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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Cavs
defeat
.
·.Bulls .

Pick 3:

675
Pick 4:
7110
Super Lotto:
1-14-16-32-33-47
Kicker:

Page6

' Lcnrtontptlll mld 301.
Cloudy. Friday, raiD, bleb In

low 40s.

766409

•

en 1ne

.

JANUARY, 11193

RIVER CURRENTS FOR SENIOR &lt;;ITIZENS

• PAGE TWELV.:

·Don't believe the myths: It's e8;SY to enjoy seafood safely

•

VOI.-43, No. 179 ·
Copyrlgh~ 1tl3

Reading the menu ·
. ·At a restaurant, you also can
take steps .to help ctnsure that
you're enjoying quality seafood.
Cont.inue to ask the same queslions X.oil asked .at the fi!lll market: • What's freshest today?"
"When did the fish arrive al the
restaurant?" "Where is it from?"
Again, use common sense in
evaluating your choices. The
calch of the day·is often freshest.
If the seafood on the menu is
£rom a country with a seafood
inspection program like Nor·
way's, you know .(hat you're
' dealing with,a reliable source. ·
Finally, \"~en. your order arrives,
if it smells "fishy," send it back
to the kiu:hen.
·•.

1111111;111.

lmpr!l\'lng tile outlook
for the rutare
Currently, the U.S. has no
D~d
maildatDty inspection legislation
·The ancient Babylonians are thought to
for seafood. But, two organizabe the first people to observe a seven- ·tions·are taking steps to ensure a
safe seafood supply for American
day week. The names of the days of the
consumers. More than 300 food
week originate from the names of the
professionals and chefs like
seven princ!pal heavenly bodies of
Schlesinger have joined together
ancient Babylonian astronomy.
in an organization called qiEFS
(Chefs Helping to Enhance Food
Safety) to express their concern
about seafood safety.
Another consumer advocacy
organization,. Washington-based
-~
·
Pulllic Voice for Food &amp; Health
. ~~.
Policy, has targeted seafood safe•
~
..l\;
ty since 1986. B!!th organizations
171 1J.rrn
have endorsed the Consumer
- • J'Jl'B'R]G "'-'V": CRJI.TT O'll'!,L'E'T
Seafood Safety Act of 1992,
All Your Craft and Sewing Needs At Low, •~veryday Prkes!
which was inii'Oduced in the Sen(r f Cia
• •1 - .late earlier this year 10 set up a
a t SHS also avde
-rs u eve1ilgs
mandatory, comprehensive
Cal614·446·1407 for ...... lnf0111ation
seafood in~pection progra~.
.Located 2 ......._......
u (Oine
Whde the btl! may·. not pass tn
.-- _,
Ibis session of Congress, it has
11 Ml Cretk Road.
focused attention on seafood
GALUI'OUS OHIO
safety issues.
. • , , .. , !I!,"".~~~~!'!""!'"'"'""""~
· !ii!lil'......__

you know•••

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AMultimedia Inc. Nowapaper

Jones
appointed_
to
posfby
commissioners
.
ty passed the required test; but.
Sw1sher noled that all. Jesting procedures were conducted through
the Department of Administrative
Services, and that standard hiring
procedures had been followed and
approved by the Department of
Administrative Services. ·
Swisher said Thursday morning
that the job description for the position lists the salary at $12.09 per
hour, plus a county supplement of
five percent and a one half-percent
supplement for each year of
longevity, or experience, Swisher
·'

as they relate to public assistance." Then: are no frills, but there.is also
"The management structure at · no red ink."
Roush referred to Jones when
the department must evolve so that
discussing
the budget process.
we can continue to be able to .pro"For
the
past len years, I had a
vide services."
very
good
teacher
on the budgeting
Budget adopted
process.
The
best
lesson I've
The commissioners adopted a
learned
is
that
if
you
don't
have it;
county budget for 1993 at yesterday's meeting. (See related stQry, you don't spend it, and that w.iii
stick in my mind forever."
page 1.)
Roush also thanked Clerk Mary
Commission President Manning
Roush said that all county agencies Hobstetter for her work in the jJ1'Ir
and departments took: cuts in their cess.
Chamber funding
annual requests, and some agenc1es
Paula Thacker, Meigs COunty
took cuts in appropriations.
of
Commerce
"I would like to personally Chamber
thank every depariment who Director/Economic Development
worked with us in reducing their Director and several members of
budgets into something that we the chamber's board of directors
could work with," Roush said. met with the board regarding fund"Now, we have
Contiued on page 3
, a workable budget

noted that the longevity supplement
will be deleflllined by the Depanment of Administrative Services.
Jones' salary has been unofficially
calculated 'in excess of $35,000 per
year.
.
Swisher said that the position
was added due to the significant
growth of the departments staff in
. ' years.
recent
"Fourteen years ago, we had 13
. employees at the department,"
Swisher said. "Mr. Jones makes the
50th employee at the agency now.
We have an income maintenance
allocation which puts $22 million
in public assistance into the county,
and .the child support enforcement
agency will collect around $1.9
million this' year. The growth is due
to new stale and federal regulations

Southern students will /Je.transferred
as scheduled according to school
board
.
By CHARLENE.HQEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
No action was taken to rescind
an earlier vole on transfer of stu·
dents from Letart and Portland Elementary Schools to eliminaJe double grades during Wednesday
night's organizational meeting of
the Southern Local Board of Education at the high school.
The change will become

effective on Jan. 19. At that tilne te
. first, second and third grades will
atten.d school at Letart, and the
fourth, fifth "and six graders will
atiend school at Portland.
Meeting with the board last
night was a delegation of parents of
students in the two schools. Most
requested that the school change
not take effect until the 1993-94
s'chool year citing problems of

changing lcilchers in the middle of
the year as one of their complain IS.
Mary Bush read a letler to the
board signed· by 247 residents of
the two communities. Several parents expressed concern about :
teacher and curriculum changes
which will result from the transt'er
of students in the middle of the

year.

, The letter spoke of concern for
the children's emotional wellbeing, citing the difference in
teaching methods, planned pro'NEARING COMPLETION • "Melts County,
ture a carpeted dining room wltb 1 sal8d bar
£"' ·
grams
the students ha¥e
bu be~a.,Jood to Ul lnd we're llappy to be
an~ i~atJl!a f.or 12Qo...lll4,! .~}n..tbrqq{IJ\I;n•";. ~o.un ")1 ~mzsszoners . becomewhich.
accustomed to, the teacher' ' pliltlllfhl"'"llktlooklng'itilllunnlt'' sata· Her.._.,.-......:;'l'
ow. :t'liere will "be a'ilequ1te parkln&amp;•liaee ."
.
';T"'
· · -. ·
·
.•
student
relationship already estabacllel ~cCture· who noted that by mid-March
along one side and behind the restaurant. Jim
·
•
lished,
the
effect of uprooting stu• Mo.C lure'• Family Restau.r ant In: Pomer,oy
~c~lure is manager !'f the Pomeroy restaurant ·
dents
!&gt;y
taking
them away from
1hovld be In· Ill new building on East Main
wh1ch opened·for busmess in 1978.
'J:',
.
. .
· .
.
classmates, and the difference in
StreeL ~ 40x74 foot brick structure will rea·
·
·
skill levels in the same grades in
· The Meigs County Commis- $21,000; Department of Human
the different schools.
sioners approved a 1993 County Services Bond · ·Retirement,
While the board did not vote on
Budget on Wednesday, which $226,560.71; MR/DD Bond Retireincludes general fund appropria- mcnt, $54, 752.75; Computer rescinding the earlier action, each
tions in the amount of Research Internal Service Fund, member indicated informally thiu
they would vote the same as they
$3,051,276.27.
$2,659.97.
.
General Fund
Expendable Trust Funds, did .at the last regular meeting. All
voted for moving the students to
General fund appropriations arc $26,121.09; Law Enforcement
NEW YO~K· (AP)- The Envi- completing lhe first draft of a pares risk assessments, such as the .
eliminate
the double grades with
ronmental Protection Agency has report on secondhand smoke and one be_illg rel~· ihursday. That -as follows: Board of County Com· Trust Fund, $15,423.29; County
the
exception
of Tom Roseberry
cancer that is' being released division WllS no( affected by the missioners, $223,281.49; County Home, $113,618.87; Supreme
quietly dropped tobaCC!l from its lung
who
voted
against
the change.
great fanfare Thursday.
change in the indoor air research Auditor, $217,266.66; County · Coon Testing Program, $3,656.98;
studies of indoor ait pollutants, a with
During
the
organizational
lileet. -The decisi9n to halt the program 1 program.
.
· .
,
Treasurer, $105,258.12; Other MR/DD
Transportation,
mov.e that aitics said was made in was
.ing
Sue
Grueser
was
elecled
presinot widely knowri. Critics said \
EPA officials demed they acted Financial · Administration, $27,614.83; Youth Services Grant,
response to press'ure from the
denJ., and Joseph Thoren, vice pres.the
release
of
the
lung
cancer
report
in
response
.to tobacco indusuy lob- $2,298. 70; P~osecutinf Attor'!ey. $21,873. 75; Supreme Coun CorntObacco industry. .
ident
Regular meetinks were set
bying. "I can tell you· categorically $188,364.98; Bureau o Inspection, munity Corrections, $6,130.37;
EPA officials cor!firmed that prompted them lo speak oul ·
·
for
the
third Monday of.each month
Until the end of 1990, the agcn- tliat there was ~ if~&lt;!usuy. pressure $45,000; County Planning Com~ Indigent Defendant Alcohol Treat. tobacco n:scarefl had been dropped,
at
the
high
school cafeteria. The
but denied doing so because of cy conducted experiments on that I kne~ of, sat~ ~nch Brct- mission, $8,805; Common Pleas ment, $7,202.70; Enforcement and
salary
of
board
members was set
c1garetJe.smoke as pan of its indoor thauer, ass1stant admm1strator for Court, $173,596.83; Domestic Education, $3,313; State Funds,
for
$80
a
meeting
for a maximum
Relations Juvenile Court, $21,366.79; Delinquent Real Estate
· Peter G
, associale direc- air research program, based in research and development
or
13
meetings.
The tobacco research program $57,692.60; Probate Court, Tax Collection, $32,239.59;
tor of the C ngressional General North Carolina. The program was
The board voted 10 renew its
one
of
the
largest
federal
.rescarch
was
doing much ·work on the _ $29,886 .06; Clerk of Courts, MR/DD Gift Fund, $5,930.82;
· Accounting Office, said his office
membership· in the Ohio School
effons
on
the
health
effects
of
seceffects
of
secondhand
smoke
in
$143,502.78;
Coroner
Office,
MRJDD
Residential,
$183,155.27;
· had launched two i.nv!lStigations· of
Boards Association and to renew
·. the EPA's secondhand smoke stud- ondhand smoke, said lhe EPA's children. "All of that work has $27,475.62; &lt;/.&lt;!,unty and Municipal Indigent Guardianship, $212.07; '!he performance bonds for memPeter
Preuss.
been
killed,"
said
an
EPA
scientist
Courts,
$103,f'6.45.
Sugar
Run
School,
$1,725;
EMS
ies. .
bers of the board, the treasurer and
The pro~ram conducted basic who spoke on condition of.
Board
of
Elections, Transfer, $46,502.34; Emergency
The termination of the tobacco
the
superinlendent.
$114,832.57; Capital Improve- Management AgenH. $7,763 .22;
: research program occurred t"!;o . research. It was not directly con- anonymity.
Attending were Scott Wolfe,
··
necled
to
the
EPA
division
that
prePreuss
said
the
research
was
ments,
$10,000;
Maintenance
and
Park
Commission,
$30,
702.13;
: years ago, just as the EPA was
dropped because the agency had Operations, $196,29.1.23; She~iff, Capital Project, Buildings, . -Grueser, Thoren, Roseberry, Denny
completed its central aims and $415,188.49;
Recorder, ' $12,245.63;
Issue
·Two, Evans, Dennie Hill, treasurer, and
B~b Ord, superintendent.
wanled to move to other pollutants. $75,242.12; Disaster Services, $32,415.20.
'
"It's outrageous that the EPA $6,993; County Public Defender
has,terminaled funding of thc"most Commission, $35,000; A~culture,
imponant indoor air polluta!lt,'' 99,462; Regisuation of Vttal Statissaid Stanton Glantz of the Umvcr- ucs, $220; Ch1ldren Servtces
The meeting regarding rural water service in Western Meigs
sity of California, San Francisco. Board, $103,450; Soldier's Relief,
County has been canceled tonight, according to lij:onoinic Develop- .
"The EPA had ~ne of the best · $54,542.30; Veterans Services,
nlent Director Paula Thacker. It will be rescheduled at a later date.
research programs in the world."
$36,817. 72; Public Assistance,
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ferguson's vehicle was listed as
The 'decision to c!rop studies of $86,007; Park Commission,
State
Highway PatrOl reported two heavy. Both vehicles were towed
tobacco smoke could hamper the $30,754 .17; Plat Map and House
accidents.
in · Meigs County from the scene.
Randy 0. Dudding of Racine has been transported to Orient
agency's wotk on other pollutants; Numbering, $46,758 .92 ~ Law
Reception Center by the Meigs County Sherifrs Departrne!lt. fol·
Wednesday.
said Dr. Alben Collier, a pcdialri- Libraries, $1,398.60; Historica·l
A R~cine youth was taken to
lowillg his sentencing by Meigs County Common Pleas Coon Judge ·
cian at the University of North Car- Society, $8,000; ln~urance on
Veteran's
Memorial Hospital by
Fred W. Crow Ill on cliarges of arson and gross sexual imposition. , · olina. "My opinion Is that no mat- Property, $151,000; Mtscellancous,
Five people were transported by
Meigs
County
Emergency Medical
Dudding .had earlier enlered a plea of not guilty and not guilty by
ter what polluiADt you study, you're $191, 795.95;
Transfers, Mei~s County Emergency Medical
Service
Wednesday
aflernoon fol·
l'f'ASOD or insanity, but withdrew his pleas to the felOny charges and
going 10 have to have· an indicator $61;836.91.
. .
Servtce iO Veterans Memorial Haslowing
a
two-vehicle
accident on
pled guilty.
.
.
of ~iF.Ctte smoke," he said. "It's
O~her Appropr181tons
pita! Wednesday night following a
Flatwoods
Road
(County
Road 26)
Crow scmenced him to a suspended sentence or two years in
certamly an important co-factor in.
Spec1al Revenue Funds: Dog two-vehicl&amp; accident within the
.
in
Chos1er
Township.·
•
pri$on and five years probation on the arson charge, and 18 ·months
whatever you do."
and Kennel Fund, $10,556.47; intersection of Flatwoods Road
The
condition
of
Toni
R.
Setton each of two charg~ of gross sexual imposition, involvin~ a 14
The GAO investigations were County Board of Mental R~tar~- (County Road 26) and Pomeroy
ers,
15,
Bald
iKnob
Silversville·,
year old Pomeroy boy.Those charges will be served consec:uuvely.
requested by Reps. John Dingell, lion and Developmental D1sabll•- Pilce (County Road 25).
Pucldin1 wu involved in a bizarre series of incidents involving a
D-Mich., chairman of the House ties, $951,125; Public AssisiADce
According 10 the report, Jocin- Portland, a passenger in a vehicle
. Summer, 1992 rue which destrOyed his mobile home on Pine Grove
ovcrsight- and Investigations sub- Fund, $2,948,989; Litter Control da Ferguson, 18, '39081 Bradbury driven by Boyd E. Bailey, 20,
Road, as well ·as an alleged staged suicide at the Ravenswpod
committee, and Virginia's Thomas 81111 Recycling Fund, $55,500; Real Road, Micldlepon, was northbound 50330 Ours Road, Racine, .was
Bridle. He is charged in Pike County with charges relating to a
J. Bliley, the committee's rantting Estate Assessment Fund, $132,353; on Pomeroy Pike. when she failed unavailable at press time.
. According to the report, Douseries or allo&amp;ed au1911lefts.
.
,
Republican.
Litter Control ~nd Recycling Gift to stop for a swp sign and snuck a
glas
B. Eblin, Jr., 27~ Bridgeman
, Also bMIIJlOI led 10 prison w~th Dudding wen: Elmer Bowles and .
One investigation concerns the a.nd, Donation Fund, S4,S68. 70; vehicle westbound on ·Flatwoods
Street,
Syracuse,. was westbound
Timothy Davidson, as weq as Donald L,indenurn, who pled guilty
adequacy or the. EPA's ICien!lfic Motor Vehicle and Gasoline Tax Road, driven by Thomas M. Stew- ·
when
he
started to make a left hand
last month to q.arges rclaling 10 the murder of Howard Lawrence of. :
peer rev~ews, in which EPA docu- Fund, $2,626,778.35; SoU and art, 17, 391 S. Second Street, Mid~;
tum
into
a driveway, causing BaiLOnJ Bot!Dm.
.
mQDts m critiqued by other sclen- Wafer Co0¥1'Vation Special Fund, dlcpon,
·
' ley, who was
eastllound, to swerve
listS to assure accUiliCy,
$53,618.32; Youth Service Subsidy
The conditions of Ferguson and
off
the
right
side
of the road and
Grant Fund, $21,873.7S; MS hCI' passengers, Raben D. E:Uis,J.6,
strike
a
culvert,
tree
and a bi(d .
Levy Fund, $461,403.46; Tubcrcu- 238 Beech Street, Middleport;
bath.
Donald E. Onham of PoiiiCIOy wu •• llkd on Wednelday night
·
losis Levy Fund, $124,561.08; Daniel R. McCloud, 17, 38208
Eblin was cited driving left 01
on a 'NIIIMl dwJ=ult, flied by DelliJo Clark of Racine. lfe
Amusement and alarm license Cbildlen Services Fund, $134,131; County Road 3, Middleport; Joshua
center
and Bailey was ciled fOr fail
· wu jiJiod peadillaa
· 1 Ill Meiga=ua Court.
fees Ill Pomcniy wae due on Jan. Marriage Licenses, Battered N. Blair, 17, 38664 Swe Roule 7,
ure
to
display valid registration.
Sherin Jam01 M. Soalsby also
that deputies ~ill be
·1, officials advised roday. 1'llose SjJousc Fund, $7,276; Community Pomeroy, and Misli D. Powell, 17,
vehicle sustained moderBailey's
mnina DIMd M. Robluon from
County, N.C., to face
.who need the licenses lie ISbd to Develo~ment Block Grant, HO Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, were
ate
damage
and was towed from
acwral COWIII of theft ad fcqery having been recently indicted by
reneontwactheirtceln~f':'!
Wl'flhf.~ovillaaefyboyr
$172,6
1.35;
CDBO-;Revotvinjl
una
v8ilable
~
pressh'
tim
e.
.
d
. · the Melp C01ftty Orand Jury.
C
the
scene.
8· tewart s ve ICe
1 sustatne
.,~ 0 1·~ If Ma•
Loan Fund, $30,140.19; CommuniBrute R
, ·
ty Housing Improvement Strateay, . moderate damage and damage to

t
• •
J993. bU d.get
Q' n'PrO ve

'EPA abandons·tobacco research in
response to industry, ~ritics ,charge.

..
I

2 Sections, 12.PagH 25 cenla

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Thursday, January 7, 1993

and since a list of individuals who
By BRIAN J, REED
had passed the lest required for the
Sentlael NeW!! Stair
Former Meigs County Commis- position was unavailable, the com·
sioner Richard E. Jones was missioners have been authorized to
appointed 10 a management posi- hire Jones on a provisional but pertion at the Meigs County Depan- manent basis.
Commissioner Janet Howard
. ment of HW1111l Services at the regvoled
against the motion, made by •
ular ~of the commissioners
Commissioner
Raben Hartenbach,
· onW
y.
and
Commission
President ManMichael Swisher, Director of the
,
ning
Rouslt
,vacaled
the position of
DHS, met with. the commissioners
in
order
to
second the
president
and said that the new position of
motion.
·
Howard
indicaled
that she
AdpJinistrative Assistant IV had
felt
an
effort
should
be
made
to
been approved by the ,Ohio Department of Administrative Services. find applicants who had successful-

of c:Oolring·you'n: doing.
.
For starterS, ask .Cor a recom'mendation where you buy your
rish. Many ~upermarkets have'
charts that give approximate
cooting times for various fish.
The more you practice, the
moie you 'II know wlien the fish
is ready to check. Schlesinj!er
suggests you check by C!lltlng
into the fish and looking at it
Cooked flesh will look con sistently opaque; underdone fislr
looks translucent. If the fish
~~es )"hen touched y;ith a fl?l'k,
1t s overdone. Schlesmger pomts
oul that when grilling, tbicker
. fish will continue to·.coot a!ter
' rem(lval from the gr11l, so ttrne
accordingly to obtain ~esired
moistness.

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""'!'".i,i.,;j_,

oOxygen Service .
In the Home.
oOstomy Supplies
•Diabetic $upptles
24 Hour Emergency
Service
. Free oellveryl ,

Home OW"-4 Hcime Operated
·~rvl•l ... Arn fer O.ar 1t Ytar1"

Meclieal Shoppe
.
.

.industry=
· .'

.

.----Local briefs ----.

.

Meeting canceled

Five injured in two-vehicle
a_ccident Wednesday night

Dudding transported to prison

A"ests reported by sheriff

Fees Past due

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&lt;

.I

�.·commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
I

Thu,..,, Jltn'*Y 7, 1883

'

. the general population that women labor, but ha$ written extensively
lffirmative-action Cabinet
about wor1cer training and retrainBill Clin11111 promised a Cabinet represent. .
By all accounts, the transitilln ing. Look for a union uftlcial, pas.
that matched America. s ethnic and
gender makeup. Depending on team w'as most proud of findin~ sibly United Food Workers presiHazel O'Leary, the African-Amen· dent Jay. Forem•n. to be named
can women named energy secre· undersecretary.
Surprisingly, siven Clinton's
tary. In affirmative action parlance
J •
o·
labor
support, there is not' a Bingle
this is refened 10 as a "twofer" member
of the newly annoianced
whether you consider the EPA someone who can be counted in
Ca~
with
close ties to orpnized
head, economic adviser and U.N. two categories. Insiders say their
labor.
By
contrlst,
a half-dozen
ambassador . as Cabinet-level only .failure was in not finding an
appoinuneniS, ita!llle8fS thai. ho bas A$ian American for a lOP position. have close tics to ~ businals.
Amana Clinton s biggest camlargely achie.ved his ~iversity Three reportedly rejected jobs.
paign
contributors were trial
By all. accounts, tbe hardest
goals. Four Clmton appomtecs who have been lnclted in a
lawyers,
or 22 percent- are Africari Amer· decision was between black c9n· ·
fierce
contest
with biJ business
ican: This is roughly double their gressman Mike Espy and Ruth
over
limiting
product
lilllJility and
represenlation in the populatiop. Harkin for agriculture secretary. In
punitive-damage
lawsuit
awards.
Two of the Clin10n selections are the end it was the support of a half.
Howevtz,
the
new
attorney
general,
of Hispanic origin. This comes out dozen environmental groups that
Zoe
Baird,
as
seneral
counsel
of
10 about II percent of the Cabinet, canied the day for Espy.
Aetna
was
a
leader
of
this
fight
Diversity !!Side, to longtime
approximately the Hispanic repte·
Washington ·insiders some of the against the trialla~crs.
sentation within the population,
Given Cliriloo s intention 10
Wom.en fared far better in this Cabinet choices seem to mate little
make
health care reform and wei·
sense. Contradictions and puzzle- ·
Cabinet than any in history fare
reform
top prioritie~. why
. .
between four and seven positions, ments abound. .
name
eduCJtor
Donna Shllall, with
depending on what is considered
Harvard economis.l Robert
little
experience
in either, as secreCabinet level. This. contrasts .with Reich was the odds-on favorite 10
two in George BUSh's origiDal Cab- bead the Council of Economi~ tary of Health and Human Serinet, and only one woman in Advisers. Howevtz, insiders say he vices? The accepted re8son ' ~ that
Ronald Reagan's initial Cabinet. ended up being the wrong gender, Clinton·wanted !lis close friend and
However, some women's organiza. afld the job went to Berkeley fanner fellow govemor (and educa·
iions were ~y because female economist Laura Tyson. Reich tion expen) ,Richard ltiley in lhe
represenlation m the new Cabinet• instead went 10 Labor where he bas education post Hillary Clinton, in
is still far below the 52 percent of no experience and no lies to big tum, wanted her close friend Slla·
· lata in the Cabinet, and HHS was
about the only slot available.
'
Look for an HHS reorpnization
that will result in dual wldersecletaries -one for l!ealth policy, one
for welfare and social programs.
IIICill.
Shalala CO!IId well become a figurehead secretary.
Then there: was the joint
Wllltl
announcement t1!at Clinton's okjest
friend, utility executive Mack
McLarty, woulil be White House
chief of .slaff, while Democratic
National Chairman Ron Brown
would become commerce secretary. The illlmediate joke was that
someone bad put lhc two names·ill
the wrong boxes.
•·
McLarty ha$ no national politi·
cal experience.' Brown, by conu.t,
is a consummate political insider
and consensus builder. He would
seem the ll¢'ect choice for chief of
staff, while first frjend McLarty is
well qualified 10 be commerce sec·
retary.
Robert WIIIJII&amp;D is a syndlclt;
ed writer for Newspaper Eater·
prise AIIOcilltiGII.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - ~y
all accounu, as lhc fOIIIIIIion of the
Clinton CJbinet enteicct' it,s ·final
slages, the transition team's personnel experts became frantic.
With Clinton's self-imposed
Chrisunas deadline looming, they
didn't have a clue who to suggest
as Auorney General.
Tbey were operating under stOct
orders that one of the four top Cabinei offices - State, Defense,
Treasury or Attorney General - ·
had 10 be a woman. The flfSI ·three
posiS had gone to men when not a
single women had made it onto the
so-called "short lisL" They had to
find a woman attorney general; and
every woman on their shon lis! bad
said no.
Up stepped uansition.tlead (and ·
Secretary of Stale-designate) Warren Christopher with a suggestion:
Zoe Baird, his fonner law partner,
currently a corporate lawyer with
Aebla Insurance Co.
In quick Oljder it was determined
that she was ~ Democrat Of soriS,
that she was reasonably well
thought of hi most quarters and, .
most imporlantly, that she was
willing to accept the job. The
choice was made and announced.
Welcome to America's first

.

· DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OJ' 1'IU MEIGS-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publlsber
PAT WHITE.HEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETICRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All leiters ire subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

~re~sur~

on to name

sub-cabinet folks
'

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-..__ ·

_Robert '· ma'uman

ByWALTERR.MEARS
·
· AP Special Correspoadeat
. WASHINGTON - While the marquee names of the new 'adminisllll·
lion go before Senate conftm1ation hearings, there's a supporting cast still
io be chosen for the sub-Cabinet jobs that make the government go.
· They're neither so visible nor so celebrated as the 14 Cabinet officers,
'.bptthey will be no less·crucia!IO the·CiiniOn administration. They are the
officials who manage the pro$!11ffis, handle the delails; write pwposals 10 ·
be sentiO Congress, do the daily work of running the federal bureaucracy.
There are deputy, assislant and undcrsecrelaries 10 be named, along
with scores - ultimately hundreds - of olhct offiCials to complete the
DemocraiS' return 10 power after 12 years of Republican administration,
·· That process is on President-elect Clinton's Little RIJ&lt;:k transition desk
'now •. along with lhe selection of his full White House Staff and the draft·
·ing of his initial policy proposals. On Thursday, he is meeting wilh his
-economic team, to look at policy options and at the handling of the federal
budget ,1
Clinton will need to be ready within weeks of taking office with revisions of both the current-year budget and the outlines tliilt will be pro~sed by the·outgoing Republican administration for the year beginning
nextOcL I.
·
It is inside work, without the televised performances at which Clinton
11amed his Cabinet or listened to two days of advice at the Little Rock
economic conference. But it is viral.
Soon after the Jan .•20 inauguration, according to one veteran of the
transition proce!!S. Clinton will need 500 to 600 key people in place in
· order to get the swift start he's promised.
,
· Arnie Miller, director of presidential personnel for Jimmy Carter, said
in a paper for 'the Citizens Transition Project, that Clinton .will have to
have those officials on the job quickly "in order to move his policy agenda during the flfSIIOO days."
·
·
Give~ the numbers, sq. incoming president bas to delegate that part or
• J)te appomtment process. Wl)en Carter set up shop in 1977 ,he gave Cabi·
• net appomtees the authority to choose their own deputies and other sub; Cabinet officials, and may have paid for it later in diminished control and
: IQyalty. ~onald Reagan's ~sition ~~on ccnttalized authority over
• sub-Cab1net selecbons, screerung and lisung prospeciS for appointment
: : : The Clinton operation is closer to Reagan's model than to Carter's.
;. At the same time, Clinton's Cabinet choices are appearing before Sen·
There was a wonderful surprise sex as an inevilability that we just tecn·agers would ~ fewer chil- sex as those who were."
:ate confirmation committees beginning on Wednesday. They cwi't be
waiting
for me when I opened up had to accept and work with, I dren out of wedlock. 'As she says,
This ha$ been I parlicula1y bit·
• nominated, let al~e connrmed! ID_IIil CliniOn is inaugurated in two weeks.
pregnancy rates ' am oils the ter argument for tbo8c who eame•of ·
my New York Times the olhct day: thought they were wrong.
· But w1th heanngs and prehmmary approvals completed in advance
Hopkins, bless her, draws the informed and uninformed are age in the ao-ca1led sexual revolu: most or all of the Clinton Cabinet could be confirmed that day or the next: an Op-Ed piece written by (of all
"depfllSsingly similar.': We don't tion, wben young adults rebelled •
: : It's been done that way even in ilivided governments; 11 of Richard . people!) a contributing editor to
know all the reasons behind the against an era that laUgbt that all
·Nixon's 12 Cabinet nominees were conflrrRed by a Democratic Senate on Rolling Stone, that bastion of pop
statistics, bin we do know one: sex, even between loving )111111ets, ·
culture, free thinkin¥ and the L·
:..liis inauguration day.
.
word.
It
was
titled
'Sex
Is
For
Birth
control fails in many cases of was bad. We wanted the next sen·
1
: .. But there's usually at least one exception to the swift, smooth conftr· Adults," subti.tled "A feminist most reasonable analogy to the tecn-ase pregnancy. Citing the fail· cration to be able 10 relate Ui sex a8
. illation process as if 10 show the Senate IS not a rubber slamp.
: . E:ven m those delayc:cJ cases, confmnation almost invariably follows case for teaching kids abstinence," quesuon that I ve ever seen: She ure rate o( condoms, she wisely a natural and wondrous aurlbure of
: •wtthtn days, but Republicans have not forgotten one exception four years and it lived up 10 my wildest hopes lalks ·about her high-school years, asks bow reliable either condoms life as a. human !Icing. We didn't
··ago, when lhe Senate rejected Preside~,~t Bush's nomination of John Tower of finding the voice of one crymg when reeJ\.age drinking was pretty or their young users are in prevent· want them to go through wbat
in the wilderness.
·
well accepted as a fact of
ing sexually trlnsmiUCd diseases some of us went dtrougb. of being
:to be secretary of defense. No newly inaugurated president had been
Thank you, Ellen Hopkins·. When her sister came through the · and AIDS.
ashamed of natur11 sexual feeliligs,
: denied a Cabinet nominee before.
·
abo11t
sex
an!ltecn-agers
Talking
even
1;0 !he ~int of impa,iring lovsame high school, 14 years later,
According to the Alan
· : Senate Democratic Leader George Mit.Ciiell said he doesn't know
with
family
planning
experts
over
ing
retationsllips
and ruming otherthe way kids looked at drinking had Guttmacher Institute, an organiza.
: ·whether there will be controversy over any of the CliniOn nontinees and
wise
healthy
ma'riages.
.
the
last
couple
of
yean,.
I'd
begun
• hopes for prompt confirmation.
·
·
'
done a 180. Designated drivers had tion that studies reproductive
10
feel
like
my
Great
Aunt
Mac.
But,
given
all·the
mishaps
that
become the norm, she writes, "and health, 36 percent of women in
• · · Repu~lic~s ~on' t h~ve the votes 10 bl~k a nomination even if they
She
insisted
that
female
legs
be
can
attend
lllO-c.-ly
sex,
we
have
bnly losers swerved off into the their early 20's become preg11111t in
: had tlie mchnauon . Sbll, party hnes don t necessarily guarantee out·
called "limbs," and that if male night.
the first year of relying on male learned as no olhcr generation the
· comes. Cartor's nominee for CIA director withdrew amid Senate contrasexpal organs must be spoken of,
"Coulditbethatteen·agesexis condom use. If a condom can't · dangers of not waiting until we are
: versy over his qualifications and record, and Democratic resislance
: aelay~ the confirmation of his arms negotiator.
·
. even in a biological sense, they be no more incvilable than we once even protect a w&amp;man Cram p~eg. emo~ly mature and responsiblC
referred to as "members."
thought teen-age drunken driv- nancy, what kind ol odils is it giv- . enougll 10 handle such a complex
· : Chnton spokesman George Stephanopoulos said Monday he doesn't
I don' t mind telling you, I didn't ing?" Hopkins asks. "Is it possible . ing her against death? ·
relationship. To say tliat ','sex is for
; mink there ts any llin 10 be dug up about any of the nominees. "We
enjoy feeling like an enemy in my to make a liberal, feminist argu- , Hopkins also cites a program.in adults" doesn 'I mean the' sexual
expect heallhy questioning, but nolhing out of the ordinary and we expect
own camp. For two decades, I'd ment for pushing abstineriCe in the Atlanla public schools where reitolution is O\'CI', rather that it is
all of our nominees to get conftr'rned speedily," be said '
trusted those who studied and schools? I believe it is."
·
eishth·graders are taught absti- coming full circle and is not just a
taught family plannin~s calm,
So do I.
nence .by upper-grade peer coun- radical veer in a dftaion opposire
: . EDITOR'S NOT~- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columinformed professionals :dicated 10
Hopkins points to statistics that · selors: "By the cad of the eighth from what bad been.
.mst for The Assoc1ated Press, has reported on Washington and
human welfare and a pragmatic suggest traditional sex education is grade, girls who weren't in die pro:~ational politics for more than 30 years.
Sarll!b Overstreet Is a syadl·
outlook toward human nature. But not having the effect we hoped it gram were as much as IS times cated writer for . Newspaper
when they began to talk of teen·age would, which was 1bat informed more likely 10 have begun having · Enterprise AsiOclatioo. •

.

•••••

•••

.....,,,

Tell young teens that sex can·wait
Sarah Overstreet

life. ·

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Resolutions for 1992's newsmakers

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Another year has come and
gone. I iniagme that a number of
people who. were very much in the .
news in 1992111'C qwre relieved 10
put the year behind them. They are
hopeful abotJ·I 1993. It offers a
chance 10 ~ afresh, to show that
lessons havq been learned from·
past miSlikes, to set straight things
that have gone awry.
As a serviee 10 these newsmakers who have provided much fod·
der to those of us ·who earn our
livelihoods commenting on their
deeds and, sometimes, misdeeds, I
have taken the libeny of providing
appropriate resolutions for the new
year.
President·elect Bill Clinton: To
resist the temptation to think that
the voters have given me a mandate
to overturn every Republican policy of the PISI12 years, To hold the
liberal special inleJe$1S at bay, IS I
succeeded in doing through much
of the presidential campaign. To
take advantage uC the rare opputlll·
nity,,as a president with a prepon·
derantly friendly Congreu, to
make long-needed reforms in such
areas as welfare, health care and
·
civil ~slice.
Htllary Clinton: To remember
that President Bill wean the pants
in the first family. To resistlhe
temptation 10 politicize my role IS
fmtlldy. To do my darndelt to 1ee
to it that Chelsea turns· out more
· like Caroline Kennedy than Amy ·
Carter.
·
President pro tern George BUsh:

€J 1992 by IIIEA. Inc

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••

S Ily The
at Associated
th . C. Press ~
th ~ ~ea er IS orecast or
enext ew ys.
.
~ cold front headmg toward
,, Ohio from the west and northwest
Will move soutbeast across the state
. torughl.
Scattered, light snqw is possible
tonight in most areas, e~cepl ~e
extreme Sf?Uth. --:here 11 mtx of nun
and snOWISpoSStble,
. Colder air behind the front .will
hkely_keep the threat of a httl.e
snow m most areas of the.state Fnday.
On Saturday, low pressure mov-

The ·Ciinton Cabinet

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Cold front will move across Ohio this evening : .

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomtnpy Mldclltport, Ohio

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To be comfoited by the knowledge
that, on my watch, communism
finally was put to the rout, 'the
result of which is that, as I leave

Joseph Perkins
office, more people iround the
world live under freely elected
democratic govemmeniS than ever
before in his10ry. To take solace in
the fact that the Persian Gulf War
victory, over which I commanded,
exoretsed evermore the ghosts of
Vietnam, which .bad burdened the
nation's psyche for more than a
q~-ccntury.

Lawrence ·Walsh: To end my
quixotic obsession witb makin11
Iran·contra into some kind of
Watergate. To be satisfied that my
calculated election-eve disclosure
of material embarassing to Presi·
dent Bulb extracted from CISDar
Weinberger's diaries seal¢ his
defeat II the pollt,
Sen.lon Dianne Feinstein, B•·
.bara Boxer, Carol Moseley Braun,
Patty Murray: To lhow that we are
no less statesmanlike, er, st"rspet·
sonlike, tban the 94 men who
presently reside in the Upper
Chamber. To demonslilte that we
are inteated in lllillllllln of gov·
ernaace and not simply nurow
fcminlll iJiuea..
Anlll Hill: To llllke no public
appearances, accept ao awards,
receiVe no honol•il. To RIIICIIIber
my *mlnaiY sincere dCclaration

at the time of the Senate confmna- Princesses Diana and Fergie: To·
tion hearingS of Clarence Thomas get our family lives hi order, as·
that I did not come forwBJd with befitting members of the British
my sexual barassment·cbarges for monarchy. To refrain from compurposes of either publicity or mon behavior. No phone acx over
enric:bment
the cellular. No topless frolicking
Republican Party: To select a on the Medirerranean.
·
new activist pany cbairmaa who
Spike Lee: To produce one ftlm
will energize the somnambulant - just one - In which there is no
. pachyderm. To end the blood feud undercwrent of an.f:ein my bllck
between the moderate and conaer- characters•. Where
is no cnmi·
vativc wings. To 110ft through the · ty between the races, Where I ICCU·
field of dreamers vying to be rate!~ depict tbe sreat strides
plrty·s standard-bearer in 1!196. To Americaha$madeinrace~latlons
keep Clinton and the Democrats alfoolins me, for one, the freedom
h6nesL
and opportunity 10 punue m_x irt.
JIISiices Sandra Day O'Connor,
Millie lobnson: To suffer my
Anthony Kennedy, David Souter: diaease qUietly. To tesiat the ~po
To remember the conservative tation 10 reple national tolevision
principles for which we stood . audiences wilb ta1oa of my sexual .
before we received lifetime exploits.
.
appointments to the Supreme
Dr. Jack Ke\IOIQn: To demon·
Court
strate IS much 'zeal f = i n s
Alan Greenspan: To resist caUs life as I ha~ for
dca,th.
for the Federal Reserve 10 furlhct
Madonna: To
lho ips IIIII
lower interat rate1. To bep infll. chains and spike~·hccla and Glion in c:llcc:t: To continue 10 urp a sll'inp. No SAM. No bMti•lity, To
capilli pins IU CUI lithe but way beeome a bqn!.apln Cltrildall. To
to stimulate economic powth and set married io a jood old·fllllicnd
jCib creation.
..
boy (maybe l!vcn a Republican).
Michael J;jsner: To donate a Move to Peoria, m., or lomeDIIce
portion of the S202 million pro- like that, bCCOIIIO a housewife,have
cecdl from my JB1e of Dlaney stock I few babies. NOL
.
oplions 10 the·U.S tr.wy lo help
· Baieblll owners: To 11t0p ruin·
pay down the natialal debt. In 10 lnf lho pme lhat lbrotiP much 'C!f
doma, I will not 1ppe1r b~tl­ th1s coatury has been fondly '
reprdcd as die nadonal putlme.
cal for enthusla=~~
Bill Clintm, but '
y a ' • To atop pretendins 10 be boller- ·
ing his popotetl 'millionaires' IW'· than-Marae oa mailers of nee
IU.
(after all, there renlliD few millori·
Princes Charles
and
Andrew
and
lies
in bue"-!l's eii!CIItive !Wib).
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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

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Hospital news
,

FJfONTS: •,

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Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
· Evelyn Rife, Rutland; Diana
Starcher, Langsville; Emma Lyons,
·
Racine.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
· Melvin VanMeter, Alben Mariin,
Clarence Wickline and James Pellegrino.
.
,

cotD

"NATIONAL WEATHER- The Accu-Weather forecast for
Friday shows snow and ice across tbe central. Plains as a storm
· emerges from the Roc~ies. Snow willlinge'r in· tbe mouataiDs from
Montau and Idaho to Arizona and New Mexico. Showers will. be
scattered along the Gulf Coast and some rain will fall in the mid·
Atlantic states. Cold, dry air will extend from the Dakotas to New
England. (AP)

Weather
South-Ceatral Ohio
Extended forec11st:
Tonight.• mostly cloudy ·~ith a ' Saturday through Monda;r:
chance of rain or snow. Low in the
Saturday, a chance of ram or
mid-30s. Chance of precipitation is snow. Lows in the 20s. Highs
40 percent. Friday, rain Jikely, pos- mainly in the 30s.· Sunday, a
sibly mixed with snow early. High chance o{.rain. Lows around 30.
in the low 40s. ChanCe of precipita· Highs in the 40s. Monday, fair.
lion is 60 percent
Lows in the 20s. Highs in the 30s. -

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The former personnel administrator
for the state welfare &lt;!epartment
says he was fired because he
helped expose wrongdoing in the
agency.
"I embartassed them,'' Paul D.
Guthrie told The Columbus Dispatch for a story published today.
. 'I spent my career trying to be
Rev, R. Keith Rader will off1ciate. honest and above board.,and this is
Burial will be in Beech Grove what I get for it"
Cemetery.
Friends may call the funeral
home Fri!!;ty from 6to 8 p.m.
.

. Mary E. Leifheit, 89, of Colum ·
bus, died Tuesday, Jan. 5, 1993 at
Columbt!s'C9111munity Hospital.
The former Meigs County resi ·
dent was born on April 18, 1903 in Opal Priddy
Funeral services for Opal M.
Meigs Co;mty to the late August
Priddy, 67, of Jackson Ave., Point
and Aurillli (Bailey) Leitbeit.
She was a swiiCI:lboard operator Pleasant, W. Va. will be held at 11
at the Columbus State Hospital a.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home. Burial will be in Middlepon
before her retirement.
She is also preceded by two . Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Priddy died on Jan. I, 1993
brothers, Norman and Albert
· at University Hospiral, Columbus.
Leifheit
.
'
Survivors include two friends, Friends may call at the funeral
Leo ·and Jean Smith of Berrien home from ~ to 9 p.m. Friday.
Order of the Eastern Star services
'Springs, Mich.
Services will be Saturday at I will be held at6:30 p.m. Friday.
p.m. at Ewing Fune..U Home. The

]ones... ·

Wrongf~l

Continued from Pille 1
ing for the agency.
Currently, the commissioners
are in the last year of ·a three-year
contract with the chamber, which
provides economic development
servict;s for the county through

death suit filed

against PVii

Pleasant Valley Hospital and a
Point
Ple®mt physician are being
•T.bac~'s·position .
sued
by
a Meigs (;ounty couple for
. The chamber has experienced
.lhe
alleged'
wrongful death of their
finaqcial difficulties m recent
child,
accqrding
to records filed in
months, and !are .last year, Thacker
the
oflice
.of
Bill
Withers, Mason
appi))JIIclled the county for addition·
County CiTI:uit Clerk.
. al funding.
·
Kathy J .'·Willis, administralrix of
. Yestcrday, Thacker, along with
the
estate pf Megan Rae Willis, and
board members Horace Karr, Patty
Kathy J. Willis and Troy A. Willis
Pickens, Kenneth Utt, Paul Reed
and Jeff Thornton, presented a · of Rudand, Ohio, individually, .are
suing PVH and Dr. Benjamin J.
request of the commissionerno
Sol.
.
combine funding of the chamber
Kalhy J. Willis was a patient of
and the Regional Planning Com"
Sol's during her pregnancy, begin' mission.
ning on or about Oc10ber 4, 1990.
The board determined that it is
not .possible to combine a·county _ The case iltates on April I, 1991
agency, such as the planning comWillis was treated at PVH and on
, mission, wilh a private organiza.
April 15; whs admitted to the labor
, tion like the chamber. HovJever,
unit at the hospitill where the agent,
servants alld employees of the
the board noted. that ihe planning
commission could be abolished and
defendant, fVH, undertook to treat
its bt~dget funneled through the
her for medical PfOblems and the
delivery of a child along with Sol.
• cham~r. However, certain services
The case IJlleges Sol negligently .
performed b3 the planning commission, such as subdivision treated Kathy Willis for her medi·
enforcement, could not be per- ·cal conditil&gt;ns and her pregnancy
during prenaral care. Further, Sol
formed by the chamber.
No action ~as taken on the . and PVH, by and through iiS agent,
scrvaniS and employees, allegedly
request, although an $8,805 appropriation for the planning commis- negligently treated Willis and ren·
dered incorrect care during her visit
sion was included in the new bud·
11et. $30,000 is included as a line April I, and in the delivery of her
child; Megan Rae Willis, until .thcir
1tem in _the commissioners' approdischarge.
. ·
priation for the contract with the
chamber.
The case states the proximate
result of the alleged negligence of
Present, in addition to Roush,
the defendaniS, the infant child died
Hanenbach, Howard and Hobstet·
April23. " .
ter, was County Engineer Robert
Eason.
· Kathy J. Willis is bringing this
action for wrongful death pursuant
10 the provisions of West Virginia
The Daily Sentinel
Code, on behalf of herself and her
(USPS U3o880)
husband, troy A. Willis, as surPubliahed , every afternoon, Monday
vivors of thetr child and seek all
throuah. Fn4ay, Ill Court SL, Pomeroy,
damages
that may be recovered unOhio by the Ohio Valley Puhli•hirc
Cam~yiMWtimed.ia
Inc., Pomeroy
der the West' Vuginia Wrongful
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Second clw
Dealh Act.
......... paid at Pomei&lt;IY. Ohio. .
Allegedly the defendaniS, in their
Memlter: The "'-ialed Pna1, aad the
treatment of Kathy J. Willis,
Oh'o' NeWapa~ Aa.aciation. National
negligently
caused injury 10 her or
Ad'9'ertllint lltepreunt.ative, Branham
Newapa~ Sale~, 733 Third AVenue,
· aggravation of her pre·existlng
NewYorlt, N...,Yorlt UI017.
medical concjition. As a proximate
result, Willis allegedly suffered
POSTMASTER: Send add..., 'challJie~ to
11t.e Daily Sentinel, · 111 Court St.
damages and 'Troy Willis has lost
Pomeroy, Ollio 45789.
.
'
the services aild society of his wife,
BVBIICRIPTION BAT£8
and
seeks damages for loss of con8)' Carrtv or Molor Bo•ta
sortium, the case states.
Ofto WeoiL ........:............ .... ............ ..... I!.60
On• Month .... :..... ............................... $8.95
Kalhy J. Willis, administralrix of
CJrne Year••!...:....... ..!........... ,,, ..... ~ .......113.20
the
eslate of Megan Rae Willis, is
•
. ' • IINOIJI COPY
.
· PRICE demanding judgement against the
Daily; ................ :...... ,, ............... ~.w. 25 Cent.
defendaniS, Jlo.th joinUy and
Sublcribon not deolrina to pay tho curlseverally, for reasonable compener INIY nJ'Iil in ·advance direct to The
satory damages 'for the death of
Daily _Sentinel on a three, ab: Or, 12
their child: prejudgernent interest,
mt~nth buit. Credit wiU be l(iven carrier
each week. .·
coon costs and interest on any
No •ubmtptio111 by ~Mil pel,uued 'tn
judsement rendered. Kathr J.·Wil·
areu where home ct.nier ~ervice il
lis and Troy A. Willis, individually,
available.
demand
reasonable compensatory
MaU loaboiorlptlono
damages .and j!Jllgement against the
. laoldo Mol.. CoaiiQ&lt;'
13 w..u ......................................... tlJt.84
defendants foqnjuries to Kathy J.
~6 WHiiL ............... ......... ................. $43.16
Willis
and the lost consortium of
62 w..u ..... ................. ...................l84.76
Troy A. Willis, prejudgment inter· •
O.loldo-.,. Coaaly
t3 w.........1.. .......................... .....7.t23.40
est and aaomey fees.
26 w............................................. k!S.IIO
The couple has demanded a jury
fi2 w..u ...........·,ll ......... .......... ......... m ...o
trial
,.

.

Los

· lh e Rock:y
the pact'fi1c Cuas t and m
Mountain region.
Snow was scattered across
Michigan, upslate New York and
northern New Englalld. Rain fell in

c:alls o-ver past 24 hours
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
. responded to 13 calls for assislance
on Wednesday and early Thursday
morning.
.
On Wednesday at I0:47 a.m. the
Middlepon unit went to Railroad
Street for Hazel MeHaffey who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospilal.
At 11:59 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Pomeroy Pike for Gary
Curtis who was lak:en to Holzer
Medical Center.
The Rutland unit, at I :34 p.m.

.

Acting Human Services Director
James Conrad disputes Guthrie's

~ claim .

Guthrie fajled to meet th'e high
expectationf of a supervisor
involved in'lhirings and firings
because he panicipated in some
way iii questionable personnel
p,racticcs at the agency, Conrad
said.
• •I was sent over here by the
governor to bring integrity back 10'

AttOJ"ney .general,.auditor
and treas. Urer increase staff

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The offices of the state attorney
j:eneral, auditor and treasurer
mcreased their staffs in the past
two years as other agencies shrunk,
a monthly repon says.
· Attorney General Lee Fisher
increased the number of employees
from 962 in January 1991 to 1,036
as of Nov. 28, 1992, the Ohio
Department .of Admimstrative Ser,
vices said.
Rob Biesenbach, Fisher's press
secrelary, said the January 1991
employment figures are mislead· ·
ing.
"We we~ merely filling authorized slots that had been left vacant
in the waning days of the previous
administration,"
hestaff
said. in Auditor
The number ·of
Thomas E. Ferguson's office
increased from 837 to 899 during
the sarne .period, wbile ..llle payroll
of Treasurer ....
•r=Y Ell en w t·th row
went from 165 10 170, the repon
said
The SUI!lrnary .of full· and part·
time employees is prepared month·
ly for Gov. George Voinovich.
. The Dec. IO repon also said the
governor cut 1,050 employees from
agencies he controls since taking
office in January 1991. As of Nov.
28, I 992, there were 48,974
el!)ployees in 28 agencies be over-

sees.

The total was down 2.I percent
from the state's Jan. 12, 1991, pay
'

Correction
Julie Hauck, a niece of Veda
Arnold, who died Friday, Jan. I,
1993, was lisiCd as preceding her in
death. Hauck should have been list·
ed as a survivor. Information was
provided incorrectly to Fisher
Funeral Home in Middlepon.

period.
Secretary of State Bob Taft listed 151 employeesasofNov.28,an
11.2 percent decline from 170 in
January I991. Taft closed a branch
office in Cleveland and eliminated
liaison offteers. with county boards
of election.
.
"We have fewer employees, but
we continue to provide high-quality
service by focusing on high priorities," Maureen Brown, Taft's
spokeswoman, told The Columbus
Dispatch.in story Tues({ay.
Employment by the House and
Senate dropped from 703 to "671
during the same period, a 4.5 percent decrease.

a

Lottery n umbers
.

