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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, u.rctl&amp;, 19SP

·Your Social Sec_urity

... ·'

f.
~

;

... · // l
MR. and MRS. EARL (CYNTIHA) SANDERS

Hazleton~Sanders
HEMLOCK GROVE • Mr. and
Mrs. James A. HazeliOII, Hemlock
Grove, announce the marriage of
their. daugt\ter, Cynthia Ann, to
Earl Raymond Sanders, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Rayl)lond E. Sanders,
Brookfield.
The bride is a 1985 ~Uaduate of
Meigs High School. The groom is a
1983 graduate of Hubbard High
School. Both are graduates of Kentucky Christian College in
Grayson, Ky.
.
The couple was married Aug.
29, 1992 at the Kenwood Church
of Christ in Livonia, Mi., with the
bride's brother, Michael Hazelton,
officiating.
The bride wore a floor-length
gown of crepe satin with a sweet·
heart neckline. puff sleeves aceent. ed with bows and lace and a lace
covered drop waist bodice with an
attached train. The skin and bodice
were also accented with lace trim
and pearls. The gown and veil were
made by the mother of the bride.
The maicj-of-honor and. !lttendants
wore pink or aqua floral tea-length
dresses with sweethesrt necklines ·
and bows and carried white lace
fans accented with flowers.
lane Hazelton, Livonia, Mi., sis·
ter of Lhe bride, served as maid of
honor and the altendants were

ByEDPEI'EilSON
Social Seau ity
M~~~qeJ: Ia AlMas
"Older Arnericans and their
families may be interested in
knowing about a nationwide infor·
matian 8Dd referral service that is
now available," said Ed Petcnon,
Social Security manager in Athens.
'fhe Eldercare Locator is a
nauonaJ toll-free number service
that cm help fmd appropriate community rcsowtes for older people
any"!'":re in the country. "Simply
by dt~lmg the toll free number, 1800-677-1116, you will be referred
to a local number for such renior
services as nursing homes, legal
assistance and fD1811Cial aid," Peter·
son said.
'_lbe Eldercare Locator service,
~hich is ftmded by the Administra1!00 ~Aging, began limited open·
Ill?" m May 1991, but went nationwide only ~ past November. Mr.
Peter.son pointed out that early
expenenc:e shows about balf of the
Clllen to the 800 number are family ~emben interested in locating
asststance for_the care ,of an ol'!er
JIII'tofnt or relative; 8Dd about a third
the callen ~ older persons whQ
~ themsel~ tnle!CSted in loca,t•
mg commuruty remces.
The National Association of

Area ·!Cm,nc:.,on Agency, which
helPI
· ·
the IOU-In=e Rllll·
ber lei'Vice, SlaleS thai "The Bider·
care I.«ator.. .is a acrviQC wboao
time has come."
The Association notes that
improvements in life expeciiDCy
ancl health care bave helped to
make Americans over the aae of 85
the f8SieSt growing ~nt of die
U.S. popuialion. And u is this aae
group that is most lilcely to need
assistance from caregivers and/or
aging ref\'ices.
"If you call the atdercare Loca·
tor," Peterson said, ''you will speak
wilh a trained information specialist.lfthelines are busy, you will be
told that the next available specialist will take your call and be placed
in a waiting queue.
• ,
The information specialist can
• help you defme exactly the type of
. service that you .are looking for,
and referJOU to the nearest service
provider. .
The Eldercare Locator toll-free
number, l-800-677-l116, oPerate$
l'rom 9 am. 10 6 p.m. (eastern time)
every business day. During nonbusiness hours, an answering
machine will Jake your call and an
information specialist will contact
you the following day.

Girls SEO
All-District
team named

Society started

Community calendar

Pick 4:

7304

Yai..U, No.218
CoA;Ightld1183

BUYS TICKETS • Roter Smith, (left), porch- 0., nry tint
ticket ror the April 17 Phil Dirt and the Dozen concert at the Rutland Civic Center. Presenll.nJI Smith with is ·lickel is-Rutland
Mayor Ed Martin.

.Concert ticket' sales unUer:way ·

The ftrst ticket for the Phi' Dirt land Elementary·PI'Q will be proand the Dozers concert was sold to vidins conceaions for the OOIICe!"~
Roger ~mith of Rutland. The cOn·
TickeJs are IY8illble at the Rut·
c~r~ wdL be held a_t the R~tl~d land Civic Center, Meigs County
Otvtc Center on Aprill7 beginninJ . Chamber of Commerce and at
at 8 P~· .
. ..
•· Fruth Pharmacies in, Midd,lepon,
"This
w1ll
.
b
e
an
exctung
.show
. Gallipolis and Point Pleasant
saying their students cannot be
for
Meigs
County
iuJd
the
ptuceeds
W.Va.
'
blind.
Further information may be
- Ms. Fisher's lawyers say the .Wilth.'I !Je1P do some JDaintenance on
.
e
c1vic
cente~.
replied
Bd
Martin,
obJained
by callins74~-2121 or the
folll'·Year dispute could wind up in
Mayor
of
RutllijJd.
Meigs
County
Chamber of Comthe U.S. Supreine Coun.
'fhe .&amp;stern Band Boosters, merce Office 992-SOOS.
Me1gs Band BOQS!Crs and the Rut- ·
'

The Long Bottbm Community
· Association met recently with Janie
Fitch, vice-president, conducting
Lhe meeting,
. The meeting opened with the
Pledge of Allegiance.
· ·Officers reports were given by
'Mae McPeek and Melody Roberts.
A collection was taken to pay
for the ,evening supper. Ruby
~ Brewer and Phyllis Larkins
prepared Lhe evening meal.
Another round and square dance
will be held at the community
i.JSA STARCHER
building on Friday with music br,
Buzz Slater and ''Out of the Blue. '
Ronnie Wood w'ill be the -caller.
,Lisa Starcher,' daughter of The cost is $5 per cou'ple or $3
George andJudi!h S!lircherofWest single . Everyone is welcome.
Columbia, was named 10 the dean's Refreshments will be served.
list at Marshall UnivetsitY. for the
Prizes for games were
fall semeste~, 1992. She is a sopho- purchased by Melody Roberts and
more there mlliorlng in special edu- Janie Fitch. ·
cation. Usa is the granddaughter of · A vegetable soup supper
Mary Slaleher, Pomeroy.
preceded the meeting.

On dean's list

The Ohio Supreme Court has been asked 10 clear
. the air over Ohio Power's "scrubber" plan at the
Gavin Planl in Cheshire.
Industrial I;nc:rgy Consumers, a coalition of 11
~ electricity UICfl, appealed a decision the Public
, Utilities Commission o£Ohio DUlle Nov. 25, approving the installalion of $815 million worth of aircleaning IICnlbben It the Gallia County plant, an article iii today's CobnnbuS Dispall:b Slid
The industrial group, wbicb includes General
.Motors. BP Oil and Anheuser-Busch, charged that .
. the PUCO's decision allows Ohio Power 10 CODtinoe
burning "unreasonably expensive" high-Sillfur Obio
; coal and is costing cotiSUIJiaS "hundreds of millions

m

year by ·.u parties except the indwitrial
and the
Ohio Sierra Club, will save the jobs of about 800
Meigs County coal miners. The plan is estimated to
hoost electric. raJeS by 6 percent hetween 1995 and

of dollars in excessive fuel costs."
A statement issued by the coalition said Ohio
Power, with the blessing of state regulators, is bpying
expensive coal from its own affiliated 'mines when
less expensive coal is available from other sources.
"We are asking the Ohio Power not be allowed to
subsidize its coal business at the expense of its customen," the statement said
.·
· ThC apPeal is part of a continuing legal battle over
the plan by American Electric Power, Ohio Power's
parent company, to burn Ohio coal instead of switchmg to out-of-stale coal to meet tough new requirel!lents of the federal Clean Air Act.
The plan, as outlined in an agreement si~ed last

2000.

.AEP spokesman Mike Mahoney said company
offtcials "believe the stipulated agreement of Ohio
Power Co.'s coal costs deserved the approval it
received from the Public Utilities Commission." He
said the company plans a legal response to the .
Supreme Court appeal.
'The commiss1011 Stal!ds by its decision in the case
and will await the Supr,eme Court ruling, PUCO
spokeswoman Stacie Oilg said.

.

Dance·'platined
There will ~I!. C0tJ11!rY we li:m
dance at MiddiC!port Elelilillwy on
March 13 froni, 8-11 p.m. lpOnsored by .the Middleport Arts
Council. The - . 11.$5 per COIIIIe
or $3 sing!O, FeiiUi'ed " - i'ill
include die 1'eUJi,two-siiJi, liile
dancing and clo'!!;f· Food 111c1
soft drinks wUibe
:•

'

.

Dustin Hoftmalt won lb~ lt88 A,eattemy Award for Beat ~tor for bliJer·
formance in "Rain Mltn." · ·

IN"ALLING NEW LINE· Worken were
basy liistaiUaa a aew water llae alon&amp; West
Main Street UDder tile Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
M!lnday. AccordiD&amp; to VIllage Administrator
John Anderson, the aew line replaces a line

plaeued bJ rrequeat leaks. Here, equipment
operator Jeremy Rose, Radne, places gravel
over a section of the new line while Doug Warden, Racine, watches. (Sentinel photo by .nm
Freeman

Koresh says, "We are ready for war"
WACO, Texas (AP)- The FBI
moved tanks into place after an
'increasinJ)y wlalile David Koresb
- seemtngly eager to fulftll his
apocalyptic propllesies - boasJCd
of having powerful explosives.
"We are ready for w-:,'' the 33year-old cult leader and self-pro·
claimed messiah was quoted by the
FBI as saying.
The 67-ton Abrams tanks, the
Arm:y' s heaviest, were rolled into
posiuon outside the Branch Davidians' compound Monday strictly to
give law officers protec:tion, FBI

spokesman Bob Ricks said. The
tanks will be lDI8fllled, he said. .
Koresh had told negotiators he
has explosives that would blow the
FBI's Bradley armored personnel
carriers "40 or SO feet into the

.

l!U'-

''

.

"Because of some intelligence
indicating he may have stockpiled
other than just automatic weapons
- there may be explosives and
perhaps even rockets within the
compound - we are taking additional defensive measures," Ricks
said.

,....--Local briefs-worker injured in fall .

' ,.
'
,-

•• •

A construCtion 'lOIOrlc« was trllllSp011ed to the intensive care unit
of Cabeli-Huntington Hospital Monday after he fell .approximately
15 feet while workins near the Ohio River at the Gavin Power
Plant, 7397 State Route 7, Cheshire. ·
A spokeswoman for Russell Construction reJKlr!Cd Monday
ChesJer Roush, 55, 2635 S.R. 7, Gallipolis, feU from a river cell
onto rocks.
A holpital spnte"Ml01811 reported the worker was in fair con&lt;li·
lion this morning and is being treated for multiple trauma.
Roush was first transpOrtied by Gallia County Emcqency Medi·
cal Service 10 Holzer Medical Cen!CI' in Gallipolis.and was later
transferred 10 cabell-HuntlngtoD. ·
The Michigan-based construction company is installing river
cells for a lime loader ll the power plant, the spokeswoman said.

Alan injured in wreck
· A Syracuse 111111 was injUred but refused lrealrllCnt following a
two-vehicle accidmt Monday artanoon, the Gallia-Meigs Poll or
.the Stile Hi&amp;hway Paaol reponed.
Acconlin&amp; 10 the accident report, Richard D. Ash, 38, Glen
Street, Syr11euae, wu eastbound on State Route 124 in Sutton
TOWIIIbip whlln bellowed doWII for a-oouad IChool bUI which
waa about 111 ItO() and was ltrUCit from behind by Blmer L. Pickens,
66, 49443 Stile Jtoare 338, Rlcine.
.
Pickens wu cited for fallure to maintain an a~ured clear disJance. Both vehiclel allllained moclenre dlmqe and wore driven
from the-.
'

.

Turkey permit deadline extended

.

'

•

The l1lltey peualt c!eec!Jine tm the l9931mkey au~ has been
extended 10 Mildl 28, .......... County Game Prolector Keith Wood
. llid Maaday.
".
.
.
' The original dedllne ror turtey permita wu Monday, Wood

llid.

''
'.

The POCO said the scrubher decision was made
on a "pure economic, least cost basis.• Regulators
subsequendy turned down requeSts by the industrial
group and the Ohio Sierra Club to reconsider the
decision.
SIB!C law permits opponents 10 appeal directly to
the Ohio Supreme Court after appeals through the
PUCO have run their course.
The Ohio Offioe of Consumers' Counsel, which
represents residential utility corisumers in the state,
backs the scrubber plan and does not support the
indus~ group's appeal, spokeswoman Belh Gianfortaro said.

London Pool will be in
operation this summer

The meeting closed with the
Lord's Prayer.
Attending were Rub[ ll'rewer,
Phyllis Larkins, Dorse Larkins,
Stanley, Juanita Well; Janie and
Brandon Fitch; Melody ltobens,
Judy Holter, -Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeek and Delores Hawk ..

.

1 Section, 10 POll" 25 cento
A Multlmodla Inc. Newopaper

· ohio Supreme Court asked to ~crub 'scrubber' plan

., ...

I

Low tonJabt In 30s. Cklucly.
Wednesday, blgb Ia upper 40s.

Pomeroy-Middlepo", Ohio, Tuesday, March 9, 1993

Long Bottom area news

DAVtomeet

' .

567

•

Community Calendar items forming in the dinner theater at
appear two days before an event Southern. High School will be ·held
and lhe day or thai eveaL Items Tuesday at 6 p.m. in the high
must he received weU in adV81lce school bandroom. All parents are
to assure publication ill the cal· urged to auend.
en dar.
REEDSVILLE • A community
MONDAY
education meeting will be held
BURLlNGHAM- The Bedford Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Eastern High
Township Trustees will meet Mon- School.
day at 7 p.m. at the 10wn hall.'
POMEROY • The Meigs CounPOMEROY ·The DAV will ty Board of Elections will meet
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall. Tuesday at 4:30p.m. at the offtce.
124 Buncmut Avenue, Pomeroy.
POMEROY - The Su11ar Run
CHESHIRE - Women Alive School Restoration Comm1uee wiD
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the meet at 6:30 Tuesday evening at
Kyger ,t;:reek Clubhouse. Juanita Trinity Church.
Roush'· will be the devotional
spea ker~ 'Jhere will be a craft
· POMEROY - There will be a
demonstra~on and refreshments.
Sugar Run School meeting Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Trinity Churcfi.
TUESDAY
Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middlepan Youlh League will hold signMIDDLEPORT - The Preceptor'
up for the 1993 ball season on Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Tuesday from 6-8 p.m. and Satur- Sorority, will meet Tuesday at 7:45
day from 9 a.m. to noon. Sign-up p.m. at the home of Velma Rue, 72
will be held at the Middleport South Third in Middlepon.
Council chambers. Anyone who
did not participate last season will
WEDNESDAY
need a copy of their birth certiriSYRACUSE - The Syracuse
cate. Registration fee is $10 per Youth League will meet Wedneschild, not to exceed $25 per famil~. day and March 17 from 5-7 r.·m . at
Syracuse Eic:mentary Schoo . RegPOMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi IStraUon fee IS $12 per child, not to
Chapter, Beta Sjgrna Phi Sorority, exceed $25 per family. First time
will have a progressi ve dinner partici\)ants must provide a co_py of
Tuesday . Meet at the parking lot their binh certificate. Further mforacross from Dollar General at 6:15 mation may be obtained by conp.m. Salad course is at Sandy · tacting Jim Lawrence at 992-3282.
Butcher's, main course is at Julie
Dillon's, dessen course is~ Sherry
POMEROY : Pomeroy MerChapman's.
chants Association will meet
Wednesday at 8:30a.m. at the conLETART FALLS • · The ference room of Bank One in
Le tart/Portland PTO will meet Pomeroy.
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Letart Falls
Elementary.
RACINE - The Racine Youth
League will hold sign-up for the
REEDS VILLE - Riverview 1993 ball season on Wednesday
PTO will meet Tuesday. Refresh- from 6-8 p.m., on Marth 13 from 9
meniS and babysitting provided.
a.m. to noon and Marth 15 fnm 68 p.m. Fmal sign-up will be Marth
HARRISONVll.LE • The Har- 20 from 9 a.m. to noon. Si$n-up
risonville Senior Citizens Club will will be bdd at the Southern kinder·
hold a free blood pressure c'linic on garten bijilding. Rt!ftistration fee
Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 1109n at will be $10 for soft
playen, $15
the townhouse. Mel!lhers will hold for basebaU ~yen, not 10 exceed
a potluck after the clinic, weather $25 per famtly. Anyone who did
permitting.
not participate in the Racine Youth
League previouslY. will need a ~PY
RACINE • Racine Lodge No. of their birth catificate.
· 461 F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. Work in the' fellowcraft
degree.
The Disabled American Veterans will hold its monthly moetlng
RACINE - A meeting for par- on Monday at 7 p.m. at the 'hall.
ents of students who will be .per- 124 Buuemut Avenue in Pome10y.'

'

Pick 3:

Page4

Blind student fights medical·
s~hool requirement for sight

Jaima Hazelton, Salineville, niece
of the ~ride; Mrs. Gayla Horinek,
LeWISVIlle, Texas, cousin of the
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
bride; and Mrs. Cassandre Griffm
woman who decided she wanted to
CuyahOga Falls.
' become a doctor when physicians
· Flower girls were ianet Hazel- were trying to save her sight is
ton, .niece of the bride and Brett . fi$hting a medical school ban on
Allen. niece of the groom, both of blind students.
Livonia, Mi. They carried white
"They're creating limitations on
baskets with flowers.
themselves and me by their ignoThe groom and groomsmen aU rance," siid Cheryl Fisher, 29.
wore dark gray tuxedos with bow "Somelhin$ I [lear all the time is
lies and veSts.
this patronizing, 'It would be so
J.erry Sanders, Martinsville, hardont:;'"
.
Ind., brother of the groom, served · The
Western Reserve Unias best man ·and the groomsmen ~ity medic81 school in Cleveland
were Daniel Vargo, Virginia has denied Ms. Fisher admission,
Beach, Va.; Jeffrey Sagstetter,
Gra)'son , Ky.; John Sprankle
Lowsville; and Gregory Fasnacht:
A local chapter of Alpha Beta
Dayton.
Gamma
been chartered on the
The ring bearer was Michael campus has
of
Hocking
College for
David Plumbley, Livonia, Mi.
business
honor
students.
Forty-two
The traditiol)al wedding ceremo- students are charter members
the
ny was followed by a reception in organization and advisor'of
s
are
the fellowship hall of the church.
Aiken and Marc Newman,,
The bride and groom honey- David
Local students 'include Sltaion
mooned in Toronto, Ontario and
Gary Snou(fer and Steve
Niagra Falls, Canada, and now Johnson,
Donahue,
of Pomeroy; and Amy
reside in Livonia, Mi., where she Hill, Longall
Boaom.
wodcs as a receptionistlsales secreAlpha Beta Gamma is an orgatary for Hydna-Flex, Inc. He is the
nization
for two-year colleges and
associate minister at the Kenwood
students
must have completed 12
Church of Christ.
credit hourS and a minimum grade
point average of 3.0.
·
An installation ceremony will be
held spring quarter.

Ohio Lottery

Coatln!Md oa.pqe 3 ,

As the standoff dragged into its
lOth day, a judge was to decide
today whether 21 children already
freed from the compound would
remain in temporary siB!C custody.
Relatives from as far away as
Britain and Australia were expected to seek temporary custody o( the
children, who range from 5 months
to 12 years.
.At times, they ·have expressed a
desire to be reunited with parents
still ·inside the compound, officials
said. The youngsters have been
kept together . .
"Under the circumstances, the
kids are doing line, but it's a diffi.
cult time for them," said Bob
Boyd, a progrlun director for Children's Protective Services.
An additional 17 children were
believed .to be amons more than
100 people still inside the 77-eae
compound. Gun battles between
fedelal agents and Koresh and his
disciples Feb. 28 left four agents
dead. Ten cultists also may have
died.
"It's our helief that he believes
that his prophecy will be fulftlled if
the government en~es in an all·
out ftrefight with him in which he
is executed,'' Ricks said
"He has made such statements
is, 'We are ready for war.' 'Let's
Jet it on.' 'Your talk is becoming
m vain.' ·~·m going to give you the ,
· opportuntty to save yourselves
before you act blown away."'
Negotiators agreed Monda&gt;." 10
let the cult bury one member ll:ilied
. iii a shooiOuL 1be victim's identity
was being withheld.
Ricks said negotiaiora have .
talked with 33 people inlide the
compound. "Those that we spoke
wilh on each occaaioo verified that
Mr. Koresh had indlceled thai the&amp;
individuals were free to leave at
•y time," he said. "And we Jot
confirmation lhll they were staying
there on their II'Nal'ree will. ••
However, negotiators also
talked wilb a Wllllll11 who said she
8Dd her ftve children would like to
leave, but those tiJb broke down,
Ricks said.

