<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12000" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12000?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T12:14:13+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42970">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b6c4a73d41401934130fc434a0f83d6e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e1e4c2b14aa0736e1d04446b66e73725</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="37721">
                  <text>Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Kentucky
limit Quantities

.Daily Number

loses,.58-56

The Ri&amp;ht To

. STORE HOURS
Monday 'thru ·Sundoy
8 AM-10 PM

434
Pick 4
4621
Super Lotto
I 0-16-27-28-33-35

.Page 3

.ALL.
WEEK

•

. JANUARY 17

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JAN. 23, 1988

n

I

,u.s.D.A. cH~ICE

.

La _

Chuck Roast .••••••.

$ . 29

1.

Limit20
Coupons:·.

·. . ·

'

LB · .

Fryer .Parts ••.•••• ~••. 3·9&lt;

·Pork Cube Steak.~.
'

2-39

8-14LB. AVG.

LB.

CRISPY SERVE

Bacon ••••••••••••••• ~~ ••• 89&lt;
. .

i

HOMEMADE

1

A

Sandwich ·Spread.~·•• 99 &lt;

2 Sections. 16 Pages

25 Cents

were not open. Students In these
programs were assigned to a
series of study halls or permitted
to leave the building.
"2. The Occupational Work
Education class at the hlgll
. school was without a teacher. ,
· "3. Several Individuals were
not appropriately certificated for
their teaching assignments a~
required by Section 3319.30 of thli'
Revised Code ana Section 3301;
35-03 (A) of the 'Admlnlstrallve
Code.
·
"4. Lesson plans were availa·
ble to give direction for lnstruc.
lion. For the most part, course$
of study were availa ble in tht:l:
elementary schools. In the junlol"
high school, some teachers haa
courses of study. some did not. In
all but a few Instances. courses Q!
study were 'not available in the,
· high school. Several teacher.s
had no guide to basic texts:
;
Continued on page 16 ·

New county maps available

.VI

•

·

offered Include guidance, health, Meigs Local School District on
psychological, remedial reading Wednesday, Jan. 12, 1988. The
and speech therapy .
evaluation was tonducted In
·'"What Is really shocking,' response to a number of com·
Wilfong said, 'Is that this superln· plaints alleging that the district
tendent and board of education · was operating contrary to law
~till refuse toacceptanyreasona·
and standards of the State Board
ble solution to the strike. They of Education. The aaminlstrahave resisted many proposals,
tlon. has established a manageIncluding .binding arbitration,
ment plan and given attention to
and they have Ignored advice · the Instructional program. pupil·
from a federal mediator and
teacher ratio, and pupil safety.
. even their own attorney. •
Results of the evaluation di·
'"Apparently, out of a sense of reeled to Dan E. Morris, superln· ·
revenge, the school board would tendent of the Meigs Local School
rather the State Department of District, are as follows:
Educatidn would close the
"1. Certificated vocational
schools than to settle with the teachers were not available to
teachers, .. Wilfong concluded.
provide· the required vocational
Following Is the statement on program. Some vocational pro·
the evaluation Issued by Frank- grams were not operational In
lin B. Walter, Superintendent of · that students had ava!lable to
Public Instruction In Ohio:
them only the related and 'aca·
"Staff members · of the Ohio dem!c classes. Automotive, elec·
'Department of education con· Ironies, .vocational agriculture,
dueled an onslte evaluation of the and welding shops-laboratories

FLAVORITE
•

-

·

Pomeroy-.-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday. January 21 • 198B:.,_______...;.._;___..,:A.::M:u:lt::.:im:,:•:::di:,•:.::•n::;.&lt;-~N::•::w:lap::::•=:P•::,•~

·

Turkeys ••••••••••••••••• 69(

.

.

Negotiating teams of the Meigs Classes are being conducted ·1n deflclences have been corrected.
Local SChool Board and the six of the nine schools of the In the event the ·deflclences are
Meigs Local Teachers Assocla· district through the use of subs II· · not corrected, the State Depart·
tlon were back at the bargaining lute teachers.
·
ment would stop state funding to ·
table today - this time · In . - The teachers ' association Meigs Local. ·
Marietta - In an attempt to statement reads:
"The report from the State
settle a teachers strike which
· "The · Meigs Local Teachers Department oi Education pol!'lls
began on Nov. 6.
Association today hailed a Sta.t e out some shocking descrepancles
An official otthe Ohio Educa· Department of Education eva· In Meigs Local Schools since they
lion Association said this morn· luatlon report on Meigs Local reopened on Dec. 21, • Wilfong
lng that negotiations were to be SChool District as a possible said.
underway today.
.
means to eventually end the
"'For Instance, 21 percent of
The Meigs Local Board had strike that Is now nearing the end the subs ·h ave tempor&lt;\ry certlfl·
requested David. Thorley, fed· of Its 11th week.
cates. and two have no certfl·
era! mediator, to bring both
"MLTA President Michael cates at all. There are instances
parties back to the negotiating · Wilfong said the report found where a sub with a temporary
table after the board of education that at least 32 of the substitute certificate In psychology Is
rejected a binding arbltratlon .lechers hired by the board of steachlng In Industrial arts and
· propOsal II had received from the education to replace striking another where a sub with a
teachers assocla lion on Mooday. teachers were not appropriately certificate in home economics Is
Meantime. today. the assocla· certificated In the areas In which teaching math.' Wilfong stated.
lion Issued a statement In regard they are teaching.
"The report showed many
·to an evaluation report Issued by
"The report ordered Meigs courses or' study were not avalla·
the State Department of Educa· schools to file a report with the ble to the students who have been
lion which had Inspected the six State Department of Education attending classes since schools
schools ot the district last week. by ~an. 29 to show how the were reopened. Services not

MIXED .

s·

)lol.38, No.1
Copyrlphted , 988

enttne

:Board, MLTA resume talks today in ·Marietta

$. 89
T~Bone Steak....... 3 .
BUCKET BEEF
·
.$
219
.Cube Steak ....... ~•.
U.S.D.A •.CHOICE

•

at

THRU

JANUARY 23

.

'

'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. ·

FRESH

Scattered snow llurrlea
early tonight. Low between'ZO
and 25. Partly cloudy Friday.

New Meigs County--maps are
now on sale at the courthouse.
Purchased by the County High·
way Department at a cost of
approximately $8,000, the maps
will be sold for $2 each at the
commissioners' and ,. plat map
offices. county Engineer Philip
Roberts reported at Wednes·
day 's commissioners' meeting.
Printed bY the Spectrum Co..
ClnclnnaJtl, .! he . new .!llaps are ,
· one-irlch scale wltli. easy to read
coloring Road names are listed
alphpbeiically and the grtd sys·
tern ,used for the. county house
numbering system Is also In·
o!uded on the new map.
Roberts said each county off!·
ces and governmental agencies,
each township, each fire depart·

men I and EMS unit, will receive the Rout~ 33 corridor a top ·
a laminated version of the map. priority. '
.
The ·· last county ll)ap was
Other business conducted Wed·~
printed In 1979.
•
nesday by the commissioners
· Roberts also reported briefly Included the following :
on a recent. meeting In Athens of
Approved a request from the
the Southeastern Ohio Regional Meigs County Litter Control
Council highways committee. Office for a $3.000 advance which
Roberts said the preliminary,. will be repayed to the general
planning report on the Route 33 fund when grant money for litter••
corridor from Rock Springs to control Is received In February .••
, Great ~nd Is. due by the el)d of __ ~.P~~ove?".. a !~qu~;;t from the: .
the year.Jhe preliminary plart ' countY recordet to establish a
nlng rEtPDrl Is part of the petty cash fund.
environmental study which was
Met in executive _session with
ordered some time ago. Because Michael Swisher. director of the
the project "Is gelling to the Department of Human Servtces.
stage when we must start press· and Ken Edsel. of Clemens·.
lng to get the road Into the design Nelson Assocjates, In e., a Co ium ..
stage," Roberts explained. the bus labor consulttng firm .
highway committee has made
•

.KoJ&gt;Ientz ·seeking third term

..
~

&lt;'
~· &gt;
'

illll

99&lt;
•
Potatoes ··············~.
0
$ 39
0
.2°/o ·Milk •••••••••:!L•·· . 1
U.S. NO •.1 WHITE

. .

LB

.

·VALLEY BELL

FLAVORITE IND. SLICES

Amer. Cheese ••••••••
12 OZ. PKG.

BANQUET

Saltines •••••••••·•• ~~ ••••

TV Dtnners •• .-••• !~~~·•• 89&lt;.

AR~OUR-~ OZ. CANS .

V1enna Sausage •••.. 5
SURF· OETERGENl
'47

oz.

s

$ 59

Li"'it 1 Per CUI!. Good Only At Powell' I Supor"'arkot
Offer Good Thru s.t. J.t. 23, 1911

\e

f$

2

Jeno' s Pizza ••••••••• 89(

U"'it 1 Por (uot• Good Onlr At Powell's Supor"'arktt
•- Offer Good Thru Sat. -.. 23, 1911

.'

fez. ·

•

TREET

COFFEE

$629

.

10.1-10.1

MAXWEll HOUSE

3 lB.
CAN

.

FROZEN

LUNCH MEAT
12

oz.

99(

Umit 1 Por Cuot-

Gtod 0n1, At ,,• .,.., Supor....ut
Offer Good Thru Sat., Jan. 23, 1911

, CRISCO
SHORTE"IffG.
· !LB. .

$199

Utnlt 1 Ptr CustGood Only At ,.,....., Supm!IIIOtit
Offer Good 'lhrv Sat. Jan. 23, 1911 •

J

"

~---------------

---·-- ----------

..

~;-

( '

--

=
ttl
l"'l

0

~

0"'=

NEW MAPS AVAILABLE - Area residents
will be anxlou to purchase copies of the new
,Melp County JDap which ju81 arrived Wednesday
imd are now on sale at the comm!Mioner!'' and
· plat map offices Ia the courthouse. The maps were

...

' =I ;

IC
'
c
i

1·.

•Any manufacturer'• cou·
,pon greater thai) 61¢ will ba
•redeemed at . face value
only.
•Only one, manufacturer'•
coupo~ per item.
•The total value of the double manufacturer's coupon
cannot excaed the purche•
price of the jtem. ~oney .will not be refundad.
•

•This offer excludes clgirettet, or any ot!Jer hena
. pJQhlbited by law.
·
•Offer is only good for pro·
duct - on hand. No Rain- ·
checka . . ·

I

By PETER ROWE
Ualled Presa International
A hilhlll storm thai hurled
tornac10es and snow as It $lashed
across the United States rolled
through ·C;'anada today and In its
!cy wake snowbound Mldwes·
terners struggled to reopen
schools, airports and highways.
. The storm, Its leadillg edge
. brushing New England, crossed
Into eastern Ontario late Wednesday 'fter whipping up blizzard
conditions over northern Michl·
gall, where almost 2 feet of snow
fell In some areas and 45 mph
winds reduced visibility to a 'half
mlle. In Marquette, Mich., 21
tnclles had fallen as of early
Wednesday evening. ·
"It appears l!l&gt;W the only area
affected Is upper1Michigan. (It's)
moving Into eastern Ontario and
heading quite nicely toward
Quebec," National Weather Ser·
vice forecaster Harry Gordon
said Wednelday.
By late Wedf\elday, the lead·
tng eclp of the four-ilay stotm
was apreadlng freezlna rain over
New England and .upstate New
York.
The number Of deaths ill whicb
atcirm may have .played a part
fOR lo 27, lacllldlna eight In
· , Callfonlla, flvebJTenae~eee, qvo
In Nebratlca .: and cme Mel\ In
AriiOaa, W~lnl aad towa.

people In the Deep South cleaned
. ·up from a batch of deadly
twisters. .
Tornadoes Tuesday sliced
through Mississippi, Arkansas,
Tennessee and Alabama Tuesday kUling five people In Tennessee, injured dozens of others and
damaging at least 100 homes ,
stores and churches. Flooding
also forced 125 people from their
homes In BrownsviUe, Tenn.; and
eastern Arkansas .
The storm blew ashore on the
llaclflc Coast during' the wee·
kend, battering a 250-mlle
stretch of · Southern California
aftd ·parts of Mexico Sunday and
Monday. It killed eight people,
leaving eight others missing and
causing at least $72 million
damage before heading for the
Rockies and then Michigan .
A Coast Guard helicopter Wed· '
nesllay rescued a couple -who
spent three days clinging to an
OVerturned yacbt that capsized
Sunday In strollll' winds 11nd
choppy aeas 180 mlles southwest
of San Diego, Calif.
Searchers looked. for the four·
per10n crew of tbe Appacbe
Brave, a flshlna ·boat. wbole bow
was found Wedllesday afternoon
80mlleiwestofEIIIellada,caut..
but flO trace of tbem was found.
Tltey were p~umed dlwtlid.
· Elaewbere, searohen tOIIIId a
Rllldelltl 111 t11e Roeldll and drlfUq net beUewd from oae of
. PlaiDI Wtdlt
dvf Olt from I two Sill Diego fllblq boall tllat
-drtftsupto.lUIIIIIIIP,ud dllappeiNd durlng the storm.
~

I·-

\

the constructlon of the Melg~
County He!lport.
He js a member of .Chester
Lodge 483, F&amp;AM.
Both Koblentz's children. Rl·
chard Koblentz and Patricia
Koblentz Wolfe. reside In the
Chester area.
Koblentz and his wife, Ma~
who rece ntly retired from em:
pioyment with St. Joseph's H&lt;is~
pita!, Parkersburg; W.Va .. ·are
members of the Chester MetM ~
dlst Church.

Local news ..·___;,_,......,.·

Bedford Twp. trustees organize
David Brlekles was reeiectedpresldent and Robert Hawk was
named vice president at the annual organizational session of the ·
Bedford' Township Trustees held at town halL
Elmer Bailey was named fire prevention officer. It was ,
agreed to use The Farmers Bank and Savings Co. a!! depository ·
for the township. Trustees agreed that wages will remain I he ·
same as established. Regular monthly meetings will be held on
the second Monday of.each month.

Both boats carried two-person

crews, all still missing

eluding Chester Grange, 4H, Soli
Conservation, Farm Bureau and
the Meigs County Falrboard.
He has been a Republican
Party central committeeman
and was a Ches.ter Township
Trustee for 12 years before
becoming a commissioner.
Since 1982, Koblentz has been
chairman of the County Litter
Control B!lard. He Is also a
county representative to lhe
Private Industry Councli and
was instrumental in obtaining

farm-related organizations.- In- . - - - -

'

2!

•Thla offer does not apply to
Powell's Super Velu Cou- ·
pona, free coupons. or any
competitor'• COI!pona.

purcha~~ed by the Meigs County Wghway
Department. Reviewing one of the maps are,
slandlng, I to r, Coun.ty Englnee~ Philip Roberts
and Commissioner Richard Jones, sealed, I to r,
Commissioners Manning Roush and David
Koblenlz.

Winter storm ·leaves path
•
of destruction across natwn

a•

.•The total value .o f the dbu·
ble COI!P\1" may not exceed .
$1 .00

\

ZEST A

r~
&gt;
r-

Meigs County' Commissioner
David Koblentz has officially
announced his plans to seek the
Republlcn nomination for
another terrp of office. Koblentz
has been a ·commissioner for
eight years. serving this year as
President of the Board.
A lifelong resident of Chester.
Koblentz has always been en·
gaged In some aspect of farming
and. has operated a Holstein
dairy since 1952. Over the years,
he has been Involved in several

~arly

today.
·
The storm tore through Mlnne·
· sola Tuesday and officials closed
Minneapolis-St.. Pau~ lnterna·
tiona! Airport for the first time
slnee 1985. By Wednesday, the '
biggest snowfall in three winters ·
covered the Twin Cities - 8 !-2
Inches, with up to 11 foot In the
.suburbs. Schools were shuttered
across the state. ' , .
.
Several highways across
north -ce ntral Nebraska re·
malned 'closed Wednesday because of blowing .and drifting
snow . Authorities said up to 30
Inches of snow In north-central
parts of the sljlte were whipped
IIIIo drifts 14 feet high.
In southwest Colorado Invest!·
gators were t~illg to determine
the cause of Tuesday night's
crash of a Continental Express
commuter plane near Durango.
Nine people were killed, but eight
others survived, inctudtng seven
wbo hiked through deep snowdrifts for more than a mile to
summon help.
Snow waa foreeast today from
·northern MaiDe aci'Ois west
central NeW Enalalld and parts
of New York, Oblo, Pennaylvanla
8lld West Vlrrtnta. Gordon said.
Stroq and IIIII)' winds were
expected adroll Montana, and
mUd COIIIII«oDa were In •tore for
ma ot tile rest or nation.

'

Nibert en.ters guilty plea

SEEKS THJRD TERM Meigs County Commlsdoner
David Koblentz 11 ~eeldag the
Repuliean 110mlnatlon for a
third lerm In office.

Weather
South Ceatral Ohio
.
Occasional snow flurries to·
day, with highs In tile mid 30s.
Scattered snow flurries early
tonight and clearing later to·
night, with a low between 20 and
25. Becoming partly cloudy Frl·
day, with highs between 25 and
30.
The probabWI)' of preciplta·
Uon Is 80 percent today. 40
percent tonight and near zero
Friday.
.
'
Wlllds will be from the northw·
eat at 15 to li mp!l and IUity
today, beeomlllf IIOI'tllerly at
. five to 15 , . . tonitllt. ~
•' ',

Keith Allen Nibert. 26. Gallipolis. entered a plea of guilt y to a
grand theft charge !motor vehicle) Wednesday when he
appeared before Judge Charles H. Knight In the Meigs Co~nty _
Common Pleas Court.
The charge was brought against Nibert as thl' result of an
incident In Middleport last June. Meigs Prosecuting Attorney
Frederick W. Crow III reports.
c Nibert .was accused of stealing a pickup truek from Cooper
Chrysler-Plymouth In Middleport, by deception . Paul Gerard.
Investigator for the prosecutor's office. reports that Nibert had
pretended to be Interested In buying the truck. giving a f~sle •
name and asking to take II for a test drive. TM vehicle was
taken to Gallla County where It was abandoned, Gerard sald::
Further lnvest1gat1o9 revealed that Nibert had prior the!t :
convictions, Including a vehicle theft similar to the Middleport ·
Incident. (;erard said.
Judge Knight ac~pted Nibert's plea of guilty and sentenced
hi'IJ) 19 a determinate sentence of one year In .prison. Nibert •
received a similar one year sentence In Ga lila County on •
additional theft charges.
• .
Proaecutor Crqw c;redlted the successful prosecution to the cooperetlve efforts of his offiCe, the Middleport V!llage and, • ·
Gallipolis City Pollee Departments and commended all of the.
officers Involved.
·
.

Report
. more nails in area
'

.
'

'

�,,

Thursday. Jllinuary 21. 1988

Comment

'

'!

,'

'

Page

.

-

l&gt;rU.g traffickers

- -~ -·

~~ """-''-...,..'~""'·.
•

.sl!v

""

ROBERT L•. wno.GETT
. PulllillleP
'
'

· PAT WBITEIIEAD
"-!.Wit P!!llll!lller/Coat.VUer

BOB BOEII'UCB

Geaeral MIUI&amp;Jer

•

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press

AaoctatiDIIalld tbe American Newspaper Publishers Assoclatto~.

I.ETI'ERS OF OPINION ore welcome. They should be leo• than 300 words

t.,.. All kttonaruubJoct totdHina and mUit bellped with nome, addl'elaand

toll!lboae oumber. No •Dillbed leiters wUI be published. Letters should be In

pod tute, . . . .Jtq ii~W~, bot persmal.tttes.

Letters to the

editor ~-~

Supports teachers effort
I would like to start oui by
·saying, I think we have good and
dedicated teacherS.
· II the men of. Foote Mineral
• (now American AJloysl had
given up like some of the people
of this community have given up
on our teachers. there wouldn't
be an American Alloys. There
were tl!Des when those nien
didn't feel like going to another
Union meeting, because everything looked so dark and almost
all hope of wprklng again was
gone. I'm not just talking from .
the top of my head, for my father
Is one of these men. It was 2long
years for these men and their
fa'lnllles. They stoOd by their
union and hung In there, and
because of that the plant Is going
. Into the 3rd week of operations.
. All the men aren't back to work
yet, because that will take time,
but they have a future to look
forward to.
I was very surprised at the
letter I read concerning Mr.
Wilfong and an x student. That
student said he had to correct Mr.
Wilfong almost everyday In
class. Well! All I have to say to
that Is, Thank God for my
parents, because
they raised me
I
to respect a teacher and not
correct them. If that student had
a problem, he should have -taken
It lo Mr. Wilfong after class and
I'm sure he would have llstened
as I'm sure all our teachers are
willing to do. Why Is that student
bringing this up now?
I'm a 1975 graduate of Meigs
High and proud of II. I never was
a student who made straight A's,
but I alw.ays done my best. If It
hadn't been for Mr. John Bentley. I wouldn't have made It

. I

through Ills 9th grade Science
class. Even though I hated that
subject and Mr. .Bentley knew
tills, he was still willlitg to listen
and help me as he did all his
students. If he hadn't cared, Mr.
Bentley could had just sat back
and let rhe fall. To Mr. Bentley, I
Thank You!
It's not easy for a union to
decide to strike, but you have to
do what you feel Is right. That
means sometimes standing
alone. I've felt very sorry for our
teachers during this strike. I
wish I could put my arms around
them and take away some of
their pain. I'm proud to be a part
of our new group Unified Citizens
for Education In Meigs Local and
I'm sure the teachers know now
they are Loved and Missed. We
want them back In their class
rooms where they belong.
People have asked us about our
decision of sending our daughter
to school. We sjmply say, We
made that decision Nov. 6 right
along with the teachers. When
they return to their class rooms, ·
then she'll return to her class
rooms.
I think It's a shame when a
person gets ready to.get In their
car and the tires are fiat. Right ·
away, the teachers done II. I
wonder, who will they blame
when this Is all over?
A person has to stand up for
what tliey believe ln. I believe In
Our Tea.chers. Best of Luck to the
Teachers. Best of Luck to the
Teachers, Now and Always. God
Bless.
Love,
Tammy Luster Searles
408 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio

go -high-tech

.

~-

lll Collri IJUoe«
Pomeroy, Oldo
DBVOI'BD TO Ill&amp; IN'!EBI:8TII OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

I.

Pomeroy-Midclapor1, Ohio .
Thursda)l .Janue~Y 21, 1 $~

'

The Daily Sentinel
. .

2-The Daily .Sentinel

Increase In the future and will .,
tend . to become more soplllsti- ,
cated as new t4!chnologles come
on the market. Regardless of
cost, traUickers will lmmediateiy test them ag~lnst law , .
enforcement agencies.
The e xperts expect . tile trafflckers will concentrate on cellu· . ,
lar telephone technology, for
example. "The cellular Industry
Is turning toward a wo~ldw:lde
market and looking at rural • .
undeveloped areas In SQuth
America; These In . turn will be
linked by :satellite to the U.~;
telecommun_lcations system .
The traffickers will thus have an
lnstanteneous communications
network that extends from the
co c.a pian Ia t I on s to the
consumer.
The drug kingpins will make ~
greater use of computers. the
-analysts believe. "It's only a
matter of time," their report , ,
says, "before various org'anlzaJons begin to utilize the same ·,
networking principals applied by
large businesses and banks."
As Ia w eniorcement agencies
develop better voice prlva&lt;;Y
systems, to protect radio and
tel~phone communlcatiolt$, the
drug traffickers "may resort to
jamming of law enforcement
frequencies." They are also
expected to make greater use of
remotely piloted boats and
planes.
·
The task force offered this '
bleak summary:
"Cost, regula tlon or legality
are of no concern to the trafficker. The only restraint .on his
use of teehnology Is therefore his
Imagination. There seems to be
no question but that the current
'.technology race' will- continue."
Footnote: The task force's
analysis ot the use of technology :
by terrorists will be the subject of : ·
a future column. ·
•

,,

'
•'
'•I

Hart's empty campaign._____R_obe_rt_·W&lt;_al_te_rs

Puzzled over vandalism acts

•

'

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ....,._...__~~---- ···--~

'

' ;

~- -.._ _.....,..... . .,._

,...._,... . , ,.. on.,.- If •

I

••
Ill

\

s

NAPA

Stwli;g Fluid

$699

...

113

"

.•

i

by club officials ·

.Booster Cable

..

I

critici~UJ

. NAPA

.

'foday in history

Davis says he is upset with

l.

