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                  <text>OH

llm11 Sentinel

~nt

Pleeeant, wv

17 11183

Is the pot c~lling the kettle bl~ck?
B1: IQM HARLESS,
Orpnlutloa Director,
Ohio Faria Barca Pedentioll
.JACKSON- It's a war of words.
Food safety and environmental
conflicts can be boiled down to
defining a few key lcriDS.
Take a look at "claemical. • It
means any substlriCc brolren .clown
into basic pmts. Blood is a chemi·
cal compound. Life is a series of

chemical reactions. However. scxne
environmentaliJta use the word, to
means one thiilg -poiJon. .
"Toxic exposure" is a loaded
term. Toxic means the ability to
cause dama~e, and anything can
cause harm if a person is exposed

New farm

MYSTERY FARM -111111 week's mystery

• _rarm, featured by the Gallla Soil aDd Water
• Couernta District, Is lc)alted somewbere ID
Glllia Couaty. lndividl!als wilbing to partlc:i·
: pate ill tilt weekly contest may do so by glleliiDg
•· the rarm's OWIIer. Just mall, or drop Off your
: guess to the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.;
- Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the GaUipolls' Dally
: Tribune, llS Third Ave., Galllpoll_s, Ohio,

45631, 11d you may wiD a $5 prize rroa the
Ohio Valley Publlshila Co. Lea.e yoar ume,
addtess 11d telephODe nWDber with your c:ard
or letter. No telephone c:aUs wlll be ac:c:epted. AI
contest eDtrtes sflould be tuned lu to tbe newspaper Office by 4 p.m. eac:h WedDesday. In case
or a tie, the wlaner will be c:bosea by lottery.
Next week, Meigs County farm wiD be rea·
turN by the Meigs Soil aDd Water Conservation

*

District.

!Jurley tobacco deadlines announced .

effective r&amp;rm q~ 8lld not flied
Gjll6a ASCS County
for disaster credit prior to harvest
Executive Direc:tor
for reasons berond their control.
GAU.IPOUS • Burley tobacco Produc:ers wishing to lease to their
cllastcr leasing is currently under· farm should contact the ASCS
way in GalliA Coumy.
otrx:e_to have t¥r names a~ to
. l'rodpcers who have marketed the hst of produc~r~ desm.ng·
their tollacco and have poundage · poundage Md to obcBln informabon
fC!iurininjl on their marteting cards on lease limitations.
.
due 10 d1asrer losseS, may be able . The dcw!liile for disaliter leasing
·to lease away their excess BurleytobaccoisFriday;Feb.l2.
poundage. A producer desiring to
New farm burley tobacco applileaac AWAY must have had a W.. cations are currently being acceptloss of their poduction, due to nat· ed. Only a small amount ol quota is
. ural causes; must have planted an available nationally and the condiacreage sufficient to produce the tions of eligibility are very strict.
farm'scurrentyearcffectivequoca: Some requirements for new farm
must have made reasonable and quotas
.
customary efforts to produce the
include: poducer should have a
hiStory of growing burley tobacco

:

Br E. A. (Lilla) CoDIDs,

'·

in tWo of tJMo.last five~. SO.. rJ

lOIII inaJme must come from pro-

equipment on
market
WARSAW, Ind.,· New 6' loW·
profile pickup on the Reliant 46
filled chamber Round Baler from
Claas of America, Inc., Columbus.
Ind., permits a wider swath to be
harvested in one pass, reducing
lime in the f~eld.
~uippcd witll closely arranged
resilient spring steel tines and
backed by an ass~ feed rake, !he
6' pickup ensures clean pickup
even in uneven swaths of hay and
straw. brittle and short crop.
. Bales produced on the Claas
RoUant 46 round baler are dense,
higb nutrient, weather-resistant
bales that resist spoilage. The 4' x
4' bales stand up in the field and
hold their shape during storage and

of Transportation is actively dcveloping a plan to meet our state's
transportation needs through the
year 2020, according to ODOT

SALESMAN OF YEAR • Larr1 Tbuton,left, bas been named
or tbe Year" bJ Gene Jolmsoll Chevrolet.Oidamoblle.
Tbaxtoll jolaed tbe GallipOlis dealersblp ID Juae or 1.990. Johilson
said "TIIaxton is a talented employ~ and a asset to our sales
team."

. .

JACKSON CO.
Ripley, WV
Janury 7,1993
SLAUGIITER STEERS:
Good &amp; Choice
Standard
SLAUGIITER HEIFERS:
Good &amp; Choice
Standard
SLAUGIITER COWS:
· Colllmercial
Utility
.
Canner &amp; Cutter
Bulls over 1,000 lb.

•
63.00-67.00
55.00-62.00
61.00-65.00
58.00-61.00
44.00-48.50
44.00-47.50
36.00-43.00
52.00-62.50

VEAL:
Choice &amp;: Prime
226-265 lb.
HOGS:
190-240

80.00-92.00
75.00-90.00
36.00-40.00
35.00-39.00
25.00-27.50
. 8.00-17.00
. 15.00-22.00

24o-260
Boais

Pip (by head)
4().60 lb

LAMBS:
52.00-55.50
82.00-88.00
75.00-81 .00
. 65.00-75.50
S2.01J.64.00
62.00-71.00
60.00-69.00
90.00-101.00
85.00:-98.00'
82.00-90.00
76.00-85.00

••

78.00-92.50
75.00-86.00
70.00-74.00
80.00-86.00
75.00-83.50
70.00-80.00
550.00-975.00
350.00-650.00
85.00-125.00

'

•

""

,t_\.

Vol. 43; No. 187
Copyrlgh!ed 1883

••.•••,. .

Pomeroy.- Middleport, Ohio Monday; January

1 $ectlon, 10 Page• 25 cents
A Mulllmedlo Inc. Newspaper

18; 1993

U.S. resumes bombing;
Clinton voices support
By ROBERT BURNS
dent Bush was to tum power over
Associated Press Writer
to President-elect Clinton, who has
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S.- consistently voiced support for
Jed aircraft bombed Iraqi missile Bush's efforts to force Iraqi comsites south and north today' in a pliance.
rollin!! confrontation between the
Bush was monitoring the situaoutgomg Bush administtation and a tion at the presidential retreat at
defiant Saddam Hussein.
Camp David• Md .
President-elect Clinton swiftly
"I don't want to talk this mom·
voiced support for the action, and 'ing. I'll have more to say later," .
said America's determination to Clinton told reporters as he set oui
fprce I;raqi eomptiance with Persian
1
· · thr gh
Gulf cease-fire resolutions "will ~e~S:~~~~c~ftal. ou
not waver" as he assumes-comClinton met Sunday night with
mand later in the weelc.
Gen. Colin Powell, chairman of the
The rust attack was· a planned Joint Chiefs of Staff, in a session
engagement in a southern no-fly that underscored tbe agreement
zone carried out by an estimated 75 between the outgoing and incoming
American, British and French air· administrations on a policy IOward
craft against Iraqi missile sites that Iraq.
·
·
survived last Wednesday's bomb·
the engagements came five
ing.
days after the Ui\.ited States-led
A Pentagon official said the sec· coalition had bombed missile sites
man~l!vers are scheduled -to take place at a base
ond attaclc was made by American in southern Iraq, 8nd ·one day after
HEADING FOR MANEUVERS • Jeffery
12
miles
from
the
Iraqi
border
and
are
designed
aircraft
against anti-aircraft batter- the administration targeted about
Williams of Port Charlotte, Fla.,. packs his bag
a
sigDal
to
Iraq
not
to
attack
KuW&amp;iL
(AP)
as
ies
in
the
north after they "locked 30 Tomahawk missiles at a facility
Monday as u; S. forces at Doha, 19 mites nortb
'
on"
coalition
planes with their that officials said was a nfJclear
of Kuwait City, prepare for maneuvers. The
·
radars, indicating they were ready complex.
to fire.
A senior Pentagon official,
The White House issued a pre· speaking on condition of anonymidawn statement that said any Tur- ty, said Navy and Air Force planes
ther provocative 'moves by Iraq struck 81 surface-to-air missile
"wiU be dealt with forcefully and facilities in southern Iraq' that surwithout warning" as the 'United vived a similar attac:k last WednesStlites and its partners demand ·
On recommendation of Mayor discuss trading the snowplow for compliance with the cease-fire da~e attaclc "was very much like
Funds· totaling $204,967.80
tenns that ended !he 1991 Persian the other day,.. except that it was
were appropriated for operation or Frank Cleland, council . approved the compactor truck.
Gulf War.
Rizer reported that in 1992 the
Racine vilJacc during 1_993 ~t last the transfer of approximatelY. 1/2
The hostilities came a little conducted in daylight, said another
·
BGre
ol\.
p
ropeny
,whi~
the
wlllage
·
vi
llage--w•re:r
system pumped . more than '12 hours•before Piesi- . official, ,wbO added·that 15 planes
weeiCa m~of R~1ne - V1Uage
Council h~ld 1D chambers in the owns on Yellowblish Road to 60,968,600 gallons of water:
Ralph Neigler, Jr. It was pointed
Star Mill Padt building. ·
·
He also reported that someone is
The apjnopriatio~s ordinance out. that the records lists the area as putting used motor· oil into trash .
provides $59,900 in the general 3/4 of an acre but the road is and it was stressed that the village
fund; $2,216 in the State Hig'hway believed to cut across part or the cannot pickup used motor oil, old
'
fund; $4;136, iJ1 the cemetery fund; area now. Neigler will be responsi- tires, ,leaves, limbs, or old furniture.
military
band,
pa~sed
by the alBy VICTORIA GRAHAM
The landfill will not accept these
$19,462 in the .fire fund; ble for the cost of !he transfer.
Rashid
today.
The
coffins
were
Associated Press Writer
Approval was given to the pur· items, he said. Rizer also asked that
$11,922.43 in the debt service
draped
in
Iraqi
flags.
~AGHDAD, Iraq (AP) fund; $1,000 in the water deposits chase of paint, the cost not to residents have their refuse in prop- ·
One of !he victims was a hotel
Baghdad
residents were still dazed,
fund; $21,023.59 in the refuse ser- exceed $150. for the squad quarters er containers and at the curb by 8
recepti&lt;;mist
identified only as
and outraged by the U.S. cruise
vices fund; $57,108 in the water at the fU'ehousc. Squad members a.m. on Tuesday when the trash is
mis.ciile attack on the capiral when Am ira.
picked ~departmen! fund, $23,064 in the will do the painting.
The 398-room, 14-story hotel
the
allies launched born bing raids
Discussed lit the meeting was a
Rizer was authorized to get a
street fund, and $5,225.78 in the
was a scene of devastation this
today
on
southern
and
northern
50150 grant for tre(i phmting. Cpun· load of cold mix for patching.
capital projects fund.
morning. A baby grand piano had
Iraq.
cil
members indicaied' they wbuld
Regular !Reetings were set for
Council ai&gt;Jlroved the mayor's
fallen iniO the 10-foot-decp missile
Local
media
did
not
immediate·
appoiniment of Glenn Rizer as be 'interested in the grant if it the first Monday of each month
ly annOilnce !he new ab&amp;Cks, which crater in the counyard, furniture
stteet commissioners. Committees included tree removal as the village except on holidays when !he meetoccurred in the late morning, and was shattered and room doors
appointed by the mayor included has many trees !hat need removed ings will be held on Tuesday.
much of the capital went about its blown off their hinges as high as
Bob Beegle, Carroll Teaford and or at least !rimmed back. B,.cause Meeting will be held in Council
business as usual. But in neighbor· the third Door.
Ron Clarlc 10 the insurance, securi- of the lack of .information on the chambers at the Star Mill Park
The fll'st attack today was carhoods
hit by missiles there was
ty and finance committees; and grant and because action had 10 be unless otherwiSe announc:ed. It was
ried out by an estimated 75 U.S.,
weeping
and
anti-American
invecHenry DeniZ, 1eff Thornton, and Jaken at this meeting, council emphasized that all meetings are
British and French aircraft
against
tive.
·
·
.
'
open t() the public.
Scott Hill to the s.treet committee. rejected the application.
Mayor Cleland reported that
A discussion was held on selling
Beegle will continue as president
"Kill Bush," said Fouzisalman
pro tem until the next ti'me all the old compactor truck but no bids on raising the wells will be al-Bandar, whO said his neighbor,
council members are present Clarlc action was taken to advertise it for taken in February.
70-year-old Buthena Kambaraga,
Also attending were Clerk Car- was killed in the Sunday night barwas absent from the meeting due 10 sale. Coljllcil will meet with ·a CO!J1·
mittee from SS&gt;racuse Council to olyn Powell. Marshall Don Dye, rage .
his work schedule.
' and Fire Chief Jolm Holman.
Although their affluent neighborhood is about three miles from
the alleged nuclear weapons facility that was the attack's target, at
least one house was destroyed,
most had their window glass shattered and fragments of a missile
rested in one backyard.
B01id said the election of Bill
WOOSTER, ,Ohio (AP) notenough.
.
At the al-Rasbid hotel. where
''There's a mixed picture: A Clinton sets !he stage for positive
Colulllnilt 1ulian Bond said people
two
pe_o ple died when the lobby
mast understand that the Rev. Mar- portion of black people have done change.
and
the
counyard were devastated
"As we say in Arkansas. 'I'm as
tin Luiher ICinJ 1r. was not the fii'St aU right since the DIOYement but a
portion.of the community has nOt.'' happy as a hog in slop'.Jhat Clinton by a missile, a furious worker
civil rights acuvist.
.
"In some ways, we have was elected, and if he just sits in shouted "Bush has blood on his
"There were h.undreds of thou·
sands of people before him,'' Bond become King-dependein. summon- his office and never leaves the hands.'' A fragment was found in
said Sunday night at the King com- ing his memory as asubstitute for White House, things will be better the rubble showing markings of a
than what we had for the past 12 U.S, company that makes cruise
munity celebration at the !;:ollege action," said Bond.
missile erJtines.
·
years,"
Bond said.
of Wooster. "And there were hunBlacks, .women and poor people
An elaborate funeral cortege for
But Bond said he is not "fooldreds of thousands of people after are coming out of a dark era
including a
l)im. He did not speak to an empty brought on by insensitivity to race, ishly optimistic" and knows that the two hotel
field during the march on Washing- sex and class by Ronald Rea1an any progress will come because ·
and George Bush and their efforts people show the same lcind of J!Cr·
ton."
'
Bond, a ·former Georgia state to make the public believe that sistence as those who prevailed
ienator; said blacks have benefited equality of opportunity had becOOle , against the resistance to a. national
holiday honoring King.
from the ciYil rights movement, bl!t a reality,h~ said. .
·

.Racine couricil apprQpriates
funds, approves ~ppointments

.

•
•
•
•

.

took part. The bombs fell front
British and American planes while
the French flew in the protective ail
cap. ,
•
The White House statement said
the strike had been •'undenaken in
response to Iraqi moves:to recoosti:
tutc its surface-to-air missile sys;
terns in the"region south of the
32nd parallel and 10 Iraq's openly
prQCiaimed policy or challenging
the no-fly zones.''
"Everybody made it borne,"
said oac official, indicating there
were no coalition planea lost.
The atlaCit was carried out by •
1S- lane coalition !Cam that ill;lud·
ed ~4 born bers. Fourteen of the
bombers were U.S. Air Force jets
(10 F-t~E Strike Eagles, 4 F-16
Fighting Falcons). 6 U.S. Navy (4
F·A-18 Hornets and 2 A-6' intrud·
crs), and 4 British Tornadoes. Also,
French Mirage jets heiJllld provide'
air cover ~uring !he !iombing run.
.
· About two hours later, a senior
official disclosed the engagement
ill the northern no-fly zone, established in 1991 to shield Iraqi Kurds
from Saddam's military.
.
"In the north there were three
instances in which coalition aircraft
attac:ked Iraqi air defense pointS,"
· said the offiCial.
The atJ&amp;Ck on surface-to-air missile radars and an anti-aircraft
artillery site was launched after
their targeting radar was activated,
' indic~tinl! thE&lt;Y w~re ready to
launch theU' miSsiles. · ·

Iraqi missile sites in !he sou!hern
·no-fly zone that surviYed last
Wednesday's bombing.
A Pentagon official said the second attack today was flown againsr
anti-aircraft batteries in the north
after they "locked on" coalition
planes w1th their radars, indic:ating
they were ready 10 engage..
·
Air raid sirens went off in Dharan, Saudi Arabia, wllich allied
warplanes are using in the campaign against Iraq, and in Kuwait
City as rumors circillated that Iraq
hail fii'Cd a Scud missile. Military
and aviation officials could not
confum any such attack.

B~nd

says people too dependent
on memory of Rev. Martin L. King

«

1184 CROWIIICftiRil4 DR.

·.

.Medical costs could go
without federal mo~ey

up

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The head or the Ohio Hospltai
AJsoeiation says if $284 million in
fedetal money il not allocated for
poor Obioans needing hospital
" cue medical costs in the state

::s ....

aoun

•

'

va

POa

Cloudy tonlgbt. Low In 20s.
Tuesday, cloudy. Hlgb In mid·
30s.

Iraqis dazed and confused

iow '1,4.

•••t
GOOD

262134

a1

'

IDI LIICOLI 'I'OWI CAR
SIIIAftBI 1111114 DR.

«

Kicker:

•

20"ro25"