chlorine·pump is needed along with She also indicated that sbe may try
By KATHRYN CROW
a diving board, and that the pool to requit funds from other sources.
Sentinel Correspondent .
: Maureen Hennessy asked if the
Syracuse Village inay lack needs painting.
In talking about operating village had I!Sked the Commissionfunds to operate London Pool but
no one can say that the residents . expenses, Pape said government ers to be placed on the list for .1994
lack spirit or the determination to regulatiOns now ~uire that liquid funds. «;:ouncil replied Lhey had not
see that the pool opens, come May. chlorine be used. Ltquid chlorine is asked for next year but had asked
At a public meeting Monday more expensive than other water twice for funds and also had written a Ieaer to them about the probnight held by ~yracuse Village chemical treatments, he said.
lt
was
suggested
that
Council
tern.
Council, it was apparent that many
get
together
figures
on
what
is
Jack Williams, council member,
residents, not only those in the vilneeded
and
the
costs,
and
then
stated
Lhat willl the pool operation,
lage but around the county, l!fe
work
toward
raising
the
money
losing
money, the village could get
willing to pitch in to keep the po61
from
the
private
sector.
itself
in
a situation which would be
open.
'
.
Several
J?COPle
at
the
meeting
very
difficult
to get out of. .He also
After hearing that the Meigs
had
suggesuons
on
how'
to
handle
mentioned
that
there are many resiCounty Board of CQmmissioners
the
financial
problems.
Mrs.
dents
in
Syr11euse
wl!o are renior
would not give any f11110cW supMichael
P,
f
t:n$i$1
stated.
that
she
,
citizens.
on
ftxed
inc:OJnes:
port to S)'racuse for the pool opera· .
David Lawson noted that the
lion, residents at last nighi's meet· would be wilhng to pay more for
pool
passes,
Lhat
the
pool
was
one
.
pool
bears the expense of all lighting expressed a willingness to work:
together to keep the pool in opera- of Lhe things which encouraged her mg at the park. Council said this
family to move to Syracuse.
should be handled another way.
tion.
Phil Hill staled that he would be
Harry Leflle who operates CanFormer Syracuse Mayor Eber
happy
10
chaperone
any
extra
activDo
Maintenance said that he will
Pickens offered his service in the
ities,
such
as
dances
or
othec
types
donate
40 hours of work:. He said
main!enance department. David
of
teen
activity
held
at
the
pool.
shutting
down the pool because of
Deem, w._ has been a guard at the
Mary
Powell,
director
of
the
apumpdoesn'tmakesense.
pool for a numbCr of years gave his
Council asked for volunteers to
support and listed some of the rea- Meigs County Park District, noted
that
she
had
contacted
Sen.
Jan
work
with the pool committee from
sons he felt the pool was hurt
Michael
Long
8Dd
was
informed
by
Council.
Volunteering were Mary
financially last years. These includ·
him
that
there
have
been
similar
Pickens,
Don Shaffer, Phil Hill,
ed the problems with the haby po&lt;il
problems
in
other
towns
and
that
Kay
Tackett,
Bob Wingett, and
as well as leaks which caused the
there
might
he
a
"hidden
source"
of
Carla
Wallace.
This group will
lose of chemicals and the weather.
funds.
The
Ohio
Public
Recreation
meet
with
Council's
pool commitDeem also suggested that the pool
deals
with
pools
and
might
be
able
tee
of
Bill
Roush,
Dennis
Wolfe,
be more family oriented.
to
come
up
with
funds,
she
said.
Kenny
Buckley
8Dd
Katie
Crow.
Carla Wallace offered her sup·
pon and asked,what it would cost
to, get the pool ready to open .
Msyor James Pape estimated that it
would take approximately $5,000,
EAST LIVERPOOL, Ohio (AP) ... you can very easily see where
but added that the problem in the -A trial burn began today at a there's 75 people who wouldn't
past has resulted mostly from oper- hazardous-waste incinerator that have a whole lot to do," Zeli.k said.
ating expenses. He said that a new has been the subject of court lights
Some staff would be needed to
and protests by opponents who keep the hailer operating, do mainhave Died to stop it from operating.
work and provide security,
The trial burn hegan as officials
of the Waste Technologies IndusThe appeal asked for an emertries plant continued to appeal a gency hearing on the issue by
judge's order prohibiting commer- Wednesday. WTI said delays in
cia! operation pending analysis of starting the incinerator have cost it
the trial burn.
~5.75 m~lion and have jeopardized
Plant Manager Jeffrey Zeli.k said mc1neraUon contracts and financin a news release that the trial burn ing.
began about 8 a.m.
Opponents, including the envi" lt was determined laiC Monday ronmental group Greenpeace, had
WASHINOTON (AP) evening that the facility was reidy asked Ms. Aldrich to block the trial
Miami prosecutor Janet Reno and alf the appropriate authorities burn . They contended the test
pledged at her confumation hearing were notified of our intention to . would pose an unacceptable risk of
dioxin contam1' nau'on. D1'o•;n
today t hat 1'f con f'umed as t he proceed,""'·"'·
........., 581·d.
~· 1's a
nation's ftrst woman attOJney genIn Washingron today, opponents suspected carcin\)gen.
era!, her top priorities would be had planned to seek a meeting with
U.S. Environmental Protection
"attacking violent crime, drug aaf- Pres1dent Clinton 10 block the trial Agency officials had Jestifted durlicldng and public cort'l!pti&lt;in. "
burn. Vice President AI Gore ,had ing a hearing that WTI ordinarily
In prepared testilnony before the said during the campaign last fall would be allowed up to a year of
Senate Judiciary Coromiuee, Reno that he wanted a congressional operation while the test results are ·
also pledged strong civil rights · investigation before the plant could analyzed.
·
enforcement and added: "I want to start burning waste.
lelik said Ms. Aldrich ignored
do everything I can to endwe ~ual
U.S. District Judge Ann Aldrich testimony from William Farland, ·
oppclltunities for all Americans. '
on Friday said the plant would have the head of the EPA's risk assess-·
Reno was the only scheduled to shut down after the trial bum ment office, and Laura Green, a
witness and the committee was while the results are analyzed, a ri.sk assessor hired by WTI. Farland·
expected to act swiftly to·ratify her process that could take a year.
· said•the cancer risk would he 10
nomination. President Clinton was
Operators of the plant on Mon- times less than allowed under other
hopins for a quick Sena!C vote to day appealed the order 10 the 6th EPA programs. Ms. Green's analytiU the last vac:aney in his Cabinet. U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, ask;- sis predicted an even smaller risk,
Clinton's first choice, ZOe Baird, ing that the appeal be heard imme- Zellk said.
withdrew h~r nomination in Jan- diately.
"The court didn't accept the
aary after admitting ahe had hired
Appeals coun spokeswoman conclllSions of these highly regardillegal aliens as liouschold employ- Debra Naaei said today the coon ed scientists,' ' he said.
eea.
had not made any dccisiotl on tlie
Ms. Aldrich was out of her
C~veland office Monday and not
Reno, a 5-'-year-old HarVlrd case. including when 10 heir iL
lawyer who bas been Dade County,
The $160 million lncinaator is aviilable for COillmen~ a secretary
Fla.; s!MII llllllmey for the lul 15 along the Obio River near OIUo '1 said.
years. faced little or no orpni:wl border with Pennsylvania and Wcat
Mick Harrison or the GovemOI1POiition u she lciUled mto the Virginia. Residents in all three rnent Accountability Project in
wttne11 chair.
.
staJeS have oppoaed the incinetaiOr. Washington, D.C., said Monday
"Attacking violent crime, drug . Zelik said Monday that plant that opponents were not surprised
traffictlns and public corruption · officials would be IQ start laying , by WTI's W""l His I!IIUl'. II rep-.
mpst be the flnt priority of the off man)' of its 104 employees .if ICIIIIIting l\)jJODelots in the dispuao. .
deputment, and if you confjrm me. the incmerator couldn't beg1n
"We believe the judco wu very
it will be," Reno said In her pte· money-mating operalioDS. Plant reaDIIble, and that tlxnl w• suf.
ptlred lllllimony.
offtciall have said the compiDY II ficient evidence in the record 10·.
Reno also promlJed to f!Jbt 011 losing SliS,OOO a day while tho suppon her decision, •• Harrison.•
behalf of the environment as aaor: incinerator is idle.
.•
said.
· ::·
ney general.
"If you're not recetVI,IIII wute

WTI plant starts trial burn

:=

Reno
hearings
begi~

(~I'

,l

~I

�•

TueeclaY, March 9, 1993 .

·commentary

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

4

fon:cutfor

Tueaday, Mallch 9, 1993

I

~ain,

OHIO Weather
Wednesday, March 10

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Tonight will be cloudy witll rain
developing south and snow developing nortll. Lows from the upper
20s to lower 30s.
A storm system from tile west
wiD bring Ohio its next chance for
rain and snow tunight and Wednesday.
Rain and snow developing nortll
on Wednesday, while rain is
expecled in central and southern
Ohio; Highs will range from the
mid-30s northwest to tile upper 40s
soUih.
.
The record high on tllis date in
Columbus was 77 in 1974. The
record low was 6 below in 1-984.
Sunset tonighl at at 6:32 p.m.
Sunrise Wednesday at 6:51 a.m.

. DEVOTED TO THE INTBRESTS OF TIIB ME108-IIASON AREA.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CliARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer

LETfERS OF OPINioN are welcome. They sbould be less tban 300
words . All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published: Leners
should be-in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

City manager's ouster
adds to turmoil
'.

'".:""...

;;.,~,

'w:-

............. _... •

-+

'&gt;'1'

By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATl ...:... City Council is squabbling, the city manager was
fqrced out of his job and there is disjNie_ about wh~ is running the city. .
Angry residents have been telephOnmg co11ncil members to complain
about the treatment of former city manager Gerald New farmer,- who
resigned this week after a council majority threatened to lire him. ·
• Newfarmer, wllo serves at the pleasure of the council, threalened to
fue him, resigned afrer 2 1{2 years in his $141,933 job, ramer than go out
fighting.
'
Councilwoman Roxanne Qualls, one of only tllree supporters Newf$11ler had on tile nine-member council, says she hopes council will handle tile siwaiion better next time.
· "I would hope tile lesson is that the council has to have a much clearer
sense of direction,'' and can express what it wants and expects from tile
city manager, sbe said.
·
·
Newfarmer, a former city manager in San Jose and Fresno, Calif., said
cou.ncil members never warned him tlley were displeased witll his performance. Ms. QuaDs agreed.
.
"He gO\ a performance evaluation last fall. He had also been given a
raise. Since that time, mere had been no f!)llllal updale,' ~ sbe said. "As far
as me process tllat one normally follows witll an· employee, he wasn 'I
given a clear reading."
'
.
Finance. Director Frank Dawson, a 16-year c•ty employee, was
appointed interim city manag~. Ms. Qualls said she thi~ the n~w manager isn't likely to be hired tmtil after tile November council elections.
, Newfarmer's critics, led"by Mayor Dwight Tillery, said he failed to
· communicale witll council and somelimes did not deliver reports tllat
council members requested. Tillery and otllers were said to be displeased
with some of Newfarmer' s choices last week. in appointing new department heads for vacancies in public works, public utilities and the waler
works.
,
Newfarmer said he was blind-sided and angered when tile council suggested he resign.
. .
"When he loses the suppon of City·Council, the professional thing for
a. manager to do is resi~ and tllat it wh_at I have done,'' be said.
.
He remains on the City payroll until June 15 to complete unspecified
iaSks. He also receives $70,000 in severance pay. · .
TiUery's council opponents accused tile mayor of fo'tcing out Newfirmer because of a personality conflict and to gillb more power in run-the.
.
.
But Tillery said he was only one of Newfarmer's six critics. TiUery
said me tormer city mana$er should have communicated better and
sllould have known be was 10 trouble for not progressing witll plans for
riew downtown development
· · "The city manager cannot exist in a vacuum,'' Tillery said in an interview witll The Cincinnati Post. "The development of downtown is in a
s"hambles and tile city manager is responsible for diaL"

What is Hillary Clinton's job anyway?
when a committee t,:hairman on · Budget Committee chairman, he things ~ the eash val~~ of fringe
Capitol Hill has called the Wllite made no bones about his distaste benefits and other non-cash
Houle on a domestic policy~. for wbal he saw IS the budgetary .income.''
he has been startled to rccei ve a disbooesty of the Reagan and B~
Most ~people earning in the"
administtations. Reportedly he JS $22,1l00-$23,000 range would have
now swallowing very hard - and enough non-cash income to drive
complaining 10 associates -.as he them over the threshold for the prois forced to engage in tile same posed tax !like to kick in.
kind
of budget sleight of hand he
Reportedly Panetta wanted Jo
return call from die flJ'St lady.
has
decried
in the past
state that the tax hike would effect
Mrs. Clinton's domestic-policy
Two examples from Panetta's people wilb ad"ust.ed gross income
clout is evidencec!_bv the fact that
the administlatioo's Initial focus is role IS point man on Capitol Hill in excess of $~.000. BUI he was
almost exclusively on issUes impor- aa.e,npcing 10 justify the president's overruled by those arQIIIld the Jli'CSident wbo w.tled to pomay the tax
tant to the flJ'St lady. However, it is proposed budget:
The
president
still
imists
that
hike
in die most favorable light
not just in domestic policy tllat
his
tax
increases
will
affect
those
1be JII'Cllident is also saying
Mrs: Clinton is exercismg increasmaking
"inore
than
$30,000
annutbat
to
make tax increases more
ing authority. It is said that ·no
palatable
to voters, he will slash
ally."
But
Panetta
knows
tllat
if
,
potential appointment goes to the
you
J'C!II)
the
fine
print
of
the
budfederal
spending
further. This has
president for fmal approval until it
brought
a
Ourry
of
aills from anxget
pacbge,
the
tax
increase
kicks
crosses her desk, and that Wllite
ious
congressmen
10 Panetta, all
House Penlonnel Chief Bruce Und- in as low as $22,000 a year.
The
difference:
The
official
with
the
1111111e
question:
What other
sey meets witll ller several times a
day. She is also exercising increas- administration 1"'41S00ing is that the r.ogt•ns are you intending to cut?
'None," has been the vell,ed
ing autllority in setting tile presi- tax. only includes tllose who bave
dent's schedule and reportedly has an ''imputed'' inaxne at that level Panetta's reply. Without exactly
veto power in preventing aides and Except for economists, tax IICCOWI- · saying so, Panetta is privately
Cabinet members from gaming tallts and a few policy woats, most telling one Bllllall that'he doelill 't l
Americans do not realize that. know what the jRSiclent is lalldng
access to tile Oval Office.
imputed
income includes sucll about. Publicly, he says that all
When Leon Panetta was House
budget items are "opell for discussion" when hard bargaining begins
with Congress. But Panetta is
reportedly annoyed tllat Clinton
made the promise of furtller cuts
wilhout fust informing him.
. How is the miniStration going
to reduce tile federal bureaucracy .
.'by 100,000 jobs, or about 4 percent? It appears by eliminating a lot
of people who do not woO: for the
federal govemmenL
As is only now coming out from •
testimony bein~ given to Cqngress,
the administratioa wiU cut not from
actual levels of ~pie on the job
today, but from 'authorized" levels - what Congress currently:
says a department or agency can~
hire.
Tbe two numbers are signifi-·
cantly differenL By one estimate,_
the federal government is currendy
as much as 5.5 pacent below fully.
authorized strengtll, This means;
that the administtation could then-.
retically reach its goal without"
oMnally ~ to let a sD!gle per-:
- go, and wtlbout replacing anyone currently employed who·
leaves.
Robert Wagman Is a syndleat- .
"WHAT EXACTLY IS IT THAT YOU DON'T LIKE ABOUT .
ed writer for Newspaper EnterCLINTON'S ECONOMIC P,LAN?"
prise Association. ·

WASHII-iGTON (NEA) Hillary Rodbam Clinton has her
White House office on the second
floor of the West Wing, but her
only official job is as unpaid head
of a task force drafting tile administration's heal til-care reform bill.
However, insidors say the president's wife is playing an increasingly central role in the day-t!Hiay
operation of tile White House and
has became a lcind of second chief
ofstaff.
This has occurred in part, say
insiders, because actual Chief of
Staff Thomas "Mack" McLarty is
·a· former businessman with little
experience or interest in policy
matters. He is mainly tile administrative head of the Wllite House;
Mrs. Clinton is taking over the
management of policy matters.
It appears l)l:rs. Clinton has
become de facto head or the
Domestic Policy Office, witll tile
president's domestic policy adviser, Carol Rasco, reporting to her
rather than directly to tile president
or McLarty. On several occasions,

Berry's World
CHANGE?
NO WAY,
J"OSE,

'

head of the Security and Exchange
Commission and laler to become a
judicial giant as a justice of tile
U.S. SupremeCoun.

'ose•nh
s,rnear
r

J'

At tile SEC, Gesell successfully
prosecuted tile former head of the '
New York Stock Exchange and
later assisted in a con~ressional
investigation of the msurance
industry. He joined tile !lfc{IOtent
Washington law flnll of Covmgton
&amp; Burling, in 1941 and was
appointed to the federal bench by
President Lyndon Johnson in 1967..
Judge Gesell was a big man
with wispy white hair and a cherubic face, but woe unto the counselor who assumed he was as soft
in substance as in demeanor. He
was a person of high principle, he
ran a disciplined couruoom and he
feared .no.one _ least of aU pettifoggers who practiced before his
bench. "That's enough lawyering," he would growl. Or, "You're
making a stiunp speech, and 1don't
want Ill hear any more."
, Although a New Deal Demo-

crat, he was a libenarian when it
came to questions of sovereignty.
Prosecutors who entered bis sa~Ctum to defend govemment lleiRCY
or .to argue a government manda""
over individual liberty 1KR ~vy
.burdens of proof.
It is for his reason' that Gesell
occupies a spot in Joe Spear's ball
of heroes. He first invaded this
journalist's consciousness in 1971,
when the Nixon administration
sought to enjoin the publication of
the Pentagon Papers, me highly
classified study of u.s. involvement in the VietDam War. If Tbe
New York TIIMs, The Washington
Post and other newspapers were
permitted to print me documents,
me government argued, me very
~wity of the nation would be in
Jeopardy.
GeseU saw through this ~ycock in an instant and denied tile
government's request 45 minutes
.after hearing it. Ordered by me
appeals court 10 hold an evidenliary
hearing, Gesell again rejected the
pleas of Uncle Sam's lawyers:
"The inlerests of me government
are inseparable from the public
interest .... The public interest

:
By The Associated Prell
: Today is Tuesday, March 9, tile 68tll day of 1993. There are 297 days
!Cft in the year.
'Today· s Highlight in History:
·dn Mm:h 9. 1862, during the Civil War, the ironclads Monitor and Virginia (formerly Merrimac) clashed for five hours to a draw at Hampton
~oads, Va.
. On til is date:
'
' .
f
died
: In 1661, Cardinal Jules Mazarin, tile ch~ef mm1ster o France,
,
lc;aving King Louis XIV in full control . .
. In 1796. Napoleon Bonaparte married Josephine de ~eaulwn&amp;is. .. .
In 1860, tile first Japanese am~assador to p.e Umted States, Nnm1
Buzennokami and his staff amved m San Franc•sco.
, ln"l916, Mexican raiders led by Pancho Villa attacked Columbus,
N M killing more lhan a dozen people.
• ~·1933, Congress, ealled into special ~ion by Presi~t ~ranklin D.
Roosevelt began its "I 00 days'' of enacting New Dealleg~slalion.
• In 194S, U.S. bomben launclled incendiary bomb aaacta on Japan,
ciusins widespread devastation; ~ !okyo, ·~least 12&lt;!,000 J?CO!lle died.
1n 19$4, Edward R. MIIITOW .cntkally ~1ewed Wl8COIISin Sen. JOieflh
R. McCartlly's anti-Commumsm campa1gn on tile CBS-TV program
"SeeltNow."
..
.
· In 1964. the Supreme~ i~ued its New York T~es ·vs. S'!'Jivan
decision, which said publiC officials. who c!:fed they d ~ libel;ed
eould not recover damages for a report rei
to their o~ICI~ dulles
unless dley provC!I~ttual malice on the P!J!t ~f ~ news orpuzabon.
In 1975. work began on die Alaskan oil ptpeline.
~ In 1m: about a dozen armed Hanaf• Muslims in~ _three buildings

makes an insislent plea for publication .••• The First Amendment
remains-supreme."
During ibe Watergate trials, it
feU upon Gcllelltu preside over die
cases against a n~ of RiChard
Nixon's former Wllite House and
political aides, including Joll_n
. Ebrlichman, Charles Colson,
Dwight Olapin and Egil Krogh.
When tile presi_dent's auorney,
J.aes SL Oair, informed die coUrt
during the Ehrliclunln trial that die
JRSidcnt wauld not aUow his former aide ac«SS to his ow~ While
House papclS, Geaell exploded. He.
threatened to cite Nixon for con- .
tempt and thundered at St Clair, "I
will dclaminc what evidtnce goes .
to the jury, not Mr. Ehrlichman, not
you, not the ~dent" He continued with prmcipled wrath: "The
WhiteHouSeconductintbisC39Cis ·
totally offensive. It borders on
obstruclion."
Siriea. Bazelon, Gesell. Pillars
of decaq, champions of the righteous. The villains of the afterlife .
are in trouble.
Josepb Spear Is a syndicated •
writer for Newspaper Eaterprise
· AYOc:iatloL

\

Twenty-five years ago, my col- called them riots, blacks called
«:;om~e tllosc figu!Cs to l~i black males use to self-ileslruc:L
umn in your newspaper was an tllern rebellions), President Johnson Apni-May's five-day dlSonlers '"
But if those figures paint a
unthinkable tllought. Even a black appointed a National Advisory Soutll C:entral.Los Angeles after~ picture of a nation moving
reponer on a major newspaper was Committee to explore why tllese four v.:h•~ polsceme.n were found inexonbly toward a "ICptrate and
a rarity.
~ guilty tn ~beating of ~Y lllleqllal" society, it is .inaec
. urate:
But 1968 was a year of far more
King -..45 hves and an estimated Black popess in the last 2S years
significant events: tile last year of
$1 b1lhon worth of property resonates in the 25 pen:ent of all
Lyndon Johnson's presidency ...
destroyed. .
black families that now live in the
tile Detroit Tigers as World Series
Twenty-f•ve. y~ars ag'?, the iuburbs and black home
chamr,s ... "In the Heat of the urban convulsions had happened ~erner Comm•ss•on d~ufully owaenhip, which has doubled in
Night ' beating out "Bonnie and and what could be done to prevent listened~ tllousands of~ thelast2Symn.
Clyde" for an Oscar ..• the future disorden.
and examined~ of~ It
5o haft iDtemcial ~
assassinations of Martin Luther
Yet, a disheartening gap in
Today, most Americans know bla~ed.!he d1sonlers on '!h•te
King Jr. and Bobby Kennedy ... the name Rodney King. But rac1s~, then con~lud_ed WI'!J a pel( Mi.JI!I of ,iustice continues to'
and a culture-defining popular virtually nobody can recall the warnmg: "Ou~ nauon 11 movmg ~
song, "Mrs. Robinson."
name of tile Newarlc, NJ ., chess- toward t~o societies, one b~t. . lnal'dl. 11 USA Today survey,
That year was also a benchnuulc playing cabdriver (John Smith) . one w~.ue - separate and 53 pen:cnt of the whites surveyed
or racial progress. The federal whose arrest on July 12, 1967, uneqlual. ·
h K
felt it was not unfair to bave a
government published a 608-page uiggered a five-day outbreak of
n .1993
. , on . t e, erner eec..., trill for die ollical~tnloecJ
report, popularly known as the violence thai deltroyed $10 million Co~mus10n Report s 2~th in the R.odney King beating. A
Kerner Commission Report worth of property and took 23 anmversary (March 1), are whites sipifiCillltly larJcr 79 percent of
(altllough its contents were about lives.
and blacks still movi_ng farther blacb fa¥orec1 the leC•Mid trial.
as popular as the national wave of
Seventy-six percent of the
Eleven days after the Newark · apart, are they dr~wmg clo~er
164 racial disorders that had disorders, Detroit erupted witll a together or are they simply IRlldll)g whiles Mveyed helieve t11at police
convulsed 128 cities in 1967).
volcano or violence that killed 43 status quo water?
. .
.
officas IIIIIJOII always lelt die 1rutb
Following that year of persons and destroyed $22 million
Whatever your opn1ons, ftve in coun. 0n1 a bini 18 ~ of
widespread racial disorders (whites wonb of property.
facts are irrefutable: (I) black bJacb. 52~ belimi off'~te~~
families still cam ODiy S6 percent -ll'lllbful.
Twenty-rive years after the
. ·in Washington, killing one person and takiag more than 130 holtaFS 1be of the median family income ot
while f•ilies, (l) blacb still baft Kaner ConunialoO lteport, neither
sieae ended two days later.
In 1990, Dr. Antonia Novello waa sworn in as IIII'FOil general, becom- aa unemployment rate 2.!1 t1me1 a iacial Annapddon nor ai'ICial
that of White~, (3) blact tidt ltill Ulllpia is around the comer. The
ing the fU1t woman and the fusl Hispanic 10 bold the job.
· · Ten years ~;,.!nne M. ,Burford relip~ as head of the embWed ' score 195 poinll below wblla on Jell trqec1y is tblt llllllY ~es
Environmental
tion Agency. Margalel Hockler was twom in u eec- the SATs, (4) black bableallill mlddle-agen ltld senior citiZl,~
have a monality lite twice ... 11 bave stopped &amp;iving a damn one
re~ of Health and Human Servieel.
'
F1ve yean ag11: Tbe day after die "Supa: Tucaday" plmiricll and cau- white' babiea 1011 (5) the criminal wayortheother.
CIJ.clt Stau II 8 IJildtated
cuses, Republican Qeorae BUJh spent the day in HOUIIOII, savorb~g bil .justice :r.:m ~y
males With tbc- Will rer NekSriiJIIr"lalliprlae
16-state sweep, while DerliOCillls Michael Dutatls, Jeac Jacbon and AI WBets b
dea!IIY cft'cct• the p!lll and_drugs A
Gore enjoyed their
modest successes.

Chuck Stone

more

is!"'.'

I

~

I

~

Around lbe nation
Late winler snow fell on parts of
. New England and tile upper Midwest today. Melting snow and ice
ams caused more flooding probems in Nebraska.
Colder lemperatures moving
across tile northern Plains toward
the Great Lakes and tile Northeast
chilled precipitation to snow in
Maine and Nortll Dakota this morning.
Some scatlered snow also was
forecast across Montana, Minneso. ta, Wisconsin, upstate New Yolk,
New Hampshire ;md Vermont
Nortllern California, Oregon and
NeviJ!Ia. stood a chance of getting
more ram later in the day, but the
rest of the nation was expected to

l.

Clinton
·encouraged

_ _;,._
_ _ Weather-----.
.

Chance of rain 50 percent.
Extended rorecast:
Thursday tbrougb Saturday:
Thursday, a chance of snow.
Lows in the 20s. Highs in tile 30s.
Friday, fair. Lows in the 20s. Highs_
30.35. Saturday, a chance of snow.
Lows in the ~Os. Highs 30.35.

Solttb-Central Ohio
,
Tonight, cloudy with rain developing. Rain could be mixed with
snow at ~times. Low in tile low 30s.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Wednesday, cloudy witll• chance
C?f rain. High in the upper 40s.

--Local briefs... --..
. .
Continued ~in jiage 1
For more information concerning turlcey permit applications,
contact Keitll Wood at 985-4400.