j

~~~~~~~~

•

·Newspapers were always
Jim Porter's rirSt love

r;::::::=================;

sw

!
•

Digital problems

.. -

Girls ratings

I

'

Staak · said. "Everything Is a talnly have lost before. So It's not
one-game approach with ~~-Our . a thing that we're going to go In
· ·
players re;tlly focuSed In on what and dissect. "
Michael Porter, a junior colthey needed to do tonight.
"I just can't be any happier lege transfer wh~ grew up In~
than I am right now. We did a nearby Alexandria, Va., scored
great job of executing In late- 21 points and sparked a dec;islvl!
second-half surge for St . John's,
game situations.''
·
11-3
overall and 2-2 in the
S01m Ivy led Wake Forest with
conf~rence.
.
25 points, Tony Black added 15 ·
Elsewhere
in
the
Top
20,
No. 4
and Boyd had 13. Tile Wolfpack,
10-3 and 2-1, was paced Vinnie · Purdue tripped Michigan State
Del Negro with 20 points, Charles . 78-67, No. l1 Oklahoma dumped
Shackleford had 14 and Chucky Colorado 96-76 and No.· 12 Iowa
Brown 13.
State trampled Nebraska 114-76.
At West Lafayette, Ind., Todd
"I'd like to congratulate my
good friend Bob Staak on a Mitchell scored 21 points to help
well-earned victory and I" feel Purdue extend. the longest winhappy for him," Wolfpack Coach ning streak In major college
Jim Valvano said. ''I'm dlsap- basketball .to 15 games. The
'polnted that we couldn't stand Boilermakers Improved to 16-1
the prospe ~i ty of a 5-polnt lead overall ahd 6-0 In the Big .T en.
and the basketball with .1: 09 to The Spartans fell to 6-9 and 1-4.
play."
AI Boulder, Colo., Harvey
. The other ranked team to lose Grant scored 24. points. and
was No '. 15 Georgetown, which Stacey King added 21 to enable
dropped its third stralgbi Big Oklahoma improve to 15-2 overEast game, 65-58 to St. John's at all and 2·11n the Big Eight. Ricky
Grace, who finished with 19
La~tdovev, Md . '
The Hoyas have lost three points, scored 12 points In a 16-2
stralg)lt for the first time since second-half spree that broke the
. •
.
the 1981-82 season, occupy last game open.
At Ames, Iowa, Jeff Grayer
place In the conference and are
off to their worst start In Big East scored 37 points as Iowa 'State
play since they joined the league tied the school record for largest
margin of victory with· lts. , 38;
nine seasons ago.
•" "What do the pros tell the point romp. Lafester Rhodes
Florida player In Wednesday night's SEC game In · •
REACHES FOR LOOSE BALL- University of
Celtics If they have a bad day or added 23 points for the Cyclones,
Rupp Arena. The Gators edged the Wildcats 58-5&amp;.
Kentucky center Rob Lock (while) hits the ll011r
two bad days?" asked Hoyas I6-2 and 2-0 In the Big Eight, and
(UP!)
.
while going for a loose ball against a University of
Coach John Thompson, who Elmer Robinson 11. Neither
played for the NBA ·s BQs ton players started after reporting
Celtlcs In the 1960s. "R:eep late for the game.
playing. You do what you do and
you try to do It a little bit better."
Added the U.S. Olympic
Coach: "One of the things that I
have felt good about with the kids
and teams that I've had In the
past is that we've overcome
.adversity. We'.re certainly accusCINCINNATI (UP!) - Cincin- chance It'll go to a hearing
tomed to .wlrinlng, but we cernati Reds outfielder Eric Davis, because $300,000 Is a pretty big
fresh off of tulng an arbitration difference, " Goldschmidt said.
. salary request of $1.05 miilion, "I picked tbis number because I
says he Is tired of being criticize!! think It 's not a number to
by club officials. .
.
negotiate off, · but a · winning
Davis and his agent, Eric number.
Goldschmidt, filed his· arbitra"There are two ways to do it. I
DJb 111, •lllhon n
...
tion
proposal
Tuesday,
while
the
could
•have picked a higher'
Ddmlt N . loba Carron R7
Reds countered with an offer of number and negotiated down. ·
Hew.rd Ill. Central StatP II
h..c•m ll·rt
$750,0oo. With Incentive bonuses , But r· think this number was.
Davis made $330,000 in 1987.
Girl!. Ohkl HI . . Sr:hoel Bal&amp;ketball
reasonable," he said.
Serles9000
Bellvereretk M. Xeala 48
Davis was among the N~tlonal
Should no agreement ·be
G"MIIIpoU.'II, Racine SGuihern n
PIUnN Harvey H. AUt ltdpwoOd 41
League leaders In virtually every reached, a hearing will be held
Comes with a 72-Month/6-Year limited
8prilllfleN s ,,, FalrtMim tl
warranty. (•NOTE-saleprice valid
statistical
category
last
year,
as
and
the
arbitrator
will.
award
W!!!IHI!IIIM 41. Bl,rrta WeM IS
with battery exchange/trnde-ulOnly.) .
he
lia
tted
.
293
with
37
hOme
runs
.
Davis
either
the
amount
he
wants
1. (.
and 100 RBI, He also stole1SO or what the Reds olfe~ed. There
I"
bases and won the Gold Glove for Is no coc:nprom!se..
NBA res~l18
his defensive play In center field .
Davis wa~ one of seven Reds
NATioNAL 8.UMETBALL A880&lt;'.
w~..,.·"o*"'"
But
Davis
played
In
only
129
players
who ·submitted arbitra • .
&amp;...0• J:OJ, Pboeab Ill
j·_.
games lri' 1987, missing such of t!on figures Tuesday. Pitcher
Gaklen Statr. Itt New olerwJ Ill
W .... llll(to•lll, PIIIUIUitlplllaiA
He
John
Franco;
whose
32
saves
last
the
September
stretch
drive.
Dei Nil 1.. Utah IIi
·u ru..,.,. .... ...... n .
suffered bruised ribs Sept. 5 In a Year were more than any other
lk.. Ue 1111, Ntw t' ort; N
ga~r~e
at Chicago's Wrigley Field left-handed reliever in baseball,
Eight feet long with 100%oopper
,..,...,·;. Oame11
Helps start gas or
oonductors to rrurunuze reSJstance,
while crashing Into the center Is requesting $925,675 - $625,000
Allanea • tltw .. IMI, 7: !II p.m.
diesel engmes at
MltftlliHal Ho.-.8: .p. m .
overheating and
field . wall on a game-ending more than 'last year. The Reds
all temperatures,
LA. LakiPr""' ~nwr , I:Stp.m.
~
power loss .
are offering him $675,000.
FrldiQ''I OamH ·
(#7208).
catch.
Flexible and easy
A Uanla M llosion, Iii.: Itt ,
Other
Reds
who
submitted
Goldschmidt
.and
D!!vls
said
GoldrnStl.te.a W•lllfllon, Dilht
to llandle in sub-'
New ,.,., at ........ 11i1hl
they expect the Reds to make his arbitration reque·sts were
zero
Weather,
Plloelllx al 01 kap. •IA:Itt
missing so many g'lmes an Issue pitcher Tom Browning ($510,000
(#740112). '
lA Clipper!! a&amp; Dallu, •IPI
San A.nloltlo al Utalt. llllllil
requested, $375,000 offered);
In the arbitration process.
Nf'W Yerk .. LA Leterw. •IPl
pjtcher
Frank Williams
''That's
the
way
I-piay,"
Davis
De~~Wr .t PertiMd, nl~~:ht
De;itolt at Sut~. nlj~:ht
($510,000,
$375,000);
first basetdld The Cine inna ti Post from his
man
Nick
Esasky
($495,000,
Los Angeles home. ''If they want
$425,000);
pitcher
Danny
Jackme to change my style of play, to
riot play as all-out so I can play in son, acquired 'In an off-season · Available at participating
NHL results
more
games, then they should trade with Kansas City,
NATIONAl. ROCKEY LEAGUE
NAP.&lt;\ AUTO PARTS stores.
bring It up during the season. ($430,000, $350,000) and pitcher
" 't&gt;dllf'llda,J'II &amp;e.Mill
lluffalo I , BoMtOIII
Calll-8()()..LET-NAPA
Don't hti)d I~ against me at Ron Robinson ($420,000,
Pll~lll'lh II, tllklt.lO :t
$350,000) .
'
Thundq'• qamtA
contract time.
·
for the store nearest you.
Ml•~ a1 ......._1~Dp.m •
';I can look at It from a business
N1' lslandtriUI&amp; Rartlenl , 1: a p.m .
Sale ends FebJ;1llii)' 1, 1988.
St. 1•111• at MoM~al, 7: .. p.m.
standpoint, but ever since I've
- - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - C t987Natiml hltomxiYePans~
Qurhroe a1 TuroMo, 1: ID: p.m •
been in Cincinnati, whatever I've
Dttrollat Nf'Wolt!I'III!)','J:.IIp.m.
Ectmon1o11 at Pll~driplla., 7:31 p.m.
done I feel It's been questioned,"
he continued. "It's like I never
Lo• Anplttl at Callarr. 1: il ,.m. Ftldq'a «iamN
can do enough. I'm tired of II. I
New .JI!rwl!J a1 Bllftalo, nia'ht
played my heart out last year,
NY Ra~~~en at '· YaneOin't'~, nt«bt
and
as'far as I'm concerned, they
Lo11 Anplftl a1 WhmiPIII• nl1ht
don't appreciate it."
( Golilschmiilt said It's unlikely
a settlement will be reac~ed
W resiling poll
before the ·case goes before an
Independent arbitrator.
.
HOLL.o\ND. Ohkl CVPil- ThM wed.'11
Dlllo hllh IChool w'"tllq l'lllllll"·
''!'think
there's
a
very
good
t•ompUt&gt;d hy Dlt•k Hoowr. lll'tniar)'·

Scoreboard ...

..

significant principally because It Imagination."
· qulrer and People magazine,
.
l
llhistrat~s that what Hart claims
Mor\!(lver, he panders to the :
But Hart has profound probIs a campaign of stimulating . lems that go far beyond his status
least serious of those onlookers; •
Ideas Is .Instead a campaign of as a selfconfessed adulterer
devoting more time to slinlna ;
cheap symbolism .
autographs, embracing babies
seeking the nation's highfj!st
In one of the mosts devastat- elective office - a post- whOse
and slmll.ar trlvtal activities than
Ingly accurate portrayals of oc.c upant must have the electoto articulating the "clearest l
Hart's recent actions, Los An·
vision for this nation's future.!'
rate's trust and confld.ence to
geles Herald-Examiner columHe cynically manipulates the I
have even a chance of successnews media, using journalists ·In '•
nist Joe Morgenstern speaks of
fully governing.
him as having "come back to ·
a
repugnant manner not seen l
At this late date, he bas the'
since the hey-day of former Vice
seduce us with the power of his
audacity to speak of a single fjlng
'•
mind . as If all he bad to do wa·s
President Spiro Agnew.
with Miami model Donna· Rice
•
•
whisper the wor(l · 'ideas' and
Hart Indeed deserves the con- •
(he repeatedly· refers to "a
we'd jump rlghi Into his bed."
mistake" or "the .mlstake") In tempt, the ridicule and the scorn •
Watching Hart travel from Des
lieu of acknowledging a pro- . he has reeelved from virtually '.
•
!
Moines to Fort Dodge in search of
everyone
seriously
concerned
tracted pattern of scandalous
•
support, tile Inescapable· conclu-. behavior.
about the quality or the country's •
•
sion emerges: His re-entry into
. He shamelessly remains obllv- governance and leadership.
'
!he contest for this year'$ Demo- . •ious to the strong llkellhood than
Voters attracted by his anti- ••
cratic presidential nomination Is
many people are attracted to his establishment appeal are delud- •,.
Dear Editor,
•
someone nicer and more Intellia self-Indulgent - If not self·
campaign appearances not by Ing themselves If they fall to deal •
In reading this letter please gent to come In and take over my
destructive -exercise by a man
"the power of Ideas" but by his with an aberrant personality that '
know that I want the Teachers childs classroom. I know she Is
who ·refuses to acknowledge
status as a celebrity fresh from · ought to have permanently dis· •
Strike settled and to get our very concerned for the children
fundamental flaws In Ills
the pages of the National En· qualified him long ago. ·
teachers back In their class- In Meigs Local. I am thankful the
character.
rooms , but the substitute State kept our schools open and
•
To be sure, In the weeks since
teachers need to he thanked. I we have a choice to send our kids
Hart returned to. the race, there
•••
feel they are doing the best they or not.
has been too much psycho! babble
can do under the circumstances.
Pleased Parent
'•
about
compulsion, narcissism
I · personally couldn't ask for
Dreama Knight
.
and other human failings.
. I
Moreover, as Morgenstern
'A gentle, softspoken man passed through the Tribune offices •for
notes, there is no justification for
many years. He had a curious mind and a sparkling personallty. . . ;
denouncing Hart "as If he were
J. Sherman Porter - or Peeps, as I almost always called him I
Dear Editor, Meigs Local School qualified educators. Then I see
somehow corrupting a pristine
became a beloved friend five years ago. He died Tuesday as many :·
no other alternative, but to meet
· , Board, M.L.T.A.
process or Impeding the progress
reporters do - on a busy newsday.
,
this requirement. On the same
of giants who've stimulated our
Looking
over
my
computer
and
across
the
room,
I
can
still
see
him
•
token
I
am
puzzled
at
the
For the past 15 years my
Intellect or captured our
sitting at his desk, phone In hand, tracking down Information for :
children, have attended .private deplorable acts of vandalism
Peeps: A Gallipolis Diary, l"hlch he wrote until a little over one year :
lnstutlons to acquire their educa- associated with the strike. I hope
ago.
:
tion. I am writing this letter as a both parties realize Irreparable
He
was
a
two-fingered
whlstling.typer
(and
pretty
good
at
It,
too)
.
•
neutral party. Neither favoring damage has been done, that will
Thlnklng ·about the times we spent tog!'!ther In the newsroom, some ;
school board, or teachers. The not be admended ·in the near
great memories came flooding back.
:
' most precious resource in Amer- future. For the sake of the
"Hayyyy,
little
girl,"
(or
"Hayyy,
Hol)e,"
If
It
was
for
Hoba:rt
:
ica, Is our children. They deserve children , of the· Meigs Local
By DICK WEST
Wilson, Jr.) I'd hear him say with great )nflectlon. And thenhe'd :
the right to the best et:lucatlon, School District, teachers school
WASHINGTON IUPI) -National Handwriting Day is coming up
point out a simple mistake -In a gentle way- but you stlllfeltstupld. · •
board
members
and
community,
the community cim provide.
this week end and the sponsors want you to pay closer attention to
I couldn't pass by without him taking my hand In both of his, patting !
I
urge
the
expediency
In
resolv,
Therefore It appears to me that
your Ones and Twos as well as minding your Ps and Qs.
·'
It
as he talked. He had the softest hands, and the softest voice and :
lng
this
dispute,
we would want the best qualified
As an executive of the Writing Instruments Manufacturers
manner
of anyone In the Tribune.
'
:
Thank you
·Instructors available. If It would
Association has pcilnted out, few things have contributed more to
And
then
there
was
the
Christmas
he
whistled
Jingie
Bells,
typing
•
Earl Fields
take a pay Increase lo keep and In
Illegibility than the ·digits 0 through 9, "and In every combination
•
In
perfect
unison
wlih
the
notes.
•
Middleport, Ohio
thf' future to secure highly
thereof."
The
first
few
days
I
worked
here,
he
asked
question
upon
q!lestlon
·
:
"Unless people start making their numbers more legible," he is
about me, where I went to school and about my family. I thought he :
quoted as having warned, •'we may be In for a return to the-Dark Ages
was
just curious, getting to know me. Oh, no. He wrote a column abOut •
when no one could be certain when their number was up."
.
me,
and I fouad It In print one Sunday. ,
.
· :•
Gee; I never knew the Dart&lt; Ages were like that. I didn't even know
Anything you wanted to know, on any subject, "ask J. Sherm" was. ,
By United Pre1111 Internallonal
t
fountain pens had been Invented back then.
the
reply, And he had the answer.
Today Is Thursday, Jan. 21, the 21st day of 1988 wltl) 345 to follow.
The association, by the way, has been sponsoring National
Peeps
was SPecial In other manners.
,
'
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
Himdwrltlng Day on Jan. 23 of every )rear since 1977. That date,
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
He
beat
Oakley
Collins
for
a
seat
In
the
Ohio
State·Senate.
The
only
.:
through the merest coincidence, also happens to be John Hancock's
·
:
other person I can think of doing thalia Jan. Michael Lpng.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter . .
birthday.
Peeps
had
a
style
of
writing
all
his
own.
Personal
and
person11ble:
Tb~ born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include ·
I mean, of course, the Jan. 23· date, not 1977.
soldier and Vermont folk hero Ethan Allen in 1738; explorer and
. Incidentally, Hancock has never been accused of misprinting • In great detail. His news stories told you more than the simple facts . : ·In graphic detail, you were told the scenario - down to what people •
historian John Fremont in 1813; Confederate Gen. Thomas
numbers although there Is no doubt, at least when signing the
l
wore
and had a' a dinner. Back In his heyday of journalism, tbere~as I
" stonewall" Jackson In 1824; firearms designer John Browning In
De~laratlon of Independence, that he had a legible signature. '
no local news photography, so the reader had to be able to envision the J
1855; reform~r Roger Ni!Sh Baldwin, founder of the American Civil
I hope, however, the association Is not recommending that we make
scene.
,
Liberties Union. In 1884; fashion designer Christian Dlor In 1900;
our numbers that large.
'
And boy, oh boy, was he Joyal to the University of KentuCkY •
actprTelly Savalas In 1924 (age 64); c:omedlanBeimyHJllln 1925 (age
Nevertheless, It tells us that "when It comes to handwriting, any
Wildcats.
We used to have dllcusalons on the merits of UK against I
63); golfer Jack Nicklaus in 1940 (age 48); opera star Placido
number of things can go wrong." .
.
Marshall
University.
Neither ot us would admit the other had·a food
Domingo In 1941 (age 47); singer Mac Davis in 1942'(age46) , and actor
;.mong the things the assoCiation specifically lists as possibly
program
academically
or athletically.
·
Robby Benson In 1955 (age 33).
causing confusion are telephone numbers, recipes, travel directions
Although
Ills
degrees
were
from
UK,
he
w.as
fiercely
loyal
to Rio j,.
On this date hi history:
.
and personal checkbooks.
.
,Grande Colleae: too. · He bad written. the !!(lllool's hlltory tor Its
in 1792, French King Louis XVI was executed In Paris.
Astor as recipes areconcerned,itasksus In "pltythepoorfledgllng
centennial celebration, and was asBOClatl! professor ol political '•
Itt 1861, Mississippi Sen. Jefferson Davis resigned from the United
rook who can't tell whether mother's handWritten recipe cslls for
'
there.
.
science
States Senate, 12 days before Mississippi seceded from tbe Union.
one-eighth or seven-eighths of a cup of vinegar."
·
•
The Golden Era of Journalism In Ga!UpoUs has ciime to an end wltb •
In 1~. the world's first atomic-powered submarine, tile Nautilus,
My heart gttes out to any chef who tries to Interpret numbers In an
the
death of :J. Sherman Porter- Peeps- or Jaspey- whatever pen ;
was launc)led at Groton, Conn.
·
.old family recl}le. Even more, however, It bleeds for the chef's dinner
name
one &lt;:ailed him.
,
' In 1977, President Jlml!IY Carter pardoned American Vietnam
pests, who somehow must swallow' the stuff.
He
saw
a
lot
of
change
In the profession durlna bll yean, and ,
war-era draft evaders and brdered a case-by-case study of deserters.
My advice to any "fledgling cook" thus baffled !stills: justJ!Ourlna
adjusted,
like
all
good
newunen.
Some things, thoualt. never cllallge · :
In 19115, the coldest Inaugural temperatures In history forced
FULL CUP of vtnerar, or any · other seasoning for wlllcll the
In
joui'Dalllm,
aritlstanlfylng
tbe
end
of hJa typed COJI)', Peepl alwaya '
cancelation of the Washington, D.C.. lnaupral parade and made
directions ml&amp;'ht be un~lear .
\.
.
. . \lied the ~eporter's ending:
••
Ronald Reagan the first president to take his oath of office In the
Some of my greatest culinary successes have come about through
--30--·
Capitol rotunda. ·
,
I'
approxlmatloJUJ such as tilts.
•
LAW. ),•
1
I
J

Wants strike settled

By United Press lnternallonal
One of UPI's co-No. 20s proved
Wednesday nigh) It belonged tit
the 'ranklngs, while the other
gave evidence It was a pretender.
Florida outmqscled No. 3 Kenlucky 58-56 at Lexington while
North Carolina State was surprised by out-manned Wake
.
..,
·
Forest.
"We're on the rise from now
on," said Flo~lda' s Hoot-2 sopho·
more Dwayne Schintzius, who
had 18 points and combined w!tl,l
Vernon Maxwell, who had 19, to
help the Gators improve to 12·4
overall and 4-1 In the Southeastern Conference.
Florida used an aggressive
de~ense to limit the Wildcats to 28
percent shooting from the field
(16 o( 57) : Playing without their ·
top rebounder, freshman Pvlpgston Chatman, who Is recovering
from knee surgery , the Ga tors
still outrebounded Kentucky 4033.
"It was a fiercely fought
basketball game," Kentucky
Coach Eddie Sutton said. "They
really kicked us on the boards .
You can't shoot 13 for· 56 and
expect to beat anyone.''
The Wildcats dropped to 12-2
overall and S.21n the conference,
At Greensboro, N.C., Cal Boyd
hit a 3-polnt shot and two free
throws In the final 20 seconds to
rally Wake Forest to a 71-67
victory.
The Demon Deacons, 6-8 overall and 1-3 In the Atlantic Coast
Conference, have lost · Darr!c
Keys and Robert Siler to Injuries,
and center Greg Keith, forward
Charlie Thomas and guard Rod
Watson to transfers. They have
also .suffered ·surprise losses to
Winthrop and Coastal Carolina.
"Any past game Is past history
tor us," Wake Forest Coach Bob

'

IOWA FALLS, Iowa (NEAlAt every stop on a six-hour tour of
Iowa farm communities, former
Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo .. waves
a~ve his head a 92-page booklet
that he promotes as the key to
understanding his presidential
campaign.
His bid for the White House "Is
based on ideas and principles,"
Hart says, and the pamphlet
contains •'my Ideas and the Ideas
of some of the most creative
minds In this country ."
The booklet Is titled "Reform,
Hope and ·the Human Factor:
Ideas for National RestructurIng." Hart promises that . "we ·.
will make It available to anyone
who would like to have It," But
.during the entire afternoon, not a
single copy of the publication Is
handed out.
Few people express any Interest In It, and thosewhodoare told
that it Is In such short supply they
will have to walt lor It to be
' mailed to them at an unsp.!!Cified
time.
Moreover, those who expect
the book to oe a compendium of
fresh Ideas' almost certainly will
be disappointed to discover that
It Is merely a collection of seven
speeches Hart delivered In 1986
and 1987.
The publications is little more
than an empty gesture. It Is

.

inside-loop; NC State·upset

_

using personal c6mpu\l!rs for
accounting, record keeping and
the transmission of data.
And their level of expertise
astounds ihe authorities.- · Discloses' the secret' report: "()_ne
electronic notebook, which sold
for approximately $70, had such
a complex method of encryption
that It could not be broken bY· a
. number offederal agenices."
The traffickers' high-tech arsenal also Includes "night vision
equipment (which) has been
'utilized along the borders" and
"remotely piloted vessels .
(which) have been used along the
coast of Florida." The latter "are
controlled from a mother ship
and are used to deliver ship- ·
ments of marijuana."
Will the white hats ever gain
the upper hand? The task force Is
not optimistic: "The use of
technology by the traffickers will

~entuckr, suffers second loss
'

By Jack Anderson and Dale Van A,tta

WASHINGTON - Drug traf- tal detectors, radar detectors
flckers and law enforcement and electJ:Onlc . alarm systems
authorities are engag~ 'In a that "protect traffickers and
headlong. dash to discover and their stash pads from courtexploit new technology , and It's . ordered Intercepts l\S well as
not at all that certain tha1 the from rival groups."
good guys· will win.
Radio monitoring devices are a
This .Is one of the conclusions particular .Problelfl. "~l" enreached by a panel of Pentagon forcement tactical communlcaanalysts who recently studied the !Ions frequencies are being monlmeans and methods . used to
to red thrqugh the use . of
detect and neutralize traffickers ·s canners," the' report says. "On
and terrorists. Their secret re, a regular basis, scanners tuned
port states: "Without question,
to DEA; FBI, Customs, Cqast
Guard as well as state and local
there Is a dynamic ... 'technology
race' underway between · the
law enforcement ag(mcles' Iredrug trafficker- as well as other
quencles' are seized during Intercriminal elements- and the Jaw
diction operatipns."
,
enforcement agencies. It Is by no
The traffickers are also em·
means clear which side is better
ploylng cellular telephones and
funded - or better equipped."
new. blgb-tech techniques to
Increasingly, according to the
thwart Interception of their conreport, dru'g traffickers are reversa !Ions. They ·are using sosorting to such' countermeasures
phlsticated .paging and · elecas tape recorder detectors, menIronic mail systems; they are

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

113

BUY ONE Of THESE!

DlvfKto.IV
l . llaiWa(lt)(l!-11
!. Marte• Local {SIIf.l)
S. Upper Krloto V..ley {I) (, 1&amp;-1)
• -1 . llldl&amp;n Vaiii!-J S.lllll ( H OI-l)
L Ddlralt Rlwnlde (I)' CIJ.t)

lit
1. NewarkC.u..lk llt-t J

......

Olvltllon I

Tram

I. LalwowOod !ill. &amp;l"a~ f 1•1
'!. Kelea
:1. Nn . .ali
... n ....... ~«••~

Ill

;.ftbiiiReldSt.r~r'•lll-:!1
u
a. N.h.,·(IHt:tl ,
'
· 18
t, &amp; Cll ......... Helltllf!M~m (I) ( lf.8)fl2
II. e.c:lle)'i' Wn&amp; (1.11
..
~111(111 te..: 11. Ollmow Ac-..y n :
IL Fort &amp;eeewrr Ill IL ......Mila.
Fill-, .« t)rw~~ Ill ft; 14. Fort IA,.mw
n~ 11. 11!1•~1~ I&amp;; II. (tif!.) Aillllil ad
IIIIIGrd Ce*r Falrhab C1), II nell;
11. ••ratyl; 11. C.•l WlnriiHill"r'J:
a ............ VlllrJ I,

*·
II. North OlntiiN'II

llotorKporU

'

... c.,..
•••ear11a.u,
.

...,..,

,.._

Major .....,IDcrt't'LI'a,...
O.lki, t. •

...._re •

-

. ,. . . .,

~.......

,.m.

-

.u.u.Jiu

Pol•t"

(USPS If. . .)
A Dlvla&amp;oa. of Multimedia, lllc.

••

121

.'

I . LMko41l

7.Wera.l~oa

Ill
~4

Pu.. lshiO'd every afternom, Monda.y
thr.oogh Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by tbe Ohio Valley Publilhlne Compaliy!Multlmedla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio me, Ph. 992-21!16. Second class postaae Plid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

51
41

SK

llU•tolltoW"IILa..
ll
t. tenia 8olllllvn
It
to.Fai..U.Id
.
U
Rtcollll te~m II. Tolfde IYiflr'll tl; II.
4 ......on and
Jlea&amp;. U; II. (tiel
M••r,. He'll; IL lt.. ) M . . . Hf.ll;lll111

v,...

... Utwll .. 11. oloRIII. 11 earh; 11. '

l"errJIIlt•rw It;

Ctullle.

The Daily Sentinel

pare~) :

IM

1111

Calendar
o.u
••lila'•
•.,.....c.m.
. 'Rio II mUioa loh Ropeo CllrJ!!IPr

~-.

tre•.rt&gt;r of u.. ott.. IIKh Sclltol
Wretadl.. fNdlf'lll MHrlaUon, alld
dhitrJr.tedlpr UPI ( 81'111. p..no vu&amp;n In

11.
. (tie) AIHuce, W•"'•

Dlvllllo•ll

t. llftlllftntllf (I)

•

i1

'

.

J. ""........ ~1ft
i

M

'·

.

4. Clllll C.l~n._ 0.8.._ (II
4.CUt)Raw._IHIIIdtlt

..........

-It

41

•a.:

It

1'7

.

II. (Ill&gt;) . . . . . . Ull

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

C.wiArJ, II _... lt. UleJ

n.
--..

.....
tL - · ......,. It
Clllel ....llleMd
I

~a

..ell.

c11o1

~-m .

In"

&lt;•=L- I.l l
~==·::....
L~Clo-. 1

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .h

•gII
,

n

II
•

1.0
-•
••
I
f ..
,- : ! = : I I . - IIJ ' tL
IL V"""'
1!1 IL ...,...., 11J IL
~
-~~
••...
, . . . . . . . _ ..... 0 •••

u..... ., ...._..._..,
..._ ...
... .......,......

_.

8UIIICllllP'I'II'I R.\TJ!II
llr Carr!• oollhlar Bo•le

One Woek ..... ,......................... ,... $1.25
One Month . ................................ $5.45
One Year ......................; .......... llll.OO
81NGU:OOPY
PRICJ:
·
boDy .................................. .'2S Cento ,

,LeBARON GTS
PLUS S770 CASH,,
PLUS
ADDED COVERAQE WARRANTY
..
(5 years or 50,000 miles·,.

GET

7.7°/o A.P.R.*,

'

.

. . . . . . . ., .

I.
I.Co

LMI=c:u....,
1.·-

POSTMASTER: Send a~ chanp •
to Tho Dally Sentinel. U1 Court St. ,·
Po...,.qy, Ohio liTe.
I

U

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

s.c..l

I

Advtrtlling R.epreowntattve, Branham
Newspaper S8Jel, 73S .Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

u

'7. 01...Wih. .
a. 81. PW Orallam
t. All,_ II , VIMellt
. lt.(llfo) ........
II. (lie) u~•• a.,m...

.u.. ...

Inland Dally Press Auoctatton and the

Ohio Newspaper Aaaoetauon. National

a...Jaad, Lalle Calllolle, t raeh.
I........ c-11. .1 (I) ~

Member: tJntted Preis International,

SUbocrlbers notdellrlncltopay thecor- ',
rtc may Nmlt 1n advance dtrl!t't to •

-

COOPER .

Tbe Dally Sentinel on a 3, 8 cr12 month
bulL Credit will be pen carrie- Nch

No IIIIIM:rtpt- by mall (MI'IIllllod ... .,

atHI ,....,

avallalllo.
'

bo• cwrler leJ'VIce II 1

w-.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,. .
.

..... _ . . . _ _

...... Cloull e11.•
' • ~ ..................... ,...............01
u
!11
o-11111 ...... eo.l:r

u

.•

IJ ~ ........................: ...........

...........

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

11

I

CHIYSLER•PLYMOITI'DODGE, INC•
'

Aiiliii•lstt S.·• • smn

992-641,
I

I

......on, oHIO-

·

• APPRoVED CREDIT- QUAUFtED BUYERS THitOUGH CHRYSLER
.
.
·
CREDIT CORPORAnON. ...__.
- - , . · - - - .....-

! .'

" L•,,.

-

,_-,.

•

w

-~·w

I

•.

.

.

.

·-,-·~.... -

'I,

I '

. . .,~

�.

'

PsgJ

4 The

Deilv Sentinel

Th~y. January 21, 1988

Thwsday. January 21, 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Rio 'Grande to host 'Cedarville ISVAC standings !'B lue Angels top
s•"

\..

ALL~A~ESP

•m tOp MOC Con
. test atUrd ay ·
,,

It's not exac!ly a battle of the
tllans, but a certain excitement
usually surrounds any basketball
game between Rto Grande's
Redmen and Cedarville's Yellow
Jackets, wbo will be at Lyne
Center Saturday at 7:30 p.m . for
Ohio Valley Bank Night.
Local Interest Is expected to
focus on former Gallla Academy
standout Gary Harrison, a 5-11
freshman guard 'f or .Cedarville
;who has seen a lot of time oft the
bench in his premiere season for
Coach Don Callan.
Rio Grande enters the contest
;with an overall record of 15-6 and

Rio women
~p Walsh _

• CANTON

- Powered by a
:;!&amp;-point performa'nce from forward Holly Hastings, Rio
:Crande's Redwomen took con:trol of Tuesday's encounter with
·walsh and defeated the Lady
:cavaliers 77-63.
The win madefor3consecutlve
· Mid-Ohio Conference victories
for the Redwomen, who started
:Moe play Jan. 14 against
·Urbana.
'Overall, Rio Grande is 13-5,
~ while Wa Ish goes to 9-3 on )he
: season and 3-1 in the MOC . The
; Lady Cavaliers defeated eros. stown rival. Malone 85-7Z on
: Saturday.
Competition was Intense in the
"first half as Rio Grande led the .
hosts 37-29 at the' end of the
period. Both teams were even on
field goal percentage 148 per·
cent). but Walsh held the advantage on free.throws, slnklnl: 3 of 4
for 75 percent. compared to the
Red women's 1 of 2 for 50 percent.
Rio Grande built a large lead in
tbe second half, l!ut Wal,sh came
~ck to · narrow. the advantage
lbrough the efforts of starte~s
.lnn Alpeter and Lanie Stal~orth. The Redwomen conU,nued their press to post the win.
Aside from Hastings' scoring
j)erformance, Lea Ann Mullins .
contributed 20 points and Renee
Halley added 16. Hastings remains Rio Grande's top rebounder, recording 13 against
Walsh.
• Mullins also had 7 rebounds
and was credited with 5 assists.
Halley had .4 rebounds and 6
assists.
. Alpeter led the way for Walsh
Mth 16 points and 9 rebounds,
while Stallworth added 10 points,
rebounds and 3 assists. Denise
G;~hera, a 5-6 senior and 'one of
Walsh's top returnees, was held
to 9 points.
· Statistically, the Redwomen
were 58.1 percent on field goals,
j)osting 36 of 62 atternpts, and
were 67.5 percent on free throws
(5 of 8). Walsh was 73.7 percent
. on field goals and 87.5 percent on
. tree throws, netting 7 of 8
attempts .
• The Redwomen are at home
Saturday when they host Malone
in a: 5 p.m. game. Walsh Is at
Mount Vernon Naza rene.
RIO GRANDE (77) - Holly
Hastings. 12-2-1-26; Lea .Ann
Mullins, 10.0-1-20; Renee Halley.
8·0-3-16; Beth Coli, 3-1-l-7; Billie
Jo Stephenson, 3·2-3-8. TOTALS

a

36-5-9·77.

5-2 In the Mid-Ohio Conference
after putting away a determined
Ohio Dominican 104-65 Tuesday
In Columbus. Cedarville went to
12·6 and 4·2 In the MOC after
edging conference leader Walsh
70-67 at Cedarville Tuesday.
The Redmen entered Tuesday's Ohio Dominican game with
a new lineup that placed senior
Ron Rlttlnger back into a forward slot and.boosted sophornore
John Lambcke off the bench to
center. With starters Anthony
Raymore and Jim Kearns in
their old positions as guards and
Rlttlnger again teamed on forward with Ray Singleton, the
Redmen took of!, led. 47-32 at
halftime and shut down the
Panthers' offense In the second
half.
Cedarville's victory ·over
Walsh ended the Cavaliers' perfect (1;-0) slate in the MOC. The
win must have been gratifying
for the Yellow Jackets, who hit a
cold streak on the road and
suffered frorn -the 2-game suspension of junior forward Tony
Ewing, one of its top players;
earlier this month. But since
then, things have been looking up
for Cedarville with victories over.
Tiffin (97-71) on Jan. 12 and
Mount Vernon Nazarene (73-63)
last Saturday.
Rio Grande Is expect~ci to
place sophomore Rob Jackson,
who suffered an ankle injury In
the Urbana game Jan. 12, at
center, with ·Rittinger· and . Sin-

Haas does
little wrong

•

.S outhern 78-57

TEAM
OP
Southern ............ 10 2 1039 712
'
Hannan Trace ... 10 3 980 816
With the first unit playing only into the !ina 1 s1an:u.
Oak Hlli ............ 9 2 755 670 • half the garne, host Gallipolis ·
In Wednesday's reserve game,
gleton repeating as forwards'. North Gallia ....... 6 7 822 983 defeated Southern. 78-57. in a . GAHS won. 50-23. Lisa Milliron
Eastern ............. 5 7 822 892
non-league cage outing on the had 10 and Tammy Elliott eight
Raymon• and Kearns will be
Kyger Creek . ..... 5 8 s15 8!7 GAHS boards Wednesday night.
for the Little Angels. Trlcla
seen as guards. with Brian
Syrnmes
Valley
.
4
8
752
949
The
victoty
left
GAHS
·10-3
Wolfe had eight for Southern.
Watkins 'and Marc Gothard as
Southwestern
.....
2
11
731
959
overall.
Gallipolis
leads
the
SO'OTHERN (57) - Crystal
probable first choices off the
SEOAL
chase
with
a
4-0
record.
Hill,
10-1-21; Deb Gratehouse,
bench.
Cyrstal
Hill
paced
the
.visitors
0-1-0·3;
Becky Wlenbrenner, 3·1·
Probable starting forwards for
SVAC ONLY ·
with
21
points.
7;
Tracy
Beegle, 1.0'2; Mel Van
Cedarville are .. senior · Brent
(Varsity)
·
Krist!
Thomas
led
Gallia's
Mater,
1-1-3;
June Beegle, 2-04;
Baird 16·6) · and junior Chris
TEAM
W L
P OP attack with . 16 points. Angie Dawn Johnson, 1·1·3; Angle
Reese (6·2), witb ,6-6 senior John
Southern .............. 8 1 823 515 Holley and Betsy Bergdoll had 10 Bostic, 2+8; Becky, Evans, 2-2·6.
Angus expected to be at the post.
Oak Hill .............. 7 1 583 500 aplece.
,
TOTALS 22-1-10-57.
Starting guards will be Mike
Hannan Trace ..... 7 2 671 571
Gallipolis hit 37 of 79 field goal
GALLIPOLIS (78} - Angle
Freeman. a 6-2 senior frorn
Eastern ............... 4 5 633 68!&gt; · attempts for 46 percent and four Holley, 5-0-10; Betsy Bergdoll,
Charleston, W.Va., and 6·2 senior
Symrnes Valley ... 3 6 601 744 of nine free throws for44 percent. 5·0·10; Krlstl Thomas , 8-0-16;
Eddie Wakefield.
North Gallia ........3 6 593 .676 The Gallians had 37 rebounds, Lori Hamilton, 2-1-5; Sarah ·
L;ist season, Callan's club lost
Kyger Creek ........ 2 6 501 551 seven each by Sarah Todd and Todd, 4-0-8; Heather Mabry,
79·78 to the Redrnen at Cedarville
Southwestern ....... ! 8 523 685 Lori Hamilton. GAf!S nad 12 2-0-4; · Molly O'Rourke, 1•0-2;
on Jan. 24, 1987. They handed Rio
TOTALS
35 35 4928 4928 assists, four by Angle Holley; 16 Jennifer Young, 1-1 -3; Gwen
· Grande a 78-76 'defeat ·a t Lyne ·
steals, three each by ,Betsy · Elliott, 1-0-2; Amy · Caldwell,
Center the following Feb. 17.'
SVAC
Bergdoll and Dana "-tha and 18 3·2·8; Tarnmy Elliott, 3.-0-6; Dana .
Callan. who has guiqed the
(Reserves)
turnovers.
Alba, 2-04. TOTALS 37·4·78.
men 's prograrn at ·Cedarville
TEAM
W L
P OP · The Gallians jumped off io a
Score by quarlerst
since· 1960, posted his 400th
Soutoern
..............
9
0
526
386
27-12
lead
and
Increased
that
Southern
........ l 2 1 18 15-.57
basketball win on Nov. 21. 1987
Hannan Trace ..... 8 1· 481 · 332 margin to 53-24 by the halftime Galllpolls ....... 27 26 10 15-'78
against Concordia (Mich.) Col1 50
lege. Presently chairman of
Southwestern
.......
5
4
392
410
r~!n:te:r:rn:i:ss:lo:n:.
:I:t
:w:a:s:6:3·:42=go:l:ng=:::~R~es~e~r~v~e!sc:::o:re=·
=
G:a:ll:lp:o:t:s::;
Oak Hill ......... ..... 5 3 306 323
Southern 23.
District 22 of the NAJA, Callan
was recently named the district's
Symmes Valley ... 3 6 385 416
• Athletic Administrator of the
North Gallla, ....... ,2 7 410 442
)"ear.
Eastern ............... 2 7 360 441
Tickets Available
Kyger Creek.. ...... l 7 283 393
BY TH. FAIMEIS BANI AND SAYINGS CO.
Ohio Valley Bank will sponsor
TOTALS
35 35 3143 3143
Saturday's Booster Night with
•
Tuesday's games
the Rio Grande Redmen at Lyne
Loaded, .txctlltnt condition. Sharp!
'Federal Hocking 72, Eastern 65
Center wnen the Redmen host
Hannan, W.Va . 64, Kyger Creek
Cedarville.
·
57
Tickets for the,. game are
Friday's galjles
available. free of charge, at Ohio
Hannan
Trace
at Southwestern
Valley Bank's main branclf, 420
North
Gall
Ia
at
Kyger Creek
Third Ave .. Gallipolis, and at its
Southern
at
Eastern
·Jackson · Pike and Rio Grande
For more information contact Scott Shank at 991·3293.
Oak Hill at Symmes Valley
btanches.

•

I

North GaiDa at KYler Creek- bury out of the paint. where
The Pirates and the Bobcats, Bradbury can put his long reach
presenting lineups fairly even }n to maximum use.
•
terms of talent and size, shoJld
The real estate under the
from ali' appearances provide a boards won't be the only place
hard-fougllt game.
the action Is likely tpbehot, ass-4
The Bobcats are likely to have senior swlngman Keith Bur11ette,
a height advantage Inside, as the the Bucs' three-point king, may .
Pirates are likely to have &amp;-5 be sent on occasion to strike from
junior Rusty Denney take on Bill long range against the smaller
Loveday. the Bobcats' 6·6 senior .Bobcat backcourt.
postman. However, Don Mays, a
Earlier in the season, the Bucs
6-2 junior Pirate forward, will beat the Bobcats 62·52 in VInton.
have to use his strengtll to keep · The Pirates have lost their last
&amp;-5 !;j!nlor forward Mike Brad- three games and their last five

Ohio .has. share

fOR SALE .

1984 DODGE. 2 DR. 600 .

Will be sold at public auction on
January 23rd, ·1988 at 10:00 a.m.
at 105 Union Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio

•'

\

of

'

.

.

··~

.

"

SVAC games, their last league have to deal with long·ral)ge
1'1n being the 77·76 thriller scoring threat Dave Mershon,
against ·visiting Symmes Valley who with his three-point shots
on Decernber 11. The BobCats ' raised the Highlanders from the
have dropped their last two dead with thelrfirstieaguewln, a •
contests.
84·78 verdict over North Gallla.
Hannan Trace a1 Southwestern However-, the Wildcats will prob- The Wildcats, favored to win . ably be able to.run at will against
against !{yger Cr.eek last Friday the slower Highlanders.
·
night, found themselves down by
In their previous meeting, the
llLPQ!nts before senior Scott Wildcats walked ' away !rom the ·
Rankin turned things around Highlanders 92-57. ,
with a 20-polnt effort to beat the
Southern · at Eastern - The
Bobcats 72-70.
Tornadoes, who plucked the
111 this game the Wildcats will

Eagles 90·51 · In their previous
encounter on December 4 l.n
Racine, ·are likely to blow the
Eagles from the skies In this
all-Meigs County contest. which
will be played . In Reedsvllle.
Howle Caldwell's Racine squad
~ q; won Its last four games
n , e1.1ll and four of Its last five
league outings, losing Its last
conference game to Hannan
Trace. Including--this match
against their upriver cou,slns, the
Tornadoes will take most of
Racine on the road with them 'for

three of their next five games,
including iwo straight befor~
facing Hannan Trace at home o~
February 12.
Oak HID at Symmes ValleyHistory Is likely to repeat Itself in
this game, as the Oaks are likely
to use their height advantage,
wrapped up in 6-8 junior Jedd
Rawlins, and their outside shootIng game, concentrated In 5·H
senior Eric faye , to great
a,civantage against the VIkings .
The Oaks sank the Vikings .884~
at Oak HIU on December 8.
-

MAC -lead after 80-76 win over Miami

By GENE CADDES
edged Bowling Green 74-71 a,nd
Eastern Michigan's . Grant
Wright State surprised Young·
Central Michigan downed Ball
UPI Sports Writer
Long and Brad Soucie each stown State 93-63· behind Matt
With four of Its riext five games State 72-51. Toledo' beat Northern scored 18 points In the Hurons' Horstman's 23 points. Horstman
on the road:' Ohio University's l!linols 96-72 in a non -league
win over Kent State, their 13th hit 7 of 8 tries from 3-potnt range. '
seven-game winning streak ·and af(air.
straight at home.
The win was the sixth lit a row for
At Bowling Green, the Falcons
.share of the lead In the MldEastern led 36·28 at the half the Raiders, who led 42-24 at the
Arpertcan Conference will be put loo,ked iike an orange .a nd l&gt;rown
and clinched it when Lorenzo intermission.
Santa Claus In losing to Western l'!eely hit two free throws with 34
to the supreme test.
Monroe Douglass scored 30
The Bobcats beat Miami 80-76 Michigan.
seconds left to .make 11 71-63. I
points and Anthony Bonner
Trailing 71-67, Western's Phil
Wednesday night, their seventh
Reggie Adams led Kent State added 20 lead St. Louis to a 79·61
stralgltt win after losing six of Holmes hit an 18-footer to make It with 22 points. ·
win over Dayton. ·
their first eight, Tiley now stand 71·69 with 10 seconds to play . On , At Toledo, Chad Keller scored
Dayton, which trailed 37-28 at
9·6 overall and 4·0 In the MAC, the lnbounds pass, BG threw the 18 points, Jeff Hailr added 16 and
halftime, was led by .Ray Sprintied for the top spot with Eastern the ball away. It was fed to three other Toledo players had 13 ger with 19 points. . .
.
'Michigan, a 75·70 winner over · Holmes who hit a 3-pointer to put as the Rockets put the game way
Louisville handed Cincinnati a
the Broncos up 72-71 .
Kent State.
early in their win over Northern 91-89 overtime lOss behind HerThe · Falcons again threw it llllnols.
But during the next20days, the
bert Crook's 26 points and 17 by
Bobcats play at Western Michi- away on the lnbounds and then
. Toledo snapped a 12.12 tie with LaBradford Smith In a Metro
gan and Bowling Green, return · had to foul, with Chris Brawley · a 20-4 run midway through the Conference game. ·
home to face pre-season MAC hitting two free throws for the first half to take a 32-161ead and
Levertis Robinson's free throw
.
was up 52-30 at the Intermission.
favorite Central Michigan , then final 74-71 count.
with one second left in regula,tlon
' Mark Brown led Western with
Akron han.ded winless Otter- tied the score for Cincinnati at 79,
· hit the rQ~~d again for games at
·
22
points and }{olmes finished bein its 17th loss of the season,
but he missed · a second free
Eastern Michigan and Kent
with 16, including 3 of 3 from the 109·54, With eight Zips scoring In
State.
.'
throw -that could have given the
OU hasn'tlOSt Sii\Ce dropping a 3-polnt range. BG was led by double figures. Akron led 56·26 at
Bearcats the win In regulation.
·
Roger McClendon paced the
93-77 decision Dec. 19 at Vander- Anthony Robinson with 18 j&gt;oints. the half.
bilt of the Southeastern Conference. The Bobcat' started their
Winning streak two nights later'
with a 72-70 win over Tennessee,
another member of the SEC.
· "We're off tq a great 4-0 start,"
said OU coach Billy Hahn, "I'm
very pleased but these next two
weeks are very big to us. "
Despite Wednesday night's
win , . Hahn Wasn't 'overly
Jrnpressedc
'
"It was a good win, but I didn't
think we played that well," he
said. ·"Credit Miami wtth an
QuakerS~te
excellent defense which gave us
probleJDs. You have -to win at
hom~ In, this league."
OU, paced by Dave Jamerson
, with 25 points and Pa\11 "Snoopy"
Graham with 17, broke. a .~0-70tie
with ' an 8·1 ~un to put the game
away.
...
Eric Newsome also scored 25
JIIOinta for Miami,. whwtl tell to
ot-ll• ailll2-~. "•·• '""
·
"lt was a typical Mtami·Ohlo U
basketball game," said Miami's
Jerry Peirson. "We fought back
to tie it but when we had dur best
man !Eric NewsoJDe) at the line,
Beam
he just couldn't do it."
10W40&amp;5W30
Headlights
Newsome hit the first of a
1-and-1 with the score 72-70 ou,
Motor Oils
but missed the S!!Cond and the
Limit t2. ,
Bobcats then scored .6 consecu·
tlve points. ·
· In Wednesday night's other
MAC, games, Western Michigan

Bearcats -with 20 points, while
Robinson added 19.
Ohio Northern and Heidelberg
remained lied for first place In
the Ohio Athletic Conference
with Wednes&lt;;lay night wins .
Heidelberg beat Wittenberg 69-62
and Ohio Northern 'edged Ma·
rletta 64-63.

MIZWAY
TAVERN
PRESENTS

. SUGAR BEAR ·
l\~ND

Friday, Jan. 22

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St.,
Ponroy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SEIYING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1861

and

Saturday,

~an.

.PC-Compatlble Tandy® 1000 HX _

69900

:

Bullt·ln MS·DOS-Juat
Power Up and Runt

Monrtor e-,tra

low As $35 'pllf MOnth•

.

Our easiest to use IBM®PC compatible _ever! With
Personal OeskMate'• 2 software ..#25-t053
ISM/A~ .

TM IBM ,

· STA·2280 by,Raalistic"'

•2.00 COVER CHANGE
MUST BE 21 YEARS OLD

MIZWAY TAVERN
RT. 143/7
POMEROYI OHIO
f

r-----------------:-----:-:;---------------.W.-________.;;...._.1-_ _ _ _ _...;__ _...,._...,..,.

Save
5160

99

..

23915

MS·QOS TM!Microsoft

Buy a Tandy tOOO HX or TX and Gel a

IIOIIUS OffER! Computer Starter Kll at No Extra Charg.e!
