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•

Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, February 18, 1993

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A few star turns fail to
make it to the Oscar dance
By JOHN HORN
AP Entertainment Writer
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.- A
few star turns. including Tom
Cruise in a "A Few Good Men"
and.Jack Nicholson in "Hoffa."
didn't make it 10 the Oscat dance.
Instead, inllependent films got
some Of the choice invitations.
Academy Award voters were
lavish in their praise of movies
made without major studio money
in nominations announced
Weilnesday.
Big-budget productions, including "Malcolm X" and "CI)aplin,"
received acting honors bill little
else, while a third of the nominations in the best picture, actor and
acuess calegories went to independent films.
"The good thing is that those
movies are getting seen at least by
the people who are nominating
Academy Awards and that there's
no big stigma attached to them,"
said John Sayles, whose script for
the independent film ''Passion
Fish" was nominated.
In the top eight categories tliis
year, nearly half or 40 nominations
went to independent films. There
was only one such nomination a
year a~o.
,
·· ·
"It s a celebmtion or acknowledgment or salute to-a kind of film

making that exists outside the Hollywood system, that could only
exist outstde the Hollywood system," .said Stephen Woolley, producer of the surprise hit "The Crying Game."
.
The Irish thriller collected six
.nominations for the 65th annual
awards, including best picture. But
the best supporting actor nomination for Jaye Davidson threatened
to reveal one oftbe movie's biggest
twists.
·
·
The
Edwardian
drama
"Howards End" and Clint Eastwood's Western "Unforgive,n"
collected the most nominations,
with nine each . They were nominated for best picture, as were
" The ~ing Game," "Scent of a
Woman' and ."A Few Good ·
Men."

pulled the movie fr om broadcast
last week after its accuracy was
questioned. The movie is about
black soldiers who helped liberate
the concentration camps.
Best actress selections .were
Emma Thompson for a love-tom
woman in " Howards End," Susan
Sarandon as a devoted parent in
"Lorenzo's Oil," Michelle Pfeiffer
as an obsessed Texan traveler in
"Love Field," Mary McDonnell as
an invalid in "Passion Fish" and
Catherine Deneuve as a lndochi·
nese plantation owner in "Indo-

Nominated for best actor were
never-before-nominated Eastwood
for his role as a gunslinger in
"Unforgiven," AI )'acinci as a
blind man in "Scent of a Woman;"
Stephen Rea as the reluc131lt terrorist ID "The Crying Game," Denzel
Washington in the title role in
"Malcolm X" and Roben Downey
Jr. for starring as "Chaplin.:'
Among the films nominated for
' best documentary feature was age."
.
"Liberators: Fighting on Two
The awards will be presented
Fronts in World War II." But a . March29.
public TV station in New York

Vot 43, NO. 211
Copyrlghtad 1M3

' LIVING SCULPTURE· Students at tbe Uni·
versity or Cincinnati walk past some hedges
spelling out "LIVE'~ on campus Wednesday

for the plll]lOSe of aUowiilg eom.:
munity Action to construct a new
state-of-the-art food distribution
facility. Funds for construCtion will
be generated from both public and
private sources through a capital
campaign effort which will be
underway in 1993 in the hope that
construction may begin in early
1994. Pantries, soup kitchens and
meal sites in Meigs County will
benefit d~dy from such a project,
since the new facility will have
more capacity and will have the
ability to store and distribute a
wider varietv of oroducts.

southeastern Ohio.
In Meigs County over 5,500
individuals were served last year
through the food pantry network.
Meigs County has six food
pantries and one meal site which
receive prod!lc'ts from the South·
eastern Ohio Foodbank currenUy
housed in NelsonviUe.
Because of the large demand for
food, the Southeastern Ohio Foodbank has outgroWn its present facility and has been in search of a new
facility for many months.
The Cicy of Logan donated 3.4
acres of land in its Industrial Par~

searched through the night, the
boys stayed together, hugged each
other for warmth and took shelter
under the uees. Two police officers
found them huddled together
Wednesday, their dog nearby.
The boys. who spent 221)ours in
the Woods, were·taken to St. Luke's
Hospital for observation. They
were in satisfactory· conditiOil early
today. All three suffered muscle .
injuries to their legs from exposure.
Brian had blisters on hts legs,
apparently because ·he gave his
socks to Matthew after they walked
through shin-high swamp water.
"There were heroics," said Dr.
Paul Bulat, chief of emergency services at the hospital. ''These kids
did all the right things under the
circums131lces."

Costa, Cubmaster for Cub Scout
Pack , 474 in Dartmouth, said
Matthew was due to receive his
Bear Scout badge, an honor given
to third-grade scouts, at an awards
dinner Friday.
Tire boys' father , Robert
Eklund, said Matthew and Brian
had wilderness training from being
scouts, "The boys know the
· woods," he said. "1bey.playinthe
woods aU the time."
TheJmthers liad wandered severa! miles into the -swamp. They
apparenUy got ·lost when it started
snowing and they tried to take a
shortcut home, their father said.
The temperature drOPPC&lt;i to 38
degrees. Two inches
rain fell
·overnight and the wind reached 30
mph.

·-----------1

•

::: i~ ~d;:: going to do the
Continuing a cross-country blitz
to rally Americans around ~is economic revival plan, Clinton urged
his audience •' to ask the tough
questions.". .
One woman asked for more
·
dewls
on his plans for ~ and
spendin¥ cuts. 'Tm a imple
:woman,' she said. "What I need
• to hear from you is, over the next
four years how much spending,
dollar-wi~~; will we see, how much
• total revenue will be incre8sed in
our tax.es?"
. He said that in the first four
years "tho spending cuts and the
revenues increases are about equal.
If you slring it out for four more
years, if you really change the
spending habits of the country, the
spending cuts are far greater than

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a national sales tal or a.touery. ·
Clinton said •he had always
opposed lotteris as fund-raising
me&amp;S1RS. As for a ao-called value
added tax, he said he ,ejected it as
a "a radical change in the tax systern" but said it might be consid·
ered "in the ,-""""'ahead."
He also said that the United
States "still has ihe lowest energy
costs by far" among the world's
i~!lustrial nations.
·
Abortion came up early in the
questioning, when a young man
aslted, "~ Y~ believe life begins
at co~n?
.
.. Chnton r~sponded by asking,
Do YD!' beheve ,women who have
~ a~~~d be )ned for ftrSI·
"" l"ed
·
. ~es, 1 do•" rep
• the quesuoner
..
The· president"'said
he felt the
h
ld
g~v~rnmen~ ~ ou
not. " rnak e
cnmina!, acu~tty ov~! whtcll even
theologians disagree. :
.
~n Th~rsday, C~mton. satd he
believes his economiC rev• val plan
"will. be ~?ad for vinually every

It's "not just for you, but lor us;
not just for narrow interest, but for
national interest," he told a flagwaving crowd at St. Lo!!is' histOric
Union Station.
Clinton's program would ·touch
every American. through a broad
energy tax on every fuel. .It would
cost the typical household up to
$150 a year when fully in place by
1996. Income tax rates would jlimp
for well-to-do Americans, individuals with. taxable income of
SllS,OOO·and joint filers with
$140.000.
Tax increases and spendin~ cuts
would add up to a $493 btllion
reduction in the expected deficit
over four years. However, that figure would be redqced because it
does not include the $160 billion
1he president wants to spend on
education, health care and other
programs he favors to stimulate the
economy.
,
Some ChiUicothe residents said
they would suppon Clinton's economic plan.
Joannie Boyle, 34, said she was
willing to make sacrifices "as long
11 it goes toward the deficit and to
9001e of the tl)inas he's asldng it go
10.*'
John . ijamshire, 52. a self·
employed lrilck driver, said business was bad and that it was time
· for the country to stop blaming
everyone else for its problems and
'begin working together to make,
thinf.S better.
• We're in this together. That's
the only way we're going to correct
this thing," Hamshire said.
"I'd certainly be wiUing to paY.
$17 to $50 to $liO a month more 1f
it was ·~ing !O help the entire
. country, he ·wd.
.

Greenspan backs Clinton plan

!Jay

H•w BIUiuu CINnU W•leem•f
Call Toll Free For An Appointment

heavily toward raising money
through tax increases and not nearly enough toward culling spending,
Clinton said in his inlroductory
remarks thaL •.•We did actually
increase some ftlnds."
He said the increases were in
such areas as Head ·Start, educalion~~' loans .and rwaining of work. e~ who !!ave lost jobs through cut.s
in defense spending.
"We have to do ihat beca11se.
that's whal determin~ what peopie's incomes._ ,.. he said.
One worn.;~ why Clinton
opted ftor an en..r..v tax rather than .

· .Clinton added that "I have no
Interest In raising a penny in taxes.
if we're not going to do the cuts."
Clinton held the town meeting
at the local high school, in a style ,
reminiscent of bis Successful presidentlal
campaign.
Chillicothe
with abOut 21 ()()()
'd
·
'so
res• ents, ts
mt·1es south• o f
Columbus.
Before the appearance the president Joued in 3-dcgree wc&amp;lhi:r.
'
"Wllfch I suppose means I don't
have enouah sense to be president" he quipped
Taking on criti~ism that his economic plan is weighled far too Amencan.

OUR SPECIAL
V ALETINES DAY
THANK YOU.

\

"

.

-

.

WIN I WIN I WIN I I:

..

j

-~

I' .
I Pleue retur.rthis entry form to 1he SPRING v AU.EY •
ONEMA boxoffke for a chance to .lru'l.a dinner
I for two at the famouaSTOWAWAYlO!STAURANT
1 a. LOUNGE In historic downtown GalU(l&lt;1lis.
will be held March I, t993 at tile SPRING
I Dntwlnl
VAU.EY ClNEMA.
.
I
Phane --......,
1 Name
t .Add~OU-----------~----1 City

State

WASHINGTON (AP)- Feder·
al Reserve CJ!airman Alan
Greenspan endorsed President
Clinton's economic proJIIBin today,
praising it 11 1 serious effort to
aiUICk budiel deficits lhat "threat·
en -the sta&amp;i!ity of our economic .
system ...
Greenspan's -p repared comment81 handed 10 reponers before
he ~ to appear before the Senalc
BanidJ;~:mittee, repreaented
SUOIII '
I fow CUncon'a pro-

pam flOm I

by

economjl: policy

inabr.
"Tho proaldent is 10 be com·
mended fcjr DIICina 011 the llblo for
active dellali the W. ot oar ID·
~eODinl

I

~---------~--------·--1

'.

'

By NANCY BENAC
·Auoc:lated Pr- Writer
CHILLICOTHE _ President
Clinton told a town meeting today
that he would not raise "a penny in

: the tal increllles."

.

COLUMBUS • PreSident Clin·· ton's proposed 25.7 cent tax per
million Btu of fuel would cost custamers of Columbus Southern
Power Co. and American Electric
Power Company' s six other operat·
in~ CO!Jlparues approximately $250
million on tbeir electric bills, AEP
said yesterday.
If Congress passed the administration's proposed tax on British
thermal units-Btu, the measure·
ment of the heat content of fuelsColumbtis Southern Power's average residential custolJlers would
see increases ofabout.$27 a year, a
4.2 percent increase. Commercial
customers would face a 4.9 percent
increase.
Columbus Southern's industrial
customers would experience ail
average increase of about 6.1 percent. That figure would likely be
higher for energy-intensive indus·
lries.
c.
For AEP's seven operating companies combined, the increase for
average residential customers
would be 4.6 percent Commercial
customers would face a 4.9 percent
increase, . while tlie average

Clinton says.ec·onomic
·plan in ·'national intere-st~ --+--

o(

.

opening rnaarb at aa ec011olllk: discussion this
morning a.*CbDHcothe High Sehool. (AP)

CENTER OF ATTRACTION • President
Clinton II tbe center of.attentlon as be makes_ ,

•

PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT FINANCIAL .
PLANNERS

A sweetheart dinner was held
~unday at the Rock·Springs United
Methodist Church in honor of
Avery and Helen Goeglcin as special couple for the year.
A program followed dinner with
welcom e by Thelma Jeffers.
"ltoses Will Bloom" was sung by
Deana Ash. Valerie Hanstine gave
a readin~.
Spectal recognition for the oldest married couple went to Walter
and Virginia Wears for 56 years.
Youngest married couple was John
and Carolyn Jacobs fof three years.
Cour.te married closest to Valenti'ne s Day was Susi.e and Butch
Mash (Feb. 15).
Karen Sloan sang "Let Me Call
You Sweetheart" to all the couples.
Each received asmall gift.
. The reading "Here's a Small
Gift from AU of Us" and a prayer
clolcd the program.

.

Community Action secures
property; food center to be constructed

BENJAMIN C. RANDOLPH
&amp; ASSOCIATES

'Dinner held

Residential electric rates
will increase 4.2 percent
under Clinton's tax plan

afternoon. The hedges were planted several
years ago by artist Gary Rievesch,i as a work or
.·
·
·
art. (AP pboto)

Tri~County

Property trans£ers pos·ted

report on several bills that are
endorsed by the state grang~.
Barbara Fry, CW A, reported
that she has en.tries ror all the contests in 1993. The baking contest
will be at the March meeting and
used candle stubs are to be turned
in to Pamona Grange at the March .
meeting..
A communication from AOPIC
concerning the meeting at the '
Meigs County Library entitled
"How Citizens Can Help Solve the
Solid Waste Crisis."
"So Dear to My Heart" was the
theme of the progmin by lecturer,
Bunny Kuhl. Members presented
old or antique items and iold the
story concerning the item.
Mrs. Kuhl annotinced that "Citizen of the Year Award" will be
awarded at the March meeting.
Several names have been submiued
and will bC voted on.
William Grueser was reported
ill.
Refreshments were served from
tables decorated in the valentine
theme by Roy and Pat Holter.
Social hour was held' at the close of
the meeting.

mld-JOs.

2 Secliono, 12 Pageo 25 con1s :
A Mullitnadia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February, 19, 1993

I

Harrisonville news

The regular meeting of the Rock
Springs Grange was held recently
.at the hall.
. Opal Grueser gave -a legislative

Snow toDiabt. lAW In mid

teeiiS. Saturday, nurrtes. Hl&amp;b In

. ..

Yol:f,ng brothers use scout training.
to survive frigid n-ight in ·woods

•
·
h
------- N ames lll t e news

.

....

ABC's .lackson interview No.1

·Rock Springs Grange meets

Pick 4:
6726

•

Tri-County Community Action
announced today that it has secured
a donated piece of property in
Logan for the construction of its
Regional Food Center.
The center will contain a central
kitchen
for its nutrition program
. also ranks as the fourth mostIn the network news ratings, and will house
ByLYNNELBER
14,000 square foot
watched entertainment ~gram in ABC won with an 11.6. CBS had a warehouse fora the
AP Television Writer
Southeastern
LOS ANGELES. - The Alex TV history, with 36.5 million view- 10.2 and NBC a 9.7.
Ohio
Foodbank.
Here are the top 10 shows, their
Haley miniseries "Queen" helped ers.
Re~ional Food Center will
network
and rating: "Michael be The
The fifSt installment of CBS ·
lift CBS to No. 1 in the lateSt ratconstructed
to prepare meals
ings despite the blockbuster num- three-part "Queen," an offshoot of Jackson Talks ... to Opmh," AB(:,· and distribute donated food which
bers garnered by ABC's Michael Haley's "Roots," came in third. 39.3; "Home Improvement," is made available to food pantries;
An installment of "Roots'' back in ABC, 26.4; "Queen" (CBS Sun- meal sites and soup kitchens
Jackson interview.
CBS ·received a 14.4 rating last 1977 ranks as the ftfth most popu- day Movie), CBS, 24.7; "60 Min- throughout a nine-county area of
week, the 'A.C. Nielsen Co. said lar entertainment program in histo- utes," CBS, 22.5; "Roseanne.''
ABC, 20.9; "Cheers," NBC, 18.9;
Tuesday. ABC had a 13.5, and ry, witll36.3 million viewers. '
ThC special programming is part "Murder, She Wrote," CBS, 18.9;
NBC a 10.8. Each ratings point
of the February "sweeps," one of "Seinfeld," NBC, 18.8; "Murphy
.represents 931,000 homes.
Oprah Winfrey ' s live, 90 - four periods each year used by Brown," CBS, 16.9; "Danielle
.minute interview with Jackson was local stations to help set advertising Steel's 'Heartbeat'" (NBC Monday Njght Movies), NBC. 16.8.
the top-mted show of the week. It rates.
By TONY ROGERS
Associated PressWt'iter
·
•
NEW BEDFORD, Mass. NEW YORK (AP) -Whitney Dog" single was No. 1 for 11 • day. The lawsuit was filed Tues- . Four days before he was to be honHouston's, "I Will Always Love weeks in 1956.
day.
ored at a Cub Scout dinner, a 9You" has becoll)e the longest-runBetty Kelley, Annette Beard year-old boy used his scouting
ning No. I pop single of the rock
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Mem- ~ Helton and Rosalind Ashford skills to survive a frigid , rainy
era.
bers of The Vandellas and The Holmes, mem~ofdtbe Vbl!"ddebllas, night in a wooded swamp with his
The song will be No. I for the Marvelettes say Motown cheated claim Motown faile to a • e Y a two brothers.
14th week on the next Billboard them out of royalties on 1960s hits 1986 seulement to pay royalties for
• 'We're planning something
pop chan, which will be released like "Heat Wave" and "Please: their work. The group was headed extra special now," Carlos Costa,
Fri~y. associate publisher Michael Mr. Postman."
by lead singer Martha Reeves.
Matthew Eklund's .scoutmaster,
Ellis said.
The groups are suing the record
The Marvelettes plaintiffs , said Wednesday. "He's a very
In October, Boyz II Men broke company,-asking that it be ordered Katherine Schaffner, Wyonetta good lcid. The boyish grin. the front
Elvis Prestets record when "End to conduct an audit and pay any Cowart Motley and Georganna tooth missing- he's a picture of
of the Road • stayed atop the Bill- money due under longstanding Tillman, allege Motown broke ·a the perfect scout"
.
board pop chart for 13 weeks. Pres- contracts.
series of 1961 contracts by exploitMatthew. 13-year-old Bnan and
ley's • 'Don't Be Cruel-Hound
A Motown spokesman didn't ing master recordings by the group I !-year-old Robert got lost Tuesimmediately; etum a call Wednes· and failing to pay royalties.
day while on a walk. in the ,woods
with their dog and a friend. The 12·
year-old friend became separated
lSCUSS
from the brothers, made it out of
J
the woods and alerted authorities.
bach, Porn. ViU.
CompUed by:
While hundreds of people
. Mrs. Grace Weber gave several
David L. Chesher, Janice L.
Emmogene Hamilton
readings at the recent meeting of
~hesher by P.O.A., ~el, to Nurs·
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
the Reedsville United Methodist
mg
Corps., Inc .. Salisbury. ·
Women held·at the home or Mrs.
Kenneth
R. Guinther, Carol L,
Isaac D. Jackson, dec'd, affill, to
Nina Boston.
Mrs. Robert Mahr had major
Guinther,
parcels,
8 A. S.I2. T-2,
. Readings included "Love," Doris V.Jackson, Olive.
surgery
at Holzer Medical Center.
"Works of Love," and "Small Boy . Kathryn Wildermuth, Lot 206, R-12, to Richard D. Hill, Wendy
Mrs.
Laura Kreb and Mrs. Ida
Hill, Sunon.
Dilemma."
to Thomas A. Oldaker, Po;&gt;meroy.
Cheadle
visited Ruby Diehl and
Robert C. Bailey, Wilovene BaiMrs. Gladys Thomas gave the
Janice E. Ebersbach. parcel, to
Stella
Atkins
on Wednesday.
opening prayer.
·
. Randy B. Ebersbach. Jennifer Lynn ley, Tracts, to Robert C. Bailey,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Babe Whaley,
Trustees. Wilovene Bailey,
' Mrs. Boston conducted the busi- Ebersbach, Suuon.
Flori~;
Bob
Gibson,
Columbus;
Kevin M. Graham, Cheryl L. Trustees, Salisbury. ·
ness meeting. There were 38 shut·
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alkire,
R~&amp;S~w~.af~. andLin~
in calls reported and cards were Graham, 2.015 A. S.l7, T-2, R-13.
Racine,
were recent callers of Mr.
,to Carl Douglas Bobb, Tammy S. Stewart, Meigs.
sent to several friends.
and
Mrs.
Bob Alldre.
Ardis R. Waggoner by P.O.A.,
Two projects were discussed - Bobb, Salisbury.
·Mr.
and
Mrs. Doug Bishop
Thelma Barton Campbell, F.33, S. 27, F. 24. S. 28, 69.979 A., auended the wedding of their niece
repairs on the entrance to the
dec'd, Cert. of Trans .• to Austin T-7, R-14, to William R. Donahue, in Kentucky over the weekend.
church and folding chairs.
Shane M. Donohue; Scipio.
A $arne was played and a prize Barton Campbell, RuUand.
The Lend-a-Hand Circle met at
Bruce E. Davis, S. 36, T-9. RJames M. Comell,llernice E.
was g1ven. Francis Reed closed the
the
home of Mrs. Virginia Gibson
Cornell. Lot #7, to James M. Cor- 15 •. to Mona J. Perry-Davis, aka on Wednesday
meeting with prayer.
evening.
Refreshments, using the Valen- nell, Bernice E. Cornell, Lucretia Mona J. Davis, Columbia.
tine theme , were served to the M. Stobart. Midd. Viii.
Augusta L. Barnhart, dec' d, Cert
above named and the following:
Mrs . Mamie Buckley. Mrs. Pearl of Trans, to Harold A. Barnhart,
Osborne, Mrs. Diane Jones, Mrs. Olive.
Augusta L. Barnhart, dec'd,
Nancy Buckley. Mrs. Lillian Pickens and a guest, Mrs. Mary Alice affid, to Harold A. Barnhart. Olive.
&amp;
Cynthia M. Hartenbach, Lot
Bise. Mrs. Nancy Buckley received
#1224 (551),10 Stephen R. Harten'
the door prize.

Reedsvl'/[e UMW
proiects
d.

845

Page4

chine."

Pacino earned a rare second
.nomination in the supporting actor
category for "Glengarr.y Glen
Ross." Other supporting actor
picks were Davidson in " The cry,
mg Game," Gene Hackman m
"Unforgiven," Nicholson in " A ·
Few Good Men" and David
Paymer for .:.'Mr. Saturday Night.".
Marisa Tomei was a surprise
supporting aclreSS nominee in "My
Cousin Vinny." Joining her were
Judy Davis in "Husbands and
Wives," Joan Plowright in
"Enchanted April," Vanessa Redgrave in "Howards End" and
Miranda Richardson in "Dam -

Ohio Lottery
\ Pick 3:

Southern
girls advance
.in tourney·

ilrUCtDIII budget deficit,"

iecNplllllid.

gram-by-program set of recom- commit the central bank to specific
mondationa 11 dislinct from general actions, sue!\ 11 cutting interest
&amp;oals," Gree...,.nl&amp;i!L
rates, because of uncertain cco·
He slid there would doubtless nomic conditions in · coming
be debate over the mix of spending months. .
cull and tax i~ Clinton hal
But th!l central bank "recogproposed to shrink the deficit by nizes that it has an imponant role
$325 billion.in the next rour jem. to play in thiJ repnl,'' he said.
He aaid he believed geulns
That commeat. coupled with his
spendin~ control was CI1IClal · strong endorsement of Clinton' •
and he ·
CliniOII'a reform of effort&amp;. were c:etJain to be viewed
the nation 1 u.lih ayatem would u at leut an implicit pledge that
conlributo llpUlc:Mdy toWIId t1a the Fed would lllnd reldy 10 proBut, be aald, moat lmponant vide lower lhort·IIITII Interet~ . wu to movo quietly ·to cut tho to oiTMt lilY attv.R ~ mlbc
deficit, wblcli he ••ld • 'will econo111y £1'0111 Clinton 1 maulve
htcJMalnaly ~ the alablllty DI!Cbao of spending cull and tal
or our ec:onomlc ay.-n If we ccn- lnaW-1
Unue 10 lailluddret~lt."
In
prepared .teltim8ny
"How the deficltla1ednced is o1. . . . , _ llid, "I can ~
very
tJulllt
be done is or our llllred
tar die
__._lmDOIUilt,
••• r~;._
t'~
,A

hii

"Leavins aalde lhc apecific
dollill, it is • aerioul ........ Ill ..,...., .._._.....Oreen~n ~aid
bMII'ne ocanomlc -.n~ Ire
piMtlble and It II a doililed pro-

••

1!COIIOIDY -

='

increase for industrial customers
would be about 7.2percent.
"Our top 15 induslrial customers
alone would face a $40 million
increase, nearly .JO percent hig~er
than their current electric energy
charges," said Richard E. Disbrow,
chairman and chief executive officer of AEP. ''We estimate thai our
industrial customers will pay more
than $100 million in new e!lergy
tax-related fuel costs of the Clinton
proposal is enacted. ·
"These businesses employ tilousands of men and women in the
seven states we serve. Some of'
them, particularly in aluminum.
steel, chemicals and paint, are

Matney
pleads
guilty
Receives 7 to 25
for voluntary
manslaughter .
,_Gallipolis man charged in the
Oct. 9 shooting death of Olley
Angel, Mill Creek Road, Gallipo·
lis, and the shooting of his daugh·
ter; Paula Angel, in the.hip, pleaded guilty WedneSday to voluntary
manslaughter witb a gun specifica·
lion and fel011ious assau!L
·
. Gerald "Jerry" Matney, 18, Gallipolis, was sentenced in the Oallia
County Common Pleas Court ·Of
. Judge Joseph L. Cain to seven to
25 years for the manslaughter
charge, a ftrst deJree felony, t1m1e
yean for the gun apeciftcallon IDII
seven to Is·years for th~ aasault
charge. a second degree felony.
Prosecuting Attorney Brent
S111nden uid Thunday the t1Jree.
year gun apecificatlon sentence
muat be ~erved betore the other
1e11111 can bealn· It will be IPIII'Oil·
matelf. eigbt yean before Mataey
Ia olilibloUlr JIII'OieJ be added.
. Matney wu arialllally chaqed
wiih murder and reJOnioua ISSIIIII
Iller 1hoodng the AnJcli with a
.38 c"'lber auiomatlc bindguri durinl a clis1luiD In the alrldnJ: lot of
Pllza H"ut rollaurint, S'aatern
Clllllpolll.

coul not . lncnur In HviJtl•ldanll rex oar · Mr. Anacf'a family agreed to
the plea, S•tnden uid.
cidzenlover lime.

tion,"Disbrow said.

"We want to work with the pres;
ident on the tough deficit problem
and we recognize the need to raise
revenues. but it would be unfortunate to derail our fragile economic
recovery in the process. Continued
economic growth is an essential
ingredient in auacking the deficit
"Injecting energy taxes into tho
mix , to'g ether· with a possib.le
increase in the corporate tax mte; ·
could damage our industrial cu~­
tomers' efforts to meet world-class
competition," DiSbrow said.

Pomeroy voters to decide tax·~
measure in special election ·
Neither Pomeroy nor. Middleport will have primaries on May 4
although there will be a special
election in. Pomeroy to decide on a
tax measure. ·
As of the 4 p.m. deadline Thursday four Republicans and one
Democrat had filed for the four
seats to be filled on Pomeroy Village CounCil, and four Republicans
had filed for the fetlf' open seats on
Middlepon Village Council. This
eliminated the need for primaries
where the ·respective parties nominate candidates to go on the ballot
in the fall.
The only tax issue filed was by
Pomeroy for 1.9 mill levy for current expenses. The levy goes on as
a new 1ssue because the renewal of
that levy was defeated in last fall's
election.
Republican candidateS filing for
scats on Pomeroy Village Council
were Thomas Werry and William
A. Young, incumbents. and George
Wright and John Musser. The only
Democrat candidate filing was
Larry ·J. Wehrung, incumbent.
Betty Baronick, longtime member
of Pomeroy Village Council, did

not seek re-election.
In Middleport candidates filing
for the four seats on Council were
Dewey Horton and Paul Gerard,
both incumbents, Robert Gilmore
and Michael Childs. This will be
Childs' first bid for a political
office. Gilmore has been off Council for the past three years having
prior to that time served two full
ter~ and a partial term. Neither
Judy Crooks, Republican, nor Jack
~atterfield, Democrat, filed for reelection.
No one filed for the open seat
on tile Middlepon Board of Public
Affairs. The terin of Bruce Fisher
expires this year.
The Meigs County Board of
Elections will meet Thursday to
val ida~ the petitions.
Independents have until 4 p.m.
on May 3, the day before the primary elections in the state of Ohio,
to file for council seats in the two
villages or for a seat on the Middlepot! Board of Public Affairs .
Democrats and Republicans as well
as undeclared regis~red voters can
file as independents.

Clinton jogs in cold Chillicothe
CHILLICOTHE, Obio (AP) - President Clinton couldn't
have picked a more appropriate spoi for bis morning jog today
- CHILL-icothe fit tbe biD.
The president, ·lq town for a question-and-answer session
about bis economic plan, jogged three miles at a local park
undaunted by !'rigid temperatures.
'
When shivering reporters exClaimed at the cold, the president sbruaged. "Yeah, it's 3 degrees.!'
.
Does be normally do thiugs like this?
"Not normally," lie conceded •
Tben be and bis .loi!Irinl partner, Mayor Joseph Sulzer, were
orr to McDonald's;stlli dripping sweat, to chat with· residents
and grab a cup of coll'ee.
"Put a little decaf in there," he said as he thrust out his coffee cup for a refill.
.
.
Clinton was asked if it felt good to be back on a campaign
trail.
"It's good IQ be back out In tbe country," be said.

TICKETS AVA:ILABLB • 'nckets for tile etpa uaullfl'lna
flllbloillllow cl tile Poiatl107 Merdl•ts AllodatiOII1n .,_. a val·
able at ~everal loe8tlou'la Pomeroy. Tbia year's lhw, "'UYer
Elllaee," will be ~ted at Pmaero:r Blt•atary on AJitll :z. ·
Pletured are Joe Clarlt, presiclent of tbe aiMdatloa, and s Cwlt, w11o 11-qalli _ , Clflltly llninl• .._ dlaiNaa. Tickell. $4, may be pudi811d at TJae Dally lleadatl, Clarlt•a Jeweby,
Tbe Jlahrle SIMp, BllttO• IIICI lltnrl, Cblipa111 Shoet 111C1 BOlt

One.

.

. ·- .- ...r

'

looking for a strong economic
recover)! and support for their
efforts to meet global competi;

G~LDMATNEY

.A-.

,..

peltea poll"""

'

'

•

. ..

�Friday, February, 19, 1993

Commentary

OHIO Weather

l

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, February, 19, 1993

..

. '

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Snow ro·recast around Ohio tonight, Saturday-

Saturday, Feb. 20
Accu-Weather• forecast for
MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

•·

.

·

' . DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.
. MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
PubUsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LI;TfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less !han 300
words . All letters tfre subject lO edi'ting and must ·be signed with oame.
address and lelephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should De in good taste, addressing issues, not personaliLies.
.

,

)-\. preemptive package •••
:· ~Don't pick it apart'
.

