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Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Social Security
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Meigs.Councy.. ~ _,;_(c..;_on_lla_uec~_,...;___P....;aae=.....;;~&gt;....;.·.;...·_.....__ ___;...._ __..;.._ _,:..;.·.

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More help for Medicare benefi~iaries

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On January I, 1993, the Govemmentwillex~aplogram that
helps people eligible for Medicare
who have limited income and. few
resources pay for some of their
Me4ic. arecrelated expenses,"·says
Ed Peterson, Social Security man~r in Athens. ''With the inaugura· lion or the 'specified low-income
~edicare b~ericiary' (SLMB)
program, the State will pay Medicare's Part B onthly premium for
· people whose income is slightly
more t~
· ·the national poverty
level."
e Part B premium is
$36.60
month in 1993.
A s ilar program is already in
·place for people whose income 1s at
or below lhl' national poverty level.
According to Mr. Peterson, u!ider
that program, called the qual1fied
·Medicare benefic1ary (QMB) program, the State not only pays the
Part B premium, but also Medi•

for non-certified employees.
. ment plani was up and running at a · Methodisi Copperative Parish .
· •·
· November
cost $1.2 miU1011. Amassed user made l;:hrisunas happier fqr 250;
Meigs County "went Democrat- . fees and ~t f1,111ds were ljSctl for families with donated food comcare's f.art A premium and a~
The programs differ in two fea- ic" on Electiqn Day." Among those . c;onsttucuon.
· . moditfes. .
:
deducubles and coipsurance turesotherthanincome:
who carHed Meigs:County were
In lhe wake of financial prob'Donald L. Lindeman of RacillC
charges..
.
• (or SLMBs, . States are · Presiden_t-el.ect Bill Clinto~ and ,· lems. the villtige of Middleport' was sentenc;ed to 20 years to life iJ)'
"To qualify' for the QM!l pro- required.to pay only the full Pan B Congressman-elect Ted Strickl,and. . 1 placed a (reeze on benefits and prison for the murder of Howard._
gram in 1m." said Peterson, "an monthly premium . .(Under the Local candidates claiming victory J w~ges for village emP,l~:
· Law~ of Long Bottom. LiJide.,
individual's annual income can not QMB program, States als6 pay the were Democrat ~anet Howard, who . After-school suspensiOI!S. for · man entered into a plea bargai
~xc.e~d $6,810; for a couple the "premium for Part A and other out· d~f~ted lo~g-ume County Com- . ~lementary $tudents w~e dtscon- agreemen~ the day his trial before al .
limtt 15 $9,190." Annual changes in of-pocket medical expenses·such aS mm10ner Richard !i· Jones; Demo- unued.after .the suspenSIOIIs;served· three-judge panel w~~Stb begin. . ·
the Ffderal poverty levels generally · deducliblesand co-payments.) and
crat Joljn R. ~ntes, who unseated . at Me1gs H1gh-School, b\:Ciime an
The Meigs County CommtSare announced in February and the
• eligibility may be retroacr.lve Prosecutin$ .Attorney Steven L. issue at a Meigs Local board meet- . sioners threatened to c:ance1 a conincome limits for 1993 will be pub- for 3 calendar months (liut.nol ear- Story; Shenff JamesM. Soulsby. ing.
tract with the Ohio Public Defend-·
lished at !hal time.
.
lier than January I, 1993) under the also a .Democrat; Republican Trea- .. The Public Utilities Commis: er's Commission. after the com"·
','To qualify for MediCllle Pan B SLMB program. (Uoder the QMB SU!f' Howard E. Frank; aild Roben . sipn of Ohio !IPPrQVed AEP's plan . miss.ion failed to seek in)J!II from':
premium help under. the SLMB progral!l there is no retroactivity.)
Harten bach· elected to.·a second · to tnstall scrubbers at the General the board about the replacement of
program in 1993 and 1994, an.indi"Only your Swe cah decide if . comniis$ionJr•s seaL Elected to the · James M. Ga,Yin planL The scrub-· Charles H. Knight. Willia!Q''
vidual must be eligible for the you're eligible for help from either .Ohio House of Repnisentlltives was ber proposal IS seen as a chance to Safranek of Athens received tho
QMB program in all areas except the QMB or SJ,.MB program," Mark Malone, aM ri:-elected to the save mining jobs at the Southern ap~intinent 10 fill Knight is con!
for, income," Mr. Peterson said. Peterson said. "So; if you're · u.S . .Senate. representing Ohio. Ohio Co11l ·Company's . Meigs tractual term, which ends June 30;
"The beneficiary's income can be income is low and you're a Medi- · was Deinocrat John Glenn.
· · Mines.
. ,
·.
1993, although at · least. ·~hne;
slightly more than the Federal care beneficiary, contact your State
Fol.lowing a ·close race, the
County offactals discussed the Pomeroy attorneys exllfCSStl!l mterc•
poverty level-·but not more than Medicare office or local Jiuman Meigs County aoard of Mental possibilil)' of coasttuctin$ a misde-. eSI in the position. ·
;:
110 percent of the annual limit in Services ~gency to apply."
. . Retardation and Developmental . mean ant jail facility m tf!eigs · One of Safranelc's(II'St cases atl!
1993 and 1994 and not more than
Submitted by Ed· Peterson, Disabilities' 1.8 mill continuing Coun!)'. using available state gtant . Public Derender was thafof J~p'-t
120 percent in !995." · ·
.Social Security Manager, Athens· levy request was approved on the monies.
.
E. Kanawalsky, 44, of Reedsville,.
'· ·
seventh try. The Meigs County
Linda Harman, 38, was arrested who was charged on December 19
Health Department levy and the and charg¢ with murder. following : with the shooting death of hi$
Eastern Local School District ' s the shooting deilth of her husband. . neighbor, Bernard Dyle Bar,. ,
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'levy request were also successful in · Michael, at theidGngsbury hom~.
Kanawalsky was ch~rged w!gl
passtng . . T~e, Southe~n Local
~nal~ I:· Lmde"!an of.Racme· aggravated murder !lnd atternp~
School,Dtsmc.tsbontltss~e •. a~d . wal~hlsnghttoaJ'!fYirial,opt- murder. The second - charge
.·
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the .Me1gs Local .ScbCK?I D1str1~t s mg mstead to ~ve hts case med involv¢ shots allegedly fired liy
lev~ request fall~. as did o~rallng before a three-JU!!fe panel. The · · Kanawlllsky at Jaw enforcement
'o·n Earth' ; by
h' ll h I'
. · levtes 10 the vtllages of utland case was setfor m on December officials who arrived on the scelie .
the evoluti·on of li'e
"
c 1 · t e c tmate, destroy food and Middleport.
.
· 21.
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'after the shooting was rep(med. •·
causing mass extinctions.'
·
plants and ktH. the dmosaur.s and
_An attempt to obtam extended . .
l)ecegll1«:t ·
.
William Buckley of Pomeroy
The radar pictures show Too· . most ~er ~ICS.
,_,. area telephone servtce between the
· John Lentes, 'Me1~s County:s was hired to rep!# James carpen!
tatis comprises two big chunks of
· Anzona s Meteo~ Crater and 992 exchan~e and the telephone ProsecutOr-elect, appom~ Pubhc. ter as.Superintendont of the Meigs
. rock, P!Obably held in ·Conlitct by scores of other holes m the ground exchanges· m Mason and N~w Def~nder Charles H. Kn,tght ·and Local School Pistrict. He will
gravity, he said. One chunk has ari . show Earth has been w.hack.ed H_a~en, w.y~ .. began. West Vu- Asststal)t P.P. : Chnstopher assume the duties in June. A forf
average widtlr of about 2.5' 'miles; repeatedly over the eons, JUSt like gtn1a off1C1als had . alrea.~Y. Tenogha ~s , hts ass1s!-3Dt p~~- . mer Eastern High School princip81•
the other is about 1.6 miles wide, the·moon and other planets. An approved th!l request. arid a senes tors for h1s temi, whtch begms m· he was employed by the Meig~.
he said.
t~co'!l1~g asterotd bl~w ~p over of h~ngs ~as ~xpected to beg!n ·January: . . · · ..
. County '80l!l'd of Education at tit&lt;
Scientists had thought Toutalis S1ben.11 m 1908, ~temng ~early. a un~.~~ the dt~tt&lt;m of the Publu;
J~son · R1ggs, Ree.dsvtlle, was time of his anpointment to th~
WJIS only' 1 mile to 2 miles wide thousand square.miles of umnhabu.- Utilt~es Com~~sston.~f Ohio.
dented sh.ock probat1on by Come superintendent's position.
. ; •.
until they took pictures as. it ed forest.
. . .
. . , William'?· · Billy LeMaster~· mon Pleas .court Jud11e F~ed W.
The Meigs. County Commi s~
whizzed within 2.2 million miles of
Last y~. a NASA repon e~u- 26, ~f Ractl!e• was arrest~d m Crow 10. Riggs .pled BW!tY. m 1990 sioners announced a $515,000
Eanh - a close call in asuonomi- . mated a 1-m-10,000. chance dunvg Flonda for h1s alleged role m the to cbarges. relating to his mvolve- waler line
lacement pro· t 10
cal terms- on Dec. 8.
.
; 'our l~fetime" that an ~steroid . murd~rs of a Gallia County man ment in the death of Vicllir .WiD of bC funded
the Issue Twrc~m•
"It's the most irregularly · m~asu"!ng a~ lea!!t one-thud of a and h1s son, Jeffrey L. f4Jiey .and Canal Wi.nc~ester, who v.:as, suuck mittee, which will, allow the Vil·
sllajled object we've_yet seen in the mile w1de. w111.?•! E~. destroy J~ffrey S. Halley, both of Galltpo- by a p1ckup m Chester.W11l s body · !age of Rutland to replace all exist-'
solar system,'' Ostro said. He food crops and posstbly end ctvt- hs.
.
was removed from. the scene of the ing ,;-liter lines The Issue Two
described the asteroid as ••two Jization as we know it."
Horace .Karr of Pomeroy aQd accident and found two days !titer fundtwUI be au&amp;inen~ by' a Colli
· highly irre~tJlar, cratered, battered,
If an asteroid wider than 3 m(lcll Gar.y "Denny" Evahs of Racine ov.er a banll: at west Shad~: His munity DeveloJI!Ilent Block Grant
jagged .objec.ts" that. have been c~ll1ded wtth Earth, "ev~n the sur. were elected as new members :of attorney •.m response, ftle~ a in the amount'of $S.1,300 approved
smacked repeatedly by other aster- vtval of the human spectes woul(l the Board of Prrectors of the Metgs mouon asking. Crow to reconsulor by the commissioners
..
aids.
be at risk,'' ·the repon said.
Countr"Chamber of Commerce,.
the 'decision, ci.ting errors in .
·
Ostro and his colleag11es
Toutatis is "among the 50
.Me1gs.Co.unty Chamber Dtrec- Crow'sentry.
.
· . . .
,bounced radar waves of( Toutalis largest Earth-approaching &amp;Steroids . tor Paula Thacker ·outlmed a defic1t · Syracuse.Mayor James Pape lllid
Old Gloty's start
.•
using a 230,foot-wide·antetma dish that we estimate to exist," Ostro in the operating bu.dget of the coun- Councilmen James"Hill and Jack . Although it wa:s never officially
at a National Aeronautics and said. An asteroid or comet the size ty di!velopment office, and · Williams told. the. county ciJmmis- adopted by the Continental Congress.
Space Amninistration. tracking sta- of Toutatis probably hits Earth approached the Meigs County sioners that lite London Pool would many historians consider the first Oag
lion in California's Mojave Desen. once every 10 million to 30 million Commissioners for addition~! fund~ not OJ'ICn fat the 1993 season with- of the United States to have been the
The radar echoes ·were captured'by years, the repon said
in g. No· action . was taken by the out $15,000 from th~ county.
· :--~tJrand Union I sometimes called Great
a 112-foOt-wide antenna.
·. board. At the same meeting, the
The county commissioners Union! Oag. This was a modification of
· In 1991, the Jupiter-bound
Payment proble.nis
commissioners' imposed a spendin£ decided against seelcin- siate ~t the British Meteor nag, wllich had the
Galilee spacecraft became the first . or the 5.7 million women awarded · freeze on all ~hases over $100.
· funds for the ~onstrucbon of a m1s.- red cross of St. G\'Orge. and lhe while
to visit an asteroid, takiilg close-up child support. 5 million were supposed
Controversy erupted .over 'lht; demeanant Jatl m the county, but cross of ~I. Andrew combined in the
photograplls of Gaspra, located in to re·ceive payment in 1989. Of the Meigs Cou'nty Litter Comrol pledged to .;levelop a plan· for con- · blue canton. For ttti!'Gran'd Union Oag,
the main belt. · .
·· women due payments. about half i-e-_ office's removal of political signs. ·structilin ofa fUn-service jail; using . six horizontal stripes were imposed oh
Scientists increasingly believe a ceived t~e full amount they were due.. Oepanment Director Kenny Wig- available s~ grant monies.
..
the red field, dividing it into t3 alter6- to 9-mile-wide asteroid walloped The average amount of child support gins maintaitied that no grant funds
. The M.eigs County. Bikers pro- nate red"and while stripes.
~exico's Yucatan Peninsula 65
~eceived in-'989' was $2.995, and the
were being us~d specifically for vided toys for children in 300
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.
million years ago, kicking up· . aggregate amount received in t989 · sign removal, .
needy families during the ChristFranklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd. presl·
enough dust to darken the skies, was $ll ..~ billion. 69 percent' of the
~orneroy's new sewag!l treatmas season, apd' the United dent of the United States, was born
$t6.3 blihon due.
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near Hyde Park, ·N.Y., Jan. 30, t882 ..

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By LEE SIEGEL
AP Science Writer
PASADENA, Calif. - When ;1.
big asteroid passed by Earth last
month, NASA scientists took. what
are described as far more, detailed
radar images of that kind of rock
than have ever been taken before.
And the images of (!Steroid Toutatis today are teaching scientists
new things about the kind of object
!hal may have killed the dinosaurs
and eventually might make humans
extinct.
The images are "1 00 times
more detailed than any previous
picture of a near'Eanh asteroid,"
astronomer Steven Ostro. of the
space 'agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said $unday.
Asteroids are big' chunks of rock
in space. Most are located in a belt
between Mars· and Jupiter, but
near-Ear.th asteroids have orbits
.that bring them close to Eanh.
"Every once in a while they
collide with our planet," Ostro
said. "They. have played a role in

Video magic
ressurrects Elvis
for birthday bash
By WOODY BAIRD
Associlted ~ess Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Elvis
lives! Or rather, the master tape
from · a !973 concert survives.
which is enough to allow him to
perform this week with the Memphis Symphony.
·
Whether he really passed away
in 1977 or is touring Midwestern
fast-food restaurants, Elvis Presley
wiU wiggle again in his hometown
. as J);lrt of a three-day celebration of
his 58th b~y Friday. .
The hoop" tncludes the release
of an Elvis poslage stamp. The 29cent commemorative stamp goes
on sale at 12:01' a.m. Friday at
Graceland, the Icing's former residence. Nationwide sales begin' at

noon.

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· Pick 3:
.542
Pick 4:

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Vol. 43, No. 177
Copyrighted 1183

Vote en~ds . in tie;.Reed to name council president
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By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
.
Pomeroy May~r Bruce Ref?d
will ·name lhe prestdent of the village council following a tie vote by _
council at their regular meeting on
Monday nighL
The council held its organizational meeting and came to a tie
vote when selecting its president.
Current President j..arry Wehrung
was nominated by Council member ·
Betty Baronick, and John. Blaetln!"'
was nominated by Councilman Bill
Young. Voting was done by ~t
ballot, with three members voting
for Blaettnar and three· for

Wehrung. Reed, who is required to
break tie votes, will determine the
matter at council's next regular
meeting.
Reed re-appointed Danny Zirkle
for another year as fire chief. He
will announce committee appointments at the next meetin~.
.
Bill Qui~kel of Davts-QUtckel
Insurance of Pomeroy attended the
meeting to discuss last week's
action accepting a bid from the
Wiseman Agency of Gallipolis for
Blue Cross/Blue Shield health
insitrance.
Quickel contends that his agency could have provided the same ·

policy (and had submitted a bid for were commended by Reed for their .
A resolution was approved
Young reported that a sidewallc
that policy) and, said last night that efforts during -the past year.
which established temporary was needed near the intersection or
he feels a local agency should be
It was noted !hal no delinquent appropriations for the new year, Spring Avenue and Main SueeL He
given preference over an agency income taxes exis.t within the vil- which will allow the village to also suggested· the installation of a
from out of town. The policy which lage, and that over $10,000 in make payroll payments in the fol- drop box for utility and parking
was approved th~ough the Wise- delinquent taxes were colleC\ed lowing departments: police ; ticket payments. Baronick comman Agency was unchanged from through Deem's efforts in 1992. mayor/administration; cleric/trea- plained or a propeny on Lasley
the 1992 policy. Qui~kcl said that Rought was credited for assisting surer; special revenue fund. and Street that needed cleaning.
council's contention that the Davis• in the collection of $69,000 in enterprise (water).
The Mayor's Report of fines
Quickel bid was not approved due . unpaid fines. Those not complying
Council approved the expendi- collected fQr December was
to a policy re-write fee was not with payment plans on old fmes are ture of up to $700 for the repair of approved in the amount of
valid in that the policy was no.t now subject to license revocation a gas tank on a village fire truck:
$7,877.50.
rewritten, and therefore, the fee did and/or jail sentences, Reed said.
Reed issued a reminder th.a t
Present were: Reed, B;aronick,
Rought reponed that $754 in old · Chrisunas trees will be picked up Blaettnar. Young and Wehrung;
not apply.
Pomeroy Police Chief Jerry fines have been ,collected since·Fri- from curbsides on Tuesday. and Councilmen Scott Dillon and
Rought and TaJt Administrator day. Meter collections for the year that they may also be dropped off Thomas Werry; and Clerk Kathy
Teresa Deem were present. and totaled $27,082.50.
• behind the junior high building no Hysell.
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later than Tllesday for pickup.

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SALE

DININ·G·.ROO.

TABLES, C.HAIRS, HUTCHES, , SIDEBOARDS, D.RY ·.SINKS, CUPBOARDS; PIE SAFES ·
AND CORNER CA~INETS.- HUGE 'SEL.ECTION!!
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. (THIS IS.,ONLY A PARTIAL LISTING.)

Reg. $499.00 ·

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TRESTLE• TABLE,
REG. $839.00

4 CHAIRS .......: ......................SALE ·...,99
.s

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WALLA WALLA, Wash. (AP)
- A man who confessed to the
grisly sex slayings of three boys
and warned he woutd kill again
was executed on the gallows early
today in the 113tion's first hanging
since 1965..
·
Westley Allan Dodd, 31, was
pronounced dead at 12:09 a.m.,
four minutes after the hooded
inmate droiiJ)ed through a trap door
and fell the
length of his 1-foo,t.
1-inchrope.
.
Given the option of hanging or
lethal injection, Dodd had asked for
hanging because, he said, he hung
the body of one of his victirris ·and.
wanted the same treannenL He had
dropped all appeals and asked to be
allowed to die, warning, "I willldll
and rape a~ain and enjoy every
minute of it. •
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· Late Monday. the srate Supremc
Court cleared the way for the execution when it issued a one-sentence ruling rejecting a bid' by 26
Washington residents to halt the
hanging as cruel and unusual punishmenL The vote was 7-1.
It was Washington state's first
exec~tion since 1963.
The last hangings in the United
States
were in 1965 in Kansas,
SOPERINTENDI!NT SWORN IN • New
Couaty Interim Superintendent ol Sc:hools Michael
· Wbalen swon Jato olllce Monday evenln1 lly Muon County Clerk Diaiul Cromley, shown above. when four murderet:S were put io
Whalen bepti dutiel today, repladna Grant Sheppard, whose reslguadon became elrectlve Jan. 4. Whalen death. Among-then, were Richard
wiD hold the posltloa uDder Sheppard's coatract until June 30, wben either board members wBI negotiate Eugene Hickock and Perry Edward
Smith, the subjects of Truman
a new coall'llc:t wltb Wbalen, or hire a new superlatendent. (OVP photo by Mindy Kear.ns.)
.
Capote's book "In Cold Blood ....
"I was once asked by somebody, I don't remember who, if
there was any war sex offenders
By JOHN K. WILEY
D.eath penalty opponents had and clinical way the state put to could be stopped, ' Dodd said in
Associated Press Writer .
gone to coun Monday to argue that death ch.ild killer We~tley Allan · his final statement. "I said no. I
. WALLA WALLA, Wash.-· I hanging is barbarous, cruel and ·Dodd today surprised me.
was wrong.
expected it to be gruesome.
unusual punishment But the quick
At 12:02 a.m .. a screen in front
''I was wrong when I said there
of a second-floor window in the was no hope. no peace. There is
death chamber was raisell and the hope. There is peace. I found both
31-year-old Dodd s~e his final in the Lord, Jesus Christ. Look 10
words, a hard-to-hear m~e of a the Lord and you will fiod peace."
last-minute religious convers1on.
Mter Dodd dropped through the
When Dodd finished, at 12:04 . trap door, there was little movea.m .. the screen was dropped and ment other than the gentle swingthe silhouettes of two nangmen ing ,of the body before a curtain
could be seen. One placed the was drawn across a window
A former Mason County bank 12 years Is. data processing super- black hood over Dodd's shoulders.
employee pleaded guilty in federal visor, until a merger occurred in The other chewed gum as he placed ·
the noose ·around Dodd's neck and
court to embezzling $12.500 ·in· a 1991.
.
it snug behind his left ear.
check . diversion scheme last year,
In a related case, the guilty plea made
At
a.m., the chamber's
while the guilty plea of another was of Patricia Ann Clark of Gallipolis, stillness12:05
Vehicle damage was. light to
was broken by the crack of moderate
there were no injuries
refused by the judge.
· Ohio, also a former Peoples Bank the trapdoor
springing o~en~ in three but
·Sharron Y. Smith of Gallipolis · employee, was refused by Judge Dodd's bound b(ldy
accidents
and
dropped mto. Monday investigated Sunday
by
Pomeroy
Ferry, a former worker at the Haden. ·
in a lower window.
..·
Peoples Bank of Point Pleji.Wit,
Clark is ctuu,ged with em~z­ sight
.
There was no violent movement Police
At 12:26 p.m. on Sunday, police
faces up to 30 years in prison and a zlin~ $3,516 from the bank m a or noticeable twitching. I watched
$1 millioo fine when she iS smten- sim1lar checlt diversion scheme.
an accident on Lincoln
Dodd's hands, which were slightly investigated
Heights.
Mary E. Bentz, Pomeroy,
ced Marcil 22 in U.S. Disuict
The Daily Mail said Haden crossed ·in front of his groin.
. was ·traveling west .on Lincoln
Court.
stated he would not accept Clark's
Corrections Deparunent offi- Heights
when a car .driven by Jerry
Smith admitted Monday she cOn·· plea after the woman appeared to cials had said earlier that if .th~y
. tinuously sent her ,penona1 checks be uncertain about her involvemerlt . prepared correctly for. the nations E. Day, Pomeroy, pulled from a
through the ,federal Reserve Sys- and 1:! Intent 10 embezzle in. the first hanging since 1965,the 7-foot, parking space into- the path of the
tern instead oT deducting them from
check diversion.
1-incli drop would snap. Dodd's Belitz vehicle.
her accounL
Joe Ellison, president of Peoples neck with very little suffenng.
The~ was moderate damage to
tile
passenger side anc! front quaner .
Chief U.S. District Judge Charles Bank of Point Pleasant. which .has
Ai 12:06 a.m., Prison SuperinHaden n allowed Smith to reniain branches in both Mason and New tendent Tana-W oriJI closed the panel of the Bentz vehicle, and
light da01age to the driyer's side
fn:e on a $10.000 unsecured bone{. ·Haven, tOday assured residents that blinds on'the lower chamber.
and
front quarter panel of the Day
AccOflling to the Charleston Daily their money is safe in the bank.
Corrections
Department
Mail, fede!al prosecuton said
"It ~ important to note that this spo!&gt;esman Veltry Johnson picked ear.
Day· was cited for no insurance
Smith embezzled $36.500 and has was uncovered by our ow!l internal up a white telephone and
agreed to make re.titution far !hal, audit staJT and not by federal bank announced that a doctor had sef the and failure to yield the right of
way.
· amount under a plea agreement te$Uiaton or by an outside audit," time of death·at 12:09 a.m.
.
At 7:04 a.m. Monday, .the
with authorities.
•
said Ellison. "It was discovered
Tears welled up in the eyes of
, Smith apparently told the judge early and all the pwper authorities Darrell Lee, the fawyer who had parked truck of'Richard Buzzard,
she wrote checks on .her personal were notified immediately. It is also helped Dodd cut through a,Ppeals 32, Racine, drifted from the Beacon Station lot where it was perked
III:COUnt and when lhoee cl!ecks important to note that Our CUS · so ihe execu'tion could go qwcldy.
Chester Road striking the
were ~ to the bank, she, tomers' IICCOIIIIII were not affected
Jewell Cornell. the mother of ontci
side and back dopr area of
driver's
would send the checks 10 the by thiJ transaCtion."
.
one of the boys Dodd tilled, patted
Federal Reserve System rather than
The bank presi4ont also · ap- Lee on the back. Clair Neer, father acar belng~ven by Bot)nie WalkdedUCting the chec:ks froll) her
C.~ttdcld the professioltalism of the of Dodd's two other victims, shook 'er, 55, RK'
moderate ,damage to
There
counL She kept the checkl circulat's empiOf!* 1M aMiu them Lee's hand. Both parents quickly
the
Walker
vehicle
but no visible
ing in the btlnkina ayltem and her with the suc:cesa of the bank. He left
chamber'
. .
damage
to
Buzzard's
truck which
III:COUllt wu not clcbi!Cd.
added the llnancial institution just
~
when
It
hit
the
guard railSmith, who nn for assessor in . COJDpleted its mOSt bssful year
ing.
Buzzltrd
was
.
not
cited ·
EDITOR'S
NOTE
AP
the May primary Oleclion on the in Its 27-year history.
.
atthoush
K.
Wiley
he
repcnedly
hid
leCt
the
Corre1ponileat
Jolin
Rtpublican 1ickct, worlted in the
EW1011Isaid the !ICherne wu dis·
motor
running
when
he
left
the·
wu
one
of
12
repotten
wllo
wit·
ptoof cq. bnent of the blnk. She covered · in June, with both
·
·
wu formerly employed with employees being discharged June 5. aeued tbe exee•tloo of Westley vehicle !llfked.
Allan
.
D
odd
•
At
!2:,
1
0
P·':"·
Monday
on
West
Central 'l)'ust,ror 18 years. the -

run

Maon

SOFASI LOVES·EATS ~nd CHAIRS

~:;.T:=.~AR TABLE.4CHA1Rs ........;..........sALE ,669

PEDESTAL TABLE, 4 CHAIRS ........................... SALE

319 ·

Reg. $1,049.00 .
·
s
. FARM TABLE, 6 CHAIRS .., ................................. SALE 839
Reg. $1,499.00
.
,
DOUBLE PEO. TABLE, 6 CHAIRS ................ SALE
,

~~:~~9.~PBOARD ............................... :..,..... SALE '179·
R~. $429.00

,

,

,

PIE SAFE ............ :.............................................. SALE

339

·(Listed Are Only· A.Few Of T
_he Ma.ny vtag Room Suites O• saie.) .
u_

Reg. $819.00 Country Pial~
. . .·.
,. . . .
.· . ·
'
. . . ~
SOFA WIWING CHAIR .................................~ .. ,.......... ,..........,.... ;....... Sale .u
Reg. $1 ;029.00 C9ntemporary ·· .
· . .· ' ,
· .·
I .s
SROFA$7&amp;49COHOABJRE.R..K
...U
...N
...E
...............,........,~ ........... ~ ...............:... ~ ............ Sa e 829
. . .
. eg.
•
·
·. · · · , ·
· .
·.
· ··
s 99
RECUNING SOFA •. .'...............................................~ •.•...•.•.••............••... Sale 5

59

1 199

.

