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Page-10-The DaUy Sentinel

Friday, March19, 1993:

.

FRIDAY
•,
RUTLAND - There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall on Friday from 8 p.m.
to midnight Music by Pure Country .Band. Public invited.
CHESTER • There will be a
special meeting of Shade River
Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM on Friday at
7:30p.m. There will be worlt in the
F.C. degree. Refreshments will be
served.

Youlh League will hold sign-up on ·Church in Pomeroy on ·sunday at
SII!Urday from 9 a.m. to noon at the 10:45 a.m. Public invited.
Middleport Council Room. R~POMEROY - There will be a
ttation is $10, not to exceed 25
hymn sin~ at Hillside Baptist
per family.
Church on unday at 6 p.m. EveryPOMERpY - Belles and Beaus
.U.IFI'ON • Gospel hymn sinJ 7 one welcome.
Western. Style Square Dance Club fc.m. at Clifton Tabernacle Church
will sponsor an open dance at the eaturing Daily Family SingelS. All
MIDDLEPORT - Rejoicing Life
senior citizens center in Pomeroy welcome.
Christian School will sponsor a
on Saturday from 8-11 p.m. Roger
~hetti dinner Sunday from DOOR .
Steele will be the caller. Refresh·
p.m. at the school lunchroom.
SuNDAY
ments will be served.
RACINE - T)le Racine Elernen· Cost is $3.50 for adults and $2 for
tary PTO will sponsor a dinner children under 12. Take-out orders
MIDDLEPORT - A round and Sunday beginning at 11 a.m. available. Call 992-6249. A silent .
square dance will be held at the: Turkey, ham, l!lashed potatoes, auctiOn will be held for an "Around
Old American Legion Hall in Mid· homemade noodles, slaw, green the World" quilt.
dlepon on Saturday with music by beans, roD, dessert and drinks wall
CJ and Country Gentlemen. · be available for $4 for adults and
POMEROY • CountrJ line
Admission is free. No alcoholic $3 for children under 12. Carry-out dance classes, Pomeroy illagc
beverages penniacd. Children wei· will be available.
Hall, Sunday, 2-4 p.m. Donation
come with adult supervision. Bring
$2.50 Call 992· 785 3 for in formasoft drinks and snacks.
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff· lion.
ington, Gallipolis, will be guest
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport· speaker at the Naomi Baptist
POMEROY - An hour of gospel
Receivin~ne

NITRO, W.VA. • The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Sawrday at the Cin-San Theatre in
Nitro, W.Va.
POMEROY - Easter craft prochildren at the Meigs
ounty Public Library. Michelle
Garettsan, insuuctor. Register by
call in the library. Registtation fee
is $4 cr materials.

~ram fa~

LONG BOTTOM - A round and
square dance will be held Friday
from 8-11 p.m. at lhe Long Bo110m
Community Building. Music will
\)e provided by Buzz Slater and
Out of lhe Blue. John Russell will
be the caller. The da.nce will be
held wealher pennitting.

•

sary wilh a luncheon at 12:30 p.m.
for Ohio Regent,
OSDAR,
. Ralph B. Bush Jr. at
noon. She will present "Reach Out
and Touch.·

POINT PLEASANT - Scout-0·
Rama, Saturday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
National Guard Armory, Point
Pleasant, W.Va. Free admission.
Demonstratio ns, showmanship,
largest boy/adult regisuation, for
all pro~s in Mason, Galli&amp; and
Metgs ounty for 1993.

f.

GALLIPOLIS
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of lhe American Revolution, will
observe the chapter's 85th anniver-

.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plliins VFW Post No. 9053
Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
round and square dance Friday
from 8-11:30 p.m. Music will be by
the Smokey Mountain Drifters.
HARRISONVILLE - The Harrison ville Youlh League will hold
its final sign-up on Friday from 6-11
p.m. at lhe Scipio Fire DepanmenL
HOBSON- Rock-A-Thon at
Believers' Fellowship Ministries
:·from 7 p.m. to 6 a.m.

HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a round and square dance at the

Reynolds Building in Hockingport
on Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. featuring music by Out of the Blue;
· Ronnie Wood will be lhe caller.
Everyone welcome. The dance will
be canceli:d in the event of snow or
high water.
POMEROY - The New Directions Quartet will present a concert
at lhe Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church on Saturday at 7 p.m. CaU
Pastor Pete Tremblay at 992-5326
for information.
LOTTRIDGE • Fish fry, Saturday, S-8 p.m., Lottridge Communiiy Center, $4 for adults and $2 for
children under 12. Carry-out avail. able.

TaxTips
hyH&amp;I

W

PRINCIPAL RESIDENCE
EXCLUSION

Q

My mother purchaaed a
and lived In It for two

' ho
yMra. She then auffered a atroke
elld can no longer care for
heraalf. She hee lived In a
nurtlng home for the put yMr.
Can ahe, llka othert age 55 or
older, exclude the gain from the
.... of her home?

A

Generally, a taxpayer
muet uee the realdence ae hie or
her principal ruldence for thrH
of the five y•ra prior to the Hie
to qualify lor the exclualon.
There Ia, ho_,, an exception
lor Incapacitated llldlvlduala. If
·the property _. · uNCI u the
prlncl.,.. reel~e for at leaat
' one 'fM! within the flv.oy•r
per10e1. !he time of ruldenc:e In •
llcenMd f•lllty euch •• a
nurelng home It trMied u uee of
ihe home •
the prlnclpa.l .
. rHI~IC8.

.

.611 I. MAll • POMIROY
I

•

..

-

STIVERSVn.E - There will be:
a h;rmn sing at Freedom Gospel .~
Mission Church on County Road
31, Bald KnobStivenville Rciad.·,.
Singers will be the Conqeron,
ley, W.Va. Rev. Roger Wollford"
invites the public.
:

•

Tar Heels rip Rhode Island 112-67- C-1

Safety
tips for
tornado
season

'Never' is a hard ' word to
swallow· Beat of the Bend -B-6
Salt was first manufactured in
Galli a County in 1807-- Sands - A-8

