<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10068" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/10068?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T11:59:28+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20508">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/deda2b15d7b3a5304fa78d818df02f8f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>105838dce7f8a4f2788d0baa6c246556</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32183">
                  <text>..

~-

. ..

".

Pomeroy-Middleport--Galllpolla, OH Point Pl.... nt, wv

31 1193

Southern
~ns lOth

·lJog producers expand breeding herds

I

'
I

CEREMONIES HELD • Ribbon cuttina cere·
monies were beld Sahlrday morniag for Micllael
Apu 's- Floral Boutique, 428 Second Ave., Gal·
lipolls. Owned by Jim and Boanle Stutes aad
Hud and Opal Saunders, the company name
originated from tbe names of the Stutes cblldren, Kimberly A.nn and James Michael. A-lso
assisting in floral designing will be Jurri ·

Reynolds. Tbe store's grand opening will be
Feb. 1. Business boars are·9 1.111. to S:JO p.m.
Monday lllrouab Saturday. The phone number
Is 441..0500. Pictured at tbe.rlbbon cuttilla are, (I
to r): Jurrl Reyaoldsl Kimberly Rbdea,
Micbael Stutes, .Bonnie !!lutes and Opal ·Saua·
ders,
·

:. ~

WASIDNGTON (AP) ~U.S.
.~ producers continued to expand
lhe1r breeding herds in 1992. contrary to many induslly analysts'
e~ations.
.
·
they had expected breeding
herd liquidation to begin in 1992
after mums declined in 1a1e 1991,
said economist Leland Sourhard ~
lhe Agrlculllile Deplnment's BOOnomic Research Service.
"Ho\¥ever, expansion continued
at· a modest pace as producers'
reiW'IIS continued above cash coSts
in 1992 because of a bumper corn
crop and stronger-than-~viously·
ex~ted hog ~ket,' Southard
sa1d In a recent edition of the
depirtment's Fannline magazine.
Pork production is thought to
have reached a record 17.2 billion
pounds in 1992, overshooting the
previous record of 16.4 billion
pounds set in 1980. Production in
1993 may set a record of 17.8 bilsaid.
·lion pounds, the report
.

Multimedia reports Personal incotnes up 1
·
(! 1992 percent in December
t
ne earnings :Or

GREENVILLE, SC - Walter
E. Bartlett, Chairman of the Board
and Chief Executive Officer of
Multimedia, Inc., announced today
opcrating results for lhe year ended
December 31,1992. The Company
had net .eamings of $60.5 million
compared with $48.4 million for
1991 and earnings per share of
$1.61 in 1992 versus $1.30 in
1991.
For the year, consolidated revenues were $576.8 million, up 10%
from $524.3 miUioo in 1991. Operating costs and expenses increased
from $368.5 minion to $403.7 mil·
lion or 10%. This resulted in a.
. 1992 operating profit increase of
11% from $155.8 miUiori to $173.1
million.
For the year, consolidated operating cash flow increased 11% to
$219.5 million. Newspaper cash
flow increased 9% to $43.7 million, Broadcasting cash flow
increased 7% to $48.1 million,
·cablevision cash flow increased
14% to $77.5 million and Entertainment cash flow increased 11%
to $57.8 million.
Reyenues for the fourth quarter
were $167.4 million, up 17%.
Operating profit for the quarter was
9.7 million, an increase of 15%.
et earnings for the quarter were
$19.2 million compared with $14.5
million in 1991. Earnings per share
for the quarter were $.51 in 1992
versus $.39 in 1991. For the quarter, consolidated operating cash
now increased 14% from $54.1
million to $61.8 million.
.
For the fourth quarter of 1992,
Newspaper revenues increased 4%
to $35.8 million, Broadcasting revenues increased, 12% to $44.9 million, Cablevision revenues

~

increased· 15% 10$40.7 million and
Entertainment revenues increased
39% to $46.0 million.
Newspaper cash flow for the .
quarter.mcreased 12% to $12.5
million, Broadcasting cash flow
increased 9% to $14.9 million,
Cable vision cash flow increased
14% to $20.2 million llild Enter·
tainment cash fJow increased 14%
to$15.5 million.
The Entertainment division's
fourth quarter revenues include
revenues from the telecasts of the
division's highly raJcd mini-series,
Deadly Mab'imoqy, the Donahue
25th Anniversary special on NBC.
the new season programming
(Rush Limbaugh and Sweating
Bullets) and the national expansion
to additional markets for Jerry
· Springer. The expenses and start." ·
up costs rlllal¢ to th~ program
ventures were higher than the rev·
enuesproducedforthequarter. ·
. Multimedia . Cablevisio_n
mclude~ the se~uraty alarm buw
ness wh1ch has mcreased 10 35,000
subscribers at year-end from
25,500 a year ago. Multimedia, Inc.
i~ a diversified media communi~lions company headquartered 10
Greenville, sc, whi~ publishes 12
dail
d 49
-dail
• Y~
non.
Y nev.spa~s,
mcluding the Pomt Pleasant Repster, The Daily S~un~l. Pomero~Middleport, Ga!hpohs D!UIY Tq·
bune, Sunday ~UDes-Senunel, Tri·
. County News-R!verC~ts, owns
a~d oper.ates f_1v~ televiSIOn and
e1ght radio stations. ope~ m~
than 125 cable franchises 10 f1ve
states and produces and syndicates
9ualit:( television programming,
mcludmg the Donahue and Sally
Jessy Raphael shows.

PARKERSBURG UVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
January 23, 1993
STOCK STEERS:
300-under
300-00- 500
5 700
800-over
STOCK HEIFERS

~~5gger

73.00-97.00
75.00-92.00
68.00-90.50
so·00-76·so

:

68.0Q-83.00
47 -00-86.00
52.50-82.00
44.50-53.00

5()()..700

800-over ·
STOCK BULLS:
300-under
68.00-92.50
300-500
69.00-92.00
500-700
60.00-85.00
Slaughter Bulls
47.00-56.75
Cows' &amp; Calves BH
475.00-575.00
Bred cows By#
35.00-60.00
Bred Cows BH
330.00-750.00
Slaughter Cows:
HiW,i Dressing
49.00-60.00
Uulily ·
43.00-48.00
Cannel &amp; Cutter
~3.00-42.00
Veal- choice
93.00-105.00
Medium
86.00-91.00
Good
68.00-85.00
Sheep • Ewes
28.00-35.00
Rams
39.00-46.00
'Feeders
68.00-73.50
Baby Calves BH
15.00-122.50
HORSES cwt
47.50-71.00
Ponies B.H.
140.00-210.00
HoGS:
(J
Male Hogs
21.00-24.00
t..G::::o::::a:::ts:.....;_ _....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,3~7~.00-~~7!.:.50~

.,-The 1993 projection will go cash costs, and some may go out ol'
even higher if producers increase business, Sourhard said.
.
the number of sows farrowing in
With declining prices and plenMarch through May," said liful SIJPPiieS, U.S. produccn have
Southard.
..
regained some of the domestic
Hog breeding herds increased marll:et once filled by impona.
by 7 percent fll)m 1990 to 1991 , . The total value of U.S. pork
and by 2 percent between 1991 and . imports fell aboUt 28 percent in r..
1992.
ca11992, to about $625 million, the
Producers indicated that they report said. ·
inrended 10 have 6.05 million sows
-farrow between September 1992
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S.
and February 1993, lhe repat said. cigarette !IIBDDfac.IUI'ei:S plan to .purThat would be a 3 percent increase chase 361 million pounds of 1993·
from a year earlier.
crop burley tobacco, ~rdi11g 10
"As long as cash receipts data supplied to the Agricultural
· exceed c&amp;Sh costs, operators will Stabilization and Conservation Sercontinue either to keep producing vice.
:
81 the same level, or to expand Major domestic cigarette manudepending on the degree to which facturers are required by law to
:f3.ipes outstrip costs,'' Southard report annuallx to lhe·department
their intended purchases of burley
Producers begin b'imming pro- tobacco from u.s. anction marlteu
duction when receipts drop below_ and producers.

A.M. Best-A++

MOODY'S..:...Aaa

•

CAROLL SNOWDEN
342 8ec01111 Ave.
GaJIIpolll, Ohio

Phoiae 446-4290
Home 446-4518

· - BARTRUM MEETS FANS • A lar~t crowd
wu on band at two Mlddleport locatlous on Sat·
urday lo meet ManbaU AD American tight end
Mike Bartram. Bartrum, a 1988 &amp;radaate of
Melp Hip School Wlllal Vauaban's Cardinal'
OD Sa~y mornlat and Locker 21!1 OD Satur-

State Fann Sells Ufe Insurance.
STAT£ FARM LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

.

I

BUICK·PONIJIIAC
1&amp;• 11Y·*IIIJIII

.

,

'

.

BUICK·
The New Symbol for Quality

ln.1America.

ej~~~~-----..1

.

Two accidents and vandalism 10
a vehicle were investigated over
the weekend by Pomeroy Police.
Larry E. Bonice, 31 of Roush
Lane, Cheshire, was charged with
DUI and failure to control his
motor vehicle following an accident on 'West Main Sb'eet at 1:42
a.m. Sunday.
Police said that Bonice was
unable to negotiilte the IUm a1 267
West Main, that he struck a tele-,
phone Jl!&gt;le and then bit a retaining
wall with his 1978 Chevrolet U'Uck.
The Pomeroy squad transported
Bonico 10 Veterans Memorial Hos·
pital where he was treated and
released. The entire front end of the
vehicle was ~ed and lhe truck
was towed from lhe scene.
·The second accident occurred at

'

,

.

We~t V~rgm1a Co~ ~SSOCII·

lion, sa1d producers 1D h1s state
have many long-terin util!tY contract.s. As a result, Polen Slid, West
Virgipia's production increased by
3.1 percent in 1992 while other
states' production fell.
"We've seen the worth of these
long-term contracts," Polen said.
Nationwide. coal production in
1992 increased 1.7 percent from
the previ~us year, but did not
match the mdustry record of 1.029
billion tons set in 1990.

ByMARTHABRYSONHODEL
Associated Press Writer
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - The
union representing 40,000 oil refinery workers authorized a conb'8Ct
extension through today while coal
industry negotiators kept a tight lip
about their progress.
~~'Ben E. Wages, president of
the Oil , Chemical and Atomic
Workers International Union,
~ted negoliiltors 10 implement a .
24-bour ex~nsion of their agreements, which had been due to
expire 81 midnight Sunday.
"Discussions with the industry
are continuing and significant
Pf!lgre.ss. has been made," Wages
said.
It was less clear, however,
whether any progress was· being
made in negotiations for a new
contract cove:roc60,000 coal miners in the Ap
hian region and
the MidwesL
.
Top officials of lhe United Mine
Workers union and the Bituminous
Coal OJ.lerators Association met
. Friday 10 Washington, D.C .. in
what was apparently their fust ses.

sion since mid-December. The tract ilegotiations.
· "I hope we wiU avoid a strike,''
talks began Nov. 6.
Caperton
said.
West Virginia Gov, Gaston
However, local UMW officials
Caperton. who was in Washington
for a meeting of lhe National Gov- have said they have been told to
ernors Association, said Sunday prepare for a strike. Only Trumka
has lhe authority 10 call a strlko; but
that lhe two sides still were talking.
"I've talked to people on both lhe target could include any or all
sides of that issue;" Caperton said. of the i:OIIIpanies covered under the
"I understand !hey wiU be meeting agreement .
The UMW made it plain before
today and tomom&gt;w."
The talks have been conducted the Sll!fl.of ~lks that its goal in !.he
under a "no comment" policy, aitd negouauons was to protect unlO!I
UMW spokesman Jim Grossfeld jobs from what the UMW calls
"double-breasting."
·
stuck 10 it Sunday.
Double-breasting occurs when .
Asked about Capenon 's comments, Grossfeld said he could not unionized companies establish
conf~rm or deny whetltu' meetings competing non-union sobsidiaries,
had laken pllice.
then shift coal reserves to thole
Wages, the president Qf lhe oil subsidiaries.
.
workers' union, has scheduled a
Coal companies in4icated ~y
news conference Monday in Den- would seek concessions on health
ver. Sources who spoke on con~- care costs .and work rules.
tion of anonymity also said lhey
The Bituminous Coal~
expected a statement on Monday. Association includes only 12 profrom UM:W Presid~nt Richard ducers, but the contract between
· the association and the union his
Trumka.
The two unions, whose mem- previously set the star!dard for lhe
bers have some employers in com- · rest of lhe industry.
mon, have been coordinating con-

1lop wage earn
·· ~rs Will
•

"d Wt
to
"I think that's not unlikelr, but
en .10 n, s cam-gn pro.,v_ nothirig's 'iione yet,'' Chnton
to mise lhe top income tax rate to spokesman George Stephanopoulos
36 percent would boost taxes on said of the proposal.
about 3 1/2 million of the nation's
The )ion's share of the lax
highest-earning couples and indi- increase - about 97 percent viduals.
· would fall on lhe 1 percent of tax·
The tax increase would total payers with incomes about
about $750 for a typical $200,000-" $200,000 a ear. They would face a
a-year family.
. • tax increale averaging $10,636.
The JXOPOS&amp;l, which was passed Those making between $100 000
by Congress last year but vetoed by and $200,000 would pay an averPresident Bush, is again under con- age of$90 moie.
sideration by Clinton as he pre- '
The calculations by Citizens for
pares his J.llan for·reducing lhe bud- Tax Justice a pdvate advocacy
get defic1t. An announcement is group, assu:Oe the higher maxiexpected in his State of the Union mum tax: rate would be accompamessage Feb. 17.
nied by a new "millionaires sur.-;
,
tax of up to 10 percent on

Wants to change public Image of schools

incomes !)VCr $1 millign a
as
Congress .votedlastyear.
Those changes would reducC the
1 $300 billi defi · by about
?illion.
on ICit
The tax increase on tbe well-todo
1 f Cli
•
' w~{ 0
nton scamP11P,IW
ill! ast ~· b de
·
e w ower e ur non
middle-class Americans bJ asking

