnesota, night
P9rtland at Milwaukee, night
Philadelphia at L.A. Lakers.
night
'
Miami at L.A. Olppers, night

In the NHL"' .

PUTS UP TREY - Indiana's Calbert Cheaney ( 40) puts up a
three-point shot over the outstretched arms of Ohio University's
Lewis Geter in the first half of Friday night's Hoosier Classic
championship game In Indianapolis, which the Hoosiers won
102·64. (UPI)

_____

(Conttn~ed from C-5)
.
SCores ... __
Prep
__;__

Ke ll . Alter 73, ~ ·alrt~x (Va . ) 70
"
Ill 61
Ket1 . Fa irmont .67 · Cen tc:rv P
Kirtland 70, Perry 36
Kyger Creek 67, Hannan (W.Va: .) 64
La ncas ter 58. Frpmcnt 50
LeJO.:I ngtCfl 81, Q€6r Fork S7
Li berty BenHI1 59. Blufftoo 52
Lickin~ Ht s. 77. Libert y Chr. 51
Lima 89. Falr lfleld S4
Lima Bath 99. Upper Sa ndu sky 54
LisbOn 70. Be~ver Local 51
Logan 90. Meigs 70
Lor. Cat h 106, Lor Clearview GO
Louisvil le 61. Dove r 44
Lowel lvU I&lt;' 69, SouthlngtCI'I 56
Lucas 62; Ce ni.E'rburg 60
Lyndhurst Brush 84. Willoughby S. 69
Mag noli a JW.Va.l 76, Hannibal River 63
Ma nc hester 84, Pendleton (Ky.) 74
Mans. Chr. 61 . Ashland Cres tvi ew 68
Mans Peter s 69, Tot. Cat h. 58
Maple Hts 72, Eas tlak e N. 58.
Mar. P lea.sa n1 61. Mt . Gilead 5B (2 OT )
Margaretta 72, Oak Harbor 66
Martella BO. Belpre 71
Marlins;t oo 58. Min erva 42
Marysville 89. Fairba nks 72
Mass Jackson 76. Uniontown Lake 45
Mass. Per ry 85. C\c\r, Ignat iu s 71
Maslillon 92. Akr Kenmore 46
Mau mee 58. Bar oo Collier (Ky . 1 56
Meadowbrook 77. Buckeye Local 63
Mentor 53. Bedford 48
Mia mi Trace &amp;1. Madison Plains 49
Middl etown 73, Milford 53
M!lan Edison 79, Clyde 76
Mlllbury Lake 66. Oregon Clay 63
Milton Union 73. Ea tCI'I 56
Mlnf'ral Ridge 59, Wa r . Kenn edy 55
Mo~a d ore 87. Dia mond SE 56
Mo ntpelier 79, Plol").eer N. Central 67
N. Olrri sted 6.1. Amherst 54
N. RoyaltCil 8..3. Brooklyn 75
Nas h. Rya n /Tenn.\ 66, Co l. Ready 51
New Kn oxvilh.• 53. SpencervUie 49
New RichmCil d 79, Beechwood fKy. 1 52
Newcomerstown 75. Black River 68
Newton 68. COvingtoo 65·
N!\c-s 70. Y'town Wilson 62
No rdonia 69. Ravenna u
No rwayne 65. Rittma n 53

Ontar lo 83, Wynford 73
Ora nge 73. Chardon 68
Ottovllle76, Fort Recovery 73
Paines Harvev 66, A 'bula Hhr. 55
Paines RiverSide 63, Jeff Area 57
Parma 90, Brecksville 78
Parma Padua 85, ClPV. ND·Cat h a4
Patrick Henry 69. Miller City 57
Piqua 66, Clay ton No rthmmt 45
Port Cl\ ntoo 55. Sand Perkins 47
Port s mouth 103, Akr . Hoba n 39
St ruth ers 52, Salem 49
Tallmadge 62 , Al&lt;.r E ll ett GO lOTI
Tl! Calvert 76, Danbu l)' LakesldP 46
Ta l. Bowsher 67, Clev . Colll nwood S1
Tol. Devilbiss 69. Clev. GlenvUle 64
Tol. Macomber 66. Elyria 43
Tot, Waite 57. Ore . Strtt ch 54
Trl VIIJageS7, Versailles 72
Tr~woOO Madison 97, Sidney 60
Tw insburg 64. Wi ckl iffe 60
Uhrichsvle Claymont 66. Sandy Val. 56
Upper SciOto Val. 117. Ridgemont 66
Vanlue 68, Ada 44
Vermilion 67. Welllngtoo 45
Vien na Ma thews 75, M'fieJd Card . 74
W. Branch 72, Ca nal Fulton NW 55
W. Carrolltoo 58 Troy 40
W. Cheste r La kota 79. Ha mlltm 58
W. Gea uga 51. SOloo 36

W. Jefferson 58, Grandview 57
Warrensvil le 79. St ron gsvtlle 62
Wa s h CH 80. Frankfort Adena 61
Waterloo 65, G 'v ille Garfield 55
Wave rly 76. Ross SE 65
Waynedale 86. Smithville 8.3
Wayflesvtlle 57. Kings 53
Weirton (W.Va. ) 79, Edl soo S. 59
Wells ton 64. Fort Pi erce tF\ a.l 47
Westerville N. 62. Wat kin s Mem. 57
Westerville S. 53. Co l. Nort hland 46
Winchester (Jnd. ) 71, Miss. Val. 62
Windham 82, Field 78
Wocdmore 75, Old Fort 62
Wocdridge 81, Root stown 58
Wocdsfl eld 87. Fort Frye 85
Wooster 84, Alliance 61
Worthl ng too 61, Col. Wattf'rson 40 ·
W. Brown 88. Georgetown 65
Y' town 'E. 7fi, Girard 68
Y' town S. 80, 'Calvary Chr. 39

Vest End
Ssle
Now In P''l''''
MEIGS
TIRE
CENTER
JOliN FILT1 - J. MAICUS FULT1
242 W. Main

OWIIEIS
992-2101

,.

Pomeroy

'

Wales Conference
Palrtck Division
Team
W LT Pis. OF GA
N.Y. Rangers ...... 2113 6 48 i52124
New Jersey ... .. .... 19 13 7 4S 150 127 .
Philadelphia ..... .. 20 17 5 45141135
Pittsburgh .. ........ 20 17 3 43169145
Washington ......... 18 211 3713J 131
N.Y. Islanders ., .. 13 18 5 31101124
Adams Division
Boston ................ 20 12 7 47132 126
Montreal.. ........... l8 16 5 41126124
Hartford . .. ........ .. 16 18 4 3610£ 123
Buffalo ............... 13 16 8 34121121
Quebec ................ 8 24 7 23 lot\ 172
c;:amp~ell

Conlerence
Norrll Dlvillon
Team
W .L T
GA
Chicago ... ......... .. 2513 3 531341ll
St. Louts ............. 2110 6 48134 105
Detroit ................ 19 16 4 4213813:)
Mlnnesota .. ......... ll22 6 28115 134
Torcrno ............... l! 26 2 24 109 157

r1s.·oF

Smythe Dlvllllon
C.lgary .............. 20 14 4 44152 127
LOs Angeles ........ 18 i2 5 411451211
Vancouver ....... ... 17 20 3 37 128143
Edmmtm ....... .. .. l717 2 36121114
Winnipeg ............ 12 22 7 31135150

In girls' high school
basketball action•••
Akroo Garfield 68, Akron N. ·so
Beavercreek 57, Cin . Wo~ward 28
Bealord Channel 44, Clev. ND ·
Cath. 39
C&amp;ntleld 86, Champion 52
Cln. UrsuUne 74, Indian Val. 58
Clev. Angefa.Joe63, Edina (Minn. )
55
.
Beaumont 70, Clev. Kennedy

In other games Friday night featuring membersofthe UPITop25,
No. 6 Ohio State rlppeq Miami (Ohio) 85-67 to win the Palm Beach
Classic, No. 14 .Ok)ahoma walloped IIUnois State 112·69 in the
All·CoUege Tournament, No. 15 Connecticut held oft Lafayette 59-57
In the ConnecticutCiasslc, No.18 Michigan State beat George Mason.
97-721n the Spartan Classic, co-No. 19 Nebraska thumped Idaho85-65,
co-No. 22 Southern Mississippi topped Holy Cross 89-86 in the Cowboy
Shootout, and co-No. 24 Alabama defeated Towson State 71·521n the
Blue Angels Classic.
At West Palm Beach, Fla., Mark Baker scored 18 poiDts as Ohio
State raa away with the Palm Beach Classic. Jamaal Brown added 14
points as the Buckeyes kept their perfect record Intact at 10-0. Jim
Paul led Miami with 23 points.
At ·Oklahoma City, Kermit Holmes scored. 24 points to lead
Oklahoma over winless Illinois State: Qklahoma tied a schOol record
with '14 blocked shots, including seven by Martin Keane. Terrence
Mullins added 16 points far the Sooners .
At Hartford, Conn., Scott Burrell scored 16 points as Connecticut
held on to defeat Lafayette. The Huskies made only 5of 12 free throws
in the last 62 seconds, but still managed to take their seventh win in
eight games. Connecticut head coach Jim Calhoun ret·urned to the
sideline after missing Sunday's game because or a viral infection. ·
• At East Lansing, Mich., Steve Smith scored 25 points, Including 20
tn the sec.ond half, and Matt Stelgenga added 22 to power Michigan
State. The Spartans scored the first 10 points of the game and'crulsed
from there. Byron 'I)Jcker scored 19 points for George Mason.
At Lincoln, Neb., Tony Farmer led four Nebraska players in double
figures with 13 points as the Cornhuskers won their ninth straight
game. Nebraska raised Its record to 11-1, one more win !han they I! ad
all of last season. Ricardo Boyd led Idaho with 18 points.
· At Casper, Wyoming, Darrln chancellor's three-pointer from the
top of the key gave Southern Mississippi the win over Holy Cross.
Chancellor and Clarence Weatherspoon each scored 24 points as
Southern Mississippi staged a furious comeback. JlmNalrus led Holy
Cross with 24 points.

. ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

NORRIS •
NORTHUP
DODGE
SALES &amp; SERVICE

NOW OPEN
At

252 UPPEIIIVEIID.
SYA'IE 11'. 7
GAWPOUS, OIUO

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

FRONTIER FARMS RESTAURANT
387 Jackson Pike (ffex,t to Holzer Hospital)
F~ontiet .· F arm's is ·Celebrating

The Start Of Its Sixth Year of
Operation Under NEW
Ownership and Management! ·

00

Velerana Memortat Hospital

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
· 11 5 East M11110rlal Drln ·
PHitroy
992-2104

r-----~-----------------------,

I
I

387 Ja.. ton Pike, (Next to Holzer Hotpitall Gdipolit
448-8836
Ply to the

...~r~~r..~!i............~.~-~~~~-~f..~~!~.!?-~.':1.!.1~!!?~.~~---~P..~~-~. .~,Y.~!~~

FREE: ONE BREAKFAST FROM OUR BREAKFAST MENU ONLY, With
Purohaoe of Anothor Breokfatt of an Equal or o ...tor Vahre. Not valid
·

ONE FREE BREAKFAST

Picture this on the fann

ExpiAtion 0 ..1: April 30. 198:1

L----~------------------------4

Frontier Farms Restaurant

387 Jackaon Pike, (Next to Holzer Hoapltall Gallipolio
448·8836
Pay to the
Order...........................................................................................
of:
BEARER OF THIS CERTIFICATE Up to $3.70 Value
..........
FREE: ONE SANDWICH FRO~ OUR LUNCHEON MENU ONLY, With
Purchaoe of AnotMr Sandwich of an Equal or 0,..18r Value. Not valid
with My other diocounta, tpeclolo, or oHort. OM check per vlllt.

.Dupon.(

Eapiratlon Date: Aprtl 30. 1111

----~------------------------i
387 Jackeon Pika, (N•xt to Holz.- Hospital) Galllpolia
448-8831
Pay to the
Ordtr of:
BEARER OF THIS CERTIFICATE
Up to $12.50 Valli
iifie!; oiiii!tiiiiiiiii!iii=Fioi.l oiili tiiiiiiiiiiiii.li!iiiu oiiii:v. wiii&gt; P.~;&lt;ii.tiO..
of Anothar Dlnnor of ., !qual or IJ-ter Vallie. Not valid with any otha•
dlaoountt, _ . ...,.or offwe, Ona ..,... per vllit.

Eapt- 0110: AplriiO, 1111

Dr. Keitb R. Brandeberry

PITTSBURGH, Pa. - K~vtn
Dennis, Mountaineer !;'I ant Chief
Chemist, co-authored a paper
preseted at th~&gt; 51st International
Pittsburgh Water Conference.
The event is sponsored by the
Engineers' Society of Western
Pennsylvania.
Other authors of the paper
were Dr. ·Mike Brown and Jim
Polito of Betz Industrial. It
described an improved circulatIng water chemical treatment
which was developed by Betz and
implemented at Mountaineer.
The new chem.lcal dispersant
improved deposit and silt control
In heat exchanges and all circulating water equipment. In .add!·
lion, an annual cost savings of
$20,000 has been realized.

..
..

shareholders - who wtu recetv~&gt;
cash and new stock in MCA's •
WWOR-TV station- should have
the option of choosing the &gt;arne
deal that Wasserman Is getting.
In ruling against him , U.S.
District Court Judge Manuel
Real said Epstein fa lied to prove
he would . be financially hurt
because he was not ofiered the
Wasserman deal.
Attorneys for MCA argued that ,
Wasserman , who will remain as
chairman when Matsushita
takes over, is actually receiving
less than other shareholders by
agreeing to accept pref~&gt;rred
stock.
Ernest Kaufman, who represented Epstein, disputed that
contention.
uwasserman u,nfairly took advantage of his
position to negatiate this special
deal." he said.
Kaufman also told ·Real there
are "dozens" of other share·
holders who oppose the Wasserman portion of the deal.
MCA and Matsushita have
reached preliminary settlements
In five other shareholder suits
filed over the deal.
The buyout, which would be the
largest acquisition of an American company by a Japanese
concern, could be finalized as
early as this weekend.
Besides the Epstein motion,
another of the last obstacles the
transaction faced Friday came
from an antitrust lawsuit filed by
Go- VIdeo, an Arizona marketer
of dual-deck videocas set te
recorders.
Go-Video filed suit earlier this
month against Matshtshita, the
world's largest consumer electronics company, and other Jap:
anese companies, alleging lhal·
lhe MCA deal is part of a
conspiracy to control production .
of U.S. "software," such as :
movies and recorc!s .
On Thursday, the Ninth U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals denied
Go- Video's motion for an order
to block the deaL A federal court
in Phoenix had also refused last
week to halt the transaction.
The U.S. Supreme Court
turned down a motion by GoVideo on Friday for a temporary
restraining order thai would s top
the deaL
Once the transadion goes
through , Osaka-based Matsu-· ·
shtta will obtain an Impressive
array of American assets, including Universal Studios theme '
parks, Universal Pictures , MCA
Television, huge film and TV··
libraries, several record labels,'
G.P. Putnam 's Sons publishing ..
and 420 acres of Hollywood real ·
estate.

white collar workers. Clearly the
landscape has changed, and a
tremendous advantage wtll
accrue to those businesses and
investors that quickly grasp the
new set of challenges and opportunities spawned In 1990.
(Mr. Evans is an Investment
Broker for The Ohio Company in
their Gallipolis office.)

Improves· operator safety and
wiU provide cost savings for the
company.
Clark ts a 1985 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and a
1989 graduate of Ohio University,
She Ia tbe daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James Clark of Route 1
Gallipolis.
'

OVEC announces senice awards
CHESHIRE - George R. Stewart, asslstang shift operating
engineer, f'aul D. VanMatre,
-'malntenence mechanic-A,
George W. Ol.lver, malntenence
.mechanic-A, and Roger W.
Frecker, ma.lntenence
mechaniC· A at the Ohio Valley
Electric Corporation's Kyger
Creek Plant, received their annl·
versary awards tor 35 years of
service to the company, as
announced by Norman H. Tarr,
plant manager.
·
Stewart joined OVEC on Dec.
12,. 191111, as a laborer tn the
labor-janitor dejlartmenl. In
1956, !le tranlferred to the

·~
448·88315

-----------~-----------------1

.·

'·

University Hosj!ital in Cleveland.
Brandeberry, who was Gallia
County's,Man of the Year in 1969,
is a truswe at the University of Rio
Grande,. an active member of the
Gallipolis Ro~ Cl~b and attends
the Fitst Presbyterian Chun:h in
GallipOlis.

. .

enmneer
e-eDiets award_

GALLIPOLIS - Rebecca
Clark, Engineer at DuPont Washington Works in Parkersburg
received a special accomplishment award for a design which
exceeded the expectations for a
first year engineer.
The design was of an automatic
purge and evacuation unit which

ONE FREE SANDWICH

ONE FREE DINNER

alleging Matsushita gave MCA
Chairman Lew Wasserman a
better deal than other share'holders for his 4.95 mutton shares
ofMCA.
Wasserman's deal, designed to
cut his tax burden, calls for him
to receive a new preferred stock
with a face value of $327 mtulon
and an 8. 75 percent annual
dividend.
Epstein . argued that other

Brandeberry named to Ohio
Valley Bank committee

&amp;J!

Frontier Farms Restaurant

In a world turning healthcare into,
business, we're making your health our
only business. That's why we sought and
achieved accreditation from the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. In an intensive on-site
survey we've been put under the magnifying glass and have been judged to meas. ure up to the highest standards of care.
When it comes to commitment to quality
our Joint Commission accreditation is
action behind words.

Judge rejects bid to block buyout

Chemist presents paper

Clip and Bring In.
Frontier .Farms Restaurant

EMPLOYEE HONORED- Steven Brac!l!ury, lett, was selected
Holzer Medical Center Empl~yee of.theY ear, and Is C!lngratulaled
~ere by CEO Charles Adkins.

A backward glance ·at 1990

THREE FREE MEALS

with any other diiCOUntl. apeci1l1, or otfera. One chedc par vi1it.