B·l

Rip-:,

Vol. 28, No. 5
Copyrighted 1993

SUNDAY-10 BIG HOURS
NOON 'TIL 10 P.~

By MINDY KEARNS
Times-Sentinel Starr
PO.INT PLEASANT- Patricia
Graziano wept as Ann Mitchell,
. Americari Federation or Teachers
(AFT) representative, asked her
what she would dO if she no longer
had a job...
Graziano, kindergarten teaeher at
Muon Elementary. was · aile . of
SC}veral teachers who had hearings
before the Mason County Board of
Education Friday evenmg. These
people make UP, lhe 26 professional
employees who are on the "RIF''
I~ (reduction in force). In essence,
· they are in danger of being layed
off.
Graziano is a single mother raising
one kindergarten-age child. '"I
.tloual dispiay ai ilie Meigs Countylleallh
PRODUCTS THA'f POISON· Au aware·
didn' t want to do this," the teaCher
Department are Norma Torres, nursing direc·
ness or household products and medicines tbat
said to lhe board in regards to her
tor,
len,
and
Carol
TannehiU,
director
ilf
child
poison is tb' fil'lt step toward preventing chil·
emotional
breakdown. She said she
family
healtb
services.
and
dreu from aettlna poisoned. 'With this educadidn't
know
what she would do,
'
- trying to raise a child wilhout a job.
The teacher, not unlike the many
olhers who had hearings Friday
evening, presented her "case" of
why she sbould not be RIF'ed.
Graziano told the board members
of 'the pilot program for whole
language she is involved wilh in the.
B;r CHARLENE HOEFLICH
pop or:.o&amp;bac Merlo' ~ tited.IJ.e., "because we-·have Jot of curious schooL. ~
..
~ . . -~
Times-Sentinel Starr
case of a local youngster who kids out there."
She added she had been lhrough
picked up a pop bottle and drank
She urged parents to check quite a bit of training, ·and would
POMEROY - As a kickoff for some ammonia which had been labels. "Know what you're purPoison Prevention Week, March poured into iL The Central Ohio chasing and pay special auention to
21-27, the Meigs County Health Poison Center at Children's Hospi- warnings, cautions and hazards,
Departrnent Friday initiated a "Poi- tal (1-800-682-7625) was contacted and then handle the product
son and You" program focusing on aod was able to advise lhe parents · accordingly."
prevention.
·
of lhe appropriate action to take.
"Choose products with safety
Being aware. of lhe danger of
Objects containing chemicals closures wherever possible, buy
household products and medicines which look somewhat like candy just the amount you neCd to avoid
and storing lhern out of the reach of are another frequent source of poi- having . 'leftovers', keep all prodchildren is the key to preventing soning, Torres said. She mentioned ucts locked up and alwayuton: the
poisoning of curious children," said an incident where a youngster a~ products in lheir original contain·
Norma Torres, nursing director at the molh balls from hiS sister's sci- ers," advised Torres.
"If you suspect poisoning, don't
the heallh departmenL ·
ence projecL
She pointed to statistics which
''The biggest danger of poison- wait foHyrnptoms to appear- act
show that the vast majority of chil; ing is wilh toddlers where there is a fast, • said the nursing director. She
dren under Jhe age of two die from lot of hand to mouth ~~etivity," Tor- suggesled calling the hcallh depatt· ·
car cra~hes or poisoning in the res said, but she said lhat caution ment for advice cr laking the child
home.
needs to be maintained until chi!- and the suspecled source of poison. One of the biggest dangers to dren are thoroughly aware of lhe ing, such as the container, to lhe
children, Torres said, comes when danJ.er of bousehold chemicals. .
Continued on A·3
adults put cleaning substances into
It's very scary," she said,

6 MONTHS
FREE
FINANCING
(WI.. ~OYecl

(fedlt)

'

)

'

/o OFF

0

I.

UP
TO

BEST

Prevention program kicks
:off Poison\frevention Week

12 O'CLOCK
NOON'Til
10 P.M.

'

a

·'

ENTIRE INVENTORY OF QUALITY FURNITURE MARKED DOWN!!!

By Spring Ai' - Ful Size Sets Only

$48888

8

Set

CASI

(With Approved Cracllt)

Bassett Dining Roorn

Light pine finish, 1 arm &amp; 5 elde ladder back
chairs, table 1-leal, 1ide board, hutch.

SUNDAY

5

98888

SWIVEL ROCKERS
NOT $499.95..........SUNDAY $248.88
SECTIONAL W/RECLINER
NOT $1799.95.........SUNDAY $899.95

Looae pillow back overalzed, mauve, beige,
blue, green.
NOT $1799.95........................ SUNDAY
77

SJn.

SOFTSIDERV
Weterbed queen elze, tube etyle frame Included.
NOT $899.95.......................... SUNDAY 1444.44

Entertainment Center
88

588

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
Blue .country.•
NOT $1498.115 ..........SUNDAY

*699.95

FLEXSTEEL RECLINER ·
Wall type Colonial, teal plaid.
NOT $9911.115 ...............SUNDAY '388.88

QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS SET
NOT $4511.95 s.i ...SUNDAY

SUNDAY

49

5 95 Ea. Pc.

NOTS2199.95SlT ·
SUNDAY

s9aaaa

Racine man flown tf)
Columbus following
Saturday accident

I

Pale grHn velvet, Traditional curved tufted
back.

w•r•nled.

NOSTALGIC CLAW FOOT TABLE

NOT S1399.95
SUNDAY

RACINE - A Racine man WBII
serio!lsly injure~ early Saturday ·
mo~· when hJS vehtcle ran off
the
and struck i guardrail, the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol rejlOned.
John M. Pape, Jr., 30, S.R. 124,
Racine, was transported by Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service to VetelliiiS Memorial Hospital
where he was flown by emergency
helicopter to Grant Hospital in
Columbus.

for a contusion of lhe knee and
released.
Cleeland R. Willis, 56, 3
Portsmouth Road, 1Gallipolis,
refused treatment
According to the accident
report, both vehicles were norlhbound on County Road 6 when
Wray hit an icy spot and went off
the right side of the road, striking a ·
utility pole and spinning back onto
the road where Willis, who was
following, could not stop in time
and struck lhe vehicle.
Wray's vehicle sustained heavy
A Grant Hospil81 spoke$wonlan
reported! Pape was In llerioul ~- =~ damap. Willis' vehicle ·
tion Saturday morning wilh head
~. diabllng dam·
and neck injuries. He was admitted age. Both vehicles were towed
toJhehospital'sintenSivecareuniL . fromthescene.
According to the accident
The patrol also reported three
report, Pape was eastbound on deer-vehicle accidents:
State Route 124 in Sutton Town• A vehicle driven br .Mark T.
ship when his vehicle went off the Smilh, 19, 656 Rodne~ Pike, BidsOuth side of the road, then crossed ·weD, sustained moderate, dilabling ·
the roadway and struck a guard rail dam~ Prida~ht when It lllniCk
off the north side of the road. The and tillod a
oo Gallia County
impact forced the veh.icle back. Road 35 in Oreea Township. The
across 'the road, where tt came to vehicle was towod ftom lhe ICCIIe.
rCsl on the soulh side.
• A vehicle driven by Tiu C.
The vehicle IUSiainod moderate, Elkins, 28, 4 Roush Hollow Road,
d!sabllnJ dama11e and was towed Bidwell, auatained light damage
from the scene.
Friday night when it SlniCk a deer
on S.R. 160 in Sprlngfreld TownTwo driven were injwed in an ship, Oallia County. The deer conaccident ~ly Friday mornins in tinued oo and tho vehicle was drivGreen Townlhip, Oallia County, en from tb8 scene. ,
the Oallia·Meial Poll ol the Stale
· • A vehicle driven by Madcllne
Hialtwayl'alrof~.
· Chafin, 73, 141 Burnette Road,
William K. Wray, 19, 14334 GallipoliJ. sustained liaht damage
Stale Route 160, Vinton, was Dalll· Woclnnday niaht w11en It struck a
ported by Oa1lla County Bmerpn. deer oo S.R. 1 iD Addison Towncy Medical Service to Holzer MecJ. ahip. Tbe deer conllnuecl on and
leal Center where he wu treated ,vehicle waa driven ftom the ,cene.

$58888

. 3 PIECE TABLE SET .

Braaa and gl•a.
All3 PI4 pres• back chalre.
NOT $1298.95................... SUNDAY '688.88 NOT S34Us .....:............... SUNDAY *155.55
ROLL TOP DESK Oak'l=lnl~li
TABLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS PI~ Finish
·NOT $399.95..................... SUNDAY 1188.88 NOT.$349.85..................... SUNDAY •1'68.88

. CHAISE LOVESEAT RECLINER

FLEXSTEEL SOFA

Ruat end beige atrlpe.
Blue.
NOT $1699.85 ...................SUNDAY *644.44 NOT $18811.95 ...................SUNDAY

.

