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.

.
12-The D~ 81 ltlnel

r------l.Dcal riews ----- Third year...
Cqurt dates announced
Pretrial discussions between the attorneys and Judge Patrick .
O'Brien were held Wednesday in Meigs County Court in cases
Involving four Meigs Local teachers and a husband of a teacher .
· County Court Clerk Linda Bentz reported that nnai hearing
dates have been set by the Judge for teachers Don Dixon,
charged with criminal damaging and disorderly conduct, and
Rusty Bookman, charged with criminal trespassing. Dixon's
final hearing wlll be 8:30a.m. Feb. 2, Bookman's wlll be 1 p,m .
Feb. 2.
Dixon's caS!! was transferred !rom Middleport Village to
county court. The charge against BOokman stems from alleged ·
activities on Dec. 21. the first day Meigs' schools were reopened
·
·
·
to students.
Jury trials for teachers Michael Wilfong and John Krawsczyn
have been set for March 8. Bil'th men are charged with criminal
damaging for alleged activities at Meigs High on Dec. 18 while
an lnservlce session for substitute reachers was being
conducted.
A jury trial for Hobart Barker, charged with assault and
resisting arrest, also stemming from alleged activities on Dec.
21. has been set for 8:30a.m. on March 1.

Water district releases report

continue&lt;! !t om pagel

ATHENS, Ohio ( UPI\ - Despile public confusion about such
legal remedies to racial and
sexual - discrimination as a !fir·
mallve action, the "new equality" emerging in America will
not be reversed. says the first
woman to head the U.S. Employment Opportunity Commission.
"I am not pessimistic about! he
future of the new remedies or the
new equality," Eleanor Holmes

Multimedia Inc ..... .... ... .... . .:49'h
Rax Restaurants ... .... .. .... .. .. . 3'h
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .... .. ..... :: .. SV.
Shoney·s Inc ......... .... .......... 19'4
Wendy's Inti. .. .. .. ...... ...... ., ... 5'1:,
Worthington lnd .. .... .... .. ...... l7%

'
SERVICI! FORECAST TO 7 A~ EST 1•1NI ·

New equality not reversed

Ho8pital news ...
Veterans Memorial
' Wl'dnesday Admissions- Alia
Dill. Reedsville; Evelyn Mains,
·
Middleport.
Wednesday Discharges Roger Reynolds. Steven Fin law.
Margaret Rose, Lawton Tern·
pleton, William Collins, Shannon
McComas.

Norton .told an Ohio University
·
audience Wednesday night.
"The remedies are built Into
the American system of law by
legal precedence, " said Norton

whoheadedtheEOCfrom1977t~

m3SNOW · -RAIN . ~-SHOWERS ·
FRONTS: II Warm "Cold ~Static - ·Occ··"a"
r
.,... '""""

1985FORD

MARVIN KEEIAUGH
378a6214..

&gt;

Vo.1.38. No .173

SALE PRICE

Clear tonight. Low In mid
28s. Cloudy Saturday. Highs
neat 56.

at y

••

enttne
2 Sections,' 1 6 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Janual:y 1.5, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

Board of _regents aWards Rio $100,000 grant

cpnlral
an armed I
whO threatened tp 1&lt;111 a wornan
with a .44 magnum revolver.
Carper succeeds the retired

In addition, the funding will be used to establish
further development, the Academic Challenge
a
viable exhibition program for the planned
Program will allow Rio Grande to e11pand these ,
Greer Museum of Art. The art mus~um
Esther
prqgrams by building on their existing level of
·
Will
be
housed in the e)(lsting Allen tlouse, a
·excellence. "
facility currently used for facultyo~f!ces. With the
The Acad·emlc Challenge program is designed
Jllanned fall 1988 completion of a new classroom
to create -"Centers of Excellence" on Ohio's
building currently under construction, faculty
college and university campuses. Existing,
offices will be moved to that fac!llty and Allen
strong programs are singled out for quality
Housl' will be renovated and redecora.led.
enhancement through additional financial
Initial use of_the Academic Challenge funds In
support.
the
nursing program will be to Increase
Jn the arts program, the academic challenge
equipment
in the nursing skills lab. The funds will
funds will be targeted for the purchase of
allow
the
sk!lls
lab to remain a "state·of·the·art "
equipment to support the teaching of sculpture, as
laboratory.
well as to lund needed equipment for photoIn addition, funding will be used to enhance
_graphy , l&gt;rlntmak!ng and com!nerc!al graphics.

computer hardware equipment and software.
"Purchase or this equipment and software will
build confidence in ·nursing students . in their
deCision-mailing skills In a risk -free classroom
setting," said Janet Byers, R.N., M.S. , dean of th e
school of nursing.
"It will assist students in learning how to
establish prlorilie.s and · identify the . most
important nursing goals and interventions," she
added. · ·
The Academic Challenge Grant Is ~ne aspec1 of
Ohio's Selective Excellence Program, which has
received national attention as an Innovative
approach to fuD(IIng and supporting higher edu·
cation.

Eastern board approves 1988•89 .budget Meeting in regular session
Thursday night, the Eastern
Local School District Board of
Education adopted a general
fund needs budget of $2,952.511
for fiscal year 1988-89, $491,242
over estimated revenues .
The board acknowledged. that
(he amount of the projected
del!clt will requl'r e an increase in
tax support for the district of
approximately 16 addltibnal

mills. As a result , the l)()ard set a
special meeting for 7:30p.m. on
Monday, Feb. 8, In the high
school cafeteria for the primary
purpose of determining if there
are any additional cuts that can
be made in the budget and to
"wrestle" with the questions of
should the board vote to again put
a tax Issue on the May 3, 1988
ballot and if so, lor how much
· millage.

.
The board also adopted · tor; the board and Supt. Dan
budgets for 1988-89 for the follow- Apling. The board employed
Ing: bond retirement. $17,012.50; · David Kucsma , Todd Bissell and
school funds, activity funds, Steven Ohlinger as substitu te
state and federal programs,
teachers for the remainder of the
$282,895; lunchroom and uniform current school year and apsupplies, $216,864.
_proved a policy on overtime,
Upon the reque't of Paul Life compensatory time for classified
and Joe Lance, Olive Township employees. The board approved
Trustees, a discussion was held a. policy and initial se t of
on bus turn:arounds with Arch administrative procedures on
Rose, transportation coord!na·
Continued on page 12

Schools with -sub teachers can stay open
The six schools operating in the department late Thursday alterClasses were being held again
Meigs Local School District with noon Indicating that the schools today In six of the nine schools of
theuseofsubstltuteteacherscan 'Can stay open .
the district and this Is the 14th
continue to stay open.
The official report which will day of classes since schools were
-This was the report of Meigs _ bt' followed up by letter Indicated · reopened on Dec. 21 with the use
Local Supt. Dan E. Morris. )hat there will be citations Issued of substitute teachers. Regular
c. _c;:AJjoP·-,
Thursday evening after seven
as a result ,of the Inspection and teachers of the district have been
:iff''~:·~: ·~!:;:&lt;lhl!Cts 8fi assist - • ·representatives of 'the Ohlo,' De- evaluation' conducted by the on strike since Nov. ' 6. Attend-.
pl5st c'
Jn~er. Sheets was ;:_, P~!J!nent•of. Jildu,catlon visited In· '··_.state Department of Edu~atlo~ ,... a!lC-e .a~ the six s~hoo)s.;tl\u~ay

Knight wa s scheduled to make an ~
announcement at 11 a.m . thi s
morning in regard to th e strike
contingent on whether he had
observed any movement on set llement of the strike. A large
group !rom the "Parent s and
Teachers Together" -g athered on
the' steps of the courthouse agaip

;e::::~ber of the parrot for 23 '- ~~~r:~~/:e!i~:1."'~J:fa'Y11;t~·f"'~=~~~~JO,i a:;;:~=!;~~ ~ , =b~~~~~~n~~~e~~~:-

Carper and his wife Leonna
·currently live in Portsmouth.

lion is taking place In the
classrooms. Supt . Morris ' said
that he received word from thl'

over a~itdance&lt;-· ear.lfl'!l ...lltol!i~ ___ )lOuse took place on Wednesda y
week.
·- · • ,; ·. &gt;,· . 'morning, and a t that time .Judg-e
Meaqtlme, Judge · Charles
Continued oll page 12

citations' can be corrected before
retnspection is held by the
department.
·

Five potential candidates for _sheriff qualify under new Jaw
Five potential candidates for
Meigs County Shl'rlff have met
new state requirements for the
job, according to Information
released by Meigs &lt;;:ounty Com·
mon Plea~ Judge Charles H.
. Knight. ,
T!te duty of Investigating the
eligibility of ~X~tentlal candidates
' for sheriff has been delegated by
ihe state to common pleas courts. _
In accordance with this duty,
·Judge Knight reviewed thl' quallflcat.lons of those considering the
nomination for the offlc.e, !nclud·
lng Sheriff Howard E. Frank,

Wendell Bradbury

2 Door, fully equipped, 1
owner, excellent condition.
Must - to appreciate.

•

e

RA~GER

' factory
1178711, 4X4, 6 cyl. eng,.
oond., auto. trans:, !'.S., P.B.,
radio, rear step bumper, sliding
glass

'

·• r....;...._ _ _ _ __

Col. Jack Walsh, superintendent of the State Hlghw~y Patrol. .
reel'ntly announced -the promo·
lion of Trooper Grant C. Carper
to the rank of sergeant and his
assignment to the Gall!a-Melgs
Post.
· ·
Carper, a native of Kingston, is
a graduate of Bishop F1aget High·
School In Ch!lllcothe, Ohio University and Portsmouth Business
College.
He graduated· from the State
Highway Patrol Academy in1981
and has been stationed at the
Portsmouth post since then,
-where he was chosen Trooper of
the Year In 1983 and 1987. He was
also selected as the Jackson
District Trooper of the Year for
1987·. He also received the O.W.
· Merrell
for )!lerltorlous

1981. "They will be respectl'd by
theAmericanpeople."
'
"Sixty-nine percent of the
Mapshowsminimumtemperatufii.Attust50%0IIIl)llh.,_._lsi'Oor:•
to receive precipitation indiC:allld
.
UPI
American people say they support affirma,tive action - the
WEATHER MAP - Rain will extend from the northern and '
first lime in history a majority of
central Pacific Coast through Idaho with snow expec&amp;ed In the
Americans have supported
hlgber elevat~ns. Rain or snow ahowera will occur over weatern .
equality." added Norton , now a
)\fontana, far western Wyoming and northern Utall. Li1ht anow
professor of laW a 1 George town
will extend across lhe IlPper Mlaalssil'Pi Valley !nl!l northern lower
University.
Michigan. A few snow flurries Will dot the eastern· Dakotas the
She said evidence of the new
Greal Laluis 'rellon and the nortbem ·Appalachlans.
'
equality can bt' found in equal ~-----------------------~------..:______
wages for young black and white
men who are college graduates.
The same Is true for young black
and white female · graduat~s.
although the women still earn
less than the men, she said.

Area

REGENCY ·

Page6

Carper succeeds Sheets as
assistant post commander

Meigs County Eml'gency Medical Services reports two calls
Wednesday ; Pomeroy at 3:35
a. m. to Route 143 for Iva Johnson
to Holzet Medical C~nter;
Tuppers Plains at 4:36 a.m .
tran sported William Grueser to Holzer Medical Cent~r .

1983 OLDS 98

Daily Number
984
Pick 4
4380 .

A $100,000 gran!'from the Ohio Board of Regents
·"rilt be used to enhance two existing "strong
· programs". at Rio Grande Commurtlty College.
The grant - fufided , through the state's
Academic Challenge program -provides the Rio
Grande Community College-Holzer School of
Nursing and the college's program leading to an
Associate Degree of Arts: Art Concentration a
tola1'of $50,000 foreachofthenext two years. Each
· program will recelvl' $25,000 a year for the next
two years.
,.
·
"These two programs are currently strong and
are a central part of our 'a cademlc mission," said
R~y Boggs, Ph.D., VIce Presl!lent for Academic
Affairs. "By ·targeting additional funds for their _

Sat,u rday through Monday
, . SOuth .C entral Ohio
Partly cloudy today, with highs
A chance of showers or snow
in the mid 20s. Partly cloudy · flurries Saturday, with a ch;mce
'tonight, with a low in the teens. of rain Sunday and Monday.
Partly cloudy Friday, with highs
Highs w11llle ln.the 40s Saturday,
. ranging from the upper 41ls to the
In the upper 30s.
The probability of preclp!ta· Iower 50s Sunday, and from the
tlon is near zero through Friday..
middle to upper . 40s Monday. ·
Winds will be light and varia- Overnight lows will be In the
middle to upper 20s Saturday and
ble today arid from the south at
Sunday mornings and between 30
five to I 5 mph tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
and 35 early Monday . .

EMS has two calls

.we ndell Br adbury. 76, of Rt. 1
Cheshire. died Wednesday at his
resid&lt;'nce. He was a retired
four th -generation farmer. He
wa s also a Cheshrie Twp. Trus t e~ .. He attended Kyger United
Meth od!" Church and was a
member of Eno Grange. He was
also a membe r of Siloam Lodge
454i in Cheshire ..
Born Nov. 20. 1911 in Kyger. he
wa s a son of the lite Clyde Allison
Bradbu ry a nd Flora .Jenkins
Bradbu ry.
He is survi ved by his wife
Audrey A. Riffe Bradbury,whom
. he marred Nov . 27. I 946.
Al so survi ving are one son,
Richard Bradbury of Whitehall.
· Ohio; one ste pson . Larry Thaxton of Westervill&lt;'. Ohio; . four
siste rs. Mrs. Dale !Mary) Sisson
of Kyger. Mrs. Dale !Helen)
Kennedy of Middleport. Mrs.
Wendell !Louise ) Roush of Che·
shire . and Mrs . Dale rLucllle)
Mulford of Cheshire; one
brother . Comer Bradbury of
Cheshire; six grandchildren.
One stepson. William Thaxton.
preced&lt;'d him in death. along
with six brothers.
Services will be conducted 1: 30
p:m . on Sunday at Willis Funeral
Home. Rev. C.J . Lemleyof!!~!at­
lng. Burial follows in Gravel Hili
Ceme tery. Friends may call at
thl' funeral home on Saturday, 3
10 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m:

Church
•
notices

..• __

Firemen busy in December

Daily stcicll prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............ 26'h
AT&amp;T , ................................ 27 Y,
Ashland Oil ....................... &gt;4
Bob Evans ......... .. ....... ...... .. 15¥,
Charming Shoppes .. .......... .. 11 'Ji.
City Holding Co ........ .. .... ..... 32
Federal Mogul ....... .. ........ .. .32"4
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... .. .. .. .. .. .:.58'1.
Heck 's lnr . .... .. .... ......... .. ....... 2
Key Centurion ....... .. .. .... .. ,..38¥.1·
' .......... .. .......... .. .20~
Lan d s 'E nd
Limited Inc ......... .. .. .......... .18'1.

Ohio Lottery

I

Announcements

------Weather·- - : - - - - -

----Stocks-__;.,._ _

Commission.__c_o_n_tin_u._ed_f_ro_m_;_pa_g_e_J_ _ __

. Reappointed IC) tile Melp
Include a percentage of operat· believe the above examples a.re dian , John Stahl; courthouse
lng funds !or salaries and fringe representative of good falth Janitor: Homer Smith Jr.; dog County Tuberculosl$ Board of
benefits, which was similar to the bargatn1ng as prescribed by the warden, Wayne Roseberr)r; · ap-· Trustees were Pastor WIUiam
Mlddleswartb, Charles Riffle,
board's last offer. However, this Ohio Collective Bargaining Law tary Inspector, Everett Holmes ;
Linda Bentz as clerk and Jen- Larry _ !(enn~_y. Paul Patterson,
proposal contained a reasonable !or Public Employees.
" MLTA officials met with nifer Jewell deputy clerk ol Patti Struble, Jeanette Lawfour percent Increase over the
rence. Lloyd Blackwood, Donna
board's offer In ord~r to negate a representatives of the State Meigs County Court; Ellen
Nelson, James Hill. Joan Wolfe,
probably salary reduction In the Department of Education Wed· Rought, Edle Sisson, Dorothea
third year.
_
nesday, pointing out deficiencies McKenzie and Debbie Downie as Tim ~lng, Harold Rice, Helen
' 'The MLTA _belleves II has , In the eduatlon program offered county court deputieS to accept Swartz and Faye Wallace.
demonstrated its wlllltigness to by Meigs Local -since schools -recognizance bonds.
Members of the Public AsSist·
give and· take in negotiations have been officially open durtn·g
ance Examining Board will be
while still keeping the welfare of the strike."
·
David Koblentz, William Wick·
~!s members Intact. :We - al$o
•
line and Robert Buck.
Special meeting
'
Reappointed . to the Mejgs
A
special
meeting
fo
the
Meigs
,
County
Planning
Commission
JrLL£l~e
c_o_rit_in_u_e_d_r_ro_m_·~p-a~g_e_1__________________
Local School District Board or'
was Fred Hoffman, Middleport.
, (teappolnted to the Community . Education will be hl'ld at 4: 30
report was rec~ived , It was ftnprovement Corporation were
trlct Wednesday to hold an
p.m. Friday to adopt the budget,
reported. Attendance at the six Paul Patterson of Rutland;
evaluation on whether meaningto consider financial statements,
schools operating yesterday was Frank Cleland of Racine; KaMe
ful education ·is taking place In
to approve bills for payment and
reported at 65 percent or the Crow of Syracuse; Richard Fol·
the six schools which are opera! ·
to consider any other business
student body. according to the · lrod of Pomeroy; Bernard Fultz
!ng w!tl'l substitute 'teachers .
whiCh may lawfully be consiCentral Office of the district.
While a preliminary report was
dered at the meeting. .
of Middleport. ·
•
~xpected this morning, no_such

Tuppers Plains-Chester Watl'r District, serving parts of
Meigs and Athens ,CounHes, would like customers to know that
the oil splll, which began in Pittsburgh, Pa. and was reported
this morning at S!stersvll!e, W.Va., wll! not affect TPC's water
supplies when It passes our area. TPC water comes from drilled
wells and thl' water district has been informed by Ohio EPAthat
there Is no possible way for contamination of TPC water
·
supplies to take place.
All municipal water supplies In Meigs County are from drilled
wells and will not be affected by the oil slick, which was reported
this morning to have been breaking up.
Charles Knighting, lockmaster at Racine Locks and Dam,
said he has not received official word as to when the slick should
reach the Meigs County area , btlt that he does not expect
·p roblems from the slick, unless there Is Ice In the river at the
lime it passes. which would slqw the _Progress of the 61l.

The Middleport Fire Department answered six fire calls and
. 38 emergency calls during December for a total of 44 ca lis for
the month. Fire Chief Jeff Darst reports. All vehicles were
driven 990.5 miles in answering the calls .
During 1987. membt'rs of the department were kept on the
move answering a total of 581 calls Including 131 fire calls and
4:;() emergen~y runs , Darst reports.
As a result of fires, damages to structures for the year totaled
$293.~00 wh!l~ vehicle losses amounted to $65,:;()0 for a total of
$358.950 for the year.
During 1987. all vehicles were driven 16,907.7 miles.
Manhours put in totaled 1706.9 with an average of 10 men on
each fire rail.

•

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Judg~ release~ latest
proposal by teachers·.

1981 FORD F-100
PICK-UP

4X4PICK·UP
184292, 4X4, V-8 eng., auto.
P.S., P.B., amllm radio, radial
112 tan, lang wide bad, rear
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#85161,V-B eng., auto. trans., P.S.,
P.B., amJim radio, 112· ton,
wide bad, rear llap bumper

SALE PRICE

•
1985 CHEVROLET
CAMARO Z·28 .

'

t7788t, 2 doors, V-8 eng., faCQIY
cond., auto. ll'llna .. P.$.. P.B:; P.W.,
••ring wheel, cnAae ooniiol,
radio, otereo tapa, radial tlrea, ·
aeato, r. wind. delaggw

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SALE PRICE

1986 V;W. JEnA GL
185311, 4 doors, I. wheel drive, 4
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ointnil

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•

•

'

.

1984 v.w.
RAB.BIT

•

180121, 2 dootll, 4cyl. ang.
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tape, radial tiras, whlta
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SALE PRICE

Deputy Dan Levingston, Robt'rt
Beegle, James Soulsby and Paul
Gerard.
A~cord!ng to the new law.
which went Into effect in March
1987. candidates must meet the .
following stiffer qualifications.
Be a U.S. citizen.
Be a resident of Meigs County
ro~ at least one year prior to Feb . .
18. 1988.
Meet the q~allflcallons of art
elector and comply with all
election laws.
.
Have a high school diploma or

•

•

equivalent .
Have not been convicted or
pleaded guilty to any felony.
offense of m'JI"'Iturpltudeor any
misdemeanor of the first degree.
Be fingerprinted and have the
local. state ' and federal finger·
print files ~earched to disclose
any criminal record.
File a complete residence and
employment blstory for the six
years preceding Feb. 18. 1988.
Knight says all five applicants
have these necessary . quali!!ca tlons and
. the only remaining
.

information he must receive are
the results of the Ohio and
Federal l!ngerpr!nt file search.
There are some e.xceptions to
the residency st.lpulatlori as
stated In the iaw, and , lor 1988
only: there are exceptions to
additional requirements regardIng training and law enforcement
experience. However, beginning
In 1989, a candidate for sheriff
must also pos:~ess the following
qualifications.
A valid certificate of training
as a law enforcement officer

within three year s prior to the ·
qualification date.
At least five years of full-time
law enforcement experience in
which the duties were reiated to
Ithe enforcement of statutes. ordinances or codes; and have at
least two years of supervisory ·
experience or Its equivalent or
have satisfactorily completed
two years of post-secondary
education.
The law allows that if a person
meets all other requirements
except the one-year residency.

'

Hearing Feb. 5 on ·Mason courthouse issue

!ng Attorney Damon B. Morgan
By MATT ROBERTSON
The examinations, according
Jr. to file suit ag~!nst the
OVP News Staff
to the document, would be to
ln~taller of the roof.
The West VIrginia Supreme determine any adverse effects
A report from P . F-letcher
that have bel'n caused by the
Meigs County Common Pleas percentage of revenue falls to Court · of Appeals has set a
Adkins
, assistant -to the director
Court Judge Charles Knight has provide either of the two preced- hearing date before Special prolon~,:ed exposure to the of the court, Indicated. on August
Judge Larry Starcher on a writ ol asbestos.
released the lates) proposal . !ng amounts.
"Reduction
In'
Staff
The
mandamus calling for the closing
The petition also calls for the 11, 1987. the damage to the
offered by the Meigs Local
courtroom was extenslvl'. Over
· Teachers Association to .t_he board will not make use of Article of the Mason County Courthouse judge to order the commission to
the bench,' he reported• a large
Meigs Local Board of Education 8, Reduction In Staff, during the because of the presence of · repair, upgrade and remodel the area 'of plaster had been damcourtroom facilities so - as- to ·
In the negotiations of the 1!187-81!. 1988-89, 1989-i990 and asbestos in the building.
pened by water leaks.
1990-91 school years. The board
Starcher, a judge from Mor· · makethe courtroom a fit and
te~chers strike which bt'gan N9v.
He also reported that 40drop-ln
shall ' not reduce staff by non- gantown. wlll hear the argu· proper place ·for trials to be
6.
ceU!ng tiles over the spectator
·Teachers were required . to . rene\VIng bargaining unit ments on the petition on Feb. 5 at .conducted, according to the area of the courtroom should be
have the proposal, which was · members and not replacing such 10 a.m., somewhere . in Mason · document.
replaced due to waier damage.
If th.e courthouse is closed, the
made orally Mon(lay, In wn\ten bargaining unit membt'rs during County, according to Paul Crab·
The
floor tiles In the ·si&gt;ectator
tree, West VIrginia Supreme suit calls for the commission to
form In the hands ot Judge the term of the contract .
area,
he continued, were dam"School Calendar- The school ' Court Of j\ppeals admlnlstra10r . provide alternate offices for the .
Knight by noon on Tuesday .
aged
and severa I had been
calendar for the 1987·88 school · This act!on was filed by James employees to a)low Mason
· The proposal reads:
The tiles, the repo.rt
removed.
"Contract duration - four · year may Include the use of Casey for John :Pav!d Sizemore, County citizens to conduct their Indicated, should be replaced as
Saturdays for school days, and ·l!dult probation officer for the business with the elected ··offl·
year contract.
a minimum .
"Salary and Fringe Be'neflts- the last sentence In Article 27 Is. 29th judicial circuit, and James clals housed In the courthouse
ln late Septerpber, Watt had
The current salary schedule and waived for the 1987·88 school - 1'. He!'fl\lln, currently a prisoner and to provide adequate space Keltl'l Biggs. an air monitor/anafor ihe o!f!clals to conduct their
· index shall be maintained In the year. Tht school year sball In ttte:~a.o~ County jail.
lyst on some asbesJos abatement
co~lstof182daysbeglnnlng'With
",
~ewly
.
eilcted
.Mas!)n
County
duties.
1987·88 school year and the .
projects and currently certified
: Cdmmllllion .R. Kenton Sheline,
The suit calls for Herman to be
1988-89 school year. The Board · the 1._89 achool year.
by the State of Ohio as an
"Non-Renewal -The first two declined to comment on the suit discharged from the Mason
shall pay 100 percent of the casts
asbestos
hazard evaluation speol the current fringe benefits for renewals of limited contracts for· ·saying that he had not seen a County jail because the con- cialist, test the ceiling plaster.
tlnued exposure·to the dangerous
the 1!187-88 ~col year and the bargaining unit members shall copy of It yet, .
be
pursuanttoOhloRevlsed
Code
.
The
petition
calls
for
the
condition
I~ cruel and unusual · Biggs reported that the compo1988-89 school year.ln the 1989-90
.
clolure. ~ntll such a time as treatment as . well
belniJ sition of the plaster In the celllr\g
school year &amp;Jid the lr,Ml-91achool . 3319.11.
was 60 percent chrysatlle asbesyear, 67 pereent of' the .genreal . "EvaDIUI\tion - ·The evalua· examii)Btlpns . can be made to hazardous to his health and the . tas and 40 percent plaster . ·
operatlnlf fllnd allall be
on t!on ttmellne In Ar\lcle23 shall be o:tetermlne the actual presence of health of other Inmates and
. He also reported that county
salaries and
for altered OliiY for the 1987-88 school ulle8t08 In !lie courthouse and · employees.
personel
and the general public
·
slept taken to
The asbestos situation started
11n11. year to require the flrlt I!VaiQa· tilt
members of
tile situation, according In August when Judge Clarence · would continue to be exposed to
General
allaU tloa to lie completed by Feb. 15,
varying levels of airborne asbesPflllton. · ·
Watt sent the Supreme Court a
tnclucle
anti lOCal for __..alnlnl unit mem~rs
tos.
fl~rs until the hazard - Is
· aho calls for the ll'tter explillnlng the conditions .
revenuet
... 1r11Qiiavenotbeell ,eva!uated~
removed,
due to the damage and
tile aeecilld evaluatloll&gt;· be Cbm·
·
Commlasloa to · In his courtroOm, specltlcaUy the
any lona term
friability
of
cenaln areas of the
pleted by March 30. .
•
•mlnatlons lor leaky roof and the water daniage
ceiling
In
the
COIII'thouae.
(beyond the n:::..=~~
"All otllfr contract lanpap .
CUI'I'eiiUy em- . caused the courtroom becallseof
Index wtn I» •
It Is alia poaslble, B1KRS
lllal't nmatn tile same aa In' the
~ion or Jeaklln the colll1h0!1111! roof. Tile continued, tllat the heating vent!·
the term
IQI
eollttacSt,
·
·
have been teaks had been occurlqslnee the
the
latlon and ill' COIIdltlantna sys.....
loard
will
place
"
roof was Installed In 1980.
$15,'100
....,.., )evy · DJ1 tbe ballot t.
In 1911!1, the C.ommlslllon .dl· . tem Is con.tamlllateil with atbes·
tos fibers due tq the Iona history
rected ·Maso~ County Proaecut·
Onlllll!ed qn page 12

as

,,

that person will be con sidered a
candidate if no other person has
met ali the requireme nts' by the
qualificati on date.
The qualification dat e is Fe.b.
18 fo r candidates filing petitions
for the pr imary election and
Marc h 24 for write· in candidates.
Although the law allows a
person who m ee ts a li other
requirements to be exempted
from I he training and exper ience
rul es for candidacy •in 1988
,'that
t• ''
person must comple te a basic
training course If elected.

f_

•.

of water damage and repa ir work
· performed on the ceiling withou1
precautions to prevent t-h e re·
lease of fibers . ,
Test results ,from L. Robert
Kimball and Assocclates , consulting ~ngineers . revealed that
the plaster in the basement. first
floor and second floor hallwa y as
well as the courtroom ceiling,
contained asbestos. The wa lls
and ceilings In other area s of the
building test&lt;'d negative. accord·
ing to the r&lt;'por1 .
In a memorandum from Mel
Curry, l'nvironmenta I consul·
tant . asbestos control program .
-- he recomended the re -plastNing
of the hallway on the second floor
·. near the circuit clerks office and
keep the ceiling painted and in
good repair.
The damaged a rea Is eq ua 1 to
about 80 squareleet.according to
the memoandum.
Other recomendatlon' included in the report were lo
re-plasterlng the other damaged
areas, keeping_ the areas painted
and In lood repair. These ar~as
.include the Ia w library and the ,
pentlio11se supply room . .
A general recommendation
from euiry was that the court· ·
hOuse should be cleaned using
damp
CJiolhs. which are rinsed
tnqMI_liPy. as the standard
IJI'OOII41P't, that dry dusting
abo~~~« ll'_t ~ dane.
Tilt eounty commission
operllll bldl on the atbestos
removal
~rilll Thursday nJahf
Ill&amp; and the bids
have be1rJ vett to Qeorge M.

