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                  <text>1893

Ohio Lottery

.Bucks
lose tilt
to Badgers
·

Pick 3:

071

Pick 4;
9726

Super Lotto:
1-S-8-10.37-42
Kicker:

Page4

500755
r

•

STEVEN WEEKS

Bee winner

'

Steven Weeks, son of David and
Jeanie Weeks, a fifth grader at
Tuppers Plains Elemenlafy, is the
winner of the fust Geography Bee
at the school. The bee is sponsored
by Nati~ Geo!!f3phic Society.
· Weeks was giVen a wntten test
of 70 questions to determine his
lcnowled~ about geography facts.
Other participants are Matthew
Boyles, Jeremy Gillilan, Sheena
Gilmore, Jessica Bartram, Jaymie
Osborne, Amanda Upton, Jeremy
Coleman, Crystal Bennett. "Mrs.
• Bonnie Kibble conducted the contest.

'I
Vol. 43, No. 180
ea..,rlglnllll 11113

.fires on
Iraqi radar

Tbe Ohio Chamber of Commerce will hold its IOOth annual
meeting and legislative conference
March 10 from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. at
the Hyatt Regency in Columbus.
More than 1,000 business leaders and legislators from throughout
Ohio will be altellding this conference.
The featured luncheon speaker ·
win be Ivan W. Gorr. He is mcoming chairman of the board of the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce and he
serves as chairman and CEO of
Cooper Tire and Rubbez Company
based in Findlay.
He will addreSs the changes and
challenges business can expect in
light of new leadership in Wash. ington, the recovering national
econo'!lr and increasing global
compe11uon.
Gorr will emphasize the goals of
the U.S. Chamber to meet the challenge of working with the new
administration to stimulate continued economic grqwth.
.
Paula Thacker, executive director for the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce, encourages business
leaders and individuals to attend
this conference.
Further information regarding
the legislative conference may \lC
obtained by calling the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
Office at 992-5005. The deadline
for reservations in Feb. 12.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
U.S. F-4G Wild Weasel fired on an
Iraqi air defense radar site today
after !he Iraqi installation turned its
radar on, a Pallligon source said. •
The incident was the tim blatdown in Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein's supposed "cease-fire"
in honor of President Clinton's
inauguiation.
The inci~ occurred within the
pastJ2 hours ID the lUthem no-fly .
ZO!Ie, said the source, who spoke
on condition of amnymity.
The source said the U.S. warplane . was escorting a Frenc:h
Mil8&amp;e aimaft that was mgbrling
a reconnaiiBice niiasion.
The radar was located about 10
iniles IOUih of the IOMl of Mosul in
northern lnlq, the toUitc said.
The F.:4Cf fired a HARM missile
at the radar, burtbere was no
. immediale JepOrt whether 811).' damage ltld been done the missile site,
.the source IBid.