. •m.77

TABLE &amp; 6 CHAIRS

Amolre type, oak flnlah by Bulllft.
NOT $1399.115

On Maldtlng Foundallon
. Flr11
Said mSeti Only

Traditional by Baaaetl Headboard,
dreoeer, mlrror,cheat, night table.

Sofa .; Loveseat

lncludao 2 reellnlng endo,
......, ormleaa el18par,
oriniMI chair, multi-color In
...uv._ tal, beige, tully

.'-···-s1788

Twin Mattress

5 Piece Bedroom

5 Piece Sectional

Flexsteel Recliner, Chaise
No - - 88
Swivel Glider wJiumbar
SUNDAY
'
NOT $9911.95...........SUNDAY $488.88 .__ _ _ _ _...

SOFA CHAIR, OTTOMAN

5
.SUNDAY

LAST AND ANAL DAY SUNDAY?

EMPIRE'S STATEMENT OF FACTS:
We muat move an entlrelloor ol f~rnHure
to do roof ,.pilr and aUlrl our
remodeling. Emplno muot o.U turnltuno
thla weekend. We will dNI where - can
eo come on In and - Skip, Mitch, lkv,
Kim and the reo! and get your blot deal
with F- Delivery, F- Set Up and I
Month• Same Ae CMh Financing (with
approved credit).

MII!IIS
SAME IS

NOT $1299.95 SET

NOT $3799.95 5£T

100 RKIIners, over 40 .Bedroom SUitaa, owr
50 Dinettes, plua much, much ·~ a11·· In
stock plua Empire will Speclll Order at S.le
Prtcea.
·
·
•

Back Supporter Mattress Sets

SUNDAY

Empire Furniture hila ov.- 15 Sectlonala In
stock, 100 Living Room SUites In stock, ovw

NAME BRANDS TO BE SOLD ON THIS LAST DAY...
Bass,tt, Fle~steel, Kincaid, Lea, ~imson,
·
Reston1c, England, Spring A1r,
Smith .Brothers, Stewart.
,

6 MONTHS SAME AS CASH

*199.95 Set

Oak flnleh.
.
NOT $788.86 _., ....SUNDAY '422.22

DROPLEAfi TABLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS
Solid wood, oak flnlah.
NOT S898.86 ..... ~.......SUNDAY 1

399.95

60" CHERRY FINISH HUTCH
NOH281U5 ,,;,_SUNDAY

'1188.88 .

· 'KINGSIZE
MAnRESSStr
Mlxln by Spring Air

NOT $1099.95 set
95 ..
SUNDAY

$499

... . . .

.. .'

. ..: .. .. ·

15 Secllon 158 Pogea

A Mulllmedle Inc. newapaper

.MlddlepQrt-Pomeroy-Gallipolls-Polnt Pleasant, March 21, 1993

Mason County teachers
plead to keep their jobs·

PURCHA$ES MUST BE PAID BY CASH, PERSONAL CHECKS, VISA, MAS'tBk CARD,A)IIfD ON
ACCEPTABLE CREDIT APPUCATIONS. EMPIRE WILL DEUVER AND
. SET. UP F~R FllEE• .

HOUR
SALE

Sunny. High In mld-40s.

.

U PARALLELED
DISPERSAL

free Delhterf
. free Set-UP

Along the river .............. 81·8
Business/Farm ................D 1-8
Classified ......... :...... - .... D4-7
. Deaths. .............................A..7
· Editorai ............................. A6
Sports........ ~.. .................... Cl·7
Weather...........................A·2

tm.es-

CHESTER - The Chesler Bato-.•
ball Associlttion will: meet Sunday ;
at 3:30 p.m. at Chester Elemeallry. J
AU inten:sted parents are invited.

~

All Merchandise Is On Sale. We·Must
Selllfl Of Our Inventory This Weekend!

· Empire wnl make up the difference.
We're preparing, but will be open.
We have to dear the second floor.

·Inside

+

I

SATURDAY
. RUTLAND - Rutland Youth
League second signup for 1993
baseball season will be Saturday
from 1-3:30 p.m. at the Rutland
Civic Cenler. Anyone who did not
participate last year will need to
bring a copy of lheir birth cenificate. Registration fee is $10 per
child, not to exceed $2S per family.
BURLINGHAM - The public
dinner of lhe Burlingham Modem
·Woodmen has been rescheduled for '
Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at lhe hall.
·The camp will furnish spaghetti
·and meatballs, salad and drink •.
Bring a covered. dish. A meeting \
will be held at 7:30 p.m. concerning a fire ~partment for Bedford
Township. A representative from
lhe Scipio Township Fire Department will speak. Everyone welcome.

75 cents

•
•

and contemporary singing, piano:
solo, lrlllllpet trio and saxophone•
solos will be held at the Meigs ~
County Public Ubrary in Pomeroy ~
on Sunday at 3 p.m.
•
ATHENS
Old Time&lt;
Square/Contta Dance, Sunday, 8-"
11 p.m. ilt the O.U. Inn Ballroom in : .
Athens. Music will be provided by.
Wild Asparagus.
:

. ROCK SPRINGS - Lenora
Leifheit will present a seminar on
Alzheimer's Disease on Friday at 7
p.m . at lhe Rock Springs United
Melhodist Church. Everyone wei·
come.
LONG BOTIOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church of Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing
Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public. Fellowship will
fhllow.

Sunda~

~

THE SNOW..PUT EMPIRE .FURNITURE IN A BIND
.

~

•

~ommunity . calendar·
Community Calendar Items
appear two daya before 111 event
and tbe day of tbat event. Items
must be received weD iD adVIDce
to assure publication in the calendar.

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

'

.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

'

.· '

...

like to stay wilh the program. She school board that Wood County is
. added she had completed over 40 49 professional employees over the
hours of special whole language state aid formula but is not RIF' ing
training on her own, and had more · anyone, because they feel lheir
scheduled this summer.
programs ate important
Graziano was not the only
She urged the board to take
teacher who became emotional another look at finances, and use
during the hearings. Teachers were the termination of jobs as a last
given the option to hold the resort. She said there are 56 people
hearings either open to the public, in Mason County who are on exor closed with only their counsel tended contracts that could be shor·
present The situauons were very tened. She also said if employees
different, some representing them- who are RIF'ed end up coming
selves, others being represented by bacl&lt;, the county loses in the long
Mitchell or WVEA representative run becaused lhose RIF' ed
Kalhy Smith. The stories w~ also empiOYC\'S can collect unemployvery different, some · teaching ment while they are off work.
secondary classes, some elemen- Therefore, the coul)ty's contribu·
tary, but all were trying 10 "sell"the tion goes up.
board their package to stay
MitChell also questioned why the
employed in the system.
county is RIF'ing 26 lllaChers when
The possible layoffs stem from if is only 19.5 over formula. '
reduced enrollment in Mason
Several bus drivers also had
County Schools and lowered state hearings before lhe board Friday
aid funds. The school system is cur- evening.•They were represented by
rently 19.5 teachers over the for- John Roush of lhe West Virginia
mula, which means their salaries School Service Personnel Associahave to come from county' funds in- tion.
stead of state money.
Hearings were held from 5 p.m.
AFT's Mitchell told the board Friday until around 11:30 p.m. Ad•
members·being ov~ 11\e formula is ditional hearings are scheduled for
not a sin, however. She lidded it is a Monday, again beginning at 5 p.m.
good ' thing. "It sbows yop care Board members have already set a
about the teachers and the special session for Tuesday, March
children," MitcheD stated.
··
30, 6:30 p.m., to vote on the RIF
The AFT representative told the lists,

SMELL .TEST ·Students at Southern
Junior High School participating in COSI's
"Chemistry is Cool" worksbop exercised sophis·
ticated ch~mical detection devices - their noses.

