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                  <text>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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·,

�:Commentary
•.

.

··

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.

Wedneldly, March 10,1993

Pllll• 2-ThiDallySentlnel
Pom~roy MiddlepOrt, Ohio:

,

OHIO Wcathe1
~unday, March 11

:~·----~----------------------~----~------~----------------------------------~~--~--~----~W~ed=~~-~ld~I¥~·~MI~nm~1~0,~1~99~~~·-

North Korea's illegal nuclear ·program

The Daily Sentinel
111 Conrt Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
· DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OJ THlt IIIEIGS-MASON AREA

'

.

!(OBERT L. WINGETI' ·
'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager ·

LETI'ERS OF O~ON are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All leiters are ~eel to editing and muSt be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published . Letters
should be in good ·taste. add:retsing issues, not personalities.

:Branstool turns
~Democrats around ·

,.

'

.· '
~·:.

By ROBERT E. MILLER
',
Associated Press Writer
. •- COLUMBUS - Chainnan Eugene Branstool will leave behind a sol. Yent and enthusiastic Ohio Democratic Party when he steps down later
this month.
· ., He is expected to take a job in the administration of President Clinton,
. :whorn he befriended last year during a campaign that enabled Democrats·
; 'tO carry Ohio in a presidential election for the ftrst time since 1976.
:&lt;•' When BranstooliOOk over Jan. 25, 1991, the oudook was bleak,
... The Democrats were $206,000 in debt.
. : Republi~an George Voinovich had' just moved in~o the governor's
•:office, which Democrat Richard Celeste liad occupied for eight years.
·
·,- , With the election of Voipovich and Secretary of State Bob Taft, the
OOP W&lt;&gt;n a majority on the stale Apportionment Board, which traditional' ,1y draws legislative districts to the advantage of the Jl8rlX that conb'Ois it
,.. . When Branstoolleaves later _this month, all bills will be paid and the
· .party expects to have at least $250,000 i~the bank.
-:; State, Sen. Robert Burch of Dover last week announced his candidacy
...Cor governor, becoming the fmt of several Democrats who arc expected
~ ..to challenge Voinovich next year.
· Celeste, Treasurer Mary Ellen Withrow, Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
.•and Attorney General Lee Fisher rrre testing the waters.
•• · The Apportionment Board drew new legislative distritts that were used
. ·in November and Republicans gained eight House seats.
. But they fell short of toppling the Democratic majority, which now is
• .$3-46 and lost a seat in the Senate, where their edge slipped to 20-1~.
~·- , Branstool, a frrrmer, said many I'OOPie deserve ctedit for' the party's
.strength, including Clinton who inspired DemocraiS throughout the st;lte.
"We had an outstanding candidate for president," he said.
.-. Still, Branstool gets high marks from most Democrats as a hard-work·
~.,ing, amiable arbiter who maintained neutrality among potentially divisive
factions and kept them headed in the same dim:tion.
~ · He has waited for weeks to hear about a job in Washington but his wait
•.:may be nearly over.
-· Branstool talked to Clinton when the president was in ChiUicothe for a
.-recent town meeting.
.
· , · "He gave me a hug, and asked me when I was coming down to Washington to join them," he said.
: •·. He told the president he is ready.
.
.
•. ·If he should not get an ,appointment, he says he will step down as
. 1:hainnan anyway. He S!lid h~ could return to his farm in U\ica and be
· -content, free of rough-and-tumble politics. Clinton visited Utica with
· Bninstool shortly after the Democratic National Convention.
.
Branstool, a fonner longtime state lawmaker, said be woUld relish an
_.opponunity for national service- "even a seed inspector."
.
•• Joking with a reporter, he pointed an index finger into a cupped hand
• -and said, "I can see me standing there saying, 'uh huh, there's a bad
: ;(me'."

..
"

Berryls World

....
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•'

,.

"I'm afraid you have the wrong number. Th is
is NOT Rush Limbaugh."

·'

Accu-Weather• forecast for

WASHINGTON - The most
serious threat to nuclear non-proliferation is not Iraq's Saddam Hussein or Iran's Hashemi Rafsanjani,
whose nuclear programs in the
Middle East are well-publicized.
It' s Kim Chong II, son of North
Korean leader Kim II Sung, and
he's well on his way to reaching
his goal of building a nuclear
weapon.
.
When we ftrsl wrote about Kim
Chong II last Mrrrch, speculation
centered around when he would
finally take over his father's tide as
" supreme commander" of Nonh
Korea. The 80-year-old Kim II
Sung is reportedly gravely iU, and
his 50-year-old son has been runnin~ the day-to-day operations of
government for at least the past
year. As' the commander in chief of
the' armed forces, Kim Chong II,
who North Koreans arc taught to
refer to as the "Dear beader," is
also reportedly leading his countrY's quest for a nuclerrr bomb.
The news about Kim Chong n is
all bad. While his father has ruled
Nonh Korea with an iron fist for
more than 40 years, the son has
lived a life of ISOlation and ignorance. He has never met a foreign

UT.

:.:. cy."
~:

l#~ber.forinstance,the

:~cdeial CommJmieations Cornrnis-

;:sion imposed a $600,000 fine on
1:the Infinity Broadcaslinf Corp. for
:'the exultandy "indecent ' language
•(of Howard Stern, who is beard on
:•rour of Infinity's radio stations.
;!ne FCC defines "indecency" as
•: "language that describes sexual
t•and excretory activities and organs
~=In patently offensive terms." ·

..••.

some, if not many, of the innumerable SubcUltures that comprise this
nation."
· As for the endangered children,
Brennan noted that the "court, for
the flfSt ~c. allJ:~ goy~ to
1 gauung access
prevent mmors
to materials that are not obscene
and arc therefore protected, as to
CIS, " One can look through all the
various FCC rulin$s that say 'inde- them."
"Indecency" on the airwaves
cency' has been v:ol&amp;ted and there
is no consistent, coherent pattern has become the FCC's main
which would permit a station to weapon against broadcasteiS. The
know in the future whether it has Fairness Doctrine used to chill
some broadcasters from programbroken the rule or noL"
This "indecency" criterion for ming anything controversial for
government punishment of speech fear of the FCC's unpredictable
was validated by the Supreme definition of ''fairness.' • But that
Court in 1978 (FCC v. Pacifica docaine was based on the scan:ity
Foundation). In one of his most bit- principle - . there being so few
ing dissents, Justice William Bren- chan.nels that government had to
nan, speakin$ of "the fragile IICRSi- provtde access for diverse Views.
bilities" of hiS brethren, added:
But now there isn't a hamlet in the
''It is only an acute ethnocentric nation that doesn't have more radio
myopia that enllbles the court to and television channelS than news·
awrove the censorship of commu- papers.
nications solely because of the
In 198S, the FCC itself declared
words they contain. The words the Fairness Doctrine in violation
found so unpalatable may be the of the First' Amendment, and it was
stuff of everyday conversations in laid aside in 1987. But there areBu~

according to Timothy Dyk,
a Washin81!Jn attorney spccializmg
10 defendmg - and trying to
expand - the rights of broadcast-

NatHentoff
.

••

employees has become a serious
drain on our nation's resources and
our own pocketbQoks. The 1992
estimate for U.S. health crrre spend-

Ted Stricklan'd ·
ing surpasses $800 billion, with 13
percent of the ~ national product (GNP) g(nng to health care
expenditures.
'
Our business environment is
also adversely affected, with onethird of small businesses dropping
their employee's insurance coverage each year, largely because they
can no longer carry the financial
burden. What do these figures
mean for the people of southern
Ohio? They represent a 147
increase in average family health
care spending.
A significant-part 9f the cost
problem is associated with tremendous waste in the health crrre industry. Americans pay millions of dollars for duplicate administrative
paperwork and unnecessary testing
and treatment desipted to protect
doctors from overzealous malpractice lawyers. We have also seen a
dramatic increase in pharmaceutical prices and ~ita! costs.
While we Ohtoans watch our
costs go up. we also WalCh our cov·
erage shnnk. Nationwide surveys
have found that nearly half of all

Amertcans believe they would be
unable to afford good health care if
they became critically ill.
Insurance companies have creat·
ed new ways to deny ·~le coverage. An example of thts is the "preexisting condition." Ohioans who
fall under this rrrbitrarily determined condition may fmd tt impossible to obtain coverage at all, and
if they do fmd covernge, they will
likely have to pay more.for iL '
Many people don't know that 81
million Americans below the age
of 6S have medical problems for
which insarance companies ofton
deny coverage or charge higher
premiums. Often, you have to get
sick before the insurance companies decide to tell you that you rrre
not covered for certain ailments.
Yet another unfortunate result of
our dysfunctional bcalth care system is "job lock." Job ·lock
describes wl)at working men and
women face when they are for~
to stay in a particular job for fear 9f
losing their health care coverage.
While bca1th care COSIS 11tC skyrocketing; serious gaps still exist m

access.

· One out of every seven Amencans is living without health iilsurance and our system of health care
has left more than 37 million
Americans with no .:cess to health

care.

For the sixth Congressional District, this means 115,764 people

live ·without health care. Nearly
44,000, or 37 percent of the uninsured in our 14 County region, arc
children.
These numbers are staggering.
Is health care only necessary for
those who can afford it?
I think not.
It's time to make access to
health care a basic right of citizenship rather than a luxury of the
privileged. We can no longer allow
southern Ohio's children to go
without quality health care.
· · These ate Just some of the challenges we face in ref9rming our
health care system. A Oawed industry, limited access, eacalalins cost
and the need to maintain quality all
form the crux pf the argument f~
reform.
Over the next several months, I
intend to discusl bolh the problems
and the potential aolutioos to this
national crisis. It will take a con·
sensus of ideas to bribll about
change. For this reason, I welcome
your comments IIKI suaeltiona. At
times you may not like what you
read or heat, but this should not
k~ep you from letting me know
your vieWs.
Please send ~our letters to my
acldlaa In WashingtOD, D.C~ 1429
Longworth House Office Buildi
WaihinJIOII DC 20S1S; or call
toll free number: 1-800-777-1833.1
look forward to hearing from you.

•lcolumbus!34•

•

Weather
· Sotith·Cenlrji) Olilo
.. Tonight,' rain likely early with
flurries likely late. Turning colder
'Witb a low near 30. Chance of pre, ~ipitation is 70 percent Tharsday. ·
cloudy with a chance of flurries.
High m the !JPper 30s. Chance of

·Ic
BI d
. ,Y an

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,,
I

Charles Ohlinger, Rutland, Ohio;
four .sons and daughters-in-law,
" Harold and Lita Bland, West
· Columbia, Homer and Virginia
Bland, West Columbia, Marvin
(Gene) and Sally Bland, West
Columbia, Norman and Carol
Bland, .Buffalo; ~ grandchildren,
74 great-gr1!11dchildren, and 3S
great-great-grandchildren.
. 'Qie funeral wiU be 1 p.m.
Thunday, 8l the FogleaOOg Funeral
Home, wi!b the Rev. George Hoschrrr officiating. Burial will be in
the Suncrclt Cemetery, Point
Pleasant
Grandsons . will serve as
pallbearers. Friends may call at the
funeral home Wedneaday, 6 to 9
p.m.

Grand jury indicts two
·ill~ kid._·apping, slaying·
.,

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
A Kanawha County grand jury
indicted two men in the shooting
..and burning death of a St. Albans
,man.
Donald E. Good Jr. and Freddie
Joe Duncan oit Tuesday were
chrrrged with kidnapping and murde{ in the slaying of Terry Kidd,
-22.
:. Police said Duncan, 20, aDeged:Jy assisted Good in the slaying last
,. NQvember.
·. Police said Kidd was shot in his
_truck and the pair drove it back to
-~

.

still senators - among them, ominously declared that if any containing _lyrics even remotely
Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., and John .- licensee did not carefully listen to dealing with politics, sex, 111\d.to a
·
DanfCI'th, R-Mo. - wbo ate intent -. and understand - all the lyrics minor degree; ccoloiY "
.
m
a
10ng
before
a
recordin!l
was
The thougltt ~Ofi~e have n~t
on codifying this repressive doeplayed, this lapse of responsibility IIOIIC away. FCC mterim chairmaD
trine in the current session.
It is difficult for some public would "raise ... a serious question lames Quello tells Broadcasting
interest organizations 81' well as as to whether contirtued operation mapzine: "We wi1J continue indeof the station is in the public inter- cency enforcement. We have to
legislators to undeiStand William est."
.
remember t1tat the Gores are botll
0. Douglas' fcrrr of government
Instantly - as law professor llt'OnJ 00 ~y... Thil is how
conb'Ol over speech in any form of
communication and so, recently, Lucas Powe notes in "American FintAmenclmeat~7 ismade• .' .
after the 8th Circuit Court of Broadc~ and the First AmendNat Heatolf 1 a aatlonallt
• Appeals agreed that the Fairness ment" (Untv~rsity of California renowned IDtltorlfJ Ill lbe First
Preas) - Dllli Billion eliminated all Ame•dment and tile reit or thi
Doctrine should indeed be intmed
Bob
Dylan aongs because manage- Bill or Rllhll a•d a syadlcat~
a number of th~se liberal censor~ :
ment
coUldn~t figure out what the writer rcir Newspa~r Enterpr.
have petitioned for arcbearing.
lyrics
meant, and anotlier or~ered Association.
·
The president can gready help
"an
immediate
ban
on
all
music
take brolidcasten out of thell second-~lau · ltatus through his
appomtments to the FC:C. If he
selec!• people who bc:lreve that
Amen~ do not requu-e government Jlliclance as to what they ,can
·
B7 Tbe Alloc:lllted Pre.
·
:
hear a~d lee, th~ president will
Today is Wedneaday, March 10, die 69di day of 1993. There 11e 296
days left in the year.
.
have g1ven the Ftrst Amendment
new f~.
today' a Hilhlilht in Hi
:
;
I 111M m bm!!Cicalting f~ nearly
On Mlrch JCJ, lll76,
BeD made wha was, in effect,
10 yean, 811!' the l'ea! of the FCC
the first telephone call. His assistant, locatod in an adjoining fOCllli ill
was pervastve. Aa tt 11111 some
Boston, heard Bell's voice over the experimental device say to him "Mr:
· ·
·
.
'. :
years ago when the commission Wataon, cotne hete._l want you.~·

I

_

: Icy M. Bland, 100 of Welt
Columbia, died Monday Mardi 8
1993, in Pleuant Valley HCJIP.ital. '
' Born June 7, U!n, in Mason
County, sbe was a daughter of the
.late Doc Bass and Ida (EdWa'ds)
·ilass. Sbe was , also pniceded in
death by 11cr husband, Tames Walter
:Bland; three .sisters, Mabell
' )ollnson Clara VanMeter Liz
· Hargraves; two brothers, HarTy and
.'Oscar Bass! and two sons, Jobnny
''and 01atb Bland.
. She ~~~ended the Peniel Church.
' : Surviving are thR:e daughters
· 'and 110111-in-law, Chloris and Olenn
Marr, Letlrt, Lucille and Charles
~ -Dider, West Columbia,·Opal and
•••

Marietta, Ohio, where they allegedly burned the truck and Kidd' s
body.
Kidd and Good worked as security guards at an Elkview energy
company, authorities said
Good, 33, and Kidd's half sisttz,
Brenda Good, had recently ended a
relaiionship prior to the death,
police said.
Kidd was living with the woman
at the time, police said.
The two are scheduled to appear
in court April 9.

'

:~House committee

OKs
:open-meetings bill

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
committee has approved a
,.bill that would require _the 1:-egisla:.lUI!! to llold open meetmgs m most
'~House

~ . cases. ~

: The bill could go to the- full
•"House today for a vote: It also
•.,would have to be go through the
: Senate before becoming law.
:' The bill would create a new sec,·iion of the state's "sunshine law."
:''rite
law requires all public policy·
1
: rn&amp;Ptg bodlea 10 allow the public
: to a'llciid meetings, except in sever·
a1 specified circumstances. A meet-

TI1e Daily Sentinel

.

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snow is 40 percenL
Extended forecast:
Friday through Slinday:
Friday. faii'. LowS 15-20. Highs
2S-35. Saturday and Sunday, a
chance of snow. Lows lS-20.
Highs in the 20s.

:-· -----·Area deaths--

•

~Graham

'

OtQ93 i\ccu Weather, lne.

I .

Today in ,history

12 fined in
•
Pomeroy
court
•

Slmy Pl. Cloudy Cloudy

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I

W. VA.

::y

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•

IND.

crisis ·firslhan~d

.Clinton, the Gores and Howard Stern
Thirty years ago, Supreme
Court Justice William 0 . Douglas
declared, in his usual uncompromisin¥ manner, ." TV and radio
stand m the same protected position under the Fir$t Amendment as
do newspapers and magazines.''
_ Douglas was very much in the
·minority on the court and among
the public. Since the Radio Act or
1927, the content of broadcasting
•:has been regulated "in the public
;- in1erest" - for example, to assure
:: fair presentation of both sides of
•: controversial issues. And to pre:~ vent listeners l!lld view~- espe:•cially unsupervised children •: from being assaulted by •'indecen-

•• •

.

During the Week of January
third, I had two significant experi.
ences, First, I took tbe oath of
office to represent the people of
southern Ohio in the U.S. House of
Representatives: second, I had a
gallstone attack.
This second event served as a
remarkable reminder of why I
wanted to be in Congress in the
first place - to help reform the
American health care system.
The bill for my' gallsto!Je
surgery and an eight-day stsy in the .
hospital came to $22,SOO. One ·of ·
my earliest campaign commitments
was not to accept the generous
health insurance package that is
available to every me.mber of
Congress. Fortunately, on my
income, I am able to afford individual health insurance health insurance for both Frances and myself.
But even with my health insurance,
I still had to pay a deductible of .
$2,500.'That's more than .most
Ohioans can afford to pay.
America's health care system is
in a serious crisis, Southern Ohio's
working families, and families
across this nation, have lived with
this crisis for a decade. They have
had to make serious choices
between putting food on the dinner
table or purchasing cosdy medical
care for their families.
The cost of providing care for
our families, ourselves and our

By The Associated Press
Northwest winds will spread
cooler air across Ohio tonight.
Snow wiU continue over much of
nonhem and central Ohio. Additional accumulations are likely.
Rain will fall over the south early
tonight before changing to flurries.
Lows wiU be in the 20s.
Snow is likely over northeast
Ohio on Thursday. Skies will be
cloudy elsewhere with scattered
flurries. Highs .Thursday should

IToledoI 33" I

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

Congressman meets health ear~

conditions

•

diplomat, and has never grililtJd In national security analysll, North
interview to a joumilisL The only Korea emer~es as perhaps the signed the Nuclear Noo·Prolifera.
known trips be has made out of wont iniUIIBiional pariah oo prolif· tioo Treaty, nobodY knows for sun:
North Korea were two brief Visiis cration matters. The pioblem is not if North Korea it_telling tile trut~
that North Korea is going to devel· about its nuclerrr program. Somo
op a nuclear weapon and auaclc the sources expect the IAEA 10 take uJI .
United States, it's that NCI'th Korea the malta' with the United Nations
is willing to sell its military hard· Security Council in the near future:
ware to just about anyone. This If North Korea cootinues to refu~
total lack of standards puts North international demands, it could
Korea in a class by itself among the escalate to the point of an embargo;
world's outlaw regimes. Some of one source pmlicts.
•
best
customers
arc
countries
their
Tile
ptospc..-t'
for
incleased
interr
to China.
North Korea's nuclear ambitions like Syria and Iran, which have his- national intervention in Nort~
Korea's weapons development is
have Westein intelligellce analysts tories of stale-sponsored ~gravely concerned. With only one
James Woolsey, who was heightened by the west's embar:
superpower left after the collapse recendy confumed as CIA director, rassmcnt over Iraq. Before Iraq
of the Soviet Unioo, the No. I issue . echoed these sailie sentiments dur- invaded Kuwait, thelAEA cstimat·
confronting the national security ing his confirmation hearings ed Iraq had one nuclerrr facility an4
establishment is proliferation. On before the Senate Governmental was 11 1c:ast five years ·awar f!OIII
this issue, no country has a worse Affairs Canmittce.
developing a bomb. Wilen wpec.
track record than North Korea.
"North Korea is probabl)' our tors took a cl*r look after th~
"North Korea appean to be a most grave current concern," Gulf War, they found Irsq bad 11
· higllly unstable government, highly Woolsey 111id, adding that they least five installations worldDJ til
repressive, and it's run by llbllleone might already have-·all the neces- develOp nuclear weapona and "'as
whose sanity is seriously in doubt sary compqnenu for a nuclear only about one yw away.
with a propensity to UJC weapons bomb.
. Lately, North Korea bas been
for destructiVe purposes," says
pulling
O.ut. all the stops. Last
Further complicating-the issue is
Brad Roberts, a researeb fellow North Koral's persistent refusal to December, Russian special forces
with the Center for 'Strategic and allow the International Atomic stonned a North Korea-bound ,ic!t
Internationals~ a Washington Encqy Agency to inspect the facil· as it was about to leave Moscow
think tank.
ities where intelligence agencies and apprehended 36 senior
·From interviews with several suspect nuclear arms are 1being weapons scientists. The scientists
were allegedly being offered
between $1,SOO and $3,000 per
month - a fortune by Russtan
s~ -:- to lend !hell expertise
to North Korea's nuclear ambi·
tions. 'I'h()ugh the Russian government has· promised .to keep close
tabs on its nuclear researchers,
many of wbQm have experienced a
drastic drop in living standards
since the collapse of the Soviet
Union, it remains a major western
.
worry that some of these liighly
trained minds will sell their talents
to the highest bidder.
.
Experts add that the problem
with a nuclerrr-rrrmed North Korea
is twofold. F'rit, there is the danaer
of proliferatiol\ of these WC&amp;JIO!!S
among terroristS, :which C0!114 then
possibly be smuggled into the United States. The second is that if
North Korea develops nuclear
capability, it could set olf a chain
reaction that would spread to South
Korea, and perhaps eventually
Japan,. A nuclear-armed East Asia
is something rto western intelligence analyst wants to see.
'
Jack Anderson and Michael
.
Blnsteln are writers ror United
l1iJMU
Feature Syndicate, Inc. .