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON -President Clinton's catalogue for chan~e begins .
with the most difficult political sales- tal\ increases and spendmg curbs.
He wants to make them while he is strongest and there is time for results
• 15efone the next elections.
• He took them to Congress and the nation Wednesday night after unex:;_pectedly broadening the shopping list to include more popular progr_runs
: and promises as weD. It offered a prev1ew of the .budget the new admmts.:tration will present in five weeks, and the equivalent of a State of the
' Union mQSSage.
. .
. 1
· . The White House had said it would be more hm1ted, less detailed on
. cuts and program proposals. llut it came with pages of numbers, after a
· day of 10 Cabinet briefings on what the new administration wants to do as
weD as what Clinton wants cut.
The strategy, clearly, was preemptive, to make it a package, put oppo' nents off stride.
~ : "This economic plan can't please everybody," the president said. "If
' ,the package is picked apart, there'D be somethmg that will anger each of
• us,. ,won't please anybody. But if it is taken as a whole, it will help aU of
us.
'
It won't be enacted as a whole, of course. It wiD be the sum of separate
_ bills on taxes, appropriations and the overall budget, all ffiOIJthS in the
.making. It wiD be changed; no president gets all he wants, not even a
;- newly elected Dem.ocratwith hts fellow Democrats m full control of
. ':Congress. So Clinton will have to compromise. But first, he'll make hts
'

•c~e began by warning that Americans are skeptical about their government: ''They know that ... various interest groups will be out in force lobbying against this or that piece of this plan.''
" Our people will be watching and wondering ... just to .see whether
this is going to be business as usual or a real new day," the president said.
.· Since the Clinton tax proposals had been floated for 'weeks, some as
. irial balloons that burst, there were no unexpected recommendations in his
·debut address to Congress. And Republicans complained that it was
i'ndeed business as usual, insisting there was too much emphasis on rais. ing taxes, not enough Ol) cutting spending.
·
.· • But Clinton said that by 1997 his budget will slice the deficit by $140
" 1\illion, " one of the greatest real spending cuts by an America" presi;dent."
. .
.
· · It isn't real yet Some of the reductiOils he waniS will be hard to ge~

:even from fellow Democrats. For example, he wants to freeze federal
·"salaries, civilian and military, this year and hold future increases one point
below the inflation rate. That won't be done without a struggle.
·· In addition, Clinton needs to convince both COilgress and the taxpayers
· that his verSion of economic change really will make a difference; that his
·program will work to reduce deficits and rekindle economic expansion at
' the sam~ time.
·
· Raising taxes, by $246 biUion over four years in Clinton's plan, usualJy is a step to c.ool th_e economy, not part of a package to s~mulate it and
add, jobs. So Chnton IS out to defy co~ventJOnal economtc w1sdom . .
· · Conservatives argue that the deficll IS a symptom, that the real wlmcnt
is excessive government spending. According to the Heritage Foundation,
~nding has gone up $1.59 for every $1 in tax increases in the past three
·decades.
·· · Clinton now promises that $2 of every $3 produced by his tax and bud·get cut program will go to reduce the deficit. He said he wOuld do it fairly,
:and obliquely· confessed to renegjng on a campaign promise by recom·
in'ending an energy tax.
Since he didn't spare the middle class entirely, Clinton noted that he
wants income taxes raised only on wealthiest 1.2 percent of Americans.
'·, Neither that, nor his dropped pledge to cut the deficit by half in a term,
·rior the forsaken effon to cut spending $2 for $1 in tax increases, was lost
QT1 Republican critics.
•
"Change now ·means reviving old, discredited, big government tax.3'nd-s~nd schemes," Rep. Robert H. Michel, the House Republicllll lead'ei srud in a TV rebuttal.
'Perhaps so. But if Clinton can make his cuts stick and claim headway
'roward his economic goals, he' DouUast lhe critics. That won't be easy.
• EDITOR'S JliOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
:national politics for more than 30 years.

;Today in history ·
••
By The Associated Press
. Today is Friday, Feb. 19, the 50th day o0993. There ane 315 days left
:in the year._
·
·
.
.
• Today's Highlight in History:
:on Feb . 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Ex~uttve
'Order 9066, giving the U.S. military the power to relocate and Intern
;"any and all Ifersons." The order was used .to detain some 110,000
•Japanese Americans, most of them U.S.-born CtllZens.
: On this date:
• In 1473 the astronomer Copernicus was born in Torun, Poland .
• : . In 1803, Congress voted to accept t;)hio's. borders and constitution.
:(However Congress did not formaUy nillfy Oh10 statehood unul1953.)
• In !807, former Vice President Aaron Burr was arrested in Alabama.
=&lt;He was subsequendy tried for D'eason and acquitted.)
'
: In 1846. the Texas state government was fo"!'aUY ins~ed in Austin.
• In 1864, the Knights ofPyliWis was founded 1p Washmgtan D.C.
·
" In 1878 Thomas Edison received a patent for nis phonograph.
• In 1881: Kansas became the fii'St state to prohibit all aleoholic bevcr.
ages
·
·
': 1~ 1942, during World War II, about 150 Japanese warplanes attacked
"me Australian city of Darwin.
; In 1945, U.S. Marines landed on the Japanese-held island of lwo Jima
~in the Western Pacific.
·
~ In 1959, an agreement was signed by llritain, Turkey and Greece
~granting Cyprus its independence.
.
.
.
.
· ;~ . In 1963, the Soviet Union mformed Prestdenl Kennedy !_hat 11 wolJ!&lt;I
~ withdraw "several thousand" of an estimated I 7,000 Sovtet troops 111

•

ru~:-1985, about 150 people were kiUed when a Spanish jetliner crashed

•iniO a mountain while approaching the aupon at Bilbao, Spam. .
.; In 1986, the U.S . Senate approve~! a treaty ~utla~mg genoc1de, 37
:· eais after tlie pact had fii'St been submitted for rauticauon.
.
::Y Ten years ago: ;rhineen IXX?I'Ie. Wf:!C found shot to death at a gambling
·•club in Seattle's Chinatown district m what became lcnown ·as the Wah
::Mee :Massacre. (Two Chinese immigrants were later convicted of the
::IdDings.)
· 1tse
· If I he "0rgamzallon
' . o f the
.• Five years ·ago: A group calling
·:Oppressed on Eanh" claimed responsibility for the kidnapping of U.S.
::Marine Lt. Col. William R. Higgins, who ~~ in charge of a Umted
:·Nations truee observer group in Lebanon. (Htggtns was laler slain by hts
' . captors.)
'

GAP.... has beef with poor meat inspection -

IToledo I 27" I

.

, .
WASHINGTON- When the remained idle.
,
tern . The meat industry was casses. ~ven if they could, at best
recent Jack-in-the-Box food poiThis inspector's grievance was allowed to "police" itself. Mane they could certily that the meat
·soning oulbreak hit the front pages, ultimately upheld, but most inspec- agement was allowed to purge looks safe, and the bulk of foodTom Devine was "only surprised tors haven't had happy endings . . trained and qualified federal safety threats can remain in invisi·
that the diSaster took this long to
inspectors. Inspectors had as little ble fonn." Three times since 1985,
happen."
as six to eight seconds to inspect the National Academy of Sciences
As the legal director of the Gov1,000-pound carcasses, blurring by has p10{10Sed npid lab ICSts to the
ernment Accountability Project, a
at 300 to 400 an hour. Whistle• USDA 111 order 10 take the ~uosswhistleblower support group,
blowers said that even when viola.- work out offood-safety decisiOns.
Devine has represented over 150
tions were spotted, companies . MC811While, Agriculture Secremeat and poultry inspectors could call Washington and get indi- . wy Mike Espy held an cxtraordi·
more whistleblowers than from any
vidual inspector decisions over· nary meeting recently at GAP
government agency. ''A tragedy is
ruled. .
headqUirlels -· once reg~ P
never the sort of vindication a "When meat inspectors protested
Tbe upshot: In the 1980s inspec- enY'J territory - with five
whistleblower wants," Devine too loudly, they were harassed, .' too condemned only 60 percent &lt;&gt;f wh1stleblowers flown in from
says. "But it confurns all the warn- fired and even threatened with e the meat and poultry that would around the coontry. At least. ·~·
ings they've been making for the prosecution," Devine says. ·
have flunked during the 1970s. The bolically, Espy was declarmg
last decade."
This war on consumers and contaminated-meat scare is now on · amnesty for a 8JI?UP of government
Typical was a case we r~ inspectors was presaged in a 1981 the Clinton administration's platter. , workers wbo until now bave had to
on in 1988. At a Nebraska meat· Department of Agriculture manThough there is some tempta· rely ontlleiiQIIergrowtd.
packing plant, a government agement memo: "The special inter- tion to heap blame Qn the hamburg- :' EXPJ!lt11. WI'tNESS .-.!mag.
inspector feared she would lose her est group)~ representing the meat e.r-flippers for nO! cooking '!te meat me .DoJI!!d Trwnp ·
01)
jobifshesiOJlpedtheassemblyline andpoulay industry have woo and long enough, the problc;m 1s .more · :hotel~t,Mte
·Millccn
where she saw what appeared 10 be now ha-.:e the ear of Washington. deeply rooted. The ras1c of identify· on the evils of junk bon&lt;ls. ~ ~van
an unhealthy carcass pass. Her Tbey 'paid their dues' and are now ing contaminated meat is kept • Boe.sky on the ~eats of ms1der
USDA superiors warned ber that it in the driver's seat.... The con- ·deliberately daunting.
.
trad~!~g. Now ~Sider Charles H.
was money out of the company's sumer advocate base has disinte"Although the in~tors are no Keatill$ Jr. •an expert 'Matoss 0!1
pocket every time. she shut off the grated. We niust he versatile and longer blindfolded w1th their hands the savmgs illld loan scanllal.
line. The inspector's union filed a adjust to this new challenge."
tied, the line speeds are still hope·
. In a recent. le~ !0 a congr_es· •
grievance with the USDA claiming
Essentially, a neW' era in food lessly out of control," Devme s1ona1 commtsSt'!n ~nvestlfaltng
the veterinarian told her it cost safety was ushered in: slaughter argues. "Now the problem is they , the .scandal, Keating s SC?n·tn·!&amp;W
$130 every minute the line houses were now on the honorsvs- can't possibly keep.up with the car- wrot~ til at !he former .fmaa~lef,
·
· ·
.who n currently servtng pnson
time for his role in the scandal, il
!'M .WiT/'{
"very anxious to tell the truth iri
this
horrible tragedY." The 1989
PeRceNT-- UNTil.
coDapse of Keating's Lincoln Sa!;
ings &amp; Loan will cost raxpayers up.
GeT
.
·to $3 billion, and has resulted ill
state and federal convictions On
bank and securities fraud again•
the rmaneier.
.
"Until the conclusion of lhl'
federal trial, Mr. Keating wa~
requested by his attorneys to nqt
speak openly on this issue," ~­
ings' son-In-law Garr Hall Wrtlle.
"He is now mOSIIliXIOUS 10 clo IJ!I.
He would be willing t9 f\Y l!&gt;
Washington tomorrow to tealify 1f
permiued to do so. You may rett~=h
me today. I am anxious to hear
your reply."
·
Commission sourees say tbey
are considering a trip to Calif0111ia
to take Keating's teStimony. "The
commission wouldn't give him 1
nationlll forum and a vacation frolll
prison," · said one commission.
'

.

'

IND.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

•

. .•.•..

.

W.VA.

roo

lea

1o Me!

~

South-Central Obio
light snow developing
late. Low 15 to 20. South winds
· less than 10 mph. Chance of snow
· is 80 percent. Saturday, snow·
tapering to scattered flurries. High
35 to 40. Chance of snow is 80 percent.
TonisJ!~

~hange

Chelsea Ann Lute ·

assistance. Yet, if the federal government spent an additional $100
billion on these new programs,
there almost certainly would

·Joseph Perkins
remain as many people on the weifane rolls.
That's because there is no corre!ation between how much money
• the government spends on welfare
· and how many people escape
poverty. If there were such a link,
poverty would have b~en wiped
from the face of Amenca a long
time ago.
Since President Lyndon Johnson
launched the vaunted War on
Poveny more than a quarter-celltury ago, the United States has spent
$3.5 trillion on welfare. That
exceeds the full cost of World War
11 after adjusting for inflation.
What have American taxpayers
seen for the average $50,000 per
household they have contributed
toward Johnson's alms race? A
poverty rate that has been virtually
unchanged over the last 25 years
from 14.7 percent in 1966 to 14.2
percent in 1991.
The welfare establishment is
hopeful that President .Clinton will
be persuaded to invest additional
money on the poor. But America
already is sPending more than

·EMS responds
:to seven calls
Units of the Meigs County
. Emergency Medical Service
responded to seven calls for assis·
: tance overnight
Monday - 9:38 a.m. Tuppers
' Plains to State Route 7 for Homer
. Cole who was treated·' and not
transported; 10:06 a.m. Rutland to
PageviUe Road for Berlin Mullins
who was transported to Holzer
Medical Center; 10:24 a.m .
Pomeroy to Village Green Apartments for Nancy Ackennan who
was treated and not transported;
12:18 p.m. Tuppers Plains 10 State
· Route 7 for Jane Fick who was
transported to HMC; 2:10p.m.
; Pomeroy to· Main Street for
. Michuel Champion who was transported 1p Pleasant Valley Hospital;
5:26p.m. Rutland to State Route
681 for Opal Carey who was transpaned to Veterarls Memorial Hospital.
.
Tuesday - 6:08 a.m. Pomeroy to
Spring Avenue for Roben Carter
who was transported to V~terans
Memorial Hosp1tal.

Jack Anderson ancl Michael
Binsteln a~e writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

enough to eliminate poverty.
and achievement, inability O!" ,
Indeed, the Census Bureau cal- unwiUingness to conttol one's chilculated last year that the amount of dren, increased single pare'\thood
money required to lift America's 7 and iUegitimacy, erirtlinal activity, .
million poor families abov&amp; the and drug and lllcobol abuse.
poverty hne was $5,515 per family.
The question that should - ~.
That adds up to $38.5 -billion, less uppennost in the minds of Qi~
than one-ftfth the $225 biUion that administralion welfare ref0fi'1110rs ia
government at all levels actually how best to modify the behavior of
spent on anti•poveny programs.
the underclass. If the government
So, then, let us say that Presi- · somehow can change the cbronit
dent Clinton wanted to make good poor's behavior patterns there will
on his campaign pledge to end wei- . be fewer of them.
fare as we know it. He 'simply , Where 10 start? The poveny dll.l
could order his Treasury seCretary provide a clue. A family with rwo
to mail $5,600 checks to every parents, both high school gradu.
poor family in the land: Taxpayers ales, one or both working'
time;
would end up saving roughly $185 has a beuer than 95 percent pmllebiUion a year,
bility of bein$ above the poverty ·
Hillary Clinton is on lhe right line. That apphes 10 whileS, blacks,
track when she says that behavior yellows and browns alike. ·
modification rather than·additional . The upshot is that the welfare
welfare spending is the key ro solv- sySiem must get away from handing the poverty problem . The outs for food, shelter, carfare and
chronic poor remain so largely . the like. If the $226 billion a year
because they bend toward self, the government spends on such
defeating behavior that impedes welfare entitlements were used
their upward mobility.
instead to provide poor women and
Roben Rector, who has written men substantial incentives to ~et
frequenUy about poverty in Ameri- high school diplomas, get mamed
ca, speaks of "behavioral pover- and get to work, it would not be ,
ty," a breakdown in the values and long before they lifted themselves
conduct thiu lead to the fonnation from poverty.
of healthy families, stable personalJoseph Perkins is a columnist
ities·and self-suffiCiency.
for The Sail, Dle&amp;o Unlon-Trl·
Such behavioral poverty, says . bune and a:syndicated writer for
Rector, produces assOrted patholo- Newspaper Enterprise Associ&amp;·
gies: dependency and eroded worlc lion.
ethic, lack of educa11onal aspiration

bring a wea\'(ln 10 school, he was
promptly d1sarmed and warned
never to do that again. If a girl
became pregnant, she was whisked

Lottery numbers

run

1

n;lli.am A•.Ru'sh'er ·

'"'

away by her family and not discussed thereafter.
Today, in this nation of250 million, there are Uterally miUions of
class dunces. There are also whole
subcultures dedicated to IUmCI&lt;) violence in many urban schools. And
every year hundreds of thousands
of tccn·age ~iriJI become ~gnant,
yet have no 'home" worthy of the
name 10 take them in.
Arid yet we' are still bettinJ the
nationa'a future on the good olcl·
flihlonecl propolilion that every
youn4ster, given that traditional
Amencan education, can Jl'OW up
to lake care of him.elf or benelf,
contribute to the beuemtent of the
. country, and maybe even become
president.
.'
As a matter of fact, we have
driven that (now false) assumption

even deeper into the ground. It isn't
enough to guarantee everyqne a
high school diploma; we insist that
our children are all capable of
absorbing a college education, and
·entitled to taxpayer betp in obtaining one. In fact, we as a nation are
so stuck on our capabilities that we
have to import Mexicans to do the
stoop labor in our fields, and Peruvian nannies to care for our roddlers.
nire isn't anotller major nation
' in the Western world that doesn' 1
have· whal amounts 10 a "twotriiCk" eduattional syslelil: One for
those only snnm enousJt for vocationa! trainlna, and one for the
much smaller nulnber, identified by
examinadons, thal can auly benefit
ftom a hiaber eclucation, Yet we
insist on treltlng every American
minor as a potcniial Einstein.
My frientll, It won't WOit. But
the question I .,ant to address
today Is the even harder one: What
shalf we clo with the dunc:ea?
Don't tell me they don't exist.
They IUO out there,· In their millions: People who clo .DOl have, and

•

'

'

'

'

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Thursday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
Pick 3 Numbers: 8-4-5
Pick 4 Numbers: 6-7-2-6
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$473,353.50 to winners .in Thursday's Pick 3 Numbers daily game.
' Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
" $1,239,970.50.
: In the other daily game, Pick 4
Numbers players wagered
$275,422 and will share $88,200.
The jackpot for Saturday's
, Super Lotto drawing is worth $20
c million.

The Daily Seutioel
'

to do with today's dunces?

For the better pan of 200 years
it was the genial assumption, and
also by and huge the fact, that
immigrants, arriving in America,
would embrace our national values,
be absorbed into our national culture, and in due course contribute
substantially to the hettetment of
the country.
To help this process along, and
also ensure that our values and culture were transmitted to nativeborn children as well, every youn~­
stet was guaranteed a free public
education. the "little red ·schoolhouse" became, and remains, one
of the central institutions in the
mind's eye ot.the average Ameri~
can.
But of cowse the reality today,
in many cases, is vastly different.
The country is far more populous,
and the poplilation far more hererogeneous, than it was when thoae 13
British c:olonies declared their independence and formed the Union. In
early America alm011 every classroom had a: "class dunce" -·a
problem, no doubt, but a manage~ble one, If anyone_ ever dared

1

(UIP81U.I80)

Publi1hed e'f'ery aRenioon, Moaday
lh-'&gt;·l'riday, Ill Caart St., Pam""'l',

Ohio loy

lho Ohio Valley PubllahlnB
company!Muttlmeclla Inc., PoaMroy,

Ollie 45768, fh, 993-2!M&gt;. Second claa
pootappoldat~,Ohi~ ·

simply cannot acquire, any skills ·
that are saleable in our highly ·technologized economy. It isn't their
fault, any more than it's. oun. But,
this being a civilized nation,. they
are our responsibility,
I suggest that the fust and most
imponant thing we can do is·Stop
kidding ourselves - and them.
They aren't going 10 be Einsteins,
they can't benefit from college. and
they can't even earn a hish school
diploma wonhy of the name. It is
unbearable to see politiclana who
know better, and ·~eachers' lobbiea
that at laast suspect the truth,
deceiving America .into thinking
thai education il tile IOiutlon 10 tile
probiem4 of theae poor IOula.
The old libenl "solution" of
simrly tltrowinJ money II .them is
wei on ita way to destroying them
spiritually, We muat love them
eiloUsJ! 10 fmc! tasb they 11e Clpl·
blo of, require that thoy perform
them, IIIII then lelpeellncl lft•cl
thai Delformaa
.

M_, The Alaodated - ...... u..

~.,:_~'r~~,ll~~"::

Nowv_:r.; SaJoo, 788 Thltd A••...
N...
,Noor,...tOOI,7.
•
I'OII'I'IIASTIISoad ~ cha,....io
Tbo Dati~t!onttnol, Ill Court St. ,
Pwm.,, lo 411'111.

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wuu. a..i..r 11 a IJIUIIclt·

ed writer lor Ntw1paper ED•r·
prl• Alloelatloa. . ·

Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tue;sday:
Sunday, rain likely south, snow
changing to rain nooh. Highs upper
30s to upper 40s. 'Monday and
Tuesday, a chance of snow. Lows
in the 20s with highs in the 30s.

. Roosevelt Newsome

Chelsea Ann Lute, infant daughter of Kevin and Lisa Burke Lute,
Tuppers Plains, died Thursday.
Feb. 18, 1993, at Children's Hospital in PillSburgh, Pa.
Arrangements
will
be
announced later by White Funeral
· Home in Coolville.

of behavior will kill · poverty

There are few matters of public
policy on which I find myself in
agreement wit!) Hillary Clinlon .
But we are ol"'like mind on the
issue of welfare reform.
·
In a recent Newsweek interview,
the first lady sounded very much
like a conservative as she ~ndered
the problems of America s underclass. "Tbe culture of poverty in
this country lias become mstitutionalized," said she, adding that "a
different set of approaches" is
needed to wean the poor from longterm welfare dependency.
'
It remains to be seen whether
her thinking is reflected in the new
administration's promised welfare
reform package. From what has
been heard so far .from, among others, Health and Human Services
Secretary Oonna Shalala, the
prospect does not appear especially
good.
It stands f.O reason that, to deinstitutionalize the .culture of poverty
of which the fU"st lady spoke, the
existing welfare system needs .to be
completely overhauled. Yet, Sha!ala is talking about adding new
progtams to the failing welfare systern, ill a minimum cost to taxpayers of $6 biUion.
On the face, the proposed new
programs see~;~~ bemgn: expanded
education and training for welfare
recipiefltS, as well as child care
allowances and transportation

Wh~t

.............S•HPd

below ·and 25 below zero for most
of the state.
The record high temperature for
this date was 70 in 1939 and the
record low was 6 below zero in
1936.
'
Sun~el Satw;day wiD be at 7:18
a.m., w1th sunset at 6:13 p.m.
• Around tbe nation
A storm that pounded pans of
California with hail, snow and tor·
rential rain continued early today.
More snow fell in portions of the
Midwest and East.
Rain extended from San Francisco to San Die~o. while snow fell
in Boston, Buffalo, N.Y., Cleveland, Portland, Maine, and parts of
Oregon and WashinSion state.
The Western storm was to continue for a few days.
More than 2 inches of rain fell

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Hou·se subcommiuee working on a
proposed $629 million workers '
compensation budget will try to
find alternatives to a projected
inc~ease in administrative fees; the
panel's chairman said
Rep. Marc Guthrie, D-Heath,
heads a House Finance subcommittee that heard testimony on the
budget request from the Ohio
Bureau of Workers' Compensation,
the employer-financed system that
provides benefits for employees
injured on the job.
The bureau's budget proposes
hiring 1,253 employees and mod-

ernizing operations in the.southern
half of the state, along with other
administrative changes to improve
efficiency.
If the budget is approved, the
Workers' Compensation Board will
have to increase the administrative
fee paid by employers from 26.7
cents for each $100 of payroll to
more than 31 cents in 1994.
The bureau told the subCommit:
tee. Thursday th'at if all th~ proposed changes are enacted, msurance rate increases could be kept to
3.5 percentage points in each of the
next two years. Otherwise, major
insurance rate increases would be
required.

----Area deaths-- Malfunction causes

·

source.

~

C1 993 AcarWeather, Inc.

_ _ _..;....___ Weather-----

You

~ou

Sunny Pl. Cloudy C/o&lt;Jdy

\/fa Auodlted Presti ~plicsNet

By The ASsociated Press
Look for mostly cloudy skies
Saturdar.. with snow tapering to
flurries tit the east. There's also a
chance of fll!'ries..lYest. Highs were
forecast to range from .the upper
20s in lhe nonh to upper 30s in the
south.
Clouds will lead to the chance
for some light snow across Ohio
tonight. Accumulations are not
!ikely across western parts of the
state, but a new inch or so is possible over the eastern counties.
Early today, temperatures were
near or below zero. Youngstown
set a new record low temperature
of 3 below zero.
Winds had diminished overnight
and were averaging 5 to 10 mph,
making the wind chill between 10

I''

'

Thu_rsday in downtown Los Angeles, bringing the season •iota! 10
21.22 inches, compared with 9.82
inches in a normal season.
Firefighters pulled a wom~n
from her car after it was swept
downstream when sbe tried to cross
the rain·swollen creek near
Newhall.
About 15 farm workers were
lifted to safety by helicopter arter
they were stranded in a flooded
broccoli field in CamariUo in Ventura County.· ·
'
Runoff and sewage from overloadeqlines turned the surf brown
along Santa Monica Bay. About
400,000 gallons of sewage flowed
into the ocean, closing some beaches..
The weather caused numerous
fender benders and minor rock- .

slides in Southenl California. Some
street and house flooding was
reported.
•
Heavy snow fell in the moun•
tains from San Bernardino National
Forest northward. Snow also fell i"
the Great Lakes region.
·
Snow was forecast for today in
the Rockies and freezing rain was
expected in the central and south•
em Appalachian states. Mainly dJt
. weather was expected in the East. •
The forecast called for tempera~
tures in the teens to the 40s along
the Atlantic Coast, mostly in the
30s in the nation's mid-section, in
the 40s in the Rocky Mountain
region and in the 60s in Southern
California.
·
The nation's high was 80
de~ in Coral Springs, Fla.

Workers' comp budget sees boost in administrative fee

'

t;e::!t"J.

The Dally Sentlnei-Pa~

Insurance rates are paid by compeilsation cases, sometimes for
about 268,000 employers. Several lawyers who ask for help.
hundred large companies that are
"We do the work, lllld they gel
self-insured pay an administrative the money," he said.
.
fee but do not pay into the sta!!:'s
J. Wesley Trimble, bureau
insurance fund.
administrator, said lawyers are not
The subcommittee criticized needed in workers' compensation
involvement of lawyers in many cases unless an objection is filed,
claims handled by the agency.
usuaUy by an employer.
Guthrie complained that his legTrimble said fewer lawyen will
islative aide spends 40 percent of be involved as the system is modher time checking on :-vorkers' ernized and operating effiCiently.

--Meigs announcementsLenten breakfast planned
The annual Lenten Breakfast of
Trinity Church will be Wednesday
at 7:45 a.m. Reservations may be
made by calling 992-7765, 985384Z through Monday.

