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Pllge 14-The Dally Sentinel

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.

· 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•

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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

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'·

.,.',.

1-.,.....r.

I~~ 9:l

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.'

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

-

,..

$

•

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0

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,.

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~'_____,

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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

•

I

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

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Commentary ·
Mutirig the VQiCe of liberty

Spending cuts7 Leave it 10 your global lesson: What foUows totali111 Court Street
government to do it penny-wise. tarianism may be worse. Clinton
Pomeroy, Ohio
knows that. He is proposing rmanton-foolish.
·. DEVOTED 10 11IE INTERESTS OJ' THit DIG8-MASON .AR1t4
Consider lhe case of budget• cial aid, and he will soon be meetstarVed State Department bureaucrats conning the Clin100 administration into an attempt 10 terminate
"Radio Free Europe," "Radio
'
Libeny," and their parent organi- ing with pro-democratic President
ROBERT L. WINGETI
zation, the semi-autonomous Board Boris Yeltsin.
.
Publisher
for International Broadcasting.
Yet. for U.S.-fundcd "home serWhat seems like an arcane govern- vice" Radio Liberty - which
ment turf war has potent 4nplica- broadcasts in IS languages
PAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
tions.
throughout the Former Soviet
· General~anager
Assistant Publisher/ControDer
In one swooprtbe budget deci- Union, which trains journalists in
LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should b.. less than 300
sion manages 10 1) violale another transitionary societies lhat often
words. All letters ore subject to editing and must be signed with name,
Clinton campaign pledge, 2) worlc still regard news as a propaganda
addn:ss Wid telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
against democracy ,in Russia, 3) weapon, which l'rovides the best
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
and China, 4) harm ClinlOn polili- obj41ctive reporting of Russia by
!1;,;,.------------~--~~~-~~-"·· cally, 5) reward that stalwart of Russians to Russians - the Clin· freedom, the emir of Kuwait and 6) ton budget proposes a Kevorkian
solution.
display confusion.
To America, Russia ·is stiU the . Clinton thinks the job can be
most important foreign country. done by the Voice of America, an ·
The nuclear arsenal. remains; in the agency that - surprise! - would
wrong hands the weapons could like to get its hands on RFE/RL' s
threaten global stability. Further federal purse, But VOA is the
•'
corrosion of Russian democracy "natio.nal service" voice of AmeriBy WALTER R. MEARS
could yield a!'.archy and an ugly ca, not of Russia. It is run by an
.
AP Special Correspondent
: WA.SHINGTON - Change 1he ground rules and the contest will be
wapi, if 1101 won, differently. Tbal's about to happen polilically with the
Oemoc:ralic drive for national rules to govern the way voters are registered.
' Republicans, worried that 1he change would worlc 10 their disadvantage, w= able 10 stop it when they held 1he White House, but they proba!Siy can only delay it now. Even that is politically awkward, since it seems
10 put 1hem on the wrong side of the adage that the more people register
and vote, the better.
.
·
GOP opponents deny that motive, insisting that they, 100, want 10
encourage registration and voting. But they say it shouldn't be with the
measure.called 1he "motor voter" biD, whic.h they contend would risk
,OOieSIIc voting fraud while unfairly foisting federaUy mandated costs on
str8llDed stale govemmerlls.
. . £isily approved by the House on a near party-line vote, 1he measure is
h~ng up now by 1he lbreat of Republican filibusters in 1he Senate. It was
due for a second test !here today as Democrats tried again to mUSter 60
votes to end 1he GOP Sla11.
· The deblle is ovct broadened voter registration rules the states would
!lave to adopt by the beginning or 1996. People would rc~ister, unless
they chose not 10, when. thef. got or renewed a drivers' .license. There
would be regisuation by .mail and at government agencies, specifiClllly
including welfare and unemployment compensation offices.
· Behind 1he partisan dispute lies the fact that finding and registering
voters has been a starling point in the political campaign process, with
·parties and candidates worlcing .10 enroll the people most likely 10 vote
tlleirway.
Republicans do not look ~or voters at welfare and' unemployment
QlfiCes. When the bill was before the House, a Democrat there said what it
really involves is registering poor people. And they tend 10 vote Democratic. ·
' In the Senate, the chief sponsor, Sen. WendeD Ford, D-Ky., said it is
elitist to 81Ji1e that people who are interested in voting will fmd out how
to regiSICI.
The GOP argument has been that the political parties ought tq compete
by persuading people to regisler and then go 10 the polls on Election Day.
That premise is sanctioned in campaign fmance laws, which pctm~ the
~ 10 raise and spend extra money for operations, including voter regSuppose your next-door neigh'" . If you'd quit smoking ·years ago
ISU&amp;bOII.
.
.
boris a nice guy IIJIII. other than the yourself and kept your drinking 10
The biil would change die process by assigning the govemmeru a far fact that his dog sometimes gets a minimum because you were ,
more aetivist role in voter registration. That forst step would no longer be yours going in the middle of the aware of the risks, would you
a CXIIIijJCiilive one; sponsors of the bill forecast that 11 would increase reg- ni~ht, you like him.' He and the
~tioa to about 90 pen:ent of eligible VOim, from the cum:ndy estiinatm1ssus even recycle.
*-' t
But you can't help but notice
llid 61 to 6!1 peiCCIIL
.: 'Then, u Ford said, polilical ,parties and candidates would still have 10
that he smokes a lot. Every time
you see him out watering. his lawn resent having to help pay for his
~people 10 suppcxt them, and to acWally tum out and vote.
•
•: Despite Ilepublican qualms, a broader, simpler registration process or warming up his car or barbccu- medical care when he knew the
~·t gnann1ee Dcmoc:ralic advantage. Sen. Mark Hatf.eld of Oregon
ing burgers, he has a lit Marlboro risks as weD as you did?
lioled that !lis Illite already has.registration, with driver licensing, and also between his fingers or his lips. He
If you're like most of US, you'd
Ills two Republican senators.
.
. doesn't do it in your house, or flick still care about your neighbor and
.
~uus on~ your lawn, so his smok- want him to have the best medical
:: EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice president and colum· mg doesn t bother you.
· care. You don't think your neighiist lor Tbe Assodaled Press, bas reported on· Washington .and
A~d although you're not !'0~· boris some kind of evil person
.,_tiollal politics ror more tban 30 years.
one ume when youwcte ovctm his who deserves your righteous indig...•'
garage ~rrowing his belt sander · nation - or some kind of tax to
"
you nouced there w~re enough pay for his "sins." But you also
~mpty beer c:ans ~ liqlKI!' bottles . realize he treated his lawn better
m hiS recycling bms 10 bwld a De than his body; and while he always
Lorean. .
.
.
drove carefully 10 lessen his risk of
'
Now,
•f
you
knew.
that
m
anothhaving an accident and raising his
"~·
er
15
years
your
ne1gh~r
would
insurance premiums, he did noth•'
•'
get e~phy~ma. lunll or bvct can- ing to reduce his risk of contracting
I expect more miracles. ~ybe ~· ~irrhos•s of the h¥er or a com- ·horrific, debilitating diseases.
': Dear Editor
~:A beautiful thing happe~ed to I'D win the grand prize in the Pubbmallon of those, and that the brunt
You hear lawmakers debating a
rfie on Feb. 25. I rode my bike to lishers Clearing House Sweep- of his very expensive medica! care . new round of "sin" lllles, and the
!OWn 10 ger bird iiCcd for my birds slakes.
· wo~ld ~ pa1d for by ~ed1care, word makes your skin crawl.
(l' bave spent a fortune feeding
I told a nurse in Chicago thal I wh1ch IS funfed by you, how You've spent your entire life havQOd's birds). It was cold. I had my expect to find a pot of gold at the would you feet.
ing other people trying to cram
11$11 wrapped ~· Anyway a beau- end of the rainbow. And I expect 10
'
tiful genifemen stopped near the find that gold mine in the sky OI)C
bYJliSS apd. ~ me a$100 bill! sweet day. It's a beautiful world. A
1;~him. I have an idea who gentleman like I met makes the
he is.
word even more beautiful. My
·' Anyway, if he reads ·the Sentinel thanks to him and may God bless
By most accounts, Janet Reno that she could ride this explosive
(i!KI who doesn't?) I want to thank him always.
boasts an unblemished record as case to re-election.
him and bless him. I used the
John ~hler chief prosecutqr of Da~ County, '·.Reno brought in lhe husban\1ll)ilney for coal and IIOltobacco and
~iddleport.
Fla. However, the latest attorney Wife team of Joseph and Laurie
bQoze. I don't usc junk like that.
P. S. ~h 9 was my binhday. general nominee very well may
Surely goodness and mercy This $100 was my birthday gift I bear responsibility for one of the
shall foUow this kind gentlem31) for . guess.
gravest miscarriages of justice·this
tie rest of his life.
nation has ever seen.
•
Before the Senate confirms Braga to interview three dozen
•
•
Reno as the federal government's children who had at some time
top advocate, its members should been left in the care of Frank and
an answering machine because I acquaint themselves with a stun- Ileana Fustcr. The Bragas seemed
Dear Editor,
• I would like 10 answer the phone feel talking to real people is the ning report by investi,ative jour- persuaded, even before videotaping
cieilcr lbout my letter 10 1he editor best way 10 do iL
nalist Debbie Nathan, m the quar- the children, that the Fosters must
As for my own opinion, every- terly journal of the Institute of Psy- be guilty of ritual sex abuse.
qn March 1 in The Daily Sentinel.
.: Sir, if you are caUing freedom of one has one, and I express it with chological Therapies.
This was not an entirely untcndie pms Slupid, then you need 10 my pen by freedom of the press
Nathan sees strilo;ing parallels able assumption. Frank Fustcr, a
and I don't use slanderous words to between a child molestation case 36-year-old Cuban immigrant, had
~a few things.
express
it.
• And as for 1he few slanderous
Reno handled nine yean ago and previously been convicted of botJI.
So
sir,
as a ~eigs County resi- the notorious Me~ Preschool manslaughter and fondling a 9Words on how our family does its
gj'ivate business, I would like to dent. my letter writing IO.Ihe editor case in C81ifcmia. The difference is year-old child. Slate regulators
•Y one thins on that. ~Y mother and 10 senarors, con~mcn, gov- that, while accusations of violence were derelict in failing to uncover
didn't go to Columbus because we ernors and the president would be and cult rituals in the McMartin the fact that he and his 17-year-old
Ullted her 10. She wanted to go my own opinion, but 10 hear you case were proved 10 be a ficiion Honduran wife operated an unliind 11 the 11111e time be closer 10 taUc no one has that righL
1he defendants were .acquitted, censed day-are service out of their
p IIOipillls. MOlt people down The most of my letters, for and
R~ made simU. charsea stlc1c in home.
which I thank the editor of The her highly celebrated~. .
~ go up Ibm when IOIIICtbing is
Yet, at the outset or the case,
Uild wron1 and Mom died right Dally Sentinel very much, deal
Back in 1984, the voters .or none of the children would say that
with jobs and highways and new Dade County were not ao - that eithct or the FIIIICIJ abused them in
where she wanted 10.
.· 1u for being a real public.per- modem sehools so our childml are they wanted 10 rebft Reno 10 her any way. So the Brag• went 10
~n. maybe I am not a meeting better equipped and educated so elected poeL She found benelf In a work on the children to cou them
aoer. But maybe having to work every Meigs school puu out a tough political fight tpil'lt a chal- iniO implicating their baby Iitten.
illc 12-hour shift for a living has bright student for tomorrow.
lenger who planlled 10 make child By the time the Brqu were finSJ)melhlng to do with thaL But I
So sir, If writinf. lettm Jell the protection one of his major C8J!I• ished, the children somehow
•r that we have given to 1he Job done, lhen I wiU keep on writ- paign ilsuea.
remembered alhoru or abuses.
IOcl1 fire de!JirlmeDt each yal and IDS lllllil our freedom is piC. So • Ript about thai tkne, Reno wa
Thil ~10mind tbe bcrriflc
~ many other chuilios o¥er the people 1iko you can't tab 1taway.
IIIVII off'ICOl Jim
informed that a handful of parent.1 c:aac of S111 '
)'Oa'S. And air, I a1ao aemd aomc · So speak out Meip County, 1t's livins in the affluent 1d1ami mburb · Wade, whoae )'011'-old dauathtcr
dine on 1he Rutland Town Council your right to write.
of Country Walk sutpeeted that was taken away from him for two
Yours
IIUiy'
when DO one walUCl ~job due to
!heir chi1drea being molested yean before be wu acquitted of
Floyd H. Cleland by
de new aewer Byltclll
BiL
a local blby-siuing service. The having tiDOd and aoclomized her.
RUIIand Dade County prosecutor decided He says cltiltl advocate intorroga:: And by the way, didn't -have
•'•

Ben Wattenberg

~OP's

argument against
motor voter bill

•

j

Sarah 0 verS" ee

~

Letters to the editor
Birthday gift

Case raises

I
;

non-propagandistic news about
China, by Chinese, to China - '
encouraging democracy. Good
idea, except that the Clinton budget :
zeroes out the aegis, the BIB .
Again, Clinton gives lhe action tq
theVOA.
·
I was member of that commission. The commissioners did not
want VOA running 1he new Radio ,
Free China because the Voice's •
marching orders come from the ·
very State Department that was, 10
use Clinton's campaign language, ,
•'cod(lling dictalOrs. •' The comlilis- ··
sion discovered that VOA's China ·
service did liaie broadc•sting about •
China, and what it did was often '
muted lest it "provoke" the Chi- '
nese communist gelonux:rats.
:
All this from one obscure bud- ~
get line item. II gets worse. The·,
same appropriation calls for build• •
ing ·a $125 million transmitter in '
~uwaiL Now kuwait a minute! The .
emir's plantation spa may be t!le •
most unstable place on the planet, ;
Is that a safe spot from which td •
broadcast about wmultuous events '
in
Islamic.wu-ld7
Is Clinton sqious7 A
spokesman for the Oftice of Man- ·
agement and Budget says it is a '
done deal. But Undersecretary of ~.
State-desianate Tim Wirth says ~
••no decision •' has been made.
~
Melmwhilc, Republicans pla!J to ~
mike an issue about lhe.RFEIRL ;
phue-out among East European ., ·
ethnic groups in America. Hard- !
line Democrats view it as more :
mindless mush. And Congress, :
which will probably resolve the :
issue, bas yet to be heard from. . ::
The legislators may yet get p
Ctin100 out or the ditdl. SURJOll is : ·
Jrowing to create a new quasi- ~
mdependent agency that woqJd. •
save money by consolidating lhe :
national service VOA with the ~
home service Radios, allowing :
each to do best what they do best, :
divorced from the cash-starved ~
bureaucrats of the State Depart- :

always-nervous State Depaltment,
inherenUy reluctant and unable to
~o seriotls journalism about a foreign nation wilh which it is also
negotiating.
China may be America's second
most important foreign nation. The
repressive communist government
is building up nuclear-tipped ll)ilitary forces and sending arms to
unsavory states. The economy is
booming. If a second $1obal superpower ell).erges, it will likely be
China. America wants such a
superstate 10 be democratic, which
is why Clinton favors setting up
"Radio Free China."
.
In a campaign position paper
Clin100 endorsed the ~epon of the
Commission on Broadcasting to the
People's Republic of China, saying, "I am especially pleased by its
principal recommendation: lhat a
new surro,ate radio service for
Asia be initiated under the aegis.of
the Board of International Broadcasting." '
Good idea. Emigre-based home
service broadcasting would give .

~

Penny-wise, pound-aensible.
Ben Wattenberg, a aealor tellow at tbe American Enterprise
Institute, .II author rJI "Tile First
' Univenal Nation," p.ubllslaed by
Tbe Free Prea aud a s.YDdk:ated
writer tor Newspaper Enterprise
Assoclatloll.

•

Exercise 'right to . write'

'*'

,,

,,
1

their moralsldown· fO'!l throal.,$ld
iou don't believe m JUdging your
fellows for,,personal. habill lhat
don't happen 10 fit your particular
ideas of godliness.
Still, your to11ic tells you lhat
smoking ai)p dnnking are risky ·
behaviors ;,. not unlike driving
. recklessly, for which we pay in
higher insurance J?!emiums. You
begin to think that If we l8ll behaviors that
causally linked 10 diseases, we shOuld call them ''risk"
taxes. or ev~ •'foolishness", taxes,
instead ofsin taxes. (OK OK, so
lawmakers ;probably won't stand
still for having therr constituenis
called fools even if they are. The
"fools" might 001 vote for them.)
If you cpme out and publicly
announCe t!!at you believe the govemmcnt shOuld tax risky behaviors
like smoking and drinking_ in the
sam~ way . private ente_rprise
requ•res cu~tomers .10 pay- If they
play, becaqse, unlike the federal
govemment, .business has no neverending cash cow 10 milk_ You'll
hear the Holy Beef Argument
"Well, 'Yhal are we going to do,
put taxes on EVERYTIIING peo-

~

~

~

•
:,,

M

..,

•

Reno

;

ncar 10 brainwashing. Tile young •
woman was placed in solitary con- ':
finement for weeka on end. She . :
was visited often by psychol~ts ..:
who endeavored to draw incnmi- .
nati~g Jesti,mony from her by ·
qU&amp;Sl-h)')JIIOSIS and other such tech· ·
niques.
All the more irregular, on at
. least 30 occasions, Janet Reno
s!OOd by in Ileana's jail eeU watth- ,
ing as psychologista worked her .
over. The pOiitiClltor aMnally held
the accused ehild moleatcr's hand
as she tried to ger a eoofession..

· Reno's office charged the
Fusters with the moat unspeabble
acts (to borrow from the tiUe of a
book an4 made-for-television
movie ~ made a heroine of the
Dade Clllioty prosecutor) including
not only various kinds of sexual
abuse, but abo child pornography,
injeclin,ll .lhe kids with drugs, animal ldllm8s, blood and excrement
rituals, praycts to 1he devil and otherwise terrorizing the children of
Country Walk.
Given 'this litany of charges, one
would think there would have been
some hard evidence. But Reno's
investigation turned u~ no blood, .
no COI'JIS!!S. no mutilated chi~ .
AU the ptOtecutor had to go on Will
highly questionable testimony that
the Bragas had exii'ICted from the
, children. .
lileno knew ber evidence will
flimsy. So she decided 10 let Ileana
apinst her h ....nd Reno's olfk:e
told the woman •s courHppointed
lawyer thalli she turned 11110'1 cvidence qalnst Frank, she would
receive · a reduced sentence.
ne-·s lawyer Jlrollgly urpcl her
10 aecept the tCims, even though
ahe mainllined ber inlloOeiiQe.
To coerco a RICalcitrantlleana to
conleu to crimea she IIIII ber hillb111d enlphadcally dealed, Reno
counteaanced lbo nao of mindbendina m~thods that were very
,;

~

•·

~

'

10rs like the Bragas kept badJtering
Alicia for 13 tnonths unt!i she
finally saiil, "~y daddy did it,"
just 10 pleQe them.

