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                  <text>Ohio Lottery.

Eastern
girls defeat
Southern

Pir.lt&gt;J: 504
Pick 4: 3942
· Cards:
2-H; 7-C; 3-C;
Q·S

Low tonight in 20s High
Wednesday lnear SO. Sunny.

Page4

Vat. 42, No. 186
Copyrighted 1992

1 Section, 10 PagH 25 cento
A Multimedia Inc. New~p~per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 28, 1992

One percent income tax not on May ballot

Wesl Virginia

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News StaiT
Middleport residents will not
find a one percent income tax for
capital improvements on their ballots when they go to the polls in
May.
While all members of Middleport Village Council agreed at
Monday night's meeting that
money is needed for capital
improvements in the village, they
,did not vote to pass emergency legislation which would put the addi·
tiona! tax before th·e voters in the
May Primary Election.
Passing emergency legislation
would have been required to meet

Wesl Virginia
A WF ST

the filing deadline of Feb. 20.
The vote came after a lengthy
discus sion of Mayor Fred Hoffman' s suggestion for the new
income tax ·Which he said would
generate about $200,000 for
financing capital improvementssuch things as street resurfacing
and new sidewalks, beautification
projects, boating facilities,
improvements in water and sewage
service, industrial and commercial
development, improvements in
recreation, and funding for economic development
The vote on a motion made by
Council President Dewey Horton
and seconded by William Walters

went down to defeat by a four to
two ·vote. For legislation to. be
passed as an emergency measure,
five of the council members would
have had to vote "yes." Casting the
"no" votes were Paul Gerard and
Judy Crooks.
The question as to whether residents can afford the additional
income tax was raised by Crooks.
Middleport already has in place
a one percent income tax for general operating ellpenses. Crooks
pointed out that about 40 percent of
Middleport's residents are retired
or on disability and would not be
contributing through an income
tax. She suggested that perhaps a

I I

6"

9"

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ITALIAN SAUS AGE · wiGreen Peppers and Onlon s ....... .. .......... .. 3.19
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PUBWICH

'TilE UNIQU E SANJJWICH"
Our own Fren ch Bread recipe

Charles Blakeslee was re-elected
to serve as Executive Director of the
Meigs County Regional Planning
Commission during its regular quarterly meeting on Monday.
Officers elected to serve for 1992
are: Bruce Reed, pres ident; John
Lcntes, fi rst vice-president; Don
Poole, second vice-president; Howant Frank, treasurer; and Joyce
Bowen, recording secretary.
Bruce Reed, reporting on the
"Capitol Corridor." stated 1991 was
a very successful year in tcnns of
new highway development. This
committce, which Reed chairs, works
through !he Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce. The "Capitol Corri-

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ou r

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cheese. lhen cove red ghell i with two meatwith another layer of balls baked on top.
meatless sauce and
baked piping hot.

HOMES'IYLE
SI'AGHETI'I
Laye rs of noodles
lopped wilh our special
homestyle meat sauce
and served w1t11 hot
br ead.
buttered
parmeasan cheese.

BAKED
LASAGNA
Homemade Lasagna layered wilh loads
of meat sauce and
ct1eese willl our spe cial llaltan seasoning.

GARLIC
£I READ
Frest1 minced garlic
bl end ed wi th our
cholesteral-free margarine. Spread on a
baked Italian bun .

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79¢

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$1.59

ANTI PASTA
SAlA D
SALAD
M
ozerella
Cheese .
Lean ha m and tOO
% Real Mozere ll a Ge noa salam; harn,
cheese tops a bed of llalatn sausage cover
ing a Jresh bed of letfresh lettuce.
tuce
HAM &amp; CHEESE

$2.39

$2.99

•
FRIED .
MUSHROOMS!

only $1.49
Deep Fried In A Specia l Batter

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AT GINO'S PIZZA OF MASON
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No Coupon Necessary • Dine-In or Pick-up Only

increase effective Feb. I to be
absorbed from current excesses in
the trash fund. There will be no
change in the amount charged customers who arc billed through the
village for the service.
Manley asked for the increase to
help offset the $10 per truckload
landfill 1:harge increase which he
experienced earlier.
Implementing the curbside recycling program with the $11.910
grant awarded tq the village by the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of Litter Prevention and Recycling, was discussed. It was noted tha~ participaContinued on page 3

dor" refers to the Route 33-124 Corrid or from Rock Springs to Ravenswood, W.Va.Rccdstateda commitment has been given to begin construction on the first segment of the
road by 1995. This first phase of construction will be from Rock Springs
10 Five Points.
Rccdalsostatedpreliminary talks
areu nderwayregardingtheconstruction of the Darwin connection to
Athens.
Rccdconcludcdbysayinghefccls
Meigs County is finally being heard
and that the people of Meigs County
should be complimented on the work
they have done.
Vijay Gadde, a represcmati ve of

the Buckeye Hills- Hocking Valley
Regional Development District,
stated the application deadline for
grant monies for downtown rcvitalization could possibly be extended
from July 26, 1992, to Feb. I, 1993
but that this is not yet definite.
Sally Ulmben of Lambert lnsurance Company and William Raymond of Western Surety Company
spoke at the meeting regarding performance bonds as related to planning commissions.
The commission also approved
all the acts of the officers and executive committee for 1991 .
The next mce\ing will be held
Monday, April 27. ·

Middle East talks underway

SPECTACULAR SALADS
GAUD EN
SALAD
Leltuce, carro ts, red
cabbage and tomato
served w;th yo ur
favorite dressing.

asked.
Horton replied that upgrading a
community could provide advantages of living in that community
far outweighing the expense. He
commended the mayor for his
efforts and success in initiating
projects and ge uing grants.
TRASH COLLECTION
Roger Manley of Manley ' s
Trash Service met with Council to
request an increase of 15 cents per
month per customer for trash collection in the village. The village
now pays $9 to Manley as a part of
its mandatory trash collection program.
Council voted to approve the

Blakeslee re-elected head of
Meigs Planning Commission

TERR·RIFIC SANDWICHES
Hot Baked Sandwiches

taX should include those people too
since they would benefit from the
improvements.
Mayor Hoffman pointed out that
not only would Middleport residents be paying the additional tax,
but those that work in the village
and live somewhere else would
help pay for whatever capital
improvements are made. He said
that putting the income tax on the
ballot would give "people the
opportunity 't6 say what they want".
Gerard que stioned what the
additional income tall would do to
new residents . ''Would more taxes,
make it so fewer people would
want to come here to live?" he

King, left, presented prizes to Jarrod Gilmore
and Tonya Miller, front, and Tonya Miller,
back. A winner nol presenl was Toni Martinez.

SUPER BOWL WINNERS • Prizes were
awarded Monday to winners or the Super Bowl
coloring contest sponsored by the Video Depart·
mentor Vaughan's Cardinal, Middleport. Michl

Senior Citizens Center receives
$10,000 software computer grant
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
rearing. Stewart was in Columbus
Sentinel News Starr
Thursday to testify before the Chil. Reports on current health and dren's Board.
assistance programs for the elderly
Stewart noted that while the
and the status of two grant applica- Older American Act has not been
tions were heard when the Meigs reauthori zed, she feels the proCounty Council on Aging Advisory grams are in no immediate danger.
Board met recently at the Senior Funds from that Act are used for
Citizens Center.
basic in-home and center based
Susan Stewart advised that the care including transportation and
. center has ~eived a $10,000 soft· health program.
ware computer project grant to pro·
Beth .Theiss reported that 12
vide in -hOme assistance to the homebound senior citizens ~eive
elderly in determining eligibility home delivered-meals, and 12 are
for county, state and federal bene- on the homemaker service program
fits. The project includes the com- under Passpon funding. These are
puter program and lap top comput· · only a part of the senior citizens
ers for use by Center personnel. who ~eive such services through
The prograp~ is expected to begin the Center.
in late March. Funding is through
Final confumation on the re~itc
the Senior Cooperative Program in part of Passport is still pendmg,
Theiss reported. hired
However, Leona
.
D. c .
Washmgten.
.
Stewart also reported that she Leifheit has been
to supervtse
has applied for rfloney from the ihe respite program.
Ohio Children's Fund. She noted · Theiss reported on Title XIX
that the Center has collaborated and Options clients notin$ that 60
with the Meigs High School staff to 100 hours are spent wath those
on applying for money to provide clients. Cheryl Caipellter was hired
mentors for teenage parents who in December as a case manager.
· may be finding it difficult to finish How the wrap-around mental
sdlool due 10 a lack of support in health money is being spent was
cari1111 for their child.
also discussed by Theiss.
•
......, lon calls 'nr men10rs to be
A report on the multiphasic
•, ,, ••~ -p..,. '
l\H ''·' , • .
. ):t' •vailablo on a C~~~G-Clll-olle basis for health screen in$ was given by
· counseling, assistance . with Becky Sail. coordinlltor. Panicipatincrcased self-esteem, and child ing in the screening were 235 per-

sons. Total cost of of the screening
was $5,558 with $1,543 being paid
by those taking part. Bail noted that
one individual was found with
extreme low blood hemoglobin and
was immediately hospitalized
while another had a triglyceride of
over 700 and suffered a heart auack
a few days later.
Malcolm Orebaugh agreed to
remain as chairman of the board for
another year.
Sid Edwards ellpressed concern
about what is going to happen to
those on general assistance during
the sill months they do not receive
money. It was J!Ointed out that the
Council on Agmg will be able to
assist those over 60 in finding alternative assistance. Edwards al so
proposed United Way for Meigs
County and will report on what getting the program started here will
involve.
Cind·y Oliveri announced that
the Ohio State Mammogram Unit
will be in Meigs County on April
29, 9:30 a.m. to '2:30 p.m. Cost
will be $55.
The next meeting was set for
Apri128 at 12 noon. ·
Attending were Orebaugh, Ball,
Elizabeth Smith, Chlirlene Hoeflich, Florence Richards, Edwards,
Leifheit, Rhonda Dailey, Stewart,
Theiss and Friend.

MOSCOW (AP) - Palestinians
boycotted Middle East peace talks
that opened today, rejecting the
demand of U.S. and Russian spon·
sors that their delegation include
only residents of the occupied West
Bank and Gaza Strip.
In all , foreign mini sters and
senior diplomats from more than
20 nations are attending the twoday talks on regional issues, an out·
growth of the U.S.-organized October conference in Madrid.
The broadest cross-sec t_ion of
the Arab world ev er to sat at a
negotiating table with Israel was in
Moscow for the session.
Fai sal Husseini , head of the
eight-member Palestinian delegation, told The Associated Press at
his hotel after the t~o-day talks
opened _that the Paiesumans would
not parucapate until h1s full dclegation is accepted.
.
. . ·
" We in sist that Pal e~tmaans
have t!'e n~~tto choose th~or representanves, swd Husseam, a resa·
dent of Is~aeli - an~ ex ~d east
Jerosalem. His delegauon an,ciudes
three Palestinians from the West

Bank, three from "exile" and
another Jerusalem resident.
In an apparent concession to the
Palestinians, however, a fifth working group was set up to deal with
the problem of refugees. The other
groups arc to focus on arms control, water-sharing, the environment and economic development.
With the Palestinians so far not
participating, it was unclear how
much could be accomplished by
the groups, which were to meet on
Wedneday.
None of the Palestinians who
came to Moscow on Monday were
seen at the section of the oval confcrence table where they were to
have shared space with the Jordan
delegation.
Other major players are absent.
Syria and Le~on ha~e refused to
attend, sayang msufficaent progress
was made in bilateral peace talks
held in ~ashin~ton that fo\lowed
the Mac~J:id meeung._
. .
Russ tan Foreagn Mmaster
Andrei Kozyrev, co-sponsor with
Secretary of State James A. Baker
Ill, greeted the delegates today,

saying his c~untry would not ~age
a battle for anfluence an the M1ddle
East:
·:we are ~ot going to compete
for 1deology, mfluence or for military domi~ation, and imperial
ambitions also are alien to us.''
In has speech to the conference,
Baker appealed to the nations of
the Maddie East to c ur~ military
spendmg and dorect thear energaes
toward the common problems of
refugees, water shortages and an
en~~ngered ""vuomnenl _
Despate the pohuca!Jssues that
currently divide governments and
peoples, there are real ties that bind
the peoples of the Middl e East
together," he said.
Baker said the Bush administration might support efforts to reduce
arms shipments, especially those
that "contribute to in stability
amidst crises."
The Palestinians, who arrived
late Monday, argued today that the
rules set prior to the first round of
talks in Madrid that barred diaspora
Palestinians and cast Jerusalem residcnts should no longer apply.

Dayton show, statehouse project get funds
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The U.S. Air and Trade Show in
Dayton will set 1 S2SO,OOO state
grant after all, thanks to a change
of heart by the Conaolling Board.
. The board reconsidered and
approved Monday a grant from ~
DevelopQient Department's division of travel and tourism, two
w~
the board had reject«!

aao.

therequest.
. '
.
; But il revcr.scd itself after

Devclopment .Dircctor Donald
lakeway and olhen J'l'O&amp;ented fiiCIS
IJ!at he said wae lacking or In error
\L

to buying direct promotional secvices such as advertising tor the
Jakeway wu accompanied by · June 16-21 show.
Tho.mas Heine, president of the
The state has supported the·
Dayton .Area Chamber of Com · show for the past several yean.
meree,.who SlreSied that the grant : Jakeway and Heine pointed out
from will not so to a priYIIC lfOIIP· that it auracts not only visitors but
. . Da)'Uin Air Fair IriC., which will - ~pycrs and sellcn of aircraft ahd
receive the grant, was depicted to related JIIOI!ucts from abroad.
the board earlier as a private; for"There's only fOil( br five like it
profit orpnization that could spend in the world," Heine said of the
money for such lhin•s as travel, DaytOn evenL
' ,
entertainment and lodgang.
.
He and Jakeway said_the show
The board has now specified- gives an annual shot ·in the arm to
t11at the
economy
.
, stare money will be limited Ohio's
...
.
when the request originally was

presented by aides.

),

mlilvr•lll'!! ~0 CONFIDENCE VOTE •
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzbak Sbamlr, left,
speaks' to fellow Llkud party members Mosbe
Are.ns, forearoand, and BenJamin Natanyabu
after his aovernment successfully p-.d a no-

eG!IIIdnce llaBot brou1bt by opplllldoll flcta1
In tbe Klllf!ltl ~01day. Sbamirl however, bas

already alftedto caD an early e~tellon, u)'la1
he doel ntit want to run 1 aovernment tllat could
lopple any moment. (AP) '
.

..

�.r

-.•'

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel :
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :
Tuesday, January 28, 1992 •

injured in alcohol related crashes.
Senate Bill 275 is aimed at redUC·
ing these numbers by sendin~ a
clear message that if you are gomg
to be drinking, you have no business driving.
Senate Bill 275 would lower lhe
current allowable blood alcohol
content of a driver from .10% to

This past week lhe Senate Judiciary Committtie, of which I am a
member, reviewed .legislation pertaining to tougher drunk driving
legislation.
In 1990, Ohio recorded
142,376 arrests for driving under
the influence . Also last year, 623
people died and 27,954 were

111 Ccnut_..Btreet
Pomerii)r, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE JI'ITERE8TS OF THE MEIQS.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

.ffi%. An expert witness testified at
last week's hearing, saying that
.08% roughly represents the level
an individual would reach after
consuming four drinks in an hours
time. The witness went on to testify
that lowering the blood alcohol
level to .08% would cut in half the
number of alcohol related crashes

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
&lt;:eneral~anager

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
lbe American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETI"ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lban 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wilb name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiU be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
Help needed
So you want to build another
prison. Why would you possibly
want to do such a thing?
If you want to build something
that is good for !he community and
the people, build an institution for
first-time offenders. Provide them
with adequate and sufficient programs where they can receive
counseling and rehabiliiation so
that they don't come back as repeat
offenders.
There are so many first time

offenders who become repeated
offenders because there are not
adequate and sufficient progranis to
rehabilitate the first time offenders
and they become repeated offenders.
The only thing a prison teaches
you is how to become a better
criminal. You become institutionalized.
loses P. Scott
Inmate, 236-222, P. 0. Box 56
Lebanon, Ohio

By MIKE FEINSILBER
Associated Pres.~ Writer
WASHINGTON - People who study the U.S . work force s.ay Japan 's
Yoshio Sakurauchi got it just about all wrong when .he said "inferior ...
lazy" American workers are the cause of this country's competitive troubles.
The U.S. economy has its troubles, these observers s.ay, but the American worker is not the cause.
"American workers work very hard and try to work even harder; the
thing that impresses me is how hard they'll fight just to get a lousy job,"
s.aid former U.S. Labor Secretary Ray Marshall.
Sull, there were enough home truths in what Sakurauchi, speaker of
Japan's lower house, s.aid over the weekend to cause squirming in this
country.
Economists said hti was on target in suggesting America isn't training
workers for the skills needed to make the workplace operate at its most
productive level.
Sakurauchi, who said later he had been misunderstood, was quoted as
telling his constituents that lhe source of America's competitive problem
"is the inferior quality of U.S. labor," 30 percent of whom, he s.aid, cannot read. "They want high pay without wetting," he said.
The charge is simply off base, said Stephen Cooney, international
invesunent director for the National Association of Manufacturers. And
the proof, he said, is that in !he last five years "we've doubled our exporu
of manufactured goods; in virtually every industry we've gained market
share against all other industrial countries."
Jeff Faux, president of the Economic Policy Institute, which studies
economic growth, said Sakurauchi was "all wet" in his comments on the
American worker.
"People are working harder, and harder for less," Faux s.aid. Since
I970, he said, the average American in manufacturing worked 38 hours
more per year while the Japanese worker worked 114 fewer hours per
year and lhe German workers 286 fewer hours.
But he said Sakurauchi was on the mark in suggesting that America's
problems lie here, not overseas, and in s.aying that the United States is
becoming Japan's "subcontraCtor."
" It's true: We're supplying Japan with inputs, with raw materials and
they 're designing and manufacturing the final goods. The Japanese have
been moving over here to assemble components produced in Japan," he
s.aid.
The problem with that, he said, is that high wages go to the production'~
workers of the world, not the assemblers.
~shall laid America's competitive problems largely on management
systems that use too many white-collar and administrative workers and
too many inspectors and supervisors, and discourage production workers
from using their creativity.
The point, he said, is illustrated by the joint General Motors-Toyota
venture in Fremont, Calif. "The s.ame workers, the s.ame plant, the s.ame
technology; the only thing that changed was the management system and
within II months it was one of the most productive auto plants in the
world," he said.
Economist Barry Botsworth of the Brookings Institution s.aid Japan
invests in its industry at lhree times the rate of this country, so Japanese
workers are equipped with the newest, most developed tools. Amenca has
lost its edge in research and development and in finding new manufacturing processes, he said.
Julie Gorte, an expert on international competitiveness at Congress'
Office of Technology Assessment, s.aid Sakurauchi had hit a sore spot on
·literaCy.
.
''Solving problems that involve putting words and numbers together is
a problem for an amazing number of workers," she said, causing U.S.
industry to skirt the problem by using inferior production systems where
quality suffe!ll.
·
And Brookings economist Laurel McFarland pointed to a 1989 study
that said 62 percent of Am~ca's largest companies had difficulty finding
employees with needed educational skills. The companies said that problem hurt their productivity and international competitiveness.
"Our vocational training, compared to Japan or Europe, is a joke,"
Faux said. " Ill Japan, if you don't go to college, you go into a training
prognun, often run by companies, which adds to your skills. Kids in the
United States drift for live or six years at minimum-wage jobs. We don't
have anything lilce the school-to-w!l'k transition PfO$flffiS the Japanese
have. As 1 result, the quality of our labor force, relative to our competitorS, is declining."
·
·

By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 28, the 281h day of 1992. There are 338 days
left in die year.
.
,
..
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Jan. 28, 1916.- the space shuttle Challenger exploded 73 seconds
after UltoiT from Cape Canaveral, !riDing an seven cn:w memben: Oight
can~ FlliiCis R. "Dick" Scobee; pilot Michael J. Smilh; Ronald E.
McNiir: EUi10n S. Onizuka; Judith A. Resnik; Gregory B. Jarvis; and
schoolleiiCher Christa McAuliffe,
- On thil dale:
' Ill 1S47. England's King Henry vm died; he 1ftiS succeeded by his 9year-okllon, Edward VI.
,
·
, . ', . .
t
'
.
' .

:lVedneaday,Jan.l9

By Tbe Auoclaled Press
Arouad tbe utlon
Clouds will dissipate through
Snow fell in ~aine and Iowa
WedneSday morning as high pres· today. Rains -ched much of the
sure builds into the state. The mer· Southeast and the Northeast, and
curr will r.n into the 20s statewide drizzle· dampened Texas and parts
torught and with sunshine expected of the Tennessee Valley.
Wednesday readings should climb
Fog and clouds clung to much
of the ~idwest and the Pacific
into the high 40s or low 50s.
The reconl high temperature for Coast. Winds wh!pped parts of
this date at the Columbus wealher • Wyoming. Parts of Ohio, Pennsyl·
statiOn was 66 degrees in !914. The vania and Southeni Florida had fair
skies.
record low was minus 15 in 1963.
Sunset wiU be at 5:45 p.m. SunHigh winds kicked up in the
rise Wednesday at 7:44 a.m.
West on Monday and freezing rain

Accu-Weathere forecast for daytime condltlona ·aod

Sen. Jan M. Long

Today, the party's cause is the
family that lives in the neighborhoods of Middle America and earns
- or used to earn - middle
incomes. These families are asking
their government with new urgency
to help them regain goals they once
took for granted: security in their
jobs, security in their homes, security on their streets.
Today' s Democrats no longer
think their only hope for increasing
votes is to be Jacksonian
Democrats (Jesse, not Andy) and
register the poor, the black, the
Hispanic. The party knows it must
also regain the votes of Middle
America. That's why the party,
while not tilming from the dis.advantaged and disfranchised, is
returning to the concerns of the disaffected and disenchanted - the
folks wbo elected Roosevelt, Truman, Kennedy and Johnson.
Twice in a generation, these voters were lured by a Republican
who promised a law-and-order
presidency and ultimately packed
our jails - with his palace guard;
yes, Nixon's the one. Three times,
they were lured by the red-white·
and-bluism of Reagan-Bush and

Streams meander, over time ,
changing the contours of our landscape. And people meander, as
well, seeking fresh streams and a
better life.
So it is that America's Mainstream and its Democratic Party
have meandered all over the place,
each in its own ways - until, at
last, they seem to have found each
other.
Chart the course of the rhetoric
of the Democratic presidential candidates of 1992- then map the
progressions of the public opinion
polls - and the convergence is
clear.
From moderates like Bill Clinton, to old-time liberals like Tom
Harkin, to one-time liberals like
Paul Tsongas, to nco-liberals like
Bob Kerrey, the Democrats of '92
are trumpeting the themes of America's middle class. They have
muted those lyrics and promises
that liberal special interests made
into Democratic standards in the
'70s and '80s, when the party was
dominated by welfare rights
activists, flower-power crusaders,
mind-bending hallucinators and
gender-bending proclivitors.

that rosy Reaganism:· "It's morning
again in America." Too late they
discovered their P,resident either
failed them or fa1led spelling because "It's mourning again in
America" for mill ions who lost
jobs after Reagan-Bush converted
their votes into tax breaks for the
rich and hard times for the rest.
Hear the Democratic candidates
of '92 debate and you 'II hear talk
about welfare in terms of helping
people get jobs, training them to
perform jobs - in short, breaking
the welfare cycle of dependency.
Hear them talk about the recession
and you'll hear plans for jumpstarting our economy with tax
incentives for industry as well as
tax breaks for the middle class.
Hear them talk about crime and
you' II hear talk of a tougher war on
crime, tougher penalties for drug
dealers, more prisons - even capJ:
tal punishmenL This is a ftrst:. more
Democratic presidential candidates
favor capital punishment (Clinton,
Kerrey, Tsongas) than oppose it
(Harkin, Brown). Twice, front-run·
ner Clinton presided over executions as Arkansas' governor. So,
goodbye Willie Horton, hello Law-

IMansfield I 44" I•

that occur in Ohio each year.