U.S. No. 1 New Crop

USDA ·choice Beef Chuck
Blade .or 7 Bone

Red or White

Russet·
•
Seedless
Ia 1ng
Grapes
Potatoes

Chuc

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Roa.s t

· - • ·
..
·
·
·
WASIUNGTON (AP) -On
he told one. "/lfle
the first working day of hiS clean- yon a ~hoolieac~er7 I've heard
s1are pe.Piency, Bill Ointon threw good things about yotir school sysopen the doors of his new home tern"
·
ioday io along stream of fellow
'~I wish you godspeed," said
citizens who ICCCIJted his invitation one citizen in an Air Force officer's
to drop by. "Glad you're here," he · uniform.
.
_
...
_
...
_you
from?"
.
"God
bless
you,
Mr.
Presiden•
told ...
......, ,._,
.,
Hundreds of ordinary citizens we're glad to have you bere in
· wboae IIIIIICS were drawn in a post Washington,'' a Catholic priest
· c:ard loltery lined up for ihe chance told him. "We're thrilled to have
ARRAIGNED - Aln~a•
to meet the new.president and Vice you here."
Pr ''mt Al _Gole,IIIBDI!ing before
As for the work of giving shape
Jei'OII)' Wlllll - unlped
011 a ~~turder dw'Je WedHsa CtiCklina file in the White House to a new presidency. Clinton
dllyla BJ&amp;wa'tllle, Tea~, and
Diplomalic Reception Room.
arranged to meet with domestic and
will bt lleld wlthcNliiRd utll
· Clinton had a handshake for foreign policY · advisers and,
he cu he eldl Jldited to Soath
everyone. and a greetins. a ques- according to a congressman, w.,
CllrOiillll. WUlla II accused of
lion, a COIIIDICIIt for CIK:h one. too.
preparing to move swiftly on fulfatally sllootlq bls wire at 1
An aide introduced C3:h visitor to
filling a campaign prom1se- to
·SOuth Canillna Air Po« base.
Ointoo and he welcomed them by
~~~bait
. .· on homosexuals in the
(AP)
name.
•
..~ 1
II 1
•
lY.6. Q10ne
/0

Program may send
guard doctors to
help Americans
COLUMBUS (AP) -Ohio's
National Guard could join a fedetal
program and put its doctors to work
in poor areas of the United States
instead of other countries.
The Medical Readiness Training
Exercise would allow some Gwlrd
medical units to do annual two. week training missi9ns at home
i~slead of abrOad, said U.S. Rep.·
John Kasich.
"Before we help everyone else
in the world, why not try to help
ourselves a little bit?" he said.
Kasich led the move in
Congress to allow the Guard to use
a total' of $5 million for the domestic training operation.
Ohio has applied to use $1 million. About $800,000 would be
spent in Franklin County, and the
rest would go to seven unspecified
rural coooties. The Army National Guard's
1121h Medical Brigade, headquartered in Columbus, would organize
the units.
A typical· medical team in the
· program might consist of 20 people, including dootors, dentists,
nurses and administrators. They
would work to immunize children
against measles, mumps and rubella, check people for dental disease
and perform physicals, said Capt.
Jim Boling, a spokesman for the
Ohio National Guard.
They also would refer ')leople to
eltbting medical $CfVices.
."We hope to build on this and
QPCfllte it statewide," Boling sl!id.

Officers elected
Officers elected for the Bedford
Township Trustees are: Elmer F.
Bailey, president; Robert F. Hawk,
vice-presiden~ and Virgil C. King,
chairman of the board.
The regular monthly meetings
will be held .the second Monday or
each month at the townhall.

Bag

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BIG BEAR/BIG BEAR PLUS COUPON
I
I
GIGaiY (20)
I
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! ·. Kellog

1

:Corn Fla es:
I "
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:
I

I

I
I
I
I
I
I

18 01.
Box ·

·orange

I

Limit 1 With Coupon Per Familv Please

Borden Elsie

Airman Willis R en.
r

-Ice.

Juice

arraigned on
murder charge

Ctn.

Cream

Bathroom Tissue ·

Blue Bonnet Spread

Angel Soft

Onelb_$ ,

Prego

.

4 Roll

Pkg.

atrs.

tghettl
2 1
Regular or Thin

San Giorgio

Onelb.
Boxes

•

r All Varieties Spaghetti Sauce

•

\.. ·

2 27~ta
30 oz.
Jars

Frozen

Frozen

Michelina's
Mcltai'O!Ii &amp; Cheese or
Shells with Cheese and
Peppers Entrees

9to.10oz. Box

Birdseye
'\

Cut.C:J Green Peas
orM· ~'

. 16 oz. Bog

d
annoznte
rr

s~ Rqiresentative Mark Malone (D.94tb District) has been ·
appointed to serve as chairman of
the House Veteran Affairs Committee as the I 20th Ohio General
BROWNSViLLE, Texas (AP} Assembly 1e11 underway.
- A 23-year-old former Ohioan
In addnjon to lhe Veteran
says he murdered his wife - as Affairs Committee, Rep. Malone
she tried to repon abuse accusa- was named to Elections and Towntions to military officials ships. State Government and Comlw:JMJSC he loved her.
mm:e and Labor Committees.
Jeromy Willis, a South Carolina
He said his committee assignairman formerly of Ironton, Ohio, ments are impclf!llllt to the people
made the statement to reporters of the 94th District which includes
Wednesday in South Texas as he Meigs, GaJii• Jackson and pan of
was led away 10 a jail cell.
LaWJeDCC County.
Asked by reporters if he shot
"I am very pleased with the
her, Willis answered frankly: Committees I bave been •ssiped",
"Yes', I did."
said Rep. Malone. ''They wilfallow
Why? .
me to have a voice pn issues SIICh
. "I loved her."
as jobs and local government that
"It's sort of ironic, isn't it," he directly touch the 94th, as well as
said.
'
iSSJIIS, that concern OhiOIIIS across
. A few seconds later be had dis-· the State."
.
.
~F into the Cameron County

1/2 Gal.
Ctn.

64 oz.

Regular or Light

,2

Your Ch~ice .~f Regular Flavors

:

1
L. __ ~~~ ~u2,0~ua,2 !?:,! ~3- __ .J
r

From Concentrate
. Tropicana

"
~

'
. ..J

According to koberts, as the
plan starids now, he will not be provided with an access road to his
business due to regulations that call
for a safety fence along the new
roadway. This fence would run in
front of Five Points Express to the
new intersection beyond his business.
Wolff iJid. Eldabaja stated providing an access for Roberts in
front of his business would create a
traffic conflict. They suggested to
Roberts to plitehase land adjacent
to his present .locatioo and build a
new facility. At this new proposed
location they stated an access road
could be provided. Roberts' objeclion to that is.that it would move
him into another township causing
hiJ:n to lose Sunday sales. Roberts
also stated his feeling thai such amove would not be financially
effective in that the cosJ for such a
venture would be quite higb.
Commissiimer Manning Roush
stated his feeling that·the plan, as it
stands now, could "put this man
(Roberts} out of business." Roush

I

cttizens at Whzte
House ·'·
-.,Hi G8ill"

10 lb.
lb.

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Starr ·
Victor Wolff and Saleb Eldaba·
ja, engineers for District 10 of the
Ohio Department of Transporta·
tion, updated the Meigs _,:::ounty
Commtssioners .regardmg the
progress of the ftrst phase of the
Ravenswood Connector Road from
Rock Springs to Five Points, at
Wednesday's regular meeting.
Studies for die fll'st phase have
been completed and copies Of this
plan were left with the commissioners. Wolff and Eldabaja stated
there is now a toll-free number for
ODOT, DistrictiO, in Marietta for
anyone who may have questions
resanfing the project. That num~
is l-800-84S-0226.
Mike Roberts, owner of Five
Points Expess, attended the meetinJ in an effon to inform the commtssioners of and speak with the
engineers about the effect the first
phase· will have on bis business.
Roberts hal! been worting cooperatively with ODOT in an effon to
find a resolution to this problem.
•

told Roberts, "I will do anything I
can to belp you." It was note&lt;t
liowever, that ODOT makes every
attempt to pay fair compensation
for damage which a business may
incur.
.
Roberts stated he will continue
to work With ODOT to solve thi$ ·
problem. He stated he has spoken
with State Representative Mari
Malone regarding the matter an4
that Malone feels there should be
an easier solution. Roberts asked
the commissioners to investigaiCIU
possibilities in an attempt to solVe
the problem.
.
::
Wolff and Eldaba.1a stated th~
purchase or properties involvejl
with the project sbould begin by
fall.
·•
In other matters of the comm,;.
sionen, the sale of dog tags
beC!I extended until January 30. :•
Attending were CommissionetS
Manning Roush, Robert Harten~
bach and Janet Howard, Glorit
Kloes, Meigs County Engineer
Robert Eason, Mike Roberts, Saleli :·
E;!dabaja and Victor Wolfe. .
•

w

l
if.J'fi•
·
Gran
. .d Jury c e· a·~~ 0 zcer
7
p~~~zdent Clzn!on greet~ in Dec 6 shooting death
.PRESD)ENTIAL wAL¥: • President Clinton gestures wblle
Wlllldnl cknnt Pe•nsylvaula Avenue In W111hington WedDesday
aRe..- daring the pmldenUal laaupral parade. Clinton Will
SWOI'IIin at
as the 4lnd pralde:t or the l,Jnlted s'ta~ (AP)
•

•

Reception slated
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Diddle
and Mr. and Mrs. Corbet Cleek,
Racine, announce the marriage of
their son, Chad Diddle, and daughter, Rachelle Davis, on Jan. 6 in
Pensicola, Fla.
There will be a reception for the
couple on Friday at the Racine
American Le$ion Hall at 7:30 p.m.
The public is mvited.

Commission gets update
o·n -bridge connector road

U.S. aircraft

Conference set

2 Sec:tlona, 12 Paga 25 ...,Ia
A lluldmllllla Inc. He npeper

Pomeroy-:-Middl~port, O~lo Thursday, January 21, ,1993

J There he wln await extradition
· to South Carolina to face charges
he sbot Marie Willis to death J111. 4
111 she waited in a Mynle BC3:h
Air Force Bale lept att.in offiCC.
Mrs. Willis, 30, had come from
Rhode Island to P.reas abuse

f!:r'

apin•~ her Clll'lllged bus-

. She was sitting in a conferellee
room waiting to be interviewed
when she Will shoe in the held
c:helt with a 9mm pistol,llltborities
said.
. :Willis llcd after the lhoc"Cing.
He wu urested Tueaday ililht
at a BfO'NitlvUie 'lliptclub by the
FBI and T - Rlilaen. ICCOlllilll

ana

f'l~

.

11101'0

. .

'

dm llld I would

bave been ....... W'tlllwllid.
. But be never aot t1101e three
dayl.

. And Wedllelday mornina he
wu amlped belen a m..UCipll
. ~ ana o~dered held without

..,
.•
•J,

pOSt

Pomeroy Police Wednesilay and

~s:::wedneaday, police

.

.

followed' the vehicle, which slowed
and accelerated whHt weaving, the
release said.
·
Carter-pulled Lamm over at
Johnson's Mobile Home Park on
Stale Route ·7 and the two men
exited their vehicles simulraneous'
ly. Caner s~ke with Lamm and
~uestioned im about his driver's
hcense, aflel which the of(icer
asked him 10 return to his car.
Lamm reportedly threatened to
claw the officer's eyes out. grabbed
him and threw him to the ground.
The two .struggled on the
ground, with Lamm silting on top
of Carter. Lamm allegedly went for
the officer's 9mm semiautomatic
handgun and pulled it free of the
holster.
While the two men struggled
with the gun. it went olf .two time~
After the second shot, Lamm
stopped struggling and went limp,
the release said.
Carter called the dispatcher at
2:49 a.m. 8fld advised the department of the situation. Lamm died
about one hour later at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis with a

,

·,

. gunshot wound between the ribs .
and ill the left ·hip.
The office~ was also taken to
~!d9 wher~ 'he was treated for
IDJUflCS to his eye, face, knees and
handS. He was later released. .
Lamm has had several tangles
with local authorities, includi_'ng a
Jan. 29, 1991 , anest fro m which he
flied suit, claiming two Gallipolis
police officers and two Galli a
Coimty sheriff's deputies arrested
him withont cause, handcuffed him
and kicked him and beat him about
the face, head and body with nightsticks, flashlights and ftsts.
According to the Gallia County
Jail ~r, Lamm was arrested in
the incident for disorderly conduct,
driving under ·the influence, resisting airest, assault, menacing, reck•
less operation, fleeing and eluding
andnooperator'slicense.
.Carter was not named in the
swt.
Carter, who has been on the
department for I 1/2 years, was
placed on paid administrative leave
while the incident was under invesligation.

The job of committees is to
decide what proposals should. be
sent to the run House fer consideration to become laws. The committees can also amend proposals
before sending them to the full
House or a committee can decide ,
not to recommend a poposal.
Committees also provide a key
opponunity fQr citizens to provide
. WASHINGTON (AP) - One
inpilt on poposed laws and to parMadigan predicted th.at public Senate Agriculture Committee has
of the items the next agriculture pressure would force acceptance of actively promoted efforts to overtic. Ill in the political
secretary will find on his desk is a all efforts to cut the department's ' haul the department
rep. Malone said,
recommendation
to trim the fat in bureaucracY· The ~hip of the
allow the legislation 10 thoroughly
the
·department's
behemoth
bureauresearch biDs, and do whatever fine
cracy.
tunins is necessary 10 come up with
Outgoing Agriculture Secretary
laws that bave the most positive
Edward
Madigan said Tuesday the
affect on the people across the
department
can do its work with
SUlle." '
fewer
Washington
positions and
The new General Assembly will
·
fewer
field
offiCeS
nationwide.
be considering issues ranging from
.education and jobs to bealth care,
the .environment and law enforceU.S. Department of Alrlc:nlment,~ said. .
ture offteea tar&amp;eted for elosln&amp;
ia Ohio by tbe outgoing Bush

Ohio to lose 22 farm offices

·'C::ttees

No one hurt in·two accident$,
Two aa:ideniS involving light to
inodende dafOa&amp;e to four vehicles
but no injuries were investigated by

•

By .DM FREEMAN
OVPNeww Statf .
A Gallia County grand jury
Wednesday nigbt cle&amp;Jed an offJ.CCr
involved m a fatal shooting incident with a suspected drUnk driver
in December.
.
Uoyd Joseph Carter, age unreported
. , was nam ed as the offitcer
mvolved in the incident in which
Donald Lamm, 37, of Gallipolis,
died from a gunshot inflicted by the
officer's weapon d'uring a traffic
stop.
According to a press release
issued by the police department
shordy after the shooting'. the Point
Pleasant, W.Va., Police Depart·
ment informed a Gallipolis Police
Department dispatcher early Sunday, Dec. 6, 1992, that a possible
drunk driver in an older model a
blue Chevrolet Chevetle had
crossed the Silver memorial Bridge
and might have been headed for
Gallipofis.
The police dispatcher informed
all pattol ooits of the suspect, and
Carter S{JOtled a vehicle fitting the
descripuon on State Route 7. He

.

43, Pomeroy. The collision resulted
in light damage to the front end of
the folmson vehicle, and light dam·
age to the )JIIIISellger side rear of the
Hartuna truck. HartunJ wu ~ited
for failure. to yidd die nghl of way.

admlllistradoa:
-Farmers Home Admlnistra·

tion ollkes in New PIIUadelpbla,
Woodsfield,
Xenia
.. d
ZIIMivllle.
-Soli Consenation Servic:e

orrieea In Caldwell, Iron ton,
MeArtllur, McC,o anelnille, St.
investipted aa accident on West
Claluvllle, Sandusky, Valley
Main. According to the repon,
View and WoodlllelcL
John Edwards, !53, or Mason; w.
-A&amp;rlcultaral Stabilization
Va. had albpped his 1980 Dodge ·
and Cotiaervatlon Senlc:e ollkes
Sever81 mailbollel on Route 124 in Cadiz, Caldwell, Ironton,
truck 111 he oreo.rect to tum onto
and
Route 338 below Portland to McArthur, Mc:Coanelavllle,
the Pomeroy-MUon Bridp. Kca·
the
Ritchie
Briel~ ~ damaged 'Lonll, PomeroyJ_~t. Clllnvllle,
neth Clark, 7!1, also of ~aaon ;
fa4ed 10 IIOp hia vehic:le IJid struck Wednesday evellllli·
Wiitenviiie and woodllleld. .
According to a tepOrt from the
the rear or the truck. There wu
moderate damaao to Bdwarda' , Meigs County Sheriff's Depantruck and Ji&amp;h&amp; ..... 10 the front mA Jim Proffitt mortlld that he
'-II a noise llound'7:30 p.m. and
He liliiOIIlKlCd a sligbtly Jailedo1 the au .mtc~e.
.1'1!e _ , accidm~ oecurred at noticed damaae to his box . He back JIIOPOsal to close unn6eded
vdticle liglltl fann ufllc:es, including 22 in Ohio:
8: 1!5 1.111. dill mamiDg. Brian John- tepOrted tltat llo
son, 37, of Muon, W. Va. Will JOinltow•dl the Rildtle BfidF,
four Farmers Home Admlnlatrltion
Anyone with informlllioll con- offices,~ht Soil Conservation
~well 111 W01t Main Street
. . . hil1990 Fold WllllniCit by c:ernin&amp; the mailbox vandllllam Service
ces and 10 Agritultural
• 1m truc:t pulllna from Uberty should contact the sheriff's olfice Sllbilization' and Counation Ser·
Main driven by Donald Hartung, cr the poa CJftlce.
vice officea.
" ...

.

Mailboxes damaged

•w

�Thursday, Janua..Y 21, 1993'

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

•

'.

Is there a job for Hillary

Letters to the editor
A job 'well done'

_ ·Well, "they" did it again, poi·
~all six puppies. There's only
orie alive and all I can do for her is
.to' keep her warm. AU of them had
!lomes to go to. How do you tell a
~hild !hat their puppy is dead? The
last puppy just died. It was a hom-

ble ·deaih. Someone in Meigs
County is very sick! My farm is
turning into a pet cemetery.
Melanie Walters O'Neil
35997 Flatwoods Road
Pomeroy

Responds to letter
.• · To Mr. Marlin Wolfe
in answer dus Chapter 20. Also Mark, Chap'

:ro: your letter on malring a law to

lllow deer hunting on Sunday. That
. 'iS the Lord's Day when we should
be hunting lost souls for Christ
· Most working people have a
'.vacation. They can plan a day for
.bunting. Please do not take the
·Lord's Day for pleasure. How
about reading the Bible, like Exo-

ter 2, verses 23-29 and Mark Chap-·
ter· 3, verses 1-6.
·
· I enjoyed reading lhese verses .
There is very much good reading in
the Bible. Try it in your spare time.
Thank you.
Iessie Grueser
Salem street
Rutland

The more you know
You see this ad on television all cost of living raise.
.
:the time and in the Readers Digest
Well, the ftrSt·of January I got a
:there is a section devoted to cost of living raise which amounted
i ncreasing your word power.
to about $18, and was eaten up by
: Well, during the last presidential the ·insurance raise.
campaign the phrase "biclde dowrt
Now, what started out at
economics" was used a lot and $30,000 ended up at $10 plus. That
"dumb old me" couldn't figure out is, it biclded and trickled and when
.what it meanL
it got to me it was all biclded out.
· But now I believe I have a han- Thus, "biclde down economics."
We on iL
Virgil Walker
: Some time ago, our representa·
High Country
tives in Washington, D.C., voted
Racine
themselves a hefty $30,000 plus

Says Jones should apply for job
Where 's the list?
:

I am writing concerning the

appointment of Rich 1ones to his
new job in the Meigs County
Department of Human Services.
I say there is no list, never was
illld never will be.
: I am sure there are qualified
:pc:ople in Meigs County to do this
f&gt;b if indeed it needs to exist.
• I wondered at the time why Mr.
iones was writing to the Sentinel
saying how nice it has been to
serve the people of Meigs County.
Now I know!
: As most everyone in !his county
:jcnows the Democrats cannot wm
.an election without the help of the
F.epublicans. That being the case

then they voted Mr. Jones out and
Ms. Howard in,
If it has been such a {Jrivilege to
serve the people of Metgs Couniy
as Mr. Jones states, then let him
step down. Apply for a job like
other people do and earn iL
And move over, Mr. Roush,
here we come.
Jim Lucas
Cherry Ridge
Pomeroy
(Editor's note: Michael Swish·
er, Department or Human Ser·
vices director, recently said that
"there is no such list of people
who have taken the test and
passed jt for Administrative
Assistant IV.")

Robert J, Wagman

Contra investigation."

Clinton should stomp the. deficit
.(

.

A battle royal is being waged puinps. The -.. public invesunent"
for that corner of Bill Clinton's gurus of the le(l, in contrast,
soul that has to do with debt and believe the government ought to
deficits. The hawks see such things stimulate the economy by spending
as garrotes that are choking the life
out ·of this country; the doves see
debt and deficits as speed bumps
on the road of progress, minor
impediments to be scooted over.
i'm with the hawks. And this is - mainly on the infrastructure and
fair warning to all the Clinton fans mainly with borrowed money.
out there: If he flies with the deficit
The supply-siders blew their
doves, he faees four years of bella- case in a spectacular way when
cious torment from this Curmud- they elected Ronald Reagan and he
geon
·
piled up deficits that were thought
· It. sounds bizarre, ~ut deficit to be massive until Geor~e Bush
hawks are really fanatic middle-of- rang up his breathtalcing conglomlhe-roaders. They buy the old·fash· eration of debt
iooed notion !hat steady economies
Now the public investment
are the result of sound bud~ets and zealots are after Bill Clinton to
that debt is a devil's enticement carry their colors. Typical is Roben
that wiD lead to eternal damnation.
Kuttner, of lhe labor-backed EcoIdeolognes of both the right and nomic Policy Instiwre, who assert·
left, on lhe other hand, subscribe to ed in a recent Business Week colthe theory that balanced budgets umn that ''the preferred ... policy is
are not the result of discipline so stimulus now, best led by public
much as a byproduct of economic · investment, followed by gradual
growth. The· difference is that the deficit reduction after growth is
supply-siders of the right fervently · back on track."
believe that the private sector, if
Throughout the campaign, Cliofreed of regulation and burdensome • ton cooed like a deficit dove. He
taxes, will prime the economic talked about public investment and

Joseph Spear

.

· "growing" lhe ecQnomy .out of its
doldrums. He .promised more
money for the young, the poor, the
cities. The budget defiCit was clearly a matter of secondary impor·tance to him. He talked the same
language during most of the transi·
lion period.
But then something remarkable
occtirred. He named Rep. Leon
Paneua, D-Calif., and former congres~ional Budget Office director
Alice Rivlin as his chief budget
officers - both of whom are
defiCit hawks of the ftrSt stripe.
Said Panetta during his confirmation hearing: "We need to con. front these &lt;!eficits, to make the
tough choices and be preoared for
some sacrifice." Wrote l!.ivlin in
her book "Reviving the American
Dream'' (Brookings Institution):
"The budget deficit has paralyzed
policy for more than a decade. ••
And, Rivlin wrote, sbe has a "bias
... against magic wands and paintess solutions. Everyone looks for
ways of acCOD)plishing ambitious
goals without effort- lose weight
without dieting, team french while
you sleep."
'
·
And Clinton himself'? When the

'

'

..

latest Busb btidget projected even
bigger sbortfalls for the foreseeable
future, the president-elect liegan
backing off his promiae to cut the
deficit in half by the end of his
term. But then be went on PBS and
vowed to challenge the deficit
monster.
My ardent prayer is !hat he will
declare war on the deficit. Not
wrestle with it; not confrol)t it, not
grappl\l with it. Go to damn war
with iL Beat it. Kill it. Obliterale it.
We are now staring at a national
debt of $4.1 trillion. It is devouring
$300 billion a year in gross interest
alone. Even if Bill Clinton lives up
to his pledge of cutting-the annual
deficit down to $145 billion by
1996, the accumulated debt will
slill be piling up at an avemge of
$240 billion a year. Even if the new
president does everything he
promised, we will still be faced
with a SS trillion national debt at
the end of four years. It will cost at
least $380 bil)ion to service iL
That's a lot of roads and
bridgei
Joseph Spear is a syndk:ated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

.

When I realized what I was
doing, I had to laugh. · ~ Hyprocrites
'R' Us," I told my friend over the
phone.
Tbe moment I'd heard the news
that the Clintons were sending
daughter Chelsea to a private
school after all Bill's talk of .
improving public education, I nearty broke my dialing finger punching this friend's number. Seems
he'd heard th~ news on CNN a few
mmutes earher and was already
halfway to a full head of steam by
the time I c'alled. "Yeah, that's
how it hit me, too," he said.
"That's sure some way to back
public education."
We ranted a few minutes until it
began 10 .dawn on me just who was
decrying this new perfidy - the
guy who went to private schools
from kindergarten through high
school, and the woman who's
always comparing . her p~blic-

school education to his and wondering if sbe should have taken her
dad's offer in fifth grade to send
her to a private school. (She didn't

Sarah Overstreet
go becaUSe the nuns scared her and '"
there were no little boys. It wasn't
the last time little boys made her
take a wrong tum.)
"Listen 10 us," I said. "Wasn't
it just Iaiit week you were quoting
some famous old dead coot you'd
studied in lith grade whom I
hadn't had in four years of college?"
He started to laugh. "Yeah, by
God, those )l!iests were hard, but I
sure did learn something."
.
Our situations ·weren't much
like Bill and Hillary's - my
friend's parents were blue-collar
Catholics determined their kids

Today in history
By Tbe ~latecl Preu
.
.
·
Today is Thursday, Ian. 21, the 21si day of 1993. There are ;l44 days ·
left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History: ·
Two hundred yeirs ago, on Ian. 21, 1793, during the French Revolutioo,
King Louis XVI, condemned for treason by the National Convention, was
executed by the guj!lotine.
On this dale:
.
.
'
In 1861, Jefferson Davjs of Mississippi and four other Southerners
resigned fro111 the U.S. Senate.
·

•

••
should have the best education pos- that
VIllerS believe this presisible. Church policy and hard work dent cares enough about troubled
allowed them to. do it. When he public schools to truly shoVe the
grew up, my .friend chose public pendulum in the other dinx:lion. To
school for his children because he hear that he had chosen a private
