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•

!P~•!ge~1!!2~-~llle~
. ~D~al~ly~Se~n~tl:neJ::__ __:.______~......,......,""'!"!!!!!!!!!!!~Po~meroy:;:-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, January 25, 1993

Disney's·newest 'land'
is ,a pie-in-the-face place
·
By LARRY GF:RBER
Associated Preil Writer
ANAHEIM, Calif. - The folks
at Disneyland won't be upset if
their biggest new at~tio.n !J1 20
years turns out to be a b1g pte tn the
face.
After all, it's Toontown. Nearly
two years in the making, the 3-acre
cartoon community opens Tuesday
with all the subtlety of a whoopee
cushion.
"Everything is a ga~," said
Dave Burkhart, the park s senior
show producer. ·
Inspired by Robert Zemeckis'
1988 movie "Who Framed Roger
Rabbit?" Toontown offers a handson tour without the movie's sinister

movies lilce "Steamboat Willie.''
The mouse's makeup for thai 1928
classic, you'll note mthe dressma
room, is black and white, of course.
Restrooms? They're in Goofy's
Gas Station, wheie rllh are iwim·
ming in those old-time gas pump!.
Visitors can also expect .autographs and pictures with Mickey
and the others.
·
"It's one giant phoio op," said
Joe Lanzisero, the. senior concept
designer. "Eye candy," Jlurkhart
called the collection of curvy
· "Toon Victorian" buildings.
There are rides, including a
cockamamie trolley with a big
windup key. A litUe roller coaster
opens Tuesday with the rest of
Toontown, but Roger Rabbit's Car
surrealism.
"You are the cartoon charac- Toon.Spin won't open until late
.. ' .
ter," Burkhart said. "You get to summer.
participate in all those cliches.''

A d

H

•

Mostly, it's a place to s!IOII and
look for surprises.
Executives wouldn't say how
much the new attraction cost;
althougb some published reports
put the price tag at $100 million.
It's the biggtst addition at the 37·'
year-old theme nark since ·"Bear
Counll)'" (now 'fCritter Country")
opened more than 20 years aao. ~
But they're quick to add thai the.
park didn't increase its ticket prices,
{$28.75 a day for adults.)
Toontown's scale fits the 10- .
year-old and under set, but
Burkhart expects to coair. som~ ,
adult smiles as well. He dived into
a pile of plastic Cliip 'n' Dale
acorns and wheedled a guest in!!~.
joining him.
,
".I've got to keep myself qualified, .. he slid

b

b

.d

u r.ey ep urn urze ;
We!~~~c~~·t~~~::.~ ·. in view of French Alps .~
G:rrs-~~=~::~:

What happens when you push that
.SCHOOL GROCERY - Third IJ'ade students
at WashinJIOn Park Demonstration School in
Cincinnati, shop recently in a mock grocery
store set up at their schooL But the store means
more than goodies for the children. They're

learning skills by stocking shelves, monitoring
aisles for shoplifters and ringing up purchases.
Materials for the projects by the J{roger Co. (AP
photo)

Children shop for groceries with
money earn~,d in the classroom
By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI ·- Doing well in
.class pays off at the checkout line
for pupils at an inner-city elementary school, where they can CMh in
credits for groceries at their own ·
supcnnarkeL
But the store means more than
goodies for the children. They're
learning skills by stocking shelves,
monitoring aisles for shoplifters
and ringing up purchases.
"They put a lot of work into
·· thintore," said Bonnie Dilbeck, a
Washington Park Demonstration
School employee who supervises
the store, "They really learn a lot
more than math and budget. They
learn how io wock together."
The store, provided by the
supermarket cham Kroger Co., has
been operating in an fanner classroom for 2 l/2 years. Edie Melieski, a spokeswoman for the Washington-based trade group Food
Marketing Institute, says it's
unique.
Kroger, a Cincinnati-based food
retailer operating in 38 states,
adopted Washington Parle School
in 1979 as a "partner in educa-

tion." The partnership helps the
school and allows Kroger II! polish
its image with ruture shOpperS and
their parents.
The store was modeled after a
similar Kroger store that has operated for six years in Stone Street
Elementary, an inner-city school in
Louisville, Ky. But the Louisville
store is opetated by adults, not children.
Judy Ball, Kroger's manager of
consumer affairs, would not say
what it costs Kroger to support the
school stores,
Pupils receive credits daily for
attendance, turning in homework,
being on time, completing class
work and good conduct. Bonus
credits also are available. Each
credit is counted as a penny tOward
a purchase, lll)d a pupil can earn a
maximum of 180 points a day. For
$1.80, a child could buy a bag of
potato chips and a can of pea'S.
The school store charges the
same prices as regular Kroger
supcnnarkets and stocks such items
as baby food, paper towels and
laundry detergent.
"It's supposed to be something
where they feel a sense of acco~

plishment where they feel that they
can help at home," said Principal
,· Helena Paul.
"We really hope they get a
good work ethic: How do I eart1
something, How long do I have to
work, and so on," she said.
A Kroger truck delivers stoclt to
the school on Mondays. Child volunteers take the goods up two
flights of stairs to the store. They
marie the prices during class time
on Tuesdays, and the store is open
on Wednesdays and Thursda)'s.
· Shopping generally is limited to
third throu$h sixth grades at the
school, wh1ch has 520 students.
First- and second-gnlders occaSionally work in the store as a reward
for good behavior or good work in
class.
,
Third-grader William Wri~ht. 9,
had his basket full as waited m line
to pay at the .egister.
Asked what he learns from the
store, he said: "Spending money
- and how to shop."
Parrish Ricks, also 9, has
learned what he must do to be
allowed to shop in the store.
"Be good in school, bring all
your homework, do your work on
11,...he said.
.

for the falling safe! Whew, ~at
was close.
·
. "You've got to understand the
• mythology," Burkhart explained
during a n:c:ent tour.
Mickey Mouse, it turns out, has
been living for years in this northern corner of Disneyland, just
behind Fantasyland. Fleeing the
Hollywood hubbub, he set up
mov1e studios in his barn · and
talked his friends into moving here.
So Minnie Mouse lives right
next door, You can lounge in her
living room and eaves~ on her
answerin~ machine. There s cheese
in the fndge: gouda and not-sogouda.
Minnie left the radio on, tuned
toWCKY . .
These folks didn't even hide the
diny laundry. A plumber's plunger
washing machine pounds a load of
Mickey's three-fingered gloves on
his back porch.
Guests get a tour of Mickey's
studios, look in on Mickey, Goofy
and Donald Duck in a projection
booth and see clips .of ~ickey

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items Social hour and trading session at 7
appear twO days before an event p.m. precede the 8 p.m. meeting.
and the day of that event. Items Refreshments. New members welmust be received weD in advance come.
to assure publication in the taleudar.
TUESDAY
TUPI&gt;ERS PLAINS • The
MONDAY
Orange Township Trustees will
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern hold an emergency meeting TuesLocal Ohio Association o( Public day at 8 J).m. at the home of the
Employees will meet in the Eastern cledc, Patty Calaway.
High School cafeteria at 7:30 p.m.
Monday.
RACINE - 'Ite former "Racine
Ruritans" will .have a meeting
. POMEROY - Graduation for the Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Belles and Beaus Square Dance Park. All members urged to attend.
CI\Jb wiU be Monday at the Senior New members welcome. RefreshCitizens Center in Pomeroy. A ments will be served.
poduck dinner wiU be held at 6:30
p.m. with dance at 7:30 p.m. The
SALEM CENTER - The Salem
dance is open to all western style Township Trustees will meet Tuesdancers. Wear square dance attire.
day at 6 p.m. at the Salem Fire
House.
MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club will meet Monday at
POMEROY - Rabbit sub-comBurkett Barber Shop in Middlepon.

••

BY ALEXANDER (J.I:IIGGINS
Associated Press Writer
TOLOCHENAZ, Switzerland
- Audrey Hepburn was buried
Sunday after a church service that
paid tribute to the love she inspired
in her fallS ~d her devotion to the
world's children. . ,
.
"Audrey Hepbum .was a star m
the real sense of the word," said
Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan, former U.N. high commissioner for
refugees, who· gave the eulogy.
"Everrone in the audience fell m
love w1th her."
About 120 friends and family
members attended the Protestant
service in the Lake Geneva village
that Hepburn adopted as her home
in 1966. Another 500 people, mostly admirers from the area, gathered
outside the church and listened to
the service on loudspeakers.
·
Sadruddin noted that Hepburn
had chosen to "dedicate herself to
humanity" by becoming a gOodwill ambassador for the United
Nations Children's Fund, visiting

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP)Former British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher will receive an
honorary degree next month at
Louisiana State University.
LSU alumnus and benefactor
Lodriclc Coole, chief executive officer of Adantic Richfield Co., invited Mrs. Thatcher o'n behalf of the
university, officials ~d.
The Feb. 8 visit will include an
address by Mrs. TI~atcher at a ceremony that will be open to the public. School officials approved the
honor on Friday.
Coole. a friend of Thatcher, also
was instrumental in getting former
President Reagan to visit LSU in
1990. In recent months, LSU has
been visited by former President
Bush and his wife, Barbara; former
President Ford, and then-presidential candidate Bill Clinton.

SALE

·Cherry Fillish,
bcelle.. Quality.
POSTER lED
TRIPLE DRESSER,
PEDIMENT

POMEROY - The final public
hearinj! on Pomeroy's downtown
revitalization will be Tuesday at 7
p.m. in the auditorium at Pomeroy
Village Hall·

MIIIO~S

DUWEI HEST,
IIIHT STAIID

WEDNESDAY
LETART - There will be a
meeting of Letart Elementary PTO
on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Letart
Elementary for all Portland and
Letart parents regarding the consolidation.

·•ONLY
••• $1,999
I TO

"'"'

$999

RACINE
southern Local
School Board wiU meet Wednesday at 7p.m. at the high school.
POMEROY - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at I p.m . at the home of Doris
Grueser.

WASHER

41• REMOTE
PIOJECTIOI COLOR TV .
.Sale $1,749 ·

Gerard Schwarz of the Seattle
Symphony will replace him at concerts Thursday, Friday, Saturday
and Feb. 2.
Muti, the orchestra's laureaie
CINCINNATI (AP) - New
York Gov. Mario Cuomo told a conductor and former musi.c direc· .
Jewish group that ethnic fighting in tor, was expected to return Feb. S.
Europe reinforces the need for conThe program.for the four perfortinued strong U.S . support for mances features the world premiere
Israel.
of "Canti deii'Eclissi" by composCuomo was the keynote speaker er-in-residence Bernard Rands ~d
Saturday at a dinner observing this with bass soloist Thomas Paul.
Schwarz is music director at
year's fund-raising campai!!" for·
the Jewish Federation of Culcin- Seattle and at the New Yark Chamnati'.
ber Symphony and the Lincoln
In a time when "ethnic cleans- Center's Mosdy Mozart Festival.

C~n~tru

HESSE~

11

MIUO:;,c ST,
HIDI AID,
IITESTAIID
AU. FOA
ONLY

$444
5

Reg. 639

SAVE '195

DRYER

SPRING AIR
BEST REST

8809..·

5

la. PL

$108 Fll EL Pt.
$299GHeiS.t

Garllia stable,
Meigs rate up

SOFA
SALE
H!ll• •lectioa
of co•try•••
coate~nry

atyloi. Tlio .
latelt faltrica
••• colon
HIGH ·
QUIUTY••••
LOW ,IICESI "

sibility of creating an economic
development office in the county.
According to Ondy Oliveri, Meigs
County Extension Agent, such a.
venture could be cost-shared with
the Ohio Stato University Extension Service. Oliveri stated such
situations exist within other counties. Under such a situation the economic development director would
work under the direction of the
extension office. Thacker and Oliveri will investigate that possibility.
Other officers elected for the
commission are: John Lentes, president; Jon Jacobs, rmt vice p.esident; Don Poole, second vice-president; Joyce Bowen, secretary; and ·
Howard Frank, treasurer.
Assisted Uvlll!l fac~ty
Ray and Patty Pickens, of the
Chester area, llttended the meeting
to gain input and support from the
commission in developing a state
.egulated assisted living facility for
Meigs County.
The Pickens' have been talking
with The Jerry McClain Company,
Inc., to gain information about
bringing such a facility to the county. The McClain Company con:
struc:ted a similar facility, The Inn
at Sharon Brooke, approximately
six yearngo frOin the &lt;k'.1ign Sllge ·.
through construction. .
.
The facility, according to Pickens, would l?rovide care for the
older generation in an apartmental
living situation with restaurant
facility - "a community within a
comll)unity." Mrs. Pickens stated
the facility could employ as many
as 40 full-time employees.
Mr. ancl ~rs. Pickens slated
they now are looking for sites in
the count)'. A.levellot with at least
five to SIX acres is neede4.· They
Continued on page 3

By THOMAS J; SHEERAN •· •
Associated ·Press Writer
CLEVELAND - Declines in
high-paying manufacturing jobs
and average hourly wages over the
past decade have pushed Ohio' s
poverty rate to a record l S.4 pcrCCI!t. an anti-poverty agency reported.
Most jobs created since 1983
have been lower-paying service
posltions, the Council for EconomIC OpportUnities in Greater Cleveland said in its annual statewide
poverty report Monday.

secretary. Not pictured Is 'Don Poole, second
vice·presldent. These omcers were elected at
Monday's regular meeting of the planning commission.
·
•

Mrs. Clinton gets an assignment
options and make tough choices
and that's hard to do at a highpolitical level,'' said, especially
since any health ·
plan is
lilcel&gt;:. to hurt
peopl~ - cut-

Ling benefits and. mcreaslng costs
for some, raising deductibles, limiting Medicare payments, reducing
doctors' incomes.

The council's county-by-county
list showed the percentage of
pOverty in Gallia County was the
same in 1992 as it was in the previous year at23.7. In Meigs County,
the rate increased four-tenths of a
percent from 27.6 in 1991 to 28 in

1992

.MiddleportSears catalog
store among those to close
The Middlepon Sears catalog and two part-time delivery persons
store will be closed along with over in the Middleport store.
.
2,000 others in the country, accord·
A Sears catalog store has been
ing to word which Bill Haptonstall, operated in Meigs County for more
operator, receiVed from Sears, Roe- than 30 years. Lou Osborn had a
buck and Co. Mcnday.
·
catalog store in Pomeroy for 17
Haptonstall said he received a years and Jack and Judy Williams
telegram from the company advis- operated one for two years, When
ing him of the
It said that Greg Gibbs took over in 1981 he
he will be advised w1thin 4S days built the building in Middlepon.
of the actual closing date but that it H~J)tonstall bought the business
from.him in 198S.
wiU occur before the end of 19S J .
Meanwhile, he said, business
As for service on products
bought from Sears, that will not be
wiU continuo as usual. .
Haptonstall said that the local affected by the closing, Haptonstall
store has had a good continuing said, because servicemen come
business over the yean and the best from the Huntington and Parkers·
Christmas in years. He said thai he burg retail store,s. .
Hap~onstall said that while he
knew changes and revisions were
coming but that he had no idea that waits for word on the closing date,
catalog stores which were prof- he will work toward getting the
,building leased or putting so~e ·
itable would be closed.
The clo•ing will eliminate the new business in it
jobs of four full-time employees

Prices start
AtOnl~

$299

closin,.

20 Styles
of Carpet

ot old

SERTA
SERTAPEDIC

51190ri.

lo.Pc.

$169 f•l Ea. Pt.
$399"'-S.t

AND
SPRING AIR
ULTRA PLUSH
JUMBO
'239Twll S.t
5

369 F. Ei. Pc.
439 Galli Set

5

METAL

STOUGE
CABINETS
c•iaaC..iHII
. Wanlrollea • Utlity

c.w......... c.w••••

20%oFF
•

.&lt;/.'

I
J

.

· Average hourly wages declined
11 pen:ent between 1979 and 1992, ·
the council said.
While the number of those living in poverty increased during the
period, the middle-class also was
affected, the council said. Ohio's
median income - meaning hair
made more, half less - dropped
5.3 percent during the 1980s.
.

Prlcee Include

MATTRESS SALE

PHR.ADELPHIA (AP) - Conductor Riccardo Muti canceled
appearances with the Philsdelphia
Orchestra this week because of the
flu.

. -slur4IJ.

Blakeslee. Blakeslee has stated he
will remAin on the commission as a
volun•like other members of the
commission.
Lentes stressed the election of
·Thacker will in no way combine
the chamber and the planning commission. It only allows Thacker
access to ~e . commission's budget
for cconom1c development purposes.
.
Ernie Sisson discussed the pos·

WHIRLPOOL
FLOOR
LAUNDRY SPECIAL COVERING
SUPER
SUPER
SALE
CIPICifv
CAPACITY

•

tng" is used as a justification for
civil war in Bosnia and elsewhere,
U.S. support for Israel cannoi
waver, Cuomo said.
"In such a .world we must cling
to one another, the United States
and Israel," he said.
The Clinton administration wiU
strengthen ties between the United
States and Israel, he said.
"A close relationship between
Israel and America should be
regarded as a moral imperative for
both nations," Cuomo said.

Ferrer and her other son, 22-:year-old Luca Dotti, then led the •
pallbearers in carrying her oak coffin ,to the nearby cemetery, juSt a.
few hundred yards from her home.:
A plain wooden cross served as a
temporary grave marker in the.
cemetery, which looks across the
village and lake to snow-capped·.
Mont Blanc in the French AlpS.
;

Tbaclw takes over the position

mittee meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
the Meigs County Extension
Office, Pomeroy.

1 Section, 10 P-• 25 cento
A Jlulllmecllo Inc. Nfttpopof

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Tuesday, January 26, 1993

Number of poor in Ohiohits record 15.4%

from long-time director Charles

---People in the news-.- CAR,MEL, calif. (AP) - Syndicaled humor columnist Erma
Dombeck treated herself to a $1.5
million vacation home to be closer
to the water, but she got more than
she bargained for during her first
~Y there.
··
" It rained the entire time I was
here," Dombeck said. "Northern
California owes me a big one
because wherever I go, I end the
drought."
Bombeclc, 65, is known for her
newspaper columns and books. She
also 1s a survivor of breast cancer
and has spoken frequently about
lier experience with the disease.
She and her husband, William,
live most of the year in Arizona.
They fell in love with the Monterey
County coast while visiting in the.
esrly 1980s. Their vacation home is
about 10 milei south of Cannel on
the road to Big Sur.
• "I lovt the smell, the feel, the
excitement of the ocean,"
Dombeck said. "I've been landbound all my life, first in Ohio,
then the desen,.ahout as far away
from water you can get."
'Dombeck sai4 she used 10 motivate herself to work by thinking of
coolcies as a reward. Now, she said,
"going to Carnie! will be the
incentive.''

Vol. 43, No. 183

. Copyrlg!lted 1883

By JU~ E. DILLON
Sentinel Nem Staff
Paula Thacker, Meigs County's
economic development director;
has been elected executive director
of the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission. That action
was taken at the regu18r meeting of
the commission on Monday afternoon.
John Lentes, president of the
commission, stated the election of
Thacker to the position of executive director would allow her
access to the budget of the commission for purpo~es of economic
development. Lentes stated economic development has been the
main focus of the planning commission and he feels this move
would help alleviate a financial
·problem that now exists within the
economic development departmeni
of the Meigs County Chamber of
ComlJlelce·
·
·
Tlie motion was supported by
all p{e!Cnt with the exception of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
· who opposed the move. Meigs
County Commissioner Janet
Howard state4 the regional plannil)&amp; commission could berlefit by

Sean Ferrer, Hepburn's 32-yearold son, said: "She ·believed love
could heal, fix, mend and mak~
everthin!l fine and good in the endt
And it did. She left us with peace,,
serenity, and her passage was·
almost devoid of any pain."
~

Pertly dDIIdJioDJabt. l.mr In
mld-2Go. Wednetday, ciOII!Iy.
Hflb Ia low 401.

•

Thacker
to
head
•
planning commission

pOOr, sick and starving children to.
call attention to their plight
·
"When she went out to the
refugee camps. to the squalor of the
tents, the mud hovels, think of what
she brought to these children," he
said. "She reached out to them'
witb her smile, with her hands,.•
wilh her heart"

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�Tuesday, January 26, 1993

Commentary

MICH.