=

pie do !hal's harmflil7" people-wiD :
ask you. '.'What's next7 We're :
going to· tax red meat because the :
heallh nuts say that's harmful? :
What about the eaa1c fanners7 Do •
you WBIIIIO ruin thcm7"
~
W~en they complain, you can :
tell them there are DO sacred cows •
(oh, all these beef puns are ldlling ~
me). You can teD tllem that, yes, If :
scientists ever show data thal eat- ~
ing beef is filling our hospitals and ••
costing us the billions that smoking :
an~ drinking are. you'll be all for •:
taxmg beef.
;:
~ou can tell them that risk is ,a :
busmess and that morals don t
decide the premiums, actuarial :
tables do.
.:
Tell them that t!te peopl~ !'ho :
~hould. !'C bankrollmg the billions ..
1n hospital fees we pay CVC!'J ·year :
s~ould be the people taking the ~
n.sks, no~ the haples.~. ~ket- ;:
P•c;ked taxpayer who dido t get to .:
enJOy so much as a butt or a.snort. ..
And finally, tell them that sm has ~
nothing 10 do with iL
•
. Sarah Oventreet II a syndl· : .
cated writer lor Newspaper :
Enterprise Aasodation.
;::

are

~

Carpenter said that the high
school principal had sent out letters
to more than 300 parents of high
school students who have .not
passed the tests setting up.a time
. for them lo meet with him and
other school personnel. Twelve
~owed up, according 10 the supermtendenL
Money Denied for Instruments
. · A request from Toney Dingess,
band director, for the board 10 pay
a third installment of about $2,500
on band instruments leased two
,Years ago wail denied.
The instruments will become the
property of the school district after
the fifth. year of leasing, Dingess
said. In the discussion it was pointed out thal the Board does not have
the money now 10 make a commitment for the purchase. Carpenter.
said .some increases in funding may
come after July 1 and he suggested
thal the board might want to recon'ider the request then.
Larry Rupe, board president,
-said that over $30,000 has been
provided for the band over the past
J ive years, with Dingess acknowl¢ging the generosity of the board.
·However, he said ,that the band is
. stiD trying 10 "dig out" from major

me

ment.

questi~ns a~out

Joseph Perkins

.

i Meigs board... ..;;c;;.;;;OIItt:::.;;•aed.::;::..::from:.::=.!p::!aae:.:t~------------ Meigs 'COmmission...
.'

Put 'risk tax' on tobaccQ .a nd liquor

I

. -Th~u~~~d~ay~·~
ally ntlnei-PIIge !
· Ma~re~h~1~1~·~1~~------------------------------~Po~m!e:r~o!y::M:Id~d~le~~~rt~~O~hl~o~-----------------------------2.!'-!E~~!G~~==~~~
1

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
_Thu_!Sday, March 11,1993

·'

The Daily Sentinel

.

. Finally, after months and ··
months of ptychological coercion "
Deana broke down. She told Re00 '
what she w111ted to hear, and on ··
that basis the Dade County proae- .
cutor won a conviction ar;ainst -'
Deana's hlllband, Frank. He 18 now ~
serving a life sentence with no :
c.hance of parole. Ileana served :
three yean of 1 10- year IICIItence "
before being deponed to her
Honduras
.
(
•
••
It ICCIIIS clear that Deana Fuster •1
felt ,that the deek was so stacked !
agamst her that she could not ·' ,
receive a fair trial. As she stood ;
before the J~ who would sen- :
tencc her,llie lared: I am plead- •
lng Ruilty not because Ifeel guilty, :
but because I think It's the best ·!
interest 10 do it for the children Mid .1
for the court and for all the people l
that are worltlna on the cue. I am 1
innocent of all these charJ.Cs. 1 ::
wouldn't have done anythiDgto .:
harm any children.
~:

native :

.

...

debts and that they now have a
$10,000 note down to $6,000. He
said that the Students and the parents are constandy iniO fund raisen
and have six planned. for the
remaindcroftheyear.
Board members Bob Barton and
John Hood citing the. band as
"some of the beSt we haveft indicated they wanted 10 give the band the
$2;500. Rupe, Roger Abbott and
Randy Humphreys opposed on the
basis of the fact that the board
shouldn't be committing to, as
Abbott put it, "something we don't
have now and we're not sure we'D
have later". '
Humphreys, while expressing ·
suppon for the band pro~. said
thai he feels thlit group will have 10
exen:ise financial !CStraint as others
programs have. He said that he
co~ld not in good conscience after
seemg the needs or some of the elementary schools in the district, give
the band the money.
· ..,...
Other Business
Treasurer Jane Fry reponed that
the district has received $23,567
for drug free school programs. :
She talked about the changes in
information reporting systems 10
the state and the !rllining which

·:

any expense 10 the county.

base length specifications. The at such earlier time u would be
Cu!lass also failed 10 meet engine • financially appropiatc, 1 ftSidenr .
Lease new car
specifiCalions.
or Meigs County be cmJ)Ioyeil • :
Following the recommendation
The vehicle is being purchased the Meigs County Pul!lic betendct. •
o( Human Services Director 10 replace a van with a lease that is
Currently William Safranek,:
~ichael Swisher, the commission expiring, commissioners said.
from Athens County, is servinJ ..:·
agreed to lease a 1993 Buick
public defender.
.:
LeSabre from Smith Nelson
In addition, Clerk ~ary Hob' J
~otors Inc. of Pomeroy for the stetter read a letter to the commis·
. Olber businl!ll
•
human services department for sion from the ~eigs County Bar
In Other busine~s. the commis-·;
$378.75 a month for 36 months.
Association.
sion:
.
The lease wiU be paid from the
The letter ieads, "The members
- Renewed its contract with.:
county's children's services fund.
of the ~eigs County Bar Associa- Johnson Control of Charleston.~
Actin~ on Swishers' advice, lhe tion feel it would be appropriate
W.Va.,IO operate~cool~:
commissiOn rejected IWo o1her bids that a resident of Meigs County be ing sySierns in the
The:
that failed 10 meet specifiCations: a appointed as the public defenders contraCt price is $4,020, the same:
1993 Chevrolet Lumina for in ~eigs County."
as last year, commissiOIICIS said. ·•
$263.60 a month and a 1993
According 10 the letter, the bar
- Received a letter from the'
Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera for passed a resolution at its Jan. 8 Leading Creek WatJ:r Conservancy ·
$267.83 a month.
meeting requesting that upon expi- District thanking the commission~
Swisher said the Lumina and ration !If the funding for the cllircnt for helping them recover~
Cutlass both failed 10 meet wheel- contract for the public defender, or $71,723.16 from Jack Crisp's lif~
insurance annuity. The leuer saJd.
the money was used 10 help main-:
lain some of 1he district's services. :
-Discussed addinJ additional-;
Continued from page 1
members
to the Hag committee. ·
Pleas on a probation violation charge.
The
commission
agreed that mem;,.
. Persons, currently, serving a sentence for an Athens County
hers
could
be
added
10 the commit•
charge of escape from the SEPTA center near Nelsonville, had his
tee
in
addition
10
the
existing five
probation revoked and was ordered 10 serve the remainder of a conmembers.
Commissioner
Jine1
viction stemming on an earlier charge of escape in Meigs County.
Howard said she would like ~
committee 10 set up a meeting and
produce i1 ~eigs County Hag by
Jul)' 4.
Brian W. Hinkel, 2l,,C®Iville, was arrested Wednesday by
Commissioner ~ning Roush
Me1gs
County
Sheriff's
Deputies
on
a
bench
warrant
after
failing
to
.
said
the county should consider
appear
10
serve
jail
time.
Saturday,
a
chance
or
snow
.
· South-Central Obio
buying
flags from an Ohio COittpi~
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low 2Q- Lows 15-25. Highs in the mid-20s
ny
instead
of the North Caro!mll
25. Friday, snow likely. High in the 10 mid-30s. Sun~ay, a chance of
company
from
which they cumru:
mid-30s. Cbanc.e of snow is 60 per- snow. Lows JQ-20. Highs in the
The
U.
S.
Army
CotpS
of
Engineers
will
conduct
a
public
meet·
ly
purchase
flag.
,
20s. ~on day, a chance of rain or
cent.
ing
at
the
National
Guard
Armory
on
State
RL
62,
Pt.
Pleasant,
on
~et
with
Cleric
of
Courts
snow. Lows 10-20. Highs in the
Extended forecast:
)darcb 30, beginning at 7 p.m..
Larry Spencer and Recorder Emci-'
mid-20s to mid-30s.
·' Saturday thro!'gb ~on~y:
' Pu,rpose of the session is to discuss cleanup activities at the
gene Hamilton to discuss granting:
~cCiintic Wildlife Station (fonnerly the West Virginia Ordnance
or pay taises.
.
Works).
.
Roush told Hamilton that lht:
Representatives from tile U. S. Army Corps of Engineers and the
commission does not tell office-·
West Virginia Division of£n~ironmental Protection Ateney will be
holders how much 10 rai11e pay.
:·
Hazel M. Claytor
Lloyd Roush
present .10 an~wer . any quesuons community members may have
"'f we have a raise this year, ~
; Hazel l'darie Claytor, 81, of 14
concernmg the pro.JCCI.
.
money will be Biven the II1IIIC way:
d D• Roush • 82' of New
. Lloy~'-~
Amby Lane, Vinton, died Wednes- Ha
u•
..
•-·~·
"·-h
10
It
wiU be up 10 (lhe off'teebolderl)·
ven• ....., ..........,.y, "'"""
,
ilay, ~arch 10, 1993 at Holzer 1993, 11 Veterans ~em!Xial
to decide what to do witb it.~·
Medical Center.
Hospital in PomCIOy. .
. Roush said.
:
~ She was born on April 7•. 1911
Born June II, 1910 in Graham
HatliiliOD asked the commission
at Leon, W.Va. to the late Enoch E. Station WV. he
of the
10 set up a pay schedule baed on
'· •
was a son
ind lva M. (Boles) Jeffries.
of time em Joyed.
::
late Henry N. and Lesla A. (Spen~ She was a retired Avon sales cer)
'There
shoul~
be
some
gui&lt;ICRoush. He was a Board Direcrepresentative, a ·member of the ta for the ~ Co.unty Bank
. lines,~ Hamilton said.
·•
,by Bob Hoeflich
first Church of God of Gallipolis, since OciOber 3, t9'n and also scrIn addition, HamiiiOD lsked thC ·
the Gallia County Senior Citizens, ved as a Advisory Bo3rd Director
commission when her office would .
the Old Tyme Chorus, the Rerired for Peoples Bank. Roush was 8
be remodeled.
, ~.
· Senior Volunteer Program.
It's homecoming time for Bud studying in medically-related
member of the Saint .l 'lid Lutheran
Roush said Hamilton's offict;:
and Hazel Wilson who are in the fields. You can pick up an applica- was "next in line" for remodeling.
: Prior to moving 10 Gallia Coun- Church on New Haven, a member
process of moving back 10 Middle- tion at die Auxiliary counter in the
!Y from Toledo, she attended the of the New Haven Town Council, a .
Present were commissioner•
port
.
hospital lobby.
'
Northwood Church of God and was
Robert
Hartenbach, Howard ani!
Hazel and Bud lived in MiddleSunday school teacher for more member of the Bend Rotary Club
Roush
and
Hobstettcr.
,.
of New Haven, and was a member
Luia Mae Quivey will marie her
pan for a number of years and tliel'
lhan 20 years. She was the superin- of
next
meeting
will
be
held
The
Phi Kappa Nu 11 Marshall
one day moved to suburbia, the 87th birthday anniversary Friday at Wednesday at 10 a.m. in the c;om.
Jendent of the Cradle Roll Class,
Univeriity.
tfe
was
a
recipient
of
Rock
Springs Road. They've been her home on Pearl St. in Middle- mission offiCe in the ~eigs COuntv.
~hairperson of. the Benevolent
the
Paul
Harris
Fellow
Award,
was
happy but ha¥e found that country port. It's a little late for a card CourthoUse.
Society, the church choir and the
'co-owner
of
the
New
Haven
MiD
living just isn't worlc:ing out these shower but you might want 10 aive
Missionary Society. .
·
Buyer of the Atlantic ' Commission
days. Bud bas been mowing sever- Lula Mae a quick congratulatory
• She was preceded in death by Company
for A.E.P and handled
al ,acres. Something like ei$1Jt. arid message via the phone. She enjoys
fi~ brothcts and one sister. •
· pro'duce in Letart Falls~'Ohio. ·
In 1!143, playwright'l'homton WilckV
just isn't up 10 thal health wiSe any- hearing from people. The ·number won a Pulitzer Prize for drama for his
r· Survivors include her husband,
H Is also
ede·" · death
e
prec~ •n
by a
more. So the Wilsons have pur- is 992c3840.
Frank R. Claytor, whom she mar- daughter,
play "The Skin of O~r Teeth.''·
·
'
Carol
Ann
Barringer,
and
chased the McEiinney propeny at
ged on Nov. 21, 1938 a1 Bowling a brothct, H. Freeman Roush.
And you know it •s a small
the corner of Third and ~in and
Green; one foster son. Henry JefSurvivors include his wife, Mary
are going through the redecorating world.
. fries of Toledo, two foster grand- W. (Wolf) Roush of New Haven; a .
Dick Knight, son of Annie and .
proCesses before returning 10 Midchildren, one foster great-grand- grandson, Stephen Lloyd Barringer J. J'.1. ' ' '
•••
Chet
Knight of Poineroy, was drivdleport
child, four brothers (Carl Jeffries of of Charlotte, NC; a sister, ~ililreid
Continued rrom page 1
ing
on
a highway near his home in
:pielisiOn, James Jeffries of Toledo,
R.
Fry
of
New
Haven
and
several
obtained
by
caUing
Bank
One
at
You
probably
have
wondered
Tampa
when to and behold he
!;:laude Jeffries of Northwood lind
nieces
and
DCP.hews.
992-2133.
ijolly
Williams,
1991
noted
a
car
in front of him with a
about Bob Tewksbary of ~id!lle­
~aymond Jeffries of SL Petersburg,
SerVice WID be held Sawrday, H '
Q
ill be headin
Meigs County licetise carrying the
Pia.) and one sis!et, Mrs. ~anha ~h 13, at 11:30 a.m: a1 Saint
entage ueen, w
g up ,porL
the Heritage Queen contesL
Bob has been returned to his initials, KW, He drove al:!f side
Smith of Northwood.
Paul Lutheran Church, New Haven,
Association president Joe Clarlc .
with
: The service will be held Satur- with Rev. George Weirick and announced a clean-up in April of .home in Middlepon from RivCISide of the car and communic
!I&amp;Y at I p.m. at the First Church of Revs. Patricia and Richard Bonds- the mini-parlc and the areas main- Hospital in Columbus where he the passengers , lane Walton, the
was confined following a heart driver, and Jo Ann Corder of
God in Gallipolis, where the body
B~ will be in Graham tained by the association in the attack. He is making progress and Pomeroy. They exchanged ~eigs
,· Will lie in State one hour prior 10 ~·etcry.
business district He also stated the is undergoiag regular testing with information as they drove alon$.
lhe service. Brother Paul Voss will
Friends
may
call
at
Foglesong
to Pomeroy" banners results being phoned 10 his Columl!fficiate. Burial will be at Vinton Funcr.tl Horne on Friday from 6-9 "Welcome
Dick was :pleased and called h1s
wiD
be
going
up soon.
bus cardiologist
Memorial Park.
follcs
about the encounter. Just after
Next meeting of the association
. ~ Friends may call the ~cCoy­ &amp;.m. His bocb' wiD lie in stale one
that when they returned 10 lheir
prior to servicea on Sawrday will be.Apn.l14 at 8:30a.m. in the
There'll be another free dance at homes both Jane and Jo Am called
~oore Funeral Home's WethC{holt atour
the church.
'
the old American Legion Hall, the Knights 10 also infonn them
_c;hapel in Gallipolis Friday from 2
In lieu of flowcts the family re- conference rooin of Bank One.
thai's on Fourth SL, in Middlepon about the incident.
10 4 p.m. and from 710 9 p.m.
quests contributions 10 the Saint Squads make 8 runs
Saturday
night from 8 to 11 :30
Paul Lutheran Church or New
p.m.
' know about you but I'm
I dOO't
Haven
. Emergency Sqtlld. ·
·c. J. and the Country Gentle- reaIIy pleased with the progress
Eight calls for ·assistance were
answered by units of the ~eigs men will be providing music for being made at cleaning up the for···;...-.___ Meigs announcements----- County
Emergency Medical Ser- dancing and the public is invited. mer MGM Farm. City site in
vice on Wednesday and early No alcoholic bevera$CS are pctmit' Pomeroy. Isn't it great to be rid of
•
·~ Ball association to meet
luncheon at the Holiday Inn in Gal- Thursday
morning.
· ted but those attending are invited the eyesore? It'll be interesting to
;~. The Chester Baseball Associa- lipolis on March 20 at 12:30 p.m.
On Wednesday at 7:5S a.m. the 10 lake their own soft drinks. Chil- see what finally locates at the
~llon will meet ~onday a1 7:30p.m. There. will be a receiving line at Middlepon unit went 10 SIODewood dren are welcome as long as they
improved spot. David and Shirley
-at Chester Elementary. All interest- noon for Ohio Regent, OS DAR, . Apartments for John ~etzger who · are accompanying their parents . Bumgardner are responsible and
Mrs. Ralph R. Bush, Jr. "Reach
ued parents are invited.
Best part. of course, is thal1t's free. we certainly owe them a vote of
~rtcd 10 Veterans MemoOut and Toueh" will be the topic of was
rial Hospual.
thanks for improving tile lOWD.
~. Bush's presentation. Ameri~· DAR to meet ,
Dea.dline for applications for
· At 12:12 p.m. the Syracuse unit
~. The Return Jonathan ~eigs . can History Month Essay and Good went 10 Route 681 West for Paula
scholarships being awarded this
The Girl Scout cookies came,
.J~hapter, Daughters of the Ameri- Citizenship Awards will be made Blankenship. She was talcen 10 Vet- spring by the Women's Auxiliary and are going, going, going. And
~an Revolution, will observe the and student winners recognized.
at Veterans Memorial Hospital is n·ew pounds are coming, coming,
erans.
chapter's 85th anniversary with a
April I. The scholarships are for coming. Keep smiling, Fats.
.
The
~iddleport unit. went to
Smorgasbord planned
Kro~er·s at 12:37 p.m. for Gwinnie
The Bashan Ladies Auxiliary
who was taken to Veterans.
TI1e Daily Sentinel
will ·hold a smorgasbord dinner Wh1te
The Racine unit, at 1:26 p.m.,
(1JBPS 213·1180)
March 28 from II a.m. to 2 p.m. went 10 North Broadway for Eldon
The auxiliary will also serve eats at Krautter who was transported to ·
Publil'lhod every al\clmoon, . Monday
ltlrough Friday, 11 I Court Sl, Pomeroy,
the Portland auction on ~h 20.
Holzer ~ical Center.
Ohio by !.he Ohio VR~ley Publiehing
Company/Multi~•
lne.. Pt:l~Mro)',
At 1:32 p.m. the ~iddlepon unit
Ohio &lt;15769. Ph . 882·2156. Sceond clua
CoUDtry music night
was
10 Overbrook Center for
\
polllft!At'l Jll'id lilt Pomeroy, Ohio.
Country ~usic Night will be Fredacalled
METAL
Han who was taken 10 Pleasheld at the Loltridge Community ant Valley Hospital.
Mon1bm': The Auodlt.ed Pres•. and lhc
•Air Show Hl1• $75.95
Ohio NC;w•pM" ~ation , Nadorud
Center lln Saturday from 7 p.m. 10
The
Racine
unit
went
to
Bald
1\dnlrt.iflinR Repnwent.livc , Branham
midnight. All bands are welcome. Knob-Stiversville Road for ~ary
•Air Siltier
$67.95
Newspaper Sllt'IR, 733 Third Avenue,
~York . New Yot"k 10017.
Refreshments will be available.
Offill. She was taken 10 Holzer.
•SI•shor
$47.95
~POSTMASTER: 8eftd......_. ehanp1 &amp;o
At 3:11 p.m. the Racine unit
Retirtclteachers to meet
'Mtrt Daily Sentinel, 111 , Court St..,
RUBBER
was called to HiD Street for Karen
Po'"""'l'. OHio 45769.
•
The ~eigs County Retired Lemley. She was taken io Veter•Air Show MCS High
$69.95
IVIIICIIJPTION IIATI:II
Teachers will meet at Trinity ans.
Ill' C.mor orllotar Ro•lo
Chw-cb in Pomi!IO)' on Marth 20 at
•MCS Keystone High
$42.95
OM Woek........................................... $1 .60
This morning (Thursday) ati:S6
noon. NQtC the change of lime. Call a.m.,
Qoe Month .............•............... .. .......... $6.915
the
Rutland
unit
responded
10
eMCS Keystone
$35.95
&lt;lfte Yr.Ar............................ ........M.~ I83.20
992-3887 for reaervalions.
~elJS ~ine No. 2 for Andrew
•
8tNGL&amp; COPY
•
•Women's MCS
. $32.85
..
PKICB
Williams
who was taken 10 Holzer.
.
,Doily.........................................•.•.25 CMta
Club lotnftt
•
The
Big
Bend
Farm
Antique
tcublto:rihml not dN:ir1n,: to Pf'Y UM! carri·
Club will meet ~onday at 7:30
,.. rnA)' ranril 1n ad"'•nca direct &amp;a 'n.o
Daily StmLincl on a lhl"''e, lrix or 12
p.m.11 Southern High Scbopl.
Super Lotto
IMII\h bft11i11. Crndil wf11 00 gi¥r.n Cll1'ricT
16-18-26-37-38-46
'Mch-.
·
Raelne
CouncU
Ill
meet
(sixteen,
eigllteen, twenty-six,
No .......mpt- by 1111111 pormlllccl In
Radne Village Council will tbirty-sevcn, thirty-ei&amp;Jtt, forty-six)
IIU'OIIti when! holM •niar JC!1'Yioe t.
meet in receaiCCI ICilion Monday 11 Kicker .
"""'........
.I
7 p.m. • Star MID Part.
4-7-7-4-9-S
1..... - ... C..nqo
(four, se~. seven, four. nine,
13 W..a..........................................I:II.IU

