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                  <text>Pomeroy-Midd~.

1988

Ohio

College
basketball

· .• IIIIT MAG .

&amp;-:::t ~

Ohio Lottery

•
ratings

Daily Number

826
Pick 4
0498

F..turlng

* b t lfalllbllfltiS

Page 3

*Rout Beet on a

· Croissaat * Stun.d
, · Pttt~s 'If l~o

·. ' . • Sl.lad B1r .

" ·* !teal Ice Cream; * .
:'!

· · · Di"ing

·~

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.

Out •

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Dr.ive· Thl'\1
Sun.-Thurs. 8 A.M.:1o P.r.f:
Fri. II Sat. 8 A.M.-12 P.M.
898 W. Main St,..t, Pomeroy

MEIGS

992·2057

•

•

at y

_.,.._,,
(Qcanvlllllj

GIRLS BASKETBALL

. THE &amp;ilEA'S MOST ·

funds will he allocated

EASTERN
BOYS BASKETBALL

COMPLETE ATHlDIC

.JAN. 29-NOITH GALUA- AWAY
FEB. 2-MILLER - AWAY

FOOTWEAI STORE!

. .GIRLS BASKETBALL

·• ••• Lue~ Ta•in•l

Middleport Mayor Fred Hof·
!man expressed dissatisfaction
with the direction the dlstribu·
·tion of State Issue 2 funds
apparently Is .taking.
At a meeting of Middleport
VIllage Council Monday night,
Mayor Hoffman said that he has
been kept' up to date by Rep:
Jolynn Boster and Sen . Jan Long
on guidelines being considered
for distribution of Slate Issue 2
funds. However, he said, both the
Ohio House of Representatives
and the Ohio Senate have similar
versions on the distribution of the.
funds. Some of the sugges1ions
being made are that local com·
munltles should have matching
funds . to share In the Issue II
. funds . These matching fund
proposals are on a 50·50 basis or
60-40 basis , the mayor said.
Mayor Hoffman said he also

/
I

. ·~

JAN. 28-'-NORTH GALUA - HOME
FEB. 1-SUWES VALLEY - HOME

~

SOUTHERN

EMPIRE .

BOYS BJSKETBALL
JAN. 24-IIYGER CREEl! - HOME
JAN. 30-MILLER - HOME

992-5627, :
MIDDLEPORT

GIRLS BASKETBALL
JAN. 28-IIYGER CRUll - AWAY
FEB. I-SOUTHWESTERN- HOME
FEB. 4-0AK HILL - HOME

· EWING
'FUNERAl
HOME
.

.

-:,

"DIGNITY AND .
SERVICE .ALWAYS''
len H. Ewing-Director

PH. 992-2121

.

. 108 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

BOYS SCHEDULE
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBAll

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
REVISED SCliEDULE
BOYS BASKETBALL
Jon. 26-Alexonder .................... Home
Jon. 20-Pt. Pleasant................ Away
Feb. 2-Worreli Local. ............... Away

Feb. 5-Wellston....._.................... Home
Feb. 6-logt;~n .............................Home.
Feb; ·9-Athens ............................ "oine
Feb. 12-Federal-Hacking ..........Home
Feb. 13-Vinton Caunty ......:......Hame
Feb. 16-Federal Hocking ......... Awoy
Feb. 19-Miller ...........................Home
Feb. 20-Nelsonville-Yark ..........Hame

Dec. 8-Southern ......................... .-•• Away
Dec. 1·1-Hannan Trace ...............;.Away
Dec. 15-Partcerstug Cath. (6:15) •• Away
Die. 22-North Gallia (6:00) ........... Home
Jan. 8-Symmes Valley ...................Home
Jan. 12-Kyger CrHk .........:............ Home
· Jan. 15 -Oak Hill .........................:. Away
Jan. 19-:-hderal Hocking ................Homt
Jan. 22-South•rn ...... ~ ••..•...••...••••••• Home
Jan. 29-North Gallia ..;................. Away
Feb. 2-Miller .................................. Away
Feb. 5-H•nan Trce ........................Home
Feb. 12-Suuthwestern ................... Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath ............ Away
Feb.19-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Feb. 20-Federal Hockirig ..:..,......... Away

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

~

Dec. 8-Eastern ................................ Horue
Die. 11-0ak Hiii ............................ Home
Dtc. 18-Hannan Trace:...... ::...:..... Away
Dtc. 22-lCygtr Creek ..................... Away
Dtc. 29~1ndian Valey So. ... Convo. Unter
Jan. 2-Southeastern ..................... Away
Jan. 8-Sauthwllltern .................... Home.
Jan. 12-North Gallia ..................... Home
Jan. 1S-Symmes Valley ................. H01111
Jan. 22 -Eastern ........................ ~.... Away
Jan. 29-Kyger CrHk ..........,.,......... Homt
Jan. 30-Miller ................................ H01111 .
FEb. 5-0ak Hill ............................. Away
Feb. 6-Federal Hocking ................. Away
Feb. 12-Hannan Trace ................... H01111
Feb 19-Suuthwestern ................... Away

··~WE. WILL

.·TAKE''CARE· OF
. A(lYOU~

INSUJANCE·
. ·· , ·NE.ED,$"...
' DOW.NING:~.dfiLDS
•

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1'987 ·88 GIRLS BASKETBAll

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-81 GIRLS BASKETBALL

\

TRUCKS

•COMPLETE RADIAtOR SERVICe

•MAJOR REPAIRS
•COMPLETE WHEE( ALIGNMENT
&amp; BALANCE

•MOST MAJOR CREDIT CARDS
ACCEPTED

PAT HILL• FORD,

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

25-•elpre .......................... Home
28-Alexander .................... Home

30-Miller ........................... Home
4-Wellstan ........................ Away
8-Federal Hcitking ............. Home
11-Well stan ...................... Home
13-Southern ...................... Home ·
15-Eostern ....................... Away

BODY WORK
INSURANCE
CLAIMS
WELCOME
461 3RD A

Dec. 7-Southern ............................. Home
DK. 10-Hannan Trace ................... Home
Dec. 14-:--Miller ................................ Home
DK, 17 -Southwlllttrn ...................Home
DK. 19-Ftdtral Hotking .............. Away
DK. 21 -:'North Gallia ................,... Away
.Dec. 23-Meigs ................................Home
Jan. 7-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Jan. 11-Kyger CrHk ..................... Away
Jan. 14-0ak Hiii ............................Hom~
Jan. 21-Southern .......................... Away
Jan. 28-North Gallia .:.................. Home
· Feb. 1-Sym- Volley............,....Home
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace .................... Away
Feb. !!-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 14-Ftderal Hocking ............... Home

DK.10-0ak Hill ....o:........................ Away
Dllj:. 14-North Gallia ..............~..... Away
Die:. 17 -Hannan Trace ...................Home
Dec. 19-Aieander .......................... Awriy
Jan. 4-Kyger Crttk ........................Home
Jan. 7-Southwestern .................... Away
Jan. 11-North Gollia ....................Home
Jan. 14-Symmes Valley .............. Away

CALL ~cJ2-33~j or
' . 99.~:2342

&amp; SAVINGS CO.
POMDOY, OH.

PH. 992-2136
...... -·
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.,

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: ~'HOME .:BANK '&gt;
FOR

HOME PEO.PLE'
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By Wire and Staff Reports
Monday night 's "blizzard"
which struck the .Meigs County
area around 7:15 left about an
inch of snow in most places and
ice-covered streets, roads and
highways throughout I he county:
Classes were called off in all
area secondary and • primary
schools because of bad weather
· conditions as temperatures
dro(Jped from the mid 30s into the
teens In less ·than two hours.
Many residents and !ndlvidu·
als stili at work were "caught off
guard" by the sudden appear·
ance of the storm despite the fact
forecasters had predicted it was
coming throughout the day.
There were four accidents
reported by the Gallla·Melgs
Post, State Highway Patrol, but
none in the Me igs County area.
Postponements began piling
up once again.
On the lOth anniversary of The
Blizzard of '78, Ohioans were hit
with a winler slorm that dumped
up to four inches of snow in some
areas and threatened Ia dump
twice that amount in the snow

••

were lik.eiy to be the lnterm!1'
By HELEN 'niOMAS ·
diale NuClea r Forces Treaty and .
White House Reporter
WASHINGTON IUPl) -Pres· aid for the Nicaraguan Contra ·
ident Reagan, tesisling the label rebe)s.
Reagan began his lengthy
of lame duck and Insisting his .
leadership has "reclaimed and Stale of the Union address ljy
restored the American dream," sayinghewouldnotoffer"jusla
is making his play fbr a smooth proud recitation of the accompfinal year to bolster his place in lishments of my admlnlslra·
tion," yet throughout the speech
· history .
In . his seventh nationally teie· he claimed a resurgence of
vised Stale of the Union address. economic dpportunity and na buoyed by loud applause from .. tiona! pride in America.
"We are strong, prosperous, at
· Republicans , the president told a
jolnl meeting of Congress Mon· peace - and we are free," he
day night he Is "still on the job:· said. "This is the state of our
and eager for a set of final union. And If we will work
victories after a year of political together this year, I believe we
can give a future president and a
defeats and personal setb~cks.
future
Congress the chance to
''I don't buy the Idea that this is ·
make
that prosperity, ·that
the last . year of anything," he
declared, "becaUJe we're not peace, that freedom, not just the
talking here tonight about regis- state of our union but the state of
tering temporary gains bill· our world."
Opponents have criticized 6_~a·
1about) ways of making permangan for a confrontational style
ent our succes~.''
Acting on that theme of cooper- with Congress, but Monday he
noted the certain bailie before
ation, Reagan summoned con·
the November elections and
gresslonal leacjers to tile White
asked for a "pledge to each other
House today· to discuss their
that we will keep foremost In our
agebda following the recoilven·
1111 of the 100th.Houae and Senate · hearts •nd lnlnds not what is best
for ourselves. or our party !;lut
Monday. Big Items on the menu

•t .('tt

"I was very much in favor of
State Issue 2 when it was
presented to the voters but am
beginning to have doubt s now.
''It appears that the legisla ture
has a way of taking What could be
a very simple grant program and
making it very complicated.
"When Stat e Issue 2 was being
promoted , I understood that it
was to be for Infrastructure
improvemenls lor a ll communi·
ties in Ohio. It appears to me that
by the time it is put into operation
it will be another program which
benefits those counties and communities who already have
money.
"The matching fund s were
never mentioned, to my knowledge, when the issue was being
promoted. Neither wa s th e loan ·
portion of the program. I can see
Continued on page lil

itized for consideration by the
By NANCY YOACHAM
locales.
Sentinel News Staff
However . current proposals In state. CuHently. a top project
Concern over the. dlstri]lution both the House and ·Senate with the SEORC Hi ghway Com·
of State Issue 2 funding was suggest distribution based on mlttee is to gel the Route 33
voiced Monday by members of population or local matching connector from Rock Springs to
the Meigs County Regional Plan· money . There has also been talk the Ravenswood Bridge into. th&lt;:&gt;
bell area east of Cleveland.
Columbus police stopped tak· ning Commission.
of loan programs using Issue 2 desi gn stage. P reliminary plan A winter storm warning was in ing reports of minor accidents
Kim Shields, county director of funds . Local officials, as well as ning on the connector road is
effect for east central Ohio and during the storm.
development, Philip Roberts , officials from olher lower popu· scheduled for complet ion the end
I he northern quarter of the state
High temperatures were ex- county engineer. and Fred Haf· iated counties arid villages, are of this year.
early today.
peeled to reach only Into the fman, Middleport mayor. re· . opposed to these types of
In other matt ers. Tom Closser,
The storfT\ moved into the teens today, wlth lows in the ported they've been in touch with
of
the Buckeye Hilis- Hock ing
wes tern part of stale Monday single digits tonight. Mostly members oJ the Ohio legislature distribution.
Valley Regional Development
"Now's the lime to do some·
afternoon. covering the that part sunny conditions are forecast for and other state authbr!Ues re- thing," said Hoffman. "There · Districl ; updated the planning
of the state with one to three Wednesday, but there .is a chance - garding distribution of annual was never any mention of match· commission on the federal Appalinches of 'snow and up to four of snow flurries in the extreme proceeds from Slate Issue 2.
achian Regional Cou ncil funding
ing money or loan funds. Nobody
inches in the central part of the northeast. Highs will be In the
Issue 2 was passed by voters in has trouble borrowing. ll's pay·
to construct an access road from
state. Three to six inches of snow teens again.
the Nov. 3 election. Passage of ing back that 's the problem."
Roule 33 16 Carpe r's Nursery.
was expected In the warning area
Fair weather Is expected Issue 2 gave ·authority to the Hoffman anticipates that if pea· Closser said a couple of last
today, with up to eight inches Thursday and Friday wlth a General Assembly to issue ple from the smaller areas of the
minute requests from A.R.C.
· chance of rain or snow Saturday . bonds , in the amount of $1.2 stale don 't begin speaking out,
possible in the Snow Belt.
have been met, and that he
Snow hit the central Ohio area Highs will be in the 20s Thursday, biiiion, to aid communities in that Issue 2 will become too expects apprpva I of the money
toward the end of the evening in the 30s Frjday and'between 35 paying for repairs and replace· complicated for participation by
back from Washingto n D.C. soon,
rush hour. but caught motorists and 45 Saturday. Lows will be in menl of roads. bridges, sewer those smaller areas.
with conslruc1ion of the access
by surprise. Brisk winds also the single digits Thursday, In the and water syslems and solid
road by the Ohio· Department of
In order to combat current
made visibility difficult.
teens Friday and in the 20s waste disposal sites throughout proposals to di stribute according
Transpo rtation possibly . in the
"Visibility was zero, every' Saturday .
the stale. Annual proceeds from to population or match. a Re- spring.
thin!f was covered," said George ' The blizzard that hit the state Issue 2 are not ·lo exceed $120 gional Planning Commission
Gordon Gilmore. count y soil
Muss!, street maintenance and on Jan. 26, 1978, killed 35 people million per year and are to be committee is forming to review
surveyor, reported that 187,820
street cleaning coordinator in and paralyzed the state.
overseen by the General the Issue 2 Fact Book, which was
acres of the county have been
Columbus. "It came in so fast.
Wind~ gusted to more than 100
Assembly.
published prior to the November surveyed and mapped, a nd the
Traffic was backed up and It was mph over much of the state. with
Although guidelines for distrl· election, and to respond to the
maps are available to the public
hard to get the sail trUcks out."
susla!ned winds in the 45 to 70 blilion of Issue 2 proceeds were current proposals either by let; at no charge. Gilmore sa id the
A nine-car accident was re: mph range during the blizzard . not developed before' the elec- ters or personal discussions with
survey is right on target for
p6rted on Interstate 70 on Colum- Record snowfalls were recorded tion, many officials, Including legislators or both. The commit· completion In October 1989. -with
bus's east side, but no one was · and an all-time low barometric Roberts, who had attended Issue tee is being headed by Shields.
60,000 remaining acres to be
seriously injured, police officials pressure readltlg of 28.28 ·was 2 meetings prior to the November
surveyed this year, and 60,000
Roberts also reported that the
said.
established.
nex1. The finished soil s urvey
election, had the idea that each Southeastern Ohio Regional
county in the slate would receive Planning Commission Highway
maps will not be ready until 1991,
a guaranleed portion of funding,
but th~ maps which Gilmore is
Committee "is ready to start ihe
without matching money and bali rolling" to gel different
providin_g in the in ter im are
without competition with other ro~ds in Southeastern Ohio prior· • · · Continued on page 10

President takes ·credit for
renewing American ideals
.'

Fs

-A.~-

J

POWELL'S

.R••U•I•

'·

Jan. 20-Gallipolis ......................... Away

WITH US"

· · FARMERS
B.ANK

•;: .

-~-~---

, 'Jan. '21-Eastern .............................Ho111e
Jan. 28-Kyger CrHk ..................... 'Away
Feb. !-Southwestern ..................... H01111
Feb. 4-0ak Hill' .............................. Home
Feb. 11-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Feb. 13-Meigs .............................. Away

"COME GROW

~-

. "i'·:"::F . '":··~.

111 'Sfc(IHo AVE.
. , POME,RP.Y·

,,:

DK. 7-Eastern............................... Away

··.

'· • "INSUitiNCE . .

&lt;

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
REVISED SCHEDULE
GIRLS BASKETBALL .

:

understands that there is a per
capita proposal whereby a cotn'
inunity would receive $10 a
person. II that were adopted ,
(hen Middleport would receive
about $30,000 a year for the next
10 years. Mayor, HofdfmaJ\ said
he could accept tha1. However.
by the time townships arid the
county are considered the per
capita figure would probably fall
well below the $10 ligtJre meaning that Middleport would not
receive a slezable amount or
money from Issue II funds.
Mayor Hoffman has directed a
letter to Rep. Bosler on the
distribution of Issue 2 funds and
requested council members to
contact Rep. Boster and Sen.
Long and give them input Into the
distribution plan.
The mayor's Jetter . says, in
part :

Issue Two topic of·Meigs
Regional Planning group

hit just before 8:30p.m. Monday, seemingly came
from nowhere, created· blinding driving condl·
lions for·motorists. Icy roads were ~aused by tbe
sudden temperature drop and all Meigs County
schools were closet! Tuesday as a result. Street
and highway department workers across the
county put In a long night attempting to make
streets and _ r~adll as safe as po~slble.

CLEARING SIDEWALKS - Jiniiny Hanning
and Charles Barrett were bu~;~y clearing sidewalks
in front to the Ewing Funeral Home Tuesday
morning after Meigs County was hil with a couple
inches of snow Monday night. Springlike tempera·
lure earlier Monday went Into oblivion Monday
evening ali temperatures witb a strong wind chill
factor went below zero. T~e blinding snow wh~ch

. MUUEit MUSSlR ·.

GIRLS SCHEDULE
USED CARS
N£W CARS
USED CARS •

1 Section. 10 Pages 25 Cen1s
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

with.way Issue .Two

JAN. 25-IELPRE - HOME
JAN. 28-ALEXANDER - HOME
JAN: 30-MILLER - HOME

~·· ' fbct*Jy

-·-

Hoffman concerned

JAN. 16-ALEXANDER- HOME
JAN. 30-PT. PLEASANT- AWAY
FEB. 2-WARREN LOC.AL - AWAY

- · ~:·
-~.­

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio', Tuesday. January 26. 1988

BOYS BASKETBALL

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· Vol.38. No. I SO
Copyrighted 1 988

Cloudy tonight. Low between zero and five above.
Cloudy Wednesday . IDghs in
upper teen~.

~·

·Bush claims CBS 'bushwacked'him;
·angry calls light up TV switchboard
.

what is best for America."
Extending a rhetorical olive
· branch, he added, "Let us always
remember what unites \lS fa~
outweighs whatever divides us."
Reagan acknowledged his own
"unfinished agenda " but
sounded much more in command
than last year, when he was•
reeling amid the Iran-Contra
scandal. His aides said an ·
absence of new initiatives, a
contrast-topreviousyears,shows .
a sense of realism about what·he
. can expect to accomplish In his
final act.
·The president chose the moral
high ground - and safe political
ground - by advocating educa·
tiona! excellence through "lm·
aglnalive refol'lllll" like merit
pay for teachers and stronger
academic curricula. He called
for a stepped·up war on drug
abule and lauded the work of his
wife, Nancy, In thai regard.
·
Reagan also repeated calls
for:
....Constjtutlo"!ll a.mendments
to return prayer to pui)Uc
schoo!l, tq oullaw aborllon t)X· .
cept when a mother's life Is
Continued on page 10

WASHINGTON (UPJ) - Vice
President George Bush, claim·
lng CBS News bushwhacked him
with anolher round on the IranContra scandal, scored quick
points with viewers for his
extraordinary live stand-off with
anchorman ·Dan Rather.
·
Tom Bettag, the executive
producer of lhe news program,
said the network had received
hundreds of calls from viewers
nationwide.
"I would say wehavehadmore
calls saying 'I am angry at Dan
Rather" lhan 'I am angry at the
vice president,"' Bettag said.
"The Idea that we misled the vice
president in this interview is a
very serious char.g e and It has us
flabbefiBSted . I don' t how the
vice president feels he was
miSled.''
-A conservative medja ,watch·
dog group promplly called for
Rather's resignation Monelay
nlgbt after the unusual exchange
dominated tbe half·hour broad· .
cast and quickly grew Into a
heated . confrontation between

the two men.
Bush. who refused to be inter·
viewed for Rather's piece in
advance, agreed to appear on the
broadcast on the condition his
responses not be edited. Follow;
ing a systematic review of what
Rather called " inconsistencies in
the record." Bush countered with
his own attack.
"There's nothing new. here. I
thought this was a news pro,
gram," the vice preside!! I said In
a debate that was marked by
both men frequently interr)lptlng
each other. "This matter, Da.n,
as you well know and your editors
know , has been looked at. .... I find
this to be a rehash and a 111tle bit,
if you 'II excuse me, a mlsrepres·
entation on the part of CBS who
said you're doing political pro·
Illes and you come up with
something that has been exhaus·
tlvely looked into."
Complalnlne that the network
· falsely ll!red him to 'the program
by promising they were doing
only a candidate profile, Bush
said . the network had "tm·

pugned" his integ rit y wi th
Innuendo.
Tom Shales. television critic
for The Washington Post. said In
Ieday 's Post lhal at the co nClu sion of the Interview , with the
videotape still roiling, Bush
boasted 10 campa ign personnel
and CBS technicians. "The b .....d
didn't lay a glove on me."
The conserva1ive Accuracy In
Media fired off a letter to CBS
promp1ly demanding "the resig·
nations of ail those respon sible, .
beginning with Dan Rather."
The interview has given CBS
' 'a black .eye lhal will besmirch
Its reput!l.tion for credibility and
fair play," said Executive Direc·
tor Reed Irvine, and is "unworthy of a major network ...
In New York. CBS News said
Bush's office had been told that
the Interview would ~ "issueoriented and Iough." Negotla·•
lions began three weeks ago and
"It · became clear that lhe key
unexplored issue 'in Mr. Bush's
campaign was Ills role In the .
(Continued on page 10)
'tJ

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:!!!~!!:__:!Ja~nua~ry~2~&amp;::_.!;19~8!!8~---------;______!P~ome~ro~v-:- ~M~iddleport, Ohio

••

comment
·T4e Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TJIE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
~.a

Bm~
~v

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.........._-r,~c:::~ ..-

ROBERTi.. WINGETI'
· Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
~laat Publl8ber/ Controller ·

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

Page 2-The o.ily Seftdnal
Pomeroy~Mkk11port.