release of sulfur dioxide

Program planned
Roosevelt Newsome, 70, Route
An extension program, 'How to
I, Ewington (Hamden community),
CATLETTSBURG, Ky. (AP) said she had breathing problems Best Handle Common Diseases and
formerly of Mingo County, W.Va., - A malfunction at Ashland Oil after the release.
Pests Around the Home Yard," will
died Thursday, Feb. 18, 1993, at Inc.'s refmery released up to 6,000
"This is something you learn to be presented by Hal Kneen, Meigs
his residence foUowing an extend- pounds of sulfur dioxide in a black live with," she said.
C
o
u
n
t
y
ed illness.
She's among plaintiffs in two .' Agriculture/Horticulture/Natural
plume of smoke, authorities say.
He was born April 4, ·1922 in
A wet gas compressor stopped pollution lawsuits against Ashland Resources Agent, on March 4 from
Min·go County, son of the late working shortly after 7: 15 a.m. Oil who turned down a setUement 8-9:30 p.m . at the Metgs County
Charlie and Ida Evans Newsome.
Thursday. The gas was rerouted last week. Lawyers say hundreds of Senior &lt;;i~ens Center in Pomeroy.
He was a retired bridge con- · through a flare system and burned plaintiffs accepted payments of AdmiSSIOn 1s free.
struction working, retiring in 1975.
off, causing the black smoke, said $2,500 to $3,000 each to settle their
Survivors include his wife, Ashland Oil spokesman Bruce claims of health and property damGardening program slated
Olive Marcum Newsome, who he Churton .
"Planning Your Flower Bed,
age because of emissions from the
married May 5, 1945 in Paintsville,
Vegetable Garden, Home LandThe release did not raise sulfur r~finery.
Ky.; two sons, Roben E. Newsome dioxide levels in the air around the
of ChapmanviUe, W.Va, and Jerry plant ·above normal levels, said
Newsome of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Ashland Oil spokes.man Bruce
three daughters, Mrs. Raymond Chunon.
·
(Ernestine Boster of Proctorville,
Sulfur dioxide, a colorless gas
Mrs. Donald (Alice F.). Wood of with a pungent odor, can be fatal if
Fifty people were fined and four $350 plus costs, operator's license
Hamden, and Mrs. Michael (Freda) inhaled and can irritate eyes and others forfeited bond Wednesday in suspended for 90 days, one year
Sowards of Columbus; 13 tl!and- mucous membranes,' according to the Meigs County Court of Judge probation;
children; four great-grandchildren; the Condensed Chemical Dictio- Patrick O'Brien.
Karla Jordan, The Plains, drivFined
were:
Kevin
J.
Grueser,
ing
under suspension, three days
and one sister, Mrs. Walter (Alice) nary.
.
Long
Bottom,
seat
belt,
$25
plus
jail
suspended if receiving valid
Noel of Lavalette, W.Va. ,
Ashlaod Oil has 10 days to me a
Services will be held 2 p.m. written report on .the malfunction, costs; J~ffrey S. Rodenbeck, Gal- operator's license in 60 days, $75
Sunday at the Lillie Pearl Old Reg- said John Hornback, director of the · lipolis, speed, $23 plus c~sts; suspended to $25 and costs; Ty
ular Baptist Church, with Brothers Kentucky Natural Resources and Edward Daniels, Pomeroy, failure Herman, address unreported, crimiIvory Sowards, Joshua Hicks; and Environmental Protection Cabinet · to conttol, $20 plus costs; Sharon nal damaging, $50 plus costs, restiSam Franks offiCiating. Burial will He said the agency wiHconsider if Stewart, Rutland, seat belt, $25 tution; Douglas Raines, Long Botplus costs; James R. Sheets, Rut- tom, failure to stop for school bus,
be in MarCum Cemetery, Route I, action is warranted after that.
land,
speed, $25 plus costs; Mark five days jail suspended, $50 plus
Ewington.
· Donna Kiser of nearby Kenova,
D.
Piper,
Bursglove, W.Va., seat- costs, one year probation; John
Friends may. call at the church W.Va., who suffers from asthma,
belt,
$IS
plus costs; Cletis S. Ginther, Pomero.l!, DUI, $450 plus
· on' S_aiunlay after 6 p.m., with wake
Miller,
Morgantown
, W.Va., seat ·costs, 30 days jrul suspended to 10,
serviCe at 7 p.m.
belt,
$15
plus
costs;
Randy G. operator's license suspended for
· Arrangements are under the
Amsbary,
Washington,
W.Va., one year, plates and registration to
direction of McCoy-Moore Funeral
speed, $24 plus costs; Pamela be delivered to the coun, one year
Home, Vinton.
·
Buckley, Pomeroy, speed, $22 plus probation, driving under suspen costs;
sion, six months jail suspended to
Alison L. Snyder, Columbus, 10 concurrent with DUI sente.nce,
ospi~al
failure to control, $20 plus costs; $100 plus costs, one year proba"
Jeffrey
C. Kimes, Reedsville, seat lion; Betty Darst, Pomeroy, seal
Veterans Memorial
belt,
$25
plus costs; Amy S. Alli- belt,$15.pluscosts;
.
Thursday admissions - Beatrice
CINCINNATI (AP) - Yet son, Gallipolis, speed, $20 plus
Tom
Stover,
Pomeroy,
seat
belt,
Lisle, Syracuse.
another candidate has withdrawn costs; Gregory Sean Gibbs, New $15 plus costs; Raymond C. CasThursday discharges - none.
from the race for the congressional
Haven, W.Va., $24 plus costs; sady, Tuppers Plains, overload,
scat vacated by Willis Gradison, Marshall Slater, Albany, speed, costs only; Rae Lynn Basham,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER leaving 12 contenders for the $20 plus c,osts; John C. Mexson, Coolville, speed, $20 plus costs;
Reedsville, left of center, $10 plus David A. Carsey. Racine, seat belt,
Discharges, Feb. 18 - Myrtle March 16 primary elections.
RepubliCan
Donnie
R.
Jones,
the
costs;
Katrina R. Turner, Pomeroy, $25 plus costs; William C. Smith,
Landis, Colleen Bowers, Timothy
Norwood
city
auditor,
withdrew
failure
to control, $20 plus costs; Morgantown, W.Va., speed, $21
Wise Barbara Peterson, Dakota
before
the
deadUne
Thursday
afterThomas
Meade, Blaine, Ky., speed, plus costs; Lisa G. Pettry, Athens,
Laudeniiilt, Janet Krider, Gene
noon,
Hamilton
County
Board
of
$20
plus
costs; Myron D. Jones , assured clear distance, $20 plus
Boyer, Sandra McCoy, Cybil
Elections
spokesman
Jeriy
Collier
Oak
HiD,
speed,
$23 plus costs;
Shiltz, Travus Sto~t. Dorothy Pincosts; William L. Burger, Columsaid.
Melborn
•
E.
Pendley, bus, speed, $20 plus costs; Connie
cclli, Mrs. Tod~ Kitchen and son,
GOP candidates Mary Anne Ravenswood, W.Va., $20 plus Fields, Logan, DUJ, $350 plus
Paul Harrison, Pamela Dotson,
Christie
of Madeira and Bruce costs; Alan R. Cole, Cincinnati , costs, I0 days jail suspended to
Timothy Hughes, Robert Stevens,
of Lebanon quit the
Gudenkauf
speed, $22 plus costs; Kimberly E. three, operatot's license suspended
Roben BateS, Patricia Brady, Wesrace
earlier.
A
Democrat,
Les
Brogack, Stewan, speed. $22 plus -to 90 days, one year probation ley Meeks, Charlotte Rice, James
Mann
of
Cincinnati,
was
disqualicosts; Nathan C. Thompson, Rut- upon enrollment and completion of
Anderson, J. Jay Johnson, and
fied because he lacked enough sig- .land, speed, $21 plus costs; Kris A. RTP school, $150 of fine and jail
Carly Peterson.
natures on his petitions.
SeD~rs, Portland, seat belt, $25 plus will be suspended; left of center,
Write-in candidates were to
costs; Ralph G. Coleman, $20 plus costs;
·
Births, Feb. 18 - Mr. 311d Mrs. have until this afternoon to me dec- Reedsville, speed, $20 plus costs;
Jeffrey
Hayes,
Radcliff,
DUI,
Tracy Lee, daughter, Pomeroy. Mr. larations of intent. independent Troy Hendrix, Dardanelle, Ark .•
$450
plus
costs,
30
days
jail
susand Mrs. Carl Lorubbio, daughter, candidates must file nominating
speed,
$21
plus
costs;
Jeremy
C.
pended
to
10,
one
year
probation,
New Marshfield. Mr. and Mrs. petitions by 4 p.m. on March 15.
Stone, Dexter, speed, $21 plus operator's license suspended for
Scott Sword, daughter, Crown
Gradison, a Republican , costs; Robert Jenkins, Delaware, one
Ronald P. Casei, MiddleCity.
resigned from Congress last month driving under the influence, 10 port,year;
speeding, $80 plus costs;
to become a lobbyist for the health days jail suspended to three.days, William Wells, Tuppers Plains,
insurance industry.
drivi'ng under suspension, '$100

scape and/or New Lawn," an extension program, will be presented
Thursday at the Meigs County .
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy
from 8-9:30 p.m. Hal Kneen,
Meigs County Agriculture/Ho':liculture/Natural Resources Agent.
Admission is free.
'
AAUWtomeet
The American Association of
University Women (AAUW) will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Racine United Methodist Church.
Belated valentine dance
.
There wiD be a belated valentine
dance (round and square) on Feb.
27 from 8-11 p.m. at the RusSell
Building in Millfield Music will be
by Out of the Blue and John RusseU will be the caUl:!'.
·

50 fined in Meigs County Court

H

news

StOCkS

Divorce sought

Am Ele Power....................34 7/8
Ashland Oil........................26 1/4
AT&amp;T...........:..................... 53 1/4
Bank0ne........................... 511/8
Bob:Evaris .........................17 1/2
Chaiming Shop... :......... :.... 16 If?.
Chmp.Industries ................ JO
CityHolding......................221/4
Federal Mogui... ................ JS 7/8
Good~ear T&amp;R ..................67
Key ntun'on .................. . 22
Lands 'End......................~:.. 24 S/8
Umited Inc........ :.............. 24 5/8
Multimedia lnc..............., .. 33 1/2
Point B111Corp.................... 12 3/4
D ... R 11
l
3/16
...,.. ea ID8II ..................
Reliance Elec:trlc ................21 1/2
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 181/2
Shoney's Inc ................ ,.... 23
Srar Bank ...........................36 3/4
Wendylnt'l....................... .l3
Worthington Ind;...............27
Stock repon. •re,the 10:30
a.m . qDOtel ~ro•lded ••'
Kemper Secur tlea,
lac., o
GallljoiiL
,,

-·

~~------llllllilt'
'

'

"

Another
candidate
quits r~ce

An action for divorce has been
filed in the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas by Rebecca D. Taylor, Racine, from Chad L. Taylor,
Syracuse.

. plus costs, 10 days jail suspended
to three, one year probation, failure
to display registration, $10 plus
costs; Walter Haggy II, Rutland,
driving under suspension, three·
days jail suspended if receiving
valid operator s license in 60 days,
$75 plus costs; Kimberly Barrett,
· Dexter, unsafe vehicle, $20 plus
cos~;

·Stephanie English, Middleport,
no operators license, $100 pl)ls
costs, five days jail suspended if
receiving valid operator's license:in
60 days, one year probation; Vicki
Pullins, Portland, reckless operation, $100 plus costs, failure to
'drive in marked lanes, $100 plus
costs; Sharon Edwards, New
Haven, DUI, $350 plus costs, oper- ·
ators license suspended for 90
days, 10 days jail suspended io
three • upon enrollment and completion of the RTP schOOl, $150 of
the fine and the jail will be suspended;
Jeanette L. Lunsford, Shade, ·
speeding, $20 plus costs; Ralph
Edwards Jr., Pomeroy, liUering, 10 .
days jail suspended, $20 plus cosis,
one year probation; Gregory A.
Taylor, Long Bottom, littering, 10
days jail suspended, $20 plus costs,
'One year prQbation.
Forfeiting bonds were: Marshall
Slater, Albany, seat belt, $43;
Karen C.reamer, Parkersburg,
W.Va., speed, $85; Melissa WallS,
Huntington, W.Va., speed, $6S;
Jackie Whitlatch, Reedsville, seat
belt, $00.

COLONY THEATRE
FAt. THRU TMURS.
EDOE IIURPHY IN

THE DISTINGUISHED
GENTLEMAN R
SHOWTIIEI
FRI., SAT., SUit 7:10 a 1:10

-.THRUTHURs.
ONEEYE-SHOW7:30
ADIIIIIIOIUI.IO

'"am

Apply for license
Timothy E. Ours~ 23, and Kristi
Ann Parsons, 21, both of Middleport, applied for a marriage Ucense
Tuesday in Meigs County Probate
Coun.

.,

D. VEST

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

FINANCIAL. SERVICES

UIL ICIIUI 111, CPA
lillY IIIUI, P
.

(614) 992·7270 ., (6J4J 667•6011
'
$1Qdieeollndlhnluf1 H. D.llllllruads••SICAI
, Inc.
43!1 E• LM CC11na IIMI.. Thkd Floor •IMig, T-110311· (214) -1151

�(

Sports

Friday, February, 19, 1993 .

The Daily Sentinel
•

In Top 2~ action,

Friday, February, 19, 1993

Southern girls edge
Miller Falcons 54-53
By SCOTI WOLFE
Southern held on for tile dmmat·
Sentl~~el Corraponcle•t
ic 54-53 win.
An Aimee Mills butct with just
Tbe scoring
six seconds remaining gave the
Southern was led in scoring by
Southern Tcmildocs a dramatic 54· senior Shenie Stover, who netted a
53 come-from-behind victory over team-high 16 points and grabbed
the Miller Falcons Thursday night twelve rebounds. Mills ended the
in.tbc opening round of the Divi· night with 13 points, Amber
sian IV girls' sectional basketball · Ohlinger tallied eleven, Andrea
tournament at Alexander High Moore, Jessika Codner and Jonna
Si&lt;hool.
Manuel each had four, and Bea
Southern had once trailed by 17 Lisle added two.
points earlier in the game (34:17)
Miller was led by. Sandy Hem'g
aad lniled by as much as 14 in the game-high 19 points. Lisa West
second half before mounting tile added eight, Mandy Cook, )enni
drlrna!ic comeback win.
Plant and Jamie.Hanning each had
The Tornadoes (3·16) will six, whie Michelle Nelson and
a4vance to the sectional finals on Tracey Doughiy each added four.
Thundal
C yook,Fcb:l215, Swbcredthey willd
.d
Coaches' commenQ
pt-y r sva e. econ -see e •· Mille
Crai Ax! ' . 1
MiD
'--'th 7 14 record. · ed "I ' r mentor
sta • .
I Cfuuw&gt;OUIWI a •
do , beli g . S1ne
. the
Tbe finish
• JUSt n I
eve 11. ou m
'
: Trailing 45-35 going into the had a great comeback. SOI!tllern out
'
third frame. Southern outseored hust!ed us and played a mce game.
MiDcr 19-8 going down the stretch. Then gu~~s were a httle better
At the t :46 mark, Southern still than 1 anbCtpated and they handled
trailed 53-47 but Ohlinger hit a our press and defens1ve pressure
free throw to iighten the score 53· ~ell. We've had a l?t of distrac·
TAKES SHOT' - Southern's Aimee Mills (10, center) puts up
ON THE RUN- Tbus unidentified Southern eager sprints into
this sbot apinst the defense offered by Miller's Jeannie Wycinski •
48 . Stover grabbed the loose ball uons lately, but that s no..excuse.
off the missed second shot and SouthemJuslolllplayed us.
the paint past some or Miller's players on her way to the hoop dur·
during Thursday nigbt's Division IV sectional game at Alexander ' \
Southern coac,h Je~ni,Co~ch
:~;i!.!=s~~~t~~~;~ision IV sectional. game at Albany, which
High Schuot, where tbe Tornadoes won 54-~3 to coUect their. third. :
drovcitinforthe.score. 53 •50.
. ~~~the~~~ s~.of~r.~mswm • . It~st-------------~----~--~----w-~_or_th_e_~_•_so_n_._ _ _ _~-~--------~- ~
court however Southern turned hltsR t sunk tn yet. Everythmg JUSt
•
the blill over. After a missed Miller happ~ned so quick. The whole Sherrie (Stover) played the best
Southern came to life just before zone in the second half, was play- at Alexander.
'
shot, Stover grabbed an important tear1! JUSt played great ~hen we ~ad games they've ever played. The · the half when Ohlinger hit a pair of ing superior defense.
!'
rebound and drove it back in for 10. 1 m proud of the enure team.
whole team did its part."
Miller completely lost rythym,
,
Southern
free throws, Mills layed in a iwjst·
III)Olhcr score.
"A funny thing happened to me
First-halt action
(13·11·11·19; 54)
ing drive, and J onna Manuel but did manage a field goal by
· MiDer missed a shot and South· the other day. I read my horoscope
Sandy Hern and Jenny Plant swished. one from the right wing to Hem atthe ·l:58 mark to lead 53·
Sherrie Stover 7-0-2=16, Aimee ;
ein had the ball with 52 seconds and it said,' an upset caused by gave MiDer a 4-0 lead early in tlle pull the score much closer at the 48.
Mills 4-1·2=13, Amber Ohlinger 2· .
left, irailihg by one at 53-52. Lady ~fcA: lies ahead in. your game before ·Southern tied it on half36-24.
That set the stage for Stover's 0-7=11 , Andrea Moore 1·0·2=4, :
Southern coach Jenny Couch called future! 1 knew r.'ght then 11 was buckets by Codner and Mills.
Southern trailed 45-35 at the big goals in the comeback bid and Jessika Codner 2-0-0,.4, Jonna ,
time to give her troops final mean_t for us 1:'1 wm tonight. 1. w~ Southern stay~~ close the e~tire end of the third frame. The Toma· also stacked the deck for the game- . Manuel 2-0·0=4, Bea Lisle 1·0· )
insauclions for the last minute of womed the fust half. We d1dn t first quarter, tr.ulmg 16-13 unul the does outscored Miller 6-2 to open winning Ohlinger to Mills combo.
0=2. Totals -19-1-13=54
'
the game.
play well. The second half we fi.nal 45 ~nds when Jamie Han· the frame, cutting the lead to 46-41
Couch coocluded. "At half time
'.
Shortly after the time out, pl~yed much bet~r, but after the . mng hit a Jllllf of free throw,s to end (five points).
1 told tlle girls they'd have to get it
MUter
Soutbcrn put up a sbot, but the miss third quarter I didn t know what we the frame at 18-13.
The next series of plays looked in gear and really .box out. If we
(18·18-9-8;53)
went out of bounds off Southern. ha~,left
.
Miller reeled off the first six as though it might break the were going to win we had to box
Mandy Cook 3-0-0=6, Lisa
Miller had the ball and still had a
, In the fourth quarte~ A1mee pomts of the second canto to lead camel's back. Witll 5:47 Icrt in the out afld we did a nice job in the West4-0-0=8, Jamie Hanning 1..(). i
one point lead. Miller put up a cou· M1lls had changed. She JU~l had 24 -13 at the 6:02 mark. Miller game and momentum flowing in second half. We also switched to a 4=6, Michelle Nelson 2-0·0•4, •
pie shots but each ume grabbed that l~k on her face and 1n her outscored Southern 10-4 in tile next Southern's favor, Hanning hit the 2· 3 zone and moved tlle press back Tracey Doughty 2·0·0=4, Sandy ;
the rebo~nd, fmally grabbing tile eyes. R1ght then I kne~ we had a three minutes to tl!kc its biggest first of a one-and-one. A Soul)lem to half coun. Even though we're Hem 9·0·1=19, Jenrii Plant J.Q.
. baD in the Jane where a three sec· chance. Amber (Ohltnger) and lead at34·17.
player grabbed the rebound on the young we played like a group of 0=6. Totals- 24-0-5=53
~
•
second shot, but promptly faked experienced seniors tonight."
ond call ensued.
and mistakenly put it back up at
Southern had the ball with 28
Southern hit 19-45 overaU (1·2
•
GRAVELY TRACTOR '
Miller's goal. The basket was good threes) and hitl3-19 at tile line.
seconds left, bringing the ball down ·
' .
and Miller led 49-41 '(rather that a
floor and putting the offense in
Southern had 29 rebounds (
SALES &amp; SERVICE
more favorable47-41). ·
motioo. Miller applied good defen·
Stove.r 12), 13 steals (Mills 7), 14
204 Condor St.
Pom,( OH. •
Soutllem was shaken for only a turnovers, five assists and ·10 fouls.
sive pressilrc and forced SHS to
ID Flld. I WID I Ill ••
couple possessions, but Miller went
travel with just 13 seconds left.
Miller hit 24-57 from the floor
CLOSED MONDAY
.,'
OPEN
TU£SDAY THRU FRIDAY
MiUer went to inbound the ball and
ahead 51-41 on its next trip down and was 5-11 at the line. The Fal·
'
IAIHPM
floor. Undaunted by the miscue, cons had 43 rebounds, led by Hem
narrowly a~ a frve Sc:cond call
SAT. I AM-12 Noon
•
by calling iime out
.
Southern fought back on two sepa· witll II, Doughty eight and Han•'
·On the inbounds pass Miller
mtc free throws from Stover and a ning with six. The Falcons had five
~THE
sent two girls deep and had a twobig three point goal by-Mills at the steals, 19 wrnovers, 10 assists and
.'••
15
fouls.
on-one drive in motion, but the
2:54 mark.
·
\
over anxious Falcons traveled.
Southern plays-in the tourna·
Meanwhile, Southern who had
t
Again facing grcal defensive presswitched from man-to-man to a 2-3 ment finals next Thursday at 8 p.m.
'
sure, Southern inboundcd the ball
•'
toOhlinger.
.
'Double teamed by two -Falcons,
Ohlinger dribbled into the lane and
lofted a pass to Mills along the
baseline. Mills stopped and
poPped. swishing the last second
JUmper to give SHS the lead.
Miller had one last chance and
qu;ickly dribbled downcourt,
308 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH.
putting itself in position for a
decent shot at the buzzer. Hern
flfed up 1n off balance jumper at
. 1913 FORD
V-t, Air, All-Fill
1990 BUICK
the'buzzer, but it did not fall.
C1111.....TihoiTrtm,
•'
CONVERSION YAH
LESURE

Scoreboard
In theNBA ...
.6io

MwnL-................ 11 31
Phlladolpllia ........... 11 31
WuiW!pn........... ,., 36
Qlcqo. .............. 35

·DELAWARE, Ohio (AP)Ohio Wesleyan center Karen
Pol'alh is one of five players select·
ed for the GTE' Acadanic All-District 4 College Division women's
baskCtball team.
,Porath, a'senior from Solon, was
joined on the team by Dawn
Brooks of Adrian (Mich.). senior
forward Jamie Crooks of Hope
(Mich.), senior guard Michelle
Harkness of Muskin$um College
and senior )luanl Jenmfer Kemedy
of Albion (Mich.).
The five will advance to the
Academic AD-America ballot. Dis·
tril:t 4 includes schools from
Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky. Tenneisee and Alabama.
..••

Meigs, Gallipolis
t6 send wrestlers
tit D-lll matfest

TO FIGHT TONIGHT -Beach Athletic Club bo•er Brian Nitz
of Pomeroy will jola neighbor and teammate Brad Robinson of
Middleport In toni&amp;bt's boxing tournament at the old Hannan
Trace Hl&amp;b Scboolln Mercerville. Action is set to start at 7 p.m.

...

"+-""'

Beige Met.
Loaded

1992 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

v-e, Auto, Air, tHt,
cnll..,poww

·5
-~ 12,999

,;;:-:

.

~

wln"--1-.;

..

1992 CHM lUMINA

Auto.,.,ll-,

powerwindowal

power wlndowe, power door locks, power mirrors,·

'

19.1 CHEVY S·10
PICKUP

•7,999

Vantand ConversiOn V6 englnt, auto., AC, AMIFM/Cas18tte,

Sectional tourney
tl~kets on sale

'4,499
5 SpHd, A~, Rilly Wheela

1988 FORD AERORAR.•••Only

:'Meigs will be · one of seven
!dins taking pan in the Division m
wrestling tournament to be held
Saturday afternoon at Warren
Lalal High School.
,
:other reams laking pan include
Adlena. Gallia Academy, Jackson,
NdiOnville' York, Vinton County
ani wanen Local. ·
:\veigh-in wiil be from 8:30a.m.
uft111 9:30 .a.m. The seeding and
COJChes' meeting will be at 9:30.
Tile first round, which will get ·
unllerway at 11:30 a.m., will be
followed br the consolation and
0!11mpionship fi!UIIs.
:fide~~ for lhe tournament will
• be 13 per session $5 for an all day
lllinp.

C.CIIiNr.loJi.

captain's chairs .. Thll Van Drives AS Good AI H LOOks Ill
12 M0./12,000 MILES WARRANTY ONLY

~

1989 CHEVY
CAPRICE
V-11, Auto, Air, Stereo

•7,999
1992 CHEVY
CAVALIER
Auto, Air, Stereo

While They IMl

'7,444

1992 CHM ASTRO VAN

.......

'

1992 GEO METRO
AUlD, Air, ltareo.

'6,999

"'.:':.:led

'117,_ .....

1992 CHM CORSICA

23

.531

Auto, v-e, Air,

1986 FOU AEROSTAL••••Only

'5,495

XLT PICk:!:, V-t tnglne, 11110., AJC, AMIFM/Cnntte,
power w .dows, polllll' door locka. 10,•11 miles.
I MOJI,OOII WARRAN1'Y

Alrtlllg, ltti'IO

1911 CHEVY 5-10.
414 PICKUP

AtlM&amp;a ........- ......... 24

'r1

.471

10.5

DdzoiL ................... 21

28
Z9

.451
.420

Milw1ubo ............ .20

31

.392

li.S
13
14..5

GDCid WOrllll'uali.

8,999

5

~f0!5,L.A.

'4,995

83 (01)

r.....a ,.,. n. s.n DioJo SL 60

'

Far West
Arizonall6, Ariaona.St. 80
Briaham Y~ 1 90, fJaaOSL 74
CafS1.-Fullerton 61, LonJ Bach St.

61

Montana S4, N. Arizonl46
6&amp;, San J01e St. 64
New Mexico &amp;2. Hawaii S&amp;
Oreaon &amp;5, WashinJl01170
O:rcaon St. 59, Wt~hinpn St 58
Pacific U. 72, Uaah St. 62
St nll Clua 66, Portltnd UJ

Sunday's pme

UCLA 72, Sui\Cotd 64
Ullh 17, Air Fof'Ql61
Weber St. 14, Mmllna St. 79
Wis.·Milwiukcc 75, CS Northi'idgc 74

In theNHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE

,.._Ill
.......
W L T PU. CFGA

Phllodolphia ....... 20

l

Ohio high sehool
girls' basketball scores

79lASJ89

6 64 2342(11

Ad-Dirialoa
........... 35 19 6
Quebec ............... 31 18 9
B•Uift ................ 32 2:2. 5
Buffalo............... 30 22 6
llonfonl ............. IS 31 4
oaa.. ..........-... 1 49 4

34 113261

1990 PONTIAC
GRANDAM
mreo

6 l6 210224

.....,.. .. 22 30 •

San JaM............. I 49 2

'6,999

•

'•

1991 OLDS 98
REGENCY ELITE

ll 160293

Wclkvllle_~. TOI'I:dO 37

Thursday's scores

SL Louil4, N.Y. blond.,. ~
Edmonton 5, l'lttabuJ&amp;h 4
Oicaf?? ..t.o.Anplal
2

33

Saturda!,f;~:""
Lao.........
' ,J ,30p.m.

=

lqtller, V-8, LDidecl

.......... ~40p.m.
•N.Y. 'el ' 2:10p.m.
• ~1·1\~.:!, IOp.m.
~ Yl, Tampa $•y u H•lifu,
II.S. lk40 p.m.
&gt;\
Winnblll11 V.
••· I . Op.rn.

a.....;aiT_I,IOp.m.
oa... •"
I 1:10 p.m.
N.Y. ~" il"'-

.

,o,40 p.m.

',

'

•
•'
''

OMrailu - l o l.Op.m .
Cllpry II Clllcop, 2o4Q p.m.

ialt

M ,,

.
M.8aflllo6i'

'

•

NJ••U. l'olllolljl -

•

' .. lf ;:.·ll,~J.-:
. . . . 1.-M

. lotml wilh Scott Brow~ Huck P.lencr,
Aaron Smtll 1nd lUCk Steed, pitchen:
Dwoll: Bell &amp;ad Jutn Del lA Ro1o. out·
rlolde: a...Jy Ea... ond o,.. O'lkllonn, caUihla, and T11n ~ iaf'aelder,
on dae-)'MI' COICI'Ktl.

.

TEXAS !UN08RS - A-d to
tenn• willl R•J s~. c•ccher, on a

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

TORONTO BLUB JAYS -Aped 10

(~ellem LalhMI. 61, .Paaumou&amp;h Cla.y

50

Reautar-aeucnl·aoaton

Ak~a~~'lpBna. S9. Ken&amp; llooaeYelt 2t

A..U-.S-&amp;.32
Aochbolol6l, Dollo 52
A._Chr. 71, Solom Roo1Lil•l6 •

-&gt;ll.lllodtRl-c

.,, Sa. hulwn·

--·1·-.-·101'1
II

CRd:avillc 53, Trimble 30
Fttnklin Pu..rnaoe are. ~. Whia.eoak

. Cl;aPoP.U.43,Kiftland3l

'

C..CalllaDadSt,a...,..... n
. Clo. VAI/13, Clo. W. Tooh 31
C-A.-62
C-4!Cio.LulltlnoW.:II ,

,.

~":b~;:n

-.:..........."
I'

•

.gy,,uw:..~~-l2 ·.

E*'
............. 7:10p.m.
~---,,7Mp.m.

~ W·hl

Dlvlllon IV , •
RlfllllMDe 38, Dridppan. 12
Cin. I.4Ullnd Sl, &lt;lri. OWUan 40

Boyoa56, B v - 23

Major coli~'
basketball scores

'5,421

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

a..- .... u.-so ·

PlaobutPilllutfoiii,IMp.m.

l
'• '

I

Aurtkl a11 Fitch 6S, Braakfllld 63
A-75.Hicb.W.32
BL.Irloo sa,_Umo....,. 30

Sullday'aaamH

•

NBWYOU: YAND'lli-Apod 10
t.enna wilh JtckLaocto, pUcbe:r, on ami-

· A-~I,a...h-3&gt;1

St.lADll• W~ I :30 p.m.

j

---.

OOCAOO WlllTB SOX -ApodiO

"""' ...w. cm1 Onbeek. dWcliw, on a

Jeweu·Seio S9, $tnsbura 49
Miomi VaiL 57, Cin. SL Rito 31
, RaciM South•m 54, HMlladr. Millar
53
•
Tutcarawu Ceth. 61. Oer1w1y SS

,,;a

.

...-

Cin. Maclcin 61, Middletown O.r. 20

TonJaht'• games

1991 CADILUC
SEDAN' DEVIUE

BOS'J"ON RED SOX ·- Aarecd to
JBI'f Ruuell arul K.n Ryan ,
pitcben; John V1lonlin, ahoNLop. and
Jeff' McNooly, ovtfiolder, on oae·year
tcm11 ,rith

w: MuAinPm 69,SondyVall. 42

Bl.lftaloatN.w Seney, 7:40p.m.
T-..BaJII TorQDtO. 7:40p.m.
CaJaotr lllloaoil,
p.m.
'

'16,949

BuebaU
MertaniAa...

Stalbenvilic Calh. 69, Fron\ier 49
Tuacanwu 1VaU. '7&lt;11, Ban.ville 53

SanJOM5, WiMipeaJ

One Owner, Loaded

Transactions

Dhi•lonm

52 173226

Phila~ 3, Van«Uver

5r~69,B-'llo5S

Wellaville 73, Salinerilla Saldtl:m 59

63,

'

-

....... Calbolio 76, Codonillo 6S

tennitl30 •
Dover 13, Winletf\tille 2A
,. Indian VaU. 61 , Ccahocton44
lmnan SJ Ponamaulh 'w. 38
Jackaon
Cheshire River Vall. 41
Maf)'lville 62, drclcville 4r
MayiVille 64, John Olcnn 61
Urbina 61, Onham 31
Waverly 47, Miami Tn.u 32

19 36 4 42 181219

Lao
WimlJ&gt;il ...... ..... 25 2:7

u...ca..,. .... AM140
N. a.,.at.t 7S, B.........,_ 52
Nila 62. v....,.. w-. S4
nnn,.. au-. 5 9 , - - 54
.....,. 50, Nowluy 4&lt;5

Olvlalon D

64 195176
60 207215

Fan l'eyo74, Wllmfoo16.5
""'"",.. 6!1. w...r.u 64

Lak~ACICI . 65, Onnd Rivv 31

Bmjamin Loa•n S4. Elton 47
BdeyeLocal 59, C.ymont49
Col Beochcroft 60, l..aadon S7
Col. OIIISalea 57, Hunikon T'!J'. 41
Col. LindGR·McKinky 41 , Col. Cen·

Sm)'lht Dlvllion
v................ 32 11 I 72 241119
c.Jp, .............. 31 .20 •• 70 233199
An......... 76 76 7 59 236251

Auto, Air, till, crutM, 2 dr.,

61

Vandalh Bud,e r i'O, Day. Colonel
Wh.iiC40

7 71 257202
... .......... Z9 22 8 66 2012011

...

Blomn Curoll 14, Lorlan Ebn 47 ·
Col. Milllin 14, CoL ..... 83
EIJri,l FinlBapt. 16, Kina'• Academy

33

11 138283

Norril DlvWon
W L T Pl-. CFGA
n 20 a 74 212161

r ..po Boy .......

Beo....... SI.O.y. Paamon43

Day. Patlel'lon 43, Middlctcwn 42
Logan. 10, Mari.eua 33
Norwood 49. Cin. Aiken 29
Sprina,. South 46, Clayton Northmont

66 lSI ~113

•/

..

•

J

c-.-lt,

12
.,..,.....,. 31.Jo•v t , :11
c.;iltoio v.u. Cbr. ,.., Millo
tliBi.Sl
llot.tll.-1!'"17
.

- 4 1. . . . . . 11

IMaeA71,"NwllaadSS -

.