------Weather----.

I

personnel in her ollice is taking.
The stale's E~IS program of
putting all student information iniO
a central system was discussed
along with possible violation of
in~vidual rights and pending lawswts.
Dorset Thomas was granted a
half day dock time and a field. trip
for DECA students to compete in a
state contest was approved.
Rupe proposed that when the
board meets in the schools the
teachers .and parents be ·given a
special invitation to attend and participate in the meeting. He also
proposed that the board do things
to m\prove public relations and
suggested a regular column by the
superintendenL It WaS decided that
a column will be submitted 10 The
Daily Sentinel about school hsppenings every two weeks.
Julie Hubbard attended the
meeting to ask about permission
for a field aip on March 2S. She
was·instructed to get her request 10 .
the superintendent in writing. This
morning Supt: Carpenter advised
that in ·checking his records he
found he had receive the request
and approved it on Feb. 18, and
·that tbe 'Pomeroy Elementary
School had been advised.
Policies Modified
Following an executive session,
the board modified several policies.
A policy was adop~ about interdistrict enrollment (changing from
one school to another within the
district) ·and intra-district enrollment (changin~ frtim one district 10
another). Details of the policy wiD
be announced by the superintendent
·
The board also adopted some
changes in policies on assessment
of disbict goals, ftxbidding changing grades earned due 10 attendance
or breatdng of school rules, guideI"mes f or permanent exc Iuston
•
.
from
whiCh bans forever a student
·attending a public school,. search
and ~izure to specify that lockers
and desks are the oroperty of the
board and may be subject 10 search,
dange.rous weapons to apnly to
&lt;
school visitors, and solicitauon of
funds by students which must have
criteria approved in advance by the
superintendent.
Gi¥en Recognitioli
Recognized and presented letters of ~ommendation at the meeting were Ted Hatfield, custodian at
the Harrisonville School, and Ed
Bartels, teacher at the Salisbury
School.
Barton read a let.ter from the
board 10 Hatfield in whieh he commended the custodian for his dedication. The letter 10 Bartels detailing his. commitment 10 education
was read by Humplu'eys.
· The board .moved into executive
session to discuss pending litigati
on.

continued,_ page •

-: - -.A rea deaths

'a

r---~Local briefs... _ ___,

Man a"ested on wa"ant

Corps to hold public meeting

Beat of the Bend...

· .

Ienf!!

--

--

lle•chantS

---

-

.

'

...

BASEBALL 1 93.

. ...

.

Lottery numbers

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'•

Hospltal news

t~ttr~uM-Ial

WEDNBSDA Y ADMISSIONS
- Lloyd ROIIJh, Fomeroy,
~DNBSDA Y DIS'CHAROES.
•Jamie Keilledy and David Carter.

.

219 N. SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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1-8-6-6

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�,

Sports

T~e Daily Sentinel~

•

,.

Thursday, March 11,1993

,

Page--4 .

North Stars' move to Dallas strictly financial, Green says

"

. By ARNIE STAPLETON
· DALLAS (AP) ~ Minnesota
North Stars owner Norman Green
s•ys the decision to move his ,
National Hockey League team to
Dallas was strictly financial.
" 1 think the fans and I share ,a
common sadness abOut the turn of
even IS," Green said of the Minnesota fans.
. Green, who purchased the North

In NHL action,

Stars in I99o; said tile club has
been unable to turn a profit for
cighl years. This week he also
complained of low ticket prices,
risinjl salaries and dwindling commumty supporL
A study he commissioned
revealed strong hockey interest iri
Dallas-Fort Worth," roughly twice
the .size of Minneapolis-St. Paul,
and nearly 8,000 fans made reservations for season tickeiS after a

Canadiens, minus top
goalie &amp; coach, beat
N.Y. Islanders 5~1

.

special phone line was set up. ·
So Green and the Dallas City
Council announced the move
Wednesday night, with the team to
be rechristened as the Dallas Stars.
Green, who presented North
Stars jerseys 'to council members
and Dallas mayor Steve Bartlett,
said that after the negotiations were
concluded he tried to .call NHL
commissioner Gary Bettman in
Edmonton, Albena, to officially
notify him that the team would play
in Dallas next seasQII.
"I wasn' t able to get in contact
with him, but the .message I left for
him was that the deal is done and
thank you for your help," Green
said.
The relocation - the fust in the
NHL since the Colorado Rockies
became the Ne-.v Jersey_Devils .11

By KEN RAPPOPORT
miss tonigtu's game in Boston.
AP Hockey Writer
In other games, it was Toronto
Even wilh a second-string goal- 5, Hanford 3; Buffalo 7, Quebec 4,
tender and second-string coach, the and Detroit 6, Edmonton 3.
Montreal Canadiens looked firstMaple Leafs 5, Whalers 3
rate.
.
Dave Andreychuk moved closer
Playing with backup goalie to his fust 50-goal season, scoring
Andre Racicot and tem11orary his 44th and 45th as the Maple
coach Jacques Lenutire behind the Leafs beat Hartford, ending the
bench, the Canadiens whipped the Whalers' three-game winning
New York Islanders 5-1 Wednes- sueak.
~ynighL
Andreychuk, who has 16 goals
· Racicot pinch-hit for i11jured in 16 games since being acquired
No. I goaltender Patrick Roy and from Buffa4&gt;, deflected a point shot ·
made 42 saves, inCluding 23 in a for his first goal of t~e game aJ
shutout second period. And assis- 6:11 of the second penod. On his
tant general manager Lemaire was .second goal, Andreychuk was on
a replacement for coach Jacque the lip of lhe crease when a point
Demers, who was hospitalized with shot came off the end boards. He
cbest pains Tuesday morning.
· batted the puck past Sean Burke at
: "It was f8!1t out there, but the 10:55 for a 4-1 lead.
guys were good to me in the sense
Hartford scored twice before lhe
!hal, if I was late on a line change, second intermission to make the
they yelled 'next up' and every- sa1re 4-3, but lhc Leafs held off the
thing was OK," Lemaire said. determined "Whalers.
"It's been a long time."
Sabres 7, Nordlques 4
Lemaire last coached the eanaNHL points leader Pat
diens in 1984-85.
LaFontaine had five points and
In Montreal, forward Vincent Alexander Mogilny added to his
Damphousse said the Canadiens league high ·with two goals as the
· went out on the ice wiih their hos- Sabres defeated lhe Nordiques.
pitalized coach on their minds.
LaFontaine's production gave
"We wanted' to win for him," him 125 points, while Mogilny
Damphousse said. "He's done ¥&gt; scored his 66th and 67th ~-!liD
much for us this year."
Houlder, playing his fust NHL
Demers, who has been ordered game this season, also scored twice
to rest pending more tests, wasn't for lhe Sabres as Buffalo moved
allowed to follow the game on tele- within three poiniS of third-place
vision or radio. Racicot, once nick- Boston in the Adams Division.
118111ed ''Red Ught" for the num- · Dale Hawerchuk added a goal
6er of goals he allowed, would l!ld t1!= assists and Yuri Khmylev
IJave made Demers proud.
also -!!cored for Buffalo.
·
• "I don't think it will change
The Nordiques got goals from
people's minds," Racicot said of Alexei Gusarov, on a penalty shol,
his detractors. ' 'But maybe I Mike Ricci, Scott Pearson and
jained some points wilh lhose peo- Valeri Kamensky.
JetonighL"
Red Wlnp 6, Oilen J
: Racicot's 23 saves in the second . Detroit's Steve Yzerman scored
)ICriod 'ol(as one shot shon of the his 50th goal of the season and
team record of 2A allowed in one added three assists as the Red
period against Toronto on May 15, Wings held off a late Edmonton ·
1970. He was finally bea!Cn on his rally.
Yzerman scored his goal in lhe
35th shot when Steve Thomas
IICOred on a )lOwer play at 3:28 of first period, then later assisted on
the lhird period.
scores by Yves Racine and Dino
: John LeClair, Steplian Lebeau, Ciccarelli in the ~and period and
~sse Belanger, Mike Keane and
Ray Sheppard in thee third. · . .
Brian Bellows scored for the CanaZdeno Ciger had two goals for
diens. Demers is also expected to the Oilers.

Jluser gets to Ophir ahead·
bf rest _of Iditarod racing pack

years ago - does not have to -be by ihe council.
approved by NHL owners.
The North Stars (32-27-9) have
With the move to Texas, where played in Minnesota since entering
ice skating hardly commands the the NHL in J967. Minneapolis
presence it does in Minnesota, the business leaders had sweetened a
NHL stakes out funher ground in . deal' to get the North Stars to move
downtown to Target Center.
the Sun BelL
"There are oow six leallls in the
But Green last month said he
Sun Belt," said Green, although was turni11g full attention to Dallas.
only five NHL teams will be in the · NegotiatioriS with Dallas officials
Sun Belt. • 'Last year there was have hinged on an agreement to
only seven leallls in all of Canada. . share Reunion Arena 'with its pin•
So the Sun Belt, where then: is no cipal tenant, the Dallas Mavericks.
ice, has a great big folll)wing in
The North Sun originally want·
hOckey. And it's about the take off cd a five-year lease, but e~Jiy
in a big way."
'
. Wednesday Mavericks counsel
City Council members mel in · Doug Adkini said the Mavericks,
executive session f&lt;ir about 90 min- in the fifth year of a 20-year lease,
utes before clearing the way for the would want a similar lease.
move. The North tars' 10-year
The city didn't want two franlease of Reunion Arena is subject chises committed to the arena for
to review and a March 17 f11181 vote only five years, so the city went

•
· '"
back to Green and all parties
agreed to a compromise suggested •
by Adkins: a 10-year lease fol -..:
towed by lhree renewal options of !
five years each for both teams.
"
Green said the lealll, which will ·
keep iiS colon of green, gold and "
·black, will be known as the Dallas',
Stars for at least the next season.
Mter that, fans will vote on a new:,
name.
3
He said nearly 8,000 people had~
made reservations for season tickets since a special phone line was•
set tip' to gauge fan interest. Indi-w
vidual ticket prices will mnge from:
. $15to $40.
~Green said the team agreed to
pay about $5 million to add an ice~
rink, new scats and a press box andJ
to an&lt;! make other adjustments att
Reunion Arena.
•
"

.WE HAVE WHAT YOU'RE LOOKI -G FOR!

Thuraday, March 11, 1993

On the national college basketball scene,

Holy Cross, Delaware win to make NCAA tournament field
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
APSportJ Writer
Add Holy Cross and Delaware
to the NCAA mix. Throw Bucknell
and Drexel into the NIT hopefuls
hcsp.
·
Two more automatic berths to
the NCAA tournament were
scOOped up Wednesday nigtu with
Holy Cross !)eating Bucknell 98-73
in lhe Patriot Leligue touroament
championahip game and Delaware
edgin$ Drexel 67-64 in the North
Atlanllc conference f11181.
Holy Cross will be makin~ its
first appearance since 1 80;
Delaware is going back for the second year in a row.
SevenJeen teams have recehied
automatic bids ao far, and another
will be decided tonight when No.
2Q Massachusetts plays host to
Temple for the Atlantic-10 title. ·
Aoolher 13 automatic bids have
)'et _to be dcx:ided. Six tournaments
begin toc~By, another six begin Friday, and one~- the Western
Athletic Conference tournamentgot underway Wednesday.
··
Of the two tot~rqament finals
Wednesday night, the Delaware~xel game was clearly the besL
~oth leallls had seveml chances to

take control, but Drexel commiued 99-69, No, 3 Michigan edged llli,
foot turnovers in the final28 sec- nois 98-97 in -overtime and No. 17
onds·and Delaware missed .four Iowa downed Wisconsin 9 l-6S.
foul s11o1s in the same 11!*1."
·
Holy C1'01111 98, BuckneD 73
The game-winning points were
At Lewisburg, Pa., Holy Cross
scored by Anthony Wright after used a pair of 9-0 first-half runs to
Kevin Blackhurst Stole the ball for built a 50-33 halftime lead, and
Delaware (22-7).
· went ahead bv as much as 20 in the
"I was just trying to help out on
and half
defense. ihe Drexel player went up secThe win·was the 17111 in the last
for the shot, got caught in the air 19 games for the Crusaders (23-6),
and .c ouldn't get a shot off,'' who will attempt to post an NCAA
Blackhurst said·. "Fonunately, I · tournament win for the fust time
was able to get the ball and feed
·
1953 Th ' ·
WrighL" . .
.
·,
smce
. IS IS the eighth
NCAA benh in school history.
Mter a quick turnover by Drexel
No. 21ndlaDa 99
(22-7), Brian Pearl missed a free
Mlcb~an State 61
throw with eight secoitds left.
At ·Bioommgton, Ind., Greg
Another turnover follow.ed, but Graham tied 1 ClllllCI'· high with 32
Blackhurst missed two foul shots points in his ftnal home game for
wilh two seconds to go. . .
lhc Hoosiers (27-3, 16-1 Big Ten).
Drexcllhen called a tiiPCOut that
The win assured Indiana the outit didn't have, and Pearl's.foul shot right Big Ten title.
with one second to go .was 'the
The Spartans (14--12, 6-11)
game's f11181 poinL
dropped their fifth suaight game
"If I was a fan I could.never ask and perhaps any chance of a postfor a bet~r basketball game. Both season bid.
teams· played great and we were
No. J Michigan 98
very_fortunate to win a real quality
IUinois 97 (OT)
basketball game," Delaware coach · At Champaign, 111 .• Jalen Rose
Steve Steinwedel said.
scored 23 poiniS and Jimm)' King
In Top 25 games Wednesday; had seven m overtime as Michigan
No. 2 Indiana beat Michigan State

escaped a b!I!Tage of three-point
baWlS
Chris Webber scored 22 poiniS
for the Wolverines
overall,
14-3 in the
lllioois (18-

11, 11-6) got 27 poiniS from Andy
Kaufmann.
No. 17 Iowa 91, Wlllcoll5in 65·
At Ames,
Acie Earl
scored a
and

grabbed 10 ~After Wlsconsm (14- 12, 7-10
Big Ten) closed to 58-50, Iowa ·
(21-8, 10-7) outscored the Badge~~
33-lSto cloae Dill the

Ohio State beats Minnesota 69-58
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By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio .State won a big game, but it
,!!light have come ·too late to save
pte Buckeyes' flickering hopes of
inaking the NCAA toumamenL
:. A 69-58 victory Wednesday
)tight over Minnesota - fueled by
Jbe three-point shooting of Derek
~and Jamie Skelton during
• 13-2 second-half run 1mpmved Ohio SIBle to 14-12 over)11 beading into the 61151 game of
J11e regular season Sunday at Purdue.
: "I lhinlc we'n; a long shot even
lf we go over lhen: and witi," said
Phio State coach Randy Ayers.
t 'Some other things would have to
hamen in the league for us to get
ln."'r
•
.: The victory, which left them at
;J-10 in the Big Ten Conference,
pssured the Buckeyes of their 16th
consecutive winn_ing season. It
llidn 't assure them of much else,
pther than a bid to the National
Jnvitation Tournament if they miss
out on the NCAA.
: The NIT's executive director
$8id last week that he would wels:ome Ohio Swe into the 32-team
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Many of the mushers were also
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&amp;ft'olo7.~4

rtnt halt at Wednesday nlabt's Bla Ten game at ···
St. Jolin Arena in Columl!us, wllere tile Buck,,
eeys won 69·58. (AP)

ST"ALS BALL - Ohio State gl!8rd Jamie
Skelton (15) beads dow-.court with the loose baD
alter getting between Minnesota's Vosbon
Leonard (left) and Townsend Orr during the

.._CooL"'·'-131
W..field S&amp;. Peler 61, fnmoat SL

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

II

and you know Jamie lik!)S to take
the lhree."
Lawrence Funderburke added
14 points and a game-high eight
rebounds as the Buckeyes outrebounded the Gophers 30-29. Minnesota had outrehounded 20 of iis
previous 26 ol'pollents and was
fourth in the B1g Ten in rebounding, while Ohio State was ninth.
Minnesota, which closed out lhe
regular season at 17-10 ovemll and
9-9 in the Big Ten, might have
been hurt by oven:onfidence about
its own NCAA hopes.
... w.e d'd
1 n •1 have our guys
ready, •' said Golden Gophers
coach Clem Haskins. "Maybe it
was because our guys felt like
we've alrea&lt;ly locked up an NCAA
bid."
The Gophers were flat all nighL
They were 20 for 54 from the field
for 37 percent after hitting 7 of 27
shots in the first halffor 26 percenl
Arriel McDonald scored 16
points and Townsend Orr bad 12
for the &lt;lODhers.
·
A 1S-:1 run, fueled by Orr's
eight points, broUght Minnesota to
a 34-33 deficit wilh ll:Slleft.