EMS responds to four calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded
7:50 a.m. Middleoort to Overbrook Cenler for Fanny Hefti who
was transported to VeteranS Memorial Hospital; 3:18p.m. Pomeroy
to Holly Lane for Rex O'Brien who wu transported to Holzer Medical CCnter; 4:44 p.m. Pomeroy to East Main Street for Marissa
Gillett who was transported to VMH; 9:17a.m. Middleport to Overbrook Center for Dorothy Will who v;as transported to VMH.

WASHING10N (AI&gt;) - President Clinton today said he's
·encouraged by House and Senate•
efforts to cut federal spending more
tllan he originally planned, saying
lawmakers' · ideas are "consistent
with the direction of
"I think that even
y we'D ...
get togetller and we 'II work out a
budge1 tllat tile American ~ople
can be proud of,'' Clinton Slid during a morning photo session before
meeting witll Senate budget leaders.
He added that details hadn't
been worked out, "but I thinlc: that
in tile end [here wiD be furtller cuts
and there will be ... a much more
substantial reduction in tile deficit
tllan tile estimates showed.''
Clinton said tile congressional
budget-cutting efforts were "consistent witll the direction of my
plan to reduce the deficit and
increase investment..•• I'm encouraged byiL"
· House Democrats are pushing a
plan to cut spending over the next
· five years by $63 billion more than
Clinton initially J)fOIJOSed. Clinton
is looking favorably on extra
spending cuts to shore up conservative suppOrt witllin his own party
for his paclcage of· spending cuts,
tax increases and new spending.

Divorces and
dissolutions

'

Editor's note: All names, ages and adllr~ are published as
IIIey appear in olr!dal reports.

In a divorce action flied Monday
in the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas, Trudy A. Dent,
Pomeroy, seeks divorce from
Roger Dent, Cllillicotbe.
· - -~lllisso!Ution was granted Mon·
day to Leanne Sue Fisher and
Ralph
Lee Fisher. Leanne Sue
would be able to collect their
Fisher's
last name was restored to
remaining entidement tluough Janher
maiden
name of Clark.
uary 15, 1994. '
Under the bilf, Ohioans who
exhaust tlleit 26 weeks of regular
benefits will be eligible for up to
VETERANS MEMORL\L
20 additional weeta of benefits, as
Monday admissions -Jamie
long as tile national unemployment Kenn~y. Pomeroy; Fanny }Jefti,
rate remains over seven percent. Middleport, and John Tillis,
The level of benefit payment Reedsville.
remains the same as before. AS
. Monday discharges - Earl
was the case with prior extensions, Wines, Cheshire.
PersonS who have already qualified
'
for or exhausted emergency bene- HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
fits under' tile current law will not
Discharges, Mar!=h 8 • Rachael
be eligible for ,any additional Rice, Linda PaweD, Deborah Rose,
Mic.hael Chandler, Elmer Risl, ~
weeks.
For more information, contact Pearl Ca.s sidy, Herbert Clark,
David Garick, 614-466-3966, or Minada Simms, Ray Barringer,
Jim Hemmerly, 614-466-0234.
Charles Shelton, Laura Melton,
Mrs. Robert VanHoose and !laughter, Mrs. Christopher Steve'~s and
daughler, Mrs. Donald Barnette
.
• and daughter, Kimberly Leach,
'
Wanda Gardner, Mrs. Randy
information, call Bob Pullins at. Patrick and son, James Vitilio,
667-3831, Ed Rood at 667-6348 or .Georgia Reed, Jennifer Faulkner,
Ed Wigal at 667-6657.
·
Billie Dailey, Julie Canter, and
E
Hymn sing planned
Ruby vans.
Faith Full Gospel Church· in ~...;.---------..,
Long Bottom will hold a special
hyf!in sing on ~day 81_7 P·'!l· feattinng The Dailey Fanuly Smgers,
Harmony Boys and other local
singing will be featured. Pastor
Steve Reed invites 'the public. FelCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) lowship will follow. ·
Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying p,oints Tuesday
• Youth leliguesJen-up
·
Sign-up for the Harrisonville by tile Ohio Department of Agn·
Youth League will be Saturday culture:
Barrows lind gilts: mostly 75
from 10 a.m. to noon at1Harcents
higher; demand moder3!C to
risonville Elementary. A youth
good.
league meetiT~$ will be held at 6
U.S. 1·2, 230-260 lbs., country
p.m. 81 the Scipto Fire Department.
. points, 43.75-44.75,- a few early
44.50; plants 44.75-45.75, a few
Second sign-up
'
Tbe Rutland Youtll League will 46.75.
U.S.
1-3,
230-260
lbs., country
hold its second sign-up Satilrday
points,
42.5044.00.
from 1-3:30 p.m. at .the Rutland
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lhs., country
Civic Center. Anyone not participoints,
41.5043.00.
pating last year must provid~ a
Receipts
Monday 6,200. Esticopy of their birth certifiCate. Regmated
receipts
Tuesday 7,500.
istration foe is $10 P.U child, not to
Prices
from
The Producers Liveexceed $25 per famjly.
stock AsSociation:
Cattle: steady 10 25 CC!Its higher.
Line-dance eta..
.
Slauahter steen: chpice 75.00Beginners country line dancing
83.00;
select 60.00-77.00.
classes will begin Sunday at
Slaughter heifem: choice 75.00Pomeroy Village Hill from 2-4
p.m. Cost of tile clau is a $2.50 80.50; select 69.00-71.00.
Cows: 2.00 lower; all cows
donation. Call 992-78S4 ·or 949- ·
57.75 and down.
.
2455 for infomiatlon.
Bulls: not tested; aU bulla 59.00
anddown.
.
Feeder catde; llteldy
· Yearling steen 60.00-SS.OOi
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are yearling hel(ers 60.00-86.00.
Monday night''l Oflio Lottery
selecdons:
Pick 3 Numben
5-6-7 '
·(nve, aix,aeven)
. 1be .egularly ICheduled mooting
Pick 4 Numbers
of Mlddlepon Vflb&amp;e Cnuncll was
7-3~
cancelled Monday nilht due 10 the
(seven, three, zero, four)
lack of a quorum.

OBES prepares for
.
The Ohio Bureau ,of Employment Services (OBES) is preparing
· to continue the emergency unem, pl~ent compensation program.
'I have instructed our 76 local
offices statewide to continue taking
applications for emergency unemployment compen~ation," said
William G. HaweD, OBES Aeting
Administrator. We will process the
applications as quickly as possible
to ensure quality customer service
to our long-term unemployed
workers."
.
Prpvisions of tile new bill are
nearly identical to the current
extension, which expires this weeken(). The bill extends the emergency benefits proqram tluough October 2, 1993. Individuals who are
entitled to beneflu at that time

Hospital news

ez•gs announcementS---

- - - 11

.I.YI.'

Hunte~ safety enThere will be a liunters safety
eourae March 17, 19, 24 and 26.11
tile Coolville Lions Oub Building
in Coolville from 6:30-9:30 p.m.
Further information mar be
obtained by ealling Bob Pulbns at
667-3831, Ed Rode! at 667-6348 or
Ed Wigal at·667-6657.

Livestock
r·e·p ort

Turkey huntlncsarety courae
There will be a llunters safety
counc for lllrlcey hunting on March
28 from noon to S p.m. at the
Coolville Firehou~. For further

Fire guts
downtown building
DEFIANCE, Ohio (AI') -Fire
officillls today were still looking
· for tho eauae of a fire that gulled a
doWIIIDWD building.
Fn Chief RobM Maribugh said
firefighters rrom six departments
were called Ia Monday night to
help fight the blaze. Fire crews ·
were on the scene five hours before
tho fire - brought under cOOirol
No one wu injmed.
.
The two-llllly bulldlq housed
. two .businellet. Other downtown
buaine11n wore damaged by
IIIIOIIo
1011 -laid
· ' lie doesn't. !mow
Marlhuab
what cauil4 the blaze, whicll is
under invttdpdon. No damage ·
~ w•IYiillble; he said.
FlNfi&amp;111111 w~ Ill die pUdcfle
of a tralillna lllllion when lhey
lpC)IIed the file,~ ald.
"Ponullar.ly we wen baving
tnlnlna. So. we bad qulta a few
fii'Oii&amp;h~tn 11 the IDdon 10 Illite a
aoolf tactlclll attack on tho fire

illclf,•• bollkl.

.

~.-~ .

,.

•

Lottery nuJ8bers

Mt?eting cancelled

.......

~-~-,-.-- - -

...-

.. '""'.- ...•
•

~

'

•

be mainly clear.
the six hours ending at 1 p.m. EST
In Nebraska, hundreds of resi- · Monday. One inch of snow fell It
dents .were evacuated Monday and Bradford, Penn., during the same
tilads were closed in many flooded six hours.
areas of the Loup and Platte river
High tempe!llture records for the
basins in the south-central section date feU Monday at Wichita Falls,
of the state, the National Weatller Texas, where an 85-degree marl!;
Service said.
topped tile 1925 record of 83. In
Early runoff from melting win- Sacramento, Calif., the mercury
ter snow mixed witll chunks of bro- reached 77, topping a 1953 mark
ken ice to create swelling water by a single digit.
levels tllat spilled over riverbanks.
The high for the nation Monday
No injuries were reported.
was 88 degrees measured at Del
Recent warm lelllperalures also Rio and Kingsville in Texas.
caused rapid melting in north-cenTemperatures around the coun~
tral Nevada, where local flood try were expected 10 vary from th(
advisories were posted overnight in 20s and 30s in the far norm, witll
the lower Reese River area near 40s and 50s across the central sec ~
Battle Mountain.
tion and 60s and 70s elsewhere,
There were no reporu of more witll southern Texas and Arizona
' than one-qwnter inch of rain during highs in tile 80s.

'!!i.Rian." .

continuation of program
.

After 25 years, how close are we?

'[Coday in history ·

IMansfield l45" I•

Robert]. Wagman

The passing of a righteous three
The past montlls have not bUn
kind to judges and former judges.
We've lost three outstanding ones,
and that means it's been a bad
semesrer for tile nation IS well.
Tbe first to go was John Sirica,
tile 88-year-old federal judge who
cracked the Watergate case and
dispatched Richard Nixon to his
infamous reward. Sirica died on
Aug. 14. Then on Feb. 19, David
Bazelon and Gerhard GeseU passed
away.
Judge Bazelon was appQinted to
tile U.S. Coun of Appeals for tile
District of Columbia in. 1949 and
had served as its chief judge for 16 ·
years when he was afflicted witll
Alzheimer's disease in 1985 and
was forced to retire. He had grown
, up poor in Chicago and had struggled to put himself through college
andlawscbool,andheneverforgot
what it was like to be down and
out. He was a .great defender of
civil rights and liberties and a
friend of tile mentally ill, the destitule, tile homeless.
Gerhard Gesell came to Washc
ington in 1935 with a Yale Law
degree in his pocket and booked up
with William 0. Douglas, then

•

•!columbusl45'

snow forecast for tonight, Wednesday

By The Associated Press

conditions and

loiCH.

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio·

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

REPAI~S MADE -A worker, right rear,
makes repairs as tbe gaping bole caused by lbe
explosion at tbe World Tra!(e •Center reveals
various levels or the parking garage beneath the
twin tower complex in New York Monday. New .

~

weekend to help shore up tbe center's sbaken rouudation, enabling bomb detectives to expand •
.their search for clues into tbe yawning crater.
(AP)

Anti-Communist protesters·.
stone police in Belgrade ·
. BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)
- Hundreds of protesters commemorating tile second anniversary
of massive anti,_-Communist
demonstrations stone() police today
in ' downtown Belgrade. One
woman was injured w)len a police
van ran her over.

Tbe crowd grew to about 1,000
people who · blocked the main
downtown Terazije street, blocking
traffiC.
The demonstrators gathered at
Republic Square and Vuk
Draskovic, leader of tile largest
Serb opposition party, laid Dowers

Rep. Guthrie will make
pitch for Newark base
HEATH, Ohio (AP) - State
Rep. Marc Giltllrie says he will tell
President Clinton how important
tile Newark Air Force Base and its
2,000 jobs are to tile community
when he atlends a national conference in Washington on ThiJ(sday.
News reports bave said tile base
is on tile list that the Pentagon has
recommended to Defense Secretary
Les Aspin for cuts, reductions or
closure. Tbe PentagOn n:commended closing about 3e major installations.
The closings are crucial to Clinton's plans to cut $122 billion from
defense spending over tile coming
years.
Gulhrie said Monday he will
make a pitch for the base in Heatll,
about 30 miles east of Columbus,
when he and other legislators meet
with Clinton.
"And we want to make sure
there is a commiunent by Congress
and the administration thai there is
a program to retrain and relocate
these people," sai&lt;l Gulhrie, DHeatll. .
Base officials have heard nothing from the Pentagon, spokesman
David Levingston said.
"I have no official information
on thai," LevingstOn said. "I really
don't anticipate being able to talk
about it until Secretary Aspin

releases tile lisL"
Aspin has until. Monday to
accep1, reject or chanj!e the sul!l!estions before submitllng his bst to
the indepen~ent Base Closure and
Realignmenl Commission.
The commission recommended
closing or reducing 35 bases in
1988 and 38 niore in 1991.
Congress approved botll plans.
Tbe commission has until June
30 to give tile plan to Clinton.

GAHANNA, Ohio - A high
school student was arrested after he
walked into tile cafeleria today and
fired five sh01s into the ceiling,
police said.
Police also said thH suspect
anomer student of plotting a shooting at tile school.
Chief Robert Kelley said senior
Cornell Stewart, 16, of Gahanna,
was apprehended at a gas station
across tile street after he shot into
the ceiling of Gahanna Lincoln
High School, aimed his .25-caliber
semiautomatic gun at a teacher and
anoiher student, then ran outside.
No injuries were reported. A
study hall was meeting in the cafeteria at the time.·
He has been chariled with juvenile counts of eanying a coneealed
weapon, carrying a weapon on
school property, discharging a
firearm in city limits and two
Am Ele Power...................•36 1/8 counts of felonious assault
Ashlanci'Oil........................28 7{8 • Ketley said another student was
AT&amp;T.•........•...... :...............59
being questioned after Stewart tuld
Bank One...........................Sl 118 offteen that ~ boy also had a gun
Bob Evans ............•.........•..18
at the school.
Channing Shop............... :.. l6 1{2
Cllmp lnduSiries. ............... .ll ·
c;ity Holding......................21 314
Federal Mc:JgUI,.................. .17
Goodyear T&amp;R •.•..•...........,7S 114
Key Cenrurion ...................22 3.18
Landa Enci.. ........................2S
Limiled Inc....................... 2S 1/2
Multimedia Inc..................33 114
..-oint Bancmp.................... 13 1{2
Rax RcstaullnL ..................1/4
Relilnce Eleclric................22 1/li
Robbins.tMyers ................ 19 l/2
Sboney'slnc......................23 1/4
Star Bank: ••••.••••••••.••••••.•••••.36 3/4
Wendy lnt'L ...................... .l3 114
Worthington Ind. ...............2S 1/4
Stock report• are tbe 10:31
a.m. qaotea pro•lded lly
Kemper Secarltlea, lac.; o
&amp;'!poll.

Stocks

_

for two people ki)led in anti-Communist demonstrations March 9,
1991.
.
Tbe crowd began stl)lling police
when plainclothes officers;
deployed in large numbers in tile
square, arrested a popular stre~.t ·
singer.
When they uied to drive t~~
singer away, some demonstratots
laid down in front of a police van:
II ran avec a woman's leg, wimeS.&lt;iessaid
.
The angry . crowd, chanting
"Red Bandits" and "Communi§!
Thieves," tllen stoned police ears,
smashing at least two windshields,
witnesses said. No one appeared
injured as tile police withdrew.
Serbia's Socialist aulhorities,
the re-named Communists, had •
warned against holding tile demon- '
stration. In 1991, President Slobodan Milosevic deployed army tanks
in 1he streets to stop tile protests
against his hard-line rule.
Serbia is the dominant republic
in tile Yugoslav fedetation.

Student fires gun in high school

~
.
•••
...... . ........ ..... _..._·---··------------"·
...........
..... .. .. ...... . . ....I. . . ___
. "
I
•:

steel beams were added to tbe structure over tbe- ..

____..___
.

A .22-caliber weapon was found
on ·school property later in the
momin$ but officers had not yet
determined whether the second
youth brought the gun to the
school.
'
Kelley said lhe second youth
1old officers 1hat he and Stewart
"didn't like school and wanted
out''
"I think they're going to get
ouL The Stewart boy is going to get
out permanently if we have anytiling to do with it,'' Kelley said.
TI~e

Daily Sentinel
(t18PB 213·180)

Published every af\ernmn, Monda.y
t.hrough Friday, 111 Coart St., PIJftMroy,
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.. .

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 9, 1993

Tuesday, March 9, 1993

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomerpy-Middleport, Ohio

Sports Probe

Rockies, Marlins look _to break out of new teams' losing moJd
.

--Sports briefs-Buketball
. . NEW YORK (AP) - Miami
center Rony Seikaly, who averaged
•17 .7 points and 21.7 rebounds in
.three victories last week, was
nllmed NBA p::~er of the wtelt.
.
B etball
.. .TULSA, Okla. (AP) - Okla·
-homa State assistant Bill Self was
,named head coach at Oral Roberts.
The 30-year-old Self n:places Ken
:trickey . who ·announced earlier
this year that he would resign at the
.end of the season. ,
HQ(key
·
-· TORONTO (AP) -Los Angeles left wing Luc Robitaille, who
'had seven goals and four assists in
three victories last week, was
.named NHL. player of the week.
•

expansion clubs.
By HOWARD SINER
Which isn't saying that much, of
Today's questions in the world
ofsports:
· ·
oourse. ~of those 10 expansion
• How good will the Colorado teams lost more than 90 g&amp;111es in
Rockies be this season?
their debut seasons- three of
· Rookie manager Don Baylor them had at least 110 losses. The
tjlinks Colorado is going to swprise last five of the fust-year entries lost
a few people during its fust season at least 100 games.
in the National League West. He . Even so, Baylor expects Colsays the Rockies are " a much bet- orado 19 avoid such a rocky stan.
"Whoever wrote the book that
ter team" than baseball's previous

'

JAIME WILSON
AD-Distric:t13
honorable mention

JESSICA KARR

AMBER OHLINGER

AIMEE MILLS

STEPHANIE OTTO

\

Seven
Meigs
County
girls
get
all-SE
District
honors
.
.

..

~ ·'

· Wodanday'o coma

Hanford It TendO, 7;.40 pa.
Bu.IWolt~ 7:40p.m.
N.Y. lllMdln at MoDtniU. 1:40 p.m..
Dc:cRid atE
9:40p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
,·

Allulk DI¥Won
T.W L Pet.
New Yock ...••. ~-·····39 18 .614
Now Sene)' ...... " ....33 25 .569
32 216
• Ollando ..................2&amp; 2J .500
Mami ................... JA n .429
l'ltilo&lt;ldpldl .......... .20 37 .3:51
l6 ..o .216

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

.m

w......,.... . . . . .

C.lraiDhrW.
Chi&lt;•ao•., ...~ ....... AO II .690
cJ..EVEl}.ND .......39 21 .6lo
Clw- ... - .......... 31 216 .14&lt;1
lndW\1 ...................1.9

Cl

I

6J
7J

I OJ
14.l

19

22..5

30

.492

11 j

Atlanta ................. ..ll 31

·.47S
.439

U .. S
i4.l
11

D&lt;uoiL ................. .ll n
Milwa\abc ,...........:23 'lS

.m

--

..

Pd.
,638
.632
.576
.·U4
.1SS

T...
W "
• HeM• .... ~............37 21
.. •. Sea Ansoaia ..........36 21

;.

t.lt.ab .....:. ................34 Z5
~
~ 34
; ,: wmnw .............. 14 41
Dollol .................... .-1 52

• n..,..,._...............

j

n

.1111

'"""' Dhlllao
Phoa'li.J; ................... , 13 ,761
S..ale ....................-w II .6110
ParllaBd ..""""'"'"'34 21 .611

•
: ..
, ~ LA. Lobn ............ 30
• ,• LA. CiPI"" .........29
' : GoWin Slate .......... 25
~ • • s.cr.mrno ............ll

.

,

216

.536

30 · .492
.424
.110

lot

40

- - 7 6.1Uoodol.oload50

T,....lo71,SI.J.......'o60

cu...-..

c-...A--IaUoo

Eut Cuolin.• 54, Jamot Mad.iJon 49
Metro Atla1tlt Atllledc: Coaterenc:e

a.-·· ...

DL.Qoioaao 96, a-t.ul SL 61
Wri&amp;h&lt; SL 12, Volpon;.o 7Z

_v...,c-CII_........,

_......

4
lj
ll
15.5
l9.S
26

S. DllAoU 70,111inoU SL l9
NAL\Diolrkll7

-Teoh79,11oodenonSL6l
U. ~ dleOr.ub 64,kk- Cllll 51
NAL\-25
Chomploouhlp
~w90,Bmy70

·

NAL\Diolrkl:ll
Champlonthl

Sprina Hill 61, x..... :l'o 61
NAIADio-4

s-m....

, •

Alllnla 121 , LA. Cii'P"' Ill

Sdueina 14, Sl Edward's, Tu.u 74
NAL\Dio-1

" ,.

&lt;1EVEL&amp;.ND l22.0amt IO'J

Midw•tenr. St., T•us 9S, Lubb«Kk

::

Monday's scores

Sinllftnalll

llldiloalOS, Seaale 99
New Yolk lQIJ, Odando UTP (OI)
Phlladclphil 92, ~ 13

• ..
' •

...'..
; ~'

-A-IcC•f,_
S..lftoolo

Delaware 14. Ncrthoulem 61

llmoi91,1Wt!ontl0
&amp;t•leiiC..,.,._,.

Wuhin&amp;tM at Ck&amp;rlaae, 7:30p.m..
LA. Laked It Dtttoil. 7:30p.m.
S..ttle ot OU..ao. 7:30pm.
Atlanta at Milwi.ukee. 8:30p.m.
Miami 11 Housum, 1:30 p.m.
0.UU It Sin Amanio, I ;JOp.m.
MianCIIO&amp;a It lltah. 9 p.m.
PhociU • Sacnmcnto, 10:30 p.m.

''' ..

.....
•• •

Cll-ploollllp
W. ltonoucky 72, Now one... 6l

w.ccGUteo.t.-...

Cll-ploollllp
SuttaC. . 1l,~63

Ohio H.S. boys'

Wednesday's games

I .

LA. I..akm at New Ycd, 7:30p.m.
Botton It Pbiladel.phia, 7:30p.m.
()(l1vc:;r It Wuhinpln., 7:l0 p.m.
lndiafta II Orlando, 7:10 p,m,

• •

Pmland l t o.llal,l ;30 p.m.
Goldt11 S~tc II Pttoc:rm. 9:30p.m.
New Jcney at L.A. Clippen, 10:30
p.m.

''
••
••

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39
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w......... ...... 32

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Sol 205 21•
12 ll9 227
71 201 232
N.Y. R...... ... : 29 24 II 69 212 247

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flillodolphio ...... :z4 31 II l9 212 :262

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•-Quoboc .......- ]7 21 10
Ba-\Cil .............. 35 2.3 7
su~ru............... u 26 a
Hutfcrd ........ ~ ... 20 42 4
()uawa .............. 9 !56 4

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77 251 230
n :!AO 239
44 223 295
22 167 3'ZI

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SLl..auil ........... 30 30 8 68 221 233
~ 47 200 2A6

Tamp Bay ....... 21 40
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C.Jta.,. ............. ]l :14 10 76 261 232
Lot ;.n1et....... 30 29 1 67 266

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w~ ......... 29 n

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,' J!4monlon ......... 23 37 I l4 193 262
... s.. Jon., .... _... 10 ' ' 1 22 Ill 321
• · -dillched playoff bc:fth

....

Mond•J'IICOI'e

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66, - - 62 C! 01)
Carn~ Memorial 77, Colurnbisna
. Crcatview S7

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Division IV
Windham S9. Swlhinp:m S6

Transactions
BaaebaU
CALIFORNIA ANOELS - Sian..t
Allluttine Lcpr, out&amp;:J-4er.

Bllkotbalt
NMIOftal . ~l

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1M Aqlfl• •• N.Y. lllq•rs, 7:40

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W'uW,..aT_,.Bay,7:40p.m.
S..-ot Mlm-..I:IOp.m.

Ntw Ja~~qat vmcouver, l O:..Op.m.

AUoclalkJn

NBA - Fined Oadt H.tlpCf, Dallas
MavaicU pml, 15,000 for a nap'lnt
foul~ HoW110n' • Winltoa Oul•nd.

