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By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Dear, Aaa Llaclen: All my life,
I've had a fear of,docton, hospitals
and havins shols. I hav~\ been 10 a
doctor 2S Years. rm afraid lhat
when I die lherc may be an IIIIOIJSY,
and I absoluatly do IIIli want this.
I am not married, but I've been
living willa a gcntlcman rriend for
several years and trust him
ccmplcll:ly. If I diC a natural death
and am lucky enough lhat no one
knows I'm sane cxcqx my iOn and
my F.ndeman friend, WOUld it be
possible 10 a~id the coronet'll wish
to have my remains cremated and
the ashes spread around in my
favorile places ..
I need to know if, by following
my wishes, either my son or my
friend would get in trouble with the
law. If I put these insauctions.in my
will, would that make it legal? I have
no valuables or life inswance, so
there would be no reason for the ,

m

police to suspect foul play. Please
help. -FEARFUL IN LAS VEGAS
DEAR FEARfUL: We spoke
with Hirvey Lapin, a Chicago
attorney and nationally recogniZed
authority on Cemetery and funeral
law.
Mr. Lapin said, "The woman
could probably be privately
cremaled, but most staleS and some
local jurisdictions require permits,
which must be oblained in advance,
and may require the assistance of a
licensed funeral dilector. Sbe shOuld

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

will be a free-will offering. Pancakes, sausage, desserts and drinks
will be available.

POMEROY - An arthritis aquatic program will be held at Roy!ll
Oak Resort in Pomeroy beginning
MONDAY
Tuesday. The program is open to
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- people in the community with
ty Veterans Service Commission arthritis and includes gentle exerwill meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in cise activities in the swimming
the Veterans Service Office in pool. Sessions wi11 be held rwice a
Pomeroy.
week on Tuesday and Thursday
from 10•11 a.m. for nine weeks.
MARIETIA- The Washington The fee is $20. Further information
State Community College board of may be obtained by calling 593trustees will meet Monday at 7 2518.
p.m. in the college's board room.
. R_ACINE • 'fl!e ~erican AssoRUTLAND - Rutland Garden ctauon of Umverslly Women
Club will meet Monday at I :30 (AAUW) will meet '!'uesday ~~ 7
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Carl Den- p.m . at the Racme tJmted
nison in Rudand The program will Methodtst Church.
be "Attracting Birds to Your Feeder" and "Winter Care of Birds."
POMEROY - The 1993 Meigs
Mary Powell, Meigs County Park County Livestock Sale and Show
District Director, will be the guest Committee will meet Tuesday at 7
speaker.
p.m . in the Meigs High School
Cafeteria.
MIDDLEPORT - The 0H KAN
Coin Club will meet Monday at
RACINE - Southern High !;:lass
Burkett Barber Shop .in Middleport. of 1968 will meet Tuesday at 7
A social hour and trading session . p.m. at the high school to plan the
precede the 8 p.m. meeting. Plan- 25th reunion.
ning March 21 coin show. Refreshments. New members welcome.
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
RACINE - Southern Local will hold a pledge party Tuesday at
School Board will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center
7 p.m. at the high school.
in Pomeroy . Members bring a
poduck dish. ·
TUESDAY
POMEROY - There will be a
. WEDNESDAY
Shrove Tuesday (Fat Tuesday) panPOMEROY - Rev . Deborah
cake supper at St. Paul Lutheran Hogeboom, Free Methodist CanaChurch m I:"omeroy beginning at 5 dian Missionary to Zaire and
p.m. The public is invited and there Burundi, will speak at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church on
Wednesday at 7 p.m. Public invited.
Members of th e Meigs Hig h
POMEROY - The annual
School Chorus participated Saturday in District 17 Solo and Ensem- Lenten Breakfast of Trinity Church
will be Wednesday at. 7:45 a.m.
ble contest at Ohio University.
Receiving "excellent" ratings in Reservations may be made by callClass C for solos were Kelley ing 992-7765, 985-3842 through
Grueser, April Halley, Travis Oren- Monday.
ncr and Becky ~ nowd e n; for
POMEROY - Pesticide Certifiensembles were G'Ftchcn Blaine,
Susan Cotterill , Becky Snowden, cation Tests will be given by the
Ohio Department of Agriculture on
Carletta Carr any April Halley.
Receiving "excellent" ratings in Wednesday from 3-6 p.m. at the
Class B for solos was Phil Green; Meigs County Public Library in
for ensembles were Cynthia Cotter- Pomeroy.
ill, Michelle Young, Susan Page,
Mary Grueser, Kelly Phelps and
POMEROY - Meigs County
Julie Young.
.
Public' Library Board of Trustees
"Excellent" ratings in Class A will meet Wednesday at I p.m. at
for solos were Tracey Grueser and the library in Pomeroy.
'
Angela Searles.
Receiving "superior" ratings in
POMEROY - Ash Wednesday
Class A for ensembles for Tracey services at St . Paul Lutheran
Grueser, Kelley Grueser and Church in Pomeroy will begin at 7
Angela Searles.
p.m. The public is mvited.

know lhat Nevada law demiDds an
Bartels recently pr e~e nt e~ a
Ed Bartels was recently selected
autopsy ollly if the penon or neltl of
to pre~nt a hands-on math lesson hands-on math seminar to the Midkin Jequesll it, if the peiiOO dies
ai the stalewide Chaplet I Spring South East Ohio C~r. 1 ln:ser. Ul!(lcr suspicious Cin:IIII\~S, or . Conferen·ce on AprH 16 at the vice Group at -Maraetta. He was
if her body is donaled to ICic:nce..
chosen as on or six 'in-service facilHyatt Repmey in Columbus.
· Mr. Lapin Jliggested that you
This as Bartels ' 30th year of itators for-the southeast Ohio
indicale in your will that you do not classroom teaching. He has taught region for the Ohio Model for
want an autopSy and make sure your at many pade levels and is current- Excellence in Matfl. He also was
friend, son and anorney each have a ly teachmg fourth, fifth and sixth chosen as the Meigs County mat!'
copy. He also made it cU lhat whal grade math at Salisl!ury Elementary teaCher of the year In 1991. In, addiyou have &lt;in mind imposes a heavy School in the Meigs Local School tion be is a participant iri the southDistrict in POII)eroy.
east region training proJect, "Math
bwdcn on others.
.
Across the Curriculum.'
Dear Aaa I aMen: I just read
Bartels has been involved in the
Salisbury Elenien~y's Effecthe lettu from "Perplexed in the Lead Teacher Project tlarough Ohio
tive
Schools grant has paid for parSoulhwest.• She lu!d been diY&lt;llted University for the past foil!' years.
ent training sessions for math and
for three yem:s. and her ex-mother· This program w;ts with a grant science. Bartels has_conducted the
in-law warned the wedding gifts sent through the National.Science Foun- math sessions and Kaf,pn Walker
by her sille or the family returned to dation which enabled him 10 attend has lead the science sessions. Par·
her son.
classes on hands-on math. He has ents are trained on a wide variety
"Perplexed" ~te the y.ooman a held in-service meetings in his of hands-on activities that will
scathing letter and asked you if she building through this program as enable them to help out in the
should send it. You !Old her that well as holding grade level meet- classroom when lhese acti.vities are
ED BARTELS
writing the letler was good therapy ings on;J~ dislrict-wide basis. ·
presenled 10 the sllldents.
and now she shol!ld toss it in the
garbage.
Ann, I could have sworn lhat was
my story. The "wonderful" man I
NEW YORK (AP) - The er of the theatel', where the Beades
married went even further. He brigh~ li~hts of Broadway apparent- made their U.S. debut in 1964, con,
refused to let me have my wedding ly outshined California's sun in the fumed the deal.
.
dress until! gave him all.the things wooing of David Letterman.
"It's a very gOod tbing that's
in the house lhat he wanted.
The !'ate-night comedian has happening for New York and it's
I had paid for o..- beautiful (and decided to move his talk show to . good for the thejlter," Niles told
expensive) wedding and made the the Ed Sullivan Theater on tlie
down payment on our home and all . Great White Way - ratl!er than
the furnishings. "Gary" made just Los Angeles - when he leaves
enough money 10 cover the bins l!e NBC for CBS this summer, according 10 se.veral reports today.
had run up before we IIIB!ried.
Since signing a multimillion·
When Gary left me, I was devasdollar
deal to switch networks last
taled. HiJ demands wen:~
month,
there has been considerable
Not permitting Gary the pleasure speculation
Letterman would go
of getting me to sinlc to his level West for easier access to HollyNE'W HOURS: .
1
gave me an incredible boost of wood guests and studio space.
self-esteem. Ann, your reply to
MONDAY -THRU FRIDAY
But CBS was expected to
"PerPlexed" was jlerfect - THE announce today it will spend $4
6:00A.M. - 7:00 P.M.
. BElTER RJR IT IN PllTSBURG, million to buy the landmark Ed
• CALIF.
SATURDAY and SUNDAY
Sullivan Theater specifically for
DEAR PITI'S.: The templllion to Letterman, The New York Times
' 6:00 A.M. - 3:00·P.M .
strike back when we have been reported.
·
wronged is often overwhelming, but
"Everyone is eJr,ciled about this.
the one who wins big time resists We intend to make this a showthat temptation and treats the person caSe," CBS Broadcast Group pres:
who has wronged him with civility, ident Howard Stringer told .the
39239 BRADBURY ROAD
' ·MIDDLEPORT
if not kindness. That is harder 10 Times. "We'll light up the marendure than any act of reprisal. Trust quee on Broadway."
David Niles, owner and. managme.

018
Pick 4:

8177

PageS

Cold tonlabt. Low between 510. Wednesday, sunny. High In

upperlOs.

·

&lt;

Vol. U, No. 212

..

1 S.Ctlon, 10 Pageo 25 Clttllt

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, February 23, 1993

Copyrlghlld 1$113

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Middleport Council wants
commitment from ODOT

•

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stair
A resolution calling for the Ohio
Department of Transp~rtation
(ODOT) to take some acuon npw
which will insure replacement of
the Pomeroy-MaSon Bridge within
a reasonable time was passed by
Middleport Village Council Monday night
Tbe resolution also requests ~t
the bridge be constructed "at or
very near" .to the present l?C&amp;tion
of the old-bridge smce l)lovmg the
location in eitlier direction would
· drastically affect the economies of
the communities of Pomeroy and
Middleport, Ohio, und Mason, W.
Va.
It has been estimated that 'over
40 pen;ent of the work force. and
citizens of all three commumues
are dependent on .the bridge as a
means of reaching their places of.
employment or purchasing needed
goods and services,
It also asks that ODOT provide
a schedule for the replacement of
the bridge to officials, and that
quarterly reports on the ~pess be
made to all three commumbes.
Gov. George Voinovieh and
West Virginia Governor Gaston
Caperton are being asked to coop-

'SIS lOW
OPEN FOR DillER!

·~ MILLIE'S

992·7713
L---~--~~----~------------------~.

erate in the replacement and location of the bridge. This is especially important, according to officials,
to provide for the stability of the
economy in communities in both
states and in ord¢r to provide easy
access between the two states for
their citizens. In view of this officials are asked for "top priority on
the replacement." _.
It 1s also being re~uested that
ODOT schedule a public hearing as
soon as possible to inform the citizens of the area of any plans concerning the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge so that the public may have
an opportunity to express the~r concerns.
.
Also requesled in the resolution
is lhat ODOT seek financial assistance or the federal government in
the immediate replacement of the
bridge since it is a vital link
between the states of Ohio and
West Virginia and since a federal
.highway. (U.S-.33) crosses the
bridge.
The Mason County Commis- .
sion passed a similar resolution last
week. Other communities on both
sides of the river are expected !O
pass similar resolutions within the
next few weeks.
The Pomeroy-Mason Bridge is
one of four bndges crossing the ·

Ohio River which is maintained by
ODOT. While a regular program of
maintenance is carried ou~ the resolution points out that the bridge
has been considered by "ODOT
engineers to be substandard so far
as width and load carrying capacity."
.
Sen. Jan Michael Long was in
Middleport recently to djscuss the
bridge replacement with officials of
Middleport, Pomeroy, aild Mason.
Copies of the resolubons will go to
him along with ODOT officiaJ,s.
legislators, and the governors of
both Ohio and West Virginia.
Projects Mayor Fred Hoffman repor-ted
that funding is now available,for
the Wheeler's Run sewage line.
reP.lacement and that the village ·
wdl advertise for bids. .Total estimated cost of the project i~
$154,784 with $139,304 to come
from Issue 2 funds, and $15.480
from village funds . The 18 inch
sewer line which has deteriorated
over the yeais,will be replaced witll
a 24 inch sewer line designed for
today's service level, it was pointed
out About a thousand feet of lin&lt;
will be repla~.
.
The mayor also reported that the
village has received a second place
Continued on page 3

\

DUPONTSTMI~TER

EXTRA HEAr(

lUCKLESS
.
CARPET

TRACKLESS
CARPET
-24 Colors
-Luura Dupo1t StaiMaster
-Warraated: 5 Yrs Mft. Defects
5 Years Stall Reslsto1t

SALE

s2 299

Sq. Yd.

I ln.t..IMI

.

wiped

BE Rift
•

Stai!tiiOSter

-FHA Approved

· s1'599

-18 Colors
-Scotc~gard

Protectio• Plus
-FHA Approved
-10 Year Wear WO!Tll!lty

s1299
SALE

Sq.' Yd.
tnatalled

Sq. Yd.
lnataiied

SALE
.

wlpad

8 BERBERS
ON SALE

•

Our Most Popular Style

-Big Loops, Patte11s, Sc•~ptlrledsl
-12' al!d 15' Widt~s ,,
•

SALE $1199 TO
PRI.CED
$
Sq, rd.lulallt4

2099

•

SCULPTURED
.CARPET

REGULAR $11.00

LEVELLOOP
CARPET
1
· -18 Colors

20

"""Sculptures,
Trackless, Level
L_oops, Berbers,
Commercial
Carpets
-Expert
Installation
-We use h,eavy
"Life of the
Carpet" warranty ·
padding. ·
-Free removal of
old floor ·
covering/quotes,

STYLES

ON
SALE

'

-Adva!Ketf Gelteratio1
Oleli11 .
-1 0 Year Warraaly

SALE

$949
,

Sq. Yd.
Installed

LEVEL LOOP
PATTERNED
CARPET
-Stait Reslst01t
-5 Year Wear Warra.ty

-olefl• Pile
-3 Greot Styles .

SALE$

10 ~n~t
9

•

-16 Great Colors
-Easy C.-e Certified

KITCHEN &amp; FAMILY ROOM

Your Social Security

'(

.·

Pick 3:

Reports: Letterman show staying inNew York .

Students compete

plete an "Application for a Social
By ED PETERSON
Security card," also .called an "SSSocial Security
5," and provide at least one original
Manager in Athens
Quick ... what's your Social document or certified copy that
proves your identity, such as a .
Security number?
Many people know their Social driver's license. If you were hom
Security number without having to outside the Uniled States, you must
rummage through wallets or purses show proof....af J.Jnited States citito find their Social sec itrity?'card. zenship or IaW!Iil alieh status.
The transaction may be accomIf you know your number by heart,
that's good because you're often plished through the mail as well.
asked to provide it. But it's also Call Soci al Security's toll-free
bad because if you don't need to number, 1-800-772- 1213 business
refer 10 your Social Sec'itrity card , days between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m.,
you may lose it and not be aware and ask that an "Application for a
Social Security Card" be mailed to
that it's missing.
Since you are likely to change you. Remember to ask for the
jobs several times during yo ur address of the Social Security
working life, it's smart to make office where you should return the
sure you have your Social Security completed form and the original
card handy because employers are document or certified copy that
required to ask for it10 verify your proves your idiAiity.
You should receive your
number and to make sure that
replacement
card about two wcdts
you're eligible 10 work.
after
the
Social
Security office
If you discover that you've lost
receives
your
information.
The
or misplaced your Social Security
Athens
office
is
localed
at
221
1/2
card, here'S what you ShOUld do.
You should visit yoUJI local Social N. Columbus Rd. and the mtmber
Security office, ask fbr and.com- is 592-4448.

Rio women
eliminated
from.tourney

Monday, February 22, 1991
.
Page-10

,-Woman wants to avoid going Ed Bartels ~o -bring 30-years~
.to the doctor, even after death , of teaching to conference

Ohio Lottery

J

Search for helicopter expands
to starr
southern Gallia County

Sq.
lnatalled

~d.

W4Md

and wire reports

Gallipolis voiunteer fire depart· ments converged on Clay Ele~n tary School at 8:30 a.m. to begm a
ground search of the Hazel Ridge
and Eblin Hollow areas near Mercerville and Eureka.
,
. SimultaneOusly, the army, highway patrol and Civil Air Patrol
searched from the air.
The helicopter an OH6 twoman army helicop~ left Huntington between 5:30 and 6 p.m. Monday destined ror W~ington , D.C.,
and was last seen on radar heading

CARPET
-12Ft. Wldt.
-HeotSetYan
-5 Yeor Weor WII!TOity
-Attfi.Statlc, Scotcllganl
-20 Colon

Police investigate car thefts

Sq. Yd.

:;~~led

ryial! capacity is concerned,-is a vitaJ link
between the two states where 40 percent of the
work force and citizens depead upon it to reach
their place of employment or go to shop or
transact other business.

Southern board
to
post
.
.
.
EMIS coordinator position
American history without credit take courses preparing them for the
until they pass, Ord said.
•
other three sections of the profi Contemporary world affairs and ciency test: reading, writing and
American history are already math.
offered at the high school, Ord
Substitutes, others hired
sa ill.
The following people were hired
Ord said students attending the as substitute teachers: Thomas L.
high school are already required to
Continued on page 3

Two vehicle wreck probed

·PLUSH~'

s
1
599
SAU

TIME FOR REPLACEMENT • Officials in
both Melp aad Mason Counties feel that it's
· time for replacement or the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge. Built In 1928, the bridge, nnw consi&amp;l·
ered substandard as far as width and lo11d car·

northeast. officials reported.
The search began 10 rural ~n
County,
and was expanded 10to
Local authorities, rescue teams
southern Obio.
and army officials coordinated their
The U.S. Army Special Operaefforts in southern Gallia County
tions Command at Fort ~rag!!,
early this morning to search for a
N.C.,
confumed that one of us hellmissing military helicopter
cop\C'S was overdue.
. .
believed to have crashed Monday
'
I
do
not know the desbnauon,
'
evening.
unit
identification
or
anything
U.S. Army officials, Ohio Stale
else•." said_ Carol_ Jones, on-c~ll .
Highway .l!atrol, Gallia and Mason
pubhc _affatrs o_fftcer for s~ctal
county sheriff's departments, Galoperauons,
whtch encompasses
Iia County Emergency Medical
elite
units
like
the qreen Berets.
By JIM FREEMAN
Service and Guyan Township and
Donald Kapp, dispatcher for the
Smtlael News Stair
Mason County Sheriff's DepartThe Southern Local Board of
men~ said officials wen: searching
Education voled Monday night to
a hilly, tree-covered terrain near post an opening for a_combi~ed
Arbuckle afler hcarins an emergen- education management mformanon
cy signal from lhat area.
system (EMIS) and data coordinaEmergency crews ftrst heard the tor position.
.
Classes will be held tomorrow at Salem Center Elementary
signal about 7:45 p.m. Monday,
According to Supetmtendent
School, ,Meigs Local Superintendent James Carpenter satd th1s
and it still was going off this mom- Bob Ord. the EMIS and data ~r­
in(!', Kapp said. , 1
morning.
.
l'k
. d . d
dinator position is a full ume
The building was damaged when tornado- 1 e wm s nppe .
Gallia County Chief Deputy administrative position. The penon
through Silcm Center Sunday evenin~.
Bennis Salisbury said the signal hired for the position will supervise
• According to C~~~penter, the building remains structurally sound.
may be coming from the southern and coordir\ate activities necessary
The auditorium will remain closed for two addition_al weeks and
part of the county, but interf~e
to control records for the state
children will eat lunch in the classrooms, C~~~penter satd. .
is preventing rescuers from pm- department of education.
'
In addition, winter weather forced the closing today of all East- , pomting its exact location.
The
district
is
required
10
have
em, Meigs and Southern local schools. ·
. · Salisbury said he believes power an EMIS and data coordinator in
tines are interfering,with the signal: order to receive state aid, Ord said.
An inch of snow on the ground
Board member Scott Wolfe,
is
hindering
the search somewhat, who cast the sole opposing vote,
No injuries·or citations were reported by Pomeroy police foUo'!'milting road cOnditions in the rural objected to posiing the position
ing a two vehicle mishap at the Riverside Food Mart on West Main
areas
tteacherous.
'Street Monday around 11:25 p.m.
because of the costs involved.
A
spokeswoman
for the sheriff's
Acconl.ing to '8 report from the Pomeroy Police Department, a
· "It's too much money," Wolfe
1 · 1989 Geo Tracker 4rivc11, by Bryan Zirkle, 26, Pomeroy, backed
department said this morning an said
investigator with the department
· Board member' Denny Evans
into the Jeft.front side of a parked 1989 Chevrolet van operated by
slid
on an icy road and overturned mirrored Wolfe's sentiments that
Christopher Nee!, 17, Pomeroy.
·
his vehicle in a creek near Bladen
Damqe to Neel's van, owned by Gary Nee!, was listed_ as ~ght
~~
saJ::.on will offer lit·
Road off State Roule 7. The man
No damap was reported to Zirkle's vehicle, owned by Juhe Zirlde.
was not injuml in the accidenL
who was a ~nger, police reported.
,
Currlcalum chaaJes l!llde ·
•
Curriculum chanses it the high·
'
school for the citizerithlp portion of
the Ohio Proficiency '!'est were
Offlcen of the Pomeroy Police Department investigared two
approved.
.
reported' Cll thefts overnight
'
lncomins freshmen will be
Acccnlinl to a police clepartment~pokeswoman. Johnny Nelson.
The American R.ed Cross ~equirect 10 take a for-credit course
t&gt;Omero.y, reported around 1'2:50 r .m. ~t hjs dark red 1983 Dodge
Bloodmobile will be at the Melfi in ccnempoqry world affairs, Ord
Aries wu IIOlcn from the Krocer s parking lot
.
County Senior Citizens Center 10 said. Students who fall to pass the
Police have CO!IIliCled other area law enfcn:ement o(f'JCes to be
Pomeroy on Wednesday afternoon citizenlhip portion of the leSt will
on the kx!Jm'lt fur the Cll and have enteled the car into the LEADS
from 1-5:30 p.m.
b e = to ta1te Ameri_can histocomputer ayaem. As of this morning, the car has JIOl_been recovAnyone between the ages of 17 ry
. IOpllomoro year. .-, . i .
and 70 who weight at least 110
If they condnue to f11 1ft c u •
eree!.
~on~lnued on paflt 3 ·
pounds may donale blood.
· zenihip, they will condnue to.take
From

Damaged school to reopen

•

s1499
\

Elemeatary of the area being searched for a
missine U.S. Army helicopter. Looklnr over
Evans' shoulder is Commander Robert Wood·
ford or tbe Gillia-Melgs Post or the patrol. (OVP
photo by kevin Pinson)
·

--Local briefs-___.,

-2 Styles ·
-13 Colen
-100% Nyloi
-Staill Resistaat

SALE

· SEARCH EFFORTS - Slate Hi1bway
Patrol Trooper Larry EvaDs, left, Chief Deputy
Dennis Salisbury or tile GaiDa County Sheriff's
Department and an unidentified U.S. Army ofticilll examine maps Monday morning at Clay

.