!it

~

�•

Comment
The Daily Sentinel

}

Coun S&amp;reel
Pomeroy, Oblo

111

DEVOTED TO TBE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

"lb.

Bm~ ~
~v

.

.....""T'".,..,...=·.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pubilaher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assllltanl Pub1111her/Coatro\ter

BOB HOEFLICH
Geaeral Maaa1er

A MEMBER of The United Pr.Ss 1nternatlonal. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are weloome. They Should be lets than 300 words

"

tona. AU letters are subject toedltln&amp; and must be signed with name, address and

telephone DUmber. No unsignEd letters wUl be published. Letters should be In

Friday. January is. 1988

Pick a

number...--~___B..:_y_J_a.c_k_A_n_de_rs_on_an_d_D_al_e_Jii__,an_A--:

WASHINGTON - There Is
Increasing evidence that the
unregulated real estate appral·
sal Industry Is a major contrlbu·
tor to bank !allures and a
growing threat to the U.S.
financial system. .
- Before a· person can become a
barber, a plumber or an electrl·
clan, most states re&lt;julre some
test of com·petency. It goes
without. saying that other profes·
slonals such as doctors and
engineers IT!USt be licensed,
Yet In most siates, an appraiser can hang out a shingle
with no questions asked.
Billions of dollars In real estate
loans and Investments are made
every year, and the appraisal

plays a key role. From the $100 ate fraud, an appraiser can
million commercial real estate overvalue a piece of real estate . .
deal to the ,$100,000 home mor· For example, a person taking out
tage to the sale of millions of a second mortgage on a home
dollars "of mortgage-backed se· qualifies for a much bigger loan
curlties, at some point, a real If the appraiser lnfiates the
estate appraiser decides hQw home's ·value.
stakes are
much each deal Is worth. The bigger In multimillion-dollar real
appraisal determines t_he value estate deals, In both cases, the
of the · property that will be lender Is left holding three
collateral for the loan.
pounds of flour In a five-pound
Lenders and Investors expect sack.
·
·
the appraiser to give them the
As vital as appraisals are·
rlgh( value. If the borrowtor · -most lenders will not iend
defaults on the loan, the lender without one - anyone can
expects that the property will be perform them In more ' than 40
.worth enough to cover the states without having to show
outstanding debt. ·
any competency or obtain any
Through ~tupldlty or dellber· certification.
·

The

Letters to-·the editor
Knows what pain is all about

..

Having stuttered all my life, I
; know the pain and embarrass·
• ment suffered by people with this
: handicap. The taunting and teas• ing you go through as a child. The
limit~ placed on your life as a
, young adu)l. The feeling of being
' excluded from many types of
' careers. The tension, the frustra·
lion, the tears of anger; these are
· the facts of life to the stutterer.·
It would do muc~ to help the
stutterer if people! would pa, tiently wait lor him to speak. If
they would please not rush to
finish his sentences. If they
would just maintain eye contact
' normally. These are common

courtesies that would make the
stutterer !eel more relaxed, and
ease the tension of speaking.
In addition to educating the
public, I would like to Inform all
Interested that there Is an organ I·
zatlon for stutterers. It dlstrlb·
lites Information on stuttering
program~ as well as acts as a
source of social contacts; !or too
long the stutterer has had to go It
alone. To get a free copy of our
Informative newsletter, send $2
(for postage and handling) to:
&amp;peak Easy Inc.. 95 Evergreen
Ave .. Saint John, N.B., Canada
E2N 1H4.
Micheal Hughes
Executive Director

·---.
'

This letlf r is dealing " 'lth the
uncalled for incident at Harrisonville Elementary School on Mon·
day, December 21, 1987. This
Incident involved the Meigs Local Teacher~ . the Meigs County
· Sheriff's Department. various
out of tow n police officials, and
the Meigs Local School Board.
The six Meigs teachers that
were allegedly arrested for con·
tempt of court were not arrested
· at all. Rather, the teachers were
detained for consideration by the
: court whether their actions con·
stituted contempt ol court. Obviously . the dismissal of the
alleged contempt of cour t citallons indicates that there was
not a legal basis for a contempt of
court vio lation .
.
The teachers were NEVER
Informed that they were In any
manner not observing the temporary rest.rainlng order. The
teachers were never asked to
disperse or identify the individuals that were pickets as required
by the order.
The Board of ~ducation did not

dismiss the charges to give the
teachers· "a break". The Board
of Education did dismiss .the
charges In order to avoid litigation (a possible lawsuit) ·that
could be brought against the
legal authorities al)d Board of
Education pressing for the false
contempt of court citation. A
lawsuit against the pollee offl·
clals Is stl)l a possible action.
All the persons Involved are of
good charactrr and have never
been tnvolv.ed In any such thing
as .this, nor were they ever
arrested.
'
The authorities OVER·
REACTED In the situation and
· upon consideration of the facts In
this matter, THERE WERE NO
GROUNDS FOR PROSECUTION OF THE TEACHERS.
Your teachers,
Jenell Barker
Ron M. Drexler
Connie Gilkey
Julia H. Vaughan
Wykle Whitley
. Mindy Young

Bush's dilemma

•

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporier . ~
WASHINGTON - Vice President George Bush has a problem.
Hoping to head the GOP ticket, he wants to campaign as t~e Insider,
the president 's right-hand man, and as someone who was out of the
toop" when It came to the details of the Iran-Contra scandal.
He does not deny that he was aware of the secret transactions IIIith
Ira n, and the sending of arms to that Persian Gulf warring country.
He also stresses how strongly he felt about seeking the release pf the
American hostages in Lebanon .
But like Reagan, he says he did not realize that dealings with Iran
boi h~d down to arms for hostages. Nevertheless, records show that he
was tuned In a lot more than he has acknowledged.
Bush has sa id "we erred" and "mistakes were made" but he never .
comes to grips with the question of why- with the experience he had
as CIA director and as vice president talking with world leaders, as he
stresses -so often -he did not analyze the picture correctly; why he d td not oppose an undercover policy that directly contradicted the
administration's public policy,
Bush notes that he headed a task force on terrorism that strongly
opposed negotiating or dealing with terrorists. Iran was on the State
Department's terroris t list .
.
The Tower report said that Bush emphasized that throughout the
period of the clandestine operation, one principle was applicable: "to
go the extra mile for th e· hostages." At the same tlme, Bush said ·the
president also made It clear. .that no one should do anything wrong to
acomplish their goals.
The board sa id that Bush "stated that much activity regarding the .,
Iranian policy was done on an Informal basts and without records."
Recent published stories indicate that Bush knew In the spring of
1986 that there would be a secret mission to Iran and thatheaskedtha.t
It be held ol(untll he completed a journey to Saudi Arabia.
The vice president has said that had he known of the vigorous
opposition of Secretary of State George Shultz and Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger he might have ha~ second thoughts on the
subject.
·'II I had a Jot more knowledge of what was going on, I would have
said 'don't do this'," Bush said In a television Interview last month.
Character has become a big thing In the 1988 presidential
campaign. Judgment and ethical courage also are coming Into play.
Republican presidential hopefuls are sniping at one another these
days to en hance their chances and Bush has been a target. But other
GOP contenders could be vulnerable on other controversial Issues
that may haunt them on the campaign trail. ·
, Sen. Robert Dole, R·Kan. may have a lot of explaining to do If he
; seeks black minority support. He voted against Imposing sanctions on
• South Africa, which has denied most civil rights to lis black majority.
: Former Secretary of State Alexander Halg may find It hard to live
, down his "I am In charge" declaration when an assassination
• attempt was made on Reagan In March 1981.
·
'
Reps. Jack Kemp, R·N.Y. and former Delaware Gov. Pete duPont
may be gambling on the wrong sllje In .terms of voter appeal by
opposing the new U.S:·Sovlet nuclear arms agreement, and Pat
; Robertson may have a time separating his poll Ileal Image from his
; television preacher day&amp; . .
' '.

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio jUPI)
Ohio siate won't have long to
celebrate Thursday night's 87-83
Victory over 18ih-ranked Iowa. ·
On Monday night, No. 10 Michigan Invades St. John Arena.
"I think this victory was
Important with Michigan coming
In," said point guard Curtis
Wilson, who scored 21 points. ·
dished out 8 assists and teamed •
with Jay Burson to give Ohio
State the edge In the battle of the
backcourt against the Hawks.
Burson led the Buckeyes with 23
points.
·
Wilson, who struggled with
turnovers, erratic shooting and
even some poordectslonsearly In
the season, now has played three
solid games In succession, although the Buckeyes lost two of
them last week at Purdue and
Wisconsin.
.. " I'm just getting to gel1wlth the

The performance of the a~~~~~~; :
sal Industry has come ·
Intense scrutiny by the House
Commerce, · Consumer and
Monetary Affairs Subcommlt·
tee. The first skeletons
discovered In the apJpralsers'."
closets during an Investigation
Into bank and savings and loan
failures and the role of Insider
misconduct In those collapses. . :
A dramatic number of faulty
and fraudulent appraisals were
found In tlte real estate loan ·
portfolios of nearly every !ailed
and falling Institution.
..;
The faulty appraisals "were
used to fool bank examiners,"
according to Doug Barnard,
D-Ga., .c hairman of the subcom·
mlttee. "They were used to make
a dangerous or even fraudulent;
real estate loan appear secure by"
having . In the loan file· a!(
appraisal which assign~. an un·
realistically high market value
to the pr&lt;lperty collateralizing
the loan," be said. · Late last year, the subcommlt·
tee prepared a major report.
That report, reviewed by our
associate Michael Blnsteln, con·
eluded that "faulty and fradulent
real estate appraisals have be·
come an Increasingly serious.
national problem whose effects
are widespread, pervasive and,
costly. Abusive appraisals hav.e,.
contributed to the Insolvency of•
hundreds of the nation's financial
Institutions and have helped;
cause billions of dollars In losses
to mortgage lenders, private
mortgage Insurers, Investors If\
mortgage-backed securities and
to ... those that administer the
· Federal Deposit Insurance

'

knocib
·the ball out of
hands of Iowa's Jeff Moe as Bu~ekoeye Jerry
Francis looks on during the first half of Thursday ntcht's game In
·st. John's Arena. (UPI)

N!\TJONI\L BASKETB.\LL A.SSOf .

Thlll'!ldlQ' '"' Re11ultr;
Jerllf'J 811, Sau.•l'llml'DlO 1'7
Mlaohl~o•I:MI, MIIYt'IUikt•l" IDi

J'li~\\'

AIDS risk
If anyone still needs convinc·

•
IS )OW'

committee's 15 members had the
gall to rate him "not qualified.''
Once again, the worst damage
was Inflicted, not on Judge Bork,
but on the reputation of the AB~
for a decent objectivity.
,
Finally, consider the malnlimi'
clergy. Ii can't be much fun to
committed to tbe servl~ of Go'l'
In •a'• •et'llllr ''at'e that'· widely,
dismisses him as "Irrelevant.'''
One solution Is to Interpret his;
teachings as paralleling various•
popular political slogans of the:
day. And 1!0 we see solemn:
assemblages of mitred bishops·
endorsing such notrums as nO:
· first use of nuclear weapons an~
massive welfare Increases ~
typically~ proposals so demon-;
strably dangerous or absurd tha~
even thoughful liberals are edg~
lng away fft1m them.
:
Here again, It Is the churches•
and their leaders that are belngi
harmed. They, and our leadln(
lawyers and scientists, must ask- a few tran,'
themselves whether
slent liberal "victories" are;
worth the price they are paylnK'·
for them.
·

'1 .

sharing eating utensils, 93 person
years "of' kissing on the cheek"
lng that AIDS Is not a threat to
heterosexual Americans, · they
and 43 person years of kissing on
need only read the latest study
the lips, not a single fat;nlly
published In the Journal of the
member became Infected.
If that doesn't lay to rest the
American Medical Association.
Researchers at the federal
non-sense abouf AII1S being
Centers for Disease Control and
spread by schoolchildren, office
the New York City Department
workers, walters, etc., nothing
of Health studied the bealth
ever will.
status of 25 husbands of wlve.s
What does It mean that such
comparatively small per-ceowho had acquire!~ AIDS through
blood transfusions and 55 wives
tages of spouses became Infected
of husbands who had contracted
by having hetero~exual sexual
the disease In !lie same manner.
contact with an AIDS-Infected
These couples engaged In a
Individual?
·
wide range of sexual activitiesFirst, It means that while the
andhadsexaboutonceaweekrisk may be low, It Is real. The
Including deep kissing, vaginal
messages regarding safer sex, and oral Intercourse. They
monogamy and sexual discretion
rarely, If ever used condoms.
are as valid as they ever were.
· The astounding news , Is that
People like Education Secretary
after repeated sexual encounters . William Bennett may have a
with Infected spouses, only 8
religious-social-political ax to
percent of the men - two of 25grind, as may U.S. Surgeon
and 18 percent of the women -10
General c. Everett Koop, but
of 55 - tested positive for the
their basic message Is valid
AIDS virus.
nonetheli!ss: Sex spreads AIDS.
According to the researchers,
If you're not sure about your
"Eleven wives remained linin- .partner's sexual history, slow
!ected after more than 200 sexual · down. Use condoms. The rtsk to a
contacts with their Infected · male may only be eight In 100spo"se." On the other hand, "One but Is an elght·ln-100 rlskofdeath
Infected woman had had only a
an acceptable risk for a night of
single sexual contact, and f 7
·
I!D.
'
another had only eight."
Beyond .that, what the stvdy ·
There Is some other news In the shows ts that AIDS IS not euily
study that Is also worth tranamtlted to healthy lndfvlduconslderlng:
als during hetero-sexual InterThe researchers looked at all course. I~ would seem to confirm
the family members who had once qaln the fact that AIDS Is
non-sexual conlact with the In- prlmarUy lransmltted by &amp;D81
fected Individual, and found that, lnte~rse - which waa quite
desplle 126 '•'"""""n
.-·- yean" of rare among th•couplea In thIa
sharing toilets, 107 persoa years study - and by direct blocJd.toof sharing tubs or showers, 38 blood contaci, which' occurs
{JeTSOn years of sharing drinking - when sbarlng dirty hypodermic
ll'lasses, 21 )ier8on yean of needles.

~ The

__;,_~_B_._D._C_ole__,~

researchers also found
that, Interestingly enough, the
older spouses of Infected
partners were more likely to
become Infected than the
younger partners - even If they
engaged In sex less. What does
that mean?
If the question was whether the
Infected Individuals developed
AIDS, the age factor might be
explain~ by the !act that an
older person might have a

weakened Immune system, and'
thus would be more likely tq
develop the disease one~
Infected.
"
.
But that wasn't the case. SQ
while this study may at least
reassure us that AIDS will not be
the new bubonic plague In th~
American heartland, It also
remind~ us that for everythln~
we learn about this killer, w~
learn something more that we do
not know.
;

'I'

Berry's -World.

j

r

'•
I

NFCCbam ....... 1.

at

BM~ton,

p.m.

1: 3D

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(' lr\'ela.d .111 Drtroll, 1:311 p .m.
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.
S11lurd»:r's G~tmetl
Philla&amp;olphlalll Nf"w\' nril, nl.hl

Friday. Jan. IS
Cue Re.erw
Saturday, Jan. II
Bowllac Green at Talt!do
Centrai.Mich at Kenl st
~learn a1

West Mlth at Miami

NHL results
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tonm al carnii!'Ff'-Mellon (Pa)

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st. Louis :1. Hartford 'l

Frlday'!&gt;i fiumt•s
Phlluddpftla 11t PUtlihur'Jih, 7::1:1 p.m .

MIRIN",..aQ at Dt•trnlt, i: !15 p.m.
Toronao Ill N""' ·ll'rsi')'. 1: -tri p.m.
" 'lt.iprJI:Ili Edmonton, A: :i!i p.m .

ntlitar)' at V~~~~t· ouvrr, It: 3:1p.m .
Slolt•rday'li Guntt'!&lt;l
Nrw .JI'ntey at Nl' litlundt'fS

John Canol at Belhany fW Va)

UPI ratings
Nt:" ' l ' ORK ( U P I)- Tht' l inUt•d Pr~11
lnJ(•rnallonal Board of foat •hrs' Top ~~~
t· ulll' ~t · haookl'lhllll' ralln~. with Uflll·
ptat·•• vult"' und r•·~ ·ord In punonlltt•'"•
tolul polnls ( has4'd on 15 polniM for llr!OI
plun•. l.t lor !'l:'t·und, ••It·.) 11 nd lu111 wt·~·lt ' !&gt;i
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119 ,.,

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1:11 3
11~· 11

101 It
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Drl~ham \ 'olli1J(

1'!-1 z

Wreslling poll
HOLlAND, Ohio tUPil - Thl' fiMI
IW Ohkl hiKJI MC hool wreAtllnK rallnii'M•
ltCC~Iary ·

lreaeurer of liM&gt; Ohio Hlkh School
Wre1111in1 Glacllle11 As~~Gelallon. and,
dbltrlbuled h)' UPI (111'111 place vote11 In
pa renllwAH ):
Division. I

Team
J
I. Lak"'oed St. Edward (12)
!.

,

Rio Gru..e at W.....

.. nm11u un ••

1511
110 liS
llfl U15

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Bos&amp;on 3, Monirt'UI;:

compiled hy Dick Hoover,

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OhJe o,~·~ •l!l,aiO!'I'

Wlhl..,ton at Dyke

Points
lXI
101

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a. Nordenla
4. Clen 8t. lr•UuM
5. North OlrnMe•

111

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15. IJulhU\11, (M·:I)
Itt. Ma~W~!I (11-:H

11. lown !'llalt• ( I:J.t}
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Rurburu., l 'olorudn Shih•, Dt•Paul. f:t' llr·
1{111 T••c.' h, flllnol~t, l.uuilivlllt•, Ml!&lt;i· !tour!.
North Caroll11.1 St111t•, South MI!OidMlll,.l,
!'It .• lohn'!&gt;i, Tt·••" ·EI PIL!ID, lJI11h .

13

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4. Colamhl DeSalt~

14

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1. M:rea8t. Vl~tent
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8. Medlu ••bye
I. (th!) ao.lonl
t. (tie) tJitrelwi\'IJe Claymont

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Lorain Sotd)lll'lew and Falrheld, II nrh:
II. W.eMei'\'IUr Nortll 8:· l'T. (lie) Mu11ll·

10.

of Intercollegiate football.

Look How We're

The Daily Senlinel

(tie. Maple HIPIJhlll
t1
SecOINI ten: II . Mentor 15: II. TOledo
RoJI!f'l H; , 13. Perry11hu'1 13; U . (I~)

hall, even though it came up ·
short. Ohio State led 46-39 at the
break.
" It's a terrifically balanced
league, " said Davis. " You're
going to ha v~ to play well to win
on the road .
"Ohio State played a heck of a
game." added Davis. " I thought
we had them on the ropes In the,
second hall, but couldn't put the
damper on it."
'
With John Anderson out'.
Williams used. only seven
players, with Mateen and Scott
Anderson the only substitutes to
see action :
~
"" If you ~ have seven guys,
that 's all you nero," said Davis.
"With all the television timeouts
and emotio-n, seven Is enough."Both teams had five players In
double ligures. Besides Burson
and Wilson, the Buckeyes got 15
points from Francis, 12 from
Carter and 10 from Mateen.
Armstrong's 22 points led
Iowa, which also had AI Lotenzen
with 16. Jeff Moe and Roy Marble
with 15 each and Ed Horton with

Tandy® 1000 HX

The Ohio . Valley Christian
Defenders were defeated Tues·
day night be a score of 59,-47 by
the Eagles from Fairview In
Ashland, Ky. This was the second
meeting of these two t.eams and
the second victory for the Eagles.
This was an exciting and close
game as the lead changed hands
numerous times In the first hal!,.
but by h~lf ..time the excellef!t
outside shOQtlng of the Ealtles
had built all 8-polnt lead. In l ne
3r&lt;l quarter the Eagles were able
to extend tbelr lead to 13 points
before the Defenders went to a
full-court pressure defense
which narrowed the margin to
six points. :The lead stayed In
single digits throughout the 4th
quarter, but was Increased to 12
at the end of the game when the
Defenders were forced to foul.
The Defenders were led 'by
junior forward John Keenan who
scored 22 points while grabbing
12 rebounds.
Senior center Eric Keenan did
not score In the ball game, but
was a major factor on the
defensive end blocking 9 shots.
Senior guard Chris Patterson
and junior guard Shannon Gil·
Ham each contrlbuied 9 while
junior forward Barry· Call tossed
In 7.
The Eagles played a perimeter
game all night and were led by
the proficient shooting of guards
Hobbs who scored 17 points and
Helton who pumped In 11.
Individual scoring:
.
ovcs - Patterson 9, Call 7, J.
Keenan 22, Gilliam 9.
FAIRVIEW- Hobbs·17, Helton
11, Smith 11, Hammonds 7, Boggs
2, Clark 2,, Shultz 7, Crance 2.

t.

1- ferTJ

difficult challenges In the history

Gregg left Green Bay and flew
to Dallas far an afternoon news
conference.
He thus returns to his alma
mater, which he left 29 years ago
en route to a Pro Football Hall of
Fame career as an offensive
tackle with the Packers and a
professional coacolng career
that spanned 16 seasons with ftve
different teams.

28
%1

14.(Ue) llellnae (I) ud MHiu Hllhlud, It IPidi: ft. ....... II: J1, North

"Hungry/ Hey, I know how you feel. We just
got tlfiCk from a fat fNtn. " '
•

Mo.-1 Untan at leldelbel'l(
OUierbeln at Ohto Nortt.en1

151 IIU

'l'h•rsday'to RI'!OIIIbi

(lllll·aru at

WIUtllbera: at Baldwla-WIIIace
Capkal at Maalll. .m

i\alllud &amp;I ladiUaltOita
n.tlq at Blal'fton\
173 1-l:t

Phlladclpht. 3. Ruffalo I
••

Dllto Unlwrtilty a1 Jlallst
aacl...al at Memi*JI St
'WI!lll la.oh at Oevelaad St
Maryt.ucl·tr.• Ilion~ at Wrl1ht 8t '
Lo)'l&amp;a (DI) at Xr.ier
•
Middle Te• at Yo•ptown 8t

Alle&amp;Mar (Pa) Drlll•n ·
w.-lllltctll at Cue ae.rve
Ollie Weaiqaa a1 Ke.,.on

I

DALLAS (UPI) - Forrest
Gregg Thursday resigned as
coach of the Green Bay Packers
and accepted the job of' reviving
the Southern Methodist team, the
first football program ever banIshed by Ute NCAA, United Press
International
has learned.
•

Defenders drop
59-47 contest

Ohio Coneae Bultetball Schedule

lndldu. at How.ton, nlkfll
Pvrihtnd ..t Slll1 i\nloillo. nl~~:ht
Goklu Stall' Ill Dt•nwr. nll(hl
lA YkhMill l'hornllll , •l~~:ht
Selittk• J LJ\ Cllpp:·r~. nr,lht

s.co.ltew; ll.{llf-)Oima&amp;dFalll&amp;lld '

\

throws with lour seconds to play
to Ice the game.
"This was a big game for us
mentally," said Ohio State coach
Gary Williams, who was going
against his former boss in Iowa
coach Tom Davis. "After going
0·2. they were very down Monday
In practice."
With 6-foot·9 John Anderson
still out of action with a scra tched
eyeball: Mateen and 6·foot-8
freshman Perry Carter carried
much of the Inside load, along
with 6-foot ·7 Tony White. Those
three combined for 15 rebounds,
Carter getting 9. But the Buckeye~ were outrebounded 33-28 by
the Hawks .
"Their rebounding is amaz·
tng," Williams said of Iowa . ''We
were scared to death. "
1
Davis, whose team fell to 10-5
overall and 2-2 In the conference,
said he . was pleased with his
team's comeba~k in the second

Gregg .signed a long-term
contract,' perh~ps . as long as 10
years, accepting one of the most

Thlt Mo'eek's

nl~~:ht

lk&gt;Cftlil 111 (\lcai(O,

FH&amp;Orla, II e~h ; II . .U.ro11 C.wel9trr !t;

. :;

AFC Champion VI. NPC ChiUIIpiOII Ill
Su Dtep, I p.m .

This week's games

r\tbln&amp;ill 1111 Dllllali '
leM&amp;o.n 111 Nrw ,J.-r~·y, nlahl

.

~ee.:-

MIIIRHOta at WMIIII...,.., u:• p.m.
APC Champlo.... lp
Cleveland at Deawr, -1 p.m.
Jaa.ll
S.per Bowl

Friday's G•me,;
SIU.·... ~nto

I

but rea) _

Denwr Sl, J1011Noa 11
, ••• 11

nr"Yt·lllftd II, fhk•altO M COT!
HoW!ilon lll3, Portland P
Denwr liS, A.llan&amp;a Itt

Politics, the corrupter._______;__W_i_llia_m_R-"-u_sh___
er:
can be found In a thing called the Marsh1111, at a very minimum,
Union of Concerned Scientists. are simply hard-working left·
This body Is forever attempting lll!eral polltlclans In judicial
to put science at the service of , robes .. To expect objectivity of
leftist politics, but It Is pretty well them would be laughable If tl)e
discounted now as the propa· stakes weren't so high.
ganda megaphone it Is.
But, until recently, the Amerl·
But that certainly Isn't, or at lean Bar As~oclatlon could pride
least wasn't, true of. the Amerl· Itself on the Incorruptibility of Its
'd4n Physical SO£lety. U'lfortu· committee olf jlidlcllil'qua'llffca·
,nately. a panel of this respected tions. This body took so seriously
organization released a report Its assignment of evaluating
critical of President Reagan's nominees to the federal judiciary
space shield proposal (iSDI). The that the Justice Department,
report w.,_s so full of ·technical under Democratic and Republi·
errors that It backfired, doing far . can presidents alike, has roumroe damage to the reputation of tinely asked the committee's
the American Physical Society opinion of prospective choices !or
than to the space shield proposal. the bench. It was no surprise,
Or take the way our legal therefore, when Robert Bark was
system Is being politicized. nominated for the U.S. Court of
Heaven knows the liberals have Appeals several years a·go, that '
every right to hang onto contr.ol · the committee unanimously
ot the Supreme Court If they gave this dlsttrigulshed legal
possibly can. We like, naturally, scholar Its highest rating: "Well
to think of the court as above qualified.'-'
politics; but as Tom Anderson
But when Judge Bark was
once- said, th_at's like arguing named by President Reagan to
over Elizabeth Taylor's virtue:
the Supreme Court, and leftist
It's too late for that. Justices pressure groups mounted a .fero·
William Brennan and Thurgood claus attack on him, four of the

NFC Dlvtatolal Playoff
MlnaHOta 31, Su Fraoct.co Z4
Sunda,-'a Reallta ·
NFC IMvlsklna.l Pl.,ofl
Wuhlacton !1, O.lcap n
A.FC IMvlalll•l Pl*fofl

NBA results

Barnard had Introduced legis~
latlon that would create a new
Federal Interagency Appraisal
Council to write uniform appral·
sal standards . and appraiser
·certification requirements.

As a result of liberalism's
spectacular' collapse as a fight·
lng faith, we are witnessing these
days an exceptionally bold at· ·
tempt to co-opt the prestige of
various normally non-political
Institutions. on Its behalf. This
may be of sollle temporary
benefit to liberalism, but It Is
doing grave and perhaps J'astlng I
damage to the Institutions thus t
corrupted': notably science, our
legal system and the mainline
clergy.
Let me stress that ,I level no
criticism at the liberals for
seeking help wherever they can
find it. Politics at a certain level
Is concerned with one question
and one only: "Who shall be
master In the house?" Contend·
ers for that position are not bound
by the Marquis of Queensbeyry
Rules. It Is up to others to defend
their own honor If It Is threatened
In the course of the struggle, and
some of them are falling to do so.
Take the scientists, for starters_. Like the rest of us, scientists
have political opinions. The most
fanatical llbe~als among them

other players, ". said Wilson, a
6-foot-1 senior. "This Is ·a lot
different team than last year. "
Although Ohio State. now 8-5
overall and 1·2 In the Big Ten, led
for most of the game. th~
Buckeyes never were able to
come close to putting the Hawkeyes away. In fact, with 5: 051elt
In the game. they trailed 78-76,
But two free throws by Burson
tied It and a basket by Grady
Mateen put Ohio State In front to
stay. But there were still plenty
of snaky moments ahead,
Iowa missed three consecutive
free !brows In the final 16
seconds, one by B.J. Armstrong,
an 88.6 percent shooter going IIllO
the game, and two by Kept Hill,
who had a chance to tie with five
seconds to play.
Hlll missed, however, and
Mateen was fouled on the fight
for the -rebound. He hit two free

Gregg. named new SMU grid coach

funds."

The rest of the story

-The Daily

Ohio

O.SU five upsets No. 17 l~wa, 87-83

Friday,

good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

• Sir:

Pomeroy-

,,

'

i

34•

...... 31.11
Tone/pulle' dtaHrig.