.~:'J'e~cf:Rog .................:.:...........:....... ~ ........·.......SALE '259.

'899

RSeOgF.A$1&amp;,13C
. 8H.ooA
· IRCRA':MASTER FLORAL . . .. . . . .. . . . .
Sale
.
.-. .............................................................
Reg. $ 1•029·00
.
·
·
·s81
Reg. $689.00 ~RAFT.MASTER ·C()UNTRV· . ·. ·
. · .·
·
s
-::.sQ~UA~R!!!E;_.!:P~ED~-~~:!.!4~CH~A~l!;!R~S::.;
.. ·::;···;.:;"·;.:;
.. ·:;::"':;::"·::.·~SA~L~E~~2..-{ SOFA &amp; CHAIR ...........................~ .........................;........................... Sale 559
Reg. $2,569.00 BERKLINE
.. · • · ·.. · . ..
• · .· , ggg
(
....'?I RECUNING· SECTIONAL .~ ....:.••.•.•....• ~.• ~ •• ~ ...................~·········· ..····Sa Iii 1 ,
.
TOWNE SQUARE ·
............• Reg. $809.00 ROWE ·
. ·
· . .. · . . . . . .
·
. ,
SOFA, Blue Floral ...................,•..•••••.•...•........•.... ~ .•:~······················-~·-··Sale . 49,
Reg. $1,219.00 CRAFrMASTER BEIGE , . .
·
.
·
SOFA I&amp; CHAIR ..~ ...... ~ .. ~ ...,..................4.:•. ;.~ ..... ~1. ·································· Sale '979
Reg. $829.00 BENCHCRAFT .. ·. · . ,
.
. ·..·
.
.
'&amp;&amp;g
OAK &amp; ALDER
'

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

.

.· GLIDER · .
'ROCKERS

•BEAUTIFU~

DURABU FRAMES

, Starting At 6nly

$1·· 99

6

SOFA. l CHAIR •...........•••.....•.·•..••,. ...••....•..••..•·..-.................................. S•le .
Reg. s~9s.oo
.·. .
·· &lt;
. · ·
.
· , ._ .
QUEEN ·sLEEPER 'SOFA .................:...•.
~ •.• ,.••••. Sale 559
. -.~ •.• ;._............................
''

-=·

the

STORE

·mEE
.DELIVERY

Moi.clay 9:30·8:00.

Tuesday-Saturday
9:30~5:00

Formt;r Peoples Bank
employee pleads guilty
to embez~lemerit charge

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between witnesses and the death
chamber.
.
Death penally foes had held
prayer meetings, vigils and demonstrations across the Stl)te ill the ·
hours before the execution. Priwn
officials arreSted five death penalty
Opponents after they climbed a
snowy embankment near a ·guard
tower. They were in jail early
today.
About 150 people in favor of
Dodd's deatli gathered outside the
prison and cheered his hanging.
Some set off firecrackers and
sparklet:S.
·
Dodd pleaded guilty to the 1989
murders of three boys in the Vancouver area and was sentenced to
death in 1990. The crimes were so
grisly that some of the jurors who
sentenced him sought psychiatric
help afterward.
·
Dodd admitted he Stabbed IO
WEsTLEY DODD
death brothers William 'Neer, 10,
the state to confine sex offenders
and .Cole Neer, 11. in a park and
indefinitely until they are deemed
strangled '4-year-old Lee Iseli the
following month.
. cured.
Dodd said he abducted lseh
from a Portland. Ore .• school playground and took him to his ap;lrt~f
ment, where he molested and tortured the boy and finally killed him
the next morning. Dodd hung the
corpse in. a closet before dumping
The first or two public bearthe nude body jn a lake.
·Once described by a pn~secutor ings regarding Pomeroy's revi;
as "predatory and unconaoUable," talization proe•s will be held
Dodd had been arrested several tonigbt (T~esd11y) at 7 in tile
times for child molesting by his a'!ditorium at Pomeroy Village
mid-20s. For years, his pllltem was Hall. All business and property
to m!)lest, get caught, confes_s. owners in tbe busiaess .dlstrlct of
serve a little time and undergo a Itt- Pomeroy, as well as the generll)
public are encouraged to attelld.·
tic counseling.
Mike Stroth of SBA ConsulUntil the youngsters' slayings,
tants,
.Pomeroy•s revitalization
he never served, more than 10
consultant,
will mttend the meet·
months in prison.
ing
to
answer
any questions
Two earlier cases involving
known sex offenders, a 1988 mur- regarding tb'e application pr.o~
der and a 1989 mutilation, coupled cess.
Tbe second public hearing will
with the Dodd murders sputTed the
Legislature to pass a ~ackage of be Jan. 19 at 7 p.m. at tbe IIUditolaws aimed at habitual offenders. rlum at Pomeroy Villa~e Hall.
The centerpiece is a law permitting

First two public
hearings tonight

No one hurt in three Pomer~y accidents

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Wasbrington killer executed by hanging

Witness: Dodd hanging was quick, clinical

•

1 Section, 10 Pogeo 25 c:ento
A MuHimedla Inc. llewsplfMII'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Tueeday, Janu.,.Y 5,1993

[,1

lnderson's •HAPPY NEW YEAR .SALE

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~ toDtgbt m·upper 2411.
Clolllly. Wedlltlday, cloudy,
blab Ia low 4GB. .

3959

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Saturday's concert uses the
same kind of technological wizardry that allows Humphrey Bogan
to sell soft drinks on TV wtth Paula
Abdul, and Natalie Cole and ·Hank
Williams Jr. to sing duets with their ·
long-dead fathers.
As Elvis, on a · large video
screen, croons "Amelllcan Trilogy" from his 1973 Hawaiian concert, the Memphis orchestra will .
play and his former backup singer~
will take their accustomed roles.
"We've gotten the~master voeal ,
track from RCA so we could have
just Elvis' voice, and we've eliminated all· the music and the backgro~nd _singers, " said Todd Morgan, a Graceland spokesman. "The
orchestr-a will play live and the
singels will sing live backup. Elvis
will sing l~d."
~
. A rock 'n' .roll show Thursday
evening and speeches by Posunaster General Marvin Run yon and
Mayor W.W . Herenton will precede the sllimp's release.
Fans picking up stamps at
Graeeland can have them canceled'
at the center's small post offiCe or
the half-dozen mobile postal stations being brought in for th'e
affair.
For the first-day sales, Graceland has 35,000 stamps attached to
special covers saying "I was
there." They'll go for $5 each and
can be bought only at Graceland.
Also on Friday, buses will take .
. fans from Graceland to Presley's
. · birthpll!ce. in nearby Tupelo, ~ ..
w they can have stamps canceled
there. .
·
•
(lraceland, where ·Presley died
Aug. 16, 1917, draws fllOre than
650.000 visitors a year.
•
Elvis fans have lobbied for the
~p for years, and ihe Posial Service held a· nationwi~ election last
summer to ~!ect lts ai't worlc. Vte
fans went for a 1950s portrait of
Presley.
· Robin Minard, a Postal Service ;
spokeswoman; says. 300 million .·
stamps have been printed and a
· second issue of 200 million is
planned..

.Ohio Lottery

.Duke gets
.·scare before
88-84 victory

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"d.
b
Radar P·zctu re·.s provl e . est
·l ·ok yet at near E arth. a·stero.z"d

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Mondiiy, January 4, 19~

Pomeroy-Middlepo.rt, Ohio

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Main Street. police investigated an car. Humphrey was not cited.
accident involving Heather There was moderate damage to the' '
Mitchell, 19, of Middleport, and rea( and passenger rear quarter
Lewis Humphrer. Jr ., 33, or pan,el of the Mitchell vehicle~ and
Pomeroy. The Much ell car was · light front end damage to the
·
struck in the rear by the Humphrey Humphrey ~-

'First Baby of 1993' contest
underway in ;Meigs ·County
The search for Meigs County's
"First Ba"by or 1993" is underway.
Residents of Meigs Cdunty who
have become the parents of a new
baby this year are invited to apply
for the title and gifts,contributed by
18 area merchants.
.
According to tile rules the parents must submit to The Daily Sentinel before noon· on Jan. 15 either
a copy of the birth certifieate or a
signed statement.from the attending
physician giving the date and exact
time of the ·birth. _
While it is. unlikely that two
babies would be born at the same
time on the same date, in that event
the .winner will l!e.named by· the
con~t committee.
Once a wi1111C2' has been named.
the parents have until Jan. 31 to
claim the prizes from the contribut·
ing merchants.
. ·
· '
. The prizes for the F'IISl Baby of
1993 include an ice cream cake
from Dairy Queen, a box of newborn Ultra Pam~ from
Foodland.
.
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a $25 gift certificate from Vaugh~
an's Cardinal; a $20 gift certifteate
from Powells; a $1 S gift certificate
from The Shoe Place; a baby
arrangement from the romeroy
Flower Shop; a $10 gift certificate
from Buttons and Bows.
A baby cup from Clark's Jewelry Sto.re, a three piece feei!er set
from K&amp;C Jewelers, a $10 gift ceitificate from Swisher and Lohse, a
$5 gift certificate from the Fabric
. Shop, a $5 gift certificate ·and 10
.percent discount on all prescriptions until sia years of age rrom
The PrtlStl iption Shop; a free meal
to the pmnts from Crow's 'Family .
Restatll'IIDL
A $10 saving account from the :
Home National Bank, Racine; a ·
$20 gift ~ertlftcate from Fruth's :
Pharmacy, a $10 gift cenificate ·
from the Middleport Department
Store, a Bible from Mill Street .
Books, and a ·$1 0 gift certifiCate . .
from hoplts Bank, Mitldlcpljt. •
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Commentary
The ·nlill.y Sentinel

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S-elections reveal Clinton's .style
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111 Court Street.

Wagman

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Tuescliy, Jan. 5
Accu-Wealher• forecast

conditions and

By Tbe A5sociated Press
Partly \o mostly cloudy skies
will prevail over Ohio tonight. h.
will be colder with lows mostly in
lhc:20s.
A weak area of high pressure
will cover Ohio on wednesday.
MosUy cloudy slcies ~ expecled.
Highs should range from the lower
~ Os in the norlhwest to the lower
40s in the rar·south.
.
. The record high·on th is dale in
Columbus was 61 in 1946. The
record low was 16 below in 1884.
Sunset tonight wjll be at. 5:21

MICH.

•
IToledo I 34• l

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place him a$ trade representative
than as White House chief of staff
- the job most assumed, early on,
that Kanror wOuld get.
The FQ&amp;gy Bottom establis~ ­
.ment is IIIC)re than a little apprehensive at the naming of Warren
.phristopher as secretary o( stale
and the passing over of Fgreiglf
. Service vetenn Thomas Pickering
- now ambassed&lt;r to- India - in
fava of Clifton Wharton as under·

!Mansfield 14~

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IND.

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'~ EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice presldeat and colum·
)list ror The Associated Press, has reported on Washiagton and
national politics ror more than 30 years.

Berry's World

_J_o_s_e.:p;_h_..s_,:;_e_ar
___

An old argument' for a new era

Pragmatists thought "The
Who won th.; right to govern? . sary, lhe. cautioUs Pragmatist view
Behind tbe scenes, foreign policy had great appeal. In the less·dan· Radios" were too "anti-comlilu·
officials allegedly representing gerous. post-Cold War world, Ide- nis~' ' too zealous about promoting
democracy, and a little uncouth.
George Bush are trying to shape alism has gained added .stature.
.
long -range decisions in direct
They were not controlled by State
opposition tp the views of Bill
· but by the semi-autonom~s Board
Clinion. On ~ surface the issue is
for International Broadcauing.
the "Israel ltransmitter." Just
They used ,budget funds that !bight
beneath lhe sUrface is an old argugo to VOA 1111d S1a1e.
·
ment that never goes away.
.
(It's the ultimate pragmatism, say
Recently PragmatistS have COV•
.
During the campaign there werr,. ' IdealisiS.)
etously eyed $180 million approdistinct differences, along ci1!5Sia
The argument .didn 'I end wilh priated for a new field of short·
lines, between the candidales. Clin- the Cold War: Idealists are saying wave transmitters in Israel: A proton's position was a.textbook _expli- push democracy. forward in com- ject of the Rat!ios, the transrnitten
cation of lhe "Idealistic" school of munist China by attachiDB human are designed to beam home-service
thoughL He said Americln foreign rights conditions to trade policies. signals to .restive Islamic popula·
policy should stress promoting PragmatiSIS say d,on't get. tl)e Chi- ·lions in South Cennl Asia, as well
democracy in the world. He criti· . neseangry.
· ·
as to olher,African and Asian Jbca.
cized Bush for not being assertive
One pan of the argument has lions.
enough as a democracy-purveyor concerned American international
(I served as vice chairman of
-· not . in Russia, the Balkilns, radio broadcaaing.
BIB, as ·well as on several bt'oad·
Bosnia or China.
Pra~sts liked the "Voice or culin11 Sludy commissions.)
B~sh toqk tbe "Praamatic"
Amenca," operating under the
As lhe Cold Wu ended, Praa·
postllon. It his always been pushed iitdirect auspices of the State · matists tried 10 ldll off the Radios,
by t~e State Deparbncnt. (Often · Department. ldealisu said VOA . despite protesiS from East Elltll·
• regardless of the president' s was fine for general overs.,as pean democratic leaders. Not only
views.) PragmatiSIS have no prob- broadcasting about America. But was the plan foiled, but Idealists in
. lem with democracy but often they wanted Jllore auertive jlro· Conpeu moved to establish a new
place a higher value on stability. pammins to non-free advenlries. "Radio Free Asia." The $tate
, . It's a dangerous wmld, they say, so They boosled ''Radio Free DepariJIIent opposed RFA., But
let's not rock the boal,. and let's Europe" and "Radio Llbeity," candidlte Ointon endorsed it, and
which beamed fair but 1011Jb pro. pledgCd an ~ pro-democ(8·
make deals, even wilh bad guys.
It is a serious argument that his daiiOCIIICy "home service" brold· cy agenda.
· Pragmatisu are now ignoring
tippled through American foreiiJI casts, featurin4 local news, to the
·policy for a long time. During the repressed .~ov1et Union and theiJ- the election resuiiS. An onpubli·
cited "deputies meetin~" was
Cold War, facing a nuclear
,
.adver- East European 181dliles•

Ben Wattenberg

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~·· «&gt; ...,~
JIKA,'""
by

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"I've already blown a New Year's resolution.
I found a job!
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scheduled Ibis week 10 recommend
that Bush dump lhe lsratl project,
America's. bi.gl!est single prodemocracy mitillllve.
It is a complicated issue. More
than ~ .milli9n h~ already been
spentm Slle preparation. New tech·
noiQgies might replace shon-wave
broadcasting. Environmenlalis!S in
Israel h~ve temporarily held up ·
construction. An alternative site in
Kuwait has bee11 proposed, but .
Kuwait is not a safe spot for lin •
American installation that will ,
broadcast during Islamic turbu· :
·
,,
lence.
One thing is clear. This is a :
major decision that will shape •
AnieriCJIA public diplomacy ror :
decades, and it should not be made •
before a new adminislration lUes •
omce. The Clinton transition team :
has privately asked ~l'it be laid •
over for cOmprehensive review.
Bush, who has run a gracious ,
transition, should accede to that •
request Not Iii do so would be nei- :
m J11'811111atic nor idealistic.
:
Ben Watteabera, a •lllor ·re~. ·
low at the Amerleaa Enterprlle .
Illltltute, II author IJI "Tile FlrA ;: ~ ·
Unlv.,..l Natioll," pullllllted 117 .
Tbe Free l'rtll 8lld a Q'Hieated

writer for Newspaper l!:ater~rbe
AIIOClallcm.
·

t

p.in. Sunrise Wednesday will be at
7:51 a.m.
·
Arouad the natioa
Rain stretched •from upstate
New York to. Alabama and snow
lingered in pans of tile Wesi early
today.
A winter s10nn that took shape
Monday ov.er the Pacific Ocean
progresSfXI slowly east and was to
bring more rain and snow through
Wednesday, the National Wealher
s·ervice said. Portions of North
Dakota and ~ ontana received
snow earl&gt;:, today and snow was

•

, expected in !he Sierra Nevada in reported in India na , Te,..as alfd;
California.
•
other Pl\rtS of the Midwest and
Schools and roads were closed Solllhwest on Monday,
·
in much of eastern Washington on
Temperatures were spring-like
Monday because of heavy snow • in the East. Amo ng the record ~
and gusty winds. Nine inches of !llghs Monday were readings of 66 :
snow fell .ih Spokane ·and 8 inches m Baltimore and 72 in Jac kson , .
fell west of Port Angeles.
Ky.:The high temperature for the ·
Elsewhere, .rain fell today as far 'nation was 84 at Naples and Slirll·
north as Albany, N.Y., .as far west sota,Fia. ·
·
as Cleveland and as far south as
High temperatures were forecast :
. A.tlarita in advance of a cold front in lhe 20s and 30s in the Pacific ·
extendinjl from the Great Lakes to Norlhwest, !he teens and colder in :
lhe MissiSSippi Valley. ·
· lhe Roclcies, the high ~Os and 30s :
Scattered streei n ooding was over much of lhe Midwest and the . ·
.
50s and 60s along lhe East Coast.

Judge O'Brien processes 33. court cases

Expect big·players in fight
over special prosecutor law

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Colder t~mperatures return to Buckeye State :;·

OHIO Weather

r'

The 'process' needs some ,~up~ating·.

The Dally Sentlnel~l---3,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
'

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WASHINGTON (NEA) IQI.
iive clearly UJIId IIIIIIY fiom ClinACCllldina to insiden c~ to the . In the end, Cli~ton turned his ton' s old campaign staff, but it
PomeroJ', Oblo.
Clinton cabinet selocuoa effort, · back on lioth, nammg former Den· ·showed that the president-elect
, DEVOTED TO THB ll'fJ'BRE8T8 OJ" '11m DIGS-IIA!ION AREA
some val111ble insights about' the ver Mayor Federico Pena. By nam- repays his poliliciJ debts. ·
president-elect can ~ ·draw~. not -~.-:-._;.,_.....;_ _ _ ___,_
During the campaign, Kantor who was in charge of lXoad strate·
So much rrom woo Clinlm picked, Rob~&gt;rt J.~
gy planning - often came into
·but from the process that was used.
"'
• conflict with the milch younger
One lesson from the fll)ai round.
•
. of cltokes: As IJI'Csident, Bill Clin- · ing a minority, Clinton showed group running day-to-day camROBERT L. WINGE'IT
·•
ton will bave 11ule time for inn- how polili!'llly admit be is; be was paign activities. After the election,
Publisher
able to go to botb Daley and Blan· · when KantOr's illw flrlll began to
·
mural bickrillg. ·
)
~the selection process, the . chard and ~ they bad to be sacri· · brief clieniS on lhe flrlll' s insider
. .
two
nast~cst fights devel
over ficed in the name or diversity.
CHAIU.F.,NE
HOEFLICH
position in the ntw lldmiilisaation.- secretary.
PATwlmmEAD .
J
Much
the
same
thing
Ilappened
Lawyer
Christopher
-is well
.
who
would
become
rtation
many
of
Kantor's
enemies
on
the
Assistant Puhllsher/Contrvller
General
..,. Manager
in the bittet wrangling between big Clinton staff cried ethics violation, )Qiown as a ~dgatilr and negotiatOr,
secretary aDd U.S, aade
business and big labor's candidales staged a mini-coup and ousted but not as SOIIICOIIC who is a deep
live.
.'
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They $bould be less lban 300
.Chicago Mayor .
Daley's for trade representative - Paula Kantor from the Iransition leaderlhinker about foreign policy. Wbar·
:: words. .All letters are subject to. editing ond must be oign!"' wit~ name,
shi
•
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.
'
Stem
and
Alari
Wolff.
Things
got
ton, a longtime advtser to presi·
brom,
banku
WiliJiun
Daley.
and
: ~ sddress and lelepbone number. No unsigned letlers will be publisbe~tters
so
heated
in
this
COntest
that
when
deniS,
has no foreign policy experiformer
Michipn
G6v.
James
Blan, ~ut in Clinton's eyes Kantor
• should be in good lasle, add!essins issues, ni&gt;t petSOnalities.
the
names
of
several
colnpromise
chard both bedly -ted the tran!lredeemed himself by his running of ence. Pickering, on .the other hand,
portation post. Both marshaled candidates was ,put forward both tbe Little Rock, Ark., economic has been line Of State's leading forimpressiveircei to back their lhe ·Stem and the Wolff united to summit. When Clinton found he eif.l policy planners wilh his own
•
bids. Both
ps spread terrible shoot them down. 4t
had to tum elsewhere to, end the • wtde range of contaciS around the
In tbe end; as he did with the trade representative pitched battle, world.
storieS about the co~uences of
naming Ihcir ·
- Daley would tr1nsp0rtalion post, Clijlton turned he turned to his old friend.
To many in State, the passing
•
...
be a tool of COIISIJIICiion inlcresiS ~is bacl&lt; on both !he ~~~~~d
Some in' the transition are call- oyer ofPickering; colipled with the
and labor unions wanting the chose his campaign rnanager Mick- ing this llie "Jox-in-theo(;hicken- selection of foreign .PQlicy expert
. ,;
By WALTER R. MEARS
biggest share of infrastructure ey Kantor. .
coop" appointment. If Kantor's (as opposed-to defense expert)
..
AP Sped81 Correspoadent
rebuilding dollars; Blanchard
The choice of Clintoll campaign law finn was lootinJ to cash in on Anthony Lake as National Security
·. WASHINGTON - · When Congress seiS about reviving the law for w,l!illd be a toOl of 111 auto industry m1111ager Mickey Kantor for the his insider statU$, 1t is probably Adviser, signals that Clinton
special proseCutors in alleged high-level wrongdoing, it's going to be oiit to eviSCCJBie auto safe!)' regula- position of U.S. llade reptesenta· much more valuable for them to intends to run foreign policy out of
some show - big names in bitter dispute over the lml.COnaa case and
the white House, uSIDS Christo·
P.lesident Bush's pardons.
pher to implement pohcy rather
:. Senate and House hearings on a new version of the independent coun·
then create it, as James Baker did
sellaw that expired !)ec; 15 probably will be lhe forum for the first Qfli·
in the Bush YC!I15·
c.iallook ~t those. mosec:uti~ ~d the six.Chrisbnas Eve oanlons that
Insiders say that the selection
infuriated the special proseCutor, Lawrence E. Walsh. Senior'Republicans
procesS is already starting to show
were .po less angry at a Walsh operation they, said had become a political
the real innuence that both Vice
aliack on Bush.
President AI Gore ahd first lady
The special prosecutOr law dated from 1978, a post-Watergate reform
Hillary Clin.ton will have in the
measure enacted on the Jlt'Cmise that !here is ~ conflict of inlerest in hav·
new administration. The two were
ing lhe Justice Department ov~ prosecutibns against officials of the
among only five individuals presame administtatlon.
sent for every Cabinet selection
. There have been 11 independent counsels, all but two of lhem named
meeting. While bQtb publicly deny
to investigate cases involving Republicans, simply because the system
it, several people are 10 lhe cabinet
lYl!.S set up to deal wilh lhe execubve brarleh they have controlled for 12
beca~ they were championed by,
years.
one or the other, and several are out
Power shifts to the DemocraiS on Jan. 20. And that would seem to shift
in the cold because they· wer~
tile political incentive for renewal as well. Republican opposition in the
opposed by the two.
Senate barred lhe extension of the independent counsel law last fall; sponMarli down the name of old
sOrs said lhey'd be back in 1993.
.
· .
.
·clinton friend and Little Rock
A Democratic adminisaation would be the larget of any -special p~­
attorney Bruce Und5er. He .has no
cu'wrs in the next four years, and that presumably will al1er GOP attitudes.
official transition' pos1tion, but he
~' · Still, Republican anger over the six-year, $32 miUion Iran-Contra case
was involved in every key selection
'arid iiS 1992 campaign fallout- a 1986 memo damaging to Bush was
and will almOSt surely be offered a
released lhe Friday before .the election - is going to be a factor in the
key White House slot if he is will·
renewal debate.
ing to move his family to Washing"'There's talk of changing· the system to make future prosecutors
tim. Everi if be stays in Arkansas,
aeyoun_table fPJ: their operations and subject to limiiS on their spending.
he will still remain a close confi1\s lhe sysle"l has operated, they are coon appointed, lhen independent.
dant
of !he presidenL
·
Ail atlomey general can rue a special prosecutor for·misconduct, subject
Robert Wqman is a syndlcat·
,.0 court review.
ed writer for Newspaper Enter-' President-elect Clinton has said he favots renewal of !he independent
prise A5sociation.
. t ounsel law. He also has expre_sscd concern at any appearance growing
out of the Bush pardons that government officials are beyond the law.
:. .. Bush said nobody should read that-into his pardons of former Secretary
of Defense Caspar Weinberger and five other Iran-Contra defendants.
"'fr .....
"Nobody is above the law," he said Wednesday.
·
' ' The president also hired a lawyer. Walsh said after the pardons that
!lush was a subject of the investigation for failing to turn over all of his
I am testing your patience, I deserved rejection). Then came mudgeon's advice: Tell them to put become a regular thing until 1959.
lt~s. He accused Bush of misconduct and cover-\Jp.
·
know. by asking you to read one Bush and Thomas (who didn't it where the sun don't shine. It's Still, itsoundslikedelayeddisaster
' .. •"Whether criminal or not, it shows lhe elhics of lhe administration in a more, piece about dte "process," deserve it).
.
·rour government. You pay for it. to me.
.
\iiay that I could not have~monstraled," Walsh said in a Dec. 26 inle!'· but as a professional Opinion PerNow come presidents, pols and They worlc for you. They can jolly
Term ~iiS for legislators. Yes, •
view with The Washington Post.
,
•
son, I cannot resist offering a few
-------~-.,.--. • w.ell do it in lhe Qpen, where you yes, a IJUiidrillion tjmes yes. Do
,. · Weinberger said Walsh's accusations were scurrilous and called lhe more deeply pondered and superbly
can keep an eye on !hem.
away Wllh !he elite ruling claSs that
whole special prosecution system un-Anlerican. "If he should find some
Do away with life tenure for now runs Congress and you will do
lew:r from President Bush to Gov. Clinton in four or five years, he may r~ ~~tsfew readers the __·
judges. Another hideous idea. The .away with slavish dependency on
siill ·be in operation," Weinberger added in a Monday ABC-TV inter- trouble right now. If by "process," .
Founding Fathers insulated the special interests, thus putting lhe •
view. " ... He is ... out of control, has operated from completely political you think I mean what rendering pundits wilh baskets of ideas Qn judiciary for a reason: To keep it pubHc interest at the top of the pri-'
motives and has auempled to coerce false testimony ..."
·
plants do to cows, tum immediately how to restore harmony to the pro- above politics. For proof of their ority list once again. A beuer "prowalsh said the Weinberger pardon completed a six-year cover-up and to the funnies. If by "process," cess. The Spear Foundation has wisdom, keep your eye on.Clarence cess" will surely follow.
·
showed "lhat powerful people wilh powerful allies can commit serious you think I mean what photo labs sbldied them and offers this guid- Thomas, who will swplise evecyConsultation between executive :
crimes in high office ... wilhout consequence.''
do to ftlm, go buy,a People maga- ance on a few:
one with his independent attitude. and legislature. This may be the
Bush said thtl complaint that he beHeved some people were !he law · zine . But if by ·" process," you
The Secrecy Solution. George And remember you read it here ritost workable solution of all. PresWJIS Sblpid.
'
~
.
know lhatl am referring to ho\V the Bush, ex-CIA chief, said all the first, in case you want to look it up. idents used to distribute listS ef ,
~- :That's lhe ftrst installment, wilh more to come. Sen. Carl Levin, DSenate J~diciary Commiuee, rabid . ta11c of pubic hair on Coke cans was
Quiclcie hearings. This si:heme, potential judiCial can&lt;lidates to Sen- :
~ch ., said lhe case and lho pardons would be reviewed when he holds
ideologues and various interest too much for him and he suggested· touted by Sen. Herbert Kohl, D· ate leaders and solil!it advice on •
Se'naic hearings on !he independent coilnsel bill, allhough he called lhat groups make mincemeat of future sessions be ·held in secreL Wis., among others, calls for hear- who might pass muster with rela- :
the second best forum and said it should have been played out in court
Supreme Court noininees, you are Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman ings wilhill three or four days of a live ease. The eroblem with the :
He said Walsh and Weinberger are among !he wiblesscs his panel will 'in the right place.
of the highly secretive Anned Ser· nomination. The tlteory 1s· that idea is lhat pro-lifers would' hale it, ·
want to hear.
The Clarence Thomas conf'uma- vices Comm iuee said much the administratiOn handlers' wouldn ' t pro-choicers wriuld hate it, poniog- ·
" In addition. whatever Walsh decides about funher prosecution efforts, tion hearings brought to a boil an same. ''Now we have seen the con- have time to polish the nominee raphers would hate it, religious fun- •
be. has a rmal repon to me when he's done; Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., odious brew that has been steeping sequences of fulrllling the momen· and special ·interest zealots damentalists would hate it, the ;
s~d the report and recommendations probably will reflect lhe prosccusince Richard Nixon defied the tary desire to accommodate the wouldn't hav.e time to devour him kooky left would hate it, the cxaa- :
iOJ;' s anger at Bush over the pardons.
· .
doctrine of comity that had guided public's 'right to know, "' he or her. The fust post-confinnation chromosome tight would hate it. •
. Hamilton, who presided at the congressional investi~ation of Iran-Con· relations between the White House Yo(itiled.
'
discovery of a speedily approved Maybe that's .what's wrong with l
ira five years ago, QPposed the pardons apd said hearmgs on lhe·special and Hill and tried in vain to stuff
This is an abominable notion justice's cocaine -habit woqld kill the process. We have been letting •
P'\Jsecutor bill are the right place to review them.
two controversial nominees down that authoritative poople often turn Ibis cure-all in a·second.
fanatics run the show. ·
• :It won't make any difference.
.
.
the Senate's throat. Then came to when the democratic process
No candidale appearances. Until
Joseph Spear Is a,syadlcated ,
·• A president's power to pardon is absolute. In eiercising il, Bush cited Ronald Reagan and his ill-fated gelS a little messy: Hid!: it, don't let 1925, nominee$ didn't even appear writer ror Newspaper Enterprise ·
precedeDIS - but notlhe most controversial of them. That was President nomination of Roben Bork (who the public participate. This Cur- before lhc Senate, and it didn't Assodatioa.
; •
Fprd 's Watergate pardon of Richard Nixon in 1974. Ford appeared volun..
tarily before a l-louse comminee to defepd itlhat faiL
.
That's a precedent Bush is not likely to pursue. allhough Levin said he
:&gt;#Ould be offered an QPponunity to lestify if he wants.