sfs

~~~ h:e:'Jv~ ~i:/~

G

· lhe' book "

~:;:L1,1!

If

' .

1ba

Pu~g
·

specifi~s;J;JS: ~~~~~

for middle-class taxpayers _ a
pledge that has been deferred, at
least, by the worsening budget
deficiL

.

Newly-formed council plans 'needs assessment'

12:19 p.m . Sunday. The 1976
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Oldsmobile driven by Ralph
' Seatlnel News Staff
Graves; 82, Pomeroy, !raveling east
Creating a strong partnership
on East Main, was struck in the
right side by a car driven by Harold between community and schools is
one goal of the newly organized
c~. 84, Middleport.
CJta.S&lt;,' was cited with failure to Meigs Local Community Educayield. ~&lt;:cording to the report tion Advisory COIIIICil.
Others are to tap the talent of
Chase 'Vas making a right turn
from lhe Rite Aid parting lot onto people in the community, 10 work
East Main when the accident to change the public image of
occurred. His car had moderate schools, and to open up the builddamage to the driver's side .front. ings for community use.
Neither driver wu injured.
Janet Bolin has been named
Vandalism of a vehicle parked director of the progrsrn which is
at the comer of Court and Second funded with a grant of $2,500 from
was investigated by police Sunday. ...die Ohio Department of Education
The windshield of lhe 1977 Dodge and a matchinB amount from the
owned by Gary Scholderer, Ball University of Rio Grande.
Run Road, Pomeroy, had been · The emphasis of the program, as
damaged in two places.
. explained by Bolin to Council
members altending the initial meeting at the MeJss ~ouht~ Public
Library Thl!l'sdaY n1ght w1ll .be to
establish and promote educauonal,
recreational and cultural enrichment as well as otlill' related com-

.Canned food drive to
benefit .cooperative parish
'

. -

. . .

Mark Po!en: ~ice president .of

t!IC

jf

The Meigs United Metl\odist
City Loan's Pomeroy office is
sponsoring a i:annod fOod drive, Cooperative Parrish offera food,
Feb. 6-20. Tho "Neighbor to clothing llld spiritual needs to the
Neighbor" effort will bene.fit the community. It hal misted several
t.:ieif.!:nited Methodist p,opera. thouaaDd families in the four years
live
sb. ,
,
, since~··
Qty LC.n :is i fiDIJICiall«vicea
Tl(e ~ Is lnvillld to brlaa a
company
SJ*iallzing in personal
non-perishable food item to the
and
homo
equity loans to conPomeroy office and receive a small
sumers
and
has 104 branch ofriCCS
gift from City Loan.
in .Ohio and 11101'11 than 700 1181ionCity Loali is locllled at 236 East wide.
Main Street in Ponliiioy. The office
is open Monday, Tuoaday,
WednesdaY llld Friday, 9 Lm. 10 S
p.m. and Thuratlay, 9 LIB. 10 7,.m.
The food drive Is pan o the
company's annual Customer
All tmOOCUDieil trailer on Roush
iltion Days celelnlion. "At Lane, Cbelhfrc, owtled bf BoUy
~f-n, we boliove it'1 impor- Men:er, - deltroyed by l1re s•.
tant to IUPJIOit lito comliiUilitiea we urday, Middleport firemen were
servo. "NOighbor 10 Neiabbor" is called to tho ICIIllO 119:51 a.m. and
one way we can thank die people were thete for allout 1W0 houn. No
of Pomeroy for their patrODIJ.O.• determlitatlon wu..aJven u to die
·said Brancb ~ Joaeph Suet. of llio file or.a fipe 011 lito
Jr. '
.
loa.
'

munity services for the reSidents ot
the Meigs Local School DistricL
As explained by Bolin, the
emphasis of the council this year
· wiU be to do a "needs assessment."
That, it was expl!tined, will determine jusl what Meigs l..ocal wants
in the war of community education
and will mclude a community survey '10 determine interest.
The council will then lie in a
position to make recontJDendations
regarding course and program
offerings and to make recommendations to the Board of Education
or other appropriate authority.
·
Suzy Carpenter, Meigs Local
teacher, who has been activel,Y
working with Bolin on lhe preliminaries of establishing th11 Council,
talked about the importance of o
"parmership between the Council
and the schools" and tbe need for
collective action on community
education.
She said thai if the community

has more input, !hen lhe community is sure to feel more responsibili·
ty to the schools which could lead
to more support for school activi·
ties and lev1es.
John Amott, Meigs Junior High
School teachet. who participated in
writing lhe grant under the Effec·
tive Schools program in a master's
degree class at the University of
Rio Grande, streSSed lhe need for
"communities to iake ownership of
lhe schools". He said that boards of
education need 10 be "convinced to
open up !heir schools."
Arnall said lhe Council needs to
"think broad" because good use of
the current grant could lead next
year to another grant and perhaps
more matching funds.
John Redovian of lhe University
of Rio Grande described the Council's grant as a S!!_in-off of the Rural
Demonstration/Effective Schools
program which has broug~t into

Mei11s County more than a half
milhon dollars over the past two
years. He reponed on plans for
summer programs in all three
school districts undet that ~·
These will be geared, he wd, to
prepare students to pass lhe proficiency tests which after this year
will be required for graduation.
As for lhe community education
program, Redovian spoke of the
resource people and materials
available through lhe University,
In the_orglllizational pan of the ·
meeting, Carpenter was elected
secretary. The next meeting was set
for 7 am. on Feb. 2S at the librlry.
Others attending were Jan
Schmoll of the University of Rio
Grande, Susan Oliver, Roland and
Jo Ann Wildman, Margaret
Edwards, Martha Vennari, Mary
Powell. Nancy Larkins, Bill Buckley, Ruth Powers, Jeanette Thomas ·
and Charlene Hoeflich.
..'

Cheshire trailer
destroyed by fire

I

•

,

Accidents, va~dalism hivestigated

5

8,995

day afte~ to siP autographs and pose for
pictures. Pldured rrom left to right are ·
Bartrum, Matt Yobktr (wearing a miniature
Bartrum .anlform) of Middleport aud Dustin
Hufflllan !I_ Pomeroy.- Picture by Dave Harris

-f ·oat
·
~ c iuction goes to generatmg.~er lants.
,
~ N csa to say •.the outlook
or 1993 Will ~ !n .great part·
on.the ell'ono~l~ poli_cles.?f ~e
Cht:tton ,lldmmlstra!'o.n, sa1d
Nauo~al Coal, Assoclauon Presl·
dent Richard Lawson.
tedC:oaliiUil'tets ~~ .~ so glut·
m ~t ~u,. u- not eyen
th~ threa( of a strike by the.Uruted
Jl1me W~rkers made the market ·
~ow-gr;ow,th forecast ~ rest
PI~P· li' 00 , . .
'th th
. e ~n s economy,
assoc: •·
t' e.~ j s ~on~ct WI
e
uonTsath · .
. b d
na !On 81' '!'IC:Sh ctodaoa opberat~f.S
e estimate IS ase on an expireS midn1g t
y, ut Uwl·
. antici~ted increase in demand for ties indic.ated !hey already had sufelectricity, since about 80 percent fici~tstockpiles.

in Gallipolis, Ohio is ranked, for 1992,

1

.

·
G
HI!NT~~ TON, .w. Va. (AP)
-With utility~ already at
~peak after two !"arm ~ters, coal
mdus(!'y execuuves don t eXJIC!=I
1,993 production to exceed .lite biJ.
bon-ton le~l of 1992.
•. ..
. The National Coal ~~a~
IS f~tlng a small l!";re&amp;se In
COIIS\IIIIptlOII to 1.010 b1~n tons,
compared to the 1.008 billion tons
logged by l'!e end ~f 1992.
The est1mate 1s Keg~d to a

Sniith Buick·Pontiac

RUTLAND • Rolland Furniture
enjoyed one of its most successful
years ever in 1992, according to
general manager-owner David
Grate.
Grate said that sales in virtually
every department increased. "Our
new pice structure has helped signific1antly. Our customers know
they II get everyday low prices
without all !he hype."
&lt;!f!!te went on .to say that the
pos1t1ve econom1c outlook has
helped increilse sales reCently and
that he looks forward to another
vear in 1993.

A ll~medla Inc. Noowapeper

Coal productio.n steady in 1993;. lose under Clinton proposal
con:sumption i.ncrreasefio.t:ecast ,~· .· ,." 'ACI~HIN.~TONlA(l-. ~;
~.

Home Olflce: Bloomington, Illinois

out of 112 Buick dealers in the Charlotte,
North Carolina Buick Zone by their customers.
The ranking is a result of customer surveys
pertaining to key measures of customer
evaluations about their sales -and service
1 exper~ence at the various dealerships. The
surveys include dealers in the Charlotte Zone
which includes parts of ·ohio, We.st Virginia,
Tennessee, Virginia~ North (arolre . ..
and South Carolina.

1 Secllon, 10 , _ 25 _.,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 1, 1993

Coal talks continue;
news conference set

•
Buick Motor Division has iust announced that

h aS SUCCeSSfiU1year

.

.

. @J'SERVICE

I

1100

,Yol. 43, No.197
Copyltghled 1183

Affordable, sensible life insurance .
·to fit your' needs. .

:~

...,

•

@J'PRODUCJS

State Farm agent today.

mld40s.

.

Standard and Poor's-AAA

For life insurance .backed by good.
neighbor service, see your nearby

Clear lotdgbt. 1,- Ia ll1ld
letDJ. Tuesday, sunny. H•·~ Ia

•

..

'

The employees of Smith Bulck·Pontiac·
wish to thank all of their customers for
the survey results.
•
ONLY•••

PageS

financial strength rati_pgs from

TH

1992 PONTIAC
SUNBIRD 2 DR.
This new Grand·Am Trade
features only 2,200 low
miles. Factory air
conditioning, 5 speed.
Balance of ·
Factory 36/36 Warranty.

cage game

State Farm has~ highest

•

had

Rutjand Furniture

Pick 3:
029
Pick4:
3033
Super Lotto:
13-23-Ui-39-43-44
Kicker:
0295113

@$SECURITY

.WASHINGTON (AP)- Per- ·-farmers, bonuses for autoworkers
sonal incomes rose 1 percent in and reuoacti-ve Social Security payDecember, belping boost earnings ments.
for. the year by 4.7 percent; the
In addition to receiving bonuses,
government said Friday.
some llllllysts had said many secuAt the same time, consumer rities indusiry executives had execspending increased S·.3 percent in clsedstock~followingPresi
1992, including a O.S pertent gain dent Ointon selection. Clinton
last month, lhe Commerce Depart- .promised during the campaign to
nientsaid.
·
raise taxes on the wealthy.
Tho department said personal
Consumer spending had risen
incomes~ increased just 3.5 per- . 3.7 percent in 1991, down from 6.4
cent in l~l. little more than half · percentayearearlier.
the 6.S percent gain in 1990 and
barely beating lhe 3.1 percent infla- Specialized markets
tion rate.
.
d 1 • Chil
Prices rose 2.9 percent in 1992.
may eve Op ID
e .
In Decemba, incomes tol81ed a
WASIDNGTON (AP)- U.S.
seasonally adjusted aMual rate of trade expertS say specialiud mar$5.19 trillion, up from $5.14 tril- kets may develop in Chile for
lion a mQIIth earlier.
g~ity wood products, such
The department attributed the as ·
and door lrames.
increase to.·accelerated bonus payP.lywood for consiruction purments 1o employees in the securi- .poses also cou.ld be of growing
ties industry, subsidy payments to mterest in the Chilean market,
· ~·
~
acc~gtoareportin .AgExPQrter
magazme put out by the Agricul~t'sForeign Agricul·
.
"Industry sOurces have stated
that builders wouldtf::hase U.S.
By &amp; A. (Lila) Collins
induslrial elywoOd . ll'(ailable," it
GalUaASCS
said. "Chileap domestic plywood
Conaty , __..ve Dlr.....fails to meet the high standards
...._.,,.
-necessary for use in the construeGALLIPOLIS - The Agricul- lion indus'"'."
.
. __
tural Stabilization and Conserva.,
tion Service reniinds producers to
report any changes in their farm
operations for the 1993 proe'
year. To obrain fllll proaram
•
fits, finn records must be up-todate. Producers should contact
ASCS if a farm will have a new
owner·
this year or if a change 1s made in
the operation of an existinR unit
Plans to combine farms or divide a
farm should be requested early
because of special processing and
county commiuee approval
requiremenla. ·
' Signup for the )993 Feed Grain
and Wheat Program will run from
March 1, 199! throutb April 30,
1993. Participating farmers will
'
have lhe """''""";t to oblain pnce'
wr,.- - - .Y
support losns while holding their
crops for higher prices and the
advantage of target prices to prolect their income. Notices of y~elds
and \lases wiU be mailed to Gallia
County grain producers, who have
been certifying !heir crops with the
ASCS olru:e, the week of February ·
1, 1993. Acrea.Ke reduction requirements are: lO.lor com and 0% for
wheat oats and bar'~y
'
'
"' ·

ASC
. S UrgeS aarm
producers· to
::.
. dS
Up date reCOr

Ohio Lottery

t

•

•ac. .

NEW COONCIL •·.... Arlit*, J.- .....
peater, Mlted left to riallt, cater t.ble, 011eu.,ci tlte
and
oii~WI ol the llfwly ~·I rd Melp Loal
Edweat.lou Ad':llorY Coitacll. ;mmltt~
attendlna tbe nnt

••ltera

P-••

meetlq wri , _ dte 11ft, Ralatl

..a Je Aaa WI

NacJ ··-

T.•kln, ···

I •

Larkin, Maraaret Edwardl,
. S-1 Oli'ftr, tile tUte
Jeanette Thoma, R11ltl Powen, Jaa Se. .oll, ~ .....,
and William Buckley, IIIII JOU ...._ ..led lilllde.
.

'"

�•

'

Commentary

•

~~==ndi::~:·:Feb==~=·=~~1~,1~~~================~==~----------:Po:m:•:r:ov~.:M:Id:d:le~po:rt~,o~h:l:o____________________________~Th:e~O.~Iy~Se~n~Une~I:!P~-a!•~i.~

Page 2-Thl Dally Santlnel :
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio :1
Mondlly, February 1, 1883 :j

Tueay, Feb. 2

r-----~----------------------,---------------------------------------~----------------------1•

Powell has more than gay iss11:e to worry about

The .Daily Sentinel
· 111 Coart Street
, . . . , , Oblo

D&amp;VOU:U TO 1'IIB DrmRBITS OJ' TID IBIG&amp;-IUSOII AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsller
PAT WHITEHEAD
Alllstaat Publllber/Coiltroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'I!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They 1bould be less than 300
words. All letters are 1ubject to editina and mUll be aiaoed with n1111o,
oddreu and lelepbooe number. No wllianed !ellen will be publisbed. Letters
lbould be in sood 111111, oddroallin&amp; iuues, pot penonalitiea.

The ·Ciintons and health care

.nfornt: No;.roont:·f._,r ·~F&amp;f:.:·

'

' ByWALTERR.MEARS .
.
~ Spec:W Correspoaclent
WASHINGTON- Esuangcd from some of his prior J!PIIIises. President Clintm is 11181ried to the one most likely 10 prove difficult and vital
10 bis admiDiJtrall!ln_
, By putting his wife in charge of health care reform, Clin10n gives
Hilllry Rodbam Clinton a policymaking rol!l no lint lady has ever had
And It aves no iluqin for mar.
A praideol usually can change advisers if he doesn't like their handiwork; indeed, Clinton is Slid to have been dissstisfied with the way health
care planning was soing before he set up the Del\' task force oo reform
and put Mn. Clinton in clage.
. Now the Clintons' coune 10 a health care plan is seL
In a war room setlillg with about 100 days to deliver, a task force that
includes six Olbinet members, lOp Wllire House aides, and re!R8CDtatives
of House and SeDate lclden, is to work 011 a J1!an thai WOUld limit health
care expenditures, guide competition to proVIde incenlives for cost controls, extead coveraae to all Americans, and find ways 10 pay for it all.
It is a pressurized job, and one tbat marks anocher of the geoerational
turning poiniS in die new govemmcnL Mrs. Clintm is a ancr woman, an
aaomey wbo has been lisled amcing the natioo's best. a penoil with the
standing to have been c:onsidered fiX appoinbnent to a Democratic ldminisaatiOII on bet own~
She also has been a political target, and could be again as a major figure in shlping policy on a major issue.
.
Clinton IW backed away !'rom p/Qmisel 10 halve the deficit in four
years and cut ll'idcUc-class taxes, among odlm.
'' But he~s said rqle&amp;ltA!Iy lhat the OIIIT war 10 control deficiiS is to conlr(ll the soaring costs of health spending, mcluding. government health
'
Medicare and Medicaid. ·
~his appraisal now is not quite so optim.ist1c as during the campaign, when diC emphasis was on univenal health care coveraae, nat on
c&lt;lSIS. The president said in setting up his task force that t11e1e will be
m!lte spending • the stan "but thele's 110 qu.cstionlhll in ... five to eight
yean, you're loOOIIg 8l massive savings with universal &lt;XMnlge in bod!
tait dollars and private sector dollars if we do il righL '' And the fii'St step in doing it right is up to Mrs. ainton. " ... She'll be
sharing aome of the heat I expect to generare," the president joked in
announcing her new job.
·
·
" ... She's better at organizing and leading people l'rom a complex
beginning 10 a certain end than anybody I've ever worked with in my
life," he said.
. It is an unpaid and llllprllCedented assignmenL
· When Rosalynn Carfir was to be made chairman of a presidential commission on mental health, legal advisers to that administration said it
c(\Uidn 't be done, even though she was going 10 fargo the salary. So she
~ as hononuy chainnan, overseeing 11M! commission 111yhow, and
~g before a congressional committee in behalf of ias mental health
legislalion.
· Richard Nixon tried 10 appoint bis wife '-1 of an advisory council on
voluntary savice, a positim that carried a daily fee. That was withdrawn
becaiiiC of the law against hiring members of a president's family.
The Clintm task force is less formal but more crucial to her husband's
administratioa than any assignment a fmt lady has undertaken before.
Changes in health care will personally atfCCI evay American and will, as
~president ssid, draw fierce lobbying and Jllllb 10111e people angry.
Despite an undertone ofmisgivmgs about the politics and etiquette of
dealing with a ~ident's wife, the assignment was genetally aprlauded,
eyen by Republicans - who may have learned a Ieason wileD campaign
. parks on Mrs. Clintm backfired.
Polls and politicians can shift quickly. The Clintons saw it happen during the campaign. When she seemed to be coming on too strong for the
a.re of the voters, they set 10 work to soften her image IUid play down her
role. Early in the ciunpaign, CliniOR had talked of a r.wo-for-one deal if he
was elected.
That wasn't emphasiud larer in the year. But the offer stood, and both
CliniOIIS are at wert.
'
.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and tolumalal ror The ASSOtiated Press, has reported oa Washln1toa aad
u~al politics lor more thaa 30 yean.

Today in history
'

By Tbe Assotlated Press
· Today is Monday, Feb. l, the 321ld day of 1993. There are 333 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in HistorY:
One hundred yeats ago, on Feb. 1, 1893, inventor Thomas A. Edison
compl~red work on the world's fust motion picture studio, his Black
Maria, m West Orange, NJ.

Berry's World
.

WASHINGTON - Joint OlietJ
of Staff Chairman Colin Powell
feels lite a Jeoeral fightiq a fivefront war. With the •ilitary and
morale already stretched rubberband thin, the coming dcblte over
the Pentagon bud&amp;et may make the
gays in the mi1illry issue seem like
a picnic by comparison.
To be sure, Powell is ·not a
happy warrior.
Aceordit\g to a Pelllllgon 80IJICe
close to the' five-star general, PoweO is increasingly agit•ted o~er die
failure of the Clintm administration to stock the Pelltagon with a
new team; over the injection of
gays in the mili~, allhough the
pro m of enfranchising women in
the military -remains incomplere;
and, most especially, over the fact
thai while COilflicts rage in Somalia, Bosnia and Iraq, and with a
watershed budget document due
SDOII, niling the gay issue was illtimed and clumsy • best.
For Powell, the mother of all
battles will be budgetary. The
Defense Department budget
already exceeds $2SO billion, and
boasiS a watforce of nearly 3 million uniformed and civilian

~E A

-ME TO

~"''"''\.

•

\.

'

.

•

&lt;J'I' ·~
• - bf
NL\.Ino.

-·

MICH.

•

M.

N-.

By Jack Anderson

IND.

Michael Binstein

• IColumbusl35• I

Drug prices are · .
untouched by
health care reforms

a

Soutla-Central Olllo
Tllilight, cletw and cold. Low in
the mid-teens. Tuesday. sunny.
High35-40.
.
Extejlded forecast:

Bob Brotton, a construction
worker at tho mining reclamation
site at Pity Me n~ Hobson, was
injured Thursday when a tree he
was cutting struck him in Jbe head.
The accident occUIRd about onehalf mile !'rom the road.
The Mid41epon Fire Depanment received a call for assistan£e
to the area·at 2:47 p.m. Assistant
Fire Chief Kenneth Dyer stated
when units arrived on the acene,
Broaon bad slid down an emlJanlt- '
ment to the edge of a cliff or high·
wall Dyer said the emergency
squad, ladder truck and'brush ttuc._
hid responded to the scene.
. According to Dyer, members of
the~ went in on foot 10 assess
the s1tuation after which time the
rescue crew loaded the necessary
equipment to retrieve Brotton. Dyer

-

am~~:'orSC:::w:·= Hodding Carter III

chic well-being would automatically transwe into harder times for
most COIISillllen. An econolily that
needs a jump 1111t might get a kick
in the head instead
No less importanl)y, the imposition of signilicant tariffs or other
economic penalties on forei$n
imoorts would severely strata
world markeiS. Japllll and Europe .
would be under heavy pi lite 10
RJiliare. American exponen, who
have been almost linllHIUcledly
responaible for aucli ecoanmie
recovery as the Ullitod Sllllel bas
ellJ!Oiienc:ed, could be siiiiP"" with
cnppling it1lpon duties. All illlernatioaal tradin.R JylllliD .....'"'*IIJI)y
constructed over decadea aad
already da ••c ~ by die llraina of
intenae competition could auickly

unexpected cooseq~~ences. Tryjng
to Jive somethina to aU the
peti111 intelatl wlio are pulling IUid
iugglitg on lbe new adminia~
would inevitsbly produc:o a proll'IDI that is a conlrldic:IOIJ, inefticient and inelfor;tive mea.
For example, the automobile
inW,atry, in die taae of job..-,
Vllion and economic heiJth, has let
It be known it -ta heavy imDort
dudes alapped oa imports. 'that
would raise the coat of foreign
· vehklea by thoital\da of dolWJ.
·
r
Given tho w.y tii1D8bt workl, it unraveL
would an bUt auarantee that the
Detroit' I spotelmen-~ just
Amoricaa •11 Tine would raise the OIJPQiite, of coune. 111ey say
their own pricill• weD.
that Jipueae and B~ ~­
That would be aa economic maten have aot ~-~by
dqw
M ol-...iw acqJO. Wliat
the rules and Jhat It 1 time to
would help the tltoaaaada who restoR a "level pJa ag lield"
work for ~ ..,
- 1they are da t or WJOIII,
CCIIII..-._ rWbether
the
deblte
Ia not I
fluiD
would h!Kt tho miDioDI of ua who
the subject of
CliniOII'I
. economic J*opo 'I, Tho cboicea
played a central role ill
The trick will be to avoid Pill· 1s vi to their economic and psy- that his Commerce Department

fqr inore detailed" consideration,
and about 20 yell'S tOO late in
another since Wasbiilgtm'a WI'OIII
srepa over tbat period are 8l leall
partially responalble for the
nation's economic .difficulties
today . Whatever thl: president
offers, it needs 10 be as internally
CCIISillel)t as it is~
The grim reality II that there is
no easy solution to the aation'a
~omic puzzle IIIII &amp;QOCI RM oo
to doubt that ooe willlftii!Dt itaelf
any time 101111, a fact dial Bill OinIbn will Ulldoubtedly •mun when
he .IIi r b to Conarea 011 Feb. 17.
Thoro are also well understood
poUtical rea10111 for JllO\IIq quick:
ly. During the Clmplli&amp;D, die p!UIdent pnllllised 10 pit II llllld JUide