Ohio
tU81dey. January 26! 1988

WASHINGTON- Saudi Ara·
bia's King Fahd is working to
keep oil prices from falling, and
he may evefi be able to enlist the
cooperation of the money-hungry
Iranians, who have been duinp·
ing cheap oil on ihemarket to get
quick cash.
.
Our intelligence sources say
Iran Is coming around, but has
alrea dy sold enough cheap crude
this fall to cause a temporary
flood Of the market. The bad

Don't say it on camera
By DICK WEST
.WASHINGTON (UP!) - I have neve r set foot on the campus of
Fairleigh ·Dickinson Unlve r.Uy In m:&gt; life. a record I hope to keep
Intact as long as a certain professor is a member of. the fa c ulty.
According to Forum ma gazine. Dr . Rober-t Francoeur tcachs
"IJUman sexualit y," whateve r tha t Is. Regardl ess of what excuses
you use, how do you expla in to you r parent s that you fa lied one of hi s
·coUrses'?
"Dear Dad, " a s tudent mig ht writ e forth r ightly. "Looks like f'm
f!Jnklng human sexuality. Got an 'F ' this se mester ."
"Can't you do anything right ?" your fath er , or molhcr . or whoever
controls the family purse strings, mig ht reply .
· I'd like to see your answe r to tha t.
The publlcation assures us Fra ncoE'ur doesn't fail s tudents merely
bee a use they neglected to read his magazine column called " Futu re
SeX." But how can they be sure they are being trea ted fai r ly, or
Fairleigh?
.
Take the periodical's word for it? Don't l)'lake me laugh .
The plain, harsh truth is tha t anyone who writes or.s peaks the pl ain.
hlltsh truth these days runs a ri sk of being accu sed of s preading the
plain, harsh truth. The Fi rst Am endm ent be hanged.
~y advice Is: Make sure the mikes a re. turned off before s peaking a
p141n, harsh truth, in or out of the class room .
'
Might as well conduct a survey .
Be warned, however. tha t the s tudy may confirm your wor st
suspicions, as one poll! saw recently did for its sponsor .
This one was a product of Epyx Inc., identified as a "computer
software company ...
~s a spokesman pointed out, "The s tudy shows th a t people are
wastlmg literally millions of man hours on. personal business.''
Above all, don't jump to conclusions, as I did recently.
r assumed a brochure. captioned " Help Abolish BO " was a soap
ad-:ertlsement. II turned out to be a press release pre pared by a
national safety organization. The " BO" was a reference to
"bureaucratic overregulation ."
'f)Je Epxy survey also revealed a majority of the nation 's teenagers
wo{Jid rather watch television than play sports.
I( that's not a plain, harsh truth , I never hearn one.
T.lte company cites percentiles of the 1.000 boys .who participated ,
. ' no(4n athletics but In the survey .
For Instance, It found that about 35 percent listed watching TV as
their favorite Indoor sport as opposed to the 18 percent who claimed
they played sports to relax.
.
Things obviously have changed a bit since I was In college. In those
days, another Indoor sport was popul&lt;tr.
•·
• ·
Which brings us back to Professor Francoeur.

Today ~ history
• By United Prell&amp; lnlematlonal
Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 26, the 26th day of 1988 with 340 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward its full phase.
·
The momlng stars are Mars and Saturn .
··
Tlie ev!!ning stars are ~ercury, Venus and Jupiter :

By DAVID E. NATHAN
UPI Sports Writer
/ PlttsbuDgh · forward Jerome
Lane spent last year snatching
basketballs off backboards. Monday night he used a basketball to
bre~k one.
Early In a game against
Providence,. Lane took a pass
from Sean.MIIler on a fast break, ,
left the floor near the foulllne and ·
dunked the ball with such force
he shattered the plexlglass
backboard.
"It was like a dream," said the
6-foot-6 junior, who led the nation
In rebounding last year. "It
seemed like when I hit the rim, I
didn't give. That's just one of
those fantasies to chalk up. I
gues~ the next one is to get 30
rebounds In a game."
Said Pitt Coach Paul Evans:
"It was unbellevab.le. It wasn't a

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

news Is thai the . temporary
surplus IJrobably won't be re· Gulf oil onto the market at one
fleeted In the cost qf heating your time Holding back keeps the
home this winter. Most of the prlc~s up.
cheap oil wa:s sold after winter
Iran has been loath·to play the
heating oil . purchases. had al· game OPEC sets production
ready been made for 1987·88.
quota~ of15mllllonbarrelsa day,
King Fahd is the most lnfluen- · 'but Iran and Iraq have been
tlal ·member Of the Organization violating the quotas . so the
of Petroleum Exporting Coun- production Is closer to 19 million
tries. Like any clever business· barrels a day. Both countries
man, Fahd has been cautious need to sell more oil to finance
abo
. ut letting too much Persian their bitter war against each

IT WAS ToTAL.LY
IJNEXPE'c;Tr~

--A HART ATrACI&lt;.·

Which Bob Dole
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Those who watc hed Bob Dole the vice
presidential candidate in 1976 are wondering if the same Bob Dole Is
· going to emerge as the presidential aspirant of 1988.
The Dole of 1976 was, In baseball terms , the political version of Ty
Cobb on the bases and Bob Gibson on the pitcher's mound: flying
spikes and dustoff pitches. In short. hardball politics.
.
In 1988, Dole and Vice President George Bush have had some
skirmishes, but compared with what went on 12 years ago between
the Kansas Republican senator and his Democratic opponents. the
GOP nomination contest to date has been patt}· cake.
Gerald. Ford's original strategy In 1976 was to run for president
from the White.House Rose Garden, remaining In Washington and
appearing only ln official functions to demonstrate what a bang-up
job he was doing. This approach had been used four years earlier by
Richard Nixon and harvested a landslide victory for the GOP.
Just as Nixon sent out "surrogates" to belabor the Democrats, the
Ford campaign made Dole its 1976 designated hitter. for which he had
prepared as GOP national chairman In 1971·72 and in a par ticularly
hob-nailed election campaign in 1974.
No more than a few days after he was tapped by Ford to run for vice
president, Dole was out in front of the television cameras describing
Democrat Jimmy Carter as a " Southern-fried I George) McGovern"
- a line originally written for Ford but rejected as being out of
character for the lofty role the president was to assume. For Dole,
with his w~ll-honed razor '\'it. it was a perfes:t fit.
Then Dole went up against Walter Mandate in the first of that odd
permutation of nalillnal politics called the vice presidential
candidates' debate . It has not been recorded what Mondaleexpected.
but what he got was a street figh t. Dole dusted off every Republican
slam against the Democrats since the Woodrow Wilson adminstra tlon, climaxed by the description of World Wars T and IT and ·the
Korean War as "Democrat wars ."
In the years since as he ha s risen In the Senafe hierarchy, the
senator has both learned to do business civilly with the political
opposition and to soften reaction against his sulfuric sense of humor
by turning It against himself. In sum , he shucked the ima ge of
political gut -puncher and became a congressional craftsman and
raconteur.
.
.
But as the 1988 campaign approached, observers got a glimpse of .
the 1976 Dole. Comparing his legislative and electoral accomplish·
ments to Bush 's list of high appointive jobs, Dole said the Republicans
needed a presidential candidate with "a record, not a resump' ."
And , In a New Hampshire debate when he was as ked if as Senate
Finance Committee chairman he had "fixed Social Security," Dole
turned to Bush with a wicked smile , waved a piece of paper and
replied. "I thought I had. but I see from his brochure that George sa ys
he did lt.''
But that was hard)y vintage hardball Dole. At' another point, Pete
duPont described hls plan to curb youthful narcotics use by denying
driver's licenses to kids who flunk drug tests. a proposal thai might
have some ill! pact in middle and upper income a reas but scare off few
addicts In poor inner city neighborhoods .
,
Dole grimaced .when he heard duPont' s proposal, but suppressed
himself and let Alexander Haig heap ridicule on tne idea. The l971i
Bob Dole would have stepped up to that soft pile~ and hit it ove r the
grandstand.

WiscOnsin·walloped by. Iowa

Iran may cut oil productio.n _.

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Pres s
Association and the American Newspa~r Publishers Association.
LET't'ERS OF .OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
tong. All letters aresubj ect toedlting and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned leitt&gt;rs wUI 'be published. LE'tt~rs should be tn
good taste, a,ddresslng Issues, not peisooalltles.

~ittsburgh routs Providence;

'

other.
,
So desperate Is Iran s Ayato1•
lab Khomelnl fo~ casht h? is
offering his oil at d scoun pr c~,
below the $18 a barrel set Y ' '
OPEC. But the ayatollah is ;
having trouble finding buyers. . .,
The United States, with Us .,
embargo on Iranian . oil, is . ,
pressuring its allies not to shop at "
the Iranian oil store.
•'
At first, the lure of cheap crude
oil was too much, and the ames
Ignored our r~uest to boycott ' •
Iranian oil, but lately they have
begun to knuckle under. Without
any fanfare, Japan has reduced
Its oil purchases from lran.'· Tbe
impact of that, and coopera.tlori
by other allies, has forced
Iranian oil sales to drop by about
500,000 barrels a day.
..
The ayatollah's war debts have 'i
not completely overshadoWed his
I
.&lt;
good sense. Iran, according to
our sources, Is beginning to
•'
•
accept the Inevitability of pro·
•
ductlon -quotas and to recognize
that It doesn't help to fi9Qd tbe
market.
'
When the ayatollah wises up, .
that will mean higher oil prices
for Americans and everYone
else.
.
•
The ayatollah is getting smart
•
· about another inevllabUlty. Pen·
~
lagon sources say he .won't · (
escalate the tanker war In the , ~
Persian Gulf because that would
;
bring down the wrath of the U.S. • ;
,:
military. In fact, our sources ~ay
It is not the Iranian .military
command that has authorized
attacks on oil tankers In the gulf.
'•
That Is the work of the radical
.
·,
Revolutionary Guards.

.

Scoreboard ...
NEW VORk{UI"IJ-TateU•IWIIIPrH!o
IIIM-nallo-.1 a-n1 of Cn&lt;:IIN' Toll 1t
C. .p! blfdld.all ral. ., Willi flnt·
P~•

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useful to see more bla,ck team
managers. administrators and
owners~ but th!' sports Industry
Is still a tiny Industry ln a big
country.
·Now, I llelleve that athletics,
both participating and special ·
lng, can be a great joy. I believe
that : great athletes are often
great' artists. I believe, as , the
coaches !Ike to say, that sports

17-1)

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College scores

II
/

are good training for life.

OMO Collrp BaMkflball 8HIIIt11
By Ualk'• Pft11M llte1'111ll .._.
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Ak.-11, Clllrap state $1
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'

RON RITI'INGER

Transactions
Batwllall

.

Olk-qo (t\LJ - PrMRotecl ral Emery
•• hiW .. IIIMra-tor. .
LeN Allpb - Slped ltn!l bUMnlft·

l · y~ar

colllnu.t .
fko8ttk&gt;-

~pt'd plkhfor Edwt• NUIII'I
lo" I·Jelll' t-olll.-.4't; al• •lll•d pJl1:1M.•nt
Powt"ll, Tt&gt;l'l')' T.,lor
Cllnl
Znint~: · elllftehler Dave He~t~f'l lind
'~*' omu vt....,t.
,
To...ito - Slrlled t~ea~.-aed hitter

•*'

0._.

""•• .,......,: 11lpecl

to

l·)'f'M'

cen-

tl'lltill: ml..,.teape ••llei*N Gle•llra Hill, Gt-n~~lmo • .,..,., Sth..lltrt'
Cam,...n:o, utt'lllt&gt;r Pill Borde"' and

llhorWop "'m' a.u,-.

Colii'Jt'
~a•nattl'IJ ~~o ..pe ...ed
lil.llharlr.Crall!' R•yward frem lllf'fDelhllll
• team.
Foo&amp;ta.U
Ka...., City - Named &lt;no ra-e Sell' II!.
offt".tve t'oonllllotor.

