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By The Bend

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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-

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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
,.

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\.

,,

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~·

· 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

•

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'

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.

•

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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

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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

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. 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

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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..
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Tutact.y, Feb..U.ry 2, 1913

Page 2-The Dally Bentlnel :~

Pomeroy;-Middleport, Ohio
Tueaday, February 2,1993

.

.The Daily Sentinel

Bill
CliniOO has ac;cepled responsibility
l:U Court Street
. for letting tliC nomination of Zoe
PomeiOf, Ohio
Baird go forward despite his
.DBVOTZD TO TID!: IN'mRE81'S 01' TID!: IIEIGS-MASON AREA
knowledge of the undocumented
Peruvian couple Baird and her busband employed. However, several
aspects of the fiasco will have a
lingering impact inside the Belt·
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
way.
Putting forward the nomination .
PubUsher
calls into question the political
astuteness of very Senior people
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
around the new president. Perhaps
General Manager
Assistant PubUsber/ConiJ'Oller
mme impmtant in this town, dumping Baird when lhc going got tough
LETrERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'Jbey should be less lban 300
calls into question the loyalty of the
words. All !etten are subject to editing and must ~c signed with name, .
new pKsident to his own people.
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Utters
Many
here now wonder if this
should be in good taste, oddJCssing issues, not penonalilies.
episode will result in a split
between the president and Baird's
few passionate SupporterS.
According to sources on Capitol
Hill and within the new admihistralion, when Baird was rust interviewed. sbe admitted to employing
the couple and not paying the
taxes. At ihe time - in the words
A:-: ve.
. ?
..........
Dear Sir:
of one of those actually invol\led in
Could it be that this nation has the process- the information was
We can not help but scratch 01r
inadvertantly
elected its' first considered "significant." but not
heads in wonder as we think about
homosexual
to
the
office of Presi- "critical," because Baird was
President Clinton's position of
infusin,g the gays and lesbians into dent of the United States?
being considered for the job of
Just a question 10 think abouL ...
the nanon's military.
While House counsel, a position
Robert Murphy
Could it he that his sympathys
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13467 SIR 160
in this Kgatd are motivated not so
Vin10n
much by a liberal attitude as by a
latent personal tendailcy to this

Letters to the editor

}U$t a question to think about

Robert}. Wagman
conversations from that point on
were with Secreliiry of State Warren Christopher and Vefll()n Jordan. Baird again incntioned the situation, but reportedly neither
Christopher, her former law jl8l'tiiCI'
and biggest booster, nor Jordan,
considered it a problem.
No more was thought of the
matter until the FBI background
check, containing the information,
was delivered to Senate Judiciary
Chairman Joe Biden, D-Del.• who
immediately saw it as a major
threat. He told this to Baird in their
first meeting, and he advised that
she go public at once, and the ttansition start immediate heavy dam.
age control.
His advice was ignored until
nine days later when the story
broke in The New York Times.
The story was jumped on by
Democrats and consumer groups
11nhappy with the choice of Baird

bee•. use of. her' conservative, _probuSiness vwws on many subJects
and her record of support for former V!ce Presideil~ .r&gt;an Quayle's
Council on Compeuuveness.
There is general agreement that
Baird's nomination could have
been saved had Clinton interjected
himself quickly and flltefuUy into'
the process. But he remained~nt,
an~ Baird was allowed to sink ot
swun on her own.
.
Several sources say that Biden
was extremely dismayed a1 the lack
of White ~use support ~or Ba!MHe went mto her conftrmauon
bearing still determined to see her
through, bu! realired after the first
day of heanngs- the day .before
the inauguration - that drastic
action W!'5 needed. .
.
. . Repo~edly • after the h~ng,
B1den tried to call the prel!'dentelect, but could not reach him. So
he took the !'OW president aside at
!he congressux.lall~ followmg the sweanng 1n the next day
and told him bluntly that Clinton
either had to immedialely launch a
peraonal effort to save the nominalion ~withdraw Baird's name.
But Clinton did neither. Baird
endQred another day of hearings in
which her P~ts dwindled .with
,

Bill targets school
building problems

Sources say that during the
lunch break, Baird tried to call die
~ but could only ~Chief
of Staff Thoinas "Mack' Mcl.ar- 1
.ty. Baird argued that she coiild still '
win ·the ' nominAtion if the White:·:
House would come to her aid. &gt;
McLariy was non-comniittal.
:
Biden again called the White '
House to speak ·to the president. :
ACcording to well-placed
wheli he could not ,get through he
told a Clinton aide that if he dii1101 r
bear from lhc president within 10·~
minptes; be would go public wilh , .
his opposition to the nominalion.· r
Clinton did call back and,Biden ·
gave him his assess.;.ent: Baird :.,
would not be conf'mned. The presi- ••
dent asked for time to·make • decision.
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Meanwhile, Baird and her small
cadre of supporters gathered in the
law offices of U!l)'d Cutler, one of
her primary backers. There Baird1 ,.,.
was call~ by a top Clinton aide, , i
who told her that her nomination
coul\1 not be saved. Reportedly, an
angry Christopher then tried to
swar McLarty. but to no avail. .
• Baird bad no particular support up here," says one high-level · Democratic staffer. "But even
those against her were ilghast at the; ,i
way lhc White H!!USC let her ~isl
in the wind for week, and then •
turned their'backson her. People; 1:
. up here remember the way Bush :_.
stood by John Tower and Sununu
to the bitter end. ft may have been . ~
politically correct fbr Clinton to cut '!
his losses quickly. but it will be : :
rememtJered up here for a long ' :
time that he cut and ran on this ' '.

·rHE fi:E.CESStOI-1 IS. OV'e.R.
I

TI'1E: SA.P ~EWS 15 - HERE.'S YOUR f'I~K. SL.IP.

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South-Cenlral Oblo
Tonight, clear . .Low 20-25.
Wednesday, sunny and warmer.
High in the upper 40s.
Exteaded forecast:
T~u,.Uy through Saturday:
Farr except for a chance of rain

---Area deatbs-Phyllis Baisley

And what about the. president's
future relationship with his secre- : ·:
tary of state? Some in the White. ·;
House apparently blame Christo- _
pher for pushing Baird when he 1
was awan: of the problem: Cbrisropher is apparently an~ that the' :&lt;
White House did so little to help' ·:
Baird.
';
Robert-Wagmaa Is a syadieat- '"
ed writer for Ne'!l'llpaper Eater-· ·;
prise Association.
" '

Joseph Spear

MEMO - NON-SECRET Innocuous occurrences can explOde
AND NON-Ci:&gt;NflDENTIAL.
without warning; Missteps and
TO: White HoUse Olief of Staff misstatementS are routinely magniThomas "Mac" McLarty and fied and disiOrted.
.
Com in unications Director George
And that gets us to George's
Stephanopoulos.
FROM: One Well-Wishing - - - - - - - - Wag.
·
Congratulations on having survived America's unique rite of passage. the presidential transition. No . . I
doubt it's occurred to you that you
didn't have the best of rll'st days on job. Or, rather, jobs - and,
the job, what with that unpleasant- fr~y. George. that's part IX the
problem. Off'Jcially. you are direcness over Zoe Baird.
This memo is wriutn to suggest tor·of communications, overaeelng
that you heed the early warning all presidential message-making.
signs: Your White House has a But de facto, you are also press
flaw - and it's sure to cause more secretary; you've cbolen to do l!le
daily press briefmgs younelf QU51
problems if it isn't remedied.
First. Mac (as even strangers preparing for them i1 a fuR-time
comfortably call you back honie in JOb, 11 your predecenon caa
Little Rock), every president attelt). The titled youna press ICC·
delervel a staff that is: bright, dedi- retary, Dee Dee My~ •. i1 the de
cated, innovative, and experienced. facto deputy press aecret.y.
Clearly, you don't ar.sp the
On this, you are batting .7.50; that's
a superstar pace in ba~eball, but 11,11 · unique symbioais that exist•
between preaidelltl. their extalded
ominous portent in a White Houae.
The senior Iliff .you assembled aides and the pro11 corpa. YoDr
for your old boyhood chum il woo- first ICI wu to bar ni£IOiiOrl from
full)' short on experience. No doubt your preu offioe. They'd ~ways
few of your coUeapa appreciate had accea 10 it belen; oven tn the
the .incomparable voladlity of any days of Nixon'• Wateraate,
WMte House. our national vortex reponen could pea101lally come by
of policy and politiCll. Seemingly to uk ques1ion1 wheaever tbe

Martin Schram

phOne lines were busy.
George. your success is crucial
to the president's: ~o my good.
wishes were with you in _your fJrst
two press briefings as you deali
with the decline and fall of Zoe
Baird.
' .
Since you've long ago made
your mmk as a campaign and ·congressional aide and ate now considered brighter and. savvier than your
31 years. you must have been
shocked to realize those briefmgs
were a communications disaster.
(HopefullY.. you aeilsed that; if so,
lhc rest will lie easy 10 riX.)
You did the president a disservice by making It seem that he had
somethinJ to hide aboul'Baird's
nornlnitlon after she'd hired illegal
aliens. You forced the press into
pursuing the scandal-mode question of yesteryear: What did the
president know and when did ~
lmowit?
Paltapl ypu didn't rut1y Jllqllre
by lltiD&amp; Clinlon,and Olberl for aU
facti (dla tbey 1111art Baird mowingly broke tbe law). Perhaps you
thoulbt tbia - like yoUr day• in
thecampelgnorConlml-and
~·d jolt spin it undf we'd forpt

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who ought to be ~uted serving

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i!J·the CabineL • Sen. Alan Simp-: ,1

son, R'-Wyo .• first asserted that
Baird's slip was "not something .
sinister," then backed off when :-.
calls started coming in from the I''
public. Sen. JQC Biden; D-Del., first
praised Baird's "outstanding
record," but after the calls began
jJouring in, lhc Sllpell:ilious son of . ,
Delaware gave her a patronizing :(
lecture about millions of parents : who maoage 10 obey lhc law:
. :: •
- Why do Americans have dif- · 1'
ficulty discerning between fat cats ·
and the '!VorthY wealthy? CaUen to
Capitol Hill and radio talk shows
blasted Baird as a moneyed mat1on ·"
with little respect for lhc law. But ' "'
unlilte such notable members of the · :.•
Silver Spoon Club as George Bush ··"
and Dan Quayle, Baird at least was ' ,.
getting herS the old fashioned way •
by earning it in productive and : · :
~tkHI.
'
P.\Jt this Curmudgeon in charge
of the world IOday and mme than a
few involved in the Zoe Baird busi- · ·:1
ness would be wearing hair shirts : ·''
tmnorrow.
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Joseph Spear Is a syadlcated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Assoeladon.
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tenses and vagaries.

Stocks
Am Ele Power....................34 1/8
Ashland 00....................... :1.7
AT&amp;T.................................53 3/4
Bank ane...........................so 314
Bob Evans ......................... 18 112
Clwrning Shop.................. l8 1/2
Chrnp lnWslries................ .l 0
City Holding......................21 1fl
Fedetal Mol!ul.................... l9 1/8

Gcxxlye. ta:.R ..................69 1/4

Key Centurion ...................21 3/4
l..afkls End..........................25
Limited blc....................... 28 3/4
Multimedia Inc. ............ ,....34 •
Point BIIICOrp.................... 12 3/4
Rax RestauranL .................3/16
Reliance Elecbic................21 718
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17 3/4
Shoney•s lnc...................... .23
Star Bank ........................... 3S 1!2
Wendy lnt'L..................... l3 112
Wonhington lnd................2S 1/2
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quote• provided by
Kemper Stnritles, IDe., o
Gallipolis.
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lh::t

Trustees to meet
Salisbury 'I:ownship Trustees
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
township hall at Rock Springs.

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ing at Hockingport. Out of the Blue
will provide the music. John Russell will be lhc caller. Everyone is
welcome.

lion but that resolution needs 10 be are ready to·sign purchase options
a part of the grant application.
on houses in the BeiSy Ross SubdiCouncil also took action to hire vision. ~ the meeting a resoMike Suoth of SBA ConsultaniS to lution was passed by Council
work with building owners on the . authorizing lhc mayor to enter into
design and scqpe of building lhc ~on agreements.
changes and provide facade inspecB1ds on additional sidewalks
lion. The conuact will run for 22 were opened and both projec Is
months f~ $10,000 and Is coolin- were aWII'ded to Eldm Walburn of
gent on .the grant being aw.cled.
Middleport. For one project, bids
A resolution wu abo paaed to' on the outside sidewalks of South
proceed with lhc streetsc11pe pojec;t · Fifth and William's and Palmer
and a conaact will be given 10 SBA .were $9,596 from Walburn and
Consultants for lllat work in the $12,499 from Home Creek EnterlllllQUI1t of S11,750. That will come prises. For sidewalks on both sides
from $2,150 donated by area buai· of Covert Lane. the figures were
nesses, $2,725 from tile viUqe. $7,092 from Walburn, and
and the lCIIIIinder from tho revital- S9,980.SO from Home Creek.
iution funds, TrusleR said. ·
In other bu1ine11, Council
To complete neceaery requite- . passed .• rat10lution of supJ~C!ft f!lf
menu for tile grant applieauon, ·ihe Ohio Power Co. remunmg m
. Council gave a tblrd Milling ud Plmaoy. RIIIIIID'thal Oblo Power
adopted .. onii•W' aenlq ap 1 will be clollaa ita officei in
prelerVIIion of deli&amp;D I!ICI rmew ~ condaue to circulate in ·
board. Named to that board by tbo
-.
.
Fred Hoffllll!l _.. JUdy · Action to ~I a suip of land
Ouilb, J
illllhe ol CamtdJ; - tbo lleubeD Collbw home ~)'
MIMI~•t q
I ''t', d' *e II
·ailll CommlailoD; D ck OweD, 181 recobiDa
Pw' 2
bulfdinl/bnliaea oner; Emma ty.
.

. Units of lhc Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded 10 aeven calls l'or ISiislance on Monday and early Tuesday m&lt;ming.Oii Moaday atll:09 un.lhc MJddleport unit went~ Riverview
Drive for Bc1pr 'I'homal. Ho wu taken to Ho~ Medical Center.
·. At 12:47 p.m. dlo llatland unit went to Lona Street for Btllel
Orueslr. She wits 1lbn ID Veu .... Memorial tfoSpltal.
.
Tho Tuppen PSailll unit, ll6: 18 p.m .• lilllliJXIited Jldt Unce to
SL J~ Hoapitll Ia l'llbllburg. W.VL
• At 9:51 p.m. *e Mlddltp«M1 unit -u to Riverview Drive for
Bdar,. " Ill Wll apin lltbD tO Holzer.
.
bennll Hart Willi fL0~1be l'oplcroy unit at 11:21 p.m.
bitt lhl Poawictt Al1lce De..-ID ve.w.
On TIIOidq It 5:51 a.m. tho Racine ualt went to Elmwood
~for Dlila Tul:lr«. Sbo Wllllba to Vetaans.
·
At 7:33 a.m. tbo Mlddlepon llllit went to Overbiook Centet for
Alice Wallh who -!Ibn to

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Hospital weather

Middlepor.t council..

Units respond to seven calls

II&amp;.,

a '

Two suspects
plead innocent

~ootiDued from page 1

CootiDued from page 1
ocliool blis was listed aslighl
Tripp was cited by the patrol for failure 10 yield from a private
·drive.
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Federal funds sought
The Meigs Local School District
is making application to the S.tate
Department of Education, Division '··,
of Educational Services, for federal
funds availsble through Chapter n.
of the Federal, Sta~, and Local
Partnership for Educational
Improvement. The application llid
aU related docwnents art available
for inspection and comments to
pareD':! and the.~ public. J'w.
sons mterest 10 v1ewmg or discussing lhc application should
tact Wendy Halar, Fecleral Plop•i ·
Coordinator, Salisbury ElemeD111ry
School.

con- .