White, beige or

�·-~--

Page 4 The

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

Sentinel

~-·--''---o-------------.:__-

Pomaroy-Middlapoot, Ohio

Friday, January 16, 1988·

Friday. January 16, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Dayton snaps losing. streak
8y Vnlted Press lnter.oallonal
Dayton's shot selection was
excellent, DePaul's wasn 't and
as a result, the Flyers were able
to e11d their Jo,ngest losing streak
tn 11 years.
Dayton surprised DePaul79-72
Thursday night, ending a six·
game losing streak and handing
the Blue Demons back·to-back
losses lor only the second time In
their eight-year stay at the
Rosemont Horizon.
· .
Dayton, which shqt 64 percent
for the game and 75 percent In the
second half, got 2J. points from
Negele Knight and 20 from
Anthony Corbitt to Improve Its
mark IP.8· 7. DePaul, whjch fell to
8·4, was paced by Terence Green
with 24 and Kevin Edwards with
18.
Rod Strickland, the Blue Dem·
ons' leading scorer, was be.nched
by DePaul coac:h Joey Meyer
after Strlckhmd missed practice
Monday.
·
· Dayton ·coach Don Do!loher
said his Cll!b's defense helped
force DePaul into some longer
shots than the Blue Demons may
have wanted.
"Our defense hasn't been very
good but I'm sure with them
going through the Strickland
bl!siness they missed him,"
Donoher said.
Referring to the school's losing
streak. Its longest since the
1976-77 sel!son, Dono her sighed a
breath of relief:
"We were catching up with
Columbia," said Donoher, refer·
· ring' to Collimbla's NCAA record
·

S. unday's
• k.
p1c s••.

By DAVE RAFFO
VPI Sports Writer
Predictions lor Sunday's NFC
and AFC Champlonsh.Jp Games:
NFC
Minnesota rplus 3) over Washlngton - The Vikings already
have won handilY over two
playoff teams better than the
Redsklns. Blowouts over New
Orleans and San Francisco es·
tablish Minnesota is the hottest ·
team In the NFL.
But winning a conference title
game at Washington will be
tough. The VIkings need to carry
over t.helr magic one more time.
That . means Anthony Carter
mus( have another huge recelv·
Ing game, Wade Wilson has to
keep his hot passing hand and the
defense has to be consistent .
The Redsklns probably aren '1
as good as they were last year
when they lost 17-0 to the New
York Giants In the NFC Cham·
aren
't nearly
as but
goodthe
as the
1986
pionshlp
Game
VIkings
Giants or 1985 Chicago Bears.
Washington and Minneesota
each lack a premier quarterback
and running back and a dominant
defense.
Washington's top defensive
back, Darrell Green, has a rib
Injury that will hinder his cover·
age of'Carter.
The Vikings are hot, and their
entire city Is on a roll. Mlnneapo·
lis is riding the crest of the Twins'
World Series title and the VIkings
wJII at least gefto the Super Bowl
before their bubble bursts.
VIkings 26, Redsklns 20

losing streak In football. "
11·12 lead with i2: 09 le ft In the
For a time in the second hall, It hall.
look~ like the Flyers' would be
DePaul, which shot only 37
grounded by poor free throw percent In the first hall, closed to
shooting. .
·
within 21-20 with 8:59 on a
Leading by nine with 3:25 left , three-point play by Greene. But
Dayton missed the front end or Dayton scored six straight
five straight one-and-ones before points, four by Steve Pittman
Knight sank a pair with I : 19 who had 15, to Increase Its lead to
remaining - to give Dayton a seven points and the Flyers
comfortable 74-69 lead. Knight · maintained the seven .point ad·
was 8 of 11 from the field, 7 of 8 vantage at hallt)me, ·
from the free throw line.
· Elsewhere · Thursday · night, ·
, "We nearly let them In with our VIrginia Tech .defeated Cinelli·
poor free throw shooting,'' Dono· _nat!, 102·97; Ashland nipped
her said. "But Knight hit a lew Bellarmlne CKy .) , 79-75 ln. overwhen .we needed them."
time; Urbana thumped Bluffton,
DePaul shot 45 percent from 94-64; ·and Ohio State downed
the field In the game l)ut only 4 of Iowa, 87 ·83 .
14lrom three-point range.
.
1\tCinclnnatl, Wally Lancaster
'Tm sure we missed some · topped five players In double
dribble·. penetration," said figures with 28 points as VIrginia
M\!yer, whose team lost to Notre Tech held off a Cincinnati rally to
Dame and Cleveland · State In notch its Metro Conference
successive home contests In 1986. victory.
"They shot thehellou~oftheball .
Vernell "Bimbo" Coles added
Give them credit."
21 polnts •. Erlc Sanders had 14,
Meyer refused .to blame the Tim Anderson II and Roy Brow
loss on the decision to b~nch 10 to help tbe Hokles boost their
Strickland, who will start in record to 10-3 overall and 2·1 In
Saturday's game at Notre Dame. the conference. The Bearcats,
"We're not looking for excuses. who got 26 points from Cedric ·
We just have to get up off the mat Glover, fell to 5-6 aryd 1-1.
and go to Notre Dame. We're
going down there to win," he
said.
G.RAVELY TRACTOR
Dayton expanded a 38-29 lead
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Into an 11-polnt advantage, 50-39,
204 Condor St.
·on Corbitt's basket with 14:15
Pomeroy, OH.
remaining. The . Blue Demons
Ntw fall &amp; Wl1tar Hturr
stormed back to close to 58-54 on
Closed Monday
Greene's three-point shot with
Tuesday
thru
Friday 9 a.m.-IS p.m.
9:51 left.
Saturday
9 a. m .-1 D. m.
But Dayton answered by scor·
lng six straight points to take a
~THE
68-571ead with 6:30 remaining.
After spotting the Blue Dem. ons the early lead, Dayton scored
seven straight points to grab a

·
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'

our Winter Clearance

or Bellar usall cars 1

AFC

Cleveland 1plus 3) over Denver
- Assuming the Browns do what
the Oilers failed to- run on the
Broncos - Cleveland will wear
down Denver behind a strong
offensive front and big backs
Kevin Mack and Earnest Byner.
When they must throw, the
Browns can count on Bernie
Kosar to find one of his many
talented receivers.
John Elway.'s scrambling will
be a problem lor Cleveland' s
defensive ends but the Browns
will cover Denver's receivers
long enough to prevent Elway
from hitting his cross-field, on·
the-run deep strikes. Last week,
the Browns Were able to concen·
trate on stopping Eric Dickerson
because Indianapolis lacked a
passing game. This week they
can play soft against Denver and
dare the Broncos to run.
With a more balanced support·
· ing cast, Kosar Is capable of
outplaying Elway and helping
the Browns overturn their over·
time loss to Denver In last year's
AFC Championship Game.
Browns 28, Broncos I7
Best bet ~ Cleveland
Last week - 3·1
Playoffs ·- 4·2
Regtdar season - 84·81·3
Best' bets- 7-6·1

Ironton wants game
Mike Burcham, athletic dlrec·
tor at Ironton High School, Is
looking for any area high school
who Is Interested In fielding a
football team against his Tigers
on Nov. 4.
Pr.lnclpals Interested In sche·
dullng their teams llgalnst the
Tigers may contact. Burcham at
Ironton High School, 1101 s.' 7th
St., Ironton, Ohio 45638, or call
him at 1·532,5235.
I

Malone becomes NBA's lith top .scorer
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Berna rd King scored 2!\ point s topped Atlanta l15·l1 2.
and Jeff Malone added 22 lo r
At Ric hfield, Ohio, Hriid
Washington, which built a 19- Daugherty a nd Ron Harper each
point lea~ In the third quarter. scored 16 points and Crai g Ehlo
The Bucks were led by Ja ck · added a pa ir of free throws with
Slkma's 23 points.
five seconds left in overtime to
In other games . New ,Jef'ey lilt ·the Ca va liers. Micha el J or·
outlasted Sacramento · 90'87, dan , who 'missed a 3-poin t at ·
Clevel;md dumped Chicago 91 ·88 tempt at th e buzzer , led_Chicago
In overtime, Houston downed with 28 points. ·
Portland : 103-98 , and Denver: .

Spencer fourth in loop FG percentage
Angle Spencer, Otterbein jun·
lor center Angle Spencer and a
1985 graduate of Eastern High
School, placed fourth In the Ohio
Athletic Conference in field-goal
percentage at 49.8 percent and
seventh in foul shooting at 72.1

percent . Such shootin g was
partly responsible for the CardJ·.
nals' 5·1 conferenc e mark, good
for a second-place tie with Ohio
Northern . Both teams trai l Mus·. ·
kingum, which is unbea ten in the
conference after li ve league
contest s.

.
'
vance. TM Redmen led by 6 at third In ·3-point field goal percen· . percentage . Young placed sev:
hal(tlme and dominated the 'tage, Is expected to be first off the enth In Ire&lt;' throw perce ntage,
remainder of the game.
bench:
and llth in assists ,
· Expected' to repeat as for Center slot i.s expected to be ·
wards against Walsh will be filled by e ither sophomore Rob
Rittinger ' and Singleton. In the Jackson - who suffered a 1
most recent conference stand· sprained ankle In Tuesday's
SHOTOKAN KARATE
ings - which named Urbana 's game- or jurtorMarc Gothard.
Chuck Lewis as MOC/ District 22 Jackson Is ranked lOth in the
Beginning Classes Starting
Player of the Week - Rlttlnger conference in rebounding.
Thursday, Jan. 21st at
placed first In individual field
Dan Peters' Walsh club. which
7:00 P.M. At Carleton
goal percentage and second in finished 22-10 In 1986·87, is
Sc.hoal in Syracuse.
individual scoring behind An· expected to start junior B.D.
thpny Harris of Urbana . ·
· .Buda and sophomore Chris
For Information Call 992-6839
Anthony Raymore and Jim Fields· as forwards. Anticipated
After 6:00P.M. or 992-5896
Kearns are starters as guards . · to start as guards are sopho·
Instructors:
The · MOC ranked Raymore se· mores Jeff Young and Shawn
Mick
Howoll,
Black lelt
cond In field gol!l percentage and Gamble. Center will be Eric
Ed Cozart, llack Belt ·
sixth in assists, with KParns Manley., a 6-R sophomore.
John
Btavor, Black Belt
placing seventh on assists.
The MOC placed Buda eighth
Guard Brian Watkins, listed in the conlerenve in field
'

ter another In a series of
Mld·Ohlo Conference battles Sat -·
urday at 7:30p.m. when they lace
Walsh In Canton.
The Cavaliers, 12·5over~lland
5·0-ln the MOC alter Tuesday 's
94-73 defeat of Ohio Dominican in
Columbus, are first In the confer·
ence. Rio Grande, 14·5 and 4-1 ,
and Malone, 8-8 and ·4-1, are in
contention for second place.
The Redmen advanced within
. the conference alter Tuesday's .
90.-78 · victory over Urbapa at ·
Lyne Center. Seniors Ron Rittin· .
ger and Ray Singleton each
mounted a scoring assault. as .
Rininger posted a game high of
32 points and Singleton added 20
to
Urbana's first hall

"';:::::::::::::::=::::;1

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~ Rio Grande's Redmen encoun-

'
. .HODGES GOES UP - Craig H~dces (15) of t~e Milwaukee
: Buc]ls goes up to !!CO~ as W~~Shlngton BuUetll' forward John
1 Williams tries to . bl'ock Hodges' shot In the· lint quarter of.
:,n,ursday airht'a game In Landt&gt;ver, Md. (VPI)

,

-

Redmen clash with MOC leader Walsh

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1984 Pontiac·Bonvlle, white, air, doullle power ..•...... '5995
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.

By COLLINS YEARWOOD
Malon e~urpa ~sedGeorge Ger ·
UPI Sports Writer
vin on the ·scoring list when ~e
Moses Malone, who has spent made !tis first basket. Malone
his entire adult life playing pro has 20.743 points in hi s 12 NBA
basketball , says retire ment can seasons .
wait .
•
"I've been in a groov&lt;' rror1 14
Malone. playing in his 14th years, " Malone said . '' My main .
professional season , mo;.•ed Into concern Is wi Jtning."
11th plac&lt;' on the NBA 's 'career
Washington Coach Wes Un scoring list when he hit fo r a seld, who took over lor ·Kevin
season· high 36 points in powering Loughery on J&lt;~n. 3, has slmpli the Washington Bullets to a fled the Bullets' offense and
136-107 victory over the Mllwau - allowed the the team to run.more.
kee Bucks,
Washington . 11 -20 and In third ·
- _"I'm 32, " said Malone, who place In the. Atlantic Division, ·
began his pro career with the has a 3·1 record under Unseld .
ABA 's Utah Stars in 1974 after
"I thought Moses was just
completing high school. " You all . un~llevable ,". Unseld said , "'If
might think It 's time for me togo, he son a mlss10n, I want to find .
but I still think I've got a little out what It Is. He's· been playing
strength in the legs."
great on both ends.. "

'

1

Preferred by Juncos, Cardinals, Sparrows,
Brown Headed Cowbirds, also Grackles, MornIng Doves and Finches.

The Daily Sentinel-Page- S

$f9S~H

' ANGIE YOVNG
BETH BLAINE
RIO CHE)';RLEADERS ...:. ~~h Blaine, douchter of Mrs. Sue ,
.i........a"'"rojaa• illllke Bialae of Galllpollll, Ia a oophomonl'ln ·
Iier second year ~ cheerleader for Rio Grand~ CoUege. The .
younlie'l' Blaine, majoring Ia accounllnlf, ' Ia a 11186 gi'iduate or
Meigs Hl.gh School. Angle Young, daugh~r of ..,bert ond Barbara
Voung •of Reedsvlllf, Is one of tbe newest memben or the Rio
Grande cheerleadlng squad. She Is a 1986 graduate of Eastern High
School.
·

(

Rio
Redwomen .
•
elJge Urb~a . five
•

Everythlngpointedtoahungry the Lady Blue Knights.
Urbana team winning Thurs· · Fleljtz ·was . pleased with the
day's Mid-Ohio Conference game performance by Mullins, who
with the Rio Grande Redwomen ·notched up 24 points. ·had 11
at Lyn~ Center, but a strong rebounds, and was 100 percent on
offense land high free throw free throws t8 of 81 and 3-polnt
percentage enaiJied Rio Grande field goals 12 of 2). Halley added
to defeat the Lady Blue Knights 14 points to her record as one of
60-56.
the Redwomen's top scorers this
"We played just good enough to season.
win," Redwomen Coach Cheryl
From the field, Rio 9rande
Fielltz said. "Our full -court press sank 16 of 56 attempts lor 28
won us the ball game. We also percent, but was better pn the
shot excellent from the lrC'c free throw line, nettlngl0of24for
throw line, so that was a key." . 79 , percent. Urba1.a was 46
Urbana Coach Cindy
percent on field goals 127 of 58
McKnight also credited Rio attempts) and had 2 of Its 4 tries
Grande's offense for thP win; at the charitY line succeed for 50
noting t.h at her team played Its ~rcent.
.·
best game of the season.
The Redwomen travel to Co"We did a nice job of capita liz· Iumbus Saturday lor a 3 p.m .
ing when they pressed us, but we game against Ohio Dominican,
gave up three 3-polnt shots and while Urbana hosts Tiffin.
that hurt," she said.
RIO GRANDE (80) - Holly
The victory gave the Redwo- Hastings. 2·1·5; Lea Ann Mullins,
men their first MOC win of the !it21·8·24; Renee Halley, 6·2-14;
season and boosted their record Beth Coli, 1 (1 H -9; Billie Jo
. to)l-5 o~erall. Urbana goes to 2-9 Stephenson,, 0·4-4; Cllrl~ Willi·
overall and Is winless In four ams,l·0-2; Lelsa Anderson, 1·0.2.
st;~rts . agall}st conference
TOTALS 16(3)·19-410.
opponents.
VRB~NA (58) - Tracy Red·
Spurfl'd by a 71·50 loss to ding, 6-0.12; JeanTwehues,3·0·6;
·Mount Vernon Nazarene last Kelly Smith, · 5·0·10; Cathy·
Saturday , Urbana took the floor Belcher, 3-2-8; Ann Frldenand seated quickly on baskets by maker, 10·0'20. TOTALS ~'7-2-56.
Jean Twehues, Tracy Redding ·
and Ann Frldenmaker, building
~
a 7-polnt advantage (10·3) before year
a -pair Of free throws from Beth
Coil and two 3-polnt field goals by '· DETROIT cUP]) - Detroit
Coli and Renee Halley tied It up Tigers Manager Sparky Ander·
with 10: ~8 left. Urbana later son, who last season led his club
regained the lead and lleld onto It io Its second American League
to post a 30.27 margin at the half.
East Chanlplonshlp In the last .
Rio Grande's press re-asserted four years, has been.. given a ·
Itself after Holly Hastings an(l two-year extension on' his con·
L&lt;•a Ann Mullins slowly caught tract, the team announced
.up with and overtook Urbana Thursday.
(5J.501 with 4:12 remaining on a . Anderson, 53, had a year
Mullins basket.
remaining on his 'current con·
.frldenmaker then scored 2 to tract, and tht! extension will keep
put Urbana .ahead, but a Halley hi~ with Dt!trolt through the 1990
field goal and a J.potnter from . season.
Mullins. with. 2: 23 left put the · In his nine years with the
game back Into Rio Grande's
Tigers, Anderson has a 748·600 .
nands.
record. Overall, he lsl&amp;ll·ll!ll\ln
"I have to give them credit, 18 years II a manapr.
they came baCk," McKnl&amp;ht aald
. l.aat ll!a1011, Allderson guided
of Rill Grande, addlna that Dftrolt fl'Oin 11,_ out of!Jrst
Frtdetllllak41r, who scored- 2CI J.llace In May to W'tn tbllt AL Easl
polnts.loiHdherte&amp;rnmates,dld,. wltb a l&amp;lheooM. Tile TI1ers
· an · 'e~Uenl jOb." l\eddlnr bad JOlt le lbe Ml••ota Twins In the
12 an.-.KeUy Smith adchd 10 for pl&amp;yOffl f IIIMI to 1.

Sparky ·ael8 two
extension .

i l- .

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Allololo

.__c-.,..., Northlmlok, IL

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Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Janu.y 16, 1988

Pomeloy Middleport, Ohio

•

7 fXrERIENCE THf JOY Of-RELIGION

~y

The Daily Sentinel

The Bend

Friday, January 15, 1988

Page-7

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
Crow'"s Fam1~ Restaurant
,,.,.,l•t l&lt;••ltl ~ F11•i Chld11
228 W Mam t, Pomeroy

992-5432

I
I

FRANCIS FLORIST

r

\111p.

( o ml' ~ ()f It r f
3~2 EAST MAIN

I

Jrl~l

POMEROY OHIO 45769
614 / 992 2644

RIDENOUR

FURNI~!e~!RDWAR~I
Home hie Saws

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MEIGS nRE
~ \ CENTER, INC.

"

(
)
I
i

Cllolr rt'he&gt;arsaJ Thesday 7 :n p m uroer dl

rectlon of Lois Burt

POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA
RENE COrner Union and Mul!rrry Rev
Tix:lmas Glen McCJu~ pastcr Norman Pres
II')' S S Sup Su !~lay School 9: :II a m.
morning worship 10: Jl a m ("118'11n~ servil'l' fi
p m rnld-'Nl'ek servicl:&gt; Wedne;day 7 p.m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH D; E
Main St Pomeroy Sunday services Holy
commurion on tOO ftrst Surday ofPach mont)\
and comlined wtth morling prayer on fhi_)
third.SU rd&lt;\Y Mornlng praye-r and sermon on
all OIB":&gt;r Sundays of th? month. Church SchoO
and Nur.il'ry care prwirEd. CollEt' lnlr tn r~
Parish Hall inmediately foUowtngtlr servlct:'
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Main St Leo Nash. evanW!Ilst Bl~e Schod
9 ]) am Morringworshlp.10 lJ am Youth
meet in~ 6 00 p.m E.\ening worship 7 00 p
m Wedn~ nigh IJ'aycrmeE'tl'lgandBiblestWy 7 00 p.m
TilE SALVATION ARMY 1l5 Butteroot
Aw Pomeroy Mrs Dora Wining In char~
Sllnday ho nes&lt;&gt; meeting. 10 a m Sunday
School 10 D a m Surw:tay School YPSM
Eloise Adams leadrr 7 J) p.m Salvation
meetlnF,. \ark&gt;us s~akm; and music spx'lal.&lt;t
Thu &amp;lay 1l :1) a m fo 2 p m Ladle; Homf.'
Leagut&gt; mm.rers In char~ aU wcmen
lnvltOO G45 p m Thu~...._ Corp; Cadet
Classs You~ Peope-Bi~l) p m Bible
StWy and Pr-&lt;lyer ITK'EtinR. open o tte public
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHUROJ OF
Offit':iT 33Zl6 Childn:&gt;n s Home Road tCourty
Road 76 992 ~ Vocal music SuOOay Wor
si)1l10 a m BibleStlllytlam Wor.;hlp.llp
m We&lt;kl003Y Ettie Shdy 7 p.m
OLD DEX'l'ER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH Alvin Cur11s pastoc L nda S\ol;an
su~ suooey SC'hool9 JJ am pr'l'achln~ser
v1ces first and thlrdSUrxlL\Y folk:lwingSurrlay
School Youth meeting. 7 .ll pm e\ery Sunday
GRAHAM
U NITE D METHODIST
Pr C'ach ng9 Vla m fir s and second Sun
da v~ of f'ach month lh rd a nd fou r h Sun
dav ra ch mon h " o rshlp Sl'f\ ICf'sa 7 30p
m WPdnrsdav 1 V£'nln~s a 7 30 p m
P aH• and B bl£' S ud v
SEVENTH DAY ADVE NTIST
Mul
ben y H ('\~ ht s Road Pomt'roy Pas or
Jot'ln S" e gart Sabba h School Supcrln
te nd en Darhne Stf:'wart Sabbat h Schoo
bc~m!; al 2 p m on Saturday af ernoon
v. th v. ors h p serv cc fol ow ing at 3 15p m
EvC'r~ one welco me
RUT! AND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- S s c Ha r e ll Warn('r Sup Sunda\Scho(J 9 :W a m Morning Wors hip 10 45

m

MIDDlE PORT CHURCH OF IHR IST
IN CHRISTIAN UN IOI\ 0....1!:!1# Ha lf'\
H" &lt;'l dN Wanda Mohlf' Sun la v 51'-hocll
Sup Sundav SchOo 9 II am .... Morn OJ!
\.\or~h

p 10 30 am

E en ng Y.. o sh p 7 lfl

p m Y\: l'(ln&lt;'s Ia'! p u\c ffi £'(' ng 7 30p m
MT MORI AH CHURCH OF GOD
R t nf' Rl'\ J mcs Sa te rf e d pas lo
f f('('m n \\ill a ms Sup1 Su ndav School
9 45 1 m Sunda v and \\ r'dn('sd&lt;tv (' £' n
ng S&lt;'I I C&gt;s 7 pm
MIDDLEPO RT FIRST BAPTI ST
Cor nf'r Sixth nd Pi! m&lt;' Jamf's SNidon
Pas o Edna W son S S Sup! C&lt;t thy
R ggs Ass Su pi Sunday School 9 IS a
m Morn n~ Wors hip 10 !Sa m Sund.- v
EHnin~ S('rV Cf' 7 p m Prayt'r m£'C'IIn g
u nd B blr S ud y Wl'dnf' sdav even ng- 7 p
m Ch lr.l t'R c hoir pract ce Wf'rl n£'s
da v 7p rri
\du ltc hol p1arlkr WNI R
pm
Rad lo p o~ am WMPO Sunday
8 30am
...
MIDDLE PORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
5th and Ma n A Hart son min !Her
Ri cha rd DuBo!ie Assoc ate Pas or Mik e
.,. GPr lach Sunda y Sc:hool Superlnlf'ndent
Blblf.' School9 30 a m Morning Worship
10 30 a m Evening Worship 7 00 p m
Wedn~day 7 00 p m Prayer meet n~
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE PASTOR Fred Pe nhorwood
Bill Whit e Sunday School Sup1 Su nday
SchOo 9 JO a m Mornin$ Worship 10 45
~ am
Evangellst c m eeting 7 00 p JTl
,. Wednesda y 7 00 p m P r ayer m eellng

•

UNITED PRI!SBYTERIIIN MINJSmY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Rev Charla Talbett
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sunday Worship Services
9 00 am Church Schod 10 15a m
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN • Sunday School 9 am Church service
i 10 15 am
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY
i
TERJAN Sunday School• 10 a m
Church service 11 J5 am
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Past or
, John Evans Sunday School 10 00 a m
Sun~ay Mornlftg Worshtp 11 00 am Chll
4 dren .s Church 11 a m Sunday Evening
ServlcP 7 00 p m Wed 6 p m....Young La
diet Auxllary Wednaday 1 p m Fam
llv Worship

997 3325

[B

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

115 E Mtfllor•l Or

P0111tn1y

FRANKliN liVED THE UFE HE
PRESCRIBED FOR EACH OF US

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

achteve worldw1de fame m so many ways as d1d
Ben1amm Franklin whose blfthday occurs th1s week
He was renowned as a statesman of mternat!Onal
stature He veri£1ed the exiStence of electrtaty by
flymg a k1te m a thunderstorm Perhaps most of all,
he left us his reqJe for a better life, whrch IS as valid
today as eve~ It mduded thrift temperance, sens1ble
hours and makmg the best use of the 11me of which
our lives are made We should all follow hiS adv1ce,
but unfortunately many of us don't, until we try to
buy back our health and then fmd out that It's too
late At your House of Worship, thank God for a
man like Ben1amm Franklin, whose legacy helped to
g1ve us our freedom many of our comforts and
convemences and the formula for a long~ life m
which to enJOY them

s•H Ston.

104 E MAIN ST, POMEROY

992-2815
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH 011
Rl 124 3 miles trom Portlan~ Long Bot
tom Edse-l Harl pastor Sundav School
9 30 a m Sunday morning preaching
tO 30 a m Sunday evPning SE'rvices 7 :m
pm
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Herrmann pastor Sunday SChool10 OOa
m Morning Worsh p lt 00 a m Wed
nesday and Sa turday Evening Services a
730pm

SOUmERN CLUSTER
Rev Roa:er Grace
Kev PlWI McGulre
Rev KeUh Rader
APPt E GROVE - Church School 9 30
a m Worship 10 00 a m fflrsl and third
Sundays) Bible study t&gt;very Sunday 6 p
m UMW S£'cond Tuesday 7 00 p m
Praypr meeting Wednesday 6 p m
(Grace\
BETHANY - Worship 9 a m Churth
SchOol 10 a m Bible Study Wednesday
10 a m
Dorcas Women s Fellowship
Wednesday 11 a m (McGuire-)
CARMEL - Church School 9 30 a m
Worship 10 45 a m Se-cond and Fourth
Sund~ys Fellow~hlp dinner With Sutt oo
third Thursday 6 30 p.m (McGuire)
EAST LETART- ChurchSchoa9a m
Worship 10 am second and fourth Sun
days UMW tlrst Tuesday 7 :rl p m
(Grace)
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 am
Church SchoollO a m (Grace'
MORNJNGSTAR-Worahlp 9 45a m
Church Scbod 10 30 am Bible STudy
Thursday, 7:30pm (Rader)
RACINE WESLEYAN- Church Schoa
10 a m Worship 11 a m UMW fourth Monday at 7 l'1 p m Mens Prayer Breakfast
Wednesday 7 am (Craee)
SUTI'ON - Church SchOol ~ 30 a m
Mornlni' Worship 10 4~ a m first and third
SUhdaya Fellowship dinner '(VIth Car mel
thlr'd Thursday i 30 p m ( MeG~ Ire)

By BOB HOEFLICH
Seattael staff
Live with It' You gotta be
klddl!l&amp;
/
With everyone
having rights
up to their eye: brows these
• days I lind It
' Incredible that
all o! the people
~rtlcularly In the Middleport
area whose homes are being
shook up oil a dally basts
allegedly by mining operations In
the C!Uton W Va area are
expected to live with It
However, that s the word re
celved by Middleport Mayor
Fred Ho!!man from Michael J
Mann division of reclamation o!
the Ohio Department or Natural
Resources New Phlladephla
Ohlo

'

Brown's rre &amp;
and
EqUI"pmenl Sales
servrce
Rulland Oh1o 45775

J

wm

Btll

Brown Owner

pnooe UT4l 742 2777

786 NORTH SECOND AVE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

flOWEIS 101 EYIIT OCCAIIDN
16141992-~039 or

16141992·$721

I06 luttJ&lt;nul Au. Po-oy Oh

Few people throughout hiStory have managed to

CHAPMAN SHOES

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Boa Archer
Rev Roy Deeter
Rev Seldon 'ohnson
ALFRED - Church School 9 30 a m
Worship 11 a m UMYF 6 30 p m UMW
Th rd Tuesday 7 30 p m Communion
first Sunday Arch er!
CHESTER - Worsh p 9 a m Church
Scho(lllOa m BlbleStudy Thu r sday 7p
m UMW first Thursda y 1 p m Com
munlon first Sunday Archer
JOPPA - Worsh p 9 30 am Ch urch
Sct\oollO 30 a m 8\b\eStudy Wednesday
7 30 p m Johnscrl\
I ONG BOTTOM - Church School 9 30
a m Worship 7 p m Bible Study Wed
nl"Sda y 7 30 p m UMY F Wf'dnesday
6 00 p m
Co mmunion First Sunday
(Archer)
REEDSVILLE- Church School9 30a
m Worsh p Service 11 OOa m (De-ele
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Chu rch School 9 am Worship 10 a m
Blb\p Study Tuesday 7 30 p m UMW
Th rd Tuesday 7 30 p m Communion
r st Sunday tAr&lt;'her
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev James E Corbitt
Rev Klllld)' Bun:h
Rev Melvin Franklin
Re\ Clemente S Zualga Jr
Rev Robert Mussmu
ASBURY (S} 1 acusc 1 - V.o1 ship 11 a m
Church School 9 45 a m Char~€- Bible
Study W('dnE'Sday 7 30 p m UMW f1 st
Tuesday 7 30 p m
Choir Rehearsal
Wedn esd ay 6 30 p m UMW fourlh Sun
dav G 30 p m Burch)
ENTERP,RISE - Wm sh1p 9 am
Church School lOam BiblpStudv Tues
day 7 Kl p m UMW F r s Monday 7 30
p m UMY F Sunda~ 6 p m Choi r Re
hear sa l 6 30 p m Wednesday tFra nkllnl
FLATWOODS- Church &amp;hool lOam
'o\orshlp 11 am B ble Stud:,. Thurs
daY 7 p m
UMYF Sunday 6 p m
(f ank In
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m
Chu rch Sc hool 10 AM Choil pra cl ('('
Tucsdav 6 30 p m UMW firs Tursdav
7 30 p m Burch
HEATH {Middl&lt;&gt;por)- t:hurch Sc hool
9 :JO a m Mm nlng Worship 10 :10 &lt;:1 m
Youth Group 4 p m Wednf'Sduy Church
Thursday
Cho l 1 ehrursal .. p m
P aver Se~v 1ce 6 30 p m BiblE' Study 7
p m Zuniga )
MINERSVILLE - Worship Service 10
a m Church Schoo 11 a m UMW thi rd
Wedne;d ay 1 p m Choir pracllce Mon
Cla Y 7 30 p m Burch
PEARL CHAPE L - Wor ship Service
9 30 a m
Chu rch School 10 15 a m
UMW Seco nd Tuesdav 7 3(l p m (Muss
m an)
POMEROY - Churc h School 9 15 a m
Worship 10 30 a m Choir rehcar.sal
W£'dnE'Sday 7 30 p m
UMW st"cond
Tuesdav 7 30 p m UMYFS undav 6p m
tCorbU I)
ROCK SPRINGS- Chu rc h School 9 15
am Worshi p JO a m Bible Studv W£'d
nesda y 7 30 p m UMYF tSen ors) Sun
day 5 p rn tJunlors ('\t'r\o other S un
day 6 p m Fra nklin
RUTLAND - Church School 10 a m
Worship ll a m UMW F r s Monday
7JOpm
SALEM CENTER- Church Schoo19 15
am Wor sh p 10 15 p m !Mussman )
SNOWVTLl E - Worship 9 00 a m
church school9 45 am ]Mus sman)

'

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

GrocerresGeneral Merchand1se
R.Jcine 949 2S50

Qllllllg

I-.