Additionally, this legislation :
would make alcohol related vehicu- ;
tar homicide a felony instead of a ;
misdemeanor. Mother's Against ;
Drunk Driving and other citi~en ;
groups, have continually pushed for :
tougher penalties for individuals
involved in alcohol related crashes. :
Stiffer penalties for those who are •
involved in alcohol related acci- .
dents could potentially reduce the :
number of these occurrences.
S.B. 275 would also permit ':
police officers to confiscate the :
driver's license of a suspected ·
drunk driver and not give it back to :
the offender until there coun hear: :
ing. This ''ON THE SPOT'' provi- ·
sion is strongly supported by the
Ohio Department of Highway Safety and numerous law enforcement
officials throughout the state. ~y ,
believe that this will deter repeat
offenders from drinking and driv· ·ing.
The statistics tell the tale. 623
alcohol related deaths in 1990 and
534 in 1991. Obviously something :,
has to be done to stop the carnage ·
on Ohio's roads and highways .
Hopefully, Senate will 275 will
help to reduce these grim numbers '
and tragic losses.
}
As always, please feel free
to call or write me, State Senator '
Jan Michael Long, if you have a,y _,
questions or comments about these ·
or any olher issues. My number is
(614)-466-8156, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio, ·
43215 .

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South-Central Ohio
To~ight, partly cloudy. Low in
;he m1d 20s. Wednesday, mostly
~ unny. High near 50.
Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:

Thursday, fair. Lows in lhe 30s.
Highs in the 40s. Friday, fair. Lows
from the mid 20s to the low 30s.
Highs in the 40s . Saturday, a
chance of snow. Lows in the 20s.
Highs in the 30s.

0ne•• • Continued from page

1.

--Area deaths-Floyd Jordan

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Floyd Jordan, 64, Pleasant Hill
Road, Athens, died Sunday morning, Jan. 26, 1992 at O'Bieness
Hospital after a brief illness.
Born on Bunker Hill in Meigs
County, he was the son of the late
Sidney and Eliza Michael Jordan.
He retired from the Athens Post
Office in 1986 after 21 years of
service in lhe maintenance department. He was a former mechanic
with Bob Hess Chevrolet in Athens
and the Pomeroy Chevrolet
Garage. He attended school at Harrisonville, served in the United
States Army during World War II
in Germany, and was a member of
the Buckeye State Chapter D.A. V.
He was also a former school bus
driver for Alexander Schools. He
was a member of the True Church
of the Lord Jesus ChrisL
~r. Jordan is survived by his
wife, Agnes Hysell Jordan; two
daughters, Mrs. Donald (Melena)
Ramey, Pataskala; ~rs. Joseph
(Kimberly) Argabright, Langsville;
one son, Clyde Jordan, Chancey;
eight grandchildren; a sister, ~
Ash, Webster Springs, W.Va.; and
a brother, Clarence Jordan,
Po(lleroy.
Serv1ces will be held Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at lagers Funeral
Home in Athens with Pastor
LeOnard Swoyer officiating. Burial
win be the.Athens County Memory

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15 Go\~6
AROLI~t&gt;'
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Ohio 45769 , Ph, 9~·2tl56. Second clasa
po~lRje paid at Pomflroy, Ohio.

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M' mber: The ""'"'ialod l'rvtio. Inland

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~T WH\LE

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Daily Pre•• AaociAlion and- lhe Ohio

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N6w1paper

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Ntw Yon, Now YOrk t00t7.
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PQSTMA..'lTER: S.od addreu changu 1o
Tloe Dally s.inLinet, Ill Court ·SI. ,
Pomeroy, OHio 4&amp;769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

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Aclve11ii1AI Reprtlflntative, Dranham
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(USPS 213·1MIO)
Publit hed every 11rtflrnoon, Monday
Lhrmq~h !'ridgy, I U Courl Sl., P0111Cnoy,
OHio by the Ohio VAlley Publilhing
Company!Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,

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1\-\E. f\..IJ

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Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m.
Contributions may be made to
the True Church of the Lord Jesus
Christ, 3374 Pleasant Hill Road,
Athens, Ohio 45701 .

Lowell Probasco
'

Lowell W. Probasco, 82, of
London died Tuesday, Jan. 28,
1992, in the Good Shepherd Nursing Ho.me in Springfield
Born Aug. 9, 1909, in Washington Coun House, he was the son of
Ora K. and Lena Wilson Probasco.
He was a member of the First
Presbyterian Church of London
where he served as a deacon and an
elder. He was a member of the
Leanore Lodge #512 F&amp;AM,
Sedalia. He ~aduated from Ohio
State Univers1ty as a civil engineer
and was n:tired from the New York
Cent{ai/Penn Central Railroad
where he was assistant Ill lhe gen'
eral manager in Indianapolis, Ind.
He was a partner in the
Harvey/Probasco Surveying Com pany in London.
Survivors include: his wife,
Mary Shotts Probasco; daughters,
Julia ~ark of Bethesda, Md., and
Susan Alcorn of Chagrin Falls; and
grandson Jeffrey Barlow of Shaker
Heights.
He was preceded in death by a
brother, Kenneth, and sister, ~
C. Cheney.
•
Services will be held at lhe First
Presbyterian Church in London I
p.m. Thursday with the Rev. Gor·
don Johnson officiating. Burial will
be in the Range Township Ceme·
tery.
Friends may call from 2-4 p.m.
and 6-8 p.m. Wednesday at the
Rader-Lynch &amp; Dodds Funeral
Home 'in London.
Memorial contributions may be
made 10 the ~adison County
Senior Citizens Adult Day Care
Center 11 6 East Second St., London, Ohio.

' 87 Carrier or Motar Route
0no Week .......................,................... at.60
0• MOilLh .........................................$6.96
0no Yeor............ ,............................$63.20

Lottery DUJ~bers

Dally.............................................
25 Centa
..

~onday

SINGLE COPY .
PRICE

Sllba&lt;ribtn ..,, dooirihllo poy lhe Cllrriin adVance dlted to The

fll' ,may ~mit

Oollioolta Dally Tribon• on a 3.6 or t2
moed. buta. Cradit wi11 be liven e~nier

...h--

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replacement has a "good poSSibility
of funding." He s.aid the project has
been rated a "3" by District 18 for
awarding of Issue II funds. Cost of
the project which would replace
lines beginning at Park between
Broadway and Riverview and continue soulh toward the Ohio River,
is $154,784.
The mayor also talked about the
need for deciding on a paving project by March I for the Issue II
allocation of $33,000.
Rae Gwiazdowsky was appointed for a five year term on the Middleport Arts Council and Gail Hovatter was appointed to the unexpired term or Margie Blake, who
resigned.
Rev. James Seddon of the Middlepon Ministerial Association had
prayer preceding the meeting
attended by those named and
Councilmen Jack Satterfield and
James Clatworthy, and Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck.

The fU'St reading of an ordinance
regulating the planting of trees was
~iven. The mayor noted that the
village again this year will be
jpplying for a grant from the
Department of Natural Resources
for trees. He said when an ordi~ance regulating the planting of
Jrees is in effect it enhances the
chances of getting a grant funded.
The first reading passed by a
five to one vote with Gerard voting
"no" on the basis that the ordinance
would restrict personal rights.
Mayor Hoffman reported that
the Wheelers Run sewap;e line

economy is healthy.
. ..
That's the Curmudgeon's Com·
pound: Bitter as gall going down, ·::
but a more salubrious cathartic can; :•
not be found.
",'
(C) 1992
NEWSPAPER, ;,
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
: '.

MOWA.Y!

Cloudy

C1992 Accu-Weather, Inc.

~on will be voluntary and that cur·
rently the village is in the process
~f checking into containers.
OTHER BUSINESS
Mayor Hoffman read a letter
'rom tlle Meigs County Commis·
1ioners advising that again this year
.he county will give $4,500 for
Jperation of the Blue Streak Cab

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St\AK~!

Pt. Cloudy

Sunny

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-----Weather-----

Joseph Spear ...:·

OKAY, WE.''JE
Go\ 1\ PEA\..-

leo

Via AssociarMI I'Mss Grapllc.sNet

and-Order Liberals.
.1
That's why, on the fifth fl09r of. ;
a nondescript brick office building ·
ncar Capitol Hill, a group of mod- ,
erate Democratic strategists·and.,
think-tankers have reason to cele- ·
brate - even though their stalwart,
Bill Clinton, has yet to win his ftrst ;.
presidential primary.
·
They are the Democratic Lead-.,
ership Council (created after the
Mondale debacle of '84) and its •:
idea-factory, the Progressive PoHcy
Institute. These moderate DernQ- _
cratic intellectuals, assembled by
DLC President AI From and PPl 1
PreSident Will Marshall, gave ideo- •
logical underpinning to Clinton's
campaign. But, more than that, they "
planted the seeds that have grown ·:
into the turf on which the··
Democrats are running in '92.
And just watch: Any day now;)
President Bush will come jogging ·.
by , so desperate that he'll be run-•'
ning on the promises and programs· ·
that are the new Democratic turf - ·
it's flourishing on the banks of the "
old mainstream.
"
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER·. ·.
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Berry's Wo-rld

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Showers T-sronns Rain Flurries · Snow

fell in Michipn ·and Indiana. Snow
dusted partS of New England and
New Yorlc. Rain was scattered over
the Mississippi Valley, the southern
Plains and the northern Pacific
CoasL
High winds and heavy rains
were expected in the Northwest
today. spilling onto packed snow
and increasing the danger of
avalanches.
The hi2h temperature for the
nation Monday was 84 at Palm
Springs, Calif.

Temperatures in the teens and

20s were expected in northern New

England; in the 30s in New Yark,
Pennsylvania, the Great Lakes and
northern Utah; in the 40s and 50s in
the Midwest, the Southeast,. the
Central states, the Rockies and the
Pacific Coast; in the 60s In northern Florida and southern Texas,
Arizona and Southern California,
and in eastern portions of the Colorado Rockies; in the 70s in Soulheril Florida and desert Calif001ia. ·

Macy's files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
W.VA.

Martin Schram .

bonds and bills - and rebuild
America I'd fix and build bridges
and roads and subways and air·
pons. I'd build parks and schools
and libraries and homeless shelters.
I'd put a million people to work
and I'd sleep well that night knowing the books are balanced and the

.•I Columbus I 46' I

:o.

Politicians: Pass the snake oil, please

Like a passel of quacks descend- wooly mouths and withered
ing on a frontier town with wag- intestines. Where is the one with
onloads of snake oil, politicians lhe guts to ten us that our economy
have been swarming over New does not have a case of the sniffles,
Hampshire with bottles of magic that it is sick and that pills and
elixir for the aiHng economy.
potions are not going to cure it?
There's the Clinton Corrective: Where is the one with the foresight
''It starts with a tax cut for the mid· to seek a lasting remedy and the
die class and asks the rich to pay fortitude to bear the pain of it?
their fair share again." Don ' t
How I wish sometimes that a
worry about that nagging budget pixie would appear and give me
deficit. Big Bill will recover the five minutes with a magic wand.
lost funds with "3 percent across
First thing I'd do is point the
the board cuts in the administJative thing at politicians and reduce lhe
costs of the federal bureaucracy."
lot of them into a pool of shimmer-.
There's the Tsongas Tstimulant: ing glop.
Cut capital gains taxes and finance
Second thing I'd do is convert
it by raising the lop income tax rate the gallimaufry we ea11 a tax code
a few points.
into a simple, flat-rate system. I'd
There's even the Bush Balm: instirute large personal allowances
Tax cuts for middle-c:lass families, to provide for the poor and to reotax credits for new homebuyers, der the system mildly progressive. I
capi,lal gains cuts, invesl!llent tax would then tax all remaining
.incentives. No details yet, but income _ salaries, wages, and
"stay tuned" for the State of the business earnings- at the same,
Union address.
·
" flat rate. My tax form would he a
And what if we like a slug of 10-line postcard. -My lllternal Revthese nostrums? What would they enue Service would be a bunch of
do for us? The same thing those ftlins clerks. ~Y goal would be to
old, alcohol-based patent medicines
f'
h
t
did: We would seta little giddy for
mance t e government, not o
ensineer society.
a while, but we would soon wake
The third thing r d do is eslab- .
up to harsh reality. The economy Jish a no-growth budget that would
would still be sick and the charlakeep up wilh inRation but not pertans would still be hawking theil
mit new expenditwts. When nawcure-alls.
raJ 111xenue growlh had finally bal;
The lruth is, a modest tax cut in anced the books, I'd keep the noa $5 trillion economy wouldn't be growth rule in place and start
much of a stimulanl (What would . reducing ~ tlllliolllhlebL It now
you do with )'tlll' $300 rebate? You Slinds at·about $3.7 trillion; it will
could take the familyjo Disney
hit $4.1 triUioD by the end of this
World for a day, if you could fial year. The mterest on it' afford to Set then:. You could buy a stop and ptliidef dliJ, p1cue- will
microwave, but you'd be helpiJII
be $319 billion. That's
the Ja.-oese ~ lhlll111.)
$873,972,600 a day, S36,41S,52S
The Jrulh is..the bud&amp;« deficit iJ • boor, $606.925 a minule. Ill the
ahtady 10 onerous - S'360 billion,
lime it l8kCI me to type this very
eo.ing IOWIIrd $400 biDian - thlt · sentence, we will .lilve spent
we camot afford to JO deeper in1o
$222,539 - just to service. the ·
the hole. (A 3 pen:en1 raclion in I debt.
· administrative costs '!VOuld not
The founh tllin&amp;l'd do is like
cover the lOll inc:cme.)
the $319 billion 1 yw I •Yed on
. The weary tr_utb is that poli_tiintelelt'-IIIICh of whidl iiJOiaa
CtiDI II I Specie&amp; lie born Wllh , to foreip pun;huen Of lrUIUr)'

PA.

t

Dems of '92 reclaim the mainstream

Don't blame Sakurauchi for
America's competitive woes

Taday in history

Temperatures may climb into 50s Wednesday

Senate reviews new tough DUI bills

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentln_ei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.•'

Commentary

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

TueSday, January 28, 1992

CLEVEL~

(AP)- Here are '
night'• Ohio Lottery

selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
5..()..4 .

(live, zero, four)
Pkk
4 Numbel'l
No•a~bacripLiou' by mall .permitted In
are•• when home carrier Hrvkt. it
3-9-4-2
available.
,,
(three, nine, four, two)
Mallhho..tpttona
Cards
IMido OaUia Co•l'f!t;)'
2 (two) of Hcarta
t3 Weeb....................... .. .........,.!.. l21.84
26 w..u ................................,.........S43.1&amp;
7 (SCYCII) of Oubs
G2•.,eab,........ , ................ ,~ ............. $84.18
3
(three) ol Diamonds
I•
O•toltleOaDiaCouniJ
13 1W•ki ..........................................S23.40 .
Q(queen) !if Spades
,.
H tWNU .....,....................... ,, j,., ,, ..... lf&amp;.liO
The
Supet\
l.ot\0
jackpOt
Is
$8
152 Wookl ........... ,..........:........... :.:..·... ii8.40
million.
· . '
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under which Loews ,Corp. chainnan
NEW YORK (AP) - R.H. able solution and ultimately came unpaid creditors.
Macy's entered bankruptcy Laurence Tisch, a stockholder,
Macy &amp; Co. Inc., the retailer to the conclusion that filing for
known around the world for its Chapter II was best for Macy's court protection as Federated and would have invested another $1 bilits affiliated company, Allied lion in the company.
Thanksgiving Day parade and future."
Stores
Corp., prepared to emerge
The filing showed Macy' s had
enormous Manhattan store, songht
sanctuary in U.S. Bankruptcy Coun liabilities of $5.32 billion against from Chapter II. Like Macy's,
Under the proposal, ~acy's
on Monday, ·overwhelmed by debt assets of $4.94 billion as of Nov. 2. they were swamped by takeover creditors would have received less
debL
~uch of the debt was left from
and the recession.
than the face value on their debt. A
Retailing analysts said Macy major creditor, the Prudential
Plagued by the same sluggish the company's $3.48 billion lever·
sales as other retailers,- Macy 's aged buyout by management and will undergo a reorganization pro- Insurance Co. of America, balked
fought for two years to remain sol~ its $1.1 billion purchase of lhe Cal- cess similar to Federated and at the proposal and Tisch withdrew
vent. It conceded defeat Monday ifornia-based Bullock's and I. Allied, selling or closing underper- it Friday.
when lawyers carried three boxes Magnin chains from Federated forming stores. How that will affect
~y's 69,500 employees remains
of documents into a courthouse and Department Stores Inc. in 1988;
Finkelstein, who led Macy's
filed for Chapter II bankruptcy
All of Macy's units, including unclear.
into
private ownership, could lose
Sandra
Mayerson,
an
auorney
protection for the 134-year-old its 144 department stores and 107
his
26.77
percent share. Other big
specializing
in
bankruptcy
cases,
retailer.
specialty stores, were listed in the
shareholders
include Loews and
"We have known for some time filing. The department stores are said Macy's likely would sell BulGE Capital Corp.
that ~y 's had more debt than is concentrated in the Northeast, the lock's and I. Magnin chains.
The biggest change was expectdesirable in such a weak econo- South and the West. Speciality
The filing said Macy 's owes
my," chairman Edward S. Finkel- · stores are s~auered around the ed to be in Macy's ownership.
$2.4 biiHon to 73 secured creditors,
Macy's creditors could end up $1.91 billion to 30,000 unsecured
stein said in a statement. "We nation.
worked night and day to find a suitThe documents starkly illustrat- owning the company, in much the creditors incloding suppliers, and
ed how severe Macy's plight had s.ame way that Federated and Allied additional debts exceeding $572
become. The company told the creditors will hold the equity in million . Secured creditors, who
court it expected to lose $86.5 mil- those companies.
hold liens on Macy's property as
Macy's entered Chapter II after collateral, have the best chance of
lion in the next 30 days.
Chapter II allows a company to a disappointing Christmas left it getting repaid.
continue to operate while it reorga- unable to pay vendors. The compaThe company's largest debts are
nizes without retribution from • ny tried to assemble a rescue plan to bomlholders.
Units of the ~eigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to 13 ealls for assistance
on Monday and ear-ly Tuesday
morning.
On Monday at 7:56 a.m. the .
Middleport unit went to ~ain
Street for Vida Green who -was
By ALLEN G. BREED
The report also noted that the
Congress asked for the task
transported to Plcas.ant Valley HosAssocialed Press Writer
force
last
year
after
leaders
comtonnage
tax was scheduled to
pital and at 9:25 a.m. a Middleport
A federal mining official says plained that the program was inef- expire on Sept. 30, 1995.
unit went to Bradbury Road on a there are some problems with a
and consistently ran over
"The states have little or no
motor vehicle accident in which task force report that concludes not ficient
budget. Kentucky alone accounted incentive to seek resolution of legGene Wise refused treatment.
all states are ready to assume full for more than half of the $13.9 milThe Pomeroy unit, at 11 :10 control over their emergency mine- lion initially budgeted for emergen- islative, operational or staffing
problems to implement a program
a.m., went to East ~n Street for reclamation programs.
cies in 1991.
whose funding is scheduled to
Wanda Faulk who was taken to
The report, which was obtained
The task force was to study- expire," the report said. "Most
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Monday by The Associated Press,
of all emergency work states would be in a position to
At 4:28 p.m. the Middleport unit said administrative and technical transferral
to
the
states.
The study focused on fully implement such a program for
went to North Second for Manda- constraints would make it too diffi- Kentucky, Colorado,
Indiana,
lyn Moore who was taken Ill Holz- cult for the states, including Ohio, Ohio, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania, less than one year."
er Medical Center. At6:47 p.m. the to effectively assume the programs. which do not run their programs.
The task force also concluded
unit went to South Second Avenue It suggests Congress extend the
The task foice found that all six that "there is a strong possibility
for Valerie Goodman who was program for at least 10 years and
states were unable to execute rapid that some constraints will not be
taken to Veterans and at'6:56 p.m. that federal officials work wilh the contract
actions in emergency
another unit went to Park Street fm states to help them make the transi- cases. While OSM can begin emer· overcome at all prior to expiration
of AML authority to collect reclaAnna Welch who was also taken to tion.
gency work within 24 hours, states mation fees ... due to the current
Veterans.
But Hord Tipton, deputy direc- would take between two months economic climate and its impact on
The Pomeroy unit, at 8:53 p.m., tor of the federal Office of Surface and a year Ill act. the report said.
state budgets."
was called to Pomeroy Pike for Mining, said ~onday that the
Several
of
the
states
also
said
Orville Hill who was taken to Vet- report - a copy of which was hiring freezes, staff shortages, and
The report suggests that OSM
erans.
made available by a congressional a laclc of technical expertise and work with the states to develop
At 11 :12 p.m. the Middleport staffer who asked to remain anonywould prevent them "predictable and adequate emerunit responded to South Second mous - was not rmaJ. And while it equipment
from
adequately
handling the pro- gency program funding and policy.
Avenue for Jacob Bradley who was "had some good points in it," Tip· grams, the task force
concluded.
transported to Plcas.ant Valley.
ton said the report made some
The Racine unit, atll :47 p.m., "inappropriate recommendations."
was called to Route 124 for Glen
"Some are legitimate reasons
Grueser who was taken to Veter· why some of the states haven't
ans.
embraced the emergency program
On Tuesday at 12:52 a.m. the as others have," Tipton S31d of the
Middleport unit went to Grover report, which was leaked through
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- the result or Jaggmg non-auto sales
Road for Barbara Roush who was the Kentucky Departtnent for Sur·
Sales tax collections increased 3.3 taxes.
transported to Holzer.
face ~ining Reclamation and percent last year in Ohio, according
Writers of the 1991-1993 budget
The Pomeroy unit went to Enforcement. "But none of them
assumed the state would collect
Welchtown Road at 3:58 a.m. for are perceived as absolute barriers.'' to an analysis by the Legislative about
$385.2 million in non-auto
Budget
Office.
Herman Redman who was transReclamation projects - stabisales taxes this month, s.aid Paolo
The
office
reported
that
auto
ported to Pleasant Valley. At 4:21 lizing landslides or moving houses
DeMaria, assi siant state budget
a.m. another unit went to Route - are paid for through a tax of 35 sales last year were the lowest director.
since
1983
and
that
personal
681 West for Thomas E. Smith Jr. cents a ton for surface-mined coal.
For the seven months that end
who was transported to O'Bieness·. Half of the money goes directly to income and industrial production Friday, budget writers assumed
in November.
Hospital, and at 5: I I a.m. the the states, and the other hlilf is held fellAnalysts
said toral state tax col- there would be a cumulative total
Pomeroy unit went to Spring by Congress and released as need·
lections as of Dec. 31, the fiscal of $1.914 .billion in non-auto sales
Avenue for Audrey Arnold who ed.
year's
midpoint, were $!26.6 mil- taxes.
was taken to Plcas.ant Valley.
Budget Director R. Gregory
lion, or 3.3 percent, above the Dec.
Browning has said that unless leg31, 1990, level.
The analysis said retail sales islators agree on new permanent
rose
0.7 percent in 1991. That was sources of revenue, Ohio may be
Gibbs, Robert Halley, Dorothy logVETERANS MEMORIAL
facing another half-billion dollar
MONDAY ADMISSIONS - erick, Louisa Johnson, Julia Mes- the smallest such rise in 30 years.
deficit
next year.
The analysts said that for the
Billy Brewer, Portland; William sick and Demmie Perry.
r year to date, the economy translatThornton, Langsville; Tammy
Births ·
ed into total Ohio tax collections
Freeman, Racine; and Louis
Jan. 27
that, on Dec. 31, were $44.5 milVaughan, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Boso, son, lion less than estimates made by
MONDAY DISCHARGES - Portland; ~- and Mrs. Ricky JohnRaymond Justice, Helen Jeffers son, daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and legislators last summer,
Of the $44.5 million shortfall,
and James Anderson .
Mrs. Robert McFann, daughter, $31.9 million , or 72 percent, was
Oak Hill and Mr, and Mrs. ChristoHolzer ~edlcal Center
pher Wallace, son, Point Pleasant.
DlscbaJ1es
Name contest winner
Jan.27
Discharges, Jan . 24 • Donna
Violet Bateman, Lonnie Bolin, Aleshire, Barry Benson, Harriet
Derek Cremeans of 34239 State
•' "' • I ,
Evelyn Casto, ~ark Childress, Bradley, Steven Burnette, Patricia Route 143, Rudand, correcdy iden·
Mrs. James Eliason and son; Mrs. Casto, Gerald Clark, Sharon Clark,
tifled the Jan. 19 mystery farm as .
Slate Auto's already
Frank Flinner and son; Jaime Mrs. Charles Cox and son, John
that of Pauline Atkins, Rudand. He
low premiums can be
Furst. Amber Gould, Sammy Harwill receive $5 from the Ohio Val·
reduced even more by
ris, Justen Kight, Melodic Leach,
ley Publishing Co. which co·spon·
insuring both your car
Penny Powell, Justin Rose, George sors the contest with the Mei¥5 Soil
and
home with the State
Saunders, Dale Smith, Charles and Water Conservancy D1strict.
Auto Companies.
Stemshorn, Charles Tower, and Cremeans was one of 11 to correctAm Ele Power ............... .. .32 3/4
Mrs.
Billy
Wallcer
and
daughter.
ly
identify
the
fanm.
Ashland Oil ..................... .31 318
Lei us tell you just
Binhs, Jan. 24 - Mr. and Mrs.
AT&amp;T...............................37 5/8
how much your savings
James Eliason, a son, Gallipolis.
Bank One ......................... .50 318
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
Flinner,
a
son.
can be.
Bob Evans ........................24 3/4
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
OalcHiU.
Charming Shop:.................24 1/4
44E 4]74
Discharges, Jan. 25 - Anna CanCity Holding .................... .. 17 3/4
tor, John Garvin, Mrs. Trent Nash
Federal.Mogul..,.......: ........ 16 7/8
and
son, Doris Rlmsburg, Lela RifGoody!la£ T&amp;R .................. S8 518
fle,
~ary Shamblin, Stephanie
Key CenUlrion ....:.............. lS 1/4
Snyder, JQrden Vannest, Neoma
Lands' End ........................ 32
Limited Inc .........~ ............. 28 3/4
Wiseman, and William Y'::f.
I
~ultimedia Inc.................. 24 1/4
BinhB, J111. 25 - Mr.
Mrs.
214 EAST MAIN
lUx Restaurant ..................9/16
Erick Oraham, a daughla', MiddleRobbins&amp;Myers .......:........ 36
pon. Mr. and Mn. Larry Thoi'IW, a
POMEROY '
Shoney's Inc.................... ~.23 3/4
Point Pleasant. '['V~.
992·6687 'I
Star Bank ........ ....... ...... ,....,25 1/2
ischaraea, 1an·; 2 - F~~~~
Durst. Lucas. .....0, . ...___..1.
WendYInt 'l.................;...... 1111'•.. Crabtree,
and S......,Rulb
H.........
Worthington Ind . ............,..2S 1/4
·-·~ - d Mr
Swck Nportrore thr10:30 a.m.
·Binhs,1111. 26· - Mr. an
s.
.quotu provld1t(by Blunt,·lil&amp;
Erie Henderson, ·a 10n, Wellston.