~ta=~i~:'
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and Saath.
.c1 ..w:-;!"~:~
-Inn,
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· HonoD. DnliWI, Jldt
dtllllilt llmi- Jgdy Cloob. and J - ClltwCJ!'·
Ilea haveI fln•IIIIPIJIOved
•d thy.
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Edhar'l ...er. N - patMed Ia loall brlell are lpel1ed •
tlle7 ..... •law al'oa1••t l!ld CJt111r NJiiH II.
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HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER ·.
Di~charges. Jan. 1 - Ronald
Campbell, Loretta Reitmile, Monie
Fraley, Josephine Siders, Mrs. Paul ·
Duncan and daughter, Mrs. Brian :-,
Garrett and daughter. Virgioia
.Shuler, Marjorie Shaver, Delbert
'Pridemore, Gail Shafer, Mary , ·
Goheen, and Earl Dodrill.
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u.-,_,
Gil•

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fiscal year 1992 operating expenses.
-Advance ticket·sales for 1992
could not be audited because lhc
commission did not adequately
account for the number of advance
·
tickets consigned, sold and
returned
,
The Columbus Dispatch report·
ed today that the 68-PBJe audit also
showed the commiss1on paid 18 ~~~~oas~-::e:e:!:e~them ~·
vendors more than $t'.3 million florida and Texas.
without proper competitive bidding · The high temperature for the :
or state Controlling Board nation Monday was 80 at Fort ·
approval. ·
Lauderdale Beach, f1a.
Ferguson spokesman John Conley did not Ktum a telephone call
today seeking commenL
The Legislature provided $3.5
million last year to erase red ink in
the commission's books. Gov.
DAY'l'ON, Ohio (AP)- Pbs •
George Voinovich is seeking $1.4
of
innocence. were entered today .•
million in state subsidies for the
for
two suspects in a three-day ·;·
fair over the next ~o Jludcet YC!IfSshooting spree that left six peQple
dead and tWQ wounded last Decem- •
ber.
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The pleas were entered for ~- .. ,
vallous Matthew Keene, 19, and
Heather Nicole Mathews, 20, dur- •, ·
ing their arraignrpent in Mont· :;
gomery County Common fleas •
•
•
Retired Persons denounced the idea Court.
Keene's
plea
was
entered
by
hia
•
and cranked up its lobby machine.
. Yet beyond that quick-fire criti- attoroey, Michael Monta. Ms. :
cism, the initial outcry has been Mathews stood mute before Montgomery Co11nty Common .Pleas
unexpectedly muted.
Court
Judge John Meaaber. who
''The reaction was less violent
enJCred
the plea for her. Neither
than in the past because the public
suspect
showed
any emotion.
.
realaes how bad lhc deficit IS and
Keene
has
been·
indicted
oa
'
that something has to be done
eight
counts
of
qgravated
murder;
·
about it," said Lawrence
Chimerine, senior economist at the six eounts of aggravated robbery,
forecasting firm DRI·McGraw· two counts each of lridllapping llid ·
attempt to commit agg11vated mur- "'·
Hill.
der, and one count each of pggra- .
vated.b larY and burglary. \
'
Other economists said the politi·
Ms. ~CheWs has been indicled ..
cal fiiCStorm hadn't started because on two counts of agg11vated murit is not yet clear that President
two countS of attempt to com- ·:
Clinton will accept his aides' der,
mit aggravated murder, five coun11 ··'
advice to lake on Social Security as of aggravated robbery, and one
part of a comprehensive effort to count each of aggravated burglary. ·· ·
reduce the budget deficiL ·
burglary. conspiracy to commit . ·
"It seems willkefy ihit a first- aggravated murder and m:eiving .,
term presideat would go after it this stolen prope•ty.
.
•
aggressively;" for fear of offend.. Montgomery County Prolecutor .. :
ing an important voter bloc, said Mathias Heck Jr. has said he will-" ·
Diane Swank, an ·economist at F'll'st seek the death penalty against
National Bank of Olicago.
Keene and Ma. Mathews, both of ····
· During the presidential cam- Dayton. Meagher ordered lhc two ·.
paign, Clinton opposed cutting held without bond.
Social Security benefits, although
The charges stem from shoot-, .. ·
he said he might be willing to sup- ings and robberies that began Dec. ·..
port a higher tax on those benefits 24 and ended two days later when : '
m some cireumstances. After the Keene, Ms. Mathews and two juveelection, he said he might consider nile su~ were arrested in lhc ·'
achieving Social Security savings car of one of the victims.
·· ·
by raising lhc retirement age.
Molita has filed a motion to
Economists differ on wbich have Keene's biai rnQ\'ed, sayio,g ' ·:
approach is best. But they generally publicity about the case makes u :·
agree that squeering Social Securt- unlikely that his client can get a ·-·
ty stands a better chance of public fair trial in Montgomery and suracceptance than in the past.
rounding counties. He said news •
Ms. Swonk noted, for example, coverage has been extensive, · ·
·
that limiting or eliminating a cost· "emotional and inflammatory."
of-living increase for Social Securi·
ty ·recipients might be more pjJiatable oow because people on fiXed
Vetena Me-at
incomes have grown less fearful of
MONDA
Y ADMISSIONS inflation.
·
Alfred Ziegler, 1'uppen Plains.
MONDAY DiSCHARGES Kathryn Robinson.
. .

Meetlac slated
Valentine d8llce
The
Lottridge Community Cen. There will be a valentine round
ter
Association
will meet Thursday
and square dance Saturday from 8at
7
p.m.
Everyone
is welcome.
11:30 p.m. a1 lhc Reynolds build-

r---Local briefs.·..-,;,.;,.

Com~IMalu.Mia .Dc~ ~:ril0),

OldO "l!f; 1'11.11111-21156.

Snow feU early IOday m 80111011
and Buffalo, N.Y. Cleveland alJo
hadsnow.
Moderate 10 .heavy snow fell
Monday night across 80Uihem
central Maine, and wind 'guits
reaching 40 mph created near-bliz·
zard conditions.
While the Northeast shivered,
the northeastern Great Lakes region
got a break from winter Monday
thanks to an area of high pJe68III'O.
International Falls, Minn .. "lhc
nation's •ice box," warmed to a
record-breaking 42 degrees Monday. The old record for the date
was 37, set last year.
A cold front was expected to
produce snow today from the
Rockies into South Dakota.
Temperatures elsewhere today
were forecast in the 30s and 40s
across the northern and central
Plains through _the Great BBsin; SOs
and 60s from the Southeaa through
the southern Plains and alon~

_Meigs announcements__

Lottery numbers

'

I

.

Court news.

..''

Day One: "A lot of the details :
and the timing of this are rather : ~ :
mqrky ... 1 assume there was some ·,, ;
communication between lhc tnmsi- •~ 1
lion officials and him."
;; I
Day Two (after Baird with- :
drew): ''The transition process did .'; i
make Jnistalre!l. And he does accept ,:' ,
responsibility for•thorn .... There · : :
was some murkiness in lhc details . ,,_,
of whit this process is for regular- · " :
izina workefS coming into 'this ,·: :
• a murky area "'
-&lt; &lt; ' 1I •
country.... This 11
the law... . There were murky 't
delails.''
.
",,
Now· ask yourself, George: If · l
you were a reporter belns fed that " :
murky-mush, what woulll you ask J
and write? Your day- wu saved •(l:
when Clinton later 1Im ply tpld :·" 1
teparun what he'd known I!ICI not '" ,1
known. Cue c1oaed .
•~ •
",.
Mac and George, you ·u serve •·•
fOUl' boa belt by never undeielti- '""
'madn.llhc public ~ really llllrVO. • ··
Amerk•• are b'riSht and avvr, · '
too. Thoy '11 fii!Jivo a preaident a· :
hiQrelllou and Oulll.. But not 1 ·' ,
politfcally calc:ulatod liCk of can· ~- I
dor. lt'a covet-aJII, real or per- •
ceiYed. that can do laiiiDi hlml.
•
M.nltl ...... II a mdlcated ~;:
Read your own briefing tlan· wrltlr tar Nnr~paper lateJ'Prile
·acriptii, choebd tull ot' puslve Allodldota.
-•

dent outmaneuvers the senior citi·
~ lobby and milks lhc sacred cow
of federal benefit programs?
Don •t count on it, prh:ate
economists say. althongh it may be
more feasible than in the ~L
Shortly after lhc administration
let slip that it was consideriog limiting cost-of-living increaaes for the
rou,hly 41 million Social Security
rec1pients, Sen. Daniel Patrick
Moynihan, chairman of the Sellllte
Finance Committee, said such a
proposal wouldn't get past his
panel alive.
"A death wish
" lhc New York
.
Qemocrat called iL ln less colorful
terms the American Association of

PomeTOJ Council..

' I

on the Zo.e fhlng

James Mfller

at or near freezing today.
Temperatures in the Northeast
were expected to be 10 to 15
degrees below IIQI'IIIal- in lhc 20s
from Pennsylvania through southem New EnsJand, and in lhc single
digits and teens in upstate New
York and northern New England.
Clear skies weK forecast for most
of the region.
Temperatures were expected to
remain in the 30s from the Ohio
Valley
into North. Carolina.
'
. . -

:,

Social Security may no longer
be the un(ou~hable program·

Phyllis E. Shields Baisley; 74 of
James E. Miller, 58, of BradBy ROBERT BURNS
Brooksville, Fla., died Saturday, bury Road, Middleport, who died
Associated Preas Writer
Jan. 30. 1993 at the Tampa General Friday, Jan. 29,. 1993 at his resiWASHINGTON - When the
· Hospital.
dence, is survived·by 23 pandchil- Clinton administration let it be
Born on Cherry Ridge in Meigs dren and five great-grandchildren. known that its budget cutters mif!ht
County, sbe was the daughter of They were not listed among his lake a nick out of Social Secunty,
the late Ray Whaley. She and her survivors in Sunday's obituary. the predictable cries of protest
first husband; the late Hobart Funeral services were held Monday arose on Capitol Hill. But they.
Shields, lived many years in the at 11 a.m. at the Ewing Funeral were hardly deafening.
.
Tuppers Plains community.
Home. Burial was in Rock Springs
Could this be the year, after a
She was a retired librarian in lhc Cemetery.
· decade of failed tries, that a. presipublic school system and a member
·Of the Brooksville Christian
~ondnuedrrompagel
Church. Mrs. Baisley has resided in
florida for about 23 years.
John Musser, revitalization
Water liae bids
She is survived by her husband, s~
for
lhc
merchants
assoAnderson
recommended · to
Robert; a son, James M. Shields of c1ation, stated he is pleased with council · to accept
a bid of
Brooksville, Fla., and a daugbter, lhc project and that he feels lhc vii- .'$138,007.62 from David Holley
Shanin Wilson or l'lllk City. fla.; a !age's commitment will produce Construction Company of Gallipobrother Keith Whaley of Texas; somethina for everyone.
lis for water line replacement on
two sisters, Muriel Bradford of lhc
Reed Silled that in the event the West Main StreeL Anderson. made
Pomeroy area and Eva Nunnally of application would not be granted, the recommendation pending that
Pickenngton; her step-mother · lhc central business district devel- Pat O'Brien, villa,ge solicitor, finds
Dorothy Whaley IX Shade, and sev- opment plan would s~ill be no irregularities m the bid. lf the
. era! grandchikbeli.
(3ne or lhc things set by . bid is accepted, Anderson stated
· Funeral services were held enforeed.
the plan is the creation of a design work to replace the water line
tnday at 1 p.m. at tho Brooksville
board. this board, com- could begin as early as next week.
Christian Ch'urch. The' Rev. Earl rev1ew
prised
of
owneiS, a repreOther matters
Haggy officiated and burial-was in sentative business
from
'
village
council
and
In
other
matters council
· the florida Hills Memorial Gar- ·someone· with an architectural approved physicals
in the. amount
dens.
background; would regulate any of $88 per person by Veterans
Kmodeling within the central busi- Memorial Hospital for members of
ness dlstricL
·
the Pomeroy Police Department
Suoth stated an answer on·the and Pomeroy Fire DqlartmenL
application should come as early as
Maror Reed was authorized to
April. After notification. partici- check mtil ways to replace or repair
Divorce action llled
pants in lhc projec;ts would have 18 the traffic light at the PomeroyAn action for divorce has been months to complete their work. Mason bridge. Reed stated thai
filed in .the Meigs County Court of JOhn Anderson, villa&amp;e administra- light was hung three days after lhc
GommOIJ. PI~ ~l Sa!Jy Jennifer !Qr, and Deat1J1a F'tg[estahlet, who .•coll~p~ of the Silver Bridge at
i&gt;ierce; Shade, ·agalnsj 'Ge'orge' has worked closely ·with Strot.b1 Gallipolis.and needs~ be Kplaced.
William Pierce, POmeroy.
throughout the project, will admin- He also stat¢ the ~h1o ~partment
1ster the projecL
~f ~ 1s checking to see
Judpent SOtllbl
Cowicilman Scott Dillon com- if a sunilar light can be located at a
A judgment action in the mended Stroth on his work in the reduced COSL
amount of $3,903.87 bas been filed project. Dillon also ieco~nized
Councilman John Blaettnar
in the Meigs County Court of Com- SbOth's efforts in completmg the co~mended the street crew for
mon Pleas by Ohio Beli/Ameritech central business district develop- lhe11 wort: o~ rell_IOving the shrubs
Publishing Inc., Independence, ment plan in such a short amount at theold)wuor high.
against Bill Miller, doing business of time.
Councilman Bill Young recomas Twin City Machine and Weld. Tax levy
mended repail; and repla~ement ~f
ing, Pomeroy.
Council voted to place a 1.9 mill damaged parldng meters m the viilevy for cuiTent expenses on the · !age.
.
Divorce araoted
ballot in the May primary. Reed
Counc1lman ThoJ!IaS y&lt;erry
A divorec has been granted by
stated this le_vy is not a new levy. It reques!ed a co_rporauon s1gn on
the Meigs County Court of Com- would simply replace the levy that Nay!~ s Run Hill: He also requestmon Pleas to Harry N. Bass from
failed in the November election. ed removal of a p1le of pit run near
Sandra Bass.
Passage by SS percent is necessary the entrance of Beech Grove
for lhc current expenses levy from Cemetery.
D!ssolution IJ'Inted ·
which =o!~;'~:!~~·
A dissolutiol! or marriage has
been granted by the Meigs Countr
Council voted to borrow
Court of Common Pleas to Ralph, $38,000 in new monies for the purCLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
E. Cundiff and Kim L. Cundlff.
Monday
night's Ohio Lottery
chase of the former Pomeroy
. Junior High School as well as a lot selections:
Pick 3 Numbers:
owne(l by Bob Thompson. Reed
The Daily Sentinel
0-8-6
stated the money will be borrowed
Pick 4 Numbers:
over a IS-year period.
(UIPIIIJ-11111
3-7-1-3
Publlabod '"'I .n.n...., 11-'-1
P~~U,y, n eaa.t at.~
Ohio '/ lba ~· Va!loJ
.

one."

One final blast

~

----;.....-Weather-----

a

•

-Between July I and sePt. 30,
Inmon and the 11-member commission spent $9.1 million on lhc
1992 fair, compared with $7.4 million spent during the same period
in 1991.
-The commission claimed
there were more than 3.4 million
fair-goers last year. but only
386,505 people paid at the gate.
About S40,000 paid at the gate in
1991.
.
.
-Spendin' on Celeste CenJCr
entef!BUUDent ~ by 56 percent m 1992, but lost $S90.308.
-Budgets were 1101 used by the
commission as ·a basis for control
and evaluation of its money or
operations.
-Advanced payments received
for the 1992 state fair, including
purse money intended for fair races
at Scioto Down~· were used to fund

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Ohio Expositions Commission
fail~ to COJltrol fued Ohio State
Fair Manager Billr. Inmon and
other employees while running up
a $3.8 million debt last year. a state
audit said today.
W.VA.
The report said commissioners
tum.:d over 10 .Inmon full a6thority
to direct. plan. coordinate and
supervise all. operations of the
expositions center.
· "While ther. may rely on the
management abilities of the various
individuals .employed by them,
· they nevertheless have a responsibility to provide sufficient review
of the results of manafemeot's
decisions and practices, • auditors
or snow showers northeast Satur- said.
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguday. Lows in mid-20s to low 30s sunState
said
in a news release that the
Thursday and in the upper 20s to . audit showed:
mid-30s Friday and Saturday.
Highs in the 40s Thursday and Friday and from the 'mid-30s 10 mid40s Saturday.

50"

Wedn~~day

Audit criticizes panel that runs State Fair

• IColumbusl48• I

sources:l

Advising two of the .president's men

1"1-\E. GOOD NE.'IIJS IS .-

"""

port her.