.·

-

Tuetday, January 5, 1993

Page 2- Tlle DallySentlnel
Pomeroy-..Middllport, Ohio- 1\Jeeday, _January 5, 1993

• •

~

J

•

J

..

-----------Wemher--------~
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, .mostly cloudy . The
low in the upper 20s. Wednesday,
mostly clo~dy . The high in lhe low
40s.
·
Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:

Thursday, fair. Lows in Qpper
teens to mid·20s. Highs in low 30s
to around 40. Friday, a chance of
rain or snow. Lows in upper_teens
and 20s. Highs in low 30s to low
40s. Saturday, a chance of rain or
snow. Lows mostly in the 20s.
Highs in lhe 40s..

Meigs County Court Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien processed 33
cases last week.
Fined were:· Gregory Sellers,
Portlimd, seat belt violation, $25
and cost~; Stanley Starcher, Rutl~nd. overwidth, $15 and costs;
Jennifer Johnson, Racine, speed,
$27 and costs; Manuel A. Ballasea,
Lyons, Ill., speed, $23 and costs;
Dwaine E. Allen, Pomeroy, failure
to cover load , $10 and costs;
Luther 0. Jones. Jr., Ripley,
W.V.a ., speed, $22 and costs ;
Robert S. Smith, Washington,
W.Va., speed, $20 and cosiS; Tara
D. Moore, Chesapeake, speed, $26
. and costs; Louis A. Altier; Coming,
speed, $23 and costs; Lewis E.
Humphrey, Pomeroy, speed, $25
and costs; Lillda J. Lam ben, Mid·
dleport, speed , $22 and costs;

..

Masanori Mori, Rio Grande, speed, in jail, suspended, two years proba: cbarge, $100 and costs, one year&lt;
·$23 and cos~e:;auy L. Gertler, tion; Richard A. Peyton, Jr.,- Dex· probation, failure to control, $25 :
Columbus, s
, $28 and costs, ter, improper backing, $10 and and costs; expired license. $75 and :
seat belt vio~'on, $25 and cosiS; cosiS; Roben J. Lawrence, Raci~e. &gt;f cosiS, five days in jail, suspended ·
Roben C. G er, Columbus, 'scat speed, $22 and cosiS, scat belt vio- )Vilh valid operator's license within :
lation , $25. and costs; Mark C. 30 days, consuming alcohol uncle&amp;
belt violation $1~and COSIS.
James Milam, Little Hocking, Gard, Middleport, disorderly co~- age, $75 and cosiS, one year probli::
speed, $20 and cos~$ , scat belt vio- duct; $15 and costs; Mark /11.. Gard, tion; Robert Landers, Pomeroy, ·
lation, $25 arnj cosiS; Tony L. ~­ Gallipolis, disorderly conduct, $50 theft, six months in jail, suspended,
.low. Gallipolis, speed, $27 and and c.osts, assault, six months in restitution, costs, aggravated men'
costs; Arthur Campbell, Parkers- jail, suspended to 15 days, S.lOO A\:ing, six rnontl!s in _jail, suspendburg, W.Va., speed, $22 and .costs; and costs, three years yrobauon, ed, concurrent wtth previous
Timothy J. Tripleu, Portland·, seat alcohol assessment; Pau R. Stein- charge, two · years probation,
bell violation., costs; Tonl Stover, metz, Pomeroy, loaded firearm in a restraining order issued; Gregocy
Pomeroy, speeding, $20 and costs; · motor vehicle, 30 days in jail, sus- Hayman, Long Bottom, reckless
Minnie Mae Causey, Coolville, pended, one year probation, $100 operation, $100 and cosiS, disordet;
passing bad checks, $25 and COSIS, and costs, fu-earm forfeited to State ly CQnduct, $100 and costS.
restitutib n; Robert Clark, Jr ., of Ohio.
.
•
Forfeiting bonds were: ChristinC·
R.acine, paSsing bad checks,. $25,
Stephen Brumft~ld, Pomeroy; Argo, Austell, Ga., expired plales,
. suspended; costs, and restitution; . reckless operation, $100 and cosiS, $60; Jonathan Frazier, Lancaster;
Michael L. Anderson, Stewart, driving under suspension. 30 days seat belt violation, $60; and Danny:
petty theft. $75 and costs, 30 days in jail, suspended to five days, con- Bentley, Coolville, seat belt violacurrent with consuming ,alcohol tipn, $60.
'

--Area deatbs· - - Weather in 92: Billions in damage, billions in savings .
Thurston Stone, Jr.

Helen E. Blish
Helen E. McDade Bush, 85, 6
State St. , Gallipolis, died Friday,
Jan. I, 1993, at St. Elizabelh Hospilal Norlh, Hospice Unit, Covington, Ky., following a brief illness.
Services will be hekl 2 p.m .
Wednesday at Grace United
Methodist Church, with the Rev.
. Joseph Hefner officiating. Burial
will be in Mound Hill Cemelery.
Friends may call at lhe McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Wetherholt
Chapel, Gallipolis; on Tuesday
from 7-9. DAR services will be
beld at6:30 p~IJI. Tuesday. , .
Pallbearers will be Lynn OUrs,
Thomas Barclay, Marc Cote, Ron
McDade, Jay Moore, and Joe
Moore.
•
In lieu of flowers, contributions .
may'lbe made to the Sam~_el
Bossard Memor ial Library, 641
Second Ave., GalliJXIIiS, jl5631. , ,

.

'

Donna Smith

Donna Jeanette (Phillips) Smilh,
· 57, died on Friday, December 25,
1992, in Tampa, Fla. She was formerly of Middlepon.
She is survived locally by her
brother, Jack Phillips, Middlepon.,

•
Stocks
Am Ele Power.....................33
Ashland Oil,....................... 26 1/4
AT&amp;T.. .......:.......................50 Ill
Bank One..............;............53 1/4
Bob Evans .........................20 3/4
Charming Sh0p.................. l7 3/4
City Holding......................20 Ill
Federal MwJ ........:.......... 16 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 68
Key Centurion ................... 22 3/4
Lands End ..........................27 3/8
Umited Inc ....................... 27
Multimedia Inc...... ,...........32 1!2
Rax Rcstawant. ................. J/16
Reliance Electric .......: ........20 1/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17
Shoney's Inc . ...............:..... 22 Ill
Slar Bank .......... ,................ 36
Wendy Int'l... ..................... 12 Ill
· Worlhington Ind................22 7/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewl vi GaUlpolls.

The Daily Sentinel
(ll8P81tii-IIO)

Publjahed every aftomoon, Monday
lh""''lh Friday, Ill Coarl Sl: , P""'""'!',
Ololo by lho Ohio V.U.,. Pulollohl•
c....,..yJMalttmodia Inc., P....,..,•.
Ohio 4&amp;781, Ph. 1182-21116. Socond elMo

po11i:op pold at fomoooy, Ohio.

·

.

Memblr: The - ..... Pnu, 11M the
Ololo NIIWI(IOJIOI' Aaodolicn, Nail-'
Advertilint ~Dtative ; BranUm
· No-per S.leo, 733 Third Aveoue,

...._--to

New York, New York.l00!7.

POSTMAI!TI!R: 8eNl

The IJolly .llt&gt;nlblel , Ill · Court St.,
I'Dihlnl)', OHio 415769. •

BIIIIICiilPTJON IIATU
Bream... 0r Motwllo•c.

One Week...........................................$1.80

Cine Month......................................... M.96

o..v............................................. N:J.:w
• IIHOI&amp; COPY
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0.0~ ....................... :... ... ..............211

Subocriben ft&lt;lt -

--

..

Cenlo

,.·pay lbo corri·
~Tho

u.-. ""' ..

«may nmllln ""-'"' -

O.fly S...llnel ... •
-~~~ ....... CnOIII wOI ....... -

12

No aullocripdoM by mall ponnlllod In
.,.... ·where home •nif!lr' •ntc. ia

,:::.

avallabl&amp;.

~

-=~~~

.

. •a w..u. ................._.....................nt-14

211 w..u. ..................._...............- ..143.18
52 w..u. .......:.................................$14.16
OoUidallolp eo••.,.

•w-........._...............................!40
u-..........................................
52 w..ta: ........-...............................

.lo
•

WASHINGTON (AP)
Record hurricane dam,age cost
Americans billions of diillars last
year. But mild 1empe~ures saved
a couple billion in heating and
CQOiing costs, !he National Wealher
Service reported Monday.
The year 1992 was typical in
that it w.as a year of extremes: of

more tonladoes than ever before month's precipimtion," said Dr.
and fewer flOods than normal, of Ronald D. McPherson of the
cool summer temperatures and National MeteOrological Center in
mild winter ones, of fewer than • Camp Springs, Md.
average hurricanes but extreme
"We are unlikely to get reserdamage from !hose that did devel- voir levels back to normal this
op.
. ,
year,' ' added National Weather
The major continuing weather Service hydrologist Frank P.
story is the West Coast drought, Richards . And he noted that the
now entering its sevenlh year. ·, . January through MarCh outlook for
. Heavy snows in D!:cember have lhe West is for below normal rain
been welcomed in the western and snowfall.
states, where 'the snowpack is a
Hurricane Andrew, cutting a
major source of wa1er:
swath of death and destruction
· "This· is a good sign, but through Flori~ and Louisiana, was
remember this is a six-year lhe year's biggest weather maker.
&amp;ought, and it is unreasonable to
It was the third siron~est hutri·
expect it to be overturned by one ciule on record in the Untted States,

Thurston T. Stone, Jr., 60, of
Middlepon, died Monday, Jan. 4,
1993 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·.
.
Born on Feb. 20, 1932 in
Athens, be was lhe son of lhe late
Thurston Stone, Sr. and lhe Laura
Nelson Sione. He was a n:tjred production control•manger at Kaiser
Aluminum Co. He was a veteran of
lhe U. S. Air .force, and a member
of Drew Webster Post 39, Ameri·
can Legion, and the· Bradbury
Chtllth of ChrisL
He ·is survived by a daughter
.and son-ill-law, Cathy and Rick
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
Clark, Racine; two sons; Daniel
woman who won $12 milHon in lhe
Ray and Richard Allen Stone, bolh
of Middlepon, three grandchildren, Ohio Lottery's Super Louo di'awing said she won't be cooking chill
regardmg Pomeroy's revitalization
Kenny, Belh, and Chad Clark, all
SOLOS to meet
or Racine; two brothers, Lawrence anymore. ·
· SOLOS meal for all interested process will be held tonight (fues·
Patricia Watson said Mm\day singles at pomeroy United day) at 7 p.m. at the auditorium at
Stone of Westerville, and "Tommy
' S_tone of Pomeroy, two sisters. Mrs.- that her part-time job at,a cafe, Melhodist 'Church will be Sunday Pomeroy Village Hall. All business
Bob (KayrRope and Mts. Ricli8rd , where chili was her specialty, is at 4 p.m. Call Rev. Eunhae 'Kce at and property owners in the busi(Neilia) Seyler, both· of Pomeroy; now in !he past.
992-5788 or Rev. Sharon Hausman ness district of Pomeroy are
.
''I'm
still
numb.
It's
unliclievencouraged to aucnd. Mike Strolh,
and a spec1al friend·, Brawn Her·
at 985-4312 for details.
able,"
Mrs.
Watson
said
after
makSBA
ConsultaniS, Pomeroy's reviman, Racine; a sister-in-law, Mar·
ing
her
Super
LOtto
jackpot
claim
talization
consultant will auend the
jorie StOne, Middleport; and an
Program planned
11tlhe
lottecy's
headq\(&amp;rlers.
aunt, Avanell' Bass, Pomeroy, sev·
"Growing Through Grier• ·group meeting to answer any questions
Mrs. WaiSon, 50, of Chardon , will be meet Sunday at 7 p.m. at regarding the appUcation process.
enil nieces and nephews. ·
.
Besides his parents he was pre· wagered S:4 .for four plays in 9uper the Chester Un'ited Methodist'
Monthly meeting set
ceded in death by his wife, Phyllis LotiO on Saturday prior to Saturday Church. Call Rev. Sharon Hausman
The Lottridge Community CenMae Hawley Sto,ne, in 1978, four night's drawing. Sl)e said she let at985-4312 Cor information.
ter AsSociation will meet Thursday
brolhers, Gene, Bob; Donnie, and the lottery's computer randomly
make !he selection.
Grange to meet
at7 p.m. Everyone welcome.
Pa~l Stone, an infant sister and a
When she checked tier game
grandmolher, Edilh McKenzie.
The Meigs County Pomona .
. .
Funeral serv.ices will be held ticket S~nday, lhc top row matched Grange will meet Friday at 7:30
Country mus1c n!ght
,
Thursday, ~ p.m. at the Fisher the drawing - 3-8-16-3-1-33-38.
p.m. at the Rock Springs Gmnge
.· Country Mus1c N1ght at the Lot"I just couldn 't believe it. Fve Hall. Rock Springs Grange will be tndge CommuR)ty Cen~r _wtl_l.. be
Funeral Home in Middfcpon with
Saturday from 7 p.m . to midmght
Tom RunyonA fficiating. Burial . never won anylhing. So I hid it (the the host. ·
All bands are welcome. Refreshwill be in Howell Hill Ce111etery. ticket) right away, but I won't say
Friends may call at the funeral where in case I win again ,'' she
Soup supper
meniS will be available. Everyone
home on Wednesday, 2 to 4 and 7 said.
.
The Burlingham Modem Wood· welcome.
The .single parent of six adult men of America will hold a soup
to.9p.m.
children and grandparent IJf five supper (oysu:i· bean and vegetable)
AA group to meet
s~id she wil! share her winnings on ,Saturd11y ~t 6:30p.m. at the
The Pomeroy group pf AA will
w1.1h her fam1ly, ftx her house and Modern Woodman liall. Those meet Thursday at 7 p.m . at Sacred
buy a new car.
.
. · auending bring a dcssen or salat!. Heart Catholic Church. Call 992Mrs. Watson bought the wm- Officers will be elected. Everyone 5763 for information.
·
Licenses issue·d . '
,
Marriage Jiccl\ises have been ning ticket at a convenience stbre welcome
·
D of A to meet
issued in Meigs County Probate in Hambden in Geauga County.
She·wiiJ
receive
26
annual
pay·
Ballroom
dancing
"
The Chester Council No. 323,
· Court to Michael Joe Cremeans,
The Middlep&lt;in Arts Council Daughters of America, :will meet .
18, Middleport, and Angela Dawn meniS of $461,538 or 53.16,154
Hickman, l6, Long Bottom; and afler federal and.state tax w11hhold- ~ ill offer ballroom dance lessons Tuesday at 7 p.m . 'Officers are
· T~eginning Jan. 12 from 7:30-8:30 urged to attend to be installed .
Timothy Eugene Davidson, 34, mg, louery offiCials swd.
· Pomeroy, and Judy Muriel Sayre,
t'
p.m. for beginners and 8:30-9:30 Officers wear while.
I
U
1003
I
X
p.m. for advanced dancers. Cost is
32, Pomeroy. ·
Dance planned
S7per couple per lesson: Call Mary
Wtsc
at992-2675to
regJSter
.
.
There
will be a round and
Divorce filed
square
dance
Saturday and Ian. 23
An action for divorce has been
Texas
dancing
.
frOPl
8-11
p.m
. at· the Russell
filed in Meigs County Common
The
·
Middlepon
Arts
Council
Building.in
Milllield.
Music will be
Pleas Court by Susan E. ~racy,
AKRON,
Ohio
(AP)
The
will
offer
Texas
dancing
lessons
provided
.
by
Out
of
the
Blue. John
Middleport, against Merlin H.
mayor's
court
system
in
Ohio
has
beginning·Jan.
13
at
7:30-8:30
p.m.
Russell
will
be
lhe
caller.
_Public
Tmcy,,Jr., Pomeroy.
· come under fire again, !his time by for beginners and 8:30-9:30 p.m . . invited.
a federal court lawsuit lhat c hal· for advanced dancers. The cost is
Judgnieitt sou,aht
Workshop planned
A judgment action has been Jenges !heir 'ability to provide due $7 per cpuple per lesson ..Call Mary
process.
·
A financial aid workshop will
Wise at992-2675to register.
filed In Mei s County Common
Ohio
is
one
of
only
a
few
states
be
held Jan . 18 at 7 p.m. at the
Pleas Court by The Associated
that
still
permit
mayor
's
courts,
Meigs
High SchOol library for all
'Booster'-to meet
Press, New brk, N.Y.• agains1
which
allow
certain
village
or
E.T. B
ling, Inc., doing busi·
1'he Meigs J tinior High Aca· Meigs County seniors and parents.
ness as Radio Station WMPO, municipal mayors to judge traffic demic Boosters will meet Thursday Guest spealcm will be John Hill of
Middlepon. The suit alleges default . offenses and other minor•crimes. at 7 p.m. at the ·cafeteria at the the Umversity of Rio Grande on.
!he Financial Aid Form (FAF), and
on a news service contract in the There are riearfy 700 such courts junior high,
Melony Greenwood of Bank One
amount of $30,988.44, including operating in lhe state. ·
on student graniS and loans.
· ·
$6,914.05 of actual accrued· ser·
Meeting slated
vices provided. •
The_
rust
of
two
public
hearings
In recent years, the mayor's
courts have been criticized as out·
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Appointment made · ·
dated. A proposal in -the stale Leg· EMS units answer calls
446 4524
' Wanda Eblin ha ~ been re- islaturc three years ago to abolish
M;eigs ·Emergency Services
app~int~d to ,the Me1gs &lt;;ounty . the courts failed af1er th~ municipa! uniiS answered the following calls
Pubhc Ubrary s Board of DlrCCtors lobby argued that villages rehed for assistance: MONDAY • 5:31
by Meigs County Common Pleas heavily upon the money their p.gt ., Racine squad to Bashan
Court Judge Fred W. Crow III, The mll)'or's courts bring in ..
Road, Perry Hughes to .Veterans
term is for a period of seven years.
The lawsuit filed Monday in M~morial Hospital; 7:38. p.m.,
.;
u.s. District Court contends rman- M1ddlepon squad to Overbrook
1 cial reliance is lhe reason mayor's Center, Helen Sams to Pleasant
. coUrts cannot provide defendaltts a Valley Hospital; 7:46p.m., Rutland
fair and impartjal trial.
squad to Meigs Mine 31 , Donald
Marcum lo Pleasant Valley; 8:31
p~ .. Middleport squad to Olivet
·
Aaomeys
Augustin
O'Neil
and
CLiiVELAND (AP)- Hete ll(t
Thurstol! SlOne' t0 VCieriiDS:
Monday night's Ohio Louery · Melissa Graham-Hurd claim in lhe Siree~
~uit that the mayor's C'ourl in subur· II :~~ p.m., Syracuse squad iO Rus- .
selections:
.,
,'
ban PeninSula and the stale law that tic Hills, Eva Mae LeaCh to Veter- ,
.,
Plek 3 Numbers
it
under violare a 20-y-- ans; TUESDAY • 2:11 p.m.,
S-4·2
I oldoperates
U.S.
Stp:me
Court ruling that Pomeroy squat! to Wolfe Drive, Jo
(five, four, two)
a
mayor
wlio
is
chief
fmancial offi. Ann Bolinger 10 Veterans; ind later ·
Pick 4 Numbers
cer
of
a
village
relying
upon 10 Holzer Medical Center; 2:53
3-9-5-9
•.
income
from
court
fines
cannot
be a.m ., Middleport squad to Page
(three, nine_
, five, nine)
Sireet, ·Katie W~ber to Veterans.
· 1111 impartial judge.

Jackpot
winner cooks
up big win

-Meigs announceme'!ts--

Court news

·J't
Const 't
of mayor'S COUffS
is challenged

7

noted Dr. Robert Sheets of tl)e
National Hurricane Cenrer in CCJrl!l
Gables, Fla. ~e has been est!:
mated at $20 b1ihon, and ~h~
said he. would nol be. surpnsed to
see 11 climb to $25 b1ll1on.
H~as a record year for ~·
does 10 the Umted Ststes wH~
1,381 twiSters reported . That
topped the 1,133 of ~990:
McPherson . sa1d 1mprove4
radars and reportllig of local storms
by spotters may account for at lea$
part of !he increase.
. · :...
He said the El Nino episode,~
occasional w~ing of a large por·
tion ·or the tropical .Pacif'w ~!
helped account for an unuaual!y
warm winter. Temperablres averaged between 4 degrees and 1l
degrees Fahrenheit above normal
across a large pan of the country
from December 1991 to Marc;Ji
1992. That saved home heating
customers, abopt $1.5 billion_,
McPherson estimatlld.
In· addition summer temperatures were millfer than nonnal, ~­
~ibly as a result of the dust cloud
blasted into the atmosphere by the
Pinatubo' volcano in the Philip·
pines. ·
'
Temperatures were from I to 4
degrees below normal jn the easl"
·em two-lhirds of lhe nation, saving
$1.9 billion in air conditioning ,
according to McPherson.
.

Hospib!l ·news

'

"

HOLZql MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Jan. 4 • Chelsea RiC:.
ne, Charles MeG uire, Donna Peek;
Marie Knopp, Mark Schartiger;
Mrs. Marc Stump and daughter,
Charles Gales, Mrs. Richard Ran•
dolph and daughter, Erica Taylor;
Paul Harrison, Mary, Cox , and
Joseph Young.
Births, Jan. 4 · Mr. and Mrs:
Ralph Thompsop, a daughter;
Mason, W.Va.
-•~

Stale Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car ..
· and home with the St~te
AutO Companies.

Let us lell you jusl
how rnuc~ your savings

can be.

· Lottery numbers

.

I ~

Vetenns Memorial
MOND-AY ADMISSIONS •
Gertrude Stivers, Pomeroy; Mehliii
Van Meter, Pomeroy; Marlyq
Wilcox, Middleport; James Pellegrino, Pomeroy.
·
·'
MONDAY DISCHARGES ',
None.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

~.,... Aut. :

l11auranee C:O..aftlea
&lt;

..

