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Page 1~The

...

'

Ohio Lottery

Sentinel

People in
the news

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
The &gt; mn "10g did see his shad·
ow yesterday and yo u know, of
• course, what lhll. means-six more
weeks of winter.
· However, for our locality this
winter has been as about as ~ as
it Jets -ve~y "tol e~abl e . We
enJOyed lrv10g Berltn' s "Whtte
Christmas" all eight thou:,and times
before the only snow·came right on
cue for Christmas Day.,-and lhen,
thankfully, went merrily on its
way. So if the groundhog promises
that the next six weeks won 't be
.any worse, we' ll accept his predic·
tion without abuse.
. We' re not only Jiving longer,
but it seems to me we're looking
better.
. I ran into Pomeroy's TreU and
·Edna Schoenleb downtown the
:other day . They were so well
groomed-and as always, person.able. It's hard to believe thatlhey
are octogenarians . . And what are
they into? ·Well, they're looking
forward to redecorating their home
ibis spring.
'
And speaking of long-living,
Mrs. Mila Ramsey of lhe Racine
area will be observing her tOOth
birlhday on Monday, Feb: 8.
Mrs. Ramsey has been a resident of the Sldlled Nursing Facility
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
since July 14, 1989. She has two
daughters, Helen Burkhan of Yald·
ma, Wash., and Wilma Schultz of
Racine; six grandchildren ; eight
.great-grandchildren and four great·gi'eat-grandchildren. She was born
"a¢ raised in Mt Vernon, Ill., one
of a family of 13 children. She has
one sister still living.
Speaking of se'!iors, Jackie

Baseball
suspends

Hildebrand kept a tally of pneuliiOnia shots give !&gt;y the Meigs County . PALM BEACH, Fla,.(AP)Health Department to elder resi- · Police j"c:stloned Anthony
dents recently . A total of ISO Kennedy hrivet, a Kennedy-clan
senior citizens received the shots member hose silltcl is TV jourincluding 27 to those ~; 39. to ruilist Maria·Shriver, after a report
those 65-69; 36 to residents 70-74; his J~ plowed bushes 11 Donlld
26 to those from 75 lhrough 79; 11 . Trump s palatial estate, Mar-a.
to those 80 lhrough 84; 10" to lhose I.,ago.
Police gave Shrivu, 27, a road85 through 89, and one: ninetY·
si!le sobriety .test and be was
year-old received lhe vaccme.
allowed to leave urer lhe results
were negative. Palm Beach police
It's interesting. Most of us spokeswoman Janet Kinsella said
would be quick to repay a dollar Tuesday lhe depanment considered
borrowed from a friend or a garden lhe matta' closed.
tool from a neighbor. But boOks ·· Jlarly Sunday, Mar-a-Lago
fall into another category. ' Once ~ suoerintendent Jim Griffin
we borrow lhem, they just seem to .. iritd police he saw a J~ Olerokee
become our personal propeny-'- leave Trump's estate after a party,
perhaps, ~e jus.t conclude they're driving "through the bushes all
not wonh rewmmg.
around lhe poperty recklessly."
At any rate, Beuy Frazier of 728
Police atlhe party l'ldioed paaol
Boswonh St., Middlepon, had a officers, who . round the Jeep
· copy of "The Bible Book". She stopped some distance away, wilh
used it frequently but loaned it and Shriver reportedly standing outside
has forgouen to whom. If y,ou run checldng damage.
·
,
across Beuy 's bOok among your
An assistant 11 Shriver's Miami
belongings sbe' d be ever so gra~e- office said Tuesday he was out of
ful for its return.
town and would be Wllvailable fer
comment
Trump spokeswoman Norma
You might want to remember Foerderer said she asked Trump
Howard Johnson, Jr., ami his Moth· about the incident, but he had no
er, Pauline Johnson. Howard is comment
·seriously ill and is being cared for
Shriver's .falher, Sargent Shrivby his Mother. They formerly er, was a vice .J!teSidential .candilived in the Racine community. dlle in 1972 Wllh George.McGov·
Aunts of Howard are Laura: Circle ern and the fint director of the
and Lizzie Woods of Racine. Mail Peace Caps;
.
will reach Howard and his Molher
His mother is Eunice Kennedy
at 1212 E. Alan St., Carrollton, Shriver, sister of former President
Texas, 75006.
Kennedy.

•

Man pleads innocent in rape,
sl(lying of girlfriend's 3-year-old
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - A man setup.
Williams set a pretrial hearing
. pleaded innocent to raping and
ldlling his girlfriend's 3 ~year-old for Feb. 23. Phillips could, face the
dealh penalty if convicted of aggradaughter.
Ronald Phillips, 19, of Akron, vated murder in the Jan. 18 beating
was arraigned Tuesday from the death of Sheila Evans.
Her molher, Fae Evans, 25, of
Summit County Jail via a closedcircuit television hookup with lhe Akron, has ~en charged with
courtroom of Summit County in~oluntary manslaughter and
Common Pleas Judge James could face a 20-yem: prison tenn if
convicted. She also pleaded innoWilliams.
He was the first defendant cent Tuesday and faces a Feb. 23
· arraigned under the new television pretrial hearin~~:.

. Literary club gathers
Rae Reynolds hosted the Mid· ing lheir children through lhe condleport Literary Club's recent fusing aflermalh, and fmally, lookmeeting held at the Meigs County ing .attheir world with bittersweet
Library. The club collect was led maturity.
Mrs. Buck said that for all its
by Betsy Parsons, president
· "Except for Me and Thee" by fascinating differences, their world
Jessamyn West was reviewed by confronts dilemmas strikingly conEileen Buck. This is lhe story of a tem)!orary • youthful rebellion,
family of young Quakers meeting racial intolerance; social inequity
lhe challenge of nature and man as and warfare's misery.
For roll call members gave a
the growing family travels westward, their encounter with the bit- Quaker custom. Light refreshments
terness and savagery that explode were served by ibe hostess. ·
into lhe Civil War, and later guid-

balll.

.
.(

.

Kicker:

. 9388

Clear toniahL Low ID mid
20s. Frlday, IDany. HJcb ID mid ·
40s.
'

•

...

•
Fau~ Aady Mora: tblnlll'lde • HoDy Brodlr· ,
,lck, Ben Holter, Garrett karr; fourth &amp;ride •
Wes Crow, Cinda Cllll'ord, Krlllte1 Cll~er;
fifth grade • Later Parker, Cbulty Holloa, Jelsica Pore; sixth arade • Valerie ll:arr, Aaron
WUI, Bryon Ma.; L.D. • David Dilley, Milldy
Gueg; and D.H. • Heather Westfall aDll J McCartney. Teachers pictured are .Mille WUJ
1111d Ron HHL

FLAGS PRESENTED • American Le1loa
Feeney Bennett Post 128, Middleport, presented
11 nags to Chester Elemeatary oli Tuesday
l!lol'llinl. Cllarlel "Red" CIIT, aeaiQr vice commande~, along with Bruce Myen, Jobn Rose,
Ralph Ballard ud VIctor Babr, presented tbe
flap to student counc:ll repraenhltivel. ·Siudeatl
pictured, Ia no particuJar order, are.: ftnt lrade
• Jonathan Owen, Caaandra Lodwk:k, Betky
Taylor; second l(rade • Carrie Crow, Casey

lol. 43, No. 200

•

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.

Voinovich submits ·record budget to legislature
By ROBERT E. MILLER
· Alsoclated Press Writer
CQLUMBUS- Gov. Geor,ge
Voinovich submitted to the Legtslature today .a record $30.8 billion
General Fund budget for lhe stale's
two-year bookkeeping period
beginning July 1.
The proposed budget reflects an
increase from approximately $27
billion in this two-year period. It
would be funded in part by project·
ed inflationary growlh in revenues
and a December taX increase that
should ptoduce about $900 million.
Most state agencies would
receiv.e increases roughly tied to
in~tion, allhough there are some
exceptions. The administration
apparently lhinks inflation will he
about 4 percent a year.
Budget Director Greg Browning

By SCOTI WILUAMS
arise with CBS.
.
because tl)ere is so much competiAP Televialoa Writer
"I think th_e network is goil)g tion," McKinney said. "We hid a
NEW YORK- When do "ere- lhrough a gradual soflening of its battle wilh CBC ovu this thina and
alive differences"' slide into cen· standards because they have to, we won that. ••
.
so!Wp?
.,
.
Go ask The Kids in ~ Hall, a
bunch of cross-dressing Canadian
comedy troupers who fought and failed - last week to get CBS·
WHAT II THE · EARNED INCOME
to clear an AIDS-Ihemed sketch b
CREDIT
AND HOW 00 I
their lale-night Friday show.
QUAUFY FOR IT?
· That's funny, since it already
Tho oornod Income crodll Ia
aired, presumably wilhout controdealgned to help lower-Income
versy, on the premium cable serworking ArMrlc1n1. In recent re•ra
lho crodllhU - . lncrooaod ond tho
vice HBO, basic cable's Comedy
req_ulrementa for cl1lmlng It ha¥1
. Central and even the Canadian
clwlgld,loo.
Broadcasting Corp., Canada's
You moy qualify lor lho oornod
Income c...rlt II your adjualod gfa ..
natiooal network.
Income and urned lnconw for 1112
It points UJ? lhe dilemma for a
w.ro lou Ilion tu,STO and you livid
U.S. commen:ial netWork trying to
wtllt ono Dl """" quolllylng chlclren In
compete with cable riYals and still
· lhe Nmo homo In lho Unltod StoiOI
for mote thlln 111 monlhe or the yNr
play it safe.
(tho onuro yoor 11 tho -lilylng child
"We're not a prime-time show,
Ia your taow child).
and we never, never will he," said
The omount ol cr ...t lo wlllc~ you
troupe member Mark McKinney. · .,. onUllod II troalod 01 o poymont ol .... lhol will prov1c1o Y'fU with 0 1orgar
"Yet we've always managed to
relund or roduco lho omount Dll&lt;lx you woul&lt;! - · owo.
·
.W henever Y'fU h ... _
...... • - • how lholl- .-t-.roturn, coli yqur
fmd a paper place for lhe show."
local H&amp;R Block olllco. llotllr yol, olop by tho ono noorest you. Wo'ro ,_. .,
Last year, lhe Kida~ shows were
holpyou.
airing on four such places: the
CBC, HBO, Comedy Cential and
CBS. McKinney said the ttoupe
has had arauments .over conte~t
with all four networks, so that 11 • 618 EAST MAIN
992·6674
isn 'I surprising
.
- a problem would.
.

TAX TIP OF THE WEEK

_ MIAtdl (AP) - Marjory Stoneman Douglas, the 102-year-old
"Grande Dame of the Everglades," who pushed for cnvirlln·
mental protec·tion long before it
became fashionable, was inducted
into the Florida Anists Hall of
Fame. ·
.
A journalist,. author and
women's rights activiat, Mrs. Douglas' ·1947 book "The Everglades:
River of GtUs'' warned of lhe dan·
gets of manmade di.sruption of
Florida's natural wilderness.
"You were far ahead of aU of us
in .recognizing the imponance of
the Florida Everglades," Florida
Secretary of State Jim Smilh said
Monday as he gave' her a bronz~
sculpture marldng lhe honor.
Mrs. Douglas was an early
champion foe creation of lhe 1.4.million-~rc
Everglades
National
Park,
now the
heart of the
once- r-------~--------~----:--------~--;.....--....,...-­
massive wetll!nfls dir,ninished by
decades of commerctal develop·
ment
, Mrs. Douglas' book still sells
several thouspnd copies.a year and
is read in many Florida school
classes.
"That's what we had hoped,"
she said. "It's the ldnd of thing
that's timeless, you see.
Her health bounced beck after
serious respirlloly problems a year
ago. Her vision faded away years
ago, but she listens to recorded
books and receives frequent visi- ·
tors at her Coconut Grove home.

released copies of the voluminous
document. He and Voinovich
scheduled a mid-morning news
~onfezence to explain lhe budget's
ratio11ale and ~nd to questions.
Ohio's pub he schools, which
Voinovich says are his top priority,
are down for increases totaling 8.9
percent over the biennium. They
would receive $4.60 billion in the
fust year and $4.79 billion lhe second, totaling 59.4 billion,.- up
from $8.56 billion in Ibis biennium..
Higher education would receive
a larger increase of 11.5 percent,
perhaps because they bqre the
brunt of severe budget cuts ordered
by lhe govemor to deal with a budget defteit last year.
The state-assisred colleges and
universities would receive $3.68
billion over the two years, com-

pared wilh $3.35 billicit in lhe current biennium.
Voinovicb' s l)uman services
budget totals $13.S billion. for •
inaasc of 17.8 pen:ent. k inc:JncJcs
almost $3.9 billion as lhe state's
share of lhe Medicaid JIIOIIMI, . .
inaasc of more than 16 pm:eot in
current levels.
Voinovich, keeping a promise.
did not propose a major tax

spNoting, tepwew receipts from
tbc guoline tax llld ouda)'f of fed·
eral DIIIC.hing money. Jn the past,
lhe depu btoent has hid a separate
budget.
In a leiter lhltlt:IXIIIIpanied lhe
budget. lhe governor said it builds
" on the strategic investments in
people and programs entered into
in lhe current bictutium ••• made in
a context of exlrellle fiSCal resbaint

increases.
and 0051 CODtrol.' '
He said he was funding a Sludy
Earlier this week, the depart·
of Ohio's tax llrtlCIIIre lllllllhal he mcniS of Rehabilitation and Corwould include money for lhal pD- rection and Youth Services
posal. It will include a review of · announced program expansions
lhe stare's sJuggisb eca101ny.
lhlllhey said would be fundal wilh
The governor included the iila
"Diing ltbour 25 pen;eot
DCpartmeot of TliiiSfOrtllion in ... 32 peaceut, ICspeCtivcly.
his budget. HOVr'I:Va', itS pitjJOIIed
Ill the P'CO'Id year .. the budget
$3 billion outlay, in edclition 10 1he period. ttHICCtiOIIS would n:ceive
$30.8 billion in Ge1eral Fund $762 millioa and youtb ~ices,

Weekly
jobless
·claims fall

POMEROI

--·-~ ·.iol!fe• olail!11'1~ a-dmp o

40,000 for. tllC week ending Dec. .
26. '
.
\
.
The decline was slightly better .
than economists had been expect·
ing, but they cautioned against
reading toO much into lhe imptQVe·
ment since claims offices .were'
open one less day because of lhe
Martin Luther Kin holida~.
. HolVever, anafysts satd if the
declines continue in future weeks it
would be a good indication thlllhe
.labor market is finally strengthenRECEIVES GRANT • Baelleye Hilla
recelwe a $5,111 cr-t Ina SCS Slate C a •ing after a prolonged period of very
R ource, Conservation aad Develop•e•t .......... Joe ....... cater. 'l1lt 111 '1 willie
weak actiVIty.
ued far If 1 w ,.ojeds Ia tile lt-a.Jdy uea
C uncil V.ice Chairman, Jim Yoaaa, len, 11d
An even better indicator of lhe
trill$ • ..,. Meip.
.
an~ Robert First, RC&amp;D .Coordinator, rlpt,
. job market will be ieleased Friday
when the government rcpons on
. the unemployment rate for January. ·
In advance of that report, .many
A $5,000 grant from lhe USDA Alhens, Bcimont. Fairfield. Hock· RC.W irel. Prioiity will be given
economists were Jooldng for a gain
·Soil
. Conservation Service in ing, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, to projec!S that alsO have other
of lOO,OOO ·payroll jobs, which Columbus
has been received by lhe Noble,. Perry and Washington mali•c flllds available.
would be the strongest advance ·
Buckeye
Hills
Resource, Conserva- Counties.
ftaeatly, lhe Rc.tD Cnnncil is
•since last 1uly.
,
tion
and
Development
Council,
of
Sponsors
are
lhe
County
Com·
active
ia promoting Dry Fire
The increase may not be enough
missioners
and
Soil
and
Water
which
Meigs
County
is
a
parL
Hydrant
installations ·a s pan of
to nudge the unemployment rate
.
The
grant,
presented
to
lhe
Perry
Conservation
Districts
in
the
10
mnl
lim
p•
... lion pojects. WMer
down. It has been stuCk·at 7.3 perCD~~~~ty rqion.
Coun!y
ttjllesentative
~
lhe
annual
IJII'lity
pojccts.
pumolion of aller·
cent foe lhe past two months.
Accordins
to
Mark
Forni,
meeung
m
January,
IS gtven to
lllliwe
inc•cpjiOibMitics,
rea.
The 11,000-decline in weekly
ud
RC&amp;D
Council
chairman
the
natural
assist
in
improving
8lion
llld
IUUiism
]I10illOiion.
and
jobless claims followed an increase resources and quality of life .Monroe Cotmty Commissi•ICI, lhe ; mjpere Ill local groups in rural
of 1,000 the previous week and throughout rural America. The $5,000 grant will be aed 10 impli:development 1ctivities ue all
gains of 18,000 and S3,000 beforement
high
priority
projects in lhe cnlllJ"es olRC.tD pojccts.
Buckeye
HiUs
R.C&amp;D
area
covers
a
lhll.
Even with the latest week's ten countr area that includes
decline, the four-week moving
average for claims rose to 355,250,
the highest level since laiC November.
In addition to the regular ~less
benefits program, an addtli!)nal
31,566 individuals filed initial
The lipinJ was believed to
Racine-Soadtem aii·Siale mming
By SCOTI WOLFE
claims under' an emergency benebaYO
been die lint-ever Tcanwlo
back
Rulsell
SinglrAM,
who
a
IX
Sentinel Cwi espondent
fits program passed by Congress.
signiltl
10 play footblll at a Divi·
Anxiety was at a peak Wednes- 10:30 a.m. beaded tbe list of
That also represented a drop from
sionlsdlool
the previous week, when 31,862 day for Ohio Umversity and sipccs for lhe Bobrats
Wed• r n,. known a signing
. people had filed under the emerday, die finl day tbal a bish
gency program.
achool student can commit to
ICC ji4illl a foachiJitcbolanhip.
Despile YCIMI ttHDmi_.ta and
•••••• Jcaas rli--.lhc ... il
llllC cme ..n dte rt'm sips the
ck-.llille, wllidlbepll It 8 LID.
Siqlcton beaded tbe list of
sip II )
day, I dtjq in lhe
accz.tance of a full, fonr year
•h ' h
s· .,&gt; joined die Soatbcnl
Two appointments were made at
dariaJ dte finl
WednosdtiJ'• regular meeting of
1111
.._. caacll Da'lid Gaul's
the Melp County Commissioners.
reip. SilcJel••. as a fzelllm111,
Bob Baon Wll appoiniM 10 lhe
, Ul t&amp;litJ ft• d4 IIIII yar •
Issue n lntegrlling Committee and
a
till h e - a-d_. oft"•·
to tho IOCIIIDue n commlaee.
me liP&amp; etld. Soa"o11- 1-9
Norma Tcma Wll appoiaiDd to
tllat ICI- widl a JOIIJ team
the Children 'a Advisory Boatel
OU
"
Trust Pund ~ lhe l!lipdan of
OolaJ 3-7 u a aopbomorc,
lhal politiqn lly Carol TarinehiiL
ScMh . . . s-.... pccrmto
In othor 11111ten, a new cammll·
a l"f aive ead _. liPt ead on
alollll'l .maar Wll lliiiOUIICtd foe
P.b. 22-:U.at tho Oreal South~
••
Hotol in Columbus.
AJtondlna the meetina were
Comnliaalonert Maanina Rouah,
Roben Hartenbach and Janet
Howard; and Gloria Kloes, - .
.clark.
.

!

BJlckeye· Hills RCDC receives $5,000 grant

'

Southern's Singleton first Tornado
to sign with Division IOU Bobcats

.'

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· Tlicu tnstructor was Ivan
S•laur, are~ phyaical !hera· · J
pist from Hunicane, W.Va. He
~ ''This training was very specific, detailed and complete; the
residenta at Lakin will receive
excellent reatorllive thenpy wilh
tfte,!e four trained tec:hnicUIII."
(

\

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Whatever it takeS.
Member FDIC

Cl 1993 BANC 0t«: CORPORATION. Loil.na subject to cred~

8&amp;.rn.·8 P.m.

.

.

Coalfield business fears.
impact of a long strike :
ByMATIHARVEY
Associated Press Writer
BALD KNOB, W.Va.- BOOne
County miners were onlookers four
years ago when the United Mille
Workers' strike against Piuston
Coal Group rocked the coal indus· The union's strike against the
nation's largest coal producer,
Peabody Holding Inc., .is hitting
hard in this mountainous southern
West Virginia county.
.
"I've been around a long time
and seen different times·and different artillldes," said Grover Thack·
er,cbairman of Local 1503's selective strike committee.
.
"Ever since lhe 1989 Pittston
strike, I've seen ll)e attitudes .of
management change. I think they
.i\lst SllW .t!ollaf signs in-lheir.. ey~
and P. greedy," he said Wednesday. ;''
'
The strike has yet to spur the
bitter feelings of the Pittston walkOUL

"Right now, the feelings are
ldnd of mixed," Thacker said. "A

lot of lhe guys have never experienced this. They can't understand

why Peabody's treating them this
way, as far as failing to negotiate.''
Tbe union says 7,500 miners
walked out in West Virginia. Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois.
Peabudy Holding said that the
strike was limited to 5,000 workers
.1122 mines in lhose states.
. About2,300 of the miners work
atlO mines in West Virginia.
Convenience srore owner Daisy

•

Plasler sees bolh sides .
She has four brothers who are
union miners. Her husband is· a
foreman for one of the subsidiaries
targeted by the . strike, whif!h
entered its third day today.
:·
"ReaUy, it just puts me in tjie
mi4dlc," she said.
:
Most of Plaster's customers are
union workers, some among tJie
dunwfiagc-elad pickets who "alb· ,
ered at Peabody Sites Wednesdily;•
A sign in front of her stoic
counter reads, "This establishment
supports lhe UMWA." ·
&lt;
"From what everybody says,
it's going to be a long slrilce; I hope
they' re wrong," Plaster said.
· The longer the strike lasts, the
more her business will ·suffer.
Strildng miners must Jive on strike
pay of $150 a week, compared with
~0 a week w~n . th~y ~workIng.
.
..
"I hale lhat it's going to ruin a
lot of the business around here
because lhll's lhe sole business, the
coal miners. It 'll hurt a lot," she
said.
In past strikes, "I could see
(business) tapering off because
lhere is no money to be spent," she
said.
Union members are conc;nlllito
ing on bui Iding $u&amp;rd shacrs and
keeping warm, satd Howard Green,
a union. repr,esentative for southern
West Vtrgtma.
" The wealher is a lot of concern
for us," he said in Madison. "We
need a place for members to stay
warm and a place for lhem to get
Continued on page 3

Abandoned house near
Racine burns.to gr,ound
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
An abandoned house on Eaton
Soulsby
reponed lhll investigation
Ridge Road near Racine burned to
to
determine
lhe origin of the fllC is
lhe ground Wednesday night

Racine ·Fire Department Chief
John Holman said when firemen
arrived on the scene about 8 p.m.
tho Slrileture hid already coUapsed.
He said cause of t.he fire · is
unknown. Firemen were on the
fur about an hour.

-=-

continuing. He said that there was
no electricity to lhe frame structure,
known as the old Simon Powell
residence, and that the house has
been unoccupied for over 12 years.
The current owner is reportedly
someone in Columbus.
;

.Eason, Torres
are.named to
'com·mittees

earlier. Your comPleted return wilibe electronically processed and sent !aster than ifyou had

ifwecan'tmaketax season a lot more fun. ~n. almostfun anyway.

·•
$170 million, for buildings and nursing homes.
Hearings on the budget are io
expansions in programs to .keep
non-violent offenders from ·over- begin in the House Finance. Conimiuee Ibis week. Chairman Patrick
crowded prisons.
The governor indicated in his Sweeney, D-Cleveland, said he
State of the State speech to the expects many amendments, but lhil
Legislature last monlh that he will he hopes to have the budget ready
propose unspecified increases in for a House floor vote by the weel:
::
Head Stan pro~ for ~hoot· of March 21.
· House passage at that tinle
ers from low-incot)le families. .
He also talked in general terms would give lhe Senate more thah
about an expansion of a pro,gram two months to act before lhe Jurm
·
that helps eligible senior cittzens · 30 fiscal deadline.
remain at home rather than enter

try.
This lime, lhey 're in the middle . .

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nllll!bcr pf A,mericans filing fust·
time chiiJns for unemployment ben·.
ef!IS fen to 352,000 in late January,
the first improvement in four
y,ieeks, lhe govctnmt.nt said
. The Labor Department
lhe num)lcr of new jobless claiJns
·· ~by 1};000 for~
:. inl Jaft,,,23. It waa.lhe lint
·

H&amp;R BLOCK

Casey and Tammy. She has previ_. ·
ous training in EKG monitoring
and has auended many seminars at ;
olher state facilities. She is a mem· ·
ber of lhe Point Pleasant Woman's
Club and Women of the Moose
organization. Her hobbies include
quilting and liq11id embroidery.
Carol McClure resides in Leon,
W.Va., and has been emplayed five
years in the nursing department.
She has three children: Bobbie Jo, ,
Angelia and Ryan, all residing at
home. Her husband, Joe, has been
employed at Ravenswood Aluminum for lhe last 20 years. She is
an active member 11 Failh Baptist
Church and enjoys arts and crafts
and walldng.
Mary Pullin~ resides in Middlepan and has worked in lhe nursing
department since 1989. She has
two children: Shelia 81ld Shelly and
two grandchildren. She enjoys
movies, travel and filllCSS training.
The four women m:cived cenification after completing 80' plus
hours of course work in practical
rehabilitation teChniques which met
rederal requirements. The topics
ranged from phy~iology of the
aged, lherapeulic exercises, medi·
cal terminology and detailed medical and disease problems. They
also recei&gt;ed tmining in lhe use of
equipment including tteadrllill,
ultrasound, hot and cold paclu,
paraffin bath, whirlpools and a
variety of other up-to-dale equiP.·
ment in Lakin's newly butlt
restorative department. Their ll'lln·
ing included many hours or dllcuasion, demonstrate and practicum.
They abo toured other physical

2 Sectlono, 14 Pegeo 2S cents
A Muldmodla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February·4, 1993

Copyrlghlod 1993

'CBS.and Kids in the Hall square ·
off,·on AIDS, but not on television

tberapy.deJ!artmenll.

RECEIVE CERTIFICATION • Four Health Service Workers
employed at Lakin Hospital received certification as
ttltllntlvelpbJIIcal tberapy technicians. Tbey are, trout, Mtrele
u.talld Carol MeCiure; back, Mary PuiUns and JaDtt Cunnlng-

· Super Lotto:
1-4-14·31-36-39

Page4

Employees receive certification
Four Health Service Worke rs
Janet Cunningham, Point Pleasemployed at Lakin Hospilal ant, W.Va., has worked at Lakin
received cerrificatio n as restora- Hospital since 1967 in the nursing
tjve/JJhysicaltherapy technicians.
deparunent She has four children:
· Eligibility for the techn ician Larry, Melinda. Joan and Aleta.
classification is to, first, be a certi- She also has three grandchildren.
fied health service worker which Prior to this training, she had 480
entails 150 hours of class and hours combined training in psychipracticum work, be employed a atric aide, ~eneral nurses aide. and
to1a1 of at least years with one of working wtth the mentally rerard- .
those years being in the specific ed. She is active in the Mason
departmenl/area. and receive addi- County special Olympics and the
uonal training of a minimum of 40 Mason County Association for
hours in that field, taught by a reg- Rclarded Children and Special Ciliis.tered ,physical therapist. The zens.
training had to be approved by the
Margie Hart, employed for 13
Department of Health and Human years at Lakin, resides in Leon ,
Resources.
•
W.Va. , and has two children:

524
Pick 4:
9388

Marge Schott

.

Bet you're glad you didn't buy
that cellular telephone stock, huh?
Do keep smiling.

- Pick 3:

3p.m.EST

'

rooci.1i&amp;:-

BtJitNS TO 11fE GROUND • Tills ah'l'l'kaad ....... Ill

wa .

a ... eld 81- Powell property oa Eato1 Rld1e Roi.. . . .

R.WillttrJIId to tile p11Und Wednllllay llilbt. (Plloto by Danio •
Waite)
'

�•

Thurada~February4,1993

:;C ommentary
The _Daily Sentinel·
111 CD

- Here is die fault line on gays in

t&amp;beet

Ben

enber·o·

..

..

plOd-..... -

Letters
to the editor
..
The Tin Uuk

.

a--of--.

MICH.

·--Ink
•:rulllbly

0

.-.

were

.-.

Wants deer setJSon changed

.·: We're Jll)ing 10 la..e a
i'C
:sunc1ay. 1 to 3 p.m.. • • .,.,...
:American I egn HaD.
:.:"·ACXJUple wcdl:s .,a I...- •
' aiticle ooooemiDg our • •ill&amp; bo

son. I want 10 -

oar dt:l:r

¢1ianged tD end tbe last week of

1"'lcre

will be a meetin&amp; con-

tcnia&amp; Ibis isslle at die Rutland

tqiglllall, Beacb Grove Road,
Rd I s-lly 1 10 3 p.m, Pleaae
a.. Wid .,.,.,_ mlhis issue.
1 a1ao IIIIP$l_ '""' we open deer
• Smldays for lhe WIDing

-

:Dccemba. I wolllcl lite tD see il mu 111111 sc:bool children. Also
· en'd in Detembet because our siDce taftinJ 10 odler hunrcrs who
.)lucks lR bcin&amp; tbot as does as die lh 1D llalll m Wc:at Vilginia, I sugbucks (2S percall of lbaa) Jooe . &amp;atlbal we open muzzle IOiding
p pe Dec. 13-18 so it isn't lbe
'ibQr antlers in cady J
·y.
' Also lhe does luM: lilde ems iD -asWc:atVilginia.
Martin Wolfe
,J~p~uary. So wbea we sllool does
Rutland
.JIIC're loosing lbree toODC..