Today in ,histo_ry

Berry's World

By Tbe Associated Press
station was 64 degrees in 1903
Southwesterly winds produced while the record low was 13 below
by a high pressure system will ~ero in 19~1. Sunset tonight will be
bring warmer tempei'atures to Ohio at S:S2 p.m. and sunrise Wednestonight and Wednesday, according day at 7:38am.
·
to lhc National Weather Service.
Arouad the Datloa
Lows tonight will be in lhc low
Scattered sno.w feU in the Northto mid-20s.
east today as the region faced its
Highs under sunny skies on secon!l straight day of numbing
Wednesday will approach the SO- cold.
degree mmk. .
An arctic blast pushed overnight
The i'ecord-high temperature for win!l chills well below zero and
this date at the columbus weather was expec~ to keep temperatures

each passing hour. Several .key: l,
Democrats oo the committee arc- •
said to have turned against Baird I
whCn lhey te.nec1 that Dan Quayle I
had beeo calling Republicans on
· the committee asking them to sup-

The more I ponder the Zoe and didn't want IQ suffer another
- Why all the talk about Zoe
Baird business, the more disturbing · "tardy Bill" reproach?
·
Baird thinking herself "above the
the thoughiS become. I can't escape
Whatever the realon,,_ Baird law7" She had consulted an auorthe notion that just about every- should not have been named for lhc ne~ who told her the' law against
body concerned - Congress, the
hiring illegal domestics was widely
president, the press, the public regarded as inane and waS rarely
ganged up on her and ran her out of
enforced. She had sponsored the
IOWn.
Peruvian couple she had hired for •
This is not to say that things
cilizensh~;:he is the one who voldidn't work out for the best. She job, and for once 1 find myself untarilv
lased her indiacretion
!&gt;roke the law by hiring illegal agreeing with Senate Majority to the CliniOO· transition te8m and
immigrants to care for her son.and Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan. "I the Senate Judiciary Committee.
to chauffeur the fiimily, and it was feel for Zoe Baird, •'"'he told .the She paid a nne and Social Security
a blunder that would have been .Washington Post after Baird with· taxes for lhc illegal coUJ;~le.
mercilessly exploited by her critics drew. "It was faulty transition
Baird also ate heapmg platters
had she been confmned as the r"'t work. She should never have been of aow before the Judiciary Comwoman attorney general. The up there."
·
· miuee and even "repented" when
denouement - her request that her
- Is it possible that Republi· · it was demanded of her •by that
nomination be withdrawn - was cans have become so accustomed sanctimonious son of South C&amp;rolidecent. It was the getting there that . to attorneys general who are na, Strom Thurmond.
stunk and raised all sorts of inlrigu- involved in crimes, cover-ups and
The unrepentant Oliver North
ing questions:
malfeasance that they get all dis- was above the law. The seven lran- Why did DiU Clinton and his combobulated when faced with ·a Contra culprits pardoned by
team pooh-pooh the matter and nominee who dabbled in mere mis- George Bush on Christmas Eve ·
shove Baird to center stage in full demeanor? AfJCr John Mitchell, were above the law. Zoe Baird was
knowledge that she had commiued Richard Kleindienst and Edwin · not.
•
By The Associated Press
a ~~ that could disqualify her? Meese- who was censured by his . - Are there more hypocrites
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 2, the 33rd.day of 1993. There are 332 days Was tt because he was angry with own Justice Department five per square foot on CapiiOI Hill than
left in the year.
feminists who were pressuring him monihs alter he left it - de~inf! a any other place on the planet? Rep.
Today's Highlight-in History:
·
. to appoint women and Baird was woman the altofi!CY gen~l s JOb Newt Gingrich,. R-Ga., somehow
Fifty years ago, on Feb. 2, 1943, the remainder of N~i forces from the not one of their favorites? Was it . because she hued an 1llegal overlooked the follies of fellow
Battle of Stalingrad surrendered in a major victory for the SovietS in because he had set a Christmas babysitter seems downright farci- Re~~Dblican Meese and cleclared of
World War II.
deadline for Cabinet appointments cal.
Baird, "You can't have a person
On this date: .
In 1536, the Argentine city of Buenos Aires was founded by Pedro de
Mendou of Spain.
In 1653, New Amsterdam -now New York City- was incorporat.

Accu- Weather• forecast for daytime condition&amp; and high
t.iCH.

as

. ed.

Warming t~end expected.ton.ight,

.

that_does 1101 require Sc:natC ccinfir:
mation..
•
.
. When Baud suddenli. wjiS m
!me for attorney genera • all her

The Dally senunet Page 3

OHIO Weathet
VVednesday,Feb.3

Baird fiasco will have lingering impact :
wASHJNGTON (NEA) -·

By ROBERT E. MILLER
AssoCiated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -Ohio's lawmakeiS will be asked to approve legislation that could malce millions of dollars available for lhc repair or replacement of dilapidated, unsafe school buildings.
·
Rep. Michael Shoi!maker, D-Boumeville, said he and Rep. Mary Abel,
D-Athens. an: working with State Treasurer Mary Ellen Withrow and others on a bill that could be introduced early as this week.
. The Deparanent of Education supports lhc legislation. It ~vides for
lhc sale of revenue bonds that would be paid off with $10 million a year
in lottery profits to help money-strapped schools solve building problems.
"It wouldn't cost taxpayers anything. It could put $100 million-$150
million out there, " Shoeniaker said, in estimating the amount of bonds
thai initially could be sold.
·.
He compared the proposal .to an existing program in which the state
sets aside a percentage of state liquor profits to back bonds for loans and
grants to businesses that expand or loCate in Ohio and create jobs.
The Department of Education already has a building IIIISl8WICe rotary
fund that makes loans 10 dislricts. However. it was reduced to $2 miUion
with the recent release of $21 .7 million for projec;ts in just two districts-of·
many dislricts tl'iat need belp.
:1 . .
Bob Franklin, the department's building assistance supervisor, said 27
other districts are on a prioritized waiting list and nearly three dom1 others are waiting to get on lhc waiting liSL
The department also has an emergency fund for problems that can
come up quickly as a result of storms or other catastrophes. That fund is
now emp~, the department said, addini! that as it now stands, the Legislature would have 10 be asked 10 8ppropriate emergency funds.
The rotary fund receives about $5 million a year in money paid back
by districts that have borrowed in the past. Shoemaker said his bill would
earmark those funds for emergencies.
A Department of Ed_tJCl!tiOn study of building !'eeds i'! all of Ohio's
mme than 600 school distni:ts , ordered by lhc LegJSiature m 1989, found
it would cost $10 billion to bring all structures up to building-code standards.
Shoemaker said the study was done by architects who went beyond
safety considerations and added energy conservation and other improvemeniS that may be needed but are nOt as important as the safety of students.
.
He said he believes it would cost about $2 billion to correct aU the critical problems. The architeciS' study found that there was hardly a district
in the state that did not need some construction or Kpair work, the depart·
mentsaid.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio -

j I

�Sports

The Daily

1\l•day, Februarj 2, 1993

S~ntinel ~:~

1\leeday, Febnl8tY 2, 1813 ;
.

~_ports Probe

. For the Universlty ·of ·Rio-..,lace__~ in Div.. ision·_ L If John
Grande Redmen, it's time to put Lawhorn's club can maintain or
Saturday's tO-point loss to Mid- improve tbal standing in tbe diviOhio Conference leader Walsh sion over the neu two weeks, it
behind diem. ~'sllill a cmfer- will be assured of a home court
ence scbedule to be played and one advantage in the playoffs la1Cr this
more game at home to play. And month.
having cracked tbe NAJA's IDp 2S
Leading tbe divi$ion thili week
list last weet in the 23rd spot, is Urbana (19-3), followed in secthere's always the goal of staying ond place by Cedarville (19-4). In
in the national limelight to spur founh place is Findlay (17-5),
tbeirefforts.
.
while Malone (13-10) is fifth, CenRio Grande (20~5. 5·3) hosts tral Stale (8-8) sixth and Shawnee
Shawnee Stale (8-13, 0-8) at Lyne State seventh.
Centa" Wednesday ai7:30 p.m. for
Saturday's win over Rio Grande
McDonald's NigbL It will nui1r; tbe helped cement Diviliion n Walsh's
last pme the Redmen v,ill .have at grip on tbe MOC's top spot at 20-2
horneforlheremainderoftberegu- and 7-1. Tied for second were
·Jar seuon, which ends Feb. 20 at Urbana and Cedarville (both 6-2).
Mount Vanon Nazarene.
Tiffin (16-7, 5-3) is tied for fourlh
But although Rio Grande fell to with Rio Grande, Ohio Dominican
founh in tbe confen:nce at tbe start (12-11, 2-6) is sixth, Mount Verof this week, it remained in third non (10-13, 1-7) seventh and

• . •'

65

.:ns

29

.293

•
c.bloo-...............29 IS .659
aJ!\'Ili.ANI) .......lS II
~ --·······.21 20

IDdl.a.•....- •...•.. .22 21
Adoo1a .................21 21
Dolnok.•.. -....•••....•. .19 . 23
Mll.................. ll :lA

.

.511
.S12
.S12
.500
.452
.429

12

13.5

3.5 "
~s

..s

7
9
10

WESTERN CONFERENCE
.

Mlft•tDt.w.

T-

WLPci.Ga

... """"'"'··-······26 14 .650
111ab ••••••• ••• --••.27 IS -'43

__

..•.•.•• ••...lA II .571
Dooww-··· ·- ··-·-15 :116 .366
' II
"' ..~ ..--......1 30 .111
Dollu .............- ...•. 3 '11 .1175

-

,

- .................31

I .195
12 .100
13 .613
20 .S:IA
LA. W0. ............22 20 .S:IA
Oolil&lt;e ..... ._ ..•..20 23 .&lt;465
. Socr
·····-··16 :16 .311

........ ................21
-···-···········.21
LA.a..- .........22

3

11.5
17
23

3.5
4
10.5
10.5
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16.5

w

time."

Officials and lawyers familiar
with the council's deliberations
aid It appeared one or more own·
en 01 the councll decided Schott
should be llllpellded for one year
and lpoke on tbe uaumption the
full piUJI will approve that. Official• bave said for the past few
weeki thai tbey expected a one.y ell! penalty plus a fiile.
SCIIJ, the Milwaukee Brewers
president, aald tbe p:oup hadn't
reached a decision. .
"I don'teva tnow where some
. ol dlell• on thil,' • be llid.

owners.

· The council, acting in the
absence of a commluioner, may
impose 1 IIUspCIIsion llf a fmc of up
to $250,000 for conduct ''not in the
belt interest~ of baseball." Baseball offlclala expcc;t a suit to be
filed on a nutnb« of grounds, poSsibly l,ncludlng alleged antitrust
violations.

-

, _ .....

~-,

----

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'

" .
_,,_.,

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•

·
HOWARD E. FRANK, Meigl C:O...tv T,_,.,

-,

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-~~LA.~

.

on Seturdly.
·
CIOoingdltl FebNI,Y 12. 19113

." :.

Obio bigh ~llool
boys' basketball poll

--·-.·.JOhi

'
'
••

to-

..:.

Now Muloo 5I. 76, t11lh SL 64
lJC- 8ulon 67. lJC lmno SB

...

1·

Rool Etlltl tox• wh.ch hiVI not botn peld It lhi cl011 of lldl coiiiCilon corry 1 PIMlty of 1111 - '· T.- lillY bl Plid 11 tilt offiCI
of t~ county trooturor or by moll. PI- bring v011r loot llx rocelpt: ond If you poy bV inoll, blue
your propwty bV llxlnt dlt· ·
trict and enclose stamped self-tddreMid envelope.
'
.
Alwoyt oxomlno yllur IIX r.C.ipt to tt11h1t I t - · oU youo property; Off leo Holl't 8:30A.M. to 4:30P.M., Moudoy lhN frldoy- Clo.d

·"

.•..

Had the Bulls lost it w~uld
Nets 115, Mavericks 96
"At the end of tbe fust half I · ..
have given them a tbree'-gatne losIt's been a recurring theme this took a blow that I thought was
ing streak ~ something they se1150~ when ~s play the 3-37 about tbe third time I got hit in the... ;.
haven't bad since the s"" of the · · Mavencks: Wm at all costs,_or suf- face,': Roberts aaid. •:The first •';;.
1990-91 season,
fer tbe con~uences of bemg the play (m the second half), 1 came
Cllicago, which has dropped lea~ lau~mgsl(lclc.
out and tbe same guy hits me in.the ·• · .
four of its last six games, has had
'We didn't want tD be.nwilber face again and I felt that at illlllle ~·t
four two-game.losing stteaks this four on the hit ~." Nets coach point I had tD defend myself."
·
season one more than they had in Chuucli: Daly Slld.
Todd Day added 23 points and
each of the 1991-92 and 1990-91 . Th~ ~ets. avoided ~ ignomin- Lee Mayberry 17 for Milwaukee. '
seasons.
•ous disllRcuon by tumJng a 57'51 The Warriors lost their sixth .•, .•
. Their last four-game losing halftime lead inw an 82-63 advan- straight road game.
·,. , ;
streak came in February 1990.
tage with 3:31 to play in the third
Mack 119, KintJ 115
: .. •
"Hopefully this win can get us quarter at Dallas.
AI Sacramento, Calif., Nick .
back on track again," Jordan said.
~errick Coleman scored 27
An!lerson scored 31 points, includ- ., '•
. Horuets 112, SuperSonics 100
pomts, Petrovic added ~I and ing three free throws iii the fmal24 .,;v,
Tbey have the third-best record Kenny Anderson 20. Dallas lost its seconds, as Orlando rallied from a .-: _.
in the l~e, but tbe Seattle Super- seventh straigbL
14-poJnt defiCit in tbe ftnal8:59.
: .,
sonics sun have major problems
Bucks 116, Warriors 101
Orlando made 41 of 57 free . · , ·
winning on tbe road.
At Milwaukee, Fred Roberts got throws, while Sacramento made . · ·
Charlotte got 19 points each fued up a[ler several roughhouse just17of25.
~· · c
from Larry Johnson, Kendall. Gill confrontations with Golden Slate's
"Needless to say, that gatne - i'
and A101120 Mourning and held off Byriln HoUSton, and channeled bis hurt,'' said Sacramento coach ·, ·.
a Seaute COIJ1eback-in the founh anger into seven points during a Garry St.Jean.
,." ,. ·
quarter.
pivotall6-71hird-quaner tun.
·
,. .
''I thought this was our best
.
game,'' Hornets coach Allan Bris, 'lo
Sports
briefs
•·
tow said. "We either tied or beat
Temais
them every quarter. Our defense
Baseball
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) .- : ·:
was as good as its ever been. We
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla:
·continually stopped their first (AP) -· Shortstop Walt Weilis and Top-seeded An~!fassi of the ~. ·:
compatriot , ,
option and forced tbem tD tbeir sec- the Florida Marlins agreed to a Uruled Swes def
ond and third options offensively.
one-year tollaact for $800,000 plus Jonathan Stark 6-2, 7-6 (7) and , ;
"This wasn lt jusi a win. This performance bonuses. The 29-year- third-seeded Jaime Oncins of ~ ":
old Weiss, acquired from Oaklan(l Brazil beat 36-year-old Bjorn Borg ' '
was a win with a plus.''
Seattle (28-13), in third otace in after tbe expansion draft, asked for of Sweden 6-4, 6-7 (9-1), 6-4 in the " ,
the Pacific Diviliion, is just ~-11 on $1 million in arbitration and was flfSl round of tbe Volvo-San Flllll- . ·
cilico tournament.
·'·; :
offered $750.000.
the road this season.

ToaJcbl'o-

I'

.I

•

, -.
;:
~:
···'·

..

FarW•t

•'

Schott's lawya-, Robert Benneu,
said he was told Monday by
National Lea~ counsel Roben
Kheel that a
ision hadn't been
made. Bennett has threatened to
ftght any penalty In court despite
the~ Leaaue Apeement'a ban
on lawsuill apinlt tbe COWICll by

•

.

•Ntw Y.t.7:30 p.m.
. _ .....-.7:30p.m.
Ooldla ·~ • aJ!VBI..AND, 7:30
P"'!.

.

'

.: ;

~ MuiDD 11. Tuaaloalhlm 61

. j

Schott 'said Monday she was
unaware of Wednesday's meeting
and would not attend. Asked
whether she though the decision
already had been made, she said,
"probably."

• Is lhili the Year of tbe Rookie
in major-league bueball? ·
It'~ shaping up that way.
The debut of the National
League's two expansion 1eams the Colorado Rockies and the
Florida Marlins - adds SO more
big-league jobs. A lot or those
spoil will be fdled by newcomers,
of course.
·
Meanwhile, teams in both the
American and National Leagues
will ~ on replacing hiRh1*ieed
(but fading) veteranS witli youngsters. For many clubs, it's just a
question of basic economics.
Luckily, scouts are saying the
minor leagues may be ready fo
deliver a bumper crop of rookies to
fill tbe gaps.
(C) 1993 ·
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

I •I ,, I

..

A suspension would be the first
imposed on an owner since 1.989,
when George Steinbrenner of the
New York Yankees agreed to an
indefinite ban following his
$40,000 payment to and association with a gatnbler. Steinbrenner is
to be reinstated on March I.

-'CEOs have gotten rogetber to push
for spans reforms.
President Joseph Crowley of the
three Daytona 500 titles in )988 Univenity of Nevada is the ne"
when he held off his son's chat- head of the National ·Collegiate.
lenge.
Atbletic Association. He's only the
By the way, "Little AI" has second college CEO tD serve as the
also been around tbe 1rliCk.
NCAA's presidenL
•
He's driven Ponche 962s to vic- Crowley was elected in January
•tories at Daytona in tbree "ln1Cma- . at tbe NCAA's 87th convention; a
tiona! Motor Sports Association record 248 collejle CEOs attended
races. He was on 1eams that won a the Dallas meeung. Nearly all of
three-hour !MSA race in 1985 and tbe prqlOISis backed by tbe NCAA
the 24 Hours of Daytona in 1986 . Presidents Commission were
and 1987.
adopted.
· • Is anybody minding tbe store
~ .what was called a landm!~fk
in college sports?
·
dects1on, the NCAA convenuon
Finally, it loots as if the presi- approved an atblelics certiflCation
dents of the colleges and universi- "' program for major colleges. By
ties have decided where the buck mid-summer, the initial five-year
stops. worried about abuse and certification schedule will be in
corruption, more and more of the plllce.

.

"

By RONALD BLUM
NI!W YORK (AP) -When the
. executive council meets Wednesday in Chicago, it is expecled to
suspend Cincinnati Reds ·owner
Marge Schou and stan baseball's
newest court fighL
Baseball offiCials denied reports
in Monday's editions of the Dayton
Daily NA!s and Los Angtlts Times
that the council has already
imposed a one-year ban on Schou,
who has been accused of making
racial and ethnic slurs. But the
penaky is expected to be vOied on
Wednesday.
'''Ibe repm1 is in error,'' council
chairman ~ud Selig said. · "No
decision has been reached at this

and beat Morgan Shepherd by two

car lengths. Bobby Allison, who is
Davey's father, won tbe last of his

••

~.

