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                  <text>Tuesday, February 9, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport) Ohio

Kevorkian .aids 12th suicide
On Thursday, Kevorkian helped'
By SHARON T11E1MEJt
myself," Goldbaum wrote. " I am
Associated PHss Writer
totaliJe:nfmed to my wheelChair Stanley Ball, 82, and Mary Biernat.'
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. - A and
is no hope that I will get 73 or Crown Point, Ind., kill them·
multiple sclerosis patient commit- better, just wane. I can no longer selves af Ball's house in Leland .
Ball, wbo wa5 blind. had pancreatic'
ted what she called " medicide" continue living like this."
·
cancer
and had jaundice as a result·
with Or. Jack Kevorkian's help
She added: "I am Jewish and
Mooday. It was bis 12th assisted have been raised to believe that sui- Biernat had breast cancer that had:
suicide and third in fiw: days.
cide is a mortal sin . Dr. Jack sjX'CIId into her chest, Fieger said. :
Fieger said: "I don' t think there
Kevorkian's lawyer denied that Kevorkian, your assistance in
the retired pathqlogisl is stepping medic ide will gel me into beaven.'' is a jury in Oakland County or the
up bis pace before a state ban on
Southfield police said they were state of Michigan that's going to~
tbe practice rakes effect March 30.
investigating the death. Fieger said convict Dr. Kevorkian for violating.
Elaine Goldbaum, 47, wbo was . 'police confiscated the equipment a law that's against the wishes of
legally blind and needed a used in Goldbaum's death, but the majority of the people.' • .
wheelchair, killed herself in her Kevorkian wasn'theld.
suburban Detroit apartment by
puuing on a gz mask and pulling a ·
clip thai released carbon monoxide
from a rube, said the lawyer, Geofrrey F'Jeger.
"She was asleep within one
minute,.. F'ICger' said.
· Her suicide was the sixth
Kevorkian has attended since the
U:gisJanm: ]J'ssed a law temporarily banning assisted suicide, effec- ·
uve March 30. Gov. John Engler
signed the bill hours after
Kevorkian helped twn· women kill
tbemselves in December.
Tl)ESDA,Y, FEBRUARY 9, 1993
Fieger has said a flurry of pea·
pie have been seeking Kevortian's
10 A.M.·7 P.M. .
help in dying bef~ the ban take$

Red women
capture loop
championship
.

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
575
Pick 4:
3268
BuckeyeS:
5-8-ll-20-2-23

.;

Page4

LcM lolllgbl near 40.
Tbunday,cloudy. High In mid
50s.

•

HURRY TO LANDMARK'S

mock lunge at tbe oeck fl tbe fiPre ID a jokiq
reference to his latest r.tm Dracula, ID wbidl be
plays vampire-slayer Pror. Van Reising. (AP
photo)

. DOUBLE TAKE • British actor Sir Antbooy
HQPklns, rigbt, best kDowa ror his role as serial
kiUer Dr. Haonibal Leder ID tbe ntm "Silence or
t!te Lambs," meets bis wax double at London's
Madam Tussaud's Tuesday. Hopkins makes a

Gay. magazi.ne stays on the shelf

=~~~~.~~v:=~j~

and in favor of carrying The Advo·
cate overflowed seating at Monday
night's board meeting at the Springvale Baptist Church in
Goshen Township has asked the
Batavia branch.
"There's a large amount of board of trustees to ban Tbe Advoinformation we need to digest," cate. He presented an inch-thick
board member Allen Bum:Son said petition that be said contained the
in making a motion to table the signatures of 1,500 people ~
issue until a March 8 board meet· to tbe magazine.
County librarians reviewed the
ing.
magazine
after receiving three
The board allowed an hour for
complainiS.
They said Tbe Advopublic comment. Seven people
cate
is
no
racier
than other magaspoke to keep the magazine. Five
on
the
shelves.
zines
wanted it removed or children's

wuh murder 10 the fust three
d~, but charges wo:re dropped
~use. tbe sta!C. had no law banrung ass•sted SUICide.
. Oakland County. P~osecutor
Richard Tbolnpson didn t !Cium a
telephone message left at bls offoce
Mon'!&amp;y ~temoon.
. .
M1cbogan aut~or,mes have
r!lvoked Kevorkian s med1cal
bcense.
.
Gol~baum was d1vorced and
wao; being cared for by ber 17-yearold daughter, l..j:slie, Fieger said.
She died at tbe townhouse they
shared. The daughter and Goldbaum's sister were there.
In a Dec. 28 leuer to Kevcrltian,
Larkins wiU prepare Soup for the Goldbaum said she wanted to die
next meeting. Meetings an: held tbe1 because her disease was getting
last Wednesday of each.mooth.
progn:ssively worse.
A potluck was served before lbe
"The loss of dignity is atromeeting.
cious
.... I cannot do anything for
Attending were Melody
Roberts. Phyllis · and Dorsel
Larkins, Janie and Brandon Filch,
Mr. and Mrs. Harland Ballard, Ada
Bissell, Mae McPeek. Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Wells, Judy Holter,
Delores Hawk and Georgia Mounl
"Prayer" was the theme of the
The meeting closed with the
program
presented by Joanna
Lord's Prayer.
Weaver at tbe recent meeting of the
St. ll'aul United Methodist Women
ch..ch in Tuppers Plains.
Film to be presented 111 the
A video on FellowShip in Prayer
"Zamp¢rini: Stiii"Carrying the was shown. RCI[IIing Psalm prayers
were JoAnn Francis, Susie Francis,
Torch," the new documenlary fdm Heather
Rockhold, Shirley Rockfeaturing Louis Zampemi, will be hold, Missy Harris, Connie Rankin,
shown at tbe First Baptist Cbun:b Betty Cbevalier and Elsie Culley.
in Middleport on Sunday at 7 p.m.
Elsie Culley and Belly ChevaThe public is invited.
lier served valentine refreshments.
The group voted to have a
Mspring cleaning" sale on June 4
and5.
The April meeting program will
the benefit for tbe American
be
presented by Rev. Sharon Haus-.
Parkinson's Disease Association
and Connie Rankin with the
nian
and the Morris K. Udall Fund in
resunection
theme. .
Excellence in Public Pulicy at the
University of Arizona
Udall remainsundercaieat Vet·
erans Hospital in Washington.
President Clinton spoke via
videotape, saying Udall's penchant
for levity was something he came
to appreciate during a year on the
campaign !rail.
·
Clinton said his recent action or
. lifting a ban on fetal-tissue
research, a move that is expected to
help Parkinson's research, was an
attempt to repay Udall for his
lessons about not taking life too
seriously.

Association to hold dances
Alta Ballard opened the January
meeting of the Long Bottom Com·
munity Association with the Pledge
of Allegiance.
.
Cards were signed for the sick
and shut-ins. Officers repons were
given.
Stanley WeUs s.uggested having
dances at the community building.
They will begin Feb. 19 from 8-11
p.m. The cost is $3 for single and
$5 for couples.
Paul ·Hauber and Jack Carrol
were thanked for their work at the
building.
A suggestion was made to dispose of the freezer now in the
building that is not being used.
Another ice cream social will be
held in July.
.
·•
A donation was made by Mr.
and Mrs. Ballard for the use of the
building.
Ruby Brewer and Phyllis

EMPLOYEE OF .THE
MONTH • Linda Friend, health
coordinator ror the Meigs County Council on Aging, was selected
as tbe January employee or the
month. She was recognized ror
her initiative, creatlvky, rellabUI·
ty, courtesy and consideration in
her work with clients and the
public. The selectfon wa5 made
by the executive director and a
committee vi rrom tbe Council's
Board orTrustees.

water and former Gov. Rose Mefford, co-hosts for the tw()-hour tribute Sunday in Centennial Hall at
the University of Arizona.
.More than 1,800 people gathered at the fund-raiser honoring the
Arizona Democrat, who left
Congress because of Parkinson's
disease. ·
Udall's wife, Norma, attended

¥

~

DALE

AND

DEREK

TEAFORD

:fwins celebrate birthdays
#

•' The sixth birthdays of Dale and
Derek Teaford, twin sons of Dale
111d Linda Teaford, Racine, were
celebrated recently with a pany at
tlleir home.
·
· . A Barney and Baby Bop theme
was carried out with cake and other
refreshments being served.
Attending were Darin Teaford,
Lindsay Teaford, grandparents
Lany and Phyllis O'Brien and'Dale
Tealord, great-grandparents, Bqb
and Flotence Adams.
·
Others auending were 'Jim

(
•

0

FRANKLIN HEAVY T
STEEL POST

,..

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....

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Lmt Pos1 2" lo 3"

12.75

16 Ft . Long
. Ar. Low At

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12.10

F~Y ~o~IIO!t

FEED LOT
PANELS

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12.10 S1.H "

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14.39

5

12.11

LOIItff Tl'lt'n LjS/ rllir

13.99
PLANS EXPLAINED • Fred Zirkle,
administrative manacer for Southern Ohln
Coal, ri&amp;hl; and Nelson Kidder, en11ineering
superintendent, explained to the Me1gs Local
l!oard vi Education where the company's equip·

•,,

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• Qo

Di scount~

Speci"l

CnuntryMar~

On

SEED CORN &amp; FIELD SEEDS

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1·3 RQjls

&lt;4

or MOrt Aoill

939-6-12 111 ... 17UIO
9J9·b ·~ ·'· .

15'f&gt; Ga. 80 Rod High Tensile

1041 ·6· 1l 'h

151.00

104 ~ · G· 14 :1,

$12.00
HUO

932 fi· t4 ,,_.

150.00

175.00
I)IUO

......
......_ 147.00

Lifetime Fence Company

HIGH TENSILE WIRE - 200,000 PSI
4,000 Ft. '59.~5
JONSEAED
CHAIN SAWS
SALE

20-40 Turbo . . . .. 1241.15
20S. Turbo . . .. . 1475.15
. . $308.15

2().t5 16" .

53!H6'' . . . .

1311.15

JONSEAED

......
'REG .

$289.115
S349.9W

S439.1i15

STRING TRIMMERS &amp; BRUSH CUTTERS
REG .

SAL£
J260B TRIMMER .. Ult.IS

$389.95
S429.85

J3209 TRIMMER . ,11H.tl

A11 l ~l~11 Appartl iRO ~-~ll:.try f[JJI S and
Hell!)' Han50n IASIIIileG Baa,'fWUI ''"11'!1. Off• ••

APPLEGATE TUBULAR GATES
I TO 4

1 TO 4
TGIBR25004
TGIGR20000
:GI8A26008
TOI0R25010

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40.00
48.'00
116.00

p ,tMJ

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TG16At5006ST
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8 '
8'
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T0116R250i "
TGI6R25016
TGf6R2fW118

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73.00

TGI6A15012ST

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80.00
81.00
88.00

TGI8A15014ST
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157 .00

APPLEGATE CORRAL PANEL GATES
C P/6016204
CP/6016206

CP/6016208

CP/6016210
CP/6016212
CP/6018214
CP/0018216
CP/60 1821 ft

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87.00
7:;1 .90
82 .00

WITH FAAMI::.
CG/6018404
CG/H01BA06
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87 .00

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101 .00
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111 . 00

10 '

TARTER GATE COMPANY
6 BAR ECONOMY PIP£ a,.,TES
o4 ' PIPE . . . . . . . . . . . ... 824 .00

8'
8'
10 ·
12 '
14 '
lfi '

PIPE
PIPE
PIPE
PIPE
PIPE
PIP E

.. . .. . .. . . . ... 828 .00
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 832 .00
.. , .. , • ~ . . . . . . e37 . 00
.. , . . . . . . . . . . . S40 .00
... .. . , . . .
847 .00
.. . . . . • . . .
. S52.00

5 SLAT STEEL PANEL Oo\TF.9

4 ' PANEL .
6'
8'
10
12'
, ... .
16'
IIJ '

PANEL
PANEL
f'.4.NEL
PANEL
PANEL
PANEL
P ... NEL

ElizabeliJ Ann Ewing. daughter
of Ben and Doris Ewing, Pomeroy,
was recently inducted into The
Golden Key National Honor Society at Tbe Ohio State University..
Sbe is a junior u Ohio State majoring in nursing.
Golden Key National Hon9r
Society is the largest collegiate
booor society with over 200 chapters at colleges and universities
across the counuy. Membership is
by invitation oniy and is limited to
the top 15 percent vi juniors and
seniors enrolled at the university.
I~ addition to academic recog~i­
uon; Golden Key awards over
$700,000 in scholarships annually
and offers opportunities for its
members to participate in service
and leadership aclivitiea.
The Ohio State University
Chapter orfcn two service programs to its tilcmben. To ave !1Jc
community, Ohio State Golden
Key participates in the MBest of
America" poOIJam. Thron&amp;h this
poognm WI:~ local elemellllry
sc:hools 111 help m J1101Q01ina theac
children tn stay in school and
become the best they ean be. To
serve the campus, memben volunteer througll the Ofli:c llf Dilabllity Servlca 111 lUI« fellow students .
who have physical and learning
disabi61ies.

. , . 821 .00

. . . . . . . . . . . . tiO. OO
.', . . . . . . . . .. taJ .OO
. , .. . . . . , ... S41.00
, . . . . , , , . . . . S4&amp;. 00
. . • . . . I • • • • • SIU.DO
. . . . . . . . , ... S56.DO
. . . . . .. . . . . . . • , ... 00

Harrisonville news
Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Coen,
Albany, were recent visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Doug Bishop.
Mrs. Sandra Foley and children,
Milwaukee, spent Sunday with ber
grandparents, Mr. and MIS. Bob

i

Pick• Up On

March 4, 1993

Plut many more itema ~INble! Call your 1o.:al1101e tor 1
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK.
llemt mll1t10 tOF , pow .-ily lor use or rep:.eklg•ng witl1out thawing .
ltJ U. ....nl of c... o.,oncf 01.11 IXIIItrol, qtUinllld afllJ ptieft .,. tuo,tcl to
""""" Good

ment Is expected to be located over tbe 11ex1 five
years. Location or eqalpmeat detel'llllines how
much tangible tax money comes into tbe school
district. Supt. James. CarpeniB Is pic:tllred left.

Kanawalsk.y se~tenced to pen
.after entering plea of guilt.y

'

Ewing inducted

O'Brien, Carol, Allen, Joshua artd
Chelsea Pal'e• Lori, Dustin and Mahr.
Mr. and Mrs. BQb Alkiluisited
Cameron Bnnager, Ashley Roush,
Monday
with Mr. and ·Mrs.
Juanita Frederick, Autumn Reed,
.
Howard
Day
Gilkey, Columbus.
Zach Conolly, Julie and Craig RanOther
callers
were Bob Gibson,
dolph, Kelly Rizer and Kyle Wolfe.
Columbus,
and
Mr. and Mrs. Ziba
· Sending cards and gifts were
Midkiff,
Pomeroy.
Dennis and Ellie Teaford, Raymond Adams, Jon and Kenda . 'virJinia Gibson spent the weet~
Campbell, Rod and Margie Grimm, end With Mr. and Mrs. Allan Gibgrandmother Wanda Teaford, and , son and sons, Columbus.
The Lend-a-Hand group met
great,grandparents Rex and Mary
recently
at the home of Mrs.
O'Brien. ·
Pauline Atkins.

·•

Wlr!Jf Supply LISIS

51 &amp; 0vM

~ -~1

ELIZABETH EWING

is working on an as-yet-untitled
film about a woman wbo dedicates
her life to humanitarian issues.

,.

20.99

5

una Poat3"" " to!)"
1·!0

NEW THIS YEAR

''Cabaret. •• and ••Barry Lyndoll;' •

~

ft.

liS' PIPE . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . SS8 .00

PARIS {AP) - Actress Marisa
Berenson plans to lead an international program to help disabled
artists under' the auspices of the
United Nation's Educational, Scientific and Cohural Organization.
'I'he program, funded by
UNESCO's Imematiooal Fund for
tbe Promotion of Culwre, will initially organize benefits in Los
Angeles and New York, Berenson
said in a Statement Monday.
"I've been interested in the
plight of disabled anisiS for a long
time," she said. "I fmd being an
anist is difficult enough as it is. We
can help financially, help them to
be discovered, to express themselves.··
Berenson, wbose films include

J,&amp;

9 ,000

·
.
.
h' ·
Joseph E. Kanawalsky. charged would recetve credtt on ts senwith lbe Dec. 19 murder Qf Bernard !C!'Jce for .lhe 53 days I,Je has spent .
Dyle Bay, entered a piCa of guilty m ~ Me1gs County Jail.
Stnce .Kana.walsk.y 11a4 been
1Q diat charge. a fuearms specifocatiOn and attempted mllfller 1\'hen he indicted by the Grand Jury OJ! a
appeared in Meigs Common Pleas c~e or aggrav!"ed m~ which
·court before Judge Fred W. Crow wou d have carried a life sentence
IIJ'Wednesday morning.
and since through ~lea bargain
Following the plea which. was the charge was redu
to murder, ·
the result of an agreement jtrrived Judge Crow asked both tbe Bay
at by Meigs County Prosecutor family members and Sheriff James
John R. Lentes and Public Defend- S.. Soulsby if they ~ere in accord
er Mike Westfall, attorney for wtth the plea bargam agreement.
Kanawalsky, 1udge Crow sen· Both responded that they were
although Mrs. Bay expressed ·her
tenced the defendant.
Kanawalsky was sentenced by concern about possible parole. The
I udge Crow to 15 years to life on ' sheriff responded oo beh'alf or an
the charge of murdering Bay, three officer who had been shot at as
years actual incarceration on the ' attempts were being made to take
gun specification, and 10 to 25 Kanawalsk)l into custody on Dec.
years on the attempted murder 19,
In response to a questioo:o from
charge.
There was no fine since it was Judge Crow, Kanawalsky also statpointed out that tbe defendant has ed that he understood the agreeno ability to pay one. He was, bow- ment Asked if he· had anythins to .
ever, ordered to pay $9,445.90 to say to the family, he stood. faced
the Bay familY for funeral ex.pens- Mrs. Bay and her daughter, Beth,
. es. along with $1,000, the cost of and made an impressive statement
prosecution and court COS[$. .
. about his sorrow on what had hapThe judge also specified that he pened, . his regret for his actions,

•.

'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sen!lnel News Starr
Tax dollars coming into the
Meigs Local School District from
the Soulbem Ohio Coal Co. are not
,expected to change much over the
next five years.
That was what Fred Zirkle,
Southern Ohio's administrative
manager, and Nelson Kidder, engi- .
Jiecring superintendent, told bo8rd ·
members at Tuesday night's meeting.
The company representatives
had been invited to come to the
meeting to talk about what the dislrict can expect in the way of tax
revcnue in tbe next several years.
While the company's real estate
taxesarestableinsofaraswhatrevenue they generate for schools, the
board's concern has betin ,with laD·
gible pooperty taxes- that paid by
tbe company on mining equipment
which is moved from township to
township and even county to county.Zirkle explained that the physical location of the equipl!lent on
Dec. 31 of each year determines
where the tangible taxes go the
next year. In other words tbe taxed
~ment must be in the Mei$S

•

five years.there will be little move- funds including $34,400 to tfte
ment .o f equipment from Salem and early retirement buyout of sevenil
Rutland townships where tax dol- teachers.
•
Iars go to the Meigs Local School
Fry also reported that she'has
District. One concern of the board received approval to borrpw
has been that the equipment might $260,000 agaonst the tan. gible'·ti.x
be moved into Columbia Township settlement from the Slate Su~where taxes then benefit the tendent of Schools.
, .:
Alexander School DistricL
On the agenda at last nigh t's
Kidder gave some assurance to meeting was an ite.m to consider
the board when he said that "the placing a levy on the ballot in ,dw
five year plans calls for basically ' May Primary. However, the b911rd
what we have how." ·
moved into executive session ·arid
Kidder and Zirkle talked about during that time it. w!IS inform~:Y
the downsizing which tollk place at agreed to remove the Item from the
Meigs Mine 2 last ·year and noted agenda, Larry Rupe, president,
that one longwall project will be reponed. He said t.l)at board memfinished lhere in May which will bers decided to see what the state
leave only one longwali job. 11iey biennium budget includes bef§'re
said that probably in 1996 some going to local taxpayers for mQre
equipment now in Salem Township money. He said that a levy' inJhe
wiU be moved into Vinton County fall is not being ruled out by the
and that they do not forsee it COlli· board.
ing back into Meigs County.
Personnel
Zirkle indicated that this could
Three coaches for spring sports,
result in a decrease in tax revenue a teacher and several others were
received by the schools in 1998 of hired during the meeting.
. :
about 35 percent
· Bobby Ashley was hired as
. In other district money matters, junior high track coach, Danny
Treasurer Jane Fry -reported on Thomas; reserve baseball coach,
general fund revenue noting that ·Mike Kennedy, head girls tra9k
while real and tangible property coach, and Scott Gheen, var-sity

o.therdertax.furcoc.~llection·;:x:
,· ~tt,on~~.l:'fia~ million,
5n8~~i8f.8~s.
~~c;:~::~han ~~ ~~1~h~;~:a~~~~~~f~~hea
she expects a decrease on

d h'
ath , the , .1
He wd tJw Southern Oh10 Coal . revenue 10 the district due to the school year for the primary learnan !5 symp Y 10r
·~I Y· pays Meigs County taxes of delinquency rate and other factors. ing, disability unit at the Rutland
l~e wd be bad aslted Godof...for~be ween $1.5 and $1.75 million She also .said that other income, School. Given contracts to tutor
g1veness and wanled tbe ~. g1vC?- and o =amount
t
Meigs Local including grants and rees,have homebound students at $11.72 per
ness.of...uhcn, .the Bay family, his receives a
e. bst year-it was decreiosed bo s24 000
hour were Shirley Van M;ter and
own, md otber family and friends.
aboUt $765
.
..
Howe:er .u~ry ~eported, the Gloria Van Reeth, bolli f6r periods
~· Bay then rea~ her stateKic(der displayed maps which School Foundation Funds have of not to exceed five hours a week.
ment m whtch she agam asked for showed five year mining projec- increased to $! 95 •937 .29 which The board also entered in an agreelife in prison for Kanawalsky and lions at Meigs Mines 31 and 2 and means that despite the decrease in ment with Francis Shrimplin to
expressed ber rear th3:' be y.'O~Id talked about last year's downsizing real and tangible taxes coming into serve as an aide at the Carleton
come back for revenge if be JS ever spawned by the American Electric the district's treasury, there is an School for a student who resides in
paroled. A statement from Bay's Power's actipn 10 comply with the overall increase in the general fund Meigs Local. Her salary will be $6
daughter was entered i~to the cte8n Air Act.
of $88•000. She said that amount an hour for each normal school day
He projected that over the next has been appropriated to other
Continued on page 3
record but was not read m open
court.
r--:----------...:;:::...=:..:.:....====::...:::...:.:.:.:.:.:..._______:....;::....__ __,
Lentes said afu:r tbe sentencing,
.,
that be is "happy that Mr. Kanwalsky's case ended with a finn senlellCC without lbe family of the victim being forced to endure the terror of a jury !rail".
"I feel that the sentence was
severe but unfortunately for the
wife and family of Mr. Bay, it
won't bring lbe victim back. However, those' in the community
should feel safer today knowing
that Mr. Kanawalsky wm be confined to jail for a violent crime
which left an innocent man dead."

Chamber speaker says program
designed to ,help women, minorities
designed to assist women, minoriBy JULm E. DILLON
ties and lower income individuals '
Seatlnel News Starr
Karen Patton, director of the who possess skiDs in business manAppalachian Ohio Micro Loan Pro- agement but wbo cannot get loans
gram, spoke at Tuesday's regular from other sources due to a poor
meeting of tbe general membership credit history or limited collaoeral.
of the Meigs County Chamber of · She said eligible applicants must
complete the business planning
Commerce.
component
of the program, plan to
According to Patton, the Athens
have
businesses
operating within
Small Business Ceiner received· a
the
30-&lt;:Qullly
region,
possess skills
loan from the Small Business
to
operate
and
sustain
their busi •
Administration to provide locallyness
and
a
participant
must
not be
based business planning assistance
on
probation
or.parole.
and small-scale loans to lower .
MieroiOIIIS ean be used by eligiincome people throughout the 30
ble
businesses for equipment and
counties of southeaslcm Ohio who
machinery,
furniture and fixwres,
arc starting or expanding small
inventory
and
supplies and workina
.
businesses within their community.
capital
needs,
according to Paaon.
Patton stated the Appalachian
The
loans
cannot.
bowtver, be used
Ohio Microloan Prqaram is
for debt resuuclllring, says Pauon.
_ There are four branch Offices of
the mlcroloan program where loan
applications may be provided: the
Marietta Small Business Devel~
menl Center, the Mid-East Ob1o
JVS Small Business Management
Program in Caldwell, the Southeast
Small Business Development Center in Southpolnt, and the Tuscarawas Smau Business Develop·ment Center in New PhllwJrlpllla.
Information on how to apply may
be obtained by contaetlna any or
these offices or tbe centrll office ·
for ·t he. prosram at the Athens
Small Business Center at 1-800822~.

K"D'Il!NPATrON
l•

AMultimedia Inc. Newspaper

Zirkle tells school .b oard tax
dollars not expected to chang~:

FENCE POST

BALER
TWINE

2 Section•, 14 Pagu 25 cenl~

•

r,,..ld wooa

Co·Op

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wedne$day, February 10, 1993

Junior Fair Building Athens County Fairgrounds
West Union St. - Athens, Ohio
'
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1993
10 A.M.·7 P.M.
Grange Hall Meigs CounJy Fairgrounds

Weaver presents
UMW program ·

---People in the news--TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Political humorist Mark Russell headlined a program filled with one-liners, yams and a few serious words
honoring former ·u.s. Rep, Morris
K. Udall, who retired in 1991
because of poor health.
Political colleagues wbo shared
anecdotes about Udall's career
included former Sen. Barry Gold-

Vol. 43, No. 204

Copyrighted 1993

*

and be's IIIli going torusb things."
access to it restricted.
. . K~voman first assisted in a suiThe Rev. Randy WonbingtOO of c~ ill June l9?1J. He ~charged

BATAVIA, Ohio (AP) - A
magazine for homosexuals will
stay on tbe shelves while the Clermont County Public Library's
boar\1 looks mto complaints that
the biweekly is 100 explicit
More than 75 people opposed to

.

The terms or the mlcroloan,
accordina to Pitton, state that a
p!l)llllacJI'y note anrlleGIIrity . .
maot wW be hdd.between tbo liar·
rower and die Athlnl Small Busi·
ness Center. 1be termJ and ra1e1 of

·'

a microloan are determined ·by
case, baSC;d on the entrepreneurs
ability to repay.
Amounts of loans can range
from a few hundred dollars to a
maximum of $25,000. However, to
best meet the needs of the target
populations, loans generally are
$10.090 or less, says Patton. Any
loan request of $15.000 or greater
must be accompanied by two barJk
deniallettm.
.
Terms of the loans can range
from a few mooths to no longer
than six years. The averag~ loan
tenn is 24-36 months. Rates are
fiXed at tbe time of closing of tbe
loan and will J101 exceed rour percentage points above prime, says
Pauoo. Prepayment is available
without penalty.
According to Pauon, microloans
are 100 percent collateralized and
borrowers BRI required to personal·
ly .guarantee each long. Every
effort is made 10 meet the 100 percent nwk by creatively using the
assets the business ·fli'SI, there·
after,lhc personal assets or the borrower are couidered. The Athens ·
Small Bulness Center requirel a
linlllcll on the item1 poach..t by
the loan and whenever po11ible
with tbo other items Uled to a lOIII• •
Patton aays paymeat plans 1re
detetmiDed on a c=- ~=buis
and tbele are ao ~
fees
for the poOJWD. The applicaDI II
however, requiled to pay ror any
appraisal or tepl COIIIIIIIC
) 10
complete the application or to

LEI IERS OF COMMENDATION· The
Melli Loc:al Board vi Education gave leUers or
com11endation to two employees at Tuesday
Diehl's meeting. Here u they were presented let·
ters are from tbe left, John Hood, board vice

.President, to Karen Slolln, employed in the treasurer's office, and John Lisle, principal or Harrisonville and Salem Center, by Larry Rupe,
...
hoard president, ri&amp;ht.
(-

'

or

-·--

COIIIIaUecl 011paae 3

trad OWIItll ~y JICkle Antlld Wa..te, ,
Weill Road, Mllldla.ort. Tilt mel 1111ta~ ·
moderate dam. . 10 lilt ,_..r aide. Tllen .
were 110 lajuriel. (Selotlllel ..._ by Da.e Har·:

rill)

,: :

... ..

r

'

�•

•.r'

The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thunday, Feb.ll

VVednesda~February10,1993

Ac:cu·Weather• forecast

By .Jack'Anderson
and
M•chael B•nstez'n

"'

Zirkle ...

MCH.

Clinton finds White House mired· in low-tech
·

IND.

•jc01umbusl42"

t:.::Dear

Responds to official's comments

Spe~ial int~res.ts ruining ' de~~cr~_c_y :
J.osep h Spear .

I

Abus~~ ·m ates don't hav·e right to ·kill

a

Joseph Perkins

Today
in
history
..

~

t

. 1'

I·

W. V/1..

\Letters
to
the
editor
·
..

Ice
lfo-lld-~1

Sunny Pl Cloudy CloudyCI1993Accu·Weathtr,lnc:.

~-----Weather------South-Ceolral Oblo
Tonight, cloudy. Low near 40.
Thursday, cloudy and Dot as warm
witlt a chance of afternoon rain.
High 45-50. Cltance of rain 50 percent. .
Extellded forecut:

Friday tbrouah Sundll)':

Friday, rain or snow likely,
Lows near 3S. Highs in the mid to
upper 40s. Saturday, a chance of
Lows near 25. Highs in the
mid-30s. Sunday, fair. Lows 10-20.
Highs in the mid-30s.

numes.