•

Consider a picture· of another ration week, as a gift to the new saw that, . in too ·many realms, know it," culling able-bodied wel· Inauguration Day. It is Jan. 20, but president, before tlie partisanship mindless govc:nunent was screwing fare recipients frOm the rolls after :
to remember what it up, mindlessly eroding self· two years. That radical reform .
. · the year is 1997. The crowd assem- s1ar1s, we •
Clinton
JliOOiised,
and to what stan· · reliance and self-discipline, mind- could change the culaue. ·
DJ:VOTZD TO TBB Dn'BKBST8 OP '11111: IIBJGS-IIASON .AREA.
bles at the Capitol. The band P!afS·
Liberals, and their interest :
Then there is a stillness. The chief
lessly ~couraging sloth, dependen·
are already chipping away
groups,
cy
and
criminality.
Liberals
have
justice moves forward ..He is joined
•
at
the
professed
Clinton _ideas. At
problems
with
all
those
views.
by the man he will swear in.
her
confmnation·
hearings Donna .
Clinton believes in government.
The man raises his hand and
Shalala,
the
secretary-designate
for
He iNiicated that what government
intones: "1, Jack Kemp, do dards may he be fairly beld.
Health
and
.
Human
Services
, :
solemnly swear ..." Or, alternativeROBERT L l.VINGE'IT
Clinton said he would restart the caused, government could cure.
a
length)'
opening
slate'
offered
ly, it might be "I, Dick Cheney, do economy and reduce the deficit. And so, Clinton promised 10 restore
Publisher
ment.
Sen.
Dame!
P.
Moynihan
·
solemnly swear ... " Or maybe it's The economy has self-star1ed. My a "personal tcsponsibilitf' stan·
.
not a man: "I, Jeane Killqlatrick, guess is that we 'II make some dard. This meant, he satd, "No noted wid! displeasure that only a ,
CHARLENE HOEFLICH . do
PATWBUEHEAD
solemnly swear ..." Or try Dan progress on the deficit, and that's M!Jre SOmething for Nothing." He single sentence dealt with Clinton·
General Manager
Assistant Publisher/Controller
. Quayle, Bob Dole,.Phil Gramm, good.
said our public programs should be style welfate ref~rm. and be said he
Dick Lugar, Bill Weld, Pat Robert·
•
Clinton said he would reform based on "reciprocity;" That heard "the clatter of ca01paign
LETI'BRS OP OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
. son, Pal Buchanan or Pete Du PonL health care. That's a tough nut, but meant "re-invc:nting govemmenL" ·promises being tossed out the winwords. All !etten are subject to editing and must be signed with name, . Or Ross Perot.
I guess that we will end up with In short, he promised to change the dow.''
ldillus and telepbone number. No unsianed letton will be publisbed. Letters
Moynihan noted chat the Chil·
culture of government. That, in
Could this bappen? How could some progress.
sbould be in good taste, odc!Jessing issues, not personalities.
dren's
Defense Fund, which both
this happen?
!urn,
could
help
revalue
America,
Chnton said he would try to
'
.....
Shalala and Hillary Clinton previIt could happen. After all, the intensely promote glObal democra· which is just what we need.
·campaign theme of 1996' is already cy. That's a great task, the best shot
He dido't just offer abstractions. ously chaired, had histoncally
set: "Bill Clinton said he was a for peace in our lime, worth teSting, The~ were specifics regarding opposed such welfare refoons. ·sen.
Different Democrat, but he didn't bu~ perllaps bard to measure politi- education, criminal justice, and •. JOlin Rockefeller said, "I am pickdeliver.••
.
call •
most intportandy, wellilre. He said ing up rumors .,.. from the ChilOf course, Republicans will
Clinton ~ised more. To his wellilre was the worst abuse of the dren's Defense Fund ... that welfare
make such a claim whether or not credit, he divined the ccnbal prob- something-for-nothing standard. reform is going to be put on a back
Clinton delivers. So, in this inatlgu- lem in American public life. He He pledged to "end welfare as we burnet.''
This son,of battle between spe·
By ROBERT E. MILLER
cial interest liberals and the rroAs\!Odllted¥ml Writer
.
fessed Clinton program wil be
COLUMBUS - Ohio lawmakers have been told they may be in for
repeated a hundred times in the
the second of a one-two punch from volcrS who believe special-interest '
years to come.
money influences elections and laws that get passed.
·
Will Clinton deliver on his
House Republicans sounded the warning last wedt althoogh both parYOU~
promises? Or will he fold, and lose
ties are working on camllflign finance reforms that they hcpe will ~RCiude
in 1996, pensively watching a sucanother swewide initiative.
cessor sworn in?
Oli Nov. 3, Ohioans adopted overwhelmingly a citizen-initiated law
. Our politics work in strange
that bypassed the Legislalure llld limited the lel1IIS of senaton and House
ways. Supponm of Clinton's ideas
members to no I1ICR than eight cooseculive years.
can best SIP.J!Orl chem by publicly
Now, some citizen-oriented groups, such as Common CauseOhio and
the Citizens League of Grrarer Cleveland, are discussing a bllllot issue to
opposing Clinton, with vigor and
heat, if and when he backs off. A
curb campaign contributions, strengthen disclosures and make other
Democratic senator says
prominent
changes dW \Jave been debaled- but. not.JIISsed- f~r years.
·
Janet Lewis; Common Cause's Ohio director, says the lime may have
doing that would be doing Clinton
come for citizens to "harness the anger" that mandated ~tm~limits to put
••a great service. •'
some Ieeth into the campaign f1D811Ce laws.
Millions of Americans, many of
But Ms. Lewis and others have announced no plans to circulate ballot
them s&lt;Kalled Reagan Democrats,
petitions - a long and cosdy J'l:l'CCSS - and are hopeful that the tam·
repaired to the Clinton banner ·
limits law will presswe the Legislature to act on its own.
because IIIey believed in what he
, House ~oriJ;y Leader JoAnn Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg. who· is
said But if he doesn't deliver, they
cosponsoring a refoon measure, said the Legislature should get busy or
will not be crestfallen ,if he doesn't
expect to be pre-empted by vor.ets.
.
.·
have a second inauguration.
. "The message out theie is loud and clear," she said
Ben Watteaberg, a senior
·she said she.hopes Legislaaue willacL
low at the American Enterprise
"Frankly, I think the Legislaaue has the responsibility," she said
Iastitute, Is author nf "Tbe First
Mn. Davidson has a bill that sets a $500 limit on individual contribuUniversal Nation," published by
tions, requires candidates to list the employers of contributors and manThe Free Press and a writer ror
dates more frequent disclosures wid! the secrelary of state.
Newspaper Enterprise Associa·
Currendy, tfiere are no limits on contributions.
tionM
·
House Democrats are also aware of a possible ballot issue; Rep.
Katherine Walsh, D- Vennilion, introduced a ref~rm measure two weeks
ago with·some {If the same reforms that the Republicans have ·proposed.
Her bill is House Bill!, the number usually assigned the top House priotiOur new president needs more cally egregious) had been named would Democrats be saymg if Ed because health costs were soaring
ty.
than
empty good wishes. So, as a commerce secretary after: (1) serv- Meese, just before becominll attor- out ~f control and 34 million
'The Democratic House and the Senate, controlled by Re~blicans,
good
luck gift, I hereby bestow ing as a partner of a huge law firm ney general, had hired illegal immi- Amencans were uninsured. But his
paSsed separate versions of a bill last year. But bolh died in a JOint com~n
President
Clinton my favorite representing many corporate inrer- grants - violating im!lligration polis and his .pols told him all solu- .
miuee in a dispute over several issues that still loom as majoc stwnbling
yardstick
and
rulebook
-they're
law - and fail~d to withho1d lions would require sacrifice and ·
. blocks:
.
.
all he'll need to make every tough
Schrnm·. Social Security for them? And tough choices. So Bush's chief of
Republicans want to prohibit unions from using membership dues to
decision.
lt'.ll
•...
what if Ronald Reagan bad known staff, John Sununu,told Health and
make contributions, over the objections of Democrats who usually gei die
For
all
ethics
decisions,
he
of
it, but appointed him anyway to Human Services Secretary Louis
money.
the GOP argues that Democrats benefit unfairly because Republican- needs only lo measure each new ests that just 'd him 1 million in this job thlt supervises the immi- Sulil.van to study health forever,
controversy against my carefully ·saying gooJ::e, and (2) he had gralion service?
but propose no program until late
oriented employm are banned from contributinJ corporate money.
calibrated~
M~g
Slick.
vowed
only
to
recuse
himself
for
Ans.wer:
~emocrats
w_ould
be
in the '92 campair.. when theY,'d
Democrats brush aside the GOP claims. saymg that employees of corFor
all
pohcy
decasaons,
he
one
year
_
only
on
decisions
opposmg
hts
confirmation
and
offer
aJ'ew generali!Jes and pnxmsporations can give through political action committees and that union
needs
.
o
nly
to
learn,
'
P
J
heart,
the
affecting
six
ftrms
he
personally
blasting
the
rich-man's-insensilivies.
But
suddenly Bush's pal Dick
members need to pool money to have any clouL
lessons of The Bnok o Bush Deci· represented _ and declined 10 ty to ethics.
ThorJlburgh lost a Pennsylvania
sions.
reCuse himself 00 rulings affecting
I knew and admired Clinton's senate race because he had no
Here's how each is best used. his fmn's other clients? And what allorney general;designate, Zoe health care solution- and the
.
First, the ethics controversies. For if Meese had OKed corponde lob- Baird, when she was a young, very t Bush team panicked and rushed out
years, I've applied one siinple test byists kicking in $10,000 each to bright Correr White House deputy J&gt;a chin policy paper.
10 e~ry conttoversy over ethics honor him at 1 Kennedy Center counsel; so I chought her appointElUIIIIple: China Policy. Princisimply
hold
the
issue
up
against
my
shindig?.
menl
was
terrific.
Now
the
Meese
pic
called for stern rebukes artd
appreciate
everything
that
was
Being able to participate in the
Meese
Measuring
Stick
and
ask:
Answer:
Democrats
.would
be
MeasiR'ing
Slick
reveals
hard
nulhs
sanctions
against the regime that
Lord Maror of Westminister's done 10 make my trip to London,
"If
Ed
Meese
had
done
that,
what
screaming
for
Meese's
scalp.
So,
about
double
standards.
slaughtered
protesters, but China's
New Year s Day parade as a result England possible.
would
the
Democrats
be
saying
Clinton
should
be
discipling
Brown
Turning
now
to
the
tough
policy
markets
beckoned,
so Bush's man
Tamara Hayman
of cheerleading, was something I'll
about
it?"
even
as
we
spealc.
True,
Clinton's
decisions,
Clinton
will
find
them
wound
up
toasting
"our friends"
UCA All-Star Cheerleader
never forget. It was a once-in-aConsider
Commerce
Secretaryadvisers
belaledly
forced
Brown
to
manageable
prObably
downright
(the
butcheJS).
Southern High School
lifetime opjlonunity for me and one
Perhaps you detect a paiiCm. On
which would not have been possiRll:ine, Ohio designate Ron Brown. He's a man cancel his godswful gala. But he easy - if he just lakes the time
.I've
always
lilced
and
respeciCd
should
foace
Brown
to
taire
sweepfirst
to
learn
the
lessons
of
The
health
care, China, the deficit,
ble without help from others. I
which might cloud my jud~ment. ing recusals, or simply taire another Book of Bush Decisions.
taxes and all ethics crises, AmenSo I'd simply hold Browns case job-one llwdoes notreekofthe
Example: the Health Care Cri- cans want their president to use but
up 10 my trusty Meese Measuring politics as usual .that clinton sis. Bush made his crucial decision one yardstick: Principles . II is
• Let's wake up and smellche cof- Icids get to hunt one day dtlring our Slick.
promised he'd avoid
.
.
early- on the basis of politics and every president's key 10 grratness.
fee.
deer gun season but we all pay the
Then I'd ask: What would
So too Clinton should hold the polls, with total disregard of princiMartin Scbram Is II!Ddlcated .
We live in a lime that govern- same price for a license.
Democrats be saying today if Ed Meese Measuring Stick against pie. As a matter of pripciple, he writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
ment and religion are sepan~ted. To
Hopefully by now you can see Meese (personal!&gt;: gracious, politi- anocher ethics controversy: What knew he ought to act quickly ABsodatlon.
•
.
.
.
many, hunting is relaxation, not this is not an issue to in any way
work. Our kids aren't even allowed make church people compromise
to read the Bible or pray in our their beliefs. It is to promote huntschools, the sale of alcohol is per- ing which is an American Heritsge.
mitted on Sundays, and many peo- Sunday hunting is allow¢ in sevAs I write these words, Bill pomj,ous jed: named Spiro Agnew
George Bush was the third. same, and IIIey howled that he was ·
ple are forced 10 work on Sundays. eral states and even in Ohio hunt· Clinton has just Iaten the oath of on them and the Nixon years got
When
he told us in his inauguration a hypocrite. And I thought, theri: 's
Tile list goes on and on. If laws ing coyotes and groundhogs on offace as the 42nd president of the ui!IY fasL He was one of the sore
speech
that he would pursue a nothing hypocritical about it. A
weie dictated by scripaue on Sun- Sunday is permitted. ·
United States, and I am wracked disappointments.
btparlisan
agenda and strive to end quarter-million Haitians would
day there would be no law offtcers
Frienda and fellow hunters, lei with feelings of anxiety and disquithe
divisiveness
of the Reagan sl'end Inauguration Day on the
to enforce laws or doctors 10 help us d.oin together on this issue so it etude and maybe even a touch of
on
and even wrote htj!h seas if he hadn 'I said some- '
years,
I
signed
the sick, even the Sunday paper wi become a law. Let's do this for skepticism blrdering on cynicism.
columns
chastising
his crit·
several
thmg.
would be history, there would be the working man and the kids.
I suspect I am not the only one.
ics.
Then
came
the
Tiananmca
Bill Clinton's choice for A1!9f·
no businesses open at all.
Think about this. Kids that hunt
Six men have been sw1111 in as
Square massacre and Bush's ney General, Zoe Baird, has con· Enough about religion. All we and fish don't grow up to mug old chief executives since I came to
Another was Jimmy Carrer, the refusal to censure the ChinesC dic- fessed to hirjnl! rwo illegal immiare asking for is hunting on Sunday ladies.
Washington
as
a
journalist.
Six
humble
peanut farmer who canied tators; and the flag-burning crisis
so we have something to do on
Plans are bein' made for a pub- times !have swelled with optimism his own Iu!!gage, paraded down and Bush's insistence that the Con- graniS to work m her home; she has
paid a fine and said she is sorry.
Sunday afternoons besides watch- lic meeting on lilts and pther hunt- . as I wimessed a politician utter a Pennsylvanl8 Avenue on foot and
stitution had to be amended to foil But critics like Rep. Newt Gin·
ing bQII games.
ing issues. Watch this paper for 3S-word pledge and become The told liS he loved us. I believed bim the torchers. When he hauled the
grich, R-Oa., the human Wedge
This seven day a week hunting time and date. Please try to anend. President.
Six times I have been for a while -until the Ben Lance press to the Iwo Jima Memorial for. Issue, wori'tlet it go and I feel like
law would benefit a lot of people We need your support. ·
!Jisappointed, thrice sorely so, and.I mess. Then came double-digit a photo-op, this Curmudgeon shouting, "Where the hell is your
thai otherwise would not get to
Marlin.Wolfe, am not eager to repeat the cxpen- inflation and the hostage crisis and jumped off the train. .
perspective? Don't you remember
hunt but one day a week or none.
DamY. Dalton, ence.
worst
of
all
the
JIOIIOUliCCillent
that
Now
comes
Clinton,
the
man
Ed Meese, the attorney general
Lots of people work six days a
Thomas E. Wilson, Sr.,
I remember hopin,K. in January the American people had an atli- .from Hope no leis, fresh off a fourweek because they have to. School
Pomeroy 1969, that maybe Rtchard Nixon tude problem, anjl the metamor- day inaugural blowout that cele- who lhQughl echics were members
of minority groups who ate spicy ·
had chanj~ed, and I resented his phosis from president to self-righ- brated reunion in America, and I food?
havin~ the same thoughts~·
m_an..;.
, y_c_riu_c_s._Th_en_he_._nieas_hed_a_teo
_ us_twerJl
__
was_com_p_le_te_~_ _ am
So you see, I am
cxc:usI am feeling hopeful. And aruuous. es for Bill Clinton. Here I stt, along
And resentful of the naysayers who with millions of other Americans,
wouldn't wait until he was sworn hoping that he will vanquish the
In
1911,
the
Richard
Suauss
opera
'
'Der
Rosenkavalier"
premiered
in
:
By Tbe Associated Press
•
in
before they started berating him.
Dresden,
Germany.
·
deficit, repair the economy, mend
.: ~oday is Tuesday, Jan. 26, the 26th day of 1993. There are 339 days
Bill and Hillary Clinton decided the health care system, heal racial
left m the year.
In 1942, the ftrSI American expeditionary force to go to Europe during
they would cnroD their daughter in divisions, fix the roads and ,be a
· • Today's Highlight in History:
World Warn went ashore in Northern Ireland.
a
private school, and .they leadCr.
In
1950,
India
officially
proclaimed
itself
a
republic
as
Rajendra
: ,On Jan .. 1(&gt;. 17g8, Ill~ fust European seulers in Australia, led by CapL
screamed.
And I found myself. sayPrasad
took
the
oadl
of
offtce
as
presidenL
·
·
Above all, I am hoping the man
Alth':l" Phillip, landed m present-day Sydney. (The pany included 700
Ing,
"For
heaven's
sake,
these will be a leader: I bope he will be
CQIIVICIS from England.) ·
In 1~2,. ~ United Scates launched the "Ranger m" spacecraft to
~·On this dale:
.
land sc~enllfic IIISIIUillCnts on the moon - but the probe missed its wget ~Ie a lnak. The public ~hoc}ls willing to change his mind when he
by
some 22,000 miles.
·
m Washington are a scandal and is wrong. I hope he will have the :
' In l !84, in a .letter II! his daughter, Benjamin franklin expressed
In
1979,
former
Vice
President
Nelson
A.
Rockefeller
died
in
New
WJhappiness over the choice of the eagle as the symbol of America and
security for Chelsea would be a courage to make unpopular dec!- ·
York at age 70,
·
·
e~ his own preference: the turli:ey.
·
'
nighllllare. It simply is not worth sions. I hcpe he will say to himself, · :
Ten years ago: PIUI "Bear" Bryant, one of the wimingesl coaches in
sacrificing this yQung woman's "For the next four years I am ·
.If! 1802, Con~ PIISSed an act calling for a library to be established
withtn the u.s. c;apitol.
college football hisrory, died in Tuscaloosa, Ala., at age f/J.
education · to mate a political going to fcngo polilicldng and do
Five yean ago: Aultralians celebrated the 200ih llllliveuay of their
what I think Is right and proper."
1837, MichiPn became che 26th state with the signing of a statepoint''
h&lt;pl bill by Preside111 Andrew Jackson.
~ountry as a grand parade of rail ships sailed in Sydney Habot, re-enactBill Clinton, who during the
Do It, Bill. We have had enough :
.
mg the voyage of the first EIKiliJCIIII settlen. The Andlew L~d Webber campaign had castiaated Bush for of sore disappointments.
~1n 1841, Britain formally occupied Hong Kong which the Chinese &lt;"·
ceiled 10 die British.
'
nan
musical "PhBntom of the Opera" opened at Broadway's Maplic The-· returning Hai~ relUJeeB to their
Josepb Jpear ill I IJDdlcated · i
ater.
·
..,.
·
; In 1861, Louisiana seceded from die Union.
island nation; announced he had writer for Newspaper Enterprise &lt;' •
·
·
•In 1870, Virginia rejoined the Union.
changed his miNI and would do che i\~atlon.

..

•• •

111 Court Street
. Pomeroy, Oblo

..
...

·-

, IToledo I 34• I
•••••
••

mnvieubis~llldtbeiQih.

~t

W. VI!..

-

Weather

Extended forecllsl:

----·Area,deaths
Nellie Nelson

ness.

•-'arn·n

s

forthe~ny.

Accordtng to the Mr. and Mn.
Piclrens, if interest in the project is
sincere The McClain Company
would pay for a market feasibility
stully tn the amount of approximatcly $7 ,r;qJ.
Mr. and Mrs. Pickens stated
· such a facility would be a tn:mendous asset to this community. Mrs.
Pickens said the faciliry could put
money· bact into the canmunity as
iq residents are not confiDed to the
facility: They will be able to lnlvel
and shop in the community because
they ·are self-maintained.
Leutes Slated the planning commission will do whale~ it can to
support the projecL
Capital Corridor
Thacker repOrted on the slltUS
of the Route 33 Capital' Comdor.
She and several other members .of
the highway sub-committee have
been attending meetin~ reganling
the maller. The c~rnmauee is now
in the process of checking into
ways to speed up the projecL The
commillee will be traveling to
Columbus to meet with Ohio

!racJ.

Sunday hunting

With hope, a dose of skepticism
·Joseph Spear

•

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Ohio New ~~ AMocladoa. Nat4mat
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The Daily Sentinel ·

l'llbli-

84, fQnller MSidenl of Buck Ridge
Road, Bidwell, died Tueaday, Jan.
26, 1993, at Pinecleat Care Center.
She was birD Fel). 29, 1908, at
Point Pleasant, daughter of the !ale
Alexandria and Msrtha (Barbera)
Peck.
She was a retired employee of
Lakin State Hospital, and she also
worked for the railroad. She was a
member of the Methodist Oiurch,
Point PieasanL
Survivon include one brother,
Chester Peck of Columbus; aitd
one sister-in-law, Nina Minnis of
Bidwell
·
She was J!TCCeded in death by
her husband, Samuel Williams.
Services will be held 1 p.m. Friday It Waugh-Halley-Wood Puntz.
al Home, with the Rev. Calvin
Minnis offiCiating. Burial will be in
Pine Street Cemetely.
Friends may call ·a t the funeral
home an Thuraday from 7-9 p.m.

Coatinued from page 1

also stated~ah ideal situation would
have access to sewage and water

Will never forget event

'

Emma .Mae (Peck) Williams,

Th acker..••

Letters
to the editor
.

'

Emma M. Williams

Born Jan. 18, 1914 in Kyger,
she was a daughter of the late John
and Laura Searles Wildman. She
was a homemaker.
She is survived by a son, Johnny
Nelson, Middleport, with whom
· she resided; a daught« and son-in- ·
law, Juanita and Eugene Reeves,
.Pomeroy; a brocher, James .Wild·
man, Lake City, Tenn.; a sister,
Emma Searls, Middlepon; seven
grandchildren; 12 greal·gnndcltil·
dren; and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband,
· Marion Nelson in 1984; 1 brother,
BiUy Wildmiln; and a sister, Norma
Dean.
·
Services will be Thur8day It 11
a.m. at the Birchfield Funeral
Home in Rutlaftd with Putor Paul
Taylor otTICiatinJ. Burial will be in •
Miles Cemetery m Rutland.
Friends may call at the funeral

Dear Mr. President:_Be principled

:1n

home on Wednesday from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9 pJ11.

Nellie M. Nelson, 79, Mill
Street, Middleport, died Monday,
Jan. 25, 1993 at Veterans Memorial
Hospital follow~ an extended ill·

reJ.

pvc

Tburaday lhroagb Sllhlrday:
Thursday, fair. Lows 20-25.
Highs in the mid-30s 10 low 40s.
Friday and Saturday, fair. Lows in
the mid te upper 20s. Highs in the
.mid-30s to mid-4111.

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, pardy cloudy. Low in
the mid-20s. WCijnesday, clwtly in
the morning and ·partly cloudy in
the afternoon. Higfr'in the low 40s.

AND GIVE YOURSELF UP.

malcin'

northeast Ohio later tonight and
into Wednesday. Lows tonig~t will
be in the 20's and highs Wednesday should be in the mid 30s to mid

40s.