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST Vernon
Eldridge minister OUver Swain Sunday
School Supt Preaching 9 30 a m each
Sunday
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Georg•
Anedo pastor Sunday service 9 30 am
PVE&gt;nlng service 7 30 p m Pray£'r ml'eting
Wednes~av 7 30 p m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST J oseph B Hoskins pastor Bible
Class 9 30a rn Mornin~Worshlp10 30a
m Evening Worship 6 30 p m Thursday
Bible Study 6 30 p 0').
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
CHURCH Sunday School service 9 45 a
m
Worship s£'rVICf' 10 30 a m
Evange- lstlc Service 7 30 p m Wednes
day Praye meeting 7 30 p m Thursday
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomerov
HarrtsmvlliE&gt; Rd Robert Purtell mints
ter SteveS anley S S Supt Bill McEI
ro~ Ass! Supt Sunday School9 30 a m
Worship serv ce 10 30 a m Evening wor
shlpSunday7pm !J. ndWed nesd ay 7p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Pln p
trove The RPv William Mlddl£'1iwarlh
pastor Church serv ice 9 30 am Sunday
School10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST
John Wright past or Sunday Schoo19 30a
m Larry Hay nes S S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rev Loyd D Crimm Jr pastaOra Bass Chairman of the Board of Chris
t tan llf£' Sunday School 9 30 a m Morn
lnJZ \\. Orshlp 10 30 am C\a n~el\ sllc S£'r
vice 7 00 p m Wt'dnr:sday service 7 p.m
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH O.x
ter Woody Call pastor Services Sunday
10 a m and 7 p m Wednesday 7 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST
StPVP
Deaver Pastor Mike Swiger. Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Mornln~ worship 10 40 a m
Sunday
even ng wor shi p 7 30 p m Wednesday
evening Bible study 7 30 p m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH
Burlingham Ra} LaudermUI pastoc Ro
bert Cozart assistant ):liS\or Surday School
10 am worship 7 p.m Wednesday 6 p m
you hmK'tinl'r. Wed 7pm churchSE'fV!ces
PINE GROVC HOLINESS CHURCH \\
mt eo ff Rt 325 R&lt;'v Sen J Watts pastor
Robcrl St:~&lt;Jrl&lt;'S S S Sup! Sunday School
9 30 a m Morninp; Worship 10 30 a m
Sunday l'VPnlng servicf' 7 30 p m Wed
nesday service 7 30 p m
SILVER RUN BAPTIST Bill Ll!tlP
pas or ~tev£&gt; Little S S Supt Sunday
School 10 a m Morning worsip 11 a m
Sunday evening worship 7 30 p m Prayer
meet in~ and Bibl£' study Wednesday 7:30
pm YouthmeetingWednl'5dayat7pm
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N 2nd Ave Middleport Sunday
School 10 a m Sunday evening 7 00 p m
Mid week service Wed 7 p m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHIJRCH
Robert E Musser pastor Sunday School
9 30 am Paul Musser supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m Sunday £&gt;Venlng ser
viet' 7 p m mid wef'k service Wrones
day 71Jm
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE Rev Glenn McMillan pastor
Mary Janice Lavende-r Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Morning
worship 10 30 a m Evangelistic service
6p m PrayPrandPraiseWednesday 7p
m Youth meeting 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST Elden R Blake pa.stor Sunday
School. 10 a m Gary Rel'd Lay leadl'l'
Morning s ermon 11 a m Sunday nlsht
services Christian Endeavor 7 30 p m
Song sPrvlce 8 p m Preaching 8 30 p m
Mid week prayer meeting Wedne~day 7

pm

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Rog
er Watsm pastor Crensm Pratt Sunday
School Supt Morning Worthlp 9 30 a m
Sunday School 10 ~ a m Evening ser
vice 7 30 p m
MT UNION BAPTIST Donald Shue
pastor: Joe Sayre Sunday School Supt
Sunday School 9 45 a m EVl"nlng wor
ship 6 30 p m Prayer Meeting 6 30 p m
Wedneaday
TUPPERS PLAiriS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Dave Prentice mlnlster Deryl
Wells Supt Church SchoQl 9 a m Wor
ship Service 9 4~ p m
CHESTER CHIJRCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rev Herbert Grate patter
Frank Riffle supt Sunday !k:hool9 30 a
m Worship service 11 a m and 7 p m
Sunday Wednsday 7 p m Prayer meet

tnt

AUREL CUFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH David Bell paator Robert E
Bartm Director ot ChrlltLan Education
Steve Eblin aulltant Sunday School I ao
a m Morning wcnblp 10 30 a m Teen.
InAction 6pm Evenl~t~Worahlp 7 OOp
m Wednetday evenln1 prayer and Bible
1tudy 7 OOp m Choir practice Thurlday
7pm
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
Charlet Rus~ll Sr minister Rick Ma

comber

1upt Sun&lt;lay School 9 30 a m

Worshi p servlct&gt; lUau am Bible study
Tuesday 7 30 p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHR ISTOFLATTERDAYSAINTS Port
land Racine Road William Roush pastor
Linda Evans church school director
Chureh school9 30 a m Morning worship
10 30 a m Wednesday l"vening prayer
servl res 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST RPV Earl
Shuler pastor Worship service 9 30a m
Sunday Schoo110 30" m BiblE" Study and
~rayl'f Sf'rvl('(' \hursday 7 30 p m
~ CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION
AL CHURCH Klnpbury Road Rev
Clyde- W He-ndersoo pastor Sunday
School 9 30 a m Ralph Cari.Supt Eve-n
ing wor ship 7 00 p m Praypr m eellnfZ:
Wedn£&gt;Sday 7 00 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN VPrnon
Eldr dge pastor Wall ce Damewocd S
S Supt Sunday School9 30 a m Worship
Service 10 30 a m
HYSELL RUN HOl !NESS CHURCH
0 H Carl pastor SundaySchoolat9 30a
m Morning worship a 10 30 a m Sun
day I'Vf'nin~ st rvlre at 7 30 p m Thursday
services at r 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al Bald
Knob located on County Road 31 Rev
Lawrpnce GiuC"S cncamp past or Rev
RO!itfl Willford asst pastor Preachlnf{
services Sundav 7 30 p m Prayl'r meeting
Wedn£&gt;Sday 7 30 p m
Gary Grlffll h
leader Youth groups Sunday evening a
6 30 p m with Roger and Violet Willford
leaders Communion serv ice firs t Sunday
each month
WHITE S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH -Coo vUie RO Rev Phillip Rl
denour pastor $unday School 9 30 a m
worship servlc£&gt; 10 lO a m Bible study
and worship servicl' Wednesday 7 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
Bill Cartrr pastor Sunday School 9 30 a
Morning Worship and Communion
m
10 30 a m
RU fLAND BIBLE METHODIST Amos
Tillis pastor Sonny Hudson supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m Mornlnt~: worship, 10 30
a m Sunday e-vening se-rvice 7 00 p m
Wednesday serviM- 7 p m WMPO pre;
gram 9 a m each Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Samuel Basye pastor Sunday
Schoci 9 30 a m Worship SE'rvlce 10 30 a
rn
Young peoples service 6 p m
Evangeilstlcservlce6 30p m Wednesday
service 7 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Mllll'r
St Masoo W Va Sunday BihleStudy 10
a m Worship 11 a m and 7 p m Wednes
day Blbl p Study vocal music 7 p m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD Dud
ding Lane Masoo W Va J N Thacker
pastoc Evening servlc£' 7 30 p m Wo
men s Mlnlsh"Y Thursdav 9 30 a m
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study 7 15

pm

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartford W Va
Rev Davkt McManis pastor Church
School 9 30 a m Sunday mornlna ser
viC£&gt; ll a m Sunday eve-nlnif servlt't'
7 :\Opm We-dnt'hr.laypraye-rmMing 7 30
pm
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHIJRCH ~ar1
W Va Rt 1 James Lewis pastor Wor
ship !K'rvices 9 30 a m Sunday School11
a m Evening worship 7 :wt p m Tuesday
cotta~e prayer meeting and Bible Study
9 30 a m Worship service Wedne&amp;day
7 30pm
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH
Walnut and He-nry Sts Ravenswood W
Va The Rev Geollt'e C Weirick pastaSunday SChool9 30 a m Sunday worship
llarn
CALVARY ruBLE CHURCH located on
Pomeroy Pike County Road 25 near Flat
woods ~ Blackwood poster services
on Sunday atlO :.. a m and 7 30 p m with
Sunday School9 30 a m BlbteSiudy Wed

nesday. 7 30 p m

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST Sf Rt 3:18 AntiqUity Rev
Franklin Dickens pastor Sunday mom
lng 10 a m Sunday evening 7 XI p m
Thursday evening 7 30 p.m
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BIJ'
TIST CHURCH Paat or Robert B)'I!I"B
Sunday SchoollO a m Worship service 11
a m "Sunday evening service 7 30 p m
Wednesday ev•nlnl oervlce 7 30 p. m
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI
NESS CHURCH Inc 7~ Pearl St Rev
Ivan Myers actlnapatt« RoaerManley
Sr ilun&lt;lay Scllool Superlaltndeot Sun
day Schod 9 ~ • m Mom1n1 worahlp
10 30 a m evenlna wonhlp 7:30 p m
Wedne.day evenln1 Bible lludy prayer;
and praise service T 10 p m
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOLIC - VanZandt and Ward Rd Elder
James Mlll« puler SUn&lt;lay School
10 30 a m Worllljlllervlce SundaY 7 30
pIll Blblt St.!!.'!f.J.!'.!'!"~· 7:30p.m
CALV~Y &gt;'IIAIIU• CHAPEL Harrl
smvtlle R.INid Rev Dowoy Klq putor:
Cltntm P'aolll llwlday lkllool Supt Sun

This Is Mann s communlca tlon
to Mayor Halfman
This Is a !oll6w up to our
phone conversation of January 7
1988 relative to your concern
about blasting vibrations gener
ated by a mining operation In
West VIrginia
Unfortunately our blasting
regulations are not applicable to
an out of state mining operation
However two agencies which
may have jurisdiction In this
case are the U S Orrtce of
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement (OSMRE) and the
West VIrginia Department Qf
Energy OSMRE s Columbus
field ortfce may be reached at
614 866 0578 The WV Depart
ment of Energy's Charleston
o!flce may be reached at 304 348
3500
For your Information sets
mograph monitoring of over six
thousand blasts In Ohio has
shown that at a distance o! about
2 mlles !rbm the blast area to
your community the vibration
may be highly annoying but
would normally be tar below the
1~1 llmll
(West VIrginia s
~'fii~Jif!,'t;rn ~~~l!llla~ ~tq O)!lc)' ~ l
Legai vlbrat on levels are often
readlly !ell by people Inside
homes and can even be enough
to cause loose objects (e g
dishes knickknacks wall
hangings etc ) to rattle or move
without causing major structural
damage

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
&amp;111 Qutekel and luth Arm fo•
daySChool9 30a m morning worship 11
am Sunday PVf'ning servlre 7 30 p m
Prayer MPE'tlng WNinesday 7 30 p rn
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
non Pentecostal Worship servi(.'(' Sunday
10 am Sunday School 11 am Evenlnlt
worship service- 7 00 p m Wednesday
praye-r mPet lnR 7 00 p m
MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH Located In Texas
Community ort Ct Rt 82 Re-v Robert
Sanders pasl« Jeff Holter lay Ieeder
Ed Roush Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m morning worShip and
chlldrPn s churt'h 10 30 am
evening
preaching serviCf' first three Sundays
7 30 p m Special servlc(l fourth Sunday
evening 7 30 p m
Wf'dnl"Sday Prayer
Meeting Bible- Studv and Youth Fellow
ship 7 30om
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
Located on 0 J WhitE' Road of Highway
160 Pat Hensoo pastor Sunday School10
a m Classes for all ages Junior Church U
a m Morning worship 11 a m Adull
Choir practice 6 p m Sunday Yountt PPO
pie-s Children s Churoh and Adult Bibtr
Study Wednesdav at 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL 570 Grant
St Middleport Affiliated With South£1rn
Baptist Convl'ntlon David Bryan Sr Ml
nlsier Sunday School 10 a m Mornln~
worship 11 am Evt"nlng worship 7 p m
Wednesday eyenlDil , Bible sJudy and
oraver M('l('tlnr 7 b m
BRADFORDCHURCHOFCHRIST St
Rt 124 and Co Rd 5 Mark St'evers minis

ter Sunday School Sup! Harrv Hen
drlt'k s SundaySchool9 3D am Morning
Worship 10 30 a m Evt:~ning- worship 7 p
m \\iPdnPSdav w ors hip 7 p m
ST
Corner
m eroy
pastor
sprvlce

PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sycamor£&gt; and Second Sts PoTht&gt; RE"v William Mldelleswart
Sundav School 9 45 a m Church
11 a m

SACRED
HEART CHURCH Msgr
AnthonyGiannamort' Ph 9925898 Satur
day Evening Ma;iS 7 30 p m Sunda\
Mass 8 a m and
a rn ConlE'Sslons onl"
half hour before f'ach Mass CCDclassps
11 am Sundav
VIcrORY BAPTIST 525 N 2nd St
Middlepo1t James E Keesee pastor
Sunday morning worship 10 a m Even
ing service 7 p m
WC'dnesday &lt;&gt;venlng
worshlp7pm VisllatlonThursday630p
m
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH Dav ld
Curfma n pastor Sunday School JO am
worship servlcl' 11 a hl Sunday night
worship servlc£&gt; 7 30 p m
Mldwe-rk
prayer service Wedn es day 7 p m
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH of Middi('J)Orl Inc 75 Pearl Sf
Re\ Ivan MyPrs pastor Roa£~r Manley
Sr Sunday School Supt Sunday School
9 30 am Morning Worship 10 30 am
EvPnlng Wor!iihlp 7 30 p m Wednesd ay
evenln~ Bible s udy prayrr and pralsf'
s('rvtce 7 30 p m

ro

LIVING WORD CHE!tTER CHURCH
Gllber Sp('f'lcer paM or Sun
day School 9 30 a m Morning !WrVI('('
10 OOa m Sund&lt;~ye ... cn lnRstrYI('('7 OOp
m Mid week prayer S('fVk'(&gt; Wednesday
7 pm
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH
LawrenC&lt;' Bush pastor Max Folmer Sr
Supt Sunday School ~ nd Morning Worship
9 :lOam Sundayf'venlngservtce 7p m
You h m eeting and Blblt' Studv Wt'dnes
day 7pm
UNITED FAITH CHURCH Rt 7 on Po
mcroy By Pass Rev David Wiseman Sr

OF GOD

pastor Melvin DrakE' S S Supl Sunday
Sehool9 30 a m Morn In~ Worship 10 30
Evening Worship 7 30 p m Wednesday
Prayf'r service 7 JO p m
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH Rallr,.d
St Mason Sunday School10 a m Morn
lng worship 11 am EvenlnR Sf'rvlce6 p
m Prayer meelln$l and Bible Study Wed
nesday 7 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyle
Borden pa!!;tor Cornelius Bunch aupt
Sunday School 9 30 a m Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2 30 p

m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Fourth and
Main Sf Mlddlt&gt;port R~v Gilbert Craig
Jr pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner
Sunday School Supl Sunday School9 30a
m Worship Sen iC£1 10 45 a m
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B Hosk ns evangE'IIst Sunday
BlbleStudv9am Worship lOam Sun
day evl'nlng servl~ 6 p m Wednesday
PVPning seyvire 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY RaclnP
Rt 124 William Hohl:lck pastor Sunday
School 10 a m Sunday rvf'nlnR: service 7
p m Wednesday ~ve-ning servtce7 p m
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don ChPadle
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Morning
WorshlplO 30a m Prayer sen lee altern
ale Sundays
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New l.lma Rd
nex to Fort Meigs Park RuHand Robt&gt;rt
Rl('hards pas1or S£'rvlces at 7 p m on
wron£'Sdays and..Sund~ys
1

f~f!~ ,sh~N~!!"~~~~~';;}~~'c1l/~

R(i,v David Fe-rrell pastor H£'nry Eblin
Sunday Schoof Supt Sunday SC'hoollO a
m Morning Worship 11 a m EvPning
SC'fVI('(' 7 30 p m Wif'dnesday evpnlng ser
ViC£'7 30pm
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH
Harrv Holt('&gt;r pastor Sunday service!~
9 30 a m and 7 p m MidWeek SPrvl('(l
7 30 p m Thursday
"
MIDDLEPORTPENTECOSTAL Third
Ave- Rev Clark Bakt'f' pastor Carl Not
tlngham Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 10 am wuh classes for all ages
Evp nln ~ services at 6 p m W~nesday Bl
hi e study at 7 30 p m Youth services Frl
ttav at 7 30 p m
EcCLES lA FELLOWSHIP 128 Mill St
Mlddl~ort Brother Chuck McPherson
pastor Sunday School 10 am Sunday
evE'nlnJ;1' sPrVIC('s at 7 p m and WE'dnesday
serv ices al 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST KPnn .. h Smhh
pastor Sunday School 9 30 am church
serv lct' 7 30 p m youth f£'11owshlp 6 30 p
m Bible study Thursday 7 30 p m
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE 3304~
Hiland Road Pom('l'oy Tom Kelly pas
tor Danny Lamber t S S Supt Sunday
mornin~ service at 10 a m
Sunday even
lng servlcf 7 30 p m Tuesday and Thurs
day Services at 7 ~ p m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE Rev Glendon Stroud pastor
SundaySchool9 lOam Worshlpservlce10 30 am Youth service Sunday 6 15 p

m Sundayevenln~s£&gt;rvlct"7 OOpm Wed

,

Now who says the blasts aren t
causing struct'llral damage? A
number of people I ve talked
think they are
If legal limits are being fol
lowed, then It seems that those
legal-limits should be reduced I
won t hold my breath until that

happens however
Rev Lee Miller pastor or
Grace Elplscopal Church who
headed the collection bf warm
clothlnfi !or the underprivileged
a project o(. the Meigs County
Ministerial Association extends
a big thanks on behalf or th
association !or your tesponse
The For a Warmer Winter'
project was highly success!ul
wlth over 400 pieces or new
clothing coats caps gloves
winter boots etc being contrlll
uted and hundreds or garments
donated
Thank yout
You might want to send a word
of encouragement along to Leona
Cleland or Pomeroy Mrs Cleland underwent hlp replacement
surgery on Tuesday at St Jo
seph s Hospital ln Parkersburg
W Va The room number Is 232
By the way Mel Smith and his
wife State Route 7 Pomeroy
have really enjoyed those home
made Christmas cards they ve
received !rom an anaonymous
sender over the past seven years
or so Some or the cards were
made from cardboard boxes
Including cereal boxes and all
with their original verses went
through the mall The perfect
English on earlier cards has
made way !or strictly phonetic
spelling on the messages re
celved more recently

•
you one

Let me run that by
more lime
A letter to the editor must be
signed and I must know that the
writer does exist
I have a flle of letters on hand
most or them relating to the
Meigs Local Teachers strike and
you ve made some good points
However It ls the policy or the
paper that letters to the editor be
signed and the name be pub
llshed It s not my policy but the
policy o! the newspaper and I
must jldhere to that So unless
)loti re' wllllng to sign IM!"St save
your energy unless, of course It
helps Just to write your rrustra
lions down
A meeting to form a new Bass
(like In !Ish) Club has been setror
Jan 22 For details call 992 2036
or 992 2318 daytime and 992 554 7
alter 6 p m for details
Now and again I read that
someone Is expecting to come up
with a new calendar Sure hope
they leave January out of the
next one don t you • Do keep
smiling

VtdeoVtew

:
«

Superhuman films ...
,
~

*

nPSday Prayer Meet lng and Bible Study
7 OOpm
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH S"n
day aUcrnoon S('rvlccs at 2 30 Thursday
evrnlnR ~l"fvlces at 7 30
~
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Mason W
Va Pas or Bill Murphy Sunday School 10 '
a m Sunday t&gt;Venlng 7 30 p m Prayer
mcoetlngand Bible study Wednesday 7 30
p m EvPryone WE'Icome
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST Sa
\em St Rev Paul Taylor pastor Sunday
SchoollO a m Sunday ev('nlng 7 00 p m
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7 00
pm
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH Sliver Ridge Duane Syden
strlcker pastor Sunday School 9 am
WorshipS&amp;vl('(' lOam Sunday eve-ning
service 7 00 p m Wcdn("Sday night Bible
study 7 00 p m
.-..

•
•

Sermonette

'
'

Here they como again- those old attertheholldav blues -right I&lt; th&lt;

1

throat

This Is tho limo of the year when otherwlso happ' P&lt;'Opl&lt; lx-gln I&lt; lrrl
For somE" Jt becomes an :.t lmost cont!nuoul'i

1

long periods of depression

feeling of melancoly Early morning dOWJ1Cas1 f('f)'Jin,C! !&gt;i somrtlmC's causC'
subsequPnt headaches stomach pains and worse And JllC' rr'ally strang£

part Is thai many persons experiencing such fcrllngs will tell you they

really havp no apparent reason to f~llow they have no r('al problems with
lhelr bills tiler enjoy their jobs and the last few &gt;H'&lt;'ks have tx&gt;Pn amon11

the happiesl o their lives
Here Is something we do not otten consider It Is altogether possible thai
we hit some low valleys because we ve had too manv high mountaintop•
It would seem the problem has to do with adjuslm&lt; nt md a lack or aood
sUmuiatlng mental activity following a p&lt;'rlod ol pl&lt;'asant experlenct' We
allow ourselves lo become bol'l'd lollowlnll a period of P&lt;'roonat succi'OI
and If we want to hi! rock bottom that 1 a IUI'I' way lo do It
So what 1 the antwer• l&lt;e&lt;&gt;p busy- notjusl physically but mt'nlall)' a•
well Don I 'allow the mind to dwell on negatives you wilt !&gt;oRin to
reproduce the very Images of Ihe things you don t want Reach oulto prople
and encourallf) them 10 reach out to you
Don 1discard your Ideas play With them during Idle fliOmenls and you 11
discover they re worth a handful of pills Never allow your mind to becomt'
Idle certainly never permit youraelf the luxury of self pity Doa 1 exJII'(!I
Ute to beeome one serieo of good limes Learn to enjoy the little thinr~sln
Ute
Don I take your eyes of thestars but never lose sight olthr street Iampo
Remember all good cornes through the tll"&amp;ce of Gn&lt;! Don 1 tackle life
wttliOUI your crealor, and If you can prar, when lhtn11s fll!l rou~h
remember He likes to hear from you when th aaa arr great
In a nulshell how do we get rid of tbo11e' after the holiday blues 'T We ll•l
rid of them by takt'!fi:':: eyn.w.:;nelves-=.utttna Ihem on GOd a()II
011 others - By F
Lee
, G,_ C
Pomero,

Columbus man may now be world's oldest

Just live with it. ..