1- FORD·BROICO

~~~5

3292

Page4

.,,.. ,.~ llefludlo••l

:~15

Pick 4:

6-11-20-30-38-41

ranee

1112 FORD BIOICO Dr FULL 1111

~-

046
Super Lotto:

a

MEN'S SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS

Pick 3:

in title tilt

IC.

duction of agriculllllll commodi·
ties ~ products, -and there may not
be a curreut .burlcy I.OOec(:o·quota
on the ,-..m. ··
The deadl~ f&lt;l!' ne'Y farm Bur·
ley quota ..,.,ltcabons IS Tuesday,
transport.
February 16.
·
.
Steel roller bale chamber with
Tobacco ~ are mninded
spirally
positioned rollcrs provides
toretumthcirlllllketingcanlsonce
the
preciSC
compression and posithey finish sellin&amp; their tobacco.
tive
bale
rotation
nccdcd to form
. ASCS has a certifiC&amp;tion form that
the
dense
exterior/firm
center
needs to be completed whCn the
bales.
Standard
equipment
also
marketing cards are rcbll1led.
includes
a
hale
ramp
which
allows
For information on the burley
COMPUTE ROCI
IObacco'program oroducers should operator to dump bale without
backing~.
.
stop by the ASCS office in the C.
The Rollant 46 is available with
H. McKenzie Agriculblral Center
double
twine wrappingor Rollatcx
or call446-8686.
net wrapping or a combination of
the two. Double twine 'wrapping
requires about 20 seconds; net
wrapping about 10 seconds. Twine
wrapping provides 14,17, 19 or 22
offiCials.
wraps to adapt 'to hay, straw or
Business and government lead· silage: net has S wrapping settings.
ers worldwide know tlw private
economic growth is based upon a
•
sound transportation system, and
the ability to receive raw goods and
supplies on a timely basis, and efti.
ciently dislribl!tc productJ locally,
nationally and internatio11ally.
Qne of Governor George V.
Voincvich's top priorities upon
taldng offJCC in 1anuary._ 1991 was
the improvement of Ohio's !fiDSponation sy~~em ·making it easier,
sa(er and more ecooomicalto move
people and goods from one plilce to
aoother.
In November 1991, at Gov.
Voinovich' s requcsa, ODOT began
workln$ on Access Ohio, a comprehenSive plan 10 meet the Slate's
302 engine, power steering, power
short· and.fong-tmn transportation
needs.
.
brakes. automatic trans.. air cond .•
c
::~-=~
:-r~·.
'j•.
Access Ohio is not just another
AMIFM stereo cassette, ti• and cruise.
highway plan or transportation
power windows, and power locks. rear .
study, it is an action cloc:urnent that
defroster, tutone paint, XLT Pkg.,
· will establish clear priorities, and
power mirrors, captain chairs, rear Step
guide tral)sportation development
bumper, outside spare tire carrier, one
and operations for decad~s to
local owner, cast aluminum wheels, all
come. It is c.ustomer-driven and
terrain
tires, 2,400 miles. .
i-esults-oriented; ind is designed 10
meet the needs of the people and
businesses that usc our Slate's
transportation facilities and services.
.
Access Ohio will not provide a
specifiC list of projects 10 be under·
302 V8 engine, power steering, power
!&amp;ken or funded; bl!t instead, will
identify the future needs expected
brakes , automatic trans., air cond. ,
to be placed on Ohio's transporta·
AMIFM stereo cassette, tilt and cruise,
tion sysrem, and develop an orgatulone paint, sport wheel covers, new
nized plaJI to meet those necds.
The flrlt phase of Access Ohio,
alllerrain tires, one loCal owner, 48,000
the macro-plan, has identified the
miles, rear step bumper.
ma~or transportation corridors in
Oh1o, includins highways, rail' ways, airports, water ports and
transit systems. InformiiiOil for lhis
phase was compiled from a
detailed analysis of population,
traffic, economic actiYity. domcltic
and international trade, allribusi·
ness activity, and linkqes to ocher
engine, power steering, power
transportation ccn~er~.
·
The second phase of the Access
brakes, automatic trans., air cond .•
Oll,io, the micro-plan, starting in
AM/FM stereo ca~sette, till and
early 1993, wiD foe• on the specruise. rear defroster, all power cast
cific ways Ohi01111 Clll access the
previously identified major tnlnsaluminum wheels~ extra clean, local
ponation corridon.
car.
The data collected for Access
'WAS
Ohio has yielded a number inll:r·
$4,495
lOW
esting facts related 10 Ohio's current trlnSporlation network: ·
• Obio raqka second behind
Tcxas in the nuniber of bridges.
• Ohio hu t~e .fourth largest
interstare highway syltcm Md the
V8 engine, power steering, power
lOth largest highway network in
brakes. automatic lrans ., air
the nation.
conditioning,
AMIFM stereo cassette, ·
• Since 1978, nearly ono-third or
Ohio's rail infrastructUre has been
tilt and cruise, power windows and
abaildoned.
power locka, rear defroster, local car,
~ Ohio has 58 public tranSit sysleather int8rior.
temi, and ranks sixth natioilally in "
overall ridership.
Later thil month, the flflt phue
Accea Ohio will be IXIIIIplcccd,
and submitted to Governor
Voinovicb and the Ohio LegiJJa.
Brln&amp;ln your belt cleaiH-a New C;ar 01'
aad we
fure for acceptance.
wiD t17 to mill:_.
the DeaL
.. Public participldon bas becil an
important, intcl!l'll p111 in develop.,
A
D.UL ••
ing Access Ohio. From April
IIEE .JAC:S
or • •
through 1une or 1992, so publi~
Our Service Department is Open Mon.-Fri. 8·5; Sat. 8·12
meetinss were held statewide to
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-12
allow individuals and organization~
the opportunity to voice their needs.
and concern• about Ohio'• tranaponation fllllft.
I
,.
'
'

-• ODOT is planning .Ohio's future
COLUMBUS - While other
statc govcmmems are only t•IIring
about the future of their ttansporta~
tion systems, the Ohio Department

~'

to enough or it at one time. For always four. Acc:Clldinf)y. alliiCi·:'
instance, caffeine in coffee could ence should offer definite answen. i
"-·t a penon U this were the c:aac, then all r~ ·
be cons ... __ .. to
1'-'""&lt;~ x ' ""
and---· .__ --··u have to.·l
needs to drink 100 cups at one sit·
· - - ..,..... WVUlU
' to acqu~
· • )~'-·'
...._
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Granted, solne farm pesticides
Defining "lobbyist' could be a; •
and herbicides in concentrated touchy subjecL A Iobbyilt workJ' ,
forms II1;,C ·toxic. However. when with legiil•t~n to·promole or inftu~ '
used com:ctly,-they mnain on pro- ence particular Icsislation. Mlnf! tected food in parts per million and environmentalists aaact: agrieultur· .
billion - far below dangerous al and support indusuy groups aa:"
"big money• lobb'""'"·
exposure leYels.
,_
l.
How do some environmenialists
Yct. many environmental OIJI~
use this term? They say toxic: expo- nizations haYe million dollar bud· ;
sure means if a suh!tancc is harm· gets. They hire ~ to wort wi~ :
ful in any amount. ii is harmful in Congress to J!Cq~Dm ~h fund-: every amount, regardless of con- ing and legi•'•am beilefiting their. -~
ccntration or dose. ·
agendas. Is the pot calling the tel· ,
"Science:" Is it relative or abso- tie black7
''O!emophobia" is an intm:sting :
Jute? Bi!)logy deals .with environ- term. It -means fear of chemicall: ,
mental and food safety. but abso"
lute proof is impossible. Still, especially in the minds of con•
research supplies wealth of iilfor· somers. To some environmental ,
mation that helps government groups genenting fear means mak·
-'-~- stnc' t ··'ety ~·:....•:-. Case ing money while agricultUJe is left '
"'"""'
'""' a 10 dispel misinfonnalion.
·
in point - nations ad~pting .Qur
The conflict's Olltcome could be, •
food safety and environmental pro- de··-'-'-~ WJ'th ,.._ · ''"'--•- deft• •·
tection Standards see resideniS liv"""w""'
u"' UIUII"""'
ing longer, healthier lives.
nition of "c:onawner." The qneation' ,
Some environmentalists say sci- · is, how ate local farmen malrinp; t
ence is absolute. Ml!th is a branch sure "consumer" will mean, "a con-·-",o f science. and two- plus two is fiidcnt .
. - - - of today' s food?"- ·. •.

Semi-Annual

Ohio-Lottery

Dallas, ·
Buffalo

Truc•

c:oulci incnlue.

Lawmaken hope tho Clinton
administration wiD appro Yo the
, illocadon of the amount for the
1111e'1 indlaent care propam.
'Ibl OhiO Hospltll Care Assurance pogrMI llun't received lilly
fodeni!IICIIIIy Iince Oc~.
Ohio boapltall eatlma~ they
i*O~ more than $610 mil6on in
JIIICOIII~ care each year:
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Wiihout the' federal money.,
more of the losses will be passed
on to paying paticnjj 8nd insurance
compan1es.
'."I.be care may be 'l!ee' to the
1
rec1p1ent of care, but m the end
someone else pars for it," said
,James Castle, president of the hos·
piral association.
. A l.e tter sent Friday b_y U.S.
Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Oh10, and
signed also by Ohio's other con·
gressmen !ells President-elect COn·
ton that "time Is running out for
the 1'.2 millio'n uninsured who
receive last-resort health care In
Ohio's hospitals.''
"

Albany man ·
cited in crash
· A 41-year-old Albany man was
cited on charges of driving under
the iilflucnce arid failure 10 conttol
followlnl a one-car crash on Ohio
681 in Scipio Township Sunday
around 2 a.m.
Jerry L , S10bart, 37847 Vance
Rd., was eastbound on O.hlo 681
when be loat conb'OI or his 1987
Chevrolet Chcvcttc in a curve, the
Galtia-Melgs Post of the State
Higbwaf Patrol reported. The car
went off the right side of the road
and struck an embJn)tment, sus.·
taining light clamaae.
No i11Juricis were reponed.
Stollart was allo cited by the
patrol 011 a charge of failure to·
wear a safety belt.

COVERT LANE UNJ)IR cor~S'l'IRUC
TION • Conrt Laae, aamed
the faa11ly
·wlJleb operated a bakery In Middleport for
man)' years, II uDder c:outnac:tlo• Ia the aew
BelaJ R011 houlq tl!ldiYislon lu MlddleporL
· Tbe lane goa rro. Palmer to WUtlams. Street.
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Six or tile el!:~- 1a tilt nbdl¥idoa are
almOIIt comp
a.. work oa the rema11111 ,
two Is aovlila ript. -... 0ac:e tile sldewalb
Ire Ia Middleport Vlllqe~plaDs to open ap II\'•

eral or tbe boan• ror pallllC vlewlat·

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Monday, January 1B, 1993

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Commentary

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P...,e 2-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
January 18, 1993

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OHIO Weather

DEVOTED TO THE IN'J11JltE81'8.0J' TU IIEJG8-IIIASON AiutA

ROBERT L. WINGnT
Publisher
CHARLENE IIOEFLICH
General Man~~ger

LETfERS OF OPINION ire welcome. '!bey should be less than 300
words. All !etten are subje&lt;t to editing and must be signed with name,
addn:ss and telephone number. No unsigned !ellen will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Changing circumstances that
may change Clinton's agenda

WASHINGTON - Most small
banks are more diligent before doling out $6,000 car loans than the
Resolution Trust Corp. was in
allowing a convicted criminal to
handle up to $6 million in seized
government money. .~
The case involving Ferman E.
Gilben Jr. iiiWIIniii:S why the Gen·
era! Accounting Office recently
listed the RTC as one of 17 fedtlal
agencies '81 "high risk" for waste,
fraud and abuse.
The 38-year-old Gilbert was
hired last year from a temporary
rmn by tbe Kansas City accounting
rmn of Troupe, Kehoe, Whitealcer
and Kent- one of 95.000 private
contractors who have received
some $2.8 billion in fees from the
RTC to assist in the S&amp;L cleanup.
Gilbert's · jl,lb desctipuon
involved shredding up to $6 million wonh of American Express
money orders sto~ in the failed
Chicago Federal Republic Savings
Bank, which was seized by the
government last November.
But many of the money orders
never got shredded. The FBI
alleges that Gilbert stole and dis-

By WALTER R. MEARS·
AP Special CorrespondeD!
·
WASHINGTON - Bill Ointon is coming to power with a mandate
for change- and an agenda altered by changes not of his making. ·
In 77 days as the president in waiting, Clinton has seen, and supported.
the use of U.S. forces on two foreign fronts. ~the same time, the economy that was his chief campaign cause seemed to be mending, while the
deficits that will burden his new administration only worsened.
. No modem president-elect had dealt with operations abroad and
changes at home that so ,altered the s!blad.on between the day of his el~­
tion and the hour of h1s ·maugurauo,n, at noon on Wednesday. He s
already modified some campaign positions in response. ·
"The American people would think I was foolish if I did not respond ·
to c~aiJ!~ circumstances," Clinton said Thlllliday. "It would be irresponSible.'
.
.
As he prepared for his journey from Little Rock to the White House,
Clinton said more than 60 percent of the American people voted for
change, and he intends to deliver il
·
.
Tbe president-elect_said changing circumstances and missions abroad
will not distract him from the urgency of dealing with the home front
problems ihat were his central issues, and that he'd always known world
events would derqand his time and attention, too.
"The point I always made was, you can't expect America to lead the
world if we're weak at home," he said. "On the other hand, if we with·
draw from the world, we'll )le weakened economicillly and socially.''
He said he will have clear policies to deal with Iraq, Somalia, Bosnia,
Haiti, trade agreements and other foreign policy concerns lest "these
things ... flare up and consume all of our time because we haven't tri¢ to
manage them."
·
Still, the flareups so far, particularly the two foreign military operations President Bush ordered during his last weeks, are going to require a
broaden!n$ of the laser-lilce focus Ointon had said he meant to devote to
econom1c wues.
Tbe burst of action came at the parting of a president who often had
been passive in a campaign year when domestic concerns were paramount
to boih governing and politics. In December, he onlaed U.S. intervention
to get food to the starting in Somalia and on Wednesday, one week before
yielding office, the air raids to punish Iraq fer breaching United Nations
'
sanctions.
·
It will be left 10 the Clinton administration to decide how and when to
eod both operations. Bush has ordered more than 1,000 U.S. troOps into
Kuwait to deter Iraqi incursions across the diSPuted boundary.
The inaugural address is tbe
Clinton was consulted on both ojlerations and backed botll, saying he
stage-setter
for the presidency, The
might order funher action against Iraq if necessary. The White House
people
learn
what the new or newly
m* a point of noting that the decisions were Bush's alone.
re-elected
president
believes is
As a practical matter, supporting the two Qperations was the only
important.
We
may
be
instructed
chOice open to the incoming Democratic presidenL He'd said from the
that
"the
only
thing
we
have 10
starl that the nation had only one president with foreign policy "solely in
his hands" and that no one should doubt U.S. resolve during the transi- fear is fear itself," as Franklin
Roosevelt said. We may be called
tion.
•
In Somalia, the enemy was chaos and starvation; in Iraq, it was Sad· upon to ask what we can do for our
country, as Jack Kennedy demand·
dam Hussein; demurring on either front wasn't a real option. Both mission' had bipartisan backing, and the only question left would have been ed. Or we may be fed self-glorift
ing tributes to the nation s
timing, which wasn't up to Clinton.
It will be next time, when the mission .could involve the use of U.S. grandeur. Ronald Reagan's "shinwarplanes to ,enforce the no-fly zone against Serbian flights over Bosnia, ing city on the hill" is the most
recent example of an old genre.
a step Ointon favors.
Whatever
the theme, it is usually a
There have, of course, been prior transitions with American forces in
more
accurate
predictor of future
action overseas, in the Korean War in 1953, and in Vietoam in 1969. In
behavior
tlian
anrtJling
said during
1981, the Iran hostage crisis loomed over the presidential transition; it
the
campaign
or
m
the
party's
platended as Ronald Reagan was inaugurated, with the hostages freed on
fonn.
terms negotiated for Jimmy Carter.
. That'S why Bill Clinton's .
Clinton began the transition concentrating on the economic issues that
were key to his election. His major public undertalcing was a two-day eco- address has been so eagerly awaitnomic conference in Little Rock. Even then, the situation was changing, ed. If this is going to be a ·"pagethe economy improving, and he wu concerned that might ease the pres- turning'' administration, one that
breaks sharply with the past and
sure for action on the program he advocated.
So as the economic indicators turned upward, Clinton said it was too honestly tackles the complex mix
soon to judge that real recovery was under way or that everything was of problems that confront us at .
home "and abroad, the president's
hunlcy dory.
:t'Jie deficit certainly wasn't; two weeks before the inauguration, the flfSt speech will provide the clues.
Watchlng the events' of the past
Bush aclministtlltion issued sharply increased projections for deficits over
four weeks, it has slowly dawned
1M next five years.
'
:Clinton said that prospect was forcing him to reconsider pm,s of his · on me that what is needed is not so
pll\0. including the promise of a LaX cut f?r the middle class. His timetable much a laundry list of proposals as
one unadorned pledge. This is the
~y had been rewntten; the. economiC package that was gomg to be
time for the president of the United
ready on the flfSt day of his presidency wi)l come several weeks later.
:He said his program will be ready faster than Reagan's was when the States to stand before the people
ancl say, flatly and unequivocably,
Republican_s took over 12 years ago. "The last time there was this kil1d of "The facts, ma'am. Just the facts."
ctwtge of party and philosophy was in the 1980 election, and he didn't • • As America's flfSt chief execugi~e a State of the Union address until mid-MarCh," Clinton said. "I
tive. raised in the television era,
thil)k we'll be ready before then."
Clinton would not have to explain
- '
his allusion. An~one under 45 has
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics for more tban 30 years.

MICH•.

mjuries following a high-speed

bar convicted felons and those who
conUibuted to the decline of the
On that nigbt, Gilbert, wbo thrift industry from participatin$ in
police charged wu driving drunk the clean!!f• Gilbert escaped nouce.
with a suspended license, nearly
Gilbert s employers apparently
sideswipe'! a sherifrs department took his self-certification fonn at
cruiJer m La Porte County, Ind. A face value. A spokesman for
wild cbue ensued It speeds top- Troupe, Kehoe mused to comment
on whether they looked into
ping 100 mph, which ended when
Gilbert's ra~tal car bit an embank- Gilbert's criminal past, referring
ment, Oipped three times in midair,
our questions to the RTC.
·
then struck the ground and rolled
"We can only assume that they
are telllng the truth (on their selfover. .
certification fonns)," RTC
Over
tbe
next
three
years,
arrested Dec, 30, 1992, after 20 ·o f
spokeswoman
Felicia Neuringer
the stolen money orderS surfaced in Chicago police records show that
told our associate Dean Boyd.
banks in California and Louisiana. he was arrested several more times
Thousands of bank instruments are on charges ranging from aggravat- Refusing comment on ~ing
that
still unaccounted for and the RTC ed asswdt, resisting mest and four Gilbert case, Neuringer
"If we had to do security checks
could lose up to $6 million.
different counts of battery.
on every emp)oyee of every conA cursory chetk of Gilbert Between 1988 and 1991, Gilbert
tractor and subcontractor, we
might have gone ttlonl way in pre- was arrested an additional four
venting the theft.
·
would never get any contracts
tiJnes on Y&amp;rious theft charges and
According to Chicago police disot:dcrly conduct He was con- . awanled."
In the past year, the RTC has
records, Gilbert was arrested in victed and served time for It least
susprndcd or barred some' SO indi1980 for canyin' an IWCgistewl sane of these charges.
viduals or ·
· from partici·
gun. The followtn$ year, be was
For the RTC, which bas frepaling. in ~tje~leanup effon
arrested in possession of a stolen quently come undec fire for. laxity
vehicle. In 1984, he was again in conducting background checks
fer vanous reasons.
A recent report by the GAO
arrested for aaravaJed
and on contracton, the Gilben case
battery. In 1985 he was hospilal- may set a new bcnclunldt for over·
painted a gloOmy pict= of the sit·
!zed .in Chicago with serious sightl&amp;llses. Although RTC laws
uation at RTC: "We have identified weaknesses (in the private
contracting system) that have
added millions of dollars to the cost
of the government's cleanup
efflXIS. but we have no way of esnmating the extent that ~ses may
beocc • ." .
AS= AT THE WIJEEL It might be consiilen!d the "sleepe," issne of the Bush administtlltion: National Security Adviser
Brent Scowcroft had a hard time
staying awake during meetings.
"It didn't ·malter what was
being discussed," one senior White
House source told us. "We could
have been discussing the commencement of World War III and
Brent would be fallin~ off to sleep.
He never fell out of his chair but he
came close a couple of times."
Bush created what he called the
Annual Bret1t Scoweroft Sleeping
Award. It went to the official
caught in the most com~ising
=~~se by Wh1te House
tributed an Wldiscloaed number of
money Olden to individuals ICIOIIS
the country. Gilbert and.another
R TC contract employee were

chase with police.

IND.

By Jack Anderson
and

Michael Binstein

.

Hodding Carter Ill
House after 12 years of baloney
about the economy, Bill Clinton
would be no less free of the need to
explain. We've been fed the pap.
Now is the time for the facts.
It is our era's categorical imper. alive, Tbe malaise that sickens the
republic is not so mucb economic
as it is moral. We do not trust our
leaders and elec!Cd 1epn:sentatives.
Having been repeatedly hoodwinked, misled, patronized and
manipulated by those in whom we
have placed our trust, we have lost
faith in the common enterprise.
Restoration of that faith is the necessary antecedent to effective gov-·
ernance . . The truth, plain and
unvarnished, is the restorative.
Our government has to stop
cooking the books. The information upon whlch the people depend
to construct their theories and
select options shOuld no longer be
distorted or suppressed.
What that R1C111S specifically is
that economic dats and projecuons
must not be withheld or jimmi~
simply because they contradict pet
nostrums or call inlll question proposals that were advanced as painfree panaceas. It R1C111S
revelation of test.esuits
field analysis of high-tech weaponry and bil-

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at Hen#o·".

AR.E 't'OlJ A.
f'AiRIOT?
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outJide the fence; with their noaes
pressed against it They wanted to
come in and hear the music. One
little boy did climb over, and a
guard lhn:w him right back.
"I said, 'What are they doing
that for'!' And some oiJ'K:tal said,
'Well, this is for the aelect IJIIOIIie.'
And I said, 'Select people! We're
not over here for select people.
we·~ over m Ill show these people that all kinds of people are
Americans.' I had a woman in the
bancf and almost as many wblres as
·
I had blacb.lt was aU mixed.

.. "Music is so vast," Dizzy
l\.1
Gillespie told me one afternoon,
1'11
'' 'JJ .
"that no one ean get more than a
small piece of it. There's always so from the 18-year-old Miles Davis
much more."
to Wynton Marsalis now. "If you
When Dizzy died on JNI. 6, the really want to know how to
extent of that loss was indicated by swing,'' he told Marsalis, "don't
its having been reported on aU the
b d
·
b
major television and radio net- ~:~...yoqr 0 Y agamst 1 e
works and on the front pages of
Dizzy was· a composer, an
many newspapers, here and abroad. ananger, an exultant big bind-leadClearly, Dizzy had made more than er, and he bnJadened and deepe11ed
a small piece of the vastness of ctheattn.jan pu1ae bbringina in lns.lllxi·
music his owli. -.
'
Alro-Cuban polymydun
The obitum;ies concentrlted 00
the obiw.::. did not aufhow he - ·with Charlie Palter ficiently mention, however, was the
so changed th~ harmonies and innare, IUishalcable docency of the
"The ambassador came up to
~ythms of jazz that all the players man. He told me once wblt hap- me and said, 'They're wajting for
Since owe them an enormous debt. pened durina a trip he made wlib you for the jam session. Are you
. to~·
Yet Dizzy refused to call bebop a hil b1J bind to t1te Middle e. for
revolutiOn. "It was Nl evolution," . the State Dc)llfllllent. ID A1lkara. ~No, I m not· going to play.
he insisted. After all, he Wll deeply Turby, the U.S. ambanado- had What we're htft for iJ to aet close
. imm~ in the bltlel, amonc other planaed a lawn perty for lOCIII dig· to thole people who are OUISide the
the ~lions of the music.
nitarles and imponant Americana fence.
. · ·•·i'be ambanador finally
Diny was a trumpet player who in the city.
extended the rang~ of the ~ and
Tbe climax was 10 be a jam lea- (ordenld) aU of those urchins in.''
the. sub.tletles of 115 phmsmg and · 'sion conduc,led,· or course, by Dizzy 1111iled. "Tbe next inornil!g
hannorues. For more than SO yean,. Dizzy. •'Then! was a fence IIIIUlld it was in the headlinea.''
Dizzy httd extraordinary presmoreover, he had .been a generous the lawn," Dizzy remembered,
ence,
and not only on the bandteacher to. young. musicians "and I noticed 1 lot of streetlcidl

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srand. When he entered a ronm, he
filled it. Alon$ with his wit and
incisive intelhgence, he had an
· inner~renity, a strength that
comes r~ what some pacifists
.
Cll1 · · - force. I I
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Several years ago, I went to a . !
rehearsal of an all-star big band, ·
with Dizzy as 1~. that was to be l
the fOcal pail of a tribute to him at . • 1
New Yart's Lincoln Center.
:
When I ~e into the ronm, I ·• •
. didn't.see Dizzy, but I heard no :
music. either. A nasty 8I'JUIIICIII was ·; :
goias on between dhtmmer Max . :
Roach and baritone saxophonist 1
Gerry Mulligan. Both had compo- ·: l
sitiona on the proaram and the . j
argument was over who was to , ,
have more piecea than the other.- · :
Tbea it becanie peliOIIIl, stingiilgly
'
penotlll. Tbe ICSl of the musli:iaDs,
:
all of them c = n l , either -· :
watched in em
silence or ·:· !
looted away in acute dlacomfon. · 1
And tbe tei!Sion ltept climbing~
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Woman charged in cemetery
embezzlement arraigned

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am•- Hospital news

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Lottery numbers

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Two deer vehicle
accidents reported

Hospital news

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spokesman said.
The water from three overflowing rivers submerged helicopters,
swept vehicles and trailer-offices
•
downstream, knocked out a road
and forced the evacuation of 160 . '
base residents, said Master Sgt. .
John Farrell.
"At one point, you look out for ·
seven miles and it's all flooded," · •
he said.
•'
FlOod damage in San Diego was
estimated at about $10 million to
private property and $5 million to
roads and other public property,

Couple worried about
anti-termite chemicals

Rutland man
Middleport pollee

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Nat Hentorr Ia a •radl~ated
writer for Newapaper J;nterptile
A~lloa.
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exception of sout11 Florida.
Temperatures today were fore-·_
off by tonight, wtth clear sktes . cast in the teens and single digits ln
forecast for the rest of the week: the northern Plains, upper Great
Rain also was expected to continue Lakes and nonhern New England,
in the 20s and 30s across most of
in hard-hit Arizona.
More snow was expected in the the rest of the northern half of the
mountains of Califonua and Neva- nation, in the 40s and SOs along the
da and in the southern Ra&lt;:kies.
Pacific Coast and most of the
Snow squalls remained over Southeast. in the 60s in the Southportions of the lower Great Lakes.
·west and along the Gulf Coast and'
Extremely cold winds moving in the 70s in south Florida. .
into the Northeast were expected 10
High temperature for the nation
keep temperatures below freezing.
Sundar. was 79 degrees at
Light rain was expected to creep Kingsvi,Jle, Texas.
across the Southeast today, with the

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at 5:34 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at
7:49a.m.
Around the nation
Nearly \WO weeks of heavy rains
were coming to an end in Southern
California, while a surge of Arctic
air pushed today into the Northeast
Winrer weather advisories were
up today in the sou.th-cenual Plains
states, where a mix of snow, sleet
and rain made travel hazardous.
Cold, dry air covered the Iipper
Plains, Midwest aild Ohio Valley.
In California, swamped under

LOS ANGELES (AP) - After
nearly two ·weeks of relentless rain
Southern California looked ahead
to a respite today from the deluge
blamed for at least six de.aths and
millions of dollars in )Jtoperty dam- .
age.
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Record amOUilts of l)linfatl have
been reported across the Southwest
this winter, bringing relief to those
still suffering from the drought but
tragedy to others.
The latest in a string of powerful
storms was expected to move
through Southern California by
tonight, with clejlr skies forecast
for the rest of the week.
But flood watches remained in
effect through today in Arizona,
where storms have damaged at
least 850 homes.
Continued rain through Tuesday
was expected to r:aise the Salt River

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No word on whether Bill Oin- 1
ton will continue the ttadition.
Jack Alldenoa IDd Mlc:bael B · '
instein are writers for United
Feature SyHitate,lilc.
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lion-dollar social experiments. h ·· up to the plate and come clean.
means full disclosure of the results
A Government Accounting
when studies of the efficiency and Office sbtdy of the various Cabinet
purpoSe of government agencies · departnlents has detailed wasre and
are complc:ted.
gross inefficiency in each one.
Just a cunory loot at the he!Jd- Denial has been the usual response,
lines illustrates that even such a though no one in Washington
low tlueshold has been too high for doubts the truth of any of the
many politicians and offiCeholders detailed aUegalions.
to surmount. Last August, Mr.
Return to the first illusttlltion. It
Bush and Mr. Clinton both knew is always painful to have to admit
more about the worsening deficit ·· you are wrong. But this country
crisis than theY, let on, wbicb means consciously rejected a form of govthat much of ihe debale about ceo- ernment .in which the leader claims
nomic remedies during the cam- divine inspiration or derivation. We
paign was·a farce. Since it would elect mortal men in a system
have been equally eml&amp;rassing to devised to hold them to account
both their campaigns td have to and provide a remedy short of revadjust tlieir pllllllises to ~te oluuon when they go wrong. It
the real federal budget defiett fig- depend$. however, on an informed
ures, they suppressed reality in a public, ad even more basically, it
joint conspiracy against the Ameri- depends on a public that trusts its
can people that would be more governors. Trust is impossible if
shoclcing if it were not so utterly the preconditi!]ll for trust.- conficonventional. It has been so long denc:e in the veracity of public offisince politicians of either, party cials- is missing.
.
came clean about the budget that
So when Bill Clinton makes his
few of us can remember the last · addl'ess, the second paragraph
occasion -literally.
should go something lilce this: • A
Tbe Pentagon has Jcnow.i\. for few mon1hs ago, I promised you a
months that the Patriot missile was rose gar'den. I apologiZe. I know,
not anything like the wonder and you should know also, that it
weapon its first aa:ounts seemed tO doesn't exist." Tbe cheering might
indicate
dng the Gulf War. Fol- not stop for a month.
.
.
low-up studies inside and outside
Hoildlnc Carter III, former
' the Defense Depa!Jment concluded State Department spokesman
that its !till ratio against Iraq's and award-winning reporter, ecllrather primitive Scuds was well tor and publisher, is president of
undec SO pen:ent, rather than above MalnStreet, a Washington, o:c.•
90 percent as we were initially led based television production comto believe. But neither the civilian pany and a syndicated wrl.,r for
nor military biass has yet stepped NEA.

while the record low was 8 below · record rainfall, showers-and thun-

. . .____ _.....;.__.Area deaths-----........-------.....-

·
·-·

.•.

,•

Six dead or missing from California storm

------Weather----;

.•• .
...
..

zero in 1977. Sunset tonight will be derstorms were ex~ted · to taper -

through Phoenix to a level 10 perNot counting those two, the
cent higher than in February 1980,
death toH there from the rains stood
at25.
when four people died in statewide
W. VA.
flooding.
The stonns have drenched the
Water flow over the Coolidge
once-drought plagued region. Los
Angeles' rain total this month is at
Dam was expected to ..Peale this
15.61 inches, already more.than the
afternoon at a level five umes high.A
er than the previous record, set in average 14.77 inches for the entire
, Glllllllll
1983.
July-to-June season.
'
Some 20 miles below the dam
Some of the most extensive
~Sh~o~II'SO~os~T-~··~IOI;.J;"";;•~R,;,;lllill;..~=~=;_•l::;ce:,_.,;S;;,:unn;:::;:r~Pt~C~Ioi=Jtly~C;;:foudy:=,
.
along the Gila River, more than 50 flooding was found at Camp
Vi• Autx:ioJed ,._ GrllpNWier
C11183 Accv--thor, Inc.
homes atready have water up to the Pendleton Marine Corps Base near
roofline, leaving about 200 poople
San Diego, where water as deep as
homeless.
15 feet covered hundreds of acres,
Arizona officials Sunday esti- including an airfield, a base
mated the storm damage so far at
Wednesday through Friday:
South-Central Ohio
$56
million statewide.
Wednes~y, fair. Lows in the
Tonight, variable clo~diness. A
Early momirig•tomado watches
slight chance of flurries. Low near 20s. Highs in the 30s. Thursday, a
were posted today from Los Ange20. Chance 'of snow 30 percent. chance of rain or snow. Lows in
les 10 the Mexican border. Two
Tuesday, panly cloudy. High· in the up~ 20s to mid-30s. Highs 35-45.
twisters were reported Sunday, in ..
Friday, a chance of rain. Lows in
mid-30s.
Lake Forest, calif., and Scousdale,
the 30s. Highs 35-45.
Extended forec~t:
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - A
Ariz., uprooting trees and damagfamily is convinced that chemicals
ing roofs. One woman was reported
protecting their home against terinjured in California.
mites made them sick and repdered
Near Temecula, Calif., three
the house unsafe, even though a
adults and two children apparently
Thurman N. Brmnfield ~iclcel is preceded in deat!J by one Harold W. Rickard Jr.
has rejected their claims.
court
Thurman N. Brumfield, 69, mfant son, Paul Douglas GrossH ld W R' k d J 54 f drowned Saturday night trying to
Jim
and Rhonda Conde told the
nickel, and one sister, Mabel Crid- . aro
. IC ar r., , o
cross a washed-out section of road.
Scottown, died Friday, Jan. 15 •
West Columbia, W.Va., died Fri- Nearby, another man was found
Day10n Daily News in a story pub1992, at the V.A. Medical Center · er. Services will be Wednesday 811 day, Jan. 15, 1993, at St. Mary's dead on a mud embanlcrnent, also
lished Sunday that they fear they'll
in Huntington, W.Va.
p.m. at the Joppa United Methodist Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
develop cancer because of chemiapparently drowned.
Born March 3, 1923, in Bar· Church in Reedsville. Burial will
A coal miner and construction
cals used in their former residence
In Tijuana, Mexico, a mother
boursville, W.Va., he was the son be in Eden Cemetery.
worker, he was a member of · and her .son leaped off a railroad
in Pomeroy.
of the laiC Frank and Almeda Janey
Friends may call at the White Laborers Union Local 543 in Hunt- bridge over the Tijuana River to
The Condes and their three chil·
Bromfield. He was an Army veter· · Funeral Home in Coolville on ington and was a U.S. Air .Force avoid an oncoming train Sun!lay,
dren
moved into the house In 1983.
an of World War II, a member of Tuesday from 24 p.m. and 7 _9 veteran.
and were swept down the swollen
Amvets post 141 and the Symmes p.m.
.
Born Juiy 18, 1938, in Middle- river, Mexican authorities .said .
It was treated with Gold Crest ·
Valley &gt;Veterans of"Fi&gt;reign Wars
port. he was the son of the late Their fate was unknown.
C I 00, a compot~nd of the chemicats
chlordane and heptachlor.
posl2~~ electrician fw; the Ford Perry F. HotTman .
= d and Margaret Williams
Fanlily members suffered a variM
C
· c· · · he
Perry F. Hoffman, 71 •. Middleety of medical problems, including
otor ompanf 1n mcmnau,
pon, died Sundav, Jan. l7, 1993 at
Survivors include: his wife,
&lt;
•
Joyve v. Russell Riclcard,·a dau.ghlived most of his life in the U:cta
vomiting, nausea, · diarrhea,
'· Cha 1 Veterans Meniorial Hospll#l.
th
0
ded
and
headaches, dizziness, tremors,
area
atten
e ..ey
pe
Born ln Middleport on Sept. 10, ter, Nicole L. Rickard of West
Two deer/vehicle accidents have night sweats and rashes, the ConChurch.
h' ., N I 1921, he was a son of the late Columbia; a grandson, Christopher
is survived
ff L. Divers of West Columbt'a·, a
reported by the Meigs County des said.
. He
Stum
bo Brum~1eldts• wtoe,
d threee• William
H. and sh'
Pearl· Putney
Ho'th
• stepson, Jamie M. Vaughan of been
I1e
an
He
le...
Sheriff's
Department
The-Condes, who moved to
J
f p 1 ·u man.
was a 1ppmg c , .. w1
'ld
The first accident occurred nearby Spring Valley. last year, said
c hI ren, ames o rpc orvt e, the former Holsum and Flowers Letart, W.Va.; a stepdaughter,
Sharon of Ironton and Dale of
C
H
US Leigh Ann Vaughan of West Thursday morning at 5:30 a.m. on they suspected their illnesses were
· and three grandchildre
Baking ompany. e was a ..
Xema
n.
Army Veteran of World War II and Columbia and a stepmother, Route 124 approximately two and linked to chlordane· and asked the
Also Slll¥iving are two brothers,
Mar · A R' Icard' 0 f N Ha
one,half miles west of Route 7. A manufacturer, Velsicol Chemical
e;:
William of St. Cloud, Fla., and ~f~~~lf~ ~choo~.grad~te _. .w.~\. ,~ ~
.
ve~,
r~pott from .the depanme~ st.~ite!t .
1
Johnn~
· Of Springfield, and two·~,
Mr. Hoffman is survived by
. Also survlvm.g are two bro.thers, S1dney Hayman, Rutland, was eastters,
Brunson of Rome and three sons and daughters-in-law Ro bert L·. R tc kar d o f ct1f ton, hound in his 1987 Chevro~l trUCk
cited
Virgie al
ibsonofBarboUrsville.
•
•
He .was preceded in ·death by Kenneth and Noreen Hoffman:-· W.Va., and Danny E. of New and struck a deer that ran mto the
vehicle's
path.
Moderate
damage
by
five brothers and two sisters.
C~ambersburg, Pa., .Fr~nlc and Haven, along with several nieces
was listed to the pickup.
Ser~ices will be held I p:m. , Cm~d Ho~m~n. ~h;rue,Jn,d
ands~~~~;:·will
be held 1 p.m.
The sec6nd accident occ11rred
Michael Joseph Eblin, 18,. of
Tuesday at the Okey Chapel Ron · an Tma 0 man, e - Tuesday at the Foglesong Funeral Friday afternoon at 3:29 p.m. on · Rutland was cited for {ailure"to
ChWth with l!ie Rev. AmOs Wilson ~onville; two daugh~ and sonsofficiating. Burial will follow at the m-law, Debra and. '!lK:k Hatfield, Home in Mason with the Rev. County Road ·1 just north of the maintain assured clear distance folMine Two Road. According to the lowing an accident on South Third
Okey Chapel Church Cemetery.
Pomeroy, and .~tnciB and Eugene George Hoschar officiating. Burial report,
Richard G. Kinnear, Stew- Ave., Middleport, Saturday about
Friends may call at the church ~unter, Ches~. a daughter, Fran- will follow in the Union Cemetery.
art, was southbound and struck a 10 p.m.
one hour befQre services. Military ciS Hoffman, Middleport;~ brother, Jonnie Smith
deer that ran from the right into the
Middlepon police repOned that
graveside services will be conduct- Fred Hof!inan. Middleport, a SIS~,
Jennie Odell Smith, 62, Middle- path of his 1988 Dodge pickup. Eblin struck the rear of a car driven
ed by vFw post 2761.
rr=.B~n~':ff&gt;'nian~~~ pon, died Sunday, Jan. 17, 1993, at Light damage was listed to hiS by Thomas E. Wilson, Jr., 17, Mjd·
dleport, as he traveled south on
Herman Grossnickel
port, Vicki Carter, Pom~roy, and Holzer Medical Center, following truck.
·
Christa Moody, Cheshire; a grand· an extended illness.
·
South Third. There was light damage to the resr of the Wilson vehiHerman Grossnickel, 74, son who resided with him, Brian
He was borll in Revello, Ky. on
cle and no damage to the Eblin
Reedsville, died Monday, Jan. 18, Hoffman, Middleport; 11 other Feb. 8, 1930, a son of the late
1993 at Camden Clark Memorial grandChildren; Nld several nieces Emnan·O. and Maggie E. Hamilton HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER truck.
HoSPital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
and nephews.
·
Smith. He was boilennalcer with
Born in Celina. he was a son of
Besides his parents he was pre· Local 105, Chillicothe. He was a
Discharges, Jan. 15 - Robert Meigs announcements
the late George and Effie Scherer ceded in death by a brother.
member of the Beaver Dam No . Harris, Mrs. Walter Peterson and
Grossniclcel. He retired after 16·
Services will be Thursday at Jl 144 of the Royal Arch Masons, the son, Shandalia Meadows, Joshua
OrpDizatlonil meeting
years of service with the Meigs a.m: at Fisher Funeral Home in · Beaver Dam Lodge 420 F&amp;AM, Clutters, Mrs. Thomas Masters and
The Bedford Township Trustees
County State Highway DeJ18ibuent. Middleport with Pastor Lawrence and the Scottish Rite of Detroit, daughter, Shawn Weikle, Amanda will hold their orgariizational meet·
He was a· member of the Joppa Foreman officiating. Burial will be Mi: He was a -veteran of the armed Beers and KeUi Boggs.
.
ing Tuesday at 7 p.m. at town hall.
United Methodist Church.
in Riverview Cemetery.
forces.
· Discharges, Jan. 16 -Camille
Meeting slated
Mr. Grossnickle is survived by
Friends may call at the funeral
He is survived by his wife, Bon- Brown, Samantha Pratt, Millard
Tbere will be a meeting fer parhis wife, Margaret Harris Gross- home on Wednesday from 2-4 and . nie Fonh Smith.' Middleport; a son Oiler, Leona Sauters, Vernia Bark- enrs and students of the junior class
nickel; a son and daughter-in-law, . 1·9 p.m.
.
and daughter-in-law, Dale and man, Margaret Dickens, Anna at Eastern High School on ThursMBJ'k and Darlene Grossnicket;
Memorial contributions may )ie Carol M.- Smith, New Haven; a McFarland, Jarold Kuhn, Bumeda day at 8:30p.m. in the cafeteria.
Reedsville; a son, Raben Gross- made to tile Meigs County Chapter daughter and son-in-law, Carol Ziegler, Linda Aldridge, Willard
MCCL to meet
nickel, Reedsville; one daughter, of the American Heart Association. Ann aod Ryan Mahr, Middleport; Hines, Eldrec Coffey, Chad ShamThe Middleport Child Conserthree grandchildren, Joyce, Melissa blin, Charles Greene, Frances Cam- vation League will meet Thursday
Patricia Grossniclcel, Reedsville;
one brother, Wilbur Grossnickel of Irene J. Phillips
and David Ray Smith, all of New den, Ted Craft, Wilma Strickler, at 7 p.m. at the Roclc Springs Unit- .
Celina; three grandchildren, Oltis·
Irene J. Phillips, 79, Pomeroy, Haven; two siste.r s, Chamelia Donna Rose, Elaine McClelland, ed Methodist Church. · Gerald
tine, Dustin and Adam Grossnickel, died Sundar. Jan. 17, 1993 at the Baker, Cincinnati, and Betty Jo Alv Canterbury, Keith Dillinger, Rought, Pomeroy Chief of Police,
Reedsville; several nieces and Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Claus, Pine Knot, Ky.; three sisters Mrs. Douglas Eblin and son, Ada will spcalc on "Morals of Children
nephews.
Born on May 19, 19 13 in Mari- and brothers-in-law, Marie and Henry, Lorena Aclcerinan and and Teenagers."
Besides his parents, Mr. Gross- on County, she was the daughter of Marshall Chaney, Indianapoli~ • Alice Moore.
·
Post 601 to meet
the late Charles Balcer and Vema Ind., Shirley and Joe Winchester, - · Discharges, Jan. 17- Kerri
Racine American Legion Post
Bilger B~. She was a homern&amp;k- Batavia, and Shellia and Jim Osren- Crooic, Carolyn Smith, Carty Perer- 602 will meet Thursday at 7:30
The Daily "Sentinel
' er.
,
dorf, Pine Knot, Ky.; two brothers, son, Mary Niday and Mrs. Carl p.m. at the post home in Racine.
(ti8P8 Jli-IIOl
She is survived ,by her husband, Jimmy and Ronald Smith, both of Stewll(l and daughter.
Dems to meet
Pubtilheol OYftY al1emoon, MondaY
D
L Ph'll'
p
Pine Knot, Ky.; three brothers and
Birth,
Jan.
15Mr.
and
Mrs.
The
Democratic
Executive
1
tl!...,h Fri~ Ill court SL, p...,."'l',
ayton ·
Ips, omeroy; a sisters-in-law, Clarence and BerCarl
Stewart.
daughter,
GaUipolis.
Committee
will
meet
Thursday
at
Ohlo b)' t11o Ohio Vatto, 1'11blllhl,.
daughter and son-in-law, Joyce and nic~ Smith, Beaver Dam, Charles
Births, Jan. 16- Mr. and Mrs. 7:30p.m. at the Carpenters Hall in com-"yiMW&amp;tmedia tao., Pom,.r.,, • Bob Grimm Columbus· a son and
Ohio7678111 I'll. W2-2t56. Second eta'. ·
·
•
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and Carolyn Smith and William
poatappataall'I&gt;NI'O)',Ohlo.
daughter-in-law, BarrieR. and and Lois Smith, all of Pine -Knot, Jeffrey Royster, daughter, Well- Pomeroy.
.
Services 8el
.·
,
·Carol Phillips, Endicott, N. Y.; a K
d
I ·
d ·ston, and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin SarMember: 111e Aloodalool Preu. 1114 lh•
bf9ther, Charles Baker, Upper Sany.; an severs meces an
gent, son, Crown City.
Evangelist Brother David CarOhiO N o - -.~~on, Nod-'
"" .
dchildre and fi
nephews.
.
Births, Jan,17- Mr. and Mrs.. penter, Belleville, W.Va.; will be
Mvertlal0. RopNentad .., Bmnbam
dus.,; SIX Ifill
n, · IVe
Besides his parents, Mr. Smith
Thomas
Arnall, twin son and preaching at the Stiversville Word
NeWIIJ!IIIW - · 'ISS Thml A_...,
great-grandchildren.
Now Yert, Now Yort 10017.
llesides ber parents, she was was preceded in death by two sis· daughter, Tuppers Plains, and Mr. of Faith Church on Thursdar. at
Mrs. Ronnie Mays, daughter, 7:30 p.m. Pastor David Oatley
~eded in death by a sister, India tersS =!ilr"t!wednesday ~~ 1 and
P06TMASTIR:
- - cho- Ia
The
DoiJy BooliMI,. Ill ·Coo&amp;rl 81.,
Crown City.
invites the public.
Bater.
·
p..._ OHio 415768.
Graveside services wm be held p.m. at the Middleport Church of
IVUCIUPTION IIATII ,
Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the ,Meigs Christ with Ai HariJon offiCiating.
BFCaniwor-llolllo
Memory Gardens The R v~ Burial will be in the Ohio Valley
Oro• woot:..........................................u.eo
Grace will officiaie. Ewin~a;~ Memory Gardens in OaUipolis. ·
()ne Mont.h ........................................ .$6.96
..
One Yeer............. ,.............................IA3.20
Home is handling arrangemenu.
Friends mar call at Fisher .
111(01.11 COPY
. There are no calling hours.
Funeral Home m Middleport on
I
PRill&amp;
Doi\~.................. ,.......................25 Coota
Jn lieu of flo.wers donations may Tuesday from 2-4 p.m. and' 7-9
Theresa Layne of 797 Wheaton Attorney's office, according to a
be
made to the Meig1 County p.m. and one hour prior 10 the ser-1
-bon ............. ..., .... .,.m. '
Road, Bidwell, pleaded not guilty press release from the prOsecutor's
Senior Citizens.
. vice at the church.
• IDIJ nllllll .. adY&amp;noe dlnot ID Tbe
llo!IJ S.IIMI oo • u.... m ar 12
Masonl~ services will be Tues·
to a ~barge of tbeft during her office.
-~~~- 0n&lt;111 wm bo
arraignment Monday in the Gallia
Layne allegedly embezzled
~~~ 8:30 p.m. at the funeral
County Common ~leas Court of money from the cemetery usocia·
Na -plica bJ .....ltad bt
Juilae Joseph L. Cain.
tion. Aceonling to a prosecutor's
paQabl&amp;
Vetera111 Me-Ill
S"he
was
earlier
indicted
on
a
offx:e
spokesman, Layne served as
.'
SA1URDA Y ADMISSIONS charge of theft of more than secretary-treasurer of the associaGoldla Hettclml. Pomeroy.
·
$1
00,000, a felony of the second lion.
CLEVELAND
(AP)
The
w..u........................................ .1a
SATURDAY DISCHAROES- jackpot for Wednesday •s Super degree punishable by two to 15
Gravel Hill Cemetery is near
118
81WIIkl........................
.
.................
78
None.
year's incarcelation.
Cheshire.
'
Lotto
game
will
be
$20
mUllan
.
0.-llolpOoutJO
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Layne
was
charged
following
an
Bond
was
set
at
525,000
with
10
because
there
were
no
dclcell
10ld
w..u. ........ ..............................
None.
Ill w..u.................. ............ ........... JIO
namlng all six numbers selected in . investigation by the trustees of percent allowed. Trial has been
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Saturday's drawing with S 16 mil- ' Gravel Hill Celne!CJY Association scheduled for Match 23 at 9 a.m.
A Wtob...;-··T;·~]i";.''f""-""' .411
AnJui Prank.
.
I
lion at stake, the Ohio Lottery sakt and the GaUia Cotll\ty Prosecuting .