\

·

Sties were clear with light
winds across the state overnight.
.Tempetatures tumbled well down
into the 20s and teens,by daybreak.
The IMlCd high temperature for
Ibis date It the Columbus weather
station was 70 degrees _in 1950.
The record low was 9 degrees
below zero in 1948. Stmset toni~ht
will be at 5:44 p:m. Sunnse
Wednesday wiD be at 7:44am.
Around the nation
Skies were clear over much of
the country early today. Rain fell
again across much of Florida.

Wind advisories were posted
ove» the upper Gre ~t Lakes and
northern New Yor1t.
Unseasonably warm temperatures were expected to linger m the
PacifiC North west, ~J!fht rain
falling early today in
areas.
In western Washington state,
rivers that surged after weekend
storms were expected to recede
today, but another heaVy stoim was
forecast for Wednesday. Cascade
Range passes were reopened to
traffic late Monday, after being
closed for up to a day by heavy
snowfall.
·
More SD!&gt;W and high winds were
expected in the northern Rockies.
Sunshine was likely from Cali·
fornia across the southern tier and

up through coastal New England.
A stalled front near the South-·
east coast produced ra in early
today in Florida: It was expected to
extend up to the Carolinas today
and continue moving north along
. the Adanlic COBSL
.·
Temperatures were forecast to
reach the, 20s and 30s from the
northern Plains states across to
New England, the 30s over much
of the northern Rockies, the 40s
and 50s across much of the South,
Midwest and West Coast, and the
60s and 70s in the Southwest and
south Florida.
· ·
The high temperature lor the
nation Monday was 81 degrees at
Glendale and San~&amp; Ana, both suburbs of Lus Angeles.

'

all-tbinp-fO-Ill-peoplc appooacb
has become a .-y-losu. Sean
has "" ;.w the spria&amp; ' t'og will
be the last in 97 yellS.
In a drive 10 ball a do ""'-long
dccliac ia its Kllil bttsi+ " • Sean
lllo ••••'&lt;WI MIMday .... it will
eliminate about SO,OOO jobs by
cady 1994 aDd close 113 stores.
Some
will
close.
A.rthllf C. Martinez, a former
Sales F'aflb A . - CXClCIIIM hired
by Sean in August to revitalble its
retailin&amp; unit, made the 10ogb
cboice 10 ga ridolthe cat'og
,"I don'ultiDl that decision
could ltave been made by a
person," said allllysl Philip
Abh..thans ol A..G. Edwacls in St.
Louis.

.

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•

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san

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.·•..)

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CLOSING • Betty Keister, a Sean employee
for 22 Jean, waits OD ~ustomer: Ji:I'IICSt Dreusa
Mal1clay ia Wooster, Obio. The WOOIIler slore Is

business bad aftcc-tu losses ol
11101e thin $l3S mjltim in eKil oC
full-lime jobs and 34,000 pan-lime
the ... dRc yellS. Mlrlinez Slid . jobs within the merchandise group,
"A lot of older J"''Pk Ia tbe
runs the company's 859
catalog ratJaQ titan JO fipl tile which
American
stores, its catalog busicrowds, sure,' • • S8ld Kenneth
ness and Sears' credit operations.
NeibalJer, n, who was sltuppiug The
unit employs nearly 350,000 of
at a sooa-aodose Cll8log in Sears' 435,000 workers.
Tuscola, BL ''Bill it'si'*BIO be a
The nation's third-largest retailthin1 of the past. We've
to er said the cuts would save it an
chan&amp;e widu • 1 ,lpcss.'
Many n:ail ...,.. ltave long estimated $300 million a year.
The ftTSt edition of the catalog
advocated sbeddin1 the catalog came OUI in 1888 but featured only
business, bat Sean Cbainaan
Edwwd 8 J - I ,· lfd wiJea be jewelry and watches. The ftTSI gendoaltled u cbid of the merdlaD- . eral merchandise catalog came I 0
yeaaslarer.
disc poop from 1990 10 1992..
For much of its early history,
"8-.a felt lie bad 10 bring
tbe
catalog had a clear mission to
someone ia froa the outside to
etfecuaclt bPI ," aid .aly1t
1bJma T..._,_ of Fiat •• ' I·
tan Co. iD New YIIIL "Martinez
historicllly has been SIM ' ?f.J ll
sucb moves and is a 1111111 man
who proba~ly wouldn't •ave
acaplllll the job - - - tbe lhi1ity
to wall; iD with • ba*:hd ••
Scan said il woa1d cui 16,0110
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Columbia Gas of Ohio Inc. -has
agreed 1D freeze for IWO ~ears the
ntes it charges for providing basic
suvice, the company said.
Columbia said Monday that the
agreement covers only the portion
of cusiOOieis' bills thai deals with
CHARLESTON, S.C. {AP) Columbia's cost of providing basic
The aiiilaan accused ol kiJiin his Sl:ivice. The portion thai customers
wife • the Myrtle Beadl Air~ pay for the cost of natural gas Base iS DOW in casiOdy ia South about 70 pen:ent of most bills - is

.ot

one ol more· tlwl 100 tbt Sean Is closing in a
series of c01t-canmc measares. (A.P)

..•· .·

deliver merchandise to millions of situated in small towns. There are
mainly rutal Americans living far more than ~.000 catalog ·store~ ; ·
away from stores. Its role lessened wich about 30 under .Sears' owner: ·
as retailers staned springing up all ship and the rest independendy
owned.
over the country.
Most of the 113 Sears depan"The strategy of being all
ment
stores to be closed are smalL
. things to ~I people has become ·
or
medium-sized
and carry Iesil :
obsolete,'' said Denise Keanethan
Sears'
full
line
of merchan- •
Gillette, vice president of marketdiSc..
.
ing at Hlmmacher Schlemmer &amp;
Sears
has
eliminated
more
than
·•
Co. ·of Chicago, which sells elec48,000
jobs
in
its
retailing
divisiciq
:,
Ironic toys and other gadgets by
since 1990. Sears slid from No. I : ·
catalog.
·
The elimination of the Sears cat· to No. 3 among U.S. general mer: :
alog will lead to the closing of chandisers in 1991, behind No. ·1 '
most Sears catalog stores- outlets Wai-Mart Stores Inc. and Kmart,
-•· -'
that.~ onlen and are generally Cotp.
.' '

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Columbia Gas of Ohio announces:· :~
agreement to freeze part of rates '·-.

Ironton airman
being held at
Charleston base

W

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Jan. 25 - wan·da
Blankenbelter, Mark Lindsey,
Adrila Milkt, Al.;o Kans. Mlchacl
MsYnard. Mn. Joe Gray and 1011,
Samanlha Goble, Merle Bethel,
Mil. Michlel Aelker llld ........
Blanche Smart, Mil. John lflniiOII
and son, Danny Alters, James
Ty!ee, Allie Holley, Benl\le Wlnebreluler, Clarence SteYeaa, Dixie
Miller, Oeorae Fraley, Deborah

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Hospitalnews

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Department oC Tral\sporlation offi.
cials regltding the process.
eo.aulty developaaeat
on community
Oliveri,
development,
she has been in
contact with Deamll Tribe of Vinton County reprding the developmeal of a strategic plan. Vinton
County has recently completed
such a plan.
According to Oliveri, Tribe is
willing 10 work wich the commission to get the process started.
Lentes stated he would lite to Carolina.
The Air Force sud Monday
see the commission set up a strateJcromy
Willis, 23. of Ironton, Squads respond to 6 calls
gic plan by February so that it
Ohio,
had
been returned from
could be presented to the Meigs
Tcus, wbere be was capeaed last
Units of the Meigs County
County Commissioners by March.
Emergency Medical Service
· Vijay Oadde of Buckeye Hills week.
b~ld
at the respmdedtosixcallsforassistance
.Willis is
· HockinJ Valley Regiollal Develop- Charleston
Nabeinj
.t
.a:onling
ment Dis1rict, the stale WilliS to see to Dave~- up+ ••• •
~~:day and early Tuesday
such a plan that outlines the goals
On Monday at 12:09 p.m. che
for the county by the planning . Shaw Air Force Base ia Samt«,
wbcre
Willis'
case
1aas
been
Syracuse
unit went to Buclitown
commiss_ion. He said the state
assigned.
Read
for
Penny
Sullivan who was
· wants to know whit projects are
'"'""'- • the
·
I
1111 m
CalC mn•tm
taken
going ·on in the county in all areas undecicJed
tal. to Veterans Memorial Hospiof development.
....._ Air .,_ ......_
ac1y of
The Pomero
.
'"''
. , . u ; ..,... COP
y urut, at 2:I 7 p.m.,
Melp brochure disaassed
Will'
•
lion dwJe, bu
the~ wena to West Main Street on an
Reporting for the 1993 toteigs
County brochure, Oliveri stated II ~I balK bi:. wid! .
auto accidenL Janet Redman alii!
· the J ~shooti~- Sandy Hood were taken to Veterplans are progressing and the color w tedc .etll
nee 6f'WI
an. •
ng aas
........
cover of the brochure has been death
Mmc W'Jllis..
mt:IJL
_, Laudermilt. refused treat·
decided. It will feature the old
- A Mynle Beacb .iad8e iS\IUed Ill
At 3:07 p.m. the Middlepon unit
court house at Chester, the present
.,;.,,_ r. W'tllis
Ullb
.Meigs County Court House in ~·r•Sorad M~
went to Route 7 and County Road
.
5 for James Miller. He was transPomeroy, the Pomeroy-Mason ~ IlL ! . widl
are OOD"ilotnl . PCI*• pcr1ed 10 Veterans..
bridge and a tomato to depict the
lionsbaaial _
.
.
OnTuesdayat6:S8a.m. the
faiming industry in the county.
Myrde linda ~ Detc:aave Ra:ine unit went to Rice Run Road
The total cost of the project will Joe Vella traveled 10 Texu on - ror James Duvall. He was taken to
be about $1,200 for approximately Moadl.y with die i*poiC of ~~tina VelmUIS.
10,000 brochures.
"'lS:!ICSSOI:'• of ·•
..__. .._
HlD
ewe • c .....,. - At 8:15 a.m. che Racine unit
· The next meeting of the com- pos
mat, i• 1,• 1• 9Qa responded to Forest Run ·Road for
mission will be held April 26 at 3 ing. W'dlis'.
p.m. at the Meigs County Public ptstoI believed 10 be dac marder an auto accident in which Ernest
Lilnry.
from the AU Fon:e's =~ taken to Holz.er Medical
Office~ Invrttiptioas

•er:'!f

,
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The Sears catalog, and 50,000 jobs, are. history
CIDCAGO (AP) - II took an
OUISider 10 do wbM llllllY believe
had to be doae • Scm; Rocw t
and Co.-kil die San..-Jow.
• • . . the
. .o=-R".....
For I
-••,
~•
..,.
boot'' had a place aextiD the Bible
in IDIDy Ammicali lnDrs But its

_

Today ·in his to ry______

eartr 10~ !he
Some fines
low ~

will penualdund

\OU'RE SURIWNDED...
PUTOUT
WEAPoN

\

origins in die CaJw!'

IND.

Reforms could go-to
ballot_, lik~ term limits

v

poriact or
Alberta, willswin&amp; throop the
northern Great I alrc, sometime
today. This will cause~
cloudiness over most oi Ohio
tonight, widlliplsaow possible in
the -thaa lbinloldtUIIt.
If die - I rt it ia10 01tio
it sboodd lilive in the Jlortb-.i

.1Marislield !37" I·

Ben Wattenberg

~- ~

BJ Tile A• la•e~ Pna
Rapidly cha&amp;inl 'W ther has
becu tbe nale for dae )Jill ~ c.sollld ~oCtile sme is expect·
ed durin&amp; the middle ol Ibis Wfd:
in Oltio.
1be National WC8111er Senice
says 111 Alhena cliDDcrlow pa·
lllTC ma, 10 n • !a( bee W of its

conditions and high

,

The Dally Sentlnei- Page--:3.

Alberta clipper will.hit northern Ohio today:~~

OHIO Weather
VVednesday,Jan.27

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. TUesday, January 26, 1993

A-moderate's ·manifesto

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeloy llddleport, Ohio

we:-qent

:::r;t"~==~i: "'Meigs

~ llcadrict of dae Mynle Beach
Police IltjMa_- .
.
.

Woman extradited .

'~'nukes to meet
11te Scipio Township Trustees
will meet Monday It 6:30 p.m. at
the Papille Townhall.

=

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not covered by the setdemenL
The agreement must be
approved by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
Parties that negotiated the agreement with Columbia were the
·puco staff, the Ohio Office of
Consumers' Counsel, Industrial
Energy Consumers, Honda of
America Manufacturing Inc.,
Access Energy and the citiesoof
Columbus and Toledo.

Stocks
· Ele Power....................331'4
Am
,
.,o.shland Oi1........................27 318
AT&amp;T..................... ,...........53
Bank One...........................509 318
{2
Bob Evans .........................! 1
Charming Shop.............:.... I7 518
Chmp Industries............... ..10 1/8
City Holding...................... 21 3/4
Fedentl Mog ul ....................19 3/8
GoodyearT"&amp;R ..................69 3/8
Key Cenrurion ................... 21 3/4
Lands End.......................... 27 1/8
L'tmt'ted Inc . ...................... 29 1/4
Multimedia Inc................. .3 3 l/l
Point Banco1J! .................... I2 3/4
RaJt RestawanL ................. J/16
Reliance Electric ................22 7/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ........... ..... 18 .
Sh
• 1
241"
oner. s nc....:;................
,..
StarBank .......................... .3 5 l/4
Wendy Int'I... .....................30 1/8
Worthington Ind................25
Stock reports are the 10:30
·
a.m. quotes
provt' d ed b y
Kemper Securtties, Inc;, or
Gallipolis.

u...,..;..lllillllillllil--1111-;;;;ll

announcements

OA.PSE to -nl•ll
B I e ol311111B stinThe Mcip Local OAPSE Chapner Ro..t, l"AmaO),
~tz ter will Thunday It 7 p.m. at
amutoaa• ••o-s
Meip Junior High School in Mid.
Coattty, N. Y. dllllilll ' J Jial dlepon.
the fint ...................
Blntnalr. aLIJIIe Hulanl.
· wbe• sbe lpJI e ed MCIIIday ill
D 1pllaed
.
Blrihl, Jan. 25 • Mr. and Mil. Meias Co .. ty Cola•on Pleas
Tbe Tappen Plains VFW Post
Clifford Ward, llauPter, GaiUpo- Comt.
No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will
lls. .
B=Jrer- aa r 'b1, dae Sla bold a round and square dance FriHighway l&gt;atrol, Sheriff Jamea day from 8-11:30 p.m. Music will
Vetenull Mem«lal
MONDAY ADMISSIONS • Soulsby ud hisJ:iea. Sbe is be by Haitage Express. Everyone
lldd in dte
• a..y jail is..eJcome
Jamea Miller MicldlelaL
Ia
.-..
10
New Ycd: 10
. MONDA'Y DISCHARGES •
blqlary
ps.
H•rr• Did sltower planDed
·
Alfred Ziegler and Robert Bailey.

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A household shower will be
held Feb. 7 from 2-4 p.m. for Rufus
and Bulah Cline who lost their
home and all .belongings in a ftre.
the shower will be beld at the Tuppers Plains VFW .Post Home.

Servkes UBdei Wl1
The Believers' Fellowship Min·
istry Is presendy holdinJ SCJVices
in the old ICings Anns building on

Route 7, one mile from the MeigsGallia line. Pastor Margaret J.
Robinson invites the public.

.

VFWtcimeet
The .Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the pas~ home. All
members are IIIJed to auend.

Under the senlement, Columbia. .
agreed not to ftle for a rate increase'
before March 1994. If a filing it'
made at that time, the PUCO would
have nine months to consider the
requesL
The agreement is an extension
of the October 1991 setdement cJf.'
Columbia's last rate case before the ;
PUCO. That agreement called COT"·
Columbia til receive a $17 million '
annual rate increase.
.
·
Consumers' Counsel William · ·
Spratley said the agreement wilf '
benefit both customers and
Columbia.
Columbia Chairman C. Ronald
Tilley praised the efforts of all parties to the agreemenL
·
"We are pleased to be able to..
assu~ our cus~ that they wiJi. .
conltnue to recetve ... service
through 1994 at the same reason-..
able cost they have lleen paying.,
smce the end of 1991," Tilleysaid..•,
Columbus-based Columbia.
serves 1.2 million customers in 67 •"
Ohio counties.
,·

.. '

Lottery numbers -::::
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here~ .
night's Ohio Louery.,
selecuons:
. .
Pick 3 Numbers
. .....
9-7-9
'··
(nine, seven, nine)
Pick 4 Numbers
3-7-3-6
(three, seven, three, six)
.
Mon~ay

.

I . ' '

English novelists Cliarlotte, E;mily • ··
and AMe Bronte wrote under the pen
names Currer. Ellis and Acton Bell. : .

�TUMday, January 26, 1993

•

Spo~ts

The Daily Sentinel

In limited Top 25 colkge action,

.

For a college ccam in a rebuild- inrenniJsion.
ing situali011, the bad times often
uJ thinl&gt; it wu good that our
outweigh lhc goodooes JDIIil it &amp;ell bend!" gO( in on tbc action, but
on its leet and stands equal to its Dyke just couldn't defend itself
peers.
agai11st our penetration," Rio
Dyke College's men's basket- Grande C:O.Ch John Lawhon) said,
ballleiiJI, wid! one win to its credit his thoughts already focused on
in 20 starts this season, had to tonight's Mid-Ohio Conference
believe that beuer days are lbcld game at home with Mount Vemoo
ail it accepled-a138-91 tluasbina: at Nazarene, which s~ 117:30. •
the hands of die Universily of Rio
First-year Demons Coach .
Grande Mooday atLync Caller. ·
Michael Westfall Jlllt·a combative
Signs that lhc Demons have the lot into lhc tint halhs Dyke lllyed
stuff of a gOod liDim cvidcnl close on the Rcdmen 'a heels,
early in lhc first half, but lhc Red- thanks 10 a IS-point performance
men were delennined to keep their from Brian Wilson and 13 points
court and went on a run that put chipped in by Robert Kuhar, both
them ahead by 26 points at the of whom were 1esponsible for the.

e-4

.

Long Beach State shocks No. 1 Kansas ·
By CRAIG HORST
gesli.ons.
· LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP)During a second-half timeout in
Top-ranked Kansas played so poor- the Jayhawks' 64-49 loss Moaday
ly against Long Beach Slate lhll night, Will~s ~ot so frusttaled
coach Roy Williams ran QUI of sug- ::kin~. let his 8SS1Stants do all the

· · 1onuz,
• Stanton among
.
Po
baseball
• • one-year pacts
p'layers szgnzng
·

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (1\P) _There 111e
94 players left in salary arbin:ation
followmg one-year agreements by
Luis Polonia, Mike Stanton and
Dante Bicbette.
: Polonia and the California
Angels agreed Monday~~ to
$2,475,000, a raise of $825,000. k
was ~ the midpoint betytccn the
$2, 9 million the outfielder bad
asl&lt;ed for and the $2.05 million die
Angels had offered.
StaiiiOn and the Allanta Braves
agreed to $850,000, a raise of
$585,000. The left-banded relichad asked for $1.05 million and lhc
Braves had offered $700,000.
Bicbette and the Colorado
Rockies agreed 10 $725,000, a raise
of $495.000. It was at the midpoint
between the $850,000 asked for I&gt;Y
the 29-ye;)l'-old outftelder and the
$600,000 offered by the team.
Bicheue hit .287 for Milwaukee

Wally Backman witb Allan I&amp;,
piiCher Jimmy Jones wilh Monuea1
~~her Jerry Don Gleaton with

Backman, 33, baaed .271 in 42
games with the Philadelphia
Phil1ics last year. He hit .345 as a
~';!_ttcr, going 10 for 29 with
Jones became a free qent in
December when the Houston
Astros declined 10 offer'a 1993
contract 10 avoid sa1sry arbiaalion.
The 28-yesr-old right-hander was
10-6 wilh a 4.07 ERA last
•·
mosliy as a starting pischer.
Glealon, a 35-year-old left-bander, wast.{) wid! a4.26 ERA in 23
t rclief appearances for.lhc Pittsbur&amp;b Pirates last year. Before
1992, Gleaton had spent his CDiire
career in the American League,
appearing in 307 games.

1~ season.

Sports briefs

Salary arbi11'8tion hearings are ·
scheduled for Feb. 1-21, and the
Hockey
vast majority of players will aaree
TORONTO (AP) - Toronto
to conuacts pri6r to hearings. ·
r011kie goaltender Felix: Potvin,
Three free agents also 181-' io · who allowed only two &amp;oais in
minor lca&amp;ue conuacts and were three victories last week, was
invited 10 spring training: inficldr:r jll!jiC'A! ~ player ol. die Mek.

-

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•

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t4
17
19
17
21
25

' ' New laooy ...........23

~,. Bcn:a....... --.~---.21
, Oriando,....., ........... 17
,. Phi.h+Jrl'ia -......... 16
: MiamL ..................12
11

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PeL
.632
S7S
.52S
.JOG
.432
.324
.219

basketbaJI poll

GB

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.............. ..ll 17

.o....................... 13

GB

Pd.
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.. ~UI.ah --~-·- ····-···--..25 13
· .San AniOftio ......- •..24 13

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.200
.013

2:1

' Minne&amp;G&amp;a .•.......•••••••7 21
' Dallal ....................- .3 D

.....

W-L PILWeell
l..C...(49) ..._ ...t6-i I~
I
2. . _ Cll -----17-l 1,5211
2
1-~1') ... 16-1 1.5t7 . ,
•
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s.
--- ~------15-l 1,)91
s9
6. ClNCIIINAn ___ Jl-t 1.254
7. Dh,_ ___ tl-3 1;117
•
I. - ·- - -- --11·2 1,134 11
9. S..IioiL...- .tS.3 1,1104 tO .
10. UNLV ·--- -- 11·1 1.010 IS
11 . ....._ ____ t:l-3 141
14

T-

•-i Chadoete •....•...•.•••• .11 19 .1616
, · lndi.nl ... .,............ - 19 21 .'*75
~ : ~ ..................17 2l A36
'~ Milw-.ts 23 .195

.11 r
.711
.5:111

·· LA.Cippooo ........ .lO 19
.~ GoldcnState .......... l9 20

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9.5

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10.$

23

.395

"

. s.a-............ 1!

