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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

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1993

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~,:~commentary

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The Daily Sentinel

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111 Court Street
,Pomeroy, Ohio

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TO THE IN'BRESTS OF Tlllt .I IEIQS.IIASON AREA

.I'WI'EDIA.N:.

ROBERT.L. WINGETT
Publisher

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• PAT WHITEHEAD
. •: Assistant Publlsher/ControUor
J

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are we lcome. They should be less than 300
"'lrds. All leu"rs are subject to editing and must be signed with name.
.• alkiress and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
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be in good taste, addressing i5Sues, oot personalities.

meeting laws
:won't
end private talks .·
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~Open

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WASHINGTON - In the
Bureau of Indian Affairs' housing
program , scarce federal dollars
often line tbe pockets of !bose who
need lhem least.
A recent 1n$pect&amp; General audit
of the RIA's four California
offices,,a draft copy of which we
reported on last November, mitlines a housing rvogram where tbe
neediest
· y go witbout basic
home
· , while. taxpayer dollars
fri
away by corrupt
con
rs
m iigible aid reeipients.
·
·The final report describes the
BIA as ''highly vulnerable to:
fraud, waste and abuse,'' and says
the agency's housing program has
been "severely mismanaged and
abused."
.
As of three years ago, nearly
40,000 Native American homes
were in need of renovation. An
additional 51,000 families were in
need of new housing altogether. On
one California reservation, investij18101'S found a family of three livmg in an unfinished one-bedroom
house that was missin2 some exte-

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IMansfield !so• I•
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IND.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

·•!cotumbus!so•

By The A110elated Prnorthern Arizona through eastern A few snow showers will linger
. A weak area of high _pressure Utah and western Colondo.
near Lakes Erie and Ontario, where
that will move BCnJSS the Ohio ValHeavy snow was expected to winds 'from the northwest gather
ley tonigbl will provide f&lt;l' parlly pc:nisl tboou&amp;h Th~ from east- moisture from the lakes.
cloudy skies and cold temperatureS . em Kansas to Ohio. Rain - fore·
Highs today were ·forecast to
statewide. Lows tonighl will 1111ge cast farther soulh, from eastern hover around zero in northern New
from around zero in the ndrtbwest 01dahoma to nortbtm Georgia.
England, the hOithem Cireal Ll,ka
As the low-pressure system states, and the northern Plains; and
to around 10 in the southeast.
A low pressure sySielll trac1dng leaves, the West Coast looted for- in the teens and 20s across much of
•
IIOI'tbciist out cif the ,IOUtbem plains ward 10 drier weather.
the. remaining northern tier, from
Very cool, dry air will persist Vermont, New Hampshire tnd
will continue to s_pread- snow 1n tbe
southwest sect1ons of Ohio on over the Northeast into Tlu~y.
Thursday. The snow msy be heavy
at times Thtnday afternoon, especially over the far southwest sections of the stale. The remainder of
WASHINGTON (AP) DCCember.
', .
Ohio will see 'only incfeasing
But the de{'artment revised the
cloudiness and a chance for flur- Orders to U.S. factories fer durable
ries. Highs on .Thursday will be goods fell 1.7 percent in Juuary, ·9.. 6 percent Jump in December
the biggesa drop in six lii(JIIths, pro- orders from its earlier cstimato of
mainly in the 20s.
', The record high on this date in ducediit large pan by a decline in 8.7 percent
The December flin. peccd by a
Columbus was 72 in 1961. The aircraft, the government said today.
Many analysts discounted the 24.6 percent surge m tranlplll;llllon
record low was 1 below in 1914.
Sunset tonight at ~:18 p.in. Sun- drop and pointed to other signs orders, had been tbe largest smce a
· sugg~sting a sti'engtbening manu- 12.1 percent advance ia July 1991
rise Thi!!Sday at 7:11 a.m.
factoring sector, including contin- and, analysts said in advance, was
Around the aatlon
Snow fell from tbe northern ued expansion c1 industrial pnxluc· not expected to be suatained.
Roclcies across the western Plains tion. Excludi!lg the volatile trans- . Indeed, transporlltion .orders
and in10 Ohio early today as a low· portation sector, booltings were up • plunged 8.2 percent in January, pripressure system churned·eastward.
percent
marily due
Commerce Depanment said pans..
. to a drop in aircraft and ~hether cumnt
Subzero tem~~Cratures gripped 0.7The
orders
for
durable
goods
items
Orders
are a ker barometer of aes tU:td ·manpower
the northern Plliins and the north.
such
as
cars
and
communications
manufaclUring
activtty.
. up w1th demud.
em Great Lakes region; with the
.
equipment
expected
to
last
more
Both
!be
Federal
Reserve
and
.
~ liiJI!IllarJer pmlltll:ilkll_.......
thermometer dipping to minus 16
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in Blsmarclc, N.D., early Ihii mom· than three years - totaled a sea- the National Association of Pur· and~ joba.
sonally adJusted $132.8 billion, chasina Managemcnl have JqJOrted.
Shipments,l!'other
ing. ·
The National Weather Service down from · $13 5.1 billion in that industtial production cantinued currenl production,
,
percent .following 1
said Cleveland was buried uqder
13 .6 inches of snow T11esday,
mcreaspm.Dcceraber.
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brealcing the old 24·hour February
snowfall record of 13 inches set
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ points, 42.S0-44.00.
Feb. 8, 1896.
.
U.S. l-2, 210-230 lbs., counay
Direct liv~ prices _and receipts
Snowfall of more than a foot at selected buying points Wednes· points, 41.50-43.00.
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will blanket mountain areas from day by the Ohio Department of
Receipts Tuesday 7,300,' Esti·
Agriculture:
miued receipts Wednaday 7,SOO.
Prices from The Producers LiveBarrows and gilts: mosUy .50
stock Association: '
cents higher; demand good.
Canle: SO cents 10 l.SO lower.
u.s; 1-2, 230-260 Jbs., country
Doris L. Hill Hensler
Slaughter steen: choice 74.00points,
44.00-4S.OO,
a
few
45.50;
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Doris L. Hill Hensler, 68, of
83.50;
select 6S.00-75.50.
:plants
45.00-46.00,
a
few
46.50
.
Racine, died Feb. 23, 1993, at
' u.s. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., cowitry
Pinecrest Nursing Center in Gallipolis. .

Duriz!Jle go~ds down 1. 7 percent in J

t

W. VA,

Sumy Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
01993 Atc:,j.weothor, Inc.

-------Weather----Extended lor~: ·
Suth-Ceatnl Olllo
~
Friday thnHIIb Sallday:
Winter storm w81ch for ThursFriday,
snow likely. Highs 25day. Tonight, Increasing cloucli30.
Saturday,
fair. Lows in the
. ness. Cold with a low around 10.
teens.
Highs
In
the 20s. Sunday,
Thursday, snow developing, possifair.
Lows
in
the
mid,teens to low
bly heavy at timeS. High near 30.
20s.
Highs
in
the
upper
~ 10 midChance of snow 80 percent
30s.

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--Livestock report

Essay contelt ·...
deadline n1dll";

-----Area deaths----Paul L. Harrison

Paul L. "Chub" Harrison, 66,
. Gallipolis, died Tuesday, Feb. 23,
1993, at Holzer Medical Center.
· He was born Aua. 3, 1926 at
Gallipolis, 1011 of the late Robert E.
and Belva Lemley Hanison . .
He retired from the Columbia
Gas Company Oct 31, 1981, after
30 years or service. He wa~ a
World War II Army veteran, a
member of the Addition United
· Methodist Chureli: MOrning Dawn
, F&amp;:AM L~ae tl7, Gallipolis, and

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speciacle of one eye winkinf. The
guiding force' behind CBS "60
Minutes," Don He wilt, arrd the
show's venerable ace, Mike Wal-

providers right down there with the all-time sad spectacle of The
used-car salesmen, and real-estale Washington Post having to return a
agents ·who specialize in swamp- Pulitzer Prize after its story qunec1
land bargains.
out to be a hoax perpetrated by
Indeed,
NBC,
which
has
just
put
reporter Janet Cooke, And so 11
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our worst foot forward, has no goes.
monopoly on misjudgments in
In the latest spectacle of General
journalism. We remember the time Motors' Chevy pickups vs. General
lace, were among the fii'St 10 ~:~&gt;li· CBS wound up led·faced after its Electric's NBC news magazine,'the
demn !he joumalistic standards or con1roversial news special, report·. network's desire to show a-truck
the competition. Hewiu was qUOICd ·ed by Milt~ Wallace, allegin11 that bursting in10 flames was no doubt
as sayilig what was on the minds of Gen. William Westmoreland mOat- fueled by the Irend in which televiall thinking people. He didn't ed estimates of enemy losses in sion-news mag! must C9fllpcte for
understanCt why NBC's news fea- Vietnam. The conlroversy caine · ratings with enacrtainment shows.
ture, which aued las'! Nov. 17, not because we didn't believe it, Result: TV labloid news.
failed to indicaie that the SP8lking but because of later reyelations The basic facts, unsparked, were
device had been used. hewitt including CBS' own in-house I amply compelling. No motorist C811
added: ''If tbst had happened at '60 inv~stigation ~ of journalistic · 'possibly prefer to drive a vehicle
Minutes,' I'd be looking for a job irregularities. They included CBS • with gas tanks located outside the
tomorrow.''
u.se of a paid consultant, about protective steel frame, as were the
(:QIIIments by people al all net- which viewers had not been tanks on the '77 trucks. But you
works, newspalfers, news maga- informed.
don't have 10' be a rocket scientist
zines and news services alternated
And we remember the ABC to know that using rocket devices
between glowering and gloating.
News report about investigations of to try to spark a fire - and then
But wail. NBC's deplorable spy allefations - concerning a witbbol~ng that detail ~ viewnews j11dgment also managed to mid-leve State Depanment offiCial en - IS worse than bad Journalfurther blacken the eye of CBS, - which used a deplorable visual ism. It is a violation of that special
ABC, CNN ~ in fact, every news ·aide a Slllged perfonnance by actors trust that must exist between jqur·
organization that consi~ers inves· depicting bow information may na1i$lS ~the public.
tigative journalism an indispens- have been traQsfened. Never mind
NBC's rocket sparkers burned
able oblipt}on.
.·
Ihat viewers thought they were badly that special bond. We can
Tba.t 1s because NBC has pro· watching the actual act of espi· only hope it has left no permanent
vided the public with yet another onage; and never mind that the : scars.
.
visual demonslration of what too · official they named has never been · · M11rtla Schram Is a syadleatecl
many people already think. PoUs cluqed with any crime.
· writer lor N'wspaper Eaterprlie
tellut that Ihe public rates iiS news
Print journalism cannot forget Asscldalloa.

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George R. Plagenz
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Qday in history

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1924. in Letart Falls lo the late
Eleven were fined
;11 om.' siop sign violation; Shawa Plum·
Albert and Eliza Miller Hill Sr.
en forfeited bonds in the court of ley, Glenwood, W. VL, $63 and
~ wMasetha ~jsmtberChuorcfthehanRacdthinee Pomeroy Mayor Bruce ~ Mon· .. costs, fictitious license, and. $63
Uns1.•"""
ow
day night.
·
and ~ giv~ false information
United Methodist Women of
Fined were Rodney Kline, I'! a poh.ce off1cer; and Dwayne
Racine.
. Pomeroyl·$63 and costs, fictitious Fuzpatn~k. Pomeroy, $63 and
· Survivors include: sons and tags; Jeffrey Hayes, Dexter, $63 costs, fatlure lo comply with a.
VFW Poslll4464.
daughters-in-law David and Rebec- . and costs, failure to com'ply with court order. .
Survivors includ.e his wife,
ca Hensler and Daniel and Pairicia previous court order: Robert Cook
John Betztng, Pomeroy, $62,
; Mary Lou Leonard, who be mar·
Hensler, all of Racine, and five Gallipolis, $37S and costs, DUI, 3 speeding; ·Thurman. Haning,
ried July 31, 19SS at Gallipolis;
JlllllldcbUdren.
·
days in Jail, and 90 days license ~y. S392:DUI, wtth a 30 day
· two sons, · Steve Harrison of
Other
survivors
include;'
a
sister,
suspens1on,
and $63 and costs, ljcense SIISpCII8IQII; Darla Hoffmln,
Chcs~ire and Larry Harrison of
Margery
Roush
of
Racine,
and
s
quealing
tires;
Gary Rose, ~omeroy, $40, no operator's
~ Monroe, Va.; one daughter, Mrs.
brothers
Dallas,
Clifford,
John,
POiliCII!y.
$20
and
costs,
littering; license; y.'ells VanD~ke. S~wut,
, Mike (Sherry) Bart~r of King
Harry
and
Dale
Hill,
all
of
Letart Denzil Hudson, 11, Pomeroy, $48 $60, drivmg left of center; Mlch_ael
• George, Va.; five grandchildren;
' PAULL. HARRISON
Falls, and Dale Hill of Franklin, and costs, speeding; S-andra Green, Long Bottom, $80, passmg
: four brothers, James Harrison of
N.C.
McKay, Racine, $48 and costs, on a double yen ow line; R~ld
. Miram•, Fla., Lawrence, Jack, and
She
was
preceded
in
death
by
speeding;
and Martha B:~· Sll!nley; Pom~y. $80, fictitious
·, Robert Harrison, all of OalliJJOiis; Josephine Bollng(!r
her
husband,
Raymond
Hensler,
Pqmeroy,
$100
and costs, · ·• plates; Kila Prank,&lt;Syracuse, $64,
Josephine L. Bolinaer, 72 of five brothers and one sislet'.
and five sisters, Iris Cox of Galing
tbe
peace,
and
10 days in jail speeding; Melvih Forester, Racine,
lipolis, lrene Tbivener of Powell, Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy, died TuesServices
will
be
_
held
1
p.m.
Fri·
fori)I'Obalion
violation.
·
$6S, speeding; Martha Boynton,
. Peggy Gillespie and Freda Fritch, day, F~l). 23, 1993 at Ihe Holzer
day
at
the
Racine
United
Methodist
Gary
Bogiess,
Pomeroy,
$63
Pomeroy, S60,1oud exhaust, Sarsh
.both of Columbus, and Louise Well . Medical Center, Gallipolis.
.
Chtm:h
with
the
Rev.
Roger
Grace
and
~ts.
failure
to
comply
with
Dubl, Pm:tJand, .$62, speed~; ~
of Luverne, Ala.
. Born on OcL 22, 1920 at Mid- off~eiatina. Burial will follow in the prev1ous court order; Christopher Larry
Smith, Middleport,
, failServices will be held I p.m. Fri· dlepon. ~ was the daughter or the
Letart
FaDs
Cemetery.
Pines,
Pomeroy,
$43
and
costs,
ure
to
yield.
. day at the McCoy·Moore Funeral late Charles Morarity •nd Lydia
Friends may call from 2-4 and
&lt;Home, Wetbtlboli'Chapel, with the .Ohlinger Morarlty. She was a 7-9 p.m. Thursday at the funeral
Rev. Earnie Perkins officiating . member of the Sacred Heart home.
,
q,nnoun~ements-Burial will be in Pine Street Ceme- Catholic Church.
In
lieu
of
flowers,
donations
tery. .
She is survived by two daugh- may be made to the 'Meigs County
a.m. 10 3 p.m. each day. On March
EMT·cltt&amp;s offered :
. Graveside military rites will be ters, JoAnn Bolinger, Pomeroy, Cancer Unit, Box ~92, Pom.eroy,
4 tbe ilellls will be $1.SO per bag.
Tuppers
Plains
Squad
86
is
conduciCd by VFW Post 114464.
and Mary Sheets, Orlando, Fla.; OH45769.
looking for persons interested in
Friends may ,call at the funeral grandchUdren, Todd Sheets snd Jo
Buemeat sale
taking an EMT class to rna with
William
C.
Burns
h()ll)e on Thursday from 2-4 p.m. L.eiah Sheets, and Jllll3l·grandchil- .
Saered Heart Catholic Church
Ihe
squad.
There
wiD
be
a
meeting
William C. Bums, 65, P.O. Box
and 7-9 p.m. Masonic services will dren, Jessica, Megan and Mary
will have a basement sale on Mon38, 'Rio Grande, died Tuesday, Feb. at the Tuppers Plains squad bay on day
be conducted by Morning Dawn Sheets, all of Pomeroy.
from 9 a.m. 10 3 p.m.
1993, at Pleasant Valley Hospi: Tuesday at 7 p.m~ not Wednesday,
F&amp;:AM Lodge t11 at 8:4S p.m.
·1 Besides her parents sl)e was pre· 23,
as staled yesterday.
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ceded in death by her husband, lal. .
Leeton to meet
He was born Oct 23, 1927 in
\
Harry 0. B.olinger, two brothers,
Drew
Webster Post No. 39,
Rummap aile pi8Dned
Gallia County, the son of Gladys
and two sisterS. ·
.
Americap
Legion, will meet TuesThe ,Forest Run · United
Funeral services will be held Sigler Bums oC Gallipolis, and the Methodist Church wiD have a rum· day with dinner at 7J!.m. and meetThe following divorces were Friday at 10 •·~· at the S•cred late Clarence Bums.
mage sale at the church on Cowity ing at 8 p.m.
He was a construction laborer Road
granled recenlly in the Meigs Heart Church. 1'lle Rev. Fr. Walter
30 on Mareh 3 and 4 from 9
County Common Pleas Court: Heinz will officiate and burial will and a U.S. Army veteran; serving
Diana S. Cross from Ernest L. be In the S~cred Hearl Catholic 10 years.
Other survivors include his
Cross, and Susan E.. Tracy from Cemetery. There will be no calling
wife,
Elsie nee·Michel Eckstein,
hours. In lieu of flowers conttibu·
Merlin R Tracy Jr.
•
Rio
Grande,
who he married March
tions may be made to the Sacred
Coatlpued ~m Pll&amp;e 1
·9,
1
,949
In
Frankfort,
Germany;
Heart Church. Ewing Funeral
January fire report
vehicle,-the report stated. Diunage to bolh vehicles w~ listed as
three daughters, Gabriele Eads of
The Middleport Fire Depart- Home is ill charge of services.
lighL
·
Washington Court House, Patricia
ment IIJlSWered a total of 77 calls Kathryn Oliver
The second accident/happened Tuesday around S:30 a.m. on
Miller of Rio Grsnde, and Beverly
daring JIUIIIIY. This Included !Me
Kathryn L. Oliver, 76, of Mul- Ratcliff of Thunnan; three sons, . .. Buhalr ROild in Sutton Township.
fire snd rescue and 69 emergency berry
Accoodin&amp;IO the reiport. Lariy "Sam" Cwnmins, 47, Racine, was
Ave., Pomeroy, died Tues- William C. Bums; Jr. and Mike A.
nortbbound
on ·Bashan Road and lost conlrol of his 1990 Honda ·
unit callJ.
day, .Feb. 23, 1993 at Veterans Bums, bolh of Rio Grande, and
Vehicles were driven a total of Memorial Hospilal, Pomeroy.
while
going
down an ice-coated hill. The car slid off the right side
Ronny L. Bums of Rodney; eight
1SS3.8 miles. Tl)e fires included
of
the
roadway
and struclt a guardrail causing moderate damage to
Born on Sept. 29, 1916 at sisters, Mildred Daft, Clara Nell
two slriiCiurcs, one on Roush Lane DeJaware, she was the daughter of Wolfe, Wilma .Sayer, and Linda
Ihe right side of the vehicle.
·
at Cheshire, and the other at Lead- the late Roy Roush and Elizabeth Kinder, all of Gallipolis, Thelma
ing Creek Road, Middlepon.
... Cleland Roush. She was a member Harrington of Columbus, Sue
r--......- - - - - - _ ; ; of the Methodist Church and Chaney pf Tel!BS, Cristiria Kirk of
Turkey huntins·permit applications are now available snd must
1he Daily Senlinrl
Pomeroy Chapter. Order or the Middleport, and Caron Jean Bums
be
returned by S p.m. March 8, acconling to Meigs County Game
~ ......., ,
!&gt;astern Star. For !D8DY. years she of Point Pleasant; Jbree brothers,
Protector
Keith Wood.
·
was owner/operator of a beauty Bob Burns, Clarence (Bud) Burns
.
T
he
applic8tllms
are
available
from Dawn Lumbel' in Chester,
Plobtllhod '::.'{ aftora-, =:§.
parlor in Pomeroy. .
and Jim Bums, all of Gallipolis; 14
Eber's
Service
Slation
in
Racine
and
from the game protector.
~~r.~:oJ. ~~
.She is survived by a son and grandchildren; four~p
bilTurkey
season
Slli1S
Apri126
and
lasts
until May 15.
bUd
~"'" llo IU.~w,::, daugbier-in-law, Leon and Teresa dren; and one~
Wood
sliid
a
turkey
hunting
seminar
is
slated fer Saturday from
Services will be d 1·p.m. Fri;oiii:.-.a~~..
Jordan, PatasJtla; lwo sisters,
noon
to
S
p.m.
at
tbe
Fodted
Run
Sportsman's
Club. No prcregistra:
,
·
Frances Miller, Letan Falls, and day at Willis FUneral Home, with
11
lion
is
necessary,
Wood
said.
the Rev. Everett Delaney officiatow. N~lao!.~·..-:.:
Delores Zeborek, Edgerton, Wise.; ing.
In.addition, trout will be stocked March 4 at· Fodted Run Lake,
Burial will be in Centenary
.W•-llt
~ott... ·- . . .
. a brother, Leonard Roush, CincinWood said.
.
IZ~tr',. ~
natl; llft!l two grandchildren, Moni- Cemetery.
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral
.
ca Harrington, Houston, Texas, and
l''
home on Thursday from 6-9 p.m.
- - _ . . . . _ lo
. Mattbew Jordan Ptob•tl•
Till DWIY· a-UMt; tu c....r St.,
Betides h~r'rents she was
Units of the Mela• County Emeraency Medical Services
p •
preceded •
b her'
~ &amp;A'JU
t l&gt;willht &lt; m
y
husband,
reSIIOIIded 10 nine calla fur sasistance overnight
JrOcaalw•....__
"ghtOiiver.
Contlaued 1om paae 1
~e5llOIICIInl Tuesday were: 10:3_
1 a.m. Rutland to PaaeviJ1e Road
path.
.
o...
-~-....................
;::•
Funeral
services
will
be
held
""---V . .
for
Beilin
Mullins
whouanspinod
to Veterlill Mcmoril1 Hoi·
- - - ··-·--·-.......,...... Friday • 3 p.m. _It the Letart Falla
Authorities in GaUia County
.
pilal;
10:55
Lm.
Syr&amp;eu~e
to
Karr
SII'OCI
fer Manila Karr .wllo ~
o... .._.....iiiiiiiU'iiOPJ- ..-.IO
CemeterY Chapel. Elder Bill Roush joined the seardt Tuesday morning.
iransponed to VMH; 4:04 p.m. Racine lD Bald ~tiVcnville
..... .
will officiate and burial will be in The helicopter - found about I
Road for David ~ was tnlilljRiriiDCIIO ~t Vllley
114--.. ·--·-----... -~c.ao . the Letart Palla Cemeteoy. Friends p.m.
1 10 ~Raid far..._ LAdley
Hoapital; 4:2.5 p.m.
I I I eo&amp;~IIJIIQ' ... - · . may•ca01tthefuneralbomeTb•About 200 law enforcement
who WISIIWiijkdid 10.
; &amp;.19 p.m. I'Gmeroy Ill Pit ' P~ lticiP
er
officeil, emeqiiiiCy medical tech·
day,6ro9p.m.
ROild for Fbalua' • • adlt who wull'ldlplllled 10 VMH;
nlcianl aad volunJeer lirafighten
...- .
. . P9:24 p.m. Pomaouy to u.s. 33 for J~qay Stoblrt wbo was lrliiJwwe Involved in the ~e~n:h, the
poned to ~ Mldkal Center; 9:34p-.ll. PQmeroy ID Lillarty
Ill I -II 1 trJ jliiliiinod Iii
January poUce report
Army said.·
·
Lane for Aan111mmona who wu toUJed but.l * liiiWjJUI~ 9:-M
•• , Mt
p.m. Middlepnn 111 Riverview Drivo fer
&amp;A1• wllo Will
anl'::~:J::a";~
iranspaned 111 Vetli• Memorial Holplll1; 10:05 p.m. Ttoppa1
1
till')', IICCCirdblllll dllllpllll dille
Vlllo
MIID«Ial
Plaillllll SIIIO loulo 681 for Opatlflliis wloo Wll lillllljiGIIid 10
!!~·-------!!M
Middleport Pallce ~IDMWJL
Tuetday adilllaaions: James
Camden Cllrt flolpibl.
· Merct:z~ poUci colhiedoaa Crilwlll, MWJapnn; l.ell« Lllh·
D"
Oat
· totalecl
Willllllltlu _ . ey, MJMieport. and Ruth Smith,
Bdi&amp;Gr'aiiOII: AI ..... 11ft IDd 'addrlllll . . pr!Jttld M
~"'"''wcS517.A-.IOI Racine.
....... ................
they an reportelhr appear Ia law earoree. .at aad
. 198 ~DI tlcteu ~ra wrlueu '·
repartl.
.
Tue~~acharges: Gena M.

Divorces granted

Stocks

,....·--Local briefs... -..

v

•'

l

1"

hear a good sermon each Sunday, ..,

.,n...,_,
"-- I
~~ifftfs =~·~!Cr.