.

_.....,.

Cold temperatures, flurries return to Ohio

MicH.

.
built. Though N:orth Korea ha~

(UIIP81li-IIO)

Published

tven-

~tROmoon .

Mcmday

thi'OQih Friday. 111 Court. St. , ParMroy,

Ohio by tile Ohio Volley Publiohint&lt;
CompmyiMalti...tia Inc.. P~.
. Ohio .tri769, Ph. 982-2158. 8ocond claa
pMlap pAid at Poi no• oy, Ohio.

Pllln'MAIITER: Send odd,_ cho111,;, to
The D•»r .Sontint1, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, OHio 43189.
ltJII8CIIUPTION lltATU
By Curler or Motor Jlo•le
One Weok.. ,.... .. ... .. ...................... ..... ... l.60
One M..,U, .. ..............- .......,.............. I&amp;.tlfi
One Veat, ........ .. ... ... ,..... ............... _,.,,U3.20
. · StNGU: COPY

.

PHICJ:

Dolly. ...... :... , ...................... .. .... ..... ill! Cento
Suhocdbonl nc&amp; dollrt.., to ..y lho coni• rMY remit in ad\*tlnce direct &amp;o Tho

-·-·
O.tly

Smli~K~:I

on • l.hme, lrix or 12

.....U. booio. Cmdit will bo IJI..n ,.,..,.

No 11Ubecription1 by I'Ni1 pcnnilted in
. , . . where homo el""t!T Mrrice il
•vaiiAble.

Mall 8•btrortpUont
lftlf. . llol.. Co•nty
. (3 - ..................... .. .................. I:IJ.8A
:16 w............................................... l43.16
52

w-.. . .... . . . . . ... . . .

$84.76

O...Wo Molp Cotonl)r
t3 Wcoko...................... ............,....... l23 .40
26 Wcoko....... ,.............. ........... ......... l46.110
~2 Wcoko......... :............ .................... M8.40

,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,(

ing is a majority of members conducting busmess in one place.
The Legislature exempted itself
when it enacted the law in 1975,
although House and Senate floor
sessions and most committee meet·
ings have been open to the poblic
anyway.
The bill that the House Ethics
and Standards Commiitee passed SI on Tuesday would require that all
legislative meetings be open,
including_House-Senate conference
committees, which have been
closed during critical budget discussions.
.·
But the Ohio ConstitutiQn,
which overrides state law, allows
the meetings to be closed by a vote
of two-thirds of the members presenL

Stocks

Twelve people were fined and
12 others forfeited bond in this
weck'.s court of Pomeroy Mayor
Bruce Reed.
Fined were Joseph Roush,
Pomeroy, $63 plus costs, failure to
comply; John Blake, Middleport,
$63 plus costs, failure to comply:
Gary Arnold, Pomeroy, $163 plus
costs;·reckless operation, $63 plus
costs, failure to control; Kevin D.
Thoma, Rutland, $20 plus costs,
expired plates; Mary Sheets,
Pomeroy, $50 plus costs, driving
·under suspension; Steven Laudermilt, Middleport, $313 plus costs,
desuuction of property, $340 restitution to Smitty's Bar;
Ernest Greene, Racine, $375
plus costs, two months jail suspended, 90 day operator's license
·suspension, driving under the influence;· Mark Rathburn, Middleport,
$63 plus costs, failure to comply;
John Dprfet, Rutland, $500 -plus
costs, fleeing and eluding, $63 plus
costs, squealing tires, $163 plus
costs, six months opmii.Or'i license
suspension, reckfess operation;
Timothy Powell, Racine, $88 plus
costs, open container in ·a motor
vehicle; Gwen Welch, Pomeroy,
fine reduced from $230 to six
months probation for assault;
Donna Knapp, Syracuse, fine
reduced from $220 to six months .
probation for assaUlt.
·
Forfeited bonds were Kenneth
Green, AtheiJs, four days jail, $153,
failure to comply; Keith Peters,
Hamden, $61, speed; Horn~ Brick·
les, Pomeroy, $60, improper back·
ing; Romana Hawk, Pomeroy, $63,
speed; Dwight Sturgeon, Racine,
$63, speed; Richard Murphy,
Albany; $68, speed; Alton C. Price,
Sterling, $130, public intoxication;
Keith McGuire, Gallipolis, $60,
stop sign violation; Larry Weese
Jr., R'avenswood, $69, speed;
Michael Stanley, Athens, $80, consuming alcohol in a motor vehicle;
To!'I'!'Y•Penningrpn. Jr., Dexter, ..
$70, speed; Helen Holter, Racine;
$20, expired plates.
·

Rutland Court news
Nine were fined in speeding
charges when they appeared recently in the court of Rutland Mayor
Edward Martin.
Fined on the charge were Brian
D. Bolden,.Hamden, $58; Melissa
Snyder, Pomeroy, $SO; David
Bradford, Procto~ville, $60;
William Purcell, Parlccrsburg, $61;
Wanda S. Jordan, Cheshire, $49;
Janis Schmoll, Pataslda, $S4; Terry
Stobart, Pomeroy, $SO; William
Green, P~_&gt;meroy, $50, and Robin
Duncan F1fe, $49.
Others fined in the court were
Michael Lam ben, Rutland, $75,
expired tags; Carl Moore, Albany,
$75, expired tags; Belinda Roush,
Dexter, $150, expired tags and
license.

LI·vestock
report.

COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) · Direct livestock.prices and receipts
at selected buying pOints Wednesday by the Ohio Department of
Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: fully steady;
demand moderate to good.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs., country
points, 43. 7S-44.75, a few early
44.50; plants 44.75-45.75, a few
46.75.
U.S. 1-3, 230·260 lbs., country
points, 42.50-44.00.
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lbs., country
points, 41.50-43.00.
Receipts Tuesday 8,300. Estimated receipts Wednesday 8,000.
Prices frOm The Producers LivestQ\:k Association:
,
Catde: steady to 2.00 higbcr.
Slaughter steers: choice 75.0082.75; select 68.00-7S.50.
.
Slaughter heifeJS: choice 73.()().
82.50; select 66.00-75.SO.
Cows: 2.00 to 2.50 lower: all
cows 57.25 and down.
Bulls: Steady 10 1.00 higher; all
bulls 67.00 and·down.
Feeder caule: 2.00 higher.
·Yearling steers 65.00-78.00;
yearling heifers 60.()().74.00.
Calves 'steers 70.00-109.00;
calves heifers 6S.Q0.91.00.
Veal calves: steady; choice
120.00 and down.
· Sheep and lambs: stead)' to 2.00
higher; choice wools 70.00-83.00;
· choice .clips, no report; feeder
lambl BS.OO and down: old sheep
39.00anddown.
•·

Am E1e Power.................... 36 1/8
Ashland Oil.....,................. .28 3/4
AT8t:T..........................'::.....58 118
Bank One. ..........................53 118
Bob Evans ......................... 18
Charming Shop.................. l4 718
Chmp Indultries.................ll
City Holdlng. .....................21 314
Federal ~1 .................... 18 112
Goodre- T.lR ..................74
Key Centurion ......... :.:.......22 718
l..andl BrM1 •••:......................25 114
Umiellnc....................... 2S lfl
...ultimedl,l Inc..................33 114
Poini Baar~.................... l3 1/1.
Ru hiMitlnL ..................5/16
Re1ianco Bleetric................22 lfl
Robbina&amp;Mym .............:..2o
Shoney'IIIK:..............,.......2.5 lJ8
Star Bll'lk ........................... 37
Wencly Int•L......................13 Ill
"onbinaton IDd. ...............23 1/l
Stock report• are t•e 10:30
VETERANS MEMORIAL
a.m. quote• , provided b7
Tuesday
admissions • Carole
Kemper Securltltl, Inc., o
C~.
Reedsville
.
Gall pol II.
Tuesday discharges - None.

Hospital news

I'

range from around 30 in the north
to the upper 30s ~ the frrr !IOOth. .
The record h:gh on thiS date m
Columbus was ?1 in 1973. The ·
record low was 2 m 1984.
S~nset tonight at at 6:33 p.m.
SuDriSe Thursday at 6:49 a.m.
Around the nation
Snow fell in the nation 's midsection this morning as a storm
pushed toward the Northeast. '
!'food-causing ice jams worsened
m Nebraska.
,
·
Winter storm warnings were
posted in lllinios, Ohio and Wisconsin. Advisories were posted in
the Dakotas, Minnesota, Michigan,
Indiana and Pennsylvania.
Snow also was in the forecast
for parts of New England, upstate

New York and New Jersey. ·
S_nowfall during the six hours
,endmg at 1 p.m. EST Tuesday
in~luded 3 _inches at St. Cloud ,
Mmn.. Two mches fell at Alexan- ·
dria, Minn.; Brunswick, Maine, and·
Fargo, N.D. Bradford, Maine, and
Minneapolis-SL Paul got1 inch.
Cold air pushed southward in
the nation's midaection. Daytime
highs were expected to plummet
after unseasonably warm weather
iearlier in.the week.
In Nebraska, early know runoff
and ice jams pushed rivers and
streams over their banks, closing
mads and forcing people from their
homes.
The high temperature for the
nation Tuesday was 92 _degrees at

'

Del Rio, TeliBS.
High temperatures today werl:
forecast in the 20s and 30s ill
Northern states; the 40s and :50s if'
the middle third of the country; lllil
the 60s, 70s and 80s in the Soul!l
and West

Government
timber sales
lose $50 million~

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
government lost money selling tin!·
ber from national forests last year. ·
The Forest Service blamed a
sm.aller harvest for a drop i11 re~­
enues from sales.
In its report for the budget ycdr
ended last Sept. 30. the service lila
Monday that lt paid out-$50 million
.
Continued l'roin jiage 1 '
more than it eame4 in sales from
Ohio 248 Tuesday evening and struck a deer that ran into the path
·the 120 national forests.
of llis 1991 GMC. Damage to the vehicle was listed as moderate.
Revenues exceeded operating
costs by $255 million, the agency
The deer left the scene.
said. But under the federal law
· governing the program, the serviCe
also paid $30S .S million to states
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
and counties f~ use by school sysresponded to three calls for assistance overnight.
tems and highway departments.
Responding were: 341 p.m. Pomeroy Fire Department' to Peach
Those amount to payments in lieu
Fork Road for a brush fii'C on property belonging to Victor Genof local property. taxes, which the
heimer; 6:37 p.m. Rutland to Dye Road f~ PaUl Dalton who was
federal government doea not pay.;
transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 10:02 p.m. Racine to
Even excluding the payments to
De witts Run Road for Doris Arnold who was treated at the scene.
state and local govemlllCIIt, only 52
of the 120 national for·~ts kept
Editor's note: Allaatiles, ages and addresses are published as
their timliet sliles above· ~ting
they •ppear in oMclal reports.
costs. Those 52 accounted for 72
percent of the iota! timber harvest.
Gross revenues totaled $1.08
biUion on sales of 7.3 billion board
reet. the Forest Service said
In 1991, the agency reported
Hall af 6:30 p.m. The camp will
OAPSE to mett
of $412 million before
revenues
The Meigs Local OAPSE Chap- furnish spagbelti, meatballs, salad,.
payments of $301 million to ~ .
ter wiU meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at french bread, coffee and pop. Bring and
counties, leaving a net gain of
covered
dish.
A
mee~
will
fola
Meigs Juni~ High Sehoul in Mid·
low at 7:30 p.m. regarding inb- $171 million. Grots revenues
. dleport.
mation on a fire depariment for totaled $1.2 billion oo sales of 8.S
Bedford
Township. Representa- billion board feet
Missionary to speak .
"Concern over threatened ·or
tives
from
the Scipio F'u:e Depart.
Colin Christensen will speak at
endangered
species such as the
Hillside BaptiSt Church on Sunday . ment will be guest speakers.
northern
spotted
owl, old groMh
Sunday school begins at 10 a.m.
ecosystems,
below-cost
timber .
Homemakers to meet
with momil)g worsl)ip at 11 a.m.
sales
and
the
us.
e
of
clearcutting
The Third Wednesday Home.
Evening services are at 6 p.m.
Chrisiensen will speak about his makers Club wiU meet March 17 at have all contributed to this decline
previous missionary work in Mexi- 10 a.m. at the Syraeuse Municipal in the amount of timber harvest.co, the Phillippine Islands and his Building. Cindy Oliveri will speak ed," the report said.
It said costs have remained confuture work in Hungary. Rev. at 10:30 a.m. on "How You Feel
James R. Acree Sr. invites the pub- About Yourself." Easter eggs will stant while the harvest has dropped
be made and members are to bring nearly 39 percent since 1989. .
lic.
a Styrofoam egg fonn, material, · The service said payments to
local and state government should
scissors and a dull paring knife.
Hymn sing
be
excluded when determini• the
. There will be a hymn. sing at
financial
bcalth of the sales proGuest
preadter
Hillside Baptist Chijrch on March
gram
because
rilanagement has no
Rev.
John
Haley
will
be
preach21 at 6 p.m. Singers will be Blood
control
over
the
costs.
ing
at
the·
Middleport
Community
Covenant Singers, God's Little
Critics
saiil
the
nwnbets should
.
Church
on
·
S
unday
at
1
p.m.
There
Laml!s, The Partakers, The Chilbe·
included.
"That
is a part of
will
also
be
special
singers.
Everydren of God, Linda Jones, The
business,"
said
Jeff Olson,
doing
one
welcome.
Young Rejoicers and the Hillside
research
economist
with The
Baptist Choir. The public is invit·
Literary
Club
to
meet
Wilderness
Society,
an
environed
The Middleport Literary Club mental group.
Dance planned
will meet Wednesday, March 17, at
Olson said the service aiso
The Gallia Twirlers Western 2 p.m. at the Meigs County Pl!blic understated its losses by failing to
Square Dance Club will hold a Library in Pomeroy with Mrs. Roy ~nt for as much !IS. 65 percent
dance Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at Holter as hostess. The bnolc review of 1ts cost for provtdmg access
the C.H. McKenzie Agriculture . · to be presented will be by Mrs . . roads for lo~en.
Building in Gallipolis (across from James Diehl on • Alice and Edith"
The Chnton , administration
Holzer Hospital). Bill Gene Evans by Dorothy Clarke Wilson. Roll wants to save $274 million from
wiD be the caller.
call will be to tell of "The woman . 1994 to I ?97 by phasipg out
behind the man. •
below-cost umber sales.
Club to meet ·
·
The suvice said the timber proThe Past Councilor's Club of
Health club to meet
gram generated nerrrly 94,000 jobs,
Chester Council No. 323 Daughters
The Rock Springs Bet!er Health more than $4 billion in job-related
of the. America wiD meet tonight at Club will hold its regular meeting income and more than $634 million
the home of Esther Smith at 1 ~ at the home of Agnes Dixon on in federal income tax payments in ·
Ruth Smith is co-hostess. Mcm
March 18 at I p.m: Frances Goe- 1992.
are to wear something green f~ the glein will have the program and ·
St. Patrick's Day theme.
Helen Blackson the contest Club
members will pay their yerrrty dues Hospital news
Dance plaDDed
this month.
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Soup sale
No. 90S3 Ladies Auxiliary will
Marcb 9 discharges - MariThere will be a soup (vegetable)
sponsor a round and square dance
anne
Casey, Mrs. Kinsey Elliott
on Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. Music sale and dinner.in the basement of and son, Vera Crow, Hannah
will be by True Country Ramblers. the Rock Springs United Methodist Hughes, Marlin Mates, Nellie HatChurch on March 19. Eat-in or field, Margie Lang, Denica Rose
Public inviled.
carry-out will be available. Serving Alice Click-Huston, Anno Morri~
will begin at 4 p.m. The cost is $1 son, Misty Martin, Dorothy Myers,
Craft program planned
Micbelle Garcttson will instruct per bowl or $2.50 per qUIItL Bring Jerry Massie, Voila Maynard, Patsy
a children's Easter craft class at the containers for carry-out. Call Bail, Orville Palmer, Arlona Quiclc
Meigs County Public Library in orders to Tracey Beaver, 992-3691 Evan Downey and Emerson Reese.'
Pomeroy on March 20 at 2 p.m. or Norma Baker at 992-5504 .
March !I births - Mr. and
Contact the library to register. Deadline for calling orders is Mfs. Donald Fillinger, daughter,
March 17. There will also be pie, Vmton. Mr. and Mrs. Derrick
There is a $4 fee for materials.
coffee and pop. Lenora Leifheit, Stump,
daughter, Pomeroy.
R./11 ., will be presenting an
· Public dinner
There will be a community pub- Alzbeimer's seminar at the church
lic dinner on Saturday at the at 7 p.m. Everyone welcome.
Burlingham Modern Woodman

..---Local briefs.."--..
EMS responds to three calls

Meigs announcements

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP)-

West Virginia offers help
for bankrupt store customers
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) foi'Warded to the attOrney geneial
- People owed money or mer- in Pennsylvania, where the
chandise by the bankrupt Appli· bankruptcy ease is being handled,
ance Store .Inc. chain shoUld con- he said.
Refunds will be made to those
tact the attorney general office's by
Mrrrch 12, Attorney General Dar- who made layaway deposits on
items not delivered, made deposits
rell McGraw said.
.
. The chain closed 28 stores in on some orders not delivered or
Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Vir- · have not {licked up a purchased
.
'ginia after Christmas and was item, he said.
given approval Dec. 28 in U.S.
Banlauptcy Court to liquidate.
The consumer protection diviMcGraw said Monday his sion C[lll be ~bed at (800) 368offJCe's antiuust and consumer pro- ' 81108 or (304) SSB-8986.
tection division has received 30
complainll. The complaints wiD be

Plan cattle meeting
Meigs County cattle producers
will meet at the Meigs High School
Library on Monclay at7:30 p.m. f~
a special progr'llm on Beef Cow
Nutrition. Dr. Steven Boyles, The
Ohio State University .Extension
Beef Specialist, will present the
progriun. No reservations arc needed.

Here*

Tuesday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
3-4-8
(three, four, eight)
Pick 4 Numbers
4-9-8-4
(four, nine, eigh~ four)
BuckeyeS
. 2-16-23-29-3S
(two, sixteen, twenty · thre~ .
twenty-nine, thirty-five)
.

Program March 25

A horne gardeners propam will
be presented by the Mcias County
Extension Service on Mll'(lh 2S
from 8 to 9:30 p.m. at the Meigs
County Senior C1tizens Center.
The program will emphasize
how to plan a flower bed, vege~able
garden, home landscapinJ, or a
'nc-.y lawn. A homeowner question
and answer session will conclude
the meeting.
I .

•

�•

•

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wldneedey, March 10, 1993

t

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

In NHL action,

.S ports

•

The Daily Sentinel·
Wednesday, March 10,1993
"--I• 4

·With Suber's lo.st-minute jumper,

•

~~ider

~Patrick

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
!' If the Patrick DiVision race gets
-any closer, the NHL is going to
need a shoe hom to pry the teams
apart.

defeats
Wagner
65-64
.
to WID NCAA tourney berth

· The NHL's most compelling
division tifhtened up even more
Tuesday ntght as the New York
Rangers beat Los Angeles '4-3,
Washington Dimmed Toronto 3-1,
the New York Islanders turned
bact Philadelphia 4-2 and Vancou. vcr whipped New Jersey .7.2.
Thoae results left the four teams
'vying for the remaining three playoff spots just three points apart.
WashingtOn is second behind the
runaway Pittsburgh Penguins with

'

By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sports Writer
Talk about a night 10 remember.
No one who watched Rider beat
Wagner to win a berth in the
NCAA tournament should ever forget what t))ey ssw Tuesday.
·: Darrick Suber certainly won't.
.:But he had a better view than most.
"I've thought about this type of
play every day since I was a kjd,"
.Suber said. "I've been dreaming
!)tis dream ·ever since I picked up a
basketball.
·
· " ... People across the country
got their money's worth tonight"
What ESPN's audience saw was
Fa court-length drive end with
O: Rider's career scoring leader mak:;ing a 12-foot jumper at the buzzer
:aor a 65·64· victory in the Northeast
:.conference championship game.
•' The victory in I,.awrenceville,
::N.J., and that of Wright State,
::which beat Illinois-Chicago 94-88
•in the Mid-Continent tournament at
::Dayton, Ohio, brought to 15 the
•:number of teams now qualified for
.:·tJw 64-tearn NCAA tourament.
~ Two more will go in tonight
•;when Delaware visits Drexel in the
:North Atlantic Athletic Conference
'7and Bucknell plays host to Holy
1!:ross in the Patriot League. The

road begius for another when
Hawaii plays Air Force and
Wyomin~ meets San Diego State in
the opemng round of the Westeni
Athletic Conference tournament at
'Salt Lake City.
Three ranked teams also are in
action in the Big Ten, whicb has no
tournament. No. 2 Indiana already
in the NCAA tournament as conference champion, plays host to
Michigan State, No. 3 Michigan is
at IUinois and No. 17 Iowa is home
for Wisconsin.
The Rider-Wagner matchup was
not a meeting between Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, but Suber and
Wagner's Bobb7 Hopson staged a
thrilling duel o their own. Suber
had 33 points, one more than Hopson, who scored his career high.
That Suber won it at the buzzer
was perhaps ap~te. Hopson
had taken a Olle-polllt lead in their
personal batUe and given W~r
(18-12) a 64-63 advantage on a
lean-in jumper with five ·seconds
remaining.
"!I was almost like if lhele were
four more seconds, you have to·
wonder if Hopson would have done
the same thing,'' said Rider coach
Kevin Bannon, whose team is 1910.
.