Monday's J&lt;oros
A\luu 117. s.u •• aiD 106
~

Toallbt's pmes
Plrilt:f.• o1 New Yak. 7,3(1 jUOL
L.~ . •att:"fno.Jcpey,7:30p.m.
MlomiotW.......... 7,lop.m.
Allatu aton-do,1:JOpa
C1.EVEIMill otl11oh, I p.m.
Hta~~~M 11 Miltrailblt, 1:10pm.
a.Koao ..
p.m.
Golden Slll\e a1 Podlmd, I 0.30 p.m.

a.a.r. 9

,. • 10.1 ... - .............106
9-iloll-.u.oii•l............................ .S3
tGC!o&lt;. VA·St.Joaoph IO.S .............. 52
O.....aoulullcUar__..palilll:
11-Caalioid (I) 36.12-- -~
(I) ]:4. ):1-l'aal cu- :16. 14-WIIbio.l•
toa Court Ho•ae 24, 15-JRONTO"N
· llOOt'iiii.L 211. 16-Wuhlo.... Coull

696
16.
.. 12-3 696
17. 1Jooh________ t4-l Sl6
I L - T " " '- - -lo.4 491
19. RaMo IL- - -13-S 471
20. &lt;Jt!
MlM " '
21.
b W.D._)1•3 3SS

1
I
2l

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23. , . _,_____ !4-l
2A. M 1
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2:1. -

343

ISO
144
ICB

------11-l

16

12
11
17

.,.,_,.,..,... _ ,w.........

101, Wiac.W.. 61, Wieh.la.. s•• &amp;.5,
UCLA 51. New Orleaas 42. Mu·
o.D"'!'!:M· XAVIER.OIUO 31, Mio.
26, . _ Y-ll, S..J•••

s..

o,n-t02. ,....._ 97

6-W,_ (l) IZ-0............................ 156
7-0.... O...U IO.l .................... t43

- r-19. IHIOWc......l
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1.,,"-

lO, lon
ilL 1~.13, Cllifamia 10. oHio ST. I 0. w..pw.
St. I,I.SU 7.
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4. New Na:ico
U... &amp;.cb St. 3.

121, Odzoitll9

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12-1 ........................:. ....1'19

19
20
13

21. c

• Pocllond ................2'7 11
~ Suale ................... .l1 11
, ·L.A. !.Wn...........211 II

'Liln·= .liMIIa V.U..tl-0...............212

753
121
fHI

l l . V - - - - -14-3
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P'll.

2-W'.uad (1)134 .......................... , 3lS

1~

3
1.5

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i·Wh;I*II·Y...... (26) 13-0. ........367

11.5

DIYioloniD

1·5""""
o:tl 1o.o . . . . . . al6
tz.o ........ m
:~-

PIL

va~. Ql

:1-

10.1 .............................. .211
40II!SAPIIAXI! (4) J34...............JQS
s-o.-tlJo (Z) \l-1 .... . ............... - ..ITI
6-llodlonl Cuaol (I) 12-1 ................111 .
7-CAPI! 11-1 .......- ..................., .169
1-Guaa Milia - 1 1 · 1 .............. 113
9-Aahoallola .._ (Z) Il-l .............lOS
IO.IIdoa 12·2. ............................. ,....13

_,_.,... u ...... ,...,.,
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:,'[.&amp;I.·Mil...U.l,

o.n... .,30

Wednesday' a pmes
in&lt;IW.. ot Phlladelphio, HI p.m.

Saaamcmo at ~ 7:30p.m.
~u~1:30p.m.

PtanU. • Miruaola, t :lO p.m.
SanAntonioatSeanlc.,lOp.m.
Utah at L.A. Cippc:n:, 10:30 p.m.
Otma'..: Galdt:ll Swe, 10:30 p.m.

: In the NHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE
,alrtc:k ot.t.a.
• Team
W L T Pia. GFOA
• Pi.ltlbur&amp;h .......... 32 13 4 61 21216&amp;
, w~ ........ 2:5 t9 ~ S4 192112
: New lett~Cy ........ 24 20 3 51 1457151
N.Y. IWpo ..... 2l 19 7 Sl 196117
: N.Y. Itlln:den .... 21 22 S • 1 19o'171
, l'ltilo4eJjiUo .... .. II 2l 7 43 1161,.
~

•
Adam~ Dl~lllon
• Montm.l ............ lO 17 S 6S 20117l
• ~ ............... 'D 16 • 60 205111

: 8a1U11.................
, BWI'olo............ ..
~ Ht.ttfcrd .............
t Ounn ...............

r1 19 3 57196116
23 19 6 ll 2091'11!
IJ Jl • JO IS7221
4 44 3 11 1122AS

' CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
:

NorriiDI..WO..

, TUM
W L T Pb. CFCA
.. Chi.ciJO.............. 30 11 6 66 IU 141

• Oluvit. .......... _ .. 'Z1 20
• Mituacu ...... _.. 1A 11
' Toromo .............. 2J 19
St. J..i,uia ............ 20 23
: Tan~ Bar ,,_ .. 16 32

.

4

Sl 212176

I
1

S6 172161

S3 166156
6 &lt;46 169171
3 33i 161 196

M
S6
' WUftpoa ........... l4 2D S SS
: LooAnpla ....... 2320 l ll
. Edtnonim .......... 171:1 7
SanJOitll.-.....- ... 641 2

1

1~

:
"'

to

&amp;o.on n ()aeboc, 7:-40pm.
New Jmc1 n N.Y, Ialaodan, 7:40

,

Jknfo.d
.. - 7.0
.....
Wllllio....
atBulrlio,
7&gt;1Dp,..
WJ.mipisatN.Y . .....,rl40p.m.

i

Detrciln E'

,

••

Hot&amp;Ua. Jella "*-· Nib lnatmaR
llllia...iloWola,--

I

•.f:40pa

OJaf::iatV&amp;IIOOUWr,lO:AOpA

The 49ers had just fallen from
the 2Sth position after losing two of
its previous three' games. Its victorY
over Kansas left Long Beach State
14-3.
.
The loss, just the second in 18
games for Kansas, came after the
Jayhawks had ~tained the top spot
in lhc poll.
The only other ranked team in
action Monday night was No. IS
Virginia. which needed to go to
overtime to barely hold off William
and Mary 93-84. The Cavaliers are
now 12-2.
The top of the poll stayed the
same Monday and the bouom
changed quite a bit. What else is
new?
All season, the same teams have
s1ayed among the upper echelon of
the rankings, and the top five
remained lhe same again lhis week.
Kansas was followed by Indiana,
North Carolina, Kentucky and
Michigan.
At the other end of tfte poll,
however, the teams just keep going
in and out.
There are four new teams this
week, and two - No. 24 Marqueue and No. 25 Houston haven't been among the ranked
since the days before 3-point field
goals. Soth Florida Slate, which
came ·in at 19th after its ovenime
victory over Duke, and No. 23
Tulane had.been ranked earlier in
lhe season.
Other than Long Beach State,
others leavin&amp; the poU were Michigan State, UCLA and Ohio Slate.
All were in the final five last week.
Kansas was named No. I on 49
ballots by lhe nationwide panel of
writers and broadcaster.s and
received 1.603 points. Indiana (17-

2) had seven filst-place votes and
1.520 points. three more than North
Carohna (16-1), 1(11hich had the
olhet nine fli'St-place votes.
·
Following Kcntueky'(13-1) and
Michigan (15-2) in the Top Ten
were Cincinnati, Duke, Arizona,
Seton Hall and UNLY.
'
Iowa, which didn '1 play any
games last week following the
death of junior forward Chris Sll'eet
in an automobile accident, led the
Second Ten and was followed by
Vanderbilt, Piusburgb, Purdue,
Virginia, Arlcansas, Utah, Georgia
Tech. Florida State and Oklahoma.
Georgetown led the final five
and was followed by Connecticut '
and the oilier three newcomers - ·
Tulane, Marquette and HOUSIOII.
·
Marquette (14-2). which has
won·seven sttaigbt and lost only 10
UNLV and Wisconsin, hadn't been
ranked since the final poll of the
1978-79 .season. The. Warriors
haven't been to lhe NCAA tourna, ·'
ment since 1983.
'
Houston (11-2) hasn't bee!J :
among lhe ranked since the last .:
poll of the 1983-84 season when :
the.Cougars lost to Georgeto;wn in
the NCAA championship game.
That was the last time Hous1on
won an NCAA tournament game
-going winless in three appesrances since. This season Houston
has won six sttaigbt and its only
losses were on 1he road to North
Carolina and UCLA.
. Florida State (13-5) is unbeaten
in five games since the return of
point guard-quarterback Charlie
Ward. The Seminoles. picked
eighth in the preseason poll, beat
Duke in overtime on Sunday.
Tulane (14-3) feU out of the poll at
Christmas when it lost con'secutive
games to Alabama-Birmingham
and Jackson Slate to drop to 5-3.
Since then, the Clreen Wave has
won nine in a row. the last three
MellO Conference rOad games.
Both Vanderbilt, which beat its
third Top Ten team of the sesson
last week with a win over
Arkansas, and Pittsburgh jumped
seven places this week for the
biggest improvemenL
Virginia, Arkansas anct Oklahoma dropped eight spots each. ,

CAI.I. US

H..- a., tt.kl.u, DaVid
....... AI 0ro1i. a - er-t, F....

M--.aT-,7~-

Wedoeoday'•a-•

years•

a••e••

Wlllirlpw~ at Pilllliwatt. 1:«t p.m.

•11

~

• B·\ The Associated Press
wrilfe Long Beach State was a
bit late, ils upset of top-ranked
l(ansas figures to earn the 49ers
another shot at a spot in The Asso·
· cialed Press colle~e basketball poll.
On Monday mgbt, just a mauer
of hours after voters ended Loitg
Beach State's one-week stay
among the elite, the 49ers beat the
Jay hawks 6449 at Lawrence; Kan.
Pri!lr to last week, Long Beach
State had not been ranked in 20

DINVII.
IROHCOI - Name~d
Wade
_
__.
NBW IIJIQNID PA'Blors- 11..
lioo Nliplllaa of Tom 8001,.
-..-efjiiOpo ........., .

Toolabt'ICUI•

·r
,

gain slot in Top 25 poll

"--LIIpe

r.btreaJ 3, BOIU'n 2 (01')

lhdfllo at Jltrl \1 '·,7 p.m.
OUlWiat St.l.ouJI.I:40 p.m.
DMil at CaJauy, 9l40 p.m.
S.. Jo. It~ A,.-; IWO p.m.

r

Long Beach State may

FoacbaD

:
.. p.m;
"'

OUT OF MY WAY- LoDJ Beach State's Lucious Harris (riJht) , .
goes to lhe boop wblle pnsblng awa7 Kan1111s guard Rex Walters
dur":a ~onday night's game In Lawrence, Kan., which the 49ers
WQn
9 to bolster their case for unseating the WUdc:ats l'rom the
top spot in the AP Top 25 college poll. (AP)

Wah Wtm.a. ...... .., ibe ~lilt.
Aodqa.d Mad)' c-a., (arward, from
ihe;,;a..U.,
.

Moaday's acore

Ohio higb school

girls' basketball scores
lS
ll

.u- c -.-..61, C..,U..., Folk
~ M-. . . . SI, l.iibtila...,...

I
..-,w.,..4l.00...41

Alliubltla Rubor .o. ,{,luwa St.

...-I... ........,...,_.

llocUJ
_._,._

NHL -lup.ded ll)'aa Munty,

o.a..u ...jill,.
- lift· ... 10 . . . .
ibe .-llr boiL ......
~~

PLAIGII - Ea...,do4
..,.,CALO.UY
_.,.._v-.r
....
,...

TODAY!

'

99Z..ZlZ4
.

' .'

2 MEDIOM PAN PIZZAS
With 1 Item
99
and
4 Colris

•

$11

.'

''

. .

known ttainer.
.Bowe is 32-0, with 27 knock
outs. His Sunday punch: ·a right
uppercut He has II!OPPed 20 opponents in the fnt three rounds (nine
oflhcm in Round 1).
But the real test won't come
until Bowe meets Lennox Lewis
a&amp;ai!J. The Canadian fighter won
their 1988 Olympic ~old medal
bout in an upset. Criucs felt the
Amtrican just slllppCII in ROillld 2.
-As a pro, however, Bowe has
bcenSICady·asuock.
So far, so good- to say the
least
Which sport atllllcts the most
'
·
COfPOIIIC
lpoiiSOI'S?
From Madison Avenue to Main
Street, it's baseball. The Great
American Pastime is a grass-roots.

Reeves named Gl'ants' COaCh

Blair.
- · - .......
ihe iajond
lloi.WIIndAlu_f
SACIIAIOINTO EINOS - Pl-.1

134237

Carter
eachThe
had six of the learn 's
boards
22
.
Redmcn held their
turnovers to 13 and the Demons
suffered 16.
Rio Grande was 61.4 percent on
shootina (54-88, 16-36 from the
three for 44.4 petcen1) and sank 14
or 18 at the line for n .8percent
Dyke connected 011 36·of 74 field
~oal auempts for 48.6 percenl,
lnch111ing six of 18 at the three for
33.3 percall. .ancl ssw 13 of its 22
tries at the lihe go through for 59.1
percent
The Demons are back on the
road tonight to play Point Park
(Pa.).
Box score:
IUO GRANDE (138) - Breu

Coreno, 4-4-0-20; Jeff Brown, 3-30- 15; Troy Donaldson, 9-3-21 ;Mau Powell · 3-5-2-23; LaMont.
Harris. 3-2-8 Lyndell Snyder, 2-04; Kyle Sc oer, 1-2-4; Walter
Stephens, • -4-23; Jason Curtis,
Caudill, 2-1-S; .Thri
2-1-0-7;
Christian, 4 8. TOTALS 38-1614-138:
DYKE (91) - Josh Noll, 346;
Robert Kuhar, S-2·9-25; Bobby ·
Davis, 4-2-0·14; Brian Wilson, 1-:.
2-!·~1; Tony Cha8man, 2'-0-&lt;l;
Wdham Pineiro, -I' I; CurtisCarter, 2·0-4; Marc Pope, 0-1-1;
Kalani Smith, 1-1-3; Derrick Hall,
6-0-12. TOTALS 30-6-13-91.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
71, Dyke 45.

.

n
'he! A
.,....
ATLANTA Hlt.WU- Actint.od.

117161
11S t l2
19l202
•• 139197

,

By HOWARD SINEQ
Bowe, 25, is fiom Brownsville, Year. He had .two other bouts in
Today's questions in l,he world the tough Brooklyn nei&amp;hborhood 1992: He knocked out Canada's
of spans:
where Mike Tyson ~~ew up. The Conroy Nelson (011 May 8) in 76
• How good is world heavy- new champ is bringing the title seconds; and he stopped South
weight champ Riddick Bowe?
back 10 New Yorlc. Dokes is a fad- Africa's Pierre Coctzer (on July
It's too soon to lell for sure. Bul in&amp; (and plodding) triil hone. · 18) in.the fifth IOUDCI.
some of the experts already rank Beating him w011'tprovean~.
Now KO, based 0111 survey of
him, pound-for-ix&gt;und, as one of · Actually, some boxing msidcrs experts, JlnksBowc as lhc world's
the top 10 fighters in the world. don't need any m!)re c!)nvincin&amp;. fifth best fighla', pound-for-pound.
That'ssayingalot-inmoreways They~realreadysold011Bowe,wbo The magazine puts him behind
than one. Bowc weighs in at·about knocked down Holyfield in Round only: 1. Julio Cesar Chavez; 2.
. 235 pounds.
II 0111hc way 10 umanimous dcci- · Terry Norris; 3. Peme1J Whitaker;
C'ol!ling offbis ~pset ofEvandcr sion. To some, Bowc is the "Rest and 4. Buddy Ml:Girt.
Holyfield to win the heavyweight Deal," not Holyfield. The exThis is how Bowe was ranked
crown, Bowe will fight Michael champ didn't have lhc size to fend by key membi:rs of lhc KO panel:
Dokes on Saturday, Feb. 6 (on offlhcru~6-foot-5challeD8Cf.
fourth by Gil Clancy, alon&amp;limc
HBO) at Madison Sqilllre Garden.
Citing his stunning performance trainer·, fourth by Pat Putnam,
However, the bout is seen as just a on Nov. 13, KO magazine hjls S~rts liiUIIrated's boxillg •writcr;
. homecorningcakewallc. .
named Bowe its fighter of tile fifth by Wallace Matthews, a
Newsday columnist; and eighth by
Emanuel Steward, another well.

llaokotbaD

2201SI

"'• .•h-.
..ru · ........ :.. That hiohU""'""
• WI'lh
•....,mons
uu....-yvontooouuwog.
!'""'"'&lt;~'.,.... lhc
. Redmen pmc
spurt put Dyke to wilhin four of lhc 23 pomts ~h. Donakllon ended
Redmen margin (36-32) atlhc 8:30 . with 21 and Brown had IS. Donmark.
aldson ended with ei&amp;bl of the
While leadin Rio Grande scor- team's toll! of 37 boards, with
crs Mau Powelf. 'J'roy Donaldson Brown addin&amp; seven. Brown also
and Jeff Brown made a difference 181lied eight assists for lhc pine,
in the acorin&amp;. with Donaldson but returning poiiu guard Jack
credited for seven rebounds and Mor1an made his fli'St full game
Brown seven usists, it was the with lhc team count by rec:otding
shooting prowess of sophomore seven assists
forward Brett Coreno which belped
Kuhar, wbose 10181 was boosted
spark a run that put distance by a nine of 12 pelf'OQIIIIICC atlhc
between the Redmen and their fi'ee throw line, led Dyke with 2S
guc:sll. Cm:no, who didn'ti!CIR in points. Wilson ended with 21
·lhc secood half, IIOIChed 20 points points and seven assists, Bo:fi
before bein&amp; ~.
, Davis added 14 and Derrick
Powell and Walter Stephens notched 12. Wilson and Curtis

Bowe·considered worldwide to be boxing's newest
'Real Deal'
.

Na..... a

s..,.,.. DMtloo

• VlllCIII&amp;vet ......... 29 I~ 6
• Calpoy ............ 2S II 6

Sports Probe

· and l3rebounclsforKansas.
No. 15 Vlrgi111a 93
Will~. &amp; Mil')'.84 (~T). .
At W•lhamsbur&amp;, .V•rg1n1a
~~
. •a two-~ loSIDa streak
but"didn t look very llillftSSIVC.
Cornel ~·s three foul shc?U
putlhe Ca.valiers ahead to ~y wilh
3:03.left tn the .cxtta J!Cl!O!'·, Ted
Je!fries S;OOfCd SIX .or Virgirua s 17
pomts m overume and Cory
Alexander had five.
It was the first victory for the
Cavali~ (12-2) sinc:e they upset ·
~ eight days earlier to extend
their '!ft~len saeak to 16 games.
WIIh~ &amp;. Mary (9-6) used a
three.-poml b~e "! ~attic back
from a 23-point deficit m the sec·~ half, 011ly to k?JC ~ the ~va~
~m for lhc 18th umc m thell last ..
Al~r led v· . . 'th 26
.
.
. uguua WI .
pomts, while Jeffries had 23 pomll
and 10 rebounds. Kurt Small, a
sophomore guard, bad a career·
high 27 points for William &amp;.
Mary.

T-

s

Cencnl Dll'lllol
• Cbico .......,.""""'"27 13 .615
: Cl.EVEUND. R....2A 16 JjOI)
• •AIIonlo ................... l9 2D .'117

S::: J::

Dlollloall

l
4

•;

ieam

feD tluou&amp;h lhc ~L
.
It was t~at k!nd of nlf]ll for
Kansas, which missed aU 1 °~ ~
~:..":,
was only
After takinJ a 34-17 halftime
lesd, Long BCach continued 10 out. plalthe Jayha'!"ks in the ~ond
hlll · The 49ers ~ ~ll ~
to _48-28 .on E?c Broll'n..s .thrce
pomla'.With 1qs remalniil&amp;. . ·
Luc10US Harris scored 2A points
for Long Beach, while Tower
~~n Hancock had 16 points

OIMn ;WIIellll;l2 • _.. l1M1181111
12·Lonla Aobalnl KID&amp; 26. tl-Tolado
s- 2:1. 14 (do)-Oolioe.e..t u~
11. l6·Ptin.. 't'iUeltinrJi4e 17. 11 u-.. 16. li (llo).Muo;Jl... laduan
(I~ .Toioilo S&lt;. .labo'a'l4.

Top 15 college

EASTERN CONFERENCE

"nclt if I continued 10 lllk, I
wouldn'tssyanflhingCOIISIIUCI!ve,
so I let the assiStants handle 11,"
Williams .s~id. "I can ne~cr
::;:I'k!~g over lhcre feeling
The ~a hawks the nation's best
shooting
ai. S5 percent, shot
only 37 percei!l in lhc fust half and
went scoreless for six minutes as
Long Beach built a 14-point half.
lime lead
It did~'t get any better ln the
second half. Jayba'!"ks' fans,
among die most loyal m lhc country, began· leaving sOidout Allen
Fieldhouse with seven minutes
remainin in lhc pmc.
·.
. "The: didn't just bell us, lhcy
beat us bad,•• Kansas guard Rex
Walras said.
The loss snapped a 14-game
borne winnina streak for Kansas
(16-2). ·
"
"Tonight is a mqical night,"
Long Beach coach Seth Greenberg
said.
"it's one lhing'IO put in a ~e
plan and liiOiher thing to have lhc
kids execule it so well.... We had a
hard practice yesterday and the
kids responded. 1 know lhis wasn't
KU' s best game, bUt what a special
'ght this· ..
·
m 1n the ~Y other Top 2S game,
No. 15 Virfinia ~at William &amp;.
Mary 93-84 m ovenune.
Long Beach (14-3) spread its
halfcourt offense 10 frustrate the
Jaybawks' pressure defense. A
tluee-point shot by Chris Tower hit
the beclcoflhcrim, bounded higher
than lhc toP of the backboanl, and

The Dally Sentinel-Page-$

Rio Grande·thrashes
Demons 138~91 in non-conference win :·
.