. Some ministers are alread
"plaaiarizina.'' of course.
'11iae is the story of the preach
er who preached a sennon from
one of. Hat'ry Emerson Fosdick'
books of sermons.
·
An enthusiastic parishionen
complimented the minister at thd
end of t~te lerVice. "That sermon!
ought to be published," said the . layman. '

-Pomeroy Court news-·- -

Turkey applications awzilable

.

Just before the Sunday service · Middle Ages, were hungry . .The
was 10 begin, the pastor told the sermon was a great mind-feeder.."
congregation that because of a ' .In those days before movies and
parish meeting scheduled to follow radio, church was not only people's
Ihe morning worship, there w'ould
be no sennon that day.
The parishioners burst into

sta~or:::t~:':so~~~y~O,

-Meigs

·Martin Schram

pious platinldes."
. ~·
"The overwhelming majority of
• £· •
preachers are good snd devout per... ' &lt;:,
sons who have nothing to say and
mUst say it every Sunday."
.. •.. , • :It
. .. t•
However, the preacher has had
• •
his
sympathizers, as well as his
•
' .
sponianeOUS ~W,Jause.
critics.
Channing Polloclt, the play~~~-----------------------------------------J
Is that an indication of the way prime source ·of educltliOn, "it was
wright
and lecturer, said, "If I were .
most
of
us
f~l
about
sermons?
If
•
their only entertainment,'' said
Demostbenes or Kant, I could not
so, coold this be one of the reasons Banon.
.
for the steady decline in church
But that was then. This is now . deliver 50 different and vital
attendance?
People today have not too little addresses each rear to the same
By The Aliri«lated Preis
The laic advertisina executive stimulus but 100 much. They have a audienee - perttcularly if it were
tToday is Ash Wednesday, Feb. 24, Ihe 55th day of 1993. There are 310 Bruce Barton, author of the best· "deep craving for peace and quiet only one of my duties."
Pollook lectured to 1SO •udi •
selling book about J e~us titled and faith," said Bartpn. "These
. . • Ill left in the' year.
eneea
a yea-. but it wu not a differ·
"The
Man
Nobody
Knows,"
once
·: • • ;roday •s Highlight in History:
.
·
come not by words but by lpirit.
• • ' Feb. 24, 1868. the U.S. House ofRe!ftsentalives impeached President posed the question in a magazine Nothing a minister says is half 10 ent lec:ture bo pve CICh time. He
; • ~ldrew JobniOII following his aucmpted dismissal of Secretary of War ariicle: "Must We Have Ser- important as the spirit of ille scr· said he prepared lhree lecturel a
in M: Starnon.JohniOII was later acquiued by the Senate.
mons?''
vice:•
· year and devoted a 111onth qr six
' On this dal.e:
.
'
Bj111011 traced the dominance oC . Otben have found fault with the weeks to the pqaltilln of
Few, if any, preiCia1 have ever
~In 1582, Pope G.~ory xm issued a Papal Bull, or edict, outlining his the sennon in Protestant worship sermon in other words:
4CIIidar reforms. (1lle Gregorian Calendar, as it became known, is the back 10 "when people's minds, just
•
"Eloquent only of superficial enjoyed that IWturyl
Until sennj)lls Improve, minisendar in ge~ use today.)
. awaltenlng from the dartness of dte thinki!_lg, l!~ited experience and
ters mipt be encouraaed to siUI
Ia 1803, in its ~ vs. Madison decision, the U.S. Supreme Court
their termon~ from boob oi"Bost
that i t - the final tnterpreter of constituiional issues.
~ 1n 1821, Mexico declared its independence from Spain.
· · ~wsaAdo~Hi~.
Sennons" or, in any cue, to mate
.
In 1942, the Voice c1 America went on the air fer the ftnt time.
~ In 1863, Arizona was organized as a Ierritory. .,
r
liberal use of ~ennon ouUines· Or
lin •1903, tbe United Swes signed sn apeement acquiring a naval sta· .
In 1945, Ammican 101dlen liberated the Philippine capilli of Manila digllll publilhed under nch lillell
from Japaneae ~trol durina World War D.
at GuantanamO Bay in Cuba.
·
as "The Mlalater Maaua1" or
In 1920, a fledgling German political party held ill fuit meetina of
In 1980, tbe U.S.ItocUy team defeated Finland, 4·2,to clinch dte &amp;old "Resoun:es oC Inspirlllon. ' '
rtsnce in Munich; it became known as the Nazi Party, and its chief
medal at the Winter Qlympic Games in Lake Placid, N.Y.
,
''At ICIIIt then we would_lei to

...

MICH.

rior walls ·and slabs ror Ihe roof.
The family's teen-~ge daughter was
forced tO live in a small camping
trailer parJced in the backyard. On

Must we have worn-out. sermons?

i

Accu·Weatber• forecast for daytime conditions and

Wedneaday, February 24, 1993

Whe·n Journalists breaKthe rules : .

?: ~8erry:s .World
.
.

Tbanday, Feb. 2S

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, OhiO

BIA housing doesn't help those who need it

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
'
•
lf• ~ COLUMBUS - House Speaker Vem Riffe says he snd Senaie Presi •
dent SWIIey Aronoff plan to talk this week about proposals to mak.e leg·
islative deliberations mOre open to Ihe public.
• But Riffe,.0-Wheelersburg, said no such laws will or should stop pri·
vate convenal.ions among tbe state's top leaden concerning poljcies !bey
believe wiU ·Sleet Ohio in Ihe right diMelion.
The speaker, in a question-and-answer ses$ion wilh Ohio ~wspaper
,
: .il!!blisbers, said he favon legislation pending in both houses that would
'· • 'JC~ire legislative committee sessions to be open to the public.
: ·.: : •. J_Most such meetings already are o~n . The legislation wriies the
..: :~~:rement into law and says committee chairmen must provide 24
· " ·· ' ~ 10 the public.
.
·
: • ' -One v~on pendin~ in the House Ethics and Slandards Conunittee
·- "'-,yould extend tbe requuement to Senaie·House conference commiuees,
· - ' •itcluding those that usually meet behind closed doors to reach agreementS\
. fill the Slllte budget.
.
? -' Riffe said thai proposal, sponsored by Rep. Randy Gardner, R-Bow1. • ~lh11 Green, goes tOo far. Evoking memories of his pleasant relationship
:; • '".j,.1th former four-term Republican Gov. James Rhodes, Riffe said the
st;Jte's leaden need to Ialk priva~ely.
·
.
r.J He said Rhodes would make proposals 10 leaders of both ~es. but if
1
• l'i&gt;'ld !heY would not fly, he would ask them, ~'What will fly?'
• '~· Rhodes, former Dfmocratic Gov. Richarii Celeste and, more recently,
·: · Fftepublican Gov. Gc.orge Voinovich have met wilh legislative leaders and
; conferees on significant rnauers such as the budget or taxcs, Riffe sliid.
. • • !r·~. Tile speaker said that at such meetings, tbe officials cut deals ~Riffe
· · ::~
· Jed them "joint recommendaliOJis"- that were relayed to the CQRfer• • : e committee. The committee explained and approved them at open
" ssions. The speaker sliid Ihe process is completed in public, Ihus meet. , ·. ·1ng ~n-government objectives.
· . , • Private discussions among state leaders "will never be open. You
· ' • ~#,!.ow thai aDd I know tbst,'' Riffe told the newspaper publishers.
. : ; ~ Riffe and others had defended certain closed meetings earlier, in .part
· · .~.Y say.ing that ~orne la'l\'.makers tend I«? posture in the presence of
,J,¥~ and-are reluc~anrto malte concess1011s for thaneason.
·• . The House committee is expected to tecoinmend passage this week of
IIi! ·open-meetings bill spbnsoh:d by Rep. Vernon Sykes, D-Akron. The
bill doesn't apply to conference committees but otherwise is identical to
Gardner's. ·
. :; ' Gardner said he understands tbst Democrats conuol the House and
The perfect parallel to NBC
· ldun't want. to let Republicsns ialc:e Ihe credit for open-meetings laws. He News' latest newsmaking achieve. : . ~d Sykes' proposal represents all but one of the Republican goals.
ment occurred not in journalism,
~;, Gardner noted that the legislation still must pass the Senate, which is
. but politics. In Cleveland, in 1972,
: 'lientrolled by Republicans. Sen. Scou Oelslager, R-Canton, has intro· the amiable Mayor Ralph J. Perk
llllced a bill there !hat is almost identical10 Gardner's.
converted a mundane ceremony
.... ~ "''..• '
into a visually memorable moment.
He used a blow10rch I(&gt; cut a ribb(ln
. .
- and set his own hair on fire.
Comes now NBC News, with its
inventive investigative news
1;t
morsel. The newsmaken of "Pate·
line NBC'' were caught using a
... . , ,"
secret remote-controlled sparking
device in an effort to visually
; . ';.!'""'
•
'
r•
demonstrate that in a crash a '77
,. ,•_. ul
Chevy pickup lriiCk can become a
Blazer. Resulc peacock flanibe.
Disaster was averted in Cleveland, two decades ago, because
quick-thinking com padres saved
•f ·'
!heir flaming mayor by beating His
Honor's head until his splits were
••
snuffed.
And in New Yorlc, NBC's
if , ...
averted legal disaster
brainlrusten
il "· \
I •
by performing a similar maneuver
on themselves.
But w.hile NBC's legal flames
~· .
have been snuffed, irreparable
"·
damlige has been inflicted upon all
of us who make the world's news
'• r•
our business. Yet that fact may
•• •••'
'
have been lost in th·e rush to
deplore.
.
~.
At CBS , the first response to
i.•
NBC's fiasco was an unseemly
'
\•,

Temperatures will remain cold across Ohio ~~

OHIO Wt'athot

•••
• ..• ... ,J

Ohio

' -~

"It bas been," said the preac~t.j
·
Perhaps the best .idea for\
improving preaching is this OliO! . •
Every mlailter would have to! ·
iubmit copies of his ...-a to I !
Wont Ser111011 CommltiOI. There'•
would be awarda for all-around:
,worst aermon, lonaut, dalleat, !
most inane, leaat comprehensible '
and most po~N~Ma,
. (
W'tlllllll'l would bo locked ·up In:
a room whell !hey 'IWOilld have 10 •
listen 10 ·tlpel of their aermcins !
playedoverandowr.
'
cr.

O..p 1'111111111 I .,.dlcat• )

eel writer lor Ntw~p~per Eater~
prise Aax:laldoll.

'

,.....

.._

:=u.--

.,,OHio-.

H elicooter...

--:u··-.. . ,.
==

EMS responds. to nine calls

-·-

:.\C •,:..:

-----.-Ia
r:=.w:;:&amp;r

J-

Hospital·news .

aw:.:::-a;. ;·. :=::m:a

,.......__. . .,-. ,_._-.____:!!
....
..............................................

ot..,

duotlia IIIOIDODih.

Pltilaon,

eport.

'

••••
Ke•per

GaJ!ipoll

�wedneedlly, February 24, 1993

;:~ Cavs,

:S ports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Spurs barely post wins in latest NBA competition . ·

~~ :

·
By Tile Allodlted ~
• • Althouah the NBA.,Ali.Stlr IRK 11 over, the tw1
,- 'continue to shine.
'
·.
.: : Charles Barlcley and David Robinson had a allow·
• dowa in San Antonio,.where the Suns ended the
; ,;Spurs'15·pme~winningstreatwitha 105-103
' ;v1c11Xy
ni&amp;hL
; : Barkloy
29' points ~d 12 rebounds, for the

said. .
.
·
.
.
.
ing mau:h with Lance B~ bolh weR ejccled.
In Ch1cago, Michael Jortll!n spramed his ankle 10
The Wolves played withoul fookie star Christilll
lhe fourth Quarter but still scored eight of the Bulls'
Laettner, scrvmg a one-game suspension for missing
last 15 points in a 99-95 win over Milw~.
practice.
Jordan, who fmisbed with 34 points, butt his right
P•en 113, Celtb" - At lnciBIIpolis Dctkf
ankle when he landed on Aalhony Ave!'. t's foot.
Schrempfscoredhalfofhis24pointsonperf~t&amp;ecAtW getting treatmen1 for more than 30 mmutes folthrow shooting.
.
. ·:
lowing the ga~e. Jofl(an. left _Chicago Stadium on
Reggie Miller had 19 pc?ints and Rik Smiu 18 rcit
crutches and d1d not speak w1th reporters. He was
the Pacers, while Pooh Richardson handed out a tet&lt;
scheduled to get X-rays as a precautionary measure,
son-high 14 assists: Sherman Douglas led Bostoli
but was listed as probable for Thursday's game at
wilb points.
.
:
Orlando.
..
Hawks 109, BuJiellll4 - At Atlanta, Donliniqlfi
" Tonight's loss can be described in on,ly one '!'fay
Wilkins scored 26 of his 31 points in the- fust half
-11fchael Jordan,'' said Milwaukee's Fred Bnckand Mookie Blaylock led a third-quarter surge by~
ow ski.
Hawks. .
·
.
••
Utah teammates Karl Malone and John S~kton.
Blaylock, who finished with 15 points, scoml4
who wcro eo-MVPs of the AU-Star. game m Salt
basket and a tluee-pointer and Stacey Augmon added
~akc City, had an off night in a 105-78 loss to visit·
two baSkets u the ~ks inc~ their 62-58 half•
•ngHouston.
. time lead to 73-61 m the th1rd quarter. AugmOII
Malone was held to 18 points, 10 below his averscOred 22 points for Alianta.
.
·:
age. Stockton got only six points- on 3-of-12
Pistons 101, 76en 89- At Auburn Hills, Mali
shooting - and se~n assists.
.·
Aguirre scored 24 points and Dennis Rodman had 2:'j
• In other games, 11 was New Yott 95, Minnesota
rebounds in what may have been his last -game f01:
91; Orlando 125, l'ortland !OJ; Charlotte 104_. New
DetroiL According to a published report, the Pistons
Jersey 95; Atlanta 109, Washington 94: Detroit 101, . are going to ttade Rodman to the Los Angeles ClipPhiladelphia 89; Indiana 113, Boston 86; Seattle 103,
pers for guard Gary Grant and forward Loy Vaugh(
Denver99; and LA Clippers 123, Sacramento 116.
plus a first-rpund draft pick.
·•
Hornets 104, Nets 95 - ·At Charlotte, Larry
Malle 115, Blazers 107- At Orlando, Shaqui!Je
Johnson had 17 points and 14 rebounds, and' CharO'Neaf scored 28 points and Orlando used a 46-point
lotte held New Jersey tD 38 percent shooting. Tile 1hinl quarter to beat Porlland. Scott Skiles scored l?
·Nets committed 22 turnovers and their Starting back·,
of his 23 points in the third period for the Magic. •
court of Drazen Petrovic and Kenny An~ was a
SuperSonlc:s 103, Nu,gets 99 -· At l&gt;envei;
combine!l 8 of 27 from the field. Rookie Alonzo
Ricky Pierce scored 26 pomts, including the gam~
Mourning bad 12 points and 15 rebounds for the
clinching basket. Nate McMillan, who scored I&lt;!
Hornets.
.
points off the bench, made a layup with I:30 left to
Knl~ ~5, Tlmberwolv~ 91 - At Ne_
w York. 11 give Seattle a 101-97lead.
•
~trick Ew1~g ~red 23 pomts and the ~ks s~Clippers 123, Kings llli - At Los Angeles,
v1ved the CJecUon of J~hn Stalks and ~1nnesota s
Stanley Roberts had 18 points, a career-high 16
f0-6 stre.tch run. The Kmcks 1~ 59-44 w1th 7: I 1left
rebounds and six of the Clippers· team-record 17
m the _third quarter !'efqre EWlJ!g w~ called for two
blocks. Ron Harper scored 12 of his 25 points ,in.the
fouls m barely a mmute, sending him to ~e bench
ftnal5 .1(2 minutes to help the Clippers blunt a Sacrawith four. JUSI 34 seconds later, Stalks g(ll m a shovmenlO mlly.
••

Suna. while Rollinson JOt35 points and II boards for
the Spun.
,
Mark Price duplicated his All-Star game pcdormance by siakiag six Lhree-pointers in Cleveland's
102-100 win over vWting Miami. Price scored 29
poin!S.inclutlin&amp;6of9froinlongrange.
"I'm probably shooting them better than I ever
have. I don'tlalow bow long it's going to last," Price

-rue.::.r

•

ur

' In the NBA .. ." '
South

....

o-p T«h73, vupu. 61

'•
'•

LSU76, AIIbuu61
.
NoMC....... I5,N-Domo56
Scion HolliS, 1o1iomi 73
SouU.Fl&lt;Na61, Ala,-B......,.... SP

'..'
•,....

C•lnllll-

I

!]lioqo...... ,_ ......... 36 17
CUM!I.\Im .......:l5 19

a..

.,.,:n

23
- .....~ ...._, ,25 rl
'""R_ ..

I

-

~ .........- ......24

Midwest
Btadley,S,DUnoiiSt..l

,€/9
.OWl
.540

.411

Mil-....-......211 . 32

.315

.

~St. ll , lndiana17 (0'1)

u.s
13
u.s

.-162

28

,

'Mo.·Kamu City 19, Mi11Wippi Sc. 17

I.S
1.5
IO.S

Douoll!........._.. ,....22 29 ,431

So~tbwest

"""'"" 76, U.ylot 75
Xanw: ~t. 67, Oklabama 63

Far WeSt ·

Sacnmen~o SL 12. UC

Davis 76
SL Mary't;CaJ.69, CS Norlhridae 61

WESI'ERN CONFERENCE
T- .

M-111W L I'd.