-'to 111c edilor:

Objects to IIUineJ collection

_ , • ..--. ( ~ IIIey put
Aid!
Moon: ill jail for tbll, didn't
. . ·, I know lhal wba I baYC 1D say
IIIey?
WillllR oar ICflools aJiow.: niay .look like real •iqtit .... ., a
in.&amp;
oar
kids to lean? And,
lot of~· bec•ee it is .:II a
,
..
,....,die
P.T.O. lie hclpiq: our
"litde lbmg. But, "lillie" dtinp
l:ids
learn
good
moral values? I
can !IIOUIIt up 10 a lot.
doa't
bow
alloul
you olbec par:. :. My tids brought lbe fCJilowiaB
a tid, we just
DOle home fnlm lfmiDMlll: Elc- atts, boll wben I ·•il\entary School die odler day: -n.c vOied for wbo we wanted 10 be
·, P:T.O. is sponsoring a Kin&amp; aad Kin&amp; _. Queen. 1'bc:le was none
"Queen Contest for the 41b--6lla · of dtis - , for VOleS 1111ff. We
lR ¥a"hill&amp; our tids not 10 drink
_grade and a Prince and Pri•d
.C'i!ndt for grades K·3 ~ die or Slllllk or use drogs. Why lR we
•eacbiq diem 10 use lbe biggest
'&gt;r·•--~''YUfO;IIUI-.; "---J,.IGI""""' '""--......... c•I'+ I
- ~lingcachclass11181tc• C I dms of all money • in lhe wrong
way?
~ m'!'ley as votes. Penni '!lim' slips
Sincudy.
··111ust be returned by JuiWJ 29.
Forest A. Lee,
'l1lllnk you."
380S8 Kingsbury Rd,
I have no problem wilh die aJD~t or lhe dance, but ( redy olljocl
_Pomeroy
-.to.'the concept of "must coUecr
..

.

An open letter to Meigs residents

·Pear Editor;

' ' ·This is an open letter 10 l*uptlly
• ~l"oors and citizens of
M,etgs County.
·1: : • Beginning immediately, 1 will
· begin an aggressive prop3111 for
· the collection of delinquent Jl!OPCI, ty taxes in Meigs County. With
Property taxes on lbe rise every·
~w
. lhere, tt is becoming more;..,..._
. ·.~nt than ever lbat allwj;J;'r.s
:siiare the burden of fundin&amp; the
'o·peration of local governments.
.~ially our county's school dis-rncts.
• , The taw provides for several
ltlethods of delinqueotlllll collcc'tion through lhe county comt sysiems. It also allows lhe aJtmty - . .
~. lhe prosecuting aaomey 81111
: tbe delinquent taxpayer 10 work
•tojelher for lhe paymenl of taxes
: jlij'ore legal action m•st llegia.
:U,.fonunately, many delinqaeat
-accounts are not settled in this
~inner. IJUhose cues, ~
~iions are the only =otne for lbc
;11rpsecuting attorney, wbo is
~ible for collecting the IDea
:tqr lhe county treasurer• .
!: ! It is not my 111isb or lhe with G
:a4yone associated ~jth my ollit:c
1o
foreclose on family fanns, resi·
•,

.....
::.l ;.
''

•••'

clepnos, or other pmpenies. However, l iatend 10 do just that if no
oilier alternatives are accepted by
lbe wpayas who have not paid
lhcir fair share. In addition; my
o11i1:e will notify banks and olba
lien holtlels of delinquent wes on
I*~ wilb I1IDrlpgeS.
This bas becu proven 10 not only
improve ooljrnino! na:s, bul could
affect !he cmlil hisiOries of those
delinqueat laX payers so reported.
If you have received WtlCSjJOII·
tlences from die IJIOSII!'Dillt'S office
ill die.-, or if ycur !*upt&gt;1y taxes
baYC been certifted as delinquent, I
IIIF you 10 contiCllhe CllUllty lml·
surer10 either pay lhe tax due or 10
make anangemcn!S for payment of
lbe laX Ill once. This offiCe and lhe
c:oooty treaSUrer remain willing 10
wOO&lt; wilh taxpoyen in Ill &amp;~~Cmpt
10 reach reasonable agreemeniS for
die paymcniS of delinquencies. We
lie also pn:parcd tD take any steps
MCW y 10 CiiSUIC !hat lallCS are

f

•

pear Editor:
;. : In 1843 Sir W'tlliam Dnwt't(J"d

.I

ll;rewan. alltOICII Idol

•.•Jo die Oreal Plains Wid widl a pMJ
; ; . ; IIICII, wagons. piles, b!nl:s,

, pns, eu:. , -

of.
:..... -lrllled in die- of
.

•

"Oh, Hillary, do alt down and drink your tea. That Ia what a Firat Lady Ia for."

While mOurning lhe accidentald!'alb of a young hoy shot by a
. clase!lle in an inner-city schQol,
aulhorBebcMooreCampbellmade
so much sense 1 bad 10 stop and
·
her proposa1: sure 1y
reconstder
something that simple and sensible,
yet so filled wilh promise, can't be
that easy. Her suggestion? That
those us wilh gifts 10 give, roles
10 model, love to share, become
vitally involved with kids who
need them in ways that can change
lbeir liwes. She made it clear that
she didn't mean just going over tD
lhe school and delivering a nice
sermon, but uuly intenwining our
lives wilh theirs: nurtufing, advisina finding and extolling what is
wilque and wondedul about lhem.
It's the stuff all kids need and
deserve, but fewer and fewer of
them get
·
· How- do we match kids fatherless in some cases, kids with
mothers who either don't care,
can't care ·or are 100 overwhelmed
10 care-'- with the adults who can
filllhat ldlling void? Since it's not
going to happen by itself, Campbell

1

c:ollc:cled Ill once.. ·

JohnR.Ienrcs
Meigs County Prosecuting Allor·
ney
110 1/2 West Second Slreet
PonM2ny,CMU&amp;4S769

for a ll•t

'Jilitin« i!CVCI1l weeks. Hundieds
-~

'

;• . PusenppipQDS--10
·ipmerous in this country dlat
:Pocb of them oblilcnlcd die *&gt;'·
: ~tilled diem widl eiO)IIIi&amp;C

died die . , - anitMls ct Ibis IJe8
aitaat . - , They coa1d not
-.1 die lliloct
Malls lbe

of-. ·
-dtauacihe 1111-

llllaliYC. To-1D~I!lllldll
· h is .._ ia -.. If we Clll
belieue die T.V•• - . _ llmost
tkdwai1J128 -~~~-

'Diere - ao econoonic reason
for lite • dim slanpteT of the
1fC81 aaimals aad !here is none
IOday.

neaocalled~f~J~~olbunting is
bi&amp;
btesit 11 Wid 11 IIR!IliOied as a
·if bald nelS,..- Wldclllll. Not
t
·
·'lbae am feell!llllicetis·
:DftC fU •pr ~ is left. 11w:y
a ..t ~~:a-. Wid c:alls, and long
;lleculeexlliiCtml914.
•: ;By die time O.iel Doc. llad c- aa1 slut a-l!lll bows and

.

'

Jtomosexuality, mi&amp;ht lhit happen
in lhe society as a wbole?
What about numbers? Gay
activisU claim 10 peJCellt of Amer·
icans a gay. But What proportion
of lhe military is gay'/ It niust be
low; it means lying and lKit gelling
caught. Is it I pen:ent? Or 2 percent? What h4!'1'Cns if lbe rules
chaitge? Would u go 10 IO percent?
Might it go higher, as lhe mililary
becomes a place wilh no .anti-gay
discrimination? (Blacks are dispro'onately in-die military in part
~use lhe military is non-discriminatory.) .

of

says sc~ools have 10 dra~ the 101e
models mto schools and miD young
lives. And as I said, lhey can'.t just

·sar:...h
Ove•"treet
"
~
1

be assembly speakers. Tl\ese chi!. dren.need aduiiS who are willing
go through life with diem one-onone, in .lhe kind of esteem-building
. relationship that says, "You are
imponant 10 me, so important to
me that no one else can fill your
place in my life." Itls something
we all have to hear, and some ·of
these children never hear iL
Try as I could, I couldn't find
any holes in Campbell's idea. I've
talked 10 too many men and women
who have joined the !Uitional orga·
nization "Big Brothers/Big Sisters, •• which carefully screens
adults and lhen mall:hes them wilh
kids who need anolher adult role
modelin their lives. These folks
spend time each week with their lit·
de sisters or brothers doing what·
e\rer it is lhe child wants tD do, as
long as all the adults involyed
agree it's OK.

w

-

~

. As part of .my job,• I've inter·
vtewed BB/BS stall and volunteers
and produced a half-hour television
program for lhe Orgl!lizition.l'~e
heard the "bigs" mve about lhelf·
"Iittles," and I've listened to very
little boys on the "waiting list"
talk about what they'd lllce to do if
they had a big brother. One hoy's
testimony can still make me cry:
He was going tluough lhe awtword
stage so many of us go through,
and would probably be the laSt kid
picked if all the candidates wac.
lined up. But oh, how he needed
someone! Shyly showin(l his draw·
ings and talldng about his interests,
our microphones barely picked up
his halting w.ords spoken with
down-turned chin into his chest.
Off.camera, his mother seemed
almov, frantic 10 find a man-' ~ho
could love her son, even for a shon
time each week.
In my personal life, I si~ up
10 be a B1g Sister seven years ago
and went through the screening
process. Just as I was about to be
matched I transferred job~ and
sadly ~oved my name frotri lhe

.

-

.

Bjg $1~ lis\.:.. ·
My litde s1ster found me anyway. A year later lhe·company I
worked for enrolled in a plan
whereby each emp~oee was to
ha·--•-t "pen "from one
·~ a """""'
of the City·'s poorest schools. I
received a C!lll from a 6th-grade
teacher wbo was mall:hing his stu·
dents with newspaper pen ~- He
told me, "I have a kid who s really
going through some challenges. I
read your column every wedt and I
think you'd lie perfect for her.... "
To make a long story short, we
graduated from lleing pen pals to
~oing tD movies, shO]IIlmg and cat·
mg out togetjler often. Six years
and two cross-counll')' moves later,
we are still close. No one else can
fill her place in my life, and I
believe she knows iL
In Illy city, there are 100 lilde
boys on the waiting list for a Big
Brother. With so many men wilh so
much tD give, !hat's the only part of
lhe crisis lhat ddesn'tcompute.
Sarah Overstreet li a syndlcated wrlt.e r ror Newspaper
EnterpriSe Assoc:iatlon.
. ·

No White House welcome for Clinton
!;lut it will be mOnths before any
kind of audited figures arc available, and by then everyone will
lllcCly have lost inten:SL Morllover,
insiderS say that not included in lhe
ftnal accounting will be millicin of
dollars worlb of "in-kind" contributions from corpo(ations. For
anows and camouflage. II all plays of paper, every pencil was gone. instance, any number of corporaon that primitive instinct 10 chase The harried receptionists did not tions donated private jets that were
and declare victory over a dumb even have "while you were out' ~ in the air constantly fcn:yinJ enteranimal.
'pads to record phone messaaes. tainers and bigwigs tD the party.
The most infonned unofficial
What animals we have left today The copy machines had been empjiUCSS
is lhat lhe total tab for this
have a harder time than ever tied of paper.
.
11181lguration
will be about $35 mil·
before. The balance ·of nature has.
The hard disks 111 lhe personal ·
lion,
the
most
ever.
,
been upset Natural habitat is disap- contputers had been wiped clean:
During
Inaugural
Week,
hun·
pearing and destroyed. The quail not only had lhe prior administradteds
of
people
showed
up
tD
pick
and rabbits have gone because of tion's work product been erased,
up
their
~y
ordered
and
fully
excess spraying. Where can the but also goile were computerized
animals that are left hide?Where lists of reporters and phone num- paid for licke~ 10 balls, the gala,
can they have their young and find bers, !isiS of hotell lhe preu stays reserve seating for lhe parade and
food? The big woods are gone. I at when traveling, contact names, lhe swearing-in only 10 find lbat
know what it was like 50 or 60 and most of the aoftwa. A couole there were none in their name.
The Inaugural COIIImittee apol.
years ago and I know what it is like of machines could not even be
ogized profusely, saying it was
today.
booted up.
, I ain not against all hunters or
This situation was repeated all simply a snafu - 100
Cl'ders
all hunting. But when lhe rules are over the White House when new accepted, a number ex
ing lbe '
laid down very few land owners get WOlters finally reached 11\eir de&amp;ks. numller of dcketl avallabiO.
"Finally" l1 the correct word,
10 say anything.
B ul !ICCOI'Ilini to IICVel'al lnaugu·
I think that lhe animals should bctause no one in the prevloua 118ft' ral Committee staft'en, that is,llllt
not be hunted on Sunday, no matter bad cleared lbeif IUCCCIIOII wilh wlu11 hijfiliCd They II)' tbat lftDr
what else goes ·on on Sunday. The lho Secret Service. So tbae were al1 the tlckets bad been cuefully
animals deserve a day of respite lines at all the
11 deeply counted and allotted, hundred•
and quiet. If you need exercise or 81ll1D1ed Cllnion. • wailed fer a were taken out of lbe group lbat '
to relax go out in the woods o~~c c:Onatdenble lillie tD be clellred in bad llready been IOid ao they cauld ·
· Sunday and watch the animals if · 10 start wort.
be given 10 lhe VIPI who IWiftlled
.
you can find one. Hear the leaves
Tbe Cllnton·Gore Inausaral ointo IDW1I in mll'!iben much gRater
rustle, watch the sun beams peep CommiUCC continUCIIO inailt lbat lhen l!lticiplttd
ihrough the branche1. Hear the their qest-ever, five·day bath
"i perlonally pulled five hunbirds sing. Watch the butterflies colt lest lhan lbe one put on by dred of the be4t relerVed pll'lde
and bees flit among the flowers.
George B!llh four yean aao, That leal tlcteu from the IOid jJIJe 10
Leave your gun home.
one Cllllied a price 111 ct $30 mil· alve to the entertainment Un·
Gayle Price lioo. This one, inlilll tho Clinton dlen," llid one former emplOyee.
"Thil.mellll_t!Jat live bundled peo.•
' Portland stall', COlt about. $28 million.

.Robert}. Wagman

':t

,s:•

.

54.

•lcolumbusl54•

•

I

pic who had bought and paid for
those tickets did not find lbem
when they showed up to pick them
up."
An inaugural spokesman, sticlc·
ing tD lhe snafu story, says that all '

such moneys will be returned 10

!ICOf::,_
ticklish question is how
and whether return the money of
tD

hundreds, if not thousands of ~
pie, who bought tickeiS to vmous
balls and lhen were denied admission bFcause the .venues w'ero
alreedy ,filled beyond capacity and
were cloacd by fire officials.
Hundreds of angry party-foers
were turned away at Ill the I ball
sites. They had Daid anywhere from
$ISO tD $3,000 tor their rickell. .
The problem wllb refunding
money is lhat ball tictets wcte not
collected at tho doors and -were
kept by lhe 70,000 who did Bet in.
They could simply mail thole back
into any refund office, and the
Inaugural Commiuee would have
no way of lmowina if lhe person
got in or not.
F~ weeki, Jewish intereltl ~

=~=of~::,~~'::

=

u leellllly ollllte. CINiodlir ..
identified wllb lbe Camop l&gt;a~vid
Middle But
procou

~Caner ~iltratiou.
many Jowl bollevo brae! wa1

fOI'Iled 10 accopt llld wbleh fa\IOied
EJypl and lhe Arab llatea. Tbey
woro alto not happy with the ,
ptotpeet of Anthony Lalce u

natioilalMCtail)' adviler, Ht,-100,
is viewed u ''no friend ollmleL ••
•

•

r

Ho_spital news

0

Fourteen inches of snow fell
WednesdaY. at Steamboat Springs,
Colo., while many other locations
in Colorado picked up 4 10 8 inches
ofsnow.
·
High temperatures in the 40s
.wac ftrecast today for the western
Great Lakes region and lhe northem Plains, and parts of Montana
and lhe Dakotas were expected 10
get highs in lhe 50s.
DUluth, Minn., hit 44 Wednesday breaking lhe record or 43 for
lhe date set in 1991.
But cold was expected tD return
Friday in the fonn of an Arctic air
mass through socked Alaska wilb
record l!!ws Ibis week. It moved
across Canada today en route 10 lhe
Great Lakes.
The air mass produced record
lows in the Alaskan interior on
Wednesday , setting records not

coalfield. ••

only for lhe day blit lhe mont!Las
well in some places, including iiI
below zero at Bettles
· :
Rain was forecast for the West
Coast today as a Wide front movid
in from lhe Pacific, wilh the smll·
est accumulations expected in Cali·
fomia.
:
I

Highs elsewhere were forecast
in the teens and ZOs in northern
New England; 30s across lhe RISI
of lhe Northeast and in lhe Gre~ll
Basin and central Plains; 40s in tile
Ohio Valley and mid·Atla)ltic
states; 50s· in lbe Pacific Nortll·
welt; 50s and 60s in lhe southern
Plains and Southeast; and 70s in
lhe desen Southwest and soulhetn
Florida.
•
The high temperature for tOe
nation Wednesday was 77 at Ther·
m~. El Taro and Fallbrook, Calif~

Continued rrom page I

Stocks

_ __._____ Weather-----..;,_.

--Area
deaths-_,.._
·w·

s

s·QU th. ern 'S zng·zeon
t' .. ,.

out of the weather when it starts
raining."
Outside Eastern Associated
Coal's Harris No. I mine in Bald
Knob, about 15 pickets sat around
a fire while others played horseshoes Wedn~y.
None of them would give their
names, instead referring 10 signs in
the, windows of pickups that read, .
''UMW Local 15.03 on strike
against P\'llbody. Unfair labor practices."
Thacket said his orders are to
maintain a non· violent picket line.
Nonetheless, security patrols
have been beefed up since last
weekend, Thacker said. Pickup
trucks with "security" written on ·
placards can be seen patrolling the
hollow near the untO'n local
.
·
Peabody has said it would not
operate mines in the states targeted
by the union, unlike a 1989 strike
against Pittston Coal Group in
wbich PitlS!Oii used non-union help
to keep mines open.
That prompted front-line confroiltations between coal trucks and
UMW picketS.
One incident was reported
Wednesday in Boone County. A
tire on .an Eastern AssQciated Coal

:~

truck was flattened by a jaciaoCic.
which is made of nails weld'Cd
Veterans Memorial
together, said Cpl. E.K. Harper of
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
the Madison state police detach·
• Cora Webb, Middleport; George
ment.
·
Inc.
~·
CuWEndifDf,NESymSDcuAseY. DISCHARGES
The first stages of a strike nDf·
Am Ele Power....................,.. 318
mally are quiet, state poftce
Ashland OiL ......................27 3/4 ·'Stacy Tripp.
spolcesman Cpl. Ric Robinson sitid
AT&amp;T.. ...............................54 1/8
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
in South Charleston.
.
in upper 20s tD mid-30s. Sunday,
South-Central Ohio
Bank One..........;................53 3/8
Feb. 3 discharges_ Janet Bar"When it first begins, it's an
Tonight, clear. Lows 25-30. Fri· fair except for a chalice of snow
Bob Evans ........................ .18 3/8 rows, Melisa Pace, Vennie Casto,
atmosphere of people geufiY_g,
north. Lows in lhe teens. Highs in
day, mostly sunny. Highs 45·50.
Charming Shop.................. l9
Mildred Ball, Florence Tubb,
together and seeing old frienlls.
mid-20s to mid-30s. Monday, a
. Exteaded forecast:
1
Chmp lndustries................. lO
Naomi McGuire, vassie Hall,
Everything's fairly light. But in .a
chance of rain or snow. Lows in
Saturday throngb Monday:
City Holding...................... 21 1{2
Roben Mossman ; Faron French,
short period of time, that can
Sallirday, fait and colder except ·upper teens to mid·20s.Highs in
Federal Mo!IUL .................. J9 718 Tina Houck and Kenneth Johnson.
change," Robinson said.
.. ·
for a thane~ of snow north. Highs upper 20s 10 upper 30s.
Feb. 3 blrtbs- Mr. and Mrs.
State police plan no special
Goodyear11tR ..................72
Key Centurion .............._.....22 314
Robert Bauer, daughter, Long Botpatrols because of the strike, 'Jte
Lands End..........................25 lfl
tom. Mr, and Mrs. Cary Carringsaid, but a ban on overtime pay Will
Limited Iric....................... 29 3/8
IOn son Piketon
be ignored if neCessary~ .
·' •
Multimedia inc .................. 34 1/4
'
'
The strike began Monday afJer
Jac k SOn
p a t riCia
, . N•ICh 0 ISOn
Point Bancorp................... :I2 3/4
Feb. 2 discharges- Robert
talks broke down wilh lhe Bitulnl·
P3 IDe
"·R
3/16
Hoffman,
Shannon
Jordan,
'
Kayla
·
"
f
""" estallliiiiL..................
Cam ll Do .
nous Coal Operators
Associatibn
.
PauI me Jaco.son, 72 • o
Patricia K. Nicholson, 50,
Reliance Electric................25
'Libemtore, Henry
npbe • ns
on a new contract covering nioie
Coolville, died Wednesday, Feb. 3, Hilliard, died Tuesday • Feb. 2 •
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17 3/4 Hensley • James Duvall, Mitchell
than 60,000 miners and 150,000
199B3, at herinSresidenceW. V
J
1993 at ML Carmel West Hospital
Shoney's Inc......................23 7/8
Harrison, Jp~yce Robie,MiN!IDdcy GCrifretirees.
·
O(ll
UliDn, · a. on an. in Columbus.
Star Bank ...........................36 314 · fith, Eva mll:ennan, n Y urThe association represents 12 of
31, 1921, . she was lhe daughrer of
Mrs. Nicholson was a member
Wendy !nt'l........................ 13 5/8 nutte, Harry Williams, Audry Hat·
lhe nation's largest coal producers.
the !ateSJhoe and Mhillie N_afomi of Level Chapter No. 109 Order of
Worthington lnd ...............,261/4 ten, Robert Arthurs, Goldie
The strike also prompted !3
0 avu.
e was a ousewt e, a lhe Eastern Star where she held all
Stock reports are the 10:30 Williams, Betty Milhoan, Mary
mines that ship .coal to East~in
member of lhe Order of lhe Eastern star points and served as past ~hapa.m. q,uotes provided . by Riffie, Nellie Martin; John Mullen
Associated tD close, affecting SOO
Starh, andh' a member of the Baptist lain. She was a past president of
Kemper S~curities, Inc.; ol and Ciani Cox. f ·
miners, said Eastern Associated
C urch •
Molher Club DeMolay; Guardian
Gallipolis.
- Feb. 2 births - Mr. and Mrs.
President Peter B. Lilly.
;.·
S e Jis survivNed balkytwodsoBn~i Treasure, Job's Daughters, Bethel
John Barlcer, daughter, Wellston.
"If the employees who sampl~.
Robert' ackson, orw • an
No. 45 and a member of Resurrecprocess or load the coal are_·bn
0
·Jackson of West Salem; eight lion Lutheran Church.
strike, we cannot accept !he coal,.''
arandchildren,andfourgreat·
Sheissurvivedbyherhusband .
Continuedfrompagel
hesaid
·. ~clchildren; and three brothers, of 28 years, Ronald E. Nicholson; a
The 'strike is limited 10 Peabixiy
. ~ralllt and Gene Davis, all son ~d ~ughter·in·law, JCJ!m Ray Gallia. Singleton said of lhe swill:h, pia yin~ linebacker and running fme season, Singleton recollected, but could spread, UMW Presidedt
. ·Besides ~~arents, sbe was and Kit Ntcholson, Grove CttY,; her "I finally got my shot at nmmng bact. ingleton amassed 1,024 "This year I guess I did all right!"
Richard Trumka said. No negotlamother, Mildred Se'!'per, Winter back. 1 felt comfortable there and yards on 180 carries and had seven
Singleton, a 6·foot-2, 200- lions are scheduled.
•
~in
by her husband, Part, Fla.; mother-m-la;w, Mrs. also switched to linebacker and touchdowns in another outstanding ~ounder, earned first team all·
Union officials,said they wail!
1 89
(Neva) Nicholsoll', Rutland; defensive end. •
season, while going most of esch
oulhern Valley Athletic Confer- more job security for miners. The
Fun•.eram 19ser·v,·ces will be held James
and two grandchildren, John Ray
Singleton enjoyed another great game both offensively and defen· ence honors last season; earned union has accused some coal oper·
Sunday at 2 J!.m. at t_he Whi,te Nicholson Jr. and Courtney Brooke season at Southern this year, again ~ively. Pemaps underestimating his second·team all·state honors, and ators of establishing non-union
F~ _Horne tn C~lville, Burial Nicholson.
was District 13 Division IV Bact subsidiaries to compete .wilh ~
wj!l be ·m lhe Coolville Cemetery.
~ervil:es will be Saturday at 1
of the Year Ibis past season; had union mines.
·
·• ~·F;rtenaa may can af tile funeraJ ~"p ilL"· Alf'fldrl'fltp~ ijQJI)e;·,S265
2,051 caieer rushing yards, and llad , Peabody Holding has sai~ }t
.' ~Sil.turdliy from 6 :to 9 p.m. . N'ol-Wicii Slltel,' Hil.liard, .wilh Pas118 tacltles.
provideS as much as 10 percenr·ot ·
101' Craig B. Scho_ll offic:iating.
tO •
Singleton also had 94 receiving the nation •s coal for electricity. ,.. :
\• Friends may call at the funeral
lY~'
~
I'
.. ~
yards, good for another touchdown,
.
CLEVELAND (AP) _Here are home oo Friday from 2--4 p.m. and
and passed for an additional 20
·• ·
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service respond·
yards
Tree packetS available
7 9 m An. Order i&gt;f the Eastern
!~eOilllsd~.y night's Ohio Lottery
~ice will lie held Friday at 8
·ed 10 nine calls for assistance Di1 Wednesday.
.
The Mei~s Soil and Water ;.JC_.
At9:22 a.m.the Middleport uilit was called 10 Overbrook Center
Besides excellil!g at football,
,.
'-"'~'
Super Lotto: 1--4-14-31-36-39
p.m. · · '
. .
for Naomi Ohlinger who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospi·
Singleton is a starter on Howie servation District Ladies AUlliliacy
~~k
3 :N~.().8~;7~'2 A
mawy ·blieeumoafdfleowloerstheco;.~be':fcona~
tal.
.
Caldwell's Southern Tomado bas- is O,?CISCC andagain oundlfering for sallane ~
""" : um · J· ...
The 'Rutland and Salem Center (Station 6) Fire Departments
tetball team, which is now 104 pac..
gro
coverp "Pick 4: Numbers: 9-3":8-8
HCart Association.
were called at 10:39 a.m. to Bowles Road for a motor vehicle acci·
overall. He is the team ',s top
SingI~ varieties packets availdent. The Rutland unit transported Kim Barrett and William Lee
rebounder and shot blocker, and able this year include white Pirie,
V.
-~ Games to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
most recently proved himself as lhe 25 seedlings for $8; scotch pi~25
At·10:43 a.m. the Middleport unit responded 10 Pomeroy Nursteam's top slam dunlcer. He is aver- seedlings for $8; Colorado -liie
ing and Rehabilitation Center for George Cundiff who was taken 10
aging 10 points per game.
· spruce, 25 seedlings for $8; NorVeterans. Atll:43 am. the unit went to East Main for Brian Hayes.
Joining Singleton on the expect- way spruce,_25 seedlings, $8; M.ag- .
He was also talcen 10 Veterans.
ed list of signees are: Jonathon. nolia, five seedlings, $5.
•
The
Rutland
unit,
at
12:09
p.m.,
went
10
Carpenter
for
Lynn
Beier,
Swanton;
Chet
Feldman,
.
Variety
packets
include
tile
. MARlETT A, Ga, (AP) - A test improvements to Lockheed
Bricker
who
was
taken
10
O'Bieness
Memorial
Hospital.
Stow;
Raoul
Griffin,
Detroit,
backyard
packet
which
contilns
catgo plane used as a flying labora- transpon planes. It was equiJlllCd
The Middleport Fire Department, at 3:I6 p.m., wentiO Africa
Mich.; Korey King, Rialto, Calif.; two each of sweet shrub, red flow.
tory by Lockheed Corp. crashed with advanced data-gathenng
equipment.
Road for brush fire. .
'
Chris Morgan, Laverne, Calif.; eandring. qnlcuiflnce, ~edoalmsier dogwood
and b~ed sh!!rtly after talceoff,
· At 5:48 p.m. the Middlepon unit went tD lhe Middleport Police
Lonche Thrash, Chicago, Ill.; Keith
P1
owenng
ond for $7;
Julius Alexander, a spolcesman
'killing all seven Lockheed employDepartment
for
Jeiry
Annstrong
who
was
taken
tD
Veterans.
Wallace,
San
Diego,
Calif.;
Steve
and
.t.he
fruit
tree
packets
whJ~h
for
the
aircraft
mater,
said
the
ees aboard and destro~n&amp; an array
The Racine and Bashan Fire Departments responded to a suucYeager, Cincinnati; and Andre contatns lwo each of Melrose apple
plane had undergone extensive
Of speciali~ electroii!C gear.
IUie ftre at 7:36p.m. iln Sellers Ridge Road. The vacant structure
Jackson, Youngs10wn.
and Empire apple for $21. .
..
· The L· 100, a civilian version of modificatioos to its wings and
was
located
on
property
owned
by
Chuck
Baker.
Ground
cover
plants
ayailible
flight
cootrol
systems.
It
w!is
fitted
lhe C-130 Hercules military transAt 9:45p.m. lhe Pomeroy Station went Welch Town Hill for a
This recruiting class was ranked ~Jspl~i~~u;~S~BJ:r:l~Yi~
pon, 'weiu down about 200 yards with special navigation equiplllent
and
cockpit
displays.
from lbe runway _at Dobbins Air
chimney fr.re at the Robcn Cline residence.
by an .Ohio Universitl spokesman plants for $! 5; and crown vetch,-12
The plane, which hild been in
Force Base, where it had tala:n off.
as being the third o three great plants for $21.
•
also had more
It clipped a Navy clinic, but no one use for nine
classes recruited by the current
Any of these packets may tie
powe(ful engmes than lhe standard
0111he pound was hun.
·
~~Two Dexter residents were treated for minor injuries following a
Gaul said, "I'm extremely orderedatlheMeigsSWCDO~~
...,e
• lnvCJtigarors wilh lhe National C-130, Alexander said.
one-vehicle
wrect
on
Bowels
Road
near
Dexter
Wednesday
around
·th
R
II'
·
·
at
33101
Hiland
Road
in
Pomet.Py
I
d
"It was not an ordinary HerTrapsportatlon Safety Board
p ease wt
usse s stgnmg at or by mail with check or money
10:15 a.m.
.
wodced lhrougb lhe night, combing cules by any stretch ofthe imaginaOhio
University.
This is a freat order to the listed address. AU
Kimberly Barrett, 24, of 36192 Buzzard Den Rd., was eastbound
through lhe wreckage, for clues to tion,'' he said
accomplishment
for
Russel and orders must be ne;d for when .:.._1&gt;.
and unable 10 ftteer lhe 1986 Nissan Hardbody pickup1ruek she was
adds a lot of credibility tD our foot·
".,.
It was designed 10 fly at much
lhe cause of lhe crash.
driving
for
lack
of
power
steering.
The
truck
went
off
lhe
right
side
ball
program
here
at
Southern.
1
milled.
There
is
a
limited
supply
!If
The plane was called lhe L-100· lower lhan nonnal speeds, mainly
of
the
road
and
into
a
ditch,
continuing
on
until
it
struck
a
larger
have been extremely pleased to pac~keis will be in and ready ;or
20 High Technology Test Bed, a to test shon-distance landing.
dill:h, lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe State Highway Patrol reported.
One of lbe crew members was
one-of-a-kind laboratory used to
have coached a player of this cal· piclrup around March 19. An exl!;t
Barrett and her passenger, William L. Garnes, 6, address same as
identified as the flight test engiiber."
date for pickitp will lie aniiDU!lCC:Ii.
above, were transported by the Meigs County Emergency Medical
neer, Troy Cleveland CasiOna, 33.
' ..
Service 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital where lbey were treated and
The identities of the others were
Food memories
released.
wi)bheld until relatives could be
SingleiOn said, "I've had ·many
· Bam:tt was cited by the patrol for driving an unsafe vehicle.
notified.
fond memories of Southern. My
Douglas High, Navy chief hosfondest is probably the camaraderie
pital corpsman, was in the clinic
and respect I earned from my team·
when the plane crashed.
mates and opponents. I've made a
A Langsville woman was cited for failure 10 control after striking
"I heard a hum. SorneL~ing was
lot
of friends through football."
a school bus on Beech Grove Road at the junction of Com Hollow
coming down," he said.
Tberuture
Road near Rutland Wedhesday around 8:SO a.m.
N t1i "· 'l'llo -tool"'-. ... lloo
"I
hope
to do well in my aca·
According to a report from lhe Gallia·~~Post of lhe State
Dido lf~flrrf·Me, Nau-1
demics
and
just as well in my alh·
A:"....:!!!......
ta!ln, ..........
Highway Patrol, Diana L. Hughes, 33, was
nd on Com Hoi·
Now~
:.:-\ 7U Third - - .
letics
at
Ohio
University. I'm really
, low Road, slid in gravel left of center onto Beech Grove Road and
---10017.
looking forward to it. This is a
.struck a Meigs County Local School Board school bus driven by
Divorce aranted
great opportunity for me. Hopeful·
A
divorce
has
been
granted
by
·
CoraA.Loftis,47,Pomeroy.
'l'llo DollY . .!laol, · Ill C-t" St.,
ly, through my play, the cama·
l)le
Meigs
County
Court
of
Cam·
No injuries were reported.
P-:..4,, Ollie.,..
.
raderie and respect at Ibis .level will
moo Pleas 10 Anna F. Lemley from
Damage tD Hughes' 1982 Mazda Sundowner pickup truck was
come
later."
Kevin L. Lemley.
listed ~ ftgliL The bus was not ~ged.
.