'"'DAU.~MAVERICKS -

....Modorl Wi)cy, pant.

Sian..t

for theftmainderof

W ASIIINGI'ON BIJLIEili - Sipd
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...._

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~ ......... ll 'ZI 9 71230:!32

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....

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Amerkan Lu1ue

; • CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

I

Dtvlolon n

OMfin 9&lt;.

frtdD::kloWD 55, Blaan-Cmvll 50

WALES CONFERENCE
Te.~

tournament scores

Col Hanley 16, IJlomy.Un;ao ..

: : In the NHL ...

..

.

om.a.ns

Tonla:ht'• gam••

~

}

Ad•~c.=ennca

.5

1.S
13
21.5

Football
Natlon•l FootbiiiiAq:ut

DENVER BRONCOS - Sipd lobn
Elway, quanerbatt, \0 1 f&lt;WJr·yett «&lt;n•
met and Brian Habib, off'au:ive linemiG,

a am. ol DM-)'Ml' CMU&amp;N. Naft\611
AMra Reynolds ..,.. . . . auilum...li-

10
t)'

control Ooaeb.

NEW OIUJ!ANS SAINI'S - Sitp\od
Derrick Ned, runnin1 back, aad Xovin
Vetduao, quanetbacJc, 10 one-yeu COft·
tracu and Marcua Dowdell, trick l'CICCive!r,
and Roanic wuu.m.. q~n lad, ID l wa-

,...-.
NEW YOIIIt

Jl!l'l -llpool ........
Lou, .. recy, to 1 IWO·JOir cornrac1.
ApM to &amp;enM wilb IAonard w..haU,
6e:fentlve Un.un, • a ~,.., ooa:

--

.

"""""'

N•G9MI HocktJ t..p
LOS ANGELES liNGS ·- Stnt Bn.~t

~dof-Ool'hooni&amp;otlho
In&amp;emationd ~or LN... lor inj lolt)'

ll!htbUitation.

reoord.

Logan captured the top two in·
dividual honors in Division I.
MeliDa Cooper, a S·ll juniOr who
averaged 18 points a game, was se·
lected player of the year while
, Ralph Taylor, who led the way to
an 18-2 record and a No. tllllking,
was chosen .the coach of the year.
Here's the 1993 Ass.ociated

s

Press All-Southeast District girls
team, as selected by a panel of
sports writers and broadcasters
from the district:
Dl¥lsloo I

nr11 etaau MeliNa Cooocr, ~ ... S-foct·
II, Jr., 16.3 poioll 1"':- 'runmi S.0U. Loft.....,, 5-10, Sr., 16.1; T• Kn11. . _ 5-ID, h.,
u.~ ~~~~·f ... s.., 1.,9;
Tami Ham~. l.a&amp;•n., S-10, Jr., 1S.2; JWio
Cdme C'triJHc:cMe. f-11, Sr.,1.6.6. .
PlaJW ot U.. ,_, Mo1iAa CCIOf'I, J..osoa.
Coecb t#tht ,..r: R.llllb Taylot,Lat~~t.
H011erallle ••U.I Jamie RorniM, OilliCCM~te; Teisha Zjm
r ... O,iUjmhe; Brandy
Bla!UQl, l..ucutet.

o.,...y,-

, Dlvl51oo II

rlnt tea.: Erill O"l.ary, A\hcna, S-6, Sr.,
lS.O; Muk... l.a)'II... S011~ Poinl. 5-7, 18,0;
Jill~ C~rtey, J~cboa, 6·1 , Sr., 12. ~;
M.uiao, Roclt IIlli, 5·7, St.. 22.9; AlodDo
,
Waoedy, 5-I, Sr. 14.0; MINDY POPI, GALLIPOLIS GALUA, J.ll, h.,ll,,; VIRNA
COMPSTON, POMEROY MEIGS, 5.4. Sr.,
llA1 5-7, Sr., 1•.0; ~ - · W• Un!..,, 5.a, St.,l7.1.

ik:r.

- · .......... Capu.

Jlllla,_,, 5-5.

Jr., 16.1;t.lt MaCamaup.,, Hilllbma,5·9, Sr.,

1•.4;

C&gt;adt:'.,:"'5-ID,A-.,
HI, St., 15.1: r.n
Sr.. 17.7: NltolioCoopc:r.

Poal, Will

Wa..tJ.~l. Jr.,9.0

nw ,..., s.tal!::"'·

w.,.._ c.....

-5-7,h.,ll.~
. ......... Wo....y,Eri·
ca Hayee, McAniuir Vinton l:ou.nty,. Sr., ~ 1.4;
Bed! Millor, llocltlllll, &amp;-I, Sr.; Bridp Millor,
Pm r l Jr,. lOA.
PlaJWollha

,_,limO'._,,""'""·

C..Ceach• fll lh• fNM Dlwn Hoidornaa,
A~ s""'~••Wawdy.

'

SAN JOSE SHARI.S -

HiiMrablt .ealloll: Owril Wt~~.tz, V'mi:.t
W&amp;INII; ~ Kowe. l:nlttma; X....,. Shocmabr,

s..... -

Motu&gt;-.,., o...atiaW _..,••.

MicbtUe McCoy, a. rwd ~ Jemy l.an·
maa.. Miami Tnce; M,~ · Snyder~ kuliboro;

!d&lt;4on ....... Wooedy; ri&lt;lp D,.u, Wooedy;
Lori Thomas, Mc0maou Norlbwelt; AmaDda
Strickland, Porumo"tb ; LORI KELLY,

POMEIIOYMEIGS;JaWI«Mmimin.Athona:
BttU! MDU, Jacboa: AMBia STATON,
CHESHIIII arvaa VAILIIY• 11111 SAUS.
IURYL CHESHIRE RIVER VALLEY;
SHEL Y METZGI&amp;1 CHIUHI&amp;E RIVER
VALLEY; MEGAN ICOLCVN1_GAWPOLIS
GAWA ACADEMY; B~ftdv H- IMn.W.

s-.

--,

Dlvlslonm
Flr_tl tam: Mulme Srolliap, Beaver Eat·
em, S-10, Sr., 4;1.1; Curie ~ Proctonrille
F1i.dud, 5-6, Sr., 14.9; Jaime llcU&amp;.I, Albal
A'•nod'!"• S·lOo h., 17.•; A~ Eblin.,~·
cocho u-.. s-a, s... 11.5;
t.uca..ille V•U.y, 5-9. Sr., 2-4.0; Amy Hupes,
WlloolonbwL 5-,, So., :IU; Leo Am Sbocioook·
« , Nlolfont, J.9, So•
Tabby Mo,..,
5-7, Sr., 1•.~ IClm........, L,....buraCaf, 5-5,
Sr., 2.1.0.
·
. ....... Julio Hluioo llichmoad Dole
, _ 5 - 1 1 , Sr.,ll...ll..;.n lli1lor,Olillioaohe - · 5•l,Sr., 16.1; Rildd ..
Coal
S-7, h., 11.~ s- c....ront. NoiIOilviDD-YcG. 5-!,Jr., 16.4; Jamie Col.cibemt, Bel·
,...5-IO,So.,II.O ·
·
Amy a.-. WlloolonbwL&amp;o, So., l6.2; CamoB"*-, Minton!, 5-7,Jr., f4.0;
lt.achol Bostic, ProccorYill• fairland; 5·11 0 1r.,
16.2; Oraoa ~~-. Zaa• Trace, !·11, Jr., 15.! ;

NJW-..,

a....

!•·O;

o.....

Tlolnl-•

-·

o... w....,on,Botp'L

Honar1ble1M11hr CarLa Smmbo, o.t HiD;
Both Rock •. Belpn; S10ph1nie Kratt, Mintonl;
Happr, ......... 1 ............. Souoh w..
o.bom. Ric:mcmd IJr.le Soulheul.m;

1
Wlp, LyacbboJ Cay; C...U. Faio,
Unioto; Jan lrCMtt, Ptiai Valley. Kim Buker,
.• . b od Dole
Julia Mo.b,
....... lleolhorlliCIOJ, Chillicocbo

Sou..._

a..•.

llwuin,::;
c:w Satilbu.ry, • • • F.Mel; Jill Shalw, •
aonvUS. York; Christina Warren;
Y..t; E1!o Oilltoy, Alblny Aloo.-.
Dh1slooiV

l'lnl: tea•; .~,. Hlmmand, Pnnkfoa A»
na, 5·11, Jr., 22.1; Natalie~ Dllnell. fnak1ln J'ur.
11..ce a-, S-6. Sr., Jt.4; S...mhl WoOnw.

New Bot,on, 5· 11, Ji., 16.0: ITEPHANIE
01TO, REIDSVILLE EASTERN, 5-1~ Sr,
ll.AI Jamie lhMinlo Homlocl: Miller, 5·&gt;, Sr.,
ll.O.
8..-1 IM• O.O.y
Prank·
fort: Adena, 5-I, Fr. 7.0;~• Martin ,
_ . . . . , ClaJ, 5-ol, So., 13.2; AIMEE MO.LS,
aACINE SOU:r"HERN., 1-J, Jr., 12.41 Amber
llan'-• Ftuklia Fu.ra.ao. a-, 6-1, Sr.; Jua

Hi't._"...,

Ri-

- -.. ,b-.Domo,5-I,St.,l3.0.
Third letm: Milly Howland, ~ Pair-

""ood.

field, 5·1, Jr., 112; Erin Soil•, Willow
Volley, 6-0, Fr.; JuUo
Loth-

s,....ea
1m

Wcatem , !-9, h;.; JAIME WILSON,

REEDSVILLE I.ASTERN, 5~ Jr., ll.l. ~
P117• or the year: Emil)' Hammood, Prank·

.

~A~

.

Coach or the year: Leo Snyder, Frankfort

0.WBTocbo.~5-7,Sr.,I7.S

PlaJW otlha , _ Maoia. s..wn,., Beaver

CotciMI or u.. yar: r~~a

Puk•, Mblfont;

OHLINGill,

CA KARR, REEDSVILLE EASTERN.

•

lttodl•d

Doonoltho
K.lolld,
- · """'Leo'""'"
City
....,.tlooollfo&lt;l:or

By Tbe Assoc:lllted Press
Western Kentucky just wanted
to mate sure.
The HilltopperS earned an automillie bid to the NCAA tournament
rather than wait 10 fmd out if they
had enough for an at-large berth.
They did what no Sun Belt Confer·
ence team did all season - beat
No. 13 New Orleans 72-63 Monday night in the league's .cbampionship game.
.
"We showed that we deserve to
be in, win or lose. This team has
ansy.oered every challenge," West·
em Kentucky coach Ralph Willard
said.
New Orleans (26-3) went 18·0
in the conference regular season,
was on a 13-game winning streak
and had vinually already assured
itself of an NCAA bid with the out·
standing-record and No. 24 power
rating according to one of the services used by the selection commit·
tee.
·
Western Kentucky (24-5) was
second to the I'I}·Vateers in the COO·
ference and its only two losses in
the last 16 games were to New
Orleans.
The bid is the first for Western
Kentucky since 1987, and it was
one of five !!:hools to clinch a spot
in the tournament Monday night.
bringing the total number of qualifiers to 13 with I1 confe.ence titles
still at stalce.

East Carolina became the lowest seeded James Madison (21-8) was
seed to'ever win the Colonial Ath· within two points with 39 seconds
letic Associlllion tournament with a left and had a chance at a tying
three-pointer in the final seconds.
~-49 victory over James Madison,
· leaving the Dukes league runner-up William D'vis had 16 pointS for
for the third time in four years. the Dukes.
Southern l!Unois beat Dlinois State
~etro Atlantic
Athletic Conference
70-59 in the Missouri Valley title
Manhattan 68, Niagara 67
game. Manhattan ended a 35-year
The Jaspers (23-6) bounced
drought between bids by beating
Niagara 68-67 for the Metro back from a crushinl! one-point
Atlantic Athletic Conference cham· defeat in last year's title game to
pionship. Santa Clara ended Pep- win by the same margin. Tliey
perdine's two-year run as West were down 65-58 with five minutes
left and didn •t take the lead until
C~t Conference champions with
Chris
Williams made the second of
a 73.:(;3 victory.
'
In other games involving ranked two free throws with 2.6 Seconds to
teams on Monday, it was No. IS play. Keith Bullock, the conference
Iowa 56, Northwestern 50 and No. player of the year, led Manhattan.
20 MassachiiSCIIs 76, Rhode lslaltd with 30 points and IS rebounda as
SO.
.it makes its third NCAA ap~ar­
Western KenbJCky opened the ance and first since 1958. Ron
second half with a 10-3 run and Robinson led Niagara (23-6) with
then led by as much as 13.
19 points.
'
Darnell Mee led the Hilltoppers
· Missouri Valley Conference .
with 18 points, while Ervin John·
SOutbem IIUnols 70
·son led the Privateers with 22.
Illinois State 59
The Salukis went on a 27-6 run
Colonial Athletic A5Iil)(ialloo ' midway through the fust half and
then cruised to the second bid in
East Caronna 54
school
history, the other coming in
James Madllloa 49
1977.
Chris
Lowery led Soothem
The Pirates go to the NCAA
lllinois
with
14 points, while Mar·
tournament for just the second
time, and this year it will be with a CDS Timmons had 11 points and 13
losing record. East Carolina (13· rebounds. Mitte VandeGarde led
16) was the seventh seed in the Illinois State (19-10) with 16
league tournament and had only points.
West Coest Conference
been to the NCAA in 1912,, TopSanta Clara 73
Pepperdine 63
The Broncos (18·11) had bee.n
picked last in Jl!CSe&amp;SOII conference
polls and finished third in the reguBy HANK LOWENKRON
and I thought. wellljustneed to go lar season. They ended Pepper·
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The to bed. I'm surprised. The other dine's two-year run as tournament
telephone call came in the middle nine who WCfll up for it are so well champion as freshman Steve Nasb
of the night, and Bonnie Blair had deserving . ... It s hard for me to scored 20 of his season-high 23
to shake not only sleep from her believe that I was singled ouL "·
points in the second half. Santa
eyes but tears.
Blair was one of 10 Olympic Clara 1made a school-record 13
"It's kind of beyond words," JOid medalists to be Sullivan fmaJ. three-pointers, nine in the second
she said.
ISIS. She learned she was the win- half. Damin Lopez had 20 points
The 28-year-old speedskater, ner from her mother, E~or. and for the Waves (22-7), the league's
who won two gold medals at the sister, Angela, in a telephone call. re11ular-season champions for the
Albertville Olympics, Monday She is the fust Sullivan winner to third straight year.
night captured the 1992 Sullivan miss the presentation in the 14 No. 15 Iowa 56, Northwestern 50
Award, given to the nation's top years it has been announced in
The Hawkeyes (20-8, 9-7 Big
amateur athlete.
Indianapolis.
Ten) beat Northwestern at home
•
It was Monda)' night in lndi·
. ·"Yoo're a winner, kid.'·' Angela for the 27th consecutive time. They
anapolis when Blair's selection was told her.
.
had to oven:ome their worst fJrst
annoonced. But it was about 3:45
Blair, who is from Champaign, half of the season and a combined
a.m. in Inzell, Germany, where Ill., and now trains and lives in a .
Blair is training for this we=Jc:nd's Milwaukee suburb, is only the third
Sports briefs
World Cup rmats in Holland.
Winter Olympic athlete to win the
Blair won the SOO- and 1,000· award. The others were figure
Basketball
meter events in Albertville. Now skater Dick Button (1949) and
DEERFIELD, Ill. (AP)
she hopes the Sullivan Award 'C8II speed skat« Eric Heiden (1980).
Chicago guard Michael Jordan,
motivate her this weelr. and into
· Blair was l!Ciected in national hospitalized for two days last week
next year, when she' goes after balloting by some 2,500 partici· with a foot infection, returned to
more Olympic: gold.
panta. The voters ·included past practice. He sat out Wednesday
"1 couldn't have bad a better winners, journalists, the U.S. night's game against Dall.u, then
season than I did last yw,'' ~Bill Olympic Committee executive spent Thursday and Friday niahts
Blair, a Sullivan finalist for the board and members of the Amateur in the hospital, missing a Jarne
founh ·time in five years. • 'This AthletiC Union board. The AAU, apinst San Antonio.
would have been the time to win, · which has presented the award
but you look at the list and you since 1930 in honor of Ill put pres8ulcetball
look at the athletes -definitely ident and co -fou~der, does not
l-ARAMIE, Wyo. (AP) any one of them is deserviiiJ."
announce a runner-up or vote W~ingcoachBemy~.who
Fighting tearS as she sp01Ic dur- totals.
·
directed the Cowboys to appear·
ing a teleconference, Blair said she
The finalists had been selected ances in the NCAA IOW'IWIIent and
didn't expect to w.in and went to from a list of 44 ilominoel made by NIT, resigned to take over the
bed to rest for today's training.
the vari0111 national govaning bod· Western Carolina program. Dees,
56, replaces Greg Blatt, who
"It was jllllllnlnge," llbe Slid. iel of lllllteUr I()Oitl.
"You don't want 10 think about it,
resigned in February.

Blair captures Sullivan Award

\

f

'

7-for-26 shooting effort ricm lead·
ing scorers Acie Earl and Val
Barnes. Iowa, led by Wade Look·
ingbill's 13 points, Used a 17-6 run
to tate a 43-34 )cad With 8:21 left
and the'Wildcats (8-18, 3-14) never
got closer than five the JeSt· of the
way. Cedric 'Neloms had IS points
to lead Northwestern. .
Conference sellllllaals
Atlantic tO
No.lO Musaebuetts 76
Rhode Island 50
The Minutemen (22-6) will get
to defend their conference title at
home. Louis Roe had 24 points and
nine rebound5 as they handed
Rhode Island (18-10) its worst loss
of the season. Abdul Fox had 14
points for the Rams, who were out·
rebounded Sl-25. Massachusetts
will play. host to Temple (17-10),
which beat St. Joseph's 71-60 in
the other semifinal, on Thursday
night
Mid-Continent Conference
Illinois-Chicago (17-14) beat
.egular-season champion Cleveland
Slate (22-6) 96-68 in one semifmal
and Wright State (I 9-9) beat Valparaiso (12-16) 82-72 in !he othef.
Nortb Atlantic
Drexel (22-6) earned the right to
host Wednesday night's title game
with a 91-80 VICtory over Hartford
(14-14), whicli was led by Yin
Bliker's 33 JlOinlS and 12 .ebounds.
Delaware (21· 7), which won the
league last season, will travel to
Philadelphia after beating Northeastern (2&lt;!-8) 84-61.

Miami.
If fatigue is setting in, Seattle
coach George Karl certainly didn't
notice.
"They killed us," Karl said
after Seattle's longest winning
streak in 10 years came 10 an end,
with Schrempf leading lilliiana's
assault of the backboards. "In· the
rust half, they outrebounded us on
our own boards (12·11)." .
Schrempf wasn't alone as the
Pacers ootrebounded die Sanies 57.
4S. Dale Davis had IS ·rebounds
and Rik Smits .JQ. They Wound up.
with 16 offensive rebounds, just
four shon of the Seattle slatting
frontline's overall total at both

· Trent's father looking
forward to hoops on·TV

.

Let us tell you just
how'much your savings
can be.

.

.

'

ends.
.
six seasons, replaced Doug Moe,
Schrempf said the Pacers' who was fue4 Sunday.
•
strong rebounding was a result of
The Sixers halted a seven-game
mediocre shooting, but' they made road lOsing strea1c and a foilr-gatne
up for it with hustle.
overall slide. Hersey Hawkins
"We. didn't shoot the ball very added 18 points, and the 76ers
well, especially in the first quar- nllde 18 of 20 free throws.
ter," he said. "They (the ofncials) · Miilnesola shot just 39 percent
'let us play, there was a lot of reach· and made only 16 of 24 at the line.
ing and we got to more loose Chuclc Person scored 22 points,for
balls." . ,
.•
the Wolves.
Reggie Miller added.18 points
Cavaliers 121, Nuuets 107
for Indiana, Smits l7 and Davis 13. · Gerald Wilkins made eight
s hawn Kemp led the Sonics straight baskets in one stretch, and
with 16 points and nine rebounds, Brad Daugherty bit seven in a row
but fouled out with 10:38 to play in another as Cleveland found its
after picking up IWQ'. personals 28 shooting ,touch against Denver.
seconds apart.
The Cavaliers broke a string of
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was eight consecutive games .below 50
Atlanla 121 the Los Angeles Oip- percent by sinking 60 percent of
pers 113; Cleveland 122, Denver their shots. They also set a team
107; New· York 109, Orlando 107 record with 4S assists.
in overtime; and Philadelphia 92,
Wilkins scored 23 points and
Minnesota 83.
Daugh'erty had 21 points, 10
Knicks 109, Magic 107
rebounds and eight assists for the
Patrick Ewing won the battle Cavaliers, who have won 10
wiih Shaquille O'Neal, scoring five straight.home games and nine of 11
of his 37 points in the extra period overall.
· as New Yodt beat Orlando.
Robert Pack led the Nuggets
O'Neal took advanta~e of with.a career-h1,h 22 points.
Ewing foulin$ oqt in a 1~ -100
~r.::Sq!: w~:~:r:c~~!J 36 .
Magic victory m tnple-overume on
Feb. 14, but this time it·was O'Neal points, and Mookie Blaylock and
who was disqualified with six Stacey Augmon 22 apiece for
fouls . He left the game with 23 Atlanta.
·
· h IS
ds emaining
Danny Manning led visiting Los
pomts wu
secon r
Angeles with 32. points and Mark
m regulation.
Anthony Mason's bank shot Jackson_ added 21,, including six in
ave
New Yodt a 105-104 edge .a row 1n a 30-second span that
g
·
' choPPed Atlanta's lead to 106-103
the 30th and !jnallead change of., withS:38toplay. ·
the game.
Blaylock then hit his fourth
76ers 9:t, .Timberwolve~ 83
three-pointer of the ni,ght with 5:18
JeffHomacet h!ld 23 ~mts and remaining.and Wilkms followed
10 ass1sts and Philadelphm m~de with a scoop shot that OOilllted on a
Fred Carter's NBA head COi!Chmg goaltending call against Loy
debut a success.
Vaught to stretch the lead to litCarter, a 76ers assistant the last 103.
·

"With Andres Galanaga and Junior Felix.
Charlie Hayes on the corners (in
Plus Florida hu a notable: - if
the infield), we already have bo!ta ovemall:d- ~ber:
fide big-league players,'' says Bay"Having Beqito Santiago is not
the kind of lllllury that most expail·
lor.
F'ust baseman Galarraga is alor· sian teams could count on," says
mer Gold GlovC2' wbo can hit. but Lacbemann. "You don't normally
he's aging lnd injury-prone_ Third go into your first season with a
baseman Hayes, who strikes out a four-time All-Star starter behind
·•
lot, is less experienced. And the the plate."' .
The Marlins are also hoping for
middle infielders are question
a strong effort from f111t baseman
marks. ,
ORIIea Destrade, who is back after
" The potential starting ootfleld three years as a power hitter in
is a veteran group,'' · says Baylor, J
•
"with Jerald Clark in left, Alex ~We are going into this first
Cole and Daryl Boston in center season with a very simple, but very
and Dante Bic~ in right." It's a effective formula,'' says L.achefair mix of speed, poVfer ·and miiiJI. "We want .to play the game
defeii!C.
lwd and play the game right ~f ~
Baylor likes the way catcher Joe do that, we have a chance to wm.
Girardi, another oft-injured vetuan, handles pitchers. That's sure to
be a difficult assignment · ·
The Rockies took 21 pitchers in
the expansion drafL But the only
sure thing scans to be 24-year:aJd
David Nied, who was the No. 1
pick: He went 3-0 in Atlanla last
season; in the minors, his career '
totals are S7 -36.
By
Despite the odds against his new
Dave
team, Baylor is optimistic:
"I'm proud of what we were
Grate
a,ble to put together for our first
of
season of competition against the
established clubs.''
R"'-1
• What about the Florida Mar·
F1nlt1rt
tins in 1993?
Don't expect toO mu~ toO soon.
The newest member of the NationAn un•ucceeefui ua..m.. ..,,,
al League East is a young team and joined tho pollee Ioree. tjo
even for a first-year expansion
Akeo lhlo much • -· Tho,
club.
cuotomorlo ~·)'8. wrong.
.
. •'People say you should just go .
Folhor to eon: "OM ollhe boob
out and have fun," says Florida· you
wore otuciY!na et the Nbrary.
manager Rene Lachemann. "WeU,
lut nldht cellocf and loft ~ .
numi!W;;·
·
to me, winning is fun. But I'm not
~oing 10 get all wrBJllled up in !f)'·
wo·have only two 1111"91 to woory
mg to set goals and Shoot for num·
..... L Ono Ia that lhlnga
..
'
bers.
novor gat back to nol'fll•l.
He knows better. He's managed
other Ia lh1tlhoy alr...ty have.
•••
in Seaule (1981-83) and Milwaudd
tho
chicken croso
kee (1984). Lachemann alsp
ptoyground? To pi to the
coached in Boston (1985-86) and
•lido.
·
•••
Oakland (1987-92): He was briefly
TNChlng !o a otr•"'ll prot•olon ·
a catcher (118 games) with the
In which you koep 11tar aciloollho
Athletics in the mid 1960s.
otudont you'd moot like to oend
· Being realistic about the Mar·
homo,
• ••
lins, Lachemann says: ''I want to
get the best effort out of every
"R.S.V.P. - • nory.., low Jllkts •
player every night we•re not gning
n•fllt!al .. 6t stora - J65 tim •
, ... Wltirt ~ - llno to lot( lor
·to laugh when we lose. But we're
I talt ~~.... ol R.S.V.P.
.
not going 10 get upset if we go out
R.S.V.P.-•
and play liard...
- lvoryNy Low l'lkes.
Fans at Joe Robbie Stadium in
Sttotll
Miami will It least be able to root
for a few
starter Char·
lie Hough, reliever Bryan Harvey,
Rt. 124 lutl•llll, Oh.
third baseman Dave Magadan,
742·2211
shortstop Walt Weiss, outfielder