1\Jesday, January 26,1993

p

Pomeroy.-lllddleport, Ohio

\ ' ·I

'•

I
I.
l

By TOM CANAVAN
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - Dan Reeves has accepted
the job of rebuildin' lhc two-lime
Super Bowl champion New York
Giants, according 10 sources close
10 lhc team.
·
Reeves, who guided the Denver
Broncos to three Super Bowl
appearances and five AFC West
lilies, ended a week of riegoli.atioas
· and golf by, reacbin• a tentative
conttact ~ment w1th the team,
.sources Slid late Monday nighL ,
The agreement llrings to an end
an almost month-ion&amp; search in
which the top two candldares for
the 'tiOII turned It down.
le:ves. who 'has been on a golf
vacation in Palm Springs, Calif.,
was not imiilediately available 10
comment A tcleplionc call ~ 11
his Colorado home late Monday
night \1)' The Associated Press was
not returned.
Giants general miD8801' G~e
Young was at a league mcetins m
Allantatodiscussthepopoeedset·
tlcmcnt of a labor dispute wilh the
players. A telephone call to his
borne went UilllllSWCIIed.
The sources, who asked not to
be identifted, said a formal ne"s
conference to introduce Reeves, 49,
would be held eilher today or
Wednesday, depending on bow
soon be could make the trip to
Giants Stadium.
Primc Ticket, a regional cable
television outlet in Los Angeles,
reported that Reeves left Palm
Springs M011day evening to go to
New York.
Reeves reponedly will receive a
five-year contract worth an eslimat·
ed $4 .million. He replaces Ray
Handler., who was filed after the
team failed to make the playoffs for
lhc second straight year.
Earlier Monday, a Giants cxccu·
live said lhc team W1IS 011die verge
of finalizing a deal with Reeves.
who almost gotlhc Giants' job in
1979 when he finished runner-up to

Ray Perkins.
·
·
"We are continuing to havediscussions with him, but we 111e mak-

atlractiiln. A tolll of 4S3 C01poi'8· ' &amp;oif(141); thti Olympics (130); and
lions sponsoi'¢ major- and minor- tennis (90).
league bascbsb in 1992.
• When did women begin to
So repOrts the Sports Sponsor play baskrAball?
FactBook, a survey of more than
Almost 100 years ago, Senda •
1,000 U.S. and international com- Berenson, a physical educatioll ..
panics. The dilec10ry is published insJructor at Smith Colleae, taught .
by Team Marketing Report. a women bow to play baskelbiiJ. the
Chicago-based sports business pub- first formal game amon&amp; women.
lisher.
.
took place 011 March 22, 1893. To: ·
"Deij)ire its many weU-publi- mlllk lhc centennial, Vlrioul events· . .
cized problems, baseball remains are bcl!lg held in lhc COilling
lhc most accessible 11p011 for IIUiior a1 Smith in Northanpton, Mass.
madeteisiOI'CIIChlhcirtargetaudiBerenson borrowed from tho ence on both die national and local original rules of baskelball, a game ·.
level," llOies Alan Friedman, pub- invented in 1891 by Dr. JIIIICI Nal- •
lisber of the FactBook. ·
smilh of the YMCA .in Springfield,. :
Affer .....,
•---ball, lhc' sports w1'th
Mass. For her female snide..., she" ·
the mostCOI]JOilitc sponsors·were:
divided the court into three
pro baskelball (402); pro football
and required players to Illy in their,
(280); pro hockey (253); college own ·sections. A soccer ball and
athletics (20S); auto racing (180); peach baskets were used.

weea '..

parts: :

Nelsonville-York slips past Meigs-with 49-46'decision

By DAVE HARRIS
points of the game, a 10 foot baseing pro&amp;rcss, prcuy . good
Sentinel
C••
ell'
IIPdent
line
jumper with I: 32 left in the
progress," said Jobil Mara, the
Susan
Crawford
hit
a
10-footer
contest.
But Crawford, who fin·
Giants' executive vice president
with
just
over
a
minute
left
in
lhc
isbed
wilh
nine points, answered
and genc:ral counsel.
game
and
Debra
Blackburn
bit
two · that with a biJCket from die left side
Robert Fraley, Reeves' attorney, free lhrows wilh 17 seconds left 10- of lhc lane Wid! just ovet a minute
also did not return a telephone roes- give the Nelsonville-Y~ Buck- to &amp;o. and~ Buckeyes took the
sage left at his Orlando; Fla., offiCe
a 49-46 upset win over Meip I~ for ROod. Mei,gs cou1dn 't conby The Associated Press. ·
. eyes
in girls' Tri-Valley Conference vert 011 ·dlc offenS1ve end an!llost
A source close 10 Reeves told
action Monday cvenin&amp;. the ball out of boupds Blackburn's
lhe AP Monday that the conuact basketball
·The
loss
was only lhc second of free throws with 17 seconds left
talks were in their fmal Sl8gCS.
the Marauders as iced the ball game of Nelsonvillethe
season
"I lllked to Dan today," the lheir record for
drops to 12-2 overall Yorlc.
source said. "It looks like it will be and 9-2 in the cooference. Belpre,
Christina Warren led the windone. Everything is goin&amp; wen."
which
was
in
second
a
&amp;arne
ncrs
wilh 12 poinll.
. ·
Reeves faces a major job
behind lhc Maraudcn heading into
Missy Siaoo and Turnc81ed the
rebuilding a team that in two years
action
Monday
evening,
played
at
Manwders
wid! 10 pointa each.
slipped from Super Bowl champiwinless Trimble.
Meigs hit 21 of 60 from the
ona 10 fourlh in the NFC East. The .
The Buckeyes (10-4, 7-3) took noor for a ice cold 3S'J, and shot
Giants pas led a 6-10 record last advanla8e
Of poor. Meigs shooting only Six foul shou makinJ fOI!f for
seasa1 and were 14-111 in twO sea•
to lake a 12-6 lead at lhc end of lhc 67'J,. Meigs collected 29 rebounds
sons under Handley.
fim quarte~. The Marauders bit wid! Turner having an fl!M•IIVIing
H~ndley got th!' job in May
only three of 17 shots in lhc period game with 14.
1.991 when Bill ParCells resigned,·&amp; Lindsey Shumway was the big gun
In lhc reserve pmc the Mamudlntlc more thail three months after
for the Buckeyes wid! six pointa in ers defeated' Nelsonville 22-14.
New York beat Buffalo in the lhc period.
·
Melissa Clifford led M:fcf:dwith ·
· Super Bowl.
Meigs scored the fnt six points seven, Bobbie Buk:her
six,
Offensiyely, .the Giants s~ill in the sec011d period to tic the pme Cr.nthia Couerill added five and
have a sohd unn. The question at 12 at lhc 5:34 mark of lhc half Billie Buteher four. Bobbie Seel
mark is who will be the starting on a 12-footcr.by Amber Black- led N-Y with .four.
· quarterback: Phil Simms orJeff · well. Kalrina Turner hit a bucket
Meigs will have another tough
Hostcdet'l
undc:rncath to give lhc Marauden a game at home Thursday evening
Handley faced the same diffiCult shon li,ved 17-IS lead at the 3:16 against Miller.
•
decision afler lakin&amp; over from Par- mark. But Nelsonvillc ICOied 10 of
cells. He picked Hostetler, but it · lhc.next14 points and lake a 25-19
Ne-.vDJe.York
still led to a quarterback contmver- lead at the half. Turner. Was I per·
(U-13-15-9=4!1)
sy dmin&amp; his short ltllure.
· feet four for fo11r in the period to
Susan Crawford 4-0-1=9: Jill
Defensively, the Giants are a lead the Marauders with eight Shafer 1-2-0o=ll, Chrisitina Wanen
relatively old uniL It is also uncer- points.
S-0·2ool2, Lindsay Shumway 4-0lain whether linebiclter Lawrence
0.S,
Melissa While 14-0-2; Debra
In the second half lhc Buckeyes
Taylor will return ncxueason.
. led by as many IS 10 poiniS 011 a Blackburn 1-0-2=4, Heather Gail
Taylor missed the later part of couple or diff~t occasions. But 3.()..().6. Totals- 19-2-5=49
this year- which was supposed 10 the Mamdden refused 10 die, fightbe his last year - with a rupllir¢ ing back to take a 46-45 lead when
Achilles tendon. He has since left Lee Henderson scored her only
lhc door open on playing another
year.
Reeves had a 110-73-1 record in
l:Z seas011s with lhe Broncos. He
was fired in late December after
Denver missed the playoffs with an
8-8 record.
I
-

Vema

O'Brien 2-0-l=S, Amber Blact-· ·
well 1-0.0.2, Vanessa Coaqlston• ·
1-0-0=2. TOiala-111 t tl

••

jNSm£ TRY - Melp
Katrlaa Turner (42) prepani to
shoot
t•e paint against Nelsonville-York front-liner LIDsaJ
Shumway durin&amp; Monday night's TVC pme at Melp Hip Sc:bool,
where the Buckeyes won 49-46 in spite or T~rner's outscoring
Shumway 10-8.
·

Rates of Taxation for 1992

In pursuance of Law, I, Howard E. Frank, Treasurer of Meigs County , Oh io, in compl iance 'with revised Code No. 323.08 of State of Oh io ,

Phillips Broncos' new coach
By JOHN MOSSMAN ·
Orleans. The YQUngcr Phillips
DENVER (AP) Wade coordinaled ·thc Broncos' defense
Phillips, son·of Bum, wanled lhc the lasl fOlD' seasons. developing a
Denver B[onc!ls' head coacbinJ! stingy unit that once went_11
job more than anything- oven if games without givin&amp; up a toUch·
he had 10 COI1IC from behind to get down against a two-minute drill.
iL
Weeks of speculati011 preceded
Phillips, one of two finalists Monday's announcement, moat of
aJong.with cverybody'i frontrunner · it centcrin~ on Shanahan, 40, the
Mike Shanahan, was named 10 lhc San francisco 49ors' offensive
position on Monday because.ol. his coordinator who was 1 Denver
superior "chemistry" wilh owner assistant from 1985-87 and apia in
Pat Bowlen. It didn't hurt lhll he 1991. But Shanahan apparently
came chesp, either.
decided to extend his 49crs' conBowleD announced his decisi011 tract after negotiations with
four weeks to lhc day afla' he fi1ed Bowlen did not yield an agreement.
. Dan Reeves.
·
· Bowlen reportedly_ offered .
' I' 1 b b 'I
Shanahan, paid $200,000 last SCI·
Phil•f. • w !I Ult an : s · son, a mul~ar contract worth
sivc, bat -hawking defense unng a·bout ••""'
1 yesr. But Shanafour yesra as the Bioncos' dcfen~
sive coordinator, insisted be han demanded more.
expccled to gel the job all alon&amp;,
'• A c011uact was ~ussed. bul
des ite Shanahan's favored II&amp;IUS.
we never got 10 the po1~t whete a
P.Everybody's been ukinC me ~o~uact was offered, Bowlen
.
. .
what I wu thinking, aad thiS is tiiSIS~
what I was thinkin&amp;, Yei-s-s-sl' '
~ hiS YCI!IS ~mg DenPitiUips said, pumping a fiSl in the • ver's defenses, Phllll(ll helped ~
air.
BrOilCOI get to lhc Super ~I !"
A popular choice among the 1989 ~ 10 lhc Al'C clllmpioasl_lip
Bronco players/ allff and fans, game m 199l.ln both aeuons. his
Phillips signed 1 lhree~year coo- de~ense Jed the
I~ fewest
tract believed to pay him $400.000 · potnts all!lwod, and ~n 1991 the
~IOIICOS led the AFC m 12 defen1 year.
"1 want to make sure you Slve Clfelllries..
.
undersl8nd -lhcre'a been a lot fl.
He. baa pre~us bead coachinJ
speculation that Wide somehow cxpcnence, havina senoed • interwas tile second man for the job, im Ileac! COIICh for the flnal four
and that'a not IIUC," Bowlen aaid. IIIIDef of lhc 198S seaaoo in New
.•'The guy who tholjd ha..e goaen Orleans after his father was filed
lhc job p die job."
there. The youn&amp;er Phillips also
At!Jlips 4S, bas been constdaed assuroed lhc capacity of Interim
\prime held-C01Chin1 maiOrial for head a.ch durin&amp; the 1990 peasome lime, lollowinJln die foot- son when ~ceves underwenl
steps of his father, Bum, who siqay 011 his artc:ries.
coached at Hous~n and New

do hereby giw notice of t he Rates of Taxation for the Tax Year of 1992. Rates e ~~:pressed in dol lars and cents on ~h one thousa nd dolla rs

tax valuation .

•

TOWNSHIP$

SCHOOL DISTRICTS

lc..,oorl

Air. .1.
Atl&amp;.

A..ucden

Two.

Ail
Otitar
JUchu:tl••

IEff"U"
lt•t•
An. • Alf".

....

lffeell"

ou..,

LETART
I

•

APe;

,,

lht--

AHI Eata• .... wll.cll.not bHn lllid 11 tho of toeh colloc:tion corry 1 p~noltv of lin p~rc:onl. Tox11 may be poid at the offlc:o ·
of
or by moll. Plo•lwl"'' yGUI' loot tu ltOiipt; and if you poy bv moil, be sure to loette your property by te• ing dis·
· tr.ict ond oncl- rtompod soil-oddrtSOtd envolapo .
AIWoys ......,,... yOII' tlx r-lplto 101 thot it 'cawnlli your PIOfllily. Office Hours 8:30A.M. to 4,30 P.M., Monday thru Friday - Closed

an lotutWy.

Ciotin(j doll Fobniory 12, 111113

'

,

HOWARD E, FRANK, Mt~ County Treasurer

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

•

�6 The Dally Sentinel

Page

TUesday, January 26, 19$J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cyrus, Bolton get their
dtle at·20th annual awards
,..

By .lOHN ANTCZAK

••

As!.

•' ed Press Writer

'. LOS Al)IGELES - Billy Ray
Cyrus and Michael Bolton were big
winners at the .American Music
Awards, and they made sure their
Critics heanl about iL
. .
: Cyf\IS was named favoriJe new
oount{y artist and his "Achy
Breaky Heart" was named tQp
®!JDtry single at Monday night's
20ih annual awards.
"Tonight thi$ award is from you
the fans, and as far ·as I'm coli·
Gemed, ro those people who don't
1jke 'Achy Brt.aky ~,' here's a
quarter - call someone who
r;&amp;res! .. he said.
•. II was a jab at country star
Travis Triu, who made no secret of
his dislike for the song. Tritt's hits
include "Here:s a Quarter (Call
Someone Who Cares)."
: Bolton captured the favorite
pop-rock male and adult COI\tempoi*rf artist tilles. Backstage, Bolton
hid a message for the critics who
&lt;~~:ride his gut-wrenching deliv.ery

and "lite-nick" style: "Soocess is
the best revenge.''
American Music •Awards nomi·
nations are based on industry
record sal,es and airplay data, and
winners are voted by a national
sampling of record buyers.
Michael Jackson won the poprock album trophy for "Danger·
· ous" and the soul-rhythm &amp;. blues
single award for "Remember the
Time." He also was presented a
· new honor, which in the future will
bear his name, for his global per·
formances and humanitarian con-

cerns.

.

Mariah Carey tuid a leading six
nominations but won only two
awards: favorite pOp-rock female
artist and adult contemporary
album for "Unplugged." ·.
Alabama was named favorite
country band.
The award for favorite female
country artist went 10 Reba McEntire. She also won COI!IItry album
honors for · "For My Broken

Heart.••

'

I

:TueHay, January 26, 1993

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--7

Pomeroy.:......lddleport, Ohio

Diners find good eating during Delaware's muskrat season .
By THEQ:SA HUMPHREV
Aslloc:lated Press Writer
SMYRNA, Del. -Nancy Bai·
ley wallted out of Mary Etta's Fam·
ily Restaurant, grinning like the
proverbial cat who swallowed the
~· But the main course wasn't
bini, 11 was rat- muskrat.

In his one victory over Cyrus, .
Garth Brooks 1!l'On favorite male ·
country artist
Bobby Brown and Patti LaBelle
were the favorite male and female
soul-R&amp;.B artists, and En· Vogue
won the CalefOfY'S album trophy
for "Funky Divas."
Boyz If Men won faVorite poprock single for "End of the Road" .
and favorite soul-R&amp;:B group.
Young rappers Kris Kross won
favorite new artist honors in the
rap-hip hop and soui·R&amp;:B calC· ·

''I'm 54 and I've been eating der, dart brown meat uotil the seathem since I was old enough to son closes March 15.
kn'?w what they were,'' said Ms.
Muslcrat is the Wednesday night
Bailey of Sudlenville, Md. $7.95 special at Mary Etta's, with
Delaware's muskrat trapping ~ potaroes and stewed tomatoes.
.season began in ~cember, and
Can't make it Wednesday?
two Smyrna restaurants are serving · Across town, Kitty Budd dishes up ·
the swamp-dwelljng rodents' ten· her secret muskrat recipe on Tues·

roast beef; others insist it's similar
to ~uirrel.
' This is a tender meat and it's
sweet. You'll never find a rough
one," said David Simpler of Elkton, Md. "It's better than ~uirrcl.
Squirrel can be a lillie rough. '
'"The secret is what you put in it

day nights al the Wagon Wheel
Family Restaurant.
"It's a lot of work. You have ro
make sure you do it right because
it's a wild animal," said Mrs.
Budd, 69, who's been cooking
muskiats since she was a child.
Some say the meat tastes like

when you parboil them to get the
wild taste .o ut,'' said Mary Etta
Workman, owner of Mary Eua 's.
Some people who have never
tried it simply can't get past the
name. When Mn. Budd owned the
Wagon Wheel, her menu called 4
''marsh rabbit''

.

'

••

•The Area's NtJmber 1
Marketplace

gories.
Pearl Jam was named favorite
new pop-rock artist and was also
named favorite new artist in l!eavy
metal-hard rock. Metallica won as
favorite heavy metal-hard rock

Days

artist.
Genesis was named favorite
pop-roCk group.
The favorite rap-hip hop artist
was Sir Mix-A-Lot, and k.d. lang
was hooored as favorite new artist
in the adult contemporary music
category.

for favorite c:ouutry album "For My B:lea
Heart," at the 20th American Music Awards
Monday lD L01t Angeles. (AP photo) .
·

TWO HONORS FOR MCENTIRE· Couatry
singer Reba McEntire displays the ~ awards
she won for faYOrlte fC!Jillle COUDtry artist, and

To place an ad ·

Call 992..;2156

One more shot

MoN• thn FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.S-12

~

LOS ANGELES (AP) ....:. Clint
•Eastwood; who just picked\up·one.
best-director award for "UDforgiveo,'' now has a shotatanoti\Cr.
He was one of five flim~en
nominated Monday for Directors
Guild of' America .awards. Over the
weekend he wori a Golden· Globe
for best direction. . . '
· .
Also nominated for · DG A
awards wete Roti Reiner for "A
Few Good· Meri"; Neil Jordan (or
"The Crying Game"; James Ivory
for "Howards End"; and Robert
Altman for "The Player."
The winner will be annol,nced
. March6.
'
•I
In the 45-year history of the
DGA award, only, three winners
haven't gone on 10 win lll.e.Oscar
for best direclilr.
· ·

I

COPYDEADLINE
Monday Paper
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Bl'LLETI\ B&lt;&gt;.\RD
BILlEnN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

ACHY BREAKY HEARITIIROB • DUly Ray Cyrus performs
at the. •
annual Amerk:au Music A,wards in Los An$eles Moo·
day. Cyrus accepted trophies for favorite country siDgle with
"Achy Breaky Heart'' aDd favorite uew country arti&amp;L (AJ' photo)

.-.

.,

.
COUNTII.Y FJ)N • Pereualal favorite Alaha·
' •• from left, Jeff Cook, RIDdy Oweu, .. d
.• .. Mark Herud011, celebrate .their 16th career trv: _:;.plly clarlat
the 20th a•aaal A•erlcaa MIISic:.
.

.

:*
~ -----People

,.

~ ~ NEW YORK (AP)- TV news~ woman Connie Chung was caught
~ off-guard when. her husband, talk
~ show host Maury Povich. tele;•phoned ~er at ho.me an~ asked a

;,questioa about then sex life.

Awarclsllbow MOIIday at the Sbrlue Auditorium
lD Loa Aqeles. Counirf made a popular llbow·
In&amp; before a noisy Shnue Auditorium th~a.
(AP photo)

in the news---

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Politi·
cal cartoonist Paul Conrad, whose
acerbic jabs won him Ibm: Puljtzcr
Prizes and the enmity of the Nixon
White House, is retiring from the
Los Angeles Times - sort of.
Conrad, 68, will retire March
31, but wiU continue drawing polit·
ical cartoons for the Los Angeles
Times SyndicaJe. They will appear
twice a week in the Times - about
half his current output
"My decision to retire from the
Times was a tough one 10 make,
but at this point in my life it's time
lo throttle back somewhat,'' Con-

•• He was taping his show ~ lilton: • audience - at the time.
,.
• ~~-... s showt being !Jmadcast
~ ~
":)1onday, was about a magazine's
survey on the sex life of the Amcri·
•e~~~wife.
' Povich called Chung at home,
· ~ advised her that their conversation
· was being listened to by a studio
: audience, and asked her if she talks
.
:during lovemaking - one of the rad Said.
:questions in the survey.
After hesitating for a minute,
NEW YORK (AP) - Director
Chung responded, "Oh, I don't Barry Levinson ·says he wouldn't
:. think l can do this. This is like 'The change anything about his latest
.: Newlywed Game.' Do l get a prize movie "Toys,'' even though it was
: if! get it right?" .
a nop.
When Povich told his wife that
He said he believes the experi; 11.0 percent of American women mental nature of the movie, which
; silid they talk during sex, Chung takes a surreal look at the war-toy
,.said she does, roo.
industry, was its downfall.
: The show was taped several
"Those are the dangers you face
· weeks ago, said spokeswoman when you take risks. The one thing
: Judy Twersky.
·
· I'm disappointed most about is the

. ruT...