.

~

\;District 13 contests
~to be held at Gallipolis
,.
E

Because of construction work at
;Lyne Center on the campus of the
::University of Rio Grande, the 1993
:S::oaches District 13 AU-Star games
;.wm be played in Gallipolis on Sun;l!ay. March 21, according to Nonn
fersin, Chesapeake coach and head
·cf the District 13 Coaches Associa-

'lion.'

.

:; The girls all-star game is sched·
:uted for 2 p. m. The boys .contest
begin at 4 p.m.
'• The girls three point shooting
:J:ontest will be held during the half-

t&lt;m

time ceremonies of that contest.
The boys slam dunk contest will
begin prior to the boys coniesL 'Ille
boys three point shooting event
will be held during halftime cere•
monies of that Contest.
Division I-n all-stars will batUe
Division III-IV all-stars in both
games. The Division I-II teams
wiU wear dark jerseys, tiJe Division
lll-IV squads light jerseys.
T-shirts-and plaques will be pre· .
senltd players prior to each game.
Admission is $3 per person.

Hopson, a Junior guard, ~pt·
ed defeat grac1ously.
"This is t))e first time this has
happened to me," he said. "I've
done it plenty of times in my career
to other people and now it's done
to me, and now. I know how those
teams feel."
Wrlllbt St. 94
Illlnois-Cbicqo 88
In this g~me, the sound of the
buzzer bad a different'result very nearly a tragic one. Reserve
guard Chris McGuire was trampled
when Raiders fans stormed the
court in celebration of t))eir first
invitation to the big show.
The crowd of 9,247 went silent
when the public address announcer
called for paramedics 10 help an
injured player. They worked on
McGuire f?r IS minutes, puttin~ a
brace on h1s neck and a protcellve
board under his back, before taking
him off on a suetchcr.
·
McGuire was taken to a ~ital
to lllJike sure there was no senous

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Alllodc Dhloloo
Tum
W L Pd.
GB
New Y.... .............. 39 II .614
New JeneY .~ ......... 33 25 .S69
6.!1
s ..........................32 211 .552 7.5
Odudo..................ll 21 .soo 10.5
Milmi .........,,.........24 33 .421 .
IS
I'IUiodCipiUa ...........20 !1 .351
19

w........._ ........... l6 •1 .211

trainer Tony Ortiz said. "He
should be fme."
Bill Edwards scored 38 points
and Mike Nahar 2S for Wright
State (20-9).
. .
Kenny Williams scored 30 and
had a four-point play to pull the
Flallles (17-1S) to 91-88 with 21
seconds left. But Wright State's
Andy Holderman hit a free throw,
stole the ball from Williams and
made another free throw.

I'M NOT GUO.TY- Jalen ROle, .a aopbCJI!IIore at the University

!of Mlcblpn 8lld a tnember of llllilen's bllkelbaU team, speaks to
re~ .durftla a news conference
In Ann Arbor, Mic~.
ROM .,ollie about ID lncldeut"wllb lbe
I POllee Department m

T=:l;

·Oetober Ill wbldl be was ticketed for lolterln1 durlag a drug raid.
ROM was not cjted or cbarged with aaytbinll else in lbe maiter. (AP)

FOURTH-GRADE YELLOW JACKETS Members of the 1!1!12·93 Middleport Yellow
Jackets basketball team are (front row, 1.-·R)
Mike Hawkins and Jason Kalgbt. Standinll

Sports briefs
Basketball

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -Dick
Tarrant, who led Richmond to a
239-126 record and five NCAA
IDurnamenl appearances in 12 seasons, announced his retirement.
The 62-yeir-old Tarrant, who
played for Vince Lombardi at
Fordham, was a high school coach
and ran a scouting service in New
Jersey before coming to Richmond
as an assistant in 1978.

By The Associ&amp;ted Prtsll
The NBA was as simple as 1·2·
3.
.
One IS the number of healthy
feet Michael Jordan played on.
Two is the nqmber of games the
Houston Rockets need to win to
match their franchise record of 13
straight victories. Three is the num~
ber of .poiqts Dominiq.ue Willtins
scored nearly every time he shot
the ball Tuesday night.
Jordan, despite limping noticeably on the infected left foot that
caused him to miss two games,
scored 11 of bis 38 ~ints in the
final 5:08 of Oticago s 86-83 victory over Seattle.
Halceem Olajuwon scored 18 of
his 34 points in the ftnal peiiod in
the 104-94 decision over Miami
that gave the Rockets 11 consecuc
live wins.
·
Wilkins hit 8 of 12 three-point
shots, scoring 37 points and falling
one sby of the NB A record for
three-point
ers in a game as Atlanra defeated
Milwaukee 117-103.
Jordmuallied the Bulls from an
11-point deftei~ accounting for 11
of their last 13 points and helping
his teammates hold the SupcrSonics to 14 points in the fioal.)l!:rlod.
Rockets 104, Heat!14
Houston also snapped Miami's
franchise-record six-game winning
streak as Olajuwon hit 8 of 11
shots in the fourth period and finished with IS rebounds.
Grant Long had 22 points, Sltve
Smith 20 and R,ony Seikaly 16
points and 12 rebounds for the
Heat.
Hawks 117,Bucka 103
. Wilkins became the eighth play·
er in NBA history to hit eight or
more three-point
ers,
He made four three-pointers in
the ftrsl period 10 help the Hawks
build a 36-23 margin, then hit two
more in the second period as
Atlanra stayed ahead of Milwaulcee
63-52 at halftime.
Eric Murdock led the Bucks
with 20 points.
Suns U8, Kinta 108
Cedric Ceballos scored a careerhigh 40 points and Phoenix used .a ·
20.4 second-quaner run to win at
Sacramen10.
Charles Barkley had 23 points

21

211
lndi.oaa ... - .............29 :!0
Allon,. .......... ,........29 31 ·
Ilotn&gt;U. ...................2S 33 '
Mihrtlllkcc M........ \•.23 36

c.&amp;doao ................32

2.5
8.5
12
12.5
IS..5

.390

11

Mldw•tDI,.W.
L Pet.

o.n.. .......................4

21
21

~

34
42'
53

,644
.631
,583
.414

.:zso
.1170

'

.772

19

.671

.5
3.l
13.5
22.!i
33

5
9
13
16

21 .611

34

41

.S44
.492
.42&lt;4
.30S

Tbunday'a pmes

Lima Bath 10, Willard 63
Omillo 40, N. R"''ol""' 21
Urban• 73, ~ 46
W. Holme~43,Ath«;!!W 41

•,

'

•
•

•
:

ToWoT1,0hio65

......

••'
=·

.;
'

•',•

,.,.

33
33
30
32
2A

26 7
Z7 6
26 11
21 6

3111

264
24)
256
269

233
234
:ZSO

:137

59 1S4 266

. ,.-ItOil........'11 4121 2110 146 21111119
221
245
~

~

AdiiiWDI-

11.-Qulbec ......
BOlton .............. 35 24 7 71 260 233

• Bulfalo. ............. 32 26 I 12 210 ~
:. Hanr...t ............ 20 42 4 .. :1:13 295
, O.Uwa .............. 9 56 4 22 167 371

,.

''
'
,

NEW OIUJ!ANS SAINTS - s;..od
1M Mill.., naM l&amp;Ckla. tD atwo-yu.r con•

tract, and Mite Broanan and Scott
Bowla, dfensivo linemu, to one·Jear

..........

NEW YOIUC.IETS - Slpd Loonud

........

Manha1l. lld'.W"- ead, so a IJueo.year

Tournaments

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS -Jio.
aipd WiDio C\IJpepper, wide receiver.

Ml~..._iCCMif..-..ct

Hockey

N_c..,.,...

NatlontlllocbJ Lt•au•
BUPFALO SABRES - Ctllod

W lhc ImcmadmW Hcctey Lc.aJue.

Division I
N. Royalu:.n 75, Puma Pldua 64
W - 61, LU......t SLildwuol 64

CAMPBELLCONFERENCE

Ncnt.DI.......
~ T._
W L TPII.GPGA
• Chi.., . ........... 3'1 21 10 14 232116

• o-u "'"'"'""' :r)
; TOftlnto ............. :M

2S 9 79 29&lt;1234
24 9 n 230 t9S
• - - . . ......... 32 Z7 9 73 234 234
'· St. Louio .....,..... 30 30 • 61 221 233
. Tlftlpl Ray ....... 21 41 5 47 202 2SO

SLM.ll
B...oliold SS, Bli.alolll
C.. Cadoollc$6, W&gt;dttill'o47
ColdMn• S6, Arch~ 41

-44.Moria&gt;Elala•2

.

and heal! coacll Tlm Ebenbada.

.

for tJie Su.ns, .who tiaiied 36-35 rcconl 32nd game; beating Wash·
befme pulling mto a SS-40 lead on ingiOn behind Larry Johnsoil's 23
Ceballof two free throws with points ad 13 rcbounda. .
.
3:05 left m the first half.
Dell Curry had 22 point!f for
Wayman Tisdale had 32 Points Charlotte, which shot 57 percent
an~ .12 rebounds and Walt for the game.
WJlhams scored '30 points for
Lalters123,Pilltoaslll
SacrameniD.
·
James Wonhf s:ored 28 points
Jazz ll~,'Tina~ea 107,
I!Dd A.C..Green a .flee Uuow, with
~tah ~a fonr-JIUD;C lloine 33 seconds left broke a de.for Los
losmg st_rcak. ~ won for just the Angeles at Detroit.
.·
second nme m rune ~cs as Karl
I oc Dumars had 41 points for
Malone scored 27 pomts and Jeff the Pistons
Malone 24 against Minnesota.
·
·
The Jazz led ,103-85 with 7:18
lefi, but had to Withstand a 20-6 run
LEGAL NOTICE
that closed the Timberwolves to
109-10~ with 1:21 remaining. A
The Public Utilities Commis' 'oil of
three·pollll plsy by Tyrone Corbin
0hio has .set lor publlic hearing
g~ve Utah a 114-107 advantage
wtth 39 seconds left.
Case No. 93-01-EL·EFC, to review
West ICOI'Cd 23 points and
the fuel procurement practlcas
Mic
Williams· 22 for the Timand policies of Ohio Power
berwdves.
·
Company, the operation of its •
Sp!lrs 119, .Mavericks 84 .
Electric Fuel Component, and ' ·
.Dav1d Rob1nson scored 19
related matters. This hearing Is
pomts and Scan Elliott 16 in his
h d 1d 1 b ·
ftnt ~ after recovering from a
sc e u e 0 e.gm at the
back.tnjury as San Antonio extendCommission Offices at 10:00a.m.
ins ~· road losinJ streak ID •
on March 16, 1993.
.lianchise-rnco 27 games,
All interested parties will be given .
The Mavericks llso matched a
an opportunity to be heard. ·'
cl~b record with their lSih consecFurther information may be '
u11ve loss, geuing jusr four points
obtained ·by contacting the
from first-round draft pick Jim
Commission at 180 East Broad
Jackson in his third pro game.
.
Street, Columbus, Ohio
Horae111l4, Ballets 104
43266 0573
r-C.;..h.;..a.;..r.;..lo;.;t,;;te;...;;w~o-n;..a:..;f::,:ra:;n::,:C;,;;h,::is;:;e.;;,·.....;;...._ _. __. ------~·
•

X::::J

EASTER AND
MOTHER'S DAY

FOODUND

SPEC~

Fll.1 IIIICH 12
lu:OG-7:00

M•d:i•oa P1ailla 60, Cinlinstcin 51

wY Ri•• ........... w.