�•

I

-'

.Sports

1

The .Dmiy
.
Sentinel
.
n.aeSday,
·

In college hoop~,

1993

·

·

··

N.Y. Rangers-New Jersey tie
only deadlock in NHL action

January 5, 1993
Pacie 4

•

1

No. ·l Duke outscores O~klaholna-1~10 in-overtime to win 88-84
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
The win extended DUke's win· AP Sports Writer
ning sa:eak to 22 games, its home
The .Duke Blue Devils are going coun winning streak 10 34 arid' its
10 lose, sooner•or later.
.
home court win strealc vs. nonThe Oklahoma Soo9ers almost Atlantic Coast Conference teams to
made it sooner, rather than later.
76.
Oldahoma took Duke inlO over- . OklatJoma came in looki1lg ror
time Monday .night at Durham, · revenge ror Duke e.ndi.ng its 51 N.C., but the No. I Blue Devils game home winn ing strea\t two
outscored the Sooners 14- 10 in the years ago. The Sooners \lattled
extra pc:riod to come out with an back from a 31-11 Duke rally in
88-1!4 win.
·
the first hair and a 20-point deficit

•

'

eight blocked shots. ·
No. 13 Arka1158$ 72, SMU 53
At Dallas, Arkansas made its
first appearance against' a South-·
west •Conference team since it
defected 10 the Southeastern Con-·
rerence last year, and SMU (5-4) .
bel~ !he Razorbacks out by missing its last 24 shotsc For the game,
Arkansas (9-1) shot 47 percent
from .the field while the M~gs
shot JUSt 23 percenL Scotty Thurman scored'24 points. 1 "
·
No. 16 Clnclnllltl 79
·
Tennessee 58
Cincinnati used a variety or
press,es and hair-court traps 10 muffle one of the countiy's most dangerous shooters,. holding Allan
Houston to a season-low ·16 points,
8.3 below his season average. The
Bearcats (7-1) allQwed .Houslon
only nine points last year'in a 6251 victory at Knox ville. Curtis
Bostic had 20 points.

do wned Drake 80-65; No. 13 lockerroom with .a 47-28 halftime
Arkansas . topped. Southern lead. Derrick, Phelns and Donald
Methodist' 72 · 53 and No. 16 Williams led the Tat Heels with 16
Cincinnati got past Tennessee 79- points each.
Sl
· ,
I
No. 7 Setoa Hall 71
No. 1 Duke 88
}
No. 1!1 Coanectint 6!1
• No. 11 Oklahoma 84 .
. At East Rutherford, NJ .. Seton
Grant Hill led the ~lue ·.Devils Hall's defense saved it once again.
.with 25 points, Hurley had 23' Trailing by nine points .with eight
points' and IS assists and Thomas minu~ to play, Seton Hall {12-1,
Hill scored 13. Hamil10n tied tilt 2-0 Big East) limited Connecticut
game on a three-pointer witb 33 (6-2, 1-1) til four baskets down the
seconds lert, and Thomas Hill's stretch and rallied for its ninth
.shot at the buzzer was deflected, .straight vic lOry.
sending the game iniO overtime.
No. 81owa 80, Drake 65
No. 6 North Carolina 98
At Des Moines, Iowa, Drake
· CorneD 60
stayed close until the final three
At Chapel Hill, N.C., Cornell minutes, :but Iowa used its strong
(44 ) didn't look anything like the inside play and siWp free-throwing
team that knocked California rrom shooting down the stretch to win. It
the Top 25 last week with a shoclr- was the closest call of the season
ing upset. The Big Red Jed 19-18 ror ille Hawkeyes'(ll-0), who open
nine minutes in, but North 'Carolina Big Ten play at No. 5 Indiana on
(I 0-1) ·took over and went iniO the Wednesday. Acie Earl led Iowa
with 22 points, nine rebounds and
•

in the second half.
.
"They put us in a position
where there was pressun; on us,"
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said.
" They fought like crazy."
The SoOners went almost three
minutes without a fi eld goal in
overt\me, allowing the Slue Devils
(9-0) to open an 82-76 lead on two
baske ts by Grant Hill on passes
from Bobby Hurley and two free
throws by Thomas Hill. .·
,
Four free throws by Hurley
down the stretch ga vi: Duke a 7point lead before Angelo Hamilton
made a three-poinler at the bu,zzer.
" We hit that spot in ·overti!Re
where the shots weren't necessarily
that bad," Oklahoma coach Billy
Tubbs said, " but we just couldn't
get anything 10 fall,"
Elsewhere in the Top 25, NO. 6
North Carolina crushed Cornell 98.60. No. 7 SciOn Hall edged No. 19
Connecticut 72-69, No. 8 Iowa

In Ohio ~ollege action,

.
I
By JOHN KREISER
.
NEW YORK {AP) - Ron Smith's debut as coach
or the. New York Rangers was a microcosm of the
team's)feaSOn:. flashes .or brilliance combined with
long stlttches.,of defensive mediocrity. .
.
. At least S!llith didn't go home a loser Monday
mght afte,r getting the job earlier in l he day when
·Roger Neilson was frred. The Rangers spoUed New
Jersey a 3-11ead before rallying ror a 3-3 tie.
:·w e. took a liulc: more pride in doing our job
lonlgh~ mstead or domg our own thing'' defenseman
Jay Wells said. "We fought haril ror this tie and
hopefully it's the start of something big. "
Cap13!n Mark Messier, who set up goals by Tony
,&lt;\monte m the second period and Alexei Kovalev in
the. third, seemed rejuvenated by the change. He ai\d
Neilson had not seen eye-10-eye since Messier criticized Neilson,'s strategy in last spring's playoff loss
10 Pittsburgh.
. "We haven't been playing up to where we need 10
m order 10 be_..wccessful ," he said. "It hasn't been
ju.st '?ne bad game or two bad games. We've been
wmntng some games on talent, but we haven't been
· playing well. Ron got more players involved tDnight.
I was more involved that I've been in the last mgnth
and a hair."
·
·
•'
In other NHL games, it was Toron10 4, Detroit 2·
Vancouver 7, Tanipa Bay 0, and Montreal4, Sa~
Jose I.
The Rangers staned out like they would run the
Devils through the nearby Lincoln ·Tunnel and back
in«! New .Jersey: New York~ s Mike Gartner capped a
furtous first sh1ft by sconng 32 seconds into the
game.
· 1
·
But the Devils 'quickly defused New York 'S
momentum, controlling play for the rest of the frrst
'two periods. Alexander Semak tied the game late hi

Cincinnati sh'ackles Tennessee in 79-58 win
,
ByJOEKAY '
CINCINNATI (AP)- Allan
Houston wanted to prove that his
nine-point p~rrormance last year
against Cincinnati was a fluke.
In every, imaginable way, the
16th-ranked Bearcacs proved Monday night that il wasn't. Cincinnati's relendess defense once again
left Tennessee frazzled and Houston frustrated. The Bearcats heidi
him to another season low in a 7958 victory.
·
"I wanted to play welltonigh~"
'said Hous10n, one or the nation's
most dangerous shooters with a
24.3-pointaverag~. "!don't think I
played that bad. I think we just
played out (l[ character - our
defense, our rebounding, our poise.
There's a lot or things you can 1alk
. GET BACK! -Iowa's Mon'ter Glasper (Jert) pusbe, .Drake's
about in a game like this.'·
Brett Sberill away l'rom tbe ball during the first balr or Monday
In other Ohio games, Xavier
night's intrastate college game in Des Moines, Iowa, which the .
beat
Notre Dame 75-60; Defiance
Hawkeyes won 80-65. (AP)

I

ScoreiJoard

.

.In the NBA ...

D«roit... ............. 22

' . EASTERN CONFERENCE
~·

:,

Atlanlk OIYilae.

~

TUIII
W L PeL
New Y... ..............18 10 .643
New Jeney ............ 16 13 .552
,, Orlaftdo .................. ll 12 .520
Bc.I.Cn •.~ .....:.......... t3 17 .433
1

GB •

6

.310

9.5

Ailllddpltil ........ ,.... 8 18Milmi ...................... 8 19

.308
.2%

9.5

9

30 130155

10

4

M~west
Cincinnati 79, Tt.nnCIICC 58

Mon""'

32 135152

Cmghwn 84,
78 (2 01)
Detroit Mercy 9t), C~o St. 71

low1 80, Drake 65
Mo .-Kan.u City 13 , Middle Tenn. 65
Nonbwu~em8l,Lehia.h66 ·

_
54

1~11 9

Edmontm .......... 14 21 6
Sanl01e ............. 6 32" 2

6.5

.464

lndioni .... .............. .I 3 I6
Aohnl&amp; .................. .\ 2 I6

.448
.429

8.5

Xavier, Ohio 75, Not.R_Damc 60

34 114159
)4 119200

Southwest

Arkan11172. Suulhc::m Mcl.h. 53
HOUlton 86, UC Irvine 78
Lamar 103, Teua-Pan Atneriean 64
Nonh TeAu 79, NE LoWiana 71

2. Wu tungton 2, tie
9011.01'1 3, Hartford 2 (OT)
N.Y. IIlandcn3, Minftemi.l 2
Pitubutgh 5, N.Y. JUngers 2
Winnipq 2. New Jcney 2. tie
Otie~go

9
9.l

I

Far West

Brigham Youna 70, Naw Mexico 56
Frun o SL 62, Coiondo St. 55
Idaho 89, Cent. Wuhlngton 75
New Me,Jco St. 78, Cal SL-Fiillenon

CalJary 1, Pbi.b•lphia 3

Buffllo 7, ~lawa 2
St. Lcuia 2. Torttno 2, tic ..

Edmomon 2. Tamp~ Bay 1
Vancouver 2, San J01c 2. tic
Mmtreal S, l.ol Ansdca S, tic

Mkfwe~t

DlwWon
Team
W L PeL
U1&amp;h .................... :..t9 8 .704
San Antonio ........... lS 12 .SS6
.HOUikln ................ .1 4
Dm)_Wr .....................7

13.

.519

20
Mitlnaau ................6 19
·Dallu.: ................... .2 23

.259
.240
.080

Padfk Dlwlllon
PhoeniA ..................2J
5
• Seaule ..... ............... \9 a
Pon1and ................. 18 9
, Oolden _S~.ate .......... l 6 13
, ·LA. Clippen ........ .16 IJ
. LA. Lakm ............ l5 13
·Sacnmcnw ............ tlo \6

.108
.704
.M7·
..S.S 2
.552
.536
.407

GB

Sunday' s scores

4
5
12
12
16

Minne.ota 6, Hartfo.rd 6, tic
B"'"fTilo 6, SLLouia 5 (OT)
Philadelphia l. Edmomon 2, tic
Oticago 4, Winnipec l
Tampa fh y at Va~ouv er, ppd ., snow

Monday's scores
N.Y . Ranacn: 3, New Jcncy 3, tic

TOfOIU0,4 , Detroit 2

25
3.5
6.5
6.5
7
10.5

Ohio college
basketball scores

Sunday's scores
Booum 120, L.A . Clipp&lt;n II2
San Antonio 114, Phoc:niA 113 (01')
Milwaullcc 109, L.A. Lalr.en l 01

Men
Cincinn.aLi 79, Tcni'ICuee 58
Dcfiaru;;C \04, HWitingtOn, 93
Xavier. Ohio 75, Notte llime 60
Mu..kingum 80, West Liberty 75
U!Wn a 123 , Wilberl'orcc l OS
J(lhn Hopkins 82, Cue Wca:tem 12

l'mWul103. """'""' 101 (OT)
No games Monday
Tonlghl's games

Women

Ot.-eland It New Yodc: , 7:30p.m.
New ~eney ~~ ~'!· 7 : 30p. m..
Detroit at Mianu, 7:3(1 p.lt\.
Bolton at Charloue, 7:30p.m.
Wuhin ~ at Atlar:a. 7:30 p.m.

Bowhng On:cn IO.S , CinciMaLi 78
Toledo 86, Oeveland St 64
Ohio 45 , Daytnn 6 1

L.A . Clippcn alnd. Lm~ . 7:30p.m.
L ~ . Lakm at &lt;;hle~ go , 8 p.m.

National college
basketball scores

at Milwaukee, 1:30 p.m.

Portlaruht Dallu, 8:30 p.m.

PhocniA at HMlon, 8:30 p.m.
San An10nio at Uu.h, 9 p.m.
Gdclcn S1..11e 11 Se.anle, 10 p.m.

East

Buc:kncl175 , Loyola, Md. s9

Columbia 84, Manh11ti.n 80
Dll1m0Uth n , Ne w Hamptltite 67

Dc:nver at ·Sa~tno.I0 :30 p.m .

Palrlt k DIYIJ:Ion
W L T I'll.
PilwbwJh .... ...... Tl 9 4 ll
',WIJbington ........ 21 16 4 .t6
-N.Y. RanJen ..... 19 17 5 43
~ewlcncy ........ II 17 3
39
1'4.Y. b landcn .... 17 I I 4 31

"

Delaware 79, NaY)' 58
Fordham 60, Horan !16
laf•yeuc '89, Vcnnont 79
Seton Hall 71. Cmnc:Wcut 69
St. Bonavmturc 73, Maine 72
Winlhtop ICH, Cent. C()Mocti cut S1

93

Soli.lh .

"

Tum

CFGA

43

'
. Wednesday's
games

Buifalo at Hartford , 7:40p.m.
Otta111a at N.Y. Rangen, 7:40 p.m.
Minncaotaat New Jene_y, 7:40p.m.
VtnCOUvcr at Torcnlo, 7:40p.m.
Tampa Bay at Lc. Angelca, 10;40p.m.

Milwaukee I 06, Atlanta 93
Minnt&amp;OU. 103, DalliJ 7 1
Otic:aco 109, Indiana 100
Utah I 10, Portland 102
Seaulc lOB, Datvcr 104
Stmmeruo 154, Philallelpllia 98
Golden SUite 113, HowtOn 101

WAUlS CONFEJI.ENCE

.

Akron Coventry 68, Akron-Elms SO
Akron N. 68, CVCA 44
Ak ron St. Vineenl 61, Akron E . SO

Monuulat S~nJcn, 10:40 p.m.

Cevdand 106, L.A. L.Uen 91

:In the NHL. ,.

Ohio 'high school
girls' basketball scores

Tonlghl's games
801\on at Pitwburgh, 7:40 ~ m.
Quebec at N.Y. Islanders, 7:40 p.m.
Edmom.on at St. Louis, 8:40 p.m.
Winnipeg I I Ctl gll'~, 9:40 p.m.

Saturday's scores

In diana It B0110n, 7 :30~m.
New ·Jeney at Ph.il adcl · , 7:30p.m.
O!ie.~ 1t Ceveland ,_ :30p.m.
LA. Clippers at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
L.A, 4Ji.et1aLMiMeaota, I p.m.

•

~.,_,. .

Ul&amp;h 75, ToJW-El Puo 54
W aahingt.on 8 I , Jdaho St. ~
Wohin't;tm Sl 87, Sacnrnento Sl. 56
Wyomina !19, Ail Force S3

Moo uu14 , San J01e I

Clippers 98, New York 97 (OT)
WnhinJI-On 100, Miami 93
Detroit 98, Orlando 97
O.uioue 11 8, New Jeney 117

Wednesday's'games

Orqon 711Hattfont 69
Pacific U. 68, Lma Beach SL S6
SL Mary's, Cal61, Boise SL 61
UC Santi Barbara n , AI.I.·Birrnin&amp;·

Vancouvcr7, Tampa Bay 0

~A.

Minn~

67

ham S7 ·

Alabama 95, Tenneuee St. 10
Appal.lcbian.St. 76, Eut Carolina 74
~At.un ua SL. 64, Lou.iaiana Tech 51 ·
Br~~dley 74, Florida AU.ntic S..._
,
Cent. Florida 72, N.C.·Omenlboro 66
Coil. of Charl e.ton 68, N. C•Jolint

70

An:actia. 48, Van BW'Cn 38
Arlington 39', Van.lue 24
Ashland Fairview Ky. 62, New BO&amp;ton

Ashtabula 43, Paine&amp;ville Rivenide 32
.Austintown Fiu:h 64, Y&lt;NJll. East 2-6
Bamesvillc 65, River 57
,
Bcall.MlleS l , Slr:)'YUC43 , ..
Be~~ vc r Eulem 75, Lum villc VaU e~

Warren Locai
Iamey Tabler 4-0-0=8, Jamey
Perth 1:0-1=3, Lisa Spencer 0-01=1, Jodie McGraw 1-0-0=2 ,
Megan Clark 2-0-0=4, Tara Johnson 3-0-2=8, Charla Wentz 5-07= 17. Stephanie Elder 1-0-1=3.
Totals- 17-10-2=46

Dallaire 67, Shadytide 49
Bellaire SLJohn 45, Bridgepon 35
Bedin Hia,hland 56, Lo.adOrivillc 4!1
Bclhcl 36, Nonhridae 34
Broobide44, Clearview 41 (OT) •

Buckeye Loctl67, Martins Ferry 32
Buck eye Tnil 53, Cla)'ITiont 38
Caldwell5S , Shenltldoah 41
Caml Fuhon NW 57, Carrollton 49
Canal Winchcncr 52, Oroycport 46
Chancl s s. St. Auptin e 32