74eL~
7~ud

By RUSTY MILLER
Trent made 8 1.4 percent of his
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) field-goal attempts while averaging
Dexter Trent already has .eserved 32 points and I 6 rebounds a game
the television at the federal prison his final year of high school.
in Ashland, Ky., for Saturday after- . He hasn't let up since arriving at
noon.
Ohio U. He led the 10-team MAC
It could be his link to the in scoring (18.5 points a game)
exploits of his son Gary, who has and, of course, field-goal percentbecome a stat player for Ohio Uni· age (.630), and was second in
versity's basketball team. The two rebounding (9.3 per game). And he
were sepat!lted five years ago when just turned 181ast Sepiember.
Dexter Trent began sen,ing a life
"I don't think anybody in my
sentence for drug trafficking.
. family or anv of mv cnaches
"When you get locked up, expected whaU accomplished,"
sometimes you wonder who loves .Gary T.ent said.
·.
you,'' Dexter Trent said. ' 'Some"He's a Charles B~ey-typ!l,''
· times they forget you. But the one said Hunter, whose fresl)inan-laden
thing that never changes is the rela- team went 14-12 this season.
tionship with my children."
" •He •s got an explosiven~ss '!"hen
Gary Trent, has more than a lit· he jwnps and he plays a lot b1gger
tie motivation to dc:i well at this than he is.
week's Mid·A~can Conference
"The beauty of Gary 'Iient's sit·
tournarnent. If Trent and his Ohio· uation is that a lot of players envi·
U. teammates can win two gam~s sion themselves as something
and reach the finals, they will they're not. shooting 3's and hanap~ar on ESPN for the champi- . dling the ball. He knows where his
" •This ·guy has been a great
··
By BARRY WlLNER ·
onShip ~'
bread is buttered. He plays within
player
for a long time,'' Marshall
NEW
YORK
(AP)
With
That .wOuld be the first time that himself."
·
and
defensive
stars
Ronnie
Lou
said. '
Dexter Trent has ever !iceD his son
Leonard
Marshall
on
boatd,
the
play a game.
·
From a distance, the father has
New Yorli Jllfs now can turn their
When Dexter Trent was sen- followed his son's exploits.
tenceii,'Gary wu Ute a lot. of other
· "It hurts real bad," the elder alterltion to an even bigger catch in
eighth-graders ·- gangly with a Trent said of their sepan~tion. ''But ihe .fiee agent m(\l'ket - Reggie
White,
passion for football.
it helps me get through my days. •'
' The sigping of Lou on Monday
Now Gary ' is 6-f~~t-7, 225
Garycarefullyclipsoutanyartiand
the .agreement reached with
pounds, already the fre8limaD of the cles about himself or his team, lam· •
Mlirshall
made the Jets the early
year in the MAC and a qnanimous inates them and niails them to his'
leader
in
p[ocurinr
talent under the
fust·team all-confe.ence llelectioo.
father.
NFL
's
new
free
agency
system.
\
"He says when I get famous,
"When 1 came. here, 'his mom
·
Lou,
signed
away
from
the
Los
switched him from football to bas· he'll selln," Gary said with a
Angeles Raiders, and Marshall, a
ketball," Dexter Trent said. "She laugh.
,.
·
starter
for nearly a decade with the
didn't want to see him get hurt. I
:Both have always been close.
New
York
G~. might be just the
\
was mad about it tor a while, but I They see each 'other when possible,
start.
guess it's all worked out OK, the last time just before Christmas.
"I'm in here for what I did
hasn't it?"
_, I .
"We hope this sends a signal to .
....
Gary committed to Ohio U. just wrong, but it means something the other playen we are after that
after his junior season at Hamilton .knowing that be's what I· did we are seriously co'mmiued from
Towqship High School in Colurn- right,'' Dexter said.
the ownership level on down to
bus. Ohio :U. was willing to take
"He helps motivate me because improve this football team and to
him'· even th9ugh .he was just my dlld wanll to see me do good," get ·it back on track where we stan·
..
scratching the Sulface of his talent Gary said.
h
. ed off the first couple of years,"
on the court and had yet to meet
So as foun -seeded 0 h1o U. general manager Dick Steinberg
Proposition 48 requirements off iL
gets ready for the fnt round of the. said.
"Me being in here, a few family toumsment Thursday, Dexier Trent
The Jets made the playoffs in
problems would shake anybody is hopeful. He's been granted a 1991, the second year of the Steinup," DeKter Trent said. "He was new trial next month that he hopes berg-Bruce Coslet era. But their
no problem kid, he was a beautiful could reunite him with his family.
season fell apart early last year,
kid. I had good parents, but I
In the meantime, there is a more then 'll!med tragic when defensive
strayed. ... But Gary was always a ·immediate hope.
tackle Dennis Byrd broke his neck
good kid."
.
"We've got cable (TV) in and was partially paralyzed. They
As a senior, he' made the gntde here," 'Iient said. "The last time I wound up 4-12.
and made.Ohio U, coach Larry talked to him 1 told him to win two
With such disappointments
Hunter loot-like a IIICl'Uiting genius tames so 1 could see him in the fresh in their minds, the Jets set out
for risking a S~:holarship on him. . fmals."
·
to be major players in free agency.
'
So far, they've lived up to their
This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For '100.00 Or Less
word.
1

N.Y.- Jets.sign Lott, Marshall

...

--- -

'

'

-- -

- - ""

Clean Out Your Closet,
Basement, Or Garage ...
And Tum Your Unused Or ·
Unwanted Articles Into CASH With A

IFIFilBlB
CCJLA®®ll!FlllBlD) AJD)

By JIM UTKE
AP Sporta Writer
New-age baseball would sound
more enUghtened and IC&amp;S threaten·
ing if the concept came out of
somebody else's moutJai,.'
Playoffs, realignment, interleague I?lay - no matter how loud
the l.'ur1sts howl, those things are
, not mherently bJ!d. At ~t they
· don't seem to be unless, as they
' still say on thct•schoolyards, you
consider the source. Then, admit· ,
tedly, there is l'CBIII to mt.
Because every time the major
It,ague owners speak, and especial·
,ly in thole rare instances when they
•spea1c as one the first inclination Is
to check y~u~ baclr. pocket and
. make sure . your wallet hasn't ·
atreiidy been lifted;
If memory IUVCS, the Lut time
one of them did sometbjrig for
baseblll without CJpKilna Ill profit
.handsomely was a ·decade aao
' when the late illy Kroc the
McDonald '1 patriarch and San
Dieao Padres owner, commandcered the rbllc-addlea ayltelll in
middle o a home aame and
launched into a 1110blinJ apoloJY
for his team '1 embarrusin&amp; play.
And if Improving the pme wu
their onty ·motlve, owners would
have been doinl thilldnd of thin!! '

·-

almost everywhere .eva" since. ·But
no.
.
So .while it is possible to view
the changing landScape d baseball
81 the ownen do - new territcry
to be plundered. a bigger cash cow
to sacrifice on the altat of the 1V
gods, more opportunities for the

~~:ir~~that~":mebeau.Jfi

ac
· wally be be"- off in the ,.._ln.
....
-If you don't bel.ieve !t, simply
look at the three lliiiJOt points of the
piopoeal:
· · I
·
• Playoffs. A Simp e COIIIparlSO!I
is in order: 12 of 28 NFL tee~s go,
16 of 27 NBA teamJ qtwllfy for the
poslsuson, and the NHL opens ill
doo.r to :.::fig.eri,ng 16 o,f 24
enb'iea. B
180 t pioposmg a
fire-sale of a postseason. At least
not,~ .

I think elg.htleanll out of 28 !s

not an eKC~tve num'!et, ,~d If

anybody thinkl otborwue, COf!l·
musioner pro-tem Bud Sehg
oxpllined in his wondel:fui1Y ~
way, "they are not antJmiedi:ally
correct. ••
• Realignment. Just watchinJ
Atlanta haclr. Pi~burgb to piecea
the Jut few yean m the NL chlm·
pionshlp series should be enouJIIIQ
make this argument: But there's
more.

They plan to continue to be
aggressive.in pursuing White, the
All-Pro· defensive end and most
attractive free agent.
·
"Reggie White said he original·
ly wanted to go to a contending
team," Steinberg said. "But he.has
revised that to saying he wants to
go wltere thcr'e is a commibnenL''
Lou, a six-time All-Pro and
leader of the defense wllen the San
Francisaco 49ers won their four
Super Bowls, said 1M! saw that com·
mitment. He signed a two-year
contract worth just over $3 million.
"I can help them at the free
safety S!'Ot." said Lou, the first ·
high-profile player to switch teamJ
under the new system. "And I'm
loolcing forward to hopefully being
able to persitade some other free
agents out there to come and be a
'p.n of thil Ol'lllllizltion '
"Myself ailded with some other
fnic agents, I think we can llllke an
impacL"
.
One of tiiOie, he hoped, would
be White.
•
'
"We'U do whale- it takes to
try to get him to become a Jet,''
said Lou, who will be 34 1n
"The Hess family hal shown it s
wUiing to take the opportunity to
'field the best team It DOaibly can.''
That team will include Manhall,
who will sign a contract today.
Marshall, 31, said the Jets' liping
ofl..ott helped in his decision.

Mar.

And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad And Mail It To Us Or Drop It Off At Our Office.
You Ad Will Run For One Week.
•

. (NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
&lt;SORRY, TIUS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)

NAME=-------------------------------------PHONENUMB~= --------------~------~-----­
MAIL TO:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
(OFFER EXPIRES 6/21/93)

'

~

Rutland Furniture

veterans-

--- '

·Are suspicious motives .
b~hind 'new-age baseball?

.'
Slate Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even fiiOI'8 by
jnsuring b,olh your car
anc1 home with the s~te
Auto Companies
.. .
'

'

.

By DICK BRINSTER
. AP Sports Writer
Meet !he NBA's new iron man
- Detlef Schrempf.
In the last two nights, ihe Indiana Pacers• center has played all 96
minutes. That may be comforting
to coaeh Bob Hill, but it ,didn't do
much for the Seattle SuperSonics.
"He won't be . ~bmplaining
about his minutes now," Hill .said
after Schrempf had 29 points and a
season-high 19 rebounds as· the
Pacers ended Seattle's 10-game
winning streak, lOS-99 Monday
night.
.
On Sunday night, Schrempf
scored 2S points in a 114-99 loss to

Nels~rill•

Western Kentucky makes NCAA cagefest ·.

R01ular IIUSOD-Midwest
Iowa 56, NOdbw.tcm SO

s-UI....

GB

were cbosen coaches of the year in
Division ill.
Erin O'Leary and Dawn Heide·
man of The Plains Athens each ·
won special awards in Division U.
O'Leary, a S-6 senior, averaged IS
points a game in capturing player
of the year'honors. Heideman guid·
.ed Athens to a 17·3 .RCOI'd in her
fust yeat as the head eoach aftu a
two-year stint at Reedsville Eastern
to share the eoaching honors with
Waverly's Steve Kitcben.
· Emily Hammond of Frankfort
Adena, a S·ll junior who scored
22.1 points a pme. was the plafC2'
of the year in Division IV. Adena
also had a eoach of the year in Lee
Snyder, who led the team to a 16-4

By defeating No. 13 New Orleans 72-63,

~tc.r.--.

•

• ...

National college
basketball scores

--61.Nlopft67

WESfERN CONFERENCE

•

""•

Toumomonll

2
IJ

was to do anything necessary to
win on that particular day. That is
the way we will appioach the 1993
5e¥011.''
Baylor, who picked up som~
experience as a coach for Milwau·
kee (1990-91) and St. Louis
(tm). is counting on f~~~r cr five
veteranS to take charge on the field
at Mile High Stadium in Denver.

Schrempf leads Pacers to win; Gavs victorious
.

Football
.
DENVER (AP)- Denver quar·
•terback John Elway signed a four·
~year contract with the llroncos for
•a reponed $20 million, mating him
;the NFl.'s highest-paid player.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ; Miami quarterback Dari Marino Marlene Stollings of Beavl2' East·had been considered the highest· em, who has scored more points
;pjlid player based on the five-year, than any high school player in Ohio
;s22 mi!Uon contract that went into history, headlines the 1993 Associ&lt;effect last season.
Press Southeast All• District
: The Broncos also signed free· · ated
girls
high school basketball team
-agent offensive lineman Brian released
today.
:Habib to a series of one.year conStollings,
a S-foot-10 senior, av- .
. :tracts. Habib played the last four eraged 42.8 points
a game and has
"Seasons with the Minnesota 51:ored more than 3,000
points ·in
;~ikings.
her
career.
She
was
a
unanimous
'
choice as player of the year in Di.
vision m m balloting by a panel of
JODAY'S BARB
sports writers and broadcasters
BY PHIL PASTORET
from the district
Dave Wilcoxen of Belpre, who
When you're young and in love, you
go' walking in the rain. When you're guided his team to an 18-:l regularolder and saner, you'd go out·only to season record, and Jim Parkes, who
get cold medicine.
led Minford to an 18-2 record, '

In theNBA ...

an expansion club had to lose 100
games never met me, and I never
read that boolc," vows Baylor. He
was a stat hitter when he became
the MVP in the American League
with California in 1979.
Always known as a fierce competitor, Baylll" says: "I spent pver
19 seasons as a player in the majcr
leagues. liking the field every day
with one thing In mind and that

In NBA action,

Beflver Eastern's Stollings top area player

,

.

I

�By The Bend

The Daily SentinelJl
. 1\Jeaday, March 9, 1~

. .

"

p.....

'"------.4
...,._......_ _ _ _ _..;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _uvv--v..;;.
_ _ .:,

.

HOWELL'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; TAX SERVICE

I

Family needs.to seek help for teen J·
De8' A-.

,_,en: Tliis II f&lt;l'

tho wo111a11 whoae IS-year-old ,
"ep«hti&amp;bW Ia bo«ile I never apit
tt &lt;I' hit my f*CIIII, 'but I was
totally obnoxiou - the qUCCII of

t.nily Ia very JOOd - , IIIII wo
are proud ol him IDd lblaklu1. Wo
owe a huao debt ID the SIIVIIicn
Amly. It docl a heelttiful job. ,...
VANCOUVBR, WASH. .

Ann

~vebebavior,Iknew
how to drive~ Ia my family

111111. By the time I

DEAR VAN.: Huadreds of

was 15, I was an

MIQI!nnalll!ll physical wreck.
I bOaled up evay emotion and
had )Dipaine bdacite$. stomaCh
Clllllpl llld fainting spells. I also
bad boull d dcpeaion ltld carved
oo my ..a with JUOr blades in
ptql1nlion rot the day I would kiD

'

parenta wro11e lcacn oimileriD yotn.
Meanwhile, when you readln- a

, •llooeh.~tloredopoldbo..t,._,

80IIICihinJ in 'iL I· c:at tdl you, die

Salvation Army is truly wcncledul,
as "Vancouver" has teatilled
Gem of the Day: · The best
respon1e to a cruel, .....,spidtat
auact is silence. Let it atand,
lliiiiiiSwered. aakat, wbcR ill Clll
willleSS its ugliness.
·
/1 life ptUSillf 1011 by1. W- 10 .
ill1pnwe your sodollldlbt
Ann I..tiltMr( MW booklet, "Huw~·

GA.
.
myaelf.
DEAR GA.: Tlw)k you for a
My parents believed I was "a le«er that reOecls a great dc.r of
nibcllious ttien" and would grow ow insight and empathy. Here's anolbet
d it. TltCy insiJtcd I w~ faking response wilh a different spin from
~ to aet aui:ntion and refused
a mother:
to take me to a doctor. Iwas given
Dear Ann Landers: The Jeucr
iron pilb wliich they believed were from the woman with the 1ee11-age Makt FriiiuU 1111d Stiip\ Btitt
,
a curwlillld fon:ed to attend social ""1ldaug~ who is a hlllCiful was a Lcntly.• Selld a •11-addrultil.
busiMu-liu
"!Ye/ope
lllld
a
cltuk
~
functions tblt I .haled.
perfect desCription of my son at the
or
mDfiiY
order
for
$4.15
(tlis
ill·
:
When I was 19, I landed in a sameage• .
college cC!ImreJor's office, and !hat
"Johnny" had always been an ~liMks p&lt;Wagt aitd ltluullbtg) 10: :
was the besinninl of my recovery. easygoing, · delightful child. Fritllds, clo Ann Lattdtrs. P.O. B~ ~
It took 12 years before I aecepttd Suddenly we noticed an alarming 11562, Cllicago,l/1. 6061 Ul562. (/If-~
the fact thai I had a aevere mood personality change. He became Canoda, wuJ $5 .OS.)
disorder which was causing the · hostile and secretive and got into
misery in iny life.
·
one mess after another. Finilly, he
I still live as far away hom my was kicked out of school for using
GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. =
family as possible, but we write drugs. We were shocked.
(AP) - Two cross-cou
. ntry skiers
letters and occasionally visiL With
Kids are incredibly clever at missing for l lfl days were SJiotted R
all the signs I put out, I can't hiding their tiddictions. Wo learned by a search aircraft and rescued
understand why no one ever that drugs had created a chemical Monday after they wrote "SOS" in
bothered 10 take me to a doctor. H imbalance in his lnin and his ·poor the snow.
Diane Myers, 28, and Tracy
the girl described in the letter is eating habits added 10 the problem.
Boren,
36, appeared to have frost.
anything like I was, she is being as In the morning, Johruiy's blood sugar
biuen
feet,
one had a svrained .
meaa to benelf u · abe Ia to bcr was so low his tantrums and violent knee, said and
Mesa
sheriff's ,
family. That lid young lady has a bebavi&lt;l' were frightening. Hi could spokesman Don County
Williams.
They
keep things calm until' he'd eaten were taken to a hospital.
·
breat.rast.bewo~dbebaveinacivil . The women, teachers from
J
manner. but nothing can work when Grand Junction, had told other ·
Any residents who were misSed . a person i~ into ~gs.
•
cross-country skiers they ~ skiin lhe Scouting for Food project of
Johnny s addicuon led .to ~~ in' to a late Saturday afternoon,
the Meigs County Boy and Cub and he finally ended up tn pnson. Williams said. 1'!lc groltp's memScouts arc asked to contact Bob Now,~ age 33, he has been clean bers told the women they didn't ;
Arms at 992-5959 after 4:30p.m.
for five years and is leadias a think they could make it to the late C
The food is distributed to fami: raponsiblc life. A religiOIB COII\U'· during daylight .
,
lie$ through the Head Start Pro- sioo In prison, alcng with a drug
"Jlley pve them a candle and
gram and also through food pantry ldtabilitation program S)lOIISOied by some matches and told them ~'d
operations iti the county. Collecting the Salvation Anny, helped tum our better hiU1}' because they pro ly
. food for nec:cty fjVDilies is an an!lu- son around.
wouldn't make it before dark,"
al scout pro.JCCt.
·
Johnny's relationship with the Williams said

wmem

HOLD THE BEEF· Burger KIDgls trst-mat·
keting a meatless Spicy Beaa burger at its
Watkins Glen, N.Y., store after animal right
, groups urged the store's owner to offer a vege-

tarian main COIII'IIe. The bean burger, which is
shipped in lrom England, ofllcially went 011 the
menu Monday. {AP photo)
•

;study: Angioplasty riskier for women than men
Circulation, a Scientific journal of pare the risks of angioplasty directBy CHARLES RICHARDS
the Dallas-based American Hean ly wilh the risks of~ surgery.
Associated Press Writer
DALLAS -Doctors say it's Association, offered no explanation
"It's premature to suggest, just
premature to suggest women ayoid for the difference.
on the basis of ihls study, that
pngioplasty based on a new study
But an accompanying editorial women avoid angioplasty,'' Dean
that found they are 10 times 11!01'C suggested that doctors, responding said. "The alternative 1s bypass
likely than men to die in the hospi- to news stories that symptoms of surgery; and there may be an even
tal after undergoing the artery- bean disease in women are treated greater risk to worn~ there."
less aeriously, might be acting too
:unclogging procedure.
Angioplasty involves inaerting a
• Of 2,136 patients who under- aggressively in offering treatment, . thin tul;Je with a tiny balloon oo its
:went the procedure in 1985 and while others might not be acting tip into a blood vessel in the arm
;1986 at 16 U.S. medical centers, aggressively enough.
and pushing until the tip reaches a
Jour of the 1,590 men and 14 of the
Commenting on the study, Dr. clogged artery. The hslloon is then
·546 women died before leaving the Larry Dean, a cardiologist at the inflated 10 push open the artery.
University. of Alabama, said it · Dr. Sheryl F. Kelsey, one of the
:,hospital, accori1ing to the study.
:. The study, published today in would be more meaningful to com- co-authors of the study, acknowl•
edged that more information is
needed before women and their
doctors can make wise decisions
about which procedure to use. She
:· Rev. Sharon Hausman conduct- loss of her brother, Wayne and her colleagues are inyolved
now in a study that compares
:ed Ash Wednesday services for the Gilliand. ·
angioplasty
with open-heart
Northeast Cluster at Alfred United
Recent visitors of Nina Robin.
surgery.
Methodist Church. People from all son were her son and wife, Bob and
!hree cluster churches attended. Janet Robinson of Belpre, an!! her
The study was' conducted at lhe
6ervice opened with prayer and granddaughter and great-grandtongregational singing of "It's Me, daughter, Julie Smith and Lindsay Graduate School of Public Heallh
0 Lord" and the reading of Psalm of Topeka, l&lt;an .. and Mrs. Smith's at the University of Pittsburgh.
Lewis, a cardiologist
51. Rev. Hausman read from II mother-in-law, Beverly Foster, also withOr.theSandra
Heart
Clinic in Portland,
~orinthians and Matthew and gave
ofTopeka.
Ore.,
said
she
found
the study fasthe sermon. She then conduc!M the
Nellie Parker visited her brother cinating, but said it taises many
Imposition of ashes to all present. and wife, Samuel and Cora:
questions. "For example, women
Service. ~losed with prayer of Michael, Stiversville. ·
are
smaller in size, and how much
!rhanksg~vmg.
· Ruth and .Lloyd Brooks and does that have to do with it?" she
: Bible study for the Lenten sea- David Games dined at .an Athens
said.
· ~n will be in Matthew at Tuppen
restaurant on Sunday nighL
In 1991, angioplasty was perPlains, at 10 a.m. on. Tuesday;
Those ill in the community formed about 303,000 wnes in the
Chester, noon on Tuesday; and include Pat and Lester Keaton,
United States (207,000 times on
Alfred, 7 p.m. on Wednesday.
Mattie Pullins, Clarence Henderson men, 96,000 on women). That
~ The church and community
and Delbert Steams.
same year, bypass surgery was per·
,Xtend sympathy to the family of
David Games and Nellie Parkec formed about 407,000 times
'chelsa LQte. Many attended visita- attended Emmaus gathering at
{296,000 times on men, 111,000 on
ti on and services. Sympathy is Cheshire earlier this month.
women).
~xtended to Mattie Pullins. for the

.:Alfred community news

Skiers rescued

• F,... Ado:. Gi-war ud F"""" edollllllor IS W&lt;ird. will ..
..... 3 ...,............
.
• Prico of ed for ell ..,.... lotten io ........ prieo of ad - •
• 1 polo&amp; lieotypo ..Jy• 8-MM'Io _ _,........ ....,n_flntday(c...k ·
· lor....,..ftntdayad,...mpapor~C.Ow-2:GOp.•.