.,

"He needs 10 be commended,'' '
Thomas wid the De!roit Free Press
Michigan basketball coacb Steve in a report published today. "He
Fisher s&amp;id I alen Rose was guilty did what be had to do. He took a
of nothing more than poor judg· rislc."
ment when police found the star
Thomas didn't explain why
~uard Inside a suspected drug charges are pending against two .
' ouae
·
other nien who received loitering
Fisher said Tuesday during a tickets in the raid. Another two
:news conference that Rose was dis· men were arrested on felony
lciplined shorUy after the Oct. 4, charges.
1992 raid by narcotics officers. . A police official, speaking on
University offiCials said they con· condition of anonymity, told .The ·
&lt;Sidcred the matter clOsed.
Detroit News that •'Jio one would
JI;•'-Rillie was one of three men tick· have ·gained •• from ,prosecuting
~!A!dh. hfor lo!teriWt~ll:ing ~ raidand,
in Rose.
·
w 1c pol~ se
manJuana
"He ·didn't have any drugs on
~rackc:ocame,. Two other men were him, hadn't hatmed anybody, had
am:sted on feton~ ch_arl~·
· no record," the official said. "It
There was no mdicanon that the probably would have been harmful
..,20-year-old .sopbomore guard was to a promising and budding
selhng or usmg drugs. .
· . career ..
. "Jalen ~ose is not. involved
"Tickets are routinely canceled
w1th druas m any CIJ)IClly - user
·
and
1e
or seDer..,., Fi•her said "He was in for vanous reasons,
~P l!fC ·
• -.
·
warned and releaSed," PoliCe Chtef
t~e ':':rong place at the wron1 Stanley Knox told The News.
tune.
.
.
,
"That's routine. From the infonna·
Fisher Sl!'d police con~~ .him lion I've gotltn from my command
about .the llCket ~ he disclp)lned officers there is nothing to it and I
Rose m October. FISher and other
•
.',
~~~crsity officials did not elabo- . rr:}~~n~~;:.ason to doubt that
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)-

Rose said he was at the hoUSl; 10
~elp a friend, but.did I)Othing
wrong.
"I would like to say, 'I'm sony'
to my family, teammates, friends,
everyone wltO's on my side,'' Rose
said. "I did nothing wrong. I'm not
in trouble with lhe law."
Rose left the news conference
early to return to practice without
explaining how he was helping a
friend or why he earlier denied
jbeing at the house.
The ticke! for loitering where
drugs are ·kept or stored was not
forwarded to 36th District Court
!.for prosecution. The misdemeanor
Iis punishable by 90 days in jail and

56 S...boarillo C.alh. 72, W. - 00:Warne Tn&lt;:e~4S, Oa.awa-Olandorf 44,

:a

WHAf All 1'IIE ADVANTAGES Of FILING
MY TAIIElUIIIli.EmONtCAUn
Fning ,.., Nblm tjoclronlcaly' rather lhln
moiling R to tht IRS glvts you nmal
tdvanlagtl

SPEED. K JOU flit tltctronlcally, lht IRS
NCtiVtl JOUI rolum ond prDCHHI
R moro quickly. You'N llltlit your rtfund
1-r.
.coNVENIENcE. Wlltn you flit your rtlttm
Ill olmllclllly, you oan lnttruct lht IRS to
dopoaR JN' rtlullll dlttctly lllto .JOUI blttlt
-•Ill or to Nnd you 1 paper ohtoll
thtouah t~t 111111. I you
moy
..... lor I Alpld Aofliwl ...ia
1o1ft
ond -ho yN' rtlund -

Ill f.lll fit

"'-

',

'
-.

2 • I X 10

~ ~~~

,f ~ •. ,I,Jr,~;\!
! 'I I! 1 Jl(, I 1

~(IIJ{d'

Dhillon IV
~~Clay 12. p,.nklin - , ........... Clay 62, llomlodt MWer

'
MON.•SUN. 10:00 AM-10:00 PM •

I

992·2556

P/\f't H

' WITH YOUR PACKAGE

REG.

I

toiMII...
OM_...,_
.....

II . . . . . . . . ,..-

I lr? Call yN' Ioiii "'" 8look

rttdy to llllp jOUI .

IAILiiiUI

113.80

'

NOW
$69. 5

H&amp;R BLOCK

ON DELIVERY
II' DIPOIIT

,.._. llllller 1 1 - be -PMltd by 1*"1 .
GROUP PICTURE 11.00 PER SUBJEC.T. PAY WHEN TAKEN
LIMIT ONI SPECIAL PER FAMILY
'

•PEACE OF IIIND. F::BJ- roturtl
......lltlt .... :1.11
- tui tht
IAI 1111' -I'M ond Ia pNOtlllttl yo•

KARL KEIILER, EA

Ill jOU IIIN !I tl

· 2·11X7 ·
. • WALLETS
11 HALF SIZE
WALLm FREE

I-

llkt'{•

.......

olllot. 1111t1r pt. ato; by till

Wynf...t 61, H.,... 52

Eastern athletic
banquet slated
fo~ March 18

Eastern High School athletic
director Pam Douthitt has
announced that the school will be
honoring its winter·Spolts athletes
on Thursday, Man:h 18 at 7 p.m. in
the high school gymnasium.
·
Dress for the bancl,uet will be
casual and each family with children participating in winter sports
is asked to ·bring two de~serts.
Drinks and table service will be
The boosters normally
provided.
ssoo r.ne.
provide
for
the EHS banqu~. but
: Cm~. Rudy Thomas, head of
currently
the
Eastern Athletic
he Detroit' Police Department's
Boosters
Club
is
without.officers
rcotics division, said Rose
and
thus
rio
formal
affair.
sn' t prosecuted because police
All parents, fans and friends of .
epted his explanation of ~by he
the athletes are asked to attend.
as at the .house.
·

Q

61111S'r . .,.

'

~) .

1

Reg. $259 Recliners ••••••• ~.$194
Reg. $369 Recliners ••••••••• $276
Reg. $409 Recliners ••••••••• $306
Reg. $499 ~ecliners •••.••••• $374

••

.·SERT~

SALE!!

. ,. ~,.~
J.a

DISCOVBI WHY
PEOPLE SAY. gii~Pf•

,.,_,

SERTA PREIUEI CGIIFORT
. III.WftAIIIY
TWIN
EA. PC.

$88 ·.Fill
$ 108
EL PC.
SU,._ ULTU

TAX TIP OF THE WEEK

w••••••, .....,.

FISH TAIL
51.79

'

I

· PO.IOY

'

Milan- 61 Onwio64
Obodioa 13,
11,01'
Patridcll&lt;oley 64, Elm,..... SO

MilCH M-Ess
PIICU 01 011 111111
SIOCI OF QIIIITY IEIILIIE
IECUIEIS.

By DAVID GOODMA'N

.

DAIRY VALLEY
Thb

X.....LU"' st. o.-53

. :10]'

S7

i,

Michigan's Rose guilty only
of poor judgement,'
Fisher says
.
...

Dtvlslonm
Akron Sprinafield 62, Akron St.V•

a_,..., 53, Y...,. Liberty 52

'

b.!;
. .

ly Hnuldor, d&lt;lf-., from Stn

Ohio H.S. boys'
tournament scores

16 :161 216

73
72
71
70

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

"""'S:!.-51

WLTPu.GPGA

40 21 6

--

FoolbaU

LOS ANOEI£s IWDERS·- N.....t

Recular oeason: East

P1lrkk Dl.tlfon

Woahlnpa .....
New ~«My .......
N.Y. R -····
N.Y. ............
Jlhlla4elphLI ..•...

"·

Bill Meyers auiltant oll'enaivelinc ~c:h.

National college
basketball scores

WALES CONFERENCE

National BaJkttblll Aalotlal1011
ORLANDO MAOIC- N•mcd Oti&lt;
Smith you&amp;h buk..U prolf'Uill manaa·

NaUanal Foalball Ltaaue
CLEVELAND BROWNS - Sianod

Al . .llolltllaiT
Sanifinll ~ IDeCil. 2:30p.m.

Ch ...,..,tlllp
Ri4or65,Wa-64

y...,

Basketball

K.tt (19·1).

New Je.raey at Ooldcn State, 10:30

"•
'. l'inobwah --·"'

:·
·:'•

¥L

Ch ... ploo...,
WrisJot St. M, DL.OO..so 81

••. In the NHL ...

,.&gt;'

•arnero.

la .... oamp.

Ata.aeJJe u..a. Colu.tt.

Dawc 1\ o.toil. 7:30p.m.
Sc.tQJe at Milwaukee. 7 :30p.m.

MimtiiiGllltSacmrn•o.10:30p.m.

•,.

dripte:z, pitchca, and Juon KCIIIdaU and
M~r~.dy
c.~lcben, to u.tir minoi-

Saturday's IIIIi aame

p.m.

~

PmSBUROH PIRA"l'RS - R.eailiJned Mike Dahon and Rourio Ro·

Toledo (11-9) , , a...w. 1 an., (23·
•), 2p.m.

Portland ltHOUitoo, 1:30 p.m.

'*

Nalloul Leaaue

Mid\ialn 61

Miami, Ohio (19-1)

8Meball
A-IAoauo

MILWA\JKEE BIIEW£RS-Wdvod

Friday's 11011111laals

Tbukday's &amp;111101
OU..&amp;&lt;&gt;tl MUnU, 7o:!O p.m•
O!.adoae at CLEVELAND, 7:30p.m.

•

Transactions ·
Ron Robinlon, pilcher, f• the JM1tPC*1 of
aivina him hiJ uacanditional rek.uC.

Tuesday'•

p.m.

•

Dovw 47.llilllbooG 35
Hamilton Be.din43, Buckcyo Vall32

ftnt·round scores
Bowlina o..a. 75,1kll SL )9
ICaa 71, c. Mldoiun S7
MJ.mi,Oh!o 67, 'II.

L.A. Lakca tt New Yadl., 7:30p.m.
Bolton .. Ptill.a4elpru..., 7:30p.m.
Denver n Wuhinpln, 7:30p.m.
Indiana ., Orlando. 7:30p.m.
Por\land It DIJlu.I :JO p.m.
Ooidal Sta\Oat~ 9:30p.m.
New Jeney at L.A. Clippcn, 10:30

I.U:c-45, TOI)'I Vall32

Cle. VA·S176, Canliold 70 ·

tournament action

Tontcbt's gam..

..

AvW~.

DlvlslonD

N.Y. ~11Moncn&amp;l.7:40p.m.
De&amp;zt.i111 Edmamon, 9:&lt;40 p.m.

MinnUCMa vi. VancGUV'!It at Saab·
kXID. Sut.. 9:40p.m.

Z7

Atlanta 117,Milwautee 103
HC&amp;lltCCl 104, Miami 9-l
San AnLonio 119, O.U.. 14
Uuh 116. MinaoM&gt;IIIO'I
Phoenix 121, S.erarnc:ctt~lOI

'

M;li... 47, Cin. Momy 38
Pldi.....,..60,o.fiance40
w-.. 59, M'\finll47

MooaaiiiB""'",7:40p.m.
WubDo- ot~. 7ool0 p.m.
l.ol Anp .. PitllburJ!I, 7:-10pm.
San J010 at S\.l..cMI.I:..O p.m.
N.Y. Ronl"' 11 em...., J:40 p.m.
Dltn:ilatCalauY, 9~ p.m.

:11)

au...., 16, S..ale 13

.

Loam SO, Col Saud!. 30

Hartford It TOI"'rUo, 7:40p.m.
Buffalo at QUebec, 7:o40 p.m.

Tuesday's acom

•

Eudakc N. .5~, Tol. Whitmer 49

Toni&amp;hl's &amp;ames

O.orl&lt;&gt;ao 124, Wuh!n~ 104
LA. l.U• 123, o.trail121

••

Oadidd Hu. Trinity 57, R.octy River

Ma.,.;&amp;IIS5
Cin. Syc.amotC40, Oftlalville 38

MAC women's

13

211
:!0

Division I
~ Cem.-How.76, Boudman .54

WiMipoc4, Tompa Bty 2 •
MiniNiioCa 4, San l(!le 2
. VIDCDUW1'7,New1_,.2

GB

Pxltk:DIWIJon

Phoc:nix ..................44
Sa.ale .....- ...............0
l'onland ,_ .............34
L.A ....................31
L.A. Cli...... ...... ,.,29
Goldt:n Si.a~e ..........2S
S.c:runiiiiUO ............ II

Ohio H.S. girls'
tournament scores

211

Pi1111Jouah 3, B...... 2
N.Y. hlancloa4,PIIilodolpha 2
N.Y. Ron... 4,1.oi An..... 3

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Twn
W
"""""" .. - .............38
Sm Antonio ...........31
Uuh .......................3l
0envel' •••.•.•••......•...24
MW&gt;alcu ............. .l4

2S3 264
193 262
113 332

WuhitiJQ 3, To•no f

.6:50
.552
.492
.483
.431

37, Mcllon.td 35,

or

teammates are Ian Story, Derek Jolmsou, Jllltln
Robison, ~ryan Cowdery and J.J. Goodman.
Beblnd lbem are aaslstaat coacb Sbane Roula ·

NBA's 1-2-3 night spells·wins
for Bulls, Rockets'and Hawks

j

sotmn1 M&lt;ltinl.,

2M 213
2111 232

269

point. Also assisting on the pme- and the Canucks struck for four peulty shot- and reached the Mario Lemieux (100 in 1984-85)
winner was Brian Leeldl. who was goals in the .second period to Ilea 100-poillllllalt as Winnipeg beat as the only roolcies in NHL history
malcing his fJI'II ippaii'IIICC for the the Devils.
T-..Bay.
to score 100 or more points.
Rangers since he suffered nerve
' Sergio Momesso, Courtnall,
Selmae, wbo last week broke
Nortb Stan 4, Sharks 2
damase to his neck and ten shoul· Petr Nedved and Jyrki Lumme Mike Bossy's 1972 mark of S3
Dave Gagner scored twice in a
der in a pme against St. Louis on scored in the mjc!dle period.
goals, aow has 59 goals and 42 I:56 spill of the second period as
Dec. 17.
·
. Penpia 3, B.W.l
5 •!IS He joias Ptlcr Slaslny (109
Minnesota belt S111 Jose.
·
CIJ)Itals 3, Maple Leafs1
Mario Lemieux made • emo- poilus in 1910-81 for Quebec),
Mite Modano reached the 30· Michal Pivonka~~ a 1-1 tiooal return to PitlsburP after his Dale Bawa.... (103 in 1981-82 goal ·mark for the second straight
tie 6:48 into the third period. lifting two-month fight with cancer and for Winaipea)'and Pittsburgh's season for MinneSOII,
.
Washington over Toronto and end· Joe Mullen scored twice, leading
ing the Capilals' five-pnle winless the Pen$Uin5 over the BNins.
Sports briefs
sueak (0+1).
· Lem1eUJ1, limited to about six
Doty's leatr said J!e had sympathy
With the reams skating four-on· minutes of playing time in New
' FCIIICINII
four, Washington's Peter Bondra Yorlc last Friday due to bact pain.
MINNEAPOUS (AI')- A let· for individual players such as Mar·
stole tho puck from Todd Gill ·took regular s!Ufls and ,aJso played tedium afcckral jud&amp;e to aaor- shall, but was focused on all play·
.
behind .the Toronto net and fed on the power play as Palguias liuts aeys jndira1es tUt die pr()pOSed ers in the league. ·
Foot baD
Pivonka at the left post for his 19th waved black-and-gold "Mario" · P'Uiemmt bttsu II tlleNf:L8nd its
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -11ie
signs in his f1111 home pmc since playas lillY be ....ooed or rcja;t·
goal of the seaaon.
Dave Andreychuk scored for the Jan. S. Lemieux's shooting was olf eel as a wide.
San Francisco 49ers denied a n:p0rt
Maple Leafs.
·
- he missed a nearly-open net
A aat dak Slid Jlllfie David in the San Francisco Cbronicle that
Islanders 4, Flyers :Z
three minuJCs into the game and Docy wrote alcocr 10 die ...DCYS they've 'iven permission to Jde
Pierre Turgeon had a goal and couldn't convert several odlcr lllOI'- infonniag tbeiD of tbat be had Montana s agent to shop the 36two essisu as the Islanders beat ing opportunities - but he assisled IWiUI down amp I by Wasbing· year-old quarterback around the
Philadelphia for their season-high on the Penguins' first goal
ton liN I • h:r WiJbc:r Mlnllallto NFL. Montana has played only
fifth straight victory.
.
. Jets 4, LiptDina 2
have illc .li••:hiae ~ category sparingly since the 1990 season.
.
Canucks 7, Devils l
· Rookie Teemu Setannc scored chopped fium the ap:anent. The because of a series of elbow operi.
Geoff Courtnall scored twice three goals - one on his first Wasbingtoa Pos1 reported .that 'lions.

damage.
"It was all just precaution,"

Tuesday's srores

23

Centnl Dlvldan
a.;..,p ..................41 II .695

CI.J!VEU,NI) .......39

sm,.IM Dhtoloo
Vanor:uver ..,.M
•• 37 21 9 ·n
Colpey , ............ 33 24 10 76
l.ol ............... 30 30 7 67
WUmipoa .•...•.••• 30 32 6 66
~............ 23 3'1 I 54
SanJoxe ............ JO 56 2 22
l·clinthod playotrbezth

73 points, New Jersey is lhird with ·
72, the lUnJen are founh with 71
and die Isllnden fifth with 70.
"Our Jftayoffs, realistically, are
now," Islanders forward Patrick
Flatley said. "It's the ~st of 20
games, and we have 10 win IS of
them."
Elsewhere, the Penguins beat
Boston 3-2, Wilinipe&amp; bell Tampa
Bay 4·2 and Minnesoiawhipped
Tampa Bay 4-2/
Ranaers 4, Klnp 3
Mike Gartljer's power-play goal
with S:S4 remaining capped a twogoahally for the Rangers.
.
Gartner ICOI'Cd his 39th from the
lower left circle after taking a Jlli!IS
from James Pall'ick at the nglit

•

Sco ,. e boa ,. d
In.theNBA ...

Division race tightens· with victories by three teams

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�Sentinel

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.

1993

March

·:Wednesday, March 10, 1993

On spring training scene,

RED RIPE

Strawberries

•

By TH Asloclated Press

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Greene groomed to replace
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Bielecki shakes butterflies,
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•

:LaValliere may be next
~on · Pirates' departure list

•

I
I
I
I

Ea·st Car·oiina· JOinS .
under-50~ company
···n NCAA tournament

r:·~~=y f~ ·looo, es~· ftrS!,;~~sb

C.oltag·e
.Chee·se
AND

the old guys, with the notable
exception of Milwaukee pitcher
~~n . Rob inson . Hampered by rd.
son was ctreling the bases aftet a IDJurtes the past two seasons, be ._._
home run.
was placed on uncond itional
''
The drama wasn't quite there ' ~eleasc waivers Tuesday.
Tuesday when Gibson bit his ftrSt
Robinson, 31 , is guaranteed
• home Nn of~ training. Sfill, $1 .2 !Dillion in 1993, the final seahe Will bacJ:; tn a Detroit Tigers son of a three-year contract wonh
unifonn 1111\ it was his ftrSt home $3.3 million. He has pitched just
rua in a year, since before the Pitts- nine games since signing the conburgh Pirates released him last trac~ toinl.1-S.
·
May.
· .
. . . . Nolan yan, who plans to retire
Gibson, who will turn 36 pn after the season, threw 79 pitches
May 28.,;played only 16 games against the Minnesota Twins in the
.
~
before the Pirate&amp; gave up on him. first Slart of his final spring
ALL-.DISTRICT MARAUDERS - Meigs basketllall players.,
Gibson laid he would !Wre, but !hi: ing; allowing two runs and four hits
Verna Compston (left) aud Larl Kelly, who received aU-District l :tj
Tigers I!Jfed him back just tie{ore in five innings of a 3-0 Texas
honors from area roadtts last week, were named to the aii-Soulht
the ,start of spring training . He Rangers loss at Port Charloqe, Fla.
east Disttlet Dlvlsioa n Rirla' sqaad by The Associated Press earlier..
sigaed a $500,000, one-year con. Ryan struck out three ~d
this week for tbelr accomplishments in le~tding the Marauders tq;
tract that could earn him an addi- walked two, giving up ali ,RBI &lt;jbll- , tile Oak Hill sectloaal title and into district play.
.
~
tiottal $600,000 if he meets sevellli · ble to ' Brian Harper in the fourth ·'
...
pcrform_ance bonus levels. He has and a home run to Scou Leius in , .
.
•
•
•
•
~
played ID only two of the Tigers' the·fulh. i.
I
.
~
fi.ve ~bi~ games, but has. ~
' Ryan, 46-yeat-old nght-han- .
.
.
.
~ .
btts, mcludmg a home run, m hiS der, wasn't thinking aboUt the ·final
.
· ' ·
••
thelitSt.time I'llJ:ive· ctally the homer, Glbson satd up a home run m my ·first sprirfg ·
.
'~ AM I NEXT? ~ Wltb Wih-prl«d plarers such as Bobby BOilil· after Detroit's 6-3 victory • .Lake- start, " Ryan said. "But I don't
land, Fla., over a Toronto split think about anything being the last
·
·
..
.; Ia, Barry Bonds and Doug Drabe" bavtnl left town, Pittsburgh
••
squad.
"But
the
next
at-bat
was
.time·!
do
something.
I
have'
to
con·
·
• Pirates catcher Mike LaValliere, sltOwa In action during spring
~
re8Jiy
the
libnus
tesL
I
have
a
tencentrale
on
what
I
do,
day-10-day.
I
; training workout~; may feel be may be next 1111 the exit list, as he bas
By JOE MACENKA
keep working, they graduall ~
dency to be-man it after one like haven't given much thought.IO this ··
: the third-highest salary on the dub. (AP)
'
·
RICHMOND, Va. (AP)- Wei· began to believe.'' .
,, .
!haL"
. .
last spring. I'm too preoccupied ·
come
10
the
NCAA
tournament,
·
The
Pirates
got
a
preview
~,
GibS;On. who walked hi_s ftrSIBt· with get~ng ready forlhe season:'',
what was ahead when, on .Feb. q;
bat agamst the Blue Jays, followed
Charhe Hou~. the 45-year-old where even losers can be wilUICrs.
Just
ask
the
Bradley
Braves
of
James
Madison went to Greenville
his homer off rookie left-bander knucldeballer, pnched four shutout
1955.
with.
an
undefeated CAA recor'!i
Huck Aener with a Une single off innings in his first start of the
.
·
Or
the
Tellas
Longhorns
of
East
Carolina
won 58-57.
·~
Rick Steed, rllising Gibson's bat- spring for Florida and bit a run1974.
East
Carolina
came
into
th
~
ling average to .600. II brought scoring single off Mark Portugal as
Or
the
Lehigh
Engineers
of
CAA
tournament
as
the
sevent
QI
BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) Last year, many or his team- back memories of his 1988 homer a Marlins' split squad beat a Hous- 1985.
seed in the eight-ream league. In at~
&gt;l!arry !3olids, D.oug Drabe~ and maleS quietly accepted the disman- for Los Angeles off Oakland's ton split ~uad 4-3 at Cocoa, Fla.
Now
add
a
new
ream,
the
East
three games. the Pirates ·outre ~
Hough s last regular-season .at·
'Jose Lm!l are Pittsburgh Ptrates tling of the three-time NL East Pennis Eckerlsey and . hi's two
Carolina
Pirates
of
1993.
·
bounded
their opponents, beat then);
.history, and catcher Mike LaVal- champions, but LaValliere was homersinGameSofthe '84Series bat was in 1980 when he was a
~
With
its
54-49
victory
over
topto
loose
balls and played bette
forDetroiL
member of the Los Angeles .
.liere thinks he might be the next highly critical.
in
.Mondefense.
•
seeded
James
Madison
"That last pitch, I went right Dodgers.
,,
pla&gt;:er out the door.
. ·
He said the .P irates were "a
day's
Colonial·
Athletic
Association
Now
they're
going
to
th6
Among slightly younger pitch·
He has two years aild ·more than fann club for the rest of baseball" down," GibsQn said. "That's what
got
10
do
to
get
that
pitch.
My
ers,
Orel Hershiser allowed two championship game, East Carolina NCAA tournament for the firs~
I've
'$4 million remaining on the three- and should compete in Triple-A.
became just the eighth team to time since 1972.
~
.year contract h\ signed after the He also said they should release hardest thing is to keep the stroke. hits in four shumut innings ·as the · qualify for the NCAA tournament . "We knew if we hun~ in therol
,41991 season. He platoons at catcher manager Jim Leyland from his con-. I'm not a mcchanicaf guy. I'm a DOOgers routed the Marlins' other with a lOsing retonl.
. and kept working hard, ' Youni!
squad 10-0 at Vero Beach, Fla.
,with Don Slaugh~ yerhis salary is trac1 so he could manage • real · strong guy.''
The
Pirates
don't
seem
bothered
said. "something good woul ~
It generally was a good day (or Hershiser, 34, struck out six.
:the third-highest on. the team, lea?!· .
.
.
.
by their losing legacy.
come Out of all the bad times." 1:
behind only center fielder ~ndr. ·
~ JUSI ktnd of reached the
.
\ .\
"Maybe we'll get to play North
~
:van Slyke and pitcher"Zane Smith. breaking point when they let Dou'
Carolina," guard RonneU Pe~n
Sports
briefs
~
: "When·you combine the fact Drabek get away to Houston,'
said, already assuming the obvious:
~
:ru make $2 million this season and LaValliere· said. "I couldn't
that East Carolina will be seeded
Basketball
~
"Siaught will make $1 million, heliev~ lh~y would let the .ace of
last
in
one
of
the
16-tenm regionals
LOS
ANGELES
(AP) - JiJ
' that's $3 million fer one position," O!lr pllchmg staff leave and I
and get s~ked_ I!P against one of Harrick, 114-44 in five seasons
~LaValliere said. "With what the thOughtlhefrontofftCebolchedlhe
PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) but could be ready by next season the game s tradibooal powerhous- I UCLA; received a th=-year coO:
'Piraies have done in c"uuing negotiations. I was asked what I Willie Greene is tile Cincinnati if the Reds ftnd tbemselves needing es.
.
.
tract exrension through the 1996-9~
~. it~ s seems only logical that' thought about the moves and I gave ~eds' third bisem10 of the future. 3
'\::"~narios out
East .Carohn~ (13-16) ts the ftrs~ season. Harriet was in the fourt~t
:I would~ next.
.
my opinion.'~:
.
of that generallllllliger Jim Bow- ' ~~~a::.~
...
team
wtth a losmg record to make year of a five-year deal paying hiD(
• " When it gets toward the end of
LaVallie~e, isn't backing down
den has left do doubt.
.
t
hoewred,eanlotsat~df.
~~t~e~oue•sc:"!~to~~
the
~CAA
field since Montana almost$400,000ayear. .
. ~
:spring training and some other club from his comment!, but realius it
But for now, Chris Sabo is the ·
State
m
1986.
Basketball
· :1
:thinkS a Veteran catcher might be ~nefits no one to criticize what incumbent and ·a,tene likely will grest players·out there and if you
The seven previous .Josing _teanls
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) ...J
!What it noeds to
ii over the top, now is histoly when a new .
start the year at Class AAA Indi- can get .theln, you can trade them, have a mtal of one v:ctory m the Willie Booker, 137-125 i.n .nint'
&gt;.then 1'11\0
, _ ~..
is.l~slhan 11 DlOnlh away.
anapolis. ThereJte'll be able to do whatever you wan!- "
tournament.
_ _ ,
seasons. at Florida A&amp;M~
-~ O:: Pira'\~,t
Ted
''I'~ a
LaVallieruaid. pia~ every day; BOwden fiopes it . i·,As m,uc)l as (lfe Rej{i' like· ' "None of that _mat~rs. .~olhing at the request of school offictals:
;si.mmons
plan any tnides • 'I realtze the Pirates have done .tu.rnons his consistency. '
'
Greene's hitting, Perez is
try· else matters at lh:s po:nl, center The Rattlers were JQ.J8 this sea..
ibe(ore the season starts Apri16.
what they've done and there's --;-Ifwouldn't ~ he's erratic,'' ing to get him to stop jumping Ike CoJ.&gt;elaild said. "This makes son.
•
~ "I don't.want to be traded nothing anyone can do. I'm not
said Bowden. "!think he's a lillie around the cage, emphasizing the everylhmg wonl1 it This is like a
obel:ause I like Pittsburgh and Ilike upset by it' anymore but it's still bit out of shape right now, which in need to stop hitting off his ·front dream come true.''
:Playing for Jim Leyland," LaVal- dtsappointing. We bad something a big4eague camp shouldn' i h.af.· footaild concentrate on keeping his
Five weeks ago, the NCAA
:J,icrc said. "l'm certainly not ask- pretty special going here. •
pen. He realizes it and h~ II weight back.
·
· · · tournament wasn't even a Consider·
1ng f~r a uade. I'm braced for one,
• "Not only did we have a good adjllSI."
Greene is doing it in batting ation for the Pirares. Their loss 10
i1though. I just have a feeling it' s club but we had a lot of quality .
The Reds love his bat and liis practice and in the cage, but in a Alabama 011 Feb. 1 was East CarJloing to happen.'' ·
. ·
friendships. We had a good club- fielding. But they do not like his game he reverts to his old ways. · · olina's lith in 13 games, a stretch
1
' Only two other Pirates remain house wtlh a group of guys that weighl
.. "Hopefully I can put ~t ~ether in which the Pirates dropped seven
'from April1987, wh~ a trade with basically got .alpng. You hale 10 see
Gicene, who bulked up during this week,'' Greene
satd. 'In
·
1one po'm.1
. a .marowa
Me SL Louis Cardinals sent LaVal- something spc;cial like that come 10 the off-season to add an extra 10 game, you don , I Wl!llt to thtn~
"Our ch10ces didn't look too
i:l~. Van Slyke and pitcher Mike an end."
'
pounds. arrived in camp at 200 about 100 !Ouch,. or y~ make tt good,' ' said ,Copeland, the only
(P.unne to the Pirates in exchange
, The biglest adj~t this sea- pounds, 20 over his listed weighi.
. worse, so I JUSt hiL I~ t have my player on :0. Pirates' roster who
lfor catcher Tony Pena. One is Van son has been learning all 'the new
"I got a little tired at the end of swing down yet. but ll s 'OIIflt anc!·. has been at die Greenville, N.C.,
:;51yke and the other is pitcher Bob names. .
.
.
lastryear, so I hit tile' weights,'' not every one else does either,'"·. ' school for four seasons.
'!Walle, a Pirate since 1984.
' "It's been lot different this Greene said. "It's'already happen·
But the Pirales kept believing in
! Of the 2S players on the Pirates' spring," _LaV~~ said. "I S~?CDt ing. I'm already down 10.19:fand
Sports briefs 1
the basics being preached by sec,
""'st-season roster last October, 11 a lot of bme early m camp astqng,_ last year I was 189 in spring ltainHockey ~, ' "· ,.. ond-year coach Eddie Payne: Play
~gone.
'Who's that?' and "Who's he?' "
ing. I don't think three pounds is
MON1REAL {AP) - Montreal solid defense, hustle and stay wilh••
goiq todoJL"
.
Canadiens coach Jacques Demers in the framework of the patient
~nager Tony Perez is taking was hospitalized with chest pains ·offensive scheme.
his lime with Oreene, who alniady and wilfmiss twogamea while kc;pt
"The last 10 games, We've been
has been iii two trades and who under observation. Demers, 48, playing everybody really tough."
went from Cla&amp;s A 10 AA to 29 was pf!:paring for practice at the . swinJIII8n Curley Young said. "It
~a:e' in the majon at the end of • Forum when he first felt the; pains. •· was Just a matter of time until we
year, when he bit .2fD with two
Baseball
· ·
, got a break."
waiting so long 10 pitch, I couldn't
~ . WINTER HAYEN, Fla. (AP) homers
and 13 RBI.
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.'
Payne began seeing the results
After a seven-month injury l~yoff wait f~r the game. But as I was lay"He's
playing
himself
into
(AP)
Deion
Sanders
set
B
record
before
they started showing up in
ing
in
bed
and
the
game
got
ciO&amp;et,
!and a sleepless night of anticipashape and it's going to take Ume,'' for the highest 111newal in baseball the won-loss ledger.
I
kept
saying
to
myself,
'May~
I
;tion, Mike Bielecki said he quickly
Perez said. "This is a kid who's 21 history when the Atlanta Braves • "We kept Kelling better," he
need a couple or more days.'" ·
JOI back into the pitchinjl groove.
and
already got my lhinl base· renewed him last week at $1 mil- said. " You have to~ in the locker
The Asuos were the last team man I've
· Bielecki, 33, made hiS fnt stan
inSabo."
lion. The deal covers the ·fust tOw:. rooms, in practice, in the gym at 6
l!flonday since ·undergoil)g major Bielecki faced last July 29 ~fore
Sabo
could
he
a
free
agent
after
elbow surgery Jut summer, aild he tearing the. ligament in his right Ibis se&amp;!On, but Bowden is trying to months of the season, but doeSri't' a.m. for skill workouts, going 10
guarantee that Sanders, also a class, coming back that aflenioon
~worked 2 2/3 scoreless Innings in elbow, which led 10 the surgery
sign him to a Jong-tenn contraCt.
;the Indians' 9·5 win over the Hous- July 31. Bi~Jecki was with the Bowden acknowledged Tuesdav defensive back for the Allanla Fal- · for practice, Md doing all that and
cons, will stay with the Braves · not havin~t • whole lot of success.
Atlanta Braves then.
·ton Astros.
.
that
"Willie's
a
long
way
aw11,y/'
afteJ.
July 31.
' '
And to see them keep their alii·
"The last pitch I threw, I struck
' " I couldn ' I sleep at all Sunday
tudes
up and to keep mgether and
night," he said. "I kept looking at out Steve Finley on a splitter,' '
the clock every 15, ~- ~ter Bielecki recalled.
On Monday, Bielecki gave up
'
three
(one to Finley), butllO
.~Sports deadlines' posted runs. ins~les
his two.innings. He walked
of •
one and struck out lh=.
' The Gal/1{'¥/is Daily Trlbun~,
' "That's' a big relief.' ' said
, ·The D,ally_Sen!lntl, . the P.oint Bielecki. "! waited seven months
.,!'lttuiJIII Reg(ster and the Sllllday- far Ibis swi I was a little nervOus
.Times-5entinel value the conlribu· befote the ~arne star1ed. but after
rtions their readers make to the the first toning I fell into a
,sjJons sections of these papers, and groove.''
•theae contributions will continue 10
Bielecki said he felt no discom,IJe published.
fort in the elbow.
~ However, certain deadlines for
"I'm really happy,'' he said.
''SUbmissions ·will be observed. The "Not so much with the slats, but
'deadline for phoms and related ani· with the fact that I didn't feel IDY·
.ctes for basketball and other winter thing.
I could have given up five
~- is the last day of the NBA runs, but if I bad felt no pain I
would have been h!flpY.''
· Likewise, the deadline for subManager Mike~ said he
·mlssions of local baseball- and was CIICOUI'IIed by ~•dccki's out·
.IOfiball-related ph,o!QS and related ing.
·
,nicles, from T-ball 10 the majon,
"I lilted what I saw," said Har• wdlu other apring and aununer grove. •'He kept !he ball down, IJII!I
IJIOitl. il 'the day or the 111t pme . a good sinker, 10d came out of 11
of ~ World Seriea. 1111 ~ne wllh no aches lild pains;"
J:.l:.~ 10d related articles for
Even thouab he Is an ax_P!!ri·
and other fall lp01'IS is the enced m*" league player, Btelec·
lltunfly before the Super Bowl.
ki admiued he was nervous about
Tbele deadlines have been in$ti- his flllt spring game.
tuted to ~'" readen plenty of Ume
~ get lhllir photos back lrom the
TtaDIJ
.
photography studio or choice and
· ZARAGOZA, Spain (AP) 10 give the 11aff1 the opportunity 10 Ja.&gt; Cunha-Silva 0( Portu&amp;ll beat
publish these sporis photos and Bjom Bora or Sweden 6-1,3-7, 7·'
lr1k:les cbing the appropriate sea- In the first round of the Zanaoza
_,.. fir that SJIOII.
,Open.

a

HERITAGE ·HOUSE

Pomeroy, Oh.

..,..

train-

20 LB.
BAG

700 West Main Street

...

It was just like the 1988 World
Series, or~ 1984. Kirk Gib-

·white
Potatoes

BIG BEND FOODLAND

•••
•••

.

Graybeards.' rule
solid in latest action

U.$. NO. 1

-

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-l
t

QUART

City __ -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

or Pictorial

c

•

•

f •

I.

290 North Second

'

vl

Middleport

;a

�By The Bend

PEPSI COLA

p

PRODUCTS

••

The D_aily Sentine :
•

STORE HOUR$

·Monday thn $Imlay'

Lande·rs

&lt;

~
' I'

.

.

l

•
A"~tt

T

·$499
., .

Cubed s.teak...........~.........LB.

$289

;;:kRL~~~. .--·-···---LB. S]79
-J.T.M.

.~ .

. ... '

ss99

Beef Patt1es. . . . s LB. Box -.. ·
l

$ 99

US~A CHOICE BO~ELESS BEEF

R1beye Steaks.....~. . 4
PORK Bun
.
S].39
Butts
IS
teaks
..........
CHICKEN ·
·· .
·
,
.
.
.
39(
Leg Quarters...:...............
LB. ·,

.· •

.

.' $279

Chicken L1vers...s LB. TuB

ARGO

GREEN.
BEANS160Z.

$1
4

s.,

l.

Mobile m{lrrzmography unitmakes
first offour visits to Meigs County

·'

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0!1 Monday, the Ohio State Uni·
versit~ mcibile mammography unil

LONGHORN

· .

S] "t9

r.

JIFFY·

the Meigs County Health Department's ca~ prevention program
which is geared to improve the
· statistics that show that only one-

,· cORN

MUFFIN ·MIX
8.5 oz.

B.r:idges won't be charoed
in "stabbing
0

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Prose· ', with a swcrd, said Sandi Gibbons,
cutors won't press charges Todd . a spokeswoman for the district
Bridges for stabbing a tenant in the auorney. 'The fonner actor was try·
chest, concludinf. t1Je former ing to evict Kitchen, who ~ rent·
"Piff'I'CI'!t Strokes ' sw acted in eel a 100m in Bridges' home.
,
self-defense.
Bridges is free on bail awaiting
Bridges, 27, had been arrested trial on drug and weapons charges
over the .weekend for inwstigalion stemming from an arrest in Decem.o f attempted murder ill the·llllhbing ber.
ofDavidJosephKitchen,23.
Kitchen was' hospitalized. His
' Bridacs stabbed- Kitchen with a • condition was not disclosed.
knife alter Ki!Chen auar"ed him
•

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE ·The Syracuse
Youth 4ague will meet Wednesday Bl!d Marth 17 from S-7
at
5)'111!:UJe Elementary Schoo • Regi$tralioo fee is $12 per child. not Ill
exceed $2S per famil1. First time
panicl1!8111S must JIIUVIdc a copy of
their bkiii certificatr;. Further infot.
mation may be obtained by con·
~ling Jim Lawtenco at 992-3~2.

-CRACKERS

-99(

Sweet
SUNSHINE ·
Food........................2o LB.
TIDE

ULTRA DETERGENT

$299 . ~~: .

•

. .

Potatoes. . . . . . . . sLB. BAG

$259

6PACK

\
TIRJRSDAY
pOMEROY • The Community
Lenten ServiCe, spo!!IOied by the
~igs MiDisterial Aseoci•rion, will
be al Trinity Congre1ational
. Church on Thlll'lday 11 7:30 p.m.
Rev. Keith Rader will be preach·
ing.
1

SJ39

POMEROY· The Pomeroy
Group or M will meet 1bunday Bl
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Chwl:b In Pllmcroy. Call 992-5763
·for inforrnalioll.
·

..

SNOW FLOSSi

MJDDLBPORT • 1bae will be

·

CHIS11IR -Shade River Lodae a round I!I!IIIQI!IIe dance 00 Satut·
No. 453 JIAAM will !lleet '1'11Dt'1- clay from 8-11~~ lhe old
4111i 7:30 e.m. • tllalodlt llaiUn legion hall iu .
. Music
Chester: Iofreallmeull will be will be by CJ and lila
l1Y Gcn·
demon. Olildten a welr.ome with
STIVERSVn.LE · Dav.i4 Car- llduiiii!PCIYision. BrinJIDICb fer
the IIIICk llble.

""eeL

Good Ol!lv At P.well'e su,.r Valu

Olllr Clelllllir. 7 thru • · 11, 1111

v

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•

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.

RUTLAND· • The R11tland
Youth League will hold its second
sign-up Saturdil)' from 1-3:30 p.m.
at the Rudand Civic Center. Any·
one not participating las! year must
provide a copy of their birth certifi·
cate. Registration fee is $19 J?Cr
child, not to exceed $2S per family.

Wll

"1::,i':llfl!lld.

2/sl

HARRISONVILLE • Sign-up
for the Harrisonville Youth League
will be Saturi!ay from 10 a.m. to
noon at Harrisonville Elememary.
. A youth league meeting will be
held at 6 p.m. at the Scipio Fire
DepanmenL

FREE

FAIRPLAlN, W.VA. -The Lib~ Plalu VFW Polt. No. 90.53 erly Mountaineers will perform
willl!lcllt 1t • ._, • 7.30 p.m. 11 Saturday at the Jactlou County
~~~ ~aMIIela ·aro . ,_._laPairpllln, W.Va.