Eastern

~~~.!~\tt..~~! Hil1, 39
Cin. Cowo ~ry Doy33, c;,, St. Demon!
,.
'
tionc3~· Lo&lt;kiood sa. Middh•• wn a.n..
Cin. M•N''""'" '3.Cm.Andenon 31
cu,_ summit
em. Sewcn
Cln.
Wln1onso.Woods
44, Hil.ll
Cln.11M1.

"~~!.t N·-~= 46. c..hon 11

.~.:.::~;"~~~~~=~~
Contin en~o~l44,

Hoi piC 22

&amp;-;.'C.rlt.~fS:.~::0.1, 31

a.f.?27Chomln•d•·luUonnc 47, Col.

O.y. ~wood 611, Coduville3l
·
49o.y. p,.,......, l4, Tro1woe&gt;d-ModHon
F.dioon Soulh ro,s....balvillo l2
ayn. w. n,
ll Emonud Boplist 41, Mownoo Volley
40F....,l HockinJ 4l, Ncbonvill• Yo.t .
F&gt;Cid l9. s...!h.. ~ 39
Fort Foyo49, Woodofioold 37
7
Fon
47 lcnnlnp l , O.lphoo St. '"""'• •

F..,._., ,.

Franklin· F\l..tnace Great S6, SymiiMII

Stephanie Otto 4-0-2=~0. Jaime
Wilson 1-0-4=6, Amy Redovian 10-1=3, Penny Aeiker 0-0-4=4, Tara
Congo 1-0-1=3, Jessica Karr 5-03= 13 ; Melissa Guess 0-0-1= 1.
T0 1aS1
1'10
..,. •6=40
•

1 66 1 ~3
169 166 "
124131
154 149

Cincinnati has playe~ t\\'O
exceptional games against Houston, who became the Southeastern
Conference's second-leading scorer
Monday wit)l 2,342 points. He
passed Miss'issippi' s Jobn Stroud
(2,328) and now trails only LSU's
Pete Maravich, who holds the
major-coDcge record with 3,667 ..
· He wound up hitting just S or 13

Olulu.

•

•

and what they see

away not only impressed with Jiis
on-the-field performance but with
the way he handled himself off the
field as well. He is obviousJy· a
class individual.".
Bledsoe, the all-time leading
passer at Washington Slate, could
be especially auractive to the Pati:i.ots, given their current mediocl\
quarterback roster or Scott Zolalc,
Hugh MiDen and Tommy.Hodson.
The deadline to declare is
Wednesday, and all eyes are now
on Marshall Faulk and Garrison
Hearst, running backs who rinishcd
second and thiid in the Heisman
Trophy voting.
Faulk, a sophomore from San
Diego State, led the. nation in rushing in his first two seasons. In ·
Dece!Rber1 be said be would aennitely return for his junior year, but
·recent developments on the NFL
labor front may "!alee him change
his mind.
NFL owners are eager to slow
. the escalation or rookie salaries,
and a $2 million salary cap ror
draft picks could·be pan or a new
collective bar~aining a.JP.:eement.
Hearst, a Junior ta1lhack from
Georgia, said in December that he
would make his decision after tlU:
Citrus Bowl, which Georgia won
21-14 over Ohio State. There has
been no word from him so far.
Smith, a sophomore, returned to
the lluckeyes this season after sit'
ting out 1991, when he said assistant coach Elliot Uzelac ordered
him 10 miss classes to attend practice. Smith rushed for a team-leading 819 yards and 10 touchdOIIIOS
despite missing games because or a
broken rib and sprained Wle. He
set an Ohio State rushing record ror
freshmen with 1,126 yards in 1990.

•
•

j

i

!

'

II

.

·.;')·•

...

'
I

'

.
~·, '

..

FIGHTING FOR PUCK - New York
Ranger James Patrick (3) and New Jersets
Alexander Semak (20) fight for the puck behmd

the net during the first period or MODday nlgbt's '
NHL game at New York's p.fadison Square Gar- :
. den, w!lich resulted In a 3-3 tie. (AP) .
•

Sports Probe

....•

.

Wo_men want respect, recognition, ·
oppQrtunity ·to be· seen in athletics

•

By HOWARD SINER
hopes up. The only teams ever 10 - phal.
Super Bowl interest worklwlde ,
Today's questions in the world do bclter in a month - the 1959Other than Americans, wh&amp;·
of sports:
60 Bos10n Celtics and the ·1971-72
cares
about the Super Bowl?
·:: •
What do women want?
Los· Angeles Lakers - both went
LoiS
of
people.
At
least
100
mil~
:
Respect, ror one thing. Opponu- on to win NBA titles.
nity, too. And recognition.
· It lakes more than one big sial lion TV viewers in the. United •
States are expected to watch:
For .the most pan, women claim to go all the way, though.
.
to be just as athletic as men, just as
"Charles Barkley has almost SBXXVll on Sunday, Jan. 31. But ;
competitive and just as interested talcen on mythical proportions," the potential worldwide audience ·
in sports.
says coach Paul Westphal, who' s for the NFL showdown in the Rose •
•
Those beliefs are cited by Fit- also a newcomer 10 tile Suns. "But Bowl is about 750 million.
ness magazine, which .reports in ics 'Don Majerlc is another rocJc of this ' In raet, NFL games were seen in.·
January -February issue on the team ." The fifth-year swingman is a 10ta1 or 95 countries this season. :
Last year, there were 261 ere- :
results or a survey: "Women have · a tough defender.
the skill and the will to succeed in ,
Free-agent Danny Aingc is a dentials issued 10 foreign journal- •
sports - what we need·, you said, key addition. Along with Majerle, . ists to cover Super Bowl XXVI in ;
is a brealc."
the top holdovers include Cedric Minneapolis. T.he game was tele- ;
According 10 Fitness, 92 percent .Ceballos, Tom Chambers and vised 10 more than 60 countries- :
32 or them wau:h live bmaclrasts. •
of,the women who took part in the Kevin Johnson .
(C)1993
NEWSPAPER ·
survey believe that females have at
'"We have a bunch of guys that
ENTERPRISE
ASSN.
'
least as much athletic ability as really want to win, " says Westmales.
"Women probably have ·more Regg~e
. athletic ability than men," suggescs
PattiSue Plumer, an Olympic distance runner. " We have' to work ·
much harder to get to the top, so
NEW YORK {AP) .:._ Today is record with three in Game 6 that .:
we just have 10 be IOugher. ''
· Eighty-two percent of the the day Reggie Jackson has been year.
Jackson played from 1967-87 :
women surveyed believe · that . waiting ror since he· fust swung a
for the Yankees, Kansas City and.:
females are equally as competitive baseball bat.
·The tesults of voting ror the Oakland Athletics, Baltimore Orias males in sports.
"They just don't show it in the Hall of Fame will be ·announced oles and California Angels and hit
same way," says Nancy Hogshead thi s afternoon, and Jack son · is .262 with 1,702 RBis.
of the Women's Sports Foundation. expected to be the 29th player to
Niekro won 318 games, 13th on :
"Women will talk about their own make it Ui Coopers10wn on the flfSt the career list, pitching mostly for :
including the inaugural gro~p the Milwaukee and Atlanla Braves. :
·performanCe, while men wiD focus
on their competitors much more." . o five. . .
Perez played from 1964-86 and hit ·
Jackson, according to his agent, .279 with 379 homers and 1,652 ;
Sixty-nine percent or those surveyed say women arc just as in~r­ wasn't!aking it ror granted.
RBis, playing for four NL penannt ·.
"He's
in
California,
and
if
he•s
winners wi)h Cincinnati and anoth-- ·
ested in sports as men. Further·
more, 79 perce~t or the women elected he'll go straight to the air- er with Philadelphia. Garvey, ·the ·
would like 10 sec more TV cover- port and fly to New York," Mau National League MVP in 1974,
Merola said ~onday. .
age of female athletes.
•
holds .the NL record ror most conThe voting by the Baseball secutive games (I ;207).
"The media coverage of
By RUSTY MILLER
women's sports is horrible," com~ Writers Association of ·America
Pete Rose isn't eligible again
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- plains author Mariah Burton Nel- . will be announced at 6 p.m. EST because of his permane11t ban from
The attorney for rour teen-agers son. "It's astounding how ignored ~nd lhe newest Hall of Famers will baseball, ' imposed in 1989. His
who allege ron.ner Ohio Slaie bas• we are."
· be presented at a news conference name was written in on 4 I ballots
NO WORDS - With sack lunch in hand, Chleago Bean head
ketball star Jim Jackson pulled a
According to Olympic star Jack- Wednesday morning in New"Y.ork. last year, but the votes didn't counL
coach Mike Ditka walks past reporters on his way to a meeting with
gun on them says her clients are . ie Joyner-Kersce: "Women liave a Phil Niekro, Tony Perez and Steve '
general manager ~ike McCaske)' Moliday morning at Lake Forest,
not seeking attention or mone~.
· Jong way 10 go to be as recognized .Garvey are among the other top ·
Ill. Ditka is rumored to be on the way out as the Bears' cbld. (AP)
Sports briefs
.
'
"This is not a for-prorit ven- in sports a5 men. We need to get players eligible. To get i!l, a player
· Baseball ·
.
twc," said Robin Stith,, who reP..e- their races known, get J,hem on TV must appear on 75 percent of the
NEW YORK (AP) - Basesents 19-year-old Gene Sidney and so people see'Women can be great bailors.
ball's executive council will aive •
three youths. "They don'rwantto athletes."
"Mr. October" figures to make Cincinnati Reds owner Marge •
hurt Jimmy Jackson. They idolize
Joyner-Kersee, winner of the it in easily. He hit 563 holl'lers, Schott until Jan. 20 to resp:md' to · •
'
'
on the career list, played on aUegations that she made racial and
LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) -:- he had made progress with several hiri);But they wantiO know-why be· last two Olympic ~Jl..,thlons, was sixth
rive
World
Series champions and ethnic remarks .
named br women in Uie survey as
Only the mother or Chicago Bears of the assislant coaches whose con·
was
chosen
the
American League's
did
what
be
did.
They
want
him
to
the
ravonte
female
athlete.
Next,
in
Milwaukee Brewers owner Bud
traciS have expired.
.
president Michael McCaskey can
Most
Valuable
Player
in 1973. He Selig, the executive council chairknow
you
can't
do
those
things,
order,
were:
Chris
Evert,
Mary
Lou
·
McCaskey
planned
to
leave
save coa ~ h Mike Ditka's job,
or who you are."
R
Fl
G ·r·r· h J
al so hit 16 ,postseason homers,
according to a report published town today for an NFL owners regardless
1 No charles have been riled.
· etton, orence n 11 - oyner including a record five for the New man, sai!f he didn't know how long
· and Dorothy Hamill.
·
after Jan. 20 it would take ror the
meeting Wedfi~Y in DallaS. 11114
I.Oday.
York
Yankees
in
the
1977
Series
Stith
said
idney
met
with
city
Fitness
also
reported
that
85
executive
council 10 make its dC:ciThe Chicago Sun-Times report- Di~ plans tp leave Thursday on
against
the
Los
Angeles
Dodgers.
prosecu10rs
t,fonday
and
is
deeid·percent
or
the
women
surveyed~
sion . The council can fine Schott
ed in today's editions that Ditka vacauon.
Di!ka h!lli one year remaining on ing whethef lo bring charges think females should play under the He tied Babe Ruth's single-game up 10 $250,000 or suspen4 her.
will be fired unless Virginia
against . Jackson, currently same rules as males. ·on the other
McCaskey intervenes. The ne~Spa­ bis lhrce-year contract But recen1 embroil.ed in a contract .dispute hand, 82 percent bclie.ve that
qews reP.,Orts said the Bears would
per cited sources it did not identify.
Mrs. McCaskey is secrelary of not have to pay him his full ~~.th~ Dallas Mavericks of the . · women should play in their own $900,000 salary ir he were fucid.
•
leagues.
.
~ the Bears and wife or team chairSu'th S81d
she also n:presencs the
What do women hate the 'most
Di!ka has said he wants to return
·man .Edward W. McCaskey. The
youths who were with Sidney dur- about men's sports? Top comSun-Times report did not say what ror what would be his 12th year as mg
the alleg~ incident. "T!I~y'll . plainrs: macho. attitude of players
head cnach . BUt be said he wants
might inspire her 10 intervene. ·
~
~!~~.ir
they w~t to pursue (41 percent); violence and brutality
Michael McCaskey did not m~t more power in matters concerning ·
'
Robert Lovering, an assistint (47 percent); orrensive J&gt;ersonal
with Di!ka on Monday, excluding plarer moves.
,
I
him from personnel meetings for ' r inebacker coach David ciiy .prosecutor, said Monday that a lifestyle (36. percent); and hero
the
other
McGinnis
said
he
and
the fli'Sl time in 11 seasons;
.
·
.
complaint asalnst Jackson was worshrp (l3 percent).
· · "I was led to believe clearly we assistants met individually and ,, under investigation.
·
The SUIIII' rortuaes '
·
would' talk, and we didn't," Di!ka together with McCaSkey. ·
1ackson 's agent said the comHow hlgh Cin the Suns rise?•
"The only things discussed plaint is UAfounded.
said after Jeavinghis-office at 3:30
..
Riglit to the top, says Charles
p.m . CST to broadcast his 'radio _were player evaluations,' ' said
"I can teD you there's no proof Barkley. He's the bright new star,
McGinnis. "Believe me. Not one to the allegations. It appears as of a red-hot team . .Sir Charles says
show.
.
,
. . McCaskey did not comment thina was said about anything though someone is tryinjlto sctJilTI he didn 't'come to Phoenix in
. ·
Monday on Ditka's ru!We aftera S- else.r.
up becaUJt or who he II!." Cleve- search of an MVP Iitle. He's lookAsked
if
it
was
un~sual not 10 · land a110mey Mark Termini said.
11 season - the team's worst sinc;e
ina .rcw soinetbina even more flashy
have Ditka in on the meetings,
1975.
. '
•
Stith said the alleged incident ·-an NBA championship ring.
-1Heml
"We should· have so~thing . McGinnis said, "I'm · not going to .Q\X:urred Wednesday evcnina when
,.
· 'Arter li perfect 14-0 record in
'
•
who said, get involved mthat...
_ shortly,"
Sidney was driving to a movie. December, the Sun~ have their
.
. said
.. McCaskey,
.

Jim Jackson's
accusers not
seeking money,
attorney says

is a ~rime.

..

Jackson, Perez waiting
for Coopersti).wn ballqting results

trl,

McCaskey's mother last hope
for Chicago Bears' field boss
.

I

t

Help redrawtheir world.
Call an11 get fr~e. information
on how to protect your children
from drugs and violence
in your neighborhood.
CaU lo800oWE PREVENT

.

Vl11.32
Fronbt;t 57, Wat.edwd 40
a.a-.me44,SIR&lt;Utioro29
Oooqaown47, Wil!UmobouJ4l (01')
,~ll'J;;wno~Ups•. coJ. ln4epen.
""""' 'U,Rldaewood 36
.'
S9, C.dl% 37
. Joweu-Selo
KeytiORe SO, Avon 49 f
Kinao SO, M..,.,.4l
.
Lokmcw l7, Yowia. Wiloon •

f ',

receiver-kick returner Curtis ConBy The Associated Press
Decisions ~Y Drew Bledsoe and way made up his mind to leave
Marvin Jone4 could make a deci- school last Wednesday.
sion ·for the Npw England Patriots a · Now it's up to the Patr\ots, owners or the No. I pick in tl)e April
lot harder.
Bledsoe, a junior quarterback 25-26 draft, to decide between
from Washing10n Slate, announced Jones, Bledsoe and liU the seniors
·
·
Monday he will forego hi ~ senior leaving college.
"We are o~viously in a position
year of college and make himself
to draft a lligh:impact player, and
eligi!&gt;le for the NFL draft.
Jones, a Florida Slate linebacker Drew Bledsoe certainly fits into
who won the Butkus and Lombardi that category," Patriots general
awards this season, also announced manager Sam J~nkovich said.
he would be leaving school early to "There are many considerations
enter.the NFL drafL
involved in this process.
.
Also announcing Monday was
"I went ,IO tbe'Copper BowUn
Ohio S_tate sophomore tailback Tuscon for the express purpose or
Robert Smith. Southern Cal wide watching Drew Bledsoe and I came

what they ~ee,

l

tlie first period and power-play goals by Claude
Lemieux and Stephane Richer in the secona made it
3- 1.
..
.
· · " We were ready ror the game," Devils captain
Scolt Stevens said. "Ther came 04t a lillie slow but
picked it up each period.'
,
·
.
Amonte.ct.lshcd the net and banged in Messier's
reboJndat 16:34 or the middle period to gi,ve New
York some lire. Kovalev tied it by converting a.. perfect feed fro.m Messier on a 2-on-1 break during a
power play at 5:56 illto the final period.
Both teams had chances in the overtime. New Jer-·
sey's John MacLean hit the post in the flfSt 20 sec.onds and Craig Billington robbed New York's :Adam
Graves from the slot after .a great feed from Messier
with I :25 left.
Smith seemed happy with what he saw in his
.debut, even though New Jersey had 40 shoes at John
Vanbiesbrouck and cOIItrolled the play ror most or
the game.
"There's room for improvement, but I'm really
pleased with everybody," he said.
Maple Lears 4, Red Wings 2 - Todd Gill had a
. goal and two assists and Grant Fuhr made 28 saves as
Toronto won ln Detroit.
. ·
Ray Sheppard made it3-2, but with only 16.2 seconds lert, ·Mark Osborne scored into an empty net .
Canucks 7, Lightning 0- Pavel Bure scored
twice to give him 34 goals in 38 games as Vincouver
beat Tampa Bay.
.
.
1,
Kirk.McLean recorded his second straight shuiOut,
and third of the season, by stopping 27 shors.
Canadiens 4, Sharks l - At Sacramento, Calif.,
Mathieu Schneider's goal at 7:59 or the thin! period
broke a 1-1 tie and Montreal took (lver fllSt place in
the Adams Division by beating San Jose.

Bledsoe, Jones, . OS.U'~ Smith to try .
their·hands at coming_NFL draft ·

Children draw

CHICAGO (AP) _ Michigan
. sophomore forward Chtis Webber
and Ohio State freshman guard
Katie Smith are the Big Ten's basketball players of the week.
Webber, a Detroit native, led the
. Wolverines lQ five wins over the
holiday break. ;includinii three vic- .
tones over ll!WOnally ranked teams
10 win the Rainbow Classic in Ron-

.

. y

team.' '

sho!S Monday, hitting just 2 or 9 in
the second balf.
The Beareats had an easy time
orrensively against a. Tennessee
defense that was a step ioo slow
most of the night. The Volunteers
were looking 10 cut off UC's passing, but ended up giving them open
lanes to the basket.
Curtis ·Bostic scored a careerhigh 20 points, most or them on
dunks and up-close shots. One
telling staiislic: UC bad 17 assists.
"That's our offense - sne8lc ·
inside and get some easy baskets,"
Bostic said. "We scored preny easily inside."
Bostic had a driving layup, a ;
dunk and an assist on a layup' to
start the decisive 27-10 run in the
!ast eight minutes or the fust half.
Acrilss the city, Xavier also put
on a solid performance 10 remain
unbeaten. Brian Grant scored 19
points and the Muske!f~rs 01-0)
turned it ilito a runaway in the second half, leading by as many as 21.
· "We've been working very hard
and w11're a very unselfiSh team;"
coach Pete GiUen said. "We're not
a great time by any means, but
we're very unselfish: The kids all
like each Other and have a good
time. I think they work a lillie bard- .
er because or the pain or last year .
or going 15-12.~ '

Michgan 's Webber,
OSU's Smith Big Ten
players of the week

Webber, who ··was named 'the
tournament's
MVP, av&lt;:raged 21
A.t.T l4
points, 10.3 rebounds and blocked
INk it, 01Whom1 84 (OT)
E. Ten.ne11e~e St. 71, E. Kenwcky 66
13 shots in Michigan's 88-73 win
)'tillo&lt;lclP.,ia ....... 13I9 6 :12 144 Il7
Holy C.... 13, William .t. Ma,y 78
over
Nebraska, its 79-78 victory
Jackson SL 18 , Bel.hlvm 64
Adn•DhiliGn
over North Carolr'na and ,·Is 86-74
'-...I ......... ,.. 2314 l lH 7ll41
Mcmpbio SL 97 . ~ St. 76
· Murray SL 75, r.GW.lppi 6S
Qucbo:J.............. 22 13 6 ' 0 !10154
triumph OVer Kansas.
B01wn ................ n ta 2 .w;, tS4 t n ·
Nichollt: St. 80, Tuu-:Sin AntoniO 61
Smith or Lo~, Ohio, led the .
;Buffalo:.............. 11 15 &amp; 42 111141
Nooth c.-. 98, ComeU oo .
Lllharn V.Uty 54, Pan. Cay 49
B ~
,
~
,
,llatlfonL ........... 11 lA 4 ·26 ll3177
Oklahom1 SL 60, J1cbmvillc ~9
•
~.q&gt;&lt;;, l6, Cory·Ro...0 4l
uc
..eyes attac mall three of
Ouawa ............... 3,33i 3 9 89193
Old .Dominlol'\.. 7t Soulh Florida 76
.. Libcny Ben~a&gt; Sl, Hudin Northqn47
their games, scoring 35 points .in a
(OTJ
.
'
Uberty Unicn 71, Shllridan 39
9! 84 ·
•
,Radford 99, W. Mai'yland 74
.um.cauniC.lhollol3, Bol!Un•41
- . wm over No. S Vi!IJinia in
SW TeA u SL 71, McNee&amp;e St. 64
t.os~n ot,cheohitc Rl... v111cy:ZS
.the opening game or the B1g TenSoolhcm U. 97, Sf Louioiln1 88
CAMPBELL'CONFERENCE
!-"
.!~
1m
~Li.
Col
lt.nley
3l
.
ACC Challenge.
. .
.
S~ 89, Buffalo 12 (01)
- · - 7•. 'bcny OuiiO.. 30
TWanc
70,
Mm:er
52
r - · -wo:.--r.... GFGA
l;l;'0.cuy 70,B~l9
Smith averaged 25.3 points per
Chloao,............. 2314 l " ·141.110
&amp;on :~,c-..ss
game and .had nine assists for the
..,_~;....---....--...:------·:......~-----------...:...._1 week;
....
Il l136

Bearcais led 47-28 at the intel1!1ission and never let the lead get
smaller than II.
'" We 're prettl good at malcing
people get out o their offense· and
what lbey want to do," coach Bpb
Hug~ins said. "It's not uncharacterisbc 10 play against us JIDd have
to scramble.
,
"Our guys had li pretty good
idea where (Houston) was all the
time. We had to get the ball out or ··
his hands and make their other
guys make decisions."
They kept a guard on Hous10n
all the time 10 deny him the baD or
make hil!l pass. Even when .the
Volunteers managed to work
through UC's trap$ and press, :they
seemed so dazed tha~ they rarely
worked plays 10 free Houston ror a
shot.
·
''They took him out .o r our
orfense,'&lt;l,.coach Wade Houston
said . " They're an exceptional

O.utscorihg Eastern 17-8 in t11e .
last round, Warren Local defeated
Eastern 46-40 in girls' high school
basketball action.
Eastern_led. the entire game, but
had rour starters fou I out in the
finale.
Don Eichinger's Warriors are
now 3-6. Eastern drops to 3-5. ·.
Jiasterp had 37 rebounds, with
Oti'6 13 and Aeiker seven. EHS
had eight .assists with Karr three.
Eastern had 27 turnovers and a
whopping 28 .
Eastern hit 12 or 47 ror 26 percent and 16-23 at the line.
Warren won the reserve game
28-24 with Stacy Elder having 14
for the winners and teammate
S~ey Clart scoring ~ven.
. Eastern hosts River Valley
Thursday.

Tex.u-Adinttcn 19, NW LwWuta 75

Douoit6, Qo- 2

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Warr.enLocal
hands.Eastern
46-40 defeat

S.lllinais 65 ; Evansvi!¥42
Samford 73, NE Dlinoil 72'

Vtn«.llver -~·-····· 2A 10 4 , 52 178lll
LosAngcJ.ca ....... 20 14 5 45 166155
Winnipca ........... IS 20 4 34 134153

6

.536

15

14 25 2

Colf,uy .........,.... 25

4.5

I3

Chadi&gt;ae ................I l

44 137131
39 125129

· Salurday's scores

Central Dtwilion
7 .7l9
Clevdand ...............lB 12 .600
o.toi1. ................... 15 12 .556

...................22

.. Mllwaukcc .............13

18 3 47 171153

·1.9 14 6
16 16 1
13 20 6

Smythe Dlvllklft
2.5
·J.S

Wllhinatcln•...., ........9 20

C~Uaao

Minneaota ..........
Toronu:J ..............
SLI.ouio ............
TI1\1PI B•y ........

beat Huntington. !04-93; Muskingum beat West Liberty 80;75; .
Urbana beat Wilberl'orce 123-105;
and John Hopkins beat Case Westem 82-72.
,,
•
There were {Cally ·only two
things 10 talk about in Cincinnati's
game: Tennessee's inability to handle the press again, and its inability
to keep the Bearcats away from the
baskeL
Cincinnati (7'1) held HousiQn to '
a season-low 16 points; allowing
him to take only rour shots in the
decisive first half. A year ago, the
Bearcats held him 10 nine points ending his streak or 57 double-digit
perfonnances- in a 62-51 vic10ry
in Knoxville.
Houston had a sore wrist in that
game. He was healthy but nearly as
helpless in this one.
".Their full-coun press is one or
the tougbe,st I've raced," Hous100
said.
Tennessee (6-3) wanted its other
ball' handlers to get it upcoun
against the press, leaving HousiOn
to use his one-on-one skills ror
easy baskets. Most often, the ball
neve'r go.tiO his hands. ·
The Volunteers made 11 of their
17 wmovers in the first half, which
UC closl:d with a 27-10 flurry . The

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·. . $ . 99

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f'ut&gt;lic Servia! of
~This Publica1ion

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992-2124
...

2 MEDIUM ,PAN PIZZAS

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""'A

CALL US
TODAY!

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lJy T_.e B~end
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Tu8$day, January 5, 1993

The .D~y Sentinel

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NETWORK ATI'RACTION • Talllsbow host
. Phil Doaahue, right, addresses Joe Buttafuocco,
left, and wife Mary Jo during Monday's taping
ortbe "Donahue" show ID .New York. Joe Butta·
ruocco's attorney Marvyn Kornberg listens at

~~-Names
"
PHILADE.l..PIDA (AP) - Jack
Nicl)olson's portrayal of Jimmy
Hoffa doesn't do justice to the
tough Teamsters boss, says a union
official.
·
: "'Hoffa wasn't that dumb," said
Jphn Morris, secretary-ueasurer of
Teamsters Local 115. " He was a
~elluva lot smarter than that pic- ·
'

ture.''

,

Morris and other union leaders
recently attended a showing of
"Hoffa," the epic film that depicts'
!he career of the Teamsters boss
from his days as an organizer in the
inid-1930s through his disappear$11Ce in 1975.
· Morris knew Hoffa when Hoffa
was head of a ·Teamsters local in
Detroit and said HOffa reminded
him of another actor.
, "He had this bounce, this energy, this very, very hard-nosed
ituff," he recalled. "He always
1litd this Jimmy Cagney attitude.''
: . Morris did say that Nicholson
got the swagger right.

. .

right. The program, airin1 'fuesclay, is among
several hlttlag the air this week coocemlag the •
may 19 shooting of Mary Jo by'Lorig Jslaaclteen
Amy Fisher. (AP photo)
·
,
.

in the news·---

CASCADE, Colo. (AP)- President Bush beat out Woody Allen,
Vice'Presidenl Dan Quayle and the
Postal Service for the Millard Fillmore SoCiety's MCI!al of Mediocrity.
"Fresh from the flutter of a million yellow ribbons and a 90 percent approval rate, Presideflt Bush
belly-flopped like a YjOun(!ed swan
into the lake of Amepcan 'despair,''
said Phil Arkow, vice president of
the group.
"He finally 'got it' on Nov. 3
when his 'vision thing' led to Bush
league bumbling in the ballot
box.''

The award, established in 1980,
is given each year around the 13th
president's birthday, Jan. 7. It honors "mediocrity to combat the rising tide of overachie,vers," Arkow
said.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jamie ·
Kellner, the n\an who brought you
Bart Simpson and Luke. Perry, is

II

:=Alfre.d area happ.enings
Nina. Robinson and Clara Foil: rod.spent Christmas Eve with Vicki
· and Dennis Gibson and children,
: Marietta . They spent Christmas
·. Day with Norma Jean and Gerald
Swartz, Reno. Alma Swartz of
Williamstown, W.Va., --:as also a
: guest.
.. Nellie Parker, Joe, Martha and
Will Poole hosted a holiday dinner

stepping down as prestdent and
chief operating officer of Fox
Broadcasting Co.
Kellner, 45, said Monday he
was leaving to try ·his hand at
another TV business. He said he
hadn't decided yet what thai would
be.
'
, • T m gQing to take a little time
and think about where the business
is going. I enjoy the challenge of
new ventures," he sai.d.
Kellner will re,main associated
with parent compa11y Fox Inc. as a
member of the board
Kellner presided over the
growth of television's "'fourth net·
work," which was created in 1986.
Fox has carved out a niche with
young viewers with shows such as
"The Simpsons," "In Living
Color" and "'Beverly Hills,
90210."

the same person for lite. With
life cxpectlllCy inereuing every
decide and lifestyles cbugillg, I
have concluded dill it is unrealistic
to expect two people 10 remain in a
harmonious telalionship for 50 or
60years.
· I, like 111111y others who write to
you, am involved with a married
~· The Qnly difference is that I,
too, am ~ ~ have young
c,hildren. NQ, this is 1101 a Heeling,
homiOIIII affair. It has been going
on for 12 yean. Sex plays a minor
role in iL
"Terry• gives me whar· my
husband will not or cannot give. '
He is . my soul rnate in every
sense of the word I ~~Bed to feel
guilty, but 1 don't anymore. lf 1
hadn't met Terry.• I'd surely be
divon:ed b)' now. He makes my
marriage I!Jienble.
· I take nothing away from Terry's
family 'and have the uU!IOSt respect
for his wife. I look. forward to
growing old with this man and
would grieve mon: for him than I
wOuld if my hlllband were 10 die. If
this sounds crass. I'm ·10rry. Ale
there more out lhere like me who
are keeping quiet? Yau bet your
sweet life there are, and most of
lhein are people you would never
suspect.
rm not looking'fot your appiovaJ,
Ann, but in my, view, there are ·

•

llarrisonville news
Francis Foley; Columbus, and
Gary Foley, Syracuse, spent the
weekend with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Mahr.
Mr. and Mrs. D9tch Hewitt,
Columbus; and Mr. and Mrs.
Ch~ck Alki~Racine, visited Saturd~y·evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Alkire.
R .
obm Foley, Syracuse, spent
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. Bob

on Dec. 27. Willis Parker of Parkersburg, W.Va. ask~ the blessing.
Other guests were Janice and Bob
Parker, M;tricua; Nancy Cainpbell,
Irene Parker, Homer and Sarah
Parker, Wilma and Howard Parker
• Mahr
a 11 of Meigs County. Afternoon
LiSa QiU and children, and Jerry
callers .w~re Louise, Sharon, Gary Bevins, Athens, were Christmas
and Mlllthew Michael.
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sam
_Holiday .guests of Marilkn and Steinmentz.
~~bLarrurRobiCnsonal were Lori itchie . Chrisunas diimer guests of Mrs.
n
. Y•
dwell; Leanne and Examae Christian were Lois ChrisKirk Fick, Columbus. On Dec. 27 tian and son, Nashville, Tenn .;
,,
they ~nded the wedding of Lori Linda Harman, daughter and son
,Rnchte and Allen Harris at Cald- and grandson, Portland; Mr. and
Lisa Buckiey in Mrs. Mike Grueser and daughters,
. Pomeroy High School of Pomeroy, Alfred Chrisunas play, ''Chrisunas ::C,a~; ~d ~~-~d~~o;o:;~
S
.
:recently completed a 12-hour and Memones•: should be Lisa Ritchie.
.•36-minute transit of the Panama
Judy and Tom Avis, Jonathan
nowdcn and daughter, Rutland.
·
OndChristmas
night, Mrs. Christian
·Capal aboard the guided missile an d Meghan, spent Chrisunas
witl1
da
· fn'gate USS Elrod, homeported in Mr. and Mrs. Juntice, Huntington · an
ughter, ·Lois and grandson,
' attended
the annual
Christmas
Charleston, SC for opcratinns in w ·va.
ily get-together
at the
home offamMr.
the Eastern Pacific. The ship is C.!lfl
Kelli and Dan Null, Cleveland·
and Mrs. James Ray at Point Rock.
rently midway through a two- Paul and Jean Mills, Belpre; Bob,
, month deployment.
Pat, Bobby , Matthew and Kevin
. This will be the ship's first time Keaton, local, were holiday guests
in .the Eastern Pacific. USS Elrod is of Imogene and Lester Keaton.
•
·
ari Qlive Hazard Perry Class guidThelma and Clarence Henderson By Jeffrey MeQuaia
ed missle frigaJe ·able 10 carry out w.ere Chr!sunas guests of Dave,
Q. I heard a comedian use the term
. anti-aircraft warfare and anti-sub- Lmda and Aaron Williams at Bel- WELTSCHMERZ. What is that?
A. This German term combines
Oth er guests were Susie
pre.
. marine warfare. These capabilities W
' ll '
M
WELT. "world," arid SCHMERZ,
·allow the ship to fulfill a pro·--u·on
· First used in English more
~
M t 1ams,R · k aryC and Emmett' "pam.'
of shipping mi ss ion for Marine '
oore, IC ' had and Eric than a century ago, WELTSCHMERZ
expediuonary forces, underway Williams.
refers. to the depression or sadness
replenishment groups and merchant
Christmas guests of Osie and that comes from comparing the world
convoys.
Clara Foll~od were Edith Harper, as it is with an ·ideal or imagined
The 453-foot frigate canies two ' Kathy, Dave, Stacey and Alan world. This sentimental sense of melhelicopters and a crew of 200 Watson •.all local;· Karen , Steve, · ancholy is not the usual material of
sailors. It is armed with missles, Kaue, Bnan and Brannon Follrod, comedy, but I hope that the comedian
,torpedoes and guns.
Athens.
pronounced this term "VELT.
,
shmerts.·
· Also a graduate ofTrident Tech:nical Clooes;e, Charleston, S.C.,
with an Associate of Arts degree,
heJO
· in.ed the Na.vy in Jui.Y1965.
.
,
,
1·
.'
Compiled h}':
. .
l. B.
rie~. Roberta M
Marine pfc . Donald B.
EmmogeneHolstemCongo
t&gt;'Brien L 588 10 George 1·
.Kennedy, sori of Perry E. .Keimedy
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio . Kom,
vm:
·
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·-

:In the service

~ w.N~~Iffyh.'e!~~~P:~~~~~beo~ we~or~ection:

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDEIIS

"lm,IMAacoloo
'11m• s,a•leet.e _.

CnllonSJMI._

no neptives here. DO ..roo qft,e?
' · THE OTHER WOMAN IN

COLUMBUS, GA.

.

By JEFF DONN As50clatecl Preu Writer
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. .:._ Yesterday's rebel without a cause wore
By PAUL RECER
the rapid expansion of the universe histo"' of the universe, called the a leather jacket lll!d white T-shirt,
AP Science Wriler .
thought to ha taned 'th the B'
.,
PHOENIX _ Small, obscur·e·
ve ~ . WI
tg research "a very important and James Dean-style. Today's sucks a
Boo:'~ some 10 bilbon years ago:
. fundamental result" that provides pacifier.
In the tradition of bobby SOli,
galaxies may, contain much of the
Thts cloud has to be o uu ed
·
f
invisible matter that asuonomers
. ,,
. .c ~ n
insight into the ulumate fate o the madras shirts or " X" ha~. paciby gravtty..
satd Rta.hard! . universe.
fiers are be~oming the latcst .te,en
. think could milke .up most of the ~ushotzky, an aStro.riomer at
"If this type or galaxy is typimass of th~ universe, according to NASA's Goddard •Space Flight cal then it shows that the universe craze -in some places. The pacifiers
studies by a new X-ray satellite.
, Center. "Otherwise, it would dissi- is ~losed," said Burns. ''It is not are worn on a string or chain
Four astronomers at a meeting pate and flY, ou~ard."
. "
.going to expand forever. ,.. I sus- around the neck and ~ traded like
Monday of the American AstronoFrom thts, said Mushotzk)o, we pect there is more dark matter than • class rings or friendship bracelets.
S9me educators worry the baby .
my, Society said a satellite called ' infer that there is a very large we thO!IghL"
accessory
is really a way of adverROSAT detected a huge cloud of amount of dark matter there."
There rut t)llo major theories on
tising
gang