!

\

John Birks -'Dizzy'

·Berry's World

I

heard s~ Joe Friday, in one of his
sevt:raJ lliC8I1I8lions on "Dragnet,"
say II repeatedly.
As a man coming to the White

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•lco1uinbusl33•

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Inaugural sets presidency's tone._· _ _ _ _ ~

. ff&gt;,~PON
ME!

By The Associated
Frigid temperatures were pre·dicted for Ohio tol)iglll followed by
a delightful winter'day. .
Widely sclttered f!UJ'lies were
possible in the south and east
· tonight.under panly cloudy skies,
.the Nauonal Weather Service said.
Lows were to be 1().20 degrees.
A CriSP, StDiny day was forecast
for Tue.sday. Highs were to range
from the upper 20s to mi&lt;l-30$, a
few de~ colder than normal.
Tbe record-high temperatare for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 67 degrees in 1929

LaXity on backgroun·d checks costs the RTC

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

Press

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime

.p

The Dally Sentlnei....Page-3

Temperatures will remain cold around Ohio

Tuesday, Jan•.l9

I

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Mo!tdav.
r---------------------------------------~----,-------------------------~~------~------~------------------~~~;_------~----~------------ ~

The D·aily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Co.', how to remove it from the · :·
house. Mrs. Conde said Velsicof · ··,
representatives told her the chemical posed no threat and no action - '

was necessary.