Quality Care
Is Our Bottom Line
We're Accredited

GALLIPOLIS - Steven D. hospital laboratory, and his
Bradbury, escort In the transport mother Sharon is a registered
department of Holzer Medical nurse at HMC. His father Is Pau)
Center, was named Employee of Bradbury.
the Year, according to Charles I,
The .other monthly honorees
Ad kills. Jr., ·Chief excu tive were Sandra ·Holstein, Thelma
officer.
Frazier NA, Vivian Hayes, VIrgil
Throughout the year, HolZer Bentley, Pamela. Nibert, Sharon
Medical Center selects an em· Eubanks RN, Donna Reynolds·
ployee to be honored monthly , Kenl RN, Kim Skidmore RN,
and from those, one ts singled out Rex Howa r d and Edna
for the yearly honor. ·The pfo- Glassburn.
gram, called GREAT, emphasEach employee of lhe month
·lzes guest relations, education, receives a $50 U.S. Savings Bond,
attitude and teamwork.
a reserved par king place for that
The monthly honorees and month and their na111e and
their guests, along with the photograph displayed In the
hospital review committee and hospital lobby .
admjnistratlon attended a recent · As Employee of the Year,
banquet ·where the announce- . Bradbury received a $100 U.S.
ment was made.
Savings Bond, a designated park·
Bradbury, a Qalllpoli.s na live,
tng place for December, a paid
graduated from Gallta Academy
day oft and his named engraved
High School and at tended the 'on a plaque in the lobby.
Holzer Colleg!l of Nursing at the
University Of · Rio Grande. He
SIX WEEKS OLD- Dave Durbin, shown In front of tbe.Comfort
plans to resume hjs education tn
Air beating aad air co,..llloniDs office on 150 Third Ave. In
the future. He began working at
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A
GaiBpolla, has operated thla aew Rbeem dlaU'Ibutor with bla wife
HMC tn the transport departfederal
court judge Friday re, and co-owner, Marlatla Marchi, at thla address for the luI six
ment'ln 1986, while still in high
jected
a
bid by an MCA share' weeks. Prior to lhla venture, Durbin was an office manager for
school.
Palmer-Donovan Manufacturlol(lo Columbus durhig bla 10 years
He is married to the former holder to block Matsushita Elect·
l there. (Times.Sentlnel photo)
Ann J. Glenn, who works in the ric Industrial Co.'s $6.6 billion
buyout of the entertainment
•
giant
.. clearing one of the final
'
hurdles to the deal.
The shareholder, Lawrence
Epstein, sought to block MatsuAccount BOoks are available at problems pulled the average shita's $66· a-share tender offer,
' by Edward M. VoUbom
• County Extension Office
the County Extension Office at a down. The remainder of bulls dUe lo expire Saturday, In a suit
Agriculture &amp;: CNRD
minimum cost. Stop and look at were close to the 3 and 3.25 target
.~
average dally gain.
the selection.
•• GALLIPOLIS -Take a ''snapAttention dairymen! A special
The Ohio Department of Agrl·
session
is being planned for
'shot" of your farm business on
culture on Dec. 19, Issued a
· ;December 31.
Wednesday,
Jan. 9. This will be
Moldy Corn Advisory. ODA offl·
clearly
an
afternoon
program
• Dis trlct Extension Farm Manclals conf.lrmed Deoxyn lvolenol
that
ts
a
joint
effort
between
)igement Specialist, Bryson
(DON) and zeoralenone (F-2) tn
Dr. Keith R. Brandeberry has
;(Bud) Carter, tn a recent release
samples of corn from Geauga, Meigs and Gallla Counties. The been elected to serve on the execureminded far~J~ers that they can
Portage and Trumbull Counties. program wtll look at reducing tive committee at Ohio Valley Bank
}lecome better financial managBoth are produced from fusa- feeding cost through the inten- in Gallipolis, effective Jan. 1, 1991,
~rs by d~eloptng their own
rium molds that attack corn as a sive grazing system.
according to President and Chief
Resource persons wtll be Daryl Cxecuti ve Officer James L, Dailey.
balance sheets. II farm recordS . result of weather conditions.
)Ire kept &lt;;m
January 1 to
'I'he Ohio Performance ' Bull Clark, MusktngumCountyextenBrandeberry joined the bank's
December 31 basis, then the . Test Program has two location~ slon agent and Joe Luby, Muskin· board of directors in 1968 and is
¥ear-end balance sheet should be
this year. Some 199 bulls were gum County dairy farmer. Luby chairman of the examination and
l:ompleted December 31. Comstarted on the ofttcal test at The has used the lnte.nslve grazing audit committee. In making the anpleting a l:lalance sheet is like
Belle Valley Statton on Dec. 5 and system for several years and has nouncement, Dailey said, "We aptaking a "financial snapshot" of 6. This group gained 3.6 pourids a real high rolling herd average.
preciaiC Dr. Brandeberry's saong
With current milk prices, we interest in our bank and welcome
your farm business on December
per day during the warm-up
wtll certainly want to look at all his unique abilities to our executive
31.
period.
Farmers operating on a cash
The 100 bulls at the Washington of the options of reducing cost committe."
account basts must keep at least
Court House test site gained 2. 72 without lowering production. I
Brandeberry, a .member of the
an annual inventory tn order to
pounds per day tn their first . have not confirmed the meeting staff at Holzer Clinic, carne to Galget an accurate handle on the
o!flc.lal. 28 weigh period. A few location yet, call the extension lipolis in 1952. He is a member of
direction of their ·business. Farm
bu lis being treated for health office or read next week's article.
the Columbus executive board of
the Physicians In~urancc Exchange
(PIE) Company, Uie largest insurer
of physicians in Ohio; and fonner
president of the Gallipolis Savings
&amp; Loan Company.
He graduated from Ohio UniverIn this, our final article of the
Impending recession.
, A final shock came with the
sity before attending medical
year, werevtewtheeventswhlch
Without a doubt, higher oil re-examination of the ageless
school at Case WesiCm in
affected the financial landscape
prices and widespread uncer- truism that real-estate may only Cleveland.
during 1990. 6ur initial issue of talnty created by Iraq's Invasion "increase" in value. The revelaDr. Brandeberry served his interthe New Year will present our played a key role In the subse- tion jolted not only homeowners ship at the University of Cincinnati
outlook for 1991.
quent economic slowdown . .How- (particularly those on ·the . Hospital and speciality aaining at
The swifl and unexpected ever, the seeds of the decline coasts), but also the financial
crumbling of the BerUn Wall were sown earUer. In retrospect, communUy.
served as an early harbinger of more heed should have been paid
Many flnan~tal institutions
.the unpredictable series of, the fact that the market rally were forced by more stringent
events that transp.lred In 1990. exhibited narrow leadership, · regulartory requirements to acIndeed, it was a year during with the . average stock faring knowledge the new pricing ·realwhich many previously sacra- much worse than the frequently ity, and large write-offs were
sanct notions were brought into quoted Indices.
quickly followed by a savaged
question.
' Furthermore, even as the stock prices. This highly publicThe economy listed along_dur- Federlll deficit continued to !zed phenomena did little to
. lng the first half, showing neither spiral out of ·control, the Prest- further consumer confidence
In short 1990 will be
·
Impressive growth nor the !nell- dent's repudiation · of "Upnation of meaningfully turn reading" opened the doOr to the bered as ~ year of tra':~~~­
down. At the same time, inflation now infamous Federal budget Internationally, political alii an:
persisted at worrisome levels.
debacle. Certainly, higher taxes, ces' changed at a bewildering
Following marginal gains tn Increased government debt and pace. Domestically an economic
the first half, the Dow raiDed the resultant higher Interest expansion of vtrtu~lly unprece·
toward ,the 3,000 level in July. payments seemed a dubious dented duration breathed its last.
Market sages clamored to pre- recipe for the economy, and
In addition man of th
began 1~
diet the exact date that the citiZens responded by proposing excesses of the 19
average would close above that an alternative solution: Congres- unwind, as best symbolized by
barrier, but these predictions slonal term limits.
the sentencing of Michael Mllken
proved premature, albeit by a
Unfortunately, the mischief or and the coliapse of hts empire
measly quarter of a point. When Congress '!'as · not limited to
However, equally telUng e~l ­
Saddam Hussein sent his troops Irresponsible fiscal policy, as dence could be found In the
KEVIN DENNIS
Into Kuwait soon thereafter, all evidenced by still spiraling est!- struggles or collapse of several
talkofa3,000Dowwassquelched mates· of the ultimate cost to gargantuan leveraged buyouts
In favor of debates over the taxpa~ers of the bailout of the the cooling of the real -estat~
duration · and severity · of the nation s thrifts.
market, and the layoffs of many

Money Ideas

THANKS TO ALL WHO HAVE BEEN SO
GOOD TO US THESE PAST FIVE
YEARS.
TO SHOW OUR APPRECIATION, WE
WILL GIVE YOU:

0-

HMC announces Employee of the Year

a

(304) 675-1675

Section

December 30, 1990

...

68

Thank 'tou For
'tour Patience I

Farm/ Business

Farm
flashes

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT ·coNTROL

a e\o.

Clev. Joe 59, Parma Padua 47
Clev. Marshall61, Tot Scott 38
Cuyahoga Falls 59. Akr Buchtel 36
Day Cham-Jul 45, Clayton N'mont
37
Dixie 51. Eaten 39
Dresden Tri·Val . 48, Licking Val. 46
Eastlake N 66, Maple Heights 56
Euclid 54, Mayfield 31
Garfield Hts. 48, Fairview 43
· Hebroo Lakewood 54, Col. Werhle
30
Howland Chr. 43. Erie (Pa. ) Chr. 17
Kett. AHer S7, Mlddletown24
Liberty Union 60. Johnstown
N'rldge44
Lorain 78, Ely ria W. 38
LOrain King 63, Col. Mifflin 59
Lords town 44, Leetoola 37
McDonald 66, Girard 32
Mentor 65, Bedford 31
Mid Fenwick 47, Valley VIew 40
Newton Falls 49, Col. Crestview 48
Nordonia iS. Ravenna 47
NorWalk Paul 56, Danbury Lakeslde27
Oberlin Fire lands 77, Monroevle 57
~arma Holy Name 66, Oev. Mag·
·
nJficat 63
Parma Val. Forge 39, Brecksville
29
Pick' too 87, Lou. (Ky.) Fairda1e22
Richmond Hts. 56, Clev. C'wood 30
RivervieW 55, Newark 34
Sprlng N 52, Spring NE 46

.

Dacamber 30. 1990

Poma-oy Middlaport-Gellipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant W. Va.

Page C-6-Sunday limes-Sentinlll,

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...

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operations department as an janitor department. He trans·
auxiliary equipment operator. In !erred to the matntenence de'1976, he was promoted to unit partment In 1956 as a
supervisor and In 1981.- to assist- malntenence helper. He adant shift operating engineer. vanced through the various
Stewart and his Wife, Gladys, matntenence mechanic classlft·
reside at Box 255, Mason, W.Va. · cations, and tn 1974, was proVanM&amp;tre joined OVEI' on · . mated tomalntenencemechanlc·
Dec. 14, 19S5 as a laborer In the
A. Oliver and his wife, Delores,
labor-janitor department. In
resided atRoute2, Letart, W.Va.
1956, he tranlferred to the
Frecker joined OVEC on Dec.
malntenence ciepartment, .where
16, 1955, as a laborer tn the
he advanced to malntenence
labor-janitor department. In
mechaniC-A
1974. VanMatre
1956, he transferred to the
and hli wife, Cecile, rMide at
malntenence department, where
Route l, Letart, W.Va.
he advanced to malntenence
Oliver joined OVECoaDec;.l4,
mechanic· A In 1975. Frecker and
19M, as a laborer In the labor·
his wife, Daisy, live at State
Route 7, Pomeroy.

_,.....;;..,........;..;,.

In

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'

MYS'l'ERY FARM - Tbll week's lll)'lltery
farm, featured by the GaiHa Wa&amp;er Conservation
Dlalrlcl, Ia located somewhere In Gallla Couty.
Individuals wlah!ng lo participate In the weekly
cenletlt may do so by gaeulag the farm' a owaer.
Jut maD, or drop off your gaeu to the Galllpolla
Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave., QaiBpolls, Ohio,
45831, or the Dally Sentinel, Ill Cou.._ 81., .
Pomeroy, Oblo, 45789,and you may win a S5 cub

,,

prlle from the Ohio Valley Publlllhln( Co. Leave
yolll' name, addretut and telephone number with
your card or letter. No telephone calls will be
accepled. All coatest entries should be turned In to
the Dewl(l&amp;per office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.
ID cue of a lie, lhe wlaner will be ch011ea by
lottery. Next week, a Melp County I arm will be •
featured by lhe Melp SoU and Water ConservaUon Dlelrlct.
• •

�Pomeloy-Midclaport-Gellipolia, Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Pilge-0-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Decembar 30. 1890

Emotional·farewell for U.S. sailors
NORFOLK, Va. (UPI) Eighteen years ago, Sharon
Decker and her 2- year-old son
waved goodbye to her husband AI
as he left Norfolk Naval Station
for Vietnam.
She and AI stood along the
same waterfront Friday, watchIng their son A.J ., now 20, leave
for the Persian Gulf region with
more tha.n 16,000 other Navy
personnel deployed as part of
Opera lion Desert Shield.
For the Deckers, the departure
of two aircraft carrier battle
groups under the threat of war
was eerie. Friday's deployment
IS one of the largest since the
Vietnam War.
"I don't trust anybOdy In this. I
don't trust our side and I don' t
trust theirs," said Sharon
Decker, who lives In Langhorne,
Pa. "I don't think we 're going to
get out of this without body
bags. "
.
AI Decker said the mast
bothersome aspect of the deploy·
ment for him Is the uncertainty.
His son Is assigned to the guided
missile destroyer USS Preble,
which like the other ships deployed, has no set date for its
return.
.
"We knew we were going to go
over and get shot at and these
people don't know It yet," he
said. "Who knows what's going to
happen the sixteenth of
January."
While some sailors acknowledged they are scared of the
prospect of war with Iraq,
officers said they remain confi-

The ships leave as part of the
dent of their mission. Navy
second wave of the U.S. military
officers have downplayed conbuildup directed by President .
cerns raised about whether the
Bush In response to Iraq's refusal
United States will be ready to go
to withdraw from Kuwait. More
to war by Jan. · 15, the U.N.
than
400,000 u.s. troops are
deadline for Iraq's withdrawal
expected
to be deployed In the
from Kuwait .
•'The basic bottom line Is we're
Middle East within a few weeks.
ready to go and we're ready to do
The threat of war was on the
whatever we're asked to do,"
minds of sailors and families,
said Capt. John Mazach, comespecially the younger crewmen.
manding officer of the America.
. "You get that weird feeling
Sailors Friday stood In their
through your body, just knowing
Navy peacpats, breathing steam
something's going to happen no.
into the chilly air as they lined the
matter what you do," said Craig
ralls of the aircraft carriers
Ridenour, 19, an aviation ordAmerica and Theodore Roosenanceman from Ava, Mo. ~~rm
velt and support ships leaving
definitely scared. I've never
Norfolk. On shore, many cried.
been through something like this
Families were allowed to
In my life."
board the Theodore Roosevelt
Evidence of the rush to get
before it left and ·nearly every
ready was evident Friday. Crewfamily was teary-eyed as they · men aboard the America carried
walked down the ·gangplank and
out a-fire drill on the deck, shortly
before the carrier left·port at 3
left the carrier.
''Everyone's just scared," said
p.m.
a crying Debbie Wooden of
With the departure o! the two
Covington, Va., whose husband
battle groups, a total of 61
Kerry departed with the guided · Atlantic Fleet ships are now
missile cruiser USS . Virginia.
assigned to Operation Desert
•'They might not come back. You Shield, the Navy said.
The Virginia, Preble, replendon't know."
Crowds were much smaller ishment oiler USS Kalamazoo,
than usual for a deployment, as destroyer USS Caron, fleet oiler
many families elected to say USS Platte and combat stores
private goodbyes during Christ- ship USS San Diego left Norfolk
with the two carriers. ·
mas holiday leaves.
The warships are expected to
Ships based In Mayport, Fla.,
reach the Persian Gulf area in a Cliarleston, s,c., Earle, N.J.,
few weeks and will bring the and New York also ieft Friday.
number of U.S. carrier battle The batile groups Include air
groups In the region to six, Not wings from all along the East
since Vietnam have so many Coast, as well aSWhldbey Island,
ships deployed so fast, Navy Wash.
· officials said.

Two trolleys collide in station
TEARFUL GOODBYE - Jenny Koester, lelt 0
of Virginia Beach, Va., and Michelle Morgan of
Warrington, Penn .• bid a tearful goodbye to lh'e

Norfolk based destroyer USS Caron as II departs
lor ·the Middle Eut early Friday. Koester has a
boyfriend aboard and Morgan a brother. (UP I)

Soldiers to get genn warfare shots
chemical and biological warWASHINGTON (UPI )
fare,"
the Pentagon said In a
American soldiers at the front
statement.
li nes in Saudi Arabia will receive
Brookings Institution scholar
inoculations that could offer
Elisa
HarriS said that In addition
some protection against biologito
typhoid
and cholera, · Iraqi
cal agents' if Iraq resorts to germ
research also Includes anthrax,
warfare. Pentagon officials said.
The inoculation program wlll tularemia, which Is also called
begin shortly, a. spokesman said rabbit fever, and botulin toxin,
the cause of botulism poiSoning.
Fri day .
"Biological weapons are not
There was no word qn what
perceived as very useful In
se rums the Pentagon would use.
Troops already have· a .signifi- tactical (close In battlefield)
cant level of protection against circumstances," Harris . said.
"The primary reason is they are
biological agents.
of
limited military utility beOfficials said masks will filter
cause
you risk Infecting your own
every known airborne biological
forces
when you unleash these
agent , and protective suits and
diseases."
gloves prevent toxins from peneUnder President Richard
trating the skin. Soldiers in the
gulf region also have been given Nixon, the United States unilaterally destroyed its biological
typhoid and cholera vaccines.
U.S. service personnel receive agents in 1969 and ceased resmallpox shots even though that search·and development of offenva ccine Is no longer given to the sive biological weapons. It has
maintained a research program
general population.
" We are committed to provid- at the Army Medical Research
ing the maximum protection for Institute of Infectious Diseases
our troops, including against at Fort Dietrick, Md., to develop

Prosecutor gives up
battle with bookstores
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) -The
Lucas County prosecutor, rebuffed by court decisions that
have prevented him from closing
11 adult bookstores durtng the
past four years, said he· was
giv ing up the battle as
un winna ble.
Prosec utor Anthony Pizza. has
as ked the Sixth Ohio District
Court of Appeals to dismiss the
the case. which began In Common Pleas Court, went to the
a ppeals court and on to the Ohio
Supreme Court', which sent It
bac k to the appealate judges.
· ·'Continuing this matter at this
time would only result ·Jn the
pu rsuit of an unattainable legal
remedy. " P iz~ said.
In se nding the case back to the
appea ls court.for further review,
the state Supreme Court called
the appeiate judges' attention to
the tes timony of an Ohio State
Unive rsity sociologist who conducted a survey of local attitudes
toward graphic sex and nudity.
The Supreme Court held that
the appeals court erred In looking
at the original trial evidence
themselves. The appeals court
could have reviewed the magazi nes if the trial court had found
them obscene, but not the other
way around , the state high court
sa id In its unanimous decision.
Lucas County authorities filed
the initial action Nov. 12, 1986,
aft er seizing 126 magazines.
The prosecutor, relying on a
law that allows authorities to
close fireworks and other businesses as nuisances, sought to
have the stores closed as nulsan·
ces because the sold magazines,
books and videos local authorities deemed obscene.
"There was no attaInable pas-

and test vaccines and antitoxins.
CIA Director William Webster
warned last fall that Iraq ,
already knOWI\ to have used
chemi_cal weapons during Its war
with Iran and on its Kurolsh
population, had biological
weapons.
Biological agents are made of
various diseases that can deblli ..
tate or kill civilian and military
populations. In the case of
anthrax, which Is carried by
sheep, cattle and even camels,
Inhalation of the spores IS almost
always fatal. If It gets under the
skin, It causes bliStering and can
be treated with huge doses of
antibiotics.
Botulin toxin Is also one of the
more deadly forms of biological
weaponry, and just a few ounces
are necessary to lace a water
~upply with a polson strong
enough to kill anyone who drinks
the water.
The· vaccination program was
first reported by The New York
Times, which said authorities
said some of the vaccine was
being reserved for use after any
attack as an antidote and that
antibiotics also were available.