\

.
•

14.0 in the Sun Belt) rode a sensa-·,
tiona! effort bY Elvin Johnson, who..
scored a qner-high 32 points anti ,
grabbed a, school-record 2?'·
rebounds. UNO led by just on~·
point 81 halftime, then pulled away;
hitting 52 percent from the field:
and holding Lamar to 37 percent

•'

Jly KEN RAPpOPORT
assist of the season on Roenick's
AP Hockey Writer
·
serond goal of the rught and 33rd
The Knickle defense wasn't of the season during Chicago's first
enough to hold the p!icago Black· of 11!f0 successful power plays.
hawks.
Elsewhere in the NHL, it was
Rick Kniclde finally made his Edmonton 5, Pittsburgh 4; St.
NHL debut Thursday night after 14 Louis 4, the New Y&lt;ri: Islanders 2;
years in the minors, and the 32- Philadelphia 3. Vancouver 2, and
year-old Los Angeles Kings "rook· San Jose 5, W'mnipeg 3.
ie" goaltender wound up on the
Oilers S, l'eDgains 4
shon end or a 7·2 score.
Esa Takkanen scored the game"I've had the flu. but I don ' t wiMer just20 seconds after Ron
Waitt to use that as an excuse," said Francis bad tied it for Pittsburgh ·
Kniclde, who ran out of gas in the anc! the usually punchless Oilers
third period when he gave up four rallied twice to beat the ~guins.
goals.
The Oilers, the NHL 's third
Knickle, signed b)' the Kings on lowest-scoring team, rallied from
Monday off the roster of the San deficits of 2.0 and 3·2 to deal the
Diego Gulls of the International Stanley Cup champion Penguins
Hockey League, was bombarded just their fifth home-ice loss in 30
by 46 shots.
games. Pittsburgh's 22-4-3 home
"When they peppered me in record entering the game was the
that first period and I canie up with best in the NHL.
.
sorrie big saves; I knew I could play
Craig Simpson scored twice for
up here, never having played at this . tile Oilers to offset iwo goals by
level before," Knickle said.
Kevin Stevens a.ld end Edmontoo's
He was not dismayed by the two-game iosiitg s~
Joss.
· Blues 4, ISiuders l
"I've bad a wondelful career in
Ron Sutter's tiebreaking goal
the minors," Knickle said. "It has with 1:56 left in regulation lifted
been touch and go the past five the Blues over the Is~;
years, but I think I'll be up here for
Suucr took: a cross·JCC feed from
awhile."
Kevin Miller at the edge of the
Jeremy Roenick had two gows · crease and found a gap between
and two assists to lead the Black- goaltender Mark Fitzpatrick's left
hawks. .
·
pad and the right post, snapping a
Ed Belfour, 10..3-1 in his last 14 ::Z-2 tie.
games, got credit for his second
Jeff Brown put home an empty·

By BEN WALKER
AP Bueblll Writer'
Spri~ training looks a tittle diffetent thts year.
The two expansion teams Florida and Colorado - become
moo: tllan just names on JIIPCI' this
weekend as the Marlins and ROck·
ies start workouts for pitchers and
catchers.
·
Pitchers and catchers from 15 of
the 28 teams reported 10 camp i~
places like Vero Beach, Sarasota
· and Scousdali:, with the ftrSI offi·
cia! workouts planned for today.
For the Marlins and Rockies,
it's also a chance to get to know
one another.
·
In Tucson, Ariz .• 63 players
reported for the Rockies' first
camp, and they spent a lot· of time
making introductions.
"Whenever I meet someone
new - which is almost everybody
around hete - I iepeat their name
three times to myself," said Steve
Reed, who pitched 18 games for
the San Francisco Giants last sea·
son.
"There are 63 guys here, md
I'm the only guy from the Giants
organization. Trying to remember
each guy's name, all the way from
reporters to the clubhouse guys to
the front-offiCe guys and ~ially
my fellow players, wen, it s diffi·
cult," he said.
"Spring training has been excit·
ing for me for the past 30-some
years," Marlins manager Rene
Lachemann said. "This year is a
lot more exciting because it's a
new ballclub." ·
· ·
Like everyone associated with
the National League expansion
team. Lachemann is eager to get
going: In the' next six weeks he
must team enough about his new
players to come up with a 25-man
roster.
· "You. have a bunch of Scouting
reports, but it's nice to be able to
Stop looJdng at the reports and find
out what people can dO," he said.
In Brade'nton, Fla., the Pitts·
burgh Pirates began preparing to
win their fourth strait! NL East
title after losing the J'
of Bany
Bonds, Doug Drabek, Jose Lind,
Danny Jackson, Roger Mason,
Alex Cole and others. The Pirates
hope new players in camp named
Young, Garcia, Martin, Backlund
and DeLos Santos can take their
place.
.
. "Maybe they should hand out
those little name tags to' everyone.
like they wear at conyemions, that
say, 'Ht, my name is ... "' center
fielder Andy Van Slyla: saiiL
The one •pitcher who needs no
introduction this sprillg ia Nolan
Ryan, who w,ill be playing his
record 27th· and final ieiiiOn this

Rangers' c1mp Thursday. He'a
expected 11 POrt Cbulotte, Fla.,
IICllt week and will wort out for the
fint time on either Feb. 28 or
March I.
In Pon St. Lucie, Fla .• New
Yort Meta 11111111« Jeff Torbuoa
said he wllt llppiCI&amp;b thjs sprlnl
tntillinJ witlt I . _ . ftli&amp;n, mainly
J!ecan'O be lalowa Ilia tid W bet·
ter. .
.
"Our )liiCJices will be ibout aa

••

..

against th e ' Bulls (5·18), th e
reserves got their chance. All 13
playeB on the Massachusetts roster, includin' two walk·c&gt;ns, got
extcncled playmg time.
·
No. 21 NN Orleans 84
Laal•r73
The visiting Privateers (20-2,

Veteran minor-league goalie shelled ..
,..
...
in NHL debut against Blackhawks ..

year.
Ryan, 461WIS 1101 art10111lbe 32
playen who reported II&gt; the Texas

n::::,,g=:'Ciomln'
0
.

,

l2

Bane Unian 69, New Albany 61

em. Sycunore :n. Cin. Andenon 38

76 :142196
71 236209
69 236201

OW:.,.
. ......
ll..,.uL . ............. 32 21
-

Abon F..._l4,Akmn E. 32

Deavermd: S8, Spring. North 24
Benjamin Lot.•n S4, ~ton 47
ChillicoU!c 31, Lanclncr l4
Cin. S~ !iil , Cia. McAuley 31

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Teun

Akron at. 67, AtwalerOu'. 'n

""""'Ell~ 55, Abon CmL·H,_

DIYiilon I

6 sa 239211
10 50 221234

-

Ohio high school
boys' basketball scores

Tournament action

4 60 202198

9 S9 226221

ill

con

Nto~ada

Lu..103

Pinobu.Jh .......... !7 16
Wuhinp&gt;n....... 29 22
Newlanoy ........ 21 :14
N.Y. ~ ..... 2S :14
N.Y. lalaridon.... 26 26

c.titomia 16. s.u~~~om c.t &amp;3

Oonup 6!1, s.. llioto 63

All-J&amp;arOame at ULJit. 6 p.m.

TMIII

NE L.ouiaiana 1!1, Tuu-S1n Antonio

New OriCIJUI &amp;4, Larn.u 13
1SW LoWaUma 70, Teau-P&amp;n American 6P
SW Teu. St. 99, NW Louiliana 17
Sam HOUlton S~ 97, NMh Tcxu 89
5~·-f.AUAin IIi, ·Tex.u-ArlingtM

No aames IODI&amp;bt or Saturday

belrmn Meigs and Vinton County
118'1111 sale II Meigs High School.
11111 pno wiD be played at the
Utii.ntlY of Rio Grande. Ticket

'•

!U
13.S
17.5
2J.l

Southwest
80

pointers.
No. 19 M u cltusett196
Batralo67
At Buffalo, the Minutemen
eased past outmanned Buffalo for
their 12111 straight victory. Once the
front-liners had staked the Minute·
men (18-4) 10 a SS-25 halftime leal,i

.'

net goal with one second left UJ"
seal the victory, the Blues' fusl m&gt;
their last three games.
·- •
Earlier. Brian Mullen tied the :
game at9:23 for the Islanders.
.· •..
Flyers 3, Canucks 1
Kevin Dineen scored his seconct=
goal of the game with 1.6 secondS"
left to give the Flyers a comebacru
victory over the Canucks.
Dineen skated in U)1toUChed 011 li •
breakaway to beat ~oaltender KaY.·
Whitmore to the suck side to caii ~
the reversal before a shocked' ·
crowd in Vancouver.
Philadelphia's Greg Paslawsld
scored midway through the third' •
period with a high shot from tlni "
slot after some sloppy chccldng by •
the Canuclcs in the Vancouver ·

zone.
Sharks S, Jets 3
The Sharks, who had earlier ··
gone through an NHL record-tying•·
17-game losing streak, won for the
second time in three tries.
· :
The win was just the eighth for"
San.Jose (8-49·2) this season, but it"
was the Sharks' second in five days •
following their mammQth losing.'.
streak that ended Feb. 14. The
SIWks beat the Jets 3-2 on Sunday ~
to~ the streak.
.. .•
Wmnipej~. meanwhile, is win ;.~
less (0..5· 1) m its last six games. ·· •·
Dave Maley scored one goal and •·
assisted on another to lead the;,
Sharks.

Marlins, Rockies finding out who's
who in first spring training workouts

Valj)llliJo93, Youn&amp;IIOWH Sl. 72
Wia.-Orcc:n Bay 76, Wri&amp;ht St. 66

JlhoeniJ.Ili.Atltnti 119
S.Qie 131, Ocldaa Slate 116
LA. c--.1o1, WuhlnM' 95

Advance tickets for Wednes·

.

6

~s

121, Sacranu:mo 114
Utah lOS, Milwaukee 94
Hau.on 119, B..u.~l4
SU1An~A~Uol03, P!Wodclphia 98

daf• Jec:tional tournament eame

Jllll!e II $3.

21
30

.255
.082

Thunday'sscores

$6,400

..,

But~« 74, 0.Y!M 59
O.evdand Sl. 67, 01.-0ric.a&amp;o 64
CJoi&amp;hu&gt;n 59, N. lowa S4
Duqucmo Tl, Loyola, 01.71
llllnoU SL 72, Tulu 63
lA Selle 13, Deuoit Mercy 72
~ 85, WilcoNin 71
Ma.-Kansu City 9-', NE IllinOO 64
N. llliDoio 74, W. lllin.U 66
SWMiuou.riS~ 71,Dnic67

2
5
l4Ji

~

Red, aparty, Milo. air,
tltt, ...._, CMMII•

.

vupu.ss.o..uss
Midwest

CB

PadlleDIPlt..U. ..................38 10 .192
Sealllc ...................33 17 .660
Poo1md .................31 16 .660
t..A. i.aUn.&lt;..........26 23 .lll
t..A. C i - .........26 2S .llO
OOldon Sil!o ..........23 3D .4!4
s.c.m-........... 17 3&gt;1 .333

1989 PONnAC
SUNBIRD

Low Mila, Auto, Air,

Sanford IS, Tonn.·Mulin 63

Tulane75, N.C. Chuloac 70

r.m... .................. 23

... ..........12 35
Dollu ...............,.....4 45

•9,999

1918 CHEVY
CORSICA

~·3

I.S
7.s

Mw..t Dhldoft
TW L PeL
Son An................34 IS .694
liloh ,_,. .................33 II .647
................30 21 .581
llcm.vcr ....~-.... -...~20 30 .400

Sh•rp, oM owner.

$16,999

Mialiaippi Col 76. Aloorn SL 63

N.C.·Wilminaloa 79. Colt of

.673

~1

. ·-· .......

V-8, Air, rear 11r,
P9 ••, ... Miow.

7UE

s....... 95, C..tawy 82 (2 OT)

~ .............. :!&lt;&gt;

Tocodo ... ., ......... 21 22 I
St. Low. ............ 26 2:7 I

Loeb, crut... att.

999

17

CouW Caralino 71, ConpbcU 66
Coppin St. 75. S. C&amp;roliMi Sl. 69
Dcliwue Sl. 76, Howard U. 66
l!u1Cuulim66, v· · · Toch49
Fll.lnletnltional
Louisiana 67

Men:u74,N.C.-AoheWie69

WESTEJtN CONFERENCE

-..\"' 1993 CHEVY S·10 PICKUP

$1891faWI
$189
1993 OLDS .98 .REGENCY

.294

CUM!LAND ....... 34 19 .642

CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO.

nan

15.5
15.5
19.5

.367
.367

c.... Dl\'lllon

BRAVE THE COLD!
SAVE SOME GOLD!

I

60

Atlantk Dhitlon
Ta~~to
WLPtLCB
NowYca .............. 34 16
New Jcaey ............30 21 .SIB
45
Bcxtm ....................26 :1A .S20
8·
Orlarulo ..... ,............2A 23 .SII
~5

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

Auto.•.•--.

South

Ad:. ·Liule Rock 67, Lwi1iana T~

EASTERN CONFERENCE

'

OWU's Porath one
ojjive cagers lauded .

.

By BARRY WILNER
·beat an undermanned Duke. The point gunners from Arizona State
AP Sports Writer
Blue Devils were without leading and Chris Mills scored 25 points in
Remember how Duke sen t scorer Grant Hill, who has a 24 minutes on 11-of-20 shooting.
pangs of fear through opponents. sprained toe.
He added I6 rebounds. and four
Well. forget it.
"I hope that Grant gets back so teammales were in double figures.
The other teams in the Atlantic that in time we C111J develop conti·
Arizona shot 52.3 pen:ent in setCoast Conference no longer are in nuity," coach Mike Krzyzewski tin~ a school record for points
~we of the two-time defending said after his team lost back-to· ·ag&amp;~nst its in-state rival, which was
nl!tional champions . Virginia, · back games for the fust time ~iJI!=e held 10 4M pen:ent from the field.
appan:ntly, has ov~e the infe- 1~. Wake F~ ~ DD;k~ m tts . No.ll Utab 87, Air Force 61
rior feeling most emphatically, as it prev10us game. I thmk 11 s ev1·
The Utes easily grounded the
displayed 'f!tursday night in a 58- dent that ·we·~ not .as ¥,ell a team Falcons behind star Josh Grant,
55 victory over the seventh-ranked that people m1ght think.
,
who had 15 points and 15
Blue Devils.
·
Hurley scored in single digits rebounds. Utab (20..3, 13·1 in the
No. 23 Virginia all!(l beat Dulce for onl:( tl!e ~ond time ~is sea· WAC) is 13.0 81 borne.
. .
at Durham. N.C., earlier .this sea- son, fm1sbmg wtth etght pomts and
Utah's backcourt of Jirtuny Soto
· son.
six iumovers.
and Byrori Wilson combined for 35 1
The Cavaliers (16-5, 8-4 ACC)
Thomas Hill had 14 points, but points and held the conference's
lOOk sole possession of fourth place none in the last 16 minutes, and highest scoring backcoun of Otis
and pushed DUlce (19·5, 7·5) into Marty Clark, who started in place Jones and George Irvin to 11
the league's second division as of Grant Hill, took four shots and points.
they became the first ACC team missed tllem aU.
No. 18 Tulaile 75
since 1990 to sweep a season series
In other games involving ranked
UNC.Cbarloltl! 70 .
against Duke;
teams, it was No. 4 Arizona 11(),
At New Orleans, Tulane (19-4,
"Sure, it's better when they're Arizona State 80: No. 12 Utab 87, 8- Lin the Metro) held off Charlotte
the two-time defending national Air Force 61; No. 1'8 Tulane 75, at the free throw line in the second
champions," .said Virginia's Cory N.C. Charlott!l 70; No. 19 Mas· half after going almost eight min.
Alexander, who had 20 points and sachusetts 96, B!lffalo 67; and No. Utes without a field goal. Pointer
shut down Blue Devils star point 21 New Orleans 84,l.amar 73.
Williams. who scored six poi!lts on
guard Bobby Hurley. "But it
No.4 Arizona 116
foul sbols during lbaf stretch, made
doesn't win us any championships,
Arizona St, 80
his only 3-point basket to stop the
and nobody's going to come in
The nation's longest winning cold streak.
·
here and lay down. for us because streak is at 16, thanks to pressure . Carlin Hartman led Tulane with
we beat Duke."
defense. The host Wildcats (18·2, 21 points. Andre Davis paced N.C.·
Especially when. the Cavaliers 12·0 in the Pac-10) S!ifled !he 3· Charlotte with 18 points, all on 3·

r-:-------

_._

"

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--i

Virginia beats Duke 58-55 to record sweep in season series·

In Division IV sectional action,

AITE
DON TM

·pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·I

,

:::~

hour shorter," he said. "And I'm ond baseman Jeff Kent and catcber · · ' ·
going to watch the kids early. The Todd Hundley, begin the spring .S' '
starters for a team that finished a, ..
veteran players I know."
Three or those young players, disappointing fifth in the NL Eas! , ,
·
center f~eldet Ryan Thompson, sec- last year,
" '

Baseball'S money chase almost
out of steam with four cases·left ., ~..;
By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP)- Now that
the players arc coming bact on the:
field, the offseason mooey chase is
almost at an end.
Boston Red Sox pitcher John
Dopson and Seattle.pitcher Erik
Hanson were set to argue the fmal
two nitralion cases of the winter
today. Red Sox infielder Carlos
Quintana and Montreal Expos out·
fielder Marquis Grissom had their
hearinp Thursday.
Qumta11a argued for $850,000
before Roben Light The Red Sox
offered $340,000, the same salary
Quintana made last' season, when
he f;lidn 't play foDowing a c. acci- .
dent .
.
Gnssom asked Theodore High
for a six-fold increase to $1.95 mil·
lion front $300,000, while the team
arguedforils$1.5millioooffer.
Two I:8SCS Mre decided Thurs·
day whet! sbonstop Randy Velarde
won agaans~ the New York Y~n •
kees an~ third ~man Jeff. King
lost agamst the Pittsbmgh Pirales.
The deci~ons gave the~* 95 lead ~lh four~ remauung.
Ilesp1te the diffenng outcomes,
both players doubled their~Vela~e mad~ $360,000 m 1992
and hit.272 w1th se~ homers~
4:6 RBls. He was 81~ $1.05 mdbon by Robert Cral instead or the
team:s $600,000 offer.
. King, who made $325,~. was
&amp;J~ $675.000 bv Ira Jaffe~

of his $1,075,o00 aequesl Kinghit '·
.231 with 14 bomers and 65 RBis. '· ''·
Two players in arbitration set· ..
tied their c:aseS Thursday. Outfield.' :
er Junior Felix and the Florida..:
Marlins agreed to $1.25 million~·. ;
pact with the chance for $50,000 in ,_.
performance bonuses. He made
$640,000 last season.
. .._,
lnf'Jelder Craig Grebeck and ~~ .
Chicago White Sox agreed a.t .. ·
$632,500, more than triple the :
$200,000 he made in 1992,
~
Among free agents, relJever Jell'
Russell and the Boston Red Sox , ~
agreed to a one-year contract witlr •
an option for 1994. Russell can' ' :
earn up to about $2 miD\on in per;·1.:;
formnnce bonuses if he appears iiJ.",:
about 60 games and is healthy fqr ·
three-quarters of the seasoil.
• ()
Boston's option is for Russell's .
1993 earnings, and the optioJ! .· '
would become guaranteed if the
pitcher achieves about 40 percent · ·
of his performance levels this sea. , ;
son. The Qlllion would allow RIIS· '.:
sell to earn about $6.7 million over ~,
the two years of the contract if he"' i
reaches tile performance levels ih
bolh seasons.
: ;
Russell was 2-3 with a 1.9b "
ERA and 28 saves in 51 games for . •
the Texas Rangers last season, theQ,. ••
was traded on Aug. 31 with Ruben .:·
Sierra to ()Uland for Jose Canscco. • ,, .
RusseU was 2-0 with an 0.00 ERA " ·
and two saves for the Athletics. ·
.. '··

:r

'·

WILD BIRD ·SEED
'

5 LB•..:.$1.20
25 LBS~-$4.30
10 LB.-$2.25
50 LBS.-$8.30
BLACK and STRIPED

SUNFLOWER SEED
25 LB. BLACK SEED ... $5.50
50 LB. BLACK SEED - $1 0.25
25 LB. STRIPED SEED - $5.10
.50 LB. STRIPED SEED - $1 0.90
NIGER (Titlstle) - 95c ..
WHm MILLET- 20c lb.
,.
·we Also Have Cracked

eo...

SUGARRU

W

. . .IIYAVE.
MJ-2115
'

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Pua•..,

....._Dally sentinel

.

•r111110W'., Ohio

Friday, February, 19, 1993

Friday, February,19, 1993

Scholllstic sitkNght

_

J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnet-Page-7

.

Mercury-toting students guilty of causing closing of TCH·S gym
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sportl Writer
· 'riffm City Schools superintendent Larry Cook adlilits that this
isn't a problem thlt many administratorS encounrer. Not e....., day do
you have to deal with.Wxic ele11\ents.
There has beella mercury emergency at Tiffin Columbian Hi~h
School thlt bas liOtbin&amp; 10 do Wllh
the telilperaDin:.
Some junior-high school stucknts pilfeml mercury from ~ lab a
~puple weeks qv and 10011: It to a
Columbian butetball game. ~ot
recognizing it as I toxic element,
they toSSed it around ~ f~llow .Sii!·
dents and played w1th 1t as 1f It
were silly putty.
Someone even poured some
down a drain in 1bc lockc::rroom.
: The state heallh department and
tl\e Environmental Protection
Agency slq)p:cd in and shut do:-v"
the gym, forcmg 1bc boys and girls
basketball teams to '-o elsewliere
for their contests while tats were
run.

While~-~ WOikerl

•..,. . -

'l!r..;.c:' a_

TOP GlJN: hiMnilk lbrvey's Fa 1 IIMtill ._die lilf
P. ill die- 1Ws
He
sc:oml 60 )ICiiau Mil 'ddd 10
n • •· 10 _ . .C 13

Sliak_,eadlbcJe8UIIrseuon 5- . llde of blck~to-back losses in · attempt with eight seconds left,

IS. 1k boys IIIIIIPCd an 11-pme mki,JID1181')'.
aihpil wilb 164~S4 Qvet Soutllem
Ballimore .uberly Union's girls
1 0 - eo .._15. The old gym had finished their first unbeaten n:gular
beCII.ed for 1bc last 56 seasons.
season ever last week' with a win
WelliiiiiOJI had lost nine in a · over Gflllville. Senior Erin BlackSinla'~~
~-~·.! !..!_ row IDd Obc:rlia bad won eight . stone, signed with Ohio University,
....._"""
- - ... sbaipt, A mismatch, right? had 28 points to lOp .lh~ 1,000 mark
r - die field Md 9 of 10 flee Wclliolp"l, iiOW 4-12, won 76-73 in career scoring, whi!e teammale
dliows. ,_60~isl 5 ::diO CJVa"Otalia.wbichfellto 11-5. , Ashley Poston needs just 26 more
be - . . . an
ZIIRII:- ill .,..., Liberty-Bentcn rook 27 points to duplicate thai feat.
tbe Cleo 'of . . . llaii!J "!iJ
i1s firsl Blapcbard ValSince losing to ·Beaver Eastern
Aqeara"s 66 for West HiP ia ley CC.CereiiCe title but bas now Dec.•21, Chillicothe Unioto has
196'4, ad 6e 61 .,- ! IIJ GCal1 - I'MI in 1 row widl 1 6644 vic- won 11 sua!Jht games. S.oph~re
Plrb dB Ji '* • 1973 _, IOiy · over Cory-Rawaon, the Aubrey Eblin has led t)le way w1th
~~
'z."s JaB Waul»
16dunight win.
19~ points a gamC.
YJii* • 19111.. . . .._ ~ dtllll ·
art Licking Valley (4-14)
Lafayette Allen East beat Ada
could .... Mlrlia"s q: '1 'r . ' sc:a:::d six of the first eiaht ~ints 67~56 IBid Montpelier topped Ever·
A•'*
'711'•11. sure-ranted Granville's green 63-62 to put an end to 16SAYING GOODBYE:
lloJi (16-l). Then the Blue Aces gamelosingsldds.
Aaika-"s llup' _,&amp;ids' . _ Relecl off the next 32 points to
LAST-MINUTE ~OES: Old.
have IIJ'CIH .,.llodl fi•i±cd ..... 17 of 18 this-1. ·
Fort's Malt Molyet hit three threetheir .._ schd•Je up ia sty~
aer,re'r •on hve won a PQint.ers and scored 15 points in lhe
Bolli- tlaeir fiaal paes 11 • • ' sl nc•d 17 Ia a row since fo~ quarter, including_ two gameA"" •• HiP Srh••befon:-- lfJIUIPII llltlr nnt two Jllles, wmmng ~throws w1th 35 secinc iilleo a aat ,e.. ..... tltdr fcaale counterparts onds left, m an 8~-81 ~pset. of
1be &amp;idl1al s.;. •- 51 I • . . Jl.l'Md illlve ltad two nine- Carey; North Balt1more s Bnan .
.56-3$ eo ad • ei&amp;l' z e biD&amp;. pae wluia&amp; streaks on either ~azarek. fouled on a three-point

inspected the school, two boys
games and one girls game were
rescheduled for nciJhborin&amp; Heidelberg College lild Tiffin Univcrsityr gyms.
Then, when a girls' ·JIIIIC was
allowed in the Columbian gym, an
ice s10rn1 hit Friday and d!e game
wasposlpOIICd.
"We don't really have any IIICI'·
cury left,' Cook said. "The problem is with the vapors, getting
them exhausted. We have to aet 1bc
readings to the point where the
Ohio Health DeplnmentOKI it."
Elsewhere IIOWid Ohio hoops,
LeavittsburJ Ldl~'s C~ Allen,
headed for MiamJ ·of Ohio, bad 1
big week with 48 points and 33
rebounds in two games; Ellt Canton's Jodi Dobransky, 1 5-foot-10
sophomore, had 30 points and a
school-reccird 30 reboUnds in an
83-.57 victory over Mansf'Jek! SL
Peter; another sophomore, Mindy
Fusetti of Ashville Teays Valley,
3Corcd 33 and 27 J?CiiDts m blclt:-toback games and IS already beiug

itii:UJ

,_,.,win

t

w..:.:

u...._

y ??t

converted all three foul shots for a
71-70 victory over HopewellLoudon; Malt Heldman hit a foul
shot with fQUI' seconds left in the
founh overtime to olve Van Buren
a 78-77 win over Ad;.
FIDally, Logan's girls had just
one senior on last year's team
that made It to the Division I
state championship game. That
senior, or course, was Ms. Bas·
ketball, Katie Smith, wha has
gone on to stardom at Ohio State.
But the Lady Chieftains have
proven Oley were more than a
one-player team.
They finished the re1ular sea•
son 18-2 and rlrth In tbe state
poll, won their rourtb straight
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League title, extended their,
league wlnalng streak to 31 and
bad winning streaks of six, five
and seven &amp;ames.
And tbls year's team doesn't
have any seniors. L,ook out next
year.

Apostolic

p

:Ashe's literary talents, myriad-of changes in baseball featured
By HOWARD SINER
.an author allcf he retired from 1en- 6.
_
.
·
A few da)s liZIIr, •
a
Today's questions in the world nis.
of sports:
He wrote ''A Hard Road to
cr lk lint Iliaci:, • Wbat's the literary legacy of Glory; A History of the ~· to bee- a -w ~is liar,
Arthut Mtte?
Amencan Athlete " which was Spans Dlulmlcd llid A. Bani
· The late tennis champion was published in 1988. Now an apdaeecl Road., GJi!IJ" il'~ '"f · -.,..
something more lhan just an ath- edition of lbo three-volume collec- doc
• - ~ AJi
Allailete.
. tion has just been issued by Amis- ca4iJdilc'"
• Ashe, the first blackman to win tad Press of New York.
.
. A±e"s off.6e •tl*'~
at the U.S. Open (1968) and WimAshe, who was being tr 1o:1 for · wu
1 ~ IIIIIJ 5 · • Wriler
tiledon (197S), earned acclaim as AIDS, died Of pneumonia on Feb.
..

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'

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- Rob
Dibble doesn't want 10 be baseball's nastiest boy anymore. "e
wants 10 be its poster Jx&gt;y.
..
· Yes, baseball's hartlest thrower
·and hOlieSt bead wants to become
its i6le model The Cincinnati Reds
reliever has two goals this year:
save 40 games and his n:putation.
· "As I get older, l try to carry
inyselfbettet on and off the field,"
he said. "Not only do I have a
responsibility to myself and the
team, but also to the community
and the children of this country.
'.'I think I've been a bad role
model for some kids for a few
years. but I still act a lot of Jlftilts
that speak highly of me when it
oomes 10 their kids. Thai's some!hing I need to build on as I get
older 10 when I leave this game, I
leave a annd impession and not a
'bad one..,.~-What's going on here? Why
would Dibble want 10 tear down an
image he's nurtured over the last
live years? Is lhe suspension-pone
reliever really going straight'!
He'd beltet. At 29, Dibble .is at a
crossroads.
. His fastball is as good as ever
..... 14.1 lllrilceouts per nine innings
last year. the best ratio in history.
But his suspensions-to-saves ratio
is. almost as unbelievable - one
s\ISI)CIISion for every 11.5 saves.
· In his 4 1/2 major-league seasons, Dibble has saved 69 games
a)ld drawn six SUSJICnsions. He's
t!trown fastballs by batlers and at

In NBA action, ·

·
them. He's beaned a baserunner
an(! a grade-school teacher. He's
fe::;' ,::!:.~ 11111 wn:sded
..--..-·
w
In-between, he's mlde amends
and promised 10 do bctlcr. It never
w~ opt that way. . nat .
past," ;rsbbi~.jll!?_!:~
·
of
do 'th ·
~uritles~"
unmaiunty, a lot iue-

ol:

l.._t::_·

R-*-"::::
::: .:":;'.;:
V b_.ofDMie'•--

1

.. _
But ~·s wei-~ Dibblev; "!"" a

=

tele_·~~::e:.~~.:
lbin olhftar

1._ !::.Citlll :!

w· .
..;!i
"I ltad~10-=., I IJ:Iii.ztb--.
_.
I Jlid. "Gecz, JCZ"w lllll., •' ••

=..