Plllllh•l"'h -

Hockey

MI......, - Be• defe..e~Ma Ema·
.... Vlwt""' a.t Ml!w' ~I'JJel' to
Kalamaaou of tile latfraat ..•l Hockry
Leape.
.
. N•L-!MupndedQwbfoc4fole...,.rnan
Ten'J" (:iu..• r It larnel• IIMptMrd
cea&lt;"•

~~~

... ,...,. I IIUMII • • liard

h• ti.M and flaM QIIP.bet&gt; lit,. . for
tn,-ohri!W'III. Ia u altrreaUoa apiMt
Monln-:al S.ndQ.
Maral . .a
Loll An~lell - ..stl{ftMI •

l'lpct~NrNIIIp IIP'f'f"Mnf

:t&gt;ytar

wid! .lo.. Hilt·

CGCk F1•1k'lill8trYicH-

,,'

game home-court winning
streak. The Hoosiers play at
.Klllaht'a alma mater Oblo State
.Weclallday night.
•

..
'I

. .

•
\'

$T/IPJIIM "~" 1\PIS,

'lfMI·~NO~T.

•

'

•

-

.

'

network did not air any report
about Knight resigning.
"There's no truth to the report
ESPN had a report Bob Knight
may resign by the end of the
day," said Matters, a coordlnaf.
tng producer for the Bristol,
Conn.-based TV network. "W~
haven't alleged any such thing,
nor have we Investigated 'a ny
such report." 1
Matters atlltibuted the report
to an unidentified Indianapolis
radio station.
"I thought! put the kibosh on 'u
at 5:1~ &lt;p.m.), and I left. When I
came back about f5 minutes
later, everybody here (in the
newsroom) 1 said, 'Hey, Mike,
you know that thing you thougl\t
you had handled... "
The Hoosiers are strugglJna
following last year's champion·
&amp;hlp season, Knight's third In his
nearty 17 years at Indiana.
Knight's squad Is 9-6 overall and
H In tbe Big Tea Ibis year. tbe
team's wont conference start In
nlneyeara.
lndiAina lost Sunday to No. 8

'

FIGHT FOR P10SITION - Wisconsin's Kurt
Portmann and Iowa's Kent Wll fight for position

during the flrsl h1,1.lf of Monday night's Big Ten
match In Madison, Wis. (UPI)

Arizona remains ·o n top in
'
poll; Purdue moves to second·:.
'

NEW YORK !UPI) - The
Arizona Wildcats collected a
season-high 35 first-place votes
Monday to retain the No. 1
ranking In United Press Interna·
tlonal's weekly college basket·
ball ranklngs.
The Wildcats, 18·1, gathered
620 points to easily outdistance ·
No . 2 Purdue, which moved up
two spots with three ilrst -place
votes and 558 points. In previous
weeks, North Carolina and Kentucky each had earned. 28 first·
place votes.
The 620 points were the most
earned .by a team In nine weeks of
balloting by the 42 members of
the Board of Coaches . Purdue,
17-1, defeated Michigan State
and Louisville to extend Its
winning str.e ak· to 16 games ,
longest In the nation among
Dl vision I schools.

With all coaches votlng; North
Carolina slipped one spot to
third, Duke advanced five slots to
No. 4, and Nevada-Las Vegas
collected one flrst-piace ballot In
taking the fifth position . D~ke
defeated North Carolina 70-69,
and UNL V topped previously
unbeaten 'T emple to enter the
Top FiVe.
No. 6 Temple, No. 7 Brigham
. Young, No. 8 Michigan, No. 9
Kentucky and No. 10 Oklahoma
round out the Top Ten. Brigham
Young, at. 14-0, Is · the only
undefeated major-college team.
The Cougars collected three
first -place votes after posting
victories over Texas-EI Paso and
New Mexico.
The second ten In the elite,
group was comprised up of No. ll
Pittsburgh, No. 12 Florida, No. 13
Syracuse, No. 14 Illlnots ,.No. 15

Georgetown, No. 16 . Texas El· . ·
Paso, No, 17 Iowa State, No. 19
Villanova . and co-Nos. 20 Mls· '
sour! and Southern Mississippi.
The C:ators defeated Kentucky ·.
to move up eight posltons, the
biggest leap of the week. The
58-56 loss at Lexington , Ky .,
caused the Wildcats to tumble six
places, the biggest drop of the . ·.
. week.

The Daily Sentinel
IUSPS IU·tiiO)
A Dlv~kln ol Mliltlmedla, Inc.
Published every afternoon, Monday

through Friday, 111 Court St., Po. meroy, Ohio, by t~e Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. So&gt;-

CQnd class postage pa id at POmeroy,

Ohio.
Member: Un ited Press International,
Inland DaHy Press Assoclat lon and the
Ohio Newspaper Ass«Xiation. Natlonal
Advertlslng Repr.esentatlve, Branham
Newspaper Sales; 7l3 Third Avenue;

Ohio Outdoors·

Winter brings o~t
many memorable things

New York, New York 10017.

1

/

ESPN spokesman Mike Matteri told United Prell llllm'na·
tloaal thai hi&amp; natloaal sporta

.

43

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fill; ~TOJl. OF ~e

Girls scores

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI)
- Bob Knight had the last word
Monday In dismissing a rumor
that he was resigning after more
than 16 years as Indiana Univer·
slty ba~ketba'l coach.
·;,The key word In the whole
thing Is bull," Knight said on his
weekly radio call·ln show on
• WIRE-AM .
The rumor spl'ead quickly·
following comments made by a
caller to another. Indianapolis
radio station earlier In the day.
The tan apparently said he had
heard a report on , ESPN, the
cable television sports network,
that Knight would resign some·
time Monday night.
"If we comment on rumors, we
mJtlht as well comment for the
next four hours," Knight told his
radio listeners.
. Kit Kllngelhofier, IU sports
·Information director, confirmed
there was no truth to the rumor.
"There'• abiOiulely notiiJna to
It," Kllqelhoffer IBid. "Tbat'a
trreiponalble ftiiOrtln&amp;'· 'l'llat
jult gall&amp; me beCause nobody
from ESPN hal even called our

....

.

HarUonlld Cal«uy, nl(tlt

Knight dismisses
•
•
resignation rumor

••'
'·

'

Ml.-.,ta, niA;III

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Berry's World

NY !.Ianden .U

.Ill I II Jtl

.Ill I I .nl
.1ft 4 II JSI
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Co.,ere.:r . AU Gamn

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WI ...aile• lot PU~I'Ih. nlallt

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Mont~IIJ 'It ~llalo,

Fort Frjoe M. SkJ¥• U
f'ort lt&gt;ipldap.ll, ColumhltM Grove 31

Standin@ll

••

V adeouwr al8t. LoW11, ~: 3S p.m.

expand the lead to 73-44.
"Pittsburgh Is a great team,
better than I expected," Provl·
dence Coach Gordon Chiesa sal d.
''I have never seen a team play
better than they did ln .the second
half. Their talent. took over the
game, It's that slrnple."
Providence received a team·.
high 14.polnts from Steve Wright.
In other games Involving Top
20 teams, No. 4 Duke held off
Stetson 81·78 and No. 18 Iowa
thrashed Wisconsin 104·89.
At Daytona Beach, Fla. , Kevin
Strlckland scored a game-high 22
points and Duke withstood a late
rally. Stetson, which trailed by 12
with nine minutes left. closed to
78·75 with 1: 011eft on 2 foul shots
by Terry Johnson. Three free .
throws by the Blue Devils put
them ahead by 6 before Stetson's
Bjorn Gehrke hlt a 3-polnter at
the buzzer to account for the final
margin.
..
At Madison, Wis.; Roy Marble
scored 21 points as Iowa raced to
a 25-polnt flrst·half lead in
routing Wisconsin. The Haw·
keyes broke from a 4-4 tie to take
a 19·6 lead. Iowa led 43-18 on a
basket by Kent Hill with 1:42
remaining. Trent Jackson had 24
points for the Badgers, who
. suffered their fourth consecutive
conference loss .
..
Elsewhere it was : Cornell 80,
Colgate 48; Rhode Island 101,
Massachusetts 78; Alabama,
Birmingham 70, Jacksonville 55; ·
Eastern Kentucky 83, Young·
stown State 55; South Carolina
80, Florida State 72; Western
Kentucky 78, NC-Charlotte 69
and Evansville 85, Butler 76.

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••

But most disadvantaged
youngsters :... black and white would be a lot better off if they
practiced their jump shot a little
less frequently and hit the books
a little more often. Maybe
Jimmy the Greek can now devote
some of .his free time to putting
that message across.

Poa.bl
at I
.1511 ..

us) 118-'1)

t. Purdue (J)

•

.The Greek's other message·___B_en_-~_a_tte_nb_er_g ••
l
So. Jimmy the Greek was fired lor example, the best boxers ,
bv CBS. He said offensive and -tended to be Jewish, lrts!Y or
ei-roneous th ings about black Italian. Today, boxing is doml·
ath lcl&lt;'s-: !hell thl'y 'i ·e so good nated ·by blacks and Hispanics.
bec:a use thev were "bred" thai
There Is something that Is, at
way in the days of slavery, that
once, remarkable, stirring and
such breeding led to "big thighs"
sad about the abundance of black
and I hilt "they can jump higher
athletes lp the big-money specta·
and run faster because of their · tor sports. You can call an athlete
bigger thighs."
aa "jock" If you want, but
Jimmy wa s immediately de·
remember that It usually , takes
nounced for racism, let alone great talent, discipline and Intel·
faulty history. He deserved to be
llgence to be one of the ~?est
fired; a public figure can't say
athletes In a nation of a quarter of
things like that in· a racially,
a billion p('Ople. That so many
ethnically and religiously sensl·
blacks have succeeded so quickly
live society and expect to be a
In leagues that were once lilY·
commentator on a national net·
white Is not a testament to their
work. One strike and you're out.
thighs but to their Intense
But Jimmy the Greek also said
motivation.
'
somf' other things in his Ill-fated
The rewards these days can be
int erview with WRC·TV in Wa·
fantastic for the big stars shington . Hf' said one reason that
many millions of doliars - and
blac ks are better athletes Is
there's even good money tor
because "I hey practice and they
journeyman players. The playplay, and they practice and play.
ers deserve the money because
They're not lazy like the white
there is also an inherent tragedy
athlete."
·
In professional sports. No matter
A few minutes after that
how talented, only a few people
interview , Jimmy talked to the
make the grade - perh~ps a
Washington Post, apologlf~?d for
couple of thousand In all sports at
his remarks, and sa:td, "I was any given time, only a sm,all
trying to emphasize how much
number of whom are stars. The
harder so many blacks work at
career of a pro athlete Is
becornlng better athletes. And
typically brief -a few years for
they work harder because they ' most. And th!!n, for too many, all
are hungrier."
·
the years of practice and persev-~lg e from the calumny about
erance ~an come to little-' out of
lazy&gt; whites _: which I guess
a big-pay, big· fame job by age30,
makes Jimmy the Greek both a
on the descent when most of us
one-shot anti-white racist and a
are just beginning to climb In o~r
one-shot anti-black racist careers.
tt.ere Is some interesting sociolToo many young students
ogy that goes with hls remarks.
spend too much of their time and
We are, after all, going through a
effort on the long shot of a pro
great debate In this country . sports career, and too little on
about poverty, particularly · math, English, history and the
black PQVerty.
1 other subject that yelld a high
ln. America, underprivileged
percentage chance of success In
peoples have long lOOked toward . · a society that bas come a long
. athletics as a way out or poverty.
way In opening Its doors for all .
In the early part of this century,
with merit. Surely, It would be

ewn.

,.~...

rankl~t~:

Tum

'•

COLFAX, Iowa (NEA)- The eoar1y."
few members ot minority
Leading the pack of Iowa·
big news these days here on the
That brief portrait of life here groups.
.
bashers
this year has. been Sen.
banks of the South Skunk River Is In Colfax Is offered in support of
But
what
two
other
states
Jr., D-Tenn., · a
Albert
Gore
the mid-January fire that se·
the contention that Iowa resl· would be thoroughly represe·n ta· previously classy politician who
verely damaged Lenny's Barber dents generally are thoroughly
Shop in this struggling central sensible people when dealing live of the entire country? Idaho has displayed a proclivity for
and New Jersey? Arizona and cheap stunts ever since he
Iowa farming community.
with presidential politics, even Rhode Island? L,oulslana and entered the presidential race.
The blaze apparently started when their state · tieglns the
North Dakota? The Iowa-New
"Somt: say the Iowa caucuses
on what's known lo&gt;ally as a delegate selection process.
·Hampshire combination !s reward Ideological purity rather
davenport, a piece of furniture
That's Important to under· surely no worse- and perhaps a than Intellectual honesty," GOre
referred to elsewhere as a couch stand because 1~ recent years the*
proclaimed In a speech at a
or sofa . It 's a popular topic of two states. that vote first In little better- than any other.
Because
farm
products
are
major
Democratic party dinner
conversation because II follows presidential campaigns - Iowa
among
this
country's
leading
'
In
Des
Moines last autumn. "I
by only a few Weeks a fire that and New Hampshire- routinely
exports;
Iowa's
abiding
interest
·
won't
...
change my tune and
l)roke out In a locker plant In the have benn depicted as havens for
In
agriculture
IS
directly
linked
to
back
doWn
from my convictions
nearby community of Mingo.
political zealots, ideological fa· the larger, crucial Issue of .. , I wlli not barter my beliefs to
When asked about the pres!· natlcs and assorted other misfits
wln vo\es here ·o r elsewhere."
denlial campaign In general, or thoroughly unrepresentative of international trad~. Similarly,
New
Hampshire's
~oncern about
In fact, the precinct caucus
Iowa ); Feb. 8 precinct caucuses the population elsewhere In the
the
future
of
the
slate's
high·
system
here has never required
In particular, however , folks country.
'
technology
Industries
Is
a
man!·
politicians to make such com·
here In Jasper County usually
When New Hampshire had the testation of the · nation's some·
promises. But Gore, In a display
offe r either taciturn responses or honor all to' Itself, Its voters were
times
difficult
transition
to
a
of
petulance, has · slashed his
quizzical looks .
portrayE'd as too conservative,
post-Industrial
economy.
Iowa
campaign start from 21 to
" I live In the country, I haven 't too cranky and too Irascible. Now
The
entire
delegate
selec.tlon
four
and
virtually boycotted the
heard much talk about II," says' that Iowa votes even earlier, Its
process
following
the
voting
In
state.
farmer Bob-Luther. "Most folks residents are characterized as
Iowa In new ·Hampshire Is a
In addition to unfairly sullying
won't get Into It untlllhe field Is too liberal, too fixate&lt;! upon
"wholesale"
affair
dominated
by
the
reputation of the state and Its
narrowed down," adds retiree agrlculf.ure and . too peace·
politicianImpersonal
forms
of
voters,
Gore , has ignored the
Oliver Smith. Shopkeeper Harold oriented. ·
to-voter
contact,
notably
televl·
admonition
that one of the marks
Tay lor says he's not especially
Are Iowa and New Hamp~hlre slon commercials. Only the first
of
adulthood
Is playing the cards
impressed with the quality of the typical of the nation? Of course
you're dealt, rather than de·
candidates, then bemoans the not. Bother are relatively low , two states, with their managea·
ble
populations,
allow
the
l~xury
moaning th.e lack or a different
. fac-t that " they'rf' starting too population states with a high
of face -to-face "retail" oolltics.
hand.
share of rural residents but very
•

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lol,al poln&amp;A (baled oa Ill,... . far lltlll
placr, It lor IK'C:ond, Pte.) IUIIll•l week'II

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Hockey resulis

UPI ratings

'

Don't.hash Iowa's

little dunk or apythlng like that."
A sign on the scoreboard at
Fitzgerald Fieldhouse read,
"The Lane Falls Mainly on the
Pane." The game was delayed 32
minutes until a new backboard
could be put In place.
When play resumed, the 11th·
ranked Panthers raced away
from an 8·5 lead on the way to a
90-56 rout.
· Lane tlnlshed with 17 points
and 17 rebounds. Pitt received 17
points from Charles Smith, 15
from Bobby Martin, 14 from
Jason Matthews and 13 from
Demetreus Gore. The Panthers
have won 13 straight at home.
Pitt started · the second half
with a 9-0 spurt to move in front
48-28. The Panthers put Provl·
dence away with a 10·0 run
midway through the half to

Name Rio's
Kittinger
top player
Ron Rittlnger, a 6·6 forward for
the Rio Grande Redmen and the
teal)1's top scorer this season •.
was chosen the Mid-Ohio Confer·
· ence Player of the Week for Jan.
16·23.
Rittinger, a senior majoring In
business management at Rio
Grarnie, was selected for hls
efforts in games against Ohio
Dominican on Jan. 19 and Cedarville on Saturday .
In the Ohio Dominican game,
Rlttlnger was 8 for 17 on field
·goals /66.6 percent). 7 of 9 on free
throws (77.7 percent) for a total·
of 23 points. He ·also had 10
r.e bounds and 4 assists. Against
Cedarville. he ,scored 35 points,
netting 14 of 19 field goal .
attempts for 73.6 percent and 7 of
8 tries at the free throw line for
87.5 percent. He also had 12
rebounds and 3 assists.
In 22 games played so far,
Rlttinger has scored a total of 471
points, based on 202 field goals
and 67 free throws. Statistically,
he is the team's top man on field
goal. percentage &lt;62. 7 percent)
and on free throws (78.8 percent) . Jn addltlo~./ he Is the
team:s leading reDQunder with
152 /6.9 per game) and has been
credited with 38 assists, 22 blocks
and' 26 steals.
'
Rlttlilger's playing has helped
boost the Redmen to a 16·6 season
record so far and a 5·2 slate In the
MOC; giving the team second
place In the conference.
The son of Ronald and Marilyn
Rittlnger of Chllltc:othe, Rlttlnger Is a graduate or Chillicothe
ffigh School, where he played
basketball under Don Cooper. He
was a member or the Redmen
teams that played in the NAIA
National$ In 1985 and 1987.

start unwrapping when the finish
By JERRY PICKRELL
Is reapplied over them .
Outdoor Writers
Rod varnish Is cheap stuff, and
Association of America
youcanpulltonwllhyourflnger.
Distributed by UPI
One of the activities that In fact. that does a better job than
fishermen invented to fill the a brush. You don't want any
long, cold days In the dead of bubbles since they'll make the
winter Is cleaning. sorting and finished rod look rough . Wllh
your . finger, you get a good,
repairing tackle.
Some truly memorable things smooth coat without
imperfections.
have been discovered a I the
Most tackle suppliers either
bottom ·of a long-stored tackle
box. Often these items are havl! a brand on hand or can get il
for you within a few days.
unidentifiable by normal means.
You might as well try it out.
SharP.ning hooks and repaint·
tng or touching up lures are You:re not going to be making
standard activities. Not only do any casts for a _few more days
such tasks fill the empty hours anyway.
when the snow bank keeps the
door closed, they also save
money.
Repainting and rehooklng
lures during this time of I he year
m~ans one less Item to be
purchased.lp the spring.
Disassembling and lubricating
reels Is another make-work
cl)ore for which there never
· seems to be time when the fish
are biting.
True, it's essential for the
'
pro~r operation of the device,
but It isn't one of life's most
thrilling ' undertakings. (When
. you don't do It, and the drag
jumps and catches and grabs
during your fight with the biggest
bass you ever hooked, THAT'S
thrilling.)
Beyond these muqdane labors
is one that most fishermen
overlook. But It's also one. that
can make a great difference In
your tackle's appearance . and
mayl1e Its performance, too.
Rod varnish can transform an
old, well-worn Junker sstick Into ·
one. that looks as if you just'
unpacked It from the carton .
All of the nicks and scratches
that accumulate from summer
days being dragged through back
' country brambles or rolllng
about on the botlom of a boat are
gone as If by magic.
·
A little care and the.rod's g1;1ide
wraps are also reinforced by the
varnish. Mliwr thread tears don't

PbSTMAsTER: Send address changes
IO 'll!e Dally Seiitlnel, l1J Court St.,
Pomer_oy, Ohio 45769.

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Page 4

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The Daily Salllinel

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

Tuesday, January 26. 1988

' I

Tuesday, January 26, 1988

·Akl:on ups record to l ·I-5 -after 61-56 victory over foe
By U•lted Preu lnlernallonal
· The Akron Zips are on 1\ roll.
The Zips notched their third
straight victory Monday night ,
with a 61-56 decision over host
Chicago State.
· Eric McLaughlin scored a
game-high 21 paints to propel
Akron from a seven-paint halflime deficit to the win, boosting
the Zips' record to 11-5.
The Cougars jumped out to an

11-2 lead six minutes Into the baskets to takt&gt; an Insurmounta- later the fatigue ·factor catches
game .and increased the margin ble 57-52 lead .
·
up to you and tonight was a
to 22-9 with 8: 45 to play In the first
Laurent Crawford and Stanley perfect example."
half. Akron cut the lead to37·30at
Jones scored ·16 points each for
Elsewher~ In Ohio college
Intermission.
Chicago State, 5•13.
basketball action Monday night.,.
· Akron took Its first lead, 40-39, ·
"We got tired at the .e nd and · Xavier rolled to a 110-86 win over
at the 15:38. The Zips 6utscored
lost our ci&gt;mpasure a tittle btl," St. - Louts: Cleveland State
CSU 17-6 to open the second
said Tommy Sultts, Chicago whipped Valparaiso (Ind.), 91·
period putting them up 47-43 with _State coach. "They applied great 72; Eastern Kentucky topped
12:13 to play In the game.
pressure and kept sending fresh Youngstown State, 83-55; Ash·
Chicago State 52-51 with s:os
bodies into the game. Sooner· or land blasted Concordia I Mich.).
but tl]e Zips scored three straight

88-59: and John Carroll beat
Geneva (Pa.), 86-64.
At St . Louts, Bryon Larkin
scored 27 paints and J.D. Barnett
had 22 to pawer Xavier to Its
Midwestern Collegiate Conference victory over St. Louts.
··
Xavier Improved to 12-3 overall and 3-1 In league play while St.
Louts. paced by 21 paints from
Tony Brown, dropped to 7-8 and

· hOSI T iff•ID,
Re.d men

Two mid-week games witt keep
the Rio Grande Redmen on the go
as Tjfftn University's Dragons
· visit Lyne Ce nter tonlgnt a nd the
Redmen host the Wilmington
Thursday.
Both games are to be ptaxed at
7:30 p.m. Tonight's contest wtll
be Bob Evans Farms Night and
Thursday's game wttt honor
Jackson's new car dealers who
contributed to the Rio Grande ·
Boostrrs Club.· ·
Rto Grande. 16-6 and 5-2 in Ill&lt;'
Mid-Ohio Conf&lt;'rence, . faces
another conference opponent in
Jim Hammond's Tlflln club,
which Is current ly 4-16 and 1-5 In
the MOC, next to last place Ohio
Dominican. The · Dragons defeated Ohio Dominican 9569 on .
Saturday. ·
The Redmen - ranked fourth
In the nation by the NAIA In tea m
field ,goa l percentage (55.1 percent for 20 gamest on Jan . 18-

wiJ.mington
·
··

wltl be coming off a 98-89 win over
.
rival Cedarville.
The game saw senior Ron
Rttttnger produce 35 points and
senior Ray Singleton . offer 26
points to put away the double duo
scoring threat of Yellow Jacket s
Tony Ewing and Brent Ba trd. Rio
Grande was even with the
visitors about midway through
the first half when "baskets by
Rlttinger, Briari Watkins and
John Lambcke hetpe(t build a
51-39 adva ntage for the Redmen
at the half.
First -yea r coach Hammond,
whose cl ub lost to Rio Grande
58-56 on Dec. 1 when Singleton 's
jumper near the end broke a tie,
Is expected . to start veterans
Tyrone Trbovich and Steve Do.ss
as forwards, 'with Mike Francis
a nd Scott Morrissey as guards.
At cen ter wilt be Bryan Brown.
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn's probable starters witt be

.

with a bucket eac h to build a 9-1
first quarter lead . .
The remainder of the game
saw the little. Marauderettes put
on an awesome dis play of pressure defense and fast breaking
offense as they then outscqred
the Bulldogs 50 to 6. Fans saw
several excellent passes off the
break which resulted in many
easy tayups.
The game was highlighted by
an 8 for 10 performance from the
fou l line. including 6 of 8 kby·
Tricia Baer and 2 for2 by Chrissy
Weaver. Kim Ha nning, Meigs'
strong forward . became the first
girl to hit a three pointer this
season for th e Marauders as she
hit a 21 footer la te In the fourth
.quarter .
Reva Mullen led the Meigs
team in scoring with 20 points
fo llowed by Baer's 16 and Hanning's 15. Weaver hit fo r 4 white
Misty Butcher and Verna Comp·

Dean na Haggy added two fo r the
v ictor~ .

Meigs·B~Iprc

Playing only their seco nd
home contes t of t.he seaso n, the
Meigs girls varsity completely
out classed Belpre 's Lady Eagles
60-3].
·The Maruadere tt es hit 26 of 66
from the field for :19 percent and
sa nk 8 or 15 fro m tile charity
sf ripe. a .13 percent average.
Wendy Fry had the hot hand as
she hit 8 of 9 fie ld goats for 16
point s and snagged 12 rebound s
as she worked in the paint
underneath.
.Jennifer Taylor led In th&lt;' free
throw shooting department as
she connected on :i of 6. Tammy
Wrigh t had 6 assists on the night
a nd Fry a lso led in steals as she
picked off 4 passe~. ·
The entir&lt;' Marauder benc h
saw act ion and each player
figured .in ei th&lt;'f scori ng, rebounding, steals or assists .
Coach Fos ter termed It a welt
ba lanced attack and was obv iously pleased with the overa ll
play of the Marauderettes
Belpre was · as cold as the
wea ther averag ing only 23 percent in the field goa l area 112 of
53) a nd had 4 or 12 from the fr£&gt;e

••

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••. .
'•• •
'•
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HOLDERS

ston had two each.
.
The Marauder gold team lost to
the undefeated Bulldogs seventh
grade team by a 33-.8 count.
Athens ran their string to 6-0with
the victory.
Yvette Young led the Marauderettes In scori ng wit h five
paints with Anna Chapman and
Courtney Midkiff chipping in two
each.
The Maroon squad Is 8-0 on the
season and the Gold unit has a 4·2 ·
reeord.

On January 31, Super Bowl XXII will
be played in San Diego, California.
The outcome of the game will be determined on the field, but YOU may
have something at stake, · too!
Just fill out the entry blank, clip it
out, and take it to any of the below
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All you have.to do is predict the cor·
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and the $50 is all yours.
ENTER AS MANY TIMES AS YOU
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Do not predict the winning .team,
just the final s(ore. ·
FOR EXAMPLE, 7 to 3
The Sentinel will take all correct entries and select the winner by random drawing. Prize awarded by The
Daily Sentinel.
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•'

Coac h Kim Adkins reser ves
easily bested Belpre's JV's by a
37-1 1 margin. Meigs did not a llow
Belpre a potn·t in the third
quarter of pla y.
Kelty ~mi th took game ~cori ng
honors wlth'16 .points, five more
tha n the entire Belpre output.
Meigs convl'rted on 14 of 46
field goa ts to :1 of 25 for the
visi tors. From the. free throw
line, the young Marauderettes hit
on 9 cit 14 aitempts as Belpre
hitting on 5 of 11.
Meigs scoring was as follows:
Smith 16, Jennifer Taylor 5,
Wagner 5, Rouse 4, Haggy :1.
Newsome 2 and Stanley 2.
Misty McCutcheon ha,d 5 ior .
Belpre, with Jerkin , Cai n and
Wolfe adding 2 each.
'· '
The Maruaderettes wilt host
Alexander on Thursday.

LUMBER

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

·~·

'v\b1d FaYlous Matflesses
at lncreo I lie Valuesl

American Fo·otball
Conference Champions

•

Freshmen In Tourney
Freshman coach John Arnott
announced the freshman team
wl II fa ce. Federal Hocking In
tournament play at 5:30 p.m. on
Thursday at the Alexander gym.
Federal Hocking, who.._,drew fhe
bye tn the post season event, will
face a Marauder team that has
been Inactive for several weeks.
The winner of this game wilt play
·again on Saturday,

(5-8, freshman! -as point guard. ·
At center witt be Shari Robertson
l5·10, junior). Forward position
witt be taken by one of four Lady
Cougars: Samantha Sadowski
( 5·11. sophomore l. Amy Feat he·
rlngllam ts-11 , junior), Jandt .
Ferrell t5·10, junior) or l\1ta
Dallas 15-8, senior).
Urbana. defeated 60-56 at Lyne
Center on Jan. 14, will host the
Redwomen In a 5:30p.m. game.
Coach Cindy McKnight Is .expec;ted to field Cathy Belcher
(~. senior) as point guard and
-,place Jean Twehues (5-6, sopho·
more) as shooting guard.
Ann Frldenmaker, a 6·2 sopho·
more Who led the Lady Blue
Knights In scoring In the Rio
Grande game, will be at center,
and Kelly Smith (5-9, freshman)
and Tracy J.leddlne (5-4, senior)
will probably start u rclrwarda.

•

•

Redwomen play two MOC games this week
Hastings s~ored 26 points In the
A battle for domination of
game and had 16 rebounds .
w·omen 's basket ball in th e Mid·
Mullins has been ranked fourth
Ohio Co nference will unfold
by
the NAIA In free. throws after
· toda y when Rio Gra nde's Redwoplayi
ng 17 games, posting 89
• me~ · (4-0l host Mount Vernon
percent
ori a total of 97 charity
Nazarene 14-01 at Lyne Center In
.
tosses
and
109 attempts ,
a 5 p.m. game.
Sta rting for Rio Grande will be
Coach Cheryl Ftelltz's Redwomen are 14·5 overall and Pau l - Hastings as . - power forward,
Swanson's Lady Cougars are 11·1 Mullins as sma ll forward and
Halley at s hooting guard
. after each team defea ted a MOC
position
.
: rival this weekena . The RedwoBeth
Coil, a freshman from
. 111en racked up their fourth
Wapakoneta
who has developed
· consecutive conference wtn Sa ttn.to one of the Redwomen's best
urday with a 79-62 defeat of
· prospects this season, will repeat
Malone at home.
at polnt guard position. Billie Jo
Stephenson.
a 5·8 j untor forward
· • · Aftet a slow start. the Redwofrom
West
Union
playing for the
; men kicked Into gear with
first
time
with
the
Redwomen,
; starters Holly Hastings, Renee
will be at center. Stepht&gt;nson has
: Halley . and Lea Ann Mullins
also proved to be one of the
building a 6 - potn~ lead at the half
Redwomen's leading scorers.
and booatlng the advantage to 18
For MVNC, Swanson 1.1 exbefore a round of foul shooting for
~led to start Ertri Sharrock
• both 1tdel concluded the pme.

'

VALLEY

throw tine for 33 percent.
Box score:
MEIGS - L. Carr 2-0-4: M.
Woods 4-0-8; Jody Taylor 2-0-4;
T. Wrlg_ht 1-0-2; W. Fry 8-0-16:
Meier 0-2-2: S.. Stobart 3-1-7;
B.Ewing 2-0-4; K Smith 3-0-6;
Jennifer Taylo r (5-7; M. Nelson
0-0-0.
BELPRE - Jerkin 4-3-11 ;
Schall 4-1-0-11 ; Reed2-0-4: Wolfe
2-1-3; Gregory 1-0·2.

All Entries Must Be
1988 SUPER
Submitted Before
SWEEPSTAKES
5:00 P.M. on
I predict the final
January 30. 1988
Employees of this
score will be:
newspaper and the
......... .........TO
...... ..... .
particip11ting
businesses are not Your
eligible. Enter as Name
oftah as you like. Address
No purchase
Ph . No: .
necessary.

· Washi~gton Redskins vs. Denver Broncos

~NTER and W'N!

.. '
.'
.• •

Clip out the entry form below and
drop off at any'of the participating
businesses.

,,

WIN CAS-H!·

0 uP.

Meigs Mitrauderettes win two tilts
The charges of Coach Roge r
·Foster posted wins over Trim·
bte's Lady Ca ts a nd ·Betpre's
Go lden Eagles in games pla yed
.
Thursday a nd Monday.
Against Trimble. Shelley Stdbart ted the Meigs attack as she
ca nned 20 points and gt·abbed 11
rebound s to give the Ma ra uderettes a 53-51 win.
Missy Woooo picked up eight
for thr Ma rauders and had six
caroms be.fore she was forced to
exit becaus&lt;' of foul trouble:
Ot her scorers lor Meigs wrre
Wendv F'ry wi th 9, Tammy
Wright who had· 7 plus 5 assists
and 3 steals. ,Jody Taylor with 6
poin ts and 4 assis ts and Beth
,Ewi ng who hit three points from
the fou l lin&lt;'.
A. Pear t took game scoring
honors with 22 including th ree
three-pointers.
The Marauder .J .V. squad
topped their Trimble counter ·
part s .10-1 6. Leading by on ly four
alter three periods, Meigs put the
game on ice in the fina l 6 minut es
or play as they reeled offl4 point s
to just four lor the Ca ts.
·Missy Ne lson had a game high
R points with Jen nifer Tay lor a nd
Karen Stan ley gett ing 6 each.
Am)' Wagner a nd Kelly Smith
checked in wit h 4 apiece and

•
•

· ~k~ ;:.n~5J~ ~t~~~~~n~nd

Meigs junior high girls win again
The Meigs Junior High Girls
maroon squad recorded their
eighth straight victory by crushIng the At hens Lady Bulldogs 59· 7
at the AthenSgym. The margin of
victory ca me as a s urprise to
everyon&lt;: as At hens had earlier
split games wit h Albany t30-26
and 44-46) and lost to Ga llipolis
30-36.
Meigs had defeated Albany
51-44, 48-45 and Ga llipolis .17-33
earlier In the season.
A stingy Meigs defense held
down Athen's Elissa Garske and
·Molly Rustenburg, both who had
been averaging in double figures.
to zero and four poin ts
respectivefy.
.- Meigs got off to a s tow start.
' · fa lling behind 1-0. The res t of the
first quarter was all Meigs as
Trtcla Baer hit three of four from
t he foul line and had a two pointer
from the field. Chrissy Weaa ve r
and Rev a Mullen each chipped )n

-

(Bailey) and he said somebody paints In the third quarter when ·back on defense," said Cleveland
from another team would get It," , Utah put the game away. John coach Lenny Wilkens. "We'
said Green, whose 3-polnt basket. Stockton added 20 paints and 13 shouldn 't have been as compta:
cent as we were alter a win like
at the thlrd•perlod buzzer gave assists and Bailey 15 paints.