~Alfred

.

community news

\ Bible study is held at the Alfred
W nited Methodist Church every
1Wednesday evening at 7 p.m.
:Everyone is welcome.
: Sunday school personnel for
; 1.993 are: Lloyd Dillinger, superin·
:telldent; Kathy Watson and Tim
Spencer, co-secrewy-treasurers;
l"lorence Ann Spencer. roll call;
Marilyn Robinson, librarian.
l[eachers are Nellie Parker and
netma Henderson, adult class;
pertrude Robinson and Lloyd
l:&gt;jllinger, Willing Worlcers; Susan
l'ullins and Charlotte VanMeter,
pusy Bees and Primarr; Doris
l:&gt;illinger and Susan Pullins, Sun·

.

'

Mr. and Mrs. Charles VanMeter,
Bucyrus, were weekend guests of
Warren and CharlOite VanMeter.
Reported ill in the community
are: Gamer Griffin, Clarence Henderson, Doris Avis, Marguerite and
Delben Steams and Lester Kearon.
Sunday guests of Osie Mae and
Clair Follrod were Kathy and Dave
Watson, Stacy and Alan, local;
Karen and Steve Follrod, Katie,
Brian and Brannon. Athens.
Katrina Specht, WeUston, was a
guest of the Uoyd Brooks family.
Pat and Robert Keatoo hOnored
their son, Bobby, with a party in
Qbservance of his 15th birthday.

climate ihit says experimentation is
discouraged," he said in Sunday's
edition of The New Yor1t Tunes.
"I don't know I'd do anything
different" if the movie could be
remade; he said. "I wanted to do
something audacious and out
there."

.

LeYblson, who won an Acade·
my Award for "Rain Man,'' is producing, and occa5ionally directing,
his f~ TV series. "Homicide: A
Year .on the Street" premiers Sun·
day on NBC after the Supetbowl.

NEW YORK (AP) -:- Eric
Scou, who played Ben on "The
Waltons,'' says the shock of his
wife's death two days after the
birth of their fll'St child has worn
off. but the pain hasit'L
Theresa Scou, 33, died Nov. 5
of leukemia, ihrce days after learn·
ing she had the disease. Her daughter, Ashley Elizabeth, was deliv·
ered by Caesarean section on Nov.
3, one month premature.
"S be never got to . see the
baby." Scou said in this week •s
· People magazine.
·
Scott, 34, said he heard from all
members of " The Waltons,"
which aired on CBS from 1972 10
1981. .
He has joined two bereavement
self-help groups and has returned
pan time 10 his job as a marketing
vice ~t with a courier company m North Hollywood.
"Now that the shock of There. sa's death has worn off, it seems
the pain is even greala','' he said of
his wife of.tlwee years.
"But I've gO! a little baby who
looks at me and I'm reminded of
Theresa. I hope Ashley loots like
her. I want her to have as much of
Theresa in her as possible. And I
think she will."

beam.

!Joard chairman, officers elected
Charles Yost wa eleeted chairman of lhe Meigs Soil and Water
:t:onservation District Board of
Supervisors when they met recenlly
Ill the MSWCD offiCe.
• Other officers elected were Joe
. bolin, vi.ce-chainnan, and Marco
Jeffers, secretary-treasurer.
: Yost appointed committee
chairmen as follows : budget • Joe
bolin and Tom Theiss; resource
conservation and development •
toe Bolin; information • Marco Jeffers; education · John Rice; equipment • Joe Bolin; reclamation •

...

•

Chuck Yost Bolin and Theiss were
appointed as fiscal agents.
District conservationist Mike
Duhl reported on several grant
applications which have been sub·

11\itted.

.

Regular board meetings were set
for the fourth Wednesday of each
month at 8 p.m. at the MSWCD
office, 3310 I Hiland Road,
Pomeroy.
Employee evaluations were conducted.
It was decided to sponsor one
student to Ohio ForeStry Camp in
, I

will

June and local schools
be COD·
tacted for suggestions of someone
toattend.
.
Hal Kneene, extension agent
agriculture/horticulture/natural
resources was present and discussed an upcoming meeting on
Farm Fence BuDding "Alternatives
Symposium to be held Feb. 13
from 10 Lm. to 3 p.m. at the Musk·
ingum Uvestoclc, ZanesviUc. ·
Attending were Tom Theiss, Joe
Bolin, Charles Yost. Marco Jeffers,
John Rice, Milce Duhl, Blair Win·
don, Hal Kneenc and ()p;ll Dyer.

·

DENVER (AP) - Cynthia ciation is holding its mi&lt;lwinter
Rylant and Emily Arnold McCully meeting here, .
have won the 1993 John Newbery
"Missing May" is about the
and Randolph C&amp;ldecott medals, death of an elderly woman named
the most prestigious awards in chil- May and her fr!ends' efforts to
dren.S, li•-h•comfon one another.
.
..,..-.uav. ..
"Mirelle on the High Wire" is a
Rylant won the Newbery. for
"Missing May," published by picture book about a litlle girl in
Orchard Boob. The award is given 19th century Paris who helps a
for the most dis.shed contribu· once-great high-wire artist conquer
lion 10 American literature for chll· his fear, while achieving her own
dream.
.
dren published in 1992.
The Newbcry Committee also
McCully won the Caldecoll for
the year's most distinguished awarded honors for "The DarkAmerican picture book for children Thirty:. Southern Tales ·o r the
for her illustration of "Mirette on Supernatural,'' by Patricia McKis·
the High Wire,'' published by G.P. saclc, illustrated by Brian Pinkney,
published by Alfred A. Knopf;
Putnam's Sons.
The awards were announced "Somewhere in the Darkness," by
Monday by the Association for Walter Dean Myers, published by
Library Service to Children, a divi- Scholastic Hardcover; and "What
sion of the Chicago-based Ameri- Hearts," by Bruce Brooks, by
can Library Association. The asso- HarperCollins Publishers.

It's medium-well, not
mutual funds, at Archie's
PAWTUCKET, R.I. (AP)The home of the "Neanderthal
Caveman Cut" is having a little
trouble with 20th-century technology.
Archie's Tavern Restaurant and
Marketplace is .located in Rhode
Island, area code 401. Alex. Brown
&amp;: Sons. a Baltimore brokerage and
investment banlcing finn, has the
same phone number, area code
410.

.

- Until November, Baltimore liad
a 301 area code.
So hundreds of harried investors
have remembered the "4" but
transposed the two other digits. ·
Tliey reach Archie's, which sells
a 2-pound slab of Prime rib called
the "Neanderthal Caveman Cut"
for $14.95, but doesn't do much in
the way of pork bellies and soy·
bean futures.
"It's absolutely incredible,' '
said Nalley Castellucei, 36, a co·
owner of the 450-seat restaurant.
"In the course of a day, the number
of calls we get for them is ilbsolutely amazin,.''
Archi~ .! receives about 30 calls

a day for Alex. Brown, CasteUucci
said.
"I don 'I even know what the
company does," she said. ·
The new area code for much of
eastern Maryland was needed
becaU$6 there were .too many 301
phone numbers, said Dave Pacholczyk, a spokes.man for Bell
Allantic's Chesapeake &amp; Potomac
Telephone in Baltimore.
· The phone company announced
the change in 1990 and Alex.
Brown made the appropriate
changes on company lenerhead and
business cards well in advance,
said Jami McDonald, vice president of marketing for Alex.
"Obviously we feel badly,"
McDonald said. "They're being
put in a situation where they're
spending a lot of time answering.
the j&gt;hone for another business.
"We've been in business at the
same addtess for almost 200 years
and had the same phone numberJfor
several decades until the area code
was changed," she said. "There
isn't much we could do."
1

,

Reedsville UMW meet at
home of Grace Weber - Mrs. Claudette Pinkerman was
welcomed u new member at the
January meetinJ of the Reedsville
United Methodist Women held at
the home of Mrs. Grace Weber.
The meeting opened with prayer by
Mrs. Nancy Buckley.
Mrs. Weber ga~ two readings
on Friendship for devotiona.
Mn. Nina Boston conducted the
business meeting during which 52
shut-in calls were teported and
Cl\rds were signed for several
Crimds.
The group paid $300 toward the .

seat

=t

pure

•

'toc the church and also

a hand vacuum.
was played with a prize
aw
•·
·
Mrs. Mamie Buckley closed the
meeting with pray12'.
.
Refreshments were served ro the
above Jiameil and Mrs. Frances' ·
Reed, Mrs. Pearl Osborne, Mrs.
Gladys Thomas, Mrs. Lillian Pick·
ens, Mrs. Mamie Buckley received
the door prize..
The next meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs. Boston.

:Ltarne

BULU&gt;OZER,BACKHOE
•d TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME BITES ond·
TRAILER BITES,
LANOCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING

Bashan Rd.,
Racine
949·2826

FREE EIITIMATES

T. SHAWN UPSCOIMB

PRICE REDU EDt

Fainily, friends
send off Marine

Public Nollce

For

R8NI Y-~;;:

Docornbor 31, 1882
· BALEM TOWNSHIP

GO~::r·~~DS

RID11pt. ............... 17,100.55

ln-1 ..................... 1,131.43
All Othor

'

'

~ .................... 126.31
TOTAl REVENUE
RECEIPTS ............ 37,423.85
EXPENDITURE
.
''

.,

Hippy Adl

Let us tall.you.just ·I ....'
how much your savings
can
be.
1· •
.
'
.
.
.
\

-· .

ROGAN' - ~

ER ,

llaluuoa_Sehl~

'

- l,•

.

:."-....;.;;=;.:....;.=.,....._.;.

Soplwrrwre - Willa
tUrStoeeil61
Happy Biriluloy
Sllonno,.
We lm&gt;eyoli,
Dad, Debbie, Came,

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 NOON

Lot HAULIIG,

36970 Ball R• Road
Potneroy, Ohio

ALL HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.
(614) 99

lEVIN'S UWI
MAINRNAIICE :

LUMIEI,or
FlAilED WORI
· In State or Out
Of State.

949·2391 or .: ·
1400·137·1 46f:;
Uwn Musing,

, So ullng.
.
Shrub ond T,. Trfm111ing
l RomoYIII
RMIII:nt'-1. Conw:Mctal

-

FrooEol-•

FIAEWOOO FOR BALi

992·53 0
WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Sptdalrlag In Cus1011
Fra.R=r
NEW &amp; USED P T5 FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
992~7013 or

-

WV. Across fr- IM Pod OHice
We Speci•Hze I•

nr•• - ........... - Exll••••• .
·Check our Price or We Both Lose

992·5553 .
orlOU"EE

.1·100-14

·~

Fer1111ilng, Woolln!l. ~

S &amp;L
·TRUCKING

Factory Choke
·12 Gal.!!!&amp; Only
10-19-92

3rtl LOCATION TO SERVE YOU lmER -

070

DARWIN, OHIO
7/31fll1nfn

. 1-26·9
•

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
Aaam AddltloM

Public Notice

-Guttar Work
..f:loctriool and Plumbing
~Doling

NOTICE OF

-lntertorl Exwlor
Palnti"!l
(FREE ES11MATES)

81·21477-IIKC.SMW

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

SALE OF DEBTOR'S

.

;.t!!"lli.Nqtltrect

you••• tiU.

HAULING

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

992-3470

PROPERTY, 8UBJECT TO
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
DISBURSEMENTS:
TO BE ANNOUNCED, IN
Glnerll
TIE FOUDWING
Gov.lrnment......... 48,715.72
PROPERTIES.
Public Safety .............. 510.58
1 1850 International
Copltal
Tr !ICior located In Mol go
OuUay........................ 35Q.OO County, Ohio.
TOTAL EXPENDITURE
tntar•t In approximatllly
DISBURSE·
310 - • r - tond looolod
MENTB ............... $49,575.31 · In Molgo County, Ohio,
Total R-pta Ovar/
brt.ny dNcrlbed • followa:
(U.....l Dleb...... (12,152.46)
Approxlmolety 59 aoroo,
Total o1 RO&gt;C. and Other
land being In t.ction 16,
Sour- Ovw(undorl
Townohlp 3, Range 13,
Diobura.,.enta Md Othor
Reloronce - : Vol. 240,
Uoeo .........,......... (12,152.461 Pg. 725 and, l(ol. 262, pg,
Fund Cooh Bat..,ce
168, Melgo County O.ed
Jan. I, 18112 .......... 29,735.78 Recorda. ONE HALF IN·
Fund Cooh Balonct~
TEREBT.
Dec. 31, 111112 ....... 17,513.33
26.2 acroa, Section 16,
SPECIAL REVENUE
Town 3, and Range 13.
REVENUE RECEIPTS: , .
Relorance D - : Vol. 245,
Toxoo ...................... U,819.40 pg. 873, Me19a County Deed
lntergov•ni'I'Wntll
Reoordo. ONE· HALF INRocolpta ............... 55,124.62 TERE&amp;T.
..
lnteroot.....................2,601.28
Approxilll•tllly 108 acrM.
All Othor
Section 17, Town 3, Ronge
Rovenuo ...............·15,426.04 13. Rolorenoo CHela: Vol.
TOTAL REVENUE
154, Pogo 10 and Vol. 107,
RECEIPTS .......... 137,871.34 pg. 210, Melaa County Deed
EXPENDITURE
Rocordo. 6NI' HALF tNT·
DISBURSEMENTS:
EREST.
Publlo Worb .........17,138.34
Approxl111ately 110 acreo.
Hoohh ..................... 17,341.78 Seadon 11, Town No . 31
CoDital Oulllt,........ 41,936.34 R•go 13. FUU. INTEREST.
TOTAL EXPENDITURE
S•l• will be held on
OISBURS............ 132,116.46 Jonuoiy· 21, 111t13, al 4:00
Total R-plll Ovar (Uncferl o'clock p.m. lit 201 S. E. 9th
lllabura.,.onta ......5,1154.U Streot, Ft. Lauderdale,
OTHER .FINANCING .
Florldo,
Propor11oe wilt be
SOURCEI (U8ESI
oold
lD tho hlgheol blddor
OthorFt...,..lng
ror -h or coto~~tor'o chock.
1our0111 ••••••••••••••:...... 200.00 A
ton por-t (10%) dapoolt
TOTAL OTHER FINANCING
the cloy oa
SOURCEI (U8Eif ... ZOO.OO
Total ol Roc. •nd 01hor
Addltlonlll terma witt be
Sour- Ovw (Undorl
onnoun- at the ..... For
lllab..... Othor
U.. ....................... I,054.U oddldonal lnlonndon, oonFund Caoh Blllll'lco
Jan.1,18fl2 ........ 100.441.30
Fund Caoha.lll'lce
rney lor
Dec. 31, 18fl2 ..:.. tOS,4116.U
O.litor..fn-Pooe•olon
Bonnie Scott, Clork,
· 208 8. E. 8th ltreot

..

GUN SHOOT

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
SIZED LIMESTONE
$9.50 Ton

Public Notice

GENERAl FUND
REVENUE RECEIPTS:
Ta...- ............ _. 119,066.56
fn!IOrF¥orNMnltol

~

Rotoo
Fully lnaurod
742·2360
1111113

R.Monlll&gt;lo

CooaNo.

TYPES

1neur•nc•

· Removlll :

BANKRUPTCY SALE

1

.Ia ~~·~•Auto
Co••••"'
.. ••

.FU 1111 SERVICE

304-675-4340, Ext. 405

COUNTY OF'IIEIGS
"Thlo Ill .., u...cll8d

. 214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687
...

' 1·26-113

Topping, Trimming,

HEART TO HEART
CARDIAC SUPPORT
GROUP
WILL MEET
THURSDAY, JAN. 28, 1993
AT 7:00P.M.
AT PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL COMMUNITY
ROOM
TOPIC: Recipe Modification for
a Cardiac Diet
SPEAKER; Marie Gravely, R.O.
For Information Call

1

.

111/'U/1 mo.

,....In :

Loren
:ilh ~:~~~~~=
Stanley. C
Fred Gibbs and Jim
A cake decorated with
Marine Corps emblem and wishin11~
him good luck and a buffet
served.
Lipscomb will be in basic train"
ing for three months at Paris Island,
S.C. He will graduate April 16"and _
wiU return home for a 10 day leave
before reporting ro 29 Palm, C81if.,
for schooling in the field of communication.
. ·,
His address is: Rec. Lipscomb
T.S., 291-80·66l5, P.L.T. 20326
Co. 2nd Bn. R.T.R., M. CRD,
PISC 29905 .

Slate Auto's already ·, ·
· low premiums can be ·
reduced even more by t
Insuring both your ear
. and home with thil Sti!tll
Auto Companies.

·992-3838

• .,

Till potoo h a l - - 1 0 • •1100 and '
.....Ill Ill"" 10 Ill .,.._
........ may be~ tor quollytng ...... .
oon 10 buy vooy - ...,. on 311
- · 4 BR, 3 bllho, 2 gongoo, '"!IIOd 1 :
BR 'Ill· Pt-'1' lhlludoo 4,800 oq. ft. wm .
bldg.
.
• .
Cal 614-912-7104101
I.

T. Shawn Lipscomb, son
David and Geagina Lipscomb,
recently for Marine CorpsHa!IJC~
Training. From Beckley, W.VL,
wiU go 10 Paris Island.
Lipscomb was honored with
party at the SlJper 8 MOJel in
lipolis.
Family and friends ·
were Allen and Opal
Allen,
Jill
and
and Charles Tyree,
Lori, Nora Eastman.

•
', I

EXCAVATING

JUNIORS 'Class of 1 994"
Studio Ambassador MODELS
Wanted from Ail
Area High Schools.
For An Application. Call:
PUTNEY PHOTOGRAPHY
. (304) 675·2387 .

Rylant, McCully win medals

FOREVER
· BRONZE
TINNING

HOWARD

P-oy,Ohlo

fL La....clolo, R '3:1311

12131182

(1) 26,1tc

..

(3111) 113 1147

R&amp;C EICIYADII
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER l SEWER

Dirt, Gr&amp;Yel and Coal
UCENSEOond

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM~nd

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

eNewH.....

eGCJnp.:•
eCo~ te

.........1••

"Helping You To Recover Your ln•esiJMnt"
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto

"

end Office Selltlng

UCINE, OHIO

~

PH. 614·912·5591
12·5-dn

MICROWAVE OVEN
VCR REPAIR

••tlALL MillS

I1 .0rWe

·

614·949·2202

6

4-7~12-2996

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

stor.&amp;c=
....
f IIIII
IS

614-949·2101 • 949·2160

or915·3139

915-4473
667·6179

lllo s.ciiJ Cllltl

.,

2112112Mn

2-7·92-lfo
I

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES
CLUB

Stone o.

..

Ufe • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health • ;
Accident -Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

IN POMEROY

SIZED UMESTONE

,.__!la:46
1Eparl.my.Bird
-.-$100 PoyoH
Tlilo 8d good lor 1
FREE c•rd.
Lie, No. 005t·32

Call614·992·
6637

D. A.IOSTON
EXCAVATING
(614)
667·662

HAULING

WOLFE &amp;
ASSOCIIIIS
ACCOINIIIII

--=~:;;;:;1~1
~:::::~
r
.
·

Quall2

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and .·
ACCIDENT INSIUNCE .COMPANY:

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

DI-DSOII'S
JlJ I
PLUMBING
flt..ihlnti,
·
·

un·.r-.

·:::~
.
·-

·-·~-

11104 LHcll111

C.........
..,..clle
-1
-

port,- 0
614-992•7144
I 011182 If!'

FOR SALE

St. Rt. 7
Clleslllre,OH.

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
RIC!son..le Rates
JOE N. SAYRE ·
SAYRE TRUCKING

14:-742-21

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent •
Box 189
- •
Mi.,leport, Ollio 45760
,
(614) 843·5264 lfl0183mn ..
HELP THE EffOIT TO IUILD A
RITUIE fOI MDGS COUNTY
HELP US IN OUI AITEMPT TO GET IIDUSTIY

"'ncom• Tu Prop•-

.P=t

-11-kHplng

RVING INDIVIDUALS
- BUSINESSES
113Y. W. SICOIID n.

......,

. . . . .,l01.4176t

.....e "" ....r
992·6193

IEIGS COIIITY
WANTED: 5 to 6 A&lt;IES OF .EWIVB.Y FLAT WID:
IIIIII ...... Ut. tal n .. ilcnl
12)-S... (J)WWIIIr
•
PIOII: htty or .., .. I u

..TROLLEY
.._e: 91H231
• PIIIJ'•
SIATIOII CUffS ·
992-2549

\

•

~

Snodgrass Upholstery

LINES

BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limeatone,

9·10-92·tfn

lltclthou....,.:.~:.:::

2U39 L~ Rolld
. t.ongovNio, Ohio 45741
(11·21, 1tc

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

l

.'

�Ohio

1893
t.nno uncrrn ent s

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

KIT 'N' CARLYLE®

.IllS..,. .......

3&gt; Announcements

-·

Larry Wrlgbt

12 nucka for Sale

1~ A~ 'fW.~1illtt':P 'iiAH HAVIH4
-~~ ~~ IN Y,~~ IIAI!i! •.

"FNo !!Ingle - . . ,, l'liwoool
Wlli:
- - P.
oAlii.
. .. ...
- Cillo-Ilion,
Cillo

Chowalot, Fonl,

=~-or

.

The World

DociP- -.,
long;

ACROSS

NO ruot,

PHILLIP
ALDER

73; Vans &amp; 4 WD'I

1A-. t rklno lnlonnttion On Mr
"""
Clnliidplnnla
'TIIomU
AM liltly
AI.. ;ton -Hill
Who
...,.. Mrirlod 1n GtMio Countr
~ Jonuory s, 1842.
A~'d·~From
Aii\&gt;OnO 'W..O Would Hlivo InIon ~ On Them. Donald E.
Hll. , , .._ DrM, so.