EMS responds
to 13 calls

Task Force: States not ready to
control emergency mine reclamation

..

Analysis shows December
state tax collections off slightly

-----Hospital news----

H

E

Stocks

dau&amp;t,er

•"•"~d-~~·-wt.;of&amp;Giiialiiillpo•Uiii'';;;'; ;;;;d ~=is~.rW\~ed&amp;e. a son.

.....

~.
....
..,;..
.....,.,.,. C'. . . . . ..

~-·
· ·
·'

.

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--··---··-------- -------·-·--·-- ·- ..

~~--

........ ...... . . .
·-

...

_ '-~·-

: 11a~'!':"~nasium.

•
placed seven girls in the
scoring column and .was led by
senior Tabby Phillips' game·high
· IS points, followed by senior cen: tcr Jennifer Roush with II, and
;Tiffany Gardner with 10. Gardner
·and Roush dominated the boards,
mosdy in the second half with 10
rebounds each, while Ruby Burke
grabbed seven caroms and added
two points.
Southern was led by junior
point ~uard Amber Ohlinger with
14 pomts and four assists, while
Andrea Moore had nine points and
seven rebounds , Aimee Mills
added six points , while Jessika
Codner did not hit the scoring column , but played a huge role in
Southern's control-dominated
game, where she grabbed a teamhigh eight rebounds.
Southern controlled the openmg
tip and went up on the first possession when Beth Clatlc hit a baseline
.jumper with an assist from Aimee
Mills.
Tiffany Gandner hit the followup jumper to tie the score on the
other end at 2-2, but Southern went
up 6-2 on an Ohlinger iumper from
the paint 111d centet drive-in lay-up
on the next two SHS possessions.
With Southern still leading 6-2.
Eastern head coach Dawn Heide.man called a time out. SHS
grabbed many key defensive
boards and controlled the tempo at
a very deliberate pace, which took
EHS out of its run and gun offense.
The EHS pep talk did some
good as Phillips initiated things
with two tosses from the line, then
Jaime Wilson hit an elbow jumper,
and Lee Gilhlan two long jumpers
to give EHS a I 0-6 lead at the

buzzer.
Roush, Burke and Phillips
jumped aboard the scoring carousel
early in the second round and EHS
went up 16-6 to give them a string
of 14 unanswered points. That
point was probably the key point in
the game.
Just before half Ohlinger hit a
jumper with 28 seconds and Moore
nailed a three-pointer at the buzzer
to put SHS back in the game at 2315.
Moore, Mills and Ohlinger kept

SHS close throughout the third
frame but between the 6:46 and
4:22 ' marks , four points by
Ohlin~er, two each from Mills and
Moore , and another from Clark
gave SHS a 7-2 run at the Eagles to
cut !he Iauer's lead to 27-24 .
Two steals by Phillips and ensuing lay-ups with another bucket by
Roush gave EHS some padding
before Mills made the score 33-28
just before the third period buzzer.
Gardner and Phillips dominated
the early portions of the final
round and Roush hit a free throw to
give EHS a 38-30 lead at the 5:56
mark. Ohlinger accounted for the
SHS score.
Four SHS girls had four fouls
and with 2:44 remaining, and with
Eastern leading 40-30, SHS was
down to just four players. Eastern
graciously worked the ball around
and went for the open shot, rather
than opting to completely blow the
Tomadoeues away.
Eastern hit 19-71 for a cool
night, while hitting 8-10 from the
line with 39 rebounds (Roush and
Gardner 10 each, Burke seven).
Sou!hem hit 13-37 for 37 percent,
1-5 three pointers and 5-10 from
the line. SHS grabbed 25 rebounds,
led by Codner with eight, Moore
with seven and Clark with four.
Linda Mangeroy and Chri stie
Cooper were credited with good
defensive games.
In other SV AC varsity action,
Nor!h Gallia beat Kyger Creek 3224, and Hannan Trace knocked off
Southwestern 55-33. No report was
available on the Symmes ValleyOak Hill game.
Eastern avenged an earlier loss
to Southern in the companion
junior high contest, as they claimed
a 39-26 triumph.
Eastern was led by Patsy Aeiker's 17 points and 17 rebounds, fol lowed by Jessica Karr with 10,
Laura Eastman with five, and Crystal Holsinger four. Southern was
led by Bea Lisle's eleven , Janna
Manuel had six, Amber Thomas
five, and Sammi Sisson four.
Eastern plays Kyger Thursday,
while Southern is at Nor!h Gallia.
Quarter totals
Eastern ................ lO 13 10 16= 49
Southern ...............6 9 13 4 = 32
Eastern (49) - Tiffany Gardner 5-0-0= 10, Tabby Phillips 3-16=15, Jenny Roush 5-0-1=11,
Jaime Wilson 2 -~. Ruby Burke
1-0-0=2, Lee Gillilan 3-0-0=6.
Debbie Gray 0-0-1=1. Totals 19-18=49
Southern (32) - Aimee Mills
3-0-0=6, Amber Ohlinger 5-04=14, Andrea Moore 3-1-0=9, Beth
Clark 1-0-1=3. Totals 12·1·5=32

Rio Grande hoopsters
2nd in Division I rating
The men's and women's basketball teams at the University of Rio
Grande were in second place in
·NAJA District22 Division I as this
· week'sactiongetsunderway.
The Redmen, 16-5 overall and
3-1 in the Mid-Ohio Conference,
host Division I ahd MOC rival
·Shawnee State tonight at 7:30 in
Lyne Center. The Redwomen (175. 6-2) are at Ohio Dominican for a
conference tilt beginning this after110011 at 5:15.
Taking fllllt place in Division I
men's 1811kings is Cedarville at 173. Rio Grande and Malone, also 165, are tied for second place. Findlay .
.(14-5) is founh, Urbana (14-6)
fifth, Shawnee State (6-13) sixth
and Central State (6-17) tS seventh.
. In women 's Division I standangs, Shawnee State (15-4) tS fll'S~
Rio Gl'll_lde sec:ond, Centra! State
(1~-5) third, ~onhwood lnslltute of
Mtdland, Mtch. (9-10) fourth,
Urbana (6·10) fifth and Indiana
University/Purdue Univmity-lndianapolis (S-13) sixth.
·
Nationally, Rio Grande center

Troy Donaldson (junior, Sebring)
is lOth in field goal percentage
(130-195 for 66.7). The Redmen
are fifth in scoring, averaging
100.1 points per game. Donaldson's field goal perfonnance is also
first among the Division 1 teams in
the district, and the Redmen are
ranl:ed first in scoring offense and
three-point field goal percentage
(276-644 for 42.9).
The Redwomen are ranked 12th
in scoring (82.5 points per game)
and 13th in rebounding percentage
(55.3).
Within the district, Red women
center AM l)arnitz (senior, Belpre)
is first in field goal percentage
(141-23Hor 59.5). The Redwomcn
also lead Division I of the district
in scoring margin (19 points per
game) and reboundingpertentage.
In other games this week, the
Redmen host Urbana Saturday,
7:30p.m. for Holzer Clinic Nighl
The Redwomen meet Malone 7
p.m . Thwsday in Lyne Center,~
are at Utbana Saturday afternoon
·

Colts may ask_Marchibroda
:to return as head coach again
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Ted manager and iiOII of owner Roben
• Man:hibroda, who took the Colts llsay, met with Mlrchibroda Moo·
• from mediocrity to the playoffs in day in Min~is. lnay then flew
:. his first stint as head coach, will be back to lndtanapolis Monday
: asked 10 repeat the miracle, a news- evenins 10 meet with his father and
;. peper ~in today's editions. wott out delails of the agRement,
~ ' The Indianapolis Star said the The Star said.
· Colli areexpecled 10 name MarchiThe COlts have been ICCking a
;: brotllt l l head coach sometime COii:h Iince their 1ta1011 cndecl with
• today.
one wiD and IS del'tata. '!'bey oould
: Marcbibroda, currently the not :'llrca:lt Maldlibroda until the
• olfcllli~ coonlinakJr of the auffa. Bills season officially ended,
; Io Billa, coached lbe Colla from . whidt it did in I 37-24 loa to the
", 197!1-79 wben they wm m
' Batli·
' S
WuhinlfOD
"-·L Red*i)ll in Sunday's
11018. Hil 10-4 rec:otd in his fint uper _..
-·
• yell followed the Colli' 2-12
Two 01bet candit~Mea we~e in ·
' record the JWCvious year and · the rimllll for tbe Colla' coaching
:• ..u1
tbe &amp;realeal turnarOUnd in jo~. illcludin&amp; Rk:t Venturi, the
NPL ~o~-..
·
·
team'slorlnel de'-a·_,
'"' .·~._......,,__
....... uu..: Ho ·w,u Rallied NFL c:oacb of tor who served .. interim bead
: dleyw.mi9?S,IIIdhll1976team ·coacb for tbe fmall' pmea aftm
• led IIIII NR. m total rifMoe. past- Ron Meyer was ftred JD ~iJber. ·
'· ill .-1 auiq.
The Cola' recud,lloapled with
; · Mllc~ibroda wat fired by all'lde widl T•JII Bay lat ~· ·
: I ~ r t lnly fltllowillc a S.ll a· eanted ~ tbe lOp two plctl in
• •1111979.
. .
tltlupring IMD II.drift. ,
.
: , , .. !nay, tbo 1eam '1 aeneral

!:

•'

.

:_Clinic to sponsor RG-Urbana game

Tuesday, January 28, 1992

Holzer Clinic will sponsor the '
men's basketball game between the
University of Rio Grande and
Urbana University on Saturday,
Feb. I at7:30 p.m. in Lyne Center.
Tickets for the game are available at the clinic's main office in
Gallipolis, and its branch offices on
Sycamore Street in Gallipolis,
Jackson, Middleport, Proctorville
and Point Pleasant.
Tbe clinic 's donation to the Rio
Grande Athletic Boosters fund
enables the university to continue

Pag&amp;-4

Eastern girls defeat
:Southern 49-32
By SC01T WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
After holding powerful Eastern
to a 33-28 score at the end of three
periods, the underdog Southern
Tornadoes were outscored 16-4 in
the final frame, while finishing
with just four players, as league
·contending Eastern rolled to a 49;32 SV AC girls basketball victory
·Monday evening at the Charles W.

'

Tuesday, January 28, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

'

attracting quality student-athletes
to Rio Grande's programs, including basketball, baseball, softball,
volleyball, cross country, track and
SOc~.

"One of the more gratifying
aspects of operating !his program
has been the interest of businesses
and organizations in the community," Redmen Coach John Lawhorn
commented. "Holzer Clinic is a
long and loyal supporter of our
institution, and its sponsorship of
our home games has aild will be

greatly appreciated."
Rio Grande Athletic Director
Tom Perdue said the university's
relationship with the clinic, wh1ch
includes free physicals each fall for
all of Rio Grande's athletes, has
been beneficial for the institution.
"Holzer Clinic hits a strong
interest in the health and wellbeing of the community it serves,"
Perdue said. "Their concern
extends to our university and has
resulted in an overnll athletic pro·
gram which can compete with the
best"

Scoreboard
In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantk Dl¥ilkJn
Tean
W L
Pet.
NewYat .............. 26 IS .634
B..-tcr~ .... ................l6 16
Ailladelphil ...... .....ll 21
Miami ....................20 23

New]eney ............ 19 22

w..runal0fl ............ t4

.S
S.S
7

.463

7
11.5
IS

.Jso

Orlando .................. !! lO

.268

Central Dhltlon
Chlctlo......... ......... 37 S .881
Cine tnd·-·--..27 13 ·"5
Delroit... ....... ... ...... 23 19 .S48
Athnta .......... ......... 21 20 .512
Milwaukee ........... ..l9 22 .463
Indiana .................. .l 5 28 .349
Charlone ................12 30 .2116

II

HEADING UPCOURT - Eastern guard Tabby Phillips (left)
heads upcourt as Southern's Amber Oblinger keeps pace during
Monday night's SV AC contest at Racine, wbich the Eagles won 4932. PbilUps scored 15 pointS to lead all scorers, while ObUnger led
the Tornadoes with 14.

DISIDNG OFF- Eastern center Jennifer Roush (len) dishes ofT
to a teammate in front of two Southern players during Monday
night's game against the host Tornadoes, wbich the Eagles won 4932. Roush scored 11 points in the contest.

w..._....... •-""'
caldt.
.

""'

. There were an lldditional 868
mutklea t:ee:Oillized for bonortlble
mention by die club becaiiiC' IIIey
meuuroc1 at 1eut 30 inellea
. '-•,
..,...
btltdidnotmocttbemore·lliqenl
!eCJuirements. or tbo JeCOid tolll
1,378 11~111kiea ~!zed br IK
Division of Wildltfe and Ohio
Hualt:ie Muatlo Club, aDJlen
rnllnd M patLdlt ri tbe flsli tltoy
~ 1lll ,-.
' 'The l!Ja'e•e ri 1arp JD'J*e!·

15

.415

1.5

.317

115

.171

18.5

·

Ohio high school
basketball scores

cannot pr«!~lde the numbers of
mtllkiea required 10 meet JliOIIIIII,
objecllvca. AI a reault, tile lllte
wll,dllfo · a~onc~ produeea aod.
stocu mu lea IIIIOieclod·II'CU
thtnt.pq.a Olllo 10 ~ filhin&amp;
opJIQih•jdee

·

·

Contlllued cooperation IIDODI1
muskio analen, fiohiq clubland
~t~~eliiiMiioe ~~fur·
· thor illcmn dupportlllitiN 10
ca&amp;elllrOpby mauioa In Ohio
.

KMLMP-IA

"

.

3
8.5
9

.293

CoL E111 65, Col. Mifflin 33
CoL Ea11m00r a6. Col.. Wat48
Col. Linden -McKinley 90. Col.
NOflhland SO
Col. Marim· Franklin 70, Col. Brigs•

16

Colonel Crawford 66, Freclericktown

Patrldl DIW!Ion
W L T Pta.
N.Y. Ranam ..... 3117 2 64
WaWna:ton........ 29 16 4 62
PitttburJh .......... 25 II .S SS
New Jtz~ey ........ 23 16 7 SJ
N.Y. lollnden .... t7 24 6 40
Ploilodd ........... 14 24 9 37

196164
212 164
216113
tn 143
l74t92
lll16l

Act."" Dlvllloa
Mon~re~l ........... 31 16 4
Boalm ... ........... 2A 19 6
Buffalo.. ........... 19 22 I
Hartford ........... "23 7
Quebec: .... ......... 12 30 5

Hilll6
172161
1741n
!381.S7
145 191

Ttam

Alhttbul.a Harbor 53, Gmcva 45
lkaver l..oui 67, Mlrtiftaton 59
Beavcrucck 49, Troy 34
Bellaire 70. Bridgeport41
Be1Wte S1. John'• 59, Cadiz 47
Brooktiekl58. Hubbtrd 31
Brootl)'n SS, Oe. Erievlew 36
Buckeye l..oell 51, Edison S. 42
Carey S7, Seneca E. 53, 20T
O.•nion S3, Pmy 16
Cin. Coun try Day SO, Cin . S1.
B"""" 21
Cin. Llndmuli: 37, Cin. Clui&amp;tian 34
Cin. Summit53,CUI. Seven Hilli 32
Claymont 43, Caml.hon 23
Col. DeSale.45, Marioo Harding 24
C.!. ~depcnd...,.ll,Col. Weat24
Columbia sa. Elyria Cath. 35
Cory-Raw101136. Van Blltm 32
Dty. Carroll 28, MiamilburJ 27
Day. Chlminldc-Julienne 4S. D1y

GFGI\

66
S4
46
37
29

Toronto .............. 14 30 5

.

Sm!1MDI"'""'

VIIICOJVGr .........

C1Ipry ..............
Winnipca ...........
1....-Anaelel .......
Edmontat ..........
SanJ01«! .............

2113 7
2121 7
20 22 9

ll2164
33 121 182

63 1?0136
49188 173
49 1 521 5~

19 II) 10

41111 ~ 1 Mi

lll!l 7
1134 4

41116196
2612.5214

Tonight's xames

Miftn&lt;IIGh 11 Hartfmd, 1 ;]5 p.m.
Wuhi:nJton at Philad elphia, 7:35
p.m.
Winnipca II Pittlb.lrgh, 7:35p.m.
Bc.tm 1t ~. 7:l 5 p.m.
St LoW at to. All&amp;elea, 10:3!1 p .m.
N.Y. Ran,aet~lt 5MJGK,IO:l5 p.m.
EdmoniGil "VanoovvClr, 10:35 p.m.
\\'tdnHdn~· '"'"'' ·~ .. .

Bllffalo at IJ«tou. 7:1) p.m.
New Jersey 11Manlfal. 7:35p.m.
Quebec at Toronto, 7:35p.m.
Chieeao at Edmontm, 8:35p.m .

Connectiwl 72. Villanova 51
llu1no&lt;»!lo 91, Ctu1l U. •1
Fairf"leld 80. St. Pew'• 65
Holan 61, BWI'alo 51
IOill72, NU.&amp;_m6l
t.o,.r., Md. 71, Clnllluo 'l

67,1AI'oy.,."

ToWIOn St. 10], Mown St.

camp u non·R*« pla,..t.'

HOUSTON AtrROS - Sipxd Rob
MW('Il' ond loo Bomor, """"'' !&gt;my
Wal.linJ, cuc(tcldc:r, anll Emeat Ril-, infielder, w rninw leap• contraaa and In·
vuod lhct.n to JPMa lrlinilll u noo •ltlfld"
pltyera.
NEW YORX METS - Namod Vada

PW011 minor leiJUO lliu.lna coordinator.
1 · ' 1 '\ . Af)f~LPHIA PHI' I F&gt;i
, 1&lt;-••· . • •Ill 1.. ny .•

' ,.

3fi ,

U,•ketball
llikdbll A.lldatiun
NBA - fin~:~d Vemon Muwall,
Howt.on pard, t1,SOO ltld Ten NcweU,
Now Jcr&amp;oy 1Ui.Unt 0011ch. 12,000 and
•uapcndod bo&amp;h tor ane JatrMI wilhout pay
...r...~ inddcnu in
&amp;an* playad Jan. 15 .
N~tklftal

tor..,..."

DALI.AS

M ,

try • ·

Md. 76

f

SUPERSONIC .~ Pltocd ·Dmidt McKey, rorward, on tho

injwod .....

FootbaU

NaUoMIFOCIOiaii~M

G1UlEII BAY PACXERS- Nonol
Jon Ozudln atr...m •iltant coach.
.I'HOBNDC CAIDINAU - N1mod
B - 1 - ........ boob ... do ond

W~DW~J..oca136,11v.ll

John Mat*o ....yt liM OGich. '

,.....,.... lO,Skywo47

Pl'ITSBUIIOH Sll!ELERS - R• .

!oloood Dio:t Hoot, 1110111111 bleb """'· /
N,- Ran l!mud1 otr.Ni\'1 coonlitutot
and Stml Aun.
coach.

...,_.,..liM

Dlmoll

Wi!H t tllJ_ 55, Otcqalon 29
Woodddp 66, Windwn 41
Y..... 53, E. U"'1JCCI1•l
.

Ohio blah school
boy8 basketball poll
COLUMBVI, O:Jo (AP),-

II...,,... ·

How 1

or- -..,. brold·
ho ... -.-Qo ....... ·
-_ _
OIDo

..... poao1

-polio

H&amp;R BLOCK

1\1111-""" ....
r.rn.o_.. -

~.

Ohio HIP Sdlool Allot'"" Auocbllon
wirll-·lootdvoorll
tl loa. 26 (Wf!lo

41-.
nptu-•- ,.,..

r.a .... ..,. ia r=Sdl-) w ~
polali:

II

. .

.IJ

Siaool

""'""'·
SEATTLE

WollovilkU,S..,boo.W.C.Ilo.41
W•tcon ltoWII 59, Cin. ML Notre

... - l o r ... olollfly..., rou" muoh •• t1,111. ••11•Mina

MA VERICXS -

Tn.cy Moen,. pud, to a Hcond 10-day

Tol. WU..62. Tot. Woodwud 13
Triad 69, Sidnty faidawn 34
TtltWIWM ValL~. Covenuy 21
Unl!ia t..ac.160. a-.w. 42
W. Unr..63, . . . l9
.

_r. .

Hooby

"·--,~
NHL
- .htpendecl JuomJr·
Pilt1b11rah hna•ill• forwar4. for 0

J1!'•

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BUFFALQ SAlUS - CoUod up
T.. o.,por, pat • ..,. toohoo!Or

"'die- -.,;t.;;;;;.:
ILACiiJAWttS -

CWCAGO
.
Tnlded r.lGUIII, - . » .. Jt.ttoat '
WholoJsr.. - .
.