3! ~ 9 ., 23! 191
:12 Tl 9 12 2:!4 Dl
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Wed-ay's ..,;res

Chi&lt;qo..._...............41

Barll

TUB WALL KITS .~~3f::j

: OPHIR, Alaska (AP) qefending Iditarod champion MarIJn Buser put at least three hours
between him and his nearest cernpetition as the 21st lditarod finOJ!ed iiS fifth day.
· Buser reached the Ophir checkPoint. 444 miles from the starting
nne in Anchorage, at 7:22 p.m.,
still running the 20-dog team he
began the nee with.
• Meanwhile, four-time champ
Susan Butcher dropped three more
aogs Wednesday, bringing her
4own to 12. Butcher, who began
the race Saturday with 18 dogs,
appeared to be in second place and
was heading for Ophir Wednesday
night after leaving the Takotna
~heckpoint at 7:11p.m.
· Both Buser and Butcher have
completed a mandatory 30-hour
Cayover and are putting distance
between them and the rest of the
frontrunners as they cover the
1;100 miles to Nome.
·
. Dee Dee Ionrowe - nursing an
lhjured knee - and Montana
timsher Doug Swingley were fin. i)hing up their layovers at Ophir
and were expected to get back on
dte trail in the early morning hours

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field if it had a winning record and
didn't make the NCAA tournamenL
"Hopefully, this will show the
commiuee we're still trying to get
into the NCAA tournament," said
Skelton, who led Ohio State with
16 I_)Oints. "If not, I just hope we
get mto the NIT."
~erson said it all CC)f!lCS down
to Suotlay's game at Puidue.
"We've got to go to Purdue and
prove we can p~ on the road and
win on the road,' he said. '.'That'll
establish whether or not we make
thetournamenL"
Allderson, a fresh~, hit 5 of 8
· sho~ from the fi~ld, inCluding both ..
of h1s three-pomt at~empts, and
both free throws he tned. He also
had four rebounds, five assists and
three steals before fouling out in
· the last minute.
Skelton, who had been in a
shooting slump in his last two
games, scored 16 points. The junior
had made 3 of 16 three-point
auempts in bas;k-to-baclt defeats,
but went2 for 4 against Minnesota.
"If he's got a good look at the
basket, he's to step up and tate it,"
Ayers said. "He got a good look.

'

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· Race coordinator 1oanne Potts
S.id head veterinarian Jim Leach
suspeciS warm .lempetatures in laiC
F-ebruary spoiled meat ilropped at
~ Rainy Pass and Rohn ·check)IOints, making many leallls ill by
ik time they reached Nikolai.
· ' Potts said food and stool samJIIea would be sent to Anchorage
'tbundav for analysis.
·.

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-5

Pqmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, March 11,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

On the spring training scene,

Bonds downplays homer in Giants' win over Mariners·

right-hander Erik Hanson for ii 2·1
lead Wednesday and the Giants
went onto beat the winless Seattle
Mariners 9-1.
hopes IS many.
"I'm not looking for home runs
.. Barry ~ds hit a.soi&lt;;~~M?mCr to ~~ thi~ stag~," Bonds said after lift·
nght field m the third IDDIDJ[ off mg h1s spnng training a.verage lb

By Tbe ~~ted Pr~ .
The $43.75 rmlbon man hit Ius
fllSthome run for the San Francis·
coG~ts, the fnt of whal the team

.364. ' 'I'm just looking for a line
drive a day."
A few miles away, Oakland
general manager Sandy Alderson
said he is looking into trade possibilities for Rickey Hendet:SOn, the
perenially disgruntled outfielder.

Baseball embracing alcohol bans
in clubhouses, on charter flights
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
; Hit the winning home run on a
hot night, head back to the clubhouse to celebrale and pop the top
on a cold bottle •... of mineral
water?
Soon, Boston manager Butch
Hobson plans to meet with his
players to discuss a possible ban on
beer in the clubhouse and on airline
flights. The Red Sox might become
the latest team to make such a
move for health and other reasons.
"It doesn't bQther me, either
w]ly. If it happens, it's good," fust
baseman Mo Vaughn said. "But
baseball players have been drinking
beer as long as the game's been
played, so it's an issue that can go
either way."
. Besides, it won't stop players
from drinking.
· "I'll do whatever they say,"
designated hitter Ivan Calderon
said. "If they don't want to have
beer in the clubhouse, !hat's OK.
Then I'll just wait 'til we get hack
to the hotel "
For the iast few years, die look
of what major leaguers eat and
drink in the locker room has been
changing. Gone are the old days
when the typical postgame meal

was a big plate of fried chicken and
a couple of beers. Now, lhe spreads
usually feature ·fruits and juices.
Even sodas are becoming scarce in
refrigen~tors.
•
•·
Other items are showing up leSs
and less, too, as baseball cleans up
its act. Pouches of chewing tobacco
are not lying around the locker
room .and neither are the sll!Cks of
girlie magazines that used to be
seen.
The Los Angeles Dodgers were
among the f~rst teams to ban beer
in the clubhouse and on flights.
"We definitely have been a little more concerned about lhe total
health of our athletes," assistant
trainer Charlie Strasser said. "If a
player wants to have a drink, !hat's
their perogative. But to give·them
something that's not healthy for
them, that goes against what we're
trying to do."
"Alcohol dehydrates you, and
that's not good,'' he said. "It's just
the total package. we· push water
and Gatorade on our players.''
· Dodgers pitcher.Orel Hershiscr
said he thought lhe beer ban cpin,
cided with increased lawsuits
against those who provide alcohol,
be it a bar or a ballclub.

In NBA action,

") doubt that it's a high moral
fssue," Hershiser said.
The Cleveland Indians do not
serve alcohol on their Oights, btll
do provide beer in the locker room
duong lhe regular season.
"On the team side, lhey're trying to protect against any incidents
coming away from )he ballpark,"
Indians pitcher Ted Power said.
·'On the player side, you can say
lhat grown men can do what !hey
want. The problem is that sometimes there aren't too many grown
men oil a team.''

,

fielder throughout his career, to a
practice field next to the stadium
for instruction on how to play fust
base.
"You have to take your hal off
10 the guy: • Kelly said of Win field. "Fony-one years old. ... Pretty special kind of guy." .
At p.(ant City, Fla .• Jose Rijo
said that if he and the Cincinnati
Reds can't agree on a multiyear
contract by Saturday, he doesn ' t
want to discuss a (leal until after
the season.
Rijo, eligible for free agency
after the W,orld Series, said he
wants to stay in Cincinnati and
would negotiate with lhe Reds afler
the season ends.

Jly Tbe Assoc.iated Press
straight games and six in seven outRumeal Robinson. who always ings.
said he could be a good NBA play·
Danny Manning and Ron Harper if he got enough minutes to · er each scored 22 points for the
prove it, is starting to prove it with Clippers, who trailed 5648 at halflhe New Jersey NelS. ·
time and got no closer until the
Robinson had 21 points, eight final two minutes as they matched
assists and five steals in 36 minutes their longest !()sing streak of lhe
as the Nets won iheir third straight season.
game with him starting at point
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
guard, beating the Los An~eles New York llO, the Los Angeles
&lt;;tippers 109-98 Wednesday.rught.- .. Lakers 104; Boston 104, Philadel"He's a good player if he gets phia 100; De.nver 126, Washington
strong minutes," Nets coach 112; Orlando 119. Indiana 106;
Chuck Daly said. "I know he's a Portland 124, Dallas 96; and
hettf!t,player than he was' cQm~g ~~J 11, polden Stale ,Ul(),, , .
off the bench for us. He's got a Trailnmzers 124, Mavericks 96
great burst to the basket, he finds
Ponland won at Dallas, handing
people open, he's playing with con- the Mavericks their club-record
f!llence and he's making the shots. 16th consecutive defeat behind
And when his conditioning Terry Porter's 24 points.
·
improves, his defense will
Randy White led Dallas with a
improve."
.
career-high 31 points:
·
New Jersey is 3-1 since Kenny
Suns 111, Warriors 100
l{ndet:SOn broke his left wrist and
Phoenix won its fifth consecuwis lost for the season. Robinson. live game and improved its NBAr8placing Anderson as the starting •best home record to 25-~ as
p(lint guard in the last three games, Charles Barkley scored 30 points
~ 58 poinlS ~ 29 as~ts and has and Dan Majerle 28 against Golden
a~era~ed 33 mmute~ m the three State.
'
.
vtctoocs..
.
The Suns led by 16 points after
New Jersey general manager three quarters, but the Warriors
Willis Reed acquired Robinson in started the final period with an 8-0
exchange for Mookie Blaylock run. Majerle then scored nine
after Daly made Anderson the points in the quarter, keeping
sta,rter.
.
Phoenix safely in front.
Derrick Coleman added 20
Celtics 104, 76ers 100
points and 12 rebounds _for the
Boston extended its winning
Nets, who won despue 24 streak to four as Reggie Lewis
turnovers, nine by Coleman.
made four free throws in the final
'Loy Vaught started for injured 26 seconds at Philadelphia, which
center Stanley Roberts and bad 23 lost its fust home game since Fred
points and 12 rebounds for the Carter took over as coach.
Clippers, who have lost four
Carter took over after the week-

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"I felt a little losL It was a little
weiid," he said. "But for my fust
game, I'm happy."
At Fort Myers, Fla., Dave Win·
field drOpped a]outine throw in lhe
fust iMing and hit a two-run double in lhe eighlh as the Minnesota
Twins ~t the Boston Red SolS&gt; 6-

end fuing .of Doug Moe and won at
Minnesota. But the loss to the
Celtics•was the Sixers' ninth in lhe
last II games.
Xavier McDaniel led Boston 2.
"It ended up all right,'' said
.with 23 poinlS. Jeff Hornacek had
Winfield,
making his second spring
24 for Philadelphia.
stan at ftrst base. "It started off a
-·
Knicks 110, Lakers 104 ·
New York snapped an eight· little frightening. It hit me in a bad
game, nine-year hom!: losing streak place, the hands·. "
Following the game, manager
against the Lakers as Patrick Ewing
Tom Kelly took ~infield, an put-~
had 34 points and 12 rebounds.
The Knicks, who never trailed
in the second half, won their IOlh
consecutive ga'me .at Madison
.,
Sq\Uife Gard~n .wJih !heir first lri·
J i
i !
urn ph over the Lakers in New York
since Jan. 3, 1984.
A.C Green had 22 · points,
Se~ale Threatt 20 points and a
career-high 11 rebounds and Vlade
Divac 18 points and 14 rebounds
for lfie takers.
.
Nuggets 126, Bullets 112
Denver won for just.the fiflh
time in 31 road games after rookie
LaPhonso Ellis sparked a 41-point
third quaner .against Washington
wi~h II of his 20 points in the
opening 4:44 of the second half.
The Bullets were led by Tom
Gugliotta wilh 26 points and 10
rebounds.
Magic 119, Pacers 106
Orlando handed Indiana its
eighlh straight road defeat as Tom
Tolbert scored IO fourth-quarter
points, seven during a decisive 121 spurt. ,
Shaquille O'Nealled the Magic
wilh 26 points and II rebounds and
Tolbert finished with 22 points and
13 rebounds.
.
Indiana lost despite a 32-point
performance by Reggie Miller.

"You get paid to do a job, and I
don't w1111t any problems on my
mind this season ," Rijo said. "If
we're going to get it done, we have
to get serious now. If my mind is
clear, I can get any bod)' o~L" ..
Kevin Mitchell, acquired m an
offseason trade with Seattle, homered in his first at-bat for Cincinnati
as the Reds routed the Houston
Astros 14-5.
Mitchell arrived at spring training camp five days after the voluntary reporting date because of. per·
sonal reasons, and manaJ.er Tony
Perez didn't use him unul now to
give him time to get ready. In
Mitchell's only other plate appearance, he wall::ed in the third.

TIMEX WATCHES .

There was no beer in the clubhouse at-Chain 0' Lakes Park after
Cleveland's exhibition game Monday night, and several players
noticed.
"Hey, why isn't there any beer
in here?" several Indians eould be
heard clamoring.
A few years ago, the Chicago
White Sox banned beer. Thal prohibition lasted only one season.
"I don't have any problems
with lhe way it is now, as long as it
d&lt;iesn 't get excessive and the alcohol doesn't cause any fights or inci. dents,'· outfielder Tim Raines said. .lhe season.''
While the rest of the Orioles
"But it's a tough issue, and everywere playing exhibition games,
one is not going to agree on it.''
Davis remained at the team's uain- ·
ing complex working on his own.
Therefore. it was a somewhat peculiar experience for him to be m the
lineup.

Robinson's play helps Nets
sink Clippers in 109-98 decision

·I

Alderson said the Athletics have
attempted to uade Henderson each
of the last two years. Henderson
will make $3 million in 1993, the
final season of a $12 million, fouryear deal. .
Speakmg of stars, Chicago
White Sox general manager Ron
Schueler said at Winter Haven,
Fla., that the club and Bo Jackson
may extend the deadline to decide
whether lhe team will keep him.
. J.ackson's contract calls for the
White Sox to make their decision
by Monday. The team can either
p1ck up the option on his contract,
which would guarantee hi111
$~1~,0~ ~nd offer another $1.5
mllhon m mcenllves, or buy him
out for $150,000.
·,
.
"His a~ent is in the area, and
we're talkmg abOut it,"· Schueler
said during a game between the
While Sox and Cleveland.
Jackson, trying to make a comeback with an artificial left hip, has
been hobbled by a sore right hamstring this spring. He has hit well, .
going 5 for 15 in folic exhibition
games, including two long doubles
Wednesday against the Indians.
At St. Petersburg, Fla., Glenn
Davis made his spring training
debut for. the Balt1more Orioles.
Davis has played in only 155
games over the past two seasons
because of injuries, so this season
he's not pushing himself too hard
during lhe spring. He singled in his
only at-bat And scored a run in Baltimore's 3-1 victory over Pittsburgh.
.
"It's just a step in my prepara·
tion for the season," he said.
"That's the goal, to be ready for

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aecidenL

The IIChool about 20 miles south
of O.Ioae. N.C., was closed for
spring brak Wcdnelday.
The men '1 and women' s·tennis
1e1ms were acheduled 10 play four
mllchel in four days in tine llates.
After playina Tuesday at Tulane,

..,

they set off late !hat night on a 350mile drive from New Orleans to
Birmingham, Ala., for Wednesday
afternoon marches ai the University
of Alabama at Birmingham.
"I think, in most probability,
fatigue is going to be a major
cause," said police S ~t. Brett
Alexander .. "By all indications,
that's where everything is leading.''

team had time tQ rest after Tuesday's matches before starting lhe 7
lfl-hour trip, noting long van trips
between back-to-back tournaments
is not unusual.
"A lot of sports do that. It's
maybe something that should he
addressed at the NCAA," Frost
said. "These eight- and nine-hour
all-night trips aren't fun. That's just
life in the major colleges.' •

Frost said he did not know if the

Miami Redskins dedicating
MAC tourney to Brown's girl
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - The wearing black ribbons on their uni·
Miami Redskins want to win the · forms in Meredith's honor.
Mid-American Conference touma"I want this championship for
ment to honor the memory or one her," Brown said. "I want to
of their littlest fans. .
·
always be able to ·look up and see
The team has dedicated this sea- this year on the ,wall as a champison to 4-year-old Meredith Brown, onship year. Meredith was such a
daughter of assistant coach Randy huge fan of this team and, as lon11
Brown.
as I see those patches on the urnMeredith died on Nov. 29, one forms, I know she's w81Ching."
day after her fourth birthday and
Miami (19-7 overal~ 14-4 in the
one day before Miami's lint ref!· conference) won a sbare·of lhe reglar-scason game. She bad GuillaiD- ular-season MAC title. But after
Barre syndrome, which auacks the . losing to 'Ball State 72-63 in the
central nervous system. The dis- season finale, the Redskins are an
ease spread to her respiraiOry mus- ' ul)derdog to repeat as MAC chamcles and halted her breathing.
pion.
When the second-seeded ~edTeam captain Craig Michaelis
skins play Bowlin, Green tonight carries a picture of Meredith in his
in the fnt round o the MAC tour- waUeL
nament in Columbus, they'll be

Thursday, March 11, 1993

"

,.