lies or drug use. Others
gas superheated to J s · million
Other co-authors of the study the fate of the universe. One is that
see
it
as
a
harmless
- and largely
degrees within a trio of small 81\l David D. Davis of the Universi- the universe began expanding at
.galaxies known as the NGC2300 1y ~f Maryland, David Burstein of tho moment of the Big Bang and poitidess - cmze.
. "These kids need to create sym·
Arizona State and John Mulchaey wiU continue to do so forever. The
,group.
The researchers .s aid the gas of the Space Telescope Science other theory is that the universe is bois of a belongingness to a social
cloud, with a mass or more than Institute: The study was presented "closed," that it will fly outward ... group. and this is another one of
500 billion suns, provides new sup- at the national meeting of the until the forces of gravity from life those,' said Jim Peters, principal
port for the theory that gravity American Asuonomical Society.
mass of the universe eventually put · of Greenfield Middle School. He
said about 20 of the school's 590
Jack Bums, a New MelliCO State· J a brake on the ~pansion.
resulting from cold , unseen,
students tote pacifiers.
"dark" matier will bring to it halt . astronomer' who
specializes
in
the
.

Page-6 .

also honest and outgoing. I really
do love her.
The reason I am writing i_s
because so many parents today
seem overly involved in the
marriages of their children. I betieve,
this cl®s more harm than gooct and
1 bope you'll back me up. -- A
READER IN MONROE, LA.
· DEAR MONROE: rm with you.
And now I wonder how many
copies of Ibis column will ,be mailed

Dear Aaa Laaders: I was
DEAR WOMAN: No nepli¥CS?
outrqed
by ywr reliponSC to "Tears
You can't be serjous. A - • has
ooly eo much energy. What is being in Springfteld." Ywr fust sentence
expended on Terry is being shorted n:ad, "It niates no sense 10 bury a
somewhere else. Sneaking around penon with jewelry on.• The nerve
of you to be so judgmenllll.
can be pretty-exhausting.
My father was a 32nd deiree
Yau didn't ask ror advice, so 1
won't give any, nor did you ask for Mason. He wore h~ Masonic ring
my approval, which is fme, because with pride ror 30 years. When be •
was buried, lhll ripJ wu on his
you're 1101 gelling that either.· ·
Dear Ann Landers: You~ve fmger -· where it bdonged. Shame
covered this a number or linles. but on· you for suggciling otherwise. -here's another point or view to WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.
DEAR N. Y,; I respect your views,
Clinsider.
Let us quit criticizing whomever but I wonder if it ever occurred 10
you what a treasure that ring would
it is Qlir ehilaren choose to many.
My son "Pon" and his wife have· been to a son, grandson Or
.
"Sharon" Uve in another state with nephew.
their two children. I visit them five · Is tltlll A1111 Landers coltinlll you
clipped ytQn cigo yellow with age?
or six days a year.
Sharon is a lousy hQ!tse!recper, liKI For a copy of Iter most freq~lllly
I do niean lousy. Don is a!SD a slob. teqwskd poewu aNI essays, seNl a
It's up to him to keep the lawn self-«&lt;llressed, long, biiSi~~ess-siu
mowed and the garage clean. Both e~~wlope aNl a cited: or IIIOMJ
order for $4.85 (this , incJutks
are a disgrace.
I presume Sharon is a good wife. postage aNl ltalldling) 10: Gems,
They seem happy. I know sbe's an c/o AIIIIIAitders, P.O. Bo:i 11562,
excellent mother, involved in every Chicago, (II. 60611-056'2. (In
.
facet of their children's lives. She is CIUIGda, ~Nl $5.87.)

yy l

·

To place an ad .
MON. thru FRI. 8A.lii.-5P.M, - SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POUCIES
• Ade ou.•ide lite coUaty yo•r ad rwu •U.t be pre,.W.
• Lctin cli.couat for .dl ,.W ia adftaee.
• Fno Ado, G;,.._y aod F.....t ado uadw 15 -.u will be
f'UD 3 dayt&amp;l DO cUrp.
' ~
0 ~· of od for oD capilallou.on io douhlo priao of ad ...,
• 7 poiatli.. type oaly ...di ~
.
.
• S.tiDel iiMI n~polllllhle (oi' _,.,. • • f1nt da:r (clleek
. for ....... fnldoyod ....... lapapor). Call~oni.OOp.a.

lo M•oriuo

Publtc Notice

.NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
,

were

.

'

Colps'"

992~ddlopoot/

~!67A'hmHre

Po.. eror

'388-VIatoa
245-tiJo Gnallo
256-G.yaa Dtlt.

843-Portlad

985-Cheooer

64S.•..Wa Dlot.
S79-'ll'al•t

247-IA&lt;ut FaL
JU9-Raelno '

742-llatload

The price Ills-

Public Notice

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
conolrucllon of tho Project
Suted propout. wHI be Ia $204,420.00.
received at the afllce ol tho
CopiM of Drowlnga and
Mayor, Pomeroy City Holt, Controcl documenta may be
320 Eut1181n St., Pomeroy, oblllned or examined ollhe
Ohio, for lurnlohlng all ·OIIIco olth• Mayor, VIIIlabor, materlalo a·nd Holt, Pomeror, Ohio. A
.equipment neceooory to $16.00 foe wil bo required
complell the P.roJeotllnown lor ooch ••• of Drowlngo
a1 tho VILLAGE OF and Contr•ct documonlo
POMEROY, MAIN STREET token !rom· tho above
WATER
L I N E olliaoo. Chacko ahall be
REPLACEMENT PROJECT, modo payable to tho VIIIand aloalclllme and piece, ol Pomeroy, Ohio .
publicly OJHin•d and reed p ropoulo mu•• be
aloud.
.
aubmillld on tho Propooal
Tho propoo•d work Forma contained In .the
lnctuao inatalallcin of 3120 Contract documonlo. ·
1•1 of I" PVC wal8r main.· Each bidder io roqllired to
The ongln-'• •llmole for furnloh with lie prop(!oal, 1
Bid Guaranty and Contract
Bond In •accordonce wilh
S.Ction 153.54 olthe Ohio
· ·Aeviold Code. Bid Security
lurniohed in Bond form,
ohall be iooued by 0 Surely

-to

llcenald in the Stale or Ohio
to provldo oaid auroty.
Each Propoael muat
contoln the lull name ollh•
porty or p•liao oubmltting
the propoulond all poraona
lilterntod therein. Each
bidder muot . aubmit
ovldanco ol ite OXJHirlonceo
Happy' Ads

181,800 and

BA opl.l'llopOoly -

1-

67$-1'1. 1'1458-Looa ·
576-Applo c .....
77s.M. ..
882-N..195-l.et.oot
9S7-Bd'alo

COI814-992·71CM ior AooC.

LEARN TO DANCE!
BEGINNERS! SW1 Next Week!
MONDAY, ·TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
Pl. Pleasant Youlh Center
LATIN: Rumba, Cha-Cha, Samba,
Merengue, Tango
·
BALLROOM: Fox Trot, Swing, Waltz,
Polka
·
CLOGGING : Age 41o Adult
COUNTRY &amp; WESTERN:

.

.

11- Help Waoo..t
12- Si'-lio• Wanted

3--ABBOUbeu;.._U

4-CI.,..wa:r

13-t........
.
14- 0..'- Trlliaia()
1~ Schoo~ al-ioa
16-Jiadio, TV a eli Repair

~Happy Ado
~Loot oad Fouad

a•..,..

7-IMt oad F.....t

.a- Puhlle so1o a

11-Min 'I.

·• A..lioe

..

18- w....,t To Do

9- 'll'~tod 10 Buy

TheGanc

inion do and roqulru lhat 1.:==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
thia prOject be complolecl no 11
lltor lh~n.Moy 15•1te3.
Blcldoro are roquitecl ·to
comply with tho Minority
•Vinyl Siding
Bua~ou ,Entorprioo (MBE)
•Replacement
roqunomenlo oat forth. In
Window
Secllon 164·07 ollho ·Ohio ALL HARDWOOD
•Roofing
Rovioed Code, ond Rille
164-1-32 ol tho Ohio
Seasoned
olnoulalion
Adrnlniolriltive Code. In part,
JAMES KEESEE
thia moano lhatony bidder, $40
. .00 a Load
lo tho extenl lhal II
992·2772 Or
oubcontracto work, ohall
Delivered.
539
PI
aw«d oubconlrocll 1o ollie
rran aC!f
certified Minority Buoinooo (614) 992•S449
Middleport, Ohio
Enlorprio• In ., aggr-le
dollar val.,. ol no looolhan
1213119211fn
12/1/92111•
live percent (5%1 of tho
~=~~~~=~
prime contract. Bidder I
1r
procurement ' activilioo, lo
tho ox tent thol tho
contractor purchaa• m~EVERY THURSDAY
lolo and/or ·••rvicn, aholl
.
EAGLES ·CLU I
ruult in lho oworci of

FIREWOOD
FOR . SALE

J&amp;l INSULATION

a

r-------...

elate certified Minorily7
Buoinooo Entorprl..a llf
aggregetedollervelueofno
•••• lhan two )Hircont (2%)
ollho prirM controcl. The
bid opocllicatlona provide
lurthor dotallo on thooe
roqulrementa.
All contractoro and
extent practlcab~ uoe Ohio ..
Produclo, matotiolo, oerv-

Admlnlotrator '
Vlll9 of Pomwoy

(1J 5, u, 11, 3tc

SiNGLES and COUPLES CLASSES

BINGO

J'errellgas ·

CLf\SSfiED
RDS
.
.
ll

.

Sood a Fertllber

.u... for Sale
Tnacb for Solo .
v.. a4WD'o
Motoreyc: ...
lloolo &amp; Mo1oro for Solo
Aato Parto &amp;
A•ao Repair
C..piq Eqolpaoeat

""-•ri•l

~ Equip,.oat for Beat
49-ForL-oo

\11-l:j II \\111&gt;1 .

'11{\111'
I

'

52- Sporliat Coodt
U-Aallq~ Mioc. M....,..adioo
5:&gt;- Buildi"'J Suppli•

J and T Gas Service

6145 p.-.
SRMJal Earlr llrd
..,..
' ·

$1;::roH

•100 lb. Cyllndoro ·
•A.V.'o
•Gao Grill Tonks
•Ve&lt;nd0111 Heatoro
ltlclae

This a•
for I
fiE car••
Uc.llo. 0050.32
111241'112/11n

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949·2391 or

·

12 00 Noon
:
Factory choke 12
gauge only.
STARTS
OCT. 18th
.

PONDS '
BEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARihG
WATER • SEwER f
LINES
,.
BASEMENTS &amp; \
HOMESITES
·
HAUUNG) UrMStone;:.
Dirt, Gl'IWII and Coal ··
LICENSED and IIONDED · .

PH. 614·H2-5591
..1,

12-5-Ift!

GARRY'S
GENERAL
MAINTENANCE
742·3"305.
AFTER
7:00P.M.
12-17·'92·1 mo.

YOUNG'S.
CARPENTER SERVICE

IN POMEROY

New Dealer .

R&amp;C EICAYITIIIG
BUllDOZlNG .

.

3~Lo.. aAct.p
36- R..t u- w..tod

an~ complexity. The owner

Read

Acky-Breaky. Electric Slide, Boot
Scootln' Boogie, Conon-Eyad Joe,
'Cowboy Cha-Cha, Texaa Waltz,
Texaa Two-Slap, Tush Puah, Flying
Eight, Cowb&lt; V Polka and more "Of
the latest tine and partner dances. •
P. S.: For you men !hat n'ed a
partner, there are 111anty of
woman that need ona!
FOR ENROU.MENT·CALL
lnslructc · Mikkl CastQ
675-3888

U..IOok
Hay a Graia

Public NQJica

-·
FORKED RUN
HAPPY Joth -The
Owner reoorved the
SPORTSMAN,
right to wolve •ny
BIRTHDAY, lnformaUU.. or lrreguloriU..
CLUB
ond ID rojoct•y or oil bldo.
SUNDAVS
"B. K."!
Johll A. Andoroon. ·
,1

4,800 aq. ft. lonn
'

'I"P
Woatod to Buy

a-..

RACINE GUN ·
CLUB
. GU""n S"'OOTS
n
·SUNDAYS
•1:00 P.M.

lmpl•m•ntauon or th•lr
proJect. Addllionat, conlrociDr cotnpllanco with lh•
equal omptoymont op·
l·IDD·I37·1460 ·
po&lt;lunlty requlromonta of , . Lawn Mowtng,
Ohio Admlnlolrativo Code
Fertilizing, Weeding,
Chaptor 123, the Gov•nor'o
Executive Order ol 1872,
and Seeding.
OPEN TO PUBLIC
and Covernor'a Executive
Shrub ancn12 GAUGE Offly
Order 14-8 ohall be required.
Trimming &amp; Removal
FACTORY CHOKE
Blddora muat comply with
R-IoT&amp;,Commonolal
the -aiilng wage ralll on
FIM Eollmoloa
ENFORCED
Public. Improvement in AREWOOD FOR SALE
121!111 mo. pd.
Melgo
~~==:::=:":26-::'92:~:"'~ L:;:;:;;:;:;:;:;;;~
Vlllago ofCounty
Pom•oy,and
Ohiotho
ao h
r
dotermtnod by · tho Ohio
GUN
SHOOT
MICROWAVE OVEN
Department of lnduatrlal

\

a-..

32- Mobile
for Sale
33-- Fanu for Sale
~ B..i-Balld...

42- Mobllo
for Beat
43-- r...... for II.,..
44- AparbMilt lor Rm~t
45-:- Fumilbed Roo...
4(&gt;,- Space for Boat
47.....:.. Waated lO Rm~t

on projecta of 1imil1r 1ize aubconlrector• involVed
with the pro}ecl will, to the

5

I \1\\1 &gt;I 1'1'111 &gt;
"11\1.-1 '111 k

41-n-forllem

Company or Corporation procurement contrecte to

1\nlndnil &lt;&gt;I ..... &lt;&gt;I .,...._
lmOIII'II may bo pcalblo ... quallylng ....
10n to buy ~ry Ncl 'hOmt on 3% aa- In
Rocino. 4 BR, 3 blllil, 2gngaa, ~ 1
bldg.

,.-----1

•

51- M•iealltutnu.ea"
58-Fnaito It: V~lee
~9- For Solo or Trade

1\1\1\1'

661-Coot.tllo

PRICE REDUCED!

.

"'A6'1• 9

446-G.Wpollo

THE ADDED TOUCH
Welcomes Jana Baker, Mandy
Eblin, and Merri Amsbary. Phone
992-5766. Walk-ins welcome.
Evening appointmenls' available.
Hours_: Mon.-Fn. 9:00·8:00, Sat
ji:00-5:00.

$ .60
$.05/day

"

lcea, end Iebar In the

g·

.. · .·
7:00 P.'..._.
•.

Yonl Sat.

I would like to thank all my
customers on my newspaper
route for cards and gins this
holiday season.
· Bernice Durst

'

22- Moaoy 10 Lotm
23- Profeuio..l s.m-

2-laM_,-

'

BULUTIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Janet lT.en' o'y hosts Evangelz"n.e ',
Mzsszonary'
• '
GYOU'" meetz"ng '

,

co-

$.30
$ .42

'
Rates are for consecutive runS,'broken
up days will be
charged for each day u separate ads.

Gollla County Melp Coanty M - Co., WV
Area Code 614 A!'ea Code 614 Area Code 304

Bl 'LLETI:\ B().\RD

~.

,.

appointed

eclmlniolralora of lho oolalo
of Mlch~ Dean Worlc'man,
decoaood, Jato of 40160
Klngobury Roed, Pomeroy,
Melgo County, Ohio, 45169.
Robert E. Buck,
.
Probate Judge
.
L.,•ll· Neoeolroad, Cl•k
(12) 22, 21; (1) 5, 3tc

POMEROY -The F.O.E. Ladies'
Auxiliary NO. 2171 will meet
1~':::~abet7hel:30dp,m7.
81 A po.:!_~
r
p.m. """~
will be a tuest speaker on "The,
Aging Eye.
~ ·

CB

~

Courl, Caoo No. 27702,
Jollniy M. Harm•. 78 Nor1h
Cherry SII'HI, Mount Glloecl,
Ohio, 43331 and Donald A.
harmon, 171 N. VIM str..~
Mount Gilead, Ohio 43338

THURSDAY
RACINE • The Racine Ameri,
can Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at tbe post
home. '
·'

•cao··il!'

j

the Meiga Co.unty Probate

RACINE • Organizational meeting fof'Southern Local School
Board, Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the
high school.

COCJJ(

II &gt;

OF FIDUCIARY
On Doc.,.bor 16, tH2, In

=·

0.

··

u- o..u... Opportaaity

follollling eelephonl! IJ#CCMJIBel ...

• A. . .if'oad ad....._t plooad Ia ibe Galli"'• lloily
Trilou,. (oxcep~ CluoiCioclllloplay, B._ Cord or Lopl
Noaloeo) ..Uioloo appear ia ~ Pwlat Ptoa..t B....... ud
1i1e Daily S.adael, reoelli"' o..,.18,000 1oo·

POMEROY • There will be a
Sugar .. Run School meeting
Wednesday at 6:30p.m. at the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce Office m Pomeroy.

..

•

56- P.., for Sale

I I\\ \I I\ I

$ .20

Clau(fied pose• c011er tlae

• Adl th.t • • he paW lD .dnace an:
Card of Th..W
Happy Aclt

Land fr ans{4ers. poste
. d ·
Jr:.'

·

1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
• 1:00p.m. -r..day
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Over 15 Words

$4.00
' $ 6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

15
15
15
15
15

1
3
6
10
Monthly

DAY BER&gt;RE MUCATION

Mandl}i Paper
TuslayPaper
WedMoclay Paper
Thunday l'lper
Friday Poper
Sunday Paper

Call 992-2156

'
feeding during seasons when Ieaveli'
arc developing or present. When
Icaves d'te down, keep dry. Repol,
every third or fOUrth year,top
·
at begmning
of growing perio ;
other years.
.
,
FOt\ lhe program ,everyooe made~
a OuiStmas ornament for cxchang
ing. '?ift.wrapping was judged with,j
pretuest gomg to Evelyn Hollon'Dpris.Grueser and Nava Couch.· ~
CHristmas favors were passed':
ou.t to each member from "'••h~'.
· ·~u 1 "
Miller.
· '•
.,1
.

OUR LANGUAGE

COPYD~E

Rate

Words

Days

_;

Chrisunas dinner for the Wild- the Chrisunas flower show and that
wood Garden Club was held at she received four ribbons. Janet
Mason Fam•·1YRestauranL
Thetss
· recetv
· cd ·~-uu«&gt; rt'bbons and
Arter the meal a short business Evelyn Hollon 13 ribbons. It was
· was h'eld. Doroth
. y smith note d Mrs. The~
· gave a demonmeeung
had devotions reading "Twas the · ~tnltion.a~the MCiJ~ Musellln mak.Night Be{ore Jesus Came," fol- tng a hvtng advent wreath with
lowed by other spiritual readings. herbs.
·
For roll call everyone was to recall
The monthly rejx&gt;n was given
a happy chun:h memory.
by Janet Theiss on the amaryllis, a
Kathryn Miller gave a report on popular holiday plant. They bloom
'
from January to April. To keep
Charleston neighbors bulbs
from year to year, keep
1
· b
·
d
·err·culate pet1'ti"on
Pants growmg y watenng an
.
.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) ·.
-Residents of a well-to-do secYC
"
lion of Charleston say Nick Nolte
I
oughttobeabetternei~llbor.
. .
1
' · 1:'
The actor, who hves on the
.
·
.
:~
West Coast, is seeking permission
·
·
:•
to establish a subdivision on a lot
The Evangeline Missjon'ary
Pat Thoma read the Chrisunrui;
on which he used to live iri South Group of the Pomeroy Church of 1story from the bible and "One Soli ..
Hills. He has proposed calling it Christ met ret:endy at the home of 'tary Life."
'
Down, and Out in South Hills, a Janet Venoy. '
·The group caroled at the.~
takeoff on his 't985f!10V~ "'Down . Betty Spencer gave the opening . Extended Care Unit, Overbrool(1
and Out m Beverly Hills.
prayer with Linda Laudermi\t pre- Center and Brenda Darst's home I
siding at the meeting. Roll call was ·
· ·,
. . Neigh~ are cin:u~ting a ~ti- answered with remembrances of
A sunshine box was presented•
uon agatnst.the prOJeCt, which Ch .
,
Off'
,toCharlesArson.
.·
~
. would establish ntne lots on four.· nstmas past. tcers reports
The hosteSS served refreshments'
.of 35616 Vance Road, Pomeroy,
David Carter Helen Carter
Roben L 'tllt'amson Lot 9 to acres owned byJ~ol~. and h1s w!re, were given and collections taken.
to Debbie Miles, Charldine Alkire '
,.ecently completed the Radio FunR'
' C
~
·. .
•
•
Rebecca. The ooumctpal Planmng
Cards were sent to Melvin Pat Thom11, Ev• Dessauer, Eilee~
ilamentals Course.
parcels, to !chard P. ~· Shcm Donna L. W1lltamson, Rutland.
Commission is scheduled to con- Smith, who was in the hosfital; Bowers, B.etty Spencer and Lindti'
: During the course at Marine L. Cilrter, Ohve.
Jaymor Coal Co.nka, Jaymar sider the proposal in MarCh.
Ashley Fields, Faye Fa~rcl lind LaudennilL
·
.:Corps Communication-Eleeuonics
Lloyd M. Moore, Ruth G. · Inc., Jay Hall, Jr., Trustee, Parcels
"They have no interest In our AliceLaudetmilt.
·
The January meeting will be1
quality of life .. said net~'hbor S8111
Debbie Miles had the mission held at the
'th De
""school, twentynine Palms, CA, Moore, tnlcks, tO Lloyd M. Moore, t6 rl4, to Paul Stnluss, Rutland. .
·students receive insuuction on the Trustee! Ruth ·G• Moore • Trustee•
Roy
Allen Sayre• .,_,
-'a•'d • affiid .,10 Busse. "'They're
'
. . e wt
bbie;..•
.
non,residents. I · study on Sonrt'se Mt' sst'on of the ·Miles as hos~SS
w
liasic procedures for .maintenance Pom. VIII.
Emtlecn E. Sayre, SUlton..
· understand people wantini to make . Christ Church of Hazard, Ky.
:and rapair of the radio equipment
Ni.c holas Grueser, affid, to
. Ralph E. Cundiff, Lois J. Cun- the most or their land. I JUSl don't r-----~~~~~~-------- -~ ·
:used in the Marine Corps.
Marg~e ':f'leser, Rutland. . .
dtff, ,parcels, to Jeffrey A. Fowler, see this as a good invelltlllerlt .,
•• Training is focused 00 the funcDavi E. Longsworth, Eva Ruby J. Fowler, SalisbllfY.
Brawley Trxy a lawyer for the
(; NRAJ)
1
:oons of uansmiuers, receivers and
Shir.ley Longsworth, Karcel~. IO
. Home ~atiO!UII Bank, 1.873 A., Noltes had no ~ommenl on the
....D - - c•!!•,va. • .,
antennas as well as teChniques for
Davtd E. Longsworth, va Slurley toUroyHendrix,JudyE.Hendrix, O)llialition
....,. • - -ft!l.11'..._ • .,
.,.
,
operational tex!ing and trouLongsworth, LeJ&gt;anon.
Sutton.
.bleshooting: Students also receive
John T. '\Volfe, Marilyn. J.
Todd R. JSing, Joy Lynn King..
DON ~N, wv
·•
·
h
fM
Wolfe, 10.000 A, tQ Ronald alcaJoyLynn.Biack,TomBiack,pt
an.• B£ - A w . y A a• ••-ID&gt;trucuon on t e use 0
arine
Quillen, Joyce Quillen, Sutton. ·
Lots 284 and 286. to David 0.'
' "'....,.
....,....,. .. aa i'...
'corps supply and maintenance
J 0h T w0 If M
Pri
•.
e, . arilyn J.
ce,MaryV. Price,Midd,J'ill.
ca·-~
va. ....,• •.,.. c·DW
,
ID
to Don Rose,
Raben B. Black, dec'd, l.:c:rt. of
BAG•.
A--..-,&amp;.,...,,.,. .
l&gt; ublications, pocration of mw'nte- Wolfe,n parcels,
pance shops and elecuonic theory. , Donna Rose, Suuon.
.
Tmns., to Connie B. Black, Robert
II!' A•r,
• AV
The 1991 graduate Qf Metgs
Louise 'V, Dixon, dec'd, cert: to L. Black, Lonnie R. Black, Jason ·
~ ••
AT
High School, Pomeroy, joined the
Robert L. Dixon, Linda L. Whit· R. Blaclc,Rutland.
'
,· '
Marine
Decem!ler 1991.
Iate h, Pom. v·u
.
BWJ701N W.lct. . .f
.1 •
'

.'

RATES

p.m. •t the home of Maida Mora.
Guest speaker will be Mary Powell
director of tbe Meigs Coonty Park
DistricL She will speak on "Beautiful CounUy." Interested guesJs are
welcome.
'

~

ml'l!i'ths.' '
i
.
Some aficiopados say paci(iers
help them relax. Jon Unaius, an ·J J.
year-old at North .Parish Elemen· - - ·
tary School in Greenfield, was
quoted in the Springfield Unio([News as saying he just likes "how
it goes 'cheet, chcct," wlien you
suck it
.
'
Daniela Alloro, a psychologist
who counsels teen-agers in the Los ·
An$eles suburb of Downey, said
pa~tfiers among teen-agers are "a·
regress1on and a way to be cool" 31
the same time.
·
• -··
' "The youngster ... needs. io scparate ~rom the l?~ents emouonally,
b~t It s a uanstuonal phase, so he ,
sull needs to go back to the')larents
for emotional support." she said .
'.'I think this fact of the pacifier
reflects this ambivalence: When
there is a problem of stress, the
adolescent regresses to earlior
behavior," she said. "But he cab
be cool."
·
:'

'

day afwo puhlicolioa to ...b ...... llo~

d
.
d
h
/d
.
.
,
.
'
•
wop gq.li eners p .. meetzng

TIT•/d

Among them is sixth-grader
Colift Drouin, who said the mouthpiece helped hi!ll kick a p11Ck-a-day
smoking habit.
"You. have something in your r
mouth. It just does il.' ' Drouin
said.
·
Some are alarmed by the fad,
which developed after the rjllease
of the movie "Boyz N the Hood."
The film about LOs Angeles-area
gangs includes a character who
sucks a pacifier.
Sage Valley Junior High School
in Gillette, Wyo., banned the paci·fiers last year and sent out a notice
saying: "Pacifiers are associated
wnh drugs , gangs and infants.
· N.one of these associations is
appropriate for junior high
school."
"It's just-a disuaction in class,"
said Principal Dan Espeland.
"You're Uying to get a questionand-answer session going, and you .
have students with pacifiers in their

•The ·Area's Number 1
Marketplace

Community calend.ar

•

I

'

.

10 the appropriale people.

Community Calendar items for Meigs County Girl Scoot Troop
appear two days befCH"e 1111 event Cookie Chainnan will be Tuesday
and the day of that event. Items at 1 p.m. at Pomeroy Village Hall.
must be received well In advance This will be the last training sesto assure plllcation In tbe cal- sion for this year. Chairmen or rep. resentatives from the troops must
endar.
· attend Those at last Wednesday's
.
T ESDAY
sesaion need not attend U!Jit cook·
· MIDDLEPORT • January Bible ie chairmen are Gertrude Casto and
study at Hope Baptist Church will PatThoma
·
be held through Friday. ·
•
•
· CHES11lR - The Chester TownPOMEROY. • Drew Webster ship Trustees·will meet Tuesday at
Post No. 39, Tuesday. Dinner at 7 7 p.m. at the Chester Town Hall.
p.m., meeting at8 p.m.
An organizational meeting for 1993
will follow.
,
POMEROY • Meigs County
React Team Inc., will meet Tues'WEDNESDAY
. day at 1 p.m. at the· home or Guy
POMEROY. Middleport LiterHysell on CounUy Road 5. MemCl b 'II
Wed esda
2
ary u wt meet
n
y at
bership fees are due. Past and new p.m. at the Meigs County Public
members welcome.
Library in Pomeroy, Mrs. Dwight
Wallace will be hostess and will
POMEROY • Pomeroy OES re'view "Rosa Parks, My StOry."
Chapter 186 will meet Tuesday at For roll call members will tell of·
7:30 p.m. The instruction commit- • someone who has Ullcen a diffteult
tee will function. OffiGers were sland.
·
street dresses.
CHESTER - The Chester GarPOMEROY • Training session den Club will meet Wednesday·at 8
· "'

..

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-7

that T.eens pacify'selves in latest fad
.universe.Will stop expanding .

Woman s~es nothing wrong
with her extramarital·affair •
Dear A1ua I•l'den: One hunchd
yean 1110. the am.,e life expectancy wu about 4S yean. In lhollc
days, it WU I rmegane conclusion
dial ooe would I'CIIIIin married to

'

pi~covery ~upports theory

Tuesday, January 5, 1993

-

Pomeroy..,...Middleport, Ohio

'

•MI VCR UPIIR

~

IUUIES
lrl.. _ll Itt Or We
Pklt U,.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992•5335 Or
915•3561
....... ,,.. •••tOifh•
211 L .._..,.
0

"_.,,

:'m2A!n

HOMEMADE
PIES.
ORDER NOW
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
985·4107
1~&gt;1i1

mo. pel.

c.
992-6215

Quality ..
St,one Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE

FOR SALE

Call614·992· :
6637
St.Rt. 7

Ch.shire, OH . ..

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

"
BULLDOZEA,BACKHOE•
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and "
TRAILER SITES,
LANDGLEARING, ,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLEO
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

AUTO
PARIS

992·7013 or
992·5553
or TOLL FREE
1·800·141·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269

.

)

CHARLIE'S

SMALL DOZER .

W.ORI

.

DRIVEWAY WoRK..
and liMESTONE .DELIVERY SERVICE
·S•oll Do1ar Work ·
$25.00 l'tr lo.r
RWONIIlE UTU

992·7553
011.

7f.ll{91ltl

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

'l

992-3838

Spedallzlng In Custom

Frame Repair
•
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODUS

1

FREE ESTIMATES

P-oy,Dhlo

WHALEY~$

.

. BISSEll &amp;
CONSTRUCTION .
•New Homes ·
•Co111p te
Relnod•li•g
Stof. &amp; Co:z:re

•G•r•c•

F IE ESTI

S

985·4473
667·6179

USED RAILROAD nES

12-30·92-llti

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.
232 2•d St.,
PoMeroy
992-2036
Check wlttJ us .tor
Hot Watar Tank
Rantal Program.
12·1·2 mo. pd.

WICK'S
HAULING SERV.IC~

36970WiwRIIII ..

,.....,.ow.

HOLitAY
~.sou

••

SIUD LIMESTONE

Dtllnntl 16 t. 'II a

. 992·3470
'

--

~

..

,·

.,

�~

4

~

•

1\Jeselay, January '5, 1993

Pomeroy:-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally 5entlnei-Page-9

ALLEYOOP

An nounct&gt;menl s

BRIDGE

$ 1 ,. . ---Ill

The World .Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle I::

3 Announcements

ACROSS '

Ue - I l l Olrtolll Uvolll ;.

- - Ext. IMI SUI P.,

·PHILLIP
ALDER

MilL MUOI Ia 11 y,._ Unlolar Co.
10114t1*15-

- -Cuol--

1 Sinewy· '

-kit

5 Stor~~gt

38 Smll 101ount
3V Sir trtck
41 -hour

compartment

8111111 tlrand
12 lr0411101t

.
w l l - Wocl. ~on. I,Blllchorlng
1113 un, der MW IMI'Iaglmeut, 304-77311113 01 :II1M-IIU353.

lllcllan

NORTH

Giveaway

1-l-IJ

· +AH
.62
IAQJ

'
WEST
+H
.QJ107l .
• 8 72
+A K 10

VJHE~ J-1E. S~D
UP l lOLD HlfJ\ l

· HAOO'T

E.A"TE~

ALL

DAY AOO 1 WAS

STARVtD

13 OWIIIScot.)
14 Efii!IIOrt

48Sharp-on
a plOw
5D Ntwopapor
OIICUIIYt
51 l!arlln plot ·
52 Largo

w1ndoring
19 Arlltt
PICIUO

EAST

20 Sllllf

• ?83
•Ka 1
IK9 3

whl..,..

·

.....

· 21 Anglo-S11on

.Q8f3

SOUTH

"5{)~

43 Kalo Nelligan
moria
45 Avoid

\

.15~
17
lo

.J9762

+KI076 2
.A95

• 10 6 54

!abbr.)

!IIi Workers '

23 oGirl's flima
24 Propc.tlilon
2e Cullt
28 Ulllr old
31

111n.

57 Decays

DOWN

Nalthbor of

1 Cry

G1.
32 Choor
33Per-

·Vulnerable: East-West
Pealer: West

•.

54 Smllstove
55 Soria! Union

woman

.5

..

•

34 Help
.38 Tarvol

'2 -La Douce
3 Klddtd
4 Shoulo

.

5 Cheat
6 Two, Raman
7 ComPitl pl.

11 Prlncolr ltaJ.
ian lamllr
•
·

ment1book

18 Rodonlt
22Welrd
23· Anetlllallc 24 Youlh or,. : ,

16 Vall agee

8 Sauuve
9 Old T••••
10 Tear

2Eon.

Soutb

25 Hare (Fr.)
27 Machine par.t •

All pass

29AIIar-- -

know

Opening-le.ad: ¥ Q

35 Uvtt
I cannol tall

1 Male YorliH T..-rlor 1 Rod
F - Doohund. Tov!ot Rd or
~md

Ostentation ·
111ay backfire

OL'.BULLET ARE
GOIN' 'POSSUM
HUNTIN'II

Lost &amp; Found

Arguably the greatest-ever adver·
tising coup occurred when person A,
as I shall call him, persuaded person B
to buy aT-shirt with person A's com'
· pany logo on it Person B had paid for
the privilege of advertising person A's
company.
· In bridge. it usually doesn't pay to
advertise your cards. But occasionally
you reveal a particular honor-card in
an effort to "lislead.an opponent a~out
the location of another honor.
In today '~ deal, the 6idding was .bizarre. North might have made a take·
out double over one heart. And South
entered the auction with a -skeletal
two-,spade overcall.
West led the heart queen and. when
it held the trick, continued with a low
heart to the king and ace. Declarer
took a diamond finesse. but it lost .
Back came a diamond to dummy 's
queen.
N~w South had to lind the spade
queen. and all the indications pointed
to West: As he hadn't led a top club at
trick one, it was clear East had a club
honor: Apparently that left West needing the spade queen for his opening
bid.
'
However, South was .Estee Griffin. a
board member of the Greater New
York Bridge A'!Sociation far· over 20
years, who died last November. She
asked herself why East, an expert, had
won trick three with the diamond king.
The normal play would be to duck.
Griffin concluded that he wanted her
to know he had the.king. Backing her
judgment. Griffin immediately played
a spade to her 10 - and it won! Declarer ruffed her ~earl loser with
dummy's spade jack, cashed the spade
ace and led a low club. Th~ contract
was safe.
'

a-. REWARD! 114-

FOWid: 2 whlta malo. dogo
wl1&gt;ollaro, 1 hu blllan marklngo,
SR 2481Succ.l8 Rd. oroa, 114-~3515 .

OolciM Aatrle"« f11n1le Pup.
NOI WNrlnQ Coller or ID. "Kalla"
Raward 114-317-Qq7

LOST male at.. Tlek coon
hound, 1 monlho ·old, 5 milo

fEANU'l'S

lrM,31J4.175-1331.

LOST: Slloltle lmlnlaluro Cclllo).
Vk:lnMy: At. 35, b o - Rodman, Randortng Plant ISta,.hor,
Hllmrk:k roada). Anew.,. to:
LadY or Boby. I14-24S.I512.

LOST: wNto Somoyocl H"lky, I
.,._ ald. aurtoharl Lana, Chi~
llcol._ Ad .. - . 114-441-4222
dllp, ....._21,. ne'e.

7

Yard Sale

'I'ES MA'AM .. I BROUGI·l'f MV
006 TO SC~OOL.TODA't' .. WELL. ,
SOMETiMES 1-lE 6ET5 LONEL.'t'...

- No, MA'AM .. I-lE WON'T
CREATE A DISTURBANCE ,,

Emp loyment Serv1ces

11

Help Wanted

'AVON' ALLAREASI- JOUr

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

time whh uo. You'll lovo t._
camp~nr.

ALL YIIRI Saloolllluot Ba Paid In
Advonca. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the d•r before 1he acfle .to.run.

Sunday Mlhlon - 2:00 p.m.

1-8Q0..112..e351.

AVON I All -'-o I Shlrtoy.
,spu,.:, 304-17S-142l.

Babyattter DMded In my horfte;

2 chlldrM. Muet hlv1 referenFrld.ly. Mond•r t41tlon - :!:00 - · Nlloblo tronoporatlon. 114p.m. S.tunllr. .
· 21114:1St.

8

____ ...,2_

ogakido. Boloro • altar
NiHth Point orN. 30447J.1021.

&amp;Auction
Rick Poaroon Aucllon ~ny,
full time auctJGMer, compiM:e

'·

'

.

~

oc-. chootera. pret.r mr

Public Sale

auct&amp;on • awvlce.
UcanHd
166,0hlo &amp; Waot Vlr!llnlo, 773-5715.

Eooy Work! Excoiilnt Poyl bo
oamblo Praducio AI Homo. CIH
Toll Frw, · 1-100-417-1561, E.xt.
313.

Port~lmo bobYOII1or lew 3 pr-.
home, no

14-, 3
1810 Folrmont Fo-,
·--,-,
nanlnge or wMkeride, 114-W2· Mel~ 2 betha, ~n tub.
1123..
. brond , . ..hoot pump, 114-14~
Po~·Ttmo

RN cltar;o· nuroo
nooclocl. ,12-llaur ohitt. MUOI bo
wllll~ to .work w.ebndl •
holldlyo. Ccnlact Sharon Skkf.
IIJOft, Director of Nu:nlng,
PI-nt Valty Pklrolng Clio
Contor._Pt,. P-ont, WY 304-

175-112&gt;0. MIEOE.

DAYIDSOII'S
PLUMBING

n'!Jalnl

;:a~
31904 Leadiag
c....kload
Middleport, Ollio

12·1·'92·1

2105.
3bdnn.,

TO MAl'~ A

15112,
lurnlohocl,
controllir, okl~lng. w11 flnonoe.

SlOG-., ti:W mon., 114-182·

SAI~T

2117, 11448H227.

OUT Of
M~/

33 Farms for Sale

34

Business
Buildings
· In Lananfllo, now

l'll~'5A~

"'

,

.

'

® ... IIIWIPAPIIIINII11 IIIII Allk

, ~ R£CEII/EO no!

OUR LANGUAGE
'

Wml rut CAAISlW,S

811ildlng
wiring ond drywall, lnoulotocl,
w.ler7electrlc avallaW., a Nil
buy ot $2500; 114---Z.

.

CAAD'J. ..

tQI.liY.&gt;T A~­
Ptoo~' M~~! 1m£1&gt; ·
TIIO\ /IIY'!£Lf 1110 Till~

Rentals

By Jeffrey McQuain
STRAKE, which rhymes with·
TAKE. may be used for a stripe or
streak: "The painter applied a strake
of color." Rake over the coals any
speller who fails to end STRAKE with
RAK'£.
.
.

YEARI~TO

t-.--h. ~rw ~ aliWlf'£!1!

41 Houses tor Rent

949-2734

614·992·71

.

tcNOw A LITT~t SUff~~ll'l6 IS
. GOOP fO, Tti~ .fOUL. fVT
SOMUOPY'S T~Yl~6

Rurollorm lew lliio--. bom
oncl out bullcllnao. 10 In
~=;.-Ohio, IU,OOO,

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
RACINE, OH.

2 BR Houao. Chll-hl RD.

tl85.~:'l4f""'· &amp;. Roior. ,.
1415 or 114-441·

qulrocl.
1243

mo.

Largo 2 olory, cornor lth &amp;
Moln, Pt. Pit. 3 lorgo boclowmo,
2 lull bolho, khchon, clnlng,
f•mllr, .Uvlng, t.undry r.oma.
1450. por month, ....._
a
dopoolt ........... 1"'"'*2205.
Avollablo •rlv o.-nbor.

TROllEY
STATiON CRAFTS
.614-992-2549
HOLIDAY HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 10-8 p.m.
Sun. 1-5 p.m.

14

Handmade Gi£Ls For
EverYone, nnd Gre at
Gi£tldea•.

Plazo. Coli Todly, I
Rog.l90-05-t2748.

AMERICAN GENERAL UF~ and
ACCIDENT .INSURANCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Heatih •

Business
Training

'

. -431711
·•

'

Wanted to Do

DoZir • land ctearlng, •ze~va~­

lng work. Wilding, trucking loge
or lumMr on Uetbed •110 \IIlii
haul equlpmtnt: 8:00 till 5:00
WMkdlrt 304-9374410.

EIR TREE SERVICE. TopPing,
Trimming, Tr11 Remov11, Htdge
Trimming. FrH Eatlmat. . t eMo36").115TAIIIf 4p.m.

42

74

Mobile Homes '
for Rent

11R
Trolior, ~&amp;
R-ICO Roqulrotl. No Polo.
114-44a-lll42, Or 114-717-4345.

M-

2 BR po~ioity lurn'ocl, Clblo
available. lellullful river view lrt
Kr"'ll pepoatl .. RtlwlnCII
Roqulrid ......_••
Homo
Pork.l14-44a-1102

2117, 114 •B WI.
.
llobUo Homoo lor ronl OoiUpollo
F
304 4 7M335 171o4075
erry,
or
·

44

.

.Antiques

roflniohlng
lond
1ft ohunlh
~ lloo Will buy; coiill4412:

Furnhon:
,.Pl.,.
..

Apanment

I'JIIICH!q

54 Miscellaneous

8224.

Merchllndlu

•

:~=..~~=-=·

imflltlon lufa. Ill full iona111. I
hr=r.tx.n., IIIla new. IM-JU..

111

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
.
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101. 949·2160
or 915·3139 ·
(No S.illd•y C•lls)
2112192/lfn

0

°

11114 eo. -.... 130. . _ ,
- t""-ln top ....... _,...
2417.
•. '
.

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

-.........

l l a - ~·- ..... 11,110. Aloo.

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages o Replacement Wfndows
· Room Additions o Roofing

~- 114 ~·an~ or 441-

Fmancial
21

w

:--,.~~,..=,;.,-,..,Bwy ar ·1111. Rlwerlne Antiq...,
tla4 E. Moln Stroot, on At. .12,4_,
Pomeroy. Hows: M.T.W. 10:w