HAITFORD

OFFERS SPONSORSHIP - James Blevins,
left, assistant administrator or Holzer Clinic,
and Mo Sanford or the Cincinnati Reds present
University or Rio Grande Athletic Director Tom
Perdue with the clinic's donation to Jhe Rio
Grande Athletic Boosters rund. Holzer Clinic
will sponsor Saturday's men's game between

Rio Grande and Urbana at 7!30 p.m. in Lyne:
Center, Sanford appeared with Blevins during.
the recent Scott Connelley Memorial Tournament basketball game between the Reds and
Gallia County coaches, sponsored by Holzer
Clinic, to benefit Big Brothers/Big Sisters or
Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and Mason counties.

WoQster beats Wittenberg 65-59
to take half-game lead in NCAC
By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press Writer
Wiuenberg and Wooster had
two exua days to think about their
mid-season showdown for first
place in the North Coast Conference. Now the schools have a
month to contemplate a possible
rematch.
Stan Aukarnp scored 28 points
and grabbed 10 rebounds to lift
Wooster to a 65-59 victory over the
Tigers Monday night and pull onehalf 'ame ahead in the NCAC
standrngs. The game at Wooster
was postponed Saturday because of
heavy snow.
The Tigers beat the Scots 59-54
in Springfield on Dec. 7. The next
meeting could be in the NCAC
tournament at Wooster Feb. 28-29.
The tournament winner gets an
automatic bid to the NCAA Division Ill tournament.
Aukamp turned up the heal at
both ends of the coun after Erich
Riebe was called for his third foul
with 16:02 remaining.
"Losing Eric early really could
have hurt us. But Stan re·ally
stepped forward for us and did a
great job offensively and on the
boards," Wooster coach Steve
Moore said.
Wooster (16-2 overall, 9-1 in
the NCAC) took the lead for good
32-31 on Aukamp's layup with

16:57 left in the game. The Scots
then \vent on an 18-8 run, taking a
50-39lead with 7:32 remaining .
The Tigers (13-4, 8-1) came
back, pulling to 62-59 when Matt
Croci hit a three-point basket with
30 seconds lefL
But Doug Cline and Brian
Buchanan combined for three free
throws down the Streich to put the
game away for Wooster.
"Wittenberg's defense makes ii
really difficult to get a shot off and
we were very fonunate to play well
and come away with the win,"
Moore said.
Aukamp hit six of 12 threepoint auempts and blocked four
shots while Cline added 13 points
for the Scots.
Luke Ragan led the Tigers with
14 points and P.J. Bartemes had II .
In non-conference major-college
games Monday, Notre Dame held
Dayton scoreless during a 16-point
run early in the game and forced 25
Flyers 25 turilovers in a 76-54 victory in South Bend, Ind.
Daimon Sweet led Notre Dame
wi!h 18 points and LaPhonso Ellis
added 17 points and seven
rebounds. Chip Hare led the Flyers
with 14 points.
Monroe Brown scored 12 points
and Dave Degiiz added II points
and II rebounds as Penn State beat
Toledo 70-52 in State College, Pa.

The Nittany Lions are 3-0
against Mid-American Conference
teams this season, also beatiog
Bowling Green and Miami of Ohio.
Scott Riley scored 19 points for
the Rockets.
In the Mid-Continent Conference, Roy Coleman scored 19
points as Akron defeated Valparaiso 72-61 in Valparaiso, Ind. ·
Akron (10-7 overall, 5-3 MCC)
got 16 points from Mark Alberts
and 10 each from Randy Ballard
and Brian Dawson.
Lance Barker led the Crusaders
(4-13,1-6)with 22points.
,,
Anthony Reed scored 21 poinJS
and Gravelle Craig sank a pair of
free throws with one second left
Monday night to give Clevelaod
State a 55-52 victory over Wright
State in Dayton.
Reed scored all but two of his
points in the first half to .he!,p
Cleveland State (8·10, 1-7 MCC)
take a 31-24 lead at the intermission.
Bill Edwards and Sean Hammonds each had 12 points to lead
Wright State (8-8, 4-3).
In other non-conference action,
Cenual State edged Knoxville 8382, Kenyon overwhelmed Thiel 8252, Point Parle outlasted Dyke 102100 in overtime and Wilberforce
defeated Cincinnati Bible 100-92.

Boston, Chicago NHL's Monday victors
By HOWARD ULMAN
AP Sports Writer
BOSTON (AP) - The puck
was on Vladimir Ruzicka's stick
for maybe one shon second. Then
the big right wing flicked his wrists
and frred in the game-winning goal.
Lumbering might properly
describe it 6•foot· 3, 210-pound
player like Ruzicka. In his case,
lightning would be a better word.
"His speed is real deceiving,"
linemate Steve Leach said after
Ruzicka's goal with 3:06 left gave
the Boston Bruins ·a 3-2 win over
the Minnesota .North Stars on Monday nighL
" That was a tremendous sho~"
Boston coach Rick Bowness said.
"Very few people can shoot that
puck like he did and put it in that

exact location."
In Monday's only other NHL
game, Chicago beat Calgary 4-3 in
overtime.
Boston's 2-0 lead, built on second-period goals by Leach and Ken
Hodge, had evaporated in a span of
I: 50 of the third period when Mike
Craig and Basil McRae scored for
Miqnesota to tie the game with
11:14left.
That broke a five-period scoring
drought for the North Stars.
Ruzicka wasn't that close. His
shot came from the top of the right
circle. But it zipped so quickly over
the right shoulder of goalie Darcy
Wakaluk that it seemed to have
come from closer in.
Leach had the puck along the

right boards just inside the Minnesota zone, then dropped a back·
hand ps·s when he heard Ruzicka
calling for :' Ruzicka cut to his left
before frring the puck..
Ruz1cka had JUSt etght goals in
29 games with Boston last season
and missed the last 40 games with
an ankle injury that required
surgery. This season, he leads
Boston with·24 goals in 48 $Bmes,
"My best shot is the wnst shot.
It's quick," the Czechoslovak said
in his improving English.
Leach scored on a power play
35 seconds into the second period,
and Ken Hodge's sixth goal made
the score 2-0 at 15:08 of the period.
But Craig's lith goal on a
power play at6:56 of the lltird period ended Andy Moog's shutout bid
and Basil McRae's third goal at
8:46 tied !he game.
Moog got his sixth straight win.
Blackhawks 4, Flames 3
Mike Hudson's goal 2:03 into
overtime gave Chicago a 4-3 victory in Calgary.
Dirk Graham intercepted goal·
tender Mike Vernon's auempted
clearing pass ~P the right boards
and quickly threw the puck into the
slot, where Hudson upped it into
the net for his lOth goal of the season.
The Blackbawks got the tying
goal from Jeremy Roenick early in
the third period.
·

N.Y. Knicks beat Utah 97-80

M .

pitther. 11111 ono-)'•r eunttacl
SAN DJEOO PADRES - Si1ncd
Dave Eiland, pilcher, to 1 millor laaue
conu.ct, 1nd invitod him to tninina: camp
u anon ·ro~t~r pla)'CI'.
SAN FRANCISCO OIANTS AJ"IIId w terms with BUl Swift · '·er.
onath,.· ··h·'
· ~., ....; • .:
• •.~

SL Clal.milla 59, WlmCII\IilJc 42
S~ VaU. 46, OM Hill3S
Tlff111 Calver\ 59, Fa.bia SO
Tol. CenlnliO, Tol. Swt 43
TaL ChriiLWt 46, MaWMa Vall 23
Tol. Nono.n-54, Tollibbey 17
Tol. R"'"' 63, Tot. S.O.lol
Tol. S1. UIIOI!o 70, T~. Bowoh•l9

Rabat Monit 64, St. Fmu:U, NY 46
SL BataventuftiN, St. Ja~qW\'1 7j
St. Fttncil. Pl. 101. tooallland U.

IAUIIe

CHICAGO Cl!BS - Named brett
Filcha IIIWIIfh tnd condilionina coordi·
n1tor and Ouren Oiemonl director of
'""""'
ondJamie
oondlliooloo~
ldl D.
ltobinfOII',
Moyer, ""'""'
Steve Adkitla,
JOllie Hol!Ni, Scdt. May tnd Jahn StU01,
pikhm; Jim Rohiuon and Man Wal·
bock, catd!.011; and Btrl Cl.r\ning.ham and
Fananda Lmaar, Olllfieldct, to tnlnin&amp;

5. Wabtter Sl, 1-nnltlin Furn•ce
O...OZ2
Sandy V1U. 37, Tual1wl2
S!Mmndoab 41, Baalltville 36
Shoridon ~~ Ali1o 32
SpMa. Nanh 30, Dty. N«Wnon1ll
Sprina. Soud! 66, D1y. Meodowdlle

Pn S&lt;. 70, Tololo l2
PrinC«&lt;OIO, Ftank1in .t Mll'lhall45

91

NEW YORK YANKEES - Invii.Od
Brien T1ylot, Mike Wia. Royal 0a)'t.On,
Mad: Hutton tnd Mike Draper, pitchcn:
Kiki Hem1nde1, Dave Sn 1nd Mike
Stanley, ctti:hen; Roben Ecrthoom. Andy
Stankiewie&amp; and Torey Lowllo, infield·
m; and Dicn Juna, outficlder, to t ..in·
ina camp .. ~tm-rottcr pta ,.as.
TEXAS RANOERS - AJtced to
~mN wUh ~ Mc:Cull•, pilcl!a, on 1
minor ICIJVC CDRI.riCI with Oklahoma
City ofthe Amc:rican A....:illiM

.,

Mu!nH,Wop61

P,

Alreed

man, on 1 minor !cape CMincL
KANSAS aTY ROYALS - A,...r
to tcrm1 with Gary Thwman, outfit.ldcr,
on 1 Gne-)Ut COdttlcL

P1incavill1D Harvr.r 71 , PainuviUc

Bucknell 87, Md.·tlallimorc Counly

10

CLEVE~..'. NO INDIANS -

to terma with Hroolt )Iooby, third baae-

RiWII'Iicle 41

L .t

112
99
60
36

BasebaU

~.. tlonll(

Pandoni.Oilboa 51, Van!~~e 37
Par!}'sbur1 ~5 . 1 :mwond 11
Portatn.,lllh \c
· .111 ~
Portwr IIUih '" " : ~
RIWIMI ~.lil rt'ocn , .tl !13

19!
149

A-'&lt;aoolnp•

ho""""""'"

· Major college
basketball scores

225

Transactions

Usbanm 14, Mlddlcunm Fenwick 32
Le:ipaic 47, Atcldit 45
Uberty· Ben~«~ 63, McComb 25
Wcu 60. ML Gilead J5
~e Valley 63, IU.bla 43
Lynchbufl Clay 57, Leabura Fairfidd 34
~bdilon 57, Comoa1.11 'l1
Martina Fe:rry 62, Sluidysidc 58
Mcadowbnd 13, Steubenville 29
Mechanictbllll Sl , Wayneaficld ·
Gooloo146
Millet 46, Belpm43, 20T
Miban·Union •t'J,An:anwn Z1
Minronl65, Wncrriy 39
Now BOlton 49, Portlmoul.h Cla.)l 44,
OT
· n• .~ 4,, Cin.ltur;'l . ~
!'lew Jueael ?j, N. Ballimcn 31
Nonhwood 47, Emonud Bop&lt;. 40
Opm 1loOO' !S,
34
OttCJO 63, Anthony Wayn11143

Mooday's scores

m

Sprin11 II. 16. Soulh Ol.arle.ton South·
wtem 17. 17 (tie) - Canal Wi:nchaler,
MoWT)'IIOWn Whii.IIOik 14.

..

801\0ft 3, Minn.U l
Chlcaao 4, Ca1JllY l , OT

Pta.
370
321

ROICCIUU T7. 1~. F~ndlty l.ibaty·Benton
24. 14 (lie) - 01)10n Je!fcnon, Yellow

Edison N. 30, Minao21
Fairborn 3S, Gn!anon 32
Fa)'CUCVille 63, N. Ad&amp;ml S3
Fodertl Hockin1 33, Nellonv ille·
Y..ro 32
Ft. Frye 76. Frontier 4S
Ft. lennillp 60, Coi~n~bwi Grove 31
Orand v.n. 48, BrillD\44, ar
OnrenriCld 63, Mandala' 32
Hamihm Badin 54, Cin. Htrrilon JO
Haml.lttc Twp. 52, Col. H.lnley 40
Hlfdin Nonhem 6~, ArlinJlOO 41
H11d1 on Weuern Reterve 52,
LouiiYille Aqllln.u 47
Jteb&lt;ln ! 1. Porumouth 45
Jdfenon 6S, Aahttbula St. John 2A
Jonathan Alder 54, Bale)' 46
Ketterint fiLJTI'IOnt 47. ~ ~d(tltt o w n

GFGA
200 U6
170 1!12
173170

122
93
49

Othen rt«&lt;vlna U or .an polnll:
II (tie) - Freeport Lakeland, Zant&amp;ville

Wayne. 28
Illy. White 67, Middlm.-n Ou. 28
E. Can10n 4'1, FlirleaG 3$

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

141
122

D!Ylslon IV
TYm
W-L
l. Fort Loramie (30) ............... 13-0
1 Berlin Hiland (2) ......... . ....... 11-0
3, Conllnd Maplewood (4). .... 11-0
4. UppcrSciotoValley ........... ll·l
l . Cloo. C.wu.,O.y (2) ..........11·1
6. foltorit SL Wm~ ......... 11·1
7.LtniCa!LCalh. ................. l0-2
a. Sandu.U.y SL Muy'a ..... ...... ll·l
9. Manlfield SL Peter'a........... l().3
10. W~lle .......... .... ~........... ll-4

37

WALES CONFERENCE

221
143

Othen r•elvl .. n or more polnb:
II (tit) - Btlpn, OUilicolhe Huntington
46. 13. Nmh Bald Tayl..- (2) 29. 14. An·
dover Pymatunina V11ley 28 . IS .
Wau1eon (I) 26. 16 (lie) ·- Piketon,
Wickliffe 16. II. Pccble. 14. 19. Cincinn.ti Awlemy of Al)'lical Education t:t

Girls

In the NHL ...

Norrll Dlvldon
W L T Pia.
Detroit ............... 21 14 6 62
Chicaao .............. :n 11 10 S6
SLl..oW ............ 2120 I SO
Minnooou .......... 20 22 4 44

i8::~:·sb;~;·(Ji:~U ~~

Ada 40. Spcncaville 32
Akron Manchelte:r 48, Akron EltnJ 32
Ameli• 67, Cin. McNicholas 53
Aahllbul• Edgewood 49, Afhllblllt

p.m.

47

m

4. Toron10(2) ..........................12-0
S. 8UC)"NIWynford ................ !0-l
6.NewMawnomfmtr(l) ... ll..O
7. Lenin Catholic: (1) ............. 12-1
New Lmdon (1) ...... ............. 11-0
9. Gn&amp;den.lndianVIIL......... 11 ·1
!O.HavilandWa)'lleTnco ........ 9·l

Kidron Ou. 59, Temple Cu-. 48
Port Clintm 84, F0110ria 67
S. CharlcalOrl Soulhealle:m 80, Clin·
too- M•aia 64
Tocu.maeh 50, Vandalia-Buller 39
Triw1y Sl, W. Salem Notlhwcmrn
36
Upper Sandlllky 62, Bucynu 59
Willo- HillCht. 77.LaieRidge 10

Wa&amp;hinp:ln 11 New Yolk, 7:30p.m.
lndlana 11 ~~elpUa, 7:30p.m.
Seaalo n Miami, 1:30 p.m.
Clenland •• Ddroil. 7:Jf ,. ...
Atlanu.at Mihn'*-ce. 8:30p.m.
San Antonio 11 Otl.la,l:30 p.m.
Sammcmo II Ullh, , :30 p.m.
New Jcncy at Phoenix, 9::vl p.m.
Oolden Slate at L.A. Lake.n, 10:30

Tum

Division

~ceS6

48

65

TWI
W-L PU.
t. Chflllpub (11) ----14-t 341

69,0'1
Col. Wtlnut Ridge 79, Col. lndcpcn-

Wednesday's games

............. ••••IIDni"IMut

I

1

.610
.476
.465

Col. Brookhaven 84, Col. Bccchcroft

66

p.m.

-........ .......,...,,
--Jill

ttN674
-.

.700
.683
.651

Tonight's games

how ......... lfttot .... ,..,..
... _ _ HIIIIIolk--Jt\lllrpi!JIIIa _ _ ,...

111USTMI

Dhillon

Pb.
336
303
144
234
200
170
I'II
120

Olhen nnlvlq 11 or ,.or~ polnb:
11. Walhlnp:lll COUft HouJC T7. 12 (tie)
- Kellclrina Alia', Prodorvlllt Fllri1IMI
23. 14 (tic) - DayiDn Chtmi:nadc-JuliCII'U10 (1), J..wimllc 21. t'. Wanr111&lt;1.
17. London 13. IS (tie)- Cambnda&lt;.
Ct...tond VW. Anatlo-SI.Iootph t2.

Clr=. 8medic1ine !19, Gufie ld Ht1.
Trinity o1a
Clc. Haya 62, Oc. Avialicm 41

801tm at Waahington, 7:30p.m.
Seattle at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Detroit at Clw1one, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphil. II Allanu., 7:30p.m.
Chieqo u San Antonio. 8 p.m.
Minncacu at Jlourtoo, 8:30p.m,
Ponl.and at Golden Su.te, 10:30 p.m.
New Jettey 11 Sacramento, 10:30

on J'DIIrllr1U111 ltRII ••
IDIItlt II 1111&lt; he ~ l!llfllllo
1rerro1 - \ lht
pDrtiM ., J'IMI' iwdiMAiftt lniDIM tNf rtprtlantl 1 ,...,., ol J'IIUI'
ow•a _llafljllrtaaa••••••-•IIIMrtill 111 ,...~
w.'re Mn

Boys
Chillicothe 49, Miami Trace 44
a~~. All• s~ a e. Kina 4S

New York 97, UWa 10

,..,,

1lllUIII teprodaaion

34

Teun
W-L
I.CoLSL0Jarlel(l7) ..... ...... 14-0
2. Van Wett(9) ....... ................ 11-0
3.BtloitWe~~.Brw:h(2) ....... 1l.Q
•. Col. Und&lt;n MtKWty (2) .. II). I
S. Bellefontaine-{7) ................. 12-0
6. Canfield (3) ......................... 12-0
7. Coh:. Eutmoor .................... I0-1
I . DNad.t. Tri·Vallay (I ) ....... 11-0
9. Dayton Dwtb&amp;r...................... a~
10. YOLIRJil.OwnRiyen ............ I0-1

FJUnD SL 64, S111 .loiCI St. 51
S. Utah 100, NE lllinW 73
UC Sanu Barbin 64, Pqlpcrdinc ~6

Monday's score

THE WEEK

rears

Wlttll.

.537

L.A. Cllpp&lt;o1 ......... 20 23
Sactamenl0 ............ 12 29

sixth-ranked Huskies have the ' I' defense. That's what we're about," 84; No. 18 Oklahoma 79, Nebraska
76; and No. 23 Florida State 68,
on the other side, as in 16-1 overnll Calhoun said.
Villanova (7-9, 5-3) was able to Florida 67.
and 7-1 in the aig East. In fact, the
Chris Smith, Connecticut's lead' I' came at the hands of Villanova shoot just 30.6 percent from the
field and Connecticut had II ing scorer, was 0-for-8 from the
16 days ago.
Since then, there have been four blocked shots - seven by fresh ~ field but still finished with 12
victories for Connecticut, but the man Donyell Marshall - as the points and distributed the ball in a
last two carne in overtime and Cal- Huskies overcame some offensive balanced offense.
Marshall had 15 points for the
houn had felt the Huskies had got- problems of their own for !he home
Huskies.
ten away from what made them a victory.
In other games involving ranked
Lance Miller led Villanova with
Top Ten team.
"Connecticut basketball , the teams on Monday, it was: No. I 21 points, nine rebounds and four
way we want it to be played, is Duke 112. Clemson 73; Butler 87. assists.
No. 1 Duke liZ, Clemson 73
based on enthusiasm, intensity and No. 17 North Carolina Charlotte
Christian Laettner scored II
points and became the seventh
Duke player to reach 2,000 - the
most by any school - as the Blue
Devils (15-0, 7-0) won their 21st in
a row. Duke led 27-9 in the game's
fllllt eight minutes and strelched the
lead throughout as freshman
the Jndiails in 1987 and batted .300.
Walling, released by Texas, Cherokee Parks led the Blue Devils
aut he hit only four homers last agreed to a side letter at $300,000 with 19 points. Devin Gray had 22
season in Cleveland and Oakland, with $50,000 in bonus opportuni- points for the visiting Tigers (9-6,
and finished at124 with 44 RBis.
ties, while Riles, who med for free 1-5).
The Athletics acquired Jacoby agenc6a:f~~ finishing the season Butler 87, No. 17 N.C. Charlotte
on July '1:1 for two minor leaguers. with
d, agreed at $400,000
84
He got off to a bot start as Oakland with $150,000 in bonus opponuniTim Bowen had as quick an
tried to fill the void left by injured ties.
emotional turnaround as the game
Carney Lansford, but then went
Murphy made $950,000 last allows. The 5-foot-8 point guard
into a bad slump, batting just .174 season, while Riles made $792,500
missed two free throws with 16
in his last 46 games.
and Beever $725,000. Walling seconds left that could have
Seven otller players were invited made $275,000.
stretched the Bulldogs' (14 -5)
to Oakland's camp as non-roster
Swift was 1-2 with 17 saves and three-point lead. Delano Johnson's
players. Also asked to attend were a 1.99 ERA for Seatue last season
outfielders Mike Kingery and Eric and came to the Giants as part of three-pointer with 5.8 seconds to
Fox, infielders Gus Polidor and the tJade for Kevin Milchell. Swift, play tied the game. Butler took a
Brent GateS, calchers Kun Brown who mado $925,000 last season, timeout and Bowen hit a running
and Eric Helfand and pilcher David gets a $950,000 signing bonus, $2 22-footcr at the buzzer. Henry
Williams Jed the 49ers (13-3) with
Zancanaro.
million in 1992,$3 million in 1993 28 points.
Boever, who became a free and $2 million in 1994.
No. 18 Oklahoma 79, Nebraska
agent when Philadelphia failed to
Mulholland, who made
76
offer a 1992 contract, agreed to a $525,000 last season, agreed with
The
Sooners
(13-3, 2-2) trailed
side Jetter for $450,000 with the the Phillies at $1.25 million, the
by
seven
with
I :25 to play and
chance to earn another $400,000 in midpoint between his arbitration
srunned the crowd at Devaney Cenperfonnance bonuses.
request for $1.5 million and the ter with an I 1-1 run to close the
Beever lost his job as a closer team's offer of $1 million.
game.
last season when the Phillies signed
Mulholland went 16-13 with a
Brent Price had 17 points for the
Mitch Williams.
3.61 ERA in 34 starts last season. Sooners, while. Derrick Chandler
Murphy, who became a free He pilched 232 innings.
had 16 points and 20 rebounds for
agent when Seattle failed to offer a
Thurman also setded at his mid- the Comhuskers (13-4, 1-3).
contract by the Dec. 20 deadline, point, agreein~ with the Royals at
No. 13 Florida St. 68, Florida 67
agreed to a side leuer for a $287,000, a nuse of $160,000.
Sam Cassell hit a twisting,
$600,000 major league contract
underhand
layup with three secwith the chance to earn another
onds
left
to
give
the Seminoles (13$350,000 in performance bonuses.
4)
the
victory.
Stacey
Poole's 15Murphy was 0-1 with four saves
foot fallaway gave Florida (10-7) a
and a 3.00 ERA in 57 games for
6
7-66 lead with 24 seconds left.
the Mariners last season.
Florida State point guard Charlie
· )l(ard penetrated after a timeout
t.(allll found Cassell for the winning
shot. Cassell had 19 points.
Andrew DeClerq had 14 points
and 15 rebounds for the Gata'S.
lunge reported caught was primariIy due ro stocking advanced fingerlings in 1982 through 1986. Many
of these fish stocked five to 10
ago had been fully recruited
WUT IOUICU Of • • • All
miD HllSky Muskie &amp;i2t by 1991,"
TU
•111 TO P..,U 61 01 •
said Richard Day, a bioln&lt;hu with
OLIDt
All W UIU &amp;oWII
theOhioDivisionofWildilfc:'
WID
PION
IIICIIII 6ft
Mustie fislting was popular last
No lncomo lo 101 lrN oatoly
year at ~t Lake in Belmont
lltcouttyaur-h~t~ll.-r
County where 81 hustie musicies
or not Nome It tulbll d1p1M1 on
•were takeo. In 1990, Piedmont
the 10urce of that lncoN and,
Lake yielded 29 huskie mlllkies.·
1ometl"'", on how muoh other
A~ goal of the Division
l - you htvt, loolol ......,
Hntfllo, lor tllllllfllt .,. 11-*lt
of Wi14Jife's mustie Jli'08IIIII is to
lliplrdltg tNt .... llftOUnt ........
provide lrOplty fishing oppor!t&gt;ni·
ties in Ohio.
~ ..P w ... - -..
While naturally reproducing
Tli ,,... oro tho ••,.. tor
muskie ~JMjms occur in a few
ltlamJ,