5·

Baseball officials deny rumors
of one-year ban on Schott

· mt St.

as.

a................-......
I!

90. c-. c

""*-SI.73.-tllo71
UloolyiO. N.C .-~ 73
iofd.••-... Coonty Winlluop
79 _ _VolloyS1.90,0nl ........ ll
Uri II' 11. 77, T-.·Muda 7..
MlqoaSL 67,llowullJ. 51
....,., 11. 76. Middlo r-.73
· N. Caollna AAT 66. llednm.. Coolt·
.... 56
Jlad(Gid 11, Choiloolm- 60
!. Cualina !L 16, Rodda A&amp;M 14
Soullo-7t.-uSLS9
SleiiGa95.N&lt;IIhfloddo7S
Vup.iaTodo70, w;n;,,tr.tuy66

AU..IIcTWLPci.Gll
Now Vod&lt; ..... -........25 IS .625
New 1.-y ........•..25 19 .568
2
.22 21 .s12
4.5
o.ta..lo ...............19 19 .500
s
pr1
t•, Nnou-17 24 ,415
I.S
. - . : ...•......•..•!) 71

Dell..., St.

19

EASTERN CONFERENCE

w.....,.,..... . . . . .12

96-92.
In other gatnes, Charlotte beat
Seattle 112-100, Milwaukee defeated Golden State 116-102, New Jersey downed Dll!las 115-96 and
Orlando beat Sacramento 119:115.

CelL of o-dwx 14,; Cea1. Florida

Inthe~A ... ·

Scott, Nordmann
honored MAC

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

won tbe.!a!!ICSI SOD-mile race eva
run - . 189.727 mph at Michigan
International Speedway.
He's "a pre111ier Indy car driver,'' accordina tD team ownek" Rick
Hendrick of llendrick Motonports.
With 50 outlets nationwide, Hendricli: ofCharlone, N.C., is tbe third
largest car dealer in the Uniled
Swes. His teams won tbe Daytona
500 in 1986, with Geoff Bodine.
and in 1989, witbDarreUWallrip.
~'I've long admired the Unser
tradition,'' says Hendrick: AI
Unser Sr-. the father of "Lmle
AI," won a record-tying four Indianapolis 500 titles.
Davey Allison, the son of anotber famous driver, is the defetiding
champ at the Daytona SOO. He led
the last 30 laps of the 1992 race

·

•
By CHRIS SHERID&gt;\N
Ill yCIUS.
·
:
AP Sports Writer
· .Jor~an scored 20 of his 37
' Thanks tD Micliael Jorda!!. the ~tnts mtbe fOUfl!l quarter Monday
;Chicago Bulls ~DR 't have ~ . mght 1(1 help Chicago ~mplele a
answer any questions about theu comeback. froll1 a 20-pomt second:longest. losing streak In al!nolt 2 half ~ as tbe Bulls beat Utah
'

Cion

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

•
•

;Chicago erases 20-poin( deficit to post 96-92 road win over Utah

Bay three,' Evans three, Tara Congo .
By SCOTr WOLFE
three and two each by Crystal Mor-, • .
Easteru Head COIICb
'•••••.
Eastern raced tD a 27·7 flllt half ns. and KrisII. wamer.
Trimble was led by Sarah •,·;
lead, then coasled to a 49-33 trisaid. "St. John's has always played
' B7 JIM O'CONNELL
umph over the Trimble Lady Tom- McDonald's 11 and Amy Eltring· • : ~
ham's nine.
· '
. NI!W YORK (AP) - The St. bard and. it's always been tDugh tD
cats in Glouster Monday night. ·
John's players wouldn't crack. No play them on tbe road."
Eastern goes tD Fairland ThursEvery Eastern player IBW action
In other Top 25 games, No. 3 •
mllk:6 bow much preuure was put
and three ~~ tbe dOubJc.4igit milrk. day and hosts Meigs Saturday at 2
Kansas
beat Missouri 86-69 and .
oll'tbem, tbey held tbeir ground.
Freshman
Jessica Kalr led tbe East· p.m.
First, it was Georgetown's No. 4 Cincinnati edged Miami of
em victory march with 16 points,
defense: The Redmen responded Ohio 74-68 in ovettime.
Eastern
Juniors Penny Ae~er and Jaill)e
No. 3 Kansas 116, Missouri 69
with a 16-0 run in tbe second half
(13-14-11-10=49)
Wilson each netled 10, Stephanie
At Lawrence, Eric Pauley
Monday night nn tbe way to a 79Stephanie Otto 2-0-1=5, Jaime
Ouo five, and Amy Redovian, ·
61 victory over the 23rd-ranked scored 18 points as the Jayhawks
Wilson
2-1-3,.10, Amy Redovian
Michelle Schaltz, Jeuica Radford
beat
cold-shooting
Missouri
for
the
Hoyas.
•
and Rebecca Evans each added 1-0-0=2, Penny Aeiker 2-0-6-10, '
Then came the media. Question fifth straight time and extended
two.
Jessica Karr 8-0-0=16, Michelle
after
llbola being alone in their Big Eight home winning
Trimble (1-16) waa led by the Schultz 0-0-2-2, Jessica Radford
'
rust p
halfway through tbe Big streak tD 19.
'
dual
11-point
efforts
of
Tammy
0-0-2=2,
Rebecca
Evans
1-0-0a2.
'
Steve Woodberry added 17
fiSt season after bein&amp; selected
.
Lenigar
and
B~th Koons. Tonya
Totals
16-1-14::49
ninth in a coaches' pr ,,I'M poll. points for Kansas (18-2 over:all, 5-0
Trace added three, Kim Pallo two,
Not one player· ran off at the Big Eight). Mart Atkins led MiliChasity
Antle two and Hope Min~
Trimble
mouth . Each gave the answer souri (13-6, 3-2) with 30 points.
gus
two.
.
(4-3:13:13=33)
·Kansas held a big edfee or
on the
coaches love tD bear.
· Jaime Wilson had a hot first
Tammy Lenigar 5-0-1=11, Kim
"Right now ·things are going boards and at the foul ine. The
quarter,
hitting
2-4
flCid
goals
and
Pallo
0-0-2=2, Tanya Trace 1-0kind of good for ·us, but anything Jayhawks made 17 of 21 free
a
three-pointer
to
lead
Eastan
(61=3,
Chasity
Antle 1-0-0=2, Beth
could happen," said Shawnelle throws, while Missouri made just
10)
19
a
13-4
rust
period
lead.
EastKoons 4-0-3=11, Hope Mingus 1;
Scou, who made all eight of his three of six, all in the first half.
em
pressed
successfully
in
tbe
sec·
0-0-2.
Totall-13-4·7=33
shots from the field and bad 19 Kansas also outtebounded Missouri
ond
frame.
Jessica
Karr
was
tbe
.points. "We're going to take tbem 47·31.
benefactor as she canned ten points
Missouri coach Norm Stewart
one at a time."
in .the fratne tD SPQrk Eastern tD a
· The cliche overload may be did not stan Jevoll Crudup, apparby
27.7
halftime lead.
·excused. St. John's (12-5, 7:2) has ently for disciplinary .reasons.
Karr bad 12 at tbe half.
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Cenwon seven of eight, and seven con- Crudup, the Tigers' second-leading
Penny
Aeiker had a good sectral
Michigan'~ Sander Scou and
ference wins would have been con- scorer with a 15.5 average, sat out
BYPASSES DEFENDER - Missourl .g uard Jed. Frost (25)
ond half, including a 6-8 stint at tbe
Bowling
Green's Andrea Nordsidered a ROOd total for the entire .the fust eight minutes and finished
bypasses the Kansa• Jaybawks' Adonis Jordan Ia the first batr of
foul line. Aeiker and Otto did a
mann
are
tbe
playas of tbe week in
season. Three four-year starters with nine points.
Monday night's Bit EIJbt matchup In Lawrence, KaiiSIIS, wblcb the
good job on die boerda for Eastern,
No. 4 Clnclnud 74
the
Mid-American
Conference.
were gone, and so was Hall of
Jayhawks won 86-69. (AP)
·
as tbe Eagles raced to a 39-20 score
Miami .(Obl.ll) 68 (OT)
Scott,
a
6-foot
senior from
Fatne coach Lou Camesecca. The
at tbe buzzer.
At Oxford, Nick Van Exel tied
Northport,
Mich.,
scored
51 pOints
trademlrt halfQOUit defense ill still
Eastern substituted freely
it
in
regulation
with
a
lavuo.
then
and
had
II
assists,
seven
rebounds
(10,5)
turned
the
ball
over
with
game
gave
Cincinnati
(16-1)
its
••'
there, and thai) as bif a reason as
throughout the second half and sevany for the surprismg success scored nine points in overtime as four seconds left, sending it to rust lead since early in the game. eral of its younger playera.clid 1 and four IICIII ill the Chiflpewai'
t
The Bearcats then hll 15 of 16 free good job.
three wins last week. He made 18
.
Cincinnati rallied fmnl an 11-point overtime:
under Brian Mahoney.
'
Van Exel, held without a field throws tD stay ahead.
"There isn't any major differ- deficit to win its 13th straight
'
Eastern rolled on to the 49-33 of 39 field-goal attempts. including
goal in the first half, turned it nn in
6 of IS from lhi'ee-'polllll'IJIIe, and
Matt Kramer led Miatni with 21 win.
ence between the way Brian coach- game.
overtime
and
finished
with
23
points.
Van
Exel'
s
layup
tied
it
.
a
t
54
es imd the way Looie coached,"
Eastern bit a meager 17 of 67 was 9 of 11 at tbe ~duow line.
points.
Hili
fmt
three-pointer
of
the
with
48
seconds
to
play,
and
Miami
Nordmann, a 6-1 aenior from·
Georgetown's John Thompsol!
from tbe floor, bit one of two lhlecs
and was a frigid 14-31 ftQm the Williamston, Mich., scored 34
•'
.
points and had 12 rebounds and ·
line.
I
Trimble hit 13 of 62 for 20.9 five aSsists in only 55 minwes last
week. JUll two poinll shy of 1,000
B7 SCOTr WOLFE
urday can be 'purchased at the high the hump. The Eagles gave SouthAlso, congratulations to· former percefll and was 7-12 at the line.
for
her career, she shot 6$.2
Eastem
bad
35
rebounds
led
by
Sentlael Correspondent
school.
em a scare Friday and could spell Eastern and Sou them basketball
l'
from
the flCid (15 of 23) in
·
OliO
with
11,
Karr
five
and
Aeiker
•
The 1992-93 baslcelball season
Speaking of Southern, the Tor- upset on any give night.
standout Jeff Caldwell for ending
Falcons
inio
rust
place
wi
the
live,
had
two
assists,
14
steals
ill nearinJ a close, but several great nadoes have bad an outstanding
Meigs is having a good season tbe 1,000 point career senring11181k
games lie ahead in the ftnal weeks . year, espec~ for the schedule both at the boys' and girls' ranks.
at Marietta College. caidwell bas (Karr five), 23 turnovers ancl 18 two victmes.
of tbe regular season. This Friday, they have fa . At 10-4, the TorCongratulations to Trevor Harri- had an outstanding senior year at fouls. Trimble ·had 38 rebounds --Sports briefs-the Soutbem Tornadoes host South nadoes are a force to be reckoned son for his Meigs,' career scoring the school, where he has been the (Koons 12 and Lenigar 8), five
Teuis
Point of coach Rick Huckabay, tbe with. Inconsistency bas plagued tbe mark. His predecessor, Mike leading ilcorer on numerous ocea- assists, eight steals, 28 turnovers
•
AUCKLAND,
New Zealand
'•
(onner Marshall University mentor. Tornadoes, but they still have man- Chancey .,vas always fust class and
sions.
.
. and '24 fouls. ·
(AP)
Elna
'Reinach
of
South
Eastern won the reserve game
Another b1g cage contest com· )ben, on Saturday, veteran coach aged to win. If Soothern could put carried that hOnor well. Hats off to
Africa beat defending champiflll
Carl Wolfe will have his first together four quaners or high heat both youn11 men. Chancey is .a ing up ill the Meigs-Southern boys' 38-27 led by Radfor.d with 11 Robin White of tbe Uniled Swes
points, Michelle Schultz llld Melilihomecoming since departing ball like the fmt half in Eastern's graduate ISSIStanl football coach at game at Meigs on February 12.
sa Giless with seven apiece, Beth · 64, 5-1, 6-4 in tbe rust round of
Southern in 1985.
game and the flfSt and third quar- Ohio University. ·
See you in the Victory Circle!
tbe Auckland Classic.
· Wolfe's Pcrtsmouth Clay squad ters against Miller, they could have
•
'
was undefeated as of last week and a great finish. ·
ranked second in the state. Clay,
Southern fans are back into the
however, was defealed last Friday swing. Finally, after _years of getby Portsmouth East in an overtime ting spoiled, spirits are high in
,bamburner at East..
Racine: The student body has been
·In pursuance of Law , I, Howard E. Fran k, Treasurer of M~ i gs County. Ohio, in compliance with revised Code No. 323.08 of Stale of Ohto,
That foiled a perfect homecom- a big facror in the spirit game. ,
do hereby give notice ot the Rates of Taxation for the Tax Year of 1992. Rates expressed in dollars and cents on each one thousand dollars
ing script as a possible win would
The same lies true at Eastern,
· tax valuation .
,have put Wolfe's career mark at where head coach Greg ·ullman
TOWNSHIPS
,win number 400. Now, he Cll'l only praised tbe support at tbe Eastern. '
.•
hope for number 399.
Southern game. Ullman says !hili ill
All
lffMtln
SCHOOLDISTRICTS
ou
••
,
lit
ttl
' Southern head coach Howie "what we need... tbe teatn needs this
••••
Reduatloft
OUter
Corp, I.M.a.
Caldwell expects a packed bouse support 10 be successful."
.both nights. Pre-sale tickets for SatEastern has played well in big
•·
games, but just hasn't jumped over

Rates of Taxation for 1992

of race cars."
.In stock car racinfs biJgest •
.event, Un~er~ 30, wtll dnve a
Chevrolet I,.umina on the 2.5-mile •
oval at Daytona (Fla.) International
Speedway. His car will be spo,nsored by V.alvoline synthetic oil
and Hendrick MolmpoiU.
.
"This will be, my fllSI Winston
Cup 1111:e t~Ya-,'' aays Unser, "and
I'm really w:iled about it. I think
we'llbaveashotatlherace.".
Since joining tbe ~in 1983,
Unser bas won 18 f!1CCS m tbe.PPG
lndyCir World Series. He finished
third in tbe Indy car Stalldings last
sea~on, af!cr winning only at the
Indianapolis SOO. .
.
In 1990, Unser won SIX racesincluding four straight -::- en route
to.lhe IndyCar championship. He

,In NBA action,

Eastern beats Trimble 49-33 .

In th~ Victory Circle .• · .- - - - - - - - - - - - - .._ _ __

·.