=

ALLEYOOP

12 -

DoihoiY ~ VIII,

1110 Cllov. 84,0011 lllloo; 8oo AI:
Carllln I 8nydor Furnlure Co.
·-1171.
.

...., WVA 83ol.

u;o -

To Toll Wl1ll You
UWOIIGiiiAILE COH¥ERSA.
TIOHHI 24 How Abbnvlotod
HO!aoolll ~0- Ext.
71:11 h.W P• llln. 111101 lo 11

~EKANDMEEK

.AKQJ

..

•Kt

+AK76$3

••

WE$T

•u

13
+tO 8
+AKIOS

J94

GIV!NlWBY

.?

EAST

.6HZ

• • 73

Yit. U...r Co. ION31.ol15.

4

I-U-N

J9832

SOUTH
• 10 8

•

·A-J9876
+Q2
+Q76

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

31 Homea fol; Sale
1 Bod.- ""'- In VJIIrogo 01
e-n CU,, -To l.adgri, 114-

.'

11184 Oldomobllo T-..do. A-1
DDRIIIIDu. New bralicH. tiMI,

Lost &amp; Found

- o....
l__
r-o
nrur.
iuollonl oondl-

-·-Hound,-·
Ad.-.

7

=·· . :..:..,.
-1on.
·--7.
......

llon. Juol lnollllod MOO ottroo
. - . 107 .......
..
Clhrt

Yard Sale

..

.... Pontloo -

-

PJ

Food

~.~tiii

~
tlon,

. . . ..c.lll4 ••• 1211. ·,

· Buslneas

Wanted to Buy

~I

D'l Aollo- ond totwogo,
-llurfna luo* ...... t-.
304-7'7UM:S.

'·

.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.., ; •

Home

. Improvements
__
...; ·
.

nloo oondl-

5NOOP'f! Vou've COMe TO
~ESqUE ME~ VOU CAN PUSH
' ME ALL TI-lE WA'f &gt;lOME ..

Colt 114-

-

~·?. In , _ - . 11-1'.

• ·--

Child Con po ouldod In rny
homo, 1'0rnt nlllrll- -to

FRANK AND ERNEST

......... 10llvltloo M1 IIIIa I . , ~

=. hl."':r"'cn'r.d

or 111. far

TV DINNSRS
CNN ! I r

2a.c~~r
--, .......
- lomltv.
...
tar ·rt.
~
7117.
•

Employment Serv1ces

hout ,...- -

towmlll,don,
to tho .,. IIIII S112.17 .... -

ooii10W71-1l5l

.

~=r·=
~
nndo. 84.00 P• HOur: 114-241-

144:1.

Including ...

frM ... - . - .14&amp;JI,
ond.._1
_
_
- · - "'!1
..001~""'
~

:

"AVON" ALL AREAS I IIIII,. rour
Urno with ,._ You'D ton tbo
AVON I All Arooo I Shlrtoy

--

'

• "'.

.. .

BORN LOSER

~' ~ _,:··~·.

WWt ~voo so
OO.Itlll-1 THe

.I'.,

tl24311.

Spoon, 10W71--.

. II

.

11 . Help Wanted
001. . . .,. , . . ,

~

. SPS~LC1Q
... .. '
..

32 Mobile ttomes
forSIIe

::,.~~..

KEEP PU5141N6, BUT BE CAR!:FUL
WI-lEN WE 6ET TO TI-lE ..

18 Wanted to Do
illor

Olaenlnp Anll•W.
..... c.tlftod ....... Aldo. Stan.... 14.10 Por Hour. .... On
7

•

•

loinlloAvolloblo.Con1oct-to

WW1o!no, ADON, P - Coro
Cent•, 170 PII'MICJMt Drlv•, 0.1Upotlo, OH 411131. 114-148-7112.

lleciiHIPra .. nl: •

•-·•221.

Utnlte. ""'" Aoololont Tlllin-

lnQ.

33 Farms tor Sill

In rny homo,
night ohlft. Aloo 1.1'13 21111. frooo - . . ,
porHimo -~~noo ondlor Applo ClrOM Ad. :l:~
wnlllnde for rout paawulll .=:,.~~lpm~ .tiOOO,
tlrrte .t hourly r.t•, 104-1752314.
2 Aoreo on
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porto
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my , ..... ..,.,oldo,
u-liii''~l~l•;f·
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prelwoblr lnlonto, 114-m-'11311,

tuu or 1*'-tlme.

Will oon lor otdorly In
114 112 'lSI.

rny homo,

Aroo. 114-

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Colt - r Clnlc'o -lolanl PT
k;atlwl, N8ncY lluHIM. For
Dololto:l~'lll/1244.

til• dtlf,

21

10 People To LoM

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1 , _ o.. rontood.
Col-4213.

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Opponunlty

•

Thm your clatter into cash,

S.U. it the 'PO' way..•by pboM,

-------

no need to leave your /lome,· ·
•I
,.
Place "XQUr clns.rified ad todqyl
15 UIOnU or le,., 3 day,
,,
3 pgea, 15.40 paUl in advance. . ,

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Aloo ln!llor _

as

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1._.__________~~----~

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low oo 111.00. Colt I ~EE
lEW ~ Calolof, 1
12·

2--~--------+
3. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:,1

ttt7.

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

Read
.,

6~-----------­
~·----------------------8,
.
-----..;-~--

•
'

I"

9. _______- - : - - - - -

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

13~-------------14
15-----------~

Read the

446-2342
9)2-2156

• .I

'

., '

.."

'.

.~~~~~~~lL-,------:--.:6~7~~3~--.._j; i~·
,.