H0111lmi ................. 22 19
Ikn,er .................. .l7 24
o.ua. ..................... l3 28
Pa~:lnc

Anglers catch record 246
'huskie muskies' in Ohio
By JOHN WISSE
Divlsloll !I Wlldllre
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- A
reconl246 "huslde muskies" were
caught by an~ in 1991, surpassing the prevtous record mark or
143 set in 1982.
The big muskies, which measured 11 least 40 inches long and
weiahed 20 pounds or more, arc
given specialrecosnition by the
Ohio Huskie Muskie Club and
Division of Wildlife.
The club- a rttd in 196210
pomote sport ftshinsllld 1111111gcment r1 the ~~~te'a mtllkie fishely.
The club a1tQ p011101e1 cateb uc1
~eleasc fishirt&amp; m wliieh q1en are
.;......__. to _........_ •Le rllh
I"'·y
1011

2.5

Goldm State .......... 26 ll
Portland ................. 28 13
PhoaW .. ....... ......... 28 ' 15
L.A. L.dcra ............ l5 16
Se~ulo .... ,,., ...... ...... 20 22

Yesterday's baseball heroes happy
to get back into game anywhere
By The Associated Press
Brook Jacoby, Jim Deshaies and
Joe Beever once were in demand.
They were the kind of players that
teams often uaded a lotto geL
That wasn'ttoo long ago, either.
Now, though, they're just happy to
get a job.
Deshaies and Goose Gossage,
both cut after last season, were
invited to spring uaininJ Monday
by the Oakland Athleucs, while
Jacoby, Beever, Lance McCullers,
Rob Murphy and some other familiar free agents agreed to minorleague contracts elsewhere.
Jacoby, traded by Cleveland to
Oalcland last July, went back to the
Indians. Houston hooked up with
Boever, Murphy, Ernest Riles and
Denny Walling while Texas
reached agreement with McCullers.
In money matters, Bill Swift
agreed to a $7.95 million, threeyear conuact with San Francisco,
pik:her Terry Mulholland agreed to
a one-year contract with Philadelphia and outfielder Gary Thunnan
agreed to a one-year deal with
Kansas City.
Gossage, 40, is fourth on the alltime save liSL He was 4-2 with one
save and a 3.57 ERA in 44 games
for Teus last year.
Deshaies, 31, was 5-12 with a
4.98 ERA in 28 starts for Houston
last year.
Jacoby, 32, hit 32 home runs for

.614
.561

MinnQQU~ ................7

UConn tops Villanova; Duke still undefeated
By The Associated Press
Jim Calhoun sounded like a man
who coaches a team with a 1-16
record and they just got the 'I.'
"I don't feel relieved, I feel
grea~" Calhoun said Monday night
after Connecticut's 72-58 victory
over Villanova. "We looked them
eyeball to eyeball for 30 minutes
and were able to put a little bit
extra in the final 10 minutes. We
did a lot of things tonight that can
make us feel better about ourselves."
For the (won-loss) record, the

Utah .......................27 17
San Anlnnio...........23 18

Division U

Far West

Mldwal Dlv"lon

GB

Otltm recelvlna 12 or more P61nt.l:
II. Upper ArUnatotl 55. 12. Cotumbll•
8100kh1ven 28. fl. O.ym Paucnm 17.
14. Columbu.a Marion·Fflnltlin 16. 15 .
Clewl.and St lptiuiiS.

B•ylor &amp;4, Tun 68

25

PeL

S. Stow (2) .............. ................ 11-0 192
6. Odonl Talawanda ............. .! 1-1 143
7. n..rr., ................................ ll ·l 110
8. WCIII Olecer Lakota .............9-l 92
9. HamilUI'I. ..................:........ .. I0-3 61
10. Lima Senior (1) ................ .... 9·3 59

Southwest

14
15.5
17.5
225

W L

l&amp;clid(3) .. .......... ................ tl.O JZ2
l. Cln100 Mdli•tey (l) ......... .t2-t 282
4. Lain ...... .......... ................ ll-t 20S

71

WESTERN CONFERENCE
T~ram

Tum
W-L Pta.
l. Akron Fircalale {28) ........... 10-0 356

BUller 87, N.C. Ol1doae 84
ClcYeland St. 55. WriJtll SL Sl
Cn:iJhtm 73, Wichitt St. 68
Ev~t~~villc 'n, Indiana St. 60
Iowa St 114, Cbiauro St. 76
N. IllinW 76, E. rU:,... 67
N. IowaiO, S. lllirlod 69
Notro Dame 76. 0.)10!1 ,S4
Oklahoma 19, Nebrub 76
SW Mi11ouri St. Sl, Sn.dlcy 31
Wil...(ireen 81y 65, W. Winod 53
Wii.·Milwlukce 90, CS Northridge

GB

.619
.500
.465"

'Ui

Division I

Midwest
Akron 7~ Volpm;oo 61

WHALERS -

lo-

ealllld June~ BliCk, ClaW, fiMm Sprinan,lol"' d!o-lloctoy Loipo.

By ROBERT MIMS
AP Sports Writer
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) New York Knicks coach Pat Riley
boasts that with Patrick Ewing on
the court, anything's possible even a road vtc!Ory in the league's
toughest arena, Utah's Delta Center.
"Right now, Patrick Ewing is
playin$ the best basketball of any
center m the league," Riley said of
his 7-foot star, who had 28 points
to lead the Knicks to a 97-80 win
over the Jazz Monday night.
Ewing also grabbed 12
rebounds, blocked five shots and
dished out five assists as New York
ended Utah's NBA-best home winning streak at 17 games.
The New York-Utah game was
the only NBA contest scheduled
nighl
Kar Malone had 28 points to
lead Utah, which rallied within 8476 with 5:20 to play, bUt was ·held
without a basket the temainder of
the game. New York ~ the
Jazz 18-12 in the fOUith quaner.
After shootinsa miserable I.of·
19 in the fourth quarter, Utah fin·
islled Ill 31.7 ~t from the field.
John Slockton waa leadinJ the
leque at49J percentoo3-pomtcn
before !Ritfirlna Moaday ni&amp;ht,
millina all five or hil attempted
treys. Utah Wli 0-for-ll from the
3-poiniiiDIO overall.
S)Gelt:lon, jtlll 4-for-14 from the
field, and Ieff t.Jalone
eaeh.' fin ·
.
.

Mondal

ished with 15 points for Utah.
Anthony Mason added 13 points
and eight rebounds for New Yark.
The Knicks also dominated the
boards, out-rebounding Utah 4835. And New York hit 51.9 percent
of its shots, with Ewing connecting
on 12 of his 22 attempts.
The Knicks, ahead 50-4 7 at
halftime, brieny surrendered the
lead when Karl Malone's IS-footer
made it 57-56 11 the 7:47 mark of
the third quarter.

r---- -,1--11

ITS TIME FOR DOMINOIS PIZ1A11

I&amp;~
~r~~

1
.I
1
I

.