•
•

Pometog Flowet $hop

214 E Mam
992 5130 Pomeray

I

804W Mlln
992 2111 Pomeroy

"2 2104

~BR~
-w::::.!.a.m-

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Pomeroy

"2 2955

992·5141
Worship SE&gt;rvlt:&gt; lO :JJ a m

Pomerov

s

Prescnpltons

Serv1ng Fannhes
264 S 2nd Middleport

SchOO 9 15 a m

Mgr

Pomeroy

~!~

FUNERAL HOME

TRINrrY CHURCH Rev Jom IIIII past&lt;r
Buck. Sunday School SuJi Churt'h

Fultz

992 2101

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

~bblt

John F
Ph

•

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

TEAFORD REALTY
216 s second

Beat of the bend

By JEFF HILLEARY
Since the time of earliest
recorded history the metamor
phosis of the herold figure has
been a series of reflections of the
current events or the period
Beowulf Gllgamesh Robin
Hood even the Greek myths are
representahve of the chaos of the
time A society hungry for heroes
wlll often jmbue them with the
best and worst of the Ideas and
fears prevalent at 'he time
Into this mlsh mash of paran
ole fear and despair that seems to
grip us almost tangibly comes
two eplc heroes who fight evll
with the almost Incredible pow
ers that we expect them to have
For example In a society that
fears nuclear death at any
moment comes a man from a
destroyed world called Krypton
Able to fly at Incredible speeds
urt tremPndous weights posses
slon almost Impenetrable skin
and tans tic optic powers he
dwells In a place called Metropo
Us 1 am speaking of course of
Superman The movie Is Super
man IV theQuestfor Peace (PG
Warner 90mlnutes)andlsbyfar

the most superior of all entries In
the series
To summerlze Lex Luthor
played wonderfully by Gene
Hackman creates deadly Nu
clear Man to light Superman who
In an attempt to save all o! us
from destruction has hurled all o!
our mlssles Into the sun Chris
topher Reeves who also plays the
lead had a hand In thewrltlngo!
this Great special effects and
enjoyable acting transform this
Into a beautiful film
Masters or the Unlvere cPG
Warner 106mlnutesl(sbasedon
the llne o! toys and the successful
cartoon series Dolph Lungren
as the heroic He-Man and Frank
Langellas as tbe vlllalnousSkele
tor have carried their battle to an
unsuspecting Earth The film Is
almost lost In the special ettects
and absurd dialogue yet It still
offers entertainment for eve
ryone ln some fashion or other
There Is however a great deal of
violence and some very non
Eternlan swearing It Is st111 a
very good movie and I recom
mend 11 highly to the hero
humngry

~~Pa.~~~~~~.~!~~r,~us2~~onTc~n~i,e~m
l

:

COLUMBUS Ohio CUPI) - A
Spanish American War veteran
who claims to be 113 years old
may now be the world s oldest
person rather than a 111 year
old Norwegian woman cited In
the Gulnness Book oC World
Records
Glen Post could be given the
IItle tr Gulnness editors are given
surtlctent documentation Alex
Reid a deputy editor told The
Columbus Dispatch In a telephone Interview !rom London
Wednesday
Florence Knapp a 114 year old

1970s
If you ve got some Other
documents shpwlng that his birth

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI CUP!) -Flavor
chemists are working on flavor
developments In !lavor laborato
r les seeking !lavor characterls
tics to put on !laver tracks
That s the general flavor or
things at Fries &amp;&lt; Fries a
company whose meat and pota
t\)es Is Improving the flavor of
food
Making sure !ood Is !lavorfulls
a bigger business than ever
thanks to the microwave oven
which Is quicker than the conven
tiona! oven but not as aromatic
The microwave oven and
products built for 11 are driving
factors In the flavor development
Industry says Bob Pellegrino a
vice president of Cincinnati s
Fries &amp; Fries (pronounced
Freeze and Freeze ) where250
!lavor chemists and other
flavor lies work All major !ood
companies are researching and
developing microwavable
products
Consumers have created a big
microwave !ood flavor Industry
Microwaves are used In about 70
percent of American homes and
the number Is growing steadlly
Surveys show consumers ex
peel !ood they prepare In the
microwave to taste justllke food

from the conventional oven
notes Pellegrino Yet because
o! conditions within the microwave 11 would be dlfflcult to
deliver the same kind of taste
without flavor companies
There are technical problems
with !oods cooked In a micro
wave A blg factor Is thai the
temperature doesn t reach 212
degrees In a microwave
That s why baking a cake In a
microwave 1sn t a cakewalk
When you put cake batter Into
a microwave the surface or the
cake lsn t going to dehydrate as
In a conventional oven because
the temperature lsn t as high
says Pellegrino That means
you don t get browning and the'
crusty type of flavor expected
!rom cakes
One of the challenges for us as
flavor chemists Is to simulate
that browning reaction In our
flavor labs so we can offer that
type o! flavor prorne to a product
For a cake mix for example we
develop a flavor that starts as a
liquid convertltto a powder and
add 11 directly to the m1crowa ve
cake mlx
An,d just how Is a flavor
developed•
In our business there are two
classlflcatlons or flavors - natu

-~-----~-People

American War and In Germany
In World War I
Whlle In Cuba he met Theo
dore Roosevelt and also mel
outlaw Jesse James as a chlld he
said
Post s wife who Is only 39 said
her husband probably wouldn t
mind bemg named the oldest
person in the w6rld
There wouldn t be no harm
she saJd adding she would be
pleased to have the distinction of
being married to the world s
oldest person
He s just a
wonderful husband •

ral and arllflclal says Pelle
grlno An example of naturalextracts from van111a beans An
example of artlflcll -a chemical
known as benzaldehyde It produ
ces a cherry flavor All artificial
flavors have to be approved by
the FDA
The emphasis Is on natural
flavors however
Consumers want natural pro
ducts and we re responsive to
that wish says Pellegrino We
spend a great deal of lime
developing natural flavors We
take Ingredients extracted from
natural products and find ways to
process them so they simulate
baking roasting and frying
flavors
Beyond flavor there s always
the ever popular aroma to
enhance
~here s not too much aroma
wltli mlocrowave foods notes
Pellegrino
Were trying to
Improve aroma generation
A cake that s baking In a
conventional oven usually flUs
the kitchen with aroma But In
the microwave those aromas
don t generate because of lnsuffl
clent temperature So we de
velop flavorings to put ln the
product that produce an aroma
A major microwave - and

II back to them If I could The Jan 22 auchon m Houston Is
expected to raise $2 m1111on wl!lch is only a drop m the collecllon
bucket when one considers Connally s $93 3 million debt
Saggmg oil and real estate prices were Connally s fmancial
downfall

By WILLIAM C TROTf
United Press lntcmatlonal
ROYALLY PG 9 The British press Is abuzz with reports of a
royal pregnancy Three newspapers say Sarah "Fergie'
Ferguson wife of Prince Andrew wUI give birth In July or
August but Buckingham Palace won t comment If and when
the du..rhess or York Is pregnant an announcement wUI be
made said a palace official
The Sun however boldly reported that Queen Elizabeth II
was delighted after being told of another grandchild on the way
and had ordered the news kept under wraps untll an
announcement Is prepared
The pregnancy reports spread as tlte duchess 28 was In
Klosler~ Switzerland skllng wlth !rlends after having to leave
her husband on duty at a Royal Navy air station In England The
Evening Standard said a reporter talked to a woman at the
chalet with a flustered voiCEr sounding remarkably like the
duchess who dented the pregnancy
CONNALLY FOR SALE Fifty people were given a sneak
preview or the Items John Connally Is putting on the aucllon
block In his battle with bankruptcy The former Texas governor
wlU pari with a parade saddle decorated with the state seal, a
$250 000 on painting of an Indian chle! and thousands of $1 bHls
personally signed by Connally when he was secretary of the
treasury
It breaks my heart to see all these said San Antonio
Museum Association President Allee Mayer one oft hose taking
an advance look at the merchandise I would buy It all and give

WONDER BABY Lynda Wonder Woman Carter 36 gave
birth to a baby boy Thursday at a Washington D C hospital
The wonder baby James Clifford Allman we1ghed m at 7
pounds and Is the first chlld of Carter and her Washmgton
attorney husband Robert Altman Carters Los Angeles agent
Rachel VIzcarra said the baby was named for Altman s law
partner Clark M Clifford Vizcarra said both mom and son
were In great health
THE KINGS CATCH King Hussein s pnze ca tch Iurned out
to be even more spec1althan he thought On a recent outing In
the Gulf of Aqaba the Jordanian mon~rch caught a 94 Inch
92 pound fish that he and h1s associates thought "as a
Mediterranean
The king was so proud that he had lhe f1sh frozen solid
ordered a specially bullt Styrofoam lined case and sent 11 by air
freight to the renown J T Reese Taxidermists m Fort
Lauderdale Fla But tlie 1ax1dermlsts Identified the king s
catch as a striped marlin- a species unheard or In the Gull of
Aqaba
The gulf runs Into the Red Sea which runs Into the Indian
Ocean where the striped marlin IS common but nobody ever
heard of a flsh making thai trip before

Community cal~ndar
SUNDAY
POMEROY
The Meigs
County Genealogical Society will

meet at 2 p m Sunday at the
Meigs Museum Bob Titus will be
the speaker

Garden Club has meeting
Plans !or participating In the
Ohio State Fair planting project
were made during a meeting o!
the Rutland Friendly C.ardeners
held recenlly at the nome of Suzy
Carpenter
Members also voted to con
tlnue with personal remem
brance baskets for shuttns dur
lng the coming year

Girts were exchanged wlth the
wrappings all showing some
plant material being Judged
First went to Lorrl Barnes
second to Joan Stewart and third
to Joan Fetty Ms Carpenter had
the devotions using Suzy s Book
or Hollday Happiness '
A dinner at the Down Under In
Gallipolis preceded the meeting

Auxiliary meets

New officers were elected at
tile recent meeting or the Auxtl
lary of the Ractae Fire Depart
ment held at the fire station
Elected were Ann Layne, pres
ldent, Barbara Lane vice preal
dent Wanda Patterson, secretary, Sandy Patterson

treasurer, Kay Holman repor
ter, and Sherrie Gravy assistant
treaBUrer

Fwid ral$11 projects were
' diBcuued at tbe rerent meetlnll
I of the Apple Grove United
' Methodllt Women held Tuelday
! afternoon at the cburcb
'
A no-bake aale was planned
• alon1 wltb an auctlan. wttll all

lunda to 110 lata the UMW
trea•ury ltema tar aood
wiD be collect~MS lnclucllna bot
cbocolate mix, tluuee, 111d
blankets
Edltb Manuel Jll'l!llded at the
mefttnr with Bve Grace filvlna

tile openlnll prayer J:.orl Hill bad ,
the secretary and treasuter s
report&amp; Fla""ce Smith read
1Crlptai'l! from Sec Cor 1 aDd
EdUII Manuel 1lad the cloiiDa
.,....,.... Dnta ....S Lori HW ll'ill
aerw NflwltiMlltl at tbe F4!bru
ary l'tiHtllla
I.

Others attendlnl were Trudy
Spaulding, Jean Jo~. Tereaa
JobniOII, \V8llda Lyana, Mille&amp;
Gl'u•aet Sherr-1• Holman,
Rbottda Lytou, .u,te Patteuon
aDd Milly Jonet, and jUDior
member, Sluy Ly11111
•

- ~,~~~A-pp-k~Gro~~~UM~W~~~e.~u----~~

flavor Industry - success story
IS popcorn
Popcorn sales have dramatl
cally Increased because of micro
waves Pellegrino points out
Popcorn 1s a healthy snack but
It was a big challenge for flavor
companies to develop butter
flavors to incorporate m the 01lln
a microwave popcorn pouch The
object Is to evenly distribute
flavor over the popcorn as lt
pops
Outside the microwave flavor
chemists are working on foods
like lee cream lrymg to match
the creamy flavor Without the
fat
There s a lot of consumer
concern about cholesterol and
food companies are trying to
reduce cholesterol while still
maintaining a great flavor
says Pellegrino We retrying to
develop flavor systems which
can be used In products with
reduced cholesterol and yet taste
just as good
In lee cream for example Ice
cream companies are reducing
the amount of butter fat using a
different fat with less cholesterol
and coming to us to develop a
buttery creamy type of flavor
We ve been modestly successful
and are still developmg It

in the news

lnatlng committees recommen
datlons for the 1988 officers
Reporta of committees were
made and It was voted totryouta
new sound system for the church
The company wllllnatalllt on a
trial IIJII.I
Prayercloaedthemeeting

woru

date Is correct wed be pleased
to see It Reid said We would
certainly give that urgent
attention
Harold Blosser chle! of medl
cal administration services at
the hospital said a certlflcate of
delayed birth registration Ust
log Post s birth date as March 16
1874 Is on rue at the hospital It
bears the seal o! the State of
Nebraska he said
In a July 1987 Interview wllh
The Dispatch Post said he
served In the Army Medical
Corps In Cuba In the Spanish

Experts try to make microwave foOd tastier

First Baptst Church of Racine
• was held lftently with tbe Rev
Steve Deaver glvlna the opening
prayer He read the 23rd Psalm
and also gave a short discourse
on tile scripture
Wayne Roush moderator pre
slded at the meeltng with the

I

•''

Philadelphia woman held the
title be!ore she died Monday
Following her death Gulnness
proclaimed Maren Torp o! Nor
way as Knapp s successor
Post aresldentorColum us Is
currently being treated ror a
kidney ln!ectlpn at a Veterans
Administration Hospital In
nearby Chllllcothe
Post s birth certificate was
destroyed In a courthouse fire In
Hayes County Neb In the late

Prayer by Mrs Layne opened
tbe meettna lt was noted that
Wayne Ly11111 and Barbara Lane
were the wlmrera Ia a C1uillmas
fund ral•lnl proJect Mra Layne
and Rbanda Lyon• served
refreshment&amp;

1983 OLDS 91

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 2 p mat the home
of Mrs James Clatworthy Mrs
Richard Owen wlll review
Hammer A Witness to His
tory For roll call members are
to give a hopeful sign for world
peace

REGENCY
2 ~r, fully et~uipped, I
awn1r, •nelilnt ceiNiiltttl.
Must see to appr~e..lt

MARVIN KEEIAUGH
371-6214

Because B&amp;R Block
cares about you,
o••rtaxpre
• Have comprehensive tax knowledge
• Receive yearly tax training
• Make tax laws work for you
• c.n prepare any state or local return

Let a

•lao• JOG bow maob we care.

618 Eist Main Street
POMEROY, OHIO
Open tAM .. PM WI lit..., I. f·lletuniiiY Ph-8fl·H74

�..
'

Pig• 8-The Daily Sentinel

Friclly, January 15, 1988

Scientists awaiting 'blast' .

Judge denies · Warner ·a new• trial

•.

AUSTIN, Texas CUP!) - A
Brecher said Chinese records
show that a supernova recorded
scientist predicted the distant
exploding ·star first seen In
In A.D. 1006, the brightest ever
January 1987 - the brightest observed on earth, reappeared In
supernova visible on earth In 400 A.D. 1016. A. similar •'reyears - will probably "re- explosion" was reported by the
explode" bY the end of the
Chinese In 1664 of a supernova
seen by Cermari· astronomer
century.
Another scientist Thursday
Johannes Kepler In 1604.
reported that ·ll'ght. photons genSupernova l987A was the
era ted by Supernova 1987A will brightest star explo~lon recordl1d
reflect across large regions · of since the '1604 supernova.
space, creating "light ec hos" of
. An even more striking reapthe original cataClysmic explo- pearance occurred In 1612, when
slon for thousands of years to
astronomer Simon Marlus saw
•
an object in the same position as
come;
Kenneth Brecher, professor of
the supernova discovered by
astronomy and physics at Boston
Tycho Brahe In 1572, some 40
University, said supernova ex- years earlier, Brecher said.
plosions recorded by Chinese,
Based on such observations,
Japanese, Arabic and European Brecher told theAmerlcanAstrostargazers during the ·last 2,000 nomlcal Society meeting In Ausyears have usually been followed - tin that he predicted Supernova
by a bright "re-expioslon," vis - 1987A will "re-explode" In 1997 . .
ible 10 to 50 )tears after the first
"II will .then fade away again In .
..
.
about a year, unless a central
sighting.
Supernova 1987A was cr,e ated pulsar has been produced In the
by the explosion )55,000 years explosion,'~ he said. "In that
ago of Sanduleak, a blue super· case, thesupernovamayshlneon .
giant star .In the Large Magel- longer as a kind of planetary
Jenlc Cloud, a small neighboring nebula."
galaxy to the Milky Way. Light
A pulsar Is created when a star
from the explosion, traveling at collapses on itself, creating a
186,000 miles per second, did not densely packed , energetic
reach the earth until January sphere of matter that rotates or
1987.
·
·
pulses at quick. regular Inter-

vals. Scientists have not been
able to determine If that will
happen to Supernova 1987A.
Brecher said the re-exploslons
of supernovas could be explain~
by life discovery of a ·g as shell
lying about 1 Ught year from the
central e)(plodlng star. In about
10 years. the leading edge or the
material ejected 6urlng the explosion will run Into !he gas shell,
which was ejected before the
explosion, resul tlng in a brief
re-tlourescence of the object.
Bradley Schafer of the Goddard Spacetught Center in
greenbelt, Md., reported to the
society that phantom nebulas of
Supernova 1987A should begin to.
appear because of light reflected
,f rom cosmic dust particles.
"We will be seeing echos ofthe
Jlrlglnal explosion," he said.
"The light will be blue and it will
be there for decades, centuries,
even mlllenrllum;' '
Scientists stlil have not been
able to explain a" mysterious
bright spot that appeared .near
Supernova 1987A In April of last
year but has not been seen since \
November.
"Many people doubt It was
real," Brecher said. "But I felt It
must have been some artifact' '
from the explosion.

•

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Rites of Bellisario

RENO, Nev. iUPI) - A wind
storm howled through the streets
of Reno with the force or a
hurricane early today, sending
shards .of glass slicing down
streets, closing the airport and
ripping down power Jines· that
started fires and knocked out
electricity to most of the gambUng mecca.
One death In a traffic wreck
was blamed on the sudden storm
that began battering western
Nevada about 10 p.m. Thursday
with wind gusting to 94 mph and
howled thrt,;ugh the early hours of
today, officials said.
The wind sent sand and.tumble. weeds swirling through town and
blew apart much of a 127-foottall, 44.8-ton, neon sign marking
the Circus Circus hotel-casino.
Fires started by downed power
Jines streaked the night sky red
· and trees flew through the air,
crushing parked cars· and blocking roads. Burglar alarms were , ·
tripped across Reno.
When (he \vinds abated this
mqrning, snow moved in, making
clean-up operations dltflcult.
"It is snowing like crazy now
and getting colder than ever,"'
pollee Sgt. Tom Szupello said.
''It's making things really !llessy
out there for clean-up crews."
Szupeilo said before the wind
died down about 2 a.m .. it blew
the roof off one home, sent
100-foot-tall oak trees crashing
downand forced the evacuation
of about 50 people from the Sutro
Motel, which was , "blowing

'•

1

attended by Air Foree and Martin Marietta VIP's.
(UPI)

Power lilies writhed like fiery
snakes on the ground, setting at
least two houses ablaze and
forcing the evacuation of 2'5
people from homes in two blocks.
"We've lost power to most of
the city," Fire Chief Otis Turner
said at the height of the storm.
"We've got hunareds of power
lines that are down. We've had
numerous tires. I have 20 'fire

companies In service ·at this
t !me. As soon as. one breaks loose
from an emergency, we dispatch
them to another.
"Grass, trees and ·trash anything that will burn when It
touches a power line - is oil
fire," !)e .said. "Dozens of tl&gt;ees
are blocking roads. One fell into a
house but fortunately no one was
hurt."
·
The wind slopped takeoffs,and
landings at Re~o-Cannon International Airport Thursday night
and at least flve..lncomlng fl1ghts
were diverted to other airports,
officials said.
·
"A p!Jot would be crazy to try to '
land In this," airport dispatcher
Bill Brown said.
Brown said the wind blew the
doors off airport hangars, flipped
two small planes and collapsed
the nose gear on another.
Another four fixed-wing planes
and three gliders were severely
damaged at Reno-Slead Airport
about 10 miles north of the city,
Brown Sllld.
The National Weather Service
clocked gusts at the airport at
76 mph at about 10 p.m. ,
Thursday. A 94"mph gust was
recorded at one station in
southwest Reno. A hurricane
car ries winds of at least 74
mph.
NWS meteorologist Peter WF
lensky blamed. the winds on the
combination of a strong pressure
gradient in front of a very strong
cold front and the configuration
of the valley In which Reno lies .
WJ!ensky said-the temperature.
dropped about 15 degrees to the

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"We have glass flying out of
windows in tall buildings all over
downtown," he said. '
The gusts blew sand, gravel
and tumbleweeds across streets,
cutting visibility to near zero at
some Intersections. A section of
Interstate 395 .between Carson
City and Reno was cJo1;ed to
campers and trailers.
Police said swirling dust and
debris caused a traffic wreck
that killed the driver of a car who
could not see a s(op sign.
Much of Reno was blacked out
because of blown transformers
and downed power lines, officials
said. Szupello said police hea d- ''
quarters was forced to operate on
auxiliary power.
"It ioOO&lt;s like something out of
the movies," said Cathy McCovey, a reporterfor stationKRZQ
which was '- blacked out. "W~ ,;
counted 15 transformers blow up ',
In a 4-mlle radius. When they
blow. they . turn white. blue, ·'
·'
yellow.". :

"

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awards from the Columbus and ·
Oh.io State Bar Associations, the
Columbus Newspaper Guild,
Scripps-Howard Newspapers, ·
and the Aviation-Space Writers
Association.

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SUNDAY, JANUAIY lnH

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P.!!'• ZIP1
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BID nPS OVII liCE ALONE .....~........ S3.29

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wllll ,_ . . . . . . . . Cltltilt,- Dr1t* , .. (off...... ··- a.c..c.

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HOURS: 10:00 A.M.·8:30 P.M.-7 DAYS A WEEK ,

·z

HOLLYWOOD CUP!) - This
year's United States Film Fest!- '
val will focus on American :
Independent filmmakers and pay
tribute to director, Samuel·
Fuller.
· ·

CIJ!IItCI 50011! EDDIE MURPHY

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JKrrhuum1's nf Cl!4tstl'r •

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WE QIVE SENIOR

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mld-30s ;.,ith' the arrival of the
snow storm, which was expected !
to deposit 1 or 2 Inches of the •
white stuff.
.'
Szupello said the street In front ~
of the Circus Circus Hotel was ~
closed because officials feared
the collapse of the giant sign of •
Topsy the Clown. The clown's :
smile alone measures 14 fee! •·
across, and Szupello said pieces I&lt;
of the sign we·re blowing Jnt.o the ~
street. The. main structtir{'
stayed 't ntact , however,' and no '
one was hurt.
·
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FIIDAY, JANUAIY 15TH
COMIINAnON SEAFOOD-CIICON PLAmR

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·rhit Weak'• Specials ·

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Court reporter takes new job
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)'Veteran Columbus court reporter Harry Franken will become
the new public Information of·
fleer for the Ohio Supreme Court
Jan. 25, replacing the late Nicho·
las Walker. the court announced
Thursday.
.'A journalist for 38 years,
Franken has been common pleas
court reporter for the Columbus
Dispatch for 't he last two-years.
-Prior to tbat, he served th'e
C(llumbus Citizen-Journal l!l the
same capacity.
·
~ranken has won }writing

newly-modllled launch pall wiD be used to launch

Hurricane-force winds die doWn
~.. snow . begir;ts .; .~p..,Jall . .~lil Reno
·

Bob Martinez Invited Hodel to ~~norkle on the coral
reels at John Pennekamp National Marine
Sanctuary to view areas that could be damaged by
oil drilling. (UPI)

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I!Je Titan IV. The ceremony Friday morning was

.

ct'I'IZINI 10" DISCO

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By IRA R ..ALLEN
IUPI) - Joe
Clark, the controversial prlncl· By EDGAR SIMPSON
pal of~ Paterson, N.J .. inner-city
CHARLESTON, W.Va. tUPI)
high school says taking a job at
- Former Mayor Mike Roark,
the White House would amount to
his poiltlcal future In shambles
being run out of town.
and his Jaw career indoubi, faces
But he has scheduled a meeting
six months In a federal prison for
today with President Reagan 's
cocaine convictions.
domestic policy adviser , Gary
Roark, 42, once viewed as a · Bauer, who said last weekend he
rising star In the Republican
would offer Clark a job.
Party, was sentenced Thursday
Reagan did. not plan to meet
with Clark, b14l his spokesman
to 179 days In eitlier Allenwood,
Pa,_ or Petersburg, Va., both
sa id Thursday the president
minimum security prisons.
bE-lieves the principal's unor. Roark, who personally led
thodox disciplinary methods
drug raids in his faded Marine
"should be lauded.'' ·
jacket with a zeal that earned
Clark, under fire from his
him the nickname "Mad Dog,"
sc hool board for unauthori zed
was sentenced Thursday by u.s. - expulsion of 66 students from
Eastside High Scllooi, has been
District Judge Walter Hoffman.
a special judge brought In from . publicly applauded by Education
Norfolk, Va., when judges Jn this . Secretary William Bennett and
area recused themselves.
privately by Reagan.
"I have publicly acknowledged ,
Clark was quoted as sayi ng he
the hypocrisy of my coriduct .and
would not likely take a White
I must live with the shame of
.
tl)at/' Roark said. "I have a
.. ·strong belief, I feel, In what'Is
.
right and what Is wrong. What I
did was wrong. "

•.
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REDEDICATION - Secretary' ofthe Air Force
Edward C. Aldridge Jr., smiles as he rededicates
launch complex U at Cape Canaveral, Fla. The

'

House job because it would allow qualit y of education he
"a bunch of obdurate, rebellious, instituted. "
unappreciative board members
Fitzwater said Reagan is not
run me out of this town."
suggesting thai Clark and other •
Clark, who carries a Louisville administrators should violate
Slugger baseball bat 'and a school board &lt;jirectives . "These
bullhorn as he patrols the halls debates take place conti nua lly ,
and illegally locks fireexitsof the throughout government. .. .' The
sc hools to kee p "hoodlums and issue here is educational excel·
thugs" out , has refused to fence and how it can be
comply with school board rules achieved," Fitzwater said.
on due process regulations in
"He feels the.degree of excel·
expelling students.
tence that he !Clark l has brought
White House spokesman Mar- to . the school system ... is
lin Fitzwater said that although ' superlative -and a good perfor·
Reagan has often talked about mance that should be lauded."
local control of schools , the issue
Fitzwater said Clark will meet
is one of ''educational with Bauer "to discu ss his
excellence."
situation in New Jersey and
He said Reagan 's approval of whether or not he could be helpful
Clark's methods "Indicates that in some capacit y .... But I'm not
he approves of the increases in certain that it involves a specific
educational excellence brought job."
to that school system and the
Bauer is empowered by hi s
discipline that was applied to the office to discuss job . offers ,
school system in terms of student although final deci sions are
conduct and to the
Increase in the made in the office of,presidential
0
.
.
nersonnel.

WASHING~'ON

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apart."

DEMONSTRATORS - A variety of · plastlc
Inflatable water creatures - covered with "oil"
- adorn a raft towed by demonstrators within
'yards of the_dive boat Interior Set!relary Donald
Hodel · was riding Thursday. Florida Governor

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HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
Writer-director Don Beilisario,
perhaps best known for his many
television series Including "Magnum. P.l.," is directing )Ill; first
feature film in New York City,
starring Tom Berenger and
Daphne Zuniga.
In "Last Rites," Bei-enger
plays a priest who offers protection to Zuniga, who Is marked for
death by organized crime.
Belllsario Is directing from hi s
own screenplay for producer
Patrick McCormick.
Berenger, nominated last year
for an Academy Award for hi s
role In "Platoon," heads the cast
that Includes Ann Tomey, Chick
Vennera, Dane. Clark and .Paul.
Dooley.

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The remaining refusenik In the
Soviet Union Is Alexander Paritsky, who had been a senior
engineer and senior scientist ·at
the Soviet Union's Kharkov Research . Institute of Metrology
before ·applying to emigrate In
1976.
The National Conference on
Soviet Jewry maintains that
almost 400,000 people have taken
the first Step toward emigration
from the Soviet Union. Of these,
more than 10,000 have been
refused permission and have
become known as refuseniks .

downtown Houston Thursday. No one was
reported injured In the fire that destroyed an
empty, unsued grain elevator. UPI

Mayor
sentenced Reagan aide offers a job, praise
to senre
to controversial principal Clark
six months

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SNAP, CRACKLE, POP - A spectacular five
"alarm fire at the American Rice elevator sent
IJames leaping hundreds of feet in the air near

•

USC helps
winning rele~se
of another soviet ·refusenik .

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

CINCINNATI CUPil- Marvin his decision.
Occasionally I would needle her
Warner, the convicted former
A jury convicled ' Warner of and say 'I hate Marvin Warner '
owner of Home State Savings nine counts last March for his · !n order to get a rise out of her ,"
Bank, lost Thursday in his bid tor ·. role In the thrift's collaPfE! nearly
the affidavit said .
a new trial.
three years ago. He was sentWarner's lawyers also said
Judge Robert Ruehlman of enced to 3 \7 years In prison and
Dalton told two. jurors during
Hamilton County Common Pleas ordered to pay $22 million In deliberations that his mother-In·
Court rejected Warner's request, restitution.
law had money in Home State.
saying defense attorneys did not
Lawyers said Warner'sconvlc· That fact, if known at the time of
show. "clear and convincing lion should be overturned bejury selection, would have autoevl&lt;!ence that they had been cause juror Larry Dalton told matically disqualified Qaiton
l!navoidably .Prevented" from other· jurors . '.' I hate. Marvin · from the jury.
,
filing the motion within 'the i4 Warner," and he told them he'
Warner, who was acqulted pf
days required ·by law.
· had a relative who had depo.s lts • slmi.Iar federal charges, Is free
· Warner's lawyers argued that in the failed savings and loan .
on bond pending appeal of his
Warner Should be granted a new
Ohio Special Prosecutor Law- · conviction to the Ohio 1g(Distrlct
trial because of Improper con- renee Kane argued Dalton was .Court of Appeals.
duct by a juror.
not prejudiced and that his ·
Home State collapsed In March
Under Ohio taw ..a motion for a remarks were made in jest.
l~fterarunbydepositorswho
new trial based on juror misconFollowing Warner 's convlc- became worried after learning
duct must be flied within 14 days lion, his lawyers and wife con- Home State had lost at·least $144
ot the verdict. Warner's attor- ·dueled extensi.ve Interviews will! million doing business with.bankneys did not file their new trial the jurors, during which Larry rupt 'ESM Government Securlmotion until 45 days after a Dalton's remark that he "hated" ties of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
verdict was returned.
Warner was discovered.
The run pn Home State also
The 14,day llmlt Is strictly
In his sworn affld.a vl,t, Dalton sparked runs on . other !)hio
.. enforced to protect the finality of said his comments to juror Rita . savings and loans and Gov.
jury· verdicts and to· prevent the Lafkas were intended to "nee- RlchardCelesteclosed70ofthem
harass.m ent of jurors, said die" her.
until they obtained federal
Ruehlnian, who hea~d testimony
'.' Rita ~afkas was a person I . Insurance.
for two hours before 'tendering enjoyed needling and · kidding.

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ID

LOS ANGELES !UP[) -Refu- revoking doctoral degrees of
senik plant geneticist Valery scientists who had applied to
Soyter has been given permis- emigrate, said Rabbi Laura
sion to leave the Soviet Union and Geller, director of USC's Hillel
will become the sixth refusnik to Jewish Center.
teach In the United States as part
Geiler said Soyfer's wife and
of a campaign by the University son were also granted permisof Southern California, officials sion to leave the Soviet Union.
said.
Specific information on the emiSoyfer was director of the gration timetable was not immeSo~let Institute of Applied Malec:
diately available, but the tam!•
ular Biology and Genetics and · ly's first stop was expected to be
chief of the institute's LaboraVienna, Austria.
tory of Molecular Biology before
"At a time when so many
applyinli( to emigrate from the pf9ple think of higher edu&lt;;ation
Soviet Union in 1979, officials only In terms ·or training for
said Thursday.
professional careers, USC has
He is expected to arrive in the once again reminded us that its
United States within the month to one of the functions of the
begin teaching at Ohio State university to provide moral leadUniversity, USC spokesman ership," Geller said.
Kent Robinson said.
Geller said university officials
Robinson said Soyfer is the
worked with the Los Angeles
sixth to leave the Soviet Union
Federation Council's Commisfor teach jng posts In the United
sion on Soviet Jewry to petition
States, partly as a 'r esult of
the Soviets to release the scient·
campaign effort s by USC.
lsts. USC staff members personWilliam Spitzer, dean of USC's ally dellvered invitltatlons on a
College of Letters. Arts and
trip to the Soviet Union in 1983.
Sciences. told .a news conference
The five .Previously released
that the university was "very are Mark Freldlin, a visiting
entbuslastlc about the release of professor of mathematics at the
yet another distinguished
University of Maryland; Semion
scientist."
Katz, . a visiting professor of
Soyter is one of seven distin- geological sciences at USC;
guished Soviet Jewish scientists,
Victor Kipnis, associate preofescalled the "USC Seven, " recr u· sor of economics at USC; and
ited by the university b!'ginning Yuri and Olga Medvedkov , a
In 1982 after several Jewish husband and wife who are
faculty members learned the professors of geography at Ohio
·
Soviet government had begun State.

"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Teen en
· trepreneur
t urn_·s h•.l m se}{ ln
• .