to PBIIIIC within lOQ da)'l a !110gram to re8IOR vitalilY 10 die oconomy and 10 cut the deficit in half.
~ public's belief in lh8l
.

com-

bis~= r:a:vcl~=·~f=

•

Units of the Meigs County

ftll""' ,19 :
the fmt brellttbrough in stildellt ·.

E"'F!l!J!C~

. LT"

on Saturday, Sunday and early
Monday morning.
On Saturday at 9:S 1 a.m. the
Middleport Fire Department
responded to ROUsh Lane on atrail·

Area death

~

lion.

.'

.

So is virtually everything. By ' :
now, there is near DDIDimlty that · j
the explolion of fedaal deficit and
debt mut be 'contained and then ~
redtJC'I'd for the sake of America'a :; !
Iona-term economic health. that •
requlrel atruclllral chanaes in the :
tu code and Ia oxpenditurea. At ·, !
d i e - tillle, the OCOIIOIIIie recov- ~ :
ery .. Ill uneenain tbina. If die debt • l
arid cleficlt medicine li too bluer, . l
the patient could have a rolapao. ' 1
IWiior than "powing the OCODo- : I
my,'' WashlnJIOn coold ead up :}:
burylna IL
·
-, •

m, foratr

·

M •.,, 'l'llo - W ..._, ......

z1:"

-

'rM

IODif.

~toabrusbftRattheJoe

, NallaMl

·The Pomeroy and Middlepon
units went to Roure 143 8l B:SB
·a.m. on 1 motor vehicle accldcnL
Pomeroy tllllspOrted Jimmy Hemsloy and Middleport ~sported
Shannon Scholderer and Lee
Willlama. AD wae taken 10 VciCt·

-. '
Patrol probes

::D#er~car w.reck
NO Injuries were 'ltQDrted fol-

•~

lowiD.I a deer-c.' acci!Wt on Ohio

7 Ia Oran&amp;e Townahlp Sunday
II'OUIICI7: 15 p.m.
.
AccclnlinJ 10 a report from die
Gallla·MeiJI POst of tho State
Hfallway· Plirol, Robert M. Mur·
Dby, 43! of 50600 Pine Tree Dr.,
lleedav Ue, wu southbound 011
Ohio .7 .S IIIUCk a deer that was
lltelllllll-. 10 cava the road. The

...
'•

.'

clllrlilaiiiOIIIII.

~I

.

.,...._10 Maphy'a 1991 Mer·
c.-y Sll!ft.Wllllllld 111110derato.

Stat!w!'l.art•eat apot-18

.Lklll&amp;l USUid

MahS..._. a Ws Na1- D.C •\ I
ltaaed ;;lnfllua
.. ., '
ad •J:cCt::c:,S
f
~.,.par
tlrfrlle AIIOda• . ' t

A maniiJO Ucu10 bu boon
IIIUICI by Milia .Cotmty Probate
Court 10 ...... Lee MiUir Jr., 25.
Pomeroy, and Dobra . Blaiao
~ 31, F'omeroy.

em;: .'·

-'

•

eaEE•. .fti··-=.
call New

....
:'!':!*••.....,tdl..,.. ad ,.u.; ar,ll,. lf•tlll -· 1

C

to Lincoln HeiahiS at 9:04 Lm. for
Gerald Shasrer who was taken to
Holzer.
At 12:SO p.m. the Rutland unit
went to Hysell Ru Road for Ada
Keesee who was taken 10 VCICIIDS.
The Chester Fire Depanment

BailCy property on Pomeroy Pike
at 1:22 p.m.
At 1:54 p.m. the Racine unit
went to Durst Rid&amp;e for Fannie
and ~even JflllllchildreD
Durst who was takea to Velellns.
Besides his parenD, he was JR·
The Middleport. unit went to
ceded in death by one brothei', Rus- Mill 'aad Second Streets at 3:01
sell Shanks, and one sister, Wilda p.m. for Robbie Clonch who was
. Shanb.
treated but not lrallSporled. .
Services will be Wedaelday at · Georgia Wehrung was transport·
11 L~. 8l ~ire Funeral ~in ¢ from Overbrook at 10:35 p.m.
Coolville w1th ~ov. !felen KUn' by the Middlepon unit•.She was
officiating. DunaJ wtll be Ia the . taken to Vetenms.
Tore~ Cemetery.
On Monday at 7:33 a.m. the
Fnends may call at the funeral Racine unit went to Wells Run
home on Tuesday from 2-4 p.m. Road for Dallas Buber who was
and 7-9 p.m.
taken 10 PleasEt Valley Horpital.
-At,8:07 a.m. the Rutlaad ·unit
weat to VanZandt Rood for Marf:!:r~ile wbo was transported 10

mates Ol\ import duties will inti- :
mately affect the economy and '
theRfOR his 1Juci&amp;CIIry peclraae. It :
is not a·docision ~and apart ;:
frolil ..l olhcn, but mtimately relat- ' :
ed
·
·•
. 10 them.

H~ Carter

Veterans.
.
The Mlddleport unil responded

Mr. Shanks is survived by his
wife of SO yean, Eldred Sintiett
Shanks; one son, Tim Shanks,
Washington, W.Va.; twodaughters, Sandra Sarver, CoolvilJc, IUid
Susie Reichardt, Marietta; oae
brother, JtichanS Sbanb, CoolvilJc;
one sister, Betty Clarlt, Coolville;

.
''
'

'

,

Born in Coolville, he was a 8011
of the late Jolm and R!lbY Russell
Sliants. He retired after 31,yean ol
. service with the DuPunt ~-

AIIIOdatlon.

'

PI~~;~~:~

a.m. the
Pomeroy iiiut was called to West
Main Street for Lany Bonice who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
At 3:48 Lm. the Middleport unit
transported Leonard Smithson to

Howard E. Shanks, 73, 4667
Brandebury Road, Coolville, died
Monday, Feb. 1, 1993 it hla real-

.

.

er fire. Betty Mercer was the
OWI!Cf... . 1 •
At lil:01 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Liberty Lane for Nancy
Griffith wl\o was taken to Holzer
Medical ~ter.
The Middleport unit, at 10:13
p.m., weat to Collins Road for
· Steven Kiffie who was taken to

Howard E. Shanks

Nat Hentoff Ia a 17ndlcated ,
writer for Nnnpaper Enterprise

.

M~ical, Servi~e

~ 10'14-cans (&lt;* aSslitaiiCe

free-speech rights, the Supreme ·
Court's 1969 decision in Tmker v. •
Des Moines School Disbict: "Students and teachers do DOt shed their
coostitutional .rights 10 freedom of ·
speecltliexprcssi011 at the schoolhouse
''
Ti er, liowever, was l8fgely ·
eviscerated by the 1988 Supreme
Court Hazelwood decision that
gave principals and school boards
swa:ping poM:n of censonhiD. In ·'
angry dissent, Justice William ·
Breman said then thai "instead of ,'
teaching children to respect the ·
divenity of ideas thai is fundamcn- ' '
tal to tho American system, the .. ·
Court today teaches youth to dis- -;
count important principles of our ,.;
government as mere plaliiUdes,"
Ye,rs before, IJrennaa had . ,
urged that when the federal . •
Supre~e Coun shrinks constitu ~ ·.
tional rights and liberties, a - 1
recourse can be State constitutions ..'
IUid legislatures. Thll Is what bas · ,
happened in California where stu- . dents can now read about the . •
Huelwood d'ecisioo with the Bleeful blowleclse that it has 110 power , :
overthem.
Nat Hentoff is a nationally .:
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the Bill 1

'

stated · two rescue lines were
sec.ured and one rescue squad
member ~lied do!"n to Brotton's location.• At d!at I1JI!C 1 baslret
was lowmd to retrieve him.
Dyer says he had the full cooperation of the consuuction ~panyandalooepointtheCOIISIIUCuon
company bridged over a deep
ravine to make the rescue quicker
and less~·
Brouon was treated oo the scene
by the- Middleport unit for head
injuries and a loss of conscious. ness. At 4:22 p.m. Skymed landed
at a scene set up below SJory's Run
Road !JRd Brotton. was. transported
to Oluo, State Untverstty Hospital
in ColumbWJ.
A ~an from OSU Hospital sa1d Btotton was treated and
released.

EMS ·responds to 14 calls

Giving students right of free speech

Delicate choices on economic reform

•I
•'
•

.''
'•

••

t

•'•
•

in:.u~~~oS::~~~l:~a'ici ~o~yb~~~i

Construction worker.injured

BASYSITiiN6.

ofRighiS.

Winter storm watches were in
effect today for patts of Colorado
and New Mexico.
The north cen~ section or the
country was expecting another day
of sunshine and relatively mild
tempenltur1~ WIUIY. A number of

~

•
••

------Weather-----

TIME FoR

,Tbe, tcxt.o(Jile T

path.

.'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Some lawmakers ll!'e saying thitt
Ohio's hands are tied when it
comes IQ doing something about a
major element of the increBiing
costs of health care - pitscription
drugs.
•
· Rep. Marc Guthrie, D-Heath,
said he will spo!1$0r a resolution
l!Sking Congress either to enact
fedenil regulations or pass a law
giving stares the right 10 srep in.
He said that in exploring' the
possibility,
of a stare laiv 10 regulat.e
Wednesday tbl'OUIII Frida7:
the
price
or
drugs, the Legislative
Fair. Lows in the 20s WednesService
Commission
IOid him such
day and from the upper 20s 10 mida
law
would
.violate
a federal ban
30s Thursday and Friday. Highs .
against
inrerfering
with
interstate
mostly in the 40s.
commerce.

I

No action by lelislatures or leq~~ cannot lead to ~ipliJIMY
courts had ever provided such acuon unless the person who is
wide-ranging prorec:tion for student threatened "reasonably' fein that
speech. And lhere was even mqre. the violence will be cdmmitted
beclnll" of the speech, ·add that the
Nat H ~ntoU
penon threaleaing viol~ hid the
Th shall be
.. •
apparent abilitf to carry out the
of erestudent s.V:h.'f"!Inoradredi~u
·o·n1, tlireat." Tft'is 1s an echo of the
rSupreme Court's 1969 Bl'lildea=.~~igh
_sch:O~~~~e:~ burg v. Ohio decision that draws
her
oral
.
that the line between speech aDd action.
~t
_. un:r ~~
Another restriction is that 11111bill - the right to swt a civil dent ~ s,peech is subject 10 ~·reaaction in court against the school. sonable ume, place and 11181111er
And, if the stUdent prevails, the regulations." A student, for
court may award BltDmey's fees to instance, can~ot with imJ.liJI!ity
the biumphant winner.
~.a. ruling by die ~pal
There are some limits in the , m the m1ddle ol a French c.las.s.
stature. Privare secondary achools !,'~• perhaps he does u m
and lJc
.-.
~
ges
thll.
~
controlJcd
by
= - ' bill-ran
a religtOUS organtzaUoo are exempt . Bill.Leonanl'
,
s .,......,~
_ if the freedoms ia the biil 1nto some h)lrdle~ at f1r,st. The
:O~:!c~asb~l::e~v'!:'; "would not be consistent with the A~LU, affllt~tes ~~ Cahf~!nia,
schools are nat aaeniS of the stare. ::!~~ous tenets of the organize- :P~~h~~th~ritiC:, •
Leonard wanted to liberate those
AIso, "hare VIO. lenee.. IS. pun- came
were iniually hesitant, but they
kids too through the California .
around The School BOI!ds ,
coosiiwticin.
·
tsbabl~. ~~ $III!Jte defines ~~ as Association was never, to say the
His poposed stature went even !D~~mg. an~ a~t of.phystcal least, enthusiastic about the bill. .
further. Just as,with hildt schools, · tnumtdation, P ys1~ VIOlence ... But iii other circles, this freeno public or privtlle coik:ge or uni- 0!' the threat of phystcal force.~ expression Magna Carta for atuversity· in the State could "subJect VIOlence ·... ~811 ~~" ~r. the ~11:1- deniS received bipartisan support
any Sllldent to disciplinary acttons ty, race, nau~ ~gm,. re~IP08 • - ranging from the California
solely 011 the basis of ... speech or sex! ~xualoo~~.ll;isability or Young Democrats and the Califorother communication that, when political or religJOUS beliefs of lhat · nis ColJc..... RepublicaiS to die CaJe
eel in outside the campus" of ' penon or ~-"
."
ifornia T~hm Asaociation.
a: g e is proccc!tAI from govemI would assume that physical
The fust bill of iiS ldod in the·
mental restriction by the First force agai"'lt anyone would be pun- United Stares, it passed the AssemAmendment or the California con- ishedS·
.
. 'this
bly and the Senate and has been
stibltion.
. 0 prectse1Yworded IS
~- signed by Gov. Pete Wilson.
uon, however, that a threat of vto-...,
·

record high lentpC'IIDlres were lied
or broken Sundsy IICI'OU portions
of the northern Plains, upper Mississippi Valley aad upper Great
Lalcc:a.
.
Colder air was expected to push
into the Great Lakes reJion today,
producing lake effect snow1.
Snow squall warnin&amp;s were ia
effect today for parts of Pennsylvania, while much of northeast Ohio
was Wider a winter siOnil watch.
The high temperature for the
nation Sunday was ~9 degree8 in
Miami.

. The storm was expected to
move off the coast of Maine today,
oullini very cold air from Canada
behincJ it across the Northeast.
A slow moving low pressure
system was moving today from
Arizona into the southern Rocky
Mountains, spreading snow in its

W. VA.

defense

Bill Leonard is a Republican
slale senator from Sim Bernardino
County, Calif. Last year, he illlroduced a bill thai might well have
appeared clangerousfy revolutionary to many principaLs IIIII school
boards &amp;ClOSS the natioa.
"It is the intent of the legislaIJ!re,'' said the text, "that a Sllldent
shall have the same right to exercise his or her right to free speech
on ca:::r.us as he or she enjoys
when campus."
. Not only public ~chool seC'ondary sllldeniS would be emanciP!llcd from ~~e~Kth codes and other
such resttictions, .but also privare
school students. Until then, it had ·
been automatically assumed that
privare school kids had only those
free h righiS that the head of
.,.......
the school permitted. The First

while the record low was 3 below
skies
and
d
.
winds
Clearing
~in 1978. Sunset t;onl.f:'~ be
.
~g
y at
will brina 10111e very chilly Jemper- at 5.Sl p.m. and SUill'ISC
7:39Lm.
atures 10 Ohio tonight, forecaslers
,Around the nation
said Lows most plllices will be 10- ·
Winter storm watche1 were
20degrees.
Then a high pressure system posted today across the sou them
passinJ over the stare oo Tuesday Rockies, while snow squalls were
will lrilllfer a slow winning trend, expected around the lower Great
die
Weather Service said Lakes region.
A winrer storm conlinucd early
By Wednesday, the highs should be
today in northern New York and
in the40s.
The record-high temperature for New England, where more than a
this dale 8l the Columbus weather foot of snow.fell Sunday in places.
station was 66 degrees in 1989 Snow was fal. liil~orning
from Pittsburgh to
Maine.
87 The Allotlated Press

employees. Defense a~;~~lysts
believe the Bush ec!miniatmioo 's
$1.4 trillion defense~· plan
for lbe fiacal yem 1 ~~ con-

The president's men have dering tp political pressures even
announced he will unveil an eco- while ·acknowledgmg them. The
nomic reform and recovery pack- c:ompleKities are such that evea the
age in his State of the Union most rational of plans could. have
~ech two weeks from now.

'

•

Accu. Weather• forecut for

left flanlt? "Interestingly, his big and genqares over $1.2 billion in
battle is going 10 be witJ1 the l:fouJe our swe ..."
and Dellums in part,iculll!'," said
-Base closings. For die manone Senate Republican. "I think bers of Coogress whose districts
he 'II win it. Everybody calls for include bases to be shut, this is
theae cuts. But Aspin has the abili- · about as JlOPIIII!' as cutting Social
ty to say, 'we'll cut it here, here Security benefits. Clinton has
and
here in your district,' and promised $(!() billio,! in cuts from
and
you'll get the (member) to back the BUJh ~·s five-&gt;:ear .
off."
, defense budget, and n:'IIIY offiCials l
- Procurement. Despire the end believe more bases willliave 10 be J
Qf the Cold War, the Defense ' closed. In 1991. some 34 bases ;
tains lots of funny bookkeeping, Dqlartment has proposed spending were cl~ and nearly 50, others :
such as a failUre to recognize more about $100 bilhl!n a year on the · were reabgned, for a savmgs of ,
than $3S billion in potential developmeat and Jirocurement of approximately $2.3 billion. Mili- · !
w:;rns cost increases. Also, weapons IBid relared ilems through tary bases are importlllt flli'DII of :·
m of the $53 bil1ioo in IIWJI8e- the end of the decade Yet the new pork-bane! projects for conpes- l
ment saviDp ~in the Bush mission for the military often sionll districiS; shutting_them. off '
bud&amp;et are l&lt;llltillf ~ul.
· · seems diaccneNed from die stick- will also cut off a key Pentagon !
Between politics and purse, er-shock machinery being clam- constillleDCy.
:
Powell and CliniOn are likely .to orec1 for. AD major I*OIPID" have
J:&lt;?,RTIJNES OF FAJ!;-l.!JtB .- :
fmd themselves alremately as allies constituencies _ ranging from The golden parachure IS alive •
and adversaries. Some of the loom- members of Congress in whole dis- and well for at least one former :
ing beales include: .
tricts p811S are inade to the
Bush administration official. 4st •.
-Alpin vs. Dellwns. ·How will conlnJCIDrS ~ (:llfielll~! "·"yea{-we reooritid;aa dil fi) r l»t .i,
new Secretary of Defense Les Piocuremcnt as port"was on dis- ' habits ot'\Vitllam -~. Rlidmft .~
AsP,in .get alo'lfou~th the new . play last year when 19 members of , .cousin of former Ne~ ~
C_h8irmln ol ~
Anned Set- the California CQnpessiODal dele- · Sal. Wama Rudman
tbi·'-!J •
vices Com~uee. ~ep. Roa Del- gation wrote President Bush of the Defense "recllllology Securilums, D-Calif.~ Wili,Dellums ~ defeading the B-2 bomber manu- ty ~Y· ~ the lpiiCy was
the fir;tt ~ chair_man of ~ factoring on the grounds that it facmg a maJor fun.ding shonfaU, '
comiDlttee, ex)lOSIRg Clinton on hiS •'sustains more than 36 000 jobs Rudman was charging the tupay.
'
crs for ttips 10 Paris tbat included
an $1,800 tab for a car Mid driver .
10 Jake him around the city. A few :
months laler, Rudman invited some '·
French
guesiS aver fer an estirilated
T~WOULD
$500 to $1,000 feast at the posh · .
~D
RiiZ-Carlton Hole! in WashingtoD.
But while Rudman raa into
~ART
some trouble .with tho Defense
:Departl!lent'llnspector Genenl for '·
his rn-pendlng ways, his friends ' :
in die ~ were wailing with ·:
.~n arms. After .Rudmali lett :·
A in November, lOp Peataaon ,
brass c:realed a new ~ for 1lim in ·
bis bometown of Boston. Rudman
now continue&amp; bis illustrious public :
service career as a liaison to the .:;
Department of Transportation, a .'
· · position that nelS him more than :
$100,000 pet year. Of COIDC, tax·'
. payers picked up the tab for any '
moving expenses the Rudmans '.
may have it!cnrml. as well as any '
cost-of-living increases· Rudman's '.
responSe 10 our inq_uiries were not .
suitable for public811011.
:,
Jatk Anderson aad Mlthlel
Blllsteln are writen lor United ··
,
Feature S;yildlcate, Int.

DAD,MI\Y8E

Mercury expected to dip into teens ·.

OHIO Wcatt1e t

•

--

'

.

\1\
...

attention to problems and if enough
states would adopt them, they
could inOuence national leaders. .
· Rep. Wayne Jones, D-Cuyahoga
Mrs. Jim A101bar7 of POiaerOJ. Mike, a 1981 •.: '
BARTRUM MEETS FANS - A large crowd
Palls, who headed a study and
araduste
Melp Hlah Sc:llool wan Vaaallaa'a .~ l
greeted Marshall University's All American
sponsored a new law addressing
Cardinal
Ill
the DIOI'DIDJ and at Locker 119 oa
dght end Mike Bartrum at two Middlepart loca.other elemeniS of the health-care
Saturda7
afternoon.Plctnre by Dave H.-ria
·~ •
problem, said he also found that . dons oa Satnrclay. Bartrum Ill pktared signing
•
'l
. c
an autoeraph for Ken Allllbary - Ill Mr. and
mrerstare drug sales are outside the
stare's reach.
Jones predicted President Clioton's new administration will look
. into price gouging in the industry.
· To finance the budget, th~ .
"It's part ofbis program,'' he ssid.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) lion budget that includes recombureau
says it will have 10 increase '
He said the high cost of drugs The Bureau of Workers' Com~· mendations it says will save
administrative
fees 4.9 percent ill .
stems from policies or drug manu- sation will make its first puch mooey.
.
1994. Insurance rates would go 11Jl1 ~
facturers, "It's not your neighbor- Tuesday for a lwo-y~. $629 milMcKinsey &amp; Co., a national
hood drug s10re," he ssid.
oonsultingfum,wdreorpmWWon . 3.5 percent ip each of the nextlWO' •
Guthrie quoted the General Meigs announcements of the btueau would cost an addi- y~.
.The bureau proposes addinf.'
tional $90 million a year but save
Accounting Office as saying that
.
PI'Otomeet
1,253 employees as it expands :
$10 in insurance costs for every $1
drug manufacturers charge 32 perPomeroy
PTO .will meet invested in operations.
throughout southern Ohio a nevi';
cent more for frequently used drugs
. in the u.s. than they do in Canadit. Wednesday at 7 p.m. Se'I'Cral classThe proposed bud&amp;et is to be system that allows faster han~. ·
He said lhat of 121 drugs sbtdied, es will present the program. A rep- presented to the House Finance of claims and constant monitoring_ -•
. . Other changes include improv1•
almost half of them cost II least SO resentative selling school supplies Commitree.
wilt also be presenL Evayone weling fraud investiptions and impos;
Gov. George ·Voinovich 'in his
percent more in the Uniled S~.
ing more medical cost controlf.'
The U.S. Senate Special Com- come.
State of the State speech ~gain
Boosters to meet
urJ!:C! that.~ comP"!!saJi~ sy~m 1be ~u also pla!ls to re~
mitree on Asi!tg ~ that 4ur'Meigs
Junior High 'Academic be reformed to reduce costs.
'us $206 millio" ~"""............. ' ·"
ins the 19805, the innation rate
The bureau says 1t would save •
increased S8 percent while pre- Boosrers will meet Thursday 8l 7
$66 million a year by handling and
scription drujs went up 152 pcr- p.m. in the school cafeteria. Evayone welcome.
Six people killed
• mooitoring claims lllllR; eff'u;iently.
cenL .
Preachlna and slnal•l
. The proposed budget does ~·:
"Pharmaceutical costs must be
Faith Full Gospel Church in
reflec~ the cost of assuming manf.·
scrutinized and regulated. ManuLong
Bottom
will
have
preaching
duties
now assigned to the OhiO' ·
facturers can no lonjler be given a
and
singing
Friday
at
7
p.m.
with
Industrial
Commission becaus~·~
blanlt check,'' Guthrie ssid.
Chaflie
Hall
and
family,
~etta,
By
The
Auotlated
Press
officials
don't
know what a ftnat ·
The industry has said lhat the
and
other
local·
singers.
Pastor
Six
people
died
in
sepamte
trafcost of providing a wide variety of
reorganiutional plan will include, .
drugs is. high, and that manufactur- Steve Reed invites the public. Fel- fic accidents in Ohio over the said Wes Trimble' bureau adminis-. ·
weekend, the State Highway Palmi trator.
'
ers get less than 2 perceni of the lowship will follow.
Trustees
to
meet
said.
Five of the six fatal accidents ·
amount Americans spend on health
If reorganization is approved,
The Orange Township TrusteeS were singiOH:ar mishaps.
care each year.
the budgets of boll) agenc1es wm:~
will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at
The patrol counted fatalities have to be changed because the'
the home of the clerk, Patty Cal- from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight bureau's costs 'would increase and''
away.
Sunday.
the commission's would decrease. ,
AA group to meet
The dead:
Veterans Memorial
The commission has proposed I(' '
The Pomeroy Group of AA will SUNDAY
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS separate S86.S million two-year ~
CARROLLTON-· John A. budget, up 34 percent from the cur-'
Jacob Schuler, Pomeroy; Randy · meet Thursday at 7 p.m. a1 Sacred
Hean Catholic- Church. Call 992- Harvey, 53, of Carrollton, in a rent two-year span. The commitlee .
Martin, Racine;
'
three-vehicle accident oo a Carroll 'al110 will hc;ar the commission••'';
SATURDAY DISCHARGES - 5763 for infonnation.
Trustees to meet·
None.
'
County road.
budget this week.
.~ ,
FREMONT - Louis M. BrumSUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Ada · The Olive Township Trustees
Keesee, Pomeroy; Fannie. Durst, will meet Friday at 7:30p.m. at the baugh, 57, of Bellevue, driver in a M"ddl
t man ~ , ,
I
Portland; Georgia Wehrung, Mid- Shade River State Forestry Build- one-car accident on Ohio 4 in
ing.
~~..Uty.
Legion to meet
di~DA Y DISCHARGES The
Racine
American
Legion
None.
W,AYNESBURG -Jeffery B.
"
Post 602 will meet Thursday at Vanalmen, 46, of Bay Village, Strl eS OUSe