- . ·Sheriff's reports-Citation issued
Citations have been issued·by
the Meip County Sberiff's Depart·
menl to Qreg A. Taylor and ~ph

R. Edwards, Jr., charging them
witlt dropping litter on Mt. Olive
Road ana Bigley Ridge Roads on
Saturday;

Sheriff Soulsby advi~ there is
a reward for information leading to
the arrest and conviction of persons
responsible for making the false
alarms. Persons with information
are asked to contact Slleri.IT Souls·
by.

Churches are alerted

Raines cited ..

The Meigs County Slieriff's
Department
was notified Sunday
Douilas RaineS, Racine, was
morning
that
a subject went into
cited 111 Meigs County Court by the
the
Fellowship
Church of ,the
Meigi County Sheriff's Depan. mont for failing to stop for a Nazarene at Reedsville and gave
stopped school bus on Friday in and requested $100 to enable him
to get to his wife and other relaOfa!lle Township.
tives that had been injured while on
their way to Iowa to attend a funer~
Par50D$ and Robinson
al.
transported
Meigs County Slteriff James M.
. DoJJulies of the Meigs County Soulsby describes the subject as a
Shorilf's Department transported while D!ale approximaiely 55 years
Mark A. Parsons, Racine, and old with graying hair and a small
· David M. Robinson, Racine, to mustache. He was wearing a green
• Orient-Reception Center to begin checkered flannel shir), dark jaeket
: serving thelt sentences recently and black denim jeans. .
• imposed in the Meigs County
The report stated the cl)urch
' Court of Common Pleas.
gave him the $100. He _left at a
Pmoos -found guilty of pro- high rate of speed in an olive green
~ .notalioo and Robinson pled
1978 Oldsmobile. A couple memguilty 10 receiving stolen property bers of the church attempted to get
and allo f~FIY·
. the license plate number, but were
Deputies also returned Gary unable to catch up with the car
NO!'llllll from Warrat Comctional
which had been parked in the lot
Insiillllioa 10 fuither consideration
neti'Routel24.
on his earlier plea bargaili agree. A member of the church later
men!. He. is 10 appear before the remembered that a subject matchCourt of Commori Pleas.
ing dlat description, approximately
two yean tiiPl did the same thing at
Bomb threat at Eastern a.church sho WI\S attending in
. A bomb threat at Eastern High Washington Coun!y.
Sheriff Soulsby lldvises that last
School received by the Meigs
Counl}' Sheriff's Department on Sunday at the Bethany Church at
Don:as a youn&amp; child carne to the
:Tuesday.
·
According to _MeiJS County church asking !he pastor for money
, Sheriff James M. Soulsby, a viola: for ·gasoline. The family was
. tor can be charged Wider sections reportedly on their way to Virginia,
of the· Obio Revised Code which No one obtained a description of
the vehicle.
i provides the transmission of false
Sheriff Soulsbr urges church
alarms-concerning an alle!fed or
personnel
to obtam license plate
impending fire, explosion, cnme or
numbers
and
even look at driver's
, other catastrop!le, knowing such
license
etc.
when
people show up
report to be false.
at
the
chun:h
asking
for money. '
• The sheriff said both sections
' are misdemeanors of the first
•degree, but if, as a result, there is Deer accident reported
: any physical harm to any person,
A deer accident was reported
the violation becomes a fourth Monday
evening around 10:30 p.m. ,
degJec felony.
.
' rint degree misdemeanors are to the Meigs Cou~ty Sheriff's
: punishable by six months incarcer- PcpartmenL
The repon stated Angie Manuel,
' ation and/or a fine of $1000. A
Bashan
Road, was traveling east on
· fourth degree felony carries a
Route
338
in Lebanon Township in
: penalty or six to eighteen montlts
her
1989
Ford
when a deer ran into
' and/or a fine of $2500.
the path of her car.
..
Moderate damage was listed to
the
right front fender.
Tbe D.ily Senlinel
On Tuesday evening Jay Black~~~
Sumner Road, was traveling
' OftrJ' on.n.-. lloadoJ wood,
hbllllllod
north on Success Road and suuclc
3:':'t,"'-·
lD Com lll.pS,j OJ,
and killed a doe deer that jumped
lllo a.lo v.no,
~~~
into the path of.his 1987 Chrysler.
~i:i:::U:.~a Pu~7~
Moderate damage was listed to
.....
a&amp; p
OJ, Olllo.
the left front fender and hood of his
....... Thl , II d·W PN., ud the
vehicle.

.

Olllo N~ t lioe, Nolioool

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&amp;alba, Bnaham

Ntwi:LJ
7U Tldrll --10117.

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D:%:"11Ml,· 111 c..,. St.,
p

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IIIIIOL1I oorr
I'IJCII

lloiiJ.. ...... .................. _,,.,,,,,_J5 C..lo

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--·
...... Crodl&amp; will .. . . , _ _
lfllll b)- ..0 piiiiiU.. ta

Me I b

ai %He

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All

The Ually Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

.
!
w ASHINOTON . - After tors from the Oenciral Accounting enly paid out over $1 billion for has twice attempted but failed to
receiving the cook's iour of the Office recently concluded. "Pro- services already covered by other moderftize what congressional
111 COurt Street
investigators call "antiq~ated tax·
White House, President Clinton gram mana~crs slrUggle to wrest insurers. The reason: bad data.
~Pomero,., Ohio
voiced a complaint to top staffers: the information they need from the
Medicare is not an isolated inci- • pro~ssing" ' systems,, \IIIlich
' ~ DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
The 175-year-old mansion iS mired
dent. Horror stories abound:
J.mpede the agency's ability to col·
in the stone age .when it comes to
-Imagine a commercial bank lecrand account for about Sluil•
technology.
Clinton
can't
fathom
that
doled out loans to customers lion ill tax re\'enues. It's also con'
how
primitive
some
of
the
oommu.
who
are in default on previous tributing to the IRS's failure to
' '•, •
nicauons and computer systems are
loans. That's what's happening at close the tax gap - the estimated
conu&gt;ared to statci-of-the·an equipthe Department of Education. . $114 billion that represents the d1f•
'
ROBERT L. WINGE'JT
menL
•
•. .
Missing, incomplete and inaccuraJC ferencc between taxes. owed and
Publisher
How can that be when the federdata in the $13 billion St8fford Stu-' voluntarily paid.
.·
•'
al government spends over $20 bil- mountain of ·data they collect - · dent Loan Program has resulted in
Sometimes the cure can be
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
lion annually on new technology much of it still in paper form. Criti- millions of dollars in new loans to worse ~ the disease. The Veter·
General Managtr
- not to mention tens of billions cal pieces of data are missing, students who have previously ans Benefits Administration underAssistant Publisher/Controller
more keeping the current systems unreliable ... the data may be seat- defaulted.
took a· modeniization program
up
and
rulif1ing?
tered
among
many
separate
infor·
The
clean-up
of
the
banking
aimed
at speeding up claims pay. LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
In
fact,
nearly
every
age01;y
in
mation
systems."
and
Savings
and
loan
scandals
~
ments
to
veterans. But they didn't.
' ~. words. All Jcuers are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
the federlll government is muttering
Take health care .:... the center- produced a scandal within a scan· look before they leaped· into a $94
· . • address and telephone number. No unsigned !etten wiU be published. Lettsr&gt;
an "anien" to Clinton's l~inents piece issue of the Clinton cam- dal. The Resolution Trust Corp. is million investment - ·an. invest·
; ' should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
.·
I
.
because, in most cases, they lack paign. National healthcare expendi- responsibl,e for managing and sell~ • ment·that will uim only SIX to 12
,, f
••
the critical information required to tures reached $666 billion in 1990, ing over $400 billion in assets from .. days from .the ayerage claims pro·
manage and control the behemoth claiming more than 12 percent of 725 'failed thrifts. But it's had trou- cessing time of 151 days, a du~1ous
bureaucracy. Compared to the pri· the gross national product Over 42 ble keeping track of its own bank - . return on the, dollar. Or. there ~ the
·vate sector, the federal govern- percent of this total is publicly accounts.
· .
case of the Navy's $600 million
.., , '
ment's
systems
are
lagging
seriousfunded.
With
36 million Americans
_
The
Internal
Revenue
Ser•
program to improve non-tactical
1:: ' .
ly behind.
uninsured, and countless others vice is in need of a massive audiL computers.on ships, which has
~ I ~'
"Information problems vex under-insured, it's nothing short of During the past 25 years, tbe IR~ resulted in 12 separate Navy com"
them especially in your position most federal programs," investiga- scandalous that Medicare mistak~
Editor - ·m~ having authority over fund-.
with
the
Health
Pcpll!tment.
ing and procurement of maJOr com~:"' I want to thank you for running
If
you
have
Qthel""proof
than
puter systems making up the pro:·tfte articles the Dayton Daily News
what
I
have
stated
besides
from
the
·.did for us. (Ref. Jan. 31 Sunday
~·hen Bill Clinton complains
:;rimes Sentinel "Chlordane Night· Chemical Co. (which I might mention
flawed
their
testing)
one
reaabout-stone-age technology, he's
(r!iare").
son
why
it
was
removed
from
the
putting his finger on a problem
I would like to counter Mr.
' • that's bigger than he could have
Jacob's comments if you will let market, please forward any proof
\rfle. ( (Note: Reference is being that this product is safe.
im~~SITION UP~ATE- If
Please read the U.S. EPA repon
(made to Jon Jacobs, administrator,
on
that
even
with
proper
also
Pri:sidCnt Clinton thiilks-he's off to
~Meigs County Health DepanmenL)
treatment of homes this product
-a rough start, it's ·been a picnic1 First of all the local Health
compared to the experience of
~Department is appare!'~Y still n?t still, does, and can cause problems
another new occupant of the White
,briefed about thiS pestiCide. We did at great risk to humans.
Mr.
Jacobs
as
a
representative
to
House.
:not get our help frC?m the State of
Socks, the black and white cat
10hio nor doctors m the State of the Healt/1 Department if you need
for your future referenc;e for people
adopted by Clinton's 12-year-old
~ Ohio. At the time this happened to
•us, Dr. Conde contacted several in trouble with Chlordane or Hepdaughter Chelsea, bas found little
taclor, you are welcome to. my
to·)l\11'1' about over his new PennsyJc
1doctors and no one could advise us
library
on
these
products.
vanla Avenue quaqe..S, according
·about .it at all, or what to do , or
We
uusted
the
Chemical
Co.
to White House sources. In fact, the
:anything.
Velsicol's
doctors
that
Chlordane
' The State of New York Healih
uansition for the First feline has
; Department and Massachusetts couldn't cause problems and we
been traumatizing. To help accli:Health Depanment are the doctors stayed in that house for two years
mate Socks to his' neW. hOme, secu1and people that told us what to do
longer, because of their lies, until
rity personnel have ·been walking
:and what·to watch for in the future. the cat died. Now we will have to .
Socks on a leash around the White
:They also advised us that you could live with the problems it left
House grounds.- "It takes some
behind. Just educate yourSelf, don't
~ not clean Chlordane/Heptaclor up.
time for cats to get used to their
:They also told us we should get out trust the first person you think ·
new surrodndings," explains one
:of. the house. They sent us books, knows the answer. We lost 1rust for
White House source. , ·
•studies, lots of information that no those people and they just plain ·
Jack anderson and Michael
~ one in Ohio seemed to know about. lied. The Chemical Co . lost the
Binstein ar~ writers ror United
: One reason was they had - before doctor's (report) that told us this
Feature Syndicate, In~•.
•the U S. - taken these poisons off stuff was safe. They just disap; the state matket'because they knew peared, they were never deposi:it was hurting people and the,en vi- tioned for coun, because the Chemical Co. just didn't know .where
:.r\;./t.l
. ronment.
: After eight years, I have close to they were. Funny! Even though
these same doctors advised another • · 1~ our traditional &lt;k(mcicracy is fear not; the el~rly ~ ~ffer. ...
~ 2.000 articles and contacts on
:i~gly sJ5ce~tible «? ~anipUI~~i~ afld ~ecisions haJi: fo be ·ma!Je
doctor
that even if misapplied this to survive into the next century, the
' Chlordane and Heptaclor, most of
~like this: A Marine l.eutenant
by demagogues. H1tler and Mus- about what programs to cut: Semor
(which are from the federal govem- chemical could not hurt people.
. people we elect to operate ,it are colonel assists Cenual American .solini exploited radio to whip up citizens, veterans, farmers, contiaCAll they would of had to do was going to have to find some way to insurgents in direct defi,ance of suppon_ for plebiscites that cement· tors, libf!'"ans, litchi nut growers
"menL
tell
the truth and we could of got resist 'the teledemocracy of phone
~
One certain article was just
ed, theu power. Every narrow· - all•w1ll be on the hom to the
:·given to us 'by .the EPA about six out of there sooner, but instead and fa'x.
·
minded agitator from Father Hill; Gridlock City, here we come.
· months ago. I know for cenain Mr. now myself and children have to
It sounds like a parartox, but it
'
Coughlin to Jerry Falwell has used · · The problem is going to get
~Jacobs l&lt;nows nothing of this arti· suffer because of them not telling
isn't. Traditional democracy, the
his flock to further his agenda of wom with every advance in com•
icle of proof that damage to proper· the lruth. The paper did not list all · kind designed by Franklin and !ef- Congress, and the legislators c~ll intolerance.
· .,
munications technology. If tele~ ty. and health from Chlordane and our personal health problems we
ferson and Madison, is deliberately him to testify. He shows up 10
Even as I write these words, Fa!- pl)ones and facsimile machines
~ Heptaclor does cauSe problems and suffer from. We know the truth representative in form: We the peo- bemedaled splendor, flashes a gap- well and his fellow provocateur Pat lend themselves to trranny of the
jthey also state the company Velsi- now!
pie elect o~rs whose jud8fl!ent we tooted grin .at the ~ameras, lays a Ro))ertson are prodding their mas~. what'.s it go10~ .to be like
I would like to thank Dr. Margie lrUst to de!1berate and d~c1d_e the Bible on the table 10 front of hun, formidable congregations to bury when 1nteracuve tclevlSlon c_om~
.col, did not tell the lrUth to AmenLawson at the Health Depanment issues. Teledemocracy IS dtrect: and assumes the posture of a the Congress in fax and phonemes- of age and every couch spud m the
!c;ans or the government.
• The main 1hing Mr. Jacobs for her hard work on this issue. She Public sentiment is whipped up by besieged hero. The messages come sages in opposition to gays in the ~ountry can "vote" on every issue
f~Ued to say was if someone lived did help and I think does under~ special interests, fanatics, Showmen pouring in and the colonel's !ntcr· military _ a fundalllental ~~ 111St811taneously?
in that house they would have to stand people's problems. Thank and demagogues; the resultant rogators turn to mush. He ex1ts an fairness that should be doc)I!~_~Y
What to do? Pray_for_leader~,
·.
.
monitor it to make sure it was safe. you Dr. Lawson.
phone calls and fax messages are idol.
.
reflection and not by fury. • A new real leaders who Will nsk their
If anyone feels they have a toted up; our ~ei!'"Csenlatives cave
"!llese tests do and can cost for just
There · is nothing wrong,_ of. radical homosexual rights agenda:: politic~ CJ!fCCfS to do the pri~ci­
a few tests approximately $6,000. I problem with this pesticide feel m and the maJOnty gets what they course, with people expressmg is shaping up, Falwell told his pi~ thing mstea~ of the ~xpechent
free to call me if you need help or demand.
know we bad them done twice.
.
their viewpoints on any subject. "Old Time Gospel Hour" listen· thmg -people like Enghsh stare~, He also failed to check the whatever, you are welcome to any. ~trect democracy works·hke The problem comes when lawmak· ers, _and they should join his drive man !'dmund BQfk~, ;-:-•ho told h1s
amount of money to remove this thing I have. This chemical works th1s. Congress passes a health plan ers and presidents surrender to pub· agamst gays m the ranks. "What constituents 10 1774. . Your repre-,
toxic material from this house slowly, it does not kill you fast, it 1hat would protect senior citi;1.ens lie passion. This is a frightening should a Christian do?" said sentative owes you, not his indusuy..
which he might keep in mind is in goes into your fat and moves when from ban~'!ptcy in the event of prospect for a number or reasons.
Robenson on his ''700 Club" tele· only, but his j~dgment;_ he betra~s
the basement under the house itself it wants to.
call!SlrOPhic illness. Problem 1s, the
For one thing, sensible people vision show. "Get on your tele- ms~ of servm' rou,!f he sacn-.
I'll wait for your letter, Mr. semors have to pay ·a f:w share of are rarely the ones who. do the · phone and dial your congressman flceSlt-to your op1010n.
and throughout the entire house
·
alf;o. How does. he think the main Jacobs, if you send it stating it's the cost. The~ \ike the ben~flts, but exhorting.lt's usually angry people or your senator."
.:
Pray for some profiles in
ploblem in the basement and safe without monitoring the house not the prem1ums. They mundate who are motivated not by reason.
As bad as the situation now is courage. '
.
ground can be removed. Maybe lift in the future. I'll 'let the public read . Capitol Hill with calls, faxes, ~le· but by rage. Are you ready for gov- the all~time call-in showdown h~
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
tl)e house up and remove the base- it also. We couldn't sell this to hun !l'am~ and letters, and the leg1s_la· ernment by tantrum? For another yet to come. Wait until the great writer ror Ne'jVSpaper Enterprise
ment and talce it to a toxic landfill. someone else, maybe you and the lion IS repealed. The elderly ncb thing, direct demOCJ1!CY is frighten· deficit debate really p;ets rolling Association.
And what landfill will take this Health Department could.
By the way, if it's so safe why
tl»tic matter? l would like to see
your estimate for this procedure. remove anything? We got hit the
;
hardest remember. Why remove
I've checked.
anything? What could it hurt?
~: Strange the U.S. Government
I mainly want people to sec'and
· ' murdcr cases IS
. whth
d6esn't allow it in the U.S. Market,
m
e er a p,crsonI
band in the process.
Brenda Clubine was convicted according to the FBI.
know
these
products
arc
no
longer
Such unsettling stausucs
i~ its so safe. Does the Meigs CounSurely these women did not is in "imminent danger. ' l,f
10 years ago of killing her husband
t! Health Departmenl have better used in the U. S. and if they do by cracking hili skull with an empty prompted both the American Medi- deserve to have their prison telli!S w0111an kills ber m~~te in the mids1
knowledge than the Federal Gov- have a bottle around somewhere, wine bottle. Sho says she was· a vic- cal Association and the Surgeon set aside. And surely some, if not of a fight, juries almost always wilt
please contact Ohio EPA for proper tim of spousal abuse. ·
many, of the women now serving. acquit on srounds of self-defense:
C{Ilment?
·
•, Mr. Jacobs please educate your· disposal. Do not just dump it out
life sentepces for killing their Only the mOSl flimsy self-defense
While serving a sentence of 15
because it will do years to life at the California Instiself on all points before ~ou. make somewhere
mates. rightfully deserve th!:ir pun, pleas·result in murder convictions.~1
someone
or
something
harm.
The .)ire mise of The clemenc
s~&amp;tements for the publtc 1n the
tute for Women, the former .nurse
ishments . . By granting mass
Sincerely
jJeper. Many new matters about th1s
movement is that the' definition o
founded
Convicted
Women
rather
than
weighing
clemency,
Rhonda Conde Against Abuse, a suppon group of
product's poison have surfaced
individual case ori its merits, $elf-defens~ is IOQ nal')'ow wherQ
10456
Stream
Parle Court 21 inmates who similarly claim General last year to declare that each
sjnce you brtefly looked at the
governors
make no distinction women are concerned. Accordin
Spring Valley, Ohio 45370 killing abusive mates. The women violent men constitute a major betweeq women
issue. But, I agree people make
justly punishe.d to · this view, a woman's !if
threat to women's health.
mistakes, just don't kill people over
convicts hilve petitioned Gov. Pete
and
those
lrUly
deserving
or.mercy. shouldn't necessarily be in immi
Accepting that this is uue, it
Consider
the
case
of.
Brenc!a nent peril to justify an attack on he ·
. Wilson for mass clemency.
nonetheless is troubling that
California is one of more than women convicted of murder can Clubine, 1\'ho hopes to capitalize qn boyfriend or husband. If•a worn
20 states in which battered finagle reprieves by simply claim· the national clemency movement, simply is in an allusive relation 1
women's advocates are ~eking ing abuse at the hands of their dead and who is fairly representative o( ship, she should have the right to!
.
blanket absolution for convicted mates. What desperate woman the kind of women-killers who · make a pre-emptive strike, say,'j
a:
.
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Wedn~sday, Feb. 10, the 41st day of 1993. There are 324 women. While Wilson is n:!olved doing time for killing her man will stand to be set ' free. Her crime killing her man in his sleep.
to make clemency decisions on a not hide behind battered women's appears to have been an act of pre·
But t)le crime of domestic vio-•
ct;ys left in the year.
case-by-case
basis,
the
politically
meditation.
lence
does not justify the supreme:
syndrome if she thinks ii might
· Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
charged
movement
resulted
in
27
Sho
was
separated
from
her
hus·
crime
of murder. While battered:
One hundrell years ago, on Feb. 10, 1893, comedi.~ Junmy Durante
enable her to beat the rap?
·
women
being
set
free
in
Ohio
two
band.
But
she
felt
comfortabl~
women deserve compassion,•
-fas born in New York Cit).'. The famed " Schnozzola, as he was known
Indeed, one of the women grantto his fans and friends alike, starred m virtually every branch of show 'years ago, eight in Maryland last ed clemency by Maryland Oov . enougH to meet him alone in a women who kiU theit husbands or:
year and two in Missouri.
b,usiness. He died in January 1980 at age 86.
William Donald Shaefer boasted hotel rbom wliere he was staying. boyfriends in cold blood, however:
The
nation~s g.overnors are
afterward about having gaiten She claims he struck her several abusive or violent the men might•
·: On this date:
.
:
In 1763 France ceded Canada to England under the Treaty of Parts, being asked to grant !118JS clemen- away with her crime. And a woman times before she finally grabbed have been, do DOL
cies
to
acknowledge
the
)IRValence
the
bottle
and
delivered
the
fatal
Our
system
of
justice
is
predi-•
.
set
free
in
1989
by
Washington
hieh enctid the French and Indian War.
·
~: In 1840, Britain's Queen Victoria married Prince Alben of Saxe- of domestic violence in American Gov. B.ooth Garaner (in an act of biow. But the evidence suggests C8led on the idea that all Americans:·
society. In fact, between 1985 and individual rather than mass clemen- that she drugged her husband and - be ihey rich or poor, white or:
Col\urs-Gotha.
.
Christ fLat Da S .
, In 1846, mentbers of lhe Church of Jesus
. o. tcr· y amts, 1991, 28 percent of murdered cy), was found 10 have hired a con- killed him when he was most' vul· black, man or woman - shall:
enjo~ "equal proctJction Ullder the·
tftt Mormons began an exodus to the west from llimots.
· women were lhe victims of present tract killer to fake a robbCry 81 her nerabk:.
To release Clubine and other law. ' By granting mau clemency :
In 1933, 6b years ago, the fllllt singing telegram was introduced by the or former husbands or boyfriends, borne, while murdering her buswomen like her would be a grave to conv1cted womon, including ~ ·
1)1111 Telegram Company in New Yark.
miscarriage of justice, ~:?ss Los those IUilty of premeditated mur- \
~ 1n 1942, the former French liOO: "N~tmandie" capsized in New York
Angeles Superior Court J e Ul· der. !be nation 'a aoverilors mate a\
Harbor a day after it caught rue while bemg refitted for the U.S. Navy.
Loman and Mildred Dunnock as Loman •s wile, Lil\da.
lian
Stevens, .whll presided ove,r mockery of thla principle.
,
. In 1942, RCA Victor ~ted Gl~n Miller and his Orchesu:! with a
ld 1962, the Soviet Union exchanged captured American U-2 pilot
Chibine's murder1 tnal. Under tJ\e
JONplt Pwldu Ia a columallt \
,/told record" for their recording of . Chattanooga Choo Choo, whtc:h Francis Gary Powen for R_udolph Ivanovich Abel, a Soviet spy held by
law, Steve11s f!IY•· it matters not for Tile Saa Dleao tJaloa,Trl- •
had sold more than a million copies.
,,
the United S"tares.
whether a peniln bas IM:en previ- IIane aad a writer for New.)llper
In 1949, Anhur Miller's play "Death of a Salesman opene~ at '
In 1967, the 25th Amendment to the Constitution, dealing with presi·
ously
abused. The salient questiOn Enterprlle Allol:latlon.
·
Broadway's ·Morosco Theater with Lee J.Cobbm the role of W11ly dential disability and succession, went into eiTecL

.

.

Wednfedlly, February 10, 1993

'C ommentary
..•·..

'

Car destroyed
Rodney Pullins, Pomeroy.
rooon.ed to the Meigs County Shcr·
if(' s Department Tuesctar morning
!hat shonly after midn1ght as he
was traveling nonh on Carpenler
Hill Road he JOI his 1919 BMW
stuck as ho pulled onlo ML Union
Road. The vehicle roponedly back·
rlfCd and caught rue while he was
auempcingto get it out of the ditch.
The report stated the vehicle
wu a total loss. .
The Columbia Township Fire
Depaltment responded to the scene.

Tbeft investipted
Sally Moore, Vance Road,
reported Monday 10 lite Meigs
County Sberiff' 1 Dopertment that
someone had taken her money,
health card, and photo identification.
An invesligalion Is continuing.
l

c hamber. ..

·-

_c_o_n_t,_nu_fd_rro_m_p'-a.=.ge_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __...·_

Continued rrom page 1
whon the student is in attendance.
If she requires a substirute that persan will be paid $5 an hour.
The resignation of Harold.Graham as driver education coordinator effective at the end of the
school year was accepted.
Thomas Gates II was hired as a
substitute teacher and \he resigna·
lion of Toni Hudson as a substitute
teacher was accepted.
A request from Michael Gerlach
for use of sick leave time,. Jan. 11·
14, was granted by the board.
Presented at the meeting were
leuers of commendation to John
Lisle, principal of S~lem Center
and Harrisonville, and Karen Sloan
who works in the treasurer's office.
Sloan was. recognized for her
job competence and Lisle for his
iledication to education, guidance,
and use ol his personal tiine to
make suuctural improve.ments al
the schools.
Other Business
Joyce Vance, cafeteria manager,
reponed that she anticipates a
deficit for -the year's operation of
$5,700. She said that participation
in school lunches has increased. It
was npted that 64 perceD\ .0( what
comes in is in state and federal subsidies, and that 40 perceni of the
cost of operation is in food and
supplies.
The question of regular bus
rules applying to 18 and 19 years
olds was raised by Carrie Morris, a
driver. She said that she is having
some problems with the students
getting on and. off at other than
their designated places. Supt.
James Carpenter said that they
need to comply with the same rules
as anyone else and that a note
signed by the principal is needed
for changes.
It was voted to enter into a con·
tract with Tri-County Vocational
Educational Planning Oeparunent
for career development services.
This will be paid for with Carl
Perkins funds.
A resolution' of order of termination of the teaching contract of Victoria Bumpass was unanimously
approved.
AUending the. meeting were
Supt. Carpenter, board members,
Rupe, John Hood, Roger Abbott,
Robert Barton · and Randy
Humphreys, and Treasurer Fry.

Under the" guidelines of the pro- Village of Rutland, the chamber the door.
At the request of Frank Vaug~­
gram, according to Pauon, borrow- has scheduled a concert by Phil
ers are expected to participate in Dirt and the Dozcfll at the Rutland an, the membership voted til .open:
on-going small business manage- Civic 'Center .on April 17 from each meeting with prayer and the;
ment training. The on-going train- 7:30-10:30 p.m. Advance tickets Pledge of Allegiance.
· •
The meeting was conducted bf.
ing plan will be designed to meet are available for $6, children, and
the specific needs of the borrower $8 adults, or at the door for $8 for Penny Facemyer, president, an cJ:
and will be determined at the loan children and $10 for adults. Pro- was held at Overbrook Cemer 1n.
ceeds from the eoncen will be used
closing.
.
Middlcpon.
•
According to Pauon, the Athens to repair the roof at the civic ccQtc~.
Small Business Development Cen·
Thacker announced February 1S
ter is one of 35 in -the nation to be Chamber of Commerce Month .
selected for the microloan program. The Ohio Chamber of Commerce
Am Ele Power ....................34 5/8
· She says the program was devel· Annual Meeting and Legislative
Ashland Oil... .....................27 3/4
oped in recognition of the ~s for Conference will be March 10. AnyAT&amp;T,................................ 53 3/4
development of small busmesses one interested in attending should
Bank One........................... 53
which IS essential to the economic contact 1'hacker at 992-SOOS.
Bob Evans ......................... 17 3/4
growth areas in this part of the
Thacker also announced an
Channing Shop................,. l7 3/4,
attempt to locate a 2,000 square
state.
Chmp lndustries........ ......... IO
foot
block
or
brick
building
with
a
- Hichway report
City Holding...................... 21 1/l
Steve Story reported on the concrete floor into which a busi·
Federal Mogul.................... 19 3/4
progress of two highway projects ness may locate. The nature .or !~!at
Goodyear
T&amp;R ..................72
affecting Meigs County • the business is being ~ept confidenual
Key
Centurion
...................22 Ill
Ravenswood Connector project and pending a possible sile location.
Lands
End
..........................
25 1/4
the Route 33 Darwin project.
Anyone knowing of any such SlrUC·
Limited
Inc
.......................
28
3/8
Story reported that he and other ture is asked to contaCt Thacker at
Multimedia Inc . ..............:..33 .
members of the highway.commit· 992-5005 .
Point Bancorp.....,., ............ 12 3/4
tee have been meeting with Ohio
Jeff Thornton and Mary Powell
Rax RestauranL ................... 3/16 .
Pcpartment of Transponation offi- announced they will appear during
Reliance Electric., .............c22 7~
cials in Columbus to become ~.e March 7 Easter Seals telethon
Robbins&amp;Myeis ........,....... 18 1/l
informed about the project He has on WT AP to raise money for activ·
lnc......................22 7/8
Shoney's
been working closely with Tom ities in this area. Donations that
.
Star
Bank
........................... 36 3/4
Hedrick of OOOT. Story stated one day may be made by calling 1·800·
Wendy
Int'L.
..................... l31/4
of the major delays in both projects 846-6673.
Worthington
Ind
................ 27 1/l
is the completion of the environFrank Smith, pastor of the Heath
Stock
reports
are tbe 10:30
mental studies. These studies, United Methodist Church in Mida.m.
quotes
provided
by
according to Story, must be com- dlepon, announced the concen by
Kemp'r
Securities,
Inc.,
~
pleted before any design work can the Meigs County Concen Band on
GaUipolis.
begin. However, design work for . Feb. 21 at Meigs Junior High
the ftrst phase of the Ravenswood School. Tickets will be available at
Connector from Rock Springs to
Five Points is underway because
t/181 work is being done "in-house"
by engineers ofODOT, DistrictiO.
Tlte anticipated time for com~
pletion of this first phase would be
A 33-year-old Pomeroy man was charged with driving under the_ , '
nine months to one year and pur·
influence
early this morning by a !fOOper of the Gallta-Me1gs Post
chasing of rights-of-way should
of the State Highway Patrol.
begin by the fall of this year, says
Dwayne E. Qualls, 1759 Chester Rd., was. arrested on Ohio 7 in
Story. Construction would then
Chester
Township and is scheduled to appear m court Wednesday. • •
begin in 1994.
If convicted it will be Qualls third DUI conviction.
'•
Story also reponed an effort by
·,
Qualls was ~so cited for driving with no operator's license.
AEP to change the route of the second seven~mile phase of the
Ravenswood Con.nector project
near the Ravenswood Bridge.
Twelve calls for assistance were answered by units of the Meigs ' .
According to Story, AEP has
County
Emergency Medical Service on Tuesday and early Wednes-·' ·
requested that ODOT reroute the
day
morning.
·
.· .
proposed section of .the road
On
Tuesday
at
7:19
a.m.
the
Ppmeroy
unit
was
called
to
Third
•.
around land owned by AEP which
Street
for
Ruth
MyerS.
Sho
was
taken
to
Holzer
Medical
Center
could be developed and utilized.
The Tuppers' Plains and Chester rue departrilents were called to ···
Other chamber developments
Eastern
High School8111:38 a.m. on a call for a bomb threat.
·
In other matters, Paula Th~cker.
At
2:48p.m.
the
Olive
Township
Fire
Deptiiunent
responded
to.
'
executive director, announced the
Route 124 in Reedsville for a camper lire. Charles Dailey was tho ' .
annual dinner for March 27 at 6:30
owner.
·
p.m. at Royal Oak Reson. Cost will
· The Middleport unit went to Bailey Run Road at 6:08 p.m. for ·
be similar to last year's dance and
Veteralil Memorial
Odessa Cart .who was transponed to Holzer.
....
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS~ reservations should be made to the
The
Syracuse
unit
went
to
Bowman's
Run
Road
at
6:29p.m.
for
.. ·
Meigs County of Cham bcr of Com~
None.
Paul Grady. He was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. .
:·
Office 992-5005.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES • merce
At 7:38 p.m. the Chester Fue Depanment responded to a brush " .
In
an
effort
to
work
with
the
Gwendolyn Folmer, Aoyd Stewart
fue oil Flatwoods Road on propeny owned by Beth Milhoan.
and William Kennedy.
The Rutland and Pomeroy rue departments were called to ·Beech ·
Grove
Road at 8:111 p.m. on a structure r.re at the Ralph Cundiff. .
HOLZER MEDICAL CEN.TER
residence.
There were no injuries and the units returned to quarters ··
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP)
Feb. 9 dlscbarges - Hannah
Direct
livestock
prices
and
receipts
at
10:46
p.m.
· ·
Hughes, Mrs. Russell Hartwick and
At
11
p.m.
the
Syracuse
unit
responded
to
Route
124
in
Minat
selected
buying
points
Wednesdaughter, Rosella Fox, Joseph
ersville for Tyson Clark who was taken to VeteranS. .
· .:
Hooper, Adam Roush, Darrick day by the Ohio Department of
This
morning
(Wednesday)
at
12:05
a.m.,
the
Middlepon
unit
·
Agriculture:
Knapp, Mildred Lee, Angela
went
to
Bradbury
Road
for
Ruth
Barnhart.
She
was
taken
to
Vetcr·
:.
Barrows and gilts: SO cents to
Swiger, Margaret Holsinger, Linda
ans.
.
,,
Jenkins, Mildred Rife, Mabel 1.00 higher; demand good.
At
1:32
a.m.
the
Tuppers
Plains
unit
was
called
to
Silver
Ridge
:·
U.S. 1·2, 230-260 lbs., country
. Porter, Edna Nickell, Heather
Road
for
Josephine
White.
She
was
trailSIXllted
to
Veterans.
•:
Boyles, Shane Dale, Justin points, 41.00-42.50, a few 43.00;
At 3:55am. the Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine No. 31 for Bill :Gilmore. Ryan Qualls, Cheryl Mer· plants 42.00-43.00, a few 43.75.
Starkey
who was taken to Holzer.
·
U,S. -1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
cer, Andrew Newsome anlj Austin .
points, 40.00-41.50.
Ankrom.
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lbs., country •
Feb. 9 birth - Mi. and Mrs.
points, 39.00-40.50.
Patrick Merrill,daughter, Kerr. ·
Receipts Tuesday 7,500. Esti•
Incident reported
mated receipts W~day 8,000.
• .
' "'·
Tuesday evening, Guy Hysell,
Prices from The Producers LiveHysell Run Road, reponed to the
stack Association:
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart•
..
. Cattle: steady to 1.50 higher.
M
ment, that he was southbound on
Slaughter steers: choice 72.00- ..,
Roule 7 DCBf the Ohio Department 83.25; select 65.00-75.50.
Sl.OO ALL MAn-ES A TUESDAY BAIIGAIN NIGHT • .
of Transportation State Hishway
Slaughter heifers: choice 71.()().. •
$5.00 ADULT ADMISSION EWNING SHOWS
'·
Garage and as he met a nonlibound
82.10; select 64.00-75.50.
1-::Sl~.OO;::SR:;::..
a=T=IZE=N~S::;A::;N:;D;:C;:;H;:;I~LDRE=;:N::=:,12;:A~N;iD=;U;:N:;DE=tR
•
:
vehicle a stone 'was thrown from
Cows: steady to 1.00 higher; all
.,
the pavement striking the windcows
60.75
and down.
•
shield on his pickup truck. The
Bulls: steady to 2.00 lower; all
damage was reponed to be about bulls 60.00 and down.
the size of a quarter.
Veal calves: lower; choice 85.00 •
and down.
Sheep and lambs: 2.00 lower to •
The Scipio Township Trustees 3.00
choice wools 60.00- •
will hold a special meeting Tues· 68.0&lt;&gt;;higher;
choice clips, none·
,
day at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville
Town Hall.

Stocks

r---LocaJ briefs---.
Man charged with third DUI ·

Meigs squads receive 12 calls

·. ·

Hospital news

1

.

Liv.estqck report

• ••••••• ··..:.
-----------1