BATH TISSUE

MILLFIELD - There will be a
round and square dance Saturday
from 8'·11 p.m. at the Russell
Building in .Millfteld. ¥usic ~ be
by Ramblin Country.

•

·RUTLAND • There will he a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall Saturday from 8 p.m.
to midnight. Music will be a by
Pure CountJy Band. Public iJ1vited.

· SATURDAy
MIDDLEPORT ~ The Ma ••e·
port Youth l,.eague will hold ~-. •
up for the 1993 ball season Satt. · .
day from 9 Lm. 10 noon. Sign·u~
will be held at the Middleport
Council chambers. Anyone who
WINNER • Jason Miller, SOD of Jeaaetta aDd Cbarles MIU,,
did not participale last season will
RaciDe,
and a studenJ al RaciDe ~lemeutarJ, waa tbe WIDner or a
need a copr of their birth ccrtifi·
cate. Regastration fee is $10 P.er
gold cl!aiD donated by Clark's Jewelry or Pqmeroy: Tile cllaiD child, not 10 exceed $2S per famlly. , used In a tuDdralsinR eftat ID willcb all pl'oceeds will 1111 tiiWIU'd
1•
expeDIII on tbe prom Bl Soutbera 111811 Scllool.
'
MARIE1TA • 'The Washington
County Saddle Horse Advisory
r---------------·-~
Cdim!aauee will hold its third 81\JlU·
1
al auction of new and used tack on
Slll!nlaY. at 6 p.m. at lbe junior fair
building at the Washington County
Fair GrOunds in Mlrieua. Can 423·
be
11
C01ntles bJ
7636 for funher infomwion.

·a=~=T~nx:t.t~

•

••

·voted 10 move 10 Friendly Hills.
The birthdays of Rosalie Srory
and Wallace .Bradford were noted.
Wallace Bradford was thanked
for the new quilting frames.
III' noted were Octa Ward, Art
Shumway, Leo Story, Elizabeth
Robei!S and Ronald Eastman. •
Muriel Bradford won the b8king
contesl with a Heath Bar cake.
Golda Reed was second 1and Leota
Smith, third. There were six
enbies.
•
A Marl:h theme 'was carried out
in the lecture pro~ram. Muriel
Bradford ~nted 'Six Tulips in
the Snow. Rosalie Story presented
a fable. Bob Reed presented "A
House Builder:" Iessae White gave
a repon on how 10 get to Parkern.

Announcements

LONG BOTIOM • Faith Full
Gospel Chur&lt;;jt in Long Bottom
wi_ll hold a special h~nm sing o_n
Fnday at 7 p.m. featunng 1be Dai·
ley Family Singers, Harmony Boys
and other local singing will be fea·
lured. Pastor Steve Reed invites the
public. Fellowship will follow.

'IU'PJ!RS PLAINS ·The Tup-

ltiiiii1,.Cull-

-l(

The Hemlock Grange No. 2049
held its regular meeting recently
with Master Rosalie Story presid•
ing.
..
Repoi!S on standing committees
were made by Muriel Bradford.
There will be a poduck in April ·
with Harrisonville Gtange as
guests.
.
Helen Quivey gave the building
fund coqtmittce repon.
Ziba Midkiff, reporting for the
legislative committee,, asked the
grange Ill back the health care plan.
A survey was conducted by the
execulkro committee , on the
grange's l!houghts on moving
grange headquarters to Friendly
Hills or keep what they have arid
make improvements. The group

•

ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock port Elemcnlary on Salllrday from
·SJII!naa Oranp wm - Thuraclay 8·11 p.m. sponsored by lbe Mid·
at 8 p.m. There will be special dlepon Ans CoanciL Admiaioo is
slnginJ IDd the bating coniCS! Yfill ·$5 I couple or $3 pot person.
beheld! .
'
ReCielhmeft~ will be sold.

SOfT RIIGIIRU

At f'oMII'I Iuper V.lu
7 thru Mllr. 13, 1111 ·

•

FRIDAY
RIPLEY, W.VA. • The Liberty
Mountaineerll will perfonn Friday
at Skaleland in Ripley, W.Vfl.

~acine

\ RACINE • The
Youth
I!.eu!ie will hold sign-up for the
/ 199~ ball season on Wednesday
from ~8 p.m., on M.cb 13 from 9
a.m. Ill noon and MaR:h 1.5 from 68 p.m. Final sign-up will be MIKI:h
20 from 9 a.m. Ill noon. Silln·up
will be held Bl the Southern kinder·
garten buililina. ~•tratio!i fee
win be $10 for ao
playen, SIS
for baseball playen, not Ill exceed
$2~ per family. Aoyone wbo did
not particlplte in the Racine Youth
League
will need a copy
of ¥t . irth cenifatr
.

tdiiousl'-

FLA~ORITE CRINKLE CUT . ,

··

CHESHIRE : 1be Gallia~Meigs
Community Action Agency will •
hold a' 1iee clothing day Thursday
from 9 a.m. to noon at the old high
school building in Olcshire.

' POMEROY • Pomeror Merchan,ts Association wil meet
Wedilelday at 8:30 Lm. at the COD·
~erence room of Bank One in
Pomtroy.

IF

,

lDgh Prescription·costs
.,

Do you feel you are payin8 100 much lor
your prescrip!lons? Then you should be ·
shopping with us. Wllh the cost of medica·
ttons constant IV on the rise, we feellt ls
our responslbtli!y 10 offer our
cus1omen even; •dvantqe poulble. ·
You see. we've made I! a pouu to know
when generic equivalents are available.
Then, working hand·ln·hand wtth your
doctor, we fllf your prescrlplion, exac!lv
as ordered, ~d ynu !IBVe 1n the process.

COUPON ·
HEARING~ TESTS

given MeiJs/Galha

.&amp;twe HEAR NG AID CENTER

'

ofrM Periling (VIdlo T-'1 Lot)
of1al 1o Frl.mlly Se!".ice
oBION Clllrge Account~
ofrM Detlv.-y to HolM ar Wort!
(CMehhe, Bradbilry,

FRIDAY, MAR. 12, 1,93-t:OO.Ioon
11 Dr. A. J1ckto• hllta' Office
110MI....Ic

BELlONE HEAliNG

1312 ....."! ~w... CIMte 7)l ~·"'

l
1
I1

' 614-446-1744
WIDNISDIY, MAl. 17, 1tf).t:OO 1.&amp;-4a00
· Cal Tol Freel-81J0.634-S26S for ali lmmedlale Appoillllenl
1
rr.. lull
Lkw•rl Hw... IM fji, 1I r • I
MyOI\t who hits Iraulilt
II ltwiiMto han a I
FR~E htarll!lltsllosat •
ctUPOII wRit yvu far

•·•·I

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,I

____ ..., __ ,..__ __ ... _________._... __.I·_
:_

~_

i.Low Prucrfplion PrieN

__

MkldlepOrt, PoiMray,

(

no

Mln«a¥10., Rutland, ly••

an.
•l

WITHOln' PUlDNG
A LlD ON V4WEI

•

· Prescription. Shop

" .......

IHIIIIII.Aw.

-Pt' 0 t, ...

f

- (
(.

Gran··ge .v;otes t0 move
. h.eaqu
d art. ers

penter, Bellville, W. Va!, 'will
preach at the Stiversville Word of
Faith Church on Thursday at 7:30
p.m. Pastor David Dailey invites
the publil:.

r..m.

POUND BOX

' '

res, R.N. nursing director at the'
Health Department stressed th_e
need for monthly breast self-exanul)ations and examinations during
regular checkups by a physician.
Early d!ltection results in breast
can~rbeing ueated sllCcessfully.
The charge for a mammogram
on.the mobile unit and its intexpre·
tation.is$5S. The service is open to
women 35 and over whO have no
or inadequate medical insurance,
non-pregnant, non-nursing and
with no personal histoiy of breast
cancer. Medicare recipients are
considered eligible since that pro·
gram does not pay for mammography.
.
.'
· The next three. clinics will be
held on .f11ay 13, ~ug. 12, ~Nov.
4. Appoantments may be made .
through Phyllis Bearhs, Women's
Hea)!h Care Teclll!itian, 992-6626.

'

Comniunity calendar

ZEST. A

'

mograms.
.
During yes!erday's visit 23
women were given x-rays which
will be read by a radio1ogist.
Results will be sent lo those having
mammograms. ·
· While milmmograms are considered one of the best weapons
· •· .

~ade!ISfllStoffo':l"plannedvisiiS

·

.'

third of women over 50 have mam- against breast cancer, Nonna Tor· .

10 Meags County thas year.
The unit was h¢te IS a part of

LB.

LB.

'

MAMMOGRAPHY UNIT. HERE. Here
Bel(y Carpeater, center, Is uslsted onto the
, mobDe m•-oaraplty uQit by OSU stailf worker
, Vera Garatolo, R. N., M. llllil Norma Torres,

'

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24 PACK 12 OZ. CAN

·'BUCkET ;BEEF ' .. ·.

=1"
•=

~

•

:t·
......

.