.Parent disagrees with.donating
_: deceased loved one's body parts
~ De8r Alllll.allden: I am writing
. about a column you pinted a few

mouths ago which I found . very
~dislurbing. It was about a.teen-age
boy who . had been killed while
_riding his bicycle.
You thought i.t was "just
wonderful" that bis family had
; ~his body to be cut up and
.pven 10 people who needed a new
~JI!I'I• a new heart, ·new eyea, new
.)iclneys, etc. You even DOled that
, his skin could be used by someone
~ who hid been bedly bumed.
~ I find it incredible that you
:COIIIidcr c:uaing a body 10 pieces "an
..act of era II MIS generosity." To me
.~it is just plain ~c. ·
'
:; If my son were killed in an
;'accident, I would never allow his
·:body to he cut up for any reason
.:whatsoever. I would want the world
:to know that I loved and ~spected
·him in dealh as in life, and I would
·:!ICC to it that he was laid to rest in a
.:dignified manner.
-~ Where the hell do you get off
"·advising people to desecrate a loved
~one's remairiS? Shame on you and
._:yru- twisted idea of do-goodism. -J:LIFI'ON, NJ.
DEAR CLIFION: Obviously you
feel strongly about the subject, and
hespect yOilr views, but I ask that
·you look a1 this issue through the
ocher end of the lelescope.
: Let us assume for a minute that
your son was suddenly stricken
blind, and the doctors !Old you his
sip&amp; could be rearorecl by a comeal
,aansplanL Would you not thank God
·fer the mintcle or modem medicine
and be CIICXIIIOUSly grateful to the
flmily that agreed 10 donaiC their
child's eyes so 11111 your Child could

·

Ann
L
d
. an ers

-

off"a. Even .if he is caught up, he
feels he should do mere because it's
the way 10 s.how loyalty 10 the
company and move up the ladder.
Ironically, bis company offers
stress management classes and
marriage workshops. The truth is, if
they bad their priorities straight,
hired ldequate personnel, provided
a ~ WOJting environment and
~ved to produce a bciter product
1nstead of a quota, these
"workshops" wouldn't beneo ry.
I hope you11 )!Jint this, Am. If
you do, I'D bet it will be posted on a
.good many bulletin boards aroW.d
the country.·· ANY STATE, USA
DEAR ANY STAT!l: Hen it is. I
think your bet is a good
Gem of the Day; Too many peq~le
know the J¥ice of everything and
the value of nod)inj.
Forget to .rave llltM rj your favorite AM l.aNkrs colwnns? "Nuggets and Doozies" is the Q/IJM/tr.
Send a self-ilddresstd, long, busiMss-size envelope and a check or
money ortkr for S.S (thiS iltClfldes
postage and hmuiling) to: Nuggets,

see?
I am certain that when you
rethink this issue yilu will change
your opinion. Thank you for the
opportunity 10 expreas mine.
Dt• ADa Ludeq: Some jobs
Should COf!IC with a warning label
that says, · "This position may be
hazardous to your health, marriage
and family."
Many companies demand so much
from their employees that they are
forced to choose between work Mid
home. Tlte new lx"eed of
ment tries to figure out how to get
the most work out of the fewest
nwnber of employees. Management
fails 10 make allowances fir employees who go on vacation or get sick,
which always create$ a backlog of · clo Anlll.aNkrs, P.O. Bo~ 11562,
work and overtime for others. C/Ucago,/11. 60611-0562. (In CllllManageinent's grand design works a4a. send $6.) ·
only if eVf'J')'Ihing goes according to
plan. Of course, it never does.
A frienit recendy asked me if she
could sue her husband's com[lllly
for alienation .of affection. Maybe
she should. I have much the !IMie
problem. My husband's job is so
demanding he is on the vecge of a
nervous breakdown. He · always
comes home late and liRd. Our
weekends are planned lll!!llld how
much _work he has to ·do at the

one.

nianaie-

CANNED FOOD DRIVE • Ia observance or
National Caaned Food Moatb, the Pomeroy
Nursing aad Rehabilitation Ceater held a
caaaed rood drive. Donations were accepted
throughout tbe month or Febr::J' and then
delivered to ~e Meigs County F
Paatry by .

some or tile members or tbe reslcleat wlnllteer
group • Helping Hands. Pictur~, 1-r, Is Keitll
Rader, admlaistrator, Ruth McEiroJ, Et•et
Koenig and Homer Deloog, resldenls. B~~ek row
Jamie Gillispie, activities director.
'

---Names in the news···LOS ANGELES (AP)- Geena
Davis calls a mag11zine article
about her a complete fabrication,
l!ut its author says it was "1 00 per·cent ICCUI'ale.' •
·
. The "Thelm11 &amp; Louise" .star
sued free-lance writer Frank Sanel10 for $5 million Monday over his
December story in Woman's
World.
.
"It's not lliatlhinmicl~ : was.
unflauering, or that I wu merely
misquoted, but rather that these
words were never spoken by me,
because the interview that was
printed never took place," Miss
Pavis said in a statement. · ·
Sanello said that he interviewed
the actress during junkets for three
of her films, and he insisted that all
the quotes are accurate.
The story, tilled "Geena Davis
- I Want to Have a Baby,'' dis·
cussed her relalionship with Hollywood security consultant Gavin de
Becker.

NEW YORK (AP) - Mariee
Matlin is engaged to a police offi-

cer.

The Oscar-winning star of
"Children of a Lesser God" and
her fiance, 28-year-old Kevin
Grandalski, share more than love:
Both wanted to be police officers
'

and studied criminal justice in college. But Matlin switched to acting
after findin$ out her deafness
would have hmited her to a desk
job.
Gmt!alslci, who le8med sign ian·
guag_e !n college, moved in with
Matlin m October.
they met a year earlier on a Los"
Angeles street comer where he was
directjqg traffic and s~e;.,was fiiJil-.
ing her NBC ,aeries "~easilnable ·
Doubts,'' in which she plays a
prosecutor.
A fall wedding is planned.
Matlin said in the latest issue of
People magazine that.she wanis
"as many children as my uterus
can handle."

_..........
Will !!leD I It

LAKE BUENA VTSTA, Fla.
Bob Eubanks, who spent
22 years on "The Newlywed
Game" fmding out how much husbands and wives know about eacli
other, will quiz parents and chi!·
. dren on a new game Show called
"Family Secrets."
"This is a family game show
where we see how much the kids
know about !heir parents and how
much parents really know abqut
their kids,'' Steve Radosh, the
NBC, show's co-executive producer, said Wednesday.
·
(AP) -

2!?

Fatal crash ofWinthrop_University tennis van
·shows risk of long trips to minor sports teams
ROCK HILL, S.C. (AP) Winthrop University has canceled
the rest of its men's tennis season
after a traffic accident in Mississippi killed one of ilS players.
. A decision on whelher to continue the women's season will he
made when the team returns to lhe
Rock Hill campus, said Jack Frost,
Winthrop sports information director.
- "Students at Winlhrop are very
much like family to us," Winlhrop
president Anthony DiGiorgio said,
Bruno Torok, a 19-year-old
sophomore from Brazil, was killed
when lhe school van he was riding
in rank off Interstate 59, flipped
iwice and crashed into road-building equipment Wednesday.
· · Police in Hattiesburg, Miss ..
said lhe driver of the team's van, a
Winthrop graduate assistant coach,
may have fallen asleep at the
·wheel.
.
' Five oo:J'layers and ihe driver
.were admi
to area hospitals and
two others were treated and
. released. A second van, carrying
the head coach and women's team
memhen, was not involvei4 in the

.The Daily Sentinel

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M.mberffitc

0 1993 BANC ONE ,CORPORATION. Loans·subject to credit approvaL ~Monctay·Friday 8 8.m •8 p m. EST; Saturd~ y 9 am.-3 p m. EST

Mr. and Mn•.Malllice JolmQII,
Bailey Run Road, announce tho
~aaaoment and upcomina mar·
flago of their dauabtor, Lee'a
Nicole, to Pint Lt. Cllrtll Proffitt,
CloYeland..
Mill John1on II a ltudent
· llt~dina tho Univonity of Rio
, Oranda where lho is majori"' in

elementary education.
' LL Proffitt II currently sarvinJ
In the United Stalel Ann'/ sta•Jone
in Fort Hood, Texas.
Tho open church weddina will
take place at Laurel Cliff Proe
Melhodilt O!urcb on SIIUnlay • 6
p.m. .

OPEII I .EVEII DAYS A WEEK

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

-

ULL..LII

.,

I

•

~

........ .
~

1::10 1.... 10 7 11J11. 1Mt ....... 11.111.10 I p.Jii. . . - ; .

2 1 1 - Raid

•

�•

UMW to hold benefit dinner

Community calendar
•
• Co••••lty Caleadar Items
: .,,11r two days before u event
... tilt day fltl11t evenL Items
: • • lie RCeiYed welt Ia advaDCe

:to -re pallliCIItloa ID the cal·

Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a

.
:

THURSDAY

• - POMEROY • The Community
: Lclllal Service, sponsored by the
: Meigs Minislerial Associatioo, will
. be at Trinity Congregational
: Cbun:h on Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
; Re-i. Keith Rader will be preach·
• jog.

from 8·1 I :30 p.m. Music will be by
True Counuy Ramblers. Public
invited.

.

MIDDLEPORT • A gospel sing
will be held Friday at 7 p.m. at the
Believers FellowsJiip Ministry on
Roule 7, one mile from lhc GaUiaMeigs County line. Pastor Margan:! Robinson invi~ die public.

SATIJRDAY

MIDDLEPORT· The Middle·
pon )'outh League will bold sign·
; POMEROY • The Pomeroy up for the 1993 ball season Satur·
Group of AA will meet Thunday _at day from 9 a.m. ID noon. Sign-up
:7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic will be held at the Middleport
·Cbun:h illl'OOieroy. can 992-5763 Council chambers. Anyone who
'"--'• liJru
..............
did not participate last seasoo wiU
•
need a copy of their birth cerlifi·
: ROCK SPRINGS ; The Rock. cate. Reg1suation fee is $10 P.er
: Spriap Glaagc will meet Thunday child, notiD exceed $25 per famtly.
:at 8 p.m. There will be speci~l
·singing and 1hc baking contest will
MARIETTA· The Washingron
: bebcld
County Saddle Horse Advisory
Committee will bold iiS third annu; niPPERS PLAINS • The Tup- al auction of new and used tack on
:pcn Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Saturday at 6 p.m. at die junior £air
:will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at building at the Washing!Dn County
the. post home. All members are Fait Giounds in Marietta. Call 423:· urged 10 auend.
.
7636 for further information.

..

. CHESlER • Shade River Lodge
·: No. &lt;453 F.tAM will meet Thurs·
·. day • 7:30 p.m. at the lodge hall in
: Chester. Refreshments will be
: IICI'Ved

.

the snack lablc.

round and squan: dance on Friday .

• elldar.
•

'llluncay, March 11 1 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel

MIDDLEPORT • There will be
a c;ounuy western dance at Middle·
pon Elementmy on Saturday from
8-11 p.m. sponsored by the Middlepon Ans Council. Admission is
$5 a couple ()r $3 per person.
Refreshments wiU be sold.

· STIVERSVILLE • David tar·
: penter, Bellville, _W.Va., will
:- preach at the Stivcrsville Word of
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA.· The Ub·: Faith Chw-ch on Thursday at 7:30 erty Mountaineers will perform
:: p.m. Pasior David Dailey invites Saturday at' the Jackson County
: the public.
.
Jamboree in Fairplain, W.Va.
CHESHIRE ·The Gallia·Meigs
: community Action Agency will
;hold a free clothing day Thunday
' from 9 a.m. 10 noon 11 the old high
~IChool building in Cheshire.

.

HARRISONVILLE • Sign-up
for the Harrisonville Youth League
will be Saturday from 10 a.m. 10
noon at Harrisonville Elementary.
A youth league meeting will be
held at 6 p.m. at the Scipio Fire ·
DepartmcnL
RUTLAND ~ Tbc Rutland
Youth League wiU hold iiS second
sign-up Salurday from 1-3:30 p.m,
at the Rutland Civic Ceruer. Any·
one not participlling last year must
provide a copy or their birth certifi·
cate. Registtation fee Is $10 J!Cr
child, not 10 exceed $25 per family.
RUTLAND • There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legi~n ~ Satun!&amp;Y ~ 8 p.m.
to midnight. MUSIC Wt!l be !l by
Pure Couniry Band Public mv11ed . .
·RACINE • The Racine Youth
League will ·hold sign-up for the
1993 ball season on Saturday from
9 a.m. 10 nonn and Monday from 68 p.m. Final sign-up will be _March
20 from 9 a.m. to noon. Stgn-up
will be held at the Southern lcinder·
ganen building. Regisuation fee
will be $10 for softball players, $15
for baseball ~yen, not ID exceed
$2S per fam1ly. Anyone. who did
not participate in the Racme Youth
League previouslY. will need a copy
of their birth ceruficale.

GALLIPOLIS • The Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance Saturday
from 8-li p.m. a1 the C.H. McKen·
zie Agriculture Building in Gallipolis (across from Holzer Hospital). Bill Gene Evans will be the

BURLINGHAM • There will be
a community public clinna on Sat·
urday at the Burlingham Modem
Woodman Hall at 6:30 p.m. The caller.
camp will furnish spagbetli, meat·
•
bills, salad, french bread, coffee
• MIDDLEPORT • The Meigs and pop. Bring a covered dish. A
LEGAL NOTICE
:Local OAPSE Chapter will meet meetin• will follow at 7:30 p.m. ·
:Thursday at 7 p.m. at Meigs Junior regardmg information on a fire
The Public Utilities Commis· ·on ol
: High School in Middleport.
Ohio ·has set for publlic hearing
depaument for Bedford Towliship.
Representatives from the ScipiO
•
case No. 93-0t-EL-EFC. to review
.FRIDAY .
Fire Department will be guest . the luel procurement practices
: RIPLEY, W.VA.· The Libeny speakers.
and policies of Ohio Power
:Mountaineers will perform Friday
Company, the operation of ~s
:at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
MILLFIELD • There will be a
Electric Fuel Component, and
round and square dance Saturday
related matters. This hearing is
, LONG BOTTOM • Failh Full from 8•11 p.m. at the Russell
scheduled to begin at the
; Gospel Church _in Long B.ottom Building in Millfield. Music will be
Commission offices at10:00 a.m.
· will hold a special hymn smg on by Ramblin Counuy.
on March 16, f993.
:Friday ll 7 p.m. featuring The Dai·
All inlerested parties will be given
:Icy Family Singm, Harmony Boys
MIDDLEPORT • There will be
• and other local singing will be rea- a round and square dance on Satur·
an opportunity to be heard.
: tuiCd. PasiDr Steve Reed invites the day from 8·II:30 p.m. at the o~d
Further information may be
:public. Fellowship will follow.
·legion hall in Middleport. Mus1c
obtained by contacting, I he '
•
·
, . . . will be by CJ and the Counliy Gen- .
Commissiorr·at •180 East Broad ' '
i TlJPi&gt;ERs PLAINS • The Tup· tlemcn. Children aie 'welcome with
Street. Columbus. Ohio
!pen Plains VFW Post No. 9053 adult supervision. Bring snacks for
43266-0573.
•

Martha Dudding was Jcadcr far
the program "Prayer and Self
Denial" at 1hc February meeting of
the Racine United Methodist
Women.
After the opening hymn, scriptwe was read from Luke.
The call to prayer and self·
deni:il is a special ob~cc for
UMW. Through it they are chal·
lenged -10 engage in prayer and 10
reflect upon stewardship as they
respond 10 needs in specific areas
of the mission of the church:
Women an: urged ID given sacrificially in response to need;s o~ the
world, as these needs are highlight·
ed specifiCally each year. E'nviron·
menial concerns, clcanlincss, toxic
waste and recycling were dis·
cussed. Some literature was Kiven
10 members at the conclusion of the
program.
Lee Lee opened the business
meeting with members repeating
the UMW purpose. After the -welcome, Sue Grace gave the opening
prayer.
- The offiCers' reports were given
and all correspondence read.
Mrs. Grace gave ·the mission
reptin and rold about children who
have been faced by circumstances
10 make their lives on the streets of
cities in India. Most street children
work and the largest number are
f!arbage soners involving separat·
mg plastics! paper, metal and ~
from orgaruc matter. The piOC ess IS
hazardous and the children suffer
from cuts and infections. They start
at dawn and end in late afternoon
to have their first and perhaps only
meal of the day .after earniug 30 to
SO cents. Desperation and the hope
of a better life in the cities brings
runaway children to the urban
streeiS.
The new revised prayer chain
lisi was given to members. The

April meelill1 date !las Ileal IIIII~Lee.
. will be Marth
chllllld 10 Apil 12.
•"" llat li1CCiliiB
..
Claris Hill ... RIO Jlrd'iaol 221llllcclilln:ht ?:30p.m.
•
will co-dair die ••kr ' t'
.
, . _ • M8y L I t - • · • '
~
w ~ ~ iii.O 'r
and Daly Wolfe will lie c.e rllk
~lilrlllis

;c;

A-.Mii ,

on•••
YAIIIAII PUSH IMIWEI

Gingerbread House

1010
&amp; SAWS
SALES AND SERVICE

IUNoliii_A_

--..w~nad•l•ol

stor.ac..,.,.
IIIITIIIA'rES

-·ndlwnt

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f

985·4473
667·6179

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will -be lldd • die • 7 dl..a.l
. room • Ma • 30. dlis will lie a
Jw.,r.. -=-1 far Jac Bilao is il.
Ins"*' of IJII •i~ priers few die
meal., do m•s will lie a• tiiCd
IDil die }IIIIIPic is iii&amp;d. 1llis wi7l

To place an ad

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beadudl-•~.t.:;'
The acw I
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MoN. thru FlU. 8A,M,s5P.M,- SAT,8-12

c:H he
book - ai- 10 S.C c.- C.
wbidl die will be • 'I u, acli

CLOSED SUNDAY

'

, POLICIES
• Adl outlide the coUDly your •d ru• •uil be prepaid
.. • Rtctivt cb.cou.at for acb pUd bt. adnace.
·
. , • Fr. Ad.: Ci...way aad Fauad ad. uad.. IS word. will be
.,. Sda)'lal oo cloaop.
.
:: • Priaa ol ad_for .U copltallet'"n il cloclolo price ohd cool
" • 7 poiDIIIao ·IJ'po oDiy ued .
: • Seatiul iiHt .... po..ibl. for error• af&amp;er ft.rd day (check
• for arron Rrot clay ad nuu U. popor). Call loefo,. 2,00 p.a.
' clay afler publicalioa. " ..Ue c.rrectioa.
:'' • Adl Lhat m..t. M paW ill ad.Yace an:
C.rd of Th..W
Hoppy Ado .
· In M-oriam
Yard S.J.•
• A cl-ifMCI ad•............t placecl U. the_GaUipolil Doily
Trihu-_ (acopt Claulfled Duploy_, B.OU.eu Cord or Lepl
Noticoo) will oleo ~ppoar iD the Po~t Plouaal R.p ..r...!
tbe Daily S..&amp;i.D.I, r.cbblt onr 18,000

liiOillb.

Mnoo•y lifts far • . • -'&lt;
wae giWII b AIIi:yK lta:s ..t
LouiJc: sacw.t. ......_, •
i•
were also "*'~! lpOL A q.ilt wiP
be PW!!IO ~ r.ily ..., bl dlrir
po" se•• • a fR..
The UMW 1993 iss
were
preseated by Lee -~ ne ~:
s

enviio-s+rtt (lriJqriqo _iCLJClialo
eiC.),- _. ~ (poualy,
abuse, Iilaacy, ac..} . , w•
{pio-

.fill this elegant locket
with memories of
loved ones. A beauti·
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gold CM:r!ay.

motia&amp; elimiaali,. of lluriers,
etc.).
, The ~J fill!d mD ••• was
takea. sict Cllls repilillilll..t &amp;a
well calls sipni
.
A ~· •i•• lbi:a: -die Ja:l:.
&amp;round seuiag for ~
sem:d by Vil:ti HiD ..t T-7
Hill
AIJaii!UII wae Magie Wea,
C!Jn Mac
Alil:c Wolfe.
SueC!acii,Ma... D M &amp;K'm:a
Walka.1"allii!J IU.IWJ Wo!fe,.
Vicld Hi7l. Gladys S · !'s, Magie
Roam. A cs Rubeill. Ollis ltiil

•u

.1:00 p.m. Monday
I :Oil p.m. Tueodly
1:00 P-"'· Wednesday .
100 p.m. Thunday

1:00pm. Frldoy

•

Cafi ·UII for more Information

..•

3
• 6
10

~· Monthly

,.