~~~.:

Trustees to meet

-Meigs announcements-Pancake supper planaed
The annual pancake supper at
the Carmel Sutton Church will be
Saturday at 5 p.m. The church is
located five miles out Bashan
Road. Pastor Kenny Baker invites
the public.

9.:

"Maria Callas" by Arianna
Stassinopoulous. Roll call will be
to i.ell of a favorite musical performer.

PICKENS'
HARDWARE

Club to meet
The Past Councilor's Club of
Chesler Council No. 323 Daughters .
of America, will meet )Vednesday
at 7 p.m. at the home of Jean Fred·
erick.

Has A Large

•
•
•
••

....

...:
•
•
______ •
..
••
•••
••

PO'PCORN

OUR SPECIAL.
VALETINES DAY
THANK YOU.
Present this ad wilh your

POPCORN

.admiSSion tickct!itub at our

consession stand and rccievc a
46 oz. size cup of
FRESfflY pop~ popcorn.

•tm

---------- _.. .._
popcorn offer expires 3/ 15/ 93

'

Llterar'- Cl•ll to meet
The Middleport Literary ·Club
will meet Feb. 17 .11 1:30 p.m. at
the home of Mrs. James Diehl.
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter will review

_.

'

'

Seledion of
FURNACE
FILTERS
To Fit Most

Meetin1 planned . ·
A Sugar Run School meeting
will be held Thursday 81 6:30 p.m.
at the Trinity Church. anyone inter·
ested in the restoration of the
school is invited to aucnd. ·

.

,

.Furnaces.
•

Mailboxes damaged
It has been reported to the
Meigs Count¥ Sherlrrs Department that llllllboxes on Sumner
Road •d Silver Ridge were dam·
aged Saturday night or Sunda}l
morning.
Apparently IIOOICOIIC driving by ·
we~ beating on the boxes. Anyone
with informailon is asked to con·
18CI the sheriff's office.

CHECK US OUTI

PICKENS'
HARDWARE
~ON,WV.

~:

••
•••••••••• ·:
·
I

&lt;il

•

�.

The Daily Sentine~

Sports

•

--

'·

W L Pt1.
..,y'.:::: ~·::::::: }!: ~ :;;~

Ohio high school·

basketball scores

Cl

•

Doys

• , ..........- ............ .25 21 . · : . 5j
Odoodo ..................21 21 .
~~
Nhcltlph'· ........... l7 Z1 .316

. w.......,.. . . . . . t•

lllllllli ,.,,,_,....--15 29

1

r

,)41
.311

31

Akron Ctnt.-Hower 6&amp;, Akron Ken-

"""" l7
Akron Ou. S~ Atwat.crChr. 51
Ak.nx1 Fuutone 67, Aluon ElletCS
Akron Garfield 73, Akmn. E. 59

14.5
16

Akron Hoban/4,

C•lriiiJMIIoa

,

• Ci0oqo ................32 15

-

...................23 :13

' -

- ................22 20

~:::::::::::t:

l:

56

l.l

.611
.62:1

' ' a.EVIil.AND .......30 11
o.d'Oo ... -.. ·-······23 21

.m

~1
9.5

.lOO
.ol'll

12

:~

13.5

MWwlll Dl....
TWLr.t.GI
' Sin - - . ........... 30 t• .612
'Ullll ................. ,..... 30 16 .6l2
1
.................26 lO .565
5
Don- ...................11 rl 12.5
/1 t'
(llle .............. l O 32
.231
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9 .191
16 .6l2
15 .6Sl
22 .522
22 ;522
21 .411
30 .loll

- . . ................. .30
Soolllo ............... - ..30
' ........ ........- ......21
O: L.A.Cl.- - ......)4
, L.A. .......... - ....•.24
,., (JaWeD swe ..-......2:0
Sou
............16

Cle. i.u~cran W. 76, Richmond Jlu.

5j

66

6
11.5
11.:5
16.5
19.5

Col. NanhWwi85,Col. Eaa14
Col. Wolnut Ria• 77, CoL BriuJ 38
CGl. W•llmd. 54, Orcwc City Sf
CGl Whitehall SS, Delaware 53
Coal Grove ~0. Franklin Fumaec

G.-49
Columtu. 68, Au:rora 62

Toail:ht's pmes

.._._ ~tJIIri' 1 'rti•, 7:30p.m.

Columbian~ Crat.vlew 80, Liabon 59
Columbua: Gravo 10, P.n~on·Gilbca

a..E\'El.AND It Odlndol-1:30 p.m.
Cloicqoll ....... , ,30p.m.

64

o.ai. Nn ,...,.•• p.m.

sa.

CGMMUL
Geneva !i3
CC!Ihoam 67, New Philadel~ia 62
Da,. . Ch•miudc·Julicnne 78, Cin.

...... s d' I p.m.
w
II Ddlll. I :30 p.m.

4s •-.,

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9'30 P"'·
P,..OlL.A. Lollon. 10,30p.m.

Plln:ell·Mari•n 41

Day. Duablt 102, D•Y· Meadowdale

96

O.O..trRivenido 107, Rid emonl75
E. Clevellnd Shaw 67, ~neniYil\e

62

Edan 65, Eu11ide,lnd. 58
Fairbltllu75, MochoniQbu'l 29
Fairmont 52, W. CuroU10n 41
Fay«~&lt; 73, Wllobon, Mi. 68
FortfryoiW, Woodtf..td33

Fan Lcnmie 16. Fairlnm 44

lntheNHL ...

Fnnkllft Hu. 59, Rornoldobura 57
FtMnCI'II R011 70. Bodford, Mi. S6

WALES CONFERENCE
hlrldtDlW " L T I'll. GFGA
, ....-p .......... 35 H 5 7l 230176
tW+' Jk ....... 26 21 6 Slll0195
N.Y. J1M1oa ..... 23 22 9 55 216209
_ _ , ........ 25 :14 4 54117119
N.Y..... :14 :14 6 54:122199
AUld 'r*i• ....... 19 26 I 46 208211_
,T-

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...................... 31 21
29 11
................ - .. rl 21
·HIIIfcri ............. 14 36

5
4
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66 225197
66 223\99
60 232191
32171250

Qaawa ........"''"' 7 41 "'

11 133273

o-...............

CAMPBELL CONFERENC~
-DlTW L Tl'la.GFGA
CIIM:qo.............. ll !I I 70 195154
.............. 30 :10 6 66 240181
.............. 21 19 I 64 195171
TCIIOftiO .............. l4 21 I S6 11•166
SLLao* ... --·· 7A 7A 8 56 119192
T - Bar ..._ .. 19 34 1 41 177212

s.;... 01,..,._

V.ecauv. ......... 31 IS I

Ca9u1 ..............

70 2A11 67

29 19 6 64 206183
.................... 25 2:! 6 56 201204
................... 24 7A 6 54 212223
.......... 211 21 I .. 151212

s-.J............... '

~ 2

t4 t4B265

Tuelday'a KDres
Phil' db' ' I, Ouaw• 1

-tna15,N.Y.Wmdorol
v....-.5,f'liMI*t

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)kaffa1o It WiftniN. 1:40 p.m.

s.a '-" Colply. 9,40 p.m.
Thursday'• comes
Mr.

.. ~. , ,40p.m.
Bay, 7:40p.m.
Tcwont.o. 7:40p.m.

W«'ll Tllllpl

v_....,

W~II.SLI..ouia,I :..Op.m .
llo*lnat~l~p.m.

f'"'l'Ml.Uehnd61,Mol .... l7
Frontier 66, Waterford 64
Ganway 90. Newcorncmown 69
Groonvillo Fahh 69, Sprini VIII.
Aoodomyl6
Growpor\60, U-Atlin.... 41
HuniJIM Badin "55, Cin. Si Xavi.er44
HcriaaaeOt.17, Warld.H.Irv-.68
HowLand Ou, 61, Pmmville Chr. 46
Indian Lako48, W. Libctt)' Salem 42
1ndiln VaiL 84, Buckeye Trai134
'-«CityBopt. 66, Emonud lhpt. 45
lrcman 77, Minford 47
lroniOJl St. Jonph 60, Portsmou~
Noue Damo 57 (OT)
JacUon. Center 68, HaullOn 53
Joffmon ao, AshlolbWa 19
John Okm 71, Meldowbrook .Sl
Kalida 66, Van Bunn C9
Kti\IUMI. 63, Chardon 62
K011'1 Awlany '17, Cromoada 67
l.aBrk 12, YOWI&amp;o Liberty II , 301'
Lako ~ 75,0nn4 Riv .. 6l
Lako
69, Bloam.Cun&gt;ll64
Lancaot«6S,WCIIctVilleS. 51
Lob....l5, Day. Cu1iolo 53
Lima Temple Cbr. 71, Waynafield
Oooba&gt;71
Lo.ailville Aqaifta1 61, Qufiold Hcs.
Trinity 56 (00
Madio&lt;n 63, Aohtabula SL John 62
Moplawooolll, Bl...,..,;.w 53
M.lran111u Chr. S6, Gn~e Bapt . .S3

lllifticta7'l
Rio Onodo 72. Tollln 70 (O'l)

---

~75,-SL70

-Domo'l9.Dor-69
w - -.75, ....-55

Women

MW-OMtCWwnct

c.anWo 91, Wobll 70
Rio Ono4e 74, nm. 53
Sha..... SL 16.-U.-.10

Sholby 61, Norwalk 51

Shtlbr 61, Norwalk 51
spa. 1~~ooo41, Ooahen 37
sw..... 51, OJaeao &lt;10
T•JI Vall. 64, Aimnda.Qcarmdt 61
T.- 67, P,lrid&lt; Honey l7
Ttee of Lifo 52. Cot Academy 24
Ttac.WCIGd Madilon 46. D1y. Moado.W·
dale 21
T1.11law 45, Loudorwille 43
T~ Voller S. 42, Nonluidp 37
· Upper ArlinKton 53, 0~-..eport 31
Victory Otr. 64, Wamri Chr. 25
Waunon 57, Evorpeen Jl
,WillO.HiU 34, Kina's Academy 28
YOWIJ. Rayen 55, Youna- South 39

Youna. WiJiol:l M:, Youna. Ean 52

Transaction~
Baseball
American Le1pt
.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Aanocd
to tann1 wilh Todd Frohwinb, pitcher, on
• ooe-~rcontncL
·
DETROIT TIGERS - Alreed lo
tem11 will!. Sk:eew:r Bunea, infielder, on •
one-year ~ootncL
TORONTO BLUE JAYS- A~ to
tetml with John Olet~.~d, Cirat ba1eman;
Carta. Oelaado, catcher; and David Wells
and Bill Taylor, pitcbcn:, on ane·yeu
concracts,

MuionCalh. 60,N........ 42 ·
Ma,...mo47.-v..... ..
Muaa53,NwwCM)dol'l
· W....a 79, Aalboay Wayne 52
Marflold 51, LUo C.lh. 4l
.....a.;.72, Pollllold 40
\lc:Dcmald 60, J...ordll,own 37
Mootina72. lklonp01lo61
_ . . , . . 70, ........ 66
N. B.-19, llonh....,j 54
N. Roy.-76,8-72
' . Napo1oaa 60, Sylvonil N0&gt;1hviow 39
Naliooal T..U 73, c..-m.,lnd., 62
Nordatill6,Moolallu. 44
Ncrhi+ Oar. 50. Ohio DMf 48

N•tlon•l LHaue

--

.......

OUoYW061,FanJ..oq.45
o.tonl TalaWUidl 59. FWfield 57
Paine~ville HarveJ 12, Ashtabula
Edp....,j52
Pain.,vllle R.ivenide 55, A1hu.~b
llubo&lt;50
Pumo 63, Bodfcri 59
"""""""12. Syl..m. Som!Mow l3
Pld&lt;trin
66, WllkW MomC&gt;'ial 56

Ultor.

MONTREAL EXPOS ~ Aarced to
\emil with Franlt Bolich, infielder, ¥ike
P..htbilo, piu:her, and Mlke Stlin, out·
fielder, on cno-)"Nr ~c\1 .
SAN FRANCISCO OlANTS N1med Bert Campane~ Ot'JIRi2.1tiMal
b..e Nnnina eo~ch •

BaskolbaU
N.al6u.l Baaktlball A&amp;Joc:latlon
NBA - Fin.ed Vemon Mnwcll,
Hounon Rock.cu JUild, $3,000 for throw·
ina a fl•arant elbow in • same Cl'l Feb. s.

Sol&gt;rint MdtWey 54, E. Paliatine 34
Sidney l..cftnan 92, NeW\Cifl 6!5
Sprida(IOld 79, Bowlin&amp; Oreal. Sl
Si. Marys 59, Elida 46
s...
62. c.,.,.. 59
StruburJ 70, TlliCitiWII Cath. SS
Stiuth• 72., Youna. Otancy 68
nppaty70,n.,. OM:wood S4
To!. C.lllalio 69, Tol. ~lop 61
Tol. CuUtian 70, Cavaby 0.. 69
Tol. Scott 93, CanlUa1 Sbit&lt;h 111
Tol. SL PraaN 61, ToL Woodward 53
Tot SL John'a 7,, Tol. Waite64
__J'ol. swt as. Tot Bo~er 62

GOLDEN STATE WAR.RJORS Sianed Sean Hiaain•, Corwat~, \0 a 10· ·
day COftUIC\.
SEAITLE SUPERSONICS - Acli·
Vltcd Dana QarrOI, pard, rrom. the in·
jured lilt Placed SteYe Sc:hef'Jler, rocwud',
m lhe injwoed lil'l.

Football ·
Natlon1l Footb1ll Lu.aue

CIDCAOO BEARS - NamNl Cvl,.

Main(ord dofcr~livoauiA.nt coach.

DENVER BRONCOS - N1mM. La
Steckel ti~ ends 1nd H-Olck• cotch.
PITTS"B.UROH STEELERS - Fired
Dan M«lmpn .,.,.,.,......,

1\Waw 77, TI&amp;ICUIWU Vlll. 65
TwinlbwJ 55, Solon 49
Uniontown Lab 94, Akron Sprina·
field 71
V"""Y Clw. 75, WIDWI 0\r, 45
W. a..,... 66, OtopUI Folia 52
W. ~ 75, RivcrView-46
W. Jeff....,. 78, Jolwtown 61
Womn Otamp!CII 7~ Hubloonl 63
WIUinall71, Spug Hi~ 60

T-71 . Y~ SLS4

v...,.s..u.69, y.,..tRiyon61

~

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' rtll. YW...C:Wa 62

-

iO,C... Connocticut St. 72

- " · , _ ik. ... :101'
.......... U. 64, -oh,NJ. 61
... .,.~ 14&lt;1. 72. MWt 67
_ ... l'oldoialt ll!rl!'- 51
Jloll '· ·~l'lallolrfl7l
IL Jallil'•11. 1\aWc:• 64
W-ll,lt. - N.Y. 71
Sou~
- 6 6 , AIL·Iionlnahom 74

.

.

techGJ,Sou$hAllb.na64,

~ 77, Nuylond 63
T__.. Tech 96, Appalachian St.

I

Dates: Friday, Feb. 26 until
Sunday,
Feb. 28Buckeye Building,
.
Location:
State Fairgrounds, Columbus
•
Houn: Friday. Feb. 26. 4 p.m..
• 9 p.m.; SIUUJ'(Iay. Feb. 27,9 am.7 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 28, 9 a.m ... 5

., HEAR NG AID CENTER

doors

BELlONE IEIIING AIHIIITII

1312 ........ , ..... ,..... 7), IIIIMD•
614 • 446-1744

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0

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'WEDNESDAY, Fll.-17, 1993-9:00 •·&amp;·4:00 p~-.1
· CaiiToO flee I-800-634-S26Sfn•ltnlnedillttAppoi!lmlld

.'

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I:

,.. ,..,, .... _....,." ...... MIS,• I 7
Anyone who llrs trouble lwl" or ~ camnllon lllnvllell to hne 1 1
nEE hearlnt Its! to see If this ariblem Clift be heiDed. lrtna this caupon wah you far 1
.
yoll' ntt HfAIII&amp; T6T, I $75,00..
. I
'
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,
1
MMCO, MID AU IIHIII?I!UU?I£11Hil?llS
I
I

WAll-IllS WILCOII

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The balance the Redwomen
have perfected, combined -with
defensive pressure, WQII the day f(!r
Rio Grande, which had shared the
MOC title with Tiffm in 1990-91.
The Dragons, sensing the pOssibili·
ties of their ·role as a spoiler (a loss
for Rio Grande would have fon:ed
th·e Redwomen to again share the
championship), gave it all they had
in the first half in an effort 10 restage the Shawnee State battle' and
upset Rio Grande's plan. ·
The result was a game in which
the lead gyrated between both
teams for most of the , q~CniDg period. A 14-point perfonnance by Tiffin's Angie Shardo kept the visi!Ols
going, bul proved to be their offensive strength as Rio Grande's
· defenses-were successful in holding

t.

!

the ftrst free throw, he intentionally
missed the second, but his airball
gave the Cavaliers possession.

·:

Celtics 104, Bu~ks ~2

•

at:

,,

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l

14K GOLD JEWELRY
REGUW

60% OFF

TAKE AN ADDITIONAL

•••
••

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•
••

STOP AND .SEE OUR SELECTION OF

•Russell Stover Candy
-•Cologne
•Carleton School
FREE GIFT WRAPPING

Prescription Shop
2S3 Nort. SHOH
992-6669

I'
'••

••
•

l5%oFF

Middleport

I
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f:

Lewts scored 20 points and Boston
'l'lttebounded Milwaukee 4~-26 10..·
haod the Bucks their fourth straight
loss.
·
Lewis, who scored 14 in the
first quarter, hi! four free throws in
the final 1:45 and Xavier
McDaniel, who had 18 points,
added six free throws during that
span for the Celtics.
Heat106, Pistoas lOS .
Miami beat Detroit for 1he
Heat's fJtSI viCIOI)' at the Palace of
Auburn Hills as fonner Piston John
Salley scored 23 points and intercepted Orfando, Woolridge's

t:

l

'

:

$3000
Start To Finish DiMer for Two ·

••

old"'-

,_tilt

yo&amp;.""

H&amp;R BLOCK

'•'

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'·vus,enttne s t£ve .9Lt Oscar ..s•.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13

'•.

One thing

5

,

Saturday on the 'Blue Knight(.
court. Tiffin (14-9, 9-3) is
Cedarville Saturday,,
.b
Box score:
•""
RIO GRANDE (74) - Kiml
Sowers, 2-1-5; Gena Norris, 4-1-0j
11: Stacey Riuer. 0-1-1-4; MJcheUej
CrouSe, 4-0-8; Tricia Collins, 5-2-1'
12; Stephanie Gudorf, 2-2-0-10;~
Lori Hamilton, 7-4-18; Ginger;
Smith, 2-2-6. TOTALS 26-4-lO- ~·
74.
TIFFIN (53)- Lisa WiU, 1-0- ~
2; Jenny Kane, 5-0-10; Angie Shar·
do, 8-3-19; Mary Lanker, 3-0-6!
Brenda 'Baker, 4-4 ' 12; Susaq
. Miller, 2-0-4. TOTALS 23·7-53 . .'
Halftime score: Rio Grand~
37, Tiffin 26.
'

inbounds pass in the final seconds.

,

• ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • •. • • • • •
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59 COURT ST.
. GALLIPOLIS, OH. •

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In assists, Norris, Riller and Crouse
each had three.
Balcer was responsible for 10 of
Tiffin·s 29 rebounds, and Lisa Witt
had five assists.
Rio -Grande shot 54.5 percent
from the field on 30 of 55 auempts, ·
including four of 17 from ihe three
for 23.5 perc!l~t. Tiffin was 39.7
percent on field goal perfonnance
(23-58). At the line, the Redwomen
connected on 10 of 16 for 62.5 percent and the visitors were 63.6 percent (7-11).
In other MOC action from Tuesday, Cedarville dumped Walsh 9170 and Shawnee State defeated
Urbana 86· 70.
The Redwomen meet Urbana

••

A,,i Hartford, Conn ., Reggie

Tickets: $6.00 Adult $2.5 0 . •
,•
Youth (6-11 yrs) free under 6, ' • Includes: 2 glasses .of · rose' wine, cup of •
when accompanied by adult
·
Parking: Plen!y of space on • soup, 2 tossed salads w/dresslng choice.
•
State Fairgrounds .
• El)tree consists of scallops, crab meat, chick- •
Deer:. Entry Ttmes - Open: • ;en breast meat 8 8 Q ribs and beef tender- •
Noon, Fnday, Feb. 26
•
• • • •
•
•
contest: Closed as of 11 a.m., • loin plus potatoes, broccoli spears, carrots •
Sunday, Feb. 28
• and mushrooms. Your dinner will be topped •
Note.: Entries may be brought in : ~" by our Chocolate Valentine Turtle Pie.
:
before the show opens, so measurAI
11 bl
111 be
1
xten 1
SQ ava a e w
our regu ar e
s ve menu •
. ers can get trophic~ measured and •
placed on display by the time the • with extra vegetables, salads; caase_rolea &amp; • ·
show q~Cns.
• desserts.
•
:
Reservations are encour-.ged.
:
.
.
·•
•
Phone 446-9545
•
Special events
,
• Tropliy deer evenl/display
.
• Nqarly 170 exhibits of hunting
equipment, accessories (many with
product for sale at their booth)
•
• Hunting seminars daily, in two
WHAT All $0111 Of THE M051
areas, contiJiuously
fllGUan a101s IIADIIY T=~
• Byron !"erguson, archei)' trick
Ts pIJiro
11w lilt
shot
...... - J . n . , - lllt1lllamal
• Dean Ziegler's Qhio Whitetail
lltvtllllt e.mo. .,. . . IIJ .......
Spectacular special display
ollllaolono on thtll rotum1. Tilt IRI,
• Judy ·Kovar, rndtan lady
'-'-• a.llllll _
_, liii'IP arlld
bowhunter, special.seminar speaker
lncaMitirf~ .............. ""
looli lor ....... Ill ......
• Dv.iight Schuh,-bows &amp; arrows
columnist, Sports Afi~ld, headline
CI!Hk,....
to . . . - ....
seminar speaker
oltlllltd onry tu poymon~ orodll 11111
• Bow lryout area
dtMIIon ........ tllgllllt ........ old
• Airgun shooting range ·
OWIPIJ' your ta, yeu a•••lr ..... • 1o
Hotels: Several ho.teiS/motels
tll!lt ytn to flit Ill •~• - ·
near the State Fairgrounds have
•_rou........ 1 - • 11111oa
special rates. Call 1-800-324llll,mlawMotllluiiJ ..........•Y
DEER (3337) for hoteiB and'rates. \
ld.lllalllt ......... Ml'llll- . . ....
Bett photo time: Late SatUrday
KARL KilLE~. u
naa_,., ....., ontM flllll Ilea 0' •
afternoon or .aroum! noon Sunday.
.
t - L In loot, MIt p11111111 tllal Greatest number of deer on display, . OGIIIIIIoi: llllloao . . -oulln IIIIWII'I ..... uooluiiOtiN!IttilltoL
crowds are best .
.
WhoMwt ,_. hno ......... aloouiMIIlt lll!lwollflot y..-, 011 ,..,IIIII
SJ!ow office. &amp; phone: North
?lllllloelt .... a..
llrllll_,_,... ..... harolD . .,... \
end of die building 614-294-0242
P11111: Through Feb. 23 - c~ll
· URLIIIUR
414-242-3990. After -Feb. 23 '·
call614-294-0242
Show producer: Glenn Nelgellind's Target Communications,
7626 W. Dol)ges Bay Rd.,
POMIIOY
992·6674 .
611IASI MAIN
Mequon, Wis. 53092. Phone: 1oi.'