Ann

RCCOLA
PRODUCTS

~

Dar Alia Landen: 'lbia put
the IICJit IDWD, Lord .~ ~!oW".
summer, I wu very iU and u close
many miles be went caa of llil waJ;:
10 dearh u r c:olll!l be wilhoul dying.
to do tl!is. As he pulled away ill hili::
big silver semi, I ~ God li!IC·
AII6: two mOIIIbs iD the hmpibl, I
came home 10 fllld llu!t my II!Oiber
there are stiU knights on tbe llllit:
had moved_in, IIi "help until you can
and that I was lucky enouih 10
&amp;ell!ack on YOI!!' feet.·
ooe. - LA V(»&gt;NE SCHAFEit
This sounds wonderful, but the
SOUJ'H DAKOTA
•:
· YiOinaD is driving me bally. She sits
DEAR LA VONNB: ~:
.........
._for a.• lWWUICl.
•
ID the llltliner all day and crilicizes
1...._.
,.:
evcrydtillg I do. Vacuuming: "You hlvea petty rough ticlreL
Dear Aaa Laaden: ~
sho!!ld move that chair fanher blick."
When your !IICllbcr starts 10 talk reac!iac ill ,our ..........
Dusting: •you should UJe wax on about your ii1Deas Ill od!cn, 110p iarlddr t 'toK
MW
thOse tables." Cookilla: "'Ibis !Utes her oold .and say, ."Please -• off retumed wid! tbe
OK, but
it would be bew!ir
if ou the liubject; It's boring. •.,...
added
a lillie_,_.....,,
E-· wheny
Then ciemposuaeforCanwta," Im i1
1
.
•
,....._ · IIKn lbe conversation 10 something IOwnte.
I correapOI!d wi~ ielalives ~
II~do
· ~ d!s~washer, she tells me else.
.
,
m mg tt wrong." I Coof!ontecl
Dear ADD Ludera: Some Gtnnlny. My lall
her. with: "You don't . have a llUCkers are still "knights of the three times widl
dishwasher, how do you -know I'm road," u two of them proved Ill me "COIIItJy Unlaiowll. •
doing it wrong?"
· ra:ently.
time, I wrote 011 tbe
I managed Ill put up with all this
One darlt nighl IS I wu driving "Gennany ill well.hu: ••
"help" 111d keep from blowing my home alone, my car backfired and in EI!I'IIJIC. Look it ap. • ~.
cool' unlil bee mends st8ncd Ill drop 1o1t power. Smoke began 10 stream WU UjNiled itdidll't-liact
by. She would repeatedly say, "Did liom under the hood. Jusalhen a big fourth time sayin1, "fc~.&lt;:l
you know tha! ·s~· (not .my !Cal ICIIIi was passing me. 'The driver Unknown." .. I.E., J,
name] almost died? 1ben sbei would v, radioed bis partner in the IICJIIIn!Ck. .VILLE, FLA.
· add, It wu days before we knew if "She's shooting fire!"
DEAR SACK: 1'lilub fora
~would~ iL I prac~y lived
When I SlOpped on the should«, laugb 10 buuoa up die wee~L
·~ the ~~ Care UruL I don~ the IICCOI!d semi was direcdy behind needed lhat.
I~ being remmded I almost died. me. 'The·driver got out of his 1n!ck · Is riiiJI Au l..tu~Mrs col-.
W1U
you please tell me ~ I can without a jacket or gloves and clipped yurs ago ytllqw
R• N. of tbe' Meigs County Health DepartDieut.
get my mother 10 SlOp llllkiilg about shouted, "Piill up your hood. You've For 11
Carpenter was ooe of 23 Meigs County women
af 11er llml
my illness? It really is beginning to gota fire under there."
who took advantage of the unit's visit for a low·
cost mammogram.
get 10 me. - A BELLY FULL IN
With his bare hands, he threw
NEW HAVEN
handfuls of snow on10 the fire until
DEAR NEW HAVEN: Obviously it We!lt oUL He then helped me inlll
your mother can~t believe_you ll!'e bis 18-wheeler and lifted my two
grown up. C.ombme that ,wath YO!Jr dogs into the cab beside me.
nearly fataL illne~a aDd bet
That heauliful li'I!Cker drove me
lllke.cluqe personality, and )'ou almost Ill the door of my home in

8AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
.
POMEROY, OH.
Wi RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANOTIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., MAR. 7 THIU MAR. It, ·tt93

.•-.......-

Mother needs to move on

•, .\

�o-The

Sentinel

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Public Notice
.PUBUC N011CE

DEADLINE
Tho Scipio Townohlp
TruiiMa will offer for ule o
4:3.0 P. M. DAY BEFORE.
1180 C70 Chavrolei Dump
Truck.
PUBLICATION
II haa a V-8 366 engine, o
t-----...;....;,..~..;;.;.;.;.,;.;;;__;..._ _.. 12 tpoed roar end, and a 4

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
: · Q11eatloa: I suffer from
:migraine headaches, and I heard
that there is a new medication on
the market for this condi!ion. Can
you leU me m&lt;in: about it? ·
·
Aaswer: There is a new medi-cation, sumatriptan, thai will be
:available at the end .of March or
:early April of 1993, that has shown
·significantly betler results .at stopping migraine headaches than current medications. However, I think
, jt would be bener if I explain more
about IJli~ne headaches before I
:!lirectly address the pluses and
: minuses of this new medication.
Almost everyone has headaches
.from time to time. Most are relatively brief, and non-prescription
pain medications are usually all
that is needed for relief. However,
811 headaches are not brief tr mild.
About 45 million individuals in the
United States suffer severe, dis.abling headaches that result in a
loss of 150. million wade days-each
year. Though there are other causes
for severe headaches, all the different types of migraine headaches
Laken together are responsible for a
. :major portion of these severe
ileadaches.
.
.
: A migraine headache can be dis).inguished by its symptoms. The
·first attacks usually occur during
·childhood, and about two-thirds of
: mipa!ne sufferers are women. The
~atn is usually one-sided, but it
;may involve all of the head as the
.pain worsens. The pain is usually
:throbbing and intense. Physical
·:activity often makes the pain worse
-once the headache has started.
_; Nausea is a vtry common com'Plaint with migraine headache as is
.extreme light sensitivity, called
photophobia. Many times, unusual
changes in the working of various
)lerves are ·also present. For
instance, you may see flashing
lights in the comer of the eye, or

smeU odors that aren't really there.
In some cases, there can even be
numbness, ,tingling or inability to
move body parts - the symptoms
of a beginning stroke. Fonuna~ely,
these symptoms clear up as the
headache subsides.
The treatment of migraine
headache is either direcled at providing relief once an attack has
occurred or at preventin~ future
attacks. The new medicauon you
heard about, sumatriptan, is used to
treat an acule atlack. In the original
studies of this medicine, it gave
relief within one hour to nearly 80
percent of individuals receiving it.
This is much more effective than
medications used today· to treat an
acute attack - narcotic arid nonnarcotic pain relievers and the drug
ergotamine.
·
One drawback to this new Jlledication is that it must be administered by an injection. An oral form
will riOt initially be' available. Fortunately, it will be sold in a preloaded, syringe-like device that the
patient can use to self-administer
the medication.
Even sumatriptan can't prevent
repeated attacks of migraine. Those
unfortunate individuals who have
three ·or more · incapacitating
headaches each month will still
benefit from beta blockers, calcium
channel blockers or other therapies
to reduce the frequency of attacks. ·
Talk to your doctor about your
headaches. He or she will help you
decide if preventative treatment is
appropriate for you and if sumatriptan or other medications are
necessary for your acute auacks of
migraine headache.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Universitr College of Osteopathic
Medicme, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45701.

Opening Soon in Middleport
THE BOOK BARN
Buy-Sell-Trade.

,.

~linics.

• The regular schedule forimmu-

ilizations at two to four months
'includes DTP (diphtheria, whooping cough, and'letanus), OPV (Oral
polio vaccine) and HIB immunizaijon which proJeCts children against
meningitis. Boosters on most the
v'accines follow at six and 15
months. Children under two years
or age will .also be given the lfupat-

..

In MemOi-y of
ALBERT (Les)
SWEARINGER
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
GRANDPAII
•

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I

"'"""'

I

scamps

/

Gingerbread ttoase

.,I

(

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAONG
(614)
667-6628

Your Grandd11ughtera,
Tabkha &amp; Megan

I

SYLVIA

LEANN
18!
March
14th

CASSIE
17! .
March

Loved and Missed
Nancy Morris

lOth

I
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I
I
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I

is immunized.

Statistics show that from 1980
to 1990 cases of measles in the
United States increased from
13,506 to 25,000. During the same
period cases of whooping cough
mcreased from 1,788 to4,188.

ADDITIONAL
QUANTITIES
*-CAL. 99C

; 1A-Gal.

I

I
I
I

Gal.
"IN THE DAIRY CASE" CHILLED

Kroger orange .Juice

FROZEN ASSORTED VARIETIES

Polar Pak Ice cream

\.50
~

Frozen Young
Turkey Breast
Pound

Nabisco cookie
&amp;Crackel!

FROZEN, ASSORTED
VARijTIES

TOtinO'S
Party Pizzas

IS%

10.2·10.1-oz.

CLE~

6 AFFORDABLE HOME located on Pleasant
Riclgll, 1:.1 story with 3 bedrooms, two lots, decking, omall
Irani porch, $18,900. Ownor .may co~der rouonablo
offan .
1
SYRACUSE - 1988 modular with 4 bodroomr, beth, ·
decking, sorno appliances, part fenced yald, metal otor·
aga building, Y. aero lo~ central air. Nllod to ... to appraciotal $47,500.

lillabla acres . Has !ots of storage buildings, and two car
garage. Irs really nico1 This one won't test 1ong. Aloo hu
satalli1e dish ,
JUST' $35,000

JUST OUT OF RACINE - 12+ acraa of nice wood
acroego. Make good hun~ng or homo rita. $10,000.

MIDDLEPORT - Historical looking comer olora. Hot 8
aparbnents up and another store down. Start your own

Fresh Baked

buslneso. Has 1ola of 100m and hu on income.
Own• wiH IICrtlloo both building• for sa,ooo.

MANUEL RD. - One ecra ol ground that could be ulod
for mobllo hoino ~bulking 1118. $3,500. Make an offrln

24-oz.

MIDOLEI'ORT- FRONT STREET -11-1 propony It
whet you've liMn loolling lor we'vo got H, In thlo houM
you hove a 2 bedroom apa~mont downllolra and a ..,,
bedroom apartment up. Aloo hu aluminum oldlng and a
ono c1r garage. P,.-lly both opartmonta '"ranted.
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER 118,000

REEDSVILLE - Cute I floor block homo with 2 bodrooma, 1 oar garage, •rear acreened porch, nice front
yald, and produce buldlng, Aoking $18,QOO.

Apple Pies

-

c(

'

GREAT INVESTMENT PROPERTY! - Located in
Pomarny, 3 story building thai with a llnlo woll&lt; could be 3
unit apt., good location. with 50+ x 100 P!lll&lt;ing area.
$29,500.
.
.

irailar that's really been taken care of on thia 41 acre
dream. Has 7 pasture acres, 1 lanced acres, and 14

AS INDICATED ON YELLOW
IN STORE TAG

.. . . "'

NEW USTING - Rouoh Lone In Chlohlre - 1+ aero ,
with 1970 mobile home, block effk:iancy apt , two addi·
tional trailer hook·ups. Great rental lnvoslmonlt $24,900.

POMEROY PIKE - Talk abOut beautiful view, with
seclusion , You should seo this 1979 2 bedroom LibertY

,,

'

992·2259•

'

·"IN THE DELl-PASTRY
SHOPPE"

l
'

•

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

lnd 4 ....... Soulh of ChnhlrtiO
Addison. Twn on st. Rl. 1 onlo
Addison PIU. Body shop approK. 2
mllooon

:r,;

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Sldlna
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
. FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101,. 949·2160
. or 915·3139

•il••
•• Hysell
IIUII ...IIOH

(No

.... 124

12 S.ssio•• $20
16 S.ssio•s $25
992-2417

.,

1•11411., C.llsl
21121821tfn

WE DO

ROOFING

AND EYERnHING UNDERNEATH

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING

TR

WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES

20 Years Exp.

BUILDERS··

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

Guaranteed Sc~olarship Money
for all college bound studentf.

•

• regardless of income
•regardless of grades
•ptus $20k guarameed loan
•regardless of credH
To cotteet )'Ollr sc;hotarahlp money
cell 614-985-3556
Open Mon.·Frt. 111-7 or sat. 1H
2·11-.

Check oar Price or We Botlt Lose
W U1CA11011 10 Sllll JH 11m1H_1

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773·5533

ASK FOR CHRIS

Shade River Saddle Shop ·
YOUNG'S

CARPEiiTER SERVIa
•d:ttlouo

Work

EVERY THURSDAY

,

EAGLES

CLUB .

and Plumbing

IN POMEROY
' 6:45p.m.

Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

Thl• ad good for 1
FREE card.

992·53:15 or
915·:1561

We will be happy to give you all tho facta.
.
DRASTICALLY REDUCED $38,1100.

ALL VARIEnES

2

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

lick Up.
lEN'S IPPUIICE
SIDICI

.your own business. A bar that is w.ll equipped and
stocked. A 05 liquor licen$1, with 2 &amp;Rartm•nta and 1
sl~eping room. Buying building and license. Phone now.

'--------------~--J

. C:Cor

Lie. No. 0051·32

MIDDLEPORT- N. SECOND- Here's a cnanCjl to own

,

SUMMER
· IMAGES

CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

OffiCE 992·2886

RUTLAND - MAIN STREET - A vacant lot with city
sewage and water available. Nice for a mobile home, etq.
.
' $5,000

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER

COUPON GOOD SUN. MARCH 7·SAT. MARCH 13 199l

We '!"II ··
I .........

New Garages • Replacement lfn;licnvsl
Room Addltl~s • Roofing

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

Real Elltate General

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
RACINE- 3rd ST.- Double your pleosura, double your
money wilh !his ono story, two-sided bliel&lt; building. It has
the potential for two busin111 incomes. Includes gas
fumaca on one side and space h&amp;Bters on tha oller. Both
sides have restrooms and window air conditioners.
ALL FOR $28,000

1

Callus!

BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES

lrl.. h Ill Or ••

LI~IT 1 WITH COUPON &amp; $10.00
I
OF
-ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
. ).

915-4473
667-6179

S

PONDS

.I LL MAID

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

FIEEI

II.IIIIIOtfiG

~--

I

I

••••iil•li••

•

'

--!

Sto,&amp;~n

I&amp;C EICAYAnH

MICIOWID 001
••II YCI REPAIR

I
I

o(·~·

and

March 10, 1992

_________
_.______
- -...
:::i
...- .

oG•r•~

,

Happy Birthday!!

BLAK~

I

Approx. 4 mMH North or GalllpoUt

LICENSED IIIII 110NDE0

March 2, 1992

'

·,

U.S. GRADE A

REASONABLE
RATES

;:: ~- ..___ _ _..:.R=•::ai~E=state=:....:Ge:::.;ne::;ral;::__ _ __

itus B. vaccine between birth and
one month, then boosters at four
months, and again between six and
eighteen months. This f,articular
vaccine will be given on y to children born afler October, 1992, Torres said.
Only fifty-five percent of all
children under two in Ohio are
fully immunized, but in Meigs
County the numbers are even
lower, according to the nursing
director. This leaves too many
preschoolers vulnerable to potentially deadly diseases, she said. The
Children's Defense Fund is spearheading health care reform to
assure that every child in America

.........·

•

BUENA GRUESER

Monday-FrldaJ:,tfJ0-5:00

COfl1l4llorizod E - .
Woric , Ins. Woltc
Welcome. Fber Gino Woric, ~ ~ &amp;
AelinishinQ , Frome Slraighlllllillp, Custom
San&lt;lllasling, Mat1ln Stnour M~ing System

BISSELl &amp;IUUE
COISTRUaiOI

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

In Memory

367·7444. 446-6644
1·100·926-2032 COIUo O•ly)

HAUUNG:Umedone,ll~--------------~---------------.
Din, Grnel and Coal

CHECK THE

2

lARRY'S BODY SHOP
D46 AUINIII'IIN•UI. . .Ir, OS. .ff6JI

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

PH. 614-992-5591

~

~

14·7-LB. AVC.I

Quarterly and
·Year-end Reports

Happy Ads

•
...··- ._ _ _,;._____....!-...::---:--.,..---

I

A 'rtu •1111 6 Cuccuwedal
F.... &amp;lilnll. .

ALL HARDWOOD

Of My Dear Friends

Love,
I

.s

,l",

through.

GRANDPA~

HOWELL'S
BOOKKEEPING
' &amp; TAX SERVICE

LIBRARY IS EXPANDING ·
-ITS HOURS! ·
Mon. 12:00 p.m.-8:00 p•• m.
TUES.·SAT. 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Sun. 2:00 p.m.·6:00 p.m.

· ABG PlKHI ·

l8wn Mae iltg.
Fertilbing, Wooclng. and
S1 1' tg.
Shrub and T-:rrtmming
6 AMIO\'ol

NOW OPIJI!

N..,...,

THE MIDDLEPORT

In Loving Memory

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

('
(

We will NOW serve children
6 months to 12 years of age.
Call us for more Information
(614) 992-7328
3110/1 mo.

mGK

949·2391or
1-1. . .37·1460

3-8-93 1 mo.

Announces .,the Opening of their
Infant/Toddler Pfogram

have had to go

would buy you a
cold beer. ·

(

I'

USED RAILROAD TIES

•

eaylng lhlsto that old
cold mirror.

On, Grandpa, I really
'
love you.
And H you were here I

•

'~.

NEW &amp; USED PAllS FOR
ALL MAlES &amp; IIODRS
992•70 13 or
992 555 3

heartache that you

/

.,.,

,... . •

R"'*

I only wish that you
were hllfll instead .of

the pain and the

FeOeral FOOO

..

. .

14%)

Accept Your

· Jill Johnson was .the guest
q,eaker on spring crafts ..

..... .

RED

FULL FLAT ... $12.00 (SA

April27.

'

f'-

Grandpa, Happy 68th
Blrthdayfl

It baa ~n hard thea~
past few yeara,
•' knowing that I will
never get to see you
again.
I alway• want to aek
myeelf; where did
you go and how
have you been.
If you were here f
would throw you a
party,
to make up for all of

Florida strawberries

t

'

r

Sptdalzlfllllt Cud011

3 Announcements

SMALL
WANT ADS·

In Memory

2

'

..
..·'

· Bill SLACK ·
992-2269

•DOZERS
or TOLL FlEE
•BACKHOE
I•IOO•I41-G070
•TRACK L.VIU
DAIWIN, OliO
•TRUCKING
(2) 24; (3) 3, 10, 3=tc:__,__..!J::==:-.:.713:;:.:.:1f~t1:,:;1111:.:.:,:tn,

HEART TO HEART
CARDIAC $UPPORT
GROUP MEETING
THURS., MAR. 11- 7 p:m.
Pleasant Valley Hosp~al
Commun~y Room ·
Speaker:
Everelt Wray M.D.
Topic: Cardiac Catheterization
and Angioplasty
Call 304:675-4340 Ext. 405
For Information

We GI.JC11V

; The Meigs County Women's
The closing Song was 'Til Put
fellowship held its monthly meet- Jesus First in· My Life." Closing
ing _at the Pomeroy of Church of prayer was given by Jan.et Venoy.
Christ wtth 19 present
The next fellowshtp meeting
·: The opening song was "There 'will be March 25 at the Rutland
S:J:Iall Be .sho~erso_f Blessing" Church of Christ with Pomeroy
w•th Debbte Miles gtvmg the open- Church of Christ having devotions.
ingpraye!.
Marge Purtell will be the guest
Devouons were by Donna Hart- speaker. There will be a book
aon with scripture from Matl.hew exchange.
· iiOd L.uke. •
Refreshments were served.
.: Pat Thoma read a poem," An
J~Iective Solvent."
'• Announcements were made that
tadies Day at Kenwcky Christian
C:oDeJC will be March 26. Ladies
Day m McConnelsville will be

WH•'EY'S
AUTO
PARTS

Mlddltpoll, 9hlo 45760

cenuine Ground Chuck

·:fellowship announces events

HAULING
•FIREWOOD

; 514 Nortll Stcond Awnue

U.S. COV'T INSPECTED

IMMUNIZATION NURSE ·.
The Meigs County Health
Department bas hired Glenna
Riebel, R. N, to handle the community based immunization clinics for pre-school children. The
clinics will begia in April.

1
ll'r:=====::i~

PRESCHOOUCHILPCARE

., ouart
.,

for tho truck conlecl the
booird'o proaklonl, Harold
Groham, 36008 Sill to Route
i43, Pomeroy, Ohio 45768,
or one olthe other truo-.
Randy Butcher n2-2302 or
Bobby Arnold 99:!-7907.

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

department hires
immunization nurse
Glenna Riebel, R.N. has been
hired by the Meigs County Health
Department as a pan-tfme nurse to
do community based immunization
:Clinics for children under age two.
._. " Riebel comes to ·the Health
:tieparunent with over 20 years of
.)lursing experience and was most
-recently employed at Veterans
:Memorial Hospital.
· : The emphasis of Riebel's role
:WiD be on reaching children whose
}'arents bave difficulty bringing
-their children into the Pomeroy
l!ealth Department offices for
immunizations.
;: The community clinics will
begin in April with the locations
and times to be announced
.• Right now contacts are being
)!lade in an effort to secure donated
-space for the clinics which will
:allow all funds coming into the
program to go directly into the
immunization effort.
.: "There are no charges involved
in getting immunization shots at
the Health Depanment and there
wiD not be any charges at the community clinics," stressed Norma
:Torres, R.N., nursing direcior.
· While levy funds take care of
ihe expenses of administering the
.Vaccine at the Health Department,
'!be new Immunization Action
Grant received from the Ohio
Department of Health will handle
;:the cost of paying a part-time regisJered nurse for two days a week,
Iter mileage, and supplies.
.
·• Torres emphasized the impor,tance of getting parents to see the
value of immunizations and then
.getting them to bring their children
either to the Health Department or
1o one of the planned community

~· inopoct or make • bid

Many back issues of many
' different magazines. Watch for
opening ad. 992·3577.