BOSTON ( UPI) _ A trolley
pulling Into an underground
subway station rammed into the
rear of another train during the
morning rush-hour Friday, injurtng 33 people. The 64-year-old
driver was later suspended after
he tested positive for alcohol.
. One witness said "everyone
went flying through the air"
when the crash occurred at 6:36
a.m . In the Arlington Street
station near the citY's P\lblic
Ga den
~ne passenger said he saw the
crash coming and screamed for
"everybody to get down and hang
on "
Two of the injured remained
hospitalized Friday night, includlng one In serious condition, a
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority spokesman said.
The others were treated at the
scene or at several nearby
hospitals and later released, he
said.
The MBTA said the two-car
trolley was headed outbound on
the Green Line when it rammed
Into the rear of the second
two-car train stopped In the
station. Each train carried about
40 passengers, the transit au thority said.
Both drivers underwent tests
for alcohol and drugs shortly
after the crash. The cause of the
accident was under investigalion, but MBTA spokesman Jim
Ball said investigators had already ruled out the rear train's
brakes or slgmils in the station
area as possible reasons .
The operator of the moving
trolley was not Identified, but
Ball said the man was age 64 and

had been a driver for 20 years.
but faulty brakes are believed to
"He tested positive (for alco- be the cause.
hoi)," Ball said . ''He has been
The ~S'l'B wa~ also notified of .
suspended without pay pending Fridays crash and was expected
the outcome o I t.h e to send a team to Investigate, the
Investigation."
.
transit authority said.
Ball declined to r~veal the
Mayor Raymond Flynn, who
driver's blood alcohol level, and rushed t.~ the scene, said he
refused to speculate on whether thought It ~~s .sqme sort of
the driver's · condition was a , practical joke when aides first
factor in the crash.
told him there had been another
''That is still under lnvestlga' tr~.ln c;ash In the city.
lion," he said.
We ve got to take care of the
Ball said he "no Information" injured first and then we've gotto
on the results of tests on the other do a real serious investigation,"
train operator.
he said.
The most seriously Injured of
Passenger Steve DePaulo was
the 33 people hurt was Identified In the front seat of the train that
as Benjamin Wade, 41, of Bas- was entering the station.
ton's _Dorchester section, who
was . hsted In serious condition
Friday night at New 'England
Medical Center Hospital.
The only other person still
hOspitalized was reported In
stable condition at University
Hospital, Ball said.
NEW· YORK (UPI) - A
"Everyone went fl~lng
woman overcome by smoke In a
through the air when we were
subway fire died on her 37th
rear·ended," said John Kennedy birthday Saturday, the second
of Dorchester, who was on the death In the freak. blaze that
train that was hit.
lnjurecl 150 commuters and left
The rear end of the trolley in
Investigators searching for
the s tatlon and the front of the car explanations.
that hi tit were twisted wreckage.
Doreen Blumenthal of MasGlass was strewn over the tracks sapequa Park, N.Y., died at 12: 07
and platform.
a.m. of cardiac arrest, a Long
Th¢ accident was the second Island College Ho~pltal nursing
underground "train wreck In
said.
Basta!' this month. On Dec.12,an supervisor
Her death came on ' tier 37th
Amtrak Night Owl train birthday and 15 hours alter she
slammed Into a commuter train was revived . after she was
in Boston's Back Bay Station, overcome
by smoke In a Friday
Injuring more than 260 people.
morning rush-hour explosion
That accident is still under that filled part of a Brooklyn
Investigation by the National subway tunnel with flames.
Transpor!J!,tion Safety Board,

Second victim dies
froni subway fire ·

ture where we can win this case,"
Pizza said. "We are facing a $9
billion industry and their printing presses never stop."
The prosecutor said he would
not consider starting over withaut a "very thorough survey of
community standards. "
"There is no way to Implement
court obscenity decisions unless
you can prove the material
violates community standards
and to do that , you have to first
find out what the community
standards are," he said.

Bush moves quickly
on Soviet food aid
WASHINGTON (UP!)- PresIdent Bush, moving swiftly to
infuse the Soviet Union with
badly needed aid, signed an
executive order Saturday allowIng Moscow to receive up to $1
bililon in U.S. credit guarantees
for American food and other
agricultural goods.
The president's move was
announced at the' White House as
he vacationed at the presidential
retreat In Camp David, Md. ·
Promised by Bush on Dec. 12,
the executive order set the actual
paperwork in motion lor the
. assistance already requested by
the Soviets, a spokesman said. It
formally lilt&amp; a 15-year-old ban
on such credits and allow' the
Department of Agriculture to
Immediately begin making com'
modities available.
The move comes, however,
alter the dramatic resignation of
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard
Shevardnadze, who asked for the
aid and stood at Bush's side at a
Rose Garden ceremony announcIng the decision.

IDjnred, tile mOl&amp; Hl'lllna lnjurJ II a llrabD lea, aoeortlt81 to a
lloepltal ipolleamaa. Tile crull II tile ~ecaad uaderpeuad trnla
wreck Ia Bo.ton thla moatla. (UPI)

TROLLEY COLLISION, AGAIN - S.toa Mayor R&amp;)' FIJDD,
Frida)' at tbe MBTA Arlbii!IOD Street
Station 1111 "T" oflleiala eleu the traekt followlnJ aa euly
momiDJ · _two-eu troDey eo Jill loa. .Thirty-three people were

rlfht, lllfVey tile -ne

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

December 30, 1990

Sunday ·Times-Sentinel-Page- D-3.

Psychic: ]an,. 15

Shevardnadze
aide details
•
•
restgnation

worst for attack

MOSCOW (UPI) - Foreign
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
resigned because he believed his
Influence was waning and felt
that Soviet policy abroad was
being undercut at h9me. an aide
said Saturday.
Leonid Kravcllenko, head of
the State Committee for Radio
and Television, meanwhile deull'dtelevlslon journalists' claim
that he prohibited them from
broadcasting a program about
Shevardnadze late Friday.
But Teymuraz Stepanov, a
senior aide to Shevardnad&gt;:e,
accused Soviet state-run media
of Imposing a news blackout on
coverage Involving the whitehaired miniSter since hls stunning Jan . . 20 resignation
announcement.
· The comments by Stepanov In
the KomsomoiSkaya Pravda
newspaper provided the first
on-tile-record details of Shevardnadze's decision from a close
associate.
"Since his resignation a
strange situation has developed:
In the West there has . been a
storm, but here In our country we
have a sort of silence zone,"
Stepanov said.
In his dramatic speech to the
Congress of People's Deputies,
Shevardnadze warned that rightwing forces were pushing tl;le
country back toward
dictatorship.
Reporters for the weekly news
program "Vzglyad" held a protest Friday at the Union of
Cinema Workers, charging
Kravchenko had said they might
be fired If the popular show
proceeded with plans to air
interviews with Stepanov and
another Shevardnadze aide, Sergei Tarasenko. .

ROW MUCH FOR THE PIG? - A Soviet customer asks lor the
price of pigs at Moscow's Central Market on December 29. The pigs
were on sale lor 1~0 roubles. With an ayllrage ~ary of !I bout 270

Stepanov said he wanted to
speak on , Vzglyad to relute
"foolish" explanations for Shevardnadze's resignation.
"There has been a gradual
narrowing of the domestic basiS
that had supported us In conducting the foreign policy associated
with the name of Shevai'dnadze,''
Stepanov said In the newspaper
interview. "The minister has
' exhausted all his reserves. and
he is unable to exert any
·
influence on the situation."
· $tepanov , in speaking of . a
" gradual narrowing," appeared
to be referring to a reduction of
domestic support for Shevard: ·
nadze'·s foreign policy because of
current conservative trends
beyond· the foreign minister's
controL
Stepanov rejected claims Shevardnadze quit In an emotional
b11rst of frustration, saying he '
had been thinking of resigning
for a year. · ·
Alexander Lyllbinov, one of
Vzglyad's tl)ree well-known an·
chormen, told Kornsomolskaya
Pravda: '"Yes, we wanted to
invite Stepanov and Terasenko,
but Kravchenko .. . did not allow
us to do this. Starting from
Monday we tried to persuade
him, but all the talks proved
useless . It Is clear that this was
done for political reasons."
The program dld not run in Its
usual midnight time slot Friday
night.
In a separate Interview with
the independent Interfax news
service, Lyublnov, who Is also a
deputy In the Russian Federation's Parliament. said, "We are
deeply concerned about the chain
of resignations in the country's
leadership."
Kravchenko, who headed the
official Tass news agency until
becoming the TV czar last
month, denied he had prohibited
the Shevardnadze aides' appearance, saying only he "advised
against" extending an Invitation
to the 62-year-old Georgian
himself.
Lyublnov said he had "Information that Kravchenko discussed the matter with Mikhail
Gorbachev," but the newsman
did not elaborate.
Shevardnadze has a good rela·
tionshlp with Lyublnov and his
co- anchormen, letting them go
with him on his plane for a trip to
Africa earlier this year.
In an Interview from the trip ·
later run on Vzglyad, Shevardnadze said he almost resigned In
April 1988 when he and other'
mernbers of the Conununlst
Party's ruling PoUtburo were
accused of ordering the use of
torce against a peaceful protest
In TbiliSl, capital of his native
Georgia. Twenty people were
killed In the crackdown.
. For several montha Jeadtna up
to his realpatloa, coDBervatlve
deputies and military otllcers
crltlcl:led SllevarcludZe for IDI1111 Eu11rrn Evropt ·aad for
brfll&amp;inl tile lovlet UaiOa too
clOie to a wtr footlq lD ill
pr'O-U.S. ~ Ill the Penlan
Gulf crllll, lrlllltred b)' Iraq's
AUJ. 2 IDva•IDD of Kuwait.

1V

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roubles a mont!), most Muscovites would have to spend nearly 50
percent of their wage io buy enough for one meal. (UPI Reuler)

HinD
When alcohol is the driver, nobody's safe! It
doesn't take a large amount to do a lot of damage. Even
.one drink can cloud judgement and slow reflexes enough
to hamper fast thinking and total control .at the wheeL At holidays when many people celebrate 'to the limit;
steer clear of disaster. If you take a drink, don't take
the driver's seat ... and make it a HAPPY New Year!

•

tnttS
- - --

TORONTO (UPI ) - A psychic
who predicted the rise ofSaddam
Hussein says Jan. 15 Is the worst
p&lt;&gt;sslble time to attack the Iraqi
leader.
But Anthony Car r of Toronto,
who also predicted the 1990 falls
of British leader Margaret
Thatcher and boxer Mike Tyson,
also say·s a " miracle" will
temporarily avert an all out war,
"For the time being there will
be peace_; but I liope that's no!
just . wishful thinking . on my
part," Carr said.
Carr said a total eclipse of the
sun - to begin Jan . 15 and only
visible in the Middle East astrologically bodes Ill for the
United States and Its allies and
well for Iraq .
,
Carr said the Ill effects of the
pending eclipse are already
being felt in the form olaccldents
that have claimed the lives of
American soldiers ·!)eployed in
the region after Iraq invaded
Kuwait on Aug. 2.
"Saddam doesn't have to really do anything, just sit back :
and watch the Americans do :
themselves in." Carr said.
•
Carr believes a "miracle.': :.
perhaps In the form of a lone ·
peacemaker, will cool hostilities
before they erupt.
In the past, Carr predicted the ·
deaths of Pope John Paul I and
Princess Grace of Monaco, the
Falkland Islands war, the eruption of Mount St . Helens and the
bombing of the Capitol Building
In Washington - as well as the :
rise of Saddam Hussein.

�.Page- D-4- Sunday Times-Sentinel

.,

-

Quayle off for New Year's
_with U.S. trOOps in gulf area

Saddam 's threat to the oil res our·
ces Jn the Persian Gulf as one of
the key reasons a 28:nation
coalition Is demanding he with·
drawal from Kuwai t.
In ;1n address at Seton Hall
University in South Orange, N.J.,
last month. Quayle said , " All the
states of the Middle East face a
major threat ·in Saddam Hussein's Iraq . Saddam's amtitions
are no t confined to Kuwait.
Rather, his goal is to dominate
the Persian Gulf region and use
its vast wealth to become the
greatest Arab hero of modern
limes, the leader of a new Arab
superpower."
Di splaying impatience with
economic sa11clions that were
Imposed, Quayle said, "The
longet we refrain from action
against Iraq, the more · ttme
Saddam Hussein has to tighten
his grip on Kuwait and the harder
it may be to break that grip, if
and when war comes. Does
patlence today risk greater
American casualties

Vietnam so at least he's making
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Vice whom contend that only military
it here."
President Dan Quayle, who has · force would ouster Saddam HusArmy Spec. 4 Anette Bagwall,
spearheaded the effort here to sein from Kuwait .
The visit to the gulf by Quayle, · 21, Charleston, S.C., a company
explain and support Persian Gulf
clerk , said, "I suppose It's good
policy, was headed Saturday for who served in the Indiana Nafor morale: at least he's showing
the potential war zone to mix and tional Guard during the Vietnam
War, caused concern In some
up. I didn' t see the preside11tbutl
mipgle with th e troops.
was excited about the fact he
Quayle' s arrival in Saudi Ara· circles . During the 1988 prestden·
came over ."
bta follows in the footsteps of tial campaign, critics claimed
Pfc. John Thorne of St. Johns,
President Bush. who combined a Quayle used family influence to
join
the
guard
and
avoid
going
to
New
Brunswick, Canada, who
Middle Eastern diplomatic tour
Vietnam.
a
charge
denied
by
was
born
In the United States.
with a moral e-boosting Thanks·
told
a
Uni(ed
Press International
both
Quayle
and
the
guard.
giving Day visit with the Operaoff
the
Beckwith
shrugged
reporter,
"I'd
prefer ... (NBC-TV
tion Desert Shield troops.
concer
ns,
saying,
"That's
old
host) David Letterf!lan to him."
Defense Secretary Dick Ch~&gt;­
news."
Pic. David Wilson, 19, ·of
ney and CQiin Powell, chairman
Quayle is expected to hOld
Biscayne, Miss., said morale was
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. also
informal chats with the troops,
especially low during the Christ·
made a pre-Christmas visit.
including some members of the
mas season.
The vice president is scheduled
Indiana 'National Guard.
" I think the morale' s pretty
to visit the outposts of the four U.
In a random survey of the
low with us being out here and tomorrow?''
S. services as the U.N. -imposed
Quayle, r esponding to congrestroops in the field , it appeared
nothing Is happening, " he said.
Jan. 15 deadline for Iraqi troops
that Quayle's visit will signal
" We 're so far from home and a sional critics urging patience,
to withdraw from Kuwait draws
that they have not been forgotten
lot of people are used to being . said: " Patience at any pr ice
near.
would be a failed policy" and
by the Bush administration.
with their families."
Quayle will be carrying a
Pte. Rod Pemberton, 30,
Quayle has made a number of seen by the world as "a lack of
400-yard-long postcard expressresolve."
Denver, Colo. , an aircraft meIn which he
ing the best wishes of celebrities,
said
,
"When
George
chanic,
friends and relatlves. David
ANSWERS TO
fl- 30
(Bush ) showed up it really
Beckwith. Quay le's press secreboosted the morale. We didn't get
tary, said the vice president cut
SCRAM-LETS
a chance to see him. But when he
short a famil y skiing outing in
The bnoe and groom knew all their
MISFIT
drove by everybody stopped
Va il, Colo., to make the three-day
friends were b1g sports tans . The1r
FLIGHT
working to watch his vehicle go
journey at the request of the
wedoing mvitations read , "Ceremony
SCORCH
by .
Defense Deparunent.
at
3 O 'Clock. or Half T1me.
BRONCO
"It's probably a little less
Quayle also is scheduled to
Whichever
COMES FIRST "
JURIST
exciting to see Quayle," he
meet with Sau di's King Fahd and
TEDIUM
added. "He didn't make it to
the exiled emir of Kuwait , both of

COMES FIRST

Classi 18
INSURANCE BIDS
Bids will ba received by
the Meigs County Public Li·
brary a1 216 W. Main St .•
Pomeroy, OH 46789, until

12:00

noon January 3.

6

Lost &amp; Found

tal,

112130,31: 111 t, Jtc

Friday. Monday odhlon • 2:00
P.-m. Saturdly.

cover~ge. including

hospi-

L1fe and prescription
card service for 10 em·
ployees.

8

Public Notice

1B3BL 18D3KC4851 36
1978 Chevy Camara, Serial
# 1 Q87UBN641942
This vehicle will be sold at
a pubhc sale at the Jackson
Pike Office of the Ohio Valley Bank Company, 370
Jackaon Pike, Gallipolis.

Ohio at 10:00 am on Satur·
day. January 6, 1991 .
The vehicle will be aold to
the highest bidder "aa, is"
without any e-.preaud or
implied warranty. Thil vehi·
cle may be aeen at the
Jackson Pike Office of the .
Ohio Valley Bank Company
up to the date and time of

ule.

The Ohio . Valley Bank
Company reeerves the right
to accept or reject any end
all bida, and to withdi'aw this
vehicle from sale prior to the
ule. Terms of Sale· Cash or

CERTIFIED CHECK.
DEC. 30. 1990:
JAN. 2, 4, 1991

Any type ot fumlluN, apa
pllances, antlqua'a, ale. Alao
appr1isa/ available. 614-245-5152.

Luneh Boxn
1950's-1970's metal dom• tops
or !9Uirt1b.cks. Al110 vinyls. No
1980 1 or plastic. Bollt. not

nac:nury.

Clll

5657.

Mare

5MI992·

Housa tl'lllar frame with · or
whhout axlas. 6141941·20'13.

Standing timber or h•rdwood or
pine pulp wood, 514--367-7511.

Standing Timber, Cllh In advance, s-14-698-4001,

Wanled old tube r1cloa made
betora 1943, Cr~nk
phonoa.
Juka boxn. Old rad o tub.a and
parts. Old radio pilrta cataloga.
Any old tyP.!t elaclronlca tube

tr,pe

~~!!:'~~~~-==~J

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
JACKSON ST. - VINTON, OHIO

JAN. 5, 7:00 P.M. SAT.