. down the remainder of the Tiffin
bench.
By contraSI, nearly the entire
Rio Grande roster got in on lhe
action 10 good effect. as Gena Norris and Lori lfamiJIOD led the SCOT·
ing with nine points apiece and
Stephanie Gudorf pulled down six
rebounds to s18rt a run that ended
with an 11-point halftime lead.
Stacey Ritter, who rejoined the
lineup after suffering an injury
nearly two weeks ago against
Walsh, sank a three-pointer at the
buzzer to send the Redwomen
cheering iniO their locker J(,lOm.
Small~(s crew .continued negating Tiffm s penetral.ion and limiled ~
their turnovers 10 take off for a 20plus points lead by the end of the
half's first 10 minules, which
ended with anolhef trey from '
Gudorf.
Enduring a total of 25 turnovers
(10 in the second half), the Dragons got balanced scoring in double
figures from Shardo (19), Brenda
Balcer (12) and Jenny Kane (10)
and m8ftll8ed to force a total of 23
possession l~s on the Redwomen. But after being held by a 9-2
scoring rush in the first three minutes of the half, Tiffin never fully
recovered.
"I think the defensive press is
what won the game, and a great
team effort from the posse," Smalley said, "We had a defensive
breakdown in the fust half when
Shardo got the ball too often, bul
that team effort really made lhe difference. This game is an example
of our team's cohesiveness and
their ability to gel along on and off
the floor.
"But we're not going to Urbana
and Malone 10 mark time," he
added in reference to the team's
remaininJ! regular schedule games.
"Evel)'thmg is geared toward our
winning the district tournament."
All told, Rio Grande gol four
players in double figures, led by
Hamilton's 18, 12 from Tricia
Collins, 11 by Norris and 10 from
Gudorf. Gudorf also led in
rebounds with nine of the learn
total of 34, while Ginger Smith
added eight and Collins had seven .

NBA games .. .&lt;Continued from Page4)
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TAX TIP OF ·THE·WEEK

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George Washington had YorkIOwn, U.S. Grant won Vicksburg,
and George Pauon was credited
with turning tJie tide in the Battle
of the Bulge. A few examples of
decisive moments in American mililary histol)'. On a different kind of
battlefield, a little closer 10 home,
, history was also made Tuesday.
With a 74-53 home viciOI'y over
second-place Tiffm, the University
of Rio Grande Redwomen won
iheir firSt outright Mid-Ohio Conference championship since joining
the conference in 1987 with a 12-1
slate, while improving to 24-4
overall.
The game marked the second
biggest win of the season for Dave
Smalley's club, which seized the
MOC's to!l spot with last week's
last-second win over Shawnee
Stale.
"The 11ame plan was 10 play 94
feet of defense. They did it, they
played their hearts out, had been
focused on what they were doing
since the Shawnee State game, and
my hat's off 10 them," Smalley said
as the team and its supporlelS celebrated around him.
"We wanted to prove tliat we
are a great team, and so far we're
on U'8Ck," he added. "The kids are
getting more unselfish as they go
along. I t~ink it' s a great group,
and they deserve to be where they

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Senti

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414-242-3990

p.mEntraace: West side of Buck-' :
eye Building, south set of man- •

J

lAKE THE KEYS
CAll ACAB.
lAKE ASTANO..

'

The intensity 10 be found in the Grande~ s bench 10 net Six assists.
waning days of the Mid-Ohio ConFor Tiffin, Ward's high scoring
ference's second round was never performance was paced by Ricky
more apparent 10 the University of Spencer with 14 points and 1~ from
Rio Grande Redmen when they Kai Wallcer.
exiled Tiffin University's Gillmor
On shooting, Rio Grande was
Student Center Tuesday with a 72- 4Ll percent (30-73, 10-27 from
70 single overtime win over the the three for 37 percent) 10 Tiffin's
Dragons.
43.1 percent (31-72, three of 15
• The Redmen witbslood the scor- from. the outside for 20 percent).
ing pressure of Tiffin's Jeff Ward Both teams ll)ade few ,trips to the
to hold Ihe bulk of !he Dragons' free throw line, as Rio Grande sank
bench in check, but Ward pumped five of. six for 83.3 pertent and the
in 21 points and 10 of his !Cam's 36 Dragons.canned two of(our.
rebounds to keep the Redmen's
Inoth.er MC&gt;C games played
margin small throughout the game. Tuesday. Mount Vetnon Nazarene
Rio Grande fell to 24th this edged Ohio Dominican 75-73 ,
. ~eek on the NAIA's top 25 list Urbilna slid past Shawnee State 75after hitting 21st last week. 70 and Walsh nipped Cedarville .
Cedarville is 141h this week and 96-82. .
Urbana is 17th.
The Redmen (23-5, 8-3) are at
The Rio Grande scoring combi- Urbana Salurday. while Tiffin (18·
nation of Matt Powell. Troy DOn- 9. 6-5) is hosted by CedarVille Sataldson and Jeff Brown each hit in ' urday. ·
•
double figures, while Donaldson Box score:
had 12 rebounds and Brown
TIFFIN (70) .....: Richard Torsnalched 10 10 give the Redmen renee, 3-1-7; Ricky Spencer, 4-2-0that much of an advantage over 14; Mike Taylor, 3-l ·0-9; Kai
theif hosts: P.oweU· and Donaldson Walker, 6-H3; .Jeff.,Ward, 9-3,21;
each had 18 points and Brown David Dennis, 1-0-2; 'Bmd Gill\ 2ended with 16 10 lead a more bal- 0-4. TOTALS 28-3·5· 70.
anced effort from John Lawhorn's
RIO GRANDE (72)- LaMont
club tbat saw some of ils ,bench . Harris, 1-0-2; Brett Coreno, 1-1-0malce some timely contribuiions.
.5; Jack Morgan, 1-1-0-5; Walter
The. Redmen led by two at the , Stephens, 1-2-0-8; Matt Powell,' 3half and stayed in the game ·with a 4-0-18; Jeff Brown, 4-2-2-16; Troy ·
be~ter performance at the threeDonaldson, 9-0-18. TOTALS 20point range . .Rio Grande suffered 10·2·72.
17 turnovers 10 15 for Tiffin, but
Halftime score: Rio Grande
Kyle Schroer made his presence 37, Tlfrln 35.
fell when he Slepped from Rio

Ohio Deer &amp; Tut~ey Expo dates

•

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Ia Dr. I. J•cksoa hiles' Office
110 ••••lc Stnet, bllun ·

I

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VICTORY! - University of Rio Gr!lnde Redwomen center
Lori Hamilton takes !1 snip of tbe net tollowiDJ Rio Grande's 74-53
win oyer·T.lmn !It Lyne Cenler Tuesc(!ly. Tbe victory gave th, Red·
'II'OIIIen their lint sole cllampionsbip· in the Mid-Obio Conference
at lZ·l. H!lmUton, a 6..0 junior l'nlm GaiUpoUs, scored 18 points in
tbt ~
cram e. i'' . . .
- •, .,
· ·
·.·
·'·• •
-·. ·· . ·

Redmen, slay Drag~ns

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FRIDA~, FEB. '12, 1993-t:OO·Noon
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5

WUI be glvtlia Mtl,s/Gallla CollfltS b1
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Eoot

lverGetAPi

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70

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By KELLY P. KISSEL
intercepting · the Lions' long eBflY 11 'pOint deficit. Eric Mon~
tross led 1he Tar Heels (19-3, 8-2)
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP)- inbounds pass.
Penn State's Greg Baruam knew
Indiana, which beat Penn State . with 17 points and !Jeorge Lynch;
· ~
there was c~mtact between he 81id by 48 paints - 105-57 - on Jan. hadq.
Exree
Hipp
scored
16
for
Mary-.
Indiana's Chris Reynolds with the 9, improved 10 21-2 omall and 10game on the line near tbe end of 0 in the Big Ten. Penn State fell to land (10-10,1-9).
No. 19 Seton Hall 91
regulation. When the whistle blew, 6-12 overall and 1-8 in'the league.
No.17 Pittsburgh 73
.
howeve~. he didn'.t exp.ect to be Calbert Cheaney scored 24 points
At
East
Rutherford,
N.J.,
charged with a foul.
for IndiiniL
"He had ahold of my jersey
1n other games involving ranked Arturas Kamisbovas lllid a career-. ·
with one hand 'and on my waist teams Tuesday, No. 6 North Car· high ;32 points and Luthe~ Wrig~t
with the other," Bartram sai~. ",1 olina defeali:d Maryland 77,(,3 and added 16, his most ever m a Btg
heard the :ovhistle blow. but 1. didn t Nci. 19 Seton Hall downed No. 17 East game, to lead 'the Pirates over.
Piusburgh.
·know what. the call was unu~ they Piusburgh 91-73.
. The game was ti.ed 35-3S at.
staned to g~ve the ball to Indiana. I ,
halftime, but Karnuhovas and.
.
No.6 N. Carolina 77
couldn't believe it"
Wright dominated the second half,
Indiana tied the game 17 secMaryl!lnd 63
onds later- with three-tenths of a
At College Park, Md., North as the Pirates broke it q~Cn with a.
,:
second left in regulation - when Carolina coach Dean Smith moved 22-3 nan.
The Pirates (17-6, 7-4) needed,'
Greg Graham,. fouled during a . iniO a tie for third place on the allthree-point shot attempt, sank: two time viciDI)' list, notching win No. 111e win badlY as they had l.o~ fjve;
•
free throws,. The top-ranked 759 as the Tar Heels overcame·an ofseven. ~
Hoosiers finally won in double ,__ _ _ _ __._.....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....:,.··- - - :
overtime 88-84.
•
"We've been going through
things like that this year," Penn
State coach Bruce Parkhill said,
much calmer after the game than he
was when officials' made the call.
·'
"I'll tell you something, we're
· going t6 be competitive and all·
right. We'll get to the point where
the calls don't make a difference."
Penn State held a 68-66 lead
.,
wilh 19' seconds left. On an
•
inbounds play, Bartram broke away
from Reynolds and was free in the
,.
lane when the whistle blew. Offi·
cial Sam Lickliter chargc;d Bartram
with pushing off and awarde4 the
·'
ball to Indiana.
On television replays, it was
easy 10 see Reynolds grabbing Bartram's jersey. If the foul had been
called on Indiana, Bartram, a 71
percent free throw shOoter, would
have gone to the line.
Instead, Indiana used the fin~
i 7 seconds to work the ball10 Ora. ham in the left corner, where he
was fouled by Bartram on a failed
three-point shot.
·
"He went up for the shot and I
went up in the air. We both came
down at the same time and we collided," Bartram said.
Graham missed his-first free
throw, then nailed the next two 10
tic the game at 68.
Penn State, the Big Ten's newcomer, took a six-point lead in the
1
fust overtime, but Indiana hit three
three-poinlers - ils only buckets
of the period - 10 tie the game at
77 and force another overtime. ·
. In the seeond ovenime, Indiana
freshman Brian Evans hit a base·
line jumper with 6.5 seconds left to
.:1
pul the Hoosiers up 86-84• Damon
~
Bailey added two free throws after

FREE HEARING TESTS

YWill- Eul 64, Y. ,.. Wilton~~

•

•
.i

scored 23 points on 11-for-14·
shooting as Utah ended a five- ,
game road losing streak with a vic::
tol)' at SacrameniO.
•
The Jazz led 101-91 with 8:06:
left on a short jumper by La_rry,
Kryst1cowialc; who scored·IO pomts~
in the final period. The KingS::
.pulled within foui on Mitch Rich&lt;
mond •s free throw with 1:54.1
remaining, bui that was 1he closest:,
they got
•
H!lwks 125, W!lrrlors 1.1"
Atlanta won at Golden State,:
banding the Warriors their seventh•
consecutive loss behind Dominique:
WiJPns' 3$ ~ts. . .
.~
Kevin Willis luid 24 points and•
15 rebounds for the Hawks, who,
took advanrage of the absei_ICe of.
Chris MuUin, sidelined eight weeks •.
after' surgery to ~pair tom liga-·
mcnts in has right thumb, and
Tyrone Hill, given the night off
after the death of his grandmother.
C!lvallen 107, Hornell103
Brad Daugherty had 28 points
and 17 rebounds as Cleveland won
at Charlotte for its fifth consecUtive
~ictory.
,
With the Hornets ttailing 105·'
102, Larry Johnson was fouled'
with 1.1 seconds lefL.AfiCr making
· (See NBA oa Page 5)
·

-------COUPON

Zanavillo ......... 7 , Pilhor Coth.

National college
buketball scores

•o

FLORIDA MARLINS - As....t
with Hec10f CarraiCO, pitcher; and
Kerwin Moore 1nd Scou Pose, 01.1tfield·
ers, on one-year ecnlnCUI.
LOS ANOELES DODOERS Named Moniquo Brandon director of
community aervicea. Promoted Laura
Picnan 1a eomm.unity service~ 1dminil·

ea.-

Aoh)and61, Hilll&lt;lolo51
Blulfton 71, O..oo 69
en. St., Ohio 16, MDunt St. J01eph

.

1CtiDS

Oat!Wbari7,Hwm64
0!rvi11o 86,
Tom!&lt;'" 52

Wollinpa 70. Dolaw.,. au.60
Whia.ha1U5, Ddawate-Ha)W 53
Wicltlif!e 77, Onllp 42
Y"""' Calvuy 107, Ooonp 0\r, 78

"

s-a£. 52,~29

~ol. Whitmer67, FGilelri.a 64

0111t C F e
loWwlo·W.U.63,IIoilldllq59
C.,.;o.170, Ohio- 56
!olio~ 66, llinm 62
M=~ 67, Madw 57
Oa -70, u.u.n 67 (O'l)

' '

B•p.. 30 .
Sanduolty St. !Wya 72. Old Fon47

Moti&lt;oll 1117, CboolWe Ri- Voll. 63

5

Top-ranked Indiana hands P.enn
State 88-841oss in ·double overtime

l2 S. J!uclld Luobonn
.
F
E. 44, Elyria im

•¥ill•

WUh 96.c.dorWlol2

r

1

56

M.,_Ot.io C011rennce
t.t.&amp;nt VantJn NWftlle 75, Ohio Do-

-12.~79

I..Dnl47, Cia.l...akou46
Lima Balli 53, SL Honey 30
Lima Calli. 76, Dolphoa Jeff...... 37
Lop11 Eln162, Bloom-Cam&gt;ll 45
Loui1villo AqUUua 54, Unl~»~~town
LakeC9
l.Dvolanol44, CU.. Indian Hill3!
- - 4 2 , /WOn Elmo 29
Muoillon 51, S,whrille :14
Ml~nC~e valL 36, Bou'lill' 21
ModUlo Boackojo 30, Col""'loU Z7
ModU1a HiJbland 7~ Cooler l4
Mi1u1 EdiJ&lt;n 47, WUlud 43
Milford .... Hamilw. 36
Mount Veman 54, Marym1lc: 35
New A1banY44,Bemo Union 27
New Brwncn 36, Spencerville 34
"""""
62, Tollmadae 49
Norw•1k St. Pau170, Fremont Sl.
I....,t.48
On.nao Cu. 3S, Cle. Andrew• 32
Oaawa·Olaadod'43, Pluld1ng40
Pod .. 51' C1e. Kamody 37
Pie1Jy 43, Nm...y 41
Plrn-11162. Now London 29
lbvoana 47,1C.c:ntR.oolewlt31
ReveR. 51, Hudton&lt;41
Royn&lt;&gt;ldo~Mq 64, FnnkJU1 Hu. 35
Racky IUvw Mllpilielt 49, Euda.ke
N.28
S. Ccmlal 53, CoUinl W.an Rolrve

Ravcma. SE 77, ~onna32
Rid..-51,Jowat·Sdo50
....,....5.1oti111My Lob 63
Solom7l, Madio ..... 52
Salinel'liUe SOt.lllwrl 51, Calwnbian1

Mon

52

Liollin Hta.4l,~40
Liollinholl. 64. Nonhridp 3-1·

(01')

•Oblo college
'basketball scores .

so

.
llulll 60, Onnvill• 58 (O'l)
Hiii"'P 55, BZJII' 51
lAkeWood 69, Menu•· 21
'Nla ""'4:Z.Faiq&gt;ort!Wolinsl2
Libmy Uniall4. Faber C~th. 3S

~E.6l, llodtllll157

Dllroilll l.oiAII,.-, 10:"'9 p.m.

'

13

CoL M.i.fllin sa, Col. Linden-McKinley:

54

-125,0oldatS....11•
'UIIh 119, .. 11.

i

sa.

Onnd VaiL
Pym•tunini vau.
OroonCI, WadiWodh 39
&lt;Jrecmoillc63, W•yno42
Hamilttll\ Twp. 36. Canal Winchcat.cr

rnaar63

Sin_,
_,.,_n

•

Gufield lila. 31, W.....,..;Jlo 36
Gnlwft 60, Konm Ridao 56

Col. lndepondcnce &amp;I, Col. S&lt;lulll 60
Col. Marion-FrankHn 68, Col. Eut·

TUOIIIay's IICOI'H

't

n.nJ,.Monroe

ClOYe:tl.caf 41, Brecksville 39

42

By Tbe Alsocilted Press
was held 10 II points on 4-of-14
Denver can't maJCh dJe Phoenix shooting.
'
Suns' claim as the botrest team in
Dikembe Mut.ombo, scoreless in
the NBA. The Nuggets aren't even the first half, finished with 15
the houest team in dleir divisioo.
points, 17 rebounds and three
Just call them dJe boa.est of the blocked shots for. Denver. Eddie
teams likely 10 be participating in Johnson pacCd the Sonics with 22
the draftloUel)'.
points.
The Nuggets pilstcd dleir most
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
impressive performance 'of the sea- Boston 104, Milw•h(fee 92; Cleve- .
son Tuesday night, winning in land 107, Char lone 103; Miimi
Seattle for the first time in five 106, Delroit 105; San Alltonio 112,
years, 96-92 over 1he SuperSonics. the Los Angeles Clippers 97;
The victol)' was just the third in Atlanra 125, Golden State 114; and
23 road games for Denver this sea- - Utah.ll9, SammeniO 114.
son, but gave them a 10-4 record
Spun 111, Clippers 97
after a s.ttetch of losing 16 of 17
Fint:PI!Ice San Anlonio stayed a
gai!les. The loss was just the third game in flont of Utllh. in the Midin 22 home games for the Sonics, wen Division as David Robinson
who last lost at home to the · had 25 points, 13 rebounds and
Nuggets on March 5, 1968, a seven bloc!Ced shots against Los
sttetch of 10 games.
·
Angel(iS.
'
.
Assistant Gene Littles coached
Danny Manning led the Clippers
the Nuggets because Dan Issei was with 25 points, but o_nly seven
confined 10 the dressing room.with came in the second balf.
stomach flu.
·
The Spun, who have won by 10
"It must hilve been our night to points or mpre ll times during tlie
win, •• Littles said.
·
cll'tent hot suealt, led by 11 going
The Nll,gets ove~came . a 13- iniO the fOUJt!l,quarter .and extend·
point deficu in the thfrd quarter; ed. the margm to as many as 21
capped by Chris Jackson's three- _pomts. · .
·
pointer with 1:281eft in the game.·
Juz119, Kiap 114 .
Jackson, Denver's le8ding scorKarl Malone had 36 poinis and
er with an 18.7 scoring average, II ~ebounds and Jeff Malone

0&gt;-

Col.. Bccchcroft 92. CoL Whcutonc Sl
Col. Brookl11ven 77, Col. Centennial

-104,Milwulroo92 .
CLIM!lAND 1117, ChaJ!ou 103
........015. D.ai1105
112. L.A. Ctippen 97

~

Vall. O.r.

B~jamin:Loi;.n 66, Triad 49
Bo&lt;kin&lt; 77,11iwio 65
B~(lCld 69, NoW\Oil Fallt 53
Brooklyn SO, Cu.yJho&amp;a Hts. 49
n....wt 10, Midpollt 55
Caldwcll49, Shenandoah 4S
Compbe1177,11oonlmon 4?
Can&amp;Cmura59, New AlbMy 48
C..pclllll:e 72, Faidand SO
.Cin. Colcnin 69, Cin. Nodhwest. 61
Cin. 'Country Day 61, Cin. St. Demud
56
.
. Cin·. Win1on Wood1 75, Cin. RoJ~H
Bocon54

l

; DUiat- ..............- .....4 ...

C~y•MJ.•

'

Akron N. 73, Akron B..chtel 60
Ak:mn St..V.St.M 62, HlldiOR Wc&amp;tem
Rett:rYcll
Bada• 54, CorUanci-Lakeviaw S:l
Bachwood ~ . Independence 60
Bcovm=dt55, Doy. Stcbbino 35
Bellaile St. John 'a 71 , Bamo~ville 60
Boll- 62, CodaM!lo 52

, WESTERN CONFERENCE
0

Sot.INIII Mcah. 71, Tcro.n Todi7S

Nuggets hand Sonics 96-92 loss
in Seattle; Cavs edge Hornets

Clo. Uonlioa65. Clo.- 42
CIA. w-. Hillo s1, a. ....- r1
a.. wyom;.1 11. c;, FUmeyto'"' 21
CUdovillo 55, Fairllol4 um.. 44
CJe.. AviatiM 27,Cla. Scialc:e 13
ae. Beaumon\46. Co. LAurel 44
C..llul63, C1e. manhJI149
C.. HathlwalB......
:
37, Hawke~~2S
0.. liar 4.5, 0.. W. Tech 38 .
a.. llcallll 31, c.. Kio&amp; 17
0e. SL Ali~4.S, C10. Catholit 34
0.. IL J...... 13, C1e. S""lll 17
ardo77.Fciotoria52
CoL B hcroft. 46, CoL WhcUtone 22.
Col 11nfp 60,Col, Wolnut Ridge49
Cal Broc*havcn 81, Col. Cc•nmnial
15
.
Col. Ea~tmaor 93 , Col. Manon•
Fnnklin23
·
Col Unda!-!&gt;ldtW&lt;y 39, Col. Mif!1in
35 (O'l)
.
CoL Northland SS, Col But42
Col. School Cor Girll43. Wcllinaton
22
CoL S01.11h 71, Col lndcptndtN:e 48
Col. Welt 6', Maran•du. 0\f, 2A
• Coldwa\et 109, Arcanum 38
eo.wnema1 SS. Wa,.nc Trace 49
Caa.voy Ctattvicw SC, Fort Recovery
39
.
~ 40, Mllu&gt;n-U.W.. 28
Cft:~Mew 54, Fan lteoove:ry 39 •
Folia 50, Nordooio 40
DofiancO 59,Aoobbold 50
ow. 72. O.y. Jof!as&lt;~~ 46
Dubl;n36, w.......... c.. 33 (01')
Fiodll 53, Maric&gt;n Hll&lt;lina 52
61, Brookville S6
GahoMa 37. Jli1liud 36 .

The

Rio ladies claim MOC championship

p

'

Southwest

'. EASTERN CONFERENCE

With 74-53 win over Tiffin,

VVednesda~February10,199~

In NBA action,
:; In tile NBA ...

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EASTMAN'S

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7
W;ed::ne~s~d~a~~~F~e~b~ru~a~ry~~~o~,~1~~3~---------------------------------------~Po~m~e~r~o!::M:Id~d~le~p~o~rt~~O~h~lo~------------------------------------------~~~~~~~~~!_

''

Wednesday, February 10,1993 :"'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

•

·::· Street ·
:~ remembered
1~ by Iowans
••

BIG BEND FOODLAND
992-2891

West Main Street

'

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DL
IS

SAVE ·

MUCH
IS

•••
::
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r

ByJIMUTKE
lOW A CITY, Iowa {AP) Nearly all the teammates Chris
Street left behind came to Ibis corner of basketbafl heaven for the
same reasons he did and from the
same kind of small Midwestern
towns that he did. Maybe that's
t · w~at made it so strange to go on
!~ ; wuhout him.
•l 1 Three weeks ago Tuesday,
~ • : Street was killed in an auto acci·
•; ' dent after leaving a team dinner
:- ; and trying to ease his car onto
heading back
; : : Highway J. He
· : · to campus for a night class. He was
:• : 20 years old. 1 •
:: : The picture on the back of the
•: , pro'ram from the game at which
:. : h!s jersey was retire4 lasl Saturday
:- : mght Shows ..Stnlet ~ Ia brush
•: , cat and a Wide sm~e. The piclll!e ·
: , : on the front shows No. 40 ·moving
•: • without the ball, something Street
: • ' did tirelessly and well enough to .
:' average 15 points and I0 rebounds ·
. ; a game for one of the country's
: • -best teams.
·
;' · In coffee shops and restaUrants,
•• on woOd courts and crushed"gravel
•: driveways; everywhere across a
:: srate where dreams and a long win: • ter conspi~e to make college bas·
:, ketb811 the thipg, frieadll and team•' mateS lind totai'strang!II'S still miss
:i both sides of him.
:!
That much was apparqlt as Iowa
,, c6ach Tom Davis faced reporters
after a grueling four-game, nine' • tlay swing through the Big 10 Con: • ·terence ended with a 73-66 loss to
t' top-ianked Indiana. !)avis was on
the front end of a week-long break
~- without a game, but the wear and
11 teat on his face, especially around
, ·' · the eyes, left little doubt 1t wasn't
enough.
;l In some ways, the story that
:' began unfolding here three weeks
!• ago is similar to the emotional run
• that Loyola M~mount made in
~: the 1990 NCAA tournament after
• the death of star forward Hank

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. Davis notes many of the same
things that happened then happen' ing to his kids now. They focus
better at some times, but wander at
others: they need little motivation,
but they get wound up too easily;
they never fail to lay a body on
every body that rumbles down the
lane, but sometime the play is just
plain ragged.
In .the week that followed
Street's death, school officials
postponed two games to allow a
proper mourning period. Something unexpectedly sweet happened: The Hawkeyes climbed
three spots in the poll, ending it at
No. 11.
The next week proved even
sweeter. First, Street's teammates
made up a 17-point deficit in the
last 5:30 to beat Michigan State on
the road. Then they closed out at
No.9 after beating powerful Michigan at home and presenting the
game ball to Street's parenls at
courtside.
But by the third week, while
most of the ache and the grief
remained, the magic was pretty

~ ; much gone.

·Fresh Shoulder

rTyson

Beef loin

Fresh Split

Arm Picnic

Boneless

Chicken
Top
Sirloin
·Breasts
Steak . -

Pork
Roast

~

Holly Farms

•
Limit 2

·

lb.

Please

Per

:1 · Against Illinois, the Hawkeyes

scored their last basket with 1.5
seconds left when the scramble for
; a reb~und ended with the ball
· : bouncmg off the shoulder of llli: I nois' Deion' Thomas and into the
•: basket. But after a timeout, the llli: : ni managed to get the ball to Andy
:, Kaufman for an equally improbable
: : try, and he canned a long, off-bal.; ance jumper to win the game.
: • . Against Indiana two days later,
•: Iowa led by as many as tO points in
: : the first half, but fell behind bX
:&gt; three down the streu:h and couldn 1
• ; make up the difference.
:1 An hour after that game had
;j ended, Davis lingered· in the hall- ·
•., way of Carver-Hawkeye Arena to
; 1 talk about what would come next.
•,
"I really don't have any idea,"
he said, "but I don't have any
·• doubts we 'II get through it fine .
•! There's no schedule for this. l"ve
, ~ let the players guide me thr6ugh it
: so far and they've been terrific."
,

, 1

•

Top

-Crispy

Green, Tender

California Fresh
Head California Potatoes
Lettuce Bro-ccoli

tJ

.
~·

?1

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Sports briefs----

Teanls
RICHMOND,Va.{AP)-Gov.
L. Douglas Wilder offered the
Executive Mansion as the most fit·
, ( ting place for Richmond to say
. goodbye to one of its most prorm~~ nent sons, tennis great Arthur
Ashe.
' • . Over 5,000 visitors mea passed
: : the. magnolia trees, up the front
• ; stauway and into the oval dining
: ; room where Ashe lay in an open
:. mahogany coffin.
·: Ashe, 49, died Saturday ·in New
:·York from AIDS-related pneuma. : nia. Doctors believe he contracted
:! the AIDS virus from an unscreened
: ; blood t~ansfusion during heart
:. surgery m 1983.
.
'
: • MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) •: Third-seeded Andre Agusi of the
:; United States beat Simon Youl of
:• Australia 6-2, 6-2 in the second
•: round of the Kroger-St Jude lnrer:i natiooal. .
'
·~ ·
Tennis
:: CHICAGO {AP)- TO.Jl-seeded
!&lt; Monica Seles of YuaoslavJB defeat·
•; ed Kimberly Po of the United
:, Sw.es 6-1, 6-2 in lhe ICCillld round
:1of the Vii'Jinia Slims ofChiago•

Potato Lover's Month Special

~

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BUY ONE ·GET ONE

FREJ:

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• 1

'

-.

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l,

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FREE 1 lb. Bog Gourmet Small Potatoes With
Purchase of 10 lb. Bog Russet Baking Potatoe5

Thorn Apple Valle

Bathroom Tissue

Food Club l 0.75 oz. Can

Bacon

CoHonelle

Tomato Soup

1 lb.

Pkg.

•

· Ore.lda Crinkle or Regular Cut '

Pkg.

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Spear Cuts

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16 oz.

Great With

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Bog

79
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$~ -- limit.i!Cons .
Por

Per Family,
Please

Disposable

. Cozies Dlapen

Top Frost Broccoli

Golden French Fries
21b.
Bog

4

.4 Roll

c~
· ~~
1.1..

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~

\.

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(!'