liked the school sysrem in his city, school for his own daughter stung a
and then he became the most little.
devoted member of the PTA.
In the emotional sting of the
I was the daughter of parents moment, I forgot the Engliah teacJI.:
who had desperately wanted col- er in my city who home-schooled
lege educations, butlhe Deixe'ssion tier own cbltdren until they reached
conspirl:d against them. My father high school. Sbe taught in a public
even.had to leave his small Kansas school before they ~ bcim, she's
town 'md go to work in a larger citf. back at it again, and sbe' s good.
to get through public high SChoo . Her kids are wonders to behold. {
The preciousness of a good educa· forgot the legion of parents who ~
lion was, no doubt, why be consid· glad our country offers free publiC
ered sending me to the best school educa&amp;ion, yet still send their chilhe could afford.
.
dren to private schools.' It's a deci"
My friend and I have had many sion they make because tbey
conversations about education over · believe it.IS the best they can do (or
the years, and had never seen a their children. Many of them teach
conflict between a parent champi· in public scbQols.
'
oning our "free public education"
.. The thing we aU have lito~~~~
and sending a child to whatever ber is that sending f-OUl cl
school he or she ftnds iijljioptiatc, a
school while
Yet neltbcr of us support President
that
Bush's Cdycation vouchers. We
doea not lllllce ·
don't think a private-school educa- pubUc
tion is something other taxpayers you leas 111 employee or patent. ·
should subsidize, any more than The oaly riaht'WII blve 10 be dlltiptaxpayers should help a parent send poitUd in till OiatDII'I edtiCIIiOn
a child tom expensive, out-of-state policies is U' be brlllki bill promisschoollnltead of the stale U. a few es. lf be does, it won't 1ll8lla' if be
hu Chol101 In Miu Mary' a Tea
mileaaway.
So why the visceral reactions Party A-cademy or the roughest
when we heard the Clintons' deci- school iuldo the Beltway.
Sar11t Oventreet II a •yadlsion? We weren't sure. Perhaptt it
cated writer for Newapaper
was Clinron'a "mu of the people"
··
.stump demeapor, or the speeches ·Enterprlle AIIOdaUoa.

made

'

''

j

,

~.

'

By Tbe AJsociated Press
Damp and gloomy.
That'!i the weather prospect for
Ohio on Friday.
· The National Weather Service
says most of the.state will see drizzle or snow flumes under cloudy
slcies. But it will be warmer, with
highs approaching 40. .
Fair skies should return by Saturday, forecasters said.
· The record·high remperature for
this date at tl!e Columbus weather
station was 72 degrees in 1906
while the record low was 16 belOw
zero in 1985. Sunset tonight wiD be
at 5:38 p.m. and sunrise Friday at
7:48 a.m. ..,
.

president's wife could SliD exercise
authority: Although the law does
not spectfically speak to salary,
past interpretations have been that

Who cares about Chelsea's school?
Berry's World

.

Accu-Weather• forecast for

Clin~on?

~--

Puppy killing continues

Fair skies should return to Ohio by Saturday ~

OHIO Weather
Friday, Jan.ll
"4!CH.

domestic affairs.
dozen women. Baird's name came
She may also end up only a few from her former law plllllllll, transi· ·.
feet from the Oval Office. Bush tion head and now Secretary of
White House sources say that when State designate Warren Christothe Clinton transition team was pher.
.
.
.
examining spaee, it appeared one
But the oddS on favonte for the .
of their tasks was to fmd a West job was Washingllln lawyer Brook- :
Win~ office for Hillary Clinton.
sley Born. a top partner of Arnold ·.
Traditionally,lirst ladies have their &amp; Poner. She was ~ing pushed
a relative can hold a non-paying offices in the East Wing; for very ~ard b,Y .almost every
position. Rosalynn Carter, for Hillary Clinton to have coveted women s orgaR1ZallOJI, and was the·
example, headed a presidential· West Wing space would send a all but unanimous choice of the'
,
commission on mental health, powerful message about her tole in lnUlsition staff.
So sure were they that. ~he
while Nancy Reagan's ''Just Say the Clinton White House.
Among Democratic insiders the would be chosen, that the transition
No" anti-drug program had a large
Cabinet appointment that has had ordered a full FBI bacQround,
staff and budget.
Likewise, members of Congress caused the most talk is that of cor- check on Born. It was ,afready,
have obtained an opinion from the poratc lawyer Zoe Baird as attor· un~ way w~ sbe B!'d two other'
·
worn~, mcludmg Baird, u;aveled:
House Counsel's office that ,a ne enerat.
~rding 10 highly p~ 1n111- to L_mle Rock to me,et with tl!e:·
spou~ may se!"'e on ~ member s
staff tn an unpatd capactty. Heather . sition sources·, the selection of president-elect and hts top bratn
Foley.,S~ ~f the HC?USC T~ Baird gready ~rised even those trusL
. .
.:.
~e ne_xl day Cbnton ~old hts
Foley s '!"1fe, ts effecuvely hts very close to Clmton. Baird was
unpatd chief of staff and among.the ·not among those on «&lt;IY of the orig- · adVISers his chOice was Baird. The
m?St powerful people on Capt~! ina! sbort lists: Reportedly, on the stunned group then had to rush an
original list were about nine names, FBI background check so ~ could
Hill.
. .
Among mstders, the best guess three of whom were women. All be n~med before the Cl!nstmas
is that~ C~i!ttoo will act as an three asked that their names be deadlinThe.
h
f
· ere . ll!'e two . sc oo1s o
unofficial, unpatd advtser to her removed from consideration.
So the transition scrambled and thought wt!bm the Clinton ~amp as
husband, one who is likely 10 hold
significant policy-.~aking clout in . assembled a new list of a half· to wby Clmto~ chose B~ o~er
Born. Some believe !hat smce Clinton knew neither women, Baird.
simply had a vasdy better interview .
and Clinton felt more. comfortable
with her. An,other, widely believed,
is that.in rejecting their No. I can·
didate, Clinton was sending a not
so subtle message to the groups
sujlporting Bpm that he cannot be
pusbed 100 far.
However, in the haste to ~int
Baird, ihe transitioo staff dtd not
spend much time looking into her
record. Democratic Senate Judicia·
ry .Committee staffers have been
more than a tilde sUtnned to fmd
that sbe is a big fan of Vice Presi·
dent Oan Quayle's regulatory
reform movement and of President
Bush's lOri reform program.
Said one top-level staffer, "She
would have been a terrific Bush
appointment.. I would say she is
~oing to have to signifiCIIlltly mod·
ify some of her views, or she will
'have .some real difficulties with
Democrats up here.''
·
R'l'!trt WaiPDII Is a syndlatt·
ed writer for llewspaper Enter•
"Everlasting life? ... No, but I do believe in Waish's Iranprise Association.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
Clinton ttanSition •s legal team, in
consultation with experts in the
government's Office of Personnel ·
·DEVOTED TO THE Il'fBRESTS OJ' TBB IIEJGS-MASON ARltA
Management, has prepared a
detailed examination of the socalled "Bobby Kennedy Law" in
an attempt to determine if there is
any job besides ftrSt lady possible
ROBERT L WINGJITT
for Hillary Clinton.
After President Kennedy's
Publwber
appoinbnent of his brother Roben
as attorney general, Congress
PAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
included in The Postal Review and
Assistanl Publisher/Controller
General Manager
Federal Salary Act of 1967 a provision severely limiting a governLETI"ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less tban 300
ment official's ability to appoint a
words. All Ienon are subjectlo editing and must be . signed with name,
relative to a governmental position.
: addness and relcpbone number. No unsigned lctrers will be published. Letters
· The taw covers not only the·
should be in good wre.~addressing issues, not personalities.
·
executive branch, but also the legislative and the judiciary, and ,
-···
defines "relative" not only as
immediate family but also aunts,
uncles, nephews and nieces,
•
cousins
and even .step-relatives. . ·
•
Since the president has aulhonty
•
..
over the entire executive branch, it
· Like many Meigs Cotmtians, I Mr. Miller for a job well done dur· would seem to. rule out completely,
any kind of formal position in the
~eived Clarence Miller's "Final
ing his watch.
Washington Report" last week.
·
Also I wisb to lhan1c Rich Ioiles government for a president's wife.
However, even with the law, a
· · Over the years I have enjoyed for.his service to Meigs County and
receiving these reports keeping us wish him well in future endeavors.
Betty Theiss,
lbreast of the actions going on in
Washington.
Racine
I would like to say ''hat's off' to

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Page 2-The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
Thursday, January 21, 1993

•

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

• IColumbus l:w,I

Fl"r.s·t hean·ng

held on waste
•
•
dum'J'n locatiOn

W. VA.

l

Around the nation
up gusts near 100 mph and !tiDed at
A long cold front dumped rain leasi eight people mov.e d into
across much of the nation's mid· southern Canada, but another syssection today as it pushed towllfd tem was expecled to hit the region
the East Coast. Another storm today.
.
headed for the battered Pacific
Heavy rain was forecast today
Northwest.
for southern Oregon and Northern
Rain fell early today from the California.
Ohio and Tennessee river valleys
Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards .
down to the Gulf Coast, where tor- sent 50 National Guardsmen and
rential rain Wednes~y caused 10,000 sandbags to three coastal
flooding in many areas.
· parishes after torrential rain fell
A storm in the Pacific North· Wednesday, includiQg more than
west on Wednesday that whipped

Meigs EMS responds to 10 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical s~rvice
responded to I 0 calls for asslStaRCe

::~~yandearlyThursday
On Wednesday at 9:33 am. the
P~meroy unit went. to Pomeroy
Ptke for Sarah Smllh. She was
. taken.to Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal.At 12 :41, p.m. the Salem Fire
Denart.-n_t was called to Old Dex·
,_ ...._,
ter Church-Road for a hayftre. The
Columbia Fire Department was
called at 1:20 p.m. to assist. The
name of the owner of the hay was
unavailable.
The Pomeroy unit, at I :40 p.m ..
went to the Arbaugh Addition for
Clifford McCartney. He was ttans·
ported to. St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
At 1:46 p~ m . the Racine unit

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -.
The first hearing about how to
choose the location for a low-level
radioactive waste dump went well,
but the issue is not lilcely to get easier to discuss, an offiCial said.
Pt.
"No one in this country has
01VI3 Accu-WMthet', Inc.
found this process to be an easy
one and it probably shouldn't be,"
said Charles R. Saxbe, co-chainnan
· South-Central Ohio
of the Blue Ribbon Commission.
Extended forecast:
1
k
Monday:
Saturday
througb
Tonight, cloudy. Chance of rain
About
a
dozen
peep
e
spo
af
Saturday, fair. Lows in upper Wednesday's heanng, the farste of
early and of flurries late. Low in
the mid-30s. Chance of precipita· 20s to low 30s. Highs in the 40s. 12 scheduled across the state with
tion 50 percent. Friday, cloudy Sunday, a chance of snow. Lows . the Low-Level Radioaetive ·waste
wilh a chance of drizzle or flumes. around 30. Highs in the mid to Advisory Committee. The last
Monday, fair. Lows in hearing is scheduled for Apri13 in
High near 40. Chance of ~ipita­ upper
the 20s. Highs in the 30s.:
tion 50 percent
Painesville.
·' .
Last year', Gov. George
OAPSE To meet
Voinovich establisbj:d the 13-memThe Eastern Local Ohio Associber commission to collect informa· ation of Public Employees will
lion and give advice to the gover- meet in the Eastern High School
.
/"'
College. He also was an associate nor and the Legislature about cafereria at 7:30p.m. Monday.
Denver W. Potts
degree nursing education consul· guidelines for placing the dump in
tant for the National League for Ohio.
. . .
. Dyer to Speak
Denver W. Potts, 76, of Nursing.
·:.~ comiDISSton.•s made. u~ of
Bob Byer, director of the Meigs
Roseville, died Tuesday, Jan. 19,
He graduated from Southeastern scientific and technical specialists, County Emergency Medical Ser1993 at Good Samaritan Hospital Ohio School of Practical Nursing the public, enviro~men.talists and vices, will speak at 7 p.m on Feb.
in Zanesville.
in 1972, Hocking Technical Cot- generators of rad10acuve waste. 12 at the Burlingham Modem
He&lt;was born on Oct. I, 1916 in lege Associate Degree 'Nursing The advisory commiuee is explor- · Woodman hall. He will talk about
. Cheshire, son of the late Clarence Program in 1974, a bachelor of sci- ing technical issues involved in a how to organize a volunteer fire
and Chloe (Frazier) Potts.
ence in nursing from Regent Coi- storage center.
department
Mr. Potts served in the Army leg~ in 1983, a masters degree in
. Ohio is part of a group of six
'
;, during World War II and was Allied Health Sciences from Rut- states ihat will rotate storage of
Dance.planned
retired from the Bridgeport Brass gers University in 1985, a master's low-level radioactive wastes generThe Tuppers Plains VFW Post
Co. of Indianapolis, Ind.
degree ·in Nursing Sciences in 1989 ated within the stares' borders. The No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will
Als~ pr~cedin_g ~im in death from the College of New Rochelle.
other states are Indiana, Iowa, Mis- hold a round and square dltnce Fri'
was hts wtfe, Mmme J. (Shaw) He was attending Widener Universouri, Minnesota and Wis!!onsin . day from 8·11:30 p.m. with music
Potts. ,
.
.
. sity toward a degree of Doctor of As the largest producer of th~t by. the Happy Hollow Boys. EverySurVIvors mclude hu three Nursing Sciences at the lime of his
waste among the 'five states, Ohto one welcome.
brothers, Clarence Potts Ir. of Mid- aeath.
wiU become the storage site for the
dleport, Marvin Potts.of ~me
Mr. Vaughan was a member of ftrSt 20 years. ·
·
Graduation set
and Ralph Potts of Indianapolis.
the National League of Nursing
The waste is currently sent to
Graduation for tile Belles and
· Graveside services will be Fri- Associates Degree Council and the
Barnwell, S.C., which will be Beaus Square Dance Club will be
·
day at II a.m. at &lt;;Jravel Hill Ceme- Zeta-Omega ·At Larfe Chapter of allowed to close next year.
Monday at the Senior Citizens
tery near Ch~shtre. ~e Feene.y- Sigma Theta Tau, nternational
Nuclear JX!wer plants ~roduce Center in Pomeroy. A potluck dinBennett American LeiiJOR Post 128 Society of Nursing . .
most of the waste, along wtlh hos- ner will be held .at 6:30 p.m, with
wiD ci!qduct military honors.
pitals, universities, private research . dance at 7:30p.m. The dance is .
Arrangements are being handled
centers and industry. .
open to all western style dancers.
by .Cannon .&amp; Cannon Funeral William .Wright
Durin!! the first hearing, propo- Wear square dance attire.
Home of Roseville.
nents satd ttie public should be
William' E. Wrigh~ Sr., 58, of
included in the decisions.
Mason died Thesday, Jan Wiry . 19,
Davis-Diddle reception ·
"Public involvement in the
Charles Vaugttan
1993 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Diddle
decision process is absolutely and Mr. and Mrs. Corbet Cleek,
A memorial service for Charles
Born November 12, 1934 at
required," to keep public support, Racine, announce the maniage of
Allan Vaughan or Nanuet, N. Y., Plymouth, WV, he was a son of the
said Robert Stratman, a vice presi- tbeir son, Chad Diddle, and daughwho died on Dec. 24, 1992 will be late Bernard F. and Cora M.
dent
at Centerior Energy Corp.,
held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the (Pringle) Wright. He was an civerwhich
owns the Perry Nuclear
Ewing Funeral Home. His cre- liead . crane operator for Foote
mains will be buried in Mt. Her- Mineral COipOr&amp;lion and aitended
Power Plant in northeast Ohio.
He said theJiant offers tours,
. man Cemetery.
Salem Community Church. He was
informatioil
an speakers to keep
Friends may call at funeral a member of Stee! Local Union .
CLEVELAND (AP)- There
lhe
public
informed.
home from II a.m. until the lime of 5171.
.
was
one ticket sold naming all six
services. Donations may be made
He was alsO preceded in death by · . Nicole Asimus; 22, a .senior at numbers drawn· in Wednesday
in Mr. Vaul!han's name to the his step-mother, a brother and two Ohio State University and a mem· night's Supc:r Lotto game, and the
her of the Student Environmental
NAMES ProJect Foundation, 2362 sisters.
·
Action Coalition, spoke against the winning ticket is worth $20 milMarket St., San Francisco, Calif.,
Survivors include his wife, Erma
lion, the Ohio Lottery said. .
94114.
Wright of Mason; three sons, Wil- dump. She said the waste would
Lottery offiCials said the winner
leak mto the ground and air.
A memorial service was held for liam E. Wright, Jr. of Columbus,
will receive annual payments of
him on Jan. 19 at the Hannemann Charles H. Zuspan, Jr. of Point
$769,230, before taxes, for the next
Fuoaal Home in Nyack, N.Y.
Pleasant, and William K. Zuspan of
26 years.
Bomin Pomeroy on Aug. 31, Mason; five daughters, Norma J..
The jackpot for Saturday's
1951, Vaughan was the son of Asbury of Harmony, WV, Dreama
Super
,Lotto drawing drops back to
Roben W. Vaughan and the late K. Ussery of Mason, Connie M.
Am Ele Power................... .33 318 $4 million.
Nina (Annie) Yates. Besides his Fields of Hanford, Brenda
AslllaJHl Oil. .......................26 S/6 Pick 3 Numbers
mother, he was preceded in death of West Columbia, and Debra E.
AT&amp;T................ .................S3 3/4
0-7-1
by a · brother, Michael Bruce Miller of Pomeroy; two sisters,
Bank Ooe...........................50 7/8
(zero, seven, one) "'
Vaughan, his step-mother, Joan Mamie Russell and Carolyn
,Bob Evans ......................... 191/4 Pick 4 Numbers
Vaughan, his maternal and paternal England, both of HWJtington; two
Olarming Shop..:.............. .17
9-7-2-6 .
gtandparents.
·
brolhers, James Wright o(Poca and , City Holding...................... 21
(nine, seven, two, six)
In addition to his father, he is DeMis Wright of Dunbar;_ 17
Federal MOIUI.................... I8 S/8 Super Lotto
survived by a longtime companion, grandchildren and sevs'al meces
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................6S 518
1·5·8-10-37-42
Bernard A. Amero, a brother, and nephews.
Key Cenwrion ...................21 3/4
(one, five, eight, ten, thirtyThomu Eugene Vaughan, and a
Lands End.......................... 25 318 seven, forty-two)
Graveside • service was held
special aunt and uncle, Faye and Thursday, January 21, at 11 am. at
Limited Inc. ...................... 28 518 Kicker
Alfred Wolfe.
Multimedia Inc ........... ....·... 33 l/2
5-0-0-7-5-5
the Broad Rtm Cemetery with Rev.
Mr. Vaughan was a registered Richard
Rax
RestauranL .................'J/16
(five, zero, zero. seven, five.
~onds-Krug and Rev.
nurse and teacher at the Elizabeth Clyde Fields officiatinJ. ·
Reliance ElecUic .......;........ 21 3/4 five)
·
Seton School of Nursing of lona
Robbins&amp;Myers
................
17
1/2
In lieu of ftowers, the · family
Shoney's Inc...................... 23 1/8
asks donations be made to the
Star' Bank ...........,............... 37
Mason Coimty Chapter of the
· The Daily Selllinel
Wendy lnt'l ........................ 12 3/4
American Canca' Society, iii care
(UIIl'll 111-1110)
Worthington Ind . ...............24 1/2
of
Grace
Somerville,
RL
I
Box
Publilhed e¥try ollomoon, Mo~
Stock reportsare the 10:30
726, Point Plelsan~ WV 25550.
'
lln:VIIIh Friday, Ill Court Sl,_ ~-·
'
a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt,
Ohio b7 u.. !lblo Valley ,...lilldnr
AirangemeniS
aro
tmder
the
eo..-yJMlll- Inc., P.......,, •
Ellis and Loewi of QaUijiOUs.
direction of the Foglesong Funeral
Oblci 41'711110 Ph. 1192-21111. !leconol tlao
....... pela al """'"""· Ohio.
Home.

Weather

10 inches around LafayeUc. Many
roads were closed, and water was:
over the top of automobiles in·
areas, the National Weather Service said.
•
Up to 6 inches fell in pans of·
Mississippi, and heavy rain alSO:
caused flooding in Alabama.
:
Freezing rain coated roads in thenorthern Great Lakes region, caus-'
ing many minor traffiC accidents.
Some children in western Wiscon ..
sin and southeastern Minnesota
spent the night away from home:
because the ro8ds were too danger•
ous for school buses, offiCials said. :
Temperatures today were fore-:
cast in the 30s and 40s across mos~
of the northern tier of states; in thi
50s and 60s in California, the'
southern Plains and Southeast; and.
the 70s in southern Texas and mos(
of Florida.
The high temperature for thC:
nation Wednesday was 81 at
H.ome:;tea•d and Fon Lauderdale,

went to Route 338 for Doris
Hensler who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
Grant LifeOight U was called at
8:06p.m. to Vertrans for Joseph R.
Roush. He was uanspMed to Grant
Medical Center in Columbus.
At 9;46 p.m. the Middleport unit
was called to South Third for
Charles McKinney who was taken
to Veterans.
·'
The Middleport unit, at II : 19
p.ni ., wen1 to Maple Street for
Danielle Scott who was transported
to Holzer.
On Thursday at 12:10 a.m. the
Middleport unit went to Coal Street
for Cody Lee who ·was treated but
not transPorted.
At 2:SO Lm. the Middleport unit
responded to Park Street for Lilly
Hubbard who was taken to Holzer.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA ,_,
446 4524

M ezgs
• ·announcementS

30s.

Area deaths

Lottery numbers

Stocks

ter, Rachelle Davis, on Jan. 6 in
Pensicola, Fla. Miss Davis is the
daughter of the !are Harold Davis.
There will be a reception for the
couple on Friday at the Racin~
American ~on Hall at 7:30p.m.
The public is tnviled.
Dance planned
The Belles and Beaus' Square
Dance Club will .sponsor a halfway dance Ian. 30 at the Senior
Citizens Center from 8-11 p.m:
Billy Gene Evans wiU be the caller.
All western style square danc.ers
invited. Refreshments will be available.

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS ·
More magic lrom vitamin C: according to etudiee at Duke
Unlveralty Medical School in Durham, North Carolina, high doaea
of the vitamin In .lotion Iorin eeem to protect the akin egalnat
damage from UV ,.ya.
Phanylbuty,.te, a d!ug uead for rare metabolic dleeaeea in .
children, may be effac:tlve·u • nontoxic treatmant for eickle cell ,
anemia. The drug producee a high level ol fetal hemoglobin.
Doctor• in Santa Barbara report that upper body exerclae worka

•• -n •• lneulln to curb geetatlonal diabatea, a complication of

.pregnancy. The women worked out 20 to 30 mlnutea, th- timett
aweek.

'

Good-for-you bran ian't ao good for sufferer• of Parklnaon'a ·
di••••· It H8ll1l that the pyridoxine In bran interfere• with the .
druga ueed to control the dlaeaae.
•
·
New bab... do better If allowed to atay with their mother• for an
hour or ao and attempt breaatleeding, than if they are whiaked aw.Y tor W:.tghing and bathing, the British medical journal Lancet
report•.
Whatever your naw baby needa, you'll find It her!! at ....

zuspan

HAPPY 75r_.
BIRTHDAY
GRANDPA!

K••••lilo(:'ulo..... R.....

Nowopa£;;

~rweu&amp;att...,

BTaham

-New
Saleo,
'"""' New York,
York 733
10017.

Court news

•

I

...

Divorce action
Actions for divorce have been
POIII'MAIITER: 8eno1- •..._ lo
'n&gt;o Dail1 Sonllaol, . Ill Courl Sl.,
filed ·in the Meigs COWIIy Coun of
Po._, OHio 4157dtl.
Common Pleas by Belinda Lynn
IVIIICIIPI'ION &amp;Al'D
Goode, Middleport, from Earl
... c.m.... ...a.
. Auther Goode, Silver Creek, N.C.;
One Woot. ..........................................
One MD!Ilh......................... .............. ..
and Barry Wayne McCoy U. SyraOoe v.ar.:......................,,,,,,,,,,___....,,2Q
'tuse, from Brenda Sue McCoy;
.
IINQLB COPY
· .
. PKIOK
Botbelw
' a. ,. •' .
.'

u:

Dally. .................:........... ..............:~~~ Conlo

-llin DOI ........ Io 110¥ U.. .m-

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w.........................- ............ WM
w.-..
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13

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Ho.spital news

w-... . . . . . . . . . . . .~
. . . ... . .

1!~

MWoob.......................................... .110
u woob..:............................ ,.,........ ·"'

Divorce vanted
A divon:e has been panted in
the Meigs County Court of Commoo Pleas 10 Harley L. StalnBker
and U11ian F. Stalnal.:er.
.

Lkita•••
illllld
Marriage licenses have been
issued by Meigs County Probart
Coun to Steven Dale Chaney, 34,
Middi~J!Ort, and Charlene Kay
Swani, 26, Pomeroy; and Shawn
Christopher Doyle, 21, Clarksburg,
and Ang'ela Lynn Bostick, 22,
Racine.

HOLZER MEDICAL ~ENTER
. Discharges, Ian . 20 - Jamie
Lane, Beulah Carpenter, Mrs.
Thomas Wheeler and son, Mrs.
David Jones and daughter. Mrs .
Thomas Amon and twin son and ,
daughter, Mrs. John .Rairden and
son,,Charles Swan, Amber Leach, ,
Iennfcr McManis•. Joshua Leeman, ,
.Mary Niday, Albert Grimmett; ,.
• Robert Klnnln, Woodrow Hannon,
Anna Barnett, Cecil Brlnager, and
Mitt!-' White.
Binhl, Ian. 20 • Mr. 1111d Mrs.
Anthony Jacbon, daughter, Ollk
Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Williams,
daughter, GallipoliJ.
Veterau Memorial
.
WBDNBSDAY ADMISSIONS
· • Woodrow Hall, Racine; and ·
Heien Will,~.. WBDNESPAY DISCHARGES.
• Cart Nelson and Betty Stalford.
·

From Your
· Children, .
. Grandehilllren,
Great•
C~andehflllren and
tful Enaplo~ees of
va..,Jaan's .
Cardinal.

' j

•

.,

CO..IeRIIft• R. ....

-"':R....
MM. tfW &amp;M . 8 :00a.m lolto,.m .
tunuw to:oo •·• eo 4 .0 D, "'·

PIIIICR.,IOIII

.

"' 1111111

'ritndty ..,ice . '-"'•"'· OH .
o,........ 'flithh .,...

E . Mom

.

Membor. 'l1oo ""--alecl Prooo, and lhe
Ohio
Aloodalion, NaUonal

'' .

'

�I
Ohio

·s ports