The Reds have defended him ·11
every turn, brushing it off as
o~erexuberance. !hey can't do that
any~;.., ,liaded ~Norm

lftllele..' Jtua•piO • •
it's Wilt lk ad~ llle
'"WIIal . . Mills., ._.. il lk

)I•

~~~~;~~~i~.for tbe.,•ast few ~~.:..:=-~
Thcn:'s
a cardl: apin,
If he winds
up ,_
~~--IIMIJ.I
• £!:
getting
suspended
the Reds
,_

are going .to be in trouble. Their from6nle• •a•• i111991-for
only other closer candidares are llOJII~ olf diclai::IIIO ..._He
Jeff Reardon and Tim Burke, and . abo wa 1 up wn:sdiq1 they've had a rough go lately.
mw 1 t.. Pi • 5 ill lk dabA lot's riding on him beiDa able . _ l6er •iire ltillaa..
to hold his temper 11 well as le8ds.
But !ley, 61l's•ltadfor.._
The Reds signed ReardOn in pan 10
"U. ,ar, I ...... 1 c:micd
try to influence Dibble.
myself a lollleller nba 1 did
"I think they brought bim over ~"lleaid..
here for two reasons: to pitch and
Tbe ltt:rds- sips of
ily,
1
1e • 111d 10 help
fi11 matia&amp; die• feel c-fonallle
~e
P!'llP ou.,
me
·"-·t ..........._.._
_...... Di"'"'·
tniO thetr long-tenn goal for me, 10
i!UUU """ ....
u-.
a•or
a
•ew
--."
Dibhandled
ltiwuldf
1fCil
lltnleglt
a
be a Closer "
,,
,_.
sMgldc:r ill'
.... ,. lAid illiz
blei~t·be interesting to see bow for 111e ...~-- ~..,-baseball'sall-limesavesle&amp;der gelS
along wilh one of its all-time sus-

~!~!:o~~es~~~~d~J~rudJ:g ~~:

By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sports Writer
The proud Boston Celtics, winners of a re~Ud 16
NBA tiUes, Ire anything but these days.
"It's an embarrassment," center Roben Parish
said after Boston established a franchise low by scoring just 29 points in the ftnt half of a 119-84 loss
Thursday night to the HouSIOII Rockets.
"It doesn't get much worse than that," Parish
$llid. "If it does, I don't want to see iL"
·
. What he saw was an eight-point second period.
which almost unbelievably was two points more than
the Celtics scored in a quarter against New Jersey in
l990.
.
'1'1\C Celtics trailed 45-29 at lhe half, eclipsing the
30 pMnts they scored in the rust half against Milwaukee on Nov. 13, 1990.
~ That, coupled wilh the recent thrust of the Rocke~; compounded the prciblem. Houston, which shot a
fflllchise-best 68.$ percent two nights earlier in a
149-111 rout of Philadelphia, canned 58 percent of
i!C shots against Boston. The Celtics shot 38 percenL
; · Carl Henaa scored a can:er-high 18 points to lead
ieven Houston players in double figutes. Hakcem
Oiajuwon had 14 points and got IS rebounds, and
Otis Thorpe 17 points and 11 n:bounds.
; The ~oc:tets never trailed. They had a 15-2 run 10
close out the rtnt half, holding the visiting Celtics
scoreless for the final6:09.
.
.• BoSton's sllooting didn't im~ve until.lhe flJ!81
Jllinute of the third period when 11 had an e1ght-po1nt
nm to clole the gap to 82-49.
~ Regie Lewis led Boston with 21 points.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was Minnesota 121,
Sacramento 114; Utah lOS, Milwaukee 94; San
Antlllio 103, Philadelphia 98; Phoenix 131, Atlanta
:119; SeaUie 131, Golden Stale 116; the Los An&amp;elea
C1ippen 108, Wuhin111Ji195, and Portland lOS, the
Los Angeles Lakerl103.
· •· Sunsl31, Hawlla·119- Pboenill is within a victar)' of tyinS a fnnchlse n:cord after winning its 18th
CGIIMCmiW home pme. '
·
· But Charlea Barkley, who sot hit 14th career
trlple:double with 25 points, 16 rebounds and 12
alii•, w-'t lllisficd.
;•• "We baven't accomplished anythins at this
· ·n real," he said, mindful thll the Suns'. 38-10
ill rill the beat in the league. "I don't think lbo
ftnt llalf or 1bc ICIIOil was a· Duke, but we have 10

-- ·
•
•

....
1)

tchoJflY

qllk:ta.a..It- bl'la, while tmv- Jo~nson, the. fust black heavydial die WOild, dial. be read von.- WCJght champion. ·

~y. talked exhaustively and
beclime a tllorough iDrellect and
wrizl:r."'
'
MIJor8 added: "He was neal
writer. He enjoyed {i,!lwing on
• _ ~l&amp;na over different ways
of
about funllalilenlal conams."'
AJk fusa wt:Ote about himself
iu ''Portrait in Motion" (with
Flat DcFont) in 1973· and in
'"Off tlte Co~rt" (wiih Neil
A'7dur) in 1981
"A if.d ~to Olory"-was
Wiilu IIJ Allie after six yws of
•wtatll by 1 seven-person staff
..., 111e lliltoly of black athletes.
Tile vo..IDCS Include interviews
,witfk cycwit• · sscs to events as far
IKt •1900.
· "Artb• Ashe has turned end1esu-sllldpreviously ltildocu-sed I10riCa into fact " noted
1JoeNft'Firi T'-s after'the work
, . pablisbed People magazine
Slid 11 "'a•••••...,lal"· Ebony
allcdil"'aloQigtrlbue.'.'
Vollae 1. (1619-1918) .covers a
paiod fiala tbe time of slavery in

t•«••

Volume n (1919-1945) includes
the story of black college spons
conferences and the segregated
Negro Lea~es for baseball players; along w1th accounts .of track;
star Je~ Owens and boxmg great
Joe Lows.
Volume ill (Since 1946) Jells of
the rise 0~ mode!'~' black athletes,
from Jackie Robmson to Muhammad Ali-andbeyond.
The three-volume hsrdcover set
of" A Hard Road to Gloty" costs a
·hefty $89.95; but IIJe books are also
available individually. Plus 1\mistad will publish a o~e-volume
pa~ abridgen:ent m Apnl for
$24.95.
.: Is there inuch new under the
sun in spring ~nin$?
There sure IS. New teams. New

sites. New~ N~w roste~.

The expansiOn Flonda Marhns
(who debut in Cocoa) are one of
the 20 major-\eague .teams at preseason camps tn Flonda. The other
expansion club, the Colorado
Rocki~ (in_Tucson), is one ofeighl
teams tn Arizona.

J.'IIIOr.

--- -- -

lhe confen:nce sincC 1985-86. The
Mustangs have not won a postsea-

Fno Will BapilltCieurde
Aah Scralt. MidP ; nt
Pulor:MadtMonow

Salorday SeMce- 7:30p.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonbip -I I a.m.,
Wedlluday Servicc-7:30 p.m.

f'our &lt;_&gt;t~er ~lubs are at new
spn.ng-~m~ Sites: the Cleveland

Indians, m Wmter ~ven, Fla.; the
Bos~on Red S_ox, ~~ For,t Myer.s,
Fla., tbe Cahforma Angels, m
Te~pe, ~riz.; .and !Jte Seattle
Mariners, m Peona, AriZ.
Manage~ Don Baylor of the NL
West Roclcies l)as veterans such as
Andres G_alarraga, Daryl Boston
and Owhe Hayes. Manager R~ne
Lachemann of lhe NL East Marlins .
has Benito Santiago, Dave Magadan and Charlie H?ugh. But bol)l
teams are filled w•th young newcomers.
Beginning the year as the ~ew ·
managers of veleran clubs are Tony
Perez (Reds), Kevin Kennedy
. (Rangers}, Lou Piniella (Mariners},
Dusty Baker (Giants) and Jim Riggleman (Padres):
Among the b•g-league stars getting ready to play for different
te~ms in 1993 are Barrr Bonds
(Giants); Greg Mjlddux (B~ves),
Doug Drabek (As!ros), Andre
Dawson (Red Sox), J1m Abbott and
Wade Boggs (Yankees), Dave
Winfield (Twins), Dayid Cone
(Royals) and Paul 1\iohtot (Blue
Jays).
.
(C)I993
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN;

son tournament game. since the
1981:82 season.
"We just needed to change lhe
attitude and perception of basketball at Westfall ... getting peopl~ to
be more positive,'' Goodyear satd.
Obviously, We~tfall's players.
manr of them holdovers from last
years 6-15 team, !live had a lot to
do with the Mustang's success.
"The. thing I think has
. been
b
most impressive is they ve een
.'

10

ble's2S.

.

0 HAM, TURKEY, DRESSING, MASHED 0
"I bad no idea what talent level 0 POTATOES With GRAVY, GREEN BEANS, 0
1 llad whea I got here; but r-:e D
.BROCCOLI WHh CHEESE SAUCE•
0
alwa)S bad a lot of confidence 10
•J1df- 1 t11ink rve always been ·0 SWEET POTATOES, HOT ROLLS, HOME 0 ·
-::t ~ ~dhat makes my team
MADE CHICKEN SOUP.
wenra11, 9-3 in scioto valley D
HOT ·BUFFET- SOUP and SALAD
D
0
Confaence play, lieeds to win one 0
.
$ 99
ofilsliauworeguJa--seascngames ·o
· CAN- El:r·
0
tllis • "'"' to wrap up second
ILL
YOU
p1ai:e.. ne Milstangs play Chilli- D
·
·D
:=.~~ ~-~~~h~ 0 lrlagla·Your Church lulletla For 1.0" OH 0
rcav:-.._ • 111 Zane Trace Fri- D
0
=~'t..~c~~C~~ D SDIYA'S COU.TIY lUICIIN 0 .
He llad six years of basketball D
(lcroll fro• Ho• llatio•al laak)
.0
....,..,._ eoapaience there, includ- D 3rd ST.
UCIIII D
... ....list twO lbe boys flesh- D
949·2324
0
-callciL
;

..-n.

7

.•

---~

Wonlrip- 9:30a.m.
S101day Sdiool- 10:30 a.m.

Ooor S•vlow LulleerM Cllurdl
Wahwl ... Hemy llla., Rowoilwood, W.Va.
c...-un: Rova. Ridwd A

St. IlL 124 A Co. Rd. S

Putor: lleld&lt; Stump
sundiy ~-9:30a.m.
Wonbip · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
WIOIIooadaySaW:es·7:30p.m.

l'wida llooda·ICN&amp;

Sunday Scbool -9:30a.m.

vlonlrip- II a.m.

s - Rood Clnlrdloi'CIIrloi

St. Pool Lulllens Cllurdl
Comor Sycunore A Second SL, Pamcror

Puum 1oeedl B. f:loakine
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonbip -10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Servic:ee • 7 p.m.

PUI!r. Gecqc Wciridt

Sunday Scbool- 9:45 a.m.

. . _ Uoliwl MMINI..

. Wonbip- 9:30a.m. (I•A 2DdS111),
7i'l0 p.m. (:Jrd. 4lh S.O)
Wet rd•y Sel:vice ·7:3tp.m.

a-dl

••

Suoday Sck&gt;oJ· 9:30 LOL
Wonlrip · I0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
w..m:•rSeMce7:30p.m.

Mt. OIIYt U - Mlillodlit
Off 124 boiUad Wilb..ru.

GranDcmlpD
a-d~
Putor: Clarlos
Sunday echo!~~· 10:30 a.in.

Sunday Scbool- 9:30a.m.
Wonlrip • IQ-.30 LIL, 7 p.m.
'ibuneiM)' SeMces - Tp.m,

a--

Puror:

Wonhip- 9:j!O a.m., 7 p.m.

Olaelos-

M ..p c..,_.ll,t Plrllir

Nor1lwula.-

1

~

Puror: 1 - B. K..,..
Wonliip- .JO..m., 7 p.m.
W.........y Srniooa • 7 1'-!"·

..._, Slwan Hau!llllll
Sunday Sdrool ·9:30a.m.
Wonbip- II ~.m., 6:30p.m.

Follll Baplllt Chorcto .
Railrood
St. Sunda~
Sc:Jiooi
· 10 a.m.
Wonhi!&gt; - II Lm., 6 p.m.
Weolaesdiy Srnioes - 7 p.m.

Chiller

Putor:

Sundoy School·- 9:30a.m.
ll-.-7p,m.
Wedooeday Smi001 • 7 p.m.

Joppa

'
llartf1rN Cloera eiQirloi ••
Clrrllilu Uoloa

Wonlrip ·9:30a.m.
School- 10:30 .....
y Servic:ea -7:30p.m.

!::':L
W

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

Hard'onl,pW.Va.
Putor: .... ~.... McManie
Sunday Scbo,ol • II L11L
Wonbip- 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.e!l.
W_.y Seniooa - 7::JCrp.m.

Sunday Scbool- 10 a.m.
'.vonlrip- 9 a.m.

-.,

M-•

Worship -10:45 LOL
Thunday semce. -7:30p.m.

Piator. Rev. Paul Taylor
SomMy Schoai-IOa.m.
u-,-7p.m.
W-.Jq SerrricOs - 7 p.m.

Puror: SJoum na .......

S...ySeMoi-9Lm.
Wanbip - 10 a.m.
Tuesday s.m... -7:30p.m.

c.n!CIAIINg,!~-l
Puror:
Newman

Pastor: Rev. Dllwid Ruuol1
Sunday $cboo1 IIIII WonbiP- 9:30a.m.
a...o.aSeMco~-r~&gt;m.

· Wedneeday Smic:ee -7 p.m.

.

Sunday Sdrool • 9:45 LID.

,

vlolslri • II ...U.

Wedneaday~rviccrr' • 1:;t0p.m.
Pastor: Keilh Rader
Stmday Scbool • 10 a.m.
Wonlrip - 9 a.m., 6 p.m . •
TUeeday Servica - r p.m.

ODDDDDDDODDO[]ODDDO

O,enllle

Hare1oon,.. 1'1-0ibylerlu Cbura
Worsbip-9Lm.
Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
Mtdtlleport Proobfllrlan

c...muollJ' Churdl

Sunday Sc:hoot . 9 Lm.
Wonlrip • 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd A 4th Sun.)

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 L!ll ., 7 p.m.

Syn._ Flnt Uolled Pr...,rtoe11D
Sunday School • to a.m.
Wonbip- I I Lm., 4 p.m. (Ill A 3nl Sun.)

Chrllllu Fellowllillp C•t«

Salem SL, Rulland
Paetor. Robert 1!. Muncr
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonbip • t I: IS Lm., 7p.m.
w ....eedsy Sc:rvic:e • 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventtst
S..•lle·Da1 AtiYislill
Ma1bmy Hra. Rd.,l'creneeo)'

Paetor:,Roy l.awindty .
S.tunlay Se'ivicea:
SabtJarh SduJO;il • 2 p.m.
Wonhip • 3p.m.

d. :'M....,.QapefCh•rdl · ·'
Su...: Mike Mallon
Stmday sc:hool • 10 a.m.
Wonhip - lta.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

/"

Untied Brethren

Fallh~urch

ML n.,... United .........,
In Cbrlit Chrerch
Te... Comm'""'y o11 CR 82
Pasror: Robell Sanders
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednc:eday Servi&lt;es -7:30p.m.

-~ool-

9:30a.m.
Wonbip -10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodrlesday1 :30p.m.
ML Oll¥t CommuoltJ Clnlrdl
Paet= Lawrmc:e Bueh
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Evenins • 7 p.m.
Wednedoy Service - 7 p.m.

Eden UoltetiBnthres lo Chrlll

2 l/2 mile! north d Reedeville
on Stole Roule 124
Paetor: Rev. RobOrt Merkley
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday SC:rvices - 7:30p.m.

, Uolled Faith Cllurdl

IlL 7 ern Pometoy By-Pau
Pa110r. Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Worship· 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wqmeeday Servic:e -7 p.m.

T-C~­

Co.Rd.63

·;;;;;nisiiii'
;: •10:30
•9:30 .....
~

flloll a_. Liahlhoult
33045 Hiland Road, 1\Jmt:roy
Past= Roy Hunter
Sunday Sdlcol - I 0 a.m.
Hvening7:30 p.m.
Tuo:sday ol Thureday -7:30p.m.

..

Sunday Wonhip • 2:30p.m.;

Thu.nday aervioes ~ 7 :30p.m..

N..., T-•••

South Bethel
Silver Rids•
Putor: Duane Sydmlb'idu:r

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhi!&gt; -to a.m.• 7 p.m.
Wedoesday Service- 7 p.m.

Mlddi•DI't C'llwdl fltlle N._....

· Paaor: Rev . .tJoyd D. Grimm,1r.
Sanday Sdrool· 9:30a.m.
Wonlrip . JQ-.JOa.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodrleeday S.M&lt;:a -7 p.m.

Carlttoala-lallltJIIol Cllurdl ..
Klnpbwy Rood

Paet= Clyde W. H-non
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.

ReodaYIIIeF..........,
CJoera ottlee N Puror: lcrbn w. DouaJae

.

Evenin&amp; • 1 p.m.

w.m,eeday SeMc:e- 7 p.m.

~ Sdrool- 9:30a.m.
w~- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Froid- GOIIflll Million

Wodneaday SeMcos · 7 p.m.

Bald~- on Co. Rd. 31
Paitbr: Rev. R,..er Willfcrrd
Sunday School · 9:30 ,Lm.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wecmeeday s.mi:e- 7 p.m.

'
s,.....
Cloera ot••1'1
..._,Rev. Gam McMiDm
Sonrlay Sdlocrt - 9:30 .....

WcrnbiP-10:30Lq~.,6p.m.

'Wednelday Sol•- -7 p.m.

u~

13 MMIIIrMI
Mldcleport. Ohio 411110

C41141 112·1117- CIIB·OOKII
CHURCH IUPPLIES • IIILEB

..MEIGS TIRE
~( \ CENTER, I.Nt

Uee FAST niNDS

.
I
1) (.

601 WTIIAII

,tft,JJJt

·i

PHSCIImON SHOP

......
' II,·,.,,.,
171lllrtlt

...

. ' IIB"'JIF

Ph: 1a1101

Po'*"'

SNOUFFER
FIB &amp; sann

ttl:....

\

J II 1 •Fulll

'SMES I SIIYIQ
99lr70JS

1

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

n lllrtll ,..... a...

··oo
. . . .,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

0\\;ff StrUI (BooGl

for normally 2-4 day
ret'uhda or
Electronic Filin&amp; for
IUida in about 3 weeb•

'

Presbyterian

Hrezet CommusllJ Churdl
OlfRL 124
Pastor: Edsel Hill
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship· !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

Neue SeiUmrenl Cburdl

Tie,.. Ptalr!M St. ....

=

Third Ave.
Putor: Rev. Qarlc Baker
Sunday Sdtoo1 · 10 a.J!l.
Evenina - 6p.in.
Wednesday Servil:ee 7:00

GnndS...

S...Jay Sdlcol- 10 a.m.
Wonbip- II a.m.
Wedneeday Servicea - 8 p.m. ·

•• A 3rd Sunday -7:30p.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
W~ySeiVices -7:30p.m.

s1-Apple ...Clrrerdo
of Gael
s-.Jllla.

SHnriHIIft~~

MlddlejHJrt Ptaloc:oolal

Sunday Sdrool- 10 a.m.
Everrina: - 6 p.m.
Wedneeday Servic:e • 7 p.m .

Puror: Rev. Seldon 1olrl""'
, Wonlrip- 9-.30 a.m.

........ C5rwdr eiGael
Pulor:1oii!IF.Cormnn
Sc:bool- 10 .....
w
-lla.m.,7p.en.
w
Serriooa-7p.m.

Cat~lOitc

Hodd"'JJCCI'( Ch-

St. RL 124, Racine
Pador: William Hcrbaclt
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedne1day Services· 7 p.m.

1411 Bridgeman St., SyrMCUee
Pasror: Roy (Mike) Thornpeon

lledrotCioerdo

Townelrip Rd., 468C
· Stmday Sdrool- 9 a.m.
Wonlrip- 10 a.m.
Wodrleeday S«viees- 10 a.m.

.......

s.r ·

RollaodFroeWRIIapllol
SahnSt.

Tueeday.SeMcos • 7 p.m.

Friclay-7~m.

Syr-•Mllllon

Sunday Sdiool- 10 a.m.
Wonlrip • II a.m.
Liunl CUll' Free Metlla lilt CIMerdl

Cocrhtlle Uslled
Plrl•
Puror: Helen Kline
Coattille CloMrdo
Main A Fifd! St.
Sunday Sdrool • tO a.m.

AporderllcFallh

1/4 lDik put Fori Meias on New Lima Rd.

Evmins 7 p.m.

Putor:~rGroce

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Hvmia1· 7 p.m.
Wrodacaday Smic:ee - 7 p.m.

Cb,rch or JOIUI Chrill,

Fallh TaiHne- Churdl

M....... s...

bilisd Bible M Puror: Rev.1van Myon ·

Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Wednc:eday Services - 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Pee!,_IA-biJ

. Putor: Konneth Baker
S101day Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m. (2rrd A 4th Sun)

sp.ool .;g,3()ljn.
Won1iip • I0:30 a.m., 7 l'.m·
Wedoeaday Services -7 p.m.

SUvemllle w ...d of Faille

Pastor: Sam Andenon
Sunday SchooiiO a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 1:30 p.m.

Thursday SeMc:e • 7 p.m.

s....,.

Cal•lrl' Pllcrtm Chapel
llarrioooville Road
Pa1tor: Rev. Victor Roush
Srmday School9:30 ie.m.
Wo!lbip · II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday S.IVice - 7:30p.m.

Pasror: William Van Melr:•
Sunday·7:00p.m.
Wednesday-1,-00p.m.

c-..

. P-.ParerT~'

Paswr: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 1 p.m.

Middleport Community Cllurcb
575 Pcad St., Middfeport

Bailey Run Rood
,Putor: Rev. E.mmeuRaw1on
Somday School· 10:00 a.m.

·Putor: Kmnedl Baker
Sunday School· 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip -10,30 Lm. ·
Thunday Services-7:30p.m.
Sutto. '
. Putor: Kemelb Baker ·
S...Jay Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Wonlrip - 10:4.5 a.m. (InA 3nl Sun)
Eut~rt
PaetOr: Roaer Groce •
Sunday Sdlo&lt;&gt;l- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

Faith F.. lowilllp Crulldt for Chrlll

Rejotdrlg Life Churth
SOON. 2nd Ave., Middlepoll
Panor: LaWrence Foreman

Putor: Konneth Balcer
SuadaySeMoi-IOa.m.
Wonhip • 9 Lm.
Wodneeday Srnices • 10 a.m.

Paaor: Rev. Soldoa 1olrleon
. Stmday So:bool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
WodnesdayServir:a-7:30p.m .

Churr.~l of God
ML MGiiole C5rwdr of Gael
Rocioo
p_, Rov.1- Saualiold
Sundly Schaal· 9:4.5 LDI.
B-a-7p.m.
Wedneeday
7 p.m.

SU!Iday School - 9:30 Lm. ·
Wonhip 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m. ·
Wodrleeday Service . 1:30 p.m.

The SaiYidon Ano1
115 Buucmut Ave .• Pomeroy.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Wonbip- 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

s.-....

r.-: Brenda Wdlcr

~

...:.,~=•s':r.

t6t Ma1bmy A..., Paneror. 992·51191
. ~Rov.Wallui!.Hoiaz
SaL Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Mau- s.:30p.m.
• Sun. Con. ...&gt;45-9:15 a.m.,
Siel. Mua- 9:30a.m.
Doiloy Mue - 8:30 a:m.

s.m- .

W~-9a.m.

Paaor: Slwan Hausman
Wonbip • 9 Lm.
'Stmday Sdtooi-IOa.m. .
Thu....y Srniotll • 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.

Puror: Rev. Blackwood

PallOr. Rev. Roland Wildman
O.urc:b · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip • l(}o.30 a.m.

Sunday Sdlo&lt;&gt;l -'9:30 LriL
Wonbip- t()-.30 Lm.
Thunclay
7 p.m.

&lt;

Ca1vrerJ Bible Chura

TrloltJ Con......,Oftll Churdl

Rullond

::,,

Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Wo!lbip · 9:30a.m., 1:30pm.
Wodrleeday Service · 1:30 p.m.

Panor. David Oiiley
Srmda)l School9:30 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Thunday SciVice ·7:30p.m.

Radoe

United fVlethodtst

Falnlew Bible Church
Lewt, W.Va. Rt. I
Pa•or: Junes Uwil

EocllhoeH-oi'PnJtr .
(II Brulin&amp;Jum c:burdl off RoUle 33)
Putor. Robell v.....
s~l; wonlrip - 10 a.m.
Wedn •y eervic:e -6:30p.m.

Puror: ...IIIHrr Cnblnoc

Wonbip- II a.m.

L1H11 Chrlollu Cloor&lt;h
Douer
Putor: Woa6y Call
B-ata - 6:30 p,e!!.
Wed rdey Ser\rice • 6:30p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 .....

I

RockSpe1ap

Putor. FI.....C. Smirh

Pino c ......
Plllflio: Geoqe Weiric:lt

s ... day School · 9:30a.m.
Wcrnhip - 10:30 a.m.
w.m,eeday Servia: · 1 p.m.

Olhcr Churches

Paaor:Keieh Rader
Sunday Stbool- 9:15a.m.
'll'onlrir&gt;- tO 1.111.
w.m,eac~ay Servi&lt;a - 6 p.m.

Latter-Day Sa111ts

Lutheran
Sl. JotooiMil.... Cllurdo

...iron~ cli.ra otCIIrloi

Mt. -~ Berpdel
Foardi A Naill St.,~ ·
Puror: Rev. Gilboet C..q,1r.
Soodoy School - 9:30a.m.
Wonlrlp ·10:45 Lm.

6

Puta:E::.(J..c:.) Kao
Sunday Stbool- 9:15a.m.
Wonlrir&gt;-.10:30a.m.,6p.m. :·.
w.......r.yScrviooa - 7:30p.m.

Sal• Caner
Parnor.Ronl'ieroc
SW!day Scbool· 9: IS a.m.
Wonbip - IO:IS a.m.

M - Clo- oi'Cirrill
. Miller St., Muon, W.VL
Sunday Sdlo&lt;&gt;l· 10 a.m.
=~lII ':"'·• 7 p.m.
W
y Semc:a • 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

I

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

Pastor: 1!ua&lt;110 B. Ullderwood
S111day Sclioot- 9:30a.m.
Wonllip • ID-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.

F.,.Ruollapl..
Putor : Arius flu11

School and OhiO um-

come out leidy 10 play (lfler die All-Snar llnalr).
Teams will be
b•."'
Richard Dumas ICOrcd I -'-lli&amp;ll32 poiais f«
the Suns.
Spurs 103, 7ien tl - S. Ast.,.;o isa"t C.
behind Phoenix ia home dom •
e, wiZit IS em-.
utive viclllries.
Dale Ellis iillde a clab 1«1iR1kJiirC ta. l-pJiat
shots in lbe fourth quaner atllis 'WIY .,,. paii.ns for
the ~ing Spun.
.
David Robiu:Ja added 19 paii.ns _, 13 1 I
t
for the Spurs. Hersey Hawtiu' 33 poiuu led
Philadelphia.
Jaa 105, Bach J4 -Uialt il ±owiire ils
1r
on tbe 11*1, winninJ rcir • f-* niute ill its last
IS
five games IS I visilor.
IWI Malone had 26 poiMI.C lalla 51'• 'I'• 20
points and 11aailtlndleJnz.-lawoe I bY su!~s!;:~~~~i:
spurts 10 beat slwnpiiiJ Mila I
PickeriaJfOU, varsity coach Pete
Tlm~nroi-Ul.~ll4-0a" • U.
Liplnp, iniUWiiCIIlal in mak·
tne8 had 28 points ... 16 I I
h . . . ('hJ* ~­
iirC
die cw•cclion bcu(een Westson. and Micbeal Willlaa• iDiilc loul 3 1 •
s rail IIIII Good) ea.
down the slfCICII forM
•
"We bad 11Jeed to lii.re someWilli8nis llad 27 poillls .c n
;.. ra- body
clle, but IIIII penon t.cbd
added 26 points u lite Tillbcauda-.1 6rir a. · OMl_,IOIIt
...,..., job II the last
scoring night of the 1 a., will for j d 6e a
1
aiwale," Strawaer said. "Joe
time in thtU 1st~.._ 5
......., _ 111•icld at the limo."
I +1 I liS- TCII)' l'laata"s
Trall Bluen
· I . . . . . JeC !!IF , ¥
his fresh ..
driving layup wida .1 • _, 1D ID pOi· 7 1 6e
_....,..bdle¥1' cy,
winning points as~ ame rn. ei&amp;k t I . I Ia
"'I tlliU: I - hesjc=eJJy in- the
the final3:23.
ri&amp;llt place .. tile ri&amp;llt time,"
James Wonby ICOrcd 2611111 llltlcd lito 15,.000. Saaa aid. "I don"t drink Pete
.point mart for his career, bat die ftsitiw&amp; L1bn 1iCZid ~~aft let l.ml 10 far I Jot of
couldn't hold off allle ally led by Paller_, a,dr: «Nob 1 called Joe liDd we met.
Orexia'. The Jail« ICOrcd 20 point, .... ill- drdWe lllll a1o11a really welllild we
sive rally.
llad laia dowlliDd talk fa
CliffRobinw led die Bluas willl 21 paiats.
{piat:i(MI D Ia) Klrlbner and
CU,pen lGI,IultiP H-l.oJV...,._oft , _ .
I Jtap)Qaao.
the bench for 20 poiutl ud a sea--lliJII 14 ..,:='111eJn, lla I viewed wilh the
reboandln Los AI 1 h (76.25) • I" h Ia a . I
....... -llilcd,'' llallid.
reccrd II tbe ,U.S. tnak for 6e fan niute ill die
Tlla ~ P' I for Goodyear
hillory oflhc OQCiL
, . II &amp;a - lltiDI place in
s.,.r~ealei Ill. 1J••~ 116- Se nlr'a lilt........ .,.. . . ldloOla
Derrk:k Mdtq ICOP'Id I
N&amp;Ja ]CI p • IIIII ._ " 4 ' 1 - CIIDJII and ·
12-af·16lllooliinJ...
.
...
.,.. . . . . . . t ·
Ricky Piela idded.25 point .C Edfio) '
a
WfMM IIIII .. W011 a SVC
22 for the SmiCI wllo • ~ 1 · 6e W•li•••
thi.lleSIOII, illc:1adiaa I'MI .. toliel ia &lt;WI '

........ Clluidr ., Chrlll

HUiolrl4 Bapll• CloSt. IlL 143jutoffllL 7
Puror: Rev. 1amea R. A""", Sr.
~School - 10 a.m.
Wonbip- IILm., 6 p.m.
w~ Servicee -7 p.m.

:'

= -High

Wonhip -10:30 a.m.
Wedneeday Seevices -1 p.m.

Paetu: Rev. PhillipRidmour

P~~~&lt;&gt;r. William .Jume
Suaday Sdtool- 9:30 ......
Wonhip • 10:40 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wecmr:sday SeMoea. 7 p.m.

Rev.John Neville
Sunday Sdrool10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wecloosday Service -7:30p.m.

R......... CII . . . fii ..... Ciorllt
Is LoiJor Da1 Saleoli
Pordand-Raoiae Rd.
Pula: J
b&gt;llieu
Sunday~- 9:30 LJII, .
Wonhip- ID-.30 a.m.
Wodnesday SeMc... -7:30p.e!l.

Sundly SChOol- 9:30 .....

'lew

New B;ven Churdo elilM N.....Putor: Glcaclon SIIWd
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
·Wonhip ·10:30Lrn., lp.m.
W-yServil:es-7p.m.

P~~~&lt;r.

DtxierChurdooi'Cirrllt
P-: Cuie StewU!

Luilflle au

PurtCioapel
Paetor: Aorau:" Smith

JWri-Yllle Hoi- Cll.,....

1'11110r. Bill' Wines
Sdlcol·- 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 9:45 i.ni.,6:30p:m.

21601 St. lb. 7. Middlq&gt;od
SomMy School- 10 a.m.
-...7:30p.m.
' Thunday 'Servic:ei - 7:30

Partlud Flnt Cilurdl olllle Nuanere

Sunday School - 9:30 LID.
Wonbip -10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Sorlie:&amp;- 7:30p.m.

S~mday

· Old Beaet Fno Will Bopillt Chord

MlotriYIDe
Puror: lleton Newman
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonlrip - 10 a.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.

871011 Ru Holn•ChPuta: Robell Ma!llly

Tupp&lt;n PlaiA Churdo oi'Chrl•

Wonbip -9:30a.m.
Thunday Servi001- 7:30p.m.

DDDDDDDDDDDDDDODDD
::a
f!e :=~=-::.:::
f:..::r=.~-t~~~~!!. D
SUN
a"I SPECIAL . D0
Cbaibol,...., bad ?16 . , . Dib- 1 l2-JCE"4d paduare of ~loom- · 0
. DI'

75
MiddJeporL
PuUr. Reir. Roy McCrnty
SomMy edtool - 9:30 Lm. .
Wonlrip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
w ......... y SeMce - 7:30p.m.

......,. : Tcm Rteay&lt;~~
Sunday School · 9:30 .....
Wonbip -tQ-.30Lm.

Belhlellllll Bapll.

·1

-St.

Wtlltr;s Bible Bot- Clnlrdl

_ . . , Cllurdo otCtrrt•

P - : Rev. Eart Sbuler
Sunday Schad -10::!0 a.m.

ru~:C:..1

1/21Dik off IlL 325
Puror: Rev. O'Dtll Murley
Sunday Sdlool· 9:30 Lm.
Wonlrip - IQ-.30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WocWiolay S.IVice- 7:30p.m. .

P - . HarrisonviDe Rd. (RLI43)
Putor: lnterial.
Sundly School- g;30 .....
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.
Wedneeday SeMc:a -7 P.!l)·

·~

Putor: Samuel Buy•
Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 LJD., 6:30p.m.
WedneedaySomcea - 7p.m.

.... c,...elllille a.._ Cllurde

2J.. Clourdo., Orloi

Mt.UolonBai
Put« : 1oeN.
,.
Sunday Sdlcol-9: a.m.
· Bverrina · 6:30p.m.
Wodneeday Servicee - 6:3Cp.rn.

Paaor: Fnak SmiiJr
Sunday School • 9;30 a.m.
· Wonbip- 10:30 Lm.
Weclaeeday Serviczl - 6p.m.

Puror: Rev. Dewey. Kina
Sunday edtoot- 9:30a.m.
Sunday W&lt;lnbip •7 p.m.
Wodnesdaypayermeo&lt;in&amp;· 1p.m.

.

Putor: •Bill Uale
- Sunday Sc:bool- IO..m.
Wonlrip • II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodneeday Servic:ee- 7:30p.m.

Ruilisd Churdo of the N-""•

Holt ness

Puoor:1adt CoJqroye
SW!day Schooi·9::JO 1.111.
Worship- tQ-.JOa.m.,6:30p.m.
Wodrloaday ~·6:30p.m.

SJmr Ruo Brepdot

Halle~)

a-111-Bei_Cio_
New Um.a Rood, Rullmd

'

Rldele Flni Bopdot
YD!IIb P-Ric:Uianis
Stmday School- 9:30a.m.
Wofsbip ·10:40Lm., 7:00p.m.
Woolaeeday Somcea -7:00p.m.

1'11110r. Rev. Helbert G"re
Suaday Sdrool - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesdi.y SeMee• - 7 p.m.

c.,.pe1 Water••

Coolvi11c Rood

Cllllller Clllll'dli .r lllle Nez• aae

Puur. Demn Newman
~r·SJ;I!9o! - 10 a.m.
Wonbip • 9 Lm.
Thunday Services -6:30p.m.

SondlySchooi-IIUI.
Wonbip • IOo.m., 6·p.m.
w.......ys.mou - 7p.m.

a......uO.. RldpCurctoor~

Suaday School-9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:4.5 Lm.
p,......, Ftnt laplllt .
l!irst Main St.
Putor: Dr. Lee Manis
Sundoy School- 9:30 Lm.
Wonlrip- 10:30 a.m.
Ftnt Soutlr... B!l!dot
41872 Pomeroy PitePutor: 1!. Lomar 0'81)11111
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wedaeeday S.M&lt;:a -7:00p.m.
Flnt BApllrril Cllurdl
6ih •d Polmer St.
Puror: Rev. lames A. Seddon
Sunday Sdlool- 9:15a.m.
Wonhil&gt; -10:15 ·Lm., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
Lonl's ~ hi Stmday of ....y.monlh.
Wedoieaday SeMce· 7:00p.m.

nor Chureb fliiM Nn . eM
Putor: Rev. Thomas McCiun&amp;
Suaday Sdrool • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 Lm. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servir:a . 7p.m.

F-Ruo

Eptscopaf

Whitt's

.-

Pula: Keilh Rader
Stmday School- 10 a.m .
Wonhip - II a.m., 6.P.m.
Thunday SeMces - 7 p.m.

Wodaeeday Sinic:Oo • 7 p.m.

KewoCioera oi'CIIrloi
Wonhip - 9:!0 a.m.
SQndrry Sdrool· 1.0:30 L!ll·

Rullud F!nt Japd• C~urdl

.

able to Win close games," said Circleville coach Tom Hamman, a
Wesifall graduate who guided the
Mustangs 10 lheir best season (194) in 1981 before leaving.
•'They make the big plays down
the stretch and that's an indication
of discipline and good leadership
from the seniors as well as the
coaching staff. The players have·