Bloodmobile to visit
Meigs Wednesday

SHOVELING SNOW • Gfel Kaapp, left, aad Mark Lewil were
busy sboveUn1 I Upt dllllln1 of IHW &amp;IIIII mornlac n« sldtnllui In
the vUIIIJt or
s- flllllnJ overnlcht cloled scbools Ia Easten, Melp and Southen loeal scbool dlltri!:ta.

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Pomeroy. Ohio
· DZVOT£D 10 TID IN1'ItRDT8 OJ' TID DIG8-IIASON AREA

WASHINGTON (NiiA) an accidenL The Mosley .;urY lieard of{ers different statistics. "We
NBC News has ..,.,1....:""" to Gen- weeks of testimony and concluded believe that over 300 persons have
era1 Motors for -~mitted not OnlJ that the fuel system was died of bum · · 'es in GMpickupin slaging a crash test of one of its defecuve and caused Shannon truck Jires,~ys 'center head
Clarence Ditlow. " Until the
pickup trucks. GM hopes tha. t
NBC's mea cUlpa will restore pubAtlanta verdict, GM has managed
lie faith in the 1973.87 model GM
to keep this 11o'ry off the front
ttucks. of which 4.7 million continpages by quietly paying generous
ue on the nation's roads. However,
settlements to keep cases from
sarety group' have stepped up Mosley's death, but that GM was going to trial and malting gag
efforts to force GM into recalling so negligent in not recalling t~the · · orders a part of those setdeinents.
and faxing the ll'IJCks, a recall that trucks it socked the autonlaker wt . ·We estimate that GM has settled
could cost GM more than .$1 bii- $101 million in punitive damages.
over 100 of these cases."
·lion.
"We all felt that the ev1willf'd~nee
At GM's press conference
At issue is whether the trucks' showed that GM showed a
u1 denouncing the NBC crash test,
fuel tanks, side-mounted outside • and wanton disregard for .its truck GM general counsel Harry Peaite
the main frame rails, leave them owners' saf~ by not ownm~ up to made much of the fact that the fuel
wlnerable 10 side-impact crashes. the problem and fixing it, ' said tank in the truck that caught on fire
GMchangedthedesignafter!987. Dale. "All GM would say is tlu!t badiiOlruptured.Rather,theexplo- .
William J. O'Neill, GM national 'We don't have a JXOblem, wben tt sive pressure in ~ .collapsing tank
spokesman, told reporters, "We was clear they did. Had they caused f~el to rush up the filler
feel that the issue has been resolved acknowledged the problem and , tu~. forcmg the gas cap to fly off,
and tbe good name of our people been moving to fix it, I don't ·think spilling 90IIIC of the conteniS of the
::Jroducts has been restored we· would have awarded punitive Lank, which then ignited.
on the apology."
damages."
·
Pearce blamed this on NBC's
John Dale would respectfully
GM is trring to minimize the .test company '·'overfilling" the
disagree. .
problem, insisting the ttuck is safe fuel Lank, and on the fact !hit the
Mr. Dale, a Georgia business and pointing out' that the Mosley gas cap was not original issue.
executive, was a member of the case is only the fourth jury verdict
ButiiCCOrding to safety experts,
Atlanta jury thai awarded $105.2 . the company has lost in. a pickUp- gas-cap and filler-tube failures are
million 10 the r.mily of Shannon truck fuel-tank suit; it has. won very common · ~use• of vehicle
Mosley, who was 17 in 1989 wben three. ·
ftres in crashes and have often been
he~ in his burning 1985 GMC
The Center For Auto Safety, a th~ major cause,of fuel leakage in
piclcup after it was side-impacted in private watchdog organizatiOn, government cnish tests, and were

Robert ]. Wagman

ROBERT L. WINGETI
·

Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
· · Assista11t Publisher/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genenl Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION m welcome. They s~ould be less than 3QO
words . All leuen are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telepbqne number. No unsigned letlm will be published. Letters
should be in good taiste, addressing' issues, oot perlonalities.

Lawsuit targets multi-subject
bills in Ohio legislature

By JOHN CHALFANT
Assndated l'resl Writer
. COLUMBUS - A pending'court case that IICCuses the LegislaiUI'e of
violatink Ohio's Conslitulion could change the way business of~ is condUCied a1 the Slillehouse.
·Under 11tac1t: is the JDCtice ot combining one « more unrelated proposals in a single bill.
·
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The teclmique sometimes is used for convenience to avoid the need to
approve ? i e c e s of legislation. It's also a handy way to push ,
through a
that couldn't win approval on its own merits.
That's hat happened in December wben a $1 billion tax increase
package, includinc a penny-pa--(811 tax on soft drinks, was approved.
The inal:ues were inserted into a bill that audtorized $1 billion wonh
of Slate~ projects and covered other matters.,
A section of the constilUlion that deals with legislative powers reads,
"No bill shall contain more than one subject, which shall be clearly
c.xpesscd in its tide. ..
A complaint ffied in Franklin County Common PI~~ a~pts to
overturn the soft drink tax partly because House Bill 904,.m which the
measure was contained, allegedly violaled the constitulional one-subject
rule.
.
"By including the soft drink tax in a bill that discusses a broad IBDBe
of other topics, the Genual Assembly has obviously rw) afoul of the single-subject requirement," the Ohlo Soft Drink Association said.
A response filed by the Slale s*id the Ohio Supreme Court in 1991 and
1984 rejected similar challenges.
·
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"The ~ reaffirmed that ... only a manifesdy gross and fraudulent
·violation of the rule will render a bill unconstitutional,'' the stale response
. said.
.
Last week, the samt issue arose in a House commiuee hearing a bill
dealin
. :fe.'r!th port authorilies. The panel voted 8-6 10 tack on an amendment
·ng with membenbip on a stale physical therapy board.
Rep. Robert Corbin, R-Dayton, upposed the ~l He supports
limiting bills to single subjects.
. "I think we would be a better Legislature if we did that. We wouldn't
be as eft~eienL We really just tate a short cut lhe way we do things with
bills like this,'' Cod!in said.
"Thm's probably nothing actually
with lhat, except we have a
constitutional provis1011 that says w~ shouldn t do that,'' he said.
' Rep, Dan Troy, D-Willowick, the committee chairman, -said the
amendnlent in question was ni:eded quicldy to c&lt;met an earlier·law.
· "I thinlr:: there has been some questionable extension of the single subject concept in cenain pieces of legislation," Troy .said.
· "I would think that if the courts would indicate thai, in fact, you will
Thanks to bare vaults and a
have one subject in a bill, we would comply and I would have no problem
crushing debt, the president of lhe
with that." he said:
United States says the state of lhe
nation is dismal.
Thanks to NBC and a craving
for auention so abominably severe
that th¢ network would enhance ·
reality to attract viewers, this Curmudgeon says the state of the
media is putrid.
· It is a confounded shame that
one taclcy.perfonnance on the pan
of one lamebrained news opezation
:
has brought mockery and ridicule
down upon an entire industry, but it

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of funny fungi tbe-pro cers of
"Dateline NBC" 'were
ing
the day they decided 10 de ·ct the
explosion of a General . tors
pickup without informing heir
viewers they had stirred a · .le
Reality Helper into the mix. Their
point was to prove thai older-model
GM trucks were "rolling. firebombs" with gas tanks mounted on
tile side of the vehicles, ouiSide the
frame. When struck broadside in
accidents, consumer activists
claimed, the gas tanks had a tendency to rupture and the trucks to
catch ftre.
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To ensure this would happen in

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Joseph Spear
hit by another vehicle. The cameras
zoomed in to catcll the·flames, and
'~NBC Dateline" bad a story seemingly worthy of high praise.
General Motors hired some
detectives, who searched 22 junkyards and ftnally found the mangled test truck ..._ with, GM says,
the tiny rocket engines still
attached ne. the gas tank. According 10 the carmalter, further investigation showed the gas tank had
been filled beyond recommended
capacity and outfitted with the
wrong gas cap; that the lank had
not ruptured and the flames that
were· ftlmed came from burning
grass; that the truck had been
·Struck at a higher spee.d than
claimed by NBC.
Irt ensuing weelts, NBC News
President Michael Gattner conceded that "sparkin~" devices had
been used to "simulate" what
might happen in a typiCal coUisioo,

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Today in history
By Tbe Aslociated Pml
Today is Tuesday, Feb, 23, the 54th day of 1993 There are 311 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
Oil Feb. 23, 1945, during World War II, U.S. Marines on Iwo Jima raised
1hC American flag atop Mount Suribachi in a scene captured in a nowfamous shot by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal.
On this date: .
• In 168S,composerGeorge Frideric Handel was born in Germany.
~ In 1822, Boston was pled achaner 10 incorporate as a city.
,&lt; In 1836, the siege of the Alamo began in San Antonio, Texas.
lin 1847, U.S. lroOpS under Gen. Zachaty Taylor defeated Mexican
• ~n. Sanla Anna althe Battle of Buena Visla in Mexico.
~ In 1848, the sixth president of the United Swes, John Quincy Adams,
died of asttoke althe age of 80.
.
~ In 1861, Prmdent-elect Lincoln arrived secredy in WashingtoniO
tifiu. an aswsination plOt having been foiled in Baltimore.
~ In 1870, Mississippi was readmitted to the union.
:• In 19M, the Rocary Cub was founded.
,
, :: In 19:27, President Coolidge signed a bill creating tJie Federal Radio
· C)xnmission, fm:runner of the Federal Communications Commission.
' In 1942, a Japanese submarine ftred on an oil reftnery in Ellwood,

*-

~~ 1954, the ~ 11111111 inoculation of children against polio with th~
sfJi YIICCine began in Pilbburgh.

•, In 1981, an aaempced coup began in Spain as 200 members of the
Qvll o.d inwded the Parliament, talting lawmakers hostage. (Howev.c:i the IDII!Ipt cql..,.ed 18 hotn lalts.)
~·Ten yean..,: Meeting widl repmers at lhe White Houle, !',resident
A;p.pn t!pOke of~ need fore "homellmd" for the Palestinians as part of

the embers of black history lJlow
brighdy and ~ rekindled penomeally in my collection of stamps of
black Americans. A couple of

Rarely in American history have
four of the nation's greatest men
died within a few days of each
other, as recently happened. More
ironic was Ihe deaths of these black
Americans on the eve 'and during
Ihe !lCfiod of the 67th annual ~ele­
brauon of black history - Dizzy
Glllespie,'Thomas Dorsey, Thurgood Marshall and Arthur Ashe.
J'heir deeds are now legacies,
but their lives still inspire. Think of
the soaring seminar we could have
en~ if we could have sat down
thtS ''Big Four" at a table and told
them to share the reminiscences of
their uiumphs - the irrepressible,
fun-loving founding genius of be!&gt;OJ!. Gillespie; the stately, whitehaired composer of Jospel music,
Doney; the tall, robust acholar and
practitioner o( the law, Marshall;
and the skinny, graceful guelle
with the dazzhng tennis forehand,
Asbe.
I'm uot as wildly entliusiastic
. about annual .blact history celebrations as.J IIS\ld to be. For one thing,

· Chuck Stone
weeks ago, the 29th stamp which honors Dr. Pe~ Julian, an
eminent scientist - was issued.
Yet the impoverishment of a mere
29 stamps 'still indiCales the richness of the black American experience.
·
Black Americans are making
history so often that you pactlcally
need a scorecard. The litany of
their achievemenll is a history of
superlatives - the fint black to
break a barrier, the first black 10
break a record, the ftrst black to
break new ground - from baleblll
legend Halik Aaron, renai11111co
man Gordon Parts and brilliant
legal strategist, civil righiS leader
and university president Julius

.

a ~d~t peace, but added, "no ?ne 'bas ever lclvocaled creating a
nauon. ~rock group Toto won 11x Orammy Awards in Los Angeles
including album of the year for "Toto IV."
'
Thought for 'l:oday: ''A 'good man can be stupid and still be good. But
a bad man must have braina." - Maxim Gorliy, Ruasian writer {18681936).
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Chambers to' O.S. S.en. Carol
Mosley Braun, poet laureate Maya
Angelou and astronaut Dr. Mae
Jemison- "my Lord, what a
morning."
·
But their lives bad been brightly
inspired by the superlative "Big
Four."
· Marshall was a one-man histoblack to suery-malter - the
25
s
cess f uII y argue over
case
before the Supreme Court for the
NAACP Legal Education and
Defense Fund, the first black to be
a · ted 801icitor general and the
=lack on the Supreme Coon.
Asbe did more than become the
first black man to win the U.S.
Open tennis tide, in 1968; Wimbledon, in 1975. He carried himself
with the worldly grace that only
comes capariiOIIed widl the dignity
of the true champion. Ho never forgot his roots ,' and he crusaded to
help build teMis facili~ for lowincome glleao Jdds.
Like Columbus, Oille~ie, di~covert.d new. horizons, sading in
musical waters never bdore
explored. He influericed jazz
throu'h COIJiposilions and the distillatton of' llylea from fellow
geniuses like Parter, MJ.Ies and
Monk. From· his horn leaped a
whole Ieaton of jazz musicians

rust

in such shows as ' A Curren(
Affair," "Unsolved Mysteries"·
and "America's Most Wanted.' ,..
But they are crimesloppel and·
tabloid shows and thus less likely
to be taken as real news that
occurred as seen.
However you cut il, Slaging the
news stints and re-enactments
reek. And If you ever wonder
whether you're geUing the genuine
article, there's a rule of thumb that
geJlellllll WOJb: If it comes in the
forJII o flickering images, it's·
Sho"f biz; jf il rubs off on your rm:.
gers, it's news.
'
.
It's not ~oolproof, but it's better
than no rule a1 all:
,
JOieph Spear Is 1 syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise.
Association.

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Cbucll Stoae Is a l)'lldkated .. :
writer for .Ntwllp&amp;per Enterprlle .. · .
Auocladon.
:

Trustea to.meet

The Board of Trustees of··
Columbia Township will meet
Monday a1 7:~ p.m. a1 the foe SIB' '
lion.
·
· Preacblnf ud sla&amp;lal
·•
Faith Fu I Gospel Church ia
Long Boaom will have preaching •
. and ~~~ Friday a1 7 p.m. with ~
IQCai ;SlRJilRI talent,. Pastor Ste~C'
R~ IRVIICS the public. FelloMIUp
will follow.
:~

ed by

the school where the adYan- ·

disadvantages IS well ·~
detailed information concemingc
early colleJe. enrollm~t are presented. Thts mformauon must be.;
made available to all lOth IIIIi 11th
grades pri« 10 March 1.
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Southern/Local will hold the ~
lllges and

==~ =~~-.
teria Qn Tuesday • 'Feb, 2'3, -at 7

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dent who is OClllliderina-,_ding
college next year uader tbe program must auend with oae of their··
parents or guardians.
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Beat of the Bend.,,

Stocks·

MI. dleport....

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who wanted to blow like Diz.
i·
On Ihe other side of the black !
musical spectrum was the JX'OIIhelmannered Doney. "Tate my hand; ; !
precious Lord, lead me, let me • :
stand." That comforting ~ymn ~- : :
only one of the many thll Dorsey. .
compose&lt;~. But.thia fltlhcr of gospel : l
musiC wrote, diJ:ccted 111\d led hun- ; 1
tlreds of choral groups into a hand~ . ;
clapping, •..,,.,_ desire to "mate · 1
BJO'yful noi::-'... ~. • ---'·"
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. All four are ~able,
j
cially Manhall. Wtth the aiJPOilit-:'. ..
men1 of an intellectual pyamy as :
his succeuor, O~rge 'Bush put :
blaclt ~ on bold
-, :
But if this is "a time to moum" " '
setbacks like Clarence Thomu, ii ' t
Is also "a time to rejoice." Black ~
America cel~bratea ill renewaf 'j
every day in Ill struglie to raltJe ,
· families and 10 birth future Mar- c ! ·
shalla, Dorseys, Gillespies and.. •
Ashes. , ·
· :
!ll~ct history is more thaa a · ;
reclliU~ of de!* led benJei. It '- ~ :
. the pull reminder that tho .-..t 1
can be con'lt:,red to secure the :
fUIUie. And , my trlend. Is one :. :
of democrtiCy 1 loveliest gaaran- . . .
.

Pomeroy on Wednesday aflemoon&gt;
from 1-S:30 p.m.
Anyone between the ages of 17•.
and 70 who weight at least 110
pounds may donate blood.

T p.m. Aay' ·lOtb or lltb ,_, ~~~~~~

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to comply with the requirements of :
ORC section 9.833 in n:gard to the t
reporting of self-funding of medi- ~
cal and dental beneftts. .
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Auending were Board President.
Ray Karr, Vice President Jim~
Srmth, Eastman, Hannum and Milce .
Martin
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The board's next meeung IS ·
scheduled for March 16 at 6:30
p.m.

Information s:ession slated
this evening at Southern Local::

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The Eastern Local School District Board of Education formed
two commiuees during its regular
meeting last Wednesday to study
oJ)en enrollment Optioqs and energy saving options through House
Bi11.264.
.
House Bill 264 allows schools
to borrow money for expenses ·
related 10 energy savings. In return,
the school has to r~pay ill loan
from the money it has saved.
The H,B. 264 committee will
~presentations from four companics before providing its recommendation
·
The bclrd alSo discussed the fall
1992 Ohio Proficiency Test results.
It was noted thl!t progress v.:~s
made in the areas of math and cw~enship whj.Je reading and Writing
scores declined. .
.
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The bclrd also recetved a letter
in' reference to • proposed freshman basketball teain for die 199394 school )'ell'. The board indicated
that detailed inf«mation should be
and the 8lhlelic boosters
.
be informed of the proposal.
Board memllers Ray Kari, Bill
Hannum, ROll Eastman, Treasurer
Eloise Boston and Superintendent
Ricbard Smith will aucnd the Ohio
School Bl)tlrd Assocjation ·spring .
CooferencC scheduled for March 9
in Athens. while' Eastman was
appointed to attend the management team OSBA workshop to be
held in Delaware on Marclll5.

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Chung," which made liberal use of
re-creations perfonned by profes.,_ ·
sional actors. NBC jumped aboard .
the re-enactment wagon with
"Yesterday, Today &amp; Tomorrow,"
·and later aired ll "news" special
called "The Story Behind the
Story" which was .Jif""'!!WI bf the
network's entena1nment div1sion
and featured unlabeled re-enact- &lt;

menu.

were reported this morninJ in parts
Winter storm warnings were ,
or Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Penn- posted in parts of the Sierra Nevada •
sylvania and 001doan New Yodt.
and the Lake Ttlboe region. W'~ :
Up 10 a foot of snow fell Mon- storm walches were in effect for •
day across ,Michigan, shuuing tonight from Colondo northward. !
Temperatures were li~ely to ;
down more than 100 school sysreach sin&amp;Je dilill or teens from the :
tems and snarling traffic.
Showers were expected to con- northern Rockies across 10 the ·:
tinue today in south Florida after a Great Lalces; the 20s and 30s in the ·
night of heavy thunderstorms. But Northwest, across mucb of tbe •
the sun was expected to shine Midwest to the Northeast; the 40s :
8cross mllllt of the Gulf Coast and and SOs across most of the 80Ulbem •
tier; and the 60s and 70s in the :
Southeist seaboard.
A Pacif1c low pressure system Southwest, along the Gulf Coast to :
was pushing ashore today over the Aorida.
The high temperature Mondliy :
West COBSL Heavy snow was pos'
sible in the mountains of northern .was 85 degrees at Kingsville, •
Texas, and Miami.
!
and southern California.