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
driver
in
a
one-car
accident
on
·
•
·
.. ·
7:30p.m. at the post home.
Discharges, Jan. 29 - Curtis
Ohio
171
in
Carroll
County.
A
house
in
Hanford
received
.•
Loc11e to meet .
Hunt, Zane Whaley, Thelma Hollz,
CORTLAND - Arthur C. $10,000 damage in I sinJie vehicil:·
Harrisonville Lodge No. 411
Johnathan Lemman, Brenda Slew- F&amp;AM will meet Saturday at 7:30 Wells, 37, of Warren, driver in a · accident late Sunday nigltl, acccrd•'
an, Elizabeth Goodwin, Jack Shaf- p.m. Refreshments will be served. one-car accident on Ohio 46 in ing to a spokeman for the Mason
fer, Virginia Ramsey, Lula Man- All master masons welcome.
Trumbull County.
County Sheriff's DepartmenL
nering, Mildred Lee, Glen ChapHAMILTON - David Maher,
A Middleport man is in Pleasant
REACT to meet
man, Kathryn Woyan, Ernest
The Meigs County REACT 33 of Harrison driver in a one-car Valley Hospital as a result of the"
single vehicle accident on U.S. 33,
Casey,James Bays, SheUey Palrer- Team, Inc., will meet Friday at 7 aceident on a B~tler County road.
soo, Betty Meadows. Lucreshia p.m . at the Community Action
GREENVILLE - Counney K. in Hartford.
Howard, Brandon Wek:h, and Dar- JTPA Building, ll7 West Second Wachter 18 of Avon Lake pasScott McKi![, 25, or Mld·"·
in stable condi~··
lene Handley.
Street, Pomeroy. All members Senger i~ one-car accident' On a dleport, was li
tion Monday morning, a hospital
Births, Jan. 29 - Mr. and Mrs. ID'ged 10 auend. New members wel- Darice County road.
spokesman said. McKinley was
John DuffelL son, Bidwell. Mr. and come.
·
taken to PVH by New Haven EMS
Mn. Brian Garrett, daughter, BidHerb group to meet
.
after the 11 :SS p.m. accidenL
well. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kisor,
. The River Valley Herbalists will Hocking students upset
According to an eyewilness
daughter, Beaver. Mr. and Mrs. meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home
NELSONVILLE, Ohio (AP) Mark Williams, daughter, Gallipo- of Connie HiU.
report
of the accident, McKinley
.
Some studenis and .teachers at
lis Ferry, W,VL
WBI
traveling
east on U.S. 33 when
Hocking Technical Coll"e are
Discharges, Jan. 30 - S&amp;ephen
he
passed
a.
vehicle
on the ~ht 8nd
upset over allegaiions that the
Martin, Robi!l Merrill, James
puUed
bact
onto
the
road. His 1991
school padded enrollment figures
Foley, Mrs. Clarence Wireman and
Chevrolet
continued
11eross the
slale subsidies.
daughter, Joshua Stone, Margareth ·
EJe Power....................33 118 10 increase
·road,
through
1
yard
and into a
The Ohio Board of RegeniS wd
Woffe, 'Ilunmy Arthur, Roben DaiAshland Oil........................27 1fl officials of the two-year college house owned by David Justice.
ley, Love) Hamilton, Richard
ATAT.................................S2 S/8 tried to increase its enrollment
The vchil:le was listed u a 10ta1
. R-. Carl Webb, Harold Payne,
:Bank. Orae...........................so 518
loss.
The accident is still under innumbeJS by counting faculty as stuSamuel Sowards. Diana Hendricks,
Bob EVIIll •.:......................18
deniS Mid offering courses with lit- vestigatiOD.
and ,David Kisor.
Charming Shop........,......... l8 1/8
academic substance.
Births. Jan. 3Q - Mr. and Mrs.
Cbmp_!ndustries................. lO lfl tle "Most
of the studeniS I know
Paul Duncan, dlughrer, Gallipolis.
CityHolding......................21 l{l
are
vefy
angered
by this,'' said
Dischll!'ges, Jan. 31 - Frances
Federal Moiul .................... l9 118 Daniel Flood, a technical
studies
Goodyear T&amp;.R ..................68 114
Idriss, Virginia Betz, Mrs. Mart
student
from
Canton.
"We
feel
our
. WilliMta and daullhter, Mrs. Larry
Key Centurion ...................21 3/4
achool.is
being
•larked"
I..ancla Erad. •••••••••••••••••••••••••25 7/8
Grubb and 11011, Mra. Jerry KisOr
Umiled Inc....................... 27 518
md dauJhter, Mn. John Duffett
and 8011, and Tm Grube.
Multimeclia lllc .•.......••....•.. 3-4
}t()ina Blllcop .................... 12'!14
RaX ReslaaranL ................. 3/16
Roliance Electric: .............. .21 718
' .
~yers ................ 17 1/l.

or

~

Workers' Compensation to mak~ bu~get pitch

n.__,-.....

I

....

on Ohio highways

.

Hospital news

epor

injured ·when car '
'k

..\m

Court news
Divorce actions
*
Melli
Di'IUI:e actioos have

Sbolacy. I IIIC•••••••••••...••.•••••22 1/4
Sllr Bri. ........................... 35 114

Woody lnt'L... .................... 13 318
Worthington Ind. ............... 25,1{2
Stock reporta are t•e 10:30
a.m. q aote1 provided by
Ke•per Securities, lac., o
Oalllpola,

flied

in die
County ColnofCcmmon Pleas by Mary R. Porter,
Raclne,lgain: t Flink W. PUncr Jr.,
Racine; and ~arab Elluboth Han1~. Albllly, against Ruuell Lee
Hiniaa Sr., Au.ny.
., .
'
,I

Stocks

~

. ..

.. . ...

1St.= ;
,..
,
......
.......... i
IISIUICI

Ill 5113

... c01m ;
.ICI1161

.

.

."

·•·

b

�Sports

Daily' S~ntinel

The

Monday, Februery 1,1~

Bills no match ,f9r Cowboys
.PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - On
~ultimate . .. the Dal1lls Cowboys· showat America diM its ream
is back - probably for a very Joag
time. .
Away from the big sbow for 14
years and outside the nation' s
sporting spolligbl for nc;:r.!{, as
long, the Cowboys &amp;Pf r
to
dominaJe the NH.. Pabaps DOl the
way they dominated the Buffalo
· Bills in a 52-17 romp &amp;mJu&amp;b lbc
Super Bowl on Sunday. Nobody
caa expect thai. .
But the youngest team in the
)CIIlllle also il the top ream.
were last in lbc Iague lbc
year before I gci here," .-I coach
Jimmy Johnson, the ~rdli'm of the
Cowboys~ amazing turnarouud.
"We were las&amp; in my fii'St year.
_ Now, we're !he best."
From 1. 15 to dwi•M(Ins in feu
years. From a proud fruchi&amp; in
disarray to a model.:f:izuion
t1w has not lllkal a • d SICJI

.·y·we

undr.r tile current re&amp;iii!CC
"I want everybody t1w enjoys
sports, I want them to know bow
special this is for this &amp;nq~ of people," Cowboys OWIICI" JCQY Joacs
said. "Becanse IIIey did set llJl off

their knee. They werca 't on their

bact, they were jusl ~ on their

knee.
" I can' t say enough for wbat
Jimmy has done. He's given bis
heart and soul to us having a win-

nq (ootbelllelm ...

J••m!O• bas done it before. He
buill a willlling pogrtm at Oldabo18a Swe. He continlled a tradi·
tioo of powec It Miami, liking the
Hurricanes to !be 1987 nstional
~o......,;,_h;..

-..---..r·

.

Now, be bas resurrected th.e
Cowboys, using dozens of Uldes
and draft-day m•nc:uvers and Plan
B acquisitioas aod flee-agent discoveries. He bas done it almost
overnight. .
.
" There was never any doubt we
would get to this point," Johnson
said. "The concern w~ bow long
it was going to tHe. As i''C said
many limes, uo III8IICl' bow fast it
was &amp;oing to take, il wasn't fast
mougb for me."
·
Meteoric is not fast enough for
the workaholic Jobnson, who
admiucd he will be back It work
"real soon," · 10 upgiadc this
dynamic team~th Super Bowl
MVP Troy Aikman, NFL rushing
lc:adcr Emmitt Smith, Sllr ~vers
Michael Irvin ind Jay t;~ovacek and

a No. 1-ranlted defense that- as of weight iJ off my sboulde!'s. No
the Bills learned - will rake away maaer wtw I do in the rest of my
your breath, take away the ball, - · at leull CliO say I got to a
. lben rake away your spirit· -Dal• Super Bowl and I was .able to
las isn' t missing much.
win.''
The Cowboys hardly missed a
The Bills acled every billike an
heal in beating up Buffalo, whicl! · AFC team in a S~ Bowl They
has lost an unprecedented three self-deslnlcted, failinJ twice ~~f:!
s~ght Super Bowls by a 109-60
toucbdowns from inside the
margin. The NFC has won nine 5. They lost quanerbact Jim KeUy
con~utine NFL titles and none
to a right knee injury. They gave .
was more convincing than this one. themselves no chance.
'
Dallas forced a Super Bowl
"You're nol going to beat a
record nine turnovers, scoring high school football team if you
directly on t'(o'D fumbles - Jimmie have nine turnovers," said ThorJones' 2-yard return after Charles man Thomas, whose t'unlble late in
Haley sacked Jim Kelly; Ken Nor- the second period set up Irvin's
1on's 9-yard run with Frank secoild touchdown for a 28-10 lead.
Reich's bobble. Irvin caught TP . Thom~. the NFL'.s overall yardage
passes or 19 and 18 yards just 18 leader foil!' suaight seasons, was .
seconds apart late in the first half. held IQ 29 Y'""·
.
Smith, the NFL's leadillg,rushetm.-., Tllotl CQ!•~W,I.\irt;~.
1991 and '92, ran for IOS" yards and .nm Qf cham~ ips. They .cOiild
a score, caught six passes for 27. notCJUC the rap of being losers.
Novacek bad seven receptions for
So they wiD canlinue to II')'.
72 yards and a TD.
•'The biggest defeat you can
Aikman sinlcd hilling of 30 have is to crawl into a shell and
for 273 yards, fow' touchdowns and say, 'Well, that's it, 1 tried and
no interceptions.
we' re not going to make it,' "
"Thu game meant everything coach Marv Levy said. "That's not
for me," the fourth-year quarter- going 10 be our style. We're going
back said. "A tremendous amount to go back to work and make every
effort to appear again." -

22

_Florida State ace injured in96-'17 cage victory
FLYING FOR A TOUCHDOWN • Dllla' delelllive em Jim·
~ale J011a Ilia over BllffaJo•• Jl• Kelly ror a touchdown after
recoverblg KeUy'• fuiDble ill the lint period or the Super Bowl
;: Suday.Ddii-,52-17.(AP)

...,.·, ...-----------------.,
Today's Sports Parade

By JIM LITKE
.
·
Ali Sports Writer
PASADENA, Calif. - FaiC plays favorites. It kisses some
•
teams
like long-lost relatives and slaps others like rent-a-mules. The
••
Buffalo
Bills don'tjust tempt fare to beat them, they insist on it
..
"There's
about this team," wide receiver Andre Reed
·: said, 111hat•s something
a mys~ery."
·' ·
Maybe
so.
But
there's
no
mystery
about this: Three strikes are
•
enough. It's time to move the Bills out of harm's way.
Ptr!Japs to the NFC, where tbcy'U never get this far again. Or to
the CFL, where they can muck up some other nation's "ultimaiC"
game._Or even to IBM, where they won't be heard from foi a long,
long tune.
.
.Frankly, it doesn't matrer where- just so long as it's 0-U-T of
the Super Bowl.
They will not, CllllllOt be allowed back. No way. Not for the rest
of.'the decade at least It would be too soon, too cruel, too cold, too
painful. U not for their sake, then for the rest or us.
We are just now forgeuing the Denver Broncos and Minnesota
,.
Vikings,
inglorious. losers of four Super Bowl each. Neither, howev'.
er, ~ed to lose three in a row. And sad to say, by expanding
margms.
The first time, against New York. the Bills came up only one
point short. Last year, against Washington, it was 13 poiniS and not
as close as the score suggested. This time, it was 35 poiniS and only
•
•'
the clock showed them any mercr.
'
"The word 'destiny' kind o floated around and I thought this
team was destined to win this game," Bills wide receiver Don
Beebe said. "Then the way we lost was very disheartening.''
· Not exactly. "Disheartening" was what happened to the Bills in
., the ftrst of their three consecutive Super Bowl visiiS. And maybe
·
"demoralizing" fits the second. But nothing short of "demolished'' filS.w~ ~ppened to Bu_ffaki on this particular Sun&lt;!aY·
Maybe 11 didn t have to be th1s way. Maybe, when the Bills were
poised 1-yard from the goal line and trailed lhe Dallas Cowboys by
,•
only 14-7 a minute in10 the second quarter, they do the smart thing
'. al14 everything that happens afterward, happens differently.
•
Maybe Buffalo quarterback Jim Kelly cats the ball instead of
running for his life 10 the right and trying 10 throw back to his left
-through a crowd of white-shirred defenders. Then maybe we don't
. have to sit through a 52-171augber.
When Buffalo running back Thurman Thomas was asked
whclher he was surprised by the call from coach Marv Levy that led
10 Kelly's throwing the momentum-shifting iniA:rccption, he replied
candidly.
"Actually," Thomas said, "I was. A lot of players were. But
you can't question the call. Marv.sent it in because he' thoughtit
would work. It didn't." .
'
But it wasn'tjust one bad decision. It was an epidemic.
We should be fair about this. The Cowboys are an exceptional
team, very PQssibly a dynasty in the making. Brutal on defense,
willing to grind out yards the toughest way imaginable, they are
worthy of the mantle of NFC champion. And of the tradition that
has seen them and their conference brethren win the last nine Super
Bowls and 10 of the past 12,
They are swift, strong and hungry, qualities that the Bills almost
certainly share. There's no way a ream gets to three Super Bowls
without !hem.
.
But these Cowboys, for their lack of experience, are already one
thing that the BiDs may never be:
.
Smart.

..

By CHRIS SJIERIDAN

sion won't be made until foolball

APS~Wrller

c(Jacb Bobby Bowden is c:onsullcd.

Strangely enough, the 1993
Heisman Trophy race
bave
been affected by a ~ d
game
that took place ort the last day of
January.
Charlie Ward, !be two,sport liar
who plays point guard aod quarller·
back for Florids Sl8te, dislocaled
his left shoulder Sunday in the
12th-ranked Seminoles' 96-77 victory over No.
Georgia
Ward's status for the rema.W,
of the basJretball IC8SOil is oot yet
clear. He will need surgery to
repair the c~~ma&amp;e. but a final deci-

...b:fi

22

Tech.

seen.

"The ilnponam thing for Charlie, this is not bis dominant sboulder," Stowers said. Ward, a right- .
bander, tbrcw for 2/147 yrds and
22 toudldowns aod finished sixth
in the vocmg for the 1992 Heiansn
' 1be 6-fOOt-1, 190-pound Ward

And Selectiqn For Your Valentine At Rite Aid

....

. TYLENOL

OEODOIIANr
ol SHAW«J

~

ADV/LCOLD
SINUS329
CAPI.Ers

...

ALKA·SELTZER
PLUS COLD
II!"S

.

•

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) ...,
: cincinnati Reds owner Marge
·Schott, accused by former ernployca and others of making racial and
: ethnic slurs, will be suspended
~ from baseball for ·one year, the
: Dly!OII Daily News and Los Ange·
. : lei Times reported today.
- Schott said she has not been
1
infOOncd of any decision by baseball's executive council, and. a
spo~an for the council denied
:any decision had been made.
• "I haven't heard anything about
Cthil. I don't know anything about
: lhil," Scholl said when reached at
· bomc: early today.
' Rich Levin, spokesman for the
executive councif, said no decision
·had been reached.
: "There will be no decision until
:&amp;lie executive council meets,"
-Levin said this morning. "The
:m-ung is tentatively scheduled for
;Wedne~ay, but the logistics are
'1101 set/ •
·
• The Daily 'News said the deci-

.. .

.

sion will be announced Wednesday
in Chicago.
.

Sunday's scores
Colleae Basketball Scores
EAST
Delaware 71, Hartford 67
Drexe185, Vermont 82, OT
·Massachusetts 93, St. Bonaventure 78
Syracuse 76, Seton Hall 67
SOUTH
Davidson 82, W.Carolins "63
E. Tennessee SL 96, VMI 70
Florids St. 96, Geagia Tech 77
Marshall 82, Appalachian S.t.
79, OT
.
N. CaJolina SL 72, Clemson 70
• Tn.-Chaaanooga 82, Furman 62
W. Kentucky 121 , SW
Louisiana 92
MIDWEST
Iowa 88, Michigan 80
FARWEST
.
·
San Francisco 64, Loyola Marymount60
·
UCLA 68, Notre Dame 65
.

"

199

LADY Sl'fEO STICK
snarCUAR

·

169

r.::J ot

24 'S

,-vANTAGE
HAIR

'

f.PJ-..'!R 299

••
••
•••
••
••
••
•

•
NOXZEIIA
SICJNCREAM

,_

199

I'«JM1 OM. v

las-

--

-1011

Y...-C&lt;&gt;st

YourCost

1)69

;:;_ ·

• RITE AID
ALKAUNE
BATTERIES

.RffEAID
MAXI PADS

~ff§:'·

TJ.HN SUPfA iH'S
OR THIN 21'S

199

r~~ 119

_
=.ggc ·-

.RITE AID

.......
"'"':-;
....=-ta~
-.·

WOMAN'S

LAXAnVE
30'S

•

~

KOQAK aow nus
3SIIII COlOif FILM
Il«l!ll'fEOOR
'D-«10 SPUD

.. Elt1'.

319
.

PRICES ON WEEIU.Y SPfCW.S EFI'ECJM FYAUM'Y 1 THAOuGH fEIRUNl'f 7, 1 - 91..:: ~MAY NOT IE AYAILAIU IN ALL STORES

'

•••
•••
••
••
••
•••
••
••

149

FILLED WITH
HERSHEY'S
KISSES
~ - 2QZ.

HERSHEY'S
VALENnNE
KISSES
OA#GIML
OR

••.~•
••
•••
•••

TEEN SPIRff OR
LADY~ED
r5Ql.""

VALENnNE
BEAR CANE

••
••
••
•

2 99

AWer Rllllate

.

ASSORT£0

ggc

u oz.

Al.i.ERGY

•• ,..
••
••
•

BARBASOL
SHAVING CREAM

&amp;_

:lO"
MEDICINE
S OR $1M/$

!

GILLETTE SERIES

·
639

CAPI.Ers

WIDfALMOM:&gt;S

149

I OZ.

PALIIER'S .
FORTUNE
HEARTS

79c

7 0Z.

BRACHS
CONVERSAOON
HEARTS

~~L
IOZ.

5'lk

•
A SECOND
SET OF PRINTS

ggc
~-

For Only...

C-4 I Process C®r Film
in 3" or4" Deluxe Printa

1

HOIIIIEL

cHILl

3.50Z.

VLTRARINSO
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
. rOUSAGE$

99

C

300 E. •in •

. Liter loHit

----···LEIIR

sse

99 C
'

CHUNK LIGHT

~TEll
•.
11150Z.

. 2hk 120.••

•

Ohio • 992'!2586

By SCOIT WOLFE
Seatlnel Correspolldeat
Starting out hot and finishing
stiong, the Southern Tornadoes
.stymied several Miller comeback
bids en route to a 75-66 uon-lcape
boys' varsity basketball triumph
Saturda_y in Charles W. Hayman
gymnas1um in· Racine. Southern.is
· now 10-4 and Miller drops to 9-7.
Scoring 15 points in the first
half, Michael Evans paced the Tornadoes with 27 points, grabbing six
steals and bluing one three pointer.
.Robert Reiber continued to do well
olfenSivdy, hilling for 15 markers
·and' a learn-high eight rebounds,
w
_ bile also srabbing four steals.
RusseU Singleton netted ten poiniS
lind had five ~. Mark Allen
and Jeremy Dill eacb added eight,
Ryan Williams six, and Mason
Fisher one.
Bruce Lanning led all scorers
with 32 pOints, hitting five three
pointers and grabbin4 six n:bounds
along the way. Lanning did a greal
job running the Miller offense, but
got little help in the third frame,
when Southern made its go-ahead
stand.
Brad Daugherty added 17,
Eddie Paige ten, Willie Peyton
four, Jeremy Duffy two, and Jon
Plant one.
Southern was red-bot in the fll'St
quarter, getting a great boost when
their own Russell Sinpeton stuffed
a break-away lay-up to put Southem up 6-0. Southern then whirled
to a 19-10 lead. In the second
round, Southern suffered its traditional let-down and aJiowed MiUer
to creep back into the fold.
A free throw from Plant and
three pointer by Lanning gave
Miller a 28-25 lead at the 3:25
mark in . the second period. Miller
held thc•edge until Michael Evans
hit consecutive free throws and a
jumper 10 tie the score at 32-32.
Ryan Williams c~ aLan. ning bucket with two bonus shots,
.then Daugherty hit a free throw to
give Miller a 35-34 lead. Southern
·went for the las&amp; shot. Reiber
drilled a 15 footer just before the
; buzzer and Southern led 36-35 at
. the half.
J
.
Evans had IS at the half and
• Reiber ten. Lanning had 15 for
. Miller.
Initially, Southern (ound itself
out to lunch to start the second half
"..,.,as' Lanning
and Daugherty
gave
.
·~
1
'

their club eight stmight poiniS for a
43-38 advantage. Southern called.

·unie, reaiouPed'"wl~ump 111rt
fCQITl C&lt;iilch Howie
well, tbcn
went on a torrid 16-0 run that gave
lbem a 54-43 lead. Southern held .
M_iller s.coreless for nearly five .
mmutes m the frame, playing some
or their best ball or the year in tbc

I

streak.
Evans, Reiber, Williams, and
Allen took turns stealing !be baU
off !be press and executed greal
passing to the open man undet !be
bucket Allen had a great passing
game, making seven assists on !be
nighL
Southern led 56-45, then coasted 10 the 75~ wit1, despitt a slight
,~ when Miller cut the score to
64-59, i&amp;s last run of.the game.
ON THE MOVE • Miller's Jon Plant races dO'IYII cour-t with
·
LANNING SHOOTS • Miller's Bruce Lannin1 (U) rtra
. Southern hit 27-63 for 43 per~
SoutllenJ's.
wmwms in pursuit. The Tornadoes downed the
jumper In game with Southern Saturday ulgbt. Lootilla on ill
cent, hil"l-11 three's, and hit 18-26
•Southern's Mlc:bael Evans, Southern -won, 75-641.
.
free throws. Miller
of46 for · ,!F:alcon:::·~·7~5=':':;,·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;__ _ _..;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
47 pea:ent, 5 of 15 th='s; and 714 foul shots.
Southern had 35 rebounds, led
~
by Reiber's eight, Singleton with 5
•
0
and Dill with seven; bad 18 steals
(Evans 6, Reiber 4), 13 assists, and
Ill
0
18 fouls.
Miller had 39 rebounds (Daugheny 12 and Lanning six), 9 steals,
32 turnovers, and 20 fouls.
Southern ·won the.reserve .p!!C
72-34. Coach 'Scott Wickhne's
lads ·were paced by Jeremy Hill
with 21, Cass Oeland with 13, and
Grant Circle, Kevin Turley, Billy
J D!ICS. and Michael McKelvey each
with six. Bill McGilllh had 10 for
Miller.
Southern hosts Coach Rick
Huckabay's South Point club Fri·
dsy, and second-ranked Portsmouth
Clay of Coach Carl Wolfe Satur·
dsy.

a---

hil22

.

•

•

Score by quarters:

•

South~

19 17 20 19-75
MiUer 11 24 10 2I-66
Box Score:
Southern: (75)
Mark Allen 4-0-8, Ryan
Williams 2-2-6, Jeremy Dill 2-4-8,
Michael Evans 9·1-6-27, Robert
Reiber 5-5-I5, Mason Fisher 0-11, Rmsell Singleton 54-10. TOials

'•

•0 •

•,

.•,
'•

Coming
February 12 ·

. 27·1-(18-26)-~­
Miller (U)
Bruce Lanning 7-5-3-32, Eddie
Paige 4-2-10, Jon Plant 0-1-1,
Willie Peyton 2-0-4, Jeremy Duffy
1-0·2, Brad Daugherty 8-1 - 17.
Totals 32-5-(7.14)-641.

......

•

••. ~.

•
0 •

•

0
0 . _ . ••

, .~

•

., ...

'

2is Valentine's Day send someone special a "
personalized Love Note. Your sweetheart, friend
or relative will be happy to know that you care!

20¢

.
'

perword

Love notes must be received by 12 noon, Feb. 10, 1993
Add a special touch to your message with one of these elements-$3.00 each

.

1&gt;. Lips

C. Valentine Hearl

H. Cupid

A. tovebirds

gan, Arizona, Iowa and UNLV.
Cincinnati. and Duke each moved
up two places, while North Carotins dropped lh= and Michigan two
after fosses to Wake Forest and
Iowa, respectivdy.
Vanderbik led the Second Ten.
, The Hoosiers (19-2) moved up Then it was.Fiorids State, Wake
one spot to replace Kansas (17-2), Forest, making its debut this season
which held the No. 1 ranking for at No. 13; arid SetOn Hall, which is
two weeks before losing to Long out of the Top Ten for the first time
-Beach swe at home.
this season. Pittsburgh was No. IS
Prem1011 cboi~ Michigan, like and was followed by Oklahoma,
~ Hoosiers a member ofthe Big Arkansas. Tulane, Purdue and Mar·
Ten, Duke and Kentucky were lhe s t1 Utah, Georgia Tech,
other No. ts. Five diffelent teams
town, Virginia and Michl·
held the fllP ranltinc in 1989-90 aod pn tate.
three - Kansas, Oklalloma and
Wake Foreat (13-3) jumped to
Missouri - were .from lhe Big the ~ .ol the poll fol~ a
Bight. UNL V and then Duke . 26-po1nt wm over North Carolina
1110110polizcd lbe lllp spot the past on Saturday. That was the Demon
IWD aeuons.
.
Deacons' fifth ·straight Atlantic
·: Jildiana hasit't been No 1 since Coast Conference wiu and foiJhe middle of the 1982-83 JOUOO, lowed a vic"?ry at Virginia. Their
when lhe Hooliers beld the posi- only losses this seiSIOII have.been to
ltairfti M-weob. 'l'llelr on1y loa- Duke. Florida Sllle and Callfcnla.
~ thll ICISIII hne been 10 KuiU
.Michigan Sllle returned to tbc:
and Kenlllcky and Iince the 1aaer ranklnp after fallln1 oul for one