At Southern Junior High

.

.Students learn 'Chemistry is Cool'
WILLIAM H. WELLS

Rapist
·sentenced
GALLIPOLIS -A Crown City
man found 11uilty of rape earlier
this morith was senrenced last week
by Common Pleas Court Judge
Joseph L. Cain. ·
William H. Wells, 20, 20741
State Route 7, Crown City, was
ordered to serve eight to 2S years
in jail and was fined $2.50 plus
Court COSIS.

Well.s is convicted of the May
27 Jape of a woman in bet mid-20&amp;
behind the Catholic Youth Center,
S.R. S88, Gallipolis. He wu also
accUICd ollddnapplns lhe woman
at knife point, but lhe jury could
not reach a -verdict oo the charge.
Judae Cain ordered a pre-senteDCC in-; 1rtiplioD after Wclb was
found JUi11y OIIIPCAnotler man charged in the
incident, Juan P. Ramey, 19, 37
Smithett Street, Oallipolis, is
IIChaduled lbr lrill In May when he
will fllce ~ of rape and tidnappine.

B1 JIM FREEMAN
Ttmes-Sentluel Staff
RACINE - Chemistry is all
around us.
That was the message presented
10 students at Southern Junior Hi&amp;h
School Friday as part of the Chern- ·
isuy is Cool program offered by
the Coblmbus-based Ohio Center
ofScienceandindustry(COSI).
After donning lab coats and
gogales, each class was divided
in10 two-student t.eams which ttaveled to nilie different stations
throughout lhe gymnasium, each
supervised by adult volunteerS. .

Students also receive a safety
briefing during which they were
warned about spills and urged to
not taste a' eat the chemicals.
Ben Warner, COSI Outreach
demonstrator, emphasizes a handson approach in lhe Chemistry is
Cool propam by having swdents
make thm3s out of chemicals.
Warner said the program was
designed to show youngsters lhat
science is fun.
During the program, students
learned first-hand how to make
common household products such
as lip gloss and toothpaste. Stu·

'•

dents also made water-based slime
similar to a popular child's toy.
"We've fallen behind in science
and mathematics." Warner said.
"We need 10 get our focus back on
science."'
''Chemistry is every\vherc, even
in the clothes we wear," Warner
explained.
The program was started about
seven years ago, when COS I was
asked to visit a school lhat was
unable to send students to COSI,
W~said.

Last year, COS! visited more
Continued on A-7

Meigs population to show
15.2 percent gain by 2015
POMEROY • Populallon In
Meigs County is expected to
increase by 15.2 percent by the
year 201S, accordinl to projections
released by the Ohio Data Users
Center this week tbrouih the Buckeye Hills-Hoctift( Valfey Regional
Development · District· (BHHVRDD).
~lgs is one of five counties in

the ei,bt county BH·HVRDD
which IS projected to increase in
llOIIUiation. The others are Athens.
llcicting, Morgan and Perry Coun·
tics.
Monroe, Noble aod Washingtoil Counties are projected to
decrease in JIO!IU!ation·
The ~roJccled rates of increase
in the CIJht counties Vlf'/

between

•

\

Here,. Rick Harris, rlgbt, assists students Jenny
Roush, Ashley McKianey and Crystal Coleman.
(T -S pboto by Jim Freeman)
.
·

S.l and 16.S percen\ while lhe rates.
for decrcuc vary between 1.8 and
15.5 percenL
,
Meigs County census in 1990
showed population at 23,000. It
projects an increase to 23,700 in
1995, remaining at lhll rlliiR 1D1ti1
2005 when lhe projected POIIUiation is 24,800. Figures for 2010
Continued on A·7

1· .

•

t

i

•

)

••

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•P.ICII

A2-Sunday nmes Sentinel

Pomeroy,.....,.lddleport-Galllpolls, Ott-Point Pleasant, WV

OHIO Weather

LinN-

Sunday, March 21
Accu-Weather• forecast

conditions and high temperatures

omo

IToledo I 42" I

•

FRONTS:

• •

• • ,+

WARAI STATIC:INARY

W. VA.

NATIONAL SUMMARY:
Soi'M lnOW will tl1'9ak through northem Ntw Englwld wiltt flurrie• and even showerslarthllr south
tomc:rrow. LilwwiN. 1 vaMty of.Pfedpitllion wilaljp thfoiJQh U. Aaina and head into the Midwe~L
Cloudl wil.n~troW m\ld"t ofT_. while 10m1 thowlf'l nltmns.r.tom. braak o\A over New
Maxim. ~of the Far Well wiH bl drier and warmer than normal.

me

Man charged with DUI
.

Sunday, becomiilg partly sunny. Highs from
upper 30s in the
nonh to near 50 in the south.
NORTHWEST
WEST CENTRAL
Sunday, partly sunny. High in the upper 30s.
CENTRAL LAKE SHORE
.
EAST LAKE SHORE
NORTHEAST
CENTRAL HIGHLANDS
Sunday, turning partly sunny. High near 40.
MIAMI VALLEY
,
Sunday, partly sunny. High in the mi&lt;!40s.
CENTRAL
·
EAST CENTRAL
Sunday,tuming partly sunny. High in the mid 40s.
SOtrrHWEST · ·
.·
Sunday, partly sunny. High 45 to SO.
souru CENTRAL
Sunday,tuming partly sunny. High 45 to SO.
LAKE ERIE
Sunday, west winds 10 to 20 knots becoming nonhwest. The
lake is mostly ice covered.
·

Vlo,._w,,... ~

01993

Aca.·wee-.ln&lt;.

WEST VIRGINIA Weather
Sundoy, March 21
Accu-Weather• forecast for

conditions and

By The Assocl~ted Press
The National Weather Service
says a high pressure building into
the Ohio Valley on Sunday will
tum skies partly sunny statewide.
Highs will range from the upper
30s in the nonh to the upper 40s in
the soulh.
Early Satu'rday morning, rain

was falling over much of Ohio. . ern Texas. Snow fell over the
Temperatures were mostly in the northern Plains early Saturday,
mid to upper 30s.
while a chill gripped the Northeast.
Sunrise Sunday will be at 6:33
The vernal equinox- begin·
a.m .
·
ning of spring- was at 9:41 a.m.
Around the nation
Saturday.
Rain U$_11ered in the.fust day of
Snow waS forecast for the upper
spring from the Great La1ces soulh Great Lalces, with accumulations of
into TenneSsee, Arkansas and east- 1-3 inches in po.ssible . Farther

POMEROY • Mony Wood of
Racine has joined the slaff or lhc
Meigs County Prosecuting Auorney's Office as a volunteer a.sistant 10 Investigator Gary Wolfe.
WOQd is a student at Hocking
CoUe¥e in Nelsonville where he is
studymg Human Service and Corrections. He is a 1989 graduate of
Eastern High School, and is 1he Sort
of Bob and Cathy Wood of Racine.
Wood's service in the prosecutor's office can count as credit
toward his degree.
According to Prosecuting Aaorney John R. Lentes, his duties will
include assisting Wolfe in investigations of criminal matters and
community relations projects as
they relate to the prosecutor's
office.
In return, the office Will assist
Wood in becoming familiar with
the court system, probation proce-

Cfeveland man chargei
tlALLIPOLIS- Gregory Reynolds, 39, 3259 West 56th Street,
Clevelantt, was arrested early SatUrday morning b¥ the state highway patr&lt;)l for driving under the influence, possessiOn of marijuana
and driving under suspension.
I

Man jailed for commitment
GALLIPOLIS - . Jeffrey L. Clark, 35, 1296 Cherry Ridge Road,
ViniOn, was jailed Friday evening on a municipal court ordered
three-day commitment for a previous charge. of driving under the
influence.