~

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EMS responds to .·.:
11 weekend calls
Units of the Meigs County" "·
Emergency Medical Service •· ··
responded to 11 calls for assistance
over the weekend.
.
'· ~·
On Saturday at 11:08 a.m. the' '
Middleport wli! responded to Bai- • ·.
ley Run Road for Goldie Hendren: · ·
She was taken to Veterans MemO.: '.· ~
rial Hospilal.
'· ., •
· At 4:04 p.m. the Racine unit .
' went to Vine Street for April Hud- ' ·:
son. She was taken to Veterans. ·- ··:
Tbe Tuppers Plains unit. at4:36 •·, '
p.m., went 10 Route 7 fer Dllrothy ,
Baker. She was transported to •.
Camden Clark Memorial Hospilal. ·' ~'
At 5:51p.m. the Pomeroy , unli _ ~ :
went to Locust Street for Eileen · ··,
Phillips who was taken to Holzer ·- ·
MedicalCenter.
.
Tbe Tuppers Plains unit, at 7:31 "~:
p.m., was called to Joppa Road fer" •'
Herman Grossniclde. He was taken'
to Camden Clarlc.
:: ~· ·
On Sunday at 8:05 a.m. the· '
Pomeroy unit was called to .
Mechanic Street for Irene Baxter ' .. •
who was talren to Holzer.
·:::
At 8:47a.m. the Tuppers Plains · ' ·
unit responded to Scout Camp '' '
Road for Leroy Kennedy. He
taken to Holzer.
· ··
The Racine unit, at 12:~ p.m;;• ·:
went to Trouble Creek Road to~ " •
Mary Kearns who '!VIS taken td, .
Holzer.
• ·
The Middleport unit was called ., ·
to Oliver Street at 6:42 p.m. for
• Perry Hoffman who ttllnsported
Veterans. ·
· ·
At 8:06p.m. the Racine unii · '
went to Pearl Street for Mike · ·
Champion. He was transported to
Holzer.
This morning (Monday) at 1:28'· '. ·
a.m. the Pomeroy unit responded to ··::·
Route 7 for Dale Wilfong who was •
talcen to Veterans.

was. ,

.o-.:·

Stocks
Am Ele Power.................... 33 1/8
Ashland Oil........................27
AT&amp;T...........,.....................53 518
Bank One........................... s1 114
Bob Evans ........................ .20 1/8
Charming Shop.................. l7 1/8·
City Holding......................21
Federal MoguL. ................. 18 318
Goodyear.T&amp;R ..................66 112
Key Centurion ......... .......... 22
Lands End.,............ ............27 1/2
limited Inc . ...................... 28 112
Multimedia Inc..................33 1}4
Rax RestauranL ..... .............3/16
Reliance Electric................20 112
Robbins&amp;Myers ........,....... 17
Shoney's lnc................... .-..23114

Srar Bank ...........................36 314
Wendy Int'l. ...................... .l3 114
Worthington Ind ................24 1/4
Stock reports are tbe 10:30
Lm. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewl of GaWpoliL

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Sports

The DailyMo~~!!!:f'!~! :
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San Francisco had cut the defiCit to on Pie~ Holt on lhird down kept
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) 24-20 with 4:22 left, ·setting up . the Cowboys from having to try
Call it a full circle.
.
Tile Dallas Cowboys, just three Aikman's 6-yard TD pass to anodler field goal.
"We
couldn't
take
command
in
yean off a 1-15 season, arrived Kelvin Martii1 that clinched the
the
fi!Sl
half,
when
we
played
our
Sunday at the brink of dominance game.
"We weren't aoing to play Con- best football," said San Francisco
in the NFL. And they did it at the
expense of the San Francisco 49ers, servative," said Aikman, .who was coach George Seifert. "In the secwho II years ago passed the Cow- 13 of 16 fer 208 yards in that sec- ond half, they took control of the
boys as the two franchises headed ond half; 24 or 34 for 322 for the game.··
And how.
in opposite directions.
game.
.
Dallas took the opening kickoff
So far, the Cowboys have domiIt was 81 least partial IIIODeillent
and
went 78 yards m eight plays,
nated the league for exactly one for ihe 1982 NFC title game, in
38
yards
comilig when die 6-foot-3
half - the second in the NFC title which "The Catch" by Dwight
Clarlc started San Francisco on the Harper leaped o- S-11 Eric Davis
game on Sunday.
But it was enough to give them way 'to (our Super Bowl victories to pull in a pass from Aikman.
a 30-20 \vin over the four-time and started Dallas' slow downhill Fullback Daryl Johnston bulled in
Super Bowl champion and send spiral. Only one player from that from the 11uee on a ~Y that typiwhat Was once " Arntrica's Team" game, San Francisco's JIIC Mon- fied San Francisco s half - the
and is now the NFL' s youngest into tana, was in liniform Sunilay, and Niners were offside on the play,
the Super Bowl a~t the Buffalo he stood on the sideline waU:hing stopped and barely made any effort
Bills.
Steve Yoong throw for 3l3 yards to stop Johnston.
The Niners came right back, but
"We started at rock bottom," in a losing cause.
stalled
at the 24 and Seifert elected
said coach Jimmy Johnson, who .
San Francisco spent the first
not
to
go for it .oil fourth-and-2.
took over a ream that had been 3- half looking like it was a step or
Mike
Cofer,
who had a 28-yard
13 in 1988 and promptly chopped it two ljom breaking the game open.
field
goal
at
the end of the ·first
to 1· 15 the next year. Now they're
But a fumble by Mike McGJud·
half,
made
a
42-yardcr
and it was
15-3 and one garile awar from lhe er on a punt set up a 20-yard field ··
NFL title.
,
· goal by Lin Elliott and another 17-13.
Then came the most effective
With help from his coaching fumble by Ricky Watters led to a
staff, Johnson made the decision ID 39-yard drive capped by a 4-yard drive, consuming nine minutes of
the third and fourth quarters. It
open up the offense in the second touchdoWn run by'Emmitt Smilh.
covered
79 yards on 14 plays and
half- something most coaches are
Other mistakes also hurt on a
loathe to do, particularly on the field that was wet but playable the score came on a lhird-and-6, a
16-yiiiJI pass to Emmkt smith for
r(lad, on a w~t field lllld wjth a despi!e a week-long downpOur and
the
fifth straight third-down conyoung team. The result was two intennittmt rain during the game. ·
version.
long touc:bdown cWves led by Troy
A 63-yard TO pass from Young
Young brought the Niners right
Ailclllan., E~mit,t~Smith and Alvin to Jerry Rice on the game's fust
back,
hitting RiCe for a s;yard 1D.
l:!arPer that wmeo a 10-10 halftime series was called back by holding
But
then came the play to Harpinto a 24-13 lead
on guard Guy Mcintyre. And lhe
· That was .followed by a 70-yard TD by Smith, who finished with er, whose lluee cau:hes totalled 117
pass play from Aikman to Harper 114 yards on 24 carries, came a b~~- That bro~ ~an Francisco's
on fust down at their own 21 alter play after a defensive holding call
•

Sunday at Candlestick Park. The Cowboys won,
30-20 and will meet tbe Bulfalo Bills in the
Slaper Bowl In two weeks. (A.P)

:Bills win third straight·
~AFC title; eye NFL crown ·

Virginia five stops Duke's
36-game home winning streak
-

lhrows.
,
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -. The. na won 87-75.
There was a 19-game home win- No. 3 Nortb Carolina 82, .Clem•
biggest cheer in the Virginia locker
.
.
room came when word of Dallas' . ning streak before that, so it's $OD 72
At Clemson, S.C ., George
victory in the NFC championship understandable that a lot of people
stood around looldng 81 each other Lynch had 17 points and 13
game was relayed. .
.
There just wasn't a wliole lot of when the final buzzer sounded and rebouods as the Tar Heels (14-1, 4celebrating going on Sunday after Duke had_JC$s points than "Visi- . 0 ACC) won their sixth straight
despite shooting just 43 percent .
MIAMI (A.P) - They were a kinds of demons in the playoffs.
They did it with excellent sup- the Cavaliers remained the nation's tor.: '
5 Micbllan 70, Notre Dame
The.Biue Devils (12-2, 2-2) No.
group of cocky stars who took a They set an NFL record by over- pan for Thomas from Ken Dav1s, only major college unbeaten ream
.
.
.
. celauvely easy route to the Super coming a 32-point deficit to·beat who bas emerged as a premium wilh a n -69 victory over Duke that missed eight of their first nine shots 55
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Chris
Houston 41-38 in the first round. back in the playoffs. He had 61 ended 'the Blue Devils' 36-game from the field and fmished the fust
Bowl. Then IIley failed.
half 10 for 31 and down 30-24. · Webber scored 22 points for the
Tbose Buffalo Bills disappeared They went on the road, where IIley yards rushing Wld 52 yards on four winning streak at home.
sometime in the last few weeks. hadn't won in the postseason since catches, mostly spelling Thomas in
You would think the first win Virginia was much more aggres- Wolverinea (13-2), who led 39-35
the team that heads to the NFL 1981, and took the Steelers and · the second half.
for Virginia at Camer.;~n Indoor sive off the boards and finished when Webber staned a 16-point
They did it with five field goals Stadium in 10 years would be rca- with a 50-37 advanJige.
run with a 3-polnter. Ryan Hoover
title pme fer !be third scraight year Dolphins.
by
Steve
Christie,
tying
an
NFL
•
scored 23 points for Notre Dame
Virginia'
led
47-40
with
10:51
They won wilh backul' quanerson to go wild. But the Cavaliers
~as grown up.
. h. .
.
.
• 'We've been tn I .IS SituatiOn baclc Fnmk Reich and w1tll slarter postseason reeord.
·
were at the opposite end of that left when Dilke w.ent on an 8-2 run (7-6).
No.
ti
Duke
65,
No.
14
Iowa
56
·
And they especially did it with a spectrum.
bc:fore," Thurman Thomas said · Jim Kelly.
to get within one ·with 8:10 left.
.
At
Durbani,
N.C.,
Duke
went
011
suddenly
overpOwering
defense.
Dfter lhe Bills beat Miami 29-10
They've bonded, become a fam"It was just as we had it drawn The whole building seemed to
Sunday to equal the Dolphins' ily , stopped the liickering and Since falling behind Houston 35-3; up on paper," guard Doug Smith waiting to see how the Blue Devils a 10-2 run after Iowa had pulled
Buf(alo has allowed 16 paints in said. "We lhougbt we could win, would take command, but, with within 49-47 wilh six minutes lefL
achievement of 1wo decades ago begun clicking.
·
with a third successive trip to the
'crhere wasn't a lot of people nearly 2 l{l gqmes.
and this is one or the bigger wins, Duke unable to make a shot, the Thomas Hill scored ·20 points,
Buffalo forced five turnovers but it's not that big in ·the concept cavaliers went on a I0-2 run for a Bobby Hllfley added 14 and Grant
Super Bowl. "But I think coming who lhought we could (,lo this,"
like we have - coming back said Kelly, who was 17 for 24 for aod had four sacks Sunday.
61-52 lead with 3: 13 left. Duke Hill 12. Chris Sbeei led Iowa with
of the schedule."
·
against Houston and going on the 177 yards, with one touchdown and
"I think that we showed class
Virginia (11-0, 4-0 ACC) never was never closer than seven the rest 14 points.
No. 9 Clndnnatl70, De Paul 64 .
road at Pittsburgh and here in two interceptions after missing 2 today," Kelly said. "I think we trailed in the game, and it held off a of the way.
At Rosemont, Ill., Nick Van
~iami - I think this (earn has J{l games wilh a knee injury.
"We're not shooting the ball
showed what maturity means. A couple.of Duke charges in the fmal
l)latured a lot to where we realize
They did it with superb work few years ago, we might have been
10 minutes as the crowd tried to well and I think it took its,JDII on us Exel scored 25 points and Cin.cin.
nati (11-1, 2-0 Gret Midwest) hung
that it's going to take a full effon to from Thomas, the NFL' s total the ones doing the talking.''
cheer, even though most were today," DUke's Thomas Hill said.
offense leader the last four seasons.
Corilel Parker's 16 points Jed on. Cincinnati led 47-23 at halfJio out and win a Super Bowl.
Stunned.
. "That's what we plan on Thomas rushed for 96 yards and
The loss has to be put into per- · five Virginia players in double fig- time, then made only one field goal
They did their talking on the
caught five passes for 70 more. He field, where !hey outgained Miami
in .the fust 11 minutes of the sec•
lloing."
spective for those 81 Dulce. Of the ures.
ondhalf.
·
Hurley
led
Duke
wilh
19
points,
' The Bills have exorcised all scored on a 17-yard'screen pass.
182-33 on !he ground and had lhe · players on the roster, only seniors
76,
No.
10
Seton
Hall
Pittsburxb
but
it
was
on
a
S-for-!9
shooting
ball for 36: 19. And coach Marv Thomas Hill and Bobby Hurley
73
had ever lost a game at home. The effon, 1-for-9 from 3-point range.
Levy stretched his hex over Don
At Pittsburgh, Garrick Thomas
Shula: the Dolphins coach is the last time a visitor left the home of Grant Hill had 15 points and
made
a 3-pointer wilh four seconds
second winningest in NFL history, the Cameron Crazies a winner was Thomas Hill 11, but those, too,
March 4, 1990, when North Caroli- came on 6-for-16 and 4-for-11 left as Pittsburgh (11-2, 4-2 Big
but he's 4-12 against Levy.
shooting efforts, respectiv~Jy.
East) upset a ranked team for the
In Top 25 games Saturday, No. third _time in 19 days, following
1 Kansas beat Louisville 98-77, VIC tones over UCLA and Connectic
No. 2 Indiana beat Illinois 83-79; cut. Seton Hall (14--2, 4-1) had won
By JIM O'CONNELL
the Top Ten by .Arkansas, Cincin-.
.
No. 3 North Carolina beat Clemson II straight.
AP Basketball Writer
nati and Seton HaD.
82-72, No. 5 Michigan beat Notre
Kansas wailed three years to get
Arizona led the Second Ten and
Dlime 70-55, No. 6 Duke beat No.
No. 11 Arizona 87, Washington
:back to No. I. Not much of a wait was followed by Oklahoma, Pur14 Iowa 65-56, No. 9 Cincinnati State
63
·
•compared to that of Long Beach due, Iowa, UNLV, Georgia Tech,
Bentley
,can\e
up
with
a
sieal
and
beat
DePaul
70-64,
No.·
20
Pitts·
. At Tucson, Ariz., Chris Mills
.State, which is ranked for the ftrst Connecticut. Georgetown, Vander. By DA.VE HARRIS
.... 4 05 ark 0 r til third burgh beat No. 10 Seton 1fall 76- scored 17 points for the Wildcats
:time in two decades.
.
bilt anil Pittsburgh.
Sentinel Correspondent
lay-up 81 '"" : m
e
73, No. II Arizona beat WashingThe final five were Michigan
The Huntington East High- period. Two free throws by ton State 8 7 ~3. No. 13 Purdue beat (8-2, 3-0 Pac-10), who led by 13 at
• The Jayhawks (14-1) JUmped
: rrom fourth to first todav after win· State, Utah. UCLA, Ohio State and landers outscored Meigs 20-10 in Hairstonlindfourstraigbtpointsby Penn State 61-54, No. 1S UNLV halftime and 60-34 early in lhe sec~
Murphy gave the Highlanders a 46ond half.
·
•ning three games las~eelc while Long Beach State.
the second period to open up an 11 34
advantage
with
1:48
left
in
the
beat
San
Jose
State
84-77,
College
: Kentuc:lcy, Michigan and DulceGeorgia Tech (9-3), which point halftime lead and held off a third period. Trevor Harrison of Charleston beat No. 16 Georgia
: the former Nos. 1-3- each lost a jumped to eighth last week after Meigs comeback bid to post a 65- scored
two straight buckets to cut Tecb 84-67. No. 17 Connecticut No. 13 Purdue 61, Penn·St. S4
,game
handing D.uke its first loss of the 58 win over the Marauders Satur- the Meigs
At Staie College, Pa., Glenn
deficit to 46-38 heading · beat Boston' College 66-64, No. 18 ·
' uing Beach State (12-1) joined season, fell to 16th after losing day morning.
Robinson led Purdue had 21 points
into
tile
rmaJ
period.
Georaetown
beat
ViUanova
66-56,
' the poll at No. 25, and some quick twice -to North Carolina and
The game was the second of · Eric Wagner,' seeing his first No._\9 Vanderbilt beat Georgia 78- and 14 rebounds for lhe Boilermak•
:research showed the 49ers hadn't College of Charleston.
eighl games played Satprday at action since breaking a finger in his 66, No. 21 Michigan State beat ers (11-Z. 2-2 Big Ten).
,
;been nmked sinCe the early 1970s
Vanderbilt and Pittsburgh both Ohio University's Convocation shooting
No. IS ~LV 84, San Jose State
hand
two
weeks
ago
stanNorthwestern
80-7S,
No.
22
Utah
· when Jerry Tarkanian was coach.
came back to the rankings after Center in the Fifth Annual MeDon- ed lhe Marauders off on the right beat Fresno State 103-83. Oregon 77
: The list time Kansas was No. I quick absences. The Commodores ald's-Days Inn Prep Basketball foot
At Las Vegas, J.R. Rider scored
by drilling a thre4 pointer to State beat No. 23 UCLA 79-73,
was 1989-90 when the Jayhawks (13-3) bounced back from consecu- Classic. Hunting~on East .with the
31
points as UNL V coach Rollie
stan
the
fourth
period
and
cut
the
and
No.
2S
Long
Beach
'State
beat
.were atop the poll for four weeks. tive losses with the easy wins over win raises it's record to 6-3. Meigs,
Massimino
gained his 400th career
. They received 45 ftrst-place votes Kentucky and Georgia. Pittsburgh who was coming off a highly emo- Huntington tead to 48-41. The Utah State 65-59.
victory.
The
Runnin' Rebels (9-1 ·,
Highlanders
built
up
a
10
point
No.1
Kansa
911,
Louisville
77
·and 1,595 points from the nation- (11 -2) dropped out after losing l.fl tiona! win over Alexander Friday
4-1
Big
West)
trailed 72-70 with
lead
on·tllree
different
occasions
At
Louisville,
Ky.,
Kansas
(14:wide panel of writers and brj;~ad- St. John's, but the Panthers beat evening drops to 5-7.
4:05 left.
but
Harrison
hit
two-three
pointers
1)
won
its
1,500111
game,
surging
:casters.
_
two ranked teams - Connecticut
The Marauders jumped out to
Indiana (15-2), which 6eat andSetonHall-togetbackin.
the early 2-0-lead ten seconds into and Bentley one tQ ~Meigs in ahead with a a 14·0· firSt-half run
Michiaan. moved from sixth to secLong Beach State, which hand- the game on a shon jumper by Jay the ball game. Bentley s came at that began with Rex Walters' 3ond with seven No. 1 votes and · ed UNI..V its only loss, was about Cremeans. Meigs built up a 12-8 the 2:31. marlt and made it a 60-54 pointer.
No. 21ndlana 83, Dllno1a "'
·1,510 poi!lts. Nmh Carolina (14-1) as far from heing ranked when Seth lead on two straight buckets by
gam~igs continued to chip away at
At Champaign, Ill., Calbert
went from fifth to 'third wilh eighl Greenllerg took over three seasons John Bentley the last coming wilh
h
H'
hi
d
I
d
b
1c
b
Cheaney
IICOied 30 points u lndi' flllt-placevOiesand 1,483 points.
a~o as at any point in the drought 2:38 left in the period. But the
t e 1g an er ea ; uc cts y ana (IS-2, 4-0 B~
· Ten) denied !UiCremeans
and
Stanley
at
the
1:50
; KeniUCky (ll-1), which held the
smce Tarlcanian left for Las Vegas. Highlanders came back and on the
1:23 marie made it a 62-58 ni coach Lou enson his 600th
:No. I spOtter just one week, losJ at
''It's a tribute to how hard lhe strength on three pointers by Ted · and
win. After !Uinois puUed to 7S-74
.
hi
d 1 d M · had
H
·vanderbilt last week and fell to seniors have worked over the past Lucas and Andre Hariston took a
lg an er ea · e•gs
a with 2:15 left, Cheaney and Greg
:ro11rth. Michigan (13-2), which three years. It's a long way from 16-13 lead with 1:07 left in the ~~~~:i:J:'J:'~woC::: · Graham each made four free
.'
:rec~ived two first-place votes,
11 -17 Jwo years ago to ·now,'' period. Bobby Johnson connected
'
'drooPed from secOiid to fifth. Duke Grenberg S81d Sunday night. "At on a 12 footer witii2S seconds left and Stahley at the line for a one·
i (12:~). which lost io Virginia on
this point of the season, it's an to cut the Highlander lead to 16-15 on-one. But their was a doubti lane
violatiOn and the possession arrow
:Sunday to snap 's 36-game home honor, but I dqn't want lhe players attlleendofthepcriod.
:winnina ~. went.from third to to think about iltoo much .because
With 6-7 senior P. J. Smith went to Huntington. Murphy then
·sixlh. It wu lhc firSI ume Dulce had we're more concerned about being doing most of the damage Huntin&amp;- iced the victory hittina both ends of
NOSE &amp; THROAT •ALLERGY
rwWd dW low since the final · part of lhe 64 at the end.' '
ton started to pull away from the a one-on-one with 20 seconds
remaimng.
·pon oldie 1990-91 seuon.
Minnesota (10-3), 19th last Marauders in the second period.
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
HarrisOn led all scorers with 21
: Virginia (11-0). the country's · week, fell out of the poll after los- The Highlanders increased their
Q111l Cut
Year ·
'only IUibeaten team and currently . ing to Iowa and Wisconsin. Boston · lead to 10 (33-23) on a bucket by points, Jack Stanley added 13 and
Belllley
1\
to
pace
the
Marauders.
on a 16-game winning streak , College (9-4) was No. 22 and Syra- Dan Murphy at lhe 1:52 marie of
,jumped from 14th to seventh after cusc (10-4) was No. 24 . The Eagles the second period, HuntingiOn East Other Meigs acorers included Todd
,winninl at Dqke for til~ first time drop.()¢ games to Providence and went into the locker room at the DiU and Cremeans with four each,
edlcare &amp;UMWA
Wagner with three and Bobby
·in 10 yean.
Connecticut, while lhe Orangemen half with a 36-25 advanlage.
: The Cavalier&amp; had three first- lost to Seton Hall and beat ProviMeigs was able to cut the High- Johnson with .two. Chris Knight
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT · '·
(Continued on Pag~-S)
:place voteallld '!'ere followed in dence.
lander lead to..six (40-34) when

Kansas takes over
~top spot in AP poll
Highlanders post

65-58 win over MHS

JOHN WAbE,·M.D., INC. ·
••AR,

:boen

.

BY SCO'IT WOLFE
'8eat'inetCorrespolldeJit
Outscoring its foe 23-8 in the
third period, the R~~tine-Soutllem
• Tornadoes ·blasted to a 79-55 triumph over Paintsville-Johnson
Central High School of Kent11clcy
Saturday night in the fmal pmc of
the fifth annual McDonald's-Days
,Jnn P.rep Baslcetball Classic.
Southern is now 7-3 ovcrall and
Johnson Central falls to 4-9.
Southern senior guard Marie
•.-\JJen paced the Tornadoes with 15
~oints and earned the Bank One
Money Player of the Gaine"
award for most valuable player.
Paintsville •s Shane Moore earned
like honon for his club by posting
· a 23 point erron.
. Behind Allen was another
senior, Michael Evans; who tallied .
13 on the night. Andy Grueser
added 12, Ryan Williams nine,
Jeremy Dill eight, Rollen Reiber
. and Russell Singleton each six,
Jamey Smith four, Trenton Cleland
ihree, and Mason Fisher three.
Tucker Williams and Jere my
No{thup each saw action but did
WAIT F@R REBOUND· Easten and Federal Hockin&amp; &amp;lrll
nO\ score.
await baD for reiJoucl Ia weekend c:o.test woa by Eutern' 36·30. •
Again ten Southern players hit
On left 1a Eastern's Jamie wn- (34) wblle Stepluinie Otto (24)
the scoring column, an effon that
loolls on at rlgbt. Steve Bowen pboto. .
.
gained much praise from veteran
mentor·Howie Caldwell.