,

r----- L ocaJ b rJ•ef:S-- ----,
ll.l(!z•g," Unl'ts •espond

Lo
..tte·ry num b.ers

n•ne cnll..

siar

·
,
h
Se en killed in plane eras
·• A"Ir· F
at Georgta
. orce 'B ase
c

\

•

rears.

.

S0!11e things that were.
WASHINGTON (NEA) Oac example: The new clintoil
Sour grapes anyone? When the
piesa
staff arrived tD find almost
new Clinton staff got tD their desks
nothing.
Every envelope, every pad_
in lhc White House, they received a
rude welcome. Basically, their predecessors· took everything with
them !hat wasn't nailed down, and

IND.

.

·.· Actually, lbe 10 percent estimate originates in the deeply
flawed "Kinsey Report" or 1948.
A recent study by the National
Center for Healtlr Statistics indi·
cates !hat homosexuals and bisexuals make up 1.5 percent of lhe PoPulation. But whatever the level,
won't lhe military rate climb wilh
legalization? If it does, is there a
disturbing tipping point in a military unit?
How will it play out? The issue
concerns ·~professed" ~ys in lhe
military. In an era of h1gh-proftle
media politickin&amp; might lhe military become lhe unhealthy venue
fill' a nationall!fiWIICnl that should
take place elsewhere? Do we need
pickets at lhe NCO club?
Against all that looms lhe potent .
and proper 1s:sue of American civil
rights, which is .not tD be gainsaid.
It is lhe fashion these days' !0
regard social traditionalists as bidebound foaies. But America has
faced a social revolution in the last
generation. Some of it has ·been
very good. Some of it stank 10 high
heaven and harmed us. Do you
remember how we were 101d lhat
"lbe drug culture" was so very
progressive?
, .
America needs, and deserves, a
serious debate about whether our
biggest deficit is social, and bad for
our health.
Bea Wattenbera, a seDior rei· ~
low at the ,\mericaa Enterprise
IDStltute, Is author ol "Tbe First .
UDiveraal Nation," publilbed by
Tbe Free Prell and I Bylldicated
writer ror Newspaper Eaterprise
Assoclatloa.

G_jving a youngster a helping hand ·

Against Sunday hunting

~~ I

By Tbe Associated Press
or snow· will affect Ohio on MooOutdoor activities will be ideal ;m,y as a pair of low pressure sysFriday with sunshine ·and above tems combine to bring moisture
· normal tem~ across Ohio. back inPo lhe region.
Persistent htgh pressure over much
The Columbus Weather Station
o( the country has kept away or says lhe record high for Ibis date
weakened weather systems that was 66 in 1946. The record low
could have affected Ohio much of was--7 in 19I7.
Ibis week. ·
Sunset today will be 5:54 p.m.
Friday will lie sunny over much . Sunrise Friday will be 7:36a.m.
Around the nation
of lhe state. But as an arctic front
approaches from the nQrth in the
A slow low-pressure system
afternoon, clouds will lie ·increasing produced sc!lltered rain .00 snow
into the state ahead of the front. today in ·lhe central and southern
Highs will range from lbe tower Plains. Temperatures were mild in
40s !0 the lower 50s.
the nor~hern Plains and Great
The mercury will plummet into Lakes region, but that should
'--1 . !he 20s Friday night after the pas· change drastically by Friday.
sage of the arctic front. As winds
Snow fell in Denver early today
turn into the cold north, snow and rain fell in Oklaholiia City and
showers are .expected 10 develop. Fort Worth, Texas. On Wednesday,
The snow could become heavy in 3 ·inches of rain fell in lhe Corpus
squalls over some areas of northern Christi, Texas, area and thunder·
W. VA.
Ohio on Saturday as the arctic air stonns rumbled across much or the
settles over the Great Lakes, Highs state.
over lbe weekend will be mosdy in
the 20s with 30s over the far south.
Precipitation in the form of rain

ACC11-WcalliCr• forecast for dav1ime

-

provisional agnostic, leaning
' Bgalnst, l look to Nunn's bearings
tD learn something about an issue
\hat is more than "IJCripheral." A
nation lives by its values more than
by its money; we're in trouble,
American-style, bcc•nse of values,
not money.
To do the job 'right, Nunn 's
hearings should deal with both
homosexuality and civillibmies in
a broad context, not just about gays ,
· in lhe military. There are c!ifficult
questions:
We ought to learn about the
nature-nllitlJrC argument. Activist
· ¥ays maintain that homosexuality
ts inherited, period. ;But many
scholars believe otherwise. Some
gay behavior is herilable, !hey say,
but some of it is influenced by lhe
social environment If so, and sane. lions .are lifted, will some impressionable young people in the military, so-called "waverers,:· be
drawn 10ward a gay life? And by
offering symbolic national alfmnation, or value-neutrality, toward

D

...

Friday, Feb. 5

Gay issue.is bigger than military

rent nep.tment ct Defense policy.
that isn't neceslbe military: It's Oeorse Bush's But, temponlrily,
"Y"'o... ••
• ,, • - A
sary.
~,,...
CCXIIJXOIDliC
un~
faulL
It's
BiU
ClintOn's
faulL
It's
: D&amp;VOIBD TO 'IBB INni'I:::':UJ~,
IA I&amp; OWOldo
T11B JIBIGII..JIAIJO ARU
the fault of Republicans in · by Nunn on Clinton provides six
Congress. It's the fault of everyone
who says, "100 bad we're talking
'IIT,._H
about
IJCripheral
islues,
-~
of
"un•
b
..
lhe dcC'ICit and health caiC... Only
'
Sen. Sam Nunn bas it right, and he months for hearings lir. ·Nunn, and
'
ROIQt'l' L WINGEIT
now faces a prodigious task, per- ·for furlber study, while retaining
Nr•,
haps- IbiD be knows.
· lhe basic policy.
.
Bush's mistake was not tD chalNunn, chamnan oflbe Atnled
CIL\RLENE HOEFLICH
Jenge Clillton after CUntD~ brou~t Services Committee, is wisely say-~ ~ PAT WIII'I"DIEAD
e-ra! Manager
it up in lhe cam~. It IS lhe J.ob ing, "let's learn about it before
of the conscrvauve party 10 ra!SC rushing 10 judgment." He is a mill• •
serious social issues, seriously.
tary expert, and he has his age
- .. LETll!ltS Of OPINION .., 'x 1'lloy obould be less lbao 300
Clinton's
error
came
later.
going
for him. He's 54, which
· : wonls. All Jeaas ""' IFibject ., - . . , oad • • be li&amp;Ded wilb Qame,
When
Bush
did
not
engase
the
means
he
carne 10 adulthood before
· oddreu 111111 u I
·-.No .• 'loaoils will be P"t&gt;'isbed Leucn
issue, America did not have a homosexuals were called gay,
obould ... ia
l - . . Flllllj
...
chance to consider it and argue before gays became a .POlitical
about iL Under those circurnstanees force, before gay activists were
Clinton should Dot have said civil · demandin&amp; that public schools
rights is lhe key concea;n and that ·teach children lhat homosexuality
he woUld lift the ban withOut con· is "an alrernative lifestyle."
gressiqnal debate. It's 100 impor·
It's a perspective we need. (Like
'. ·'
tanL
.
Nurin,
a bare majority of American
•. . Sometime aao • old Maa- . . . . . die left sidi. Pulled alllhe
Republicans
in
Congress
want
a
voters
came of age before the so.
• Brooks Sayre slwed ollais waJ blck it wu lhc emergency hot-button glory vote 10 codify cur- called •'sexual revolution.") As a
e~icnccs wilh 111c Mlidd T FanL 1Jnkt. half way forward, aeutral
..t allllle way b wad, biab bear.
I wouldl&amp;e 10
Oa die .... lbree JIN'• 1•.
, . If you bawe sa, ciw d
. . die left - -low gear,
·o.: driven oae. J011 ..YC •i I a the
the mddk: one reverse, and lbe
'' tlreat Americm Exp:a
.' :' They called ba "The Tia
It
die ~ auto·
Lizzie• but you Qli!Ma't pat a*lllllic · W'Jib die loa&amp; handle
. iii her.
. , Mine was a 1924 two seated Slil:t bwad Wid you left die _low
·,touring car. It oaly bad dnc dacn. II* 0111. il wwld JO- biab gear
:None for lhe driva's side. 'l1lcy ifya.hldm•'lh~
'lbc pi fcalwa • die Sleering
ooty half 1oon ... ,.. ...
o• '
. ailje cunains ill die .,.... ... two
Fnm&amp;l'foroow.-latu. _blanQU. Youdidn' thaYCIIIYliOU-Virgi\Wabr
6!~ JC11in1 your ams auad ,...Hip Country
:giiUriend. Had to lrel:p Racine
. .. .. There was a loa&amp; •-ae llil:k

r

'

The Dally Sentinel Page _3

Above normal temperatures continue around _Ohib

OHIO Weather

Page ~The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepqrt, Ohio
Thurtday, February 4,1993
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Two injured in accident

Langsville woman cited in wreck

_.,._

___ ..

Court news

1

· ==':!=-~

Oito ·-··-··---............. - ....11.80
Oito ................. - ..........................
()a~ ............... -

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

lllfGYCOPr
- I'IIIC&amp;

.

. . .. .

IWJ.--................._ .........-» C.tl
IIOIMotlllilto..., ... _

.- :r.ra~~:m:
..., .................. .
•

I

2

"" ,_,....._ ..
u•t.....=
-------·-····-·::i"'
-·-·-·- ····........ .ae
1.......
· a .v.,...oa

----·-"
""''

au'hh

,

~

...........~-~.,..,..""...........-

IIW.....___. . . . .
• w-..._. . . . . . _,_,. . . . . . .
'I

.71

--:~AO

· - - -..·--·-·-......., ..... _

10
..o

"=--,.,...-----=---'

JUdj-.ent aoqbt .

A JUdgment action in the
amount of $25,000 hu been filed
in the Meigl County Court of Common Pleas by Maxine 0. G!iffilh
· and Cbarlcs 1!. Orllfilb, Pomeroy,
against ~er F. Dillard Jr.,
Ponltroy,
Joe Doe, 111 uniden·
tilled operatOr ol a iiiOIOI' vehicle,
and State Auto lnlurlnce Corpora·
don, ColumbuL

Dlllolutlon -abt
· A dluolutlon for marriage has
been filed In lbe Meiss County
Court ol CotWUUII l'lliu by Lel!lne
Sue Pllbet, Recine, end Rllph Lee
Fllher, Racine.

Liquor stores to close Feb.lS
All state liquor SPOres and departmental offices will be closed
and theie will be no spirituoUS liquor sales at state liquor' qencles
Feb. I 5 in observance of Presidents' Day.
·
Editor'• note: All names, a1e1 aad addresses are as they
appear lD law enrorcement and o~ reportl.

-Meigs announcements-~
Deer bunten meetltts
J.,ealota to meet
Thore will be a deer bunting
1he Jellljar meet1na of Ameri·
meetin&amp;,at lbe American Leaion ·
lAdon Drew Weblter Polt No.
·Hallin RUtland on Smday from 1· 39 wllfbe belcl Feb. 16. Dinner will
3 p.m.
·
bo • 7 p.m. and meetina at 8 p.m.

ea.

--

1'111.-tATAUN.
MIU141
.
I!IOIIIA'I TIIIPU ~y
Onel---7111
'J 1 Wotl:ll•t•
I

�Thursday, February 4, 1993

·sports

The Daily Sentinel
· ,

Thursday, February 4,1991
~

p

Baseb~all

executive ·committee
suspends Schott for one year

'

Marce Scbott, sbown with Hal Mortis (left) a~d
Reggie Sanders at a preaa conference. Morris.is
wearing tbe road uniform, and Sanders is wearing the home wltlta. (AP)

MODEUNG NEW UNIFORMS - or shall

·we say brln&amp;ine.'back old ones -for the Cincin-

_natl Reds' 1993 season Wednesday couldn't

. overshadow the baseball executive comminee's

. 'ODe-year suspenaioa levied aaa!nat Reds owner.

. In tbeNBA ...

W. Mid\ ............ 6 3 .647

BOSU .............. ..S
Tolodo ............4
c. Mich ............ 3
Kent St ............ 3
Aknln '' - '''''""'H2
E. Midt. .......... ..2

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AdaolkDirilloo
TWLI'd.
NOw Y..t ..- ....... .26 IS .634
.Jaooy
:10 .556
Odando ................. ;20 19 .513
......... ..........22 21 .l12
Jlhi' • ;::· .:......... 11 25 ..as
_ _ _____ ...... 14 27 .341
.\2 30 .216

GB

-----.25

w........,_____.

3

Cllodoao---·-..--..22

BoU St. tiO,A!uonM
Bowlina Green 10!5,

Alllooa-....... ......22

_ _ ......,_..... .22

DoaoiL. .....c......... l9
Mil..-...... ......11

.471
.353
.412

,35! ·
.412
.350

Ccn~.

Michiaan

99

1•~

.1&gt;00
.l24

:10
22
22
23
25

I 9
611
7 10
6 1l
., 10
7 13

Wednesday's ICOres

l

l
9..5
12

Miuni, Ohio 69' """ 55

Ohloll,E. ~74(01)

Tolcdo64, W. M;c~Uaon 62
Saturday's games

C•lraiDI•Woa
Qioqo,,_. . ...... ;IO IS .667

CUYEI.AN0.-.27 II

9 I J29

4 ~56
5 .444
6 .333
6 .333
1 ,.222:
7 222

3
6.5

Akron fi Miami. Ohio
S.U Sl at W, Mic:hiKUL
E. Michiaan •t Bowllna Groen
Toledo It C. Michiaan
Kent It Ohio

7~

.lOO
.lOO
.452

7.5
9.5

.419

11

!~:..~

I~ ~9

ZIW
- ....,_.
Uloh ... _ ............ -21
·-=;~.26
Dmow
IS
)'' ·;::::::::.:: :.9
OoDos. _ .............- .3

IS

·':::

CCIIIf.

Team

W L Pet.

l~\"' .............1 01.000
Mich!&amp;on ..........6 2 .7SO

GB
_

.m

31

:073

2A

PoclkDt,...;. . .............. 32 9 .710
I'M1Ind ............... ..21 t3 .613
4
- ........"'-..- · 21 t4 .M.7
4.5
LA. a -.........23 :10 .535
10
LA. l.Wn...........22 21 .lt2 . It
Ootdln Sta1e .... .....20 24 .4Sl t3.l
Sou
.....- ..... .!~ 27 .372
11

•

..........A• .•
·-~::::
- ·-· ·
.. St ......3 s
~,

Oluo State ~ .......2 6
PennSoate . ....... l ~
Nonh-.....0 7

Utoh tOO. Oat ... 96
-122,Mim-.t02 .
aa..,.ll71, s........ 81

Tonl&amp;bt's pmes

Oold&lt;a Sutut New Yodt, HO p.m.
~ -~oaey, 7:30p.m.
lndlono K Soot - . , 1:30 p.m.

..

QicraoatLA: ~.I0:30p.m .

UtolutLA.l.ibn, !0:30pm.

Friday's K•mes ·

19 2
17 3
12 6
I" 5
•
14 3
.s.soooo 1132 4s
.m ' .11 6
.250
9 I
.143
~10
.000 lit

our

Oblo Conference
Hiram Col. 70, Capital61

John CrnoU 66, Mount Unb •9
Mlll.kinpn 11, Ballilwln·Wallace 79

Mtd·Oblo CIHlference

6 54 219194
• 52 mm

Bdltcl.lnd. 97, Blttfnan 69
ClnciMid 91, A..tin Puy 6t
Dd"liiiCO 74, Wiaalbera 72

Non-conference
WllnUnpn 74, c.... lJ

I &gt;44 200216
71 231117

s....................

4 64 219t92

I M 222t94

6

Major college
basketball scores

60 230111

'.

'

4 31170247
4 t6 121263

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
NorrloDIW L TPU.GFGA
Chlco11".............. 31 II I 70 t9lt54
............... 29 20 6 64 232113
"'""'-" ......... 21 II I 64 193t75
Tomnlo."N"""'" 2-4 11 I S6 173163
St IAalo .......... 23 23 I l4 115115
Tompo Boy ........ tl 34 3 l9 174211

Bucl:nell6S, Colpte63
Fordham II, Holy CmM 73
Lafo)'COO 99, Lch;,hl2
76

T._

Sm,a. Dlrilloo
Vanc:cuvw ....... " 30 1!5 I
C.lpl)' ,_,....... 29 19 6
WllinlpcJ ......... 25 23 6
LooA11111co ....... 2A 23 6
l!dmon... ...... " .. t9 :II I
~

wec~ne~~~ar••scora

_ . . , , -.... 2
2

O...S.Rt

-7.Loo~2

--,

H.'\'.-J,T-2

fHl 1· 1' 2,N.Y.--2,tie

~\.--,.
DooioO&amp; 5, ~ 0
7,S.I.e3

v-•.T-Bo1 2
No P11'" nurldiiY or Friday

· All-laatsoturdaC
'!~3 p.m.
0....
,._

.:

WLPcL

••lilt. "'""-''"

W

...._ __ __,7 2 .171
.m 11t6
- --·----' 3 -

v;n....., 12. Pluobtqh 76

72

Allbama A&amp;.M 94, Al•bam.a St. 83
Appolodtlon S• 10, N.C.·W'.tntinAubuon IS, Miululppi 74

'

Coaaal Cualina 14; O!ut.an Soulbem61
·
Coppin St. 73, Del.awan St. 64
OuU II. Nonh Cuolino 67

Flo. lntanationol 77. C..&lt; Fknldo 72
Aori.da fiJ, Alabama 59
Oemalo77, T...,_tl0

OnmDilna St 106. C..~a~ayll

Jockoonst.M.,T~SO

Jan\CII Madiaon 110, Morpn. SL 71
Kenwoky 17, t.6uio ..... So. 63
McmpiUo St 96, Fl..tai Atlantic 46
N. Carollna AAT 65, Wlnac!n..Saleln
62
•
N.C&lt;-11-boo&gt; 94, Foldelp Dictio.,.10
Rldonond It, Ooartlo Maoo 62
Southom U. 91, SE La.ioionoiS
V...-ru76,SouthC...U..72
w.c...un.o 73, Londcr 53
WlllWn A Mor)'77, VM167
Wlnlluop 79. N.C.·Aihmllc116

Midwest

99

loll St 60. A1uon SO
Bowlloa 0.... tOS, C.... Mlchlpn

.

C-d91,Auo1io;..,6t

B•....W. tOI,I.Dyalo, Ill. 70

MAC standings
c..r.

Towtan St. 12. Md.·Ballimot. County

South

61 236166
64 206 t 13
l6 20t 204
l4 209217
46 152209
14 141265

l

9

'

Eut
St. lolqm'a74, Rhodo lUnd 6S

•.

IS

North Coast Conference
CU&lt; Wooicm 17, K"'l""' 83
Den1ooo 69. Eulhom 57
Ohio W01leyan 97, Oberlin 70
w-71, Atte"""'y 69

5 73:121;176
6 l6 207193
9 ll 2t2204

l

~

,.

•

Ohio men's college
basketball scores

Rio Granda 79, Shawnee St. 64

Ad.riNDI.WO.

...JB:

\y.

.,

Sunday's came
Putduc at MiclUpn

T Pta. GFGA

-

-·.o.-

By RUSTY MILLER
receiver Joe Jurevic.ius of Menwr
AP Sports Writer
Lake Catholic and Nonhwestern
The days \when Ohio State ~signed Division I lineman of the
locked up overy lOuted Ohio high year Ryan Daniels of Toledo St.
school senior to play football in John's. Reggie Garnett, a bruising
Columbus are over.
·
6·2, 220-pouild linebacker from
Parfty, expanded national re· Akron Buchtel, picked Michigan
cruiling Jirograms and other consid· State over Miami of Florida .
'fl!tions have put an end to tha,t.
Columbus Brookhaven running
; It was made abundantly clear by back Charles Henley; the runner-up
C:urrent Ohio State coach John .for Mr. Football, signed with
. t;:ooper Wednesday as he an · Kansas. '
nounced a class of 20 recruits on . It was the Second year in a row
tlie fu:st day for the signing of na· ~- Football didn't sign with Ohio
tiona! letters of intent.
State. It was also the second time in
-~~ "I'm not bere to tell you we · Cooper's six recruiting classes that
!lidn't miss out on some r,tayers in . he didn't get a running back out of
the state," Cooper said. • Obvious• Ohio.
there are players in this state we
"It's an average year in Ohio,''
would like to have signed who Wallace said. "There weren't a lot
~ent somewhere else."
,
of great skill-position athletes in
:. Ohjo State got signatures from the state this year."
12 native sons in what Cooper
But Cooper said of such ana·
called a •good but not exceptional lysts, "These guys are making a
yj:ar for prep talent in the state.
hving, you know that. Some times I
' Cooper was disappointed in not question what a guy in California
!linding some of the top names in knows about players in Ohio. .. . I
tlie state, several of whom did not don't put a lot of stock in thaL"
eren visit'the Ohio Slate ~ampus.
Wallace said Ohio State's re·
:, "The tiling I like about this emits would i:mlk in the middle of
c~. 111ese are people who want to the pack among classes in the Big
IIi: here,'' Cooper ~aid. "It's al· Ten.
"'ays disappointing if somebody
"It looks like an average class,
didn't visit your campus . ... There's like a lot of the Big Ten, in a big .
s,j&gt;me players out there we would group behind Michigan. Northhave liked to ~ave signed."
western outrecruited a lot of
Ohio Slate's most trumpeted in· schools this year ani! I can'i restate signees were 6-foot-4, 260· member a Northwestern class this
Pound defensive lineman Mike good,:' Wa)lace said by telephone
Vrabel of S!Qw Walsh Jesuit and 6- from Costa Mesa, Calif.
5, 310-pound offensive lineman
The University ofCincinnati
Raymond Harris of Massillon Per- signed 22 players, including three
ry.
.
. . local players: offensive lineman
~ · According to Allen Walltice, an· Zack Sweeney of Princ~ton. defenalyst for the California-based Su· sive tackle Jim Gibson of La Salle
perPrep recruiting publication, Vra- and defensive back Ron Brown of
bel and Harris were the top two Middletown.
prospects in Ohio. But Ohio State
The big -school co-backs of the
missed out on the next five.
year on the All-Ohio team went
·., Cooper picked off signatures separate ways, wim Cincinnati SL
from four offensive linemen, two Xavier's Scott Sollman heading for
tight ends, three qllllrt(;rbacks; ·two Notre Dame 10 play baseball and
tanning -backs, one kicker, one Cincinnati AndeiSon's Jason Druso
Wide receiver, three defensive line- signing with Miami of Ohio.
ii!en, twO linebackers and two de·
Jurevicius' quarterback, Pete
fensive backs.
Jelovic, signed with Kansas State.
&lt;" But the Buckeyes still missed · Jelovic was the back of the year
OIJt on 'a half-dozen of the biggest and Jun:vicius the lOp lineman on
!lames iii the state. Fullback· the Division ill All-Ohio team.
liileback~ Man: Edwards, the 1992
The Division IV back of the
~-Football in Ohio, elected 10 go
year, Tom Paolucci of Warren
b Notre Dame. Michillll!l ~U&amp;bbed Harding, signed with nearby
\lie big-school first-team All-Ohio Yciungstown State, while the co·
Q'\larterback, Scot Loeffler of Bar- lineman of the year Ryan Price of
6erton,
while Penn State tool:. wide Brookville is headed for West Vir·
.

'·'

NOdh'lt'eltem at llliDoU
Penn Su.te at Ohio State
Minneaou at Michipn State

Prlrldl. DI.Uklet

6

-

.647

Saturdoy•aaames

WALES CONFERENCE

San.IGie . ~ ......~-

OSU gets 12 in-state

(201)
.
Ohio Nonltem 71, 11eiddl&gt;q 70
OUabain 114, Ma.ri.b.. 67

In theNHL ...

............ 33 t8
~ .............. 29 t7
30 20
Buffalo ............... XI 2.0
lloftlonl ............ t4 l!
Ottowo ... _,"""" 6 46

·

·Jl9
.375
.313

Indiana ... IOWI

7:30p.m.
Dcroit ltc..EVEL\ND,7:l0p.m.
NewYOikacMWni, I p.m.
. lndl.iot Dollu,l:30 p.m.
MinlwoU at Haulton, J:lO p.m.
Srcnmano at Dm.ver, 9 p.m.
LA. Lak.m a1 PhomiJ:, 9:30p.m._
Odmdo • Ponland.10:30p.m.

:a.

... .

TontKbl's 1ame

Mli.Uoo"~

w...._. . ..

661

,706
'
•
,814
.770665

Iowan Illinoia

Golden • " ll Wuhintta~,1 :30p.m .

W L
l'luobuoah .......... 34 14
25 22
H.Y. bopo ..... 23 21
N.Y. Isl.andm ~·· 2-' 23
Nn~axy .......
23
l'llllldclphll ...... II 26

.90S
.ISO

(In national letter-of-intent day,

Wednl!lday•ucor•

1'1llladclohioiiB...,.,7:30p.m.