.....,...,;,;;;o;;;;;;.;~;;;;o;..;;;;;;;...........
~c"......-sunn.._r.....,Pt.C~Ir£oy.-..~~
;_; y . Skies will be partly ~loudy around Ohio today

Continued from A-1
hospital emergency room.
As for CO!Ilmon sense
r~O)inders, she had these suggestions:
·Keep all medicines and household chemicals out of the reach of
children.
-Always use child-resisiant
packaging when available.
·Keep the telephone number or
the Poison Control Center in a visible place by the telephone.
. -Keep a one-ounce bottle of
syrup of ipecac on hand in case of
poisoning, but never use it unless
told 10 do so by a Poison Control
Center specialist,
According to statistics from the
Ohio Department of Health Director, Dr. Peter 4&gt;omani, more than
one miJlion children ate, drank or
inhaled a poisonous substanCe last

GALLIPOj..IS -, Gallia County sherifrs deputies investigated a
complaint of breaking and entering at a Gallipolis church Friday.
According to the report, someone gained entry to the Gallipolis
Christian Church, State Route 51:18, GallipOlis, by brealcing glass out
or lhe front door. The subject also damaged the back door or the
ch.m:h. Chtm:h officials said nothing was found 10 be missing.

Man reports theft
GALLIPOLIS -Charles Harmon, 854 1/2 Second ·Avenue,
Gallipolis, told Gallipolis police someone stole an compact disc
pljlyer and ~0 ·in change from his residence Thursday. The report
did not specify how entry was gained to the residence.

OfiiO

Firefighters to meet
G.ALLIPOLIS - Tjle Gallia County Firefighters Association
will hold its regular meeting 7 p.m. March 25 at the Gallipolis
Manicipal Building. All Gallia County firefighters are invited to
attend. ,

PHYSICAL THERAPY SERVICES
(Physician Referral By Appointment)

1'

-L.............
--

•

•
''

~Alcohol

may impair ·
· ~body's ability to fight AIDS
•
•

• PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A
~ew AIDS study published today
:Suggests that drinking not only
1owers a person's inhibitions about
-unsafe sex or inuavenous ~ use,
:llut impairs .the body's abihty 10
ofight the AIDS virus as well.
: "A!eohol intake is something 10
:Worry about if you are a healthy
;person engaging in a high-risk
,.ctivity. or if you are already mv
lJositivc," the researchers from
lfhomas Jefferson University warn.
:· The study, which was examined
:ihc effects in 1he test tube, appears
-in today's Journal of Infectious
:Diseases.
•: Dr. Ron Watson, direciOr of the
:Alcohol-Immunology Cenrer at the
:University of Arizona, said alcohol
'l:ould be a "small but imporlant"
:£isk factor for AIDS. "T!ais is more
~vidence to stay away from it," he

Sign-ups Tuesday .

"Rememb~r to exercioe your right to ehoooe

.G~LIPOus -

Applications for the Home Energy Assistance
Program and the Golden Buckeye Card Program will be taken 10
a.m. 10 2 p.m. Tuesday at Bossard Memorial Library.
,

your physical th!lrapiot.''• (Medicare Law 1802) ·
We Accept Medicare, Inourances and Workero
Compemallon For You. . .

Canehart
arrested
Y

"SERVING THE PATIENT AND THE PHYSICIAN"
Rt. 35. West • Gallipolis, OH. •. Minutes
from Holzer
I
.

fi.li/1111

Home Owned

Vehicle damaged in accident

POMEROY • Harle&gt;: F. Johnson. Wolfe Pen Road, reported 10
the Meigs c;;Qunty Sherill's Department that on Friday night around

· Home Operated ·

614·446·2206

~~_p-11_1, be.~~- killed a deer that ran in~ the Path of his :_

'•.r·-~J!ltl\
lpm d ofthe veh'l
~"''"'&amp;"'to c'fronten
1c e was 1i sted as mod""
e.ate.
II

said.

In the study, the researchers
combined in a test lUbe while blood
cells of 60 healthy people and the
AIDS virus, mv. The volunteers
had been drinking up 10 10 cocktails or the equivalent over a week-

end.

,

The researchers found the mv
quickly replicated and invaded the
"helper" cells, the CD4 lymphocytes. It also prevented "killer"
cells, the CDS lymphocytes, from
attacking infected cells and halting
lhe disease.
The effect did not vary wifh lhe
amount of alcohol the subjects
drank.
"Even casual consumption of
alcohol Slimulares replication of the
AIDS virus in cell cultures," said
Dr. Omar Bagasra, the study's lead
aulhor.
Bagasra said alcollol - which
•
•'
generally dampens the body's
immune system - may increase
the likeliMod of infection in peo:: South-Central Ohio
ple drinking up to 36 hours before
;. Sunday, turning partly sunny. exposure to the virus.
1figh 45 to
Alcohol apparently plays two
•• Extended rorccast:
roles in HIV infection, said study
;: Monday through Wednesday:
co-author Dr. Roger Pomerantz.
·: Monday, a chance or rain or
ow. Highs from the upper 30s in
lite north 10 lhe upper 40s in the
Iouth. Lows between 25 and 30.
:t'uesday, a chance of rain ·or SDQW.
jlighs between 35 and 40. Lows in
the 20s. Wednesday, fair. Highs in
1895
ibc40s. Lows between 25 and30.

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Cal -M•ARTs lor more Info.

Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are printed as they
app"ear oil omclal JVOIU.

!.....-----..
Look again!

Weather

••
••
••

.

POMEI,W Y • Ron A. Caip4;han was arrested Friday night on a
cllarge of dtiving un4er suspension by the Meigs County Sherifrs
DepartmenL He was also arrested on a capias from the Meigs Coun!Y ~ourt c~ging he. had failllf:l to pay on his fine. ij,e is being held
. m J&amp;il pending a heanng m Me1gs Cowl!y Court.
·
,

· Providing Physical Therapy For Over • Ye•a!

U,A.t
W.'I.U.IInw.

•

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•Work Recovery
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·. TO ENROLL AT
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS COLLEGE
CLASSES BEGIN MARCH 29th
For More Information

rot lldVIInOO pA)'mflntM rMdn

MAIL 8UB8CIUPTION8
hnd.Q' Onl)'
One Year.............................................. 7.d4
Six Montha............................ ...... ~ ... ll2.t179
O.lly ond Bandoy
MAIL 81/B8CKJPTION8
lnahle County
13 Weekll ........... ........;.. .. ................. s~u .84
26 Week.o .. ........................................ l43 .16
U Weok.t .. ........................................ 184.76
. . . . . Outaldo Co•nl;)'
13 Weok.t ............ ..... ........... ..... ......... la3.40
:18 w..u .........................................."5,110

Call: 446·4367
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j "U Weekl...................... 1, .................. 188.40.

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has much to offer Meigs County iii
the field of law enforcement, and ~

am ple&amp;$ed that we Cllrl offer him
the practical experience that he
needs, and that is so important to:
succeed in any job."
•

aid kit and a check ror $50, which will be used to j
purchase camping equipment. DiUon, an Eagle 1
Scout, was recently recruited to serve as Assis· • ;
tan I Scoutmaste~ ror the troop.