The Dally Sentinel- Page-S

.

haven't seen from this group and
I'm pleased." -Behind Moore's 23-point effort,
Matt Ward added 11 , Nathan Salisbury six, Mike Jarrell, and Craig
Stalker each four, and two each by
Barry Fannin, Kevin Wheeler ,
Stephen Butcher, and Beecher
Buu:her.
The rust quarter was a quality
quarter from bolh clubs. Soulhem
too1c a 2-0 lead .on an inside driver
by Mark. .-\Jien, then Moore reialialed to tie it at ~-2. Russell Singleton hit a tum-IIIVIIIId jumper for a
4-2 SHS lead,.then Moore wheeled .
again to tie the score at 4-4. Evans
hit a lay-in to push the score to 6-4,
Soutllem.
. Moore hit a three pointer to give
his club a 7~ advantage, Central's
only lead of the campaign. Goals
by Allen, Ryan Williams, and a
Willialils-fisher-AJJen driver gave
SHS a 12-7 advantage as Southern
reatly startcd.to roU.
The frame ended at 19-15, but
signs of fatigue had already set in
on the Golden Eagles. Two goals
by Matt Ward pulled Central to
wilhin two at 21-19 at the stan of
the second frame. That, however,
was short-lived as Southern hit
three consecutive three-pointers
(Evans-.-\Jien-EvWls) to give SHS a
commanding 30-19 breather. After
a time out Evans hit a twisting,
rim•riding lay-in, but missed .the
foul attempt and a possible string
or four-straight three-poinl trips.
Southern then soured somewhat
as both ciubs turned the ball over.
SHS went $COreless for three minutes and ten seconds before Allen
hit a goal at the 1:43llllllk. Central
Jilcewise went scoreless for nearly
five minutes of the frame as SHS
rolled into the half, leading 38-25. ·
Southern went on a 12-2 run to
begin the third frame. Allen did
another great job, while Williams
served up one of his best varisty
~ames. Jeremy Dill hit a hot streak
m the thitd round, w.hile Andy
Grueser began his surge to a

.

.

SINGLETON SHOOTS • Southern's Russell Singleton (42)
shoots jumper at the top of tbe key durin&amp; Saturday's game at the

Convo In Athens. The Tordadoes WOJI, 79-55. Jobnson City's Jesse
McCarty (32) attempts to block sbot.

tw~lve-poiitt game. Southern tip- Nathan Salisbury 3-0•6, Craig
toed til a 23-8 advantage in the Stalker 2-0-4, Kevin Wheeler 1-0·z, Stephen Butcher 2-0-4, Elzie
frame arid led 61-33 at the buzzer.
The fourth round was a fonilati- Blanton 1-0-2, Beecher Buu:her 1lhe' right track. We've played two
ty, but SHS held ·on for a 7-9-55 0-2. Totals 19-3-(8-16)-55.
good games back to back and
Soutbern (79)
score.
.
Mark Allen -5-1-2-15, Ryan
Southern hit 29-55 for 53 perthings are really coming together.
For one thing, the kids wanted to
Williams
3-3-9, Jeremy Dill 4-0-J!,
cent, hit 3-6 three's, and was 12-20
prove something tonight. They
Michael
Evans 2-2-1-13, A-ndy
at the line' for 6s' percent. Johnson
looked
at
that
program
and
saw
Grueser
5-2-12.
Trenton Cleland 1-..J
BY SCOTT WOLFE
each added eight apieee. Nicole
Central hit 18-49 for 36 percent,
Racine-Southern,
three
appear1-3,
Ruben
Reiber
3-0-6, Mason
was 2-9 f~m three point range, and
Sentinel Correspondent
Nelson add¢ two.
ances
and
O-for~3
.
They
wWlced
to
Fisher J, J-3, Jamey Smith 1-2-4,
·
d
Although not scoring, Aeiker,
hit 9-16 at the line.
Key free throw .s hootmg
an : Redo vi an,. Tara Congo,. Rebecca · change that!"
Southern
had
29
rebounds
led
Russel Singleton 3-0-6. Totals 28clutch baskets in the final three
·
"With
the
exception
of
a
score3-(12-20)·
79.
by
Evans
with
eight
and
Dill
five.
minutes gave the Eastern Eagles a Evans, MelissiJ Guess, and Jessica less streak (3: I 0) in the second
Stalker
had
eight
and
Ward
seven
hard-fought 36-30 girls' basJrelball Radford were all credited wilh period and a short streak in the
of Central's game-high 34.
victory over the Federal Hocking playing great defense, an aspect of third frame, we played the most
SHS had 12 steals, 18 turnovers,
DOWIIII CIILIS
Lanecrs Saturday aftemO(ln at East- the game that greatly influenced intense basketbaU we've played all
nine
assists, and 15 fouls. Central
em High School.
the outcome according to Coach year. The kids played hard and hit
had 17 steals, 19 turnovers, and 23
Flnalmlnutes.
Wolfe. Additionally, Otto grabbed the open man co.nsistenlly. I've
rouls.
•
After leading the enJire game a $&amp;me-high 16 rebounds and seen· some things tonight that I
There
was
no
reserVe contest.
and holding a 26-23 edge aoing Aeiker added seven.
Southern
hosts
Trimble next Friinto the fmal quarter, .Eastern tired
Federal was led by Jenni Kibble
111 SICIIIII
day
in
Racine.
·
in the rmat round at the hands of a with eight, Mahorney had seven,
Score by quarters:
sticky Federal Hocking defense. Tracy Bentley six, Katie MaxweU
YOUII-PIIMir
Johnson Central IS 10 8 22-SS
Federal used that same defensive five, ·and two each from·Erin SnedHow the top 25 teams in The 87-63.
.
.
Southern
19 !9 23 18-79
AIIIDIIBIII
style last Thursday when it upset den and Alison Pierson.
Associated ~ss college basketball
13. Iowa (12-3) beat No. 19
Box score:
state-ranked Belpre 29-27.
Eastern led 7-4 after the first poll fared this iveelc:
Minnesota 84-77; lost to No. 3
Jobnson Central KY (SS)
A back-door lay-up by Federal's frame, then carried a 15-14 edge
1. Kenwcky (11-1) lost to Van- Duke .6S-56.
Shane Moore 5-3-3-22, Man
Erin Sne4den gave the visitor's its 'into ,the half. Eastern had built up a derbilt101-86.i,.,
1161
14. Virginia (11-0) beat Clem- Ward 4-3-11, Barry Fannin 1-0-2.
only lead of the night, a 28-27 26-181ead with under a minute.to
2. Miehigan (13-2) lost to No. 6 son 100-82; beat No. 3 Duke 77score witll4:54 remaining.
go in the third frame, but a Mahor- Indiana 76-75; beat Notre Dame 69.
·
Eastern's Stephanie Otto · ney jumper and MaxweiJ three 70-55.
15. Connecticut (8-3) lost to
stepped to the line and calmly hit pomter at the buzzer cut the lead to
.3. Duke (12-2) .beat Wake For- Pittsburgh 80-78; beat No. 22
both ends of 8 bonus to ·~a: give 26-23aoing into the rmat frame.
est 86-59; beat No. 13 Iowa 65-56; Boston College 66-64.
.
Eastern the lead at 29-21!.
tern's
Eastern hit 10-32 for 32 percent lost to No. 14 Virginia 77~9.
(tie) UCLA (11-4) beat Oregon
defen~~e applied more perimeter and 16-25 at the line, while Federal
4. Kansas (14-1) beat No. 10 99-87; lost taOregon State 79-73.
pressure and forced several bad hit B-57 overall (23 percent) and Oklahoma96-85;beat0ra1Roberts
17. Purdue (11-2) beat Wisconshots b~ the Lancers;EasiCm's sue· ,J-of-2 three pointers,- while .notch- 140-72; beat Louisville 98-n.
sin 76-60; beat Peim Staie 61-54.
cess,in Jhe finale was attributed to .ing 3 of 10 at the line ..
5. North Carolina (14-1) beat
18. UNLV (9-1) beat Missouri
. the fine defensive rebounding from
Eastern won the battle of the No. R·Georgia Tech 80-67; beat 101-84; beat University of the
senior Otto and juniOr post woman · boards 38-28 led by Otto, Aeiker, ClemSQD82-72.
·
Pacific 88-71; beat San Jose State
Penny Aeiker. Their aggressive and Karr. Mahomey and Kibble
6. Indiana (I S-2) beat No. 2 . 84-77.
rebounding (!ave Federal just one each had eight for Federal. .·
Michigan 76-75; beat Illinois 8319. Minnesota (10-3) lost to No.
shot each ume down the co·urr
EHS had four assists, 18 steals 79.
13 Iowa 84-77; lost to Wisconsin
when the game was on the line.
(Otto 8), 27 turnovers, and 17
7. Seton Hall (14-2) beat No. 24 79-70.
Leading by just one, Eastern's fouls. Federal had five assists, 11 Syracuse 80-73; lost to Pittsburgh
20. Georgetown (10-2) beat
Jessica Karr hit a· pair of bonus steals, 19 turnovers, and 27 fools.
76-73.
•
DePaul 74-45; beat Villanova 66auempts to push the score to 31-28.
Eastern's reserves played a
8. Georgia Tech (9-3) lost to 56.
After a missed Federal Hocking decent rust half, bot lost big , 39- No. 5 North Carolina 80~7; lost to
21. Ohio State (9-3) lost to No,
.
. .
.
d 13.
College
of
Charleston
84-67.
.
23
Michigan State 77-60.
posseSSIOD, JUDIOr potnt gl!ar
Federal.
led b s~·-'Harri
Jaime Wilson executed a pick and
·
. was
Y. '":''•
s
Relisttred Represe•tatlves:
9. Arkansas (12-1) beat Alaba22. Boston College (9-4) lost to
roll with teammate Amy Redovian. . IIJI!I Debbie Rogers With Cl~l each. rna 74-66.
Providence 73-65; lost to No. IS,
ICA l KEllER Ill, CPA.
Wilson drOve to the comer Wld hit Michelle Schultz had _e1ght for
10. Olclahoma (12-3) lost to No. Connecticut~MARY KEllER, EA
.
a baseline jumper to give EHS a Eastern and Crystal Moms five.
4 Kansas 96-85; beat Nebraska
23, Michigan State (10-3) beat
33-28 advanll!$e.
·
Pastern. now 4-7, faces Water· 102-89.
No. 21 Ohio State 77-60; beat
(614) 992·7270 or (614) 667·60.11
· As time choked off the clock, ford, also 4-7, on Thursday. Fcder11. Cincinnati (11 -'1) 'beat Northwestern80-75.
Federal's Lisa Maborney hit a aHalls to S-7 overall.
Securities offered through H. D. Vest Investment Securlies, Inc.
.Clevelaild State 72~3; beat DePaul
24. Syracuse (10-4) lost to No. 7
jumper from the lane tightening
Score by quarters:
.433 East Las Colinas Blvd.. Third Floor •Irving, Texas 75039 •'(214) 556-t651
70-64.
Seton Hall 80-73; beat Providence
the score at 33-30. 'At the 1:35 FEasederal 4 10 9 7·30
12. Arizona (9-2) beat Washing- 69-S7.
mark Aeiker missed her only free
tern 7 8 11 10•36
ton .93-76; beat Washington State
25. Utah
beaJ Air Force
throw of the night, the ftrSt end of a
Federal (30)
bonus, and on the rebound Eastern
Katie
Maxwell
1-1-0-5, Erin·
fouled Snedden, who also missed
Snedden
1-0-2,
Alison
Pierson 1-0lhe fi!Sl of the bonus as the score
2,
Tracy
Bentley
3-0-6,
Lisa
stood steady at 33-30.
Mahorney
3-1-7,
Amanda
Gaspers
otto came up with an important
In pursuan ce of Law , I, Howard E. Frank , Treasurer of Mei gs Countv , Oh io. in compl iance w ith revi sed Code No . 323.08 of State of Oh1 0 ,
rebound and Eastern pushed the 0-0-0, Missy Bennett 0-0-0, Jenni
do tlerebv give no tice at the Rates of Ta ~tatio n fo r theTa ~~. Year of 1992 . Rates expressed 1n dollars and cents on each one thousand dollars
ball gradually up the floor, working Kibble 3-2-8. Totals U-1-(3-10)valuat ion . •
·
'
some time off the clock before 30.
TOWNSHIPS ·
karr drew another foul. Karr hit 3·
Eastern
(36)
AU
Elf1c:U••
~ in the last 51 seconds to sec:ure
SCHOOLDISTRICTS
"''·
R•ld,
,..t. . E:ff•ctl••
Oth•r
M .A .
Rlt•
Stephanie Ouo 2-4-8, Jaime
Reduction
lhducUon
Ae,. &amp; Atr.
the Eastern win.
C.arp . E . M.S.
Otn•r
.
Wilson
2-4-8,
Amy
RedOvian
0-0AND
· · Overall, Karr hit 7-8 from the
line in the final quarter, hitting 8-9 0, Penny Aeiker 0-0-0, Tara Congo
Q-0-0, Jessica Karr 5-8-18, Jessica
overall for the night
Radford 0-0-0, Melissa Guess 0-0Tbe scoring.
Karr, a 5-10 freshman, led East- 0, Nicole Nelson 1-0-2, Rebecca
ern with 18 points and silt Evans.O.o-0. Totals 10·(16·25)·
rebounds, while Otto. and Wilson 3fi,

Eastern .g-irIs edge
•
F ed'. eraI H ock. •.ng

we~:~~~ :i!n::~e~~~

...........

, INSUUIICE

s••., ....,

How Top 25 fared

••cou1n

••a

H. D. VEST
FINANCIAL SERVICES

Rates of Taxation for 1992
.

...

Highlanders. . .

(Contl~ued rrom Page 4)
.

HUNTINGTON EA-ST
played but did not score.
(16-20-10·19=58)
Meigs hit 23 of 53 from the
Murphy
6-1-5=20, Smith 7-0floor including four of IS from
3=17,
~n
S-l-3zl6, Lucas "1tbreedoint range ror 43% an.d
1-0=5,
Basham
2-00-4, Culbertson
canoe 8 of 15 from the line for
53%. Meigs pull¢ in ,31 rebounds 1-0-0=2; Zimmerman 0-0-1= I.
with Harrison grabbing eight. TOTA.LS- 22-3-12=65
Field pts- 25-SS (4S.5%) ·
Meigs had 10 assists with Aaron
3-10·(30%)
Tbree-polnteraDrummer and Dill getting three
Freetb.,..-12•21
(57.1%)
each, the Marauders had IS
Rebounds
31
(Smith
9)
turnovers.
A.sslsts12
(MurphyS)
Murphy led the Highlanders
Steall - 11 (Murphy 7)
with. 20 points, P. J. Smith added
Tur1oven -17
17 and Andre Hairston added 16.
· Huntington hit 25 of SS from the
MEIGS
floor includina three of ten three
(15·10.13-20=58)
pointers for 46%, they hit 12 or 21 '
Harrison 5-2-5-21, Stanley 5-0rrom the line for 57.%. The HighIMden hid 12 usists with Murphy 3-13, Bendey 4-1-0-11, Cremeans
aettinl five· •nd committed 17 ·2.()-0.4, Dill 2..(1..().4, Wqner 0liJniOYCll.
.
1..0.3, Jollnlon 1..()..().2. TOTALS .
Harrison wu aelected tbe -JJ-481158
Field p~s ..... 23-S2 (44.2%)
11001 Moat Valilable Player for
Three-polntera · . 4- U
ias. he was preacnted his award
(26.7%)
.
.
' ty Mallha1l All American light cild
.Free lb.,.. - 8· JS.(53.3%)
~ Bartrum. Murphy was aelectRebounds - 29 (Harrlscin 8)
4d the Hiah1anden "Most Valuable
Blocked sbots - 1 (by Cre~layer. Murpby wu prCsented bls
a
award by Marlene Sto1Iln11 of means)
Allllta - 10 (Dill de Drummer
aeaver lilltera Hilh School.
·
-- !ltoiii~Jfl laat, weelt became the leach)
Stnla-2
Ohio HiiiJ School All ~ lead·
T.,IIOftn ...:.. U
l i l a - wtlh
3.000 Jio!nu.

~

o-

';

.
\

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Southerp wins seventh game, 79-SS ·

1 Page4

Cowboys earn first S.uper Bowl berth since 1979_

GAINING SOME YARDS • Dallas Cow·
boya' Emmitt Smith (22) rus for 16 yards
aploat die Sao Fruclsto 49ers durlna fourtb
qauter lldlon or tbe NFC cbamplonsblp· game

_M_o_n_da..;y~,_Ja_n_u_a..:ry;_1_8.;.,_,.;.m;.;.._ _,;;_ _.~---------

.

~

...

Real Eltlllllxll wh.c/1 htvt not botn pold at tho clott of otCI1 colloctlon c:a&lt;rv a ponoltv of ten percent. Toxts mav bo poid at the office
of the county triiiUrtf or by mail : PletM bring your lilt tlx rtctiPt; and if you pey bV mail, be sure to loe~te your property by taxing dis·
'
·
• . ·
trict and 1rk:lo11 stlmpld ulf-addreued enwlope.
Always extmlne vour till rec.ipt to 111 that it cown all your property. Office Hours 8 :30A.M .. to 4:30P.M., Monday thru Friday - Clo11d
on S.tunltv.
Clotin9dt11 ftbnlary 12, 11193

.
HOWARD E: FRANK , MtliiJs County Tre•urer

\

..

�.

By The Bend

: De8r AM Lucien: I can tell
makes me a hippo, so be iL
by your 8IISWer to "Slim Lady in
Fresno, Calif.: Two monlhs ago, I
Pico Rivera• !hal you don't ride 1hc
·
took a trip from Los Angeles to
bus much. You.bawled her out in.a.
London. For nearly 12 hours, 1 was
manner she didn't deserve when she
squashed between two enormous
cOmplaillcd about.fat people taking
women. In self'Ciefense. I took a
up a &amp;ell ll1d a half and squishing
sleeping pill, When I awakened, I
her apinst 1hc window.
lhougbtl was paralyzed for life. My
Ann, rm a people person and easy
left~ was cornplelely n1111b.l hid
to get along with, but when I ride
10 be helped
the p1ane bec111ae
public llaiiS)IOr1aliOn, I do 1101 want use a bit of rdincmcnL Far empie, my leg jusc buckled. Before we •
a stranger "lhisclose" to me. --;JERI how lbout Ibis? "Would you mind off, ! knew I was in big trouble.and
IN WASHINGTON STATE
moviJ!&amp; over just a bit? These 11W1 asked the fligltllllaldant if lhe c:wld
DEAR TERI: Many readers wm are really too small for two people.• inovc me. She said, 'Sorry,lhis is a
exln:mely upset wilh my response,
The next c:onesponclent tells a . sold-oot flighL There's nothing 1Cll1
and IIIey spared no words letting me different story:
do. • Maybe when poople make their
know iL Please mid on:
Dar Ana: rve been heavy all airline rcBCrvalions, IIIey should be
Dear Ann Landers: If some my life;andno"'haseverworbd asked whatlhey weigh. - JL.
grossly overweight stranger for me. When I ride ljle bus, I make
DEAR J.L.: I think there mJiht
suddenly Sat on your lap, I don't a speCial effort 11&gt; sit next to a slim be a law apinst it - aornelhing 10
believe you would ieact with peat · petiOli so lhat I don't crowd anyone. do with invasion of privacy.
ccrdialjty.
.
When dial's not poqible, l .lry to (Judge llana Rovner: Call your
Size is not an issue hm. Each or leave some space between me and offiCe.)
us has a comfort level regarding my seatmalc, even tllouih it's not
Gem of the Day: A football fan is
lhe space around us. We bave a always comfortable. It hurts to read a guy who ycDs a1 1hc qlllltelbadt
tendency to react defensively, unkind comments about "Cal people." for .not being able 10 pinpoint a
neglllively and sometimes violendy Thanb forplcafling for compassion. receiver 46 ytrda down field ll1d
when someone intrudes into our . We neid iL
lhen can't rmd hia own car in 1hc
space.
From Columbus, Ohio: Y011 wm parking lot aft« lhe game.
I take the position lhatno one has awfully tough on thai slim lady who
Is life ptmillg you by? W11111 to
lhe right to sit on my lap without complained about lhe seat hog. I improve your IOCioJ .skills? Wrilc for
my pmnission; Y011 missed a r~ ·can't tell much from lhat small head Ann LaNJers' lleW booklet, "How to
opportunity 10 tell your readers that shot of you in lhe Disjwch, but rn Make Friends and Stop Billig
it Is perfecdy good mariners to say bet you anc a bit of a hippo JOurSCIC, l...oM/y:" Sertdase/f-addrtssed,IO#Ig.
10 a ~te. on a plane, on a bus or which explains your militant defense
business-size e11wlojlt aNl a ch(ck
il) a private car, "I am being crushed. of t!le fatties who write to you. -or mo11ey order for $4·.1S (this
Please get off me. • -- CYNTHIA IN Henry F.
includes pos~age aNl Nwllillg) to:
WASILLA. ALASKA
DEAR HENRY: I am 5 foot 2 Friends, c/o Ann LaNJers, P.O. Box
:DEAR ALASKA: Your point is a and have weighed between 112 and 11562, Clricago.IU.606J/4562. (/11
v~ one, but your language could
117 for lhe last 30 years. If lhat CIJIIIlda, :send $S .OS,)

Ann

orr

0

-Committee plans for
~pcoming fund raisers
•

I

.