'
By HOWA1tD SINER
, Today's questions iD tbe worl!l
of spans:
• •
: • Can the defending Indy !500
·champ win tbe Super Bowl of stock
'car racing?
: AI Unser Jr. is bopjng for the
bcsL "Little AI" is J1C11in1 ready to
:mike bis WinstDD Cup debut at the
;Daytona SOO on Sunday, Feb. 14.
;He could become the flrstlndianipolis 500 champion in two
· ·decades to win the Daytona SOO.
:only Mario Andretti (1967) an~
:AJ. Foyt (1972)"have ever done 11
before.
·
' "I've always wanted 10 drive in
' the Daytona 500," Unser says.
"My goal is to be tbe beslflll:e car
driver I can be. And, tD do that, you
·have to be competitive in all kinds
•

non-antagonistic rivalry between 10 assistS in tbe Bears' encountm1 came in the latter portion of the •
ShawneeSweeiglllh.
Inspileofaroclcyseasonforhis the two schools which are aeparat- with walsli and Tiffin.
1982-k3 season, when the Cavateam; Shawnee Stale mentor Jim . ed by 45 miles. While Rio Gnlllde
Probable swtm for Rio Giande lien were coached by Bob Hug- .
Amz.en is confident that tbe 1eam is catne out on the sbon end of the include Jact Mqrgan (5-9, fresh- gins, who bas since n- to nation- ..
improving, and evidence of that series in its first season, it leads 7-4 man, 4.1 points, 4.8 assists) and al fame at the Univmitr of Cincin· · . ·
was seen last Friday when WalSb going intD tomorrow's meeting. .
Matt Powell (6-4, sqDumore, 22.8 nati ... Powell's 36 pom11 against -' ·
escaped the Bears' den in
Expecled tD stan for tbe BCIUS points, 4.2 rebounda) as the~· Walsh put him in a 11e with Brown . .
Portsmouth with a tO-point vicuxy, are Travis Merry (5-IO,junior,lS.S with Jeff Brown (6-S, seruor, lS f~ the one-game in~ividual higb . . .
a feat repeated Saturday when TiC- points, 5.1 assists per game) and points, 7.3 rebounds, 5.3 uaists) thu season. .Brown hit 36 on Now. .., ;
fin got away with a!J 89-79 win Darryl Lisatb (6·0, sophomore, and Brett Coreno (6-5, sophomore, 14 when the Redmen edged ..
over Amz.en's group.
.
11.8 points, 3 rebounds) as the 11.4 points·, 4 rellounds) on Geor~etown (Ky.), the preseason . . .
"We may not be winning any guards. Bryan Dyer (6-4, sopho- offense. Troy Donaldson (6-8, favonte for second place in the·
games, but I think we're getting more, 5.5 points, 5.1 rebounds) and · senior, 20.4 points, 9.4 rebounds) NAIA, 80-78 to win tbe champi- ..
onship of Georgetown's touma· ,
better," he said. "Before the~ Ron Kenley (8 points, 5.2 will be tbe centa".
·
. is over, I feel our guys will prove rebounds) will be tbe forw~. and · The game Is sponsored by. ment ... In natioria1 statistics, Don· .
that they compete with good Craig Miller (6-6, junior, 6.1 McDonald's restaurants ofGallipo- a1dson rose to second in field goal . •
teams.~
points, 4.3 rebounds) wiD be aldie lis, Athens and Hendennn, W.Va., percen~a~e (68.5). while Powell is ·
Arnzen, who bas beaded the post. R:tan Hudson (6·0, junior, and tickets are available at those 19th in scorin' ... Team-wise, the -:
Redmen are third in scorlng (100.7
Bears program since Shawnee State 15.8 pomll) will be first off the locations.
.
became a four-year institution in bench on defense. ·
DRUMBEATS: Walsh notched points per game), eighth in icoring :
1988, spoke with no ill will !Dward
Last week, Merry distinguished its first win at Rio Grande in a margin (17'.7) and sixth in field -•
the Redmen and their coaches, an himself by compiling 40 poilits and decade Saturday. The first time · goal percen.(!53.5)\
.
indic;_ation of the competitive yet

St. John's, Kansas post
wins in college cage action

The DallY, Sentlnei Page 5 :;;

J\.1 Unser Jr. looking to make Winston Cup debut in 12 days

\

'

Redmen host improving Shawnee State for last home game

·-

Pomeroy . Middleport, Ohio

·.::~
•There's never most cases, an a£l, title search andre~ simply caD us at
been a better time vantage you don't oonting of the deed. 593-6681 or 1-80(), ..
-to get aBank One getwithothertypes Servicesthat\\Wld 677-4994.Andcut ~~::.
. lbneF..quityLoan"' offmanc~.·
nonnallyrostyou~ yourbiQcOOa,la "~,: ·.'
muchas$500.
. down11o- • ., J·u.,.
'~'
, Interest rates are
.Best of all,
cl .
Th
· still at some of the you pay no OSJDg
a
h'
. lowest levels in
costs- including
loan.
years. And your in- attorney's fees and
terestpa,ymentsare lij&gt;Praisalcllanles. Bal1k

taXdeductiblein

j'

,,

015:3 BANe ONE

plusthecostofthe

~·noo "C:on.utt

y0s tax

~aor tor spec~IC

·

· Or,ifyouprefer;

_Oae._NA

-Fill:

condiliOI'II and dtbiilt. &amp;A;jecl: tl Cl'tdt IPPfML Q!fel'

tJq:J~rM ~

.
31, •

·

�'

The Daily

By The Bend

Sentinel ·~

The Dally

•The Area's ·Number l

1\leSCIIIy, February 2, 1993

.

PICI• a

-Mark~tplace

Woman with osteoporosis seeks
more infortnation about the disease
DBARRBADI!RS:Doo'tst,iptbls
column te e•• you tblnt It dOesn't
lpply to you. ID a few !!V'41tbJ (or
Yc:an&gt;. you may . wialt YO!J bad

· SO LONG • )eulrer 8lld James Stolpa and
tMir ·llve-1110111!1-old sou, Clllytoa, talk wltb tH
ll$edla durl•l a farewell press couference at
Waaboe Medical Ceuter Mondiy. The family,

who survived eight days iD tile snow iD aorth·
westem Nevada iD Jauaar;r, flew from Reno to
Hayward, CaHf~ MODday afterlloou. (AP photo)

Harold
Felton re-elected
.
as OVAL board president
.

OVAL caucus .. The meetin~ bas
historically been held in COIIJWIC·
lion with the Ohio Library Council
Le~Jislative Day. OLC has changed
their plans, and alrcmatives neccT to
be developed. The board also
authorized Anderson to travel to
Washington, D.C. for the annual
American Library Association Legislati\&lt;e Day to be held April 20,
The Board authmzed a contract
with United Parcel Service so tbal
OVAL cari serve as a drop-off
point for the public. ~·ups stops
here everyday," Anderson commented, "and because we are conveniently located and have plenty
of parking, this sbould provide a
service for the community. • An
upgrade in the Pitney Bowes mail·
ing equipment was also approved.
The 'now configuration will eliminate fifteen hours of labor per
month I!Rd provide for improved
fund accounting.
Because of the 1993 Calendar,
the board also authorized three
additional floating holidays for the
coming year. OVAL tries to provide service every day the post
office is open, and because these
scheduled holidays f~l on weekends this year, lbe additional days
wcreapproved.
·
Anderson presented, and the ·
~ .!'J'J'fD':ed an Americans with
Disabilities ·Act (ADA) compliance
plan. This plan will bring the facility and its procedures in line with
this new fedelal regulation. "I don't
COunties.
;Director Eric S. Anderson also believe it will cost OVAL more
di,cussed changes in the annual than $2,000 to comply," Anderson .

lfarold Feltou, rcpreacntinj lhe
HCbM Wescoat Memcxial Library
serving Vinton County, was reelei:te4 president of tbe board dur·
ina' lbe Obio Valley Area Libraries
(OVAL) ~ of Trustees replar
.lllfCIIDiat System Headquarters in
Wellston on Jan. 21.
;This wiU be Felton's founh term
sqvins as president. Frederick
Good, re.Jiresentins the Logan
HOcldng County District Library in
I.Apn was ·re-electcd vice presi·
~~$it for his fourth term. Also ree~ to ICIVe as board secretsry
wu Roxie Underwood, rcpreacnt. ·· lbe Jacksoa City Ubrary. This
be Ms. Underwood's t~ird
tep 81 sccrctacy. The boal:d 8lso
~ovcd lbeir regular 1993 mcetinJschedulc.
. ·
1he boanl approved lbe submissi&lt;!.l) of three grant applications.
.ne $412,000 state prolfllll, which
~ idministration, continuing
cm.-!!ljon and J'CSO!Ir&lt;:C sharing·serv~ was approved along wilb lhe
Li'bnrY Services and Construction
Aot (UCA) Title I program for
S4f4,000. Tbese are the standard
0'0\L ~ng grants.
"'e ' Readin1 and the Young
Clti\d" spceial program to intra·
du.c yOungsterS to reading through
daf care facilities application, for
$8:i120 was also submitled. This
arpnt wiD serve as a demonstration
· project in Hocking. Jackson,
Uwrence, Meigs, Pike and Ross

:fu

· .:

f~ · ·

.

Year I Enter," "Another Year of
Dawning," and "God's Nursery.:•
RoU eall was a garden resolution.
Leuers were read on recrcling
and. from the Meigs County Park
District promoting tiie county as a
show place and urging all garden
clubs to take pan.
A thank-you note was read from
the Carrie Grueser family for howers and a report on shut-in baskets
was given.
Kathryn Miller had lhe arrangement of the mlinth using berried
holly and a red bird in an antique
basket. She had a miniature
arrangement of maiden fair fern
and pink African violets in a cup
and saucer.
Heidi Elberfeld gave a repon on
broccoli, a member of lbe
family. It is high in vitamin A With
6,000 units. The leaves contain
30,000 units It should be Only
steamed for 10 minulel, JRS01king
in salt water to rid lhe mmute green
worms and insects. It is rich in pantohenic acid which helps the
adrenal glands. corns, bunions, calluses of the feet. It can be started
early indoors and planled when two
inches tall outside after frost. It
should be mulched well and does
well w~ weekly.
Connie Hill demonstrated malting a swaa using a coat hanger wire
wrapped with artimesia, sea lavendar, using inserts of globe ama· rand!, sweet annie and silver spiral
eucalyptuS.
She also staled herbs sllould be
used ftah so they can bend and not
be dry," brittle ~ not drop .seeds.
They can be cleaned by a mist and
kept for three to five years.
A gift was presented to Mrs.
Hill and a dmert course aerved to
guest Virginia F'llher and members.
· Evelyn Holter won lhe Afric:an
violet door prize.

cab.

ANISSA HOWELL

u

•
arrtVal

r~eW
~
· .CraJ "Buck" and SUsan How-

X llpCII, ~the binh of
1111', Anissa Jo Howell, on
at K•lispell Regional Hos-

weighed seven pounds and
fotr ounces and was 20 inches

kill.

firmw grandparents are Francl( Howell of Strasburg: and·
11tenm Lanlzer, Beach City.
.
Na&amp;ernal grandparents are
rt:~ and .Jeanie Sa.ndy,

said. ''with lhe J.srgeSt items beins a
six inch ramp to die back door and
a TDD commuiticltions device for
the phone system .• Anderson
infiXIIIed the board he would make
a formal report on lhe IOia1 cost of
the renovations when they were
completed.
OVAL is the only state fun~
resi9naJ h'brary system in Ohio. It
serves the citizaps and libraries of
Athens, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, and Vinton Counties with
progr1111s of services developed by
those libraries.
Wanda Eblin serves on the
OVAL Board as a representalive of
thi Meigs County Public Librllly.

t

Days

viJI'bilily.

.· '

'

The Meigs Local School District ters describing the conference
will be holdir, psrent-tescher con- · scheduling procedure along with
ferences on hursday, Feb. 11, other information. Students will be
flom 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. and on Fri· taking lbe letters home sometime
next week.
day; Feb. 12, flom 9 a.m to noon.
In announcing the conferences, .. Purpose of the conferences is to
James Carpenter, superintendent, allow the parents and teachers to
said thst school will ' be dismissed discuss pupil progress and to ~
on Feb. 12 and·on Monday, Feb. the parents and schools informed
about student activities as they'
15, which is President's Day.
As for the conferences. Ca!pen- relate to school behavior and perter said tbal parents will receive let· formance. '
f' •

Carpenter said that he encourages parents to take advan~e of
the opportunity to commumcate
with their children's instructors
~ goal is to create a more effec;
nvc educational prOjpiiD from lhe
exchange of information and ideas.
Questiona regarding the confer.
ences should be directed .to the·.
children's schoola of attendance
Carpenter said.
'

To.p lace
an ad
.
MoN. tbru Fa1. 8u1.-SP.M. -

MO!Iday Piper
Tlilidoy Paper
Wedr hy Paper .
Thunday Piper
Friday Paper
Sundoy Paper

SAT.8-12

POUClES

• Mr. ..~~We 1M ooaty yov ad AM ,. - t . . p.q 'd
•• a-..
di.oouat for od.J polo&amp; Ia - - ·
Fne Ado: Gl~wor aod F.....! oolo ....- 15 .....U wlllllo
... ~clayoouoclwp.
·
• PriMo£ o4 t.. all eapllollonon;. do.W. prieo o£ o4• 7 polal 1m. lflio o,.Jjo oood
• S..!laollo M ...,...U.Iofor....,. ..,_flnldor (.W
lor erron fino day o4 rao Ia popor). CoD W001 1.00 P·•·
...., aflor ,.w;c.lioe "' .....

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MIDDLEPORT
ADDITIONS CAN BIIWIITO YOUR BOUQUET ·
ORDERS MUST 81 CAl tiD IN IY 12 NOON, PIIRUARY 11TH

a.-,_ a-

lor Solo
In-- r~"""'f•• Solo

l._B I

1,26-9

'•

1 - 18" ·Mylar Balloon
#3
with message
1 - 34" Mylar Balloon with message 5- 18" Mylar Balloons
. solld colors
1 - 18" Mylar Balloon with message
1 lb. Russell Stover
5- 18" Mylar Ball9Qns solid colors
· Boxed Chocolates
Weighted with Candy Fllled.Mug

U-Sita d ..
J3.-lw -

'-Loat...!Fouod
7-LOaouodF.....t

773-111-

1112-1'1-Ba895-'•·"1

•

2- 18" Mylar Balloons

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

41-

-llcriNioa-wlloot

u-llolp Ylllod

......

&lt;"
'

-

992·3470

,OWNER: ..
Jeff Wlclersll1111

'

!

.• .

4-Q~:--.J
~a.,.

SIZED · LIMESTONE

-Income Tox Prep.-ollon

I

-tSB lr~
576....4::1 c......

Potiiii'Dy, OIIID

'•

11

~A---

675-PL"-

36970 llt1ll Re1 Road

:,

tong, on Decomber 11

0f

HAULIN~

WOLFE&amp;
ISSOCIITES
ICCOUIITIIG

Holur lledlool Cenllr.
llo-lgrandporenll
ore Millard o.nd Allie
Fol.y ol Galllpolll, end
p1tornot grondparonto
ore Harley ond Jon•
Eblin of Glllllloll•.
Gr..t-grondpirent to
Henry· Eblin, Sr., ol

a..J:r..o... ........ .

45-F......... a-s,-blloao

SERVICE

••

i

-

- F.... Ior!l.-

•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING
D~ A. BOSTON

~

•

~

U-llaltilo a Solo
»- r .... for' Solo
J4..:.... P..,J,-· B·riU. .
3S- Lou ol: " " -

I; I \ I \I "'

GET BF.S1JLTS • J'ABTf

k

.Rem.....

. ·'+

Brilon ond Dlno EbUn
l . ~''!o''!'c' lho birth ol
daughter, Chorlee
Brlinno,7 lbo., 20 ln.

.

'I

Raoldonllol6 Cotn-vlol
Free &amp;l:llnll•
RREWOOD FOR SALE

THANA ~
GARACE·FUL··
OFSTUFF '

!•

,\ I I \ I ' I I

LMm Mauulng,
Fertilizing, Wwdlng, Wid
Seeding.
Shrub Wid,._ :rrtmmlng

AHANDFUL
OF CASH

I

I \I;\ I 'I I' I ' I I I '

·

j

It

$ .(2
$.60
$.05/day

$13.00
$1.30/day

10/11921fn

--

4- '18" Myhir Balloons

1411....,1oo~

be

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

~

'

$ .20
$.30

for each day as separate ad•.
1-------:-=-=-======-=----~

667-Ca.l.tle

PRICE REDUCED!

..•
•..
•
"
•:i•

•

with message

S7!1-'ll'alool

:us•c.....

2S6-Ctorao Dtra.

DEDLINE .
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

••

'

MJ • n\h DilL

91'S a
,
MS-P.rdoM
247........ , . .
M9 p ,

... Doily S...tioel, ........ ·-11,000 ""- .

.•

Bouquet #1

,.rtJ
Po-r

388-~

Cud ol nutuo
a.,. .....
lolol-riaJI
lord Saloo ·
• .. cluolllool - · - · ploeoclla ... Golllpolo DoUr
T..U..... (""!"P' Cto.lfloclllloplo)', B I
Coni or Lop!
!"•-) will aloo appoar Ia tloo Polat Ploooiiuot B j ""aod'

~

Deliver your
love and affection
with balloons

992~·m

446-Gallpollo

16'74 ,, •

- · · $81,1100 end

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

~

l-laM

-tlo•

• - tiMndng Gl up to 80% &lt;I pun:!-.
be pc&gt;Oii&gt;M 1or qual!ytng ,....
oon 10 buy .,., nlco ' - on 311- In
Rlclno. 4 8R, 3 balhl, 2QIIIGOI, 1

Over 15 Words

, Galla Coantr Melp Coallly M - Co., 'JlV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 3M

BmER

;

100 p.m. Thilnday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Rate

l!ates are foto conHCUtiYii nms, brokeil up days will be .

t:OOp.m. MO!Iday

1:00 p.m. Tuooday
1:00 p.m. Wednoodoy

Clauijiecl JHIBBI Cflller the
fo'llmllift6 teleplw1111 e:cc/uuage1•••

• Ado thot- loo poiolla " • - on:

- . . , . . ... -

Monthly

DAY IIElOIIE PUBLICATI~
1:00 p.m. Solurdoy

COPY DEADLINE

.

CLOSED SUNDAY

,.