15
15
15
15
15

446-Golllpolla
367..(heeW..,
3-Vla.ton
245--Rio Gr011do

DilL

256-G"l'OD

992sMiddloport/
Pom.fii'OJ' ·

675--1'1. l'louoDI

985-a-.r
841-Pordand

576-.Applo Gro••
773:M...,..
882-New Huea
89Ssl.etaot
937-Ball'olo

r.a.

949-····

_247-t.e....

643-Ar..Wo Jlloa.
379-'II'.J ...

742-R..J.,.d

. 458-lAoD

667..(ooi.Wo

6:45p.m.

Special Ellrly Bird
S100 PIIJOtf
Thia ad good for 1
FREE c•rd.
Lie. No. 0051·32

(614)
667·6628

HOWELL'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; TAX SERVICE-

~ ILolollo S.. for Sale

:iRales are lor COIIM!'Utlve runs, broken up daya will be

PHOII

,.----:-i

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 189
· ·
Middleport, Ohio 45760

PH. 614·985·3949

Jeanie Ho•weU.

IIOW OFFEIIIIG-.

NOTARY
· 31111 mo.

OIL IIID LUBE SERVICE
liRE REPAIR AIID ROIAniG

2/15/tl/ I -I'll

•cROWAVI OVIII
aad VCR REPAIR
I

II

';.!" ..

~~~~

KEII'SiHDAICE

SIIYICI

992-5335.,
915·3561

..... ,_ ...,......

,,

217 L S.n•oj St.
POMIIOY.OIIO

as-F.... lor Sale
Je·"di. .
as-; Lou a: Aonap
~ Jloa1 Eotato 'll'aato&lt;l

KEVIN'S LAWN
949·2391•~

v... a:4WD'•

llo-yeloo
8oall .t lloro'" few Sale

1·100·137·1460
' - " Mowing,
Fefllllllng, w....ng. . .d

4arollapalr

Shrub and T- Trimming

"'-trlool
""••••Eqa....
..... ~a:

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and.BAll GLOVE REPAIR
3/8/lfn

~-

1:00 P.M.

Snding.

. • ,..0'1..

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
· ENFORCED

Reskltntlll6 COrnnten:itll
fi'M EtllmttH

FIREWOOO FOR SALE

Chester, Oh. 45720

985-3406

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAY.S,

MAlin NANCE
T..... forSalo

Shade River Saddle Shop

36358 SR 7

M- . .,

·: , c;harged lor each day u separate ads.

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

47269 St. II. 241• I Ya Milo OH lt. 7
,.,. C..itor o• II. 241

IIP-F.. So!eHTrado
I 11:1• "i 1'1'1 i l "
,\ I I\ I ' I '
.

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and •
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

KELLER'S C
lENDING·

auanerly and
Year-end Reports
REASONABLE
RATES

FnltaA:V........

.

:man-

(614) 843·5264 . 112019:wn

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

$.30

......

IN POMEROY

ILL . . .U

$ ,42
$.60
$.05/day

$1.30/day

, EAGLES
, . CLUB

1'41.! for Sale

$20

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

EVERY THURSDAY

3-1-13 1 mo. pd.

RATES
Words Rate Over 15 Words

~ Days
• 1

(614)

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

GaDJa Co1111ty M~Jp C;)'1111ty Maic&gt;n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

•The Area's Number l
Marketplace

•

-

6 months to •12 years of age.

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG

Clsaified paBe• c011er the
follouiing eelephoM escharyre•···

bo••

'•

Sa..,..

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. S.111rcliy

COPY DEI,DLINE
MOI\day Paper
Tueoday Peper ·.
Weclneodoy Peper
Thunday Paper
Frklly Paper
Sunday Paper

l••ou•ces ••e Ope•l•t of t..lr
l•f••t.(Tolltller Prot~r••
We will NOW serve children

2·7·92-ilal

-.

Ml~fil•pat.,awo· mea

Perte and a. dtea fDt aa

......li••

Photo Locket

PRESCHOOUCHLDCARE

z~;:c,~o
_

-o.!
...... . .
.c
•.,..

Je~lers

:4

On Apri120 a
will lie
sen'Cd 10 A]&amp;la Della Kwppa ..t
on April26 a
will be s:noal
10DcllaKwppaC

......... .

IISSILL I IUUI
· COISTIUCTIOI

' Snodgrass Upholstery ·
"He/pint: You To Recoru Your lnW!6Iment''
Church, Home, Truck, Boat. Auto
and Office Seating

. I-H-'11Hin

RACIIE, OHIO
614·949·2202
6 ••• -.. .

SUMMER
IMAGES
2 •I•• oil Hysell

luniH40H
Rt. 124
12 SottiHI $,20
16 Sosslou $25

BrLLETI\ BO.\RD
I

!

.

.

BULUTIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30 P. M. DAY IEFORE

••
fi

•

••

992~2487
3+113-1

••'

'•

•''•

PRICED.

•

•

•

•••
~

••'
••
••
•

I

••

Tht p!tco hu- rodUCid 101111.100 llld
lnoncfna ol up .. - ol .....,_
111111 bl paotitole lor quollfylng por·
ton ., buy ..., nlot 11om1.., 3\\....., In
- - 4 BR, I biilllo, 2 gonooa. rollld 1
BR opt. P - ' 1 1 - 4,100 oq. lllwm

-

f
,.
•'

bldg.

"LEARN TO DANCE!"
Beginnarsl All Agoot Slo-r Pacel

TUESDAY
DtETCLASS
Location: Big Bend Heailh &amp;
Fitneu Mill St., Middleport
Eurcioe &amp; Diet Plan Combination
s WHkt $99.00 (can pay as you go)
(Include• uoe of exorcjM equipment)
In~ moeting Mon., Mar. 15,
5:00 .m. Call 992·311117 for •tails.

Ne"

'

7

s

•

i

'

•

7

I

•

'I'

FRI

'

I

I

1,.

l

~

••

•••

- -porlnlr

J

•'•'

,

Polot ........ 'jbl/lh center
5:30-7:00 c-oy &amp; WOIIom
Loam 111o 1&amp;1011 llnl dlnclll Actrl Bruk)l.
Ell&lt;:lltc Slldl, Soot Scooun· ~~~-Texas
WORZ, Flying 8, Ton Stop Polill. CononEyed Joe, Tuoh Push, Elvlta. Ski Bu~lt,
Montana, Slap Leatt~er, Louie,
Turrlllewo&lt;l,lllll mortl
8:30-10:00 p.m. (c..p1oll) CGurllry
Lllrn 111o
ctono1101
Two·ltlp, 8001 Scaatln 8oOQit, TIXU
W.lz. Cowboy P-. Ton Slap Polk&amp;,
CowOoy Chl-()111, eoaon-Eylcl ..... ~
Wo~an, Monlana, w..tem SWing.
SwN1lliorl- llldmortl

l

·•~
••
-1

WEONESOA't -

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

8:30p.m. IIIII- (CoupiH)
Fox Trot, Swing, l'lallz, Polk&amp;
P.S. You oould bl .,,. ol my danoora gotng
on T.V. C~Dinco • Wnlo . _ Cllll

....... ..-.....,
-

Callo,l75-3118

..

.. .
'

Col 814-1112·7104 for

i'

PRICED
I

Wild Turkey Seminar
SAT., MAR. 13-11:00 A.M .
Guest Speakers Will Include
PRESTON PITTMAN
National and World
Cha~Tlllon Caller
·
ALSO DOOR PRIZES and
TURKEY CALLING CONTEST
$2.00 ADM.-Under 12 ~REE
Located at WV National Guard
Armory, At. 62 North. Pt. Pleasant
Sponsored by Chief Cornstalk
Chapter of N. W. T. F.

Buy-Sell-Trade .

•

-

TURKEY HUNTERS!

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

'

~

••

EXCLUDIIIBOII I INFANT FDRNiftJRE

~-

•

•-•=

In •••Uord
Townohlp, Mol.. County,
lla• of Ollie ailcl lleltog Iii
Fr80tlon :11, T-n I Norlh,
Range 11 w... ol tile Ohie

C••P•.,.• Pureh•• •tt
llo!!tl....,lletl•l•la11oii1M111t1 ol• iflelnilaat
ttlletd 410 IMt ......... 0
... 11;21" ._, IU7 IMI
Ollil Nortll14 . ., II' 01"
laet 12.11 ,... froM lllo
loutllw•t- frf ultl
Freotlon II, • Ntltl pelnt ot
'iglnnllll
tile . .,

=In

'
i

PubliC Notice

Situate

OPEN.,..,aY-sATURDAY
9
P.M.
su.AY 11
P.M.

433 Laurel Clift Rd.
Pomeroy

PubliC Notice

"

~ofT-

NOW OPDI
MYSTIQUE
T'•NNJNG
.
-

I&amp;C EICAVATIIIG

ATTENTION I

Opening Soon in Middleport
THE BOOK BARN

Na (lloQrall Road) Mel

balrigM ... Ifarll (or Fred)
111111 Weal line; lliltl palnl

ollooglnnlng .... toe1111 lte
Norll- • - ol a U1
..,. lot; tllonoa North 1t

dog.H'21"hat117.11r.ot
anti Nortll o...., 4t' 11"
W.t1M,74 feat .... North
. . . . 01' 41" · - · . . .1'
r.ot lind Nof1ll 17 dog. II'
14" E•t a.11 '"'"""'
the oonter of
"oad T·l7 HI (M1Gra
Roed), Nt1t1 oontor ol towna~lp RHII 1-17 HI! oleo

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
36970 Bal R11 Road
Pomeroy, Olllo

STONE
SIZED LIME

992·3470

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAND CLEARING

: WATEn:E~EWER

.

SCA Wolfe Bed '
15 Session $25
Depot St., Rutland
742·3190

BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES

HAUUNG: Llmeaton•,

~~~~·=

·FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

SHRUB
TRIM a•d
REMOVAL
BILL SLACK

HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.

992·2269

(614) 992·5449

•LIGHT HAUUNQ
-FIREWOOD

1

USED RAILROAD

Appointment
112211

mo=:.

Quality .

WE DO

ROOFING

AND EYEIYTIING UNDERNEATH .

TRO

BUILDERS :

20 Ytars Exp.

StoHCo.

SIZED LIMESTONE
. FOR WI

Call61f.992·

6637

St.lt. 7
c....lro,

BISSELL BUiLDERS, INC.
New Homea • VInyl

New Garages • Replacement

Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAJ. FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139
' ·

Publlc~lce

Rlgge Waei Una;" thence
oouth II . . . 03' 11" W•t

438.74 IMI to on -Iron rod;
.. Iouth 4 . . . . . 11"
Eoot 357.04 f•t 1o . , Iron
rod otlhe N o " " - 1 of • 1.01 iore lot; lhenoo
South aa Mg. 15' 31" Eaot
300 1H1 along 11M North Uno
of a 1.01
lot to the
lnl of IMglnnlng oontoln·
ng 3.41 .,.., more or ._.,
exaeptlng oil IOIJIII rlghl8 ol

••ro

r.:

C1tll for

'======

OWNER: .
I!:P:Ii.:6:14-=99=2~·5~59=1~
JeH Wkkersllanl
1II
3-11·93 .

WQ.

Tho MMh ilaln lto ....W

dacrlptlon ore buecl en
tho Ohio Co11pony'a

CARE FOR

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

(lei••IIIIJ C.lrl

.

ONM

IAJUIY'S BODY SHOP
IH6AM.._,.,. •

..,....,..,o•.•••,i

367·7444 • 446 6644
1·100·926-2032 (0~ o..,,
Mondlty-Frldav, 1:00-5:00

~E--.fluolr-.IM.­

Wtt,..,FIIorGtuo-.Cal=a&amp;~
11 ~10&amp;
FWiNtltitg, , _ Sll,;;l
Slnlllluling. Mtrtln s-w

9ylllm

PuraMoaau~

DQD REFIRENCE:
VDI...o 241, Po.. 141.
Molga co·u ntr heel
AMor•• I-'d rMI ••• a,ralaod at:
la,1a.oo.

'II= ---··................,

,Road T·!7 __boln' ~ Herb (~r _Fred)

IU=~NG

.... ,Cilah

leu .... two-lhlnla

... ........

~~~e.,

llledffol ...... Count,;
Olllo

c:..:
=~

-·

�.•

Thursday, March 11,1993
Sentinel

Ohio

44

Ohio

j\LLEYOOP

March 11, 1993

Aplrtment
for Rent

7t

IIWI (111111111
4 Cttawlclf

:a • , oocn.apl. f1

4tl IIJL

"p lr

WYIDW7a-au.

PHILLIP
ALDER

Pwrri

.....,

• :'.lterec~
•• olwonl
~'":-J...

... llutlc lllln't

1Ut-.::-

51,__ .....
54 lloutlllla

45~ .....

purct••

50 Pulpit

13 TlnJ ,.UCie

;a

...... Yllloy - . Ooll - .

18s-

=r:. --,100,-

' . 1111011•

......~ •••

[Jve :M Till! To
• looutlfUI
Olrtolll/Diylll
,,..
_..
. .... ..,., ~.. Por 111ft. 11\111

1112111M.
- . full

c:.,ort, ac, ltll

11,Yn. Un1Ur Co. (101) 131·

NORTH

=
J:..:.:. '""rr'tt~
ac-.·_..,-on,..____
........,._
-: n:::r

•as
WEST
6$

Jl

~' . . .

Clf

nn.

:pon-Colllo
-&amp;lhopllonl. · - ,...

· "-"•PI

11

Helpwantld

-.-eo

--Und-hornefor

EIR TREE BEAVICI. Tofllllng,
Trlmmlne. T...

CMJr OOidon

Allrl ... INgle
8 mo Old, oxc dOg,
1711-23...

to

houl , _ -

0111 JOW78.1ll7.

!too nuo fUo1

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

Haw room In a nice cllln

Olhlr-,

+rr'chalr, bedtllll or

... -

CNA on dulv II ol dmoo,
ond 20 ,..,. ...

Trollw,

12xll -

z-

~~~--,.
45
~.lpoocl..... 010,
1171 1ldO ,,

1

....

.-.o.o-·~­
lbl:lst@at«. I
lint Condl-

__ __

Furnished
Rooms

1tl3 Aletud&amp; m MIN, 3

Hovo VOCJIJICY lor - • or
....a
ln¥1Ud ='lt..z::nnllla
nurolng-.,1

•

-42 · - -·
r::J.,,_

.

lnl- • _.....

fobo.
_,.,..mobMo-.
......._
----~.,;
.lor"• o.,.... certified. ...
polnllng,

wiOh-.
hCMJooo, will do odd

Froo

lor I:OIIPII.

'

-'o Jo--·

a.

;;:::ra~ Conl.-y Q

_,_.,--···

1114 MIN Cllr.an I 81 drroorna_
, 112 llaUt, 2 ... . _ . , Goo

Hool,llony- -'11141.
......... 1111. t

~

-

=-.
-

1171 Cho"l 1 112 Ton Truclc, 12
Fl., Groin loci, • Sl&gt;oocl. E-.
lonl Condlllon, 114-24W$:M, •

Wanted to ·Rent

Fll!fllly .__... To :i To S
BldrMm ·HoUle In Country,

.....
D-.. 815-tiS-··
P I -~
Con ColiOct:

Anguo

aua Two Yw Old,

~~-... 1-104-'IIS14M-~. loll Or

-lori'OJJI.- or monlh.

Oolllo Holll.
Plianll: 1M •• lilT Or 11t .t • •
1'144411111 .... 1:10.
11
wMh ~
Aleoi
.-.:e.
All he ILVM:
14x'JO, I lldroo~M. 1 Bldl. Coil olor 2:00 p.m. 31MIEioo. MoM, ~ ... onlng. Allof IIIII, WY. ,
.

_,_

Livestock

...,.....

NOW II

1117 S.ta · - •x~ Tohoo, Full
Loedlcl, 17.000 ...... GG!OCI
CoridtUOn, I1-I4IHOS3 Aoklng
,7,000. .
~

BABY II

!ontlll\
- ei+tii
hOI
. drf"'%~
, ao,
2421.

. . .lJIU.

'

1.1erchand1sc

11 ~ For

1711-M:tl oftor 11:00 All.
Chovrolol, Fonl, Doclgo, pickup
- . BhOrl or lomg. NO ruol.
.....1&amp;4281.
:
· Aopo ·Toklng lido f!H' 1JQ
Chevy S.10. Conloct: ........
4112.
.I

,PEANUTS

y.,.

W...._

---.-.

Clllld'o

Pomeroy,

'

..

.....

~=.101 • Aololll '· ~- '
Noociii¥O In holpc room, boonll
Will
plow
• dloo vo*n 30W82·•'103 oftor 7:00

1111 OMC S.11 Jimmy. 2dr.,
· LOOirnllootlo. :10U71-IIS7.
1882 AorOotw LX, . . - , ~

Tr~nsporlat10n

74

I

I

Point PleMud .,..,

In

~

II,. In ownny- far I
children. SIUII .... ry, room I
board, ret requiNd, 104-171-1377.
No Exporloncol S500 To $900

on

.

"" ......

. . . 2-0wnj

....
tMO. 304-

.-.

OE wllhlng

111&amp;11

GOOD

EJ.

Lind -

Rraarlllllonld PUIIIt Ms sua.

HISDATS

---~
~;:.::r:ano~

,..,..m.

........... I1WII-MIIO.

75 Boats &amp; Motors

p...., ON. liD I

11111\ts!l~-.hi

7

tWI II

-

fDrSBie

•

~-­

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

STAIIT IIIIIDIATI!LYI Eom Up
To -IWIII.obollna -cordi
Homo. Sol " ' - OWn
No Oualoo. Wrtlo: P Rick Pooroon Auction Company, .UY,
111 S. Llnoolnway, N.
lull limo ouctlonoor, COiftlllolo Au...... IL-2.
ouctlon
ooMcl. Uooilood
. .,OIIIo &amp; Wool VIrginia, 304-

APPUA1tCU

-

.........

I'

Don, Junk Kl Soli UO Your - .
WortUng Mlfor 4 ppMt r II,
Color
TV"I,
R~
Froo.,., VCR'o, lllco001ouoo,
Air Concllllo...rs, Outtar Am.-.
Elc. 1*251-1231.
J &amp; D'o Auto Parlo ond - olso buYinG funk 0110 llrucllo.

.