IndianahaswOaeialllltraigbtCOO: weet. The Spartan• (11·5) folference ....... hilf Gil the road, lowed I tougl!, emOIIJ?Dal llon!e
includil:xw:f 1IIIIIP~n!e.
loa 10 Iowa w!lh a good lUid Will
: The
vocccJ No. 1 ~ Purdue this weot 10 aet I**
\IY 51 melD ben of a aallonwide m. ,..___., __ (9-6)
22nd
JIIIICI ol writers ud bloadcastera
"""'""""'ut
was
and
41111 bad 1,610 polnu. Kentucky dropped ~t after loslq Bli 8asl
(Is- 1) hid the Diller 14 filii-place road pmes this week to Miami aod
vOiel and 1,569 points in moving St. John's, Houston (11-4) wu
liP two IJIOI&amp;. ·
·
ranked for the fust time in more
· Kanlu was third, and was fol- dian a declllo, but it laslcd • No.
lowed In the_ Top Ten by Cincln- 25 for just one week as the C...ljjln
Qlll. Dab, Nortb Cllollria, Michi- , loll 10 Texu Tecb . ' •
. ,
•l .

··

''

.-:...

By DAVE HARRIS
In the win over Nelsonville. York, the Marauders jumped out to
Sentinel Corrapondent
The Meigs Marauder freshman a 14-2 lead at the end ol tbc: ftrst
basketball team under the direction Ptriod and rolled lO the 44-32 win.
,of Coach Gene Wise won three litanley led Meigs with 12 points,
games recently. In the fmt comest Yost added 10. Other Meigs sail'·
the Little Marauders came rrom ers were Abbott with seven, Han~l;lehind 10 defeat Vin!On County 44- son six, Paul Pullins added five,
· 41. The Marauders then piclted up and Steve Vance .and Bush added
"wins over NclsonviUe-York 44-32, tw~rtheints=hover Point Pleasant
and Point Pleasant 31-26.
· In the win over Vinton , the the Marauders outsoored the home
Marauders outscored lbe Vikings team 11-S in the fourth period to
, 24-5 in the last period to erase a puU away with the win. Sranley led
. 32-25 deficit and post the win. the way with 12 points, Abbott
; 1deigs was Jed by Herbie Busb with added seven, and YOSI six. Other
; .t3 points, Donald Yost added 12 Maraudtirs scorers were Bush with
·lind Travis AbboU 10. Gary Stanley four and Hanson with t~o. Jay
· scored six points, all in the fourth Raymond hal! 13 10 lead PomL
· jleriod and Brent H-"son added
Meigs w1.11 host Jackson on
tour points. Jeremy Ward led Vin- Monday everung.
.100 with 13 points.
·
·
·

rmlsh.

E~oa,ggc

Pag1 5

posts
lOth victory

By JIM O'CONNELL
AP BalltetbaU Writer
Indiana became the fifth No. 1
team this seasou today, a far cry
Irom the pu1 two yean when one
team hekf the lllp spot from start to

.,-

The Dally Sentinel

:Southe~n

:C incinnati jumps
to 4th in AP poll

•

LEMON
CLEANER

Pomeroy-Middlfi)Ort, Ohio

:Meigsfrosh capture
: three hardwood wins

• ••••

•a•-•

EXTRA STRfNQTH

.
'.

,: Schott has not been
:J nformed of decision

.

in the game battling Georgia
Tech's 6-8, 240-pound James Forrest for a loose ball Ward bad nine
assis&amp;s, four llleals and lh= points
with the Seminoles (14-6, 6-2
ACC) ahead 60-35 over the Ydlow
Jackets (1 I-5, 4-3) when he was

Great Values

....
.

....·

"He will need to gel il fixed
eventually," said tean1 physician
Dr. Kris Stowas.
How the injury afreciS Ward's
foocball SllliiiS - and his status as
one of the early front-runners for
tbc Heisman - also remains to be,

No. 4 Cincinnsti beat DePaul SO:
54, No. S Duke topped Maryland
78-62, No. I3 W-" Form upset
No. 6 North Carolina 88-62, No. 8
Arizona edged Oregon Swe S7-54,
No. 10 UNLV .defeated Utab S18te
87-78, No. 11 Vanderbilt beat
Auburn 73-70, No. 16 Oklaboma
hurL
downed Colorado 94·70, No. I 7
. In other Top 2S action Sunday, Arkansas defealed Georgia 97-79,
Syracuse beat No. 14 Seton Hall · No. 18 Tulane topped Southern
76-67 and No. 9 Iowa beal No. 7 Mississippi 65-52, No. 25 MichiMichigan 88-80. .
gan State beat No. 19 Purdue 72On Saturday, No. 1 Indiana 64, No. 20 Marquette got past St
defeated Northwestern 93-71, No. Louis 65-62, Colorado State sur2 Kentucky beat Florids 71-48, No. prised No. 21 Utah 78-69, NO. 23
3 Kansas crushed RoUins 103-56, ~town lost to Boston College
suflen:d the injury wiih 16: 17 left

Monday. February 1. 1993

~~COUPON~~

fgood for«
l(l one hu «.
EliPIAEs FE&amp;.

~.f

.

t:. Rost

H. Teddy Hear

G. I tove You

F. Cou n

·r---------------------------,
U·
' :bJ.u..e flo.U
I
II

I
1
1
I
I

•

l'MyllH!nl must otcrompany your order

Name

Numberofwo!do

-~
l:lty

at:IOJporword

l'.hone
Sl•lc

I
II

-4

Zll' - - - - -

MK'iSi\l:t: (l'l"asc prinl):_c:......._ _ _ _ _ _- - : - - - -

M •te"*'l (W desi...t)

I
I
.. I
I
I

Picture $5.00

ToiOIS
S(ll•d:1l Ar1 El..:m.:ul

~if d..·,.•ircth,

i\ 0

(; 0

I
I
II
I

The . Daily Sentinel

I
I
II
•
I

I

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I

B0

II CJ

t: 0

Tllail. to. LOVE NOTES

I

.. i.l

··

(; I,

. II i.l

I.

L------•---·----•--•••-----•- .I
.

'

•

.'

"

�,_

HIGH

i

•
••

1112-1113

Pomeroy~ddleport, Ohio

Monday, February 1, 1993

Monday, February 1,1893 •'

Page-6--The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel Page 7

.•The Area's

OFFICE 992·2886

.
;

I

Number l

1992·93 B~YS' SCHEDULE

.

...

•

•

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
FEB. 5 - Miller, Away
FEB. 12- Waterford, Away

205 Nort~ Second Ave •
Middleport, OH
RUTLAND - Nft
- Spacious lot. 3:.1 m1
In IDWn and a cute ·
trinmod, I :.I 11Dry home
wllh 3
and equipped kitchefl which

I

NOV. 30-AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3-FAIRLAND
DEC. 5-UNIOTO -1 :00 p.m.
DEC. 10-AT WATERFORD
DEC. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 14-AT BELPRE
.
DEC. 11.:.TRIMBLE
JAN. 4-WARREN LOCAL
'
JAN. 7-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. g.,.AT MEIGS - 3:00 p.m.
.
JAN. 11- SOUTHERN
JAN. 18-FEDERAL HOCKING-1:00 p.m.
JAN. 21-WATERFORD
JAN. 23-MILLER -1 :00 p.m.
· JAN; 27-BELPRE .
JAN. 28-AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 1-AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 4-AT FAIRLAND
FEB. 8-MEIGS - 1:00 p.m.
FEB. 15-AT SOUTH POINT

DEC. 5-AT MILLER
DEC. 11-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 15-PT. PLEASANT
DEC. 18-WATERFORD
DEC. 19-AT FAIRLAND
DEC. 22-AT SOUTH POINT
JAN. 5-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 8-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN.15-AT HANNAN, WV. ·
· JAN&gt; 19-SOUTH POINT
JAN. 23-AT Pt PLEASANT
JAN. 28-AT RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 29-SOUTHERN
FEB. 5-AT MILLER
FEB. 12-AT WATERFORD
FEB.13-HANNAN, WV.
FEB. 18-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19-FAIRLAND

THIS-WEE 'S
GAMES

•••

1992·93 GIRU' SCHEDULE

:

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FB1. 8ut.·5P.M. -SAT.8-12
POLICIES

'

'.
••

POMEROY- llaln . _ - ·A commercial bulking wllh
2,000 ~ letl and 3 aplllmenls above !hat have just
been ramodaled ond all have new furnaces. The upstan
has a $775 a mo""' .income. Great place lor a busineu
and an Income 11om the 8plllmenls lOr paying the biUs,
$44,900

''

•

·SOUTHERN TORNADOES
BOYS
.FEB. 2 - Portsmouth Clay - Home
FEB. 12- Meigs- Away
GIRLS
FEB. 2-River Valley - Home
· FEB. 4 - Waterford • Away

---

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

BOYS
FEB. 2 - Wellston - Away
FEB. 5 - Federal Hocking - Away
GIRLS
FEB. 1 - Belpre • Away
FEB. 4 - Wellston - Away

.·

®Ho~~·

Where America Goes 'IIJ Rel3x ·•

For Just Pennies A Day.

BAUM LUMBER

MIDDLEPORT- BLT (lle!lw look Twice) at this 2 s!Oiy
home silting on a large comer lol Look althe e~ thai
11 has to oller. a f18W 2 car ~had garagt. Lennox
pulse lu~ with .... alr conditioning unit, new aiding
and roof. II hal a large tiving room. 3 bedrooms, 1 balhs.
aqulpped kilchen with new oak cabinets. ·
NOW$63,000

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

ST. RT. 325 • Arl older I y, story home thai has 9 rooma,
4 bedrooms, aluminum siding; and 3 porches. Sits on a
11118 over 3 ac:rea. Can be yours lor Only
$37,900

I••• Rd., Rlcil1o
twttthart Spteltl

RUTLAND -A split level home wilh an open raised hall·
W"'f, has ba.,lilul oak railings. Has 3 bedrooms, a large
balh, Ulilily room arid loaded ·wilh cabinels in kilchen:
HHa~s;a~2,~car~~~~: ~all~u:m;in~~um~s~i:clng~ and 1.8 acres and

tor....

~

· 14 SESSIONS -:-

114

Limit 2 Per Customer

$42,000

~·

•

20

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and , .
REMOVAL . ·

255 Mill St.

Middleport, Oh.
992·3345

.

. 3 COHYEHIENI LOCATIONS

SECOND STREET JACKSON AVE.

USED.RAILROAD .TIES

$18.000

.

•

•
'•••

$25,000
DOmE TURNER, Brakw.~.....................H2-at2

School.

BRENDA JEFFERS.. .............................H2-3058
DARUNE BTEWART...............................-"2-6
SANDY BUTCHER.. •••• - ...........................112-5371
JERRY

MAKE nARilE...

Public Notice

Topping, Trimming,
Removal
R-onable Rain
Fully ln•ured

TOOL

742'2360

following:
Building and Poraonal _ _ _ _:.__::::.._~======
Real Estate General
Property lnauranco
In order to be oonalaed
all aealed bldo ohall be I
received In th• treuwer"o
office by 12 o'clock noon

-;;;;:::====::::::::::::==:::;:;;::;:;;;;:::::::j

@

on:

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
AND RADI'O SHACK
106 N. 2nd

Middleport, OH.
992·2635

YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN
MUSSER INSUUNCE
111 SECOND AYE

POMEROY
992·3381

GUARDRAIL

•

&amp;

SIGN ERECTION

228 WEST
MAIN ST.
POMEROY

CALIFORNIA
TANS
V.latf•• .......
15 Sessions '15
Pies.FREE bottle .of
lotio•
GoN Tlaroutll Fellru•rr

949·2823

PHONE

HAULING
LOG HAULING;

LUMIER,or
FLAilED WORK
In State or Out
Of State.

S &amp;L

(614) 992-6451

=~·.:.':;

lM8 K. Neooolroed, Clerk
(2) 1! I, 11• 310. • __ ·-

1 C8rd of Than~

VALLEY LUMBER

1 Middleport, Ohio

P. 0. Box 683

Your local

Po11ero , Ohio 45769

JUST DO IT.

ST/HC
Dealer

•

IEifif:bliiii!~·~

SALES • SERVICE • PARTS

IDENOUR SUPPLY
'

.

'

N. 2nd AVE • .
I .

MIDDLEPORT

'

Prescription·
Shop
For All Your Prescription and SUDdry Needs
See Us

253 N. SecoRd

11141...........

POMEROY, OHIO

1

·

PRICE IIEDUCEDI Racfna- epprox. 12+ acres ol ~I
ground. Utilities available, property needs IUIV"'fod.
ASKING SIO,OOII
.
GREAT &amp;TARTER HOME OR RENTAL INVEST11ENT·
1 112 slary homo wilh 3 bedrooms. on IWa loll ol50 X
100 each. Alklng $18,900 may accepl reasonable oWer.
IIMEDIATE POSSESSION- Approx. 20.05 eaes with 40
X 28 hunting cabin. Very pnvate, rustic and remote.
$17,d00
.

We Would 1:.1111 To
Thank OUr Many
., FfiMIUWho
EAGLE RIDGE- Bl• room lramt home with 3-4
bedrooms, 112 bamt TPC _.,, 2 oar garage, 1 + aare
llllrilmblnd U. With
on paved roed. ASKING $111,600
Ollta, Clrdl•ncl can•
On our IIIII! Weddllig ·1
HOW TQ .LL YOUR HOIII:
Anrilve,.ry, Jan. 21.
1st" CALL CU!LAIID fiUI.TY.
'
2ND
LilT
THI
PIIOPIATYYOU
WIIM10
.LL
We .alao will! to thank
SAD RIW AMI WAIT FOR THE "80LD" liON 10 APPEAR
fllav. and llr1. 1bm
IN YOURYOUR YAIIDI
'
Jtunyon forthell .
CALL TODAY I'OR DETAILIIII .
..pport, prlyerl lncl
· viii• whloh .,.,. rMIIy
lpPfiOiatad.

OOcl Bll• You AIL
Mlldrecllnd Clifford
.laoobl

,HENRY E. CLELAND......................................SIJI2....11.
TRAC'Y IRINAGER ...............- ........................... 2411
JEAN Tlf\JIIELL••- .......................- ••··-····-14"2110
OFFICe....._ ..._:..............................................112·2211
\

1'1-

45. leoa

S76-Apple c..,..
· 77S-Moooa
882-N- u....,
895-Lololt
917-Bdolo

SUNDAYS .

· 1:00

~.M.

· OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

c.......

WOLFE &amp;
ISIOCIATES
lCCOimHG
otnoolne Tu Prepwallon
•oakkr•fllng
.P"'froll
SERVING INDIVIDUALS
BUBINE8BE8
t II~ W. IICOitD s\',

,.._,oft.._

POIII*OJ1 01• .tS76t

··•-n•f!)
92-6193

..

'·

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
, LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES

BASEMENTS.&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

PH,, 614·992·5591

J2·5·tln

Words

1

3
6
10
Monthly

15
15

Rate

Over 15 Wordsl
$ .20

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

15
15
15

$.30

$ .42
$.60

$1.30/day

$.05/day

Rate~~ are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separaie ads.

~

Snodgrass Upholstery
"Helping Yoll To Recover Your Investment"
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating

UCINE, OHIO
614·949·2202
614·7j'2·~!996

~

MASON, WY. Acro11 tr.. the Post OHict
We Specialize 11

Tires • Alig1ments • Exhausts
Check -our Price or We Both Lose

3rd LOCATION 10 SERVE YOU linER
1-8·1 mo.

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773-5533

ASK FOR CHRIS

COMMERCIAL and RESlDENTIAL
FREf: ESTIMATES

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139
(llo Sellllay Calsl

1-11 -'13

EAGLES
CLUB

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thle ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULUDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
. AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
· DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

f/8/"112/lmo.

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

HELP THE EFFORT TO IUILD A
FUTURE FOR MEIGS COUNTY
HELP US IN OUI AnEMPT TO GET INDUSTRY FOR
MEIGS COUNTY .
WANTED: S11 6 ACIES OF RElATIVELY FlAT LAND:
(1)
611, Nlww .. eltvatloa
121 Willi S.W• (3) AH Will•

No-· ...

PHOIE: Pltty or

l•r Pickens

IIHie: 915-4231 or Pcmr'•

TROLLEY STATION CRAFTS ·
992·2549

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
......
.hiM
.,..,,r-a

·; a

31904Lellllclg

HOURS:
Su nday · Mo n.:~ av - Closed
Tuesaay - Wedn esday· Fr iday - 9 : 30 ~.m . . 5:30P.m .
! hu rsday · Sat ur day - 10:00 a.m .. 3 :00 l'. m.

Cr181t 101111

IIW•Itport, Olllo
614-992·7144

104 Mu lberry Aven ue
Pomeroy . OH 45769

10/1112 tfn

WICK'S

SERVICE
36970 WI R• Road
Pt~~~~n~y, Olllo

SIZED UMESTONE

' 992·3470

''

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows :
Room Additions • Roofing

61'4·742·2138
EVERY,. THURSDAY

.

BISSELL BUILDERS, .INC.

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

(614) 992·5449

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614-992·
6637
St. II. 7

Days

.

HAULING

. Delivered.,.

Quality
Stone Co.

RATES

POOR BOY TIRES

UCINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOTS

Marketplace

GET RESIJLTS ·• J'ASTf

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

HIIDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load

.

BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION READY FOR
VIEWING! Crew Rd. 3 badroom horne, approx. 1 acre,
beautiful living area, fireplace, basement 2 Cll garage,
decking, dDMI space, tllic room. si-lk, carpeting, 2
balhs, VERY NICE I IU,IGO
.
R ch
NEW USTING- FRANK RD.- One floor frame an
Slyle homo 4 bedrooms. 2 balhl. lamlly ro~m
wlflreplace. one car garage. In ji!IIUnd pool. 1.1 M . With
fenced pool area. Pretty home, greatlocationlta,IGO

.

8yreoiiM, ~ 4577t·

'

SrtHL •. .• .

608 EAST MAIN

On .January 21, 111113, In
lhe llelge County Probate
Court, Cue NO. 277l4,
EllzabiMh Cutler, 632 E.
lllln Slnet Pomeroy, Ohio
457et, wu eppolnted
Executor of the eetet• of
Thelma A. Dill, d-ued,
ltle . of Third Stro•t,

-/l;ttl/ili}
555 Park St.

~92·2259

~675-1'1.

667-Coohllle

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

NOncE OF

KFC.-

9~~5-Clooo~er

845-Po.......
247-Lolat F..
949-lodoo
742-Ltlaod

&gt;

99.ol!•:lld

· PIJt!IIC Notice

1111/j

588-VIaloa

24S-IIIo Gnade
256-G.J..; Dlo&amp;.
64S-.\roillo Dlo&amp;.
179-Wol.at

. (614)
667·662

(1125; (2) 1, 8, 15,41c

AP=~ OF

992-lllddloport/
Pomero,.
3614 ''" .

446-Golllpolio

EXCAVATING

EloiH Booton, TrHiurw
38900SA7
R-vllle, Ohio 45n2

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT

GaDia Coanay Melp Coanay MMOD Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Aft&amp; Code 304

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

TRUCKING

lluch 10,1H3
Said B08rd of Education
r4tHrVH lho rlghllo acce1~11
or re(e.ol•y llld -''
anyMd .. - .
Boood of Education
Ellllitern Local School

W. VL

'

D. A. BOSTON

F&amp;l TIEl SEDICE

USE WANT ADS,
AHANDY

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Bowd ol E-.elan of
·EniOJn local School Dieltlcl c!eelreo lo receive
o11lod bldo on the

e~&amp;chtmgel ...

folloNing telephorut

AMERICAN
liFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

Diolrlcl

WILL TAKE CARE OF ALL

Clouified page• cur~er rhe

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER "
•TRUCKING

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONnRUCTION
•hwHontes
eGarallS
eCo111plete
Re1110deli•g
Stop
c~:&amp;•'•
FlEE&amp;En
ES
985·4473
667·6179

bedroom farm houile. Located near the Easiern High ·

'•

DAY III!FORI! PUBUCATJON
1:00 p.m. Soturdoy
1:00 p.m. MOIIday
1:00p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wedneodoy
tOO p.m. Thuroday
t:OOp.m. Friday

1128193/tfn

ST. RT. 7.- Approx. 16 acres olland with an 8 room, 3

5TH STREET

1asan, W.Va. Pt. Pleasa11, W.Va. New

.

HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD - Looking for a piece 10 build
that dream horne or a place to par1&lt; ·thai mobile home?
Well, here it is approx. 2 acre·s wilh a 12x16 building already 181 up and ready lor you.
•
$12,000

Peoples

Bank

BILL SLACK
992-2269

l'ilh main-nee bee siding and a aloraga ·

building. Can be bought on LAND CONTRACT with
$3,000 down. 10% lntetell with a monthly poymenl af
appmx. $249.05 for 7 yrs. Call today for an appolnlmanl

NOV. 30-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
.
DEC. 7-VINTON COUNTY
DEC. 10-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-AT ·MILLER
DEC. 17-BELPRE
DEC. 21-WELLSTON
JAN. 4-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 7-SOUTHERN
JAN. 9-EASTERN
JAN.11-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 20-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 21-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 25-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 28-M ILLER
FEB. 1-AT BELPRE
FE;B. 4-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 8-TRIMBLE
FEB. 11-AT EASTERN

When The Time Comes ... See Us
For Your 1993 Graduation
Announcements.

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

~lh home

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 4-AT ALEXANDER
DEC: 8-TRIMBLE
DEC. 11-MILLER
DEC. 12-AT ATHENS ·
DEC. 15-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 18-BELPRE
DEC. 22-WELLSTON
JAN. 5-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 9-ATHENS
JAN.12-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN.15-ALEX.(NDER
JAN.18-HUNTINGTON EAST at OUC
JAN.19-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 22-AT MILLER
JAN. 28-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 29-AT BELPRE
FEB. 2-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 5-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 12-SOUTHERN
.
FEB. 18-VINTON COUNTY

MEIGS MARAUDERS

-.

'•

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

.

.

1992 GIRLS' SCHEDULE
NOV. 30-EASTERN
DEC. 7:-NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-WATERFORD
DEC. 17-AT RIVER VALLEY
DEC. 21-AT FORT FRYE
DEC. 23-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. ,28-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN. 11-AT . EASTERN
JAN. 14-AT WATERFORD
JAN. 20-MEIGS .
JAN. 21-AT NELSONVILLE-YOAK
JAN. 27-TRIMBLE
JAN. 28-SYMMES VALLEY
FEB. 2-RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 4-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 8-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 15-AT SYMMES VALLEY

• Fl. Adt: Gi-war aod Fouod .do UDdorlS word. willloe
rualdaJietaodoup.
• frico ol od 1.. aD capitol""- lo double price of od oool
• 7 ....... u.. typo •air uod
0 SoalioNiio lOOt NpoaoiloJo J.r "'"'n aftor tnl day (cloooJi
· lor ornnllnt dar od,... ill papor). C.U.loelon Z:OO P·•·
.dar allor P"Nicorion "' ..Uo .......11o.
• Ad. that IHit 1M ,.W Ia .....ace an:
Cud oi.Tiwou
Happr Ado
I• M•&gt;riuo
Yards.• A duoillod od......_t pt..d ill the Gollipolio Dolly
T.U..... (aeopt Cluoillool Dloplay, B • - Card or LopJ
No-Y wW oloo .,.... 111 the Poia~ Plouut R..........d
... Dolly Soalbaol, ....labatl•-111,000 ..._

.
•.

DEC. 4-SOUTHEASTERN
DEC. 12-MILLER
DEC.18-AT'SYMMES VALLEY
DEC.19-UNIOTO
DEC. 28-COAL GROVE- At OUC
DEC. 29-AT RIO GRANDE ·TOURNEY
DEC. 30-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. 5-EASTERN
JAN. 9-AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 15-SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 18-JOHNSON CENT., Ky. at OVC
JAN. 22- TRIMBLE
JAN. 23-AT CHESAPEAKE
J.AN. 29-AT EASTERN
JAN. 30-SOUTH POINT
FEB. 6-PORTSMOUTH. CLAY
FEB. 12- AT MEIGS
FEB.13-WATERFORD
FEB. 29-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 30-AT TRIMBLE

CLOSED SUNDAY

• Ad. oUIIide tl. coua~y yoar .a d rua aut he pNp•id

!

GIRLS
FEB. 1 - Trimble.- Away
FEB. 4- Fairland- Home

'

COPY DEADLINE
Monday ""per
Tueoday Paper
w..m .. •ay Paper
Thunday Paper
Fddoy Paper
Sunclly Paper

• a.-.. dlloouatfor ada paid ;. .dwuee.

i

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

To place an ad

..

949·2391or
1·100·137·1460
....,. Mowing,

F;oriiHIIng, Weeding, Md

-1111·

Shrub- TrH :rrlmmlng
.
• Remov..
A• IMutlll a commlf'dll
F,_E81lrnal•

FIREWOOD FOR BALE

1127113

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
41 HOI! III for Rent

Monday,

Houuhold

5I

KIT 'N'

CARLYLE~ by

1,1883

•

Ohio

SenUnel · Page I

Larry Wright

Goode

lltd ac•,1CW~-

r,-o,, Yo;!:nr._ '"iW.::
A t*"'tt1UIM"

I

.. ,...... Plue

II *til I

1:c:::c.~.~.:=

......

I

~

Tw lltdna n

:~:-· .....,...,fl4.

r":nounccmcnts

torRent
""'""·
~
'
, 11R
AIIlJa•
R'!lfi*M.
No Pill&amp;
~- Oi'I14-11J.Q41.
11 -llo FIIRE LDT 11ENr1
........ only . , _ .,.,

_,., lno- eldr11ng, • ... up. 1400 111 ~-

. ....

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

2 lr, 1 ..... - h of
Eun1oo, on 81. 111.7. No polo,
-

PHJU.IP
ALDER

........_ . ClnleA . . Or

aa~•·=..,.,.

tf..-=: ... &amp;-i-.'1:

-o..~· ........
Collie And,.._,
IIIII -

=
Or ..........
a..=~=::

42 Mobile Homes

-

'II'IIA I'UIINITUIIE AID ,..
P11AHCD
t11ttlt•OR .............

Dlfi!IOII

On -.z.o.n:

-.

Nolhlnl Ewr PN aMllld.

EAST

•

lnl- - . $400 For AIL 114Ml 1120
CCUNTAY
I

w.

45 . . . . . .

.,

·

z
Collier-.-

~.Choir,-

End ra~~~oo,

._,_........."*J
_...,.
,.,,
--

W•n

.QIOU
171Z .
.,\1[ Q 71

0.. 141 Ori . . _

4-

Pllll.

No

Notrl'll

+2

KQJt

Jt54
J53

•
,
.
- -~ """

_;;:r?rII II,~ ~~'-''-'~,'-.:

FUAIITUR£ . AND
CRAm
.... CNibl And Croll ......

SIT

..... . .

55

•An

•n

•- ..~~

-._--Coone
...
~...::========;:::::::=:::::=::;:..J
--·

,.

Vulnerable: 8oth
De•ter: South

Soildo

~l L IVt'~1kn •,

lNT

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

5 52, Rom•• . :

6 -Pno
7 Erich-

1-

-

...

Strollelnl

2 . . . (prel.)

..

8 Direction

31wMd

U &amp;.k

•wen

&gt;-d'l'l r,l:f1p'11

.

s. • z rfar

IAKQ S

U. AIZIIt- -141, fl4.

7

!M~

SOVTB

~~!lli

e:.:..w:.c::,.....:.·~

51 . . . . . . .

• lOUU
.AU71
I lO I

u

..

__

rH!I(UI

~=.