Also, Eastman was ~ted as tuition student at Et~stern High
the district's OSBA legiSlative lia- School as of Feb. 9;
son for the 1993 calendar year.
• Approved an amended appro·The followinJ people were priations. payment of bills and. the
employed as substitute teachers for minutes of the Jan. 13 organizathe balance of the 1992-93 achool tional and regular meetings;
year, to be used on an as-needed
• Met in executive session to
ba'sis only: Thomas L. Gates, discuss pa-sonnel malterS;
Emily Rogers and .David Curfman
• Adopted an agreement with
Sunny Pt. ce.:dy Ctcudy
Sr.
J.W. Didion and AssociateS to proIn addition, the boanl employed vide services to enable the district
Marie E. Johnson as a substitute
coot forthebalanceofthe 1992-93 - - S
~-----Weather----school year to. be used on an ·as ,.
1,-.1. , .,
Tharsday through Saturday: ·
needed basis only and employed · Trustees 10 meet
: South-Central Ohio
Thursday, a chance of snow .
. Tonight, variable cloudiness and
the followinJ as volunteer assisr.ant
, The Lebanon Township
coaches for 1993 spring sports: Trustees will meet Friday 11 7 p.m.
cold. Low S-10. Wednesday, most- Lows from around 5 north to
ly Sjlnny in tbe morning. Increasing around 15 south. Highs 2S-30. FriPaul Brannon, softball; Jerrod at the township building in PortSpencer, uact; BfY.BD Durst, ba'se- 1 d
ci9UdineSS in the afternoon. High in . day, a chance of snow. Lows 29ball; Leonard Koer\ig Sr., baiCball.
an ·
25. Highs 30-35. Saturday, fau.
the upper 20s:
The resignation of John V. Pm-Lows in the teens.' Highs in the
. Exteade!l forecast:
upper 20s to low 30s.
ine, elementary teac her, ~~ · Reerulliaa underway
. Ja?pers Plains Emergency
accepted effective Jan. 27 and u"'
Sq
No. 86 is looking .ro~ perboard approved Jl!lyment to Perine
sons
interested
taking a EMT
of 20 hours of hOme wroring time class 1.0 run within the
squad. For
calculated at his regullw hourly rate
those
interested
there
will be a
of pay.
~obert Carter
Oscar Jordan,
meeting on March 3 a1 7 p.m. at the
In other action, the board:
Tuppers Plains squad bay. ·
Robert G. Carter, 46, or
. Oscar B. Ionian, Sr., 91, !If ML
• AppJOVed a pun:haed services
Pomeroy, Ohio, died Sunday, Alto,
a~ment for services to be rendied Monday, FeJ?ruarY
Blondmoblle
February 21, 1993, a1 Holzec Medi- 22, 1993, al bome.
dered by Kirk Reed as a tutor to
The
·American Red Cross
cal Center.
Chastidy Millhone. The tutoring Bloodmobile
He was a retired farmel and a
will be 81 the Mei's
. Born November 14, 1946 in Bal- £0111117 employee of the Weat Vtrservices will lie for a ptlriod of two Coun~y Senior Citizens Center m
lilnore. MD, he was a son or • • Di:paltrneat of Highways. He
to a maximum of five hours per
Thelma {KJam) 1)ndall or spring ::'a member of the (Jospel Lighweek, a1 a rate of $12.SO per hour;
Ute, NC, and the 1aJe Lawrence thouse 'Memllcle Chill:li and an
; Accepted the bid of Jack WestCarter. He was a chef a1 Barefoot avid foll hwitcr.
fall for the purchase ofa used 1973
Bay Resort a1 Iiikhllrt Lalce, WI.
lnternalional school bus;
Born· February 18, 1902 in
. ' He was alao peceded in death by . Mason County, be was a soa of the
• Accepted Alan Durst as a
.
a lsisler.
.
, late Jatnes B. and Lora (Divis) Jor. The postsecondary en~Oment
' Addiiional survivors include ·his dan. He ·was also pe(:eded in death
options
Jrllgr&amp;m was established ~
continuettrrom page 1
wife, Julie ' {1aqucl) Carter of by hil wife, Mary l . (Rifle) 1~
permit higb school students m
0rt1 cautioned against restoring gradeS 11 and 12 to earn college
pPmeroy; a daughta', Jassiline Car- two llrotherl; a lister; a grandson; Orate D, David Cudinan D, Lesley
Carr
and
Scott
Walton.
the
secretaries hotn. ·
and hij!lh achool graduation credit
l!!r of Pomeroy; lWQ PIS. K«iel and a foster SOIL
In
addition,
Bill
Hensler
was
"Spending
money· we don't have through the successful completion
Carter and Thurien Carteri both of . Survivors include two daughters,
POmeroy; and two brothers, Ken- Beatrice Rollinl Of·Leon, and ReCa hin:d as assis18111 baseball coach for is wrimg," Ord said. In addition, of college courses. The program is
neth Carter of l'littou, NC, and Plantz of Point I'J! •nt; llix sons, the 1993 season while Jim Ord said, ''We need 10 ta11t a long intended to provide· expanded
Alan Carter of Roc~, NY.
Wallace and Sberman.both of Leon, Lawrence was approved as assis- look • the principal position." '
Ord is cunendy serving willtout opportunities. for appropriately
Savice ~ill be held Wednesday, Lyle and Oaear B. Ir., both of ML tant softball coach.
qualified high school studenll
Mary Smith was hired as high pay as high school~
Feiiruary 24, al 11 a.m. althe W'li- Alto, Lawrence of Columbus and
experience.coarse worlc ·at the coschool
custodiM
effective
Mardi
1,
.
Tbe
board
voted
ty
to
coxen Funeral Home in Point Kenneth of Middleport; two Mas,
• or unlYailty JeteL
.._....
to
eater
lclllllllzld
.,Ost
the
principal
posidon.·
Tht
· One of the requifi:menls for parPleasant with Pastor · Joe Gwinn Ruth W'liJOn of Cih:leville, OH and
The
board
granted
permission
to
motion
10
restore
the
secretaries
ticipalion
in the program is that the
officiatina- Burial will be in Pine Juanill Malfm of ML Allo; 28 Treasurer Dennie Hill to go into the hours passed with llc8d President
s!udent
and
his or her parent(s)
Grove Cemetery in Leon. ·
grandchildren and 37 grealstate
loan
fund
if
needed.
Suzie
Orueser
opposing.
attend
a
coUnseling
session provid· Calling boors will be licld al the grandchildren,
.
•
Following
the
vote,
Evans
made
Honor
ror-r
auditor
funeral home Wednesday morning
Service will be held at I p.m.
Acting upon 1 motion by ·Evans,
from 9 am. uruii lln'ice time.
Wednesday, Felifuary 24, at .the the motion to restore the disuict's
secrelaries
hours
worked
to
seven
a
the
board unanlmously voted to
Crow-HUISeil Funeral Home wilh day, instead of the four they cur- rename
tbe high school base~ll
Rev. Herman Jordan and Re•. Kenrendy wOJk if the disuict goes into· field in honor of the late Wilham
-..--------~~~~~ .. neth
B..W will
Wic~•. M!f,s County Auditor,
ll'
be in Durst
lllain officl•tjng.
Metnorill Cemetery
in the loaD rund.
·
In
lcldition,
Evans
moved
the
who died m YJanuary.
by Bob Hoeflich
Couageville.
.
the·J!OSition·
of
high
Other
action
.
board
post
Friends may eall a1 the funeral
principal for the upcoming
In other aedon, the~
.
home
tonight (Tuesday) from 6-9 school
Am Ele Power................... ,35 718
school year.
- Approved the mmutes of the
Ashiand OiL...................- ..27 3/4 p.m.
January meeting and approved. the
Middlepon's Nora and Denver
ATclT.................................S4 1/2
. fmancial and activity fund state- Rice who seem to be in touch with
Bank &lt;lne...........................S2 liB
..1
conti.nued from paaet
ments:
world and always seem 10 be on
U1
_Agreed 10 post the position of the
Bob Evans ......................... 16 3/4
hand ·when comfort and suppm are
Cllarming Shop.................. l4 718
Southern High School principal;
rating from the local committee for district commiuee.
needed have received an update on
The
bid
of
.Ruben
Collins
for
• Established an assistant trea- former resident, Owles Brooks.
Cbmp Indnstries.............- .. 10 1/8
Issue 2 funding on the N~ Third $1SO for a four foot strip of land surer's
position;
City Holding.-...................21 314
Allhough having left Middleport
paving project.
..
.
bordering
his
property
on
Logan
_
Discussed
the fOQlball budget a number of years ago, Broolcs has
Federal Motlul.................... l8 3/8
It was also reported by the
G&lt;xxlyear nR ..................66 3J4
and die instrumental program for continued to maintain close friendmayor that the village has ~ived Street was accep!ed by Council.
Key Centurion ...................22 3/8
Mayor
Hoffman
discussed
the
the 1992-93 school year;
ships and to visit the community.
the federal and sllte subsidy for
Lands End............:........ ;....23 l{l
governor's
budget
for
the
new
two
- Adopted a policy requir!ng
Charles had· a serious fall on
oper8tion
of
the
taxi
business.
FedLimited Inc...............:.:..... 24 1/8
years
and
noted
that
the
recommenstudents
to
pay
debts
for
supplies,_
Nov
. 29 and underwent brain
eral dolt.s totat'$44,010 with the
Mukimedia Inc..................33 114
dation
is
for
continuing
a·
freeze
etc.,
before
receiving
grade
cards
surgery
that night. He spent the
state amount beinJ $56;610.
Point BancGrp.................... l2 3/4
which has been in effect the past and dipiOOIBS;
next three and one-half weeks tn
Ru ResiaUIIIIL ...............-.3/16
several y.ears which curbs growth
- Agreed to assist the Letart- intensive cate. He was moved out
Reliance Electric................J9 314
Council aclqtowledged a conui- to monies funneled back to local Portland PTO by paying 60 percent of intensive care into a room on
RobbinsclMyers ............... 18 314
bution from v;ney L.urber ~ govemmenL
Qf the $2,064 cost of new chalk- Christmas Day and his wife ,
Shoney'slnc ......., ........-...:22 318
$1,000 w~ o matena s tow
He also expressed concern about boards and shades;
Louise, felt that was a great ChristS•rO 1 ,. . ..¥.:..-;.,t;-·~'114 J . c~uucuon. of the roof over the a recommended $1.20 tax for each
- Discussed the junior high mas present.
water connection which, aecoriling · school after-school detention poliW=4~-l.;f.\.~;~ll
.:~ • _uon
.al
~t:·re~ff::
On Ian. S with strong support,
W
lftd................26 $It
f/J 11
J)art
.
10 Hoffman, would cost Ihe village
cy.
.
Charles
walked some eight feet
Stock reports are tbe 10:30
lion JXOject wor1c in the village.
between $1,200 and $1,500 a year.
Attending were Board President between parallel bars. However,
a.m. quotes provided •r
. Otb Bust
A sewage collection taX may also Orueser, Vice President Pete after that day be got weaker. It ~
be proposed, the mayor said, which Thoren, Tom Roscbeny, Evans and determined that he was not gewng
Kell!per Senrltles, lat.,
Council- 10
Jetter
1
10
GaU•polls.
Sears Roebuck, Sears Tower, would be used for hiring personnel ~!~~u~r.intendent . Ord and the nutrition needed to maintain
~ood bealth so a tube was inserted
Chicago, Ill, 60684, Customer Ser- to regulate water and sewage sys- ........,.,. Hill
mto the stomach for feeding. It will
vice, .askJ'J,~
Sears maintain a tem~he mayor's report for tbe
be removed when he can handle
srorem
month showed receipts of
Veterau Me•orlal
food through the mouth. He also
The Dlily Sentinel .
The first reading of an Qrdinance $2 547.55. ~ndina were Mayor
Monday's
admissions - Luvena underwtnt a tracbeotomy but that
,
calling
for
vacatinJ
an
alley
.
r
un.
~IIMIII
..
Council members Dewey Hayman, Long BotloiD:
· tube was removed on Ian. 26. His
.
'
"';'
ning betwa;n Fourth inti 1bird was Hoffman,
Horton,
Jack
Sauerfield,
Judy
.
Monday's
discharges
Paul
Plll&gt;llaW
afAI - · 11-y
doctor assures Mrs. Brooks that
given by Council. It was pointed Crooks. and James Clatwonhy.
~,...,,ac-t~?
Anderson,
Pomeroy.
Charles
will walk and talt again
lllo 0... \ldlq
l ~ 1
out that the IS-foot alley has not
~U....a Jacl
16)0
and
will
get home. On Feb. 3,
been· used as an aller for many
Ollio ;;i.i P1l. 1111-2118.
was
moved to WoOdlawn
Charles
years and that the people residing
~
a&amp;P
CW•OIIIo.
Nursing
Home,
S3S Lexington
on the alley liSe the· area for partII
Continued rrom Pllt 1
. , . . . _... - · ... lllo
Ave., Room ISO, East Wing,
ing.
·
Oldo Na•
la ' ef=a, M tf •
Mansfteld, Ohio 44907 and is ·tO
Mayor Hoffman was appointed
Nelson left his keys in the ilnition, the spokeswoman said.
Now 't()
, 711latin,
'rill.. - .
undergo occupational, speech and
by Council 10 aerve 1111 the blue 2
A IS-year-old Pomeroy youth was appretiended after allegedly
--l00!7.
physical therapy there.
Commiuee re~ng Ph.il R~
stealing a Racine woman's car.
·
Louise comments that your
who has reslped. The vi!Jaae with
1'011'NA8'1'111 .... -~ ..
Janet W~rne~left her Dodge Lancer in front of a Union Aven!JC
fto ~&amp;laol, Ill C.n 8&amp;.,
·
cards,
notes and telephone calls
the largest JXllllllation in the coun...
business around 6:30 p.m~ Aiound B:4S p.m., sbe ~ to dishave
been
s.uch a boost to her
ty, Middleport in Meip County,
'
IUIICaiFIICM&amp;AI'D
cover lhe ear missing, police reponed. The lceys were left m the car,
morale
during
the long~·
appoinll a represenlltive to tbat
lice said
o.o
_.-~.:g
'
po Around 11:16 r.m. sherltr James $oulSby reported a vehicle al
CMI .............................,..,_,,,,_,
,
A few weeks hiCk I lclvised yOu
0.0 - .:.... .._...... _... _ ........- .111.10
his
reeldola.
Upon
lllrival,
Jiolice
found
Shawn
Whiaetincl
and
die
thai
Violet {VIcky) Morarity of
~
IIJIIOL8 OOPr
Tickets
alleady
IIOlea
ca'.
.
.
PoooCioy
wbo has suffered from an
.
.
Soctioaal t.oQtball ticlrets are
~- -- ..................................-Jieo.tt
Whilieldnd
allegedly
1101e
the
ear
and
wrecked it, police 111d. A
unusual
1q
dill'l., for a year «
I
avaiJable • Melli Hiah School for
po~ce : ; : : - - w d charges Were to .be mod in the prosocu- .
so
would
be
enreriq
a hospital in
tbe Meill VI. VliiiDII 'tounty J11DC
II . . . .-1
California
fqw
surpry.
IOriO
to be p11yec1 w~• 7 p.m.
Whltteklnd was released to the custody .o fh'II pareflts, the
~ .... c...- will""
She baa done tbat and has
......
at the University OfR Orailde.
spoJceswamlllllid
undergODe the IUJIIery which wu
The ticlrets - $3 -=b.
more eomplicateil than at first
H. I 1$1' 1oJ ...,._ Ia
thouahL
She is JepOned to be doina
•- • Ne- ..... . . . . oorolot Ia
welf.
howe~rer. Her address is ·
• Unlti ot the Meip Coun1y Bmerpncy Medical Setvice respondTo meet Thursday
Chapman Oeneral Hospital, 2601
I
ed
10 0110 Clll for IISIIIIDCC Mo11day.
. ·
.
The
Middleport
Youth
I.eque
East ~an Circle, Orange,
.........____
.. ,.
.,. will bold Ill flrlt lliDCIIIaa 'l'llanilay ,
At 10:33 p.m. the Rlllland IQUIII went 10 ~ Street for Oova
Calif..
•
.
•w
Cremeana
w11o
was
ll'
I
1IIJIOt'
f
.e
to
v
Memorial
Hospilal.
11 6:30 p.m. Ia the ...iddleJ19rt
a 11' -..c t
'
And did you ltnow that Augh
II Wooloo...·-···· -··········· .. - ......... AO · · Co~mj;IJ"room. AnfOill iateresled
£ditur'l
IIOie: AU ........ lllld ad '1 tn• are prlllled 8S
and
Esther Daniels, former resi•................................................
W I
- · · · -··--..· - .40
in coachin1 or belpiDiin either
Iller ap,_. Ia Iaw tlllarc-a ud odltr tap urll.
·
denll,
have moved hiCk to ~eip .
CIPICIIiel il inviiDd to I!IICJid.
W. VA.

'

and that "ignite\'5" had been used
as well- but, he said, none of
these-things caUsed the explosion.
GM sued, Gartner experienced
some epiphanous moments, and
"NBC Dateline" anchors Stone
Phillips and Jazle Pauley went on
the au with a sojler and abject
retraction.
So all's well that ends well,
hey? Sorry, but no. What NBC did
is a perfect example of the ~ ~
continues to plague televtston
news. That pox,; is pictures. They
are regarded as the paramount
thing, more important even than
ttuth.
Four years ago, the pox visited
the business in;the form of ''reenacanents,'' the reconstruction of
events for dramatic purposes.
Remember when ABC News was
in hot W8lllr because it hin:d a couple of actors to portray senior State
Department diplomat F~lix Bloch
·handing a briefcase full of state
secrets to a· KOB agent? The film
180 with no indication that it w~ a
flat-out fate.
Undaunted. by ABC's critics,
network news offtcials leaped oq
the innovation like mongrels on a
mutton chop. CBS began airing
"Saturday Night Wi_th Connie

The record higb temperature for
!his date BJ the ColUmbus wellher
station was 66 in 198S. The record
low was- 4 in 1885.
· Sunset today will be at 6: t 7
p.m. Sunrise W~y will be at
7:12am.
ArOIIIId the •tloD
Snow dusted the Midwest and
the Northeast today. Skies were
mosdy clear and temperatures mild
along much of th~ Gulf Coast,
promising perfect Mardi Oras
weather for New Orleans.
A band of Arctic air moving
from the Plains toward the Northeast was picking up moisture over
the Great Lakes. Snow showers

Eastern group t() discuss energy saving options :

...... ,1',,.

I.·~ '

I

·• ICC)Iumbus!2s• I

•

u""...,.

10

'Big Four' personify bl~ck history

,'Thank heavens WE'RE not MIDDLE CLASS.'

'

•

a videotaped test, HaC's "Safety
experts" strapped toy rockets
under an expenmental pickup and
ignited them just as the truck was

-Berry's World

h~.You have to wonder w t son

,

MICH.

menWion. SiDcc that lime, GM has.
nc_&gt;t won a jury verdict,~ setding most cases before trial.
~s J!art of tho~ settlements,.
plamuffs .and thCJr l~wyer~ are
sworn 10 sile!!ce,andjudges ISSue
orders teepmg all documents
secret. But~~· thanks to a Texas:
~w. that veil of secrecy has been.
p1erced.
.
·
In 1989, Rtchard Zelenut of
F~ Worth burned 10 ~th w~n
htS 1987 GM truck was hit I!Rd liS
gas tank exploded. Last year GM
settled his famil(s lawsuit out of
court for an undtsclosed su!" a,nd
asl!:ed that Texas State D1str1ct ·
Judge Jeff Walker seal some 24
boxes of GM documents that
Zelenuk's lawyer bad obtained by
subpoena.
.
But Texas law forbids docu- ·
me~~ts to be suppressed if a public- .
bealth issue is a1 state. On the day ·
last Novj:mber that Judge Walker
was to hear a suit brought by a public interest group to get ICCCSI 10
. the records, OM uted thai they .
release and then deliver to· the
National Highway Traffic Safetx Administration in Washington ·
some 70 bo- of documents relaling to lhe pickup-truclt: fuel sySiem.. .
NHTSA is still suting through .
these documents. Evenwally they.
will all be releaSed to the public. •
According to sources who have ..
.· seen the ~. they contaip ~M ·
side-impact crash tests showtng .
fuelloss.
•
NHTSA will eventually.decide ·
whalto do about the trucks. It can
order a recall only of those ~ i!' .:
the last eight years. However, if.1t
were to recall the 1985-87 models, .
there would be tremendous pres ~ ,
sure on GM to voluntarily recall ,
and fix older models.
·;
Robert Wagman is a syndicati ;
. ed writer for Newspaper Enter~ .
prise Association.

·ec~sr~i"'1'1!111'13•

wron'

'"'I,;QJ

By Tbe Alloclated Pres~~
Snow warnings are in effect
today in northeast Ohio.
A snow squall warning is in
effect in the extreme northeast
counties, and a heavy snow warning covers Lorain, Cuyahoga and
Medina counties. ..,
The National Wealher Service
said snow squalls will continue in
an.d close to the v.-aming areas
today. Snow will accumul8ie from
6 to 10 inches in the squall warnina
area itnd 2 to 4 inches in' the heavy
snow wamin~ area.
·
Lows ton•ght will range from
abou1 zero over northwest Ohio to
near 20 in the southeast.

forecast for daytime conditions

rs"

The Dally Sentinel Page 3

Snow squalls will continue in northeast Ohio

lfednn.day,Feb.l4

even major ~ of fuel los$ in ·
OM's own secret crash tells.
The bistory of lawsuillagainst
GM pickup-truck fii'CI shows an
interesting pattern. The company
tried and won several early suits·
between 1978-82, but it has not
won a jury verdict since 1983. Trial
lawyers say this is because in the
~tsy sec~reLGBMutteptswui~~own
.n
,.
""'tawy·ers began , _ them983
and
10
, ___ .. GM release....,,:,_
,a.. docu-

1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO VVeathcr

Page 2-The Dally SentlneJ
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
1\Je8claY, February 23, 1993 ·

;

Has GM ·pickup truck been .vindicated?

The Daily Sentiriel

1

Friday, February19, 1993

'

Hospital news .,

,

=t

Pa.

5

r-----· Local ~riefs••. -----,

• '!£:
.w.--.

...
w........._. . .-.. . _.. .
___.........
,.......
..
'll;to==-=.:-·'
--

County? They left here many years
ago and .have been residing most
recently in Boynton Beach, Fla.
Welcome home.. .
If the name of Hayman- sur. faced in your family tree and
you're into genealogy, you might
be interested in a boolc beiDa published l)y Douglass F. Hayman, Jr.
The boolc pertains to the origins of
JohQ Hayman, 1766-1826, who
was one of the first settlers of ,
Meigs County, ~~:cording to Douglass.

The book entitled, "Ha)'IIIIIIS of
the Eastern Shore of Maryland,
1666-1800 traces Henry Haym111 ·
and their son. Henry, Jr.• fust setders of Somerset County, Md., in
1666.
The boot is available at $10
postpaid for orders received by
Ma:th 1 and bOoks after that will
be $20. Hayman's address is 1387
Stonecrea Road, Annapolis. MeL
21403.
Not having seen the boot, I will - ,
not urge you to make a purchase;:
It's kind of cravel al your own risl{•
situation. At least you know of its
availability if you're inlelesled. .
That llfOURdhog ~·t seem to .'
be too swift in coping with motor •
vehicles but wben it comes to the ·,'
weather, be'sa smart cookie. This;··
too, shall pass so do lceep smiling. · · •

,..-.,,

' -~---

available

.....