Ga

.610
.6).1
.596
.392

.2

s.. ......... _,.. 16
~~~~~o ...............'i" ...3a 19

"""""" .... -....... _..3t 2t
Denver _............ -•.20 31
M
a· .-....... _..12 36

FIIST

.

TOO LATE- Obio State's Derek Anderson (23) reaches out too
to st.op Indiana's Grec Graham on this layup durin&amp; Tuesday ·
flallt'• - T-. ..atclrup at St. Jolin Arena in ·~~~~~ where the
!'ucku•es•oa'S1·11 iD o.vertbae. (AP,)
· · ..
·' , ,
~
~

'

.

'

0Uart

. U.S. GRADE A

WAM~E/1/LONCACRE

Split Chicken Breast
•

I .

. RED Ill/If

Florida strawberries

•

Phio State slips past
lndiana 81-77 .in OT

T·Bone
steaks...........

•

LA. LU. ..,_,_,.,.26
LA.a- ...- ..21
Ooldoa Siooo ..........23
Saaw 1 .... - ...... 11

8:

I
.I

;"y':,~;

___.,.

Qd

'
'# ' •'i

: By The Associated Press
·: Not even a great play by Bob
Knight could save No. 1 Indiana
tLis time.
.
~ The Hoosiers' hopes of a perfect
Season in the Big Ten ended Tues4ay night with an 81· 77 loss in
~ertime at Ohio State.
, Indiana (24-3. !3.1) had won 13
'ifl a· row, including an escape in
dpuble overtime earlier this month
lit Penn State. The Hoosiers were
tile last team to go undefeated in
tl)e Big Ten, doing it in consecutive
seasons in 1975 and 1976.
' Knight almost saved the
Hoosiers arter Jamie Skelton's
three-point shot with three seconds
l~ft in regulation put Ohio ~tate
(13-10, 6-8) ahea4 71-70. .
· With two seconds remaining,
Knight set up an inbounds play
designed to draw a foul. The
coach's plan worked when, on a
length-of-the-court pass, Ohio
State's Derek Anderson ran over a
p,ick set by Chris Reynolds.
: But Reynolds missed his first
·free throw and made the second
6ne, sending the game into over·
' ,,
ume.
" "Bobby Knight- look what he
did," Skelton said. "He set up a
8reat play and got them to the free-

throw tine. •'

'

'

.l

l

l

!

•

·outscored Notte Dame 30-6 to stan
the second half in laking a 70-33
lead.
·
No. 14 Seton Hall85, Mla!DI73 .
Conference scori.,g leader Terry
Dehere had 21 points and helped
Seton Hall stay on top of the ~ig
East. The Pirates (21-6, 11-4) are
011e game ahead of St. John's.
Dehere scored 13 points in the
fust half as Seton Hall took a 39-27
lead. He later made two consecutive three-pointers, giving the
Pirates a 51-341ea4.
·
'
Constantin Popa had 17 points
and a career-high 18 rebounds 'for
Miami (9-14, 6-10), which is 0-4
a~nst Seton Hall since joining lhe
B1g East last season.
Georgia Tecb 73 .
No. 12 Virginia 61
Travis Best scored 26 points and
Georgia Tech beat Virginia for the
eighth straight time.
·
Malcolm Mackey added 15
points for the host Yellow Jackets
(15-8 overall, 7·6 Allantic Coast
Conference). Cory Alexander had
15 points for the C;IValiers (16-7,
8-6).

·, Skelton, who finished with 22
points, hit another three-pointer,
!.his time wilb 40 seconds left in the
i}xtra session, 10 break a 77 •77 tie.
Arter Indiana's Brian Evans missed
4 three-point lry. former Hoosier
J!layer Lawrence Funderburke
Jdded a foul shot.
.
~ . Ohi.o State, which trailed by 1.3
eoints early in the second half, won
!i¥ the third straight time against a
~- 1 team . The Buckeyes beat
IOwa in 1987 and Indiana in 1983
in their last two meetings with' top!ll'nked clubs.
·
:•·: "It's been a tough year for the
pij!yers," Ohio Stale coach Randy
~yers said. "They've been lbrough
a•lot of adversity. This one was for
item. They deserved to have a
tllod win over a quality team."
·;: Greg Graham had 21 points for
llidiana and Calbert Cheaney had
~- The Hoosiers played their second game wilbout starting forward
Alan Henderson, who is out indefini!ely with an injured right knee.
; Funderburke.and Greg Simpson
e~a:h had 12 points for Ohio State.
: "We made enough plays to
win," Knight said. " We made a lot
of. great plays, but we made some
bdd plays, too .... The team t~at ,
m!J!ces the plays deaerves to wm,
arid I think that's what happened
toltighL"
··l in other games, No. 3·North
Carolina beat Notre Daqte 85-56,
Nb. 14 Seton Hall defeated Miami
· 85·73 and Georgia Tech topped·
· NO. 22 Virginia 73-61.
·
: No. 3 North Carolina 85
Notre Dame 5li · .
~ Eric Montross ICored 19 points
alld North C.Oiina won easily at
bQn1e for its sixth snight YielD!)'.
Tile Tar Heels (23-3) avenged a
lcil to the lriJh 1ut year at Madi·
"" Squire Garden.
·Notre Dame (9-15) has losr!O ·
o( 111 last 12 and is 0· 7 against
r.ked teams. Monty Williams
. . . , 20 poiDII for the Irish.
·
, 1The Tar Heels led 23· 10 midway lhrouah 1he ftrst h.alf., ·They

'

15
13
13..1
II
23.1

Zl
25
!0 .&lt;134
:IS .327

Oblo blgb school
girls' basketball scores

104.Nnr,...,,
I

"

.

,.

1

.....

._113.-16
Cdo:qotf, Mil t "
........ ICIIt:::!='" 103

-1111,.
"
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LA.
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, W-13. II (tie~
Cia. Win"" W-. Cln. Wood...., 12. ~

(tie)-Cin.

Dlvlstoa D
1-WIIIard (24) 19.0 ................. ,.........321

Hludon. lndlao Voll. (6) :10.0 ..,,,,_296
)oW""""' (2) 19-G........- ...- ..........24Z

..W~Wc~W~:v......, &lt;•&gt; 19·1...........223
s-~

'

.
. 12-Pack .:
12-oz.cans
.

10.2·
10.8-oz.

aallon

l'lluboqto -~ ...

31 II 5
22 6
2S s
N.Y. !boP-· r1 :14 t
N.Y............ rl 7:1 6
Jlh'hd 'rt" ...... 20 2911

Olloon . . . . . .

21~~'NroN ROCK HILL 16.l~·

Cion. VA·SI.I..... 13.16-Raiorad 12.

II 2SZ 199

Dlmtonlll

Taa
t
•
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l.cHiiSI.I'IWal (29) »0.............)12
:1-o.-lllo ~ lll-1..,... ,_ ....,.............2:!9
~Do-OUWond (I) 17·1 ............. .243
4-a....
17-1,,,..............
110
5-llelpnIP.t. ___
,, __
.........._l49
6-B 'fleW (t) 16-2 ......................... 141
7-8 I, Wa.ePiimVID. lJ.2 ...........121
I-CAPI! (I} 11-2.-.............. _ .......... 114
9--anl a...J 16-S .......... !...........M
I~ HILL 16-2 :....... .................. .30

''

...,

A._DivW.
___..,., 31 19 6 12 236 204
:M II 9 11 253 217
...... ---·- 32 22 6 10 :1&lt;10 212
Butrtlo.. .......... 30 22 7 61 254 206 .
llarttG'II ... ,..,_. 16 39 4 36 193 261
Oa.tn ............. 1 52 4 llt4730l
_

o-........._,

ASSOitTED VAJIIETIES, F/WZEN

Totino's Party Pizza

--

:.u1.t:1J OR BUTTON

.

.., ,

11ft,

-·

SOUI1IIIIIN

.

Jlinth oul of 115 In his class, with a
3.62 grade point average. He plans
to' major in indJ!Strial hygiene or
environmental SCience.
His grandparents are Mrs. Ira
Burcher of FIXt Worth. Texas, and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Blakeslee of
Pomeroy.

'

....·~·-··

11-L) "
Dl)' • 12.-Part I
fll'l
. :12. IJ.Camir c.Mow 25. 14A
to
23. u (do~J.iloUo ... Jolla'~ !Ail'oic
21. 17·Nowll~oll6. 11-MI4d..o.-.
Ftntriclt15. 1~ bc:;14. ,

.·Ohio blgb school

i

campbell's!
Mushrooms:
!
B-oz. Pltg.

- ,,. - ,,.

...

7-Cinol-(lliH ...,.,_. __M
l--l.oWaooll7•3 .... _,,,..,_,.....
,.IACINI!
~~-·-·-···12
IG.l'llaTSNCII1TII~Y 111-4-.,.....d!l

S•1.0-.........
I 52 2 II 161309
.. .

!

16-oz.

2 - - N"'Woy (]) 17·1 .......... -.283
~-lllt.nd (ll 11-L................zt9
...Findla, !Jboit&gt;.B....., II· I ..........t97
5-Cin. CowllrJ!Oar 17·3·..... -....,........ I:M
~-11.
17·2 _..,...... -.131

...,..._...

•

Butcher signs letter~of-intent
to play football at WKU

Ta•
Pll. '
' ........ Coot. c.dMolio ClO) 11.0 ........ 344

'
y.....,.. ........ 33 19 I 74 2l3 119
eat,uy ·-·"-· 32 21 ' 73 :145 209
.... ............... rl rl 7 6t :M4 2110
Wlnooli&gt;'l--""" rl 28 6 60 226 233
HI
'QI'I,.H•·-· 22 S3 I S1112 243

•••

.

Division IV

211

M
•··-·~·· 30 2.1 I 61 213 206
SL l.ouio _, .._,. :IIi 29 I 110 210 22S
·T-8iy _.. ,.. 19 39 4 42.116233

'••

Elbow .
Macaroni

19.11-MulOo l!llin .t:z.

W L' T Plo. GFGA

o.o.it ___ , .. ,. 33 21 9 7l .•

Below

SAN GIORGIO

Oa1holio, Colu.mbus Hartle, 21. 16.
BIICJM Wrnfool Jll, 1J·t-in C.lhlolic ·

T - .- ........ !0 22 9 ft 211 112

18Jtems

OUT OF REACH - Molllealllfter 1ettlna
ot tile Miami flat's John
Salley on a layup, the Cleveland Cavaliers'
Mark Prkeyen) ,Is ADaclced Ia the f~ ou tbe
the ball out of readt

nat.loi u ...... ,......
11·-.C....U 21. 1 Z . - 23. 1~
w.u..m. (I) 22. 14 (tio)oCio&gt;e. c-.t

£1oimp ,_,,,.... :M :10 I 76 216 11t

Dnrhe

·.

Olloon

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
T-

u ...._ '. -

ll·N•• Coaoarilolln Olono f9. t:z...
Y'
- ( 2 ) 32.11.(: I ldoo

10 2!0 214

63 211 n
63 236 22S
60 :145 2t7
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9-Cine. ~ 14-3 ........:...........67
IO.lle!W-11-3 ............. -:........ _,AQ

-~
W L TPio. GFCA

ww·_., , __
....... n29

¥

a.w-c--17-2..........79

WALl!S CONF'IRENCE
·_

19-t,N,.,,,,,...., ,,,,_,,,,.~": ,,2D7

6-Da- - - ...3 .......... _ .......... 111
7-RIVII'Inl Soudlcaa 11-1 ...-:.'!1".......... 105

In tbe NHL.. .' .
,._

Pta. ·

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7!!0.,...
S... Aal.aiD rt O.u' ...... 7:30 .P.ni. ·
l'lloWJot- I:J9p.on,

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25.12-Columbuo

Marioo·l'rini&lt;Hn 13. 3 (d'c)· AIIlance,

?:30..........
7:30p.m.
lncliMo M'ff II I!""· 7:30p.oL
- . Nllotol; 7:30 ......
lpm.' '
NowY·
. . at~I!30JU11.
Dlliwolatllollu,l:30p.m.
.
lluh • Ooldoa S..O..IU:30 p.m.
LA....._ a Sa: M ,10:30 p.m.

' 14·6·LB.
LB. , . 56.99

Pta.

Dillon nalYI~.,. •en polnlt:

II·Loroin MaUnl '

Tonllht'a p - ·

-. JO.:e

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I·SlOW (27) 111-1 ................................ 321
2-Sond...... (7) .111-1.:....................:.... 279
).T.- -111-'t .............. -...... 2!51
..Cio!oolaad 1111. 16-2 .......:... ,:,,._.. ,,221
5-C- McEinlor 15-3 .....:............. 170
. 6-Talodo s- (I) 16-2 ............. _... , ..136
1·~ i9·1 .. - .... -................ :........ 119
11-llaaUIIoa ·~ .... _........ __ :, ... _ ........ 15
9-lloylon - 1 6 - L..............76
to-Lima s..-16-3 ·--·--................65

Adlau lot, w
M
a.vlltANI) 102,- 100
DrMzqb, 101 ftP!
19
t

Dlvlsloa I

Team

nu~t,~..,;...

Steelers more
ready to lose
Nickerson than
fatten his.wallet
PITTSBURGH (AP) -The
ever-frugal Pittsburgh Steelers
apparently would rather risk losing
Hardy Nickerson to free agency
than name him a franchise player, a
move that could upset the team's
salary structure.
Under the NFL's new labor
agreement, each team can designate a franchise player, to be so
designated for the life of his conlract
The rule allows learns 10 protect
a marquee player from free agency
but comes with a price. The player
must command a salary equal to
the avera~e of the top five players
at his pos•tion.
The Steelers had the NFL's lowest payroll last season and designal.ing such a player would alter
their salary structure· significantly.
If running back Barcy Fosler were
designated, for example, he likely
would quadruple his $413,000 base
salary of lasL season.
Foster, however, doesn't qualify
because he has one year ldt on his
contract. All-Pro cornerback Rod
Woodson isn't eligible either
because he was one of the players
involved in litigation against the
lca¥ue.
'No, I don't think we're going
to name a franchise player," Steelen director of football ~rations
Torn Donahoe said. "We vc pretty
much made up our minds on this.
And you may sec other icams
doing the same thing."
.
Nickerson, a Starting linebacker, ·
is the top Stecler eligible for free
agency and, although he hu aaid
repeatedly he hopes to play elsewhere, could .be reconsidering al'ter
playing under Cllllt:h DIU Cowher.
Other Steelers eligible are
defensive end Aaron )ones,
linebacker Bryan Hillklc and taclcle
Tunch llkin. Hinkle and llkin are
considering tctirement.

0

'

6

,(167
,646
..131
.!19

NowY&amp;Io95,
91
o.t-.12S.......... IO'I

'

•

.196·

'

T~(IKOtH

LIMIT ONE 18-cT. CARTOII WITH
I
COUPON' $1D.DD
OF
ADDITIONAL PllllCHASE
' ..
so LIMIT o""ECO!Jf"~ l'fR .cusr~ER-t ,;., I
COUI'PN~Sif,i FEB 21-SAr:
FEB. 17, 199!
.

FLAT . .. $12.00 !SAVE

- ... -.............39 10
- . ..................,)1 17
.......... __,, __,,,. t7

Grade A Large Eggs f j

U.S.D.A. f;HO/CE CRAIN FED BEEF
POilTERHOUSE STEAKS DR , ,.....

In Top 25 action,

c!

' KROCER

1

SEASON

1s-cr..~ .

4

,Oil

PoclkDI-

Quantities 0 '

I
I

OfJ,THE

n •

Ohio high ~hool
· boys' basketball poll

14.1
21
29.1

.~

Dollu ..................... .4 &lt;15

llaatr1ona1

The Dally SenHnel Page 5.

Sports briefs
Hockey
.
:,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - It
appears likely that Disney's ~
expansion team will begin Pia)'
nexl season. The Los Angeles
Times rrPonecJ today that the Disney and Ogden Entertainment COil!:;
panics are close to a lease that
would pave the way for the 1eam to
begin play at the Anaheim Arena iD
October.
.
,,

.

·
boys' basketball scores

T.tpt'apma

\

...u I. I '•rt11Mfcn,1:40pa.

DeoNil}. Ba!!olo, 7&gt;10 p.oL ·

N.y . l1naeraa1 V•acouver,

10~

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TODI'IWIItDt IIC1Ift
Ill..... I

Cot. s- "· 0 - 4 3
1boa1u Wm-..... 54, WGIIIioi....
KlP
. 3D

.Til&amp;

IlLLEY
M••'• Spedlal:

!
JEFF BUTCHER

FREEZER PLEEZER

FIIOZEN 6.7-IJZ. CRISPY CRUNCHY FISH STICKS
DR CRISPY CIIUNCHY

orange ·
Buy OM-Get OM
·cream
Treats .......... 12-ct. PllEEI
FRENCH ON(IJN. RANCH DR VEGETABLE
Kroger
Llgllt
Dfps.... .. ... ...

Mrs. Paul's

FIWZEN SINGLE SERVE TURKEY DR

n-oz.

spread.........

1.s~z.

· carrot~ ......

KrOger ·,

Chicken
Pie ............ ~....... 9-oz.
Chl-thl's
Tortilla
Chips........ ... ,,~z.
ChiCO'S
Nacho u'#tv...
sauce ......... :.. 1-/b.

t6·oz.

Spices .. .......

:&amp;ht
EnvelOpes

crealnlr

.,,..,..,
12-o&amp;.
'

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.sa
6 .sao
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vt\N I.-a Norman, forwud . .Sian~ '
._C... ....... 10 I . - I IO.dll1

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cw :citwAUDB BUCKS- Plll'M
Tod4 Dor. - - , . . lho lnjooo4
lllt. IJ.aiie111 Denll IUOn&amp; ... Alta

-1'JIIli70.Doo,tu.':tii

. NEW YOU llNICilS - Plu041
..... " ±== pll!l. ............
U.. ~lillie
lido AD II

--1'7.-1*"•54 •
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NIGHT liGHT

COFFEE RICH

CoFFee

"'Pill!'
' ,. Cet-

Mini
Peeled

ASsorted

Tvson

Prmento ·
Cheese

_

PllEEI

Whole

Pickles .........

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Fish
IJIIY ..~~. -· ,.._
Fillets ......... s~z.

K/KJGE/1

sweet

47

In the Big Ten... .

BUNNY LUV ·

NIW
.-n•
_ YOIJ_..
•- - ,

~~"*

NafW•IdJII
biMtnll IN•

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

· ~a~~

Former Racine resident Jeff
Butcher, son of Jim and Jennifer
Butcher of Rockport, lnd., siJned a
national letter ol intent on Peb~ 4
to play football at Wostem Kentucky University in Bowling
Green,Ky.
.
Butcher, a 5-10, 180-pound
senior, attends South Spencer High
School in Rockport. He was named
to The As8ocialed Press and Unlwl
Presa laternalional ill-state teams
and was a four-time all-league
Selection. He scored 211 points in
his career at South Spencer and
made nine field goals over 40
yards.
As a junior, Butcher set a new
school record for longest field goal,
a kict,of 47 'ylrdl. On oxtra point
attempll be wu 26 of 28 in bis
senior yw, abo hiain&amp; five of 10
field J08I lllelllptl.
Durina his - · he ki~ 18
field IOals and made 145 oxlra
poinll.
'
Butcher is a left-footed soccer
style kicker and Ia one of 14
recruits 10 sian letbn of Intent to
play at Western Kentucky. WKU
c011:h Ja Hartlauab aid, unis
wu a 'needa' cluL Somalimcll you
NCIUk die bel&amp; plaJer 8¥liiiiJie ud
IOIIIOtinltl yo• IICfllit 'baled OD ,
w111t ,oa • ldiq. 1'1111 yw we
lrild 10 brill ill. playenlbll Clll

u.e FAST. DJNDS
for aorm.aDy 2-4 day
.refund• or
Eleeii'OJiie FiJias for
refmla in about 3 'we*•.

~rlf'.!tr.:S
10 lie d!Onam•
WlCU next,.-.

~ tlciDer

fO

Academically,

~·

~lltclier

raQk$.

•

i

�Pega 6 The Deily Sentinel

EASTMAN'S

Wtdnll IIIWO Februlry.24, '1883

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

\fedne8day, February 24, 1.3

•

or·

•

U. S•.NO. ONE

••

.

·

f·)odland Sp•2(ral Coupon

145

3YIIImES

TE
POTATOES

.,

f

I

c•kk•• of'••• Sea I
TUliA
I
1.

, 2°

•

1.0

6.1250L

I

•

ca•

·

$1CUMthF m 111 Pwchn•

Um1t 3 Wlho-'PJI' •

Back on lbc lealll lhis ~ are
Belh floyd. Midland, an mflelder
some~~n~ngcompelitiaD,be._ · and its only jlinior, in addition to
The lWJI will be c:o.taptained •econd-year pia yen Jane )ess,
by Robin .SIUII ot JCIOIIIrCIVille, its Troy, infielder and co-cap lain;
only ~enior and four-year swter Charlene 7'1:art, Glousler, oulf~eldwho has been bonoied by Dislric:t pitcher; Starr Philpot, Dayton,
22 and the Mid-Ohio Conference pitcher; Kellh!obinson, Marion,
each year she's pili fed Cor Rio mfle,L~~ , Shelley WhilakGrande. Stull was pl,lyer :Of the er, Vllllo . . . .bar, clllCher-infielder;
week 1111d' a member of the MOC and Sheri Wilt, Springfield, oul·
'
fielder
and dislric:t teamS as a eau:her in
her freshman )'ear, repealed lhe . ewJ'Ithe le8lll areJ!ealher Briosame accomplishments. a sopbo- ~~·k roveport, ou leld; Tanya
more, and last year wuJlayei of
'~· sid/' f' %es~ , Chester,
lhe wee!c and a member lhe con· , ~&amp;:oro'" _1e ~ Sehnda Hollie,
ference/dislrict le81liS as an infield· W
• pttc f ·,/vannab
1
cr.
. st!ve~t
•e er; and alhi
"We expect a lot of leadershiP.
..~ ha ~lhhou~. · b
and experience from Robin, ·and if
ef ~ e g l retw:ntng, . ul
she has a coruiSlent ye&amp;ri she deli- ~";o·
are~ who
nilely hns a $It at being player of 'lasi . Jn 96
.. ~:~ .~es
lhe year," Fane said.
season,
, .
start-

The--Redwomen compe*f in a fall
schedule and ended !I~7 against

N ·

.

loss,

'

--

the "'llionals last year and Mount
V.emon Nazarene is tough, while
our Soulb CuoliNlrip will have
10111e good reams 10 play, perticu·
larly Under. Our non-leape s1a1e

ing nine will be SII'OIIg, but heaven
forbid 1111y' injuries."
Forte said lbe le8lll's strength
has been in its defense, but wina
conditioni~filt.'wed improvement
in hilling · . Pitching will alSo
make the differeil~e. particularly
when led by Philpot, who compiled
a 9-9 record in her fust year with
lhe RedwomM.
Rio Grande """liS •k· 1993 ·-·
......- u"'
son Feb. 23 against Coker (S.C.) in
lhe flrSl of five $ames il will play
in lhe soulh dunng spring break.
The team's home opener is. with
West Virginia Slllle·on March 13.
The 1auB pan of lhe schedule will
see lhe Re4women in tournaments
at Ohio Dominican and Shawnee
Slate.
"The schedule is the toughest
we can get at our level in Ohio,"
Fane said. "Shawnee Slate went to

will have its mOIIIClllS, wilh Capila1
probably being lhe best of lhall&lt;(
but our dislrict games will be~
lcey 10 everything."
~

r------_;;...__________~--~·

I

Rw· Gr,"'•"e so•""ball s•-•e

....u.
Date
Op,_nt
Feb 23
at Coker
Fe
. b.' 24 .........,.....................
•
................ at Ftancis Marion
Feb. 2S ........................ .at Newberry
Feb. 26 .............................at Lander
Feb. 27 ............................ .al Erskine
March 13 ......................W.Va. Stale
March 23 ..................al WilmingtOn
March 27..................... .Notte Dame
March 28 .;................. .at Charleston
March 30 ....................;.at0Uernein
Aprili ......................Shawnee SIBle
April2,............................alFindlay
April 3 ............................... .at Tiffm
April3 ......................... .atl.ake &amp;ie

'J'

'.

""'

April4....................... .at Heidel~
A "16
M t Ve~
Pl"!l ...................... ~-~·-·iJ'-'
Apn 8 .........................81 u:uoorv ,..
. April 10 ...............Mount SL Joseplt~
Aprill3 ....:.......................... Malone:
A)¥ill5 ...............................Urbarul:
Aprill7 .................................WalsJt:
Aprill8 ............................ Lake Erici:
April20 .............at Ohio Dominical(•
April 22 ............................al Capill!l-'
Apri12A-25 .....at0DC Toumamen(•
April ZI ..................Morehead Slate:
April29 .......... ~.................. Marietl;i:
May 1-2 ....at Shawnee Slllle Toum,:
;

:

Lyles Lima Senior's n~w star; Ironton's last win a landmark
"

•

By RUSTY MILLER
g~y who nobody noticed \Wltil lhe
AP Sports Writer
biggest game of his life.
Ever wonder whal happened to
Elsewhere, Alliance Marlinglhe other guard last year· tor Lima ton's girls ftnished 19-1 for lbc best
Senior?
.
record in school history; Chilli·
Although Demond Lyles often cothe HWitingtOn's boys won their
played second fiddle to two-time last 10 regular-season games
: Mr. Baskelball Greg_ S.i~pson, be !Jebind ~ Keller, who's averag"
wowed fans at lhe DivtSJOO I state mg 21.4 pomts and 14 rdlouncJs a
championship game last Man:h by game; Gnadenhuuen Indian Val' scoring 43 poinlS (9 of 13 on lhree· ley's boys ftnislled 20-0, bul need·
poinlerS),in an 88-86 overtime loss ed a three-point goal by Jason
to West Chester Lakota.
Alsepl at the buzzer to beal
• Well, Lyles hns done quite well . Uhrichsville Claymont:63-60 and
'i without SimpSon aroWld lhis sea- ChesapeilcewonitsseoondSlraight
· son.
·
Division Ill polllille iD what coach
[ ~senior guard recently scored !'JQnn Persin called an;.overachiev17 pomts 10 become lhe second- mg year.
·
. leading seorer behind you-knowIronton's 73-68 victory over
, who in Lima Senior history. He has Portsmoulh ;Friday was, its ftrSt oo
1,547 career poinlS, not bad for a lhe Trojans' home (loor since

I.

L••

•

:Scholastic Sideiight

rl .
I
I

BAG

I

FollOWing a SeiSon in which it
revitali:red ilsdf into conlelldtz sta·
Ius, tbi University of Rio Grande
softball ream has set its sishts on a
, poslason berth lhis spring. ·
'
"Uke I told lbc fellll, I'm men
' excited about Ibis year lhan last,"
1
lhird·season Redwomen mentor
AngeloaUFor~ Hid.d"!:!.u canbou ~it
. around, W!fttel' Ill ...... a. t_tl,
, but now lhe lilne has come to do IL
"I
· 1 ~ 1 tha
h
t lh ab~ous y· ec
-~we a~e
1
e di 11)' 10~~ learnS1m
l
SlnCL '
'f
t ~: ot
~ul't,~ure on~~e~ I
, lAs Y~
•~
·
; . h w~ ~ ~ 1992 ,_you~
, ts t ~ pr ak ~m:t l!d.tor tn t
, ~-~m eup, he! WI ~
· ~ et ~ . mg sop
rna . ~ng ':rar's:
: 2 ca=nfr or~ tev~s e
· le8JII
om e expei"lence,

DLAND

·1
· II
·.

L---------------~--~

,.

.,

The Dally Sentinel-Page-]

New season excites '93 edition ·ofRio .Grande's softball team _;

BIG IEIID FOODLAIID • 614·992-2191

.,

.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

. In wake of3-lloss to Devils,

,

.

•

1971 ;·and Holgate continued ilS
topsy-l\lrV)' season. The Tigen I0$1
their first ~even games, lhen won
lhe next five, lhen lost six straight
before friday's 64-45 victory pver
Liberty Cenler. Unforturlalely, Hoi·
gale closes outlhe regular season
agili~st unbeaten Wause_c;&gt;n, !h.e
Sl8lC s No. 3-ranked leallltn DIYI·
sion 11. .
Look ou.t for Leipsic's girls
~-The ywn$s had a bi$ Y!l8f
thiS season m gomg 1.8·2, wmnmg
lhe Blanchard Valley Conference ..
and laking a share of the Pumam