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1
p~~!~~~nfo:
~r!u~e~~~ a~~
fined him $5,000 for his Nov. 17

_

.for alleged federal fraud charges

Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, a devout foUower of convicted cull
killer Charles Manson, strikes up a conversation with a U.S.
mar!lltal alter pleading no contest Thursday to charge of e!lcaplng
from federal prison In Alderson two days before Christmas. She 18
serving life for trying to assassinate President Ford In 1975. UPl

guilty pleas to six misdemeanor
By MICHAEL C.TlPPING
counts of cocaln!!· possession In
LOS · ANGELES iUI'Il
' an agreement with federal
Barry Minkow, who founded the
prosecutors.
ili-lated ZZZZ Best carpet cleanRoark, who vacated the may - ing empire in his parents' garage
or's office as part of the plea · as a teenager, wa s Indicted on
agreement, will report to the
federal fraud charges and ha s
prison Feb. 15.
,
surrendered to pollee, his lawyer
A defense lawy-er suggested
said. . .
Roark prefers to serve his time In
Minkow . 21, turned himself in
·Virginia, since It is riearer his· to police Thursday night alter
parents. Hoffman gave his conlearning that he had been In sent but advised the lawyer,
dieted ea r'l ier In the day by a
federal grand jury, Minkow's
crashed. Both he and the pilot James Mcintyre, the prisons
would
make
the
choice.
attorney
Arthur Barens said.
were killed.
"They
run
it
like
a
hotel,
you
"We
understand
In a general .
Last month, the Federal Avia- .
know
you
have
to
ask
for
sense 1the indictmentl Involves
tton Administration released a
allegations of stock fraud, securirecording of conversation be- accommodations," Hoffman
·
ties fraud, bank fraud and
tween alr traffic controllers and · said.
Roark pleaded guilty on the similar charges," Barens said. ·
the crew that showed about 24
Law enforcement authorities
minutes elapsed between the second day ·of his trial, and.
prosecutors
agreed
to
dismiss
24
confirmed
that police computer
time the plane was de-lced .and
other
charges,
including
13
fel·
records
showed
thafMinkowwa s
the moment it crashed.
ony
copnts
Involving
the
distribu
booked,
but
the
nature of the··
Government rules &lt;lo not spell
tion
of
cocaine
and'
tampering
charges
was
not
released.
out a maximum tlme ·jlermttted
Barens said Minkow, who
between de-Icing and takeoff, but with a grand jury. The government
also
agreed
It
would
not
maintains he Is innocent of
Continental Q!flclals say the time
wrongdoing, was to appear bewas. normal and that proper make recommendations on
punishment
fore a federal magistrate today.
procedures were followed .

·Investigators suspect
Contii;Iental jet stalled.

By FRANK T. (:SONGOS
WASHINGTON (UP~) -Federal Investigators believe It will
take months to determine
whether the apparent stalling of
Continental Airline.s Flight 1713
was a symptom of other problerns or the cause of the acCident
that killed 28 people.
Government documents released Thursday show an engine
compressor apparently stalled
four times just seconds before
the jetliner crashed In a Denver
s nowstorm .
An investigation Into the cause
of .the tragedy continues.
The DC-9 crashed Nov . 15 at
Denver's Stapleton1hternatlonal
Airport, killing 28 of the 82
R.assenger.s and crew aboard.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl)- A
The National Transportation
unbid contract of · nearly $1
Safety Board released a transcript of the cockpit voice record·
million awarded to a Columbus
lng of Flight 1713. Thedocumerits
office supply firm by the Ohio
showed a "sound similar to Student Loan Commission has
engine compressor stall" at 39
been ordered canceled by OQv.
Richard
F . Celeste.
54:&gt;conds after 2:1.5 p.in·. MST, just
after the planf' became airborne.
Celeste's order resulted in
negotiations aimed at a settleThe recording picked up four
ment or a lawsuit flied ·by a
repeated sounds similar to encomwtltor of th~ Continental
gine compressor stalls. The
crash occurred exactly at 43.8
seconds seconds after 2:15 p.)'Tl.,
about five seconds after the.flrst
sign of the apparent stallings.
The transcript reveals the
(ollowlng sequence of events:
i\t 2:15:28 p.m. the captain
South Central Ohio
says, "Vee one." The plane js
Becoming mostly sunny this
still on the ground but moving . aftern!H?n, with highs between 30
rapidly on the runway. This Is the
and 35. Mostly clear tonight, with
last point when takeoff can still
a low In the mid 20s. Increasing
be aboried.
cloudiness Saturday, with highs
At 2:15:30 p.m . the captain
near 50.
says, "Rotate." The plane's nose
The probability of preclplta,'
points up. Takeoff Is Imminent.
!Iori Is neal zero through
At 2: 15: 36 p.m. the captain
Saturday.
says, "Positive rate." The plane.
Winds will be from the aouth at
now. In the air, Is climbing.
IO to 20 mph today and' from the
At 2: 15: 39 p.m. Is the first
south at five to 15 mpb toDight.
•sound similar to engine compresOhio B1deaded 11'oNcaR
sor stall rapidlY followed ·by
Saadq....,.... .,.....,
similar IOUDdl and the crash.
A chance of rain eacll day, with
The documen'- shtlwed no
highs In the '401 Sllllday and
"smoltlng !run" evidence pin·
mostly 1ft th!' 501. Monday and
pointing ~ CIUII! of tht crash.
Tul!lday . Overnight lows will be
The plane's flrsl officer was at. In the 30s through the period.
the colltrols when . tlie plane

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

Celeste cancels office supply, OSLC contr~ct

Weather.

II

Oftlce Furniture and Supply Co.,
which was given the contact to
Install work areas In a downtown
bulldlng, where the commission
plans to move. The commission
currently has offices in another
doWntown building.
,
A lawsuit flied Dec. 24 by the
Thomas W. Ruff &amp; Co., says the
commission deceived the State
Controlllng Board and the state
Department •of Administrative
Services in obtaining an emer·
gency appropriation to buy oltice
equipment from Continental.
Jean Bussell. deputy director
of the student loan commission,
testified last week in Franklin ·.
County Common Pleas Court
that she misled the Controlllng
Board by not telling It 'a bout
lower blcls , from compe!Jiors, .

ZZZZ Best and Minkow filed
with the Securit ies and Ex for bankruptcy last summer
change Commi ss ion las t year
after being dogged by accusathat more than 8o percent of its
lions of fr;1ud, th eft and diversion
revenues come from the rcs tora of corporate fund s for personal tfon business.
use.
The company 's problems surAs · the troubles of the now
fa ced publi ~ ly last May wiih
$200-milllon company unfolded,
newspaper reports that it had
rung up $72,000 In fal se credit
Las Angeles Poijce Chief Daryl
card c harges in 1984 and )98o and
Gates alleged that Minkow a nd
eight other individuals and or·
tha t a flower shop ,the n owned by
ganized crime families in New
Char! ~s B. Arrington Ill. ZZZZ
York were using ZZZZ Best and
Best 's chief financial officer, had
four other Los Angeles busi·
rung up $91 ,000 in bogus cha &lt;·ges
nesses as f•·onts fo r a drug
in 1986.
money-laundering operation .
Minkow wa s never sh.v about
promoting
hi s last -growing com Citing "severe medical prob·
pany
in
telev
ision ads and on
!ems,'' Minkow resigned as ZZZZ
"
The
Oprah
Winfrey
Show ." He
Best's chairman several days
won a commendation from
before the firm - listing $36
Mayor Tom Bradley and spoke
million in debts to its cred itorsabout entrepeneurship at local
fil ed for bankruptcy July 8. The
high schools. The cover of hi s.
-compa ny's board of directors
book, "Making ft In Am erica,";
and several groups of stock·
s hows him lea ning on a Rolls holders have since filed civil
J:toyce.
suits against him .
One of the suits, flied in
•'
Superior Court by ZZZZ Best,
alleges that Minkow and two
associates withdrew " many millions" from the firm's checking
accounts for their own use. It
claims that ZZZZ Best's primary
business , repairing fire and
To •end a beaullfutty
water damage to buildings for
~
d.. fsntd fun ..ot
Insurance purposes, was "an
onong•:,.";'~J"" ull
elaborate scheme .. . to divert
POMEROY
ZZZZ Best's corporate funds" for
M&gt;nkow's use.
.FLOWER SHOP
The company has said in filings j'
"Th• ~·.,.Am•·•"" S.ndo ,,,..,.-

Including Ruff.
She also testified thatthe bOard
was told the state could be
assessed $445,000 In penalUtes
,and the cost of· occupying two
bulldlngs unless the contract was
. approved.
Bussell 1\'aS to testily again
Thursday, but the ~earlng was
postponed when lawyers for the
state, Ruff and Continental entered settlement negotiations .
A Celeste spokeswoman said
those negotiations were prompted by the governor's order to
cancel the Continental contract.
"I think we have enough
Information to believe people
weren't provided with enough
information when a decision was
made," said Celeste press aide
Debra Phillips.

=

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. EnJoy the very fl nest In home tfyle
cooking al the very beat prices around 1

MONDAY

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For CONUitlng end Information ·

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5349 . .
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TUE&amp;Dif" • · .
.
534
:iiiCIIIfl•tt• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Cabhaae Rolls ••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••• ~·~··········

r.::==:=====;;;::;:·:::;i·
"CAN YOU USE OUR HELP?'~
your h•vy reaponelblllty.

.

~Qt!!&amp;QAY

.

Beans &amp; Corn Bread ..........................

THURSDAY

.

Hot locut IHf Sandwich ....;.............

$150
. ~-~,
$ 349 , fi

FRIDAY

Ha111 &amp; Scal'-p•d Potatoes................

SATJ!RDAY

,

Po1tato Soup.&amp; Sandwich...................
!.

'

$349
$

\

'

991·1111

-

•••••o•
;

I

,.
,
1 9 · ,,

HOUISIMON. tllru SAY. 6:30 A.M.-1100 P.M.

. :!··WILLIAMS DINER

1~

I
I

,.
I

�..

";

Friday, January 15, 1988
6 Lolt and

LAFF·A·DAY

Found

42

LOft Rodely S-o ._.., ....
end M1ton

1WHR New .._.,.,.

7

·- :n::::.. .,..::::== .:.:-·==
-""·-------·~
--···-··

-·
:........... . -.......
.: _

I Ul Uotil N001I SA!UitAY
&lt;LOIID SUNNY

_ _ . . .,..,...lloltioOf Mo _ _ _

~=
~=

loo _

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

~- ~ ,...-=
-_........ .....
..,.,..._ 1!1'? __ ., ......

_,. _ _

Yard Sale

MTJII

MDNIAY llw• ,_AY I lA M S PJL

__=

-'-"'":"/ IC-

t:.:::J::-~.==.,,.
..................
.._'"

f. !fWMM , . . . . . . . . . . -

..

... . ·oaUTj)OITi..........

___

,.

&amp; Vicinity

••
r
t:i
-~--­
:t:=.":.-

n:::.:r;:...
,._

8

Ratings released

ICards sign Homer

PUBLIC NOTICE
FOR SALE
1973 CHEVROLET C60
DUMP TRUCK

ST LOUIS (UP!)- Free agent
Bob Horner, criticized last week
by St Louis Manager Whitey
Herzog, Thursday was signed by
the Cardinals to a one year
contract to !til a' void left by the
departure of slugger Jack Clark.
Horner. 30, played last season
for the Yakult Swallows of the
Japanese Central League He
became the first maJO&lt; free
agent acquired by the Cardinals
Since they signed catcher Darrell
Porter Dec 13, 1980
"It's been a dream of mine to
play for the Cardinals," said
Horner, who turned down olfers
from the Texas Rangers and
Atlanta Braves to sign with the
National League champions
"What an absolute fit for me
Every ballplayer's dream 1s to
play for a perennial contender "
A week ago, however, It looked
as tf Horner would not be playing
for the Cardinals At that time,
Herzog satd Horner would not
solve the first base and power
httter problems left by Clark's
departure
"I just don 't think Horner's the
answer," Herzog said "I don't
know what he'd h1t In our
ballpark He never plays when
he's hurt "
" No player wants to hear
comments like that In the paper
about him," Horner satd at hts
stgning "After talkmg to Whitey
last night , I was very convinced
that he wanted me on the St
LoUis Cardmals

Browns, Broncos sport similar attacks

Pirate girls top SWHS 58-37

~-

.,

..

,

A.W

--~

I

DENNY CONGO'
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410 ·
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL -·SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

1

AKC Boston Ttnitr puppy or
AkC Chlnne Pug puppy Call
814·043·2710 anytime

ltJying Standing Timber Cal

PWMIING &amp; HEATING
Ntw

1~4-371·27&amp;8

Location:

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Flthlng Supplln

Pay

Your Phone
and Cable Btll8 Here

Bu'f'n~

dally gold, silver coins,
rtngs, Jewelry sterling were. old
coins, large currency Tap prl
cu Ed lurkaU Bart.- Shop,
2nd Ave Mkldlepan, Oh 614
992·3478

IUSINISS PilON£ •
16141 H2·6SSO
R£5tDfNCl PHON£
16141 992·775.4

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

Raw fur, beef and deer hldH
Oyn Sing end Yellow root We
htvt wheat and mte Iitts
Tripping supplle1 far ule (Buy
•nu uMd trapel Last day to buy
fur, Feb 8 1988 George
Bucliley Hours 12 9 114- 18447B1

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 LOC:UST ST.

1:00 P.M.
1

POI'IUOY -915-3561

KEN'S APPUANCE

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Standing timber Clll11114- 742
2328

SERVICE
985-3561

•R•nv••

Middleport, Ohio

IS FOR SALE
If interested stop by.

1/2 PRICE SALE
GOING ON NOW

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

Wf SEU USED APPLIAIKES

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

BISSELL
BUILDERS

742-2035

WANTED BHCC MoklngAdulto
for tr~~ining Batie Education,
AIEIGED. Job 8kltlo, Employ.
ment AHJnence. and Flnenc1al
Aid avelteble Contact Aduh
spr\IICII It 114- 246-1338
Dpn't doloy do h toc1oy1

CUSTOM BULl
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

ExCELLENT WAGES for •P.,.
time auembly work, electrona. crafte Otheq Info 1-804841-0081 bt 29S7 Opon 7
dfvs CALL NOWI

"At lllasonable Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

•

Young lady ta live-In and help
c•e for little boy Cell814-446·
- 89&amp;5

Day or

NO SUNDAY

1YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Roofing and gutter work

wotk

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 9U-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4 15 86fc

DON'T LET YOUR ELECTIICAL PIOILEMS IfCOME A SHOCK TO YOIII
CAll

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

~

Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

D&amp;C ELECTRIC

6:30P.M.

992-6226

Ron Dlle1 or
Gllry Cummln1

Choke

12·7·'17 ttn

BOGGS

.LLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP

SALES &amp; SIIYICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO
614-662-3121

•SWGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES
OPEN 1 to 9 P.M.
Rt 124 Acrou from
Heppy Hollow Rd.
RUTLAND

1o1m Dtort,

Ntw Hollailll, lush Hot

Farm Eqilipmont
haltt

E•••..••t

614·742·2355

tic

o.......

BASS
Needing 22 af Jan ConUict I
dayo 814·9t2·2031. 814-992·
2318 Afte• 8 814·992 6547 I

Wanted Peyroll Clerk Mult
know shorthand &gt;Co....,uter e•·
.,..tence helpful Salary n,gatia
bit with experience Send resume to Box Cia 123, c/o
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 125
Third Ave • Oalllpollt Oh1o
45831

ATTENTION ELECTROLUX
CUSTOMERS
Frank Fultz Is now your
authonzed factory Ale• and
Hrvice representative For
,Hrvice phone lo.t 937-2272, \
Anytwne

Unlimited Income Anyone may
W1nter CIHrance up 10 75
percent ott The Attic 203
Bridge St Guvanctalte. At 2.
Huntington
~

quality Call 114-448-8273 af

ter 7 PM

Bebyshter In my home for
kindergsrten tgt boy R1o
Gr11ndt ar111 Mu1t be d.,ndablo Col 814·24S·II01 allot&lt; B
PM

Middleport

.....wtuc.....t

12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10.7-tln

'------~~·~:;.

HIJ fARM UNIT
Seeking mdlvlduels In Gtllla and
surrounding countltt If you are
aek1ng e carM~r which includn
grtl\ earning• advlnc~ment
opportunlt1n. and unbeli.,.,eable
lncenttve program1 we shOuld
talk! Company benefits and full
training For ptrtonal Interview
mail neme, phone number lftd
brief 1ummery at employment to
Mr
District Manager,
Ba• Cle900. c/ a Galhpotls Daily
Tribune 128 Third Ave Oelllpo
lit Oh10 4&amp;831

Announcements

INFORMATION WANTED·
About Steven Lew11, w•f• Polly
Gardner rettdents af Gelll• t
County, 1840 to 18&amp;0 P1rents{
of Nathan leWis bom 1n Otaego
Ca N Y Veman Ltw11 3484
Grima by Laine, Uncoln. N E '
61102
'

(Free Eattmatea)

GUN SHOOT

F1111
P1rt1 &amp; Servl•

3

- Plumbing tnd electricel

Middleport, Ohio
1·13-tfc

.Aulhonnd

WJC Hethh Prolnllontl R•
qu•rad Ucen..d Dietician or
ehg1bll far hcensur'e Apply at
the Gallle County Health Department Equal Opportunity
Employer

Annuu nee 111 enl s

-Concrete work

992-2196

Faclory

'

-Addonl and remodelmg

PAT HILL FORD

----------.d
12/14/1 mo.

r

tVINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•SLOWN IN
INSULATION ,

BISSELL

4

Giveaway

Mature 1dutt to bebysh In our
home Mand-v
Friday Rtf·
erences Required 81luy negatiOblo 304·171 8918

"'ru

Lady to babysit In my home

814-440·1815

12

Situations
Wanted

Cenified nurH 1111JI;ant will
CJPII far aick or elderty in vour
home Ekp • dependtblt Full
or part time or Nliat for a few
hou" Call 114-387 0328

Insurance

!0&lt; Dlroct Ca•o ltoff. Tuottday
Momlng·10·111nlu...,._.,
o111. .1202 Ca&lt;ta Dr. Qa!Hpo.
Ill Oh6o for funher lnfDrm~tlon
ctlt 441·1171

"

l'

---------------~
3 male pert Collie and Engllth ~

Job humlntl Noo'd t okltll Wo
trlin peop.. for jobt aa euto
mech~~nicl. Clf'IIH••· IIMtrl·
•n•. food Mrviol worMr1.
ettctronloe teohnlollna. irMiu•
trial MnteNncewartcen. nur•
Ina atlliatOntt 111111 - ·
. .ohlnlm. tnd-.... IIIII•
.., now fDr aiM. . beolnnlng
Ja-ry 4111 CoM Tfi.County
Vout-1 Adult- tt7&amp;:1'
31111 nt. 14. A Wtritty af

Painter puppln.304 171- #
If!
1171
One female pup, 304 481- jP1
1904
r
..,.----,------~·~· j l

One12 week female puppy, Jln ::·
collie
7183 pan ah.,...d, 304-871· 1,'J

htndlnt
--ltabto
· to tar
PlY- ""
IYollllng o,.

Lost and Found

ollglblo

""

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

Govemm0111 .lalla. •t 1.040·
111.130-. - H I - Your

'
(

~-...:._--'-__...-~- .

*•

SJ!=f2··
PH. 949-2160

~------~----------·~
IIJtw11rd for return of-.... end 1\

Eltlmt~tea"

. . . . _plo_t_

Cocker Spenleft· 1 mille. 1"
flmtie • 3 pup1 to ltvt away to
GOOd homt1n eountry preferred
Call814·3BB·8717
•'

6

C.rtey Lott Mand., . . - 1l
from ........_ ftl p lramerllio .,f.i
Calli I 4-tH· ?148.

Gnft piano, C1110 IC.,board 1nd
organ tuiont In mv home tG
..,.nntrs. HVIInced etudente
AltO leach chording and trans·
poalng. If Interested c•ll 814
9t2 11403
Will do Federal and Statelncame
TPel, typing. booking, and
Notery Hrvice Margtrtt Parker
114 812.2214

Sa~

1917 Olda Cutle11 lul)f'Mie
Call 304-n l-6815 or 713·
5811
1188 Chi'\IY Chvene 4- door
automatic. AM · FM radio
'4000 Calll14· 742 2777

Space for emaH trtlltrt All
haall up1 Cablit Alto tfl'lclency
room•. el' and cUlt MMOn,
W Va Call 304· 773 5111

1885 Chovy Cavell• S,...:lol
Edition, futt 1njected ' cyl, 4
IPHd grev "lver stnpn. Grot
euv U.9n oo 304·175·
2683
•

For rent office -ce 172 N
Second MlddleltOtt. Oh 1, 2 or
3 rooms Will remodel to ault
tennant Phone 114-892·8471
or 614 992· 2.t13 after 7 00

1979 Pontiac LeMans wagon. I
eyi,PS, PB, AC auto. tkc cottd•
t2.500 00 30~·875 · 1794

pm

Sp1ciaus moblle home lata for
rent Family Pride Mobile Home
Park Qllhpoht Ferry 304-875
3073

78 Ch•mSiet Manu , 4 cyl,
1&amp;40 00 Ptlone 304 · 875
2467
For Hie 1988 Poot••c Fiero GT.
Clhn t8 700 304 171 4480

51

72

Trucks for S11le

Household Goode

Olllo Ill
t ....... H Adlftla.aillei ....,.. lor 100

lltd ICF .... llltltt1l """""

•

5olenimfi:
r1o11 R.... ........,, (
Ttlillltoo• ll141111.fio.,

3 bedroom hou• with 32 1c'"
in Eurekll, Ohio 1cra11 from the
d8m laHmttnt • etorage build
ina U1 BOO 814-441·22011

3 becfrogm houu In Gtllipolia,
Nice condh:lon 2029
ChothamStreot 031 BOO 814
441·22GB

Fum•lhtd lpt n•xt ta llbr~~ry
Ona profet•onal J(lult only
Park1ng Call 114 •48 0338

32 , Mobile

2 BR apt Stow • JOI&lt;Ig
fumiahtcl Near Oo Mart Call
114·441·7025

Ohio

Home•
for Sale

Trallw for ule 1814- 14x70
••cellent shape. custom made.
all otac •8700 Cell 114-698·
4428
Cambridge 1970 3 BR 12a70
Gat heat. 11A betht Extra' good
cond teBOO Call 81•·4•6·
0175
Firltllltof BI!Nopeymtntltill
Meyontln.w'l7't FrHcredlt
check F,.. deliVery • stt-up
We fln1nce whet we Mil UN
your tax refund! Hurry far but
ooloctlon ELIEA HOME CEN·
TER. Clrcillllilla • Chl111cotho
Ohio WATS· 100 Ill 07&amp;2
1 878 Wlndaor 14x70 with ex
Plndo 3 BR • ell elec CA.
wa1her6 dryer,awnlnga. porch
underp6nnlng Excel cond Must
He C1ll 114-182-7437 after I
PM

12•80 lnMiddl-rLCall814·
992 3150
1 819, 14x'70 tnller With 7x24
eapanda 3 btdraam, Stove and
..trif Vortnlco114·742-2840
ewninga
14•70 Wlndtor with 14x30
addition, 3 bed roomt, black top
road. appro• 3 acree G1lllpoiiJ
304 871·1130

Fo...,.
33

Farm• for Sale

•

103 IC!'ft 7 room hGUM Wtth
beth Unlimited free •••
8tocltod pond 2100 lb tObacco
bMe Atla tr~IJer ·~ with
-·UPS. Colllt4•742·2542

34

Buaine11
Buildings

For R~ Comm1t0ial lullding
In Downtown O.Hipol11 with
off-llrHtt p.arldng Alto a room
unfurnllhtCt apartment in Gelli
polio 304·171·4130

F111,1111:1,d
jlueinass
Opportunity

flt~.tl

31

Furnlshild apartrn.t, 4 roams •
b.th 1 or 2 tdutts No pets Ret
a MC dep reqUired Cell
114 44&amp;·0444
2 BR partillly furnished In
town f27S All utilities petd
Call 614·446·8723 after 7 PM
Nice cozy 3 room apt Furn11h"
All carpeted Utilities pa1d 1260
• mo Dep &amp; ref requlred Call
814-448-7&amp;16
Ala Grand• Nice 2 BR 1221
plu1 electric Call 114·441·
10311
Otacloul l1ving 1 end 2 bedroom apertmanta It VIllage
M1nor 1nd RM!rstde Apartmenta In Middleport From
f21 I Including utllldH Call
114·892·nl7 EOH

2 bedroom epartment on L•ngalrt
Hill. Pdm.roy Cal 814-812
lUI Of 114·182·3481
New, 1 bedroom apartment
Furniahtd or unturnlahad In
Pomeroy Call814-441-8898ar
114· 982 &amp;304
I room unfurn••had apt Call
., 4-9112 5434 o• 304 882·
2111

0000 USED APPLIANCES
dryers. refrlgeretors
r~ngea Skagg• Appll1ncu
Upper RIYtr Rd b.. 1de Stone
Crelt Motel 814 .t41 7398

w..herl,

lAYNE S FURNITURE
~

Sofa• and chtira prie«&lt; from
*391 to t995 Teblts •so end
up to t125 H1de • beds 1390
to t695 Rtchners •225 to
1375 Llmpo 028 to •126
Dinettes 1101 and up to 1486
Woad table V¥·8 chair~ 1286 to
1795 Delli. 1100 up ta t376
Hutchts '400 and up Bunk
beds campll'tt w-mattreues
1295tnduptal395 Babybtds
1110 MattresHa or box 1pnngt
fuH or twm 188, firm 178 and
188 Ounn aetl 1221. Kmg
'350 4 drawer chest t89 Gun
Clblneu 8'un a.. ar electric
Baby mattra11e1
range 137
135 &amp; 146 Bed frame• 820,
130 &amp; K1ng frame 160 Good
Mlect1on of bedroom aultu
metal Clbinetl headboerdJI30
and up ta aa&amp;
....... . ....

90 Days ' ume 11 caah With
1pproved credit 3 Miiea out
Bulav1lle Rd Open 9am ta 6pm
Man thru Sat Ph 614 448·
0322
Valley Furmture
New and ultd furniture end
epphcancea Call 814-446·
71;72
9 5

'I·"'·

PARSON'S FURNITURE

Rt: III' Is

2 bedroom furn•l8d ept, rtf and
deposit. New Haven. W Ve •

304·882·3217 or 304· 773·
1024

for Rent

Lartt 2 3 BR hou• Ptenty af
atorage Htndenon area Call
014·441·7021
•

3 lad""'"' I bltho In ChoohiN
on Riverfront Available March
1 n Dap • ret required Call
114·317 7117 or 1 703 3118·
1108

- · CoM 114·441-3171.

J Ill · Ltnd ·
131,000
11100-.2.....
INm on lit 141 w..

- •

I'M-

F~rewood
delivered stacked
1315 00 M11on Caunt1e1 Galli
poht, other ereea w•th1n res1on
at our diSCrtatian, 304-896·
3448

8 h '.'l~Uiatlon coin operated
pool table 'AI mch slate top one
HI bel•. 16 pool sticks exc
ahape, 1150 00 Call even•no•
304·982 2400
Lasa.splltter. eatra heavy duty. 4
way aphtter, 18 hp engine. 18
gel per minute pump 6 •nch eye I,
split 41 lnchn long on lraller
1971 El Cam.no good cond.
304 876-4127
Left hind Whitetail II compound

baw w1th accealolres 304 676
2467

SURPLUS DENIM Co&lt;ho&lt;l.
Rental Clothing Naw h••vv
coverelle t22 00, ~ new
warlt eloth1ng, boatlall Winter at
rea10nable price• Sem lama
rvilla'a. Old At 21 · junction
lndependtnce Road Ea1t R•
venswood. Fn, Sat. Sun. noon8 00 pm 304·273-5856

Used nrfng. 1afa &amp; chair Corbin
Ave

B•tch Street, Mkldlepan, Oh10.
2 becfraam furnish_. apt. utili
11u Hid, rtferenc.and depo11t.
304·882·2681
Three bedroom lptiCIOUI apt,
unfurnllhed leundry room. Jef·
fet~on Blvd 304 178 2135
Furn11hH apt •n town. cal
304·175 :2820 before I 00 pm
Nice 1 bedroom apt. Wlter 1nd
lartaa• paid, aw cond end
ceiling fant, grounds Clrt for. na
children or pete phone 304
773 1312 o• 304·B82·2827

Rooms for rent. d1Y week
month Gallla Holtl Can 114
448 9180 Rent 11iowas•120
month
Sleeping room for gentleman
Upltlirs Privalt entrance I 1 25
lllj)ftthly 114-982-7204

46

53

814-4461171

Antiques

Antique Bra11 bed Ful 11111
Corbin &amp;: Snyder Furn1tu,. 955
Second Ave 814-4411171
Ant1que1. buy ar Mil R1vanne
Antiquu. 1124 East M1ln St.
Pomeroy Houri Mon Tu.. ,
andWid 1000am 800pm,
Sun 100 pm 800 pm By
chance or appointment Russ
M-e 814 992 2528

54

Misc. Merchandise

Call1h1n's Used Tue Shop Over
1 OOOt1r11 ai1•112 13. 14,15,
te. 115 8 miteo out Rt 2tB
Call 81A·26B·8251

Space for Rent

c

Nlft 2 aR hou•ln M_,.,..
DW• ...._ d,._., AC. lui
belefMnt, l!aoet. location C.l
II 4·441·1103 B 30 PM

311td"""" h - to. Nnt

-......RtKWIIil.~

Woodbumer. modem 4ft wood
coffee Ulblt. wam1n1 minored
dre11er, 304 176 4-0&amp;4

Oak flf'tiWOOd C1il 304-876
2757 eher 4 30 p m Aalc for
Woodm1n

APARTMENTS mob1le homes.
ha,.MS Pt PIHIInt and Gllllpollt 114·441·8221 c

lrond now J IR.-

-"
· ... lerval~
. . .·
- Cal
81+448-IOJI.
SIR llotiae- ..... -htl

U Haul truc:ka and tralters for
rent, 304·6715·74-21

4Yt acres. approved Hptlc,
county water, utlilt..a, Send Hill
Road, not restricted. after 7 00
call 304.e75-1128

UftfurnliMd. 2 bedroom~. no
............. Dttpoolt Nqulrod
con t14·112·30t0.