·

CLEVELAND (AP)
Th
ere
were no tickeiS sold naming all six
number~'selected in WedneSday's
Super Lotto cjrawing, so Saturday's
jackpot will be $8 million, the Ohio
:Lottery .said.
Pick 3 Numbers
6-7·5
(six, seven, five)
Pick 4 Numbers
7-1·1·0
(seven, one, one, zero)
Super Lotto
1-14-16-32-33-47
(one, fourteeil., sixteen, thirty·
two, thirty-three, forty-seven)
Kicker
7-6-6-4-0-9
(seven, six, six, four, zero, nine)

Stocks

the department," he said. "When it
gelS wa ll9int when you no longer
have confidence in the person
who's heading up your human
resources ... you can no longer
work that way,"

Meigs County
announcements
Women Alive to meet
Women Alive will meet Mon-

~~~bak~u~~1i!r~h~~y:~ ~~~! ·

tion81 speaker and craft demonstra·
lion. Refreshments will be a salad
bar.
. Sororitytomeet
.
The PrecepiOr Beta Beta Chap·
ter, Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, will
meet Jan . 14 at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Maida Mora.
DAv to meet
The Disabled American Vcter·
ans and the Ladies Auxiliary will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall,
124 Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy. .
Merchants to meet
The Pomeroy MerchaniS Association will meet Wednesday at
8:30a.m. in the conference room of
Bank Olie in Pomeroy.
Ohio Eta Phi to meet
The Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Me ius
County Semor C"lttzens center ..m
Pomeroy. Jack Slavin will be pre·
senting a program on art. Hostesses
arc Becky Triplett and Becky
Trent
Trustees to meet
The Rutland T.ownship Trustees

FROM CIIAJU.ESTON, WV

Wli.L BE SINGING AT rill

·CHESTER
CHURCH

446 45Z4

. ' · ·,. ·

7

will meet tonight, (Thursday) at
6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Stalion.

COLON Y TH EATRE

TONIGHT
51-S.,.rll

UNDER SIEGE R
OIIIIVEII.G SNOW 7:30-AOil $1.50

SYfJ!,'U!'!AY
Wesley Snip.=s

PASSENGER 5:
@

.

Fri.·Sot.·Sun. 7:30 '1:30 ·

Mon. thru Thun. o .. Evening Show 7:30 ·

Admiaaion $1.50 • 44H023

Hospital news

CALVARY ECHOES .

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

SHOW TIMESr

AT&amp;T................................ .52 3/4
Bank One. .......................... 51 318
Bob Evans .........................2I
Charming Shop.................. 18 5/8
City Holding.......,..............20 l/2
Federal MQS.ul.. .................. l7 3/4
"HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Goodyear T&amp;:R .................. 69 3/4
Key Centurion ................... 21 7/8
Discharges, Jan. S - Merty
Lands End..........................27 318
Wireman, Oi'val Fileder, Brian·FerLimited Inc. ........:.............. 28 718
guron, Bonnie Isaac, Chloie Ogdin,
Multimedia hie . ................. 32 3/4
Connie Lawson, Janet Watson,
Rax RestauranL.. ................ 3/16
Mrs. Ralph Thompson and daugh·
Reliance Eleetric .. :.............21
ter, Mrs. Thomas Gilliland and
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17
daughter, Laura Westenbarger ,
Shuney's
Inc......................22 3/4
Donald Hinkle, Bobbie Morrison, ;
Star
Bank
........................... 35 1/4
Alice 'Freeman, Denny William~ .
Wendy
lnt'l...
.................... .12 7/8
Carla Stewart, Ashlee Smith, Jason
Worthington
Ind
......:.........22 3/4
Whobrey, Roben Garrow and H.E . .,.
Stock
reports
are the 10:30
Chandler.
a.m.
quotes
provided
by Blun
Birth, Jan. S - Mr. and Mrs.
Ellis
and
Loewi
ot
Gallipolis.
Robert Baxter, daughter, Bidwell.

ANDrU

.

.PHARMACY
TOPICS
By Your

SWISHER·LOHSE
PHARMACISTS
Good news for working mothers - A University of California/San
study lound thot women with demandlng)oba hod a lower rlak
oth..rt oHack lhon unemployed women.
••••
And at Wellesley College, reoearchera noted that working women In
reladonlhlpe with ldd1 w•e I•• up"! by c•- presoureo.
••• •
Vocclne ogalnat hepelltla Awas tMied on more than 1,000 children In
a New York community suffering from an epidemic of lt. None of
thoae vaeclnatellgot the disease. Manufaclurar Ia applying for FDA
approval.
·
••••
Implanted callbrlllotora that aense an Irregular heartbeol and shock
the h..rt back to normal work well and greatly ellmlnoled the need
lor antt-arrhythmlc drugs, ,....rch at the University of Washington
found. Patient• reportad en Improved quollty of life.
Diego

••••

•

Artificial blood that ¢an be given to pallenta ol any, blood type waa
devaloped at the Unl-alty of Iowa. Now undergo ng cllnlcoltrlala,
the fluid Ia ulcl to pbH ."Ilia or no riak of trenamlttlng dla..oe.
••••
What'a new In mectlclna? You can count on ua lo k1111p up with the
!Meat developmenta, the belt. to .-va you at, ..

-=~~

tt&amp; ill&amp; ......
- . ..., ..
Molt. tiW . .. 8:00a.m. 11 1.0 p.m .

SunUr 10:00 ' ·"" to 4:00 .... 1
l'tiEICR,.IOIII
.
N4. 112-2111
E. l'rilllollw ....... - -· ON.

ap.,

.E~er~one Weleom~!
-

'

.

•

.

went to Main Street for Evely!) •
Rife who was .transported IO.Vererans.
The Middleport unit was calle)l
to Ash Street at 3: 13 p.m. for
Johnnie Smith wllo was treated but
not transported.
At 3:51 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Flatwoods. Road on a
riio10r vehicle accident in which
Tony Seller was liken 10 Veteran$.
Boyd Bailey refused treatment. ·
Tlie Pomeroy unit, at 9;24 p.m;,
went to the Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center for Edith
Cook. She was taken to .Veterans:
At 9:52 p.m., two units from
Pomeroy;·the Syracuse unit and the
·-Middleport unit, responded to two
mo10r v.ehicle accidents on Flat·
woods and Pomeroy Pike. One
. Pomeroy unit transported Danny
McCloud to Veterans. nie Middlc.pon unit took Bobby EUis and Matt
Stewart to Veterans. The Syrac115e
unit transported Joshua Blair and
Mist.j Powell to Veterans. The oilier
Pomeroy unit transported Jacin!lil
Ferguson to Veterans. Andrea Qillard refused treatment
,
The.,_,Racine uri it, at 9:56 p.in. ,
went to Third Street for Emma
Lyons who was taken to Veterans,
The Rutland unit went to Route
3~5 at 10:35 p.m. for Wanda Gardner who was taken to Holzer and.at
11:44 p.m. the Middlepon went to
Second Street for Lucille Cundiff
who was taken 10 Holzer.
On Thursday at 3:42 a.m. the
Middleport unit went to Norlh
Fourth for Brenda Jeffers who was
treated not transported. Jl'he miit
was called again for Jeffers at4:34
a.m. She was again treated but not
transported.
Finally, at 7:17 a.m. the Rutland
unit went to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Roger Riggs who was taken to Vet·
erans and at 8:10 a.m. was lroJIS·
ported 10 Lifefliglit to Grant Medical Center in Columbus.

'

"

Am Ele Power....................33
Ashland Oil.. ...................... 26 1/4

CONRAD COOK .

central· and eastern Texas and the
southern Atlantic coasral states.
The nation's high temperature
was 85 in Hollywood, Fla. , and
West Palm Beach Fla ·
' ·

Squa
. d S ,fespon d t 0 13.

Ex-official at ·Ohio Human Services says
he was fired for exposing wrongdoing
.

--Area deaths-Mary E. Leitlieit

· to thqou·th .s boul
. d bring nun
·
mg
through the rest of~ weekend:
Sunset ~ay w1ll be at 5:23
• p.m. SunriiiC ri~ wilJ .be ~ 7:53
a.m. The rec d h1gh on tilts date ·
was 64 in 1 ; the record low was
6 below zero 1942.
Around the nation ·
- Cloudy skies prevailed today·
across much of the nation and rain
fell in parts of California and the
. SoutheasL
· Rain that flooded Soutllem California streets on Wednesday was to
clear out by Friday. A colder s10rm
was forecast and could produce
more snow .in ~igher eievations in
the West and ram elsewhere.
Angeles and San Francisco
hatl rl,!in early today . So did
Atlania, Macon; Ga, Charleston,
S.C., Birmingham, Ala., New
Orleans and San Antonio:
About 8 inches of snow fell
Wednesday near the Owens Valley
in California and rain mixed with
snow fell in higher elevations along

.• •

�,

.

•

Thui'H8y, Janu.ry 7,1893

~Sports

•
•

•

The Daily Sentinel·
.

"

Thursday, January 7, 1993

Page--4

Knight- 'goes hunting after .Hoosiers get him ..6j)Oth career win .
. By Tlic~iated Pre$5
. · If you w t to know what Bob
Knightlhoug t about his 600th win
~~ a college co.ach, you' 11 need a
camouflage outfit and a gun.
•· Knight skipped the postgame
news conference Wednesday night
after No: 5 IndiaJ)a beat No. 8 Iowa
~5-67 to make him the youngest of
die 15 coaches to ever reach that
victory milestone. Word did filter
down, however, that he planned a
hunting trip today~
. "He's a terrific coach, and
tbat's obviously an understatement," said Tom Davis, his count;rpart at Iowa: "Those of us in the
profession almost as long as he has
oeen appreciate the perseverance it
takes to get that many W's and still
remain relatively sane."
. Knight bas a 600-212 mark in
28 seasons, and his teams in 22
Seasons at Indiana are 498-162. At
52, he is one year younger than

'.

Henry Iba was when he won No. .13 Arkansas 90, Mississippi 78; the worst for the Shockers (4-4) streak to 13 games 111 the ACC won the if seventh ~traigh.t ·game·
Minnesota 64, No. 14 M1chigan since a 71-13 se.tback to Emporia opener for both · teams. Cory behind the 25 pomts of Jerry
600.
The Hoosiers (12-2) won the State 57; Memphis Sttiu: 84, No. 18 Stale in 1917 and the worst to a Alexander stored· 11 of his 23 McCullough and Chris McNeal's'
Big Ten opener for bot!l schools Vanderbilt 78; No. 25 Virginia 80, Division I foe since the school .points in the final 7:40, including a 13 points and 14 reba.~: ~i.
and handed Iowa its ftrSt loss of the No. 23 Florida State 76; and No. 24 began competing on that level in three-pointer with I:OI left that (3-7, 1-2) was playmg tts firs ~
broke the game's ftnal tie.
game since its shocking win .ovef
1947.
season by hitting' a season-high 10 Pinsburgh 85, Miami 78.
No.
24
Plttsburgb.IS,
Mlaml78
Georgetown,
but the Hurricane~
No. 13 Arkansas 90
No. lDuke 110, Clemson 67
three-pointers. Guards Damon .BaiThe
Panthers
(9-1,
2-1
Big
East)
again
came
up
short on th.e road.
The.Biue Devils (10-0) tied the
Mississippi 78
Iey and Greg Graham came off the
Scotty Thurman's 34 points led
bench in the ftrSt half with Indiana school record with their 23rd
trailing by eight and scored 28 of straight win in rebounding from the the Razorbacks (10·1), who trailed
Indiana's next 35 points as the overtime victory over Oklahoma on by ·as many as 12 points in openiog
Monday night. The loss was the defense of their Southeastern ConHoosiers took control.
Bailey finished with a season- worst (or Clemson (9-1) since a 44, ference title. Thurman broke the
high 17 points, all but two on three- ·point joss to North Carolina in game's ftnal tie at 63-63 and then
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- up, in case ihat falls through, with
pointers, and Gr8ham had 17. Cal- 1970 afll) the Tigers' ninth in a row he and Robett Shepperd added con- World Boxing Organization welter- South African Niek Kulamo, who l
bert Cheaney added 14 as the at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Bobby secutive three-pointers as Arliansas weight champion Manning Gal' already defended my title ·against.
Hoosiers bounced back from Sun- Hurley led Duke in .the Atlantic broke open the game.
loway doesn ' t get sentimental They keep saying the .fight was
day's 81-78 loss to No.2 Ken- Coast Conference opener for both
Miooesota 64
when asked why he's been a fighter close, so they want a rematch. As
teams with 20 points, Devin Gray
tucky.
No. 14 Michigan State 57
for 13 years.
.
.
Jong as the money is right, he can
·
Val B~es Jed the Hawkeyes le4 Clemson with 25 points.
· - ·· ·
The Gophers (9-1) opened their
"It's all about money to me," get another shot."
No. 4 Kansas 103, Wichita St. 54 · home Big Ten' schedule with a win ·Galloway said. • 'All that 'I'm
(11 -1) with 18 points.
Galll&gt;way, since dropping I oe
Center Eric Pauley missed his over a ranked team for the fifth doing. it for the love of the sport,' Costello as his manager last
In other games involving ranked
teams Wednesday night, it was No. ftrSt shot and then made his last 10 straight year. Jayson Walton scOred that's crazy. You do ii for. money. August; has been managinil$nself
1 Duke 110, Clemson 67; No. 4 tO finish with 20 jloints and lead all 14 of his l&gt;oints in the secorid This is a business."
· .,
with help from former Olympic
Kansas 103, Wit;hir,a Stale 54; No. the Jayhawks (10-1). The losS was half for Minnesota, but it was the
Galloway, 32, of suburban gold medalist Jerry ~e and long- .
defense of Chad Kolander on . Gahanna, would Jove to have a time associate Lee WtiUams. GalMichigan State center Mike . , chance to get some big money, loway recenOy sigtted a three-year
Peplow ski that made the differ- such as the $500,000 or so he'd be contract with Don King to promOte
ence. Peplowslci was belli to eigh: paid if he landed a bout with the his fights.
Fincllayl2. Ohio J)c:minican 61
6-~~V~(3)1f-U...........,..... 53
points, 10 below his average, and welterweight division's biggest
"Jerry and Lee do more than
7-M.iiia SI.CID Marion Local 7-1.. .........44
Muqucae 8~ Dayu&gt;n 44
made
just
three
of
eight
shots,
well
name,
Hector
•
'Macho1'
Camacho.
just
coach me," Galloway said.
1-Momool SL Jooopll9-1 ..................... 39
Wri&amp;)tl St. 136, Otieago St. 91
Nonh Bollim""' (2) 7-0.............. ....... 39
off the 73 percent he was shooting But first he must fight Gert Bo "They do a lot of other things.
IQ.IIoolla..l C.oncll-1 ..........................32
National college
entering the game.
::.,
Jacobsen of Denmark agilin.
They advise me and set up appointOtlttrs
rtethlna
12
or
mort
polntl:
ments.
1
basketball scores
Memphis
State
114
Gallow~~ast
title
defense,
11-Newbury 31. 12-MeDonald 24. 13
No.
18
Vanderbilt
78
last
Nov.·
2
'nst
Jacobsen,
was
is
another
trainer
and
my
"Lee
(tje)-Lockl&amp;nd, Suaarcrcck Guaway 23.
E.St
Anfernee Hardaway had 26 stopped in
first round after the cut man, but he is more than that to
ll-Borlin lliland 21.16-Brillol (I) 18.17
' Caniliw: 69, Bucknell ti8
(lie)·Oatcs Milia Gilmour, Pitaburg
points,
12
rebounds
and
10
assists
two
banged
cads.
Jacobsen suf- me. He's a teacher, a father figure
Cmt. Cannectiau. St. 81. Skidmarc66
Franklin-Monroe 16. 19 (tie)-(::onvoy
Colp\065, Yale6J
'for his second straight triple-double fered a deep gash in the forehead. for me. He's been with me evet
Cre1twood, NEW BOSTON GLEN · Delaware 106, Md .-Baltimote County
WOOD, SouthinJton O!.alk• 13. 22 (tic)·
and lhe Tigers (7-5) snapped the ' the fight was declared no contest, since I was I6 years old."
·
98 (01)
New Riq:el, New WalhinJ\on Buckeye
Commodores'
10-game
winning
and
Galloway
retained
his
belt.
It
Manh~ 74, Holy Crou 70
reat
crafty
"He's
a"left-handed,
Ccotnl12
Pt ..bufsh il, Miami 78
streak with the help of a school· was the second time a fight fighter with exceUent speed." Page
Rhode bland 87, Jona 80
record 22 su:als.
between the two had ended because said of Galloway. "I sparred witll
Ohio high school
Siena 7(), Fordham 68
"'
St. Jou:ph'1 73,Loyala, Md. 61
No;
25
Virginia
80
.
o
f head butt.
him one time. Just from that one
girls bas~etball scores
Towsm St. 78, ~~~Muon 71
·No.
23
Florida
State
76
"The
way
the
fight
ended
last
session, he's extremely difficult (to
Weal VU)inia 84, DUquesne 67
Amhcm 54, R~y River 36
William 4 Mary 58, Navy 53
The Cavaliers (8-0) extended time with Gen, I'm going to fight fight).
0
Asht..bu.l.a 61, Madison 56
the
nation's
third-lon11estwinning
him
again
in
Denmark
in
Febru"Outside
the
ring,
he's
wellAshtabula Edgewood 68, Gene\la 51
South
Avon Lake 54, Olmlled FaUs}6
Alabama 77, L.SU 61
Sports briefs
ary," Galloway said. "They are mannered, easy to get along with. ~
BolveterOCt 43, Wayne22
Appallchian S\.111, Ma.ahaU 92
talking about March or April with have nothing but the highest regard
Bnm:wic.ke 46. Clovcdeaf 4S
BUlfa1o 70, J•ektottville 63
Buckeye
Trail
Ill,
Colhoeton
59
Tennis
Camacho.
. forhim."
.
Coil. o( OurleaiM 65, Coanal CaroliCin.ttt~ S. 47, Canal Fulton NW 46
DOHA,
Qatar
(AP)
Second"But
I
have
another
fighllined
na.60
Cardinal Stritch 40, Tol Statt 36
Davidloa 81, W. Carolina 69
seeded Goran Ivanisevic of Croatia
(bardon 56, Twinsbw'J 0\ambulin 39
Duke II 0, Clem1011 67
Oe.Heighta61,Pmn.aSr.5l
....
beat
Andrei Olhovskiy of Russia 6. E. Tenntatoe St. 11, VMJ S4
Cearview 58, Avon 55
Flodcla 76, Auburn 73
3,
7-6
(7-.2) and fourth,-seedcd
em. o.sotco 28, Cot. Roody 2l
Oeorge Washington 71 , James MadiCot. H1!rtley43, Newllk Ca~ . 35
Andrei
Cherkasov
of Russta defeatson 56
·
Crutwood S4, Windtwn 4S
ed
Youness
El
Aynaoui
of MorocLamu16, SW Louisiana 1~
!loy. Foinnml $0, Sprin1. Nonh Tl
Memphi.a St. &amp;4, Vmderbilt 78
&amp;
co
6-3,5-7,6-4
in
the
second
round
Illy. Meadowdalc 67, Day . Belmont
Mis•. v.ney St. 84, Mo.·Kanus City
2l
of the Qatar Open.
69
63, P•Y· Colonel White
. Radford 79, Allentown 63
ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) 47
SE Louisiana 108, Teu1 Coil. 94
I
Carrollion
30
Third-seeded Alexander Volkov of
· South Cuolin•9S, Tc:nncacc 85
I
62. Collcnillc 45
UT..cha.llUDORI 71, Fw:nun 61
Russia beat Man:11s Naewie of Ger50.
Sprin~ Nonh Tl
v· · · so, Acxida St. 76
~O,BtMbide41
many 6-2, 6-1 and fourth-seeded
W~tueky 88, SOI.itl'l Alabama 83
· Hanibal River 60, Skrw~ 28
Cedric
Pioline of·France defeated
J1ckson 71, Portanouth '31
Midwest
Jeffenon 47, Ashtabula Harbor 45
Todd Martin of the United States 6Akron 53, Bowling Green 51
John Qt., 65, M"'''ft 42
4, 6-1 to advance to the quarterfi·u~-zJa
ry II, 1993
Cent. Michigan 71, E. Michigan 64
Kennon SS. WicWffe 24
TOR:· lOB -AIMS "'
Detroit Mercy 83, Notre D.me 59
nals of the South AusuaUan Open.
Ke)'llllne '39, Obcrliri 32

Galloway must fight Jacobsen
before payday with Camacho

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allandc Dlwlllan

Pd.. · GB
.655

TWn
W L
New YOit .............. 19 10
NawJency ..•... ...... l7 14

.548

Orlando .................. l3 13
Bc:r.ton.~.-................. 15 11
.....dpma .............9 18

.SOO
.469
.333

Wuhing\00 ............ 10 20

.333

Miomi ......................9 19

.321

3

4.l
l.l

9
9.l
9.5

Ccntr.l Dhillon
Chicago.•..._.·:::-·"''''22 9 .710
CLEVELAND .......19 13 .594

3.5
l
6

Detroit ................... 16 13 .SS2
Chorlot!•&gt;. ...............ll 14 · .517
Milwauk=·.............14 IS
tndiana ............1••• ••• 14 17

Atlanll- •..................12 , 17

.483

7

.452

8

.414

9

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklw•t Divllioft

Team

W L

Pet.
.714
.536
.500

. l]ul\ .............. .........20 8
7' San Antonio .......... .IS 13

HOUita!. ........ ........ .14 14
Da\w:r ..................... 7 21
MiMesw ................ 6 21
Dallu ........ ~.......... 2 :M

GB

.250
.222

5
6
ll
13.5

.007

17

Seattle ....................20 8
• Prutlond ................ .19 9
L.A. I.Uoft:........... l7 13
GoWen s·u~.e ..........16 14
L.A.
l6 tl

.714

2.5

.679
.l67
.533
.l 16

3.5
6.l
7.5
8

Sammento ............ \2 16

.429

lO.S

o;_. .........

AUanta at Milwal.liee, 1:30 p.m.
Pt.ocnix ot D.UU. 8,3() pm .
Portland at Houata~,8 :30 p.m.
~Lih at San Antonio, 8:30p.m.
Miami nOoldcn Stat.e.10:30 p.m.

· Minami &amp;2. S. Illinoia 76 (2
NE Dlinoia: 76, Indiana St. 73

Friday's games

New Jersey at BOMn, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Wabinat.cm, 7:30p.m.
L.A. Clippe:s ar. Omlctte., 7:30p.m.

New Yodl: at Orlando, 8 p.m.

Atlanta at Deuoit. &amp;p.m.
Seattle at MinneiOla, 8 p.m.
Milwaukee at Otic.ago, 8:30p.m.
~!" at Denver, 9 p.m.
I ...
en~ at L.A. I.U.en, l0:30 p.m.

r-..

4 46
5 45
3 '41
4 38

166143
17616&amp;
129132
1551 51
32 1441 57

Adams Dlvl1lon

Montrul... ......... 24 14 5

53 174142

2313 6
2215 2
19 15 6

52 182155
46 156 143
44 181142
26t241SO
9 91199

IllS 4
3 36 3

Soulbwest
Alkansu90, Miuissippi 78
Drown 73, Prairie View 70

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norris Dl,lllion
.
Team
'W l T Pb. GFG A
Chic&amp;JO.............. 2J 14
51 141110

s

Detrmt ....... ......... 2218 3

47 178153

Minnesota .......... 19 15
Toron~o .. ............ 16 17
St. Louis ............ 14 20
Tampa Baj ........ IS 1j

44
39
34
32

6
7
6
2

138136
127134
141 153
136158

Smytht Dlvt.lon
Vancouver ......... 2S 10 4 S4 183113
Calgary .............. 2S 11 4 S4 162123
Lot Angele&amp; ....... 20 15 5 45 169161
Winnipeg ........ 16 20 4

36138155

Edmonton ......... 1422 6
San JQL!e. ............ 6 33 2

34115165
14 120202

Wednesday's scores
Buffalo 3, Hanford 1
N.Y. Rangen 6, OU.wa 2
New Jcmcy S, MinnQOUI I
Vancouver 5. TOI'I'lr\to 2

Tampa Bay 6,l.o! An&amp;elea3

Tonight's games

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How a
sUite panel of 1ports writers and biOJd·
caster~ nt.ca Ohio hi,dt sehool girls bu ktl.ball IUJnl in the lim wcck.ly ~gular­
ae.non poU for The Auodat.ed Preh, by
Ohio High SchoOl Athletic Auociation
division•, with wan -lmt record through
gamea of J1n. 3 (fust-place Yota in pmn-

lheaa):

Division I
Pta.

l·Pickcringt4:ln (14) 9-0 ...................... 154
2·Eutlake North 8-0 ............................ 77
Wooster 8-1 .......... ....... .-.-.................... 77
4-Cin. MOlhet of Men:y (1) 1-0 ........... 70
5-Gufie.ld Hl&amp;. Triniay (2) 7-1 .............. 66
&amp; w.rren Harc!i.na s-o..........................so

?-Columbus S(lUth 8·0 ..... ....................49
8·Cin. Sycamorc7· 1 ............................44
9-Rocky River Magnificat 9·0 ........... ..43
tO-LOGAN 6- 1 ..................................... 31

01her1 receh•lng U or more polnls:
II (tie)-Younptown Au llintown Fitch ,
YoW\e,stown Boa~man 29. 13-Manillon
Wuhln£lon 21. 14-Vand alia BUller 20.
1S-Celina1S. 16-Weallake 14. 17-Mcdina
13. 18-Grafton Midview (1) 12

Dlvlslon n
Pts.

I·Url&gt;ono (l) 6-2... ........................... .103
Z.Cle. Villa An&amp;-·St. Joe (3) 7-l .......... 67
Ht. Moryo M..,..riol (2) 8-0 .............. 6l
4-Canfield (1) 7-t1 .... , ......................... .. 64
5-llomilton Bodin()) &amp;.0 .....................60
6-Dayton CmoU i·O ....................... .... .58
7-Alllancc Marli:ngton (2) 9-0 ............ ..5 I
8·Chestc:d.-nd W. Geauga 8· 1 ..............43
9·Dreaden Tri-Vallcy 7-J .....................40

t &lt;t;~.!!':'.!:~~ ~~-~~~.&lt;.1&gt;..~:

C.lguy u .St. l..ooU.; 8:40p.m

i 3-MadU:on 29. 14·Waruw River View
27. 15 (tie) ·Columbua Beechcroft,
Patukala W1tkin1 Memqrial 25. 17Delaware Buckeye VaUey 24. IS -Rayland
BuUeye 19. 19· Shelb)' ll. 20 (tie)-Bellaim, Elid1, Medina lli&amp;hllnd 12.

Others rectlvlna U or mort polnta:

Friday's games
N.Y.lslandc:n at Buffalo, 7:40p.m.
. 01.\.lwa at New Jeney, 7:40p.m.
San Joce at Toronto, 7:40p.m.
, Vancouver at Det~i~ 7:40p.m.
Lol Angcle&amp; I I WlMlpeg, 8:40 p.m.

Dt•lslon ID
Ttam

4-Balt.imore Liberty Union 1·0 .....·.......S:8

Mld·Amerlcan Conference
Akmo l3, BowlinJ CJnon 51
Miami, Ohio 65, Ball SL 50
Ohio 67, Toledo 61

•

W. Mieh.ipn 60, KeN 50

North Cout Cooferenc:e
All&lt;.....y 66. Kat,.., ll
Ohio Weateyan lt.Cuc WCJLcm 74 .
Wlucnbcq 72. Dmilon S7
W~90.0berl&amp;n42

Ohio Conference .

l'ts.

!-Coldwater {1) 7· 1..............................90
2- VenaillCII (4) 9-0 ...............................87
3-Bmokvillc (2) l ·O...................... .......63

0 h io college
· . basketball scores

•

:::: ~

Quebec at Docton, 7:40p.m.
Wuhingl«&lt; at Phlladdphia, 7:441 p.m.
MinnCIOll u PiusbuiJ,h, 7:40p.m.

EdmonlOn u Chicago, 8:40p.m.

5-Utica (3) 1.0 ......................................:56

6-CU.. Wr""""l (1 )7-t .......................l2
7-BEAVER EASTERN7-1 .................41

R.oc:ky Riv. I.W\, Wctt (2) 8-0 .........Al
9· Wellsville '1·1 ..................... ........ .......38
10-0Gyte.\own 0\ippewa 7·0 ..........•.....~6
Othen ncet.lna 12 or more p(Mnbu
11-Eut Poleoline 34. I Z.ColwnbU 33. 13·
Belmont Union Local (I) 3l . 14-Sardinil
Eutem Brown 21. IS-Granville 27. 16Braollfield 26. 17-MJN FORD 2S: . 11·
Cu~lia ~...., ~S. 19·BELPRE 14.
20-Sputa Hiaflland 13. 21 -Lou.donville
(I) 12.

Capital 84. John Catroll 66

Hirlm 82, Baldwin-Wallace 76
'Millkiltg,um 60, Muicaa S5
Ohio NOI'\h«n 75, Heiddblra 70
Ouerbein 74, M01mt Urtion 5i

Non-confer:en~
Btufftm 64, Adrian l7

Dlvlslon IV
Team

J

NR. season.

Pll.

I·S, Otarlca:ta! SE (4} 7-0 ................... 96
2-l.anMville laMJeflft&amp; (6) 9· 1... .......... 19

3-Donvillo ~ - I ..................................... 12
4-Coh.mbiana CtM-.licw (2) 7-0 .......... 64 1
Thom_l.o&lt;l,.,... 6-0 ................ 64

20

Sprina. Scum 78. Xcnio 38
St. Ursula 44, To!. Bowsl'ler41
StmnpYille 48, Berea 42
Tol. Catholie 70, Tol. Secu45
Tot. Ro~ 41, Tal Libbey 32
To!. Wa1t.e 52, To!. Woodward 28
Tri- Valley 68, Philo 36
T~itr.

89, Cle. Cathr.lic9

• Veftnilion 58, Elyria S2

W. Bronc:h 56, Morlina10n 48
W. Ge.aup96, Oranac36
W. Muokinoum 60,t'lew t..e.ingu&gt;n 37
Waterloo 5~ 1 Mogadon~ 2A
Wellinaton 52, Elyria W. 23
Weatlah: SJ, Bay 46
Whitehall34, Oclawarc 33

-·

ZaneaYille R01eerans 65, CoL WaU.a·

56

.,

TransaCtions
Baseball
AmtrkaniAipt
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Sign~
Mark Mclanore, infielder, 10 a contract
with Rochester of the Internuional
l.elgue and .invited him to •prina training
u a non-rona playa:.
.