' ..., ...................... ___ do•

J

Bl'L LETI'\ BO.\RD

.•

· 3/111 mo.

DAY IIER)RE PUBUCATION

COPY DEADLINE
MClllilay Paper
Tueodoy Poper
Wednoedoy Paper
Thurodoy Paper
Friday Paper

1:00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I:OOp.m. n-lay
1:00 p.m. W~eoday
IOOp.m. Thlll!day
1:00 p.m. Friday

~yPapor

Public Notice

Public Notice

,
TUESDAY
, · MIDDLEPORT · The Middle:pon Youth League wiU hold sign: up for the 1993 ball season on
·Tuesday from 6-8 p.m. and Satur: day from 9 a.m. to noon. Sign-up
' will be held at the Middleport
Council cliambers. Anyone who
, did not participate last season will
:need a copy of their birth certifi•cate. Registration fee is $10 P.er
:child, not to exceed $25 per fatruly.

forming in the dinner theater at
Southern High School will be held
Tuesday at 6 p.m . in the high
school bandroom. All parents are
urged to attend.

'

992·3838

. ' UCINE, OHIO
614·949·2202
, ... _........ I• .,..•OAI

f/81'1211

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
Mhldleport, Ohio 45760
. (6141 843·5264

Now Taking
Applications for
·Part Time Bartenders.
Inquire at Elks Lodge in
Gallipolis.

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING .
47269 St. It, 241 e 1Y. Milo OH Ri. 7 ·
Tluu Cllelter •• Rt. 241

PH. 6.14·985·3949

I
Tha price .... -

NOW OFFERING-....
OIL AID LUIE SERVICE
nRE REPAIR AID ROTATING

NdUCiod Ill tBI.800 In!

-~....... d ... to&amp;M.. al~

-

*"'"' ....

..., bo paooiblo ... "

aan
to bul'
- - 11omo on II% In
Roo:ino.
•BR,SboN,2-rniclt
BR lilt P!- •.8110 oq.IL r.m

bldg.

•
.

2/U/t:l/1•

.

Col814-8112-7104 ...

HEART TO I:IEART
CARDIAC SUPPORT

.

. .

THE MIDDLEPORT
· LIBURY lrEXPANDIRG
ITS HOURS!

GROUP MEETING

"'''~ , · :rHURS., MAR. 11 -7 p.m.

SALES AND SERVICE
Palla endS. wlce for all
moll• onei modele' of
lrocllon and r.nn

REEDSVILLE • A community
education meeting will be held
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Eastern High
School.

614-949·2101. 949·2160
or 915·3139
(NO S.lllay CaHs)

EVERY THURSDAY

POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Elections will meet
Tuesday at 4:30p.m. at the office.
POMEROY - The Sugar Run
School Restoration Committee will
meet at 6:30 Tuesday evening at
Trinity Church.

I

·- RACINE - The Southern Junior
, High boosters will meet Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the junior high school.

.

~
~

POMEROY • Ohio Eta Ph1
·Chapter, Beta ~igma Phi Sorority,
:will have a progressive dinner
;Tuesday. Meet at the parking lot
'.across from Dollar General at 6: 15
p.m. Salad course is at Sandy
, -Butcher's, main course is at Julie
Dillon's, dessert course is at Sherry
f bapman's.

l, LETART FALLS - The
Letart/Portland PTO will meet
:ruesday at 7 p.m. at Letan Falls
Jllementary.

•

: REEDSVILLE • Riverview
PTO will meet Tuesday. Refresh/!lents and babysitting provided.

POMEROY • There will be a
Sugar Run School meeting Tues·
day at6:30 p.m. at Trinity Church.
Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT - The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, wiU meet Tuesday at 7:45
p.m. at the home of Velma Rue, 72
South Third in Middleport.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Genealogical Society will meet
Tuesday at 5:15 p.m. at the Meigs
County Museum m Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE • The Syracuse
Youth League will meet Wednesday and March 17 from 5-7 p.m. at
Syracuse Ele'!lentary School. Registration fee is $12 per child, not to
exceed $25 per family. First time
participants must prov1de a copy of
their birth eertificate. Further information may be obtained by con·
tacting Jim Lawrence at 992-3282.

HARRISONVll..LE - The Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club wiU
;llold a free blood pressure clinic on
,1uesday from 10 a.m. 10 noon at
tfle townhouae. Members will hold
a potluck after the clinic, weather
POMEROY • Pomeroy Merpermitting.
chants Association will meet
Wednesday at8:30 am. at the con'
; RACIN E - Racine Lodge No. ference room of Bank One in
461 F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday at · Pomeroy.
7:30 p.. m. Work in the fellowcraft
degree.
RACINE - The Racihe Youth
League will hold sign-up for the
::: RACINE - A meeting for par· 1993 bali season on Wednesday
jihts of students who will be ·pet· hom 6-8 p.m., on Marc~ 13. from 9

.

.[ j

"

'1

"·

.~ )

'"..

THURSDAY
POMEROY • The Communi!4'
Lenten Service, sponsored by the
Meigs Ministerial Association, will
be at Trinity Congregational
Church on Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Rev. Keith Rader will be preaching.

..••

- ~

~\

..,

· ·--------~---·
SAVE UPTO . .' I
I

I
II
I

POMEROY • The .P0111eroy
Group of AAwiU meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church in Pomeroy. Call 992-5763
for information.
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m. There will be special
singing and the baking contest will
be held.
TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the post home. Ali members are
urged 10 attend.
CHESTER • Shade River Lodge
No. 453 F&amp;AM will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the lodRe haU in
Chester. Refreshments will be
served.
STIVERS VILLE • David Carpenter, Bellville, W. Va., will
preach at the Stiversville Word of
Faith Church on Thursday at 7:30
p.m. Pastor David Dailey invites
the public.
CHES!llRE • The Galia•Meij!S
Community Action Agency w1ll
hold a free clothing day Thursday
from 9 a.m. to noon 11 the old high
school building in Cheshire.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
·PURCHASE OF
INSURANCE
MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTIENT OF HUMAN
SERVICES'
prop 01010 will btl
rocaiv..t by tho Melgl

lnalruclons 10 - . .,.,
be obt.ln..t Ill a.o olllco of
th~ Clerk of tho Molgo
County Commtaalonera,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sold Board of Co•·

p-:'Smc'!hlo at the
aerk'e
· until 12 noon
on lie 21th d8y of 118rch,
ltl3, ud tt I :00 p.m. ,
opened by the Clerk of uld
Boord for Merc}lntlle
Robbery ondllurglary F Sllunp covor190 10 protoct
"'""'"""• llplnot robberY
ond bu~I:XC, los~ In the
amount
.ooo.
SPEaFICATIONS
PURCHASE: llercenlilo
Robbery mil Burglery F Stamp tnau .......
AMOUNT: 1100,000.00
Covoroge. (However, aold
cover•g• c•n be broken·
down Into 1100,000.00 ..,Ito
will docfuctibl• of s-.oo,
SI,OOO.OO, ond S2,500.00
Altirnotlv•.)
EFFECTIVE DATE: Morch
27, 1113 et 12:01 A.M.
Eutom S - d Time.
TERM: Thlo policy -uld
boi IliUM for • . , _ , _

atlof1111J811d .. ~

.. it,alonere •••rv•• the
right to . . . . lormalltloo to

CoUnty Commlaelon•••· acaept and reject .,..._ or

'"

.

.i

.•

·"
'

'

·~
(

.~

.

'

,j

•

'"

period, with ·•nnu•l. or

...., E.-·ao..r or
.

Clerk

Mtlge County
Commleal(:i) 9, 16, 211:

; EAGLES
CLUB

r'

I'WIIc Nollce
liTHE

MEIGS CQUNTY COURT
, OF C:: .,OH PLEAB
POMEROY, OliO
a.nk
N.A.
Pt.lntlll
V8 .
Altn B. AllmM, Mat,
Dlifad••
NOTICE FOR
PUIIUCATION
c.. No.l1-cv-m
Notice Ia .....,.:''""
thlll an ~the 1
d8y
of lletGit, A. , 1ta, etlhe
hour of 10:00 o'"""* A.M., I
... offer tor ot pullllo
eu. .. , Ill tile ltont door of

IN CLOSING COSTS. .

mostcases,anadvantage you don't
getwithothertypes
offmancing.*
Best of all,
you pay no closing
costs- including
attorney's fees and
appraisal charges,
plusthecostofthe

01900 BANe ONE COAPQRATI6N 'COniUII ywr

~

HAPPY 50th

.,J

'

a&lt;Msor lor specli'ie COI'KIIIions ana O@IAIIS,

~

!O

credlf

approt.~ll. t~
011er

'Ma-ch il1, 1993

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAND CLEARING
WATER • 8£WER
UNES
BASEMENTS •

LICENIED 11111-D

••• 614-992-5591

::'t

Cohablo Townohlp, llalge
Coolllly, Ohio, ond llei•D
port of • troot of 1llnll •
cleeorlbetl In YOIMIIIO Ill,
100 llolga County
RIDDrct. and IMI)3
_ , . . . t If
I.

1:::

1

· l•lnat1111 ot o ·pol•t
wllere llle EMI line of
F1 IIIII J3 Intel
I wllll
Tciwnohlp flood 11; . . _
Froellen ....
417·71' 10 . .

w.

127.10' to II point In
T--"'p flood 11,
•• ..... pin ... •• 11L1
~._

· SUMMER
-IMAGES ·
2 •lies Hllysell

._IHIIOH

... 124
12 .....~••

uo
,......... us
992·2417

3 411G-1 mo

Mlllll&amp;

CWSIIUCnOI

E.41U1;10

• E. 11.21' 10 • pollll;

............ 04'11"!.

111.14' to tbe point of
8lld oontolnlng

:2"-..':

~

............ •tiMille

...,.rll"teofwrof_,.._
Deed R.r.,._: Valume

•••

P1111 FilE llottlt of
lolf011
'-1 Titre... feltr•ry

HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.

949·2823

(614) 992·5449

15 Sessions '15

12/31/92Jifn

a:&amp;t=N
H5447J

667-6179

' FREE card;
. Uc. No. 0051·32

SAYRE
614·742·2138

To collect your scholarship money
call 61 4-985-3556
Operi Mon.-Fri. 10.7 or Sat. 1G-4

BILL SlACK
992·2269

MYSTIQUE
TANNING

USED RAILROAD TIES

SCA Wolle Bed

RWOIWI.E

. Guaranteed.Sc)1olarshlp Money

Reaso•••••
•••••
JOE N. SAYRE

NOW OPEN

WE DO

ROOFING .'

AND EYERnHING UNDERNEATH

TR

742·3190
Call for
'

WPENTER

•regardless of income
. •regardless of grades
"plus $20k guaranteed loan
•regardless of credit

2-1 1 mod. ptL

15 Session $25
Depot St., Rutland

YOUNG'S

ASK FOR CHRIS

tor all college' bound students.

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

.SMAL.l DOZER
WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
IMUMESTONE
DEUVERY SERVICE

1304) 773-5533

LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAl

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG

CHARLIE~$

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!

HAULING

SHRUB &amp; TREE
.. TRIM and
REMOVAL

j

.

$100 Payoff
Thio ad good f~r 1

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

3-8-13 I mo. pd.

~

........

~r.iatfiN

(614)
667·6628

=
.
.
.. -H.,.,. ... -:.r=:
=
.........
..... ...........
.......... :r::s:;.
........
11'

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

CALIFORNIA
TANS

12-5-lfn

Eeet

uhlawa:

titlesearchandre- simplycallu8at ~
cording of the deed. 593-6&amp;81 or l-800-.~
Servk:esthatwould 677-4994.Andcut -::
nonnallyoost}&gt;ooa8 )'OUI'closingroets ~
much as $500.
. down to size. · ••
Th apply for a
home equity loan,
stop byv the nearest
Bank One.
Whatever it tcilees7 ·
Or,ifyouprefer, =~-NA

I&amp;CDCIYAIIIG
IUUDOZING

the lhedlf• Building, 104

the::

ftappyAdl

6:45p.m.

Spac .. l Early Bird

One..--,

leaond llreet,
aoml-onnuollntlollmeniL
Oh.lo, · the
PonlerOJI,
s.p.olo .-1 ln.,_._ loluwlaa;,..l ...... allude
bldo will be rocolwd with In
of
ond
· , Md
the
r11poct to a.o lnaurenco Btolo of
r-lr- 10 btl purchOMd .. T-elllp of Colulllblo, 10 •
provld..t by a.e apeclfl· wll:
coUont. Speclftcoliano ond.
PIIUICEL 1: Blluot..t In

5

IN POMEROY

HOllE SITES
HAUUNG: UIIIHI:one,
Dirt. Gntnl•nd Coal

Froollon 13, T. I, R. 11,

'·------------

There'snever
been a better time
togetaBankOne
Harre EquityLoan.'"
Interestrates are
still at some of the
lowest levels in
vears. And your interestpaymentsare
taxdeductiblein

-.
w
'

COMMERCIAL 11,11d RESIDENTlAL .
' FREE EsTIMATES · .

Mon. 12:00 p.m.-8:00 :p••m~
TUES.-SAT. 10:00 a.m.-6:00p.m.
Sun. 2:00 p.m.-6:00p.m.

For Information

Soat.d

!•

·.
New Homes e VInyl Siding
:
· New 'Garages • Replacement Windows· ·
•
Room Additions • Roofing

I

Call304-675-4340 Ext. 405

J
'

BISSELL BUILDERS; INC.

YllllfWt
YMDIWI PUSH MOWER
2 Cwdo .. Hylo
lOIO IIIUIIIEIS &amp; SAWS

3 innouncemants

. Pleasant Valley Hospital
Corrimunity Room
Speaker:
Everett Wray M.D.
Topic: Cardiac Calheterizatiqn
· and Angioplasty

&gt;:

and O.ffice Sutlng

opening ad. 992-3577.

.

,j

"Helping You To Reco~er Yoar /n~estmenf'
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto

Life ~ Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accidenf •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

•

.o

Snodgrass Upholstery

Opening Soon in Mid!lieport
THE BOOK BARN
Buy-Sell-Trade.
Many back issues of many
different magazines. Watch lor

Pro·-ie·c·t contt'nues

a.m. to noon and March 15 from 6g p.m. Final sign-up will be March
20 from 9 a.m. to noon. Si11n-up
will be held at the Southern kindergarten building. Registration fllC
will be $10 forsilfthsll players, $15
for baseball I?.layers, not to exceed
$25 per fam1ly. Anyone who did
not participate in the Racine Youth
League previously will need a copy
of their birth cenificate.

~

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
8lld TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS.
HOME SITES ond
TRAILER SITES,
l.ANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAY8tN8TALLED
UMESTONE-TFlJCKIIG
FREE ESTIMATES

ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANJ

t

•

,- ; Community Calendar items
:ippear two days bel'ore an event
tlnd the day or that event. Items
must be received wen in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
;tndar.

985-3406 •

a

•

.Community calendar

,•

Chester, Oh. 45720 .

NOTARY

Public Nollce
,•

36358 SR 7

. BULLml IOAID DEADliNE
4:30 P.
DAY IEFORE . .
.,
pulliCAnON

•

1

992·7036

Jeanie Howell, EA

I e ,W. O.tlid. II. CO•lJ J'OIII' ... , . . • •t M ....,.W

SllvatiQn Amly tellle, pleae drop

long, diffiCult road ahead. and I pray
her family doesn't make Iter walk
tblt road alone. •• COLUMBUS,

POUCIES

CLOSED SUNDAY

LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

REASONABLE
RATES

CanlofT!ouk.o
Happy Ado
Ia M-oriuo
Yerd Seleo
• A "'• · '""" •••~'=•• ploced
c.tlipolio Daily
TribtoM (...... CW.If'..d Dlopley, B . . - Can! or Lopt
No-) will e1oo eppeu mt1oo Poiat Plouul Rep lor ...I
... Deily S...tiMI, ......... . ..... 18,000 ... .

1e...,

tbru FJU. 8A.M.~5P.M.- SAT.8-t2 .

MON.

CUSTOM SADDLES,

Quarterly and
Year-and Reports

• A.io ,.., • .,. .. pold u. .,~..... ""'

To place an ad
Call992-2156

Shade River·Saddle Shop

'BUILDERS ·

20 Years Exp.

Appointment

742·2328
313M !In

112211 mo.

uns

992·7553

POIIIIOY, OH.

a-wa.

CARE FOR
'
THE
ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE.
992-5858
696-1290

KMN'S LAWN
.UINIINANCE

Annnu ') r r• llle r·t ,..,

949·2191or
1·10Ml7·1460

3 Announc:emet~~e •·

L..-..Maals~~t

........

Ferllllaltlg, W.ellng, Md
.

.

Shrub ond ,._ =IHmmlntl

" Renlov.t

Alllds ..... .6 CucuwcueuW
FrME-11
FRWOOD FOR BALE

NOIIh or GotMpolle
.... 4 miiiiSOulh 04 ~ IO
Ad411on. Turn oil Sl. AI. 7 anto
. Addlton Pille. Body·llhap 1ppro•. 2

Appo•. 4 -

mUtton

'·•

r=.or
.,,..
W«i&lt;·

pleco(bJ

OniJ)

. i

I,

�' 1883
3

71

Llw M -

32 Mobile Homei
for Sale

lllortH T... To

If!-.-·
'jlta,. 13.11 ....

""UttCIIItdi1.....JIG.DR

I

llln. -

'Ito. UniMor Co. 1102) 131-

-c

5I

--

~day, March 9, 1993

ALLEY

AulOI for Slle

ACROSS

HouMhOkl
Good I

Giveaway

PHILLIP
ALDER

.J6.

NOI\TJI

33 Fann• for Sale Ruroltorm w ..... - . loom

,114-31J.Jt13.

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

~

KQJ9
Q73
AIH

11 AcrM 11/L Loncl Wotor
IEIIC Avolloble, a-goo Crook
SM,ooo Finn. 114-4*-

!"!:'-L

"Hey, it could be worse. •You could
be home doing your taxes!'"

BUll,... or

1 1 u 1 rrtlal2 8Cf•

Locol P o y - Routo tfO,OOO
Yeor1! Ul!llllll OHor. Col1...
22Hlill.

-

-

1- -

Sotltb

BARNEY
IT'S II)Y NAPP'I TIME

•'GOO·

' .

AN' I DON'T WANT TO
HEAR A PIN DllAP II

THIS SliTTER
15 PRACTICALL.'r'

'

e.mz.

CoH AlTA Allor 4:GO
Don, Junll II Soil Us Yout Nonl14-m-G033 (&lt;;OUECT)
Working lllojor Apptlo-. . ,...--:::-:------.,

~ TV've'R-.,

A:.:.a.=:::

w.._., ..........

monoyl

Air Condhlonoro, Gulor Ampo, F- olghl job .--~~on
25f.t231
program . - -.trodhlonol
Etc••~·
,...
.
omploy-, (ONOW), 1J &amp; D's Auto Porto ond Solvoga, 131-1&amp;01.

.... b&lt;iylng junll Clro &amp; INCiio.
304·77U3-I:S.
WANTED 11-ng tlmbor • poy
cooh -

-n

conl...t olgnod •

-.·IOJ:
-·014-413-1105.
-0 .

Will ....... In lly Homo. .....

ood In Ploy ..... Ellpll'lllriCOd.
Rfttl c11 AnllabiL Rodftll1

Nobility • Ohio
315 • Sordll,
...... Cllfi114-14W8111:

Aa..tlono. Sowing, lllndlng,
W.nlod - . . tlliobor, top 114-24&amp;-12fl:S.
. . - polcl, . . . ..Umotoo,
llcoiUdloaafna oompony, 304- lorn Nm0¥111; IUd on old born
815 3015 offll-73831

W.ntMI To Buy: Junk Auta.
With Or WHhollt lllolcn. Coli
Lorry u..ty. IM 3M 1303.

FROZEN ..

. . . . . -.out

of tho woy7

Top -

' -- • ...

Pilei: All Old

u.s.

Calni, -Qold Rl-. Colno,
Gold Colno. II.T.B. Coin lhop,

lit - - . Oolllpollo.

Employment Serv1ces
11

Help Wanted

"lloko Big llucb" Work At
Homo Auill S.A.S.E. t10 To
~A Supplloo, Box II, Hillsboro,
OH 45133.

SSSatee Asp: atnhltlv..SS

Oooo rocognltlon of your oiiOIIo
&amp; lho polll!'llll lor high lnoomo
mOtivate ,PU? W. ar. • nwmber
ot W•t Ylrglnll'e~ reCall
m.nulldured
or~
gonlutlon - l n g of NloU
-...-Ions In Wool Vlr"'niL Duo
...-•

Oolor ond -~~ wort&lt;, by tho
hour, lowMI rite, I'MoMM23

or 111 113 11289.

make .,.,. suct\lpreference,
llmlalton or -rlmlnallon'

This newsp,.,er wll not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is In vlolalk&gt;n of lhe
law. OUr reiders are hereby
lnloomod lhet 1111 dweMings

Tf'!E fOI.&amp;.OWING
T~~ff

Of

atfiertlsed In this newspaper

t"'""' t-.

Hondymon hoi
locidora, 111111111 Vory d-ldoblo '

"NHDnaba..

"'f.":

call or write Wntwood Sunday calla pMiaM.
ShoW, Inc, 5898 FH. 00 Havt room In • nice c•n
Elllt31Bo "::~r••lflo, WV 25~04, mciCforn homo, 24hr. odun coN:
3 ·
304·
whoolcholr, bodlut or Olhor·
' AVOII' ALL AAEASI Shore your WIN. CNA on duty at Ill dmoo,
time wllh Ul. You'll lovt the ,.,.,....,.. and 20 y11r. tX·

beet

5 Lodloo Who Would Uko To

porfenco,
anytime.

..n

114-2111-1113

care

for

elderly ,__.. In tt.lr

StrviCN prvvld1d ln-

ctudo: light - .......
homt cdlng, ....... no. rn
pert;on.l cart, lranaponatlon,
yord work, etc. Sotory, room &amp;
bolrd dotl10d. For lnt....low coli

Bocky 304-t7H857.

ba"'·

_,.-

.~llf~ I.IMIAll6tt."
31 HomBS for Sals

··•-r

-

·• .. ....

•

In - - . lUIIy corpotod, 2 por-

.•

.

--·-·--J -: .

• •

,

,_

BORN LOSER

- . -rto - . loll . . ..,
rwfrklerltor, llwao .uuliWcf, Home
Not'rllnll, Roolno, 011. - ·

~." /fl'( eat' ... ttl 1.
,..,.,_!!£ ,._WI~.
c.otiFIQl~TIOtW. 51UT!OM, fiJI£

OOT ~IMC.IN6Ifl&gt; ~ OIJt!&gt;TIOA~

LNE:R!

drlllod

-·

1011i For Current Rtpo U.l.

44

Lorgo eant. .pory Hamo On
17.1 Aorao 11/L With limo And

2 Bodroom Aportmont

••

Pass

Pass

eEINIS A 'NII-TCHCt::l:!i16 R&amp;,AI.~ CN

23 Waaklftd.

wl~•

10 Layer of eye

Flrot

~
-·~·

" Wlk:GJDII.
lbbr.
~24 _ ... . , _ .

-.
32:::·
COIIIracllon •

3D llteda Of

Pass
Pass
Pass ' Pass

~

r-'

33

canea•
olllcill

38 Gaah
38-llllltp
41 Heyl
43 DIWft

aoddlll

46 Rot.diY.

.... '"'

47 El- ..,.. ~
48 Fit.td of '''
' ·;.
50 Slraln tor ~ -;
brMth
-~-"!.~

A. The pineapple ,is an. international symbol of hospitality. ·This sign of
welcome became popular centuries
ago when sailors began to carry the
fruit back from long voyages; the
pineapple would b~ placed outside of
inns and houses to attract visitors.
Among edible symbols, the pineapple
is easily one of the most Inviting.