T.-

·
By JOE KAY
Perez S)lid at 11 media .luncheon. Pleas Court, claiming he was rued'
CINCINNATI (AP) -What "I've been aabd quealiona allout because he opposed her allegecl.
will Marge Schott's suspension this situation aD the time, but I'm policy of not hiring blacks, arr4
mean to the Cincinnati Reds?
not even ddnlcjna about iL I'm just because he testified against her in li
No SL Bernard on the field. No trying to c:onc:entrate on baseball.•' . lawstiit filed against Schou by sev.:
cigarette-puffing owner iii the front
S&amp;ne of Scbott's black players era1 ~f the Reds· liinited ~- ._.,
Dec. 6 - Schou countersues~
row at games.
have thought about iL Her use of
· Other than that, not mucb.
racial slura, the basis for her sus· denying charges of racism ana
. The terms of Schou's one-year pension, made them uncomfort- ~!aiming Saba wrote chjmsel!
suspension from maior teague able, even thougll tlley weren't $6,894 in unauthorized checks ani!
negligently paid $52,571 for health
baseball Wednesday g1ve her the around to hear them. /
·
insurance
premiums to retired
chance to stay involved with the
Outf~lder Reggie Sanders, wllo
front-office
employ(l!:s. Schott alsO
team. She can watch games from is black, said the team needs to talk
asks
for
$25,QOO
in dama,es for
the owners' box at RiVerfront Sla· thinP. out before the season starts.
defamation.
·
·
dium and participate in majlr poli·
• I've never seen a side of
1992
•
'
cy decisions.
racism from Marge in dtc·lime I've
Nov. 13 - . Deposition of.
The only things she can't do: been here,'' ·said Sanders, a rookie
watch games from her first-base last year. "We have a great rela- Charles Levy, the Reds' formeG
seat or make the day-to-day deci· tionship.It's all kind of hard for me direcwr of marketing, is releast4.
sions in running the team.
to believe. but I don't really know Levy says Schott called forme~
Reds outfielders Eric Davis anlf
Schott's never gotten involved what happened before I got liere.
in day-to-day decisions all that
"The key for us is to go to Dave Parker "million-doll111 nig.
!'!uch anyway, preferring to let her spring traiiling and have a big dis· gers" ~nd kepl a swaatita ar~
baaeball guys" - her general cussjon about it, let everything out; band at home. Roger Blaenii(e, th~
managers- run the show. General .. put it behind us and then play base- former vice president Qf bu.sin~
manager Jim Bowden takes over in ball and never talk about ft again.•• operations, testifies in a depilsitio\1,
her absence, so there's no real
The only lingering bird feelings -that he also heard Schott mak~,
..
...
change there.
could be Bl!long the team's seven racial rimlarks.
Baseball's suspension amounts miliority partners. Several of them
Nov. 14- Schott issues a stare~
to making her stand in the comer· said Wednesday they wished ment saying: "I am not a racisL, I
for ~ while. She.can go to games, they'd been coilsultc4 by baaeball's have never been more hurt or dis,:
but rust can't be seen.
·executive committee during the gusted in my life."
·
.
As mild as it sauncjs, that could investigation.
· ·
Nov. 16 -Trial, in which Sabo
be the wugbest punishment of all
"I feel the limited partners seeks $2.S million in damagef;
. f~r Schott, who loves mingling should have been ilicluded in some begins b~fore Uamilton County
wtth the fans.
.
· of this so that at least we could Common Pleas Judge Fred Clll'·
"You'd be tak.ing her out Qf the 'thirik about it,'' said Louise Nip· tolano.
·
,
ballgame," reliever Rob· Dibble pen, who owns two of the team's
Nov. 17- Cartolano dismi~
· said WedneSday afternoon, antici· 15 shares. Schott owns 61/l.
· Sabo's claims of retaliation an.!l
paling the suspension." "You'd be
Willam Reik Jr.., director of a unethical business practices, bu(
hurting her personally and this . money management f11111 in New allowa -the case 10 proceed on the
community."
York City, thinks Bowden will do a racial prejudice claims.
.
,
Schou wasn't available for com- good job running the team in
Nov. 18 - Sabo dismiaaes !hi;
· ment Wednesday. Her lawyer, Schott's absence. But Reik, who remainder of the suit, saying 11~:
Robert Bennett, described her aa owns one share, would have pre· plans 10 ask the 1st Ohio Dis~i
"very upset arid very depressed" ferred having former general man- , Court of Appeals to reinstate thq
over the way things have turned ager Murray Cook taJce over:
. claims' thrown out by Cartolano~
ouL
.
Bowden has been general man· Hank Aaron calls for baseball to
For everyone else in thC organi- · ager for o_nly three months. Cook . investigate Schott.
,.,
zation, it'll be business ItS usual.
ran the team during the RosncanNov. 20- Schott issues a Slate~
It's 1101like the Pete Rose gam. daJ and was fued after thai season.
ment, saying her use of the word
bling scandal that followed the
''I think Jim's doing a great job. "nigger" and her possession or:11
team through the 1989 season, He's an incredibly bright guy,'' swastika arm band weren '(. mesg~
causing ·a.distraction that contribut- Reik said: "But I know Ml!fllly's to offend.
~
ed to its fifth•place finish. Rose had a lot of experience in those
Nov. 23 - Schott meets
slayed in the forefront as manager fields." ·
Cincinnati with National Leagl\1;
while he fought major league base- . Here's a chronology of events in president Bill White.
'
ball in court liefoJe finally agreeing the Marge Schott controversy: .
Nov. 24 - Sharon Jones, a foe~
to a lifeti!lle ban.
1991 .
mer Oakland Athletics executi.i
This is different, manager Tony
Aug. 23 - Cincinnati Reds assistant. is quoted in The New
Perez said Wednesday.
.controUer Tim Sabo is fired.
York Times as saying before the
"Pete was managing. He was on
Oct. 9 - Sabo sues Schott in SQirt or an owners' conference cat1:
the field. That's what's different,'' Hamilton County (Ohio) Common ,
(See SCHOTI on J&gt;aie,5)
~,
.
'

Plltduc62, Ohio Si.tacs f1
W'LICOnlin J01, North....,..l7
MiMCIOU. 95, Ptnn swe 61

Wedllllday'o ocora
tbadocM129,PbilrdelpN•lll
Mirmi. 11" Adrnu.96
CJIVI!UIMD till, MilwmkooiOO
119. Dol1u t02

Owralt

W L PeL

-~ 1
lllinolo
5 2 714
11.. ,lf.J .. - :1,5 ·-•- .- ..• ·u":'":"·::"',s
3 .625
~
t2.5
' ·w
• .. .... .
•
ll 22S 17J
~• IOWI ,,,..,...,_, ....,3 2 .600

..•

tA

Big Ten standings
WESTERN
CONFERENCE
Mldw ....._
.a

,·

The Dally Sentlnei-Pa~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Iowa SL 96, Nltnlkt 89
' - 1L G.'»'ehm 61
Mllml, Ohio 69, K.o 55
_ , , ..... lt67

-6SCI~S4

NEillioollti,Cidol10 s. 74
Ohio It, B. - . , . 74 (0'1')

I

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up the tab on dosing costs that
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fees, etther.
. ·
Get your home equity loan
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And as you probably know,
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·
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·
. · ~:
·.'

.

'

BANKEONE.

1993
Jan. 3 - It is reported that
Scholl donated $100,000 to the ·
Cincinnati Academy of Physical
Education, a predominately bl~~:k
alternative scl)ool, for a .college
scholar!lhip program.
Jan. 4 - The Executive council
gives Schott until Jan. 20 10 give
· written tesponse to teport.
.
Jan . 8 - The Council says
Schou CID appear before it at Jan.
22meeting.
·
Jan. 12 ....,. Jackaon speaks to
owners durin&amp; a major leaaue.
meetin.lll OraliiMne, Texu.
Jan."22 ~Schou~ beforo ·
the a~~:ulive councllat Clnpevine, 1

TCQW.

Whatever. it. takes:

..

~3 -

'•

.

s49 OVER INVOICE AT TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS!
Plate Your Order Todayl

,

Feb. I - Amid tepOIU Schott
will be suspended for one year, '
counell calls Feb. 3 meetina at

,,, .,

Bank One, Athens. NA ·
Member FDIC
..

You Can Pay Sticker Price Elsewhere Or.••

Schou is suspended

.~or one yoar, fined $25,000 rar laa~
~e tlie aecut1ve ooiUtd( Judaed

·-

'racially and
sive.••

1993 BANC oNE CORPORATION 'ConauK your tax acMaor for specific condl
'
' I ••"
1 10118
approval. Offer expires Marcl1 31, 1lilla.
and_details. Subject to credk ~ ••

\

ethnicall~

offen-

-~

I

It

�•
Page 6

The Dally Sentinel

•

Thursday, February 4, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Brown, Powell scoring leads Redmen to victory over Bears
But wise decisions from Rio
Grande's unbeatable senior ~r­
ship of J err Brown and Troy Donaldson, and the unerring shooting
skill of Matt Powell allowed the
Redmen 10 go on runs that helped
contain the Bears' lhreat.
With Merry leading the assault,
Shawnee State got inside the Redmen court and made its trio or successful three-pointers in the first
half count to briefly exchange
leads. Brown, who ended with 22
points fot the game, led Rio
Grande's scorin$ in the opening
period with 10 pomts, while Powell
added eight and Brett Coreno seven
to help post a five-poin.t halftime
lead. For th~ half, the Bears domi-

A 79~ victory over Shawnee all scorers in the McDonald's
State University Wednesday at Night event, spwml his teammates
Lyne Center proved to be another to keep Rio Grande's margin low
notch for the University of Rio all through the first balf, and }hen
Grande Redmen in the Division I come back in the game's lalll:r sc:c·
and Mid-Ohio Conference race, but !ion to make the outcome not qwte
it was another one of thOse games " as certain as it appeared.
where the score didn't tell the
"Merry did a great job on us," .
whole story.
Redmen Coach)ohn Lawhorn
The 'Bears mired in the base- remarked. "We hard a had time
ment of the di~on and the confer- containing him so we had to wear
ence, have nevertheless been him down, and he did get a lillie
improving their game and didn't tired toward' the end, particularly at
8pllrC the horses as they.kept their
the free throw line. But you have to
hosts on the run for the bulk of the give him a lot of credit- he's a
game,
very good point~·"
.
Bears mentor J1m Arnzen put11
The speed and penetration of
Shawnee State point guard Travis more suc~.intly : "Merry kept us in
Merry, who netted 26 points to lead the game.

In jersey-retiring ceremony tonight,

Bird to be honored by Celtics .
· ByHOWARDULMAN
BOSTON (AP) - Soon after
Larry Bird signed his first Boston
Celtics contract, assistant general
manager Jeff Cohen got an urgent 1
a.m. phone call at home: Rescue
· the Midwestern hayseed who had
wandered into a rough neighborhood bar.
.
· He sped to save the future of the
fnuichise.
"I got down there, and I ,almost
got killed," said Cohen, whose
jacket and tie stood out in the
crowd. "He was lip with these
guys wearing his Mack cap and his
overalls and havin!l a great time.
He was fitting in w1th them beautifully.
"He was making fans."
Thirtee!l years later, the selfdescribed "hick from French
Lick" who still prefers sweaterS to
suits and shadows to spodights will
be honored at a star-studded ceremony where his number will be
retired tonight at Boston Garden. .
Magic Johnson. Bob Costas.
John Cougar Mellencamp. Leroy
Neiman. Red AUerbach. ·All will be
pari or it. There are whispers that
· Hollywood's Kevin Cosmer, star of
"Field or Dreams," will show up . .
The technology of videos on

a

gfant screens lind a laser-light
show, all hovering above the splintered, parquet floor, are intended to
evoke the same awe-fjlled response
from the full house that Bird did. ·
He walked away from the game
quietly, and a bit stiffly. when he
retired on Aug. 18 because of back
problems. He held a news conference, then set off into semi-obscurity. attending Celtics games but
spending more time in Florida,
where the fair-skinned Bird
obtained a rich tan.
"I bet he wishes he could just
sort of fade awlly, but they're not
going to let him do it," Cohen said.
Like the ancient Boston Garden,
which will be dressed up with
portable lighting and sound systems, Bird can resume his normal
life after Thursday night.
While the splasliy ceremony
may be out of ·character, "he's
been in the spotlight ever since he's
been a Celtic, so why should it
change now7 You've got to realize
the magnitude of the star," said
center Robert Parish, part of the
Big 'Three frontline with Bird and
Kevin McHale.
Bird, once concerned about his
twang and grammatical gaffes,
became much more comfortable as

a public speaker and often served
as team spokesman ..But "I think
he's nervous about" the ceremony,
Celtics senior executive vice president Dave Gavitt said.
It won't be squeezed into half- ·
time or staged as a mere preliminary. The Ccltics ·don't play Thursday night
.
They had no problem gellmg
people to pay an extra admission
- . the same price as game tickets
- to draw a sellout crowd that has
lieen a constant since late ·in Bird's
rookie season.
,
The other 15 former Celtic players who had their jerseys retired
were honored on a game night.
Gavitt said one benefit of a separate admission is th.at proceeds will
go to charity.

nated the shooting (50 percent to made some very good decisions."
Rio Grande's 41 .2) and the ))oa(ds
"Rio did a g(lod job in the last
(14-10).
10 minutes in adjusting to the slow
· But the Redmen caged the Bears pace of the game," Arnzen reflectlong enough in the second half to ed. "They milde the key adjustlead 59-44 entering the final I 0 ments by placing Powell in the
minuteS. But Merry, who played all shooter's slot in our trap situabut one minute of the contest, lions."
exploded for a total of 17 late half
The Bears ended with 22
points to be the only Shawnee State . rebounds, seven of ihem by Brian
competitor 10 break into the double Drer, who had six in the first half.
digit column. On his work and RIO Grande netted 25 boards as
some limely contributions from his Donaldson and ·Powell each
teammaiCS, the Bears came to with- snatcbed seven and Brown six.
in six (66-60) before Brown and Brown also Illd on assists with six.
Powell, who also hit 22 points, and The game's swift pace, surprisinga 19-point performance from Don- ly, resulled in few wrnovers -five
aldson pushed Rio (Jrande ahead.
for Rio Gmnde and nine endured
"We were flat, there's no ques- by the Bears.
'
lion about it, and I can't tell you
Balanced shooting perfOrrlliiiiCeS
what exactly the reason for that were seen by Rio Grande's field
was," Lawhorn said. "But when goal performance of 46.2 percent
you're flat and ·noi having ~ood (30-65, '12-28 from the three for
concentration and can still wm by 42.9 percent) to Shawnee State's
15 .points, you must have a preuy 47.2 percent (25-53, seven of 15 on
good basketball. team. Our seniors the outside for 46.7 percent). The
played well down the stretch and Bears connected on seven of nine

. ·-

..

THE KANAWHA

over
·voice
DAYTONA$,
TRUCKS

• "It's really just a different time
and place that we live in," he said.
"A lot of the things that we'll be ·
able to do Thursday night techno· logically weren't possible in earlier·
days.
·
"We just thought it would be .
absolutely impossible to do justice
to this guy at halftime of a game
without absolutely destroying the
integrity of that game:•• ·

Qlii.X.~9 OVER INVPICE!
25NEW DODGEA~~~I VANS IN STOCK
12 USED MINI VANS . .
STARTING AT

THAT'S RIGHT!

Purdue defeats Ohio State 62-57
' By RUSTY MILLI'R
sixth in a row for Ohio State (9-8·, percent
Purdue had beaten Big Ten coCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- 2-6) sincebeingrankC!INo.2l.
Purdue coach Gene Keady was getThe Boilermakers, who led by leader Indiana in the regular-season
ling phone calls from former play- as many as nine points in the first finale last season to hand Ohio
ers and they weren't congratUlating half, were on top 33-30 at the break State the outright conference chamthe Boilermakers on lleing ranked as Robinson accounted for more pionship.
·
th
half
(17)
f
th
·
·
N
·
"Randy
owed
me
one,"
Keady
No.l9.
.
.
an
o eu pomts. tho
.d 'th
h
. ·\'A lot of our .former players more than ijve points separated e sw W\ a 1aug .
have called me and ~ why we ,teams in the second ·half;;with 11 · , ._ _ _ _..._..;~._...,;.._,....,..,_;.._ _,;;.;,...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~~'!-~
weren't playing hard," Keady said lead changes.
t
after a ~2-57 victory over Ohio
Ohio State took its last lead at
State Wednesday night "Our play- 55-54 on a. driving lO•footer by
ers are embarrassed because now Jamie Skelton with 2:59 remaining.
the alwnni are calling me and criti- But Purdue pulled even on a free
.citing me. And I let the players throw by Matt Painter with 2:10
know it"
·
left.
Keady's office phone should be ' Twelve seconds later, Greg
quiet for a while. •
Simpson, who led Ohio State with
Led by Glenn Robinson's 29 · 14 points, missed from the baseline
points and II rebounds, the Boiler- and Matt Waddell rebounded for
makers played defense down the · the Boilermakers. Purdue set it up
stre.tch as if every possession was for Robinson, who was fouled by
thelast.
Skelton as he tried a 12-foot
"Defense was the key. We did a turnaround.
great job on their Olltside _players,
After Robinson hit both free
making them make the .p ass throws, the teams traded misses. At
inside," said Robinson. ~'That was the 41-second mark,, Simpson's
a good team effort. Kee11ing Ohio pass low to Lawrence Funderburke
State in the 50s is a grealjob."
was stolen by Waddell, who was
Robinson's rwo free throws with then fouled. He hit both free throws
1:41 left gave Purdue the lead for with 35.8 seconds remaining to
good.
build the lead to four.
.
He had spurred the BoilermakAnother Ohio State miss led 10 a
ers (13-4 overall, 4-4 in the Big foul shot by Painter with 23.4 secTen) to a 33-30 lead at the half onds left for a 60-55 lead. Two
OUR J)RICES JUST GOT BEnERI ,
with 17 points.
Cuonzo Martin foul shots were offIT ONLY HAPPENS ONCE A YEAR!
Robinson is in his flCSt year as a set by a Simpson dunk at the
SAVE 20% TO 50% STOREWIDE!
college player after sitting out last buzzer.
EVERY
ITEM
IN
O.UR ENllRE INVENTORY RETAGCIED AND
season because ofProp48.
"We can get it to a winnable
MARKED
DOWN
TO THE LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR!
"Robinson is a great player, one level, but we can't finish it," said
UMITED
COME PREPAMED TO BUYI
of the best fust-year players I've Ayers, enmeshed in the longest los• Receiverl\400lor
seen in my 10 years in the Big ing skid of his four-year coaching
• On·Screon Menu
Ten," Ohio State coach Randy career. "Sometimes you forget
Oi~ay
Ayers said. "I have 10 commend how to win."
·
• 178 Channel
Cnpabilily
Purdue for keeping the ball in his
Purdue did not miiice a shot in
• Oirecl A.cce&amp;~
hands. He hit some tough shots, the last 3:25, and scored its last
Remote
displayed some toughness.''
eight points from the line.
Purdue coach Gene Keady
Painter added 11 points and
agreed.
Waddell 10 for Purdue, which had
"He's easy to coach," Keady lost six o£ the last eight meetings
'289
said. "He's got a great heart, but with the Buckeyes. Skelton added
25" Diagonal lCM:SEAT
he's still Fot to get belll:r on funda- 10 points for Ohio State.
.
SENTRY 2
'259
mentals.'
'
The Boilermakers made 24 of
• Aecetver f,oioMnr
Robinson made 13 of 22 shots, 42 shots for 56 percent, while Ohio
'189 .
• Unrhed TV VCA
and had 11 rebounds as the Boiler- State - which has toPJIC:d 50 perFlomotc
... Qn -Sc reo rJ
makers (13-4) evened their Big Ten cent only once in its e1ght conferMrou
record at4-4 . The loss was the encegames. was22or52for42
, Or~ p1.1~

""

-

AKRON, Ohio.(AP)- Mike
Connor didn't take long to be recognized and ap~Jreciated by the
bowling commumty.
Connor, of Akron, completed
his fust year as oornmissioner of
the Professional Bowlers Associatioa on Jill. I, and liis initial tinker- .
ina w.ith the organization has
drawn notice.
.
Bowlers lowrnal, the oldest
sports magazine in the United
SIIUI, hal chosen Conn&lt;r its 1992
~ of the year for whal it called
'Ill exemplary job" since taking
OVCif for Joe Antenora.
"I ltldded with them when they
eaDed that I was still in my honeymooD year here and they were

Jlllllinlllelnelldous ~ on me

"Seriously, it's a grca! honor.
More than anything it's a tribute to
t~~e PBA. We arc devel~ing so~
exciting programs, and 111 thrilling
that we are getting recognition in
the industry for the things we ,are
doing," he said.
Connor became commissioner
after working meR than 30·years in
various executive p!&gt;sitions with
BridgestoneFirestone Inc.

One of his early moves waa to
create " marketing department at
PBA headquln.en in Akron to help
sell the PBA to fans, spoiiiDfl and
manufacturers. Amona the toola

developed wete a IDUnlllllent salea .

.video, a PBA Tour pocket IChedule
10 continue to produce," Connor and an expansion (J the tour's officiallicensed merchandise.
;
IIIII.

• 178

.

Ch;;nnet

-......

Syst•m 3

'

more than $2 billion was bet on the
lolb:ry.
.
"You can't stop anybody from
!'Ding ~is . You ~alk into ~y bar
m
ctry and 111 for a while, ~d
you II see somebody tak1n~
action," Jimmy B. said. "I don I
care where you go.''
Go to Broold~:(;there Hynes
-an~overab , ymobwar-

'¥

~fOQ)nr~:tsa:;:::~~~-ra: ~oW:a~~~~:\:C~~

..ed acllo.n .from the ~pper D:on
1m self, J&amp;de~ Oambmo family
.b,oss.John ~out..
~ Jim!fty •s the other extreme,
operatmg
dd horses
•
·
· a numbers
· h h' b and
Qperallon wtt Is u Y 1R an
o.uter borough. He makes about
~13.;.:~ a Y~~i!ri!•!:
~his modest home • .
•• 1· G
bl' . N YOrk ciry.
&lt; am mg 10 e-..; .
IS
£v~rywhere, from the streets to the
lllltes •. Th,e h~me of Wal! Street,
piealnall~n s biggest gambling hall,
IS . so orne to more sports, gambhng than any other C1ty m the
coontry.
.
' P~ of t~e r~son IS enforcement: In a City With l,OOO m~
a year, gamblers are .not P.ubhc
Enemy No. 1.. Ano~ IS the ~esSlfll~ action With professional
~.two football, three ~key,
two basketball, ~o baseball m the
greater metropolitan~·
. How much money IS ~~ here
~cry year? City cops won I CVI:Jt
m~e a guess, bur Brooklyn DIS·
tr)~t Altorney Charles J. J:Iynes
erlm~t~ tl!e annual .wagenng_ at
S 2 billton 1llegal!y on everythmg
ftpm sports to casmos 10 the num~.rBfkets.
.
·. It s safe to say llle.gal_¥an:'blmg IS pretty much thrivmg, S81d
E,rnfSI En.g, a lieute.n!'-'!1 in the
cuy s Publtc Morals DIVISIOn and a
l't\8Ster or understatement
' Those figures ignore the city's
legit gamblin~ operations. OffJlack Betting did $887.3 million in
b.~siness in the last year, while

one ofGotti's '!lll capos before dia- New York City police aren't faring
betes and a kidney transplant muchbelll:r.
slowed him down, allegedly earned .
Public Morals' Eng agrees gam~is mob status throuflh an expertise bling is rampant in the ~ity, and
m ~areas. The c1ry,'s other mob there's not much the cops c~ do to
fumlies each run theu own gam- stop it. Only 100 investtgators
bling operations, the FBI said.
work full time on gambling; most
.Gamblers aren't the only losefS: of their arrests are street -level

fn college hoons

D k K
S
. •
Hurley, Beane help u e, ansas tate WID
·

r '

·

·

last_year. Sports betting !5
By DICK BRINSTER
Carolina. Then he popped a long
cash .cow for the.m~b. ": Th•s
AP Spor11 Writer
one to start a 20-9 final push that
carnpllgn h!!1 the~ nght 10 the
No one should have any prob- led tl!~ Blue Devils to an 81{)7 vicpocket book, beh said
·
1em imagining a big Shot by Bobby tory over the Tar Heels.
tO·
Man
attan,
where
the
· the
,
ther
"M
L: d f I'
h
.
Go
1 pavmg
G'ordalioringoperated whc:reChi- Hurey
way .orano
. Y eyes ...
n o 11 up wen
t ·
:
here victory by Duke. Now, clutch free they went to that 1-3·1 zone
· natov.;~ gll!'gs
s~smos, w _ lhiows by Kansas State's Anthony because I fig(\red that the ball
·
=~:b house gam Beane7 That's another matter.
would came around to me..and.I
~0 to Staten Island, where New
But as sure ;85 Hurl~y b~e a would have an ~~en shot.. sa1d
..
.1
tempof~~IY sconn' drOught w1th a Hurley, who fmtShed wuh · 20
ersey operallons SC\ .up base .to key three-~ m the Blue Dev· points and seven assists.
~e. advantage or a !&lt;Jwered ~lice ils' victory over North Carolina,
As the ball went through the net,
abiltry 10 bust gambling operations. · Beane put aside his 66-pereent effi- Cameron Indoor Stadi11m erupted.
~ sicam uses call forwarding -:;- ciency frOI't\ the line to give the It'was Hurley's fourtl) three-pointer
dial a J~y nwnber, and the call IS Wildcats a victory over Oldahoma. of the game, his only field goals. .
automallcallr bounced ~o New . . "I was teasing him that my s~;
Elsewhere in games involving
~?r~. lnvesllgators. tracmg the · ter can shoot free· throws better,
the ranked, it was No. 2 Kentucky
ong~nai.number fi.nd JUSt an empty Kansas State coach Dana ~tman 87, Mississippi State 63; No. 4
room With a phone.
.
said after ~cane gave the Wildcats Cincillnati 98, Austin Peay 61; No.
, Go to Queens, w~ Gow ~1- a 62-61 v1ctory over the Sooners II Vanderbilt 76, South Carolina
o!fully -· and angnly - decned Wednesday night
72; Vi~ova 82, No. 15 Pittsburgh
h•.s bad $BM.bling l~ck on federal
",~was as confidenll!l I could 76, and No. 19 Purdue 62, Ohio
~mtheearly ~.
.
get, the 5-foot-10 pomt guard State 57.
. "I bet the Buffalo ,Bills ~IX said.
.
Kansas State (14-3, 4-1 Big
dimes ($6,000), and they're getung
In went the f1rst. In went the Eight) got the ball after Terry
k!lled:, 10..0, ,I bet N~w ~gland for second. Three seconds .Ia~. ,it was · Evans of Oklahoma (14-6, 2-3)
SIX dimes; I m getung. kiD.ed w1th
over and thousands ofJubilant fans missed the front end of a one-andNew England I bet S!X djt,nes Ill! poured onto the court at Manhattan, one free throw with 20.3 seconds to
Chicago; they're losmg, Goltl Kan., to celebrate the defeat of the go.
mnted.
16th-ranked SOOners.
Following a timeout, Beane
''I bel three dimes on K.C.
At Dmham, N.C., Hurley hadn't brought the ball up court and tried
They're winning. Maybe they'll scored· a point in the second half a 15-footer that was bl~ked by
lose, too, those (expletives)!" .
and No. 5 Dulce was clinging to a Pete Lewis. DurlnR the strul!l!le for
When mobsters ar~n 'I losmg. three-point lead over No. 6 Nonh
their own money gambling, they're
taking in everyb'?&lt;IY else's cash.
Gambling remams one of the
mob's most lucrative forms of
income; it's~ infrequently policed
and comes with a built-m second
moneymaker -loan-sharking.
Joseph "Joe Butch" Corrao, ,,
8

b:

flunkies .. · .
. .'
· arrests.
. In a cny Wit!' 8 m•ll•~n. people,
- Satellite rooms, where TV ·
f•ve Maf•a cnme famil•es and . transmissions are stolen and ,
uncounted thousands. out to m~e a beamed i~ for bettors, I~ arrests.
.
fast bu~Ic. the pollee gamb.Jm.g
-: ~licy banks, bas•cally nwn- .
arrest f•gures for 1991 read th1s . bersJOmts, 11 arrests.
way:
.
.
- Casinos, 88 arrests.
- Bookmakmg opemllons, 95
-Numbers, 1,128 arrests.

f"

the loose ball, a foul was c81Ied on

An elo Hamilton, sendi g Beane

to

:f!Askia
line for a one-andk.
Jones led Kansas State

. 17 pomts.
.
w1th
Beane had seven
points and five assists He was 2
fo~ 2 from the line. Okiahoma got
19 points from Hamilton and' l6
from Evans, whose only miss in
four foul shots was the one that
helped dOom the Sooners.
Eric MontroSs Jed North Carolina with 22 points and 13 rebounds
Thomas Hill added 16 poinis
and Grant Hill 15 for Duke (16,3
A::C 5-3), which canned 12 of d
free throws in the last1:37. ·
George Lynch added 17 points
for the Tar Heels (17-3, 6-2).
· No.l Kentucky 87
,
Mississippi St. 63
The Wildcats (16-1, 7-1 SEC)
proved rude hosis to the Bulldogs
(11-8, 3-5), win!1ing on the strength
of 23-2 and 14-6 surges. Travis
Ford made three three-pointers in a
23-2 first-half run and finished
with 21 for Kentucky.
After Mississippi State closed to
56-50 with 10:37 left, the Wildcats
went on a 14-6 spurt.
·
No 4 Cincinnati 98
Austin Peay 61

The Iiearcats (17:1), geuing 3t'
points from Nick Van .Exel, won'
their 14th straight game while
handing· the Governors their 13th
straight loss. Van Exel made four,
three-pointers to become Cincin-·
nati's career leader with 114.
Rick Y11dt led Austin Peay (3J.
15) with 19 points.
No. II Vanderbilt 76
South Carolina 71
.
The homestanding Commodores
( 17-3, 7-I SEC) won iheir sixth
straight game, thanks to Billy
McCaffrey. He scored six of his 27 ,
points in the fmal53 seconds.
Villanova 82 .
No. IS Pittsburgh 76 .
.,
Lance Miller !cored 20 or his 27 ,
points in the second half. James
Bryson added 20 points and Calvin :
Bred 16 as the W1ldcats (7-9, 3-7
B1gEast)wontheirsecondgamein,
a row after losing seven straight. • ·
No. 19 Purdue 62, Ohio St. 57
.Glenn Robinson scored 29:
points, including rwo free throws to:
put the visiting Boilermakers ahead .
for good with 1:41 left against the
slump-ridden Buckeyes. Robinson
made 13 of 22 shots and had JJ ,
· rebounds for Purdue (13-4, 4-4 Big
Ten).

~eigs

win three games
.· The Meigsr.::-eshmen
Marauder freshman Stanley led Meigs with 12 points,
.

basketball team, under the direction
of Gene Wise, won three games
i1:Cently.
: In the first contest, the Little
Marauders carne from behind to
~feat Vinton County 44-41. The
Marauders then picked up wins.
over Nelsonville-York 44-32, and
PointPieasant31-2ti.
· ,
·. In the win over Vinton, the
MaraUders outscored the Vilcings
. 24-5 in the last period to erase a
32-25 .deficit and post the win.
igs .was led by Herbie Bush with
poinl,f. DOnald Y oat added 12
~ Abbott 10. Gary Stanley
~ 'six points, all in the fourth
JK~riod and Brent Hanson added
I'Oiir points.. Jeremy Ward led Vinwith 13 points.
.· : In the win over NelsonvilleJ.uk, the Marauders jwnped out .10
t-14-2 lead at the end oflhe first
8"od and rolled to the 44-32 win.

¥.n
••

Sports deadlines posted
f

Yost added 10. Other Meigs scorers were Abbou with seven, Han- ·
son six, Paul Pullins added five,
and Steve Vance and Bush added
two poin!S each.
In the win over Point Pleasant,
the Marauders outscored the home
team ll-5 in the fourth periOd to
pull away with the win. Stanley led
the way with 12 points, Abbott
added seven, and Yost six. Other
Marauders scorers were Bush with
four aad Hanson with iwo. Jay
Ra)'lllDIId bad 13 to lead Poiat.
'MeJss will host Jackson on
. Monday 'evening.
.
.

No advance tickets
. for Clay-SHS game
There will not be any advance
ticket sales for Saturday's game
between Southern and Portsmouth

Cllty.

,

The doors will be opened at
5:00 p.m. No one will be pennilted ·
in the· gym ul)til that time.
Portsmouth Clay is coached by former Southern coach Carl Wolle.