CALtFORNIA ANGELS -Signed
Ron Tingle)' and Greg M)'ert, catchen,
and MaD: Hobancr, pitcher, 10 me-year
cont ra~ta . Agreed to terma with Rene
Gonr.,.let, infielder, on a minor-lca~e
contn.C\ and invbod him 10 'Prl,na trairung
as • non -roller pll)'cr.
TOROI(f()BLUEIAYS - Atpood to
wilh Mark EichhGm, pit.cher, on a

lver 'et APal

'
•

term•

onc-yeu contnet.

'

.

Nallanal Laaue
CINCINNATI REDS - Signed Dave
Cochn ne., infielder-outfielder, to a con·
tract wilh lndilnapolil of the American
Anoei1tion . Named Jack McKeon con sultant and Tommy Dunbar man•
of
thcir Prinu&amp;on, W.Va., afi'Wate in the Appalachian Lague.

au

Basketball

Nallonal BuktlbaH Auot:latlon • ·
ATLANTA HAWKS - Aeli vued

Blair ~muuen, c:auz-, rrom t.he injund
lin. Waived Andre Spencer and Alex
Stivrim, fcirwarda.
BOSTON CELTICS ...:. Waived Bart .
Kor...t, auud.
D~S MAVERICKS - Aetintcd
Dexter Cambrldg,c. !mrrud, from the in·
jwod tilL Woivod Stoohon Budo, auold.

COLDEN STA'I'B WARRIORS Activated Alton U1wr, oaner, (tQm the
injwMliaL WaivedPIUI.rr.ey,panl.
· INDIANA PACERS -Activated
Vern FlominJ, 1uard, from the injured
U.l. P1aced n;.....; n ....m--, eaur: Cl!r the
injwld U.t. ..... -·~
MILWAUKEE BUCKS - Waived
Anthony PWiud, forwlld.
PllllADI!IJ'III 761!RS - Rctoucd
. Kenny Pa~e, forwanl .
I

•

"'
,:j

· FoolboU

Nadonal Poe&amp;llaft ~-

KANSAS CITY CiiiEl'S - IWI Joe

Pcnd.ry, ~awivc coordlnlhlr, BNot 1ui~
1n1, runn111g back1 coach and Howutl
Mudd, oltenaive Une OOida,
PIIILADELPIDA EAOI£S - Plococl

I

.

..·j .
'I

·:

~d3 Walal.fttOnt safety, on .the pnc·
tice tquacl.
·
·

"

w

...

.

'

•·'

Saturday
'

me

that's how efficieot I want to make
this offense."
.
playoffs if Young is injUJed.
Running backs Barry Foster of
For his part, Young said he's
through looking over his.shoulder. · Pittsburgh and Emmitt Smith ~f
"Despilc what Slime people felt Dallas were next in the balloting
· last year, this is the pa'rec:t offense with 11 and I0 votes, respectively.
for me," he said. "I think yoo're Sterling Slwpe of Green Bay-, who ·
noticing now as I get more com: set a league record with 108.recep.
fortable in it. I don't run at all. I· tions, got two votes. Cortez
mean, it's very minimal because " Kennedy of Seattle, the Defensive
·,
of the Year, got one. ·

19'93 FORD ESCORT
THREE GREAT CARS!
ONE FANTASTIC PAYMENT!

Most ·o f the pressllt!l came from
having to replace the injured Mon'
tana, a lO-re- starlet who led San
.Francisco to four Super Bowl victoriei. Young had been Monlana's
understudy for four yeer~ after
coming to the 49ers in a 1987 uade
with TI!Dpa Bay.
.
.
He stepped in as the starter at- ,
the beginnmlt of the 1991 season,
w!Jen a 101'11 nP,t elbow tendon put
Moni8D8 on injiRd reserve. Young
struggled .early on, goi!Jg 4-5
before suffering a knee injury that
·sidelined him for six weeks.
In Young's absence, Steve Bono
went S-1 as the· starter and there
were; those who questioned
Young's ability to handle the job
fulltime. But, when a knee injury
felled Bono, Young started the
final ~arne of the 1991 3eason,
throwmg for 338 yards and three
IOUChdoWus in, a 52-14 rout of the
ChicfgoD
!Jelnh·
· 1n,..6 f'lOIS
· h I·n
l e1r
espllC
1991, the 49crs missed the playoffs
for the ftrst time in nibe yCllfS.
When lingering elbow problems
put Montana on injured reserve
again, coach Ocorac Seifert named
Younj! the SWter at the beginning
of th1s year and told him the job
was his until he played Jria-.way out
ofiL
.
There'IIIO lign ohhaL
YOUhgled the 1c18ue In passing
with a .07 rating, completed .a
league-high 66.7 percent of h1s
passes and tbrew 2S touchdown
pauea, allo topS in the NR.. His
3,46S pWinJ. yards w~ second
only 10 Mlanu's Dan Marino.
.
Montana, after mlsaina nearly
two ycara returned in the final
game of thO season, but this time It
was as allackbp to Young.
,
Duplte 10111e public clamor for
Montana, Seifert has m~e clear

"'

..

' .

game against Tampa Bay ceater ·steve Kasper.
Gretzky bad beea sidelined ror t•e last aine
months wltb a herniated thoracic disk; (AP)

as NFL'~ MVP

Montana will orily see action in

LX· 3 DOOR

' YOUR .CHOICE ONLY.••

S22032*
.

PER MONTH

LX· 5 DOOR

'TO QUALIFIED APPLICANTS

LX WAGON

THESE ARE
NEW CARS,
LOADED WITH
ALL THE EXTRAS!

'PAYMENT CUOTED ON $10 ,384 .90 AT 9.75'11. APR FOR 110 MONTHS.

REBATE ANP FTB CREDITS INCLUDED. TAX, TITLE a FEES EXTRA.

YOUNG NAMED MVP - SliD Franclaco quarterback Steve
Youag (left), wtt• •et,ran passer Joe Moatana at bla side, • •
named the NFL's M01t Valuable Pla7er b)' Tbe Allodated Pr•
Wedaetday ror llll••~&lt;lna the..,_ to llle JIIIJOII'I iD bltiiiCOIHI ....
SOB • the te111'1 starter ·atur ltepplq Ia lor Montana Ia the 1~1

seti!Gll. (AP)

Sports briefs
·JameiP. McElhinney.
Football
Football
,
DENVER (AP) . - Denver
ATLANTA (AP) - ' Gen.e
Broncos quancriJeck John Blway is
expected to reJaln full use of his Stalllnaa. who led undefeated
left ahoulder m 4-6 weeks after Alabama to the national cbamplunclerJoin~ic surgery to onshlp, WM aamed NCAA Divi· .
remove
me spur. 'Ibe operation sioo 1-A Co1leP Coacb of tho Ycat .
was P.etformed Tuesday by Dr. by die Americ1n Football Coaches
Association.

a

'
. }

S"abres 3, Wbalers I - Pat LaFontaine scored
with 52 secoQds left to breal:: a tie; then added an
empty-net goal as Buffalo won in Hartford for iis
fourth~.&amp;~1 victory.
.
AI
, Mogilny, whose eight-game goel-100r:
ing streal1 ended. set up the go-ahead goal when he·
hit LaFontaine with a pass through the crQwd in the
slot. LaFontaine got his shot off as he was being
puUed down by Andrew Cassels.
. LaFontaine, who had only two shots on goal and
missed much of the game afrer injuring his knee iii
the fust period, scored into an empty net wilh 19 sec- .
onds·left.
· ·
. ·
Devils· 5, North Stars 1 - ·Alexander Semak
extended his goal-scoring streak to five games by tallying twice as New Jersey beat visiting .Minnesota. ·
The ~viis snapped a season-high four-game winless streak'(0-2-2).
.

.

back."

Woodrida&lt; 43, Oomurullc 41
Young. Wi110n6l, Columbianl47
!CI!r

A T8!11Jll Bay casiOff who came
to San Fraocisco ln 1987 as 'Joe
Montana •s backup, Young put
together an extraordinary year in
his ij.rst full season as the 49ers'
~.
.
On Wednesday. he was rewarded Willi bis selei:tion IS The Associated Press 1992 NFL Most Valu•
able Player.
·
·
·
Young, tbe league's passing
leader and a central· figure in the
49ers' returil to lbe playoffs with a
league-best 14·2 record. received
56 of 80 YOII:S cast by a nationwide
panel of modia meftlljers.
.
. "Nobody else has done as much
' for his team this year," tight end
Jamie Williams said. "He had
pressure. He had a lot o_f pressure
on him. He dealt with it this year.
He's come of age as a quarter-

.

Solon 75, 0\apin Falll21
SprinJ Vall. Academy 47, Xenia Wil-

Ohio high school
girls' basketball poll

Tum

By DENNIS GEORGATOS
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP)
- Steve Young became an
overnight success in his eighth

Shaker Hw. 42. Normandy 40
Shaw 60, Valley Forge 58
ICI!r

~itchell

AP . 1 ~elects Young

R0011U'lwn 60, Field ~S:
Sandu.&amp;k)' 56, Lon.in 36

Texu Tceh 18, North Texas 70

Tum

".!

.

'

N. Olmsted 52, fairview 42
Padua 39, Holy Name 38
Paineaville Harvey 56, Conneaut '37
Pa.ineaville Riverside 37, Ashtabula SL ·
Johns 32
Pic:.kcrinJ1on 79, Watkiru Mc:morial 36
Ravenna SE S3, Streetboro 31
River V1ew 41, Sl'leridan 31

Gonusa 83, 1daho St. 71

PitabUI&amp;IL ......... 28 9 4 60 188138

6

Rt.· 143

Midpuk 52, Brecksville42
Midview 40, Admiral Kin.l311

Ohio 67, Toledo 61
Southern Mel.h. 63, St. Louis 56
W. Michigan 60, Kent SO
Wii.-Milwaukee 76, W.Illinois 67
Wright St. 136, Chiea&amp;o St. 91

Colorado 117, Centenary 96

Patrkk Dhlllan
·W L T PU. CFCA

Quebec ...............
Boston ................
Buffalo ...............
Hllttford .............
Onawa ...............

on

Boiae St. 83, Saaunento Sl. 69

WAI:.ES CONFERENCE
Wuhingwn ........ 21 16
N.Y. Range:n ..... 20 17
Newleraey ........ 1917
N.Y. I.Wul&lt;n .... 17 19
Philadelphia ..... .. 13 19

Lonin (:ath. 42, Elyria Cath. 32 ·
Lonin Southview ~7. N. Ridgeville 46
LDWMlle S4, Minezota 48
Maysville 74, CrooUvillcSI
Medii!• Sr. S:l, N. Roylaton St
Me:nlor Lake Calh. 46, Chudon NDCL40 '

Far West

.In'....the. NHL ...
TtMII

•

EVERY MONDAY NIGHT

·lllinoi.! St. 65, SW Mi.uow:i St. 57
Indiana 75, Iowa67
K1nsou 103, Wichita St. 54
M"'l"""' &amp;~ O.y~on 44
Miami. Ohio 65, Ball S\. SO
Minnclob. 64, Michigan St. 57

.
of Wayne GretzkY..
When they K4 it cranked up, they're going to mate a
GreiZky returned for his first game of the_season
lotolteam~l bad.~·
.
and 1,OOOth of his NHL career with two assists .
New Y
gave new coach Ron Smith his ftrSt
Grettky skated weU and made several setup passNHL victory thanks io a four-goal second period. es to te{lmmates, including a pair that led to two
Smith replaccd Roger Neilson on Monday and the
goals in the secOnd pdllod. The Kings outshot Tampa
Rangel'S tied New Jersey 3-3 that night in Smith's · Bay 36-20.
fust NHL pine. ·
·
·
Brian Bradley scored twice for Tampa Bay, giving
"This was a big game for us, and for a lot of reahim 31 goals and 56 points for the season. •
sons," Rangel'S captain MarJe Messier said. "It looks
Canucks 5, Maple Lears 2 ~ Ana!OU Semenov,
like with (New) Jersey we started io play well."
Geoff Courtnall and Sergio .Momesso scored -in a
Unlike recent games, they made it look easy
2: I 1 span of the third period as Vancouver extended
, against the NHL's worst team after the ftrSt period.
its undefeated stt~ to nine games and moved into a
By the time rookie defenseman Sergei Zubov scored
tie for first in the Smythe Division with a win in
his second goal of the night at 13:10 of the second · Toronto.
.
.
period for a ~ lead, Sidorldewicz was replaced by
Trevor Unden and Pavel Bure also scored for the ·
Daniel Berthiaume.
.
Canucb.
·
In other .games, it was Tampa Bay 6, Los ·Angeles
Todd Gill and Rob Pearson scored for the Leafs.
3; Vancouver 5, Toronto 2; Buffalo 3, Hartford I.
and New Jersey 5, Minnesota 1.
Llgbloing 6, Kings 3 -The Kings endured their
ninth straight game without a win despite the return

ByDENNIS GEORGATOS
Ervins;-who missed the MinSANTA CJ,,(1fi\;' Calif. (AP)
nesota game with an ankle injury,
-The thought of a repeaqlCrforwas ·Jisted as questionable for Satmance by Brian Mitchell -is more
urday's game. Gibbs said he may
than the San Francisco 49ers can
not know until game time whether
stand.
Ervins can play. ·
·'
. They're scrambling f!Jr ways to yard store.
"We're going ~o try and get
While it appears he can do it all, Brian involved as much as ~e can.
stop the Washington &amp;edskins'
runner and special teams ace.
Mitchell said his teammates are the I think one of the things that deier"We're oing to prepare for ones who made his runs and returns miness that for us is Ricky Ervins'
him like w prepare for Deion possible.
(status)," Gibbs said.
Sanders. He' that kind of i,mpact
. "I learned when I wits a quarter.
. Other Washington players listed
player," San francisco linebacker back that you're nothing without as questionable are cornerback
· Antonio G said.
help," he said. .
·
Darrell Green, who missed last
·. The 49ers 14-2) have uillil SatStill, it's MitcheU's· movements · week with a bruised heel, corner!lldaf. to come up With their plan. that will he shadowed by the 49eis. back Alvoid Mays (ribs) and defenThat s when lhey p~ WashingtOn
"We'll have at least one guy . sive tackle Jim Wahler.
(10-7) in a divisional pliyoff, with responsible for him.'' said Alan
The 49ers, who had a ftrst-round
the winner advancing to the NFC Lowry. the 49ers special teams bye, should be relatively healthy.
championship.
.
coach.
Ricky Watters, slowed by a bruised
San fraocisco is paying extra
The Minnesota game marked shoulder over the last month of the
attention to Mitchell after seeing Mitchell's ftrSt extensive backfield season, should be back at full
bim chew up the Minnesota duty of the season. He has wake4 strength . .
Vikings for 209 all-pwpose yards primarily as a returner, averaging : Also returning from a monthin ,Washington's 24-7 win last Sat- 21.4 yarda on kiekoff returns and long injury absence is right tackle·
urday in a wild card game.
. 9:3 yards ilfler fielding punts. •
Harris Barton.
·
"There's very rew guys that can
: "It loots like he single handedWashington is the defending
tv broke the Minnesota v~::ps:. run back a kick in the NFL, Super Bowl champion but its
&lt;49ers tight end Brent Jones · .
· because ftrSt of all, you normally repeat chances are alive only
i Mitchell, while subsituting for get killed," Washington coach Joe because Minnesota beat Green Bay
· GRETZKY RETURNS - Los Angeles Kings
ibe Injured Ricky Ervins, rushed Gibbs said. "You've got to be an in a regular season ftnalc.
center
Wayne Gretzky (119) makes his first
for 109 yards and a touchdowll. He extremely physically tough guy.
That allowed the Redskins to
appearance
the season lor limited action dur· ·
llso had a 38-yant run off of a fake Brian can do that. Tbe reason why claim the final NFC playoff berth . ing tbe nrst ofperiod
ol Wednesday algbt's NHL
punt, a S4·yard punt return, a 16.- ·we haven't played him much at despite their regular season-ending
yard kickoff return and three catch- running bacJc is ~ of our $UC- loss to the Los Angeles Raiders. ·
es for 16 yards.
cess (with)Ricky..Er\lins."
·

...

Tonls!lit's games

the othel half we weren't. Gi¥e the Rangers credit.

A former college quarterback,
Mitchell also is capable of throwing the option pass or lateraling the
ball during a return . Against
Atlanta on Sept. 13, his lateral lo
Desmond Howard resulted in a 55-

'at 7:00P.M.

, Wednesday's scores
Bolu:m 103,1ndlana 94
Philadelpbi.a 132, New Jeaey 106
a.EVEl.AND 117, ChiRIO 95
llolmi• IIO, LA. Q;ppon 1~3
L.A. LakM~ 98, MiMaou 78

By Tile A.uotillted Press
The Ottawa Se1111ton are well on their way to
making NHL hlllory - the wron kind. ·
·
.~ The Senalon reached the :fway 'point of their
·f~t NHL ICUOII on ~Ito set at least two league
~ for fwility. ~IC 6-2 loss to the Rangas in
New York Wednesday night was their 20th in as
many road ~s and left them With a 3-36-3 mark.
They're on a JliiCC to get only 18·pomts, three less
than the current record of 21 set by the first-year
Washington Capitals in 1974-75. They're also inching up on the Caps' record of 37 straight road losses.
"Obviously, 1t was not a ROOd ni$lJt for me," said
Ottawa goaltender Peter SidorltieWJcz. "When you
give up five goals on 13 shots, it's never a good
effon. I was seeing the puck' well. It was just O!JC of
those nights where they were geuing it by me.''
. The loss exten4ed the Sen!ltors' overall losing
streak to 10 games and their winless siieak to 11 .
lfhey last won on Dec. 5 with a 3-2 decision over
Philadelphia.
. "Tonight V(as really two games in one," Ouawa
t011ch Ride BOwness said. "Half we were Jtood and

'

EUCHRE GAMES

I

drops 20t~ straight road game; _Gretz~y returns.

Washington's

· MIZWAY ·TAVERN
Corner of Rt. 7

.
raeme DlvlliOn
.l'boci\U. .................. .22 5 .815

Ot~awa

San Francisco keying to shackle

a

f-

In NHL action,

.

Scoreboar·d
In the NBA ...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, ..

•

"

'

·,

'

/

�.-

•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In NBA (!Ction,

I

Cavalie~s p~st

. By 'l'be Associated Press
It's news when Michael Jordan
slumps or the Chicago Bulls lose.
When both things happen in two
straight games ·that's headline
material: .
'
·
Jordan had 23 points,_but hit justI 0 of 22 shots from the floor
Wednesday night as the Bulls, losmg for the second time in as many
nights, were blown out.by the
Cleveland Cavaliers 117-9S.
" I think I'm coming down with
a virus, so my energy level was not
really high,'' Jordan said: "I really
didn't ·have the legs 1 needed. A lot
nf shoiS tonight came up shon."
Jordan missed his last sev en
shots before leaving the game at
Richfield, Ohio, with six minutes
to go and the Bulls trailing by 19.
He had missed ~even of his last
eight the previous night in Chicago's 91-88 home loss 10 the Lak.ers.
Meanwhile, Cleveland won for
the lith time in 13 games as Mark
Price made certain the Cavaliers
took auvantage of Jordan's cold
speU by scoring 30 points - 23 of
them in the second half. ·

Thursday, Jllnu.y7, 1183

.

.

117-95 victory over.Bulls -

Brad Daugheny added 24 points
and 12 rebounds and Price 13
assists for tfe Cavaliers, while
Sc~Uie Pippe led Chicago with 24
poUlts.
·
·
Price toOk three stitches on his
· left ey~lid, after being ~it by Bill
Cartwnght s elbow Ja1.e m the fll'Sl
quarter, but his shooting ~dn 't cool
dmvn as he scored 14. third-quarter
pomts on 6-of-7 sh9Qtmg. ·
Two of the baskets were consec·
utive three-pointers ~uring a 22-1
run that_put the c;avabersahead 84·
131ate m the penod.
In other NBA games y.'ednesday m~ht, BOS!'JD beat !!$ana 10394, Philadelphia ~u~ed New Jer·
sey 132-106, Detroit lipped the.Los
Angeles Chppers 110-103, ~the
,Los Angeles Lakers beat Minnesota 98-78. .
· C~ltlCS 103, Pacers ?4 .
~urgmg Boston w,on Its 1~1rd
sll'alght game ~ter lo~mg four m a
ro~ as ~egg1e Lew1_s scored 2~
pomts to lead the Celllcs pastlndi-

er with 5:41Ieft in the first quartt-r.
That started a,.I3-S surge that Gamble CBppe&lt;l w1th a three-pointer that
made the score 31-24. Boston Jeer
by at least four points 'the rest of
the way.
~eggie. Millec B!ld Rilt Sntits led
Indiana With 18 pomts each.
Plst~ 110, CUppen 103
. Terry Mil!s and Orlando Wool·
ndge pombtned for 19 secondquarter points as Detroit ran its
home::OO~ winni~g streak to niDe
games w1th the v1ctory over roadweary Los AnJteles.
· Joe Duniars scored 24 points
and lsiah Thomas had 14 points
and 10 assists for the Pistons, who
have won 14 of theit last 18 games.
Ken Nomtan scored eight of his
21 points in the fourth quarter for
the Oippers.
76ers 131, Nets 106
Armon Gilliam scored 26 points
as Philadelphia rebounded from a
56-point loss in its previous game
to rout New Jersey. It was the
ana.
76ers' largest margin of victory
Boston t~k the lead for good this season.
20-19 on KeVIn Gamble's 14-footClarence WeatherspoOn had 23

McDomild's/Days. Inn Classic slated for January 16 .

.

'

.

.

THE PRICE IS RIGHT, as in right on the money duriag
Wednesday aight's .NBA game betweea tbe visiting Chicago BuDs ·
aad the CleYeland CaYBiiers, which the C&amp;Yaliers won 117-95 in
part beeause of guard Mark Price's game-high 30 poiats. He had 23
in the second half to key tbe hosts' comeback. (AP)
·..

The
' fifth
annual
's/Dayslnn .PrepC·lass·c
1
MCDonald
will be held at Ohio University's
Convocation Center on Saturday,
Jan. 16.
The day-long basketballtoumameht will feature eight games
played by teams~ close as Meigs
and Racine Southern and as far
away as Long Island, ·N.Y. and
Milwaukee, Wis.
Here's the schedule.
• 9·.15 a.m. - North Adams vs.

Ironton
H .
E
unungton asi
• .11 ·a.m. ry,/.Va) vs. Meigs
• 12:45 p.m.- William Floyd
(Long Island, N.Y.) vs. Fairland
• 2:30 p.m.- Mobndsville John
Marshall (W.Va.) vs. Wellston
. • 4:15p.m.- Philadelphia Germantown Academy (Pa.) vs.
Alexander
• 6 p.m. - Milwaukee Rufus
King ry,/is.) vs. Canibridge
• 7:45 p.m. - Benton Harbor

(Mich.) vs. Parma HeighiS Valley
Forge
.
.
.
• 9 p.m.
Paintsville Johnson
Cenual ~y.)[Ys. Southern
Ticket information and other
details about the teams will be
announced later. Special group
rates will be offered ·
Ticket Information can be
obtained by contacting Jim Der·
row, Wellston High School, 6()0 S.
Pennsylvania A
. ve., W.ellston o.· H
45692, at1-3114-2162.

4

!!'

• •

points, Hersey Hn-tins 2l ·
Charles Shackleford and .Ran
An~non IS apiece aild Jeff Hof.
nacek 14 for the Sixen.
• ~.
New Jersey wu paced by
Dnlzen Penovic's 16 poin!s./1" •
Laken 98, Tlmba wih""' 71 ,; •
A.C. Green !JCQied 17 p;iniS mil •
pulled down nine re~Jc;~mdi .to Jeli&amp;l:
Los Angeles past reeliDa ~ ta. ·
Minnesota's 78-point tottP
matebed ~season low~ was !be!
fewest potnts allowed this -'0!1'
by the Lakm.
.
; :
·,
;';

PBL results

7).

Toledo was ahead for much of
f, but Ohio rook· the
to play at 50-49 on a
Ryan rccnwood layup and held
on for the win. .
In other games, Akron beat
Bo,wling Green 53-S I, Central
Michigan topped Eastern Michigan
71-64, Miami, Ohio beat Ball State
65-60 and Western Michigan edged
Kent 60-SO. ·
In Oxford, Mau Kramer had 20
poims to help Miami of Ohio (5·2)
stay ahead of Ball State all night.
'amie Matthews led Ball State
(9-4) with 15 points, even though
he didn't start and played only 29
minutes.
Miami coach Joby Wright said
the team was preoared for a tough
game because ' ithey knew how
important a good conference start
is.
"You don't like to play a team
like Ball State this early in !he season," he said. "We did it, it's over
I
"
the second
I
with 2:

.

.

·

I

oouySTP' OIT--1
'

'a.....r. •cMJlV "'UOI

'"""•"'\l.t¥•..... . . . .., ,.

l&lt;"'" · ""' ll!t ~••1·
COINIIIIICr ....)'!. "'lb INl.

.

.

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ta..OO •or nNfK1l'll.

M01il k1: CMS DEPT.
I f ; Wttll Orin·.
~IRM&gt;. TJC1M-ell

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11153-2U7 I
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Al&amp;YI04L I
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C'.-.lt• •

ll!lk

Ur!WII08

new f!lther of an adopted
Meanwhile, Jay Leno continued
baby boy_, m1ght be preparil!g for t6 send up his NBC bosses, who,
~e idop~ of a someumes mfan- he cracked on ' 'The Tonight
tile .and colicky star named Letler- Show" New Year's Eve, celebrate
man.
the holiday differently from most

------Names in the news

SCOI)'i'S Vlsri' PNRC • Cub Scout ·Patk 241, Racine, visited
.tile raldeats of Pomeroy Nurslag .aitd Rebabllltwtlon Center
. recau,. Tiley oaq carols and plisscd out cookie trays aa\1 Christmas cardl. Pictured, 1-r;-are, l'nlnt, Willa Gum and Edna Henry,
resideats, wltb· B~r Cubs, Aaron Oblinger, Dally Hill. and Joey
· Maauel, Wolf Cub Adam Ball, Webelos Cubs Brady Bowling,
Micbaelhll, Joaathaa Evans aad Wolf Cub Jordan Hill and Wallace HDL Not pictured are Tyler Johnson, bear cub, and Adam
· JollUCMI, ti&amp;'lp' cub.

.....

.

'

Auxiliary offers tree packets
The MeiPo Soil and Water Con•

and Empire apple for $21.
· Ground cover plants !IVailable
this year include the pachysandra,
50 plants for $IS; Bllltic ivy, 50
plaJ~ts for $ j 5; 111\d crown vetch, 72
plants for $21. .
Any of these packets may be
ordered at the Meigs SWCD Office ·
at 33101 Hiland Road in Pomeroy
or by mail with check or money
order to the listed address. All
orders must be paid for w~en sub·
mined. There is a limited supply of
packets.
Packets will be in and ready for
pickup around Marcil 19. An exact
date for pick up will be announced.

servation Di'Sirict Ladies Auxiliaty
is Olil:e again offering for sale tree
packets and ground cover plants.
Single varieties Jiackets avail·
able this year include white pine,
25 sccdlings for $8; scotch pine, 25
seedlings for S8; Colorado blue
sprncc, 25 ~:~~~lor 48; Nor·
way~. 25
· gs. $8; Mag·
nolia, five seedlings, $5.
· Variety packets include the
backyard packet which contains
two.eacb of sweet shrub, red flowering,quince, Redosier dogwood
and pink flowering almond for $7;
and the fruit uee packets which
contains two each of Melrose apple

Couple.to observe anniversary
BUY ON~ I
ONEFREr;

prou~

By FRAZlt::.R MOO.RE
AP TelevisiOn Wr1ttr
NEW . YO~K ~ It was
unknowR earlier th1s ~eek how
CBS ch1ef Howard Stnnger, the

'

ker."

President-elect Clinton wiU be
sworn in Jan. 20.
NEW YORK (AP) - Paul
Tsongas is back in the hospital,
The New York Tin\es said today.
But the former U.S. senator and
presidential candidate. refused to
discuss his treatment for cancer
until it's com~leted.
"I under tand and appreciate
the press in rest in my progress,
but unfortu ately this intense
media scrutiny has cost my family
any semblance of privacy," the 51·
year-old Tsongas said Wednesday
in a stall)ment.
The Times said Tsongas was
back in the Dana-Farber Cancer
lnstitule on Wednesday for furlher
. ueatmenL

LOS ANGELES {AP) .- . woman, listed only as Jane Doe, IS
Ronald Reagan dismissed as sheer. suing for $2 million.
nonsense a TV Guide story that
LONDON . (AP) - Rolling
said he voted for Bill Clinton.
Sf1?ne
Bill Wyman said Wednesday
" After more than 80 years on
this Earth and several decades in he has quit the band.
"It's all over now," the stonypublic life, I thought I'd heard
everything. But this week's TV faced bass player said in a televised
Guide ranks up there with the worst • interview, borrowing the title of a
of them,'' the former.president said Stones hit.
"I have many special memories.
Wednesday in a,statement
In !he Jan. 9 issue of TV Guide, It has been wonderful. But I
an unidentified top official on Clin- thought the. last two tours with
tol!'s fnaugural staff said Reagan them were the best we have ever
done and so I was quite happy to
voted for Clinton.
"To put an end to such non- stOp after that ~ '