3Qol.m:534S,

'""'"' ·- --·
-•
r:= ,....,
Wonlocl llllrMiint llnlbof, top

~
nooc1 loaafna - " Y · i!IM-

fi5.30111 or-fii'JISI.

Vfanlocl To luy: Junk Autoo
~h Or WKhoUt lloloro. Coli
Larry Uwly. IM 311 '" '·

-bla, IM-liU377.

Wanted to· M: }Unk tutoe, mUll
bo
Wonlocl To Buy: Pop.Up c.,_

~~~~~!on.-­

Top -

Colno,

GOld

Paid: AI Old U.S.
Slhtor Colno,

Rl~

GOld Calno. II.T.!o. Coin

lo_hl_

llor 811, M. ·~
..
0122,
_ Dolloosy.
s - ... BulovUio Rd.

Cllko

""' II hold tumlo!!lng, 112 nsL
.........,... Rd. Pl. PllieiM, wv,
ooiiJOWTS.MIO.

Do You LCMi To Coolr1 An IJ:..

oKing Cancopl In Pao1j P1111 ~ - tndlwld 'ttl In ¥oUr ArM To
o..-IOiroti Quollly K~-

Real

Employment Serv1ces
11

Heip Wanted

"lloko Big Bucu" Work AI
~ Rulh ·s.A.S.E. flO To
DIA ~upplloo, Box 81, Hllllboro,

PI'* Hurt Dlq!&lt;i Llle ..... .
1110; llmoloyoil COl IIIII; Ani!Clllna Cloool, - . COli

Esl&lt;lte

111 ttMIIS.

T - , No DolloOitlo, N o -..

::::.~;. Y- OWn

1ft, NO

II. u. , . _ -· -·...

t ..... Hoe

Con ArTA Aftor •:00
114-m.GH3 (COLLECT!

-

"""" duty

..... 21. Aoolllt~ •::nrr7ioM
lion 1llru Frf. 10'3:
Clll ldo
Ool1 Couroo.

All real eistate advarltslng In
this newtp&amp;per Is tubleet to
lhB Fedaral Folr Housing M.
ol 1~ ..n1&lt;11 D11ilkoo Illegal
ta advarnaa "any preference,
&amp;mllation or disetlmlnatlon
based on race, colOr, tellglon,
sex familial Blaha or l\llklnal

==

Sing

lluoit •• Wllllni

To l'rovot For lloro lnlonnotlari,
c.ll14 441 .... Aak For Dan.

Womon: lloko moro monoyl
froo olghl -fob - l i o n

origin. or any trlenuon to

(et.ft

Old, Uloo 10
- · Zonllh

---·-·
~ &amp;

'

....
'""

I:O::t, lrollor, IS YOitllha
nowl, TNIII!!II -or Pl..

Auto Pans &amp;

-

Bullclln.g

""'*
....."":6:~-......

Blocls, l:rlols, IIIDoo. lora,·Rio
. -- . Dll
.s;ott -114.......
Cloisdo"

Campars&amp;

. GET

MotorHomH

' LOST.

HOW DID I E:VER GET
ELECTED PRE'&amp;IDENTOF
THE' FRIE'NDSHIP cu;eq

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1111 ........ 3000, 4 door,

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Serv1ces

Home .
Improvements

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ABTRO,GRAPH·

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

5 Lodloo Who WOuld Uko To
Soli Avon Coli f14-441-3SU .
AVON I AH' Arolo I Shirley

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It is true that some bridge defenders
will try to steal you blind. But usually
their plays will be logical and ·
away their holdings in the key
Today's deal is a good example.
Against your CODtract of
hearts, West leads the club ·;····c. .. ,.
continues with the club jacki
overtakes with the ace and returns
low spade. How should you continue•
North's three-heart response was
limit raise showing at least four""'lrd 1
support and some 11 total points:
accurate assessment for a hand
live-card side suit and only ..,••• 1
losers.
You have lost two club tricks.
seem to have a·certain diamond
so if you lose a spade trick as well,
will fall to defeat. Therefore, the
mec!iate reaction is to try thee:r:.~~
queen. But against competent d•
ers there is no chance that
the spade king. If East holds
he woa't overtake with tbe club ace
trick .two, He will play low, waitlllg
his partner to switcb to spades.
Given that West bas tbe spade king,
your only chance rests in an elimination. Play the spade f,ive and win
dummy's ace. Draw trumps and
your two top diamonds before castin1'
adrift with a spiiJ!e. · ,
.. ,
If your luck ill in, West will be end·
played. You will ruff his black·sillt return In tbe dummy and discard
diamond loeer.
Always draw condusions from your
opponents' plays.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Some lime, before I close my eyes, I real!):
would like 10 sing The Slar-Spangled Banner ocmowhere." - Rulb.'
BrOWfl,

' ·'

WOlD
'::~:t:~' S@~~lA-~t.trs·
lAM
I
ldiiH ., CLAY I, POLLAN _.;...._ _ __
0 four
Rearrange letters of
ICrambled words

llolh
llld IIOCill oondlllook better for you In 1111 yeer IIIHd
tllen they l!tM lor quill time.
TiJikl 10 Jlllke 1111 moat ol
)'Oiilllle In bo1ll ol .... ·
"ICII (l'tiiL • r
In aoge~on•nal,
oondH-IOCIIIIIiiOI tlble for you loeltlr,
10 don't lllke yourllll or 11ft: too lllriDUtly. ~ In !he IIIOic 01 your mind
u..t ~ II OK lllld Ukllr to (Ill

IIIIi.,

-

liMier. &lt;Jet 1 Jump on life by un·
-.ncllnO 1111 In"'*- whtol\ ...

...

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you\ In the.yoar, ~· Send ore likely to bl more recept Ive lo your
Aolro-Graph pradk;llonl lo-,
c:oucepta today !han !hey - e
dly by mailing S1.25 plua a IQ!Ig, Mil· yMterday. Dori't 1&gt;1 bllllllulabout going
addreuecl, otamped envelope to Aotro- back to people whoM tupport you
Groph, c/o IIIlo now1paper, P.O. Box · need.
91.28, Cl-d, OH 44101-3428. Be laRA (lllpt. zt.0cL 21) Flnanclol
ture to 11111 your zodloc olgn. 1
1.-e.,. atltllng to mo.. In your favor
U.S (llleroii21·Aprll11) Youiproba· 11 INa tlml, 10 gl.. priority to oltuatlona
~lor materlll grttlllcatlon ere !tic..
IIIII could mue or save you snonl)'.
1y lo bl better today, and theM wll , Profit ,II Hkely, u long u you handle
atam lrom your MCOJDd tourr:o of In· lhlnal 'properly.
COJJMS r - tlsan your primary one.
ICo.stcl (Ool. M llo t. 22) ~
TAUIIUI (ApollO...,. 10) You might • w h o - did you a fa- prev!Oully
hi\IIIO mike 1 clloltlon tod., \1111 wiQ could tum out to bl your blggeat boolt·
allect another peroon baal del youi'MII. er toeltlr. Thll wll bldW to toctora that
Try to do Willi It good for him or her ao you won't Ill _ , . Diet ftlst .
well u om.t It good lor you. .
'
IACIITTAIIIUI (Net¥. II Dell. 11) 8o
W
I(MIIj 21-.luM •111erv1a1a you
In IMitn lhet n of lllgniiiIWICier for 10vec1- tod., ceuc~ brine
toda)'. but, ~~y~~~e _,.,.
you a
Mill*Intuitive
lion. Do )'0111 good
• and Mil bet·
they COUld pro... -~!he world.
IOfiiiC CIll ,
CAIICIIII..... I1
II) Something ·
II*- ..._ 111 Thlt
that you're ~tty lnvojveCI In lln't
• wrr dly for you
bllnglfiiiNitlldao-velyaolcould ...... 'ifNI- II OOIICIIIned. Llldy
bl. Since you'H be ...,. o1 tt.llewl, Luck will Ill doing ~tlllug 111M: can lo
tllfl In ond make the ""
ary help, but 111M: 1411 ~ Ia you to do your
adfuatinenta.
·
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LIO lolllrii-ACII• II) II you MIOclate AOU. . . . (M ....... 111 II your

-.or

govwnlng

tor-·

ttrong-c:f

-

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...-UIIn8torl tocley IIIeY COUld ollllld . . .,. Clllrl)' dllllllocl today,
a ......... e11eot upcin your pro- IIIII wll ••'llfiOI )'0111 IIIOIIvlllan llld
ductlvtty. 0.. your lnltlltlw, lnd don't - t o 1110011d. Onol you ,oouvluoe

I-

bllntt.tn)ocl byno'"-do atlt. ,
»lapL D) AIIQcllta

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.,

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)'OUIIOIIyou-do~.­

.,. you will do fUll lhet.

A. Yes, ir s, wrong . AWFUL has
become one of the most overworked
words in !he language, If you must use
this modifier. though, be sure to use
its proper form . To modify the 'lidjec·
live. SWEET. you cannot use the ad·
' · AWFUL: instead, an adverb
lAWFULLY! must be substitul·.
ed. Your words will be in better taste
if you use "awfully sweet"

,.
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low to form four simple

--~~

K I NC E S
2

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OUR LANGUAGE

Q. Whal 's wrong wilh saying !hat
something lastes "awful sweet"' Or
is it wrong?

'MORTY MEEKLEAND WINTHROP

WY. 104.

•AVoN• ALL AREAS! Share your
lime wHh 1.11. You'l love thl
· oompoA)'. HI041-192.f3Sf.

... u-

,

tonka, ono ton

R
m4133i•t

are IVal abtl on an equal
opponunty ba..,,

--~.z

~RC, DID TliEY.

-roy:.,..__'

OH &gt;15133.

THE

• HuiiiMIII
' 8hort leclllll
10 lloclef Carol

,

..,' ..
· ·~'

By Jeffrey McQuain
Somebody CHURLISH 1 "CHUR·
fish"! is vulgar or ill-tempered 1 "lhe
churlish prisoner"!'. Please hold your
temper. even if you hear some~ody
mi,suse the adjective CHURLISH.

advertised in this newspaper

..... , ...,ou... ~ -1 C.AI-

"'

•

knowl~ occepl
adverUsements lor raal astale
which Is In violation ol the
law. Our raadals are herebV
informecl tnat an dweltngs .

lf4.

AAI~TIIE~
~~

Thl5ne-wllool

lor - · · ·

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18 wanted to Do

2M
Will 10M
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21ncr.-bJ
· 3 No. ol lt. 1111
4 Ll..eaout

.AKJ1014
t A8 5

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make any sud'l praferenca,
l mlaUon or.dllertmlnatton. •

Wll In
llollyoll
In llyEwportonood,
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....
Ploy Aloo.
A...,_ r 1 AniiiiiM. Rodney
Arlo. COIII14-:M5-1117.
Born·- o l: ............ born
~- &amp; out of tho wov'/

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Rentals

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Supplies

EARNOAEAUU

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utroo. $4,100. kopl 304. .1111.
'
Evonn:do 4 hp,OUiboonl .....,,
llkl n.w, 304-t'1M731.
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nontrodltlonol
ShoP. i'ilii&amp;i.--·
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LAYNE'S PURIITUU
Camp'1tr ...._ lwmu...

rn-ma.

Wanted to Buy

.-,y booi. 41"

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2241.

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In
boa,ATl,tiO;_OE_
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.
110.
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1100. W

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motor •iw.l tran., 1700, Itt.; ..

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~~

VET"'

I&gt;ON'T
.-YOU '-NOv/
tfOw TO
fCNOGJ&lt;7/

BANANA

~•-lxlraRIIIbon

Ronl -

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MotorcycleS

.
Pontb't
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-

Rolslgotolos, Ill, IMPackota, LOOI
oa, Opon Lolo 4t8 Datil
WKh IJtllslocl liomoo.

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MIS'J'sR

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........
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Lillo - · Prlco .NoFi'

ARRIVSS
EARLY FOR

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No 11opoo11

Soluftlly.

8

,FRANK AND ERNEST

'

Anclloallll. .... , .. :z.t.

Jllll.

All Yard Soloo lluol So Paid In
Advanc~~. Deadl•: 1:0CIIIm thll
cloy boforo tho lei lo to run,
lklildoy ...ion- , ;OOpm Frldoy,
llondoy
odlllon
10:00o.m. .

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SC~OOL

~ERE

RI6~T

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Aw, Folnl

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Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

Conowloon ....

loadlld, 110,000. wll~
- . . lrodo, ...... . _ ......
4:00 PM.
.
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Clrlllla ¥1nrt On ·_
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...... 110.
Boloonilco""'ln_.__

Slop By SloJ!= C.ro, c..,..
plolo Liwn
, Wo Do I All,
81t ttl Dl28.
Moving SOlo: RCA_,_ ~A . •
Monthl Old 1200; wtncnHIIIr
Pulftll Clun 1Z Cia. f!OO;
wa,.. 11om1na
Goo Automatio
Spoco -lor t110; lllnl _ ,
&amp; Dryor looro, t210; Almond
Sooro
tMG.
Parlo In lllocll, Rod..- 25'11.
Alii floH.a-ZMI, Woohor &amp;
DryorS"-.

GOOD.. MAY I SURE.
ASK YOU A
60

~

IIJn2 ...... 110, -

Core. Coli Uo For A Vloft. lnfonl
lrodclert~ ., .... 1227. p,...
ch = I a llc:ttool Agtl 114-44111224.

8WMIIIWIY

SOUTH

Soulb

SOUp;"

1

-.......

Dor C... Conlor 1
Blocll WIM 01 HIIC On
Piko ll.f I A.M. -1:10 P.ll. I
Quolfty And E-loiiCI 1o Tho

DOWN

When commenting about .a Holly·
wood studio chief, Wilson Mizner said,
"He's the only man I ever knew who
had rubber pockets so he could steal

Houuhold
Goods

llloo

34 ReMo.. lrom

33ROMen~1

By PbUIIp Alder

QUESTION?

rot;:a_drop !no-

+A 10 76

.......

5 c.ttl! ol

es Ida. time

Let them tell you
the facts

peifllnoed, ........ aII, .......

-

64 CM. prov.

31 Type ol boat

Opening lead:

I CAN'T WAIT
TO TELL HIM ABOuT
TH' NEW
HAWICINS

aMl

12114 ....

on w oon. .,.._1141

HERE COMES
UNCLE SNUFFY

Ala,wlowe.~:
Quick Willi--. , . . llooon PU, 21.000 11Uoo;
,
=~ Crooll Trucking, 114-245- AC, 14,100, 114-J71..2't21.
18110 Ford F-110 Lorlll XLT
Pliewo::sd: All llwda J tp11t
'
- h &amp; Woolorn Bocldloo For :1714118.
- •
Ploii-Up l.oocl. ..... ~311.10.
--1111.
1111 llozdo Nowljo • ·•1y loodocl1
~- Lltnoillln Clftlo, IIIlO, loolhor !niOit:.t, loki 010~
For- Loclloo- - · 1111 ~- buHo, ond c-..... -~~~ or moko olflr, oso.l

47211.

-oclbuN'ng. _Eioiotrlc_

'BARNEY

11!111 Chny ex•. $1,200. finn!
3114-tTI-l'lli.
•
loow.. 1 aatt, 2"'" a.tf . . ..
D.OIO. IM Ul tl10.
1~1 .S.to olclluo. .•ulo, 4 •rt!.
a.-.
30ol-i7a-aU7.

....-, · coD · l,..ai-11U I P.II.IM 441 . ..

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63

54 Ml.:ellaneous
Merchanctlse

Trimming.
fi'OI4p.m.
- - - · ....
IIJ.7117"Abr
·

a .- "-bii s.-n,..don,

=v~.
word

Vulnerable: East-West .
Dealer: South

32 Mobile HomH
for Sale

18 Wanted to Do

63 8rMII

+u

Cula,r---------"T---------1 - - - - - - - - -

w-.

61

23 Cliett

•s .

+Qs

,.... Ollltf"'ll ............
• - BR 143. ,,,.• ..,, Cillo.
............
111.000, .......
$i4,000,111 •

"I've had self-image' problems ever since
•
'
realizing we're an evolutiqnary dead end."

Ducko 1o • ' - ' ·
~· llor.
4• •P"'·
EoMM ........... Yo!Y
Part
Ailllrotlan
. lhophotd /Lob,
I1W87-0I57.

2

KQJ$2

_,,_,~

moole

211ul,ln Spalo
22 Doctor'•
..
29Aclle

• Q 10 6

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tlllboet
$8011he51-llenchu
58 TOIII CrUIH

280ce...

EAST
.• J9643

+K1087

-7171 ....

roome.

1-U· II

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.Q972
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AM'"' IG "Mil bll hUll

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43F-

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Autos for Sele

2 I • ... .....•• ,.._ Flrlt
AwrtU~tGalllpole_tl4

r-

ACIIOII

BRIDGE .'-,

KIT 'N' CAltLYLE® by Larry Wright

The

A

'1;1'

PRINT

NUMBERED
LETTERS

I

II

t Is r

II I

5

1

I' I' I' I'

II

I

II

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS
' ·"
Genial • Price • Livid • Malter • AVERAGE
Gabby wife to husband, "Scientists claim that the
speaks 10,000 words a day." The hen
replied, "Yes, dear, but you're above

,,

�Thursday, March 11,1993

Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Library lines
Program teaches student
RU'J'H POWERS
driv~r~ cellular phone safety TheByMeigs
County Public

READING TO CIDLDREN • Members of
the National Honor Society at Meigs ~1gb
School are taklag time out this week to read to
elementary .students in Meigs Local Here, Kat·

rina Turner, Lori Kelly and Michelle Young
read a story to Mrs. P11ula Whitt's kindergarten
class at Middleport Elementary.

:Council to offer Tai
Chi Chu' uan classes
Beginning March 22 and each
Mpnday evening through April 5
from 7·8 p.m., the Middlepon Ans
Council will continue to offer a
!eries of Yang style Tai Chi
Ch'lian classes to be held at the arts
council center located on North
SecQIId Avenue in Middlepon.
The cost of these classes wiU be
$1 5 and Eric Chambers is the
instruCtor.
Since these classes began over a
year ago, numerous people have
asked many questions about the
nature of these classes and Tai Chi
Ch 'uan in general.
Tai Chi Ch 'uan was developed
by Chang Shan Feng, a man born
~ n the early years of the Yuan
Dynasty about .the year 1278 A.D.
· He was very intelligent and during
his boyhood began the study of
C.onfuciansim. At about age 18,
Chang was admitted to the Shaolin
Temple in Hunan is a student
undu the instruCtion of the fantous
Priest Chou Yuan Monk. There he
studied Shaolin Kung Fu for 10
~· The Shaolin Kung Fu generally belongs to the hard, external
fighting arts. Chang's skills origi·
nated from the Shaolin Ch'uan
(fist) and his martial arts techniques reached a perfect and unpar-alled state. After leaving the
Shaolin Temple, Chang began to
develop a new and higher form of
Shaolin Ch 'uan which he called
Tai Chi Ch'uan (supreme pole fist)
which was based upon the yin
(dark) and the yang (light) Tai Chi
symbol. Chang thereby turned !he
quick movements and hard acuon
of the Shaolin Kung Fu into a gentle and soft exercise with the
emphasis on the bre~~thing and .~e
cultivation or the mmd and spmt.
Thus, this martial art is intended
for good health as·well as self-protection.
. Tai Chi Ch' uan is an exercise
ror the whole body. The body may
be kept in a condition of relaxati~.
quietness, slowness and tranquility
without violent or tense movements. Yet irs aim is to strengthen
the muscles.
· This is a martial arts exercise

By CAROLYN P.IONE
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS '- A high school
sophomore say~ taking part in a
trial program on cellular telephone
safety has convinced him he needs
a car phone.
.
"''I used to look at them as saict·
ly a trend, but now I see it can also
be helpful too, if you might run out
of f.!S• or in any kind of emergency, ' said Casey Goodson, a student at Nonhland High School.
The cellular division of Chica·
go-based Ameritech announced
this week it is expanding a program
that teaches driver's education stu. dents how to use a car phone safe·
ly.
The companr will offer the program free to h1gh schools nauonwide beginning this fall.
Ameritech spent $800,000 oil
the trial program for students in
three high schools in Columbus
and eight others in Illinois, Michigan, Missouri and_Wisconsin,
Nancy O'Connell, director of safety education for Ameritech said

Wednesday.
All the trial schools plan to continue the progiam.