LOGbonllt 7 . 2 - - - . -

For Slle Ladles white uniform•
size 18YJ 20 814 992-2779

Extra nice 8 piece dark p1ne
living room ••.ute Excellent
upholltery 1nd very 1turdy
UIO 814
--.:.;.:._:_
_992
_ 7715
_ _ _ ;, JcPhllco Rtfrlger~~tor, worlilgood, • 65 Building Supplies
no 4 drawer dreller $20
Meltl wardrobe. t20 Mt11l
bed 110 Cell 814·986·4362
Bu•lding Materi1l1
Block bnck Mwer p1pea, win
While. 40 Inch Wh~rlpooleleC1rlc daws, llntele, etc Claude Win
range with 2 avena Vety Qoad
ten, Rio Grande. 0 Call 814
condition Call814 992 3270
246·6121
PICKENS USEO FURNITURE Concrete block I allsiZtl yard or
Soft'l. chatrs. lampe, rechnert,
delivery Mason llf1d Galhpohl
d11het dmnette, beddtng, hide·
Block Co
123Yt Pine St
•bed glauware a. mise 304
Gelltpolla. Oh1~ Call 814-446
875-1460
2783

Acreage

41R ,f....,..a.fullb....,ent 3
ml 10. of Oa~U1 t32.100
Call D-114-44e.ll11. ~...,
1 oo. -·1244
•

lot - - WIH
In af m -

1979T Bird, goOOconditiOn 14
ft Myers boat with oral and
tmall motor 814 992 2890

Nicely turmthed ground floor 1
bedroom apartmHt Ideal far
tingle or couple Attached g•r·
age No peta 114 IM9·244-1

It

114 441.QI74

Gal.....

lntel"'lltt Batten•• for ule Alia
Blend latteriu Buying junk
bitter... Mo"il Equipment
814 702 2455

Mollohan Furniture
&gt;
Upper River Ad Oalllpolla Oh
Dlntttea·l226 • up, Liv•ng
room suites- 8300 a. up,
Rachners t155 6 up. c;.rpet
ttarting at t4 • yd Financing
available ta qui1H1ed buyen Call
814·44B· 7444

ol-e holt Ref NqulNd Coli

Homes for Sale

Miked hard wood alabt e12 per
bundte Contamlng epprox 1 VJ
tan FOB Ohio Pallet Co
Pomeroy. Ohio 814- 892 14-11

POLITICAL ADVERTISIMENT
1mprtnttd spec1alt1t1 metchts,
Un1on mede, H o. "Sam"
Somerville. I linea 1181) June
t•on Independence Roed, Old At
21 East-Revenawoad ar 58
Burdette Addn Point Pleaunt.
304-273-6886

&amp; Snyder Furniture. 9&amp;5 Second

30' Harvell Gold tlectnc range
t95 , Maple drop leaf dining
table pad 3 le1v11 6 chairs
lamps tl 00 and up Dreuer1
130 end up Oeakl$20 and up
304-875-1460

Reedy mix eancrete end all
cancrelt 1upphet Cal ue Valley
Brook Cement 1nd Supph..
304 n3-5234

56

Pets for Sale

Groom end Supply Shop·Pet
Grooming All breede All
styles l1m1 Pet Food De1ler
Julie Webb Ph 614·441·0231

1 oaom duple•. b-m- uor
m.~ nlctolocttlon 304·

...

AKC 1!11- Old E~loh

....... Dot -~- tar ltud
-.-mUIIINt.. - ·

11 l u - -"-· Potnt Pl. .
aom. J04.171·HSI. toW price
on 1.-.
Do owto
-

~~;;;~;;;-H;;;;;;;;:

...-

......... 304·182·2Cif4.

57

Mualcttl
lnltrumente

--·•M-.

aItt&lt;• '"'.........
w.v
....,..,..- ...t'letiV.
to ·
1:00- ...

Guitar Ll!t t aU lndluWuil In·

PIANO POll IIlLI
WMtM· R .., t ultk petty to

l--------a:.:.:=r
.:,:.·..: 114-lll·ltM
r..-. ... - ~ ~~-lilllllt
c.1
I ..

114...1·

...................... fiMI\111
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Col
Mtntger tt 111·114· 1111

011

Cd
or 114·111·

tovti&lt;M.

'•,.t.:.SH:;:_I_,_,-~~~-- J ~7104..;.,..
_ _..__ _ _,;__

I •

•

)

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

1 982 Oodge 250 Ram Custom
canwr11on Trailer retldv Call
614-446-4383 day• 446 0139
evens &amp; weekends
1977 Bronco New batterv &amp;
tire1 Runs good $1500 Ca I
614-246-9394
1986ChevyBiazerS10 4wheel
drnta loaded Evart po11ible
opllon. aun roof $8000 Call
814 992 6141

76

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessonas

wetdeater~

USED EQUIPMENT
A vanety of used tractorl round
balers rake. mawen. gnnder
mixer. gravity wagon blade
plows earn picker heybmet, ~
Nltr1, chain•w. tob ~titer
disc 1 harrow

JIVIDEN'S

Used &amp; rebu1lt trensm111rons All
Internally inspected &amp; guern
teed Call 814 44-6 0916 We
buy JUnk transm•n•Onl

79

814 448 1176

800 Ford tractor whh plowt &amp;
cultiVItor, S2996 AC 0-12
tractor With plows cultivator
belly mower 11691 Owner will
f•nance Call 814~286·8522

62

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Travel tr11ler sleeps 6 good
cond $600 00 304- 773 5873

1981 60 HP bulldozer w1tl1 h"t
power 3 pt h1tch, •hlce new 22
hour~ post drtver 3215 Owner
w1ll finance Call 614
281.6622

Se rv1ces
81

Wanted tO Buy

Home
Improvements

\

1-------'--.,,--,-_:_

Livestock

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnconditiOnal hfttlme guaran
tee L'cu;:al reference• fumiahed
Free est1m1te1 C•ll collect
1 114 237 0488 dey or night
Rog•rsBasement
Waterpraof1ng

12 Grade Holste~n He Hers Will
atart to freshen in February Call
114 474 7283 after 8 PM

SWEEPER end 1ew1ng machme
repeu pen• and supphea P1ck
up 1nd del1very, Dav11 Vec;:uum
Cleaner one helt m1le up
Georges Creek Ad C1ll 614-

Now buy1ng shell corn or eer
corn Call fodatest quotes R1Ver
City Farm Supply 814 448
2185

63

Registered Quarter Harte, May
1983 Gtldtng, 16 3 hands
Ou1et The Own Son of Choco
lale Convoy jWorld Halter
Chemp1on) Call 614-286
8622

6 mce 12 week old pt~• for tale
Cell814 949·2237
2 Simmental yearling Built
Sire. big &amp; tall Contact Paul R
Kerr Chnter Oh1o· 614-9853638

P1gs $25 00 etch, R1ce's P1g
Farm Ten Mile Road, 2 m1les
from Rt 82 304 461 1683

64

Hay

It

Grain

Milled hay ar aHalfa - square
Nle1 Mind hay large round
bal81 Call 114 288 3334
Jaelc1on Oh10
Good conditioned hav S1 25
per bl,. Call 114 985 •291

Tr ~ n:-; por1 ~11un

roano

AKC 1011tt- 2 yot• old
Chow-Chow, uled tor ltUd
.. rvtoe. 1trlou1 ln(lutrM onty.
p110MII4-441.QOU

73

JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIPMENT
Spec~al tale pnces on Long &amp;:
Klatl uactort S. Vermeer balers
All types Qf Vermeer mowmg
raking 6 leddmg ~ui.Piflent A
-complete line of bale handling&amp;.
IHdlng acceuon... gnnder
mb.1rs wegont, tra•lers. rotary
tiller. rotilry cutter~ blades
cultlv1tora. d•ac plows. seeder•
poet augers &amp; post dnver~
wood1phtttr1. gates. he1dgate1
J)OWtlrwsthen 1queeze shoots
llveltOCII waterers plaetiC tlnb
mmeral feeder~. truCk or tra•ler
ramps, truck reck• spr1yera,
Wheel Har1e lawn &amp; garden
tract on 6 Huaqvama cham ..ws

1 184 Thunderbird loaded,
tha&lt;t&gt; Nancy Htn
OOOd
cond.. 1100 Cat 114 3818488

t200
monlll Muiben'YAW Pcm«&lt;y
114otl2·1187 01 114·892·
7410.

1976 Ford p1ek-up Rangar XTL
Runs tnd looks good t860
814·247-4122

CROSS. SONS
U S 35 WNt J1ck1on Oh10
814·288 6451
MtiiiY FergUIOf\. New Holland
lulh Hog Sal•• a. Service Over
40 ultd trllcto" to chooH from
&amp; complete line of n,w &amp; uaed
equiPment Largest selection 1ft
s E OhiO

&amp;

~

1977 Kenworth 3406 Caterpll·
l1r engtne Good rubber good
cond111an 1986 Frut trailer 41
ft w1th ••de kit Good rubber.
good cor1d1ti0n 614 742 2480
after 6 00

Farm Equipment

Dregonwynd Catttry Kennel
CFA Himalayan, Ptrs1an and 71 Auto's For Sale
S1tmeH klhens AKC Chow:J7"'-------'-----pupp&gt;n Coli 814-441·3144 1974 F 700 Ford FB 6x2T,
efter 7PM
Pentel ball hitch. 13300 3 axle
eq trallet' w•th ramps 11200
AKC Male Yorklhirt Tt"ier 1977 F 250 4•4 01800 1973
puppy a wks aid For mare lnt 1BOO Load star tandem With
lnlo•m Ctlll14 3&amp;7 0118
boom, 17300 Call 61 4 -317·
0857
Felm•l• Blond Cacliapao puppv
U.ying pulet1 Ceramic pten
198' Ptymauth Harlaon 4 dr
ware, ceramic bitqueware
N1ct tiOO or best affllf Call
Men'• dreu c:lathH C.H 114014•440 8317
441·4011
1879 C....,.. Co•dobt Good
Pame..,nlan Smtll red femsla
cond NHCis windshield 11500
Spayod t7B Call 114·44B· ar best after Call 814 4411927
11517 1htr I PM

11.-441-0117 or 11011 hit
w........ -.441-1077

•

61

I'

1979 Chhrolet ptckup Excel
cond One owner Auto V 8 38
Smith an 44 frame Cell &amp;14·
44&amp; 3899

fmn Suppltt~
/li Ltveolock

1178 Chevy Monze NIMis
..,.,, Aoklng t160 Coli 814
441 2141 "' ••• 212&amp;

.,....71.1m.

I ...._ . I -

Open all winter, plenty fresh
huits produce vmer~pe toma
tares, 50 cents pound Jeck 1
Fruit Martcet At 36 Henderson,
w ve

Far Sele- M1atd t11y. restncted
building lata Ca11241 1457

New wood 8 pc hvtng room
su1t11, 1399 96. ehett of
drawen 4 dr.wer 148 tw1n
mattretMI, t95 ,.t, m•crowa.,.
awtn 1t1nd1
THE WORKING
MAN ShtlEND

3 BR hou• on IR Big yonl,

I :-;l.ilo·

~.A.~=-•

Nice 2 IR apt • lto'lt. refr~g . •
water fumlshtd 4Yz mtles from
G111ipall• f215 ma No pau
Call814·448·8038

County Appliance Inc Good
used appHancn and TV seta
Open BAM ta 8PM Mon thru
Sot B14·441·1888 627 3•d
Ave Galllpohl, OH

RCA 26'' con~l• color TV.
.remote Excel cond 1200 Call
814 44111BI

20 acns m Hemlocli Orove erea
Co Rd 39 Excellent hunting
Some timber 114-892 7297
aftw500pm (':

Loti

Rent Ltlle·Land Contract
Hamtll In EuNII:a. Rodney Vii·
lage II EVIns Hgte Dep &amp; Ref
rltflulred Blacliiburn Realty,
Rntau,.ntlor oolo 1380 Eoll l '1_1_4_
·•_,.._·_0001
_ _- ' - - - - em A"' Call 11.-44-8-30n or
44-1 8782
Fum..hld HouM·IH First Ave
1200 1 mo Ref &amp; 1100 dep
Coil 114 441-4038 o• 448
111B
23 Professional
2 BR with flreplaoe • Y\ ICI'II
Services
1210amo Coll814·441·7881
Furniture refinishing tncl repeir,
quality work. Me t1timetee and
rtllonable rttea 304-171·
7911

Upstalra 3 room • bath, fur·
nlahed Cl ..n UtHitt .. pald Ref
&amp; deposit rtqulred Adutt. only
No.,.., Clll814·448 1519

NEW· W11tern boott• 130
Warkboots t18 • up (Steel&amp;.
soft toel Call 114-448-3159

Full-al:re me«ress !Stern• 6
Faster}&amp; ba• spr•nga E•cel
cond Call 614 24&amp; 5040

N1cety furn~ahed small hou1e
Aduht only Ref requ~red No
palO Ca11114 441-033S

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends lh.st you
do bualnHt with people you
know and NOT to 1end maftty
through the mill untif you have
1nvt1stigettd the offering

luiWry T•• Apartments El..
g1nt, 2 Br 2 flaar, tully
c•petld. CA and Met Private
entrance, encloMd patio pool It
pleygraund Steu-t219 per
month Utlllthts nat mcludtd
Ctll814·367·78150

of uted furniture

tPt Louted down
town Pamlf'Oy Call 814·9921058

3 BR hauH • garage A 1 Real
Estate, Carol v...., Broker
304-87B·B104

21

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 531 Jacloocn
Pike from t1 13 a mo Welk to
Shop and movln 814-448·
2568 EOH
,

sultet,-~j\'~li~::;!::bedroom
·
Desks
wringer Wllher. a complete line

JVC VHS VCR- 4 heed, remota
control b:cal Cond t200 Ctll
814-448·1155

Up~irt

36

e1 •·

Apartment
for Rent

2 BA lptl I cloatta, kitchen·
appt furnilhlld, W•her Dryer
hook up, ww carpet. newly
painted deQ Atgency, Inc
Alit• Call JO.t 171 7738 or
816-5104

41 . Homes

.... -·117·1000 £tot. II·

;:'t.'

w1tll8 femolo ... A - to .

Will Clrt far eld!My In theirhame
or mint Or will do houH
cleenlng 614·992·7179

Middleton Eatatee Group Homtl
for etdtrfy wiU ......,... and

18 chicken• ta g~ '•
ca:-w-ay:....:C~a.,.ll..:l_1_
4·-=3~8..:7..:·7..:1.:"::..._ ' •

:

Proftsalonel R•umea Send In·
formation and 110 ta 177 Sun
Valley Dr Oalllpalla. Ohio
46831

1348

Approx

2 or. 3 bedrooms, full b...ment
g•111 HpaNtt With bacli 1ft
trence~ call efter 3 30 pm.
304·17B·259t

Wanted to Do

Cart for edlerly pereona m their
llo1111 Call 114·388·8507

labf'altter needed in my home 3
or4deyJaweft Call814·44-8·

To good hom• Smtll mall"
muted breed dag Approx 164lbl Blackl!.tanwithwhlteblau ~
short h1ir CIIII14·44CI 13.4 "

FOj.IIU), Mod
f-lo .....· l•
......
"'""''"''
lhaplleld
.._ Found
In dctuiii&amp;Mn
lun.1
Call 114-441·111f till ~

"FrH

All areas Cell MarHyn

0CCIIiOMI daytkna baby•ner In
my hom~ lrregullf Khadule,
Hnd ntmt and phone ta P 0
Box 431. Point P.l....nt. W Va
25560

18

' 12-31-871 mo pel

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

AYON

4 5-ffc

WHITt Hill RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO

PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKES. BAKITS, ETC.
12 2 '871 mapd

Penon to do houMdeaoina
Some caaklng. mull be
experltnctd with your own
famlty or others Contact A R
Knight 114 882·2433 Coli at
118 Uncoln Rd .Pomeroy

Call ua far your mobile home
lnwurence Miller Insurance.
30:4 812-2148 Alaa auto,
home. IHe. hnlth

•Dryen •Freeze,.

THE DABBLE ·SHOP

train Apply In penon. No phone
callo
410 Pike St . Ganlpollo. Ohio

~I~ I VII I'

•Wethers •D11hwashera ~
•Refrigerators

10.9-tln

Holidey Inn. OeiHPOIIt

Wented Evening Cook: We w1ll

13

l•npl11~1111~111

All Make•

llCINE, OliO

44
Medical Asll•m
Young end dwe~plng Medical
PI'IICticeliiHklng ll*aQII with'
1 etrong beokground for a long
term pothiOI'I. Wt lire looking for
MNneane to till~ the Doctor
with petienta, and handle backup ,.oponllbllhlft with bllllnjj,
the bualnau offiCI 1nd general
dutiei Th• pro.-r Individual will
have 1 greet opportunity to grow
wtth the practice PlaaM Mnd
your rHUme in strict confidence
ta the fOllowing tdctr.M Th•
Oolly Sontinot P 0 Bo• 7298.
Pomeroy, Ohto 4171t Quail·
fled eppllc:antl will be contected
In the M~r future for an
lnterviN Th11 potition islmmedlotalyopon

wu- 304·182·2&amp;41

WANTED TO BUY Cimtonnlal
Book Gallipoll1, Ohio pnnted In
1980 Varnon lewis 3ol54
Grimsby Une, Ltncoln, NE
B8B02

161 North Stcond
Mid•oport, Ohoo 45760

OIIIIIM COIITIAC101S
Ref•en us
11 :J.tt"

6-IJ.tfc

W1nt lo buy UNci furniture end
antiques Will buy entire hau11
hold furnishing, Marlin Wedemeyer, 814 245-6162

UHCI MobUe Hamt1 Call 8U.44B·0171

915-4141

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Camp.... hauMholcts of furnl·
turl • entiq1111 Aim wood &amp;
COli heeter1 SWIIin'l Fumttu,.
&amp; Auction, Third &amp; Olive,
114-441·3111.

1

_.., .......

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tra•••lealo•

WANTED TO BUY UIIOd wood
&amp; cOli hHtlfl IWiin'l Fuml
ture, 3rd &amp; Olive It GelllpoUa
Calll14·441·31&amp;8
•

CALL 7U-23 5

CHESTER. OHIO
I
•HOME BUILOJNG
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODEUNG•
REPAIRS
8EP1'1C SYSTEMS.
lACK HOE WORK

124, PomtroJ Clhoo

TOP CASH paid to. '83 model
and newer uMCI ctrtl Smlth
a Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Ea,ttm
Ave • Galtlpollo Call 114·441·
2282

WIDE
SELECTION
All MAKES AND
MODELS

10.8-tfc

Rl.

Bill GeM Johnson
B14·441 3172

NEW AND USID

CONTIACnNG

~

u"d cart
Jtm Mink C""' · Otda Inc

PARTS

MARCUM

Roger Hysell
Garage

We pey c••h far lete model clean

v.w.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
z.- Gallipolis,
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Ohto 45631
'
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry lilts, Pomeroy,

Auto'a For

1977 Chevy 8 cyl Call
448·3044

Bill SLACK I
614-992-2269

!::z: Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

V1llage of Racine, Oh•o.
receive Snlod Bids
8·00 P M • Mondoy, Fo·
bruery 1, 1988, for tho 1973
Chevrolet C60 dump lruc:lc
declared e•caoo property by

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo P"b
Route 33 Nanh of Pomeroy
Rental trallere. Call 114-112
7471

12•10 2 bedroom rnoblat home
Completely fumlahed WISher
and dryer Cell 304·576-2842,
Ashton area

Per Pickup Load
Delivered

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Jano Beegle, Voltage ._,.,~, . 11

71

Space for Rent

s3500

Deptndlble Hnnna
Sales
CJ Hearin&amp; Evaluations For All Ages

Public Notice

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

46

LOcust, Oak, Cherry

.,

Braves m 1986 before signing
COLUMBUS, Ohto tUPIJ with the Japanese team as a
Cmc tnnalt Seton, Garfield
free agent In May 1987. With
Hetght s Tnntl} , Rocky River
the Braves In 1986, the
Lutheran West and DeGraff
nght handed slugger batted .273 village council
Rtverside hold down the No 1
The Sealed Bids will be
with 27 home runs and 87 RBI
spots m the first week of the 1988
Horner has a career average of opanad at 7 00 p m February
1, 1988, ot the regular
Umted Press InternatiOnal Ohto
278 and 215 homers In nine ....,nthty
cou~t ....ung
Htgh- Schooi Board of Coaches
seasons In the majors.
C&lt;Juncol . _ the right to
girls basketball ratmgs
St. Louis General Manager Dal acc;ept or r11ect any and/ or aU
Se ton heads the Dlvtsion I or
Maxvill, who was third base bids
vehoCie may be..., dur·
big school ratings, with the
coach at Atlanta when Horner ongThe
the day houro by contact·
coaches votmg m four dtvtstons
played there, said Horner would ong Glenn Rl- 1t the wfor the first time rather than
Depamnont Buiding, 3Jd &amp;
contribute to the club
v
... Streit.
three classes , accordtng to the
"One of Whitey's concerns and
Bidders ore to marl&lt; on the
new state tournament format of
a concern of mine at the tlmewas envelope;
"BID FOR CHEV
the Ohto High School Athletic
the length of the contract," ROLETDUMP
"
Assoctatton
Maxvill said "In the negotia
Tnmty was the coaches' top
tlons, that changed a bit and
chmce m Dtvtston 11, Lutheran
when that changed, our tnterest
West m Divtswn Ill and River
definitely increased a considera ·
stde in Dlviswn IV
ble amount "
Se ton ill ·OJ the 1986 Class
There also was some concern
AAA poll champ, held a 239 225
about Horner's ability to hit
margm over Toledo Central
home runs In spacious Busch
Cathohc (12 0) m Dtvtswn I and
Stadium, but "we think he can h1t
also a 14 7 edge in ftrst place
anywhere," Maxvtll said
votes
Horner, who earned NL Rookie
Bo8 \..I!~!.!.U.J
of the Year honors when he went
E Main ·•
directly from Arizona State into
POMEROY, OH.
the major leagues in 1978, is
992-2259
expected to play first base and
RUTLAND-1\\storyhome
fill some of the vo1d left by the
m Rutland 3 bedrooms,
departure of Clark
bath and storage butldmg.
"It opens up a whole new
Front sittmg porch, all on a
Jackson at Galltpolls
challenge for me I'm sure the
n1ce lot
ONLY $19,900
Athens at Loga n
to
be
comparisons
are
going
Warren Local at Manetta
MIDDLEPORT - Unoque 3
made/' Horner said, "'but I can
Northwes t at Portsmouth West
bedroom home m, good
onlygooutanddowliatlcando ' '
Greenup at Poitsmouth
condiloon
Equopped k•t
The terms of the contract were ·
Sy mmes Valley at Southern
chen
washer
and dryer
not disclosed, altho11gh Horner
Southwestern at North Galha
1ncluded Ftreplace fronl
satd there were Incentives for
Hanna n Trace a t Kyger Creek
sotiong porch 1\\ baths
games played and performance
$18,500
Oak Htll at Eas tern ,
"All I wanted to hear was just He satd he could have made more
Valley at Wheelersburg
the htgh stgn from Whitey that he money m Japan, but that the
RACINE - Matn Street Gtlmet County at Wahama
real!) wanted me to be here, and Cardmals' offer was better than
Close
to e~erythmg Cute 3
Waverly at Mmford
I think even If he hadn't wanted
bedroom
home on a level lot
those
made
by
Texas
and
Rock Htll at South Pomt
me, It would have been a Atlanta
Carport, storage buildtng
C K at Chesa pea ke
Close to shopping, church,
challenge for me to come here
"It was a little btt sweeter than
Was hmgton CH at Greenfield
scho~s
$19,900
and prove to htm that I could still the deals we turned down wtlh
Saturday's games:
play thts game and play It well. • Atlanta and Texas ," said
Ga lhpohs at Pomt Pleasant
MIDDLEPORT - Here IS a
"I didn't want to let this thmg
Horner, who was accompanied
Portsmouth a t West Unton
cute
one floor plan 3
slip out of our fmgers, so I called by Bucky Woy, hts agent "I
bedroom home n1ce kitchen
Jackson at Wh eelersburg
Whitey and had a great conversa
would have had no trouble
and bath Shed equipped
Waverly at V1nton County
tlon with htm last ntght, ' Horner Signing back m Japan, and
kitchen
$16,500
East Clinton a t Greenfield
' said
I
turned
down
a
lot
of
fmanctally
Warren at Fort Frye
Horner played for the Atlanta
POMEROY - Just out ol
money. but I'm satisfied "
town• Over 13 acres oi land,
great buoldong sttes older
house on property needs
repatr Agood buy at
$9,200
ALBUQUERQUE, N M (UPIJ 29 carnes m the 34 10 victory
Cleveland's runmng game Is
- The Cleveland Browns and the over the Houston Oilers in last
not limited to Mack 's talents If
LETART AREA - Appx 2
Denver Broncos have had stat1s
Sunday's AFC divisional playoff
Mack is Ineffective or has to
acre m1n1 farm wtth small
ttca ll y compettttve runmng at - game.
barn, sned plus a 1978
leave the game, as he did last
modular un~ w1th 3 bedrms,
tacks dunng the regular season.
Cleveland's offense averaged
Saturday with a stomach virus,
satellite dtsh Dnlled water
'The fa ct that the1r passmg 116 3 ru ~ hlng yards a game, but
the team can use Earnest Byner.
well
$24,000
ga me ts so ex plome, you don't erupted for 175 yards on 34
Byner gained 432 yards on 105
heat much a bout the1r runnmg carnes In Its 38·21 decision over
carries and etght TDs during the
MIDDLEPORT - Two to
ga me,
Br own s head coach the Indianapolis Colts last
regular season, but exploded for
three bedroom home loMarty Schott enheimer satd prior Saturday.
122 yards on 23 carries and one
cated m town Level lot,
to Thursday's workout at the
The Browns figure that shut·
TD against the Colts. He also led
carpet1ng and other n•ce
Untvers t!Y of New Mexico
tmg down the Broncos' running
Cleveland with 52 receptions
features MAKE OFFfR
The Browns meet the Broncos game and containing quarter·
$19,000
during the regular season
In th e AFC IItle game Sunday at back John Elway , the league
The Broncos do not have a
NEW LISTING- POMEROY
Mtle Htgh Stadtum
Most Valuable Player, I ~ the
Byner m reserve Denver's
-3
bedroom tratler JUst out
"They have a good running gameplan for victory
second leading rusher during the
of
town
Wood burner, I car
game and Sa mmy Winder ts an
"If anybody contams John
regular season was Elway, who
garage,
equipped kitchen,
outsta ndmg back ·
Elway, our chances of winning Is
gained 304 yards on 66 carries
AC, fenced yard Also has
Denver' s ground attack is le&lt;l going to be much less," says
and four touchdowns
workshop w1th hookup for a
by Winder, who gained 741 yards
Denver head coach Dan Reeves.
The Broncos' run defense has
woodburner m the garage
on 196 carr ies . a 3 S.yard aver·
'If we contain (Browns quarter
Frmt trees MAKE OFFER
allowed an average of134 5yards
age, and six touchdowns. He had
baf k) Bernie Kosar , we also
$15,000
per game
46 ya rds on 13 attempts agamst
have an excellent chance to win
''(Cleveland's) running game
MIDDLEPORT - Two un~
the 01Iers last week
"It's not that we don't respect
has been a little more effective
apartment
buildmg. Ready
Winder, a 5 foot ·ll, 203·
their running game, but nowa·
than ours this year," said
to
be
moved
1nto. 3 bedroom
pounder fr9m Southern Missts· days , you need to have a
Reeves "They mix the pass and
umts
should
rent lor
sippi. has gained more yardage quarterback you can rely on to
run a little better than we do. We
$200MO PLUS EACH PRICE
than Clev•Iand 's Pro Bowl ful
get you out of those tough
rely a little more on the pass "
REDUCED MAKE OFFER
!back, Kevin Mack Mack ran for
situations on third down ' '
$16,900
735 yards on 201 carries, a
3 7-yard average, and fi ve TDs
SYRACUSE - Bnck and
kame ranch type home wtth
But Denv.er's ground attack
basement I car garage, 3
may have difficulties establish
bedrooms, large level lot
Ing a tempo against Cleveland
Fenced
area Good condt·
Since the season opener In New
!ton
Call
tor appt $39,500
game
Sat)lrday
against
visiting
Junior Rachel Borden Jed all
Orleans. where Rueben Mayes
Chesapeake. The Highlanders
collected 147 ya rds, the Browns scorers with 20 points Thursday
POMEROY - Beautiful
will play at Hannan Trace next
night to pace visiting North
defense has not allowed a run
modern kttchen compll
Thursday.
nlng back to reach the 100.yard Gallla to a 58-37 win over
ments lhts 3 bedroom home
NORTH GALLIA (58) ~
Southwestern in girls' basketball
plateau.
w~h 1 deck FuM basement,
Borden 8·1·1·20; Coe 6 0.1·13;
lots ot closet space N•ce
After facing the Saints. the action
Cordell 2·0·4-8, Parsons 3·0·1·7;
woodwork PRICE REDUCED
Though the Bucs found them·
Browns instituted the " Bear"
$42,900
Pickens 2·0·1·5; Stout 2·0·1·5
defense and that formation has selves on top 28·13 at halftime,
TOTALS - 23+1J..il8
effectively stymied opposing 1'the score wasn't Indicative of
SOUTHWEsTERN (37)- Bal
running games Cleveland al· the intensity that both teams
ley
7·0 1)5, Hammond 2·0.0-4,
fioor,"
said
Pirate
showed
on
the
lowed just 95.5 rushing yards a
Pope
2·0·0·4; Hall1 0·1·3, Lewis
mentor
David
Moore
game In the regular season,
0·1·0·3;
Potter 1·0·1·3, Burlesoq
Pirate junior Tammy Coe also
second best In the league
1·0.0·2;
Stoner
1·0·0·2; Lambert
Denver's rushing attack aver scored In double figures, with 13
0
0-1
1.
TOTALS
- 15-0+31
aged a surprising 131 3 yards a The Highlanders were led by
Seore by quarters
game in the regular season and junior Christa Bailey, who
North
Gallla .... 14 14 1~ 18-58
scored
15
ranked sixth In the AFC, but the
Southwestern
. 5 8 -12 12-37
The
Plri!les
wfll
play
their
next
- Bronocs gained just 61 yards on.
--

Tonight's games

.\

Thursday. Horner played last year for theY akult
Swallows ha Japan after spendlnJ nine years for
the Atlanta Braves. Maxvlll hopes that Homer
will till a void left by the departu~ ofslugger Jack
Clark to the New York Yankess. (UPI)

2 bedroom mabilt home, fuel oil
hut, good for couple and ont
child, no pet, 1180.00 month,
304-871-4088

FIREWOOD

Bus·i ness
Services
ALL SMIIJ£S - St. Louis CardiDals' general
manager Dal MaxviU, right, Is all smiles as free
agent Bob Horner displays his aew uaUorm after
signing a one-year contract with 'he team

3 bedroom unfumlshtd Stow
and rafrig . curtalnl t210
month t100 depoaH and utilitin 114-992 7479

Qalltpolll fiM M.,ktt · FormM
Oa- Rto 3B. 110
Open llturdtYI a lund•y•
t-1

:s::::=-....

a:c:;:r=.
,,_.
,,_,....,

Furnished 2 BA mobile home
Located at K 6' K Mabllt Hom.
Park, E11tem Aw Dtp a Nf
r~ulred Calll14·211-1187

. .; . . ............········..