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'No aubecripti'on• by mall pnrmit.ted in
area11 wh"ro motor carrier a~arvh::t'f iK
J Av•ilable.
Tht'! Sunday TilnP.a-ScnUnC'.I wtll not tw. .

i

SCOtrr DONATION - Mw-k DUlon of The
Medical Sboppe, 565 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
presents Boy Scouts David Hapney, lert, and
Chris Pitchford of Porter Troop 222 with a fll'st

'

• .New York, Nl'lw York l0017.

..

durcs and other facets of the·legal - offiCe, and has become an asse1 in
proross.
our investigations department. In
"We're pleased 10 have Mony tum, I am confident that his work
on board." Lentes said. "He has in the office will help him succeed
a lrcadr shown an eacerness to in the chaUenging field that he has
assist 1n various pr9jects at the chosen to enter. I feel lhat Mony

'•

Hospital news·

.

.

Yea:ie also warned that iron-containing medicines and vitamins can
be deadly to young children, and
said that iron supplements were
responsible for nearly one-third of
all child poisoning deaths rrom
medications last year.
The Ohio Depar1ment of Heallh
and the Ohio SAFE KIDS Coalilion have issued the following list
of 10 poison-proofing guidelines to
make homes safer for·children.
1. Keep all househOld chemical
products and medicines out or
reach and out of sight of yo11ng
cflildren and locked up when no1 in
usei. ~se medications with safety
• cap..s... Always
·
use safety packa~ng
3
and properly close the con tamer
after use.
~- Keep all potentially hazardous products in their original
containers.
•
S. Never switch medicines or
. potentially dangerous household
. products mto food conJainers ·or
unmarked containers that can be
mistaken for something harmless.
6. Never refer to medicine as
"candy".
7. Cle&amp;ll out the medicine cabinet periodically and safely dispose
or unneeded medicines.
8. Stay alen while using poisonous products around the house.
Most accidental poisonings occur
while parents are using a household
chemical product such as balhroom
cleansers.
9. Keep poisonous plants out of
the reach of children . Teach children never to put leaves, stems,
bark. seeds, nuts or berries from
any plant into their mouths .
10. Encourage grandpareniS or
caregivers to poison-proof their
homes.

GUEST SPEAKER • State
travel diredor of the Ohio Divi. slon of Travel and Tourism
·George Zimmermann, wiU be the
featured speaker at tbe Ohio Valley Visitors Center annual meet·
lng at noon March Jl at the
Stowaway Restaurant. Reserva- Name contest winner
tions for the luncheon can be
made by calling the OVVC at
POMEROY • Allegra Will of
446-6882 by March 26. The cost ' 33655 Willnick Road, Rutland,
is $7 .SO per person.
. correctly identified the mystery
'
farm in' the March 14 Sunday
Times-Seminel as that of the Virgil
King family. She was one of 13
making the correct identification
and
her name as winner was select·
Veterans Memorial
ed
in
a drawing. She will receive
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS - Don$5
from
the Ohio Valley Publishald Cottrill, Syracuse; Edythe Jay,
ing
Co,
which
co-sponsors the conColumbus.
test
with
the
Meigs
Sqil and .Water
FRIDAY DISCHARGES •
Consecvation
District
Ethel Grueser.

Member: 'l'hfl Ala.ocialcd P'rftlll . and Lhn
Ohio New~tpa p cr A~~t~oci .dion , Natiomd
; Advorti11ing Reptilllr.ntii.Uv(l, llnnhAm
) Newt~papcr SAleM, 7:13 'l'hlrd Avenue.

dl'er sakty as weU as many tax~
In additioo, yoo mightdm!e tAl iiMa in a aelf-di!a1aiiRAin whidt yoo
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&lt;B1i6cale! li depim~ mu!llal fundsorammm and piftlnd IIIAldt dhd.
lnveStar ahK&gt; dfers a dimmt brokerage.aervioo &amp;l- investm wlxl
p.fum their own nwmch 800 make their own investrnentdedsms. This

....
•

PreventiOn ...

.Church reports B&amp;E

south, from the lower Ohio Valley:
to the centtal Gulf Coast, scauerea:
showers and an occasional thunder-:
storm were forecast.
The Northeast had clear, cool;
weather along the coast, but li~nt:
snow was likely across the intenor·
because of a high pressure system.:

Sunday Times-sentinel-Page-A~

briefs---. Wood joins staff of Meigs prosecutor

c;JUYSVILLE • Michael Barnhart, Guysville, was arrested by the
Me1gs_&lt;;ounty S'!M~s Department foc driving under the influence
and fruling to mamtaln control.
.
According to a release from department, Barnhart and anolhcr
individual hid been in a disturbance at a RoUie 7 bar. He left the
establishment and traveled north on Route 7. As he approached
Cline's Fruit Farm, Barnhart began to pass anolher norlhbound
vehicle on the rigliL Barnhart's pickup truck went off the roadway
on. tile right going iniO the ditch and hitting a culvert at lhe Cline's
driveway.
.
· He was cited to Meigs County Court for a hearing on the
charges. Possible charges from the incident at the bar are pending. .

I

.

...

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

·~---Tri-County

Weather forecast

blhocllr.

•

• IColumbusl4s• I

' March 21,1993

noon, Surday, Mareh 21.
high_...... -

MICfi.

45°

March 21, 188$

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Ohio/W.Va.

March 21, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel I A4

ft. Pleasant to merge junior, senior high schools
•

By Mindy Keams
OVP reporter

'•

·'.POINT PLEASANT • A vote
tllat was passed by the Mason
County Board of Education well
Q~er a year ago has taken a sudden
t~isllhat some teachers do not like.
. According to Michael Whalen,
%Uperintendent. board members
~sed a measure over a year ago to
itiake Point Pleasant High School
and Point Pleasant Junior High
Sthool one organizalio~ struc·
ture. Up until this time; however,
no action has been taken by ad·
111.inisttalion on that measure.
~· With Whalen, the former PPHS
grincipal, taking over the _PP!!ition
af superintendent. the pnncipal's
jlosition was opened. Whalen has
gow asked the board to hire one
principal (7-12) for both the junior
lligh school and senior high school.
q&gt;nce completed, the schools 'f"ill
merge and become one orgaruza.
t)onal struCture.
• Paul Maynard, representing the
iaculty and staff of Point Pleasant
~unior High School, spoke to the
~hoot board Thursday evening, as·

king why the junior high is losing
an administrator.
In addition, Maynard asked
when the consolidation of grades 7·
12 occurred, if public hearings
were held, and when the teachers
will 1)e notified of the change. He
asked what effects the change
would have on the master schedule,
events and activities, if there would
now be one faculty senate or two,
.and about ttansportalion of ninlh
graders between buildings for high
school classes.
·
Maynard said the junior high has
. the largest POPubltioa of students of
any schoof in the county. He said
there are many discipline problems
at the school, and l)le Slalf feels a
part-lime principal cannot handle
the load.
Whalen tol!l Maynard even
though the principal . would covet
both the hi~h school and junior
high, the junKll' high would have its
own vice principal and two
guidance counselors.
.
Maynard was not permitted to
ask all the questions the staff and
faculty bad written, but he did
make several paints. .