W.'fl

26 or
AO

Count

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With ~oupon
In C1rcufor

~

�1993

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Wednesday, February 10, 1993

Family
Medicine

Page-8

Rural residents to receive books by mail catalog
Residents of rural Meigs County
will be receiving this month the
Books by Mail catalog from the
Meigs County Public Library and
the Ohio Valley Area Libraries,
Ruth Powers, librarian, announced
today.
She said that Books by Mail
allows people to borrow books
from their home and is es~ially
good for those who have difficulty
getting to the library. ViUage residents can receive a catalog by calljng the Library, 992-5813. •
There are hundreds of books to
cboose from in the easy to use 40page catalog and the service is just

like it is from the public library.
There is no charge and books can
be borrowed for a few weeks and
then returned. The only difference,
Po\\!ers explainl:d, is that it all happens through the mail and you
don't have to leave your home .to
receive the service.
· .
All postage costs for sending the
books to the readers and returning
them. . \0 OVAL is paid for
' by the
service.
,
Novels, romances, mysteries,
westerns, and olher books to tead
for enjoyment are included along
with informational and children's
books. Ther~ are also special sec-

lions of books in large type for
those with difficulty seeing, and a
section of easy to read books for
aduiiS just learning to read. .
Books by Mail is easy to use,
said Powers. She explained that a
post card order form is provided in
the catalog and anyone interested
in checking out a .book simply
writes his or her nwne and addn:ss
and the title of the book on the
Card, drops it in the mail, and in a
few days a nylon mailing bag with
the books is delivered by the local
~stal carrier. When residents fin·
I~h reading the books they have
ordered in, they simply go back

Associate Professor
of Family Md•

mc

·Pete Scott to head Riding Club .·

MACYREES

Rees sings National Anthem
$t Southern basketball games

Officers were e lected at the will be open to the public. All
recent meeting of the Meigs Riding sponsor money ·will be donated to
. Club held at the home of Pete and the childrens fund. Prizes will be
Cindy Scott
awarded to the ones who collect the
Officers are Pete Scott, pre~i­ most money.
dent; Dave Carsey, vice-president;
Membership dues are now being
Cindy Scott, treasurer; Te rri collected and are $5 for an individCarsey, secretary; and Pam Mil- ual or $10 for a family.
. hoan, news replirter.
Ads are now being collected for
· The meetings will be ~eld on the the billboatil signs that are at tlie
rirSt Thursday of each month at the Meigs County Fairgrounds around
Scott residence on Flatwoods Road the riding club show ring. These
. in Pomeroy.
sit~ns will be painted to order and
· The ~ewly f!:-OrganizCd club is wtll hang at the f:jirgrounds for one ·
for anyone interested in horses. year. The price o~ads start at
There are trail rides scheduled for $25 for the name,
of the busievery month. There are six horse . ness .and on up .to $~ . for a four
shows s.chedulcd with the first by e1ght sign. Furtl)er mformauon
speed show on May 8 at the Meigs on this advertising may be obtainedshow ring at the fairgrounds.
by calling 985-2455.
A Ride-a-than for Saint J udes
The next meeti~g will be March
Childrens Fund is scheduled for 4 at 7:30p.m. at the Scott residence
June i2 in the Rutland area. This on Flatwoods Road in Pomeroy.

Announce birth
Rick and Kim (()''Lynn) Taylor,
Ft. Myers, Fla. announce the birth
of lheir second child, a daughter,
Tasha ·Marie,•on Dec. 24 at Lee
Memorial Hospital.
.
She weighed nine pounds. and
nine and one-half ounces and was
22 inches long. She was named
after her great·grandmother, Marie
Watson.
Maternal grandpareniS are Van
and Janice O'Lynn, Ft. Myers, Fla. ·
Paternal grandparents are Don
and Diana Taylor, Long Bottom.
There is another daughter at
home, Neisha Nicole.

~

: Macy Rees, eight-year-old son
q! Jonathan and Missy Rees,
Racine, pleases the crowd at SouthTornado ballgarnes by singing
tbe National Anthem.
·'· Rees, whose father is the fresh.i!Jan coach at Southern, is a third
!1!3der at Racine Elemenlary where
oo is an honor roll student. He
~tends the Racine First Baptist
~burch ani! is a member of the

ern

Racine Boy Scout Troop. He is the
grands'on of Mr. and Mrs. James
Rees, Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Cummins, Racine.
Rees, who also sings at his
church, sang publicly for the first
time during a Southern football
game this past year.
·
He will sing the National
Anthem at South em's home game
on Saturday night

five residents receive nursing
honors at Hocking College

Seminar Saturday

.: Five Meigs County residcniS are Click of Thornville and closing
ainong 53 Hocking College nursing remarks were by Connie King,
~uderits to have successfully
McConnelsville. They are students
~ched the half-way mark on the
chosen by their classmates for this
way .to completin$ their Level I honor.
traimng and a cappmg and patchmg
Nursing faculty taking part in
ceremony was held in their honor.
the ceremony were Molly Weiland,
Students from the area presented Janet Marshall, Barbara Byrd,
caps and patches were Carolyn Lynne Peterson, Connie ThayerCasto, Alesha Keney, Sherry Pat- Wolf, Lynne Mortan, Robin Moore
terson, all of Pomeroy; Karen and Tammy Lawson.
Mcintire, Racine; and Karla
Organist was Mary Lou
&lt;;hevalier, Chester.
Lehman, Laurelville.
,.;'The welcome was given by Tom

..

..

41 attend fellowship

\

·. The Meigs County Women' s
Fellowship met recently at the
Middleport Church of Christ. There
were 41 members present.
The opening song was "Just a
Closer Walk with Thee" lead by
Linda Bates. Opening prayer was
by Donna Hanson. Devotions were
given by Munel Bradford w1th several readings and poems and closing prayer.
·
,; Amy Perrin sang a s0lo "We
ftlve This MomenL"
; Kathryn Johnson conducted the
niccti'r•&amp; and officers reports were

...

· The Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene will be haying a marriage
enrichment seminar with Rev. Darwin aqd Jeannie Pressler of the
Logan Church of ,the Nazarene on
Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m. The
cost wiU be $5 per couple and will
cover·both nighas.
The church is located across
froin Fotked Run State Park.

.'l

me~ting

\vins fourth contest
Lacie Nicole Colmer, daughter
Of Tim and Micki Colmer, Rincon,

Ga., and granddaughter of Jerry
and Barbara Colmer. Pomeroy, at
the age of 16 months has won four
beauty pageants.
She was nall)ed Baby Miss
Peach Blossom in September 1992;
Baby Miss Harvest Queen in October 1992; Miss Southern Chrisunas
in December 1992 where she was
first runner-up in beauty and first
place in prettiest hair.
She has won a total of nine trophies ranging from eight inches to
seven feel tall, several crowns, a
robe, banners and gifts.

Del Laudermilt, son of Ray and
Cheryl Laudermilt; Racine, has ·
recently completed his Ohio Peace
Officer Basic at Hocking College.
Following his completion he
went to London to take his certification exam and scored an 84 percent. Laudermilt is seeking
employment · in the law enforceThere is no such thing as an
ment area.
"international copyright" that will
automatically protect an author's
writings throughout the entire
world. Protection against unauthorized use in a particular country
depends primarily on the national
laws of that country. However,
Youth Nlght at the Naz will be most countries do ~ffer protection
held Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Fe!- · for foreign wor)(s under certain
lowship Church of the Nazarene conditions.
across from Forked Run State Park
with "Rapper" Matt Wilson from Which Wa,Y did It go?
According to The Kids' World
Belpre.

News briefs
Almanac o( Records and Facts,
Native Americans called the Hadson River "shatemuc," which
means "the river that flows two
ways." the name was · later ·
changed to the Hudson in honor of
European explorer Henry Hudson.
The Hudson River is known for the
strong incoming ocean tides that
push salt water 150 miles upstream'.
When lhe tides recede, tile water
flows back into the Oc:ean, and the river appears to flow both north
and south.

Youth night to
be observed

.~

marriage seminar on Friday at the
Middleport Church of Christ. Further information may be obtained
by contacting the Middleport
Church of Christ
The program was presented by
Mary Jane Wise. She spoke on
Shakers and the Shaker Village in
Kentucky and their way of life.
The closing song was ''Take the
Name of Jesus with You." Marlyn
Wilcox closed with prayer.
Refreshments were served.

· ..

ATTENDS SEMINAR ·
Virginia Shuler, a student in
the nursing assistant program
at Meigs High School, recently
attended a regional officers
leadership training seminar
for the Vocational1ndustrial
Clubs of America (VICA) in
Washington, D.C. Shier is
the regi011al parliamentarian.

The FBI, The Bureau of Printing
and Engraving, Arlington National
Cemetery where she visited the
Kennedy Graves, Challenger
Memorial and Changing of the
Guard, and the Hart Building
among other poiniS of interest.

ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VALLEY.
Wee•'s
Special:
•

PIZZi . B~RGER

$1

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Equiline can provide cas!1 for any
purpose-a new car, a vacation,
family health-and the interest
may be tax-deductible.

Equiline is a multi·purpose line of
Pavmt~nts can be made in monthly in·
credit based on thA equity in your
stallments or in lump sum. Simple In·
home. It works like a checking
I
terest is charged on the account's
account for homeowners..
I ~~· ---~~
daily balance at the rate of 1.5%
over lhe Wall Streel Prime Rate
If you qualify, Peoples Bank will / ~ lllf'tlllleS
....fOI!.-.
and is subject to change monthly ..
set up a line of credit of up to
~ • ~ ~~~
75% of the appraised value of
3...0!!f!Z---::;;;...
Once you have Equiline, you can
your home less the outstanding
'
-;;;;~
wnte checks based on the equity in
mortgage balance. For example :
- - - -;;;}!'~ your horne whenever you wish-no · ·
Appraised Value
·
$100 000 1 _ •·-~~ need to apply for a loan. For full
•·
•
""- ~
d1~closure, dlllCUSS EqU1L1ne With a
75% of appraised value
$75,000
loan officer.

'YiliJij----- -

Less balance of mortgage $40,000
Potential line of credit

992·2556
I

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Peoples Bank will waive closing OOS1s
on EquWne Wldl Aprill5, 1993. · ·

$35,000

..

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69 .

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. .
WITH FRIES•••"••• ~
MON.·SUN.10:110AM-10:00 PM

Once the account is set up, spe·
cial Equiline checks will be issued
and your line of credij l'!ill be avail,
able for any purpose at any time.

..,.,.,._of
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423-75 u;

MIDDLIPOIT

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992-666t

NIILSONVILLI Till PUINJ TbO O·NLY

753-1955

-------.~--------

797-Ht7

376·7U3

Que11ion: I use a laptop com- to $8y, "I told yi,u sow if future
puter as pan of my work. As the research su~ their position.
name implies, I usuaUy place the' However. illS also possible tbal
unit on my lap when I'm using iL EMFs don'l1 pose a-serious health
I've read about the dangers of elec- risk. n.c.e jusl isn't suffiCicnl da!a
tromagnetie radiation and.electro- tomakcadrri•ion.
magnet fieldS. I'm worried that I
Even ifEMFs are shown to be' a
may be exposing myself to danger cause of &lt;:aDCa" by further Ieselicb,
by using my laptop computer. Cal the evideDce suges!.S tbt nmabu
you help me get a handle on the of additional cases of canta" they
relative risks of this and other elec- cause will be quite small. Jn other
bical hazatds?
·
wonb, tbc cJumces ol gelling canAnswer: In 1979' a research cer from your laptop computer or
paper ~eported .that children ·who froca a "f rby bigh-tc:Dsioa power
.lived in homes close to high-volt· line are milch less lban that of
·age power lines had an increased developing 111111 . . _ from your
:occurrence of cancer,' particularly c~ snri:ing m fiom tbe sec' leukemia and brain cancer. The ood-band Slllllkeolyoursponse
proposed cause for the increased
So, .wbal should you do about
number of children with cancer your laptop computer? Well. the
. among those individuals was the streilgth ol111 elecbOII""""i; field
' electromagnetic fields (EMF) gen· decreases as you move •'!'/ fiom
crated by the power lines. There the device. Doubling tbe distance
.have been many Sludies done ~ the source of the EMF is away
this original paper that have aied to from you reduces the suength of
·clarify the risk power lines and tbc fldd to oae-fowtb its previous
other sourees of EMF, like your level. One simple procedure can
, computer, pose to us.
gready reduce your Clt)IOilllre ,vith, And, you might be surprised to out a great s;ICrifice in the utility of
·find out that some of the research your computer. I'd recCimmend lbal
has actually shown helpful effects. you put your lll(llOp compuru on a
For instance, a consrant low-level dest wbellever you can. That puts
elecr.romagiletic-field can promote the soun:e away from mon: of your
the healing of some types of frac- body.
tures. Furt!)ermore, short-term
By tbe way. your computer may
exposure to very high-intensity not be !be largest soun:e of the
fields- such as during a magnetic ·elcctnxnagnelic ndiatioo to wbich
resonance imaging, or ~. scan you .-e exposed. YOW' hair dryer,
- seems to hav~ no negative electric blanet, microwave oven,
health consequences. The unan- and many other common devices
swered question is at what suength gCDenlte sipif'ICllllt EMFs. Howevof EMF and at what lehgth of er, the leagth of your exposure to
exposure does harm occur, if at all. them may be less thlm the length of
The research that has been com- exposure to your computcc. And to
pletcd· so far haS generated no uni- complicate mauers funhet, some
versally accepted answer to the researchers think die mquency llf·
question of the risk Pfoduced by tile EMF may be more importallt
electromagnetic fields. Numerous than the sm:ngth of the eleclromagstudies done in this counlry and in netic field.
· foreign lalll!s SU&amp;J!est that tltere is a
I'm Ddt convinced that EMFs
nsk, but that the 1~reased number pose a bealth risk, but I'm sulliof cancer cases 10 the groups · ciendy concerned thalllry to miniexposed to EMFs may be due to mize unnecessary exposure. I'd
other factors and not the electro- recommend you do tbt SEJC until
magnetic fields themselves. In we 1aJow mon: abola the real danother words, the fesults of the stud, gers ol EMF
·
ies are inconclusive.
"F.Wy
is a weett
Those who take the current column. To suNail qnesrjnns ~
ex.per!mental data ~nd say that to 1o1m c. Wolf, D.O.. ~ UBithere IS mcreased nsk of C311Cer versit,Y College of OsteoiN!thic
because of EMF exposune may be Medicme 011lSYCIIOr Hall, Atbens,
correct, I'm sure they wiU be glad Ohio 4S70r.

Community calendar

m

Attends seminar

•

KllOCEilllECEIVES NATIONAl llECOCNJTION

The Kroger co. Is proud to be the first
corporate recetp/ent of the
·
Martin Luther King, Jr. Management
Responsibility Award for notable
- contributions In addressing human
neects and the Qua/ltv of life
through social responsibility and
communltv Involvement.

SALUTE TO B~CK HIST)IlY MONTH

'

Merucinc"

•

'

Virginia Shuler, a student in the
nursing assistant program at Meigs
High School, recently :mended a
regional officers leadership trauung
seminar for the Vocational Industrial Clubs of America (VICA) in
Washington, D.C. Shuler is the
regional parliamemarian.
Speakers at the conference
included Steve Denby, Jeff Merick·
el, Stacey Cannon, Harris Cole,
Shane Petree, Adrienne King,
Kristi Wolfe, Tiffany Hayes, ·
Monique Robinson. Senator John
Glenn, and several state and national staff members of VIC A.
Shuler also enjoyed touring the
Lincoln Memorial, Jefferson
Memorial, Iwo Jima Memorial,
Kennedy Center. Vietnam Veteran's Memorial. the White House
and Capitol, the Old Post Office,
LACIE COLMER

1

PROGRAM PRESENTED • Kenny Wiggins rf(:ently presented a recycling program to M.rs. 'Karen Walker's sixth grade science claSs at Salisbury Elementary. The class is responsible for
cleaning up Utter from an area or the school each month. Wiggins
provided the school witb recycling boxes for aluminum cans. Pic··
tured, hr, are Stephen Hysell, Todd Billingsley, Tricia Davis,
Meredith Felts, Tommy Burson, Mall Pavicb, Josh Wilson, Mrs.
Karen Walker. Back row, Kenny Wiggins.

Completes course

•

1o1m C. Wolf, D.O.

into the mailing bag and are sent
back to OVAU The postage is paid
. by OVAL for both ways. There is
no charge tb the reader. The service
is funded jointly by Library Services and Consttuction Act Title I
funds .provided by~ State Library
of Oh1o and the Meigs County Publie Library.
Besides Meigs, the OVAL area
includes public libraries .in the
cilunties of Athens, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Roii!I Scioto
and Vinton Counties ..Oil tnat agency the Meigs County Public
Library is respresented by Wanda
Eblin.
,

.

.. Community Caleadar items cy Medic:al Services.. Re6eSiunents
;: appear two days before u event will be served by the Modem
·and the day of that event. Items Woodmen of American, Burling~ must be received mU in Jidvance ham C.Op. The pulilic is 'urged to
1: to assure publication in the cal- attend.
~• endar.
•
RIPLEY, W.VA. - Liberty
WEDNESDAV
MomuainceB will perfonn Frid3y
• MJDDLEPORT-RcvivalatOld atSkNdandinRipley, W.VL
·Bethel FreewiU Baptist Church will .
LONG BOTIOM - Faith Full
:be through Saturday at 7 p.m. with
' ' R Marv' Marki Rat"'- B h Gospel Church in Long Bouom
'· ev.
!n .
n.
r· urc. - will have preaching and singing
.;er, pastor, mvlles the public.
F 'day 7
·th Da ·d Daile
••
n
a {1-m.WI . ,..
y
"
THURSDAY
and the Dailey Family and other
:: TUPPERS PLAIN~ • Tuppers , !OC!'l sinJen,,~tor Steve:' Rec:d
;;Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will mv1tes the public. Fellowship Will
;meet Thursday at 7:30 p,.m. at the follow.
·:Post home. All ·inembers urged to
REEDSVILLE. _ The Fellow'
ship Chun:b of the Naiareae will
;;attend.
• CHESTER R 1
·
be having a marriage enrichment
- egu ar. meehng, seminar with Rev. Darwin and
.:
: Shade River Lodge No. 453
.:P&amp;AM, Thurday at 7:30 p.m. Jeannie Pressler or the Logan
::Refreshments will be served
Church of tbt Nazarene on Friday
,.
.
•
and SatUfday at 7 p.m. '):he cost
:: ROCK SPRINGS _ Rock . will be $5 .Per couple and will
:'Springs Grange wiD meet Thursday covet both mghiS.
·:at 8 p.m. Members bring an old
SATVRDAY
:j tem for the program.
·
LOTIRIDGE - There will be a
valentine poduck at the Lottridge
·
.; HARRISONVILLE - Har- Community Center on Satwday at
~risonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM 6 p.m. Everyone is welcome.
'!Hill hold a special meeting Thurs- Country music night will be held
day and Feb. 18 at 7:30 p.m. Prac- . from 7 p.m. to midnighL All bands
•i.ice in the master mason degree. are welcome.
i\11 master masons urged to.attend.
~
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
•
' • POMEROY - The Pomeroy a valemine dance at the Old Legion
' i!roup of M will meet Thursday at Hall in Middleport on Saturday
;7 p.m., at Sacred Heart Catholic from 8-11:30 p.m. with music by
,Church. Call 992-5763 for infor- CJ and the Country Gentlemen.
1!f!aoon.
Admission is me and cbildn:n are
"
welcome with adult supervision.
: POMEROY - A valentine social . Brins iofl drinks and refrestunents.
.. :evening will be held Thursday
·,from S-8 p.m. at tbt senior citizens
ATHENS
Old Time
i enter in Pomeroy. Music will be Square/Contra Dance. Satl!fday,
:provided by The Classics. Free Dance Factory in Athens, 8-11 p.m.
llffering will be taken for the musi- Cost is $S per person.
cians. There will be dance, cake
:walks and refreshments. Bring , MIDDLEPORT - The valentine
~freshmenas for the snack table. pany or HojJe Baptist Churcb in
rublic invited.
Middleport will be Salunlay. 6:30
, ::
p.m. Nursery provided. l'lloiOs will
·•
FRIDAY
·. · be taken far SS. Cost of themeal is
:: TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- $6.50 per perSiMt. Proceeds will be
pers Plains VFW Post No. 90S3 used for a new sound system.
• lind ladies Auxiliary wiU spoosor a Reavations MqUeStaL
round and square dance on FricJ4y
rrom 8-11:30 p.m. with music by
FAIRPLAIN. W.VA.- Liberty
i:True Country Ramblers." Every- Mownaincen will perform Saturqne welcome.
·
day at the Jackson County Jam:,
1!oree in Fairplain, W. VL .,
• BURLINGHAM • There will be
1
i meetin&amp; friday al 7 J)JII, at the
WILXI!8¥fU.E - A valonliae
burlingham MOdern Woodman • dinner will be beld at the
J1all to orpoize a Bedford Town- Wilkcsville Pytbila HaU on Satursbip Volunteer Fire Department. day at 4 p.m. COil is $5 for adults
Guest speaker will be Bob Byer, and $2.50 for children. Public
ciiJe®r of Meigs County linlellen- . ,invited.
.
'
• .

lb.
FRESH "SILVER PLATTER"

Assorted Pork Chops

lda!Jo Potatoes

fSOLD IN 10·10.5·LB. PKGS.I

we Gladly
Accept Your
Federal Food
Stamps

Tne Kroger co. was
proud to accept.
Tne King center's
1993 Award If'
honor Of the Re\J.
or. Martin
Lutner King.

ADDITIONAL
QUANTITIES

64-0Z. 99C

REGULAR, HOMESTYLE OR CALCIUM

6-Pak

12-oz. cans
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, DIET COKE, SPf?ITE OR

coca cola Classic

U.S. GRADE A .
WAMPI.ERILONGACRE

Whole Chicken

Pinto Beans

Fryers
.PtiUIJII

WITH ·PRICES LIKE THIS .. .
WHY SHOP ANYWHERE ELSE? •
"·
CONDITIONER OR

.· LUCk'S

J

suave ·
Shampoo

•

11-16-0Z.

SA~E $1.90 L/3.
•

I

GENUINE

... - -

~- (' ..... •;p """"""'···

'

· - · - · · ... • ·

4

...

.

..--• . • 4 .

't &amp; -•fo' ....

i

..,_

~--

'.4...

\

·~;;

... '.

�PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

,
,

2 unR aonLES

STORE HOURS ·
Monday thru Sunday

-'·

.
.,

._.

Vakntlfte Special

.89(

8 AM-10 PM

•,

15 Sessions '15
Plus FREE llottla 'of

.·

...

.• •

To place an ad

::.

I

I

I

}

GRADE A WHOLE

'

.

KIT~HEN PRIDE

'.
'
'••
r

•

USDA CHOICE .

$ 99

BEEF

Chuck Steak............... 1
$ 99
Ribeye Steak. . . . . . . . ta. 4
~LICED
$ 169
- ~-= 'f, Pork Lotn...............Ls.
·
9
.
(
6
'.

...
~ &lt;!

.•
i'

·

.

•

lb.

•

.

DEL MONTE

.

I

.

·

;~
:

. OLE ·sourHERN PATIIES

Sausage......................

_ $2·39
3-lb. &amp;ox -· ·

La.

POLICI~
• Acta ou&amp;lide d. couaty your ad ,.....
he prepaW
• a...... di.cotiDl for .... piid ill ach·aDCe.
• r... ~. c;.....1 ud r......t""" •...- IS""""' will 1oo
I'UD 3 da)'l at II!)_claarp.
·
• Prioe ol..tl... all ca~ lo-.o u do""lo price olod ...,
• 7 joeiDllioo typo oolr- •
• SeatiDelil 'DOl ...,....w.. ror errora after fira&amp; day (check
forem&gt;n llntdoy ad .... Ia popor). CaDhefore2&lt;00 p:•.

••t

. Happy Aclt

Ia M - ··

1 card of Tttanks

Yonl S"'-.

• A claulttod o d - t placod Ia tiM CaWpolio Dolly
Tril&gt;- (acopt Ct...il'tod Duplay; a....... C..d or i.pl
NotiCOo) willaloo appoor lo tiM Polal l'louaal B.ptor add
tiM Dolly Seollaol, readU"' 0... 18,000 t.o-

•

.

Chuii/UHl pCige• cower the
foa-ing telephone esclaang~...

••

.••

G.Wa County Melp Collllty Muon Co., WV ·
Areo Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

•

:
•'

446-Gollpalio . 992-Mioldloporll
367~ne.hfN

.•
.
.,

6 PAK

$139

USDA CHOICE ~ONELESS . BEEF

61~-..

458. Looo

Po.-ePDf

S88-"Vlaloa ·
245-lllot G....le
256-G.,.. 111ot.
64lh4nllio l1lot.
379-ll'al-

98&amp; 0

S7f&gt;.Applo Gro..

ar

77S-M143-Portloa•
247-l.lton Falla ' 882-N..., a •••
895-Let.art
949-Roelao
937-Bodl'olo
742-Rod•••
667-Caohllle

· ~--------~~------~

:••
1

'

:

• .

.

HUNT'S

· W1e ers ·

12 oz.

- -

:t

$

VALLEY BELL

$1
Cheez·ats. . . . . . . . . . . .1o oz.

SUNSHINE •

,

$ ·179

MIRACLE WHIP

Salad
Dressin
---

oz.

Fried Chicken. . . . .24 oz.
MORTON •

· .

TV D1nners........a.s-1o oz.

I

Good Only Ai Powall'a SUP* Yalua

Offar Good Fab. 7 thlu Fab. 13, 1113
1 P.r cuatomar

Good
Ollar

0

AI Powtll'a SUper Value
1'111. 7 thru Feb. 13, 1113

cuatom.-

)

'1

.

I

Bob &amp; Gay Ann Burke,
Jerry &amp; Joyce Burke
&amp; Teraaa Burlta.
&amp; Greatt:l,
Grandchlldran

. FIREWOOD FOR SALE
6-26-'t2~fn

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
ILL MAlES
Iring _It In Or Wa
Pick !IP.

.

. 915·3561

,,,.,, ........ OlflW

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER
WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK ·
Clld LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

2-3-83· .

WOLFE &amp;
ASSOCIATES
ACCOUNTING
-Income Tax Preparatitn
'llookkHping
·
•Payroll
SERVING INDIVIDUALS
~nd BUSINESSES

113\', W. SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 011. 45769

l•••r••c•)

992-6193

992·2259
REDU&lt;;EDI Spacious iog hom'o with 2208 sq. It 3 '
bedrooms, 2 baths, ceiling fans, built in shelving/cabinets,
largo wrap around porch , nowor heat ptJmp, 3 1/2 acres,

• I

2 oulbuildings . Many unique features! Now reduced to

S77.SOO
.

NEW USnNG- Spectacular contemporary homo with 3
bedrooms , 2 baths, sun porch , decking , appliances,
firaplaea •.60+0cres, swimming pond, lis~ pond, shod and
e•tra cab1n $98,000

205 North Second Ava.

Middleport, OH

aparrnents upllalra, haa great rental potential and you
could put your own buaineu In down1talr1 . Building ha1

NEW LISTING· Bolhon Rd. - 81/2 acmswith 1978 12 X
65 mobile homo and olcior house, includes 2 septic
systems, TPC water, FAN.G. and·B.B. heat $23,000

CHESTER ~ sum- Rold - A great lillie gat away or
aWter home. Haa 2 bedrooma, 1 ball!, fuel oil·furnace.
· Horne on ....,"''· 34 ocr81.
112,100

paVjld Rd. $7,500-1988 24 X52 Mai1Uiactut9d homo now

a new roof, lralhly painted and decorated. Ha1 3 loll.
Wu $-42,000.
Now 131,100

LAUREL CLIFF- 1+ acre utilities on site LCD water,
on lot 3 bedrOoms, 2 baths , newer heal 'pump,
appliances, CiA, fireplace skirting, steps , (like new1.
$29,900. Package logethor 1o make a perlact homesite! ·

.fAIRVIEW IUIIIIVIIION ·Crew Rood -A large Ill
1o1 witlt a Barringtoo dQ&amp;Iblewide, sitting on 1 fuN
baHIMnl Home haa U bildlocwn&amp;, dining 100111, family
roOm. lnd ~llld pocl, back deck.
much morv. · .
......1,000.

MIDDLEPORT- Commercial building fully rented apts.
upalairs , business downstairs. Some newer remodeling
has been completed. Good location, good monthly
incomel $53,000
'
•

RUTLAND - llhln .llrHI - A large 2 alOry 10 room
hou11 will one ball! 11/ld 1 lillie over II ICIIIi ol_ground.
Aloo hal a 24x30 melol mor10n b!"lclng.
ae,ooo

RUTLAND- Brlclc. St. • 1 floor lramo home 2 bedrooms,
one car garage, fruit trees, garden space, appliances.
$19,900
'

IIIDDLIPORT - II JOU Wlllll privacy near 1DWn with a
grlllll .... , _ ... how "" pltoce for you. On lhla 6.
IICIIII you buld your q.om home. Thera Ia water
and......., ..... I~ .
.
.17,100.

1112·2258- THE NUMBER TO KNOW WHEN

sm

n

YO~·RE

BUYING OR 'SElUNG A HOME I EXPERIENCED AND
REAllY TO SERVE YOUR NEEDSI
'

I

HENRY E. CLELAN0.............................. 892-8191
TRACY BRINAOER................................U8-2438
JEAN TRUB8ELL ................................:.848·25eQ...
KATHY CLELAN0....................:..............882-8111
OFFICE.......................,............................882·2258

~

"

·&lt;'

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.~. • Agent

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio .45760
(6141 843·5264 112o/9311fn

USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30.92-tfn

YOUNG'S

'

CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room AdciUono
-Gullo&lt; Work

-l:leclrie~~l ond Plumbing
-&amp;oling
-Interior &amp; Exterior .
'
Painti~
(FREE TIMATES)

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
·
Room ~ddltlons • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
. FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2801. 949·2160
or 985·3139

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

INo Sunday.Collsl

IMPA0VE YOUR
MORTGAGE
SITUATION.
REDUCE
AND/OR
CONSOLIDATE:
NEW LOANS
ALSO.