After Virginia's loss to North CaroUna,

The Daily Seniinel
/

·

Niagara now owner of longest win streak

Thursday, January 21, 1993 ,
p
'

.
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
pie Eagles play in the Metro - second half and turned a sevenAP Sports Writer .
Atlantic Atliletic Conference with point halftime _lead infO a 29 -point
The longest current Division I the likes of Siena, Canisius and edge at one pomL
winning streak in the country can Iona- not exactly household
North Carolina (IS-I, S-0 ACC)
now be found about four miles · names.
got 14 points from light-scoring
from the Canadian border, in snowNiagara (11·1) has come l:ack forward Kevin Salvadori. The Cavbound western New York.
from a ·season-opening four-point alien (11-1, 4-1) were led by Doug
Niagara University holds that loss to St John's with 11 suaight Smith's 16.
. distinction today with a victory by an average margin of more than
No.5 Micbiaan 80
strealc of 11 games, thanks 10 Vir- 13 poiniS. Their 86 poiniS per game
Mllme110ta 73
ginia's 80-58 lOS!! 10 North Caroli- average is 15 beUer than last year,
At MinneapOlis, Chris Webber's
na Wednesday night dull ended the when th\ly fmished 14-14.
· two d~ capped a 21· 12 secondCavaliers' best-in-the-nation streak
"People want 10 see that type of half spurt that helped Michigan
at 16.
basketball, it's fun for them to (14-2, 3-1 Big Ten) hand MinnesoElsewhere in the Top 25 watch, and I think jleople in west· ta (10-4, 2-3) iiS first home loss of
Wednesday, No. 5 Michigan beat em New York are starting 10 get the season.
Minnesota 8()..73, No. 19 Vander· excited about watching us play,"
No. 19 Vanderbilt 102
No.8 Arkansas 89
bilt downed No. 8 Arkansas 102- said Reggie Moore, a starting
89, No. 11 ~edged Arizona guard. ·
· Vanderbilt ( 14-3, 4·1 SEC) now
The streak is on the line IOnight has knocked off three teams that
State 91-87, No. 20 Pittsburgh
defeated Boston College 81· 70, as Niagara visits Manhallan.
were ranked in the Top IO when
and Wisconsin surprised No. 24
No.3 North Carolln;t 80
the Commodores played them Ohio Stale 76-67.
·
Vir1btia 58
Louisville,
Kentucky and
If you've never heard of NiaAt Chapel Hill, N.C., the Tar Arkansas. Billy McCsffrey hit four
gara, don't be surprised. The Pur- Heels pounded the ball inside in the p;;;;;,;;~.;;,;;,.;.;..-...;.;.

&lt;

Wisconsin beats Ohio State 76-67 for Bucks' second straight loss
MADISON, Wis. (AP) · Michael finley says knocking off
No. 24 Ohio Stale gives Wisconsin
th'e perfect send-off on a three-

•
•

I

•

game road swing starting Salllrday
against No. 21 Michigan State.
"Any time you beat a ranked
team it gives you confidence and

respect," Finley said after leading
the Badgers to a 76-67 victory
Wednesday night "A ·lot of 1eams
can produce at home, but only the

Stow
uses marksmen, flexibility to stay unbeaten
,,
· STOW, Obio (AP) - Stow is . casuaUy as if he were shooting free
the No. 1 team in the swe among 'throws in.his back yard.
Ohio's biggest schools. And the
Kovach, averaging around 29
BuUdogs like it that way.
poiniS and shooting just under 50
.. That may be one way 10 explain percent from three-point mnge and
tile high-scoring exploits of the 54 perceqt overall, set a scoring
unbeaten and state-ranked Bull- s,tandard the second game of the
degs, but Dave Close, the coach season when he scored a schoolbehind the team has averaged more record 51 points against Firesrone.
tl!an 90 .poiJ;IIS a game, insisiS it's
"Kevin can shoot it," said
Close,
"But we liave four of our
ontr, an illUSIOn.
'We don't limit our kids' first eight players who are accurate
sfiooting. If they have an open shot, from three-point range. Kevin is
t!leY are urged to take it," Close one of the best pure shooters I've
said.
ever had. His scoring isn't a
. . ': Twice the Bulldogs have planned thing, it just happens."
acceded the century DUri, getting
As a team, the Bulldogs are
t:16 against Petersburg Springfield shooting 57 percent from the field.
a~d 108 against Ravenna, in
Close credits assistant coach Ken
defense of their Metro League Rector with smoothing out the
c&amp;ampionshiJl.
kinks in individual offense.
: The hot hand in the IOrrid offenAssistant 'Lee Brachik's input
sive streak belongs to Kevin defensively has helped the BullKovach, a 6-foot-2 senior guard dogs 10 limtl opponeniS 10 under 70
WhO flfCS in three-point goals as poiniS·a game.

"That's their focus, but I make
the fmal decisions," Close said.
KovaCh isn't the only offensive
t1ueat at Srow.
·
Chet Feldman, a 6· 1 senior,
averages 16 points a game, and
three others - 6-S senior Steve
Wood, 6-6 junior Geoff Byrne and
6-footjunior Jim Leone- all average around nine poiniS a game.
"We have a lot of kids who can
handle the ball and that gives us a
lot of freedom 10 sub. We also have
kids who shoot very well ouiSide
from three-point range and our
feeling is that if we have that kind
of talent, why not exploit it We're
just playing up to our streniUh.
"Plus, ()ut kids like iL We prac·
lice hard and play hard. A lot has
been said about our outside shooting, but our pressure defense .has
aUowed us 10 make a lot. of layups,
100. • •

Scorel&gt;oard
~ In

c

.
So~tb
Aubom II, T - 7 5
Ond•m Soutbtm 76, Wmlhmp 6S
O.ri-10, c;udcl70
Dol'au173, Alo,.lljnnjn~;"''62
Ftmido S&lt; 1,, ctoa.aa I

tbeNBA ...

--

EASTERN CONFERENCE
TW L Pd.
' Now
_ ,Y&lt;D
_ ,-·-··--23
_.... _ •.%! 14 .622

IS
I,
. -................. 16 16
• fbill
lS 211
. I
II 2S
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·-·
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: - - - . _____ ,.,21
I

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GB

.S:ZS
.500
.429
.306
.216

Mini ':; ' 69,Ml~S..53
N.C.C-.IBO,N.
AAT7L
Now Odouu '16, Lomor77
NOIIb Cualiao 10, Vi
51
Rkhme~~d 54, W.illi.aTMary 53

115

&lt;

3.5

85
85

Mldwett

13.5
155
195

- ...................2!1 I .751
lillllo ...................3ll 10 .722
P•cdoo4................25 II .694

.3
15

'-

=· ................

·--

1.3
4

ac . . . .

"It was good 10 get the second
in a row at home and protect our
turf," said Wi~onsin coach Stu
Jacks,on. "This game _gives us
some confidence going tniO three
. road games. We want 10 get betlcr.
We're capable of doing battle, but
we need 10 show this kind of mentaliOughness."
WiSconsin tmiled 46-41 when
Finley initiated the crucial run with
a tip·in basket with IS minutes
remaining. He completed the run
with a spectacular off-.balance
jumper that stretched Wisconsin's
lead 10 66-54 with 5:03 left.

from Federal Tax, and
in some cases INCOME
FREE from state tax.

H. D. VEST FINANCIAL SERVICES
'KARL KElLER Ill, C.P.A.
Registered Representative
(614) 992·7270 or (614) 667·6011
· SecurMies allenid lhraugh H. D. Vlllllnveetment SeCurities, Inc.
433Easl
.
TIWil
75039•
556-1651
&lt;

Southwest

Ri&lt;:e 61, Tau Tocll59 .
Southcm Mcdt. ?9, TCluCJviAian 6S

7J

17 .521
.l9 11 .514
• OoWoo ....... - ..IP 19 • .~
• 1m
..........14 21 .~

: u..

'

Mdmi,OIUo 59. C..&lt; Michi&amp;m 43
MichipaB0,--73
N - . 86, Soc:nmcato S&lt; 70
Narth...._at Iowa, ppd.
St. LaW 16. Au,p"M)U 73
Tolodo 17, .ur.., 71
W. MidoipD 16, Ohio71
W'IICOIIIin 76, Ohio St. 67
YouniJ\OWft St.104, Bufi'.Ja 89

GB ·

. LA. l.Msi .........J9

I

~IOS.Dolaw...,S&lt;65

TW L Pd.
l1llb _ .................. .24 12 JGJ
: Soo-.......... .22 I~ .629
•• .................20 16 .556
. o.a- ...................10 2S .216
7 26 .212
,: l)ollu .................-3 30 .091
-

Stepbaae Motia. cenler, to Huniltoa of
lhc Americ:lll Hool:l)' ........ Reoolled
sm. slfp. daf'~ rrcmlfamll\CII..

Boll SL 61,Bowllna 0oeon 59
E.Miobipo7S,E..r71
EvWvilfe73,0.,..6S
IUinoil St. II, Loyolo, D1,. 64
Iowa St. Pl, S. Utah 63

_..

-

Loop
.
liT. LOUIS BLtlES - Aacioood O.V.
~cl!:ll)', Wt win&amp; ro Pearia 'rL 1he In-.
n..a...!Hookoy Loop
·
VANCOUVER CANUCKS - Smu

Vondomih 1112, kt"""l9

WESfERN CONFERENCE

&lt;

lain Frucw. ctmor. to Capica1 Dimiet of
IlK ......... Haeby Loop
CTITAWA SENATORS - Rccailod
Gor4 DiACICil, dele.naeman. from San
Dieao or tbe Intomuional.._Hockoy

&lt;

IU

.

NEW YOU. ISLANDEIS - Sent

&lt;

C..l'laddo 61
Souoh.U.-.13.-69
Ccmlino 11,-76
trr.O.u11n0op 1g, App&lt;loohion S&lt;

69

8
8

·.·'·

Hex:key
NollouiHaokoJ.._UI

-69.

12

.••

ordinator.

Gecqia Soalbca. 75, Puanan 73
LSU 16. Caat. C:C. n t' c:ac St. 53

I
35
45
7

.595

FootbaR

Nollonal Footi&gt;IU lMaut
I!OUSWN OILERS - E1t&lt;odod lhc
Cclntnc:t ~r Kevin Gilbride. offcmi"e co-

;
good teams produce on the road.
Finley, whose previous high went 10 wort.
"I really have 10 give Wisconsin ·.
That's the big chaUenge for us."
was 32 points, scored 19 of his
a lot of credit," said Ayers. "The
Finley came !0 the rescue after poiniS in the second half..
came
out shooting the bah
the Buckeyes rallied 10 wipe out a
"Finley was just ouiStaJiding,"
exuemely
weU early. Our defense
IS-point Wisconsin lead ·
· Ohio State coach Randy Ayers
got
us
back
inro the game. But F'mThe 6-foot-7 sophomore for- said. "The thing that iri'ijlressed me
ley
got
it
done
down the SlreiCh." ~·
ward scored 14 of his career-high was his~fsical suength. Wbcn be
34 poiniS in a tO-minute span. of got the
in the paint he was able
COLONY THEATRE
the second half as the Badgers to go up strong. He's made the
outscored the Buckeyes 25-8 10 improvemeniS you would expect in
regain control.
a second-year player."
"I don't know if I'd say I was ·
Finley starled out hot, scoring
wired," F'mley said. "I just wanted 11 poiniS in the fJnt seven minutes
CHRISTMAS CAROle
to win and I thought my man ' as Wisconsin'raced 10 a 21 -61ead.
STARTING FRIDAY
couldn't hold'me. I felt like if I got
But Ohio Stale follght back, led
the baU I could score every time." ·by Simpson. A three-point basket
I
by Simpson puUed the Buckeyes 10
' 'My teammates were getting within 32-31. A three-point play by
me the ball and setting picks for Tmcy Webster just before the end· ·
me," said Finley, the only Badger · of the half ·gave the Badgers a 3510 score in double figures. "When 31lead.
·
they do that 10 help get you open,
The Buckeyes continued their
SHOW TIMES:
you have to knock down the charge early in the second half,
FRI.·SAT.-SUII. 7:10 u::IO
shoiS.''
ouiSCOring the Bad~ 15-6 10 take
M~~Y=sl::~:,"v
• It was the second straight victo- a46-41lead. lbat was when Finley
• · Aclmloolon SU0•441-01123
ry over a ranked 1eam for the Bad·
' .!:=~~~~====~
gers, who· heat then-No. 19 Min·
!II
nesotalast Saturday. WisConsin (94 overall, 2·2 in 'the Big Ten) is off
to its best conference stan since
We can help find
1987.
Ohio Stale (9-4, 2-2) lost iiS sec·
investment that's
ond consecutive game. The Buck·
eyes were led by freshman guard
right for you
Greg Simpson wtth 19 poiniS, 16 of
them coming in the first half.
Lawrence Funderburke and· Alex
INCOI\IIE FRE~
Davis added 14 each.

I

!lor Wat

15
12

•

Admna91,Ari&amp;Gna St. I?.
Colando U, Mo.-Kantu City~

Obio bigh school
girls' basketball scores ·

Frlda1'• .......

Nno-Yoctatfta·*lpbi• 7;30p.m.
PboelilaaW·Nn- 7:30pm.

Mi.aill0dco4o, 7:30pJL
I'I&lt;WI4norll-7:30pm.
U..Lokm 11 Uuh, I p.m.
..._.,. Qlcop, 1:30p.m.
o.tftlila &amp;In Afttado, 1:30 p.m:

r:
•
,"

.,....

(]J!VI!LANiht LA. ClipPon,

10~

:~

-•O.W...Swo,I0:30pm.
... , , '·=m.,.•ntW 10:30p.m.

.

:. In the NHL ...

·---

::

Adela 46, u.bura Flidiol&lt;i Z1
......bolo 43, Alllobu1a I!Aic&lt;wood 44
Ali!gbuJo llo!boc ss. 0...... ;16
Avm 47,l..akewood 39
Belloho 62. SL Cloimillo 54
Blufftm sa. eor,..Ra...... 47
Cbapio Folh SO, TwinobwJ 40
O&gt;aool39, C.Velond Colb. 23
Clwdon 57. W'ooklif!O 39
Cio. ADderloo 48. Foidield 39
Cio.""""' l2. an. CAP!! 44
Cin. Sumnrit44, New Miami. 29
Cal. WaUCI'IIon 72, Cot Hutley 41
Cmmrood 57, Woadtidae 49
Day. Ounbu7t, Dty. Moadowdale 31
Day. Whi.le71, ·o .y. s.lmont 29
no... 61, Cmol FuiiGa NW 40
Bdilau. N. 63 Tmon~a 'I1
EI)'Da C.lh.lo. Lenin B....uide 39
Fi.w so. s . - .
Fnmmt R01146, Tol. WbUmcr 36
OG'field Hu:. Trillity 95, Parma l;IU .
llolyNune22 .
Gam&lt;llvillo SI, W'uodhom 42
lcffc:nan S9, Alhubuh St. John 52

Keaerin&amp; Ahet43, Troy 41
K&lt;ycuone
t..,.;, Colh. 45

ss.

WALES CONFERENCE

.•; r... ah ...

Ub C.lh. 42, llldua 35
l.aunll. 69, Cl&amp;.. SL Aupstinc .54
LDniD a..m.w 54, Colwnbia 42
LcmWo Kina 5a, Lonin 39
Lenin-. 64, m,.u. &lt;16
Louinillo 60, c - s. 42
Madilon 3S, CCIUMIIU.t 21
60,c....lboo 3&lt;i
71.-66
lbcino fouthcm 33

W L T .... Gf'~A
• Pi\ '
31 11 4 66 207159
• W................. :14 II 4 !12 114162
- - - . . ...:.. .. 2319 3 .., U61.,
w-ooo

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• Bulfolo ..............
.• ................
;: Dllawo ...............

.

2915
2615
25 11
22 11
12 30
442

N•w Coxinaton .55, John Glenn 52

(011

,Newui&lt;Co1h.4S,V....m-44
OlmloedF.U,61, Budtoyc 50
PaiDeaviUe Han"CI)' 49, Paiaetvillc
Ri...W.:M
Pain&amp; V.U. Sl, Lalhun Wemm l9

--

.

Pumo46. s......-n

·. CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
.•• T -

Ri""' Vlow 54. Td-VIIIey 44
R-..74,Mopdoa44

W L T I'll. GPGA
:Cioicqo.
.............
nt7 6 60 t67m
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Transactions
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I FLaiii'Cisa \

FUIIIIURE,
IPPUIICIS, ·TV'S

fined him 110.000 IDIUJUinl with"' &lt;I·

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PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT &amp; FINANCIAL
PLANNERS

&lt;•
&lt;

.

FULL SET

since he arrived in Montreal after
seven seasons with the Devils.
Muller scored the game-wiruling
goal against his old team on
Wednesday. His 21st goal and an
assist gave him the team lead with
63 points in 48 games - 9f1C point
m~re than Stephan Lebeau a,nd
Vmcent Damphousse.
The Devils had the best of the
scoring chances Wednesday. but
several excellent stops by Roy
IMik: the diffcae11ce.
Roy, who has regained bls
three-time Vezina Trophy form
after a worrying sluntp earlier in
thC month, said, "I just wanted to
keep the team In the pme." ·
Chris Terreri was lllrollg in the
New Jmey net as Montteal outsltot
the Devils 37-3S.
All the goals came in the second
period. Muller, Denis Savard and
Mike Keane scored for Montreal.
while Valeri Zelepukin and John
Macl ean replied for New Jersey.

TODAYf
993-3134

wilh Jo. Otiv«, ccchet, on • or.

Natlclluil .,......,, Almc:lalkJn
NBA - S~ded Clad• Hamley,

.. Cempb.n 75, Md.·Baltim.ore Count'
fO

- --17~65

-

BukelbaU

u. 71, CociDia ... "

,,

'

:W.

·MONTRIW.I!XPOS - Tndod Todd
suap~oo. oadloldor.... o...i&lt;io.
~. to Milw..U. foe Owlie Mon•
10po, ~. and are.. Mamto, fint

lluketballswres

NEW YORK (AP) - Charles from the court to the locker room,
Barkley's latest violation of NBA both at lu!lflime and at the end of
rules will cost .him about $40,000. . the game, without any discussion
The F't1oenix Suns forw~ was with the game officials," Thorn
suspended for one game wrthout said. "Conduct such as Charles
pay by the NBA and fm_ed $10,000 displayed on Monday cannot b~
Wednes!lay for vaultmg over a tolerated."
scorer's table and arguing with an
Barkley shot an airball on a 3official.
point shoter with 11 seconds left,
Barkley's behavior in Monday's · then complained he had been
106-103 loss to the New York fouled by Anthony Mason. M •the
Knicks was criticized by NBA vice game ended, Barkley continued his
president Rod Thorn, who issued · argument with Clark. When
the penalties. Barkley was to miss warned by Clark that the outburst
WedneSday night's game be_lween would cost him money, Barkley
against the Oeveland Cavaliers at went wild, taking off after the offiRichfreld, Ohio.
cial, who was already heading for
Based on his salary of $2.~2 the exit ramp leading 10 the dress·
million this season, Bi!fkley wtll ing room.
lose about $29 ,SOO tn salary.
Madison Square Garden security
Including the pay loss, he has ~n blocked Barkley's path, but later he
fined more than $140,000 stnce denied that he had anything violent
1989.
.
in mind He said part of the reason
"I made a mislike and they're he was penalized was that lite ipcigoing to suspend me' for the dent occurred close 10 the NBA's
game," BarkleY. said. "I just have offtees.
to deal with it ... I don't think it . . "Being in New York has somewarranted a suspension. But I know thing to do with everything,"
what they gQt to do. They got 10 Barkley said.
. :
keep people coming, so they've got · While with the Philadelphia
to control ihe image of the league. ' 76ers last season, Barkley was
So I understand that"
fined $10,000 and suspended for
Barkley missed a shot in the one gsiJie for spitting at a fan. In
final seconds against the Knicks 1990, he paid $39,000 in fines,
but thought he was fouled. He including $20,000 for a ftght with
leaped over the scorer's table and Bill Laimbeer or the Deuoit Pischased offx:ial Jim Clark after the tons and $5,000 for a bel with with
. game following an exchange of Mark Jackson, then of the New
words.
·
York Knicks. Barkley was fined
"Our rules are clear that players $45,000 the previous season. ·
and coaches are 10 ao immedintely .

coach Coleman Crawford. "We
By ROOD AUBREY
were trying 10 talce sboiS instead of
~lated Press Writer
trying 10 be patienL Unfortunately,
&lt;?JtlO N?tthem .coach Joe ~- we could not diCiale the tempo of
poll wasn t worned about berng the game "
do'Y!111 poiniS at hal~.
.
In 0~ MAC games, BaU Stale
Jony V&lt;?ge! won t.let us , beat Bowling Green 61-59, West·
lose, Campoli Slid after his 89-88 em Michigan ~ed Ohio Universiovt;n~me vtctory '!Vednesday .over . ty 86-71, Miami or Ohio posted a
Ohio Conference f!Val Otterbem on 59-43 deciJioil over Central Michi·
a Vogel basket Vitth four Sej:Onds gan and Eastern Michigan defeated
lef~.,
.
Kent Stale 75-71.
.
We wanted to take th-: ftrsl
In a Big Ten rivalry in Madison,
good. shot that we saw. It did not · Wis., the Badgers beat No. 24 Ohio
s~ me that Tony Vogel came Stale 76-67.
up w~ the ball. He refuses 10 let us
Sophomore forward Michael
lose.
.
•
.
Finley scored a career-high ~4
The vtctory helped .the Polar points to ·help Wisconsin get its
-Bean (14-0 ovel)ill. 9-0 m the con- second straight victory over a
ference) rematn u~beaten and ranked team. They knocked off
eJ!~ the Cardinals home court• then-No. 19 Minnesota on Satur·
wmrung streak at 39 games.
day
~n oth~r Ohio Conferen,ce
Back in Ohio, Dayron suugglcd
acUOn, Herdelborg beat BalcJv.:m· · with EYI!isville, losing 13:65 'as ·
Wallce 87-61!, C&amp;pital '!Jeat Mariet· Scott Sludfler hit it 3·pointer with
ta 6S;48, Mount Unto~ topped 3:45 10 play, 10 give the Aces the
Muskingum S9-56 and Hiram Col· lead for good. Shreffler and Parrish
lege beat J~ Carron 87-67 · .
Casebier each finished with 22
And ~ng of records, m the points.
North &lt;;cast COnference, Kenyon
Dayron mopped 10 1·14 overall
beat Wrttenborg for the fust ume
d 0 2 . the Midwestern Colle
since the 1950-51 season. Wednes· ~ • tn
•
day's score was 59-56, thanks to 18 gtale. COnfef!~nCC. The defeat was..
poiniS from Todd CZanosld.
.the runth straight for d!e Flyers, off
Kenyon improved to 10-6 and to their W!&gt;fSt stan smc.e D~ton
S-3, while Wittenberg dn?Pped 10 be~tp~ro~: !ulit.e
11-4 and ~2.
.
fans are standing by the team. .
Also !n the NCAC, Wooster
·"I'm very grateful for all the
beat Denison 67-32, Case Western
nnnnrt they are gi::f throughout
topped Oberlin 74-63 and Ohio ~'r&amp;d- 'ty, he .
18
~esleyan pounded Em;tham 110yO::;roWn ou~ed B~ffalo .
·1 the M'd A · .
Con~er
104-89 wtth Donme Taylor s 20
n
t • mencan
•
iniS leading the way for the Pen·
ence,To!edo beat Akron 87-71,
who nevez trailed.
·
after a dtsmal fl~t half that lu!d
In other games, Rio Grande
Toledo up 23-8 wrth 11:20 left tn overwhelmed Wilberforce 122-87,
the.~ltSI~f.
.
. .
Firidlay topped DeftaiiCe 77-74 and
~ s the worst job ~e did tn Alma 8haded Bluffton 64-61.
a half m two years," satd Akron

HOUSTON ASTROS - Aped to
1m111 wilh Az.&amp; Haw&amp;,~.-. on a ana-

:MaJor collqe
1

in

CINCINNA
REDS
- Apeed to
plldleD.
... -T1-·

'

;~

ONU beats Otterbein
OT; Marietta, OU fall

--- ·
-·

Friday··-

".,.•

DENIES LAYUP TRY- Michigan's Chris Webber (rigbt) beals
Minnesota's Cbad Kolancier to the baU during Kolander's layup try
in Wednesday n.igbt's Big Ten p!lle in Minneapolis, which the fiftb·
ranked Wolverines WOD80-73. (AP)
.

.

~nu

BENJAMIN C. RANDOLPH
&amp; ASSOCIATES

NBA fines, suspends Barkley

·MONTREAL (AP) - For Kirk
Muller, there's no special joy in
beating his old team, the New Jersey Devils.
"I try to forgot .about it,"
Muller said after bis Montreal
Canadiens rode Patrick Roy's fine
goalttnding 10 a 3-2 victay in the
onll, NHL game Wednesday night
'I Sliii have friends over there,
but I just think .about winning the
game, not bearing my old 101111.''
Muller and loaltender Roland
Molan1011 came 10 Monueal from
New Jeney on Sept. 20. 1991, in :
exchange for troubled ~r
Stephane Ricbor and wmger Tom
ChOnke.
This MCt S~e Savard caUed it
the best deal he s made since he
becune Monlreal's general manager .in 1983.
·
The moody Richer, a two-time
50-goel scorer. was a paclt of problems for the Canadiens, while
MuUer bu been a good influence
and poblbly the ctuo's best playu

~.;?n.a;{~.;.,. 49

s 61 21!!160
6 51 I,!HM
3 53 112164
6 50 2110164
4 21 147215
3 II 106232

...___________,

Montreal edges New Jersey 3-2

=

&gt; N.Y• . _ ... , 21 IP 7 .., IUIM
. · N.Y.IIIoriden.... 21122 5 45116174
• . Pbill"""lp!rio ..... 1720 7 41 173171

.•

PRICES CUT 10o1o to &amp;Dolo PLUS.

rr

straight technical fiee throws aflu
Razorbacks coach Nolan Richard:
son was ejected with 15:50 remaiJt· ·
in$. bumping the lead to seven
pomiS. Arkansas (12-2, 3-1) never
climbed back into the game. ·
No. 11 Arizona 9l
: .:
Arlzoaa State 87
At Tempe, Ariz., the WildcatS
(10-2, S-0 Pac-10) came back from
a 13-point deficit in the second .
half, thanks mainly 10 Ed Stokes~
who tallied 16 of his 18 poiniS in
the second half. Arizona. State fen
8-4 2 3
··
10
'N~.' 20 Pittsburgh 81
Boston College 70
... .
At Boston, Jerry McCullough
scored 22 poiniS and Pittsburgh'
(12-2, 5-2 Big east) held Boston
Colle~e (9-5, 3-3) to 40 percent·
shootmg. Pitt's 13-4 run broke·
open a 58-56 ·game midway.:
through the second half. .
· •·

.,,•••
•

·'•'
,~

...

I

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',

�•

Ps;• 6 The Daily Sentrnet

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

__

.

Thursd8y, Janu.,Y 21, 1993

Thursday, January 21, ·1993

Division I and conference leader
Cedarville (17 3 4-1) at 7·30 p m
for-Ohio
Bank N" · · ·
The traditional
ri airy
v

vaney baste:efj

between the two seboob takes oil
an added diniens'1011 ...ADA"-look 10 advance
~"-;'~n
Ia --L.: . beythe ~· . . ~
P ce ......... ng 1ft
wvu1on """

·
·
d-·tO pzt z·nsz· e skz..ll
.R. ed•wom~n
- •day·
.agaznst Jac k·ets on satu.
1

will plso ~ a pnooty tor tile Red·
_women because tbey confront tbe
Yellow Jackets all over at
Cedarville next week.
·
Starting for Rio Grande will be
·season.
Gena Norris (S-3, junior, 10.6
Smalley said that aside from points, 3 rebounds per game) and
CIJI'fCnt Mid-Ohio Conference lead- either Michelle Crouse (5-6, junior,
er Shawnee State, "tbe opponent 10.4 points, 3.5 assistS) or Slilcey
we are the most concerned about is Ritter (S-6, f!'esbman, 11.8 points,
Cedarville ... we will have to be 4.4 assisiS) as the guards. Taking
.playing well when we meet them the forward slots are Stephanie
here and on tbe road."
Gudorf (S-9, junior, 14.1 points,
.. The hour of ·decision in the 4.9 rebounds) and Tricia Collins
Cedarville mau.er will be Saturday (6·0, sophomore, 8.9 points, 7
at5:IS p.m. in Lyne Center when rebounds), with MOC Player of tbe
the Redwomen, 15·4 prior to Week Lori HamiliOn (6-0, junior,
_tonight's home meeting with Mal· 18.5 points, 8.9 rebounds) at the
ooe and 4-1 in the Mid-Ohio Con- post.
ference, take on tbe Yellow Jacket
Backing up Zehr are guards
squad coached by Kathy Freese. Melissa Hartman (5-4, freshman,
Cedarville enters witb a 13-S slate 13.3 poiniS, 4 assists) and Mindy
and is 3-3 in the MOC following Humble (5-5, senior, 8.6 points, 2.9
Tuesday's 65-S61oss 10 Tiffin.
assists), Pro(lable forwards are
Of utmost concern to the Red- Christine Copeland (S-10, sophowomen will be figuring a way to more, 5.3 poiniS, 5.4 rebounds) and
sto~ Cedarville center' Amy Zebr Becky Cave (6·0, freshman, 6
(5- , senior), who is averaging 25 points, 3.6 rebounds).
points and 13.4 rebounds a game.
The Redwomen currently owa
Zehr has also been the high scorer wins over Wilberforce, 106-42;
.in all but one of tbe Yellow Jack- Spalding, 82-62; Midway. 98•73
ets' games, a.nd dominated the an&lt;) 94"73; Wilmington, 100-64;
rebounding in 16.
Notre Dame, 100-63 and 85-69;
. · Cedarville will bring a fairly Lake Eric, 86-52; West Virginia
balanced game tbat matches the StAte, 95-60; Fairmont State, 88style the Redwomen have tradition- 67; Manchester, 88-73; Walsh, 78ally adopted. To date, Rio Grande 65; Ohio Dominican, 99-94· and
has played one conference game at Tiffin, 76-61. Losses have ooen to
home- Tuesday's 88-74 victory Findlay, 79-74; Central State, 79-.
over Tiffin- and hopes to keep iiS 68; Mount St. Joseph, 103-90; and
record inract. Cedarville, in con- Shawnee SlaiC, 87-84.
trast, has lost its last three MOC
Cedarville's win slate includes
• games.
.
·
' Mount Vernon Nazarene, 84-70·
At the same t!m~· ~ing fresh
·
•
"We Cll!lnot lose a conference
game at home," University of Rio
Grande Redwomen Coach Dave
:Smalley reflected last weekend as
'he sized up tbe remainder of tbe

I

Ohio Dominican, 87-59; Urbana,
71-62; Kentucky Christian, 68·51;
Hanover, 83-68; WilrningiOn, 8861; Notre Dame, 66-52; Mount St
Joseph, 78-69; Anderson, 100-11;
Geneva, 68-47; Taylor, 90-68;
Bluffton, 72·57; and Lake Erie,
101-53. Its four other losses were
. to Shawnee State. 86-70; W!Ush,
75-73; .Malone, 79-SS; and GeorgeIOwn (Ky.), 76-66.
The Redwomen have compiled
an 88.3-points-per-game average
with a margin of victory of 20.8.