County League. Bul what's ahead
might be beuer.
. .
· Coach Gary Krembrink's learn
beat Vanlue 73-41 as sophomore
Cheri Siebeneck had 28 J)oinls,
ciassmales Kandy Martinez 1111d .

4

Jaime Knueven had 11 apiece and a
fourth sophomore, Tricia
McDaniel, added 10..McDaniel has
been lbe ream leader all year, averaging 17.3 poinlS and 14 rebounds
a game.
The fifth Slarter is a junior. And
fut~re opp_one~U lake note : t.he.
JUntor varsity, J8Uimed wilh even
more sophomores, wenl 17·1 lhis

wilh 44 poinlS in 1111 83·57 vicllll)'
over Cleveland South; and Tmvis
Mulanax and JI!OII Byler ot Can·
ton Heli~ Cbrislian -'t sc:orec1
32 points m a 122·68 landslide
over YOUIIPIOwn Christian.
· CraiJ Kerns became lhe lhird
player m, school history to score
1,000 potnlS in a career as Bainbridge Paint Valley clinched its
season.
first Scioto Valley Conferenee Iitle
Canal Winchester's Shawn s~ 1964. Also hilling lhe 1,000Haughn notched 41 points (27 .in JlOIDI mark: C11111on Glen Oak's
lhe first half) including five lhree- -. poug Meyer, North Baltimore's
pointe1Sandfoutdunksilian81-48 Brian Gazarek, Liberty-Benton's
victory over Logan Elm; Alliance's ·Stephanie Meyer and Rock Hill's
Chester Harper scored a career· . Jason Cadc.
high 38 points in a 63-62 loss to
Lynchburg-Clly's Paul Cluxlon
Nonb Canton Hoover; Massillon had a biJ year. He set a schopl
Jackson sophomore Jami Bosley record wtlh S97 poinll this season
broke a 27-year-old scQring rec:ord while averaging 31.4 points a

1

.

·.

.

•

1play may get boost-if Lemieux takes ice e~rly
Penguins'
power,
.
.
.
-

I

.

'

By KEN RAPPOPORT
they were held scoreless on,eighl ~ uiday's home~ against Tampa
AP Hockey Writer
man(ll)wer advantages, and they Bay. His silllalioo is to be evallllllMario Lemieux is expected to have converted jus! two of lheir last ed again oo ~
come back lo die Pittsburgh Pen- 34 chances.
· "ll's not a
of IIIOiivation,"
guins 'shortly. Tho way they've
The power play hasn't been lhe PillSburgh' coach Scotty Bowman
been playing lately, lbey' 01111 use same since L.emieux was sidelined said of lhe Penguins, who have lost
him.
by Hodgkin's disease last monlb. four of lheir last five. ''Maybe it's
1
''Out power play is terrible,'' 1 Lemieux .last played on Jan, S. He .· lhe facllhere was ~tlot. of specula·
Penguins forward Rick"Tocchet doesn•t end his Jadiat;on ·lre:8llilenll lion lhal Mario mialtt nlay. He was
said' followillg Tuesday night's 3,1 until neill Tuesday, bUt might~ oul fo~ so long. &lt;We're lillking a ·
loss at hoine' to the New Jersey back sooner than Clpecled. The liYO-monlh Ordeal before he's even
Devils.
Penguins would prefer be not play back."
The Penguins have hardly until !he radiation Jlll)cess is over
Wilh Tuesday night's ioss, lhe
'looked like lhe Nl«.'s 10)1 power~ but general manager ~i ~Irick . Palrick Qivlsion·IW,Ijll• f,enauins
It play ~ of late. ,~ night, :.; ~Iii not tule ~~Sat· 1051· lhe!( ~- in·Ma!~/points '.

'

:.~ Gw
. ynn

·

''

· '

~

Br T~ jlM!M'lated Preis
said. "llutlhese ~ were judg·
Spnng 1f!1inin1 is a IPC'Ciallime ing niy whole career hn one pitch.
in baseball whl:it lbcR Is hope for 'Jhey don't remembel\ lhe silllation
i all. It is' a lime to focus on the goOd I was )iul in, the debatable calls.
', things lhal might happen ·in the TileR was a whole slew of lhings
} future and forget, ab(lut what went lhal went wrong lbat ~g." ·
.• wrong in 111e pasL
·
"People Hy·l mustJie awful to
I For Jony Ow_ynn. whoM '!"Cight ~ ~p a hit to .• guy off th~
has been noptc at San D~eao's
h\ Belinda said at lbc Pinlles
camp ellch spnng,' this is a time 10 camC: 'Bradenton, FliL '.'1 sort of
Lalk about odler lbings.
fek
urapegoat all .W!nlel:; But
nobodr brought up the _Sttua~ I
1 "I don't usually say I am not
I going to l8lk about something, but I came mto. I'm npl !l__h_~h-proftle
I am telling you guys now, it is lhe closer. I'm not a m~ worker.
· ; firSt day ot spring lnlinlng ,PI I'm _Bul I ~ my hardest.; gave 1()(!
• not gomg to talli: about 11;'' the .percent.
.
I four-time NL batting champion
For Mark Davis, lhis'joa lime to
~· said Tuesday at his arrival In loolc ahead.
' &lt;f .,_ ·,.
· Yuma, Ariz. "I have my .reasonst
Davis has only seven sli~ and
: and IIley are personal reasons.
• a 5.49 ERA since 19~,~ he
; "Ev.ery year I come 10 C8111P· '11/011, lbc Cy Young"' . Wjlh ~
'. it's an issue," Gwynn said. "1111$ saves and a 1.85 ERA
lhe San
: weighl issue has really been lfillinl Diego Plldre8. ,
·~ .
1on my nerves.... My actions should
Davis, 32, Is m, camp wtlh the
! speak for me. My joll is 10 play Atlanta Braves tn. West Pali,D
, baseball and 1 am going 10 go..out Beach, Fla. He sa1d he won l
; and play baseball. That's iL Now '
~ get8~~.~ed as lhe PadrU' '
Su'
:

I

T k

: ~:s~~~~~~

;

seve&gt;al

m lhe wm-

• 1er.

·

.

i , ·For Pittsburgh reliever Stan
• Belinda, this is a time to drop
, memories frotn last October.
·
; Belinda gave up a two-OUt, twO: run single to Fnriclaco Cabrin in
lhe ninlh inning lhat l811ied AdiJU
; pasl the Piratelln Ganlo 7 .ol·lll6
NL playoffs. Betiilda's moii!Xu: did
DOl bring a lot or encouragemeot
duringlhewina. '
·
I "I had a lot or bate mail,'' he
•

I

DIAPERS

y. Gil.

99

50 4oFF:

BEECHNUT
Of :
BABY FOOD roTHE.wsPURCHASE
W/COUPON
•••••••••••••••••••••••••
I

27·50

COUNT

1

I

, lhe team viclOn ia d!e open, noVice
·and junior Oly~~ic di·vilions,
.respec:tlvely, in i:HJUthorn Ohio·
f,West VIrginia 'American Boxlna
;JW-'""' CharilnionlbiDI.a two-

-FREE

...
POTATO

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

I,daye;;!i"-whicllmlaalldsatur·
day niabt lllbo old 8annm Trice

Alit YAIIITIU

' ;High Si:baoJ In Mal:erYtDe.
; Approx~aPrite:ru:= S~~S!o
lhoweilllpau&lt;
.y
:niaht ftpll, ~
110 Fflllk
:Beach, tountaiiiOIIt direCtor and

t
2
·
1
9
CHIPS 1•1• ol. .

...

l(llllnoter.

-tn

' 'I'IIe HunllnpJil VFW Plllt 1064
leiiD came In l6cond In lbo l)pel1
1
dlvlalan. The llelcb A"'leclc Club.

o.a:
11lpolla. took ~ In t1a novtae
1

l ~lvialon Thomp10n

---....

_;,

.

;1l 199,, ·. d
Jac son e . ,J Jn uctee

into
Baseball, Hall of Fame
•
·

B7 PRED GOODALL
TAMPA; Fla. (AP)- Reggie
Jackson won't have to ·ahare the
spotlight in Coopentowft this sum!'ameer·l!~2.headed into . ..' Hall of
.-,
IUU05.
"He will have his. day in the
Sill'S, so 10 ~.to perfdnn on lhe
platform by himself," Hall of
)'lame president Ed Stack said.
,"I'm sure he'll enjoy
1 very
much."
•
I

.:·

Jackson, lhe only playa- elected
by lhe B~b!lll Writetl Associalion f)( Atilerica th~ year, will be
indncted Aus. 1. The Veterans
Committee bild an opportunity to
give him COfl,lpany, but di.d n'l
Tuesdly.
'
The panel lhat considers candidales in l'I(O·Cilegctles- players
who ~ve been retired for 23 years
or more and execudvea, .~.
umpin!s and sws of lhe Qld Negro
Leaaues - failed to elect aayone

....___. . . ..

·-

•

•

Rocreatloa

juniorOlyi!IJii!: division.
been criticized in recent years
Tho indtvidual champions in bec&amp;IISt of lhe difficulty it's had In
each divisioft included Thompson giving candidlreldle nece!lary 75
,Recreation '1 . Richard Duilon pen:ent support.
(open), independent Robert Peete
A 'fC'!IICJ, tho c:ammiiiCC elect·
of Beckley, W.Va. (novice) and ed pucher Hal Newbouser and
Thomp10n Recreation's Harper American League ';!l~e Bill
Broderlct(jllliotOlyi'IIDk:).
"-'"--·on.._~..._
Olillr ~ce:-lnciudecJ Ryan ,..,.~ we::~ offOII' bal·
Anhur and .,ril Mlyl, .fdilton lots illlidD that~,'' Slack said.
B.C.; Clwlea Daker, MaU BuiDI
lbatlWO VOleS-liken in
and ~r Glbe10n, Poll 10&amp;4; each
Jimmy Adklna, Dellllrtoa, W.Va.;
otlndlvldualuotll
Steve.M!MFI•e!a, Kenlllllb 511" ' a.
ckllo. I caoYtell
Davl4 V01rt1F1 and Eric Wlllon,
are. Tbe resa ot lbc
OU; J'yler Cradoct, Weatwoocl,
witllauy1
Ky.; Robert Seay, Fayetteville,
..
W.VL; Jim Milch. ind., Mctantown, w. Va.; Keith. ,spili:o•,
Thomp10n Recrea:tlo•; Arclo
Lopn, Ind., Fayoacvlllt W.Va.;
Chrll Stanley, walkover, Fayot·
tevlllo. VL
·.

w.

••

~
~

" Pre·sale ticketHdt lbo 1JOYI llnd'gifls• sectional tournament
f ·.gamef at Alexander High Scbciol, Wcdneaday and Tlllnday will be
onsaleatEaslemandSouthemlfilhschoolslbisweet.
Southern's hoys.llllllced lOth In 1he Slate's Division IV nmkings,

sewn to four galites, last losing on

Me-I•gs spo.r t s· b rie
• f:s
'

i D-:IV .presale tickets 4Vailable

~~!.laJ&amp;!"~=P~~~":&gt;'~c:;.t;:g~~~~

Tickets purchased at llic piC wiD not benefit lhe school.
The Soulbem·Trlmble ganie follows lbc Easlem-MIIler game,
hich be~· s at 6 15 p.m Eastern - • · tickelS will be a ailable at
w
: · m lhe
· office. .,._
v
Easlem
· 'llh School
· •
·
In giris~" action, s0utb0in defealed second seeded Miller 54-53
·last Thursday in fm round action to advance to lbc sectional fmals
Thursday at 8 p.m.
.
Soulbern will. face Croobvllle in the lower bracket finalS at 8
p.m. ~~em, which drew a bye, wiD play lllp-seed Frankfort Adena
m the upper braclcet fmals at 6:1S p.m. The two winnen will meet
in the disaict tournament at Soulheaslem High School in Richmandale oo March 3, settill#lbc stage for a possible Easlml-Soulhem
rellllllCh. Tickets for those ga~~~eB win be available at lhe respective
schools lhru ThllrSday.

Jn dep~n11en
..1
It
OUrnamenI Sl'~~
'"ed .

The Soulhem Higb Alhletic Department and Athletic Boosters
will be sponsoring lbeir annual independent baslcetiJall lOlD'nament
Saturday and Sunday at Southern HiP, School.
·
The enlt'y fee for lhe lOUmament IS $100 per lealll.
For further infonnation please conlaet alhletic director Howie
Caldwell al h001e today at ,614-949-2954 after 7 p.m. or at Soulhem High School before Thuraday. Caldwell can be conlacled allhe
high school afa 1:30 p.m. daily at614·949-2611.

·

Division II matfest Saturday
sec~~~~n~:::n=~~~f;ms:;:::yinato;:e~~g~

School.

Nov. 30, 1991.
•
Don Beaupre stopped 24 shof
in winning his sixlh conseculi\Ot
slllrt.
:
Nordlques
6,
Oilers
3
••
al
V eri Kamensky scored twioe
and assisted on Mike Ricci's g~
ahead goal, one of four by Que~
in a span of 5:46 in lhe third JlClif
od, as lhe Nonliques IIOlChed lhef
flflh straightviclllry.
~
Steve· Duchesne, Joe Sakic anD
Owen Nolan also scored· for lire
Nordiques. Esa Tikkancn scoru
two goals and Pett Klima had lit
other for lhe Oilers.
•
Jets S. Sfttaton 1
Teemu Selanne scored his 46di
goal to break Winnipeg's recorll
for goals in a season by a rookie. ; :
Selanne's second-period goat
broke Dale Hawetehuck's mark !X
45 set in lhe 1980-81 season. It alsO
left SclanNHrst seven shy of Miki
Bossy's
record ot 53 goals iii
1977-78 with the New Yor~
ls~Jamesli,Sharkll
·:
Theoren Fleury and Jo~

winless Slreak.
,'
• The Sharks put oo a bela per.;
•Ormance than lbe last lime thl
teams met on Feb. 10
suffered a 13-lloss 10 lhe
lhe WOillt in lheir two-year history. :;

Aclion will swt wilh first-round action at 11:30 a.m. The finals
and consolation games will follow.
Other teams competing In lhe event. will he Alhens, Gallia
Acaderny,Iackson, Nelsonville-Yoi"k, Vinton Couilty and Warren
Local.
·
·
Weigh-in wiD be from 8:30unti19:30a.m.
TickelS for lhe lOUI118IIICill will bll $3 per session .or $Hor 1111 allday Slamp.
·

T'AX TIP

wi!!~h~;':~=~

:c:hef"~~~~~f~:::!:

.

THE WEEK
-

aJ

iiiM' All AW"ME fCil

..-..........
.
.
,
.
,.
:=-'!:::; ::::=.-:.=':
:=!~:

IMII.

Mllllll

=........., .. a~_.:.:·~
~!: •..•
.... •... •J

............
·····~·

10

''""''

lter of Colum • ihe 'Milton Box·
ling Club of Milton, W.Va. and lhe
;Ohio Univenlty Boxing Club w«e

o•ao•••s
OZ. 1M

• •,

....._
1 "''

l
,IUidod
by 11e1c11 a.nd

t

I~ if he can't make the rosier.
; 'l'm coming oull!ere to enjQy
lhe silUilion," he said. "Whalever
h_appens, ha"""
. " s.... I realize lhat
r,.,...
baseball is j!(ling to end for me al
some point, • he said.
, . . '_'l·,lt'y to J?UI alllhat. out of my
mmll, 1101 thmk about 11, because
when I do, I dwell on it inside," he
said. "I certainly don'l apologize
for anything. It's not like I haven't
been going out lhere and aying."
Will Clark also is looking ·
ahe~~d, espe_cially 10 playing w!di
newly acquired B&amp;rry Bonds. The
two sws were scheduled to work
ouliQgelhe( for lhe fusllime today
at tiiC San Fnncisco GianlS' camp
in Sl:ollSdal!:. Ariz.
,.
,
"I've 'beard a,ll winter 1\ow
Barry and 1 weren't going to gel
along," Clart said. "I have nothing agains1 Birry. .We will work
togelhet as well as anybody I've
warted with." , .

'

(.

Wilh lhe Canadicns holding a i.
I lead, Muller and Daigneauft
helped them pull away with lbeJF
quick goals, Muller's 29lh came 411
seconds into the period on~
rebound of a wraparound shQJ ~
defenseman
Shawn
Hil~~
Daigneault added his eighlh on)
setup from Vincent Damphousse in
lherightcomer.
~
Capitals 4, Jslanden 1 ~
~~
The Capilals exltllded lheir wi '
ning Slreak 19 seven games as
.
Hunter, Kelly Miller and Bob ea:z.
!:!er each had a go~l and ~
'

n::.::

L

I

~ in assignment to lhe minor

mce. The Adams-leading ~ . lhe New Yoi"k ._,landers 2; Quebec
Canadi.en,s moved i~to first. by a 6, Edmonton 3; Winnipeg 8,
point wilh a S-1 v1ctory at St. Otlawa 2, and Calpy 6, San Jose
Louis.
3.
Slephane Richer and Pelel' Stast·
Clnpdfeu 5, Bllles 1
ny scored in the third period to lead
Kirll: Muller and JJ. Daigneault
lhe Devils.
scored third-period goals 28 sec·
Elsewhere, .it was Washington.4, . onds apart for lhe Canadiens.
.
.

Beach Athletic Club .boxers
fonllesecondlimcmnveyears.
co~~~ ':c"::n~
. 1claim second in novice division
12VOICS~neededforelection.
'
group' which also failed
---c:' "·-·"'- Cen· was the runner-up team in the · addThellllyone
to lhe Hall in 1988, has

ASST•..
HIM/HER '
HUGGIES
ULIU IIIII

$139
LB.
PORI ~HOPS
IOMOGIIIIID
.
$119
CHOCOLATE • SKIM SEilTIST

·'

wants _h_is weio.h t to beD,Oil-issue

i

TENDERIEn QUALITY
ASSORTED
5-6 LB.AVG.

.

,,

game. He also set school and Hig~
i land County ieCords wilh games 1:1
l.s3 and 49 poinlS. For~ career, 11t
has scored 1,93~ points, aveflllina
25.1 over n games. Last season 11!1
shot 90 pen:enl on his free ~wi
and was special-mendon All-Ohio';
This year, he is a~eraging jl
rebounds and S.4 ass1slS a gam~
while shooting 61 percent on 2oi
pointers, Sl percent from three;
(!Oint range and 87 percent at thO
line.
"'1
Finally, no wonder Bucyrur
Wynford coach Rob Sheldon if
balding. What he's been througl(
lhi,s year would make anybody'£
hair fall out
~
, Six of Wynford's games 'J::~
been decided by five poinlS or
including lwo o.vertime games. "

.

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By The Bend

Skiers found
Tunday. after four nights of
!Uizero -ther, all five skiers
Wer&amp;found.

Tlte Daily

Sentinel~

Wednesday, February 24, 1993

\

;

-======·=·=\·=·========='==·====::::~~~~~---....:------~------...:.,----------~P:a~g~e~~ !:

Expecting .parents are at odds-&gt;
.
about son's circumcision
I

, '

'

•

· Dear ADD l.aDden: My wife and
I were both in our mid-30s when we

Five skiers
found alive
in Colorado
ASPEN, Colo. (AP) - Five
skiers lost in the avalanche-ridden
wilderness for four nights slept in
below-zero cold, melted snow on a
cwnp stove for drinking water and
burned furniture in a ranger's cabin
tci stay warm.
'' All five were rescued in good
shape Tuesday. Two skied into a
trading post and called authorities
from a pay phone; the others were
rescued by helicopter after
searchers spotted their distress sign31 - an upside-down American
flag.
. "TI!ere was no question in our
m,inds at any point that we weren 't
going to make it," said Ken Torp,
50, of Denver. "It was just a matter
of how ugly it was going to he."
'The three men and two women
had set out with two other crosscountry skiers 'F{iday on what was
supposed to be two-night Dip in the
rugged back country. They lost
their way Friday night and got
caught in a snowstorm Saturday.
Two membe.rs of the group
made it to safety Saturday. Dowis
of rescuers on skis and snowmobiles mountod a search for the others, who were feared caught in an
· avalanche.
Rescuers had said early Tuesday
that there was no more than a·J-in10 chance of fmding the five alive,
and they.were considering calling
off the search as another big mowstorm closed in.
·
But shortly before noon, Torp,
who was chief of staff for former
Gov. Richard Lamm, and Elliott
· Brown. 43, of Golden, reached the
'trading post in Taylor Park, 30
miles south of Aspen and about 15
miles from where they disappeared.
Hours later, Brigitte Schluger,
50, an art gallery owner, Rob
Dubin, 38, and his wife, Dee, 40,
owners of a video production company, were rescued by ·Army helicopter at a cabin where they had
spent Monday night. All three are
from Denver.
"The five people we
euphemistically referred to as Popsicles are here and I'm thrilled,"
Sheriff Bob Braudis said.
Mrs. Dubin and Schluger were ·
hospitalized with frostbite. Brown
also suffered frostbite, on three fingers, but wasn't hospitalized.
"We just did what
do in the
mountains to sW"Vive,' Dubin said.
After the ·snowstorm hit, Torp
and Brown - the most experienced skiers in the group - split
from the others to fmd a route out.
Torp said he and Brown spent
two mghts in the open with no
shelter or sleeping bags but found a
ranger cabin Sunday night in the
abandoned mining town of Dorchester near Taylor Park.
·
"We both determined we were
not going to die out there," Brown
said. ~ ·we just knew we
wouldo't."
They had little food - just
high-protein snack bars.
" Staying hydrated is pan of the
trick of staying warm , so we were
trying to do both along the route,''
Torp said. "And at night we were
using our stove to melt snow to
stay hydrated." ·
On Tuesday morning, Brown
sald, they spotted two snowmobilers and followed them to the trading post.
.
The Dubins and Schluger ended
up following the same path. Dubin
said his 118flY spent SaturdaS' night
in ·a fabric-covered snow pit, Sunday night in a snow eave and Monday night in the cabin· Brown and
Torp had used the night before.
D.uring their 30 hours in the
cabin, they burned furniture .and
kerotene to keep warm. The three
had only two sleeping bags because
Schlager had dumped hei' backpack
and sleetJing bag after having trouble keepmg up.
.

roo

---People in the news--.....--

4 to 7 lb. Average
Medallion - Self Basting

U.S.D.A. Choice

Lottery ~elections:

Turkey End . eel Frying
.B.reasl Rib Steak Chicken .

,

....

~

--

U.S..No. 1

Food Club 1 lb. Pkg.
OR
.
Sugardale 12 oz. Pkg.

. :~~:
i

lb.
'I

· Thompson White or
· . Red Flame

I·

Russet
Seedless
Ia ing
aeon 'Potatoes· Grapes

·'

.

'

Meigs County's
Extension Comer

•

High Prescription Costs

.'.

' .

Food Club Cheese Food

American S...lu

lb. Quarters

Gorton Value Pack · .

M..a BuHer

\

Fish ·Sticks or .Fillets
·

Each Slice Wrapped

GreatWilh~a ,

Crinkle Cut French Fries

..
,,

239

· '27 oz. Ba

.

Ce/eb..rateS blrt
•
ay

n

.'
.

,

'

•

I

'

J

.,

~

'
'

9 to 11 oz. Wemrr

lop Frost CauliRower,

Bonele• .

,, h I

,W

BI'OCIII Pattioo,

Pick 4 Numbers: 1-4-I-9
BuckeyeS: 2-12-17-20-37.

Col11lllunity.calendar

·•

0

Brussels Sprouts,

e Baby [ nrrnk

•-

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21b.
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~--·~=---------------~--~------

16 oz. Bag
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REEosVIU.B-

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· a...otT...Wo,

Rondololo F~lot Stripo

wrmour

::g.

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Chid.on N..Qgob,1

Pick 3 Numbers: 1-7-4

--------~~~------------------------~·

Tyson Holly Farms .
Grade A Fresh Whole·

La e

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - Two
Ohio LoUery tickets show the right
five-number combination in Buckeye S, llld each endtles the owner
to claim a 5100,000 prize, the Ohio
Lottery announced IOday.
Here are Tueslfay rught's. Ohio

married four Yl:lln ago. We did not
plan on having a family, but when
she discovered she was pregnant at
the age of 40, we were thrilled.
We learned through amniocentesis ihat the baby she is canying is a ·
boy. We are terribly excited. Now
· comes the problem:
Should tho baby be cin:umcised? those who bad gone through the proI say yes. My wife says no. eedure.
.
Aecordins to what she bas·mid, the · • Dr. 'TI!omas E. Wiswell, chief of
practice is no longer necessary, and neonatology at Walter Reed Army
she sees no reaSon to put tho infant Medical Center, who previously had
through all that pain.
opposed circumcision, changed his
&lt;Jur family physician and my ' mind 'when he read studies that
·· , wife:s ~ian are both in favor indica""' circumcision affords a high
of ~~umcmon, but they say the degree of protection against cancer
.deciSion must be made by .the of the perris. Of the 50,000 cases or
parents. Since my wife and I hold penile cancer reviewed, only 10
opposite views, we'd like yolirs. -- - oc:cumd in men who were circurnMR. PRO AND MRS. CON IN cised.
BALTIMORE
Have I told you more than you
. DEAR P. AND C.: Some bighly wanted to know? Perhaps, bUt the
J'espected physicians can be found statistics make a strong case for
on both sides of this issue. Circnm- circumcision.
cision of newborns was considered
Dear Ann Landers: After two
a routine procedure uutil1971 when divorces, I swore I would never
Do you halle q~srioiiS aboIll sex;··
the American Academy of marry again. Then I met "Mr.
, SURROUNDED • Comedian Chevy Chase,
be was bo11ored as Harvard's Hasty Pudding
b111110
O/UI to tiJl/1: to? AM /...mttkr'i''c
Pediatrics said there might be Wonderful." When be asked me 10
center, re.acts as be Is kissed by two actors In
Theatricals 1993 ~ny orthe Year. (AP' pboto)
religious reasons for circumcision, marry him, I said "yes" imrtlediately. bookJet, "Sex twl the Teen-Ager::~.
drag Tuesday night In Cambridge, Mass., wbere
but it had no medical benefits what- After a beautiful three-week honey- is frank twl to tht poilll. Send .tf·
self-addressed, IDnr. bu.siiiUs-mt"'.
soever.
moOn, he moved into my home.
Years later, after a survey was
Now, four months later, his · envelope twl a check or 111i1MJ Of~: :
taken at several hospitals, it was 22-year-old son has gouen kicked der for $3.~ (t~Jfs inelwlu posiD(,_j.
The elder Colemans and Ms. De discovered that the babies wl!o ~ . oot of college and is living with .us, twl handling) ro: Tt:ens. c/o AM -.
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) Court Judge Hiroshi Fujisaki ruled
Thomas
countersued for defama- 1101 cin:umclsed were 10 times mote along with his 25-year-old daugh- Landers, P.O.' Box ll562, Chicago/-"
·
- Former " Diff'rent Strokes" in his favor Tuesday.
tion.
·
The form~;r child star's disjlutcs
child star Gary , Coleman was
likely IQ suff~ ~ ~ ttact ter. She. was laid off eight wi:eks lll. 606ll-0562 . (In CtllfOda, selld-&gt;