Saturday 's (119-100 over the
In
the
third
quarter,
each
team
.
1
was . took 21 shots from the field, but Boston Celttcs)."
·"Our Intensity level wasn~(
,
"It's something you never Utah hit 15 and the Cavaliers just
Ritttnger and Singleton on for - expect. I'm just glad someone 5. Overall, Utah shot 59 percent what It should have been,"
ward and juniors Anthony Ray - from our team did tt," Green said from the floor to just 37 percent Wilkens added. "We kept the ball
entirely too tong on one side of the
more and Jim Kearns as guards. following Utah's 119-96 victory for Cleveland,
·
L,ambcke, a . sophomore from · over the Cavaliers.
Green's historic basket; his court."
The league office, which had
only fie ld goal in the game, ·
Wthnlngton who started as center last . week, may repeat In set up a direct line with the capped an outstanding quarter r-;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
place of Rob Jackson.
scorer's table and had been
as the Jazz outscored Cleveland I1
Wilmington's Q·uakers . 3-10 on calculating the points In all three 40-16 to lead 92-67. They hit
the season after losing to Findla y NBA games Monday night, 15-of-21 shots In the period to
89-64 on Saturday, are coached a lerted the scorer's ta ble follow - 5-of-21 for the Cavaliers.
by J .F. "Fritz" Pltnke. Ph.D.. tng Green's shot, which in"Everybody was great tonow In his fifth season at creased the (otat to ~.000,001.
plt-oGL \ u
night," said Malpne. "That's the '
Wilmington.
The game was stopped white way we like to play. We got the
poUC'{
Ptlnke is expected to start as Green autographed the ball that ball outside and put pressure on
guards Pa t Stevens, a 5-10 junior will be placed In the NBA Hall of them. And we were able to get In
from Jackson. and Greg Scott
Fame.
their passing lanes and disrupt
·
(6-1, junior) . At forward witt be
"I'm glad that a veteran player their o!lense."
Derron Calvert 16·2. junior ! and
got It an(! that It was a good shot,"
Brad Daugherty, Mark Prlc~
Tim Dicke 16-6, freshman). while said Utah coach Frank Layden . a nd Mark West ted Cleveland,
Wilen you need us, we'll bt
Cra ig Halt (6-6, junior) will be at
· Karl Malone scored 36 points but ·each scored just 14 points.
there
... with prompt, con·
the post.
·
·
and grabbed 12 rebounds, both The Cavs are now 18·21 . ·
eerned
insurance service. We
Thursday'sga mewttt conctude game highs, In leading Utah,
" We didn't have real good
always
try
lo be friends you
· a hom£&gt; series for the Redmen,
18·20. And he scored 12 of his execution tonight. We didn't get
ean depend on. Call us today.
who are back on the road
Saturday when they play Ma- rr:===:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~
lone's Pioneers a t 7:30p.m .

league's 5 millionth paint. and Rickey Green was .wondering
~fore Utah's game against . who It would be.
Cleveland 31•year-old Jazz ~~:uard
"!was talk~ about It to Thurl

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 5

1'-1.
At Cleveland, Eric Muddscored ·19 of his 25 paints In the
first half to pace the Vikings past
Valparaiso. Ken . McFadden
added 18 paints as CSU upped Its:
·record to 12-4 overall and 3-1 in
the Association of Mid-Continent:
Universities . Va lpara iso.
dropped to 8-8 overall and 1-3 In
the league.
'

Green scores .NBA's 5 ·millionth point as Ja7.z beat' Cavs
SALT LAKE CITY WPI) - l t
was no secret Monday night that
an NBA player .would score the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

AI""Y" Offering Pre.Need
Cowuel~ and A rronl!"""'nl•

.,
••

BIN H. EWING
...CTOI

..

•

�'

·-----

The Daily Sentin~l ·

•

By The Bend

• c

'Tuesday, January 26, 1988
' Page-6 ;

..

jTeens,

alcohol and peer pressure

' .,_. AM I eefp a: This may be

;, \ dUikult for you to believe, but our
· ,' I~ son has a drinking
. probif n
·,
,.
Mjobn• was always a JDO(I·na·
, tured, well·behaved, well·liked
: """'""' of~ foQtball team. A few
· Mekl 110. he ·sJipped out of the
· boule, lOt drunk, took the car and
WNCbd iL He was not hurt, nor
were any .of his friends. The ear is
beiDc repaired. We were shocked,
llOIICierncd and scared.
; john had shown all the signs but
: we didn't know what they meant.
; He bad begun to ~ failing grades,
; was kicked off the football team,
, 'llayed out way beyond . his curfew
and his attitude was offensive. We
~ John when he broke the
• rules, but we dido 't take time to
: listm to him and find out why he
: was behaving so poorly.
' Thank God, after the car acci·
dent, we did listen and we learned
· that he had been drinking on a
RIJII)ar basis for about a year and a
.: half. Our family doctor sugested
' that we send him to a treatment
: center. sO lirr, he is doing very well,
~ but we are keeping our fingers

'

crossed. He is trying witb all his
might to keep frc;nn taking that first
drink, but it is awfully hard to
buck peer pressure. The first· day
back at school he was offered liquor
three times.
·
Nobody wants to believe his or
her child is an alcoholic. Neither
did we. Please, Ann, tell the parents
who read your column that they
should be alert to antisocial behav·
ior. Tell tbem that drinking a few
beers is not OK. lbat's how our
john got started. He then worked
up to·half a li[th a day and more on
weekends.
If your child is havins problems,
listen. Pon:tjust punish bud behav·
ior. If you learn he or she has an
alcohol problem, get that child into
a treatment center, tben stay close.
All children need love and under·
standing. but' tbose who are alcohol-dependent need it tbe most.
Sign us - TYPICAL FAMILY,
QUAOiiTA PARISH, U.S.A.
DEAR TYPICAL: Thank you for
sharing your story. It's one I see in
my mail dozens of times every
week.
According to U.S. News and

Clearin1house· for 1\lcohol and
Drug Information, P.O. Box 2345,
Rockville, Md. ~2. or the Na·
tional Council on Alcoholism, 12
World Report, alaihol claims at
· least IOO,IXX&gt; lives per year. This is
25 times as many as all illegal druas
combined. Two of every three high
school seniors have ·drunk alcohol
within the past month. Small won·
der. By age 18, a child will have seen
I 00,000 beer commercials.
If your child · has a drinking
problem, get him or her to a
treatment center.. The chances are
that your insurance policy will pay
for it. If you want information on
where to get lielp, write to: National
W. 21st St., New York, N.Y. 10010.
Dear Ann Landen: My motherin-law has been ·bull3ing me for
years to adopt a child. She thinks
that because I enjoy my nieces and
nephews that I would love being a
mother. She is wrong.
I am in my early 401. Neither my
husband nor 1. have ever wanted
chil!iren. The reasons are very
personal, and we've never discuMed
them witb anyone.

Asbury women meet

Ann
Landers
I hate being nagged about this,
in front of other people.
Will you please tell this Butinsky to
mind her owl! business? - BADGERED INS. CAROLINA
DEAR BADGERED: Your moth·
er·in·law needs to hear the messa.,e
from you. I ha~ a hunch that one
well-worded sentence would shut
her up for good. I recommend it.
Do you have q~M~Sti(IIIS about se&gt;;
~y

but nobody you can talk to about
them? A'nn Landers' new(~&gt; revised
boolclet, "Sex and tht Tmwger," will
give you the an.swm you n«d. To reo
cdve a copy, mul $2.50 plus a sdf'fld·
dresRd, stamped, No. 10envtlope(39
crnrs poslllfJe) to Ann Lamkrs, P.O.
Box 1156,2, Chicago, Ill, 6061 1.f1562.
ANN lAfftRS •
Ct988, lat Aog~la ,..,.. Syndiult
Crnt... ~.
.

"The Older Woman: A Re·
source for Mission 1988" was the
program topic for the prayer and
self-denial service by Mary Cun·
dlff, leader, at the recent meet·
lng of the Asbury United Metho·
dlst Women held at the home of
Mary Lisle.
Mrs. Cundiff ln discussing the
topic noted that each one having
received the gift of life Is always
moving forward In time to the
period characterized by the
term , "older woman." She said
that the purpose of the program
was to affirm one another whe·
reever we are ln our time llne and
to renew the appreciation for the
special gifts that are ours to give
and receive from one another.
The women joined In prayer ,
song, -s crlptur.e. and meditation
during the program with periods
of silence and reflection. Read·
Auxllalry

Ladles Auxiliary of the Mason
Fire ·Department wlll have a
soup sale Feb. 6 beginning at
a.m. Vegetable soup, chlll. po·
ll1d . tato soup, hot dogs, and baked
goods wlll,.pe sold.

n;

· Beat of the bend

"Pape birth is announced·

~~lebrating

' Mr. and Mrs. Allen Pape of ·
Racine are announcing the birth
of a son, Joshua Allen, born Dec. ·
30 at the Holzer Medical Center.
Joshua weighed six pounds, one
ounce and was 19 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are ·
Mr. and Mrs. Larry O'Brien.
Racine, and paternal grandpar·
ents are Mr. andMrs.JohnPape,'
.Racine.
Maternal · great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs, · Marshall
Adams, Racine, and Mr. and
Mrs. Rex

.

...~·; .
~o..;.

By BOB HOEFLICH

Seatlael staff

t : Will January ever end?
t • I don't think so, but

Sarah
Fisher, who Is nowcoordlnatorof
e!!hlblts at the Meigs Museum ln
Pomeroy, thinks so and is mak·
lng special effort~ towards the
observance of Valentine's Day at
the Museum - that's Sarah optimistic.
In explaining plans for Valen·
tine's Day at the Museum, Sarah
says:
· "For our February exhibit at
the Meigs County Museum, we
would like to display old
valentines.
.. "If you have any we can
borrow, please call or bring them
to the Museum by . Wednesday .
Feb. 10.
"Also we are having a contest
"fQr the prettiest homemade val·
', entlne (no age limit) so adults or
. children, please help us to make
this a success.
Do get together with a friend
, and combine your artistic ef·
· torts. We wlll have them on
~ display, Sunday, Feb. 14, 2 to 5
: p.m. Also at this tlme we will
: hold a bake sale.
· Members of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
· hope to see ·you and your
valentine there.

Vals Day
and were at the Meigs Couniy
Board of Elections Office, Me·
chanlc St., Pomeroy, on Mpnday,
employees at the office need for
you to ge: In touch at once. There
. may be some misunderstanding
about the Information you were
given and they would like to
clarify 11 so do call 992·2697
immediately.
·
Erin Anderson has bee n named
to the first semestesr dean' s list
at Capital University. Erin, an
elementary education major ,
resides at Route I. Dexter.
Capital's dean' s list recognizes
students who have achieved a
grade point average of 3.4 or
better on a scale of 4.
It 's jus! about (he last call.
If you want a video of the Big
Bend Varieties of 1987 - think
you will be pleased with it .copies are still available. Call
Video Touch to place your order.
I hope many of you will
remember Betty Hayes, former
Syracuse resident, who will be
observing her 60th birthday on
Feb. 1.
Betty mo~&lt;ed from Syracuse 12
years ago. She is In 1ll hea lth,
chronic bronchitis. Her weight is
down to 72 pounds;' she's confined
at home and Is on oxygen all of
the time. Her morale is a little
low and she could stand your
encouragement right now .
The address is Route 4, Box
164, Metropolis. Ill .. 62960.·
The Hayes children, by the
way. are Brenda Davis. Debbie
Wolfe. Bill Hayes, known by
many of you. and there a re two
more sons a I homP.

It you're a crafty Meigs Coun·
: ttan, you may be interested In a
new idea the Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce has come
up w!th and that ls selling crafts
on consignment at th e Pomeroy
· Chamber Office.
: The idea Is for both visitors to
· the area and for local residenis
: who like souvenirs of Meigs
County. Items considered for
sale must be handmad &lt;' a nd from
WP' r(' advised that f{ptin ,\II' ill
ta kt• Cai'P nr 1110s(' wrinklP~ . Now
Meigs County··a few !arts ' hould
be included on P&lt;~ch item.
,. - now if H"r ca n com ~ · tip with
If you think the idea wi II n,·and
something to take care of the
· you want to take part . call the energy leve l. we're on our way to
. chamber office, 992·5005,
becoming a nation of ieen ·agers .
'maglne that! Do keep smiling.
If you drive a blue plc.kup truck

SARAH PICKENS

Pickens
birthday
Sarah Celesta Picke ns cele·
bra ted her first bl"ihday.Sunday
with a party hosted by her
parents, Calvin and Kay
Pickens, at their home on Ho·
back Road, Racine.
A Care Bear theme was
carried out with two theme cakes
being presented to Sarah by her
grandmother, Zelma Gilmore.
Cake, chips, ice cream, punch ·
and coffee were served. Gifts and
cards were presented to the
hono red gue.st.
Attnding besides Sarah and her
parents were her brot her and
sister. Corey and Jessyca Hatfield . maternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gilmore,
Pomeroy; Tracey Payne, Dean
and Vicki Pulllns and children,
Kayla and ' Deanna , Racine,
Teresa Barber, Tom Boso and'
Anthony Barber, Portland.
Sending cards and gifts ·were
Mr. and Mrs. William Nathan
Pickens, paternal grandparents;
Racinp; and Mr. and Mrs.
William Bak&lt;'r and c hildren, Jill

Paternal great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Nlal Salser, Syra·
cuse. and Mr. and Mrs. Hershel
Roush, Racine.
Mr. al)d Mrs. Pape and Joshua
will be returning to their home in
Wurzburg, Germany soon .

ers were April Harmon, Helen
Teaford. Harlette Sinclair, Ann
.Sauvage, al!d Beulah Ward. Rose
Ann Je)'lk!ns, a gu~st, was at the
plano for the singing of hymns .
Mrs. Lisle gave devotions from
the Upper Room . Officers' re·
ports were read and 17 shutin
calls were reported. A. freewill
offering was taken .
.
Ann Sauvage read a letter from
the Barbers of Slne·Cera, a home '
for delinquents ln Athens County,
thanking the UMW for providing
a Chrlsmas tree, decorations and
glfts.
. .
Members were reminded to
send a birthday card to Linda
Ferrell. A · get-well card was
signed for Ava Zo Sisson. Also
attending were Marcia Karr.

Communit
11 ·
. J
Bui[fjers me,et

Mr. lind Mr. Lyle Balderson
hosted the January meeting of
the Reedsvllle Community
Builders Club held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs . Lyle Balders,o n.
Since Denver Weber decl!n~
the presidency. Warren Pickens
was elected. Dues were collected
· and refreshments enjoyed dur·
lng the social hour.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Donald Myers, Mr. and Mrs.
warren Pickens, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead, and Mrs.
•Denver Weber. The Myers will
host the February meeting.

Orange To.wnship Trustees will
meet ln ~egular sesson Monday,
Feb . 1; 7:30 p.m., at the home of
Dorothy Calaway, iownsh!p:

Poetry award presented Tyree

YOU USE OUR HELP?"
Do you need a vacation from 24 hour care of

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Quirks in the neivs_____

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a loved one?
Let Americare Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilit.a tion Centers' understanding.
professional staff temporarily relieve you of
·
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Accepting residents for short term ret~pite care.
.
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For Consulting and Information

Business Services

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POMEROY

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:Randy Travis is· the big winner
"
~ at the .American Music·Aw.ards
•
"
~

~

~·
•• Till

~
1Mn MOVIES to VHI TAPE
let us convort thost old
Home Motlies over to •asy
YHS.
CAll AMl CARTER
or lOB'S ElECTRONICS
. 446-6939 or 446·7390

LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Coun· .
;,. try star Randy Travis ·and pop
~ singers Paul Simon, Anita Baker
* and Whitney Houston were big
~ winners at the 15th annual
~ American Music Awards show . .
~
Travis, who led all iiomlnees ,
! with votes ln four categories, won
~ all four awards, Including favor·
! tte country male vocallst. Travis
locust, Oak, Cherry
• Also won the award for favorite
~country album with his "Always
!;. and Forever' • and favorite coun·
. ~ try single and video with
Per Pickup Load
"' "Forever and Ever ..Amen."
Delivered
, ~ Simon, Baker and Houston won
... two awards apiece on the basis of
BILL SLACK
~ random balloting by 20,000 re·
614-992-2269
~ .. cord buye~~ across the country.
i But the headliner of the even·
: ,i lng wa,s ihe_28-year-old . Travis,
.. 1who briefly addressed reporters
=;with ·e ach succeeding award. ·
" ' By the end of the evening he
! was carrying two of !he. awards
"'in each hand.
· ~· •"They're pretty heavy;" he .
RANDY TRAVIS
:&lt;Jok~. "Heavier than I thought .
; 1 "I have a couple of mantles at
calls!, while conceding she Is not
uppermost balcony.
• ))orne where I can put them . . It
Houston took the honors for yet ready to tackle what she
:.won't be hard to find a place."
faV9rlte pop;rock femalevocallst considers -the ultimate vocal
•: Travis said the evening. was a
and favorite pop·rock single for hurdle. · ·
•':testament to perseverance,
·'I want to be considered a true
her hit "1 Wanna Dance with
'1 ·
jazz
vocallst," she said, "but one .
~ ·. "I flr~t went to Nashvme when Somebody CWho Loves Me) ." ., · reason singers shy away from
The twin victories marked the
,.. I was 17," he salil. "I was turned
third
year In a row that Houston jazz ls you're , so . fiercely crl·
" ~owl! oby everybody, more than
tlqued. I would say that I'm at an
~once. 1 always believed some· was a multiple wlpner, coming apprentlce level now."
•
on
the
heels
of
five
American
.• thing would happen, but not llke
In
other
categories,
Michael
Music Awards ln 1987 and two ln
.. this ...
Jackson's "Bad" was named
..~ Simon won favorite pop·rocl\ .. 1986.
SAliS &amp; SRYKI
"It's still nerve wracktns." favorite soul-rhythm and· blues
' ' rnaw vocalist and hla "Grace- Houston
single,
the
first
award
Jackson's
st WT
aald backstage. "I'm a
: land" album, which won raat
lateat work has carnered..
nervous
wreck."
·
l
GUYMII,
111110
year's Grammy award for album
Hlulster, Janet, wo~ favorite
Baker
won
the
.awards
for
;, of the year, was voted favorite-.
614-661·1111
favorite female vocalllt in soul· pop Video for "When I T.!Jink of
AltlloiiMII WI . ...,
· pop-rock album.
'
, YOu."
lllwHI..U,W ...
But prior commitments. pre- rbytbm lllll..blues music, while
Reba McEnttre a~epted the
, _ I lp IIJftt
t venied. hll attendal.lce at tbe her album "Rapture" was the award · for favorite co11ntey fe·
favorite
soul-rllythm
and
blues
· Shrine Auditorium, where the
· male vocalist via satellite from a
'
,.~
awarda pfOil'llm was held'before album.
Nasbvllle, Tenn., studio where
Sb,e
echoed
Travis's
thoug!Jta
·
~a capacity audience of 5,IXJO
Partl&amp;
IIIWdc lnd111try lnaldera and a that perseverance Is the moat she was working on her next 1
t 1.
few hundred fans exiled to the Important attribute for any vo· album.
_.,..................
,_,

FIREWOOD

.

'"j

,, ,... ....
~

Roger Hysell
Garage

MEIGS OFFICE:
MACHINES

DENNY CONGO

BISSELL .
BUILDERS

.

~

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By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Pn-ss International

-

King birthday

Kara King was honored over
The Golden Poet Award has
In the letter to Ms. Tyree, Cole the weeken4 with two parties ln
observance of her . seventh
• been . presented to Josephine advised that her poem had won a
birthday .
~ Tyi'Eie of Pomeroy and one o! her Certificate of Merit Award. The
On Saturday she had a party at
• poems will be pUblished ln the poetry editor said that lt wlll be
lib
ow Biz. Pizza In Parkersburg.
· Great American Poe~rY Anthol· included ln a book to be published .
Besides
· pizza~ 'c ake'"'and lee
·' oty, according to a 'letter from in June. He also advised that the
cream
were served to her
: Eddle·Lou Cole. poetry editor of · poem will be copyrighted for her
mother.
Diana, Jesse Little,
protection.
~ World of Poetry.
I .
,
Craig Knight, Sam, Ronnie ·and
Ben Carpenter.
•'
On Sunday she celebrated with
a party at her horne In Racine.
Cake and Ice cream were served
~.
.
to her grandmother, Mary Par·
; . RUTLAND - There wlll be
provide their own skates, how• ter, her great·grandmother, Su(roller akatllt'g at tbe Rutland
ever, If anyone wishes to donate sie Fischer, John Porter, She- ,
;avtc Center, every Friday night : skatea to the flvlc cente.r , they tagh Wilson, Mark Porter, Misty 1
: atartlq Jan. 29, from 6: 30 to 8: ;Jil l may do 'so by calling 742·2861. Swisher. Sam Carpeiler, Chrlsll!
•p.m. ~tnlsllon will l!e Sl for · Special, time will be slotted eaotJ and Craig Knight, and her I
atudellts, $2 for adults, and free . . evening just for skateboarding. motber. She received g!fla at
H'ilr spectators. Skaters must Everyone wel~ome.
both parties.

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time being offered

,

lowship of Melg' County
Churches of Christ will mN't
Thursday at the Rutland Churc h
of Christ.

.......... ___
.. .-·

• .l,

l, Skating

POMEROY - The Women's
Auxlllary of Veteran.s Memorial
Hospital wlll meet at 1' 30 p.m.
Tuesday at the hospital cooler·
ence room . Helen Hill and Betty
Sayre will be hostesses .

s3500

KARAKING

______

.
~

than ·a reaction to Jhe Was hington Post's article
portraying her as infuriated by the book. "What's
to be Infuriated atiout," Mrs. Reagan asked.
The Reagans have had no direct contact with
A PG FERGIE: A mere hour after Buckingham
Deaver
since he was convicted of perjury in
Palace an nounced that the Duchess of York was
connection
with his lobbying activllles. As lor the.
Riverview
POMEROY
. CHESHIRE '- Cheshire Chap·
pregnant. London bookies were already laying
Crispen said he had beeq reading
president,
Garden Club will meet Thursda y,
ter OES meets Tuesday, 7:30
odds on the gender a .nd name of the royal
·.
Mikhail
Gorbache•'s
"Perestroika." a book that
7:30 p.m., at the home of Mrs .
p.m., Officers and members
WEDNESDAY
baby-to-be. The baby wUl be the first for the
Ernest Whitehead. Co-ho stesses
Mrs. Reagan also intends to read.
MIDDLEPORT - American
should attend to make plans for
duchess. better known as Sarah "Fergie"
ELVIS REVISITED: Prise Ilia Presley says she
Legion Feeney-Bennett Post 128 wilt be Mrs. Herman Grossnickle
District 24 meeting and ~chool of
Fer,uson, and Prince Andrew and ls due ln
sometimes
wonders what her ex-nusband, Elvis.
and Mrs. Ronald· Cowdery. Pro.·.
·instruction on Feb. 2 at Cheshire
and its Auxlllary wlll meet
August. A palace spokesman said Sarah ls In
Uke today If he had lived and
would
be
Elementary ,
Wednesday evening at the hall. A. gram on hou seplants wilt .be
excellent health .and the royal famlly ls
straightened
out his !Jhysical and psychologiCal
joint dinner will be served a! 6:30 . presented by Mrs. Harlls Frank .
"dellghte~" by the news of her pregnancy . ·
prob)ems.
•
KYGER- Cheshire Township followed by meetings of the two
· The Wllliam Hlll odds-making firm is offering
he
currently
be
enjoying
a
career
"
Would
Revival
.
Trustees meet Tuesday. 5: 30 groups at 7:30 p.ni.
odds of 5·6· that the child wlll be a boy, even money ·
•
revival
Uke
so
many
other
artists
of
his
era?"
she
·
BURLINGHAMThe
Word
of
. p.m.. Township Building ln
for a girl and 66,1 against twins. The favorite
writes
ln
8'
TV
Guide
artiCle.
"I
don'
t
think
so.
I
Life
Church
at
Burlingham
wilt
LONG BOTIOM - The Long
·Kyger.
names are George and Ellzabeth, both at 3·1 odds.
think It was fate that his llfe end ed when it did. I
begin reviva I services Monday, 7
Bottom Community Association
Fergie's next publlc appearance ls scl)eduled
.
don't
think he really wanted to live beyond 40 (he
p.m. eac h evening.•Johnnie Rid·
wilt meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
for Friday when she and Andrew wlll attend the
CHESTER - Chester Town·
died
ln
1977 at 44). I heard him SI\Y many. Urnes
dle wlll be the evangelist .
at the community building.
'ship Trustees wlll meet ln special
wor)d premiere ln London of the film "White
that
he
didn't want to be up on the stage w1th th~
-session Tuesday, 7: 30p .m .,at the
Mischief."
guitar
·
p
ast 40. He wanted to go on with his career.
MIDDLEPORT - The Ohio Speaker
BRESLIN WOR.K ON STAGE: Pulltzer Prize·
·town hall.
·
ln the studio and in the movies."
.
LONG BOTIOM - Mrs. Mary
Valley Commandry 24. Knights
winning columnist Jimmy Breslin's first play wlll
.
Presley
is
producing
a
TV
movie
about.hl&gt;r
Ufe
Folmer
of
Long
Bottom
v.;lll
be
·
Templar.
Middleport,
will
meet
be produced just as his new novel is coming out.
·' POMEORY - The regular
with
Elvis
and
says
the
experience
ls
sometimes
the
speaker
at
the
Feb.
2
meeting
The play . "Queen of the Leaky Roof Circuit·," wlll
monthly meeting of the Meigs at the Middleport Masonic Tern·
painful. She says _the most difficult part or her llfe
operi Feb .. 251n Louisville, Ky., as part of the 12th
•County Utter Control Advisory ., ple, Wednesday night . There will oi the Long Bottom Chapter of
wltb
Presley was watching him become addicted·
Flame
Fellowship
to
be
held
at
· annual Humana Festival of New American Plays.
·Board wUI be held TJJesday, 7:30 be full form openl.ng practice.
to
dr11gs.
·:As much as we urged him to get off
7:30
p;m.
at
the
Mt
.
Olive
It's about'a welfare mother who.challenges the
·p.m .. at the Utter office located at
temper was short so there. was just so
drugs,
his
Community Church. Lo~g, Bot ·
THURSDAY
bureacracy- a'theme also prominent ln,Breslln's
the intersection of Union Ave.
much
any
of us could do .... " she said. "We felt
'tom.
Suzanne
Bush
ls
president
RUTLAND - The ladles Fel ·
latest book. "He Got Hungry and Forgot His
and Route 7 near Poml!roy.
helpless."
·
·
and invites the public.·
Manners. " .
GLIMPSES: Star-athon '88, a weekend ?eneflf.
A· spokeswoman for Breslin's publisher, Tick·
to fight cerebral palsy . raised $21 mllllo.n. John
nor &amp; Fields, says his 1986 novel, "Table Money ,"
RUter. Henry Winkler. Florence Henderson,
wlll soon be made into a movle·starr!ng Kathleen
Nancy Dussault , _Dennis James and Donald.
Turner.
O'Conner
all took part ....Charlene TIIIAm returns
FIRST LADY REACTION: Nancy Reagan has
to
"Dallas"
for the season' s final two episodes as.
scaling
Everest:
KATMANDU
,
just fini shed reading Michael Deaver's memoirs
Salem 'rain tax' triggers tor- for men, which does away with
Lucy
Ewing.
"! got back in time. for th~.
Nepal
(UPI)
A
record
252
and her press secretary says she's not furious
renf of pr!ltest: SALEM, Ore. the tie and adds a cone-shaped
cliffhanger."
Ti.lton
says . "! just hope I rh not 11 .,
climbers
wlll
try
simultaneously
after all. An earller newspaper report said the
(UP!) - The .c'JPI!a\ ctty's cuff for work at a computer
'
...
Texas
A&amp;M
University's
College of Busines~
to
scale
Mount
'
Everest,
hoping
first lady was "infuriated" by "Behind the ·
.attempt to tax Oregon s most keyboard. Or a jumpsuit for
Administration has named ollman T.. Boone,
they can reach the summit on the
Scenes," the Inside story of Dea\l.er.·s days as
women that covers the body with
abundant commodity ~ rain Pickens
Its !lrst distinguished entrepreneur of the
35th anniversary of the . fir st
has 'run into a torrent of opposi· cotton to adjust to the "green·
deputy chief of sta!f for President Reagan.
year.
The
corporate wheeler·dealer will receive
conquest of the peak and plant a
Spokeswoman Elaine Crispen says Mrs. Rea· ·
house effect."
lion froin bqslnesses.
the award Friday.
'
flag.
gan had read the book and had no comment other
·, A real estate ·a gent says he has
The two futUristic fashions won
Expedition
leaders·
Kl.\mar
collected nearly all the 4.500 grand prizes Monday at a "Suit of
Khapga Blkram Shah pf Nepal.
signatures needed to refer ·a the Future" contest, sponsored
Shi
Zhenchun of China and
4-month·old "rain tax" to voters by a natiQilal retailer. Twenty·
Toshlo
Imanlshl of Japan Mon·
at the May 17 primary.
nine finalists were selected from
day
exchanged
flags to be placed
The tax ls actually a storm about 100 design colleges
atop
the
29,029-!oot
mountain
drain utlllty fee that Is tackro on nationwide .
that
straddles
Tibet
and
Nepal. .
" sewer and water bills . It costs
Stephen Walker's suit for men,
Representatives of the most
, owners of a slngle·famlly home · "Techno-Ease," was chosen for
ambitious
mountain-climbing as·
i.:, just 75 cents a month, but can its blend of professlonallsm and
sault
In
history
said two teams
"'- amount to thousands of dollars a comfort that he predicts wlll be
. 10 ftl(l AM AD UU. "2-215. ·
MOiiDAY thn1 ,..AY I A.M. M 5 P.IR.
wlll
attempt
a
"cross·traverse"
l:. year for the owners of businesses welcome in the fast -paced 21st
I lJl. UntH NOON SATURDAY
_,_ ....... ......
lft==t::
'"".. ....
. .1111
.,,.
ascent this sprlng .'One team wlll
. UOSED SUNtlY
~· with large roofs or parking lots
century .
::::
:
:::
.~·:
:1:::
'
._,...~ .
II
11t...
011 •
dfo ,.
climb from the north and another
;: that . contribute runoff to the .
"Fashion has rio logic," said
I IIOIIfll • IU ...
111 .•
- ··
.:::!..,.
o H • o""""'IDr .., _,,..'"""
'-'_......... ,.................
..,....
'' '".:.. - o_ .. .,.,..,..,., ..... ,.""'""'~'"
·•existing storm drain S)ISiem.
Walker, Who ,Studies at the from the south, The . two teams.
'"", ................
71.:...t... .......
with
climbt'rS
from
Japan.
Nepal
~· Realior John Baker claims the Fashion Jns)lt.ute of Technology
''-""''"'-·=-..",!~.::"~ ::::=
:-·=~ 'c'::;;,., ~.:-:
, .,_,_..,,_
, ,...
~- scheme is an unfair tax on of New York, "P.eople just want ' and China, will desce nd opposite
"'."""'
..
...
Cle'-i/ied pap• coa~er 1he
slopes.
~: business with l.a rge roofs, park· to look good · and feel
~·~~::·
~
::::=~t::""followiit• lelepiaoM u1claa~•···
"The cross-traverse will be
~ ing lots or sidewalks, and he comfortable ."
=-~·
::r=:t. =-c::·::
• wants It referred to voters.
Co-winner Diana Compton of considered a success ~ve n If I he
teams from the north and the
OUDUJII
::. "The people 1 have talked to Houston Community College ln
•
south
'
reach
the
summit
...
In
' think it's silly to be charged for Houston said ·her loose-fitting
11- · • the rain that runsoffrooJtopsand . cotton jumpsuit ,was tallor-made different times and dates," the
·
'Nepalese
expedition
chief
said.
• driveways .. Baker said. "It's lor a future global climate that
The cllinb. conceived three
~ jusi a way for the city to get away may be wanner because of the
years
ago, wlll begin In Mareh.
::. rrom property taxes and impose predicted "greenhouse effect"Public Notice
.
The
252-m ember expedition
;• fees that have ilo bearing on the scientfflc term for a retention .
""people's ability to pay."
of heat · from sunlight at the plans to meet on the summit.
then the party from the south will
tl Baker said that II storm drains Earth's .surface dut' .to atmos· descend
·• NOTICE OF ·
north into Tibet and the
~~~re a problem. they,, !;hqul&lt;l ,Qf , .pherlc carbon dioxide. ·
APPOINTMENT OF
party from' the north will descend
FIDUCIARY
'~· maintained" within the cliy's . · As top prlz~ wlnn.e rs, Walker
.the
officials
said.
into
Nepal.
On
Januar;
20,' 1988, in
~•existing $129 mllllon·a·year ' and Compton will display their
the 1\.~eige County Probate
PLUIIIBI~JG &amp; IlEA TING
The
climb
Is
planned
to
coin·
budget.
. creations at the Young Inno:va· .
Court.
CaM
No
.
25748,
lOw L0&lt;11tion:
New &amp; Used
The "rain tax" has been used tive Designers Show this spnng clde with the 3Cith anniversary of Woodrow T. Zwilling, P. 0 .
161
North Stp~~~d
II.
12
4,
Pomeroy
Ohio
Sir
Edmund
Hillary's
May
29,
SALES-SERVICE
Bo~ 99, Syracu•. Ohio
widely In the Pacific Northwest in Milan, Italy . .
.
Midoloport, Ohio 45760
since 1978 when . it was estab·
Other entries mcluded an lfi · 1953, conquest of Mount Everest 46779, woo appointed Exe·
AUTO
&amp;
TRUCK
SUPPLIES
cutor of·the eltate of Sylvia
.
SALES
&amp; SERVICE
. :Jlshed ln Bellevue, Wash .. off!· descent business suit for men, with his Sherpa guide .
Royal
&amp;
SCM Typewriters
doceued, tote of P.
REPAIR
We Cany Fishing Suppll"
This spring's climb will be Zwilling.
;clals say.
which changes color with ll!l'ht
Royal
&amp;
SCM Caladators
0 . Bol 99, SyrocUH. Ohio
Pay Your Phone
the
Nippon
Television
covered
by
Al•o
Tr111•1111o•
45779.
Royal
&amp;
Max
Calh Registers
Fashions suited for the future: and mc;oo: a s~xy. tlght·fltlmg
aAd Cable Bills Hera
Robart E. Buck •
and
the
Yoiniurl
new.s;
company
.; BOSTON IUPII _What wlll the women s suit that Includes. au·
IUSIHISS PHONE
HOMER BELT_
PH. 992-5682
Probate Judge
' well-dressed man and woman be . then tic wings , and a sult·Of· paper . which are financing the $6 Lena K. Ne•••lroad. Clerk
1614i 9U·6SSO
Long lottem, 011. 45743
:0
·
?
armor with wings and a jetpack. million climb. The firs! l&lt;'lec&lt;~sl (1) 26: (2) 2 •. 9. 3tc
or 992-71 .21
RESIOENCE PHONE
Ph. (6141 843·5486
~ wearing In the 21st century .
. . R
d 252 cUmbers wlll try is set fo r. May 5.
.16141
1·26·'88·1 mo.
,
6-17-tlc
" It could be, a sash-wa1sted smt
.
ecor
.
.
TUESD"-Y '
.
VINTO[)I - American Legion
161 Vinton .meets Tuesday, 7:30
p.m.