EMS respon,ds to call

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..........
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5

•

�..• •

Tuuday, Februa,Y 23, 1993

·sports

The Daily F~!~!~~

runs
.~ Clock
.

Page 4

.} '

'On Wednesdlly's agenda,

intO the second period that shat- successful trifecta allempt by . up by 10 points and I thought we'd
lered the hosts' small lead.
Annie Mains. A foul whistled on be over. the hump, but they came
head to head in a bat!le for
The Bears pulled awoy from two . Gudorf apinst center Jcnni'Wessel back. We had an
Ill the
supremacy, one has to emerge on · one-point margins in the fmt five reslllred m a deadlock at 80 111: the end, and while it
'I work 0111,
the losing end.
•
miputcs, but Rio Grande's pl!tient four-minute m.-Jc. Tiffany Clayton our kids did not choke, and t· want
· For the University or R.io offense orcheslratcd on the iDslde connecred for two at 2:39 to put to emphasize that point. They
Grande .Re'dwomen, f1g~ting_ I!' by Tricia CoUins and Stacey Riuer, Shawnee State back In charge (82· played weU all year, I was proud of
":eCP theu top seed Slalus 10 DIY!- chip~ away at the advantage 80).
· the way they cooducted themselves
. SJon ,I and advance ~ .~ ~PI ·
unuU.ittcr's fJCld goal at 10:29 Pill
' Hamilton's basket at :39 again on and off the court, and I think
onship game of the diYlSIOII splay· the Red women behind 65•63. A put Rio Grande behind by one (84· they represented the university
!'ffs, thll: fac.t cam~ 10 light as an foul 011 the Bears Pill Ritter to the 83), but her. trip to the foul line well."
_
mtcnse meeung w!th ~d-rsnked line 'for one folll shot, which was resullina from a Bears foul failed.
"It was anyooe's game." Hqen- '
Shawnee Stale Uruvcnilf Monday all Lori Hamilton needed when her Mains hit for two at :IS with Smith said. "Both teams fought
: at Lyne Cen~ ended w1th an 86- jumper 111: 9:58 gave the Redwomen Hamilton caUed for the fooL Mains hard for every possession and .
8S loss for Rio Grande.
their first lead Qf the period.
·sank both of her foul shots and everyone on both teams played
Robin Hagen-Smith's Lady
Effective shooting from both the Hamilton scored what would be their hearts oot It's too bad one of
Bears, now 22-9, face second·seed floor and the foUl line by Hamilton Rio Grande's last two points with these fine teams can 'I go to the
Cenual Stale (23-4) in_the tide bout Ritter and Stephanie Gudorf pin th~ two seconds left
1, .
nationals. Dave has done a great
Wednesday at Centr81 State. The · RedWomen aliead by 10 (77-67) at
"Had there been another 10 sec· job wit!l his program and he has
Marau.~n defeat~d IUPU·In~i- 8:23, but.a renewed attack from the onds, it would have been a differ· some SUP.CJ players.•
anapo1is 1n Monday s other semifi- Bears slashed it to two 81 5:06 on a ent game," Smalley said. "We got
Ham1lton led all scorers in the
na1 ro11nd. Rio Grande exited the
playoffs at 26-5, the best-yet season finish in the history of its
women •s basJretbaU p-ogram.
"We set our goals for the season, and those were to win the
Mid.Qhio·Conference and win our
last !4 regular season games," Redwomen Coach Dave Smalley said .
as his first season leading the ~
came to a close. "I am proud to be
associated with these fine young
ladies. They have no reason to
hang their heads.•
Both Sl'ilalley and Hagen-Smith
were in agreement afterwud that
each team played to the fullest, and
the game bore out their assessment
as Shawn.ee Stale jum)ied out for a
: quick first half lead. flowever, the
· ~ were continually uacked by
Rio Grande, which advanced from
narrowing the margin to tying at 23
with seven minutes left in the fmt
half.
, The Redwomen, aided by timely
1 three-point shooting from Gena
;.Norris, suona inside play and fool
uouble that ·temporarily benched
: some of the Bears' top players,
·' slipped past to post a 3(;:.29 lead at·
the half's two-minute mark. But
Shawnee Stale, powered by double
: figure performances frOID sill of its
athletes, mounted a run that saw
~io Grande ahead only by two at
the iiltermission.
"At the half, we felt pretty good
abo111 where we were at, but
Shawnee went on run just before
Salyers (center), for the ~ ball In the palat
the half, which 'ave them some
REACHING FOR THE BALL - Rio
durin&amp; Monday nl&amp;bt's Division I ftrst-rQund
Grande's Kim Sowers (10),.Stacey Ritter (13)
life,• Smalley said, referring 10 a
playoll' con... at Lyne Center, wblcb the Bears
' reSUillenl Bears offense that reswtand another unldentlfted teammate try .to outwon 86·85. (Ptloto by K~ Kelly)
reach two Shawnee State players, includina ·Joy
ed in a three-pointer just seconds

.

:.(Jlso
·~

their league title to New Boston
Friday, then suffered a stunning
upset Saturday at Northwest .
McDermott.
Southern's success formula has .
been a balanced offensive attack,
great defense and an excellent team
effort.
Senior Michael Evans leads
Southern with 15.6 points per
game, ~oring 313 points overall.
He has hit78-141 from the floor (
55.3 percent) and 57-83 free
throws, while also connecting on
?4·111 three pointers. Evans' scormg output has mopped somewhat
as Southern's offense ~as gained
more balance. Evans 1s a clutch
player and capable of the big game.
He avcraaes S rebounds per game,
second highest on the team. ·
Next in line is Marcus Allen,
senior swing guard who has scored
238 p~in!S for an 11.9 ~verage.
Allen IS capable of the b1g game,

having twfce ~~in the high leading the teim (percent-wise)
Kittle is noted~ an ~tanding 'rebound •
•
•
twenties and is an exceUent three with 19-S4 ,trey's ~S.l percent), player with a qu1ck .f~st steP.·
Hook IS a s.wmg l!*d, who 1s
point shooter. He has hit 60-134 wbilehiaing :26-39~ the line. ,
Southern. an~ R
. yan W1~s w!U almost exclus1v~l. y nghl hand~.
rrom the floor (44. 7 percent) and
Robert Reiber, junier post man, defend~ sii!JOOg lcft.Side. Kit- He provides pomiS off the drive
25-39 at the line, while connec:ling has come inlo his ownrecendy; hit- tie can hit OU!IIde, bu111 mo~tly andcanburtO!I the boanls.
on 31 of 89 three's for a 34.8 per- ling 62-115 from the floor and hit-- noted as a dnver. '!be ~COIIIJ!IIl
Irwin and Angle are the t~p
cent average.
.
ling 31!-54 111: the line. He owns an report notes .that Kutle u eas11~ replacementS for. Greg Ho!be!' s
Senior Russell Singleton has 8.1 poml scorl!lg .a~ with 154 _ frustrated.~ by the fait he TomcatS•. ~,le 11 decent1n81de, ,
developi:d into a.quality_ player, this points, but has had b1gh double- fooled out in the third quarter of where ~·s SIZe (6-foot-3.• 220 ·
year scoring the third highest point digit tallies the past three weeks. Saturda(s pmo. ·
~~~...~key factor In his suctotal (206 pts.) and gn!bbing a team Reiber is also ~ top reboundcr and · . ~y ·IS an extremely strong ~y- cess .. u"' ~ . ·
high 163 rebounds (8.1 per game). on&lt;OIIItlellll:r;
~
. .
er. Smglcton and the T~ five
Southern wms m the . ar~• of
He has connected on 90-193 field . The Tornadoes will face Trim- miiSt keep Day from teceiVIIIg the bench suenl!lh.Jeremy Dil11s the
goalll:lempts for 46.6 pcrccnt and ble's stiriin(.line·up of Re11ben ball in tile pamt He is the team's tir$111111 off the~ while Andy
26-~1 .~ throws. Si~gleton !sals_o Kitde, Justin JJJy, Rusty Richards, !O~ rebo~nder and stronghold Grueser •. Trenton l.:leland and
an .UIIIJDI~tor defensiVely With his Tom Hsrdy and~ Hoot. Adam · lllSide; He IS also a 8QOd shooter.
Mason~
replacej
shot blockiilg ability. .
~is also I! ~anckoming scor_Richards can _provide the ~ ments.
'. Y
. penonne
Sophomore Ryan Williams has mg threat. Trimble fields the SIIIIIC poult threat and IS also a good driv- areandJTucam~r_ SwmuW~eremy Northup
lived up to his billing· as a prime team, minus the Gatchel brothers, er. He like 111111y of d!e other Trim, """"
s.
.
lime point guard, playing clutch as it did laSt year when it defeated ble lllaYeri likes to Jill! the bill on ' f As a holsteam' Southeln has bit 464
basketball the last seven games, the Soulbem for die Disirict Crown. · the llocir.
. o ·.982 s •CX: 472 percent, averlength of So111hern's winning
Trimble Slarled the season poorHanly is a steady inside player a$1!18 71.2 pomts per game and
streak. Will~ is averaging 9.8 ly this year and thus far has not and good reb&lt;!liitder. This player g~vmg up 58.3 per game. SQulbem
~Is per ga111e. hitting 57·128 recovered. Ju~in Day an~ ~ittle
likes to •o back door and gets has averaged 33 rebounds per
·the floor for 44.5 percent and ~boll! averaamg double digUs.
many pomts on the follow-up game.

:e:.C':P

·

'

.·

•

;Lady Marauders in D-11 finals Thursday

~Third

Meigs-Vinton County

:.:
•

By SCOTr WOLFE
8 in leaSli play; SeDdHICIAitspoHent
Wednesday evening, Februal'y
;: If last Sat11rday's ~e~gs 24, the two teams meet again in
·Marauder-Vinton ,County Viking fJI1!1 round play of the Dj.yision ill
,IJI&amp;ICh-up is any indicalion of the . secliOOal tournament at the Univer~quality of game this ~edne¢1y'
sity of Rio Grande's Lyne Center at
· ioumanlent rematch will be, area • 1 p.m. The winner of that game
:u sholl1d be in fer
bam- faces GaUia Academy in the sec-.
;bllmer. Meip lolt ill
fmale . tiona! finals Saturday.
•74-72 on a Jllir·of last-lleCO!Id flee
Melp' boys coatest
' lhrowsfromVimmCouaty'sJason .
Vinton Coonty is led by Jason
\Jiilliam•
,
Williams and Alan Kiefer. That
,: Thole aboll adUIIIy came with duo each nctled 18 points apiece in
• 110
showing 011 the dock. Yin- Saturday's loss. Williams is a good
: ion Co. ended the season atll-9 overall shooter, especially in the
; j!Dd 9-1 in the Tri-Valley Confer- paint
mopped 10 8-12 and 8·
That duo is joined by Nolan
·:·
'

e,!

nme

:--Meigs
"'

-

match~p
.
.

·

Wednesday night
'

.
per game and was second

Yates, who is t!te Vikings leading do it aU offenSively and adds )lllileh m:Poilits
frame.
.
reboondu.. YateS grabbed 10 car- . tohisaaackoffthetebound.
higli in r.eboun4ing with eight last
One can bet that Phil Harrison
oms Salllfday and also added 16
John Bentley joins Eric Wagner week. Cremeans· is also a rioted and company are woddng hard to
points. Yates is a key factor in the in running the Ottense. Bentley is a ·shot blocker.
·
correct some of Saturday's mispaint and is dangerous on the fol· siii'C-~ed guard, capable 9f the
Bobby Johnson, Kyle SimPJOD cues. Hopefully, the reslllt will be
low 11pjumper. ,
··
• th~ pop!tcr aDd accurate m the and Aaron Drummer round 0111 the in the Marludcn favor. Game time
Rounding out the line;.2,:: paint He avcrtgea 14.1 points per lineup. Drummer is steady in all is 7 p.m.
·
•
Dusty Adams (4), Chad He
game and Wagner 7.5 per game.
aspects of the game and i~ ~ 8QOd
Mdp prls to pial Thurtday
(5), Jason Snider (8) and Scott
Todd' Dill is a key rebounder. baU handler.
Ron Logan's Melli airls squad
Braden.
and has · k hands, evident of his ·
Several younger players have (17-3), the Division If Oak Hill
Phil Harrison's Meigs ·Maraud· four s~lisl week. Dill is a-- filled in at the varsuy level and sectional tournament's top seed,
ers are led by senior Trevor Harri· aging 7.S points per game and is a have . done a good job for the will face ·10-7 Rock Hill
son, who averages nearly 20 points good passer, last week picking up Marauders.
at Oak Hill High School at 6:3
per. game· and tallies over six four IISiists.
·
Meigs hopes to find some of the ·p.m.
· reboonds _per game. Harrison is a
Jay Cremeans has been picking punch tb8taUowed them 10 set the · The two teams last metla.st .
good .driver and stop-and-pop 11p some of the rebounding slack tempo early. last week. Meigs year, when Rock Hill defeated
shooter. The yoonger Harrison &lt;:10 for Meigs. Cremeans averages near blitzed to a 13-4 advantage, then Mcip on a last second shot in the
_
.
.
led 19-14 at the end ·or the first sectionalfmals. :

Thursdab

.

-

'

'

'

=Eastern
to
face
Miller
in
first
round
of
Division
IV
·sectiorials
.
.
.

'

By SCOTr WOLFE
S.dHI Correspolldent
. ' TbC Bulan Buies will face the
second seeded M'lller Falcons in
first roUnd play or the Division IV
boys' sectional basketball tournament Wednesday at 6:30.Ji:i at
Alexander High School in
y.
Presalc tickets,for both the boys
:~ lirls games are on aale at the
"high achool.
-' · Eastern's girls wil face top'seeded Frankfort Adena Thursday
at6:15 p.m." Alcllander.
•
Miller (11-9) defeated Eastcm at
Miller in the lint pme of the sea·

; SJHJTtS Probe

son, then defeated Eastern 7S-S9 at
Eastern on February S. East.em, 3·
16 ovetall, has played much beuer
ball since that t1me, and most
recendy dropped a heart ble&amp;king
60-59 contest to Fairland.
In the last game against Miller,
Eastern scored only IS first-half
points, but Cfllpted for 44 secondhalf pointB. Easlem seems to have
overcome its fir:t;t period jitrers, and
should play the Falcons tough
Wednesday evening.
.
.
Eastern is led by sophomore
center Charlie Bissell, who is averaging 11.8 points j&gt;er game and

·

:~Nicklaus'
: . i ByHOlvARDSINER
" Today's questions in· the world
. iii' sports:
.
..• - •. Will
the Golden Bear roar.
?
. aplll

. He's giving it his best shOL Jack
'Nicklaus, who just turned 53, is
Slruggling to shake off the rust and
a hip ailment that led to his worst

12.8 ·rebounds per game. Bissell is
a strong post player and Eastern's
bread-and-butter man inside. Bissell recently grabbed a probable .
school record 30 rebounds against
Feder.al Hocking. Bissell is also a
~ood foul shooter. and gOod shot
mside IS-feet from anywhere on
theOoor.
Pat ~ewland, a speedy junior
po~t guard, is noted as a good ball
handler and driver. Newland is
' averaging 6 points per. game and
runs the Eagle offense.
·
Chad Savoy is. at swing guard.
His n~~mbers have been down late·

..

.

ly, but he is a good driver and sood
Olltside shjlotcr. Savoy is capable
of burying the three pollltcr.
Jeremy Cline, senier wing man,
is a fine ooiSille shooter and Eastem's three point ace. Cline can
break a game open, or spark a
come-back with his sure-shooting
from beyond the tine point ~Robert Reed, junier post man,
helps' Bissell ancher the inside as
does Jeremy Buckley. Buckley, a
senior', has fooght off injuries all
season lon!l, but bu recendy sta•
blized the Eastern inside game.
.

·

teams record
.~. Home·
. By
AI'Odatecl Preas
coach Paul Evan&amp; woodered

=:

Tile

• Pitt was the pits and 1Ulane was
· terrible. Kansas ran into a hot home
team and UNLV was upset in front
·of former coach Jeny Tarkanian.
All four rankeil ieams lost on
theroadMondatr.ight . ,
.
No~' 2S Pius
shot 30 percent from the fiel and scored Its
fewest points in eight years in a 5348loss to Provide~.
" What do you think? We set the
game IMlck about SO years?" Pitt

.

been the only two tournaments I've rounds of golf since last August._
vinually never skipped since I've
On the weekend before Pebble
been on tour," says Nicklaus.
Beach, Nicklaus was last in the
His fJrsl PGA stan of '93 was at · four-way Senior Skins Game in
the AT&amp;T Pebble Beach Nalional Hawaii. He collecteci·$SS,OOO. But
Pro· Am on Feb. 4; But Nicklaus Arnold Palmcr($190,000), Chi Chi
missed the cut in the California Rodriguez ($14~,000) and Ray
event after scores of 73-76-72. He f1oyd ($60,000) dill better. · ·
had only played "six or seven"
,

In trade with SuperSonics

;Lakers get Benjamin, Christie for Perkins
:" INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) Sonics two years a'o- a very
t:lenoit Benjamin is getting a fresh popular move with Cbppen fans.
start. Again. And Sam Perkins is
Things haven't worked out for
.g.elting a big opponunity .· .
Benjamin in Seaule, either.. He
The Los Angeles Laker.s played in only 31 of the Sonics' SO
.,.cquir.ed the oft-criticized Ben- games this season, averaging 14
Jam in and the rights to unsigned 1/2 minutes, 6.7 points and 3.6
(irst·r.ound draft choice Doug r.ebounds.
Christie from the Seattle SuperSonSo for the Sonics, the trade was
fcs on Monday in exchange for addition by subtraction. Not only
Perldns.
was Benjamin not playing much,
The Laker.s (26-23), who arc the team knew it wasn't going to
looking toward the future, suddenly sign Christie.
.
. got a lot younger - Benjamin is
"Benoit has alwai~hanted to
28 Ouislle is 22 and Perkins is 31. play for. this team,"
rs guard
'The Sonics (33·17), meanwhile, Byron Scoll said. "That's very
are thinking about a championship positiv~. He can only help us."
now. Currently in second place in
Laker.s general manager Jerry
·the Pacific - Division behind West denied speculation that Ben·
Phoenix, they hope Perkins can jam in would be moved again
provide a boost as they ancmptto before Thursday's tmding deadline.
reach a higher level.
.
Ther.e have been rumors ~~ the
. . Benjamin, a 7-footar, played S Laker.s will acquire another
.. 1/2 years with lbe Los Angeles 11nsigned first-round draft pick,
Clippers lfter IIIey ftllldC him the- g11ard Jimmy Jackson, from the
. ll'lird overall selection in the 198S • · Dallas Mavericks before the uad_·
NBA draft. He was traded to the

ing deadline.
Regarding that, West said,
"You have to RO one Step at a time
in this league.'Y
·
Perkins admiued he wu surprised by the deal.
"WeU, I'm in shock," he said.
"But at the same time, the Lakers
have to do what they have to do."
About the Sonics, Pel'lcins said,
"They've got what it lakes 10 win,
there's no question the talent is
there. Now we just need to get the
tunnel vision and mental attitude it
takes to get to the championship
level.''
. The Sonics are expected to
insert the 6-9 Per.kins into the stan·
ing lineup in place of Michael
Cage. Perkins, averaging 13.7
pointS and 7.7 rebounds, would
JOin All·Star. Shawn KemJ.l and
Derrick McKey, each 6-10, m the
frontcowt.
"We think we are. making a
trade that makes us a beuer lellm

that aui be more successful," Son·
ics coach George Karl said, adding
that Perkins' style of play "shollld
fit in with what this team is uying
to do."

Obviously, Benjamin's style
didn't fit in with the Sonics.
"I have no control over how
much time I play," Benjamin said.
"It was linie to niove on. Everybody's going to lake their shots,
I'm fully aware of that. But my
th~ust to come in and play
lllal.etba .''

.

Lakers coach Randy Pfund said
he plans to give Benjamin playing
lime immediately.
Christie was the 17th player .
chosen in last J11ne's draft. The
Lakers said they have already start·
. ed cqntract negotiations with
Christie's agent, Brad Marshall
Christie, a 6-6 swing man from
Pepperdine, rejected a four-year,
$2.742
. ' million deal with the SonICS.

.

'

Penguins convince Lemieux to stay off ice until healthy
By ALAN ROBINSON .
PITTSBURGH (AP} - He
wanted to.l)lay agsin ·as early as 10
day• a1o. He planned to make a
much sooner-than-anticipated
re111m on Saturday.
. Bu&amp;,-the PittaburJb ~ng11ins
have finally convinced. Ma~l~
Lemieu not 10 play aga1n unul
after his radiation U~tmcntB for
C8llcel' sre COflll))el,ed. ·
I..emieux, whcdeamed Jan. 8 he
baa Hodgkin's disease, has practiced for the lilt twa weeks despite
WllkiPll five-times-a-week dierRe Rportcdly urged the Pen·
to let hllll play u early as
13.
.
·
Lemicu1 told friends Suaday

'

hip ailment cause of his having .worst year,on tour
year ever. on the PGA Tour. "I just
need to go play golf," he vows.
The "Player of the Century"
hopes to get back into the swing of
things during the next few weeks.
He's pointing to the Doral &amp;yder
Open in Miami. lt begins on Thursday, March 4.1
"Dorsi alld Pebble Beach have

night he expected to play Saturday
a11ainst Tampa Bay, only to learn
h1s radiation ueaanentS have.been
. extended thro11gh March 2. His
final full dose of llldiation wiU be
Fridpy, b11t he also will receive
• lowe.r doses n~t Monday and
· Tueaday. · .
Also, for the first time since
beginning his therapy three weeks
ago, Lemieux told teammates Mon- .
day he is experiencin&amp; some
faugue. Doctors said fatigue is a
normal side effect of radiation and
increases the longer the treatmenll
last.
· Penguins general manager Craig .
Patrick, who has said lltde to the
media about Lemieux since a Jan.
'

I

IS news conference, told reporters
that Lemieux has agreed
not to play until his therapy ends.
The Penguins fear that should
Lemieux be injured in the area of ·
the neck where he is beinjl a:eated,
it could delay the tadiauon trell:; ·
ments- and·his recovery- ev'en
Mo~

~cr.

'I know he's anxious to play
and he wanII to play,·· Patrick Did.
"But we'd like to see him finish
out his llldiation treatments.''
When Lemieux le•rlied aix
weeks ago he had Hodgkin's-dis- . a cancer .of ~ nodes,
huaid only that he
. 10 rewm
for the Stanley Cup playoff• in
mid-April. However, he prac\iced ·

four tiinea lilt week without jlrob\ems and reportedly wanted 10 play
several times, besinnina with .a
Feb. 13 &amp;lllle against the Chiclgo
Blackhawlcs.
"We've never hid to talk.him
0111 ~ ,.Yihina;" Patrick aid. "He
agrees Wlthourpcllidon."
However, Patrick.admllled that
Lemieux inqUired about returning
to the two-lime Sllllley Cup champion Penguins' line11p while sdll
imclergoina l'ldlation
Patriclt wu utod If the Penguins shouldn't Just tell their $42
million star lhlt lie can't plar, - no
ands, ifs or buts - unul he':
healthy. ,
.

'

-

Hi1 Skins Game rivals at the

Malina Lani resort even teased him

•
Collegiate gymnasts are limited
to 20 hours per week in the gym. ·
"To judge the entire sport by
pdinting to 11 few specific situatloni
ts 11nfair," says Greg Marsden;
who to~~:hes women's gymnastica
at the University of Utah. B111 he ·
supports efforts to protect the
health of all gymnasts.
'
• What's the "Indianapolis
SOO" of Star-i:lass sailing?
.
ll's the Bacanlj Cup, one of dKl
oldCst 'and most prestigious Starelias repnas. It' a going to be bold
March 7-12 on a lO.S-mile course
off Miatni. ~bolll SO boats will

.~

~

'..........
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'

at his

NBAslate
·

Tonlabt
~at New faa.. 7:30p.m.

'

-~~~7:30p.m.

_,_,_~7:30p.m.

W~o&amp;-7:l0p.m.

Miami. a.BYBLAND. 7:10p.m..
p.n 1' !lut.Ditroll.1:l0p.m.

-k~':30r...