awarded nearly $1 .3 million by a with hi$ parents is far from over.
no•• effort
10 land $4 .45.)
·-'
LONDON (AP) -· Anthony problems and kidney infecbOIII than ago and has • made
r
•
His parents petitioned in 1989 til
judge who ruled Coleman's parents
and business adviser skimmed appoint a conservator over their Hopkins, who won an Oscar for
son's financial and health needs. · best actor last r.ear as the maneatsome or his earning~.
Coleman, who suffers from kidney ing killer Hanrubal Lecter in " TI!e
Cole~an , 2S, bad su,ed his par·ents, Willie and Edmon11 Coleman .problems that stunted his growth, Silence of the Lambs," has been
. of Zion, Ill., and· his adviser Anita won that case and sued them for kni~hted .by Queen Elizabeth ll.
. t·
'I am a little bit numb at the
De Thomas in 19~9. Superior malici_ous litigation.
·
invited.
Community Calendar items for the auction.
moment," the 55-year-old Welshtwo daya before an eveal
appear
· ·~ '
man said after receiving the honor
POMEROY
Key
women
fronil'
and
the
day
or
tbat
event.
Items
MIDDLEPORT
Meigs
Local
Tuesday at Buckingham Palace.
must be received weD In tldvauce OAPSE Chapter 17 will meet area churches will meet Friday at 1~"
~-'- 1fi!/IIA .
1
NEW YORK (AP) - No, no, to as8ure puhlicatiou in tbe cal- Thursday at 7 p.m. at Meigs Junior p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic' 'Church in Pomeroy to plan for -&lt;' i.
High School.
no, says actor Ltam Neeson, he endar.
Church Women United.
· ~
never told a newspaper that ~ forWEDNESDAY
STIVERSVILLE - Kerry Drenmer. lover Julia Roberts.should get
MIDDLEPORT - Bosworth ):
POMEROY -!Rev. Deborah nan, Palestine, W.Va., will speak at
· acting lessons or that " Leap of
Council
No. 46, R.S .M., S.E.Mr"·
Hogeboom,
F~
Methodjst
&lt;:anathe Stiversville Word of Fait h
Faith" co-star Debra Winger was
degree,
Friday,
7:30p.m. at Mid,,.:
dian Missionary to Zaire and Church on Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
"not a gracious actress."
·
dleport
Masonic
Temple.
·•.. ·
will
speak
at
the
Laurel
Burundi,
Pastor David Dailey invites the
"I've never once in print said
' "~.
anything deuimen(a] aboUt anyone. Cliff Fre.e Methodist Church on public. ·
SATURDAY
I'm really upset about this," he · Wednesda'y at 7 p.m. Public invitLONG BOTTOM - There will•:
MIDDLEPORT - Middl eport
said Sunday during a screening of ed. '
· · Youth League ·Will hold its first he a turkey hunting safety clinic on:;
his new movie, "Ethan From~ " · ·
POMEROY
•
T~~
annual
rrlceting Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in Saturday ·from noon to 5 p.m. at' ·-·
. The Irish actor said he was quot~ten
Breakfast
of
Tnmty
Church
the
Middlepon Council room. Any- Forked Run Sportsmand Club, Curo ~ ·
ed oot of context. by USA Weekend
will
be
y.'ednesday
at
7:45
a.m.
one
interested in coaching or other tis Hollow Road, Long.Bottomv ·:
magazine.
.
.
Reservauons
may
be
made
by
callactivities
with the youth league are Call Keith Wood, 985-4400, to reg..-:. ·
Writer Laurie Werner stOOd by
ISler.
•-• ·
ing
992-7765;
985-3842
through
asked
to
attend.
the Story.
Monday.
"He's a gentleman · but he's a
KANAI.IGA - Liberty Moun-"
gab,'' she said•.
taineers will perform at the r:i.A.v ...•·
POMEROY - Pesticide CertifiFRIDAY
PORTLAND - The Lebanon Center in Kanauga on Saturday. .:·: ·
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) cation ITests will be given by the
Ohio
Department
of
Agricullllre
on
Township Trustees will meet Fri- A judge ~illed ·there wasn't
MILLFIELD -'A belated valen' ·•
enoll'gh evidence to' try three Wednesday from 3-6 p.m. at the 'day at 7 p.m. at the township buildtine dance will be held Saturdav " ·
drifters on atiempted murder _ Meigs County Public Library in ing in Portland.
fr om 8- 11 p.m. at the RusselL ~­
charges in the beating and robbery Pomeroy.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full Building in Millfield. Music will be • ~
of ABC correspondent Gary ShepPOMEROY - Ash Wednesday Gospel ChurcH in Long Bottom provided by Out of the Blue. John"·
S(d.
..
Superior Court Judge James services at St. Paul Lulheran will have preaching and singing Russell will be the caller.
Albracht on Mortday dismissed the Church in Pomeroy will begin at Friday .at 7 p.m. with local singing
POMEROY , The Royal Oak '' ·
talent. Pastor Steve Reed invites ·
charges against Charles Ray Hicks, 7:30p.m. The public is invited.
Dance Club will sponsor a dance '
the publid. Fellowship will follow.
25; Johri 'Girau, 18; and Zoran
JUNIOR HIGH ROYALTY ·Tile follcnriD&amp; lltudeatawere eled·
Sa turd ~y from 8-11 Jl.m. at Royal :·
PO!t1EROY i The American
Marjanovec ; 19, in the Nov. 2
ed by tbe studeal body to be Valelitiae Roy'lllty at the Melp Junior
Resort George Hall will pro•..
Oak
Red/Cross Blooomobile will be at
RIPLEY, W.VA. - Liberty
attack at Shepard's home.
High Scbool. From left are: Billie Bentley aad iustla Seymour, ·
vide
the
music.
.; ·
Hicks still faces charges includ- th.e Meigs County Seniilr Citizens Mountaineers will perform Friday
,·,.J .
seventb grade, and ~rlu Krawsczyn aDd BUiy Nicholson, eighth
·
ing robbery, mayhem, auto theft Center in Pomeroy on Wednesday at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
vade.
STIVERSVILLE - The Clark '&lt; ·
afternoon
from
1-S:30
pm.
Anyone
and receiving stolen property.
Family
and Dailey Family singers ; between
the
ages
of
17
and
70
who
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Tuppers
Girou and Marjanovec are charged
will
perform
at the Stiversvill e ·
weight
at
least
110
pounds
may
Plains
VFW
Post
1'/o.
'
9
053
Ladies
with receiving•stolen property.
Word
of
Faith
Church on Saturda~ :
donate
blood.
Auxiliary
will
bold
a
dance
Friday
Two others have pleaded innocent.
•
at
7:30
p.m.
David
D!liley invites_· from
8-11:30
p.in.
with
music
by
to related'charges.
the
public.
· ..:.
THURSDAY
the
Happy
Hollow
Boys.
Public
The five men were arrested
POMEROY
Auditions
for
the
Nov. 4 trying to sell Shepard's car,
Midnight Cloggers will be Thurspolice said. ·
·
day
7 p.m. in the Pomeroy VilShepard, 54, was beaten in the lage at
HallaudiiOrium.
head, with a fireplace poker. He
Harold H. Kneeu,
testing you should have ,attended a said. Tuesday he had returned ' o
WE'RE PUTTING A LID ON
POMEROY • "PianninJ Your
Mdp County
training session or at least picked work earlier this year.
Flower
Bed,
Vegetable
Garden,
Extension Agent
up
"I still 'Can't remember the men
Homeowners; lt's geitfng to be training 'W!terials offered by the entering my house because I was Home Landscape or New Lawn"
will be presented by Hal Kneen on
,
that time of year - SPRING. It may locAl extension office.
hit over the memory cente{ of my Thursdar from 8-9:30 p.m. at the ·
be snowing and five degrees outMeip County will have another brain," he said. " TI!e doctors said
'
senior Citizens center in Pomeroy.
..
sid~, but ~fore you know it the trainin8 session, for pesticide appli- I may never remember.''
Admission
is
free.
Do you feel you are paying too much fQt
spnng ram and warm, sunny cators, on Wednesday evening,
your prescriptions?Then you should be
'11
be
h
H
February
:14,
from
7
to
9
p.
m.
at
"'
'
'
wea th er WI
ere. ave you the Meigs County Extension
NEW YOt&lt;K. (AP) - Ivana
POMEROY - Pomeroy Serenity
shopping with us. With the cost of medications constantly on the rise, we feel it is
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
rp~g'l~~u:'Jvf:e~e~ssaryyou ' Office
Mulberry '· Heights ' 1 Thrumpbwants.to
gild l!er new .tov.:~eroy
'
Ouse,
ut nCJgh6ors lD the histone
our responsibUitv 10 offer our
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
ordered your seeds or plants, Pom
·
district don't like the idea.
·
cus tomers evei'\' ~dvantllge possible.
. designed a new flower bed, readied
Greenhouse and vegeta.ble
Donald Trump's former wife · Church. Call 992-5763 for inforYou see, we've made II a point to know
mation.
your lawnmower, repaired broken growers reserve Tuesday evenmg, h
I'1 d
h
L
d
It
when
generic equivalents are available .
· shovels and rakes, painted lawn Marcil 2, from 7 to 9 p. m. on your ~s app . e to 1 ~ . an mar s
Then, working hand·llljjland with your
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
doctor, we !Ill vour prescription, exactly
furniture and started lifting schedule. A joint jedueationals ·pro- m=:~~~ol:a~~~~~~:.~of.re:;
0
Plains
VFW
Post
No.
9053
will
0
as ordered, .~d ,you ~ave . tn the process.,
w~hts? If not, time is nmning out. gram sponsored '1 rae~. lerra and parts of Its columns covered
meet
Thursday
at
7:30
p.m.
All
'Fot those interested, the Meigs an!l B.F.O. Supphers on Water with $6 900 worth of old leaf
~Low Prescription Pricea
·County Extension will be giving Quality • i.t~ effect on . ~Ian!
ghd, ' members aaend.
•Free Parking (Video Touch Lot)
twO ~evening programs, Thurs- Growth, PestiCides and Fertilizers
POMEROY
Free
~lodling
dAy
day, FebruarY 25, and March 4 at will ..be Jlven at Mc~o'? .Mot~r
ClintOn Holsiriger was honored
•Faat &amp; Friendly S.rvlc.
8:00 to 9:30P.M. at tho Meigs Ll)dge, R!~Y· West VJrgJrua. This recendy with a S!JfPrisecelclntion will be held at the Salv.aion Army
.
•Store Charg• AccM . .
·
in Pomeroy on TI!ursday from 10
County ~enl~ Center. rho first ~tsgtvenl!notialchara~.
ofhis73rdbirthdajathisb0me.
•Free De!lvery to Home or Work
program IS enudcd Planmng, Your . "Cuirent and potell 1 ClirisbllaS
Attending were Larry and a.m. to noon. All area residents in
need
or
clothing
Invited.
11
01
(Cheehil'll, Bradbury,
Flower bed, Vegetable Garden, I I!'O~~·Ibn:ebeP,JWWhel~d 1°tbc- Nancy Holslnaer, Rhonda and
001
Homo LandiCape and Lawn. The · tiOJI
are lnJ ·. . a
Stacy L 1 Racine; Debbie Zach
Middleport, Pomeroy, Maaon,
CHESTER • There will be a
second proanm will empbulzo Ll~ldng County AdmiDIItratlon and B~ Me.oo.,.., John E le,
Mlneravltte, Rutland, Syracuee)
how to bell handle common dis- Building, Newark, OJ_Uo. 00 ~h ' _Middleport; James and Vir 'Tnia special meeting of Sbade River
cuca ~d pests aroulld tho home 4, H llid 18, from 7.30 to 9.30 P· CaJ~ter, a ·o1er, Derek, Brfctget Lodge No. 4'3 P.tAM on Thuts·
PUlTING
~. ,
.m. Costs are
per ~-atloThe Holslnaer, Teresa Pridonstine, day • 7:30 pm. 'Nith work In tbc
A LrD ON V4LUE!
Farmer,• noedins a pesticide sessions wiD
':Ide 11uorm n Roedsville; Carrie OllliaD Athens; B.A. cleRree. Rcflahments will be
served.
applicator. • cerilfll:iltlon, to pur- about the feasiblhty of startlna a Sandra and Chuck 'tirazler,
chase reslrlCred PNdt:idel. oan take ChriltJI!II Tree arm, plant Pomeroy; Connie, Bill and Joe
~ Ri~
tbe test on Weclneldaf.t Pebrulcy hoaldl/d~ conlral, controlling Moodispau1h. Little Hockina;
Garden
Club
will
meet
Thursday at
2A, CriJm 3to 6 p. m. at,1111 PomeO- veaetatlon tn tho plantation and Kerry Jaltice, Belpre; Paul and
7:30
p.m.
at
the
home
,Janice
ry Branch of the Miet• County inlecl/mile control.
Wlllda Holllnaer Ben and Carol
with
co-hoste1101,
Xlla
Yaung
Public Library. Pleaae aote tho
For additional information, Owens Amy Rlehanllon HockFrank
and
PhyUil
Larkins.
Brlna
cluae ql tho re.tinali~ duo 10 the . please call the Melas County i~ 8lld lhe guest of honor's
frui! for tho
llld ~
ex~ ted Iuae tumou~. Prior to
Bxlellaion oft'lce at~'
wire, FnDcel.
.

PI-

16 Slices, 12 oz. Pkg.

'

Ann
Landers

~ther ,iilb. I fi nd mySelf cleaning . :
up afler ffiese total slObs, and we ge( :
on each othds ·nerves.
·
"Mr. Wonderful" and I got into 11 :
big fight over his kids. He has not :
spoken 10 me in two days and I am ~
miserable. J bad such high hopes fQJl,
this marriage and now it is comint:·
apan at the seams. Did I make .,mistake somewhere along tbc line-~ .
Ann? If so, what was it? -- TEARS:·
INTEXAS
.
:
DEAR TEXAS: You made 1\Ja~:
mistakes. The first mistake was ~·
letting your husband know exactly
what the grou.nd .rules were
pettaining to yout home and his:
children. The, second mis!ake wif..
~t insisdng ihat your husQand to&gt;
wtth you f~ coonseling tho min~~ .
your marnage got into trouble or·;
going alone and availing yourself of ·
the guidance of an unbiased !hint
party. You need outside help.
don't let those kids ruin your chance.·
for happiness. Good luck.
. "·
Gem of the Day: It's OK to ast~­
dumb questions. TI!ey're easier 16r
handle than dumb mistakes •
,.;~.

..

fril!t ...,..

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·-··- ""'' ....

~-·

- ,.....

.... ·" . -....-. . . ...............

'

,... _·-···-- '

I
.....--• •••

" .. &lt;-...... ....~ - -

""

-. ... - --·-;-·- ..........

. . .. . .....
~

�•

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Peg• 1G-The Dally Sentinel

..

--.

•

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.•

R CPRODOOS
24 PAI12 OL CAliS

.Monday -thru SundaJ'
8 AM-10 PM :

c.n 992-2156

•

.GaDla County MeJP Coimty M-n Co., WV
Area Code, 614 Area Cod.; 614 Area Code 3M
.
'

$499

.

' 446-G.U:pol:.

•AA.

'

~

. . •

-A I
:... T?

•

Yonl.s.Joo

5

I

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

"

.

.....

388-VIatoa
24&amp;-llo Gnode
2St&gt;-G.,aa Dioo.
643-,\nhlo OUt.

379-11'....1

a

5

992-MJ.WiepoiO/
• Pomero1
985 G · gnr

67&amp;-1\.

1'1-•

458 leoa

5_76-.Apple G..,.e
843-Po..W.d
773-MMOD
247-l...tutfoL
882-N.... u....en
949-R•elae
89&amp;-Lelut
. 937-Bolfolo
742-lbollood
667-Coohtlle

.•

FRESH ~ORK BUTT .

.

.SteaR/R oast.....................LB.

-

....... a

•

•

4=30 P.
tiT BEFORE
..UUUON

•

.

••

-

lYME llliSEIISE INFORMATION'
IIIEEJUNiG IIIAACH 2' - 7:00 P.M .
PI'
II '!Iaiiey. Hospiial

--••
-

•
••
•

$139
·-

5

~Conference Room

Ilk .Jimor.t. 5pealtitr
IRoDrW..omatioo call
Hllil0i-i!e6~256

'
\

PORK

Cube Steak.........................LB••

.( h

$199

Chuck Roast....;.__ L8. · 1
USD~ CHOICE BONELESS BEEF _$ _ 99
Chuck SteaL._.LB. 1..

TUB

..
l

TOASTER
PASTRIES

oz.

11

LB.

$ 69

i~

MERICb

: $_·179
. ;. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

COLBY LONGHORN
eese.~

Sau

a.,., Ado

5

;

24 PAK 12 OZ. CAliS . •

1 LB. ROU or 10 OZ. LINKS MOUNTAINEER

3674 . ...

....,

Colllpolio Doily
......C ·c !Diiti-J,B · uCardorL.p.l
_iollioo~iiol-tHop,...,.d
. . . . .5
I,
,. ._18,000. ..._

•

Round Steak...................LB. -

............
Cli0ol4...... .

•

7-UP, DIET 7·UP
or OtiRRY 7-UP

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF-BOnOM

•

•

'

BEEF

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00p.m. Soturdoy
J:OOp.m. Mondoy
dlC i'""· Tuaodoy
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. ThUJiday
1:00 p.m. Frlr:loy

·· ' Clouifjed pofle• c:OW!r the
follouJin6 telephone esc:hoage1.,,

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD
FEB. 21 THRU FEB. 27,·1993

USDA CHOICE BON

COPY DEADLINE
Mcnday Paper
T...U.y l'llper
Wedneoday l'llper
Thundoy Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

~

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
'

To place an ad

•

RC COlA, DID 1111,
A&amp;W·ROOT IFEI,
SUNKIST OUIIGl
STORE HOURS - .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

79(

$299

•

Public Notice

PU8LIC NOTICE
Galila lind Uelgo Counileo
have .-!Yael a gronl from
the Ohio Daparimenl of
TranapoNUon, OMolon of
Avlotlon - to atudy the
aviation n-o of the two
Countteo. The otudy will
daWinlna lhe bool oltelor a
Galila-lhigo RegloMi Air·
pon copabio of m•Ung lha
Jong-term aviation
Gallla and Uelgo.Countiaa.
tho third In a oerleo of
pubi:O worlcshopo relaiad :o
tho atotua of tho otudy Ja to

FabruJiry' 25, 11193, lllhe Dr.
SomuaJ/ 1,; Boooord Yamoriai Library of Gailla
County, spruce Sir..: at
Flrol ·Avanue, Golilpoilo,
Ohio, from 5:00 PM to 7:00
PM . Thol8 ln:-IH In lhe
o:udy, are lnvi!H to olop In
and obialn lnlormotion on
.th
tudy ota:ua · ond
1 n'o::nga0
1 "1
to daia. A mombof
of
conauitlng taam wiil
be available :o anowor
lnlorinol quoatlono ibou:
the atucly•

.-.rar

be h.e ld on

-.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Canis ot Thanf&lt;S.
M pholos oot picked

1·100... 41·0070

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

CHESTER AGRI
SERVICE
·l'vlaster l'vlix
·Buckeye Feeds
·Fertilizer-- Bulk
&amp; Bag
·Pioneer Seeds
·Farm Suppl1es

614-985·3831

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

DARWIII, OHIO

Bnshnn Rd., Racine
SwetthtDrt Spealal
14 SESSIONS- 1 14

POMEROY, OH.

99(
Tomato~s...___.___,La. 59
VA~EY .BEL~
. ..
$1- 89
2 Yo Mllk. . . . . . ~. . . . . . GAL
FLAVORITE

-. SWEn SUE

949·2391 or
1·100·137•1460

. .
USED RAILROAD TIES

C

· HOWARD
EXCAVATING

OWN£R:
Jeff Wickersham

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE

~NFORCED

~'

.
~

.

•
..."
'

'5

•

.•

YAIDIIAN RIDING MOWIR
YAIIDMAN PUSH MOWU

2~-CC,t.
1010 lUERS &amp; SAWS

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE. ,
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SiTES and
TRAILER SiTES,
LANDCLEARJNG,
DRIVEWAYS INSTAUED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING

SALES AND SERViCE
Pana and Service lor
mokee and modoio of
Jrtclcira and farm ·

oii

equi~onanL

MORRIS ·
EQUIPMENT.,

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

OH.

l

YOUNG'S

..

!
CARPENTERSERVICE ·-·

DEPOT STREET
RUTLAND

742-3190
Call for
Appointment

C. YOUMG
992-6215
P-oy,Oiilo

f/22/t mo.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

·EVERY THURSDAY

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
11/ATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS &amp; ·
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LiCENSED and BONDED

EAGlES
CLUB
IN POMEROY

Lawn Mowing,
Fortiilzing, Weeding, 111d
Seeding.
Shrub and Tree :rrlmming
I Removal
Rriktwttl•l &amp; Commtrclll
FrH Elllm•tn

MICROWAR Oftll
a•d VCI REPIII •.
.ALLIIIIU
•·
lriJII_It ..... . . . ~
l'klll.. _ ~ •

lEN'S APPLIANCE

SERVICE

6:45p.m • .
Special Early Bird

992·5335 or
915:2561

$100 Payoff
Thio ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32

PH. 614-992-5591

.

Au217LS.C
... ·-"'"'
.........
St.
NIIIIOY, OHIO

12-5-ttn

••
•

•

r-.-PE
__R
__S_O_N_A_L..,. r--AM-ER-1-CA_N_G_E..:.N-.ERA_L_L_IF-E-••- ..-. ~
CARE FOR
THE
ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE.

. ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire •-Health •
•
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

~

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Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. Agent £
Box 189
~:
••
Middleport, Ollio 45760
~;
(614) 843·5264 1/20/93Mn ''
I

992-5858
696-1290
2·f-93

~
Snodgrass Upholstery ·
"Helping You To Reco•er Your Jn.eslmenl"
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating

RACINE, OHIO
6 1'4,949•2202
61

FiREWOOD. FOR SALE

IHG-92-Ifn

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

I

•

Real Estate General

l'iew Homes • VInyl Sieling

;:.,.
~·

New Garages • Replacement Windows ~
RQom Additions • Roofing
~

CHICKEN
BROTH

j

•

LAWN
MAINTENANCE .

-: J..,I);
,

2-7-92-1..

2·3-93·

614-992~

•._..CHIU'. . .

320~

985·4473
667•6179

St. Rt. 7
Choshin, OH.

---

992.,3470

ES

MYSTIQUE
TANNING

6637

'

f EUSY

SMALL DOZER
WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
and LIMESTONE
DEUVERY SERVICE

Limit 2 Per Cuatomer

Call

.•

SIZED LIMESTONE

Sto,.&amp;C:•n

NOW OPEN

SIZED LIMESTONE
. FOR SALE

l

Pomeroy, Ohio

R•••li•a

CHARLIE~$

Stone Co. ·

CREME
COOKIESi

36970 Ball Run Road

-c..., ••

CLUB
·GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

,..------, .

~JAYMAR
Quality

.......-.·----...

S~RVIC~

2·4·93· I mo.

GOOD UIITIL FEI. 20
949~28.26

FIRESIDE

······-·
•G•r•s:•

CONSTRUCTION

WICK'S HAULING ·· uCINE GUN .

Removal

Reasonable Rates
Full Insured
742·2360 219/9

· 992·7013 or .
992·5553
or TOLL FREE

7131f9111fn

&amp; BURKE

12/311921Hn

Topping, Trimming,

Sp::dalzlng In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODRS

89(

89(

HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.
(614) 992·544.9 .

992·7553

200L

5249

'

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

REASONABLE RATES

PUbliC Notice

-APPLE PIE
FILLING

(2) 17, 24, 21c

Thu~fd,y,

SENIOR PHOTOS
Pl&amp;JSHED IN. THE
1990.1991 or 1992
Qi+t [ion editions
may be picked up
«bing ollice1hours at
The DailY Sentinel.
Also avairabfe are
phc4os from Desert
~·••.In Memory,
BiiUJday and

upbyMardl '31, 1993
will be dscarded .

••

·STOKELY

Public Notice

The

.

.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139

HOURS:

Sunday - Monday - Closed
Tu esday - Wednesday - Ffiday - 9:30a.m .. 5:30P .m .
Thursday · Salurday - 10: 00 a.!" .. l :OO J' .m .

•

(llo Swldey CeUsl

104 M ulber ry Avenue
Pom eroy.O H 4 5769

-.14·'12 OZ. CAN

~-

211 2/82/lfn

lfl7/V3

0.

SHOPPER VALUE

Ice Cream. . . . . . . . . .'h GAL~

MARQUEZ . -

COTTONRU

.
CAPT. CRUNCH CEREALS

$1~9 ·

BATHROOM TISSUE

89(

15·16

oz.

4ROLL
PKG.

Good~~~ At Pvwell'e SUper Value

Fill. 21 IIIIU Fell. 27, 1113

Olttr

•

.'

LniL 1 , . Q Ill 61111'
r

...

SLB.
BAG

$169 )

Goodc:~ At Powell'e SUper V.lue
Olltr
Feb. 21 thrv l'eb. 27, 1113
1 ,., CUetornlr
(

mum z

I
I
I
-I
I
I
I

IL

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

•

5

•
•

~.QUEEZE

. ...
•
.• •
.•

caooc::a~ AI Pawell't SUper V.lue

Fell. 21thru Fell. 27, 1113
LJ:nl 1 Iter CUtta-

a
- 'llliil;

....

-

-

4

• GF oat•ua YOII'I
D

- --

• Mtp \ pI d with
aeadtine~. dllep ffytlr, ice
"

1 -Jail81ongasJalo

uo,-.

'

280Z.

_
_,_
.
_._..,I'IIIIX
-:1!
_....
e
•

••

I 'as

•

l.

i

.

••

(

..•

VACANT LOT· Loeated on S~ng Ava. ail utiil!ies' are
available. Great site Jor rnobiia home. Immediate possessoon! $5,000
.
MiDDLEPORT- Great iiit!e &amp;Jartllf home or ranial inllllatmantl 1 ftcor tram home :\as ,3 bad!ooma, balh, fuli basemont, one car garage, appliances, F.A.N.G. heat. ailic
space and ~- insulation. ,S 22,000
'POUEiiOY·OoborneSt. 1iloolfntmehome3 bedrooms
bath, fub finiahed basemen:. ASKING $t0,000
'

f"

I

In llltl
iitchon ..

FARUJ llal Run Rd.· r 112 •torv Jrame home with 4
bedraoma, LCD wal8f, 206.6 6• acrea, aome t.ncad moor
timber,~ practiCing oil &amp; Gu well&amp;, fntegas to house: large
bam, otorage sheila. ASKING $125,000
.
, MIDDLEPORT· One ftoor 1rame home 2 bedrcoma ...
~nt, appie ""'·garage, t;u:e &amp; allonlable. s1e:ooo
WE WANT ·YOUR USTINGIIF YOU'RE THINKJNC! OF
BUYING OR SELUNQ GIVE US A CALLI. WE'RE
ANXIOUBE TO HEAR FROM YOU I
HENRY E. CLELAND .....................................1192·8181
~y BRINAGER ......................................... Nf-2431

•

•

•
•'•

. 992-2259

GOLD,RiiiGE RD •• S..25+ acres of vacan:landllncludes
3D x 3D house . Mostiy tlm!Jer. elactric available minerai
nghll with proper!)'. $~4.5()()
'
-

.••

'

99

_,
--

....

•
•
•

(

260L

. ....,..:tjiiO.

•
•
••

KETCHUR.

-MORTON SALT!
Offer

••
•.

DEL MONTE

-10(