'f'oiOto&lt;odl•oll • ............ ~-·,., ........ ..

A Selection of Over BOO Mountings Including
Necklaces, Earrings and Men's Rings

Center to receive services al·
. though membership does help
verify for state and national
agencies, a funding source, that
the Meigs Center ls providing
worthwhile senior programs.
Membership checks along_ with
the name and address of the
contributor should be sent to the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center, Box 722, Pomeroy . 4?769.

.. ....,...__

'

'"""' _ , _ ........ - · " ' ,.,,.. . -... ""'u .. ••

:Membership
drive for seniors set
.
A membership drive Is under·
·way at the Senior Ci tizens
Center.
Membership ls S3. To ever;,:one
who Is a member the bl·monthly
newsletter which details lnfor·
malton on the variety of services
'and socllil actlvltlesat the center
will be sent this year.
Senior citizens, however, do
; not hav,!' to be a member of the

·-

,....-----People in the news

Community calendar

~I!ClU

"CAN

and .Jan·d Hl'rlll'. Ind .

~

. . -a.......
,.. . . . . . _,.

Trustees to meet

Clark's Jewelry

---- -....

Pomeroy- ll/liddlepbrt, .Ohio

Tuesday, January 26, 1988

••'

-~---

---~

•

-~

...

--- ... -·

Hats. PoMrOJ,

•

.,

.,

�.

Pea•

8 1ha Dally Sande,.,
Lifllt lhi•l•

........_..................

In

lht

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

'

Worth )\/ol

ort

. 41

_..

919 41h.

8030.

5tction !

44

Homes for Rent

'

~ve.

CaR &amp;14·441·

3 bt4.room houa for r ..t In

3 bedroom. 2 lull b.tha. ltrge
living room, dM\Inu room and
khahen . Alao laundry room , 2
car ••qe. central air. Ea11Mn
SchOol Oit trict, Ref....,.ces r•

party

of, the

~v=~::.'l:..'=.::':l...u:

my ......._.... to bo. lh• ...t
lime 1 am ti(Nna to proacuta to
thatu•u:tMtoftftelaw. Bonnie
DeVautt.

4

~...

Giveaway

11

Fom• holl Lab.. holl lrloh

Help Wanted

21

EXCELlENt WAGES for apere
time aaarnbly wort: .atctrol'!i~. craf11. Other.. Info. call

Setter. About one yee'r old. Cal

114-441-10119.

1-504·841 ·11091 ; Ext. 2987.
Open 7 doys. CALL NOWI

2 tmell puppitt to giveaway. 2
month' old . Calf 304-&amp;7&amp;·

1314.

81111 of clothing to givUWIIy.

It you _.. lntwHted In t Nlling

2 Cats to give MVIY to good
home. litWr trained. 1 mile, 1
' femlla. Call 11•-448-2323 after 4 PM.

some lnfonnttion.aboutyouruM 31
Homes for Sale
and your wMit hiatory. We will
contact you for an lntarvtaw.
fireplace, fulbltemant. 3
Send to: Automobi .. Club of 4miBR,,
.
.o.
Of Galipolit. *29.900.
Soutt.•ttem Ohio·MA, AIT: Call Daya-&amp;1•·U8-1815.
aftll
Mtle .-.d fem ... kitttnt. De ...
Caaey Jonta, P.O.Io• 371. . &amp;:00· 441·1244.
grr; oncl
otriped ond grr;
Ohio
~5812
.
and white atriped. Also aduh
male cat, and fem"• dog. Cal "Friends Retail Corp" of Galli- Brand new 3 BR . ne•.GIIIlpolll
114-985-3884 .
.
polis. Ohio, aeeka a compMent l9cks an Rt.,7 . 2cargarage,nlce
lot. Immediate PD-l'"'ion. Will
' " person to work in chil~­
·trade in Of mobile .
Wirehaired .:Terrier, female. · "
ran's
clothing
store. Muat be con,ider
home. property, etc. Bargain
,....ld and hid ahots. 10 tbt,
highly
mo-od
ond
LOVE
....,., arr;. 13 mOnth• old, to. wortdng with childrtn. S.nd ........ Colll14-441-8038 .
goad homo. 304-S91-3073.
resume to: Friends Rttlil Corp., Wented: HouH willl proP*tY or
P.O. 801 981 , O.llipolls, Ohio property alone. Crown CltyOno yoor old .,.,. Colio dog, 4H31 .
304-175-2347.
Meroervill• arH. Ca11'81 4 ·218Government Joba. •1 1,040· 1247.
tl9 , 230ye~~r . Now Hiring. Your
I room• 6 balh. Newly remoAroo. 805-117-1000 Ext. R· deled.
6 Lost and Found
In Athelia. Wtll to wall
9106 for current Federal list.
CMpet . t21,000. Call 11•·258·

b-

-th.

Camlfa. Reward. Calle14-992-

3172.

8

Public Sahli
8i Auction

1270"' 211-1970.

If you' N tmbtlloua tnd loolllnt
for a cer. . oppottvnity. Jwn the
Nationwide lnturtnct family.
We IItva tots of peopla Nile you.
At .. agent you can aarn
420,000 ormorelhtflrtt .,..,in
ulary 'plua lddftiontl bonUMI.
Sand rnuma or call · for an
•ppointment. Natioi.wlde l.n.• u:ranca, P.O. Box 1079, Marietta.

2&amp;1-1970.

00. 45760 . 114-374-8241. An

ecr-1 opportunity employ.r.
Wedem"Yer'a Auction Sarviceavaileble 8t ~our convenience
and locations. Marlin Wede-

m.yer AuctiunMr- 114-245-

5152.
9

Wanted TQ Buy

Wa pr; cash f01 late model c:lean
used

c:••·

Jim Mink Chev .·Oidt Inc.

Bill Gene John10n

114-441·3872

TOP. CASH ptld for '83 'mod ..
tnd newer u1ed c.,.. Smith
Buick-PontiiiC. 1 9i 1 East~~rn
Aw.• GallipoHs . Call 614·"8·

2282.

Compteta hoUHholdl of furnl·
tura a tntiquel. A-.o wood &amp;
cotl heatera. Sw.in'• Furniture
a. Auction. Third • Olive,

614-446-3158.

Want to buy: U1ed turnitUra and
antiqun; Will buy antirl hou1•
hotd furnishing. Meriin Wedemeyer, 11•-2•&amp;-&amp;112.
3.8R. houHwlth p~eonJe¥ ..
land. Call 81 • -U8- 3375.
u ..d mobile homn. Ctll 814-

441·0176.
Standing timber. Call 814-379-

2758 .
Buying daily gokl, aUver coin1,
ring•. jftll'elry. Aerling ware. old
coina. lift• currency. Top pricn. Ed llurkan Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. &amp;14-

992-3471.
Raw hlr, beef and dNr hideJ.
Gyn Sing and Yellow root. We
h...,• whe.t and nita litH.
Trapping Juppties for Hie. (Buy·
ing uHd trips). Last d.y to buy
fur, Fa b. &amp;. 1988 . Gearge
Buckley. Hours 12-9. 614·6s-.·
4761 .
Standing timber. C811614·742·

2328 .

46711 .

R N neadad for nuning rehtbili·
tation unit. Requirn caring
individual who's nursing prectlce are gaared toward '"loring ·
residlnGe to th• ho'ma environment 'II much 11 poui~e .
Contt,ct Nancy VanMeter
D .O .N. Americare Pomeroy
Nuning tnd Rahabiliation Can--

tor. 114-992-leoe . E.O.E.

AVON - All ,,..., Call Marilyn
Watvar 30•·182· 2845.
to babyait in my home.

814·441-1815.

R .N,, phyticitns office, ple11e
tend r11ume to ,Box C-11 care of
Point Pl•unt Regilt.,, 200
Main St., Point PI.. Hnt, W. Vt .

25550.

Get ptid for tnding books!
•100.00 per Uti". Write; ACE·
1517g, 1,81 S. Uncolnwtv. N.
Aurora, II 105•2.

12

Situations
Wanted

lonety pr•ichooler naeds com·
pany, Will btby sit frH M'Other
pre-ac:hooler couple hours day
time in Middleport. Grandma.

614·992·7216 .
13

Insurance

Call us for- your mobile hom•
Insurance! ~iller Insurance.

304"882 ·2145· Aloo: outo.

1 8 Wanted to Do

St:rv1ccs

Profession•! Resumes. Send information and t10 to: &amp;77 sUn
Valley Or. Gtlllpolla, Ohio

Help Wante«;;

WANTED: BHCC seeking Adult•
for training. Basic E"Ciucation,
AIE / GED . Job Skills, Employment Asslatance. and Financial
Aid available. Contact Ad~.tlt
Sen1ice• at 614· 2•5· 6336 .
Don't delay do it today!
Sell Avon. Get your own Avon 11
1 ~iscounl. Call &amp;14·••6·3358.
Heeded: A director of nursing few
a SNF-ICF Facility . Louted in
Southeastern Ohio. Previous
exptri"~ desired. Oualitin:
Should h.ve good mtnt9•~T?ent
. te.d.rship. a nurting . tkiiiJ.
E11celent 1111ry 6 twpnellta. Send
rnume. to: 801. Cla.-121. c/ o
GaiMpoli• Dtily Tribune, 826
Third · Ave.. Oatlipolit, Ohio

Sewing • altltfation• In my
home. Call 614· 2•15·9226.

.

814' 742-2254 .

2 bedroom mobil• homl In
Middleport, Ohio. Reference
end Sacuriiy deposit. required.
304· 882-3267 or 304· 773-

5024.
44

Apartment
for Rent

.

33

AUCTION

.:~Ft'~NITURE

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used applitnces and TV Htl.
Open BAM to IPM. Mon thru

.s••.

114-992-3711. E.O.H.

APARTMENTS, mobilt homes,
housn. Pl. PIHunund ij,llllpo·

llo. 114-441 -1221 .

39.4 acral': Two olderhousu•
outbuiktlngs. pond. Appro... 20
acres tlllabte, countvwtter, Ford
tractor. Kvver Creelc t 'c hooll.

.

.

2 bedroom furnilld apt, ref and
deposit, New Haven. ~ · Va.,

304-882-3217
5024.

135,000, N•g. C•ll &amp;14-3889704. .

Of

304-773-

leech Street. Middleport, Ohio,
2 bedroom fumithed apt. utili·
li.. paid. refer"cea and dapo~t.

304-882 -2568 .

3 bedroom house, 1 Vz batll,
Mtton. 2 efficiency •Ptl1ments.
Point Plea11nt. Cell 304-176·
4228 evening•.
·

814-992-2264.

Homes for Rent
Private guittr l•sons. Limited 41
number Of studHIS. Prefer
baginnilrs. IU · 949-2887,
3 BR. houN • garage. A· 1 Real
-::--:--::--:-:-~~-J -em••· Carol Yeagar-8roker.
Give piano. Cuio Kevbotrd and
304-175-15104.
orgen leuons in my home to
beginn••· advanced sludenta.
Also INch chording tnd transposing. If inttretted ctll 814-

614-448·1199, 627 3rd.

a.

week.ndl. t&amp;.13 a hr . Dr.
sfimuet L. loturd Memorlt~

Ubruy. 141 a-nd Ave .. Oolli·
'polis. Call for tppolntmant-814-

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH.

GET "PAID 104' ...ctlna bookll

INO CO. recommendl th.. you
do bulinwl with people "u
know, tncl NOT to send mon_.,
lhrou:C.the mail untU JOU hwe
lnww
ed the offering.

t1 00.00 per thla. Write: ACE·
33o. 111 S. Uncolnway, N.
Aurora, 1110542:.

Lo-1 Tol.,.._ &amp;u....,. 1:00Moftlloy.
1:0 0 - - .

_
.......
_
.... _
-_ln..,.,...I -·

Fridr;. Coli
n .&amp;o
"""' "'"'
.......
114-441-3811
...
12 AM only. lot . _ - . -.
ond

writtln communliDMb'l end
NIMioN. Forttn·
... offiot worll Mel calsc1ione.
8ond 10 ... Clo 121
o/ eGeiMpalll Dally Trfllune. 121
Tlllrll .Avt. CltlllpoUt, Ohio

· 843_..:··'2.-a_l_3_o_...,
.;.·'~PM
•"•'
..,c_t-'-":..1_4_
.,..... &lt;f.'
1 77 Ford pickup. F-250. Auto. •..~:

~""'tt

&amp;1•·318·9828
. topper. c.N f
tic. V·8 wtth
: ··\ •
1112 Ford plck· UP , truck . .. .,~
U250. C.H
•. .,.
,...::.. 14 ·211·1~22 .
;
__...~

...
'·

,

'j:
.....
,.

1178 Fonl F-150. 4 opoocl, 381

M. Fibo- tot&gt;l*· UIIOO.

,.

114-982-1141 .

1879 Dodge tf\lok. •480.00,
304·175-2531.
.

'I

·'

:::r:

1

Wuhers, dryers, refrigarttors.
rangll . Skaggs Appllaneea.
Upper River Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel. 814-•4&amp;-7398 .

Kenmore wtlher-white. 176
Kenmore Wathar-coppartona,
$7&amp; . G.E. wuher-Avilc•do.
S9&amp; . 4 side· by-side relrtgeraton
tram e111, Frigidtlre refrigerator. t915. 2 door refrigeraJOr·
avacado, 196. 30 in. alec.
rtng•11MV.n t !JOid, t91!5. H ln.
elec. range-white. t715. Oaa
ran"•avacido, S75. Sbgga
Applianc"
679 Upper River ~d . , 8114·...,.·

7398

.

.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE

Beds, dasltl; lampa, tablet,
cauchs, chalra, dinnetn. mile.
HaH mila out Jericho Rold.

8 o00 ·8:00 Sundov• 12:00·
6:00. 304·175-1450.
Sofa and chair, good cond.
FIIIIOntble price, Cell eft.- 1 :00
evenlngs, '304-871 · 7111.

Two bedroom tpanm.nt in
Htnderson, 304-871 -1972 af·
t• I .

114-448-4383 -

ev.... &amp; weekends.

2985.

FIGURE SHAPING TABlES

.

1971 -Joop CJ5, 4 whool.drt.o.

74

Motorcycles

1984 Kawattkii(X 80 motorcycle.

E...nom oontltlon. •aoo.

Coli 114,992·11081 otter 1:00
Liv81tock

1----------

Uniden Sett41i1' syJttm. Re•
lil1e VCR . 19 in. c;,olor TV, Ctll

p.m.

i

77

Auto Repair

64

Hay

8t

12:30 pm .

U Hatal trucks and tralllfl for
fiNWood dalivered, ttlcked.
U&amp;.OO. Mason Countin, Galli·
poll1; other tra'ai: Within reuon
at ow, diacreation, 304-89&amp;-

3446.