~ealth

''

• . . - lranamlaalon. It will
ba told. ao it !lfilhout any
warranty mode or Implied.
Tho bldt will bo oponed
April 5, 1893, at tho
Truoleft regular mftting.
The Scipio Truo- ronrvo
the right to rojocl any or all

IEYII'S lAWII
MAINTENANCE

-

HELPI WANTED- PROPERTIES OF AU SHAPES 6
SIZES IN IIIEIGI COUNTYI WE HAVE IIUYERI
•••• CO_!!.LD BE YOU HAVE WHAT THEY WAHTI II;
YOU'm: READY TO SELL GIVE US A CALU

DOTTIE TURNER, Brokor ............................. 182-58t2
BRENDA JEFFEAS..........................................8t2 10M
DAAUNE ,ITEWAAT.........................................et:l-1311 ·
SANDY lUTCHER .......................................- •.8t2-U7t
JERRY IPAADUNG................................(:!CM) 1112-3411

-

217LJoc_,ll,
POIIIIlOY, OliO

LI.STOIE,
GUDL &amp; COIL

.JOE···SOli··"
.....
I. SAYU

SAYlE
614-742-2131

SIZED LIMESTONE

FOR SALE
Call 614·992·
6637
St. II. 7

Cite..Ire,

PH. 614·915·3949
lOW OFFEIIIG.-••
OIL IND LUll SEDIC.
DIE REPAIR IND IOTARIG
2/15/91/1-

3-4-113-1

NDWDPBN

Quality
Stone Co.

47269 St. lt. 241 • 1Y. Mile OH lt. 7
Tltra Clteiter o• If. 241

MTSIJQUE
TANNING
SCAWolt.Bed
15 Session $25
Depot st., Rutland
742-3190
Call for
Appointflllflt
11211'1-

AIIERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE
\

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Aeciilenr •Annui.ty, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 119

Millldleport, o•1o 45760
(614) 843·52.64

Saodgra~s

Up.olstery

"Helping Yo11 To Ruo,., YouliiNIIN11i&gt;'
Church, Home, Truck, lklltt, Auto
and Oftlce Set IIIII

, UC.I,OHIO
614-949·2202
61

OFPICE ........ ,_ .................................................. 812-2...

,,

................ Oifloo

HAULING

KELLER'S CQSTOM
BENDING

"

I

.,

�sentinel

March 10,1993

1993·

__
.. _.... _,__.,_
_...._1 ...........
_
"!:r
...
-.- ..............
aue~

21

....

-lhe-·--

~---

e' ,...... .,

......... te:cace~
P.O. loo II\ llyi " •

-llul
lf:Z

41771.

......

. ,

It

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

.ACIIOII

. . . . . . .

11'1otJ .-111(1

-114111.1....._ ....
fd sadllll ......

...

......

,.''

a,.--. .. - - - .

7 AlifcM(Md
12 Dlll.-t

L

PHILLIP
ALDER

•

Lho :14 /Ontll Toll To
Olrtol!l , . . _ _..
,lat. - Yra.· Uni1111
R.tl Por
eo.IIIII.
(W.I)-lSI-

36

R•l Eatate
Wlntld

ReJI EstJie

~ICE: bUm ..... - " " '
lloop; .... OPAL 1 - . A I ·
DrillREDUCE;
YOu -

a..m

.,...

T.U OPAL Avalllblo
At: FMI!'PhO"'*f.

4

f11• ll:h

tl2400l,avenfnge.

lllvertlalng In
ttn
l&amp;b)ld 10
lho FO&lt;Ia&lt;ll Folr HaUling Ad

..,. aoosx·

,..'WJWII .. , ..

of 11168- lllegel
to - . . """J prelorOnco.
lmtlallon.,. clscll-lon
beNd en ""'• ooiOr. rlilglcn.
IIX lamllll stilus or nlllonaJ
origin, •""' lniOrllon to

•1

Y-vch·e. _.._,
=• a.
Sol Llo
...... Applln£111,

TY'oi
,,...... pill : ..rt larder Calla.
• ShOphord. 114-4441-1114.

Pupploo to

g'-.

port chow. 30f47S-11111.

1lOo

adval1...,..VtolaiiOrl
illlowtngly

llathOr

• ... -· ..,

-.,.
II._ lllln.
From ~...::::::::==:::==:;:===='="=-==· :...~
Rent: I ...........
Be drum a
.._..,

.

~

ICCel&gt;l

'

I I Jww,Jbo...

P.tchoi.

1104-77:14177.

Houllhold ', ·

-lor-Jorl~

Jwo,
111101nearu.l14 • • • •

'
•.

tlnomlnlvono,- .
.,..,.,. .......

-2 NT

· THAT'S TEN

•ANES

far Rlnt

SD/141
DPEilATDil,

FER ME,

LUKEY

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

11

Help Wanted

ALLYird--h-ln
· - llg I...U" Won AI
- · DEAOUIE: 2:00 p.m.
To
IN cloy .,...,. lllo Ill to to nm. T~·
DU
lox II, H.110' ro:.
llundly • 2:00 p.m. 011411 •
·l'rlcloy. lloucloy odltlon • 2:00
............ I ...,,, ..
p.m. Sotunloy.

u.u.

""~el mistakes.real world; ewryo~~e
·
a book hu appeared tbat coo:

s.to:

~

-·ion tor- ,. . .

~

t)ooo .,.._.lor
ol.t"!'f
lllrcll 1\ 12, ....
.... -13, {2M-MM) ....... 211 To fller.. ........ JOU? We era 1 member
corvlllo Left On ........ - . ol Wool Vllwlnlo'o
.1ot On Algid. llwlftMIIIng manuloct- n g orPaal Pi: I Fl.or, .._ pniHIIon - I n a of7 rllll
81
Woodllurnor, fi1. _.tioneln- Ylrt!niL Due
eulollll
... Plpo.,~,_z_ ...... to our tr. . data.,... .. over

·-·

Cllolr, ~ _ . , ...... Lug
Chrome WhNte, Cloehn, Othlr

.
· l!owtng Solo: RCA, VCR
4
. llonthO Old UOO: Wine-r

"- -

Gun 12 0.. 1100;

Wann llomlna Goo Automatic

Spece ...... 1110; lllnl

w.t.r
I 0.,... SUro, 12110; A SUro
AI ·-23Y.
Porto In •odl, $140.
Reduclll
All 114-441-2144, -hor I
DryorS-.

w.-

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

I N I I I I U , - we

llriglon • - looollon. IIJOU .,.
thO end wentlo Ill Wllh lllo
belt, CIIH or write w.twood
Home llllow, lnc1 111. 10

;:.~"··

1-.
.
·--....,..........
-.. . .-2.--,p'.

....

bo You IDYl To Cook? An b·

for Rent

a..-..._

OUIIIIy

-

llo Dollvortoo,lloOuocu.
Ootormlne v- Own tn. NO

OIIIIIICKI.

CIN ~ITAAftor 4:00
I14-2'/I.OOSS(COLLECT)

wv 21104,

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

'fNIW ..._1 Car AtIIChell 0onge. 2 ' c.. u•--CA.IIMICJor.
-Plutl ._-Ciwi
o.a A.._ ,...,. T
H.l. 114-

....llotor-.-..........
..-

.

Clll1114411-11t7.

A~~
,.._~

-ng,

111m rltiiOYII: -

llem

monthe frH IDI rwnl, ,... 'MalO,
dlliwrad end ... up, ilrlrtlng

Itt old

.n.....,

~~~~

1112.11,... .....,.h Wna al•

onyonewholoelcltorholp, In ,.... Will do
llebre!Hing In "" homo. 304171-'U+t or 304-171-2510 Ieiva

mnuge

OrNer
UMS lollc8l work, by tt.
how, toweet nte, ~S.In23
orl14 141-1218.
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trlmm'"sl, Tr• Removal, ~
Trimming. Fr• &amp;tlmltllf 11._
31J.711TAft• 4p.m.
Goo ... Portable Sowmllli don~

houl,.....CIIIJ04.47S-1l57.

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

.2. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
.3. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

4---::----------

S.___,i..--- - - - - -

6-----------"'f.'

·-----------

·8. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __
10,___________________
11 ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

12-----------------

13•.___ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

llotL- -

..,

au 4411137

0r

114-2464111- 3::11.
, 112 - . . lloblto - .

loth,

ottly.

tz.IO.

1112
rune

Motorcycles

-

.

"-*

Nlghl Mtowlt 710,;
~._no oond, Ultlng,

tl,ZIIO.-~

1111 Yamaha 200 4 whullr;

=z -. •-

..

'

-lric&gt;

...,_ -·lotL 11100.'
»447NOIII.
'

For - . 1M~·

FRANK AND ERNEST ·

.

'

Mtogo-'

- · Llko - . -

74

til.

.

FttNIGIN~ .....

..

::-·

.

so.

...•
...

•

•

75 Bolls &amp; Motora
•

forSal4i

.,.. ..IIIla.:. --l

Trans port:Jt. 011

0 I

•

~-10

•

f1/J •

"\1-i ...VEf
0

•

Cl .1tlh,. Jrt1A,...,. ...

'·

"'I

............. . . .
-·M05tlll;_nlltoo.
__
~ ..... -

•

SORN LOSll:R
~~
~IW«~T.

~"2. -=."'-.oc::'•/:=

,.,

queen and, after West plays low
smootbly, put w:mmy's ace. They
assume tbat If
lw tbe elall klq,
he will always cover ID bonor Wttb u
honor - or ·~least be will tblak about
ll Tblt is 1 dangerous' 11111111pt1011 to
make - unl\!11 your opponent It botb
llalve and rutbleally etble.J.
The aclull declarer c:ubed hll
spade 'll'inflen flnl Oa tbe tblrd
round, Welt tllJcarded the dub two.
Judalal tbat West badn't made a clev-.
er clllcird from K-4-2 of elubll, Soutb
led the club qu.i, to tempt a cover.
He thea put ap dummy'• aee ud
dropped Eut'l klq.
.
Of eoune, Welt lllaald UYI tm'oWII
a dl1mancJ. 8outb wulllllll unUUiy 111
haw A·K.Q-z of dJ1m • . But tbat II
what tbls book It 113 aboilt. •
'

50Mf0Hf

~

____

,.
.._,.,
.....
OUR LANGUAGE·

EMO!&gt; ~liCE. me;
~elloll.!

wl ........
.... -

11:1........
....
·-··
..........
.......

Atll•-'""' __,.......

45

Fumllhecl
Rooms

--or

1111, lla8on wv.

~

Wlnted to Rent

an

·- - ..........

Alll.....,nay.
'

412111.

~

O.O,Iioncl-.

· ·i

..._ ... -..-...-.

Anardllhrwcl PUIII • ..,.,

CA.I1W4M11:J.

51

FRIENI;)e~ ..

WtNtU&lt;fW.E.

\~

\~

era-. •

ur·. . . ..

1112 Cut- · - · ......
JIIOA, ........
ARiia.for-lOW

Ho1181hold
GoodI

-.

1H1 ..... 11117 4

6TAND IN 'THE .

~.""
Clttdltlo_o!!ni. · -·
=..c:.~~l\110,

Cll Colfect: .,....,.

1112 ......... -

PHRAee'~R~

\

::-.:::- ,_,., wv. -

~A~

WHOEVER COINED THE

a=

....
21111. Polnl........
Jlluo, 2101"5.~:::

UlceMW,iM-I~M.

1111
·
11171, Ctavton
2 ... *ooms,
J ......

HAVE!N'reOLDAS\N61..E

.. '$.A~·
LENQNADe
ALJ- Ooi.Y.

- I 21"
- .. SilO,
CloMrol
m
II T.V
I t t -Etoctrlo
t-.

r.1rrchandlse

..... ~

Q. We're looking for a word for AU·
THORITY that begins with the letter
P. Ca~ you suggest one?

liend Mold Morine
- . Wlh C11n!1na CIN I

.... 1110

--o..·-. .u-.-Fomly Looftlng To Allll Z To 3
ladracwn .._..
~.

llltylne Holy Ridge Mllla,
Ill
z lleilroomo,
AIC,
........· porcll,
...... lolltllll,

• rh.., II •

. You may wanl lo use PUNDIT .
This noun, although it's quickly be·
coming overused, does refer to an au·
thority or wise person. Based on
Sanskrit lerm for "iearned." PUNDIT
came inlo English more than three
cenluries ago .and il has flourished in
lhe last few years. !Always be sure lo
pronounce lhis noun "PUN·dit" if you&gt;
wanl listeners lo think you're a
pundil.l ,

vinyl . . .

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

VI'RA FUAIIITURI AND All.

........... ,.,~....*"P-Ine come, I~-~.
llloe Peull'e Dov C... Clntor 1

PIIA-.

tl4 ...... 01114 ··~~~~

Block Wool Of HMC On Jacl&lt;oon

Pike 11-F I A.ll. 4::11 P.ll. W
CluiiMy And £~nee to Tile
11 e-m FOr Your Cllfld'e
Clro. Cllt Llo For A Vloh. lnlonl
IToddle,. 114 411 !227. p,_.
chooloro /Sehoot Aao . . . - .

:r=z--.....
···.... _,... c.ne-.
_..., -

-..

1224.

....... 1114-

Building

SuPPIJI•

-..,~or~o~~,_...__

a-u.·
....
- ~-.
ar-. OH
Cll 1142411DL

! ••aae.

lly ..... Lown Cero, c......~-.W•DoMAI,

aooo. .-.body.-.
1113 - -

4 -·

'j

1Jll.ll15.
- rod knocldng, - · Ctlt~ lty CL,II,OOO Mltoo,
IUOO,
el - · - 4 - ·
· *'61W112olori:OIPII.

...

Olclo good.......
OOnclh.
tiDn.
,._
"'"''·
prliiL

--loe-AmU
Llor, HO, llllftKII,'•apJ r' n
·
Utllle
,,.._, PI
PO, IIW.
,., LaadJfl 1i Anclh - CITi

-

WIN Do loltielnlna In lly on 110, On lutrillle Plu, Ex·
,.,Wr1 u• a Rsft:w •••· IM44e.aMI.

•

.111N,IM4JNWI2.

BERNICE 1
BEDEOSOL

help,.,....-.

. I

Gr.pll Malcflol IWCIII
llandwMIIO do IO lllllkl lhe llfallol',.
lhlp - · Mall $2 plul • lOng, Mil·
ldclrlll U. Mlllli*l IIMiope . 10

MalallmM•, P.O. 8ox t1421, a...
IIIICI, OH 44101-3421.
•
...a (IIINIII1·-- 11) Try lo u.p

fMtlly Pt~llnte wiiNn .... 001111• ol
VOUf' 11101 I Did k!dltY· Input frOm InOf
OGUid be cs. \
.............. IIDI'w.

0!11-•

-

TAI .. II I.... • .., •1 ..,_.

Will
- . ......n......
.... ..
PoW- . .'. .

""" wllorn 1'!111',. aiDIIIy lllllilled
OGUid b e - Clllloulllo (1M IIDng w1t11
lltan .... today. If ,.,.. reapond """
........ lhe IMullton mtglll ... 0111 ol

;;;hancliiii••

..

(Mar 11...... . , .. ~·

,...., lltan llldlllll•tt

15';'
~ .;:::-::;:-;;::::;~:;::--:--­

...... 1:•• -

Galllpotli Daify Trlbune
446-2342
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
992-2156
Pt. Pleaeanl Register
, 675-13;13

rwr •
lmn 111 OGUid -

o1

(n . . , _

IIIII

au toclaJ. c-.
. _ IIIII ,.,..

. . . . . . . . . 10 rtoaup.

CAUIIL (4illll1. . _, «n .order 10
Ulllloa wllliii'!IU _.,. 1-.1 today,
11111111 Ill ltave to Ill I pr8lly

Pllitlflil beOOI 11111111. H1101,,.,..

·;p Lc

...._ I

~~~!!!..•

-

·~·cr ·· ••
.....
rwr: e•:'
E
•

....._.

-·
Ill leCIIIIIIt IIIIi 10n .~~~c~
. . IIIIIIIIPO!It • Wa Ill •11111
w«1 be on .- •.- ldcl rwr·
. . IIIIOul ......... ollllllilrl.

a-

m.
;:..::,.:-;r-r.
Mulll, ....,,
CIH

(

If

~

-IIIlO IIYID 111111,.,..
0111evourlllllh.

'

I

' ZW~L

HJXL ',

I N W.Z L

X V

GWilNA

NJCL

OLPWEL

L V L Z ,

J

HW

Z H U E ·- Z I U T I 'N L A

J

E L U N N V

ZJTI

HDL

0 U T T L E

ZWXLGDLEL . '

EllHO

OEWaT.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ·:Goorgo IIIIIUIChlnlt ~ 1 - tM1 .,_ II
WOtllln, Rudoll Nureyey Changed thai - l i o n. • - Mll11n Bem.'lilrt•.
0 1113 by NU. Inc.

tO

.

0

Recrrongo loiters of
four ~erambled words
low to form lour ~mpJ. """"' 1

LAI'NGE

'lllfl

I
'·1-ri-rCREPI
-r-1:::.r-1-T.r:-t .

I
'-TI-t ;

vI

0 I l

Gabby

-age ~ speaks 10,000
L.....,..J........L-J-.L-...J.
words a Clay. •The hen pecked
....---------,~ husband replied, "Yes, clear,
T RAT E M
but you're above ···---r

1--1-"-1-r.ls-"T-1

"Scientists

..__1"6;....;1r-:.:,,,...:-;1:,.7.:;1-t O Comple1e

lhe chU&lt;kle quoted

by filling in the missing words
'--'--L-...J---1-..&amp;........1 you develop from step No. 3 bolow.
•

•

•

•

•

•

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS
IN THESE SQU"RES

•

UNSCR"MBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

SCUM Lm

I
ANMU

..,

Bsffle -Again~·I · Notion - HALF GONE
My dreama . ,
to real for my comfort. Last
night Idreamed I wae ea ng shredded wh8at when
I woke up I found my mattreas HALF GONE.

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

.............. ln-.llof.

Jcy'1 Dlycar• cot1111ed, ••·
peiienced, retlrtnc•, all 1g11,

~

By Jeffrey M&lt;Quain
•'
ACQUITTAL refers lo setting free
by legal process. If you've been look·
ing lor a spelling key lo lhe middle of
the noun ACQUITTAL. quit.

14_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

\S

/

-~~-.full

Yoty Ctoeo, W.lef - . .. ttlttl, . . - . .terANL 111 a•naa .
II Jill
... 111
C1r1 oln• ...... 1 111111 J ._.

14x1Q. 2 11 drwo:
. ,.. 1 ...... Roon. tor rent •
11*11:h.
Ela Ifill. ~ After 1tor11ng IIi ....... Hofll.
IP.II.~.- -- --- -....
IU 4~1510.
1111 Rlulw ' n 14~, • ••• •
.... ~ room. wtlh ~
~ co-..., AleO
., .,_,.,AI Ita ak ~
c.u .... 2:CII ....... -

to IN mU Jull

CA~H?!I
Tum your clutter into ctUh,
W it the eg1y way... by Rhone,
no need to leave your hoi1U1.
Plgce your clessified gd todgy!
15 words or leu, 3 dgya,
3 pcmer1, 15.40 paid in advance.

NAME?

erron.

Totlay's deal fram tbe book It 1 &amp;ood
example. The ol*lial bid of two nolnunp ibewed 20:22 pillataln the mod·
e~ style. Nortb wllely railed to tbree
no-trump. expeetla&amp; the club suit to
provide sufficient tr.leb for the 1ame
to make.
West linda the lrrllaiiJII bearllead.
It -~~~~ as tboup tbe cootraet depends totally on the club lineae. U tbe
flaeae It working, you wiU win at
leut one omltlck. But If It loses, you
are down the tubel. •
•
Some players would lead tile club

lndol-1~5.
.....• ~,..._.. Null•l 1 ll'nd •
~~~1m 121110 Froodom . . _ .
_._
..._
11·=:.~;..Home, au Hoot • ...... 1111. Cell
~
~.......
111111 ,.
non- Ao~or. &amp;coltont Concll. . . , ....... A¥1111~11 ....

Coring Chttotlan womatt,
emokir, would IIU to alt wllh

Want to:
PIN do-wn EXTRA

t100 '''' ••· .,..

· ~- a .._ "

11own • out
Wll ....... lor Mivlge. lf4.
2111014.

fumloltlll,

the - · ....-

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

....~·-·
W.Va.

Hay &amp; Grain

=tr:.= ...... 12. I

F.INwood: All IIMdwcadl lpqt
0 ...... . . PIM-Up LMcl.
...-ve
f'lllrPtilu4,
'
0.,... .,,. up, 1114- 114-21f.1111.

=:.

llondlng,

64

.

-1111

-~-..1bolh,en

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

on 11 Point Pluo, 2101
W'( ;::..::..···· Pie. . .,

-IIIII
~1-.--rata.:...uallloti

!",:;~ · ~-·
..
~

-

'' TJ.IE BROTI'lERS •
SOMmiN6 OR OTJ.!Ert'' ?

•

. ·--·---·

.

-mowlel.
120t11no.
..,..
Cllt tM-111 .to. .
1014.a

lla ' ldl Al*tft.,..., 1 led-

COfnpilny, Rlclne,

~··

'=

..- .. •'!"• -.
.......... a_ ..._ '

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

own tro-•

I-NSI2 or llop In
...,,,._u~p 1111 appllcltloft at

-...
--

........ . . . . . 111111--

~~~
.-_
Ml,

IIEAUTIFUL APAIIT1IEHI't AT
IUIIOET PIIICIIKr UtCICIOII
ESTATES. •
J ' an _Pille

Wlllllll-. Ia 2111

:::-=:t!'~
Alter• ,., AYIItll*i. RoeSner

NOW HOW ABOVT

~

Coaauwlwn

-~~~ ft, Conelatitnettl
llillllh
AI f P.ll. A....
Io~~mmr. :ldr.,
Uoilletoo,lollng:ll
..., · - · 120......... ~M-~75-1527.
.......
110.
"""'
101""'
O
f
CllerotoloCllllo,
_...., 11 ............. ....,
.........., LX.. loldtd, ~lr
ao 'll~ltWtro10
1 - N. lor oi.IIM-t1a-NI.