~~~~·~
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lacnm-.o ., L.A.•~lippen.

......

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OaWan-

In tbe NHL... WALES CONFERENCE

PlirldiDhloloo .
TW L rra.. 'GFGA
~ ......... ~I 11 ! II 251 196
~I 2l 6 61 :IA6 212
N.Y.~ -· 27 24 9 63 %16225
. -.....,. ·-·-· 21 25 ! 61 2111 :107

w-.... - ·N.Y. -

... .27 :16 6 60 :M~ 213

...i'*'phl•,..... 20 29 II St 221· 2A4
''

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~ ............ . 33 11 9 1!1
· - ............. 32 22 6 70
Bullllo............. :10 ·22 7 61
Jlonfon ... ., ....... 16 39 • ,.
Oaa.......... _, 7 !I 4 11

· He:Wol aaW,·Mariotla69 ·

zn 203

:147 214

:140 212
254 206
193 :161
14! 2M

y...,.,_. S&lt; 71

C1e¥e1aM S1. 96,
B.111ln4117, Wripl I&lt; 10

Non-coaforon&lt;e
Taylor 17, Mmlne 74

National college .
basketball scores

~

.

._,:1,...,.33

IJ"""' .,. -

·Fiftnc)1own 7j, Blll.U 13
N. Colle&amp;• Hill S:l, Wi11iloub&lt;ua 10

McMechen (W.Va .) Donahue 58,

W-5&lt;1
o...mu. 4!, Hoolh :16
Solin&amp;. N.... !10. T - 60
r....,;;o61,Minl0!6

z.-.u:o0... Sl. Ho.i~aae'bu. !0

Transactions
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· Ohio high school
girls' basketball scores

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6-U-86.

Halrtlme score: Rio Grande
39, Shawnee State 37.
· '

.,

by Iowa's Acie Earl in the fi~sl
half.. Kindig said he dJouiht goal~
tending should have been called.
Iowa improved to 17-6 overall and
6-5 in the Big Ten, while PelUI
Stale dropped to 6-16, 1-12.
No.ll1New0rleau71 · ,
W. Kentucky 67 (lOT)
At Bowling -Green, Gerald
Williams hit the go-ahead baslcet
and two key free throws in the
ond overtime as New Orleans
clinched the Sun Belt Conference
regular-season title. New Orleans
(21:2, lS-0), unbeaten in eight road
games this season, squandered an
11-pointlead in the final five minutcsofregulilionandfellbehindat
the beginning of both overlinre
periods. Williams finished with a
season-high 27 points, while Oatnell Mee led Western Kentucky
(18-S, 11-4) with 20.
ProvldeDce 53
No. ~ Plttsbi;U'Ih 48
,
At_Providence, P1~gh w~u
scoreless for 8:25 late m the second
half of a sloppy game. Both teams
were plag11ed ~Y turnovers and
poor folll shooung. The Panthem
(1~·8, 7~ Big East),~ ~011 ~
third Straight, scored JUS! SIX (lOlnts
in the final 10 minutes and shot 24
pc;rcenl in the second half. The Friars (14-9, 7·8) won their fourth
consecutive game despite missing
15 of 2S flee throws and commit·
ling 1S turnoven. Mic~l Smith,
had 18 rebounds for Providence. ;

sec-

.Heidelberg beats Marietta
to advance in OAC playoffs

Rqutar...uon adlon

C~BELLCONFERENCE

''

•.

' Jllnl.........._..,....,.,I,M...IUnioolO

Oblo Conference Tourn~meat

40 percent). At the. line, Rio
Grande netted 13 of 20 for 6S percent and the Bears were 92.3 per-·
cent (12-13).
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (85)- Gena
Norris, 1-4-2-17; Stacey Ritter, 53-13; Michelle Cro11se , 1-1 ·0-5;
Tricia Collins, 6-3·15; Stephanie
Gudol'f,' 2:2.3-l3; Lori Hamiltoa,
11-2-22. TOTALS .26-7-13-85.. •
SHAWNEE STATE (86) ~
Joy Salyers, 0-2·2; Annie Mains, 13·2-13; Jeaneuc McNelly, 1-0~2;
Tiffany Clayton, 2-2-0-10; Molly
Linville, 7-1-2·19; Trina MUZingo,
4·2-10; lenni Wessel, S-4·1,4;
Robin Bugg, 8-0-16. TOTALS 28-

TAKING AIM- Rio
Stacey Ritter (13) &amp;oel
liaalnlt a S b - Slll:e player as ~be taltes alai at the hoop durbli
Mollday nJpt's NAJA Dlvilloa I playoll' &amp;ame II: lh&amp; University
Rio Grande's Lyne Center, where the visiting Bean wva 86-15. Ritter wu oae 111 ftve Redwomen acorin&amp;la dooble llpres. (PbOto by
Kevill Kelly)

higll29 points and Temple frustrat- he left tl)e school unciCr a cloud of Stale (16-8, .S.:s !Iii Eight), which
ed Tulane with a 'tough zone· conltoversy at the end or last aea- r.allied from a six-point deficit in
defense for a 79-57 upset over the • son.
the second half. Kansas (21-5, 8·3)
No. 16'Green Wave.
.
In other Top 25 games, No. IB· stayed in the JIIIIIC behind reserve
"We just cooldn't get anythmg Iowa heat Penn State 74-S8 and center Greg Ostertag's 16 points,
out of our offense,'~ said Tulane No. 19 New Orleans edged West· ' Thii))Cn led Iowa State with 17 ·
coach Perry Clark.
·
· er.n Kentucky 71-67 in double -poiiltB.
·
Idris Jones ·~ 25 points and overtime.
UC Salta Barbara~
UC Santa Barbara upset No. 13 . Iowa St. 75, No, 7 Kanes 71
No. 13 UNL V 83
UNLV 86-83 as Tarkanian watched
At Ames, Fred Hoiberg and JIIS·
At Santa Barbara, the Gauchos
from behind the Santa Barbara IllS Thigpen each made a free throw beat the Rebels for only the fourth
· bench.~~ was the f~t UNLV g~e in the fulai2S ~and Holberg time in 29 me~tings. J:tay Kelly
Tarkan1811 has seen m Di:nOn smce 111adc a key defeDSJve play for Iowa ~ored 11 of h1s 13 pomts m the
seeD¢ half and had. IS assists for
the Giuchos (14-9, 7-8 Big West).
Duane Carter had 10 points and
eight rebounds for UCSB. J.R.
SE-71, Auaia ...J64
Rider led UNLV (17-4,10-3) with
S1. Lauia 11,.S.IWIIail '71, DT
24
points.
·
Wldlila S&lt; 'l:l.llnkl 65.
WiJ.-OraraBaJ S7,N. IllinoU 42
Tent pie 71), No. 16 Tulane 57
At Philadelphia, Temple (12-10)
Soutbwllt
led
all the way against Tulane (20TeuaAA:M'T1. Tau 57
5), which shot only 37 percent
Tuloa 69, OoiF... "
from the fJCld.
Far Wilt
Aaron McKie had 24 points and
ucs--16,UNLV13
11 rebounds for. Temple, while
Ohio 'high school ·
Pointer Williams scored 13 points
for Tulane.
. boys' basketball scores
No. 18 lOWI 74, Pena St. 58
Tournament action ,
At State College; Iowa's Val
111-1
ea. - 1 6 . C o . - 6 1
Barnes scored 33 points, including
DoJ. ColoMIWhllo "· Qoy. p,...,..
sill tht'!:e-pointtrs, and 1 Penn State
S1
'
llamillal 47. Cin. - - 43
fan was thrown 0111 of the arena for
t.J.noa!l,V...wlo-- 4 7
111.-rv
arguing
with an official. Barnes
~!l.P.udloii4P
a..nmu.n,w-...53
made II' of 12 shots from the field ,
C1o. l.ulhono Eu136, KitiWid 23
DI-D
S
Col~~mbt.aa CMlview 65, Howland
and all five of his free throws.
c,.,.= 74, W'UIIW River Vicw.S
0.., 16
Ooy, Nooluidp 60, Ooy, Curoll S1
Jeff Kindig, a Penn State sophoibilo-= .,
N....... JI,Lool-:16
more, was ordered to leave Recre·
w.,7!, Plol1a 63
s. awt.... SJr17, v.uo.. Sprinaa
ation HaU after cursin' at r.eferce
19
,
Dlwllk!R m
Sid Rodcheffer followmg a block

...,

..

l
I

· Ohio nien's'College., .
basketball scores .

llofiaftco I03, c..-.tia 65
Flndloyi..,MJdL. ~7~

IIIah ..
llklO ,...
·LA.I.aU..-Swaw ao 10:30p.m.

)

Yancouvar, I 0:.0

s..a~t•l6•••oc•,lp.m.

oo...r .. Dollu.l:lO p.m.

~
I
'

N.Y. Rlh&amp;m u
p.m.

Mld-Coadneat Coatoreace

-Yodl•lollwa-.1:30pr

I'

Do&amp;IGil at Butrllo. 7:40p.m.

· \VM: dey '
-lw·r.:a=7:30p.m.

~-·i&amp; W=hh,oa, 7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
llldlusa
l'aolloadllllioml.7:l0p.m.

.t

Wedoeodoy'• pmn

Pidt.dolpl!a oilladfonl, 1&gt;10p.m.

g•me with 22 points and was
r.esponsible for 11 of Rio Grande's
31 rebounds. Norris ended with 17
points,~ with IS, and Gudorf
and Riuer with 13 apiece.
Molly Linville led the Bears'
scoring with ,19 as Wessel had sill
of the I!CIIII' s 33 boanls. Mains was
credited with nine assistS.
Smallty noted that from a
COIIchinJ lllndpoint, "1 hate to see
it end, but we liave a good nucleiiS
coming beck and I'm excited about
the poasibilities presenred by the
student-athlotes who are interested
in our program."
·
The Redwomen were 47 percent
on field )IOib (32-68, three of 12
from the three for 2S percent) to
Shawnee.Stale's 45.8 percent (3372, sill or IS from the outside for

victories against four Top 25 qu.intets

postgame 116ws eonf~. '
Iowa Sial: rem81nCd perfect at
home by beating No.7 Kansas 7571. The Cyclones are 14·0 at
Hilton Collse~~m this season. .
Kansas pltiyed without starting
center Eric 'Pauley~ who injured his
left knee in pregame warm ups.
Pauick Richey started in Pauley's
place and ~ nine poiilts before
fouling out with 5:071eft.
Eddie Jones scored a career- .

preSsure-)!IICked competitions.

with a new nickname - "Lava
Jack." Nicklaus admits: ''I
couldn'tlceep it out of the lava."
He adds: "l'hysically,l knew I
wasn't q11itc ready:" .
.
He's had 10 ~liSt his SWUII· to
cope with his sciauca pains.
It's been frustralil!g for the star
who has won 70 PGA and five
Scnion IDUIIIIIIIICntB in his 31-year
professional career. His last PGA
title was the 1986 Masten; his last
major Senior PGA title was the
Open in 1991.
Last year, Nicklaus played· !n
'
'
just eight PGA Tour events. Best comper.e.
Star-class
sailing,
whicK
finish: tied for 29th in the Honda
Classic. In all, Big 1act wound up involves two-penon vessels that
223rd on the PGA ~oney list with are 23·feet ionJ!. is demandiJII and
competitive. fn fact, the last 20
just $14,868.
''Ninety-two wasn't a very good America's Cup champs have all . ·
year,'' Nicklaus says. H~ expects been accomplished Star-class
'
better in 1993: "Thr~running sailors.
and stretching, I've
hard 111:
getting myself back, and my hip .,
back in shape to be able to do the
things I need to do.''
.,, ..
What's ahead? "I'U play 9uitc a
bit of the Florida swmg,' says
Nicklaus. "Doral and Bay Hill, fer
sure. Quite possibly Honda. I'm
•
alao going to play The Tr8dition,
'
the Masters and the PGA Seniors
Championship.''
· • ~ the wony over abuse in
Slate Auto's akeady
the ttainina of yoong world-class
tow~canbe
gymnasts also incl11de older highradlielld~!"'" by
school girlS and college-age
ln8uring bolh your car · -,
women?
'andhomewilhtheS••
,:
Not really, iecOrding to experts.
I Auto CompanieS.
t
There's a world or difference
j
between the young girls who are
Lei Ill lei you just
elite perfonnen and other competi. tors.
.
how much Your savings
can
Thill's wbll: Susan True, a for. . be.
mer women's gymnaslics coach at
''
Wabash University, told the NCAA
News. She's now assis!ant director •
of the Nlllional Federadon of State 1
Hif.! School Allodat!O'II. '
I
'The one lhinl you clon'tlee at · .
the high-school or collcglale level ;
Is the same level of intenalty,"
214 EAST MAIN
accordinJI to True. "That's not to
say that they don't work u hard,
POMEf'OY
but it's simply a whole different
!
. . . . .87
psychO.''
Crltlca worry especially about ~
pre-teena •nd yount:,:ns who
'
.leave borne, lrlin fer
011 end
..... Aide .
with llem•nding coacbes, risk
Injury while trylna to maintain
· child: like figures and travel to
~~

rniiy

a

Randy Kaylor has played weD ond-half poilUs. He recendy had 32
lately, while Matt Martin, Wes against SOuthern.
Arballgh and Mickey Goode proThe pmlolnjnanUy senior lineup
vide bench strength.
:
also Includes double-digit ~orer
Eastern has- won just three Eddie Paige, a lure-hinded threat
games, but played well with several from the fane. Brad Dallgilerty is
tollllh opponenu, 'especially River also a tou&amp;h '!COring threat, along
VaOey, Fairland and the second with. Eric Plant; Willie, Peyton,
half . Southern.
Manny Merdde and Bill McGrath.
led by Br.uce Lanning, Peyton is a JfC1t post player and
a talented point guard and offen. shot blocker, but often gets in foul
sive threat. Lanning can drive well trouble.
or. SlOp and pop the three pointer.
Eastm1 coach Greg Ullman and Lanning was held scoreless the first his !lOOps are looking forward to
half at Eastern, but sccred 17 sec· .the rematch.

·

out on Redwomen ·as Shawnee State wins 86-85

An inescapable truism of athlctics is thll: when two good teams go

. Southern to get rematch with lrimble in D-IY ·sectionals

- &amp;~~ defcaled Trimble 83-39
. Saturday ni$ht and ycstenlay movin&amp; up to runth place in the DivisiOII IV Sllle rantinp, the RacineSouthern Tornadoes are bubbling
·witb confidence going into
. Wednesday night's rematch with
·the TOIIICIIS
· Southem.(16-4) the lllp seed in
·Jhc Division IV ~1811dcr sectional toumiiiiiCnt, will lllke on Trimble
in the 8:15 nightcap 111: Alexander
''HighSchool .
East«n &lt;3-16) faces second seed
~ (11·9) in the preliplimry at
~&amp;X30. The two winners will square
:llrTuesday. March 2 at A\e1811dcr.
•'· Howie Caldwell's Tornadoes,
:iiaving handily defeated Trimble
.' l4-16) and Federal Hocking this
f;&gt;eetend, moved up one spot in the
· ~iated Pl'ess state rankings to
~itlnth. Ironically, the Tornadoes
:1»oved lhead of Portsm011th Cl~y
16-4), a team they defeated m
· Jlaeine
three weeks ago. Clay lost
..

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--1·-._.-·
-----·-

• . . . . . . . ., I

'

NIW INIAIIIIPA11101'1-a.

.

......,.

., __,,

1TLB III.UIAWU -

All·

By Tile Assoclatecl Preas
HeidclbeQr's Mike Hunt passed
a career mi1estone - and also
extended his career - in the fust
round of'the Ohio Conference playoffs.
Hurst, 1 senior, ~ 3S pOints
to ptJSS the t,~nt mark for his
career as the S
1Princes overwhelmed Mariell8 109-69 Monday
night in Tiffin.
. Heidelbera (10-15) advances to
the qDarterlinals and plays at
Hiram•W~y.

Marieaa (5-19) tied the game II
6 with 16:56 left in the flfSl half,
then Hcldelbtq went on a 10-0 run
capped by a tip-in by Hum at
12:11.
.
.
Mall Adams scored 16 points
while DotiiiO Edntondlon llld Dar·
rellllllucll had 13 apiece for the
Student Prlncel.
Curt Plum- JCOied lS points
for the Pioneen and Patrick Judy
had 13.
.
In another fint-routld OAC
playoff game, Duane Sheldon
ICOIId IS poin11 to help Baldwin·
Wllllll:e delea&amp; Mount Unioo 61-50
II:BenL

Tbe Yellow Jacketa (13-12),
.

,,

who meet regular season champion
Ohio N01diCID on Wednesday, also
had 12 points aqd 12 rebound~
from Willis Brown.
Mouiu Union (9-16) led 23-2i
in the flfSl half before B-W surged
shead for good Scou Gobely anjl
Todd Simon each 1cored nine
points to lllp the Purple Raiders, , ,

LEGAL NOTICE

.•

The Public Utilities CommissiOn of
Ohio has set for pubHic ~ring
Case No 93-01-El-EFC. to reYiew
the fuel procurement practices ' ·
and policies of Ohio Power·"
. Company, the operation of ~~·.
Electric Fuel Component, and '
relaied · matiers. This ........... Is
scheduled to begin at the "·
Com~ offices 1110:00 a.m.,:,
on March 16, 1993.
,_,
All interested pirtles will be givln
an opportunity to be heard. •'
Further Information may bt •'
obtained by contacting the '
' Commission at 180 East Braid ·:
Street, Columbus, Ohio
:;

·-·"'

4326&amp;-0573,
.

'

�...

The Dally Sentinel-Page 7

\- ·
-~

p

-

•
- ~

'
I

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I

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I

-·- · · - - - -

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

TUesday, February 23, 1993
Page-6

I
•
••

R~ader:

.

.

If you .don't like what you
see on TV, do something about it

I

Dar Au l.e"'lera: I am aiel:: ci
the aex, violence, profanity and
nudity on telcviaion. I cannot
believe the thinla that are beiDa
shown on TV these dlys. It is
dis8'"~~"1·

LaD defS'

I'm aurel1111 not the only petiOli
who Qllll IIIia filth ltOpped. Here
. 8lC, I few sugeaions on how to get
it off the wbc. Pleaae pint tbein.
When you aee ~ on TV and do what we CIIIIO get this II'Uh
~ is nffensive. wrile or call lhc • off of television. •• J.R.. SANDBilliOn and ay you didn't lire what BORN,IND. ·
•
you saw and you doa't Willi to aee
DEAR SANDBORN· I too

~SIDIDAY·fie~

Choir win perform at TriDity
at 7 p.m. Sunday. The 38
ar•nddtlldren of area

residents. Aadrea Elberfeld, fourth from left
seated, Is the eraadd•uehter of Robert and
Charlotte Elberfeld. Eric: RuueU, Dot ldeatllled
In the picture, Is the arllldsoD ~Mary Kautz.