SURPLUS DENIM , Carhan.
Rentll Clothing . . New huvy
coveralll U2.00. heavy . new
work dotltlng, boot a all winter at
reuontbla prl~ . Sam SornervMie's, Old Rt. 21 -lunction
Independence Road. E11t Ra·

I'

+. •' -

79 Motor~ Homes
8t Campers

'
'

.!

.Winn-.,. 11 ft. Self \:ontlined. 11000. New condition.
C.III1··2M·1178.

,1

I'

'

"''
:-..r
.,.

....

'~
~'-.."::.t

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

Homa
Improvements

For ule- 8ig round Hie.. Oood
flnt cunlng. t20 per bela,

~· .

)

loodod. 814-985-3949.

175-5286. -

.

Hoy, col1304-675·5081 .

1983 Chevy. Cl.. lion . Am radio,
Firewood for Nle, t30. 1 pickup: auto. lr•ns .• PS, PB. 89,000

lood, 304-458·1138 or 468-

min. 1170Q. Con bo-ottllo

·

Oalllpollt Dally Tribune or for
more Information call 014-4482342..

0ak firewood . Cell 30•·8752767 aft:• •:30p.m. Aak for
Woodman.

1974 VW luptf ....1.. New
EJCcal. cond. 14.000 mi.
MajorCredlt Ctrdtl A1gardl.., *3000. C.ll 11•·448-23151f·
of credh hlatory. Alto, new· tar 8 PM.
credh card. No one refuted! Far I 7::::-:--:-::---::--informetion call ... 1 · 318 · 733- 19715 Ford Grenlda. Good work
1082 ext. M2938 .
oar- eeoo. C.ll 114-441-008&amp;
paint.

oltor5 PM.·

56 Building Supplies

1977

c..,...

frodl. 91,000

114·448·1111-Doy, 441·1244

1fter I PM.
iuildlng Materiels
llodl. briok. HW«, plpt~, win- 1984 Ford Eo-. •2199.
dows. lintels. ate. Claude WI•.
Auto lal•·
tera.. Rio Grande, 0. Cell 81..., Rt 7John'•
below Holiday Inn.
241-1121 . .
IC.aneuge
Opon~l~
concr... block• all liM• yerd or

SWEEPER end .-wing ~.chine
repW, parts. and tuppli•. Pldl
up and ~ery. Dtvl• Vacuum
Cleaner, on• htlf mile up
Gaorges: Cretll Rd. C.U 614-

. 441-0284.

OoiUoqlo, Ohio Coli .14-4412713. -

..

.

,.
I'

1'

:;
1,

'·

Fetty Tree Trimming, nump • ' ,·

_

I·

,,I•

'

AOIIry ar ctble tool *Hiint·

"

MottW.IIsoamplet~same_dey.

Pump .... lnd tWiice. 304-

RTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
DID 'IQ.J KNOW MRS.

STENGLE HASA
.BCY/L OFGOLPFI5H

NO, I

NEITHER DID

!t ~NTIL I

DIDN'T.

::&gt;"'TON IT.

ON HIOR DESK~

ltarka ·Tr• and ll'l!ln Servia,,
lawn c••· lend!lcaping. IIUmp

~.·~ ·

removal. 30•.· 178·2842 or

571-2803.
82

.

Plumbing
Heating

1·"-·

8t

bp4Hrlent. -heel. locltion. C.l!

114-441-12011 oltor 5:30PM.
G•lllpollo. e221. Coll448-441 e
oltor7 PM.

•·I

..•

-~

Car. Fourth and Ptna
Ool... ~o. Ohio ·

YOU'LL NEVER

.''

Kiln Dried A..,.-lon Honl- 1177 Corwtte. 40.000 ' 1ctu81 , ~~ono 814·441·3881 or 114.
wood
••d Plywood . . mlloo. Coli - 7 PM. 814-371- · -a-4477
.
,.
Mouldlna. trim, bultDno, ptugo, 2188.
·
'
· - • · toy porto ond . , . _
,. I '
......... ADELMANN. CLARK, 1885 N,._, :100 ZX. l.oociod.
84
Electrical
I'
INC .. Rt: 83 N.; MDAithw. 0.
8t
Refrlga:ation
31,000 · EICOI. Cond. Col
. 114-591-1271 .
,814-441-BISI .
q
I
Reacty mix conoreta and 8n 1981 Pontloo 1000. SHAAPI
QOnet.._.tvPPNn. CIM us Vetley
~lllldentlll or CO~I wir- ,~ \"•1
•5&amp;00.
Collt14·448·1178
.
Cement ond Supplloo,
i"g. Naw service ~i"l'ipeira ... ,
304· 773-1234.
1114 Z-28. • ~...... olr. Blook . . UcanMd electrician. Elt:im~ ... "' 1
fr11 . Aklenour Electrical 3Q.t. ~.w'~t·
..1100. j:olll14-441·1178.
171-1788.
•
"' .&lt;;.&lt;11
,.
56
Pats for Sale
1184 TrMI AM. Auto., eir,
'
T·top, •1100. Col 114-44886
General Hauling
IB?t.
Groom •nd· Supply Shop-Pot •
-----------~-- ··
Grooming . All bread1 .. . AII 1'110 vW R-. Goo. 4 opd .,
~· . .
onytoo. lomo Pot Food Doolor. .,,, 11ooc1 oond. naoo. c.n
Dillard Water Service: Pooll. ;.
Julio w - Pit. 814-441-0231 . 114-448-.....
' Clattrns. w.. t•. O.llvtrY Any- '"''
time. Call 114· 441-7-'«M-No , n;
DrlfOnwynd Cattery Kennel. 1185 fonl looort. t2H8. CoN . Iunday callt.
,
CPA Hfmal.,.n, Pwalan and 114·218·1122.
' "
1 1 - k -. AKC C J • J W11t1r hrvioe. &amp;-.~ft'lmmg' ._i
,..,...... Coil 114·441-3844 1117 Olrlo. Cutlolo
pools, oittems. wella. Ph. 114- · •
oltor7PM.
c.n 304·773·1111 or 773241-9285.
. ~
81!1 .
Pen w11110 c._ c- a
R a R Wotor -- H- .'·~
1871 T·"'rd, goad aondldon.
1/181h - ·. - · 01110 Cloll
Lalon10. WrhoiD ... 17t,
. .J1,....
- ... loyt
"""'Watera.c.t
- · for. .•\'"i: 't'
- · Colll14-281-1333.
rnertv
hnMroy, 9ltlo. 41718.
104-171·1370.
·
\,. r
Full .ilkN!dod wlllto Oonnon
'
tr\li ' .
.
'
'rl~t.rt·
lhoplrord ..."" •••. Col 1111 DlcloC.-L&amp;.IPaul R:upt, Jr. w..., hrvtoe. t" olltift
114-441-1141.
U200. 1171 Cllovy
Paolo. obn..... - ·· Colll14- •• ... ,•
..,...J171.
plok-up hoii·IOn. UIIOO. Col
114--·2101 .
.
:~-----:-~--------- ,.~4
67
Mu1lcal
W
anereon' a W•ter HauUnt. ~
... • 1
1814Citoolololl
.............
,....,.....
,.... lmm ......
Instrument•

w-

.

GUESS WHAT

I

JEST

.

Gar

.
,.

I"""'

'
'•'
_;.:1

••

r::~ r..:r.~· ~.::
G...._ ......_II INIItdH tft. • • 0 0 0 0 0 - ·- · o M - . . . ·...
. . 171
. ·l14-44l.ot17 or oon ...,. •1,..,7t=
=l-•.,_.,_.,...:.._·_ _

·--·

1077.
68

CornpMioly fum- ....,. lor

dt-. For n.elltfo. Olft

"!"· ... 304-171-

"Nickle doaan't have a fDI'WII'dlng ad·
draae.

Try tying It to a

and throwing It
In th8 Elllt River."
brick

Fruit

171'7J ,..,.. · - · ·

::t:; • ayl, _

17

...
'.

..,.

tt7t~TD.4-.e.--.

........ - -· Co!
114-441-4118.

114-·41ot"' 37t-2740.

pllan ..................

w...,.... ___. 114-448- 1

Nloa one bedroom houM n. .
dOwntown 6 lhoooll. Ret•en·

'a..-.

=. . -'""*"·=·

=. 2f000

•' a•:

Upholstery

-·•
I

_ _ •_v_iMf_.tSI_b_le_•__ ~.oo. ;r'171~::,&gt; ••• ....., up~~•••nna ~ I
!!!ooufltYorooza- n.o- J
'11 v.w: 1710.00. 'All ..... lft .......-.... ~allll,.&amp;f. Cell
I
.- - f l o.oo '...
-4 s• lor lroo
n.ooo.D!'. lt4·148· ·J;4·171
304-M2o3820.
I lltlt.l.
.
·'
I

I•

works. (1 :00) g
1!]1 Moneyline
OJ (!) Love Connection
11:3011 (2) l!5l News
(!) Spor111Cenler (LI
[il Cheero
0 (J) Nlghtllno Q
®J Magnum, P.l.
1!]1 Sporlll Tonight
llll!ll 'Night Heat' CBS Late
Night A singer ill need of a

., ~

'"'

101 uu.dalve ,,_...lllkNI,

3 eR.' hOUie, 2 mi. out 141.
fJIIO • mo. Dop. a rot. -"""·
Coli 114·448··2110 •llor I I'M

';:'!.

IS IT
KETCI-liN'?

I

COI-.

Fumllhed: One bedroom cot·
-or one
· Nloo
moniod
lady.lot
Noopel,
Ref. •ooulllo
dep.

@ MOVIE: An Onmarrie.d
women IRI (2:041
ill (!) MOVIE: Allantic City
(RI(I :44)
8:05 (I) NBA Baskelball
8:30 til Branded
[il II (J) Growing Paino
Jason mu st prove to a
furious Carol.that secrets
can'! always be Kept. 1;1
9:00 til 700 Club
Il l]) 1m MOVIE: 'The
Murder of Mary Phagan, Pan
2' Movie of lhe Week Q
[il 8 (J) Moonlghting
David'S father announces he
wants David to be his best
man. (R) g
···
(!) \D) Fronlllne Relive the
rise and fall of T.V.
evangelists Jim and Tammy
Bakker. Q
®I lll illl Jake and llle
Falman McCabe and De rek
are taken hostage : Jake
works to safely free lhem .
1!]1 Larry King Live!
10:0Q Cl) Slraighl Talk
. · Ill II (J) tllirtysomelhing

demonstrate how the brain

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
·

1!]1 PrlmeNew~

Michael a nd Hope . g
(!) Voleta &amp; VIsions Wilne ss
tl ips of interviews with
Robert Frost, leading
pasloral poet. g
®) llll!ll Cagney a. Lacey
Cagney and Lacey are fo rced
1o take a drug lest; Cagney's
is posilive . Q
l!lJ News
llJ) Evening News
OJ (l) Benny Hill
10:20 f1] MOVIE : Legend of lhe
Loot (NR) (1 :47)
10:30 Cl) Celebrity Chela
l!lJ Tony Brown's Journal
llll News
OJ (l) Hogan's Heroes
11 :00 Cl) Remlnglon Sleele
(!) Lighler Side ot Spono
Ill II (J) ®I 411 ll2l News
(!) Sign Off
I!]) The Brain Models, graphs
and animation help

·''I'

.....

ID 1!21 .1m Jeopardy! g
@ Barney Miller
OJ (!) WKRP In Clnclnnall
7:35 (I) Sanford an&lt;! Son
8:00 Cl) Crooobow
II CiJ 1!)1 Malloek-Matlock
delends a softball coach
accused of killing the u,mpire.
(!) NHL Hockey
[il II (J) Wllo'a tho Boos?
Angela comes to startling
conclusion about her feelings
for Tony. (AI 0
l!l (D) Nove E'xplore ·1he
devek&gt;pment of a new snack
fOOd ~- an inexact science. 1;1
®l 1111!21 48 Houro
.

Elliot leaves Nanc y and
temporarily moves in with

::-:-::-:::-:-:-=---:--::-- '.'

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both.
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Ill
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POll.
SwiMming

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Colll14·148·21143.

~

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GE . Spoclollng In Z-. Col ._;
304-5?8-239S .. 114-4412484.
.-..
removal. Call304-171-1331.

tfJTIMAl'E

'·
,,,,''·

RON ' S Televllion lervlae . ...~ ......
Hou• call on RCA, Q.uu.er, , _,

1984 Lynt, 1183 Citotion,
1183 Oldo. F l - . 1182
K - 1 . All lor oolo Of trodo.
C•lll14·218·1270.

Block Co .• 1231h Plna St.,

RIGHlS ~to..AllOOS...

'1 :

Unconditional llfellma ._...,
tH. Locel rlfwenoet tumilhed.
FrM atimat... Call oo11ect: •
1·614-237-0488, dr; Of nlghl.
AogeraBasemant
Waterprooflnt.

OJAPE~AL

891-3102

mH•. auto., Y·l , t1&amp;00. C.H

-...,. Mooon IOftd. Oolllpolio

10 FIOHT HU'MtJ

,.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

304~

71 A t ' F S I
. vonowood, Fri, Sot .. Sun: noon- , _ _ _u_o_s_o_r__a_e_ _
8:00pm, 304-273·5155.
I

·

c

enlnga efter ~PM .

81

Mi..d hay, •1 .00 Hie.

•

•I

Point 8ooth. Win conoidor oN
olloto. Coll14-441·442&amp;....

Hty for Mle. large round bal...

114-882-7302 .

I'

. •'••.

PM .

Rd . Coil 114·982·51122 ot

1728.

..

Rotunda - allgnmim: machine.
Will accept beat ott., Cal ·
81•·'"1-4425• .,.,lngeafterl

Grain

j

,.•
•

'

Mixld hay or alfalfel • ~quire .
20 cu.h . Hotpoint ch'•tfreenr. · HI•. Mixed hay • l•ree round
•1&amp;0. 2· I ft. tool boiCft·•kM b•loo. Coli 814-281 -3334.
mount for pick-up, t400. I lncb Jtckeon. Ohio.
cJIIm~ blower tor'wood stove,
= - : - - - - - - - · l c•10Q. Co11114-251-1181 .
MIJttd 118'1 or alfafa in square
bales. Mbiad .h"f In large roUnd
MIXed hard wood tlaba. •12 per bales. Ctll 814 · 211~ 3334 .
bundle, CCHftalnlng approw.. 1 'h Jtckton, Ohio.
ton. FOB . Ohio Pallat Co.
Pomltt'oy, Ohif'. 114-912·MI1 , Hty for aala. lllrg .. ro11nd and
sqU.ra b•l•. Call 114-117·
Firewood for Mle. Hardwood 1114.
llabl, .e10 per bundla. Sawed
wood, •1&amp; average pickup load. 30 large round baln of hbt..:l
Lumb1r 1 inch. 2••· 2w.l, 2x8·at hr;. no.oo .., bolo. c.p
Sawmill Co. Rd. 11. Paachfortl. 114-841-2512 .
.
t

304- 87~-7421 .

..

"
' "

.

·,

SIIE SAID IT MIGHT
IIELP MS TO SET 01/ER
Fea,INEi DEPRESSEO..

c.
. .
•C·

I THOUG~fr MAif&amp;E
'{()U'D PLAif.A 6AME
OF CIIECKERS Wmt ME ..

I SUPPOSE I !IAI/E TO
LET HIM WIN, TOO ...

break is blackmailed by lhe
mob. (R)
@ Magnum, P.l. Arrow lhat
Is Noi,Aimed .
ill ill Taxi
· 12;00 til Blimo end Allen
II (2) l!5l Basi of Carson
·(!) ln•lde lhe PGA Tour (A)
Ill NlahUino g
Ill (J)"Foil Guy
l!lJ Sign Off
ON-Night
OJ (l) Rowhldo
12:30 &lt;II Jack Bonny
(]) Ski Wortd (R)
Ill Nowlywod O.mo
®J MOVIE: Thll Block Swon
{~RI (1 :25)
.. fD MOVIE: 'Many Hoppy .
Rttums' CBS Lite MoVIO
llll MOVIE: Grey Lady Down
{PGI (1 :51)
12:35 Cll MOVIE: Hit Martly
O'Koofe (NRI (1 :20
1:0Q IJ)Iool 01 ClrGucllo
ei2J 1111 Lite Night with
lllvtd LllltlriMn'
{!) Bohollltlc 8porte
Amedee(R)
.

a&gt; T111111 or Conslquoncee
e11111gn 011

I1J Cro••tn

• .') o'l"&gt;

I

_

_

_

_

"

r----- - - --.;...,

Th e y' now t a ll us we can
microwave min ute rice. I thin k
that's making lhings move aM-

N A L M E T ,-.
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yolJ de'llelop from step N o . 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS.\...
.
Garish - Happy- Basin - Fllc/ily - PHYSICIAN

""

,.

..-·.

,.

." '.

Admitting n~rse at. hosPital: "Who should we notify In the
case of an em8rgericl(?"l&gt;atlent; " I would hope you 'd call my

PHYSICIAN!"

..
• •

·

·,

BRIDGE
·Careful play
improves odds
By James Jacoby

1-!8-18

NORTH
. A7 6 4
.K J 3
t K Q9
+ s o2 ·

'' .

EAST
. 10 .
• Q976o42

WEST
+KQ J9 8 52

••o
a
• 53 2

."' ,,'

.·

t 7

+ J 10 9 B
+7
. ,,
Pre-emptive bids are annoying, parSOUTH
ticularly when you have a strong hand.
+3
The approved method of' showing a
p,owerlul two-suiter over a pre-empt
t A J 10'8 &amp;4
•• If,
18 to cue-bid the opposing suit. :J'his ex+ A K QU
plains South's fouNpade bid. Nort h
Vulner a ble: Nor th-South
had been strapped over three spades,
Dea ler: West
but his partner's strong bid galvanized
him into what might have been unwise
West
North East
overbidding. He bid live spades to
Pass Pass
force his partner to pick a slam and
•' .
Pass
Pass
tben carried on to seven diamonds.
7t
Pass
Pass
Pass
The play lor the grand slam was
Pass
good and was a shoo-in if the clubs
.,. ...
split 3-2. 'Because Ca reful Charlie was
Opening lead:
K
.•
the declarer, the odds got even better
as he played it out. Charlie won dummy's ace of . spades a nd trumped a . . [king, ma king dumm y's .jac k good. East
spade. He played a diamond to t he ha d to hope tba t his pa rtner had a club ·•
dummy and trumped another spa de. honor, so he thre w a club. That ma de
He cashed the ace of hearts, played a n- decla rer's last little c lub a winner , a nd - ·
other trump to dummy and trumped tlie grand s lam was m ade .
dummy's last spade with his ace of diTr y playin g the hand wi thout :;;·':
amonds. When he then played the last trumping a spa de at trick t wo. You'll · ..
trump to dummy, East had to come be in the wrong hand whe n you play
down to ,five cards. If East threw ·a the lasttrump, and East · be able t o · "
heart, his queen would fall under the safely
·
t he
·

.A

...

.....

3.

5.

+

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..

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

DOWN
1 Veal or
·lamb cut
Z Pandora's

1 Throttle
&amp;Quince
or pear

ll"Dnuns -

.

escapee,
some say

'

the

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box

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Mohawk"

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Unbidden

4Piunk

18Stage

work

preceder

14Conunon

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or horse
15-diem
II Make

6 Flour·

18~1anan's

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water
mix
7Comic
Olsen

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&amp;Computer

union

appurtenance

18Cord

21 Pitch

'.

9 Subjugate
28 Nothing, IZ Equipped
to Becker 17Colony
member ·
24Bowl

220naroU

zo

27 Divulged
Z8Handle
copy
ZIAbbr. for

. ,.,

composer
Arnold

..
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a judge

80 X-ray dose

8l"Laat-

.. • ;..-

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ln .Paris"

88 Soul (Fr.)
84Noteven

85 Knock
88Unspoken
40Hinnble

42 Finnish
lake
48 Burt:

.'

ReYJ10lds

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streetcar

..

tum
.UBrll

' ,,.,

45 Bring

to bear

·r.

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for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordure all ·

hinta. Each day the code letters are different.
CIYPTOQUOTE

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1:30 ()) LluNIIIId lllnlr
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2:00 ()) 7011 Club

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Y•iutar'l C~Dtoq.-e: MY FA,THER HATED
RADIO AND COUU&gt; Nar WAIT POR TELEVISION TO

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INVENTED SO HE COULD HATE '111AT TOO.

... .....

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PE'l'ER DE VRIES
;

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t--T.:I~:-'TI-rl-"!5......-1 ..

(J)

@ Croaafire

· 441-0139

Run• good. Newtlrn. l14-742·

Now buying lh.. l com or ..,
com. C.ll forl.ttsl quotat. River
City Ferm Supply, 114·441~

Opan your own f6gure ulon with .
the origl.,.l S•utt• Conaapt
Figure Shaping Ta~... Buy 63

rent,

:·~

1---------

oond. Colll14·448·1379.

toctorrdl_roct. :J12 -234-8147.

,_7_3_ _v_a_n_•_&amp;_4_w_._o_._

82 Wanted to Buy

1978 City triula aluminum
trail•- ~2 foot box. Very

1· Peerleu gas huter, vented,
complete with stcwe pipe. Wih
hut: at lust two roome. Call
114~441-3528 or 1M at 124
RiverS~ .• Kaneuga .

Fum"'** houu.' 3 IR . 29 Ntll,

448-7323 . .

[il

(!) NlghUy Bueinna Report
®l llll!ll CBS Nawo
l!lJ Body Electric
. 1!]1 lnoldt Polillco '88
@ WKRP In Clncinneli
OJ (l) Too Clooe for Comlort
6 :35 f1l Carol Burnell
7:0Q (1) Remington Steele
D I]) PM Magazine
(!) SportoCenler (L)
[il Entertalnmenl Tonight
0 (J) People's Court ..
(!) \D) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NowoHour (1 :00)
®)News
1!]1 Moneyline
·:
ID l!ll l!5l Wheel of Fortune
@ Cheers
fJi (!J M•A'S'H
7:05 I]) Andy Grilfilh
7:30 D I]) CIJ Hollywood
· Squ1rea
(!) Countdown to Calgary
0 (J) Judge.
®) Wheel of Fortune Q

4'

1171 C~ovrolot 8-oclo 'Illpickup, •uoo. 1977 Ford F2IO
lour wiiMI drt.o, •1300. Col
114-949-2801 .

SLATA

.lhe

2433.

FirewoOd lor .... All herd wood.

0o11..,..,, 131. eon 114-4411437.

c.... Pull.

Coil IJA-281·1522.

torpo. Coil 114-317-0141 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

flllnlll.lill

21

• ;~•,

___ ______.

I

1-T1PRODO
..:.r.:12;..,.;:,3~,---l ~-

li\ Inside
PGA Tour
II ABC Newal;l

' '"'· ·

• ·•
;· ;::

1111 Ford Ra,... 1. I epd.. .;...t;.~
AM-PM·Con. 8,000 mlloo. Co" . , •
114-nn oltor 4 PM.
71:•

;)!() 1

2010J .0 . 1faetorw/ .J .D. equiPment, 2 row pl•nter, ploWs.
rotary· hae. post driver. t3910.

KevttoM 'Ct.uiC Mtgs· Dodge
or Ford. hereiN machine. &amp;err
g•nerttOr, tool1, llnlvtl, crefia,

614-246-5294,

982-&amp;403.

Adutt-O.Ik Aalst.nt. 15 hours

Jf

1

....

Mutt M '"" to appreciate. a ,1812 Dodge 210 Atm. Cuatom ."' •:
bottom plowt, treneport disc.
conversion. Trail• ready. CeA
14710. Colll14-211' 1122.

.

A'le. Gtllipolis, OH .