:: The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
ty!e Daily Sentinel, the Point
asant Register and the SUIIdayes.Sentinel value the contribuns their readers make to the ·
· p sections of these papers, and PBL. results
contributions will continue 10
These are the results of recent
published.
.
action
at the Pomeroy Bowling
However, certain deadlines for
Lanes.
issions will be observed. The'
Jan.l7
ne for photos and related actiLeague
Early Wednesday
o s for basketball and other winter
is the last day of the NBA Mixed
Tea011 (In order. of nalsb) f~~ewise, the deadline for sub- Hackett's Roofing (29), Banks
lissioils of local baseball- and . Construction (26), Tony's Carry
llftball-related photos and related Out CUi), Sports &amp;. Stuff (25), Rut- .
hcles, from T-ball to the majors, land American Legion (20),
i well as other spring and summef Teaford Golf&amp;: Trophies (18).
Hi&amp;h series - Bub Stivers
is the day of the last game
World Series. The deadline (S63);l&gt;ebbie Sa~ (494)
otos and related articles for
Second-blabest series - Russ
and other fall sports is the Carson &amp;: Jac"\ PoUrod (487 tie);
Betty McKinley (487)
ll8tun1ay before the Super Bowl.
High game - Bub Stivers
• These deadlines have been institilted to give readers plenty of time (206); Betty McKinley (190)
tb get their photos ,back from the
· Second-high 11ame - Jack
thotography studio of choice and Follrod (186); Debbie Sa~ (184)
te give the staffs the opportunity to
Team series - Hackeu's Roof11J!blish these sports photos and ing (1875)
IJ!icles during the appropriate sea·Team game - Hackett's Roofson for that sport.
~ ·
ing (653)

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INGELS

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16141 tt2•HU
fill fnei•IIO 421..111

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The Dally Senllnei-Page-T

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·

Bowling magazine ·recognizes .
Connor's work as PBA commish

; · By LARRY McSHANE
. ' NEW YORl{ (AP) - I f you
WilDt to kRQw about sports· gambling in New Yo!'k City, you need
~o know guys hke "Handsome
Jack" Giordano and a guy we'll
Call Jimmy B.
. :. Giordano worked the high end
- Super Bowl, NBA playoffs,
March Madness- and was the

attempts 11 the free throw line for
77.8 percent, while ~io Grande hit
seven d. 15 for 46.7 percent
The Redmcn (21-5, 6-3) return·
to the road for the first time in three
weeks this weekend when they
meet Ohio Daninican on Saturday.
Shawnee State (8-14, 0..9) will be
at home Saturday agains(
Cedarville.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (79) - Breu·
Coreno, 2-1..0.. 7; Jeff Brown, 3-4."
4-22; Troy Donaldson, 9-1-19;;
Jack MOrgan, ()..1..0-3; Mau Pow ~'
ell, 3-5-1-22; Walter ~tephens, 0..1..:
0-3; Tim Chnsllan, 1-1-3.
TOTALS 18-12-7-79.
;~
SHAWNEE STATE (~4) ....:
Darius Wi1liams, 3-2-8; Travis•
Meiry, 8-3-1-26; D!~fiYI Lisath, I•·
0-2; Mike Helton, t-2-4; Ryan
Hudson, 1-2..0..8; Ron Kenley, 3-2·'
8; Brian Dyer, 1-2-0-8 . TOTALS_
18-7-7-64.
.
Hatrtime score: Rio Grande38, Sba-ee State 31.
·'

IC

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Gambling:alive and well in New York City despite police efforts

•

.,

•

Thursday, February 4, 1993

•
:.

")

OPEN BEVEN DAYS A WEEK
..,... - . : 1:30 a.m. 1o I p.m.~ lhnMith ~.
a::lllo.m. 1o 1 p.m.lloturdoy, - I o.lll. 10 I p.m. 8uncloy

:·••
••

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IALUPILII

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211

111111

�,

.Page

8 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, February 4, 1993

Pomeroy-Middlepo.r t, Ohio

·s arajevans survi~ing... barely .
"We do think that God is. with
By MAUD S. BEELMA.N
us,"
said Amila Omersoftic, minis·
Associated Press Writer
ter
in
charge of refugees and homeSARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovless.
"
If this· winter were harder,
ina- Mirsad, an engineer, snares
tile
resulls
would have been terri·
pigeons and crows in a rooftop trap
ble."
to provide fresh stews for his famiSince the siege began last Afril,
ly and neighbors.
Other Sarajevans make eggless adults .have lost an average o 30
pancakes and roll cigarettes of tea pounds, women more thau. men
m toilet paper. Some root through because they tend to sacrim'e for
garbage cans for anything salvage- their children.
"People are now on the border
able.
line
of.mainourishment," said Dr.
• · Ten months into the siege of
Tim
Healing, a WHO epidemioloSarajevo and midway through a
'gist.
"They're not starving, but
deadly winter, the city 's.380,000
they'
re
not geuiilg enough food."
residents do a remarkable job of
Major
epidem ics have been
surviving.
averted,
but
:Healing worries tile
But life is far from tolerable.
stressed,
underfed
res idents al'e
"Most people lie down in a cold
vulnerable
to
disease.
Doctor$ have
space and wake up in a cold
reported
scurvy,
hej&gt;atitis
A, dysenspace," says lsmet Serdarevic, a
tery
and
lung
infecnons.
60-year-old architect
Dr. Risto Tervahauta, the World · Healing is especially worried
:Hea!lh Organization's representa- about tuberculosts, which spreads
tive in Sarajevo, says Sarajevans' easily, and typhus, Which is carried
resourcefulness, and an unusually by lice that thrive in overcrowded
mild winter, have so far prevented rooms.
Every aspect of life, it seem s,
widespread deaths by cold and
has its perils.
~unger.

.

:u.N. Envoy predicts
•

!arge peacekeeping
force for S.omalia
By REID G. MILLER
Associated Press W~iter
'
. MOGADISHU, Somaha - The
piggest U.N. peacekeepin~ force
~ ver, with .a man~ate to. 1m pose
order rather tllan JUSt mamtam 11,
may replace the U.S.-led military
coalition in Somalia, the world
body's special envoy said Wednesday.
; lsmat Kittani, an Iraqi diplomat,
~aid the situation required a
stronger approach than the usual
passive role of. only separating
combalants'
Meetin$ with reporters, Kittani
said be dtd not know when the
~ecurity Council w~~ld reach an
.agreement on authaizing a peace~eeping force for this East African
nation that has been ravaged by
War and famine.
; The peacekeeping mis~ion
would replace a U.S.-led mthtary
force. of about ~8.000 person'!el.
allowing the Umted States to With·
draw some 20,000 servicemen and
women.
·
11¥: Americans and allied troops
fLave restored some order in
!Mogadishu and other parts of
:SOUthern Somalia since Dec. 9 and
-relief aid is moving again. But the
~ountry still swarms with gunmen
'411d rival clan militias continue to
lash.
~: Banles between two warlords
·outside the southern port of
:.Kismayu derailed another round of
:peace falks among Somali clan
:Jeaders that were to have begun
;t1onday in Mogadishu. U.N. om;(:ials said Wednesday that a Bellflian army patrol found the bodies
\!If 15 Somalis massacred during the
jjghting in the south .
:• Kittani said a consensus ,..as
:building within the United Nations
~ make the Somali peacekeeping
·!rorce " very, very large and perhaps
:ihe largest" in U.N. history.
1:' . He said the force could number

up to 20,000, w'hich would be
about 3,000 more than the United
Nations has in Cambodia ils
largest operation to ilate.
'
one were to ventti{C a guess,
I thtnk the tendency is toward giving it an enforcement mandate
rather than the traditional peace~
keeping mandate," Kittani said
U.N. peacekeepers normally are
not allowed to shoot unJFss sbot at'
fii'St and IIIey do not try to impose
cease-fires or confiScate arms.
The U.S. coalition has been
operating under rules tllat allow
soldiers to shoot fii'St if they consider themselves threatened. The
force itlso ~s c6nfiscated weapons,
and Amencan and Belgian troops
attacked a Somali warlord's militia
to prevent an ~tack on another rae-

·:u

Only about a fifth of the city _has
electricity even sporadically. Hospitals and bakeries have fltSt priori·
ty. U.N. crews canceled power line
repairs after attacks by Serb and
Bosnian fiJhters who had agreed to
a cease· ftre. The line bring ing
power to Sarajevo, underneath a.
frontline, could go at any minute.
Running water depends on electricity at the pumpina station, and
doesn't reach the upper floors of
buildings.
•
Pipes crack Ia the cold. Spilled
water from buckets lllms stairways
into icy slopes.
Officials of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees recently
began COII)batting diet deficiencies
by bringing in orange juice and fortified flour.
.
UNHCR 's target is 270 tons of
food a day, or 610 grams of food
per person, said Tony Land, head
ofUNHCR operations in Sarajevo~
The airlift brings about 200 tons
daily. but aid offiCials are !lbout 40
tons short of their goal because .
fighting in central Bosnia has interrupted some land convoys.
Jasmine Butkovic, 25, stands in
.
'
!
PARTISANS -A. p-oup of civilian defense
the outskirts or Sarajevo, Tuesday. Tbe hills ,_
an outdoor mBJket peddling a few
soldiers of the Bosnian Army, boldln1 their maioverlookiDI the Bosnian c:apltal are the theater ',
cans of relief rations. With tile hard
cot
cat,
staad
at
attention
during
their
morning
or iatense figbtlllg between Muslim led forces ·,
currency she earns, she can buy
near
the
frontline
of
the
hiD
of
Zuc,
In
and the Serbian "Cbetnlk" army. (AP Photo)
brlellug
, ·
fresh milk and eggs - which cost
1
up to $45 per dozen.
'
Mirsad is too ashamed of how
•
he lives now to give his last name. .
San:asm dripping from his voice, ,
. CompDed by:
Cummins, Lot 7, to William Mor- Hutchison,' 1.000 A., to Suvannal!
the haggard 37-year-old bcld up a
Emmogeue Hamilton
J. DUncan, Salisbury.
&gt;.
ris, RacineVill.
F,Y business suit and ~n army . Recorder, Melp County, Ohio
'John M. Brewer, dec'd, affid. to
James R. Mills, Decree.• v/s
Jacket: "My working 1111ts."
Marjorie N. Brewer, Olive.
..
Albert. R. Dangelo, Wilma L. Linda Lou Mills, Pom~.
"We work, we are warrim, and Dangelo, Kenneth B. Yoqng, Betty
Christopher
Robert
Lemley,
Village of Racine (Incorporatwe help each other," tfe said "I'm . L. Young, 7.6 A. to Jimmie L. ed), 0.7~ A, parcel, to Ralph Nei- Helen M. Lemley, F.CCI• 0.30 A&lt;
nothing special. Tllere are thou- Young, Karin L. Young, Olive.
to State of Ohio, SalisbUI)'.
glei-, Jr.,Donald B. Neigle, Sutton.
sands of !JCOI!le like me.' •
.Milo B. Hutchison, Betty Ann
Thomas F..Cummins. Sandra E.

Meigs. property transfers

J•

for

We have what ou're lookin
.NaUtilus

-

I

lion.

Kittani said a U.N. force might
need stronger powers 5o "we do
not relapse to the chaotic situalion" that grij!ped·Somalia for twO
years. An estimated 350 000 Somalis died last year from ~al-. famine ·
and banditry.
The United States has 24,292
military personnel in Somalia and
its 23 coalition partners have
, 13,713. Kittani said the United
States would likely keep about
4,000 support personnel here to
back up the U.N. peacekeeping
force.
Despite citing the need for a
strong military presence, Kittani
said outsiders will not be able to
pu~ Somalia back together.
Kittani said he regretted the new
· round of peace talks for the Somali
factions failed to get under way this
week.
The meeting was to have begun
Monday, but deadlocked immediately when a faction ted by Gen.
Mohamed Farrah Aidid boycotted
the talks because of alleged ceasefire violations by a rival warlord.

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;.unusual action - pre-empting a
~prime-time series because of con'"tent-seuadangerous precedent
: · "Many people are· concerned
-:about what seems to them to bC
~undue infiUCIII:C on the part of the
•·Mormon church " said John
-:Engslrom TV c:riJk for tile Seattle
~Post-In~. "ADd a numbcir
. of people are concerned about .the
• very large issue of what they con; sider to be censorship." .
, _, "Picket Fences" stars Tom
~rritt and ~Y Baker as a niar-

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~
~ Robin White. son of Robert and
· Dove White, Coolville, will be

included in ..the 1993 edition of
•:•Who's
Who Among Students in
: Americu Universities aad Coll ieges ·
~ A·graduation of Eastern High
. School, White is a junior elemen.~ tary education. major at the Ohio
•Valley College, Parkersburf!.
: w .v a_. He will be gra,duating m
1993
• He is a member of chorale and
~Kajlpe: IOCial club. ·
-.•·,- Se.__,
'-.
...,..111 was......_.
_ . 011 _-_
,
:iC acbievemeni.ICrvice to the com.
·
':nlunity,
leadcnbip
•
. m
' extracwncu.
·" · •

4583

Your C.ol:

•

~.'

~

New Meigs County Proseculing
::AiliXIICY John Lentcs ~ ou tile
::philOIOPbiCI be is bringins 'til that
..offtee at Monday night's meeting
·::or the Mlddleport·FoneDJ R011ry
;~;tbcJ,~
Heath Uni!Od
.,
Olufcb.

••

•s2" · . ·

".

knobhandle

404613

r

•

UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Navy Sea bees Dennll D 1 II , 11ft,
of Chlcaeo and Steve Gilbert of Mesquite, Texas, uallthe root' 011 u
: oatllouse under construction at their base at Mogadishu's airport
NFCB-40 wiD hufld more thai! 300 outhousn, hun:
Tile Seabees
~ dreda or tent decks and other projects durin a their seven week
depiO)'IIIent Ia 11Dpport of Operation Restore Hope. (A.P Photo)

or

{

..,~~.., Cllco, !..~abou
· R~
t ""' .
Micldlepora:-~ llotlry Club's
involvement tu the Adult Basic
Educatioll pognm. He DOled ~
!he local club is the rnt iu ~ 11a1c
to tpiiiiiOl" m awards benquet for
the ABE I*_OjiiiiL
•
Gaest ..... - oblaved Ill the
meel,in1 u a put of dforu to
ina
d IAihi,_ Protper:tlw
-......and
Dilld
...........
.reeog-.

h.. .
·==-~''':;'6

,.. r.- a••-•-••·"

I

weU as prosecuting 1110se who bave
commilled offenses. He aid that be
would li~e to won:. ~ schll!lls,
c:onu~uruties and CIVI~ organ~liOns mm effort to JIIOUVIIC Mcap
Countians to tate pride in lhe
things amaild them.

-~iilaud.
Ollllltlgl. pa
d'rnt,

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.1 ..H2..611
SIS,. ST.

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....

'

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'

"Culinary i'Jerbs" .was sel~cted

·as this year's theme for the River

Valley Herbalist.
The study this year will be die
f ocusing on culinary uses of an
herb through the herb of the month
reportS and refreshments committee.
.
To round out the culinary
adventure, there will be a workshop
on "Tea and Uses of Tea." Chef
J.R. Southatl from Charleston will
give a cooking demonstration at
one of tile meetings and there will
be a program on using herbs in
drinks. For the crafters there will
be workshops on mann¥ swags
and a basket class featurmg deer
horn handles; making bows and
tussie mussies ·and programs ·
demonstrating herbs to dye with.
and Ornaments for the holidays.
There will be programs on garden·
ing lind dish gardens.
Field trips include Riverview
Flowers and Herbs on April 17;
Fairlield Garden Tour on June 27.
Medici.nal pr,ograms include
sometlling on herbal body products
and a field trip to Equinox Herbs in
Rutland.
At December's meeting Jan
Gerhold and Betty Jones were
elected to co-chair the 1993 Herb
Fest.
It was nOied that now is the time
to start buying bags of amendments
to improve the soil : peat moss,
bonemcai. lime, etc.

gratd'ul.
Gem d tile Day: A fool ud his
moocy are invited placea. ·
Is tlltJI Alii! I..a!rMrs co/1111111 yo11
clipped ytiJTI ago yellow with age?

For a copy of lrer moSt frequelll/y
nq~~emd poems 111111 esiiiY'· :send a
•lf-&lt;Jdilru:sed, lo11g, busiMss-size
e11velope 111111 a chcc/c or /Miley
ortkr for $4.85 (this i11cl11dts
postage 111111 htwlli11g} to: Gems,
clo Alii! Laii/Jers, 1'.0. Bo:x }1562,
Chicago, 1//. 60611-0562 . (/11
Catltlda. :send $5.87.}

\1

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&amp; ASSOCIATES
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT &amp; FINANCIAL
PLANNERS

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Cundiff, Gertrude Roush and
Courtney. Norma Baker, Nettie
Moore,
Cl
,_ MBeckl!Johnston,
L Eileen
w I'
ar .. , ary yers, ora o ae
and Amanda, Sherri Baker and
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•- , Sharon. Louks • Kri s, Amber•
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Heather
and Rice,
Holly Elma
Duffy.
Lois
Duffy, Amy
Louks,
Jeannette Duffy, Frances Roberts,

~~s=~~ili;,
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Nitti Lawson, Icy Miller, Karen

Connolly, Edith Man~el, Regina
Roush, Gertrude Neigler. Pam
Buckley and Andrea, Cheryl
Browning llld ~ Folmc.-.
Sending gifta were Jackie Frost.
Debbie- Unda warner, Karen
Tripletl.''hitie Beegle, Gayann
Clay. Amy Lawson, Sallt Owens.
Dcbbio Roush llld Oaistina. Bonaie Mankin, Heather Mankin,
Sbclly Wood aild Raeni and Debbie Toundas.

Rejoicing Life
posts honor roll

taDred

flU

• Racbol Forbes,

Delivwy

lllntllaa

7 .

Braun,

ShowfOGIII

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•1•

-ew

Lori Duffy was recently hon-.
· ored wi!h a baby shower at the
Presbyterian Church in Syracuse .
The event was hosted by Kris
Duffy• Lois Duffy and Amy Rice.
Games were pia~ and refreshments of cake, chtps, mints, nuts
and!t::.J:ie.:~ilma Parker,
Carrie
, JO'Ann Smilh, Vicki

""Hi• ..

Prlcesle .. n.......
felt. ll,'lttS

eeives the fist as a sip rl ~
sian, bot the· traditional Cbinele
meaning of fist is that ot au
lion and containment. Thus, Tai
Chi Cb'uan follows lbe five t.ic
principles of slowness, lisJttneu,
clarity, balance and .calmness
which illleract to enlighlell as weD
as invigorate the whole peiUL
The arts council inviteJ the pub- .
lie to participaJc iu this unique program which will be coaducted at
the arts council center on NQVh
Second Avenue in Middleport.
The cost d the pogaau is $IS.
Further information may be
obtained by calling 992-2675.

Thus spake Zarathustra
Aryan peoples (Persians and .
Medesl dominated the area of present
Iran by the beginning of the first milB•••lfNIS
W.lcOIU
. . f.
lennium B.C. The prophet Zoroaster
R'
introduced a dualistic relig ion in
Call Toll
which the forces of good (Ahura
Mazda Lord of Wisdom) and evil
(Ahir~l battle for dominance, and in·
dividuats
ai-e
judged,
by their actions,
(In
Call
Collect
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of Tai Chi C'h\wi aDd lecturer on
Chinese Taoist ~hilosophy.
Tai Chi Ch uan is an ancient
Chinese martial art which has
proven to be a health-giving exercise which strengthens the mind,
body and, spiri~ as well as developing a foundation for tile mternal
styles of Shaolin Gung-fu.
This ability 10 calmly, but effectively develop the practioner inter·
nally as well as externally is one of
tile primary reasons why many of
China'.s one bill.ion people continue
to practice Tai Chi Ch' uan today.
. It translates as " the supreme
pole fist." Western culture per-

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Students from more than 1,400
institutions of higher Ie.n~q in all
SO states, the DiSD'ict of Columbia
and several foreign nations will be
included in this volume.
Ohio Valley CoUege is a two·
year institution offering associate
de~ees in liberal arts, secretarial
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for years. Recently, it'blew the
whistle on Watson &amp; Hughey and
warned readers of Watson &amp;
Hughey's name change. Consumers
Disest also su~ested two Drl!8Diza·
tionl that can help telders avoid
IIC8III chlrities. For information on
activities llld publications. send a
latge. self-addressed, stamped
eiiYClope to: .
Pietjonal Charities Jnfonnation
Bureau, 19 Union Sqqare West, .
Dq:tiiDnent 250, New York, N.Y.
10003-3395.
Or: Philanthropic Advisory
Service. Council of .Betler.Business
Bw-eaus, 4200 Wilson Blvd.. -Suite
800, Arlington; Va. 22203-1804.
I have been working with the
aUQmey general's office to put
a stop to these rip-offs. You
may use my name 'if you wilb. I
am .. ELLEN BLACKSTONE,
SEATll.E, WASIL
DEAR EJ I EN: Thailks for your
research as weD as your courage.
You ud Marjorie Siegel have
performed a grt!8l service, and ram

DA' to meet

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Whzte among Who s Who

.; ~

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All IUIIIIYWOOD
lATH CAIIIETS &amp;.
IIAIIU TOPS Ill

The Middleport Arts Council
will offer three. evenin's of classi·
cal Chinese Tai Chi Ch uan martial
arts on Monday evenings begiMing
Feb. 15. Other classes will be Feb.
22 and March11. All class~s are
from 7-8 p.m. The instructor for
these classe~ will be Eric Cham·
bers, natinnallv recognized reacher

ried couple, sbeiiff and physician · pie calling themselves Mormons.
of fiCtional Rome. Wis.• midway
"The episode grossly misrepre·
between Twin Peaks and Lake sents The Chuq:h of Jesus Christ of
Wobep.
Latter-day Saints, which owns
It cle!*ted in Seplember to aiji· . KSL~TV,'' said Bruce Reese, prescal pamse. It wu voted belt new · ident of KSL. "We have worked
dram~ by Viewus for Quality with CBS 10 get lhem to change tile .
Television, 11ut nmkcd 63rd of 114 · show to eliminate the potential
sbQws in last WI'JClc'sl'llings.
· nationwide spread of this misperOn !an. ~2._ KS):.-TV ~f Salt ception and tile enforcement of old
Lake CitY. said tt was droppin&amp;tlle stereotypes. '
show until funher notice. It cited
"They have declined to do so."
episodes in which a IUI1!C hummed
On Jan. 28, KSL's sister station
"Killin!! Me Softly" during . KIRO-TV of Seattle dropped the
euthanasia llld a 111111 who danced show.
wilh his wife's ~KSL.and ~0 have mai~tained
KSL also objecu:d m the Jan. 22 that tlleir deciSions were arnved at
show, which depicted a teen-age independently.
Jirl achieving u orgasm by henelf
1
10 the back seat of • car, and .
T
focused 011 a suspected incestuous
,y
relationshi.P that II_D1Ied out 10 be a
The Disabled American Veter·
polygamous nwnage among peoans
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
·
the hall; 124 Butternut Avenue,
.
.
.
~
Pomeroy.

·.=M .e·t"g· s·.-' pro:secutor
~addresses Rot.ary Club

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Other

HEARl

Dar Au I "d 11: Your m:aii
column on W~ &amp; Hughey,
tile fund-raisin&amp; COIDJ1811Y, wu
illlllei h'l Appm:ndy it 111o ftl
effcc:aive. It _ , that WIUOII
&amp; Jlu&amp;bey 1111 c:binged ill to l)inx:t iespon.e Creative Services·.
As your readers will recall,
Watsoo .t Hugbey iqa 1ts many
so-Wied charitable orpnizaliona tioned in your arlil:r C(l!&amp;MIII IDiicit
suchatheCwrerFundofAmelica UDder their pabpwn nonw 11lil
and the Waliu:r Cancer Research is very clever llld CCIIIfJua lbe
Institute. The Walter Cancer ,public. Few ezemplc, learn fium
Rmmcb IDstitute's own litaature tbc Pcific West "P"h•i" cite
states llllt lea tbltn I pen:ent of the project title, "Cucer Center
the lDIII moaey lliled acmeJly aoes for Detection and Prevention.•
to n:1 cb. ,._ remalning 99 plus Contributions to the National
percent goes for "administrative Cancer Research Cenler !l!'t1wlly
costs, fund misiDg llld educa'ljon 10 to the Walker c-At tucb
associated with the fund-raising Institute.
appeal~ •
I wcdt for lbe a.niea Review ·
I hope you will COI1IiJwe to hound CoiJicil ofMUna"L We II'C a-this crowd whose clever lawyers · profit orauizltioa llllt mciniton
have figured out liow to keep clwrities solicitins iD Mianerota
lhem in business llld out of jail and educalel donon on bow to
~add these naines to the list ' makeinfwmalgivingclocilioiJS. We
d orpnizations that uile WatSon abo alert the public to questionable
A Hughey in lbeir fund-raising solicitations.
efforts. Warn your readers. about
"lbanb, Am, for your efforts to
t!ae folklwing:
keep the public informed. If they
., NatiQalal Emergency .Medicine see it in your column. they believe
Association (IIOiicits undei the name it. --. MARJORIE SIEGEL,
of National Heart 'Research) of RESEARCH
AS$0CIATE,
Towson, Md.
CHARl11ES REVIEW COUNCIL
. Institute for Advanced Studies in OF MINNESOTA
;.Medicine dRiVeroale, Ga.
DEAR MAiuoRIE: I 1J111Rc1a1e
.: Adopt-A-Ptt,lnc., in Tulsa, 00.. yow iapaL Hae'si!ICJtber lcaer that
·: American Institute for Cancer lll!tlla21-gunDIUII:forllalingthe
:Research of Washington, D.C. This public to the SIIIIC ~
:organ~on was founded by Chat
Dar A.u Loden: Consun1en
;:HugheyllldJmyWIIIOII in 1981.
Digest is a highly ~ted Wildt:: . Some of the cguiDiions men- dol which everyone tn&lt;lws has

By
WILUAMS
: • A.P Televlsioa Wrifa'
.., • NEW YORK- Two.Mormon·~owned TV stations baV~~ dropped
t CBS's eccentric, smaU-IDWD dnmla '
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·Associate alerts readers ·about Council offers martial art classes
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w.n Hooting-.

Thursday, February 4, 1993
' .Pigl •

1·Two Mormon-owned TV stations
;~ drop CBS' 'Picket Fences' .
SCOTI"

37 9 '

"VOIIR CHOICE'

The Daily Sentine-

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1G-The bally Sentinel

~People

Beat of the Bend...

-

in the news-

DETROIT (AP) - Actress State Unlvenity Tuesday. "There·
Marlo Thomas returned to her fore, Vielllllll _is my !""'"'"!bility,
birthplace for the first time as a the destruction of Iraq 11 my
performer, ~g a 10-day run in responsibility, the extension of
th_e !/lay "S1x Degrees of Separa- rights to women, minorities and
tion. '
gays is my responsibility."
"I actually was born at Grace .
Farrell is a spokcstn8a for ConHospital (while) my parents were cern, an international refugee aid
on the road.'' Thomas, daughter of organization. and has traveled 10 El
late comedian Danny Thomas, said - Salvador, Nicaragua, Bosnia and
We'dnesday. She said she only Somalia.
returned 10 Detroit later while trav·
"I see need. And I1think pC:oplc
cling with her father.
must respond to need on any level
She said she and her husband, they're capable of doing," he said.
talk-show host Phil Donahue, are "There's a giant, unseemly, over·
malcing their largely commuter whelmin need."
. marriage work. "He understands
Farren added that his work on
that I need my worlc and I under- "M-A-S-H" helped foster his idestand that he needs his. We fly a1s because the show didn't ex~ to
bsaid~lc. and forth to
other," she . "fill up the space between com-

.by Bob Hoeflich

•

• Thursday, February 4, 1993

lt)ursday, February 4, 111113

Like the "beat", tJ1e "studies" go comfort or our own homeS for 8s
·
on and every day we're enlight- _ iong as possible.
The Home Health Service of.
: ened--41nd Wllrried-llbout the latVeterans Memorial Hospital is
::~ est fmdings.
· One Qf yesterday's announce- helping to make that a reality for a
ments advised us of a relationship lot of people. The overall pic·· between dreams and heart attacks. ture-Qur wishes plus the present
- It seems that a lot of upsetting government philosophy _that people
: dreaming takes place near wake up should stay tn their boQies as long
• · time causing alot of stress and the as they can-goes a long WaY in
explainin~ the growth of the hospi•
morning heart attacks.
Hopefully, this study isn 'I tal's servtce. In 1972, the servtce
going to rattle you one biL No Sir! made 829 home visits. In 1982 the
Like that yesteryear song says: number of visits grew to S,J49.
''My Dreams A.re Gelling Belter And would you believe that in
mercials. •' .
..
1992 the service made 29,S40
All the Time". Your's too?
Between visits, Thomas does
calls?
get to see her husband, if only on
S YDNJ'iY, Australia (AP) Shrubbery at the former
television.
After
catching
the
show
Mel
Gibson's sister kept up a fami.
Things
keep
moving_
along
for
Pomeroy Junior High School did
recently,
she
had
a
little
advice:
ly
tradition
Wednesday by a_ppearThomas
M.
Brown,
Port
Clinton,
get out of hand but it won't any
"He
needs
a
haircut."
ing
on
the
Australian verston of
formerly
of
Meigs
Coimty.
more. It has all been removed.
•
"Jeopardy!"
Tom,
as
he's
lrnown
here,
has
Looks a bit bare and no chance of
WINONA, Minn. (AP)- Actor
Mary Estridge's father, Hutton
growing ouL Oh well, maybe one been named to the Terra Technical
Mike
Farrell,
who
played
B.J.
Gibson,
was a champion on the
day years down the road, there'll College Board of T~s by Gov•
Hunicutt
on
"M·A-S-H,''
says
the
U.S.
show
in the 1960s, -and later
·-- · -· be a government grant to plant ernor George Voinovich . A
world's
problems
can't
be
blamed
won
on
·a
string
of Australian quiz
some more. The building- has been Republican, Brown is an aide to U. on govemmenL
programs
when
he and his family
•• purchased from the Meigs Local · S. Congressman Paul GiUmor. He
"The
policies
arliculat\l(l
by
Ollf
migrated
here.
.
.
.•- Sch.ool District br Pomeroy Vii- replaces William J. Kelly, a Fre- government are ours. We have Ill
Estridge
who
lives
in
But
~::; Jage. The emphasts at the moment
mont Democrat on the college take responsibility for them," FarTallangatta,
180
miles
northeast
of
• " is roof repair and replacement of board. Tom's term will expire rell told an audtence at Winona
Melbourne - · dido 't win.
broken windows. Then will come Dec. 12, 199S. Terra Tech :s
• ·- some deep concentration on the trustees are responsible for setting
uses-and there should be many- student tuition rates, hiring
.. for the attractive structure.
employees, setting salaries at the ·
school and that type thing.
Tony Jones of Tuppers Plains
Musically talented Ohio high clans, both young men and
Before becoming Gillmor's aide
has IJ!ldergone gall bladder surgery at the Port Clinton office, Brown · school students, grades 9-11, are may obtain an application from
as well liS a couple of other opera- was a long-lime teacher !llld admin- invited to apply for membership· in their local school band direclor, or
tions at a Parkersburg hospital. isb'ator in the Pon Clinton School the 1993 AU-Ohio State Fair Band.
write directly to Omar P. BlackHe's recovering slowly. He'd real- System. He is the son of Mrs. NelThe All-Ohio State Fair Band man, Director, All-Ohio State Fair
ly like to hear from Meigs County. lie Brown of Route 3, Pomeroy, has been a fearured attraction at the Bank, 5190 West !51st Street,
Cards wiU reach him at Room 20 I. and the late Virgil Brown.
. Ohio State Fair since 192S. It is Cleveland, Ohio 44142-1741.
Camden-Clark Hospital, 800
comprised of 250 of Ohio's finest
Applications must be submitted
Garfield Ave., Parlcersburg, W. Va
making
it
high
school
musicians,
by
March 26, 1993. The 1993 Ohio
Clinton's dream of wiping out
26102.
one
of
the
largest
marching
and
State
Fair is scheduled for Aug. 6the deficit in his four year term has
bands
in
the
nation.
performing
22.
'
now decreased to one-half of the
·Since we're living longer and deficit in four years. I think most
Participating in the All-Ohio
Counting the people
we know "There's No Place Like of us can live with that-and I - State Fair Band is a unique musical
Home", all of us want to sray in the think most of us can keep smiling.
and social experience, according to
On April I, 1990, the Bureau of the
Omar P. Blackman, director. The Census began to take the 2tst decen21 day camp offers a valuable nial census of the United States. It
opponunity
to perform.more than took !he first census in 1-790, when it
•
'
60tieces of music of varied styles counted 3.9 million people, and has
an periods. Band .members work conducted a census every 10 years
1\1 ('lien I ( ·r"""u ;111d Holl lludak
with a superior staff of .JS music over the past 200 years, as mandated
educators from throughout Ohio.
by the U.S. Constitution, Article 1 Sec'&gt;rlwol P\1 ('holo:_!i-,h tor \l1·i:.!' ( ount 1
'
Interested high school musi- - lion 2.

eacn

•
•

WICK'S HAULING
. SERVIa
36970 Ball Rn Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

SIZED LIMESTONE

992·3470

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OWNER:

••-'

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DEPENDABLE MAYTAG

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· •'lastsloilger, needs le"wer ·

· Strickland hospitalized

Bunge told the 'udience to work
· 10 educate the public about·homosexuals.
_
"If the lies about us get out
before the truth llbout us dOes, peo-

'

I

John Strickland is confined to
lhc Tol~ Medical College Hospi·
tal, Room 3t26, 300 Arlington '
Ave., Toledo, Ohio, 43699. He is
in need of a lieart transplanL
A graduate of Pomeroy High
School, class of 1958, he i s married to the former Lily Girolami
and they have four sons, Steve,
Rick, Chris and Michael. John is
the brother of Pandora Collin1,
Pomeroy, !llld the brother-In-law of
Guido I. Girolami, Pomeroy.
1.-

&amp;1,..(..7 ...1 F~ odo ..._15 wonL. will too

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repairs and costs lesS to

service .

r.... upllallo-. u clnWo prioo ., ... -

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Rates are for consecutlw l'llliS, broken up day. will be
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New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing

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FCII' Flecet Y•• Ending

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COit14-W2·7104""

Dealnober 31, 11182

, aSpood-dilling

ftlt.JUIMI--

ANANCIAL REPORT
OF THE BOARD OF
UBRARY TRUSTEES

-.41111,3-.2-...udl '
BR opt. P . _ , - ~.ICIII aq. n. 1Mn

I

GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
8411 ' 583
Tu•-·······
Patron Flnlle'IUICI..•·

•

lllt.11t.IIMHn

.'-- ------·-------,-

t-

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949•2826

REMOVAL

T,.....,.,.