~ ·

15
15
15
15
15

10

Call992-2156
'

••

f

Words

1
3
6

Landers

Parent-teacher conferences slated

...'
'{

Deeds a pelt doal more

MOlt people tb1nt 011b ......osls is a
di.-.ae of lbe eldcrly. This is not
true. It can Slrike women u early u . '
cliAiod It 0111:
•·
mid-30s, and men ire al!lllat risk.
•
Dar Au' ndrrs: I en a S8Too many young people today
year-Gill woaU llld hive )Ill been
are lata I Jifeltyle that will CIIIIIIC
diapuaed wilb ~II!~ I weat
m eva1 paaer iDe~ fl Cllle010 my doc1ar hecanae I baYing
porosis in lbe future. Teea-qus
. a lot of paiD in my t.:k. Ia addllion
and pre-a- ""oood be edt'CI•d
Ill lbe )llin. IIIIMM &amp;I t11at I had 1i1at motber wilb this dreadful c!l I
about tbiJ i11not1 and told: Doo't
almoat 2 lncbes in bci&amp;ht. llld my
My doctor bas JiveD me 1 Slide, limit ...,.0. consiiDptioll,
bact. llaldng ulbe neek, is begin· ~ tbal will help me )IICYCIIt · eat a halauced diet rich in calcium
nina Ill bunch over. It t11t111 out er!ctitiopalfnlctma.Botabealaobls and exadae rqpllarly. Women at '
lbat l'fiO of lbe bones in my spine made it elear that diele II DO c:me midlife should aee their doctors
have not only la&lt;*eo, bullhey have for OlleOpOnl8ia. Onc:e bone rna. is about tlloit bone beahb.
collapaed llld are cletaioralinKlost. it csmot be ~aeecl On a
Medical expertS I've eonsulted
My doaor told 1110 I have some brighter DOle, she belieYeS that if I believe dill 011A10p0101i1 is both
. of lbe rllk faCtors for clevelcping follow my trea'W.at plan, my bone ~le and treatlble. An excel·
Olltoclpllilllil, wltit:b I didn't know. louwilloccurllulower(*lO:
lent organization that can give
For U.S••• :e, I didn't~ thai sinoe
Ann. I am writing toast )'011' help. you the entire picture.is lbe N81ional
my IIIOther had O"'mopanl8ls, 1 wu Pltase teU me whele I can Jet the OsleOplrOiis Foundalion; Box A,
IIIOI'Cllblytoaetlt.
most reliable lnfonn!!ljm on bow 1150 17th SL, N.W., Suite SOO,
My motber, Ill IF 71, lllffeml a to )nY!IIIt OIIDJpCI!IIiJ ml bow I WuhiiiJUIII, D.C. 20036. Write
aevere blp hc:aue which )eft her can bcpflom ~ 111016 bnocl. fllr infonnallotl llld ICIId 1 llql\, I
pen-ay dlgb!ec! Before Ibis I need tbiJ infonnlllon 1101 only lelf.addien•e~.ltllllpedenveiope.
happetled.llhe was active, energetic for rile, but for my ehildren and . Gem of the Day: A sign 011 lbe
and young for her aac. Today llbe grandchildren. I Want to Slalt early desk of the chairman of lbe boud: '
is old and frail, UIICI a ~ and to belp diem avoid what my motber Nobody ever Iearits an)'lhing when
FDD DO lonpr lllftlen. do bcJuaework . and I ~ now going lhroulh. When he's talking.
·
Or go out widi her friends. She is my doctor !Old me 1 had osteoparoIs life [HWilog yo 11 by? Wllllt to
very dependent on me aiJd my sis. I set out to learn everything I impr'oWI yow social skills? Writtfor '~
brocher, and we worry !blllbe next eould about lbe dlsea•e, bat I have AM Ltutders' lltW boot/tt, "How ;0
11tp will be a nuning bOme,
had trouble f~g informaliDIL
·Make Frle11ds a11d ·Stop Bellll
I. am 11111'11 you can undentand
.Because thiS IS sudl a common l..oMiy. • Seltll a .V-odilmsed, (91!t. ~
bow upaet I am.l have a demanding pr_o~lem, Ann, there must be biUIMINiu IIIWI/ope tllld a cMd: ~
job~ need ID be healthy 10 I can Jnilliol!sofpeoplelikemewhoneed · or lfiDitey order for $4.15 (tills :
GOI!Ii!l~ ~ !*e care of my family to be tnformed. Pltase belp us. ilu;/lllles postage tllld lltutdlint) to: •
~bel. What I haven't told CONCERNED IN NASHVllJ:;E
Fmltlb, c/o AM Ltw/ers, P.O. Box . ·:
youlldtallhaveiYIOdqlllenwbo
DEAR CON~ !'Ill liad 11562,Chicago,ffl.606114J562.(111 •
now have 1 Jlfllldmotber IJIId a you wrote. This IS a SUb)CCI thst CIJI!OdiJ, #1111 $5.05 .)
;

f?lberfeld reports on broccoli
The Wildwood Garden Club
h~)d its January meeting at the
home of Dons Grueser. ·
:Kathryn Miller presided at the
meeting which opened with a readins.;"Prayer In a Pinch." Dorothy
Smith had devotions, "Another
:

Anll

RATEs ·

992-2156
••

USED UII.IOAD

FIREWOOD
FOR SAlE

FOIIYIR

CALIFOil II
IDS .

..........
......... ............
u ........ •u
........,. ...... ..............
··-···-··· ......
'WIIIIII

IIIIDWOOD

S40.00a Lla•
.·Deii•IIL

Unit 2 Pw CUiiDIJNt
It

(6 14) MJ-1449

,

......... a .......,

949·2121

1211111211fn

"
\.

,,

•I

,.

"

�•

1993

1983

•

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

35 LDt8 I Acruge

51

,. Or .._, Noolh
Golllo
..........
- ·
Utllllloe
Anlloblo,. Ownor

114-ttl-1.

I'S'"ul 11rG1 lot an PMcocll:

---·
All
8olt.

1"' Honrdl; Or' lwll ... Ucelltnl

eondlllan, .OVor..,.lloi
lond. Flo- Rd., Pon.roy,

'

11 Autos for 8811

Household
Goods

c.;z:
-loinI V1nw1

"'-dng.tM-• 1111.

'
Ohio

The World Almanac:• Cro•IIWord P.•n'e
" ACROSS

In ..... On

C:Orpolo, 1117 N.

/

PHILLIP

¥1'RA FURNITURI AND ap.

ALDER

PUANCQ
111141 1 • OR 111111 1111

. .lluwer''e
.... .
~
p:IIIIIDn,
Guidio.l14.-a'NI.

•'.-..._.

lhorl

NORTH

'

z.z.n

·~9853

tAB 7

~V..."THIS caJ D

.H

WJim
8

...

~smoos

EAST
tQ63

Q109763

KQ2

IAI076
+9432

10 65

SOUTH
tAKJ 1074

•As 2

14
tKQJ
Vulnerable: Bot!!
Dealer: South
Stttb
z+

3•

' BARNEY

--~

-

molo town

Found:

-

eq..-. ~10.

-·

EAMOIIEAT$$$

Ho-- :r-u::.c,e:..-::._ .t. \.;

=-"='"
·-

I JESl' HAD TO GIT ME
A NIW IJIISS FER TH'

SUIPII~f

-11,2011 A

... 1 -

PAITY,

Friondty ·part Bklo
'-lon.IM.ZU.5103
old. Ooocl - -oftor
...

630pm '

Re2l Estate

~ .-. . . .
!lint
Cue57 • •In ' -t p .
1

a.-•

••u•111111

1BA

·-~ . . . . . 31 liOn IS for 8811

0

Or--

orr a

. Col _ _ .._

IMo2JMOD(OO' I Em)

Trallot,

Rolwo 11100

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-

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-.
.............
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llol'f-.
-.
011.

D-h

lit up. 1&gt;100, 111 711'1.

cau., 114-37N171.

NO, I DIDN'T SEE

-...w!r'll

good ooncl_, I'M-111

-· • '""f!lm-. m a

llatt liar. WIN

Why PlY ..,. when yo&lt;l . .n
liiDIIS ·14x7a Rodmen wllh
1 yoor wtrrtftly, olepe, oklrtlng,
dollvorod lnd Ollup lor llllmo.
C.ll far lntlrnllllllan, 114-:sas.

AKC - - ·
- lo- -·
I . - h e ~- !!!.•_!!!!! - .

I

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8

-h;-.....--ltlo·

SI5ZJ7 ...,. _,h Including olx

.........

..,..... lrMiot Nnt, new 14a70,

Don'""'*., ...

Uo-- -

Color

....... -

Worldl'l

......

TV'I,-

ftl~
VCR"s.

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SUiit

11/6 Clnolllo.•a, -

.._

... .,. . . mi.

=-=1"*

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Clllltnaoio:

-Tolur.M*._

I

lArry u-ty, I'M ~-

Top -

W I

Poltl: AI Old U.S.

ColnL

II.,...

Cain lhop,

.. -A-Qolllt&gt;oiL
W.-lolluy: - -

52 Spoi'tlng Goods

•ov•.

- 111111t.
St&gt;ruc*.._Rklgo,
-· I
pump,
-NIAM._P.IL. 112

................ olocblc, $14,!100;
Cluolly And E 1 II Till ~m: or&amp;M--192.-.7.
..
eaa-n F. Yaw Chld"a
COn. Col
I'« A VloiL lllw, 1913 14x711 Rod·
lfoddllls 11t ta
I
P,... ....,.
wllh 5 ,.., war,.nly, ln-

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dlaalalSchDGIAp......._

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PI

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f uh.. ...
,

lor lnduMry,

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nllloblo
Aplo. Ml or

-. .... =--="ilia.~~·:J:
w:zatlliilitorlllb.

e.. air

ar •el

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.....

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mcwlle. c.n 114 ttl 2811. EOH.

~az-.
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-Wotor , - · NoAofrlaeNtor,
Pola. IJ4.

Reftua- u,1'1;4a211-t3SL

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TAAIHINOW.'II.
dIn

--·'--·
---or
- · - . .trolnlng In
16-21 ... Old. OUt ol
- I n Pt. ..... o~o~~.: ' IZ2ll
-

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....
10:110 .It,. te
I:GO
PM,- ...........
· Fell."
Clrpllp.

--CTOIIS
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=

NcJEa-.N C III). U.ToSIOD
Wll Tndn. c.. 21 .._
lat. Hin'. I A.M. To I P.ll.

7Diy&amp;

auv or MH. Riverine Antiquo,
1124 E. Moln • - · on Rt. 12_4,
Ponllfor. Moura: M.T.W. 10:w
Lm. to 1:110 p.m., Sundor 1:00
lo t:QO p.m. -2121.

71

......

I

GUYS
i
PON'T l.l~t i
TO I~
f
TltP .
I&gt;OwN.

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Autos for Sele

BORN LOSER
'PII&gt; 'I'OU mlW TMI~
~""y'

2.·2.

IF TilE 6ROUNI&gt;H()(. (J)IIe) OOT .
~ Ill~

HOI£

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AAlJ

SE:eHI~~ •

WE't.L ~

,.ttO IC.IDOtllci. ;&gt; [ lo~CJNQ~
WfllH£1t W(OCWII1

l ·~~~~a~oo~·=Mm~~~~-m~e~~~na~~~

Ill CAAMNt£1. 8
~MOOr

By Jeffrey McQuain
CLOY overfills or satisfies to
excess. Don't be coy about spelling
this verb; add L after the C of COY
for CLOY.
.

~

Want to:
PIN ao-wn EXTRA

a' WI~

•

CA&amp;H?H

Q. Should you or shouldn't you capitalize "civil war"? My wife and I don't
·
agree at all on this question.

. ..

I ~T NN' FICO&lt;!t10
ElCHOOI.. Ft:R 6HON-,.6.NDTEU.., 'YE'eTER~. .

2124" 10 SIOIId -

MRS PINKMAN

GAVE.W:A'D."

A. Please don't battle about this ·,
question. If you mean the mlijar 19th·
century conftlct in the United Stales,
then American style dictates that you
'should capitalize "Civil War." lfyou're '
referring, however, to any other strug·.
gle, lowercase the term: "The Eura-,
pean nation face8 another civil war"
uses a style that should cause no con·j
' filet.

MYFROeGOT
A •e-PUJe.''

•'!L...r.. 1121 Each;

-

•

!TUESDAY

SNVICCS

2 bed-.. tu"' !!.000 btu luol ell IIOVO,
,- _ - 1 rt...,....,_
...... clop .., ao1 lank latand
$110. -

&amp;Ill.--·

::_111-c:..::at::.:.L:::.._,==-:-~­

Nlw HIIftn, nllll 2 badroom
furniiMd or untumletwcl ape,
clop 1111. --211111.

Nlw two 1:!1 droa:w aputiMnlll,
I d ldtchen, 7\h 81.,

*lUI~

By QARY LARSON

=~··~m..·~
Fumlohod Smoll
.-.....•• Ulllhloe, No
Poll. Coli - 7 P.M. I,..__

-·

BUY111ELL

UIID PIIOM 0 . .118
Fell. I, 1:00 Ul 1:00 PM. 12.00
por -nment. non ,.,..,_
doblt. Palril &amp;c-..

.. - -

Contplolty

Fum-

mobllo

_."'
4tl 0331.......
. No - ·

a ,,..

PI

~Mewmtr

11

sr ,..,..,.,

n' --.IM-IIZollll.. ..,

Anwaad: Alf lladwacdJ Split

1:1 r

' eom

One t J cum
....,..,_
SDihno. If aludan utllr., iiii
-urlty dapaelt, no Poll; 114-

-~L

45

tlkllr nM 111 machine 110.

End ol '12 - . . . . . ,..
~~g&amp;~lor )Nno. tloo. lluy 4, got
........ P - - 1U 8u11ornut,

................. _,.,
One

CouchEnd
wtth .z.motohlng
tt:ze.
- .._ """''"
Eaoy

.

F.umlalwd

Rooms

Po"*\DI • ....-·

Doll¥- . . Plcii-Up J.oild.

114-ZM-ml.

RIFF

Home

' I

7Um your clutter into ct~~h, .

---

-o~

"'; '

$.d it the 8Qlf tfiGy..•by'IJhgM,
no need to lsove your home.
Pl4ce )'OUr clqgjfied ed iodqy!
15 ae6rd, or le;,, 3 dqy«,
3 pgpera, 15.4Q paid in od11a,nce•
21--------------------. ________________
3 •. ___________________

AITBO·GBAPB

~-

4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,_______

BERNICE
Jl!EDE OSOL

5._ _ _ _ _ _...,...____.____
6 __________________
7.~
·

_ _ _ _ _ ___._________

B. _ _--'"'-~----------9;.__ _ _._,;_;....,......:..,._ _;:.....

10...__ _....;;_ _ _ __
JJ._ ____________
12..__ _....;;_____.:.....,_

___;

18.___ _ _ _ _ _ __._

82

........

Plumbing 1
Hilling

~~eoa·'
p;.l.loi.Cus
IWI*i

.

14·------------ . ... _....
15- ---:-:-::-:::-:r.:-:----

Te .,..

~IM····TtiOSt

G.~£.&amp;.ULA,

Transportal 1011

--..

Fill=;~
E:N·~·f·:.:;

wiTtt

PON'T IOTttt,

54 MIICIIIaneoul
MBrchandlll

ond

honll,1ml1o--n...,.

T'IIU

·-lon

1100,121A
Good
1178.00.
Colt ...•
twti:IOt~-=a

7]1c.
·.
,
, _oocllonel,
and tool 614-'JIIZ·
l14711allw7prn.

Contplolty

c;:,-; =.:..
::-=~=~

..

1177
Flbor
T-r. 8ZGO;
,
12.10. • • IJdJoucn-Suite $200. ,...._
441 1224.

With Black Door Exc •••nt eon..
dttlonll1t t• 1171 After 4 P.M.

-

•

'FRANK ANn ERNEST

10 Inch Whlll Topon Gao Stove

21

1 Ballet danc-

5 -Miry
6 - Ungue

~··town

er'a aklrt
2 And olhera
(2 Wdl.)

(airline)

7 Jlmmy(The
Greek)-

p.,.

/1(/il£

-

114 ... . . .

....... _ . . , I n " " -

'1111 FM SIDI

-

'

--

"""· No .....
· ,'
Ford Truck, $1~

'*
ol -, Poroh ••
IConeugo, ····441•11171.
.
Remington

•

.o;.-

.,
.-304~

Q-

~·f
.. -----

Rowing
lllochlnt
tao;
~JWr 1\f'llli
$10 E""!!i_ Colla lllochlne 120,

301-t754ll2.

A_l .. -.1......,

........... ,.,., p ......

- ...
_I

~
, uere-.

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4tfi20117'DR14 °

•AVOif' ALLAREASI-tiMowllh•.Y'"''I-a.
......,.1.0 . . . . . .

--__ '"..,._

1
l::r..'
:
"
;",.'
:
•
:'..u":.ng-O::
boloo,•r-.., 114-IIZ•7102.

YF'flnoe
.....
DIIMrt .
....,.r u.ct AJNtllt- u, cor-

.. Qlrt21
Cu"
-..,..
E a - Illite

a ..,__

Help Wanted ·

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

1

10,147ml1 ml,_. drtv• -ilde
tltrooge,o:IIIO,III Ml 21U.
.
Forlolo:Ooodlhtd ,Hey,SZ.OO
- : -110..
·
ct.molol, Ford, Dodgo,o pickup.
F•rm, 304-811-4308.

BUDGET PRICU AT JACKSON
ESTATE~" · 531 .......... Plko

..

11

Rt-. bed -

Ear cam lor - · TI""'Rack -Ford

. ~·
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BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

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Two 2 bedroom mobllo .- . .
Apple ... _ from
ODCJ).. Plant, f,IIO, rnonlll

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• VIcinity

lllotldliY

411.

1171 Dodao pick up, rv,. good;,

Yard Sale

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l-IE WAS RUNNING SO
FAST I DIDN'T SEE I-IlM ..

DOES HE KNOW
'!'OU'RE 01A5tN6 filM?

A POLAR BEAR
RUN BY' HERE ..