Wyman, who at 55 was the oldsense, I' 11 spell it out for you once
est
member of the RoUing Stones,
and for all," Reagan said. "I
said
he was leaving to concentrale
actively campaigned and energetion
his
other music and business
cally supported George Bush in the
interesiS.
November election and I proudly
He owns a restaurant in London
cast my vote for him."
and
said he may continue to make
TV Guide and the author of the
.
solo
recordiligs. He had a hit with
report said they stick by the story. ·
the lighthc;art¢ "Je Suis Un Rock
Star" in 1983.
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) "When I joined this band we
A lawsuit filed by a woman who
says Magic Johnson gave her the though! we would last two or three
AIDS virus now officially identi - . years with a 1Jit of luck and come
fies the former basketball star as out with a few shillings in our
pockets.•:· he said. "Now here I am
the defendant. ·
30
years later and I. have not done
Up to now, Johnson was listed
any
of the other important things in
in the lawsuit under the pseudonym
life."
Richlird Roe.
·
But U.S. District Judge Richard
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Bruce
A. Enslen ordered the change
Springsteen
Pearl Jam's Eddie
Wednesday, ruling Johnson lost his Vedder willand
;perform
at the Rock
right to pnvacy when he acknowl· and Roll Hall of Fame
awards ·
edged in TV interviews that he was ShoW Tuesday.
.
the defendant.
Among the acts who will be
. Johnson has publicly acknowl·
inducted
are: Cream, Creedence
· edged that he had a one-time sexual
Revival, The Doors,
Clearwater
encounter with the woman in 1990. Frankie Lymon
&amp; the .Teenagers,
The woman's name will remain
Van
Morrison
and
Sly &amp; the Famishielded by the court to protect her ly Stone. "Americal\
Bandstand"
·privacy, the judge said. the

SATURDAY·
BURLINGHAM • The Burlinfl·
ham Modem Woodmen of America ·
will hold a souv supper (oyster,
bea11 and vegetable) on Saturday at
6:30 p.m. at the Modefll' Woodman
hall. ThQse attending bring a
'
desscn
or salad. Officers ·will be
THURSDAY
elected.
Everyone
welcome.
.., MIDDLEPORT • January Bible .
· Sllldy at Hope Baplist Churth will
LOTTRIDGE • Counuy Music
be held tluougl\ Friday.
Night at the Lottridge Community
RACINE • The Racine Ameci- Center will be Saturday from 7
can Legion Post 602 will meet p.m. to midl)ight. All bands are
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post welcome. Refreshments will be
available. Everyone welcome.
bornePOMEROY.- The F.O.E. Ladies
Auxiliary NO. 2171 -will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. A potluck
dinner wiU be held at 7 p.m. Theie
will be a ~est speaker on "The
Aging Eye. ,

.

Jill ••

1~

......
........
1111171.1

__.....

r.:;;, .... OPEN lEVEN lAYS A WEE'K
a- Hourt: 1:10 un. 10 I p.m. l!lan-..IIIIOugllfrldoy
1:10 1.m.10 7 p.m. ~. lOCI tLm. 1 p.m.~

CALLIPILII

211- 111'11111
441-E

,,.

•

host Dick Clark is also joining the
hall .
.
There's no actlll!l .hall yet, but
one is planned in Cleveland.
The eighth annual s~ow will be
held at .the Century Plaza Hotel.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - ·
" Tonight Show" bandleader Bran-::
ford Marsalis says his ·arrest for- ·
speeding over the weekend had:
mcial overtones .
The saxophonist, who is black ·
said officers pulled him over' :
ordered him out of the car and :
frisked him wi!hout telling him -;
why he had been stopped. When he,·
asked, Marsalis said he was told he
was going 50 mph in a 35 mph
zone.
"I told them that I didn't think .
thai it was protocol tQ be frisked
for speeding and they kept asking :
·me where did I get that attitude?
"Because of my 'attitude' I was
handcuffed, put in the squad cat
. and taken to l)le polics station, but
never offiCially booked or read my ·
tights," Marsalis said in Wednes- :
day's Times-Picayune and later in ;
a news release.
He said he was released on the .
way to the station when police real-·
ized who he '!"as. He said he driven:
back. to his car and given a speedmg llcket.
"There's a problem with the ;
police force that any time yoo see a :
black guy in a nice car in a nic"e :
ne1ghborhuood, he's a drug deal- ·
er," Marsalis said.
Police spokesman' Lt. Sam ·
Fradella said Marsalis was arrested
because he refused to sign the tick- :
et He changed his mind on the way •
to jail, Fradella said.
• •.

·· Glenn and Sara Smith of Nor- Mrs. Smith ill the former Sara Bur- ·
!DaJ. Dl., former Meigs County resi· delle and she spent many years
dents, will observe their 50th wed- babysitting children.
·
ding anniv~ Sllllday, Jan. 10.
They are the parents of three
Mr. and Mrs. Smith, who now children, Duane Smith, West Jef·
live at 1402 E. College Ave,, Apt. ferson; Jan Jones, Newark, and
119-F, Normal, Dl., 61761,1ived i~ Donna Evans, Bloomington, 111.;
Pomeroy until eight years ago at and have·three grandchildren.
which time tJx:y moved to Dlinois
A srriall celebration is planned
to be near thetr daughter, Donna in observance of Mr. and Mrs.
~~vma.s_llldbcrfamily. · •
·_ .. ·srfiith's , go~en weddillg ~niverml!l! walled f«m,tri yeaq at sary. Acquamtanccs hen!,11ftl!'invit·
the DaY!5.Jal Pllnl. He was .WiS' · e'd to Send c:ards to the C9Uple.
known 1n this area as "Smitty".
·

Commualty C.ateadar ilems
appear two dli,s before an ev'nt
Md the day; of that eveaL Items
•lilt be received weU ia lidvaD«
to assure publlcatloa In tbe -cal•
eHIIr.

89!.
-·
...........,_

folk$: " At NBC , they still can ' t
figure out which auld acquaintance
should be forgot But the 'rework.ing on it!"
y ·
Continued on page 8

-

NEW YORK (AP) .- An unauthorized - and apparently uncom·
promising - biography of Hillary
Clinton wiU be on store shelves in
time for Inauguration Day.
Signet Books said Wednesday
that "Hillary Clinton: The Inside
Story" will offer a look at the
woman who on "60 Minutes" last
year "bur.ned her way into the
American ·psyche as she turned her
piercing gaze at the nation's view;
ers and said: 'Here we are - take
us or leave us."'
.·
The book by Judith Warner is
based on interviews with Mrs.
Clinton's family, friends and busi·
ness associates, Signet said in a ·
statement It covers her transforma·
lion from a "dowdy bespectacled
governor's wife who refused to
gi.ve up her maiden name to the .
gl~rrtorous lawyer and power bro-

-Community calendar

~

•

~ither Leno? Whither Lette1n1an? ifs siffiple ·

• .
.:; ;

.Lea1ue -Early Wednes~y.
Mixed
·
•
Teams (in order of rmlsll) . ~
Hackett's Roofing (12), Ban~
Consuuction (8), Sports ol StUrr
(8), Teaford f;olf ol Tropbies (11,),:
Tony's Canty Otft (8), RutlaiJd:
American Legion (4).
High series- Russ CarsQII:
53
( 6) and Mary Musser (479)
••
Second-hig!lest 5el'ies-Terry·
Seidenabel (484) and Shirle s·
mons (459)
Y liftHigh game - lhss Carsop
(211) and Mary Musser (187)· 'Second•hlgh game.- Teny
Seidenabel (174) and Shirley Sialmons and Susan Mosaman (bolb
172)
·
•·
Team series- Tony's Carry
Out (1887)
:
Team "8
T ' C·_.,
ony s _,.,.
Out(666) • me -

and we won."
In Akron, Mark Alberts had 17
points to lead the home team to its
victory over Bdwling Green.
The Zips (6·3) led the Falcons
(3-6) by 25·22 at the half andnever
trniled again.
Bowling Green tied twice in the
second half, and came within two
points with 13 seconds left on a
layup by Shane Komives to make it
52-50. The score was 53-50 with
six seconds left when Michael
Huger was fouled and had time
only to sink a free throw.
Further north in MOII!II Pleasant,
Mich., freshman Leonard Bush
scored 19 points to lead Cenual
Michi~ to its.victory over' East!:rD Micbiian.
· DeShanti Foreman and Sander
Scou added 12 points each for the
Chippewas (4-4). Eastern Michigan
(5·7) was paced by James Reed's
16 points.
Foreman started the second half
with a three-pointer before the
Eagles cut Cenual's lead to 38-37.
But Bush buried -another threepointer with 14:41 left, and the
Eagles couldn't gercloser than two
the rest of the game.
In Kalamazoo, Mich., Sean
Wightman score'd 26 points for
Wes1em Michigan as the Broncos
beat Kent State.
Greg Holman' s three-pointer
with 3:28 left in the first half gave
Kent State (3-6) a 30-28 lead. But
Western Michigan (4-5) took con!
uol of the game during a 12-2 run
that included two three-pointers.

By TIM PUET
said Flyers c·oach Jim O'Brien.
Associated Press Writer
" What is there to believe in when
The Dayton area's two major you're 1-107 Every one of our
college basketball programs are players has played good basketball
providing a textbook case this sea- in their lives and that has to continson of two teams going in opposite ue. I have IIi fmd a way to get our .
directions.
players to play with more mental
Wrighl State is 7-3 and set a tenacity."
school scoring record Wednesday
Mid-American Conference play
night by defeating Chicago State got under way Wednesday with
136-91. Dayton, meanwhile, fell to Akron _ e&lt;;t~ing Bowling Green 531-10 in losing to Marquette 82-44 51; M1am1 of Ohio downing Ball
for its worst. defeat since a 151-99 State 65-60; Ohio University getdrubbing by Oklahoma in 1981.
ling by Toledo 67-61 ; and Wes!Cm
. Bill Edwards led Wright State Michigan a 60-50 victor over Kent.
with 27 points as the Raiders
Allegheny and Wittenberg
opened the game with an 11-4 run remained unbeaten in the North
and kept suetching the lead from Coast CQnference with the Gators
there. Mike Nahar added 24 points, topping Kenyon 66-SI and WitlenMark Woods 23, Andy Holderman berg defeating Denison 72-57.
17 and Delme Herriman 14.
Ohio Wesleyan outscored Case
Woods also became Wright Western Reserve 81 -74, and
·State's all-time leader in assists Wooster blasted Oberlin 90-42 in
with 573.
other conference games.
·
Dayton fell behind 9-0 at Mar·
Ohio Northern, picked no beuer
quette and never recovered, with than fifth in the Ohio Conference in
the Warriors going on a 13-0 run !0 preseason selections, stayed
go ahead 26-6 midway through the · unbeaten with a 75-70 decision
flfSt half. The Flyers went for one ovec Heidelberg and leads the consuetch of more than five minutes · ference standings by two games.
and another of more than four min- Elsewhere in the OAC, it was Cap·
utes without scoring in the fust half ita! 84, John Carroll 66; Hiram 82
and aailed 45-16 at halftime.
Baldwin-Wallace 76; Muskinguni
. Chip Hare with 14 points was . 60, Marietta 55 and Otterbein 74;
the only player in double figures Mount Union 51.
.
for Dayton, off to its worst start ·
Bluffton was a 64·57 victor over
since t!le 1938-39 season. The Fly- A~. and' F'mdlay defeated Ohio
ers wm limited to IS field goals in Dornm1can 82-68 in .nonconference
51 attempts for 29 percent.
g
"Worried? Yeah, I'm worried,"
ames.

~

. •.

·Dec. ,311

Thursday, January 7, 1993

Page-7

These are the results of reciat
action at the Pomeroy Bowliilg;

Lanes.

The Daily Sentinel

·'

.! •

1' '·

Dayton area .sees. two
~earns go1ng In opposite
directions; MC defeated
.

.

'

OU tops Toledo 67-61
in MAC cage action
By ROOD AUBREY
It may have been opening day in
the Mid-American Conference, but
to some it was just as imponant as
the last.
"I told oilr kids this game was
as imporlantf if it were the last
game of the ear for the champi·
onship," sad Ohio University
C&lt;liiCh Larry untcr after his 67-61
victory ove~ ·Totedo on Wednesday.
Gary Trent scored 19 points for
the Bobcats (4-5), while Craig
Thames had 16 for the Rockets (2·

By.The Bend

•
'".

•
•
•

.

MILLFIELD · There will be a
round and square dance Sattirday
and Jan. 23 from 8·11 p.m. at the
Russell Building in Millfield.
Music will bjl jlrovidcd by Out of
the Blue. John Russell will be the
callec. Public invited.

· MIDDLEPORT- The Meig~o
Junior High Academic Boosters
RUTLAND · There will be a
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the dance at the Rutland American
,cafeteria at the·junior high.
Legion Hall Saturday from 8 p.m.
to midnight. Music will be provid·
LOTIRIOOE • The Lotuidge ed by Pure Counuy Band. Poblic'
Community Center Association invited.
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
HENDERSON, W.Va ·Special
EYCI}'OIIC ~square dancing and clogging at the
POMEROY - The Pomeroy community building from 6:30 to
group Of AA wiD meet Thursday at 11 p.m., featuring bands, Counuy
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic Grass and Idle Tymes. Everyone ·
Church. Call 992-5763 for infor- welcome.
mation.
.
.SUNDAY
· ~S PLAINS • The Tup- .
POMEROY • SOLOS meal for
pen Plains. YFW ~ost No. 9053 all interested single~ at Pomeroy
. Ladiel Auxiliary Will mcct_'Tburs- United Methodist Church. Call
day at ~.m. All members Rev. Grace Kee at 992-S788 or ·
urged to
Rev. Sharon Hausman at j)85-4312
for information.
FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS • The ,Meigs ' CHESTER • "Growing Through
County Pomona Grange will meet Grief" group at Chester United
Fri~y at. 7:30 p.m. at the Rock Methodist Church. Call R~v.
·~ngs Grange HaD. Rock Springs
Sharon Hausman at '9~-4312 for
Orange wiU be the host.
information.
'11JPP£RS PLAINS • The Tup·
pen Plains VFW Post No. 90S3
Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
round aad square dance Fridiy
from 8-11:30 p.m. with music by
C.J. and Country Gentlemen.
E*YODC welcome.
.

•

LONG BOTI!)M • Fa1th FuU
Gospel Claurch_IR Long ~otto~
willba11e I special hymn smg Fn·
day at 7 p.m. with lbe .Marvin
~ Family, ~tor Stev~ R~
IDYitel the publx:. Fellowship will
follow.

.

'

'
The bibematlng benlder
According to the Kids' World Almanac of Amazing ·Facta, tradition
holds that if the groundhog comes out
of its hole and sees its shadow on Feb.
2 tGroundhog Day•. spring will be another six weeki away. If it's cloudy,
and he sees no .shadow. spring will
come sooner. But groundhogs hiber, ·nate in a deep sleep. When . or if, they
stagger out to look around on Feb. 2.
it's not to look lor shadows. but to look
· for a mate or get something to eat

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•

Meigs volunteers gear up for Hormone.deficiency o~e :
children
wet
the
bed
Easter Seal telethon campaign reason
A•• u•••r•: nil
· · The Eas!er Seal Soeie!y of the
Jtiver Cities of which Meigs County is a part will launch its 1993
telel.hon campaign Sunday with a
reception from 2 to 3:30 p.m. for
more than 100 vo)un~eer fund rais·
ers at the Blennerhassett Museum.
. Among the Meigs Countians
who will be doing volunteer work

.
'

in the ~elethon are )l•lary Powell and
Jeff ThorntOn of the Meigs Count¥
Chamber of Commerce, and a n:pn:sentative from tile Peoples ~ani&lt;
in Middleport
·
The annual telel.hon, th~ sociely's major ~nd raiser will air in
tandem with ational Easler Seal
Society pro amming March 6·7

•

Beat of the Bend.,, '

Lande.rs

l~"Uf2,§~1M~A~I~I~I~~~~~~ IRlea~j~~!ll~leAI

Not an especially good holiday treatment center out WesL Personseason for ~s. F~ces Robens, nel at the eenLCr asked Frank quesRa.cine, a re ired teacher. Mr~ . .tions on his problems and treat·
Robens spe t from· Dec. t! unul ment. Bonom line, he was told lhat
Dec. 23 at th Holzer Medical Cen- were he at l.hat Western center he
ter undergoing medical treatment. would be receiving l.he sallie treat·
However, she does send along ment .that-he was getting at the
thanks for the cards and gifts. You Huntington hOspital.
By the way, this isn't Frank's
ihade it easier for her.
first
experience wil.h cancer. He
· And Mrs. Leona Cline of Route
had
problems
five years ago and
I, Racine, also wants to extend her
underwent
surgery
at a hospital in
!.hanks to everyone who helped so .
Pittsburgh,
Pa.
Frank
was delightmuch dwing lhe illness and death
ed
to
be
able
to
get
back
to his job
of her husband, Russell M. Cline.
at
Gavin
where
he
has
been
'!'he folks at Veterans Memoria)
Hospital even fixed up things so employed for the pastl9 years.
that Leona could stay overnight to
-~---'·
You ought to tune in WSAZrTV
be near Russell when l.hings got
really bad-ljll(l she reports he di~ Saturday at 6 p.m. .L. B. Vaughan
of Pomeroy is to be featured in lhe
getexceUentcare.
. Spealdng of Veterans Memorial, Hometown Hero segment of a proloved ones of residents at the hos· gram airing at that hour.
pital's extended ell':e facilitY, a,lso
wish to express therr appreclliUOn
You'll be pleased to know l.hat
to every individual, the ·churches Garol Ball has been reblroed to his
and the organizations who Jll:OVi~ed Racine home from a Columbus
entenainmcnt and gifts making •t a hospital and is doing very well. He
joyful holiday season for those res- was scheduled to receive a treatment yesterday at Grant Hospital in
idents.
Columbus. Garol and his wife,
'
'
: Perhaps , you will remember Mary, appreciate so much your
Bob Harbrecht, formerly of concern and caring-they think
Pomeroy, who moved to the Meigs County is a great place to
Columbus area a number.of years live-and it is.
ago. Bob has undergone several
And-Meigs County will have a
cancer swgeries and is now undergoing furlhcr ueatmenL Undoubt- new dociOr this monl.h. He is Dr.
edly ,'Bob and his wife, Margaret, George A. Kusnir, M.D., who is a
would appreciate hearing from native of Buenos Aires, Argentina,
:Meigs County. The address is 34 7 He is an Iniemist and a NephrOioBlar!dford Drive, Worthington, gist. His office located in the
Meigs Medical Building on Mulbhio, 43085.
berry Heights is scheduled to cp:n
Middlepon's Frank Epple was on Jan. 18 and Dr. Kusnir will be
glowing this week and small won- on staff at Veterans Memorial Hosder.
Pital. Incid.·entally, he's pleasant,
: He returned Monday to his polite and .considerate-and has
~mployment at the Gavin Power excellent credentials. I predict
Plant after having been off for five you're.going tO like him.
inonths due to illness. Frank's
.
problems started in August and he
Thank you sincerely for your
underwent his apparently success- expressions of sympathy. Againrul treatment at St. Mary's Hospital as so many times in lhe past· you
in Huntington, W. Va.
. have lifi.Cd me from some tmpleas. You might be tnterested •n ant depths. And now thanks,to
knowing that during his treatments, you, I can even give my best sllot
Frank did c~ll a national cancer . tO that keep smiling bit.

--

~

. "Once every 500 years a musiwhere he wasbeingtreai.Cd for pancreatic cancer. His music was pla~­ cian comes along who i nven ~ a
new form of music. Dizzy Gillespie
in~ whe!l he died, said Virgima
belongs in this ntegory of rare
W1cks, his spokeswoman.
musical
genius," said singer Tony
"He must know that he has .
Benneu.
given more pleasure ·to more JlCO'
"He never played a bad. riff or a
pie than most people get to do m a
lifetime," said jazz ~ocalist Joe bad chord," said New Orleans
Williams. •'Watch~g him was like . trumpeter AI Hin. "And he knew
that hom upSide down. Oh man, he
watching a magician." •
Gillespie stQOd in the forefront knew !lis instrument."
Gillespie got his. nickname for
, of jazz for decades, giving shape in
the 1940s to the ral!cous jazz re- clowning around and wearing odd
invention he named bebop and laLCr . clothing. He to!~ jokes on stage
merging Latin rhythms wil.h main- and sometimes put his feet up on
stream jazz. Bandleader·'W oody music stands.
· Herman ranked Gillespie wi.th
His antics got him fired by .Cab
Louis ArmstrOng as the most influ- CaUoway in 1941. The bandleadcr
ential jazz musicians of all time.
saw a spitball whiz ·by, though!

ENGLEWOOD, N.J. (AP). The death of J;lizzy Gillespie
pilenced Ill! ori.ginal - a. musical one-of-a-ldnd· 10 everythmg from
his cool bebop rhythms to his stage
antics, his bUllfrog cheeks and his ..
bent trumpet.
:
· The legCildary hom player died
at age 75 Wednesday at Englewood
Hospital and Medical Center,

or

or

by Bob Hoeflich

Pomeroy-Middlepqrt, Ohio

Family seeks help for fire victims

or

or

Whither,,

or

or

To place an ad

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper

Call992-2156
MoN.

TIK!IIday Paper

thru FRI. 8A.M.-5F'. M.- SAT.~l2

POLICIIS

-do•

0

Ch'a~net

Capabtilly

~-·

-

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

101'1

'

-

J&amp;L INSULATION
"

to buy very nice home on 3YI acres In

· 4 BR, 3 blllta, 2 _ . , ranled 1
BR opt. Propooty lnckodoo 4,800 s&lt;j. ft. fann
btclg. •

I.

539 Bryan Place

Middleport, Ollio

Welcomes Jana 13aker, Mandy
Eblin. and Merri Amsbary. Phone
\l92-5766. Watk-ins welcome .
Evening appointments available.
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9:00-8:.()0, Sat.

NOTICE OF APPOIJim.ENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On December 21, 19e2, in
the llelga County Probate ·

Court, C••• No. 27743,

__
...........

~

,

'

..

"'"'
...,
=:ai:!.,...

Ca1h . Zinrmennan, de-

---

coOled,

tall of llaln
RuU.nd, Ohio 45775.

-~

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

·' System 3

30" ELECTRiC RANGE

'

. ..,

s599

Laminate Top, Solid
Pine Chain

(12) 24, 31; (117, 3tc

-__
_
-...

5·

'

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

39
UlfJIICyle •-"er
White Ba.k&lt;,.l-un Enamel ·
with Maldllng
Cushions

&amp;J2135LK

·!=2:~1· $49
CREDITTER

~ .............

MASTERCARD
VISA

DAYS
s-, ..
-=

INGELS
. FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY,

c-1

106 NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDI.EPORT; OHIO 45760
i
(614) 992·2635
TOLL fREE (800) 426-5581

·'*""IDTUI!
=V

'

,~

36970 Ball R11 Road
Pomeroy, Ollio

SIZED LIMESTONE
· $9,50 Ton

•
t&gt;i•

...,._
.,.........

4.JCI.fl ....

..--••

-

oe..lli-.i

••

•

I

'

•
-------~~
Vl~A, MflSTERCARD,
lo IJISCOVIRACCl!I'T&amp;O

'

:;jJ
31904 leading

CrMkRoad .
Mlddlt,ort, Ohio
614·992·7144
10/11921fn

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES
·CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card.

Lie. No. 0051-32

RACINE GUN

ctu•

GUN SHOOTS
· SUNDAYS
1.:00 P,M,
OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY .
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED
121911 mo. pd.

Over 15 Words

Rate
. $4.00

$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

5&amp;- Petl for Sale
57- Mueieal ln.•trwneall

$ .20
$.30
$ .42
$.60
$.05/day

Fnio. 4 V. .lableo
Fol' Sale or Trade

I 11 (\1 ~1 1'1'111 ~
.\I I\ I ,·lo( 1,
'l"P

32- Mobile H. . . 'for Sale

Wanted to Buy

33-Fam.fo~S..Ie

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days Will be
charged fo~ each day as separate ads,

Li-k

34- B..t - B.oil:li. .
3~ Lo.. ol Acreop
~-----=='""=-=:-====c=-------1 -Roo.! Eooale 'l'aatocl

Hay&amp;Gnia
Seod&amp;Fetti!Der

1:1\1\1~

Gin' BEStJLTS • J'Aftf

A•lo! for Sale

41- Ho- for Beat
42- Mobile Ho.• (or Raat
43- F....., for R811t ·

Tneh for Sale

44-- Apartment lor ReDt
45,- Funoiohecl Booou

Boa.. 6: Molon for Sale

v.... .t4 WD'o
MoloreycM.

Auto Parlll ol

,...,,-,;.,1

-SpooolorReat

~A.m...1emr
~CiYMwaJ

..

~HapP7Ado

ll-HelpY..o.cl
t:l- Sito.da• Yutocl
13-- t .......

6- 1:-t ucl Fouacl ·
1- Loot ucl Fouacl

14- B·W=ac Tralai..
l~ Sct.oolo oliDOinlelloa

a- N&gt;lic s~ a

Au.cdoa

!I- Yoaoeol to Bay

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•NtwHOIMI
•Comp It
·
.. Rtmodeli•g
Sto/. &amp; ~:-;are
JEllS
ES
985-4473
667·6179

•Ger•s:• ·

16-llodio,, TV A "CB Repair
17- Mioctlto-"'
18--We•&amp;.IToDo

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
ALL H4RDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.
(6.14) 992·5449

2-7-92-1111

GARRY'S
GENEUL
MAINTENANCE
742·3305
ARER
. 7:00P.M.
12-17·'92

47- 'l'aatocl to a...
F.qul-rt for R-t

12fJ1192/lfn

.YOUNG'S
CARPENTER

Adcltiona

,.J

Work

oncl Plumbing

ExlMior
PainlitL
(FREE 11MATESI

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
P..roy, Ohio

s:a-s..,......c...
~Aodq-

54- Mbc. MeftMndW. .
5~ BuiJdiac Supplieo

85-- Geaeral HauiiDs
86- Mobile Ho•• Repair
87- Uplooloiory

-F'errellga$
~

$JAYMAR
Quail~

Stone o.

SIZED .LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614·992·
6637
St, Rt. 7
', Cllt1llirt, OH,

New Dtaltr
J and I Gas Service
•100 lb. Cylinders
rR.V."s

•Ga• Grill Tanks
•Venlfeaa ·Heaters

Rt. I 24, Racine
614-949:2072
119

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949,2398 or
1·100·137c ·1460
•
Lawn Moweng,

Fertilizing, Wooding, and
SMding.
Shrub ond Treo Trimming
a Removal
Reatdenllal A Commercial
FrftEaUmal•

0

HOMEMADE
PIES
ORDER NOW
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS

' FIREWOOD FOR SALE

985·4107

6-26-'ll2•tn

1211411

mo. pd ..

992-3470

"·Happy Ada

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES •ncl
TRAILER SITES,

LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMA,TES

992·3131

WORK
DRIVEWAY WORK

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.
2322•d St.,

JELIVIIY SIRYICI

Po•roy

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER

anll Ll.lSTONE

S••Il Dutr Work
S25.00 Ptr IHr

IWOIIAILI UTU ·.

992·7553
011.

N SHOOT
FO~KED

RUN
SPORTSMAN

CElLULARONE~
Authorized Agent

TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE

CLUB

SUNDAYS
12:00NOON

992·2036
Cheek wHh ua for
Hot Water Tank
Rental Program.
12·1·2 .... ,..

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Only