This sale will make our 2nd year that we've had our
monthly anitque and collectable sale, so we do have
buyers from all over the area lookifll for good
anliques.
If you have any antique and collectables you wantto
turn into cash give us a call at 388-9370 - 3888880 before 6 P.M. Jan. 5, 1991.
PARTIAL LIST: Libby glass, Fentm, pink depression' butter
c~ock. CarniVal stag, Fostoria, Red Ryder BB guns, iron stme,
p1e saver, mus1cal boxes, small orpn, autoharp, stool with ball
&amp; clawfeet. ball cards, 4 drawet cherry blanket chest • hand.
cut dovetails, walnut side tabl~ van~y bench . no seat, primi·
live one drawer k~chen table, pnm~ive two door kitchen wall
cabinet. painled 4 drawer gentleman's cabmet. child's fokf-a·
way drop top desk, tin Coca-Cola bottle wall thermometer .
17", St Anthony home shrine, toy G.I.Joe space port complex
electnc trains, mght table· I drawer. pair walkie-lalkies, sev:
era I straight razors, wood Santa Maria ship model, Chein w/U
lin ferris wheel, asst. 50's, 60's &amp; 70'stoys, doll beds &amp;cribs 2
old comforts, bicycle buitt for two tandem.
'

AUCTIONEER, FINIS ISAAC-388-9370
Licensed &amp; Bonded in Ohio

OR
ISAAC'S FEED, ASK FOR VIRGIL 388-8880

New Haven, wv 25215, 304-88ot·
2220.

Wanted to buy: Junk ca,. with
or without motora &amp; tc:rap metW1nt~

To Buy: Junk lutoe
with or wlthoU1 motors. C.ll

Announcements

AT

Employment Serv1ces
388~449 .

Fro• pupplll: Good natured,

good with kido. 614-&lt;Mt-0020.

11
Help Wanted
AVON • All aroaa, Call Marilyn

WHv•r 304-882·2645.

Kittens. Phon• 304-675--6038.

Mhc.cl brMd puppl•: 1 m111, 1
female. Very •m•rt, adorable
puppiaa. 514-258--6348.

Lost &amp; FOUild

6

4 months old t•ma~ Cit .. black
wfWhite p~ws, had •II shata. To
good hom• only. 304-675-3911.

FOUNO. Brownhalrod Cabbage
Pateh doll found lit Big WM"

614-698-137'1.

LOST· In 1ru of' 51

Story

Run

Rt. 7 •nd

Ro.t, 3

t.m~le

Baagln, Reward, 614-982-6443.

2

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise
MOD ON

BUilDINGS, INC.
1-'.W"..dlt'llrr- ~ inr"

1903

13733 S.R. 110
Ashland, ly. 41101 -1939
Call Toil Froe Morton, Ill.
1·100-447-7436

In Memory
In loving memory
of my husband,

BART MILLER,
who left me 7
years ago today.

Dec. 30, 1983.
A happy home . we
once enjoyed
How sweet the memo·
riel IIIII.
But deeth has left en
empty space
Thi1 world can navar
fill.
boved end 10 sadly
m 111ed by your wife.
Mildred. and
children.

D. C. Metal Sales. Inc.
Cannelburg, Inc. 47619
Specializing in Pole
Buildings .

Oeaigned to meet your
nHdl. Any size.

CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATE Ofl
post bldgs...and package.
deals. Save hundreds.

OWNER; ANNA J. TAYLOR
AUCTIONEERS:
Col. W. Keith Molden &amp; Jim Carnahan
614-742-2041 - 614-949-2708

local Sates Reprtstnttrtiu

DONNA CRISENBERY
E.S.R ., Box 166
Gallipolia, Ohio 45631
PH. 614-256-6511.

OH. M311

CISh

•

L111ch by

.... 15 4

........

11

c

8172.

South

West

Nortb

l•
2+
3•

Pass

2
2•

+

Pass

W. Vs • • 163
Pos. I.D.
Hip lllltW loostars

BR In countly. Stav•,
l"'lripmor. W.t..- &amp; fr•h pakl.
1210 pl.. ~- .,..._

•

with the third club. !inaily ruffed by
West with the nine of spades. Although ;-:
South had thrown two hearts on the ' · •
clubs, West could cash the ace of •
hearts and lead a heart. Declarer
ruffed , but he was not able to come to
nine tricks. He still had to lose a spade
and a diamond and finally one more
diamond. taking only eight tricks.

==••

3 badt
hauu, land contract, 304-17'1-1104.

OOVERNIIEHT HOliES

ropolrl.

(U

~om

Dallnquont

$1

property. Aepoeaenlona. Your

..... [11 - - Ext.' OH-

th ~ l.sle- Oswald Jacoby) are now av;uJsbl~ at
bookslores Bollt are published by Pharos Boob..
@ 1910, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE AIIN.

GOVERNMENT HOliES

411::::=2;::*=.cu;;'"''*;.~:,:,-=.::::'lot:.::.-~l 41 Houses for Rent
~om

$1

(U ropolrl. Dallnquant tu 2 bedroom ao11,.., garage,
property. Rap nualans. Your $171. ThrM Mdroom hDu•, 1
.,.. (1) 8DIH87-IDOO. Ezt. QH. 112 blth, bli.....,.t, garage.
1:::D1:::•::':::""::.:cu::rr:::on1:.::.;r::-!:::':::'ot::.·__ Throe bod_, homo, 2 botha,

-nt. _,. . ,

42 Mobile Homes

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Zbr - . kHcMn w'-lovo I
rsfrlgoralor,
.-.
pluo
uttudla. diOC*I &amp; r•tertncea,

141160 2 BR. 1114-44H!I21.
14x70 mobil• ' - In Rutland.

t910

...w-41131.

pllcllllono 614-992-2124.
HOME TYPISTS, PC usore
naoclod. $35,000 potonlllll.
Dotalla. (tl 105 617-60110 E11. 84512.
REGISTERED
NURSES.
RADIOLOGY TECHNOLOGIST.
Full &amp; Part-time posltloM avail·
•bleb excellent Nlary; benet••:
flax I It wortt schtdul•. Cont..:l
Parsonnal DeiM!rtmant, O.k Hill
Community Medical Cent•, 350
Charlotte Avenue, Olk Hill, OH
45658, tl14-682·l717. EOE.
SALES
MANAGEMENT

TRAINEE

11

nto.. Throe Mdroom, 2 botho,

to sanely at -.rptton

no ....._2•A•r Flm Ave. 114-

PCJ·r

,.

.:'&gt;

r

Cr1, fl rrH1
h

' 'i

'Ill

( . f II hI

Hr-lf('"
,jJ I I

: J&lt;Jrt'&gt;H 1

jl, '&lt;I II

~~I' dl: I d

Ptr,lir•. M illr r f &lt;' f'. ti T1' 1
"'-l1it•lh,: sIll ;ll, H•'.t t
H ( ,r flll• Stti!O:', H r~d ! . I!
1

"

r

·Hfi lflH 1 f
''

ASTRO-GRAPH

In llk:kla.port, 114-112·

Enorgllllc
ooOiolo
tMm mem• : DE.NTAL HYGIENIST lo (oin DUr pnctlco port~lmo. You'll wont to
hne all tha ,_....., quallll•
ola top notch don10I hygt.nlal.
Mu.l bo ltconood In 1ha oto1• ol
Ohio. Willing lo hard?
Sand Ul your reiaumt and u~ary
htolory to Box CLA 054, elo Qat.
11po110 DallY T-no, as Tllfnl •

l-1 h

fit)~)/

,

Av~ua, Galllpalle, OH t51n

14
Attraln

«)

'l·'ltJ ) /(I i
' I) ~~

I

t

\ 1'1

)

~~

., .

,

I)

-'Birthday
OIC. 3G, 1990

0 1990 r;.ntury 21Real Eota~ Corpontloo as tru- rarlhe

® al'KI 1111 llademarU or Ce!nury 21 Real EIILII&amp;e COrporauon.

$1 .25to Astro-Graph, c/o !his newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland. OH
44101 -3428. Be sure to slate your zodiac sign.

RT. U41 is this attractiVe 3 bedroom vmyl sided home wijt,
iamily room, living room, dining area, bath and more. On. 2.5
acres m/1. Asking $54,900. Call today.
11275

you try to get coy. you'll get caught
ARIES (M•rch 21-Aprlt 19) Today you
might feel like sounding oH to an Indi-

one of those days. If you agree, try to
find something more constructive to do
with your time.

peers are concerned. so make certain
everythtng you do is above reproach. If

VIdual who really deserves lt. It's best,
however.. that you hold your tongue and
count to 10 or even 20 until your anger
SUbSides.
TAURUS (April 20-M•y 20) If you get
involved in a f.nancial transaction today
that reQuires paper work . don't take
anythmg lor granted. Read the contract
or agreement carefully . down to the
very last hne.

TRANQUILITY AWAY FROM THE RUSH - Ran.ch home
iocat~d minules irom town. With a little oamt new caroet
and TLD you w111 have a great place to come home to. Price
reduced }J:1;61111: $39,900.
#27~
SIXTY WOODED ACRES -Containing scenic view for home
s1te and tra•ls for h1k1ng or hun ling. Abundant wildlife, pic·
turesQue large rock !ormation Enjoy nature at its best on
your own land.$20,000.
#22•

CHARMING CAPE.COD HOllE- 4 bedrooms m/1, I II baths,
full basement. Solid home wrth character, circular paved driveway mto conven1ent garage with opener. "Must See". Ask•ng $59,900.
N249
EXCELLENT RIVER VIEW - From Front St., Middleport. 3
lots w1th a.3 bedroom home, detached garage. Look at this
one, you Will fall in love. Only $35,000.
#248
'

NEW LISTING -Your Attention Please!! If you want to own
a home, have we got adeal for you. Owner f1nancinR 9'!6 in·
teres!, cozy 2 bedrooms, dining room and laundry. N1ce level
lot w1th garage. Only $19,900.
•283
BAUM ADDITION is .this extra nice bi·level home •n a well·
mamcured neighborhood. Maintenance free exterior loan
assumption available. Call today to look at th1s spac1ous 4
bedroom, 2 bath home. Asking only $62,500
f216
UNION AVENUE- Is this mce 3 bedroom 11&gt; bath horne
with family room, dimng room. living room and kitchen. Gls
heat..One car detached garage, lull basement and more. Ask·
ing only $35,000. Call lor appointment.
. mt

'

..
..

m1ght not be as cooperative as you
think lhey should be. The reason. how~
ever, may be traced to the e)(ampte you
establish. Major changes are ahead for
Capricorn in the coming year. Send lor

ZOdiBC Sign

,

AQUARIUS (J•n. 20-F.eb. 19) Experi-

menting with shortcuts pertaining to
tasks or assignments that you know
from your own experience require t1me
and patience could be a big mistake today . Don't make extra work tor yourself.

.'

so don't overreact today If another's

yours.

SCORI'IO (OCt. 24-Now. :12) You're
pretty gOod 11 figunno out thlnge for
yourself today If you are left 10 your own
devices. HoWever. complications could
en1er lhe picture wtth the suggations of
an uniOIIcltecl idviler.
IAGmAIIIUI (Now. 23-DM. 211
You're Uk-'it to function more elfaCtlvely
today H you can _.,. independently
of OlharL In lilllaliOnl where t..,work
Ia required you may be more dl a hlndran"J:"an a ....p.
·

LOCATION - LOCATION - LOCATION
Ask anybody! "Location is most important when
selecting a home." Here's a 6 room home on 1
acre w1th a great v~ew of the river and only 5 miles
from town. Includes 3 bedrooms, fireplaces, full
. basement, garage and barn. $59,500.
#116

PISCES (Feb. 20-M•rch 20) Social
complications could resull today if you
are too insistent )NIIh everyone doing
thmgs your way. Try togo along with the
will of the ma)orlly, even it you don 't to~
tally approve of 1ts 1deas.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 18) Be on guard
today so you aren't drawn 1nto situ~­
tions you dislike. e1ther of a social or
commercial nature. You'll be happier 1f
you're able to control events tnstead Of
having them control you .

a

TAURUS (April 20-Mar 20) Your con-

gan1 than you should be. Try to live

point of vtew •• diametrically oppoM&lt;I to

PEACEFUL LIVING ON RACCOON CREEK
Perfect setting for relaxation and enjoyment oi
Raccoon Creek. 3 acres, m/1, wrth good access to
the creek and plenty ol room for recreation. Log
home includes 6 tooms including basement.
Large deck overlooks the wonderful setting. Per·
feel for weekend get-togthers or lull-time country
living. $34,900.
.
*231

your Astro-Graph pred•c1ions today
Mail $1 .25 to Astro-Graph , c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland ,
OH 44101-3428. Be sure 10 state your

CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) When conversing With friends today. speak welt of
pals who are not present or say nothing

position.

' '

locked.
,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jion. 18) People
l"ith whom you'll be involved 1oday

could cause you to be more extrava-

LtefiA (lept. 23-0cl. 23) Everyone .is
entitled 10 express his/her own opinion,

NAF.

many of the same rout1nes anc:t procedures into which you were prevtously

towards others.

''

''
•

as welcome

GEMINI (Mer 21-June 201 Imprudent
management or your resources today

'.

.,

ant surprises as well

changes. You're no1 likely to follow

it you start changing. plans that affect
them as well as yourself . Be thoughtful

'

if country 1s the place for you, then don't miss seeing this 1988 "Mansim" sectional home. Nature
is your neig)tbor on lh1s secluded one acre, mcety
landscaped yard. 1500 SQ. ft. of living space. 3
bedrooms, master bath features a "gar~en tub"
with shower. Dining area and eat-in kitchen. Patio
doors open onto a large wood deck. Your oppot·
!unity to get back to the greal outdoors tor only
$45,000. Southwestern schools.
#807

The year ahead could have bo1h pleas-

GEMINI (.._y 21-June 20) Vour lriends
will tolerate your restlessness today.
but not your Indecisiveness. especially

perhaps distorted to the person abou1
whom you talked .
LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 2211n order to expe·
dl1e your tasks or assign,men1s today
you might be tempted to take shortcuts.
Unfortunately the methods you're likely
to employ are apt to cause more worl&lt;
than when you star1ed.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-llept. 22)11 wilt rellect
poorly on your Image today If you try to
take lull credit for something in which
you played only a m1nor role. Don't let
your ego put you in an embarrassing

NEW LISTING IN GREEN TOWNSHIP
Very nice an.d spacious home located in a Qu•et
neighborhood offers 4 bedrooms, 3 lull baths, full
basement and more. Extra lot included, also in·
ground pool. $81,900. Priced to sell!!
N218

Dec. 31, 1990

centration might not be up to par today,
so 1t is very Important that you think before you speak. If you say some1hing
you shouldn't , it could be e;xtremely dlf~
ficult to retract .
~

Your comments will be repeated and

1,

' Equal HOf.!IIRR Opportunlt)'.
UI:H OffiCE 181NDI!PENOEN!J! OWNED AND OPIIIIAntD.

guy, Capricotn. treat yoursell to a birth·
day gift. Send for your Astro-Graph predictions for the year ahead by mailing

1
I)H}-:

GET OUT 01 TOWN!!!
Yet stay within commutin' di_sllnce, Make your
home m Porterbrook SubdiVISion and be lUSt m•'
nutes from shoppinund hospital. This family size
home features 3 bedrooms, 1II baths and a big
family roam for lots of fun and games. Big
backyard for the k1ds. City schools. Establish your
roots in th•s secure and fnendly neighborhood.
$59,900.
IR11

t.Di'-Your

Nowii!Soulheletem

Buol,_ Coll•go, ~r~ V.lloy

')I;

44b

2

Business
Training

PIBCEB (Feb. 20-March 201 Your motives could be suspect today where your

),

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'

124 ACRE FARM- On Lm coln P1ke wrth 4 bedrooms, 2 bath
home. Tobacco base. Some farm equiPment 36x48 barn.
$74,900.
11277

'

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

AQUARIUS (J•n. 20-Feb. t8) Upon occasion. socializtng could lurn out to be a
negative involvement a~d this may be

~.. 1

· Real Estate General

Real Estate General

W.nlod:
oriented

COZY COnAGE - Located on 12 actes m/1. If you want
peace and QUiet and privacy, you will love this cozy 2 bed·
room home Features a large fireplace, patio doors from mas·
ter bedroom and more! Call. You will be ,surprised at the
pnce!
#288

1 iii&gt;

11411lt2-3027.
14x70 Mxpando 3BR, 2 blho,
WBFP, dl•hwallhar, llhed, LP
hNt, on10 ac. Hann1n Tnce
ach-.114-256-1HG after 5.
3 bod&lt;OOm troller, $250. por

.

MYRTLE DRIVE - Immaculate 3 bedroom, vinyl
h~me, 1~ bath, heat pump, large garage. Level yard.
$56,500
#271

I lp .

.

for Rent

Naw 111111 14•71 mobllo homo In 3 bedroom In AKine ancf 3 bed- month, plus UIIIIUaa, no pets,
Mlddlaport. Call Tom " , _ raam In Pomeroy. 5141112-302'7. :304:::.:._.~7:.:5..:-4~088=. ---,--114~-3341after 5:00 p.m.
1

ParHtmo
""''"" man naoclod
mull have your own car. Mini~

num wagt ptue .13f mila lor gn
mlt.ga muat be 1bll 10 work
ovonlngo I Saturdayo. Apply In

UbMty mobllo ...... with

addftlon tofal 4 Ndroom•, 1112
to 2 .ere~, IMim and amall ehtd. 3
Bodroom holiao, 7 miiH 0111 Broad Run Rei, Now Mlahbarhoad, 3D4--175--110l ar
175=1311.
Hawn, 304-812-38A4.

Help Wanted

.

1r.llllly - . gorogo, boMmont,

new carpet, ga halt, &amp;~ga,
75;,;•;,;orlo,;,;;,;I1;.;4..;ZIIS;;;,Z3:;;:23;;;.____ 111540 or --2405• .

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTIES

II' I

$2115/m0.
I

ta•

James Jacoby's books ·Jaroby an Bndgt " and
·Jacoby on Card Games " (writlm w1th his fstlter.

',

.J

...... ·;rovldod

Rentals

might do 100 much talking to the wrong

MIDDLEPORT- 1 rooms. bat~. basement, storage bu~dlng
~2~.~~~-wlth garden space, c1ose to ctty park and shoppmg.

-

114 tH13tl.