dUll V luel lnclu~es three diskettes with storage box. hea~ cleamng

·-

a • ·kit, MS-OOS: The Basics.ot and your chOICe ol mouse.
.¥25·1506 and choice

o\126-3025 m ~26-3125 or .¥25·1040

Hlgh·S~ Tandy 1000.
For Home or Office

.

Low AI 110 Per Monlh •

TX

Computer

119900

286-Baled IBM PC Compatible

Sealed

TANDY
1000

Monitor e)(tra

I==;;:

Ready to use with Personal DeskMate 2 software, With
640K RAM and 3•12" disk drive. #25-tSOO

$500 prize to

PC compatible! Ideal lor
data processing. Bit-image .__ _ _ _:
graphics. Tractor. #26-2802

Reg. 219.95
Low Aa S15

Per Month•

3-Ch. Walkie-Talkie
TRC-219 by Realistic

TAD·t05 by DUoFONE®

Cut ·330/o

Cut200fo
:g~s

3995

~~:5

Keep in touch anywhere you go!
Range-Boost antenna system and
J.Watt power for maximum signal
reach. With ch. 14 crystals.
#21-1639

_ _ Prlntln9 Calculator
EC-3016 by Radio ShacK

20o/o Off

N65-954 Baneries extra

ggc

Reg. 1.99

4-4-802

Announce-only an- '
swerer records your .
tO-second announcement on a memory
chip! Tonelpulse• dial·
phone. #43-386

Save•aaeo

8915

'39!! :a~ ·
•so

14915

Auto-Dial Phone

Cut 28o/o

: IIUUIIII =:l llllllllHI:::.
Save· OMS

•40

ua•

;;;;;;t-;:

SCT-74 by Rl81iatic I

13%0ff
Stores 20 numbers lor last
auto-dialing! Tone/pulse'
dialing. Choice ol white or
brown. ~4J.511/5t2

Reg. ·
12us

90-LED spectrum display lets you "see"
your adjustments. Bullt·in Stereo Ex;
pander. #31-2020 '

ET-135 by Radio Shack

3415
Reg. 39.85

Reg. 179.95
Low Ao 115 Per Monlll•

'

Deck ·

Save

•eo
11
' ftA.II
a--

Copies paraonal cassettes in half the normal tlinel Dolby' 8-C NR. 114-649

CTR·75 by RI8Hstlc
Four Outlot

Six Outlet

HALF

Cut'4

Cut '5

PRICI

14!!,

2IJII

131 ,:.;,78 10!!
LN-90

HALF F'RICE

~~iii":iE40-40ii &amp;n;or~;;5~

3995.

LN-80
Eo&lt;:h

TV-100 by Realistic

Walnut veneer!
With 8" woofer,
2'12" tweeter. t9"
hlgll. Buy now!
34

27!'4.95

Ideal for Taxes
Goes anywhere! Has
item-count key, prinV
non-print control.

Novae·15 by Realistic

Cut.
33%

Moat lltl,lor Cra•t ·

C•ftls.AqoaiiiM

.

23 ·

Motor Oil

: INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (UP I)
':- Jay Haas did little wrong on
tl)e greens at Indian Wells during
the opening round of the $1
mllllon Bob Hope Classic. He was
pretty good off the tee as well even when things failed to go as
p,lanned.
• Haas collecttld nine birdies and
nine pars Wednesday in the
!I.-under-par 63 that produced a
one-stroke advantage o.,.r Andy
Bean and Sandy Lyle of Scotland.
~lx of his birdie putts came from
at least 15 feet.
: But if you're looking for the
Jflpst Interesting shot of the day.
take Haas' dri've on No. 17. It
rilcocheted off a television truck
and bounded back In the fairway,
wbere Haas went on to save par.
"That showed you what kind of
!]lund It was," Haas, 34, said with
1t smlle.. and shrug.
· : .A nephew of 1968 Masters
&lt;:hampton Bob Goalby, Haas ·
began the 90-hole. five-day tour·
narnent on the back side and
birdied Nos.ll,l2,14,15and 16two or those with 20-foot putts to make the turn in 31.
·
• He then birdied Nos.1-2 and 4-5
lietore parrlng the final three
HOles. That cost him a shOt at the
course record of 61.
.I

SVAC action heads doWn stretch with ·4 Friday contests

SYLVANIA

'

. WALSH •(63) ' - Jill Hanigofsky, 3-0-2-6; Ann AI peter,
8' 0-2-16; Denise Gahera, 2-5-0-9;
Limie Stallworth, 5-0-3-10; Michelle Gahera, 2-0-0-4; Cheryl
Longnecker, 2-0-3-4; Naomi Tho·
mas. 1·2-3-4; Missy Ulle, 2-0-2-4;
Beth Abramowski, 3·0·0·6. TO.
,.-ALS 28- Hii-63.

.

The DaHy Santi._t-Page 6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

highlight OVB
night Saturday ·
"We've never had to bring out
the ladder, but we'll have it
standing by just in case" said
Larry ' Lee. Head Teller and
Assistant Vice President of Ohio
Valley Bank In discussing the
annual Hoop Shoot during Ohio
Valley Bank Nlghi at Rio Grande
College.
Ohio Valley Bank Night Is
scheduled for Saturday, Jan. 23,
at Lyne Center on the campus of
Rio Grande College when the
Redmen meet the Cedarville
Yellowjackets in a crucial Mid
Ofiio 'Conference game. Tip off
time Is 7:30p.m. and all persons
In attendance will be given a free
tioke! by Ohio Valley Bank.
The ticket not only gains you
admittance; but enters you In the
drawing for tlie Hoop Shoot at
half time. The "first person to
make the designated shot '!'ill
win $500 In cas~. Lee, who serves
as the Hoop Shoot referee said:
"this Is the third year we've used
this format. We start out at mid
court and every 'time somebody
ll)isses; we draw for another
shooter and move In closer . The
last two years people have won
on a layup." OVB President
· James L. Dalley added: "that's
not bad money for rnaklng a
layup, plus we had a couple o!
people almost win the $500 with
the long shots last year. Who
knows maybe somebody will win
the ~oney with tbt first shot
from rnld court this Saturday;
but you can be sure everybody
will have a great time and that
somebody will Indeed walk away
with.,..
.
Dalley added that Ohio Valley
Bank Is plealed to support Rio
.-Grande Colle11e and remlnded
fans that free tlcketa are availt·
bJe at all Ohio Valley Bank
locations and can aiiiO· be obt81Dedat LypiCelltertlttntahto!
tile pme. lmm.IIJIII family
membtn of OVB emp!Ciye8 are
JIOt eu,tble for the hooptbOol.

1
1

•

USEIIIAUTY
PM1S

Fram

5P
. cabriolet
frlliil

•
--·--

From

37 22E 29

95

95

Landau

Medo or Qualco
Locll Oa ltll
lnjl:blld Into took.
IPGW•ful
clllellngllglllt
Uiiii&amp;IZ I .I ICI ldC'II d

pil'tl. ....

,

Ebony

Dorado

Gumout

From

fnlm

fnlm

'4 995.

Garblntor &amp;Choke
Cleaner
Spnoye -yfuet eyat...,
gutnlnclvlmilh, 13-oz. epr1y. #7450

Mark VII SUper Sabra.

10-LO Gas Una
Antlheeze

-

Ab .arbl1110111tn
lor-lllr

................
anclpniiMiion.
1:k11.#10U ,

.

lllltennotlve
Flexible Dipstick·
IIalter

Aller 1975 Modell

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

AWIEK ·

All

$10.080ff
'
GIIIIDalla
201UpperllvwRold
(814) 4 18 4103

�'-II•

'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

8 - The DIIV Satltinel

.

'

lhurldav. January 21 . 1988':_

21. 19,88

•

Pomeroy- Midcleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-

7 '

~

·"'
' ..
..•

'·

.
,.•
•

.

.•

...•

'

'

I
'

'

.......•
.:...
.
•.
..
..,.•••.

..

••

,,..•

'

i .

t:

Clip out the entry form below and .
drop off Jt a1;1y of the participating
businesses.

IN CASH!

\

•

' .ilo
~

•

"~

•
•'

..

~

On January 31, Super Bowl XXII will
bt played in San Diego, California.
The outcome of the gam• will be de·
termined on th1 field, but YOU may
have · something at stake, tool
Just fill out th1. entry blank, dip it
out, an4 take it to any of the below
merchants for a chance to win $501
All you hawe to do is predict the cor~
.rect final score of Super Bowl XXII
and the $50 is all yours. .
ENTER AS MANY nMES AS YOU
WANT!
Do not pt1dict the winning,team,
just the final score.
FOR EXAMPLE, 7 to 3
The Sentinel will take all corred en·
tries and select the winner by ran·
dom drawing. Priz1 awarded by The
Daily Sentinel.
.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

~·

~

Washington R~skins vs. Denver Broncos
•

••'

..

All Entries Must Be . 1988 SUPER ·
Submitted Before
SWEEPSTAKES
6:00 P.M .·on
1 predict the final ·
January 30. 1988
score wi II be:
Employees of this
newspaper and the
............. .... .1'()...... ...,..,.,.. .
• participating
businesses are not VoUr
eligible. Enter as Nome .
often as you like. Addr~St .
No purchase
Ph. No.
necessary. ·

""'

..

.,,,

. Citizens of Meigs Local School District deserve b~_tter than n·o answers from a
. board of education that refuses to respond to the very voters who elected them to .
' ·responsible public p~sitions. ·-· -.

"

..,..
~

....
•
~

..."
,"

'&gt;

,.

•

••

-,.
"

u
~.
·~

N'

••
"•
••
'"
••••
K

•

National Football
Conference Champions

The ct;allous disregard for the rights of Meigs citizens was never more apparent than at' Tuesday's specicd board meeting. First of all, the time of the meetin9
~ · ,. .was moved up three hour~; possibly to discourage many people from attending.
.
-The .meeting was called ostensibly· to consider the Meigs LocarTeachers Associa.·· .tion' s request to submit the unresolved issues in the current contract negotiations
·to binding arbitration.
\
'

..

• •

'

''&lt;.

I

~

~

ENTER and WIN!

••

...-

American Football
• Conference Champions

•.

"'

With several hundred interested and anxious citizens braving a cold rain, the
board went ·into executive session for one and one-half hours. The board abruptly
adiourned with: .
".· ' .'.
.
'

:

., "'
~

:

•
f

''

VALLEY
· PIZZA! ·
PIZZAII ·
PIZZA Ill
You'll Find Great
Tasting Pizza Every

LUMBER .
55 Park St. ·

·Middleport

Day At

. PRESCRIPTION .
SPECIALISTS

For Quality Drugs,

, • Wetch Repair
• Je-lry Repair
. • Engraving r

Sundries, Etc. .

113 Court St.

.Open Till 9:00 _

Pomeroy

Every Night
Sunday 11 fG 8 ,

Don't Forget We

992~2054

Offer Senior
Citizen Discounts ·

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

342 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis

992-6669 .

992-2228

446-269~

271 N. second Ave·. ,
Middleport, Ohio

222 EAST MAIN
POMEIOY; OHIO

. ..3 Registered
· Pharmacists .· ·
· To Serve You"

992-6491 .
786 N. 2nd St.

BUICK
GMC
' .TIUCI
For All Your

.'
'
\

=

. sMITH-NELSON
MOTOIS

i:

••

992-2174 .

500 llSliUIN .
PO.OY, OliO

:

'

•
. ;:

.

--------------.
,...-.-------,
-----------1.
_____
___,
.
_....._
____
!
Fiftee
:.
MEIGS AUTO .
L - - -·-·•
" - -Ohio
- - - ' .......__;..;.__,.;..;.;...;,;,;;..;......__, z

.'"COME GROW
WRH US" .

•AUTO •LIFE

Je~elers

•BUSINESS

of ·
I t ·t
. n e~J y

.;,H~B~L~ ·~~R:E

SALES, INC.
.'

n
ttiousanal

'

..

•

•'
'
'

neon e

~

5

_, ..

wh&lt;Jcare ~ .

I

•

~

.

~

,

•'

.'

'

Meigs Local Board obviously ,c~ooses to· ignore questions from constituents about the more -than 11-week-old strike that has torn the ·community
..asu.,der and deprived ·its.students of the qua.lity education they so rightly deserve.

'

''

.

.

•

'

.'

.•.•
•

-.
•'

•'•

.•

• .
.
..• •.
'

• '

t

,

~

~

I

,

•

':

1

.

'

'

•}

•,

••

'•

.'•
•.
.
•

..

:'

°

\

.

...

.••

·~ . : .· •Spending thousands of dollars on 'an e~pensi~e surviellance team from Ken, . tucky. · .
· · , · · . ·· ·~ . ._ · : . .
.
..
: .
·.•Pa·y~ng. ta .· (ol~mbus · a~tor.ney . more than ·$1 00 an hour.-·
· · · "•Hiring substitute. teachers with doubtful certification at $ ~ 2 S a day plus
expttnses.
.
.
.
·· The citizens of Meigs Local want their schools back to normal and their teach.·ers ~ack in th~ c~_alsroom. If you want some answers !O these questions, please call
. ". the school board.

. •.

. '.•
..
•
•
•

••
'
'

(

••
••

,.

•

LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION-------.
Richartl Y•ulh.an •••••••••• ~••••• 992·3~7~
Jeff Werry •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 992-6183 ·
llrris •••••'!·········· 992·2153·

Second St, Mason, W. Va.
_ m-5514
5th Ave., New' HMn, W. Va.
182-2136
lirisan Ave. Pt. Pi.unt, W. Va.
675-1121

•
.

'

•

IIEIIBER F.D.I.C.

'

-'

•Not responding to the MLTA's offer to return to work in return for binding ·
arbitration on ·the unresolved issues.

•

(

•••

IDIIIr"

••

Jh~

I '

..
••'

'

'

I

~

·PEOPLESQ
BANK
iii
'""• letfer

.

"

The citize"s of Meigs Local deserve better than no answers. ·
.·. Citizens of Meigs local are demanding.some answers. It's time the board of.
education becomes accountable for such actions as:
·

·

.

.

-....,..

~

.

"/o,

~

•
•
••
'·'
·····w"""'

public
·act·ion o~r ·vote on ·the MLTA proposal,.
.
•No public discussions.
·
.

•

•

•.

'

....., .

'

:~No

...

-•

'

&gt;

•No stateme~t. on .the binding arbitrat.ton ·request•
•No state~ents to the 'citizens wh~~gathered to hear the board's decisi'on~ . · · · · · · · ·
J.:

••

'
•'

1

.

I

:
Transportotion Nncls See · ::"' ·
Us Today....
~
"We've Got The Keys To
/lt. Better Deal"

.

•-

~ .

..

--•

•

'

Clark's"-*
Your Professional Full
Ser,;ce Jewelers

'

•'

Jewelry Store

'

'

•·

~

•••

.
.. .

. '•
•;
1~

;:

•

.I
.

' •~
•
:·
'

'

•

•

�.,._ ....... --··-

...

·· ~

-

.. ·--

-· - -

--

,...

.

Meigs girls lose to VC Vikings, .5648. -l

McARTHUR - ~I fouls
and mlalecllaYIIJllwere t~rnaln
~ for a 56-48 lou at the
hands of Vinton County's Lady
VIkings, accordtna to Marauderette Coach Rorer Foster.
"We would get a player open
underneath with 'no one near
them and blow the lay-up. The
shot would not ao .d.,.wn" aald
•

Taylor ~ all fon:ed to 1 seat
on the pine after belni whistled
tor five per_. II each.
.
With these th~ frontline
playen on the bench. Meigs was
forced from their man to man
eoverare that had proved so
etrecUve for tbree quarters and
weattoatwo-tbreezonedefense.
'fhll move freed up the Vlldng's
Runyon and Crouse, their . top
aual. and tile Vlll:esoutscored the
Marallderettes 23 to Bin tile final
mJnutes of the game. Crourie,
who bad 1!een held to one field
goal tor tbree quarters, canned
elevea poinllln the final minutes
,
of play. Eleven of the hosts 23
Advance ilclU!ts are on ute at . pollltil c~ at the charity stripe.
EasternLocalScboolaataCOitof
MJuy Weiods, with 17 points,
$2 for studetlts ldliderrarten·
took searing honors for Meigs
sixth ·grade; S2.50 for students and Runyon'• 19 was high forth~
7-12; ~nd S3 for adultl. 111eae Lady VIkings. In the rebounding
prices are effective aa presale department, Shelly Stobart
·prlees, thus lndlvldual1 , must
grabbed 10, Wendy Fry hauled In
reserve !heir tkuts tbrolllh the 6, Woods and Jody Taylor each
s_chool. nckets Win be IOJd at the ' • ··had 5 and Beth Ewing nailed 6.
doOr for an additional 50 cents.
Tammy Wright had two steals
· The event, ·sPDJ!80recl by the and two assists and Taylor was
Eastern Athletic Departmelit,
credited With three assists.
will be Preceded by a prelim!Box scores:
nary contest between Tuppers
MEIGS- Stobart2-0-6; Woods
Pllllns and Chester Elementary 8-1-17; Fry 4-0-8; JOdy Taylor
teams.
3-2-8; Wrtiht 1-2-4; Beth Ewing
1).3-3; Jennifer Taylor 0-2-2.
_Foater. "'l'llf Vlldnp wou14 IJ'Ib
tile rebou1iJ llld eollvert the
balket at t1ae ot11er ·a to atay
cla~e wbea we abould bave belli
blowing them out" the
stated.
'
Tile Meigs five led for three
quarters of play buf tot lnto foul
trouble In the filial frame. Milly
WOOIIJ TammyWrllbtandJody
· ·.
•
·

coaeb

Harlem All-StarS to

perfortn at·Easter1t · The Harlem All-Sljlrs, known
world•wide as thi! •·tunrnakers
of Basketball", will be playing
the Eastern faculty Tuesday,
Jan. 26, at Eastern High beginning at 8 p.m.
·
Besides featuring a stellar
team with widespread talents,
the all·stars add a Utile "fun" to
the game With their slapstick
comedy stints and unexpected
practical joking.
Tuesday's game will highlight
one of the most Widely known
all-stars, the notorious "'Tricky
Dicky", the original .master of
basketball comedy.

TRICKY DICKEY

Victory Circle

VINTON COUNTY - Ru~n
6-7·19; Reid 2-6-10; Crewey 2·2·&amp;:
Prater 1-11-2; Fain 3-0~; C~
4-5-13.
..~,
. __
,
The Marauderette Reserv.,
who have suffered only one ·kif•
this season, kept their win s!J;t{lk
alive by downing the Utile V~
37 to2S.
Jelllllfer Taylor led the
crew with 12 points. TeaJDJU. .
Deanna Haggy and Missy N~
contributed 7 each while ;Amy
Wagner chlpplid .In with ·· :~.
Shannon Newsome 4 and ~!JY
Smith added two for the wi~eraVInton County's Dixon canaecl
·
k'ed
11 r ' •...._
~~:,' .Neal pic
up
or ~
~;.:.,::,;__ _.....;_ __;,._..,.

.

'

'

141

I

..

'

-.

. .•
'

..

The Da.ily Sent~nel. .:

.

•
..
Thursday, January 21. 1988 !

'

.

Page-9

~-

Ann
Landers

you two appears to be very good.
Inform your son that if he wants
to call those· 976 numbtrs in the
future, be will have to pay for them.
(111 bet l!e11 soon decide that he's
had enough.) Also tell him if he ---...1 hate the way I am, but I don't
orders any porno 6Irm you'd like know how to stop. This oompulsion
to take a look at them with him. has taken over my life and tiJade me
This should dampen his enthusiasm miserable. Some days I. feel like

considerably:
The important . lhinl is for your

committing suicide.

... . .

. . . ....

•

master
installed

.

William D. srewart, a 45-year.
member, was recently Installed
· as Master of Racine Lodge No .
461, F&amp;AM. Stewart was ln. stalled by Right Worshlpflll Ellff
Edwards, past district deputy
grand master and 33rd degree
mason. of Proctervllle.
Stewart served as master of
Racine Lodge in 1968, 1978 and
will now serve in 1988.
Other officers Installed -were
Roger Grace, senior warden;
Perry Hill, junior warden; Frank
Cleland&gt; treasurer; David Fox,
secretary; Ralph Webb, chaplain; W!lllam Hoback, _senior
deacon; Thereon Johnson, junior
deacon; Ivan Powell, tyler;
Larry Spencer and Robert Beegle, trustees; Robert Beegle,
·
lodge education ofticer.
Racine Lodge No. 461 meets
the second Tuesday of each
month. All master masons are
invited to attend. .

1bere must be others out there
son to know that he can tal)c to you . like me and we all need help. What
t~bout anything. As he becomes can we do? - UNCLEAN IN
•
more mature, hls fasciriation · with CANADA
DEAR CANADA: I have dealt
sl!tonda.
. the.sleazy stuff will diminish, and
I tllbd to my son caimly about eventually it will die a natural with the problem of obsessive&lt;om·
the c:alla and asked if he tould dea~ brought on by boredom. ' · pulsive behavior in -this space .many
explain his· fa!Jinp. I wantM to
Dear ADD b'"'en: Since I was times. Sorry you missed it. It is well
know what he 110t out of sud\ 61th. 13, I've had a problem that has been lutown that we all have little ritualS
He - reluctant to rrspond even aettina worse. I'm_19 now and it is· we perform, but when they take
thoulh he 111111 always been quite taklna om my life. It's called OCD · over our lives, they cease to be
open with me. His only comment - ob ·,MOmpulsive disorder. · normal.
Some IIC\l' dfii3S have beel1 devel·
I JDalllll!d to keep it a secret
that ~ had been having
oped
that !\ave been found to be
trouble getting a prlfriend. · (I from everyone until six months ago
effective.
They are not FDA &amp;Jl'
should leU you that he is tall and when I told my fiance. He has been
' JIOOCI-looking bUt somewhat shy.) .· very supportive and wants me to ·see pro~ed yet, but with several•dfii3S
A thank yo1,1 letter from MarTo add to my troubles·(or his, I
~octor, but · I. re~ ~use _I approval is imminent. Contact the
Obsessi~e·Compulsive
Disor(!er
and Sand:( Ruth, Korean
shall
·• 4on't mow whidl) I found three- .d on't believe this is a medical
'missionaries,
for a Christmas
Foundation,
Inc.
(P.O.
Box
60,
·•rlna binders ·fill~ with ·photos of problem.
·
·
·
was
read
at the recent
gift
!Ji)tiDi:.clad models · and ids for
I frequently feel dirty even Vernon, Conn. ~) for
porno 'l'ideoi. He has no't ordered though I wash my hands several ahd locations of dinics around the meeting of the Pomeroy United
anythina to my knowledtle, but I liines a day (maybe three dozen). If tountry tluit have been authorized Methodist Women held at the
am afnid that may be the next step. hand-washina doesn't make me feel to distribute these drugs under FDA church.
Ada Warner gave a i:eport on
I want to nip this in the bud if I clran, I will take a shower and put guidelines.
the
American Bible Society and
Planning a wedding? What 's
c:an. Please P'll t something. - all my clothes in the wash. WasliinB
handled
the collection or the least
WORRIED MOM IN NORTH my clothes is very time-consumill@ right? What's wrong? "The Ann coin. Plans were made for the
HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. .
because I must J!O through at least Landers Guide for Brides" will relieve UMW members to work at the
DilAR MOM: It sounds to me as 12 steps. Sometitne'l I have no your an:dety. To receive a copy, send bloodmobile In June.
if your 11011 is quite normal. More- clothes to war because they are all $2.50 plus a No. 10, self-addressed,
stllmped envelope (39 ~nts ~tllge)
·· '
over, the totlununicatiop between · in the wash.
A total of 146 sick and sh41in
to Arm Lantfers,-P.O. &amp;x 11562, Chi· calls were reported. Martha
cogo, Ill. 6061 UJS62.
Hoover preSided af the meeting
with Dorothy Downie giving
ANN LAMIERS • -·
Ot988, l.qs Anoe~• Times SiOOicato ont1 · devotions from II Pet~r with .
Crollon Synrlelll
thoughts on "A Little Bending
and a Little Stretching" followed
by a prayer circle and the Lord's·
Prayer.
Revival services will be held at
A program on "Jesus' Healthe Silver Memorial Free WUI
' Baptist Ch1,1rch Second St. Ka· logs" was presented with readnaugh, beginning Feb. 7 with ings·being given by Mrs. Hoover,
Services at 7 p.m. and continuing Bernice Carpenter, Marie Chapthroug!h the week with services at ' man, Allee Struble, Kathy Cor- .
The ' Rev.
bitt, . Helen Fisher, Marge
.
be
Reuter, and Jackie Hildebrand.
Refreshmli!lts of Ice cream and ·
cookies were served.
' '

UMWmeets

a

names

afld time.

Rod Littlefield, former SHS
ace and business major at
Wittenberg University, has
scored 827 career college points
and with 24 will move into 25th on
the all-time university· record
books. Littlefield has 187 points as
a senior after 16 games and
averages 11.6 per game from the
swing guard post lion.
Last year, In two of Littlefleld'' s
three years, Wittenberg went to
· the NCAA Division II Final Four '
and was runner-up li)1987.

~

. · Deef Alia Laadtaa: I. read your
tolllmn very oftM, but I have never
been lilotivatM to write until now.
What I SSW that letter about the
976 phone numbers, I knew I had
!0 speak up.
I have a 15-yar-old boy who uaes
the 976 number all too often. When
I. appmrlw;! him about it he said it
wu for lpOI'tS updatts, etc' I called
. oae of the numben to clieck .and I
Wll horrliied at What I heard. The
· tall 1utM about thllle minutes. I
was. 'skit _tO my stomach after 30

.

Dr. Hunter wlll soon be opening
his new office in Racine in
conjunction with Veterans Memorial Hospital and the Horne
Nati&lt;1nal Bank.
Thanks Again Doc for your
help!
· .: ...... I wonder it this thought
has ever QCcurred to anyone else
In Meigs Courity? In the old days
each little village had everything.
it needed · at home on its own
streets, and most of all wl thin
walking distance. Wasn't that
convenient?
I mean, everything one would
need, Including the ole "General
Store", banks, specialty shops,
hat stores, shoe stores, stores of
fine clothing, barber shops, hotels, dr!lg stores, · Dr. Offices,
Livery Stables ~garages)· . etc.
But - no, man with hUman
Instinct and intuition does the
smart thing now days and drives
15, 50 to lQO miles to get what he '
need ·s;
now
that's
convenience???
Yes, I understand that things
are closer because of better
transportat!on,and that the last
time I led my truck to the livery
stable, it wouldn't ~at a thlrig, but
just wouldn't It be nice If
someone would think, "Wow,
Wouldn't It be nice to have
everthlng we needed right here
at home!"
Did you know that In 1Sso
Metgs County had over 32,000
people In It and know has
over 24,000' people; and
Racine was dubbed "The Paris
Meigs County'?
Everyone has a little bargain
hunter in them, and It seems
'some are out to make a quick
buck just as some spend $50 In
gas to save a buck , but maybe
some day ,_we'll ..be able to park
the car and walk to our own
downtown 'MALLS'.
At . any rate, despite pauper
status, Is till like to live In Meigs ,.
County

~

.

By The Bend

Fa5cination a part
of boys, maturing

'Aids' Polley fqr t)je Southern
School Board.In addition he
came to the-school to give various
athletic teams physicals,savlng .
many parents a lot of mileage ·

_Three for~er Southern High
basketball stars, who starred on
the state runner-up team In 1982
are now Into·coaching and all are
doing quite well. Jay Rees Is the
reserve mentor at Southern and
Is undefeated at 11-0,whlle Kent
The Harlem ALL-Stars will
Wolfe, also a top Rio Grande star play the Eastern Faculty next
and graduate. Is coaching Wa-· Tuesday at 8 p.m so make plans
verly's reserves and Is 9-3 despite to attend. Besides the reknowri'
· losing. a top sophomore guard to basketball magician Tricky
the varsity .Richard Wolfe Is the Dicky, area readers may recog·
freshman mentor at Ross - nlze these players more readily:
Southeastern,where he has been Oadng Dennis Eichinger, Dunk·
a big part of developing Ross's !ng Don Eichinger, Crazy George
winning program il0-3).
Gaga!, Eric 'the enforcer' Chambers,Steve 'Crazy Legs' Weber,
The Racine Is proud to say once Ralph . 'The Fox' Wigal, Ron
aga!l) that It has a town doctor In 'Tree' Hill, Don 'Stonewall' JackDr. Doug Hunter, M.D·. . Dr. son, and yours trulylreaders
Hunter is married to ~he former may pick a name as I've been
Tonja Salser, daughter of Cookie called many) .
and Ronnie Salser, Racine.
OOn't forget that Southern
Although not _much mention . travels to · Eastern for a cage
has been made of II ~ newswise) , thriller .Friday evening at 6: 30.
, the communlly and school disDave McMillin Is out with an
trict Is especially appreciative to ankle spraln,but may be back,
Dr. Hunter for donating many while Ken Turley may also be out
hours of time as team doctor for with an ankle lnjllry,
Southern athletic events. especially attending the heavily conUp Racine way the Southern
tact sport of football where his Athlepc Dept. Is planning an I
services were fequently need by Independent men's double ellmlboth sides. · ·
. nation basketball tournament.
Dr. Hunter Is also active In • Please contact l&gt;ave Grlndstatf
community atfalrs and has to enter or for further
helped develop the necesl8ry Information .
•

·,•

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

Charles W. Hayman still
winningest coach in Racine .
By SCOTI' WOLFE
Sentinel staff Writer
It was with great regret that
this edition of the Victory Circle
finds thE:J. local community and
the family of education both in
mourning over the death of the
much respected Charles W, Hayman, former teacher,educator,
and executive head at Racine
and Southern Local School
Districts,
Incidentally, despite all · the
success of recent Racine- ·
Southern basketball (earns, Mr.
Hayman Is the wlnnlngest Coach
In the school's history with 214,
taking Racine to Its first state
tournament.
To many people, Mr. Hayman
was 'b!gger than life. I recall that
on several occasions as a youngster, many young students Including myself, were overly eager to
get a gltmpse of him as he visited
our·grade.school. Someone would
say,"There's Mr. Hayman!" and
the ·entire class would respond
with the enthusiasm of meeting a
celebrity or athletic superstar.
When Mr. Hayman would visit
your classroom, students would ·
be overly cautious and very -r u·ly,
sitting up stralgt and erect to.
reflect a good lmpression.After
all this was Mr. Hayman.
Yes, Mr. Hayman was Indeed
respected.
Behind his ' notorious stern
glare and stone-faced Impression
was a kind, caring, fair and
dignified man. If one looked close
you could detect his occasional
smile and the gltstenlng ln his eye
. that ~ingaled his approval. He
was just not a teacher.but an
educator.
Everyone attending school In
the Racine-SHS district · remembers Mr. Hayman, even
those that remember the times
that they had to be disciplined by
him; And all speak highly of this
man, because of respect .
Today. the Southern High
gymnasium is known as the
Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium.
Last week Mr. Hayman W&lt;IS In
town (Racine) for a bank directors meeting and was In good
spirits as he reminisced and
laughed about the past as he
shared memories with many
town folks.As lt turned out this
was his last trip to the place he
knew for so long as home.
This community indeed feels
the loss of a great teacher: coach.
and human being. ·

.............----..... ... -·-

MelP _

.....

.

..

$400
CASH.BACK

.•

$500

'Manual
Tranimllslon

· CASHBACK

$500

. ()ijy

•'

IL\Y WALKER

$750
CASH BACK

SHERRY WILCOX

vaJ~ntine girls .chosen
· Beta Sigma Phi Vale~ tine cognition In the sorority's annual
Girls have been announced by contes't, are Sherry Wilcox of
. the Ohio Eta. Phi and XI Camma Beta Sigma Phl, and Kay Walker
·Epsilon Chapters. ·
of XI Gamma Ejlsllon.
Selected by vote of each . Ms. Wilcox, corresponding se·
chapter' s meinber.shlp, the girls cretary· for · the chapter, Is th~
' pow competing for national re- medical records business office
manager for the Skilled Nurs'!ng
Facility of Veterans Memorial
Hospital. She has worked at the
hospital for the past four. years.
She and her. husband, David,
reside on Route 124 near
Pomeroy.
.
'
•
Ms: Walker·s ince her selection
have moved with her family to
•
Florida. During her 12 years In · sor~rlty, she · served In many
offices, She was employed at

$500
$600
CASH BACK

CASHB~CK

'

Lydia ·
Council
selects
officers

MERCURY
,.

1988 MUSTANG LX

1199.95 SaultOO

IS Tr.
W•r!OIIy
Sots Only

OTHER .SEALY MAnRESSES
.
TWIN
lot- '19.95

fUll

GUIDI

. . '11'-'S

1..
175 80
•

•

S$995 S7995 ·'
..... . .. ... $9995
Quilted

Qullttd
.._,,...

• p&lt; ·
Stts Only

Revival 'planned ·

CA$HBACK

$750
CAS.H BACK

... ,..

TWN SIZE

1-:--------...,;,.---------------,·•

·. -p
'
FORD ESCORT

$9995

SO%

Officers
wereof e_
lected,
at
theNew
recent
meeting
the
Lydia
Council of the. Bradford Church
of ChriSt.
They are Madeline Painter,
president; Jackie Reed, vice
president; VIcki Smith, secretary; Suzie Lightfoot, treasurer;
Becky, Amberger, reporter;
.Cherie WllllamiOn, misslonal'y
.tun4.

1988 RA

RECLINERS BY.

auto. trans., P.S., , ctuise control,
1am1nm 1-ad~
·. slereo tape, radiahires, bucket seals,
window defogger
·
SALE PRICE

.WINTER CLEARANCE
CONTINUED

WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR.
FLANNEL GOWNS ·&amp; PJ'S
ROBES

.

.

NAVY, RED AND BLACK GOWNS

ALL REDUCED!

t

LYNX

CAPRICE

4 drs., sed101, V-B· eng., f!.clory air le&lt;ts33,, 4 doors, front llileol drive. 4 cyl. eng.,

vinyl100f, auto. tlans., P.S., P.B. P.door

tilt steering wheel cruisa contllll, amtfm

·r~A~m~e~r~ic~a~r~e~
~P~o~m~e~r~o!y~H~e~a~lr:h~
Care Center ·for
several years. - ~b~~~~~;;~~~;~~;~;~~~;~~~

~1fumn

cyl. eng., factg~:

.

stenltl tape,

rad~

ires, white waRs, ,..

defogger
SALE PRICE

I trans., P.S., P.B., am 10dio, bucket seats,
miles

SALE PRICE

.,

Plans were ll)ade -'to sponsor
mlsslonsry workers. Peggy and
Melllla Russell at the Mexico
Christian Children's Home.
Added to the list of Items which
wiD be sent to Grundy Mountain
Missionary was pillowcases.

No Dealer Participation To.Affect CQ'nsumer Costs

The annual mother-daughter
banquet to be held on May 13 at·
the church was dlscullled arona
with the men's prayer breakfast
which will be held on Feb. 6 at
9:
a.m. for all men of the
ch4rch.

(

ao

..

·250 New Cars &amp; TruckS Avail ble

.

, It waa ~i'ted thatadletctass
, b¥. ~ ltAJrted •at the church
. •aDd · will be hefd tl!~ og
'flllll'lday mo,-ainp. ·
l.
, . Mra. fleed opened the meetlna·
wltb ' offleell•' reportl beJna
Jan Koehler baddevollonl
Wblch lnl!luded an . blatallatloa
III'Viee. · RetreallmeDII were
...-byKatlly~anciJaa
Keller to t~~o~e· umec1 and

SIJicWCWir

,_ CIIIIW
Of Cellir.- '
Style
I

118.11161 . 6 cyl. eng., a•ndlrd trW., P.S., P.B.,
Ndio, bucket ..... gouges

. --

SALE PRICE

Sj680

I

·, as-.

NUCJ IDeaeer.
Morrla, Delorelti
r~·=~
Tina Ill

JIMI

C8roJya "NI(lbQiaclll, Gerry
toot, IINltle Smith alld

bttb. lAIII Kollller, FruCiija··

.-;;tf'ia~m--lloine
_ M.a. - ..
If,

USI CIUI WY
fiWIDIII .•
YCIUI

......

fill .
IIII.MIY

Nil II

t·S-Y
&amp;fl. .

tolD;

6 cyl. eng., sta"dard trans., amnm raoio,
wills, t/2 ~n.long wije bed

SALE PRICE

�..

..,,,
D of A chapter. holds·. meeting

----·--Thlnday,

Pomerov-Midcllport, .Ohio

Practice for the spring rally to
· be held 011 March 12 at Loean was
held Wbell District 13; Dau&amp;hters
of America, held alllfttlq at the
Cheater lodae ball.
Lora Damewood, district COUn·
cllor, prealded With Esther
Smith, state 'lnakle sentinel,
dlacusiln&amp; the state conVention
and the fblaiiC.Ial needs. Several
money m•ktna projects were
noted and members were asked
to bring ·o ld quilts they no long
want or use and to beg1n saving
aluminum c;tns.

Esther Harden, District J3,
deputy, spke brletly about lilme
chanaes In the ritual, about the
upcoming rally, and named the
members to work at the project
tables. Practice announced were
for Feb. 20 all p.m at the Chester
lodge ball, and March 5,1 p.m. at
the Senior Citizens Center In
Logan. Helen Wolf was pianist
for the meeting.
Attendlna were Mary Moose
and Belly Wolfe, Perry Counc!l,
New Lexlnaton; Margaret Cotte-

rill, Esther Harden, Jan.lce Law.
son, Bette Biggs, Betty Spencer,
Eileen Clark, Guiding Star Coucll, Syracuse; Jo Ann Baum,
Bonnie Landers, Erma Cleland,
Ethel Orr, Belty Roush, Helen
Wolf, Everett Grant, Thelma
White, Esther Smith, Lora
DamewOOd, · Marraret Tuttle,
Charlotte Grant, Mary K. Holter,
Faye Kirkhart, · Sadie Truuell,
Doris Guteser, Opal Hollon,
Elizabeth H~yes, Marcia Keller,
all of Chester .Council.

Community calendar
TlltJBSDAY
Legion Hallin 'Rutland.
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Child Conservation League
CHESTER - Shade River
wlll meet Thursday at 7:30p.m .
Lodge 453, Chester, will meet
at the Ohio Power O!flce In
Thursday, 7:30p.m., In a special
Pomeroy. Devotions wlll be · meeting. Work In fellowcraft
gl~n by Linda Broderick who
degree with past masters In
wlll also provide the traveling
charge.
prize. Bunny Kul!l wlll be the
guest speaker. Hostesses wlll be
FRIDAY
POMEROY - A square dance
Helen Blackston and · Peggy
will be held Friday, 8 to 11 p.m.,
Harris. l'he district president
at the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
w!ll be there to discuss plans for
spring conference. Members are Center. Live music. Admission
$1.50. Public Invited' Bring
urged to attend.
snacks.
POMEROY - The Meigs
SATURDAY
Co~mty Democratic Party will
CHESTER - Annual Inspecmeet Thursday, 7:30 . p.m., at
tion of Shade River Lodge 453 will
Ca.f!Jenter Hall on Main St. In
Pomeroy. All lnteres.ted demo· be held Saturday. Dinner at 6
p.m. followed by lodge at 7; 30.
cr:ats are Invited to attend.
.
'
RACINE - The annual bus!·
SHADE - The annual !nspec·
lion or Shade RlverLodge453wlll
ne&amp;s meeting of the women's
department of the Reorganized
be this Saturday, Jan. 23. Dinner
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter wlll be served at 6 p.m. and lodge
Day Saints, Racine, wl!l be held
wlll open at 7: 30 p.m. Work will
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m ., at the
be In the Entered Apprentice
church on Portland· Racine degree. All Shade River
Road.
members are asked eo attend
and bring tw.o homemade pies
RUTLAND - The Unified
with them. The lodge wl!l meet In
Citizens for Education In Meigs
special session Thursday, Jan.
Local School District will meet 7' 21, 7:30 p.m., with work In the
p.m. Thursday at the American

'

Fellowcra!t degree. Past
members w!U be in charge of the
work.
·

will be held. It was reported that
meettna
a funny
auctiona
Mary
Sllyder
whomoney
underwent
triple by·pass at Uofversity HOS·

FLORIST

POMEROY - Jan Lavender
and Kathy ·McDaniel will lie
singing at the 7 p.m Sunday
service at the Carleton Church on
Kingsbury Road. Clyde Bender·
son, pastor. Invites the public.

352. L Mtin St,. Penwoy, OIL

kDOWD as the U.S. Customary System.

.1·0 DAYS LEFT!

January Cl ••ranee
.
.·s.·al'.•
STOP IN ANU SAVE ON

MEN'S, WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN:~

DRESS and CASUAL SHOES
h~ifa!t hOU$~
tth

•T.

•

.•

.

SHOE PLACE

. "Oj1en Imilaled - Never ·
Dupli«led"

SBCON.D

NIVER

Special meeting
CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees will meet in special
session Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the
town hall.

of tlie new look, Hutton went virtually unrecog·
n!zed while In Dallas except by those who saw her
trademark gap-toothed smile.
·
GOOD · MORNING, LAW SCHOOL: Adrian
Cronauer, whose life Is the basis for Robia
WIUiams's demon disc jockey In "'Good Morning,
VIetnam," has seen the movie three t,lmes and
would have had' a part In II had It not been for law
school.
·
"It was made In Thailand in spring and I
couldn't take time off or I'd miss finals," says
Cronauer, who attends the University ofPennsyl·
vanla law school.
""
FERGIE DELAYED BY FOG: The Weather
was wet and foggy and the princess was late but no
one seemed to mind waiting for Sarah FerguSGn,
wife o!Prtnce Andrew. Fergie was 45 minutes late
Wednesday when she arrived at the Eugene
O'Neill Theater Center In Waterford, Conn., with
actor-producer Michael Douglaa and his wl~~·
Dlandra.
The duchess had arrived In New York earlier In
the day and !lew to Waterford on the private
helicopter of real estate wizard Donald Trump.
She visited the tHeater center because It will be
the beneficiary of a special performance of the
new Broadway.play "The Phantom ofthe Opera."
GLIMPSES: When she's not singing or helping
her husband fight crime, Madonna Is stlll ..an
actress. She will be appearing in David Marnet's
new play, "Speed the Plow," starting March 29at
Lincoln Center. Her co-stars w!U be Ron Silver,
who appeared on Broadway with Marlo Thomas
In "Social Security," and Joe Mantegna, who won
a Tony lor his work In Mamet 's "Glengarry Glenn
Ross" and now Is In the Mamet movie "House of
Games" ... Music critic Chuuck Eddy flied a
$500,000 suit against the Beastie Boys for using
him In their video without his permission. It goes
back to January 1987 when Eddy claims olle or au.
'of the rowdy' rappers sneaked Into his hotel room
In Los Angeles and doused him with a bucket of
water. Someone videotaped the prank and it
ended up on the Beastie Boys' full-length video.

~UI~-;~OUD~i-;eea~·;·pounds,~~~loc~·;b~ei~a~n~d~fee~t;ls;;;;~2~~~~~~~~.

,... 992-26t4

ALL 87 Olds &amp;Ch·evrolets
IN STOCK ·

By LORI K. WEINRAUB
· concealment of a $350,000 cam·
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) -The palgn loan.
,
director or the Arizona Depart·
Members of the committee
ment ofPubllc Safety, the first said they were disturbed by
witness In House Impeach~ent Milstead's testimony . .
hearings, said Gov. Evan Me·
''Ralph Milstead Is' a man or
cham angrily .o rdered hlin to · great integrity ," said cominlttee
block . an Investigation Into a chairman Jim Skelly, a .R epubll·
death threat allegedly made by a can: Asked II he was troubled,
gliberpatorlal aide against a · Skelly said, "Yes I was. Is u·
grand jury witness.
,
damaging? No question ."
The chairman of the Impeach· · As Mlllitead was testifying,
men! committee said Wednes· .l\'le.c ham was being Interviewed
day's testimony by Col. Ralph T. by KOLD-TV In Tucson about th,e
Milstead, director of the DPS, ( allegations. A reporter asked
was troubling and damaging to Mecham to comment on Mil·
Mecham. •
·
stead's testimony but the goverMilstead told ·the committee nor said he did not know what the
that he · disobeyed Mecham's DPS director was saying. .
order because he had no choice
News director Don Shaler said
but to coBperate with the attor· after· 13 rillnull!s. the governor
·ney general's Investigation. He · became upset with the questions
said he refused to violate his oath and walked out.
··
of office or tamper with a
Hearings In the House w!ll
witness.
resume Friday. The panel also
Milstead, the first to testify wlll delve Into charges Mecham
before the select committee deliberately hid the $350,000
Investigating whether enough campaign loan and Illegally too\C
evidence exists to Impeach. the $80,000 from a state fund and lent
Indicted Republican governor, It to his automobile dealership.
satd lie was "almost speechless"
Mecham lias denied the.
wlleh Mecham told him he should charges, saying the campaign
not talk to the attorney general. loan was properly reported and
SEARCH CONTINUES- Sergeant J. Mahaffee (L) and other
At the time, Republican Attorney that the state lund could be used
poUce
officers enter
unoccupied bouse with guns drawn while
General Bob Corbin was leading for · any purpoSe e)!cept to pay
conducting
a
house
to
.house
search lor triple murderer Fred
a grand jury Investigation of political debts.
·
Komabrens Wednesday. Kornabrehs, cohvlcled .of kllllng three
alleged campaign Improprieties.
TOday, meantime, TheArlzon;I
· members or bla family, Including bls wife, was convicted February
"He /Mecham) said, 'The Republ!c reported Mecham told
19811, but escaped Tuesday alter over-powering two Cbarleston
attorney general is out to hang guests at a breakfa~t this week he
.
County
pollee officers, Iakins their .337 Magnum revolvers, and
me and I'm not going to help him believes laser beams are being
their cruiser. PoUce have cordoned of! an area and believe
stealing
In any way. I don't want you to used to eavesdrop on his office
that
the
suspect Is sllll Within the area after eight slghtlngs late
help hlni get me, Don't tell the and home.
·
TUesday.
Dog8, river and marsh craft, aircraft, three wheeled
attorney general anything,"·
The newspaper quotes an unl·
vehicles,,
S.W.A.T.
teams and 125 o!llcers are Involved In the
said Milstead. a 20-year law dentlfled man who sat at the
search.
UPI
enforcement veteran and appoln· governor's table as saying Metee of 'former Gov. Bruce cham said he believes laser
Babbitt.
beams are being shot through
"I said ... 'I can't do .that.' He windows and . that he always
said, 'Tell them the matter has keeps the radio on to jam the
been taken care of. It was only a .beams.
.
.
· CHARLESTON, S.C. (UPI)- after he. was hosp,ltal!zed:
Utile spat In the governor 's staff.'
Mecham, who faces arraign·
"I tried to persuade him by ment Friday on perjul'y and . Kendall Smll·h, who spent 40
"The chest x :ray shows the
saying we have to cooperate with fraud charges .for allegedly con· mInutes under a frozen farm
the attorney general. He said, ceallng the campaign loan, said pond, was removed · from a·
said,is'.'but
there
Is stillthe
no
'Never. Don't give them any he looks forward to testlylng respirator and Is breathing on his doctors
pneumonia
almost
gone,"
prognosis
concerning
his
neuro·
own, but doctors remain cautious
help."'
before the Impeachment panel.
logical status."
.
. Mecham is accused of ob· No date has been set for his about the·9'· year"Dld bOy's chan·
Hospital
officials
said Smith's
ces
of
lull
recovery.
structlng th!l Investigation In a testimony .
cardlt&gt;-pulmonary
functions
re·
Physicians
at
the
Medical
report by special counsel Wll·
Mecham, 63, was elected to the
main
stable
and
he
contlnues
to
University
of
South
Carolinjl
said
llam P. French, which prompted state's highest office on his fifth
move
his
arms
and
legs
and
open
Smith
was
removed
from
a
the hearings.
try In 1986.
respjrator on Wednesday and Is· his eyes, as he has been (lolng for
· ,M nstead ,said · Mecham was
His ' troubles bllgan lmme·
,
·"
several days.
anery and upset during the dlately after taking' office when breathing on his own lor the first
Over
the
weekend,
the
youth
time
since
his
rescue
Jan.
12.
c~nversatlon, which lasted about
he 'a oollshed Arizona's paid boll·
responded to the volc.e s of his
Despite the apparenf improve·
eight minutes. Milstead said he day honoring Martin Luther King
'
.
parents, who have maintained a
Jr.
.
.
.
..
jotted down key words during the
ment In his condlt!on, ,Smlth was
constant
vigil at the hospital.
conversation, but did not .tape
still !!sled In critical con41tlon
Opposition mounted . over a
.
Rescue
workers pulled Smith
record it.
series :of remar)cs that Insulted and remained .in what his doctors
from'
a
pond
In rural Dillon
:The threat allegedly was made
blacks;women and homosexuals called a mild coma. ' ·
County
Jan.
12
after
40 minutes.
by former prison construction ' ahd most recently, Jews and
Drs. Karen Powers and Fred
chief Lee Watkins against . Asian-Americans. The governor Tecklenburg said in a statement · He had been playing on th~ Ice
with two companions when the
former legislative liaison Donna. also was criticized for making released by M'USC that Smith
surface cracked and dumped
Carlson . .Watkins repo(tedly told
unwise appointments to key state was recovering well from a bout
him into the Icy waters.
another government official that · jobs.
with pneumonia that developed
Carlson talked too much and
In addition to the crlmlrial n~------::
Indicated she could wind up dead.
Indictment and Impeachment
Milstead said he considered hearings, enough signatures
/
the threat "very serious,' ~ partie·
have been validated by . county
uillrly because Carlson was a · recorders to Ioree new election In
witness ln the grand jury lnvestl.the spring ..
g~tlon . Into Mecham's alleged

Youngster improving ·

' .

oo·

'

Director of Public P~ychologist helps in manhunt for killeJ;'
Safety is first·
•
Witness in hearings

an

SALE

·'

!Th:~::~·~J:an~uwy~~2~1~·~1~9~8~8--------------~------------~Pome~:ro~y~-::M:~:=Ie~~~rt~,~O~h=io~------------~--:---:-----~Th~e~D~a~i~~S~e-m_ine~I-'P_a:ge:~1~1.: ~
·

The system of measurement that

Infonnatlon on the club may be
obtained by .calling Mrs. Ale·
shire, 99H464, or Mrs. Dean,
992·2TI4.

~i4.-

-•

A film will be pres en ted
Sunday night at 7:30 p.m. at the
Mt. Herman UB Church, Texas
Community, on the lite of Fanny
Crosby.