~~~~

,,.

10 CGupd'- .
11 Food llall •

WHI

18Fencer'•

Pass

IWord

Pus

22 AllilnCI
2311ab
24 Eicepe(oi.J:
25 Guldo'l high
note •
27Hockeygi'HI
5

·IN--,-7
T•--I'Md·-

Opening lead: • K

••HELP, FELLERS II

~mo.l1tltl-1

29=-

The lead
out of turn

IIon,1144JNm.

-dp'.....

30 Outch town"
35 I've found ltl
31DIIUI
•
37 Atonllc

wupon

..

•

31 Ruder In ..
churcl!

. 40 Unedomed •
42 P1rt olllllp'e
IIIII
·•
43 Shark
t..U
44 How IWMt·•

NO, M~AM .. I WASN'T"
VOLUNTEERING .•.

--

I WAS 516NAUN6 FOR

•

46 - Krlngle •
47 Auld Ung ..,_
49 Clolll
'"

A FAIR CATCI-I !

..

50 Frying - .:
53CollllcFet&lt;
COIT8 Pi.lo BY
Aonah, :lbdnn.,
2 llolllo, IUIIton ll!lng room,
lwdwoodlloon In dining 100111
onbywoJ, 2 .., dllllllhocl
lietl.
40 ......
.....
.1-414-INr
-oftorlpm.
CICJIIERNIIENT HOliES From .,
1u ~u· Doll=- ru
Property. . •P. _ ~me. Your
An!O (1)
Ext. Q!lr
1011t FOr CUnwnl Ropo Llol.
W.nl to _ , JCIU awn homo bu1
..., '"' ........... -lna'l w.
hlo.. ....;..t:,;,.. we wlliMII

CL081NG

SELLER,~

=or

S!"'.J:o

Eildi-111 -

· ooas . F

:;FRANK AND ERNEST

E D El

"'

Z?lYK

M F I 'C
F

SRMK

RXR' CD

JtFYEl

souiiiiiN: -r;r.;=;.,.~..~-~· ;;;.
,.. ,_.,

K G F S E • ·-

but there's no rMoon "

dliiiLW- • - - - - .., lho radio." -

-~~~"':!
pollmnent.

..,Tclllllllr'•ai.:
..............
,....~
Y....... K.

0 D L

WElDF&amp;El

PfiEWIUS

.

WK!)FGKE

0 .I Y -F S

Y F S l'

TrJ ns port :111 on

onllnd--wlthoomon

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

F

-

--eaoa

m

------

CBFI FJIY ClptER

~~

Jomeo Brawn .

....

to HtlldUII an lpo

..,

lAME

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

I

Gallipolis

• VIcinity

tiJI Pork Eololo, l.,b I ........ 2

~.:::: -.::. t':o

._:rr

p.m•

aoor.,

tex11 cleck. Ptachhw
10x12 GUtbld&amp;. 1 arw I •xtra

_...., on

~W-:-ot----,..-.,.,..,...,.-.-------,.,.

...... - j o b . . . . . . .

~

-

Mldcllepon

AHa~......

• VIcinity

14

1-'"

AM Yonl ._.,.. 1o Poll! In
-!!or - .Doelllo
....
ocl, lo lo run,
......, odftlonr 1:OOpm l'(lcloy,
!londiY odltlon 10:G0Lnt.

re..,:c.-.
.

Hill Rtl, iiDW75'

-

Pomeroy,

nontriclhlonll

(OHOW), · -

-

....... ...., lllfiOo 141170,

Ml 1J1ec. 2 blil ouc=. AJC, ·
_ , . , . porch, ldlchln llland,

•-a.

Tckas•• Trw ...,., ...

Tllouutk&amp; ,,.. Ealmlttll •
lfl.'IIIT.U. .......

or·--.

01 a,... Porteble S.wmln~._cton1

::"~'1;i·

'"" ... )liM

Wanted to Buy
llllor'
T'f'.!l..

,~-

.,........

doiiWry, Mllfl!.

....

-~·~·-......
_ •.,_-On

-

AFF'ID"Dtl,
llllhlptlll-

===~~~i
qu- 4i041

blda,
1411-4:

l'lonto Rd.

)uNI..,. a •-.:
WlntM Ta 1ur: Jri. Auto.
I

Coli

• --.a

Employm en t Serv1ces

11

Help Wanted

HILl' WAHTIO

-

.......,

-ceN. -t

1or _ , Of Plllllnl
t n1bl1, 111141
22PI.

.... -

PM.

. . . . . Wll . , _ . . . . Por
ZEo; Te ft You ~;

41 A. I -

lr1ok - . ·3

IR,2 ....... 1,_~•ul

-mont, 2 lome, Work 15110p,

Dhr al&amp;re l8ohool ..... t'Moo4*o
1224.
. . . . . Cleaning,
""'
.....
loo .... VII!UY
r'IJida
•11•1.

11~1WIIoro0r'-o­

-

...

E_.,..,.

-1"'-.
-·Ill

tlnelow••· 3044'71-6Ho.