31 Holllft for 8ale

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 18) Usually
you're reasonably good at keep1ng secrets. especially !hose of a business nature. but today there is a possibility you

FOREST RUN ROAD -Extra nice setting, approx. 3.4 acre!
w1th th~ 1987. Clayton home,. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths ano
laundry, walk-m closets. Askmg $49,500.
·
#267

po11o, •-to g.-y
llone &amp; aholdna center, Wider,

Re&lt;Jl Estate

Some of the restnctive conditions that
Inhibited your progress this past year
w111 be lessened or removed in the year
ahead . T-hese alterations will enhance
your potential lor success.

ST. RT. 124-3.84 ACRES M/ L AND A 1y, STORY ALUM I·
NUM SIDED HOME wrth 3 bedrooms, bath. krtchen and living
rm ., 2 car garae, gole building wished, satell1le d1sh and
more. Askmg $46, 00.
·
#284

3 5 - Apt. 2br, 1 both, ~·

------

Real Estate General

GENTLEMAN'S FAR II - Elegant country living an 131 acres
-m/1 wrth a lovely cedar 4 bedroom M~e . Over 2 000 square
feet of living space. includes 4 bedrooms, ilrepiace. formal
dmmg, eQUIPPed kitchen and much more. Land ISlevel to
rolling and includes a beautilul pond, a 2 car garage and a
barn. You w•lllove 11. Call for an appointment $110,000.00.
#121
NEW LISTING - Two story frame home, mce woodwork
throughout. Oetached garage, Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. Only
$22,000.00
#295

3 room fumlohod opt, '""""

.

Help War:tted

Real Estate General

QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD IN GREEN SCHOOL DISTRICT is
this 3 bedroom I bath ranch wrth big kitchen, 1 car garage,
I I&gt; lots. Asking $43,500.
#261

2 or 3 IR opt. U - River Rd.
114-441-1• or 441-1314.