~~~-·=::•-.:-z-oc,.&gt;lois ioclltod
:
-.... cil!i• IIIKI Buy
18W8ge
____
._-._..__..._.,home,
ana

iiJ1 a -

•

.

Burritos...--,;..._._,_s
·DOMINO SUGAR

(
99

215 . . . . -

t,THYTRUSSELL
............................................ -:zteO
CLElAND ..................&gt;........................ 1192-t111

•

OFFICE :.......................................-.................. 1192·2251

•

•

•

Guaranteed Scholarship Money -.
for all college bound students.
•regardless·of income
•regan;l~s of grades
"plus $20k guarantead loan
•regardless of credR
. To collect your schOlarship money
'

, call61~9iJ5.3556

-

1

Dual E::lhiUII with
_
$109.95 + Tu

Co•puter Bnlandng • Struts, Shocks,

lrruahi•l .
· Cbet:k our Price or We Botb Lose
ktl LOCAnOI TO SIRI YOI iiiltt,..._,
CciDIIItor

.•..·..

11
·

Open Mon.·Frl. 10.7, or Sat. 10.4
2·11-. pd.

···
r ....;_ _ _....,....~.....~~......- - - .··•·

KELLER'S CUSTOM
~: ·
..----.._
, lENDING
47269 St. Rt. 241 • 1Y. Mile OH lt. 7
T.... c......, .. lt. 241
PH•.614·985·3949

lOW OFFERING••••••
.
OIL UD .Wll SIRIIO
DIE IENII ·AIID 101111..

L..-.-~--~-2/~1-1/t;..;.;;l./;...;;.1,;.;;-~"I

J

.::.

�,,

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.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

)

12-The Dally Sentinel

Page

SNAFU® by Bruc.e Beanie

Announcements

35 lots &amp; Acreage
Harn.lle, Aural

Eobtbllohod,

GUYS! WE WANT TO HEAR
FROM YOUIII WE'RE UVE AND
WAITIHCII 1.-1110"" Ext
11411. n.w Pwr 11n. 111ue1 1o 11
Yra. Unlalar Co. -o0815:
UVE CHATUNE ~--3391
Exl 5141. ».W Por lin. MUll
1o 11 YrL Unlolor Co. (802) 131·

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

GoodI

OhiO

-

1

SR 21L

ACROSS

Dill

Approx 1 Acra, Wtl1er, Eltctrlc,

114-311-1111.

3 Badooom Both ·a 112
BoNmant Dr Oorogo1 1~
Squora Foal, Oolllpiolto City
MD'•. Ron~ LGt or
AcN To BuHd .
Lolve
... _
Anytl- 114-W·'IIZ7.

•s u
IAK7U
+AI

-.

EAST
.KJ2

••

.,

•1u

.AKQI0976
182

. «:1 IH3 by NEA. Inc

Pu-.

54 Mlscellaneoui
Merchandll&amp;

I FI'IO llole
Fllhar: Houoty Cllnla Aldo niOdod pon
Part Rottwellw. IIOthlr: s.tler time
fo ~ In lantllv DloMina
C'-1111, 114-378-2233.

ana

on~.. . In IItie~~. ~111•
Uwrance CounU... MYM han

Lost&amp; Found

6

modlcol ona

••PI- hllpo

lul; wll trolot motura lndlvldtiol

Graham Ad. nowly
ramodolod, 2 porchoo, private SUpot ~ bod w/1
lot, no polo, clopooft I ror. ...... d,...,. -11 '"' ooo roqulrad, 304-1715-2171.
' SWAIN
Fumllhld, 2 of 3bdrm., lor Nnt AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
In Country Mobllo Park. Woohor/ 011¥11 81., Oollpoll,. ' Ulld
dryor, olr1 _f2351 mon., 114-912· rumnure. ........ w....... a
Work booto. 114-4411o31U.
2167, 114...5-8227.

-

out ol oounly- Sond
loltor of -~ I'IOUmo ond
- ornotoYmont .......... to
Pionnotf · Poranthocid
ol
Soul- Ohio, 3116 Alchlond

No

Gallipolis

Avonuo, Atltonl, Ohio mot, by
Moroh 3, tW3.
.
E.lpoollt•l MOO To ALL Yon! Slloo- lo Pold In WooltiY -orolol Pt : •-lng
AdVIncl. . DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. FHA . . _ _ Rotundo. Orrii
tho doy bolltra tho ad Ia 10 run. t·fllfUI Ext.Zt:l.

&amp; VIcinity .

f!undojo .- . . • 2:00
lUI·
J. odltlon •

'~~

8

t:o

"
c.J.;;iji:'o oltortnt2ctoo::..'1::"-~"\:ir!:':i..!,t

famllalstatua ot national
origin. or 11ft lntlnlion to

toll ocrao, .._ woodl,

malolllf( ouch f)l9ftronco,

krawingly accept

mMI.EOE.

In

nings.

5 r•r warranty, ttepe, aklrtlng,
delivered •nd Htup .tar $115ma.

are available on an·equal

_,u,nll)' balls.

w.w.-

-

pold,

llpm oriM-141-2204 oflor lpm.
M

53

AntlqUII

,.,_ ...

=~ ~tam"":!

114otll2'7711.

= =.

tumHuro, Oobr~·lll4i.

i:'i':w~'=ia!l~

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

2 otory cotonlol

rooms.

homo•~- bod-

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
fllmllyroom, lend ar11, ow.-.r BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
financing, 304.a715-2414.
ESTATES. Ul Jockoon Plu
lntm 11e2/mo. Walk to ohot&gt; 1
4 ......., hill bo-nt. car.-r, alr-cancf, 177 Partt Drtve, - · eon 114 u1 2111. EOII.
304-eTS-4512 pluee IMn m. . a-h II lllddoport Ohio, 2
Nil.
bod.-n Iumia=
utllhl•
pold, dop 6 ral,
2·21110.
8 room home, 2· ac:rM boat
ramp, 3 bedroomt, with or Fumlohod ~ A - I lalh,
whhDut furniture, aompllte Vary Cloon, Wotor Pokl, In Porkhchon, hoot pump, 304-8112· terlrN. 114-388-1000.
·2068 or 882·2221.
Fumlohod Ape: 1 .BA, i20 41h
CHESHIRE PRICE REDUCED 3 $280. Utllllloo polil. 114 Ul 44ti!

t1. 441 1116

Employment Servtces

21/2 betl•, 1uwplace,

:rz·

Help Wanted
•AVON" ALL AREASIShoro your
tlmo wlh ... You'l ton tho
cornpo.ny. t-eoo-912-11311.

11

B.:lroOiyla

1

Bath

New In·

oulotld Wlnc1owo • Siding, Ooa

Heat New ·Central Heat "&amp; Air,
Newiy ·Remodeled lntertar, Car·
pon.t. Rural Water• Coblo, 8385

AVON I All - · I Shl~oy

Sprilra, -.elll-14at.

............ ~1M

llvoiY 3
Yllr old glrl 'tn Point ""
P-..!0&lt;
Ootllpollo · OI'IL
P-.od
l)loymola. Worlllng poronbt. Call

Child .... -

lmpkntentlna 1tn s.uon.
Find Hoot Fiomllloo For Fronch

neceNary.

10

Tolor.l:.':"

poop1o to dollOhio
Volley
Booko:
Qlw:wwd,
AI
,
Polnl
Pl....,., O~mmo Londlna,
'-'· Oolllpolla ........ Llloil,

18

Wanted to Do

.;.::....~~;:...;::;:....,.,....

Anoratlone. Sowing, llondlng,

114-:14M2111.

Private, 4 bedroom home, 2

home, 1 mile blkJw town

ground paot, Alallhe, I mil•

hour, loWnt rate, 114-MI-!123

or 111 t13.a"".

15288 or 114-143-5220.

Trimming, TrM Removal,

ond 01- 1-7-M2S.
12115 llobllo Homol Excellont
Condhton. Whh Awn nct1 And 2
Air Condltlonoro, Located:
Roctno Ohio, 11,000. For lnlvr·
mation: 304-875-4831 After I
P.ll.
1m Fo&lt;rnt Park 12115 2 Bad·

full

21

__

both,

comblnod

khc~dlnlng
ar... Unfur·
nlohod. 3~115-3113 Of 896-

Ftnancial

W.V1. lie ...... !l.nd ...uma to

45

Furnished

Rooms

Roome for rent • w.ek or rnanth.

3173.

5I

.

tllo""""""
·
Frao In-toni II~ · your
FEDERAL LAW.'ENFDACEIIENT. own homo · bolld buoiRIII.
llony Pooh- Avollelllo. No NUl.
,or port~lmo. Ito,.
lxperlence tlrcflllry. For Ao- """""' ·- n 10 doyo.
,_lonCol$
1 Ext. DHIN. I A.ll. To I
ltnil.,
P.M. 1 Doyo.
Guidi to holM emplojnWIII, tf
you Will to moko gooCI - . . ;
Load Guhor Ployoo: For Et- lntm the or your own
tobllohod Rock, Country Bond. hotM, nMh 11 and IAII!Ioi fn.
Mutt Have Expirtenc. And E· lorlltllton to: CIC Cornpony,
qulpmtnl Ne c ets~ry. Phone; P.a Bor 112, Syrocuoo, Dhlo

14•71 Rodmon wRh 2 bod- lng lat.VI; .Rocllnora 1121i.!ofo
,_, 2 bo1h, Z -1, coli 304- Aoid ChotN 1211 Dr 010.111
1112~ or 104-Tn-1112.
Wllk; ColfM And Enol WMh
poor. 11W lot· I' 1'lltlo 1.
!,OOitlng Far A Qloat? Conoldor A Choln ':!'..~=~
Pro Ori.od Homo, Lorgo Orvoro
or'a

You have ln'Hitlpled

,ull

=.::::~.'::.

45771.

Llko docorotlng &amp; -!Ill?
Muolclono drumm• wanio to Moko -Y $24,000. yoor. Wci'lt
)oln .. , _ g._ doing
.. .-, -.n. EntiN
- -oluo
··
_
oqul-nl,
ooun;ry !IRfl rook; uceflont •
~,700.
Huntington
1104114411 :Mil or 114I

!Joy
~. Col'I'll- 2144.
DfYwlhoppl.l1'1

ti.S2· WMk; Bcoklhllv• ltut•

_..,..,.---

IR mo.

Dr 4 111111 0u1 141 Ori

..._. IIDrtflol. 'ttn 14110 fled.

Pllw.

mort with I ,_,

-~

)n.

No

~

·

=--~~c!on :f: r,:Co::m:::plot=o
Nolhlng E- l'rlownod.
=.:olt:..o:..:w:::oo::bo1::
. :::11-::t_ub_un-M,

3No2434 ooli 101' lllko.

Unci tHorn. Dev11opment, El·

eommode, 1112

n two

-Homo Cantor Will Show You vanMy, 304-6715-1460.
_ , Your Now ltnaro · Dr cou

link

.

-~~~~o"!aftllo41c, foundo- . . NTRY c=.fTURE AND
don I
' Allin Ono Loon w
A-• 1looof
Pocltogo, Low 1111, Open LolO
I luy And . W -

Wllh ·IJglttod Homll. 1.a14-772· Fum11- 223tllolo- 111,
·,114-4411-1422.
. .
.

-··

(

..., .•.

.

' •. \

WELL, I IMAGINE 114E !:EASON
'{Olf·CAN'T TlolROW·A SNOWBALL
'/'OU DON'T I-lAVE ANI{ I-lANDS ..

Z·Z¥

OF COU~E, YOU
COULl/ ALWA'fS
JU5T''WIN6 '' IT!

1110 Sllvoroclo S1opoldo.t....4.:!·
loll.,-·
31,-.1.,
-·
wUI DDI alr:lu p11rtt.l
trNe Dl 01.-

j'

cltr Chewy truck end take O'll)r

,,

-.z41•.

.

&lt;
..· . '

..

----F!{ANK AND ERNEST

opd.a': "

oao. 304.a71-20111.

IF
~HAJCSSPSAR.S
.HAQBESN

EGYPTIAN:

..

Llvr'cJtcc~

61 Fann Equipment

,.. B9RNLOSER
Willi 'fOUit. NEW

· - ..._...
N,»&gt;A Ita
..,.
. .llottl
. 111'1
AQHA
Ooldinlo iiCb I IC
Wedd~ .... oon0111111 -h - - ..,., • • 11-14, m. Ford Ttrtct... Wllh
111~4~14~1~24~0!:_·-::::-..:·=,....,......,.1 Ford ~ N,IOO; 21010 ..,
::
•~.
White a..n 11u Wltertltd. · - WJ:ib · ••
.....-.
loot=-• HeaJbAIII; I121,-.. ~ Ana.llla, IM-2JI..
1715-4131 Allor 1 P.ll.

' ~-

~

li--..

...
!~fa£

,.RtGilT

-'FT~

IT SIIORT£0 OUT
.l.HD S'!AAT€0 TO ~R!

DElte.TOR?

""

An anonymous wit said, "Behind ev·
ery successful man there stands an
amazed woman ." But sometimes suc·
cess isn't such a surprise: it is etched
in stone - as in today's deal.
North · shot his .partner into six
hearts. When the dummy came down,
South saw that they might bave
missed seven. But he had been taught,
when balancing precariously on his
grandmother's knee, to concentrate on
the actual contract.
After winning trick one witb dum·
my's club ace, declarer drew two
rounds of trumps. He continued with a
diamond to dummy's king and a
ruff. · Next came a diamond to dum·
my's ace ~nd a diamond ruff. If the
suit had broken 3-3, South would have
claimed all 13 tricks. But West discarded a .club.
South wasn't displeased, though. I.t
gave him a chance for a pretty play.
He led a low spade and finessed dum·
my's nine. East won with the jack
bad no winning riposte. II he returned I
a club, it would concede a ruff.·and-dis· l
card, allowing decl,arer to jettison his
spade loser. If East played 'back a
spade, it would be into dummy's A·Q
tenace. So East tried the diamond
jack. But South ruffed, played a spade
to dummy's ace and discarded his last
spade , on the established diamond

Note that West couldn'~ help by in·
serting the spade 10. Dummy's queeu
would be played and the·A· 9 would
main as a tenace around East's jack.
The contract is defeated by a spaode I
lead and a club switch, but that is
,
possible to fiiul.
Any time you see an A·Q-9 combina·
lion, consider an endplay.
IIUIK.

OUR LANGUAGE
Anything DILATORY is slow or de·
layed: "The enemy's dilatory response
angered the army." Get up to speed
on this adjective lly wonouncing
DILATORY "DIL-uh-tor-ee."

-nd 1t hoWbiRI. -

Holland . . ...,............

1lonll -

...._.. -

·-

Q. Our favorite bird is the FLAMlN·
GO. but we 're emllarrassed that we
don~ know how it go&lt; the nam e. Can
you tell us'

......
71 bolor.
.......
..
llrtnllor
- Al1
· - flOOdHolond

CA&amp;H?!I

304473-4211.

63

Livestock

1 PrtintOoldlng 11t 21WOI7.

z v- Old .,... a Tock Col
84illaeal 1:30 ..f:30 P.ll. Or
W11l • • 11t 311 1111
K~ ......, Gray Araltlon lloro.
R Ql ,.....

R~R'S~

... Solo.

T•w111

W.....,

-·-·~·~-

' SOMEONE

79

-.IOM75ole'JS.
Noy, llqUOI'I a. ' 12.10.
30ol.a'lfl.3110.

clutter into cwh,
Sdl, it the easy way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your cldujfjed ad to®y!
15 worh or le81, 3 dg.p,
3 ,pqpers, $5.40 paid in advance.

For-.

~loiii · I--

Hn Aloo, . . . .030.

....
..

Motor Honies

I'M

TO LIKe IT
IN HERE.

MYH5A.D...

'

.......
- ~1731.
121 DOO. - . - • :••
wlh--

.-

Servtces

Hoy lor

Tu~ your

Clmpe!'l &amp;

THI5SA:K~

IS THAT

6E~INNINC:'t

1114 -bofiO, 10 .. Chloltaln .•

Hay&amp;Graln

0""""11
- - . your Colloflor~~
\

MIND. IQET
L.Offi OF AIR.
WHATc::peS
WORRY ME ...

Al.'f.'AY5 Pl.lre

lor 1:00 Pll.

64

f'UT I DON'T

eeCAUeE

..

81

114-

Home
lmprovaments

.'

,,

....

Transportat ion

71

Autos for Sale

IlL.,_

-porto, 11100;
lr\ICk IDpper, M; 111 111 ID N
-ilprL

11175 lulclc Corttury, Worlt
Cor, $7110, 1114-1141-1121, 114-M&amp;1544.

-

Chovy::-.;·:.:t: -o.,
............

-

...:....,_
~

__ ------

;, ASTRO·ORAPR

1110

alno,Goocl
. .110
_ .-71112
1111
· En-

iltor 4 P.M.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

,6 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

7. ____________
8. ______________
9. __________________

. .

10~~~-----------11
. __________________

. ~'Your

12 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

~'Birthday

13 . ______________
14 _____________________

82

Plumbing I
Hilling

. l'ab.11,1-

-:-a::..o.;:a·· · :·

Fr 7 I...\ ANI
INI
c.r..d. 'r P1 lilt, C.e

Gallipolie Daily Tribune
446-2342
Pomeroy DilDy SenUnel

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

992-215~

Pt. Pleasant Rqilter

· -or--~~ ludidJ

~~- -

675-1333
(

, ,,.,

arv. ,,.
0• •

~.

11 Rlvor In
Belgium .
'16 Srmbol lor

enforcer

6 Lote
7 Algonquian
Indian
8 Small barrel
9 Rascal
10 FUll

DOWN
1 Young dog
2 Eggn
3 Sure

aamerlum

18 Actor Julia
20 Cnrrled by
wtnd
22 Attentiongelling
oound
23 lnv11lon
25 Gtoeaw l1brlc
27 Shoe .
contentt
28 Skeleton pert
29 Plnchn
30 Slrtger Anlla

+K

·@~..._.APIIIIWICS

Want to:
-

4 Rope fiber
5 Mil. law

Eaat
Allpass

By Jefl'tey McQuain

PIN down EXTRA.

Ab..e
Topr.lo
Cull d
Engllah bltby

24 -MiniiiCI
25 Saucer'•
mala
28. Copuchln
montcew
·
27 Geologlet' l
flnd
29 01 couru not
31 Mlodood
32 That hurts!
33 Sc1nd.
mo.now

34 Type ol
terrier

.38 Field ol granular snow
37 Put on
39 Urb1n1
41 ReMglouo
poem
42 Nut tree
43 City In Ruoala
44 Merit
45 Nogalln
prefix
47 FrtlhWIIII
flah
49 That wo'man
50 Actor
Brynner
53 Perform

Ft18ftll
could ptay
kiY roleo
your
ror
...... """lheed.
Thll In
,ma•
_af·
,
·~ "- , _
'
. be t11r1 or two good P* who - t l y
rwalda.l1 • ,oonillderabla dlttance from
you.
- I
M
Nell 1,._ 10 E all 101 Do not
bul14d up people 1oday wham you thin~
04111 l*p .you In material 001-na. Thll
could ))a an llttreiM In IU!Uity, bacauaa ;
~·ra out or illghl, you'li ba out or
n\ktcL ,Trying 10 patch up a brok8n ro-

mance? The Aa1ro-Groph Matchmaker VIRGO (Aug. 21-Bept. :121 usually you
can help you to underltand whal to do are pretty sharp a1 spotting good buys
to make the relatlonoltlp wortc. Mall S2 and bargalno. Today, h -. your
plus a long. MII..Ckl-. stamped purchasing cannln- might be fuzzy
-ope to Ma1chmaker, P.O. Box and cau&amp;e you to make poor cholcea.
UIRA (Sept. :12-0ct. 211 Don't be
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
ANII (....., 21·Aprtl 111 You'U do 111)h1111tad towllrll others 1oday, but, by
thlngo Wllll1oday, but only up to a point. the a.ne token, don't go to extremes.
tnatead or going .u out ano:1 doing a pro. Tha gesture Ia much more illa'IJ!Icant
ject perhoctly, you arellklly to oettle lor 1hen ltaslze.
IOI!IIIhlng far )8os thorough.
SCORPIO (Oct. :awlov. 2211n order 10
TAUIIUI (April IO-M8J 101 Decillion· spore someone's fHIIIQa today, you
milking 1111'1 opt to ln11mldato you to- might no1 ba as 1ruthM with this peroon
day. Probleml might arloe .from a last· . u you oltould ba. Thl1 11 1 kind apmtnuta Ch111Q8 that Ia lnotlgotad by proech, bu111 might no1 be conati'UC11ve.
lmpulle, rather lhan IOI)tc.
. IAGITTAIIIUI (Nov. 2H1ac. 211 A·
Gl.... (.., I,.._ 10111 you .,. In· · nanclll COIIdlllona are a bit difficult to
In • ·IOclaiiiOIMiy with lrianda lnlarpre1 today. It loolca lito you could
tad.,, 1ry lei go 1t10ng with the mljprlly 1- 10m411hlng you lall .... you heel
IOIIead or ottompttng lo 1mpoea your tied - · Don't ntllke un,...oltc: uwlll on them.
oumptlons.
CNICIIII ("'- 11-...,
-lin man.,.. c
- -~-. 111 You
~r...
_•
__,. (~.
..._ lhet alhoct ·1'01!' ano:1 ..-putatton, might not be too racepltw to adWll of.
do nptlal orttel. make deolillona lor you farad you by o - . today, ano:1 1~11 11
today. What their ln1ereato unfortunate. Lalor In the alt1moon, you
might be dalrif!W11al to your own.
could regret your lndlflarence.
LIO (oluiJ ta-Aul- Ill The oplrll could ' AGUAIUUI (,.,, :IH'all. 11) Even
ba wtlflng, but the ftaoll mtgld ba !hough It might ba 18mP11nQ, II 11 today. Thora ono lndlclitiont tltat you no11o dluamlnato gooolp 10 o111tra toma~ otart prO)ee1s and give up on thMt day untH you've hod a chance to chtlolc
quickly 11 thily tum out to ba too chal- ou11he 1-.
longing.
'
. '
•

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity CIPMr cryptogram~ are a ..ted from QIIOtallom: by fam~s people, put and present .
E.ch letttfln tn. dpher llandalor anott~er. Tod•y's dw: H e-qual• M.

' DPFLS

•

KV ·

A. Please don '( (urn pink with ern·
barrassment. The bird with pink or
scarlet reathers look its name rour '
centuries ago rrom a Spanish term for
"Fleming," a ita live or Flanders. The
Flemish or Dutch were though! by the
Spanish to have a pink complexion of
good health, and the llird ·was believed
to have that same bright coloring.

KJ,

DP ;

UDSSKLI

OCPF

c v

D 0 0 C Z

WCAP

LHCNKCP

DSCEPI

RLIKCI

ICLJP'N

NADN

C G L S

D

N K H L,
XC E

N C

0 KG L . '

JKPFOLNCP.

•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Golf Is golf. You hit the ball· you go find il. Then
you hll i1 again." - (Professional golfer~ Lon Hinkle.
·
·

I
I
I
(
:
I
1
1
1
1
Ir---------.
TRUHHS

FURFG

.

6

.

RY 0 K

.

•

.

.~

718111

1
L.-.L.......I.-.L.......l_.J......J.

•

While attending a lecture, a

~. fellow worker yawned and

said, "He's supposed to be a .
man of few words, and he's
...,.;:R_E:r.,::K:..rO...:R.;...::W:..--Ij been telling us that •.. ·····!"

r

.

o• cbomlpll~te
·t

.' heh chucld~ quoted
Y • mg m I e miss1ng words
you develop from step No. 3 below .

P~INT NUMBERED
· LE TTE~S IN SQUARES

ANSWfRS
Rotten • Cluck • Trait· Infamy · COUNTRY

:.
.~

.'
...-.

low to form four simple words. I

5

...
'·

T::!~~~, S@\'l~lA-~£~s~
ldltad by CIAY R. I'OLLAN
0 f~ur
Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

seven.

,.

F II tTl Su;,pltf',

i·;

..

,,

,.

u-

On - - ;

•-

10 ....,. CJI, lcyl, I

--.;)
. = 15~---------------

r.:~'::.&amp;:'~v':r,.'~:: =-~=i.. · ~

flOOd

•

5. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Household
Good a

Business
b:,.1 ~:noLoo=town\:~; 1112 corpot 110, lx12 wlnyt flO.
·
t-1
Now Carpotlng, Muot Soo, Solo on Ill corpot In otoolc. llolOppo"unlty
...;;:~==:.::!:...__
114-143-0441 (Evonlitgol.
lohon ..,..... 114-441-11144.
1

mell UniH

m,

4._......__________________

IIU Skyllno Holly Ridge 141111, VI"AA FURNITURE ANO AP·
all
- ·porch,
2 boilroomo,
· AIC, 11u~~
• • • f'2
U8AORNCEI!~·
••• -u
covoroc1
kltchOn lolond,
Olongo · bldo'- und.....,.nlng,
lin now, 304-llD-2414,.
Entlllolnmont Cordor'o fMI· Dr

==·

F1.ueaac d .
- - • ..--.P
........ load.
Nlnt.... .l tapee, worb Pt.
1150. 304.f71f101111111r llprit.

EIOdrtc
· - - ,..,.
Cl a-,Boonnort~t:lll.
- , Dryoro,
Up, x,

1--------------------

Merchandise

Ford Ao~4 eyt, 5 :"

304..,.....

DAI!?J

2 . _____________________
3. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

OH10 VALL~~OJI,)~ISHINO cO.
Nllclod: 50 Pooplo To Loll racom..!'CIO thll you do buof.
Wolalif. No Will- Nllclod. ROll with pooplo you knowL lnd
1M NMu,.l, 101MC. o..,..nt..ct. NOT to oond -..y lhr"'!!ln tho

388-8374.

Colorno~ . . . . _ 11,000
BTU,
e-lon, well, •
1 111 •• 1M!