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

2 b.droonl •pt. for rent. Stov~
and refriger..or are furnished.
Ctrpeted. Nice 11ttlng. Cell

30 acre ftrm : Mostly tillablt.
Near Rio Grande. Pond. bams,
good home. Ctll 614-245 -

C•lll14-251·,251 .

12

Oliva St .. Gallipolis.
NEW· 8 pc. wood group· $399.
.living room suites· t 1 ~9 - t899 .
Bunk bed• with bedding- t191.
Full size mattrnt II found.tion
llarting - ~99 , Recliner.•
stanlng- t9
USED· Bedt. dreuen. bedroom
suitee. t1 9 -t299 . Desks,
wringer wa1her, a complete line
of used furniture.
NEW· WHtern bootl· t30.
Workbools n B 6 up . (SIMI 6
taft toe). C.lll14-•4&amp;-3119.

992· 5868.

Farms to· r sa·le

~~lljl;illl'

, 030 c.. 1,....,

Cll..hen's Uaed Tlrt Shop. Owr
1.000 tlra. aina12. 13, 14, 11.
11. 11.5. 8 mll11 out Rt. 218.

,-

3 bedroom treil«, Portland area·.
e200 morith, t200 deposit.

II

Ill OJ

(!) Dr. Who
l!lJ Owl TV &amp;:;I
1!]1 ShowBiz Today
@ Facia of Life
fJi aJ Happy Dlya
&amp;:os mAlle e
6:30 0 (2) 1!)1 NBC NighUy N_.

8.E . Ohio.

3 bedroom. furnlthed. GoOd
dean condition. 1 child, no pet•.
51 Household Goods
t176 per month. New Htven, ' - - - - - - ' - - - -- -

304-882-2466 .

,H

/'r l1

0611 .

Nice 2 lilt. hOUH in Middleport.

PI' week. Some avenl"fl

4111J1 . .

. 2 bedroo~. furnished . Utilhin
paid. 1 child accepted . No pets,
drUnb, or dope. Call 814·317·

Sofas and chtira priced from
1395 to t996. Tabln 1150 end
SON E~TATES. ·5.3 8 Jackson up to $126. Hlde-a-tieds •390
32&amp;4.
Pika from S183 1 mo. Walk to to t696 . Recliners t221 lo
- -- -- - - - --loS376. lllmps t28 to •125.
6 rooms and bath. gtrage. shop and · movies. 81• -446·
Dinettes S109 and up to ••95.
outside building. new tiding and 2518 . E.O.H.
Wood table w-e chairs 12815 to
roof' new carpet. well inauleted.
$79&amp; . Desk t100 up to t375 .
M11on W.Vt. Call 814-992· luxury Ttra Apartments. Elegant. 2 Br. 2 floor, tully
Hutchn 1.00 and up . Bunk
2813.
carpeted. CA and heat. Private beda complete w . mat1re• ...
t291and up to •395. Baby beda
Houu far ufa in Pomeroy. entrance. enclosed patio, pool•
PII!YQround . Start· • ·299 per . $110. Mattr...norbo•springa
114-837-1321.
month. Utilities not included, full or twin •ea.~l78. tnd
188, Queen sets t 26, King
Houae for ule. Will sell on land Call 81•·387·7860.
$360. 4 drawer ches .. 9. Gun
c::ontract wltll t5000 down.
Asking t24.000. Calll14-912· Nice 1 BR . apt. Range and.refflg. cabinet• 8 gun. G11 r electric
range 8376 . Blby· attrnses
28152 OJ 81•·498·8817 . Will furnished~ Water • garbage
$36 &amp; t4&amp;. Bed framn $20.
cansldttr mobil• horne on trade, paid, DepoSit required . Cell
81•· 448-•345 after 5 PM.
S30 &amp; King frame t60~ Good
selection of bedroom suitet,
Upstair~ 3 room 1. bath, ' turmetal cabinets. headbOards t~O
32 Mobile Homes
nishiMI. Clean. Utiljtln ptid. Ref.
and up to $86 .
for Sale
&amp; deposit required. Adultl only.
No pets. Ca11'114-448· 1119.
90 Dey• same es cash Ve!ith
approved credit. ;J Mil11 out
1978 Windsor 1•x70 wtth Ill· Furnished 2 BA . aptrtmenl. Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to &amp;pm
Mon. tllru Set , Ph. 614 ·446·
pando. 3 BR ., all alec.. CA, Adults only, No pets . Inquire at
washer • dryer. awnings. porcll, First &amp; Olive St .. 11k for Rote 0322.
underpinning. Excel. cond . Mull Stilner.
Valley Furniture
.... Cal &amp;1•· &amp;82·7437 after 6
Furnished ap•rtment· 7 ,Nell ,
New end us~ furniture and
PM .
Gallipolis. 1 IR . t22&amp; . Utilities
applicancu . Cell 614-4481970 Cambridge 12x70, , ... ptid. Call "8·4418 a her 1 PM . 7&amp;72. Hours 9 · 5 .
heet, 3 BR. 1 "h bath. l;.xtra nice
Mollohtn Furniture
throughout. $8900, Call &amp;1•· Nice cory 3 room ept. Furnl1he~ .
All carpeted. Utilitltl ptid. t240
Upper River Rd ., G~lllpqlll, ,Qh.
446-017&amp;.
.
t mo. Dep. &amp; ret. required. C1ll
Dinettta· t226 • Up, U'ling
ro om t ultU · •3oO • up,
12k1SO. In Middleport. Call 614· 614-446-7616.
Recliner•-*156 6 up. Carpet
992-3150.
New delu11e 2 BR .• equipped
atenlng at t4 • yd. Financing
available to quilified buyars. Ctll
14• 70 Windsor with 141130 kitchen, tow utilities. Excellent
614· •41·7··· ·
•dditlon. 3 bed roomi, btack top location. No pets. Oep. a. ref.
road, tpprox 3 aern, Gallipolis required. Call 814-448-12150.
J loS FURNITURE
Ferry, 304-176·1930.
Graciout living. 1 and 2 bed·
lform1lly Parson' s Furniture)
1416 Eastern Ave.
1987 Clayton 14•70 mobile room apllirtm~tl •• Village
1 0 per cent off on cOmplete
home. 10% down .payment, Manor tnd ·fUvertlde Apa·r1 •••ume lo•n . payments mantt in Middleport. From · 11o~::k . Monct,.y. Jan. 18th thru
Set. , Jan . 23rd.
•187.61 , 30•· 6715-7209 or •2 1&amp;, including utilities. Cell
514-992-7787 . EOH .
living room Slihat from 1179 &amp;
675:75&amp;4.
up . Bedroom sul111 t419 .18 &amp;
up . Complete nlicroW.ve stends
Completely futnished 12x65. 2 Conage efficiency, total elect·
1 39 .91;' &amp; up .
bedrooms, on rented lot, ctll ric:. refrig••tor, ttove, nice.
HUD approved. 2215 Mt. VerCome in· and meet the new
. 304-67&amp;-4853.
non Ave,, Pt. Pleuant, 61•·
Ownera.

Will do Federal•nd State Income
Taxes; typing, booking. and
No1ary service. Margartl Park•

45131 .

,ltll:lii .... IOI..t

House preferably with acr...for hutbtnd • wife only. EJCCal.
reference. Ctll814-441·7848.

BEAUTIFUL APA!ITMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK-

.....-..----;;::---,.,--,::co-:--

I

Antiquft, buv or uft. Rivarina 61 Farm Equipment
~tiQuM , 1 124 Eeat Meln · St .•
Pomeroy. Hours: Mon., · Tues.,
CROSS. SONS
endWed.10 :00a.m.·I:OOp.m .,
U.S. 35 Welt. J-... . Ohio.
Swn. 1:00 p.m.·I:OO p.m . By . 814·211-8451 .
chanc. or appolnt.....,t . Rua
,..,.., Ferou10n. rMw Holland,
Mooro. 114-182-2521.
luth Hog Sal• • Service, OV4H'
40 UMd lrtctort ta chooM from ·
6 complete lint of naw • u-.ct
54 Misc. Merchandise equipment. L119e1t Hlec::tlon l.n

47 Wanted to Rent ·

614·441·7026 .

9112.

4&amp;631 .

•

'•

Antiquei

Baay &amp; Bell Antiques. 8uckeye
Poddlor, 114·441·71U. Ewn· ·
k'lge • weekend•.

3073.

•

2 BR . apt. Stove &amp; ;efrig.
furnished . Near Go Mtrt. Cell

2 bedrOom, 2 beths. 2 car
S~trage, 18\lel lat on Ri. 33.
Swimming pool. aatelite. cion
to Meigs High. Clll 614-992·

rior and exterior trim. roofing
and gtnlfal conttructlon eaperienca required. Must htvatoota
and transportation. (tru~ pr•
ferred). Good pay for right
person, San4 rnuma and work
hi1torv to: Th• Daily Sentinel.
Boa 729C. Pomeroy , Ohio

home, lift, health.

Employm~nt

11

le*'
carpenter. 7 Y'llr. exp•
rience minimum. Framing, inte-

La...,

Spacious mobil• homt lots fa,
rent. Family P_rlde Mobile Home
Park. Oallipolls Ferry . 304-875·

roy. Close to high tchool. Clll

Furnished tpt, next to llbi'try.
One prateseional adult only.
Parking. Can 114-448-0338 ..

614•448-3144.

63

2 bedroom on Crew Rd., Porn ..

176· 5104.

Avtilable February 1tt. 2 Bedroom houM In town in goad
location. No pals. $325. Secur·
ity depotn II r.terences r..
quired. Wiseman Real Estat'

~.!:·~-=":·-=...======:;=====:::::===:::~

w .vo. Coil304-773-1151 .

2112.

2 BR . tpts. &amp; closetl. kitchen·
tppl. furnished, Wuher-Dryer
hook-up. ww ctrpllt. newly
ptinted, deck. Rag"cy, Inc.
Aptl. C•ll 30.-8715-7738 OJ

3 BA ., 2 bath1, 30x40 gtrage.
Crown City- St. Rl. l563. 8 acr...
t80,000. tell 814-216-1270 or

.

Space for small trailen. All
hook-ups. C.bla. Alao tfficJency
room1. air . •nd cable. Meson.

sepertte d ining room. •n&amp;
month. Ownttr pays treth pick·
up &amp;hoot,
wattr.
Renterpayt electric,
goo
• •100 d~poo(l. Coli
11 • · 379-2730 after 7:00PM or'
379-2292 anytime.

614-742-2110 botwoon 8:00

c.,..,'"
Gall• County trea,why
not contidlr AAA? Send ut

1 10 Int. Trent·aiU II . ...
-cummings. Recently G¥at'·
tel. New lnjectan. New
p mp . AC . Am·FM · C•u .
1 241 ~ir... Truck tiM ......

Route 33, North of Pomeirov.
Rental trailers. Call 814-992·

end 4 :30,

D ()) Cll II (J) ®l
1!)1 Newt
(!) SportaLook (T)

~}~,

h

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom• Pork.

2; bedroom t,.lter for rent · In
R•cln•. n&amp;o.oo. monthly. Ref·
erence needed . Call 814·9•9·

AI!,TOMOBILE CLUI OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO·AAA

Colll14-388-8449.

Lott at 848 Logan St., Middl•
port. A 31 mlllimet• Konka

Yaeger, Broker. Call 304-8711510•.

2 BR .. lurniohod. w/ d hook-up,

Beauty Shop for 1111 in town.
C1ll 614·992· 3184 for mor.e
informttlon.

r

olflo... A· 1 Rool. Eototo. Coral

7479.

B~tsineaa
Opportunity

~

Commerciel building for 1.....
Downtown Pt. PI..Unt . Storet,

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

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

&amp;:OQ lil Crazy Like a Fox

. New t.nderl·rock•

rnator-tterter-battery , ,...
It urburator. neW ~i' ·
· 1n0 01111 windOw. Excel.
. nina cond. •125. C•ll
I 4.....8 ·1,12.
.

Office S.p ace for rent. boel.
downtown O.IHpolit !ocalton.
lnqulriH call 814-.UI -4222.

'~ActuaJJy~

dtnne

EVENING

p ntle· rear tho.;kt -brak••· .

175-3753.

'Fish' is the ONLY
I know'."

cr=~-1

1 73 GMC. I oyl.. otondord,
ft

r,o"'

~.,

1'7~Y ~

KanM~tt

11 ~· 247 · 4945 .

8
d-.plex, blisemenl, gtr·
age. private. nice loct tion. 30•-

To what

,.

1 II Dodge Ram 0 ·100:
I 788.
John;• Auto Sal•
A . 7 below Holid1y fnn ·

46 Space for Rent

9hlldron . 114-982-3090.

.....

mlriM

•·

0 "til dark

Unfurnlahed hou.,for rant. FUuv
carpeted, ni!)tl, end ciHn, e~ergy
efficient. Will except 1 or 2

Announcements

W!m ~ W{ WITJillj6tw.D

2 · Truck• for Sele

Furnished Rooms .

Roams for rent. diY. Wetll,
month. O.ltia HOtel . C•ll 114·
441-1180. Rent as laW aa t 12,0
month.

efterl5:00.

'I7&gt;.I::E "60'( WHO IS &amp;.l..D 1/J ~
· .fmlf... Hf IS 'IUY cme.e.A.L,

2 17.

304-175·1381.
45

..

• · Grand Prix, 301 engtne, 2
b rreal. t 480 .00. 304-171-

Fumtahed one bedroom apartrnw~•. adutts only, no pelt.

. Syrocuoo. Coli 114· 992·7118

qulrod. Coil

-1 Auto' I For Sale

Apartment'
for -Rent
.

lv ~1. Conlac::t Harold Hy.... Main S t ., Rutland. Ohio.

3

Tuesday, January 26, 1988

. .,,

"•14 ,

�•
•

!~~ag~a~1~0-~n.~~D~~~v~S.!~·~,w~~~------------------------_!P~mne~m~y~M~~~~~~·~O~h~io~·~----~_:--~~~--------JT~~~~~Y~·~J~an~u~~~2~6~.~1!9~8B~~ .
news_..;,_____ Hoffman ... _:C=:o~ntt~nu~e::_d.f~ro~m!..!p~ag~e_:l'_ _ _ _ _ _ _...__ _...__ _ _ __,...._ _ _ _ _ _•.' .

.....----Local

'

Will tq.ke bids on bridge Feb: 2
Bids will be taken Feb. 2 by the Ohio Depl\rtment of .
Transportatton.for the resurfacing of a section of State Rout!'
124 and construction of a bridge over Leading Creek, Joe Leach.
·'
· Deputy Director for OOOT District 10, announced:
The bridge ts located ~n State Route 124 In Langsville.
Rutland Township, near County Road 10. Construction will
consist of a composite steel beam structure with reenforced
concrete and thr~ 52 !oot span substructures . .
· ~~tlmated com;tetton dates for the project Is selfor Oct , 15,

I'

1

.

The Parents For Education support group, ;ecently formed In
the Meigs Local School, District. has scheduled an organizational meeting for Sunday, 2 p.in., at ihe. Meigs Junior High
building In Middleport. All c0 1)cerned parents In the district are
. urged to a.t tend this meeting . .
· The group will discuss the formation of a panel which will
consist of a representative from each of·the schools In the Meigs
. District. It. Is the .group's Intention that with this type of
leadership. no parent In the district will have to stand alone
. when facing a problel'fl or when unable to get an answer.
. - The group will also announce be announcing to the public the
. goals and purposes of the organiZation for the remaining school
year.
·
Organizers of Parents For Education are urging Meigs Loc&lt;!I ·
parents to ' 'get involved In your school system." ·

,

'

.•

Continued.on page 10

!rim-Contra affair,.; the network network blank while in Miami
said.
last year for seven minutes &lt;!fter
CBS &lt;~lso s&lt;!ld It had described being told the U.S. Open tennis
the program's content In promot- tourll&lt;!ment would run intd his
lng it .
scheduled news cast. · _
· "I don't have respect for \Vhat
. ·•Mr . Vice President," R&lt;~ther
yfJu're doing here tonight ," the said, "I think you'll agree that
vice president told Rather .
your qualifications for president
Then he got personal.
and what kind of leadership
·•J want to talk &lt;~bout )llhy I you'd bring the country, what
w&lt;~nt to b~ president," he .ex- · kind of government you'd have,
claimed. "And I don't ihlnk. lt's . is· much more important than
tatr to judge a whole career -It's · wh&lt;~t you just referred to."
not fair to judge my whole career · A few moments later he was
by a rehash on Iran. How would prompted to ask how Bush and
you like it if I judged your career President .· Reagan could be
by those sEWen minutes when you "party to sending missiles to thE)'
walked off the set In New York?" ... ayatollah of Iran."
../
The C&lt;!mer&lt;! caught -a visibly
"You made us hypocrites in the
surprised Rather, who left the
face of the world," said Rather,
who made . his reputation as an
aggressive White House reporter
questioning Richard Nixon during his final d&lt;!ys of the Water·
Dally stock prices
gate
White House.
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
The
Interview ended' on a curt
Bryce and Mark Smith
note when Rather quickiy asked
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Bush If he would go before a news
Am Electric Power ......... :... 28% conference before the low&lt;! caucuses to deal with the "unans-·
AT&amp;T ..... .'..................... ....... 29
Ashland Oil .. :: .................... 55\1, wered questions" about his role
in the scandal. ·
· Bob Evans ........................... 15
Bush, who beg&lt;~n thesentence,
Charming Shop pes ............... 12
"I've
been holding news conferCity Holding Co : ..... . ........... 34
ences
since March, ... " was
Federal Mogul.. ................... 35
abruptly
cut off by Rather.
Goodyear T&amp;R -~ ......... ....... .58%;
"I
gather
that the &lt;!nswer . is
Heck's Inc ..................... ...... 1Yo
no," the anchor said'. "Thank you
Key Centurion ..... ........ ....... 391,6
much for being with us."
very
Lands' End ................... ...... 201,6
Limited Inc ........................ 18\1,
Multimedia Inc ... .... :.... .. ...... 53
Rax Restaurants .............. : ... 3%
Open house
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. ... 71,6
Chester Fire· Department will
Shoney's Inc . ............. ......... 20%
have
an open house on Thursd&lt;!y,
Wendy's Intl ....... :................ 5%
at
7:30
p .·m ., for all lllfljll fire
Worthington lnd .................. 17%
departments to come ana view
Chester's new FMC, Spirit
tanker. Refreshments will be
served.
Continued from page 1
Meeting canceled
adeq.u&lt;~le, he said. Gilmore Is
The financial aid meeting
encouraging the public to "come which was scheduled for tonight
and get these maps because
!Tuesday) at Southern High
they 're worthless If they're not School h&lt;!s been cancelled. ·
used." Maps may be obtained at
. the Soil Conservation Service
office on the top floor of the
V eteran~,Hospl1al
Farmers Bank and Savings ComMonday
Admissions - Linda .
paiw. Gilmore also said that his
Rhodes, Long Bottom; Herbert
services as a soils expert are
Shields , Racine; Helen Waddell,
av&lt;!Uable to the public . free of
Middleport. :
charge.
Mond&lt;~y Dls,ch&lt;~rges - None.

ACTIVITIES FOR ALL
INTERESTS
Americare-Pomeroy
Nursing and
Rehabilitation
Center
(614) 992-6606

Stocks-

Announcements

Issue Two ...

Hospital news

I

Haning, Middleport; three brothers, Willis
Haning, Piqua;
Morris Haning, Nelsonville, and .
Ray M. Haning, 76, 35822 State
James (Max) H&lt;~nlng , CarpenRoute 143, Pomeroy, died Monter, 16 grandchildren and ' two
day at Veterans Memorial Hospigreat-grandchildren.
tal following a lengthy Illness ..
Besides his parents, Mr, HanA retired coal miner, Mr.
Haning was born lnMelgsCounty · Ing was preceded in death by two
sons, Gall Keith anq Randy Lee
on Sept 17, 1911, a son of the late
Haning; a grandson, Jerrry
Clyde and Hattie Graham
Haning.
·
Wayne Searls, Jr.. and two
brothers, Dana and Graham
He Is survived by . his wife,
Haning.
Myrtle Haning; five sons. Ray
Graveside rites will be held all
Nolan Haning, Albany; Ronnie
p.m. Wednesday at the Wells
and Jerry Haning, both of PomeCemetery with the Rev. Dear!
roy; Thurman · Haning, New
Porter officiating, The Ewing
Marshfield; Lester (Butch) HanIng, ·H arrlonsvllle; three daurhFuneral Home Is In cliarge ot
ters, Rhea Wlllis, Columb11s: . &lt;~rrangements. 'T)lere are no
Wanda Searls, Pomeroy; Donna · . callJng hours.
't

••

.Clear tonight. Low ne11r JO.
Sunny Thursday. Highs I~ mid
20s.
·

Pick 4
' 7869

'

Page4

'

•

a1y
· Vol.38,

No. ,.81
.Copyri!lhted 1988

•

enttne
1 Section, 1 4 Pages

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, 'January 27, 1988

.

':.

A C!lr-traln collision Tuesday at about 10 a.m. at the·rail-road
crossing In Gallipolis Ferry resulted In $2,500 tn damages to a
1983 Oldsmobile, according to a department spokesman.
The car, driven by Phyllls ~ckner, 54, Gallipolis Ferry,
apparently slid onto the tracks and w&lt;~s unable to to get off the
crossing. Beckner w&lt;~s no longer in the car when the CSX train
hit the ,car.
The engineer of the train, William McGaughlin. Vienna, said
. the train sustained no ·apparent damage. ·
There were no
. ._Injuries In the Incident.

Ray Himing

Daily Namher
350

26 Cents .

A Multil'!"edia Inc. Newspaper

.,.11

The dozen gets .
.dirty again

Presiaent ...

Tra~n hits .car early today

Area ,deaths

Dragons-

,-

.
.
. .
·Meigs County J'mergency Medical Services reports six c&lt;~ils
Monday; Tuppers Plains at 12:52 a.m. to Route 248 lor Linda ·
Rhodes to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 7:14a.m.
to Lasley St. for Norma Goodwin to Veterans Memorial
. Hospital; Pomeroy at.10: 19 a.m. to Minersville Hill for Brenda
Watson to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 3: 30 pcm.
to Mill St. for l"ola Swisher to Holzer Medic&lt;~! Center;
Middleport at8: 40 p.m. toSo11th Fourth Ave. tor Helen Waddell
to Veter&lt;!ns Memorial )iospit!ll; Rutland. Fire Department at
11: 45 p.m. to an auto fire on New Lima Road ..