ss.99

One Large
· Pi

I&lt;&gt;~
~~~

.,

..
'

I

1

sto.99l

1
I

One L$rge . I
I
1

Deluxe pizza
plu·s 4 colas

Pepperont · ~ :

i 11.
:
II
!
_......
_...... 992· '
I y....
I .

'i!i"=":--=
I I _ ..,. ....

I v....,
1

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2124

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-

-

8y.TheBend

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, January 28, 1892

Page-6

LCommunity
calendar
.,.
·~: Community Calendar Items
ji'jlpear tWo days before an event
l)ld tbe day of tbat event. Items
~ust be received weD in advance
18 assure publication in tbe cal·
aidar.
\; •

~:
TUESDAY
ilt: POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. •

~he Crusade for Christ at 22nd
~t

Church of God of Prophecy
Point Pleasant, W.Va. runs
rough Saturday at 7 p.m., with
v. Rick Towe, Pastor. Rev. Paul
hapman and New Life Singers
, ·u perform Monday mght's ser·

. !(:C.

'.

€: POMEROY · The Ohio Eta Phi

thapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
!o'jll meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
~ior citizens center in Pomeroy.
B) I members are urged to auend.

'.
! : RACINE · The Southern Local

School Board will meet Tuesday at
7 p~m . at Southern High School.
RACINE • The Southern High
School Cheerleaders will have a
spaghetti dinner on Tuesday at the
high school beginning at 4 p.m.
&lt;;ost is $3.50 for adults and $2 for
students. All proceeds will assist in
lunding the cheerleader's trip to
~mpete in national competition in
Florida. The public is invited.
CHESTER • The Chester Township Trustees will meet Tuesday at
7.:30 p.m. at the town hall.

er from the Victim Assistance Program.

Middleport FD sponsors Legion to celebrate
home safety program
Four Chaplains Sunday

A home safety awareness proPOMEROY • The American gram is being sponsored by the
Legion Auxiliary of Post 39 will Middlepon Fire DeparunenL
The program is directed at home
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
safety
through fire prevention .
post home.
Each month the department will
RACINE · The Racine Ruritan· award either a smoke alarm or a
Club will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at fire extinguisher to some person
Star Mill Park. Sheriff James M. living within the area servoo by the
Soulsby will be the guest speaker. Middlepon Fire DeparunenL
Drawings for the prizes will take
Beans and cornbread will be
place
at meetings of the department
served.
on the flfst Thursday of each month
throughoutl992.
WEDNESDAY
There is no cost to have a name
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
port High School Alumni officers entered into the drawing. Residents
will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at may enter once each month by
McDonald's in Pomeroy.
POMEROY · The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at I p.m. at the home of Doris
Grueser . The program will be
"Taster's Choice."
RACINE • The Southern Local
School Board will meet Wedncsdax at S p.m. at the high school.
THURSDAY
POMEROY. The Ohio Young
Democrat Club will hold an organizational meeting on Thursday at 7
p.m . at the Carpenter's Hall in
Pomeroy. Anyone between the
ages of 17 and 36 interested in
auending may do so.

mailing a postcard with their name,
Four Chaplains Sunday will be
address and phone number to the
Middleport Fire Department c/p celebrated by Drew Webster Post
Home Safety Awareness, 286 Race 39, American Legion, at the Rock
Street, Middleport, 45760. Entry Springs United Methodist Church
forms are also available at the Mid- Sunday.
Plans for the observance were
dleport Water Office.
made
at a recent meeting of the
The contest is limited to the
post
held
at the hall. It was 49
coverage area of the fire depart·
ment which includes Mid!lleport years ago during World War IT that
Village, Salisbury Township, the troop ship, Dorchester, was
Cheshire Village, and Cheshire sunk. Aboard the ship, among oth·
ers, were four chaplains, one a
Township.
There can be only one winner Catholic priest, one a Jewish rabbi,
per household. Residents must be and two Protestant ministers.
Before the ship went down, the
IS years of age to enter.
chaplains gave their life jackets to
four soldiers, thereby sacrificing
their own lives to save others.
Ali legionnaires are invit:d to
join
Drew Webster Post in the seradditional 4i per ton for all over 25
. tons spread.
The 1992 Annual Meeting and
Banquet was set for October 20.
The speaker and location will be
Melanie Jane Beegle, Racine,
announced later.
Those attending were supervi- has been narnoo to the Dean's List
sors Thomas Theiss, Charles Yost, at Bowling Green State University
Joe Bolin. and Marc~ J~rfers. Oth- for the fall semester.
In order 10 be placed on the list
ers attending were D1stnct Program
a
student
must achieve a grade
Administrator Opal Dyer, Districl
point
average
of 3.5 or beuer on a '
TechniCian Bla1r Wmdon and DIS4.0 scale.
tnct Conservauomst Mike Duhl.

Meigs S&amp; WCD elects officers

Thomas Theiss was elected as
chairman of the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors when they met
recently at the office on Hiland
Road in Pomeroy.
Other officers elected were
Charles Yost as vice-chairman and
Joe Botin as secretary-treasurer.
Regular meetings were set for
the fourth W~dnesday of each
month at 8 p.m. All meetings are
open 10 the public.
.
rental
ratenew
of $25
wasAset
for the
limeminimum
spreader
purchased by the district. With an

New
arrival
William and Linda (Bartimus)

PAGEVILLE · There will be a
public meeting at the Scipio Town- Ayres, Reedsville, are announcing
: POMEROY - The local chapter ship Building in Pageville on the birth of their son, William Ben&lt;il Mothers Against Drunk Dtivers Thursday at 7 p.m. to discuss the jamin Harrison Ayres, on Jan. 19 at
(f-fADD) will meet Tuesday at 6 installation of water into Pageville Camden Clark Memorial Hospital
IHII, at 101 1{2 West Second Street Village.
in Parkersburg, W.Va.
in}'~meroy . There will be a speakThe inrant weighed seven
pounds and eight ounces and was
20 inches long.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and
Mrs. Henry Ayres, Abingdon,
• Mrs. Forest Bachtel reviewed the age of 36. Shelly died at the age
tile Romantic Poets from 1798 to of 30 and Keats died at the age of Md.
Maternal grandparents arc Mr.
1;883 at the recent meeting of the 26 of tuberculosis. The poetry of
and
Mrs. Elza Bartimu s,
these
last
three
makes
the
romantic
Mt!fllleport Literary Club held at
Reedsville.
tile home of Mrs. James Diehl.
period one of the greatest ~ras in
• The poets included Wordswonh, English literature.
Coleridge, Byron, Shelly, Keats.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace conducted Bashan Ladies Auxiliary
'~:~lese poets preferred nature and
the meeting in the absence of the
Plans were made at the January
humble people to aristocrats and · presiden~ Mrs. Bernard Fultz.
meeting of the Bashan Ladies Auxwisdom gained from ancient
Members responded to roll call iliary to have a smorgasbord dinner
p~ilosophers . Mrs. Bach tel read
by reading a few lines of their on Sunday, March 15.
many of the poems of the above favorite poem.
During the meeting, appreciamentioned. Byron's first poem was
The hostess served light refresh- tion was expressed to all that
'!iitten when he was 20. He dioo at ments.
aueoded the Chrisunas dinner.

Literary
club reviews poets
.

On dean's list

vice at the Rock Springs Church.
A repon was _given on the 67th
national convenuon of the' Legion
where a resolution was given stat·
ing that at each American Legion
meeting, an empty chair will be left
for the missing in action and the
prisoner of war servicemen. At
each meeting at the local post, two
empty chairs will be draped with
the MIA-POW flag.
It was reponed that a new sign
will be erected for Drew Webster
Post. Ohio has the highest legion
membership in the country, according to a report from the member·
ship chairman. Next meeting will
be held on Feb. 4.

Trustees meet
The Bedford Township Trustees
held their organizational meeting
recently at which time Elmer Bailey was elected P':esident; Robert
Hawk, vice president; and Virgil
King, chairman.
The desi~ time for regular
meetings w11l be the second Monday of each month.

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

·EXTENSION GRANTED
Last Day To Pay ·First Half
Real Estate Taxes Will Be
FEBRUARY 10, 1992
10% PENALTY Will Be Charged After The
Feb. 1Oth Date on Real Estate Taxes
Closing Date on Trailer Taxes is January 31, 1992
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER,
HOWARD E~ FRANK

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1992

Flowers, Clinton accuse each other of lying
By DANA KENNEDY
Associated Press Writer
De~ocratic presidential candidate )l1ll Cltnton, exp~ssing exasperabo~ over a wo~ s .llil~ven
accusauons of a love affarr, 1s hopm~ he can use ~ Texas camprugn
swmg ~y to discuss the Sta~ of
the Umon and set h1s campatgn
back on track. .
.
Chnton has e"!phab~~ derued
Genrufer.Flowers descnpbon of a
lov~ affair, aod an !'JlC New.s poll
tndtca.ted that a w1de maJOnty of
Am,encan~ didn't feel. that Clinton ~ m~age was an ISSue m the
presidential campaign.
At a New Yorlc news conference
Monday .sponsored by the tabloid
Star, wh1ch pa1d Flowers for her
story •. the ~sas. state ~"!~Ioyce
and smger sa1d Chnton IS absolutely ly_ing" in denying the 12year affrur.
·
. The news conrerence was teleVIsed by Cable News Networlc and
both Flowers remarks and the
attention it drew ~as bluntly
denounced by the chainnan or the
Democratic National Committee.
" Enough _is ~nough," Rona!~ H.
Brown sa1d m a statement. . We
should pull the plug on tmsh JOurnalism and titillation television.''
Clinton reacted directly 10 Flowers' account:. saying: "She didn't
tell the truth.
Hillary Clint~n. campaigning
for her husband m South Dakota,
sought to close the subj~.ct o~ce
and for all, saymg , We ve
explained ourselves as best we can.
We l~ve itat.thaL"
.
.
Clinton h1mself pred1cted m
frustratio~ that. there would be
m~ tablo1d s10nes.
. .
. How can there not be w1th .the
kmd or money they are passmg
out?': he asked d~mg an appearance m Jackson, Miss.
Chnton today was sche~uled to
campa1gn m three Texas c1t1es and
comment on President Bush's State

of the Union message. Other
Democratic candidates stayed in
~':few Hampshire to offer their reac. uons.
,
,
Flower.s allegations were
!"'substantiated, and a, tape record·
mg played ~t the Stars news conference, ~a1d to be of telephone
c~versations betweenF!owers and
Clmton, did not .establiSh that there
had ~n II!' affarr. . '
. .
Clmton s.carn~gn organiZ8uon
sought to dlscredl! Flm~ers Monday by r~leas~g a notanzed statement froin a L1ttle Rock agent who
f~r four year~ booked her as a
smger a~d satd ~he never menllOned Cli~ton to him.
After hstemng to the tape, the

DeCourcy pays fine,

f••
StayS OUt 0 jail
CINCINNATI (AP) - A former Hamilton County auditor has
avoided jail by paymg a $4,000
fine after being convicted on five
countsofimproprietyinoffice.
Hamilton County Common
Pleas Judge Thomas Crush sentenced Joseph L. DeCourcy Jr., 69,
to ISO days in jail Friday and fmed
him $4,000. Crush said the jail sentence would be ·waived ir DeCourcy paid the fine by Jan. 29.
DeCourcy paid the fine plus
$347 in court costs Monday.
He pleaded no contest Friday to
the five misdemeanor charges, ending a. two-year investigation of
improper tax breaks allowed during
his 20 years as auditor.
He was indicted on 190 counts
of complicitl to thert in office,
derelicuon o duty and recording
raise tax information. He pleaded
no contest to one count of aiding
and abetting theft, two counts of
dereliction of duty and two counts
of listing false tax infonnation.
The other counts were dropped
as part of the agreement with prosecutors.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

Oay5
1

Moolhly

..

5.!"t0 d1sr:oun1 tor

~ds

prild 1n ad\lilnct:

4'x8' Panel

BLUE
SLATE
CONSTRUCTION ADHESIVE
.... ,..,.... ..,....... 214307

28 oz. SUB 4 AIIHESIYE....2.99

II

BLUE

Tho color 6 toxturo of wollpoper
11 3o-40% nvlnga. Duroblo, no

nnd to worry obout teoro or
pHIIng.
ISS

4'x8' P•l

CHELSEA
Durllbte Y." wood becbcl plllll.
lna1olla qulckw a ...,., than
othornl
fCP

1~x12•

O'DELL
OALUPOUS
i VIN' It l 3RD AVE.
~1271 .

II ,oo AM . SATURDAY
2 .00 P.M . MONDAY

BRANDEN

HIGH HIDING

SHED

ROCK

An IRS-trained volunteer can

help you ~th your taxes. FREE.
Just calll-800-TAX-10400
Stop struggling. Are you elderly? Do you
CAIHlCARRY

-clng-

llrecocle ehHtrock, drywllt
ecrliN a nlltt, wll8rpf001 board

511

'

JN.tillalla~

(Old

a

-~·

LU

'IESTUTTU LUMIER YARD IN TOWN'

446 Galhpohs

992

675 P1 Ple.ant
458 leon
•
576 . Apple Grove

Store)

In elioak.

•

WB12,

ER
POMEROY
834 E. MAIN ST.
11211100

MON..FRL 7ol:30
lAtH

have a disability? Or is English your second
language?
~ch out for help~CaJU-800-TAX-1040.
We'll tell you the place nearest you where a
volunteer can help fill out your tax form.
Four million people like you gofa helping
.nand last year.
MAKE YOUR TAXES LESS TAXING. "

.

' &amp;
Af'ldc-·o l,.,_:-

MARLIN'S
WHITE'S HILL BAND
COUNTRY MUSIC
.
Willie Nelaon, ~ohnny Cash1 Elvis
Prea(ey, Ml~~ Haggara ·
George Jonaa en~ Ranily fravls
. type mullk:.
(Rulland Legion Hall
Beach Grove Rd.,
Rutland, OH;)
EV[t'Y Friday Night
. 8 to 12 P.M.
Admieaion $3.00
Per Co'4'1e S&amp;.oo-undar 12 $1.00

-~~====:=::=;;r;:;:;::;!
. ol '""•nk•
r ,,.
1 Clrd

__~

79

.

Bus•n•s OppofluOIIy
Monf'f'· to Lo•n
Prot ....onal Slfv1ces

81 Hom a Improvement 1
8 2- Plumbmv H•atlll9

55
56
57

8 3 huvaling
84 £1.ariclll Atlf.tirahon

a

Building Supple•
P••• J~r Slit
Mulicalln,lrumen1s
Fruits &amp; Vegelabl•
For Sale D:f Trade

sa ·
$.9

85 Guneral Kaultnv
86 · Mobile Home A!tp•lf
81 Upholalery

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING &amp;
REMQVAL
Pnmlng and Landscaping
frea htlmalts-25 Yrs. Exp.
Call ahar 6 pJL -992·2928

UJ3, I-. pol

DK,s FARM TOYS
by ERTL
Displayed al The
Quality Print Shop

PICK·A·PAIR

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
Sllrting al $235 por mo.
Very nice 2 or 3 BR, 2 balh
hou" wlbooement and
carport, free

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dlrl, Gravel and Coal
Ucenaad .. ti Bonded

PH. 614-992-5591

12·5-tln

POMEROY

markdown
on shoes
before closing
store.
OPEN FRI. &amp;SAt
10:00 A.M.·l:OO P.M.

~a•.

CALL 614·92-5 28 or
385-8227
12·11·1 mo.

MARCUM
CONTUCTING
-New Homes
-Remodeling
-Garages &amp; Room
Additions

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

vs

Froodon 12, Town 4 Nor.. ,
Range t2 W.t, Orango
Townahtp, llelga County.
Ohio, and being mora
pardoulorly dMcrlbed ae
lottowa: Beginning ot •
allk•
which fMt,
r. North
4 41' 1.71••• -o or leu.
E11t 377.25
Md North
Refaranoa Deed, Dead
..
54 w..t t .115.11 feet Book 221, Pill• 541.
tram the louth.Ut corner
Whare11, aliClh Judgment
of Frao11on t I, thlllctl North aniMa
IIICh l'MI praperty to
U 00' W..~ ..... fMI to o be eold by ... 111dwllgned
p'ln\ th- lou.. 4S 00'
....ry tho Ioiii -unt
WMt 443.00 fMt 10 1 point, io
aleuih'lillg!UII~
1henaa Iouth II 2T !at
Now, lhenfara, pubtlo
oUI.OIMiio
..
... r. hlnllY gl¥ln that I,
South It
...... llloufeby qf llllga
134.14 ' ,.., to --~,---., C.Unty, Dhlo, ,.tM HIIIUOII
lhlnc• North ..
r•l prc!Perty at publlo
1!111 111.10 leal 10 ~~[Ill auatlen .~ o11h, lo the
1
onthlw.lllneofT.
~~-of •nount
2111, . . _ l!lont tho
tMI equal• at le¥1: Aa

Public Notice

992·3838

385·8227 .. ,:: .
t2·11-1

CARPENTER SERVICE
Addltiona

-Gutter Work
1
-Eiaetrlcoland Plumbing
-Roofing

-Interior &amp; Ex1orior
Painting

1

(FREE F.STIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·621 5
Pomeroy, Ohio

I 1-14·'90-tl

l I 1 t

II ...

H.E.C.

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614-992-3524
1·22·'92·1 .,.

FOR SALE .-.
Call614-992-6637:- o·
St. Rt. 7

Cheshire, OH. .. · •
1121itn •

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
F.IRE DEPT.

Bashan Building
EVERY

SAt NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Starting Sept. 28

R••odtling
Stop &amp; C•pare
Frtt Esti•at•• ·

985·4473
667·6179

•VInyl Siding
·R~Iacement

lndow
•Roonne
olnaulat on

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742·2097

539 Bryail Place
Middleport, Ohio
11114/lln

MAShC®-

THE NATION'S FINEST
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

•Uabll&amp;lbk ...-c U\'iajl
.CU.tom fit-110 IDIIaUidOII me.

·N•"',...- po;aua,

I

"

YOUNG'S
-Room

rna. ,

MICROWAVES ~JAYMAR
Quality ,
VHSCAMERAS
Stone Co. ~.i;' '
AUTO RADIOS
SIZED LIMESTONE ' ·
REPAIRED

and South Nne oft R. No.
280 North 23 45' Wool 44.0
feet to 1 alike, thence North
83 30' W.at 142.0 1011 to o
point, thence North 20 45'
Weal 24.5 1011 to the point
of beginning, conlllnlng 7.8
•cr.., more or .....
P•rcat 2. Sltuoto In
Fr1cUon 3 ond FrecUon 12,
Town 4, Ringo 12, Orongo
Townahlp, Melge County,
Ohio, ond botng more
p1rUcul1rly dMcrlbed .••
lotlowe: Beginning 11 the
Northooat COI'lllt' of FrooUon
No. 3, thonce North 4 48'
Eoot 377.25 laol to • point,
thence North 86 54' Weal
1,595.31 loot to 1 atiko,
thence North 87 04' 30"
w..t 1155.251Ht to tho true
point of beginning, thence
South 87 04' 30" hat
3&amp;7.45 INt to 1 alike 11 the
Northwaat cornor of o 7.1
oore troot, lhonce South 43
00' Weal ,443.00 IN! to o
et1ke 11 the Southweat
comar olo 7.H ..,. troot,
thence $outh '35 f7' E1at
431.00 foot to I alike II tho
Southellt cornar of 1 7.1
point, then co ·North I 36'
W01t t33 u INt to • point,
thonce North 17 31' Wool
18.00 fHt to 1 DOint, ....,ctt
North ~41_.38' 'W11t 183.58
foot to I point, thoncl North
I 31' WMI 174.10 IN! to o
POint. thlllctl North U 0$'
'Will t86.71 fMt to 1he point
of beginning, conllfnlng

9-6·11

614·992·5528or ;

6·t2·90-tln

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
HOWARD E. FRANK

Cho~e Only

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES Md
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

JUST OFF IT.33 &gt;
Only S7Sr mo.
Ca
•

USED RAILROAD TIES

Public Notice

11·22·92·1 1110.

I

Newly Re·Do1e "

BILL SLACK
992·2269

Public Notice

MEt~if=R PLAINTIFF

..

COUNTRY MOBILE·: · :
HOME PARK
hos nice homeslles
ovallaltlelor up to J
80 homes.
,:. .

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

J&amp;L .
INSULATION

882 NI'W H.ven
896 lllt•fl
937 Butllllo

.. '·
' "

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

c..... ,

843 Porl._..d
247 let•rt Ftlls
949 Ractna
742 Rul..-.d
667 Coolv•le

...

Business Services

GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory

Pom•o'r

..

&amp;3 · Anhquea .

.
54 · Mfac:. M11chand111·

liUfihl4611

Hoftt1

Serv1 ce&gt;

773 M••on

985

Ct,.petl &amp; M010t

51 · Hou•hold Good&amp;
52- SportW.gJloo"dl

RACINE GUN
CLUB

MukUtpOrl

·~:'tad ~F:.Uon 3 ~nd

'

Acr:•tor••

F1cto'd. Choke
12 Gauge otgun Onlr
Strictly Enforced
9·13·'91-dn

panaltln, lntor ..t, ond
coat• oalolowa:
P•cel No. Taxee, tn-t
MdPenolU.,
1o.oo554.000
s .zsus
1o.oo555.ooo
St,740.54
Total
st,ll3.77
Porool 1. Situated In the
County of llllga, Sllta ol
Ohio, and In the Tawnahlp
of Ora"c:.e, ond ro'i:::.dld

•,

1•

985·4141

NITA JEAN RITCHIE
41885 STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
DEFENDANT
NOTICE OF SALE
UNDER JUDOIENT OF
FORECLOSUIE OF LENS
FOR DEUNQUENT
LAND TAXES
C11e No. 11-DLT-33
Whtrllt; Judgmont ha
boon rondered agalnat
certain parcel• of reel
proporty for taxea,

202 NORTH SECOND ST.

xrlw11 I·W.' ...
Mason Co , WV
Ant a Code 304

2 00 PM . FRIDAY

7:00P.M.

I'

tilt•

Metgs Cownly
Aret Codl 614

••••••mente, ch•rge•,

PCIIIII

littler _..,. ..... ltlcloe
tiiiM. Avllllllbleln while only.

WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY

ntllf.

'h"x4'x8'

INTERIOR
PAINT

PAPER

2,.00 PM TUESDAY

,oo P M
z,oo PM

·

388 Vinton
245 Rto Gr•nde
266 Gu~n D11t
643 Ar11Ma D111
379 Walnut

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
EVERY FRIDAY EVENING

8.95
4'11' , ...

.05/ day

Area Code 614

367 Ch•twe

-·-·-

6.98aAL
lATEX

17•88

Go~lh

8.95
j

PECAN

GRENOILl

Galht County

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION

2

I'OI'I'r

.follmvill~ 1!•/t•flhww

'--;::::='=U=B=LI=C=AT=I=O=N=:::;--4
I

BeluUiul tight woad grain pMII
with the beat Luan bocklnm. Ataa
mood to UU WhM refaclng
doora, pllnt or atlln the bock.

.60

·

C/n.~.~i.fit•t/ fUI~(' .&lt;

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

MISTY

.20
.30
42

•

BULLETIN BOARD

4'x8' Pael

7.95 111 :.

@mstrong

01\su appe• Ill lht: PI Plu•anl AeqiS.It:r and the
ll!itChlllg OVtH 18.000 hOIIHts

SUNDAY PAPER

4.95

S\3.00
01 ..30 / day

lor uch d._, n qpn111 •d•

pMd

~HIUAY

5.95

.19m

.·

Rain Meter consea.tuve runs._brolutn upd-ws wtll be chMged

WEDNESDAf PAPE~
THUASOAV PAPE~ '

;~

15
15
15
- 15

10

POLICIES

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

' .'

15

72 Ttudl.a tor Sale
73 · V.m&amp;4WO ' a
Motorcyc:lw
75 Bo•h &amp; MoiOfl tor Slle
76 Auto P•ulr.
77 ·· Auto Rep•
78 C•mp111g Equ«pment

Mer c h~nd1se

AMI.o, TV &amp; CB Aepau
Mtlcell.,.wou s
WM\ted To Do

Over 15 Word&amp;

Rate
54.00
$6 .00
$9 .00

Wofdi

3
6

CI.OstD SUNDAy

COPY OEAOLINE

•,

w.,,_,

12 Sttuat.on W•ted
·\3 lntuflnce
14 • Bus•n•• lr111mng
15 School• &amp; lnslruct•On

RATES

-2156

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8
to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until MeON SATURDAY

Will

., .. . .

Serv1ces

21
22
23

Transportation
71 • A~,o~ to;-$.i. ·

41 HouMs tor Rent
42 Mobile Homn tot Rtmt
43 F•rms tor Rent
44 - Apar1mll'll tor Rent
45 - Furnished Aooms
46 Space to' A•t
47 · W•nttd 10 Rent
48 · Equipment tor Aunt
49 For leMt

Employmenl

16
17
1,8

63 ltv ..lock
·64 ·H.., &amp; Gflin
'6.5- Se• I Ferlrhur

11®1111

Publtc Sale • Auc11011

9 Wanted 10 Buy

"·

.61 -:- F•"" Eq-.ment
62 ·· W•lld to luv

3 l BuiHI•I Buildings
35 lois lo Atre~gt
36 .. Aul b1e1e w.,t•d

5 Htppy Ads
6 laat and Found
1 V•d Sale~pa•d W.Adliance!

11 - .Helo

o L;v,~s,luc k

31 - Homn tor Sal•
32 MoiMie Hom• for Sllh:
33 f4rms tor Sale

2 lnMemory
J ann&lt;MJC..-enh
4 GtveWtr..,

"8

f wm St: tllli'~ S

Real Estate

1 C.d ol ThWiks

12·2·91·1 mo. pd.

pl.llrt Oa1ly lnbunt:.

'

Announc ements

614-992·3394
Or Call
742-3020 Evenings

•A cl•••luxl adverhsenH..••I pl;,cud•n lheOa1ly St~nlln.d 1«11
ctlf)l
clau1ht!d d•splay . Busmun Card ann tuulll noucesl

OR WHILE QUANTITIES LASTII .

•

8:30 am-4:00 pm

' frtt ads
GtveiiW•Y and Fo..,nd ads under 1Swordl w1ll bt'"" J d.,1 at no ch•ge
' Pt1tt1 ol ad lot 111 cap .. al letlllrt 15 doubh.. pnctl ot ad co"
'1 pomt hnt' lype only ''sed
• ·
'Senl••el 11 not retpOnllblt' lor errors atier tus1 day iCht~c:k
tor enors hrst dav ad runs m papurl Ciill bl!fOrt' 2 00 Jt m
d._ alter pubhcitt•on to makt1 conecteou
' Ads thll mual be p~nd .n advanct! ar•!
Card ot Th""kll
H•PPY Ad,
In Mumonam
YauJ S;llus;

''DELLS

• Jhe Area's Number 1 Marketplace

HOURS:

"Rect~t~t~

((Cl~SSIFI!D m,JS B}lre to gat raau11s))

Clinton campaign also suggested
that it had been ediied or deliberately garbled to eliminate mater~
that might be beneficial to the govemor. There has been no independent verification of the 1·oices
heard on the audiotapes played
Monday, but the Clinton campaign
did not dispute that one voice was
the governor.
Whatever the truth, Flowers.'
appearance marked an escalation in
the campaign controversy that has
thrust Clinton into an unwanted
spotlight at precisely the time his
candidacy appeared to be taking
flight.
In :in interview with CBS's "60
Minutes" on Sunday, Clinton said
Flowers was a "friendly acquaintance" and they spoke when her
name surfaced in rumors about
Clinton's personal life.
Flowers said Monday the
Arkansas ~overnor told her ' 'he
loved me' and played a tape of
what she said was Clinton in late
1991 discussing the likelihood
reporters would ask about their
reladonship.
The voice urges a denial, then
says, "They can't run a story like
this unless somebody said 'Yeah I
did it with him'.''
'
'
"Yes, I was Bill Clinton's lover
for 12 years," Flowers said, adding
she had lied about the relationship
for the past two years "to protect
him .... The truth is I loved him.
Now he tells me to deny it. Well,
I'm sick of all the deceits and I'm
sick of all the lies."
Clinton told reponers that Flowers had "changed her position ror
money."
Clinton and his wife appeared
on "60 Minutes" in hopes or
putting an end to questions about
their marriage. During the interview, the governor denounced
Flowers' allegations as false but
acknowledged ''wrongdoing'' in
his marriage.

•s-1111-1• r.. ..,. '""''"
.ii •Ufellmo rnme _ ,

t.a

�TUesda~~anua

PIG• a

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WriJbt

Announcements

71

18 . Wanted to Do

IIII.JU;.t

[Darvest ABargain...

·Reap The Rewards...

Announcements

llttll Si!!GIIt: Guya • Girll. Coli
Today. Dille Tonight. 1.foo.4o7.
10M, 12.15/mln. Mutll Bt Over
11.

4

GIVeaway

~llhw!!'r;:U'::. tv..~J

Exporil!lct. IM-4-.
E I R TREE SERVICE. TOIIIIing,
Trlmmtng, Tr11 Romovot, HOdge
Trimming. Fr• Eatlm1llll 11431l'll57.
GtorgH Portoblt Sowmlll don~
hiUI~ur I~ lo lht mlu jul1
11 -875 1 •

1 YHr Old, I•Mit Hound, 2
Yur Old BNgll Ho"nd, Runs ca

Rtbbkt Good.ll14-319-2114.

1·male dog, mec:t. tlu, mhc

'·

Mill PtUII'I Doy Ctro Ctnltr.
Safl, sHorct.ble, c:hlldc1111. · M·F
&amp; o.m. • 5;30 p.m. Ago• 210-10.
Befort, 1h1r school. Orop.lns
wtlcomt. 614-441-8224. Ntw In·
font Toddler Coro, 114-446-6221.
Will Do HOUH Cinnlng And
Oftlco Clttnlng, Exporiinctd.
814-441-7715, 614-441·1719.
Would llh 10 blby lit or 111 with
lldtrly, 3104-882-2243.

When You Turn To
The Classfieds,
All The Bonn~ Is Yours! -""
Now that the weather has cooled
down, why not heat things up a bit
by clearing your closets, attic or ·
basement of those unwanted items
and advertising them for sale in ·
the Classifteds?
And, you can put that extra
cash to good use by checking
the Classifteds for local garage
sales, Rea markets and bargains
in your neck of the woods.

ALL Yord Saltt Mu11 90 Paid In - ---------------- 44
Apanment
8 USiness
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. 21
for Rent
lht dov bo!oro lht ad lo 10 run,
Opponunlty
Sundty edition • 2:00 p.m.
Apt for rwnt, good cand, good
Frldoy. Mond., tdHion • 2,00
INDnCEI
locttlon, now oppiltncll, cor·
p.m. Slturdly.
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO. ntr 101 Sixth Sl I Moln, 304·
rocommonds lhtl you do busl· 675-5831.
ntll wllh ptoplt you knowhorld BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
NOT lo und mCXliY lhroug tho BUDGE1 PRICES /liT JACK"~
8
Public Sale
:l:~~n~:•,:u hovol~-118"... ESTATEs, 53&amp; J.tcu'"'
&amp; Auction
from $192/mo. Wolk to ohoo '
I'm Involved wllh oom• bull- movl•. CoN 614-441-2188. EOH.
Rick Pttnon Aucdon Company
poo~lt In • morkttlng ntl· Complllly Fumloh·" Smoll
full lim• auctioneer, complete nwork. Wt rt wonting lo txpond
IUctlon MrVI.et. LlctnMCI Ohio, In this lrtl and ar. rooklnt tor 1 Hou11, $250/mo. PIUI Uthltlll,
W11t Vlrglnlt, 304-773-5785.
buslniU mlndtd -rt111r who Ia And Dtpooll. 514-441-o338. Coli
lnllm11d In 1 -~ 0 -•·ry In· Btforalp.m.
·;;.:;5~or oppl, Clll Grog, l!il- EHicloncy apl.lor rom, btouti!UI
carpet, nice couch 1na blr, 304·
9 Wanted to Buy
Loctl S111ck Mochlnt Dtol, for ~675.:.·.::10:,:4:.2.,...,--::--~-Fumlthtd 3 Roome And Bllh
Farman Cub li'IC1or Wllh AI· Slit Chtop, 1-801).955.0354.
Clean, No Polo,
lachments. Call 814-99a.6528.
Local Vtndlng Dill, Must Stll Upslolro,
Rettrtnce
And Deposit A•
Went To Lilli Tob1cco B1111. Chttp. 1·80Q.1111·3333.
qulrtd. 614·441·1511.
Call After &gt;p.m. 114·388·9769.
Fumlshtd Apartmonl, tbr, nll1
Real Estate
W.nltd To Buy: Junk Auloo
to Ubnry, pirklng, cantl'll haal,
Wllh Or Wllhoul Molora. Call
air, reterencea. 614o4*0l38.
Larry Ll..ly. 614-3118-1303.
Btloro 7p.m.
Top Prien Paid: All Old U.S. 31 Homes lor Sate
Furnlthtd
Eftlcltncy,
All
Colna, Gold Ring'!! Sliver Coins, 3 Unll Allllol, Slluottd On 112 Utllhlu Ptld, Short Btlh,
Gold Colno. II.T.o. Coin Shop,
919 Slcond Avanut,
Aero lothMalnten•nc• FrM, Ex- $135/mo.
151 Second Avenus, Gallipolis.
Clolllpoll•, 614-446-31145.
Ctlllnl S opo, 614-446-8588.

44·6-234·2
675-1333
992-2156

3 Pu=ltt, 1 Molt, 2 Ftmoloo 1
Pon
nill Cocker, Bttglo Ana
Bloc
llo,I14,44U&amp;4§. ·
Bllok klntnl Wkh blut OyH lo
glvttwoy. llolhor· Slomnt.
304-875-4506.
Glf11lln Shtphord, 1 112 yr old,
nHds good tamlly whh lots of
room, 304-875-11120 ahor 4:30.

7

$3150/DAY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE
CALL YOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
1·80Q.25H242.
AVON - All 1r11s, C1ll Marilyn
WIIVIr 304-882·2645.
Marwg~msnt,

35K + Or Will

Atllmbltro Wonted lo SSII5.
Wllkl Nlt'l Co, hn IIVtral
opon 11110 P.f.F.T. 1-iOil-3556951.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

Want to:

Excellent

~.PIN down EXTRA
...
.
"
'.
'.

~~

..•

-·
"..
••

1hm. you,. duller· into cn.sh,
Sell it the easy way... by phone,
no neefl to leflt'e your home.
l'lace yoUI· classified ad to(lay!
.l5 wortls or· less, 3 days,
•

3 pap~rs,$6.00
Cnll '"" nf]ir.l' fm· flaid in adtmnr.P. mlmf!

.1..___ _ _ _----'-_____

2.------

Exl. 571.
Rotundld.

6JS.tl839.
Rtnch style homt, 3 btdrooma,
2 full baths, tat In kltch•n.
dining room, 1ttched g1r1gt,
Unlnralty
Ltnt,
lot1ted
$66,500. 304·675-4132 or 6155914.
Rtductd To Soli: $49,900,
Chtohlro, Ohio. 804-032-6851,
904-1132-7610, 114.:167o4649.

ho""

2568.

'

r.

34

Business
Buildings

pr-:·

1p1,

Rooms

Apl tor ronl by manlh or -11.
304-182·2S6f.

Shl~ty

53

Antiques

I TI-UNK TilE TEACHER IS
MAD AT YOU FOR NOT
DOIN6 YOU!!. HOMEWORK ..

S~E

SAYS S~E MAY HAVE
TO RESORT TO CASTIGATION

•

S bilrm. mobh homo, 3 mil"
from Pomeroy, IM412-IIII
3 btdrllom, 2 bel~ ltnohod
~-v W~ng, N. AI. 2,
3ltr IMO,

lalitltmo. Wiler in-

=.".tO:.~!:
To
1Gp.m.

~2013,

full lint TNijllctl fllh. lllrdo,
omellonimlle ond tupplltt.
PuDIIItt for ule. llealllend
mlit!tt... Dtclllhundo. f04.e7s.
3521.

lllit'-&gt;1&lt; YOU'%
f"LKW 1.0~

Equipment

lnllfl1lllonll 424- Troctor,
Built Hoa. 13,315; 1111·tJonal ti:MI; 100 ,... $2,110;
John 0... 1020 lhlrpl $4,188.
OWntr WIH F - 11111--.

on.

W.llljld: IIHcl lorm oqulllmtlll,
tnYih_lng you w1nt to ull. 8142...1301, 114-286-8040 Allor
lp.m.

r..Fa:~

-

l'M 8~1NGING yov INfO THf
/
/)fGIJION~MAfCING P'DCf.JS,
;!S';;:;:.-;.
_fiN~I.iy •.. GVt.$.f

Wl-fiCt'f HAN/)
you~

63 · · Uvestock
11N AQHA Gtlclng 7· Pointe., Youth Of Tho

Yw. u.tc1 141. Stock Tnlltr,
lla lilly ....,.. · - Btcldll.
114-2IHID
.
'

64

Hay' &amp; Grain

Top qulillr, MY tor 1111, tUfl
tqUIIO _bolO, CIA 114-ln·seae

TranspotUit,on

if=~hrer

I

l:r.'ntly~::- Q

rt

.0 .Jeoperdyl c

GlleaSWSTereo.
D College lelilt!DIM
Purdue at indiana (L)
QtCtOntlre
7:35 (J) IInford and Son
1:00 (J)
0 ln.the Heat of lhe
Night Virgil's attampta to
reconcile a family feud ere
, hindered. (R) Stereo. C
(I) MOVIE: li'onwMd ~

PAYC/'ItC.It •
ff'J,

e

WE60TTA

TALK.GU%!

(2:00)
(J) ())

iiJ 1D e R - 811 A gin
stops breathing during an
lllergle reaction. Stareo. Q
d])
RIICIIII'e Dlnnlr

e
o Murder, Ilia wn r:;a
a On Staga Stereo.
ao Rln
Prtm•••wa
c
1lD. nn, lr-8 Cop

.....

EEKANDMEEK

-

S'tereo. Iii

1:05 (J) MOVIE: AV111ncf11
. EipNU (PG)(I :56)
Cililtipltol Crlttarl
(PtlvleW) A field mouse

a:ao·w

travolstu..Waehlngton. D.C.
(J) (JJ. Ill •
1121• a~tn oflhe
Union AddNtllnd
President Otorge Bush's
Stela of lhe Union address Is
broadcast Uve wHII a
DemoCratiC reaponsa, as well
as analysll by
~~~nts. 11 :00)

~

22113.

t

Now gu 1onkl, body jlllll, ont

!

• R
MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Ste~
MOVIE:

~

Dowling II helped on a case
by lhe ghost of SllerloCk

6PECI&amp;:6 .. .

HOlmes. (R) Stereo. Q
t.30 D Ca llga llllilltbllll
Alabama II South Clrollnl
(L)

Services

Improvements
"----~==,;,..;.;;.:__
BASEMENT·
WATERPROOFING
:
UncondHionll llftlllmo guoronltt. 1.8col rolnncn
Frtl ntimiiH. Clll Colilot 1·
114' 237-0488, city or night.
~1'1 IIHmlnt Watwprgg.