~~~::~~:::k~xpectsto

Melu- ~unty' e Oldeet Florllt

,..;--;..._--People in .the ·news----...,
By WILLIAM C. TRO'M'
United Pret111 ..tenadoaal
WAS IT NEWMAN'S OWN?: Sean Penn was
lighting again early Wednesday, using a bottle of
salad dressing to defend his Malibu home. Penn
and wile MadOIUIB came home about 12:30 a.m.
Wednesday and found prowlers In their yard.
Madonna dashed Into the house to dial 911 while
Penn placed a similar call on his car phone.
In the meantime, Penn was joined by
Madonna's brother, Marlo Clconne, 18, and they
cornered the Intruders. When one of the prowlers
tried to punch him, Penn grabbed the handiest
Item available- a bottle of salad dressing- and
bopped him pn the head wlth!I. AfterPennmadea
citizen's arrest, pollee booked a 20-year-old man
and two 17-y~ar -olds but released two other
youths after It was determined they were not
really on Penn's property.
Penn also played crlmebuster on Jan. 7, making
a citizen's arrest of a man who crashed his pickup
truck through the gate of Penn's estate.
: RACQUEL'S DAUGHTER MUGGED: Actress
Tabnee Welch. the daughter of Racquet Welch,
didn't tare so well with the criminal element In
New York early Wednesday. She was knocked
down and robbed In front olan apartment building
by two men. One mugger fled wjth her purse,
which contained about $20 In cash'fnd some credit
s;ards, and the other was captured by a witness
and held unl!l pollee arrived.
· Welch, 26, who appeared In the movie
~·cocoon, .. had to be treated ror cuts and bruises
at a hospital.
· HUTI'ON SINGED: Actress-model Lauren
ilu«on came by her new short-haired look quite
by accident . Hutton was in Dallas recently to 111m
·~ommerc!als for Cadillac and revealed that the
haircut was needed to trim away the hair that was
singed when a gas stove blew up In her face as she
was lighting it in her New York apartment the day
before Thanksgiving. VIsiting friends quickly
packed her face In lee and rushed her to a hospital.
• Hutton came away without any facial burns but
lhe ends of her hair had to be trimmed. As a result

Pell)' Vlnln~nd Lennie Belle
Alesblre were the llest losers at
the TOpS Club hek;l Tuesday
nlght at Coonhunters Club on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
· )!!eat KOPS loser was Pearl
Knapp, aud Imogene Dean won
the fruit basket. At next week's

SUNDAY

Utter meeting
POMEORY - The regular
monthly mmeetlng of the Meigs
County Litter Control Advisory
Board will be held Tuesday, 7: 30
p.m., at the Utter office located at
the intersection of Union Ave.
and Route 7 n_ear Pomeroy.