Nice I I;

--·

a..,.

-.·~.-.
.,.
4:00PII. • '
11t1 QIIC ..-.o
4wcf. LoW millE II
11W

Apllrtment

cling-~"'­
Party ~ Amblllouo
lndluld ·h In YoUr ArM To

... -.....
.. . '" ......

-

EARN D.! IEAT''.

'A'!IOW ALLAREAIIINrayour
llone with • · You'l love the

(!'OVtclo.. your

CIIAms

talDa a DOIH!",P. stream of bad ·play,.
Mike Lipkin's .Invitation to A,n•lbJla•
U011" {lleYyD, ••u~. B00-2'1l-2221) ez.
ptalDa how to paah the ClpiiOIIeDia Into
IIIAkiq erron aDd bow to profit from

.

START IIIIIIDillfiLYI lorn liD 4 lwJoati ..... Clfl ......
To 1100 IWit Lalllna-.,.,.
Rt. 1 , ,_ ... "You( Own P-11

110- T-.

lngutoe-lorow-

,f NEED A. COliPLE OF
BOOK~ ... DO '1'0U I-lAVE ''A
' TALE OF TWO TOWNS'' . ~'(

- l h r i : W I I · F. .
llld -,2t.lh.llmlri'OOIII.

-3SY. 111 I. Lll ul .,.,. N. d - - . 22.71
. ...... 114-MNliS.
Autoro, II.
THE IWIIPEREDCHEF

All pua
Eut

•••

---

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

· -3 NT
· Pill
-

l ~~~DC,!~~~~'~· Howewr, 11 we all

'

b

mort

+KQ5

Mosl bridge books feature good
bow. to win by declarinl or de-

- • ....-...;--1
..........
.....
:::.. . ·:.p::-..n:
.....

42Womaw.,

'

Cashing in ·· .
on bad defense

DOC!!

-

Port·~ 11Yt111 - A I Mo ..
Hlr J I nino. Cll Ill I I Main 112-7711otw~•nr.

8 llltllllt ....,
llllnvldon
t Ullhlkl ·

By~lpAider

.,.......
...
-... ,
- . _ilr,
wtnylttldlrig,
-

Employment Srrv1ces

40=-:.

lb~tgio~

YOU ARE

1\tom,-..:..!...!...";"...
. . -=·~=
"=•=
Yard Sale

' 7

Opealnc lead: 'I K

·~ LIV&lt;~'&gt;IIJCk

. ..1..
.. -.....,...,..
.... 1_

7

M ••nlllr
:llllullc IMoll'l

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Soutb

Mldilllpan, 114-•

1111 Ill- .... .11 .... ~
-.a
. ,1 u llllho....,..

2210.

-BIMiuel

+Q 10 7&amp;

31 Homea for Sale

Nlrltionlor,
Not'flri, ........ Oit.

.....

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

33Cin.::•·
34a'd

tAKQ5

F :1111 Suppl,rc,

Good•

---

:at . . . . . .
3 , l'lllrtMceutlo.

SOVTII

42 Mobile Homea

lnlormed mot 11 -lingl
adYetiiMd &amp;n this nllllip aper
.,. _..... on 11'1 eqtMii
-turlly-

Wofttom-.1104-~ot

ful- ,,

·

•

- . IHIL per- I .........
....,..__

net

1- 84onD XE LN'
1111•, Take O..r ,__._..-. 0.:
Aollnenco, Ceii144N - · ,

. . .,.,... taO

Rlnl ,..._....._ •

tor...., estatt
Whlc:llllln
oltilo
llw. Our ralllloro.,. honlby

~.

SiiiiU lowing malo whfte·whllllgllt -

-wll

-..0111!

lmlotlon ot -mlnotlon.'

111

..

:

'\ #I•

IJ,flt,.,

mllol ""'eucn prolorance,

llooltlgwllora,

aun-.

trot, 11~. 1114-2111-1270.

......

21 Tllhlltcll

+J 1874
.10113
+A IOU
+It

1112 Coli AutOflllllla, With Air,:
12,000 - ·
~,i..!':, Hie-,.
Air,...
"'•
_,, 11.~ i.. 1114 Oodge Aut-Io wnh All, CruiOo Can-'

All rill -

Hllllnel

EASI'

;

a ...., ....

12- IHctalto

1-11-11

+A Juu

-on, N.OOO 010, 114-'

Giveaway

Ju'*

EEKANDMEEK

1111 _ . . . Oloncl l'rtt,
~. 11,1100 ."'ltoo, vory II"CCIi

. ,_.. _
IIIIIIIC

21

+au

011 Fot Wlllto

lion . .

15- ..... ullr.
11 Cillo pll I
11CD '111111.

1tllluanVA

NOilTII

,., dluNIIc:. A - Frulh

13=CII

'·
'I

"

I'

�-

Pllge 14-The Dally Sentinel

.

.

· Wednnday, March 10, 1893

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meeting set

Ohio Lottery

Buckeyes
outlast'
Gophers

"SIOIII&amp; and Skill" was the topic
of the February meeting of the Galliplllis Area Ostomy Group which
met·recently for the rirst time at
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
·•
R.bonda Dajley , RN, BSN,
· diec:Jor or nuning at the Pomeroy
, -hospital, $CrVed u hostess for the
· , meeting. Joy Cline, RN. CETN,
Pleasant Valley Hospital, spoke en
the construction 111d-functions of a
stoma and Phyllis Brown, RN,
CETN, Holzer Medical Center,
presented tips on what is to be done
tf skin around the stoma starts to
bre3lr. down.
Refreshments were served.
Another meeting will be hosted by
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
September. The group is meeting
in various locations so that more
people will be able 1o attend. All
ostomiltes, their families and interested persons are invited to attend
all meetings of the organization.

Pick 3:

395
Pick 4:

1866
16-18-26-37-38-46

PageS

Kicker:

I

.e

•saasa•

.i .
•
Vol. 43, No. 221
.Copyrfllhllld 1983

2 Secttono, 12 Pagoo 25 Centa
A Multlmedle Inc. ,.._.paper

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

Meigs board renews··
personnel contracts
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
School principals were
employed along with other supervisory non-certified personnel at
Wednesday night's meeting of the
Meigs Local Board of Education.
Fenton Taylor's contrac't as
Meigs High School principal was
renewed for five YC!ICS as was Gordon Fisher's as assistant high
school principal, and John Lisle's
as principal or the Harrisonville
and Salem Center Schools. Anthony Perry, principal of Rutland E1ementary was given a three 'year
contract, and Qebbie Haptonstall,
Pomeroy Elementary principal, was
rehired On a one year contract
Paul McElroy was e!llployed as
director of. transportation and

I

r---,
I j

•
••
'·

.,.',.

1-.,.....r.

I~~ 9:l

'

'•
.'

Regul.ar, Diet, or
Coffeine Free
Diet
.

•

From Concentrate

Food Club Regular or
lite Fruit Cocktail,
Peaches, Chunky
Mixed Fruit, Pears

FOod Club

World
Orange
Classics Colas · Juice ··
'

•

Frui,t s

6 Pack
12 oz.

oz.
Cans

Btl.

I

Fried Chicken, Meal· Loaf, Fish Sticks, Chicken
Parmigiana' Mexican Combination,·Noodles
with Chic en, Spo9hetti With Meat Bolls,
Macarom and Cheese

Mrs. Pauls Budget' line
-

Ore. Ida
Crinkl~ or Reg~lar Cut

Fish Stic
French
Swanson
Fried
or Fillets
•
D1nners.
Potatoes
Budget line

-

,..

$

•

I

0

•

,.

By JULIE E. DILLON
Selldael News Staff ·
The 1993 Spring Fashion Show~
·"River Essence," of the Pomeroy
,:Merchants Association will be presented Friday, April 2, at Pomeroy
,£lementary.
'
-. Tickets for the eishtb innual
,show ~ available for $4 and those
·attending will have the opportunity
to win a variety of prizes which
will be given away. Each person
~ding will also be presented a

I

.
.

7 to
12.5 oz.

KATIE ALEXANDER

Box

.Sixth birthday

.Limit l Free Per Family, Please

21•. Bag
.,

Prepriced 69¢

108-175 Ct. Box· Facial Tissues

Hi·Dri Towels

Kleenel( or Softlque

!Roll~

2 .!1

Food Club Cheese Food

American Singles
Eod. Slico Wrappocl

16 Slices 12 oz. Pkg.
•

4•o;~
.:J

Chqea tu11 10 be filed in Meigs County Juvenile Coutt againsl
two female juveniles allegedly involved in the thefi and forging of a
. check belcnling to a Mcip Higlt School studenL
,
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulaby said the check wu
sto!CII from a 11Uden1'1 pune oa Feb. S and then the name wu
· forJJed on the ehec:k which was cashed ai the C&amp;K Supennartet..
According 10 a lheriff's depariiJ1ent report, Soulsby obtained

Premium·Saltines
1 lb.

Fom~y. ~

Sox

r

Muggles· Diapers

Ca•pltell's Soups·

,,
\.

~onMooday.

Cream of Mushroom
'

105oz
C ·
an

.2!1 ""'
·

cOupon bag worth a considerable
amount of savings from participet·
ing businesses. Tickets are available at Clark's Jewelry, The Fame
Shop, Buttons and Bows, Chapman
Shoes, Bank One and The Daily
Sentinel.
This year's show, under the
chairmanship of Susan Clark, will
highlight not only what's available
in the latest fames, shoes and jewelry. but there wiD also be a variety
of entertainment featured as well.

Youths charged in theft, forgery

Nabisco

U!11il4 Pet

'l~'_____,

'

~

.,

to each project
.
energy research •. food and agricul_ All students receiving superior · ture research, water research, and
ratin¥s will take their projects to recycling.
distr,ct competition of the Ohio
At the awards program Dr.
Academy of Science on Aprill3 at James Tonl!·frofessor at Ohio UniOhio University.
versily • wd present a trophy 10
Plaques for those receiving Bookman for the Meigs Junior
superior ratings will be&lt; presented High School which had the most
by area businesses and organiza· superior projects in the Southeasttions including the Meigs Local em Ohio Dislriei in 1992.
Teachers Association, the Student
(\. representative of the Ohio
Council, Ohio Association of Pub- Academy of Science will also be at
lie School Employees, Academic the program lo l!fCSC'll th_e Krec!&lt;er
BoosterS, Meigs Junior High Effec- Award to Metgs _Juntor Htgh
tive Schools Program, Southern School. The a~ard ts presented: to
Ohio Coal Co., Tuppers P\ains th~ school havtog d!e outstanding
Water District, Meigs Litter Con- sctenc~ depanment m each of ~e
trol, Ohio Power Co ., Veterans II dtstn~ts of the state. Metgs
Memorial Hospital, arid the Sci- Jumor ~tgh was_selected for the
enceCiub.
aw~rd m 1992 m Southeastern
In addition special Governor's Ohto
Awards for Excellence will be pre·
R~p Mark Malone will also be
sented: They will go to the student present at the program 1o congratu·
with the outstanding project in the late the science students
area of environmental science,
·

_.,.._-Local briefs----.

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24·50 Count

t

·:.Merchants' 8th annual spring
~fashion show to be held April 2

•

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Projects will bejudg~il 'Fuesdqy ,.

Science Day will be held at
Meigs Junior High School Tuesday
with judging of projects dwing the
day, ari open house io view the
_·exhibits beginning at 6 p.m. and an
awards program at 7 p.m.
~ Rusty Bookman, Science Day
_director, advises that the purpose of
the program is to stimulate mterest
: in sciences, to P!OO!Oie research, 1o
.promote scienufic knowledge, and
to recognize high achievement in
•anaining these objectives.
• Each eighth ·grade student at . Meigs Junior High School, approx.,imately 165, is required to have a
_project. A learn Of J?rOfessionals
and/or educators will JU~e the projects in four area - origmality and
.cce~,tivity, clarit,l' of expression, use
of the scientific inethod, and
knowledge achieved.
.
:- Scores of superior, excellent,
gOod and satisfactory will be given

16

Gallon

Cans

-

nation, wltile Tara's project deals witlt grass
stains on materials and .lite errectiveness of
detergents. Here site worp on Rgnres l'rom Iter
survey ·to determine wbat works best on remo¥·
ing stains l'rom diiTerent fabrics.

.. during Science Day at Meigs Junior High

New
arrival
Jim and Paula Winebrenner-

Daugherty, Middlepoit, announce
the binh of their daughter; Danielle
Susan Daugherty, on Jan . 16 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
She weighed seven pounds .and
2.2 ounces and was 21 inches long.
'Maternal grandparents ·arc
Gordon and Susan Winebrenner,
Syracuse. Mnternal great·
grandmothers are Maggie
Winebrenner, Syracuse, and
Ernestine Zuspan, Mason, W.Va.
· Paternal grandparents arc Fred
and Juanita Daugherty, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.

SUPERIORS - Fin~bing off
preparation for S~ienee Day
.Stephanie Stewart on tbe noor, and
G~~~~-~·~t=lbe~' computer ISIIIsted by Aaron
Holl)nall.
bs a project on seed ierml·.• .. -.

,-

DANJELLE DAUGHERTY

. Katharine Virginia "Katie"
_Alexander, daughter of Bradley W.
and Stephanie Alexander. V imon,
recentlY celebrated her sixth
birthday with a Barbie themed
family dinner and binhday party at
Show-Biz Pizza in Parkersburg,
W.Va. ·
· Guests included her sister, Carol
Ann, an(! brother, Nicholas, Victor
CastO and Annabelle, Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Houc~ins, Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmy lexander, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Eason Jr. and Amanda,
Jl!(ly Ooeuer and Staeie Alexander,
Susan Houchins and Huey Eason,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Dawkins, j{ellie,
Christopher and her grandmother.
Sending cards and gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Perkins, Mr. and
Mrs. Rony Yonaley, Briaq and
Julie, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Casto,
Jonathan and Austin, Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Fogarty 1 Brianne and Ryan,
Mr. and Mrs. George Tripp and
Mrs. Melissa Moore.

blgh In mid 30s.

..

LOS ANGELES (AP)- " A
Few Good Men" and Kevin Costner, Whoopi Goldberg and Ga'ith
Brooks were all double winners at .
the People's Choice Awards.
'·'Home Alone 2: Lost in New
York" and "Sister Act" were both
honored as the year's best movie
comedies Tuesday night
Winners were determined by a
Gallup Poll of more than 5,000
pei&gt;ple nationwide who were asked
to list their favorite music, TV
shOws, movies and stars.
Brooks was voted best male
country music and best male musical performer. Cosmer was named
best movie actor and best dnunatic
movie actor. Goldberg won honors
as best movie actress and best comedy movie actress.

I

Partly cloudy. Friday,.,.,..,

477495

People;s Choice
winners named

j

Low tonlgbtln mid :ZOO.

Super Lotto:

.

2
""•
Per fam~y.

•

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In lddllion, a Paneroy youth was apprehended after ahe allo&amp;edly attempted to Ileal an 58 shorts oudft at the Big Wheel Depart. ment Store orr State Roure 7 ncar Pomeroy.
A petty thol't~aint has been nted in the juvenile colii'L The
juYeDU. wasl'lll
to ibe ct11tody of her parcnu.

Persons transported to ORC
..J

David Persons wu ll'llliPOl'led to the OrlCIII Reception C~ter
• Wedneatlay after t!ppllllina Iii the Melp County Coon of Common
c..,•••••
,... 3 .
'
.
. 011
.
-

The next promotion for the
association will center around the
fashion show with a group ad to
run April!. Tbc Daily Sentinel will
also publish a tabloid supplement
for the show which will be inserted
on March 2,. Advertising deadline
for the fashion tab is March 19.
Vicki Fetrell gave the member·
ship report with 19 full mell)bers
and· seven associate members. Full
membership in the association is
available for $" with associate
memberships at $3,.
New members to the association
include Fult-z and Warner Attorney's at Law, the Fraternal Order
of Eagles, City Loan, Triplett Engineering and Banks Construction.
Pl1111 for Hcritqe Weekend on
June 12 were discussed with the
employees of Bank One in
Pomeroy to·chair the acdvitiea.
According to Dianna Lawson,
Bank One employee; several new
activitie~ for the day's achcdule or
cventl are being explored. There
will be a car show by the OldiCI
But Goodie~ Car Oub, a pullle, Ill
antique show in the minl-JIIlk, a
vlriely of enunalnment. a "rubber
dllckie" race 011 tbe Ohio River, a
putt-pull aolf aamo, a dunking
machine, Ill oulhoule
llld IDVeralgiiiiOI for Childtea. Ctaflen
and .oonceuioaa - aJao welcome
on that day. Futther lnfomation_
regarding booth space may be
Contlaaed .. J111t 3

Eu~ene

Hawkins ·as director of
mamtenance, both on two year contracts. Joyce Vance was hired on a
two year contract as cafeteria
supervisor.
Also hired at t!te meeting was
Amy Erwin Perrin as assistant high
school track coach for this school
year. Added to·the substitute teacher list were Patricia Williams
Gould, Cynthia Facemyer. Jody
Taylor, and E. Jean Smithern. A
purchased services contract effective March I for tutoring a homebound student was g,iven 10 Sandra
Tillis.
Proficienq Tests
Results or prortetency tests were
discussed at the meeting with Supt..
James Carpenter reporting that 29
juniors at Meigs High have not

passed one or more sections of the

test. Passing all four sections is a
state requirement for graduation
starting m 1994. The students can
take the teSts two times dwing·their
senior year.
Carpenter said that students took
the sections of the test they had
failed again last month but that the
results will not become available
for several weeks. yet. A special
three week class with intensive
work on test prepatalion will be
offered this summer at the high
school under a Rural School Grant,
the superintendent reponed.
He said that parental, support js
needed and that without that support thete will be "some verx disappoinll:d parents next spring'.
Contiaued on' page j
•

Meigs commission OKs
new bridge resolution
'

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners adopted a resolution .Wednesday morning supporti ng r4;placement of the PomeroyMasonBri~.
.
The resofuiipn rei.ds:
"'Whereas, the Meigs County
Commissioners are concerned with
the age and condition of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge ... and its
ability to continue to provide ready
access between the communities in
Ohio and West Virginia; and
"Whereas, the communities of
Pomeroy and Middleport in Ohio
and Mason, West Virginia, are eco·
nomically dependent upon the
bridge as. a· vital link between the
communities, therefore;
"lie it resolved by the commissioners of Meigs County. that Ohio
Governor George Voi,novich and
West Virginia Governor Gaston
_ Capenon are hereby requested to
cooperate in the replacement and •
location of this bridge in order 10
provide for the stability of the
economy in Meigs County, Ohio,
and Mason County, West v~
· 'nia,
·10 0 rde
'de • th
'li
r th r lo provt . •th•or e . 1 ~y
o e economy. m e counues_ m
both stateS and m order lo provtde
easy access between the two states
for their citizens."
A similar resolution was adopted last month by Middleport Village Council. The resolution
'received its first reading by
Pomeroy Village County on March

tem (PERS), ·
percent is deducted. Under the
By state law, county employees new sysll:m, the 8.5 percent will be
c011tribute 8.5 percent of their gross paid by the county on behalf of the
wages to PERS while the Cllunty . employees, from the employees
contributes an amount equlil to gross pey, before taxes are figured.
13.55 percent,of the gross wages. Commission members stresSC!i
C~ntly, ~a~~es are figured on thal the ~(erment does 110! involve
worters' ~$JlliY before the 8.5
Contlpued!~jllle3 .'' -~-,- ·

'!J!:'rT'r.---...,.

MAKING DECISIONS - Fifth and sixth graders at 'fllppen Plalall
Elementary are spendiaa this week involved in the TWYSAA (Talking With Your Students About Alcohol) program .wblc:h roc- 011
Approve tax deferment plan ·
alcohol
and other drugs responsible ror lifestyle-related cllsee""'. Tbe
The commission approved a tax
youngsters
learnthey are responsible for their IIWil decilions.. Here, T•
deferment program for Meigs ·
P
Elementary
Rhb graders ·make posters showing the cbolc:a tltey
County employees involving the
may
face.
(Sentinel
photo by Jim Freeman)
Public Employees Retirement Sys·
I.

race

CONTRiaVTBS • Tile Racine Gun Club

reeenliJ tnaCie alaeable ..arlktlolll to lite girl

seoall . .d cab ICOtda l!llbelne. Here Dennie

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"

'I

HUI, -~· ltbdl elucbto Garry In"\-.
muter "' Pacll 341, .., •fti'IJ M:-., h
or the Raelne giriiCOat troop,

«

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