~~~~~~~~O~H~._!~~~~39~1~o~r~~~:

••'

llfil'1211 mo.

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD

MICROWIYI' 0¥11
•••VCI IINII

LAKE

tt2·5335or
. 915·1561

RAGINE, OH,
949·2734
12-1-'12·1

.

I

••

1111d mACKHOE WORK

.. •.

CLOSED THURS. NOON; SAT. 2 P.M.

n~~!!llng

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE

I

•2ea·-10
BIG
•

LAY-A-WAYS

WICK'S
SERVICE

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

.,......
. _.._..,

SAVE
,..._

Probala Judgo
l..enll K, Nee~, Cleok

SELECT·A:BROIL ·

~

StrMt,

Robet1 E. Buck,

~ · WITH

• Fleceiv&amp;r.MoniiOr

Chorlono A. Hlrper, 351108
Road, lltddloport,
Ohio 45780 • • appointed
Executor of the aetate ol

11lu•

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window .
:Roofing
rlnaulation

. JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or

• THE ADDED TOUCH

•'
l'

,

Cla,ified page• cailer the
following telephon.e exc#W.nse. ...

.

9:00.5:00.

=::"'-........................
--.•....,..

DAY BER&gt;RE PUBLICATION
1:.00 p.m. Saturday
. 1:00p.m. Mcnday
1:.00 p.m. 1\aday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thunclay
1:.00 p.m. Friday

ru3doyoollao .......
• Price ol ad fDfr al eopltal le._ ll dooltle price of ad cool
Gollla County Melp Co!IJitY Muon Co., WV
• 1 poial , ..... '71'" ••lr .....
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
• S..llaolio oot...,poooillle for .... n aflor f...it dar (cbeek
for omon f - cla7 ad ...U.. ID popor~ CaU beforo 2:00 P·"'· .
~olllpolla
992-Miolcllepanl 67S:.1'1. 1'1-111
dor .,,_ pal&gt;tlcada• to ...tur
458 Leoa
Po111eroy
367-CI:eohlre
• Adl tUt •'illl M paW ia ..fy~ are:
576-Applec .....
9es-a-er
388-VIDtoo
~of n.ao~oo
Happy Ado
843-Pordaad
245-Rio Groode
773-MIa M-oriui
Ytrd So!eo
2474oooo1Follo
256-Gtoyoo
Dtoo.
882-N
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• Reo.l...dioco... t fDfr ..Jo paid ... ad-•·
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CLOSED SUNDAY

PRIC
E UC Dl
Thepofcehu--1oS88.110iJ11nd .
o - llnonclr4l ol " ' to 10% ol ,...._ ·
. moy bo , . . _ lor qulllljlng per·

-

Words
1
15
15
3
15
6
10
15
Monthly 15

Days

SENTRY 2

'

'

Marketplace

25" Diagonal

·~

.

or

14 cu:n. REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

Premium SEq A.OOio
System
• MTS Stereo witt1 dtlll Notse
Aecluc1ton

.

Honor roll posted

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D of A officers are installed

•The Area's Number I

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.

Gillespie had tossed it and got in a yo ungest of nine children . His
Their marriage, which lasted his
fig ht with him. It was widely ·father was a bricklayer and amateur lifetime, gave him stability that set
reported l.hat Gillespie c.ul Cal- mu5ician.
him apart from many musicianS'.
loway in l.he n:ar end with a knife.
His first instrument was .the He once said he stayed away from
Although he came of age during · piano, bJ!t in the ':hrrd grade ,Gille- hero~n .- unlike some fellow jazz
the Big Band era, he and young sp1e fell•n love w1th a friends new mus1c1ans - for fear his wife
·
players, including saxop)Jonist trumpet and played it whenever he ' would leave him.
Charlie · " ,Bird" Parker, began could. By the late 1930s, he had
During the 1940s, Gillespie's
experimenting in all:.night jazz ses- moved to New York and gotten a sharp clothes, beret and goatee
sions that gave rise to bebop. " I job with orchestra leader Teddy symll?lized the cool image of the
guess ·Charlie Parker and I ha.d a HilL
new Jazz scene. He later replaced
meeting of the minds, because both
In 1939, with the help of a the tieret with an African-style cap
·
of us inspired each other," Gille- young dan cer named Lorraine · and favored African clothing.
Willis, he joined the Cab Calloway
H•s other trademarks - his
spie later said. ·
. .
He was born John Birks Gille. Orchestra. The .following year, he bulgi!'g cheeks and bent llllmpetremamed cOnstant.
spie in 1917 in Cheraw, S.C .. the married Miss Willis. ·

Officers were installed at the
It was announced ihat Sharon
Attending were Ada Bisseli,
recent rileet;.ng of the C~ester Bryant had an accident. Esther Mae McPeek, Doris Koenig Sandy ..
Hospital where he is being treai.Cd Council No~ 323, Daughters of Smith is in the hospitaL Helen White, Charlotte Grant: Faye
in lhe bum unit.
America, held at l.he hall. 'I)elma . Wolf is improving and Elizabel.h Kirkhart, Betty Young, Goldie
Powell wears a size 40 waist, 30 White, councilor, presided.
Hayes and many others have col&lt;;ls Fredrick, Laura Nice, Erma.Clelength pants and extra llirge in
Pledges to the Christian and and flu.
land, Mary Holter, Jean Welsh ·
shirts and coins, while his wife American flags were given, Lord's
Betty Roush read the audit Marcia Keller, Alta Biillard, Betty
· wearS a I 2-14 in pants, medium in Frayer repealed, Psalms read, and report.
Rous)J, ·Doris Grueser, Opal Hoi;
blouses, and 14-16 in coats. Those the opening ode was sung by alL
The. Past Councilor's Club will Ion, Lora Damewood; Thelma
with items to contribute may call Officers reports were also given.
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the · White, Everett Grant, JoAnn
The Good of Order Committee home of Marcia Keller.
378-6455, 949•2799, 843-5172 or .
·
Baum, Mary Jo Barringer and Elhel
949-2329 and pickup can be wiU have a silent auction during the
Erma Cleland read "Poem of the Orr.
arranged.
Month."
last meeting in February. .

With Charles Powell of Long
Bonom expecting to be discharged
froni University Hospital, Colum·
bus, within a couple of weeks, l.he
family is continuing to collect
household items and clothing for
him and his wife, Estheria. ,·
The couple's trailer home was
destroyed by frre Dec. 26. Powell
received severe burns and was
taken by LifeFiight to Uniye.rsity

''

{,i\

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

.Dizzy Gillespie; trumpet master, bebop pioneer, is·qead at 75

on WT AP. The gOIII ls to surpass
Dear
Ia
dleir life, 1e11 111em w~~c~e to F'
l.he 1992 total of ~80,000 which 0111: of lbe IIIOil dllllculllearn l'¥e
llelp, God llaowlllilw ..,. b
u
was an incn:ase over the 1991 total
but 1 reel I have ID
- ' llmi1y m:nben my ._...
of $62,000. The local society is
CCIIId 11M ClUed bil dldllu Jr!de
aiming for $100,000 this year.
OnSIIutday.OcL24, my26-ywiiDOt dlo• ...,.. 111 lire'l N111~' •
Last year, t!te $0Ciety provided old biudD lbot IIIII tilled him 'f.
ANN 1ANDD8
.,..
the. rapy, therapeutic recreation,
Clll'levallqia 1D npl•u bow I n-•s u ,._.
Slhe15111ROMI .•
equipment, advocacy and oth~r Ifeltwhenlhepolicocaelomycloca'
. B"~iNsACRAMBNTO
programs to more l.han 800 chil- and IOid my mother llld me wbll
111
~ 11!• . ' •
......,.,
........,
dren and adults in Al.hens, Meigs had Uppened. 1 Ul still having
DBAll SISTER: MJ ,_ue1t .
Morgan, and Washing100 Counties bOUble underanding what COUld grandchild, I don't know if my . cor-doiences on lhe loa ol ,out
in Ohio, and Wood County in West
·
-~...._ --·'d -·'-· · :h_,..,lh"
biothei. It may belp 10 know you
Virginia, This year the society will have been I() wnJn&amp; in my baby """'"'" WUIII .._ , . d uu""6'' II. have writlal I lctler dill is - II) ..
brolber's life lhlt he would do such · · I Ml trym, 10 bird ID be llnlDg save .me Ji'Vtl.
·
ako serve Noble County.
dill I ba-'t bad lime
For lbole
~ wbo lilY bi!
. After Sunday's kickoff recep- a horrible !bing. He was. young, for my heall.hy
and
on
tbe
vcqe.
receivto
face
my
own
grief.
I
•
lbantful
caamplldns
llllddc,
or b diale
tion and until the d.ate of the
ing
l!is
Ph.D.,
and
he
had
so
mucb
dlat
myl"alher,
who
died
four
yars
who
have
survived
IUdl
i ~
telel.hon, l.he volunteer will solicit
going
for
him.
,
·..,,was
ll(llftld
lhiungedy.
loa,
dlele
are
crilil
,
advance pledges.
·
1111 1 -.d
I
know
you
don't
have
l.he
My
daughler
is
too
young
to
llliJIIIOil
p0up1
il
over
lbe Ualled .
The telethon has eight sponsors,
Chevron, Domino's .Pizza, IGA answcn, IMl just talking about my ~em~ llow laldcrly her lillt:le SIIID 11111 e-n To
die- , ~·
~tores, Morris Sales and Hospital
brolber and pulling my pain clown hek1 her or how Sllllrtand kind lie or lhe center lleiRit1111
yvu. write
Shoppes, Ohio Valley B4nk, Peo- on JliPCI' is helpful. I know my was. I will always love him~ but to lhe . Allerioan' Auociation
ples Banking and Trust Co,, River- brother loved . his fimily, but he samctirnes I am somgry at whal he Suicidology
"·
, 2459 s. Ash,. Denver,
town Motors and Uniglobe Travel.
couldn't have been lhinking
us did to himself and to us lhat it
During each hour of the when he did this. My mother is ,....., blocb out dill love.
Colo. 110222. Do it IDday.
·
Deu
Ana
Llllderl;
I
JeCelllly
telethon , 12 volunteers plus a dev•I!B"'CC
washeronlyJOR. If
Please. Ann, ir uy or your ......_..... a.._._......,,...,
_ ,...,_ who
phone bank lea!ll of six will answer it ..VCnm-'t
my. dau.gh.tet, her._only !elden 1n lbinldng llbout ~Kina ....-"' .........,. w.._..,
wet !heir bedl. Sinc:e -Y !iildlal
phones . Develop·ment Director
Leslie Foraker and volunteer Larry
Continuedlfolllp..e7
are bealen, ~qled and telled
Steinel again wiD host the two day
about ~hi-. I lhou&amp;l!t IIY lea« mi&amp;hl
Wil.hin days, the network must · GO:
·
event
be helpful to lome of your reeders.
put up or shut up in its campaigilto
-With about 4.5 million ~view­
Tbe telethon will featUre appearThere •e sevenl reasons for
ances by the 1993 poster represen- keep Sweet Baby Dave away from ers, Leno's audience level bed-wttting. Apparently one very
tative Trent Fogle of Beverly, · .CBS, whose offer of some S14 mil- approaches that of Johnny Carson's . common one, which lwasnolaware
lion per year NBC must match or a year ago. Moreover, Jay would ' of. in llonnone deficiency. It is
RouLC I.
,sweeten by Jan. 15 - as well as operaLC from, a position of strength considered a sleep ~ over
give Lettennan the 11:30 time slot against Dave on CBS, wben: only w)lich lhc dlild has no c:oniiOI, Thele
The honor roll for lhe flfSt nine the network awarded to Leno only an eslimared tWo-thirds of the affil- cllikRR sleep very soundly. Bcc•u'IC
.
.
iates would initially carry Leuerweeks at Southern Junior High last May.
~~~e- 1ac1c
this hormone. lhli
should
have
been
bu!&gt;yed
mall's show.
·
··
Leno
School has been announced:
..,.Lena's drawing power at 8CIIIIIion of .-ling to urinate il
Sevenl.h Grade - Cynthia Cald- by a StorY in Thursday's Los Ange,.
·
les
Times
surveying
two
dozen
11:30
p.m. is dernonstraled, wht:re- notpzr nL
well, Evan Sllllble, all A's; As~y
My
hope
is
that
if
parenb
have
a
NBC-affilialcd
station
managers--,
as
there
is
no
conclusive
proof
lhat
McKinney, Valarie Cundiff, Nikki
betler
undcnllnding
this
condiRobinson, Billy Young, John Mat- all of whom expressed suppon.ror Letierman can broaden his 12:30
his stayinJ pUL .
· a.m: success in an e.licr benb.
tion, lbey will be pMieDl wilh .
son, Stephanie Stemple.
There •s a growing consensus on
-Leno works ~ (well, sort tbe1r clli1dnll. I will- fupt my
. Eighth Grade - Josh Roush,
Amber ThQJnas. all A's; Jessica the part or industry insiders l.hat of). Compare his $3 million annual IIIOiher's lftF or tbe IJ*IkiDp I
Counts, Jason Lawrence, Travis NBC will keep Leno. CBS wiD win paycheck to CBS' $14-plus million ftiCdved becMIII! I - "100 lazy" ID
offer for Leaennart Add to lhat lhe get up and JO to lhc toilet.
Lisle, Raquel Maddox, Amy Rizer, LetLCrman.
The
arguments
for
the
NJ;ICrePOrted $8 million to $10 million
· Chris Ball, Zach Couch, Jesse
1ben: is I IJQIIDCIIt lhal docUJn
Leno
and
CBS-~euerm~n
Nile
owes Lerio if they uproot him can peacribe. I hope (llftllll who
Maynard, Cassie Collins, Greg
McKinney, ~dam Roush, Jessica match~ps are compel)mg. While from 11:30 - in which case bj: reed this will Sllld:: proressionil help.
we ~~ for the b1g shots to prove says he's ankling, maybe suaightiO
Sayn:. . .
-- VISALIA. CALIF.
us nght, let's sum up why: · ·
.CBS.
DEAR V.: We did extensive
Winners announced
HOW CBS WILL .BENEFIT
-Dumping Leno, the good sol· . Cindy Faulk arid Wanda Faulk FROM GETnNG ~: dier, 'could prove a public relations checking on this ploblem, lind the
were b.e st weekly losers at the
-CBS for lhe frrst ume m •ts nightmare. After all, NBC is l.he top authorities in the field aay
~nt meeting of Ohio TOPS Club
history clll! ,be a real contender in "etwork that already gave you lhlt bed-weaing is 1101 a loii&amp;KW.al
No. 570. Linda Grimm was runner- the late mght wars. There is no Deborah Norville pushing . the problem. When ltCIIed by druJs
up. Linnie Aleshire was .best KOPS. surer, quicker, easier way than much-beloved Jane Pauley off alone (whicb Ire COIIIy), lillie is
loser and Ola St Clair was runner- Dave (u~less ir~ Jay).
.
"Today.''
·
acx:omplished. When Uled c:omclly.
up.
-W•Ih a solid PIOl!flm m p~e .
-Leiterman is a pain in Lhe the saf"CII, 1110111 efta:live and least ·
Linda Grimm was fruit basket at 11:30, CBS over l!TI)e can. wm keister, the ever-ragging employee. expensive method of thmpy is tbe
winner and Calis to Searles was bac!' the hour from 1ts affiha!C" Lena is a hardworking Joyal com- condilioning alarm.
gadget. gift winner·
stauons, fO!lghly one-hal~ .of wh~e.h .pany man.
'
·
Do you lt4w qiiiiSIIDIIS tlboll su,
Peggy Vining was the Decem- currently f1ll the ume w11h syndi- . -Agreed, Leno may never be
.
b11110
OM 10 Iaiii 10? Allll Lantkrs'
ber monthly queen.
cai.Cd
fan:.
.
.
elliCUy
cool,
but
his
appeal
is
genbootltt, •su DNI 1M Ttt~~-A~tr."
· A funny money auction will be
.....operaung_ on the lh!lOfY 'that erally considered more brol!d-based is frtlllk DNI 10 the pow. Seltd a
held Tuesday. All members l!fC to you wake lip W)t!J the n&lt;:~work. you than Letterman's. Meanwhile, 'after
lo11g, b!UIMsr-liu
bring .a wrapped item for bids. · ·
went. to sleep w1th, a b1gger laLC- 11 years of doing the aame cuuing- ~lf-Qdllrused,
tllwlopi
alld
il
cited: iJr 1110111)1
'
Twelve members were choseri nig~l audie~'for CBS could mean edge thing, Leuennan could be in
order for $3.65 (tllis i~clYdts
to participate in a "hat parade" to a vtewersh•p boost a fe~ ho.urs danger of dulling his blade. Aa
be bel~ J~n. 1.9. Be~t hat of the · later for the scrappy but sull third- Dave bits middle age and tycoon postage DNI lwlltdliltg) tD:· TteiiS,
"month' will wm a p~
place "CBS This Morning."
tat
"ust ho 1
he
· . c/o AMLalltlus, P.O. B« 11562,
WHY NBC SHOULD KEEP s · US,)
w ~g can . cuttl
Peggy Vining ,pn:seni.Cd a froCllicago, Ill. 606II-0562. (/11
LENO AND LET LETTERMAN w•lh hiS brauy, anu-hem shuc~?
gram on "Are You BOdySman."
Canodo. • •$4.45.)
·

:rle:_nDIIII.

/

Thursday, January 7, 1993

Thuradey, January 7, 1t93

Pomeroy-Middlep'ort, Ohio

Page 8 . The Dally Sentinel

AlLIIIIU

lr~tiAOrWi

KIN'fMfiAIK'E
SIIYICI

SHRUB
TRIM and
REMOVAL
aLIGHT HAULING
eFJREWOOD

Bill SlACK ·
992·2269
USED RAILR'OAD TIES

I&amp;C IICIVADIG
IULLDOZING
PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAND CLEARING

WAfER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS &amp; ··
HOME SITES

HAUUNG: Llmatone,
Dirt. Gf11Y81 and Coal

LicENSED llftd SOIIOEII •

PH, 614-992-5591

12-5-Wn

HELP THE EFFORT TO IUILD A PROSPEROUS
FUTURE FOR MEIGS ,COUNTY
HELP US IN 0111 ATTEMPT TO GET INDUSTIY FOR
MEIGS COUNTY
WANTED: 5 to 6 ACRES OF IEIATMLY ElAT LAND:
(I)Nnn"-6ft.twl

.. . , .

121 Mit s... PI W Wtl•

.·-·=

•NONE: Pllltr or by Pickens

915-421111' ...., •• .

TROLLEY STAnON ·CUFIS
992·2549

�1193

- Announcerner11';

PIPunDIIII•.Oo)f--lllllddleport, Ohio

12 • 10 l ralter, POIMI'CJIW

.U.

141110 2 • • 1 ...... loulh of
EuNIIa, 011 II. R1.7. No polo,

h•••=··z ....,
.....

King abe wrrt 1
~·....
.............. Ql 1112

~011

I

I.A'INE'8 FURIITIJRE
NlwM£11 . ~.
Carr ' 's horM -·~lhinc
:O.
2 Badroom Mobile HomM For Hour.: Mol lit, N. 114-411Dltloall,
..- 2 P.ll.
IIi- 0322,
3 - •. 0111
Rd.
qulnad.
NO Poll, -Call Aftw·
F... Dollve,Y
11t 1•• 0127.
2 BR

ALDER

-

•.••••.

.,:.~ ~

pon~

•••Uoblo.

PHILLIP

·-lito
..
............

lum'ad. Clblo
Beautiful rlvw viow In

KanougL Dopoall • Aoleronoo
Aellulrid Ft.lw'• Mabile HolM

. NOR115

~~~~

t A KJ1098 763
• A K 10 9

Park.ll4-448-1102

·EAST
. J 109 876 54 3 2

••••
tQ4 •
+3

.J

SOUTH
• AK
109B 7 6'S

+2
+s 42

W..t

Nor&amp;ll

3NT

4+

4 NT - Pass
6+
All pass

s+

Pass

twlated
11 Rovtne
12 Pronunct.tlon mark
14 Continonl
(abbr.)
15 Hallltuate

,.a

lvar.)
Sea eagle

Commer~e

18

agcy.
20 Worn awoy
22 Swill ri wor
23 Crarna - cromo
25 Fiber
27 26th proo.
28 PrtParaslor
print
30 Rec:lptenl of a

42 - Rico
lurrouchs ·
44 Fatllfler
45 llounllln on
Croto
47 Havlnc llapo
tor lleartnc
411 Jtckla' o 2nd
husband
50 Fevor ond
chills
52 Notwarko
54 - ptua ultra
55 lrrlta?e
57 Fastened
51 Honks
50 Chure~
council

2 12 maa.

8 Frolfl, bfow
1 - aw11
10Cr-t
lllaptld
11 S?lga

3 Edcor Allan

32 Haroe' o neck
DOWN
hair
34 Figure okalor . • 1 Adorned

s...

2.

35 Strolling
31VIolln's
oneHI or
4 1 SpWiish tor

1 Vo1nond
6 Bocoma

17

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

...

..; Tlloldlla

boquutt

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

t•

1

The
World
Almaaac:®Crossword Puzzle :
.
'

BRIDGE
caiiiM-112~

'

The

4 Auld Long -

5 - ond mlno

6 Eotimoted

13~1e

7 SW alate

16 Make muddr

Eaat

18 Go up
21 Ardent
24 --ofTwo

3+

CHMI

21· Taa
21 SIJI~

Opening lead: • A

;.to':

A 52-card problem
with a wrinkle ·
There is~ small band of enthusiasiS
who like to ·pore over double-dummy
problems. Tbese are problems in
which you can see all 52 cards. You
must work out how to make (or, occasioitally, how to defeat) the contract.
Most double-dummy problems are
complicated, . but today's isn't too
tough - and it has a slight twist. Giv·
en the opening leal! of the heart ace,
have to. work out'the r.Sult with
play by .both sides. .
.
The deal is taken from "The Best of
Robert Gray, Book Two· ($5.50, The
Bridge World, 39 West 94th Stree.t.
New York, NY 10025-7124).
The bidding is contrived to make
South the declarer, because six diamonds by North cahnot be defeated.
U the opening lead is ruffed low in
dummy, Eut overruffs and .leads back
his second · trump. West must score
two more tricks for two down. Therefore; declarer must ruff with dummy's
diamond king. What does East play?
U East · discards, declarer cashes
dummy's diamond ace and leads the
club ace. If it holds, declarer exiiS
· dummy with the diamond three. East
must win the ttick and play a spade,
al?owillg SOuth to discard dummy's
c:lub ?~on his A· K of spades.
But East has a defense. When the
beart ace is ruffed high in dummy,
East underruffs with the diamond
qllf!C!D.
Declarer cashes the club ace before
leading the diamond three. but West
·wills with the five and plays another
top lle.art: two down.
When did you last see everyone follow a.ad a defender's trump five
first round of the suit?

Real Estate
31 Homes for Sale
1511 Sq. Fl., .1f licro lol1• 2d

DO VOli MIND IF. MV
006 TAKES THE TEST:
TOO'? YOU KNOW, JUST
TI-lE FUN OF IT ...

walla, 2 complelt balht, Cllnii"!D

-a.

room, living room. 3bdl'f'ft., walk:..
In
lully corpolad, 2 por·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
All Vonl Sileo 111101 Ill Paid In
Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 P.'"·
lho day .,...,.. tho ad lo lo ""'·
Sunday adlli"'' • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. - y adhlon J 2:00
p.m. Salurdl.y.