.. C Concert Choir to perform

~ : ' The Marietla College Concen ·Knoxville, and AtlanUL
.
~ I ~l)!lir will present a concert SunTheir tour program features a
t ~ at 7 p.m. 8l Trinity Qmgrega- broad range of styles spanning
,._tiQDat Church, Second and Lynn nearly four centuries from the
Streets, Pomeroy.
RenaiSsance .composer VictQria, to
, - · 'fbc; aclccred choir ensemble of one of our century's masters, Ran: 38 ~ben will include gre11 and dati Thompson. The group's musi• meet masterworks, according to · cal energy takes die audience from
: ~ Mark Davis, department the pulse of Bach through the
~ "cfrOirman 1nd director of romantic lhrob of Brahms to lhe
1 e~ 8l the college.
contemporary power of Copland,
·•
Although most of the under· fll1ally emerging into lhe irrcpmJS·
: lflllduates in the choir are majoring ible vitality of African-American
tn 410me field other than music, spirituals.
their common commitment to
In his sixth year as director,
: excellence of jnterprelation and . Davis himself, an operatic tenor,
: dynamic perfo~ has marked holds a bachelor's degree in music
!hem as. uni~e and. gr&amp;l)ted ~ from the Cleveland Institute of
· rave remws m preVlOIIS tour ctnes Music and two master's degrees
I llllc:lt as Jloslon, Philadelphia, New
from the Ohio State Unive~sity.
'-Von:, Washington D.C., Cleveland, Along wilh his solo oratorio activi-

1 I!

ties, he has been a member and
soloist wilh lhe Cantari ensemble
of Columbus; the Old Stone
SingersofClevelsndandherecently returned fron\ a Carnegie Hall
performance of the Berlioz
Requiem as a member of the
Robert Shaw Festival Chorus.
The 1993 Concen Choir is made
up of students from virtually every
discipline, including music, tradi- '
ti~ ~beral ans f~elds 111\d ~
medtctne, mass medta and
petroleum engineerin~. Marietla
CoUege is a piYIIC D8llonaUy rec· ognized liberal w coUege located
in Southeastern Ohio.
·
The concert is free IUld open to
lhe public wid! an offering received
to help defray tourinJ expenses and
to encourage the chou's future.

anythi"' !ike it qain, If It !J a
commerctal that Ia offenatvc.
COIIIICI the lllvatiser and say you
wi!' not '"9: the products until it
qwtsldvatiDIIntllalllliDIIC!I'. You
can get the advcniser's lddreas and/
or phone number off of lhe IJI'O(Iuct
pac•aportaa in !he store.
The addl
sand phone numbers
for tho three major television
netwults are: .
1\BC: Audtence Information
Department, 77 W. 66th SL, New
York, N.Y. 10023;, ~12)456-7~77.
CBS: QS Audience Semcea,
524 W.
S'-• New York, N.Y.
· 10019; (212)97S-3247.
NBC: NBC, 30 Rockefeller Plaza,
New York, N.Y. 10112; (212)6642333. .
.
The operator or library wiU have
lhc addrea and phone number for

( Mardi Gras madness peaks in New Orleans
I

By MARY FOSTER
Associated Press Writer
· -: )'iEW, ORL~ANS - .New
I Orleans Mardt Graa craztness
: cUmbed toward ill peak today, w!th
• 11 splashy pllllldes,,a transveabte
: beauty contest and more boozy,
' bawdy ~velry on tap.
I . Fat Tuesday ~estivi~ were to
I. ldck off early this mommg, when
I ,jazz clarinetist Pete Founlain and
1 !!hit-Half-Faa Walldng Club were to
. wing down fashionable St.
Charles Avenue.
At midnight, police and trash
t sweep .~ugh lhe French
~:;
, ushering m lhe austerities
•
L
·
~
··we don't worry about how
::. we'll feel on Wednesday," said
"' one reveler, Maria Sawyer. "We
~ have 40 days to get over it, all of
~i LeiiL And tllal's about how long it
will take some people.' '
· More. dian 2 million revelers

I

~

were expecled to swarm into New
Orleans today. Wilh postcard-per·
feet weather forecast, this Mardi
Gras was expected to be a hedonisi's delighL
·
•
Eleven parades roll in and
around the city today. One .of die
most popular and well-attended
aqnual events is a. beauty contest
for transvestites in the French
Quarter.
After nearly two weeks of daily
paradea and parties, thousands of.
tourists and residents got a chance
to slow lhe pace Monday at Lundi
Gras, a day of music, roex.and fu:eworts along lhc Mississippi River.
"It's crazy and wonderful,"
said Dorolhy Davis, 74, of Cleveland. "I've heard about it for years,
but you can't know what it's like
until you actually go through one.
There's nothing like it in Cleveland, !hat's for sure.''
Sharon WiUiams; 29, of Hous-

m
l). Wind Symphony presents
~orld premiere of Three of a Kind

Three of a Kind was connois·
· sioned by the three soloists with
I financial support from the Ohio
: University Research Committee
and the Ohio Arts Council. According to the composer, the original
.~ for lhc piece came from David
·~wis. The trio had been on tour

j

tl

Seedlings available

Westvaco Corporation will
C make Loblolly pine tree seedlings
t for spring 1993 planting in Wash;l~. Meigs, Gallia, and Alhcns

!!.SoWJitles.

Landowners may obtain
seedlings at a cost of $16 per
. The minimum order that
wJil.be II:CCpred is 1,000 seedlings.
Orden
will be acCepted from now
11 until Man:h IS, 1993.
·
1
Landownerawhowishtooblain
l seedlings may do so by eon~linl
1your local WesiVaco 'i6eaentative
t W. E. Matics at 304- 3-9073 or
, by ' contacting Westvaco Fine
I Papen Division, Roure I, Box 41,
: Washington, W.Va.,.26181.
' Landowners wiih old fields !hat
: are idle or have areu where timber
: haa been harvested may want to
• ~.... plantinJ tree leedllnp 10
.~J)iof.ecl tfae envtroDment and provit!e a polelltial future cash crop.

.

Performers named
AMES, Iowa (AP) - Bryan
Adams, John Mellencamp, Neil
Youn1. Paul Simon, Ringo Swr,
Tammy Wynette, Ricky Van Shelton and Travis Triu 1re among lhc
performers on lhc biD for',l;lalm 4id
•

The Second Marine Division
Association is searching for aU former or present Marines who were
ever in or auached to the Second
Division. The Second is a highly
decorated division, known' for its·
many historical baitles and engagements, such as Guadalcanal,

Limit 2 Per cu ..omer

20

My ex-husband is Sl. MiS$Y IIIII lilY
ex had a baby boy a (ew months
180·
My question is this: Since my son
Skeeter will be lhe baby's uncle,
wh8l would the ll!abv be to my other
three children? Would he ·be a
.ncpbcw, a lilodlor or half llld ha1f'1
-CONFUSED, L,AKELAND, FlA.

To place an ad

biow up in a clr explosion or Jet
Rated PG
lhrown in jail ilnd the next mommg
•••V2 (Diit nlllve)
he always wakes up in his hotel
Columbia Pictures
.
room to the melodious (NOT!)
(Now pltzylng at IM Spring Valley sounds of Sonny and Cher singing
Cinema 7. Checlc local listings for "l Got You Babe" on his radio
time)
·
alarm clock.
Life without consequences.
Movie review
With a gift like th.at, what more
· . By Kevin Pinson
could anyone want?
·
Conners.
wants
his
lovely
pro. .
.
ducer,
Rita
(MacDowell).
Using
. DtdJa e~er see lhat episode of
.Star Trd. The Nut Gen~r~tlon lhe fact !hat he can strike out as
where. the lJ.S.S. Enterpnse.geu many timea as he wanu and start
stuck ~ !I time loop and the crew fresh the next (same) mornina;.
keeps liYJD8 the same day over and Conners IIJCII trial and error to learn
his target's likea and dislikes in an
ovetl
attempt
to enamor her to him.
Apparently t~e producers of
The
film
chan1es s~ ralher
Groundhog Day did.
.
.
abruptly
once
Conners plan SlarlS
Groundhog ~ay, starnng B1!l
\O
work.
The
sudden downs.hift
Murray and And!~ MacDowell, ·IS
the Slt?IY of ~lcVlSlon WC8lher per- from a f!!CY comedy to a sen'!us
sona!UY Phd Conners (Munay) roman~ ts ai!Dost4 enough U, gtve
who ts SC!'t.~ co~er die Groundhog one whtplash. . .
.
Murray ~lays hts ~ off-the·
Day fesbvlUes ID Punxsuta~ney,
Pa. and Y"Bk;es up every momm1,10 cuff, buUwhip-lllDgued wisecracker
lhe realizatton lh~ he has to live as we have seen him do in every·
thing fro"! !t!tat6alls to G.hostFeb. 2 aU over Bgaln: . .
Once &lt;~,ver the tnlltal ~hock, b~tm. Thts ts not~ complaint~onners.l;eants he can ~ hts ~­ h~ s 100 percent cnJ&lt;?Yablc tn lhe '
life Twthght Zone cptsode to hts mcbe he crea1Cd for hunaclf almost
advan~e- he.robs ~ored cars, ;J.1,ears ago on f aturday Night
plars ch~ . With tnuns and leads
MacDoweU also give a fine per·
police on swcidal car~·
formance,
but lhe true disappoint·
He can electrocute htmself,

.. .

CLosED SuNDAY

.......,. ...........
r..

. • PriM tlod
oleopllol...._.lo .....,.. pr1eo
• 7 polo&amp;U..typoo.Jr ....

• lw'l

.

Willie Nelson announced lhe
lineup Monday for the April 24
concert at Cyclone Stadium.
Farm Aid has raiacd lnore than
SIO.S million for family fa1mers
since it was sWied in 198S by Nelson, Mellencamp and YDID18 ..

1

1o- ...,...U.io lor ....n .rt.r lint dor (.... k

446-G. . . .
S67Alz

,...,.,...,... . ..,, ...... owuiCdoa
• Ado !Mt · -... poid Ia ..._ ....

CoN otTioulo
• A

.....

,,.

v.u,.

I

675-1'1. 1'1

992 ¥ • ' ' fUt/

"'

...,

451 t.o.

sa-Port'-·

516 .... c.....
T1S-II-

2~111ot.

247-LotootF. .
949 I· I

IIIJS.I'I.·895-11'·...

T42 .......

937-lloolrolo

611 lr-H= Dill.
3'19-'lf-

985

Call 614-992·
6637 .
St. Rt. 7

Tht prico

a

r-

..... -~ the front door of the
Court Hou.. In Pomeroy,
Ohio, on the 11th day of
Me1ch, 111113, ot 10:00
o'ctoclc 'A.M~ the loltowlng
1811da .... -menlo, to-wit:
Sllualeln .,. Townehlp of
Orang•, In the County of
M•lga end ltata of Ohio.
Being In •••11• No. 1~,
Section 33, Town 4 of the
Ohio Company'• PurcllaM,
and boundad and - ao fcttowa:
hglnnlng altho South~
•••• corn•r of tha Ianda
formerly ownocl by J. A.
Wealllltttn Secdon No. 33;
th.,.. North 101 roda to
tho County Road; thonoo
north 81 degr- W•t 18
rode and 18 llnka; then.,.
South 71 dog,_ - t 15
rocla and 14 llnka;
South 41111 des.- W•t 21
rocla and 23 llnka ; then.,.
South 87 degr- Weal 37
.rocfa Md 511nke to lhoforka
of tho road; thence aouth
'"' dog,_ Eaat 41 roda
and 4 llnka; thenoo South
8% dogr- Eaat 27 rod a
8lld 18 Hnka; . , . _ Eaal711
rocla end 11% IInke to the
plao• of b•glnnlng,
oontalnll!ll forly-llve (451
-mO.. or laoL
DEED REFERENCE:
Volu.,. 330, Page1i, Malga
CoW~ty Deocl Racordo.
Audllor'a Parcat No.: 10·

1100 ond
ftnn:irlll ol up .. - ot ......,._
- bo pooolble ... quolllylng PI&lt;·
aon ID ~ ¥efY nice home an 3% acHI In
Rll:lnt. 4BR,3-.2-.1W118d1
BR IIIL p.op.ny lncludll 4,800 oq. It f1lrm
bldg.

•

Col 814-1182·71041Dt

"

:::,r._--1

SENIOR PHOTOS·
PUBLISHED IN THE .

• 1990, 1991 or 1992
graduation editions
may be picked up
·during 'office hours at
The Daily Sentinet
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.

KeviD P11110n Is a statr writer
for 0hlo Villey Publlsblna. .. j

Uses maiden name

PubliC Notice

oX:·

Ill.,.,.

""

PubliC Notice
ut, the- N. 511 dog. 15'
41" E. 351.2t' to an Iron
1'*- B. 43 dog. 10 E.
...,.~... to on Iron Pin ....
dog. 35' w.
Ia a point In
centerline of Columbia
Townahlp Road 11, poooi!!P
•n Iron pin eet at 107.13,
"'"""" wllh ukl ..,.d N. 74
clag. 21'
25UT to
tho polnl of beginning and
oonlllnltlg 8.771 - ·
Subject to ••
and right. of •r of racord.
Deed ' Reference: Being

P!n

s...

·

tr w.

part ol th•
r•l ••tote
d•orlIn Volume
221,
P•oe 113, Melga County

DeodR-"L

.

LEIISINCil OF
AlllOIIOiliLE FOR
ntE MEIGS COUNTY

DEPAATIIENT OF

HUIIAH SERVICES
S•al-.1 bldo will bo
recetvoct by the Melga
County
loud
of
C6mmlo•Ionera In their
office located In the
Cou"""- ltoond St...c.
"-Y• Ohio G7ell unUI
12:00 noon on the 3ril day
.of llercll, 111113 and 111 1:00
p.m. op onoctlty lho C*k 01
allld Boord and ....S aloUd
for th• teaotng of a 1WS
automoblla 'for tha Melgo
County Department of
Hu.,.n Seo wloao. llld blda
tobequotadlorath-~r
..._period.
Bpt ctllcllllon0

Ya:::.IIDING MOW&amp;

YJ

PUSH IIOWEI
Htdo•UCylo
EOIO riuums &amp; SAWS

SALES AND SERVICE
Porta end Seo •ice for ell
,.,.... and modeta of
lnc;to,. end flltm

ioiiis
EQUIPMENT

-.••.
y

Snodgrass

Ohio

•• Ill•

614·949~2202

Parent's Pay
setatMJHS

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOllE SITES IIKI
TRAILER SITES, .

LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INBTAu.ED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

CARPENTER SERVKE .

Lite • Medicant • Cancer • Fire • Heal~h'·~
Accidenf •Annuity, IRA • Mortgag~ .. ~
.

•

•

'

"I

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. Agen:t.J;
I

· '· · ~

Box 189

~

1
" '\' ..,
.

Middleport, Ohio 45760 ·~·· .
(614) 843·5264

47269 St. Rtl 241 .. I y, Mile OH ··~ 7
. 111ru Ci!ellor 01 If. 24.1 .. :~.::

PH. 614·985·3949

. :r

NOW OFFERin:.....
&lt;~
OIL UD LUBE SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR AND ROUtiNG .-~~:
2/15/93/1

CHARLIE'S

SMALL DOZER
WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK

atdUMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES

Pontll'oy, Ohio

POOR BOY TIRES
ALIHMEIT- 4 whHI

Dual Exhaust with Gloss Pacb -; ~
$109.95.+ rax
'" &lt;~
Co•putar laltl•dn.t· Stret1, Shocb;·:·':
;;~.:
Ca•bor lrru1hlng
Check our Price or We Both Lose ; "
Jr4110CATIOII JO SDYI YOU llllll

'""

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!

POIIEIOY, OH.
2-3-83·

·~~""""~""'""~"""""~

I!O:tMI

(304) 773·5533

ASK FOR

CHR!~

11

NOW OPEN

MYSTIQUE
TANNING
DEPOT STREET
RUTLAND
742-3190
Call for
· Appointment

CALIFORNIA
· TANS

.............
15 S.llietiS 'IS

......
._. nw.... ,..,.,

1rn11

Plea fUI llattle of
'

949·2823

•FIREWOOD

BILL SlACI
.992-2269

mo.

••

WICK'S
SERVICE
36970 Iaiii• load
PotWOJ,OIIII

SIZED UMESTONE

992·3470
OWNER:

Jeff Wkkenlt•

BISSELL BUILDERS
,
I

I&amp;C IICAYAIIIII
IUu.DOZING

COMMERClAL and RESIDENTIAL .
. FREE ESTIMATES
.:,(,
614·949~2101 I 949·2160
or 915~3139
(llo Sel!llay CaH•I

HAUUNO: Um.tone,

~~=:..~

••• 614et92·55tl

THE

ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE.

992-5858
698-1290

,,

~~ ~ :

. " i,

\

CARE FOR

fJI

,,

2112192Mh

·•ciOWAVI Oftl
Here, CQUrtesy li lht IRS, are tomt ways 10 lnct11111 )OUr tall 1 IIIIJ be dlductlble.
mund, or dtc- )our tax bill, on your l99l Ill urn:
lldlriJ • Dl 'Ia~ 'bi may be ablt 10 claim thlt cracilt If
lbmad h-1• Cndlt. 'bo may be entitled IDa aedlt of )OU'rt 65 or older; or If you are retired on dlllbllity and ~
'
up 10 $2,2111f your ldjlllllld f'OIIIncQIIII! Is less than $22.370
permanan!ly and tetally dlllb!M whtn you retired. ' "' · .
and you hM • quallfylnl child.
.
Ill ctFDitlc lllnt- Thb -.'t -you~ but Will ,.t ~a
lellqlbur Hollll. 'bJ may be able ID poltpone the tall
refund faall; IIIUIIIy lbovtthl'll-kuflltwei'ICIIW the return.
on part or all olyour pin, or maybe eoen &amp;" ~ breaks If • , There .,.. many more. credlu and daductlons you' tllould
you're 55 or aide'
·
kriOw about. Call us 1011{,. at ,._~1040 fi)r........., 111
c.ulty
suffiAd
~
any tax ~UIItlon, Sat your tax 'pac~.
from MnU such as ftres, 1IOI'IIadoes,
~~-~=
· "'
~~-~'~.
psdt11Jis on any li the 11'10111) 'lli'!".IC
11 abOoe.
hurrtanes, floods and car occldenu
,.,..,..~""'
..., ...,.,.,. for

INC~ ..· ,.Jo

New Homes • VInyl Siding · .: "
New Garages ·· Replacement Wind~
Room Additions • Roofing ..,. 1

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEM$
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER .
UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES

USED RAILIOAD

'"

AMERICA.N GENERAL· LIFE an,l
ACCIDENT INSU~NCE COMP-

KELLER'S CUSTOM
·
BENDING . ·

992·7553

•LIGHT HAULING

,I

61

12/3119211fn

WAIT ADS
·AlE . . . .
11TH IAIIGAIG

SHRUB &amp; TREE
· TRlM and '
REMOVAL

'

·~·

UCINE, OHIO ·

.

The p....,l_ ore locoted
1!1• Rou.la 3, Atbony, Ohio.
The proporty to oppnt..d at
anon thouaand . dollara
(S7,0GO.OO), and eannclt be
aold for l•u then TWO·
THIRDB Qf that amounL
The JIIOJIOitJ Ia to be ~ .
proparty of the·
,...... to ""' obovlacotlan,
order of aale In
frosn the
Court of
Ohio, and
tho

I

:~:

and Office Seating

FOR SALE

YOUNG'S

1211, ... 23, 3to

Upholstery;~

". Helping You Th Recover Your lt~vestmenr:_.:
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto ~ ~

..... HARDWOO..
·Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

Ja- M. SoutobJ,
Sherllf of Meigs County,

...

• j

6181'1211

11od OHOMS 001 .

,,
I
'

1/X1/'il3

FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED
1128193/tfn

11eoc1 Retoronae: Volume
217, Pogo 715, Molga
eo...tr Deed Reoorda.
The premteea to b•
oonvayod ••• lnad ••
p.,cat Number 05.00004

a.-.._

10 :00 a.m .. 3 : 00p . m .

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY

NOTICE TO BIDDERS .•

fOf aald au...-!le may be
obltllnocl from lho Clerk of
thelhlgo County BOard of
Commlaalonara b•tweon
the hour• of 8:30 o.m. end
4:30p.m., Monday through
Frtday.
Tho Comml..tonero are ·
bound by hd-llaw which
prohibita COIIIractlng from
an -bllolnMnl !hoy or a
family IIIOIIIIIar may hove 1
flnanolalln-ltl.
.
The Commlaalonero
,._,.the rlilht to lljacl
any II blda ancllor to ac:c.pt
tho - t bid fur the lnl8ndod
purpoM.
110314
Mory E. Hobollller, Cl.tc
Said reel estate Ia
Melga County
appralaod at: $20,500.00.
Comml..tonon
Terma of Sola: Calli
(2111, 23, 2to
Real ootota connot b.O
aotd lor , _ than -thlrda
of tha appralaod vllue:

--·nt•

TMursd ay ·Sat urday -

UCINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOTS .
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

Public Notice

Public Notice

tu--.,. .

HOURS~
Sund~y . M onday - Clo 5ed
T ues~ a y • W• d nes&lt;Jay • Frldav - 9: :l0 a .m .• 5 : JO P.m.