II

bedroom apt,, Spring Ave.,

256-61112, 114-:JN.:ml.
1113 Folrrnont lloblto Homo,
14170, 2 Bad~. 1 Bllh,

men::lll and rftktentlal, call
Adam, •~·11141.

Sclonco In Phvllcol Tllorojly,

514-446-6160, 614--388-8221, 814-

__..,..

PI. . Nnt .,._, OM-62&lt;6858.

$250/mo. or $350/mo. with
utiiHioo pold, 114-912·7878.

-

.'!t!l"; 1m
'
11178 ..._ 414 12,300 • :
·~130C.
'
~

Dryor,

apartment,

~41'41 1110.
o1 ~20/mo. Ooltlo Hotol.
.
.
rooms, WB, Total klectrlc, I
81.111.218, 2·112 Acroa MIL. 114-

11M 14170 Patriot trailer. 2 IR,

=

only.

-lwr.

retlrencn required, no pet., Pl.

dellvertd •nd HI up, *lrtlng l'wo bedroom In lllddttporl,

--.g ........ Ouilllod . .....
dlcbtl Will pCI Oil 8Khefor of'

Clll303 tiiJ 1213.

C.ller ID bol1 14 "*'&amp;GI), never
Ulld, $45, 114..112.atll. W.VI.

UR TREE SERVICE. Tor:;g, 32 Mobile Homes

Elec. Helt, Undlf'J*1nlng. After
5 P.M. 114-4411-3044.

PI-

A

T.V.,
or,

ewer•

Pomwoy,
t1'Piimo.,
$'100
dlpoon,I*"T-31113 oftor llpm.
Smoll Unlumlahod Apon-.
for sale
In OoiRpolla• No Pwla, ~~'
$152.17 por month Including olx Dopooh &amp; Hoforanco, I
moroho fl'lo tot rant, now 141111, :,044:..:. :4.~-:---,--.,::.,-,-­

.

PEANUTS

dor, I . _

Noon 11111:00 P l l . -

nlohod. Yory cloon. No polo. Coli
304-6715-1311.

QM

-ton.. .
.

-·-55-"
·
e.

· · Bottloflold ....
l:'-~.-,..~
nb'-i':l:'--=.;br
::V,"1:
..........

One B.troom aPirlrMnt. Fu,..
bedraom

'•

WM~

-

Complllly Fumlohod mobllo

One

.-

Pll.

-.

ocroobt5 yra old, lorgo khchon, loolllng ~vor. No Pwto, Cl. 114.
wood umw In bltemtnt, above 441.0338. .

pt,, ....

. P.O. Bo• 720, Rlploy, WV 25271
or l:orUct
olllco 304372· 2731 oil 312. EOE.
Exp. Lood 'Oultorlol And Bau
Pl•y•• NMdld For Country
Roell! Banet. Serious lnqulriH
Only. 114-:14!1-1097.

RlveRkle

1715-5112.

Trlmmlni. Froo Extlmotoll 6
31'1'71151"Aftor 4p.m.
NMt ......... HlrtforG, liMon,
Woot ·Colurnllla, Lolir!, Cllflon, Oacrgee Portable S.wmiiiJ don't
Southoldo Apple ara... To boo haul fOil' 1o' tho mtll Juo1
OCMM Independent contractor
Clll304.a711-tl5l
you mUll bo 18 yooro old, hovo
IMUIH car, v•n ot truck. be llloo p-·o Doy Core Cantor 1
ovoU.blo minimum 5 doytlght Block Woot Of HIIC On Jocu.n
, tlourl deity. Ta. rnern rout. In Plko 11-F I A.ll. ·5:30 P.ll. If
OUIIHY And Exporionco lo Tho
your
ilolahtborhood
-1200 oil.
l04 bolwNI'I·
10:00
All 11 COncem For Your Child's
ond 1:00 PM, lion thru ~. Coro. Coli Uo Far A Vloh. lnlant
A-lcon Dlrac1ory Sorvtoo lroddiOI'I 114 446 622l p,_
ehooton /School Ago 114-4411Corp. EOE.
1224.
DIRECTOR OF PHYSICAL
THERAPY
Qualhr cleaning een~lce, com·
-wv OoMrol
Hoopltal,
Rtptoy,
currot)IIY hoo
poet.
don ..ollolllo loi ~cr . of
Tblrl'))y. ~~~~ ..
....., &amp; bonolh llka. EXcottont

•nd

Arao (1) 105-912-8000 Ext. QH.
10181 For Curr.nt Rlpo U.t. 1_

out Sond Hill, 304-881-3124.
Stlldonto For 1 Month Sumonor
Homo Stoy. Good ~dol Cerdtlecl nun. alcll wHI cotM Racl.-.1...._,
er•: 111M
Income With Flexible Scheclule. 10 your homo. Will work 24 huro.
Will
do otoonlng • cooking. All Flootwood, 14x75, 3bdrrn., 2
Coli Dr Wrlto 4if~P.O, ~~~ 111ytlmo 30W71'7710.
both, now pump, Will, oopo
- - 011
4111-4 .
.
tic,
Olorago
building
covol'ld
' Dollvor Tolophono · looko, No Dciar ond Bollaol wort. by lha polio, 1 112 ocroo ii:l, 114-1143uperlence

Manor

-oom

Roqulnid.
'4' 0151.

7UOI1.

Oraclouo living. 1 and 2 bodroom aponn10nf4 11 Vlllogo

BT/;t E ROUTE 7, Haducld. 614- Apo~monto In lllddiiiiOfl. From
~1111. Colll14-912-11150. EOH.
441 31.44.
ope,
·oovERNIIENT HOliES From ~ Nloo two
..heriDryer
haak~p.
!U Aopolr). Doll:~= Tu w
. Propony. R . Your raloronco, dopoolt, no polo, 304-

Ago

*COORDINATOR
..
WAKT£11. llofln

after? p.m.

a

.....

By Pllillip Alder

,!

--···-No-.-. . . . . .

Ro=

1116.

....of"

s•ortb

17
11
21
22

Success isn't
always amaiing

. ..· ·' "•'

Unor, Nair Hootor Pw- Aolo AKC Slroltlo Co111o. - . I PIJIMida, .,. - .... .,...
OBO E-lngo: 114-4411o
10tt10 chain link clog Cllonolo4, Ford, Dodge, Jl!ckop . ., '
1250. 304.a715-3ttl
bodo. . ar lang. NO · rllll.
• '
1.or111o orlglnot bloolc ooqu~no
~
~ ................... 1
:;..~
Ou1 Rt. 111, Qolllpolla.l14o
441 0513 W.,.. 8hoem tw. .
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I
Fllh Tank, 2413 lackl aR Ave. 1110 4 WD Ford Aongor Trucl!,
Point p -...
AC, M,DOO lllln,
lull llno Tropical lloh, ltlnlo, 111-allll3
0.

~~or

GRUB WEEDS !I

OH--THAT

THINS !I

;

- s . Aut-,

':=

UPOIIII'I.
Pa~IJ tum
.
UtMMiol •nd cobl1 pold. 30W'fll.

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ol: Vllloao ·o,... Alllo. 141 or
oolllt4-f112-37t t. EOH ..

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ramodoloil.

.

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Antlquoo, Klmboll ...,.. plana.
1124 E. lloln •1'101. on Rt. 124, ~, ""'TJ':"i~ a
Pwtwoy. Moura: .II.T.W. 10:00
• •
..
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....
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Furn11uro rapolr a ,.Pnlohod, ~=

.

i

good, ........ - · 101,

-

luy ...... -

to I:DO p.m. 1-·2121.

IT'S THAT THING
LOWEEZ.Y USES TO

GR!JBBtN' HOE,

E~• ....

....... ~

114-31'1''lll0l

-ton . Pradtdlt

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

CAN I BORRY'YORE

ConcltkM•, IM-...iM. •.,. • .•
1lll Dadp 41:4 lruok,
. .. ,_.A·

•

llullcllrtL wolah1 ond lol
cluohtolr 01 Rllo Alii -.....,.
Thooor.w.,todlol.

2bdrm. aptl:., talal .a.ctrla, appltoncoo tumloltod, toundr)o

W.ntad to buy: Junk outoo, mUll ·
·bo -blo, 114-lli2·'1172.
Top PrieM Pold: All Old U.S.
Colno, Oold Ringo Blvor Colno,
Qold Colno. II.T.il. Coin Shop,
lSI "-""· Oolllpollo.
W.ntad to buy: _,. mobllo

Ptll

Pt..Chln...._4.._.