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NNING

Donetlone ................... 1,514
lOTAL RECEIPTS .$443,m
DISBURSEMENTS;
Sllarlal&amp;
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BALANCE ...~.... 884,'738.47 OTHER ANANCINO
t _.tty lhle repCII'l to lie BOURCFSI(USES)
correct .,d true, to the bnt Dperellng
ln-.....- ..................100,000
or my knowt•dge.
Glorlo Hlltton, 1122111113
Towruohtp Clerlt
All, ioxl2, FundBellrAlbany, Oh. 46710 Jen. 1, 11113......... ,...311,4&amp;5
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(2) 4, 11G
Cuh In IIIRU (NeiJ ... "\2!!
~Cieh ................ - ...... 10
Chlnge ca.t.................- .•14

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TRIM and

lOTAL DISBURSE·
llalanoa................70,788.57 MENTS .•••••- ........... 32$,453
E 111~"--kllenoy) of
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FOREVER
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Felt-1,18113

11'4o112...1•

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ACCOUNTING
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SERVING INDIVIDUALS

ond BUSINESSES

113'!t W. SECOIID ST;

POMEROY,OII.45769

,_,._1

IAk••leffW.I'IMr

KEVIN'S
MAINTENANCE

KEN'S APliAICE

FertiHJing, Weeclng, ond

SERVICE .

992~5335or

915-3561

Office

'-nu-ing,
BMdlng.

Shrub -

Tr• :rrtmmln!l

&amp;-oval

Rltld•nl'-' • eommen:aa1
, .... EatlfMI.. '

AREWOOD FOR SAI.E

USED RAILROAD

Pill fUI llottl• of
lotion
. _.......... Jellr•rr

Rocky R. Hupp,·D.C.U. Agent
I

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
1/20/93/lfn

POOR BOY TIRES
•

WV. Across fr- the Post OHico

Wt Specialize Ia
nrts llitiiiMitl
I

Ex••····

I

CheCk our Price or We Both Lose

3rtll0CATION TO SERVE YOU IEnER

992·6193

~LnOrWt

992-2269

................... 1
15 S.ulons '15

'

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·

(614) 843~5264

949·2398 or
1~800~837·1460

BILL SLACK

CALIFORNIA
TANS

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare
• Cancer • Fire • Health
•
.
-

Lie. No. 0051·32

~
Snodgrass Upholstery
:.

"Helping You To Recover Your lnvesi~Mnl''
Church, Home, TNCk, Boat, Auto
,
and Office Seating

UCINE, OHIO

614~949·2202

61•-....

.

HAULING

Guaranteed Scholarship ·Money

BULLDOZER, BACIOtOE
- TRACICHOE WORK

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

for all college bound students.

LANDCLEARIHG,

Reasonable Rates
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

Total rr..ury

Checke ..........._ ..... e,o50.10

,

742·2S60

Racelpla-·-·-.......... 1,111

Contrlbittlolle, Glhe &amp;

FREE card.

·Bellrnoa..... ,...._ ..,70,788.17• Oilier Obfecte-..............~ .. 30

...... 7 I

•

......... - .................. 11,118
MleoeiiM!COUI

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
. Thlaltd good for 1

AoMonlbllrFuly lneured

~:r.,g;·~~·i·;;;;;j:·-···2,458 ~;;;,;::;;;:;:;;1;-:n-;;a~

u-·----·--·--23,143.00 8uppl...........................5,715
Puroftelld &amp; Contraoled
Fund c..tt Balance
Jlln. 1, 1111Z... - ...41,515A7 Set O'loee....................M,425
Ubmy lleterlale &amp;
Fund C:.llh Balance
0.0. 31, 11112 ...... 84,738.47 lnlormotton ............... 42,017
Caphat Oullay.............52,384
Dapoallory

•

CUTIS%

Public
Notice
MENTS
...............
101,111.31
Tolal Reoelpll Over(Und•)
Dleb. ....._................ 23,143.00
Tclal of Ric. &amp; Other
lour- Ovw (Unci•)
· Dleb. I Other

Topping, Trimming,
Removal

•

:

SII,IIOO ... ·

~
_ _ .............. quallylng- 10 buy VIIY nlco home on 3~ llnl In :

•

·~·CCTkl&lt;

:sa a

.PRI~E REDUCED!

7

t

---net
C'a J

-to ..
•-nr•""'•"•IOIO%

•

DUOFON£

26%

• Hangs up on

.-lvecl until February
11183. Right Ia reMrvacl
r•f••• ell bide. coiitac~ I
Wanda VIning il 1112·2111
lor mare tnlormadon. ,

(2) 4, 5, 8, 3tc

-CUT
c :rt ..
flllllll.,.,

·

1885 DOdge Rooa Van
lale. Sealed bldo will

104 Mulberry Avenue
Pomeroy. Oi-!45769

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SAlE

c.........

,FOR SALE

Sunc:tay • Manday -C losed

Tuesday · Widnesday · Friday - 9 : 30a .m .. 5 :30 o .m .
Thursaay ·Saturday - 10 :00 • .m .. J :OO fl . m.

Stoae (o•

...... 7

PUBLIC NOllCE

HOURS:

YOUNG'S
74-llo~onJ&lt;'-

-&amp;J- F.......
46- 8-lor llaat

I

6$- Sead a Fortin-

n-· ""'""' r.., s.1a
41- &amp;o.. for R.t
'IS-• T.,..Ufor S.lo
Moltilo u - for.... 73- v... a' 11'D'•

" - Apart.Mt fw -._,

COMMERCiAL and RESiDENTiAL
F~ ESTIMATES

CLUB
GUN SHOOIS
SUNDAYS
1_:00 P.M.

li4'-lla7 A CrO!a

36-lleat Eotato 'll'aatad

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

,\ I I \ I " I' I ll .I,

$.05/day

. , -----=:-:-

PH. 614·992·5591

''

58-Pot. for Solo
5'7- MaoicalI 58- Frallo a Voptai.J.
59-ForSeloorTrada

I I\ \\I I \I

•

•
'•

Dirt, Gravel•nd Coal

•

Marketplace

""

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llm..tone,

667-Cool.th

RATES

• PwcetAon en~met tol)

FREE

247--l.o&amp;ut F.U.

..
• DePtrldlbolily l)fov.r! '" I

Fll.tlf AvaWie
wHII Approved Crtdlt

2S~Diet.

M~a Diet.
S79--11'W.t

.

DISHWASHERS

BULLDOZING

77S-II. . .

'.

DEPENDABlE MAYTAG

RIC EICAVITING

c.....,

576-.l.pplo

• The Area's Number l

.. -

• No. 1 prtltn'ld brand'

245 1lla &amp;..ode

.'
.... ''
'

DRYERS

675--1'1. 1'1458 Looa

S88--VIatoa

... Doll7 S...doMI, ....w...... 18,000 .....

Jeff Wkkersh11111

UCENSED •nd BONDED

992-Miclolleportl
Po.....,J
985 0, rt
IHSo-Po..a..d

446-4:olll....
S67..a...w...

.

• Ado ....... lio poW Ia u....:....,
Cudol'l\uko
U.ppJAdo

DEPEN~BU! MAVTAO

CIDai,lied page• ctn~er the
fo~ing telephone e:cchonge•...

.

• 7 pOiat liowiJPO
• S..llaol to aot . .,...u.lo 1.. ....,,. aftarllntola' (c._k
for anon lint o1a, ad,.,.. Ia ,.,..). C.U
2:00 P·•·

•

~

Audience members laughed at
some statements made in the video,
including one comment the average
homosexual male has 126 sex partnena year.
"You lll)d I know they don't
Jq~~eSCDt most of us," Bunge said.
"But it's hard to convince people
who don't know any better."

"' .

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

DAY liEIQRE PUBLICATION
l:OOp.m. Soturd.ay
1:00 p.m. MOncboy
l:OOp.m. Tllllday
1.:00 p.m. Wodnooday ,
1txlp.m. Thunday.
l:OOp.m. Prtd.ay

1

• R-.. diooouatfw oda poW Ia ..t.._, -

Homosexuals urged to debunk video
pie will believe the lies," Bunge
said.
The Dayton showing of the
video was Bunge's f'trst stop in a
statewide tour prompted by a repon
that the Ohio Pro-Family Forum of
Columbus met in January to discuss how to-enac1 a law similar to
Colorado's anti-gay rights measure.
No such legislation has been introduced in Ohio.
The Colorado law prohibits state
and local governments from passing laws that protect homosexuals
from discrimination. A Denver dis·
· trict judge has delayed the law
from taking effect until a court case
challenging its CO!IStitutionality is
heard later lhis year.

POUCI.ES
• Ada •.W. d. eoD.ty ,..., ad,.... ••tM ptq

COPY DEADLINl!
MCllldaf Paper
Tueodtty Paper
W±od yPaper .
Thunday Paper
FridayP1por
Sundly Paper

1\1\l\1:-

girls. Although many persons tend
to recognize ADHD more quickly
in boys, it is now believed that the
problem occurs equally in boys and
girls.
. ·
The causes of ADHD are
unknown. Some theories trace the
disorder to problems in the brain,
reactions to foods, or h~redity
(passed from parent to ,child).
Although the causes or ADHD are
unlrnown the known-treatments are
effective.
In the past, treatment of ADHD
cons,i sted only of medication.
Although stimulant medication
such as Ritalin and Cylen are still
being used effectively today, it is
believed that treatment must consist of more than just medication.
It is .estimated that 75% of
ADHD children respond favombly
to medication but long term gains
can only be realized through a
combined treaunent plan. This plan
should include parent training, psychological counseling, and classroom techniques as well as medication. Parents and
ultimately ADHD children benefit
from support groups which address
their special needs. Psychological
counseling is recommended to help
prevent emotional problems which
are often the result or the ADHD
child's inability to control his/her
behavior.
For further information on these
services, please contaCt your local
mental health center. Suggestions
for classroom mana11ement techniques for ADHD children will be
discussed in our next article. If you
desire more information on this or
other school related topics, please
write Bob Hudak or Cheryl
Cross31) in care . of Meigs County
Board of Education, P.O. Box 684,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) Homosexuals have been urged to
help educate the public about their
lifestyle as a way of responding to
a video that portrays them as sexstarved people.
Jerry Bunge, chairman of OutVoice, a statewide political group
for homosexuals, showed "The
Gay Agenda" to about 60 people
Tuesday night at a church.
The video was. produced last
year by The Report, a conservative
group that opposes homosexual·
rights legislation. Sen. Jesse
Helms, R-N.C .. has cited the video
on the Senate floor as an example
of why homosexuals should be
banned ftom the military.

CLoSED SUNDAY

•

The Education Forum

• ~: : This is
of two articles which
·: : will deal with the srndrome known
as Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
• · Disorder (ADHD). AD.HD is a syn•: • drome characteriud by serious and
: : penistent problems in attention
-: •. span, impulse control, and hypemc-• • tivity.
:. : Problems in attention spll!l are
-:'.- often seen when a child appears to
: ~ have difficulty listening to and fol, .• lowing directions. Problems of
~
impulse control often appear as
behaviors that seemingly are not
thought out. These behaviors can
lead to accidents or other problems
· such as wben a child rides his bike
into the street without loo_king or
answers questions .in class without
being called on. H~ractivity may
.be seen when the child cannot sit
still, jumps abou~ wiggles in his or
her sea~ and seems to be always on
·· the go. Parents often describe these
children as never walking.
Since most children show these
. behaviors from time to time, it is
· _ crucial that diagnosis of ADHD be
• · based on the number or symptoms
:- that occur over a specified period
-~ · of time. For example, some experts
:: believe that a pre-schooler must
~- - show 10 out of 14 problem behaviors. for at least one year in order to
be diagnosed as ADI-ID. However,
an adolescent need show only 6 of
. the behaviors because their activity
level is typically not as high as a
younger child. A child's mental age
:; . or level of inteUigence shOuld also
-:: • be considered in the diagnosis of
-~ ' ADHD. For example, if a eightyear-old has the mtelligence typical
• or a four-year-old, then the diagnosis should be based on behaviors
measured for pre-S(hooJers. Until
recently, it was thought that boys
were more frequently ADHD than

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.K.- SAT.S--12 ·

..

women.

-

Call992-2156

•
'
"
"

Students receive invitation

...

To place an ad

.

AYAIU8LE.
SFPnc SYITEIIS,
HOM!IITEJ1AAILER 111E8,

DIIVEWAYIINITAll fD
UIIEITONE-TAUCKINCI
FREE E!I'I'OIATEll

992·383&amp;
..,..,,

CUIUE'S

SM*II DOZU ·

WORK, ,
DRIVEWAY WORK
. . UMESTONE
DEliVERY SERVICE
RUSOIIAI.E RAllS

992·7553

fi"FOY,OI. .

614-742~2138

'regardless of Income
'regardless of grades
*plus $20k guaranteed loan
•regardless of creel~
To coltec:1 your scholarship money
cal1814-985-3566
Open Mon.·Frl. 10.7 or sat. 111-4
•

2-11-- pd.

HELP THE UMI to IUILD A PIOSPEIOUS
MUlE JOI II8IS COUIIIY
HELP US II OUI AJT.,T TO tiT
J01
- OfCOIIIIIT
WANIEII: 5 It 6 ACIES
IEWIVB.Y RAT W1k

•sm

1111111_.._..,, ••I .....,.....
(2) WilliS... (J~W...
PIIOII: PtlltJ er
.... .
It aztiHDier ... lf'l

ROLLEY SIAnOI CUFD
991-2549
·.
'I-

I

�(

Pege-,2-TI:'e Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Mobile llomll
for Rent

42

Thursday, February 4, , 993

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Hoi II I hOld
Good a

-

lbOd--honloL21/2 l'olohlll c.,. ftH41.JIM4.
mllol
AL M au1 of l•olw
-. 30W7I.IIll- 1:00 Ptll. tniCorDol .... tna~
Fumlohod,-2 0 &lt; - . for,... 141.01 ............ In lloOio
In eou.ry ...... , . W.hert

on

..... -... - . -

~

-nil ......

t. Po--' Chol

-y.

Two I b ldiOOhi rnoblll ~

~., ....,...t:rl

·~ - · oeiUng
1· "-1- c:...e

Syr-.

ronl In
on.lpon.

coa Fronklo
~ ;.;::::
..:=:lo:::.::_::::-;:low=ll'-:long::::-._:;;:.
' ,_ -

.
,
.
.
.
.
. . . . . . -·homo

Apolo orove
·Ooodyoor
Plont, ocoooo
1250. month

••t• 1

fll• him-._iof I
-Lrlty
oo17W471. · :104-5..-2434

-leo? (l.Nm
lo lho - n g

' ~'I::::U Foil. a, 1::10 Plr,
, DIO
Avoorcolto4~-~ For lnloo iiilllc:iil

;~ 4

Giveaway

~ 12 ... '*I S l -

kllton, • l7l-alll •~w I :DO PM. ·

Why poy ront you oon
own I 1tn M.110 Redrilan with

a y- worronty, ·old~lng,
dollvorod ond ootur. lor ttaamo.
Cell for ln..,_. on, 114-381IISZtukfor-

2 ....,.... p.•pl•, • mo old, :J04.

17Nifll.
.
2 P _ . , 1 Fomoto, IM-3N-

~

a pupploo:

mlxod, to wu. - 1

" I' m tirsd of having nightmares about

+·--------n~o.t.b~e.in~g~p~r-e~p-ar~e·d·t-o_r_a_n_e_x_a__
m . ·--------~44

~~mole. Qood polo. St+

_11,_.,.H_el..:..p_w_a_n_ted_,___,

· 'I"'MMI88
, - " ' oftw
pupo,
, -PM. ·old, 7::10

· Found: mole town
tolitr.l14oll41-4110.

OOIOrOd

No '-'•ncol 1500 To SOOG
P -: llolhw -Hiaky, Wooklr /Polontlol Proo-lllfi
FHA llongogo Rolundl. OWn
Pllhlr.._.:_
Towvotl"'
.....
woh
II• . ._ -·
-

-. .·

Houro. l.f0t't4MII03 Ell1.213.
24Houro.

• ·- : lllud Mlnllluro llolo Col..........
oppl~v... Old, 114- -po~ time
Clllllor,
bo ....
ta
, · mao~.
YN old, bol
n 10:10 AM
• a:oo Pll; No p - collo
Milo
pltuo. Crowlord, Oroo, Htndor·
. .. ·~ - . 4

3:£ .....,... • -.wv.

c.Mr

to good home

31

3 lodroomt, 2 Bolho, Dlnlnn
R
•
oom, Lar@ LlvIng Room,
Flroploco,· Pn Aero, City
SchOol•, a MlnutH From GaJ..
llpollo. 814-441-7l37.
F
Bla a BR DokOII Inn Home
bulK on your lot. $39,995 &amp; up.
114-111-'1311.
,
Chnh~o: 3 BA, 1·112 bath,
-ood llooro IIIII baoomonl,

~ibi~~~~~.O~ .'1~~~..,11;:

or 44&amp;-353z.

2I-

011.. • ,

Apo~mont, 81cwo I

.

~=:.•~u ~

t1DO

·~••

iii.......,UpMoi,.Apo~-.
Unhlril-. No Polo, llopoell

114-44._-.

Aoqulrod,
2bdrm. a pta., total llectrlo, IPplllncoo lumlohod, loundry

14
Wotk-.,1
H.
Whl,_ ' - - dut.J. wahoo
ttao . .;;ii: aat.oo, MoYiol

=r-'71. =-

wt«e Around Noee. An...,. To

Conely. Coli Anytlmo. ,,.......
1421.

r

EARN QREAT $1 $
Do Vou LOVE To Cook? An Er·
cttlng New Con~ In Home
Pony Pton Booking Ambltlouo
lndlvlduolo In Vow A,.o To
Domonolroto OUollty Kftchon
Tooto, No Dollvo~oo, tlo Ouotoo,
Dee•mlnt Your Own Hrw, NO
GIMMICKS.

L.OSn I yr old . _ hound I
1
looafO, Ylolnlly .ol Jorlchci
R I (bolilnd Hlah 80hool),

Con RITA Aftw 4:00
tM-2'11-0033 (COLLECT)

Comploollo~t- _

part Lab,
with IlliCit .............

Loll:: ,pll't Boxer,

nut Annue
Chllcl'o pol.

7

u .N

Yard

1

l*tt2·7e5a.

I::or~'l'~u=r~~ ~l"a'!
Olvlng Out Appllc1Uone For
The,. App,.nllcnhlp P~ram

From Jonuooy 11, Thru Fobiuooy
a, 1112 AI Tho Union Hill,
Locotod At: 2134 Oolllo 9t-,
Portomouth, Ohio. $30 Appllco-·
tlon F- Equol Opportunhy
Employor.
.
WoHr-. ...... noodod lm·
modlololy. Apply In poowon:
Countryv klchon, Roclno, OhiD.

Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VICIRIty

W.-: Doloy llllur, 1
- . . . . NoMmokO&lt; 11oft.
- · · ' Exporloncod' And
8
4
~
":.~ 104
A
7 • - Roqulrod. 14-2 5·
P.
;;;d."j.'' "
a:
Mou moro money!
·r«~ · F111 ....,,.
..... ~~dft,-lon,
M--"~. .~ ......
- · •4"'
"'"'
• .,... .....,
'::'T.l ,_
11
. ·. 11
OUI 2tl Oil "
nontro
Cl ••· ·- · · - . COOio. ...
,3
•.
nt,
(ONOW).
t:'OO8
Lll - - · -llo, plcluno,
·~-. Iron pal, oldlloto.
I ' I 0111,
oamlort•,
,.....,..or.lrtdlo, ooddlo,
14
Business
A&amp;:L Yonl loloo Muol lo Pold In
- · DEADLINE: 2:DO p.m.
tho doy bolont lite od Ito lo run.

=£,

.d•:O-

p

-==•-

Tra(nlng

:="::.. CoJ'I:;!~~;v~~~

omeroy,
llddleport
&amp; VIcinity

J'M-88%·

~403 or I

VI-

·~

lpart:;:ra l,tR~
AJ;olt- !f1 M':r.E:: Fown
tiN. CoM lt+ftZ
· EOH.

front w/..umn aiding, 1001C200 n.
lol, :ICM.aaZ-3287 oltOr 4:30PM.
W.nllo own you own homo bul

;:::,

11~
- ; , •rao.
,_,..._. 1 " 2 ._..,
utllhllil paid, MP • ,.,, 4
•

con'
got onoygh
Hnonclng7
Wo
hive IIVIrll
horn"
we will 1ell
on land cantract whh 1 amlll

801Dot, tom..cpm.

8

coil304-675·t~7.

~ondymon,

PubliC Sale

IOut:tfoot'

Odd .lollro, lndOO&lt;
Er-

~'t·IUO Por Hour. 114-245-

&amp; Auction
RICk Pelraon Auctlo~t~ c;ampany,
ful time auct1onM V~9mplele
IUCtlon
urv5ee.
UeenNd
118,CIIllo I Wool Vlrglnll, 304-

lllos Pouio'o Doy Coro Conlor 1
Block WHI Of HMC On Jac:klon

0331•

No Expo~onoo
NIDIIIII')'. Wt Will Trlln, 1210
Ptr Woo!lTo Sloolll You Otiollly.
lmtlldloloiy.

- ~
..... ...,
-....
n.,Tho.-' ., •"'-

••••

.,

1568 Sq . Ft., .18 ocro

lo~.

2xl

Willi, 2 complete balht, enning
room, Hvlng rGO(n, Jbdrm., wafJt;.

p.m.

•

•

FumM~n ropolr 1 roHnllhod,
buying old lonlom~1 J'Nitlo

t990 Bpnrco Aldgo, 3bnlm., •

pond. VInton. Colonial

Lots &amp; Acreage

_.,...,

farm

Rooms

Sl-,_.,

Roomo lar oont • wool!., month.

·

11 Ac... More Or Ltu, NOith

2 lod......, Homo Per
- · AI lvo"ro:,n. No ......,
Collo, et+l7lo
.
.
a •••-• -"'Homo, Furn~OIMo, •210 Dopoolt,
It+
I, 114-2-.
2 bodroom, oil oloc, $165. por
~."" dtp. IIIIHIIol, o304-

11

.-

'

1 Pulolr llrolid

""'.a

·

•'1110

• ·

:.~· ...,...;.~~~,

....,,_

:!f~r~~"l:t:~o~Y owner. t~=~~~ttao.
at 11201mo. GeUia Hotel.
35

g

w/pll--

0no

Po~lllly

barno, oummor hcuao, gorogo,

Ook - h lionel

=..... billow-.
-.CA.

0no
....,,_
-h211mo. lncfudee ulllltlel, $100
-Lrlty dopooH, no polo: It+

~:'1:'"'";=,oil -tole, 114t.SCO:

oowtng mochlnoo, old bloUn
hlriiHon, Ooby, tt4-882-lll411

54

, . _ en IOqulrod, ,. ooto. Pl.
,.._.,..,tt+ft:l.a&amp;IL.

112 b.th, htl1t pump, llove,

In .. fullj oorpoiOd, 1 - I lod,_,.. All - . . ,
ohoo, olocorio ~ AC 1 11- ,..,.......... 817U1&amp;
nll-or,.._lrwo,- BooAI:21Conllollrool•erNll'flonlo, lloclno, OH. 114-14•
~~. l'obnary o, 1111.

.- .

;~=-~~til.~
17;1

~~·=-=~~=-="'=· =~==;:;~~~~~~~~~

304-

,

~--•

p- ..._.

...,-

z;;:o~~r

:=
~

oiuhw~

•1121 AlwiP.II.
flul "'"d d -.
-._ - - • .

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12,100. 11184 Ptro-ih Voavgor
lopoooll2,200. ~11-11141.
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305
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looluolng . Amino Acid Body
luldl- wolahl ond Ill

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John lllillnt v.-, It+

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Build Inn
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•
King olzo wotor bo&lt;f" nlghl
f~';_'i· dr_, I hutch. &gt;~'IllLAVNI't I'URNITURI

Supplies
llook, l!rlcll, ...... .............. Cloildo' Wlft.
·•
Jlle ClrtNo, 011 Col It+ ·

fumlohlnao. .liiiiiiL
llllol- ... olclloo&amp; • ..,.,.
IIIII flllv. 30A1NIOI

llotrfl: Moo".. N. 114-441~ OUI - .. . Rd.
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COOKIE!

I -..:~.&amp;. . . ~-....__,__~-1
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FRANK AND ERNEST
T,..AT Tt4e GOVe,NMeNT POeSH'T ICHOvl
wtfAT
I&gt;OINt;/
A.Nl&gt; .l'M AfMII&gt;
TtfAT IT

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~Till~ I 1oac.. nW !f£.£0
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:111.010 IlOilo. 11- boonli,
,...., llllch, AIIIFM
:tto.lonol~'l;,of
II In I , Nlch_tiodo, 81L. 2#
LR. o r u e o. _..,..
11M
oiiOri:DO'PM.
· :0

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The olden EFTSOONS m ea n s
"soon after": " If you leave now, I'll
follow eftsoons." When you look up
this adv~rb in the dictionary, you'll
discover the pronunciation soon after:
"eft ·SOONZ."

Q. My husband wears a PROS THESIS , and we 'd like to know abou t
that word. Where is it from•
·

B•• Boll. luHr oqulpP.d, fDr

SHE' SA'fe H: ~ee .

r Ne\I£R KNOW WHEN
SHE5 P!..JTTIN!\'MECN.

RUDE NOISE5AND

Auto Parts &amp;
· Accessories

A.. PROSTHESIS &lt; "pros -THEE sis") is a medical term for an artifi cial device that replaces ·a missing
limb or other body part . This term,
which first appeared in English in .
1900, comes from the Greek for "ad. dition." The adjective forrn is PROSTHETIC &lt;as in "a prosthe tic knee" !,
which any prophet can tell you rhymes j
with PROPH~TIC.

€&gt;1Nae~WDr'~-

. _ T.....,loolono, Uood I
.......... ..,_ llo~ln\ol ...;
owner ~ u.:m;.
221t, PO!Mooy: 114-992-lltOO. •

::::gt,.~lloor
lonu, lon lruajl

IIIII•,
,

WY.to4-

Services

THURSDAY

I

RIFF

Home
Improvements

Thm your cluuer into cah,
s.Jl it the 89fl' UICI)'oub.x ghoy,
~. no need to leave your home.
Place your chuajfjed qd today!
15 word. or le11, 3 dqya,
3gqve,., 15.40 paid in caclvance,

- ·-

z.,1------------------___________________

lievlo lo!winl -lno And
- . . Cloonor llopolr, ,,..
PloMip And Dolivo&lt;Y, Cloorgoo
CoHit flood, -&lt;0214.

IIASEMENT

'

AEVO

0 ELK D
MYPKC

OEVO

LT

IBZIWLIKNI

IAIWF

LK

TYGI

s.________;___________

=-~:::~2474:

4. __________________

llhor -

lp lite year llhead In ICIIYity lhll you
doing might be morketed u • :
~roftllble prOduct. Thlo may be btoughl :
· Olboul by 1n unuau-r and ctrouiiOUI'
chain o1 ...,,,,
"

atlono lhat oould ooi-.r.ly IIIMtlt you '
and your male. When you nllmlng at
the -lergll, you'N • dynamic comblnlllon. Aquorluo, gill Jump on llle by '
underllancllng the In"'*- whiCh n

w11o Ukel you might be lnotNmantal lo- !YOU 11M
doy In holplng you ocquiN something ' ICIMtloa
you•.,. wanled lor "while. 11 !ftlghl not lum oullo
be 1~.11ut It will lie tlgnlflcanlto you. · pale sue c
LIO l.lulr 11-A. ., 21) Others will be ··
,

•~

.. No.-I

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

lopllo Tonk =11!1_$110. Oolllo

Co. -IVANI NTIRPIIIIU,

6-------------------7•.____
~------------B.
_______________
_

Joclloon, OH
S7.Na.
UIIIIIY llcla lal: :IO'Il40'xl'
PUtfH ltHt ..._, Oelvltume
Roof, tl'lll'- lllldor. ~

•• Dtw. M.4441- .....