also taken-on the challenge of having a new system and a new
coaclt.'' he said. .
.

•LM•'IG.~irylll

Wonlrip -II LOL ... 7 p.m.
Wedneeday SeMce -7 p.m.

to first winning season ~~~ seven Y~.a.r~

CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (AP)Joe GoodyeaJ knew coaching the
wasi!J boys t btheiiiCIIII would
llcalat~fiul.bul he bad no idea it
-.Ill llcdlis macb fun.
Good) ell, Williamsport Westfall's finn-year bead boys basketball coach, has gnided the Mustanp 10 1 13-S record. It's the
sdlaol's finn double-digit win seaDl ia seven yan.
ne naral Pickaway County
sdlaolllbo will post its fmt win· lliilcllll!llll smce anll-10 mark in
1984-&amp;S.
... a-il 11as always been one

w.

Mkldl1p art~ t1 arttt
5tb ""' MaiD
. Pulor:Alllarllm
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonlrip- i: 15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WIOIIooaday s.m... -7 p.m.

. Soodoy ...... • 9:45 LIIL

~::::'~v~:a~~~:t~:.r'.::i
:e~dle.=-:..:==
Rookie'
head
coach
P:uides
Westfali
Dibble their only stoppet. It's a llti:yliJ.,Irl•JCE.A3' J1 .at
·
q
'

:Houston, Portland among victors

'

Keay Moore ~f S!: "His grades America to the era ~t I581!C Murpllllla UCLA, but be was phy, the first three.-ame wmner of
•ell"" ialy
then, just a the Kentucky perby, and Jack

1tCR

., Cloeerde ., Cllrloi
lll MoieoSt.
Puror: ADd.- Mila

raJ W-Cioerdo oi'Ciorloi
33226 Qilclnon'e !lame Rd.

·

)

Sports Probe

a..-

PIII&lt;r. Gary Hines
Sunday Sc:bool.- 9:30 1!-D!.
Worship - 6 p.m.

S111day School· 9:30a.m.
Wonllip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wecklee&lt;laySeM- · 7p.m.
P

Flahroou

Now Life Cloore!e of Gad

Church of Chnst

SAI:ES

GRAVELY

?04 CCNJd411' St.

P_ro,, OH.

992:2975
'

UMJNGS.(OAn

FISHEl
FUNERAL HOME
·99t-5141

264 s.iiJ IIIII .

MIM:pet I

Nationwide Ins . Co . .·
of Columbus., 0.

tl.,..

·.

104 W. Main

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

tt2-2111 Pomerov

BILL QUICKEL

MISHER&amp;l.OHSE
~
w• Fill Doc:lor!.' · ~
{
. PrHcrlptlon&lt;

HI·JtS$

t,

-.

Po,.oroy

MaTS

...
liKE

.FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

•

ttomthle Saws

(row's Family RestaUr-ant
"lultttl•l Kt~tulr FIIH c•ldu "
~21 W. Main St., P'omtroy

992-5432
'
EWING
FUNERAl HOM£
··f);~nih' and Sf•rt'i«-(1 Alu ·n'· ~"

Established 1913

992-2121
10. ....,, ....

2t4 E. Main
992-5130 Pemeroy

_./

WMTADs8ET

~··· .·

f RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

:t
•,~.. " " ''~'"•

·

fMlj

~

.

Y•terans

.

MlmcRial Hospital I'
115 (. ............

"2-2104

,_,

�..
.....

.

' rt Ohio
~

:r,~.

The Daily Sentinel

••

...••

Th D II Se II

--- - - &gt;.

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Friday, February, 19, 1993
•

PERSONAL
CARE FOR

Pag~

:--------------------------------------------~----~----------------~

\April17 at Rutland Civic Center

•

'
'
The village or Rolland and the
Meigs County Chamber of ComDear Aait l.ancJe'I'S: Eight years
merce Tuesday announced a joint
ago;
I 'found my aon's body in the
venture to have Phil Dirt and the
street.
He bad been killed by 1
Dozers perfonn in concert at the
Rutland Civic Center 8 p.m. on hit-and:nm driver oolhe way home
April17.
from schOoL SiDce then, l have met
ANN LANDERS
Phil Din and the Dozers play wid~ many other motben. fldlcrs.
"1992, Loo Aac•le•
old-time rock and roll from the sistm and brothers wbo have lost
Tim., Sflldleoi•
'50s and '60s. 1n recent years, they loved lllle5. They aU ape Willi me
Cre.oton Syndicate"
have played twice to large crowds on lhe following point.
· at the Meigs County Fair.
Please talk about the person we
At a recent village council meet- have lost. ·even if ihe mentioo of bis diem as well. c- WE REMEMBER
ing, Rutland Mayor Ed Manin and name causes us 10 weep a little. It is INCLIFI'ON, N.Y.
Executive Director of the Meigs a joy to speak of my son and to
DEAR N;Y.: Most people are
County Cl)amber of Commerce
know
that
he
has
not been !(ltaUy Jductant 10 talk abouUOIIICIOIIC'S loa
Paula Thacker signed a contract to
fir fear of opening old WWids. You
bring the entertainers to Meigs . forgotten.
I
am
hmt
when
people
who
knew
have
lot them know that lhe real
County.
"I believe this joint effort is him never menlioo his name. It is as sadness comes from believing that
another way to enhance the fact if these people are trying to pn:tend loved ones have been forgotten.
that the chamber is worlcing coop- that he never existed To deny that . Bringing their names into nonnal
eratively with all of Meigs County. this beautiful child was an conversation is a lovely thing to do.
Thls project will help the village of unportant pan of our lives is both · Thank 1you for an.. enlightening
letter.
Rutland with $Orne maintenance impossible and unrealistic.
We may not be able to control
Dear Aan Landers: My
.and repairs on the civic center
which are desperately needed and what happens to us -- death, husband and I have been happily
also will provide entertainment for accidents or life's blows •• but- we ·married for 10 years, but ihere are
Meigs County and the surrounding do have a choice as to how we deal days when I wonder if we're going
areas," Thacker said.
·
wiih our losses. Victor Frankel, a ·to make it
Ticket information may lie re$pected psychiatrist, survived a
I have been 'pursued . by two
obtained by calling the Meigs Nazi conccntratlon camp because bf different bosses since I married. 'lltis
County Chamber of Commerce at his great love fOI'his wife, who died started before the tenn "sexual
992-5005 or the village of Rulland there. Frankel was determined not harassment" came into vogue. In
•at 742-2121.
to let ihe Nazis destroy his spirit or both cases', I finally quit the job. I
his will to live. He kept himself alive might add ihat I am attracdve, but
•
by thinking about and speaking not a knockout. and had no interest
about his beloved wife. She was his in flirting. I ended up telling .my
key to survival.
husband about lhe harassments. I
Please tell your readers how couldn't have made it wilhout his
COOLVILLE - A missionary important it is for ihose of us who irust and suppon.
Recently, my best friend's husballd
convention will be held at White's have suffered losses to spes)( of the
Chapel Wesleyan Church in depaned, to recall the good limes left her and their 9-month-old baby
Coolville Saturday and Sunday at 7 and to know that others remember for a woman in his office. My friend
p.nt. nightly and 10:30 a.m. on
.
Sunday with Rebecca Bibbee from
India. Public invited.

Ann
Landers

. SIGNING CONTRACT· Paula Thacker, executive director or the
:•Meigs County ChaJQber or Commerce, left, and Rutland Mayor Ed
&lt;[&gt;iartin sign a coatrlct at a recent meeting or the Rutland Village
·.'Council to have Pllil Dirt and the Dozers, a popular regional band,
':perform April17 at the Rutland Civic Center.
.

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items
REEDSVILLE - A cornbread
and
bean dinner will be held Satur· appear two days before an event
day
from noon to 5 p.m. at the Feland ihe .day of that event. ltems
lowship
Church of the Nazarene,
· must be received weD in advance
. to assure publleatlon In the cal- Route 124, .across from the For\&lt;ed
Run State Park in Reedsville.
. endar.
Coleslaw, fried potatoes, hot dogs
and chi{!s will also be available.
.
FRIDAY
· · LONG BOTTOM - There will There will be a free-wiD offering.
. &lt;be a square dance at ihe Long BotHARRISONVILLE - Har.•:tom Community Building on Fri.; llay from 8-11 p.m. Music will be risonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM,
annual inspection, Saturday, 6:30
: provided by "Out of the Blue."
p.m. Baked steak supper. Work in
•
:
SYRACUSE - Weekend revival, master mason degree at 7:30 p.m.
: Syracuse Nazarene Church, Friday All master masons invited.
: through Sunday, 7 p.m. nightly and
CHESTER - Steak dinner spon·, 10:30 a.m. and6p.m. Sunday. Rev.
:; Wesley B. Frederick, speaker. Mel sored by Pomeroy OES, Saturday,
:. .and Mary Felts, special singers. 5-7 p.m. at .the Chester Masonic
Temple.
;: Jlublic invited.
·
• ••POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
. ;. LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Western
Style Square Dance Club,•
. _Oospel Church in Long Bottom
dance,
Saturday,
8-11 p:m. Tom
: will have preaching and singing
Poe,
caller.
Refreshments.
Public
• Friday, 7 p.m., featuring local talinvited.
; cnt. Pastor Steve Reed invites the
: public. Fellowship will foUow.
NITRO, W.VA. - Liberty
:
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers Mountaineers, Saturday, Cin-San
• Plains VFW Post No. 9053 and Theatre, Nitro, W. Va:
: Ladies Auxiliary will hold a dance
SALEM CENTER • Star
; Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. with
• music by CJ and Country Gentle- Grange and Star Junior Grange,
Saturday, 6:30p.m., potluck supper
; men. Everyone welcome.
and work project. All members
SATURDAY
auend.
;· · TUPPERS PL,AINS • The
HENDERSON. W.Vf\. - Gallia
·:Wines Family will present a conTwirlers
Western Square Dance
: cert at the Tuppers Plains Church
Club,
dance,
Saturday, 8-11 p.m.,
; of Christ on Satllrllay at2 p.m. feaHenderson
Community
Center,
. turing "Kevin and His Wonder
Henderson,
W.Va.
Bill
Bush,
; Horse. A covered dish dinner will
caller.
Public
invited.
; be held following the program.

attend hippology event

Several members from 4-H
• horse clubs in Meigs County
• attended a hippology and judging
: session on Saturday at Ohio State
:University in Columbus.
•. During the hippology sessions,
: members identified a variety of
:~ubstances that are put into a horse,
·~uc h as types of grain, etc.
·• Attending from the Meigs 4-H
l&gt;Icasure Riders were Holly Mil jloan, Matt Milhoan, Sara Crl!ig.

Susan Grueser, Sarah Grucscr and
Lindsey Nottingham. Rachael
Downie is advisor for the group.
Assistant advisors traveling 10 the
sessions ,were Pam Milhoan and
Faye Craig.
Daniel Grueser attended from
the Young Riders Club.
- Mrs. Downie stated this was the
first time any members from Meigs
County auended the event

..

.

. HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a square dance Saturday from 811:30 p.m. in Hockingport at the
Reynolds Building . "Out of the
Blue" will perform. Ronnie Wood
·will be the caller. Everyone welcome.

is hear1broken and scared. I'm sad
for her.
.
Last week, I attended an .anniver-:
sary party f~r my huSband's Jaw firm:
I couldn't help but notiee dlat one o(
the young female attorneys he works
with COiildn't keep her eyes off m"./
husband and was always at bis
elbow. Although I trust my husband,
I can't help but feel uncomfortabiC
about this womat in his oft"acc. s~
calls him at home with 'office
questions,' which I iuppose ia
legitimale, but I really don't like iL ;
I hate lhe lhought that rm feeling
threalened, but I guess thai's lhe way
it is. Please give me some guidance:
-- JUANITA, NO CITY; NQ
STATE
DEAR JUANITA: Tell your
husband exactly how you feeL
Emphasize ihe fact that his associ•
ate's phone.calls at home inake you
uncomfOIJib)e. If he has n:spcct for
your feelings, the calls will stop, and
you wiD have the peace of mind that
is rightfuUy yours.
Gem of ihe Day: If you don't likC
to be alone, you probably bore othel'
people,'100.
What's rlre muh abo111 por, co~
caiM. LSD, PCP, cr(J(:k, spetd aJtil
downers? 'The Lowdown on Dope''
has up-IO·Ihe-miltate informtJiion o/t·
drwgs. Send a self-addressed, l011i,
b!ISiMss-siu envelope IJIId a cltec~
or f11011eY order for $3.65 (this in•
cl~Ms postagt and halld/ing) to;
Lowdo~n. c/o AM Landtrs, P,O.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 606JJ ~
0562 . (In Catulda, send $4.45.)

The Past Councilor's Club of
Chester Council No. 323, Daughters of America, met rtJCently at the
home of Jean Frederick. Elizabeth
Hayes and Ada Bissell were cohostesses.
Laura Mae Nice presided. She
read
from St . John. The Lord's
RUTLAND - There will be a
Prayer
was recited and pledges to
dance at the Rutland American·
the
Christian
and American· flags
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
were
given
in
unison.
p.m. to midnight. Music will be
Members answered roll call by
provided by Pure Country Band.
readin~.
what wan on their candy
Public invited .
valentine hearts which the presiPOMEROY - The Mei~s Coun- dent gave each member.
ty Litter Control Office wtll hold a
recycle day Saturday from 9 a.m. to
noon at the Kroger parking lot in
Pomeroy.
The Homebuilders Class of ·the
Middleport Church of Christ met
SUNQAY
recently with Dorothy Roach pfe·
POMEROY ·• The Gallia Area siding.
Ostomy Association will meet at
Frank !hie gave the opening
2:30p.m. Sunday at the cafeteria of · prayer and officers reports were
Veterans Memorial Hospital in given by Rosanna Manley and
Pomeroy: The hospital will provide Katherine Evans. . .
beverages; and refreshments will
Prayer was requested for Clarice
be provided by members. AU inter- Erwin, Marilyn Bishop, Geneva
ested Meigs Countians are invited and Clay Tuttle, .Bill and Flo
to auend.
Grueser, Osby Martin ~ Ruth Bamhart, Joe Hill, Pam Ewing, Rufus
REEDSVILLE - Patty and Jewell, Carrie Jackson, Dian WalkLenny. Youth Ministry Ventrilo- er.
quisrs, will perform at Sout!l Bethel
Devotions were given by Elsie
New Testament Church on Sunday King, Mary Martin aild Katherine
from 6-7:30 p.m. Further informa- Evans. The closing prayer was by
tion 'may be obtained by calling . Bud Wilson.
985-3505. Everyone welcome.
Refresh111e'nts were served by
.
.
Mary Martin, Elsie King, Dorothy
LONG BOTTOM - Rev. Nor- Baker and Frank lhle to Dorothy
man Butler will be guest speaker at Roach , Mary Martin, Thelma
the Long Bottom United Methodist Boyer, Netty and Willard Boyer,
Church on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Dorothy and Gene McDaniel,
Public invited.
Loretta Tiemeyer. Lester Bowers.
Katherine and Glen Evans.
POMEROY • Rev. Eddie Buff· Dorothy Baker, Elsie King, Bud
ington, Gallipolis, will be guest and Hazel Wilson, Rosanna Manspeaker Sunday at 10:45 a.m. at ley and Frank lhle.
Naomi Baptist Church in Pomeroy.
Cards were signed for Marilyn,
Public invited.
Bishop and Clarice Erwin.

Class meets

·

#

'

Income opportunity seminar s~t
An Income ()pporturilty Seminar planned for S'awrday, Feb. 27,
in Parkersbutg, Vf.Va., IS designed
for individuals iri Ohio and West
Virginia who are interested in
information on alternative incomes.
The keynote address will feature
the story of the development of the
Longaberger Company . The
Longaherger is the dream of Dave
Longaberger, founder and owner of
this multi-minion dollar enterprise.
The keynote address will be followed by presentations on marketing and business organizations.
Three breakout sessions will
also be offered, featuring 12 different topics. Some of the topics
include: "$ in Your Pocke~ Aquaculture, Bed and Breald'ast, Nursery/Christmas Tree Production and
Marketing Arts and Crafts.
The program wiU be held at the
holiday Inn which is located near
the intersection of U.S. 50 and
Interstate 77. The program will
start at 8:30 a.m.. wtth registration
and refreshments ·and conclude at
approximately 3:30 .p.m. A pre-reg-

!stration fee of $12 is requested and
mcludes lunch and seminar handours.
This seminar is being spoliSored
by the West ·Virginia ilnd the Ohio
S!ale University Extension Servtces, The Buckeye Hills and
Kanawha Resource Conservation
Development Districts and the
West Virginia State Conservation'
Agency. For further information
contact the Meigs County extension Office at 992-6696.

Meigs anitoun.cements
MARIETTA • The Washington
State Community College board of
trustees will meet Monday at 7 ·
p.m. in the college's board room.

· 4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
COUNTRY· &amp; WESTERN DANCE
SATURDAY, FEB. 20 -II to 12 p.m.
At Pt. Pleasant. WV. Moose
LEE BROTHERS BAND .
Bring your drinks and snacks.
TICKET$: Adults $7 - $9 at doc&lt;
675-3888- 446-6941 . 992-6387

•

I
)

..

•
•

•

;
SCOUTING FOR FOOD • The annual Seout: tng for Food ba1 distribution will be Saturday.
• Residents are asked to put cans or rood In the
: ' bags, which will be lert by the scouts, and leave
•· them on their porches on Feb. 27 to be picked

•

up by the KOUtl. AU 'food eoUtcted will be deliv·
ered to the Melp Cooperative ·Parlsh wblcb will
distribute ibe food to the need of the county. Pic·
lured are memben Pomeroy Cub Seoul Pack, 1r, Ryan Pratt, Josh Hooten and Chris Snouffer.

propooola from ott lntarHted public, prlvato, and
pantranalt oparat 0ro for the
provlalon of tha aervlce

propo- In the Section 16
apptlcldon.
,
Woodland Contoro, Inc. II

1110 lntereated

POMEROY
BOWLING LANES

EAGLES

In co·

ordlnatlng the uoe of lht
vohlcle with an~ public,

CLUB
IN POMEROY

private, and paratranall

opara.ou In the area.

614-992-3432

POOL
TOURNAMENT
Starts at 12:00 noon on
Sunday, February 21
Open Bowling
12:00 noon

SENIOR PHOTOS
.PUBLISHED IN THE

1990, 1991 or 1992
graduation editions
may be picked up
during office hours at
The Daily Sentinel.
Also available are
photos from Desert
Storm, In Memory,
. Birthday and
Cards of Thanks.
All photos not picked
up by March 31, 1993
will be discarded.

necaaoary dttalto by
contacting Chorleo · E.
Admin!·
atrator, .or lhtcotm a.
Orabough, Aoooclate Dl·
Facltlty/~aloty

NCIOr, Woodland C.nten,

Inc., 3086 Stata Route 180,
Golllpollo, Ohio 45631.
Wrllten comment• and

propoaallnuel be aubmttted
within 30 dayo to the
agency addreoo given
·above with a copy to the
Ohio Department of
Tronoportatlon, 25 South
Front Street, Columbua,

Ohio 432111-0899.
(2) 18, 26, 21C.

Public Notice
PUIIUC NOTICE
The lletgo County
Council on Aging, Inc.,
which lo 1 prlvott nonprofh
oorporetlon, Intend• to

Public Not.l ce
To all
peraona
lntereattd ,
PUBUC
NOTICE

public notice Ia hereby
glvon: ·
1. That on1882,
the teth
day of
o-nber,
pureuant
to Ohio Revtoed Code
Section 6118.051 ot oec.,
there woo flied In the ofnce
of the Clerk of tha Court of
Common Pleao of Melgo
County,
a Petition
to
amend Ohio,
the prior
order
ettabtlohlng the Tuppero
Plalno•Cheoler Walor
Dlolrtct purouant ·to the
authority of Ohio Revtaed
Code Section 8119.051.
Specifically thll Board
petlllone thla Courl to
expand Ita power• to
comply wllh the otalutory
provlalona end to extend

tho geographlcol area
comprlolng tho preaont
Dlotrlct ond allowing tho
future development. The
Tuppore Ptalna-Chuter
Water District now covera

aubmll on opptlcoUon for 1
capitol grant under the more area than originally
provlol!ln of S.CUon 10 of propoood and the Dlotrlct
lha Federal Tronalt anllctpalao
expanding furAdmlnlotrotlon to provide ther throughout
the County
lranaportatlon aervlce for
In
the
future.
elderly peraona and
2. A public htarlng on
poroon1 with dlubltltleo
aatd
Petition ohall be held In
within llalga Count~. The
Melga
County Common
grant oppllcotlon will
Pleas Court on the 2nd day
raquHI one (1). modllled of
March 1993, at10 :30 a.m.,
min-von (VII-3-2), one (1)
by
the Court of Common
IWo-woy Fll radio and one Pteaa
of Melgo County;
(1) mlcrocomputw.
10
Ohio,
ol
the Courthouae In
II Ia projected
the city of Pomeroy, Ohio.
el::::r. and/or
All peroona and public
...
will
corporations owning or

1 card of Thanks

Public Notice

The flml!Y of

lntoreoted In real eot.te
within the territory
dtocrlbtd above will be
glvon an opportunity to ba
hoard at the tlmo and tho
place above opeci!Md.

thanka and haai1falt
appreciation
to
Vatlnnl
Memorial
Hoepltal Emergency
Room StaH, Nuralng
.taH, or. Wltherall, Dr.
Pllltareon, · Dr. L.en!Z,
Dr. Wltharall'e .taH,
Rlldlology etaH of

Fire Department

a

The Rutland Fire Department Is sponsorina fund
raisin&amp; proaram to ralae money for needed equipment.
Persons repraentlna JOUr Fire DePartment will be
contactlna all homes In the ll'j!a over the comlna weeks,
1 askiJII for 1 donation of $20.00. Persona will be plna door''
to door .a nd will e.ry Identification or an LD. bad&amp;e.
The Fire Department.willie. to thank everyoDe tor their
1 donation by 11ivlnaa complimentary certificate for an BxlO

CARPENTER SERVICE

N N
ew 0 ...1

•Garages
•Complete
Re....eliag
Stor. &amp; CoMm:zare
F IE EST!
ES
'985 •4473

992·6215

667•6179

Pomeroy, Ohio

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
HARDWOOD
.
.
Seasoned
$40.00 a load
Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

9-1

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

YARDMAN RIDING MOWER
YARDMAN PUSH MOWIR
2 Ctdt IIIII 4 Cylo
1010 T~IMltiiRS &amp; SAWS
SALES AND SERVICE
Porto ond Service for oil
makH and modeto of

FOREVER
BRONZE

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
1 HOME SITES arlll
TRAILER SITES,
. LANDCLEARING.
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING

lraclo,. and f•rm ·

equipment.

MORRIS

IPMENT

TANNING
•••han ld., hciM
Swttthtlrf lpHltl
14 SESSIONS- 114 .
Uml1 2 Per Cuetomer
'
GOOD Ullll
fEI. 20

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

949·2826

1-21-13

GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOTS

Quality
Stone Co.

SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

POOR BOY TIRES
ALI&amp;IIMEIIT - 4 wh11l

Dual Exhnst with Gloss Packl
$109.95 + Tu
Contputar lalm~ci•a • Strut•, Shocb,

C••bor lrru1lling

Call614·992·
6637

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAtJGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE

Check our Price or We Both Lose

W LOCAJIOI 10 SIIVI YOI.Illlil,_a,.,

St. Rt. 7
Cllesllire, OH.

Guaranteed Scholarship Money
for all college bound students.

ALLMAKU

'regardless of income
•regardless of grades
•plus $20k guaranteed loan
. • regardless of credn

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SERVICE

HolZer Mldlcel Canter,
Dr. Kholhla, Ewing
funaral .
homo,
pallbeara, all frlende,
flmlly and nelghbora
who Mnt food, nowera,
money, and carda, flllv.
'Robart Smith, Rav.
EdMI Hart for . baing
hare lor ua In time of
alckn... and loaa o.f
our balovacl huaband
·and
lither.
Your
thoughttulneaa · and
klndnaM will never ba
lorgottan.
Thank you,
MarJorie Miller, wife

992·5335 or
915·3561

.......... ,_, Offlco

To collect your scholarship money

217 L 'aco•alSt.
POMEROY, OHIO

Open Mon.·Frl. 10-7 or Sat. 10-4

call614-985-3556

2-, , mod. pd.

CHARLIE'S

SMALL DOZER
WORK,
,
· DRIVEWAY WORK
and LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

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

REASONABLE RATES

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139

POMEROY; OH.

llo S.nday caHsl

992·7553

Daughtere: Jeanie
Raynolda, Phyllla

.

Howerton and all the
· grandchildren

~

Snodgrass Upholstery
"Helping You To Recower Yo/U lnres/rnent"
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office

992·2259

205 NOrth Second Ava.
Mlddlapcirl, OH
I ROOIII, 4 be&lt;toixna. lilumlnum oldi;'ll. ind 3 po&gt;rches.
Sill on over 3 acre•. can be yo~ for 137,800.

1
I

0

12-5-tln

Iring _It In Or We
'Pick Up.

'.
'

POIIEROY- Unllllln ~ -A 2-3 bad!OCm home with
upper ind lower rf181 porch. 11\d utility room. Could be a

nice·- horne or rental property. $14,000.

I

·CONSTRUCTION

r-------YOUNG'S

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

OFFICE 992-2886

I

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

LICENSED.and BONDED

PH. 614-992·5591

.__ _ _ _.:.::

ENFORCED .
Larry E. Spencer, Clerk
Common!!~=~=~~~~
, Melgo County
~aoCourl
(2) 5, 12, 19, 28, 4tc

.lamea E. Miller
wlehaa to axpr... their

RUTLAND· Rutland Garden
Club will meet Monday at 1:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Carl Dennoon in Rutland. The program will
be "Attracting Birds to Your.Feed"
er" and ·"Winter Care of Birds."
Mar&gt;: Po~ell, Mejgs County Park
Dtstnct DtrtJCtor, will be the guest
· speaker.

-Support The Rutland -

l .l~======::!

WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llme.tone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good fort
FREE card
Lie. Nu. 0051·32

An~one lnteroottd
In
altbmlttlng apropoool or
coordtnodng tranoporlotlon

Hampton, Maintenance/·

R&amp;~u~~g:.=:••
SEPT::?:~:TEMS
LAND CLEARING

EVERY THURSDAY

aervlcaa can obtain the

WIC changes
Changes are taldng place in the
Women, Infants and Children
(WIC) supplemental food program
of the Meigs County Health
Department, Debbie Babbill, R.N.
announced today.
Babbitt said that this week WIC
began computerizing client information. She said the new procedure
means that clieniS will need to keep
scheduled appointmeniS and be on
time. The child who has the
appointment .must be accompanied
by a parent or guardian and have
proof of birth, Social Security number, immunization .record, and
proof of income, which can be a
medical card 1r checl&gt; stub. ·
Pregnant women must bring in
proof of pregnancy from a physician or nurse. All pregnant women
will have a foUow-up appoinbDent
every six weeks for re-checks of
weight, blood iron and 24 hour diet
recalls . Ch!ln(les in income,
address. or telephOne number must
be reported to the Health Department.
~ttendinjl gro.up nutri~on educauon sesstons ts a reqUirement.
For those who aucnd tho sessions,
food COt!)XJIIS can be picked up f~r
three months. Otherwise coupons
will be issued on a monthly basis,
Babbitt said..

992·5858
696·1290

lnvlt•• . comment• and

Osbourne installed as sentinel
Mrs. Nice installed Ella
Refreshments were served by
Osborne as the sentinel of the club.
the hostesses.The secretary's report was given
Attending were Enna Cleland,
by JoAnn Baum and the treasurer's Belly Young, Goldie Frederick,
report was given by Goldie Freder- Thelma White, Ruth Smith, Opal .
ick.
·
Hollon, Jean Frederick, Thelma·
The death of Zana Gainer was. White, Ruth Smith. Opal Hollon;
noted and it was announced that Jean Frederick, JoAnn Baum
Goldie Krackomberger and Esther Smith, Mary K. Holter, Faye
Dorothy Ritchie were in the hospi- · Kirkhart, Alta Ballard, Ada Bissen,
tal.
Mae McPeek, Ella Osborne, Mary .
The door prize was won by Jo Barringer, Margaret Amberger,
Leda Mae Kraeuter, Alta Ballard lnzy Newell, Lora Damewood,
and Pauline Ridenour.
Laura. Mae Nice,.Elizabeth Hayes,
Garnes were cooducted by Mar- Marcta Keller, Charlotte Grant,
cia Keller, Laura Mae ,Nice and Ethel Orr, Leda Mae Kraeuter,
JoAnn Baum. t
Pauline Ridenour and a guest, Sandra White.

ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE.

Public Notice

'

.

~ Members

THE

Mother ~ays it's OK to talk .
about loved ones who ·have died .

lPhil Dirt and the Dozers to perfotnl·

&amp;-9

1-P

WANT A HOllE WITH LOTI OF POTENTIAL AND
23 ACRES OF LAND?- H81 4 bedtooms. oalalile dloh.
24 ft. above ground swimming pool. TPC watar 11\d 2 car
garage. All !Dr 121,000.
RUTLAND- Now Lima R1111d - Spacious Ia~ 31\ acrto
In ....., 11\d a oule glngarbrMd trimmed, t% &amp;lOry holM
wl!h 3 bedroom&amp;, 3 DOF'Che• and aqulpped kitchen which
.... been rarnodlltad. 121,000.
LOHO aonoM - Boahan Rood - II you're tired ol
living In town, you might want 10 lake a look at thla 3
bedroom, 2 beth home with a torgalamltv room.lirtpl-.
llniohad baumtnt and gloooed in porch on approx. t%

..............
.llrolttf. ... . . . . . . . .

NEW usnNo. ST 7 Pomeroy, 2 story frame home with
3 badrOcms, carport. central air, 3-4 acms.
I
ASKING $39,000

RACINE, OHIO
614·949·2202

61

POMEROY- Wright Sl., Beautilul A-Fmme home with 10
rooms. 5 bedrooms, 2 baths. 2.725 acres, fireplace,
dacklng, garage, patio, outbuiding, woodburner. private,
yet cloae to town.
$95,000
'MIDDLEPORT· 2 unH apartment building with both units
curmntty rented this Is good investment property.
$13.000. II truely lntereal8d... make an offer!

HOURS:

Wt Apprttlelt ~"' ltal111al

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP- Laflle steel building 9600 sq. ft. of
apece with cement ftoor and foundation, approx. 7 y1s okl.
Hao electric and watar wall on aka. Located on 24.93
acm In the counlry.IMMEDIATE POSSESSION I
$31,1100

Whll"'••ee• dewa

TEXAS RD- 23+ acres 2 story home 3-4 bedrooms, bath,
vinyllkfing. TPC walar &amp; well, ooma fenced acreage.
moot puture and tillable. Includes bams, shed, out
bullclnga, fruit-··
ASKING 75,000

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

THIS PLACE 18 REALLY HOJ'IPINGI TO GET IN OH