!&gt;IJ

1 o1owo,
chao, oloctrlc
-·
rwfriclent;or,
...,....._,
Home

-leal-

lllddlolon Eolat• Will Ill
Taking
Joriuary
1Zih, l P.lll To 3 P.ll. For DICano SlaR. IIUOI HllfO HfOh

lchooii!Qul-, Ohio DoMiio

Nat'fBanlc,
- · 011. 114-11411.

2210.

~100 Iiiii ft, 4 _
b droam. 3 ful
bolho, Iorge TY - , now ..,.
pill. buement. cloM to ecfl a all,
nlco nolahbol'hood, Chandler
Drtn, ~1831.
'

~. And 8o Awalloblo For
Doug ~-II- e.
Cll
_
_ toloo
lo _
L&lt;!colid
From 3 BR Rodney Vlllogo, Large Lol,
8
Public Sale
Ctty Sc;hoola, Ntw carpet, Paint,
Roof, Nlco, 137,500. 114-319&amp; Auction
- : 10 l'ooplo To LaM 2511.
Walahl - · No WIN P-r
Rk:k PNOIOil Auction CompanJ, .......
~ · ..... 100%
lull limo auct'-r. complolo Nolllfll, 1 - Guoionload. Call A.fruw, 3 f»drooma, 1112
blithe, 2.1i11 ;~-;&amp;~•rage, awlm1uctlon
11rvlee.
UcenMCI 303-415-41213 •.
mlng pool, .
-2Bf4.
161,0hlo &amp; W•t VIrginia, 304773-5785.
. .
No Ex'**-! $lOCI To $100 BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Wooklv IPc&gt;tnlal Pr..-ng Hlolortcal AIM c:or,. Lo1 ·111
FHA llort- Rolundo. Own llaln Sl. PL -.._ IW
. Vo.
Howl. 1-501-;;1 .. 0503 Ext.213. Comp!Mo!J
,g Wanted to Buy
2 Full
24 Houro.
.
Bolho, 3 41110 ladi&lt;IOI!IO, ·so·. Sty.. Aluminum Chrtltmu Part·Timo. AN chargo nuroa HVAC, Nair ca-. Avollablo
lmmadlatly.l~.
Troo, lf4-446-INI2t.
c
naadad. 12-llour ohlft. IIUOI be
Don1 Junlc II Sell Uo Your Non- wl•na to work .... _htnda a BIG 5 BR Do- Farm Homo
holidliya. CDn1act ... llldd- buln on your lot. $31,9U &amp; up.
1~7.111. .
.
=ng
~::: ·
o
r
of NUIO!ng,
F... _
VCA"o, lllcrowavoo, P I - Valley Nunlna !)oro
Air Condtllonen, Quhar Ampe. Conlwc_PI. Pleuant, ·W'I 304- Clearlaw SUb. (R1.7 S), 3BR, 2
botho, haat pump, dblo
17W2... AMOE.
Elc. 114-~1-1231.
ranch. Gallipolis Sc'-la. 1·
J ·&amp; D'o Auto Parte and WallrMo 18ano.-, can 114- l7H1161.
Sallvag•, aiM buvlna lunk cara 446-47M.
GOVERNMENT HOliES From J1
• tr\ICka. 304.7'73,!341.
Women: llako mon money! (U Ropalrl. Dollnquom Tax
Uood mobile homn. Coli 014- F... olghl wook )Db propaiallon Property. R.-...aona. Your
progr1m_ about nontl'ldhlonal Araa (11 805-112-11000 Ext. GH·
446.()175 • .
IONOW), t .aoo, 10181 For Current R.pa Uat.
Wanlad old lube lypo raoloo • 13
.
Ranch olylo " - , 3 bodroomo,
TY'a. Did radio pana l tubn.
Old juka boxoo. lluol bo _ , 14
1 beth, .Uached g~rag•, Haw
Business
Andatsol1 wludc eel, antral air,
than 1950. Colt Chuck 304-NZTraining
2220, P.O. lox 1111, -!!avon,
IO:'~~c cd, Muon.
WV252U.
.
·
Rolraln
Nfttl-atom
Wa,.ad To Buy: Junlc ·Auloo B - Collogo, S~n~ Volley Smoll, ..,., nk:o - · gooc1
Wllh Or Wllhoul llaloro. COli Ploa. Call Todliy, 11 I 13&amp;7R ~hborllccd, Mld·JPQf1, good
1.a1ry Uvoly. 114-388-1303.
· lnnelmMt pl'al!lrty, $8500 ; 1141Jog.IIO-CI&amp;-12l0111.
1112·2812.
.
Top Pr- Paid : All Old U.S.
Coino, Gold Ringo Sllvw Colno, 18 wanted to Do
3.2 Mobile Homes
Gold Colna,, II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Slcond A..,uo, Golllpolla . . U.R TREE .SERVICE .. TC&gt;DDing,
for Sate
Trimming, Troo
HOdge
-Trimming. Fr• Wmateal lf4. J152J7 I * _,h Including alx
Employment Services 31'1-711r.Uw 4p.no. .
monthl frM kit rent, new 14x70,
Expo- Sr. Cltlun wanta dellv..-.d and •• up, lklnlng
anid olepo, 1-1011-83141125.
'i:"'i":..~Lr~
11 Help Wanted
111111 2 BA, 2 bolha, 12x&amp;l, all
GaiRoollo Dally Tribune, . J25 aloelrlc, 15,500. 114-441-1511.
•AVOfj" ALL AREAS! Share your Thin! A111., GoUipollo, 01145&amp;31.
1188 Skyline Holly Rldgo 14x70,
time whh 1 '!!A ~l~~r':v. the o 1c,.. Portable
all ala!:, 2 bodrooma, A/C.
company. ~-.
haul ,... 1oao to
cowred porch, kttchen ... and,
AVON I All - · I Shirley call ~75-1ltl7.
OIOfJIIIO
undorponnlng,
~paa!O, 3-75-1421.
7&amp;-2464. •
Hondymon, Odd Jobo, Indoor liD MW,
eortillad Nuroing A I - lor IOuldoor lllocollanooua Er· 1lilllill0 Fairmont Fantaliy, 'Mx80, 3
phVtJelan• ofHcj MnCI ,..,.,,.. rando. 14.00 Pw Hour. 114-245- bedrooma, 2 belht, garden tub,
to P.O. lox 22CI, jl,ijnl - . 11443.
brlnd MW tt.t pump, I*MeWY25150.
2105.
0 &amp; E lndu.ln.., II'IM'Iuf.c:tu111r
ol proclalon com~olor lha
traneportatlon lndualry, hal opponunlty lor oxpior- tool
and dlo mo...-. Connnllonal
and Elll oqulj&gt;monl, tMtmarlly
1-loollng. Excellent bonalha
whll growing company tor right
~r.an. If lnterettid, Mild
NIUrM by January 16th IO : E 6:
E lnduatrlel, PO lox 3oa9 Huntlnglon, WV. 25102. EEOiilif. No
181tphont calla pleue.
WUI ~,. tor el•rty In mr home,
Eaay World Excollonl Pay! .U. 114-1112-5851.
Mmble Prt;)ducta At Horn. . .C.II Will do bobyallllng In my homa: 33 Fanns for Sale
Tall Froo, 1~117-6566, Ext. Chnhlre • •· E""x.,..-. I refer.

-•loci:

54 Miscellaneous

Fumlohad, 3 Rooma 1 Bath,
Merchandise
Clean, No ~a 1 Raloronco 1
00-'t AaqulfH. 114""'"151 1. 11M caaa beckhoo 1130. 15100.
Grocl- living. 1 and 2 bad- ""'Urea. In top llhapo. ~75room aport......, o1 ¥11'- 2457.
llanor
end
Rlvwalilo
Apartmonlo In lllddlaport. F"""
$1116, Call114-1112-6850, EOH.

~e ~S,.,.T

=:.:=

':.;

:ti·

313.

6'Mo367..o221

Rural 1r.m lor ..... haual, bam
and out bultdint.!J. 50 acr• In
llalgo Counlv, Ulllo, $55,000,
114-11112-3901.

34

Business

Buildings ;

.I

· BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

.614-949·2801 • 949·2860
·
or 985·3839 ·
(No

Building In Lllngsvllle, new
wiring 1nd drywall, lnaulated,

n

:1-5 Aero Traeta For Solo On Addlaon Pika...: . _Laval Land
Cleared, IIi

41 Houses for Rent

Stttidar Calls)
2bdrm. houH

In Pomeroy,

partly fumlahed, private setting,
1250/ monlh, PlY own Ullllllel,

· AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and ·
' .
.CCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Lite • Medicare • Cancer · ·Fire • Health •
, Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

.Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

.

.

·
lox 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
'·
(614) _843·526412·11-9i· lmo.

vans&amp;4WD's

•on.

$360. 114-318-11311.

.
Firewood: Ail Ha-a Splh
Dollvarod $40 Pick-Up Load.
Ono bod_, ape, giOUnd 1'-, 114-258-1311.

prtvoto ontronco. kllchar! • all
UIIIHiea lurnlohoo!. $271. mo.
304..7HH:t.
·
floor Wlluml- 3 BR
opartmonl. Ao'"'- and For Slu meclum ,.._
dopoolt roq-. 114-448-0284. - r - · -lm WI loolhar
trim, ftannollnlng, IIIIo - · 45
Fumlshed
kinG $50, polcl "50; aloo mloc.

·-

·-'
~

IZ·ID Teru aoz., Good U.C.
H.D. Pump, 11 R . Blade,

Wllh Til FuM Cob With ROPS

Good Condlllonl $10,0110 304-

Rooms

Rooml: lor IWII .. ,...~~,or month. t«lpnt.
':r-1:2' at $120/mo. Gollla Holal. :F,..--"~-~1:-,-,.,.~1:-"n"=la-:-d-.,.-.,.
I
9519.
oad, cUI ... cloll111rod ti.N honaSIMfllna roomo wHh -'&lt;Ina- lng wolghL 304-7734696.
Aloo lnlliW a -. All '-k•UfiL GenMto Nldrlllon Produclo
Col lftar 2:00 p.m., 304·1'7:1- toaturlng Amino Acid Body
II&amp;St, llaaon WY.
~:,_lntlor:'.C.
46 Space for Rent
duolwoly • An. Aid Phonnacy.

Oftk:o Or ....... ~-. "
Sve~~mor. Strut PhOne: 114- H_.. Coal, $45 A Ton Stoker
440-71159, 8 A.ll. To 5 P.ll.
Coal, $10 A Ton Dlll111rad, 114441-..
OFRCE SPACE FOR RENT:
llodom oHico ..... In Buol- King Silo
Glrta Whho
I Pro-lonol Building ,_ Twlii S1u Bad SUho, 114-441avallablo. Coil llorrlo Hilaklno, .,,.,
114 4412131 or 441-2!112.
Mull Sill: -ulllul Full Length
Whllo Shadow lllnlc Coal, Afr
prolud: $7,500. Price Hog. 114-

BORN LOSER
~NEXl", e.xcw51v£ IDl£ VIDEO -,

114-1111-4211.

.

Lart10 2 olory, comor lllh 1
Marn, Pt. Ptl. 3 large bedrDDtM,
2 .lui bolho, kllchon, dining,
lomlly, living, loundJy _ , .,
month, r~lwoncoo I
-~ad. 114-441-2201.
Anlloblo •rtr Dlcomllor.
Rio Grondo, 2 BR, 1·112 boltl,
1410/mo. Dlpoolt roqulrod. 114446-4222 daya, 4441-2flll ...'o.

=·,r:

42 Mobile Homea
. .
tor Rent
1BA
Troller,
DopooH
a·
Ra,_ence A~~qulred. No P••·
114-448-111~2. Or 114-717-4345.

e&gt;-. . . .AIIIl ..I'IIIJI

•

.......

LANGUAGE

TilE ~TIC. ~IE CK
IWt TAAfPe&gt; OJol TilE: ICE

C;:;l;==:;;;::t_
· AT LNC£ PHOO!£!

The . South

African

LAAGER

I'S.AH·· Plr"l is a camp, usually pro-

a circle of wagoas. Protect
hounle?f against spelling errors; aldouble · the' A in the noun

Want to:
PIN 'aownEX.TRA

JLAAGIER.

..

CA&lt;£,H?l!

Wol-

-=r.
ole.

llnlta, -

· ton trucil.

- --=-

Serv1ces

cash,

. Thm your cluuer into
Sdl. il the eatx way... b,. ghone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your cluajfied ad «orlax!
15 at~ord. or le11, 3 dqp,
3 pqpea, 15.40 paid in advance •

--

'

DR~-_,

312-3133 or 1

81m-IHH;IOI;;m;;;..:-:--.- -

AITJIO·ORAPH

2.
1------------------~
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

BERNI~E

BEDEOSOL

..,.--....__ _

'Your
'Birthday ,

9. ______________

10~--------------

11~~~--~----~12
____________
~-

. olwt.I,1MI

82

Plumbing&amp;

r\ 'I')
··

13~-------------__..;....;.________......__

::==Hial=ln.;.a~..,._· ·..

15~~~~~~----

Clnlflld, Rnld 'tlel
cloliiWII-1111.
•

14--~

, 446-2342
. .
9)2-2156
67 333

·

AQUARIUS(.IM.IO f • f t ) B e today lhat you don'.t mlllalhinglharder
tor your!lelllhan lhey actUitlly .... You
need "'*"'to operaleln. H""' reduce your wiggle room. you'l 1110 redU!:8 your ellecu..,....
PISCII (P.... :Ill "
:Ill)
a
poulblllty you might get """"""" in a
dewf9-1 loday
senalon be._IWOir-. Tlle-.r "
thing you could do Is
agalnslthe othor.
· ARIEl (...... 11-Apoll 11)·Try nat to
be loo huty.or .........
in -

c•

c- 21-.IIIIJ 22J You

A

lll1tly e o - a ..,. -

......,. -...-. •

-

-

iT

are

Di n111' • •

be ID -

-

3

l j - " " ' . . llying to
iu z lad 7 · · e.. Don~t be

ouallll I ' l l f - II IAii UII
lEO UoiJr 21 ' • :Ill a. :w-ed to

-tar--ladlly. '
-

.. -

-

-

;

-paaple

-.~~~ do,.. bltlbe in a II!M

'* n..·. -at-.
I
7 C... 21 - 5' :Ill II milllll be
• tar lfOIIIII be , . . . - ,_son

7. ___________________
6----------~------~
8._.- - - --:---

llonstodaybymaiHngS1 .25pliiU IOng.
sell-addressed. stamped, anlillllupo to
Aslro-Groph. c/o this l - I P - · P.O.
Box 91428. C-.nd. Oli4410 1-3421t

Be sure to state your zodiac •

3._.....,..~;---------

'-··---~~"
eo.n...'"

........... And llrvloe. .... ,. . ,

' •
~=~;..;;,:.::....___..;·, d

84

Electrical &amp; '
· Refrigeration

';

""

In lhe v- lhWid you 1t1 llkilly to be
more lortunale In eudMvooe you ptr·
· ·IC!f!IIIIY conlrol lhan you Will be In parl·
l,.ohlp arrongwnents. Dellgn your
!(elll- 10 lhat you ere tile principle

IICior.