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nolllblo, 114-t..,_ or 114' lloytl4,

Polneroy,

4 Saint Frafto

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:PEANUTS

~t. Home For
Rent, AI Eftrll-., No S..ncloy

2 I di'OOJII

Apanment
· torRent

3 For le• IIIII

DOWN

Pass

There are certain plays a defen~lerl
make that appear crazy. However, they work because the declarer,
who cannot see all the cards, will nev·
er believe the defender would be
irrational.
·
One species was immortalized
Frederick Turner In his article
Grosvenor Gambit' in the June 1973
issue of The Bridge World magazine.
Far ezample, suppose the declarer is
in seven spades. You hold a pleasing
Q·J·x of spades. Dummy, on your left,
bas the K·lO·x of spades. Declarer
wins trick one and plays a low trump.
You table your low trump; you don't
split your honors. Will declarer finesse
dummy's 10? Of COU!'!Ie not. After·
.ward, though, be will spend several
deals recovering from the shock. How
couid you give bim a chance to land an
'impossible' grand slam?
Another possibllity is in today's
deal. South opened with a questionable ·
strong, artificial and forcing two
'I:Jubs. North made a queitionable positive response of two no-trump. Then,
when North could raise only to four
spades and did not cue-bid an ace en
route, South should bave passed.
West led off with his two top dia. moods, South ruffing the second. South
took the nell three tricks with the
1 -;r.:;,:· ace; ·beart king and beart ace.·
11 '
be . ruffed the heart eight with
dummy's spade nine. East &lt;liscarded a
club.
·
Convinced that West bad the spade
queen, declarer led the trump five to
his king. He couldn't believe his eyes
when West discarded a heart .
Tbe normal result hed been ob-

i,

- . lncl- ill!rtlng. .. _

IIIZI Ilk lar · -·

Pass
Pass

58 Pile

The mirrors
were dusty

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1114-4*'11142,
12 .-he FREE ' LOT RENT!
2bdrm., only $1112.17 por

Dr~

Eut

2NT

18 In the precedIng month
20 Faught'wllh
aworda
22 Comedian.
Caeur
23 Cloih
me11ure
24 Heughty
27' Unlack again
31 Aviation
1gcy.

By Phillip Alder

o
- ond 1upp1y .._.... 64
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I VIcinity

Norlb

p.,.
Pass
p.,.
Pass

'pass

agency

.......,

42 Loan lhartl
45 SF writer
lllac49 Care lor
50 A bone
52 TalTY
53 Wild aheep
54 Night bird
55 Algonquian
Indian
56 Blood
pigment
57 Sorrow ·

Opening leaQ: t .K

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Gallipolis

ME !I

lloqulrod. No Polo.

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7

WHO IN
THUNDER
ARE YOU
FIXIN' TO

SURPIISI

PAW!!

FrM mlud puppiM, 114-'JIIZ· Dot lilu 1DWE T o - All &amp;-

4NT
6•

West

4t
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15 RUIIIIn niWI

16 Jazz player
Kid-·
17 Actor Stln .

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8RKOUnl
12 SouthWIIt·
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13 Bemtteln, lor

14 Llyor of eye.

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32 INnlth gold
33 Alr lngrtdMnt
37 Northem
Ireland
40 Type of tubtr
41 Unit of
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In the year....,. you ahauld be - • o
- lmOIIISdgtl you've 7IGIIIhd from
PM! WI 5 Ill IRS Thllooutd-you
well • you- oonlflllllllalor 1 paanlon
' Iny--!'II Of .,ds awar•
AQUN:::. ..... • ...
all alar aan
I
not
110 1 11 II PJ. I you 1M · · - • Willa
ocJdl, IIIII IIIIUid IIIII you IntO a 1111111
- O f SRI J lilt· AQuartun,INIII raur·
. . 10 • 1111$ d,, .... Stnd for Aqi!M111' Allr04nph JlliillllOIIOM for ltla year

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ahead by mailing S1.25 pluaa long, eel!addreeaad, slamped copy to AttroGraph, c/o thla - - · P.O. Box
91~26. Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be
eure to slate Y®f zodiac llgn.
PIICEI (Fell. 10 ...rcll 10) Do no111tempt to manege a crtllcal tlltuatlon lor
anotller lodey thai you are not ·
equipped to handle. There 11 a ahance
you might make a coatly m111ake lor
whlcll you will be held eccountable.
- S (llaniiii1·Aprld 11)11 you areln
a llltuatlon ladly where you hive authOrlty over athera, alrlve to be griCioua
lnlleed ot dom-..g. II you 111..
puahlng, aubordl- w1U PUIII back.
TAURI,IS IApltl ao '! J 181 People
you'H be~ with lodly wlll-t
you II you II'Y to menlpUiate them lludth
ftanery or lnilncertty. Your mou- w1U

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Everyane·lunlllied 10 his or her opinion loday, evan

those who lolally dl11gree wllh you.
Don'l take It as a personal affront II they
are nolln accord with your vltlwL
YIIIGO (Aug. D-dl..,t. 22) There Is a
paaalblllty lodey .you m!Qht have a mlsunderstanding wllh a claae friend. II
won't be much to begin with, but II II
lan 't reaolved quickly, It could be blown
out or proportion.
L1IIIA (dl..,t. za..oot. 23) G-aalty Is
one of your nobler traits, but be careful
todly leal you corry II to extremae. You
m!Qhl give away eomethlng that you'll
.-dllhlt'.
IOOIIPIO (OcL M Nn. II) You are 1
rather . .IItie llld Cftlltlve
todey your OUIIOII'IIfY Of
might nat be up to lte U..
.
be ....., piiOI!ved.
I
' E'lllllOM ~ be - o f 11111
you. .
I ?Ell (lllrl1...,_. 181 In otdtr to ' IAGITT~ INotr. a Dw 11) Be :
derive lnlllnt ~bllon today, you IXtrwmely ~ Of how you 1l1lftdual '
~ be liiCIInllll to mlka della lhlt dO )IOU!MIIIn IOOllllltuatlono todey.lfyou ,
not- your bei1Mtll1111ln hlong make 1 1awt pu, you~t
make h
run. Thll COII1d be 1n111 wltllheryou . . lltultlon worM by
n.
!
~-lng ot 1181Wr'•IO·
CA IUCOM (DIL II ,_
~
c.ICAIICIIIIIII:Illl (oltM 1W11r tl) TOlley, ,though your lntentlonl will be good tohaPinll olhall wll Clo lltlngl for you thll dey, U.. II a 1111*- you might dO
you lfiouJd be doing for ,out~~~! COII1d ·thlnga In a mllltiW that will Oflencl Olh11111 10 dlllppOint-•. Thl only per- •• lnttelld olllrOUI!ng thelr gralnus.
1011 you CM count on II youl'llll.

,,

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but

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
c.brlty~cryptogrwnl .......... frtll'n~ ~ .............. -lnd~.
~ liltt« 11'1 the~ Mandt for

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "When a woman behives like a man , why c:an't .. :1
she behave like a nice man?" - Dame Edith Evans.
'•"
'\114

TUT DAILY
PUULII

I

EQl s u B

I

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SJEUS

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I

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new

KR Y EJ
1---,l,.--...,l--.:r:--l.---4

ways arnuing
us to hear.
'IMiard the nagging wile
1-..d.--L..--I--1..--' ~
• her henpecked husband:
r-- --P-P_A_R_E_..,I you a man or mouse? Come
0
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.

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8

Complo

e lho

chtKklo

quoltd

by filling in the miSii~ words

you doveloa !rom

slop No.

3 below.

...'.
.....•1.
.....
c. I

....

P~INI NUM8ERED LETTERS IN

I HE SE SQU,O.RES

"•

.
· SCI.M1 LITS ANSWERS

-.
, _,

/Edging - Youth - Ouest - Impend - STUPID
The class laughed at the silly answer the student had
given. The Professor commented lhat what you don't
know won't hurt you bul nsure can make you ·look

~TUPID.

. . . ..

Cl 1!!3 TYDeT!fho

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LP.

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od

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'tUeSday, FebruarY 2, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.'Sniper' has-success ill: its crosshairs Names in
·Snl
Ra:iR . .
•••, lll (out offtv~)

·

Review

·

Columbian druglo~d w~o ~eir
intelligence reportS 11 P.lanninB .a
coup fOI' l'lnlma'• elecllOil day m
order to place his own man in
o~.
' Beckett and Miller get alonjl
about as well as gasoline llllll .a lit
matCh.
..
Beckett is none too l!appy with
being stuck in .a life-lbrealeniJis sit·
uation with a wet-behind-the-em
Yuppie wbo has never killed a man
111111 Miller finds himselfrd~g on
a lifeloog miliWy man who is so
used 10 operating alone or with his
partner, he.can't take ~ers from
someone with no expenence.
Oii .the outside, Beckett is the
characrcristic nail-chewing leadler·
neck. A cinematic peek 'ipto .his
psyche, however, reveals he 1s a
man with a conscious, a 111111 wbo
shares his mind with the f11ce of
eveey man he has evez ki11cd - all
75 of them.

the newS

NEW YORK (AP) ~e::
Rea. who plays an Irish
•
Army gunman in the moVIC. "The
PINSON
Crying Game," had more than a
passing ~wledge of tbe group:
111111:)
He grew up mBelfast, 111111 bis wile
was once an IRA member.
Every now and then, a rose
Dolours Price served eight years
blooms fiom amidst a pile of 10 worry about overdosin~ on too
in
prison
for her part in car bombgarbage.
' many rue fights and explOSions.
. ings 20 years ago, She and Rea
SniP..tr, starring Tom Berenger butThewharealt
goesstmyonisin~e~::!O::t
were married in 1983.
.
arid Billy Zane is such a rose.
Rea
named
best
actor
of .
In a pile .of action films with two men as tlley struggle through
Society
of
1992
by
the
National
soond-alike tides and steroid boys the mission.
,-said
he
used
that
Film
Critics
pumping tons of ammunition into
.Tbom!IS Beckett (Bcrcqer) is a
bacUround in plaY!nJ the role.
nameless baddies, Sniper stands Marine sniper making his living
"f'in not an actiVISt and I don't
out !IS Plaloon did a few years ago cutting down political figtllll!l wbo
'
bdieve
in violence," Rea, SO,·said
during the rash of Vietnam flicks.
get in the way of the United State's
in the latest issue of ~te. "What
With most shoo\ 'em up action- South American plans.
1
bring is an understanding of bow
Wilen bis spoiler is ld1led during
adventure films, the only brains
decent,
ordinary people got
displayed are the ones wbich bit the a helicopter extn1Cti011 following a
involved
and
bow thai spiraled into
wall after someone gets shot successful mission, Beckett is
something
out
of coa~ll'¥e tried
through the head.
teamed up with a civilian sharpto
express
my
expenences !IS an
Sniper , however, is a psycho- shooter 1imt the National Security
Irish
person
rather
than ·just be an·
logical tbriller with some thought Cowx:il wbo has zero experieoce in
Kevla
Plluoa
is
a
stair
writer
empty
vessel
as
an
actor."
·
behind iL Altl)ough it does not lack tile jun$le.
·
for
Ohio
Valley
PubiiUia&amp;.
Thctr mission is to take out a
· for action, the viewer does not have
NAVARRO BEACH, Calif.
(AP) - Grateful pcad drua!'mer
Bill Kreutzmann IS protesung a
state plan to give the bopt to a
of homeless beach dwellers.
" am going to chain myself 10
sometbin~ and I'm willing 10 gel·
arrested,' said [\reutzmann, who
more like a creeping diSease than walks buckied, and authoriiies has lived on the Mendocino coast
By LARRY GERBER
the usual quick-and-dirty Califor- ordered people out of 46 expensive 20 years. "l find it incOmprehensiAssociated Press Writer
ble and morally bankrupt 11&gt; 1rea1 ,
ANAHEIM, Calif. - If it
flash flood. wildfire but unsafe homes.
human
beings like this."
"Even
if
we
are
allowed
10
go
·would do any sood, Gerald M.
The
Parks and Recreation
Two
yoreeks
of
near-record
rain
back
into
our
homes,
no
bank
is
. Steiner would )l'Obably post a :'For
Departmeni
plans 10 evict by tbe
in
January
undeonined
Steiner's
·going
to
give
a
mortgage
to
any
Sale" sign on his $1.2 million
' SWEET HEARTS • Candy packer Linda MacKenzie fills
end
of
the
month
about 20 adults
Anaheim
Hills
neighborhood,
send·
prospective
buyers.
And
you
know
home. Instead, he plastered his
·"Valeatlne hearti with chocolates at the Phillips Candy House Ia
and
nine
children
who
have lived in
ing
it
slipping
l
inch
downhill
we're
not
going
back,"
Steiner
garage door with protests and every day.
· 'Bostoa last week· whDe l?reparing for the Valentine's Day rusb.
·
·
•
·
trailers
and
makeshift
shelters on
said.
moved out
Valentine's Day is tbe h1ggest chocolate buying day of the year.
the
beach
for
18
months.
.
Foundalioas
and
swimming
Perc
bed
oil
high
rolling
hills
The neighbors left, too, victims
. (APphoto)
few
weeks
ago,
Kreutzmann
A
pools
cucked,
streets
aild
side2S-acre
cast of Disneyland, the
of a slow-motion landslide that's
,
.'
neighborhood offered panoramic started bringing the beach dVieUers
clothing, food, sleeping bags and
views and wide streets.
other supplies.
"They won my heart right
While some glass will be Recycle Day.
.
away," he said.
.
The 46-year-old musician wants
accepted at the Meigs Coun(y
Other ,items 10 be accepted that
Recycle Day on Feb. 20 at Krogers, ·. day are aluminum, steel and tin hOS*S
the state to give the people three
mirrors, window or windshield cans, soft drink plastic con~. ·
~'
m011ths to fiild somewhere else to
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Some
"The tapes are $25 to $40 at glass, ceramic or laboraiOry, crys- plastic jugs, newspapers, and COITU·
A soup supper preceded the liye.
graduates this year will be able to most schools," Muckenthaler said. tal, oven ware, milk glass or drink· ~ated cardbo8rd. Newspapers with recent meeting of the Prec:eptot
relive their high school days by ''The JWO can bC: combined for a ing glasses will not be accepted.
mserts remCJYed should be bundled, Beta Beta Chapter, Bela S,.a Phi
LOS ANGELES (AP) . slipping videotapes iniOtheir play- better price."
Glass bC:verage and food con- tin cans should have the top and Sorority, held at the h' e of "Blossom" ct&gt;-star Joey Lawrence ,
ers instesd of dusting off the old
Miamisburg, West Carrollton tainers should. be Separated by bottom removed and flattened, and EleanorThom!IB.
~ets a chance·IO sing on an upcom ~
yearbook.
· arid Trotwood-Madison high color, clear. green or brown, but plastic bottles should be sortedThe social commiuee 1urved mg episode .of the NBC comedy,
. Kettering Fairmont is one bigh schools also are producing video not crushed, according to Kenny one group.being liter bottles, and broccoli soup in homemadl!' hooey but that!s nothing new for the teen·
school ·preparing ''video year- yearbooks.
·
Wiggins, dirccror of Meigs County the other milk or water jugs.
wheat bread bowls •.Dessert was ager. . .
.
books."
Mark Herron, yearbook adviser Litter Conttol which is sponsoring
sweet.chocolate brownies with
Lawrence, 16, made his TV
··
mint ice cream and hot fudge.
"These students are·an MTV for Centerville High School, has
singing debut at age 5. on "The
generation;" said John Mucken- been talking with Muckenthaler
0
Joan Corder presided at the Toni btShow."
·
thaler, a 1976 Fairmont graduate and a North Carolina company
meeting which in. ritualistic form.
"~othing My Love Can't P"a,"
who is helpin'- produce the year• about starting a video yearbook
T)le 1993 organizational meet- and several readings on the New Twelve membti's responded 10 roU a music video based on Lawrence's
book. ''They like the gmpbics and nextlear.
ing of the Willing Workers of SL Year weze presented.
call: Eleanor Thomas, Ann Rupe, debut album, will have its premiere
special effects we do. And we try
" see it as a neat way to recruit Paul United Methodist Church of
AttendinB were Beulah Zum- Jane Walton, Lillian Moore, Donna on the Feb. 15 episode of "Bios·
to be very current by buying •the kids for journalism class," Herron Tuppers Plains was held recendy at bach, Mae Vlileyard, Doris Koenig, Jones, Velma Rue, Norma Custer, som."
rights to music - Ganh Brooks, said. "Video is riow part of the the church.
Evelyn Spencer, Edna Harmon, Maida Mora, Betty Ohlinger,
Marky Mark and the Funky Bonch, whole jo.umalism field. Some of
Terri Soulsby, vice-president, Mildred Caldwell, Rev. Sharon Clarice Krautter and Charlotte
Boyz U Men, Bryan Adams."
the companies offer plans and cur- conducted the meeting that opened Hausman, Patricia Hall, Mildrell Elberfeld.
''
Muckepthaler, owner-operator pculum guides I can teach from."
with a reading from the third chap- Brooks and Tc:ni·Soulsby.
the next meeting will be at tile
of.a frapcbise for International
Video yearbooks are intended to ter of Ecclesiastes on the theme
Wilma Haught, Florida, pur- home of Donna Jones for the
Video Yearbooks, . works with supplement print yearbooks.
"Time."
chased the Dresden Plate quilt from Valentine pany a1 6 p.m. Membms
video swdents at the schooiiO plan ,. One producer,Jim McCarthy of
Mildred Brooks and Patricia the workers. The BosiOn Commons · are 10 bring scraps of material to
and produce slice-of-school-life National Video Yearbooks. said Hall gave reports.
is now being quilted and will be up make valentines.
segments held togethe.r with brief about one-third of the srudents who
Plans were made to work on fot sale.
·• :,
· -llloio·o.i'.._-.;_____•-.......'f
narration and recorded pop music.
bur books also buy tapes. His fran. quilts and comforters lind a bake
A "missing you" card was ·.
The Fairmont video is being ch1sees signed up 500 schools in sale in A -1•
signed for Hazel BarnhilL
·
·
sold at $34.95. The school's print 1991.
Overf:i sick calls were reported
The next meeting will be held . ·'
yearbook is $40.
.
Feb. 9 fOI' an all day meeting.
TriStar ~ures
(N_ow playmg at IM Spri.118 Valley
C::•lltma 7. CMI:t local liStings for

. Byltli:VIN

Sliding homes: Disaster strikes
posh neighborhood,.inch by inch

grouf

=f

.