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

~~~~::10:·:un::4:~::
· :::==7:=:l=M=~~~==o=r=M=5:4:1M=.~====~~~M:2:l:~::·:::::::::::=:J!~~~~-~OI~I~lT~._~y~,l~~~~--l'-lll
_
Roglotoratlon ,_12l118.

WHAT WOULD IT TAKE TO GET YOU TO BUY THIS HOIIE7Large 21? acre flat lot. Ranch hom~ with 3 bedrooms. tamilv
roam, large two car garage. Call and give us your 1dea. Askmg
$46.000.
.
#246

HOUNhold
Good a

Opening lead. • J

NHd tn' home care ~on"·nt lor
"" ~d:y~~~~=5~0~., thru $30/sso,oOOS!c~ Vur~2:eal·
lont Bonofho, 2 Yur Training
Needed: m•le, ftma&amp;a or couple Program. Sllbmlt Anuma In
to .tay with elderly man In hiJ: Canlldlnca To : P.O. BoK 8421
homo full tlmo. PIHH coli 614- SOU1h Char1ooton, WV 25303-

CITY SC.HOOLS - 1986 doublewide with 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, dtnmR area, fam1lv room. livinR room. walk-in closet
and prden tub w1lh master bedroom. Nice lot. Call for de·
tails. Only~$41,000.
#281

51

All pass

WHh 11 CO. In Flnenclal S•·
vlcn. Sfllrtl~ Salary Up to
•30 000 A
Pot ntl I 01

NEW LISTING:-- Here is a lovely 3 bedroom, 21&gt; bath, spht
level w1th family room, living and dinmg rooms full basement, brick fireplace, separate woodburner 18K36 pool, 2
car garage, central a~r. All this and mote on aver I&gt; acre. Call
for details and appointment today. Askmg $84,000.
#296
GREEN TWP. - Isthis brick &amp; vmyl sided ranch w1th 3 bed·
rooms, bath, kitchen , livinR room with firePlace ..Ras heat.
rural water. All this and more on .73 of an acre m/1 Call farappointment.
#282

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrighl

Apenment
for Rent

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East

Domino's PIZZII naw taking apa

Ftldoy Januaty .4th bolwHn
10o.m. I 12 Noon. (Sl3l m-

CurrontiY lntarvfowlng DENTAL
HYGIENfSTS for I ' people
oriantect.. hlah . .lhy dent•l
ol11co. P!ll1~1mo I full·tlmo
poeHiona available. MU8t bt
!leo- In lha 11110 of Ohio.
S.nd compa.te I'IIJIUml ta Box
CLA 055, c/o Galllpofls 0.117.
T~bunoJ...8,25 Third AvorMIO, Oa •

-·
3

FlllJilCial

+Q

Nortti has a better response avail·
able - he should simply ra1se to two
spades. By first bidding two clubs and
then supporttng spades. he got his stde
too high. But expert defense was still
necessary to set the contract. Since
West had declarer's second-bid suit
(diamonds) bottled up, he decided to
cut down dummy's rufftng power by
leading trumps.
Declarer won the ace of spades and
immediately led the queen of clubs,
overtaking with dummy's king If East
grabs the ace. there ts not much th~
defense can do. Whatever happens,
eventually declarer will play the king
of spades in dummy and then be able
to cash three club tricks to make hts
contract. Of course, should East win
the club ace and swttch to a diamond ,
South must refuse the diamond It·
nesse. (If it loses, the defenders mtght
then take two heart iricks and wait for
the setting trick in spades.)
But East held up when dummy's
king of clubs was played. When declar·
e.r continued with a second high club,
East held up once again. And the same

Help wanted

SCHOOL)

poln11ng 614-lll2·

I

.Q 12
t AQ5 3

By James Jacoby

,

Mrs. Taylor has sold her home. so will offer the followinc. Located approx. 2'11 Mi. WEST of S.R. 7 and
approx. l'z mi. EAST of Rutand on S.R. 124. This is
approx. 3 mi. WEST of Pomeroy, Ohio. Sale will be
outside so dress for the weather.
TRACTOR &amp; FARM EQUIPMENT
1956. Ol1ver Super.55 w/wide fronl, live hyd., live power, 3
pt. hitch, gas.engme; O~awa 3 pt. post hole digger, 3 pt.
mowmg mach me, 3 pt. 6 d1sk, 3 pt. 6' Little Rino blade, 3 pt.
remsmg slip scraper, 3 pt. 2 bottom plows boom pole front
end loader w/hyd. bucket, 2 row corn planter converti!d to 3
pt. buu saw, dove tail trailer, utilrty trailer, tractor tire
chams, 2. Oliver Super 55s for p~rts (unassembled), 2 farm
gates, ch•cken crates.
LAWN &amp; GARDEN
.
16 hp Cu~ Cadet w/hydrostat trans., 52" deck, lawn
sweeper, and rotot1ller attachment, 12 hp Bolens w/ 44"
deck, blade, and plow, m1sc. lawn &amp; garden tools.
AUTO
1978 Ford Thunderbird w/air, P.S.. AM-FM cassette auto
trans .. 351 W. engine
'
·
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTABLES
Large cast iron pot, cast iron bell, 1912 Estate R.R. caboose
slove, very heavily carved _parlor settee VGC, several pes.
furmture 1n as found conditiOn {has been stored in barn).
HOUSEHOLD &amp;MISC.
Gtbson refr1gmtor, nat. gas cook stove, 2 pc. living room
surte, bdr~. surte w/Queen SIZe bed, bedrm. surte w/luli
bed, ch1ld stable w/3 chairs, liquor cart brass floor lamp
humid1f1er, dehumidifier, Montgomery Ward H.D. 18 auto:
washer, Cole Hot Blast healing stove, utility llbie, hall tree,
Upflush commode, canmng tars, gas grill, 5 bags Bentonite,
AMF 10 speed bike, galv. &amp; plastic drums perforated pipe
(used). misc. dishes &amp; glassware, lots of other household
rtems. The garage &amp; outbuildmgs are full of misc. items not
gone thru yet.

even thousands of
dollars.

4&gt;8%

W.Hpopor I

Sunday Times-Sentinel

,...trod, 304-1112·32t'l.
floor, prime ..,..... •nil po...
lng, ~nn• Included, aeo.
2 BR mobllo ' - a t Eowvr-.
114-:178-2171.
- · 30W75-l".M4.

2321.
Wll do Olflco, hOUM or buol•
, _ a'-nljL~ 123~"1J have

• A 16 4 3

Hf'Y~ retail accounts part-tlma
In GaiiiDOIIe &amp; Athena ArNI. No·
al•. No nights or w•kands.
O...ndable car neciHI.ry.
Salary + Zt cant• a mlle. Call

e1t .44t e3t7.
INTELLIGENCE
JOBS.
All
~h
US
OEA
Me. Nc!'Hirlng. C:m'~i
eooo Ext. K~1 0fal.

ANNA J. TAYLOR RESIDENCE
S.R. 124, RUTLAND, OHIO .

4

EAST

tKJ l064

Hanging in
by holding up

121,

2. bodroomo, Mlddlaport, Ohio.
S.Curfty d.pallt •nd rafwllncM

[WA~ATE

I o.m. • 1:30 p.m. Agoo 2 -10.
Btfolw, .,.., achool . .,..,"'
w•lcame.. t.,.......224.

SOUTH

Babnmer needed for 2 yr. old. MaJor s.rv~ eo. Ia sHklng
ftomt or yours. Non-emoker. faahJon orienled Individual to

My

SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 1991
10:00 A.M. .

Larry Llvoly. &amp;M-388-8303,

Plula'o Day Caro Cort1ar.
Sa10, affordable, chlldcare. U.F

44

42 Mobile Homu
for Rent

llabf .. lor Now YNra Evo and
Now Yo- Day. 304.-75-1113.

.Q 10 8
• K J 10 8
t98

• A 9 53

work and travel requll'ld. Mak•
$40(000 to ~1000 commlplon.
011 1-800-477-&lt;233.

AVON I All Aroao I Shl~oy
Spo•ns, 304-175-1429·

PUBLIC AUCTION

al. 614·3711-2829.

Giveaway
Bag of clolhn to glv•way. 514-

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

typo. Chuck ~,__P.O. Box 5981

11

Help wanted

hours, Including Sunday.

appllcallona for 1 plol,._hoO

Public Sale

Rick Pea._,n Auction Comptny
PUBLIC NOTICE
now booking auctlone, ex·
FOR SALE
periance maUa the diffeNnce.
The Ohio Volley Bank Llcenud Ohio, Kentucky, W..t
Company, 420 Third Ave- Virginia, 304-713-5785.
nue, Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 ,
will offer for sale the follow- Wadameyer'• Auction Service,
Rio Grandt, Ohio 614-24!5-5152.
ing described property:
1986 Chryoler LeBaron
~
Wanted to Buy
GTS, Soria!#
1C3BH48K7GNt51548 Compr.te household or Estatnl

WEST

.J 9

Act Now! Excellent wagnl Mature J»r.on to help children
Spare limo ...ombly. E10y work and
aduhe wllh a urloua
It holM. No IXptrttnct. Clll ,._ problem,
Enuroolo.
Ap504-&amp;tt-7778 Etn. 5214. Open 24 pointment• aat by ua. Hard

store dttectln pot;hlon at • If&gt;
cal location. Th• ,._hlon can

8

JACOBY

LAFF-A-DAY

W•ntecl to Do

• 111 •. . . . . .... _ _ _ _ - - -

+K J 10963

JAMES

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galipolis, Ohio-Point Plee•ent, W. Va.

1%-21-H

t 72

CONSULTANT

$300. 614-3'19-2820.
Amajor rolall chain lo acct~pllog

&amp; Auction

1986 Dodge Omni, Serial#

11

Help Wanted

the day befDrl tM ad fl to run.
Sundar edition ~ 2 :00 p.m .

NORTH
• K ~%
• 61

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

1976 Cougar.' Good work e.er.

LOST: Black male cat. Lincoln
Hill aru. Pomeroy. O.Ciawecl.
Child's pot, Roword. Pt.... Call
614·992·7727 or 992~7376 .

7
·Yard Sale
_ _ _..;_..;_;;,.;;..;__ _
ALL Yard Saloa Muot Bo P1ld In
Advance. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.

1990, for Group Insurance

11

18

BRIDGE

U.lgo COunty !'arm ""'-. "'I
ICrNQe, frM gu, hNt a water
At. 33" naar Pratt'o F~ Moda

•

Public Notice

December 30, 1990

Dacambar 30, 1990

Poin.oy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

within your own budget and means.

CANCER (JUM 21-Julr 22) An ally
upon whom you are depending might
abruptly change sides and leave you
standing alone. Above all else 1oday, 11
is 1mportant !hat you be sell-sufficient.
LEO (Julr 23-"ug. 22) You're reasonably capable 1oday, but you mus1 be
aware of your limitations. If you take on
more than you can comlortably man-

age, undesirable results are likely.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-llpt. 22) Be extremely
select~&lt;e today regarding your choice of
coMpanions lor social purposes. If you
pick the wrong ones. 11 could pu1 a big
damper on your enjoyment.
UIRA (llept. 23-0cl. 23) If you present
youneif in an overly assenlve manner
1oday, the type of raautta you're hoping
for might escape ·you. Instead of being
pushy, strive to~ ~=aant.
SCORPIO (OCI.
• :12) You'rallkely to be In 1 friendly and gregerlous
mooCI today, which Ia well and good.
provided you don't give away secreta
told to you In strict confidence.
•
IAGmAIIIUI (~. 23-Dec. 21) Thera
Is a pouiblllly today that you may be
manjpU!Med by . . , __to plcll up
cer~.tr~ -tatttat IIIIOUld be the lOla responliblllty of another. Don't tel yourself be uM&lt;I.

HEAR. liE OUT ON THIS ONE!
Read until you come to lhe part about Summer
Cabin on the Riverllf you're one of those families
that would like a nice 2 bedroom home w~h 2
extra bedrooms in the half story, a really mce,
very attractive livmg room and a modern custom
built krtchen. came on m'ln addition you get ase·
cond 2 bedroom home which you can sell or use
as a rental. Watch out now, I'm going to ZAP you
wrth the bonus! Tell me you like to fish off your
own pier, plant a garden and grow all kinds of th·
mgs, have a horse or two for the kids. How about
everything above located in town on 2 acres that
runs to the river and already has the cabin down
by the riverside? You can buy it all for $69,900, or
priced separately.
Nl23
HEADS WILL TURN TO TAKE A SECOND LOOK
At th•s 3 bedroom recently redecorated home that
~ brimming with comfort. Dining will always be
pleasant in the attractive formal dming 100m, 3
bedrooms, nearly new carpet, lull house attic fan,
enclosed I! bath with shower in lull basement.
Gas heat, central alf. Don't be disappointed by a
sold sign. See this one now! Kyger Creek Schools.
$60,000.
N815
BUY TWO HOliES. GET ONE FREE!!!
Agimmick you say? Not at all! We have two 3 bed·
room homes 1hat have been well mamtamed and
cared for for sale, and we'll throw in a mobile
home to make it a bargain! Currently rented for
$710 total, and could rent for more. Call for more
information.
N209

IN TOWN CHAIIIIER
Very attract1ve 2 story on 3rd Avenue offers more .
than you m1ght think. Located extremely conveni·
ent to shopping and schools, th1s 4 bedroom home
has had a lot of improvements done to it 1nclud1ng
vinyl siding, new gas pulse furnace. plus family
room and bedroom a~dllions . Latge enough lor
good s1ze iamliy. Fenced 1n yard. $69,500.#810
BURKHART LANE!
Character and charm can be found 1n this attractive well-cared for home within walking distance
to town. Remodeled throughout, 11mcludes 3 bed·
rooms, living room with fireplace, formal dining
room and basement. Don't overlook th1s home.
Call lor an appointmnt. $59,900.
N802
WHAT A WONDERFUL PLACE
Beautiiully remodeled. redecorated I I&gt; story
home on 13 acres. Very comfortable and cozy
home includes large eat-in kitchen. dming area
and living roam with lireplace. 3 bedrooms, baths
and lull finished basement with separate k•lchen.
BONUS-Separate I bedroom home perfect for
in-laws, relatives or even rental. Both homes have
been extensively remodeled and are in very good
cond•t•on. Well maintained barn. tobacco base.
Beaut1tul view and relaxing atmosphere make 11
easy to enjoy the country. Priced in the 80s.
#211
UNDER FIFTY, REALLY NIFTY!
You'll count yourself lucky to own this goad-lookmg bi-level w1th one car garage and fenced yard.
There are 3 bedrooms and one bath, and the
handy person in the family will enjoy f1mshmgthe
lower level into a recreation room for the family.
Don't wail - the price 1s $42,900!
#503
CAUGHT COUNTRYITIST
Here is your cure! Settle into easy l1V1ng '" this 2
bedroom 2 bath, cedar trimmed home along Rae·
coon Creek. Woodbumer '" liVIng room and a
kitchen you will en1oy working m. Park 2 cars •n
b1g garage with adjoining workshop plus a large
ton crete area for RV. Add to lh1s a720 sq. ft. furnished rental property or guest house. rake ad·
vantage of this great opportunily. $80,000.
#812

PLEASE READ
As tn1s is such a nice h'ome and at such an affordable pnce that we want everyone lookmg 1or tne
nght house to know about this one. New on the
market. it is a bnck/lrame ranch, well cared fot 3
bedroom, 2 baths, living room with fireplace, large
garage and much more.
#410
EXCELLENT BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY!
Great m town location. 3 year old bUIIdmg buill to
code tor bar and grill. Over 2,000 sq. ft. Well in·
sulated. Plenty of parking. Owner will sell build·
ing, equipment and liquor license for $115,000,
or will negotiate lor bUIIdmg and lot separately.
Good potential for busmess.
#202
LET NATURE BE YOUR GUIDE
To this counlry home on 13.9 acres. Privacy, lour
bedrooms. family room and one car attached gar·
age are tust some of the features that you Will enjoy Pnced at $52,500.
·
N501

Ill NT CONDITION
3 bedroom, 2 bath home located only 4 miles west
from Holzer Hospital. City school system. 6tooms
ut•hty and 2 car oversaed garage attached. Double closets and lar~ bath off spacious master
bedroom. 12x20 liv1ng room. 12x151amily room
with wood stove. Labor savmg kitchen. All electnc
home - heating and coaling. Lots ol bu1lt-in stor·
age space. Above ground 4'x24' pool in excellent
condition. All on over \! ac. level lot Located 1n
Rodney area off main traveled road . Listed at
$63,000.
#303

--

'

.

•

.
HOTS
40x150 each on Chatham Avenue. Alley •n rear
separates them from Eastern Avenue businesses.
$19,000.
NSOI .

•

•

'

E. M. WISEMAN, BIOIEI
DAVID WISEMAN, lt~IER, 446·9555
LORETTA McDADE. 448-7729 CLYDE B. WALKER, 246-6278

--

YOUR "GET STARTED" HOME
Settle mto this homey three bedroom with fenced
backyard. You'll love the large k•tchen and ad1010·
mg cozy family room . Pnced at $39,900. #512

·Wiseman Real Estate
(614) 446-3644

..

B. J. HAIRSTON, 448-4240

•

�Page-D-6-Sundly ,._.Sentinel
5l

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W.. Va.

HouuiiOid

- ·-

THAT DAILY
,UlZLII

Goods

'O@Rdtl~-~£tfSs ::!~

- - - - - - - Edited loy CLAY R. ,OLLAN _..;__ _ _ __

. ... Willi
)'0011.11210.

0 words

Rearrange the 6

tumnure.
- .... Wort&lt;-o.t~

Block, brick, Dipot, winlint.... etc. C1auda Wlna
taro, Rio Grande, OH Call 814-

scrambled

doM~,

below to make 6
st mpl~ · words.
Pr int letters of
each in its line of SQuares.

.ucnoN a FUIIIIITUIIE. a
Olivo st., ClolllpoiiL- I ~

•

245-5121.

1

-- ...........,...........
fill

a · d;

I II I

'

.......

...... .,. . . . .17.

I

.....-.-.n.-.
Antiques

Buy or .... RlvoriM Antlq-,
1124 E. lloln
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to I:CfO

Sandyvlila POOl
!!!!~
Mwo, Frf._lo~ Sun.
1NUUIII.f:JO PIL All . . - II·

1- . . .

Sl-. '-""· ....._to ... _ brJan.t,
--vy WO&lt;II -"'"'...
p.m., Sundly 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
iniiOC!t••--614·992-25:18.
Quint
NHd pro 1940 IIOOd -ion.
Sand photos •nil ct.crlpllon to

1 Patton, Athn-. Ohto 45701 or
call 6141992-5657 or 11415122461.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

g

blo

nat;

-

!MI.,.

Pillllc

..,.lme

G7.10 loox. I!JtpltM Doc.

100-113 1411

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

llglti

._.. rr•

..

t:LiA1

:n.

I
.
'
1-..l.,=--.,. .;._,. . . ..,,--1 an1~!ir~~:~~d~n~e~~~~s~~~
NPORC , OB

nMd rHChedUIIng. t uk your

fans. Their wedding invitations
read, "Ceremony at 3 O'Clock,

HAPPY JACK MANGE LOTION;
promotu htl!llng an~ hair

growlh to any mange, hot spot

or fungus on dogs &amp; horses
wtthouf Cortl110nel Southern
Stain, 304-1175-2780.
·

Dec•...Jan.

11 0

•

•

I

UPolntmenla

wMI

prayora, potlonce end loyaHy.

God Bini you 1111 Bill W1rd;
JIM IJ-" a mo) Plano So~

viet. :Jo4J882-2325.

·

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

F«-. lief _ , . -

1110 AC irr SOrloo 3 Trac10f With ~
Clb New MotO!J New Paint, •
M,Uo; OfT, AC trac1or, PS. 3-_
Point HltQh $'1 ,1Hi 100 ,-on~,. •
whh Ford Loadar, $3,685; OWner...

Will Finane•. 614-286-e522.
.Jim's Farm-Equipment, SR. 35,.:·
Wast Ga11ipolll, 814-448-9777;.•
Wlda ..lection new &amp; uud farfi\
tractors &amp; lmplamants. · Buy, ~
ull. trade, 8:00..5:00 weekdaya._:·
Sit. till N0011.

Ground, -

IESIDUITIAl · INYfST MEII S · CaMMEtCIAl · fARMS

23 LOCUST ST• .

oy fi.l ii ng in the miurng words
. you de•e lop lrom step No. 3 below.

446-6806

m

oollleaam,

llilday,

63

84

85. General Hauling

Electrlclll &amp;
Refrigeration

li I R Water Borv!Ca. Paolo clo-

torno, WOIIO. 1-11•1,000 or

=es~~-

.,Ivory.Call -

85 General Hauling

f17

Wllll-.on'•
Wit« HaUling,
,.....bte ,. . .. ' votum. .....

lngtrl_.y- 21 ,_...Tho

- 2,000 to weHI,
4,000 ··~~
ctatam.,
Mo. \ ; 0
304-1!1W'2tlt

'**•

Real Estate General

~··

"_1-

Tra nsportal1011

1980 Ford F250, 4X4, 351M, 1uto,
12,000. 304-17U431.
chevy, 305 eng,
automatic, 1ft. bOd $2000 1 614·

198'1

Autos tor Sale

11

a

:c
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

4x4

992-91172 or 1182~41 110 lor
Carlo, !Of Ron.
.
1982 Full lixo Ford 4-whael
tm Fanl Fai_,. •von. drive, otandard, V-II . 114-1112·
d..,.ndablo
0111 t14-IIZ· 2404.
2155 « S71-G31allor t p.m.
1914 Rtngor Expl. V~ auto, AC,
1171 llonle Carlo, PSIPI, IIOOd PS, wnh to~r1 lllll ml, •••
cond., _ ~ra Ml rl... f f , - cond, 304·~1&amp;ul.
304.e11M1318.
.

Reai Estate General

1171 Ch:y ule, 11+381 11151.

• .;~

Upholstery

.._..,.. UpiJolllortilg -

bMt In ktmlure uphOIIIIMng.
Coli 304-171-4114 ..... ..
urn.~

• .

1979 lmpoll aoo.814-44&amp;17138. 75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale
1!180 Toyota Tono-!1 .,. -nor,

VIRGINIA SMITH . BROKER. 388·8825
DIA.N CALL~HAN . fiEALTO A . 2~6- &amp;251 , ,
EUNICE NIEHM. FHA.LTOR •. 448 ·1897
RUTH BARR. REA ~TOR , 44 11 -0722
, ·
LINDA SKIDMORE. REALT-QR . 379 ·2686
DEBORAH SCITES . REALTOR 446-6806 ,
LYNDA FRALEY. REALT OR . 446·6806
MICHAE L MilLER . ASSOC IATE 441 14105

rtll•bl• lren81*1auon, 304471- tm 11 n . Slan:tan Tri-Hull
6310 lor datolfo.
Boat. 125 HP, Evltvudo Engine,
lot&gt; upholotory.
1111 -~~ lmpoll, very compille
good concllllan, 72,000 mllee, Can 114-281-t:lti ofter7;00 p.m. .
6t4-1192·m&amp; anor.5p.m.
81-or Yacat 1978 35ft. T/2711
..ct.r. Kahler Qen.t Snifter,
111111 COIIbrtly Chmolll, 2 Cru
AIC, HNt, VI~ nlc. Nmllurl
door, 4 oytlndor, po, pb, AC, and
INk Int., Battory chargor, 2
37,000 miiH. ucolilnt -.dtlon, mariM
n~dlo..~,_ Furuna 111dar.
&amp;14-1141-2111.
Call81~1-f2A after ?p.m.

R ~~LT O"'

WhHI Orin. '7.1G0. 114-241-

tal. Yard work.
ftlwad: a ' rrd

11231• .
1N7 Plymouth Horizon, I il,d.1

$41
pic~...........
-·
Don't
Landlcaplfll.
.

76

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

low m._p, 12200., 1m F'ora Budget Trtntmlaelont, Ulld II
LTD, gooa cond., Mtll. fM-281- robulll .' otarllnll at $110; lt4-24S.
5877, 614-319-2283.

&amp;251.

Real EState General
lltlll. CI7YS lOST IAGIIIFIC£NT HOlE- NATIONAL RE· ,,
GISJEI: Victorian, excellent condition. Down by the Oh1o River
.n Gallpofis: Oh. VERY ELEGANT turn·of.lhe·century home. 4
~rms. , 3 baths. library, useful attic and complete basement, 5
fireplaces, ~~ heal with central air, garaee. Romantic gazebo
Pal•os. beautifully lar~dscaped . All lovingly maintained. Potential
Dl!ld and bleaUut 01' remain resklential.

. .

Real Estate General

EQUAL HOUSIHO
OPPOAT&gt;.JNITY

206 NORTH SECOND AVE .
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992-2888/HOME 992-6892
DOTTIE S . TURNER, BROKER

NAYLORS RUN- Beautiful, corner lot w~h 2.15 acres. Has
natural gas across the road, electric availible. Older drive·
way.
$6.000

•

LETART- lainlenance Frat Exterior - 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, 3 sitting porches, and a dining room. Nice big level
yard. Fenced area with barn for animals, and atree house for
Child !en.
MUST SEE $42,500
MIDDLEPORT - Historical looking corner store. Has 6
apartments up and another st.ore down. Start'your own busi' .
ness. Has lots ol room, and has an income. Call for more de·
tails.
RUTLAND- Salem Street'- Why look longer?- There are
3 bedrooms in this I ~ story home on a 50x140 lot. Has
newer heat pump, skylighl, vinyl siding, and a picket fence
for privacy. Don't miss out on this DEAL JUST $27,1100
RT. 33- About halfway to Athens- Brand new construe,
tion. Has a spacious, beautiful2 '" acre lot, kitchen w~h is·
land, dining room w~h atrium door, and alarge living room.
Has 2 bedrooms and 2 baths downstairs, and could have 2
bedrooms and one bath upstairs. Owner will fin~h upstairs
for a little more money.
MUST SE THIS OIIE $70,500

Yea~.'

Real Estate General

~
=·:: C:ANAD~~
·· - -~
· .
. REALT''
.

AUDREY F, CANADAY, BROKER
ROBERT D. BRENNEMAN 446-2174