9. _ _ _ _ ___.;... _ _ __

............. i-100 11111041.
WlllrUid ...... _,~

J0~---------------

----~.,Yin '
=.r-.-.

12-----=-.,-:------:....i-JI,.__ _______________
_

Q

11 ..._____ --------....;.....:;--~...,.

Plumbing

&amp;

Flit. 5,1. .

Hlltlng

14·--------~--------

en'Joy

15 ____~~=-=--=-=-----

446-~,342

1

. .;;.

bctrloall
Rettliii'IIIOn

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Wlllem Dafoe.

WOlD
lAIII

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FOULJY

I
r,

L A T U V

"I think intelligence is like
money," one philosopher once
eoldme. "lfyoudon'tletonhow
'":~~~=:::=~·:__,little you 've got, people will
rN I R H E 0 lire~! you as though you ... a

1--,r=-.,:-r-.,---t

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5

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1 1 1

I I 16 I I O
•

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Complete rhe chuckle quoted

b~ filling in the missing words
yo\( develop from step No . 3 below.

•

•
•.

..
..
'
'

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

,,"

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
··-·

\

.

•J

Frolic • Pants -Begun - Quoits · CONTESTS
While on a vacation last summer my family made a
. game of finding lhe most unique bumper stickers. My
favorite one said, "Passing on curves is best left lor
. judges of beauty CONTESTS."
·- ~

.

.. . .....

TVDooor

.......

~

.,
'

.

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'

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LP.

FEBRUARY 4

Ft WOI'lh TX

\

-•oro

...,I

!

'*'-',.

IAOITTAIIIUI (llolr. D llto.l1) Tllll
could be • r e d - d~ lor unoi~Khed i
Sagi11Wianl. Thlte'o • good ~
you mlghl1114111 - • whom you will
find extrerllely lllp nllrg ond VIce

52

• '•

..••

VNOLKS

"

==.!:"en::::~odwa::, . c':Mr.;m:a~o~~ .E~·~. ·~·s·c~o~·~·~E~~~ ~
'

.

'.

,.,,

things In my llle to be anything other than an opt1m1st.

looking lo you lor leederahlp l""ay and
they ore Hkaly 10 be very uger lo partie- '
lpelo In
you Propose. Try to ,
lncludo u many u poulble.
. .
VIRGO (Aug. Ill lopt. Ill) Romonlk:
overtones could be very ap~elllng 10 ·
you IOday. Soft llghtl, • - muo1c ond
a secluded nooll lor you ond yow opeclal someone will mlko lhla a perfect
day. .
.
,
LIIRA (lept. lli-Ool Ill) Membwa of :
lhe oppOiite gender will flnd you
more attrlliltlvo than uiUII IOdoy. Vou ,
will be sincere In your efforts to mike i
lhem feel lmportlnl llld apiCiaJ, ond
lhey'U - .. H.
ICOIII'IO (OoL ......,, :12) The
your'SUCCIIIIOday ... ln~~~== ~
you ·,. dOing, -her you
' on 1 omall Ulignmlnl or
objective. Take
In

"*"·

•

••

XWPNI
CVALTYK.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I've been too lucky and seen .~oo many beautllul .

F-lon Wotll, Aoollng,
KN-. And IOihO. Froo Eio
llllllool llolort- No Job
TOll lit Or lmlllll-.,_il. •
govwnlng you In lhe year aheld. Send
lor Aquarius' Aslro-Graph · predictions
tOday by mailing $1 .25 plus olong, oelf·
addrHied, atlrt'lped envelope to AllroGraph, c/o lhla newspaper, P.O. Box
91428, Clevetan~. OH 44101-3428. Be
sure lo llate your zodiac llgn.
PIICII (Feb. 211-Mo""' 20) Think of
lhlnga you would like to have al this ·
time lithe lunda wore available. Thlo will .
motlvota .,d lnaplro you lo work with
groelw purpGH.
Alllll I" ult 11·Aprll1t) A surprise
cou141 be In alore lor you IOday when
someone lelia you 111a1 a rec:enl acjulln·
tanc:e really Ilk• you, -Iaiiy when
yotllnlltelly lhoughl thll you hldn'llm· .
preued him or her.
TAI,IIIUS (A!Njl....., 20) Your comP•lonlte - n o lor someone you
loWI .,. . . .ly aroullll IOd1y. You will '
be willing to ..,.,. your lline and mike ·
omalloacriflceo on hla or her beholl.
01111111 (liar n ..luno 10) Involve- ,
manto with trtendo could be the majot !
conlrlbullng fiCior tor rMidng today
happy day. Your oplrilo .,. eleveled '

·I '

G I

VJDIWT

Gl

NEVKSIT

pr...m.

EVAI

L

t

:,on~.R ::.:':. ·1$_..:'.:3

I

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Home lmprovemenlli
Y... llllpootoo100 Pn Oldor a
Hcimoo. Aoorn Addh~

ASTRO-GRAPH

r
r
,..

~ ClpMr
t
. . cnMed from quotatklnt by IWnOul people. and
:..:::tM ctphtratllldllor a/'IOIMt. TocMr'• clw: B ~~X

Cvrlll

•

,,
I·

UnoondiUonll ltltlme guar~~n!.
lu. Looot ,......... lumlohod,
Col 1:'00-217o0171 Or 114-231'

....,...flni.
~--

'

'

•
•

WATIAPAOOI'I~Q

.3 •. ____________- -___

9 )2-2'1
. 56

times tbe Bermuda Bowl.
Kehela outplayed his Egyptian
ponent in today's deal. It occurred
ing the 1980 World Team Olympiad
Valkenburg, Holland .
Kehela , opened a strong no-truornp
with slightly unusual diStribution.
North, Eric Murray, used game-fore·
lng Stayman and drove to a slam once
the heart fit came to light.
Botb defenders led a spade against
six bearll. The Egyptian won with
dummy's king, cashed the heart ace
and crossed to the heart king. Now be
played on clubs, but be could no longer ·
handle the bad splits In both clubs and
hear.ls, finishing
down.
After winnillg with dummy's spade
· king (the ace i8 needed as a late baad
entry), Kebela cubed ooly the heart
ace before turning to clubs. When be
led the third round, what could West
do? Whether he ruffed or discarded,
Kebela could draw all the trumpa and
concede one club trick to East.

By Jefll-ey McQu~in

t • •·~·••
DR tDO~'I
_
-good,t400.:104
.

81

+9

OUR LANGUAGE

•-e.
::•t

••
or tradl .for dour, 814-2472'1111.

1

Allpus

one

• 114!

=ra\'oond,ounolllotnw

lie.
R
1724133 or 1

6.

Pass
Pass
Pass

I

for Sale

· • ..

P...

Paso

bas

Ell_

-

1p0t orllt+t4t 11204 oftor tpm.

CHIP

1 - ChoYY 510, 4 who01 drtv ..
:104-1'11-4042.
'
1117 Ford - o r von,
eon...oond.
lhodoo
blue on M
bl~
, _ o1 mllolgo,

~. 130, e1tiii

.,..._
..
10111
wlnllr ooet. dtnltn wl teattw
trim. lllce ,_.,, wn etS. now
MO,poklltSO: omo Otloc, lo•oo

GlOCOLATE

75 Boats &amp; Motors

(.}'
I
7~

2t
3•
4 NT

I

i

"""'·trao-•=.
'

- •• --"''"· "'
--.-,...

P...
Pass
Pass

Eoot

Pierre Trudeau once said, "Canada
exports hockey players and cold
weather, and imports baseball players
and acid rain.• It i~ports and exporll
bridge players.
.
One of the best Canadian p~~[:~
.ever is Sami Keltela . But he ro
. Canada by a circuitous route. year1sl
born in Baghdad. When be was 7
old, his family moved to India .
he was sent to study II\ California.
was there tbat be learned to
brltlae. Alter completing his stu•ili'ei.l
Kehela moved to London. Finally, ·
1957, be settled ·
He bas often

YOU SPEAR Tl-fE WILD

;:r",o~..=lll,.,o.iwlllrlpmd~ 74
·~
n
MotOrcycleS
-"'iji"i$;;;GstA~r:i~
1.H2 ICMI 1K' CIJWaO, ~
1111 ~~· A,.o, olrlvon lolllo, 2,400 101.;;

Wan"t to·
PIN
EXT' D
.,;1

WMAT I-IAPPEN5 IF YOV CAN'T SPEAR
A POlAR BEAR OR A M005E?

:o::..rr

aoO

!NT
2•
1•

Opening lead:

.PEANUTS

11 1-10 Pick-up, clean, 114441-

-

Nort~

By Pllllllp Alder

1888 S.tl, GIIC Plck.Up Truck
- Point, - nroo On OUtloW
1
- . 4 Cyllndw,
Spooc(
l'r~M~n~U~on.
,p,OOQ 4IM--3e1-!

no.

6 Actors' org.
7 Revelers' cry
8 Courage
9 Artiol'o dog.
10 AuthorRand
11 Comedian

1 Barrel (obbr.)
2 Cry of oheep
3 Vault
4 NaUve of Tol
'AVIV
5 Color abbr.

One trump
too many

vans

tm ~-~-., ou
-.
'
01o1o Dolo
. . , _ ., """"~I ..._;;:"r
- · modol
.,.,.... t
li2HP - · IYPI 1D wlh 110
............. ~-...,_ olr

Well

"BESSIE '
SUE !I'(

·
Sal
AutOS fOr
e
73
&amp; 4 WD's
.;_;___,,.:.:;......,...,...,........,...,.,,......
tltt Choily lollol,. wlh 417 au. 1111 Bronco. full elzeii 4W01 PS.
ln. qlno. CoH 11444Wlll. . ~_l._lutomauc, new tlrM, new
, , . Chovy t1121on,loVI. 41p, - . ~ _ , .... '13,0DO·
lo $3000 OBOj
no. --.
H21• 1171 111o1w11.
,.... Cho- sw, .....
.... W..... .....,..; loolili ._
t7IO: .,._. ;
v4
-ion,
• 114- ..
::....,. good,
'

.!"'__........,...,

Soot*

s•

:;:231;:1::·-.,..,.-,·: -:-::-:---:-:-~~. Ford, Dodg• plcluip
~
-~
"
""
" ' ' - or long. NO I'Uit
"'

il•x-.:

DOWN/

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

":".!! "::r.,

71

'

+AK1076

1
:::'\,Rolli sat. lloro 'ISOt,
.. Ptl
~ .C.:,:,::...,-:::,..,.---,---~:-

1

Couch whh. motGhl'111 chllno
2
$121. Eild $35. Eooy

'A-.:d

-

,,.,..,.,",lnl.,.

131¥
r••td, 1011 good 1111po,

81,000
-•

cluoholy o1 Rllo Aid l'honnoiiJ.
lhooolo .,.y 10 dlol.
Oood uood nn cHoir, good 0 ..,.
dHion,IM-H2·7341.
.
Hldo o bod OOUIIh, llorol prinl,
grHn r . . - bolh $1DO. :104~~~";':'&amp;;:.'; m.am or 773-ttot.
H; Hlow lllvO&lt; lo!dlo Pial Korf Pr-olpnol Koyboonl,
PIOr.~ IIHoe 0111 141 Ori IJMoln · - condlllon, ,,.
cludod, t400, oood vwy llllo ltv
young w..,.n, lt+t82......
~~~~~E-•
,!?"
0 1~~ : onytlmo.
""' ...
""" -- -·
•
.._...
ylllg wo • ...,
OlCOUNTRY ~ 'RNITURE · rv
- v ....... 'Tolin .......... tm Cho1r
CRAI'TI
Von llotiJ. 304.t'IW88I.
Wo Hovo Crofto And Croft 11up- 1:,=='-..,~o.="o.:;u:O:o~o."=loo~~~-=R""~-:
Aloo wtn
v-· Shloto.
woCullom~
Buy And Sill · 11uo " ' " " - Lona- Oown
Oood Uood Fumlluro. Como 1M 12, 2 lhon Clioonto, •12.
Us AI 2231 IIIIo Roulo 141,114- -1121.
.
448-1422.
~h pn&gt;duclo, Bhobloo orc • 8llal 1 po Metlonll pnJo pioduotl

!)omplllo

.,.~ owcorn,ltwl2-'1:102.

h_, l:6 ·
., .--

• YaCotlonol

Colomon~•-lon.
lurnoco,
BTU,

For -

VI'RA PUANITURE AND AP.
PUANCU
114 441 4425 OR tt+44Htta

~
~
•mo 11

Eoi' corn for •II, olio.g~ndlng
ovoHolllo, ttoKM-1412 or 114'
lll8-14110.

1m Ford • - . . - u.... •
bnkll, aood •-lon, IIIII
4WD: 1871 Chryolor, 318;.
tm ron! 250 Dlclllip, :100, -~
goco1 cond., 11&lt;1-liiM4&amp;1.
.

2421. dry • •

AH Corpol I Ylnwl In llocll Pn
MoHolutn C.rpols, Rn N.
11+441-llt44.

'18118.

Hay &amp; Grain

64

138. lood, · 114-241.,ytlmo or 114-441-3884 1~
. . 1:00 "PM.
·
~-~·. • Ho~-~. 8pll
r u - - ~ 11
•. , . _
DollvorOd, 140 Plok.Up Loiod.
11+251-131L
For lllo- Loolloo wlnlor - · lull
,__.h. 1101' _..,old Nor! hoo

Household
Goods

•K J76
1!08

lt(.IIWIIII or lt+t82· .
'
72 TruCkS for Sale

·

'*' .......

--.

~

CIOOD

H54.

tlili'-

-

W:

I::J.

lnoludoo onc1
tua.
t.Anrllmo.
to- ond fool lt+'lll2o low
: 114-'1112 11•
tta AMC ...... 17JIOO AoiUOI
24'111oftw 'lpm.
...,.. . . . . - , AlfJPM Ito...,
IIW ""- kl 1100. Now 1 7 T• traok lulk Food lin Whh C · ll'o PS. - . hp Aalo
:ICM.e75-1114. ~~Mol~"'!!.•~mo.~~~~~~~~~41~11~2~4~-1-.111' 4111414L
BUVIIILL
. ..
.• · -·~·
• USED PROM DAEISEI
Fob.I,I:DOIIII:DOPM.I2.00
1'1' _,.. _..,
1

7pc.

... Wanted to Rent
.,,

5I

44

t93

+QJ92

SOUTI'
+A a

sc:.=:

PRICED TO IELLI1988 CoiiiOID,

••

Q76S42
83 .

1111oo -·Ill. 11183 Food,
1on .... .:; .,..., a,4ta..

Livestock

For Bolo: AI!C - - ...... lor . . , for ulo, n...APlio. - . , - . 4 11o1oa 1 4 F.,., :IOW71-4301.
%ni loo.. Yo! = I II - ·
I -·-~
•-~ d,
""Ho~for ulo, 11!1 oull lltl' · - - • ~ - • · It+ bo
2nd llultlna- _ , .

.:..,Y
· '61 fWm Equipment
p1oyo ~ ·

Ill ,.......,_ _,.,..
nogolloblo; Shlrpol
doa. full bloodod
11110:
10of."773-1113.
• young,
•

63

•

·~~ -~- •••-~-" H·o::· .._,

-

Merchandise
Ool
ftoh nk ond 11111
3t
lonsij

11as1, llooon WY.

Call aler 2:00 p.m., 304·77J..

lHAiSIWI'?

~L ·-·~~·•.. 71,00011~ -'r.
1 con ~ 1 '::1~ 2 lo coli-. _ . , now ~·
AKC
llogQormon 12,- t
110.
runt1 g101~ .....
.._,., ,......,.,1200,11W12I OUI; t4.000. • ..,.
IIH.
·
'
Mlxod !lYing ohio~ lo8 oldw po~lollrodo,IM-1112'2357.
a"M-111-2'111.

Miscellaneous

End of '82 ctooronc• , _ lrowgulor '""'"- $3oo. Buy 4, go1
0111 trM. P.eliaf. 132 lutt•nul,
Pomoroy. to-1~·

wllh cooking.
Alocilnilor - · AU ... po.

~

EAST
+QJ10642

·~10 9 8 s

oond.

I'll-

Complllly Fumlohod molllie
homO, 1 milo
o..,.
r. No
IM-

:4'-l'-

.m

Locllf Branch Of 16 Store Chain
H.ede 22 P.aple To $tart Wot'k

Houro: M.T.w. to:Dil
o.m.
10
I
:DO
p.~'-Sundoy 1:DO
t 0 1:00
114-WR-2521

~~ =rn.:~mr.:::

......

Homes for Sale

~:: :1;, :."::';.'"on~~~

--.y.

Com:::::.-c.:plllly Fum
. -'"""'~Non
.
__.,...
~""-..'I P.M. • -

$152.17 por month lncludl'111 obt
mcntholroo lot ront,- 14x70,
dollvoood ond ool up, oklrtlng
ond otopo, 1.-&amp;37.et25.
1983 Rlchordoon 14r'I01 3 Bod·
roomo, 2 Bolhs, ooraon Tub,
Conlrol Air, 114·37WS50.
tttt 911yllno Holly Aklgo 14r70,
II ot
2 boil
AIC
:ovor:''porch, kl:=•·lolond:
olorogo
undorponnlng,
llkonow,
711&lt;2484.

o;;·

31

:=.;;~~~~~~=-~:-

!:lnv
C:.~o~!"to. cg,::
olndoi' ... :104- 3201

Ptko ~~-~-I· AE-~:30 ~liTho
. H Qolllo High School .Aooo,
Ouolhy _,d x,...,...nce ••
UtllltiH
Avall1bl1,
Own~r
m.ma.
tt COncom For vo.. Chlld'o Flnonclng, 814·381-GU&amp;.
Coro. Coli Uo For A VIs H. lnlonl
9 Wanted to Buy
tToddleN t'M-ot41-1227. p,_. 1ttl Horlda Goldwin;, exc.a.nt
Doll' Junk HI Soli Uo Y011r N""' c h - 19chool Ago 114-441- condition, 4000ml. O'ior ocrollot
l1nd1 • Fl1twoodi Rd.. Pomeroy,
Wooldng llojor Apollonuo, 8""4
~ '
114·MI-2061.
Color
TV'a,
Aetrtg.atore, Nurolng
Studonl CNA Will Coro
F; ~ VCR'•, Microwave•,
All
lonoro, Guhor Ampo, For Tho Eldo~y. st4-245-61Jl
Etc. ..... 1231.
Polnl Socurlly aomco. Inc.
Prota•lonll Security •nrlcn
Don, 111- Awoy Your u.- lor
lnduotoy, Buolnooo I Homo. 1-:--~------tod I Dryoro, Tum 24 hour oorvlcn. 304-675-6512.
41 Houses for Rent
lnlo Cooh, Cllll 11+44tIOII&amp;.
Quality cleaning •nrlce, com-- 3 IMdroom houu, Pomeroy,
J I D'o Aulo Porlo oltd Salvor., men::lll and rnklentlal, caN $2501 mon., depotlt l reter.ocoo ooqulrOd, no polo, St4·H.2.... buvlna Junk ura • true 1 . Adom, tM-62-lW.
liiiW7H3ot3.
Woddlngo,
Annlvoroo~oo, •'::5.:::51.::__ _ _ __ _ _
portraht of all types. Dave &amp; 1 ·
WlniOd To Buy: J101k AUioo Doni".!. _D I D Photography, 3 Bod,_ SHMID. Pluo
Wllh Or Wltholll llo!IQ, Coli 304.frHI14.
Dooooft, 1824 Eulom Avonuo,
Lorry,Livoly.I'M48M303.
Rot..._ Aoqulrod, No POlo.
ci,. tor children In my ~14oll~~~~~221~2~=---::-==
TOll Prlooo Polcl: All Old U.S. Will
Colne, Gold Ringe , Sllvv Colna, homo, Mondoy through Frldoy,1
814-11112-6280.
3BR on At. 110 noor N.O.H.S.
Colno. M.U. Coin Shop,
111 SocondAvonuo,Oolllpollo.
Wlllcorolor oldoriy In my homo, ~~~
~~TS~i't/~Jm ,
114-388o9115.
W.ntlld to buy: uud mobile 114-Hz.t858,
4 bodroom houoo, 914 Yllnd 81,
814-441-0175
Financial
PI Pn, S3DO. rol I dop, 304 4t8
1721.
Employment Services
I n - : ,. polo, DID.
21
Business .
I rol. lt+37li.Z20t oftor l:do
p.m.
Opportunity
11
Help Wanted
Alo Clnndo, I IR, t-111 both,
•avow ALL AREAII Shire your
f4501mo. 0opoe11 - · It+
448-4222 dl)'e. 44N1JII .......
llfno with •· You'l lovo lho
• INOTlCEI .
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINQ CO. - · --~~
1181..... utu-.
recomnwnd• thai rou do bu•J.. 2311 Lincoln Avo,
:IOM'II-1110.
AVON I AI Aroot I Shlrioy nooo
With pooplo you know1 ond
........ 304-675-1421.
NOT lo ,.nd mont)' thlougn thl
Dub Clolnoro, po~ llnw to lull mall unlll you havt lnvntrgltH 42 Mobile Homes
time wort IVIIIIbtl, no ex:• tht onerlng.
to f R tnt
Do
you havt or want ,.,...,, for
=~Th~~":-F~:~. ~r:~
Trollor,
~K
I
an lnvntment? W• have tev.,al 1BR
S;DOPM.
.
In Pomeroy •nd Middleport thlt Reference A~ulred. No PM1.
are prlc~ very pet tor rental e,._lll42, OriM-11'1-.
Income. 9ener Price tor caah 12 montho FREE LDT RENT!
bul wilt conolclll' -poymonl ...., 2bdrm.. ontr t'l12.17 ...,
ond lend contoocl. H lntwootod
Coli llwt2·240S or 814-11112- Mt
-up.
. 1400
lnoludoo
•111 Oklnlng.
717'1.
2710 to echHUia 1n appDinta lod,_ Mobllo Honto.
' onont.
I22Mio. 1200 ~~opoo~, 11c1wo11
- . 111·- . - , If No
AnlliNr U~ve M IIIII

Real Est&lt;Jte

1

Now IWo bodroctM .,.n......,
oqulpod ldlchon. . 'lth 81 ·•
- · 1-J.U'It, 1-JI.
..'12.

Moblle.Homes
. tor Sale

houoo nowly nmodolod. 2 loogo

Ml.c:ell•neou•

um

32

nooono,Both111~GonlonTub,

h•ll your ktQs to the mill jullt

8

..,.n "'
Gougo Aulo 1471: B-nln1 tO
Gougo. PumpNowWI.t1~4t7351.
53
Antiques
'"

2581.
lllddlopoot, 2 Hdroom ru...
1 u ntuml- 1pi0. do P
n

•
:1-53 oratC.IIIZ-114.
1112-2211.
.
lluot oocolllco, 111113 14x'IO RodFumlohod Dno 8odPtou. Coli Todliy, a
-43670 mon wllh I yoor worranty, In- RIOtft Apo.-1'11, UUIMioo Polcl,
A-.no-os-t:ma.
ciud• dollvory oolup olopo Dopooil
. , No Pols 218 llolo
All Vord loloo Muot Bo Pold In
~
ond okl~lng, $1B5mo. Coli tt4- It root, I22IJIIo. ilriV'ito Pork· Doolllno: 1:00pm
tho I - - - - - - - - - - I :38:::::CS.Z;:-4C:34"7.Cooll=lor"=::M:::Ikc:'.o::':_
· ':""::-::" lng, ttl 4413117.
·
141
doy - . lho od
to ....n, 18 Wanted tO Do
Noohuo 14x'IO Ex~ndo, 3 Bod· w• K::::, 1 l o - AporlIUildoydlon-t:OOpmFrldoy,
..... ou CouodryBoftlna,VII
-y
odlllon
10:0Go.m' EIR TREE SERVICE. Topping, Flroploco, Foonl uock, 614-245- Clooo To Town, Pmrolo po;nilng,
811urdly.
Trimming,
Hodge
r:90;.;.;.:73::.·•,;.'1+2;.;.::4.;.:5-:.;1;:2.;.34;;..- - - - 12-4Mioh....
; ~...
~~~ D..,•P,:::Iotlo T-•·
12
--~ 1
Trimming. TrH
FrM Rtmovol,
Eetlmateel
014- 1·
MARC. Molao Ao~llon tor 387·11157Aftortp.m.
33 Farms for Sale
-olon,IM.Z4H'In
llolordod Cfilldron, will hold o
1.::::....:-::::-~~~7:;=-:::::::
,._,.go
ooll
Snwdoy, Ooorgoo Po~oblo sowmlll, don1 'is .... countoy utoto wHh 45
Furnished
F.WU.ry e, 1193 It the Carleton

80 1

WEST

Wlb~D

:.:~~-,12,IGO. IInn,

&gt;-; '
j.Aoa,.~
'""'""

...... ·

52 Sporting Goods

poymonl In Pomooav ond
llldlloo Olt. Coli tM-1182·2403 or
t14-w.l·2710 10 ochodulo on II&gt;'
polnlmonl

I :;;;;;;::;:.;;;;·-----'~- ..... ,1114 112 attt. ' .

1. . Chow Coroloo, lcloiNcl ••

21 Night bafore
22 Amaoaaa
25 Make vory
hippy
20 Easl of Tenn.
30 Part ol amaH
Intestine
32 Twist
33 Whale
35 Dale for
computer
37 Poso (lor
portrait) ·
38 Flesh

+54

..

Ponl A...- -~800. tN7
~Ill. 1001 Como"!
lt.HL 1W4 Llnooln Conllnontll

• =~,\ lo -;::: ~~='a:· =~~~::.::-.:: ~taa:.i

:

oroct... Hvi-. 1 ond 2 . bOd.

~EEKANn MEEK

A~nlanca

45 Container
47 Anlmtl WI~
lore org.
48 Conlrolo
52 Rtnlol olgn
(2 wds.)
55 Anglo-Saxon
monoy
56-cologno
58 Comporatlve
ending
59 Typo of lorva
60 BMf onlmol
. 81 Southlrn
blackbird . '

mop

IAKJ

.J:I',j

1310

Aroo (1 105-962-1000 Ell. QH.
10181 For Curronl Ropo LloL
Houu for .... with 7 room1, 2
lltll balho, llropi!oco, now Lonox
hool pump, a cor g~rogo, b~cll

•

Z.4-IJ

.AQU

-

GrDOmi:J

R. .l.....on llodol 1100,128A
....
••7l Co1 1 ,
"
Qood •-lon- .DO.
lwa:IOI-2211
Wl-oo llodol 12, 12 Oougo
t42l: Brownlll!l
20 Oouoo Pum\1
,_

GOVERNMENT HOMES From 11
IU
Ropolo).
Dollnquonl Your
Tox
Pro,.rtf.
Aepo~Mitlon•.

•

··~1 ·••

,""'""'!

O.

o

ill

NOJn'H
+K75!

....
Kon...,. D
rro•w
· :10:::;4::112=47N..:::;..--,-::-- ·,
17B.DO1o 1111.00.
Woolomhauo
drP•
c·:::..:
-1110,00
hllvY
ttK,
80041y'o
'*d C..,aul dilly
lo - llllOG
1888 Mo"""l'
_
_! H•-··
-o-, ·
1
Ro~or oimond nu - · .;.
Farm Equ...__
Alii!., Air, Cnoloo, JG,...,
MliH,'
61
saao; Konmoro rolllgefllor . _ 110 , Peta for Sal•
...,,_,.
at.tw Or Boot 011or, tt+441·
11M 1111. DO olllo lo ttiO.DO. :10
-·
- n d 7• ,_bl
. no. ~
In' oloolrlcnng•
rongoSH.DO
whHo Skagat
1111.00, .
1 .AKC
Cockw
Sponlol moll, HoUnd 1ft ,_,..,.,..
• .::..:,-• "".,.
~
.Ill Ford E
LX:z. .•!::.~o
ut .. .-,
"- ..'
3lln"
.
a&amp;Wl
l~no.
1
.
IICOit
181
Appollilncoo IS Vlno 81 ll'lo
llonol tOft lnnoporl - . Oohl lottd!!l1_1ow mlllo, ..-.... It+
441-73Mar
. 1..aoo.,..tt44n
Groom 1nid lupptr ·lhaD-Jt.l u grlnller mix•.. NnJioOand 441-lMual•lp.m.
All br.-..,_ olvl-o. lupor 71 • - ~... •• - - '
t . _ lnoo oolrlaoroiON lo ·--Doolor.
:IOW73'4211.
•
Food
. . ~ullo
·..., ' - .......
- ·· Flnblnl, ........
choooo 11om 11 2510'lt7S; 1100 1. Wollb. Coli 114 44f 1123L
·· 11,000 1111411, 30W'/IIo
Jaido door ~&gt;C&gt;pportono with
62 Wanted tO Buy
'llllhtw 4:0G Pll.
.
loiO ond wolor di•J&gt;O!'- tt7B: ~~=-=
·14Ford ._,Ly"!o41p., ......
one21ou.ft.uprlgiiii-Jlu taiO.
Wa-: Worm llomloog .._ ond-aood.nouoao,a14'
, _ ·~ lon outomollo
'
•
tt4 112 IIU.
14N021 oftw IJpm.
•

loclrc'""

1·~

===-1'8

q.:,ru..IIJoooj
-;aq :oolom
I

171 to tl21 •ch; ..•citric ranaa
1125 ooch; ono portoblo diOhroom
ID ochool - · llko nowl125i.o_nolorgo
In town.
IYOIIIblo !'!1"~'11 mochlno l"""j II: VIIIIP QN 1 Aplo. Ml 0&lt; . 18 portable T.V. o tt21
coli lll.fi:l-mt. EOH. .
·oochi 110111! lrono S3 ...h
· =.:::.::::..:::..:.::=:.....--.,.- whllo -Hioo loll. ovorylhlng

hlr&lt;lwoOclllooroln dlniii!II'OOm
ond ontrywoy, 2 cor dolochod
_go, hNI pump, on 40 oc,.o,
Dorwln oroo, 11a,1oa, 1.e14-61183838 oftor Opm.