BARNEY

fu...__

I FEEL PLUMB I'LL 61T YOU
SHAICY, DOC!! SOME NEII.IIE

TDNICII

•

SIX
DO"EII.S
A BOTTLE

Compitlollobllt Stt-Upt.
Aeollrs: 9om1Mf'ical, Artldln.
llof lmpro~o. ~:

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'*

!!!" . , . . . ..... put ~
.Will polio - ·

Hilling

14

.J

+u
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

By PlliUp Alder

Well Norlit East
Most books about major bridge Sotttll
Pass Pass
Pass
4
•
cbampionsbips take time to appear.
One world-cbampionship book wasn't ·
Opening lead: • K
published until after the next cbampi·
onships bad taken place. TerenCe
Reese of Britain, however, wrote the L----------..;_--------..l
book about the 1991 Generali Europe- fensive play. To test yourself is West,
an Championships in diary form while cover the East and South cards.
they were being played. And he resist· ~ainst four spades.. you lead the club
ed the temptation to change the text kmg. Declarer w1ns_m the dunlmy and
after the event.
plays a spade to hiS queen and your
The book, 'Brilliancies and Blun- .king. What do you do !!Ow?
ders in the Euro~n Championships" . The band occurred 1n the ?pen Se(MaxweU MaciDillan Bridge, $15, 212· nes matcb between Ireland and P..866-5860), describes many good bands land. Pat Waishe found the oruy card
in an entertaining style, and some bu· ~ de~eaUhe contract, gtven tlieactual
morous incidenls bave been added. diStnbuhOn: the beart kJDg. .
However, it helps if you like the fol·
Tbe four defensive trlcu tiad to be
lowing one,,as it has been put In twice. one spade, one diamond, one club and
' My husband is the chief librarian of ~ beart ruff. U Wa~ ~d cubed
the National Library of Scotland,' hi!! club queen before swttcbinl to the
sal~ Li~ McGowan. (British w®ten's heart king,11e would bave bad.~ entry
team) during ali interview, 'but It's ·remalnl'!C in order to tepiD tbe lead
easy to overstate the excitement of to give his partner the ruff._Tbe heart
that •
king left declarer w1th no npcllte. 1
TOday's band features a great de- ·

!D-.--••••• ••--

•

I

.,.,..

Aquarius' Altro-Graph predictions for or_,· hold up.
the year aMAd by mliflng S1.25 plus a LIO (.lu!J 21-Aut. 22) A friend who
long, Mlf·eddrNHd, stamped enve- tru,.e your judgment might come to you
lope 10 Astro-GriPh, c/o thll MWIPI· 10! adVIce today. 111slmportant you tell
per, P.O. Box 91428, c-and, OH thlslndlvldulllhe truth. But II must be
4410 1·3428. Be 111r1 to state your zodl· done u tiiCI(IIfly u poallble .
1C sign.
VIIGO (Alit- Zl-hpl. 22) People
PIICIS (fell. 210 Mr Ch 20) If your you're In~ with todey could 1oM
. · emotlonl, , rather' Ihan your Iogie, are reapect lor you - If you fall to carry
permitted to make evaluations or u- your flllr !!hare at the mponelblltlel.
1ot1nents !oday,- you could be Ui&lt;lng L.atw, upon review, you mlgllt.not be
tor trouble. Keep a cool heed and think 100 fond ol YourMif either.
reallllblly.
~ (ltfll. Ill-Oct. II) You might be
Alltll (Merci121·Aprll 11) You might lorn lod8Y between ~able pur·
try to ICIIIkl 1 big tiiiOIIodly When yoU 111111 tUid uniUI'ICIIve, b\11-1111....
_ , . . jf»L think 11 ~ crowd · algnrM~tll. If you yield to the former,
~ bthlvt 1ri a limhr .,..,_. Be you'A lUll mail' I110f8-'&lt; for youi'M(t
... your role ' model II worthy of • later·
.
·
lmllltiOn.
ICONIIQ (OIL 14-Notr. II) Tlmktg Ill of
TAUIIUIIAprll•ll8riOIInrtQa'd1o exb.-~loday.eoclan'ttry
tuiiiUing ~ ll1lblltoul obiN't-. be. to fiUIII ImpOrtant fii'VIIcll ~ lhelr
prefllredlor .. uplllll struggle today. " naturll
~
vwY
would .,. will to bll 101......., whll an!dcM about glltlng lhem clone •.
you 110pe to gain w1t11 w11at you mull IAGITTMUI (IM. II Daa 11) If~
pay. ..
1111 ~~~~~~y
1111au1 • Mind
(lllr 21..... 10) E-tllougll whO 18n't
to lllllclall8nd, ~
~ ll1igltl ..... to ... wHh- tougll - · t
Ill fnlnl Of Oflwl. ..,..,
. . . . . . . . today, clan't ' - ' your
""""" lor . your
llllidfidltodoiO.If~do,-·~
will, ,all 01*111 ltlfl liP I ' - ' ·

ACROSS

'I

Instrument

1 TV's talking
horst
(2 wds.)
5 AnnoJing
lnMCt
9 Small bed
12 Flrskate
(2 wds.)
13MIIItr
stroke
14 Dollir bill
15 Ukeaowamp
16 Island In lhe
Carlbbtan
17 Htart
t8 High nola
IV Romaine
20 Arrow polson
22Beuech
24 Actor-

34 Impair
35 Dlltanct

meuurt

36 Sillp'l
workero
37 Eskimo, e.g.
3V Sorts

408111-

41 vaal or btef
42 PriiH
45 Ctvlly In rock
46 Dogaaan.
49Fuu
50 Architect YMidtrRohe
52 Son of Adatw
53 Rt191n's son
54- ftlt

q-.

(obHUion)

551illt
for tlllort

G.....r

561110- tung

25 Muliclan -

57 Pollet (II.)

John

58S~

27 Halltd
31 Gllmtct
32C- .

DOWN :

together
33 Hawaiian

1. Auntls2 Make muddJ

lor DemocriCY

..

s:;o-~

a:..:)......
'~lldlnll
10 100

c.-

lii:l.o
..
IOE.f£.Q

1"'1FJ-

, !I~=
I)E....
Ift

c.............. a)11tllllno11

'*'L-,........
........CINflll

. . . "' .. ..,., ....., ,... Into

. I

'

ae

~ lllgltt Colli! Q

'*' - - " ..

fOUIIII
....: .~·
. . .- GlllltWIIttil
.·
.
.., .....t . . ---llllitlllll-

a.- "-'

Rablltlllll
10:30.
and CllaH

,,.. i&amp;: &lt;lle •

...
r,

i.~~no.Q
~.

.

. '
The World Almanac® Crouword Puzzle ;
.

Prelldlrrttl~n will
likely IMi .
by what
Anllrlcattl •
of lhe tough
~eouomlc ttmn they are
·~now. (1:!)0)

toar

8, _ __;______;__;___.;;._

A book written
during the event

=·

- ..

~z.

SOUTH
+AQJ8532
'Q 10 2

IThe outcon'lt
CISollhe
Ntwt1892
ltiiCIII

~ Cnoil Rd. Ptrlt, ...,.

lldlna or lrolltr lldrtlnf. I

.AKQ75
+J9762

+KQ105

pqctangered by lhe Gulf War.

="'t:;.

ri

'7

~ Nova Envlronmentalllts
fight to 11'11 wlkllf8

CUitll
_ Homo lmprov-nlo:
YNrt l!lporllnce On Olcltr I
NtwwHomH.R_Addl_,,
FOIOido11on Work,
.
Knohlnl And Bodle.
llmotnl Rtftt- No olob To
"'- Or Smoll114-441-0225.
F,.....n·o Plumbing And Hlltlng,l14-288-11n.

IIWII- - ~kup, ""' ........,.

EAST
t64

Stareo.

-plod. 114-2M-111l

Plumbing

Law. Order A

Ill.

Plumbing, Elictrlcll . .._.....

82 .

.

pregnant legll secretary
mlacarrlMIQ bllekrnall her
boll. tR) Stereo. Q
(l)llwt
(J) Cllllll of 1M Cl1lmploi1l
. Rieky Staambolt and Sting
VB. Rlek Rude and Stunning
Steve Austin. Van Hammer
va. Cactus JICI&lt; and a Six
man 11g.taam evant frOm
Topeka, Kan. (Rl
(I) .(J)eltomeltont Abe
and Gklrill want their own ·
·,bus~ they moonlight.

Home

Dtvlo

Pollon

Sterto.

IO:OO(J)e 0

l!llflp.a., .,, ..UaL

-

a2.t

!i'm:·
£
10 flllllr Oow!Mg Mtltllle•

'OF AL-L. QUAORUPECe,
DOt16 Al&lt;E THE:' eu~IOR.

12155 Iuddy Troller, fair cond~
tion, for more ln1ormtllon CIU
114-1112-3785

,.. -,....-.an - _.......
- ·l'lc
rr:t ....
1111 Cltryllor Col dl ~L
peltll, - tlno, . - . -

o

Oenlueiallc RHfiOIIH

Ron'o TV sorv~... p~t~IZina
In llnHh alto • .....,. t1IOil
·=~"""'!"=-:---=-=---=~ 1otMr ~ - fiiiOiro.
oifo, .wv
.
-Good 1100.- Alter 104-ill4*0hloi,._I4U.

~-

e Full HouH

Stephenle challenges.!he
winner of a sclloof spelling
contest. Slareo. C
(!) Nova Environmentalists
light to save wildlne
pqctangered by lhe Gun war.

71 Autos for Sale

1'-100 ...... HI. 4

...With Chllchn

WEST
+K 10 9
'K963

t84

Ente§:tnenl

ALLEYOOP

Budall Tro111mllllont, Ulld 1
rtbu1", tt•rtlna 1t S99; A~oto
Po~.. 114·245.8877, 114·371-

Cltl~·

e Tile Mora You Know

stereo.
)118 Ml

(-1,8

Campers&amp;

PHILLIP
ALDER

(I) Now It Cen Be Told
(J)
Tonight

i

1/

r~cletora,

.10963%

+AB

0 Tile Wllltona
7:05 (J) Atldlma Fantly
7:30 (J)

NORTH
I·ZI·tl
t7
'AJ854

BRIDGE

~~
a MontyUnt

9:00 (J) •

ling.

had to eliminate many courses. The studenls held a '
rally and one student's banner read: 'Leave the class
CUTTING to US!'

• bif~
v,,

,.,,

Stylus • Clarig • Doubt - Atomic • CUTTING to US ·
Due to bi~ govemment budget cuts the stale college,

~-":'nctit c-..

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

81

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

(!) MieN!"~,.

.

Jlm'o Fonn~EulpM1111.SR. 35,
Wnt 0.111
, l14o445-ITI7;
Wide ....., ""'•""" ronn
tractoro . I lm~o. Buy,
1111, 'lradl, 1:00.5:00 -doyo,
Sot till Noon.

LETTERS IN SQUARES

~=:=1§1

t!JOUQH~

Motor. Homes

61 Fann

·,

e PRINT NUMBERED

IJl•

Ace•-

79

a local

I~
Camp loll · lh• chudl• quottd
by filling In lhe milling -do
1·--·L....J.L....!.--.L.--L.___, ·you develop
lrom 111ep No. 3 below.

8:35 (J) Andy Qrlffttll
7:00
0 Wl1tel of Follune

Rotl Wllllro Gtnntn lrtd. floor ~~~ tile. D &amp; R A.-o,
Poronll O.F.A., Chow Puppllo, RIDitY. ,.., 3044724133 or 1·
All AKC Roglllllld.IIM-24 ~' 111 11. @.2'13..585.
Wolllod To Buy: 414 Fronl Drivo
Troln For J)Odgo 111'19 323 Gttr.
Farm Supplies
114-145-7121.

&amp; Livestock

1

~---· mention!'

e:aoiU *...."C R
~&amp;·~ ..... 0'

350 ~c llolor;
lncludld; Hll-. Goaaltt, And
Kldn., Bon. $1,100. 1!o,.: 114446-8261; Evtnlngo; 814-3712115.
.

ton tNCk whlell,

Iii

1:06 (J) hwrtr Hlll!lllea

,

74 Motorcycles
56 Pets lor Sale
1IHIII Yomohl Wtnlor 4 Whl.....,
=---.---;-::-.,..--::---::-:
Graom · ond Supply Shop-Pel

Polill PIHNIII,

Is
G E WL I G
I I' I I I e

IIi Rht 1lD. Till, K·8 CGp
~tareo.

My 1WO 80f)s.entered

department store's pos)er oon,'
- ! :r0 test. The eldest son won first
I ~li- ~-1---J1.---J
L-,-.i..
prize. · Th!l yoUngest boy
alglled, 'Yaa, and I only won

8 World Today

TO YOU IF 'IOU DON'T
KNOW WHAT IT MEANS ..

Op F OR ~

.

IIJ 8cooby Doo
D Up ClaM
·
IIi New Zono Stereo. Q

11811 Full Sla Bronco XLT,
l.oodtd, Eacolilnt Coodlllon,
Coli Any11~, IM417.o1H•.

76

tl
_~,!
I .;.,......,..!~I~, !I

INiTI-"ode,

T~E'( CAN1T DO SOMETHING

I

SHEOOCii
RORAB

~Math I.Nmlng Hour

AI!,

G100mtng. All brlldO. llyllt.
ltmo . Pol ' Food O..llr. Julio
Wtbb. Ctll614-448-0231.
Blondt and whit• Cock1r
Spaniol, molt, 7 wkt old, 11100.
304-87W4011.
.
Fish Tonk, 2413 Jockton Avo.

EVENNQ .

1:00 (J) e !II ()) e G1 1D e
ONtwt
(I) VIdeo " One TV Stereo.

!kr.""'

245-5121.

I

•

liD !,!1~11 Stereo. Q

1988 Mu11ong GT, whHtlblack
lrim, S.opttd, VB/5.0, 26,-~,
powor t.umblr 11111, tald on.
mult Hll, $9500, &amp;14-192-81731

Block, brlckj - • llipos, wlndowa, llnl*, ttc. Claudl Wln1111, Rio Grlndt, 011 Coli 114-

TUE.. JAN.21

PUIIIII

Ill. ....,_

Buy or 1111. Rlvorlnt Anllquoo,
1124 E. Main Slrelt, PorMroy.
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. lo 6:00 _
992::::.Z.:.Ot:..5e-,_.,...,,-~-~
p.m,_Sundly 1'00 10 6' 00 p.m. 19Ba Ponlloo LtM1111 Allll'll
814·n2-2526 •
Rodlo, Air, Good Condlllon,
31,0110 IIMII, $0,000. For llo!t
lnformlllon Coli 114-441-2342
54 Miscellaneous
Atk For Pout.
18tt Jttp Chtrokll LlmHod
Merchandise
EdHion, FullY l.otdtd, Low
111111111, $21,600. 114 441 2240,
Flrowood lot 1111, 114-1192-6255 Evtnlna 114-44HJ118
IVInlnQS
nga:
'
Ill Ford Grantdt laid-" .. 100
- ·"
·
Flrowood, Hordwoods, Ehhlr :tO' · -7- 0 ·
Frtth c.- Or Stooontd, Pick-up -::~=·~'=N·.,-....,...---,Lotd, $45.114-445-11430.
Ask Abo.- OUr lnsltnl Tal
Refund, EIHI Home Ctnlir,
HHrtltnd lndulllrM, Inc. Yttr 6111-112·1220.
.End Sloragt Shod Modll
Ct•ronoo. ti12ll8 DE$479. Dish 72 Trucks lor Sate
Bern, 304-875-ee73.
1818 F·100 truck. 614·149-~888
Modioli Suppilll: Now And sft.,
Spm and wMksnd• ·
UHd Whlllcholro 3 Whtoltd
Scoottrl• Ul1chllra, Eltctrk: 1884 Chtvrolll StO 2.8'18
Bids. t.tc. lnswtnct And ~bod Plckuoi4Spotd lltnutl
UtdiCIIW Acclated. cau Advan-- Tr1111mlnlon, Timid Glo11 AII1tgt Hllhh, 1~5811·11120.
FIIIIut $2,500. 114-318-11311.
fu
s•t
Pooch
gown. - · 18811 NIIHn pickup, tiOroo, AC,
14,100. 304-871-2131.
304-I'IW '
SttlrNOOd,
$45. 1890 Nluon pick-up, gr.,, bod
dlllvtnd 1'01111 Pillllnl .,.., liner, kpMd, 21,000Ml, liiJRii
104-8'11-2075.
lltroo, ptrftc1 cond, $1200, IM·
Snow Chill tnQW - · 1 II', t =992:.-6.::1~131==18::92:.·:::
201::::5:...,......,._ _
:lfl". Eilclrlc olin. cond~ Chtvy S.10 lruck. Excotllnl
tlon. $100. 104-8'111-218!.
condiiiCXl. 304-615-1965 ., 304·
88245211.
Som SomtrviUt't Army Su"""'
by Sondvvlllt . , ... , Oftlct,
Jockoon County, WV. (Eatt of ~ 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
77
Ro-owood.
Ctmon
cavtrlllt 20¥. dl11e0unt pair. 1178 Chovy BIUtr. Traitor utn
F~.. Sol., Sun. Noon • 6pm. &amp; tlru. AsiOII:Id tractor pel1s.
othlr dap houra can 304-273- Coli mornlngo 304-895-3441.
5855. Union madt labeled Ida 1111 JHp CJ5, now top, IS.OIIO
vlflltlng lptCitlllll.
mlln, focal owner, 304-175-1214.
UHd Futl 011 Stovt Wllh 250 1184 Chevy Blour, Sllvllt'tldo
Galton Tank, Alao Two Warm pacbgt, IIIlO 305 tnaino 4
Morning Slovu, 814-441-1430.
wlwtl drive, V-8, PS,
PB,
ohlrp loolllng, 304:57'-211...
1188 Eogll Slttlon Wogao, Ont
55
Building
OWner, lw IIIIH~, Four
Whttl. P-r Drl.., Op.
Supplies
llono, 114-4-310.

11111 -

15.....__~~--~7.·-----~···.

992~2156

Ntw Honn, one bedroom fur·
nllhtd apt, depnlt and
reflrtnce rtqulrld, 304-882·

Newly redecorated 2 bedroom
reterence l depoelt requlnd, no plio, :!04-875-!112.
CCmplttly Fumlohtd mobile
homt, 1 mill Hlow town over32 Mobile Homes
toolting river. No Poll, Cllt4·
446.0338.
for Sale
Pl1111nt "Pitalrt Apl, 509 112 S.
1181 Naahua mobile home, 3rd Slrlll Mlddlopon, llvl~ rm,
14x64, 2 BR, 1 balh, ntwly 2·bdrm, kill bllh, lg yord,
rtcarp.ttdh washtrfdrysr, 1116 $300mo I ullllla, 614·1185-4231
front pore . Ptrk Lint Court.
614-446-8732 after s . $9,300.
Ytry nlct 1 BR fumlthld lpor1·
mtnt on Mt. V1mon Avt.
Shon Time On Job? Poll Crtdll Upttolro. P~vo11. $231 pluo
Hlllory A Problem? Many IIIC1rlc. Rtl. I clip. 304-875Ropo1111Hd Mobile Homtt To 21151.
ChooH From. Small Down
Poymonl. Coii1-8Q0.581o571t
45
Furnished

9, _ _ ____.___

675-1333 '

(.()( 1£66

.-.
..... :.
1888 41p,
Dodatlolcltd,
Daytona,
$6,000.
614-441-0l1i.

room"*#· l~l;:r&amp;::