MARY FLOYD, REALTOR
.
HOMES, FARMS $ COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631 :

. NATURAL REDWOOD Hbli'E' _: YOUCAN FEEL THE QUALITY
CONSTRUCTION THROUGHOUT THIS BEAUTIFUL HOME. 4
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. FORMAL LIVING AND DINING
ROOMS, KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH SOLIO WOOD CABINETS
-RANGE, REFRIG. AND DISHWASHER. FAMILY ROOMS ON
FIRST AND SECOND FLOORS. SITE IS VERY PRIVATE. COMm1~Mo. SURROUNDED BY TREES. APPROX. 3 ACRES

aoo

1987 Fanl Bronoo II X~T. 4

And ·Prospe,rous New

Home
Improvements

11.10 ""'

abi0.114-441-1GU.

i200.
...........

lVe ll7ant To ll7ish You A Safe

$1

1989 Ford 2110 Lariot · Dlnol,
iArt" round balll .ol hay for aut~ loaded, low· mllugo. f14·
· Ale • f1S - - Do"-J Anll· ;;;25f;;_:31:;:;1L_ _ _ _ __

1·

Real Estate General

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1.:.1

S.w chalna buy 2 aet 1 trH;• ,..
Sl.de,. EqulpmiJit, 30~-875ollt21. ~:

-.

Real Estate General

79

~~·· ...12-,

PIOFESSIDNAIIIlVICE MAlE$ THE DIFFEIE"CE •

. . . &amp;11110 1!•

Autos tor Sale

Machinery
Sioroge
SP~;~
36'x45'x11 ·, 1·18'x1 1' sliding.•.
door, 1-3' m•ndoor, ch~ca of 1i colorw, $7,333 tr.cted. lrol\ ·
HorM 8'-!lldar11 6'14-332-PIS. --

Real Estate General

@
...........

71

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-7

100 lb. 12%
M.DO por
tOO lb. Alfllfa Hoy. 11-"'o

---=--:-::--------"----------"----~·:·
Real Estate General

..n

Pomeroy- Middlaport-Gellipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

tt4-la-IIIUoti-771Z.
tPSIIIP Eacort 5~1~ innoo., Auio.,
N:., AMII"M!Ca ..., 4 dr.,
o_,. •• oom -.oo ion, MW BlINI.
IM~ or 3881240.
balll, Lorlg loll-, OH 114llfWUI.

Livestock · : :~
,;H-o....,-o-=F,..or"'s=-.,..,,..;
, "'sl-g"'2"'Y•_•_rORl~:­
AOHA
Sorrell Gelding,
~
Dunrovln Fruh Fum Jutt off Sr broke; Bta 2 YMr Old AOH.\"'.,.
881 tilt ol Alb1ny. Wa accept Chntnut !'lily, 6 AOHA Wtaill-j
food 1t1mpa. V1rlaty of ·appl~t 1 ln11 Show Quality. 614·28e-t522. ·: .
a'"lah chHH end bun., mlxla
nutt, hontY or eorghu'". Prima grain .fHd ltHrw-112,. r
Tuo,day-Sunday
9-G. dally, Umousln. $1.28 per lb. hinging .•
cloHd Monday. 614-118-8288.
weight 614/698-276,.
~ ; .·· :

56

I

I·

wlonow

.... , _ lot·

7111.

MagnavOll T.V., t14-&lt;146' 614-448-00711.

llflhtod

I'MNMIIOW

ACK Rottwtller, 7 wkl. old,
$300. Champion blood line. All
614-388-g)S4.
AKC roglottrod Cocker Si&gt;anlol
pupo . t1418&amp;7-3090.

Cattery Persian,
Slam... ~nd Hll'ftllayt~n kiUana.
814-448-3844 1h1r 7 p.m.

I

I

A'!ftY

Due to arMrgancy urgary rny

Dragonwynd

~==R=~U=~S=J~-~I==T==~- o__r__H_a__lf__r_.!me,_Whichever ..
_ I I I 1~ I
M uT E I 0
~~-30
1--T:"~_;_,.;:;_:;...:.._,.,..,-f 0 Comnlete tne cn uckle quoted

114-all-tstl.

-~IM~LE'S

SAil

1~

....--.L........J.-..1..-.1..-.L.__._

M7 41 C1it1tr&lt;!

. . . . hi

stand, $750. ~0.

Musical
Instruments

111M Pel Food O.alar. Julia
Webb. Call 614-448-0231.

•hat•.

l-........

Dryer . . I 5 Itt t• atU. _

mJrraw and llhllvn, chnt, d,.uw anrd nJghl: 8 I W Waterbed wtth

Poodlt _puppiM, tlney top,
AKC, red apricot •leo, mlnlt~
achnauz.a,. ..tt
piipper,
coolvUit, 614-117-3404,

Grooming. All brMda. All atylas.

l

RHOCCS

AI= l ndiUonlld W.hera, D~
G· aranend ~ eervtce. for

-F-Ith-l-an-k,-24-13-Joc-koon--A-Vf.
Point Pl.... nt, 304-875-2083,
filii line Tropical lith, blrdo,
sma II anIma I1 and auppl..

Groom and SUpply Shop-Pol

2

THIFGL

o.llwal'ld. ·Aah, O.k.

Pets for Sale

56

___ ,.,_
&amp;t tt.y &amp; Gr111n

:-:--=----- - - -·:.
56 Pets for Sale
:;61~F;;ann~E::;q::u~lp;;m::e;::n;:,;t;;;i:~·c;
a

STIFIM

53

Building
Supplies

55

Oecember 30, 1990

December 30. 1

BEAUTIFUL LAND -

PARTIALLY WOODED, NEAR . RIO

GR~NDE. APPROX. 47 ACRES, NICE 2 BEDROOM, 14'X70'

MOBILE HOME, PATIO, GARAGE, BARN. IF YOU LOVE THE
OUTDOORS, HIKING AND CAMPING, THIS PROPERTY HAS A
SMALL A-FRAME NEAR THE WOODED AREA SUITABLE FOR
CAMPING. AND IF YOU REALLY WANT TO ROUGH IT PART OF
DANIEL BOONE'S C~VE IS LOCATED HERE. $65,doo. NEW
ON THE MARKEl
CHESHIRE- VERY AnRACTIVE 3BEDROOM AT AVERY AT·
TR~CTIVE PRICE. $36,500. KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH
RANGE ANO REFRIGERATOR CARPORT, LARGE LEVEL,
FENCEO LAWN. RE~DY TO MOVE IN ANO ENJOY!

. .

.

·..

446-3636~
NICE COUNTRY HOME - 3 BEDROOMS, EAT·IN KITCHEN,
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE AND REFRIG .. VINYL SIOING, NICE
. SLOPING LOT. EXCELLENTBUY FOR $35,500.
.
BULAVILLE ROAD -VERY NICE I YEAR OLD HOME,.3BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, GOOD QUALITY HOME HAS ANDERSEN .
WOOD WINOOWS, ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP, 2 CAR GARAGE,
OVER AN ACRE LA\YN, KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS. $59,000.
PORTER BROOK SUBDIVISION - THIS 3 BEDROOM, I 'h .
BATH HOME HAS LOTS OF CHARM, FIREPLACE WITH WOOD·
BURNING INSERT IN LIVING ROOM, ATTACHED 2 CAR GAR·
AGE, INGROUNO POOL WITH COVERED PATIO. $68.000.
·! } .

SOMETHING DIFFERENT: L-SHAPED RANCH HAS STEP
DOWN FR,OM FOYER INTO MAIN LIVING AREA. COMB.
KITCHEN/DINING/FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AND
SLIDING DOORS OPENING ONTO PATIO. 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, 2 CAR ATIACHED GARAGE, CONVENIENT TO Rl 35,
HOllER HOSPITAL $60,000.

BRICK RANCH- 3 BEDROOMS, 211 BATHS, NICE OPEN ll ·
VING/DINING KITCHEN AREA WITH FIREPLACE. ATTACHED
GARAGE, DECK, NICE LEVEL LAWN W/ GARDEN AREA LOCATED ON O.J. WHITE ROAO. $66,000.

REDUCED $5,000 - OWNERS OF THIS LOVELY HOME
WOULD LIKE TO RELOCATE AND HAVE REDUCED THE PRICE
TO $60,000. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, NICE OPEN FAMILY
ROOM/KITCHEN AREA WITH FIREPLACE, 2 CAR GARAGE.
LOCATED ON JAY DRIVE. JUST OFF ROUTE 35.

EUREKA - $7,500 - EXCELLENT BUY ON THIS HOME.
NICE SIZE LIVING ROOM, KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH RANGE
AND REFRIGERATOR, I BEDROOM. BATH ANO UTILITY
ROOM. ACT QUICKLY THIS PROPERTY IS PRICEO TO SELL
FAST'

. BRICK HOME IN CITY - 4 BEDROOMS. 3 BATHS. THIS
HOME WAS CUSTOM DESIGNED FOR THE SITE HAS 4
LEVElS, CATHEDRAL CEILING IN LIVING ROOM GAS .FUR:
NACE, CENTR~l AIR CONO. $54,500.
'

BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY SffiiNG - NICE 3 BEDROOM
RANCH HOME HAS FORMAL OINING ROOM, FULL B~SE­
MENT, 3 CAR GARAGE. LARGETOBACCO BARN, EQUIPMENT
BUILDING. ~PPROX . 56 ACRES. $60,000 .

. 1.57 ACRES - 7 ROOMS - OWNER FINANCING
Nice home ,-central air, rural water system. large family
,room 26'x22', garage, storage building, storm doors
and windows. Nice home close to Hol~er Hospital. See .
it now.
#651

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
446-7699 or 446-9539
WHO'S ON FIRST?

RODNEY AREAl!! .

You will be when _you make a hit w~h this excellent home on Oak Dr. 3bedrooms, living room wlh
fireplace, 2 balhs, new storage buildin&amp; beautMul
landscaping 1n back lawn. So many impro~·
ments. 1t's like new. ~place you're proud to call
home.
112110

Real

One story home dh 1.9 acres mo1e/less. 2 bed·
rooms living room bath, dining room, new caroet
!hroughout, partially remodele!l, 3 st01age buillfdi·
mgs. Call h)(lay.
H28

E~ate .General

POMEROY. OHIO
992-2259

..

GALLIA COUNTY - 3 bedroom ranch trpe house w1th full
basement, 2 car garage, sitting on 2. acres of ground
located in _the country: 6 miles out SR 77.5. Property needs
some repa11 and IS oHered ala Bargam Pnce o_
f $21.000.00.

' RIO GRANDE AREA .

SUPER PRICE, LOCATION, &amp; CONDinON

Remodeled 3 bedroom very attracti~ home inclupes full basement, ap~rox . 30 acres land that
borders Raccoon Creek. Small wooded lot, pasture land, tobacco base and good size barn in
good condition. Please call.for more details.
112871

LOOKING FOR A BARGAIN?
Mini-farm . 4\\ acres of land and 5 room house, 2
bedrooms and bath. Naturfl sas FA furnace. Small
older barn. Gallipolis Township. Can you believe it.
$24,600.00.
#2890

GOLLY GEE - S8,900.00

Is lhe asking price of this 2bedroom f1a111e home
located 1n the village of Vintoo. Large mce level
lot Owners need s-o·l·d despetafely1 Call at
oni:e!!'
412126

WHAT A SUPER LOCATION!
581 Sun Valley Drive, close to Holm Hospital and
shopping conveniences. Cute 3 bedroom ranch
with attached piaae w~h storage area. Living
room formal dininc room, k~chen and utility
room: Newer carpet and enetgy efficient heat
pump. Nicely landscaped lot approK. 90' x 100'.
Call today. $40s.
H2181

DIVORCE YOURSELF FROM THOSE
RENT PAYIIENTS!

For this I 'h story home. 3 bedrooms, living room ,
bath, dining 100m, full basement I car unat·
!ached garage, very well constructed, vinyl siding.
$30s.
#2883

NEW LISTING?
. CONVENIENCE!

at acres more or less located in Harrison and Wal·
nut Townships. Wooded..
1101103

,danuw
.....

POMEROY Older 2 story ~orne, gorgeous woodwork, fire·
, place, nice kilchen cabinets. 3 bedrooms, equipped kitchen,
• c.entral air. garage and st01age. $39,900.00.
·

Only a few blocks from church, school and shop·
pm~ 2 story bnck home situated on .644 acre 1n
Galhpohs. 3 or4 bedrooms, 2 full baths nice living
room and large eat-in kitchen. Call today for appointment
H2888

JUST LISTEO!
BE NATURrS NEIGHBOR

will Want more !han one. Oak, maple, dogwood and evergreen
hees rn.~~ke !his a suburban paradise. Also lots fronting on White
Rd. fOf lull particulm call to inspect.

BUDGET PRICED! $22,900.00

Well maintained I story home and .9 of an acre
lot. 2 bedrooms, livin.JI room, bath 1 eat-in kitchen,
newer shingle roof. Call for comp1ete listing!
.
H2884

16 ACRES MORE/LESS
.

With th is 100 acres. Older I 'h story home plus modern A:lrame. Barn. Rural water, marketable timber, pnvate locat10n. Call today!
N2889

THIS PROPERTY YOU CAN
AFFORD!

VACANT LAND .. .l3.n ACRES approx .. Green
township, rural water and electric available.
N2136
For the couple just starting out or retirina! Cute 3
beddroom ranch home, nice kitchen . living room
SI e porch or car~ort. Storage buildin.JI ana
l
{~~ero~ot approK, 72'x150'. fMMEDIAT~fifs

LAND/HUNTINGTOII TOWNSHIP

$21,5011

POMEROY - 5 acres of vacant ground on top of a hill near
town. Greallocation for house or trailer. $3,900.00.

1546. lAlE VIEW LOTS - Choice lots w/speclacular vi!w. You

JUST RIGHT

When you could be paying for this newly remo·
deled 3 bedroom ranch. Livinc room, bath, forced
air gas heat newer deck aree, nestled among
shade trees on approx. I acre lot.
*211i2

POIEiiOY- 2 bedroom, I~ st01y home with carpet, buin-in
bookshelves, patio and rear balcony, with aview ofthe river.
I~ ca1 .garage. $23,000.00.

50 acres more or less. frontage alon1 Shepard
Lane. Call for more details.
110004

Located in Huntington Township.
m/1 $7,000; 4 acres m/1 $3,700.

12

ft. with 3 bedrm. apt. Prime lot~tlon on SR 7.

RACINE- Bl st01y home with 3 bedrooms, _! ~ baths"car·
pet and hardwood floors. $29.500.00.
DEXTER - Here is your home in the country - Secluded 3
acre wooded homesite and anewer barn style home 1n great
condition. Up to 3 bedrooms, 2\\ baths, full basement. Call
for your showing. ~steal at $56,000.00.

acres

#0007

LOTTA LAND

LONG BOTTOM- Lebanon Twp.- 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, total electric ranch home. Has refrigetator, range, bUIIt-m microwave, Thermopane windows. Beautiful deck, storage
building. Sitting 0n approx.. 1.35 acre. Only 10 mms. to Ra·
venswood. Private and qu1et!! $59,000.00.

Approx. 133 acres in all. Wooded situated in Ohio
Township.
•
nooos

YOU CAN BRAG ABOUT THIS

DAIWIII - Country setting, 3 bedroom, I bath, all electric
modular home with 2 car garage and storage buildmg
srtuatlll on aptlrOK. I acre of land. lmmedJate possess1on.
$34,000.00.

Gorgeous brick home just as soon as you take one
loQk, you'll be sold. 3bedrooms,formal dining and
h¥1n~ rooms, 3 baths, lamilv room. fullv equipped
kitChen, 2 car garage and separate 24'x36' garage,
p~nd, Pflvate settm~. Exceptionally nice home
With a lot .ol amemt1es plus over 4 acres. City
schools.
N2857

POMEROY- One of Pomeroy's most unique structures.The
old Elm Hur5t Tavern is now for sale. This building hasava·
riety of potential uses. Call today lor your show1ng.
SI2,500.0Q.

'
BOAT DOCKING PRIVILEGES
Are included with this 3 bed1oom mobile home
and 2 lots lapprox. .70~. cable TV available. City
schools. Call today for more details.
112160

POMEROY - Remodeled home in town with large l_
ot. Three
or four.bedrooms. Carpeted, elec. B.B. heat. Bargam pnced
at $22,900.00.

I

IB

REALTOR•
J~DY DEWITT

-'46-1147
.(

446-6624
CAIMY WIAY .
446-4255

SAil IIOFFMAH

379-2449

OWNERS HAVE DONE A LOT OF WORK AND
NOW YOU CAN GET THE BENEFITS - Five
minutes to town, 3 BRs, 2 baths, LR, kitchen,
nat. gas heat, vinyl siding. $39.900!
BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME + 162 acres, m/1.,
Green Township, frontage on Raccoon Creek,
city school district. Attractive log home offers
4 BRs. 3 baths, family rm., LR w/FP, kilchen
w/FP, full basemen~ heat pump/cent air, 2 .
car garage, barn oo property.

'
MAY BE WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR Newer all brick home just five minutes from
downtown. 3 BRs, 3 baths, gt"eat room, family
room, 2 car attched garage, heat puinp/cent
air, city utilities.
83.2 ACRES. 1/l NEAR MEIGS MINE Ill Oldet two story home w~h vinyl siding. Storm
windows. Two small barns.

• PoiiEIY - Cute little house that needs some fixing up. 3
• • •bedrooms and 2 baths, carpe~ N.G.F.A. heat. In tnwn loca.tion. $14,000.00. •

ST. RT. 588, ver1 nice hOme and 3/4 acre,
m/1. Home offers 3 BRs, LR, FR, kitchen, bath.
alum. siding, p•rt basement. ~dditionalland
can be purchased.

TUPI'£1SPI,AIIS - Here is a nice little home with 2 bed·
1001111 1 bath hardwood floors, easy to heat. Newly repainted and fldd up.Reilly to mo~ into.Sitting on anice lot
150'x456'. $23,900.00.
'

$32,000, EXCELLENT STARTER HOME - 3
BRs, LR, k~chen, bath , laundry, attached aar·
age.

lfii&amp;D LIITIIISI

101 ACRES.I /L, GUY All TWP. - Some till a·

.

·-.... HUPP ............................... ..................... 941-2257
941-2660
JEAII11USSELL........................... .._. ............... -44&amp;6
915
. JOOffHICIUE ........................................................ 992·2259

738 Sec:ond Ave.

20 ACRES, MORE OR LESS, HUNTINGTON
TOWNSHIP -OWNERS MAY HELP FINANCE
QUALIFIED BUYERS- Ranch style home off·
ers 3 BRs, LR, kitchen, balh. Newer barn
15x24. Call for more information. .

RUTLAII.D - Must see to appreciate. 3bedrooms, Ill bath,
ranch. Beamed ceilings. Heat pump, CIA, patiO, garage, car·
port plus olh11 buildings s~uated un approx. 6 acres.
$44,000.00.

.

Judg D1wlff - 810k1,
J• •IIIIU CAmll
J79-21J4

i

DEXTER - Railroad Street- 3 bedroom, I bath, I~ story
insulaled home, has bay window inliving room. 2slory cellar
. house. Storage building, with eKlra lots. $19,500.00.

lll32. NEW LISTING- COIIERCIAL 9UILDING- 4.768 sq.

Fond regards to
you and your
family in this time
of togetherness and .
good cheer! Thanks
for your faith in us
and for helping us make 1990
one of our best years ever.

ble.

·

LARGE HOME WITH APPROX. 7 ACRES. 1/l,
approx. I mi. from Gage on Rt. 325. Master BR
with skylite 3additional BRs, 2 baths, kitchen,
LR, large laundry, full basement Owner willing
to work with qualified buyers on fmancmg.
CONCRETE BLOCK GARAGE IN VINTON.
28x32, concrete floors, 220 electric service,
forced air fuel oil furnace, two 7x9 overhead
doors, one walk-in door.
ARE YOU READY TO MOVE TO TOWill Come
look at this home located in a very nice, quiet
neiallborhood. Living room with gas fireplace,
kilchen, large lat11dry rm., bath, two nice size
bedrooms, large screened back porch that you
will enjoy,'attached garage and fenced yard.

211 ACRES. IIORt OR LESS, HUNTINGTON
TOWIISHP - Brick home offers 6 BRs, 2
baths eat-in kRchen. LR, FR, elec. and wood
hea~ cellar house, log barn, slleds,frontage on
Raccoon Creek and Little Ra~coon.

MOVE YOUR IIOTHER·IN·IAW IN NE11fllli•
and you can move into this
located on Rt. 141 just minutes to
prox. 5 acres, mobile home and
house. Home oHers 3 , l-shaped
kilchen/dining area, LR, i
ment with FR. den, garage

THIS ONE SPEAKS FOR ITSELF! Beautiful
brick home on .93 acre lot. Bull Run Rd ., over
2100 sq. ft. of living space. Totally equipped
kijchen, 3 BRs, 2 baths, 20x30 livin g room,
formal dining room , fireplace, HP/cent air.
25x31 garage wRh openers, large rear patio,
fenced yard.

BEAUTIFUL All BRICK HOME WITH AN
ABUNDANCE OF ROOI ..Iocated 5 min. from
town this lovely home oHers 4 BRs, 2 baths,
formal livmg room, formal dinin&amp; kitchen
w/Jennn-Air cooktop, FR w/FP; laundry, 2car
garage with openers. Call today.

NICE HOME FOR THE GROWING FAMILYGreen township near Centenary. Bi -level home
oHers 4 BRs, 2 baths,LR, kitchen wlrange, refrig., fNi, displ., oven, FR, gas heat, attached
garage, situated on approx: one-half acre.

$22,500! This A-frame home oHers. 3 bed·
rooms, 1'h baths, LR. kitchen with stove and
refrigerator, electric heat, part basement
Hannan Trace School District .69 acre.

150 SECOND AVENUE - Walk to shopping,
church or park. Nice older home offers LR,
kitchen, den, bath, 3 BRs, basement. Call today for more information.

SPRING VALLEY - OAK DRIVE - large
ranch style home oHers 3 BRs, 2 baths, L·
shaped LR/dining area with fireplace. nice
'kitchen,·large fa.miv rOC)m, laundry area,_patio
door~. gas heal
OFFERS MORE THAN THE AVERAGE HOME ...2
lots and a beautiful home for $44,900. Out·
standing features of this home are the livmg
room wijh fireplace, buiH-in hutch 1n dmmg
room, 3 nice bedrooms, 2 baths, gas heat and
central air.
GREEN TOWNSHIP - SMALL FARM CON·
TAINS 15.69 A., m/1, 2 barns, shed , garage,
and a4 BR home. Other features ol this home:
LR, krtchen, bath. part ba semen~ wood burner
stove. propane heat, city schools, close to Nor·
thup area.

VERY NICE RANCH STYLE HOllE LOCATED ON
STATE Rt. t&amp;O: 3 BRS, LR, k~chen w/range, re·
AFFORDABLE LIYING ...$38.000 - 3 BRS, . tngerator, one car attached garage. 100x300 It
I\\ baths, LR, kitchen, M. gas furnace , car· · lot.
pet, 24x24 unattached garage, just outside of
town.
2.4 ACRE TRACT - COMMERCIAL SITE Located on Upper Rt. 7 across from the new
REDUCED TO $49,900 Til-LEVEL HOME
. LOCATED Oil IT. 160 offers lBRs, 1\\ baths. shopping center.
LR, k~chen, family rm,, two decks, attached
garage.
·
LOT 4 SALE, ROD~EY CORA RD. - .824
acres. $6,900. Call for details.
169.7 ACRES. IIAIIISOII TWP. -Home on
property with 3 BR, bath, LR, kRchen, FR.
large baJn.
36.5 ACRES 1/L- CLAY TWP.- Fronts on
5 ACIE LOTS FOI SALE ..GIIH Twp.. crty
Friendly Ridge. $18.000.
schooll. Failfiefd Yanco Rd. 1111. ·

II ICE HOME LOCATED ALONGOHIORIVER$39.900. 4 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, carpet, oil
heat. 2 car detached garage, utility building
large lawn and nice view.
'
AnRACTIVE HOME JUST MINUTES TO TOWN
- Ver( nice home located at the edge of town
offers R, kitchen, bath, 2 BRs, gas heat, carport and co~red patio, trailer pad on property. 1.33 acres, more or less.Very nice starter
home and priced right
NICE STARTER HOME - Located 1ust at the
edge ollown. This home features 3 bedrooms,
bath, living room, kitchen, dining rnoin and a
full basement Five minutes to downtown.
PRICE REDUCED TO $65,0001- Beautifullshaped brick. All rooms large. Eat-in kitchen,
formal dining. LR w/FP, 3 BR s, I \1 balhs, attached garage.
$25,000 - Approx. I acre along St. Rt. 588
(400ft. of ftonlage) . Small home oHers 2 BRs,
bath, LR, kitchen, mobile home pad on prop
erty.
.
.
NEAR NORTH GALLIA H.S. - 21\\ acres m/1,
Morgan Twp. Frank Ward Rd. - $17,500.
$15,000- 19.143 acres m/1. Approx. \1 mile
from city limrts. All utiiHies available.

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

JEANNIE TOWVER
446-6624
I

TAMMIE DEWin
441·0703

·IIIU. OITIEIWILUII TOTAl I iOIILE HOlE lor

ment. SIJiciol.l ~ b~l!vel offers IDut btclrDDms, tnee
kltc~t trs lituttelt an 1.7 ~eres m/1. Perfect pltce
flmily. Onl1 $47,000. See l~s one 590"
·
I

--- ---

-'

.. - . "'·-·--·"--·- ,.; .;o,

•

�December 30. 1990:

Pomeroy, Midclaport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Page D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Marxist regime allows Albania's first ,opposition newspaper ~·~
BELGRADE. Yugoslavia
(UP!) -Albania's MarxlstPresldent Ramlz Alia has agreed to
allow independent newspapers
!or the first time In 46 years of
communist rule. but under strict
guidelines, the official Albanian
news agency said Saturday.
PubliCations not abiding by the
JtUldellnes risk closure, accord-

ing to the new policy outlined by
the ·Albanian Telegraphic
Agency In a dispatch monitored
in Belgrade.
In issuing the order, Alia
granted permission to the tiny
nation's fledgling opposition
group, the Democratic Party, to
publish a newspaper to be called
"Democratic Revival ," the ATA
said.

The decrees were approved
Friday by Alia's Cabinet. The
Cabinet also adopted new regulations for state-run television and
radio as well as the ATA,
ensuring the Albania Party of
Labor leader retains control of
the most Influential media by
overseeing their operations and
appointing managers.

Walesa names economist as
WARSAW, Poland tUPI) President Lech Wa lesa nom inated economist Jan Krzysztof
Bielecki for the post of prime
minister Saturday after more
than two weeks of an impasse
with parliament.
"I can disclose that the president' s candidate for prime m inister is Jan Krzysztof Bielecki,"
presidential spokesman Andrzej
Drzyclmskl said , at a news
conference Saturday .
The 39-year-old Bielecki .. an