Rol·

WllooNior Oldltly In my homo,
1141G'UI.
,

Fmanc1al

1:mcr.#""'"' IIIWn 10 I

1100
1111.
-........
... 112
You'l
.... '""

=
.....

"

0,

........ , ,0 . ...lillit
m.

10,000 blu -

OUT~-

Nlw Havwl, nloe 2 ll11froom

UIID P - IIR&amp;88E8
Fob. t, t:OO Ill I:GO Pll. U-00

I

UOJII

.A-~

... "":"

- --··
...

. . . . . . . . . lallll.

IUYIIIEU

PW .......,,.... non .....,.
dUie. Polli P' =nt Vuc&amp;Laal

..-.

21

_....:.J:~~~~L-

-···00111

tiilooW
I ...-.noPI
._
, _ . . . . . _ . Pl.

t•droom

lr
llopooll,
7

=~r::J:=o~ ow...,.

35 Lots • Acreage
-

8chool

HIQ!I

u.
.............
FI.'WIDIIIg,
111 • dn · -

.

.,. Itt 2Vtl.

IMualul llrge lal . . Dru aah
. Awenuet ...,- ..... ftta~~ aad a

Guido,.,. - ,,.
lux

7

J

..........

no plll8; IMr

Fumlshed
Rooms

~lorranlr_Of_h,

- . 11t
.llllngot
· - · - Hoiel.
. . . .10

- ·1 ·
· .........
C&gt;iitr-.
...
1Md
111111
11 Rei.,
POii410Y,

1/a,

45

~.-....

5

nlm,

•ntlna ,..... wlh ~.
Aa.t,....,._, All haat1 upe.
Coli . . . :1:011 ,...., IIMrm.

-. ...-wv.

lrT wantld to Rent
Prall 111 a1111 Coupte w.nt To
Rlnl,SIIIINZUW.2 ..... WII

ru..::-"' -••t-- ·

=~~:;::,

I Up, Hoy ·"'- · 71 2oTan DOdge lntok,

I'IIIWM .,.

-

Couclllou, 1...- IMr
lll-'11111.
"'-ood: AI Ie.rn adl .,_
Dtlt •Ill 140 PIDk-Up LoiM1.
114-2111-1111.

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

For ... · -· "' IMihor
140~.-.-

l'or ....
~ In
Hli.. l\flw'n'o
. .1711. ... 1-Coll .......

No

1

4 •.__________________
5.______..;:;,.._ _..;.;;_____.~

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

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

~'II'UIUITUIII

.........
=:o:.= . . .....
- ...-.. =.=:...:..·.:'~·~'
=-......
""""...=""'.:1
:r.:.........,.. "' ...... ....
tinT.:~"·
uo .........
~'..am
~

-

Conool .... -

Vlnrl

'··'
••

.-

1 11111
-m'MII1S .u:~~•w

~ - T...,·CiiniJ

· Dem·ss - BASKETS

'"'

.,•

···'

A......,_.IOacblelancblastsummet . He said

he-SIIIRUidlldbJ•dr•lnltlral he only escaped
. bJ buJMg a blat I 1101 t11o BASKETS.

,

. . ..

v- R

1f

FEBRUARY 11 ...

-.. .

BERNICE
I!EDE OSOL

1•....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
6~---------------

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

Houlr. lion ••• N. ........
Tid.

;r.... the ch;.,kle ~uoted
-L.
-lrL-...IrL-..1--..Ir--'r
br
~'
in lhe milli"9 words
L
-do alu;: ...... $lep No. 3 below.

; ·. AITRO·ORAPH

~----

Houllhold

11811111111!!-

111171Ce yoo took ---

c .

...,·•,

no need to ~ your laOfflfl.
Plqce your clq•,W,d qd todpyl
. 15 UIOnU or lat, 3 ·dctyt,
3 pge,., 15i4Q paid in Gdvance.

9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-..:...._

c .,,,, ......

llat what you don't
hurt you but~ sure

W iJ clae em .OOy...by Jbone,

r.1Nchandlsc

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

' Clllll41711.

P I I II E D

Thlt Professor com§

I

Thm your cluUer into cuh,

------------~-------:::::,-;-,,.c;:. ::::!'::;.,." 2.
a.·--------------~--______________
C!uo.l!lr

Goode

0

~

End ·of '12 ali IIWIOir new If.

8 •._ _...;:,____,........:_ __

-

'Tia. class lal,tghed at the
the student had

liiiJ • s a

•5rsrl--=l;,.,&amp;
,::..,l;..:...,l,.;;;..,l,...-t

A. Yes, there is, acconlinR to sev· ·
eral dictionaries. Although the llljeer •
live STALE is often preceded &gt;by
MORE, the comparative Conn ,
STALER may also be used. Your cficr •
tionary may list STALER as tbe mmr
parative fonn and STALEST as tile
superlative form; look through tbe
entry after the main word STALE .
&lt;Never, though, should you try lo •get
,away with "more staler.")

DO 'IQJ E':'.1i:R
'M:INDER WHAT
LIFE ISALL
AeaJT:t'

IMONDAY
One
iipMlrnent,
fur.
............... pald,i
... WICII
lnCI diJ IIR,t14-M'N111.
0nt t J WLLL
f r'krlelll,

r

~

L_-_-'_-_.J_L-_:.-::.~:.:•--.

Q. I wanted lo use "staler" in a
word game. Is there sucb a word,
though?

""" oil .._

~-a-tiiO.­

rt, 2 t

I I I 1 t : IIW I_,
111
I
S QE UT
1

Something DOLEFUL is u d ·o r
without cheer: "His doleful ·expressian
depressed me." When you use tbis
soulful adjective, remember 1o rhyme •
DOLEFUL with SOULFUL.

OM Til£

CA&amp;H?II

fur.

81

.....
l'B.5,......- ..... . .

=
_§

:_• plld,..., a '"'• .,,

.....

, . . . . . , . Q . . . . . . .......

..... l'ar .... .... l'rldoi.

•AIIOII*ALLARI.Ut--.

~lo'Gtft

......

,.. 304-171.

-·-.----·

On-

--'OC..C...Conlort

~-0111-CIIIIn

~~~k- 2 2 PEOPLE
Te
lnw; I ll&amp;tlty. llull
1e
tlllllll,
DIJ___
n 1 bt , _• AM-N
ola

-..J--~ - ···

AJC,

Crib Wllh Shld.l1t Ut 2380.
01 HIIC
Polol: AI 0111 U.S. PIM .,_, I A.ll. .e:IO P.M. n ~~-~-h
Gold~_......_
Guo1!1r And
lo Tho hooao ,_,
• 2 lltp
~-.:::::- 111 eco- fOr Y- Chlld'o
IL
Gold
·C... Coli U. For A YIOII. lnlonl
SC ..,..,.,
• .I
T - l14si4IG27. , _

Lorrr LJwlr.IM Ill

t:TdSap art 1 I 2 room

33 Fanns for SBie

J l D'O Aulo- 111111..._.

--·IMino
m:au:

...

-ai""""' ·-

.........

-Or-e.::!':i

-..-,.-~oc~.-

...... OhiO.
Vlc:l. 141170,

"'--............
-.--· .•.
Wwldng
Color

.!"...
end-lnL-......
14-

only.

Don, ""'* •1 lol U. Y-llonr

" . .......

MUll IICIIflw. 1111 M-'0 Reel-

DlopiOy
Moclolo,
El,... Cld Houllkl-== We loloolod
Do l•wthklt FfOIII
.. an F - Clly lloltllo Hamoo, IMr
To Plooi'll Hive Rek:a
t14-WN.
SchUlz, 141170, 2btlrm., tolol

&amp;Auction

II

lll4of4M31.I

1.«11' OUit.

Want to:
PIN ao"nEXTRA

ot-

.... wlh • ,..,. _ , , 1ft..

,..,._or,

TAAT I .

--acellaneous
Merchandise

1110 Flllnnonl FlnloiiJ, 14xl0, a F u - I - I IMit,
b o d - 2 bolho, girdlft lub, y.,., Clean, W.IOr ....... In ter Area. 111 a• u aa
bnnd , _ -pump,
211011.

Business
Training

MAliC. Jloigo -lilian lor
. ,........ Cfillchn, w111 • 18 Wanted to Do
rumm·ge . - -- ...~ . UR TAU IIERVICE. · l~,
Ftlbrulirl,1ta. .. •

· PubliC S81e

54

.....
IIIIo-. ::t,. a;it""nlng,

1110 Rld90, :lllnlm., 1
112 bolh, pump,
oil -~. ~f.IIOO:

8

·re~~=~~q ~~

6ond

Rolroln
HowiiiSoulhM. . .
lulln••• Col9, I~ V.H-,
Plua. Coli TodiY. 1 1 - 41ml
RogWOI121141.

...........

:BORN LOSER

- . .....,.. lllnluahout,

ALLYonl--loPololln
Mvonoo. ~UNI: 2:GO ......
tho dlr 111o od 10 10 run.

EIDGIG

11.__~..:..-.._,.._..:._...:....._____

1Z-----~~---13~-----...,.....................___

~··------------~----15 ____~~~~~---446-~.342

9J2-2156
75 -1
6
l~~~~~~~~--~

In

111e,.., l5leedoekln,_,..._.,.
you erellcety Ia
pl...

oonlld~rlble ..

perlecllor you. Moll S2 plus along, sellr
addr-.1, 81amped envelope lo
Mllc:llmaker, c/o lhll newepaper, P.O.
Box 91428, Clevelend, 014 44101 3428.
PIICII (Feb. ao ¥1 ell 101 The more
lnloneely Involved you become In coni
structlve end.-vora todar. the more
your luc:lc lo likely to Improve. Keep
plugglng eway until you acllleve the end
r - • llnll you desire.
ARIII (Mifcll 21·A!I!tl 111 Involver
menta you have today Wllh lnlluenllal
lrlenda Should turn oul IIVorably, prodUCinQ edvantagoe 'lor them u well u
lor younetl.
TAURUI (April »Mar •1 Do not be
lntlmld.zed today by d...topmet tlllhlt
pnlmole oompetHI'on or prod.- c:llelr
lange. Thl1 oould be your etrongelll
5

-.aallre~beetlllota.

YGU'1I ••lop. Your l8lth w11 not be m • (IMJ 11.,.. 1018117-approv.
niiiPIIQII, beeN-"-IIIICIIIIOtp lllllmportllll ICJC!AY.!~~'
COUld llloduDe mutull biJieflll.
younleiiiiiU
1111
_,_...., U"""
· I I " ' - c,_ ao , . 11) 'l'our 11 11!1 _.. l/1111 wt1 lllel' out. H l/1111
I ,I Ill$ ... 01111' 110!111 I!IMIIItlet C~IIC'I, dlmiiC~~~~L.uolc
·
111

. . . . . . :5 =In

·COUld ?le ...... MIIIIUIIIOdly. You '

"

-

• .......,_, ,_.y

you

dltlona you are lhe PWIOil who pre~tn·
10 call lhe Sholl, bul today you could
rare beHer In arrangwnwtll -.you
play only a supponw. role .
V7RQO (A... zt..hpl. 22) Major llrldee
..n be medtllodey conceo nlng- am-1
bilious obje!:tl... you .--.11y 111111-:
llllhed. Mike lhele lhe local polnll Iori
your ellortl. ·
'
1
UMA (lepl. 21 !)cL DIAn eventlhel ,
you' ve been appr....,..ve about coukf
lurn out to be a ~ ol ~· lor you
today. The lellon to be -...ctlo nollo
worry about lhlftllll 111at rney
happen.
SC:OIIPICI (Oot IIWIIMr. 8) Thll II
good day to lmpiemenl cMngM lhlt
you .... oould benlllt bolll you end :
people ,OU're iilfPOillltile lor. Taka ·

-

i

a

~-=:lu.~JGUr_,

8AG1TT
(lllllr,D . _ ",',;::: 1
toii1U4Qe U?.. end.,_o
,
..._ o0Utllll y0u tnllt. but,
..,... talllft. don't dleiounl tour _,
ludlnM=IL
Y-=d IIIO,.......IOiilllf. .
tile..

r.-

.

;

y-1
toall-1

-lhal lllniiiMd 10 loOIItawrlbly upoll
Cll
.D 111 , 11)
blllP'Ill .i=tll
~WIIIre today Ill ..,.l/1111.1 nol b l - . PJI hill.. fllrPIIIOAII !1111n
to lliGit:.W ...,..llllll/1111'1 lind " · , of. Dwliopn•rt• wlfll'lnalng up, Ill oour 11 1010111r.. llltlluciiiiRCI fndut.
The~Melcl\rnlll•lllatlnlty ; to~ed&gt;Oi•IIQI
lrloutnlll
equ11 rorr In~
1W1811 ligna w ..--.y LIO ("""Dr-Ill ,Under 111011 con· lidding to ,our Ill oJ Ill
In

OOUid-

,,

•

I

•

�'

By The Bend

'

The Daily Sentinel
\

Eastern girls
post another
cage victory

Monday, February 1, 1~

Page-10 .

Please, please, Mr~ Postman send People in
me the rigfit mail, says readers
the news

Dear A.. Landers: When a
letter CODies back from the post
office twice with a notation
inforining the ICiiiCb that Ollil to
Kamas requirr.s Canadian postage,
it is not merely a "gaffe" but a
s)'DipiOIII of a 11101e serious problem
'- national iploi3Dce of geography
and hislory.
As an intcmatiOillllradC lawyer,
I have had letters lo Hong Kong
returned after being routed to
GuateDiala. Telephone oJ)erators
have asked me what state Ottawa
·. is in, whae in Cbina Singa~ is,
and in which pan of Yugoslavia
DusSeldorf is !ocaled.
When postal workers think
Kansas is in Canada and Hong
Kong is in Guatemala, it's liDlc .we
took a serious look at education in
lhis Country. - M.A.C. IN D.C.
DEAR M.A.C.: You~ sil!ging DIY
song. Read oo:
·
Dear Ami I aaden: Here is yet
another tale of the U.S. Postal
Service:
A while back, I mailed a letter
to a business acqualntance in
BinninghaDl, Ala, A ~ laler, I
received half of the letttt back. It
was the half with DIY re!Dfll address
on iL
I became curious aboul the other
half and called my colleague in
BinninghaDl. Sure enough, he had
received the other half. Don't you
lhink the JI08l office should give me
a refund or IS cents? - BRIAN K.
PREJEAN, BRUSLY, LA.
DEAR BRIAN: I do and I'd like

MONDAY
STIVERSVILLE • Revival at
the Stivcrsville Word of Faith
Church will be through Sunday at
7:30 p.m. nightly with' Pastor
David Dailey. There wiD be special
singing. Public invited.
·
LOTrRIDGE - Cub Scwt Pack
376 will sponsor a spaghetti:supper
at the Louridge Community Center
on Monday at 6:30p.m. Ccst is $4
for adults and $2 for children and
senior citizens age SS and over.
Crafts will also be available. Menu
includes spaghetti , tosse.d salad,
garlic bread, pies, cakes, coffee and
lemonade.
SYRACUSE • The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet Mon-

'

i.
j

CHILI CHAMP - Helen
left, ha lien umed
making cbamp as a result of the annual dull cookoft' beld at Yellerau Memorill H08pitaL Coni's clll1l -leleded 11 the bestiDicle
by .four ftaallstB' representing staff, employees, volunteen and
department heads. Employees and ¥olnteers voted on their
ravorlte sampling of the rour offered at tbe hospital cafeteria.
Corsi receives a large cook SpoOn rro.. Jaekie Sfarcber' .cad or
the nutrltloa department or the bospltal who stages· the auual
contest.

In 1984, for his role in
"Amadeus," F. Murray Abraham
woo the Academy Award for Best
Actor.
On Crete, the Bronze Age
Minoan civilization emerged in
2500 B.C. Apr~ economy
and richly decorauve an was sup-

ported ))y seaborne commerce,
I

'I

The Syracuse Asbury United
Methodist Church recently held a
carry-in dinner for the Syracuse
Charge.
Guest speaker was Samuel Nsaman, Pakistan, a friend of Rev.
Deroo Newman, pasuir.
Group singing of "Amazing
Grace" was accompanied on the
piano by Rev. Newman who also
gave devOtions and prayer.
Closing the meeting was prayer
by Samuel Naaman.
·Attending were Rev. Naaman
Michelle
Caines, · Marie
Houdashelt, Elma Louks, HaUie
Robertson, Jean Stout, Mary Bell
Warner, Mary K. Roush, Kathleen
Stott, Bob Smith, Hope Moore
Russ Moore, Bill Winebrenner'
Dorothy Winebrenner, Sandy Haw:
ley, Sarah and Alen, Faye WlQins,
Dick and Betty Ash, June Lee, Roy
and Rose Ann Jenkins, Rochelle
and Kimberly, C,rystal and Wcndi
Harmon, Helen Teaford, Marl
Lisle·, Bill and Mary Ruasel ,
Wanda Rizer, Kathleen Frya-. and
SCOO!er, Ann SaUvage, Mary Cundiff, Beulah Ward and Oennis

Perfect Sleeper PLUSH

$399°° FULL 'sET
$499°0 QUEEN SET

Vol. 43, No. 188
Copyrtehted 1H3

•

night's meeting when Council of De.velopment must be matched
passed necessary legislation to • on a S0-50 baSis by I~ particiapply for a granL
. pants. The village is !llso required
Friday is the deadline for filing to add 10 percent of the grant to the
the application and Jean Trussell, project.
. Trussell repo!led that 18 buildgrants coordinator, indicated to
Council \hat she will be taking a ing owners have committed
copy of the updated plao and other $103,200, and that the village has
required materials to Columbus an Appalachian Regional Commission grant of $70,000, other comThursday or Friday.
As for lo~al funding, grant mitted funds of $16,000, and
monies from the Ohio Department adminislnltion and imolc;mentation

ByCHARLENEHO~~CH

Seatlnel News Staff
: Middleport Village will submit
an application for downtpwn revitalizatiOII grant funds of $217 ,SOO
to the Ohio Department of Devel·.
opment this week.
The long proceSs of.developing
:a plan for restoring the downtown
·area and securing interest and
:pledges from business and building
·owners was complered at Monday
,.

.

•

r

\.

,,

.

.

.

~·

· B JULIE E DiLLON

•

~tiael N~ Staff

: Pomeroy Village Council vored
:unanimously Monday evening to
·make apphcation to the Ohio
:Department of Development for
·downtown revitalization monies
:available from the state. .
· The cen.tral business district
·development plan has been com·
.pleted by SDC Consultants Inc
·Jackson Mike Strotb Pomeroy-'~
.' revitaliziuibn consulrmt, will sub·
mit that plan 10 the Obio ~Dlent of Development by Fnday

.

which is the application deadline.
thai for total application to the state
Council's decision to proceed of $322,200. This means a revitalwith the project carne following ization project totaling $644,400
!lOti~ of commi~ from ~ul!d- could become a reality for
mga m,the central~ district. Pomeroy. .
.
Council also unammously pa•sed
As required by the Ohio De~all the required resolutions and ment of Development, in addition
ordinances pertaining to revitaliza- . to the central business district
lion.
development plao, village governStrotb stated of the 53 bUildings ment must match 10 percent of the
· in the central busin~ disuict, 23 · total application. That match for
. have mllde commitments totaling Pomeroy is $32,220.
$292,200: He sai~ an additional
Pomeroy. Mayor Bruce Reed
$30,000 for design work and stated the v11lage' s share of the
administrative fees will be added to total commitment must be desig-

COMING DOWN • Tbe old service lltation
on ~e MGM Farm City property in ~meroy
recently purchased by David Bum11ardaer Is
coming dowa in tbe secooc1 phase or clearing tbe
four acres lor development pur~ Monday

•Ear, Nose 6 Throat •Allergy •Hearing Aida
1 •Head 6 Neck SUrgery
QUALITY CARE FOR YOUR FAMILY

$2 99

14

Ft. REFRIGEUTOR
SALE

~~

SAU

$49900

IY Wltllll...te....................

...

~~~~~~Y~E"""R-1 TUCILISI CAIPIT, KUIPIIIY CAIPIT,

''

PliSII CAIPET, Uftl LOOP CAIPIT,
Il-l CAIP.IT

~--~--~20~S~n~U;.S~O;N~S=IL~E~I
IN .STOCK

Man cited in accillent

. VINYL FLOOR CORIING
•IS NTTIIII

$J1199

IAII . .

•12 n. WIITI

no

IQ.YAID

c.r

Medicare &amp; UMWA AttiprDenll Accepted

•

-\
'

I

•• •
!• •

·-

-kU--

:=;:.;sr,;'

•

Suitt 112 Valley Drlwe, Pt. Pltaaat, .

.