21, 1988

Film set

TOPS meets

Da1ce Frlcl1y
. POMEROY - A dance will be
held Friday, 8 to 11 p.m., at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center.
Music by Larry Hubba~ and
True Country Band: Admission
$1.50. Public Invited. Brlbg
snacks;

J.,_.,

*UNDER
INVOICE

'·
•

..

i

AlL

'.'
'

'

.

t

.

. RUPTURE
EA SER

,.

'88 Beretta's

CJI IJIS HER LOHSE
~fnrrr

$1 ,000.00 DISCOUNT
+ $1,000. 00 JIM COBB CASH REBATE

•
Phone 446-4524

l
I

~
'

.. .•'

.

CI)!ING

SOON ~

•

'
!

't'•

1/2 PRICE

SPORT S.HIRTS

ITRE:5S DYED

Regular S9.'J S, size$ S, M, Land.
·XL and SJ1.9S sizes 2X-3X 11nd
4X. Poly cotton blend.

._

SWEATER SALE!
Crew '*k styles, vests and •di·

ganl. Yau'll like the styles and
caleri.

/2 PRICE
MEN'S

~L; leader· is

trying
liquidation to pay debt
B)' BRANT NEWMAN

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

,Hours: Mon., Wid., Fri. 8:30 a.m.-8:00p.m., Tues. &amp; Thurs. 8:30 a.m.--5:30p.m.,
Sat. 9:00 a.m.-4:00p.m.; Sun. 1:00 p.m.-5:00p.m.

COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPI)- Jim
Bakker says be bas the financial
backing to pay off P.I'L's S62
million -debt and vowed to light
any attempt to put the bankrupt
and acandal-plagued mlnl.ltry he
lpunded 10 years aeo on the
auction block.
Bakker's offer to pay PTL's
credltilra came Wednesday just
houra after a lawyer for PTL
tJ'II&amp;tee David Clark told a

~=!.~~on=· that

c: £dwtn Allman fll
~v ··-J

AI""'"""

said no one at PTL wan~ to !lei!
the televlslnn and entertainment ·
mlnl,stry J)ut on the auction block,
buhdded It seemed ~lent to
develop a contlqency· plan.
"Nobody wanll 11 to come to
that, but we think we WOIIJd be
remlas If we didn't at leut plan
. for th,lt poutblllty," Allman told
U.S. Bankruptcy Judp Rutui

Reynolds.

"We IVIll never allow P1'L to ao
bankrupt," Bakker uld from 1111

, home In Palm $prinp; Calif. '!I
wiU flallt It from belllf put on the
alictlon block. . 11

1

KNIT SHIRTS ·
S, M, L.and XL sizes. ·S~lid
colors, rugby stripes. no~
velty styles.

30.

0/0oFF

TESTIFYING - Col. Ralph T. IIIIINead, director of the Slate
Depariplent of Public Safety, &amp;ea&amp;Uyfag In *lie tint full U, of
_Roue Impeachment Hearlnp to deelde If enoagb evidence exiiMs
1o .01111&amp; Gov. Evan Mecham Wed-.18)'. UPI

Back To

I'

·Dresses,
Jumpers, Skirts
and Blouses

MEN'S

*.Includes F

•

MEN'S FLANNEL

WOMEN'S

1/2PRICE

675-992-6614

.•

£ODI E MURPI1Y in "RAW"

PRE-TEEN

1

308 E. Main St.

'•

.

TOPS &amp;

Olds~obile•·Cadillac

',

,•

1/2PRICE

IEMAINING
STOCK

JIM
.COBB
Chevrolet•

.•

'

"

Winter Coats
ANo , Snowsuits

'

Buns being . investigated

'T

r;:====;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;;;:;;;;::,,•
,r ,

CHILDREN'S .

Youngster showing _positive signs

j

thlnldng, who he m!ghtturn to for
assiStance and who he might be
after," Kirby said.
.,
Kornahren s was spotted sev· , .
eral times Tuesday night, but .•
.there were no signs of him .. .
Wednesday. .
.
"He'~ an accomplished woods· 'man , sohe's lnhiselemeht,"sa!d ..
Charleston County Pollee Capt. , ~
James Atchison . "There are . ·
some swamps and. creell~. and • .
hunting cabins In the area.
. , .
· Atchison ~aid Kornahrens hid , .
In a wooded area 20 miles south of. .
Charleston in 1985 afterk!lllng , his ex-wife, her stepson and her
father.
"He went into the woods and·
found himself a nice place and
just lay down, " Atchison said of
the 1985 manhunt . "He w.as just
going to try to outwalt us."
Atchison said Kornahrens may ..·,
be using a similar strategy this ,, .
time. Pollee said several of the .,
convict's relatives who live In the ,
Charles ton area asked for protec· . , ,
tion after learning of his escape. . , ..
.T racking dogs led the ,passe to .
the home of Kornahrens mother . .·
early Wednesday morning, but a .
search of her home revealed no , ·
trace of the fugitive.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;:~;~~~~~~·

PANTS

: cHARLESTON,. S.C. IUPI)Over the weekend, the youth . hope the boy would survive, and
" Kendall Smith, who spent 40 responded to the voices · of his they said brain damage would be
m'!nutes under a frozen farm . parents. who have maintained a likely If he did.
pi.nd, was removed from a constant vigil at the hospital.
respirator and Is breathing on his
Rescue workers pulled Smith
. However ,In a similar case last
own, but doctors remain cautious from a pond In rural Dillon month, 11-year"Dld Alvaro Garza
about the 9-year-old boy's chan- County Jan. 12 after 40 minutes. Jr., of Fargo, N.n., recovered
c~:s of full recovery.
He had ·been playing on the Ice after spending 45 minutes· under
· Physicians at the Medical with two companions when the water In the Ice-covered Red
tl'nlverslty of South Carolina said surface cracked and dumped River. Garza was declared cllnl·
Stnlth was removed !rom a
him Into the Icy waters.
cally dead after his rescue but
respirator on Wednesday and Is
Smith's body temperattfre had was released from the hospital
breathing on his own lor the first
fallen to ·a bout 74 degrees . less than three weeks after the
time since hls rescue Jan. 12.
IJocto~s Initially expressed little
accident.
·Despite the apparent Improvement In his condition, Smith was r-------------------"'"'---~
stJll usted In critical condition
J
aild remained In what his doctors
cllled a mild coma.
GREENWOOD, Ind. '(UPI)Health officials said the staples
·Drs. Karen Powers and Fred State health officials are lnvesll·
ap):lllrently
were pushed Into the
Tecklenburg said in a statement · gating a report that ben.t staples
buns
alter
they
were packaged. A
released by MUSC that Smith were pushed Into . hamburger
spokesman
'for
the Cjnclnnatl
was recovering well rrom a bout
buns baked In Cincinnati.
bakery
said
no
·staples
are used
WJth pneumonia that developed
Investigators said no Injuries near the bakery or In the
after he was hosplta I!zed.
were reported and apparently all
·
•''The chest X·ray shows the packages Involved In the affected packaging process.
Klosterman's allo uses metal
pieumon~ Ia almost gone,'' the
shipment have been located.
detectors
to be sure Its products
dc)ctota said, "bUt there Is still no
The buns were baked In Clncln· leave wlthout evidence of tam.
~Is concerning his neuronail by Klosterman's Bakery and· perlng, the official said;
l!lflcalstatus."
shipped
to severs) Indiana cities,
\
•'
Including the Indlanapoll• area,
lioapltal officials said Smith's ·as well as Louisville and Lexing' ; c4)-dlo-pu~ry !uncUons re·
ton, Ky .
I!Jllll stable and be conUnuea to
Wilen a plalie breaks tile solll!d bar:
liiiiWe 1111 anna and lefll and open
The staples we(e found by a rler, 111tenen In the area bear lbn: : ·Jia eyl!l, •• he baa been dome ror customer at Indy's Res~urant derelapa. Tbe pll.ot doel not ' bear
· ai!'Veral days.
near thP Greenwood Park Mall. ' them, tlloup.

By CHARLES JARVIS
CHARLESTON, S.C. (UPI)A posse ·hunting a condemned
triple killer who overpowered
two deputi es and escaped into the
woods vowing not to be ta ken
alive enlisted a psycholog!s tin an
attempt to trap the fugitive who
" has killed all the people he
loved."
Fred Kornahrens was being
returned Tuesday to the Charles·ton County Jail when he overpo·
wered two deputies, took their
.357 Magnums , held them at
gunpoint and commandeered
their car. He had been taken last
Friday · from death row at the
Central Correctional Institute In·
Colum~ to Charleston for a
routine hearing.
Pollee stopped their pursuit of
the commandeered pa t rol 'car
when Kornahrens threatened to
k!lllhe lawmen. He released the
deputies unharmed, abandonetl
the cruiser and then vanished
Into a 5-square-m!le wooded area
of suburban Charleston. The
convict, the deputl es said, vowed
not to be captured alive.
Kornahrens was convicted and
.s entenced to death Feb. 10, 1986,
for killing his former · wile,
Patricia Josephine Avant, 30;
'her stepson, Jason Avant , 10; and
her father, Harry Lee Wilkerson,
69.
"The man has killed all the
people he loved." Charleston
County Pollee Capt. . Marvin
Kirby said Wednesday. "This
man doesn't have a lot to live for.
"You have to take hi s state of
mind Into account when you're·
dealing with this person. I just
don't think he'll let us take him .
He'd force the actlon."
Officers with tracking ldogs ,
helicopters and a search plane
combed the wooded area Wed·
nesday where Kornahrens Is
believed to have fled and conducted a door-to-door search In a
residential area ,, They also used
boats to check creeks and
swamps in the area. Kirby said
the 125-member posse had been
joined by a psychologist.
"We're just trying to ge t Inside
his \)ead and see what he Is

WOMIII'S

SWEATERS
OUr nlttlinlng stock.
Mostt, lar• slats.

410/oo,

30°/o.

. ..

MEN'S

SHIRT SALE!
Includes:

•Van Heusen Dress Shirts
•W11tern Shi~tl
•Flannel Shirts
•EntW. Stock Sport Shirts

SAVE

30°/o

'\

�•

-

•

----~-------------------------------------- - -- ------------~~~--~---

. hge 12-The o.lly Sa :U181

·-France declares
•
•
_wa-J•t-lmgs
::~::lo Iran against
attacks
.~}:Gulf
..... .

By FERNANDO DEL MUNDO
MANILA, Phllipplnes (UPI) -

Coraton Aquino t&lt;J&lt;iay · Fidel Ramos tp replace Defense
named armec;t forces chief Gen. Secretary Rafael Ileto, who
resigned over the government's
alleged failure to unify the
mllltary in the face of a growing
·
communist insurgency .
Aquino announced Ramos' ap. pqlntment In a nationally televtsed statement and said she
accepted Ileto's resignation
" with much reluctance.''
. She said deputy armed forces
chief Lt. Gen. Renato de Vllla,
described by his criltc.s as a
" Ramos clone," will take over as
military chief.
"In leaving the government,
General Ileto leaves us a legacy
of continuing com;ern for the
' development of professionalism
in the armed forces - the key
ingredient In the fipal defeat of
the communist insurgency."
Aquino said. .
"I share his concern and
assure him that the work he
began shall be completed by us.''
Defense Department spokesman Eduardo Pangillnan said
lleto's resignation was contained .
in a letter dated · Jan . 14 and
submitted to Aquino the same
day.
Panglilnan said Iletp, a West
Point-trained ~etlred general,
, met with Aquino on' Wednesday
an hour before a scheduled
Cabinet meeting and .discussed
his offer to resign.
"He got the impression during
the meeting the president w!ll
accept it. so , he made the
announcement this morning,"
Panglllnan said.
"I fell that .t he insurgency is .
NEW DEFENSE MINISTER - Armed forces chief General
the major threat to the country
Fidel Ramos, seen In this undated file photo, was named the
and should be dealt with effecPhilippine's new Secretary ol Defense by President Corazon
tively by a well-organized, reviAquino afler the shock resignation of Rafael Deto from the post on
talized armed forces ," the 67·
Thursday. REUTER
year-old Ileto said.

•

confirm an attack on Lavan, an
By DANlEL J . SJLVA
narrow Island off the Iranian
MANAMA, .Bahrain (UPI) coast bristling with oll terminals
France has declared the toughest l,lnd storage tankers.
, • Western pollcy for confronting
Iranian attacks on Persian Gulf
France's warning is the closest
shipping, warning that French , any of the Western powers
'warships wlll flre 'o n any gunboat maintaining forces In the gulf
Ignoring orders to break off an have come to granting protection
attack on a merchant vessel.
to all merchant vessels In the
• The commander of French waterway, regardless of their
forces In the gulf, Adm. Guy nation of registry.
The United States, while playLabouerle, called Wednesday for
other Western powers protecting tng a more aggressive role in
· shipping In the strategic water- providing assistance to merway to adopt a posture similar to chant vessels stricken in Iranian
-th'e new French rules of attacks, has resisted pressure by
moderate gulf states to expand
· . -engage!Jlent.
"We cannot see other ships
its role and provide protection. to
burning with their crew without
all commercial shipping.
,. helping," Labouerte told reporAfter a series of concentrated
ters aboard the Marne, the Iranian attacks on. Kuwaiti ship- .
French flagship in the gulf,- · ping last spring, the United
according to Washington Post States placed.l1 tankers from the
correspondent Patrick E. Tyler, emirate under U.S. registry and
a member of the Pentagon media
naval protection.
pool based in the gulf.
Under Navy rules of engagement In the gulf, U.S. forces In
Labouerle said French commanders would not provoke Iran
the 550-m!le waterway are proht• but added that it was necessary
blted from intervening in attacks
· .for France to state clearly how it on merchant vessels . not flying
would respond to Mayday calls,
the St11rs and Stripes.
saying there are "some conseLabouerle, 54, commander of
quences of the lra.n-Iraq war that France's'Indian Ocean fleet, said
' we won't accept a.t sea.''
he Issued new rules of engageThe gulf was hit In recent ment after an encounter Saturweeks with some of the most day In the Strait of Hormuz
between the Frencl) warship
violent and spectacular attacks
on shipping by Iran and Iraq
Dupleix and Iranian gunboats.
Dupleix skipper Claude Nusset
since the two nations, at war for
more than seven. years. began
told · reporters in a separate
preying on merchant mariners in
interview on the bridge of the
warship that he heard a radio
March 1984.
distress call from the LiberianIraqi mllltary officials said
registered chemicaltankerRainWednesday Iraqi warplanes
streaked hundreds of miles down · bow at 11 a.m., moments after it
thegul!andattackedollfaclllties . was attacked by gunboats in the
strait .
·
at Iran's Lavan Island.
The French war~hip turned
, " A sp&lt;ikesman for the Iraqi
· armed forces In Baghdad said
around, .steamed at full speed
: several jet fighters made the
back through the strait and
:· arduous flight down the gulf and · spotted the crippled Rainbow off
sent missiles crashing into the the coast of Oman, smoke l!lliow.crltical Iranian facility at 12:20 lng from its crew quarters.
· p.m .. igniting· a fire.
·
"At 3:30 p.m. we sal\' three
: Shipping officials could not
speedboats, - which fired three

.
'

.

-

rockets at the Rainbow witho_ut
reaching her." Nusset said
•
through an Interpreter.
As the Duplelx - closed the
distance between itself and the
blazing Rainbow ami came
within range of the Irania n
rocket fire, the warship "called
on the gunboats to stop their
threatening shots or she would
fire," Nusset said.
" 'The speedboats stopped

•

.

Presld~nt

shooting · .and moved away,"
Nusset said. "The fact that
Dupleix went qufckly and close to
the tanker obviously stopped the
attack and saved the Rainbow
and Its crew.''
Nusset · said that during thl;'·
e ncounter the Duplelx trained its
fire control· radar· on the three
Iranian gunboats and that its
100-millimeter deck gun was
primed to swivel and fire In an
·
Instant.

U.S. Austrian ,ambassador plays it

By JOHN HOLLAND
VIENNA fUPI) - Vienna
nativea!ld new U.S. Ambassador
to Austria Henry Grunwald sidestepped the issue of Austrian
President Kurt Waldheim's
cloudy wartime past, · saying
'·'everything that can be said has
been said."
. In a pre-recorded interview
' broadcast Wednesday and taped
earlier this month with Austrian
television ORF. Grunwald, a
natlv'e Viennese Jew who fled
Nazi oppression in 1938 and much
later became .editor-in-chief of
Time magazine, said his first
diplomatic assignmeql was not a
"return hOme" but "to a strange
land · which. I still like very
much ."
Austria's domestic media has ·
had generally favorable reviews
of Grunwald since his appointment by President Reagan late
last year . The 65 year-old Grun-wald has not given any media
interviews since arriving In
Austria Sunday.
Speaking in. a clear but rusty
German, Grunwald said, "I
: believe everything that can be
said (about Waidheimt has been
said," and declined further com: ment on tl)e subject · 'untll I have
been here for awhile."
His comments as ambassador
were broadcast after he had
presented his credentials to
Waldheim in a brief and formal
·ceremony at the presidential
palace earlier Wednesday.
: Grunwald declined to talk to
reporters following ihe ceremony, but Waldhelm later told
Austrian radio ORF that relations between the U.S. and
.Austria had been "strained"
following the U.S. Justice Department ~ecision last\.,year to
.place him on a "watchlist" of
·.undesirable visitors.
Waldhelm said he hoped that
. with Grunwald's appointment
there would be a "renormallzation" of relations ·between the
two countries.
· One U.S. Embassy source said
:\'he (Grunwald) Is playing it
very cautious at the beginning."
, . Grunwald, the source said,
"doesn't want to get ott to the
kind of start or finish his
predecessor (former Ambassaaor Ronald Lauder) did."
Lauder, a cosmetics executive
and currently running for the
U.S. Senate in New York, anrered many Austrians by retuslnt to attend Waldhelm's
awearlq-ln as president Iii June

The letter expressed fears
about divisions In the 159.000·
member armed forces , rocked
by five mutinies since Aquino
took power 1n a civilian-backed ·
milltary revolt 23 months ago.
"This Is the rationale behind
the reorgantzauonat and operatlonal concept I had repeatedly
·proposed for the military," the
letter sajd.
· "It has been my distinet
impresston that the reorganlza tion of the military has not
proceeded as I had envisioned
and I fear that divisive elements
and controversial issues within

l

P~roy-Middleport,

the military, It not checked
promptly, wlil erode whatever
gallls ,we have achieved since
February 1986," he said .
lleto founded the Scout
Rangers credited wltb crushing
In the 1950s the revolt of the
communist Huks, forerunners of
the rebel New People's Army
that has been battling the government for 18 years.
The New :People's Army ha!tan
estimated
25,000
members in
\
.
Southeast Asia's only growing .
communist insurgency.
Iieto .resigned as· vice chief of .
staff of the armed forces under
former President Ferd !nand
Marcos after refusing to go along
with Marcos's declaration of
martial law. He later became
ambassador to Iran and
Thailand.
Iieto . played a key role In
persuading generals to side with .
Aquino during the 1986 revolution
that toppled •Marcos. Aquino
named him defense secretary •
after She sacked Juan Ponce,
Enrlle, whose al&lt;)es were lmpu-·
cated in a coup attempt In
November 1986.
lleto's offer to resign came
amid an Impending revamp In
the armed forces with the retirement in A,prll of 41 generals,
including top level officials.
Under the new constitution,
Ramos is not due to retire until
next year. Bui most generals
occupying sensitive posts are
retiring in April . .
lleto is known to be critical of
Ramos, who crushed .the ·coups.
against Aquino, Including the
Aug. 28 uprising that left 53
people dead and nearly toppled
the government.
Gregorio Honasan. the army
colonel who led the August coup,
was captured in December. H~
said he led the coup because of
Ramos' "\veak.and vacillating"
leadership.

- By JOHN SWENSON
UPI Pop Writer
NEW YORK (.UPI) - The
all-star jam session that ended
the Rock· and .Roll Hail of Fame
dinner early today took a bit of
the edge off a ceremony that
included an acceptance speech in
which Mike Love of The Beach ·
Boys insulted many or his fellow
performers.
· The Beatles, Bob Dylan, The
Supremes, The Drifters and The
Beach Boys were' all inducted
into · the ' Hall of Fame at the
$1,000-a-plate third annual btacl&lt;' UedlnnerWednesdaynightat the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. ·
Woody Guthrie, Leadbelly and
. Les Paul were honored as early
Influences on rock 'n' roll, while
· • Motown Records founder Berry
Gordy Jr. jollied the Hall of
Fame's list of music business
giants.
After, The Beach Boys were.
lndl!cted by Elton John, Love, the ··
gi-oup's lead singer, shocked the
glittering crowd.
\
.
"It's too bad Paul McCartney
couldn't be here.tonight because ·
he is In a lawsuit with Ringo
(Starr) and Yoko (Ono) ;" Love
said. "He sent a telegram to
some high-priced attorney I' say-..

.

.

lng he would not make It · ·
·'The B!!lich Boys did about 180
performances last year,"· Love
contlniled. ·"I'd like to see the
'mop tops' (The Be a ties) do that.
I'd like to see Mlck'Jagger get up
and sing 'I Get Around ' against
'Jumpin Jack Flash.'
'-'1 challenge 'The Boss' (Bruce
Springsteen) to get up on stage
and jam. I want to see It Billy Joel
can tickle the ivories."
Love then used an obscenity to ·
refer to Jagger.
. Finally, as the band tried to
drown him ,out, Love shouted,
" We're going to do it. We're
going to do it for world peace!"
Love later joined Jagger'•.
Starr, George Harrison; Spring·
steen and Joel on stage .along
with Dylan, John, Jeff Beck and
31 other stars for the jam session,
which included such highlights
as Dylan· and Harrison sharing
lead vocals on "Ail .. Along the
Watchtower," John Fogerty
e lectrifylng the crowd with
"Born On the Bayou," and a
no-holds-barred finale of "Satisfaction" that had Jagger trading
vocals with Springsteen.
The proceedings began wl th
Ahmet Ertegum Inducting Gordy
and reading a telegram of

congratulations to him from
Michael Jackson.
Pete Seeger then inducted
Lead~lly , Neil Young inducted
Woody Guthrie, Beck inducted •
Les Paul and Elton . John In·
dueled The Beach Boys.
Love's remarks overshadowed
Joel inducting the Drifters Into
the Hall, but when Springsteen
presented ,Dylan with his award ,
Dylan admonished Love, saying
"peace, love . ~nd harmony is
very important, but so is
forgiveness."
After Little Richard inducted
the Supremes, who were represented by Mary Wilson and the
late Florence Ba.l)ard's daughter
(lead singer Olalla Ross did not ·
attend), the ceremonies ended
with ·Mick Jl!gger inducting the
Beaties.
Celebrities who gathered for
the event included Yoko Ono and
her son Sean, Julian Lennon,
Muhammad All , Little. Steven,
Little Richard , -Dave Edmunds,
Peter Wolf, Ramblin' Jack Elllot
and Arlo Guthrie.
'
Befitting the Induction of the
Beatles, the first non-American
act, diners we~ served a British
meal that included . poached
salmon, English green salad,
"bangers' and ri!ash" (a sausage

•

.•

-·

.JAIUON' INTO TilE MORNING HOURS " Fenner BeaUe ~rp Harrison, let&amp;, Jania Willi .
rocker Bruce Sprlnpteen and RoiUng Stone&amp; ·
legel!d Mlck Jager after ceremonies Wl!dnesday

where Harrison wu lndncted Into the Rock and
Roll RaU:of Fame. The Jam aeaJJion wu held by 31
rockers at lhe dinner and Induction, and lasted
Into the early "!Ornlnl hours of Thu~ay. ( UPI)

••

r,D.artini,

friends

at hand
Gracie Allen.
The gravel-voiced, cigarpuffing comedian started in s·how
·business with a song and dance
routine . But he climbed to fame
as a gagman and was ranked
among the ellte of .American
comedians .
His beloved Gracte·died hi 1964
of a heart attacl(. ·
Burns years ago turned to
serious acting, winning an Oscar
for best supporting actor In the
1975 film "The Sunshine Boys"
when he wa:s 80 and then
co-starring in the 1977 hit . "Oh.
God!," with John Denver. He
also appeared in "Sergeant
Pepper's Lonely llearts Club
Band'.' and "Just You and Me
Kid."
.
The birthday party was hosted
by New World Pictures, distributor of Burns' latest movie, "18
Again," set for release in the
spring.

NEW MANUFACTURED HOME FINANCING

Hallmark Gift Wrap

1/2 PRICE
Till Gone!!

TRASH
BAGS

BRILLO
SOAP PADS
lOX
Of
10

69(' 79&lt;

Speidel Twist-On and
Flex-On by Kreister NOW

11.
12 PRICE

FINANCED

.
$10,000
$15,000
$20,000

(t 10 llontll!r ...,_,..,

ANNUAL
PERCENTAG,ERATE

$128.17'
$192.26
$256.34

13.25%
13.25%
13.25%

. New Haven
882·2135

Polht Pleuant

VILLAGE PHARMACY .
271 IIOIJil · ' I

U

Equal

OY,OIIO
j

•

875-1121

2nd 8t1Mt
llllon

JDAn

• ·•

~O.ft

IU..

1 IIOiti'M

.

....

w .•

• -•

' "· •

Ill..

-

ou..

-·

- -•

CI.Wifled pop• couer tltc
followtftt t•l•plaone ucbanpll ...

==·

:2-=:J.

:"'c!:·. ::

u ...........

Public Notice

Public Notice

.
LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Public Utllitioo Com-

mieaion of Ohio h11 sche~

duled lor huring Cue No.
87-2082-GA·AEM, in the
nillner of the oppllcotion of
Rutland F...t Compeny for
outhorlty to increen ended)\111 ito roteo and charge• end
to change h1
on an
emergency
ondteriffo
temporary

H.Holdai=~QOt=n. a1u1 M8ry

. PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE lo hereby given

t~at on Sl!!turd8y, January

23, 1988, at 10:00 e.m. a
public Hit will be hold at
1011 Union Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio, to Mil for caoh
the following collateral:
1984 Dodge 2 dr. 800. SS#

Glldyo

•

773-5514 .

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

........, ca11t. • •

"

\V

.

....

11,,

1 B3BV61 C6EG148466.
Thli Farmero S..nk and
Slvingo · Compeny, Pom·
•ov. Ohio. r8Mrvea the
right to bid at thi1 Nle. and
to withdraw the above collateral prior to Nlo. Furtliv.

right to reject any or •II bid•
aubmitted.
further. tho obove colla'
terel Will be aold in the cOndition It is in with no expreaaed Or implied warren-

The Farmera Bank and Savings Company reHrv" the

11) 20, 21, 22, 3tc

ties given.

·Business Services

.,
~;:======:;:~r;:====:;:==::;-r;:==;;=;:;:;;:;:=:;

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
··
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIlLE, OHIO
614-662-3121
Authorizld Jot. O.ro,
New Hollanol, lush Hot
Farm EquipmMit
Doalor
.

Flrt~ 'E411pMe•t

YOUNG'S
·· .
CARPENTER
SERVI' CE

R 124 p
Oh'
'·
'
omeroy 10
A. UTO &amp;TRUCK

or 949-2860
Day or Nilht
NO SUNDAY CALlS

4-i&amp;-1&amp;-lfn

HOUSE FOR RENT
I 07 LOCUST ST.
~Y--915-3561

- Plumbing •nd atectric•l

985-3561

SERVICE

All Maku

992·6215 or 992-7314

•Wuhers •Diahwaahen
•Ranges •Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

P-oy, Ohio

WE SEll US£D APWANCES

V. (, YOUNG Ill

PH., 949·280 1

&amp;-17-tfc

KEN'S APPUANCE

work

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
'"At Reasoidllt Prices"

REPAIR
AI10 Trill• I11I01
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

- Addono ond romotHIIng
-Rooflnu 1nd guner work
-Concrete Work

IFree Eotimal&lt;il)

BISSELL ..
BUILDERS

•
Rog·er Hysell
Garage

I~t'L uc

4-5-tlc

o.o. '

Celllomia. filed In
thil Court an eutlwnllcal8d
copy of tho lett8rl of hil appoirrtment . . . . . him by The
Suportor co..n of CetlbniO:
County of Son llenwdino,
Cet1tral Dillrlct. Probete Dlvi·
lion. All .. edili4 of decedent muat iA 1nt their
Co~

claiml, to 1hio O&gt;urt. - · ·
16) montha, ..... the of
·IUCh filng. or 1holr - · will
be lorowr bei'Nd ao o pouible lien upon the Ohio roll
estate of auch decedent.
Robert E. Buck. Judgo
Meigo County, Ohio
(1 ).21, !B; 121 4, ;!tc

Ntw location:
161 North S.cond
Mid•ljlart, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C•rry Fiehlng Supplin

Ply Your Phone
end Cable Billa Hera
IUSINESS PHON£
t614) 992-6550
lf!IOEIKI PHON!