The company expects to spend
$2,500 on each school ·at fmt and
$600 a year after that, Ms. O'Connell said.
,

She said the company has not
projected possible sales to instructors, students and tbeir parents,
although several people who participated in the trial program have
bought cellular phones. ·
"It's purely a public safety program. But irs nice to see the other
benefirs from a marketing standpoint," Ms. O'Connell said.
She said the company hoped to
recoup some of what 'it spent on the
program by selling the material and
ideas to other cellular companies.

OUR WEDNESDAY FOODLAND AD
SHOULD HAVE REA~

S.A.F.E.

U.S. # 1 White Potatoes
20 LB. BAG

BE A S.A.F.E. FOSftR PAREN7

WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE!
EASTMAN'S

As a S.A.F.E. foster pareat you CCIII receive up to $1240 per
. mont~ for each foster dlild 11 your home.

FOODLAND

FOR INFORMATION CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-331·9989
l(outh Devel9pment Corporation of America
A MULti-SERVICE PROVIDER

ERIC CHAMBERS
that does not restrict the number of
participating persons. You can
practice it alone or with two or
three other persons. Even a large
group can practice it together.
Almost everybody can perfonn
the movements as long as they are
interested in Tai Chi Ch'uan male, female, old, young, strong or
weak, healthy, sick, etc.
One may do Tai Chi Ch 'uan at
any time or ;my place under any
kinds of weather conditions.
You may do the movements
regardless of the time- early in. the
morning or late at night. Do the
postures and fonns for 20 minutes
or more each day. Naturally, the
more you do the better.
Tru Chi Ch'uan requires no special clothing nor any equipment.
Just put on comfortable clothing
and soft shoes without heels.
Since this ·is a gentle exercise,
there is no panting or hard breath·
ing. With these manial exercises,
one will eventually learn a method
of self-defense to protect yourself
as well as the cultivation of your
mind so that you will become more
diligent, stronj&gt;er, more active,
patient, optimisnc and peaceful.
Further infprmation may be
obtained by calling 992-2675 .

A soup dinner was planned for
March 19 and a discussion was
held on a upcoming retreat.
Devotions, "Ordinary But Beautiful" and scripture from Isaiah
were given by Virginia Wears.
· A closing poem was given by
Frances Goeglein.
The meeting dismissed with
prayer by Norma Balcer. Refresh·
ments were served by the hostesses, Frances Goeglein and Virginla
Wears, carrying out the theme of
St. Patrick's. A shamrock was
given to each member.

Boosters to meet

Justin Ira Eblin, son of Roger
and Karen Eblin; Columbus,
recently celebrated his first birthday with a party at the home of
grandparenrs, Ira and Hope Eblin,
Syracuse.
A teddy bear theme was carried
out. Cake, ice cream and potato
chips were served to each with
favors for each child.
Allending were Cyndi and
Jimmy Coleman, Northup; Paul
Morgan Jr., Terri ,Wright, Kim,
Sean and James O'dell, Debra,
· Charlie and Megan Mills and Luck
Sword, Gallipolis; Heather and
Larry Cundiff, Racine; Bob, Diana,
Robert and Dawn Brush, Centerburg; !lonnie and Debbie Krautter,
Geraldine Hanel, Edith Barton,
Betty Reed, Pomeroy; Tyson Lee,
Tyler Stewart and Eileen Snyder,
Middleport; George, Jean and Tony
Moore, Columbus.
Sending gifts were Jim and Jean
Brush, Centerburg, and Briggitta
and Terry Johnson, Middleport.
Sean O'dell won the door prize.

I

I

\

Frances Goeglein presented the
program "Our Savior Lives" at the
recent meeting of the Rock Springs
'United Methodist Women.
• Dorothy Jeffers opened the program with a reading, "What Easter
Means." Other readings and scripture were given by Michele
Showalter, Pandora Collins, Tracey
Beaver, Rita Radford, Thelma Jeffers and Norma Baker.
Norma Baker presided with
Sharon Folmer giving the opening
prayer. Officers repons were given.
Betty Wills reponed on sending
cards to the sick. Prayer requests
were talcen with Lenora Leifheit
leading the group in prayer.

JUSTIN EBLIN

'I

SPECIALIZED ALTERNATIVE FAMILY ENVIRONMENTS
RECRUITING HOMES IN MEIGS COUNTY
Welcome Into Your LHe A Chdd Who Needs Yoilr
Support, Nurturance, Guidance,and Encourage11ent.

Toledo
eliminates

Pick 3:

•

ou 85-84

508
Pick 4:

6807

Low tonight In mid 20s.
Snow. Saturday, snow, high In
upper 20s.

•
· Vol. 43, No. 222

Copyrighted 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, . Friday, March 12,

2 Sections, 12 Pagoo 25 oento•
A Multimedia Inc. N-poper

19~

No one injured
in fire at MHS
'

No injuries were reported following a fire this momin!l at Meigs
High Sc~ool in Rock Spnngs.
According to a Meigs County
· .Sheriffs Department dispatcher,
.llte fire was reported at 9:52 a.m.
Pomeroy, Mi4dlepon and Syracuse
fue departments responded to the
··scene, the dispatcher said.
According to a report from a
. person at the scene, units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical ·
Service'were also on the scene..
An unofficial source reported
the fire staned in a storage room on
the third floor of the building. One
observer
said
'.
... heavy,
. black smoke

was seen billowmg trom the third
floor and roof area.
Approximately 700 high school
students and 100 Meigs Junior
High School eighth graders, who
were to11ring the building, were
evacuated. Buses were· called in to
return
. . students to their homes.
Otje observer said the scene
seemed to be calm and that the
evacuation proceeding in an order·
ly manner.
. Fire departments were stiU on·
the iicene I;IS of press time. Further
details will be released when they
become available.
.

~

STUDENTS DISMISSED • Students at Meigs High School
were evacuated this mornina when a r...e broke out in the top level

of the building. The Pomeroy, Middleport and Syracuse nre
departments were still on the scene.at presstime.

.F BI traces money in WTC bombing probe
NEW YORK (AP)- The FBI was used for the bombing, possible where in Gennany the money came
. is trying to pinpoint the source of escape, safe houses and other ter: from and whether it was meaht to
·thousands of dollars in overseas rorist activities," the investigator .underwrite the bombing.
'
·wire transfers that are believed to said. "Our main thrust is where the
Gerinany has one of the largest
have paid for the bombing of the money came from."
Muslim communities in Europe
World Trade Center, a federal
The source would not say where and has beeo a base of operations
investigator says.
·
in Europe the transfers originated ~ for}&gt;iiddle Eastern terrorist organiBank records in New Jersey but The New York Times, citing zauons.
show that money was transferred unidentified sources, reported
Finding the source of the money
· from Europe into an account held today Ihat .$8,000 wired to the would hell! investigators detenhine
:jointly' by the two Palestinian accoun.t of Mohammed Salameh a motive m the Feb. 26 bombing
bombing sq5pecrs under arrest, the and Nida.l Ayyad has been traced' to !'t~t killed at least five people and
investigator.said Thursday, speak· GerJ)Iany:. t , •. • ,- • /
IDJured more than 1,000. The bomb
iiJ&amp;J!D.co..n4!tion o,f!'"ony"!'!t)'., . ,
Investigators told. fbi: Times, wen.t off in.a ganjge .undemeath the
. ~.~We'SjieCatamih~~~r,,:fowever, that t~ey ~ ~.~qte ",twin IIO·story to\\'~rs. , . , ,
·
·
·
·
While the federal investigator

would not disclose how much
money had been transferred into
the acco~nt. he said there were
probably several deposits of under
$10,000. Deposits of that size
would avoid federal laws requiring
the reporting of cash transactions
of$10,000 or more.
Salameh, 25, is an illegal alien .
from Jprdan who was arrested
March 4 in Jersey ·city, NJ., where
he was living, Ayyad, 25, ·a Palestinian-American chemical engill'&lt;Y• was Jli!J:.Sted .W. ednesday at
his home ili]itii,PlewO!Jd, jiiJ. ·
Both are charged with aiding in
•

the bombing. Salilmeh is alleged to
have rented the van that held the
bomb. Ayyad's alleged role has not
been disclosed, but investigators
said he has the know-how to mix
explosives.
Ayyad and Salameh share an
account at a Jersey City branch of
National ·Westminster Bank, and
the transfers went into that account,
investigators said.
James Espbsito, chief of the FBI
in New Jersey, said late Thursday:
"We have a high sense of confldence we will be able to_detenn.ine

•

and track ... the origins and traffic
of that account."
Other links between the two
men include attending services at
the same mosque in Jersey City.
And both Salameh and Ayyad have
been close to El Sayyid Nosair,
who was acquitted of murder in the
1990 assassination of the anti'Arab
extremist Rabbi Meir Kahane but is
in Attica state prison on related
charges. · ·
'
· Investigators said Thursday they
doubt.Nosair played a role in the
~oml&gt;ib!l put was a · ~ 'martyr or
hero" for tlie suspects.

.Two Ohio operations targeted for closing
B.Y The Associated ~ess .
Oh1o took a double htt today tn
military installati~ns that Defense
Secretary Les Aspm recommended
for closmg. About 4,800 jobs are
affected.
.
.
. The Newark A1r Force Base m
Heath and the Defense Electronics
. Supply Center in Kettering are
among 31 nationwide that would be .
closed ander the lllail.
. Two other Oh1o operations were
on the list, but how they would be
affected was not immediately clear.
They are the Defeo~ Infonnation
Technology Service Or~nization
in Dayton, a data processmg center.
and a regional Readiness Com mand center in Ra,venna.
As~ in said that during the six
years 1t will talce to implement the

ALL

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'Dinner, retreat planned

The Eastern Athletic Boosters
will have an emergency meeting on
Sunday at2 p.m. in the high school
cafeteria. All parents and friends
are urged to attend.

Library has a full calendar of
evenrs for March and April.
Events which you should mark
your calendar for include:
· March 20, Easter Cmft for Kids
at 2 p.m. Registration requested;
March 21, Music by Sharon Haw·
ley and Group at 3 p.m.; March 27,
Teen Talent Show, sponsored by
the Meigs County Library Youth
Council 'at 7 p.m. There will be
cash prizes and trophies; March 28,
Community Band Concert at 3
p.m.;.Apri118·24, National Lilnry
Week. April 19, Ronald McDonald Show at 6:30 p.m.; April 22
"Night of a Thousand Stars" with
Reading by Senator Jan Michael
Long at 6:30 p.m..
The library invites everyone to
come and enjoy the events we have
planned.
·

Ohio Lottery

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AIDS AWARENESS DISCUSSED' · A program on AIDS
awareness was presented Thursday evening at Eastern High
School. Jean Donado, director of the Athens AIDS Task Force, dlli·
cussed the virus and the truths and myths about the disease. The
event was organized by Sue Arnold, physical education coordiDa·
tor at the school.

AIDS
awareness
.
program held

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preci~ measurements for military
operauons.
. The base lost about 600 posilions dunn!&gt; a round of military
budget curs m 1991.
.
The base h~ .an annual payroll
of about $87 million. The Air Force
said that in 1990, the base con~
tributed $254 million in economic
benefits to 16 Ohio counties. It also
was responsible for creating 2,068
jobs off the base.
·

Pomeroy man pleads guilty
to three charges of rape

--Local briefs-__,
Man pleads not guilty to charges

to the Ohio Revised Code, is an
aggravated felony or the .first
degree.
Nonnan was sentenced to five to
25 years confinement on all three
counts with the second and third
count suspended to five years probation after the fust term is served.

Deputies investigate theft

child or from a nursing mother to
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that deputies
By JULIE E. DILLON
her child. She also stated the distook a report Thursday evening from Randall Johnston, Langsville,
Sentinel News Staff
who reported $30 and car kers were stolen from his trousers while
Jean Donado, director ·of the ease is increasing in teenagers and
he was practicing track at Me1gs High School.
Athens AIDS Task Force, present- women.
According to Donado, over 25
. The bouom of a locker was forced open allowing access to the
ed a program on AIDS awareness
. trousers, according to a sheriff's repon.
·
aJ Eastern High School last nighL percent of new AIDS c~ses are
people
in
their
20's.
She
says,
on
Anyone
with
information
concerning
this
incident
is
asked
to
T~e event was organized by Sue
average,
it
takes
eight
to
ten
years
contact
the
principal's
office
or
the
sheriff's
departmenL
Arnpld, physical education coonli·
for the first symptom of HIV to
nator.
The Athens AIDS Task Force is appear. After that, a J?c:tsOn who
an organization that strives to build has been diagnosed w1th the HIV ,
Units of the Meigs County Emergency,Medical Se~ice reSpondap awareness of the scope of the · virus can expect to develop full ·
ed
to
five calls for assistance Thursday.
.
blown
AIDS,
on
average,
in
about
AIDS problem both nationally and
Responding
were:
804
a.m.
Pomeroy
to
Smith
Road
for
David
ihree
years.
An
person
with
fullat the local level. .
1
King who '!&gt;'US transported to Veterans Memorial Hospit.ll; 1:31
AIDS (Acquired Immune Defi· blown AIDS, on average, can die
p.m:
Middleport to Pearl Street for Barbara Krautter who was treat·
within
two
years,
says
Donado:
clency Syndrome) Is undoubtedly
ed
at
'the scene; 3:12 p.m. Syracuse to State Route 124 for John
Donado
stated
"AIDS
is
someone of tho major concerns of the
Krawsczyn
who was transponed to Veterans Memorial Hospiral;
thin~
we
have
to
talk
aboijt
in
our
population today, and according to
4:40p.m.
Tuppers
Plains to Riggs,Crescent Manor for Buddy lam·
Donado, it is presently spreading famtlies. Commtu~lcation is imporben
who
was
transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 4:38 p.m.
.
faster in rural areas than in urban tant."
Middleport
to
State
Route
7 for Viclde ·PhiiHps to Pleasant Valley
Practicing safer sex, according .
~·
Hospital.
DQnado discussed HIV (Human to DonadO, greatly reduces the fisk
In addition, at 11:04 p.m. Sll:ymed !fBDSported James Ne~n
immunodeficiency Virus) and its of conr:racting the disease, but, she
from
VMH to Riverside Hospital in Columbus.
stresses the onlr way to be assured
end result- full blown AIDS.
DiJcussing ways of tile di~'s of protection 11 total abstinence
cransmission, DOOado S\Bted 1t can from sexual relations. Donado stat·
only be III)IOid through sexual con- ed by the time of pduatipn, about
A request for a judgm~t ,of $12,836.62 was filed recendy in the
tact, lharing needles (of any type), 7S percent of all students will have
.
·
. Coatlaued on paJ!t 3
and from a mother to her u~born
Contlaued on paae 3.

EMS responds to five calls

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1

base clo~ings, the Defense Depart- . base's public affairs offlce said.
ment w11l reduce 1ts force by Officials also planned a news con24,000 .m.i~itary personnel and ference there thisaf~oon.
:
57,000 CIV!hans.
· The base opened m 1962. It IS
Th'e .Air Force base emp. Joys part of the Air Force Materiel
. 1.?~ CIVlhans and has about. I~O Comll_l8l1d, which has.headquarters
m1htary personnel. The base 1s m at Wnght·Patterson Au Force Base
Licking County about30 miles east near Dayton.
of Columbus. .
The Newark base repairs naviThe electronics supply center, in gation systems for missiles and
the Dayton suburb of Kettering, military aircraft. It also is the Air
employs about 2,800 people. It Force's metrology center, making
buys electroruc parts for all branch·
es of the military. It is in the.Dayton suburb of Kettering.
Stephen Stromp, a spokesman
for the. electronics supply center,
said he had no information and
A 39-year·old Pomeroy man
declined comment.
Einployees'at the Air Force base pleaded guilty to three counts of
were to. be told about noon ..the f8pe Thursday in the Meigs County
Coon of Common Pleas.
Gary Norman admitted to
enRaging in sexual conduct with a
child under 13 years of age on July
I, 8 and 15, 1992. RaP«:· according
A Penland man charged with two counts of breaking and entering and one count of contributing to the delinquency of a minor
pleaded not guilty to ihe charges in Meigs County Coon.
Sky Flynn, 19, was arrested Tuesday evening by Meigs County
Sheriff's Department deputies for allegedly breaking into the
Clarence Conger property and a cabin owned by a Dayton area resident He remains Jailed in lieq of $25,000 cash or property bond.
A preliminary hearing will be held later this month, according to
a sheriff's deparunent repon.
A juvenile was also arrested and was released to the custody of
his parents.

-~~~~~-

$12,836.62 judgmentsought

I
j

.

.

•

GOOD EGG TREES • Memben of the Women's Auxiliary at
Veterans Memorial H01pltal are pictured preparlaa eggs for their
annual GOod Ea Trees Easter fund-raiser. Residents are lavlted
to place an egg on a tree Ia tribute to their "favorite aooci ell''
The name of each honoree will be placed em 1 pastel en aDd ~
en placed on one or three trees to be featured tbls year. C01t 11 $5 •
an eg. Names and money are aow being accepted. Honorees wiD :
be alvea tbe ens tor souvenlra after Easter•. Trees "'" be located :
In the hospital lobby, the careterla and the sua room of the tddlled :
nursing facUlty. Pictured readying tbe Eater el11ia ror the project : •
are, from tbe len, Jessie Wlllte, Libby Flsber, Jeanette Lawnnce .•
and Betty Sayre. All proceeds IIi to the hospital's Women's AuxU· lary.
.
·
·
,
:
•

'•

(I

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