It wasn't immediately clear can.
,
direc · f ·
what effect the walkout would have
Joe Klmgl,
~ o penonne1
on prodUction or on industries that · for Peabody Co~l m Henderson,
rely _on c~al: In 19_90, Peabody K&gt;:·· refused to discuss the compaHolding SBJd II supplied 19.P,C'CCDI ny 5 plans. Coal d "···- Assoof the coal used by U.S. utilities.
. Peabody
!!" ":""""'" .
"The coal company has a lot of c~':ed ~te m1nes m W~ V!fcoal stockpiled, and the power gwa, Arizona, Cclorado, lllmotS,
companies d~. to~~ So. they're ln~iana, Ken~c_ky, M?Jitanl and
ready for a f1glit, sa11!_ .Ma~k Oh!o. It .wasn t unmedl8tely clear
Rankin, who works at a ~m~ m wb1ch nunes were affected. .
Blacksville. "I guess we ·ll JUSt
Notaffec~ Wm! Wyommg .and
have to give them the best one we Colorado mm_es of ~1!"der R1~er
Coal Cc., a lhird subsidiary, which
signed a contract. with the UMW
last summer.
·
UMW President Richard Trumka announced the strike hours
'
before the midnight expiration of
Three people were transported to Veterins Memorial Hospital
the union's contract with the Biwfollowing a one-vehicle wreck on Ball Run Road in Salisbury
minous Coal Operators AssociaTownahip Moaday llllUJld 8 a.m.
·
tion, wbich represents 12 of the
Aecordiq to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
nation's largest producers. The
Highway Palrol, Jarnea R. Hensley, 16, of 31S6S Painter Ridae,
agreement, ·negotiated in 1988;
Vinton, wu 10utbbound ·and lost control of the 1986 Chevmlet
c'overs-more than 60,000 miners
BI»M he 'IV8S drivina in a right curve. The vehicle slid off the left
and about 150,000 retirees.
side of the road and ovenumed into alltlal1 suam.
''At this limo. our suite is limitHensley and two puiensers. Lee Williams, 14, Vinton, and
ed only 10 ~y." Trumlal aid.
Shannon L. Scholderer, 17, Pomeroy, were transported by the
"If, when and how tbis strike
Melp County Emerpney Medical Service to the hospital where
•expands depends entirely . on
they WCIIll treBled IDd rdcucd.
whether the B(:OA companies are
' Damqe to Ytlblcle was 1lsted as moderilb.
oreoared to blrpln."
Hensley wU cited ))y the patrol fll' unsafe speed. '
· No talb weRI IC'hedl!led
Tho union said. it struck over
Ullfalr labor pt IICtices, 1 move tbal
Could pMCCt union members' jobl
A Pomo101 tMI was cited afler a two-'¥Chicle acddent on carr
if the CWijMiay biJed tepilcementl.
Raid In Oranp TOWIIIblp Mcndly around 3:30p.m.
Unkln O!!jcilllllid ibey want &amp;o
Aa:clrdiDi 111 a report tnxn die Oallla-lrfeiia Poat of the SIIIO
suenalhan
job . - .
union
Higho~ Plilol, .. ~ Meial County 1lo8ld ol.llducltion
blllilculetl--'
......
d
aciooJ but driven b)' RobertS. Vlhi111, 62, of 44107 Cm Rd.,
Coolvillo, waa e•dlot•NI oo
Raid Mid - atn1:t in tbe left.
Olltbllshlna
- -tblllr
- -lillian milea.
10
compile wltb
- ))y a pida'l' lniCk tlriwn Ill Tockl A. Tripp, 26, of 39564 SlllllnTrtullb llid fllbDdy IIIII otber
er Rd., l'biDiaiJ,J', wWdl pullecllrom 1 prlviiO arM.
.
affiliala of tile Bitumlaoutt Colli
-~.:&amp;ora Aaaociadon "have
Ford F·350 IDd the 198llnlllorwtlonal
·
Ill INIOtid Ill OVI!IIthe 11101t
CO.CIIIIIed.on JIIJI3 ·.
aimple iDfcnildoD roqttolll" ~
talks boiiD Nov. 6.

Three injured in wreck

••'

COLOI COIISOU

CARPET SALE

29900 ·

. A

·- ---Local briefs· ~

25%0FF

---~25•

..

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
As Dlany as 7 000 miners in
Appalachia and me Midwest went
on strike today at the nation's ·
.largest coal producer in a dispute
over job security.
Members of the United Mine
Workers failed to report for the
' midnight sbift BIIUbodtoatCoal Co.
and ljastcrn Assocla!ed
Corp.,
which operate mines in eight states.
Both are subsidiaries of Peabody
Hl&gt;ldingCo. of SL Louis.
·

au _. e111m --~~;"~

$

•

al'teriloon the rront ot the station lncludlllllbe
rour coocrete pUJan wblch held up the roofed
area over the p110line tapks Will! knocked down.
A week qo Sunday the framed strnctares on the
properly were burned.

Coal miners go o.n . ~tri~e

SIUDIIIT HSI~1 IOlLTOP
IIIDIRAL .... 1141

Moore. ·

JOHN WADE, M.b., INC.

•

-

TV SPECIAL
Jt• COLOI POIIIILE
$
" ..........___............ 26900

Council adopted an ordinance to
authorize filing of the application
for $217,500 in revilalizahon funds
with the Ohio Department of
Development after giving it a third·
and fmal reading.
Several required resolutions to
be submitted with the application
were also passed. These mcluded a
resolution adopting the plan for
downtown revitalization as updated
witll the assist!lnce of Buckeye

.• .

Hills-Hocking Valley Regionajl:
Development, a relocation and ·
assistance plan to help anyone who .
might be displaced during the revilalization. one calling for the develi •
opment of the stteetscape plan, Bill!:
another hiring SBA consultants to :
develop that plan.
·
Trussell said that she does not
anticipate that anyone will be displaced in the process of revitalizaContiniJed on page 3

.

nated for a specific ~se in the
central business district According
to Reed, that specific purpose will
include repair o~ the. parking lot
waJ! along the Ohio R~yer. He stat·
ed 1t has needed rep811' for many
years and that this project could he
the answer w that probleJ_D. S~gestions offered ))y Stroth m usmg
that commitment included a
streetseape program of tree plant·
ings, sidewalk repairs, period li~ht·
il)g and a development of the nver
front area.
Portions of council's monetary

commitment can, according to
Stroth, come from in-kind services
such as work by village employees.
Struth .stated !he developm~t JJ!an
len~ Itself rucely to such m-fdnd
serv,ces.
Council's concern regarding the
project is that some oftlie buildin~
who have committed a certain
amount of money will back out ana
not complete the project. In that
case, Stroth stated, another- building
in the c~ntral business district
could p1ck that money up by
match. If grant money is not used 11

will be returned to die deJia!lment
of development. Accordmg to
Reed, this IS what council wants to
avoid because regardless of
w~ or not .som~ backs out,
council must still ~Jrut $32,220.
Joe Clark, pres1dent ~f .the
Pomeroy Merchants Assoc~li_on,
stared on heha!f of the ~UIIIal,
thai he recol!l)ized co.uncil's sltua·
lion. He said those mvolved are
sincerely committed an~ have
giyen a lot of thought to their commJUnents:
.
Continued on page 3

It's official: Punxsutawney Phil
says six more weeks of winter

Quality Brands lncl!ld• lerklne, Rewe and
Craftmaster. Allin the ltfut styles, fabrics
'
and colors.

SYLV~NIA

of planning funds of s28,300, all of
which can be considered local
match money.
She further explained that the
village's 10 percent can include
donations to the streetscape plans
of $3,180, stage construction match
of $4,000 and streetseape plao of
$2,725 for a total of $9,905, leaving Coun.c il to come up with
$11,845 over a two year period. ·
In-conjunction with the project

..•

Pomeroy seeks state money for dow.ntown proJect .

.DESK SALE

15 Cu. Ft. CHEST FREEZER

1 Soctfon, 10 P~~g~e 25 con to
A llulllmodll Inc. N-PI'~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, February 2, 1993

Middleport's revitalization plans now comple.te

OFF
SOFA SALE

SALE PRICES
START AT ONLY'

.

Clear toDigbt. Low In mid
:zos. Wednesday,sunny. Hlgb In
upper 40s.

•

OPEN
SERTA
BEDROOM FURNITURE
PERFECT SLEEP

Dinner held

News notes

Pick 4:
3713

•
•
•
•

•

Perfect Sleeper FIRM

\

086

H&amp;R BLOCit

$349
$479°0· QUEEN SET

•

~--------------------~-----------------------L----------~----------~:
·*'· ...

you do not receive mail that is
dangerous. They also try bard to
protect you from swindlers. We
deliver mail across the street or
across the Unired States for lhe same

Community calendar
Commualty Caleadar Items
appear two days berore aa event
and tbe day or that event. Items
must be received wen in advance
to assure publication in tbe calendar.

Pick 3:

Page4

, MIAMI (AP) _ The parents of
jazz trumpeter Arturo Sandoval
fled cu))a and ~ived safely in
Florida after their fttst escape boat
sank, the musician's manager said.
ANN LANDERS'
fee.
A speedboat picked up the elder·
Ani....
If for some reason you have a Sandoval, also named .Arturo, and
piece of mail retmned that should his wife, Cira, after the fiShing boat
luwe been delivered, check the zip they left Cuba in on Saturday
code. If it has a stamped hand on it,
began taking on water. The Santo help. How's this?
do 1101 ~mail the same envelope dovals, both in their 60s, were
Dear Postmaster Addie CroChet because that hand will raum it to taken to Key West, Fla.
Mrs. Sandoval was hospitalized
Please send IS cents to Mr. Prejean you every lime.
We are the only 'goYCI'IIIDC8t-run
for minor back injuries suffered
in Brusly. .
service thai gives the same service during the crossing, which was
~ar Ann LaadeJ'll: Can you
handle one 11101e JI08l offJCe stcry? regardless of wbo you are or where ~:.f!J:~d the manager, ~arlos
A couple of years ago, I too1c a . you live in. the United Sta~; This
· Sandoval, 42, a protege of the
leave from university teaching to includes lhe elderly • the. pcior and leaendary trumpeter D.izzy Gilleq
do research in Italy. My mothei' even those wbo are incalteraJed.
The
U.S.
Postal
Service
is
made
.
sp1e,
left Cuba two years ago and
wanred to send me a letter, but not
has not l!eCII his parents since 1990.
knowing how much postage to up of many dcdicaled employees They will be reunited tbis week
affix, she simply taped two qwwrs who work very hanl. Pleale awre- when he returns from a concert lOur
to the corner of the envelope and ciate us. -YOUR POSTMAN ·
in Ja , Valldejuli said.
THE WINM:R - Sherry Smith !11 Beecb Grove Rllltd, RutlaDd, '
·put it out for the rural posanan.
DEAR POSTMAN: I do - and
~elder Sandoval is a retired was the wbmer of this 52 1Ddl Magnovox telemlon set awarded by
mechanic and his wife is a home- the Rutland Furnltue Co. or Rutland and Rutland H-e FurnisbTwo weeks ~. I reccivtd the so flo many millions of Americans.
letter at the llalian university where The mail gets through in spite of maker. They left behind a daughter, . inp or The PlaiDs.. Sbe 'IV8S one of several th0US811d who slped up
I was studying. It arrived with no rain, snow, Ooods, lwnicanes and her husband and grandchildren in at the two stores in a promotion whicli started Ia October. She had
.
·
stamps, but the two quaners were earthquakes. Count me as a booster. Cuba. They plan to stay in Miami, eatered oaly one ticket.
'
where other members of the family
still taped on the envelope. l)on'l After an, where would I be without
.
._Hve.
you love it? -- MARC MAR· it? j .
.
'
Is a/eoltol rllillillg yoUT lift or 1M ·
SCHARK, PH.D., PROFESSOR,
fiiLLSBORO,
TeJtas
(AP) -·
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH life of' a lpvtd OM? "Alcoho/UirJ:
Crusading
country.
star
Willie
NelHow to Recog~u It, How to Deal
CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
~n. who raised money for strug&gt;DEAR MARC: I dol Keep With It, How to Co~r It" C1111 gling American farmers, is bending
reading:
'
lilT!! t/JUJgs arolllld. Strut a •If:
back to his birthplace for another
Dear ADD Landen: Recently I addrtsud, lo11g, b11siuss-~ize cause: restoration of a cenrury-old
have read many dtrogatory remarks trtve/ope and a check or mortey courthouse ravaged by fire.
in your column about the U.S. Postal ordtr for $3.65 (tiUs irtcludts
Nelson, the bandana-wearing
Service. We are humans, and We do postage and handlillg) to: A/ooho/, country rebel known for sucb songs
mike mistakes, but our inspectors c/o A11111ANiers, P.O. Box 11562; as "On The Road Again," will
work around the clock to see that Chicago, Ill. 606ll-0562. (In
heildline a March 28 benefit conCantllla, #nd.$4.45.)
cert to help rebuild the Hill County
Courthouse.
Nelson, organizer of several
Farm Aid concerts·, " as born in
Hill County, where the 102-yearold courthouse .was destoyed by
rue on New Year's Day. The conday at 1:30 p.m. at the Syracuse played at ihe Reynolds Building on cert will be staged in front or the
Municipal Building.
Route 124 at Hockingport on Mon- gutred landmark.
•.
.
. day evening. All bands are weiJim Showers, a Hillsboro attor• receive your refund anticipation loan in a matter
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio come. Public.invited.
ney who is coOrdinating the e'vent,
of days
Township Trustees will meet Monsaid organizers hope' to raise
day at 6:30p.m. at the Pageville
LETART • Letart Township $200,000. Tickets were expected to
• no cash needed-all fees can be withheld from
TownhaR.
Trustees will meet Monday at 6 range in price from $20 to $100.
your checK
p.m. at the office building.
Nelson, also known for singinJ!
MIDDLEPORT - Bible Sllldy at
"To All the Girls I Loved Be!ore
• available whether we prepare your retum or not
Hope Baptist Church in Middleport
TUESDAY
and "Always on My Mind,' was
will be Monday through Feb. S at
, MIDDLEPORT · Middleport expected to aiiJJICt otber top enler6:30 p.m . Classes for all age Lodge No. 363 F&amp;:AM will meet tainers, Showers said.
groups. Jim Ditty will be the adult Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. A cornbread
"He has uied to support what·
teacher.
and bean dinner will follow the ever he can when he can in
618 E. Main St., Pomeroy
· Sac. &amp; Sycamore, Gallipolis .,
meeting. All members asked to Texas," said Beth Torroll , a
~4
UIL IEILII
446-0303. "
RACINE - Racine Chapter No. attend.
spokeswoman for Nelson.
134 Order of the Eastern Star will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. MemPOMEROY - American Legion
bers tiring hearts or valentine relat- Drew Webster Post No. 39 will
ed items for auction. The disuict meet Tuesday at the post home.
bean representative is scheduled to Dinner at 7 p.m,, meeting at 8 p.m.
attend. Refreshments.
CHESTER - The Pomeroy
RACINE • Racine Village Order of. ihe Eastern Star No. 186
Council will meet Monday at 7 will meet Tuesday at 7:30 pm. at
p.m. at Star Mill Parle.
the Chester Masonic Temple. Offi.
ccrs are to wear street length dressHOCKINGPORT · Country, es.
IUJ Ju1t Th, PJ.Ctl You NHII, '
)'~~~~ and
music will be
Oalr, Maple and Chirry Flnl1h.
WEDNESDAY
TOTAl SUSPIIISIOII
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Sturcly ~·••tructfon.
,
SYSIEM
Lirmry Club will meet Wednesday
DRESSERS, MIRRoRS, CHESTS, liDS
at I :30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
and NIGHT STANDS
.
Chester Erwin. Mrs. Ronald
Reynolds will review "Ritu8Is of
'
Dinner'' by Margaret Visser. Roll
00 FULL SET
call will be to le11 of a memorable
dining experience.
'

Ann
Landers

Ohio. Lottery

•

• : lv

'

. PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa: (AP).
- Punxsutawney Phil, dragged
from his bwrow in subzero temperatures, looked to the ground and
saw his shadow this morning,
meaning six more weeks or winter
·lie ahead. Sort of.
The groundhog's prediction has
nothing to do with the sun - the
town's Inner Circle club makes the
purpotted forecast days in advance.
But the cloudless sky lhis morning .
would have guaranteed a shadow
had the sun been high enough in
the sky.
American folklore says a
grobndllog seeing its shadow
means six more weeks of winter.
No shadow means an early spring.
Some 4,000 people showed up
at Gobblers Knob outside Punx ·
suiawney to take part in the fun,
despite the dawn temperature of 6
below zero.
Over the years, Phil and his predecessors have predicted six more
weeks of winter 97 iimes in the
107-year tradition of this small
central Pennsylvania town. The
current Phil prognosticated in a
nose-to-nose cbat with lilner ·Circle
President Jim Means; it was read to
the cheering crowd by Paul
"Rusty" .Johnston.
"See that image over by that
twig, it's not verr. dark and not
very big. It' s a likeness of me,
that's my shadow I see, six more
weeks of winter there 'II be,'' Johnston read.
This Phil escaped a date with
the executioner to make today's
encounter with his sbadow.
The groundhog bit a member of
the Inner CirCle Jast summer and
state and federal health officials
soughi his head for a rabies test.
But Phil got a reprieve after the bit·
ing victim releised health officials
from liability.
.
'(he groundhog forecast is based
on a German tradition bl9Utlht to
the Pennsylvania hills iri 1887. If a
woodchuck, or groundhog,
emCfl!ed from its burrow in early

February and saw its shadow, it year were Staten Island Chuck. a.t
would be frightened and return to · the S~n Island Zoo in New Yorlc
City and Jimmy the Groundhog of
its hole for another sili weeks.
In three of the other U.S. towns Sun Pmirie, Wis.
The lone dissenter predicting an
that stage similar Groundhog Day
events. two saw shadows but a early spring was Gen. Beauregard
Lee, a furry forecaster in Lilburn,
third did DOL
Agreeing with Punxsutawney Ga.
Phil that winter would be long this

=-·

SEES SHADOW ·Jim Means, ptesldent of the PullliSIItawney · ·
Groundbog Club, boldl PullliSIIbnntey Phil, the weather
ticatlng JlrDUIIdbog, after the anllllaiU'II' his shadow early
y
mornln1 on Gobbler's Knob in PullXSIItawney, Pa. The slptlnc of•
the shadow sigDa1s six more Melts of winter weather. Some :Z,OOO
people pthered on the Knob Ia sub-zero weather to witness tbe
event. (AP)

Robinson sentenced on four charges
At a plea hearing held before
David M. Robinson, : 31, of
Racine, was sentenced Monday on Meigs County Common PICis
three counts of forgery IDd a couat Coun JUdge FJed W. Crow m yesof receiving stolen property, all lqday, RcibiniOn witbdrew an ear·
felonies
. · 1ier plea or iiOl guilty to the charges
According to Aaslatant Prose· and entered a guilty plea to the fQU!'
CUiini AIIDrney Charlea H. Knif.'t. . counts.
For11ery and receiving stolen
Robina~ enlllied
guilty
propeny as contained in the indictment against Robinlon ue fourthdegree
felonies,. accordins to
Tbll lndicllllllllt - the reault of
KnighL
Both
charges carry maxi)loNn-'•1- 1992 tbeflllld 1110
mum
possible
penalties of 18
of a Cl'lldlt card helooaiDJ w Iene
OWea 1'1lo ,.,........ counts were · months in prilon and a maximum
diamlssed, due ~eata from PlllialtY of $2,500 or both.
IIMIJIIIleo I of die iW
t'l &amp;mlly - Ro&amp;.inson, who wu 1ep; :1: 1ted
coun by Melp County Public
wllo YlctimiiiiiDCtl in those in
Defender
William Safranek, was
counta.

votr:z

=::or~~~&amp;':-.-=~

sentenced by Crow to 12 momha in
prison on one count of forgery, and
18 months in prison on the remaining counts of forgery IDd reoolving
stolen property, io be lerVed con.·
secutively, or one after the other. ;
The consecutive ICIItences 01
the latter three counta were sua:pentled ))y Judp Crow, 11!111 RobinSOD wu placed on probalion for
ftve )earl.
Robinson wu also ordered to
pa'y reatltlldOD in the IIDOUDt of
5157.50, CCIIII d~ In 1be
amount 'of $500 aad wu give•
credit for time a.ved. RobinwiD be llbn Ill die Orieat ....
lion Cenlllr Iaior lhla -* Ill bella
servins his --.c..
· ·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="333">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9627">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32185">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32184">
              <text>February 1, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5518">
      <name>shanks</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