' '

985-4473
667e6179

'

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICADON
1

I

Vt

104 Mulberry Avenue
Pomeroy , OH 45769

flEE ESYIIIA1ES

667~

doo V.U,. S..liool, ........ •-li,GIO 1oo-

Bl' LLETI:\ BO.\ RD

~~~- -

R1pa/r

Stoll &amp; CHIIIIN

..

241111ac...le

~

lloppr Ado
Yud9olooi

'llooiOih...
I plooo,l Ia .... Collipolo
T"'"- (...,a Ch lllool Dloploy, B - CoN •• Lopl
~) wllloho opp0or ill 1M foWt "-'-'B....... ud

The Association wants to mate
contact wid! lheae men and women
in order to inform !hem of lhc as~
elation benefits. The association is
not just a social organizaiion,
although many old buddies have
been located and friendships
r.enewed through the process. A
scholarship fund is set up for
dependents of deserving families of
f?rmer and present Second DiviSion personnel and lhe association
also publishes a ~imonthly paper,
keepmg members tnformed on various activities, veteran benefits eu:.
A reunion is h~ld each year, :.Vith
the 1993 reumon scheduled for
Denver, Colorado in S~ber.
Any person who is m, hss ever
served with, or been attached to,
the Second Marine Division is
url!ently requested IO'C!llllaet: Bill
Smith, 21500 Lassen St., #168
Chatsworth, Calif. 91311, or cali
(818) 341-0504.

Parent's Day will be observed
Friday at Meigs Junior High
School.
Activities will begin at 8:4S •
with a welcome from Bruce Wil·
son, pripcipal. ~ will be music
by lhe blind and choir of the achool
and the Student council pre.sldent
will speak about lhe lhin1s which
tha!poup has been doing.
. · Piaq~ will be preacnled to vartous bus10enea who have been
involved in lhe achool program and
· !here will be several Jtudents recognized for out-of·achool acdvities,
such as scouting.
1
r Following lunch in lhe c8fetala
to which parents are invired, 20
minutea sessions or each d•y'a
classes wiU be held and ....,ts are
invited to join !heir child for lho8e.

Friday

Gallla Cotuity Melp Cu '1 11- Co., WV
An• Code. 614 Ana Code 614 Area cOde 304.

r... ...... -clarul....,lapO,..). c.Jlloolorw2:410p.• .

ment is Ollis Elliet as Larry, Con·
ners' cameraman. His performance
is fmc, but his role is restrained to
keep him from casting any shad·
ows in Murray's spotlight
·We get to see Elliot's patenred
Born Loser persona only llriefly,
and that is disappointing to us Dave
Letterman fans who find him hilarr
iilus.
•
Groundhog Day will not see its
shadow and should stick around
until spring. .
r

na:

FOR SALE

&lt;o!llflele
••-•li•a

or ..!0011

s~~

SIZED UMESTONE

..............
-c;....... .

IW•o.m. Th~y

.• Ado ....... 1M .....,,... od , _ ....... ,..., .w
........ 41ooo..t r.. .... paid laul.....
~ tiwAdo• Ci-warudF.....Iodo...olorlS-n.willM

DEAR LAla!LAND: Tbe baby is

t.•,;:.!MI

IISSILL &amp; IUUE
COISTIUCTIOI

1:00 p.m. We:lneday

Sun&lt;bly Paper

POUCIES

related two ways to your exh'II....MI'a Olher cblldren. He is their
Jlllanal half-brodler as .well a their
matemll half.,;~ e.....,.
I hope you iipjli«iate this ~
bec•nr ii toot my aaff quite a while
to flpfC it nuL
Delr Alia Laden: Wilh great
inraat rve lead your lrticles on
breast cancer in both men and
women. Plesac lllviae your n:lllc:rs
th8l pelS, too,lhnuld be eUminCd ·
for lumps in their breasts. 11011 two
belovect terriers to !his dreaded
diacaoe. Tell your n:lllc:rs if tbey ftnd
any lumps to hive a vet checlt !heir
pets ll once.- SALT LAKE CrrY
DEAR SLC: Right on. Tblllks for
lhc lip.
F~r~l to lllllt Si/llle of YDfll'fa·
vorileAMLa!wierscoiJUMS? "Hug. g,u tutd Dooms" is the DII.I'IM'.
Stlld a st/f-addrtssed, long, biiSi·
ness-~e enwlope and a check or
mofWY order for $5 (1/lis irtellldes
postage 111111 lltwl«•g) 10: Nuggeu,
c/o ANI LtW/ers, P,.O. 80% 11S62, .
Chicago, .Ill. 60611..()562. (In Can~
ada, send $6.)
;

INDIANAPOUS (AP) _Marllyn Q._yle, like the ftrst lady, is
using her maiden name lheae daY!.
The wife of former Vice President Dan Qua~ye
is oin1 by the
name MariJ Tucltcr
1
Th8l
Jtate.
ment issued by
law ftrni'ICrie
DeVault Alexander ind GapehJ
announcing that Mrs. Quayle has
signed 01111 1 par1ne
When ~ident ~linton's wife
g~ to Washtngton. _she ~turned to
~~::,.!~e name Htllary ~odham

1:00p.m. Salurday
1:00p.m. MOllday.
1:00 p.m. 1\oolday

MOtlllay Paper
Twoclayl'llper
wrr ·~y l'llper
Thunday Paper
Friday l'lper

MoN. Ibn hi. 8A.II.-5P.M •• SAT.6-12

LeatQ91

DAY lii!RlRE PIJBUCATION

COPY DI!ADLINE

Call992-2156

Evely groundhog h~s its day
Grnundhoa Day

~~~

Clle1llire, OH.

~=-~ns:.,~tly, Pana-

As Phillips recalls, "David's
ides was to have a composition that
brought everyone togelher for a big
splaShy number. I bel8111he project
with lhe spirit and music of lhese
two jazz-influenced American concertos deep in my thoughts. The
musical pelSOOa)ities of lhese !Me
wonderful soloists also influenced
many details of lhe composition."
Mark Phillips has acbieved
intcmatibnal recognition for his
awardwinning orchestral and
chamber music compositions. His
orchestral composition Turning
won lhe 1988 Barlow International
Competition arid has been per·
formed and broadcast by the St.
Louis Symphony Orchestra and the
Cleveland Orchestra, Leonard
Slllllcin conducting. Olher awards
and distinctions include lhe 1990
Delius Chamber Music Award,
ASCAP Standard Awards, and
ASCAP Raymond Hubbell Award,
and fellowships from the Ohio Arts
Council and lhe Indiana Arts Commission.
Also on the program will be
works by Strauss, Hindemith,
Holst, and Delio Joio.

VI.

Marines sought
by .aSSOCl'atz'on

other ~ IICI'NCib.
Lot • aa Amliricw lite acdon

b

····led•
, .......••.•
,. Spttltl
14 SESSIONS- 114

&amp;:;!!!~~~;~~~~~:'::

with the Ohio University Wind
Symphony, performi.ng the
ArtieShaw clarinet concerto and
George Gershwin's Rhapsody in
Blue.

ton stood in the hot sun Monday
wearing a shon black skin, long .
gold.beads and~ feather mask, _
bobbmg and weavmg to lhc iounds
of Trombone Shorty and lhe Jazz
All Stars.
"I've been here lhree days and
gone to four P8lades. I've danced
with people I don't know and
kissed people 1 don't know for
beads. It's Wonderful," she said.

"nd

rV,

c;1ep1am the J11b11e 011
ba It
vitally lmponant tbal we not
inlllrfere with the rights of those who
like it '
I would not want to live in a
country where the government
decided what Mnnle could lead or
loot at.
,.....,..
Writlen prolestS to the sponsors
are effective, but the mOlt immccli8lC eena0r is simply to uae the off
buaon.lf what y011 see or bel!r docs
not meet with your approval, in Jca
than 1 aecond, the prt1age is gone.
Dear ADD Landera: I have
beca marriCd twice and divoo:ed
twice. 1 had a girl and boy by ·
my first husband. 1'1.1 call them
Missy and Skeeter. My second
marriage )I'Oduced two girls and one
boy.
My aecond husband fell .in love
with Missy the daughter from my
fust 11181T1aic. She is 35 ~ old.

.!)~o;. ~hoe &amp;.

Quality ·
Stoae Co.

niiYCI IINIR

au.-a

lf1ii.:

IIWSIIVICI I
H2-53Jier
tl5·3561

.......
,.. .....
......,....
117Lhu•• h.

316/'IIOilln

Guaranteed Scholarship Mo~
for all college bound studentail•nu
'
, •.t

'regaftlless of income ·: •.&lt;
"IJQ8Idleas of grades ;··&lt;:"~
"plus $20k guaranteed loan v;
•ragardJeea of cradll
·;&lt;;~&lt;!
To colllct your IChollrllllp monty · "w
· ·
call814-8~3558
.... w
Optn Mon.·Frl. 10.1 or Sat. 1D-4
'

:t-1

�•
!lliilllllllll!t.

•

Ohio

32 Mobile ltomll
forSIIe

" it

1893

Houllhold

23,1993

Ohio

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlahl

The Wo-:ld Almanac• Crouword Puale

BRIDGE

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

34 Actor -

Guhlg.,
35 No. of fl. ,

1TV11t1twork
4 Ralfelouo

3er:'37 Perfotllld

8 C::..ag•

org. •

39 Chlrglng
wlthtu
42 Part of f8Ca

12 1.1. Ume
13 Loll
14 Southern

NORTH

•Ka

44 lnlonntUon

&amp;gCJ.

of-

.AQ74
.AQI07!

17 Doii'IHO-

.Q7

1!1 G.,o pl_,od

WEST

. author

EAST

onhornback
20 Flying

•1oas2
.K

21

•Jlo o

Qi752
I

64
AJ9S2

cre1ture

.Kl086
.KJ63

.• J9BSZ

•u
Vulnerable: East-West

31

32

52 Donlltl
Trump'• ex
54 At written

55 South Of
Mlch,
56 Church law

acroaa

27
28
3D

48 Art Apoatlo
48 Raga
· 51 Woodin lub
(mill. I

MllltarJ cop
23 Curtain

SOUTH
.o\6

,.4.

43llolowt

blackbird
15 Pe-ln line

1-IJ.tl

doorway
Anoint
Dlotlllbanco
Blbll dlv.
Unhappy
lndlcaUona

57 -

2 Youtl: org.
3 Walkld
·

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WASN'T THAT NICE OF
LUKEY TO WALK
14 MILES JEST TO
SEE IF YOU
WAS GOIN' TO
PULI.J THRU,
PAW?

I OW.E TH'
VARMINT

-

41 HOUIII fOr Rant

.~ ::!FRANK AND ERNEST

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The British have a remarkable talent lor
calm, even when there Ia no ci'lals." -

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Franklin P. Jones.

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gossip said to the other, -.he
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Complete the chuclda quoted
by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

6

UNSCRAM8LE LETTERS TO
GET "NSWER

I III

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
, .,.
Formal • Eater- Swede - Office • AFFORD
"Why can't we save any money?" the husband asked
his wile. "Wen·, replied the wife, "I blame it on the f!Bioh·
bors. They keep buying things we can't AFFORD!"

Sorv'CCS

IHhNrY, Puhun. Ohio IM-

•

c'"h,

.1144.

Thm your·clut.ter into
SJdl. it t~e easy way...by Rhone,
no need to kave your home.
Place your cla,.itjed pd today!
15 words or lell, 3 day, .
3 sagers, 15.40 paid in advance.

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year ahead bymalllng$1.25ptuulong, !banking on someone elsa lo cover for'
you today or ball you out ol an old obll·
11111-ad~. otampod onvelopa to
Aotro-Graplt, c/o thll
P.O. gatlon you lncumiCI, you might be di&amp;·
Box 91428, C-and, OH « 101.3428. appointed. ·Be propared to lend lor
BERNICE
Be oura to llate your zodi8C llgn.
yourMII.
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(illan:lt
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Large
~EDF;OSOL
doMa of pellenca and t-ance might ttro uoually able to discern both llda of
be
today. Thla II one Ollh- a problem, this giH mlgllt not b e - · ·
llmla- ""* people you'll deal with live today, and your judgment could be
on a one-to-on, butt COUld have a chip , one-tided. Be careful.
ICOIII"'I .(Ocl. M-Ilo¥. 221 If you are
on their lhoulclero.
·
TAUIIUI (Apotl »Mar ID) Today'a on employee ol ltOmttOiltl alu, thll 11
problema could haw you operating at a not a good day to slack off. Your booo
dllladvlntago II you get rallied. Don't will be ...,.,aung you u a producer and
add to additional proaaurea with 111111-in- he or lhll cOuld hitve a long memory.
IAGITTAIIUI (llov, II Deo. tl) Think
,ftiCiecl behavior.
.·
thlnaa over ..,Y ~ belin getttng
~(Miptl-.lltMIDI Youcou~ be
. morolllicapllbll to ftatltry today thon In~ In 'IIPIICUiallve -tura with a
1r11nc1 today, bleat• II both of you ttre
I'll!- :M, UIUII. An acqueintiiiiCI whO will per.
.CIIW IIIII naw may uae ~•-• com- -'Y tnlamtld, 11t1naa won't go ,...,,
~ II a good cltttrlcl In tho yeer · pllmonts to manipulate you.
CAPIIICOM IDeo. INM. ") Suc:;..pte~~~ t1t11 you COUld prollt lrom an on-; CAIICIII(..._ 11. . 11) Tolal . ,•
CMI OOUid be det!llld to yo~~ today Hyou
. . _ lln:l lnlu.ttd ~ anollllr. IAdYi catiOn 11111 be raqulrod tc:clay If you 1topo dlllflltt wour own 11110- to
rlouclk lillY put you ;.,1 tho right pleoli lo ...,..,. a c:r1t1ca1 objlcttw. Trytng tcr IOineot• who II .... compettnt. lt'a ·
• at Jual 1111 r1g11t lima.
; llkll ~ on wour -... anct good loolca blttlr not to ... thocltttrlcl.
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'"1bo lltllllul at 1111111111n0 wour ...; ptopo1etollml to1ntroducl
or .ll'a- t1t11 yqu- with him or'* II
about whloh you
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•'1fiafyourM~~to elllt1lldlf glll.llond rw rae~~y too oon1u11ng.
cour:MI COUld be harmful rather than J
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A. British publications often use
CIVILI~ATION, with an S. The preferred American spelling, howev~r. is
CIVILIZATION, with a Z, and even
some British dictionaries prefer that
spelling. When the verb form is used,
you may also see CIVILISE, which. is
a frequent British
· and should
be

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SATION in printed matter? is that
now•the right spelling?

A ~ HA510 Be CIO!A.zY 10

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By JetTrey MtQuain '
A whisper or murmuring sound is
SUSURRATION &lt; "soo-suh·RAY ·
shun",: "She heard the susurration in
the hall." Feel free, though, to speak
the noun SUSURRATION above a
wqispe•. .

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Bridge administrators strive to
keep politics and religion out of tbe .
game. Tbe players don't care wbo
their opponents are, only what the opponents' bidding system is. But occasionally governments have instructeoj
their teams not to play against certain
people. Happily, though, those days
seem to be iri the pasl.
In 1990, a team from the British
Parliament competed against a team
of Swedish legislators and other offi·.
dais in Stockholm. Today's deal was
played by the Indian ambassador to
Sweden, Pusbkar Johari, against the
parliamentary captain, the Duke of
Atholl, and his partner, Lord Smith.
Declarer won trick one with dummy's spade king,,cashed the heart
and played a heart to his king. w-•·· 1
spade discard was an
sight. How should Ambassador Joh••ri.i
have continued?.
.
To draw all tlie trumps would make
the contract entirely. dependent on
diamond finesse. If it won. fine; if
lost, the defenders would cash a
cade of clubs.
AHhe ·other table, the declarer
the diamond finesse now. Better,
not good enough. East won with
king, put his partner on play with
club ace and received a diamond
The .club king defeated tbe
The ambassador found the
play: At kick four, be led a diamond
dummy's ace. ~ long as lt
ruffed, he was pianaing to drive
the diamond king. He could handle

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I

Page 1o-The Dally Sentinel

.

Pomeroy...-Middleport, Ohio

· -~dey. February 23,_
1tt3

r;Jross, say baby boomers: The
·'Brady-Bunch' look is back .
tweed maxi coats 8t the recent fall
collections) have embraced the
'70s look. Madonna .wore a Sui
ensemble of flares and a midriff
blouse with Morticia-like sleeves
during her recent apr.'arance on
"Saturday Night Live. '
Ivana Trump's personal shopper
was recentir spotted buying-her
client a patr of bcllbottoms at
Bergdorf's.
Even the august House of
Chane!, renowned for its classic
suits, featured bells witli gold buttons down the sides in the recent
collections.
Not even hair is safe. Men, are
sporting sideburns again. Even
worse is what one fashion writer
calls the "Mrs. Bll!dy hain:ut."
"At the moment there's a big
shag craze." admitted superstar'
hairstylist Oribe. "I try to make it
as modem as possible. But I grew
up in the '70s. You won't catch me
in a pair of beUbottoms."
He apparently has a lot of com·
pany, at least aniong his genera-

•

By DANA KENNEDY
~lilted Press Writer
fNEW YORK - Get out your
flared pants and platform shoes.
The '70s - the most reviled period
in fashion - are back.
•
Hiphuggers, crocheted vests,
peasant blouses, chokers and other
dclrili!S of the era were part of the
hottest looks on runways this sea-

son..

.

They've taken over the covers
of fashion magazines and are heading for department stores in the
heartland.
. "It looks nonconformist and
slightly rebellious," said Michel
Botbol, 23. fashion marketing editor at Women'll' Wear Daily. "It
goes along with the new administration. The power suits of the Reagan era are history , People who
lived through the '70s_think this
stuff is hideous, but to kids it's new
and fresh."
· Designers from Anna Sui to
Anne Klein II (which featured

'

Indiana 81-77

lion.
"It's a fashion victim look and
I'm past the ~t of being a fashion victim,' said Lorin Cole, a
makeup artist and former Ford
,model who is in her mid-30s. " It
may be new to ldd!s, but I've done
it. I don't want to do it again."
Camilla Sanford, 36, of Kentfield, Calif., said: "By leaps and
bounds it was the worst era o'f
clothing ever to come .down the
pike. I knew it was ugly even
lherl.''

...

Page4

How and why did styles from an .
era long considered a fashion
embarrassment become cool again?
The credit - or blame -· goes to
the growing power of the twentysomething generation. ·
''We're in this repressive society where kids are told they can't
have sex and sow their oats, so
they' re desperate to recreate the
'70s, when you could do all that," .
said Village Voice columnist
Michael Musto.

The now-t'al)ed showplace's
architectural features will be
restored and its electronic gadgetry
second to none b)' the time Letterman's CBS senes premieres in
August. CBS anno.unced Monday
that Letterman decided against
moving the show to Los Angeles,
as many New Yorkers had feared.
CBS is paying about $4 million
for the building, plus several million more for restoration and
upgrading, said Ed Grebow, CBS'
senior vice president of operations
and administralion.
''It is being constn~Cted for Let·
_ tennan and to his specifications,"
Grebow said.
In a statement Monday, Letter·
man said, "It's great to be back on
Broadway." His experience on the
thoroughfare is primarily as a

I

Seventh birthday

· Vol. Q, No. 213
• Copyttoht*l 1H:I

Meigs School Board
hires teac.hers,.subs

Conrad Cook and The Calvary Echoes

POMEROY - The 1993 Meigs
County LivestoCk Sale and Show
Comminee wiD meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. in the Meigs High SchoOl
cafeteria.
·
RACINE • Southern Junior
Hi&amp;h Boosters will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at the jUllior high.
RACINE • Soutliem High Class
of 1968 will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the high school to J!lan· the
25th reunion.
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A girls' softbaU coach was hired
and several teachers were added to
the substitute list at Tuesday
night's meetiiig of the Meigs Local
Board of Education held at the Salisbury School.
Maria Dawn Knopp was hired
as the coach. It was reponed that
no certified, qualified candidate
had applied for~ position after it
had been advertised. ·
Employed as substitute teachers
were David Curfman, Linda Johnson, Emily Rogers. Randall Goldsberry, Lesley Carr, and Scon Walton.
Hired as substitute bus drivers
were Kim Taylor and Vonda
George.
'f1!e resignation of Jim Oliphant
as cross country coach was accepted by the board which commended
him for his coaching ,work. .
The board approVed a field trip
for the Vocational Industrial Clubs
of America (VICA)' to take place
Friday and Saturday. The students
who were top winners in compelitions held at the high school in

Gospel co~ce~ to ,feature groups, soloist
Area gospel music lollers will tone. Greg Koontz, and tenor, Tom
.
have tl:eir rust opportunity in 1993 Weaver.
Motivate is what Darren Smith
to enjoy an evening of southern
gospel music at Wahama. High wiD do to his audience.
Conrad Cook and the Calvary
School Auditorium, Saturday, Feb.
Echoes
recently recorded with the
'1.7, at 7 p.m., in Masoa, w.va.
Horizon
Music Group in Asheville,
The concen wiD feiture tonrad
N.C.
Their
new single, "Having a
Cook and ~ Calvary Echoes, The
Conqueror's and soloist Darren Good T'IRlC", is their latest relellle.
This ~l~ase follows their .recent
Smith.,The concert is free. ·
The Conquerors are a traditional chart h1t, 'Moses. Take Your Shoes
blend of male voices consisting of Off".
It is i£!1.POrtant to learn from
lead singer, Mark Boggess" bari·
,

people who have been successful.
Success describes Conrad Cook.
He is' one of the top song writers in
the gospel mu$ic industry. Behind
every successful man is a 'woman",
and in this case, she is Patty Cook,
wife of Conrad. She is the bookkeeper and alto singer for the
group.

'

Co~. Patty and their daughter, Robm, make up the "backbone" of the Calvary Echoes.
Doors open at 6:30 p.m. The.
~oncert begins at 7 p.m.
'

---People in.the news·----.

.

I'

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) ·thicker than Bo~e's thumb. "He
- Heavyweight bj&gt;xjng champion · looks like he's really interested to
Riddick Bowe helped bring see us."
medicine 10 famine-pia~ SomaBowe said conditions obviously
tia on Monday, also VISiting with were tou&amp;h on U.S. troops as well.
U.S. troops and impoverished local
'"You know it's hard when
children to boost morale.
these guys are drin1r:ina hot soda.·'
Bowe's four-hour stopover in Bowe said dur-ing lunch witb
Mogadishu was sponSoted by the Marines and ArmY. troops.
U.S. relief agency AmeriCare and
Bowe paid 594;000 to charter a
included a visit to a feeding CCI!ter. . flight from New Yode that carried
Children sang for boxer, who gave · $1.8 rni11ion in medicine. said John
his cap to an emaciated 13-year-old Riehl of AmeriCare.
girl.
'
He said he expected to fight OX·
"I'm verj happy to see him and champ El'ander Holyfield in a June
we are happy to welcome him," rematch.
· t"
said Abdi Mohamed Abiiker
Aodon, whose arms were barely
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP)

·Study results on education in
Appalachian Ohio revealed

- Paul Newman took a bfe!lk froni
. filming the life story of the man
who invented the Hula Hoop to get
behilld the wheel of a stock car and
take a high-~ joyride.
"What this Is, is a day of rest,"
Newman, who began racing In the
1970s, said Saturday at Myrtle ·
Beadl Speedway.
Race driver Kevin Prince of
Wilmington, N.C., who loaned
Newman one his cars, rode along
with the actor at first' to. show him
aroumt
"We did 83 mph rifht off the
bat," Prince said. "AI I did was
show him· the groove around the
track and be did the rest. He picked
it up real quick...
.