·p M

.
.
· economic adviser to the union round of presidential elections
Solidarity since 1980 and a close Nov. 25.
Walesa, who became Poland's
associate of Solidarity founder
first
popularly elected president
Walesa, had been mentioned
in
ttie
second round of the
among the candidates for prenational
elections.
had promised
mier since Walesa's Dec. 9
to announce the name of the new
election as president
The impasse began Dec. 14 prime minister within three
when parliament approved the days. He failed to do so after his
resignation of the government prime c!loice, lawyer Jan Olsheaded by Prime Mlnlste.r Ta- zewski bowed out citing "slgliifide\lsz Mazowlecki, who an- . ·cant differences" with the
nounced his resignation two day s president.
Walesa then suggested he
after a surprise de feat In first
might seek a delay in parliamentary elections to allOw a temporary government to function or
retain the outgoing government
until the elections, expected next
spring.
T he Ohio Supreme Court in
But Walesa faced a storm of ·
March voted 6-1 to deny Pay- opposition over a suggested
check any reduction In sentence. delay of the .e lections and MazoRalph Buss , Paycheck's lawwiecki made It clear his governyer , told the Cincinnati Enquirer . ment would not sta,y on. ,
friends ~f the singer filed ,the
Friday. Drzyclmskl · said
petition on Paycheck's behalf.
Walesa would retain Leszek
Buss said the friends are In the ·Balcerowicz, a .deputy , prime
music business and live in the
minister and architect of PoCleveland area but he declined to
land's controver~lal economic
name them .
austerity measures, in a key role
" I a m not sure they want the
in his new government
publicity," said Buss.
In the presidential campaign,
Highland County Prosecutor . Walesa was sharply critical of
Rocky A. Coss said clemency is
Balcerowicz's .austerity camout of the question.
paign aimed at healing Poland's
"Absolutely , I'm opposslng
ailing economy during the transiit," he said . " I've already
tion from decades of communist
written to the parole board
rule to a democratic, marketobjecting.
driven system.

Paycheck asks for a pardon
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Country , and western singer
Johnny Paycheck, serving time
for wounding a man In a barroom
shooting, pas asked outgoing
Gov. Richard Celeste for a
pardon .
. .,
Paycheck, a native of ' Hillsboro, Ohio, who gained fa me in
1978 with the song " Take Th Is Job
&amp;.nd Shove It '' is serving a term of
seven to 9 ~ years fo r shooting
the patron of a tavern in
Hillsboro in December 1985.
Paycheck ha s served 10
months of his sentence for
aggravated assa ult , tampering
with evidence and usi ng a bandgun. He is ineligible fo r parole for
nearly five more year s.

The new rules are the latest
clianges by Alia In an·economic
and political reform program
initiated after the 1989 fall o!
communist regimes in other
Eastern European states and
accelerated this month by prodemocracy student. protests in
Tirana and anti-regime riots in
other major towns.
The Democratic Party began
planning its own newspaper soon
after it was formed QY students
and Intellectuals following Alia •s
Dec. 10 decision to legalize
independent political parties in
what had been the most represslve communist state in Europe.
The newspaper will be the first
opposition publication to appear
since the founding of the Marxist
Balkan nation In 1944. It was not
Immediately known when the
first Issue would be printed.

1

does admit women.
"I find Ita double standard that
this admlnlstatlon will comply
with policies In Saudi Arabia by
not flying the American flag and
observing religious customs but
it ignores Issues of human rights
here. " Karas. said.
Karas said Quayle's staff
should have Investigated the
local iss ues and told him about
the controversy that has been
brewing since September at
Cypress Paint.
'
Beckwith said, "(Quayle) has
been assured that the club does
not discriminate and does not
have a policy of discrimination.
But perceptions are important
and the vice president is unwilling to leave any impression that

he condones any form of
dlscrlinlnat!on."
Karas said he felt "somewhat
better' • when he learned the vice
president canceled a second
day's play at the club.
"But that does n'o tabsolve him
of the fact that the vice president
nas become the center of this .
controversy. I think the only
reason he canceled was the news
media made it a nat!qnal story."
Beckwith said'Quayle arrived

racist, warmongering, an tina- :
tiona! character or which lnsti- gate na tional.hatred and writings :
which call to overthrow through ·
violence the co nstitutional :
order" of Albania, the measure :
said.
It said such publications are :
also prohibited from "calling for :
foreign Interference In the home affairs of the country" and .
"writings which spread state
secrets defined by provisions in
'
power ." .
Newspapers that failed to
abide by the gulldlines w'Ui be
closed by the regime and "the
persons · acth\g contrary to the ,:
rules defined' by the decision bear':
responsibility . according to the
provisions in power," the mea- :
sure said.
, .
It said the decree was effective'·
Immediately.

One dead in · truck-train collision
SANDUSKY, Ohio (UPI) - A
passenger in a pickup truck \Vas
killed Saturday when the vehicle
collided with an engine of an
eastbound passenger train between Sandusky and Huron .
The 'Sandusky post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol said the accident
occurred at 1:58 a.m., kUling
Todd C. Hummel, 25, Huron .
The driver ·of the truck, Christopher B. Wert, 25, Norwalk, was
in . critical condition at Providence Hospital in Sandusky.
Troopers said the 16·car Am·
trak trafn was traveling at 77
miles an hour two miles east of
Sandusky when the 1989 Ford
Ranger struck the right side of
the lead engine. The train did not
derail and none of the 250
passengers on board were
Injured.
Authorities said the Camp
Road crossing was marked by
cross bucks and signal lights,
which where working at the time.
Troopers s~~;id the Impact .

Quayl_e canc~ls golf round at all~hite cou~se
MONTEREY, Calif. (UP!) Vice President Dan Quayle canceled his golf game at a California course Friday after a local
official protested Quayle's play
at the club that was dumped from
a national tournament this year
because of it s . all -white
membership.
Quay'~s
spokesman Dave
Beckwith' said the vice president
was unaware of the controversy
surrounding the all-wh ite Cypress Point Golf Course.
The vice president did play a
round at the course Thursday,
before Monterey Co unty Supervisor Sam l{aras raised a protest
when he learned Quayle shot a
round at Cypress.
For 40 years, Cypress Point .
was one of three 'Monterey
courses to host the AT&amp;T Pe bble
Beach National Pro-Am tournament. previously known as the
. Bing Crosby tournament.
"For the vjce president to say
he was unaware of the issue is
Incredible," Monterey County
Supervisor Sam Karas said
Friday.
Karas originally raised the
issue Thursday after learning
Quayle was in town to play a
round of golf at Cypress Point .
Quayle is an avid and accomplished player who captained the
golf team at DePauw University
In Indiana, and Is an honora ry
member at the Burning Tree
Club outside Washington. The
exclusive club In Bethesda, Md.,
has been a males-only bastion
since 1922 , refuses female
members and generally bars
them from the property.
"It 's jus.t another slap in the
face of the black community in
thiS country by this administration ," said R.J . Strong, president
of the Monterey Peninsula
branch of the NAACP. "We've
been insulted by Reagan, by
Bush, and now by Quayle."
Strong said he has received
several .calls from people. who
are angry that while Quayle was
enjoying the cool weather and
plush surroundings at Cypress
Point, young black soldiers are
waiting to go to war In the "hot
sand of the Persian Gulf."
"That seems to be thei r main
complaint," Strong sa id. " It 's
just too much for them to
swallow."
Quayle was joined by Air Force
Secretary Donald Rice, Ebersole
Gaines, the top U.S. diplomat in
Bermuda. and Phil Edlund of
Paradise Valley, Ariz.
The Professional Golfers Association in August Issued a national policy barring discrim ination based on race, religion , sex
or national origin at private clubs
hosting PGA events.
For the first time In 40 years,
Cypress Point was told by the
-PGA In September It was Ineligible to hOst the AT&amp;T Pro-Am
because of Its all- white
membership.
A spokeswoman for the club
said there are no black and no
Asian members. She did not
knQW whether the club has
. admitted Hispanics . The club

The decree on newspapers was
enacted under a Dec. 17 law
formally authorizing the formation of Independent " political
organizations and associations"
and It stipulated s uc h groups
may " Issue newspapers, reviews, or other publications ,"
said a copy of the measure
pub! !shed by ATA.
The measure contained guild·
lines that Indicated such publications would be closely scrutinized
by the regime, saying they
"should be pervaded by a progressive democratic spirit, contribute to the strengthening of the
national unity, the defense of
_freedom and independence of the
country and the constant development and progress of economy
and culture."
Newspapers are banned from
"carrying writings of fascist,

knocked the truck 's cab off ttte
frame and It landed on the side of
the tracks. Both truck occupants
were wearing seatbelts and
troopers said the seatbelt on the
driver probably saved his life.

'·

POIIEIOY, OliO

WILL a CLOSED
MONDAY, DEC. 31 &amp;
TUESDAY, JAN. 1, 1991.

Ridenours
CHESTER

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE • .

985-3307

• 9.9 S APR RATE FINANCING •

FINAL CLEARANCE
"Check Our Lot" - Nobody Sells for Less!
,,

2 1990 BERETTAS G.l.
1 1990 CHEVROLET CJ.MARO

R.S. T-TOP
1· 1990 OLDS ROY ALE 88 4 DR.
1990 CHEVROLET
FULL SIZE TRUCKS
1 1989 S-1 0 4-WHEEL DRIVE

s

N·O· REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED!

Wotch Worren Moon ond '
the expl01ive Oiler! try
to burn their powerful

.

Vol.41, No.176 .
Copyrighted 1990

CABLEVISION

[8

Meigs countians think positive about future
"I'm happy to repon that we at
Middlepon Trohies and .Tees have
experienced a great year • our sales
were up 38 percen~" Gilmore says.
''This past year," Gilmore continued, "we acquired $10,000 worth
of equipment enabling us to do instant screen-printing of shirts,
sweats and jack~. We purchased
our second computerized engraver,
and cOmpuiCr graphics software."

f
'

!r HH.

~URl'i

·.BOB GU.MORE ·

ANNE..BEAHRS ·

"We are in the process of purchasing land for expansion on Cottage Drive, and when this is complete, we will he even hetter equipped to senre our customers in a
new modem facility., We can't relate to the gloom and doom
forecasts • we are growing rapidly
and look forward to a fantastic
1991," Gilmore said.
Anne Bearhs, a sales clerk for
Clark's Jewelry Stores in Gallipolis
and Pomeroy, has her hopes set
high for peace in 1991 - and is
looking forward to the return home
of American military staff in the
Persian Gulf.
"I hope thatl991 brings peace to
the world and our service men and
wOme in the Middle East home
safely and soon." Bearhs says. .
"Also, I hope for continued good
health and hapiness for my family
and many friends," she continue~\.
"Most of all, best wishes to Scott
and 'Anthony for a happy and
.
healthy 1991."
"Good health, happiness and
prosperity for everyone," is Mary
Hobstetter's wish for 1991.
Hobstener, who is the clerk for
the Meigs County Board of County
Commissioners, also says · she
would like to see "all of the 1990
qt~npaign -promises.fulfiUed.:~
,

•

3 Rutland families·evacllated
due to heavy rains, flash flood
Three families were evacuated in
Rutland early Sunday evening due
to the flash flooding foUowing the
heavy rains which at one point put
about four feet of water on Main St.
Accotding to Rohen Byer, Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service director, the Rutland Fire
· Depilrtment was on the scene from
5:20 p.m. Sunday to 2:30 a.m.
Monday when the water finally
receded and the residents could
return to their homes. No water actuaUy got into living quarters, Byer
said, although it was in the
basements of many homes.

TWo of the families evacuated
were takep to the Rutland fire stalion where they were served hot
food by the ~en's auxiliary,
while the third went to the home of
a relative. The Middleprot Fire
Department assisted in the evacualion. ,
Byer said that at the onset there
was a slrong odor of gasoline and
some film on the water, but that the
waiCr was coming so fast it soon
disappeared. The director reponed
that his department will be looking
into the ongin of the gasoline.

The EMS director noted that
water came into places where it
ha~'t been for 15 or more years,
particularly on ~alqn Sueet, and he
credited this to the gmund heing so
sarurated. He was complimentary
of the work of the Rutland firemen
who stayed on the scene ·for nearly
nine hours.
'
' At 10:45 p.m. the Pon\eroy Fire
Department went to Deadman's
Curve to evacuate a touple of
residents when water threatened
their home. niey were taken tO the
home of a relative where they
remained until the water receded.

MARY HOBSTETI'ER
Grace Weber of Reedsville, a
retired teacher and school ad·
ministrator has high hopes for the
world and her community.
· "With the year of 1991 beginning." Mrs. Weller said, "I would
like to think that i!OQn the problems
In Saudi Arabia will be peacefully
solved and those involved will soon
be returning home to their
families."
"For Meigs County, 1 would ,
hope that funds could be provided
to continue with a sound educational system for every child in
Meigs County - this would include
Carleton School and Meigs In-

dustries."
"Reedsville," Mrs. Weber continued, "needs to be asswed during
this appraching year that the voting
precinct will be returned to the

GRACE WEBER
community. The Corps of Engineers qeeds to provide funds for
the Belleville Locks and Dam to
continue with the maintenance of
their grounds in order to continue
to provide an attractive area for
Reedsville. I would also like to see
improved highways leading into
my community."
Mrs. Weller continued with a
personal note. "Hopefully, good
health ,and happiness will prevail
for 'mr, loved ones as weD as for
youts. '
"My hopes and wishes for 1991 are
simple ones," says Dennis Wolfe .of
Racine. "I wish that everyone
would slow down a linle and take
time for their family and fellow

man."

"If we would all practice the
Golden Rule, Wolfe continued, "the

Heavy rains · from Sunday are ween 7:'18 and 7:44 a.m. this morntaking their toll on the area. AfiCr ing causing water to fill the dip in
things have . almost returned to the·Pomeroy parking lot.
nonnal following heavy rains
The rains have once again
before Christmas, area residents are Cl\used many of the roads to close
. again finding flood-like conditions in the COUI)ty. State roads closed, at
throughout the county.
press time, include Route 33 at
Accotding to a report from Dan Burlingham, Route 681 between
Houser of the National Weather Darwin and Albany, Route 143
Service in Charleston, W.Va. the toward Hanisonville near the
Ohio River is again expected to rise enttance .to the old Meigs County
to levels similar to those before Landfill, Route 124 between RutChristmas.
land and Langsville, Route 681
The Pomeroy Police Depanment from Darwin to Tuppers Plains,
repons that the Ohio River at Route 248 at Keno, Route 124 near
Pomeroy raised three inches bet- the Forked Run and Rock Run area,

and Route 338 at Antiquity. County
roads closed include County Road
3 at Leading Creek, County Road 5
at Bradbury, County Road 29 at
Bowman's Road, County Road 34
at Pine Grove and County Road 28
at Keno.
In addition to causing the closing
of several roads, the rains caused
the evacuation yesterday (Sunday)
of 10 families from the Rutland
area. The evacuation took place
between the hours of 4 and 6 p.m.
through the efforts of the Rutland
Fire Department and Emergency
Squad.

ENTERTAIN • These youngsters of the
Forest Run Methodist Church sang and gave
recilatioas, an to the delight or residents of the
Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended Care Unit
Sunday afternoon. Costumed as bells the
children presented "T!;Ie Little BeD that
Couldn't Stop Ringing." ~'Roseaan Jenkins was ·
pianist for the program and was assisted in its
direction by Marsha R~ell and Failh Varney.

.

Two Portland residents suffered minor Injuries Friday after
the car they were riding struck a
ditch and flfpped over on State

Route 124.
Connie L. Caplinger. 31, and
her passenger, Gary R . Nutter,
41, were taken to Veterans

Logger dies in accident
I

J2!!~~tJoN
1616Elmll AVENUE

GAWPOUS, OH.
(6 I 4) 446-3672 .
SPECIAL SERVICE HELD - A special
ClllldleUabt servke Will beld Friday eveulna on .
lbe Pomeroy parking lot for servke mea aad
~mea servlagln Saudi Arabia. Tbe service Will
~f

-'

,•

world would be a much betiCr
place."
..We get so caught up in our own
wants and needs that we forget
there are so many people who
would trade places in a heartbeat"
~·1 also hope the new year wiD
bring peace among nations, and our
hOOps home to their families very
soon," Wolfe said. "In shan, be the
best you can be. ana. to borrow a
phrase I IJave heard before' - 'keep
smiling'".

No paper Tuesday
The Dally Sentinel will not
publish on Tuesday to allow it s
employees to e njoy the New
Year's holiday with their families. Regular publication will
resume on Wednes day.

Two injured when car overturns ·

GENE

-·

DENNIS WOLFE .

From the hospital the children went to the Meigs
County Infirmary for a repeat or the program,
and then were taken to a local restaurant for
refreshments. In tbe group were left to right,
front, Brian Allen, Travis Lisle, Rochelle
Jenkins, !lridgel Varney, and Tyson Buckley, and
back, Mary Chaney, Amy Varney, Sara Ball,
Tyler Johnson, and Chris Ball.

•ALL RElATES AND INCENTIVES APPLY.

,,.....___.....,_,.... __

.

Flooding returns to county

.WE'LL .BEAT THEIR DEAL!!

,.

1 Sections. 12 Pages 25 Cants
A Multlrhedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Monday, December 31, 1990

DON'T FORGET
CLEARANCE SALE ENDS 5:00 ·p.M.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 31
BRING IN ANY COMPEDTOR'S AD•••

division rival Steelers.

Mostly clear Monday night,
with a low between IS and·20 .
Mostly sunny Tuedsay, with
highs In the mid 40s.

•

n·h:, t:Nt

OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY MARKED DOWN.

TONIGHT BPM

25, 31, and 47
Kicker: 445863

Our wishes to aU for a grand time and a great '9 I! .

MONDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1990
8:00 A.M. TIL. 5:00 P.M.

ANDERSON'S

. -P~e3

Though events in 1990 were
ofiCn less than pleasan~ Meigs
Countians have kept their chins up
and continue to think positively as
they head into the new year.
DespiiC some dismal economic
news stateside, Bob (}ilmore of .
Middlepon Trophies and Tees
maintains that his business was
good this year - and he looks forward to an even bener year in 1991.

at the course Thursday and ,
canceled his scheduled round
Friday, returning to Vail, Colo. ,
where his family Is spending a
holiday ski vacation. Quayle Is
scheduled to depart Saturday for
a tour of the Persian Gulf.

.9-D and 1\·S
Lott.o: 2, 6, 11,

..

'

..

Pick-3: 544
Pick-4: 7150
Cards: 10-H; 7-C;

Bengals AFC
Central champ

-:;:

Hummel was taken to Fire- ~':
lands Hospital In Sandusky ~­
where he was pronm,mced 'd ead/ ·
The accident was under invest!- .:
gallon and no citations were ;issued.
·· ·

HAPPY NEW YEAR!.

Ohio Lottery

~wrap:

cooduded by Rev. Mark Morrow at lite req11e1t
area family wllb three 10111 serv1D1 In
Operation Desert Shield. Approximately 45
people attended tbe ceremony.

or aa

A l,.ong Bottom man died Saturday afternoon from injuries
helieved to have been sustained in a
logging accident.
Accotding to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Gary
Holter, 45, was worldns at a Jogging site on Bald Knob Road, and
had been sighted by family members late in the afternoon at his
buD dozer.
Later in the evenins, family
member$ bec4me concerned that he

'

had not retUrned home, and upon
investigation found Holter at the
site with chest and head injuries.
Soulsby re~ Monday that
the lnvestigaung officef believed
thai Holter was injured with his
chain saw when he attempted tD
free a felled tree which became entangled in anothei" uee at the sire.
Meigs County Coroner Douglas
Hunter was 81 the scene on Saturday, along with the sheriff's
dep81111lenL

Memorial Hospital by th e Meigs
County EMS after the accident in
Lebanon Township, accordi ng to
a report from the Gallia-Meigs
post of the State Highway Patrol.
Caplinger was treated and released, a hospita l spokeswoman
said Monday . There was no
record of Nutte~·s treatment.
Caplinger was wes tbound on
State Route 124 when she apparently lost control of her 1980 Ford
Fairmont and went off the right
side of the road . The car
continued on, striking a mailbox,
a ditch, and then flipped over
onto Its top. Neither Caplinger
and Nutter. were wearing their
seat belts.
Caplinger was cited for driving
under the Influence and no
operator's license.

- -·-"'t"-- . .

'1
~

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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