Lin. t• 1:00 p.m., Sundlf 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114-1182·21521. ·

Mlat PaUI1'a DIY Carw Cent•r 1 O n o B R - - t o
OIIIIIICIIIt oncl
Block W"' Of HMC On Joci&lt;Jon downtown
Plko M-F I A.M. ·5:30 P.M. II ~-r- 1-ttll.
Olllthy
E.......nco lo Tho
11 COnc:am For Your Chlld'a.
C.ro, Coli U. For AViaN. inllnt
ITocldtoro 114-44NZ27. P torRent
....._ /Sc~A;oiM-446-

And

heoloro, Wootorn a

-hlr

53

Business

~ponurilty

--·-·,_ .... IIDm••• ...._

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINO CO.
NCOmmondo thll ,.., de buolo
whh-'" you k-, and
NOT to Hnd monoy througn t._
moll unlit you hi" 111-tgatocl
tho olforlng;

.

1-------------------3 . ___________________

2.·----------~------~
'

4;
--------~--~----5 •. __;__ _~----....;..

6----------~----~-7. _ _ _~~--~~
8 •. __~------------9 •. ____________~-----

10~------~--+.~~-11~-----------·------

12------~~---------

13:~----~~~-----14-._ _ _ _ _,;._
·· - - - . . , . .
15 __~~~~~~--~

446-2342
9J2-2156

trtoo, ~~~- ......... - ..... 110 polol tiiO: - .... .
...... i\cthli'l' ... ......
1111, Npm or hUll IIIII •1torl,...

,. '

. ~i

""'*

TUeSDAY

I.

Servtces

&amp; Uaad

Thm your clutter into ctuh,
Worlo -a.ll4-44$-3151.
il the ep•y way... by phone,
TV Solo: ear- t.Y. woo
$110, Solo $95; RCA LY.
woa $95 cut to NO.
no need to leave your home.
Solo: OE ._.vy tluty tiiO
cut to $95. Konmon *vor 171.
Plqce your cltzuitied ad loW!
30
-!Ia
- - incll
tom
.lll
c·
o ipllao
w
rwlrlaomoro, prlco rod.-. All
. 15 atJOrd. or le11, 3 dqp,
--will , ..___ · paid in advance.'
=~~=:·~ 3 puer., '15.40
'

•

titles ."

~

Oliva Sl., Galllpollo. lumH~n,

I

•I

"":c::= -,-.

FURNITURE. 112

7

'•

i•
':':'---:--:------

81

Home

•'

0

::

·'

lm'provements

::

---~==;;,:,;__BASEMENT
"
~

WATERPROOANO

,....lite..

~~-tM.
Loa!
turi'IWM~d.
CoN 1400-217-0871 Or 11W3l-

0411

R..,_

Prun•n\/

Wlte~proon,..

:•

.:
1,
i•

1· ::

Cultla Home k'npq IIRLIIDt
Yoono lbpwlol- On Ofdor •

1:

--._Roam Addldono,

'

_

l'owoodMion w..,tl, Aooli!!1 0
And ..... , ... Eio .
........, Rafl wen, No Jolt

Kll-

ASTRO•GRAPH.

Toe ... Or-1114-~1.
-~

-

..........

Cloo- .......,,,_

~And o.etw.Y. cl~l~
c...ll.lloed,l~. .
ll

- - . TV ..._,

BERNICE .
BEDEOSOL .

-'"!lzlnd

. ::

In oloo • ulc*og f110i1
othor- Houoo ..... -

~=

t.-tot'1~h~- ,

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

.......... OH,. . . .,.,......--u

Wllf •louifcl

pttio - .

~

:&amp;: ·- oklrtJnl. •

.

Plumbing 1

'Heating

•

-·-.-~~
=·And
" ,•• ""'· eom.••.
loo.

.

•I

EleCtrical &amp;

3

.len. •• 1113

the

..

-·I

'

It could prove to ypur idvont~g~~ln
,...r ohead to lunciion U lr\CIIIpltHIOilt•
lr 01 others as ~~~~~- II circumstances r....lre you to farm an elliance,
do 10 With WI.
CAPRICORN (Dec. II. . . 111 Stn..
IO' be oell-eulllcllnl today,~ el'
IIIII upon w110m you can utuaAy depend
: mtght not be there when you most . them . .- Capricom. tree! youroelf lo e

•
."·

oiOL IIMII-111t.

.:..,.

.

'

0

-

-~

.

.

CANCER (Juno 21·~ulr 22) Even a
harmless rendezvous could be seriously
misjudged by others today. Don 't step
out of ljne in the romance departmeni ..Walk the straight and narrow.
LEO (Julr23-Aug. 22) 11 may be a sari-

sure to stale your zodiac sign.

ous ·mistake today t.o ptay favorites

AOUARIUS (~on. 20-Feb. 11) Make where lrie"ds are concerned. II you do
play oUt of your work toelay, but don't some1hlng tor one pal and ignore thereplay and ~void your work. The fOrmer quest Qf another . i1 could cost you the
will make thif)QI easter, but the latter good will ·of both .
_
will create con\pllcalions.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-lopl. 22) Do not prePISCitl (Feb. . , . _ h 20) Try not to sume that )'OU are the spokesperson lor
be too demanding of friends today . be- your peer group todey. Unless you're
cause they will resent" il 11 you make elected by the majorily, your reign
them leel they must be held account~ coul~ be Short~lived .
,
· u•RA (lopl. 23-0cl. 23) Be roiallstlc
able to yo\1 for tn&amp;ir actions.
ARIEl (-ch 21-Aprll 11) UnlorJu· regarding what you !lOpe to achl...,e tO·
nately, others might be reoloJant to your day or oloe. you might trip alier your own
. methods and procedures tolley and not limltallono. Keep objectives J'lthln your
do things the way you went. There Is a capabilities.
chance this may unduly trigger your an· ICORPIO (Oct. 24-Ho¥. 22111 you telk
ger. ~ard your t...,per.
too muCh toellr tnere's e chlnce you
TAURUS (April I I Mar II) 11'1 ~ot like might be forced to dalond PQIItlont
You to dallberately put 10meone down abOut wl1tCh you know nttll. To tM on
In the p r - 01 otller't,IO don't do it the ........ locuo on Ustonlng lnt1-.cl
today. A painful Ienon could r81&lt;111 II ole~
. you'Cio.
SAGITT
(Now. 23-Doc. 211 Be
:11- II) Be prudent IMIOIIallle regnlng 11te terma and
In the m1nagemertt o1 your resou.- condlllon• you hOpe 10 got lodar In a
1oday, II poopte with whOm you 'll bu...... dMI. II 11te apoclftol ara too
be InvolVed aren't. Set )'OUr own aten- llenh, the endMvor could loll IPIIIIn
dllcil inlt..d o1 btllng 1 "me loo" lronlil! your oyea.
·

a.... ,...,
parson.

•

0

....!....:.--· ·~

. ti

.'

.

birthday gilt Send lor Capricorn's As- f
tr6-Giaph predictions lor the year ·
ahead by mailingS 1.25 plus a long-. selladdressed, stamped envelope to AstraGrapl1, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box
91428 . .Cleveland, OH 441~t-3428 . Be

' ·I

•

Q. I received a letter ~bout new
books lhat said. "Included are a list ·
of lilies." lsn'l that an error?
A. Yes, it's wrong. The synta/( of
lhat sentence reverses the normal
subject-verB order, and the subject is
·the singular LIST . CThe plural
TITLES is an object of the preposi·
lion OF, and an object cannot be the
sentence's subject) With LIST, the
proper verb is the singular IS, not the
plural ARE. To include the right verb
with your subject, use either "Included is list of titles" or "Included are

a

goo tonlla, .
rwclltono . :- .... mot,;- 'J
olc.
D a Ror 1
312-31133
•

SWAIN

-AUCTION a

_._if

come, call ''*Mt-22?'8.

SAY 5CHS'IHN&lt;9-61UPID=i

,,

Auto Parts &amp;

Accessor1es

Rango a rllrla. St21, oouah a
km .... $175.111 118 0001.

F - . 2 or 3bdnn., lew ront
In Ccunlry llcbllo.Pork.
dryor, olr..._l2351 mon., llolott2·

Hive v~e.~ncy fDr bed pat~nt,
lady profo.,ocl, but oA lo wolo

76

R. I I. Fumlhn. Nlw, ned, an-.
tlq- Hoo · - Jumlohingo.
Maocn, WY. :JQ+7J'3.15341.

2 aR; ...-h, , .... 5 011. """"'
Rt. 218. $275 mo. tiiO - Wotor lncludod. l14-256-1327.

(614}

coll304475-1450.

NewiUood

.lonfcho Rd. Pt. PtNNnt, WY,

3 - - largo yord, cRy
oci!OOI dlotrlc:t. 711 P.,.h Sl.,

Middleport, Ohio 45760

Houoohald hlmlohlng. 112 mi.

'

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Box 189

Y~Y.

::

drtwtn .... bike, 2,400 ICt:ual l l
mille, uc cond, runa NU n.wu ~;
114-241-1111.
:,

PICKENS FURNITURE

t BR
Trollor, . ~· , &amp;
Ref•rMCe fi4Niulred. No Pita.
·-'11142, Or 114-717-4345.

ICinouoo. 114-446-'11173.

Motorcycles

WHY DOee&gt; ll!f NaJ11ol AL.~
HAYelVBEOPEN~EN I

I ::::'7-:::-::-::::-~:i::::-~
tta Kowuokl CSR-210, boM :·'·

.

Rocky R. Hupp, D.c.u. · Agent

I GOT" AN 'F'ON THAT
seooRAPHY TeeT

' I

Rio o..-, 3 IR, Jotl2 bolh,
1450/mo. Dopaoit roqlllrocl. 114446-4222 doyo, 441-21111 ......

Rotroln
N-IIISoiOhNotorn
Bualn... Collage, ~r:~1 Valley

18

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

~ ..'•"

'

3D Obleln

38

ME AN'

6

1

j

,.

---

37 Regreltld
38 Pokltlan't " ,
Bonulr40 Bury
42 Foalar
. 43 ......
44 Writer Anlla ;
0

48 "- W1lk" .:.
47 Epochs

•

4Q BIHbelltlar:
50 Tile Hil . "
53 NoglliYt

prefix

·' S ' L M
GWEG

E Z 1E P C
WELM

Z S T M R
WER

BA

IMETJM ' CC

80

GB

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N Z S J G

MECGIBaR .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A dictionary definition of career is: A headlong
rush, usually downhill. Not a bad description really." - Michael Bentine.

':~~:~:~' S©~g\)lY\-~~~s
letters of the
- .....
0 Rearrange
four scrambled words

41

WOlD

IAMI

- - - - - - l d l t o d 1r, CLAY l. POLLAN

•

low to form foyr slrnple

1_ I

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2

1 I

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OSNEO

II

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.

1. 516.

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S LI B S

.

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L ·I MA N E

..·
1

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_

"Why do you think. you 're
qualified Ia be a night watchman?" the employment agent
asked the lellow. "Simple," the
guy laughed, "I have ........ .".

I
Ih,r-r.la;-:j-l...;;.,·r·l.:. .··;lr:O,Irl ·G)
T I NNy E

A

V

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

0

I I I I I

·=-=.;ANS~WE~R-....1._._,"'-""'":--'-~~
A

UNSCRAM6LE FOR

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

u

'- ~

· Stooge · Verve • Audio - Voyage - YOURS
.
After attending a party lor my nephew my sister-i_n-law . ·
as~ed. "Have you ever noticed, that couples Without
children know just how you should raise YOURS?"
I

' (0 1992 TV Listi

Inc.

Ft Worth. TX

JANUARY 5

''

'

Complele the ' chuck le quoted
_L
__
L_
-L.
L
.
....J.L.-J
by
Idling in t-be missi ng words
L
you develop from sfep No. 3 below.

-.

.,

·~

•
•

-.

·-·
•. 0

..

...-,.
'

0

~

�Pomeroy~lddleport,

Page 1G-The Dally Sentinel

(

Ohio

Tuesday, January 5, 1993

.

Pow,erhouse women ~hange
televisio~s 's fem~le . images.
Jly.LYNN ELBER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES - They were,
tb'nroadsl.he.lingo of times P~t.· tough

Take that, all you dense souls
bl
the
0 f dale
un;t e. to grasp
concept
rape.
,
Lahti (deliciously and deftly
played by Miss Post) is a "vefy
. Bette Oavis, Joan Crawford, assertive women ·tiving life as she
Rosalind Russell- women with a pleases," said Ms. Bloodworth·
career, an attitude and-meaningful Thorn
slioulder pads. But don.' t loolt'for
Te:.'i~ion, that valiant keeper
thet~ count~rpar!s to~ay at.the ·. of the flame, hasn't forsaken its .
·movtes; tei~VIStQn tS l.hetr domam. . mainstay - . the warm, supportive
"ryte conte~porary small-screen motherly wife (or is that wifelx
verstons are, m many ~. mold· mol.her?)
e,d by women who· have achieved . But 'e~en she tends to be ·less
success in the TV i'ndustry as writ· sweet and more sassY ,li!&lt;e Jill Tay· .
ers and producers.
lor (Patrid~ Richardson) on ABC's
When you see a brash Muwhy "Home Improvement." Or that
Brown, look .f9r a D~ane English. singular roree of nature, Roseanne
Or peer behmd cham-smokmg, Arnold.
·
tough-talking Georgie Ann 411~ of
Ms. English ~ails such types
the new comedy "Hearts Afm:' to "the talk-back wife."
find LindaBI~worth-ThOinason.
"The. days of Donna Reed. Then there s the new CBS those days are numbered " she
, , Western," Dr. ,Quinn, Medicine ·srid. "Women like Kate Hq,b,urn
.Woman, starnn.g .Jane Seymo~r are far more interesting than a charas a ~emale. phy~lCian on a. man s acter who just stays in the lcitchen.
fronuer. Prtme mover behmd the That's not the way most houseSaturday night series is Bet,b Sulli- holds operate anymore."
BELIZ.E MAVANS • University or Central . evidence or a thriving middle class in lbe Mayan
van, the fust woman to smgleha~dOn the other hand, relatively.
Florida anthropologists Drs. Arlen and Diane . civilization, which discounts lbe old theory tbat
edly create at\d serve as execuuve
. ·
,,
.
producer of a prime-time network few "\~rror, say; the . Event~g
tbey became.extinct when tbe peasants rose up ·
Chase, shown Monday, bave.made a historical
drama.
,
Shade cla!l• wtth mom (Martlu
against the privileged. (AP pboto)
discovery amongst Mayan ruins. They round
All of the above have created Hen11er) a htgh-powered prosecutcharacters wh9 are aggre'ssive, mg attorney ~nd dad (Burt
· smart and resilient. Also arrogant Reynolds) an enlightened football
'
and vultlerable, selfiSh and giving.
coach.. ,
.
In other words, real women. ·
·But leis hear 11 for role mQdels.
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP)- A paper after 1\e ·was shown pho- office maintains files on 11 Ron
Women with a point of view. And, Role m.odels are exactly what
man who IK:ted as spokesman for a tographs of a man identified as Lee Huff ilnd a Ron Lee.
·
"Through
our
intelligence
net·
sometimos,
women with an agenda. m10onttes clamor for when they
and
taken
at
Klan
rallies
in
1988,
Ku Klux Klan group that erected a
work
...
we.
suspect
they
arc
the
."1 like it when you say no. decry ~~h-a-mmute bliK:k charac·
cross on a downtown Cincinnati 1991 and 1992.
.
Because everyone knows wh.en a . ters. on sttcoms or the few parts
The photos are similar to a 1986 same person," Webb said.
square has a criminal record an(!
According to the Hamilton tele=· guy says n~. he really means yes," avatlable to most other ethntc .
used an alias, a newspaper report· Butler CoWity jail picture of Huff,
phone
dircciory, the telephone Lahti (Markie Post) coos sarcasti· actors! .
the newspaper said.
.
ed.
.,
r
number
at which Lee has been con- cally when her lover (John Ritter) .. Accordmg ,to ftgures from the
The Journal-News said a man
The man who had identified
Screen A~tors llutld, women 10
himself as Rtli· Lee is Ron Lee who identified himself as Lee said tacted is listed under the names refuses to kiss• after a spat
• 1990 recetved up to 46 percent,of
Huff, the Hainilton Journal-News il) a telephone interview last week Ron and Janet Huff.
the roles on TV (although only
County records show that ihe ·
that he was not Ron Lee Huff and
reported SWiday.
about
30 percent or the roles in reaHuff was convicted in 1987 or didn't know anything about the propeny at the address listed with
DAYTON,
Ohio
(1\P)A
man
tw'e
films).
that number was transferred from
possessing marijuana and showing convictions.
By contraSt Hispanics received
.the
Huffs to Darryl D. Huff in whose body was found tn the trunk
The
man
said
he
did
not
know
an obscene movie to a 12-year-old
of
()is
car
Sat.urday
was
killed
3
percent
of all film and TV roles
boy and a 13-year-old boy and girl why the telephone number where 1984, the newspaper said.
Thursday,
the
~roner's
offit;e
said.
in
1991,
while
Asians got 1 pen:ent
Darryl D. Huff told the newspaat his home in Ross rownship, the he has been contacted by reporters
Rai!lh
D.
Gnmes
Jr.,
37,
of
Day~
figures
·less than their rep·
across the nation matches the one per that he qwns the property, but
newspaper said.
ton,
dted
of
multtple
·gunshot
resentation
in
the
U.S. population.
. Lee, who had rece· ¢ messages listed for Huff in Butler County he refused to say if Ron Lee_Huff
wounds,
JIK:k
Joyce,
an
mvesUgator
Ms.
Bloodworth·
Thomason is
or Ron Lee lives there.
·
·
at a telephone number listed for court files.
10
the
Montgomery··County
corounsufPrised
that
television
has been
"I'm not associated with that
"I have .no idea how that could
Hitff, did not return calls seeking
ncr's
office,
said
Monday.
·
man at all. I can't make
kind of
be," the·man said.
comment Monday ..·
Grimes' car was towed off Inter- T
a
statement
about
that,'
Darryl
"Yeah, that's Huff all right,"
David Webb, director of the
·
state
75 early Satur~y because it 1
former Butler County Sheriff Montgomery, Ala., group Klan- Huff said.
was
in
a hazardous position, police
.The Klan erected three crosses
Richard Holzberger told the news· watch, told the newspaper $It his
The Village of Pomeroy will
Sgt,
Larty
Grossnickle said.
..
on Cincinnati's Fountain Square
pick-up
Christmas trees at the
Grimes' father and brother went
between Dec.' 21 and Dec. 30. Ten
curbs
in
the
village o~ Wedncsday
people were aecused of toppling or to the towi!Jg company's lot Satur- only. Trees mar also be dropped
defacing the crosses and charged day night and ltad police open the behind the old Junior high school ·
trunk because they were worried
with disorderly conduct.
about
who hadn't come building in Pomeroy.
The Meigs County Co-operative. accepting the reality of the loss, 2) .
Parish has purchased a video series experiencing and expressing all the
with psychologist Dr. Howard painful feelings, 3) ·putting your life
Clinebell, entitled, "Growing back together, 4) examining your
loss in the context of your faith,
Through Grief."
··
There will be an introduction an.d 5) reaching out to others.
meeting on Sunday at 7 p.m. in the Through loving listening, the one
social room of the Chester United in grief can 1become strong and
vital again. I
Methodist Church.
The meet,ings will be one hour. ·
lrt"these videos, Dr. Clinebell
and his own group;which is grow- with a fellowship time following.
ing through grief of loss of spouse Child care help can be arranged.
through death and divorce, loss of The group will last for about eight
·child and even loss of parents, give weeks after which time it will be
persons in the group an opportWtity determined whether or not to con·
to share their own experiences and tinue.
. Further,information may be ·
find healing.
Dr. Clinebell designates five obtained by calling 985-3530 after
tasks of grief work. They arc: I) 5 p.m. this week.

.

Meigs boys
post wins

more respOnsive than the movie
industry to the changing image of
women.
. ,.
" The features industry is much
more male-dominated. Women in
features are strong in an almost cartoonish way." she said. The serial:
nature of TV also allows time to
bring audie.nces along, graduallY:
intrOducing change.
Women's success in getiing';:
positive images on TV gives mus·
cle to arguments that the medium
won'trealistically depict min'orities'
until' they achi,eve some measure of
behind-the-scenes power.
·
"It's axiomatic •. The more·
power you have, the. louder your ·
voice is heatd," said Gilbert Cates. .
a movie producer and dean of tJt&lt;
UCLA Film Scl!ool.
.·
:;:

anr

d•

ree lSposal Sef

Parish purchases videos

BERLIN (AP) - Two-time fig.
ure skating champion Kalarina Witt
hopes to return to Olyll)pic compe·
titian.
Witt said Monday she is'seeking
.a change in her professional status
that would let her compete in the
!994 Winter Games at Lilleham·
mer, assuming she makes the German team.
" I am the sort of person who
needs a big mountain in front of me
to climb," the 27-year-old skater
said on the ARD television net·
work.
She won Olympic gold medals
in 1984 and 1988 for the former
East Germany. She then gave up
her amate\lf career to appear in professional ice-skating shows.
"The desire to really compete
·again has been there for a long
time," she said.

•

NEW YORK (AP) - Patricia
Highsmith may write dark, psychological tales or murder and intrigue,
but don't call her a mystery writer.
" That implies a puzzle," she
said in an interview in this week's
People magazine. " I just wrilc
what I feel like."
The 71-ycar-old author said the
character of Tom Ripley, the
charming, gentleman-murderer
who has been the center of five of
her novels, came .to her newly 40
years ago when she saw a man
wallcing along 4 beach in Positano,
Italy.
"I wondered why he was therf
alone at 6 a:m.," she said. ''Later I ·
thought of a suiry about a man ·sent
to Positano on a mission, and
maybe he failed."
Beyond that, she said, "the
impulses are subtle an.d completely
buried •.
" I can't explain where the ideas
· come from."
She has published 20 novels,
including "Strangers on a Train,"
which Alfted Hitchcock made into
a movie in 1951, an!l seven shortstory collections. Her most recent
bookis "Ripley Under Water."

1

•

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - .Kathy

Ireland, known for modeling scanty
swimsuits on the pages or Sports
Illustrated magazine, says she
refused a similar wardrobe for a
part.on a television show.
"I felt it was. excessive. It just
wasn ' t necessary." she said in an
interview in this week's TV Guide'
"I don't mind wearing a slcimpy
suit or trashy clothes if it fits the
character, but if it' s inconsistent
with the character, I mind," she
said .
In a future episode of "Down
the Shore," which airs Thursdays
on Fox, Ireland guest stars as a
computer peri pal who discovers
her corresp~ndent has been lying
about his aptlearance.
Instead of a swimsuit, she wears
shorts. "Reasonable shorts," Ireland said.
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands
(AP) - Was that Chrissie Hynde,
lead singer of The Pretenders and a
militant vegetarian, in a fast-food
joint on Monday?
It soy was!
Hynde was qne of a dozen animal-rights activists enjoying the
debut of an all-vegetable hamburger at McDonald· s.
"I like it!" she said. But "It
could use more soy."
Hynde, who hadn't.stepped foot
in a MacDonald's for 20 years,
once said the fast-food chain
should be bombed because ''ani·
mals die fotBig Macs."
· ·
The "Groenteburger;" or Ve~­
etable Burger, consists or a motst
pattie of mashecl potatoes, carrots,
peas and onions topped with pick.
les, cottage cheese and chives on a
sesame seed· bun.
It will be available only at
Dutch MacDonald's for now.
LOS ANGELES (AP) Shirley Horn had the top-selling
jazz album of 1992, but that hasn't
changed her feeling~ about the
music industry. .
·
"I have no love for the .busi·
ness," she said. "It's ugly."
While she hates the business.
she loves her music.

RECLINING

LOVE SEAt

OUT OF
TOWN FOR

Tony Grate, a 1992 graduate of
Eastern High School, is. a member
of the freshman class of Mount
Vernon Nazarene College for the.
1992-93 academic year.
Grate, a business administtatioo
major,' is the son of David L. Grate,
Long Bottom, and Mrs. Karen S,'
Wheeler, Gallipolis.
··
Located in central Ohio, Mount
Vernon NliZ81'ene"'ollege is a fouryear liberal arts institution ,
enrolling students in bachelor of
arts and bachelor of science degree
programs. MVNC announces a
freshman class enrollment of 262
and a total.eruollment of 1,127.

RECLINERS

$11811

SOFA
LOVES EAT

12
SELECTED ITEMS
Months
FREE
EVEN LOWER
Financing*
. TIIAl'IJ

availability of low interest loans
were explained at Tuesday night's
final public _hearing on the projeCt.
Approximately 25 persons
including village officials, membus of the Middleport Commuruty
Association, business and buildinA
·

owners, and banking and utility
. officials gathered in the conference
r'?om of People.s Bank T~esday
mght for the .hearing, a requtrement
before the village can make appli- ··
cauon for an Ohto Department of
Qe.velopment grant.
·
,
Feb.:5 is the deadli~e for applying for a grant of up to $400,000 19
aid in the revitalization of the
downl!lwn area; through restoration
of building facade, some rehabilitation, and elimination of slums and
blight
.
At last night's meeting Jean
TrusSell. Middleport's grant specialist, encouraged building owners
to get·in their dollar commitments
. for restoration so that the application process can move forward. She
said that owners must sign agreements about what they will do to
their buildinJIS and how much
money they wtll invest since any
funds from the Ohio Department of
Development must be matched dol;TI:EEirsC-~romiiiii¥io'Nt.. Two
lar for dollar.
Farmer's Jiank, left, and Emma Paugh, ollke
In addition to that match, the
$1,000
. toward the streetscape
manager, Middleport braub, aad Gary, C.
vi)ilige must put in 10 pen:ent, but
ph~se or Middleport's downtown revitalization
Smith; executive .vice president, Peoples Bank,
as earlier·pointed out, that can be in
project were made at Tuesday night's final pub·
present checks to Jean Trussell, Middleport's
the form of other grant monies, inlie hearin11. Here Paul Reed, president o~
grant specialist, second rrom left.
lcind services, pr corporate contri'
butions.
Buckeye
HiUs-Hocking Valley tants, Inc. continues to work with was held on .how to ftll those build~
Trussell said .that the village can Regt~nal Developmen(District. is' the village on the project
ings with businesses or, at least,
expect a decision on the grant updatmg the restoration plan of the
The village has 17 vacant store ·use the windows for organization
application about April l.
downtown section, and that J. fronts (31 1/2 percent or the target- displays to make a better overall
She said that Bijay Gadde of Michael Stroth of SBA Consul- ed business district). A discussion
. '
;
'
(CODti&amp;ued oa Paae 3)

·-

', ..•. '

•.,... •j-·

,,

.• ..,

,~

.,

.r-

-.

.

'

-

I

'

.

.

."!'

'

By JULIE E. DILLON

HUTCH
OAK

IIMIO
MAUVE .
FULL

SWIVEL
GLIDER .
RECLINER
UnlESS
SET
s99 99 SET

12
MonthsrFRU

.

ODDS &amp;
EIIDS .

SAVE!!
•
'

grant funds. Pomeroy's revitaliza- · ·filnds. For example, if Pomeroy
· SentiDel NeM Stalf
tioli chairman John Musser also would apply for the total $400,000
,The ftrst ~two public bearings stated that Lisa McDaniel, a repre- available, village government
regarding p mercy's downtown sentative from the Ohio Depart- wouldhavetofund$40,000 toward
,revitalizatjo was held Tuesday ll)ent of Development, who made a the project. Possible ways for the
evening at v'
hall. RCpiesenta· recent visit to the area, felt very village to meet that 10 percent
lives from the Pomeroy Men:hants positive about Pomeroy as well.
match could come from such 1
Association and Pomeroy Village
Stroth also commented on the sources as in-kind funding, which
Council, as well as inUlfCSted com· efforts of the active Pomeroy Mer- Stroth felt was very feasible.
mWiity indivicJuals attended.
chants Assoc.iation.• stating "you
Tile downtown business plan
Mike Stroth of SBA Consul· have a mcn:hahts association envi- must be completed before tlie
tants, and Deanna Figlestahler, who ous of anyone." According to application can be made and Stroth
is assisting Stroth in the process, Stroth, a stron·g and active business . feels this plan will .!Je cOIIlpleted in
discussed the steps to be taken in association is looked upon very seven to I0 days. The plan will
the application process. Strol.h was favorably by the state when apply- ' contain his suggested ideas for the
hired as Pomeroy's revitalization ing for revitaliZation grant money.
designated business district. Stroth
consultant to develop the down·
The Porilcr'oy Men:hants Asso- stated there are 38 businesses in the
. town busineas plan for the desig· ciation has spearheaded this revilal- designated business district. Of
.nated business district. The desig· ization attempt and has 'had com- th_ose 38 businesses, monetary
nated business district runs from plete and full coopcratio~ from commitments froJII at least eight
Lynn Street past Buuemut Avenue Pomeroy ViUBge Council. .
· are needed for·application. Stroth
to include property owned by Dr.
As required by the Ohio Depart· will be in contact with business and
Harold Brown, and from the park- ment of Devclopmen~ the applica- property owners r~garding this
ing lot to Second Street This plan lion for rcvitalizati~ill be sub· matter. These monetary commiti.s a necessary step in the applica- mitted by council. The village has ments help de~ermine how much
iion process. A,Pplication deadline already donated $10,000 to the pro· grant money for which the village
for grant momes from the Ohio jcct for the downtown business may apply.
Department of Development is plan. and according to Pomeroy
. Business .and property owners
February 5. Stroth will continue Mayor Bruce Reed, council is com- attending Tuesday's meeting feel a
with the project throughout its mitted to the project. According to 50 percent match situation .would
entirety.
Figlestahler, the more interest best benefit the designated busineSs
· BRAER ON THE
• Tbe Liberian·
. Stroth feels encouraged that shown by village government the district This means if a business or
registered olltanker Braer lies of the southern
Pomeroy will be looked up favor- more favorably the state' looks at property owner agrees to do - for· tip of the Shetland Islands is seen half sub·
ably by the state in the application the application.
·
example • $10,000 worth of work,
merged as It oozes oil rrom Its ruptured strucprocess because its .dpsignated .
According .to Stroth, village $5,000 would be allotted In grant
business district meets all criteria goverltment must match 10 pet'cent money and the owner would only
necessary to be considered for the of what is applied for in grant
(CODtlnued ~' 3)

. Meigs County Board of Ele~tions

DOUBLE

DRESSER

'11"7711
LAMPS

8:00A.M.

'TIL

OPEN

WEDNESDAY
·
8:00P.M. THURSDAY
FRIDAY

. WHILE MIP'S AWAY

·.

72

BIG
HOURS

FREE DEUVERY FREE FINANCING
LISTED ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. .
'SUBJECT TO APPROVED CREDIT

.,,..

, ·DAYBED

VISA

DISCOVER

MASTERCARD
.'

By &amp;tlu.N J. REED
. . elections to determine whether
' S~Hl N~M StarT
Soulsby met the ~equirement of
In respollJC to newspaper arti· five years ofl f~ll-ume e~per1ence.
cles concerning the recent Meigs . Jane Frymy~. deputy dtrector of
County sheriff's race, the ¥eigs the ~· S81d the bo!lf!l was not
County Bolrd of.Elections has ~SJIOI!Sibl~ ~o~ _determmtng a canreleased a letter sent to Republican · didate s ebgtbthty • that .the C'!"!·
Sheriff:s Candidate Paul Gerard t:l!'!n Pleas Judge del!l'JD.mes ehgt·
addressmg his claims.
. bthty and carufies eligtbtlity to the
Gerard, a criminal bailiff for the ~d.
.
In a "final attempt" to answer
Meigs County Common Pleas
Coon was unsuccesSful in his race Gerard's questions regarding
·against Sheriff James M. Souls by Soulsby's candidacy 1_t!Je members
in November. .f.tcordin4 to an ani- or the board (Henry wells, f.velyn
cle In Monday's edition of the Clark, John Ihle and Chauman
Columbus DlsptJich, Gerard claims Henry Hunter), .wroie a letter to
that Soulsby is not qualified under Gerard dated Dece.mber 18, and
Ohio law to hold the office he has · advised him that his only reco~
occupied since 1989 •. based on a ' wu a civil suit..
.
.
lack of full-time law enforcement
The letter cues Oh10 Revtsed
experience,
Code Section 3513.05, w~ich in
·. According 10 that article, "Ger- part .states tb~t protests against .a
ard sald.l!oulsby, during a recent candidaie m11st be flied by a qualt·
pretrial hearing, admitted he lied elector wlio is a member of the
.worked pan;time for law cnforee- same political party as the proteSt·
. ment ~gencles before be,coming ed candidate In writing no later
sltcrlff, and Oerard questions than 4 p.m. on the sixty-fourth day
whether Souls by wu ever· a full- before the day or the primary elec·
time police officer." ,
tion. , .
·
· Oerard has asked the board of
."This action," the board's letter
••

tanker

breakup, massive ·oil spill

LERWICK, Shetland Islands
(AP) - Six planes sprayed deter·
says, "was never taken."
gent today trying to disperse oil
The letter also makes referenee
·u· r
to a court case referred to b.Y"er- spt mg rom a tanker being bat·
..,.
tered by high winds and waves on
ard and published news stories the rocky ooast of this wildlife-rich
about the issu.e.
North Sea archipelago.
"The case of Attire vs. Trumhall
The Liberian-registered B,aer,
County Board of Elections is very · loaded with nearly 2S million galmisleading if a person did not Ions of oil, \TaS awash but unbrounderstand the facts of the case. It ken after more than a day of {erawould appear that the Trumball cious pounding on rocks at the
County Board of Elections held the southern tip of the largest or the
h~aring after the primary, which· Shetland Islands.
they ~id. But the candidate whose
The Department of Transport
candtdacy was· protested was an ,said a 4-square-mile slick of oil had
independent candidate arid the fil. oozed from the tanker since near
ing deadline for an independent'
,
. liurtican. e·force winds drove t't
was SWie I, 1992. An independent aground Tuesday after its engine
·candidate .does not appear on tbe ·railed.
.
.
,
· primary election ballot. .Soulsby
Environmentalists reponed an
·was a Democratic candidate for increasing toll of birds and fish
sheriff and. did appear on the smothered by the oil. ·
·
'
Democratic party prtm117. balloL"
Winds had 'calmed somewhat,
. The letter conanues, 'The ques- ' with gusts to 60 mph this morning,
tion still remains what action can compared to readings as high 8.'1 85
be taken aile{ the primary elecdon mph Tuesdly. Wave heights were
if jt is discovered that the candidate 13ct6 feet, according to the coast
lacks !he required qualificadoni. guard in Aberdeen, Scotland.
Since, Mr. Soulsby has been certi·
The Shetlallds govCilling counl .
fied as. the winning candidate and cil sail! containment booms and
(Cpntlnt!ed~Pllae3)
·
other cleanup equipment were .

t.

·I ·
l

ture, ·threatening tbe ·surrouitdlltg IIW'lne envi- .
ronment. Tbe tanke·r survived intact through a :.
night of ferocious pounding. (AP)
'
:

Storm~hreaten

responds to.Gerard's ·challenge

ODDS &amp;
IIID •

2 Sections, 12 Poges 25 cento
A MutUmedls l!lc. Newspoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Wednesday, January 6, 1993

..,-

'

Months ·
FREE

BEVERLY, MlTCH U K.IM
HAVE MARKID

In ·tow 401.

PQmeroy begins public .hearings
on downtown·· revitalization

"" -

*33321

BIG
HOURS

Low IOillgbtla upper lQs.
Cloudy. Tbursdoy, cloudy, hlp

•

Among freshmen

12

SKIP'S

Vol. 43, No. 178
Copyrighted 1883

' .

••

TONY GRATE

WARDROB
AMOIRE

12
Months
FREE
Financing*

·e
~

CHERRY .

-People in the news-

Pick 3:
579
Pick 4:
4578
BuckeyeS:

17-19-24-27~29

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff ,
·
An overview of Middleport's
~~~~~plan for downtown revi·
~as presented, and the
f10anctal commitments
building owners and the