' . ired in the job market.
rellfor eXJm~ple, S~.4 percent of the
students estimated the cost of
attending a tW~&gt;year college til be
twice as much as the actual average
=""""',..,
cost, and 14.2 IJC!CCRt estimated the
cost to be five tiriles the aclll81 cost.
Dave
Lack of finances was cited by 58.1
Grate
percent as the maJor problem
affecting their deciston to pursue
of
higher edncatio&lt;~.
Appalachian Access and SucI Iliad
cess seeks to breakdown these false
F~nllwe
barriers and identify possible points
of intervention to improve access
rateS for high school.,students enter.
,
ing two- and four-year colleges in
W• don't •top doing thing•
bec•u.• we grow old. ~- 11row
the re&amp;ion.
old becluM ~ ·~1 doing...,.._
Thro1,1gh making parents, high
school professionals and .Wdents
Nothing mona you 1 better
a ware of resources, options and
llotonor thin hearing your MJM
IMIItioned.
planning methods, the project
•••
hopes to ensure f~ture opportuni- .n-.•o 1 fool born
wory minuteties for student.s anCI economic viaond moet of ....,. end up In front
hili for the · .
of you on the highway. •
••
~:report~uses on 12 l'eJR· 'talk Ia ch•op.• KMplng
quiet lo·
sentati ve counties from the 29
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
county Ohio Appalachia region. 11
wiD hold a pledge party Tuesday at
•••
surveyed more than l,SOO high
You're autt doing prelly w.nlf you
7 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center
can rem•mber that you forgot
school seniors u well as a comin Pomeroy . Members bring a
-g,....,lfyouoon't..c.l
bined total of more than 800 parpotluck dish.
wholltla.
ents, high school professionals and
•••
non-traditional iltudents.
Before you fooJI"l . ,
MIDDLEPORT • The Mei~s
· The research llld data collcction
County Scottish Rite Club wilt
"R.S.V.P. - • w.y4oy law .... •
and analysis for the Access and
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Hw~ II ... stor• - J6S Mrs e
Success Study-'W.s conducted by
Middleport Masonic Temple.
,... . . , . _ .... foll-'t.
the Institute for Local Govenu'nent
Refreshments will he served. All
.
. . ._.tiLS.Y.P.
POMEROY - Ash Wednesday
POMEROY • Free clothing day Administratioa IIIII Rural Devel~
Meigs County Scotti~h Rite mem. services
I.S.V.P.at St. Paul Lutheran will be held at the Salvation Army ment (!LOARD), 'based at Ohto
hw,.,t.w,..._
bers invited.
Church in Pomeroy will begin at in Pomeroy on Thursday from 10 Uni VCfltity, in colllboration with
Sonut
7:30p.m. The public is invited,
' a.m. to noon. All area residents in Project Dli'CCior Dewey Lykins of
POMEROY - . The MADD
need of clothing invited,
Shawnee State Uniyeralty.
·
group will meet Tuesilay at 6 p.m.
RACINE
•
The
Wildwood
GarII. 124 l11t..H, 0 ...
at 119 Butternut Avenue in den Club wiD meet Wednesday at 1
Funding for the project came
CHESTER • There will be a from the Ohio Board of Regents
Pomeroy. Public welcome. ·
742·2211
p.. m. at the home of Janet Theiss. special meeting of Shade River
and
the
Rural
Universities
ProLodge No. 453 F&amp;AM on Thurs- gram.
REEDSVILLE - The COII\muni- There wiD be a white elephant sale. day
at 7:30 p.m. with work in the
ty Education Com miuee of the
THURSDAY
E.A.
degree. Refreshments will be
Eastern' Local School District will
POMEROY
•
Auditions
for
the
served.
Tax Levy On House
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the East- Midnight Ctoggers will be Thursem High School cafeteria.
RESPONSIBIUTY . All ownara ol hnuae trellera haYing a 1Mu1 In
day at 7 p.m. in the Pomeroy VilREEDSVIU.E • The Riverview
thl Slltl of Ohio and IUb)lct to the tax 81
OF
HOUSE
lage Hall auditorium.
Garden Club wiD meet •!fliunday at
WEDNESDAY
·
provldld
above MUST register such lrder
lNMEP
7:30 p.m. at the home Janice
wtth
the
County
Auditor on or prior to the date
POMEROY • Rev. Deborah
OWNERPOMEROY • "Ptannin&amp; Your Youn11 witb co-hostcsaea, Kila
•
the tax It due 8nd payable.
Hogeboom, Free Methodist Cana· Flower
Bed, Vegetable Garden, FrBDk and Phyllis Larkins. Bring
dian , Missionary to Zaire and Home Landscape
New Lawn" fruit for the fruit trays IDd artic!Q
UIIQII'&lt;lhl tranller of ownerahlp o1 a hnuu
Burundi, will speak at the Laurel will be presented byorHal
Kneen on for the aucdon.
,
trdlr
th• certificate • • • aa to auch trlhr
Cliff Free Methodist Church on Thursday from 8·g:30 p.m. at the
shell
expire,
and the original owner ahall
Wednesday a~ 7 p.m. Public invit- ~~enior c1tizens center in Pomeroy.
lmlllldlaiely reiiiCIYI auch certllcate 11om lhll
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local
ed.
trallll'.
OAPSE Chapter 17 wfll meet
Admission is free. .
'
nursday at 7 p.m. at Meigs Junior
POMEROY - The annual
Every
~
Ill
a
houu
trailer
ooun
or
pelk
OPeRATOR OF
.
.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Serenity High School.
Lenten Breakfast of Trinity Church
or -rv
er of property liiiCI lor tuch
A HOUSE .
Group of AA wiD meet Thursday at
will be Wedilesday at 7:45 a.m.
P!IIJX!II
wiMn
there II nO operator 1hlll kMp
TRAR.ER
ST!VERSVILLE - KCrry .DknResa-valions may be made by call- . 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart' Catholic
a
ragl111r
ollil
hoUu 11'1111'1 which mau .,..
COURTChurch. Call 992-5763 for jnfor- nan, Paleatfuc, W.Va., will speak at
ing 992-7765, 985-3842 through
111.tilt oourt, p&amp;Jk. or pnlpllty.
the Stiversl'ille Word o( Faith
mation.
Monday.
-'
Church on Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
IIOWAID L
TIJPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Pastor David Dailey invites the
POMEROY - Pesticide Certification Tests will be given by Jl!e .Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will public.
A recently released study of barriers to higher education in
Appalachian Ohio reveals that 80
percent of area high school seniors
want·to attend college, but only 30
percent actually do so.
This rate is well below the rate
for the state of Ohio (41 percent)
and for the nation (62.4 pacenl).
The Access and Success Study
was conducted by the Appalachian
Access and Success Project, a consortium of 10 collcges and univer~ si!ies in the Ohio .Appalachian
, region,-includin!f Ohio University.
The report c1ted the distressed
economy of the re&amp;ion and the
!esultin~ economic hardships facmg Oh10 Appalachia.families as
crippling obstacles Jo panicipation
~~=~-people in JK!SISCCOildary
It also noted that many students
fail to pursue further education
only because of ''perceived" barri·
ers that would disappear with adequate information and planning for
Ohio Deparunent of Agriculture on college. The study found students
Wednesday from 3-6 p.m. at the tended to overestimate the cost of
Meigs County Public Library in college, lack confidence in their ·
Pomeroy.
.
intctl~ctual ability and remain
undennformed about skills
POMEROY • Meigs County
Public Library Board of Trustees
will meet Wednesday at 1 p.m. at meet· Thursday at 7:30p.m. All
the library in Pomeroy.
members attend.

By

7~«~

c.......

.

Rutland Furniture

.

nursing, welding, electronics, and gave a vote of thanlcs to those who
cosmetology will be going to helped get the school back into
Cincinnati to participate in district shape so that classes could be
competitions. Proof of insurance is resumed there today. The roof Qf
required (rom any drivers trans- the gymnasium was partially blown
off and there there were several
porting the students.
Esther Black was granted a dock leaks in other parts of the building. ,
Board members mentioned the
day for Feb. 2.
A change in the time of the next work or the. principal, John Lisl\t
meeting was announced. The.meet- custodian, Carroll Johnson, aqd
ing will be heid in the Central other staff members who came oal
Office on Wednesday, March 10, at to help, along with Robert Eason;
county engineer. who inspected tl)e
7 p.m.
Lily Kennedy on behalf of the structure for safety, .and John
·•
fourth grade at the Rutland School Musser, the insurance agent.
Wendy Halar, principal, talked
expressed appreciation to the board
for installing shelving in the class- about the effective schools pro~
at the school and with a v1deo
room.
·
· Afl!lt a silent prayer to open the showed the students in various
meetill&amp; presided over by Larry activities in their classrooms. · ::
An executive session was he)jl
Rupe, president, Board mem ller
Bob Barton proposed an audible following the meeting to discusi
prayer be given by a member of the personnel matters and another isM
clergy or some board member. addressed by Rutland Mayoi
Rupe asked Barton' to talce care of Edward Martin and a member o(
•
securin~ a minister or give the Rutland Village Council.
Attending were Supt. James
prayer hun self at future meetings. .
Carpenter, Treasurer Jane Fry, anltTh~ damage from Sunday's
wind storm to the Salem Center Board members, Rupe, John Hood~
school was discussed and the board Barton, and Roger Abbott.

Military investigating scene to determine cause
RECOVERY ~.,acne worliera prepare to
retrlew 1M body or 11 U.S. Army belicoDter pilot,
1'aelldlly·aear Crown City. 1be army II •l aftld· .

eatln&amp;)he lcene tills week to 'determlae tbe
crash. (BDI R- photo) ·
'
~ ·' .
·. .. . --.. ..

~811se of the
,

..--- Local briefs........;..____,
Patrol probes one-car wreck

Community.calendar-

RACINE • The American Association of University Women
(AAUW) will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Racine Unite·d
Methodist Church.

2 SeCI!ono, 14 PIG" 25 0M11
A Mulllmedlo Inc. Newopope;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 24, 1993
•

Middleport CCL meets

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before aa el'ent
and the day or that event. l.tems
must be received weD In advance
to assure P,llhlication in tbe calendar.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - An arthritis aquatic program will be held at Royal
Oak Resort in Pomeroy beginmng
Tuesday, The program is open 10
people in the community .with
arthritis and includes gentle exercise acpvities in the swimming
pool. Sessions will be held twice a
~~&gt;eek on Tuesday and Thursday
from 10-11' a.m. for nine weeks.
The fee is $20. Further information
may be obtained by calling 5932518.

Cold loalpt. 1.- arvud
10. Tlnndoy, cloudy.IIIP HU'
30.

I

·.

delivering pizzas to the staff.
"We'D do anything," Said Galvano. "Dave's got lots of money,
but we don't want his money.
Money's not everything.~'
On the corner, Nasser Ali,
owner of the International Smoke
Shop, was pleased to hear that Letterman has a taste for cigars. Ali
noted that his shop could also supply the staff with beer, aspir}n,
canned goods, Lotto tickets, and a
selection of pipes and rolling
papers.
The theater was built in 1927 for
live performances, then outfitted
for radio by CBS in 1936 Blid converted to television in 1949. From
1953 until1971, Ed Sullivan was
host of his weekly variety show on
its stage, presenting such stars as
Jack Benny and Jackie Gleason
Elvis Presley and the Rolling
pedestrian.
The strip of Broadway between Stones.
·53rd and S4th streets, just a few
On one particularly memorable
blocks up from Times Square, ~unday night in 1964, Sullivan
should meet Dave's needs.
mtroduced the BeaUes for their first
Across the avenue is a 24-hour U.S.~ce.
· banking machine whete Letterman
In recent years it has housed the
can have ready access to his $14- "Kate &amp; Allie" sitcom and occamillion ~ per-year earnings from
smllai ~s such as the "Don•
J ~ :m;&gt; .·-~·
-¥ ' ·'
CBS,
and
a
high-rise
office
buildahue'' 25th ilnniversary special last
&lt;~·
'
ing just right for his inquiring cam- fall.
.• \~~
.
era gags. Just up the block is a
Letterman's New York-or-Los
• \
j
-;.
-tuxedo rental, in case Paul Shaffer Angeles future had hung in doubt
and the World's Most Dangerous since Jan. 14, when he disclosed to
Band ever decide to clean up their his audience at Studio 6-A within
D!AMOND MCCLURE
·act.
NBC headquarters at Rockefeller
Joe Galvano of DaValentino Center that he would leave that netPizza, two doors from the theater work on June 25 and go to CBS.
Diamond Gay McClure cele- entrance, said he loolced forward to
brated her seventh binhday recently with a patty at her home given
by her J!loiher, Sandra Bass. ·
· Attending were Bill, Melissa,
Patience and Raven Johnson;
The Middleport Child Conser- na.
Peggy, Misti. Carl. Gregory Muss- vation ~gue met. recently at the
Husband's Night will be held
'er; Tammy Fletcher, Jimmy Rock Spnngs Umted Methodist next month with a potluck dinner
Weaver.
and entertainment. The meeting
Church.
Sending gifts and cards were
Linda Broderick, president, will be March 16 at 6:30p.m.
Josephine Tyree, Becky. Spanky, opened the meetmg with the MothA "brown bag" auction was
Jenny and Lanny Tyree, Belinda er's Prayer and the Pledge of Alle- held. Money is to be used for the
Gray, Hope Boring. Jeremy Ross, giance. Devotions, "Valentine District Conference 10 be held next
Clyde Gray.
Memories" was given by Kitty year.
Her father, Jesse McClure, and Darst.
,
. The tr11veling prize was won by
Sue Thompson toOk her on a speEach members answered ron Kllly Darst and the hosteSs gift was
cial shopping trip.
call with their "Greatest Hope of won by Lmda Broderick.
Cake, ice cream, candy and Growing Love and UnderstandRefreshments were served by
cookies were served.
ing."
.
Misti Gibbs and Kitty Darst to
• Special helpers were Peggy and
Tammi Mash was welcomed th_ose mentioned and guests, CadMisty Musser and Melissa John- back iniO the group having moved dric Gibbs and R.D. Snider.
sOn.
.
back .to the area froJ!l North Caroti&lt;

Pick 3:
174
Pick 4:
1419
BuckeyeS:
2-12-17·20-37

·

David Letterman unpacks his
bag and decides to stay in NYC
By FRAZIER MOORE
AP Tetevisioll Writer
NEW YORK - David Lenerman has decided he'll move five
blocks to a television landmark
instead of 3,000 miles to the other
coast when his Iate-nig.ht show
switches from NBC to CBS.
What will Broadway's Ed Sullivan Theater - site of such TV history as the Beatles' U.s: debuthave in store for its new occupant?

Ohio Lottery

Buckeyes
upset No.1

· Snow covered roads and wlsafe speed contributed to an accident
Tuelday aflemoon on County Road 30 in Sutton Township, the
Gallia-Meiga POBt of the State Highway Patrol reported.
· AccoJding to the report. Charles T. MI!P.Je. 18, Rt. 1 Bowman
Drive, Racine, was westbound when he slid off the left side of the
Snow-covered road and struck a fence and a tJee.
· ~s::luries were reported .and no citations were issued. The vehicle
ned moderate damage and was towed from the scene.

Deputies probe two accidents
·No injl!fies or citations were reported following two accidents
investigated recently by deputies of the Meigs County Sh¢0ff's
DepartnleiiL
According to a report from Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the first
accident occurred Mon~ around 10:30 a.m·. on Ohio 124 at
Reedsville IICfOS8 from R
Store. .
•
According to the repon, a 1987 Pontiac owned by Barbara
Baker, age unn:ported, Reedsville, was parked illong the road and
was struck by a 1979 Chevrolet owned and driven by WUUam Sard.
18, Reedsville. ·'
Sard pulled o~t onto the highway and got too close to the parked
Continued on pap 3

-

Helicopter
f~und,.
pilot.dead
.
'

There were clouds, strong winds
investigation cir the recovery of the
From ataff ancl wire reports
and
llpDI1Idic snow squalls Monday
aircraft,"
he
said.
.
Military authorities are trying to
night
but nothing that would make
The crash-site has been corfind out why an Army behcopter
flying
hazardous, said ))avid
crashed shortly after takeoff, doned off and anyone found in the
George,
·a meteorologist with· the
area will be escorted off by authoriIeiDing the pilot.
National
weathei service in HuntThe body of Maj . Robert P. ties, he added.
ington.
Mallory was with the 160th
Mallory was found in the wreckage
MaUory was in the Army for 14
northeast of Crown City Tuesday. Special Operations AviatiQn RegiWASHINGTON (AP)- Sen· according to a news release from ment at Fort Campbell, Ky., a part years and was assigned to Fort
ate Minority Leader Bob Dole said the Army's Special Operations of the Special Operations Com- Campbell in July 1992, the post
said. He is survived by his wife,
today the decision by President Command at Fon Bragg, N.C.
mand at Fon Bragg. ·
·
Clinton and Democratic congresMallory, 37, a native of Cot- Patricia, and three children. ,
The cause of the crash was not
The
State
Highway
Patrol
said
.
sional leaCiers to schedule early known. It wiD be investigated by orsdo Springs, Colo., was the only
helicopter
crashed
in
Guyan
the
votes on budget cuts showed that the U.S. Army Safety Genter at person aboard the OH-6 Cayuse
Township near the Ohio .River vii- Clinton's c:GOnomic plan is in trou· Fort Rucker, Ala., the Amiy said.
light observation helicopter.
ble in Congress.
The helicoPter left the Tri-State !age of Crown City, about 15 miles
Chief Deputy Dennis Salisbury
"ney know ·the packa&amp;e is in· of the Gallia County Sheriff' s Airport near Huntington, W.Va., south of Gallipolis.
The search began Monday night
trouble,'·' Dole, R-Kan., told Department urged the cUrious to . about5:2~ p.m. Monday after stopreporters. "T~ey have to have stay out of the area.
ping to refuel. It was en route to in M_ason County, W.Va., where ,
cover 10 make it appear they have
"The army is now in control of Fort Belvoir, Va., and was sup- officials nrst heard an emergency ·
spending cut.s, so they're bringing
posed to arrive there at8:47 p.m. . signal in a wooded area near ·
811
up the budJiet'resoluli&lt;!n first.•'
It was reported overdue at10:30 Arbuclcle, which is near the flight ·
Continued on page 3
Facing mounting Democratic fully by not interfering with the ·p.m.
defections, Clinton and top House
·and Senate Democrats decided
Tuesday evening to delay a vote on
the l,lfCiident's $16 billion "econonuc stimulus" spending inaeases. Many Democrats were j)alking
at a quick vote on boosting spending unless they Were also given an ·
Jame1 Fry, Pomeroy Pike, has with Jennin.gs Beegle·, a board Plant where he is employed to help
early chance to vote 'for a deficitbeen recognized for his years of member, writing the narrative out with the Meigs County Fair.
reduction package. ·
.
In the commendation, Fry was
which was submitted to the Ohio
lnatead, the leaders decided to volunteer service to the Meigs Department
recognized
by Dailey for being one
of Agricuhure.
aUow a voce rlfSI - or simulllne- County fair by the Ohio Depart· · "Fry's contributions are invalu- of the "nrst 10 arrive and the last to
ously - on a budget resolution ment of Agriculture.
"To be singled out as the great- able," said Dan Smith, Society leave" during the days of the Mei's ·
laying out Clinton's plans for tax
est
contributor to the success of president. "He 'brings his truck County Fair. He said that this ni ·
increases and spending cutJ.
your
is a distinguished recogni- loaded down with toOls and does itself exemplifies Fry's interest i.'l
Senate Majority Leader Geor&amp;e tion,''fair
both the fair and the community.
wrote Fred L. Dailey, Direc- everything from clraggin~ the trac·
Mitchell, D-Maine, said that with tor of the Ohio Department of . tor traCk to fixing water lmes. AnyThe award on behalf of the Ohio
the votes, "We'll take the necesDepartment of Agriculture was prething
that
needs
10 be done,, Jim
Agriculture,
in
the
commendation
sary steps for meaningful deficit
does it, and he's always. there," sented to Fry Tuesday afternoon by
toFry. .
r
.
.Wuction and economic growth."
Smith, local presidenL Smith had
.
The
recommendation
for
Fry
to
Smith said.
.
White House spokesman
received
it from Dailey at the
For
the
past
do.:en
years
Fry
has
George StephanopoulOB said that in receive the awatd came from the
recent
Ohio
Fair Managen' annual
a Tuesday evening tel~ con- Meigs County Agricul!W'C SocietY talcen his vacation from the Gavin convention held in Columbus.
ference with Democratic congreaslonal leaders, Clinton "asked
them. 10 put the bud~ resoluti()D
on a fast track so we could lock in
the spending cuts as sooo as possible, and they have agreed.''
House Speaker Thomas Foley,
D-'Wash ., said the ahprt-term
increases in road-building and
other programs would be voted on
"a week or two" later than bad
been planned. The budget resolu- ·
tion would be adopted about a
month earlier dian anticipMed.
.'
Foley said be expected votc1 on
)
both meaaurea to occur between
mid· Much ' and 1/!!~ 2, when
l
Congress bealna ill
recus
"It's imponllll 8Dit vallll!ble to
demolliiiW to the whole country
our commitment is to the w~ole
p!OfiiiR, 11111 jlllt lbo llimulul proglllll, .. he tlllil reponen. .
The cleciliorl camo 1ft« nutnerous Democratic lawllaken PllESIIN'I1tD AWARD ; Jcme~ll'ry, callr,
mainly fi1cal ~oallerVatives and
tare, aad litre Daa
trtddeat of tile ,
ror tile paat
ftt:Blloa ,._
freahmen - apWI a molt over
Mei&amp;l Pllr llolrd, 11ft,
lilt Cl PI fs '.
Gam to l'Oiaa...r lila untca at tile Mella
earlier piiiiiiO IIIJilftM the !lpCIId. tina to Fry. Jeaalap
Je, 11a.rt1 -w,.·
ConatJ Pair. He ua Md recoplucl for bu
made tile _ ..atlalli ol Pry lor tllu a d.
:
ing iDcreaael in Milch IDd the budwork tllere lly tl!.e ~p.parta~eat. ol ~
get mol~ ~bout a mondllater..

Sen. Dole says
Clinton's plan
is in trouble

~~J!~ts S:a"'s~;t~tc~

Ohio Department of Agriculture
honors Fry for dedicated service

.-

Sa,

12,.... ............

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&lt;1
f

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