POOR BOY TIRES

614-992-7523

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!

. 2112192/lfn

9·10.92-tfn

ALIGNMENT - 4 wheel

Dual bhaust with Gloss Pocks

$109.95 +Tax
Computer lal•dng • Struts, Shocks,

Cambor Brushing
f

I .

.

'

Check our Price or We Both Lose
Jill LOCATION TO SEm YOU IEMI H!-1 mo

(3041 773-5533

ASK FOR CHRIS

~

PERSC:lNAL
CARE.
BECAUSE
WE CARE.

Snodgrass Upholstery
"Helping You To ,Recover Your ln.vestmenf' .
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office !)eating

992-5858
696-1290 '

RACINE, OHIO
614·949·2202
6 ._ ......._.

2·9-93

MANnS nLURS DIAUR
YARDMAN RIDING MOWBI
YARDMAN PUSH MOWER

2C;do '""' 4Cyle
E&lt;HO TRIMMERS &amp; SAWS
SALES AND SERVICE
Porto ond Service lor 11
makH and modal• of
tractor• and farm
~qulpment.

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT .,
RUTLAND, OH. ;
742·2455

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES
,,
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1

FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32

..

HAULING

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

OFFICE 992·2886

--..

Call 614·992·
6637

· Real Estate General

General '

.·' -------~~~~~--------:

I

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

~------~------~

•

.· $990

·

316190/tfn

(Abowo Jail w.·roor

Qualig
Stone o.

St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
217 E. Secontl St.
. POMEROY, OHIO

¢$fJAYMAR

JeH Wickersham

.AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT · INSURANCE COMPANY

H·92·tfn

614-742-2138
1·11-'113

Real

RACINE - A commercial ·2 story brtcl&lt; building with 4

1
1

AHklen1t11 • Commerclll
FrMEallmlt•

'

(
69

99(
~n~

Fertilizing, W-ing, and
Seeding.
Shrub 1111d Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

••• _ _....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ !
;.

--.. BULK SLICED
-----,•
SHOPPERS VALU
II
BACON
GRf!ULATED SUGAR !l 10 LB. PACKAGE
..
4Lis. ~~

.2/s 1

.''

·.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
741-2160
. •NewHo•s
2/il/93
•Garas••
•Comp ete
KEVIN'S lAWN . . Remotleliag
MAINTENANCE
Stol. &amp; c_;zare
F EEES
ES
949·2398 or
985·4-73
1·800·837·1460
Lawn Mowing,
667·6179 .

446·9545

.

•,

10 LB. PACKAGE

159

Schutttlaa,

Meigs &amp; Mason Ct&gt;unties
get a Special Surprise!
Reservations Encouraged

...

189

·$

STARKIST TUNA
6.soz.
·
CANS
Good Only
Offer Good
Limit

OWNER:

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUG E ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAl

.

Topping, Trimming,
R8moval
Reasonable Rates
Full Insured

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

·:

2 $1

Sadly mined by
.Joyce &amp; John

1·26-83

F&amp;A mE S.EIIYICE

992·7553

Fab.9,1992
Gone, but not

Bring Your Valentine on
· Saturday, Feb. 13 and
Join
for A
Grand Evening.

..

•.

. 949·2826

Ago,

Us

'

GOOD UNTIL fEI. 20

Who Lift tla Ona VIII

57-59 Court St., Gallipolis

•

:·

lim~ 2 Per Customer

In Memory Of Our
Beloved Mother and
Grandmother
VIRGINIA S. BURKE

OSCAR'S

.''

2R%
.
Milk
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
gal.
·G ADE A
.
, G.ROUND
Large E·ggs. . . . . . . . . . doL 69
BEEF
MORTON

lwttfhurt lptlial
14 SESSIONS- 114

REASONABLE RAJES ,

In Memory

forgotten.

10.75 oz.

2. s1

2

..::sioo

NOODLE SOU

Lettuce. _. . . . ._. . Joead

'

.,•

CHICKEN

v

Good Only At Powtll'a Super Value ·
Off.- Good Feb. 71hru Fib. 13, 1993
Limit 2 .P..- Cuatorner

BAND BOOSTERS
CHILl DINNER
Thursday, Feb. 11. 4:00-?
Meigs High School Cafeteria
. ChiiWegetable,
Soop/Combread/Crackers
Dessert &amp; Drink

CAMPBELL'S

t.., ••• ~ ...... .. ,

\

•' •

•'

SM~H~
(!) ~
,-

.•

PUBliCATION

••

79(

•

\

'.
:·
..

460Z.

,
•

The Family 01
CAROlYN K. lll'TLE
Wishes to express
sincere gratHude to all
our relatives, friends
and neighbors who
wer9 so supportive
during our time of
grief.
A special thanks to
Rev. James Keesee
and to the Middleport
Community
Association for their
kitldness during our
loss. Also the third
floor staff at Holzer
Medical Center.
Your prayers, thOughts
and friendship was
greatly appreciated.
Sadly missed by
husband. Sidney
Little, daughters ·and
grandchildren

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

TOMATO
JUICE

~~ BAL~RD'S BOLOGNA or

lashan Rd., Racine

,

In Loving Mamosy Of _
JOHN COLWELL
On His Birthday
Feb. 10, 1927
who passed away
Jan. 17. 1992
Sadly missed and
remembered by 111Wa,
Catharine, sons Frank
and Pam, Dean and
Alina, Daughters, Ann
and Paul, Masy and
Robin, and tan
randchildren

CLOSED SuNDAY

••t

,

JUICE
.DRINKS

Call992-2156.

CoN of TlooaU

'

SQUEEZ·ITS

In Memory

day afaer puWjcat.ioa to ·~ cornelia•
• Ad. tlaat
be paid la M•aae."are:

280Z~

61b. box ·

2

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - S.u.S-12

.
·
.
.
39(
SQUEEZE
Chicken Par.fs...........•......lb~ .
CATSUP
.(
Frying Chicken..............~. 69
89(
$ 39
3
Shced Bac.on.........

MIXED FRYER

.

'

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

.

~529
..

··The Area's Number l
Marketplace

..•:
•
.....

24 PAK 12 OZ.

I
I.

. 992-3470

Gootl Through fehruary

RCCOLA
PROD

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
.- PRICES GOOD SUN., FE 7 THRU FEB. 13, 1993
.·

.

SIZED LIMESTONE

949·2823

POMEROY, OH.

GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

Pomeroy, Ohio

· · lotion

298 SECOND SJ•

..••

UCINE GUN
CLUB

CALIFORNIA WICK'S
SERVICE
TANS
36970 Ball Run Road

HAULING .
LOG HAULING,
LUMBER, or
FLATBED WORK
In State or Out
Of State.

EXCAVATING
(614)

PHONI: Patty or Ray Pickens
Home: 915-4231 or Patty's

TROLLEY STATION CRAFTS

TRUCKING
9

992·2549

HO U RS.
·.

Su n dav · Monday - C losed
Tuesaay · Wel':lnesaay · Friday - 9 : 30 a.m .. 5:3 0 P.m .

Th u rs day· Sa t ur day - 10 :00 a.m .. 3 :0 0- l' . m .

104 Mulbr.r ry A vtJnllf'
Pomerov . OH 4b769

(614) 992·5449

D. A. BOSTON

(2) With S.war (3) Aad Wtllar

S &amp;L

'"•• HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a load
Delivered.

•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

HELP THE EFFORT TO IUILD A PROSPEROUS
FUTURE FOR MEIGS COUNTY
HUP US IN OUR ~TTfMPT TO GET INDUSTRY FOR
MEIGS COUNTY
WANTED: 5 lo 6 ACRES Of RELATIVELY flAT LAND:
(I) No - • thaa 6ft. v.,..ce a altvatloe

1127/IIJ

HOWARD
, EXCAVATING
BULUDOZER,BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TFWLER SITES.
LANDCLEARING,
· DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE·TRUCKING

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

. ll&amp;rlzl1

I&amp;C IICAV.TING
BULLDOZING
PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; &amp;EWER
UNES
BASEMiNTS&amp;
HOME lUTES
HAUUNG: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSEO and BONDED

••• 614·992-5591

Guaranteed Scholarship Money
·for all coll,ge bound students.
.

'

• regardless ol Income
• regardless ol grades
'plus $20k guaranteed loan
• regardless ot.credft
To collect your scholarship money
call 614·985-3556
Open Mon.-Fri. 10.7 or Sat. 11).4
1•11 _ , . . .

�Page-12-The

Dally

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

42

~ Wanted

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Wednesday, February

•

to Rent

71

' KIT 'N' CARLYLE® b~ Larry Wright

Wednesday, February

10, 1993

...

Autos for 5818

1

o, 1993

The

Ohio

Al..LEYOOP

The World AJmanac:" Cro••word PuDie

BRIDGE

1 W0H0ER WIIAT OL' GUZ 15
OOING? I THIN!' I'LL GO IN1l)
TH' CAPITAL fJoH SEE!

ACROSS
11naect
4 S.ndtorth
8 Flower to ba

PHILLIP
ALDER .

2bt On Bob llcComloll Rood,
GIHipolle. 114-44e..H.

uw-·a
prment

r.1crchJndiSC

13 CIIJ In

Ftorld1
14 Collection ol
·. tecto
15 Tra._rant
17 lllaclllttvoua

1;,1nounccments

3.

Fumw.J, 2 IH' 3bdnn., tor ...W
In Counlry llollllo Pottc. -hor/
dryer, .~lr;}- mon., 814-HZ-

Announcements

2117. I

LIVE CHATUNE t-'1110-3301
Ex\. 1114t. n .01 , . 111n. -

W22I

51

HousehOld

1811 Fofd Eecort. 4dr.• 1.1 1fto: :
...... !lo~ndord 1rono., low .'

Goods

mll•g~~,

OArPtt. ooffM
lobtoiiM~...t coinblnatlon,
TV,
'71-1111
2

b

I

00111 . . . . . .

2 lodroorna a 1 lad""'"'
lloblto Homll, No Potl,
Rolotonca Aoqulrod. 114-711'
4345.
Own tar .... tl)an Nntl Nl'w 2 or '
. 3bclrmo. lor only 11'1Z.M por vt'AA FURNITURE AND Ill'·
PUANCU
month. lncludoo okh11ng, 11dollwoty • oot up. "HOO•e 711'1. 114-448-4421 OR 114-440-StSI
Ent-nmont cantor'o 114t Or
'TWo
- -porch.
· 1\imun- $5.152 Wtek; I aokiMIY• ltll't·
fumlahed,
prd, A~1orcondition, New HlivM, 3CM 112·2411 tng 12U5~ Roell'*" ~IIIL'!&lt;&gt;fw
an,tlme.
"I finally realize what my wife's collection of
=..c~:., '::, lEnd-~
'TWo
mobile hOfnll 14K70 2 bodknickknacks is good for : .. skeet shooting'"
Dooro Slllll
With 1
rooma, Galllpollo ~.-.y. ,..10 3 Chllr11 (All
~)i WMhlr8,
1----------r---------~ bedroom
Pl. Pll.
All -.. 304-J'T.I.
$2110.
1
2--,,..-..,...-,..-:--:'"--====Pupploo, 1. Fomale, 1'14-311~.mo $100.
dopool

Bo11 Yrw. Unla1ar Co. (102) 131·
0111.
PIYCHCS TELL YOUR FUlURE
Cll1 ~~ En 11101
$1.01 ..... llln. 111101 8o tl Yrw.
Unlour eo. (6021131-5.
REDUCE; Bum lllflal while you
aloap. Tako OPAL. ovalloblo a1
FNih Phlrmlcy.
To Wllorn M llay eon.,.,.,
Thank. You FO&lt; Aoturnlng Our
Dog, Candy. Robyn l Roblllo.
4
Giveaway
8324.

11

3 bllck • whlto jiupploo. 114MI-21123.

LPN, PH
.
B-s~~l:e. rna.., 10 montha okl,
luH
limo
pooltlon
wllh
loeol
814-012-31117.
•
phyolclono oftlco. Prolor ox.n.nce. s.nd I'MUIM to 801
=~:Jt"• pinto • q-.. 304- t-5 .,. ol Point Ptuunt
Aegilter, 200 ... In It, Point
,.._nt, WV 21110.

Froo Pupploo: 114 441 11121.
Froo Puppl11: llolhat -Hiaky,
•.
R;f:lonlotFalhat, · Tnvollng - - . n , Soonluyl
:30pm.,
Some Wfth lluo Eyoo. IM-311- 35h.-..r., Y.F, 1:
f7VO.
llolgo
COURIJ Chamber ol COmmerce,
2110
Eul
Sooond
Stroot,
cat Fornolo, opopd,
declaw.d,
trained.
Pretty, Pomalow, Oh. Dlldllno tor 0 "'
loving, ~~~~·· Excellent com- plicot~ wlll bo February 11,
panion. Clulot. To good homo.
""'
.
30447W135.
llytlet Wanllld, For Buay Salon.
otd Junk TNck No' IloilO', 114- Hourly _ Wogo UJ&gt; To ~ A

---to:
Week: Clrol.l14 4411122:.

25e-11De.

THE PAMPERED CHEF
EARN GREAT$ U

Loll&amp; Founct

6

Homes for Sale

Why pay ront whon you cart Or 4 111110 Out ,.1 Dn Lincoln
own a 1113 1417D Redman wfllf Pilla.
CLOSING COSTS PAID IV 5 yMr warranlly, Itt~. ·aldnlng,
~ELLER, Cedar Ranch, 3bdrm., dellvtNd and utup for $105mo. •No Dopooll Oil -2.ow;,;
2 baths, eunken living room, can lor lnlormodon, 614-JIS. Nothing E.,., Pr11D~IInld.
·
hardwood floore In dlnl~ room 11121 au·for Branda.
COUNTRY . FURNITURE AND
and entryWiy, 2 car detached
'
· CRAm
ga111ge, hHt pump, on 40 acres,
Wo Buy And Soli Good Uood
44
O.rwln are1, $85,500, 1.fi14-898Apartment
Fumlture. me Slate Route 14'1,
U38 a~er 6pm.
114-ol4&amp;-,.22.
for Rent
Houst tor salt With 7 roame, 2
0000 USED . /ll'PLIANCES
tun batht:, llrepll,ce, .new Lenoll 1 lodroom Apo~mont. 1171/llo, Wa~do
Y!I!'O. r-'-'--"!!t
heat pwnp, 2 cer garage, brick Ph• Utlllt._, Country Selling,
,.,piiov-•• 18
Irani w/alumn alclng,. 100x200 ft 10 Mlnutoo From Oolllpollo, 114tot, 304~2-3287 after 4;30 PM.
441.0140.
1 lA oponmont In Point
LAYNE~8 f:URNITURE ~2
Mobile Homes
.
P l - . Oulot,_ Jlllvoto, good r-..a...• home luma.hlnge,
nolghbod ood. 112110 por month. _,.,....
..tor Sale
114 441 OMI or 3044'11-11180.
:J2':'~
t:"lo~lle Ad.
$152.17 por month lncludl~ olx
FrM Detlvlry.
mOfltha Ire• ~t ren~, new 1 x70, 2 """" · ~apartment.
IJtiiMioo
&lt;lumlohod.
111110.
por
delivered and ael up, skirting
month. 1200 Ohio Bt. 304-175ond otopo, 1-8110-137-5625.

5'1011.

12 monlho FREE lot ronll Now

PICKENS FURNITURE
NIWIUtlld
HouMhold · lumlahlng. 1tz mi.

JOI!Ioho Ad. Pt. Pleaoont, WY,

call304-471·14110.
R. &amp; 8. FumituN. New. uMd, an-

Dola&lt;mlno YCI4!r Own Hro, NO
GIMMICKS.

1159 12x55 trailer, llrlppod out,
good tor •ltoragl or workshop,
Col RITUft01 4:00
$4.50, cell 114-"982-34'N belore
114-~33(COLL!CT)
8pm.
Loot: llalo Pigmy -~ O.J. Wonlod: Ca~n1, Oonlloc Middle •1173 Forroot Park 12d5L~ BoctWhMo RoodAroo, ~,.._-. ~ Woman To Care I"Or A 3 roomt. wa, Total taeetrlc.
MOnth Old Baby On A Pan-Timo St.Rt211, 2·11.2 Ac:re1 MIL 114Yard Sale
Boola, Wllkdayo Only. 614-441- 2!51-51112, 11'-31'1-21118.
7
0418.
1t111 2 BR, 2 botho, 1bl5, all
Women: Make more money! eleclrlc, $5,100; Hou. l Lol In
Froo olghl -Job P'•parotlon Crown Chy, ttz,ooo. 814-441·1511.
Gallipolis
progr1m aboul nontraditional
omptoymont, . (ONOW), 1-aoG- 1988 Skyline Holly Ridge ,.,70,
&amp; VIcinity
Ill aile, 2 IMC:trooml!l, AJC,
e3U508.
covered porch, kitchen laland,
·ALL Yord Soleo Muot 8o Paid In
alor1ge bldg, "nclerpennlng,
Business
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:0G p.m. 14
llkl new, 304-175-2414.
tho day boforo tho ad Ia to run.
Training
1890
Falrmom Fantaey, 14x80. 3
Sunday odlllon • 2:0G p.m.
Friday. - y odlllon • 2:0G R•r111n
Now!ltSouthenlllfn bedroomt. 2 batht, garden tub,
114·149~.m . 9aturdly.
lualn- College, Spring VIIIIV brand new he•t. pump,
.
.
Plaza. can Todliy, 614-446-4367fl 21105.
8
PUblic Sale
Rog.-12741.
11t0 Spruce Ridge, 3brdm., 1
112 bath, heat pump, stove,
&amp; Auction
refrigerator, all· elaclrlc, $14,!100;
18 Wanted to Do
6'14·843-5373 or 114-192-6647.
Rick Pooroon Auction CO&lt;npony,
tu11 time auctlanMr, complete CNA will care fof eldtrty In thllr
audkm ••~~··
Uc.ruMd home. have rtltrencH and ••·
,..,Ohio • WMt Ylrglnla, 304- porlonca, l,.·lm-3257.
773-5785.
E&amp;A TREE SERVICE: Topping,
Trimming, TrM Removal, Hlldg1
9 Wanted to Buy
Trimming. Fr• Eltlmateal lf4- 8.6% fixed rate mobile home
llnanclng available. Call 1-aoo.
311l'TI5TAft• 4p.m.
Throw Away Your Unw~~n­
486·7011 tor appointment.
.
ted .Walhen &amp; Dry.,., Tum OIOrgN Portable Sawmill don't
FanlutiC
Buy!
New
70x14,
Them Into caoh, Coli IM-oW&amp;- haul y - loQo to tho min Just
3bclrm., lnclucllngHilllvery, Ht
call 104-175-1117.
8058.
up, aklnlng l otopo, 117M7 por
J a D'o Auto Porto and Solvogo, Hove YICincy tor oldorly, monthL1yr. FREE 101 ront, 1-aQO.
~aeonable rll.tl .. •Home away
488·71n.
trucko. from
holM'\ 114-149-227&amp;.
Looking For A 0..11 Contldtr A
· Wllntod To . luy: JLW\k Autoo Mise Paula'• Dly Care' Center 1 Pr..OWMd Mobile Home, Large
Block Weat 01 HMC on Jackaon S.l.etlon, Low Money Down.
With
Or Wlholll
- - · ·Coli Plko
M·F I A.M. -5:30 P.M. It FrM S..~Up And O.llvtry. 1-IOOLMrJ Llvoly.
IM-3811-1303.
Dualhy And Exporionco lo no S89.S1'10,
Top Prtcoo Paid: All Old U.S. 11 COnctm For Your Child's
CotM, Gold Ringo Sll- Colno, Care. CAll U1 For A Visit. Infant Mutt Hcrlfice, 1993 14x70 Red·
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop, fToddl•ra 614-448-6227. Pr••· man whh 5 year warranty, lndttlvary, IIIU~ 1t1p1
111 second A-uo, Oolllpollo.
chooloro /School Ago 614-446- cludll
and aklrtlng, $18!mo. ~.;all 61...,
8224.
Wanted to buy: uood mobile
38.5·2434 asl for Mlkl!l.
h0fnii, 814-44Ul71
Ordained mlnllttr tplul Mattera Nashua Mx70 Expando, 3 Bed~
IMarM In counHIIng) Mlkl loWllntod: 22 Callbor· Pump &amp; car p.11810r1te. Bend contldentlal roome, ·Bath 1 V2, Garden Tub,
....,.r Acllon Rlfloo, 12 6 410 Inquiry to PO Boa 140, New Fireplace, .Front Deck, 014·24511073, 8t4·245-8234.
.
Go- Pump Sholguno, Solid H.lven, WY 25215.
Or Vont Alb Modale Only. Ouno
2 Bedroom Mobil• Home
tm And 0111or, 114-441-1122, • OU.tity cleaning Hrvk:e, com- Nice
mercllll and raidentlal, call And Corner Lal, Porter Area For
P.ll. Or Lata~.
Solo. 114-38H028, Or 114·245Adam, 014-012-11141.
8244.
Wa~ to b"f I pair of white
gMM;_also 'Minll hMvy t.yera; R•paMible
t•neger
will
114-112~5042.
·
bebYatl on· wMkend• and Land /Home D•velopmot, Ea..
wooknighto, 114-012·3257.
· 1M Home C.nler Will Show You
Howl Your New Sinal• 1 Or
Double Well, Septic, Fauitcla~
Employment Services

Don,

==Junk care l

comp~~ny.

llqUIII. HouNhold tumlahlngs.

Elllcle101y apartment, Mulberry
Avenue, Pomoooy, 814-1112-5111.
Oroolouo living. 1 and 2 bodroom apartminta 1t Vlllaa•
Manor

1nd

RlnniCia

"""~"""" In lllddlepon. From

111111. Coli 114-1112-5850. EOH.

Newly romodolod apto, now '~"·
ptllncoo~OI otxth Sl, dopooll
required, 304-675-1'131 inor
5:0G, doyo llS-5131.
Coinpletly . FumiaMd

SMall

-

130Gimo. + IJIIIHin. No
PolO. COli Boforo 7 P.ll. 114-446-

0S3ol.

Con!plotly Fumlohod

moblo

~.. rlvor. No Polo,

a . 814-

M11on, WV. 304-773-5341.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
Olivo SC.. Gltllpollo. Now &amp; Ulld
futnhure, hMt.,., Wntern a
Woril - ·· 014-ue-3tS9.
WNrPGGI · t.a., du1y washer
wat t150. cut to 195.00, Meytag
wathlr huvy duty wa• S15d".
cute lo SIS.OO, Kenmore Dryer
$75.00 WHtamhout (tryer
$150,0G
OUt
IO • 195.00
Retrlpator 1lmond lllct new
$250. Kenmore ralrlgarator frost
froo $175. 00 oulo IO $150.00, 30
In' tiKtrtc r1ng1 whha $85.00,
381n' goo rongo $0.00 Ska,,go

Appollonooo 71 Ylno Sl- f4·
448·73H or t-100-411-34H

1

1 mU1 below town over·

I " - trM. ~trator1 ta
chooM '"""'$121 to $171i alea 1
lklllaldl door aoppertone with
leo and· - r dloponoor 1171;

Want to: •
PIN aownEXTRA

CA8H?!t
'

16 AcrM Mort Or List, Nonh
Gallla High Schoot Area,
Utllltl•
Av•lla.,._,
Owrwr
f;lnanclng, 114-381-IIH.

Business
21
AVON I All Arooo I Shlrloy
Opportunity
'-'"· 304-e75-1421.
!NOTICE!
Cl)elo Gilley And Cllppor
LDung~~: under new ownert1. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Now 1\lring: cocktail wallr....., recomrnenda llilt yo" do buslwaltrM..., line cooke, holiteaa. n... with peol* you know1 and
NOT to aMd money througn the
No~ CillO. Apply In poroon
trom z.ep.m. 571 St•t• ROute 7. mall unlll you hive ln11ea1Tgated
tho otlao1ft9.
Glltlpollo.
Llko docorotlng I oowlng?
NomoHoonhAido
HOlM HMtth AkM WantH Far M1M ... Y $24,000. year. Work

11&amp;1-411'1 fO&lt; lion lntormatlon.
LAW ENFORCEMENT DEA, U.S.
IIARSHAU'S Hiring. No
Eapo- - - r y. FOr ""'
oticotlon Information can :n•
· ~5UM!,_!xt. OH155 ea.m. To
lp.m. 7 uoyo.

No £xperl•ncel f$00 To $800

WeeklY /Polentlal Proc. .lng
FHA - - Rotundo. Own
1-101·111 Eal.213.

Entire

buslnHI,

Rentals

tl"'lnlriG 11,700. Huntington 304-

523-5172.

AOUie:

R_e cnslon

proof r,u.a,.... wtlh • study
caoh lncomo. 1-800-4153-1353.

41 Housea 1or Rem

VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich

1 lodroom In Rio
Orond~1 Acrooa From Unlvorally,e...- 4 8 .
3 bedroom t.ou., Pomeroy,
12501 rnllr)., dopooM &amp; r - cee required, no pelt, ·~·

Ouk:k? No Wayl But W• Have A
Coocl, St.. ch', AHonlable, Butin... Won'{ Latl. hiOD-284·

Yond.

ICIEHTIIT

.tot.JCATOR FIW
Prajoo4
Dl-r
lkMith
~ Content ap..loliot In
Tho Phyolcol lcloncao Noodod
For A Bclonco Education
- . , . Loodorohlp Team. Ph. D.
In P.h~c• Or Chemistry Pr•f•
rod. Appllcollon Doodllno •
follrUI'Y 21• 1113. Addrooo tnAnd•oq- -lcodon
From: David Todt,
fhgl ,... Cootd-k\elot, '':l!.ct
Dllliacwery,
nee
-·~•
untwwo~ty, Portomouth,
OH
~303 (1,.1 315-223t.
4

=

-ory • R-ptlonlollor low
- · Clood - - - o!dllo ,.
""""' - · dlctOIIon, ~-·
- ... H-1,
care
Pe. Pll. .rc.
R.gl•~!~ 200 Main
It, Point P-nt, wv 25550.
IOOKKEEPER
•clliTAAYI
orontod to WIO'k ot tho Oavln
PoWer Pe.nt tor • natloMI c..,.
llrucllon firm. DutiH will tn~
elude p~Y,ro_ II, eom• AlP, and
01Nr oHic. rtlated ckiiiM: Muet
~ typing and tiNHoy

.-ilia whh - - oxportonoo
1101!11 .......... contlll
Rial! 11 1-IOO-t2UOI2 lor fur·
thor dolollo. EDE.

am.

Real Estate

~

3 Bodroomo, 2 Botha, Full Cor·
pol, lioctrlc Hoot lnground
llwlmmlng Pool, WhMo Rood,
Gllllpollo. 814-4414755.
3 Bedroom Hom~&gt; In ChMhlre,
Ou
Hoot,
W-"'"'·
$300/Uo .. UOO DopooM. 114-448·
1715.
Lovely 7 Room H - For Bolo
Or R1nt, loti ot Room, For

31 Homes for Sale
1111 Sq. Ft., .11 acre lot, 2xl

waite, 2 oomptltt bathe. clnlng
room.llvtna room. 3bdrm., walk·

In c'-•· lully carpeted, 2 porchla. .,_.rta haat, AC stO'ola,
retr~awator, M.,._wired, Home
Nat'raank, Racine, OH. ·B14·14i-

2210.

!!ION lnlarm.tlon, 114-441~3'1.

Choohlro: 3 IR1 .,1·112 both,
hardwood tloon Ml buement,

Rio Orondo, 3 BA, 1·112 bolh,
$4SO/mo. Dopootl roqulrod. 114-

carport;

1ldlng,

53

Antiques
ca•1110 Convonablo,

1m
12.000. 1~318.
Antiquo bedroom ouHo, In·
Ml llzo lload • toot
boorda. bod frame, ma«rno &amp;
box aprtng1, ctteet of drawer~,
=~~~'f~nd mlrtow, $300.
Buy ,.. ooll. Alvorlno Antlquoo,

112"4 E. Main StrHI, · on At. 124,

56

441-4222 d1y1, 441.Znl •ve'e.

CA, natur11 (las

h"'!', co~J 147,000. 114-3117-7178

42 Mobile Homaa

Dr441-31:R.

tor Rent
Clly Schoolo, Now Homo, Iaing
c-ptotod, 3 Lorga lodrooma,
W.lfl~n c - . 2 Full Bothe,
111 u- homo -··-JI'O!I!.~
Dining, Family, Ullllty Roi&gt;m,. 12 moroho FREE LOr
==~lilting
....112.17, 1•
Largo Kllchon, Oak Coblnoto,

R""'·

lieat Pump, 2 Ctr Garage, Deck,
Large Corner! Fl•t Lot, Concret:e
Drive. By Bui dtf, 814~41-8038.

2 &amp; 2 lodr_,o, Nllr N.O.H.I.
StO..~ Frldao. Wotor, Trooh
Pold1
&amp; Dopoolt, 114-

!'_._..,.....

*-·

Ortam Home! Anlahld drywall
modular, over 1100 aq.n.,

2 lodr-. All Elootrlo,
Khchon Furilnlohod 1 12711/llo.
Soo At: 211 cantor Strool1 er-n
CI1Y, friday, February o, JH3,

3bdrm., 2 bath. morning room •
fam ily room. Tum key nnancing
available. 1·800·466-7671. .

GOVERNMENT HOMES From $1
(U Ropalrl. Dollnquont Tax

1.......7011i.
2

Property. Reponaalllont. Your

led,._.,

On RCMA1 211.

l l a - Aroo, A - a I

Aroo (1)' 805-162-8000 Ext. GH-

Dopooft, IM-ol4&amp;-11111.

10181 f:Or Cu"enl Aepo Lltt. .

I

·

· .

.

nlng doga, 110, 11~·~·
Fish Tenk, 2413 Jacbon Ave.