Report: Klan spokesman hid·be.hin'd alias

.

,-

Fipal public hearing held on revitalizatio~ pla11

.

Body m trunk

0 hio Lottery

Southern, .

"

'

ready to be used once the weather
improved in these sparsely populat-'
ed islands aboUt I00 miles north of
the Scottish mainland.
A spokesman for the Transport
Department said the detergent·
spraying planes were operating out
of Sumburgh Airport about I 1/2
miles from the slick . .
"They take 90 seconds to put

their full load on ·the slick. So they '
are up Wld down just'as quickly as .
is possible," said the spokesman,
who did not give his name.
He said the oil spill was largely :
c~nfiqed to the Bay of Quendale :
but broken patches or oil had scat- •
tered farther east around Sum- ·
burgh, the south tip of Mainland
(Continued on Paae 3) :

.-----L0 C. aJ br·e~s---. . . .·;
.I I;
Deer accident reported .

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported that on Toes- ·
'de ·
I dJ
day
evening,
dep11ties
took
a
deer
.acet
nt
report.
th past
Avisthe
of'
Coolville was traveling east on Pine Grove Road ujust
church in her 1991 Chevrolet. As she braked for a deer that.wu
standing in the roadwar. another deer jumped from the left into the
driver's side'of her vehicle. Damage was listed as light to mode~.

""an
· "'"alz'sm •;nves,;oated
ft
"o

The Meigs County Sheriff's Departrncnt contipues to investipre
vandalism to the Columbus Southern Power base .radio staliOD
· building on the flood road in Pomeroy: According io the department, some'30 to 35 shots were fm:d into the buililing and door,and
~generator was damaged. ·
Damage was estimated to be between $1,300 and $1,500. Anyone with information about the incident is asked to contact Colum(Contlalltd 011 Pllae3) ·

•

._---------------------...J
'
••

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    <tag tagId="193">
      <name>stone</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