161!11 ........ ~

GUN SHOOT ·Read the Best Seller
RACINf .
Read the
FIRE DfPT.

CLRSSIFIEP RDS

Basha111 Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Annou nee 111 enls

Fortory Choke

3 Announcements

12 Gauge ShotguM Only
10-7-tfn

New credit card. No one refused!
Major credit cards lind more. Get
. ..... _

2

In Memoriam

IN MEMORY OF
EVE V. BARRETT
WHO SADLY LEFT
US 2 YEARS AGO
What Is Mom For]
Ia she for love or is
she for abua•;
Ia she for slavery or
always our. use.
She always had. time
to~ you -and me
But how was : her
time we ne)ler did
sea.
Yoa, Mom, do this
and do that; hurry,
Mom, I'm leta;
But sit down and
think - she haen 't
evan ate.
She hurries · ali her
day through,
So ihe can apend the
evening with you.
But ask yourself do I
glv• her the time of
day
·
As you selfishly go on
your way.
She prays every night
for h•r babi.u, you

.Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sen1ic.
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages.

z
a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

- Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

hours. ··

--------··. BASS
Meedng 22 of Jan . Cont.ct

. WintiM' Cle•ance up. to 76

percent off. The Attic. 203
Bridge St . Guyandotte, At. 2.
Huntington.

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at

4

Veterans Memorial Hoi&gt;Pilal
Mulberry Hils, Pomeroy,

Giveaway

2 Ki~tent to give away. Call
814-446-7075.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
.SIDING CO.
llew 11- luilt

"Free Eotimateo"

PH. 949·J860
or 949-2801
NO SUNDAY CAW

3-ll-tfn

GUN SHOOT

EVERY

SUNDAY
1:00 .....
RACINE
.GUN CLUB
UONI, OliO

I 9-tfn

FOUND: Tape cue, tlpet. C..ll
to identify. 814·317-7746 after

OPEN FOR

6 PM.

BUSINESS

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
Wltll'E liU ID.
IUTIJND, 0110
742-2035
12-3'f-at·1 mo: pd .

61.·4441· 1950.
Clothing to ' give ~way . 49 'h

Spruce St. rear.
446-0386.

At· I 10 tlldly 011 my
w.y.
.

PAT HILL FORO

llflllrllnTIIllls. .

1JI-11H '
ONo ;

111-.p~:tl·

1·1:1-ltltl

tl'llill!llf

3. 81·4 -

Beautiful young cit to giVe
away . Neutered. Call tl14· 992 ·
72t5.
Free to good home in country,
Male German Shepherd t 9
month• old. 304·875-&amp;aaO.

Puppl". half, Heeter. 304-882 2148 .
"'\

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
UMESTONE
·GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
1-tfc

F,.. puppies, small. good house
,.... 304-4178 -7418.
.

Pit Bulls to give away,
7376 .
.

304- 87~ -

1'wo puppi... haH Bird Do~ half
Terrier, call 1fter 8:00pm, 3d48711-t887.

IS

Lost and Found
'.

White. long-hair f81Mie cat with

pink collar. Lost Saturday in
Sug• Run .,.., Pomeroy. Call
814-tt2-28N .
·
Found: 11ound dog on White Hill

Ad., Rutland. Mult deecrtbe or
ohow prvof 10 ololnt. 114-742H71.
'

•c
"-Pork.--

, LOST g111y

It Cll 111111r and re·
core fllllltors and
htlter coru. It Cln
lito ICid bollllld rod

.

Free puppl81· 5 males, 1 tem•le.
Call between 7 &amp; 9 PM ~

. "'" ooU•. •

Olll'lllllton... 1110

'

your card todayl Call 1-618489-3734 Ext. C -1622 24

doyo 814-992-2038, 8t4. 9922318 . Aftor 8 814-992 -5547.

~
::t: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

1111h lhe wllroem.
..... ....,. my memorite 111011 and_..,

..

llllrll eat tile liMe are

Public Notice

gott lkl Glldy8 H. Heideogott.
l flU of .... City of

cltly

ANO'I'III:a YBAB. ~·lC'*- 0 ...........
aellt I I .ldtl . . . . W.tiiUCIJ bJ'

Public Notice

1-.....,;-------.J..---------'----------

HeldeoQOtt. alul Glldyo - - · L - - - - - 4 : . .·!.:1S::,:
·'B::::6::::·fc::.J

-y.

•

.,

....... w_.....:........,,. ........ ..,.....,.

·-a--

Bha ltlll 111 at home
Pfl'llnt for our day.
All that lhe a1bc1
: from God you Is let her live lo har leet Lally fNI,
So having our own
llwl. God lOok her
hom•.
Neuanuor. on thla

PEOPLES -BANK

I

::n::

Even thoug~- grew
. up and went on our

Other Terms And Amounts Upon Request
Loons SUbJect To Qualification Of Borrower

12212 Jackson Ave;

~..:::::""

-;
Agn range from 18
through 43.

ONLY 1Oo/o DOWN - FIXED RATES

_5th Street

__ ..____ _

:~~':;.:.::..."":""''"

M..