:!1!rrt.::"'
.. ...
q::::J:;i".. ...

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Crown City, 1 Z•B&amp; 3 lA Newly
carpeted AC. hilt wfdl proPin• 1220 1 rna plu1 1100
demage dep • utllftitl Older
eowpfe preferred. Llmlt 2 child
ren Ref requtred C1ll 1!114·
211· 1138

304·112·2183, .... 2·2125

TO IUCI All AI CIU ttl 1156

Th&amp; Daily Sentinel-Page 11

·Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

1t74 AMX Jovolon t200 Call
114·841·2201
1110 Iuick Rittlal exhau11 Sa~ body
Callll4 441 7111

""' •
•11500

t 977 Old I Cutle11 Auto , AC
11.000 mlloo; Votta Rollyo
11100 Call 114·441·4208 ...
,..8PM

.............. ""'..'"'

1874 ¥. 10ft plollup. 302. v ...
..,o. neo, 1111 M-rv
M•-· '721· wll Colle - ·
Celt 114·441·1112.

.....

-Itt

.....-.-.--

t•7BhrttM- - -

446 · 029~

~

J &amp; J Mob1le Home Service•
Budd on · remodel btth roonn,
well pump repllf replacement,
dram work (daan or unstop) All
work guaranteed SeMce calls
made Call 814 440 6744
RON S Telev111on Serv1ce
Hause calla on RCA Ouarar,
GE Spec11hng '" Zemth Call
304 676 2398 or 614 .t462464
Fetty Tree Tr~mm•ng stump
removal Ce11304 876 1331
Rot1ry or cable tool dr.lhng
Most well• comple1ed11meday
Pump aales and 1erv1ce 304
89S 3802
Stark• Tr•e and Lawn Serv1ce
ltwn care. l1ndscaplng. stump
remov•l. 304-676 2842 or
578 2903

82

Plumbmg
Heating

&amp;

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Car Faunh and Pine
,
Gllhpol•• Oti'io
Phone 61.t 446-3888 or 614
446 4477

84

Eiectrical
&amp; RefrigeratiOn

Res•dent11l or eomm..-c~el wlr
1ng New service or repa.ra
Ucennd electnc11n Estimate
free A1denour Elec1r•cal, 304 ~
876 1786

85

General Hauling

OHI1rd Water Serv.ce Poot1
Clstams Wftlll Otllvery Anv
t1me Call 814 4-48 7404-No
Sunday calls
J • J Water Service Sw•mm1ng
poa11. ci1tema wellt Pl'l 814
241 82n
A &amp; A W1ter Ser\llce Home
daters. wells, pools filled For- •
merly Jem• BoYI Waters Call
304 875 8370
Peul Rupe Jr Water SeMc:e,
,.,_,.,, c•terna wells Cell 114·
441·3171
Wetter110n'a W1ter Hauun,,
r~tonable r•tw. lmmedl ..e
2.000 Utllon dtllvlry, .........
coli 304·171- '
211t

- · -M. 87

Upholltery

tOr,
,.,..llally'o 1371
Colll14·441·7117

--.--ltotly . .

1111 lA Cer AM·FM OIIIMit.

• - ohtpo. 41000 mil••·
t1200 Colt 114·111·43111

,

•

•

�. .. . . . .....

. '"

~.

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel
. .

Eastern...

Co~tlnurd from page 1

May of 1988. and If It falls shall student for ~-ctlons or actJvlttes
·place the IPvy on the ballot each en11aged In or rPfralned from
successive November and May during the strike by the MLTA. ·
tor the duration of the contract
'"The board will pay cost of
until passage Is secured.
Ins urance payments for thOse
" SuppiPmt&gt;ntal Contract -" bargaining unit members who
Proposal as offfired by the MLTA used their benefits ulid!'r thl'
beginning the 1988-89 · school COBRA provisions .
year.
"Makeup days shall include all
"No Reprisal - The agree· days schools have been closed
ment will contain a no reprisal and onP·half the days schools
clause providing ·that no reprl· were open.
sals·wm be taken by the Board of
"It the partles .are unable to
a ny Pmployee against any em- . agree.on the amount of money to
ployPe, student, parent or a Implement the salary and fringe
benefit provision, the parties will
utilize e?~pedlted artltratlon
under· t6e American Arbitration
.
Association rules.

_Enter pleas of guilty
Two MPigs Cpunt y men piPaded guilty Jo charges against
· them m appearances before Meigs County Common Pleas

Judge Charles Knight.
·
.
. AppParlng this morning, Victor PPrty, 63, of Route 3, Albany.
a Columbia Township Trustl'!', t&gt;ntered a writtl'n plea of guilty
to cultivation of marijuana. The charge originated Aug.18.1987.
AppParlng Thursday. Phillip Laudermllt, 22, Pomt-roy,
entered a written plea of guilty to breaking a nd entering a
garage in the RacinE' arpa In m ld-~ember . Tools were taken
in the break-i n.
·
· Pre-sentencE' investigations were ord!'red on both men.
Sentencings have· been set for Feb. 25.

Stocks ·

Bank seeks foreclosure
Racin.e Home Natlonai Bilnk ha s filed In Meigs County
· common P l!'as Cou rt a $88,:!65.31 foreclosurp actio n for real
es tate in Salisbury Township from Coai Power Inc ..
Minersville, and Stanley 0. Hunt , Cha rleston , W.Va .
.
A Meigs County Grand Jury session has been schedull'd filr 9
a.m. Thursday . ·
·
·

'· "''

'•

Fridey, Ja~ 16, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

...---Local news---.. JUdge. ••

·~·

continued tl'om pa~ 1 .

bomb threat procedures.
ThP board entered Into · a
contract with the H&lt;~ll· Kimbrl'll
·E nvironmental Management Co.
for the purpose of complying With
thE' Asbestos Hazard Emergency
Response Act Compliance Pro·.
gram . Thl' faithfu l pprformance
bond program, in the amount of
$20,000 eac h on the president of
the board and the superi ntendent
through the Nationwide Insu·
ranee Co. was renPwed along
with mem bership in the Ohio
Schooi.Boards Assn.
Approv!'d were a n advancE' of
$282.57 from_the genPral fund to
the Chapter 11. Fede.ral Program
for 1987 until repmbursement Is
receive-d from 'the state; ap·
proved for cash flow reasons, a n
advance of $12.000 from the

• general fund to the lunchroom
fund. and· $6500 from the genera I
fund to the uniform supplies
r!'sale fund I student workbooks).

•

The board ,approved the dates
of April 29, 1988 through May 4
1988 for the 1988 senior class trip
and. granted a leave of absence
without pay, effective Jan. 19,
th~h April 4. 1988 for employee, Sally Caldwell. Brian
Windon, vocational agriculture
teacher. was reinstated to full
time. The board joined the
Coalition of Rural and AppalachIan School Districts for parity
pffort and . agreed to provide
flnan&lt;;lal support In the amoun.t ·
of from .~100 to $200 annually to
support suc.h an Initiative to
fu rtht&gt;r the cause and financial
. plight of the 115 school districts In
the 28 Appalachian counties.

Announcements

Sports C-1

_prevtews

Community
effort

Bea~ of the Bend, By Bob Hoeflich.IJ-;..8

PageB-1

Medical insurance dilemma••.
Jack Anderson A-2

•

Inside

Along the River ........ 8 ·1-8
Bualness ........ ........ ......D·l
Comics-TV .............. Insert
Clasllifleds ................ D-2-7 .
Deaths ......... ............... A·3
Editorial .•..••..•••••••.•. .. .-A-2
Sporta ...................... C-1·8

Chance of rain 80 percent.

•

tmes-·

Schools of the Eastern District
will be clost&gt;d Monday In obst-r•
va nce of Martin Luther Kind
Day.

Department elects 1988 officers

"

7 Sectlona. 48 Pea••

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiAiMiuilti··~. ~~~- ;;;;;;;

Community College seekingboost in educational access
RIO GRANDE- A Rio Grande
"The relationship bPtween
Community CollegE' project d!'· fewer college graduates, higher
signed to Increase student access unemployment and greater provto higher education In southeast- · erty Is o.bvlous. It Is one of cause
ern Ohio has been funded by a and effect.
·
$65,000 grant from the Ohio
"While education Is vlew!'d by
Board of Regents.
the vast majority of the people in
"The explosive growth In our four-county 'c ommunity . colknowledge and tntormatlon, lege district as a means of job
scientific and technological ad- preparation, we have one of the
vances, expanded carl'l'r OP· . state'~ lowest rates of high school
tlons, and the desire for financial graduates going on to postsecon'
s.tablllty and an Improved quality dary !'ducatlon.
of life have Increased the need for
"The need exists. and the '
a college education," said Her- community .college Is uniquely
'man L. Koby, Ph.D., Secretary- equippPd to meet that need.
/ Treasurer of Rio Grande Com- · "Our goal is to Inform parents
munlty College.
and students of the role, higher
The Rio Grand!' project education plays In Improving the
funded as part of the state's quality of life," Koby said, "and.
Productivity Improvement Chat- to explain· that postsecondary
·lenge program- sets as Its goal education Is both accPsslble and
ment was made by .Jud,e Knight In bill chambe~
an Increase In the participation affordable."
CROWDED COURTROOM - Some 1118 par.
to
media
repreaentatlves
and
was
to
the
effect
~
rate at postsecondary education
To that end. · the Rio Grande
enta, aludenta and te~ben were In the courtroom .
that.
a
media
blackout
Is now In etlect In regard to
of
southeastern
Ohioans
from
grant
will be usPd :
Friday morning to hear an announcement on the
families
,with
no
collegiate
·
-To
develop and Implement
.
the
strike
..
(Times.Senttnel
photo)
.teachers strike from Judge Charles Knight,
experience.
an
awareness
campaign that will
common pleas Judr:e. However, the annouace·
Citing recenUy completed stu- Inform every 9th through 12th
dies, Koby said, "Local residents grader from non-collegial!'
as a group have less education, homes In the four-county comhigher unemploymel)t and more munlty collegE' service area of
l&gt;overty than residents In other the career. options available to
parts of the state.
college graduates; and, to explsln the affordable cost of

I

Discharges .January 12: Sanford Bills, James Blu!'baum
Thomas Bush, Marjorlt- Casto,'
Mrs. Stephl'n Colegrove a nd son,
CarolinE' Isreal. Richard Newland. Clifton Pack and James
Workman.

Discharges ,Ja nuary 13: Grace
Abbott . Cec il Ba iies. Carol
Baisden, Willia m Bowen, Josef
Clendenin. Hazel Daniel. K&lt;; nda ll
Dunn. Gary Finle~ . Harold
Gibbs. David Gra ham, Maxin~
Gri mm .' Willi a m Hosc ha r , E lisr
Ho.vd. Cecil KeP ler. Joyce

Clarili&lt;'alion
The Susie Abbott J i s t ~d as the
plaintiff in a lawsuit agains t
George Stitt and T&amp;G Auto Sales
in The Dailv Sentinel ~arlier this
week is not Susie Abbo tt . lOR
Wehe Ter race , Po merov. The
•,uit has bren dismissed. in thp
M!'ig-s Co un ty Common !' leas
Co urt.

Marriagt&gt;s lo t&gt;nd .
divorce actio n has bre n filed
in Meigs Cou nt v Co mmon P leas
Cou rt bv Shir ley Y. Tur ner.
Middleport. !rom Clair A.
Turner, Middleport.
.John R . .lpffprs and Robin
A nn e tt~ :Jd !ers have bee n
gra nted a dissolution of th eir
A

rf,l;]n:lagc.

Hospital news
Elmer

HvsPI I. Rutla nd.
·Thursday Discharges - ·Do·
rothv flrc\.vcr. Rettv Stover.
Chai·tes ra vne: Ruby Frederk k.

I

Chester C. Oliver. 7:1. Clifton.
died ·Frida\· morning in Pleasant
Va lli')' Hospita l.
Born Marc h 12. 1914 inCra ham
Stal io.n. he was a son of the late
George W. and Lena 1.. Clar k
01 ivf'r.

1

Preced ing him in df'a lh wpre
one brot her. Carvin F. . Oliver;
three sis ters . Garnet N. Good nit e. Gladys L.- Go ulding a nd
Ge rtrude R. Young .
He wa s a coalmi ner, and a
heav.v eq uipm Pnt opera tor for
the Wes t Virgi ni a Dqla l'lrne nt of
Highways. He re ti red from th ~
Imperia l EIPe t ric Company,
Midd leport, Ohio. He atte nded
the Clifton Unit ed Methodist
Chu rch. was a me mbet of th l'
Clifton Gun Club. a manager and
player of the Hartford Tlg!'rs
s ummPr pro baseball t~am. He
a lso managed a litllp· league
baseball team.
·
Surviving are his wi fe, Frances OllvPr. Clifton; one daughtl'r
a nd son-in-law, Shirley A. and
· LU ther Tucker, Mason; a daugh·
ter, Joan J. Be nne tt, Sunman ,
Ind .; a son and daughter-In-law ,
Robert W. and Dorothy ' Oliver,
Mason; one sister, Mrs. Gorma
Bumgarner. Mason; eight grand·
chi ldr e n and four great gra ndchildre n.
Services wlll be Sunday at 1: 30
p.m . aJ the Foglesong Funpral
'iome with the Rev. O.B.
'-l;.:tcher, and the Rev. Terry
·'. :nroz officiating. The burial

1,,

~THENS

LIVESTOCK SALE.~
.January 9, liM
Ci\'M'LE PRICE..": Feeder Sleet": (Good
""d Choke) 310-101 lh•.M.QI.IIUI; 5M-18Q
1~. S1.1J0..71.511; Feede r HtU~n: 4Good
and Cholee) -~~~ lbo. IUI·U.M; SH-'1111
lt»t. -111.~ .00; Feedet" Buill': (Good and
C,!Jok~) 300-500 1.... &amp;1.00-IIO.ot; !100-700 lb•.
5.•.10·ti&amp;.50: SlauK"hler CowM: UUIUieN
.JJ.Of.-16.25: Can1en1 and Cutlehi :J.I.0044.00; VeaiM: (Cholc~ Mnd Prime) 75 00..
82.00; Baby · Calvr~: (By the He~d)
44.00.70.01; Baby Cal\les, : (By·the Pound )
70.0099.01.
•
,, HOC. PRICES: (•II, Burow~· and Q llt~ )
...08-230, lbs. !17. '7~.!50: Butchl"r Sows:
30.00-3 ... 50; Butcher Boars: t7.1J0.30 :Mt·
Ft&gt;~t&gt;r Pigs: (By th@ Head) 1~.00-lt.OO. '
SHEEP PRICES: Old Sh•op: nooDow"; Goat!ll -10 .00-Down.

(

'

,,

N iUII :
A mt!dla blllck~~ OIIStlite~iie~tU !rom botli the
.

l-ocal SChool Dlatrlct
J3oard of 1Cciuc11 uo'n .,.a nd . the
Mellis Locial Teachers A&amp;socla·
lion In regard . to negotiations
between the two In settlement of
a teachers strike which began on
Nov. 6 was requested by Meigs
Commomn Pleas Court Judge
Charles Knight Friday,
Some 150-parents, teachers and
students gathered In the cour·
troom to hear an announcement
which Judge Knight had stated

Melp

"Every now and

A marriage licens!' 'has been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Co urt to Herbrr ii. Nov Grate 11
·&gt;
· Susan'
- o. r omeroy . and Re becca
Ba uer , 11. Long Bottom . .

EMS ha!O no ('ails
MPigs · Co unt y Emergency
Medical Services rece ivt&gt;d no
ca lls on Thursday .

I

then I think about
my own death, and
I think about my ,
19
1
1
·
·
·
&amp;
r..,,,.. Ki., '· 29- %1&lt; own fune I
·
I don't want a long funeraL And if you get somebody ro deli~~ th~
eu!ogy, tell them not t~ talk too long ... Tell them n6t to mention thut I
have a No~! Peace Pnze ... Tell them not to mention that I have three .
or four hundr~ other awards ... I(lJike somebOOy to mention that
~Y _that Martm Luther King, Jr. tried to give his life serving others
I~ hke for somebody to say that day that Martin Luther King Jr ·
tned to love somebody. .
' · ·
. Say that I was a drum major for justice. Say that I was a drum
major for peace. That I was a drum major for righteousness And all
of the oth~r shallow things will not matter.
· ·
!_wont ~ve any_ money to leave behind. I won't have the fine and .
lu~UOOl;IS thm~s I~ hke to leave behind. But I just want to leave a com·
m•ttffi hfe behmd. ··~ "•~Uk'~

will be a t the New Lone Oaks
Cemetery, Point Pleasan t.
. Friends may ca II at 1he fu nera 1
home on Saturda~· from 2 to 4 ·and
7-~ p.m .
.

~

'

.

he wOUld rnake ,In regard t«! th~ · lng ln. a location chosen by the
strike ptlday1lt11 ·a.m:· •· ~-'"'"'mediator . .HoW~Itfifliilt -· . _-~.Judie KnJtht ' saki that both
·make a statement In · the cour· , sides ag~ that steps towards
ti'OOIJ! but did diiiC.UU the b"c:k·
settlement of the strlkr bad been
out' with media repr£!S!!ntatlves
made durtng earlier Informal
In his chambers. Judge K11lght
dLscussloll$ and that numerous
commented that hi! had talked
nPW Ideas had originated In thoSe
with repre!l1!ntatlvfs from both
meetings. ·
..
the teachers group and the board
He stated that both sides had
. of education and that .both sides
agreed to refrain from public
felt that the federal mediator
comments from this time on
could help In reaching a strike
Indicating that they can comply
settlement. He said that negotla·
with the judge's request without
tors would m~t with mediator
a court order. There are to be no
David Thorley Satrurday mornpublic communications at .least ~
until an agreement Is ready to
brought back to JUdgE' Knight
.
and that agreement can b!'
Pomeroy on Wednesday and
placed ·before the Meigs Local
made plans to be at thl' court- . Teachers AsSOCiation for a vote.
house on Friday to hear an
Judge Knight Indica red that he
announcement scheduled to be
felt the blackout would ·help
made by Meigs Common Pleas
towards a settlement. He also
Court Judge Charles Knight.
Indicated that he feels public
There was a question and answer
Involvement has helped. The
session held relating to the strlkt&gt;
judge warned that the strike Is
which began on Nov. 6. The group
not over, but settlement Is closer
discussed their purpose In unlthan ever before, he said. Proling to work tog:ether to end the
eress towards settlement was
strike and afterwards staying
being made before the Inspection.
organized In a parent, student,
of six schools operating In the
teacher organization · to work
Meigs Local School District was
towards betterment of t]le
held on Thursday. Judge Knight
schools and for the benefit of
concluded. ,
(See GROU,, AI)

·
· j
Group ortns
due to str£ke
.
·
·

RUTLAND _ "Unified Cltlzens for Education In Meigs
Local" was the 'name adopted by
a group of parents, students and .
teachers for a new orgari.tzation
formed Thursday night as the
- - -result- of -the Meigs Local
teachers strike.
There were 162 parents, 23
students and some 50 tPachers
.preaent tor the meptlng. held In
the Rutland area and called to
discuss the •teacher strfke sltua·
tloa In the Meigs .Local School
District. Members of th,e ilroup
discussed their pPacetul demon·
stratton at the courthouse In

•

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Delmus Earl Mar tin , 94, of
Coolvill&lt;'. di!'d a t th e Ca mdm
Clark Hospital in Parke rsburg
Friday morning.
Born In Dod ridge Countv , W.
Va. he had workPd in earlier
.vea rs as a foreman for th!'county
and sta te ~ighwa.v department
a nd wa s a form e-r trustpp of
Carthage Township. He atte nded
the Methodist Church In
Coolville.
'
He was preceded In dea th by
his will'. Ruth Johnson Martin,
daughter. Lila Claire Sinnett
. five brothe rs, two sisters, and
two grandchildren.
Surviving are three dau g hters.
Doreen Gorrell, Belpre; Elva
Gorrell, Coolville. and Edith ·
Butch!'r, Pomona Park, Fla.; a
son. Robert D. Martin, Parkersburg, five grandchildren, . 21
great-grandchildren, eight
great-grea !·grandchildren , and
a sister, Gladys Heflin, Edgewater, Md.
·
·
FUnPral SPrvlces will be held
Monday at 1 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home .. Tht&gt; Rev. Roy
Deetl'r will officiate and burial
. will b!' ln. the Torch Baptist
CemeterY. Friends may call at
the funeral home Sunday 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m.

hi tribute to Martin ~uther King,}r.,
· BANK ONE w1Uobserve
.
the national Jwliday .
created in his horror and w.ill be ·
close&lt;! on Mon~y, January 18th.

By MARGARET CALDWEU..
TlmeHiellllnel StaH
. GALLIPOLIS - OVer the
holiday season, many la.mllles
joined together to celebrate the
joy of the holidays and to enjoy
getting re-aqualntlng with lost
friends, families and nt-w family
members . . The Karl ,paulsen
family of Gallipolis had an

I

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Fam_ily bridges
. ·distance, years

Df'lmus Martin

·BANKSON£.
.

Ff!IHntlto~/I«&lt;PPI 1111to cmw.

..

.

exceptionally special family
gathering when Karl's mother
and uncle came to visit from
Norway.
Rake! Paulsen and Lorentz
Jacobson are fi•om Notteroy,
Norway. They carne to America
on Dec. 17 and let) ori Saturday.
Although Uncle Lo11!nlz was a
~erchanl marine a11d traveled

along both coasts of the United
States. this was only the second
time mother, grandmother aild .
great grandmother Rake! had
been1n the United States.
Rake!, 76, first came to the
United State In the summer after
her-husband Peder Paulsen died
In January 1972. Her · only son
Karl and bls family were living In
Fairmont, W.Va., w~ten she
came to visit. She stayed with the
family for seven weeks.
·
A housewife all her life, Rake!
receiVed numerous Invitations
from her American famlly over
the years to return to the United
State• lor other visits. Irene
Paulsen, daurtiter·ln-taw, saki
Rake! would retuae because' of
her bad bjack. When she was
Invitee\ a11alli lhls year, Rake!
aeeeptecl wilh her brother Lorentz bellde her.
. Rakel dQeln't speak Eqllsh,
but ber Norwqlan-born son and
Lorentz trallllate fqr ber and
other faml11 members.
Raltel eliperleDCed the areat
Joy ot lffllil ber fl"!&amp;l araadlon
for !be lint time. She allo aald
that the Jl'llldklcll bad IIOWD too·

lut.

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.,

Judge seeks · media blackout
.during:~~UP. ~~~e}lers ~tr~~-., ~ ·Forttter ·school

I

Market report

Area deaths

Clwslf'r Oliwr

'f

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Veh.•rans Me morial
T hu 1·s d a~' Adm issio ns -

Births .January 12: Mr . and
Mrs. Ch!'sler C0oper, Jr., son,
Lt&gt;tart. W.Va. Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Han~ock, son, Gallipolis .
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Hays,
da ughter. Middleport. Mr. and
Mrs. .John Jaml's, J r.. son,
r•atriot. Mr. and Mrs . .Jimm y
R iddl~. son. Jackson .
·

.

,

Tbe lalt ume Rakal wu 111
America. the traveled wttll tbe
famUY a1olll tbeHStCOIIt.loml!
of tile . . . lbe Yllltitd Wire
Myrtle Btt.cb. S.C., WldltlltOD

D.C.,

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pu1a

ot

(1M PAIIILY, .W)

·i

education in the community
collegE'.
·
-To assl'st In the completion of
financial aid applications for 'so
pPrcent of the graduating seniors
from non-collegiate homes In the
four counties ·over a two-year
period.
-To join with each school
system In offering an "Introductlop to Technology Careers' • ·
course and a financial aid se·
mlnar each year for recent high
school graduates who are underemployed or unemployed and not
att!'nding college.
-To emphasize the feaslblllty
of postsecondary education tor
targl't groups through a series of
"Experience College" programs
during the summers on the Rio
Grande College campus for pub·
lie school and Community Action
ref!'frais.
"The project Is dPslgned to pull
people Into the higher educa·
tiona! system who ar!' from
families that have no collegiate ·
experience," Koby concluded . .
"lt Is based on the assumption
· that such people, once In the
system, will play a critical role In
the economic and social development of the region and the state."

adm~istrator,

coach, Cliarles· HaYman, d-ies

••.

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&gt;I

.RACINE...:. Charles W. Hayman, 83,403 County
. Line Road, WesterviUe, as a long tlmeadmlnlstra·
tor and basketball coach In the Racine schools,
died Friday at St. Ana's Hospital In Westerville.
Hayman was born at Letart Falls, a son of the
late Charles W. and Mazy Weaver Hayman, on
Aug. 20, 1904. He was i'·graduate of Otterbein
College and Ohio State University and was In
retirement after having served for 40 years as
executivE' head or the Racine area schools. The
gymnasium In the present Southern High Sc.hool is
namlid In his honor. He was a member of the
CPotral College Presbyterian Church In
Westerville.
He was a past master of Racine Lodge 461.
F&amp;AM, and was a member of ,the Scottish Rite In,
. Columb~ .
,
Surviving are his wife, Irene; a sister and her

husband, Ralph and Mary Alice Kerst, Columbus;
a brother and his wife. John and Mary Ellen
Hayman, Westerville; nephews,. Terry Hayman ,
David and his wife, Bonnie Kerst , amd Doug
Kerst and a niece. Karen Kerst.
The body Is at the Hill Funeral Home In
Westerville where friends may call fr.om 2to 4 and
7 to 9 p.m. on Monday. Funeral sPrvlces will be
held at the Hill Funeral Home at 9 p.m . Monday
evening. The body will thl'n b!' brought to the
Ewing Funeral Hom!' In Pomeroy where friends
may call from 2 to 9 p.m. on TuPsday .
Masonic rites will be held at the Ewing Funeral
Home at 7:30p.m . Tuesday and funeral services
will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at that (uneral
home with the Rev. Charles Norris officiating.
Burial will be In the Letart Falls Cemetery .

Some. - postal senrice to be affected

. -··
WASHINGTON CUPI)- Post
Office windows nationwide will
soon cloSE' tor half a day each
week to comply with tederal
budget cutting me.a sures , the
· U.S. Postal Service said Saturday. but home delivery will not
be affected.
"We feel that it's necessary for
the Postal Service to participate
In deficit reduction," explained
Jim Van Loozen, a postal service
spokesman, who said no layoffs
are planned . for the nation's

800,000 postal employees.
Van Loozen said, despite speculation, the plan is not an attempt
to pressure the Postal Rat!'
Commission to grant a rate
Increase - Including raising the
cost of a first class stamp from22
cents to 25 cents. Postal officials
requested the. lncre,ase In May
1987.
"In all likelihood," people can
·expect to see a "cut In window
hours, about half a day a week,"
within 30 to 60 days, van Loozen

said. "This Is strictly the retail
window and lobby service that
will be curtailed. "
Regular home. delivery will
continue, he said. ·
"We don't anticipate any rnajor service delays," and wlll not
be closing down post offices on
Saturdays or permanently, Van
Loozen added. "We're not going
to be laying off peoplE'."
"The savings will come from
adjustments on the work hours "
.
SOME, A4)
'

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