:.The Sugar Run School Commit-

lhe school and it has been suggesttee is planning several fuild raisers ed lhat those families make memoin:an atteiJipt to raise $30,000 to rial donations to help preserve lhe
repair beams and replace lhe roof building.
.
Mrs. ·Powell also staled a roster
oj) the Sugar Run School House.
• The committee is lrying to raise of past students is being compiled.
t!Ks.money by spring so lhe project
Furlher information. about the
can go out for bid and be under project may be obtained by conroof in the spring, according to tacllng Rlichael Elberfeld Downie,
~ Powell, direciOr of lhe Meigs 949-2289; Eleanor Smith, 992Cl)umy Parle District.
2639; Marvin and Lois Neutzling
t Fundraisers planned to "Put A· Burt, 991-3101; Linda Darnell
B'pm Under The Roof' include a Mayer, 992-5954; Alice Huber
llincheolt, quilt sale, a $500 bond Globokar, 1-304-773-5707; Mausilt and an auction.
· ·reen Hennessy, 992-5402; Walter
• Each committee person will be and Mary Kimes Grueser. 992approaching area organizations to 3270; Roger Willoughby, 992have one fund raiser a year 10 assist . 2639; Robert F. Snowden, 7;42~th the Sugar Run School project.
3051; Ernest Vanlnwagen, 992Mrs. Powell stated some families 5402.
hlve had several generations attend
'

Meigs singers head to
~nnual festival Jan. 23
: Three Meigs Choir students - those recommended by high school
Tracey G~ueser, Kelley Gr.ueser music supervisors.
· Tracey Grueser, a soprano, will
aild Cass1e Hubbard - w11l be
aaiong 900 musiC students repre- sing in the honors choir directed by
sdnting 107 Ohio high schools at guest conductor carl Harris Jr. Kel&lt;:;.io Wesleyan on Jan. f3 to take ·ley Grueser, a soprano, and Cassie
part in the 44111 annual h1gh school Hubbard. an alto, will sing in the
music festival .
festival chorus. directed by music
: After spending mostof the day professor Roben Nims.
oO campus rehearsing, the students
Harris conducts the concert
will present a public concert at 7 · choir at Norfolk State University
p;m. in Ohio Wesleyan's Gray where he also is professor and head
q,apel. A limited num~ of gener- of the music deJ)arlment
·
at.admission tickets will be on sale
The annual music festival also
af the door for $2.
will include a choral conductors
1 On the basis of audition tapes,
reading dinic arid auditions for
ohio Wesleyan music faculty have music scholarships.
c~osen participants from among
Teresa B. Davis is choir director
at Meigs High School.
•

Receives award

\

p~sented

to Wayne, Martha, Jenni:fer aud Michelle Caldwell.
CQOlville, at the recent dinner ·and
celebration of the Modem Woodmen of America, Camp 10900.
They were praised for their volunt~r help of service and materials to
those in need in the Coolville area.
: A 50-year membership pin and
"Half-Century Club'' certificate
wtre earned by Arden Depoy ,
Guysville. ·
"The Woodmen's Creed service
was led by Phyllis Jackson, Athens;
Richard Smith. Eddie Russell and .

John Breedlove, Coolville.
An estate planning discussion
included Roberta Henderson,
Sharon Smith and Judith Ann
Gillian . Coolville; Bill Jackson,
Athens; Robert Henry, Amesville;
and Harold Hawk, Tuppers Plains.
Drawing prizes were won by
Linda Williams, Belpre; Ida Livingston, Richard Gillian, Jessie
Brooks and Paul · McPherson,
Coolville.
The next meeting will be ·a
Valentine party, Feb. 12 at 6 p.m.
at the Coolville Lions Club.

Laurel Cliff area news

•
'·Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs and days with Mr. and Mrs. Robin
da~ghter, Kristi, Clearwater, Fla., . Buckley and family of Ava.
Mrs. Sharline Johnson and
.were holiday guests of his parents, daughter,
Sammie, Reynoldsville.
Mt- and Mrs. Clifford Jacot&gt;s.
days with Mrs. Ann
spent
a
few
•Mrs. Jean Wright has moved
Mash.
inrb her new horne on Laurel Cliff.
Darbi Dorst, Marysville, spent a
Guests of Mr. and Mrs . J1m
week
with her grandparents, Mr.
Gilmore over the holidays were
Mrs. Sandy Gilmore, Rick and Mrs. Jim Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mash, son,
Kenne~y and Deanna Dors.t,
Bobby,
and daughter, Christy,
Columbus; and Lisa Dorst, Darb1e
Loris,
S.C.,
spent the holidays wilh
and AtimaS of Marysville. ..
·
Mrs.
Ann
Mash.
· Mn. Rulli Douglas, Columbus,
visited her mother, Mrs. emma
Fo&lt;.
d Mr
· Mrs. Donna Gilmore an
s.
American Legion Drew Webster
Mildred Jacobs spent Th!lrsday
with Mrs. Shirley · W1Se tn Post No. 39 will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. for dinner Yiilh .rneelinB to folMCConnelsville: .
,
X&gt;ennis Gilmore spent a few low at8 p.m. .

Group to meet

~

'

By ELISE ROSEN · .
Alloclated Press Writer
NEW YORK- Same set, same
exhortation: "Fight the real
enemy!" But diis time it was Joey
Buttafuoco, not the pope, whose
picture got shredded. And· it was
Madonna, not Sinead O'Connor,
doing lhe shredding. ·
·
Madonna, I!PPWin~ on "Saturday Night Live" tb1s weekend,
belted out "Bad Girl" from her
"Erotica" album, lhen ripped up
an 8-by-10 of Buttafuoco as she
echoed the words 'that got O'Connor in so much hot water.
Buuafuoco is lhe alleged lover .
of Amy Fisher, the Long Island
teen-. ~er who shot Buttafuoco's.
wife. ~ television movies have
been made about thll ca~e and
Madonna's perfonnance Sa.tutday
night appeared to be intended i11
fun.
.
0 'Connor appeancd deadly serious when she tore up a picture of
Pope Joha Paul n during lhe OcL 3
ep1sodc of NBC's "Saturday night
Live," shocking viewers and produceB alike. ·
Tile Irish singer said she was
protesting Roman Catholic dogma.
Madonna, who has stirred controversies of~ own wiih her sexually suggestive treatment of religious images in her music videos
and ~oncei'ls, ·said at lhe 'time lhat
O'Connor's irreverence went too
far. ·
.
"! thinlfthere's a beuerthway.to
present her ideas 'ra111er an npping up an image lhat means a lot
to olha people," Madonna said at
the height of the controversy •
around the same time that she
released her book of erotic fantasies, ·"Se&lt;."
Attempts to' reach Madonna's
spokeswoman, Liz Rosenberg,
were unsuccessful Sunday. The
switchboard at Time-Warner was ·
closed.

RATES .

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son-L ink

REEDSVILLE • Mr. an.d Mrs.
Gregory Lee Link are residing at
111 Clay Street in Tiffm after lheir
Aug. ~. 1992, wedding at St.
Joseph's Catholic Omrch in T'tffin.
The bride, the former Michelle
Lee Wilson. is the daughter of
Donald and Betty Wilson.
Earlysville; Va., and Gail and Dennis Eichinger, Reedsville. The
groom is the son of Bernard and
Dorothy Link• Tiffim·.
.
Jane Link, Tiffin, served as her
sister-in-law's ·matron of honor.

·

d.n.Dr'

I

Ron Link; Tifrm, was best man for
his brolher. Randy and Jim Link, ,
brothers of the groom, were ushers. . :
A reccptim followed the wed- •
ding eetcriiOI!Y at SL Mlwy's reae- "":
ation room.
:
The bride is a 1986 gnD18Ie of ;
Eastern Higl) Scltool. She anended •
Ohio Univefsity and is employed I
by Mcroy Hospital in Tiffin.
~
1begrooinisal9110gndllatrof ~
Cal vert High School·m Tiffin and '~
is employed by Alco Health Ser- •
vices ofTifrm.
·
•
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15 words or less, 3 days,
3 pepers,$6.00
CaU our office for paUl iA ""'''"'"e rale1!
1.

10.

3.
4.
5
6.
7.
8.

11.

HAULING

LOG HAULING,
LUMBER, or
FLAJBED WORK
In State or Ol,lt
Of State.

S &amp;L

Public Notice

Courlhouae, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

NEW USTING - MIDOLEPORT • Ranch style home with
3 '*~mama, 2 baths, bar, bull~n oheiving, newer heat
pumplcantral air, 24x80 includes large raar poron, and
. ot01ago ohed. Groat localionl $29,900.
·

LIMESTONE,

POMEfiCIY, OHIO ·

L:=::::==3/=6f=!lo=/lf~n

r

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

I l {"

CLUB
6:45p.m.
Special Earty Bird
$100 Payoff

App~anoeo incb:ladf ASKING $19,900.

~"

HAARIIONVIW - Vllclnl ground! 28.2119 acroo localad ori SR 11&amp;4. Aildng 1111,000..

~h

"~"

UNION AVE.- I~ slory home, 3-4 badroomo, carport &amp;
wood bring, ft~. good neighborhood, CioN to
ohopping. ONLY $11,1100.

Ml

NO EXTENSION WILL IE GUNTED ON TUlLER TUES.
r
· HOWARD E. FUNI 0:•,..
'&lt;J
MEIGS COUN!f TREISiR·~ '
-~

l.i)

, ,j,i
~

.

.

'

. '\

~I)

UITING - Brick It - 1 floor lrame home With 2

badrooml, 1 bath, gao h..., one car garage, gordon
~. fruil lrHo, on paved ttrHt, lot of 66x 160.

~~

WE NEED U811NQ81 CALL toDAY IF YOU WANT TO
IELLI WE HAVE BUYERS!
.

~E. CLEUNO........................................H2-1111

TRA YBRINAGER ........................... :.............. 114t-2-431
JEAN TRU18ELL..............................~....... "~'''Mt-2180

.,

'

.

SHRUB &amp; IREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

POMIIOY, 01.

61
GARRY'S
GENERAL .
M41NIENANCE
742·3305

AFIER
7:00P.M.
12·.17·'92

t "C..

SS-Aa.....
.
54- liMe. Ilea • §
55-- lleeiL5wl S., I '

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIC.
New Homes • VInyl Slclng

New Garages ·~:amant Wlr'"'ldow-.a.
Room A
• Roof.ag
.
COMMERCIAL ...t RESIDt:NI'IAL
FREE f.S1111AT£S

614-949--1 • Mt-2160
ortl5-3139

.. ,. s•••., c.IJJ

.........
...••••••••••
=.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

coamucno11

-c.

F&amp;A Till llntCE

••

Ste,.&amp;C=IN

. Topping. Trtmmlng.

f EIISI

Removal

ES

915-4473
667·6179

R-on.tlle~

.

2·7·92-lfw

111113
)I

MISOII, WV• ...._. , _ ....... Ollia

w.s...-..••

nres ....._.... Erl .....
Cbeck our Price or We Badt l . -

3rtl LOCA1IOI TO SliM 1M

Ana

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL'
(304) 773·5533
ASK FOR CH RIS

~

Snodgrass Up.olstery

"Helpi11g You To Reco-..er r..rlawil ,_,..
Chun:h, Home, Trucll, Boat, AulD
and Office S1 lilly

UCIIIE, OHIO

614·949·2202

•

,j

....

HElP THE EFFOIT TO IIIII A PIOSPIIOUS
.
RJTUIE FOI IIBGS aJIIITT
HElP US Ill 0111 111WI TO liD ...s11Y R11
EG5 CCMIITT .
WANTED: 5 11 6 MIES Of IB.AlltBt RAl U.:
(l)lll-"-6.ft.N)

. . ., '

mw.s-rpJw ....

PIIOIIE: Pwllf w .., Pi *r 11
....: 915-4231 ...... ,.,

IROUEY SIADOI CUFIS
992·2549
HOWARD
EXCAVAnNG
BULLDOZER, BACICHOE
ond TRACIOtOE WORK
AVAII'BLE
SEPTIC SYSTEIIS.
HOIESITESond
TRAILER SITES,
1.AHDCl.EARitG, .
DRIVEWAYS INSTAUED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESlUIATES

992-3831

6111'11211

BULLDOZING

,
.......,
--T-

Fan11p

J ... lhiS.swio
•100 .. c,·
7

y

•

oRV.'a

•LS

I'

II. 124.1 I

a

.."

614-Mf.JW2

FORKED RUN

PONDS
S£PTIC SYSTEMS

PH. 614-992-5591

' 12-30.92-111

POOR BOY TIRES

R&amp;C EICAYinNG

.USED RAILROAD TIES

lt.lt. 7
c•••••,., 01.

7·2-2310

GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

BILL SLACK
992-2269

•UGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

~JAYMIR

Futty·lnlured

9-10·92-tln

LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmeatone,
Dirt. GriiVel and Coal

11-13-'92-1 mo.

'.

I~

11124/'UMn

-992·7553

SIZED UMmONE ·
. FOR SAil
Call 614·992· ·
6637

1

Lie. No. 0051-32

S•all loser Work
$25.00"' ·
IWOIIARI
U1U

0FFICE.......................,................1.. ......... ........ ..H2-2251

I

Thi1 ad good for
FREE card.

DEUVEIIY SEIIYKE

Quality
Stone Co.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

AlliiAIU
lrflla It 1ft Or We
'Jlick Up.

217 L lecMtl St.

•ntlliMESTOIE

REDUCED- 1 floor frame homo in Midclltport on 2 lots,
IMIUroo 2-3 bay carport, patio, 3-4 bedroom~~, fireplace,
FANG, paved ltrMt lanced y81d, storage shad, insulalion. cablo. NOW S27,ooo.
•

A aom Addition•
-Gutllr Work
~leclrl... ond Plumbing
-Roofing
-ln'-rior &amp; Ex...,.ior
Pointing
·(FREE ESTIMATES)

HAULING

lcr•u • - PMI Office

DRIVEWAY WoRK

NEW LISTING - F..,. on To- Rd. - Two otory home
with 3-4 bedrooms, .JPC+ w.l water, 23+ acras of
....cedltillabielpulunt~ncludos bar, ohedo, cnb, outbuildings, lruit IrMa. $75,000

NEW

B

n-:s,......c.No

CARPENTER SERVIa

MICROWAVE OVEN
Dlllltl VCR REPAIR

992·5••5
Of
••
915·3561

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER
wou

~·

Sl

YOUNG'S '

992·5380.

IN POMEROY

992-7259

·· 12131/92/lfn

Pemeroy, Ohio

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

RobertE.!!uck,
Probate Juotg.
Lon• It Neoawoed, Chlrk
(1) 4, 11,18, 31o

' .' '

(6 14) 99.2·5449

TRUCKING

992:-2156

been filed ooking to rolhove
the
utot•
trom
PUBLiCATION OF NOTICE adminiotrotlon, oaying thot
TO ALL. PERSONS inter- tho uooto do nol exceed
Mted In the Htale of Mory $25,000 .1nd lho c~ed!tors
Ouollo, doa•ooed, toto ol . will not bo !'rojud1cod
101 "New Str•~ Pomeroy, -Y· A hoanng on tho
Ohio 45768 Moigo eounty appncottonwin bo hetd
Prob~t. co'urt, c ... No. F~bruory 3, 1993 II 1:30
27574 An opplicotion hoi o clock P. M. Poroono
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _; . . . . . . _ · - - - - - - knoWing ony IOIIOn why
..., ...
"-noral
lh• opplic1tion ohoutd nol
Rial E-'""''
be granted ohould •ppoar
ond inform the Court. The
Court hi located W. Second
Street, Mol go County 1

IMPROVE YOUR
MORTGAGE ·.
SITUATION . .
REDUCE
AND/OR
CONSOUDATE.
NEW LOANS
ALSO.
614·992-7523

ALL HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a load ·
'
Delivered.

FrH Eetlmateli

I ', ( . ' . ';

"'l
·r.

11 M' n,....,..
18-Wu... ToDo

1·800·137·1460

RREWOOD FOR S:.t.LE
6-26-'824111

15

A111 POCHI
.. '

'

14- Baoi- Traiaiat
15- Sclooolo"' 1 16- llodio, TV A CB llepUr

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

t..wn-ing,
Forlilizlng, W-ng, and
.
-lng.
Shrub ond Tr• Trimming
&amp; Remon!
RNidtnllol • Commtrclol

12.
13.
14.

tn

' ~

49--F•l--

13-lu-

KEVIN'S LAWN
·MAINTENANCE
949·2391 or

992·2156

Public Notlc:e

11-BelpWoaled

u- Si~aalio..; w.....

0

9 "

'

2

CLASSIFIEDS!

992-2156

-.-r. . a..a
_,...._. __
45- F..n.w..l.._

(l...oJoffW.rur
l••nllte)

Call Sentinel

Scott Lucas, Administrator of
Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy,
announces the opening of the offices of
Dr. George A. Kusnir, M.D.,
· in the Meigs Medical Building
adjacent to the hospital.
Dr. Kusnir is both an Internist and
a Nephrologist.
For appointments or information,
please call ·
992-7463 or 992-7579 .

•

-S-forB.al

Pomeroy Dally Sentln~l

YOUR ATTENTION PLEASE!

3S-~6Aea

.... ~ora­

20%-60% OFF

SMALL
WANT ADS

I;!' • .

~r

113Y. W. SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. 45769

!

Bums, who began performing in
Las Vegas in 1941, walked slowly
10 cenrer stage, sealed inro a large
chair with his cigar and began 10
impart the wisdom gained from 90
years in show hnJness
1
"Why shoulda 't I be a country j'
singetl' he asked in a prelude to a _
song. "I'm older than most countries. ••

I

~l&amp;oloilos-r..­

778-11-

742-lellaod
667-CooMie

-r-~or9olo

M-D

41-S...wa-

67$-1'1. ,. ...
458 Leoa
576-.Applo c .....

,-~ .Po~nerey

-l&amp;oloiloo-ww.

~-----=,..,.-====="=-----l 36..-II..J~W.....

CA6H?!!·

1102 V18nd St

THE TU BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR 1992 :;..··~
COLLECTION OF THE REAL ESTATE TAlES, ALSO '( !
"
. FOR DELINQUENT TAlES.
...
CLOSING DATE IS "fE·R~ARY 12, 1993 ·
TRAILER TAl DEADLINE IS JANUARY 31, 1993. •,..,

.

charged for each day u oeparate ads.

PIN down EXTRA

Pt Pleasant, WV.

smart. rich - and alive."

$.05/day

'
Rates are for consecutive
runs, broken up days will be

SALE

,,

s .20
$.30
s .42
s .60

ont to:

GINGERBREAD
HOUSE of GIFTS

Plans to stay in the business .
LAS VEGAS (AP) - George
Bums says he plans 10 stay in show
business "until I'm the last one
left."
The comedian, who turns 97
Wednesday, celebrated a bit early
Satitrday night wilh a performance
at Caesars Palace.
His opening act, Florence Henderson, introduced him as "everything I wantiO be at his age: sexy,

..... P.lal l'loUul 8 " .......
W.o... 11,00011o-

ALL UPSTAIRS
MERCHANDISE
MONDAY, JAN. 18 TRRU
. SUNDAY, JAN. 24

way to make it to tlti nna1 IOUIId ~
for lhe millions of dollars was to ~
return compleled eDirics on lime.
· "How legitimate is Ibis cooleSt
if she can make it into the f'mal ~ ·
round?" be )IIOieSted.
Diane Haag, •nimn• supervilor
at Publishers Clcarin&amp; H011se. in
New York, said it must have been a)
fluke that Mrs. RybMczyk was stiU
in 1hc contesL
·
"The only way you can ll:liVIMC ~
your chances iS to mum it," Ms. i
Haag said or 1hc 1~ m,illioos or :
households receive ·across the
country.
She said the IXllllpany probably
purchased a mailing list with Mrs.
Rybarczyk's name on iL But dial
wouldn't explain how she stayed in
the running if sbe didn't comply
wilh 1hc rules and fill in all those
boxeS wilh stamps, her scit said.

~-llidolloportl

867-a...w...
388-VIaloa
24$-lloG......t.
;156-G.o,aa OW.
64-...waDW.
879-W.._,

Bl'LLETI~ BOARD
. IULUIIN IOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICAIION

~,

·Dead woman makes it into fmal
i
round of sweepstakes competition . :
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - A
woman who has been dead for
more than a year has made it into
the final roun4 of lhe Publishers
Clearing House sweepstakes.
The son of Elizabeth Rybarczyk
of Akron said he is shocked that his
mother's name made it into the
final round for the $10 million
SuperPril.e.
.
Acco.rding to a letter mailed
recently to Mrs. Rybarczyk, she
mailed her Publishers Clearing
House entry back on time and put
all the contest stamps in their proper places.
.
··You've already got a lucky
streak going," lhe letter said. "It's
always amazing to me how many
we have to eliminate because IIIey
forget to romplete their entries."
Her son. Mike Rybarczyk of
Aleron, \aid he thought the only

±d,r

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

2-Im M
4-46-Golllpo..

. T..._(...,." " .. lllopla,,B.-Cutlor~l
~)will ... -

Over 15 Words

Gallla CoUDty Meitpl County MMOn Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Cod4i 614 Area Code 304

• FJto..ef .. ""' ......... .._. .. dout.lo,.... ., .. - ·

REUNION - Popular ''Lauglt-In" series replan Ra.. 8-.zj
and Arte Johnson ~Jet togetlter at a party a.m11 aadq die TV
show's 25111 annlversar)' at Loew's Santa Moaia Hotel. Cast I
members and special Qllleo lllfiiS joiDed producer G-. Sddat·
ter and HoUywood notaltles at the celebratioll. A ._..._., speriel, ,
''Rowan and Martlil's Laugh-In' 25th Anniversary," wiD air FeiJ.
7 on NBC, (AP p)loto)
·
,
-·
·
TI ~"[
~

15
15
15
15
15

Rate

Claaified PG/lBI c011er the
foiWwin$ telephorae e:rclaange1...

-s ...,. ..........

•..,1,

~

-

• A.lo ......... _.,. ,... od ........... ,..,.w
............... ,.. .... paid .. o d •r-A.Io: Ci-ftJudF.....todo....W15wordowW ...

MEIGS COUNTY REAL ESTATE OWNERS

Representatives' of lhe Middleport-Pomeroy Branch 'o f the Amer·
1can Association of University
Women are travelillllto junior higll
schools in the county to '10llcit
applications from leventh grade
female students who would be
interested in attending Be ·Wise
Camp. One student.from the county
will be selected 'to atlend lhe camp
and lhe application deadline is Feb.
15. The camp will be held this year
at Dennison Univenity. ·

Thunday Paper
FJ!day Paper
Sunday Poper

CLosED SuNDAY

POLICIES

I :00 p.m. Soturday
1:00 p.111. Moaday
I :00 p.lll. Tu.l.oy
1:00 p.111. Wedneeday
IOOp.111. Thunday
1:00 p.lll. Friday

Weclne!oy Paper

MoN. din FRI. 8.t.M.-5r.M. - S.tT.B-12

1
3
6
10
Monthly

•
DAY BER&gt;RE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE
Mmdayl'oper
Tuooday Paper

Call992-2156

Sharon Matson was the best
weeklr loser at 1hc recent meeting
of Oh10 TOPS Club No. 570. Run- ·
ners-up were Judy Laudennilt and
Linda Grimm.
Ola St Clair was the best KOPS
loser and she also won the fruit
basket.
. Peggy Vining won the gadget
gift.
Members were reminded to
bring in their hats for next week· s
meeting. There wiD be a prize for
best hat.
.
Plans for Area Recognition Day
were discussed.
The group meets every TueSday
from 5-7 p.m. at lhe Pomeroy Carpenter's Hall. For further iqformation call992-S638 or 992-2234.

Campers sought

Words

Days

TOPS meets

Tanner Hysell celebrated his
ftrst binhday recently with a party
at lhe home of his paternal grandparents. The party was given by his
parents, David and Penny HyselL
A "101 Dalmation Theme" was
carried out.
.
Dinner, including cake and ice
cream , was served to those mentioned and maternal grandparents,
Bill and Carolyn Biggs, paternal
grandparents, Harold and Twila
Hysell, Vindl! Biggs, Jamie Biggs,
Don, Debb1e and Don Hysell,
Gary, Sandy, Amy and Brutany
Hysell, great-grandparents Nathan
and Bette Biggs, and Sharon Biggs
and Dave.