..... I 1~. New 11N,,
- I .._ OoMII · J.C Oood
Colodllloo!, 1110. ih4 d1 IO)G
Allor a P.M.
•

C

ea

~:~:-~ ~~~ ?;.~~:~ ~~=.- ".=:!':' ':~0:.: ~

Found: odoroblo puppy, " Run Road near N1111 S.tt...

Q

J!h : . : d:.r:,.,-.=
hb. lllh. ...
Drive, By luhoor, t1H4H038.
- l y romodolod, utll-, opplonco
porlo.
DoiW l'loh 'To!1llr, 11411 , . . _ , Avo.
CLOSINQ COSTS PAID By Clblo pold, S311011no. :IOW75- SWiohor Uood Alllllllncoo, ..,. · Polio!
,tatl.
nw of Aond ., Pwch 1!11 full · ..,. -....:..., Blh, 111...;:
. for. __I!) p
.
Konoup, 1-llfl:l.
...Mi."'iiijj
2BELLER,
bal~, Codor
ounkonAonch,
living3bdrm.,
room, A~-llld~l

THE PAMPERED CHEF

Dodoo Do- Tuobo :t
l.oodod, Y:ull - · AMIFIII

Oo

ill

,

-

44

broldCIIIIFI
4 Doll'o HO.U it
author .
Q Somovrada
12 Saloon
13 Toll
14 Memo abbr.
15 Stratum
17 Glutton (var.)
19 Aaol-eatett

PHILLIP
ALDER

An•••r to Previoua Puz1~

40 Locotor
42 Bli legolly

1 UK

~~:= ::.'l~~

-.Pw-Ohlo.

O

T.~.'ollo.-1211.

woo

Apartment

for Rent
1 Bodroom 1 112 lllho Furnlohod, All UliiHioo .Pold, ~xoepl
!'loclrtc, PriYIIo Porklng, Will
44
Kopt. eM ' 2102.
BA
1
apertmeIll. In Point
Ploooonl. Qulol, ......,..., good
nllghbort1aod · hl0 per month.
•-aor:IO&lt;HJI.t-

Homes for Sale

CHy 80hoolol Now Homo, Bolng
Complolod, • Largo IO!Iroomo,
Wolk·ln CIOIOI, Z Full lotho,
Dining, FomHy, Ullllly Room,
Laoao Kllchon, Ook Coblnllo,

'Oftly,I04 -

-·
·-"-2211.
Loo1 Chllcl'o Pol, Kona!'IJO A':~
~r
Me::.
Lonor Holr, Whfto Logo And

t'f MA~~ Mo4
~ fllool(
1'"1S ~IDe ...

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

lumlltn,

~

.......... ....
- . . , o8 ...... · - -

4_.en- '

olloloo:No:wt:lo:od
Hc......hllcl
fllmlehlng. 111 mi.
Wrlcho Rd. PL Pl....nt, WV.
OIII:IO&lt;HJI.1450.

AUCTION &amp; I'URNITUAl.

ACROSS

----11,
~·-ml~ .,:

Hot

SWAIN

The World Almanac &lt;!! Crossword PtnZ,e

...,..

-· -

llq.... Hot hold lumlohlnp.
Mooon, WY. :J04.m.u41.
R.........on,F........ W-.
Doy-, VCA.. , ltovoo, Ccotor

...

lunblod,

818G,IIWG11171olwtpon. ,

.......

Ill

. -

-CololootlyCL,4-.~

.... Ooll Fumfton, Tllo!ooo,
- . CNno'l, ........... llo.
Rhw Volloy Ooll Fumllon,
lor &amp;":.,'\;~:'tal'..~ o.lllpoiiJ.
114M2-~
.
PICIWIII'URNITURI

=-.:.~-·

·ALLEYOOP
!Th7u~r~a~da~y~,~Fe~b~r~ua~~~4~,t~99~3----------~~--------------_J~~~:!~~~~O~h~lo~==========,-==~~~~~~~~~Th~eD~~Se~n~tl~~~~~
!!!!!

Autos tor Sale

71

, .

~

�•

Page

Dental care should
begin· during infancy
February is National Children's
Dental ! k alt' Month.
New pareniS may 1101 realize the
importance of caring for their
infant's primary teeth. However,
tbe Raywinlde Dental Society cau·
tions parents that serious tooth
•decay may develop -by the child's
first birthday .. Even though the
child's primary teeth will eventual·
)y be replaced with permanent
ooes, the Jlri!narY teeth are critical
_for proper chewtng, speaking and
appearance . They also reserve
·space in the jaw for permanent
teeth.
· Baby 'boule tooth decay is a
condition that can destroy the primary teeth of an infant or young
child. It can develop when a baby
frequently receives a bottle of milk,
formula, fruit juice or sweetened
liqui&lt;ls as a pacifier .or comforter. It
inay result when the child is
allowed to fall asleep with a bottle
during naps or at bedtime. Prolonged demand !&gt;reastfeeding !Day
also cause this condition. Although
tbe teeth most likely to be damaged
are the upper front teeth, other
teeth !DBY also be ilffected.
· Bacteria are present in a thin
film of plaque that constantly
forms Qn the teeth. The bacteria arc
sugar as an energy soun:e. In the
Jirocess, the bacttria produce acids
that attack tooth enamel. Frequent.
lengthy exposure to. sugary liquid
can result in acids attacking the
child's teeth for a!least20 minuteS.
After many such auacks, tooth
decay
., . can occur.

February is National Children's Dental Health Month

All types of sugars, including
those found in bottle and breast
milk, for!Dula, fruii juices and
sweetened liquids can cause plaque
bacteria to produce decay-causing
acids. How often a child receives a
bottle containing these liquids and
for how long a time the child's
teeth are exposed to decay-causing
acids are two important factors.
The Raywinlde Dental Society
says parents can help protect their
babies teeth by doing the following.
After each feeding, wipe the
child's teeth and gums with a damp
washcloth or gauze pad, to remove
plaque. Begin brushing your
child's teeth as soon as the first
tooth erupts (around six months) .
Continue cleaning and massaging .
. gums in all other areas thai remain
toothless. Flossing should begin
when all priJIUI{)' teeth have erupt·
ed, usually by age two to two-and- ·

'

. RACINE · The Racine American Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home.

RUTLAND . There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
p.m. to midnight Music will be by
Pure Country Band. Public invited.

LOTI1UDGE • The Lottridge
Community Center Association
will · meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
Everyone is welcome.

SYRACUSE - A rummage sale
will be held at Carleton School in
Syracuse on Saturday at9 am. The
sale is sponsored by M.A.R.C.

1UPPERS PLAINS · The TupTUPPERS PLAINS • A
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
spaghetti
dinner will be served by
Ladies Auxiliary will meet Thursthe
youth
group at the St. Paul
day at7:30 p.m. at the post home.
United Methodist Church in Tup'
RUTLAND
• The Rutland pers Plains on Saturday from 5, 7
Township Trustees will meet in p.m. Spaghetti with homemade
regular session Thursday at 6:30 sauce, salad, garlic bread, coffee,
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station. tea and desserts will be served.
Cost is donation only. Special
Public invited.
music will be presented at 7:30
FRIDAY
TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tuppers plains VFW Post ~o. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
dance Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at
tbe post home. Music· will be provided by S!DOky Mountain Drifters.
Public invited.

NOCAV1Tl.ES

•

TASMILEBHGHNC
0 T S 0 R c I L Y B D0 C
ONDY.WX QZGFGCO
TPLELYABICDAF
· HOHSNMMOENTVG

BAKNCTRLNGOII
R"O {A H W I X I W 0 T 5
UTY OO MZSSCTIE
S MeM O LA R K · T J H E A

'

YaL43, NLZ01

H A WB I Y C E R F P S L
B D M E I WD N G L A Q A

Syracuse Council takes .
no action on combined
.
trash pickup proposal

.UIITE:IX AN OSN N
VBHPRONMTSTGT
T L DOL MWE OS E O E
GFUEQIOLNYOUO

T L ME A H F I N S I 8 P

calendar

p.m. by Jan arid Kathy. Public
mvited.
'

-

ANTIQUITY.- A song fest will
be held Saturday at 7 p.m. a1 Faith

·

Fellowship Crusade for Christ
Church, Route 338 in Antiquity.
The Gospel Travelers, End Time
Singers and more will perform.
Everyone welCO!DC.
. SALEM CEN,TER • Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
meet Saturday.at 7:30p.m. at the
grange hall near Salem Center.
Potluck refreshments (soup) will
follow the meeting. All members
and candidates urged to attend.
''

CHESTER • OistrictlJ, Daughters of America, will meet Sa!urdai.
at! p.m. a1 the Chester Lodge Hal.
Plans will be made for the spring ·
rally on April "3 at Logan. Afl
members urged to altend.

•

'

Woman-sentenced for using
credit cards stolen from corpse

•

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) ~ ihe cards when he wOrked a!
LOTIRIDGE - There will be a
A woman who pleaded guilty to the tpedical examiner's office.
smorgasbord dinner at the Lotusing
cards stolen frQm a Whitt,was sentenced to up to 10
tridge Community Center on Sun- corpse credit
in
the
state
mcdical eltalllin- years m~SOrL
day from noon to 1:30·p.m. Cost is
Two ~~ also· received titre¢
er's
office
has
been
sentenced to
$5 for adults and $2.50 for children
years
prollllll.on in tbe case.
three
years
probation.
under.l2. Everyone welcome. ·
.\
During 'her sentencing hearing, .
\
Wanda Folden, 24, of Charleston
MIDDLEPORT· Rev. Robert said
she was innocent But she told
Gibson, guest Speaker, Four Chap- Kanawha
County Circuit judge
lains Dinner and Dance on Sunday Andrew MacQueen
to proceed with
at 6:30 p.m., Middlepon American the sentence.
·
Legion Annex. The 10 a.m. Four
said
she
was
a jury
She
William and Pauline '·
(\' oung)
Chaplains service, hosted by the . would not believe her afraid
if a trial were Buck, Route 2, Point Plcuant,
Middleport Church of Christ, is held.
·
W.Va., will observe their 68th
open to the public.
Folden was one of four people • wedding anniversary on Saturday. .
charged with several felony counts
·The couple has three children:
of credit card fraud stemming from Mrs. Roger (Betry) Phillips, AriThe moon completes a circuit the tbeft aild use of the cards taken
zona; Cbarlcs William Buck ill and
around the eanh in a period whose from the corpse in April.l991.
Nancy Pope, both of Point Pleas·
mean or average duration is 27 days,
Reuben White of Columbus, ant; W.Va.
7 hours, and 43.2 minutes. ·
Ohio, pleaded guilty last year to

.

.

Anniver.sary to
be observ,ed

By Kathryn Crow
Sentinel Correspoadent
Syracuse ~~ilage Council
Thursday night diacussed at length
~ suggestipn made a1 tbe January
meeting that the village go into the
trash collection business with
Racine.
It was emphasized that the corn·
bined collecuon was only a suggeslion to be investigaled by a committee composed of Syracuse and
Racine officials. It was pointed out
tha! there are no definite plans as to
when or if such a plan will materialize.
Meeting with Council in regard
to the possibility of such a plan
were Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eblin.
Eblin has been collecting trash in
. Syracuse for several years.
Council advised Eblin thai they
do not know when or if they will
proceed with such a plan.
Eblin said tha! landfill rates will
STATE BUDGET· O•ic. ·GetY. Gec.rce
bus Thursday. Budaet Director Greg Brownina.
increase beginning ·March 1 and
Vulwo~ rf1M, ...._ .. • _... f/lbls record
left; sits beside the governor during the
asked about a possible ra1e increase
announcement. (AP)
·
$30.1 WIU. p111p1Zd lUte
d•ring ·•
. to coyer his additional eli:penses.
He suggested a dollar a month from
cwl'ti mIll liteR...... T - Ia Colum·
each customer as an increase.
Council took no action on Eblin's
proposed increase. Members did
.
.
~ll hill' !ll~ ~ :weJ.l~!ic4 with
a::a iflfit'SC'flttte ~w·~· ;----·-..~· . ·~- suiirii of stale 1)uaget"r&amp;oittces: his service to the villagF· . .
B.J ROBQT E. MD I EF
Mayor James Pape explained
Sweeney'S panel will !DCet 10 the primary and secondat:y Cduca't I,._ Wrila'
COLUMBUS - The House times out week. He plans morn- tion budget has fared ve~ well ill that the only reason for the coming, afternoon and evening ses- thc governor's proposal,' Sanders
i*mAPl - tliuronP bcarmp 011 Gov. &lt;laqc VoiDurichls sions, a.ting with DepaJ bttent of said.
.
ed
.
Spending for higher· ucabon, a
$30.8 ltillian .....t bill - Jcad. T!amq,; .allioo officials.
Voiaovich and Browning target of previous budget cuts,
cn..,.tliltiOmCky•l a may
the document earlier would increase 5.4 percent July 1
released
be ill.._
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Tbunday.
They
said it contains no and 6.1 percent the following year.
a.a- Pluil:l: Sw C}'1 Dunemployment mtc fell to
Universities
and
colleges
could
nation's
:
Wt
increases,
but
stretches
Ciewt.d, IIIII ot11cr jjji!IJj!jcn of
raise
tuition
by
no
more
than
4
per·
7
.l
percent
in January, the lowest
·but
maintains
Q.uality
serabe fig+ e cnnminre bead IC:Sii·
level
-in
a
year,
as signs of growing
vices
ia
lilbt
economic
umes.
mony Thursday fro• Budget
Voinovich said the budget ecn~~=ilor Elaine Hairston of ec'onomic strength in the past three
Director Gret Browaing - aid shows
his commitment to cost· the Ohio Board of Regents said the months finally translated into an
they nocd lime 10 IlDdy die .........
improved jobs pictme, the govemeffective operations, in line with plan was a positive step.
a1 over die • '• ,.,
"Govemor
VoinoviCh's
proposment said today.
Sp
Van Riffe. D-Wbccl- his campaign pledge to get in to
al
stops
tbe
budgetary
free
fall
for
The Labor Department said that
c:ntllq, da:fjmd • •••• ... Tltuls- " die bowels of state government"
education
and
JH:t!Vides
for
the
0.2 percentage point improvehigher
dayl lllbou&amp;b- imJJ!!"i 7 (()D- in sean:b of :mvings. .
suppcirl
for
growmg
enroll·
ment
in the unemployment rate,
some
Tic~ calls for a $3.7 bil·
eems wac cxjMesscd by HnMJCC
she
said.
which
had stood at. 7.3 percent
ments,"
mnini•~
. lion ilic:Jit ase from .current budget's
Overall
state
spending
would
since
November,
stemmed from
Swcc cy aid tbl: gowaoorl a $27 billion total. Tbe governor
increase
by
7
percent
in
each
of
the
healthy
employment
gains in manRepublicaa consolidated liDc blamed most of the boost on the
next two budget years. The mea, ufactwing and retail trade.
ill:ml" ia a
dill JDi&amp;bl iadi- cost of federally mandated pro·
sure assuines that the Lesislf!ture
In all, payroll emplQyment rose
pams,
such
as
Medicaid.
which
he
1:8fe. bidden priorities. Rql. ~­
will
approve
reforms
in
Medicaid
by
106,000 last month, the biggest
said is inaeasing by $500 million a
C..Ijilell, ~
&amp;U•
that
would
save
$400
million.
increase
in six months, and more
ized plaas to c•t 121CMJ0 low- year.
While
there
are
no
plans
for
a
than
double
the Jl'ltry 50,000-perilll•Mtc r-an r.- ~ _. . Generally, the plan provides
major
13Jt
increase,
the
bill
proposmonth
av~e
for all of last year.
inflationary budget increases of
at least $45 million worth of
Still, the mcrease was far below
wlgtha:~"!::.\= ·::,~,~ about 4 pen:ent a year for most es
assorted fee increases.
the 200,000 to 300,000 new jobs
jn
- i a h . - . . . . 6d "ec
prucnaa. Tho House and Senate
Fees charged by the Division of normally produced monlh!y in the
lirE"KI. for- f •e
would ~ 6 percent ~! ~
wildlife would increase Sept. l, early stages of an econormc recovto beam pb•ac wealthy sellool IJIIIMDillaJICSU:d. VOUioVICh limit·
1994. Hunting and fishing li~nses · ery. .
.
~
his
offite
to
a
5.5
percent
bien,
clisllias out . . the ••• -· sghsjdy
would
go
from
$lito
$!4.
L•cens·
This
was
the
last
maJor
economformula ID
fimd- nial incrasc.
'
es
for
out-of-state
hunters
would
ic
repon
scheduled
to
be
released
EdiiCilion would get about 4.5
increase
from
$80
10
$90
while
before
Pr~sident
Clinton
makes
ing.Becilmia&amp; Tllesdayl Sweeocy Jlt:lcenl more each year for a biennon-resident
fishing
lic.
e
nses
would
fi_nal
decJSI?ns
.on
the
make-up
of
will becia allin&amp; ia 4 • 1 lads' nial total of $7.9 billion.
go
from
$18to
$23.
hiS
econOIRlc
sl!Jllulus
package.
one by one 11 ctirgss dcir priori- ,. State School Superintendent
·
Analysts sa1d that the January
lies fur tic r.wo-yar ll'll•IFF )lt:liod Ted Slmders said the increase for
jobs
gain vias not likely to dissuade
Fqinninc July I. He lqJcs II '-we schools was only slightly higher
the administration from putting fordie bill reilly for a floor- ia llle thaD die inDation rate.
ward the modest stimulus packa!le
Maldl,llc aid.
"Relative to the rest of state
it has been discussi~g of $16 bilIt dell wualtl fxe t b c - ~ government, and given the conlion in increased public works
spending and SIS billion in new tax
breaks for businesses. Clinton will
unveil his economic program in an
address
to Congress on Feb. 17.
· Congressman Ted Strick! and
Today'
s jobs repon followed a
was appointed to the Subcommittee
on Rural Enlerpfises, Exports and
the Environment this week, accordASHLAND, .Ky. (AP) -Uilioo about I. 7 percent higher than an ing to a press release from tbe conworkers at Ashland Oil Inc. S carlir:r offer, but still below the ini- gressman's office.
The subcommittee. part of the
CatleUSburJ refinery will CCl a tial uniou dcmlild of 20.5 percent.
House
Small Business Comminee,
Local
3-505
Vice
President
chHce Moauy to vole on the
deals
primarily
with economic
Chides
Utnnberc·
said
the
compaom:··~~~eat~&amp;toft'a'.
ny
also
IJII'II!Cito
increase
the
com•
development
issues
in rural m;eas.
i•u for 900 Oi, Ow:mi1
JIIIIIY
S
moathly
contribution
for
cal and Atomic Workers anion
"I CM!psigned on a comnutmcnt
WASHINGTON (AP) cmployea Ia KcnFirly lucals 3- bealtb-care benefits. The family toward economic develQPment for Ohio's jobless rare fell to 7 percent ·
aJid 3-214 IM*Ooed die CUll· plln iacleue would be $20 in tbe rural soutl!ern Ohio. Appointment last month, according to figures
ll&amp;t oft'a' lllelluiday ..tldccl- Jint year ud $25 in each of the
to this subcommittee is a signifi- . released today , by the Labor
ulod die - .
.
.followilt8 lWO years. while tbe pay- cant first step roward fulftllinent of ~IICIIL
for sinale workers would this commlunent," SlricJrland said.
unemployment rate was 7.3
• Jrlh
taa • ..., 165 ment
.
$8
... $10, he aid. .
Strlcldand was also appointed ·to pen:cntln December.
WCibu •
OIJio, Jdia.
I o thagsaid the company the.•ubcontmitt~ .on resulation,
Nationally, the unemployment
cry - ' 50 at • Vaholiac IJoogi•
I
"ewd
CGIIIIICt ~ &amp;bat the
busineaa opponwuuca and tecbnol· rille fell to 7.1 pen:ent in January,
plant i• Precclo.l Pa.l un I [ lp...ted 10 Jbe offer. Bill+ +. . . . ..... feell Jrill JllOIIICl job leCUrio~;
,
.
tbe lowell level in a year, u siena
Many of. Ohio s small bus•- of growing economic strength in
ay
RGiflr Sc-. said ty. "We 111t.lecl our memben out
tba
1M*O¥al is a sood thrn doin« die WGk to Dlllte sure nesses have suffered under the the put tltieo moutbs finally llans·
lip.
itW()l~. . . . . be said.
::,r.::;~:u=::!':t over- · :::' iaro an u~'k!~ pictwe,
"WI.. a telltatil'C ...weat
Lcoa!';!
Oblo and
locaiJ' rraditlonally
"SIJ1l!l ~u~~~~uos are vital to
~~t said the
with oar two 1aJ4ea locllls.- r-,.1
wMdl
CuletMbut
1
befln
they
set
COID!DIJI!i'
Y
c
gro
·
stawtbbility
and
•
tenlonsd
to·termuse
January
une!Dploymerit r~le
llape dlil is a (IQIJiiwc - ·
t
for c===. well. ...... .._. ia CCJDII&amp;t talb lacl "will proba- oconom1
· 1 111
droppocJ 0.2· percent, after bemg
my small business commltte.e 1iozei1 81 7.3 perea~tllince Novem1Jh I "Sda•llit.
bly be a ct.y or lWO behind us.''
Sclnm said tile - &amp; t Cllls
Tile CUJJ•t conrrac:t with the ulignmenllto help, create an envt· bor, mainly because of healthy
for a 3.5 I** I .,.C iller U itJ expbed as mldalpt Sunday. Bul IOIDDODt Fbat.la friendly to the~ employrnont pins in manufttCltlr·
each f/1 die ...
3.7 de ...., aped to a ro111n!J exten· adon _. operation ~ small bust.- in• and retail trade
ncsses," Strfckland wd.
.
•
•
pen:ellt .in die dlinl ,_._ 11111 is siaa while
•i•rions conunued.
.
..
I

••cet

Voinovicb budget gets prompt hearings
....

I

"tans

SUNDAY
CLIFTON, W.VA. • Revival
will be Saturday and Sunday at 7
p.m. at the Clifton Tabernacle with
Jerry Courell, evaligelisL Everyone
welcome.
.
1UPPERS PLAINS • A household shower will be held {or Beulah and Rufus Cline on Sunday
from 2-4 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains
VFW Post Home. The Cline •s lost
all their belongings in a fire.
· CHESTER - "Growing Through
GJ,icr• group will meet Sunday at 7
p.m. at the Chester United
Methodist Church •. Call Rev'
Sharon Hausman at 985-4312 for
informatiorL

bined trash proposal was that it that the Village cannot get into !hi
would generate·money for the vii- tree cutting business because of viJ:
!age and give ~e .viJ!age a full-time !age finances.
.
employee. Ebliilmdicated that per·
Crow also menuoned work
haps a pl3!' could ~ Worke~ ?Ut which needs to be done on the Roy.
between h1m and vtllage off•c•als Jooes Road ~~Cross from the Shelly.
where the village could generate Fortune residence. While acknowl-:
some money from his llpefation.
· edging the work need to be done,
Meigs C~unty En~inee~ Bob the mayo~ said that village has no
Eason met wtth Council to diacuss one to do 11.
.
plans for a new concession stand
Councilman Dennis Wolfe
and press box at the ball -field . r~ on updating village ordi-:
Eason told council members that nances and presenting a letter from
such a project is outside his-area of Walter Wolfe Drane Co. in whicli
expertise but that he could recom- it was indicaled that the cost WOUld'
mend others. He volunteere~ to be several thoosand dollars. Howcontact someone who he thtnks ever, Wolfe said that the company
m1ght be -able .to help and then g~t docs offer a set of model traffiC and
back to Council.
.
. criminal code books at a cost of.
Sharon CQ88T met w1th Counctl $60.
, •
re~ding a trt7 on village. property
Mayor's report showed receipts:
wh1ch IS causmg foundauon darn· of $1,299. The repon of Jim Con•
~ge to.the AI~ VanCooney ~ouse nolly, chief of police, showed 27
·~ wh!ch she liv~. After a ~tscus- · traffic citations issued, two com-·
ston 1t ~as dec1ded that 1f the plaints of vandalism investi~atcd,
own~ w1ll ':alee down the '!CC· then the transporting of two juvemles IIi
the village. 111 exchange w1ll a]?an- coun, 18 miscellaneous calls, and
don a secllon of street from S1xth. the .vehicle driven.1,113 miles and·
and Peach as requested by the in serv~ 83 hours.
owner.
.
Attending were Mayor Papc,. :
. The need for a tree on v1llage Clerk-treasurer Janice Lawson,
propeny in front of tlie Syracuse Chief or Police Connolly, and
PresbY.terian Churc,h to ~ n;moved Council ti\Ctllbers, Jim Hill, .Crow,
was discussed by Council mem~ Wolfe; Jack Williams, Kenny :
Kathryn Crow. Mayor Pape sa1d Buckley. and Bill Roush.
· ·

January's jobless rate lowest in year ~

I"

1

string of swjmsingfy good news on
the economy in recent days that
help¢ to lift the stock market to a
record high on Thursday.
Investors were buoyed by news
of foreign interest rate c~t~, the
best gains in U.S. producuv•LY to
two decades and robust retail sales
in January.
Clinton cautioned Thltrsdly

the economy still was not produc· ·
ing jobs a1 rales of past recoverici&amp; ·
and he noted that some of America's biggest corporations were stil~
being wracked by massive layoffs.
"I'm still not convinced tha1 the
country is set on the right course in
terms of generating jobs. And
that's the key thing -jobs," he
said.

..

I

..t,...,

Jclp...,....-

;

.'

llrGet

.Strickland on ·

,/

Ashland Oil workers
·to vote on offer

HENDERSON· Square dancing
and clogging at tbe community
buildin~ from 8-11 p.m. Music by
Adams County Pickers. Everyone
welcome.
'

\.

TAKE THE KEYS

.
Air Bound" basketball shoe.

•

CAll ACAB .

'

sos

TA'KE A STANO . ,
.

•t c--..

.

i' ' •

'

f RII NlJ ~

Ulllrl [II f HII Nll S ll HI'v f Iif!IP~ ~

two,_., ...

MIDDLEPORT

-

JUilf..:

a- .a

1!1:;

*New Spring Shoes a~rlvlng daily!
Come see our In-store closeouts...

subcommittee

State's jobless
rate is down

1

•

219 N. SECOND

2 Sectlono 12 Pagea 25 cent,..
A MuttlmOdlo Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 5, 1!!93

CDpJ •W•Ifllll 1913

POMER9Y · The Meigs County Fish and Game Association will
hold election of officers Friday at 7
p.m. during the monthly meeting.

TUPPERS PLAINS - .A prom
dress exchange will be held Satur- .
day by the Ladies Auxiliary or the
Tuppers Plains VFW ~ost NO.

Flurries toalgbt. Low to mld
lOs. Saturday, cbaaco or saow 60
pon:oat. Hlgl! to low 30s.

•

TOOTHPASTE

· REEDSVILLE • Olive Township Trustees will meet Friday at
7:30 p.m. at the Shade River
Forestry Building.

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. .
Liberty Mountaineers will perform
Saturday at the Senior Citizens
Center in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

7699

SEALANT
FLOSS

LONG BOTTOM • Faiili Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing
Friday with Charlie Hall and family of Marietta and other local
singers. Pastor Steve Reed invites
the public. Fellowship will follow.

SATURDAY
HOCKINGPORT • There will
be a valentine round and square
dance Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m.
at the Reynolds building at Hoctini)Xlfl. Out of tbe Blue will provide the music. John Russell will
be the caller. Everyone is welcome:

Pick 4:

SMILE
TEETH

~

auend.

871

Page4

FXF J NVE DTE ETH
Never allow your child to fall
asleep with a bottle of milk, formula, fruit juices, or sweetened liquid
Dudley says:
tf your child needs a comforter ·
•
between regular feedings, at .night,
"To Keep Your Choppers
or during naps, fill a nursing bottle
Looking Awesome, .
Please fill in your name in secret code.
with cool water or give the child a
·
Brush
Them
Twice
a
Day
•
clean pacifier recommen~ed by ·
- - - - - - - - - -· - - - your dentist or pediatrician. Never
and Floss Them!"
\
give a child a pacifier dipped in
any sweet liquid
.
Avoid filling a nursing ·boule : • 1991 .&lt;mrnc.n o.noJ Aoo:boion Dudley the Dinosaurr• is a tr.~demarited ch.aract~ of the American Dental Association. Use of th is cha ~crer Is $1ritt.ly limited to the American I&gt;enu l As50dalion's Guidelines fOr U$a11t.
with liquids such as sugar water,
sweetened gelatin or soft drinks.
'
Make sure your child gets the teeth. Ask your dentist about rec- the proper amount
of fluoride.
beginning by the child's frit !lirth- day.
Ouoride needed for decay-resistant ommended methods for obtaining · . Schedule regular checkups

·' niatiOn.

Pick 3:

Message

Find the following hidden
dental words. Look across.
down and diagonally.

a-half.

Community Caleadar items 9053 ·at the post home from 9-11
appear two days before an event a.m. A S I fee per dress will be
and the day or that evenL Items charged. Call Merrilee Bryant at
mast be received weD In advance 985-3376 for further information.
tn usure publication in tbe cal·eadar.
, ' HENDERSON, W.VA. · The
Gallia Twirlers Western Square
Dance Club will hold a dance Sat·
THURSDAY
STIVERSVILLE • Revival at urday from 8-11 p.m. at the Hen'the Stiversville Word of Faith derson Communily Center in HenChurch will be through Sunday a1 derson, W.Va.
7:30 p.m. nightly with Pastor
HARRISONVILLE · ; Har·
David Dailey. There will be special
risonville
Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM
Singing. Public invited.
will meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Junior Refreshments will be served. All
High Academic BoasterS will meet master masons welcome.
Thursday at 7 p.m. in the school
POMEROY • Meigs County
cafeteria. Everyone welcome.
'
REACT Team Inc. monthly meet·
POMEROY - The Pomeroy ing will be held Friday at 7 p.m. at
the Community Action JTPA
t'~· (lroup.of /!A will meet Thursday a1
. 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic building, 111 West Second Street
Church. Call 992-5763 fot infor- in Pomeroy. All members urged to

Ohio Lottery ·

·Celtics retire
Larry Bird's
.number

'
Dudley's
Secret

Word Search

~ommunity

-

Thursday, February 4,1993

Po'!leroy-Middleport, Ohio

14-The Daily Sentinel

d the

-

•

ALMOST HOME • StrlkiDI members ol the U•lted Mbie •.
Worken ol America naU a bomemade n.1 pale nandll:r to •
sbed they have built to sbleld ..emHlves from enid -tiler ••
Peabody Coal CIIDp 11 ue• Morpnlleld, Ky. Mhlen ne tttrlklq
Peabody, the natlmi's 1araest cnal producer, In a disp11te over joli
. security. (AP)
\

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