. "Dedicated to enriching and
improving the life of Senior Citizens
"in Mason, Galtia and Meigs counties."

:S

School yearbooks
Recycle Day slated Feb. 20
.deo age
.
nto
Vl
mOve 1. '
.
.

Eleanor Thomas .
meetz'ng

Th·e difference ·between Medicar~ and' Medicaid ·
The 'iinswer i$ yes ... and
although there also are similari·
ties between the two program$,
many people use the two wolds
·
lead
You've beard of Medicare. '~':~~ly 111111 thiS can
And you''!'e JI!'Od.IsbA!&gt;~~ heardm:e
Both Medicare and Medicaid
. tmn, Medicsu
u..,re a
er- are ·--"'--t-sponsored health
ence?
gova:m""" _. . . .
·
·
·
by Carollrwia-Carter
SodaLSecurity mtlllllger
la"GaU!poUs, Ohio

•
Willing Wor kers h /d meetzng

Sellers among Who's Who

Kyla Renea Sellers h;~s been
featured in this year's 26th anniversary edition of Who's Who Among
American High School Students.

KYLA SELLERS

high school students are named 10
Who's Who.
A senior at Meigs High School,
she is enrolled in college prep
classes, i~ captain of the varsity
cheerleading squad, student coun- ·cil, yearbook staff, French Club, ·
Fro~~ch Honor Society, hand, track,
cross country, gymnastics. ati
office assistant and Buckeye Gtrls

Sr. on his S4th birthday was held
Friday a1 the Rudand Freewill Baptist Church social room. ·
Attending wo-e Bud and Trudie
Stewart, Rollie and Shirley Stewart
and Suzanne, Roger and Linda
Stewart and Rusty and Renee Bob
and Dorothy Stewart, Corby and
J
Cl .. K · h
enny
ee .. , Cit and Do11
Woods, Kelly and Marlene Stewart, Steve and Kellie Stewart, Pete
Sta~~~:·in community Chris- and Dianne Hendricks, Shelia and
tian projects such as H.U.G.S. and John McKinney, Paul and Arlene
T.I., Fellowship of Christian Stu- Taylor, Mack and Estelle Ralph,
Bea and Lee Wood, Tom and Lisa
dents and attends Faith Tabemac Ie Woods, and Missy and Katt'e, Bub
ChUith of Balley Run t'n Pomeroy. and Icyle Herdman, Randy and
where she is a member of the cholf G · H 11
C
and helps with church youth
enla yse and. ody, Robbie
and Phyllis Stewart, Richard atld
1!"'5~!· was Sweetheart Queen her Kim Davis, Eddie and Shirley
d
d Carutben, Bob and Sandy McMiljunior year: Winter Won er1an
lan, Doris and Harold Ramsburg,
Queen &lt;:an&lt;!ldate and h?"'ecommg Elaine Burton, Sherrie Ramsburg,
queen candidate her seruor year.
. Tony a and Daniel, Brenda Carr,
She plans t~ at.tend .Marshal Ron and Joanie CoUins and Shane,
Umv~1 ty 10 maJor m radiology.
Debbie Gilkey and KeUie, Delilah
She I~ the daughter of Pam Sell- Mulford, Edna Stewart, Betty
ers, Middleport, and the late Williams Joyce Goode Dora
William Sellers.
Hysell and'Nancy Rose.
'

rec!n7Y
~1:~ 1.'!j,.~ ~U,~i
.
th Opera" .
IU
the

Program underway
A new Sunday school program
entided "Hands On" has been start·
ed th Hill ·de B · Ch h
at c
St
llpiiSt
urc ·
Each month will feature a new
topic. In January it w!IB Bible study
month •.in February it will be love,.
in March, missiOTIS work. A feature
of -the class work wiU be to learn
the books of the Bible. The church
is located on State Route 143 just
off Route 7, Pomeroy. The rvblic
is invite4 10 attend services Y the
Rev. James R. Acree. pasror.

Receives award .

Valorie Clonch, daughter of Mr.
and Mri. Ron Clonch, l;'omeroy,
receiv~ ,a certificate .and candy m
recognttion of wearmg the most
Christian badges at the same time
during a recent contest at the Hillside Baptist Chun:h. The certif~
Community Calendar items . Dinner at 7 p.m., meeting at8 p.m. sent Everyone welcome.
was presented at an awards proappear two clays before u event
gram for l992acbievemints during
TUPPERS PLAINS • The .the New Year's Eve celebration.
CHESTER • The Pomeroy
and tbe day of tbat eveat. Items
Orange
Township Trustees
Order
of
the
Eastern
Star
No.
186
The Rev. James·A. Acree made the
must be received weD ill advance
meet
Wednesday
at 7 p.m. at the presentatiQIIs..
will
meet
Tuesday
at
7:30
p.m.
at
to assure publication ia tbe cal·
the Chester M!ISonic Temple. Qffi. home of the clerk. Patty Calaway.
e,aclar.
. cers are to wear street length dress·
es.
TUESDAY
THURSDAY
STIVERSVILLE • Revival at
Southern Junior Hilh Booltcn'
MIDDLEPORT
• Meigs Junior regular
ROCK
SPRINGS
•
Salisbury
tl\e Stiversville Word of Faith
meeting usually held the
Church will be through Sunday at Townsbip Trustees will meet Tues- High•Academic Boostcn wiU meet flfst Tuesday of every month has
7:30 p.m. nightly with Pastor· day at 7 p.m. at the rownship hall at Thursday at 7 p.m. in tbe schQOI · been canceled for Februlry due 11&gt;
·
cafeteria. Evc:rYone welcome.
David Dailey. There will be special Rock Springs.
hasketballiOUm&amp;IIICDIS.
sjnging. Public invited. _
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
WEDNESDAY
•
Group
of AA will meet Thunday at
MIDDLEPORT
•
Middleport
, REEDSVILLE • Eastan Athlet·
p:m.
at Sacred Heart datholic
7
Literary
Club
will
meet
Wednesday
ic Bo6ste11 will meet Tuesday at 7
Revival at Old Betbol Freewill
Church,
Call 992-5763 for infor- Baptist
at
1:30
p.m.
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
p.m. at the high school cafeteria.
Church will be Monday
Chester Erwin. Mrs. Ronald mation. ·
through Feb. 13 It 7 p.m. n!J~y
MIDDLEPORT • Middleport Reynold.l will revieW "Rituals of
with Rev. Marvia Marldn. Ralph
RACINE • The Racine Ameri- Burcher,
Lodge No. 363 F&amp;:AM will meet Dinner" by Margaret Visser. Roll
JIIIIOf, invilel tbe public.
Tuesday a1 7:30 pm. A cornbread call will be to teU of a memorable can Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post ·
and bean dinner will follow the dining experiepce.
home.
meeting. All members asked to
Pomeroy
PTO
POMEROY
•
aJtclld.
There Wtu be I dlnce It the Rillwill meet Wedneaday at 7 p.m.
POMEROY • Meigs PERI will land Americ:m tAP- Hall 011 s.t. POMEROY • American Legion Several classes will present the meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at the urday from 8 Jl.IJ!. to miclnl&amp;bt.
Drew Webster Post No. 39 will program. A representative selling senior citizena center m Pomeroy. Music will be by Pare Coontry
sch®l supplies will also be pre- All members IDled 10 aaend.
m~etJ'.uesday at the post home.
Band. Public Invited.

;

Representatives from the
offiCC·of the Galiia County Audiror will be at the Gallia County
SeniOI'· Citizens Center, .Tuesday,
February 9, from 10 • 12 a.m. 10
help seniors fill 011t.theiJ: l{omestead Exempiion appllcMions 1111!1
8118W« any. questions. You will
need to mate an appointment -by
ca!tins tbe I &amp;: R office a1 446 •
7000. Yon must ~Jour tall
.
statement 111111 your
security
number with you at the time of
your appoinlmenL
The Homestead Exemption
Act is a tall reduction program
devised specifically for those per-

Reviews performance

e
m 01ICIIgO, ., at
Chicllgo Dinner Thealrc.
She is the daughter of Bill and
Deidra Tyree Hysell, fonnerly of
POmeroy. She is tile granddaughter
of Jo Tyree, Pomeroy.
She enjoys Stephen King novels
and country western music.

Community calendar

tt
State Aula's alreadY
low premiOOIS can be
rediiCIId even more J:IY
insuring bolh your car
'and home with the S"te
AUto Companies.

.

can be.

...
..

Doctor: 'How old ant you?•
Padant 'Now, or when I flrlt antared
the wallklg room?'"
'
•••

'

No.I! wu the first bualnenperson.

,,

~Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

He ftoatad the lirst joint atock oompany, and forced aU hla compedtors
intD liqo......,,

•••
Bouto employee: ,.,. got an opom
mind. So 11llet you decide whether

or not I'm righl

·

"11.8.V.P. meono everyday Jow

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

prl- on evlfYihlng In the 110,.
When you .,.,.,. hevl to look lor
Hll beoauoe of R.S.V.P.

R.S.V.P. 11111na
Evaryday Low Prices.
S..uaat

State Auto .

·tn•.,•nceC.,..nf••

;

Rutllnd, Oh. '·
742-2211

will

Meeting canceled

Revival planned

Dance scheduled

t

I

U~

FAS'[ FUNDS

for nonnaBy 2-4 day.
rer1md1 or
Electronic F'iliq for
about 3 weeki refaDdl. ·

homestead shall IIIClude land surrounding the home not .e~ing
one ~re. An OWDC( bvmg .tn a .
mobtle home can npive bomo-.
stead exemption on Ul! to one
acre of land 111111 the mobile llor!Je
regardless of whether tbe mobile
home is taxed as real estste or
personal property. Oaly one
home in ~ state '!"'~'~ by ~e
person making applicatioo or bis
or he( spouse is entitled to the
exemption. An owner means a
person whose name is on the
deed 10 tbe home, a buyer under a
land contract, a life eslale tenant.
or a mortg8i0r.
THREE QUALIFICATIONS
FOR HOMESTEAD EXEMP·

Security disability benefits fo~
two ~
_
.
. Sortie people with permanent
kidney disease also q_ualify for
Medicare. People gewng Social
Security are automatically
enroUed in Medicare when they
tum 6' or 24 months after they
started getting disabililf benefits.
Those 1101 already gewng Social
Security benefits need 10 contact
the Social Security office before
their 6Sth birth4&amp;Y to sign up for
MecilciR. .
·
Medicaid is a health care prograRI. that's tied into a person's
economiC circumstanceS. Generally; you qualify. for Medicaid if
you have a tow 1ncome 111111 few

noN
·
(I) The owner must be at ~t

.

Rutland Furniture
Rt.124

::Otsic~=~~~=:;

Income (SSI) usually qualify for
Medicaid. Medicaid is financed
through general tax revenues _
not through Socw Security taxes.
sThoo uldappclooytactfor :eeg~~i:iparyo~
.ment of Human Services, 3rd
Avenue. Gallipolis, Ohin.

Medicare coofuse Part B of that
prosnun with Medicaid coverage.
For example. a woman visiting .
our office recently told me she
had "Medicare Purl A and Medi·
caid Part B."
I knew she really meant she
had both Parts A and B of Medi·
care but if sbC ·were to tell the
sam~ thing to a doctor's biDing
clerk it could lead to Jroblcms.
O~e way to tell which,pro·
gram you have is by the identifi·
cati011 card you were issued. The
Medicare card is white with a red
and'blue stripe running across the
top. Here in Ohio. the Medi~d
card is a beige envelope siZed
card.

It may be the middle of winter, who buy goods, !ease ~rsonal 6S yrs. old sometime during the
but spring will be here before we property or obtatn sev1ces are year in which they first file, or be
know iL And with it comes sales protected ~nder the. ~nsumer permanendy and totally disabled.
pitches from unscrupulous per- S~ Pracuce Act. Mikita further · (2) The owner must bave a ·
. sons soliciting home repair and advtses· never pay t~e entire total income of not more than
seUing household goods that will amount of a homo-~ contract $16;500 a year. "Total i!'comc~
sound too good 10 be true. They up ~ntiJ!d always get tile .ser- means tbe adjusted puss IIICOIIIC,
are just that In ever incre~~Bing vtce m wn~ng. !tfanY p~lems under the lnttrnal Revenue Code,
numbers, person's over 60 are can be avOided if precauttonary of tile owner and his spouse for
finding themselves tbe targets of me!ISUreS are taken.
the year preceding the year of
consumer fraud. Whether it is . If you are 60 .Years. of age or apphcatiOII. 'This includes comhome solicitation, ear repairs, or older 111111 an Ohio res~ you pensation, rent, interest. fees 111111
in-srore sales, senior citizens are can contact the Legal Hotline for most other types of tiltal income.
victims of unfair false, deceptive Older OhiOins by dialing a roll- All retirement benefits are jncludpractices.
'
.
free numbC:r, l-~00-488-607~, ed in total income even though ·
"Seniors have the right 10 be and request a free pmpblet enti- thel may 1101 be lllllable.
·
dealt with fairly" says William tied "Consumer, ana Debtor
(3) The owner must own 111111
Mikita, Manlllln&amp; Attorney of Rights". 'TI!o pamphlet ta:Dvides occupy the home as the principle
PRO SeJaioniAARP's Lmi Hot- ·consumer tips on such lhinP. as place of residence as of January I
TUI)' Noble, ~il Blake, Joy r.-u, Xylpu S.lldes •
line, "And I empbulzc tlie WOld rights with respect to rel!a1rs, of the year applied. "Principle
RIGHT'.Mildllsaystbatusually , wbat to do when purcbutng a placeofresidenee"means.where ud Tliebaa 1toa11 eQIJ tb aftena- ~ at the MMoa
ca tile aetidles of
the only tbiq the senior citizen new car, the lhree-day right, to a person resides for themajor Sea1or Citllu ee.ur. llcir .we Wonaa
bas dono wrong is 11&gt; bttve IIUIIed cancel ,and b_ow. to deal. w1tb
the ~ Ceater caJI '7'73-5152.
.
' . .
.
som~on~.· ~~ peiJODI in Ohio , threiiOIIlng ICtion from crediton. .
(Continued on Paae-2~ ...

'

.R.ROGAN - ~

•./!J

The only thing herder thin achill'ling
perfecllon li'tolelallng It In o4hell.
Halo: how St. Patar anawers the

how much your savings

sona sixty-five yem of lge-and
older or someone whO is physical!Y 01' mC!'JallY dilabl~. Appllcauon 10 this pOJifam will reduce
tbe taxable value (which is 3S'll&gt; .
of the total assessed value) of
your property anywhere from
maKi!DWD of 75,., or $5,000 .
(whichever is the lesser) 10 a minimum of 2S 'll&gt; or $1.000, depending on the applicants yearly
income.
"Homestead" means a
dweUing 01' single unit in a multipie-unit dwelling or condomini-·
urn, owaed and occupied as a
home by an .individual. The

.
·
I
IS.eni_ors and. consume_r fraud

phone at lhe Pearly Galli

Let us ten you just

Medicare without being on Social
Security). Most people ~w it
by the terms Part A and Part. B,
wbich refer to what are commonly called the hospital (A) and
. doctor's (B) partS of Medicare.
Part A i;s paid f~ by a portion of .
the_ Social ~ecunty ~yo~ pay
while woddng. Part B 15 _(181d for
by the monthly prem1ums of

AtJditor's
office
to·do.
Homestead
·exemptions
=:!'~~~~~o!~~: M:d~:r~~·~Jfl~C:.~
·'
.
.
:
,
·if you've been getting Social somCtimes, pciopte who have only

Birthday observed

A party honoring Ross Stewart

both help !'!1.
medical bills. But there aren t
many other similarities after that
and the e~gibility rules for each
are very differenL
.
Medicare is .the health insurance program that's tied inro the
Social s.ec.nrity . program
(although 11 18 poSSible to' get
.
•

care programs and

•••
•
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•'
•••
'•

•••
•

•'

I :

•'

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•

:

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