Cedarville is averaging 76.4 poilits
and its opponents 64.9.
.
REDWOMEN NOTES: Following Saturday's meeting with
Cedsrville, tbe Redwomen are baclt
on the road next Tuesday at Mount
Vernon Nazarene, and are hosted
Jan. 28 by Cedarville. The team
will be back home on Saturday,
Jan. 30, to meet Walsh in tbe first
half of a doubleheader tbat will
also see the Redmen play the Cavaliers ... The playing of tbe National
Anthem at all Redwomen home
games previously consisted of
recorded music, but Ibis year it's
getting a live rcndilioo. Kristie Arm
Gamer, a freshman from Columbus
.a.nd a member o( the Grande
Chorale, is doing the honors.

fourth siot in -the MOC IS the week
bessn "!ith a win over the Yellow

Jackels m the flnt round of cmference play. ·
'1 bc game «ii1 offer a
to the Redmelnlcfcnse IS it I
to stem or at least temper forward
Ken Rueter, a 6-3 forward who is
leading Cedarville in scoring (25
poinupergame)andinrebounding
(12.9perouting).
, .
Some encouragement may be
offered to Rio Grande in tbe fact
tbat Don Callan's club saw a fivegame win streak - including its
four conference wins- shatlered
at Tifl"m Tuesday when tbe Dragons rebounded from their 103-87
loss to Rio Grande last weekend 10
nick Cedarville 79-76. Other MOC
results from Tuesday saw Ohio
Dominican down Shawnee State
92-79 and Walsh keep its standing
intact with a 75-66 win over Mount
Vernon Nazarene.
John Lawhorn's Redmen, in the
midst of a hectic home schedule,
fell prey 10 Urbana 99-89 TUesday
but boiDICed back Wednesday for a
122-87 win over Wilberforce, utilizing the services of its regular top
sccxers but getting big games of the
bench as well.
Rio Grande's other wins of the
season include St. Mary's 92-8S;
Georgetown (Ky.) 80-78i McMaster 112-88; Shawnee Srate 96-72
and lOS-70; Wilmington 93-68;
West Virginia Wesleyan 96-73;
Dyke 129-80; Cenlnll SlaiC 102-78;
Malone 97-84; Olivet 12\-85; Ohio
Dominican 83-81; and Findlay 9490. Other losses were 10 West Virgi11ia ·State 88-84; Walsh 83-70;
and MercyhUrst 99-89.
Cedarville has pep~!~
schcdule with wins over
·

chall:C

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cavs beat Barkley-les·s Suns; Celtics, Knicks among ¥ictors

1"" ~I 1......
WAAIA
.
"""" : uw•n• ......yan 81-7S;
Weaem OnUirio 79:63: Mich'ro•·
Dearborn 96-71; SJIIUII Albol'il6.
~7; West .Chester 84-61 · Lock
Haven 86-84; Asb!l1 9S-S7·
Wilberforce 107-90; Wilmingto~
~1-86 in overtime; Grlceland 112·
~2; Penn State-Behrend 67-62·
·· Lake Erie 108-76; Mount Vm

..AA 'dol'--" .d to . . .
..-n II luw ue Jnjunes ...
Alta' Salunlay, the R~ coolinue tbe borne stand w1tb bllct·to·
back pmea: DyG on Mooday and
Mount Vernon Nuarcne oo. Tuesday, witb game liJIIes set for 7:30
p.m.... The Cedarville game wiU
be hesrd on WGTR-FM (101.5)
witb Randy Parsons .on tbc playNazarene~7-73;Urbsna104-93;
by·playlllldTimKcmmererproShawnee State 90-83; and Walsh vtdingcolorcommenWy.
89-76. Other losses were to Taylor
75-58 and SL Vilx:ent67-SS.
Entering the &gt;battle for Rio
Grande will be guards Lyndell The PubicUiiltiesConvrisslonoiOtio
Snyder (5·10, senior, 2.8 poiniS
2.S assisJS) and Matt Powell (6-4: has 1181 local ptJblic hearings In till
19921ong-1erm forecast report C8IIS
sophomore, 22.6 points, 4.4
for
Columbus Southern Power
rebounds). At forward will be Jeff
Company (92·5~EL·FOR) and Olio
Brown (6-S, Senior, 14.4 poiniS, 7.4
Power Company (92·574-EL·FOR).
rebounds) and Walter Stephens (64, sophomore; 7.1 poirus, 3
The Columbus Soulharn Power local
rebounds), witb MOC Player of the
hearing will be .held on Tuesday,
Week Troy Donaldson (6-8, senior,
February 2. 1993, at 6:00 p.in., at 11e
21 .2 poiniS, 9.6 rebounds) at the
offices of the Comrnl$si0n, 180 East
post.
·
Broad S1reet. Columbus. Olio 43266. The Yellow JackeiS will counter
~73. The local hearing for the Olio
witb El Seabra (6-2, sophomore,
13 .I points, 3.7 rebounds) and . Powercasa'ttillbe~onWed,_y,
Febr\JifY3, 1993,at6:00p.m.,atCity
Mark Combs (6·2, senior, 7.4
Hall, Council Charrbars, 218CIMiand
poiniS, S.8 assists) as the defenders.
Forwards will probably be Ken
Avenue, S.W•• Canton, Ohio 44702.
Rucker and I aden Callahan (6·3, . The purpose of lhe hearings will be_,
senior, 18.S poiniS, 3.3 rebounds)
provide members of the public 1he
witb J:1avid Barnes (6-S, senior, 9.5 . oppoltunity to be heard rQJdlng 1he
points; 7rebounds)ascenter.
reuonlblene&amp;$ of 1he companies',
The Redmen are averaging 99.3
long-termlorscastrepolltlings. Copies
per game witb a scoring margin of
of 1he reports are available In various
17.4 over its opponeniS. Ccdarville
county public libraries wilhin the
is averaging 89.1 points and giving
affected service territories. Further
up 76.1 p« game.
.
DR~MBEATS: . Tuesday's
information may be obtained by
game wrth Urbana saw tbe return
c9ntacHng t~e P~bllc UtiiiHes
of Brett Coreno, 6-S sophomore
Conimission of Ohio, 180 East Broad
from North Olrtlsled, and Jawanza
Striet, Coluntus, Ohio 4326&amp;0573.
Childs, ·s.u junior from Columbus, to the Redmen fold. Botb had

ui.A •u- ."
. teanls, improving io an NBA·best 41 -1 against the
.,_..
....,."
-·Golden slaiC topped Utah I 2"v- 11 3.
Barldcy drew the suspension and a $10,000 fmc
Celt.lai 1%1, Hawks 106- Robert Parish grabbed
league's four newest teams.
for c)lasing after the officials following a :f'hocnix
15 rebounds in a lopsided third quarter as Boston
76ers 115, Hcatlll - Heat center Rony Seikaly
Joss m
' New y ......
.A
... advantage 0 f KeVJD
· Will'IS• 5mC bac"a. ·1D postmg
·
ua• 00 Monday.
wuo.
fiOish~ with 28 poiniS and 17 rebounds.
Cleveland, however, was missing John Williams,
the victory ovec Atlanta.
Miami scored a season-high 70 points in die flfSt
on the injured Jist with. a sprained hand, and Mike
Witb Xavier McDaniel getting 11 of his seasonhalf and a franchise ·record-low seven in tbe third
Sanders, who suffered a bruised knee in practice. The
high 27 poiniS, the Ccllics ourscoml Atlanta 31-15 in
quartc:r: The 76ers rallied from a seven-point defteit
cavs ·then lost point gua'd TerrcU Bllllldon to a hip
tbe third period 10 take a 93-78 lead. The lead ranged
in the fulal 47 seconds of the fourth period to force
pointer in the second quarter.
·
from lliO 20 points the rest of the way.
an overtime before eventually winning.
Willcins rcplaced Sanders and scored 19 points. ·
Knicks 114, HOI'IIdl91- Patrick Ewing bad 30
Jeff Hornacek SCQrcd 27 poiDIS for Philadelphia.
Mark Price scored 12 of his 26 points in tbe fmal
points and 13 rebounds in three quarters for tbe
Soules 111, Lakers 101 - Ricky Pierce scored
quarter, putting Cleveland ilbead for good 100-98 on
Knicks, who enjoyed leads of 22 points in the fllSl
10 of his 26 poirits and Shawn Kemp 12 of his.24.in
a shot from tbc l.an!i with eight minutes remaiiling.
half and 28 in tbc second. New York is 16-3 at home,
tbe firSt quarter as Seattle opened a 28-8 lead, then
Cedric Ceballos .replaced Barldey and scored 10
with one of iiS defeatS coming against Charlotte on
held on for the victory over the Lakers.
·. - .
points in the fli'St quarter. But he had J'ust four points
Dec 10
Warriors
120,
Jazz
113
Tim
Hardaway
had
· · Johnson led Charlotte witb 19 points, but he
the rest of the way. Richard Dumas Jed Phoenix wirh
Larry
28 points, Including a three-point play with 1:40 left
23 -poiniS.
bad no relvlmuts mthe flfSt half and fmished with
that helped Golden State preserve its victory over
In other NBA games Wednesday night, BosiOn
just four. --r·
Utah, ending t11c Warriors' five-game losin~ streak. ·
beat Atlanta 121-106, New Yodt boWJCed Charlotte
Trail Blazers 110, Tlmberwolves 94 - Cliff
-Chris Mullin ·added 27 points and Chris Gatling
. 114-91, Pon!and overpowered Minnesota 110-94,
Robinson had 22 points, 14 rebounds and a career·
equaled his career high with 19. Karl Malone's 30
Philadelphia topped Miami llS-112 in ovenimc,
high -'g.ht BSSJ'sts 10 lead Portland past ..'--esota.
points and 12 rebounds led the Jazz.
Seattle beat tbe Los Angeles Lakcrs 111-101, 31id.
wu•
Portland
continued iiS domination..of
expansion

1 de ndaByhTbe A..VIed
A... ho Pressh f .__ th
t pe
w o you ,_ w muc o a rwy e
absence of &lt;;:barles Baltley in the Phoenix lineup
was
• in the Suns' 123-1191oss to the Cleveland cavaIrers.
·
Barkley, barred from playinf in Wednesday
night's game at the Richfield Co 'seum by a onegame suspension handed down by the NBA earlier in
!he day, was conspicuous by his abaence.
·
After all, tbe wide-body bward leads the Suns in
scoring (26.4 P._Oints) and rcbounding '(l2.8).
"We didn t have Charles as tbe post player we
like 10 go 10, and we had to SCI'!IIIlble on .tbe perime1\lr," tbe Suns' Kevin Johnson said. "He wasll"t
there 10 tum mistakes into good plays with offensive
rebounds and blocked shots."
The Clvalieil, who had their own problems witb
players nlissing _games because of injury, weren't
mterested in hearing Phoenix gripe about playing
without Sir Charles. ·
·
'
"They had more 181entl~ft out there tban we
dill," said Cleveland's Gerald WilkiDs. "That's no

~tudent-athletes jus~

...
.......

forthcircbildrcn's m.tm.
.
"Kids quit school over it," he
· said •'We lalked with youths who
sat in their dorm rooms expecting
thedoortoburstopen."
Following the arrests, both
Rhode.Island schools went through
. a soul searching over campus gambling. But there was little interest ·
among students.
Few showed up for discussion
groups about the issue. Those who
did felt it hypocritical to worry
about SJX?r!S glimb~g on campus
when it rs rampant m the rest of
society.
Faculty members attending one
fODJm even argued that on-campus
gambling should be treated as "an
extension of societal values and
activities."
"Not only was the administra- ·
lion confused but so were the stu·
dents· and faculty," said John
McCray Jr., vice president of student development. ''The commit·
tees came batk with a fmding that
most of tbe university community
thought' it was a minor issue compared to bigger problems like rape
and racial harassment" ·
. But there are larger issues entan·
gled with campus gambling. Nearly
every betting ring discovered during the past few years has included
the active participation of school
athletes, calling to question
whether the athletes might be influenced by gambling debts. _
Four members of Bryant's basketball team were suspended for
their involvement In the betting; a
Rhode Island player was linked 10
the ring but cleared of wrong(Joing.
At tbc University ,oJ. Maine; 19
membels ot.tbe uniV'&amp;sity's·base·
ball and football teams were suspended in April for betting tin aver-

cases,

In Ohio high school hoops this week~

Pass. 1 000-point mark in careers

07
Umlt 12

Clllrll

....
.......
10WII,
10W40,

!Mil

GOES AIRBORNE- Rio Gnnde's Matt PoweU (33) leaves tlie
-noor for the shot while teammate Tim Christian (50) clears the
·paint to. get In plllltlon for a possible rebound during Wednesday
night's game at Lyne Center, where the Redmen.won 1Z2-87:

Rio Grande bench puts
122-87 leash on Bulldogs
'"

••

In spite of a slow start that Bostic, wlio was supponed by 17
allowed Wilberforce University to from Darnell Allen and 13 apiece
make some headway in tbe first contributed by Cliff Brown and
half, the University of Rio Grande Chris DaCosta.
Redmen emerged with a 122·87
Donaldson netted 13 of Rio
"victory Wednesday at Lyne Center. Grande's..33 rebounds, and Bostic
In their fifth home contest in led the Bulldogs' total of27 boards
more than a week, the Redmen with seven.
. regained the floor well before the
Rio Grande shot 53.8 percent
halftime and drew good perfor- (43-80, seven of 27 from tbe threemances from members of the point for 25.9 percent) and canned
bench, particularly junior guard 29 of 36 attempts at the free throw
Kyle Schroer, who pumped in a line for 80.6 percent. Wilberforce
total of 12 points (11 in the first managed 45 .1 f)ercent on field ,
half) and laMont Harris with IS.
goals (37 -82, five of 21 from the
Following a Mid-Ohio Confer- outside for 23.8 percent), in addi·
ence loss 10 Urbana Tuesday, the tion 10 sinking eight of 11 at tbe
Redmen found it wise 10 rest their line for 72.7 percent
The Red men advanced to 17-4
heavy hitters in anticipation of this
weekend's battle at home against and meet Cedarville at 7:30 p.m.
Cedarville.
Saturday in Lync Center for Ohio
- " But Matt Powell arid Troy Don- Valley Bank Night. Wilberforce (5. aldson, responsible tor much·of Rio 9) is at Findlay Saturday.
Grande's scoring of late, still Box SGore:
RIO GRANDE (122) - LaMchipped in to lead all scorers as .
Powell burned the nets for 29 ont Harris, 2-1·8-lS; Jawanza
points and Donaldson collected 24. Childs, 1-0·2; Lyndell Snyder, 1-0· · The momentum Wilberforce 2; Brett Coreno, 6-2-2-20; Kyle
generated from its 133,124 defeat Schroer, 2-2-2-12; Walter
of .indiana State-Richmond on Stephens, 0-2·2: Jason Cllf\is, 1-4TUesday boosled the Bulldogs 10 a 6; Matt Powell, 9-2-S-29; Jeff
few IC8ttered leads in the firSt five Brown, 1-2-4; Tim Christian, 3-0mlnurea, but big scoring from Don- 6; Troy Donaldson, 10-4-24.
aldson and Powell soon put tbe TOTALS ~7-29·122.
threat to rest. The Redmen led by
WILBERFORCE (87) - Eric
23 at the half and never looked McDuffie, 1-0-2; Chris DaCosta, S·
back.
. 3-13; Darnell Allen, 4-3·0·17;
What Wilberforce lacked in LioneL Taylor, 1•0-2; Brian
orgl!lizalion was made up in hus- Copeland, 3-2-8; Keith Piersawl, 1tle, and in spilt of the huge lead the 2-0-8; Cliff Brown, 6-1-13; Mel
Redmen posled in tbe game's latter Bostic, 10-2-22; Will Waddns, 1-0·
half, the Bulldogs continued to 2. TOTALS 32-5-8-87.
plug away, led by a 22-point per·
Halttlme score: Rio Grande
formance from post man · Mel 64, Wilberrorce 41.

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35 poiniS iii a 64-37 victory over
Canal Fulton Northwest.
Hebron Lakewood's Kelly
Bocrstler had 17 points and 17
rebounds and topped the 1,000mark In career polniS In a 36-35
win over West Jefferson; Newark
·catholic's Nicole Broo"bank
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Trinity won 57·50 at Pilllburgh
North Catholic, which - rulted
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Areadla'l a- Besmer had 31
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By ~USTY MILLER
scorer last week with 45 p(lints Carey ..beat Hope~-I:oudon 113- =a~!.f~ ~;'~ =e~;
AP Sporll Writer
against Columbus Ready. She 94 Fnday; ~miles away, Sber- Association. The NCAA has
What goes around comes around added 36 more later in tbe week wood Fauvrew beat Antwerp 29• declared some 30 athletes on six
for Findlay High School.
against Portsmouth~ to become 16.
.
campuses ineligible for involveWith 30 seconds left in Find- tbe first prep player rn t!'e state
The North Central c~.ference ment in gambling during the last
lay's game at Zanesville Friday, . . ever to top 3,000 career pomiS. She has always been~ compe~ruve c:on· four years.
Javan Conley w~ called for a foul is av~r~ging 41.7 points a game f~n~. In a pnor conflg.urauon,
NCAA rules bar sbldcntilhletes
(his fifth) and a' technical. this season.
SIX of tiS 10 teams mlldc 11 to the · from making even casual bets oo
Zanesville went on 10 make 3 of 4
TEAMWORK: Chesapeake's stat~ b!JYS ~~ornament. After their own.school's teams; betting
free throws and won the game 61- boys ran their regular-season win- rea!•gnmg, II s powerful once on other college games canal~ get
SS.
ning sireak to 391n a niw by mov- agam. Bucyrus Wynford, Buckeye them in troubiC. Wbilc _they can bet
The next niaht at Marion witb inJ! to 11-0 through last week; &lt;;enlnll, ~loN?l Crawford, Crest- on pro games, Hilliard says the
30 seconds left. fflnlini's Orlando Bainbridge Paint Valley's boys set !me, Onrano, Riv~ and Frcder- is ~easily crossed.
.
Roge11 was called for a foul ~his a school record with their ninth rckiOwn had a combmed non-con"Once somebody is iniO you for
fifth) and a technical. And Ibis urne (61-33 over Piketon) and lOth (92- · fercnce r&lt;:COrd of 28-6. Wynford a couple thoiuand dollars, they can
the Trojans hit3 of 4 free throws to 47 over I.atbam Western) straight (8·1), whrch ~~~ ~adc two srate call tbe shots,'' be said. "It raises
win 65-60.
victories Ibis seasOn last weekend; . tournament lrlps 1D recent rears, the possibility of some bookie
Elsewhere around Ohio P.rep
Columbiana Crestview's boys leads the league but has woo Its !tit ing he'll forgive a debt if you wm
honps, Upper Scioto Valley s 6- and ,girls teams are a combined 20· th~ee games by a total of ftve by three instead of six points.
·
foot-6jumor Jason Williams scored 1 Ibis season; Massillon Washing· pom!S·
.
. . · "We haven't seen evidence of
40 points....:. aitd lOpped the 1,000- ton's girls broke the SGhool record
finall~~ymg ranked teaR!S IS . that, but even if it doesn't happen it
point mark for his career....:. in a for consecutive viciOries by win- allm a w
nd's work for Celina.
·
triple-overtime, 85-70 victory over ning their ninth straight, 39-29 over
The unbeaten Bulldogs handed
Marion Elgin; .Elida sophomore . UhrichsviJ!e ~ymont; c~h Joe SL Marys Memorial its firSt defeat
. Marc Bishop hu 12 of 15 three• Goodyear u livmg up 10 his name, on Jan. 8, then ended Bellepoint shots- and Is 47 of 98 from in leading WiJiiamst!ort ~estfall ~ fontaine's 32-game regular-season
behind the.arc for the_yellf- in an 8-3 start after gomg JUSt 6-15 a winning streak with a convincing
scoring 42 points in a 100-79 vieu1- year ago.
.
77-53 viciOry Saturday:
ry over Sylvania Southview; Jeff
GOING TO EXTREMES:

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;
•
·
·
•
.
·
·

ies.
integrity of the game.'' .
"Some people involved will
The college setting offers become tltbCJHeileurial. just in the :
enticements to bet. Expanded same way a number of people who :
.sports covera~e. including· cable use drugs become drug sellers," be channels, provldes access to dozens said
:
of games each weekend, making it
The experiS see no easy solu.;
part of the social scene. Mixers and .tion. Shaffer believes the state ·
beer blasts sometimes revolve should set aside some lottery prof- :
around the game of the week.
its to help those hurt by gambling:
Howard Shaffer, a psychologist · Phillips said society has to ~ck :
who beads tbc Center tor Adclicbon the problem tbe same way It ~ : ·
Studies at Harvard Medical School, alcohol or drugs.
· •
said most students come 10 college .
"You use the culture to herJ!:
with gambling experience.
·you out, 10 force a change of llllk:
"Seventy percent have garpbled tude," be said. "Fifteen yca ~~~ .
in high schOol on the Iotter)&lt;,' • he driving and drinking was not a mat-:
said. "They have been taught·day tee of concern oo campuses. Now il:
in and day out that the way to is heresy. Xou have to do tile same.
fJJIIIliCial succ:ess is gambling.' •
y."~th gamb~. to make peopl~ ~:
This experience, he said. breeds rtu a potaJiially ~gerous actiVIty:
young gamblers and young book· for young people.

Student athfetes have been
implicated. in spo~ts betting in
South C&amp;rolma, Aorida and Texas.

·

'

raises the question. It goes to tbe

~;!!~~:rio~ with a student-

. ·.Boers tte·r:,,B.ro'okbank·
w. I.JJJ•tams,
'

·

part of betting.scene on some campuses

By FREDBAYLEii
'
"I would be surorised if it were of sports and other-events in a
AP N8tloul Writer
.
to be prov.en 10 inc that any Ameri- hopeless attempt to cover losses,
When the police surveillance can university With male swdents missed classes, .alienated friends.
• • team made its sweep, it found a did not have belli~ witb a bookie The result heavy debt tbat often
scenemorclikeani&gt;lf-trackbetting on campus," sard Valerie· C, meansanendtocollege.
parlor !ban a college dormitory.
Lorenz, executive director of Com"Young people are constantly
Phones rang incessantly. Stu- pulsive Gambling Center Inc. in exposed to ads on 1V that say for a
dents crowded ill a room, along Baltimore, which operates a nation- buck you could be a millionaire
with the flOor adviser, yelling for al hotline.
.
tomorrow,'' Phillips said. ''It
the latest spreads on upcoming
"In college, invariably the appeals to adolescent rationality,
games. The student-bookie .took roommate is the gC?-betwee'!,'' said the kin.d of tbinki.ng' that says, 'I ·
!'ciS. as fast as he could, usmg a Lore~. an expert m observmg and can drmk and dnve, .I can walk
special pager to bep up on the Las treatmg gambl~rs for 20 years. along the edge of the cliff, I can bet
Ve~ line.
.
"The roomr'n~te says, 'I'll take money.'" .
.
.
It was a pretty SIZCllble opera- yolir money and take 1110 the book·
That atutudc was ev1dent m
lion,'' said Lt. Bill Wardwell, head re.' That puts an additional burden Rhode Island. AuthorilieU!IY five
of investigations for Mic~an on the compulsive gambler because memheiS of tbe Bryant basketball
SlaiC University police. "It
ed he feels obl.igat~d, thinkin~ his team ran up betting .debts of
like they were talring in a couple roommate •.~ hts best fnend. $54,000, then worked off tbe debt
thousand dollars a day."
There's typtcally a network of by acting as collectors for 21-yearThe. gambling operation might ~es on C!I"'PUI· ~d some are .old Matt~ew Zimmerman, a
seem •. at ~ glance, a f!!rgi_vahle link~ up wrtb bookies off cam- f~anct maJOr and al;leged m~tercombmauon of youthful indiscre- pus.
mind of the 'lxx*making opeiatlon.
lion and high spirits. But t1ae was . .For ~se.IU!'ed in10 campus life
Authorities learned ofits e.xis·
a darker side to the student enter- rt rs a dtsqll!eung trend tbat ~ys tence !1fiec two women complained
prise rhat was shut down last year.
upo~ ~ growrng jlroblem: gambling of. bemg threatened over a ga~Some patrons were thousands of addicuon amoog the young.
bling debt run up by a roommate, a
dollarS in the hole, facing threats·of
"It used to be you'd see some former University of Rhode Island
violence if they didn't pay. Police football cards PllSsed around. Now football player.
believe there may be a linl!: something like 25 percent of tbe
State police said they found a
between the sjlorts betting ring and studenJs gjlmble on a weekly sophisticated interstate operation
one stude~t's suicide.
·
b~sis," said· Willi.am Phillips, that used comp!ltcrs, lOll;free num"We Interviewed one of the duector of counsehng at Bryant ~ and overrught couner compa.people ·sittinle::, the room who had College, where two studeniS were mes to handle hundreds of tbou~ in.to
" Wardwell said . c!U~fl!ed last f~l with ope.raling a ~ o~ dollars in bets~ six sra~.
'He satd~ Tm glad you guys srx-figu~ b~ttmg oper~llo~ tbat
This v;-as !K'l the kind of thing
stopped tbu. He had not been a had tendrils mto tbe Umvemty of where you d Sit down and ~~rch.a
bettor in the past, but be had some Rhodl? li!land and other c;ampuses.
football game and bet ~10! w.d
other pnib!effi~ like &amp;!co~l aJ?use.
Phrlllps' contact wrtb st~dent Car~.Steel, a state police "!~uand gamblinjl jUSt fit nght m10 1t.'' · gamblers tluee years ago led him to i,Bior. It was of equal -sophiS":ta·
The betung ring at Michigan survey 2,000 students 11J ttine eol- uon ~ a~.Y adult-run gambling
State is not an isolated incident. lege campuses. He found 6 percent operation. · . .
·
Within the past t1tree years, sophis- of !bose. polled fit the profile of .
Equal: also, m tts !"'eged strong
ticated operations have been dis· patbologtcal _gamblers - a fi~e ann tacucs. Steel wd sDJdents at
co~ered on c:ollcae campuaes Ill t:owicc tbat ·Qf,the aeneral poJ!!Jia· , . Bry_an~_a,d Rhode Island. !eared f~
Texas;·'". *rkaQsast ·- ·Fiorljij; uoo.- ·~" · ""
· ,.,~, ·~ '; · t!Jeu~_.tyaf~r· t:u~up btg
~igns of ~ addictioo: clinstant deDis: In.SO!I'e
)llrCDIS hid 10
LOUisiana, Maine and Rhode
Island.
beltiDg on a wider and wider range COI)IC up Wtth thousands of dollars

1Dnl,
111W40

.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

In NBA. action,

Rio·Grande-Cedarville game to heat up conference race
The University of Rio Grande
Redmen 17-4 and 3-2 in the Mid
Ohio conrercnce, go up against~
big guns Saturday when they host
.

.....,

MIDDLEPORT

'

\~

�.

-

.,

Thu,.clay, January 21, 1993

By The Bend

The Dally Sentinel
Thu,.ay,.Janu.,Y 21, 1993
Pllge-8

.

Love costs: Company kisses
off workers with hiekeys
sor of psychiatry at the University · don'tllleelcertainstandardsofproByLYNNELBER
ofCalifornia, Los Angeles.
fessionalism, tben it's something
A&amp;Sodate!l Press Writer ,
"Someone with a low sex drive . we have ID deal with."
Show a hickey ,lose a day's pay.
People who sbow hiclceys may
That's the new JXJlicy 11 a Southern may look at it as a b111ise. Someone
California medical company that with a lot of sex on their mind wiD be displaying a rebellious slmlll:;
.
has b&amp;nned those telltale marks of look at a hickey as if tbey're too, Goulston said
watchinF,
Sharon
Stone
in
'Basic
And
J!CI!llle
wbo
ace
the
small
passion as unprofessional.
marks could be distracted lly big
Why kiss off worlcers branded Instinct. " Goulston said
new
JM?licy,
approved
last
fantasies.
The
by love bites?
Because coDeagues and patieniS month by CliniCas' board of direc- . "Anything visual that triggers
complained, the Brawley-based ton, requires that wcrkers sporting our imagination makes us feel
Clinicas de Salud Del Pueblo Inc. hiclceys be sent hon:le without pay. uncomfortable," he said. "TbC:
They may return when the biclcey more it's connected to sex, tbe
says. · ·
"They were visible and no is gone or covered up, Ms. Tamez more it triggers the thougbt of
naked bodies and sex and conlaet..... effort j'iBS made ID cover tbem," said:
· said Diana Tamez, persoMel man·
Although the problem wasn't . "It's tougb 10 get it out ~:Jour.
ager for the 115-employee firm in widespread at its three healtb care mind and out of your sight
~Imperial County, near the U.S .- clinics, Cllncas formalized the rule back to concentraling on something: ,