Maynard said since athletic
directors are being eUminated, the
vice prinoipal will also have to take
on those du,ties. He also srressed it
is not fair f&lt;r a guidancC counselor
to have JO deal with discipline
problems. He added the guidance
counselor now deals with problems
stemming from home and school,
but not everyday problems that
teachers send students to the office
for.
Among the other · questions
Maynard had on his list to ask the
board were what would happen in
an emergency situation if the principal was not present; what about a
master schedule; and how the dislaiiCe between the schools (two and
one· half miles) would be handled.
The teachers also questioned if
administtalive positions were going
to be created elsewhere. Maynard
said the administrative to smdent
ratios · lhroughout the county in'
eludes 1:500 at PPJHS/PPHS;
I :250 at Wabama; 1:167 at Hannan;
and 1:240 ·on elementary levels.
Maynard alsll asked the board to
clarify why some jobs are being

CIRCLEVILLE • Judge
terminated while others are being
William
H. Harsha of Circleville
created, and appear to be the same
has been elected presiding judge by
jobs.
his colleagues of the Fourth Dis·
Most of Maynard's questions trict
Court of Appeals, a press
remained unanswered at the end of
release
announced this week.
the presentlltion, with Board PresiThe
Founh District serves 14
dent Harry Si!lers teUing Maynard counties
in southern Ohio and
the decision is an administtative bears cases on appeal from all state
one, not one for the board. Member ll:ial courts in that district. Before
Palli Doeflinger said the board wiD being elected presiding judge, Har·
back Whalen's decision, but the! sha serVed two years as the coun's
board always has the option to go administrative judlle. He is suc·
back to two principals if it does not ceeded in that posttion by Judge
work out.
Peter B. Abele of McArthur.
Whalen said today when the
In his new capacity, Harsha will
board made the decision to include preside over the sessions of oral
· both schools under one organiza· argument to the court. serve on the
tiona! suucture over a year ago, it . Court of ·Appeals Association
first wanted to join for athletic pur· Executive Committee, sit on the
poses onfy. The idea came up when Board of Judges of the Couns of
ninth grade soccer players wanted Appeal which reviews alleged mis·
to play on the senior high ream, but
were not allowed by the SSAC be·
cause ninth graders did not auend
the high school.
The SSAC carne back and said
the board could not join for ath·
letics only, and !he board revised
the vote to state the schools would
be made into one organizational
structure,

•

: COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP)~ ouse Democrats plan tQ make
changes in Gov. George
¥oinovich 's two-year budget that
include the removal of a tax on
aursing homes, Speaker Vern Riffe
~ys.

• He also told a news conference

~riday that other provisions calling

G:&gt;r education reforms - including
CettinJ! goals for students and
~ hangmg teacher certification
il:quirements - could be changed
gr removed.
~ Riffe, of Wheelersburg, referred
10 the $30.8 billion budget that is
due for a House floor vote March
31. "I don't think any of the
~nanges are what you would call
roajor,"· he said.
'
: Voinovich proposed the nursing
~orne. tax- $1 Jli:r !Jed per day.~o ratse .$25.8 mtlhon to expand
~ommuntty programs for the elder·
~Y·

The governor said the programs
help elderly Medicaid pauents stay
out of nursing homes, where theit
care costs die state much more in
the long run.
Riffe noted the tax is also part of
ari administtation welfare reform
biU lhat is pending in the Senate.
He said it and other reforms
should be debated together. A
major :welfare bill also is under
study in the House, but he said it
also would not be included in the
budget.
Nursing home officials have
lobbied heavily against.the tax, and
they appear to been effective. "I
haven't found anyone who is in
favor of it," Riffe said.
Voinovich' s education reform
proposal has been·under frre from
• both parties because it lists person·
a1 attributes, su~h as being able to
get along with others and appreciat·
ing creativity, among goals for stu-

dents.
Some House members said
these goals go beyond education.
Rep. Wayne Jones, D-Cuyahoga
Falls, referred to them as "the fluff
stuff" and said they should come
out.

Lottery numb.ers
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Friday night's Ohio Lottery selec·
tions:
Pick 3 Numbers
. 4-8-9
(four, eight, nine)
Pick 4 Numbers
3-1-9-7
(three, one, nine, seven)
Buckeye 5
6-8-14-17-29
(six, eight, fourteen, seventeen,
twenty-nine)
The Super Lotto jackpot is $8
million.

I

'

December.
,
Howard had pleaded innocent
when he was arraigned Jan, 13, and
had ~n scheduled to go on trial
Monday in Highland County Com·
mon Pleas Court.
The charge was reduced from
murder in a plea bargain, and
Howard was sentenced Friday.

WOODBRIDGE, NJ. (AP) ,FBI agents searched the former
·home of a New York City taxi
driver wanted for questioning in
_the World Trade Center bombing,
but have yet to locate him.
Mahmud Abouhalima has been

he was born, shortly after the
March 4 arrest of the flfSI suspec~
Mohammed Salarneh:
·
The Times, quoting unidentified
sources, said Abouhalima had
come to the auention of authorities
in connection with other terrorism
investigations, although .they

The Philadelphia Mummers•
Parade was· organized in ilsJiresent
form in order to celebrate the American centennial. II wa.. sponsored pri.
marily by the Silver Crown New
Year's Association. The parade. which
dates back to colonial times, combines
the Swedish custom of celebrating the
New Year with the English tradition
of the Mumll)ers' play.

Lake Superior, located in North
America, is 350 miles long and 1,330
feet deep.

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CULT T·SHIRTS FOR SALE • Two
entrepreneurs, Stacy Bolles, 26, len, and Jaoe
Lupfer, 28, both or Waco, Texas, set up shop
; with the BriiDch Davidian cult T-shirts Friday

(MUST BE PRE·ARRIHGE~)

.

~

aneruooa uear the cult's compound. The cull
has been uuder siege siuce Feb.18 wbeo federal
agents tried to serve 11 search and arrest warrant
on cult leader David Koresh. (AP)

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WACO, Texas (AP) -Thefust
people in a week left the Branch
: Dlfvidian compound following
Uwhat authorities called the most
r positive negotiations with cult lead·
l er David Koresh since the early
f days of the armed standoff.
1'
Two men left the compound
~ about 8 ~30 p.m. Friday and were
I immediately whisked away for
questioning, according to a fedeml
:rsolirce who spoke on condition of
; 8110nymity. 1'heir names were not
"released.
: With the starid6ff ending its
:, third weelc, the FBI also disclosed
• that Koresh seems to be basing a
~ decision to surrender on some
: impending astrological event that
·· he believes will be a sign from

experts note that spring begins
today, the Jewish Passover begins
the evening of April 5, and Easter
is April11:
Also, Sunday marks the begin·
ninll of the zodiac sign of Aries,
whtch some astrologers associate
with impatience, beginnings, lll!d
quick and positive action.
•
· · Ricks described a Friday moming discussion as the most positive
since Koresh reneged pn a promise
· to surrender March 2 after his ser· mon was broadcast .,·.
Federal agents amved Feb. 28
to search the compound and arrest
Koresh, precipitatinJ a· shootout
that left four federal Agents and at
least two cultists dead.
Twenty-seven people, including
~ God.
· 21 children, have lefi the com• "He gave us an indication with pound since the siege began.
~ regard to certain asttQlogicalthings Eighty-six adults and 17 children
:, that were going on," FBI agent remain inside.
·
:• Bob Ricks said Friday. "If these
After the conversation, the FBI
~ things carne til pass, we're talking delivered to cult members letters
~ in terms of days, not weeks."
ftom attorneys who have been
• Astronomers and religion retained for them, a religious audio
•
,.
·. casseue and some magazmes.

sunset. Kids catching fireflies

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out there. But thank goodness

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found inside, but he wouldn't detail
what was confiSC8ted.
.
Life continued to return to
mal at the World Trade Center;
where several businesses went baCk'
to offJCCS Friday.
The bombing investigation con~
tinued as well, with the focd~
remaining on tons of rubb~e
beneath the towers.
.~
Two people, Salameh and Nidi\1
Ayyad, have been arrested.