THE ACTION GIVE.US A CALL..WE HAVE BUYEIIB
THAT ARE BUYING AND SELLERS THAT ,ARE
IEWNOI WHO SAY'S WINTER IS ILOW?I

Life-• Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
~ccident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

color portrait to !It taken at tbi Fire Department.
This tund ralllna provam Ia lqitlmate and your Ji1re

DOTTlE
ll2-1112
BRSIDA JE
..........................................112-3016 •
DARUIII
MT........................................IIti2-GI5
IAIIJY ~R....._...............................~ ...III-71
IHERYL WALT~~Ch81hlre........................317-0C21

Departliiient asks tor your supporL

IPR~ .............................(304) IIN4tl

JEAN TRU18ELL ..................................JI4t.He0
KATHY CLELAND...................................ft2-1111

.OFRC:I!....- -....................................................112·2111

OfFICE.- ............. ,,_,,,............................112·2251

J!ARY

~eating

HENRY E. CLELAND..............................ft2-1111

TRACY BRINAGER....................., .... _,,,Mt-2431

WE TOTE THE NOTE%

...

.

. Rocky R. Nupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
Middleport; Ohio 45760
,.14)
1120/9:Wn·

Sund;n• · Mondo - Clcscct
Tu e5day · Wednesday · Fr l d.iy - 9: 30a. m . . 5 :30P.m.
Thu rsday · Sil,t urday - 10:00 a.m .. 3 :00P .m .

104 M ulber ry AveniJC
Pomeroy , OH 45769

1127111

KELLER'S CUStOM
BENDING
47269 St. Rt. 241 • 1Y. Mile OH lt. 7
· · Tltrv Cll01ter oa Rt. 241

PH. 614·985·3949
IIOW OFFIRIIIO."•••

OIL1 AND Ll.l SilVIa
TilE REPAIR AND IOYAYIIII
2/IS/tl/ 11801111

�•
•
Ohio
SNAFU®~by

Brua! Beattit

32

--c....

Announcement~

3

-· ...............
.... -.
............
--............
--,.
~
......

•
••

.

'

'

..

-.,.,...

-·

IJIIIMIN

.

High

ALDER

NORTH
97 51

.AK763
+QIO

41 Houses tor Rent

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

1

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

lUG

Sodroom Houoo In

WEST

EAST

+u3

+9S2
9J96

9AIO 83
10 9

Oroncle, Aclwo From Unlv.,.
oMy,IM-SUft41.

,

+A7652
SOUTH

+AKJ4
9KQ2

tm

a.AJI.L -

tJ5

94

2 -oom homo, -mont,
H.. Hllven, SQ4.71S-1881.

nolpo. pluo
_o
i ...I _CNIIDio.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

51

HousehOld

South

Goods

I NT

1111 Chevetto Auto Rune
Good, 1800, Aloo 1m 0 ......
RuM Good, - , Rought

NOPE

::0 080, Colll14-44e-OJIII.

--"""·

Fllh To'*, 2413 Joe"-&gt; Ave.
Polnl: .......... 31M.e75-20S3,

.. -

T...pc.r ,:;: Wnla,
111

Popon,$50--.o. ..

Golden ......... Puppile. No

~

10 OEO Motro $3,SOCI. 111
Covolllr 111,500. 10 Comoro 1toc

IF I HAD

CHANGE
WILL DO YOU
GOOD!!

TH'

GONE II

llull

1111 Ct.vf'DIIII
Aulom.tlc, AQ, L.Mdedt $1,500. 114 311 1011.
;
sen:

Bertt1,

v.a,

Good I

Lost &amp; Found

,,'

·11119 ChoY'( 1 112 Too1 Truck, 12
R ., Grillrt Bed, 4 Speed, E)!:cef.
llnl Condtlon, IM-2!15411~.

llx12 Clrpol ""· 1112 ·$50.
Sale an 111 c.rpllt In Mock. llol-

FounciAII--Sizo·

lollon corpote. IM-446-'11144.
All Corpot &amp; Vlnyt In Block 0..
Solo. llolohon C0rpol8, 1117 N.

Dog, I1WI7oJ2II.

.........

.Laol: -~ R.., - .
,_.... Pwldu
, ..... ..WU.

114-441-JI&amp;44.

-. -

VI'RA FURNITURE AND APPUANCES
814-44.-«28 OR 1 - 5 1

SWAIN

--·_,.51.
-·unklg,
ondAUCTION I

FURNITURE. 1Z

Otlw Ill., ...... - . UOod
tumlure, ...._., w•ern &amp;

MUiic'-nt drummer wante to
join or form group doing

-=

PI-nt Quill prlvlto, good

country lf1d rock, exctU1nt •

IIU2t2.

Yald Sale

7

w-.

1~ Notorol, 1 - o.. rontood.

COM ~llo1213.

au-ingl~

No

adv.rtised In til newspaper

are available on an equal
-rlllnlty bull.

Ooll Hll TIUCklng

Com~n~
~ ll~nclid Ovor The
Aaed Semi Tr~~ctor ITr~iler

Drt._.,

wanted to Buy

9

•, I D'e -•·•o ~_.._ ond

s.::r.,

INYfltgl:"* CliO I

~
~773'U4

true

I.

3'1

On. Ront-2-0wn·

Ttlll'IG····wE'n GOING TO

'

GltANT ~IJ A

,..__..., ~tfOLt faYI

COUNTRY FURNITURE AND
'
CRAFTS
Wo Buy And Soli Good LJood
Fumhure. 2230 Stitt Route 141
614-446-1422.
•
0000 ' USED APPLIANCES

II&gt;~I'ITtTY.

VIne StrMI 0Coll 6'14-441-'/3N, 1·

800-499-3499.

Fum._

1 lA, 120 4th,
pold. 114 446 4418

1HI KoWIIIkl LTD 454- boll
drive lfr.t tMk• Rler coalld-

2xS

waite, Z complttt batht, dining
room, living room, 3bdnn., walk·
In cloMte, lully carJMlld, 2 por·
chn, electric htat, AC ltove,
rtfrlgtrldoi', llltNo-wlred, tiomt
Nat'l Bank, Raclna, OH. 814·949·

2210.

tllltlnlod To

Buy:

J..,k

Autoo

With or Wllhoul 11otor11. Coli
UrrJ Llvtlr. IM 311 I JC J.

...._. toltvv: Junk eutoe, must
1oo t-bl•, 1140112·1112.
Tap Prtc11 Pilei: AN Old U.S.
c-, Gold AI- llhor Cotno,
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
111 . _ , . A..,uo, O.Onlpollo.

Complete

home

0322, 3 miiH
Free Dtllvery.

out Butevltlo Rd.

1912 c.Mury, 11

Wqnt to:

PIN down EXTRA

·CA8H?!!

1H3

~

----Solid
._-_Only. Ouno

;,t.\i.d - , 114-441-1122, I 18 Wantec:t to Do
I'.ILCir~.

•

'

En1ployment Serv1ces

.

··a..

1ta: LPN, graduate k&gt;oking tor
port~lmo or ful~tlmo Job,
""""loblo.
. 114-su-e 44

anytime.

Rsnch style home, 3 ~roomt,

1 belh, attached garsge, Ntw
And.raon wlndowe, central air,

aooc1 neighborhood,
:104·713-1110•

I

lltt.

Verr llvub.. Q room

Mooon.

home with

2-cor corpon on SA 143,

Pomeroy, Ohio. Apprtlnd tor

,•

spirits." Ask any of your kin. and you
should be !old to pronounce KIN·
DRED "KIN-dred ."
'

Q. How did 1!1 get started as a

'

MORTY MEEKLE
WHEN I 690N UP, l'M 6011'16.
10 e:ROIIA 6&amp;\RDAL.LTHE:

WAyr::JOWN 1l:)MY FEET.

THAT WAY I'LL NeVER

HAve 10 WSAI&lt; ANY
CLOTl-'E:5.

greeting ' I've always wondered about
that

LOt-IS AS'IOJ ~
10 WALK e.EHIND
e:va&lt;YBODY eL.5E.

A. HI began as' a v~rianl of HE;Y.
The three-leiter HEY dales back to
Middle Engli sh lwith the spelling
HEll as a call lo signal for allen ion.
Our modern interjection Hi began in
American English during the Civil

,"i

Tronsmlalono, Uood

~

War. and this informal version

2213, Pomeroy: IM·992-S100.

.
.
""" - ....
=
-63

Llvlltock

Llll'lln

"' .. 11-3532.

Propertf. Aeposs. .tlont. Your

~

IIIII·

a
. - . ....,".,... 81artlna ..
owrwr 114-241-~ ......_371-

h~tl eable, $4'7,.000. 814-367-Y,78

Ar.. C1 105-102-8000 Ext. GH-

··related" or "similar... as ,in " kindred

a14 ... 4312.

gat

00\IEANMEHT HOMES From 11
IU Aopllrl. Dollnquont Tox

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
Challenger rno, 2.8

1111 Bronco for pilrtl, new
,,..._, new tlree, good Interior.
114-2411-11421.
a I. Truck tapper tor tale. Call

3 BR 1·112 bat~
hardwood floo ...l.!un basemen I:

1018D For Cuntnt Aepo

Turn your clutter into cash,
Srl1 it the easy way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
15 word&amp; or less, 3 days,
3 oaoers, $5.40 paid in advance.

Kimball otoctrlc ployer plano,
plono- ,,..., pYoM 1

Con~ ploy

bunon and lei lt. ralts pa.r,
olo- JIO. old, groot condHion,

,.
-

:;w f", Ndlllorl,
tanka,

ton truek
floor mate,

,,.

3Q4..

,

DIW

..c. D I F1 Auto, Ripley, WV.

..... S724l33 or 1~:rn.;me.

Hay &amp;'Grain

Services

"'
•

IFRIDAY

•

RIFF
·;

814-192·7711.

32 Mobile Homes
,.. tor Sale

I-1

1152.17 .... month Including olx

monthl fret )01 rent, , _ .,..70,
dotlwrod IIIII oat up, oklrtlng
lnd ltepo, 1-1-1125.
1 m - Porte 121115 2 Bocl-

I

'

I

-I

I

TOiol £i001r1c,
St.At.211, 2·112 AcrM MIL 114roomo,

WI,

ZH-elll:l, 114-37i-2llll.

Bod-.

1113 Fairmont lloblle Home,
14i70, 2
1 loth,
Eloc. Hell, U.......nlna.. Aftor

5 P.M. 114 •41 ~. ·

1111 lkytlno Hotly Ridge 141&lt;70,
all etec, Z t adrOomt, AIC,
ccwerecl porCh, "ltct.n lsllind,

Ill_.
- ... undlrpooonlng,
llko ..... :IOUro-2414.

lift lkJtine 211110, 3 bod~, · a
3 tcoo AC,
Muot bo movod, 304511-2120.

m.-. ......,

1------------------2 .. . . . . ; , _ - : - - - - - - - 3. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;,

5·------~--_ _.....;,_ _ _ ___

6~

rBERNICE
'. BEDE OSOL

7 . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
8 . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
9 •. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

10~---~------11
. ______________

~'Your

12 ________________

13 . ______________~-

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

Plumbing &amp;
Hlllltlng

...... 20, 111:1

G~lipolie

Daily Tribune
446-2342
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
992-2156
Pt. Pleasant Register
67:,5 ·1333

..

·

wcmrthday

15~--------~-----

' I

er ordtnary day. ~now Where to look for
romance and ~ou'.ll find it. The Aatro·

•ASTRO-GRAPH

4. _______________

In the year ahead, improvements in your
•·!

a.......

..........

1w

I

I

......

rt

1111.

kloo:

--Ult(IIIO,-·

om.

I;

...,,••

or

·HELLO has been a popular greeting
since that time. To call for somebody's
allention. though , HI is now being
challenged by the similarly short YO.·

115,000, oaklng $14,000, 114·1112·
3330.

•

AUII.

By Jell'tey McQuain
The adjective KlND.RED mean s

A

Chuhlro:

Wenlod: 22 COHiool' . ~- I progr11n about nontrldltlonal
..__Ritloo,12141G ~· (ONOWJ, 1'-800.

Cuddy 470

.uWthl motor,
•pel. tran1.,
ch«ch; • presture plate. 114·
.....137'1 .,.., 5.
•-

Do 'Yau LOVE To Cook? An IEJ:. · tlnonclng, 304-671·2414.
Concopt In Homo
Portr Pion Sooldng Amblllouo 3 bedroom home corner lot,
lndlvldua• In Your Area To Camp Conley, Pl. Ptt, By owner.
Dlmonltralt OU.Ihy Kllchan 614-44$.8148 after 5:00 PM.
T.-, No D.llverln, No Ouot11,
room home, 2 acrn boat
DM-ne Your Own Hro, NO 8!"Imp,
3 bedrooms, wllh or
GIMMICKS.
without lurnlturt, complete
kllchtn, htat rmp, 304·882·
CoU RITA Aftor 4:00
2069 or 882-222 .
1114-:ns.G033 (COLLECT)
~. natural

C),_,.....,.,....,cu

llllctuii•Englne l Mtmdrivt,
_ , condlllon. c:aa 114·2561110.

cMtnt -

c1rport, tiding,

ft.

47

41

TfleiiUIUI

51 Crafty
52 Hindu
garment
5 4 - - carte
55 A wrllar
58 Pllylul child
57 Comtdlan

Nightingale
3 Allay4 - Louis
5 Dlsc:ard
6 lr111lan

. CHill

58 Mormon

Stele

DOWN

money
7 Grain
8 Above
9 New Zealand

1 - -dalay
2-

All pass

Reldrm •re ilJvited UJ &amp;end c.rrl-pMf ,,...
tiDIII to ptJJJJp AJder, iJJ c.l'l! of tlJb ~ptt.
Tky CD f.te Maftled Mly t/Jroqll fM ft&gt;IUIJJit.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for 'Sale
17 ft. Norrie Crift Ban loot,

fumlshings.

2 ..ory colonial home, 3 btd·
rooms, 2112 bltht, fireplace,

WCHMn: Mab mar. maneyl
FIM •!ollt wook Job proporatlon

(
•

power than I Mid- I'M -On-me.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

tamllyroom, Btnd aru, owner

111111to buy: Duckol Muacovy
...... 1 doZ.eM-441-'1341.

i

BORN LOSER

exc:. cond.· ruew like new- More

Apl:

$210. Utllltlol
after7p.m.

43

44
45

E.is1

114-446-1751.

ovlllll&gt;lo.
11 lllittoO Vinton ArH, 12 Acres,
Centllven
of PointAootY
~lunt
Timoer, 2 B.clroomt, All
lit. 13 N, Point Ploo10nt, W~ Electric. No Lind Contract. 114E.O.E.
,
441-1240.
k)t

.i

W.iaherl, dryen;, refrtgeretore.,
nmgu, Sktg~ Appllancn 71

Homes for Sale

1518 Sq. Fl., :18 acre

DON'T wOfln AJOIJT A

Couch &amp; chair, 4 kitchen chalr1,
Z 1w!ve! rockers, 304-675--2432.

v.mon Ave, $225. plue eltc, rtf
I clap, Na Hud, 304-175-2651.

IIIHII

EAANOAEATIU

FRANK AND ERNEST

1rll Font Bronco 414, Auto
Pllnl, Exeollont Sllapo1
114-2!11-1151.

Fumlahecl one bedroom apt, Mt. Hou,.: Mon-Stt, Q-5. 114-446-

Excelenl Pty, 114-882·

Part tiiM LPN'• nHd8c::l, varloue

DopooH

Nothing Ever Precwned.

aocept

adYittiaementa tor real eetate
which lain vlcladon ol tho
law. OUr roedeto are ho&lt;oby
intoomed that illdweRingl

111:1.

&amp; LiVCSIOCk

the Fedetol Fair Houalng Act

or 11168 which "'""" • meaa1

to advef1ile "any preference,
limitation or dllcriminatlon
billed on raao, color, nllitllan,
MX familialtWUI Of national
origirl, or qln18ntion to
make any oudl pteforanoi,
Hmitation or discriminatiOn.•

PubliC Sale
&amp;AuctiOn

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

/

Thia I1IW&amp;pllpfM' will not

8

'

• ·J. Ill. Plono, 304-

441-8221

ohio ,__r Is oubject to

I

I

cond,

Farm Supplies

1 - 5 or304-f711-11550.
2 led room apt tor rent. 614-

All realeolato odvoltislng "&gt;

Nol50WIDPooplo
PowerToNLoH
-.

882-23a

lor ..... For lnlonnaifonm
Cllll14-t-

Paint

I

ea.-. plana

"" ~~- • an. $100. 10 . , -nanty

nelghborhoad . .$250 per month.

qulpmont, I1HN·2411 01' 614·

-----~-:"---1

In

.

after ,

Instruments

-II.~

Wllon Coke Plftl

apartment

.~-.-304-7"1!1-1155
EwOrk,
II.

Musical

57

'' qOD 1'EMPER5 THE WIND
TO Tf.!E SHORN LAMB ''

WE S~EP~ERDS
HAVE A FAVORITE
SA'(ING .

1181 Ford Aa-.r. 4 cyl, 5 ;'

West
Pass

Whenev~r some declarers come to a
crossroads, they always seem to
crash.
'
In today's deal, South thought he
was driving cleverly along tbe main
highway when in reality he was head·
ing down a side road that looked attractive but was leading to a cliff top.
Against three no-trump, West 'led
the heart three: four, jack, king. South
counted seven top trfcks and antici·
pated getting two more from dia·
monds. And he knew an avoidance
play when he saw one.
South led a diamond to dummy's
king, returned to hand with a spade
and led a second diamond. If West had
played the queen, South was planning
to duck in' the dummy, keeping East
off . the lead. However, when West
played the 10, declarer put up dummy's ace and led a third round. South
was pleased to see West win this trick,
but he was \e5S pleased when West
promptly sw1tched to the club nine
(the high card denying interest in the
suit) in answer to his partner's encour·
agjng club-seven discard on the previ·
ous trick. East won with the ace and
returned a heart: one down .
South's path required finding the di·
amonds 3-2, with West holding the
club ace and West having to win his
side's diamond trick. But there was a
much better route available. Assum·
lng West's heart three was an
card, the suit had to be splitting
so, South just needed to find West
the club jack. At trick .two,
should have finessed dummy's club 10.
His nine tricks would have been four
spades, one heart, two diamonds
two clubs.

HousehOld

IR

41

By Pblllip Alder

•~

Merchandise

1

40

Driving
on the wrong road

ENNY
I'D BE

$4.,100. Ill ucellent condition, ~
114381 0811.
'

72 TruCks tor Sale

......,..

(abbr.)
8 Hawaiian

Grollod, In
horoldry
or two colora
ArriiJitoro
(tbbr.l
Roman 101
Ann bono
-radio
Mro. ln
lolodrld
Compltar ol

Opening lead: 9 3

BARNEY

loti. ......... -

36

money .

+KB3

•

cer. (abbr.l

5 Thutor sign

29 Opp. of NNW
30 Snake
32 High carda
33 Snow runner
34 Plaintiff

• 842

6

I F.lylngllu-

12 Contf)lracr o
13 Eljlionage
org .
14 Shut up
15 Brlbo
18 Tolk ldlr
18Botlllr
11 12 mos.
20 Russian rJver
21 Verr softly
(abbr.)
23- art
24 Bar legally
26 Actor
O'Toole
28 Pula up

t.tJ-IJ

Anoworte,.,..,_hulo

35- Unous
36 Pig,_
37 Prevont

·lnotrumenta

Rentals

PUIURI
~1-1101111 Ed. -

-

PHILLIP

Flnoncint, · - -·

Par ..... -

...-.011-

ACROSS

+Q 107

PI~ 'ftU. 'lOUR

-

Tbe World Almanac" Crossword Puul~~

BRIDGE

O.Mr

Anlloblo,

·~~~--CD. (1011 131·

"'"""" ...

ALLEYOOP

or L.Ha, Nonh
8&lt;1\oot ANI,

,. AcrM -

Q.olllo

LM Ctlo\TUNl 1 - - f t

btl:.... -

Autos for Sale

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

OIIIJ.,S IH UYI Ill 24 - . A
!!!ljl Toll OM 0.. Onol CoiIH .J . . :1101111 Ed. - ·
~C..--1.

71

Ohio

1220.

.

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

Apartment
for Rent

.

wn1sa- You
- 1 Your Single Or
Double~ Woll, Soollc, Founda·
tlon a .,.-... Allin One Loon
Pocklgo, Low llotoo, Open Lata
Wllh Llghlod 1-eM-172·

"

~

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriglll

19, 1993

Lind IHaml Dlu1lopment, El·

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

44

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Frll~•v. February,

1993

liOCIII life ate indicated. Howe-. con·
, tinue to malntlln &lt;:1001 Ilea with old
friends. Reinember, tilly are the o"""
whO stuck by you When you - • len
popular.
PIICIS (Fall......... 2G)In ordat to
accomplish lmportllflt object!- todl)l.
_....,...and bold,... on your behalf will be required. ·II you're too flint·
heartOd,lt ml)l and up bollllQ juot anoth·

duc::live c::onc::epl. ,

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt.' 22)1f you get off

on the wrong track with co-workers ear-

Graph Matchmaker Instantly reveals
which signs are romantically pertec.t tor
~au . Mail $2 plus a long, seH' ed·
dressed. stampecr envelope to Match-

warned is forearmed .

makel,' clo this newspaper, P.O. Box
91.28, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
ARIES (-ch 21-April 111 A close
friend who is always rather tight·lippad

LIBRA (Sept. 2:1-0ct. 231 You ma~have
a slight edge over rivals toda~ in situ&amp;·
lions that have elements of co,npeti·
tion. Howelier. don't go so far as to

about finances and private affairs wm

a chance and bet the farm .

ly in the day, the situation is not likely to

be remedied before quitting lime. Fore·

. 'resent being placed under close scrutl·

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-v. 221 Oeveiop-

ny loday . DQn't let your curiosity create

ments in financial or commercial areas

an lnclllent.
could c:Orne about to ~our ll~i~g today.
TAURUa (April :ZO.Moy 201 You ore ca- However, the problem is that once ~ou
pable of whatever ~ou set your mind to haye something In your hlnda, you
today, but there's a chance that oth.-s ·might get careless and loee it.
may rectiive more cledlt for ~our ac- ·IAOmARIUI (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 The
compllshrnents than you reap yourseif. , right an&amp;¥18&lt;11 could be found tOday In
GEMINI (lbJ 21·JUM 211 It would be ' situations where ~au rely upon ·your logwise today not to . boast ln. 'dvance
ic. ThiS may not bo true If you put 109
about 1honga yolo ontend to achltive. much credence In hunchee or' lntuitlve
There is e possibility that oircumotances ·perceptaont. •
might not eblcle by ~our timetable.
CAPIIICOIIII (Dec. 22-Ju. 11) CondiCANCIR (June 21-.NIJ 22)' You might · tiona era a trlllil unuiUal today. You
be called UPOn to manage a crlticalaltu· might be fortunate In your matoorlll aJ.
ation for onottfer ·today. Treat this mat· flirt. yet not so lucky In keeping the
tar u If it - • your own. DoillQ any- good wttt ot those involved.
thing 1- could make your venture AQUARIUS (Jan, IN'ab. 11)8oclaluniUCceoaful.
~ntara with frltnds should tum out
LEO (JIIIJ 23-Aug. 221 You might find It pleuaniiY tor you tC!Cfay. Con.vtiroetv.
,_..ary today to try to be all thlllQs to ~our dealings with bullnesa 11110C1atea
all people. Unfortunately. thlo could. might be a pain In the neck.
prove to be an extreme!~ counterp~.
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I like to work, but I don't consider rnyaelf a
workah'o lic at all. I love lo play, believe me." -

Richard Dean Anderson .

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th1ng has taken great strides
.
f forward, even opponunity.
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nity to arrive via a ....... , .

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PRINT NUM8EREO LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES

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- UNSCI.I.M8lE ABOVE LETTERS
V
TO GET ANSWER
•

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SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
• ·•8
Freeze -lci"fl· Naive • Pestle · CITIZEN
A famous polilic1an once said to a group of voters,
"The most imponant political office lhat a person cen
hold is that of private CITIZEN."

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0 1!!3 TV Oltli TIChi •

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FEBRUARY 19 J.~

�11-p11 12-The Deny SenUnel

advantage is being able to dil
quickly through files without
appearing to fumble.
Some lawyers also said they
have smoked cigarelles, made faces
or whispered with ~. 'l1lll
helps them feel more relaxed and
project confidence, they said.
Three j6dges in the courtroOm
and up to five lawyers in their
offices communicate with help
from arnplifJCrS and other Jizmo1
thlt eliminate the deep-well SOUild
often associated with speakerphones.
"It's sort of discolleerling, sit·ling in an empty counroom lalldng
10 the air, .. Associlte Justice N"da&gt;las Dibiaso said. " But it WOits a
well.'' ·
Lawyers and judses agreed the
leehlloiOJY isn't suitable for criminal jury trials and other conferences that require visual aids. But
they feel il is suited.for appeal•
court, where uguments ~d to be
dry and procedural.
·' SometimeJ,'' said Associ11te
Justice Sleven Vartabcdian, "you
actually listen better when you
don't have distractions."
The 1st Appellite District in
San Francisco and the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court in San Jose
recently installed identical equipment, made by Genlli6- Communi-

don'tUieilMt'
· u~j .
A•• • I J.az J - Anlliz
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Jft.M
----'bly
&lt;*Cit·cailiilliuwwidc
· • 10
•• -,lioFr. UU IWJW)Ui

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M

of llle bvdea of payinJlriVC:I

expeues for cOIId-appoinred

~cba't tllillk }'IJil CIB jastify

payiDJ $800 10 $1,000 10 briDI

the reqllesL

dae pcaple in wllra dille's _ .

er way," lle llid.
Cbief Depnty Clerk Victoria
Hernendtz esti•aW tile: initial
$10,000 ia\
tile
far die

;::lT!!}.!,400 a_.

e . . . - -

RMi"'

Some lawyus said IIIey !lliss
maki- eye CIJI!Wf.
tile
body . . . . . . . . lryiD.J
10 psyeb ont ntkr lawyers. But
they said diose faciOrs are O.tweigbed · ·- - b y die time
and-y--.
"ltalller tbU spendinJ foUJ
hours Oft die ..... I CIB lie JRJIQ"·
iag my cnl arpmeat," SICYca
Shayer Slid m.. B ' sfidd. 100
miles 10 die .-11.
'
As far die lack of eye C1!DIM'l,
he uid: "Yot1 c:a't see tile justices, 10 JOB C1B't ICC if dlcy'n:
wilb yot1 or - . Bill I bnwo bad
expel
:'"I wllcn: ,w'n: • .,.,
in fnlal at .... - JIID Slilllblt
blow if lbey'n: .... J'OL..

;udle7

: : Plins were finalized for the
The dinner and arranfements post.
·
:.American Legion Birthday.Ccle- are under the CORlJ!IiUCC o G~
Post Evemm"' &amp;vices wac:
· bration at the recent meeung of Horak, Paul Casc1, Lenny Jewell the lli&amp;h'ilkatt..·• •
Drew Webster Post No. 39, andGeorgeNeaelroad.
alldec
'mm'ws- 1 cr. Pomeroy. The cele~tion will be
The American Leflion Auxil- baed ill dlii•ICltiilz.
held March 16.
iary, under the direcbon of Mary
Post -benllip ans m 287.
, This program and dinner will be Martin, will mate the table dcctn- All tli&amp;f* - . ·
are Jqld
held 11 the senior citizens cenler in lions and furnish the cake and part to
tact ollicerJ at 111e post 10
Pomeroy. Rev. Roland Wildman oftherneal.
c:oa ·
;o
o~· . willbethe~speaker. Heisthe
All members of Post No. 39, secureann111
2'4'F ••••
minisler of the Trinity Congrega- their wives and all members of the it is i.mpui. . IO be 1 £1M ola ftl·
tiona! Church in Pomeroy and a ladies auxiliary as well as their
P •
member of Post 39. Rev. Wildman spouses and friends 8Je invited.
The-m Me at.Jllew Web.a~rved. i~ the United States A.ir
Mrs. Lo~ Burt wiD perform sev- 51er Post No. 39 wiD lie fobn:h 2
:Eilrcc during the Korean War.
cral sele.cuons accompanied by with a dinncca 7 p.m.
Ralph Werry, a mcm.ber of the

BJ DANIEL Q. HANEY

AP Sd n re Writer

BOSTON - Mutations cripple
Jeilel, ud aow scientists have
fonnd tilat IIley sometimes fix
diem, 1110.
Wbilc liliJ kind of repair work

liB 0 I • ' 'wTif been seen in bac·
ll:lia IIIII cells m test tubes, it has
never ~~~ witnessed in people

'*

:r:::;:::: .....,

....,__--Names in the news--- ·is
tile.,..
." Julie Dinan, a five year member
Of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sfsma Phi Sorority, was honored
recently as valentine quccn with a
~y at HoDy HiD Inn 1D Pomeroy.
:· In ajldition to the party, the
cl!apter preaented her With a pin, a
ycllOI" rose, candy and balloons.
· Dillon·, who Is employed as a
siiciety 'and general news reporler
with The Daily Sentinel, resides on
LincoLn Terrace in Pomeroy with
hi:r husband, Scott Dillon. She is
ihe daughter or Robert and CharJhtte Elberfeld; also of Pomeroy.

ing a woman with the .AIDS virus, · and mode£, wb01e fill£
ruling the basketball Sli!J' wasn 'I Mldt WlbibaJ, isMd
obliged to tell her of his previous from HaWiii aftJ:r ilci-c u•i i ut£
sexual caiQUCSts.
by IClivisls.
The $2 million lawsuit filed in
"In 1916 I •
' a JIUIIP at
October claims Johnson either school'kids oa a field trip,_, at
knew he was infected or should them Afli A · • " Lie llid.
have told the unidentified WOIIIan "And in 1988. I amalted two
thlt he nn s high risk of havinJ the Vie~se a c:ue of
virus.when they had sex in 1990.
beer. I Dllld lacilt 2 a a dlrillc
"A defendant who has bad thcli: "MO*""..,.-'IICOI*unprotected aexual CII(OUIIten with serioully Lut by ... I c!ill."
multiple partnen does not have a
"I• tniJ lOllY· I - a lll:nlegal duty, to inform a plaintiff of ager ud iniOXic:ared wilell I did
his or her past sexual activity," tbeae "u.s" Lie llid. ..Bnt ....,
U.S . DistrictJudse Richard A. noemr .. •
Enslen said Thursday.
He &amp;Wd 45 daJI i!a jlil ill !be
Johnson has sa1d he had sex aaack em die v;emsm r ill
with the woman once but didn't Dole!
Maa
have or didn't know he. bad the
W~J*' . •• 1 • m camvirus at the time. The trial is set for paign 10 e'
e • rc..s at biJMarch 1994.
.
, otry. His spokes•,., Gary
The former Los Ansetes takers StrornbuJ said details bad DOl
Star'announced in 199lthlthewas beenWIJiteliOUL
infected with the AIDS virus.
__
NEW YORK (AP) r- Bill
NEW YORK (AP) --: Rap star Cosby IIIII NBC_. 1!0 Wllik IQMarley Mark says he's sorry for ings mqic roJCfkr qain, witll
racist attacks he made as a teen- · four movies ia 2993-94 IIIII 1 acw
ager and wants to warn .others xrieldlc•• .........
against acts bigotry.
The four "liJ•t •ystery"
The. 21-y,ear-ol~ white rapper movies will CWQiwo .., a ~
one-hoar myacry ICrics ia 1 ,
NBC West Coast President Don
Oh~ said lla:Dy.
Bob Byer, director of Meigs
C!lunty EmergeJ;)cy Medical Serv1ces, spoke recently at the .
Burlingham Modern Woodmen
Guy HyseU, praidellt or tile
Hall in Bedford Township on how Meif: ~Dty lt£ACT Tc.~ ills
to organize a volunteer fire depart- proc 11.
- JIEACT Uail- 21
ment.
Number wiLL- be-: apia ia
Mike Duhl also presented slides memory at 'c:cwdydr'
•-and explained dry fire hydrants.
ber, Hlrl..t ~-- A1estJire
There were 66 people in atlen- Jr.
dance.

*

Bob Byer speaks

Proclamation made

JULIE DILLON
·"

Dr. Kevorkian assists
-14th and 15th suicides
~

_,

: ., By LAURA GRIMMER
• · Aslloclaltd Preu Writer
WATERFORD, Mich. - With
two more suicides, Dr. Jack
X,evodcian is stepping up the pace
Gs .a March 30 deadline approaches.
· Two cancer patients from California breathed carbon monoxide
through a mask Thursday in
•
~vorkian 's presence, bringing to
· ··-. IS the number of suicides in which
.Jie·liD-auil!led since 1990.
Kevorlciliifllas- assisted in seven
suicides siilce Dec. 15, when Gov.
John Ensler signed a Jaw. effective
March 30, makina such activity a
crime punishable by four years in
prison. Six of the swcides were this
mcnth - three this·week.
" "People are becoming more
delperate," said Kevodcian' s aaorriey Michael Schwanz. ''People
)Yho miJht not have contacled him
are contacting him now aut of fear
and
lc."
has said he inlends to
ifJ.IDfC the new law because he conSJden it irnm0181.
.. Stale lqillatm aeemed hesitant
r.huraday '? try to move up the
~w·s el'l'a:uve dire. Rep. Michael
,..ye cited a 1976 opinion by Michi· ,
Fa.n's auorney gene~ ~nt qucs-

.l&amp;"'vorkian

-··

Fund raiser set

The jlmior llld - It
Somhml HiP Sc!Jonl- aooeaiy
COMtiCiinla ftmd.aisiJc popw
Ulin I plld ciJaill wiJidl . . . . .
by C!art's Jewdty. Protioned the constitutionality of such ceeds from lhii will lie -.1
aslep.
. toward t•e 1993 Juior-Seaior
The latest victims were ~
Iii:
· die
Jonathon Grenz, 44~ or Cosra Mesa. f~ may
farlpQe
~
Calif., who had throat cancer, and
.
f Sl JIIUII.a• thea -'"limtlit
Martha Ruwart, 41, of Cardiff-by- bOO 0
- TICUU +llr
«.*" . 11
the-Sea, Calif., whose duodenal may ~ ~ rn.~-;(~
cancer had spread to her ovaries, or 1e111or c . ·-~ -......said Geoffrey Fieger, another Man:ll4. The wm wil be ldlaKcvorldan lawyer.
ed Man:b S.
They used the saJQe melhod

doJre.s

'*