54 Miscellaneous

Sollti

BARNEY
'·3UGHAf0 II
) mIN HERE
'THIS VERY
.. MINUTE--

Merchandise
Point Plollont, :J04.0711-2013,
2 bath vanltlet, blthtub, com· tull dna Tropical floh blrdo,
mode, oak trim, red cedar tum. omallonlmalo and o•-'t.i.
""""
bar, 12• . ...-tal .br1kll, siding, HAPPY JACK TONEKOTE: Ll·
trim a aaflltl. Old oak manila. quid food I\.11PIImll'i prow~
304471-4004.
nutrient• for 1 warm winter coat
:1-Ton control AIC Unit; for doao and call. ' A&amp;O FEED '
7D,OODbtu Colaman I.a. turn•c.; SPLY, 814-012-2114.

OR l'LL
FEED YORE
SUPPER TO TH'
HAW6S!I

I~ unvented IPICI hMtere,
T~pt~~~n wall ov.n and n~ng•
top; 30.._ bottle a•• hot water
hllleri 114-112-5146 or 814-712·

localld In O.C. MWDhv Co. g.a.
llpolli. HeM o -. 1'14-«1.o404.

2111.
5 HP.·Roar Tlno Tlllor $200, 7 HP
Front Tlno Tlllor $12S, can 304171-57111Aftor a P.M.

Aoglotwod Dolmollon Pupa,
Woimod, Shoto, 1200, 114-311;:8321=.-:-;=:-:-::===:-=-:::::Two 5 Wook Old' SlomHO Kit•

Atlentlon Comic ·Fans: Twa naar
mint copra of Wolverine 11, one
nNr mint copy 01 Punisher 11.

lent, Seal Polnl, Wormed, Utt•r
Trained,
Father
Regllterd.
Ready For YalentlnM Oliyl 114-

Puppy

. Palace

Pill

Shop.

r-·

Cuoront Wizard prlco guldo 3117·77010.
valut $77. Will ucrlflce for $45. TwD V•r Old Female, CFA
Hurry! Won't Lilt! Call "Logan" R-altt•rlld Himalayan Cat. HM
304-475-5712 anytlmo.
BHn Spayed And
Beautiful cat But Dulle Toma.,_ a..dt on 11le II Paint per1rnental. $250. IM-441-0815. ·
P1to11, 2801 Jackaon AVe, Point
P11101nt, wv, :lltM-571-4084.
01 . MuBical

Doc-.

eoto"'irl:•
BTU,
wall, S

,•

:.

T.h • 11fe way to diet.

tlonal 10ft tr1neport dlec. Gehl
65 grlnd1r mixer. ..,._ Holland
Supor 10 hoy botor, ·All good

H.o: monhorl TV, built In VCR,
wl1h rt~mote, $300; Cold Spot
Saara freezer, S100; 614·g92·

cond. 304-27:1'4211. Troy-Buln tlllor, 7HP horto
modo!, hiller furrowar, row

~200.

La- :1811 ·18 Mhz WI YOA
Monitor, 40 MB Hard Drive. ·New

ovor '$1,600. Only 1 Yoar Old
Juot $8110. 814-446-5189.

'

but••-u-

kod

.

.....
'IES. MAAM .M'&lt; HEAD SORT ·
.OF HURTS ... I THINK MA'&lt;BE I
1-lrli&gt;;Vt THE 60LL'IWOPPER5 ...

72 Trucks 10r Sale
1m 2 Ton Dump Truck, ~ :
Condition, Conoldo&lt; Toke If 3/4,
Truck On Trade tn, Flrowood 111•
a Up, e14-:lll'7031.
1181 ChiVy 112 ton pickup. 2110 •
1 cyl., auto. t......,loolon. cad:
oft• lpm. *-77U543.
1181 OIIC Plck.Up 305, AT, NOW:.
Paint, &amp;m.uet, Surr~IMr, Run-.
nlng loonlo, lllnMO Covert
113,000. After s P.M. eM-2!11-1m;
114-2111-1051.
.

marker, wrap .round bumper.

-::~~--:::::-:::---::::~=

I

YES, MAAM .. I I-lAD
A FLU SHOT MOUT

A MONTH A60 ..

'·'

--

&lt;-.......__

NO. M/1.AM .. THE AVERAGE

FLU 5!-IOT HAS NO EI=I=ECT
ON T~E 60LLYWOPPER5 ..

'

LICSNSS
PLATS
BUREAU

.;

'.

Motorcycles
=~===~~==1882 Huikovimo 250 Ench(f"1
For 1350 614 441 1811 Alt• a
P.ll.
1182 Kawaeakl CSA·2SO, bon

J""

!)ruga.

1hm your clutter into ctuh,
sml it the eau way... by phone,
no ,.eed to leave your home.
Place your clau(tied ad todpy!
15 W()rtU or leu, 3 @y,
.
3 gpgen, $5.40 paid in advance.

•

1--------------------2.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
3. ________...;_____,_________
4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
5., _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•I

OONT KNOW WK't' MISS
WOU..Of"r' 16 !30 F'I&lt;OUD
OF

Spinet· conaole plano for ule.
Take on small paymenla. SN
locally. 1-100·343-f4M.
Sunttar kloa.un heater $25.
S.al'l Ufettrfe uercla• blk•
171. 20r30 tarp 121. New mtns
size 10 anlc 5 buct.le boOta 115.
304·773-5271 or '773-5101 after

Block, brick, ...,.,. pfptl, win~
dowt, llntale, etc. Claude Win·
te,.., Rio Grandt, OH Call 114-

12~---------------

13 . __~----· ----

14--~-------------

15 _ _~~--------

446-2342
9)2-2156
6'l5-133:J

W-RI.

He~EI.-F.

7t

Autos for Sale
1114 Ford Vlotoril. RuM car.l, ·
23
1
o::' ~go-.
800
••
010, .Uor I P.M. e
""rm='l"'lo-,-.,-...
-.:td-:-n-:1:--•-•-•"""•d
wori&lt; oar, 30W7WSI2 or 1711-

.'f,"

Building
Supplies

Ae A reACI-ISi!, SI-U~ls
A COMPLETe MA-11.-t..li&lt;E.

SHeHASN'Tee:eN
ASI..S 'TO TEACH
NoS A 'THING-.

41 For lnet¥ca
44 lloulllwHI·
am lndlln
48 Electrical

"""

By Pbltllp Alder
North American Bridge Championships are held three times a year.
Nowadays they feature many tournaments lor young players. Last summer, in Toronto. the primary event
was the Junior (under-26) Trials. The
main aim was to pick the U.S. team
for the World Junior
next August in Denmark.
the winners, Jeff Blond and
L'Ecuyer, were from Canada. They attributed their success to aiJIJ'eSSiv&lt;el
bidding and aej:urate cud-pllay .
ln . tnday's deal from
m,at•. •
L'Ecuyer was North. His double
for takeout. Perhaps BB~lo~~nd~..:~.o~:~~
have passed over three ••
he was hoping to reach a slam.
doubles were the actions of an ine"P'!rienced player.
Declarer ruffed the hearl lead and
played a club to dummy's queen, West
duckin1 his king. With the aid of the finesse, BIOIId drew trumps, West discarding a heart on ihe third round.
Next, South led the spade 10, playing
low from the dummy when West covered with the queen. Back came another heart. Declarer ruffed and ducked a
club. A third heart removed declarer's
last trump, but, given ihat West bad
the spade king, declarer knew be was
sale. U neither black suit was breaking $-3, presumably West bad~
with 4-$-H distribution. On tbls ....... , 1
he would he squeezed in spades
clubs.
With the spades actually $-3,
BIOIId's 11 tricks were three spades,
six diamonds and two clubs.

A. Yes. it's wrong . The word that
you want is REGIMEN !without a TJ :
pronounced " REJ·ih-men.'' this noun
is used to refer lo a systematic plan
or program such as a diet. Spelled
with a T, the noun REGIMENT I
" REJ·ih ·ment"l is usually applied to
a military unit of mo~ than on e battalion . Practice a daily regimen of
word study, and you'll never confuse
REGIMEN with REGIMENT.

48 Plant
con'-lnora
4U.Ibor org.
50 Nomll- "
51 Chlltar
52 And not
54 lloklllllll
org.
55 3, Roman
56 T11.tlllla
59 Conclrllint

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.orlty Clllhlf ~togrlfM . . cnMtd frOin ~--by tarno. peropll, put end P'W*rt·
EICflleiWin tNieipMrNndlfat' ..othlr. Todflr'•c.W:I.-M.

I M E I F W'F T L ,

TH

an

Impossible

aim." -

ldllld by CLAY

0 four
Rearrong-. letters of
scrambled word1

I

-

v..r

Condtdonl ta.'!OD· fi4.441·1G21. ;304-e?&amp;-1711.

, ... ~~

·

I
~I I'll
v
I
I
I

LYFUL

~R E

Sitting on a park bench one
day ~ overheal'd an elderly
gent tell his companion that he
knew he was getting older ·
,...----.-----. when he knew his way around,
--rB~YrN"TiD:-:iO..=-E~-ll.-but didn't--~- like-----."
E G

1---rl-rs_,....;..,;;;,_,.--...j
_ 1 1 1 ~
L-...L.-L.....J-.L..J. •

r

I

16

I' I e Compi~ie

7
L.-1..-J...-J...-J...-J...--1

1

-·s

"""'*'

.J

•

.tne

dn.o~kle

quoted

by f,U.ng 1n the m1ssing words

you develop f rom step N9. 3 below.

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
-.. -•
Chaise - Aona - Gouge • Melody - DEGREES
A family I know has three offspring in graduate
schools. The dad looked at the tuition costs and mumbled, "I get poorer by DEGREES."

out-

.,

POII.AN -~----

!1 ' 12 111

------

.

10

T R I Gy T

Graph Matchmaker can help you to un- coukl reduce your momenlum.
derat.,d what to do to mike 111e rela- LEO (.lilly :IS-Alii- 22) You might learn
. tlonlllllp work. Mill $2 pius along, lelf- eomethingi' real .lialue today, not fl'om
addr-.ed. stamped envelope to people whose counsel you seek and reMatciMnlker, P.O. Box 91428, Cle\ie. specl, bul r..om an individUif whole
BERNICE
ideu you usually discount Kaep an
land, OH 44101-3428.
PIICES (Fell. :10 March io) A ·101M openmlnd.
I)EDE dSOL venture could work out rather - for YIRGO (Alii. 23 lopL 22) Shatlng· wilh
you today, eepecillly H H 1o with a Pill'· others will not only pt8Ue the recipiant
son whOm you've "-&gt; fortunate with In today, it Should afford you an equal
the pas!. Lady Luck wilt be ruMing the amount of gratification as - · Joy is
awakened through giving, not toklng.
mochlutll y.
ARIEl (-.ct. 21·April 11) S.. tun LIMA (llpt. ~ :D) The ball il In
and frtvolout actlvtiiM tod~ that ln- your coun todly, and you should now
VQive only ootecl frlenda. Modulating be able 10 exerdoe dominion, over a 1111·
your PIICI 1 bit could be very helpful In uatlon that provioully was dOminated
rllurbllllllng your attitude and outlool1 by
floCIOfl.
on llf1.
~011'10 (Oct. 114 lin. 22) A'!l()id so. TAUI'\II (April 2NIIIJ :10) Tllll II I . clal
today that lncfucle
'
w1111 ~ you Mva 111111 In
good day to devota 10m11 " - houri
to your fa-'ll flabby. 11 your ...,.- COIM,IOit. Till - I rntgl1l be furl for
Flll.11, 1 '
truly cllalllngtl your manual and mill· 101111, but not ro&lt;K I rlly for you.
' •·
Interesting developments arelndlcat!Od tal cle.terlty, It could prove...,,.,. IAGI'nAMII (*W. ZI-Oc t1) Tllll
Ia a good dayiO II)' IO gel together with
.tDI"'fhe year ahead. In HWiral relation- en~.
. lllllpa where you've IXPII'Ienc!Od dla- GEMINI (M8y 21..,.,_ :10) A little vari- a !*lOR ,OU've r-.tty me1 whom you
COfd, harmony will pr1¥all. T,_ 11810- ety In · your life today could be very II· -.ld ltka to know belt•. He or fectlve In buoying up your oplrlto. F.,.. feels the same way.
clatlons could prove very productive:
AQUARIUI (Jail• .,..,._ 11) !1e a k-. go your ". uaual routl-, and try CAPIICORII (Die. 22-.llft. 1t) You will
condUct youneff today In • that
Ob!IWVW, U well U I good ........ to- IOIIIIIIItng 11ft and dllferWit.
otherl
wll
find
admirable
r
lhln
CANCD
(.luftl
21-.luiJ
22)
The
oecret
d~y,, becauoa you might ~ - . t~lng significant from a Pill'*'" yoU'd to prodUCing dlllrllbte r~lta today Is orr..atve. In fact. your PMIS may emuleal expect to be a , _, Trying to IO&lt;nllntaln ICOIIIilllnt p!ICI. Don't op- lata your behavior and tiiCitcs.
patolt ~P a brokan romance? Tlii·Aitro- erate In lila and 1111111, becauH thla

.W

·

below to form four simple words.

~&gt;I'"

C'Your
.
'Birthday

Greene.

Graham

-T_::_~_:~_;~_'""'S_© ~dllA -L£ t~S· ::::

" ASTRO,-GRAPH

..,_.lo,

V FE L

Cl ttt3 by NEA, Inc .

tt.wer Homee. Room Addltlont,

.,.

E L R

ECZMXC . '
GXCZ
CFJLTWRP.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Despair Is th~ price one pays tor setting oneself

""'-''"~·

Two Conlobt, OM Nnt anottwr Utllty lklg IPI: 30'x40'al'
r., ....... $350, 304-175-4tt3 al- Pilnled StMI Sldee, OatvaiUIJ'
101 I:OOPII.
·
, !Moot Root, te'xl' Stool Slider,,.

E

BTIGALEZATL

E

MECWTK

VFEL

Curtto Noma 4mprovomanto:'
y..,. ~lonc:o On Oldor l

::=.,bl._f~orod, ~=~=~:~~s,

AP

R'£LOFWT

'GFUFCWJ

''•.

Plck.Up And Dollwoty, Glorgu
C - Rood, IM-44t-.

"""

20 King22 Shlda tree
23 Onaxpeclld
win
24 Thanka, In
Britain
26LHthar
fiCioftel
28 Almfnt it
2g..._IOI

whlll

Trials
for the young

..'."

v.euum Clllnar Rl!plllr, FrM

Kin ol fiiOIIO
llr. Rllhlr
Bult•141. . .
Lumplol

·-~

.

F~~lon Wort., Rooil'!9,'
K...,_,. Anti lathe. Froo E•·
11...... 1 Rata~..-, No Job
. Too llg Or flmoltii~7.0ihl . .
~ · llaohlno And.

10
11
16
18

30 Outer IJIIICI
32 Crude tM'-1
33 Egg drtnll
35Eg!Hhapld
39 Aitlcla
oiOGI¥1--

·RIFf

81

== ::;:

MaCa, 114-10.:2711.

Pass

All pass

Scrv1ccs

llan Door, p;cu Eroctod. Iron
1810 Chryolo&lt; Dordobo, alent- lldgo. t-312--.
otx,
rune f1101!1
M•tal roof and aiding, baked lanftlon owlloh, 1100', ... WMI ~ld potlo - · .Wk~
anamll and golv. 304-372·1301 114-aa:M'71-. .....
lf'fOOMd roomo, 'pul up •1~,1
0&lt;372-0842.
aiding or troltor lltlntno. IJ4o
•
1NO Rod, &amp; IIUI Chov- 240-fta.
Manu lodr 'or Bole.
Aloo. S PuJIIIill To Olvoowoy, 82
Plumbing &amp;
56 Pets for Sale
114-tiW!IIO.'
Heating
~~.-=.:r...~
I :F:-rH=ma"-n·'"•"'Hoot.;..;,l.;.n~.;.A;.:::..,d,.,C""OOI-,-,ngn-.
~ PI,_ tiOO, lnOiollotlon And
loa. ASES
.... 11~ ue •••
C.nlntcL Relklentlat, eamm.,. ,
Clo- ltollon clot.114-211-1111.
· ,
AKC Cocker Sponlai Goldon 1112 Biondo $110 !och, 114-245-111!11. w....,, c.u~oo, Auto, Air, ~n~... I~.;.;;.;.;-:::.;;.:.::.---..w.'
tor'lxcoftont,
Ao110111bto 84
Electrical &amp;
, .
AKC Doberman, Rottw•lltr, Wlra
Refrigeration : •• ; •
Fox T11rltr, Min. Plntchlr, Pug, eM-na 11 oo.
llln. lchnauz•d'oodiO, Mynal1 1112 ~ Lolaron Aaltlng I::':'==....::--...;...;.;.;.......,.,;..
tt,ooo, 114-441-om.
Rnldontlol or commorolot •
11«1, - - 0 4,00.
•- , •-~ ~- A • • : : , : : Wl~ng, now ...,,.. ., JOpalf'i.•
AKC Pameral'llan, tllmale, 1210; 1- ·-,)Ioiiar u - -rlolah."
Pol bolly .... $10; balh "" lllloo. car, Eo lent tRI-ur lloctrlcal, WY000301.
245-5121.

1 Barral (lbbr.)
2 PaythlcGllllf
3 School of
whalaa
4_...-lhe

.•

TV Sorllce, -lot~
'Ron'o
In Zonllh oleo - n g
othor brondo. oolle,
.....
·
........
304-5714311 Ohio 114-440-2 . .
1171 Fonl Muetang, Automatic,
tkmnoot, lluo With 1 BlOck loPiia Tonk""""""" $10~O.lllo

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

10~--------------11
•._ _ _ ________;______

Hoy, oquoro boloo $2. &amp; 12.110.
304.. 75-311110.
Mulch hoy lor oolo. 304-175501111.
•

B:OG PM.
2237.
.~ .
Wesher11 a Dryere, S75 l Up, 30 1175 Dod~ Do
. " Bwlnr.; $300,
.
nil
Da~ Warranty, Call .Washer &amp;
SIOflll,
..71-1711 A 01 5 •· .
Dry• Shoppo, 114-440-2M4.
Woodbumer,
Uka
new 18'111 CO&lt;volte, 4 lpood, 12,000
wlchlmnar, $225. 304-875-41i3 Mllll, Sthl Orf. Coil Anytlmo,
attar 1:00 PM.
114-S7WIIOII.

55

9., _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____,

3'J2.JI33 • 1

HOOle
a..... 6N Gae Powered; Poet
Improvements
.Hole Digger, EJ:cellent CondlUon. 1371: 114-441-8881 Attllf 5 "-lum Hay Rolle $25. MorIASEIIENT
gan'• Farm, lit. 31. Pliny, 304P.M.
WATERPROOANO
137-21118.
1
Stnonld Wood, $40 Deliv•r.t,
Uncondblonal lifetime guaran-1
114-441-0770.
IN. ~I rtferencH turnithed.•
Transportation
can 1..110-287.0571 Or 614-237o
Stilt lop pool table , $800. 3040488
Rogar•
Basamtm'
875-51171.

6

7~---------. ______________

~~

Obi .

t

Q. Is it incorrect to reler to a diet
as a "regiment"' I need to find out.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

eM-....11115.

HM450.

5

llood for
Lova
5 H1lr In front
olaarl
6 A continent
(abbr.)
7 8eklng pit
8 Ireland
9 - humbug!

DOWN

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

By Jelll-ey McQuain
One sense of LiTHIC is "made of
.stone· las in "a lithic structure"! . It's
no myth thai you can find a rhyme for
the adjective LITHIC in MYTHIC .

call 114-9~-3471 befDr• 111pm.

iiMutltul

available, 114-198-2412 or

Pass
Dbl.

p_.,.

t•

Obi.
3 NT
It

@.-. . . . .ANRMJIM diiAIM.

blaCk
TM'IneuM 1113 Yamaha 175 T"r.. Wheelllf,
w..... 111 ,., vary otytloh, 4 yro 1700 Or Boa! Oltor. 114-31111porory Choir,_ 150 King Size
waterbed sana or Btst Otter. otct. Otllor rkflng ..,_, 304- ::;-::=c·::::--::-7-:-c:-:-'-::571-2001 1fler 1:00 PM.
·
1H7 2.50 MoJave 4 whMier. For~
114-245-51He, 114·:118-HOt.
Aealtt.,td Llmoualn cattle, ule or trade for 2SOR or 2SO ·
One Rainbow all attachment .. IIOAoro, buno, ond cowo, e1-. auodrocar. 304-882-2882.
ttlll undar warranty, $750. tlnn.
012 ..1110.
304 ..75-1125.
76 Auto Parts &amp;
Plnaoonlc 1 Pin P~ntor $125, 64
Hay &amp; Grain
Accessories
1,.·241-5383.
:::::::::-~:::-:::-::~~:::-=
BOOib. round boloo ol hoy,
tanb, one ton true.:
Prom DMIH, Beaded Royal $61bale, will load, 114-141-2201.
0 rodlowtorl
floor matt, .
Blue &amp;,quenc• Long Gown 10.
12. Z Black Short GOwns, f.12. Ear corn lor aal•, alao grinding oto. D a RAut A loy_,_~. 304- ·
Uauv• I Blue Floral Conlem-

._..._

-.
..

FRANK AND ERNEST

mi"!1_!11C concl, rune llkt newll

Livestock

4
4•

•

Eoll

v.r,,.,.,,l

.

18110 !lodll" Cuotom 'Pick·U:
Whh Topper, Auto, Air, AMJf
All Electric Power, 1 Owner,·!~·
collont CondlllonL RHH Hltcb,
15,100. 114-317ollt111.
.
1$81
AangW
414
STX ·
AL
:~~:~1. , Aoklng $2,800, ;

74

2•
Pap

Norlb
Pass

r

grading blade, bor tlroo, 814M8.zt82.
drfvl.n atrMt bllca, 2.•00 actual

63

I

~ 1117 ~ Ra
·~~

Woll

AMwer lo ...... ,...........

..... t
41 High card
42 Slclllln •
votc1no
43 SaultMarta
44 C111tomor
45 Son ol radio
47 I n - (roullnlzldl
49 Encourage
12 wda.)
53
57 llotort.ta'
org.
58 AciraN
Sophlleo Encoral
81 Spider's trap
82 Lock of hair
83 Rtvor lotand

Opening lead : • 7

~

1n st Nm ants

rurnec•. worn
81,ooo
condition,
, 114-MI-3313.

I~

MI._, .M•~·
Sell AHlno
'
il,171--·
-··
. U,IIOO. 114-24W771.
•.

~to - 304-171-1200.
'" - - wroc
aut•.

....

2t
3•

+

'

:11,000 - - ' Loodacf, ~~ •
Nil ~r IJ'.II.
:

a

32 Alleafuta
34 Altorthought
...br.)
35 Hockey groat
Bobby36 N•g~ttvit
37 North ol
Mno.
38 Brud-rllalng

Vulnerable: E;lst-West
Dealer: North

9401, 614-775-4341 (\ihiRicothe)

Eoch, 304-471-411211.
Booglo p.....,. out of oood run-

31 Timber lrH

+10 •.

tAKJ1087
tA9H

Pets for Sale

1 __ ... _ ..

EAST
t952
.AKQ95
IQ3 2

SOUTH
+1064

M.4r'!SE ...

1111 Ford Tempo AutOMatto, ~:
AL, Aoktng s2,eoo, 1~-441-ont. ..
AKC Aoglotorod Co~n Torrlor 11111 Plymouth SUndance, 2.5 •'
Pups! SlSOL Great Yalentll'lll Enalne, A&amp;AornUc Whh ~r.
Glhol l14-31:r-770G.
COrCruloT.!~'!'. n1 :JJ..~.!!IH
. , $?.000
. .•
·
~-~··
:~ ~,:~·~"::,,0a"~~Zl~ 1181 Calobrfi.J Eorooi!Ofl, :
AMIFII llerta ea••••· Crlllll ,
. ~KC Roglllorod Slborlon Huoky Conlrol, AC, .71,000 MMea, •
Puppln, Blue Eyn, Roro fled 13,1100. A-t Condhlonl 114-4411- '
Coolo, Aoklng $1110-' 114-240- 2011.
:

REDUCE; burn off tat while
•leap. take OPAL tablel1 an E·
YAP diuretic, available Fruth

Guido,

132 Buttornut, Pomoooy.
5 ICNI, email IM'Irnlltvl cabin,
-cat, $1100,
· -ca.N
llivw,
..., ...
114-tl24471
botonoipm.

:MHouro.

STILL AVAILABLE
To .,... Hamil And Add,.....
,,_ Plr 1000. Colt · --~~ llln 111 .Yro +I Dr
" ' p,. N. Awora.IL
- 331 1111
s . u ...
........
10M2.

n., 114--112-2121,

-lng room oqulpmont, pluo
Vending

· d O.t11CIAfJS ...

$1210,

114487·7821.

17 or 11 Acrea on Uncoln......t-!!::
$13,500- ... bo flnonood .,....
down·

WEST
KQI
764 3
64
KJ32

rr MJ5T &amp; VER-t' DmCU.T
10 f-WE:. 10 ~EP ~
\IXlRD f¥..L "'l1E ·"llME .. .

E'-JH

1ttl'l.21- P100
22 lloftgral
250ntlle
contrary
27 Sioux Indian

tQ 76

::.a"

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

1.aoo-tl2-6358.

holM.

;,;;.·, .
1
11"11VW£ •

I. clualvety
:~::~~~~or~J:.
=~a~:
11 Rite Aid Pharmacy.

1220.

Ftnancial

11

.

OOIJ'T

1117 Ford Rongor, 4 cyl., 5 ~·· •,
lowrof Oonle or-n, axe cond !~!100 mlloo .. $32110. 304 75- .
441.0:131.
4
304·7TW431aftofa:OG
PM. \
- ' Ford Ranger, bed toppet", .,
Dual a . . nnel Ttrw Syttlm with
1188
Ono
bodowm no
·~·
roloronooopolo, Pl. one 21 cu. R. upright ,_orllko ntr.·MtllriM and charger, only
30,547ml., minor driver elde ·
new szeo· ten automatic \load • row tlmoo, 11100 OBO,
. damage, , 21110 , 1,..14• 2544 . , ·
pt....,.. .,..; e'M-IIt2.aa~.
wllhato sii - ; ton olaotrlc eM-Otlll-1227.
F.tr;n Supplt·',
.,.,.
m
to $1150; gas rang•
ChtVrolel, Ford, Oodg• pickup ·
171 to1121-h; oloctrlo rangoo FlrNood: All Hordwooclo Splh
&amp; Livestock
· Furnished
Shari or long. No ruat. ;
1121 oooh; ona por1ablo droh- · Dollvorod 140 Pick-Up Load.
:IDW'IU211.
·Rooms
wuher, tiki new ti2Si one lar'ge .114-~2?-!51-;:.t:C311;=::;.::--;-:c--:-:-::
COfJhtg machine SZOOj thrH For Sale~ Lac:IIH wlntar coat, full
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
11 ponoble COlOr T.V. o $125
61 Farm Equipment
each; new .tum Iron• $3 ..ch langth, ·eriJr, w/plald teart, haa
while otUOiltloo loot. _,thing boOil dry c oanod, $30, 614-192- 14ft. duol ule ~ Boy troll!!, 11113 Bronco, lull olzo, 4WD, PS,"
.old wrth a 30 •y 8 ..~ntHd. 2421.
·
MilO tlrm, call 114-112-34,. PB, automatic, neW tlrn, ntw
~uH&amp;er, good condl11on, 73;000
we allo lllack new enCI uHd For Sat. Slz1 medium ladlll boforolpm.
mO., rHYCIId ta 13000 080,
appllonco
parll.
Dolbon wlntar collt, -·lim wl laalhlr 7 Ton Brack Bulk Food Bin With 114-112·7733.
~
SWIIher \JMd ADPilancea, cor· trim, llkl new, wn Its, flOW
Motor, 1710. 114a2~24.
,... ol Rand · ·a ,.,ch St,
1ft2 AWalor LX. ~.
$40~ paid tiiSD; 1110 mite. ladln
Kanauga, 1'14-441·7473.
11,000 111111, W01ronty, All
olotnlng;
call
814·012.ztS5,
llo
l.ocuot
Pooto,
$1.0G
'
Up,
Aloo
• ..,.,. ,..,... with cooking.
Splh l,.o2!51-a11, Or 614-2111- - . _ Llko Now, $14,1100,
5pm or 1114-MI-2204 oft or lpm.
Aleo ln~ll• lf*:ll. All hook--u~. - h - - TV, · Early
080,114~1·1110.
.•
Amartcan1 zs•. color, good con- Gene~~• Nutrhlon Producta 1'121.
can after 2:00 p.m., 304·7TJ.. dillon,
11o-Nf.3a05.
.
Small brood lruck- 1DSI
!18111, llaoonWV.
featuring Amino 'Acid Body Now Holland 71 t&gt;oyblno. Holland 1ft hayblne. Int.,... Chovoro4!'1 lcyt.. Sop.1 $350,

horne.

lion &amp; Drtv..-ay, Allin On• Loa.n
Package, Low Ralet, Open Late
With Llghttd Hornet. 1-G14·772·

W-" In Gatlloolle Ar•. Call 114-

J

.. -l

1UT Ply....,.h Sundlnca 2.2, 5,.
SpoOd, PS, . PI, /lC, Aoklng
12,10G. Attar 5 P.ll. 114--1772.
11111 ca..llor Z24, I opood,
cruloo,'· foc PW, PDL, uc Cond,
14.110.
J71..2331.
11111 Chait Corolca, good cond, ·
12.2110. 304-67Utllll.
:
1111
Dolhotou
Charade.
IG,700ml., •lr, P~ aterto, . :