TI-l&amp; ~L-IDe .

~

-

2

22 World org.

3.

last summer and kept seeing hotels
that pictured a pineapple. What is it
supposed to mean•

Avonuo,Oolllpotlo,ltll4s 122L

5111111-

: ·~

52 Cutuff

se F•lllhaod 58 Kina ·.::_
Ill PeriOd of -

lima
~
50 Willa! track
13Fonnar
-

-

-·"

;&lt;: .• •

-.......
....
• pJ.,

' SXDLSX

ATITOUKGOX

TIVTRP

-· ·.
...

- ~

GDPQPWXH
VDJTO .

WKTW

LCHDIV

U K T 0 S X H

W. K T W

ATtiXW

~·

GP

...

OCLXRXN
M X L U X M W G D D • •

JTLWGO
AXLOKXGJXL.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ''A lie can be hllllway round lhe world
truth hoa got Its booto on." - James Callaghan.

.

betort tho •,
•".

WOlD
'::~:~;~' s~~(l~-J££~s·
lAM I
141tod
ClAY R. POlLAN _,;__ _ __
O lour
Rearrange lehers of tht
words be·
~r

~erombltd

'..,.
-.

"" low ,ro form f.o ur simple wordJ.

I

13

FALBEF

,~ i
a

.....
_.. .

--

tI

I

G

-ilr--1I

.'

I=~·=-==·=~·=·~":_,
I'
I I I I 1 Ia
HEGI T
h-5-~~lr-::,1,.;:.6

L.
r-

My dreams are getting to
real for my comfort. last night

,

I dreamed
eating
shred·
ded
Whaat I was
When
I woke
up
found my mattress ·-· -··-.

.:.

1 N T 0 0- N

Q

Complete _lhe &lt;hu~ k le quoled
by f1ll1ng 1n the m1ssmg Vtards
'-..J.......JL-...L......I-..1-...J vou develop from atep No. 3 below.

.

_

_

_

•

7

•

.

..

"'

"

1'1'1'1

....

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

SCil.f.M.lETS ANSWERS
Couple • Crimp • Rusty - Limpid - UMPIRE
"I've called you every, name in the book." yells the
girl, "and you just stand there and smile!" "It's easy,"
the guy says, "I was an UMPIRE.' ·

, .

Valley Ar•, O.k Drtvt,

Corpor1,

Bodroomo 1 112 lalhol
AD, Ou Holt, Ful

Apoltmont For Alnl: 1 Bod·
In QalllpoUt,

a.. mtnt. Alcent~ Rtmodatad room, Firat ll'laar,
'lbrouahout. Prleo: 114,100, 114- eon --.1421.
401-Mil.

BEAUTFUL APAA7111ENTS AT

Th,.. a.ldroom ranch tiYit,
large khchan, living room, fote
of cloMII, talll .-:t:rlc, new

BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON

J - Plko
from 12011mo. Wolk to &amp;
movt.. C.lll14 ue zs• EOH.

ESTATES, 031

a-h Stroot lilddtoport, 01o1o,
room opt, rot ' dop, utllhl•
polcf,-·2511.

1

•-'ntmonf.
32 Mobile Homes
for sale

1 bdrm., 1 llll,h,

on

olrl !~~~,,~1~111100
~ut~llt=lo~o~lu=""""~od:,
. dopoolt, 114-

1152.
17 por
lnoludlna
montho
lrMmonth
lol - ·
now ~r711,
clollwlrod ond HI up, oklotlng

ond ~~- 1- U A I.

1113

.

Fill,_.. llobllo -

Fumilhod S ~ I Both,
V... Cloon, Wotor Pold, In Por·

14a70, 2 ledrooma, 1 Bath;

twlrel. 114-381-1000.

Eloc. Hoot, u. .._nlng. Allor
0 P.lll. $14-4411-3044.

Or
_ oolouo

1N4 Ftlrmant, Mx70 wtth 11x18
oddhlon, 3B'!,. 1 both, t2x14 Inoulotod bulle~ng. Eloctllo hoot.
Qn 112 ..... 114-2M-1147. .

11111 Skyllno Holly Aldgo Mr711,
Ill et.c, 2 lledroouu, AIC,
........ kltchon lolond,
blcla'- •nclor!lllwq,
new, JD4.1-,a.2484,

:OSO
Fmanc1al

oPus

Q. We visited some historic sites

AWATCHDO&amp;
MueT" .4LWA't'6
f'.EAL.ERT... '

Apanment
for Rent

"'"" (1) - - Eat. QH.

B~ck 3

INT

2•

lloallnt loll

18 Sour

20 Klndof-

Eut

OUR LANGUAGE

MORTY MEEKLE AND
WINTHROP
.'

22.75 ' ......

QOYEANIIEN7 HOliES From II
&lt;U Ropola. Ooll:=tuont ru
Properly.
F 111 ana. Your

~lng

Nortb

By,Jefl'rey McQuain ·
Use ORNITHOLOGY for "the study
of birds." Even flighty speakers should
pronounce the noun ORNITHOLOGY
"or-nih -THAH-Ioh-jee." .

$21,000, 114-M.2te3.

Swlmmlna Pool. Adloclnl 13
Acree MIL Aleo Avtfteblt. For
111.,. lnlormotlon Coli • Bill
Connell At Donna Summer.
AMity. 014-384-Sfn, 114--

West

11 Aavolvt (I

25HibrewtotW '
21 Buddin
_,

'

4 bod_, on povod
101d, bloamontlr born, gorogo,
pool, 3 0 At. 1, utllfto,
lloof aiding, chy wotor, clllorn,

vfnyt tieing, ,..tr:fglt'ltor, range,
chimney, kW:atecl on 1.32 acru,
noor Pomoroy ond hotpllol.
FruH lr- oolllr howe now buildings, SM-112·71'13 lor

Hvlllfl. 1 ond 2 •~
,_. opolt- II VlllHo
Manor
and
Alvlrtiat
Aportmonto In lllddloport. From
till. CIII_IM-IIZ.flll. EOH.

Tum your clutter into caah,
S§}l it the easy aoay... by phOne,
no need to leave your home.
&amp;ce your classified ad todtU!
15 word. or less, 3 dfUI,
3 nqpers, $5.40 paid in advance.

1----~----------2.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _-'''~-3. _ _ _ _ _ _~--""--

........ •,
,

4 ..,...-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
___
:-_
----65._
_-_-_
_-_
_-_

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

~--

45

Furnished

Rooms

Aoomolorronl·-ormonth.
811111:7 It lt20/mo. Clolllo Hotol.
114 4 ISIO.

7. __________~--------8.~--:-....;,_;...__

9. ______,..--_ _ __

10~-------,..-----~-

Cell alltr 2:00 p.m., 304·7'r.Jo.
IUI, . .eonJW.

12_____________

Allo lrallw opooo. AU '-"-ups.

ll.,_ .....__...,...._______

cutting

tx11•-11144.

COl--.

tltlnQ-.

~.

..

...

..11\...

·~·

82

you oould - · -

In the open today. How..er, do It In a

j

Plumbing ..

IAGmAMII(..... Jll 11M II) There

992-2156

Pt; Pleasant Bept.er'

675-1333
I

l

··-1

·,... ·j

........

- ~·,

'
_,
'

=

Pomeroy DaUy Seadnel

•

. ..,

dlpiOtMIIC - · whhOul holllllty.

. . . . (II8J 11...... 10) tl you ltavw a are lndloat10111 IIIII you might be more
lhoriiMIIICifY today, tlwe'u poeaiblll- IOierlttl lltd oonaicllrate ol -..1 _.
ty you 111111' 1'111111 a pMt1u1 PMt mt. qu4llntMQM today tllln you wtl be of
••• 11ta1 "-tee ltavw taught you a lee- ' , _ . Willi wttam you llhlre strong
1011 U. 11rat around.
emol_
loniiiiOnda.
•
CAIICIIR (..... 11-.luiJ Ill au.11ty - CUNCO... (Deo. . ......_.)llla- * 1 - Pl-.,1111 ovw quMt11y IOIOakoutforyoutOMIIn.. MIItoday,
today. tneiMd of -pang to dO too but d~'t dO 10 In·• _,...IMI ooukl
many t111ng1 -.nutt--..ly, 1ooua In on bNtM anothel In order 19 gel wft-' you
t1w ona or two projeeta that you can do - ·1
wtlfl.
AQU 'WI (...... :1111 ..... •1 Gl*d
LIO '(o!Uir 2ll .,• . , ......., ,ou're VOifNIII
lncllnallcM• today to
l)ql 1M IYPI 01 1*1011 whO lnaally In- • • tun
too wlalllly llld ..,_
lluenoad by tllltn; but today you might t111nga too lndl-otty. Tltia ooukl
Ill -..e till.. lOr yG\1. Make aul't _ IPill lniUble.

446-2342

tx12 Mrpot 110,
NO.
Solo on II ..,... In lloal. llotlohon wpoto.

~ ~ toclay ~ding

qullltled to do.lnetelld oleaW~g lime or

~

G·'Upoli• Dally Tribune

.

Alllll (llliall 21·Aprlltt) Ot!we wHI

hold you to

-.

...
.....
""'

oay.
TAUIIUI (April 1H1er :IIO)In order to ICOIII'IO IOat. 2e llao. Jll) II you're
expedite a manertodoy, you might at· d - t - Willi llltMihing In a ¥11'*1
tempt to do -lllng thll you .,. not relattonelltp. 11'1 belt to bring thlf1a• out

14------~------15~----------------HoUHhold
Goode

Box 91428, Clevlllnd, OH 44101-3428.
Be aura to llate your zodiac: lllgn.

any commltmenta you mue to tt..n. If
you promlll you'ro going to do IIGITIItiling. you Mil better mean what you

_ _...;,;__ __

lloopfng 11101111 whh cool!lng.

you think for 'yourMtf.
·,
,
WIQO (Ails. 21-lepl. 22) Strlvw to be
mothodlc.l end reellltlc In your com•
.-ctllllllllra today. There II 1 ehanoo
· p.1 ·might ldd youraelf Into thinking
tou're going tci be to get fiOI'Mo
)ltlng for nothing.
• a..RA (e.pt. 2ll Ool Jll) II you want to
mekeata--lmPNA~on on aiMI'IIbt_r ol tho oppoalta """*'today, don't
- o n too atrong. of hitting a
IIGme run, you're likely to fllt1!ta out.

Plec.' Aetro-Greph predictions tor tho .
YHrtthead bymlllllng$1.25ptuaalong,
MH«&lt;dl'liiMCI, ltllltped snvwlope to
Aetro-Graph, c/o this nevupoper, P.O.

13~------~~---

'

Slt.eto~Ge

,tPlleSefoiTf
,, T~e 8tST Of

are avalabte oo an equal

1251.

Hwaband &amp; Wlflt tttm looldng IO

AVON I All Araoo I Shll1oy home.

Spoora, 304-4'15-1429.

ttOUFS

171:-7117.

HolM

Soli A•on CoiiiM-446-3358.

SliTTER MV TOAST
CHONKV SUTTER!

FRANK AND ERNEST

UR TREE SERVICE. 1'~, I ;22t~O.~;;;;;M,di~~;;;;;;;;:
Trimm~ 1,.. Removal,
I Z bid,__, dlnlna raont,
Trimming. Froo EollmotHI I
-I'll,
oori-ftnilhod
317-1'15TAior 4p.m.
upotolro, goo - · COI'IIIII air,
Experienced tanner I toager w:tnYi alclng, NpiiCII'IIII'It wtnloOklng lor worlt on dill'• l&gt;iol, doWo, oorpotod, oxo &amp;
-Ions, 2014 .Joe.,_ Avo,
hoy loim or logging, coli d 304- 304-171-:!324 oftor UO Ill · F.

Wark tlrMir Corfto.
p!Mtd. 304-17M121.
Ha
1 1n n.....-.--~•
ng ~ Core
Hamo n ~ Cot1Mnblo, W.V,
larl!lllolfomolowho-•24hr.
10 our tNmen da ua growth onr N.A. are. State and tt..tth
tho toot 12 - h o WI lrl Ooportmont 1
~ hoYO
Unglon
"'""
laoollon.
II
you
ora
.....
ond
11101
of
LC, 014tno "" - "'""
ppro
thoi and wont to bo With lhl ' 1112·2711 - - llo~pm. No

_.pony. 1-8fl0.112-1351.

UP IN TI-lE
MORNING ..
SCMOOL DRIVES
ME CRAZ'I'...

)

tHI Sq. Ft., jl ocro lot, 211
W.nlod 7o ·~
·
P Com- 175-23oM
boliyofttlng
my homo. 1oo
- ..- willis, 2 complolo bilho, - , .
or In
304-e'IS-2510
""""· Uvlna,_,, sbdrm., wolll'
~

E:il

I HATE GETTING ,,.,..,,... NOW I I-lAVE TO

origin, or arrt lnle~lon to

opponuMy

7TrM
8 Wotcllalepl
I Bordeaux

I Placo
2 Mop obbr•
3 0.YOIW .
4 Sanlanco

cont1lnor
311 Author John

I don't think the stale does enough
for artists and· writers in the way of
subsidy and taz relief and so on. I
, mean, as an artist and a writer, I have
to be surrounded by beautiful things
and ~autlful people. And beautiful
people cost money.
No, I didn't write that - it was the
English humorist altd playwright Alan
Bennett. But I do agree with the first
sentence.
There have been numerous beautiful bridge plays through the years.
Many of these - like today's - are
simple in essence. If you find the critical defensive play hel'e, you can justifiably feel pleased with yourself.
Cover the East and South hands. Sit·
ling West, , you lead the heart king
against four spades, Declarer wins
wilh dummy's ace, plays a spade to his
ace and returns a low spade, East fol·
lowing with the two a~d 10. You cash
the Q-J of hearts, everyone following
suit. What should you lead now?
There is a natural inclination to
cash the club ace to defeat ibe game,
but th!S is demonstrably wrong.
Count South's tricks. He has five
spades, one heart and at most two dia·
monds. That's only eight. You must
make sure he doesn't win four dia·
mond tricks or two club tricks. But
you can afford to concede one club
trick. The correct defe11$e·is to lead a
low club at trick six. Whatever the lie
of the cards, you must defeat the
game.
Note finally that conceding a ruff.
and-discard is fatal with this layout.
Declarer discards a diamond from the
I~:::rland ruffs in hand. Tben one di·
I•
ruff in the dummy establishes

1o ad'olenise •any prelerenet,
11m1811on or dlscrfmlnatlon
based on race, colOr, i'811gl0n,
sex tamlllal Sllllus or natk»naa

)WI ·, _ , . lor ootvogo. 11421~1·~014~.:-:--:--.:.__ _

::Cllrl.. Cllrtotlon - n , non-•
.,......, woUld dM to alt wllh
Wlnlldlabw: Mtktuta,.mu.l ~~ wha Ia aick • nMda
bo t-llfo,ll4-ifiU377.
hltp, In your homo. Wll do

N060D'I' TOLD ME
LIFE WAS GOING TO
6E TI-llS l-IARD!

AU real estate acNertlslng In
l~s newspaper Is ~tad to
thO Fedtnll Fllr Housing Ad
01 11isa wtic:ll makes lllogol

Wanted to Do

18

attack
37 Taa

e Train obbr.

TQDAY

PEANUTS

You LOY! To Cook? An Eo· ·

OIIIIICKS.

DOWN

Cllaplol~

By PbilJip Alder

cling Conoopt In Polly Pion SoolcJng Ambit-

Amo11con Flpr or UonoL 304-

35 lncllolo

proliX

parte

5

ONnPPY TDIS

EAANOAEATSSI

~ In YoUr Arao To
Domonotroto- lth.9 Wanted 10 Buy
T-, No Dollverloo, No OUotoo,
Old oloctrto trolno w por1o. Dllorml• Your o.m Hn, NO

~Coup~­

A beautiful play,
yet simple

THE PAIIP£RED CH£F

Do

.Jl06S2

34 NaoaUYI

Opening lead: " K

AUNT SUKEY!!
WE GOT TO PlOW

Real Estale

Public Sate
&amp;Auction

C~:labbr.)

PARCELS:

::&amp;" ..':'"'.To--.,...~

:M-

8

llldar

85 Turn 11ta

Vulnerable: N~ither
Dealer: West

ODinlna Soon In Middle~
land; wooda. ,_.UN Md hUla.
Tho' 1o01t hm- 8•- 8el- Coli for good ,... 1-tM-513mil.y booll 1541, Athine.
.
'
7
Yard Sale!
loouoo o1 "*'Y ========:jNoodllvolnholp, """"· boord &amp; - . ~.- 1ar _.... 36
Real Estate
P
304-182·2403 oftor 7:00 odd' ........... •·
Wanted
Pll.
VENOINO ROUTE: 0o1 Alch
Middleport
No ~ocol 1100 To 1100 Dulak? No Wotl But W. Ho" A W.nlod To ~ luy On
-Usa Of 14 ,_To Lo• VICinity
- illol "'
I • Clood, - .... A - " .... 081 MualtiOidlng .... Club For
""
FI4A 11oft- - · own - . - ' f List. , . . . A-...., Aoi!P- CoN 114-246WO!'III Exi.21:S. Vond.
- Aftorl P.ll.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Por1·'llnlo l l y l l l l - AI Hair Cornmwclo~ Homo UnMo,
Hlf3plnhlg, Call Ill IR Moura lrom tiH.OO. LMn~ LoUona,
Rental s
Of N ~41 33SS.
At;c
rieL llonthtr peymente
loW .. $11.00. Coli toclo~J
NEW Color Cotolog, 1
•
' lla garago oolo rain or
1!17.
af to Rul-, ilo;;j; 10th,
121h, 13111, Ioiii of mloc.

omeroy,

+a65

...

-.me.

Clydo ._,Jr.
IE~R••
•~RE

"813

• AU753
• 10 7 2
tAKH

Or0¥1,

84 Splrtluol

21 Wlolltd dlld
· 31 Youn111tor

SOUTH

~~;1-==:::=::=:;====r:========:j
ft 111.aa Apple
1nwrt9 bot·
~-with 214
Aohton
Business
public
.......
1 ..,.
1o1o Iller·
wfth
lpflrautld
Hplla
.,...,...
~~==I-11__H..;:e..:lp;..W;.;.a.;;;nt.;...;:.ed:.__ 21 Opponunlty
owo loll- •-•Ilion.

Apptleonto Wonlod· 11 to · 20
11oun por wook, 14.110 pluo
tra•ol, llolor roodota, must
your awn tnnopartolion, coiii14-MII4St2 or olap In
ond ~k up an appln\lon .t
'.0. llllng Compon•- Roclno,
--..,...--~----1 0hlo
45771.
~

EAST

ltQ

(abbr.)

82- Piper

23 MOll
lnobrtllld
27 - ptua .ullro
28 Gluttony

.10 2

WEST

........

21 Rustle

t 10 92
.KQBS .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage .
Lost &amp; Found

,....,

• Aes

ond out bulldlntl!t _ID ..,.. In
llllao Counl,_ unoo, IID,OOO,
114-'li!MIIOI.
.

...
v·

Aftelrerto"eiiiYI,....,

- Corro
40 Boaebal' l ' 1 - IChOol
· Vincent
5 Predator'•
42 Hint
wlellttt
44 Chief alllfJ
II Y-anlmol 48 Blbla dlv.
12 Mormon
48 Clty-dwtler
Statl
' 50 Fland
13 Folllolngar
53 Subtroup
Guthrto
54 Jorfut•
14 se, Roman
••clamllion
11 Bel of lour
56 Clttmlcot
17 Grilli IIIIer
lllfiiX
11- UngUI
57 Leos liOPDr
"LAind
81 Thoatar il11n
0

I .arM, fvctd ln, 3 lA MObl..

-Shophonl &amp; 114
Viry Good WHh cottll,

•

The Daily

.""". ..
'I " .'\

H.

•

•

�Singer~

Beat of the.Bend...
I always like to start these cued by Reedsville fireman. Well,
columns a positive note so I'll Pineapple has delivered her calf.
mention tha1 the Ohio Department Both mother and baby are doing
Qi Highways recently awarded 40 well
·
bighway improvement projects
totaling $29. 1 million. Meigs
What with the' weather having
County isn't mentioned in any of been so bad, members of the
them. Now let me sec. Wasn't Women's· Auxiliary· at Veter.ans
Meits the county that was denied · Memorial Hospital are fulding it a
the prison location because the bit difficult to sell spring and E$highways were inadequate? Be not ereggs.
discouraged. Afler all even though
However, the group hasn't done
we wait and wait, we do know tha1 too badly '-ving sold three dozen
every"dog" has his day, don't we?
eggs for the Mgood egg ~" durin&amp; the first week. However, with a
A very good turn by Harold goal of20 dozen eggs to be sold for.
Raiqer, Route 143 resident who the fund.raiser the group is hoping
may have helped avoid a tragedy.
ll:te weather will get much better
During last week's flooding of and help get all the good eggs in
Route. 143 Harold happened 10 spot d)emood.
a motorist stalled in the high water.
This year there will be three
The motorist had gotten out of his white Easter 1rees put up ar the hoscar into the flood waters which had pital, one in the lobby, one in the .
quite a lot of current. Harold got cafeteria and one in the skilled
.into his truck and just as he f!l&amp;Ched nursing facility. Residents are
the motorist, the motorist fell and being asked to place an egg on one
the current threatened to carry him of the trees in recollllition ·of th~ir
towards a creek. Harold grabbed favorite "good egg". The pastel
his hand and pulled the moiOrist to eggs bedecked in ribbons will carry
safety. He then took the motorist the name of each "good egg" and
to his nearby home in his truck and flocked eggs will be given to the
a wrecker pulled the car from the honorees after Easter. Besides
water. So, a happy ending.
being a good fund raiset the trees
. !like those, don't you?
also provide attractive hospital decorations for the season.
The Meigs High School Class of
If you'd like to pia&lt;;!: an egg in
1978 is in the reunion mode and so tribute to your favorite "good egg"
a need for present addresses of on one of the trees just send the
class members. ,lf you graduated in ruime and $5 to the Women's Aux-.
1978 or know someone .who did iliary. 115 E. Memorial Drive.
please advise the following of the Pomeroy. Some of the people who
grad's cu.rrent address: ' Rhonda already have purchased eggs are
Hudson Hannahs, 511 Mulberry buying them in memory of loved
Heights, Pomeroy, 992-3119; Lisa ones while others are buying in
Prater Roush, 33178 Bailey Run tribute to friends and relatives.
The Auxiliary is such a great
Road, Pomeroy, 992-3486, ir Dave
Harris, 36100 Rock Springs Road, volunteer organi~alion and
deserves your support.
Pomeroy, 992-7569. Thanks.

on

I'm not going to mention thai a
week ago in the Lancaster-Columbus area regular unleaded gasoline
was selling for 93.9 cenis a gallon.
If !told you that, how in the world
could I expect you to keep smiling?

With DGA win, Eastwood's
favorite movies get respect
By JOHN HORN
AP Entertainment Writer
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.After being ignore(j by Oscar during his entire career, Clint Eastwood finds him·self the odds-on
favorite to win at least one Academy Award this year for "Unforgiven. ''
Eastwood picked up the prestigious Directors Guild of America
award Sarurday night for his Western, giving him the edge on the
competition when the Academy
Awards.are announced March 29.
In the 45-year history of the
director's award. only three winners haven't gone on to win the
best director Oscar.

Classes planned
Ballroom dancing, with insnucIOr Gerald Powell, will be off~
by the Middleport Arts ~ounc1l
beginning March 23. The mtermediate class will begin at 7:30 p.m.
with advanced class at 8:30p.m.
Texas style dancing classes will
begin March 24 with intermediate
class at 7:30 p.m. and advanced
class at 8:30 p.m.
The cost for each series is $7 per
couple per lesson.
For further information, or to
register. call Mary \'{ise at 9922675.

JEREMY SMITH

Second birthday
Jeremy Marshall Smith. son of
Wes ley and Doreen Smith,
Pomeroy, celebrated his second
birthday recently with a party at
Showbiz Pizza.
Attending were his grandparents Larry and Fona Smith, Harry,
Cindy and Christopher Pickens,
Scott Peterson, Chrissy Taylor,
Melissa, Tiffany and Casey Manley, Brandi Hicks, Kim, Brandi and
Xantha Smith, Laney and Luke
Dillard, Natasha Wise, Casey Win·
ters and Ruby Stewart. .
.
Others presenting gtfts were hiS
grandmother, Janet Smith, Middleport. and Damian Wise.