I

Ohio Lottery

.

i-;.,..10~·

EMS has six callS Monday

Bush...

of

. the good points In both of these This is probably where most
. lighting r.ecommenda lions for town's cemetery trustees for well ·~
since it would provide a .contlnu - the needs are a'nyway.
·
over 20 years . .
the miniature golf course. ·
ous. pot of money lor cbmmuni"Competititve grant' programs
Albert Roush, represimtlng ·, Council gave a second reading
lies who .have the money to are great butwe also need funds' to an ordin&lt;~nce which will · Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Amerl- :
' match . a.nd can afford ·loan which . aren't so hard to get. I provide P'~Y Increases :tor vlllage can Legion, met .brlefly wl(hthe :·
.
. _, . thoughtthis was what State Issue workers tn March.
repayments. .
mayor and council to complete a :
"I don 't feel this was the 2. was all about, b4t It apJiears 1
form necessacy to exempt the
Mayor Hoffman announced
intention of the voters. Most was wrong."
that the Middleport Board o! . new American Legion HaH ln. '
people thought there would. be
Council made plans to proceed Public Affairs h&lt;!S advertised for Mlddleix&gt;rt from t&lt;~xes In accor- :.•
very few .strings attached to this with the purchase of a miniature a used well driving "and well · dance with the village program •·
program . but we wen~ wrong golf course for the Hartinger pulling outfit with bids to be In by which permits exemption on new ~
again.
·
Park- with · the purchase to be the .next council meeting. There construction.
.
·
;
"If we had $50,000for matching
made from Mtnl Golf, Inc .•. Is only one local ftrl)'l now doing
Councilman··· Jack Satterfield ·';
funds and could afford to repay a Jessup, Pa.., &lt;!I a· cosi of $13,800, · the well work and It tsgoingout of satd · that. .ne will check . out; .
loan, we would go to our bank less th&lt;!n the $15,210 ' lowest business . Mayor Hoffman com- locations of several street lights•.;;·
~here w.e could obtain probably
discount pries -normally o(fered mented that th: board's owning which
are·
the.;
..
. not burning at
.
as goOd an Interest rate as by the firm. The ·town will send the equipment would be advan- · present time. . _
.
•...; . ·
· through about any st&lt;~te pro- $2,000 now on the contract w.tth tageous sh'lce the cost for pulling .
Attending the meeting 'were ::'
gram. At the wesent time our payment of .$4,900 to be made . a well by a firm coming In from Mayor Hoflm&lt;~n ; Clerk- ~;
bank's . Interest rate Is 6 % March 1 &lt;!pd. $6,000 to· be paid out of .the area can cost from · Treasurer Jon Buck, &lt;~nd Co,un-,;;
oercent.
wi)en the course Is completed. A . $1,00il to $5,000. M&lt;~yor Hoffman . cllmen Dewey Horton, Willlam-J
"All these guidelines are prdb- mlnl&lt;~ture golf fund wits estab- · &lt;~lso expressed high pra lse for the Walters, James Clatworthy, Sat-~~
ably goOd for larger communi- · lished last night so the financing !ale James (Boo) Simpson who terfield and Gilmore.
':,..
'
' ...J.'.
..,,,,
ties , but it would appear to me can be set up and Councllm&lt;~n , had se~ved · effijctively on the
that it is going to become another Bob Gilmore reported that com- ·
grant program ·such as the ones pletlon d.ate Is April 1. He sajd
oper&lt;!led by the Ohio Depart- . _that the local course will carry
ment of Development which are out a special river theme In going
socomplicated that it t&lt;!kes a full along with local atmosphere &lt;~nd
Sputh Central Ohio
The probability ·or precipita:
time si&lt;~ff to keep with it. Wh&lt;!t 's that the owner of the flrni is going
.
·
V&lt;~riable
cloudiness
today
,
·
tlon
·IS 61lpercent today and near·
wrong with the old way of doing into specl&lt;!l.redeslgn work lor the
,Yith
highs
In
the
mid
teens
.
·
zero
tonighi and Wednesday,
·
things, simply, ' such as 'the · toea( course. Council will diScuss
Partly
cloudy
tonight,
with
a
low
·
Winds
will be from the north at ~·
revenue sh;~rlng funds used to. the location of the course at the
between
zero
and.
five
above
10
to
20
mph
tod&lt;!y and light and ·
. be?
·
park with mel'flbers of the town's
zero.
Partly
cloudy
Wednesday,
northwesterly
tonight.
' '"And wh&lt;~t Is·· wrong with recreation commission. It W&lt;!s
with
highs
In
the
upper.
teens.
providing funds to are;),S which agreed to have Columbus and
Ohio Extended Forecast
cannot afford to match funds? Southern Power . Co. suggest
Thursday through Saturday . .
Fair Thursday· and Friday·,•
rcontinued from page 1&gt;
with a chance of rain or snow.::.
Saturday , Highs will be In the 20s;
'.
Thursday, climbing Into the 30s:
threatened &lt;~nd to require a · toward democracy.
HOLLYWOOD tUP])
Friday and ranging from 35 til~!&gt;&lt;
balanced federal budget.
Indeed, he .asserted a ' .'global
Ernest
Borghine
aild
.
Telly
Saturday . .Overnight lows wjll be:
-Increased military funding democratic revolution has put
Savalas
co-star
In
"The
Dirty
In
the single digits early Thurs,·
arid &lt;1 cutback in federal spend- totalit&lt;~'rianlsm on the defensive.''
Fatal
Mission,"
a
Dozen:
The
day,
In the teens Friday morning".
ing on programs such as welfare, :)nd "Amerlc&lt;~ 'is &lt;~gain a vigortwo-hour
TV
film
based
mi
the
·
and
In
the 20s e,a rly Saturday. •
allowing states to take the lead.
ous le&lt;!der of the free world."
,.
1967
hit
movie
in
Which
they
-A line-item veto &lt;~llowing a .
"Our record," he said of his
also appeared.
president to strike single items administration, "Is not just the
This c&lt;~sf also includes Erik
from (ederal spending longest pe&lt;~cetime reconomic)
1
Estrada,
J~ff Conway, Hunt
legislation.
exransion in history but an
Cor;d, Ernie HudBlock,
Alex
-Confirmation of Anthony economic and social r.evolution
son,
John
Matuszak, Ray
Kennedy, his third nominee to ... that at a critical moment in
1\'lan&lt;;lni
&lt;!nd
: Heather Tho- .
replace Lewis Powell as . a world history reclaimed and
mas, In a departure from the
Supreme Court justice: and of 27 restored the American dream."
all-male
cast of the original
other nominees .to the federal
The president discharged his
movie.
bench.
constitution&lt;~!
duty . before a
· In additioh. to Borgnlne and
As expected, ' the conflict In packed House chamber. Among
S&lt;!valas,
the original film
Nicar&lt;~gua and the battle for
the 1,400 In attendance for the
featured
Lee
Marvin, Charles
· Cdntr&lt;! &lt;lid were ·key points ceremonial affair were members
Bronson,
Robert
Ryan, Jim ·
among foreign policy issues in of Congress, the Supreme Court,
Brown,
Clint
Walker,
John ·
the·speech. Reagan said Nicarathe Ca blnet &lt;~nd the U.S. diploCassavetes,
·Dol)ald
Suthergua· s 1eftlst Sandlnista · regime matic corps.
·
·'land and George Kennedy.
"knows the tide Is turning"

Redmen
.
topple ·

.

. Parents to .meet Sunday

.

•

'32 OUNCE

BIG ROLL , ·

DAWN

. MISS OPAL'S
PAPER TOWELS

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

EVERYDAY LOW PRIC~!

2/99¢
1

4Q.$..

DISHWASHING
LIQUID
50~ OFF LABEL

14Ri.
1.111

8.48

BARBASOL
SHAVE CREAM
EVERYDAY LOW PRICEI

SOFTIQUE

ASPIRIN

FACIAL 11SSUES

2~U~EG.

BY KLEENEX

99¢

2.4t

COUNT~...........7

--aiii'C'Oi5iiTI

80UNCE
. VICK'S

FORMULA
44-D
·4·

99 OURREO.
Ul

80UNCE

CHLORASEPTIC'
TI1ROAT SPRA
CHERRY OR MENTHOL

.2~§R~.
a.u

24 OUNCE
TPI.LET .BOWL
CLEANER
EVERYDAY
LOW
PRICE I

BIG 150UNCE

'HEAD&amp;
SHOULDERS
SHAMPOO

EVE=AY299·

GNP4.2
percent

Real
"GNP
Gross National Product

_.....,

5.4

I

By DAVJD VESEY
UPI Business Writer.
WASHINGTON, !UPI) . - A
buildup of il)ventorles and ,acceleratlng exports pelped offset a
sharp decline In consumer spend- '
tog to push up economic growth .
4.2 percent tn the fourth quarter,
the Commerce Department said .
Wednesday.
Real Gross Na tiona! Product
expanded by $39.2 billion from
. October through December, or
- 4.2 percent {rom the t~lrd to the .
fourth gu~rter of-19!17, a~;cq~dtng
to~ t~'e· preUiii'!riary__ esuinate by
the dti118rtmerlt's ' Bureau of
Economic Analysis . .
· Real GNP rror:n 1986 to 1987
' grew 2.9 percent, or$106.3 billion.
The•economy grew by an equal
2.9 percent In 1986 and 3 percent
In 1985. ·
When computed · from the
fourth quarter of 1986 to the
four'th quarter of last year, GNP
was 3.8 percent higher ln. l987.
exceedllJg the Reagan admlnistratlon prediction of 3.2 percent.
· . T!ie fourth quarter growth
figure "was somewhat .of a ·
pleasant surprise," said Und.ersecretary of Commerce Robert
. Ortner. · "It was better than
everyone expected." · ·
Ortner said that the buildup of
lnventorles and cutbacks In consumer spending were matters of
some concern, but predicted
moderate growth hi 1988 based on
stronger .exports and capital
spending.
· From the second to third
quarter of 1987, real GNP In-

'

Seasonally adjusted annual rales
Percentages rellecl change
·
from previous period.
.r---.2-0A-o--,

4

4 All 1 2 3
'85 1986

4 All 1
'86

2

1987

Meigs County's development director will help
potential applications complete the required loan
application forms, applicant responsibility form,
source of Income sheets, agreements and
certifications and federal labor st&lt;!ndards forms .
AU of these forms, when completed and signed,
along with three year past financial statements,
three year projections and a brief business history
comprise the complete pack&lt;!ge.
Dollars are competitive and in short supply.
Early application Is strongly urged to ensure
adequate financing for a!J Meigs County ~usi~ss
and Industry.
.
.
.

·Meigs Regional planners pick:
.
officers for · .new fiscal year

3 4
y

UPI
FIGUREs RELEASED
A buildup of Jnventlirle~ a!ld
accelerating exports helped offset a sharp ~ecllne In consumer
spending to push up e;,onomlc growth 4.2 percent· In the fourth
quarter, according to the Commerce Deparlm~nt. (Ufl)

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Stall
Charles E. Blakeslee w&lt;!s
again named executive director
of the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission. when the
Commission held their first quar•
terly meeting . of the year on
Monday at the. Farmers E!ank
and Savings Co. building.
·
. Named as. officers for the
coming year were Thereon Johnson, president; Fred floffman,
first vice·presldent; .Orion ·
Roush, ' second vice-president;
Lee McComas. secretary; and
George Collins, treasurer.
The fourth Mondays of April,
July and October were established as regul&lt;~r meeting dates
lor the planning commission, If
needed. · ;
.
.
'A 1~87 financial report for the
commission was approved.
Among . itel)'ls reported as 1987
expenditures were $1,162.50 to
• the executive director; $790.90
_for office expenses and mileage;
$$1,600 for consultant's fees; .
$459.91 for expenses incurred by

'

the Meigs Couhty Business Ex- _ port housing project.
The commission called the
pansion and Retention Progr&lt;~m
state' s -attentlon to the fact that
through Ohio State University;
Meigs County is the only county
$1,600 for Sp&lt;!cial projects.
Total expenditures and the not represented on the Ohio Task .
encumbered balance for 1987 Force for the Ohio Riverfront
Redevelopment from Pittsburgh
amounted to $6,407.71..
Regul&lt;!r , appropriations for to Cincinnati. A present&lt;~ lion was
m&lt;~de at " hearing.\.!! Belpre In
1988 total 55,257 .25.
September.
The office for this
Following are many ol last
program
is
now
being set up. The
year's commission activities. as
director
is
from
Pike County and
listed by Blakeslee in his annual
Meigs
·
County
is
to have rep res· ·
report.
In 1987, through the commis- entation. The.-questlon Is when?
Preliminary site information
sion's consultant, Meigs ·tounty
was
submitted by (he commismalntalned .a presence and
sion
to a local utility company
·helped keep. the road
the
when
the company 1iias unable to .- .
bridge oil ·t he state agenda and
get
the
required information
the SoutheastPrn · Ohio Highway ·
lmmedia1ely.
Users Committee.
- ·
In conclusion, Blakeslee· reThrOugh Its county appropriaported
that Mejgs . County h&lt;~s
tion, the commission provided
become
known as having : a
: the required funding through
planning
commission,
which acOhio State UniversitY for the
county's · Business Expansion cording to Blakeslee, ',' has a
certain intangible value. A planand Retention Committee.
Letters of endorsement for ning comm.ission can only do
projects were routinely submit- what the county wants and will
. tep and a special letter of support," he noted. " Your input
endorsement sent on a Middle- is needed."

to

•.
creased 4.3 percent, · or $40.6 deflator· was 2. 7 percent In the
billion. GNP grew 2.5 percent In fourth quarter . &lt;~nd 3 percent for
the second quarter, and 4.4 the year, the government said ..
percent In ,the first three months
Bu~111ess inventories Increased
of 1987.
$58.3 btlllon In the fourth quarter,
· Personal spet\dlng declined 3.8 following increases of $24.6 bil. percent In the fourth quarter, the lion in the third quarter and $39
sharpest drop since the second billion in the second.
quarter of 1980, ~':hen spending
By MATT ROBERTSON ·
Down UndeJ' Restaurant con- lty is good, but it w.on't get Mason
Non-farm Inventory invest,
P.limged 7:9 percent In the midst ment Increased $41.6 btllion In
cerning the priority of highway · County a fe&lt;~sabillty study.
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va.- An
of a recession;
·
extension of either Interstate 64
projects, the Improvement of
"We're not looking at one, two
the fourth quarter, in contrast to
Real personal consumption . a decrease of $10.6 billion in the . or Interstate 77 was the· main . U.S. Route35inp&lt;!rtlcular. llwtll or three years, it could be 10
expenditures In the fourth ' quar- third .
subject of discussion at Tuesday be the first of a series or ye&lt;~rs before the road is even
.
ter decreased $24.1 billion comafternoon's meetlngoftheMason meetings.)
started,'' Lewis ·said. ··we need
Real net export~ of goods and
pared with an Increase of $32.2 services increased $7.7 bllllon in
A study needs to be done first , to quit fooling around with people
County Chamber of Commerce.
billion In the third.
A committee consisting of
though, to decide which option is
who have other Interests," he
the · fourth quarter, compared ·
Economists watch personal with a decre&lt;!se of $5.7 btlliori in
members from each county · the best for Mason County: Lewls
added.
spending closely In GNP reports the third.
"(Congressman Bob) Wise,
along the·corridor between Cha- said.
'
for a good Indication of economic
The study will be to determine
ru.s. Sen. Jay) Rockefeller,
rleston and Columbus, Ohio, Is in
Imports increased. $8.9 billion
direction. Inflation as measured from bctober through Dethe planning stages, said Bernie ,which interstate to connect with, · Ritchie, and (Gov . Arch) Moore
by the GNP's Implicit price cember, compared with . $28.4
may be gone in 10 years, but the
R 1dille,. chamber · board either with an extension or with
president .
an access road, Lewis said,
residents of Mason County will
billion In the third quarter.
"The only function . of the &lt;!ddlng that Interstate 77 is
stilt be here," Lewis s&lt;~id.
Imports .of petroleum &lt;~nd petrocllmmlttee wlli be lhe advent of. closer.
.
The date for the chamber's
leum products, which accounted
four-lane access to Mason · . Money will be required to annual dinner was set for March
for about one half .or the third
county ;' ' Riddle said, adding _he finam;e the study, but the pleas 24 at 7 ·p.m. The main speaker
quarter Increase. fell $4 .2 billion
doesn't know What form . the for funds to finance the study are
be w.s. White. chief execuIn the fourth quarter.
commlttee
will
take.
falling
on
~eaf
ears
In
Charleslive
officer
of American Electric
. Approximately 400 parents, students and teachers met with
Real federal government pur"Don't go· after the improve- ton, Lewis said .
Power, .
Sen.' Jan Long and Rep. Jolynn BOstes at a , meeting of the
chase · of goods and services
ment of U.,S. Route 35, but rather
"Pleas in Charleston are fa!The chamber also discussed '
Unified Citizens for Education held Thursday evening at the
jumped $18.2 billion in the fourth
the extension of an Interstate," !ling on deal e&lt;~rs because of the poss~bility of having a VIP
·
Legion Hall 111 Rutland.
quarter, compared with an In·
Jim Lewis said, noting It may bE! /State Highways Commissioner reception before the dinner.
A two hour question and answer session was held with the two
cre&lt;~se of $3.7 billion In the third. ·
easier to get the extensltln of an William) Ritchie's : t11terest In
Ah outdoor drama at Fort
National defense purchases
officials who Indicated they Will take local concerns about
interstate than the: improvement . Ravenswood and the-lack of Randolph at . Krodel Park was
fell $0.5 bllllim in contrast to &lt;Ill
education back to Columbus. About 9:30 p.m ..word reached the
funds in Charleston,".Le)'.'ls said. · discussed, .with Steve Carpenter
meeting location as to a tentative agreement between the Meigs
Increase of , $4.8 billion In the · ·Of a u.s. highway.
. (A SQtitheastern Ohio Regional ·
Lewis also noted thai the help and Georgiana Tillis appointed to
third. Non-defense · pur&lt;;hases
Lbcal Board of Education and the Meigs Local Teachers Assn.
.
the
proJect Is receiving from the look Into an outdoor dr&lt;!ma.
Council
Highway
Committee
' and this was greeted with hearty . applause. A potluck dinner
IncreaSed $18.8 b.illion. In conmeeting
will
be
conductd
In'
Gallla
County business communwas planned for Monday eve~lng with an organlzatlo,nal
tmst to a decrease or $1.2.bllllmi.
meeting to follow. A vote of thahk.s was given to Sen. Long and
State and local government
Galllpo!ls on Feb. 3, at noon In the
Rep; Boster for the two clearing !hell' calendars so they could
purchases Increased' $5.1 billion
meet wtth the local group.
·
·
lrt the fourth quarter, corrtpared
'• with an Increase or $1.3 btlllon In
the third.
James See, 47, of Middleport, appeared Wednesday mo.r nlng
Real non -residential fixed InSouth Central Ohio .
II!
Melp County Common Pleas Court before Judge Charles H .
vestmeqt decreased $4.2 billion.
Partly cloudy today, with a
The two-story f~ame home or the William Hayes Family,
Knlcht
tol.enter a plea of guilty te·a single charge of receiving
.(n !he fo~rth quarter compared
chance of.snow flurries and highs
, Township Road. 624 off County Road 10, one mile west o!Dexter,
staten
property.
The charp atemmed from · an inCident In
near 20. Generally Clear tonight,
with' an Increase of $25.9 b!lllon In
was destroyed .by fire late Tuesday night. , ·
·
Middleport
on
Saturday
evealnj and was contained In a biD of
·the th'ird, while resldentlal fixed'
with a low near 10. Mostly sunny
The home was completely engulfed .When the Salem Center
lnfonnallon
from
the
Office
ol PrORCutlnK Attorney Fred W.
Investment grew by $2.8 btlllon In
Thursday, with highs ih the'mld
Fire Department ar~. lve'd on the scene. The department was
Crow
10.
·
·
the fourth quarte~ follmvlng a
20s.
called at 11:15 p.m. No one was home a! the time of theflte.
See was charred with ·dlspotliDI of a videocassette recorder
decrease of $3.3 billion In the , . The probability 'of preclpltaCause has not been determined. A car was lost In the blaze tn
· and a mlc~ave o-ven when he knew or llad reason te believe
tl)lrd.
.
·
tlon
Is
40
percent
today
and
near
addition to the home and Its contents. Losses were set at$35,000.
·they had .ooen o~ed as a result of a theft, accordlnl to Paul"
Personal Income Increased
zero .tonlghtand Thursday:
Gerard, ,laveaUptor for the pro~~~~eUtor. 'lbe ftems whlcli See
$90.5 .bUll on In the fourth quarter,
Winds will be from. the southw.
BOld at a local bar were atnODIMYeralltems which were stolen
up from an Increase of $52.4
est'at 10 to 15 mph today and light
Tbuniday
eveabtl from the Harley E. McDonald realdeace.
billion In the third.
and westerlY tonight. _
Approxlmate~J flftet!n guna were a1.1o ripirted mlllllln1 In the
Personal outlays Increased
Extended Forecut
break'ln, Gerard lAid. As of late TufJBchQo, none of tile Item1 bad
$5.7 billion In the fourth quarter,
Friday throulh Sunday
.The Pomeroy Elementary School was closed today after a
been
recovered, bat ciimlnal eomplalata have been llled aac1
sharply lower thah the third.
Mostly ·sunny Friday, wtth a
.
· •
bomb threat was reeelved pt the school.
feloa;r
warrant. olltaltted for the arreat of tltose penoita who
quarter Increase of $69.1 bllllon. . · cbanei: of rain or snow saturday
Other schools 'of.. Meigs County, with the ~xceptlon .of the
bi'Otlpl
the stolea piooperty to See'a Middleport home.
Personal savings Increased. an~ a ,cl!ance of rain oa Sunday.:
Carleton School In Syncuse, were all open f(lr classe&amp; today
Becelvbl1 lltolea pmperty, u charpd In . tile bll\ of
$71.6 billion, In contrast to a · Highs Will be ID ,the 30s Friday
after bavlng been closed Tuesday ~ue. to weather conditions.
lafo~on, Is a fourth jlqree felsa)'.
,
decrease
of
$4.4
b!Uion,
The
and
ID
the
40s•
Saturday
and
Scllooil of the Meigs l.ocal.School DIBtrlct underwent a wave
.Judp Knlpt accepted tlie plea of pllty and lll!ntenced S..e to
savings rate, savings as a per.· Surulay. Overnight lows wtll
of bomb threat &lt;!ails last fall and ~eral young people were
·
a
di!tennlila&amp;e aellleace of IIi moaths Ill prlloa. llaflld allo
centage
~&gt;f
d'spoaable
Income,
range
from
15
to'29early
Friday,
turned over the lo Ohio Youth Commission lis a result of the
ordered
the Mlddlepr$ to make ....tl$ttUOa and to ..y the
Increased
from
2.8
percent
In
the
cllmblna
Into
the
20s
.Saturday
calla.
·
coal'$
COIIIII.
third quarter to 4.91)erc,e ntln.the mornlna and to near 30 early
fourth.
·
·
Sunday. . .

Highway extension concern voiced;
committee for~ning in the future

400 meet with .legislators .

BAYER

BIG 250 COUNT

SNO-BOL

Fourth
qua-r ter

.
..
will be mad&lt;.&gt; "' a five percent fixed rate of ·
interest. Terms will vary according. to the type of
IMn.
Applicants should pick up the ·necessary
pre,appl!catlon ·materials from the Meigs County
Development Office, week days, from 12:30 to
4:30p.m. or phone 992-6861.
All loans must be approved by the Meigs County
Revolving 'Loan Committee. Upon approval the
entire project package will tie ·reviewed by the
Regional Loan Committee. meeting at offices of
the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley . Regional
Development Pi strict in Marlett&lt;~.

.....-. Local news briefs. .....,
50

EVERYDAY
LOW
PRICE!

.provided by .small businesses·. the commissioners.
· aim to become adept In the use of the new
C&lt;!pitallzed revolving loan fund .
.At the present time, Meigs County has inv~sted
$12.000 in the Regional Revolving Loan Fund
which has been matched by the U.S. Department
of Commerce, Economic Development Admlnls·
tratlqn, to Increase the total to $60,000. Loans to
qualified borrowers will be on a two-to-one ratio.
That ·Is, a total loan of $15,000 would require the
business to contribute $10,000. and· !he Meigs
'Revolving Loan FUnd would provlde .$5,000. The
critical
. adv&lt;~ntage or the localfund is that all .loans
.

By BOB HOEFtiCH ·
Sentinel News Staff
'T he Meigs County Commissioners are announc- .
' lng a loo~tl $60,000 revolving loan fund for business
and industry,
The commissioners h&lt;~ve joined with other local
goverrurtents l.n Southeast Ohio In an attempt to
attract and retain businesses.for local communities. For small to medium sii~ businesses, l)ew
vel!lures and businesses operating In this area,
private flnariclng for fixed assets, equipment.and
working capital Is s&lt;~ld to be difficult to obt&lt;~ln.
Since the bulk of private sector jobs are usu&lt;~lly .

1.2 GALLON
VAPORI~ER

5.99
ou:.
INHALANT...
t.IGAI.I.ON

wm

:See ·appears in ·c ourt .

Weather

House destroyed by fire

.

·School closed after bomb threat

'

. '

'

-

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