DINNER HELD • Tbe starr of tbe Flsber·
pubtisber; Mrs. Belinda Dean, mailing and disto 'avoid misunderstandings and else."
.
·Mexico border.
mm's Net beld a dlmter recently. Tbe newsletter
tributioa; and Mrs. Debbie Cloncb, secretary.
Hickeys long have been fodder improve compliance, Ms. Tamez
for Hillside Baptist CbllfC)I bas been In service
Also attending tbe dinner was Rev. and Mrs.
for teen-age teasing. The Fox TV said by telephone Wednesday. .
for about 16 montbs. Staff includes, 1-r, Mrs.
James R. Acree. To receive tbe rree montbly - series "Beverly Hills, 90210" had
A few workers objected when
Sandi Jones, advertising and mailing; Linda
publication, write or call Hillside Baptist
character Brandon Walsh (Jason . the policy was introduced during a
CaJJL Malic Riggs, Mon~,
Jones, editor; Mrs. Racbel Hood, maaager and
Cburcb, 39724 Route 143, Pomeroy, 992-6768.
Priestly) suffer his friends' jabs staff meeting last week. "They Ala.;
Jennifer Jobnson of
gia;.
after ·getting a hiclcey in a 1991 said, basically, 'Isn't what we do Lisa Riggs of Kentucky; and'
on our time our business?"' Ms. Pauline Atkins were Rq:Dt visitors
episode.
No snide remarks from adults, Tamez recounted.
of Stella Atkins and Ruby Piehl ·
"We don't~ with that at · Mrs. Lola Clark is slowing
please. Even they react to !he Signs
of zealous kissing, said Dr. Malic all," she said. ' But at 8 or 9 improving at borne after having
Goulston, assistant clinical profes- o'clock, wheJ! they come in and major sutgery at a Point Pleasant
Hospital.
Mrs. Kenny Davis and son of
Salelll Cenrer. visited Mr. and Mrs.
Doug Bishop on Monday after-and decided that perhapS this late
Dar AM I-anden: lanm:ialed
noon.
.
your m:eut column about docuirs
dividend may be a blessing.
I unior Payne, Columbus, visited
wbosccm to always run lale. Under·
When I told my husband the news,
Mr. aild Mrs. Sam S1einmetz on
SII'Miably, the padeats who must
he was furious, called me an "idiot"
By PAUL RAEBURN
increasingly importanL
Saturday afternoon.
Wlil are U1J1CL
and said I would have to give this
AP Sdmte Editor
"It certainly is a risk factor~
Tbe Harrisonville Presbyterian'
ANN LANDERS
I am 1 family physician. As
cbild ·away. I told him under no
MONTEREY, Calif. - Eating pie are beginning 1D look at,' he ChiUCh has a new look with tbe
"1992, .... Anc•la
hard aa I try, I, too, run lale. Wby?
circwnslances would I do sucb a · fish instead of steak tonight sharply said. •'Tbe recent studies suggest it completioo of vinyl"$iding by BiS- ·
Times Syiolicale
Bemw it is vinually impossible
.
thing llld if he couldn't stand an cuts your risk of a heart attack may be an important one: JD consid. sell and Bwte.
Cr&lt;aiMI Syndicate" ..
ID 11:hedule around problems the
tomorrow
morning,
a
docta
report,
er
pow
in
risk-factQr
evaluation.''
infant IIUIIIId ll his advanced 11311
pitients don't ld1 the receptionist
ed Wednesday.
Most heart attacks occur in the
companies and lawyers (he's 46), then he wu fm: to leave.
New
studies
suggest
that
highearly
morning. There may be sev~­
about when they make their which interrupt me. on 1 steady
I am noW in my sixth month and ·
fat
meals
put
the
blood
into
a
al
reasons,
said, but one
. llpllOilmenll.
basis. Such interruptions add wu sme !'f this lime he would have hypercoaguJation state within six or could be thatMiller
high-fat
·dinners put
Today, for example, it was a nocbing 10 patient care, relieve no regained his sanity and changed his
severi
hours,
.raising
the
risk
that
the
blood
into
a
hypercoa$Ulation
-WOIIIID who needed stik:bes. She llllffering and can make for a w:cy
miild. No way. He is angrier than
also bad bad bronchitis fer a week. _lmg day. Govanment JegUlalions ever. Ann, we have no money dangerous artery-clogging blood state by the foUowin$ monuog.
will occur. -Low-fat meals
"ln .Western socteties, most' of ~
'lbl:n tbcR Wls the man with bigb also demand !hat nursing homes
prOblems, llld out lovely home can clots
quiclily
reverse
that.,
us
ta1ce
our main meal of the day in
blood Ill ~ 11 ze who uldenly opened inurrupnne fc.- everything, includ- accommodale a nursery vecy nicely.
"If
you
talce
fat
out
of
your
diet,
the
evening,"
he said He reported
up 10 me aboul his llcobnlism.
ru
bet you've never had a Jetter you don't have to wait years to his-fmdlngs at the American Heart
ing the need for a Band-Aid.
The neu patial needed 1 mole
So if I'm late fc.- your appoint- as ridiculoQS as this one. Please lower your risk of heart disease," Association's annual science writtakc:a
her la:k but was more ment, folks, pie~ remember leiJ me what to do. rm too &amp;Shamed said Dr. George I. Miller of the ers' conference.
concerned allout ber depression. that I'm attempting to deal to identify myself. Sign me .. Medical Research Council in ·Lon·
MiDer's 51ndies have shown that
Tim 1-a gill with a aevere c:augb compassionately with JlCOIIle who NAMELESS, FACELESS AND don.
fatty meals activate a blood clotting
J1!1o _ilkccl if I would ~ve her need my attention and that .one ·or PLA~SS
Researcbers have known tbat substance called factor VII. He
C!lf wax. My next pauent was a theae days, you may be one o( theln.
DEAR FRIEND: You are not high-fat diets will. over time; raise · described it as the fuse that sets off ·
Wi:naD witb a yeast infectioo who -- S.F.G. (M.D.), SIOUX CITY. the lint w0111an woo 11as written blood i:holcsterollevcls, incrauing an eaplosion of blood-clotting
also needed her sinuaes trealed. My IOWA
abiJut this problem. Aim!lst always the risk of a heart auack. But the chemiCals in the blood.
KASTLE BALSER
Miller's studies of middle-age
1aat Jiatient CIIIIC ID ace me about
DEAR S.F.G.: Thanks fur taking the nutcases change their min~ very short-term effect of high-fat
the ringinJ in his ears, but be teally lime out of YOUT busy day ID write. when the baby comes. I am betting meals on blood clotting hasn't been men.in London found that heart
disease risk :was related lo blood
."!"'"""' to llllt about his grief over a I received hundreds of lettm from yours wiD, too. If he doesn't, insist appreciated, Miller said.
The
idea
tbat
a
low-fat
supper
of factor :vn. ·
1 V1
:pcrsmllllllta'.
physicians who said the same !bing. that he go for COIDiseling. He has such as broiled n,h can lower levels
In one of the most recent studRoger and Tonya Balser; New
· AU ~bee people needed a physi- One point several otbc:n made whicb strudel in his noodle.
heart-disease
risk
the
next
morning
ies,
Miller
looked
at170
men,
ages
of Pomeroy,
Haven,
:cian's care and a sympathetic you did not was that the doctor
Forget to save SO~M of your should help doctors· persuade 40-59, and found that those with announceformerly
the
birth
of
their dsugb:... None of the complaints w= doesn't do the scheduling .. the favorite A1111 Ltinders co/aiMS?
patients
10
cut
the
fat
out
of
their
the
hiJhest
fat
intake
had
12
perter,
Kastle
MacKenzi
Balser, on
;frivolous. I try 10 manage my time secretary or nurse does.
"Nuggets and Dooties" is the diets, he said.
cent
higher
fac10r
VII activity than Ocl 17 at Camden-Clark Memorial
·so I don't drop from exhaustion,
Dar Ann Landen: I am 42 ~ 11/lSWer. Selld a se/f-addre~d. lo11g,
Dr. H. Bryan Bre.,.er of the those with the lowest fat intakC.
Hospital in l'lutersburg, W.VL
.but I lltill fmd myself worting 70 old and have lluce lovely childten, bu.silless-sm e11vtlopt alld a check NationallnstituleS of Health agrmt
"The higher the level of factor
She weighed six pounds and 15
:holn I week.
113118 17, 12 and 9. I was sbocked or mo~~ey or4er for $.5 (tlli.r iN:Iudes that the link between fatty fooils VII, the shorter the fuse and"the ounces and was 20 and one-hal{ ·
: Another invisible time thief that When I learned a few months ago postage alld Ita/Idling) to: NU,gets, and hypercoagulation is becoming larger the explosion of clotting facinches long. Her name came from :
·puts physicians further behind is the - that I alii pn:gnanLiam not thrilled c/o AM I..matkrs, P.O. Box 11562,
her late maternal great-grandfatber, ·
'iuJ .... papea WOit and lelepbone with the
University of Clive Castle Keebaugh. ·
:
of diapm and 2 Chicago, Ill. 606/l-0562 . (In
calli from sowmment qencicl;
Maternal grandparents are Mar- .
Chicago researthers fed controlled
have
it Clllllldo, send $6.)
Nancy Manley was the best diets ID 24 women and found that vin and Marjorie Keebaugb, ·
weekly loser at the recent meeting when tliey were switched from Reedsville. Great-grandmother is .
of Oh10 TOPS Club No. 570. Julia high-fat dietS to low-fat diets their Levanchia Cain, also of Reedsville. :
Hysell was the best KOPS loser.
Paternal grandparents are ·
factor VII activity dropped by 11
Trina Faulk: won the fruit basket pen:eht.
Lawrence and Shirl_ey Balser, Tupand Nancy Manley won the gagdel
Miller could not calculate pre- pers Plains.
"ft.
cisely
how moch bean-disease risk
Other children are .two&lt;daugh- :
gl
.
.
Meetings are held every Tues· jumps ¥ter a high-fll meal, but he ters, Stacy Davis and ·B ridget :
day with weigh-in from 5-6 p.m. said the increase in risk was sub- Balser, at home, and Trenton:
and meeting from 6-7 p.m. at the stantial.
Davis, who visited that weekend. :
local carpenters union hall. Further
information may be obtained by
caiUng 992-2n4 or 992·5638.

Pomeroy-Middleport,. Ohio

~M~ arre~ted in videotaped slaying
·~ at cemetery
0 f hi s £ornter Wile
By PATRICK REYNA
. Aaaoeia_led J'reas Writer
MIAMI - Federal agents acting on a tip intercepted a bus in
Texas in what they pretended was a
sean:h for illegal aliens and arrest·
ed a man who shot to death his ex· ·
wife in front of a TV camera.
Emilio Nunez, 34, reached for a
gun Wednesday after being onlmd
off the Los Angeles-bound bus
with the btber passengers but was
overpow~ authorities said. He
was jailed for eventual return to
Flonda, where he faces murder
charges.
Nunez shot his wife in the head
12 times at close range Monday
when she showed up at a North
Lauderdale cemetery while he was
· being interviewed for a TV pro-

gram. Nunez was tbQe 10 visit the
grave of his teen-age daughier,
whose suicide be blamed on his
former wife.
He fled after the slaying, which
was captured on videotape and
shown on networlc television.
Authorities said they received
an anonymous tip on Tuesday that
led them to the Greyhound bus.
FBI and Border Patrol agents and
sberifr s deputies stopped the bus
in Fort Stoclaon, Texas, simulating
a routine check for illegal aliens.
"Everyone exited t'iom the bus. ·
A sttuggle ensued. He went for his
weapon that was in his pouch, and
he _was resul\ined," North Lauderdale police Lt. Lol,l C&amp;vallo said.
A 9mm pis!Dl taken from Nunez
was believed 10 be the one he used

ID ltill his former wife, investiga·
IOrs said.
·
Nunez was being interviewed
for the Spanish-language program
"Occurrio Asi," or "It Happened
Like This," about his 15-yc;ar-old
daughter, Yoandra Nunez, who
killed herself in-November.
Nunez had told a tepOrter for the
"Hard Copy"·like program thai
his former wife, ~3-year-old Maritza Martin Munoz, slapped the girl
after learning she was JIRgn&amp;nt.
When Martin arrived a1 the
cemetery- apparently unexpectedly - Nunez pushed past the reporter and cameraman and
opened f~~e.
"I should have done it a long
time ago!" he said afterward in
Spanish.
-

Chester resident reports area news

.
Pr::e~~l~g~.;~flag,
and~-o:~.~~~~... =~ Ty~f~~~~~ilie~!~~~~~:;.

led by Erma ~lelan~1 prestde.nt,

opened the ladies auxiloary meetlllg

al the firehouse on Wednesday
evening. Dues and money for cards
were collected and bills were paid.
The secretary and treasurer's
repMS were given by Betty NeweU
and Opal Hollon. Committee
reports"werc given and cards for
the sick were signed. Everyone is
to b~ing a valentine to.tbe next
meetlllg. A game was enjOyed and
Mrs. Cleland served refreshments
to those named and lnzy Newell,
Eth~I Orr, Lora Damewoo~ .
Clarice Allen, Clara Conroy, Elste
Folmer, Dorothy Hawk, Paula,
Chelsey and Jordon Wo¢.
Holiday visitors of Lucille
Smith were George Reuter, Akron;
Kathy Frietag and dsugblerS, Mary
and Susan, Canton.

Days

For those who get upset with
a late doctor, try to be patient Lowjat meals cut heart

Officers elected

To place an
MoN.

tJu:u Far. 8A.JI.-5P.JI. - SAT.B-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

• Ado ..................,.,....... .._. ....... .....,..w
• lloeol•dloco- for ..to pololload......
• Ft. Ado: Gl--y ud '""'"' ..t. ....i.r 15 ......d. willloe _

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

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

• Prioo olad fw all oopllalla-.ioo doal.lo prin olad• 7 .....

• S..tbMI ilaot ~·· cllflble fo.r .aftOn alter~ day (eheck
for ..... door ad nu io popar~ Coli Won 2:00 P·•·

..., aflar puWieo-to .... .Ado &amp;loot- ... pold .. - - ""'
Cud al 'l'luuoko
Happy Ado
lo-rialo
" Y~Salao
• A d I'lad ad ••tl
t plocad ioo tM Gollipo. Doily
T...._ (....,. Clo-lfled llloplaf, B - Cud or lopl
~)willaloo
ioo tMI'Diotl'lauaat Rot 1w ud
... Doily .......... --~~~ac ·-11,000 .....

op,_..

F&amp;l TREE SERVICE

Columlli&amp;INew York Ball, Wednesday alabt at
the D.C. Armory inWMblnJIOII; (AP pbolo)

I

\.

junicn

: SAX DUET • Presideat Clinton aacl Clarenee
. Clernoos play lbeir IIIIXIIDllones at lbe District
or ·
-

.

'

'I

Topping, Trimming,
Removal ·
-.........~~-.

Fullylnaund
742·2380

.

•

cappmg

Tho week of Feb. 16 has been:
setiD begin regislaina bigb acbool'
students for next year's clas~~e~.
Material• will be distributed in·
English cluaes and cacb student·
will be ubd ID come ID the gilidance office for an individual confercnce in order to reaister. Tbe
regisuation sheet must be siped
by a parent or guardian. Juniors:
and freshmen will be.realslered·
first allowin&amp;ldditlonal time for
the sophomore~ to eaplore voca-·
ti';l"al qpdons. Tbe entire proceaa,
• wtD talce aeveral woeb. _
On Mlrcb 10 and 1'-NI.:Cib.
grade repstntlon will liD
at•
Meigs Jaalor Iilah Scltool. The
!JIJ!I.acbo!ll 0.." "'kn wiD go 1M
JDlllOI' blib to baNile that proc cs1
Alit lor tbo ACT and SAT
dalel, !be 1e1t dallll are Aprl13 and
J~me 12 for the ACT,IIId March 'J:1
and May for the SAT.

1/MIS

Bl LLETIN BO.\I{D
BUUEnll BOARD DEIDLIIIE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION .

PRICE

Tho potoa hu-

-to

DUCEDI

Cal 614-8112·7104 tor

w...._.,Popor
Thuroday Papor
Prlday Popor

- -

.....

446-Calll....
i6TA"o
J88-Vitdoo
245-JIIoG..-.
256-G.,.. llloo..
641 ._... 011&amp;.
J79-'ll'....

went major surgery ~ St. Joseph
hospital, Parketsbutg, W.Va., and
is recuperating at home.
Jean Frederick spent three
weeks in Wintez Haven, Fla., with
Mr. and Mrs. Lany Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hartung,
Heather and Andy, Louisville, Ky.,
and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Hanungand Jed, Avon Lake, were holidsy
guests of Mr.·and Mrs. Tom Nice.
Christmas dinner guests of
Opal Eichinger were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Eichinger and Susie, Pick·
erington; Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Horton
and Elizabeth, Columbusi Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis Eichinger and Dane
and Kris Wilson, Reedsville; and
Mr. and Mrs. Don Eichinger.
Tiffany and 'ustin, Vincent.

·-

"

98'H'o

Tax Pr.,arallon

o!JoMknping
•hvrol

sERVING INDIVIDUALS
and BUSINESSES
113Y. W. SICOID n.
POIUIOY1 OH. 457"
,..... ~•HW.roar
........1

Public Notice
'

Rev. Terry Alvwez,

Foglaeong Funer•l
Home, pallbeerere
and
Elderc•re
Nuralng HDml Who
made her comfortable during her atay.

....~""-"' .~._,

• • • 10 .......

Cqunty · Public
Library atalf Dnd
Samuel Evanl who
bnlughlao much JoY
to
cka1ng her laet
claya. Your love Dnd
JdftdneM will never
be lorgoltan.
ttany
Roueh
Alttu' a Frena••
Roueh

'*

a.....,

NOTICE OF
APPOINTIENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On January I, 1-, In 1ha
Malgo County Probola

Cour1, CaM No. 'l77U, Don

K..,nelll Qruaaer, 41440
For"t Run Road, Raolna,
Ohio 41771 w• .,polnlad
Exaculor of Ill• •Jala of

C•rle E. Gru•••r, de ..
Dtllld. lite of 0121 Fotat

Run Road, Swtton Town...lp, Aaolne, Malga County,
Ohio 45771.

Aohrt E. lluek,
ProiNite.ludga
LlnaK."-tolroM,Ciork
(1) 14, 21, 21, ...
I

SMAll
WANT ADS

AlE~

.

"

891 ........
937-ld'alo

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

===--=-----1

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

•nil UMISIOII

IWOIIIILI UIU

OL

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

TRAILER SITES,

FRtlE ESTIMATES

992-3838

Wt2/1

•100 lb. Cyll,.ra

-Gao Grill TMka
Haa....

bciH

61

...........
"•r•s:•

.......
u.,
Sto,.&amp;C=•n

eCo~

te

F IEESI

IS

915-4473 .
667·6179

2-7·92·111

SHRUB &amp;
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

I

RIC IICIVIIING
IUUDOZING
PONDS

SEPTlC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARIIG
WATER l SEWER.
UNES
BASEMENTS I
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limeetone,
01~ Gr.vel and Coal
Ll

IIS$1LL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED UILROAD TIES

•A.V.'• .

'

SITUATION.
REDUCE
AND/OR
CONSOUDATE.
NEW LOANS
ALSO. ,
614-992-7523

mo.

~!gas
••• h•llr
J •nd T Gas Service

IL

Fruil.o .t V,..cal&gt;._
ForSaloorTndo

I 11:11 'I 1'1'1 I I '
,\ I I\ I ' II I( I,
32-'- Mohllo Ho•• for Sal.
33- Fanu for Sale
34- U..t- Buildioip

Waa181ltD8Uf

Li-k
Ba1 aGram

3&gt;- Lo1o a Acnap

Soool a r ooliliHe

36-lloal Eotalo Waalod

.btao for Solo
41- Do- for
Touelu for Solo
42- Mohllo H-• for R•ot 173-- v... a 4 lVD'o
4.,1-- Fanu lor R•t
Motorcycle.
44- Apo..-t for R•t
Boolo ,.t Moton for Sal.
~ r...,;,.hod a...,
Auto Parto .t Acco-•rieij ' &lt;66- Space for Beat '
Auto Repair
47-'- w••~oo~ to
c..piO, ~qu~,....
48-- Eq~-t lor Heat

a..

52-SporliofGoodo
53-

.u,...;.

~Mioe.Morcloaadloe

55- Booildi"'l SuppiU.

Ute • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage .

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

(614)
667·662

992·7553

c....,,.,

MORTG~GE

I3- I ... ~~nan
14- Buoi- Traltoi"'l
15- Schoolo a l .. tnactloD
16- Radio, TV a .CB 1lepair
17- Mlocol.......
13- 'll'aolod To Do

DIUVIIY IIRVICE
S••ll Do- Worll
su.oo Per How

Call 614·992·
6637 '
St.lt. 7

MU1ieallu1r111Milt1

.

u- Situatiotll w.-~~~e~~

DRIYI~a~\ou

. SlWL DO%ER

LAHDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE·TRUCKING

YOUR

to Buy

11- Help 'IVaalod

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

FOR SAlE

4-Ci.,.way
s-BapprAdo
6- Loot ..,j Fouad
7- Loot ..,j Fouad
&amp;- Publie Solo .t

CHARLIE'S

Reasonable Rates

-SIZEI» UMESTONE

2-lo M.ooor,o
3- AIIDOU.DC...ta

9- Wutod

POIIIEI~!-

I

I; I \ I \I ,

A.cti011

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and mACKHOE WORK
AVAILA&amp;LE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and '

·Stone Co.

The family ,of Willa
Jacoba wlehea to
expreae e 11ncere
thlllk you to frlendl
and neighboR lor ell
·the carde, food,
llowere, money,
prayere and love
ahown ue dwlng o~
tlma of ion. A apecia! th•nk you to

let

247-Lo&amp;ut , ...
949-11 ......
742-Rotloa4
667-Coot.llo

WOLFE &amp; .
ISSOCIA1ES
ACCOUNTING

~ncoma

.

84J-Portluol

Quality

1 card or Thanks

$1.30/day

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

11\\\tl\1
'

a-

675-Pt. p
458 Leoa
&amp;76-Ap,la c;......,_
77s-ll882-N.w a•.,.

992-MW! pottl
Po.....,.

614-7tu.-z

. --

$.20

Galba Coanty Melp C-..ty M._ Co., WV
Area Cod~ 614 Ana Code 614 Area Code 304

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL&amp; COAL

$8UOO and '

Over 15 Words

folloUJins .telepho~e e~clwntfe•...

H4ULING

.

6
10
Monthly

Rate
$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

Clouified POil8• curer duJ

992-6193

. . . .Ill "'""to "' . . . - '
- - bo pooiloi for quall)1ng .....
ICIIIDbuy ..o y - - o n 3 l l - l n :
-.a.4BR,3....,.,2gangoo,IWMd1 •
. BR IIPl PIQPIIIIr- 4,8CO oq. ft. !Inn
bldg.

DAY BEFORE PUBUCATION
1:00 p.m. Soturd.ay
1:00 p.D.. Monday
1:00p.m. Tuaclay
1:00 p.m. Woclnaday
100 p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Sunday l'lpor

POLICIES

Programs help _students::
prepare-for their future .~
,
must met with a high school counselor ID discuss the program.
Results from the fall1992 proficiency tests will be in from tbe
Qhio Department of Education
about Feb. 2. Tbe next leSIS will be
given March l-4. Students must
retalce whalevcr section• they did
not pass on prior tests. The state
now ICQuires that any student gn~~~.:
uating during ilte 1993-94 acbool r
year or after must pass all four'
parts of the proficiency test in order
to receive a diploma unloss tbey·
-hhandiave. ~ eacondi~tlon.due 10 10111_e:

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Popor
T...tay Papor

Call992-2156

~~·~::·study,

Officers were elected at the
recen1 meeting of the Evangeline
Missionary Group of the Pomeroy
Information on career opporwChwch of Christ held at the home nities including the ~ secondary,
of Debbie Miles.
option, whicb pernuts higb scbool
Of6cers are Debbie Miles, pres- st~ts til attend coUege c_laases_. is
ident; Charldine Aikin:, vice-presi· available ~gb the Metp Higb
dent; Pauline Kennedy, secrewy; 1 SchoolllUldanCC departmenl
Janel Venoy, treaswer; Pat Tboma, . ~ednesday ~lleg~ preJ111f810!Y
flower fund; and Eileen Bowers, Jumors a_nd ~ntors mterested, m
mother-daughtez banquet.
communtcauons atte.nded. a P':O·
. In the absence of the president, gram ~ted by ~hio Univ~ty
Linda Laudermilt, vice-president, where public. relauons professton~
conducted the meeting.
_
als and pubhc. relations students
Charldine Alkire had the opCn· provided I!'= with an understandin$ prayer and devotions from ~~of the illlpOrtatiCC off the profesPhthppians were by Janet Venoy. uon and kno~~ o \!OW ID_preShe' also read "Thankful for all pare fc.- a"::/::' public re~.
Things" and "Begin Today."
!bey ~so
. about partJcipatOfficers repMS were given and mg m mlaliShips lnd Jtqll ID Ulkc
collections taken. The roU call was ID learn more about the profession.
On Feb. ~6 the ~- S. Navy
00 the new ~ear.
A contribution was sent to a career cducauon van will be It the
missionary family, Angie and Vicic higb school and students in gradea
Laws.
ll and 12 will have an opportUnity
- Eileen Bowers had the mission to tour the facility on wlteels to
study on "Inaugural Temptations" explore .c.ar~er and educational
from the "LookOUL"
opporlWilUCI m the Navy.
Sunshine boxes were prepared, · Materials on the post secondary
which will be' p!CICIIted 10 Mindy option which ia open to sopboYoung and Melvin Smith. Cards mores and junion ~ be bNMied
were sent 10 'Mindy, Melvin and . out soon by the gptdance depart·
' Mark OiiCT, and Sara Bailey, a menL
lbinldng of you card.
·The .post secondary option
A game was coodocted by Pat wllich is open 10 sophomores and
Thoma 111c1 papers were distributed
allows afl!deniiiO take colon wclmen of the bible for the next cge classes and recelv~ high
meeting by Mn. Milea.
school and/ar ~Uege crediL SW·
Mrs Verwry pve JXIIY'F for the dents must sttll, however, meet
refresh;..enll aerved by the holtess requirements es~bllshed by tbe
to thole named and DebbJo Alldrt, Board of Educatton in Ordt,lr .to
Betty Spencer and Eva On eter.
gradU!O and_P,11 all four parti of
. The February meeting will be the OhiQ ProfiCiency T~L Students
heldatthehomeofBileen BoweQ. and parents wbp. are mterested.

15
15
15
15
15

3

i\TeW arrz'v·a/

TO p s meets

Words

1

disease risk within hours

orr

the ~ohday week wuh Mr. and
Mrs: Cia~ ADen.
Roy Chtisty has returned horne
after a three weeks visit with Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Matlack, Lake
Worth, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Westjohn
and children, Gulfport, Miss.• were
holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs .
Bruce Myers.
ChtisQnas dinner ·guests of Mr.
and Mrs. James Ridenour were
Pauline Ridenour, Mr. and Mrs.
John B. Ridenour, Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Ridenour and family, John
L. Ridenour, Teresa Evans and
children. Jason and Jared Ridenour,
all local.
Holiday visitors of Erma Cle·
land were Mr. and Mrs. Barry
Wade and children, Richmond,
Va.; and Rev. and Mrs. David

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

Harrisonville news

Ann

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

NIED and IICINDED

PH. 614-992-5591

12-5-tln

HAULING

Lot UUUH, ·,
LUMIII,er
FLATIED WORK
In State or out
Of State.

S.&amp; L

TIUCIIIG
992·53

BINGO

~

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

CLUB ,
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Specilll Early Bird
$100 PayoH •
Tlila ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32
11/2.V12111n

Snodgrass Upholstery
"Helping You To Reco•er Your IIIHSlmellf'
Church, Home, True!(, Boat, Auto
and Orrlc'• Seating

UCINE, OHIO
614·949·2202
', 61•-:~•:

POOR BOY TIRES

SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

CLUB

'

IUSON, WY. Aao11 fr- the Post OHk•
We s.-cialize Ia

Tires·.lli•••••·

SUNDAYS
12:00 NOON
Factory Choka
12 Gauge Only
10.19-92

MAIIITEIIANCE
949·2391.or
1-100·137·1460
· LAwn Mo•lng,

Ferlllilillg, Weeding, and
• •• ring.

Shrub and Tree Trlm•insl
•~ov81
Alii~ 1111111 &amp; Col•-dll

FIREWOOD

Exlll•••• ·

Check ·our Price or We Both Lose

Jrd LOCATIOI TO SERVE YOU linER
1+1 mo.

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(3041 773·5533

ASK FOR CHRIS

BISSELL BUILDIRS, .INC. -:
New Homes • VInyl Siding
:
New Garages • Replacement wrndowa
-

FJoom AddHions-. Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101. 949·2160
er915·M39

,.......,c.a.,
.I

II,EWOOD
FOR SALE
.HARDWOOD
Seasoned

$40.00 a load
Delivered.

RI'IUIE fOI MilS aiUinY ·
HElP US Ill - AJTT M TO GIT IIIDUSTI'f

PLUMIIIG

AUIIAIU

•

HElP THE EFfOIT TO 1111111 A P10SP1HUS :

MICIOW.RORN
••VCIIINII

-· ,

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