......
't'::."::: ...... -::.=::;:..,.,~=

~_._

(6 4) 992-6606

15VEARTERM

~~~~----

IO.R.C. 2129 .021
To All Credltora of
such
Decedent:
Notic:8
io
.... _ that
,.__,., ••v"
on 1he 161h day of Jonuary,
1988. Carrol ~ Colliotd. ~ wtth WI
andoo&lt;lciluoo 1nldof1hoEI-~
of
llkl.Glldyl
M.ry Higley
GlldyoHigley

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. holes of golf to get away from
iupi) . - Comedian George something. I cari play golf 24
Burns, with a martini In one hand . hours a day, who wants that?"
and a cigar In the other, cele- Burns said . .
brated his 92nd birthday Wednesgoing to die again
day by regaling ~riends arid aqyway.not
I died in Altoona ., You
admlrers -wlth·a .r aspy rendition: die once, you don 't have to d·ie
·
of "Old Bones."
again. I don ;t believe in dying.
More than 200 people packed You lose a fortunewhenyoudie."
the Bistro Gardens to follow
When a large birthday cake
Carol Chilnnlng's lead in singing . was Wheeled out, Channing led
"Happy Birthday" to Burns.
the th.rong in singing "Happy
Other celebrants included come- Birthday." The guest-of-honor
dians Sid Caesar. Milton ·Eerie,
then broke with the scheduled
Dan,nyThomas. Jack Carter, and program and sang "Old Bones,"
· televlsldn personality Vanna rather than "! Wlsli I Were 18
White.
· Again," a number for his upcom. Decked out in a houndstooth Ing film .
•· spottcoat and hoisting a martini ·
Chl!nning said she asked
in . one hand and his trademark Burns: "Do you· think I'm up to·
cigar in the other, Burns was doing 'Hello Dolly' on Broadas~ed about relirem~nt.
way? And he said; '.Of .course.
"Don't retire :.. keep busy,
Your voice is as good as mine.'"
keep· working, do something.
Burns tickled radio and televiWhat the hell do you do when you
sion audiences for 26 years as
· retire? You don't enjoy anything
straight man to his nutty wife,
when you retire. You play nlpe

AMOUNT

.
...

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF GLAOYS HI·
GLEY HEIOERGOTT Af{A,
DECEASED.
CASE NUMBER 211742
DOCKET
N PAGE 8
.. NOTICE

_*MOBILE HOMES
*MODULAR HOMES
.
*DOUBLE WIDES
All

.....
·-· _...•.• .•.•
fU..
... _., ___
IMl'f

P1rt1 &amp; S1 _,

"''m

gence officer in the deportation
of Jews and the execu lion of
anti-Nazi partisans in the Balkans during World War II.
Grunwald was asked In the
ORF interview if the American
medla in particular . played · a
strong role in the negative
Impression of Waldhelm.
"The media . alWB¥S plays a
role." the newsman -t urneddiplomat replied, "I believe
everything that can he said about
the case of Waldhelm has been
said."
.
"I don't want to comment
(more) about the (Waldhelm)
situation until I've been here for
some time," Grunwald said.
Waldhelm has denied ali allega lions that he knew of or
participated In war crimes.
Waldhelm also said he was
"quite confident " that a. report
by military historians due out
next month will clear his name
and "things wlll quiet down"
after Its release.

.~."-,.,

Public Notice

mencare-Pomeroy
N_ursing and .
Rehabilitation Center

A.~urs~trl~a;n;fe~d~e~r~al;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj·l

......
-·-·
________.... _,
-·-·--

....,_....._~

the Commlooion. 180· Eall
Bre-d Street, Columbuo,
Ohio. At that time, inter· - portio• will ba afforded en opportunity 10
pr•••nt pubuc tlltimonv.
t1) 21. 1tc .
·

'.

accredltlon' as ambassador to

... Til

. . , , _ .... - D I Jt· - - D I

.;:;;;;..,.c.._,..,.. _ _ _ ,. _ _ ..

ot9:30o.m.otthoolfl~·•of

Co'·m munl'ty.

Wednesday.

10 PIACIAII AJ WI "1·1151
MONDAY tlw• -AY I A.11, .. S P.M.
I A.M. llotll IA'IIIIIOAY
CLOSID -AY
I'OUI;IU '

t1.36 per •n
MCF.lncru..
The h..ring
quetted
of"
will be hold Merch.14,1988

-B urns :turns 92 . with ctgar

presldimt Kurt Waldhelm \L)
REUTER

·The hall , founded in 1985, is in
after the release of their, first
record, making the selections a · the process of establlshtng a .
tribute to lasting musical value permanent archive and museum
in Cleveland.
. more than timeliness.
'

4909.111 of Ohio ReviHCI
Code. The Company hao ra-

'

NEWAMBASSADOR-ThenewU.S.amhassador Henry . A. Grunwald ( R) handed over his

and potato dish) and plum
pudding.
Potential Inductees to the hall
not ellgtble until 25 years

. basis pursuant to Section

g Years ,
S •
erv1ce· To The
A

The Daily Selrtinei-Page-13

Ohio

~1-star jam session followed indu·c tions, Beach Boy insults

cautiousr-----~~========~====-

'1986.
. The 69-year-old Waldhelm Is
411epd by some groups to have
collliborated with Nazi war crlmlllall ai a German army lntelll-

----------------------------·----

.

Thanday, Jllfll8y 21, 1988

Aquino names. Ramos defense minister

•
•

-~ New

ThU'Iday, January 21, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

Glt wearing

K • K Mobile

711-4111. '

...... 'GiiDrpoiTi........ ·_·
81 VIcinity
,
..................................

...

,.

�-

.........

.

.,.

________

;~·;~1~~~ft-~o=-;~~~~Jij~A.]~~---~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~==~~~~~~~~~..:.::
LAFF·A·OAY
-.:-o-cqtJIIinel

8

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

42 Mobile Homea
for Rent

u••• ~ a.vlaer·. , , M your oan ••tee

WI

lllif 'ra ... ~~~. Merlin w....
_ . . Auolloo- · 114·Z41·

IIIZ.

9

2 bod- for .... In
Roolno. 1110.00 IIIOitlhtv· Rof·
_ .. - · Col 814-848·
.2112.

·

'i2:'ib;;wl;;oo;;m;_;on;.cC;;;_;;iRicdi.:..:'iPo;;;;;;...!
·roy.
Cto. 10 - betuellft
·1:00
Col
114-742·2110:
-4:110.

Wentecl fo Buy .

--·· --

.. "" _ _ _ ...dot_
...... -

Chw.·CI* .....

lOI' CAIN ..... for '83 moclol
_. newer ueec1 ceri. Smidt
lulall·Pwt' • 1811 E..-..
AWII., Glm,~tll Clllf14-44e-

44

.

WANTED TO IUY: Uood . . • coel heeler~ . 8wtln'1 Fuml·
two. 3td. • Ollw St. OolllpoUo.
Coli 11 4-441·3111.
Con phll hot ut DoW~ of·fumi- ·
.................. Aloo-·
eo~~t .__., IWIIn'• Fumllvte
•

•· DIIDh,

Olive,

Third •

11 4-4oM·3111.

w- .....y: Uood fumlftlre .....
on lq w . - b u y - hou..

:=..~~-~ w....

B . - dndlng ......... eoH
114-3'n·2751.
Buyifttl dolly gold. otM:r ooino.

rtngo. 1-ry. otortlr:g wore~ old
colno.' ..... ..,......,,,'Top pri·
· - · Ed luritott Bo- Shop,

2ncl. Aft. Mldd._.Oh. 114992,3471.
.

Aow fur, and d- hid•.
Otn Sine ond Y - rvat. Wo
'!'I'M whoot ond ntt. • -·

l..,.,.IUPPiinforM&amp;.. tBuyl.. -tropol . Loot doy to buy

fvr. Fob. e , 1888. Goorgo
Buoldey. Houn12·8.114·114·
1111 .

Stondlng ambo&lt;. Co11814-742·
2321.

w.

Yo. outo llcoNo "'"'"

wanMd MfoN 1111: Clarence
Tilua. CWk. Pe. 11113
•

f I' II 11';1111 II
~'J 11 I '. II

,,

I

-.

"My name IS
. Harry BlinkstrOm, ffi
. Case you ha::Ve some .
hang-up about mVing
money
ea
to T.OTAL STRANGERS."

'11

Lodv

Help Wanted

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

10 l:oirya~ In my homo.

114-441-1186.

1878 WINitor 14Jt70 with U·

MONEY FOR COWOE118Vd·
10 lndlvld::olo who bocomo

· ponclo. 3 IR., oil :rlao.. Col,
- - • dryor, ownlngo, porch,
undorplnnlng. bcol. cond. Muot

mo-o of lha Army lllotlonol
Ouonl. coli 304·171· 3110 or
1·SOO.M2-ll11.
.

.... Call 114-182·7437 1fter I
.PM.

VETERANI: IAtuoholppoyyour
ChriOfiNO blllo. Anny Notlonol
Guord-· port·- - -lui timl:
bonoflto. 304-17S-3tl0 or I·
100-142-3819.
13

12x50. 1n Mlddii!IOrl. C.lll14·
882-3150.
14x70 Wind- with 14x30
addition. 3 bod roomo. block top
roat\. appro• 3 ..:rea. Gllllpolll
Forry. 304-175·1930.

lnsuranpa

;.._

...__

,._n
Ul tur your mobi .. home
lnlur•noe:
Miller lnlurlnce
•--·-·~· 111o.hMih.

1987 Clavton 14x70-· mobl..
home, 10" down p1yment,
·
IllUme 1oefl,
paymen 1 I

·

1187.&amp;1. 304·171· 7209 or
171·7114.

·

l:odroomo, qr:
304-171-4113 .

s-•··

Pro-•

Roou.,..
form8t:ton lnd t10 to : 177 Sun

WANT£0: 8HCC -

.. -

AlE / OED, Jab Sldlla, Employ·
A...._nce, and Fln•n~

lftlr'lt

Aid .vaillb6e. Canllct Adult
Senlcee It 114·2415 -5331 .
Don't d•y do it todeyl
EXCELLENT WAGES for . .,.
time auembty worll; electron._ c...-ftl. ()then,. Info 1-&amp;04-

1141·0081 Ext. 2987. o .... 7
doyo. CALL NOWI
'

Sell Avon. CktyOurOwnAvonet
o dlocount. CoN 114-oWa-3311.

noo . uoo . 11100 . Perw-.

Pege 81111 people
. . -. Dnly- with •loo
,,...,_. . - llptlly. Bond
~ ta . Bo• Cll 12•. c / o
·Cktl'pa lla D.aty Tribune. 82&amp;
Third Avo., Golllpolh, Ohio
Vettow

.

411131 .

Gallipolit,

Sewing ·• . ahnltiont

In

home. Colll11-246-9221.

mv ·

Give piano, Ca,!o Keyboard and
orgen t...ona In my home to
ldvanced 1tudents.
Alto te.ech chording and trent·
poaing. " interelted cell e14·

992·5403.

33g, 111 S. Lintolnway. N.
Aurora:. II 50142.
Ladi•ITMphoneSurvey, 5 :00 -

Somo tlmbor. 114-892-7297
1fter 1:00 p.m.

Will do b.tty 1itting in my home,
Iota of TLC. 304-171-e730.

41

11,000 IU re~ir) dellnquen1 ••
Pfopertin and repo'a . For cur·

..,., lloto coli 1-800-351-4187
ut. 3170 1110 open ew.nlngs.

Re.t
Et.. te. Carol Y~e~er- Brok.,,
304-175·11104 . .
Nicely furnished 11111111 houn.
Adu~. only. Rof. required. No
poto. Coli II 11-448-0338.
lMge 2-3 BR . hou ... Plenty of
• atorege. HendllriOn aNI. Clll

Business
Opportunity

114-448-7026.'

-~----

Small grocery ltore whh tKcellent meat • deli dept., inwntory
&amp; equipment. Help on financtno
equipment av1illble. LlaH on
building open. In Gallipolis.
Serious il"!quirl.. only PINae.

Coll614· 448-1543.

881uty Shop for ..; .. in town.
Clll 81 • ·992·3814 for more
informatton.

Re~l

Esla le

814·1192-2433 .. COli ot 118
Un~n

Rd.,Pomeroy.

If you ' re ambltlout and looking
for a
opportunity. join the
Nationwide Insurance family.
We h.w lots of tJeople like you,

c:....,

AI an qent you e~~n earn
120,000 or more thefirltyearin
11llf'y plul edditionlll bonu .. l .
Stnd retume or call for an

appointment N•tionwtde lniU·
ranee, P.O. Box 1078. Mtrient.

Oh. 411750. 114-371-8248. An
'.::q::"".::.':..-:.:::.::.":..u:..n_;•..:.•.:.•m...:..plo.::ye:.:_r.
· leW.....,: 10meone to watch 2
c~ren in

Homes for Sale

4 BA .• fireplace, full b•ernent. 3
mi. 10. of c;.mpoHa. $28.900.
Call Daya-814·448-1111, •ftar

6:00·

448·~244 .

Brend new,3 BR . n11r G1lllpoli1
Lock• on At. 7 . 2 car garage, nice
lot. lmm~late poi•aion , Will,
consldlf 1r1d• In of mobil•
home. property, etc. Bargain
priced. C1ll 814· 448-8038.
3 SA . houM. Land ,contf11ct.
$38,000. $2100 down. 2 mUM
from town on Rt. 141 . Weekends a Evenings after !S PM·

114-4411-9280.

Wanted: Hou .. wh'h property or
property llone. Crown CltyMerctrlille 1rea. C1ll 814-2158-

1247.

my homL I'm aingla,
21 end wofk twing lhlft. Could
WOftr. out living •rrangmenta.

a roams

Roforoncoo. Colll14·742-2790
or 114·742-24111.

corptt. U&amp;,OOO . Coll814-211·
1270 or 211-1970.

Bet paid tor reading booktl
1100. "rtitle. Writa:ACE· 31e.

3 BR., 2 bltht, 30x~ prage.
Crown City· St. Rt. IB3. 8 om:o.
•eo.ooo. COIII14-211· 1270or
268-1970.
.

181 S . Lincolnway, N. Aurora.ll

10142.
Po.ttiDft avaHab ..: Fosler e~re
provider. lndivfdull or family to
ptovide · c..-. for J*ton with
men•l retlrdation In thtir home.
Home mutt mMt S•te Ucen·

..,. AequiNmeftta, Banefftl In·

etude retirement. medical inilu·
ranoe. Ute ln•urance, paid
w.catiOft, lnd pet'IONII IHYI.

,....,, 114,033 . ., 1.293.
lntentJted aptJUunta Mould
MnCI ....., of lnttrnt end

-

to: Molol Co. 80.

MR·DD. P.O. Boa 307 John St.,

Syreou•. Df!io. 41779 . An
equal opportunity amploywr .

'

"VON • All o,.oo. Coli Marilyn
w- 304·•2·214&amp;. .

&amp; b8th. Newly remo-

deled. In Ath1Na. Wll to

Rent -l,e111 · land Contract :
Homes in EurwU, Rodney VIllage II , Evan• Hgt1. Dep. &amp; Ref.
required . Blackburn Realty,

B 10·446·0008.

3 Bedroom- 2 bltha in Chllhlre
on Riwerfront. •vallabte March

111. Dop. • ' rot. roqulrod. Coli
610-317· 7617 or 1-703-3e81109.
Nice 2 BR. hou• in Middlepor1.

DW, gorbogo dlopoool. AC. full
biMment . Excel. locetlon. Call
814-448·9206 Iller 6 :30 PM.
Fuml1hecf houl8. 3 lA . 28 N1il.

Golllpolla. t226. Coll441-4418
1fter 7 PM .

• Fumilhld: One bedroom co1·
tege. Nice for 1 married couple
or one lady. No pet. Ref. &amp; dep.
Call 814-4-46·21543.

Government Joba . •18,040-

31

Homes for Rent

3 8Ft. houR • gtrllifl. A- 1

Fllldll CI.JI

Friday. •3.50 per hour ptua
bonuo. Coli 814-148-3816, 912 AM only. for appointment.

P.-.on to do hOUIIcluning.
Some cooking. mu1t be axperltne..:l with your own family or
othen. Contac::t A.A. Knight

Will

Gowrnment Hom11 for t1 . (U
r.-ir) . Delinquent t1:11 pro!Mfty.
AepoiMMions. C.ll 805·1871000 E:11t. OH-9801 for current
repo list.

3 BR;- houM. 2 mi. out 141.
$3501 mo. O.p. &amp; ref. required.
Call 814·,...· 9280 .tter 6 PM
S. weekend•.
By IChool. COntlct HaroiCt Hy11111. Mlin.St., Rutland, OhiO.

2 bedroom, . moatiy fumilhed
houee In MiddllpOart. 11150.
3 bedroorri hoUII for rent In
Syraouoo. Coli 814-992-7889
1fter 6 :00.

3 bedroom, 2 full bathl. l1r01
IMno room, dining room •nd
kitchen . Also laundry room , 2
e1r girage. central air, Eastern
Schoof Oiatrict. Aef.-.ncft r•

qulrod. CoHIll 1-247·494&amp;.

LAYNE'I FURNITURE .

comploto · · -

-.·

=sr"''

Misc. Marchendiaa

Valley Fumiture
New and used fumltuN end
IPpllcanc••· Cell 114·441 1172. Hour• 8·1.

:::=~·::-::---:-----

••ncta

Soooncl Ave. e14-.WI·1171 .

66

l'ets for Sale

Groom and Supply lhop.,Pet
Groomlnp. All braed1 ... AII
atylel. lama .Pet Food 0.1lar.

Commercial buHdlng for IHH.
Antiquee, buy ,or ...11. Afwrine Julio Wobb Ph. 114-441-0231 .
Downtown Pt. PIIIMnt. Store1, ' Antiqun, 1124 Eatt Main l l.,
officii. A·1 Real Eltlte. G:arol
Pomeroy. Houra: Mon .. Tues.. DntgOnwynd Canery Kennel.
Yeeger, Broker. Call 304-675·
and Wed. 10:00a.m.-1 :00p.m ., CFA Hfrnllly.n, Peralan and
1104.
Sun. 1 :00 p.m. -1:00 p.m. By Siamaee klttenl. AKC Chow
chance or appointmw~t. Ruu puppl•. C1ll .114-441-3144
COUNTRY MOBILE Home P.-k,
Moore. 1114-992·2121.
. lfiOt"7PM.
Rou11 33, North of Pomaroy.
Old butr&amp;t, exc cond . Two old :W;::h-:it:-o-:0:-o-r_m_o_n--::;Sc-h-o-p-ho_r_d
Aen•l trailera. Cell 814-892-

7479.
Space for small tr1ilera. All
'hook-ups. Cable. Alto efflcl8ncy
rooma. air and cable. Ma1oft,

W.Va: Cl11304·773·685t .

Spacioue mobile home totl for
rent. Family Pride MabHe Home
Parlr.., Gallipolis Ferry. 304-875-

3073.

ml:row dreoooro. Singer treodlo

pupploo·fulll:loodwl. C.lll14-

•wing me chine. Plcklftl UMd

441-1 149.

Fumlturo. 304-175-14110.
54 Misc. Merchandise
Call1h1n'1 UHdlir1Shop. Over
1.000tlrel,liMI12,13, 14,11,
18. tl.&amp;. e mlloa out Rt. 218.

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

l..er;e 12" Oac•. One

~m~II.­

441-1107.

'

OI!=ar. One plrenha. CaM 114-

57

.

Muaical
Instruments

Coll814-261&gt;e211.

47Wantad to Rent
3 BR .• Mobile Home or houte in
country. Clll814-367-0406.

Keyltone Clluic Mag•- Dodo•
or Ford. EurcjM mechkM. Ban-

WurtHtzer organ. ThrM key·
boerd &amp;Niital mulic a,...m,
gener1~or. tools, knlwa, cratta. · Lnh ..,.U.en. C1ll 114·441·

torpo. Coli 114-387-11141.

Knight Templer unHorm sin 44,
ll•o Fe1. Oood condition. CaM

51 Household GoDds

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 82

Olive St .• Gallipolis .
NEW· e pc. wood group- *388.
Uving room tultft- $198-$599.
Bunk bedl with bedding- 1199.
Full aiu m ...,... • foundation

atartlng· •a e.· Recliners
otortlng- 199.- .
USED- a.cts, 'd reiMI'I, bedroom

Worlcboota 118 • up., (Steel •

aoft·tool. Co11114·441·3169.

Sot. 114-441· 1119, 127 lid.
..... GoNipollo, DH .

_388_2_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Plano. Very good . -. 1100.
Colll14·441·8743.

'
Individual In·

Merct1anrl1sr.

County Applllnc.. Inc. Good
UHd t~pP,:IilnCH lnd TV •tt.
Open 8AM to IPM. Mon thru

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

814-441· 1340.

Guitar laltonell
IINOIIon. Brunlclrdl'o Muoio,
e14·4411·0117 or ooll JirH
Wornoiwy lnOINctor. 114·••1·
1077.
. .,...

Model12· 12ga., Browning 11
g1 .. 137 Wlnchlltlf. Univerul ·
12 ga .• 31 Remlng1on 12 11.

I '. 'II

Colle14-441-3341.

sII IIIII I'\

,\ 11'•1',111 .k

Rtgulltion lire pooltablt. Good
oood . . t1 60. Coli 114-441·

2300.

Mixed hard wood lllba. •12 per
bundle. Containing eppro'~t, ·1 "h

ton. FOB. Dhlo Polloi Co.
Pomoroy. Ohio. 61 1·912·1411 .
Klng_.;.e weter Mel mntrtaa.
llnor Oild _ ..,unit. 171. eon
814-881-4312.

Fliowood for lolo. llordwOOd
alol:a, ••o ,.. bundlo. • wood, o111avorogo plcluplood . .

61 Farm Equipment .

32 Mobile Home•
for Sele

CROll. SONI
U.S. 31 Woot. Jookoon. Ohio.
114·2-·1411 .
M - . , _ _ , N- -nd.
Bulh Hog • - • - .. O..r
40 uowtl t r o - o t o - ftvm
of now • oqulpmont .. ........ .... Ill
u . O!tlo.

•_..,....lito

lumbef 1 InCh, 2x4, 2x8, 2a8 at

1 - 14x70 ·
II¥D ......._... cwtom IMCie.
• - · ••700. Coli 114·111·
44Zt.
.

Aa;lo:wl Quo- Horoe. l:loy
11 • Golding. 11.3 hondo.
Oulot. Tlio Own lion of Chc:co·
l1t1 Convqy (World HeUer

1111 Dodge R1m D · 100 . ~ ..~

IDI WKRP ln ClnUtnall
eill Too CioN for Comlart

..::::::.:..:::..:.:::.::.~--:-~-'-""'
.1171 C-.olet 8 1 - ~ ~

e ~ 12 week old plga for ult.

1878 D - tiuck. t410.00,·' ·
304·171-2139.

64

Hay

l!o

Grein

MIIIOd hoy or olfolfo · oquore
1M1111. Mlxed hay • llro• round
baloa. Coli II 4·281·3334.

--------lcMIIIOd hoy or oHofo In IQUOre
bol•. MI.... hOV In lorgo "'"""

boloo. Coli el 4·211 · 3334,

J•mln ,. .. OhkJ.

Llfile round

Hey for .. ._
oq..,.

b-.

11e4.

can

Vans

73

end

114-ee7·

Ot

30 llrge rOuftc:t balea
hlxed
hoy. uo.oo ,.. ...... . Coli

8t

Mlood hoy tor oolo. Coli 114·
742-2711.
Mlud hoy,
171-1211.

.,,oo

....._

(I) I!CAA 1'11111 Four

lion. CIQ-thel ctoMt. Ice boJc.
Wloh booln,.good tim. t41100. ;

1887 Hondo CRIOOR. coli for
...... 304-171-1780.

•

bolo. 304·
Boataend
Motors for Sale

TI ,I 11\ pI. II j I IIIII

a...

78.

1883 Chwy. Cltotlon. Am rodlo,
- · trono., Pl. Pl. 11.000
mlloo. 11700. Conbo-otlho
Golllpolla Dolly Trlbuno or ""'

more information cell814-'441-

l!o

..

Auto Pirta
Acceasoriei

I

vilv ·s - -

polnt. Elcol.

... Noond. 14,000 mi.

t3QOO. Col 114-441-2315 oftwrl PM.
1171 fOld Pinto.-· oom.
e200. Clfl 114-441-7111-Dey.
304-171-51711-E-.
1875 ford o ..nod •. GOod wort.
.... 1100. Cllll14·4411·0085
PM.

-I

1•21u1.. Lwlorbo .Umlt:od. 4

dr.. AC. AM·FM, tiH whool,
oruloo. 3011, V-1 onglno. 110.700
mH. E::col. -.1. Colll14·441·

-4311 oflor e PM.

lhS C h - rod with rod
i n -. I opd.. fKtory olr,
AM' FM. - r aohot. 47.000
mMoo. o3000. Coli 114·388·
.
8111.
1114 Ford Eooon. o2188.

John•a AutoS.._
Rt. 7 below Holiday Inn.
KaniiUII

Opontll-

'.
~

1:30 a

~!'I

1,.

--·

II,[ ~

(I)

Free Mtlma••· Call col.ct
1-114-237·0488, doy or night. - •
R o g a r 1 I 'a 1 • m e n t

..
'

RON'S · Tatevlalon 8arvice .'~~;~ .
Hou, calla ~ RCA, OUIIar,• ""·""' ,
GE. -'ollng In· Zonlllt. CoH ··
304-111-2398 or 1114·441·
2414.

•

I 5EtC:E THAT

AL.L.I~'!OR
·AqA.IN,

CL.EVeR BeAST. ..TUI&lt;NE:D
IT5E-L.F INDA UTTI.EOLO VDY

WITl-lA·sHOPPfNG Q!RT.

CREEPIN:T UP
BEHIND ME.-

-

c...

1971 Flro Bird Formulo. Air,
wlnd..Wo. 403·4 .......
blo.. - ·· Good oontlllon.
C.lll14-9ll2-27;72.
1813 FOld !X,, \lory good
oondltlon. No ru•. new drel.
lbl.

v..,

milo ... 12100. firm.
C.N 114·882·-.'

CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEAnNO
Cor. Fourth lnd Pine
Olllfpolia, Ohio

•
r

Phone 114-44e-3MI or 114·

•

441·4477
84

8t

·1 172 FOld-· Good-·
1271. et4·HZ·I023.
1H71111S Comoro. - blo.. · 13,000 ·tnlol.
outo, 411 reor ..... -good.
muol how •4.100.00, 304- '
773-1847.
•

.

R&amp;lklentill or commertlal wir·.New aervlce or rwpair1.
Lleerlood oloelnclorl. Eorlmotw
-S78·· 1781.
R-our Eloctricot. 304·

•

'

•

·''

eCZJ faxl

General Heiding" '""

.

241-~···

104-17::-70.

••

1

~

.

GMIII

!I~ Dlownlng

"

a ltalllln

• Take five

10 Irish

u

Islands
· 3 Hlstorlc
·- . pn1e
lendmark

11 Fixed,
as a lime
11 Barbados
native

18 Tattle
18 Printempe

4 Kuroeawa

I

ftlm

Ex~;esslve

fried,• e.g.

20 Liver

Z9 Sipa ·

~~·.!"~

7 ·"- you
8 Football
Jlll88

81 Facade
partner 12 Tee off
24 Shredder 81 "Somewhere

I

. - the ...•
87 Rldse

fodder

21 Noah'e

.,.
'•

.. '..
'

.....
.....

· 38
·~
40Unfoqot-

Proportion

...

ten

"' ...

.. ...

...
...

4ZChange
dlrectlon
41 "1984" e.g.

' ..
•

1111

......

,,

ca1P'l'OQUOTB
t .

1·11

'

EV

·8 K R T R

J y 8

. ~

B K Y B

.,

L W X S.

y

L WR

NLXP

E V

J I 8 K

NLW.81DCB.-IBXIBYD
LV.IIT
l'ut I 3.. O:alr= Ill I WAS A lftiDINT.

WAII'D WJI) WAI'diD 'I'Jillih.JDIN'I'..W--THI WWDI 1'&lt;8 C. CQJI!QI 1ft. - Jjt, 110
.'

1

I
1

.

..

.....

'

8 TRY 8

8 L

BVOY .

•••

..

11 10 of a sen lllndigenous
peak
89 Vex
12 "I 14 Precept
18 Layer
41 Smoked
Camera• 17
17 Relevant
salmon ·

Y W F

Uphol1tery

'I

,.

follower

13 Pinta

e.g.
kidding?"

19 "Sie1-

'

Y~'eAMwer

paste _

8 Ziti, .

follower

.

• ..•

"..

writer

~·

IIIIIOVII: Clltllaa Wlllamt

I

1i .••,:'

DOWN

One letter stands for ll'lotber. In this umple A is used
for the three L's, X firr the two O's, etc. Sin8Je letten, ..... '
-.puetlqlhes, the length and fannatian ol the words ere ell
.. ...
hints. Each day the code leUen uedlfferent.
.

(Nil) (1:S1)

. ,,""""

..

··' '
.....

laLONGFELLOW

~
304-l~ ,umutan~ dllluerM. ·· ~,

=~

1..... .---------__J

- ~

u•-

1:00

...
...
£-==--·-

Opening lead: • K

,· AXYDLBAAXR

:=.'&amp;41ln.
......
CJIIrLIII ...... l1&lt;30l

87

....

'

DAD..YCRYPI'OQlJm'ES-IIire'sl!ntowortlt:

'11:30 (Jl.lacll .....,
• (J) • Late Nlgl1l .....
DIIVIII
® AI Amellc1n Puling
..,._ ffOITI Cl1811oM, NC

'

"The goocl , _ 18, It workel T1le bll;l ,....
Is, I'm taking out a $1,000,000 life~
·
policy Dn you."

.

2:000 ·-·~
• --·
7
2111. - · ...... 104-1 1- •.

,.,

PID
PID
PID

14"Demon"
drink

Unla10wn (1 :56)

.... - -,, ......... ..
• .-.110,

...

Pus

unit

12:20 (J) MOVIE: Towanl ...

Wllt.treen•a W.-er Hallllnt ... ~ v
NeaOnlble , .... a.~o.. __........, .,.,.

371-2282 onytlino.

Pus
Pus
Pus
Pus

eill .

"

hut, • tiOO d-H. Coli
I•14-371-2730-7:00PMor

WHI

1st George ·1 Snetdl

(IJNe=

. • e•

Plul· RUpe, Jr. W•r 1erv1ee ,. '.- . clolomo. - · CIH 114; ' '·
441·3171 .
'
i·

6 Cartoon-

~=~

••

fllotl. for. ;-;
: :

Vulnerable: Neither .
Dealer: South

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS · U Place for
1 AntJ:y
19 Acro88
look
" S1rlln

IIDIIgiiOfl

~.:

R ' R W- IIMoo. =-.,
-· :::W~.CAN ·' I'

.AKQJ

83 Period

12:00 ()) lluml and Allin
(I) lport8CenMr (L)

.,
JW1tar8onrio:o. S ............. .. ,

J
-o. .o-mo. wwl'-. Ph. 114-

u

acore
31 Electrical

Nlghl Glambonl and O'Brien
are drawn ln10 the Chlneee
· Mafia.
IDI Magnum, P.l. Murder 101

OHiord Weter Son:lco: 'PODia.. 'Clollrno. Wallo. 1101'-Y Any· • -· Coll'- e14-441·7404-Noaundey calli.
.
. . . . ,~

12•80. 2 BR ., unfumiehed, w / d

I

.Kil3
.AJ&amp;U

IOGolf

(IJ llflcn Tonight
.
• 1121 'NIOhl liNt' cas Late

:

--- - -··"
'

. .I

SOUTH

dell'19Sawbuck

(!)Sign Off
11J1 MontlyH111
e ill Love Con111Ct10n
11:30a(J) 115) Tonl;ht8how
(I) Cl1llrs
e (J) Nlghtlt111 Q
11J Magnum. P.l. ·
liD Sill ~ The Sikhs of
Yuba City earlbute their
SUCCISI 10 hOmeland
traditiOns. (0:30)

'•
Jnt.

8J 108854

17 Waistcoat
18 Commedlll.

11:00 CJJ Remington 818111
• (2J (I) • (J) IIJ • G2l
ID)HeWI
..

&lt; •

E leetrical
Rafrigantion

•wu

'

.72

jewelry

a ill Hogan'• Heroe•

·---··

,
,,

By James Jaeoby

EAST

section ·

iNewa

.'

· 5111.

.H

14Fake

.,

Plumbing
Heating ·

Guidelines
for a squeeze

..•

13Church

. Charles Francis lulams' son
Henry becomes a historian.

llo

..

·~.

&lt; '

W81 tPG) (1 :40)

lawn
landaceping, ttump
removal, 304-571·1842 or

1917 Oklo. Cutlooo Supremo.
Coli 304· 773·1811 or 773·

e (J) MOYIE: 'Allan'

10:30 liD Aellml Chronlcl..

Stoflot Treo ond Lown Sonrio:o.
171·2103.

1111 A Dlllatllll Walkl

a

Walllptoofing:_

891·3802

..,

amond trick..However, West switches ,,spade to dummy's ace and a spade ·'·
to a trump. The right procedure is for !lack to bis king, the lowly nine be-~~
declarer to take all bis trumps and .comes a winner.
then all his club tricks. At the end, be
Tbe guldeilnes to remember In de- will hive K-9·3 of spades, and dummy veloplnga squeeze are (I) loee quickly ·
will hive A·8 of spades and the queen any tricks tbat .must be lost, (2) look ·
of diamonds. West must reduce to for sltuatl0111 that may be problems"
three cards and since be must keep the tor the defeuse - ID this cue the dia~· ·
diamoad ace u a IIUird against dum- 1110111\ queen and length ID spades, (S) .
my's q,_, be will come down to ooly lead oat sure winDers, wblle preserv· ·
two spades. When declarer plays a · inl communicatlona.
·

-m

FRI~...1Hikll&lt; ~
~

• •· Local ref....UI fum .. had.

Moat waHa aompletad MINI d.,..
'-'P Ml• and tervice. 304-

•

I·ZI-11

round. South then asks for aces and
bids the slam. After the king of dla· ·
monds lead, declarer would have easy
going if West tried to casb a second di·

1:00 ()) 7110 Club
(2J 0 Chllrs t\morous
Annie Tort&amp;lll and Laurie fill
in for Carla. ·
.
(!) liD Mystery( Miss Marple
·checks Into a.rtram's Hotel
where things
too
oerlec:t- ~
'
Ill) e 1121 Simon Mil Simon
T.o help hla client, Rick must
team up with the comoetition .
0 LarrY ICing Uvel
1:30 (2J 115) Night CoUrt
10:00 a (J) 115) L.A, Law
Roxanne's. ready to rejec1
legal immunity for her
accused boYfriend.
(I) Coll~Va llultltt!all
(!) lnekll T.lllvtiiOn .
• Qwlstiol11 n posed ·
· · concerning SovieiS In
AmeriCan lllavtalon.
!II • @Knols Landing
AIJby scPrns Charles Sj:otfs
offer 1o ~~~~ his will and
' marry her. Q
liD Hews
0 Evening Newl
10:20 (JJ MOVIE: '1111 Moonahl111

OOfJ'r USlW 10 ~

(

Fotty Treo Trimming, 01Ump
- ·· Clll304·1175-1331 .
llotory .. ooblo tool drtiNng.

&lt;

e

(

SWEEPER and -lng mochlno
twpolr, portL ond ouppiiM. Pl..
.. and delivery, Devil YICUUm
Cleaner, one h1lf mile up
Gooom,.c.- Rd. Coli 114·
441·
.
.

10 GET ANSWER

18 Ccilllge S.ekltblll .

..
,.'
•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unoondltlonlll liflllime gueran-

J I I I

UNSCRAMBlE AIOV£ LEITERS

(PO) I;!

~~--~------------~
Home
lmpro,v •manta

..

... "

ABC 'l'hufllday Nlglll Movie

.

'

81

(2J

..

PRINI NI,JMBEREO lHIERS IN
JHES£ SQUARES

In the bidding, North responds one
spade and theiJ makes a non-(orclng
. lnvltatiooal jump In hearts on the next

Denise and Jateen loae
Clasa project egg Maggie left
In their care.

r

,

111ft roal, am-fm 0

ED, M'l' DEAA!

-old• m.: ·!::•

riSht hond
a
11-11 Chevv lhortbad .. •110.Collll4·317·014•. ·

c-...

1174

CLOSELY GuARP·

f

""'

a._ •

iiU
Low mlloo.
Good oond. 12300. Coli 1142118-1121.

19ie Clvallor AS, Mko - ·
21,000 - .. outo .. air. Pl. N.
AM·FM·Cioo. tMt. can 114·
311-8240.

AL.L RlliHT ••• BUT
SeE 1HM' $1-i&amp;.'S

Uud.rwbulltronomliolono.AII , ,::
intln'lllly inlp 1
IUIII'CoU 114-441·08•. W .,.•
'"'' lunk t ........lioni.
~!'"'

2342.

Four RoHy Whool..; · ()Mdyoor
tlrot. good bUd. SR 80·13.
11 oo or boot offor. can '1 14·
371·2732.

.. .'

you develop from step No. 3 belo!N.

'from Day 19, which clelcribes a
squeeze play In a sii·beart contract.

(J) '1111 Channtnga

Don discovers Charmlngs·
true iden11tie&amp;; Ulllan must
cast a spell. C
(J) liD SliCk Champtone Q
(Ill eG Tour of Duty The
platoon happens upon a
U.S.O. troop whose chopper
was shOt down. Q
01 PrlmeNews
QJ Hoaen'• Hlf'CIII .
e ill MOVIE: Mlaelng (PO)
(2:02)
1:05 (JJ MOVIE: Five Card. Siud
tPGI(1 :43)

•

------"---,....,.-- . '
'

if, College S.ekllbaH

..

14 ft
fiberg.... bolt. r
Y·-.oldlhoJ-onglno,
oerw. trvMfng motor, •400.00._,.!
304-8811-3031.
.

Complete thtt chuckle quoted
b-y filling .in the missing ·words

rre-

7:35 (JJ Sanford and Son
1:00 ()) Hill Town
• (2J l!J) '1111 Coaby Show

AS Cf?EA'iiVE!

71 Auto'• For Sele
1 9SI Oodjjo Omnl, 4 clr..
11;000 mll01. outo .. 1912
Dodgo Arleo. 4 dr., 83,000
mlloo. - .. oir. 11811 Oodflo
Ch..., 2.2, •uto .. air. 40.000
....... Cllll14-379-2721.

a ill WKAP In Cincinnati

(I) •

.. ·'
...

give him a pari which .~?"

The most~ book by Alan Truscott, New York Times bridge editor, Is
"Basic Bridge In Three Weeki" (Put·
nam Publishing Group). Tbe brterest·
lng concept of this work Is that the
learnlnglocea takes place over 21
days, wi the beginning player
sumably aillorbing the materia in
easy stages. Today's deal Is taken

~~m~y=~IQ

"C~fATitJti A [&gt;V8l-IC
/ NUl SANCE:" ? .. .
GEE, X NtV~
T(ioVGHT Of Mysft..F

Motorcycle•

75

Hlghllghl8: 1112 NOr1h
Carolina. Geo~own,
Houston. Louilivllle
G(J) Judge
Gil Wl1ell of Fortune Q
OCoanflfll

.:

114-BB2-n17.

'.' "

James Jacoby

r:30e(J) (I) Hallywlltld

-

the Presklen1 UMd
-raJ
Plflltosign
1 doCulllllll.
Hepondnd.
"Whycouldn'tthly
Witched •

BRIDGE

7:01 (JJ Andy Grilflth

.
'
··,•
1971 Dodgl Von. Cl_, condl-. , 1

.•Hoy, ool 304-171·8081.

liD MacNIU/ LlhNf

lie~

. ..

;:

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS.
· Set/be - Yeeal - Witch - E)'WIII - THEY WERE
.
Tacj Ia lhe111 ol mlldng gu•ta 1881 at home when that's
· whare you wish THEY WERE.
.
·

• ill M'A'S'H

1177 . _ 4..t. Now duol
oohoult. 302. V-8. Runo.looka
aooc~ . neoo. Coli oflwr 1 1
I'M·I14·379·2112.
' .

.74

6

• 1121 115) Whlll Of FOftu111

114·848·2112.
Hoy for - · U:rgo round b-.
114-112-7302.

8

IIJ ......
IIJl Montlyll111

4 W.O.

15.

.'

A newly r\atul'llized u,s. c11iDn

l._l._l._.l_J'--L...J

NlwiHOW·I1:00)

11112 Dodgo 210 R-. c.a.om
oonw:oton.· Tralor roody. Coli
114-oWa-4313 doyo, 4411·0138
. . . . . . . . . . . .k

e1121cuNetn

(!)

. ;.

6

• (J) Peopll'i Coufl

-'

-·

. WR A N 0 R.. IO
IIII I1

(I) llporleCemt (L)
(I) E_..._.. Tonight

ton Ol!:kup. 11300. 1977 Ford

i

,

8:35 (JJ Cal'llllumett
7:00()) Rlllllnglon StHII
e (J) PM Megealne

~. •
"""'

Ken...o•

Opon til dorll

13
I~

liD (lodv EllctiiC
IIJ llllldl Pollllca ...

.4781.
·
"~t
John'o Autos#
Rt. 7 bolow Holiday l~n· I

F2110 four wllool - · 11300.
Collll4-141·2101 . ·
"'·

·

a

I

.
~L=-~=
I ' I- =:·=-=:~·
..

e (J) ABC Netn_Q

(!) Nlglllly lulinlll RtlpOII

ChomplonJ , Coli 114·211·
1122.
Coli 114-841-2231.

(I)

..,.,

y

.....:.rE-:-=D;..;G:...·~U-:-=1~~ !

ttucll. M-o In 40'o. I eyt., 4 ·:
~• . nooo. Coli 114-317· ''i

815

SowmHI Co. Rd. 11. Poochforto
Rd. Coli 114-882 -&amp;822 at
12:30 pm.

- · ? e-1210.
T - tor -

· l,lvastock

good 100

up• wli1er. Aenterpeyeeleotrlc,

HouM for .... In ' Pomeroy.
114-137· 1321.

83

I: 12

e:~~·::~:N::::~·

'""'

1880 Chewy, ohon- _

now

8 room duplex, ba•m..-.t, u•r·
tgl, privete. nice loca~on, 3M·
875-3753.

"'"""G"'

Oot ...... ..... - . . . boobl
tiOO,OO POf - · Wrlio: ACE~
117.. 111 I. l.lnc-y. N.
A - . 1110842.
•

B

c

NORCW

(!)Dr. Who
liD Moving lllaht AlOng"
IIJl SMwltz fodlly
IHF-ofUfe
e&lt;li lleppy Dare
8:05 (JJ Allee

.,

ti I~ i I I

I

iii)Newl
(I) lp 'el oak

1178 Ford F-100. I oyl., 3 opd.,
ohorl bod. with · llodlol -·
tlrwi.I7;Dq9..,Pnloi ....... Vory .•
o _nAoldltg
Nolg-:liaad"'.
.~ _ . _ _
IIIII. :;
et4·441·9407.
·•&lt;•

~ with~~~~~~~;;~~~~~;~~~~~;;~
&amp;4

Antique Bran bed. Full ll1e.
Corbin a Snvdtr Furniturw, 911

THURS., JAN. 21 •

..

1171FOid4-drlw.f·1SO.
EK, - d....... Co1l
114-371·2741.

ao•- Jo-...ohlo.

Office $pec:e for rent. Exdel.
downtown Gallipolis locltion.
lnquirl• c•ll 81 • -441-•222.

.'~' "'

EVENING
8:00 ()) Crazy 1.1111 a Fox
• (J) (I) • (J) Gil • 1121

.'

·:v.e.

3 MHM OUt

Antiques

•

•

1172 C-. 111\*uP• PI, PI,
olum. alot wtoooll. 110'1'1 - ·
.CoN 114·317·0110.

tUtl'HJ ~.DDif&gt;~,
1'111'1'
I'N'f\K•
rr=====::::~~::::~ .

90
D•v• Hma
u
Bull\flle.Ad.
Openhmtolpm
Mon. lhru Sot. Ph . .,._......
0322.

53

'

Trucks for Sale

onglna. COli 114·&lt;141·
0384.

C-.
polto.--wt--

46 Space for Rent

Television
:Viewing
'
. .

••

Ntw point. niw ....... - .

to IIH. I I - 1221 ta
1371. ........ IZI to 1121.
0 1 - 1111tooc1 upiO 1481.
Wood tablo w-e ....... UBI to
1715. Dwale ., 00 ... to t371.
Hutoll• l400 ond ..,. -

IPPf'O...-.d oredlt.

•

'•

15 •

The Daily

1M2 Ch ............ lhort Ired.

Sof11 and c:Ni111 prioed from
•n1 to ••t&amp;. Toi&gt;leo eso onc1

bodo

lfiOfl PM.

72

Trw •aump remowi•.Fioawood
tpo- Dump trUCI: load. Hoop
lhop 1nd .,.3
mavl•.
voucheu 1ccepted . Don'•
• mo.114-~1
Wolk toLond-poo. Call 11 4-441·
_2_a_u:_. .:.
E.:
.o.:..H.:.·----~
1 8 41
~
. Mollohon F"mltu,.
·.
Luxury T- Aponmonu. El•
Uppor
River
Rd.,
GIIUpollo.
Oh.
1971
T·Bird. good -~lon. 14
gOAl, 2 Br. 2 floor, fully
0 ,.1, ond
COrpotod. CA ond hoet.-Prt.oto DlniiiiH-1221 • up. LMng fl. Mvwn: l:oot ontronc:o, ondoold potiQ, pool• room ... _itea-1300 . • up,, ....., motor. ewe La&amp;onte.
Pllyground. Start- t211 per
Rldi_.ll 5I " up, Co~ Wrhoi 10 •· 110
ltlrdng at •4 • yd. Flnlno
-•
• Pomlfoy,
month. UtiH&lt;I• not lnoludod. oval'-blw
to quPHiocl buyero. C.
Ohio. 4l7t8.
Colll14-317-7860.
111-441·74&lt;14.
u Houl ........ and ........ lor
Up...!rt 3 •room • bath, fur..... 304-1711-7421 .
UIOd
rofrlg
..
oofa.cholt.
Corbin
nlohod. Cloon. Utlltloropold. Rof.
• Snyder 'umltt::o. IHSoooncl F . _ doll..,wl, otocbd.
• d-'troquiNd. Adultoonly. ..
.... 114-441-1171 .
No poto. Coii114-.WI·1618.
UI.OO. J
•
8
FURNITURE
.2 IR . ponloly fumlohod. In
.. dloo- 304-· .
IFonnolly Poroon'o Fumlturol
town. U71. All utHitieo poid:
34411.
141
I
Eootom
Aw.
Colll14·441·1723 oftor 7 PM . .
10 ~r cent off on eomplete SURPLUS DENIM, C.rllort.
ltock. Monc~tv. Jan. 11th thrv R-1 Clothing. N- hMVY
FumlohOd 2 BR . aponmont.
· iot., Jon. 23rd.
Aduh1 onty. No peu'. Inquire ••
oo ...olll nz.cro. "-Y
Llvii1Q room oulloo from 1171 •
Firat a Olive St., Ilk for ROM
wort. alothlng. baolod-rol
Stllner.
up. Bedroom IUitu ••11.85 •
.._blwprlcM. BornSomo---------up. Complete mlcrowaw
Nillo'o, Old lit. 2 1 · t39.1&amp; • up.
·
Groolouo living. 1 ond 2 bod·
l n d - - Rood, boo R•
Come In •nd inHt the new . Vla•uuood, Fri. ••· lun; nooaroom apertment• at Villlgo
Ownara:
Manor 1nd R ivenkle Apirt8:00 ..... 304-273-1111.
ment1 In Middleport. From
Ull. Including utllltlot." CIR
Comblnetlon wood • coalltove.
- · Col 304-175·
114-882-7787. EOH.
Some trw COli with ttove. C.U Ook
2757 4 :30 p.m. Aok for
el4-388-11913.
Woodmon.
2 bedroom aparcm8nt on Uncoln
Gold lofo· 91 in. long, tiOO. 2
Hll. Pomoroy. Coli 111-992Fro- .leo 100 - ·
1631 or 114-992-3489.
''"" club chlh. •10 eiiCh. ........
dloll Gold • grHn llripod choir. 150. rrt01iltor-ii'tlblo,