The film ·received nine nominations, tying it with "Howards
End." Eastwood was nominated
for best director, actor and as a pro·
ducerofa best picture.
Despite a prolifu: career including
Plains
"The"High
Outlaw
I oseyDrifter''
Wales," and
the
leather-faced actor with the gravelly voice had never received an
Oscar nomination before this year.
"I've made my mark with
Westerns," said Eastwood, who
became famous in 1958 on the TV
series "Rawhide." "It's ironic it
comes around with this kind of

DEAD AT 78 - Singer, bandlellder Billy Ecbtlne, shown In bls
Las Vegas home In 1992, died Monday at 78 ID Mootellore Hospita.I In Pittsburgh, Pa. Eckstlne, one of America's ·most popular
vocalists In the late 1940s, .lived in Las Vegas but went to Pittsburgh for treatment alter 5111fering a stroke last year. (AP pboto)

By CLAUDIA COATES
' Other . htts from h1s heyday
Associated Press Writer
!?eluded. "Fools Rush .~~:"
PmSBURGH - Billy Ecks·
Everything I Have Is Yours, A
tine was the ricb barilale on "Blue Cottage for Sale," "l Apologize,"
Moon " "Body and Soul" and "Prisoner of Love," "I Surrender,
Olher banach of me 1940s and •SOs. ?,ear•" "~r F';'Olish ~:' and
But his greater contribution may ,. Car~van. His IW:\ b1g hit ~as
wen be as a bandleader who helped Passmg Strangets, a duet w1th
· usher in modem jazz.
Vaughan:
. ,
· Eckslille, one of the first black
Ecksline was o~e of ~ca s
singers to become a crossover st:ar most pop~ar vocalists, but his mce ·
among white listeners, died Mon- barred h1m from freque~t TV
day at 78 after suffering a stroke appeara~ces . 'Yhen h.e .fmally
last summer
·
appeared m a maJor moVIe m 1953,
Before hiS sin$ing ~.he led MGM's "Skir~ Ahoy," he was
the Billy Eckstme Band, which 101~ not to let hiS eye~ res~ on ~e
.spanned the evolution of jazz from white actresses watchmg ~un sang
swing to bebop Over the years .the m the scene.
band featured ~uch greats as Miles
. "They. w~en't ready for ~!ack
Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie s1~ge~s smgmg l&lt;;~ve SO!'gs, • ~e
Parker, Sarah Vaughan, Dexter sa1d m a . 1984 1nte.ry1ew. It
.&gt;Gordon and Ari'Biakey.
sounds, ndiculous buill~ true. We
"Billy Eckstine's band was an weren t supposed to smg a~ut
important· place where musicians love, we were supposed to smg
·came together and found a leader about wirk or blues.''
who was willing to .absa"b some of
-.yilliam C~nce Eckstine grew
· these newer sounds," said Ed up 1n Washmgton,_ D .~ .• and
Berger, assistant director of the attend~d Howard U!'1ve~11y. He
Rutgers InstituteofJazz Studies.
:"'as hu~.d as vo,cahst w1th Earl
"He had the big band that was
'Fatha .Hmes Grand Terrace
the spawning ground of modem qrthestra m 19~9 "";',sang on tw~
jazz. Everybody was in,that band," hit b!~ recordings, ~~Uy,Jelly
said ·25-time Gram my winner ~d Stom:'Y Monday. He urg~
Quincy Jones.
Hines to h1re Vaughan, G11lesp1e
Musically ahead of its time, and~- .
.
Eckstine's band was .active only
Surv1vors mclu~e seven chtl&gt; from 1944 to J947. After that. he · dren, four: g~dchildren and one
took up crooning the roml!fltiC bal- great-grandchild..
lads that won him wider fame.
funellll w11l be

- - -· Names in the n_e ws--LOS ANGELES (AP) - ForMichael Jackson Productions
"He has a bump on the top of
mer "Diff'rent Strokes" st:ar Todd Inc. will give a share of its profits his head and a little cut under his
Bridges was arrested on suspicion
to Jackson's Heal The World Foun- chin, none of which required stitchofstabbing a tenant in his home.
dation, said Steve Chabre, a Jack- es," said Doris Berry, the former
"It was possibly a dispute over
son executive.
senatOr's secretary.
the rent not having been paid,"
"I believe passionately in the
Bob Goldwater struck his chest
Officer Roben Simpach said.
power of mass entertainment and on the steering wheel and also
have seen how, with positive mes- bruised an anlcle.
Bridges, 27, was booked for
investigation of attempted murder
sages, it can help alleviate the probGoldwater, a Republican, lost
and jailed without bail Sunday. At lems we face, including the suffer~
the 1964 presidential election to
the time, he was out on bail, await· ing of the world's childien," Jack- , Lyndon Johnson. He retired from
ing trial on drug and weapons son said in a stalelllent Monday.
the Senate in 1986.
charges.
•'MJP will enjoy a rare degree
David Joseph Kitchen, a 23- of independent integrity allowing
PORT ORANGE, Fla. (AP) JENNA COLLINS
year-old who had been renting a us to produce the kind of commer•
John Travolta's neighbors at an
11. T
•
[
bedroom at Bridges' house, said cia! films we believe can achieve
exclusive development for aviation 1 YeW
the'fonner child star stabbed him some good in this troubled world.;;
buffs say his plane is too big and
Michael and Rhonda Collins,
with a kitc.hen knife, Lt. Stella
MJP will release full-length . noisy.
. .
West Jefferson, announce·the birth
Mattson said.
films, starting this year .with a
The homeowners assoc18llon at of their fourth daughter, Jenna
Kitchen was in serious condition musical written by and starring ' spruce Cree- Fly-in filed a lawsuit Marie, on Jan. 26 at Grant Medical
Monday wit.J! a punctured lung, Jackson, Chabre said. It will Feb. 26 seeldng to .ban Travolta's Center.
Mattson said.
address inequality and prejudiCe, Gulfstream G-2 from using the
She weighed eight pounds and
Previously, .B(idges was acquit- Chabre said.
landing strip outside this city.just 11.4 ounces and was 20 inches
-south of Daytona Beach. A hearing .long.
ted of attempted murder in the
1989 shooting of a coc~e dealer
PHOENIX (AP)- Fonner U:S.
is set for Wednesday.
·
Paternal grandparents arc Mr.
, atadrugden.
Sen. Barry Goldwater suffered
and Mrs . George Collins,
__
minor injuries in an auto accide~
Reedsville.
.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - . . Goldwater, 84, was a passonger
· "This is a question of safety and .• Maternal grandparents nrc Mr.
Michael Jackson is forming an Friday in a car driven by his 82- welfare for the community," said and Mrs. Kenneth Fausnaugh,
independent film company dedicat- year-old brother, Bob. The vehitle the homeowners' lawyer, Stephen ,Reedsville, and Bill Phillips, West
ed to making uplifting movies.
hit a car braking ahead, police said. Ponder.
Jefferson.

arrzva

.------------'---:----------------------------=-=:::====-

Pick 3:
348
Pick 4:

4984

Buckeye 5:
2·16-23-29-35

Page4

The last pure Western to win a
best picture Oscar was 1931's

.. Cimarron." "Dances With

Wolves," which falls into a category all its own, won in 1991.
In addition to the best film
award, the guild presented several
other honors Saturday night.
The guild's D.W. . Griffith
Award for lifetime achievement
went to director Sidney Lumet,
whose films include "Network,"
"Dog Day Afternoon," .. Serpico"
and "Twelve Angry Men."
The television awards went to:
"Seinfeld," &lt;best comedy series ,
for the episode "The Contest,"
directed by Tom Cherones.
"Northern Exposure," best
ni$httime dramatic series fOf the
episode "Cicely," directed by Rob
Thompson.
\
"Wonderworks," best daytime
dramatic show for the episode
"You Must Remember This."
directed Helaine Head.
"The Tonight Show," best
musical-variety show, director
Bobby Quinn.
"Brother's Keeper," best documentary, directed by Joseph
Berlinger and Bruce Sinofslcy.
· "Another World," best daytime
serial, director Susan Strickler.
The pilot fOf "Picket Fences,"
dramatic specials, directed by Ron
Lagomanino.
.
Leslie Dektor won best com ~
mercia! director for a Philips Electronics spot.
The Career Achievement Award
for Sports Direction went to television sports innovator Harry Coyle.

a1
•

Vol. &lt;41, No. 220
Conrilhlld 1813

2 Sectlone, 14 P•1111• 25 -to
A Multlm-.118 Inc. ,._I'll*

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 10,1993

Work begins on Pomeroy
water line replacement
As part of the village of
Pomeroy's systematic replacement
of old water lines; workers began
Thursday' replacing a 4,000-foot
stretch of line from the Middlepon
corporation limits to the Marathon
service station on West Main
StreeL
This pat1icular stretch of water
line has been plagued in recerit
years by frequent breaks, Villa~e
Administrator John Anderson S8ld
Monday afternoon.
·
According to Anderson, 56'
breaks were reported in the last five
·'' , ....
years - an average of more than
011e break per month.
The old lines were consnucled
of pit cast iron pipe which is not
· very flexible or malleable, Anderson explained.
· The new line is made of extra;~,. &gt;• ;, ' 1:'
thick PVC pipe which is very flexible, Anderson said. The new pipe
also has a Slicker, corrosion-resistant inside surface.
'
Dave Holley Co~tstruction Company of Gallipolis; as the lowest
bidder in the project, is installing
the new Jines wbich include an
the current level or tundiDg, 6:J percent of the
' '
CONCERN #OR. LIBRARIES • Nearly
eight-inch
main line, a two-inch
slate Income ·tax, be retal!ted. Here Ruth Pow: .1,100 Meigs Llbra,r y pa..-ou hav' expreued
line and a new
residential
feeder
ers, librarian, displays the petitions wblcb .will
• ·their cencen about decrellled state funds for
fire
hydrant
with
a
separate' shutbe combined wllh others from Southeastern
: .llbrarla br slplna peOO.S wbkb wllltbbe ·pbloreoff
valve,
Anderson
said.
Ohio and taken to Columbus later this week by
• sented to Gov. Georae Volllovlcb ud e 0
a!l
OVAL (Obio Valley Area Librarietl) repre- · Issue II grant money is provid: Legislature. The proposed budaet of Gov.
ing 90 percent of the funding for
sentative.
·
: 'Volnovlch for bleaalua 1993 calls for so111e
the $130,000 project with the vil· reduction In state IIppert. Tile petlticJDS uk that
lage water depanmerit funding the
{emaining 10 percent, Anderson
said
~•And.ersM said · 1he project
ATTACHING FEEOEil LINE • WQ!'k.C!!l Pom,r.cu~s carre,lit
water tine replac:ement project sboald be COIIIpleled by May 15. Here,
should be completed lly May 15.
Doug Warden and Mllce Holley attadl a two-lndl residential feeder
Mean"'hile, West Main Street
line to an elRht-lnch· malo water line. Tbe new line wlll extend
under the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
approximately
4,000 feet from the Middleport corporatloa ll)le. (Senis
closecl
to
traffic
while
workers,
'
People
wanting
to
serve
~~.a
mittee·
chairman,
updated
the
By JIM PltBEMAN
install
the
new
water
lines.
tinel
photo
by
Jim
Freeman)
guardian must fim lill out an apph- chamber on the upcoming dinner·
Sfttbiel Newt Stair
ll'he neod for pardians was dis- cation for JU8rdianship, Ducic ~- dance to be held .March X1 at 6:30
cliiSCd at Tueaday's monthly meet- Acourthearingissetupand!he p.m.atRoyalOakResort.
Hairis said the committee is
,
· .
ing of the Meigs Coon~ &lt;;bamber judge may then appoint guardianofCommerte. A auardian IS a person legally in charge of a minot or
of the I members that reservations need to .
handled bfsome
the Meigs
of someone Incapable of handling activity described
County Probate/Juvenile Court.
be sent in as sooo·iiS possible.
their own affairs.
Ouest speaker Probate/Juvenile
The probate court handles
In addition, the chamber disCOLUMBUS Ohio (AP) _
The companies agreed with the ·theuseofphones.Aronoffsaidthat
Judge Roben Buck said there is a estateS, guardianships and marriage cussed the upcoming Phil Dirt and State Auditor Thoinas E. Ferguson ·auditor's findings, but it was not already has beencorrected.
greartr need for guardianship for licenses, Buck said. The court han· the Dozen slated for April 17 at 8 says a .lack of controls and confu- known if they sought reimburseRiffe said that if personal -calls
the elderly now than in the past dies approximately 600-70() cases p.m. at the Rutland Civic Center. ,
sion over responsibility led to more ment from those who made 1he are bemg m~ by House mem!Je~.
liec:ause people are living longer annually.
·
Paula Thacker, the chamber s than $300 000 in questionable tele- calls, Ferguson spokesman John "We are gomg to put a stop to 11.
and often haVe no family members
The Juvenile court haridles cases executive director, said the cham- phone bilis. in state agencies and Conley said.
Rep. Casey Jones, D-Toledo,
who can lib care of them.
involvmg ' crime committed by ber is working with the village of the Legislature.
• . Officials and law_makers were repaid $11,655 to the sta!e. Rep.
"I WOIIld like to aee more ~e juveniles along. with cases involv- Rutland by promoting the event.
Ferguson said Tuesday that four g1ven hsts of ques110nable calls Mark Malone, D-South Pomt, paid
come forward and offer thetr ser- ing harm to juveniles ~Yother filii!Other bulnea
state agencies totaled !11. least charged to their numbers and asked back $754.33 but left SS,10S worth
Vices as auanJians, •.Buck said. "It ily members, Buck Slid. Approxt- · Membership committee repre- $160,000 in questionable calls over to determine which were personal of questionable c;alls u~esolved.
does not lib • lot of lime."
mately 600-6SO cases are handled sentative Jeff Thornton said 36 the last several years, 'while legisla- and should not be charged to tbe Riffe SBld Malone s credit card was
People who 11QC6P1 t!JC ,..respot.....,ISi· in juvenile coon each year, Buclc members have yt:t to pay their dues torS made at least $140,000 in such state.
.
stolen. .
bility of suardianship often "find said.
·
'
and encouraged people to fmd new calls during the two-year period
Senators and representatives
. He S8ld Attorney General L:ee
the rewards to be great." Duct said.
Hl1hway COIIIIIlittee report
members. As incentive, Thornton ended June 30. .
reimbursed the state $22,579 for Ftsher ~ ~n.~ed to determine
Bill Bias, admlnlsuator at the
Highway committee member said the chamber offers fax and
Ferguson referred Tuesday to calls made from their offices or Mal?ne s hab1hty, bu~ that the
Pomeroy Nullling and Rehabilita- ' Horace Karr said District 10 of the notary services·lo ita members.
his audita of the departments of charged to their state credit cards, opin1on has IK!l beenhe. n:cealsolved•••
lion Center, mimxed Buck's senti- Ohio Department' of Transportation
New members introduced were taxation, mental health, hwnlll ser- Ferguson said.
~ff said IS
a~mtmg
•menll.
hopes 10 get an environmental Dan Arnold of Dan's clothing store vices and rehabilitation and correcHouse Speaker vern Riffe, D- the opm1on because. ~en. RIC~
Bw, explaining that he occa· impact study completed for U.S. in Middleport and ne~Vly appointed tions. He said bills from six other Wheelersburg, and Senate Presi- Schafrath: R-Loudonville. was list·
siolialiY 1J11e1 throuah the prt Ate 33177 connector road in nine Meigs County Audito{ Nancy agencies are being reviewed.
dent Stanley Aronoff~ R;Cinci~- e_d as havmg $8,326 worth ?f quescourt to obtain emergency months.
Campbell.
The largest amount uncovered nati, said they are revtewmg theu uonable calls, so~ of which may
&amp;IJirdilnlhip of ~C clients, said
Karr said ODOT wants to get
JoAnn Willford, new chamber so far, $110,000, was in the controls but that members are not have made ~y him.
..
one of the chief tasks for a the first _pan of the proJect. f~om secretary, · was introduced by Department bf .Taxation from aware they must pay when a call
Schafrath SBld he was advised of
liU8nlian is to serve as a signatory Meigs High School to FIVe Pomts, Chamber President Denny'Facemy- !985-1991. Ferguson said the state does not involve state business.
the problem 18 months ago and
lor mcdic81 services.
separated from the rest of the pro- er.
recovered $85,000 of that amount
Ferguson criticized the Senate paid the amount listed at that time.
"If anyone il willing (to serve 11 · ject so construction can begin earliApproximately 2S members from two telephone companies. for not having a written policy on
aaiwdian) I would be interested in er.
attended the meeting held at the
·
tafking
to
them," _Bias said.
.
.
.
;•

I

•J J.

'

'"' I ' '

-~f~~:iti~~~ts::~~:;:::!~Jli:g

.. .

~~ ~'he!t~~:~c:e~i~d~

o~:-:=:.:r'::=- ::~:.uraingandRehabilita-

h
Audi•t tu'rns up m·ore t a·n

$300,000 .•·D· quest••onable ca·IIs

d

. h
Portland man bel on c arges

:.Police arrest another bombing sus-pect the\~~f:~=~~~go~~~
, · : NEW YORK (AP) _Another
: man WILl arrested today in connec"tionwiththebombinaoftheWorld
· Tilde center the FIJI said It was
,..,., letond _;.,. directly ~ to
· jj; deYNIMi blast.
·. · The su~t's identity was not•

disclosed immediately, nor were
the specific charges that would be
brought.
,
A federal investigator who
spoice on condition of anonymi~
said the man was arrested m
Maplewood, N.J., and allegedly

. Local brt·e~s
·
II

.

·d
·:. Stolen car recovere

Tnvellng troubldon

In addition, We offer programs such as
We don't have to tell you that tax preparation
can be complicated. But we would like to.tell volunteer Income tax assistance, tax counsel·you where to find help. Just call our toll-free . ing for the eldedy and small business tax
hotline for answers to your tax questions.
education. Plus free forms and publlcatiohs,
services for the sight and hearing.impaired,
We also have free telephone service with
recorded tax information and automated
community outreach programs; even audiovisual materials for loan to groups.
refund information. Just calllele-lax at
1~29-44n. Or see
·
Doing ~ur taxes
your tax package for nuni- -'1'~ .l m.nal Revenue Sarvlce doesn't flave to be taxfng.
bers in your area.
fdl/11 Answers. Assistance. At 'l&amp;ur Setvlce. Just call •.

During the 12th century, many
French noblemen adapted a new life
style. lnDuenced by tbe code of ehival·
ry that wu spread by tbe Crusades,
they called ·themaelves troubadors,
and traveled to the leading courts -in
the region, singing and writing songs
in the vernacular. The movement
Oolirilhed in Provence during the 12th
and 13th centuries.
Proxima Centaurl, discovered in
1915 is tbe cloaeat star to Earth &lt;with
the ~xception of the aun) . II is U2.5
light·yeani away, a distance o£25 trll·
lion miles.

..

. .
.

i

'

Low tonight In 30o. RaJa.
· Thursday, hlgb In upper 3Cio..

•

shi~uck

fibn.''

---

·Ohio LQttery

Rider gains
NCAA berth
with y_ictory

bandleader Billy Eckstine dies _at 78.

· by Bob Hoeflich

You may remember about
"Pineapple" a cow owned by Kay
Epling of. the Reedsville area.
Pineapple almost feU over a cliff a
couple months back but was res-

Tuesday, March 9, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1o-The Dally Sentinel

was !nvolved in r!'nting th~ van
used m the devastallllg explos1on. .
FBI spokesman Joseph Vahqueue would 18y only that the suspect wa~ a ma~ arrested by ~BI
agents w~thout mcldent about 6.45
a.m. The man would ~ brought

towirds the cabin and observed the
two subjects he had seen walldng
counts of breaking and entering . by the school bus.
and one count of contributing ro the
The sheriff's office contacted
delinquency ofa minor follo~~ the bus driver and learned the idenincidents on Sharon Hollow R
tity of the suSpects. Sheriff SoulsTuesday afternoon.
_
by, and Deputies Robert Beegle
· Meigs County .SI1eriff James M.
Soulsby reported,that Sky FlyM,

~~!rt:aN~~=u':~:::diD
f!no1~::!C::·=~~~
One other man, Mohammed year-old Route 1 Ravenswood

; For the fourth time in lbout two month!!. a car stolen frOm the
: Colwnb~M~Circleville- hal been Jeeovcred in Pomeroy.
· Al:conlina to a report from the Pomeroy Police Department, a
' 1987 PQnllac O!llld Am lllpllltlldly IIIOicn froiD BettY Hurles, Cir.: cleville, Wll recovered Sunday lfOUIId 10:24 p;m. from Willis Hill
·
.
· Road- Spring Avenue.
:
The incidCnt is under investiption, a police spokeswoman S81d.
·

Salameh, bas been cblraed in the ' youth, also implicated in the
bombing. The man lmlled today alleged brealdng 1llld entering, was
allepdly was with Salameh when released to his parents pending a
he rented the van that authorities · bearing in Juvenile Coul1. Flynn's
claim wu used in the blast, the initial hearing will be In Meigs
sowco said. It w11 not c!e.r if his County Court.
role went beyond tbat, the investiAccording to the aheriff, a
glllor said.
buildiJia owned by Clarence ConA sec:and m.. bas been charged get ancfa cabin owned by ~ Dayton
with obslrUCtion IX justice
resident wero entered late Tueeday

:Deer-vehicle wrecks reported

Water oft' Thursday

·

: Two deer-vehicle wrecks- invelligated recently by deputies
: of the Meip County Sheriff's DlplnmenL
: Cllffonl Smith, S5, Racine, wu10111hbound oo Pine G1,0ve Road
• Monday n1aht when he lirw;k and lcilled a deer that ran onto the
: roadway. Moderate dama1e wu Usled Smith'• 1980 Chevrolet

:
:

pi~~well,ap lllb&amp;.IM1ed. Long Bottom, was eastbound on

Rytland Mayor Edward Martin
has aimoanced thai the ,.,... in the
Village of Rutland will be off
tomorrow (Tbutsday) from 8 Lni.

..

•••

Camblaecl OD pqe 3

'

·~,

Road residence and picke\1 up
Flynn and the Ravenswood youth,
They were talcen to the sheriff's;
office wbere both gave statementS:
regarding the incident.
::
,
•

Four returned to posts
by Meigs County Board

•
Four were rehired for their cur- needed basis.
Supt. John Riebel reported on;
rent staff positions.when the Meigs
County Board of Education met $3 000 received from the Martha·
H~lden Je!lnings Fund to cmy out:
Tuesday night at the board office.
Bob Hutlac and Chtlyl Crossan a "We Care" JXogram for the tei!Ch-;
were hired as school psychologista, en and some non-leaChing ..rr of·
Carol Brewer as work study coor- the Eastern Local School District in;
dinator, and Sheila Hashman as April.
:;
The superintendent updated.
early childhood teacher.
ar:IOlddeputiealhathehld
In other personnel llllltcrS, Gre- members on the GAP convenioa;
gory
Cooper was certified as a pro~! and the ~ prllplllt• .
observed two subjects waiting
school
bus driver for the Eastern wh1ch might filter some money:
along State Route 124 near the
Local
School
Disuict, the ~goa­ into the schoolsyslem. The treuur-~
Theiss Farm about tbe time the
er's report Wliil given and bllla weR&gt;
lion
of.
Katie
Gilmoro
11 111 &amp;ide in
school bus went by tbere. Coliaer
.:
hlld JOIICI to Sharon Hollow Road the Adult Buic Education Progranl approved for payment.
was accepted, and Mary Hawk was . AttendinB were Bill Quickel;;
employed to repllce her,111d Dimm . president: Jeff Harris, vice preal;:
Whilo there he heard a noise l'lom . Cowdery was hired as a substitute dent; Bob Burdeae. Hlrokl Lllltae,,
the hunter's cabin. He went teacher aide to be use on an as- and Dolum.. Reed, memben.

~'::!1 !~ttlcio~~~C:~~rA•~ :,..~ 1:?'en~'':':tc,l::
checking fo~ leaka, according to
Martin. '
near

L.--------;....________,____. ·
.

and Harry Lyons went to the Eaton

'

..
·,

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