•The Area's N•••nber i_

6l

Marketplace

Dance classes set

First birthday

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

Madonna mimics
Sinead O'Conner

GTE reduces
workforce

TANNER HYSELL

Pa;s

The Dally Sentinel Page 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, January 18, 1993

.

PASADENA, Calif. (AP)Wboopi Goldberg's movie "~ister
Act" took two prizes at the 2~th
NAACP Image Awards, while lhe
TV soap opera, "The Young and
the Resdess," and the TV drama,
''I'll Fly Away," each won three.
The awards were given Saturday
to diose presc:riting positive images
of blacks. This year's submissions
covered mancrial released from lhe
fall of 19.91 through the fall of
1992. .
MARION - GTE announced
Michael Jackson performed and plans today 10 reduce a~ximate­
received the Silver Anniyersary ly 98 jobs in the Oh10 Region,
Entenainer of lhe Year Award. The ~ccording to Bill Griswold, Obi!&gt;
show wiJI be broadcast on Jan. 23.
vice president-general
Goldberg was named best movie regional
manager.
actress for "Sister A:ct," which
"This cost-cutting move is very
also won as outstanding motion similar 10 those undertaken by our
picture. Denzel Washington was competi!OrS," Griswold said.
named best movie ac10r for "Mis·
"These reductions anc a continu".
sissippi Masali."
·
ation of our effort 10 rightsize our
operation in response 10 competitive factors and new technology .
advancements," Griswold added.
The Middleport Arts Council "We want to remain a strong, sucwin offer a series of dance classes cessful company. Tlrese actions are
on westem line dancing beginning intended to make sure 'we anc pieWednesday. Dances to be taught pared foi-lhc future."
include lhe Electric Slide, Tens
"Because Ibis work force reducFreeze, Achy Breaky, Tush Pusli, tion is. spresd across all GTE operBoot Scontin' Boogie and olhers. ating areas and affects all job clasCost of lhe classes, per session, are sifications in Ohio, lhe impact in
$3 .50 per person 8Djl '$7 a couple.
anr one community is minimal,"
Gnswold said.
"GTE offered hourly and management employees throughout
Ohio various voluntary separation
paclcages in November," Griswold
said. "To help reduce lhe number
1
of involuntary reductions.•
GTE currendy serves some 850
communities with over 2,900
employees in Ohin.
·

¢a/dwells receive award
I A "Points of Light" award was

The Daily Sentinelf
.

Getting close isn't for every'one-

Monday, January 18, 1993

SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS .
12:00NOON
FackNyChoD
12 Gaii!JI OaiJ

LICENSED lild BONOED .

12-5-tfn

-BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. A. BOStON

EICAVATIIG
(614)
667·66

PL• • • •
OJ.~

·~
sttMLz n e

•.•...,......
Creelr ....

614-tt2•7144 '
1011112
l

•

�-

SNAFU® by Bl'lla! Bealde

Ar' 11 nunc l' lll ( 111S

'"•

·-

5I

.

-

-~···-

'

18, 1993.;.,;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8 The Dally Sentinel

PIICII

-- ~ ··-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® )y Larry Wrl&amp;llt

18,1993

Goodl
&gt;

-

·Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

The Dlilly Sentlnei--Page-.9 ,

--

·ALLEYOOP

-7'1 Autol tor Sale

•

Houuhold

~nda~January

BRIDGE

3 . Annouilc:emlfltl
•

em.w
Bod """!!
Diolly

ono

l'umlohod,
In GolllpoUo, CGon• • - · No Poco,

............
1 2,001,
lloiiiiii

PHILLIP
ALDER

Rei..• Dopoolt, · 21143.
.

...

Trailer,

tAl

41 Acclg. lfllty
10 Pertltntng to

51=

13 Vlneg.-

~R

l
R o - Roqultod. No Pill.
114-W6-1'142. Or 614-787-4345.
14110 2 lr, 1 milo SOUih ol
EuroM,

ofQA ·

&lt;$IF......

16.:::::.. sa::=•IGn
15 tNt (Fr.)

for Rent
1IR

43F-

IS Cenl.11 Corl'ecUy

42 Mobile Homes

NOiml
.Q15S

.......

4A

+7

.AQ104
tJ
.KQJ6 2

t10H 32
.109 3

..... -Incl.-, 114w::nii
Aftw I P.ll.

26

....

.
=

IM&gt;bt.l

511 NtfiOtlt In
llr

61 CIWI\ry

y

NoYIIk
2lt Pnldenl

.H2

.JH2

-

23
EAST

WI!ST

Ulllllloo A..UOblo. School luo
Rl. Cadonuo Aloe. 114-37t-22117.
1im 14x'IU, Homo For

51F~

11t Dulclt town
21 - v\chlcl
22 GA'-1

ttaH

,.,.,.ctt. tl4411.eo11.
3 • - llobllo Homo: All

54 filet.! llrlllfl

18 HellpllcH·

.K76 S

on Sl Rl.l No plio,

to\cllel'

-

63 Te\tvlllon

tWJ&lt;dt
M- Loult

31 ()rpntol

.

65 SandWich

llg\tl

typa (lbbr.)

33 AcCOIIIpMth

34 All

SOUTH
.AKJ108

40=)

tAKQ

48754

12 Wdl.)

two, Rom111
• Onlonllkt
herb ,
5 Aqutllc
3

DOWN

37 T.cked
3$ lAngiii unit

.5

.-

......... ,'"'1111,....

'2 IINport In
Alaeiia

1 -wyclub
2 TV't talking

mamm11

8 - Monroe
7 Acljeclht

hortt

Vulnera ble: Both
Dealer: East
West

Db I.
2'.
4NT

Pass

,.

BARNEY
UH-- WHAT DO
lOWE ON MY
GROCERY BILL,
~ILAS?
·

Sooilo

JEST A
SECONT,

PARSON

Nor,.

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

'

Opening lead:

Eul
14

+10

Op.en up
the lines
There are 'deals in which you need to ,
go backward and forward bet-n , ho+-f

PEANUTS

·==· v!:

GCWERNIIENT HOliES Fn&gt;m S1

C:O,:r;.~~U;,

....... (1) - -

n1u. .._..
-........
old--.--..-, *' ""-.114-3.

1Wo mo1o AJCC -

Ext. Qll.

1018t For Culnnl Ropo Uot.
-

loiN • Round Ill•
11110.

P'

T1 ,: qspor1a1rOil

In Vlllago 01 ChMhlro,

Ohio 114-441-04111A._I P.ll.

.... By Owner: 3 ltd~
.._.., Adrl... Slrool~ ..~

SpMe, F

6E~ORE TI'IAT, WE WOUL.VN
~E 51TTIN6 HERE ..

AND I WOULDN'T BE
TRADING 'YOU A
CARROT STICK FOR
A FRENCH FR'Y' ..

....._

. . . . .

~L

~

wluituas,

· ... ,.........
30Wli31171.Aftw4
,10W15-1411.

In 140'1, Con Holp

.....,_, ti4-44Wm.

-

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IJ:yl·
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•

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Plvmoulh •.,.,_

opeod; 112,000. 1104-

- Fold
Aut-Io -

v...Pu:!'r _J
lilt; All

14,000. 1144!11-12JII·
.
.
Fold lll&lt;inoO XLT, V.., PI~.!.
PI, PW, POL. AIIIPII - . ;

;

price ..... CIt,._.....

I

AND ERNEST

.... 1001, ..........~ 4WD,.._,

1814 l'onl Tompo,_ Wllh H1000
-

Aold!IF

...- .

1111

--Mklng:IUOQ.I14-

441-C1111.

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lint oariciMion. LbW ·~r;,., Coli- ' '
IIWH-1122
' ·

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·
fllOM NADONI'IA.....
.
l'N ~OPING TO
GfT A rAI'IAHA
TtiAT PftLS

GfN£-ilC.
~f)FA~t:H

LAB'

74 . Motorcycles
1m Hondl ~ D¥*"'h..t~.:

=
·
". \.

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S11110., 1t11
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1814 ltonto XR IGO, 1410. ...... I

tor.a..ta• •.~u..
'1N2 "•w ., CIA-210,

u Oldlm;blla. CliO
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1117 Dda

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1111-7111.

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114 - t4S4 .
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1110 IU.Uiol Klllna 710,
ollvw, looo Ilion ' :1,100 mlloo,

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-Door ~-.:,,000- --=-=,::-.-....,-=-,.--==w,...,""kl&lt;-.".--=•=2
c.diiiH . llevUio 114-37t2111.

· t11.100

Hlitno-

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As LI I 'p 011111 ,.,.

Ellt.:O..

IIIII Paull'l O.y C.re ,Center 1
Block Will 01 HIIC on .loc:"Piu 11-F I A.ll. ·5:30 P.ll. II
CualhJ And Erporlonco lo Tho
11 COncom For Yow Chlld'o
Cere. Coli Uo For A Yloh. lnfllnl
trDdds.,. &amp;t4 ue em p,.._
ot a cl1rt ISchool Age 1'14-446-

•ere • \'3 acre under roof, lllC
1w fMd Ill (!100 lon olio) or
(1101100 IIIII orch ~

1224.

..........•. 2 Acr•

• offlco bldg: Aoldng $11,000.

Land

-·

Shill Aoutel54,111 3111143.

ond """'""" · - 1301--;::::·=======~
CON lor oldorty In mJ home,
114111H851.

Ovw ........... land, ........
building 1111, on F - • Rd.,

~~- -

llobllo ....,_ Lola, For ROlli,

I wRh outoldo

building, 114-141-

2081.

Wolll Now SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCW:
ng, Fronilng, Moltll Counly, Solom Twp.l

Building, Ro

Illy Will, Floori:=:Polrolng,
Roollng, Elc.
""'' Havo
Refere~

cu. 1144

t6IGi ICN. Romolo, booullfu
lond; woodo, pootura ond hlllo.
Cell tor good map. 1-11Wn-

1141,Aih0no.

WI

L.Jwe In

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.....

21

Buslneu
OpponunHy

HOUS81 for

Rent

-·hr-n

=r::~:;::i~And=~

Ilon P =· eompoellln
BolorY, I
lndlna - . ,
PIArl nal £n.
........ . . And Outstanding

Ex_._

Camntuu•w

Col- Cllnlo'o _ . , Pf
lu:lll 1rwllor, Hiney MuNine. For

~= ~~~-

''' ••• 10 .....,.
Welaltl. No Wll -

'10111' Nolurol- Quoranl_,,

eo~• •u:ns.

-

Merchandise
Household

Goods

AND APPUAHCU
.

.

114 ttl 4421 OR 114-4414118

4 --

on

Rlwor1 2 1111•

Clly
Be-, 1410/llo. iiM1 """
5113 lilt.
4 -..,., lolh, Fu,_ Hool

!lOngo, Rolrlgonll"!t_llo__PIIo,

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Chom- IUdao - · •

flo.

. . . . "" --'12110-.-

Con,.,.,,,.....__

Rio o
...... '""" Willh
Dlllt
And 1om..- For Fomlly,

OUR LANGUAGE

llloMt If!

H£1ol Ufl,!)lo...~~

COST

SHe CAN'T
WA'TC\:1 FOOD

ccw.MEROIAI...e

AND €&gt;HE CAN'T W4.UC. 8'1'
PIZZA ~LOR LJNLe&amp;.s

eHE.eON A l E¥!1 \.

ONTV.•.

t-

WANION means "curse" or "bad
luck." Mispronouncing this archaic
noun may be bad luck: WANlON is
pronounced "WAN-yun." "
Q. I'm practicing to be a discus
thrower. Can DISCUS ever be spelled
DISCUSS?
A. No, that spelling is a mistake. In
track and field ·activities, DISCUS C
"DIS-kus") is a disk of wood or plas·
tic that's thrown for distance. Spelled
without a doubled S at the end,
DISCUS has been used for more than
three 'c enturies. DISCUSS &lt; "dis ·
KUS"I, which ends with a doubled S,
is the verb that means ·to talk about,"
and it cannot be used as a noun .
Check your dictionary for more information before you decide to discuss
DISCUS.

IMONDAY

'

-·-IC.---

CELEBRITY CIPHER

..
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75

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PREVIOUS-- SOLUTION: "I feel I am wl1houl 'some of lhe real neuro&amp;M . ::~
lhat" ICiors and aclriiSMS can have." - se"" Young.
••
- ··- -- . . . •·' .
WOlD
IIATI&amp;IlT
PIIILII
-

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ea••

•••

0 lourloorra,.. lottoon of
ICIQmblod -d•
low Ia lann lour -do-

I
I I I I I' I
IL.~:=R~=~~=~:=:il
I I I r _.
I I I I I' I
UMRITS

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HUMOT

HA CN

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•••
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"Welt, I'm middle aged,"

sighed
fellow.
know,
that
agethe
when
your"You
memory
is
•
shorter, experience is longer,
..--------,stamina is ·lower, and your
G0 NHUE
'forehead is ......_.
·

s·

•

·

•

A

•

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A

Complete the chuckle quoted

V' by fill ing in' the misSing words
you develop from srep No. 3 below.

'l::r

PRINT NUMBEifO lETTERS IN
· THESE SQU~IES

•

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ~NSWEI

I

II I

SCIAM-LETS ANSWERS
Deport • Whole • Jiffy • Carafe • AFFORD
A fellow was down on his tuck. Another chap tried
to cheer him by saying, "There is nq$11ing wrong with
being poor, but now a days mostfotks can't AFFORD it."

--.
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. ..

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..

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.

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U:!n9 Inc.

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JANUARY 181

....... . 1.

,;jj
......

Tonnlna Bod For Bolo Willi 8un

100 .
...
_ 1110:
...........
_
_
iif·22

..-

.

Thm your clutter into cruh,
S.d it tluJ eau amy.. ;by phone,
no need lo leave your home·, .
PlaCe your cfg'lified cuJ &amp;odfJ.XI
15 ..Ord. or leu, a'dqp,
3 pger«, 15140 paid in tUivance.

,,,..,os

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

3.,.------'----'-..:......:-~.;,.;;._-4._.----:--~~...;;_;.+-:--....;~
5 ...,;__--.;.,__;,-r~~-:-:-..:;...,.6'~---~~---'-~~--

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9•....__,---_ _ _ _ _ __
10~--~-..,;__ _ _ _ __
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12----------~--..,;___

14·--------~--..,;_~~~

2 Bod- TCIIol
lloalrlo, Pumtt. ·Willi To
W.l Cotpoi, 111.-.uDe.

11\V - .

HS

11'~...,..---------------~
-

Il10IId. ~or_O!IItry ~L . _.

~F'?'VOU

.

-

175-2101.

ISA
WANT AD

- •hi-- -

2M-1Z1'1.

VI'RA FURNITURE

Soutll Of OoKI-

~

1..+-+--f-

lullo Cow Hta. _ . . , 114-

·--

Cloootow SUb. (RI.7 81, 38R, 2
bolha. - ,.,_ dblii """"'·
ranch. Qolllpollo SchOolo. 1·3047N-IMI.

THE BEST

""*-bra1

AI 'Co- l Y1nYt In llocll . On 2017.
. Solo. lrlollollon Cio-o. 1117 N. . ._ • d-...J...boeh
lhor
IOOrk, ~"" ari1N141.