:!i~...~~~~~- ,_ ~~,.:~~. ~;,T;;~y·~::::: c:::Cc.:':'n'=;:~;..cc.::crod=s"'l'*='cc••~Huo=~ i':r:~~~Fro~==~:$:
lo I:OG p.m.-114-192·2521.
pupa, ready Fob. 5th, call 81
175:ii\5~
gro '
:
Fumlture repair l rellnlshed, 1924073.
buying old lonlorno Troltlo :,;-.:-;-::-:;-;=':'·=::-;;::::::;::-. 111110 otdo Toronodo - - · •
:U:::::.
oowlng mochlnoa, old brokon Purob,..l Doberman Pupploo, 2 .::;~:::CII":I~Ioi.::,7S1.::2::.:,H,:.5.::·.::1):'4-;4;-;48~71:-:3!~. :
tumhwl, Otby, 6M·fi2·"'41.
, RH1, 1 FIWn, AH Malw, $75 ,.., Pontiac Orand Prix ,LE, •

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SllwJ,!?aL~~.~A1~or'1 r.=========,;=;~;=;';'"'~"';"';':·""=~ lep.,
lkle damage,
·~hi:,"Sij;'.,-rn:=:
~minor driver
IM-MI-2844
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2 Doge Loot: Plot 6 lluo
· 2bdnn., only $152 .117 per month.
Tick .Pup, At lnt_.on 01 Do You LOVE· To Cook? An EJ:. lnCI!oldll •klnlng, Sl.pl &amp; lit
Aoull Til • Honnan T.-, can citing New 9onctPt tn Home
To tte home, can 1-800-466IM-44M322, 114-251-11117.
Pa"y Pion SoNJng ~mbllouo
1'1.
•
Found: M- - · A t Woyno lndl'llduata In Your Area To i2x60 Washer Dryer, Stove,
.......... Holghborhoad - . .,_,. ..nte Ou,litY Kllchen Refrlg.,ator, b ,ooo, 814·3&amp;7·
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·
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gray · - 1 - . ounroot,
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Dally

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page

•

Wednesday, February 10,1993

Ohio Lottery

Bearcats
defeat
Warriors

Dorothy Karr
Beat of the Bend...
presents
by BQb Hoeflich
garden club
program
111!4
of

If you were young
talented loolced again. It was Dale Walburn
and had a choice locations where . of Middleport who was being sent
The February meeting or the you'd prefer working, chances are home. And you didn't believe in
Chester Garden Club was held the beautiful Cayman Islands Old Horne Week.
recently at the home or Pat Hoi ter would be clo~e to the top of
A 'reader asked about the ldnd of
featuring a program on birds.
favorites • even the impossible
figures
that were involved with 'h:Je
Dorothy Kari gave a talk on "A dream.
Baird
who
had her nomination
Favor Returned·· Winter Care of
However, the loeation is realil}'
as
Clinton's Auomey
withdrawn
Our Feathered Friends." Insects, for Meigs County's Robyn Barnett
General.
You,
toO, might have IQst
pests and weed seeds that birds who recently accepted a job in the
consume in the summer, while they Cayman Jslaf!d&amp; located !n the track of the figures in the
also arc citjoying fruit and tender British West Indies. Robyn IS uaf. widespread publicity that was
green vegetables, the importance of fie director and production assistant given the case.
a feeding program in winter is evi- at Z 99.9 FM. This radio station · Baird had paid an illegal alien
dent. Once ·a program begins, it opened only in May of last year couple-one to care for her child and
should continue through lhe cold and ig tile first privately owned sta· the other to serve as chauffe~r­
weather. It was noted 'that birds' tion in the Islands. It's located on $2,000 a monlh and had provided
body temperature is 113 degrees. theJargest of the Islands, Grand room and board. according to £ig.
They can handle peanut butler and Cayman, which is 480 m~les due ures I have been able to. locale. She;
fat quite well. Mixed with bird soulh or Miami. Oh, and IDCiden- did not pay F.I.C.A. or required•
seed, sometimes adding com meal, tally occasionally Robyn has a_n unemployment taXes on the C9uple .
they provide tasty bird meals. cipportunitY to become an on atr and Baird did admit that she knew·
Kimberly Fetty, Lessie Osborne, Rachel Bales,
REGIONAL WINNERS • Twe11ty-five
Apples and oranges also disappear versonality on weekends when she the couple were ille~al aliens.. . . '
Robin
Gardner,
Jennifer
Pi-omtt.
Standing,
1-~.
awards -re plftleated to tile BIISilless ProfesSo there's the mformat1on m:
quickly.
It is important to provide does some substitute D.J. work.
Wendy
Clark,
Aodr.
e
a
McDonald,
Tammy
sioiiiiS of America fn. Mftc5 High School at
water
amj
give
special
attention
to
Although
she's
a
.
l
ong,
long
·way
case
you're in~rested.
!·
Quee11,
Lisa
S11yder,
Rhonda
Gibbs,
Stephanie
Picb-y Ross JVS I'«Utly. Tile Regioll D win&lt;
from
home
being
"young
and
tal·
the
water
supply
during
extreme
Price.
ners from Meigs HiJ!!h Sdmol are, 1-r, seated,
Upriver in the Reedsville area
weather.
·
·
ented"; Robyn is probably enjoying
lives Kay Epling who has a very ·
A video made by the National the experience to lhe fullest.
Audubon Society, "Owls Up · Sl)e previously worked at Q102 oregnant Jersey cow named :
Close:• from Ohio Association of in Marietta and l)S107 in Belpre. r.Pi.neapple".
Near lhe Epling home is a steep .
Garden Clubs was shown by Mrs. The daughter of Ron and Carol
Barnett
of
Reedsville,
Robyn
grad·
embanlcment
which has a 30 foot
Karr. It gave a colorful account of
drop
into
the
Ohio River. Some-,
uated
from
Eastern
High
School
in
the lives and habiiS of 17 ~ies of
.
how
"Pineapple"
got too close to
1987
and
was
a
!991
cum
laude
owls. The next day-lhe vtdeo was
the
drop
31)d
was
extended
ovenhe
graduate
of
Ol]io
University
receiy·
shown to the students of Chester
steep
banlc.
Kay's
son,
T1m,
ing
her
bachelor's
degree
m
second grade.
couldn't
budge
"Pineapple"
in.
his
Roll call, "Bring for display and telecommunications. I know you
join
me
in
wishing
her
·great
sue·
effort
to
pull
her
back
to
safety.
Twenty-five awards were pre- fust in information processing spe- buSiness law; Lisa Snyder, flflh in a bird brunch" was answered wilh
Tim's friend, Brian Wood, di~ov- '
pine cones filled with peanut butter cess. Enjoy, Robyn.
sented to d!e Business Profession· cialist. second in administrative business knowledge skills.
ered
that .Tim and "Pineapple" real·
Students advancing to state and bird seed and suet in mesh
als of America from Meigs High specialist. lhird in business knowl1
y
had
problems so Tim and 1\rian
And I keep telling you it's a
School at Piclcaway Ross JVS edge slcills, sixth in proof reading competition on March 19·20 in bags for hanging in feedirig areaS; a
ued binder. twine· around "Pineap'
recently. ·
· and editing; Stephanie Price, lhird Columbus are Wendy Clark, Lore- mixture of seed, sunnower, cracked small world.
Edna Stobart of Pomeroy and ple's" horns in an awi·mjll to The Region II winners from in administrative specialiSt, third in na Oiler, Stephanie Price, Tammy corn and other grains, regular bird
seed' to suit, lhe appetite of a vari· ·clarice Erwin of Middleport retrieve her. Meantime, Kay sum· _
Meigs High School are: Tammy financial· specialist; Kimberly Queen and Kimberly Feny.
Olhers
from
Meigs
High
School
ety of birds. Comments included a attended school together · come on, maned lhe Reedsville Fire Depart·
Queen, fust in f111811Cial specialist. Fetl}'. first in administrative spewho
placed
well
but
did
not
win
•
bird bath warmer, the gold finch now • it's has been a while back, ment and about a dozen firemen .
second in fmaocial specialist. sec- cialist; Andrea McDonald, first in
awards
were
Misti
King,
Megan
and
love of lhistle seeds and cobs and they were good friends. As . carne to lhe rescue of "Pineapple" :
ond in business lrnowledge slcills, business malh, second in business
Bartels,
Missy
Jeffers,
Shannon
of field com secured to a post or often happens lhey went about their pulling her back to .safety with an ·
fourth in proof reading and editirig; law, fifth in financial assislallt; JenMcComas,
Becky
Williams,
Penny
lives and hadn't' even seen each attached rope. "Pineapple" was ·
Rhonda Gibbs, thinl in infonnation nifer Proffitt, first in personal
tree.
Gillispie,
.Sandy
Vance
and
Angie
other
for years. However, fate apparently none the worse after the :
The "Save the Earth" lesson,
processing assistant; Lessie finance, sixth in payroll accountWhite.
intervened
and lhe two are now experience except for being short .
"Brushing Up on Paint" by J~an
Osborne. third in infllnlliltion pro- ing; Robin Gardner. third in key_
sharing
the
same
room • that• s 390 of brealh from the struggle.
Frederick reported that accord1ng
cessing specialist; Lorena Oiler. · boarding; Rachel Bales. fi'rst in
I
do
like
stories
with
happy
end-·
•
in
the
orthopedic
center
of
Grant
to the San Francisco Household
ings and I'm glad "Pineapple" is :
Hazardous Waste Facility, paint Hospital in Columbus,
o.k.,
aren't you? Somehow I've :
Edna's daughter, Libby Moodis·
and paint produciS account for 66
never
looked at the expressi~~ of
percent of the hazardous waste paugh of Pomeroy, was at Grant
"being
over the hill" quite _in this:
dumped by individuals. This Hospital due to her mother's hospilight
before.
Do keep smiling.
includes oil-base paint, thinners, talization when she noticed a man
solvent, stains and finishes. The being transported on a gurney. She
by-products of oil base paint are
also nasty pollutaniS.
Devotions by Maida Mom from
•
"Heaven in a Wild Flower" by Joan
·.
NEW YORK (AP)- Mick Jag- about her affect her.· ~
Winmlll Brown, were on "Rose of ger marked the release of his
She added: "It's not pleasant
Sharon Love." The aulhor writes "Wandering Spirit': album with ,a when people say or do thmgs that
that seeing the naming blossoms, gig at a dance club 1n New Yodt s are cruel, but that's more a ,renecgrowing in abundance on the plane
tidn on them than on my daughter
.
of Sharon, give her the assurance East"IVillage.
hear no one paid ta·J!el in or me &lt;ir my husband.''
of God's,Iove. The plants bend and tonight!" he shouted to lhe mvita·
sway in lhe wind, their strong, sup- tion-only crowd at Webster Hall on
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A TV
ple stems, not resisting, but bend· Tuesday night. "But you can still series is in the works for Sinbad,
mg resiliently, righting lhemselves have a good timet''
the comedian and former co-star of
when the breeze stops. Observers
The 65-minute, 14-song set the NBC comedy "A Different
are reminded how important it is included 11 songs from his new World."
that people remain pliable in lheir solo album, but Jagger didn't comSandy Grushow, Fox TV's prospirituallives.
•
KAREN HOGUE
gramming
chief, said Tuesday that
. During the business meeting pletely ignore Rolling Sl!JIIes mate· Sinbad's humor is "in sync" with
rial. He played "Live Wilh Me"
notes of appreciation wer~ heard and
Awarded scholarship
Fox's young audience.
"Rip This Joint."
from Jam1e Gillispie, Pomeroy
Sinbad has starred in specials
The audience of abou't 1,200
Karen Sue Hogue:daughter of
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
such
as HBO's "Brain Damaged"
for holiday tray favors and from people included record industry and was in lhe movie "NeceSsary
Mr. and Mrs. Gelald (Mary Donna
Helen Wolfe. Betty Dean, Pauline figures, contest winners and Roughness."
Grueser) Hogue, Darlington. Pa.,
has been named the recipient of the
Ridenour and Jean Frederick pro· reporters. The concert was beamed
Tbe new series will be produced
vided altar nowers at Chester Unit· to clubs in Atlanta, Chicago, Los by Walt Disney Television.
1993 Community College of
'
ed Methodist Church during the Angeles and Toronto.
Beaver County Presidential AcaSPECIAL OLYMPIC PRESENTATION· The Business ProJ~gger doesn't plan a tour to
winner month. Pat Holter and
fessionals of America Club at Meigs High School presented a
demic Scholarship.
,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - For
Maida Mora assisted wilh holiday back the new album. But the Harry CoMick Jr., it's Christmas in
dlecl reuntly to L.W. HarJII!r in support of the special olympics
She is a senior at Blackhawk.
Stones
are
set
to
begin
recording
decorations at Trinity.
program. That support is a statewide project or the BPA. Maki.ng
High School.
. .
.
February.
The postponed meeting for their 27th album next monlh.
1M presentation to Har)ll!r is Wendy Clark, treasurer of the Me•gs
She will be gomg miO tbe medi·
The Gmmmy-winning musiciWI
March will be held March 10 at the
club.
cal field.
NEW
YORK
(AP)
Hillary
is worlting on an album of holiday
home of Clarice Krautter.
She is the granddaughter of
Rodham
.Ciinton
says
she
would
standards.
Mrs. Holter served valentine
Dave Grueser, Galhpolis, and has
have
liked
10
have
had
more
chi!·
"You name it, it's probably
refreshments to 12 members. Twila
several aunts and uncles living in
dren,
and
she
resents
comics'
wise·
going
to be on there," the 25-year·
Buckley received the door prize.
lhe Pomeroy area.
cracks about daughter Chelsea.
old singer-songwriter-pianist said
"It would have been fun and Tuesday. He said he may also
The Meigs Local Chapter 1 will hold a training session on
wonderful
to have more children, include an original composition.
tcac:hers will be holding their. train- problem solving and eomprchenand
I
know
Chelsea would have
A TV special, "Harry Connick
Fuur eyes-·for all
ing sessions for parents from now .sian from 1:30-3:30 p.m. Rutland
Flight orthe c011dor
•
liked
it,
but
you
know
it
jusi
didn't
Jr.:
The New York Big Band COn·
According 10 The Kids' World
In January 1992, tbe long cffon until the end of the school year. will have its training session with •
·
work
out
for
us,"
the
frrst
lady
said
cert,"
wil air Feb. 14 on cable's
Almanac of Records and Facts, the
to save the California coodor from Parents, grandparents, guardians or Mrs . Paula Chancey and Mrs.
in
the
March
issue
of
Redbook
Disney
Channel. The show was
first people known to wear eye'
extinction reached a new ph~. any other interested party may Linda McManus on March 26 from
directed
by Connick's fiancee,
magazine.
.
9:,30·11:30 a.m. on comprehens1on glasses were the 13lh-century MonThe majestic birds had almosl dis- attend any or all of the sessions.
Mrs.
Clinton
said
she
has
tried
model
Jill
Goodacre.
gols. These eyeglasses were made
On Friday, Pomeroy Elementary and probkm sol~1~g. Harnsonv11le
appeared as a result of h~mling and
to
help
Chelsea
deal
.':"ith
su~h
of convex-shal'ed quartz with
the use of pesticides. 'The last sur- · will be holding 'their training ses- ' w1ll hal~ Its trammg sess1on w1th
slights as the recent Wayne s
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Proud
viving condors had been captured sian wi1h Janet Hoffman and Mrs. Paula Chancey and Mrs . frames of tortOise shells. In the World'' sketch on "Saturday Night papa Quincy Jones was present
1700s, Benjamin Fmnk1in carne up
in !987 and bred in caplivity. On Tammy Chapman from 10 a.m. to Vicki Haley ?n comprehension and
with
the idea of-combining far- Live" in which characters Garlh when Nastassja Kinski gave birth
Jan. 14, a male and female were noon on phonics and basic math problem solv1~g on March 26 from ·
and Wayne suggested d!e 13-yearreleased into the wild in d!e first factS. Meigs--Junior High will hold 1-~ p.m. Salisbury w1ll hold 1ts sighted and nearsighted glasses into old isn't as'attractive as Vice Presi· to the couple's first child, a 7pound, 14-ounce girl.
step wward reslllring the birds to their session with Ron Drexler tTammg sess1on wuh Mrs. Barbara one pair of bifocal glasses._
dent AI Gore's daughters.
Kenya Julia Miambi Sa.rah
from 1·3 p.m. on oral reading and Mat~ews Crow from 1-3 p.m. on
lheir natural hab11aL
"It's sad that people don't have Jones was bdm Tuesday at Cedarsproblem solving on Feb. 26. On Apnl 7 on bas1c facts and readmg
The laqiest denomination of U.S. anything better 10 do lhan be mean Sinai Medical-Center.
March 3 Mike Kennedy at Meigs comprehension.
currency
now being issued is the StOO to a child," she said. "My attiwde
Miss Kinski, 33, whose movies
Jazzerc1se . a fitne s center \\as High School will hold his training =T...;h:;.e..;l_nt'-e....
rn-a-:lio_n_a-:I-::W-:o-od7w-o-rk:-e-r-s-;of bill. Issuance of currency in denomi - is, I'm going to do everything r can
include
"Tess: • "Paris, Texas"
listed as th e l-HR leading lranch1S(" m session on computer problem solv- America labor un ion w
"'
founded in nations large r than SIOO waS discon - to help Chelsea be strong enough and "One From the Heart," now
th'e United Sta tes for 199:!. "'llh a ing· from t -3 p.m , On March 26 t987 by Wilson Hubbell : it has 28.000
linued in t969.
not to let what other people say
has three children. •
start-up cost of $2.32a
Salem Center with Bryan Zirkle · members.

Pick 3:

038
Pick 4:
8707

Super Lotto:
3·21·25·33·35·47
Kicker:
252255

Page4

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I

Vol. 43, No. 205
CopJrtghted 1993

2 Sectlona, 12 Page• 25 cenll

'

BRIDGE REPLACEMENT MEETING Among those attending an informal meeting
with Sen. Jan Michael Lon&amp; on steps to be take11
toward gettina a time line commitment on plannine and replacement or the Pomeroy-Mason
bridge were olr~elals from Pomeroy! M!ddleport,

.By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
Mary Powell, director of tbe
Meigs COunty Park District. spoke
at Wednesday's regular meeting of
Jh(Porneroy,-Merchants Associa·
Obrt H ·
Mrs. Powell discussed the
·Meigs County Showcase to be held
at the Meigs Counl}' Fair Grounds
on CJoL HI rrom 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
and Oct. 17 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
According to Mrs. Powell, this
promotion is desi~ed to acquaint
tour companies w1th a taste of the
area in hopes to.be ~hosen as a destination by several. Mrs. Powell
feels the showcase can also help
local citizens to become more
aware of the varied aspects of the
county.
·
The idea for this promotion
came from the tourism branch of
the Ohio Department of Development. Mrs. Powell ~tated the primary goal of the showcase' is to
at.trrua media attention from larger
areas including television stations
and statewide newspapers.
The showcase, according to
Mrs. Powell, is intended to represent all entities, festivals, events,
and organizations in lhe county. By
presenting such a showcase, Mrs.
Powell hopes to develop an indus-

_T,::::.:-::::;..:-::::.:-~~-~;;-~

On AU OUT.

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STUDENTS OF THE MONTH _- Tbe. student of tile month
-mbly - held rec:ody at Tuppos 1"1ai11s Elemmtary· Sc~L
Those receiving die award are, 1-r,.froat. Cl)d.J Bartram, L1sa
Smilb Bryaa Millear aad Cllris Coaaolly. Bad, Jake HCMisebold·
. er,
Ste•eas, Stevm W~ aad wes~e,. Slaafet_.

J.;.,.

then' becomes part of ODOT' s
"Project Development Manage·
ment System" (PDMS, for short),
at which time, funding can be
released.
Durm expects to submit the project proposal to Columbus "within
the next few weeks." Once submit·
ted, there is no way to. iletennine
exactly how long the review pro·
cess will talce, he explains.
Durm also adds that just
because District I0 is trying to get
the project programmed, it. is not.
considered a priority at lhis time.
"The district IS thinking·ahead to
future priorities," says Dunn, "after
&gt; •
current priorities are met, such as
the Connector Road to the
·' Ravenswood Bridge, the relocation
of Route 33 as a four· lane from
Darwin to Athens, and the building
.• of the Route 50 four-lane in Athens .
' County.
· Should lhe project proposal for
a new bridge pass lhe Columbus'
review process and be placed on
PDMS, the next step wU! be 10 hire
a consultant, Durm says. It would .
be the consullallt's job to conduct a
"location st.udy" to determine
where a new bridge should be built
Many factors' would be considered
in a location study, inclUdins environmental concerns and public
input.
•
·
John Dowler, District 10 deputy
director, also points out lhat every
SENTENCING • Polowinl bllltD-Ina b)' c-moll Plea
Court Judllf Fred W. Crow ID Wedlltldty, lo.epb E. Kanawalmeasure would be taken to ensure
sky, 44, of Reedavlle, wu lakea back· 10 the Mel1s County Jall
federal funding on this and any
w.ltlre he will nmUI utlllle ll.tralllpOI'ted to the Orient Correcother ODOT project "The
tiolllllllllltule, Kauwlllkx, pictured ten with hllattomey, Pnblk
Voinovich Administration wo.uld
, Defeader Mike We1tra11, entered a plu or cullty to mur~er, a
never approve a project that did not
Rrtlnllalpldl'leldon OD that char1e, a11d to aHem pled murder or
adhere \0 required guidelines for
fedendfundmg. ·
·
a II" elllorcemnl o111ctr. .
•
·

Although WI ani!Ouncem~nt was District 10 plaMing engineer.
made a couple of years ago that
Durm reports that planners in
steps would be tak.en to replace the his department have been gathering
Pome\oy-Mason bridge, that the necessary information UJ get the
announcement was premature. A . bridge replacement project "proproject of this type can be initiated grammed" through ODOT's Cen·
only by the Ohio Department of tral Office in Columbus. · ·
.
Transportation. Only recently has
B)' ·programmed, Durrn means
Distrtct 10 of OOOT, Marietta, that 'such a project has to have
tallen lhe initial steps UJ start a pro· approval from a number of sources.
ject to replace the bridge. And even Those approvals, along 'with a plan
though mitial steps have been of action, are submitted 10 Colum·
uta1c;en~,~a~ne;w~~;:l1~
· s~stil~'!l~y~ears;:_b~u~s
for P,rPCCSS.
review. aUpon
passing
lhe
to Tony
Durm , review
ptoposed
project

-----

Io. s.r iroe eat.
I

try of tourism in the county. She is Pomeroy on June 26 and 27 at
being assisted in the. showcase by which time the public may board
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs County . the boat 10 learn of its history and
.Extension Agent, CQ-Chairman.
how it was utilized in its ·day. A
Mrs. Pow~ll says the showcase charge of $2 per person wpuld be
needs participation from every requested to board the natbOac .,
grpup in the county' to be a sl'ccess·
-··The flalboitt is stopping at towns
ful event A public meeting to dis· along the Ohio River .and will
cuss the showcase will be held begin its jQurney in March and end
March 9 at S p.m. at lhe Chamber in October.
of Commerce Office (former
The possibility of confirming
Pomeroy Li~).
this stop will be investigated.
Fash1on Show
Revitalization
The eighth·annual fashion show,
· Speaking on revitalization,
sponsored by the association, will Clark 'stated Pomeroy's grant appli.
be held April 2 at Pomeroy Ele- cation was submitted to the Ohio
mentary. The· theme for this year's Department of Development oli
sllow will be "River Essence" and Friday. He stated a copy of the
tickets will be available as Soon as grant is available for review at
next week.
.
Clark's Jewelry for anyone inter,Susan Clark is again show ested. Word on the awarding of the
chairman and the show will carry grant will come the first week of
.
. the same format as in previous April,
years.
The next meeting of the associa·
The next show meeting will be tion will be held March 10 at 8:30
F~b. 25 at noon at Clark's Jewelry.
a.m. at Bank One.
All committee chairmen are urged
A mem.bership drive for the
to attend.
organization is still underway.
Other matters
Anyone interested in joining may
In olher matters of the associa- · do so for $75 for a full membership
tion, Joe Oarlc, president, reponed or $35-for an associate member·
he had received correspondence ship. Membership dues should be
from American Pionl:ell; Anoat. A made.payable to the Pomeroy Mernatboat with this organization has chants Association in care of Vicki
requeste.d permission to stop in Ferrell, treasurer.

closing i~ disastrous to businesses. when a federal highway may no
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Hoffman noted that a survey taken longer cross the Pomeroy-Mason
Sentinel News StaiT
The need for replacement of the some time ago ·showed that bridge.
Cost of a new bridge, according
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge and how to between 40 and SO percent of the
go about ·getting a time line com· business in Middleport and to Hoffman, has been set at $20
mitment for a new bridge were dis· · Porneroy comes from Mason Coun- million, $2 million of which would
cussed by area officials with Sen. ty. The mayor also pointed out that go to tear down the old structure
Jan Michael Long at a meeting held the bridge is vital to those who and $18 to construct a new bridge.
Monday night at Middleport village cross it every day to get to work.
That figure came from the Ohio
hall:
.
Since it takes such a long time Department of Transportation fol·
Mayor f'red Hoffman called the to get plans completed and funding lowing a 1988 Sbldy which recom·
informal meeting which was for replacement-maybe six to mended replacement of bridges in .
attended by John W. Blaetmar .or eight years-Hoffman said that Ironton,
East
Liverpooh
Pomeroy Village Council, George now is the time to let the Ohio Portsmouth, and Pomeroy.
Nichols, mayor of Mason, Dewey Department of Transportation
Accordin~ UJ (igurts presented
Horton, Jack Satterfield and J!lffies (ODOT) and everybody else know at the meetmg, the bridge had a
Clatwoitby of Middlepon Village that there is real local concern maintenance cost of $4,516,000
Council, and Blllce Fisher, Tom . about replacement of the bridge from 1978 to 1988. The paint pro.
Dooley, and Chuck Kitchen of the because of its age.
ject in 1989 cost $2, lll,OOO; an
He
also
said
that
state
deparl·
Middleport Community Associa·
. inspection and analysis in 1989.
tion. '
. ments need to know that there is $199,000; an inspection in 1990,
It was the genend consensus of general agreement among all offi- $107,000; and repair work in 1991:,
the group that the Bend area cannot cials here lhat a new bridge be built $250;000. It has also been project?delay pushing for a new bridge in the same location so as to con - ed that inspections cost $110,000 a
because · of the long process tinue benefiting all three communi- year.
ODOT in the fall of 1990
required for ,planning, securing ties.
Concern was expressed by announced at a Meigs County
finWtcing, and the actual construe·
Hoffman that any delays now in meeting lha.! a study for replace;.
tion.
The bridge was built in 1928 getting some plan in the works ment of the Pomeroy bridge was •
and through the years has been toward bridge replacement could underway.·
closed sevend times.
an eco- mean the loss of possible federal
From those attendin~ last
Continued on page J
nomic link between the
states, highway dollars later this decade

.
r

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CERTIFICATE .OF APPRECIATION·
Richard Eric Chambers, center, was presented a
certificate of appreciation for his six years of
worlc In 1M safely belt program. He missed only
two of 156 scbeduled sessions. Tbe program bas

now been ditc:ontlnued. Here Bill Quickie, board
president, presents Chambers with the certifi·
cate as new board member Dobrman Reed,
right, looks on. Reed replaces Oris Smith who
recently resigned.
'

Applications being accepted by
board
for
secondary
supervisor"
Replacement
of
bridge
still
ye(lrs
away
.
.

News briefs

____________________....

and Mason. Here as they reviewed some stalls,
tics on the bridge are· from the left, Pomeroy
Councllma11 Joh11 W. Blaettnar, Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman, ~en. Lone, and Mason
Mayor George Nlcbols.

·Fall promotion topic
of merchants speaker .

Training session planned

News briefs

A MutUmodla Inc. Newopeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 11, 1993

Area officials discuss
bridge replace.m ent

-Names in the news---

I.

Low tonl&amp;btnear 48. Friday,
rain H ltlh Ia mkl 4Gs.

•

Awards presented io 25
BPA members recently

.I

'

'

.'

,.
I

Applications for the position of
secondary supervisor arc now
being accepted by the Meigs County Board of J;:ducation.
Bill Buckley recently resigned
from that position to accept the job
of superintendent of the Me1gs
Local Boitrd of or Education.
John Reibel, county superinlen·
dent, reported at a meeting of the
board Tuesday night said that sevelal applications have already been
received. However, applications
will be accepted until the April
meeting of the board. The job is
expected to be filled in May.
According to Reibel, the position
requires a principal or supervisor's
cenificatc.
Transfer of early childhood
funds was approved and a repoft
was given on the vehicle purchased .
by the board to house a miniature
classroom to be used for pre-school
handicapped children. Instead of
the teacher going into the home of
the student, the student is taken
into the van classroom where a
deslc and materials are readily
accessible.
The bus driver certificate of
Failh Varney was approved. Also
approved Wll$ a contract wiJ]t Resi·
dcntial Management Service
(RMS) which provides health care
business services. The agency will
wodt with the board UJward getting
lhe county schools certified as a
licensed health care provider. This
means lhat the school system can
.be reimbursed for special services
to Medicaid-eligible students.
These services Include things lilce
speech and psychological

scrnces·

According to Reibel, this could
bring in sevelal thouS8l)d dollars to
the county. Payment to RMS. will
be in the amount of four percent of
whatever is received.
The board also approved a contract w'ilh the state audi10r for the
Generally Accepted · Accounting
Principles (GAAP). This includes
puning fixed assets on computer.
The Meigs County spelling bee
was announced for Feb. 25 at
Southern High School at 7:30p.m.
A certificate of appreciation was
presented to Richard Eric Cham-

bers for his sill years or work with
the safety belt program. It was
noted on the certificate from the
Ohio Department of Education that
seat belt usage rates increased from
17 percent to 58 percent John L.
Rochester, assistant director of the
Ohio Safety Belt Educational Center program , credited a significant
part of the increase to the worlc of
safety beh center instructors.
Reibel reported that during the .
six years. Chambers missed only
two out of !56 scheduled sessions. ,'

•

WARM AND SUNNY • It seemed IIIOft like Mlly thaD Pebnary Wednesday~ when the temperature hit 70 cleateca 011
the Baak One tbennometer Ia Pomeroy. Folks llled their
walked a little slower to enjoy the warm, sanny wutber which
· weather forecasters say lsll't here to stay.
·-: _

_..IDCI-·

. ..

\

•

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