•4 .00. Call betw:aen
All
good
cond.
eon
114-.WI5 rooma, unfumished. C.ll8141:00.1:00- 304-171·4184.
1118.
882· &amp;434 or 304-882·2518.
lrldgo otoo1 • motchod I boomoKenmore waatw-whke, e11. 11, 11. • 20 ft. lottg. lrldoo
Cottage efficiency, total elect·
Kenmore 'IA(IIher·copperton•. d"'*lfttl· BdO ft. 304-17tric, refrigerator. stove, nice.
t715. O.E. Wllher·AviGido 2021.
HUD IIIP'ovod· 2215 Mt. Vor·
.
191. 4 olde-by·oldo rwfrlg. .to~
non Ave .. P'l. Pleaunt. 614from 11711. F:lglld- tWfrlgore- f1Dn11le recliner. lro'lhiN IOta.
992-11851.
tor, 1~5 . . 2 door rlfriglfalor· ntm Nno -'fttl .,.cltlno, coli
IVICJdo, *91. 30 in. llec.
APARTMENTS, ri:obllo .homoo,
Ifill&lt; 1:00, 304·1711·1281:
hou111. Pt. PluuntandG1IHpo- · rong•h-.t gold. W91. 38 ln.
eleo. r8ng•whl1e. •71. Gu
lia. 814-448· 8221 .
rangi-IVICIIdo. 1715. Sk~gp:
Appllancn ' '
2 bedroom fumincl 1pt, ref and
579 U-r Rlvor Rd., 114·441·
dtpotlt, New Haven. W. Va .•
7388 .
304-882-3287 or 304-773 Buiktlng Meterilll
5024!·
Sloolt, brlctt. p l -.....
3 pieCe bedroom autte for ule.
- ·. llntolo, ....,, Cloudo Winlnch.td• bo• epringa 1nd
Bo:tch Strati. Middlopon. Dhio.
twro. Rio Orondo, 0 . Col 114m11tr1u. Price negoti1bll. C.ll
2 bedroom fumithed •pt, utili·
241·1121 .
814-9112-1801 .
.
tl" paid, reterencnand depolit.
304-882-2&amp;88.
Bodo,
lompo, tobin, Conc:rww blocko olllluo yord or
coucha. chal111. dlnnetta. ml.c. --ry. Mooon oond. Golllpollo
H1H mile out Jericho Road, lloolt Co.. 123~ Plno St ..
45 Furnished R ooma
8 :00 ·8:00 Sundaye 1 2 :00· OoiHpollo, Ohio Col 114-.we.
27S3.
8:00, 304-171-1450.
Rooma for .-.nt. · day. ·week .
month. Galli• Hotel. Cell 814Whirlpool. no frolt Nfllalmor, RNdy IIIII DOIIIIIIIIII and 11
441-9180. Aentlllowat$120
t125.00. 304-175-8848.
month.
.-.

eultee. 1189· 1299. Detks
wring..- Wlllher. 1 complete lin~
of uold fumiNre.
.
NEW· W~~tern bootl- $30.

3 ludeouen ~- llove
ond -.... aunolno. 0210
moMtl. 1100 ,_.... 1nd utiU·
-.814-H2•,.71.

Mid AWelldh ffW work hnme-

2 BR . oP,. Stove • rofrig.
fumlohod. No., Go Mon. Coli
11
..""·7021f.
·
·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BuooET PRicEs AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 531 Jocbon

2 bedroom. W·D hook-up.
Aduha, Mnior citizen• pNf.,..ld.
11 II l'ftDIItll plut d-1~. 247
N. 3rd. 814-992-1197 or 1~ 1 8 -B31 · 39152 . --~v•llable
Immediately.

M- tc.. :wnt S mlloo
ltvm Golllltollo on Rl. 211. Col
114·211·1001.

--bo--lod

U'- R - 114. ltono
Croat M-. 114-4411·7381.

UHonduptoUII.IobyIIIO. Ma..,._orbox2 ._R . epta. e cloteta, kitchen· ful or twin "'· flnll 17., oftcl
oppl. lumlohod. Wooh.O-Oryor · Ill. a - t221, King
hooll·up. wW , carpet. nowly 1310. 4dro_l_tii.G..,
polntod, dock. Rog--,. Inc. ' ::oblnoto I gun. Goo o r Apto. Col 304-"1· 7738 9r ..... t37e ........... 131 • en. 1o:1 trwmoo no.
175·5104.
.
130 ' King
110.oultao,
Oood
of ln:mo
l:odroom
Fum.., 1pt. next to tlb,.,.,. ooloctlon
motal ooblnoto. holdboordl 130
One pro*lionlt edutt only.
ond up to ·-~~:.......
Porldng. eon 114-441-0338 . •

month. Calll14-892·1878.

_.,.........ta8oxC-11C8,.of
.. Rogllter. 200
Molft et., 'Dint - o t, W. Vo.
2llecl.

....,, 0111 for 11111 lntnwl

'""!''

dryoro.

. hookup with IKptndO. H•lf tnlla
2 beckoorn. 2 batht. 2 c• poOl Holoor Mod\ool Contor, Coli
garage, IIYII lot on Rt. 33. e14·.WI·431t or 304-111·
97110. '
~wlmming pool, lltlltte, CIOM
to Molgo High. Col 114-982·
Nice 2 Bedroom nltar. Lar11
3254.
yard. Ko-. Con' 11 4·441~--~----·lo15 rooms and b..h. ..-.tl. 7473.
. . . _ bulding. oldlng ond 2 BA .. lumlohwl. wid hook-up,
roof, MW carpet. wallinau .. tecl.
_.... dlnl.. room. 1111
. Mason W.Va. Call 614·892·
'""""'· o - poyo ...... ...,...
2813.

R.N.; "'ytlcl... otflct, pi--

Tho W.....poo Outlot.

OOOD USED
w-.
.. ••hluoootoro.
r~ngee. •••••• Applianael;

'

Pomeroy--MiddlePort. OhiO_- . :

: ·;

c:- tiM). 11.000
-114-oWa-IIII·Ooy.
- ·· v.e. 11100.
eon
4411·1~&lt;14

w_ ltl
~~l'. CNl!t
0\'BU•'""'

.
APPUANCEI

1877

71 Auto'a FDr Sele

·~· .. ~

......

d-•·

9 :00 ..,..nlng1, 5 d1y1, Monday-

159,230 ~ar. Now Hiring. Your
Area. 805·187-1000 Ext. R9101 tor current ftld..-.1 list.

Acreage

20 acres in HemkK:k Grove 1r11
Co. Ad. 39.' EJIICellent hundng.

I NOTICE I
rience ~ry . Evening work.
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Light lifting lnvolvod. 11200 o lNG CO. recommend• that you
mo. Profit lhuing • other do butlneu with paople you
lMneftla. for penonlllnteMew . know. end NOT to und money
clll614-448-e1•8. Thurs., Fri.,
~h~h the mall un1il you h.ve
• Mon. oflor 9 :30AM.
mvest~g.-ed the offering.

GET PAID for reading bOokll
t100 .00 per title. Write: ACE ·

8t

.

employment. No ••P•

oppolntmont-814-441-7323.

304-175·4130.

35 Lots

et4-992·2214.

HELP WANTED

Adutt- Delk ANIIUnt. 16 hOUI'I
per week. Some evening• &amp;
we-.nd1. 15.13 a hr. C.ll for

For Rent: Commerc:lel Bulkling
in Downtown Gdipolla wtth
off·ltrnet parking. Alao 5-room
unfurnilhecl apertment in 0.111·
po~•·

Will do Fed. . land State Income
Tue1; typing, booldng, and
No•rv 11rvice. M1rg1ret Parker

21

Locel company now hiring for

Buaineas
Buildings

~nn..-..

Ohio

15131 .

tul~tirne

phono 114-441-4241.

,Loving gn1ndmolher wanta to
babvlk In her horne. Uwt in
Thunnen. c;.11 814·2•5-9495.

b - oolory• bonofl!o. srnume ta: Boa Cll.-.1 26. c/ o
Oollpollo Daly Tribuna, 826
Aw.,

3 bedroom, 2 betM. acre ~nd
magi gaqge, fof Nle or rent,

34

GOVERNMENT HOMES . from

Ne.._.: A.directorofnur.ing b
a SNF- ICF Facility. Loceted in
SoutttMttem Ohio. Prwlou1
.. per._ta deeired. QuaUtiaa:
Should h~We good mlftlll..,_..t,
lood-lp. • nurolng oldllo.

Third

lot, coH

V•lley Dr . Gallipoli1, Ohio

fol U.ining. Bl* · Eduution,

15131 .

ilftlod

Completely tumllhed 12x65; 2

1 8 Wanted to Do
Help Wanted

Apenmant .
for Rant

t1lri;.;i~~;:::~r.;;:::;:;:;;===::-l ,.... '"""

304-112-2141 . Aloo :' outo:

"

14''7
.&lt;.. .......
.. wa .."""'

up to t121. Hlde-o-lrwdo e3e0

l14-4ee-3172 '

2212 .

t..-.. . . ,

151 Houaehold Goode

'

llilnday, January 21, 1988 :-- ·

t.

.

.
.' .'•
' .

..'.
....,
..

'

•

,·,.r,..._

~-

..

�•

1~The

I

.~

Dtiy Sa 11iilll

.

Area deaths

. I ,..Nile Gatten

:

,...ov

More ,than 300 aIIend
I UCE .meet m Rudand
e

bans; three gra_ndchlldren and
one great-grandson.
.
Graveslde Services will be
Saturday at approximately 11: 30
a .m: at the Suncrest Cern~tery,
Point Pleasant; with the Rev:
Maicolm Mciver III officiating.
Friends may • call Saturday
fi'Om.10 to 11 a.m. at Foglesong
Funeral ijome. The famUy has
requested that In lieu of flowers,
memorial donations be made to
Calvary Baptist Church, 1165
Crottlestown -Road, Chambersburg,Pa.,1 7201.

Loucllle Delores Garten·, 58, of
Bradbury, died Wednesday n)lht
at Ho'-" Medical Center after a
sudden!~~
·
Mrs. ·Garien was a daughter of
the late Everett Watkins and of
Freda Fern Watkins Clark, who
resides In Bradbury.
Besides her mother, she is
survived by ber husband, Harry
· A.. Garten, Bradbury; two sons,
Richard E. Garten of. Polrit
·Pleasant, W.Va. and Terry
Garten of Bradbury; one son and
daughter-In-law, Michael L. and · Eber Reiber
.Judy, Garten of Barnesvll)j!; one
daughter and son-in-law: Sandra
Eber Rush Reiber, 70, PomeK. and Don Hanning, Bradbury;
roy , died Thursday morning at
nine grandchildren, Scott and the Veterans Administration
Kimberly Hanning of Bradbury. Hospital in Huntington, W. Va.
Angela and Rowena Garten of
Mr. · Reiber was born May 21,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., Melissa 1917 tn ·Letart, Ohio, thesonolthe
and Chris Garteri of Barnesville, late Castine and Della Davis
Michael Brandon Garten· ilnd Reiber.
Mi,chele Mehl, both of Gallipolis,
He was a veteran of World War
and Brandon Giesey of St. 11 having served In the U. S.
Petersburg, Fla.; and a cousin. Marine Corps. He Had been
Gary Rife, whom Mrs. Garten
awa@ed the Purple Heart Meraised.
dal. He was a truck driver before
In addition to her father, she his retirement.
was pre&lt;'eded in death by an
Surviving are a sister, MarInfant brother.
garet ,Johnson, Middleport; two
Services will· be Saturday, 12 brothers, George of Columbus
noon, at Rawilng-Coats-Blower and Robert of Racine; a grandFuneral Home with AI Hartson son, Timothy Reiber and several
officiating . .Burial will he in
nieces and nephews.
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.
In add_ltion to his parents, )1~
Friends rnay call at the funeral
was preceded in death by a son.
home on Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 John, three sisters and a brother.
to9.
·
Graveside services will bf
announced late by the RawlingsJames Simpson
Coats-Blower Funeral Homed in
James E . (Boo) Simpson. 72,of
Middleport.
Middleport, died Wednesday in
Ravenna, in Portage County.
A son of the late Harry Simpson
and Mayme Simpson Hartenbach, he was born Aug. U, 1915 in
Pomeroy .
He became ill while visiting
relatives in the Kent area over
'the recent holiday season, and
was hospitalized at Robhtson
Memorial Hospital in Ravenna.
where he died.
A funeral director, Mr. Simpson began his career: in the 1940's
with Rawllng-Coats Funeral
Home, which. in 1979, became
Rawling-Coats-Biower Funeral
Home where he was currently
employed. He was a member of
Middleport Masonic Lqdge 363
F&amp;AM, and a member of Heath
United Methodist Church of
Middleport, and the Middleport
First Baptist Church. He served
as chairman of the Board of
Trustees for the Middleport
Cemeiertes.
.
SurvivQrs include one daughter and S&lt;!n-in-iaw. Sandy and
Harry Roush, New Haven,
W.Va.; three grandchildren.
Kristin, Marla and Whitney
Roush, New Haven, W.Va.; lour
sisters Helen lhle and Georgann
Grim~ of Kent, Jane Wolle of
Olmstead Fails and Sar&lt;~ Beach .
of Ravenna; two brothers, Dick •
Hartenbach. of Laguna Niguel.
Calif. and Ro~rt Hartenbach of
Kent; several nieces and
nephews.
Services will · be Sunday, 2
p.m., at Rawiing-Coats-Biower
Funeral Home with Rev. Clemente (S&lt;mny) Zuniga Jr. offi·
elating. Burial will be in Middle·
port's Riverview Cemetery. ·
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on
Saturday .

nu.dly.J!nu!y21,1•
. .
.

1W u f CWO. Ohio
.· '

.
Approximately 325 parents,
students and teachernttended a
Monday evening ~In&amp; of t.he .
UnlfledCitlzensforEif~atlonln
Meigs Local held In Rutland.
Michael Wilfong, ·president of
theMe)lsLocaiTeachersAslocl··
aton, spoketothegroupconcernlng the MLTA's recent otter to
submit unresolved issues in the
·Nov. 6 teachers strlketoblndlng
arbitration.
Piansweremadetoattend th e
boardofeducationmeetlllgTuesday night and present the board
with a petition supporting the
arbitration u a means to end the
strike. A report on a student
demonstratiOn at Me)ls High
School was given.
The group discussed at length,

Daily Number
4-50
Pick 47776

PageS
.

M ddl-eport
oourt.

.Local
· . neW8eee

'

ID•

EMS has six calls Thursday

.

.

'

e

VoUa. No .178
. Copyrighted 1e&amp;8

'
, '.
..' ' ' '
- ,.-~-'""

0

Thank God·, it's over! "

This comment was made Friday morning ·by a member of the
Me)ls Local Teachers Association In regard to a tentative agi-eement
which has been reached In the strike by approximately 15"0 members
&lt;!I the usoclation.
The Strike got underway exactly 11 weeks ago today.
The tentative agreement came about through negotiations held in
Marietta Thursday. The district's hoard of education had asked
David Thorley, federal mediator, to get the two parties back to the
negotiating table alter turning down a proposal by' the teachers
association Monday a~king tile strike to be settled by binding
arbitration. Thorley ·was on hand for Thursday's successful
·
negotiating session.
Negotiations which produced the tentative agreement ·got
underway In Marietta about 10 a.m. Thursd~y and it was 1 a.m.
Friday before details had been ·
down. Members of the
returned to
County about · 2: 15 a.m.

Teachers ot the district met at about4 a.m. in Rutland and ratified the
tentative agreement.
·
The hoard of education will hold an executlve~:ion at 4: 30 this
afternoon to review the terms of the tentative a . ment and then
will vote on ratification following that session.
Terms of the tentative agreement are not being disclosed at this
point and probably will not be disclosed until next week when the
agreement can be put Into ·rormal contract form, Me)ls Local Supt.
Dan E . Morris said this morning.
.
Morris said that he began at 4 a.m. this morning the processes of
closing :;chools of the district lor the day. Six of ihe district's nine
:;chools have been operating since Dec. 21 with the use of substitute
teachers. Ali schools or the district will be reopened Monday morning
dependent, of course, upon the ratification of the agreement-by the
board of education this evening. The regular teachers will be in their
classrooms.
A tour year contract Is provided ·In the tentative agreement with the

....
., .

Carolyn Rader, treaa•rer, and M~~:~:
lay representative of the C
Melbodlsl Chun:h. Tbe money wiD he used lor a
fellowship hall planned as an addillon to the
church building.
•

DDI'LAYS CHECK a check lor
$1,310 received as total proce~ds from a Modern
. Woodmen of America, Camp lO!ioo, matching
fund drive are the l,lev. J!!lirey Burdsall, pastor;

•·c.~

'......, '

" • 't
r .,.

.
'.......•·'

H '-'

...,~

.,

~~t' tl •

'

....

li n
~~

v

•·

'

••

•

-...

....,
j

.,

.,j

.' ., I
~·

••'
•'

PFIIC£ •

,,,
,,

~.

'

Cambridge.

.

'.1
••
•

•••

i'

. ..''•

'" _,...'

I •

Stocks

...
•
~:

.."•

Full FJawx; ijghts, ' ...
Ultra Low tt Menthol ..."'•
..
;z"
...

~ngs

'•

Daily slock prices
(As ol10: 30 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smlih
•• Blunt Ellis .r. Loewl

~ ~J

t" ....

- t. ..

...."'
...:a
.....•

"' "

*On spec:ialy marked. padtagea 1t111e qu~Jilialast.
'

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide.

llr

.'

...

lllllplb.

Fliiii'IMt: ll·av''ll(,'tl .. ttlcGiiii-IJIItll; 12 .....:.
0.8 .. nicltlttl-~h Lft: 6 .. "II(.' 0.6 .. ttltllllttlllf.
Jill ell~ • "FTC W

present contract which expired on Aug. 3~. 1987 belhg extended for
one year. New provisions of the agreement will go Into eHeet for the
three additional years of the contract. The lour year contract will go
through the 1990-91 school year.
- ·
. "We're pleased to have this tentative agreement," Supt. Morris
commented. .
Details of the opening of schools with the regular teac)lers, the
revised calendar and rescheduling of athletic and other events will be
announced soon, Supt. Morris concluded.
Rep. Jolynn Boster and Sen. Jan Michael Long were In Meigs
County Thursday evening lor a question and answer session with the·
Unified Citizens tor Education In Me)ls Local which also met In
Rutland. At approximately 8 p.m., an announcement was made that
progress was being made at the negotiations session In Marletti!Later, teachers were advised to report back toRutlandatmldnlghtto
vote on a tentative agreement. }\ewever, it was several hours later
before copies of the tentative agreement were delivered so the vote
could be taken.
·

House panel ·issues solid
.hazardous.Waste proposals

.

..'

1 Section, 1 0 Pogoo
215 Cento
A MuttlrMcti• Inc . Ne~ll)llper

Tentativeagreeltlent reached in strike

•

•

,,

.. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday. January 22, 1988

...

•

Cloudy lolllcbt. Low In mid
28:!. Cloudy Saturday. HI cbs
near 30. Cbance of ,..,. 20
percent Saturday.

entitle

,..

f)

.I

0

oi

Canie Mohr

Am Electric Power .. .... ... ....27%
AT&amp;T ................. ....-.............27% ·
Ashland Oil .. .... .... ... ... .. ...... 55%
Bob Evans ............ ... ... ......... 15
Charming Shoppes ... .. ......... 11 "Vs
City Holding Co .. .. .............. , 29
Federal Mogul.. .... ... .. ......... 34 ~
Goodyear T&amp;R ............... .... 56~
l'!eck's Inc............. ....... .... ,....2
key Centurion .. .. ... ........ .... .~9~
Lands' End ...... .. ...... .. ...... ... 21~
Limited·Inc .......... ....... .......17~
Multimedia Inc ... .. ... ........... . 50
Rax Restaurants ............... ... 3~
Robbins&amp; Myers ... .... .. ... :.... 8~
Slwney's Inc . .. .......... .. ........ 18"Vs
Wendy'~ Inti. .. ..................... 5%
Worthingt~n In1 .......... :-..... .17~

Ohio Lottery

notices

0

.
I&amp;
way.1 they may have of rqrclng an .. ·a nd fl*!Cb tllerapy. .
·· requested, you· may appear . ,
periOD,
by your attorney. or bY
end to the ,trike. A concern wa1 . "'· At Harrlaaavllle' aDd Ru
such
other
....,..eaentatlve 81 ll .
brou1ht out pertalnlnl to tland, · two lnllldred minutes
permitted to p'racUce before the
teachers re~lpq and leavln&amp; plaJmedlnstrucUonperweekare
the area ·anc1 teaebt1'1 expreued ·not belnl provided In art, music, aaency · At the lleal'tnl you DIV ~
to tbe group t l l i t - felt they and pllyslcal education 18 re- . wlpret~!...ev'!epncepearl
· ~ ~:":: ;
need toflndl'lllplo)'mantthroqb qlllred by Section 3301·35-02 (B)
~·
which tbey can aupport their Code(ll).(b) of the Administrative qatost you. In the alternative, :
families. The next meeting was
you may C:hoole to present YOIII' :
set lor 7 p.m. Thl!ndav.
"Notice ls "bereby given that a ' position, arguments, or conten- l
H08pla..:l· aAU~
..
.
reportmustbefUedwlththeOblo Pt;::lo;::ns~ln~wrl;.:.::;:r,;·.:':_ _ _ _ _.":1.;
1
·a.-.. _... 8
Department. of .Education no
...
_
......
_,
later
than
Jan.
29, 1988, lndtcat••
Veteraudetlle 1es
Wedneaday Admissions - · In&amp; bow ·the •bove
c nc
.
Euia Wolfe, Pomeroy; . Jett . have been correc:led. Onslte
Evans, Ractae. vertncatlon maybe conducted by
•Wednesday Dlacbaraes department ' start to review the
Six defendants forfeited bondl '
Pearly Jewell, David Talbott, statuaofcompllacewlthtawand andthreeotberswerelinedl!lt!le.,
Mayor~
·· Ml ba 1 Br
Julia Biron,
c e
own, standardl
.,..,......on..33l7•01 ·of·~- Revised court of Middleport
esc1 ....
bt
Sheila Mania, Jllliii!S J&gt;ellegrlno,
_,"
"""
Hortman Tu ay ..... ·
Ethel Hatfield, Htlen Kennedy . Code prclVIdes that 'A board of
Forfeiting were SUe A. ~ ·
· ed~atlon which baa not cQn·
muno, Pomeroy, $450, . dTlvltli.
folmed with other taw and the while Intoxicated aQCI.$50, wuv;
COn,tlnuecl trom pap 1
i111es ~t tlieteto, aball not. lng course; David Shuler, Latlil'·
,partieJpate In the dlltrlbutlon of ville, $450, driving wblle
'
.
fwldl authorized by sections . cated; $ll0, expired operator'li:
, Middleport Pollee J:eport. .Richard .Vau11Uan.•, ' owner, Is a
3317.022to3317.025oftbeRevlsed
· Ucense; Dennis TUlls, Rutland;
member of the Meigs Locallloard of Education. Although a
Code,
except
lor
IQOd
and
sultl·
$450; c!i-'IV!Di wbUe. Intoxicated; ;
number of InstanCes where the roofing nsiiS had been thrown
cleat
re&amp;SOn
established
to
the
Kevin A. Johnson, West Colum-.
we~ reported earner this week, the Vaughan store was the only
satisfaction
Or
the
state
board
of
·
bla, w. Va., $450, driving willie .
ll~Cident . reported this morning.
·
education and the state control· Intoxicated; Anthony C. Ward,
llni board' .
,
Point Pleasant, $25, assured · .
In the event tbat the conditions clear distance; Deborah M.
cited · above continue to exist Thevevln, Gallipolis Ferry, $42,
·beyond
· the lollowup and onslte s~llll, •
Me)ls County Emergency Medical Services ~ports sb\ calls
verification,
It
11
our
Intent
to
Fined
were
Robert
H.
Taylor,
Thursday; Middleport at 6: 26_ a.m. to Bradbury lor Loucllie
stop making payments to the · Middleport, $10, expired fl!lll·;
Garten to Veterans Memorial Hoapltal; Pomeroy at 6:36a.m.
Me)ls
Local School District, · tratlon; Richard L. · Norman,~
was called to assist with the above; Rutland at II: 02 a.m. to
pUrsuant
to the provisions of Pomeroy, $50, reckless opera·'!
County Road 1 for Nancy Chapman to Holzer Medical center;
3317.
of the Revised tlon,andWIIUam-D. Whittington.~
·
Chapter
Racine at 6:50p.m. to VIne St. for Lucille Dlebf who \'{at treated
Code.
Mlddleporl. SSO and costs, dlaor ~
but not transported; Racine at 7: Of p.m. to Letart-Falls tor GaU
"Determination
made
h,reln
derly
manner, . and $100 and
Pierce to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 11:09 p.m. to
are
subject
to
tbe
proVIsions
of
costs,
20
days probation, reslatr;:
,Kingsbury Road tor Zachary Arnold to Holzer Medical Center.
Chapter 119. of the ReVIsed Code.
tog arrest.

Carrte E. Mohr. 83, Chambers·
burg. Pa., forme rly of Point
Pleasant. died Tuesday in
Chambersburg.
She was born Feb. 18, 191». in
Gallipolis Ferry to the late John
W. and Nannie Mead Stevens.
Her husband. Garland J. Mohr,
who preceded her in death in
1.962, and his brother, Earl C.
Mohr. operated Mohr's Grocery
Store in Gallipolis Ferry for 40
years .
She was a member of the
.Calvary Baptist Church. &lt;:;hambersburg, and a member of the
Woman's CJub of Point Pleasant.
Surviving are two sons, John A.
Mohr. Columbus, Lawrence G.
Mohr. Chambersburg, (a former
funeral director in Mason
County); two sisters, Mary Forrest,.South Charleston, Mrs. Eva
Gibson. Phoenix , Ariz: one
brother. John Stevens. St. AI-

Church

B'"J~~._;•of..;.eervl...:..:;,;_:ces=we;_:re;_::.:Y_::o::u~m:,_a_y_req_ues_t_a_h_H_rl~!ll
d ·Contlnll!d trom paae 1
·"
.
not available: ptdance, health, :rtt:.u:rc:.a~ ! ~=1~ .
paycbololleal; remedial reading,

Ohio utility bills show largest
drop ·in years, counsel ·says
1

--

•

•

electricity, $71.31 for 13,000 cubic average. The only other increase
By United Press International
feet
of natural gas and $21.04 for amQng the 27 smaller cities was
Ohioans are paying less for
rilonthly
telephone service.
· in Marietta. which was up 0.3
their average monthly utility bill
Toledo,
in
fact,
continues
to
percent.
today than they did one year ago,
have
the
second-highest
average
.Gas bills went down In ail 35
says the Ohio Office of Consurate
cil
major
cities
In
the
region,
cities,
ranging from a 5 percettt
mers' Counsel.
behind
only
Philadelphia,.
and
drop
for
East Ohio Gas Co.
The average monthly utility
ahead
of
such
cities
as
Detroit,
customers
to a 17 percent debill In Ohio's eight largest cities ·
Indianapolis,
Charleston,
W.Va,.
crease
lor
customers
of Coium·
Is 5,5 percent lower than It was
Fort
Wayne,
Ind.,
and
Louisville.
bia
Gas
of
Ohio~·s Toledo service
one year ago, Consumers· CounKy.
area.
sel William Spratley said
Cincinnati
remained
·
the·
In September."the Consumers'
Thursday.
cheapest
of
the
eight
cities,
at
Counsel
and Columbia !'11ached
E'a ch of the eight cities $111.93
$35.56
for
electricity,
agreement
to redJICe the utility's
Toledo, Cleveland, Akron, Can·
$55.47
lor
gas
and
$20.90
for
the
rates
by
$6.7
million and end the
ton. Youngstown, Dayton, Cotelephone.
disparity
in
the
company's rates
lumbus and Cincinnati- showed
Chiefly
responsible
lor
,the
across
Ohio
.
a decrease, ranging from a 9.4
Electric bills decreased lor all
percenl drop In Columbus to a 1.3 · decreases. · Spratley said, were
lower
fuel
costs,
lower
federal
consumers
·except those served
percent drop in Youngstown.
taxes
and
tougher
regulation
by
l:)y
.
Ohio
E&lt;llson
and Toledo
"''This was the largest decrease
the Public UtiUt.ies Commission Edison, whose rates Increased
we've seen iri 11 years," said
Of
Ohio. He also credited his own 0.4 percent and 1.1 percent,
Spratley. "'Since 1985, rates have
agency
.
respectively.
·
decreased 7.6 percent."
· In a survey of 27 smaller cities
The highest monthly telephone
Toledo retained Its !lrst-piace
in Ohio, Defiance jumped from bills In the state are in Chilliranking among the eight, with an 14th to first• place, showing a 1.8 cothe, $24.77, while Newark has
average monthly cost of $14,4.99
percent Increase in its mon(hly the lowest, $15.55.
- $52.641or 500 kilowatt hours of

to clean up these sites," tbe ton to dispose of trash in Ohio,
By J.E;E LEONABD
committee
report said, citing where in other states It may be
UPI Statehoue Beporler
"serious
contamination
of area $30, rangingupto$100aton. Troy
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -A
groundwater"
near
poorly.
de- said even a $2 per ton increase
six-month study of the disposal of
signed
landfills,
and
probable
solid and hazardous wastes has
would not be unreasonable, and
yielded the recommendation that methane explosions.
would bring benefits.
"Most or Ohio's soUd waste
thestateoiOhlDievyasurcharge
The committee recommended
on all trash Imported from other problems can be directly attflb- that landfills exempted trom
uted to the abilene~ of any Ohio's first solid waste disposal
siates.
A 15-member Ohio House task comprel)enslve planning," the laws In 1967 be brought under the
,
Ioree also proposed that the state report said.
new requirements. "II they canraise hazardous , waste dumping
Prompting the commit!"" not meet acceptable ~llvlroil;
lees at leuttotheleveloltboseln study were reporta tbat Ohio mental standards to insure the
nearby . states to discourage landfills were reaching capacity public health and safety, then
expoi1ing, but that could pose a and out-of-state companies are they should be closed/' the
legal problem.
trucking garbage to eastern Ohio committee decided.
from' East Coast slates wltb
'l'~Jr.commlttee Issued a bost of
The panel also recommended
recomlfl·endatlons T,h ilrsday stricter reaulltlons and higher ll!llpectlon of , out-of-state garabout the.disposal of solid waste, dumping tees.
bage, as well as empowering the
or ordl~ garbage, and hazard:
"Disposal of solid waste In state attorney .general to make
ous waste - toxic chemicals.
sanltary·landtllls rnusi be gradu- background Investigations of any
One conclusion wu that Oblo's ally phased out as alternstive applicants lor permits.
law needs to ditterenUate be- methods are developed and en- . Attorney General Anthony J.
tween the two types of waste, couraged," the report said. Celebrezze Jr. told a· legislative
keep .the toxic· substances· out of ''Recycling centers and markets committee that one owner of an
ordinary landfills, and see that .. muyst be fostered and Oblo's eastern Ohio landfill had ties to
the two are Segregated In house- clt~ns must be educated and organ~d crime In New Jersey .
hold disposals.
encouraged to break old habits
Troy said thelatterrecommen~
. ·The Senate met briefly and lpgralned by · our disposable, datlons could be folded Into a
joined the House In weekend throw-away society."
hazardous waste bill now moving
adjoul'!'nient after passing a bill
In addition to tbe surcharge on through the House.
; .
requiring the adjutant general to out-of-state trash, the committee
The commlltee recommended
make rules for the use, bindilng recommended that the state be that tbe Ohio Environmental
and display of the Ohio flag .
divided Into distrlcta lor solid · Protection Agency be . put In
The House Select Committee to waste disposal plaimlng.
charge of coming up with a
· Study Hazardous and Solid
It also proposed a·"tlpplnglee" program to reduce and properly
Waste Landfills found "some tor each unit of solid waste dispose of household hazardous
appalling and disgraceful situa- disposed, with part of the money waste.
tions that should never have been going lor planning and adminisSuch waste Includes paint, oil,
allowed to happen," and that the tration, part lor recycUng and cleaning solvents, pesticides,
cost of remedying those situ&amp;· · waste reduction programs, and batteries, garden chemicals and
tions will far exceed the cost of part lor cleanup costs at aban- other substances which, If
proper disposal and regulation.
doned or Improperly closed sites. thrown In the garbage and taken
"Potential catastrophes to the
Rep. Daniel P. · Troy, D- to landfUs, can cause groundhealth of" Ohio's citizens awalt Willowlck, chairman of the .water contamination.
unless remedial action Is begun panel, said It only costs S8 to $12 a

Oil slick speeds up, pas$es Ironton
water early today was about 300 the Ohio River water, and wouldparts per billion, contrasting mix It with water from the
with readings upriver of parts Guyandotte River.
•.
per million, Eiam said. ·
The slick was expected to
In Ashland, officials said the ·reach Portsmouth, the next Ohio •
city has had tlrp~ to prepare lor city thdt uses river water, at
the slick: .
about 2 p.m. today.
· ..
"The situation Is fine. We
''Portsmouth is planning to ·
anticipate no problems at ali," stay on line, using a treatment
said Ashland Mayor Richard · approved by the (Environmental.
Martin. ''The rains ·have swollen Protection Agency)." Eiam said. ·
the river, of course, and the snow . "II (thetreatmentdoi!sn'tworkl, ·
run off has sped up the they have a three-day storage
progress."
,
capacity." .
Ashland closed its intakes to
About 1 million gallons of .
the
Ohio
at
1:
49
a.m.,
and
Martin
diesel
fuel poured Into the Monon· .
has about 5 million
gallons of water hi storage"and · said the city has a three-clay gahela ltlver when an Ashland
they · plan to stay ott until water reserve, whiCh should be Oil storage tank crumbled Jan. 2
more than enough lor the sllcll to near Pittsburgh, and then tra,
pass the city, which he said is veled Into the Ohio.
expected
to take about 36 hours.
Ashland Oil, the largest em·
basin, a type of reservoir-'·'
The slick hit Huntington, pioyer Ashland, has several ·
'Recent heavy rainfall' bas
speeded movement of the spill W.Va., late Tbursday n)lbl, but water. barges along the Ohio to
from 1 mph to about3 ~mph, she caused no problema tor resl- · help any city that needs emer· .
denta. Officials with West gencr water supplies, Arm·
said.
·
,;;
"It's really picked· up steam," VlrgiDia-Amerlcan Water Co. strong said.
said
they
would
be
able
to
treat
she l!llklTbeheavyraln;comblnedwlth
water flowing Into the Ohio from
aucbtrtbutarlesaatbaKana":ba•
Mfllllllllum and Hocldq rivers
' hu allo belpecl dllalpate theoll
POINT PLEASANT ~ The Muon County Commission,
concentration. ·
.
meetln&amp; In feplar ae~alon Thill'lday n)lbt, let the contract for
The concentration of ollln the
the alibestol removal In the water damaged areas ot the
'
cq1ll'tbollle. The prlcetlg II mon thaa'tiO.OOO, otrtctaltl aald.
Otrtclala ware told tltere ·11 DO ublllltl In the jaU and DO
·· No TV pkle today
"alrboi ne'' ullela Ia tbe I:OUI1IIotllt - ·
With CommllaloDer 'l'llomu D. ''Tuelter'' Mayes ""'!dar tbe
motion, CornnllllloMr PIIJI Wll1d• IIC.'IIIIdbll and Conuala-

By United Press lntemallolll
The 80-miie diesel slick on 1the
Ohio River "really picked up
steam" and reached Ashland,
Ky.. the home of the company
whose ruptured tank caused the 1
million gallon spill Jan. 2, early
today, authorities said.
Sonya Elam, a spokeswoman
for 'the Ohio Disaster Seivlces
Agency, said the sUck passed
Ashland and its Ohio neighbor,
Ironton, at about 4 a.m., forcing
. both cities to close their water

T oQk' II~o'Mce t' 0 study" m·. s··..an·ce ln~=ton
for 'm ental illness, alcolholisni ~~da~~· o~~:.~a:ld~~fvi::
A"

·

UA '

.&amp; '

·

'

.

·

.

·

.
.
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- A on insurancecoveraee. and cov- pastprealdentoltheOhloPsychi·
19-member state tuk force will erage lor -catutrophlc ·mental atrlc Association; John _Corrlstart soon to atudy the need lor and emotional disorders, alcoho- gan, Columbus, director of tbe
Dlvl~ion of Rehabilitation Paychanges In laws reprdlng health lism and chi!mlcal dependency.
Leglslatora on the task force choloiY, Dodd Hall, Oblo State
care lnsutiiDCe for mental II·
lness, alcollolllm and drug are Seas. David I), Hoblon, Unlveratty; Jonathan York, exR-Sprlngtleld, and Scott OeiS· ecutlve director of the Frankllri
dependency.
Gov. Richard F. Celeste an- lager, R·Canton, and Repa. Jane CoiiDty Mental Health Board.
Empklyera-J~~~epbKrabach,
nounced the appointment of tbe . L. Campbell, D-Cieveland, and
Robert
H.
Doyle,
·R·
Columbus,
Ohio Mallllfacturen
task force members Thursday .
~aven:zeek.
·
Association;
Staaley Morae,
Among the membera are Pam·
Other
•ppobtteea
are:
·
C'leveland,
m11f881111Rt
conaulela S. ~de, dlrt!ctor at the Ohio
Consumer Representatives - • tant; Shirlee Sa-a. Piqua,
Departmtllt of Mental Healtli;
Dr. Ronald Fletdler, dll'ector 'or Ohio SU(INIIIe Court Justice Qu-. Qty laduatrles.
Inauren - Carol Carillo, Cothe Ohio llepartlllent allllaltb; CI'Bfl Wrllht; Jlld&amp;e VIrgil
and Geoqe )'abe, &amp;tate Juperla· M11111r, Mullllon Municipal lumbus, Natloawlde Lllf lliiU·
Court; Ecl~~a Hawldna, Clncln- ruce.Co.; 'l'llamu Qui.,.., Clft.
tndlllt qiflulU'IIIIIle.
'file tulctorae WWrecommand natl, Ohio :Alliance tor tbe Men- cllulau, Commlaait7 Mutual
lllllll'lltee Co.; T11antaa Work·
biiPfG illllllltllll U..tmeilt liei'· . tally DL
vtc., lncludbll alternatives to
Health care Provlllen - Dr. mu, Columbtllt, AISOCIItlon ot
111-pa~ treatment, llmltatlo111
Norman "Clemens, .t:leveland, Lite Inauranee Companlel.
I

,

.

Pennsylvani.6 firm awarded ·contract

. •. ,.,"' ..........

uarweS.IIIit_......,..,.....
elllla . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
r!Jt •• :a .....,.. ."• n
I IL
I

aloa Presldeat R. . Keatoa M:tiiM wt11t1 ID tavar, tile
commll&amp;loa pve the watract lcl Project DewlapiiWIII Gi'OIIp,

Plttlbarlh. Pa.
.
'

. .

.

_

. .. . .

.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="112">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2678">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="37723">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="37722">
              <text>January 21, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="205">
      <name>clark</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2303">
      <name>garten</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2177">
      <name>mohr</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2140">
      <name>reiber</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="166">
      <name>simpson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="613">
      <name>stevens</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