'

~~~--~~~-­
To '-- 31 .Homes for Sale
-

=.a..

Worood To Aonl: llolor For WHUnd 11~~~.-r; Soulh
Bond, Coli PIC
'lUI.

.

Real Es1ate

~-.:=·=="
sam lolellliu..-s llltllftllll
""Woe.'='(E.~
!!! loll.~ - . • f:OO Pll,

Alnl, 3 Bod- 2 8olllo, Will
-11,
docron lnowlotH, . . . - " "
PoJ
For
Nloo
·
No
1211.11.
Child..., 114-44H7011.

II Kollo,
llrln, 13110, 1350, Rolol11101 •
Requlrwd, Dopooll, No Poto, 114- 51

448-1113.

~K,~~ON

'"""Ill!.•
a.........liiCh

.....

OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT: Aoollollc llodlm offici .... In Ill tis
&amp; Prof ' onll lulldl~ now
...Col .._
ldno,

3 lodi'IIIHII -

UfMiyiL

IT! WilY !« 1W1KR

..u6T" .STARTeD
ON A ES!Ric:;:T NEMI DI5T.

- '

46 -Space for Rant

Proll:•lonal Coui* Want To

1 . . .oom, ,..,_~ee•, $'150
-...Po' ':ne
INOTICil
~. - · + Ulllhloo,
Pine GrO'ft Chwch, Vinton,
••• ,..,.... Therapy . . OHIO VALLEY PUIUSHINO CO. Ohio, 304-1524307.
- ..... ,.., do bUll~lnAI Opporlunlly In A wlh _ . . JOU k,_, ohd 2 Bod- Lorgo Uvlng
NOT 1
0JOU.honlnvaoiigolod
tho Room, Khchon, Dining ANI,
moll
uniU
llle-lng.
8oth-, c:.po.tL
·
11+241-11083
Allor B ~.M.-

TliS YEAA ~D GoOT AA

wtlh oooklng.
Aloo-lrollw - - Alhook-&lt;lpo.
Coli oftor 2:00 p.m., 1104·7735881; 1111011WV.
.

lf7 Wanted to Rant .

41

Auto Pane &amp;

,.eor I AGUIE t~ ~~~

Rooms

1-.2131 or441-2112.

Rentals

.
hcM•tlurru, room 1

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

Fumlshlld

N .

WlH Do Cl~:"'~

.-c1,......
'M\afwww:c
ta lox
· """'"'...
Rqulrod,
0.14 . . . .. Polni ,._,.,
lor, - lloln St. Pl Pit,

45

A_,. lor ron1 ·-or moroh.
Slorli~ 11 S120Jmo. OoUio llolol.
114. 8580.

ArN).I14-44&amp;41211

~~·- ~·1114t :

,.

BORN LOSER
'f\JP. .. [ ANW-Y lliOE

~M~

•

lri 'i'roiuo, C.Hiomlo =~~~\\"''

WIU

lt111f4 • ' ~tar IM....-r
,., loll _.. _ . , ..,.. -

44141Q0r~1103ooforo

T,. lopping I l...imng IX•
trio lllimatoa, 1104111114411.
Will ~ ln my holne. Racine

Dlllenco..

CA&amp;H?H

Third Avo ..... Oo'lpnl'o._114-

T., mlloo ooUih of PI.l'ft. an Rl. IP.II.
2,3CJ4.51t28M.

v....lon

...

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.

PINao~EXTRA
•

1

or~.llg~~~CMJghlw

rt

76

Want to:

........ -.lrlokRonolo 3
lA, 2 llolho, 3 --~1
-rnan1,28omo,WOIII
,
Ctlb Whh Sl!od. 1-2384.

'

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"::i:"r:-.
•
11.
•......... -~-J
.

, . , Dodge ~ _~.~:, 4 o-.
AIIIIIOIIIo; AI&lt; ......-. Till,

ITSELF/
-

boll

dot...r- WM; 2,4011 lllilol

Ocuunmeut tk*a:
112,000 Pw Y-. -

THAT'S NOT AN EVEN
TRADE, FRANKLIN ..

1114 ~ P• r au r wn.
Alll-lc, llr, P8, AIIIFII ~

el ;:· :~."=
Foraod Air Hoot, -

MARTIN LUTI'IE( KING
~AID, '' I I-lAVE
A DREAM"

your band and the dummy. Sometimes
It's easy; perhaps you arecrossruffing, .
But at other times you must open the
lines of communication before going :
about your business.
·
In today's deal, you bid aggressively ;
to reach six spades. West leads the
club 10. How do you plan the play?
It iS a matler of style whether you
overeall ooe spade or double with that
South hand. I prefer simple overcalls
to bave an upper limit of 16 points, so I
would double. North's jump to two
hearts sbowed some 9-11 points and at
least lour hearts. J:lis lour clubs was a
'Splinter bid, showing the values for a
raise to four spades with at most one
club. This was music to South's ears.
You have an automatic heart loser,
so you must plan to ruff your three
club losers in the dummy. However. if
you try to use two of yoor- diamond
honors as hand entries, you run the
risk of an adverse ruff. It is better to
clear the pal,bways by leading a low
heart from tbe dummy at trick two.
However the. defenden maneuver
now, you can check that the trumps area't l-0 and organize not only the
club ruffs but also the band re-entry to
draw the rei111Iining a~rse trumps.
(If the trumps are 4· 0, you will have to
hope that the player with the four
spades bas at least two diamonds.)
M. the splinter bid bad excited South
into using Blackwood, perbaps West
sbould bave led his sinlletoll trump at
trick one. Here tballead would be fa·
tal to the contract (is would a dia· ~

15 _ _~~~~---

446-2342
9J2-2156

~

. .. :

r.omanc.~ ond you'll nnd II.
Gr~ Malcltmaker lrillaniiJ

Aalro- CANCER (,._ 21-.IUIJ 22) Your opreveals portunllles lor personal glln tra likely
AITRO·ORAPH
wl1k:lllllgna are romanlically perlecllor to be prevalanlloday In tr1111a lhal you
you . Mall $2 plus a long, llll·ed· do nul consider your cullomary chan·
d -, Slomped envelope to Malch· . nels for earnings. Don'1 be afrllld lo
maker, c/o lhla newspaper, p:o: Box ecout around a bl1 .
&amp;1421, Cl-and, OH 44101 ·3428.
LEO (July D-AIII· 221 Before mald"'l
BERNICE .
AQU RIU8 (oltn. IO:Ftb. 11) Per10nll any major dac:lllonl loday II behoovM
freedom and Independence lo perform you to dlocuss you&lt; rau'llill(l wtlh your
I!EDE OSOL whal
y0u canolder neceaury 11 lmpor· mate. Ha or ol1e mlghl ha.. good tanl lor your MICC881 loday. Don 't put lhal could give you a whole , _ ,_.
yourMII in a pOIItlon where olhers In· lptCIMI. . •
hlbl1 your movemenla.
VIRGO (Aug. :IJ.Iepl. 221 An lmportanl
PIICII (Ftii. IIO:MwCII 20) .......... . objtellve that you've been re1uc1an11o
cr111oal mllllarllrom a logical perspec' pu..- should nol be i(j-ad any long·
live tO:.~bul,_ by the aam8 lol&lt;on, ... Once you &lt;*ide 10_do -hlng
don't
n1 your lnluiiMI porc:ep- aboulll, your fMis and --oolonl'
1\ont. Tllgtllter, lhey,can be very aHK· wtll begin to evaporate. Be bold.
· tlvelor you:
(8epl. D:Oat.ll)ln order lo eel·
.-a (lllfciii21·April11) Somalhlng IJIIIA
vance your 1111-llldey. you will
.... which you - h i g h " - eppun h... lo be 1 bl1 IIIOrw 1111r11ve than
to be 1-blli and 11 looter lllca 11 could , ..... been In t1tt pall. You cen do
...... 1.. 1111
-'&lt; 0111 . .Howe,.., you'll htve 10 use wl111 ..... doing, • long • you juS1
dllermtnlllon 10 ""'k' II a r.llly.
bll- In youl'llll.
S..ll frllncltttl!la you have d-opad TAUIIUI (April 20...., 10) Your day ICON 10 (Got. 14 NoJ, 22) You mlghl
....., the lttt couple Of~ wtH tcqulra might begin on a ralller playiUI nota, but be a bit 011 llol!r .-tOday, 11u1 once
-and graater tiglllllcauoeln tilt rur H won't lake much tor you. 10 Mille you ciet locuad and get Into gaar.' auclfletd. l n - 1 wtlh lncll¥kl· down and llllka a tr811111lon toward en
tNIIclly. Keep your
'"::.l~.l:o= mutual beMIIts.
ambiUoua lulllllmant. ·
eron your target
·
C
(Dt!t. IWall. 11) Try lo 0 1 - ( ... .,......... 10) !VIII when IA81TTAIIUI ( - . II Dee 21) You
~ ,au&lt; rMourca II lhll lime, - you conlronl ~e\IIOPR*III .... good 1111 llllfiOIIIOCIIry, ~~~­
b 1 ,.. a bit ,...,., down ~~lhyou today, you wtlllllft be a to mtlnllln a you .Irani • llllllloCIIclil _ ,• .
might h... 1 belttt "" lor ,_., an phllotophiCtl outlootc. Your-11111udt Will lion. Take limo to 1111 your Slory In an
1
yau .do now. You wltlretrat lllllhay goalongwayiowardehltplngyouovar· ordlrlymlnller.
·
...,•t aveJiablli. Know-· to look tor come chllltnQal.

.

I

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'blr
.
CBirthday

'*""'and-

.

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Paae 10-Thl Dally Sentinel

Poinerciy-Middleport, Ohio

1a,1m

•

•

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
007
Pick 4:
3753

Kansas- . ·
tops
Kansas St.

People in M·P Rotary meeting focuses ·
the news on threat of tuberculosis _- . ~

Beat .of the·Bend... .
by Bob Hoeflich

Monday, January
.
.

'

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
First brother-elect Roger
Clinton was chastised for bis casual
wardrobe by a fashion-conscious
audience member at a local appear(AP) -

In case you've wondered, the
Royal Oak Dance Oub is alive and
well.
· . If you enjoy "cuUing a rug" this
would be a good time for you to get
involved since membership for
1993 is now llpCII.
·
The club Will ~e four dances
. thjs year the dates mcluding Feb.
27, May 8, Nov. 20 and Dec. 11
and of course. the dances are held
in the pleasant surroundings of
Royal Oak Resort-each, dance
gQeS from 8 to 11 p.m.
Membership for the season is
$45 and by paying your membership for die year you oot only save
money-price 11 the dQor is $15 a ·
couple-but you help enable the
planning committee to secure the
.1/ands in advance. You can mail
your yem:ly membership to Roben
Hysell, P.O. Box 143, Syracuse,
Ohio43779.
Milking up the 1993 planning
committee •are Opal . and Roy
Grueser, Robert and Julia Hysell,
Joanne and Mickey Williams, Joan
lnd Bruce May, Peggy and Ken
Harris, Toni and John Redovian,
Chuck and Lynn Kitchen, and
Phyllis and Larry May. Officers
this year are Opal Grueser, presi~ent; Robert Hysell, treaSurer, and
!ulia Hrseit and Phyllis May, co-

surgery but will have to stay nearby
for a couple more weeks for oulplltiennreatment at the !Jospiral on a
regular basis• .During the hospitalization period, Vicky and Ted will
be joined by Vicky's daughter,
Katie Da~is, who lives in Aorida
these days. ·
We know lhat you join in wishing Viclcy a successful operation
and a speedy recovery.
May Kelly of Middleport-the
wife of Marvin Kelly, former Middleport Village Councilman-is a
patient at lhe Charleston Medical
Center and would certainly be
cheered with some cards. The
address . is Room 3()7 South,
Charleston Medical Center, Washington and Morris Avenues,
Charleston, W. Va.

Bet you at times have wondered
whatever happened to Dorothy
Oliver and her family, Dorothy
was an outstanding English and literature teacher at Meigs High ·
School before she decided to look
at the rest of the worlrJ.
.
Well-the Olivers' were all
together during Qle Christmas season. They're scattered hither and
yon, but still share Dad Bob's
address, Box 445, Mason, W.Va.
sccreranes.
Bob, who still teaches at Meigs
The club has el(pressed regret at High School, is okay afte~ having
'the loss of Edna and Robert Wood undergone a battery of medical
and AlUla and Lloyd ·Blackwood tests following a illness which
who have !lroppcd li:om the com- sauck him 11 school in September.
. hlitree. They have been long-time Dorothy is still working at Chemimembers and officers and have cal Abstracrs Service in ColumbUs.
been quite insJrumental in keeping · She was injured in November'the dances going over the years. says she walked into a door in a
The two couples deserved their big darkened .theater in Columbus-.
vore or thailks from the club.
Come on, Dorothy, that's what
they all say.
There •s bad news and good
The Olivers• son, Lance lives in
news on Vicky Morarity, Wetzgall . Puerto Rico where be is copy editor
St., Pomeroy resident.
of the world news section of the
The bad news is that Vicky has San Juan Star. He lives in historiserious health problems resulting cal Old San Juan with lots of sand,
from a bout with a deadly sttain of sun and warmth. Make you envipneumonia a year ago and has to ous? The Olivers' ~ghter, Lynne
undergo surgery.
and her husband, Chris, are living ,
The operation involving the in Czechoslovakia. Lynne is
lungs is difficull Vicky has been employed wilh an American law
. referred to one surgeon who is firm-she's an attorney, you
reportedly the only one to perform know-and her husband is a parther needed operation using laser in owner in a couple of business venthis country. The good news is that tures.
Vicky is optimistic as she makes
Undoubtedly, with everyone
plans to proceed.
going in different directions and
Joined by her son, Ted, of Lan- involved in varied life styles, the
caster, Vicky will fly out of Olivers didn't want for conversa·
Columbus on Fdl. 10 for C~ tion during the_if holiday getGeneral Hospital near Los Angeles, together.
Calif. She musl be there five days
before lhe operation takes place for
No, I didn'tget invited to the
various tesrs that have to be com- inauguration either. But, hey, we'll
pleted. If she progresses satisfacto- live with the hurt and will just keep
rily she will be discharged from the smilin'.
hospital two weeks after the

PageS

ance.

"I'd like to know why you
dido 't dress properly," Betty
Yaeger, 50 of Palm Beach said during a question-and-answer session.
ill response, Clinton, in town
Friday to open the Palm Beach
Round Table speakers series.
stepped from behind the lectern to
offer 1he crowd of about 300 a
chance to critique his ouifit.
He wore a baggy navy blue
jacket, white shirt, !lrown dress
Hush Puppies shoes, a festive
Uncle Sam tie and blucjcans.
"I'm sorry. ma'am," Clinton
said. "If I'd liad time I'd have
sewed litde rainbows on my pockets like you've got on yours, but I
thought judging l?eople by !heir
,clothes went pul m the 1950s or
'60s."
Ms. Yaeger defended her commenrs la!er.
"Everything was wrinkled and
his hair was unkempt. He was
.d irty," she said. "He shouldn't
'embarrass his brother lhat way:"

••
Vol. 43, No. 111
l'.opyrlghted 1ea3

America's first combat troops head home

•

INGEU .E,LECTRONICS
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RACINE - A meeting on agricultural law will be held on Tuesday at Southern High School in
Racine. The session will be held
from 7 to 9:30p.m. in the vocational agriculture classroom. Fencing
laws, dog laws, water righrs, underground storage tanks and many
ot¥r laws affecting farmers will be
discussed. The session is sponsoredby the Adult Basic Education Cen• ter of Tri-County Vocational
School, as a patt of its continuing
education progrnm. The meeting i£
open to tl1e p.ublic at no charge.

MONDAY
POMEROY - A financial aid
workshop will be held Monday at 7
p.m. at the Meigs High School
library for all Meigs County
seniors and parents. Guest ~ers
will be John Hill of the University
of Rio Grande on the Financial Aid
Form (FAF), and Melony QJeenwood of Bank One on student
granrs and loans.
~ RACINE - Big Bend Farm
Antique Club will meet Monday at
7:30p.m. at Southern High School.

TUPPERS PLAINS • The
. Orange Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the home
of the clerk, Patty Calaway, for
1993 appropriations.

\

TUESDAY
CHESTER- The Meigs Co11111Y
Livestock Sale and Show sub-corbmitleeS have scheduled meetings to
review 1992 livestock rules and
regulations and to make recornmendations to the 1993 senior fair
board. The meetings are open to
any 4-H or FFA member, parent or
advisor. The swine sub-committee
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.rri. at
Chester Elementary.

.

POMEROY - American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy, Tuesday. Dinner at 7
p.m., meeting .118 p.m.
LETART FALLS -There will
. be a special PTO meeting at Letart

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT T h e
Middleport Arts Council will offer
a series of dance classes on western
lWle dancing beginning Wednesday
at 6:30 p.m. Dances to be taught
include the Electric Slide, Texas
Freeze, Achy Breaky, Tush Push,
Boot Scootin' Boogie and others.
Cost of the classes, per session, are
$3.50 per person and $7 a collple.
.Call992-2675 or·992-7733,

NEW YORK (AP) -The average American homeowner will
spend S1,100 Ibis year in energy
COSIS, a:cording to the U.S. Department of :Energy, which adds that
this can· be a bomeoWDel''s highest
household expense after mortgage
payment.t.
.
Since bolh major presidential
candidates sup(JOrted conservation,
tenewable eiiii'IY IOIUtCS and more .
efficient ~. "homeowners could be the leal winners after .
1 .•

y,

With the departure of !he 3rd
Battalion, 9th Regiment, fewer than
9,000 Marines remain among more
than 25,000 U.S. '!OOPS· There are
also another 11,000 troops from an
international force of 20 nations
operating in Somalia.
.
. "!feel tha.t we did a ~ood 1.00...
said Lance f"nl, Shane eaux, 20,
of Dralh, La
_ ~
. r.'I'm nor sure lhat the
mission is complete. I hope the
people come out of starvalion. I see
the way lhat we live and the way
that they live. Big difference.''
·
Somalia bas lost 350,000 of its
people 10 famine, fighting and disease in the last year. An additionsl

."I feel it's time for us to
leave," said Pfc. lames Brumfield,
19, of Baldwin, Mich., one of the
850 Marines from lhe 3rd Battalion, 9th Regiment, returning -to
Camp Pendleton, Calif., today and
Wednesday on chartered flights.
"The more we stayed here, I ~illion people are considered at
think the Marines would have let
Some Marines said the rocktheir guard down," said Brumfield.
:'The more .we stay here, we feel throwing they often had to endure
st's not a threat anymore and lhcn bothered. them at first, but they
leave w.ith a feeling ofgoodwill.
SOJileone could lltlaCk us."
· Some Marines said their mission
"It bothered me at first, but then
was complete. Others weren't so I r~ they were just kids and
sure.
·
they were playi11g a kids' game,"
Even as lhe ba!falion was lcav· said Lance C~. Antonio Valening. other Marines providing secu- zuela, 20,1!fC 'cago.
rity for relief workers came under
"You can't put most of the
sniper fue in scattered parts of the blame on the people," said Lance
country. U.S. military spokesmen Cpl. Nathaniel Willey, 20, of

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POMEROY - The Middleport
Literary Club wit! meet Wednesday
at the. library in P!&gt;meroy. Mrs.
Ronald ReynoldS will be the hostess. The book review will be presented by Mrs. Eileen Buck on
"Except for Me and Thee" by Jessamyn West. Roll call will be to
tell of a Ouaker custom

&amp;O·Ch. Scanner With Prlorltr

this election," says Frank Glover,
vice presiden1 of Owens-Coming.
An analysis of their energy pillforms by the building material
manufacturer found bolh President
Bush and Gov. Clinton willl'ush
for decreases in utility regulations.
The candidates' aim is to help
make energy conservation more
feasible and profilable for Qtilities
and homeOwners, according to the
study.
.
·

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GOING HOME • A Marine waves bls boardbig pass as.201 memben of 3rd Battalion, 9th
Regunmt board their chartered .iet for home at

.

Mo1adlsbu airport Tuesday. Ma.rlnn
returning to Camp Pendleton, '-•'"'·•
March. (AP _,boto)

By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
"We continue to watch Iraq's
AP MDitary Writer
behavior. We certainly would not
WASHINGTON- U.S. Air hesitate to respond if necessary,"
Force jers auacked Iraqi air defense · said Fitzwater.
sites in lhe northern "no-fly zone"
Meanwhile, tbe Vatican said
Tuesday while the Bush .adminis- today that it has accepted an Iraqi
!ration moved·a second aircraft car- request to ask the United Nations to
rier into the region with a warning press for dialogue and halt military
that more auacks could take plaCe.
action in Iraq.
Today's skirmishes in the northIn the first military incident, at
· em no-fly zone came after an Iraqi about 2:40 a.m. EST Tuc;sday. an
missile and radar installation F-4G Wild Weasel fued a mt~sile
"lOcked on" to one U.S.. jet ~a at an Iraqi surfa~e-to·air missile
second fighter drew lraqt anti-au- and radar mstallallon after the radar
craft artillery fue, a Pentagon offi- ''locked on'' to the American
cial confmned.
plalie. an act that U.S. pilots conThe rene":ed ~stilities- a day sider. a p~vocatio~, lhe Pen~~on
after a coordinated alhed attack on official satd, speaking on condition
Iraq's southern defense network- of anonymity.
.
came as the United States was
In a separate episode about three
moving the USS John F. Kennedy hours later, two F-16 Fighting Fa!into the Eastern Mediterranean, cons dropped several cluster bombs
within striking distance of Iraq.
on an Iraqi anti-aircraft artillery
The Bush administration warned site after being fired on by the
that more attacks could take place artillery, the official said. He said
unless Saddam Hussein abides by !he pilots reported "secondary
U.N. demands.
.
explosions," indicating that the
~ lhe White House, spokesman Iraqi gun emplacements had been
Marlin Fitzwater said, "This damaged'ordcstroyed.
sounds like a defensive auack." He
Also Tuesday, at about 4 a.m.
refused to rule out more strikes in EST, an Iraqi Mi0-23 fighter was
the final 24 hours of the Bush spotted flying in the northern noadminiSIJ11tion.
fly zone, the official said. When

confronted by an F-16, the Jraqi
plane fled soulh, he said. Also, an
F-16atabout3:45a.m.ESTreponed Iraqi anti-aircraft artillery fii'C,
but the U.S. plane did not retaliate.
The incidents were similar to
lhree Monday in which American
and British planes reported being
ftred on by anti-aircraft artiUery or
targeted by air defense radars in the
northern zone patrolled by U.S. and
allied aircraft
. ~~ about the time of Tuesday's
tnCJdents, 3 second U.S. aircraft
carrier was moving to wilhin striking range of Iraq to bolster the
Bush !ldministiation's warning that
more attacks could take place
unless Saddam Hussein abides by
U.N. demands. .
. Meanwhile, a second U.S. aircraft carrier was moving to within
strildng range of Iraq today to bolster the Bush administration's
efforts to force Saddam Hussein to
abide by U.N. deman!ls.
Called away a day early li:om its
port visit at Naples, Italy. the aircraft carrierUSS John F. Kennedy
with roughly 85 airplanes aboard'
was heading into the easter~
Mediterranean, a ·senior defense
(Continue on Page 3)
•

Wehrung re-elected as council· president

The two-story c~ment block chief. the lire Sllrted around a oatuB~JULIE E. DILLON
of the MGM Landmarlc property on . !age Hall. At that time, ·Mike
home of Rufus Cline located on raJ gas stove in the baseMent. Fire·
East Main Street. That person has Stroth, Pomeroy's revitalization
Route 7 near Tuppers Plains w'as men were on the iseene for nearly
Larry ~tl:::e~Staf!
gutted and all its . conten. ts four hours, and then were recalled
e
,g WI agam serve requested that the Pomeroy Fire
destroyed in 8 ftre Monday after- 'at 7:17p.m. when the rue rekin- as president of Pomeroy Village Department burn some of the
died and were thefe fo~ 81\0tber Council. '!\'~ was .~ous­ . buildings on that property.
Maypr Reed, as well as council,
nD&lt;JF~ppers Plains firemen were hour. There was no estimate of 1&gt;: voted m to tha~ post.llon at last
called at 2:18 .P.m. but lhe house dalnagc.
ntght:s ·regular mceung of the slated concern al)out burning the
buildings on the propefty before
was fully engulfed in flames when
The Pomeroy unit of the Meigs , council.
.,
they arrived on lhe scene. ·They County Emergency Medical SerA! the: council s last regular existing fuel tanks there can be
were J'oined to n~- ht lhe blaze by vice was called ill 2:23p.m. to beat meeung 1D ~ember, two me~- removed. Zirkle stated he is checkMrs. Beulah Cline who 1tu a heart bcrs were nomtnated for lhe prest- ing into lhat mauer and will ilert
Chester, Coofvil e and Pomeroy condition. The Tu~rs Plains dency -. Wehrung and John ~~t- council as progress is made.
fuemen with cech deparunenl tak- .
tnar
th each candidate recc
Obfo Power support
ing ICveral piccca 9f equipment.
squad again treated
. Cline at
- wt
.
tvm.g ·
Council
passed a resolution in
Accordmg td a report from 5:09 p.m. She was not uansported three vllfCS eacb.llJ .that case It ~s
T
PI
cithei' time.
up .to lhe mayor to break the lie which it went on record stating lhe
¥ark Boyd, uppers ains fire
vote.
desire to keep Ohio Power in
Before Mayor Bruce Reed could Pomeroy. Mayor Reed stated lhere
cast his vote last night, Blaettnar ·have been discussions with Ohio
stared he was withdrawing from the Power and Columbus and Southern
nomination and 1'CCOIIIII1CIId lhat to ~rge. According to Rel!d, Ernie
Wehrunrl be accepted 11111111i1no\1Sy Siss6n, office manager of Ohio
as president of the counciL
Power il) Pomeroy, italed nobody
WASHIN010N (AP)- AmerThey are not paying big!ler
Mayor Reed expreued bis knows exactly what is going to
lean worker~ are about to feel the taxel. They aim~ly had l~as tax appreciation to Blaettnar for his
downside ofP!elideiU Bush'• Cllll- widtheld from tbeir .paycllecb dur- move stating MWe had two 10011 happen. Revltaliratloa
j,aign-ye~r elTon to atlmulate the ing the last 10 months of 1992 candidatea. He (B'"ttn•) bu been
Second readi~- given to
·~ economy: a smaller tax reA1ad.
bceouoe Btllh wu ttyina to boost very aood In bil first year. He resolutions per1ai .· 10 Pomeroy's
About 12 percent ol c:ouplel and ~ ..,endina.
· kecpt e~waklna lllpdler. • downtown revlt szation. An
indlvitils acclliiOIIIed to recelvSpendin&amp;aclllally rose during
Pin ·
•t nporta
IIIIClldment to one resolution was
lng a tax refund e~eb 'Wintor will the flnt quarter of 1992, only to
Danny lrkle, Pomeroy Fire· to exlend the botmdarles ol the desact none this year. Low-and mid· drop In tbe .one~ quarter. Now, Chief, wu authorlzeclto purchue . ignated business dlslrict to include
ille-income Wlllken Will find dlelr some analysts worry that Jhe three new portable radios and one lhe putlng lot atona the river and
COUNCIL PRESIDENT ·l..arr7 Wemna, left, will again sene , •
as
president ot tM P:a Ill OJ Vlllqe CounciL ije- .......botlll1 •
refunda
reduced
by
••
much
as
rechm
lwnp-llliD
refunds
OVJ
the
mobile
unit
provl~
the
cost
lhe west side of Buuemut Avenue. .
1
·
elected
at 1ut nfabt'a replar aeellq ot tbe council. Pictured wt" :
$300 llld.IOIIIO who bid expected \ next aevenl weoka will cause WOI!1d riot eltceed 53
.
.
The fmal public hearlna on revi.·
Wehrun1, otrerlnJ biJ CODIJ'IItnladons, Is Pomeroy Mayor Bruce ~ •
to eeild a check with their retu~;ns . W01bn to curtallll*tdlnl just as
· Zlrtle reported to councll "that lalization will be held fuesday,
.
'
·..:
wiU have to make It a Ualo lltpr. · .
(Condnl!f Dli , ... 3)
he ha&lt;tl!een contacted by the buyer . Jan. ,26 ~t 7 P·!D· It Pomeroy VII- . Reed.

·Presid-ent Bush's economic
stimulus cuts tax refunds

INGELS . ELECTRONICS ·
1 4 1
"' "'

ftpten lbmv water on tile IIUies lnll~. (Sen·
tine! photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

Fire guts TP home

.--. ~

'

· U~S. conti-nues attack·on Iraq .

........

'

Auto Sound Ampllllecl

SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club of
Syracuse will meet Wednesday. ·
Bring items to make ttay favors for
February: red and white construe·
lion paper, red ilik pen or marker
glue or paste, scissors and a ruler. '

High cost' of enf!rgy

:vy

Chicago. •'Ninety-five percent of
the people were wanting us here.
They were in the streers sin~in~.
clapping, saying, •Amenca~'s
good."'
With the departure of lhe fii'St
Marines, the United States is moving toward transfering military con·
' trol of Somalia to a United Nations
Command, perhaps within two
eeks 8 U S iii
w
'
• · m tary spokesman
said Sunday.
But such a timelable appeared
unrealistlc an
. d designed simply ~or
public consumption to pressure lhe
U.N. to move faster so lhat the built
of American forces could return
. home sooner.
Critics say the U.N. is dragging
irs feet in adopting resolutions on a
d
comman structure and rules of
engagement- percquisites necessary for the transfer.
The u.s. military spokesman,
Marine Col. Fred Peck, said the
change in the American presidency
wilh the inauguration of Bill Clin· .
ton Wednesday could contribute to
dela
~n~er the current plan, many of
lhe 25,000 American troops will
h
t
d 11
·
P
ase ou gra ua y as secunty
unproves. But a substantial contingent of U.S. logistics troops and
staff personnel and a Marine
amphibious assault force afloat off
the coast are to remain after the
U.N. takes over.
·

~- lllll·plly
-~.
Cll**oJtiCIOfd.
tnOdl. AIAO·

~li.I'H!...

.... t&gt;t.H

said. No casualties were reported.
Since .the Marines landed in
Somalia Dec, 9, one Marine has
been killed and one Marine and one
COrpsDl8ll have been wound-

.........
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Falls Elementary on Tuesday at 7
p.m.

B1 GEORGE ESPER.
AP lipfelal Cnrrespondmt
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
- The first American combat
troops to head home from 'Somalia
ended a bittersweet tour today,
leaving a lawless, famine-sttiken
land where their humanitarian mission was often greeted by ·sniper
fue.
.
~ 202 Marines abottni the fmt
chartered jet to leave cheered loudly as :aileridants locked thll door and
pulled away the stairs.
· .
Minutes. later, they were in the
air.

...

1 s.ctlon, 10 P~gea 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newopeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Tuesday, January 19, 1993

.•
/------~--------~~--------~-------------------------------------------------------------­

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before u event
and the day of that event. Items
must be roceived well in advance
1.!1 assure publication in the calendar.
.

Variable doudl-tolllabL

A siJibt tbante r# nurrles. Low
near :ZO.

Limked to In Stock Metthandise

•

.l
'

'

'

�</text>
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