~~~·e
IEN;SiNOANCE
SEIVICI

:

rot

COUIIIY
.•
WANTED: SteUCIIS OF IDA11VBJ RAT w.i:
. 111111 _ _,.. ..._••• .. •••,.
•
(2)-S... (J)Atll....

tt2·5325111'
. 911·3161

1 4 99

992-2156 ...'~'_
. ,_. 1.~;.; ;,;,;.~; .; ; ~; ,; ,n IL-=::.:.2~!!!1

'I

"

lltM _a...lfill
. Cl'llil...
.....,.,., Olllo
614ott2·7144 .
1011182

992-6215
.......,,Oido

&lt;

"*•• :·

PHil's ,... , ., a.,
• ••• tll-4231 .. ....,.

TROWY 11111011 CUFfS
992-2549
••

�·l

January 21,1913
51

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

Hol.uhold

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WriliJt

Goocla

74

Thursday,.~.,,..,.,""

.

•

21, 1993

The

~ ALLEYOOP

MotOrqciM

The World .AJm•nac•crouword Puul~

BRIDGE

THEY'VE 111\0 THEIIt CIW'ICEI
NOW IT'6 OUit 1'lJIIN I *II! oiEH!

VI'RA FURNITURi AND AP-

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. M:IIOII

. PIJAJICES

114-446o41M OR 111 411 till

311111111

PIULLIP

- Jut u.r 1 PJL

2I
'hiler For ..........
44WJII, I'M 4. OIZL
I

~·•1\Ml

1 .....

,..,
t4l1l.
- d,l14For
Rent .
. . . .- . . h,td

37 E a l l -

ALDER

....

z r · oun 1'1J\..J. aow1••
Ana. ConloUOol And
.._lon. fl-.
A-ble Feb

.-......... ,. •••• 11........

·34 ....
l:!:l ...

31=hower'l
llielt-

31 Slow

2 IR pel1lolly lurn'od, cable
........ llooUIIIul rtv. . . . In

==·::..:=
Port..l-.1102

AutoParta&amp;

76

For ...... Or Slit: ' llodraoma,
14~' ...... - · Raul• 554,
11WII1141.

-&gt;

EEK AND MEEK .

_,

.. .....-.,
43 E..._lllo
45TIIIIeiCI811

+K7

•

.10973

...

EAST

+109"
.71
,.,

~ 1/.XU.D AIJ-oOIJ'.
IJJM)f "D
A

AG&lt;:unltN
1171 Co&lt;IIIIO II .,.,... For
PoM, Coll1t- ..........

~AMA

P.ll,

co cxru-

A!nJT c,ru W(S '!

+&amp;54

SOUTH
+K7 2
.. A 102

rrS CHfNtl&lt;&gt; io

:1017111111, 4 211711111ot- .....
4

ctUture
41 .. (Sp.J
42ft: t!liMWI

~&amp;II

NORTH
+AQJ5
.. ISJ

1.. 11441J41:10.

....

=r-~~~---

.

t:O"THMJ~R

1 Pollee Ollicllt
(ti.J
2 Drtvera' org.

+A532

~1lavst\&lt;P5. ..

3Vana

.AQJ

i

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

fli
i

-

Soolll

t+

8

4 PinciiM
5 Guided
6 Two, Romtn
7 Director

P als

AU pass

2NT

Prtmlliger·

II Polnllrll .
pnCUI
10 . . .
11 Golf,. Wooclan tub
18 LOtlt
- 2D lllbllc:al ..._..,
. 21 Tlmllera ~
22 Hollie run :

king

-

_..,.....,..· 23 0.. for lltina
25 Hoodlurtll&gt;
280c-

Opening lead: • K

I'M FtXIN' TO
SWDDNtl
-Wid

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

mo-t. ·

cod_ ...

28 lte•ttoKY
29 Ortnltt atowlr
32 Of 111M .

After technique
comes flexibility

tau .., ,.,_.., -..,.;.

na.

-- -

33 Babylonian

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

38=-...ion
38 Of •• dlc~te

HaUbrid~~~~~~~:::

plays, we would become bored
quickly. But luckily there are

Services

40 .Scottlell

contracts that call for an ·~~=~~~
approach. In these, usually it is
44 Arcllltect ~.
tant to consider the deal as a _...,I
IIIH Wlft dar
not
suil
1.+-lf---1-.In ·
deal, West leads
king
trump. .
your
Often, with this
would bold up the ace lllltil the
round. But is that rigllt tltis
You have eight lop !rids:
spades, ooe heart, two diammc!s
one club. You can get )'IIIII" rlirtllt !rid
from the club suit, except lllat JOII
be taking the r - iniAl West.
C.ELEBRITY CIPHER
•
Dllllldlr~ots a - . . a'lllllld lrOiil quotet~on~, tty la'noul ~ PMt.,., PNMfll.
player with all the hearts to casiL
&amp;ell-In . . - - _ , . tor WKIIIIr. TQ~Ct~~Y1 c:M· N IIQWIII G.
the finesse rates to lOSio, )"OUsbotJN
gineer an endplay.
• Y X WE
PMF
C M E 'I
PWDD
'
Win the secood round of hearts
tile ace, checking to see 1llloelhor
•"
HEC
XMDDWV
I XW
DMFCWGI
follows ooce or twice. Then casb
••
diamond and spade w~.
LG
YXWE
I
X
W
P
X
W
H
V
PMF
brings West down to fiw' cao.l'nllt.l
bly be will discard one club :mol
I X W
• • 61."
VHCHV
diamonds, retaining tuee hearts
two clubs. H so, lead a heart. Let
M'VWLDDP
(IIIHVP
AFVNXMKK). · •
cash his three tricks, but lome bim
PREVIOUS SOI.IITlON; ""E-,. wants to be a rock star, rlghl7 ll"a.
lead away from the club king at

-+-

Harne

,. PEANUTS
.~

;'AND T~E VO ICE

o• THE TURTLE
IS loiEARD IN
OUR LAND .. ''

42 Singing ',

••I

I.IIJ!: //) IIJ

...

U

..

...

Ernplr-ymrnt Servtces

32 . Mobile Ho11'181

tti-UII .Or 114411-1101 .......

• P.ll.

4S

Furnished

Rooma

1111 Bllyllno Holly llldOO 141711, · Rooma Ia&lt; nnl ; - o r monlh.
.. IIIK. 2
:.tea;=. AIC,
IDUICed ~ 1 kiDflln llllncl, -~ .. .-..... Oolllo Holol.
1141 1580..

.,.,_,

· - ::.,.. ='"'"ling,

,_2 ..............
pump,·-·

1 8 1 0 - F-.r, - · I
t
tub,
lnnd , _ -

21105.

SIMplna """"" wnh cooking.
Aloo troll•
- ·p.m.,
All hook-upe.
Coli
...... 2:00
:104·773-

1151,11aoonWY.

.p-

46 Space •or Rent

1810 ,..,.... Rlclgo, strdm., 1
112 ....... hMI '"""" llCWe, OFRCE SPACE FDA RENT:
Buol,....
:o~-.:.=_::ro; llodom ollloo ouholn
Bulldlna , _

._ WD1k1
Pori Cllf
.... 14
.....
p, IDO!ilrll
At Homl.
Tall ,_, - . Ell.
I

...

. Ill.

I·-

BullnaH
Trlllnlng

of lond,lacolod .. Llnlo
SIXIAIOn•• BR, 2 bolhl, llmlly

onlloblo. Col llanlo HMidno,
114 441 2131 or 441 2112.

room, dining ...... Po~ly
311•40 ...... '3 .... 1fT Wantld to Rant
bulldlnao. s,. bi ~
....,. Sfol.e7&amp;.1ml . . . .,..,..... Prohnl:nll ~ Want To
-.lllod-llalho,WII
Pay For Nlao - . No
35 Lata &amp; Acreage
Chllclr.t~

1 acre - 113 . , . under roof, exc
Ia&lt; lol 1800 ton olio) at

or._
.... _..lor
-~--·
. . :J
bldg: Aoldria
• olllc8

tl8,000.

UR TREE SERVICE. TO!IIIIng, Ton mlioo- ol Pt. "JIM. on R1.
T.........., TrM Romo,I,I!Ocfga 2,30W71-2114.
T - . Froo EollmoiHI IM- 1.873 - - . 2ml. lrom Alclno,
117-7111"Abr tp.m.
Apple tank,
llrovo11000,
Rd. ~~-=
ooptlc
..... pm.

t

W.nlod To - : llolor Homo

For

I

-Loci-- =

:::::".:r:t:'~~
.
For- -

BORN LOSER

F·:11rn SttpfliH s
&amp; Live stock

Belden ~ Uwilerl ,., . . ,
UOOI ttJ Ptillip .tider, i8 care
l'lley&lt;Ube-

A. ~T. C:tEMTLEI!~IL

........

•~

For ...; l'rll'' fuilv .. 2 I d
= · o r · - lrolior, 114-

_...,....._A_ . .
BuldlnG, wolghl -

-10 . . .

_ . . , .. -

'lllo-

Aiel

llld lol

-....qo.

,~~
. .....

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

CA8H?H

·-·

:-.63;;_~Uvaat~~o:;;-c;,;k~-~::-

· Q. . We've just started growing
apples and pears. Is there a word lor
the study of growing fruit!
A. Yes, there is. The ll'Ord is POMOLOGY (pronounced ~pob-IIAB­
Ioh-jee"l, which refers to the sdenWX,
study ol growing fruit. A pen;on who
un~ertakes the study is a POIIIOLOGIST &lt; "poh·MAH-Ioh·jist"l. Both 1'0MOLOGY and POMOLOGIST are
based on the Latin IIOMUM. "fruit"
First used in t818, the noun POIIOir
OGY and ils related POMOLOGIST
are two words still ripe for the pick-

PAR1Y!1 'lOW

NOW

HADA

eveRYBODY'5

MAD AT ME.

PAR.iY~

O u l - plapr plono, AI 111rw TC.............. Aloo
cheap, . _ . _ . , Kai'ry L. Fllhlr • a 'lllnmer. 114-MI·'ITII
...... 11t- 3Abl. .

Fot Wr rllr Ml Trllt To Soul:h
Bond, Coli POII,..._"IOI.

Merchandtse

51

....

-

BURBLE bubbles or males a gurgling sound. Verbal experts are
always sure to rhyme the verb
BURBLE with VERBAL.

Want to:
PIN aownEXTRA

-loolurlng A
-ion
...........
- Add lady

'

Daft,.,

By Jeffrey McQuain

•

lot""
clolhlntL con • 21116, ..... or o14 141 221M

ing.

Household

-. '

•

rI

C 0 PH E

I I I

I

My daughter never helped
in the kitchen until I took the
advice of an elderly neighbor.
'-..J-L--..1.--L---'----"· ~
She told me the best way to
.-----:----..:;_.,get a teen into the kitchen was
N U R J E·P
Ito put a-··· in there.
1--r,-r,~
.
Comp lete the chuc.kle quoied

E GG0 U

rI

I

I I ·

•

•

~

•

•

.

•

PRINl NUM8UEO tETTE~ IN
lHESE SQUARES

•

,UNSCRAMBI.E AIIOVE lETTE~S
TO GET ANSWER

by ftlling in the missing words

.__.__.....__,__._......__. you develop from step No. 3 beiC?w.

IIIIII

SCRAM liTS ANSWERS
.., 0
Samon · Ylflld • Hobby • Uneasy • SOMEBODY
_A felow I know ~ieves there is plenty of money in
!tis counlly. He thinks the only real problem is that
eve1yone owes ~ to SOMEBODY else.

All C.II&gt;OI 6 Vlnvl In llock On
Sale. Mollohan C:Orpota, 1117 N.

114-ttl-11144.

.....
v-·

w. Have

FURNITURE

CIW'TI
Cnllo And

AND

er.a s,..

~

...,.,.,-..,, a• ran.

AiooWIICuotoni~

lhlrlll. wa Buy And llill
- AI UoiOd
~CGmoU.
2221-141,
114ttloMZI.

...... ___
,..,.........,_lo
.......
.... ................
.. -.
...............

. . . . llould ....

Transportal ton

I'DI"nll _..,.ARE:

...... .
1

.

·~

THIF.RSIDI

.

,

...........
,_=~~~=
,._ - · - ·

~

r:-...

1-121·1111 011-

==
-7217.
IUDI.

-.,.=.

":1::~ .

0..

are
go-nlng you In the year ahetd. Soind
tor Aqull"luo' Aslro-Grapll predictions
today by maiMng $1.25·ptus a long, aelladd..-d, alamped envelope lo AalroGraph, c/o thla newsp-. P.O. Bo•
91428. Cleveland. ~44!01-3428. Be
sure to 11a1e your zodl~gn.
PIICI!I (Fell. 2D nco oh 20) Kaep In
touch lild slay on good Ierma wllh
three ·lndlviduala who have liMn -.y
helplul 10 you rec:enlly. There's a
chance they could be ·IIViln more ol an
asaetln this partlrular period ,
AlliES ( - 21.April 11) Condlllons
are pr...,.lly conducive for laking poal·
live meeaures to make your hopes reell·
1111. Lady Luck will lnlarcede when ohe

. AS'I'RO-GRAPH

3 •. ___________________

U•

='='· .... --...
1o1r

4. ________________
5. _____________

........lng In
Hamo. Any
1111111. LOCIIod City
Umllo. NurM . Aoololont Tnlnlng.
WIN loollyollln my homo, Alclno
end Pail~ - - . 814-IU11301.

·-·1221.

'

1-------------------z. __~------------~-

SWSd:nlttlcl Ia

TrM lapping 6 trimming

s..u.

'

By GARY LARSON

twii lllln ltp&amp;"Ctd lrom lhllr
I

Thm your clutter into coth,
it the eau UJtJy... by pfwu,
no need . to lea.ve your home.
PlQce your cfnuitjed ad cowl

15 aDOrtU or le.,, 3 AA!I,
3., _pgeri,
15.40
:
. pa.Ul in a.dmnce •

0'1
.,.~..
..,. _ _ h o t _ ...

.

BERNICE
~EDEOSOL

6~----------------~
7•....._..;.________________

8.__________________
9 •.,.......______________
10...._____________

'

12
______________
11~---~-~-----

=
-- ·-·

=
---···
:,a..1tll ltMittiUWk ldr,

21

Bualnaa

42 Mobile Homes

mt.

•or Rent

tg '0

1111
Toollor,
.,.,._.
I
Aele&amp;aiOI lltqtllrM. No Ptt•.

1-.111t2. or e1t-.,.,_.

114-a-.

~our [NderShlp quallllel might be aubIn .tho year ~­

:aterohiiJ ll'lhencecl

SIIualionS you paraonaiiY create or con·
:trill -ld h.,. very gooct chances lor .

15 ,;..'----:--:-'::-:::-:::-:--:=---...:...;_-

h,N71.1........1000.

446-2342

.. _....li.-.

9J2-2156
675-1

0

Snake department ttor81

18~---------------14
_________________

-.IJI.L,iiiOo;-

-, 11;ii6.11t
" ' - ttlDINIIIIIOh,
-1111..
...

2 lr, 1 ml'- llaulh of
on IL R1.7. No polo,

olall. 22.1. .

lr~rll,

2.1 1.1., 12100. t14 . . .nt

"*·

rMICC 1'.

__ ._.. 11) Int-I

IAGUAI"''I (olall. _...,.._

•

1 transitiOnS .,. likely In thle dma
1 ~. The Uj)ICtl lndlctle thai you

1may piiiJ alellderohiP role In - I I I I I ·

uatlonS where you h - mer8ly 1
lollower.
Aquarlua.
get
a
jUmp~
Hie by
.
.

4

lions With ihe aerlousnesslhey do;;.;;;;;,.
L£0 (July u:).ug, 22) Agreements or
perlnerohlp arrangemen'- that you enter today have lh.e polenllal lor benefi.
ciallongevtly, provided elll'h partlclpanl
looko out lor lhe olher.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lept. 22J As of tOday,
changes mlghl begin slirrlng where
your work or career Is concerned that

could lead to fresh opporlunlllll. II will
be up Ia you,--· to recognize and
appreclete lhlllr valueo.
UIIIIA (llept. 23-0ci.IIJ This fs a gooct '
cycle to gel oul and clrculale more In
order lo develop new con1ac1s and
lreoh soclallnlereoits. RelaUonohlpsthal
you . .ablloh could provelrullful.
ICOIIPIO (Ool. 24-ltow. 22) Beginning
,. . . )llljl MCIV!{'Il ~)rjllh d~IAI· I tOday, try ID diMnOIII" yburaeil from
t!Ortand.. . , . _.
'
. ·
ll!luallons thai have proven unproiluc- •
TAUIIIUI (April ....., lliJ Don'! be llVe. 181110" probablllllee for IUCCIII '
alrlld lo eetablloh oblectl-todily lhal ·COUld Item from new lnllltMia.'
·
are ••ted a lew lllf)l aboYe your UCIITTAIIUI ( ...... :a Dec 211 II Is
usuel orcope of operation. The chal· lime 10 Plil plano you have recently
lenQII wtiiiiOUM your bel111t ablll1iel. t.e.t formulatlngl~lo oc:tlon. Thla Ia a
CIIIIN (...,. 21..,_ lilt) Knowtedll" propltioUI parlod .....,. IOUIId ldMI
lhal you ·ha.,. ,_,,ly acquired will nol and concepla could produce Mlbalanbe Willed. In fact. wh.ll you have llal",_111.
.
lelmed lhtough _
....pei'tenoa c:.ut•cotut (Dec. :I2-.IM. 111 You.,.
COI!id automllk:ally teed 10 poaillvo now In • cycle .mer. you cauld be more
rortunale lllan usual In endeevora 11181
CAliCO (J..,. 21-.luly 221 Some Inter· can edd to your iiii)OIIMO or reeou...,...
. . lng developments mlghl occur loday Give priority to malllltl .....,. you tore
11111 could be o1 bentlfli to you matlltlal· . mal-.ly motlvale(l .
l)o. Treel bullness and llnanclal allua·.

I

......

-

•

-,r.s......,,.--.,,r--1 0

•

Good a

COUNTRY

Magnuson. ::

...

OUR "LANGUAGE

61 Fann Equipment

COOl, wl..,.,
INihor
trim,·flllnnolllnlna.
lito
•
ldng .... pold $1111; ......

~nn

wrong, West wilt bore~
·Be fleJ:ible in your thinking

.....

........ ·loti-

up with It and love it." -

bore erer~ for 1 Wftlt.

COOl, lUll

2421.

tts ....... we grew

drOp
his now si·~!~~~it.f!.~~!l
it right,
you b&amp;¥e a story

ololil144f6.1111.

- •....._-I:OOPII.
FINWOOd: An Hantw ad1 SpQl
Dolly- . . Plck.Up L.Mcl.
114-216-1318.
.

b

i.'I
.,

Plumbing &amp;
· ., Heeling
7

Fl.-, 120. ........... lruoll

PI •

It seems straigbtforwanl, but
clever West wiD put you to a peso.
will discard the diamond four, the olia-1
mood queen and two clubs. U ..,
that, you must cash tile club ace

;.::.:::::,
":::l"':=..cca:a
Certtflecl. ...
•••

Third · An-. CloMIDOIIo; 114-

tll2.17 ..... - h lnoludlna ...
monawlrH
1o1 Nnl,- MIC7V,
_
.... lllld ... up, lldrUng
ond . . _ 1-.aH121.

HELPWAHTaD

82

untumllhed :z ...room.. m

for $811

Help Wanted

11

WII-JIIIID-rii
--........
=r---..

TWD Mel,_ 111M-. on llat70
lol, tiO,OGO ot wll lond
ODIIlMt with clown PIJII ...,
111 112 1101.

12.

·'

.

I

o\

..
.' ..

�•

....... 12-llle o.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, January 21 , 1993

'

Ohio Lottery

Meigs and
Eastern girls
post trium_phs

INVE

Pick 3:

655
Pick 4:

Page4

Cloudy lualgbt. 1.-llllllid
30o. Sotunlay, high ator SO.

6799

•
·

NOW

WAS

Zenith 9" AC/DC Color ...........................................................................'339 ..... '249
Zenith 20" Remote Color 4 Only.........::...............................................'419 ..... S289
Zenith 25" Pine Finish Remote 3Only...............................................'699 ..... s529
Zenith '0'' "SYS.3" SEQ Sound Console ....................................'899 ..... *639
.Premier 30" Ga~ Range........................................................................'-429 ...... s299
Kelvlnator 301' Electric Range Alm~nd ...................,.....................1499 ..... 5379 ·
Maytag 30" Electric Range "Deluxe" ..............................................'se9 ..~ .. 5429
Gibson Electric Dryer nme Dry.........................................................'409 ..... '339
Gibson Auto. Washer ~xtra Large Cepaclty........................................ ..'469 ..... '399
Kelvinator/Gibson 14 cu. ft. Refrigerator "Roners·.....................'619 ..... S469
Kelvinator 18 cu. ft. Refrigerator White or Almond ........................'699 ·:·.. s549
Gibson 1S.6 cu. ft. Refrigerator Glass Cantilever Shelves .'839 ...:. *629

.