~~~l~~~~~~~~:f/~~~~

and relatives were preaent
·" My sister had a very advanced
cancer," said Ruwart's sister Mary
Ruwart. "We've had a lot of cancer in our family. We've seen what
it can do and the suffering it can

IOHJ&amp;RTAINS • Melp Couty's Kim Batey who plays and
•11-bJ ,u d western musk entertained reSfdents or Onr.,..,. Caler, Middleport. recendy. Oae Overbrook resident in
1i1r · ' w e - Grace lbnt!ey, Kim's srade sehool music teach·
er. Klal, daapter vi Aady and Betty Batey of MiddLeport, now
1 It• ill CtD.b!IS aad performs in several dubs Ia that area.

Dutch scientists find
mutations sometimes
fix bad human genes

:Legion birthday celebrate planned

Valentine
queen
'

with a knife will remain in custody
until their trials.
· Judge Joseph Zieba of Lorain
County Juvenile Court on Thursday
rejected requests from lhe girls'
lawyers lhlt they be relelsed from
the county detention home.
· Thomas Janas, chief assistant
Lorain County prosecutor, opposed

!llllil-.
In ID!!ay's issue of the New
Eae!aad Journal of Medicine,
DalclliCicntists delcribe two cases
in wilic• people inherited a gene
tblt lho+Jld have c••sed a form of
mascJdv dystrophy but did not.
111e r •1 A priJie in the gene's

code M*'&lt;flow returned to nomaal
• it - r d from one generatioa 10 the DCIL
"h's lnad-aew unetics,'' Said
Dr. Robert G. Komeluk of the Univenity or Ottawa in Canada. 'T' .
~·s what makes it fascinat- 1

ests p armed

In lMI O..:h cues. plus another
dixowaed by Komelldt, the mulatioa wuec:t:d the BCRCtic error that

usses myotonic dystrophy, the
_ .. n•adu!tvalietyofmusClliar dy•Cflly.
Genes maill the code for the
body 10 assemble proteins. Many
iDIIai1ed diR'sel arise ·when Ibis
code becomes scrambled. As a
KSDit, the -makes a defective
pOICin or-mall.
Myotonic dystrophy results
rn.n mcf"' in a gene that contains inslnctious for making an
enzyme that regulaleS other protarr.s re-I in eel! walls.

Pesticide certification tests (for
those farmers and individuals who
wish to buy and apply restricted
use chemicals) will be given by the
Ohio Deputrneni of.Agriculwre in
the local area a1 the following litiles
and locations:
Wednesday, Meigs County Publie Library, 3-6-p.m.; Feb. 25,
Athens County Ex'tcnsion Office, 6
County
p.m.; March 3' w-·~m
-· · .."'~
~.
Agriculture Center in Marietta, 7
p.m.
1•.
Further information may be
obtained .by calling the Meigs
County Extension Office at 9926696.

s---... ·

=

!J'C

The girls, ages 12 and 13, are
charged with delinquency by realOll of conspiracy to commit aggravated munjer. If found guilty, they
COuld be remanded to the custody
of ·the Ohio Department of Youth
Services until they turn 21.
The Irving Middle School srudents, whose names have not been
released because or their ages, face
trial April I and 2.
·
Thefre accused of ploUing 10
kill then English teacher with a 12- ·
inch fillet knife because she had
adnionished the older girl to pay
attention in class.
- .Police said 10 10 tS classmates
placed bets totaling $200 on
whether the girls would carry out
the alleged plan.
.
The girls were IUTesled Jan. 20
afler Assistant Principal Jacqueline
Greenhill (oiled the plan. She heard
rumors of the plot 1tnd wept to the
classroom about IS minutes before
the attack was 10 be Carried OUL

"Excellent" soloists were Letitia
Holsinger, mezm soprano; Julie ,
Brown, flute; Viclci Warner,
marimba; Jeanie Cline, flute;
Jonathan Avis, alto sax; and Kristi
Warner, marimba.
"Superior" ensembles were t
woodwind trio of· Charlene Dailey,
Dawn Foley, Julie Brown; clarinet
choir of Dawn Foley, Jennifer
Mora, Adria Frecker, Meredith
Crow, Traci Heines, Judy West,
Christie Grossnickle; sax quarlet of
Letitia Holsinger, Heather Well,
James Ewing, Jonathan Avis; and
the percuSSion ensemble of Vicki
Warnef, Joe Karschni~, Brian
Hoffman, Kristi Warner and Brandon Buckley.
"Excellent" ensembles consisted
.of, in the marimba quartet of Vicki
Warner, Letitia Holsinger, Andrew
Wolf, Karen Morris: and lhc brass
quintet of Lauren Young, Annie
King, Melissa Dempsey and
Andrew Wolf.
,
In all the Eastern music"ian s
entered 28 events and e~rned 20
superior and eighl excellent ratings.

..

'

S•Ganb Club held its Febru· and Wanetta Radelcin displayed
fr! .e~Mcll the borne of Mildred valentine arran8Cillents.
Others answering the roll call
Jeffers anil she gave the opening
"A flower or sbrub that I haven' t
tlmJlicms "The Things I Prize."
Paaiiae Atkins, presided and grown and plan to grow lhis year"
made •••oiCCinents of upcoo~ing were Martha Chapman, Allegra
m inp in Meip County and the Will and Virginia Nelson.
The hint for the day was garden
S£*illltqiollal meelins to be held
beds can be edged with gniy cinder
inGailinCollntyon April24.
£mBa Aikins rqxxu:d on "Seed
block or outlined '!'ith britlc.
Refreshments were served by
- Sowa DohliM" Theie are several
cobs IIIII die sizes are tall, middle the hosleil.
size IIIII dwarf. The tall ones are
beacr fen- IIII!JICIIICIIts. The midsize aad dwarf varieties can be
in coatainen. The single
waiety liB 1 simple elepnce.
MlrJje Rife ~ on the "Lure
of tile: c-uiL They have wax
Lib: :-a ..: IDIDt at the flowers
resemble a double rose. They can
be pown ill CO!IIainen, put out in
the emsbine ill IIIII inside
wllm: they wiLL DOt freeze in win-

Blacks important part of early
Gallia labor- James Sands· A-7
'

Vol. 28, No. 1

County must pay back pay from Jan. 1989
Br KEVIN PINSON

lion."
'
duties that are such that lhe sheriff
Unclassified positions are must rely on the deputy's J?.CI'SOnal
'defined as "requir(ing) qualities judgment anfllcadcrship abi,lities.
that the General Assembly has
"The evidence present¢ to the
deemed are not determinable by . SPBR indicates thai appellant (BUrexamination" and do not receive nette) did not exercise personal
lhe proleetion of clalisified employ- judgment or leadership abilities,"
ces.
the appeDate court's deci!ion ~d.
In another words, classified "All of the tasks she carried
employees are generally the more . out .. were under the direct superviperrnanent staff who do not change sion and upon the CXI'fCSS orders of
when a: new etecled official takes the sheriff. Her duues were such
office. The unclassified employees . that any properly trained individual
are those hired by the new official with knowledge of the appropriate
as part of his personal staff. . .
procedure could complete the
Salisbury appealed the dec1s1on staff.•
to the Gallia County Court of ComIn her appeal, Burnette also
mon Pleas and on Feb. 2, 1992, lhe atgued the common pleas court, in
.terrnirlatcd
·. Burnett appealed her di$111issal court ruled Burnetle was indeed an iiS reversal of the SPBR's decision,
t..o' the State Personnel Board of unclassified employee. The ruling erred by considering her relation,Review and following._hcarings was also affected by the consider&amp;- ship to the former sheriff in regar~
held March 31 and Aug. 29, 1989, tiQn 9f Montgomery and B~eue's to its judgment
."The trial court based a large
the SPBR found she was ·a classi- relalionship and the state s ncpo·
pOrtion of its judgment upOn that
,fied employee and could only be tism laws.
removed frof!l employment for · . The decision of the SPBR was fact ..." the decision read.' "As there
was no evidence of the relation'1!00'1 cause and only afler follo~­ reversed.
case
then
carne
before
the
·ships
in the record, we fin~ tliat the
The
mg certain procedures outlined 1n
lhree-judge
panel
of
the
appellate
judgment
of the·trial court wu an
the Ohjo Revised Code. ·
eourt,
which
r.uled
the
SPBR
was
abuse
ofdiscretion
as it relied upon
. . The SPBR ordered that BW11ette
corroc:t
in
itiJulina
thlt
BurnetiC
,
lhlt
fact."
_
. .
• be roinstaled with back,pay. .....
Salisbury said Saturday he is
.. Civil service posiuons are was a classified'employee. .
The decision cites previous worlcing with the prosecuting attordofin~:d a• eitfler .classified or
unclassified. Classified positions precedent·setling cases which fur- ney's office and further action may
are defined' in Yarosh v. Becane as lher dcrmc unClassified deputies as • be taken.
Prosecuting Attorney Brent
those for· which "merit lind fimess lhose who are required to perform
can be determined by examina- d~ties thlt the sheriff could not del- Saunders could not be reached for
egai.C to an average
or comment .
T1mes-Sentine£ Staff
• Fonner Gallia County Sheriffs
Department personnel aide Jamie
E. Burnetle must be reinstated to
her former position wilh back pay
dating to January of 1989, the
Fourth Appellate District Court of
Appeals ruled recently. ·
.
According to the court's decision, wr\tlen by Judge william J
Harsha, Burneue was aslced to
resign her posi1ion when I!Cnnis
Salisbury assumed the off1ce .o f
sheriff in 1989, replacing Burnette's father, James Mont~ornery.
She refused, and her posiuon was
0

'

•'

a contribulion to aspousal IRA. You
can contribute up-to $2,000 per year,
assum10g your husband has earned
at leas! that much during the year.
Even !hough you can contribute to
an IRA, whether or not you can
deduct any part of your contribution
will depend on y(lur total income and
whether your husband is covered by
a retirement plan where he worl&lt;s.

Siapioe binbday party.
o 1 re Council will present the

aJion.-

nLJy.

Members were reminded to
IJriD&amp; lbeir Jifts for the rabies at the

Aft own•"' of house trailer• having a ••us In
the State of Ohio and subject to the tax as
provided above MUST register such trailer
with the County Audhor on or prior lo·th• date
tha tax Ia due and payable.
.

RESPONSIBIUTY
OF HOUSE

1'RAILEJt

OWN!!R"-

~
-ainJ closed in regular
llilna..

Upon the tranafer of ownership of a ·hou..
lraUer the certKicale • • • a to auch lrallar
. ahall expire, ·and the original owner ahall
lmmtdlnlaly remove auch cartWiclle from lhe
lraller.

AltelidiaJ were Opal Hollon,
Lorn Dlmewood, Erma Cleland,

Orrt!ota; Gtant, Maa McPeek, Ada
BisrD, Alta ilallani, Jc:an Fredrick,
Evenu Grant. Elizabeth Hayes,
Edlrl Orr, Plll1iae Ridenour, JoAnn
B
, Ratll Smidl, Esther Smith,
Marein Ke££er, Doris Gruuer,
·u .y Jo Bauk:p, Ooidie Fredrick
81 Belly YOIIIIJ.

'

OPIRATOR OF

A HOUSE .

'IMIIL!R
COURT-

•

e

Every operator of a hountraller court or palk
or every owner of property uaed for lueh
purpoaa When !hera Is no operator ahall keep
a raglltar of all houn trailers which mlb u..
of .1M court, park, or JIIOP8rty.
·

·HatrJUID I.FIUUII,

MillS COUIIY JIUSUIII

--- -- - ... --··
•

DEMOLISHING A 'LANDMARK' • Work
contbtues at the site or tbe r.,.ar MGM Fann
City Inc •. buiLding In Pomeroy. Here, Lulie

POMEROY

To Levy. On House Trailers

Rain. Hlp - y lli

IIlii..._

13 I allon 10:11 hgM

A lluldlnodla Inc. _.,....

By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmes·Senlinel Staff
POMEROY- "We do a good
job educating children in the classroom about the hazards of drug
abuse, but we do a lousy job in
reinforcing the education."
.
That was tiJ!: mesSI!IIe illustrated
by Dan Hieronimus, director of lhe
Rewarding Adolescent Drug Abuse
Resistance (RADAR) program,
. In school, children learn how
harmful ilrugs are, but once outside
the classroom they are deluged by
messages in the form of advertising
telling them its.OK to use some
drugs, Hieronimus said. W.e need
to positively reinforce the anti-drug
message outside of the school, he
added.
,
Hieronimus, a former Lawrence
· County sheriff, announced
Wednesday that he is seeking

grants to stait the RADAR program
in Meigs, Gallia and Jackson cou.nties.
The program, started over two
years ago in Lawrence County, also
mcludes two counties in WCSl Virginia and two in Ken lUCky.
The RADAR program rewards
youngsters age 12 to 17 for staying
away from drugs with discounts
from area merchants and by sponsoring special RAD!\!t·o~ly
events. In return, partiCipaung
youngsters are required to actually
prove they are remaining drug free
by passing a drug test
Youngsters indicated they want·
ed economic rewards and media
recognition, Hieronimus said referring to the first time he asked
youngslers what they wanted in the
form of rewards.
Continued on Aell

DAN HIE1t0NIMUS

Health department grant brings
immunization
clinics
to
Pomeroy
.
. -·
~·

·, By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Nm Stair
POMEROY .• The Meigs County Health Department his received
a $10 000 grant from the Ohio
· Department of Health to hir~ a
pan-time nurse to do commun1tybased immunization clinics for
children under age two.
.
Norma Torres, R. N., nursmg
director of the local Health Depanment, s~id Friday that only 45.5
percent of all chi!drcn ~der two in
Ohio are fully 1mmumzed. Th1s
creates ·~big problems", said the
nurse because 100 many preschoolers ~left vulnerable to potentially
, deadly diseases.
She emphasized the importance

of gettiog parents to see the v'~ue work out in the communi!)' serving
of immunizations and then getting lhose who have difficulty getting to
them to tiring their children either the Health DeJ:Itlrtment in Pomeroy.
Torres said thai lh~ is hopeful
to the Hcallh Department or to one
of the clinics which are being lhat spaCe for the community clinplanned in communities around the ics will.be donated so thlt all ·or the
grant money can go directly into
county.
.
"There are no char~es involved hiring a nurse.
The nursing director ~id that
in getting immunizauon shots at
children
under two years of age .
the Health Deparunent and there
will not be any charges at the com- will be .given the Hepatitis B vac: ·
cine between birth and one moinh,
munity' bascd clinics," said Torres.
While levy funds take care of then boosters at four months, and
the expense of s,dmlnislering•the again between six and 18 monlhs.
vaccine at the Heallh Department, · T~is particular vaccine will be .
the new grant will handle the cost given only to children born after •
of hiring a part-time registered October, 1992, she said.
The regular schedule for immunurse for two days a week, s~e
Continued on Aell
explained . The new nurse Will

Clinton finds receptive ear
for sacrifice among Ohioans : -

You haven't reached age

Paaline Aikins read from Ideals
concernin1 Valentine's Day. She

Sports.........................-.:•• C1·7

· Weather. ..........................A-2

Court orders fo~mer
p;;;g:~:"~ff:~s incentives
sheriff's aide retnstated to youths who say 'no' ·

70'12 so you're eligible to make

ICr.

AIODI the river ------Bl·8
Business/Farm.- ••••s:-.Dl-8
Claslitled
Deaths. -.............. - ............A-7
Ed.itoral .............................A6

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, February 21, 1993

Copyrlghlod 1813

g

.,wn

"

•

'
'

IRA CONTRIBUTIONS
My husband Is 72 and·' still

618 E. MAIN

Inside
---------..D4-7

-B-1

/

by H&amp;R Block .

Dahlias focus of Star
Garden Club program.
.
A

'

--~-

Early days of prep basketball in
Meigs County recalled· Crow· A·6

holds a job. We would like to
p orne money in an IRA, but are
told he can't because he's o~r 70'12.
I'm only 65, bull don't work. Is there
any way around these rules?

Chester D ofA members meet

Chester Council No. 323,
Daughren of Amcrit:a. IICliiiCCIIlly at the lodge bali witll Betty
Young,counc:ilorL_
Pledges 10 die diristiu ·and
:Amorican
flqs were pwon. The
_
cause.''
-Grenz's cancer forced doctors to Lord's ~ '911 ~eed j'alms
remove his larynx and much of his read, and the-fiiSI- ffiifie. tongue, Schwartz said. Grenz's S~gled
It was reported lbat DoRIIII.y
physical decline and his mother's
death two months ago forced him Ritcllie nl GoLdie ~ : : : ·
wu home ft01a lbe
into a deep depression. Fieaer said.
Kevorkian has been helpinl · death of z.a c..p..r- ...t.lt
people die by carbon monoxide wa IWed dw Ada V•m II is ill
poisoning since he was bamd by the hospira!. .
The Good of Onicl" rommiuee
court order 11om USinJ a device he
invenled thlt intravenously admin· · had I silent u:tioa
Marcia KelLer thanked diose
islers lethal doses of ttugs.
.who sent cardl and came 10 ller

}

'

.

Eastern music students
comp,ete at Ohio U.
Twenty· six members of the
Eastern Music Department compel·
ed in the annual Ohio Music Edu.caticn Associatioi\ DiSirict 17 high
school solo and ensemble contest
held at the School of Music at Ohio
University . .
·"Superior" soloists were K;i~
Michael, mezzo soprano; Let1Ua
Holsinger, alto sax; Charlene Dai·
Icy, mezzo soprano and flute;
Andrew Wolf, t~ombone; Dawn
Foley, clarinet; Adria Frecker, clar·
inct; Julie Brown:,t.bass'oon; Annie
King, trumpet; Noelle Pickens,
flute; Christy Drake, flute; Jennifer
Mora, clarinet; Heather Well, alto
sax ; Lauren Young, trumpet;
Melissa Dempsey, french hom; and
Ginger Nutter, baritone.

Redwomen begin tournament play.- C-1

Modern day
Daniel Boones

~used

CII iOIIS Olrp. ia Sllllalre City, but

0

0

ELYRIA, Ohio (AP) • Two
Iaeventh-gradc
girls
or plot· ·
ling to mwder their English teacher

J

75 cents

"lllltl a\

Judge says
girls must stay
·in detention

by phone: Judges all
¥Jressed
up,
but
no
one
shows
....
--:.r:ro

:W.AMAZOO, Mich. (AP) A judge threw out ·part of a lawsuit
accusing Magic Johnson of infect-

'

Friday, February, 19, 1993

~Court

By NANCY MAYER
Aaoclaltd Preu Writer
. FRESNO, Calif. - Two judges
"who weren't buying a lawyer's
·:p~ent lllmed to each Olher and
jjnmaced, enjoying one of the
jjdvantages of the nation's only
.'l;oun that routinely hears argul!lents via lelepbone hookup,
; TeltJCOPferencing in CalifMiia' s
-5th Appellate District courtroom
lets lawyers argue their cases from
the comfort of their offices hun4reds of miles away.
: The judges in the nine-county
: ·centnl California district sometimes preside over a ncar-empty
~ounroom, with only a clerk on
hand to place. monitor and record
the calls.
Teleconferencing saves time,
hundreds or thousands of tax dol" tars, and removes the sling from a
. jaid¥,e's glare. Or vice versa.
~:
'Normally, you may be intimi.aated by three justices glowering
down 11 jou," said James Goff, a
' lawyer tn Or11nge County', 2SO
· (hiles to the south. "But now you
can glOW« back and it's OK. They
can•t see you.''
··: "If my knees are quivering, at
: least it doean·' t sbow,'' said lawyer
. J~uth McCluskey of Modesto, 100
,·miles to the north.
··•.. San Francisco Bay Area lawyer
.!'aut Mudricli said t~C: binest

)

•

Frank, c•ester, •• a scooplollder Friday to
remove aad stod.ple eartll aad debris from lhe
· , site. (OVP pholo by Jim Freeman)

From A.P, Staff Reports ·
CHll.LICOTIIE - Residents of
this soulh-ccntral Ohio community
say they are willing to pay higher
taxes for President Clinton's economic 'plan if he ~eelS them
halfway and cuts spending.
Clinton told about 1,700 stu·
dents Sllpporters and residents Friday at a town meeting in Chillicothe HiJH School that he wouldn't

raise ta-xes unless he also cut
spending.
He said that in the first four
years of his economic plan, "the
spending cuts and the revenue
increases are shout equal.
"I have no interest in raising a
penny in taxes if we're not going to
do the cutS," he sltid.
·
Most area residents interviewed
·about Clinton's visit said they

weren't Democmts or Republicans, ·
but voted for a presidential Candi"
date last year based on their feeli~gs ,about him. Even so~e who
d1dn t vote for Chnton sa1d they.·.
~ere listeniugjo his appeal for sac-. :
nficc.
·
·•.•
Anne Cox, 39, said she agrees
with the presi~t' s plan "as long
as there's a cutm the spending.
Conlinued on Aell

Gallipolis teens :Spend theit
weekends in 'The Cellar
instead
Qj th:e doghouse ·
·Ch -. h
·

Ufe
.,

f~

Q 1efS

·
.
..,fre
·
trouble e.

· · . and.· eaSeS
f Ufl'

parent s '

.

.

RliUier than ·paca ·the tloor and
wiiCII the clook while lbelr IOCR•
are oul oa a Jlliday or SatU'day
niaflt )IIIDtlnr the town Tid, many
~ lnlleid send their Children
to 11ie ~Jar.

-.

! I

.

mt'nds' .

Ill' KEVIN PINSON
Tlm•Se•tlrie£ NIWI Stair
GALLIPOLIS -:- Let'a .face,
parenll worry.
Thcr Clll not ile£p but worry, it
is £1111 or their jQb delcriptlon eapoclally If their off1prlng are.
teenipiL

The Cellar is the lower level of . conuols traffic.
the Grace United Methodist
When it first opened its doors in
Church, 600 Second Ave., whera.' 1980, The Cellar welcomed o~ly
for a quaner, taenqa1 caAiocial- about a dozen teens, Swann Slid.
ize, dance and play pnte1 follow- Crowds of ~p to SOO now grace the
iRJ Gallia Academy Hiah School youth center.
·
.
football and baslcetball home
"I.~ot:cloubtanyonehadany
games.
·
'
antic1paU011 1t would lake off like 11
·m~e 'thin thlt makes Ibis place did,. he said.
.
.
unii£11C and fmport..ll .IO the cornYO!Jth IJIOITIIII layleaders 0t,ry
munity is to g'1ve the kidl a life and Cindy FeliQre began volunteer·
place to hanJ out," said Gre&amp; ing with The Ge1Iar four years ago
Swann, GUMC's aiJOCiate pastor.
and took dwp of it more than ,two
The Cellar has video games, 1 years ago.
•
kltchen/conceasiorl atan,d which
Mrs. FeD~ said the ICCTII .who
offora hoi dOJI and pop corn, a attend are generally pretty well
pool atble, video ~ and music behaved.
andlilhtl fCI'diiiC: •
· '"We've had very liule problems
Tile IJIVenth· t rouah 22th as far u kids tryinseo brill&amp; (alcol!lllden come
ao from The Cel· holic) drinb In and things lib diaL
far u tl!eY pi-. noy are IIQI They know tbis is al.l volunteer
loctod In, but each tlmti they re- 1 balll IIIII if there ia too much trou·
.._ the 1eo111 must ~y admlulcn. ,ble there may not be a Cellad a
.So .lbto ·quarter cover charlo not couple ot weeks."
Only 1!eiPa delray expeniCI but also
Continued on A-8

-s

o/

'·

.,
•

)

.... .

'--T&lt;&gt;Ci~iiioor:=-:-T;:;;ee;;n:;.-;...~.;;re~La~u~lihtti;e;r;on;;---:-;~~or;-;a~q;u;art;:;;er t11e1 ~·· meet, daaee and piny
vi The CeDar Friday •la•tla the lower
Graee Unltec£ Melbodllt Church where

games. (Tlmes·Seatlnel phoiD by Kevin PI-)
'

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