a birthdor gill. Send lor
:13-Aiijj :~ 22) Wt&gt;an molting
Aquarius' Aatro-G[aph predictions lor
i
today, try to look
. ASTRO·ORAPH
the year allead by mailing s1.25 plus 11 ahead and Illow lor probable conlin· .
long, 81111-addresoed, llllllped erw. genclea. Toke lhe long-range view In·
lope 10 Astro-Graph, c/o thlo - - &amp;lead of merely lhe lmmedllte.
per, P.O. Box 91428, c-.,d, OH VIRGO (A... :13-...... D) Things might .
4-4101-3-428. Be sure to state your zOdl· start out slowly lor _you today In your
BERNICE
!IC sign.
comrnerclll dealings.
don't
(Felt. ?!L8•rcli :tO) This could be Impatient 01 .,_,..lc, ~use
BEDE'os_o L PIICIB
be a prolltable day lor you. 11 pulh· you will - o p momentum u you go
c:O~ to lhove. you're Hkaly to, be able along.
lo drlvs a harder bargain than your LIIRA (llepl. a-oct. 21) Do nbt mll&lt;e
counterpart.
any Important commKmanta today
ARIEl (Marc~ 21·Aprll11) II there Is a without first diiCIIUing them with your
now lntarool you're loolclng to tiur- at male. He or llhe could be oware ol pe..
this -time, tlllk to the heavy hitters today. rlplleral aspacls t~at aren't obvious to •
~~~~~likely 10 be tn a reoeptlve lrame ~0.....0 (Oct. 114-Nov. 111 You .,.j
CRI..
TAURUI (April 2IL88J :tO) When talk· 11t111n a fortun1te crete far on ability lo :
,.,.- "
lng to paop1e today with w11om you're finalize Important de&gt;alopmanteto,your I
not 1rttjm81ety acqullntod, H't ball to
sallolactlon. Keep IIMI PI IIIUN on until !
,
Jtlll, 17, 1 •
c10 moN1111entng than CO!Mrilng. Lat lhinga .,. tied the way you w~nt .
them discover who ond whll you are a • them.
·. In the yeer you might 111&lt;1 on a I bit at 1 lime.
IAGITTAIUUI ( - . 21 Dec. 11) Aftrm
more ernblll0!14 challenge than you 1 Gl. . . (Mar a1:.1uM aa) Tbore to jus- hind on the tillar wHI be Nqui..S todly
have 1n1111ptecl In the p11t. Whit you . tlllcallon today lor the optlmllm you II you .,. maneglng or directing pro. c1ec1c1e to dO might nol be eaey, ret your ' r,aa about a
It may hew jecl or anterprtaa. Be IUN Miborclnlloo
poellblllt~ lor baing ••·c~mlul .,.1 the potential to be 111 you lhklk 11 11. ...-atlrtd you mean what you say ond
vary atroni.
.
However, 11 must be t..tect ond worked say whit you - ·
. AQU""'U (Jtlll, »feel, 11) You aN 1 0111. ,
CAPRICOIIN (Dec. ~ 11) Your .
·lUlled lor the leadarlhtp rOle today, be-l CANCER I"- :n..,uly D) In cornpetl- para"""'"I llnenclll COl-111 11 thla
CIUOI you'll Wngl lor whit they, II.. d-opmente today, don't per• time ohOuld, be dedicated to illuatlono ;
are, and your Nalllllc -oaclt to urt:; cetve youroollu the undardpg. In feet, that allect the Mllare ol your 111111/y. ..
planned ~opma~ta will help t - you hive a sttgilt edge and your a - - •You are In 1 poilllon 1!1 do oornalhlng o
who are working with you. Aq"''rtuo, sarr will recogntzatte""" 11 Y"'' don't. · constructive In this area.

H..-.

q'our . ..
hday

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

CLRSSIAED RDS

I..._

that?

A. Yes, there is a problem; the
wrong verb mood is used in "I wish I
was certain." When you make a wish,
the mood changes to the subjunctive,
because you are hoping for something
that's contrary to fact. (If you were
certain, you wouldn't be wishing for
certainty.) From now on, use "I wish
I were certain," and you'll be sure to
keep your audience in the ri~ht mood.

..

IWIIllgii:.W.O..Ia... .......

.

· ·

. . . . _ - . .... _114-

WOLFF TANNING HDt
Nlw comnwcw. Home Unite,
tram tllii.OO. ~ Lotlono,

••.
33 PillviC bone · '
-n-t-'1 3-4 - lrtCI r...- ~
341 Notice ol
"""""'-t 37 UCI&lt;wltelt
up :;
••

IIYing

-t-+-'1 311 Dlelurblnce
enc11n11

I was certairi"? Or is lhere a problem

.-

1..

Fmanc1al

21 I.Niher
IICtory
. 23Welrd
25 Deaanr

418allllalk
43 AdJICIIYI

Q. What's the matter with "I wish

35 Lots &amp; Ac~~~ge

Hlustretor • · •
"
(2 wda.)
••

111 In lriMII
-

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ctovea
Non-protiiTV

Convent

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51 Neighbor of •
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ITAF08M
PFDGLWI.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I should rather rny play ...-e da.mned by bod .,
ptorora than moraly saved by good acting." - Oliver GoldarnKh.
. - ... .

TQ,'

'IIAT lAlLY C. ffll
PIIZLII PI!Q
_ _ __;.._ 1411M loy

.,,
_,

0

R110rronge I.H•r• of
lour ocramblod -ds
law to form four words .

..r
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.. KRAHES
.
1. 11 1 1
1

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A

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Two old maids attended a
high school reunion. While
5. 1
:!"
walching the people dancing,
. .I 1
. . . ... one turned to the other. "Havf;l
. - - - - - " - - - - , you noticed that a lot of the
Hy p 0 C
dreamboats have given .. the

N 0 WU 0

p

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I

~,,r.~,---l·u· Lomplete

--·

the chuckle quoted

by filling In the missing words
L-,1,-,J_....__,_...._:J you develop from step No. 3 below.
•

=r.-rz.'"...llrwt: ~ ==h'\:..._eo;: 441 Z31D. '

18Artcleco

-t-+-+-+-t31 Tea type

For something slow or sluggish, use
LAGGARD &lt; "a laggard approach"l.
Finding a word that rhymes .with the
adjective LAGGARD should' not leave
you haggard.
·
48 A. I Brick - . I
IR,2Iolbo,l~

10- -loin:;
crawllnt
12 Poilllve
,
worda
13 Fly

4 M1rrllld wom•n'• Ulle
5 Shlrp bark
6 VP'a 1uperlor
7Frae
8 Uk1
9 Unit olaur·
IICI llltiiUfe

27 Allll.210wne

Jeffrey M&lt;Quain '

IZ24.

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Pass .
All pass

OUR LANGUAGE

oho ' ,. IScbool Age ,.........,

llnolu11•. 31114-t7UAO.

Pass
p.,..

C) . . . . . . . . . . IMIZU

OI.\W)5, ~?

--WootOIIIMCOn
- · · Dor Clno Contor
1o I n.Plu IH' I A.ll. -1:10 P.ll. H
OUollty t_... _ to Tho
.. CCinoom For y- Chlld'o
Clno. Colt Uo For A VIlli. lnlonl
noddle,. 114 ue em. p,..
Slotor'o Cloonlng, quottty 1no
...... torVlabw
-·"' 1
r 't 1 .alii.
Rolo

Eut

· Some pairs of sayings contradict
each other. For example, "Birds of a
feather flock together" and "Oppoiites attract." Also, "Any pu~licity is
good publicity" and "Having the·crit·
ics praise you is like having the bangman say you've got a pretty neck."
There's a cliche for every flavor.
The same thing .applies to certain
bridge deals. You are trying to guess
the location of, say, a queen, but the
evidence is contradictory. Looking at
it one way, you think- or hope- thlt
East bas the queen. Lookin1 at it an·
otber way, you think West has her.
How do you reconcile the diflerence7
Often ·you don't; you just guess. But
usually there is an indicator available.
· Today's deal fits this picture like a
glove - even though pictures rarely
wear·gloves.
After you have opened with a weak
two, your partner boosts you into si1
hearts via Blackwood.· West leads the
club three: lour, king, six. Back comes
the diamond 10 from · East. What dO
you make of that?
When the dummy came down, you
were thinking that you would he lak·
ing a trump finesse through East. But
if East had queen· third of hearts, why
didn't be lead the club ace at trick two,
thus forcing tbe dummy to ruff?
Assuming East iSn't a beginner,
there must he a reason behind biB apparent madness. He must know that if
his partner has the heart
· ·
doubleton. He has liven
option; don't fall for it.
tric!t two, play out your two top
hearts, confident that West will drop
the queen.

Jour--...._..

O&amp;U:v

40=···

15 Hiving 1rm
cowering a
42 High Cl.'d
17 Symbol for
. 43 Poetrr loot
calcium
45 KenniiiOIIIId
18 Hurrk:1n1
46 F11har 01 Jr.
canter
47 Fill·
20 Europe1n
bonomld
clpilal
boa I
21 Hindu
4116,
Aom1n
cymbllt
50 lllh ..... I
22 Ancllnl
52 llllrptac:e
wilting
54 Collect
24 Depot (lbbr.) 55 Entongll
25 PIIIIOiophtr
-Marx
DOWN
28 TV'• t1lklng
horta ,
1 ~Hiler
12 wdl.)
2 II o dollcloull
28 Refrigerant
3 S~ntry (lbbr.)

By Pblllip Alder

t'

81

.

35 Diving bird
37 Kloolle38 HoUHhold

The evidence
was conflicting

..

.....

'Uood
441 DI7L

WIDDY JUGHAID
IS SHORE WEDDY
FER HIS'N!!

- - ...... "1111!
a' .,.m;
rtnoe;

Alcll PMI eon Auction ComPMJ',

9

:-

Serv1ces

WtSHT AWAY It

4-WD, lull· - · .C, L'!!!!!'

&amp;Auction

MIOdon
NI"Wk:e.
Uomnd
~ 1 _ , ¥1r!lillto, 304-

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

MOMMY. WILL FtSS IT

THUPPER?

--DLolotlon-,

Public Sale

. . . . --r. . . . . .

!!'. .....

. 15 WIDDY TATER
WEDDY FER HIS

olo. D RAulo~.- ,
~~1
;
.~

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-oolloowpl-.
11M Chovy Cltollon, oleyl.,

"=-,"'!ff!!

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ond...

8

....

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.......
tGOil
..,.,
linn,
~-.ms.

Pets for Sale

minipool,--

14

-

-~~~··Nd, 11110.

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, _ _ 1'112
bolho,:U ·I
_

ALL Ywd -111111 lo Pold'ln
- - DIADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tbo doJ bo.... tbo od to 10 NO.
!!l!ndof odlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Fot!lar.- illondor od"lon • 2:00

I

"r• ;r.'"~"':!~
tonu. - ton IIUCII ::
w
..... .

~

WOOl

lllpllltrn
13 Orlglnelod
14 Length unit

Opening lead: + 3

·RAaNEY

-1111t

6

tailor

33 One who

'

W..1

Puzzle··

30 ApllfOXImat•
ly (2 Wdl.)
32 Acquire br

I Sm111 one
8 Mldrld
. muuum
II Aclfear

(abbr.)

NORTH

Almanac:~ Crossword

_

7

8
•

7

•

7

12

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS

~H~IIlll

I

f3

I

I~

.-.

I'

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
IN THESE SQUARES
FOR ANSWER

..."

7

-

.. '
... .

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
'"''
Trough • Mower • Banjo • Pretty • NOT GET
When I told my old uncle I was going to college all
he said was, "In today's lime, a college educatron is
one of the lew things people are willing to pay lor and

NOT GET."

"
•

.•

..

·"

..1

.... . ,

�•••

•

•
'

.

•

By
The
Bend
.

The ·Daily Sentinel

·Marauders
defeat N-Y
Buckeyes

TUesday, January ·26, 1993

Page--10 .

Man literally _lights a fire under
·his in-laws to get rid ·of them·
Dear ADD LaDders: I am enclosing a clipping from a London
newspaper and would be intaesled
in y()Uf JeiCtion. ~:~ere·s the story:
•A pensilliiU aet fim 10 his home
to gee rid of four in-laws who bad
come fm a lhnle-day visit and lllayed
fiX dtree months. Wilfred Harte, 61,

.::.!U:S
~~:m.anc:u~
London,andaenieocedtoservedtree
years in prison.

"Bebebeaetthefue.~made

sure his dog, Tweet, was safe. He

RECEIVES AWARD • Tbe Meigs Soil and .
Water Conservation District received a superior
service a~ during tile 50tb annual meeting of
tbe Ohio Federation of Soil and Water Co.-vatlon District in Columbus. Tom Theiss, left, a

then told police, 'It was a very good
blaze. 1 felt quite euphoric.'
"the court was rold tbst Harte,
married for .20 years to his wife,
Peggy, was furious at tbe behavior
of unwanlcd guests who he said had
taken over bis home. 'They never
wanted 111 11'0 to bed at, nighL 11JeY.
stayed up wa•~"'"• TV until S a.m.
on a -~·•·· !;~:-My electric bills
were
I paid lhe rent, laxes
and all the Oilier expenses and felt it
wasn't my home anymore. Finally,
when it ,dawned on me that they
might never l~ve, I decided to do
something drastic.'
• As his wife and her relatives
slept,. Harte- poured S gallons of
petrol on lhe floors and set frre to it.
The court was told thai only through
extraordinary good fortune was no
one seriously injured.•
I, too, am plagued by relatives
who come too often and stay too
long. While I would not 11'0 quite
this far, it was rr.assuring 10 know

·&amp;ubled.

supervisor for tbe MSWCD, recei11ed tbe award
from Federation President Bob RockweD, cen· .
ter. Looklne on is David Fulton, Goodyear Tire
and Rubber Compuy.
·

Meigs S&amp;WCD .receives top rating
The Mei~:s Soil and Water Conservalion Dtstrict received a superior service award during the 50th
annual meeting of the Ohio Federa·
lion of Soil and Water Conservation District in Columbus. The
award is pan of the Distinctive Service Goodyear Conservation
Awards program, ·
·
The Distinctive Service Pro·
gram. sponsored by the Goodyear
. Tire and Rubber Company, encour-

ages district supervisors to evalilllte
their natural resource conservalion
prognun on an annual basis. District programs me ranted in a number of meas of service to county
landowners and resideniS, including delivery of teclmical assistance,
conservation education and infor!Dation pro~ams and overall program planrung. This year 75 local
districiS rated superior; nine rated
excellent, and three received a

good rating.
.
.
.•
The OFSWCD was organized tn
1943 to strengthen the natural
resource conservalion progmms of
Ohio's 88 count;r based SWCDs.
The annual meetlllg pv~ soil ~
waleC conservlllion distnct su~scrs and their staffs an opportumty
to gain new insighiS intQ local prognun development as weD as learn
about natural resource management
offerings available at the county •
state and f~ level.

a

Ruritans"· will have meeting
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Star MiD
Parle. AU members urged to attend.
New members welcome. Refreshments will be served.

Balderson will present the program,

SALEM CENTBR • The Salem
Township Trustees wiD meet Tues·
day at 6 p.m. at the Salem Fire
House.

Racine.

TUESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS
The
Orange Township Trustees will'
hold an emergency meeting Tues·
POMEROY • Rabbit sub-comday at 8 p.m. at the home of the .
mittee
meeting. Tuesday. 7 p.m. at
clerk, Patty Calaway.
the Meigs County Extension
RACI!\'E • The former "Racine Office. Pomeroy.

Youth convention set
The sixth annual "Youth Auac"

Youth Convention for the Tri-state
Teens Advancing Christ will be
held at the Gallipolis Christian
Church Jan. 29-30.
This year's rally will feature
study sessions, worship. conceriS.
music, entertainment, and recreation.
Tom Lawson, professor and
writer at Kentucky Christian College, Grayson, Ky., will be the featured speaker. Tracey Tooley associated with "One-One-Ministries"
of Chesapeake, wiD be the featured
singing artist.
For more information call Mic
Bowen, youth minister, for pre-regisuation, at 446-1863.

Honor student
Melanie Jane Beegle of Racine
achieved a. 4. grade point average
for tile fall semester at Bowling
Green State University. She was
named to the Dean's Ust A graduate of Meigs High School, Beegle
is a senior at Bowling Green, She is
the daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Jennings Beegle, Racine.

POMEROY • Recertification
classes for currently licensed pesticide applicators will be held at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens CenleC on Thursday from 1-4 p.m. and
7-IOp.m.
POMEROY· Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter. Beta S1gma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 6
p.m. at the home of Eleanor
Thomas. There will be a soup supper.

WEDNESDAY
RU1LAND • A special meeting
of the Leading Creek Conservancy
District board will be held at 10
a.m. Wednesday at lhe office.

POMEROY -.Pomeroy Group
of AA will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
at Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
CaD 992-5763 for informatlon.

LET ART • There will be a
meeting of Letart Elementary PrO
on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Letart
Elementary for all Portland and
Letan pareniS regarding the consol·
idation.

MIDD1.EPORT • Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ. Mary
Jane Wise will be the guest Speaker. Public invited.

RACINE • Southern Local
School Board wiD meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the high school.
POMEROY • The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at I p.m. at the home of Doris
Grueser.

NEW YORK (AP) - Rushing
in where district attorneys chose
not to tread, the Geraldo Rivera
television talk show has presented
the case of Joey Buttafuoco to a
studio "grand jury.''
The verdicts, as seen Monday
on the syndicated "Geraldo" program:
-By 9 to 3, the pnnel said there
was enough evidence to try Butta·
fuoco for statutory rape of Amy
Fisher, the Long Island girl, now
IS, who said sbe and Buttafuoco
became lovers when she was 16. ·

RACINE • The Racine Ameri·
can Auxiliary will meet Thursday
at 7 p.m . at the post home in

POMEROY • The fma1 public ,
hearinl! on Pomeroy· s downtown
revitalization will be Tuesday at 7
p.m. in the auditorium at Pomeroy
ViUage Hall.

Landers
Tim..
' ,.
Creaton Syndlulo" ' :.

.tJiat I am not alone. Quire IIIOI'Y,
isn't it. Ann? What do you think? ••
ASOULMATBINNEWARK
DEAR NEWARl{: I think Ibis
was an ~uemdY risky aolutioo,llld
I hope it doesn't give my Rlll!cn
any ideas. Mr. Harte is lucky
nobody died in that fue. He could
have been charged witb murder.
· Dar Ann 'lo~Jiden: This is in
response' to "The Other Woman" in
Hampton Roads, Va., who is
invol\led wilh a manied man and
gave ~evcral reasons (I call litem
excuses) to justify hti behavior. 1
have two commenta - one for her
and one for yOII, Ann.
Dear OCher Woman: I agree that
the cbances of meeting a man over
30 who isn't married, alcoholic, a
moocher or gay me rather slim.
Stability and commitnieot are not
words thai are associaled with large
numbers of males tbesc days.
Your man is no beUer than the
rest of the loaen if hll is sneatiilg
around behind his wife's back. If be
chcaled on her, chances we good
thathewillcheltonyou.
Ann, why did you bave 111 remind

~

~I

THERB

·

1:

DEAR STILL LOOKING:
hope your lelia" wiD be clipped by:
all tbe 'WOIIICil who me "looldng."
Bein&amp; alone is infinitely beau than
being saddled with a Qasbing bore,
a cheat. an alcoholic or a Creel~. ·
and I have a ton or letters to prove
iL
An alcohol probltm? How c011 )1'011
Mlp )I'Ourstlfor someone )1'011 lcve?

"Alcoholism: How to Recogniu It,
How to Deal Wirh I 1, How to.
Conq11er It" will give yo11 the
aiiSWers. SetuJ a self-addressed,·
long, brulness-stu_en~loPI twJ

Pick 3:
717
Pick 4:
- 3572
BuckeyeS:
5-6-12-27-33

Page4

!he WOIIIIII that sbc is 48 and "not
gelling any )'OIIIIICr"? Sinoe w~
does youth guaranlce anything? ~y ;
pandrnolhcr m.nea a aecond ~ ;
at age 68. My mOiher remarried at ·
66. Her .husband is now ~. and sbe :
can't keep up with him.
,:
My advice to those who are look;
• for someooe __.ial wilb wbom '
lhme Jheir
sin)ple:
your sense or humor and tum,
yourself into your own !lest friend.
Would you fix your best frieail:
up widt a manied man, a moocher,;
an alcoholic or a gay man? Of•
courae not, so why choolle one for~
yourselfl- HAVING FUN AT 45; _
Bur STILL LOOKING BECAUSE:
ANN SAYS THEY'RE OUT

:

'

Vol. 43, No. 194
• Copyrlghled 11183

. Sale of the old Pomeroy Junior
. High School property to tbe Vii·
. • ~age of Pomeroy for $35,000 was
' authorized at a meeting of the
. Meigs Local Board of Bducation
· Tuesday night at Salem Center
· School.
. The deed, according to tbe
• agreement between the Board of
• Education and Pomeroy Village,
, will specify that no permuent
·buildings or ftxtures will be con~ structed which would prevent part, ing at athletic events or· other
, schoOl nctivities taking ~ on the
: athletic field or in that VICinity.
'
It will also specify that any
• problems ·pertaining 10 the asbestos

in the building or responsibility for
i, s remOval wiD be assumed by
lhe village. Transfer of the property
is also contingent on verifiCation of
a five year lease for the superintendent's offices in the old Pomeroy
Senior High School building, now

who will estimate the value.
remainder of the schpol year in the
Turned down by the board was a areas of indu$trial technology and
request from Pomeroy Elementary driver education.
School to transfer the approximate·
Three purchased services conly $500 in !he safety patrol fund to tracts were ~warded during the
the principal's fund for the pur- meeting. Jim Carnahan was hired
chase of a laminator. The boardJelt as a driver for students to the
Yillage hall.
.
the money should be used for some Athens severe behavior class filing
· The board granlcd easements fiX specific· project benefiting the chil- a vacancy created by the resignarights of way around the Baptist dren since it was accumulated tion of .Curtis Holiday accepted at
church property and at the end of through various fund raisers carried the meeting. Sandra Tilhs and
the football f~eld behind McClures out by tlie stliden~. The money in David peem were employ~d for
to P001eroy as a part of the junior the past has been used on expenses homebOund srudent tutoring.
high sale agreement
· of the safety patrol trip to Was)lin~­
Supt. James Carpenter was
As for the sale-of timber on ton D. c;. No trip will be talren this authorized to use a substitute for
some district-owned propeny the year.
.
the learning disabled unit at the
board voted 111 posrpone any action
Michael Cockier was added to Rutland school until a regular
pending a report from a forester the substitute teacher list for the teacher can be hired.

•

"-·' ANSWERS QUESTIONS • Mike .Stroth, -~ to''$400,000 iD arant .ioaey fer enliucement of
aeeond " - rfpt, r-roy'a revitdzldloD coa- , ~ the ceatral bllllit- dlstrld.
are, 1~ultant, aaswered queatlou at tbe final pubuc:·
r, Job Muaer, revitallJatlon a
1111 for the
hearlaa reprdiD&amp; the :~':don process for
Pomeroy Merchants Assoe ation; Deanna
· · Pomeroy's dowdiUWa n
lion. A~adon .. Figlestabler wbo is working with Strntb nn the
delldllne fir the VJIIa&amp;e rl Po!Mroy Is ebnary
application; ud Pomeroy Mayor Bruc:e Reed.
5 to the Obio Departnaent of Development for up

Allor.etnred

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy's final public hearing
regarding downtown revitalintion
was held Tuesday night at Pomeroy
Vii!J.«e Hall.
Mike Strolh of SBA ConsultaniS
of Jnclcson and Pomeroy's revitaJ-.
ization consul~! again answered
questions pertaining to the process
•nd informed those attending
6l111Ctly what the project involves.
- The Village of Pomeroy is
applying 10 the Ohio Depanment of
I;levelopment (ODD) for up to
$400,000 in grant money. The revitalization program, according Ill
Stroth, was started in 1985 in an
elton to enhance the lboks of centta1 business districU. The applicatiOn deadline is February S.
. ; Strodt stated tbe central business
·· district runs from Sycamore Street
to the west side of Butternut
,

Avenue and from Second Street to
lhe Ohio River. He said there me
approximlltely 40 b!lildings in the
central business district and that
commitments have already been
obtained by ova- one &lt;ben boild· ings in· the cenllal business district
A commitment from 20 pen:ent of
!he buildings in the oentra1 buainess
district must be obtained before
application to ·the ODD can be
made. John Mll88er, revitalization
spokesman for the Pomeroy Merchants Associaliori, stated that 20
percent has already been commit·
led and thai he feels thm could be
a commitment from as many Is 20
buildings.
In addition to a commitment
' from 20 percen' of tlie buildings
there must also be a 10 percent
match commitment from the viilag e. If the $400,000 would be
awarded the Villal!e of Pomeroy

•

· ,
iJ .;
Pole, equipme:nt taken

' Four-wheeler stolen

MEMBERSHIPS RECO,GNIZED - Jo. .
Holiday, left, recently received llill65-,.r • - ·
bersblp seal while bis 10n, Raymo•d Holiday,

' '

c:enter, reeelftd bll 50 year -Hnblp c:ertlllcate fr!IID ~ Patty D,er of Star Granae.

.

I

~

I

....

~.:::..;;;.,.,

NEW AU.DITOR - Naacy Campbell was appointed Meigs
County auditor at Tuesday night's meeting of tile Meigs County
Republican Central Committee. Sbe wiD filllbe uaexplred term of
the late William R. Wickline. Here CampbeD Is cOngratulated by
Bernard Gilkey, committee c:hairmu.

•
as president of Hemlock Pipeline, investors and receiving imd dis- :
Inc., keeping the corporate books, bursing oil and gas revenues. She .
preparing payrollleport.s, and man- worked for A &amp; P Drilling Co. and :
aging the office. Prior to that she Adams Drilllng Co. from 1969 to .
was employed to research oil and 1980 and prior to that did ~- : ·
gas leases in various counties by ing and secretarial funcuons for .
Proffitt's Wholesale and J.D. Roy Proffitt Wholesale, and secre- ,
Drilling Co.
tarial .and paymll functions for E. I. .;
Her experience in the oil busi- ·DuPont De Nemours and Co.
ness also extended to billings for

Ohio, West Virginia officials join in effort
to establish interstate local calling service

w::;hased

t·

· Naricy J. Campbell of Racine is
Meigs County's new auditor.
She was appointed to fill the
unexpired term of the late William
R. Wickine by a majority vote of
the Meigs County RepubliCan Central Committee at a meeting held
Tuesday night in the Common
Pleas Courtroom.
Wickline's 1erm will expire in
1994.
Canipbell was one of six appli. cants for the position which has
been. vacant since the death of
Wickline on Jan. 9; Since then
Mary Hobsteuer, clerk of ' the
Meigs County Board of County
Commissioners. has been serving
as temporary auditor. Campbell
assumed her duties today after
being sworn in Wednesday mom- .
injl by Common Pleas Judge Fredenclc W. Crow .III.
The other applicants were
Kenn·y Utt, Larry Lavender, Ray .
Pickens, Deborah Watson, Tom
Reed.
The new auditor is currently
pursuing a degree in business
administration with a -major in
accounting from Ohio University.
She is a junior there with a grade
point average of 3.96 and has been
the recipient of the Big Six In~live Award and a Dean's Scholarship.
·
A graduate of Racine High
School in 1965, Campbell the next
·year completed a 12 month secretarial course at Mountain State
Business College.
From 1983 to 1~89 she served

must match that with $40,000.
Pometoy Mayor Bruce Reed stated
village council is concerned with
where that mo~y wiD come from
but that council is committed 10 the,
project and will do what it can to
see that the plan goes through. .
Strolh stated projeciS eligible for
the grant money include exterior
upgrading. signage, roof repairs,
heating, electrical and anything to
correct a code violauon. He
stressed.however, that the money
may 1)6t be used for remodeling
pwposes.
Estimates for participating projects have been economiCal according to Stroth. He stressed these
estimates an: only ''rule of lhumb"
estimates and me not binding to the
participanL He said the state recogBy Mindy Kearns
nizes ihat the parljcipaniS are only
Officials
of lhe Mason, New
estimating the cost of the worll: to
Haven.
Pomeroy,
and Middlepon
be complelcd. Stroth stated actual
areas
left
a
meeting
on establishing
estimates from conttactors would
local lelephone service between tbe
four !Owns a liale less optimistic
1
owners that conunitmeniS must be than they were before, but vowing
persevere. .
=~ed~~O:~~~e't:!~: to Towns
officials met :rue~Y _af:
Bill Pullins of Family Homes, reported to the Meigs County
ings on the revitalization ordi- ternoon at lhe Mason Crty Building
• · Sheriff's Department on Tuesday that someone bad cut down a
nances and make a decision with represenratives from the West
• treated pole taking the electric meter, breaker box, weatherheads
whelher or not to proceed with the Virginia PSC, PUblic Utilities
and enuance cable at the pole at !he old ~andy's Auto Sales plupetapplication. Reed again stated Commission of Ohio, GTB and
ty on Route 33 at&amp;teipiiC.
·
.
council's commitment to the pro- C&amp;P Telephone companies 10 disPu!Uns ~Wed die)' bad
the property. The re~ siated
ject and the desire to see the project cuss what steps are necessary toes.. the pole bad been sawed o at the ground making tbe mtssing porthrough.
tablish local calling between the
• tionaboul10-12feetln length.
Deanna Figlestahler, who is two West Vuginia rowns of New
:
It was reported a duD colored pickup truck was seen there Tuesworking ,wilh Stroth on the grant Haven and Mason, with the Ohio
day morning.
·
·.
·
application, stated the importance rowns of Pomeroy and Middleport.
•
An inveltigalion is continuing. Pullins stated he is more inlerestof the design review board which
Dannie Wallcer · of the PSC
~ ed in recoverin~tbepole and equipment than in prosecuting.
will be set by the 'mayor. This seemed optimistic about the venboard • composed of one tepresea- ture that was 'begun five years ago
tative from council, someone with by Mason Mayor Geolge Nichols.
an archlleCtural IMickground and as He said Mason had filed a formal
.Jnck Pett:ncn, Syracuae, ~ 10 the Meigs County Sheriff's
.
many as four business people • wiU complaint with lhe PSC, at his sug-.
• Depadment on SundaY thai his four-wbeeler had been stolen from
enforce
the sl8l.dards for the cen- oestion, to get tbe local mea call·
the farm on l'ellnon llollow.
llal
business
district as passed by · ing. Wallcer said lhe complaint'
The report stated !he four-wbeeler was recovmd and charges are
ordinances
by
the village council.
wasn't an objection, but was used
pending.
An answer to the application, as a mechanism to bave an official ·
.according to Stroth, will come order in the stare.
IIIOIIIld April S with 1 111111 date for
AlaUboxesda~ged
Wallcer said local calling has
the
project
around
May
1.
He
said
recently
been expanded in West
~ Joluuon, Lovell Read, "'niJXIInnno"tedM to !he Meigs County
panlclpants
In
the
project
would
Virginia,
with
most people baving a
Sheriff's DeDartmenl that over tbe weekend some damaaed his
bave.up to 18 months to complete local calling distaricCol22miles in
mailbox by hl'tiinglt wilh a blunt objecL
wort and the project would be • circumfem~ce. The trouble with
ciOied out after 22 montha. .
New Haven and Mason callirig
Saulb concluded the '-ina by Pomeroy and Middleport locally is
savinl Pomeroy Is a "small sleep- that the call crossea the state· line.
James
Gallipolis, was &amp;mll,ed Tuesday aftanoon by
lni g1ant ready to awaken. • He Wallter aaid bolh C&amp;P and GTB
Galllpolia Police on a folaay wamnt from~ County.
,
He Wll tratwpolled 10 tbe county Une and lllnled ova- to Meigs · slaled the ObD is expecting about would bave to get a waiver to cross
30 applications with fD-12 or those !he line.
• Counly d"9!1"" wbo relayed him to !he Meip County Jail.
Wallcer said the officials ate
CODtin!led pap 3

~---.-Loca,l brie~"s ~·---.. ·co~~R~t.::~ar:::-ding

When .)I'IUn 11 'Jf!fl'S old and ,ml•ve liVed thnJIIIfh as much as lblani; even the chance ID alle1td Wwol '
is somtthing. But tot:ia)l Palani not only goes ID school, she plays tit£ cello tmd she's active in athletics, •
Thanks ID Easter Seals, Palani has gotten academic tutqring, she's gut111 ID camp, and she's rraived a ; !
whe€Jchair.ln fact, She's even p.e on lo win medals in the Junior NaJiono1 Wheelchair Games.
All of which have given her the chance every kid deserves: the chance ID.be a kid. Pa/ani is just
, •
Onl! of millions of childml and adults with disabilities that Easter Seal quality ~iliJa.
,,
lion /)rogroms have helped. Gi~ID Easter &amp;ills. QIVI! THI! POWI!" TO BI!CO_MI!.
• .

studeniS to one teacher.
Following an executive sessjmi
to consider a grievance from Faye
Manley. the board voted to pay her
four hours of overtime if lhe union
will file no more grievances concerning the use of vans unless a
driver has been conuaclcd to ta1ce a
trip and the trip is canceled.
John Lisle, principal at Salem
Center, spoke briefly on progress at
the school and the effecbve schools
program.
Larry Rupe presided at the
meeting attended by board members, Randy Humphreys, John
Hood, Roger Abboa, and Bob Bar·
ton, Supt Carpenter, and Treasurer
JaneFry.
.

Meigs County auditor

Final he~ring held on proje·ct;
deadline for application Feb. 5

THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE • The Riverview
Garden Club will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Gladys · The bombing of Baltimore's Ft.
Thomas. Co-hostesses will be McHenry In 1814 . inspired Francis
Grace Weber and Frances Reed. Scott Key to write "The Star-Span·
Marilyn Hannum and Ruth Anne lied Banner." .

Graduation at Meigs High was
changed to May 23 due to a conflict with alumni banquet schedules.
Meeting with lhe board was Lily
Kennedy who represented fourth
grade parents at the Rutland school
She expressed concern over class
size. The. superintendent explained
thai adjustment of the open enroUment policy is expeclcd to ta1ce care
of the problem nexl year. Meigs
Local Teacbers Association president Carol Ohlinger and several
other teachers also talked about
open enrollment and asked for
input into the policy changes. The
state sets minimum standards of 25

Campbell named new

l/562,ChkGgo,IU.606Jl.(l562.(1n .

POMEROY • A Sugar. Run
Schon! meeting will be held by the
Meigs County Parle District at 6:30
p.m Thursday at Trinity Church.

A lluldmedt. Inc. Newepoper

:_Meigs board OKs sale.· of junior high school building

Alcoltol, clo AM Ltw:leTs, P.O. Boz ·

POMEROY • Free clothing day
will be held at the Salvation Army
in Pomeroy on Thursday from 10
a.m. to noon. All mea residents in
need of clodting are welcome.

2s..tlona,12 Pagee25-

Pomeroy---Middleport, Ohio '!"'ednesday, January XI, 1993 .

11

-By 12 to 0, they said there Matvyn Kornberg, commented that :
wasn't enough evidence to charge the mock hearin~ · "oversll:ps tht;':
Buttafuoco with conspiracy to bounds of propnety" and threat~ •
shoot his wife, Mary Jo, who was ened a lawsuu for slander if it
wounded in the head by Fisher last aired. But Jeff Urdel, a publicist f(l('
May 18.
the show, said that as far as hit,
-Eight of the panelists said knew there had been no demand•
they didn't think Bua.afwx:o could that the show be stopped. and il~
get a fair trial because his reputa- . went on as scheduled.
.•
tion has been destroyed by the
As decided by a coin toss befmt; .
media.
the show was taped Jan. 14, matrl· Neither of the Buttafuocos moniallawy.er Raoul Felder acted !
appeared on the show. Fisher is as prosecuror and criminal defense··
serving a five-to-15-year prison ~ialist Barry Slotnick defended"'
term for assault
Buttafuoco.
Buttafuoco's real-life lawyer,

near 50.

'

clt«k or moMJI ordo for $3.65 (this
itrdwles pos14ge twJ llmullillg) to:·
CIJIIIJIIJJ, send $4.45.)

Partly doudy lolllgbt. Low In

30Jt Tbui'llhy, cloudy. Hlab

••

'Geraldo' show 'trial' says
Buttafuoco shouldn't be charged .

Community calendar·
Community Calendar items
appear two days before u event
and tbe day or that e~enL Items
must be received well In advance
to assure publication in tile calendar.

Ann

0 hio Lottery

. Pattersoll an-ested

ra=-.

on

faced with two taslcs. The first is 10
get both the West Vuginia and Ohio
commissions to talce lhe necessary
steps, then get lhe Department or
Justice to agree to give the waiver.
Not everyone felt the venture
would be smooth sailing-, however.
C&amp;P representative Bob Swoope
said an interstate venture hasn't
been approved since 1984 and there
would be "real road blocks 10
cross." It was noted that this will

Air Force charges
Willis in wife's murder
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP)
-The Air Force has brought mill·
tary charges of murder and
attempted murder against an airman from Ohio accused of killing
his esttanged wife at the Myrtle
Beach Air Force Base, a
spokesman says.
Senior Airman Jeromy Willis,
23, of Ironton, Ohio, already .had
been charged with civilian murder
charges In the Jan. 4 killing of .
Marie Willis at the base's legal
offtce.
The military . presented its
charges against Willis on Jan. 20,
said Dave McMahon, a spokesman
at Shaw Air Force Base. No officia! explanation was given on why
the charges were not announced
until Tuesday.
Willis is confined at a prison at

~

•

the Chatleston Naval Base, said Lt.
Cmdr. Max Allen, a Navy
spokesman. His case has been
transferred to Shaw because the .
Mynle Beach base will close in :
March.
:·
Milita!)' and civilian
tori &lt;
are negotiating who wllf:juris. :diction.
·
·
Myrtle Beach Police Chief S1111 .
Killman said he did not kilow of :·
the miliWy charges undl he was :=
informed by the news media.
-:
"I'm not sU!Priled," Killman :told The Sun News of Myrtle
Belch Tuesday.
•
Myrtle Beach police said they :·
thought they had jurisdictlon ·
because Willis was arrested In ·
Brownsville, Telias, on-Jin. 19 on a ·:
murder arrest WIITIIlt issued ,by a ~
city Judge.

-?

'

•

•

set a precedent wilh lhe justice •
departmenL
·
:
PUCO Attorney Examiner Doug
Jennings agreed. He said the Ohio
commiSSion has three inlrastate
cases . pending with the justice ·
depanment at the present time,
which has been . pending over a
year. He added the long distance
carriers inlervened in lhe cases
which made them even mo~
Continued on page 3

'

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