.1:_--,---___

•

~~

1UT IAit.T

•d]) •~~~-~~':'l;l·
Q
Andy Gltllllli

~~~~~~~~~~~======~lion,

-•ilnlt

1(1.__ _ _ __

SIOCE

085 _. 388

Buoln- tonnly Dr.
Rtnkln Ray PlcHil1 offlcti, 501 Rooms tor rtna • week or month.
S. 3rd Sl. Mldd'-rt, 1400mo I. Slonlng ot $120/mo. Gtlllo Holtl.
Avon rwprntntatlva wanted, utllllltl, 614-NS-4231
114-441'11580,
.
no territory necesury, fret alft
wllh tlgn·up, Coli Kay, 614·lm· 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1'180
2 to 5 ocro 1011, Rl. 35 trontogo
BE ON T.V. llony No- For Rodney. Unrtltrlcted. Ltna1
Commorclolo. Now Hiring All Conlrocl. Privtlo. 114·245-1448.
46 S pace IOr Rent
Agn. For Collin; lnko. Con 615Borplni/ Flvt Acm Solei Trailer lollor ront whh full hook·
779-7111 Ert T·15l&gt;7.
Wooclt
And Port Open
Coamltol~llt Needtd: GtunmPropony, Nlct Building Or up IIIII 0111 biola. 3104-8711-llh.
llld $1'10 Per W11k, Paid Mobile Homo Slit Eltc1riC Vacation., Call614-446-7267.
Survey, NNr Alhons, ibso.
r.lerCililll dISC
$650,
Monlhty
DRIVERS, torn to $8!10. wkly. Dtposll:
WUI train HYirll openlngt 1110 P1ynt111: $92. OWner Financing.
1-801l-927.Z1111.
PT 1-8Q0.23Hil57.
Household
Euy Workl Exetlltnl Poyl Aa- LAlli lor ulo~lltn _ . 5I
llmbll Producll AI Homt. Coli lobll. 304-f75.~
Goods
Toll F-, 1-800-4117-61111, Ext.
313.
Big Sovlngs On All Corptt In
Renlals
Slock. CUlt And Cony; llol·
Fln~ncill Strvlct c.- Oppor.
loilln Ctrpols, 114-441-l'M4.
lunl1y. Small Bu•- Diolr•
I choir, Eorly Amorlcon
l'lroon Wllh Oulgolng Ptr·
41 Houses tor Rent • Couoh
oonollly.~, Typing I Cciinpulor
wiWood trim, 1225. 2 P•-n
SkUio. upportunlly For Advon- 3 btdroom hod~ In country, chilro, $75. OICh. 304-875-8871.
comonl WHhln OrgoniUIIon. ont milt from Mtton $250. ,.r
0000 USED APPLIANCES
1
Sind Rnpon11 To: Box CLA mo,
107, Clo Gtillpoill Dolly T~bun,, 5332.dtpotH requlrta, 304·173- Wolhero, dryon, .........
rangt~.
llbggo APIIIIInct•,
825 Third Avonuo, Gtlllpoilo, 011
U - AI. . Ra. ' Btl~ Slont
115131.
3-BR
on Lincoln Hgt1., Crall-.
Ctll114-441-73tfl.
814-892·7188 aher
Llctnud Mantger For Loctl Pomeroy.
5:00pm
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
. Buuty
Salon. Comp.tltv1
Wogo1 Pokl Vocollon llltdlc:ol 3br 2 Btlht, FP, DW, CA, Complllt homo lumlohlngo,
P1on Avolltblo, Training. 114- 1475/mo. Dlpolh Rtqulrocl, 114- Houro: Mon-Sot, H. 114-«f.
3out luilvllll Rd.
4414353.
441-4222, or Evtni"'II: 114-441- 0322,
Fr11 Otllvtty.
21111.
U,_inl Dri-, 111101 8t AI·
PICKENS FURNITURE
INti 25 YHro,Oid, Wlth·Citln 3br Houll Fot Rtn1,_ Dlpooll
Nti01Jitd
Driving RtcOrd. Chlulttrt And Roto-. •oqulnd,
Houllhokl fumllhlng. 112 mi.
llctn11 Roqulrocl, l'lrt·Timt.
'Strld RHumo To: il!llgl LIIYI - t ; l On - n g Jorrlcho Ad. Pt Pilllln1,. wv.
coli :!04-675-1_450.
Ll,_lnt Strvlct 511 Jookocin llochlno, 114-4'-2.
Plkl, Gtiilpolil, OH 45131.
4·bdrm, 111 ntw kJtchln, 2-c•r
RENT20WN
114-441-SIN
NEEDAJOBI GRIATPAYII
gorogo, no hoUIIIII1t, pf0tt!1 ol
Vl'ro Fumnura
over 350 COmpenllo You gordon lpaco, $3GOmo piUI .....
NOWI Wort! From HOME And I Ulflllleo, :knlln ou( SR124, Solo • Chi'!. amo Wllitj
Rectlntr, sur Woe~ lwtnt
QET PAID, 301-837·5011 Dtpt. 614-281o1177
ltd
D3, 24 Houro.
·
· =-p.-,.:.....:.o:..
y,"'='2·,_bd&lt;,_m_ _,ho,-uu--,-=nn-. RtiCUr, l3.a
Compltle tl.41 w.ll, 4 . , _
Nttdtd: Chril11on lluslclont. lthod bo-tnl, on llroll Plrk·
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Benefits,

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3

BORN LOSER

January 28, 1992

Ohio

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

28,1992

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�Pta•

TUesday, January 28, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

111--The Dally Sentinel

,,
\.

Patterson hosts legion meeting

'

The American Legion LewisManley Unit No. 263 met recently
at Dale's Restaurant in Gallipolis
withj.ouella Palterson as hostess.
Contributions were made 10 the
U.S.O. and Paralyzed Veterans.
Orders were also submitted for
the American Legion Dispatch and
for poppies for Memorial Day.
Lorrene Go~gins, president,
read a bullettn from Sharon
Squires, Eighth District President,
concerning the 46th session of
Buckeye Girls State held at Ashland College on June 13-20.
Dorothy Casey gave a report of
the Christmas party and a vote of
thanks was given 10 Mrs. Casey.
It was noted that unit has
reached its membership goal.
Cheer cards will be sent 10 the

" .

sick and shut-ins.
Lola Hampton, le~islative and
national security chatrman, urged
the members to write their Congressmen on issues for the American Legion National Legislative
Commission. She distributed legislative addresses and the pamphlet, "How a Thought Becomes
and Bill" and "How a Bill Bocomes
and Law."
She staled Persian Gulf veterans
are eligible for membership in the
American Legion and that there is
an adjustment for Desert Storm
families for the setbacks in their
lives.
On National Security she said
communities and states can be
made better places in which live if
residents would get involved in

White named to dean's list at OVC

BIG FIVE FOR C&amp;C • Tbe members or the
C&amp;C Music Factory celebrate their five American Music Awards Monday in Los Angeles.
From len are Freedom Williams, David Cole,
Robert Clivilles and Zelma Davis. They won for

Favorite Dance Musk: Single for ''Gonna Make
You Sweat," Favorite Dance Artist, Favorite
New Dance Artist, Best Pop-Rock Group and
Favorite New Pop-Rock Artist. (AP)

American Music Awards winners named
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Here
is a list ofwiMers at the 19th annual American Music Awards:
Pop-Rock
MALE ARTIST: Michael
Bolton.
FEMALE ARTIST: Paula
Abdul.
BAND, DUO OR GROUP:
C&amp;C Music Factory.
SINGLE: "(Everything I Do) I
Do It for You," Bryan Adams.
ALBUM: "Time, Love and
Tenderness," Michael Bolton.
NEW ARTIST: C&amp;C Music
Factory.
Soul-Rhythm &amp; Blues
MALE ARTIST: Luther Vandross.
FEMALE ARTIST: Mariah
Carey.
BAND, DUO OR GROUP: Bell
Biv DeVoe.
SINGLE: "I Wanna Sex You
Up," Color Me Badd.
ALBUM: "Power of Love,"
Luther Van dross.
NEW ARTIST: Boyz IT Men.

Country
MALE ARTIST: Garth Brooks.
FEMALE ARTIST: Reba
McEntire.
BAND, DUO OR GROUP:
Alabama.
SINGLE: "The Thunder
Rolls," Garth Brooks,
ALBUM: "No Fences," Garth
Brooks.
NEW ARTIST : Trisha Yearwood.

Smith.
Dance
ARTIST: C&amp;C Music Factory.
SINGLE: " Gonna Make You
Sweat," C&amp;C Music Fac!Dry.
NEW ARTIST: C&amp;C Music
Factory.

Robin White, son of Robert and
Dove White, Coolville, has been
named to the Dean's List for the
fall semester at Ohio Valley College.
.
White is a sophomore busmess
major who is a member of the A
Cappella Singers and is president
of the Kappa Social Club.
To be included on the Dean's

Officers elected·
At the ollanizational meeting of
the Columbl8 Township Trustees,
Gay Johnson was elected president;
James Gaston, vice-president; and
Granville SloJII is the other trustee.
Regular meetings were set for
the fmt Monday of each month at
7:30p.m. at the fire station in Carpenter. The next meeting will be
Feb. 3.

Granges to meet
Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange will meet Saturday at 7:30
p.m. at the grange hall located on
County Road I near Salem Center.
Presentation of 50-year membership certificales, and the presentation of the fourth degree will be
included in the evening activities.
Members are reminded 10 bring
their favorite recipes for inclusion
in the State Grange Cookbook.
A potluck supper will follow the
meeting.
All members and candidates are
urged to auend.

Reedsville UMW
holds meeting

ur

Rap
ARTIST: Hammer.
ALBUM: "Homebase," DJ .
Jazzy Jeff &amp; The Fresh Prince.
NEW ARTIST: Naughty By
Nature,

Convention was announced for
May 1-3 at the Holiday Inn in Worthington at the recent meeting of
the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held a1 the
Episcopal Church in Pomeroy.
The th~me for the convention
will be "Celebrate the Discovery."
Many of the events will center
around the Quincentennial celebration in Columbus.
The group agreed 10 send a letter 10 the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce in support of its
effort 10 secure a medium security
prison to be located in Meigs
County.

Fellowship members give reports
The Meigs County Women's
Fellowship met recently with the
Bradford Church of Christ hosting
29 members present.
Linda Bates" lead the opening
song, "Tis So Sweet to Trust in
Jesus," and Karlita Stump had
opening prayer.
· Lynn Runyon had the devotions
reading scripture from the book of
Hebrews. The Bradf&lt;Jnl Church of
Christ will have devotions.
Kathryn Johnson presided at the
business meeting in which officers
reports were given.
· Karlita Stump gave a report on
the update of the next Women's
tleueat in September announcing

The Reedsville
United
Methodist Women met at the home
of Mrs. Mamie Buckley recently
with Mrs. Nancy Buckley ,as hostess. Mrs. Grace Weber gave the
program readings, "On the Wings
of Prayer," "Faith is a Mighty .
Fortress", and "Aren't You Glad .
You're You."
Mrs. Buckley conducted the
business meeting. The minutes of
the last meeting were read and the
treasurer's report was given. 56
shut in calls were reported. A dis- .
cuss1on was held and the basement
project was to be worked on,
Games were played and refresh' ments were served to the abovenamed and to the following: Mrs.
Pearl Osborne , Mrs. Gladys
Thomas, Mrs. Frances Reed, Mrs.
Diane Jones, and Mrs. Emma
Durst. The next meeting will be at
,the home of Mrs. Durst

•

United MelbodiJt Church in Syra·
~ met recently .at the home of
Mary Lisle with Irene Parker pre-

lldiaJ.

The group will meet at the
church on Wednesday at 9:30 a.m,
to sew carpet rags and quilt in
preparapon for a llllzaar in the fall. .
Several money mating projects
were discusicd.
.
Easter baskets for the shut-ins
will be 'made and prl!yer closed the

Beulo Ward had the ·openinJ
prayer 1114 a reading by the ptell·
cleet, "The Book. • Devotions by
'
He!• Teaford Wll I reading on meetlng.
:Healing Minlttrlet." Officers
Altending besidel lhose named
lepiill fr'CIUIIo given.
.
were Martha Moore, Bob Smith,
It Wll DOted that II rugl had .Ann Sauvage and Jean StouL
. _ . . . , . . 1Uwae10ld.

'

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...

•

Bush plan calls for tax breaks tO spur economy
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON - President
Bush is sending Congress a $1.5
trillion spending plan that he hopes
wiU heal up a stone-cold economy
by offering a grab bag of tax breaks
for workers, students, home buyers
and businesses.
Bush gave a preview of the
spendin~ proposal, being unveiled
today, tn his State of the Union
speech Tuesday night. He vowed,
" !know that we're in hard times,
but I know something else: This
will not stand."
Even before the fiscal1993 budget arrived on Capitol Hill, critics
were charging that Bush's takecharge rhetoric did not match the
reality of his program.
They said the centerpiece of the
president's package, an effort to
pump $25 billion into the economy
this year by lowering withholding
rates, was more an accounting gimmick than a bonafide tax cut
The budget for the year beginning Oct. I, which doesn't need
congressional approval, would simply dole out to Americans money
they would get back anyway a year
from now in tax refunds.
The administration estimated it
will increase take-horne pay, starting on March I, by $175 a year for
the average single taxpayer.
Critics also ilecried the president's proposal to seek an additional $50 billion in reductions in budget authority over the next five
years by curbing or ending produc-

Here's The Ruts &amp; Bolts:
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care uf this newspaper.

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For all the heartwe.rm1Iig detalls, call

992·2156

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 ~Street, Po~~~en~y, OWo 45769

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Ttlal W :.....................................,...............................................:........, ............. .
Ttlal Mull'ld.M: .....,-......... --.--..................................................,............ .
ADS lUST IE IECDVED IY 5:00 P.l. FEIRUAIY 12 AIID PAID IN ADVANCE

-------------------------------------~---·--.-------- ·------

The Daily Sentinel

Police Department was called to
.assist. After brief questioning of
tile driver, it was learned that the
tapes had come from D&amp;M Pizza.
The Syracuse Police and shop
owner Marty Moriarty were noli·
ficd, checked ihe building and
found that it had been eltiered.
During the questioning by
Soitlsby·, Trussell, Deputy Robert
Trussell, Marshall Jim Connolly
Continued on page 3

,...--Local briefs-___,
Hit-skip accident probed
. Mei$~ County Sheriff's de~ties .are investigating the report of a
~ ac~ tllal occiu'ied in Oltve Township 011 Saturday.
According to the departrnen~ a vehicle weN off the roadway and .
thi'Qilgh the fence at Charles Hall property in Reedsville. ,. .
,It was~ that the _vehicle drove through the field and then
extled, ~gmg two S:CliOIIS of fence. Charges against a subject
are pending.
.
·
--

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
judge today e~tended a court order
that prevents Columbus Southern
Power Co. from imposing a 28.4
percent rate increase.
Judge Richard Sheward of
Franklin County Common Pleas
Court extended the ortler until Feb.
7, when he will Otle on a whether
to make it a permanent order.
Columbus S.outhem' is seeking a
rate increase of $202.8 million,
which would add $16.21 to ·the
average residential customer's
monthly bill. The company has
offered to· lower the increase to
$155 million until the PUCO
decides the case.

.

~(

"It appears that West Virginia
industries are indeed making
progress toward pollution prevention," the study said.
Toxic emissions in 1990 totaled
56 million pounds of 313 different
chemicals, down from about 69
million pounds in 1987, the report
said.
Of that 10181, 29 million pounds,
or about 52 percent, came from
West Virginia's 26 chemical
plants, down from nearly 34 million in 1987, the study said.
"The ultimate question is, have
chemical releases decreased? Yes,
they have, certainly on a statewide
basis," said Paul Hill, president of
the Charleston-based institute for
chemical studies.
He said that follows a trend
nationwide.
"I think it's a different climate
today . I think people are more
aware. I think the companies are
more aware," Hill said.
Kanawha County, the center of

the Kanawha Valley chemical
industry, had the most IDxic emissions in the state at 17.5 million
pounds, followed by Brooke County at 12 million, the report said.
Eight other counties had emissions of I million to 5 million
pounds: Marshall, Wood. Hancock,
Cabell, Mason, Tyler, Monongalia
and Jefferson.
or the emissions, 30 million
pounds of chemicals were released
into the air, down 29 percent from
1987, while water discharges of 2.1
million pounds were down 33 percent, the report said.
Land disposals were down 6
percent to 8 million pounds and
treatment center transfers were
down 15 percent to nearly 3.1 million pounds, it said. Transfers to
incinerators and landfills were up
12 percent to 12.5 miUion pounds,
it said.
"Things are not going to happen with one fell swoop. But it
looks like we' re making a dent,"

The company says the increase
is needed 10 pay its share of the
cost 10 convert the Zimmer power
plant in southwestern Ohio from a
nuclear operation to coal-fired .
Two other utilities shared in that
conversion.
The company said in Decemhcr
that it would impose the increase
under a state law thai allows a utility to impose an increase if the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
does not decide the request within
275 days.
Sheward on Jan. 10 prevented
the company from imposing the
full increase, which was to have

taken effect on Jan. 13.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel
William Spratley and Columbus
City Attorney Ronald O'Brien filed
a lawsuit, calling the increase
unconstitutional. The case is pending before Sheward, who scheduled
oral arguments for Monday.
The PUCO has recommended a
rate increase' of no more·than $1?0
million, while the Office of the
Consumers' Counsel suggested the
increase be limited 10 $85 million.
The office represents consumers in
utility rate cases.
At today's hearing, Columbus
Southern attorney Samuel Porter
objected to the extension, saying it

Middleport woman among 100 finalists in

By JUUE E. DILLON
Sentlael News Starr
What was at fust thoug~tto be a
practi~al joke by a family member
has turned out to be an opportunity
_to win_$50,000 llld a-new $10.000
SearsKenmorcappliancekilthcn
&amp;'
makeover for Gloria Gardner,.
M~ia.s County ,Sheriff Jamea ~- Soulsby rq10rU that his departPaulina Hill Rold, ~.
.
menlts tn,vcsii(l&amp;bnglhree breakine and eniCring Incidents that 1001c
Mrs. Gardner is one of 100
plaqc earlier this week.
finalists who will be competing in
The fmt occ!J~Ted at the c;.T. Chapman !'fSidence pn County ·
the Pillsbury Bake-off Cooking and
. ~oad 3.1. The door on the ~tie hOme was kicked in, and atelevt, Biking Contest on Feb. 24 at Di~~~~=:.' ~r. vtdeo pme, guns, briefcase and cam- .
ney's Contempo~ary Hotel near
·""·-- depu•'··
cal'.... the J
OrlandO, Fla.
' On
. MondaIJ. III&amp;n•ru~•,
,_ were
..iu 1D
im Harmon
Wbon Mrs. Gll'dner first
residerx:e on Satldy,J?eselt Roed in Lebanon Township. Acx:ordinJ
. 1e11eind nolificatlon that sbe was 8 ·
.
Caatlaued oa pilp ,J
·
·,. · finalilt lhe thought 1 member of
~--:-~-----.--......_..;._ _~_ _. _ her ramny TI8S playing a joking~ ·

Meios B&amp;
. E's i_nvestigated , , .

not provide examples of the programs on the hit list, although officials said many of them would be
repeats of programs Republican
administrauons have tried unsuccessfully 10 ~et rid of fpr years.
Bush ~Jeered the savings from
getting nd of unnecessary government programs at $5 billion.
The budget also proposed a
freeze on domestic programs ,
excluding benefit proplli!IS such as
Social Security, at thtS year's level
of $203 billion.
In addition to the change in
withholding .rates, the administration as expected proposed offering
a tax credit of up to $5 ,000 for
first-time home buyers.
The president also proposed
increasmg the $2,300 personal
exemption by $500 per child.
Bush also proposed allowing
families 10 set aside up 10 $2,500 a
year in a new type of Individual
Retirement Account in which th.e
money invested ahd the earnings
on that money could be withdrawn
tax-free after seven years.
Other proposed tax breqks for
individuals included restoring the
tax deduction for interest on stu·
dent loans and repealing the luxury
tax on yachts and expensive planes.
For businesses, the president
proposed accelerating the flfSt-year
depreciation that businesses can
claim on purchases of new equipment by 15 percent in an effort 10
get companies 10 boost invesbnent
spending.

Breakdown

Fiscal year 1993 outlay astima1a:

$1 52 tnll1on

Where It comes from
Corporate.income
taxes
Excise taxes

Where It goes
Grants to stales and localiUes
Other federal operations
Dapos~ insurance
1

Price said.
The instiwte for chemical studies said the drop jn toxic emissions
included a 39 percent decrease in
the release of cancer-causing chemicals.
Fourteen carcinogens accounted
for nearly 5.7 million pounds or 10
percent of the emissions, down
from 9 million or 13 percent in
1987, the study said.
The most common carcinogens
released were benzene and methylene chloride, a total of 2.8 million
pounds. Among chemical plants,
acrylonitrile was the most common
released at 964,123 pounds, the
report said.
Chemical plants, meanwhile,
reduced 10xic emissions by 13 percent and earci~en releases by 57
percent, the insutute for chemical
studies said.
"The dialogue between the
community and the chemical industry has had some results," said
Continued on page 3

Judge extends order prohibiting rate increase

Lawmen apprehend five
in connection with B&amp;E
Five individuals were apprehended at midnight Tuesday in
connection with the II p.m. breaking and entering of D&amp;M Pizza in
Syracuse.
According 10 Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Deputy Scott' TrusselL
made a routme traffic stop on a
vehicle in Middleport. While talk.
ing to the driver of the vehicle,
Trussell noticed a large box filled
with video tapes. The Middleport

uon on several -Cold war· weapons
systems. They said the cuts weren't
nearly deep enough.
"The most urgent challenge for
Congress is 10 put more muscle in
this anemic recovery plan and do
what it takes 10 revive the economy," said Sen. Edward Kennedy,
D-Mass.
Private economists, who have
said thai any significant anti-recession package would require $40
billion 10$60 billion in tax cuts and
extra spending , estimated that
Bush's program would be onetenth of that amount.
"this is a much smaller pro-.
gram that we had been led to
believe the president would offer,"
said Michael K. Evans, head of a
Washington consulting firm. "If
we have an economic recovery this
year, it will happen by itself. This
program won' t do it."
Bush's pet proposal to cut the
ta~ rate on capital gains, profits
made from the sale of assets such
as stocks, was back in an expanded
fonn, with the 10p rate reduced 10
15.4 percent for assets held for at
least three years, down from the
current 28 percent rate.
Bush's election-year budget proposed spending increases for a
variety of popular programs such
as space exploration, crime fight·
ing, Head Start and cleaning up the
environment.
But the increases were offset by
proposals to abolish 246 federal
programs. The administration did

Industry says it's more aware of environment
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- At least four West Virginia
chemical plants saw increases in
toxic emissions from 1987 to 1990,
while state industries overall have
cut emissions by 19 percent, a
watchdog group said.
"I think everybody has become
more aware of the environment,"
said Karen Price, president of the
West Virginia Manufacturers Association.
"It's just good business for
industry 10 look a1 waste. If they're
reducing their wastes, they're
reducing their costs,'' Price said.
The National Institute for
Chemical Studies on Tuesday cited
the decrease in toxic emissions in
its " West Virginia Discharge
Reduction Scorecard.'·
The Sllldy analyzed infonnation
from 117 plants statewide on air
emissions, water discharges, land
disposals and transfer of waste 10
public waste treatment facilities or
mcinerators and dumps.
.

• All greetings will be published in
a special section on Valentine'
Day, February 14.

2 Soctlono, 14 PagH 25 otnto
Allultlmedll Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 29, 1992

'

eagles ClasUJ[epares for bazaar
: 'J'he Eaglea Class of the Asbury

Vol. 42, No. 187

FROM THE HEART • President Bush delivers his State or the
Union message to a Joint Session of Congress Tuesday evening.
(AP)
,

• Your greeting must be received
by. Wed., Feb. l2, 1992

Low tonight In 30s. Hlgh
Thursday near 50. Pardy doudy

PageS

Schedule For Completion On February 14, 1992
llon'L miss your chance to thrill someone
npoc lal with ,Y0 \11' vcr.v own meooage of love .

Pam Perry will be the main spcalcer.
Announcements included the
Bradford Church of Christ revival ;
The Voices of Praise from Ken tucky Christian College will perform Feb. 16 at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ; and revival at the
Bradbury Church of Christ on
March 27-29.
Karlita Stump and Carolyn
Nicholson had a skit on servants.
The next meeting will be held at
the Dexter Church of Christ
Jane Hazelton had the closing
prayer and refreshments were
served.

The club will meet Feb. 4 at 7
p.m: at the home of Connie Hill.
Officers will be voted on and an
herb fest site will be selected.
A "friendship" bath bag will be
created. Members are to bring
about one cup of either dried lavendar, rosemary leaves, mint, comfrey, rose petals or thyme. Members will take home a bath bag that
will soothe and refd.
The herb-of-the-month will be
comfrey with the emphasis on it's
medicinal uses.

6-S

nual

reetin s ection!

RVH steering committee meets
The steering committee of the
River Valley Herbalists met rebt·
ly 11 the home of Connie Hill to
plan the calendar, set goals and
review the by-laws.
. Plans for the year include several programs to teach gardening,
new idea' on how to use herbs,
WQI'kshops, an herbal picnic and a
,_y" night OUL
· A theme for the year was selected and it was decided that the
group ,will study old and new
pinal uses of herbs.
·

Cards: ·
3-H; 9-C; K-D;

Copyrighted 1992

Preceptor Beta Beta gives
support to Meigs chamber
Founder's Day was announced
for April 30 at the Sportsman in
Athens. The theme is "A Time for
Us.!!
Members purchased tickets for
the Wy council service project,
"Prom Preview," to be held at the
Meigs County Public Library on
Feb. 16.
Members worked on various
crafts following the meeting.
A sack lunch with dessert provided by Donna Jones and Lillian
Moore was enjoyed by Velma Rue,
Belly Ohlinger, Maida Mora, Jane
Walton, Ann Rupe, Joan Corder,
Jean Werry and Eleanor Thomas.

Picj( 3: 897
Pick 4: 9702

Now Under Construction:

Heavy Metal-Hard Rock
ARTIST: Guns N' Roses.
ALBUM: "For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge," Van Halen.
NEW ARTIST: Firehouse,

Adult Contemporary
ARTIST: Natalie Cole.
ALBUM: "Unforgellable,"
Natalie Cole.
NEW ARTIST: Micha el W.

List, a student must maintain at 3.5
or higher grade point average and
be enrolled for a minimum of 12
semester hours.

c'rime prevention, fire protection
and prevention, savings bonds,
U.S.O., blood donor programs and
emergency preparedness.
Florence Richards, reporting :
from the American Legion Firing
Line said that stricter laws are
needed 10 stop the foreign agents'
influence in decision mating of the
United States. She stated new legislation should be that American
principals operating in foreign
lands be the same.
Closing ceremonies were held
and it was aMounced that the next
meeting will be hosted by Mrs.
Richards.

Ohio Lottery

Meigs boys
defeat Miller
five 78-.65

·

· .fl

her. After some convincing from
the Pnlsbury representative she
quickly realized the call was legiti·
mate and the excitement had
begun. ·
·
• She decided.to.enter the cornpetitionforthecballengeofit.soshe
created •nd worked out three
oopes according to the guidelines
set forth in the contest rules, She
created a casserole, some mapleRlazed ctaeenl roDs. and a pump~ CICICCDI checleclte, Then one
night it hit her- a buth idea..., a
deasert c:ieation uslag a Pillsbury'
Fudge Brownie Mill. M!s. Gildner
•YI it TI8S the kait ravor1re of her
ct;eatlbns .bUt oe lyped it up and
sent!toffanyway. ..
·
.'

The notificatioo came and Mrs.
Gardner fP!IIim! she had no rec&lt;Jnl
of the recipe other than what was in
her head. Not to fear .because she
realiml the ~ipe w. still on the
typewriter ribbon. So, she painstakingly took apart the ribbon to
retrieve .the recipe even though all .
the letters were backwanls. Now all ·
she had 111 do wu type the necessary paper work to aend back to
corilpetition olfteials. B._ - guess
what? No typewriter ribbon. ~ ,
many calls to local businesses she
·finally located a ribbon 111 store in
Gallipolis. The only problem beinf.
it ~ in use on a display mode • ,
~a pi~ of despolation the~
· Coatlaued 011 pap 3
•\1'1

was costing the company $500,000
a day in lost revenue, Columbus
Southern, a subsidiary of American
Electric Power, has 473,000 cus~mers in 25 of the state's 88 coun-,
ues.
Sheward said he would not be
able to rule on the complex rate
case sooner. He said his mother
died on T~y and that he would
be ore the job Thursday and Friday
10 auend·her funeral .
. Sheward also is presiding over a
lawsuit seeking 10 reverse clemencies former Gov. Richard Celeste
issued hcfore he left offiCe in January 1991. The trial entered its second day (9day'
'

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