ODDS'N ENDS

Conimunity calendar

~.C~o~m~m=.~.l~t,=C~al~e~Dd~a~r~l~te~m~s=~Fw~Tth=Ch=urc~h=on=1b=ursday==81=:7~:30==;d~e~=ee~.~Fn7·ila~y~a~t7~:;::30~p.~m~.~.,~the;=
appear two days Wore aa evmt
ud tile day al tbat evealltems
must be reeell'ed well ill ad'fBIIce
to assure publlcatloa ill the raleadar.

· T~DAY
REEDSVll.LE - There will be a
meeting for pareDIS and studeniS of
the junior class at Eastern High
· School on Thumlay 81 8:30 p.m. in
the cafeteria.
.

'

ROCK SPRINGS • The Middle·
port Child Conservation League
will meet Thumlay at 7 p.m. 81 the
Rock Springs 'united Methodist
Church. Gerald Rou,ht, Pomeroy
Chief of Police, wtll speak on
"Morais of Children and
Teenagers."
RACINE • Racine American
tigion Post 6m will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. 81 the po§('home in
R;tcine.
POMEROY - The Democratic
Executive Commiuee will" meet
Thumlay 81 7:30 p.m. 81 the Car·
penters Hall in Pomeroy.
: STIVERSVILLE - Evangelist
Brother David Carpenter,
Belleville, W.Va., will be preach·
ing at the Stiversville Word of

p.m. Pastor David Dailey invites
the public.

Middleport Masonic Temple.

RU1LAND - There will be a
TUPPERS PLAINS - Special dance at the Rutland American
meeting, Towers Plains VFW Post Legion Hall on Friday from 8 p.m.
No 9053 Thursday at 7·30 p.m to to midni•ht. Music will be by
· a quartermaster.
'
·
White's Hin Band. Public invited.
elect
AU· members
10
urged auend.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
POMEROY - Poultry SulH:om- Gospel Church in Long Bonom
·
. caching. !Did sinfe· ng .
mt1tee ' Th ursc1ay • 7 p.m., Met'gs will have7Pf
Pastor S
eed
County E.xtension Office in Friday 81 p.m.
teve
Pomeroy.
invites the public. Fellowship follows. Local singers.
LANGSVILLE- The Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
POMEROY - The film, "The
meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Eye of the Storm" by Billy Graham
offJCC.
Association, will be presented Friday at 7 p.m. at the Laurel Cliff
POMEROY - The Pomeroy ~~ethodist Church. Public
Group of AA will meet Thursday 81
7 p.m. at Sacred Heut Catholic
SATURDAY
Church. Call 992.-5763 for inforRU1LAND - There will be a
mation.
·
dance at the Rutland American
.
MIDDLEPORT - The first Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
meeting for the 1993 Soapbox . p.m. to midnight. Music will be by
Derby will be Thursday 8l7 p.m. at Pure Country Band. Public invited.
the Blue Sae.ak Cab Office in MidMILLFIELD - Round and
dleport. Anyone interested may
square dance Saturday, 8-11 p.m. 81
attend.
the Russell buildin$. in Millfield.
Music will be provided by Out of
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Bosworth the Blue. John Russell will be the
Council No. ·46 R.S.M. will have c:aller.
annual inspection, Royal Master
LOTI'RIDGE - County Music
Night 81 the Louridge Community
. Center will -be Saturday from 'I
p.m . to midnight. All bands are
welcome. Refreshments will be
·be in Cleveland his year. The. sixth available.
degree will be given in Washington
County on April24 for those wantKANAUGA - Square dancing
ing to get the seventh 81 the nation- and clogging 81 the DAV building
al convention.
from 8·11 p.m. Music by Liberty
A communication from the state . Mountaineers. Public is invited.
master was read by William Radford and the secrewy announced
SUNDAY
.
new Ohio state grange cookbooks
CHESmR - ''Growing ThrouiJt
are roc sale.
. Grief" group at Chester United
Bun11y Kuhl, lecturer, asked Methodist Church. Call Rev.
membels to bring an old i~ or Sharon Hausman 81 985-4312 for
antique and a story about it for the further information.
February meeting.
Charles Kohl was reponed ill.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Sheep
Refreshments were served by sulK:omnliuee will meet Sunday 81
Mr. and Mrs. William Radford and 2:30 p.m. at the. Tuppers Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Radford.
VFW Hall in Tuppers Plains.

Supervisor speaks to Grange
Kenny · wiggins, iitter control
supervisor for Meigs County, was
guest speaker at the recent meeting
of the Rock Springs Grange held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. William
Radford.
Wiggins explained lhe different
phases of his office such as solid ·
waste, recycling, education, etc.
Liller control packets were distributed to all members present.
Barl!ara Fry, eN A, reponed on
the continuipg program of saving
all eyeglasses. She also reponed on
the Pomona Grange meeting and
all who assisted in serving were
thanked.
. The national grange session will

WAS

Charisma Qak/WickerChafr Blue Velvet... .......................................'249 ..... *139
Wall Pictures • Variety Prints....:...............................................................'49 ..... s19
Table Lamps Beige "Duck Prlnt".............'.......................................1199 ..... s75 PAIR
Table Lamps Chocolate "Floral Print" .............. ,.................... :..'199 .....
PAIR
Entertainment Center Dark Pine.......................................................'369 ...... S199
Bean Bags 6 Cotors ...........................................................................~ ........... .'45 ... :. s27
Swivel Desk Chair Oak ..............................................................;..........1199 ..... 5129
Console/Mirror Dark Oak ..................................................................,...1429 ..... ~299
Eureka Sweeper...........................................................:............................... ..'1 o9 ..... s79
Wood Mag~lne Rack...,....... ~.....................
'39 ..... •19
WAS

NOW

Country 2'Pc. Blue Check Prlnt ........................................................'999 :.:.. s499
Tradltlonal2 Pc. Green/Mauve Floral..............................................'999 ..... *629
Country 2Pc. Blue/Maue Prlnt.:......................................................'11gg ..... *649
Early American 2 Pc. Blue Florat.. ......................................................1799 ..... *529
Tradltlonal3 Pc. Aqua Acrylic ·cover...~ .....................................'23so ...... 11388
Contempora,Y3 Pc. Nylon Beige "Suede"...............:.................'2195 ..... *975
Tradltlonal3 Pc. 2Styles-3 Color Choice' ................................. ..'1699 ..... *999
Tradltlonal2 Pc. Comer Group Beige/Blue ................................11199 ..... *699
·Curved Recliner Sectional Muiii·Print.. .......................................'1699 ..... *999
Recliner 2-Way,Brown or Blue.........:.................................................'229 ..... s119
Catnapper Recllner'Green-Beige-Biue............................................'339 ..... 5199
·Catnapper Rocker-Recliner Mauve Strlpe...................................'389 ...... 5249
Swivel Rocker Beige Velvet ..........................................................:.. ..'259 ..... S129
Glider Rocker Brown Dot ....................................................................'299 ..... s199
·La·Z·Boy Rocker-Recliner Green......................................................'489 ..... 5299 ·
Loveseats • Odd Lot • 4Styles.....................................'499·'699 ..... '299-'399

BEDROOMS

NOW

WAS

"NOW

BaSsett Traditional Oak CKT/2 REC'T ENDS.........................,,..........'499 ..... '289 a
Bassett Dark Oak CJawfoot Large CKTJ2 DRAWER ENDS...... :.1840 "':· *639 BET
Ashley Oak French Leg ovAL CKTJ2ROUNo ENDS,.....................1360 ..... *239 BET
Ashley Tradldonal Oak CKTJ2 REC), END8................ :................ .'349 ..... S199BET
End &amp;Cocktail table, 6STYLES VARETY FNHS. .....'119-'249 ...... sss.s125 EACII

Table LnE PINE. ..,.....:.....................,.............. .'179 ..... •at-

'

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Mason Furn lure Co.
'

'

.

DeDDy Facemyer, ceater, presldeat; Paul Reed,
left, vice-presideat; ud KeDDy Utt, right, trea·
surer.

NEW OFFICERS - New officers ror the
Melg• County.CIIamber or Commerce are

After bank, FBI investigation ·

,

Michael L~ - ~~r_ridge indicted
21 COU:rits by fede-r aljuiy

on

By JIM FREEMAN
OVPNewsStalf
A Gallipolis native, Michael L.
Berridge, 36, of Columbus, was
indicted in Columpus Thursday by
a federal grand jury on 21 couniS
including charges of bank frauct,
embezzlement, false slatements in
connection with loan applications
and misuse of Social Security numbels, a s.:nior FBI official repMed.
Starting in 1982, Berridge, who
work~ as a loan officer at the
main branch of the Ohio Valley
Bank in Gallipolis, allegedly
sought to defraud lhe bank by pro.
cessing loans to fict;~~ple
and then keej)ing the
, FBI
Supervisor David Hanna said Fri·
daym~ing.

NOW

WAS

Bassett 5 Pc. Dark Oak Cane FronL .............................................. .'1699 .~ ... s1 088
Bassett 6 Pc. Cherry· Head &amp;Footboard................................... .'1299 ..... *749
.
$
.
American Drew 6 Pc. Nostalgic Maple.................................... .'....'2999 ..... 2177
Bassett 5 Pc. Black • Mirror Fronts...........\... .....................................'1399 ..... '788
DMI 4 Pc. Oak Shelf Headboard.............:..........................................1799 ...... s499
Four Drawer Chest Maple Flnlsh.................................................................'79 ..... 149
Stock Bedroom "Protective
Closeout Prices/

TABLE SETS

..

,Housing starts are up
18.5 percent in 1992

l . ..... ............................. .. ....... .. .....

UPHOLSTERY

2 Sections, 12 PofiM 25 cent&amp;
A Mulllmedle Inc. No OPipor

Pomeroy-:-Middleport, O~lo Friday, January 22, 1993

sao

5 Pc. Chrome/Glass Top Table, Blue Velvet Chairs ................'469 ..... '269
5 Pc.-cOuntry Oak·Table/leaf/4 Chalrs..........................................'389 ..... s249
5 Pc. Oak Table Wood Edge/2 Leafs/4 Splndle...Chalrs.............'699 ..... s439
7 Pc. Dark Pine Table/2 Leafs/6 Chalrs...... :.....................................sssg ..... *439
7Pc. Ute Oak Reel. Wood Edge Table/6 Splat Back Chalrs..1899 ...... s599
Open Front Oak/Almond Hutclt-"C/oseout"...................................'699 ..... 5289
Tradltlonal9 Pc. Oak Dining Room
,
Trestle Table/6
Hutch .......................................121 ..... s1299

ript, are , . ... ,.. • kl, Ka*J Ln, a edle..e Fauy IIIJ'Itle ulJ Tl'llap'• plclt, aodel
Saadra Glllllord. ne Pl'tlln• il~~:•edlaled 10
air Feb. I. (AP pltGto)

Copyrighted 19$3

. NOW

WAS

JOAN PLAYS .CUPID • JOIID Riven, Jell,
plaY, matchmaker •• me eo~~dDCted • "Dalt.g
Game" ror DoDald Trump oa her mow mped iD
New York Wedaesday. Posing, second left to

•

Vol. 43, No. 191

.

Charles· R. Timms, Steven Myers,
Eric R. Robens. Ge9rge R. Robinson, Henry L. John. son Jr .. Raymond L. Strait, Dennis J. Brown
and Alan E. Stewart.
· Berridge allegedly also produced fictitious soctal security
numbers for Brown and Stewart.
In addition, Berridge allegedfy
added amounts to loans to three
real customers which inflated,
witliout customer authorization,
principal wnouniSdue to the bank.
According to Assistant U.S.
Auorney Randy Yantz,. B~rrid.ge
should go before U.S. Dtstrtct
Court Judge Sanda Beckwith for
armignment wilhin ~ weelcs.
He faces a maxtmum sentence
of 35 years in jall and a $1,250,000
fmc iffound guilty on all counts.

, In addition, Berridge allegCdly
added amounts 10 existing loans of
unsuspecting legitimate customers
and ·then kept the proceeds, Hanna
said ·
'
A bank spokesman said Friday
morning that Berridge's alleged
schemes were uncovered in May •
1991 after an inltmal bank invesligalion revealed several discrepan·
cies.
I
.
The information was turned
over to the FBI the following
month, the spcltesman added.
Berridge )hen resigned from OVB..
No customer money was lost,
the spokesman said
Accordiog to the U.S. Auorney's office, Berridge all.egedly
made loans in the following fictitious names: Williwn R. Walters,
.

.

l

.

Bob McEwen says he'll run to
replace Gradison in 2nd District
BATAVIA, Ohio (AP) -· Bob taXes."
McEwen, a former 6th Ohio Dis· · He announced his candidacy at a
trict congr~ssman, announc~d morning news conference 81 Clertoday he will run for the 2nd Dis· mont County Republican headquartrict seat being vacated by Rep. ters in Balavia.
.
Willis Gradison.
McEwen, a Republican who
McEwen said supponers con· spent 12 years in Congress, lost his
vinced him the disuk:t needs a con- 6th District seat in November to
servalive and experienced voice.
Democrat Ted Strickland of
•'I thinlc that with the new (Clin· Lucasville.
ton) administration, it will be
Oradison, a Cincinnati Republiimportant that we have a fightet to can, announced his resignatimJan.
pro!ect the pocketboolcs of taxpay- II, less .than a week after being
· ers," McEwen said.
sworn in for his lOth term. He will
''This will be the ftftlt rongrcss· leave Congress at the end of the
man for Cincinnati in two years," month to head a)ealth insurance
he said. "It's imponant that we lobbying group. .
·
have someone who can hit the · A March 16 pnmary has been
ground running. representing our set to select candidales for the May
values of economic growth and low 4 special election to replace Gradi- '
#' ·

Authorities are quiet
abOUt grandJ·ury review
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) · Authorities are keepin~ quiet about
the results of a $rand Jury's review
of evidence agwnst a man the FBI
calls a prime suspect in the·shoot·
ina death.l of four Ohio !lUtdoorsmen.
But two newspapers reported
today that the man likely will be
indicted in two of the deaths.
Investigaton on Thunday
cleclined to say whether the Noble
County grand jury had reaehed a
deei1lon Ia the ease ~~IIDst
Thomas Lee Dillcll. 42, al Mapo!i,, •nd Prosecutor Lucien C.
Youna III w.. not available for
eommenl
·.
.

But a lask force investigating
the shootings, which occurred in
eastern Ohio between April 1989
and April 1992, has scheduled a
news confeJei!CC in Coshocton this
afternoon 10 dsiCUSS the ~
Tbe Aboa Beacm Journal ~d
The Columbus Dispatch, quoung
sources they did not identify,
reported today dial Dillon may be
indic:ted in the shoolin_. of Gary
Bradley, 44, of Wilhamatown,
W. '!a., who was killed April 5
while fiahin• Dear Caldwell; and
Ctegde Hawkinl, 49, t1 Manlfield,
who was killed March )4 while
fishliiJ nelr Wills Creek Dam in
CoshoCton County.
. ·

son.
.
The 2nd District, in southwestern Ohio, is made up of Adams.
Brown and Clermont counties, as
weD as pans or Hamilton and Warren counties. McEwen said half
that region feU in his old district
before the districts were redrawn 10
reflect populalion changes.
'

WASHINGTON (AP)- Housing starts rose 18.5 percent last
year to ihe hlghest level in three
years, the government said today. It
was the ftrst increase in six years as
the industry rebounded from its
poSt-World War II low in 1991.
AU n:gi011s of the country posted double·digit increases as housing found itself buoyed during a
crealdng economy by some of the
lowest mortgage rates in two
clecades.
The Commerce Depanment said
construction of new single-family
homes and apartmeniS IOialed 1.20
million in 1992, up from 1.01 mil·
lion fn 1991 when construction
dropped to its lowest level since
World War II ·as the economy
struggled to emerge from the recession.
Housing starts in 1992 were
boosted by a 5.5 percent advance in
December, .to a 1.30 million sea·
sonally adjusted annual rate. That
was the highest level since last
March when they reached a 1.34
million rate.

Construction then bounced
around until August, when it
jumped 12.1 percent 10 a 1.23 million rate and then leveled off. For
theyear,startsroseineightmonlhs
and fell in four.
Analysts attributed the overall
improvement largely to mortgage
rates that dropped from 9.03 percent in March to 7.84 percent in
September after the Federal
Reserve sharply cut other interest
rates.
. The 7.84 percent rate was the
lowest since mortgages reached
7.76 percent in June 1973: Rates
averaged 8.03 percent dunng the
weelc ended J~. 15.
Starts, wh1ch had tolaled 1.19
million in 1990, plunged to 1.01
millio~ .the following year as tile
recesston touched. boltom. It WJIS
the lowest level smce 326,000 m
1945. the final year of World War
II. Starts totaled 1.2 million in
1946.
.
The 18.5 percent mcrease h1s1
year was the l!'fgest slllCe a 60 percent advance m 1983 as the econo-

Clinton withdraws Baird n-omination
.

WASHINGTON (AP)- President CliniOn early today withdrew
his·nomination of Zoe Baird for
attorney gcnenl, bl!winJ· le·mounting opposition because ~f her
admission she knowingly vsolated
federal immigration laws. It was an
early embarrassment for the young
administration.
..
Clinton gave no clues as to
where he would look for a new
anoriley ,general, the sol~ va~cy
in a Cabmet he was calhng to the
While House today for iiS initial
meeting.
Women's groups immediately
urged Clintop to name another
woman 10 the Justice Depanment
post.
·
Gloria Allred, president pf the
Women's Equal kights , Legal
Defense and Education Fund,
called Baird's action "a wise deci·
sion" that was in lhe best interest
of lhe nation and the administra·
lion.
But Allred also said it was
"important ... that this position be
filled by another qualified woman
attorney.''
,
Baird, under pressure, requested
her nomination be withdrawn and Clinton accepted - in a midnight exchange of leners. It fol lowed another exlraordit!ary day of
conftm181ion hearings at which it
became clear she had not been able
10 put to rest the conuoversy about
her 1990 decision to hire a Peru·
vian couple to care for her child
and drive family cars.
Baird, in a combative appearance Thursday before the Senate
Judiciary Committee, had said she
would not withdraw, and that she
would make a "great" anorney

.

general if given the chance. She
would have been the ftrSt woman to
fill that post.
-But .in .her leiter. to Clinton,
Baird said: "The opponunity to
reinvigorate the Depanment of Juslice under your leadership as president must not be lost
"The continuing controversy
surrounding my nomination seriously impedes my ability to
~hieve that essential goal. My love
and respect fot what the Depart·
ment of Justice should be has led
me to reach a decision tonight that
I should respectfully request that
you wilhdraw my nomination."
In a reply leuer, Ciin10n said he
accepted
.. her request "with sad'
ness.
.
The president blamed the
episode on his transition team's
failure lb fully analyze Baird's disclosure that she hued the illegal
iml"igrants after no legal workers
responded to a newspaper ad for a
live·in baby-sitter.

I

"For ,that, I take full respoasibility, ·' Clinton, dealin&amp; with tbc
first crisis .of his administration,
said· in slatement r.eleased by the . ,
· White House aN:22 a.m. ·
In a personal. note to Baird,
Clinton referred to her violation of
immigration laws as her •'child
care situation" and said he
believed the concerns were
"unique to lhe position of attomey
general."
On CapiiOI HiD,. senior Pcmocratic aides said Baird and Cli1110n
had little choice.
. "We knew by theendoflheday&gt;
thiS was doomed," said a top aide·
10 one Judiciary Committee mem-"
ber, speaking
· "I · on condition of
anonymUy. tJUSI wasn't going to
go away."
Baird, 40, chief counsel at Aetna
Life &amp; Casualty, was lapped by
Clinton on Christmas Eve. Prevtousl y, she worked in the Carter
White House and Justice Depart. _

Well-known Mas.on County
leader, Jack Burdette, die~ ·
~ack Conner Burdell, 84, of
Potnt Pleasan~ who was weD
known in Mason County for his
community service, died Thursday.
January 21, 1993 at.Pleasant Valley

Ho~it ~as COO~IQr
::~~~;,~c:~
the Muon County F81r, the West

b&amp;Uctball team, which.won second
in the state tournament and played
in tbe national high achool IOUrD8ment in Chjcago. .
·
He attended Marshall University
Conliaued on · :1
••

a
for the 1974 Point Pleasant BJCen-

Virginia State Farm Museum
Mounlaineers for Rural Progress'
NAm, P!CasanLValley Hospitai
Boen1 of nusrees River Museum
Boen1 of ~r• president
of the libmry
and wu a ·
WSAZ Hometown Heio.
He was a member of the Point
PleuMt Presbyterian Chli'Ch,
whele he sened as 111 eiiB a
dtaoon IIDd 1 Sunday SciiOOl
ICICber
BIDdeu was educated in the
tehools of Mason Colllty. While in
hifh achool he won the Friedm111
pnze twice. He puticlpated in Ill
hi,gh IIChool 1p0111 and was 1 forwant oil the original Big Blacks

BAIRD IS OUT • Attoney Geaeral-deslpate Zoe Baird test!·
nes oD Capitol HUI nursday before lbe Seute Jucllc:l8ry Committee. Baird bad rejected sauest~ons. tbat m~ step ulde l'or •Iring .
ill'l:al •IieDS to work Ia her household, but late Tklll'lday algbt, .
she asked President CllftiOII to withdraw ber aomlntl011. (AP)

Langsville rna~ he~d ..-.
in W~st Virginia·jail .-·-·.
•

•
•

JACK BURDE'IT

A Langsville man is being hCld
in the Putman County, W. Va. jail
in conjunction with the theft of
$80,000 in merchandise from
Jerry's Do-lt Centet in Wellston,
according to a spokesman at the.
Wellston Police Depnnent.
The depat biiiClll offJOCJ said that
James Bryant was IIJIIi'ehended in
Putnam County Tuesday. The
break-in and theft occurred on Dec.
28 .and the merchandise was l'IICOvered d]e following day in Madison,

I

••

· my was emerging from the previous recession.
Construction of new homes and
apartments•had topped 2 million
during much of the 1970s and
reached a 1980s peak of 1.81 million in 1986 before stirling an
annual decline as the economy
weakened and construction of
apartments outpaced demand in
many areas of the country.
In fact, single-family starts rose
22.6 percent in 1992, to 1.03 million uni~. while multi-family starts
. felll.3 percent, to 171,00units.
In December, single·family
starts jumped 3.1 percen~ 10 a 1.13
million annual rate, whife aputment construction moved up just
1.9 percent, to a 112 ()()() lllle.
Mortgage rates ~veraged . 8.21
percent in December.
··
Applications for building per,
mits, which some economisiS COD·
sider a barometer.of future accivity,
surged 7 ,P=ent m December, to i
1,21 milllOIT rate. For the year, per:
mits jumped 16.5 percent, to 1.U
million.
·

,,

'

W.Va..
:~ :
The FBI has taken over the e-.··· ·
the spokesman said. •
· .-:
In Meigs County Bryant w.,. :
earlier Indicted on a charae oC: • .
recelvina stolen propetl)!. Meili:'
County AssistiiDt Pro1ecator
Charles Knlght aid Friday ina that the iDdietmeot lliele wiD .
await proceedinga of tile cllll'llll ·
c~ in other ""tmin.
Bryant llso faces .c hars•• I•
. Gallia County.

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