•

~~~

Pa

Openmg lead:.

11171 Cho¥y 1 112 Ton Tnrolc, ,12 · ::

,.. DDdao Rom Trucl!,
T - . Excollon1

~~w-. sso~.

To Buy: Junk Autoo
With Dr WtlhcoA llotOrL Col
Lorrt Uvety. 114-311-1303.

~.._'!,•'"-

~ •nd Supply Shap

BARNEY

Grooming. AD . . - , · - .... Ford " - · 112,000. oood 1.··
lomo Pol Food
·· ·Julio ~ 304-171-'1184 oftor 11:901.~ ~
Willi Webb.c.HI14
441231.

•P IF

""" ..., _...

..,...., Far .2 -

Pets for Sale

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,fill.

~'=~~P1"1· 304-

hornM.

wl
loolhor
~-

-· -

For ,8111: KtrW s

-

31 Homes for Sele

otondlng tlmbor, lop

Uko-!:~tf:/.~ '= =-:zto;;.....:

-trim,

lloturlng Amino Acid Body

Coli . for In-len, 814-3115- 54 Miscellaneous
11121 aok for BNndo.
Merchandise
44
Apanment
for Rent

F - . VCR'a, lllciOwo-,
Air Condhlonlra. Oulor Ampo,

Elc. 114-2511-12311.

·

Why poy ront when you ~n
own a 1113 1411P Redman with

lnlol!nod lltat all dwolllngo
advellilod In this new,a p-

A..,..,. atcn,

TV'1,

country, deposit and ref.,..nc•
required, 114-Mt-2833, mor-

8dY&amp;ttiMmenta for real esrate
which is In vlotodcin of lhtt
laW. Our.readers •• ~ ·

O.k Hill Trucking eom~ny
wlclnlty ol 111. 7133 I Pamoroy ·" 1 Ex~nc:Od o- Tho
P!u .... colll-oiiOZ
Rood 9onil Tractor /Traitor
Don, Junll ftl Sell U. Your - . Drl-., Elcellont ...,. · - ·
Working .lllojor ~loncoo, 111:1.
Color

Two bedroom trailer far rent In

This newtpept( will not

- t h o - of 1~, MF. 8 1 - lhot IIIC Cl-lfY
oontplolo tho TCE will bo
ollglblo to apttly lor -ptoy.·

56

For .... ... "'ldiiJIIII ..... orm...a.

-

Ret.r.ncea,

304.-.58-1011 WMkdav- betWeen
lom-lpm. Aok loi Polly.

limitation or discrimination:

loci .. W7151 -,.~ngo Rd.,
!'Pw01m!I'I*'"'Ooy.y1 011. 417111. a - 1e - ·· Apply In _ . bolo

Fum~Mwd,

Dop0olt,l14-3811oll611.
- 2 BR ,_homo, 2 mil•
out Tribbto Rd. 1200 month. Coli

~ex

tlon

Wanted to Buy

Plirtly

...., ond ~ boltad
ond golv. IOA72.a30I

-lo-ToEY-IIcl, l14o44llollU, .

Nlco 14r70 2 Sotho, Nllr
N.O.H.S. W.tor &amp; Traoh Pold,

t o - •any tnlotenco,
lrnilatian ar diicrimlnadan
buod en raco. colo&lt;. roligion.

-

Sho......,,
tilt-lid .
WIH ToM.
·PtooOo

52 Sponlng Goode

the Foclonil Folr Houolng Act
of 19611 whlcll mokH It ilogal

PROORAII
Poa•u ........... a ...,

Rick ..... _ AucUon CoottpWtj,
luA limo -lonllr, oomplolo
-ion
oorwlco.
Llconlld
IIO,Dhlo I W•1 VIrginia, 304773-11715.
·

9

All rea1Hta18 advartlllng In
thl. niWIPII'8f il subject to

jjI ~;iii~Aii:ii""11Wiiiii
NURII
A1D1
TIU.I.JQ

PubliC Sele
&amp; Auction

OldssueobUe ~ runa pod, · ··
$450. tilt Dodge Van 311 ...... -:
bOdy work $450. • ...
...........
•i

12x15, two bedroom ,,.....,, on

Wooltdoy, ....lng and Sotwdo¥
ho&lt;.n . . to bo upoctad. Trmil

....,·....,

OMC • orlglnol, ruM grOI)', · ' ••
oxtra P."na, JIIO. 11171 ' . ..

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

South
••

.-

72 TruckS for Sale

Building
Suppilei

55

214-

. - M-. Pooltlon -trw
Nlloblo
trano)OONiton.

•

Merchandll&amp; ..

Good, Sloody, Allordo~uol­

nooo. Won1 Loot. 1
to roprocluctlvo Voncl.
ol cllonto. I..Goldng loi
!IDIMDI.a who ta Hlf~lnttd
ond con In tho pooltlon • .
Real Estate

Yard.Sele

pt. Pleaunt
&amp; VIcinity

54 Mlscelllneous

Jocu.n
- . Point - ·
WV,304-I~.

VENDIIIO ROinl&lt;: Ool Rich
Quick? No Woyt But Wo Novo A

who Ia -1¥11

7

Vulnerable: North-South
Deale?-r:
South

BlltJ*
- 01 flwlnt
ond bul!t
,_
.. Nlo
Pluo, -2101

high ochool dlplorno or oqulv•

IUIIIX

41 Small
bouquet
42 Glvo forth
lrMIY ·
44 Sign up
48 Pertlan
48 Toll and thin
5 i Bulgarlon
money
52 A Scott
541n-ol
55- deJrance
56 Oppooilte of
octo
57 Blackbird

Clrrill()l

SOUTH

1lency; good communlcaUon
llkUie; accur..:y wtth tigurwi

3D Ute o choir

40 Chemical

15 Rocreotlon

IJIO&amp;S
+t0875S

Thi'IO blook -'""'• mochor tull
~or. 114-!li2-tn3.

38 Acct.

lettuce

NORTH
• "Q 8

'

&amp;c-.

Giveaway ·

ncoro (abbr.l

3e Chnt~dloh

14 Type of

..

Real Estate
Wanted

36

35 Footboll

•w•
13 Tiny opening

Drivowoy, T...., $10,000 Firm.

Roclpo - i o n Sllad pizza.
Dollclouo- r.elpt. plue
So&lt;nh of tho bonlor Chill pia.
-h fS.OO S.A.S.E. Box 31111
Potrtoi,Oh4!1151
REDUCE; Bum Oft Fit Whll'o
You ~ lou OPAL Avollobif
At: Frut~ 'Phormocy.

c•••••

(mua.J
5 Makolun ol
D Plgj,on ·
12 Part ol the

PHILLIP
ALDER

Anawer to Prevloua Puute

34 Comec111n

I Somewhat

Acni TNc:t. On 'dd'n n

~

Plu t.ovll • c - Loncl
f20,000 For Each Trac1. 114-31'1'

3

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle .. ~

BRIDGE

w.e.t,. Slapllc.,

~.

The·

114-251-1i't2, 11Wli=DII.

11118.

4

-

1993

Wednesday, February 24, 1993 :

Houle hold

. 2 112 ,..,.. 11/L Dozed For

3 Announcements

. •..•

&gt;·U

•

"That n~w woman in my o.ffice is so dumb.• one office
gosstp said to the other, "!!he thinks a meadow lark is
·a party you have in the COUNTRY."

�Severe baldness linked tO' ·
heart disease, says report ·

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
..

.

John C. Wolf, D.O.
, Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

'

.

· Question: ~ six-yw-Old son exudate" and the lymph n!ides in
has had steep lhroat several times · the neck are swollen - not a sim·
this-winter. His pedialrician thinks pie scratchy, red throat. In mt
we should have his tonsils childhood, "repeated infection
removed, but I'm reluctant to do didn't have a clear defmition.
Today, it does. It means having
that because I've heard tonsillec·
six
episodes of tonsillitis ill one
tomies aren't necessary . What
year,
or.five episodes of tonsillitis a.
should we do?
year
for two consecutive years.
ADSWer: The tonsils are part of
Your
son probably has met one of
the body's defense system . They .
these
criteria, and that's why his
can be seen by looking into the
ped.ialrician
~ommended a IOOsil·
mouth of any child. They are the
lectomy.
·
rounded mounds of lymph tissue
Question: What should I expect
· lqcated on the side walls of the
throat just behind the last molar. In if my child has a tonsillectomy?
Answer:. Your son's pediatri·
cliildlen the tonsils are quite promi·
nent, but in adults they usually ciao will ask you to take your son
shrink down to lillie patChes of tis· to a doctor who specializes in ear,
nose and throat (ENT) surgery.
sue.
The surgery to remove the toll· After this doctor confirms your
pediatrician's diagnosis, he or she
sils - called a "tonsillectomy" is performed frequently, but not as will actually do the tonsiliectoiny,
·
frequently as it was 20 ¥ears ago. It if you give the OK.
Tonsil surgery often requires an
was previously beheve!i that
enlarged tonsils caused frequent overnight stay in the bospi'tal,
sore throats, aild surgery to remove although sometimes it is done on
the tonsils prevented 'sore throats. an out-patient basis, which would
Wben I was a child, one of my sis· allow you to take your son home
tas and I had our tonsils out at the that s·ame day: Ask the surgeon
same time;' It was considered a about the arrangements for your
"normal" surgery that all children · child. You should ·expect that your
shoUld have to keep them healthy. child will have fewer sore throats
Today, we.know beuer. The tonsils and Rencrally be healthier after his
enlarge as a response to infection: tonsillectomy.
They rarely become so infected •
It's ·important to stress that you' ·
tliat they are the sowce of)Uness, ' will make the fmal decision about
However, there are still some whether or not this sur~ery is pergood reasons for an adult or child formed. To make an mtelligent
to have his or her tonsils removed. choice you need to be as informed
In children, this operation is most tis possible. Ask two basic quescommonly performed beCause the tions: Why should this operation be
tonsils have beCome so large that performed? Why should it not be
they cause difficulty with swaUow- performed? Then weigh ihe pluses
ing and breathing. If your son has and minuses. Don't agree to the
surgery until all of your concerns
' difficulty in swallowing, snores have bei:n' addressed, aild evlryone
while sleeping and breathes
throuJh his mouth most of the agrees that a tonsillectomy is best ·
. ·
·
time, tt's likely his tonsils are to for·your son.
"Family
Medicine"
is
a·
weekly
blame.
Another common reason for column. To submit questions, write
tonsillectomy is repealed infection. to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni·
versity College of Osteopathic
I'm talking about tonsillitis where the tonsils are enl~ed and Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
covered with blotches of ' whitish Ohio 45701 .

Mardi Gras rev~lry gives way to Lent
By MARY FOSTER
Aslociated Press Writer
NEW ORLEANS - Two mil·
lion people- from wide-eyed otit·
of-towners to transvestites in lingerie- ate, drank and danced their
viay through Mardi Gras in one last
fling before· police cleared the
streets to usher in Lent today.
"If you want, it you can fmd it
on ·Bourbon S~ at Mardi Gras,"
·said John Summers, dressed as a
i:ancan dancer in ruffled skirt and
net stockings. "If you don't want
it, you .can at least look .at it. We
have beautiful men and beautiful
women ready to let go of all their
inhibitions.''
Revelers included clowns,
dozens of ersatz nuns and priests
- ~~vena foppish quartet of heav-

Busy Bee class
,meets at church

'I

The Busy Bee Class of the Mid·
dlepon First llaptist Church met
'recently at the home of Freda
Edwards with Rpsemary Lyons
presiding. .
.
The openmg prayer was giVen
by Pooch Brewer. Members
responde~ to roll call with each
givmg a btble verse.
· Devotions were by Freda
EdwardS, "Seasons of the Soul. •
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Edwards to Pooch Brewer,
Rosemary Lyons, Ruth .Ebersbach,
Fltda Edwards, Lillian Demoskey,
Elizabeth Slaven, Elizabeth Searles, Betty Gilkey. Betty Denny and
Dorothy Evans.

MJHS SPELLING BEE WINNERS • Nancy whaley, rltbt, ·sev·
enth arade, daugbter !If M.-y and· Delmar Wbaley, Mlddlept~rt,
was the winner Of the spellblc bee at Meigs Juaior Hllh School.
Allam Tltomai, 10n of Debbie Jean Thoma~, Pomeroy, and Tim
. Thomas, waa ruDDer-up. Other pardcipl!llts were Scott Dodson,
Bobble Klulson, Amy See, Mike FryJitye~, Tory Swartz, ~!e
Blalte, DliYid Gritul, Da\'ld Park, Scott 8eDen, Stacey Cotterill,
Cbad HaDIOII, Myca Haynes, Steve PatterloD, Steve McCulloulb,
SbaDDOII Petrie, Ubby KiD&amp;IIIId Justin SeY..oar.

By BRENDA C. COLEMAN ·
Aslociated Press Writer
CHICAGO - Balding heads
may mean vulnerable hearts.
A repon published today says
21· toSS-year-old men who were
severely bald on top were thrc;e
times more likely to suffer heart
attaCks than those with full heads
of hair. Men with moderate bald·
ness had a 1 1/2 times greater risk.
. Men with receding hairlines even severely receding ones- but
no baldness 'on top faced no
increased risk.
The report on 665 heart-attack
victims and 772 IDCII who had suf·
fered no heart attacks appears tn
The Journal of the American Medi·
cal Association. The study was
paid for by the Upjohn Co., maker
of the hair-growth drug Rogaine.
The hypothesis that baldness
1\l'ay predtct heart disease goes
back more than 25 years, said .the
researchers, led by author Dr,
Samuel M. Lesko of Boston Uni·
versity School of Medicine's
School of Public Health. .

Such men should be espec~y_
sure to get themselves screened fOt
high cholesterol, hi~ blood P!'CS·
sure and other tratiS that might
increase their risk of heart disell!c:·
he said.
·
.
· ·~
. Authors of the study contrOI!.Od
statistically fot' the possible effeciS
of smoking and high blood prea•
sure, as well u age, family hisqy,
drinking habits, exercise habiiS and
other factors that affect heart lisle. .;
Lesko said it is unknown
whether 'the results are applica!&gt;k;
to men over 55 or to racial minot.!· .
ties, who made up only abOut _5
percent of the subjects.
,,
Presumably Upjohn is mo~t
interested in men most likely 10' u~.
the drug- those under SS, Leske!
said.
.
:: ·
All the doc'tors said more
research will be needed to mllk~
sure the link exists and if so, why: •
··
•

By BOB THOMAS
Aslociated.Press Wrlt!r
In' "Falling l:iown," Michael
()ouglas is having a bad day in
L.A.
.
It all starts when he's tntpped in
freeway gridlock, surrounded by
noisy borps, bawling children and
ci'IIM}' motoristS. He abandons his
car and starts walking al:ross the
city, growing angrier with each
encounter.
,
First, he beats up a store owner
and trashes the merch1111dise over
an 85-cent charge for a soft drink.·
A couple or ~g members accost
him and get attac.ked. The gang
retallates with a drive-b)' $hooting
aild end up deld and dying in a car
crash. Douglas cotnliiiiJideers their
arsenal and walks on.
His next victims inolude the
patrons of a fast-food restaurant, an
army surplits store owner, a pair of
wealthy golfers and more. ·
Robert Duvall happens to have
been in the same freeway jam. He's
a ~ detective on hia last day
before retirement, and he is the
onlr member of the Los Angeles
Pobce Department to pick up the
scent of the wacko terrorist. Anoth·
er cop,,Rachel Ticotin, agrees to
help him. ·
,
Despite a top-notch cast,
''Falling Down" is just another
urban shocker based on violence
and illopc. Could Douglas' ~Y
trail remain unsuspected by the
entire J)O(ice force?.Could anybody
walk lrom Boyle Heights in East
h.A. to Vcnicc al the ocean in one
day? Maybe an Olympic athlete. ·
By now, moviegoers are inured
. to the bias~ of !Wtornali~: weaponry
and the nddhng of tnnocents.

Dinner scheduled

Council to convene

meet

Super Lotto:
4·5-111-23-28-43

Page 9

Kicker:
119585

speculated that a cenain male hor·
The caregivers suppon gro)l{l
. .,
mone necessary for baldness to "Let's Talk" for family and ~
develop may have a role in sup- who care for shut-ins or pe11~
pressing "good" cholesterol,· partially disabled, meets 4ver'
which. proteciS
the
Mon
· day from S;,.,..,:
on "' 30 p.m. at IIIC
"'~
. heart. d" h
Etg h1 prevtous
stu tes ave American Hospital for RehabiliO.:.
e~plored whether the association tion on Coun~ Club Drive ,Iii
truly exists: Researchers who H ·
w F iii'
"", ed II , h
I d d .
mlltngtol!, • a. ac tators "'"'
revtew a etg t cone u e m · Deborah Suii-Lewis, Social SA'.!1990 th8t "a small risk of coronary
·
d
· · A T be p"f:
disease due to baldness may exist, vtces, an Patriclll · au ' ~but this risk is smaller than that of toral care Department.
1
'
w~li-known risk factors such as
Director Joel Schlli'IUither goes one smoking and hypertension."' said
step farth.er. He seeks l!umor in an editorial in JAMA.
..l.·
·
The editorial's authors, Drs. 4.\utOUflCeS meetingS .
these violent outbursts. I;&gt;ougias
tosses1lfT one-liners while threaten· Peter WJI. Wilson and William 8, ·
ing families and employees in the Kannel of the Framingham Heart
A stoke suppOrt group· for ~il
fast-food place.
Study, said some bald men may sttoke survivors and their family·
Douglas b expen at exploding want to.taice extra precautions, such
as rigcsously watchinlg th
their choles- members, meets the second Tues'
rage, but his role as D·FENS of each month at the Arnericail
taken from his1icense plate -pro- terol altd blood pressure and quit· day
Hospital for Rehabilitation in Hunt'
vides no shading. Sure, he's been
smokinR"ch
. ardg. J Carroll cardi I ington, W.Va. from 4:30-5:30 p.~.
fired from his defense job and tingDr.
1
0 • At the Marc~ 9 meeting, Sgsan
;a
·
yearns for his ex-wife and young ogist at Lo~la University MediCal B' R h b'I't t" c
185 • e a 1 1 1!- ton ounse 1or,
_en who are losing
daughter.• Bul does that motivate Center, sa1d m
will speaic on "Services Available
him to launch a idlling spree?
their hair on top should view it from Division or Vocational R~;
The saving grace of ".Falling "more as a marlcer for a potential · bilitation." Further information
Down" is Duvall, who .can do . problem rather than aS a potential. may be obtained by contacting
more with -a s.idelong glance than problem itself."
Roberta EQierSOII at 304.733-1060,:
most actors can manage with a
page of dialogue. Rachel Ticotin is M~
warmly sympathetic as the only .
friend he has on the force.
"
, . ·:
Barbara Hershey is convincingly
Final plans for the Lenten visions for their needs as God does
terrorized as D-FENS' ex-wife and Breakfast at Trinity Church on the same thin' for each. God is
presumed victim. Tuesday Weld Wednesday at 7:45a.m. were made constantly admmistering needs' and
has the thankless iole as the neurot~ when Friendly Circle of Trinity guidance. God is with everyone
ic wife who is pushing Duvall to Church met recently with Gay Per· always and is always there when
retiremenL ·
·
rin
·ding.
·
needed. The Shephard takes each
The ·City of the Angels never
ft':'as announced that.the Marl· sheep into the fold one by one 81\d
looked more bellish.' Andrzej etta College Chorus will pre~~ent a gives each one individual attentiiln,
Bartkowijlc's camera captures the concen.at Trinity Church on Sun- justilsGoddoesforallpeopte. • ...
worst of the city and its inhabitants. day at 1 p.m. Eric Russell, a grandThe offering was taken, by Mary
~ven the wall murals look threaten· son of Friendly Circle member, V. Kautz with offertory prayer by
mg.
Mary Kautz, will be performing Maye Mora.
.
fbe Warner Bros. rele~e was with ihe chorus. The public iS invit·
A valentine theme was used 'at
wntten by Ebbe Roe Smtih and ed.
. tbe refreshment table. A desser.t
The program 'was presented by · salad and cupcakes were served to
produced by_ Arnold Koi!elson, '
HefS!;hel Wemgrod and Timothy Maye Mora. She based her fro- 13 members attending. A-valentine
Harris: Rate4 R, for language and gram on "The Interpretation o the
was presented to everyone.
'~.
violericc. Running time: liS min· ' 23rd Psalm" by Charles Allen.
Hostesses were Pauline· Maye'r ·
utes.
Some· excerpts were • The. sheep and Marie Hauck.
:
knows the Shephard will make pro·
Motion Picture Association of
Amtriea rating definition:
R - Restricted. Under 17
requires accompanying parent or
adult~.
The Evangeline Missionary sion study on the Laws, which tht
Group of the Pomeroy Church of group is supporting,
.
Chrisl met recently at the home of
Debbie. Miles had devotipns
Eileen Bowers.
from
Psalms. Mrs. Bowers read a
everywhere could push for more
The opening prayer was given poem "Spirit LUter" and "What is
minority enrollment, improve ~il· by Pat Thoma with Debbie Miles Love"
,
ities specifically for blacks and presi:J.· A quiz on ·bible women ' The women's fellowship gro11p
fight racism senenllly.
was
•
will meet at the church Thursday. ,'
Lee said this in response to a
Officers reports were given and
The mother-daughter baqqliet
question about a student takeov~ collections taken.,
. will be held May 6 at 6:30p.m. '
of a
buildin in Aprill988
A sympathy card was sent to
Mrs. Thoma read "Effecti~e
at ~te in w~ich protesters Linda Laudermill. and cards were Solvent"
,
·.'
demanded the administration step sent.to Dorothy Ritchie and Lane
Mrs.
Venoy
gave
the
prayeffor
up efforts to anract black students. . Goods. The sunshine box will be refreshments served by the ~
State police were called in and presented to Helen Millel'.
to those named and Debbie AJQe
arrested-89 demonstrators.
Charldine Alkire had the mis- and Pauline Kennedy.
·
' .,
.'

Vol. 43, ' No. 214

Copyright.~~

Ddnce planned ,
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 LadieJ Auxiliary will
have a dance Friday from 8-11:30
p.m. at ihe JIOil home. Happy Hoi·
low Boys will provide ihe musiC.
Public invited. .
.

A multiple sclerosis support
group for ,1111·persons with MS and
their family members, meets the
second' Tuesday of CI!Ch month. at
.6:30 p.n!. at ihe American Hospital
for Rehabiliwion on Counay Club
Drive in Huntington, :W.Va. ,Fur·
ther information may be obtained
by contacting Lany Kwant at 304272-6431.
.

4-Hers meet

Members of the Meigs i4·H
Pleasure Riders returned r.ccently
from the 4-H Horse HiptK&gt;IOJY
Clinic a1 the Ohio S~~~te Umventty ·
Hone Barn in Columbui.
Members panicipated in a hllnc
ju1f!;/ event as well 11 being
qu
on all types cA hone relat·
ed itemL Allending the clinic wae
Sara Craig, Holly Milhoan, Matt
Milhoan, Sus1111 Graeser, S~~tah
Oi-ueeer, Llnzie Noulnabanl,
advison, Rldtael Downie and Pam
Milholn. Abo auending were F110
Craig.
. During the group's February
mectina, project boob were dis·
tributed.
· The next meedng will be Mllch
I 5 II the Milhoan '1 home on Rock
Springs Road. The elub will review
the fair horae lhow with Terri

'an"

~eri':~IZndlnl the m~ti~g

were Tracy Shaffer and Jessica
Wheeler.
•

'

.,

FUture of area pools in ·doubt
&lt;'

, EYE EXAMS • Eye el181Dlnatlons for children are one or the many
;services offered by the Melas County Health Department with fund, Ina from local tax dollars. Here, Jert MeAdoo M.D., 1111 opbtbamolo&amp;ist from Athens, demonstrates an eye examination on u:year-old · Brandy Stevens, Middleport, as part or the children's eye clinic held
..,Wednesday. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)
.
.

· ·,·

Voino
. vich won't retreat
Y
Cut
ment
I
I
f rom
0C3
govern
.
·
·

COLUMBUS, Oblo .(AP) -Gov. Georae Volnovlch won't
I . t frOID
w•l to CUt the IUDount or 11ate tax n:ve11!Je
. • allared with
pvfl'!l-nt, but he wiD support reHer -from
· uiittmcled ltllte mudltes.
·
_Vblnovlch dete~~ded the revised fuading plan for counties,
, mnnldCHtln, townships atid libraries IncludecHn the state
bu~~~ dtr.tb~ :'e:t~~~uld
with tile dollars tliat we
__, ..__
C
C
bave," Volaovlcb ·...d aucr a speech .to the ounty ommls·
sloners AIIOdation ol Ohio oa Wednesday.
"IDdlredly, II I Ctlecf to &amp;et IICI'OIS, we're helping them witlt
.a lot of the lodal well.,e proarliml that are being funded quite
halllbomely," he said.
r

1

l:::Jrup

:
·
Ia
·
•
., ess c zm.s u1:'
n
J0 bl

L----""'"-~---------------..:...1

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
nuniber.of Americans filing first·
time claims· for jobless, benefits
edged up by 4,000 in mid-Febru· ary, the fitS! increuoin a month,
thegOVCI!IIIIentreported today.
. But the advance was only half
of what many llllllysts had C:X~I·
ed._And 4~ ~tates-.and temto~es
reported declmes, while only e1ght
postedTheincrcaseaLabor
De•
. ,
, . parunent said the
ne111 a.PPhcattons f'!r unemployment msurance durmg the week
ended Feb. 13 totaled 325,000, up
froiD 321,000 a week earlier.
Claims_have remained below
400,000 stnce September. Many
analysiS consider that num'!er to be
!he threshold between an nnprov·
1ng and deteriorating labor mada:L
The Labor Department reported
eariier that payrolls gre_w by
106,000 ·m January, the btggest
inC:r&lt;'&amp;Se in six mon'ths, while' th~
unemployment rale dipped to 7.I
pereent after remaining stalled at
7.3 perce~t the previous two
months.

The (our-week moving average
'of new claims continued to fall dm·
ing the latest reporting perjod. It
dropped to 334,500, the lowest
since the average reached 327,250
during the week ended S&lt;;Rt. 30,
1989.
Many analysts prefer to track
the four-week average because it
smooths out the volatility of the
weekly numbers and more aCCU·
rately reflects the labor situation,
In addition to the regUlar weeldy
benefit claims, 22,405 other appii·
cations were filed by newly laid off
workers for benefits under a federal
emergency program. That was
down from 30.118 during the week
ended _Feb. 6. ' ·
. The emergency prograrn ·is due
to expire on March 6. But the
House voted 254-161 on Wednesday to extend unemployment insurance for up tQ 26 weeks for laid off
workers whose state benefits have
expired. The Senate Finance Con:t·
mlltee approved a similar measure
earlier in the day.

,.....--Local briefs-~~
Due to overstOck, this Singer sewing machine .dealer Is
offering for sale to the public a limited number of ne,v
special 1993 heavy duty zigzag and open arm sewlnq
machines that are made to last, and sew on all fabrics:
denim, canvas, upholstery, nylon, . stretch, vinyl,
EVEN SEWS ON LEATHER! No attachments nMtjed.
for buttonholes (any size). It monpgrams, hems, sews
on buttons, satin stitches, overcasts, dams, appliques
and more. Just set dials and see magic happen wltho~
old·fashloned cams or programmers. These Singer
Heavy Duty Machines are suitable for home,
professional or schoolroom sewing. Twenty·live year
warranty.

YOUI PIICE Willi AD $169, WITHOUT AD $299

willcoiM. V18A, u.tere.nt, AIMrlcan Exp- .
-iptld. INnd- FACTORY lUI ED CARTONI '

Cllecll, CMh

•Hf' flHfll

;~f)OD

maY AT f!f!S I OC/\TiOli

t, I'JAVS ONLY!

11•1 IEWIII CEiftU ·

THE FABRIC SHOP '
POMIIOY, OliO • 992·2214
Open 8 to 5

ttiru Saturday

I

A llulllmedla Inc. Newopopir

'

ay,e M. ora presents ·program :

.
Meetings posted

2 Becttone, 14 Pogea 25 -Ia

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 25, 1993

11183

Stroke support group:

Mother-daughter banquet set

Heavy enowwamlng
tonlaht. TG!ol a_,utelkln C&gt;l ...
e 1na.... Low In the low ZOe.
Fltdly, enow. High :1045.

•

'Let's Talk' open to:··.
is ~ ~0:~!':, ~e~.n~~: family and friend~ :;j

T

'·

274
Pick 4:
3263

•

-Names in the news.:-

·Key women

Pick 3:

Just when you. think
you_~· ve had a bad day,
try ~Falling Down'

ily rouged toy soldiers who extend·
ed a limp wrist in a nod to President Clinton's bid to lift the mili·
tary's ban on homosexuals.
With brilliant sunshine and tern·
peratures in tlie 60s, many revelers
donned the skimpiest of costumes.
Others on French Quaner balconies
shed their clothes in response to
chants from the crowd and were
rewarded with trinkets.
"These are great!" Tom Con ..
roy or New York · said of the
strands of beads he wore. J"See
these big green ones? Women will .
do anything for them. Well, at least
they'll show me just about every·
thing for them."
Police cleared Bourbon Street of
drunks at midnight as Fat Tuesday
gave way to Ash Wednesday, the
stan of the austere Lenten period
before Easter.
Police reported no serious prob·
!ems. Most arrests ~re 'for pick·
pocketing, drunkenness and dis·
turbing the peace, Sgt. Bob Young
said. Am:st figures weren't imme·
diately available. .
BALTIMORE (AP) - Joe
A rider ren orr a float after he -Jaclcs~n suggested his s!'pers_tar
passed out and slipped out of his · son, Michael, exaagerated m telling
safety harness, police said..Doctors a national television audience his
said he suffered head and neck father abused him as a boy.
injuries. In the same parade, a 16- .
"When you chastised a youngyear-old boy was hit by a float but ster back m the early ages, we
wasn't seriously hurt.
called it a whipP,ing •.Now it's
One man wore the cardboard called child abuse, '· ihe elder Jackfrom a case of beer, held up with son said Monday. He was refening
suspenders, and nothing else but to his SOl)' a in~ew Feb. 10 with
jogging shons.
' Oprah Winfrey in which ·the per·
Charles Sawyer wore only . former said his father beat him and
strategically placed chains. Next to mocked his complexioit.
him stood a statuesque blond in a
"Michael's interview with
black leather bikini. "Today I'm Oprah was good fat Michael," Joe
Gloria. The rest of the year I'm Jackson added. "It sort of put me
George Walker," the blond said.
down a liule biL" '
·
~andy Patterson of New
Jackson made the remarks .while
Orleans was resplendent in a pink plugging his new cola, Jo~ola,
gown with hoop skirt, ruffles and which comes' in cans bearing his
lace, and a hat with long ,white signature and a description of him
feathers, Doug Taylor wore a black as "father of the Jackson entertainbustier and high black boots and ment familr and renowned
carried a riding crop.
entrepreneur.'
·
"I went for romance," Patter·
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) son said. "Doug is more basic. His
Filmmalctt
Spike Lee picked up a
costume is called 'Domitrix."' ~
political football' and ran with It
when he suggested black college
athletes could threaten ~ to play
unless minority students .get more
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post clout on campuses.
No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will
"You have to hit them in the
have a spagheui supper March 6 pocketbooli," Lee laid Monday
beginning at 4 p.m . at the post nighlto a IIIOitly white IIIICIIencc of
home. Cost is $3 .50 for adults'and 2,500 people at ~ml SIIIC.
$1.SO for children 1ttnd under.
"You talk about lheiC llig foot.
Public invited.
ball and basltotbali 'TV conttacts
and you have no black athlelea ... it
could wort," ·wd the maker of
"Mako1m X'·' and "Do The Right
Bosworth Council No. 46 lblng."
R.S.M. S.E.M. degree, Friday, 7:30
He suggested thai by llling their
p.m., Middleport Masonic Temple. swus u mone)'lll8km for colleges
and universities, black athletes

EMPLOYEE OF THE
MONTH • Angie Russell was
recently selected employee or tbe
month by her feDow employees at
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.• She· bas been
employed In the laundry departtq
ment 11 a laundry aide for the
past 1 112. Russell volunteers her
Ali key women from area
OWD litite to participate in facility
c~urc
hes are to meet at Sacred
spoa10red fuad raising projects
Heart
Catholic
Church on Friday at
. to help raise moaey for the
I
p.m.
to
plan
for Church Women
Alzlaeimers Research Founda· United.
·
tiOII.
.

0 hio Lottery

Tennessee
upsets No.2
Kentucky

:1Baby born in squad vehi~le
.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Meilical Service responded to three.calls for assistance overniaht including 'a call in which a
baby boy was born in the squad vehicfe in route to the hospital.
Al2:14 a.m. this mornina. the Racine squad responded to Third
Street for Ruth Swan who gave birth in Minersville while the squad
was in mule to Pieasalit Valley Hospilal in Point PleasanL
·
In addition, at 10:43 a.n:t. Wednesday, Pomeroy Squad 1
responded to the Pomeloy Nursing Rehabilitation Center for Cora
DeLong who was ttansported to Veterans Medical 'Center.
At 10:40 p.m. Wedneaday, Pomeroy Squad I responded to U.S.
33 for John Slllll)bo who wu transponed to VMH.
.

Schools take part in voter program

According to MiddleJ!«!!I Mayo'r
By JIM FREEMAN '
Fred Hoffman, the vtllage lost
Sentinel News Stair '
Meigs County youths could be between $12,000 and $15,000 on
required to find other places to• the pool last year.
"We don't know if we can open
swim this summer if financial
(the
pool) or not," Fred Hoffman,
problems force the ciosin~ of the
Middleport
mayor, said this morn·
county's two public ~w1mming
ing.
.
pools,
Syracuse
Mayor
James Pape
. Wednesday morning, repreSen··
said
this
morning
it
will
be up to
lalives from the villages of Middlethe
Syracuse.
Village
Council
to
pan and Syracuse unsuccessfully
decide
if
the
pool
will
be
opened
attempted to get money from the
Meigs County Board of Com- this summer.
"There's a good likelihood (the
missioners to help furid the two
pool) will never open," Pape said.
pools.
In addition to using $5,000 in
As a result, it is unlikely the
pools will be able to open this sum· general funds, Pape said the villllge
borrowed $10;000 the past year to
mer, the villages' mayors said.
Maintenance problems and a operate th.e pool.
The pool has lost money
cooler-than-usual summer contributed to·both pools losing money beCause maintenance that should
· have been taken care of hasn' t been
for their villages last summer.
taken·care of, Papeexplained.
In addition, the pool was closed
part of the summer, Pape said.
Commission criticiud
.
Pape criticized the commission

Bloodmobile
receives 66
p-ints of ~lood
.

.

.

~·

.

for looking at the siwation on what
he called "a shon-sighted basis."
"The pools offer too many posi·
tive things for the county for !he
commission to take sucb a negauve
attitude," Pape said.
Both pools serve the public,
Pape said, addi~g that perhaps
thousands of youngsters were safe·
ly taught to swim at the community
pools.
·
If the pools close, there'll be no
more tramed swimming lessons.
Pape said.
It will be up to the parents to
teach their kids to swim, Pape
added.

Continued on ptJge 3

·:

Sixty-six units of blood were
received Wednesday during a visit
of the American Red Cross BIOO!I·
mobile at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center.
Among the blood donors was
Sarah J. Fowler, Middlepon, who
gave her 100th unit, a total of 12
112 gallons. Another donor, ·lljlrry
D. Holter, became a two gallon
· donor yesterday.
First-time donors were Debra
Folmer, Alben l'llrker, and thomas
Parker, all of Pomeror Kandi
' Hysell;:!1!ddleport, an Charles
James, RaCme.
·
The canteen was served by the ,
American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Middle·
port. Tracey O'Dell and Libby
· Fisher were the donor attendants
for ·the-visit and Retired Senior
Volunteers of the Senior Citizens
Center assisting were Dorothy
Long, Wanda Fetty, Mary Nease,
Emma K. Clatworthy, Peggy Har·
ris, Jean Nease, Helen Bodimer&lt;
Florence Richards, Beulah W. ·
Ward, Evelyn Gilmore, Gerald
nurse Terri Tern, Parkersburg, w.va~ attends
GIVING BLOOD • David Harris, advertising
Wildermuth, Goldie Fr,ederick,
to HarriS. Sixty-six units or blood were colleCted
representative ror. The Dally Sentinel, donated
Biondena Rainer, Grella Suttle,
during the Bloodmobile visit. (Sentinel photo by '
blood Wednesday when the American Red
Lula Hampton, Mary Buck, Lloyd
Jim Freeman)
·
Cross Bloodnioblle visited the Senior Citizens'
and Ardella Johnson, and Donald
Center' in Pomeroy. Here, licensed prai:tical
and Betty Maurer. Brian Reed is
Logan.
,
·
McCloud, Billie S. Fitchpatrick,
Meigs County's blood chairman.
Rutland: Tammy Miller and
Adaline
J.·
Baker,
David
L.
Har·
Herbie
Bush,
Angela
Sellers,
Donna
M. Davidson.
·
Donors by COmmunity Were:
Pomeroy: Harold Norton, Janet ris, Marvin E. Taylor, ·Paul F. Barr, Do!ln&amp; M. Hawley, Kandy Hysell, · Long Bottom: Donald R
N. Ambrose, Jerry E. Reitmire, Nancy Thoene. Dale Thoene, Ger· Norma G. Wilson, Gloria J. Peav· Spencer, Laura L. Hawley, iBruce
Nancy J. Reitrnirc, Janet K. Peav· aid E. Rough, Dan E. Foillrod, Glo- ley, Mary A. Sorden, and George Hawley, Oris L. Smith, Merrilee
ley, PhyiUs J. Witherell, Walter R. ria K. Kloes, Donald R. Smith, L. Harris, Jr.
Bryant, Sharon E. Bryant.
Mason, W. Va.: Brian E. JObn·
Couch, Robert W, Smith, Wilma Sonia J. Allen, Roger C. Gaul,
, Minersville: Kenneth E. WigA. Mansfield, Brenda S. Cunnins· Roger A. Abbott, Barbara A. son.
gms.
'Racine: Marie A. Bush, Freddie
ham, Raymond L. Landers, Debra Riggs, David G. Graham, Madhu
Syracuse, Darla N. Thomas and
J. Simons, Harry D. Holter, Grace Kathy J. Cumings.
Folmer, Daniel R. Folmer, William ,Malhotra, John W, Moore.
Middleport: Micahel R. Mow· E. Holter, Dawna Arnold, and
W. Radford, Alben Parker, Tom
LangsviUe: Ellis E. Myers.
Parker, David M. King, Howard P, ery, Sarah J. Fowler, Dorothy C. Charles James.

s.

Derby

officers
announced
An organizational meeting was
held w~ab at the office or the
Blue.Streak
Company, Inc., to
elect offiCers for the annual Meigs
County ~oap Box Derby to be held
in Middleport on June 27. ,
The followin&amp; officers were
elected: WiUiam Snouffer, director;
Charles Neutzling, assistant director; James E. Pape , treasurer;
Cheryl Fisher and Debbie Peck·
ham, secretaries.
·
There wUI be two divisions run
. this ~ear .. the stock and kit car
diviaons.
·
The event is open to boys and
J.!rl• qea nine tluouah 16. To qualIfy, conlellants muat Ito nine years
ol age on or be(ore Aug. I, 1993.

Students of ·:~~ aso altendins Meiss and Southern high
achooli may be e
to vote in the May 4 primary election after ,
Proof or age ia n:qaired.
~=::the Ohio First Vote 1993 (li"OI!1III sponsored by
Reglsuidon day for contelllnts
Ohio :
d State Bob Taft.
.
will
be announced at a fulllnl dare. ·
Teachen 11 achoola (lllticipatina in the propam devote one class ·
·
Anyone
inte~ted in taking a
~.to ditcussing voting aild regillering eligible and in~
part in this event can contact
William or Oary Snouffer at. the
'
The -tary of 11110'1 ofT'tee auppllea each (lllticipatlq acbi&gt;ol
Blue
Streak Cab Com(ilny at 992PROGRAM IN PLACE· Kitty lfuler,
with a videptlpe about
vildng, teaching guidea and
dlrednr ol tile Melp Local Talented lllld Gifted
7075 or !1112-6471 Monday'through
reglatradon miiDriaiL 11to IJitllc!plliag achoola ~nt 64 per·
Propam, II plelared ltete with Jeanller Lee
Friday
from
8
a.m.
to
7
p.m.
and
cent of an publlc IIIII priYIIO high acboola in Ohio.
'
Saturday
from
8
l
.m;
to
S
p.m.
Stepp,
a tltlrd pade II deat, IIICI Kara Balllq·
PaniclpidnJ IIUdanll will bl reaiJtered before the April 5 deed·
ton,
a
lint
lll'llde lllldnt, at l'omero)' Elelllen·
The
soap
box
derby
is
a
youth
Caatilllllll 011 pqt 3
· _ __
Coatinued 011 paae 3
· 1111 oa We(llllday monill&amp;, 1'1le new proaram,

cltlzen-'t=

·

Pape speculated that more area
youngsters will take to unsuper·
vised -swimming in ihe Ohio River.
"You know what that means,"
Pape said, referring to the possible
increased likelihood of droWning&amp;.
No iDODey, lorry
Commissioqers Manning Roush
and Janet Howard explained the
county did not have the money to

heiR the villages with the pools.
'There's no money to help,"
Roush said. "I'm sorry."
Roush explained that the county
is currently facing the cost of two
murder irials.
Syracuse had requested $15,000
w$ hi1 e Middleport requeste!I
11,000•
;
· The . county currently has
$30,727 earmarked for parks and
recreation. Of that amount,
$22,141.63 is fol' employee-related
expenses.
.
.
· Discuss r011d petition
,
The commission invited County
Engirieer BOb EasoCnharan~ RR~~add
1te 1oe to
Township Trustee
. discuss a petition presented to tlie
commission last week by Noble
Summit ROad resident Ray Fowlei.
Tho.se signing the petitio)!
requested that t,be county abso~b
the road in the county road systell!•
Eason and Rife said .the roa;d
needed work and agreed to jlat¢h

,I

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