·

CAI'f??COSI?I (11M. 11-.11R. 111 Back off

K 7

o · ·x

-·-is- . . ,. -._

ding llliglll -

1D _ ,.
I '' I •
. , _ 1""' try lil Lie 11

to-_,... ....,....,
.. .....,.,
IDe-.
z-.

~~~~-- C!DIIId

. . . . . . . 211h:L 211 In ,.. nj

•·•-in-to

5

. . . . , . ,,

,...

-

dllng mat1erl thai 1*1* t o - c:a- - · - - ;
I · - - -·
·r -. llyout8keoll--prapol- lfOIIallip•
let', H's likely rou·n , ... to . 1111 _,.,.llliglllbe--lllap e
fflglll .
- {'
-•
TAURUS (April :Ill.., :IIIIOonat.c- KG 4 COIL liE
• 8 __
ceterate your lfllertlfly IOday !f 110U- ~_.,I
5I US t o - " 0
thai_, JOII"-.Iobe """""' lll-

or,._ - ...,.,_.,... -

tram a oltuotton todey - · you teat lobelngroj t c l a l b y - .. A-'l .,.
~IC - l l ,lrytng IO preiiUrC you
mlgfll work, bull hird.,. - "Into milling a oommltment. AllY prom- GOillll C. 11..-.:1111 n·o -nat
~- you make under dur- ere not 1111 .to a,~&lt; tawratrom 1-IOday• . . , .
to be honored. Get a jump on life by un'
oneo 1rom
whom llnart!'lll
you'ro ~
lllltigraa
• - "'
deraiMdlng ,,.,. I n - which ""' · ctatly
. gG.eming you In ,,.,. year lhetld. Sond
roqueot could - · a • a 1ne
lor Cllprlcarn'l Altro-Oroph predlc· reopon•.

DIM.,.,..

.. '

. S'

ia -

_

38 llettltld
40 Sobbed
43 tt.rneu
"
llriPS
48 Cal
.
48·11441n•• .
lion dale
51 WW?Iareo .
53 wronp,:s
SSIIILo
r.
58 BehOld!

OSUD

IKRCOL

NCX

X Z DE

DaXIOA . '

Z70KE

ZBXZBTSE .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I won'l be In movies anymore.' I walked away
wllh nary a glance back ." - Jane Fonda.

'::~;~;~' ~)@it~lA-~t.trse
ldlled
CLAY I. POUAN .
O Rearrange
letters of the
four Krambled words be-

WOlD
lAM I

...,.......

, _ . _ . . , . _ ..

SilL

..

S'

I 5 - 1i1K :Ill he IQ 111'-

a :w sz • -tar p ID s_a,....
• _s·_a
... , _
_ , ,- _ _

• - . . ..... .. . - -~liEIIIe ..-

-.

u.e

'

.

J

•.

~V

t. I I I I 1

low to form four sirnple words .

..

FRIBMEL

1

I

SAlLE
S

GE

I

I

My .boss hired his niece as
his assistant. To assure her
that she would have to work
I
,__....I_..___,_..__.,.
_ ':' very hard he lectured, '1'here
r--::-::-::c:-:-:-:-:---. is no elevator to success. You
TIQAUN
lhavetotakethe ······."

I

0 0 ·-T---l
1---..;_;;-,;;_,:;
~ 1

I

O
I I ~ · I I 16 you
develop from step No. 3 below.
Comp lete the chuckle quoled
by filling in the missi ng words

PR INT NUMBERED LH TER S IN
Tt&lt;ESE SQUARES
·
•

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Weaver • Rhyme · Depth · Unison · NOT READY
The guy was two hours late for his date. He knocked
on·her door and found her in a nightshirt. "I'm two hours
late, " he exclaiml)d, ·"and you're still NOT READY!"

l

-~
~.,
2211, Pionoroy:
114-HZ-8100.

258-1011.

TBHiiOA

ZRHHETRRL

a

R P

HRX

A UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
V
TO GET ANSWER
·
•

ll!i' 1£56.

h w ' 'an ..... .-...-lnc.r ~
Since Rebulll, . . . onw, 114- 1
I

B

31
part
' 33
35 """
Chi- or
· JIPIMIC ...
31 Snlall37 Aclreol Tort

I I I

Cll..We I I !OC,..

2SI Iuick 'U Enalno. And j'

8udaOI TI'IIIOI!Iioo..._, Uoad " '
....... oll-otanlna .. lll;!

ACEF

W

&lt;.JUST"~

BORN A
PARROT.

ue :roe.

'X Z D K .D 'F ·

A

r v.oi-ltlel&lt;
Auto Pans &amp;
Acca11arlea

-+--t

L.-.L-...J.t........J.-..L.-..L.--'-

WHYlWA~

76

w-+-+-+"-t

I

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP ·

'

:..= :.

The 11fe way to dle4.

....

'Of

175-7515.

-

a.dJe.i clothing; caU 114-112·
2155, 8-lpm or II4-IMI-ZZ04 a~

.,-,...,,If's
.....,_ _•-7 -'t3

4.,......._ _ .,;.__......__..;....;._ _
5. _ _-...._ _ _ __ _

Rentals

ALA~MIII6J.Y

om Ford :114
4 wo, m1111 ·
-._ Colllftw 5 p.m., 114-448- · I·
01H.
• I
Comolory lol Kirkland Gardana, paid Mao. will aaH

M.41CES

GL-OSf GUfSfflf

wat•ri•Mclric IVIillble, • real
buy al 12500; IWM2-~2.

35 L.ots &amp; Acreage

so..e

ChowoiOI, Fonl, ~pickup 1
~-., long: NO Nat.

9"';Bt

-il.

14. ~T M

I

TV"":!"'

omt:'st';""'·

F~Atl

7:1 Ford :114 1011, nil4 Mil 'I
damaged, :1110 -.-; 4W0 end I
undonlrtva, 1100,114 HI 4314. ;

lJIII&gt;fflST ANI&gt;

·

•

�Pege

12-The Dally SenUnel

....---Ohio briefs---MOUNT VERNON, Ohio (AP) - More 1han 100 law enfoo:e.
meni offiCers a~ the filllenll of (anne: Knox County Sheriff
Paul Rowe, known for providing prisoners homemade ChristmaS
diMers for 19 years.
.
Rowe, 68. of Brandon, died Friday of pancreatic cancer less lhan
a day after he retired as 'sheriff, a position he held for 16 yeari. He
was buried on Wednesday.
"He lived his_life serving others," the ~v. Tom Wallace said
durin.~ the funeral. "Our lives have been enriched by his long Set·
VIce.

.

·

Rowe, a lifelong Knox County resident, began his 38-year law
enforcement career with the Mount Vernon Police DePartment
After eight years there. he spent another eight years wilh the Stale
Highway Patml.
.
..
In 1964, he became chief deputy of the Knox County Sheriff's
Department. He was elecled sheriff in 1976.
· ·
•
~

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP)- A company can't reopen closed
areas of its landfill near South Salem because it shOuld be able to
find other ways to solve problems with pooling waler, the Environ·
mental Proleetion Agency said.
· Mid-American Waste Systems Inc. wanled abou\ two more years
or dumping space at the Triangle Landfill.
· The company hoped to add trash to increase the slope or the
landfill. The move would increase rainwater runoff and prevent
pools or wa1er that seeps through the trash, Mid-American said.
But EPA Director Donald Shre~ardus said in his rejection letler
Tuesday that the company should mstead add more soil to increase
the slope.
,..
Local officials said the rejection will mean higher garbage fees
for customers because trash will have to be hauled to a solid waste
district farther-away.
CHILLICOTHE. Ohio (AP)- Mill's Pride opened its ·distribution cenu:r in Chillicothe after taking a week to move 15 miles from
its headquarterS in Waverly.
.
About 200 truckloads of stock were moved this week to the
400,000-square-foo! building which offers twice the space or the
Waverly cenler, said Distribution Manager Annando s-anchez.
The larger warehouse will allow the company to increase production and creale as many as 200 jobs over the next three ~.
said spokesman Tennyson Martin.
·
Mill's Pride manufactures kitchen cabinets, bathroom Vanities
and other ready-to-assemble wood products.
(:OLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A man who inay have suffered a
heart attack drove his truck into an apartment building and knocked
a woman from her bed, authorities said.
Witnesses told the Franklin County Sheriffs Department that
Wilbert G. Giffll), 58, of Columbus, drifled in his truck between
lanes for nearly three blocks before hilling an apartment building.
Giffm, who was fitted with a pacemaker several years ago, was
pronounced dead at the scene of the accident, said'SgL Carl Booth.
The 1r11ck went into an apartment belonging to' Joyce Turberville,
65. One or the wheels stopped at the head of her bed and knocked
her to the floor, investigators said.
She was taken 10 Riverside Methodist Hospitals for bruises and a
cu.t to the head and then released.

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Elizabeth Gee, the wife of Ohio
State University President Gordon.Gee. will receive the 1993
YWCA Women of Achievement award posthumously, the organization said.
·
Mrs. Ciee, a former research associate and adjunct professor at
OSU, died in December 1991. The organization's first posthumous
award is honoring her for her contributions to central Ohio.
She's among 12 wom~n chosen for this year's Women of
Achievement award, including state Treasurer Mary EDen Withrow;
Cheryl A. Boyce, executive director of the Ohio Commission on
Minority Health; and Sharon Boyer, volunteer and member or Parents of Murdered Chi~dren, an organization trying to increase victims' righ!S.
.
.
The women were nominated by local businesses, organizations
and the public and chosen by a panel of community l~ers.
·

·Police taking doll
slashing .s_eriously
. SANDUSKY, Ohio (AP)Whoever has been using a razor to

investigating a repon that Barbies
were slashed at another department

:~h!~~i~:v~~~i:n~~~~g~~~ ~~~~e~~~~s~~~:e~uldnot

Auto ~ales improve
DETROIT (AP) -With Detmit K pickup truclc.
leading the way, the U.S : auto
Overall truck sales rose 14.2
industry posted a modest sales percent compared .to a slight 0.4
improvement in 1992. selling just percent improvement in passenger
under 13 million unlts of cars and car sales.
.trucks.
7
In the most-watched auto sales
In a year when Ford's Taurus rae~ in recent memory, .Taurus
midsize sedan fmally outsold the ed$ed Aeeord by 16,274 units to
Honda Accord, Ford, General claim leadership il) U.S. car sales.
Motors Corp. and Chrysler Corp. The Accool had been the best·sellsaw their overall sales rise 6.6 per- ing car in the United ·States for
cent vs. a 1.6 percent improvement three consecutfve years. Taurus and
for Japanese automakers.
Accord finished thUd and fourth in
The U.S. dompanies stole about total sales foll'owed by Ford ' s
2 points or nlartet share from the Explorer sport utility truck, up
Japanese, in pan ~se of price from seventh last year.
increases forced on Japanese cars
Huge incentives on the Taurus
by the strength of the yen against and Accord helped overaU sales or
the dollar.
domestically built passenger cars
Almost all of the sales gains rise 4.5 percent in the final 10 sellcame in light trUCks, minivans and ing days of the yeat. For the year,
well-appoinled span utility vehi- domestically built C3f sales were up
cles, which arc heavily dominated . 2 percent.
by the Big Three.
Sales of domestically built
Piclcup truclcs, which traditional- trucks, up 17.3 peic.ent for the year,
ly drive the industry out of reces- were down 9.5 percent in late
sion, were the No. 1 and 2 best- December.
·
selling vehicles. ·For the 11th year
Among the Big Three. Ford's
in a row, Ford's F-series pickup total vehicle sales were up 11 pertruck was the best-selling vehicle cent over 1991. It was the only
overall, followed by Chevrolet's .C·

J

Thursday, Jenuarj 7, 1183

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

mode~tly

in 1992.

are taking the case seriously, a
Authorities were warning local
police deleetive said.
stores .about the vandalism.
DENVER (AP)- Dick 'Fiem- high-society catering company.
· Franlclyn Judson, Denver's 'chief of Denver Broncos. ·
Thirty-six people have gotten publicf.health.
The dolls were cut repeatedly in McClung said some stores have ing and thousands or others are·
Fleminj, who aaended a catetoa
the crotch and breast areas, Timo- increased security where the doll is thinking back to their holiday par· hepatitis ~o far - all of them .
The list or those who may have
board meeting Dec. 16 of the Denthy McClung, a deleetive with the displayed.
ties - what they ate, who was employees or the company or those been exposed is a who's who of ver Convention and Visitors·
who attended any of the nearly 100 Denver, including Gov. Roy
Perkins Township police depart·
"I don't want to ·use the term tending the buffet.
Bureau, is among hundreds wM
mcnt, said Wednesday.
Barbie slasher, but there's some"The fresh fruit was good," holiday-season parties it catered. Romer, numerous stale lawmakers
have been given shots against the
"We're not ruling anything out. body out there culling up Barbics. said Fleming, president or the Den- Health officials warn that I00 peo- and the coaches and staff of the
hepatitis A virus.
· ,
~
It could be something. as simple as ... We're taking this very seriousver Chamber or Commerce .. "Just ple C&lt;!uld fa¥ ill before the out· r"'"""'"--r:::~.z;.;...;~~kid in a store finding a razor knife ly," he said.
when you think ·you arc eating break IS ovet.l
"!think we have potentially the
and cutting the boxes.
McClung said tiolice could not healthy ... "
most
'dangerous, explosive situation
"It could be an adult who knew obtain fingerprints from the dam Fleming is among an estimated
relaled
to food-borne exposure to a
this type of incident would attract aged dolls.
15,000 people who may have been
I have seen in my 22
virus
that
notoriety and publicity.
Lisa McKendall, spokeswoman exposed to h~titis in an outbreak
Colorado,"
said Dr.
.
years
in
"Or it could be somebody suf- for Hawthorne, Calif.-based Mattei, traced to a kitchen ma~ager at a
0
fering from serious problems, a which makes Barbie, said the comsexual deviant or some type.·· pany had not heard about the vanMcClung said.
dalism.
0
Within the last two weeks, at
"We have had no calls regardleast seven Barbie dolls were taken ing this particular incident in Ohio
out of their boxes and slashed at or any other city. It mUst be an isothe Hill's department store in lated incident," she said.
CINCINNATI (AP)- Two midnight Monday.
When the women did not return
Perkins Township, about five miles
She said the cpmpany will mothers and a baby sitter have been
south or Sandusky and 70 miles investigate and decide what action charged with child endangering for by 7:30 the next morni~g. Eicher
west of Toledo. The dolls Sf ll for to take.
allegedly leaving seven children asked a neighbor·to waiCh the children while -he went to use a pay
about $10 each.
"Until we have more infQrma- unsupervised in an apanment for I
telephone, police said. He allegedly
Several Barbie dolls were tam- tion·, there's really nothing we can 1/2 hours.
pered wilh at the Kman store in the · do," Ms. McKendall said.
David ; · her, 25; Vjctor,ia went to work instead, and the chi!·
Sandusky Mall. The mall also is in
Clark, 25;
Joann Buckner, 26; " dren were alone for 1 1!2 hours.
Perkins township.
Shared technology
were charged Tuesday, police said.
Charges against the women
from the condition of the
stemmed
"I don't want to s.ay anything
In Japan. the advanced Neolithic All are from Cincinnati.
apartment,
police said.
about it," said a man who Yayoi period . when irrigation. rice
EiCher is a former boyfriend of
"The
place
was in complele disan,swered the pho?e m the ~anag- !arming. and iron-and bronze casting Ms. Clark, the mother of four of
said
John
Morgan, investiarray,"
er s office at Hill s. He would not · techniques were introduced lrom Chi- the children, ages 2, 3, 4 and 6.
gator
rot
the
police
division's pergive his name.
na or Korea. persisted to A.D. 400 . The
Ms. Buckner, who lives with
~
.
A man who answered the man- mynad Japanese states were then Ms. 'Clark, is the mother of the sonal crimes unit. ' 'There were
ager's phone at Kman also refused uni ted by the Yamato clan. under an other children, ages 2, 5, and 7.
food crumbs all over the place, sil·
toeomment.
emperor who acted as the chielpriest
Police said Wednesday the verwate on the floor, food just left
:
McClung said oolice wcoc of the animistic Shinto religion.
"'-women left the children with Eich- out and garbap;e everywhere.' •
er at their apaitment just before
New Year's.Resolutions aren't the easiest things
to keep. Let Fanners Bank help! Our New Year's
Resolution acc01mt could help you pay yout bills 'and
Compiled by:
Sutton.
save money. We'li even tailor the ICCOUII! to~
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Richard L. Connolly, etc .. Shersure this is one New Year's Resolution you'll be able
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
iffs Deed. to Secretary of Ve~erans
to keep! Call or stop by today.
·
Affairs, Chester. .
George Pierce, Sally Pierce,
Logan Monument Co. Inc., Par·
Parcel, to Harley McDonald, Pom, eel; toT. &amp; D. Properties, Salem.
Audrey, D: McQuaid, dec'd,
Viii.
William T. Ours, dec'd, Cen. of . Cert. of Trans, to Lawrence W.
'
trans., to Donald William ours, McQuaid, Salem.
Ray Garland Ours, !ames Thomas
Audrey McQuaid,- dec •d, CerL
&amp; Savings Company
'
Ours; Bonita Ours Mason, Virginia of .Trans, to Lawrence W.
McQuaid, Rutland.
·
Ours Waller, Lebanon. Eugene Triplett, Karen Triplett,
Harry W. Hendricks, Tressie D.
211 Weat Second Saeel
Route 1
2.000 A.,S .29, T·2, R-12, to Hendricks, Parcels, to Harry W.
Pomeroy, Ohio ..S769
Charles E. Grim, Marilyn Grim, Hendricks, Jr., Ronald A. Hen•
Tuppen Plaia&amp;, ObiO 4S783
dricks, Terry A. Hendricks, Salis614J9:92-2136
.
6141667-3161
Sutton.
·
Eugene Triplett, Karen Triplett, bury.
Parcels, S .29, T·2, R-12, to Richard
' Gary Wolfe, Sonya Wolfe, Lot
Member FDIC
L. Butcher, Samtra K. Butcher, #60, to Cathy Ritchie, Racine v.

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M 0 th e_rs,· Sltt.er, Charge d
• • .
WI th _Ch I').d en d angering

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Pay
BiUs.
Save
Money
•
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Property transfers

CALL US
TODAY!

992·2124

FB' . Farmers Bank

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS

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$.

W..1nem1

10

-99

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378

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Pick 4:
6569

Low llllllpliD ..ld 30s.

Rain, sleeL Sallinlay, snow,
.blRb Ill mkl..JOs.
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VoL 4t No. 180
Copyrlgh.... 11183

1 Section, 10 Pogn 25 c:enla
· A lluhlmedlll Inc. Now.pap«

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Friday, January li, 1993

Joint tfash collection_tops Syracuse Council agend~
By KatbrynCrow
Sentinel Correspondence
The possibility of Syracuse and
Racine establishing a joint trash
. collection was discussed at length
at Thursday night's meeting or
Syracuse Village Council.
.

life in jail

h_

Pick 3:

Page4

Keating could
·spend rest of

Denv.er's hepat_itis outbr~ak began_with .one food andlei

Ohio Lottery

Meigs girls
top Southern
" .
·cagers
•

automalcet to gain market share in agement, car sales were off l5 per.both cars and trucks. The Ford cent, mostly.,.,.nseofGM'&amp;deci· Ranger compact pickup and the sion to !educe low-profit l8lca 10
Escort subcompac;l joined P.serics daily rental companies and foclll •
trUCk$, Taurus•and Explorer llmong more on individual buyers: OM~
the top 10 belt sellen m1992.
said it cut about 200,000 units licat_"
"The market's strength in fleet sales, which hid 11111811 gain$ in;
recent months is encouraging, retail sales. ·
•
• ~especially the return or individual
Truck sales, however, ~~ _
customers to the car market," said 9.7 percent, giving OM 111
••
Roben Rewey, vice president of gain of 1.4 pen:ent in total vchiclei
sales operations for Ford's North sales.
·~ ·
Americanautomotiveoperations.
Among importers who also ,
Chrysler, on the strength or its assemble vehicles in Nonh Amcri- :
minivans and Jeeps, had 27.9 per- ca, Honda reported 4.6 percent·
cent highei' .IIUCk sales in 1992 th8n lower sales, Mazda Slilcs dropped ;
a year earlier•.It sold 37,568 units 1.8 percent and Mitsubishi sales ~
of the all-new Jeep Grand Chero- f~U ~.6 pm:enL .
. .·
kee, leading to record Jeep sales.·
N1ssan sales, mcluding 1~; ;
Chrysler also set a record in U.S. . were up 9.9 percent for the year, ·
minivan sales at 462,070.
largely due to the sueeess of twO ,
Chrysler car sales fell 3~6 per- new U.S.-built vehicles, the Altima.!
cent in 1992, but its new line of midsize sc;dan and the Quest-mini·:
widely acclaimed rnidsiie cars van.
•
• were introduced with only four
Toyota remained ·the only :
months remai11ing in 1992. Com- iJ11por~er to sen more than 1 million ~
binCd car and. truclt sales were up vehicles in the United States. ~
13.3 percent, the grcateSl percent· reporting 7.3 percent higher sales "
age gain among the Big Tluee.
for its combined ToyOIIt and Lcxus ·
At GM, when: a yem- of turmoil . divisions.
·
. ,!
resulled in the ouster of top man•;

LOS ANGELES (AP)
Chai'les Keating Jr. couldn't convince a jury that vindictive regulators and a real-estale bust caused
America's biggest S&amp;L collapse,
and now he could end up spending
the rest of his life in jail.
!(eating, whose spectacular
downfall made him emblematic 11f
the nation's savings and loan fias·
co, was convici.ed by a federal jury
Wednesday along with his son, 37year-old Charles Keating lll, of
looting Lincoln Savings and Loan.
Prosecutors said they would
move immediately to get their
hands on the rich«:&amp; they say Keat·
ing may have stashed away. ,
~g. 69, already is serving II'
tO-year prison lenn for his convic·
lion on stale charges of. swindling
investors.
'
He and his son claimed that
vengeful bureaucrats and powerKEATING VERDICT- Stephen Neal, tbe
son, Charles KeatiDg III, gui;ly. The senior
mad prosecutors made them their
attorney
representiag
former
Keating 'lt'IIS convicted on 73 couaiS ol racke:..·
LIDcoln
Savings
prey and that the collapse or the
tee ring, l'raud,. conspiracy and traasporling
owner
Charles
Keating,
Jr.,
talks
to
the
media
real-estate market in Arizona
stolen
property as listed Ia the federal ladk:t·
outside
the
Federal
Courthouse
in
Los
An&amp;eles
calised Lincoln's failure. The jury
Wednesday
after
a
jury
round
Keating
and
his
meat.
His
son was coovlcted on 64 counts. (AP)
didn't believe him.
"I don't want to hurt his feelings, but we all felt we would have
liked to have one of those fake 'Continental Corp., in April 1989 conspiracy. His son was convicted pay fmes of at least $18.25 milliOI!.
expanding noses that grows longer cost taxpayers $2.6 billi?n.
.
of 64 counts.
The younger Kuling could also be
and longer •• juror David Webb
Addmg to the case s notonety
Though the Keatiligs face maxi- forced to give up $231 million. .
said.
,'
· we~ th_e millions Keating paid his mum sentences of hundreds of
The government hu not beOil
Prosecutors accused Keating or r~umly ; h!S Jel·s~t_tasles, h1s dona- years in prison, a lawyer connected able to disprove Keatlhg's coitc .
creating phony profits through uons of ~1.3 m1lhon to the caus~s with the case who spoke on condi· tention \llat he was fina!lcially
sham l@nd and securities sales. L~offive U.S : senators whose help ~e tion of anonymity Said they were ruined when Lincoln wu seized
Without them, the government sought w1th federal regulaf,Qrs, h1s likely to get 20- to 25-year terms at despite par,ing his family morealleged, the empire's Shaky condi· nsk~ mvestments m land, hotels senu:ncing March 15.
than $35 million during tile 19801;
lion would have been clear to regu- and JUnk bonds, and the thousands
U.S. Attorney Terrce A. Bowers Keating's ~wyer, Stephen C. Nell,
lators. ·
.~
of elderly Lincoln investors who said prosecutors would ask a judge said there is no evidence thai X.The failure or Irvine-based Lin- lost fortunes buying junk bonds.
today to set a hearing to force .· ing has a dime.
coin and the bankruptcy of its
Keating was convicted or 73 Keating to forfeit more than $265
Neal said he would a~ die
Phoenix-based parent, American counts of fraud, racketeenng and million that investors ·lost and to verdict.
' •1
'
·
•

--

Duke Bentz, Jeff Thornton and
Scou Hill, Racine Council members, met with the Syracuse Council members to discuss how a joint
venture would work through the
pooling of assets which the two villages now have.

The group discussed ·the trading
of Racine's compactor truck for the
Syr-acuse Village dump truck.
Bentz pointed out that the way
things arc going, what with co~ts
and regulations, that it would be
wise for the two towns to consider

joining together in accomplishing
what is needed for both villages.
Jack Williams, Syracuse councilman, stated that it is feasible that
Syracuse and Racine can be in the
refuse business. Williams suggested a committee from Syracuse be

appointed to meet with the commit·
tee from Racine to discuss the possibility of such a venture. Those
present felt a program could be
worked out for the benefit or both
villages.
At the present time Racine has
. a

.

new used compactor with one regular employee assisted by two gen~
era! relief workers. Syracuse village docs not have its own collection service nor does it have a full
time employee. According to ·
Continued on page 3

Meigs is taken off closing list
·according to Ohio ASCS.director

,.

By wire and staiT reports
Dorothy Leslie, executive
director of lhe ASCS in Ohio, said
this morning that the Meigs County
ASCS office is not incl\lded on a
revised listing of county offices
slated to be closed by Agriculture
Secretary Edward Madigan.
Ohio's Monroe County would
lose three agriculture offices under
a federal streamlining plan that
would shut down a tot;ll or 22 in
' the state.
Madigan on Thursday said he
will order the closing or consolida·
tion of ,as many as 1,242 field
offices around the country as soon
as possible, perhaps before Jan. 20,
when the Bush administration ends,
including those · in Meigs,
Lawrence, Hocking and Vinton
Counties.
He' said at a news conference he
was giving Congress and farm
groups a chance 10 review his proposals bef&lt;tre issuing a final list

ed for closing. 'They arc Belmont,
Harrison, and Hocking.
She emphasized that these arc
only "proposed" closings, that a
final recommendation for office
restructuring will come from Madi·
gan next week but that' the Clinton
administration will make the final
dec.ision.
The list sent to Congress pro.posed closing:
.
-Ten or Ohio's 81 Agricultural
S1abilization and Conservation Service offices.
-Eight of the state's 88 Soil
Conservation Service offices.
-Four of the slate's 33 Fanners
Home Administration offices.
Under the plan, Monroe County
would be the only one in Ohio los- ·
ing all three offices, according to a
copy of the plan obtained by The
Associated Press. The offices are
located in Woodsfield, which is in
eastern Ohio. ·
·
. ·
"This is not about reducmg scr-

revised list in her office Thursday.
Instead or 10 ASCS offices on the
original list, Leslie said the revised
list contains only three offices slat·

our services to fanners in a manner
that respects the role of the Ameri·
can taxpayer."
. .
.
Leshe d1sputed the hst showmg

iii
R

, .....~-- v.\c.e -to :\{armet'l/ 1 Madigatt said.
Leslie said that she received the "It is about being able to improve

nextweek.

'
PRESLEY POSTAGE ·Middletown postmaster Mel Gregware displayed $heels of new
commemorative Elvis Presley stamps·tbis morn·
ing. The new stamp went on sale this afternoon
in conjunction with what would have been PreS·

-ley's 58th birthday. The 'clamor over, the stamp
has postal employees all ove.r the nallon expecting long lines to buy the most popular stamp in
recent history. (AP)

Patrol to
take more
accident calls

..

.....,.~

Riffe endorses Meshel for party chairman

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)House Speaker Vern Riffe has
endo~scd Sen. Harry Meshel of
Youngstowri for. chairman of the
-Ohio Democratic Party, if the job
becomes vacan 1. Bu1 others are
iniCrcsted, too.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)-Elvis
Graceland, which draws
. Reports circulating in the party
was sighted at the post office 6)0,000 visitors a year, set aside
say
current Chairman Eugene
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP) today.
35,000 first-day pos~1l covers readBranstool
soon will accept PresiNottfte Elvis who always seems ing. "I was there." '!'hey sold for The State Highway Patrol will be dent-elect Clinton's appointment to
taking more of the accident calls
to be buying a chili-cheese dog at a Siench,limit 10 to a customer.
a job in the U.S. Dcpartmcnl of
~andled by the Ross ·
formerly
7-Eicvcn; but the lean, mikeElvis fans' lobbicil for the stump
Agriculture.
cradling, hip-swiveling, lip-curling, for nine .years, overcoming opposi- County Sheriff's Department.
Branstool, a farmer and former
Sheriff Bill Knoll, who took
ycs-sirring King of Rock 'n' Roll.
tion. in some quarters because of his
state
senator, helped Clinton camoffice Monday, says it's· part. of his
The long-awaited Elvis Presley abuse of prescription drugs.
.
paign
in Ohio and brought him to a
stamp went on sale at 12:15 a.m. at . A nat1onwidc election was held , campaign promise to ttirn more rally at his farm in Utica.
a half-'dozen mobile postal stations last summer to select artwork for accident work over to the patrol to
The Clinton transition team has
across the street from Gracclnnd. the stamp, and more than I million give deputies more time for other ·interviewed Branstool who report1
And hundreds stood in a drizzle on b;1llots were cast. By a 3-to-1 mar· duties.
edly
is
undergoing
an
FBI back"It allows us more productive
what would have been Elvis' 58th gin, funs went for the trim, 1950s
ground check, which is a routine,
birthday to buy iL
Presley instead of the chubby , time at the scene of a mor~ serious pre-appoinuncnt procedure.
Nationwide sales at po~t offices jumpsuit-clad Elvis during the criminal incident,"· Knott said. "In
Brunstool imervicwed for a job
a shor{ time, we should sec a short- as assistant
were set for noon local time.
, years before he died nt Grnceland
secretary but he r~cnt·
er respansc time to all calls.'·
"Elvis was a king or the people. at age42 on Au!l: 1~. 1977, .
ly
said
he
was
sure whether that
Knott said each trooper at the or aqothcr postnotwoald
His fire -his excitement changed
The Postal :strv1ce has. pnnted
be offered,
our cult~rc" Postmaster General 500 million of the stamps. the • patrol's Chillicothe post handles on He didn't know whether he would
Marvin Ru~yon said at the height largest commemorJtive issue evcr. 1 average of I 1/2 accident investiga- get an .offer of any kind.
of a night of festivities at Presley's The Postal Servtcc expects to pull a tions a week. He said much of \he
Branstool couldn ' t be reached
white-columned estate. "This, too, profit 10 excess of S20 mtlhon ?n burden of the 1,350 to 1,550 acci- ·for comment Thursday. His office
will be a No. 1 hit."
,
the stamps and related souvcnH~ dents a year his department handles said he would not be available until
can be shifted to the troopers.
Fireworks marked the moment like mugs and T-shirts.
today.
"If I had lhe manpower, I could
the 29-ccnt stamps went on sale.
''I want the Wiv!lcgc of being
Riffe, or Wheelersburg. said
Betty Budd¥ or Denver said her one or the first. smd Sue Su.ther- handle traffic ·and criminal cases," Brnnstool has done an excellent job
Elvis fan club planned to buy sev- Inn or Haleyville, w~o 'd been WUlt· Knott said. ''Right now, th e Ross and will be missed if he accepts. a
era! hundred dollar.s ' worth. mg to buy stamps stncc early aftcr- County Sheriff's pcpartment can't Clinton appointment. But if he docs
"We're going to put them on our noon. -"He was special in my life do an adequate job with both,: so leave, Riffe said, Mcshel could siCp
mail for now and forever," ·she ancl this is a special commcmora- l ' vc got to make priorities.''
LL David Baker', commander of
said.
tive in his memory.''
the
patrol's Chillicothe post, said
La Vera Chapel of While Luke,
On Thu.rsday night, about 800
he
welcomes
the decision.
Mtch., had an Elvis-stamp ~1ttoo on. fans were inside a tent in a Grace"That's
.our-sp!lcialty
here. I'm
her :irm. "I wanted something dif· lund parking lot for a rock 'n' roll
David M. Persons, 30, who is
not
saying
the
Sheriff's
Depanm~nt ·
feront.'' she said of the 3-inch· wide show when a large part. of a raised can't do it, but thM's specifically wanted in Meigs County for viola.replica of the slump . "It will n0 or collapsed: No one was hurt.
tion or probation imposed by the
remind me of when the stamp came Everyone was ushered outside for what we:re trained _to do,' ' he said.
Court of Common Pleas after his
out. I will never forget."
the rest of the performance.
September 1991 escape from
Among a crowd of about 1,500
The stamp's release is the focus ·Williams arrested
SEPTA Center at Nelsonville, was
who flocked to Grace! and were ·or a three-day celebration marking
Debbie Williams, Route 143, taken into custod·y by West VirPresley's former wife, Priscilla, Presley's birth in nearby Tupelo
Albany. was arres1ed late Wednes- ginilt State Troopers and Jackson
Md his only child and sol_
e heir, Miss., on Jan. 8, 1935.
' day mght by the Meigs County
County deputies on Thursday
L1sa Mane Keough.
Sherirrs
Department
On
a
warrant
evening.
. ·
•
from Perry County charging her ·
According to a report from the
· with felony child endangermen~
Meigs,County Sheriff's DcpartBecause Meigs County Jail does
meni, Persons initially told officers
rate than when it began. The unem- not have facilities 'to lock up female
WASHINGTON . (AP)
his name was Chris Chambers.
Ohio's unemployment rale dropped ployment rate was 6. 7 percent in prisoners, she was transported to
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Athens County until Thursday Soulsby advised that Ravenswood ·
slightly. while the nation's jobless January 1992.
The nation's unemployment rate morning when she was tewmed to Police had received word that Perfiaure held steady, the Labor
held at 7.3 percent in December. Meigs County for a hearing in
Oepanment announced todayl
·
sons had been living for several
'rhe unemployment ra1e m Ollio rite Labor-Department had origi- Meigs County Court. She waived weeks in Ravenswood' and that he
last month was 7.2 percent, down nally reponed November's rate as the hearing and Wa!i released ld the was wlinu:d for escape in Ohio.
7.2 percent but after. revising its . Perry County Sheriff's De_parunent.
rtorn 7.4 paca~t in November.
. Ravenswood Pollee spotted him
In Meigs Counly, the .figure data for the past year, 11 now shows
Thursday morning at the lower end
was 11.7, same 11 October, but up the rate at 7.3 percent.
·
of Ravenswood but he got away.
from last year's S.S figure. In Gal-·
December's national figure was
His vehicle was tpwed and
lia County, the job~ rate was up Slightly higher than the 7.1 percent
impo~nded.
_
somewhat, 9.1 compared with 8.8 jobless rate reported in ~anuary
The Me1gs County Board of . . Sheriff Soulsby advised that
in October and 7.7 ot a year ago.
Elections will meet Monday at4:30 West Virginia Trooper Mike
1992•
Ohio ended 1992 w1th a higher
p.m. at the office.
· ' Comet has filed a· fugitive from

T_he rush is on, Elvis
stamps go on s.ale

10 ASCS offices proposed for clos- ·
ing. ·
·
She said she received a leuer
from Madigan on Thu~y stating
that only .three were proposed for
closing. Those offices are in St.
Clairsville, Cadiz and Logan.
The list sent to Congres·s
includes those offices but contains .
seven others.. They. are in Wintersville, Ironton, Pomeroy,
Woodsfield, McConnelsville, Cald·
weD and McAtthur. Ms. Leslie said
that list is outdaled.
The network of offices was creau:d when 20 IX\rcent or Americans
lived on farms and didn't have
modem communications. Madigan
said less than 1 percent or the population now .lives on farms and •that
modern telecommunications and
transportation services mean fewer
offices are needed.
Madigan had no figures on the
amount of Savings that would result
or number or jobs that would be
- cut- . ;_
· ·· .....
Although the Clinton administration COijld reverse Madigan's
order, the outgoing secretary said
that was unlikely.
Continued on page 3

in "with experience, know-how
and contacts."
He added that Mcshel, a member of the Senate since· 1971 and a
former Senate president, "is a
fighter for people who work for a
living and against government that
gets in the way.''
·
Mcshel has confirmed that he's
interested and said he would resign
from the Senate if appointed. The
chairman's job pays about $65,000
a year.
.
Beyond that, he declined further

comment.
Mcshcl would not get the job
without opposition.
Sam Barone. the party's executive director under Branstool, confil)lled late Thursday that he will be
a candidate if Branstoollcaves.
He ~aid he respects the fact that
Riffe and Mcshcl "arc.longtime
friends" but that the speaker's
endorsement will ~ot keep him
from sending an application to the
Democratic State Executive Committee.

New congressman plans
surgery for gallstones
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Freshman Rep. 'Fed Strickland, DOhio . said he likely will have
surgery for gallstones as soort as
possible.
Strickland , 51, was taken to
George Washington University
Medical Ce~ter in Washington,
D.C., on Wednesday, the day after
he was sworn-in to his first,term in
office.
He complained or stomaclt.·
pains, which may have been caused"
by passing one or the stones, he
told The Columbus Dispatch.

The Lucasville man said he
would be incapacitau:d for seven to
10 dayi afier the surgery and could
return for House work after that if
he didn't exert himself.
Congress is in recess until Jan .
20, when Bill Clintort is inaugurat-.
ed president.
Strickland beat Republican Rep.
Bob McEwen of Hillsboro in the
November general election fot the
6th District scat that covers southem Ohio from Warren County to
Washington County.

Persons taken into custody

·ohiojobless·rate drops

Board to meet

I~

.
.
justice complaint against' Persons Thur~day night whether Persons
since he is wanted in Athens Coun- was to return to Ohio or if he was
ty on an indictment for escape from going to fight the extradition .
the SEPTA Center. Sheriff Soulsby noticed one of his Jerse y cows was
advised there is a capias from the missing . He reported he has
Meigs County Court of Common · checked the fields, fence line, etc.,
Pleas for his arrest for probation but cannot locate the cow or a
·
violation. 'Arter he is returned to break in the fence. ·
Anyone
with
information
on the
Ohio, ,Meigs County authorities
cow is asked to contact Follrod or
will arrange 10 get him for court.
· ·
There was no indication late the Shcrifr s Office.

Police probe minor accident',·
The Pomeroy Police Depart•
ment investigaled 8 m
_ inor accident
Tuesday at. 813 West Main Sueet
in front of Subway in Pllmeroy.
According to a repon from the
departinent, the accident occurcd at
6:22 p.m. when Jerry Aleshire, 44,
Syracuse. who was driving a 1986
Ford, was rear-ended by Jennifer
Bamhtm, 17, Pllmeroy.
.
Aleshire was traveling west·
bound and was atlempting to tum

•
'.

lefl into Subway when Barnhart,
who was driving her father-'s ·
(Wayne Barnhart) 1988 Pontiac
Crand Prix, and .was also west·
bound, struck Aleshire's vehicle
resulting in a rear-end collision.
Aleshire's vehicle sustainod ·
light damage to the rear-end and
Barnhart's vehicle sustained lillhl
damage to the front end. Aeeonbng
to the report the~e were no citations •
or injuries.
...

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