Woodllnd C.nttrels funded In part J)~ t~ Glllli-Jackaon-Mt~• Board of
Alcohol, O,uig AddlcUon •nd llanl•l Hutlh SarvicH

.world

Howard also pleaded guilty to
abuse of a corpse and illegal pos·
session of a weap.on contrary to
terms of his parole on a burglary
conviction.
Judge Robert McMullen ·sen· .
tenced Howard to a tollll of 13 to
30 years in prison on all three
charges.

..

ONE OF THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE &amp; PROFESSONAL MENTAL HEALTH AGENCIES It~ SOUTilEASTEAN

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Tuesday and Thursday -1:00 P.M. to 5:00P.M.
Bowl3 Games for'3.75
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The Torah, which is the sacred text
of Judaism, is composed of the five
books of Moses.

~

Sunday Times-Sentinel/AS

declined to give specifics.
mud Abouhalima lived since Nov.
At the apartment Friday, FBI I with his German wife and four
agents led a man away but would children in the one-bedroom apannot identify him. A law enforce· ment. His brother lived upstairs
ment official , speaking on cqndi· with his family, she said.
tion of anonymity, told The Associ·
She said she hadn't seen either
ated Press the man was Abouluili- around lately. Neither bad paid
ma's brother, Mohammed.
their March rent, though it isn't due
FBI spokesman Jim Lamb said until the end of the month,
no arrests were made.
Agents took out boxes from \he
A woman who works in the apartment throughout the day.
complex's rental office said Mah· Lamb said no explosives were

SPECIALS

Riffe said the goals should be
clear and that the Legislature
should debate th~:m . "Maybe it's
time we have a special commillee
look at this," ~said.
He expressed similar concerns
over ieacher requirements, which
specify a license rather than a cer·
tilicate and make tenure and other
changes that have raised concerns
of the Ohio Educat¥&gt;n Association.
He said members of the House
Finar(ce Cornmiuee have been discussing what to do and that they
expect to decide by next week.

.

Wood{anc£ Centers~ .Inc.

there are still a few things you can
.

sought for questioning for more
than week in the Feb. 26 blast that
crippled the twin towers, the
world's second-tallest buildings.
The New York Times reported
today that investigators believe he
and his family fled to Egyp~ where

. OPEN BOWLING •••• '2.00 per ga•
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jMan ·sentenced in shooting_death
: HILLSBORO, Ohio (AP)- A
(man who pleaded guilty to involunuary manslaughter in the shooting
~eath of his cousin has been seil~enced to up to 30 years in prison.
• John Howard, 21, of Hillsboro,
:was accused of ldlling Jill Taylor,
:18, whose body was found buried
-in a Highland County barn in

Nation/World

SKYLINE LANE$
BOWLING PRICES

1-Iouse to change Voinovich's budget, remove tax

~

•

PbiUy, a daneillg iown

·.

...

.. .

FBI searches apartment of bombing suspect

conduct within die Supreme Court.
and be responsible for Stlltistical
reports to the Supreme Coun.
Harsha said in the release one of
his major goals is to further
improve the effiCiency of the coun
and to ensure that all decisions con·
tinue to be made with integrity and
impartiality.

.

.. ..

•

March 21, 1993

Harsha elected presiding judge

~

in jars. And the weatherman

·.

..
,_"

·..

•

being wrong. Like that old pocket-

~Defe~se's

key witness
:testifies in King case

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they're supposed to be doing,'' sai!l
Sgt. Charles L. Duke Jr., after a
slow-motion review of the v~deo·
tape. "What you have is two officers using controlled force .on a
suspect who has exhibited combat·
iVe, aggressive behavior.'' .
Duke, a commander of the Spe·
cia! Weapons lind Tactics ream of
the Los An,eles Police Depart·
ment, said King's behavior seen in
the beginning of the videotape Jus·
tified his continued beating even
while he was on the ground.
Duke testified on behalf of
Koon, who is Q.D trial alopg with
officers Laurence Powell,
Theodore Briseno and Timothy
Wind in fedeml court.
The defendants' acquittals on
most charges in· a state trial last
year sparked deadly riots.

, LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
~ defense in the Rodney King federal
"trial set the Stage f&lt;r the fi!Sl tesli·
"mony by a de(endant by calling a
~ use-of-force expert who said
1King's beating was within police
..' policy.
~
Sgt. Stacey Koon, one of four
; offiCers accused of violating King's
:civil rights, could take the stand as
·early as Monday. In the fustlrial,
·in state court, Koon characterized
:the beating as a managed, con.troUed use.of force.
~ The defense's key expert wit·
·:ness, in testimony Thursday and
~ Friday, offered a similar opinion of
.. the March 3, 1991, beating of Kin.ll
.. after a high-speed chase. The inch
. :dent was videotaped by-an arnateiD'
•photographer.
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After a long, hard, cold winter, it's spring

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A6

Tobacco lobby worried about ·$2 excise tax
.

.

8l5 Tblrd Ave., GalUpolls, Ohio

(614) 446-2.341

111 Court St, Pomeroy, Oi!io
(614) '192·2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBARTWR.SONJR.
Encullve Editor

PAT WIUTEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher-ConlrOUer

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the Americon
Newspaper Publishers Association.

LE'ITERS OF OPINlON 11re welcome. They

should be less thon
300 words. AU letters ore subject to editin&amp; and must be sianed with
name, address and telephone .number. No unsigned letters will be
published. Letters should be in good wte, addressing issues, not
personoli ties. •

The latest efforts to make
·: goyernment work better

WASHINGTON
As
Congress and the White House
weighed an inc:Jusc in the federal
excise tax on tobacco, Philip Morris mobilized-calling.in chits and
showering elected orficials wjth
campaign contributions, honoraria
and junkets. The tobacco giant's
disuess was reflected in a flurry of
inlemal correspondence: ·
- "We should activate every
tool at our disposal immediately. I
have a feeling this is not a test, this
is the real thing."
· ·
- " If we are ever to flex any
muscle we must do it·over the next
72 hours."
- "The plan is to give early
and large campaign contributions
... thereby jumping on the band·
wagon early and at the very least
buying ... silence (of opponents).'
That was in 1990- the last
time tobacco's interests were targeted. Back then, cigarette taxes
were ultimately raised 8 cents a
pack to 24 cents, an inc~ase so
nominal that even tobacco champion Sen. WendeU Ford, D-Ky., supported it in a compromise. But
President Clinton has Joined the
· battle again by suggesung that he
might be readying a sin tax on
cigarettes of $2 a pack to help
defray the cost of health-care
reform. This time, Ford will not
yield any fll&gt;Und.
Sen. BtU Bradley, D·NJ., in an
oblique warning to the White
House to have the "stren$.th of its
convictions," says that "if we enil
up with a 24-cent tax, then the
administration's action will not
have matched their rhetoric. "
Bradley has proposed legislation to

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent .
WASHINGTON - Every new administration puts its efficiency
experts to work on remodeling government, vowing to end waste and
make Washington work better lhan before.
~ But while they've been at it on and off for more than 40 years, (uneri.•can confidenCe m the federal government has slumped to the pomt that
:most people think it creates more problems than it solves.
: President Clinton's team is renewing the mission, assigned not only to
~· improve but actually to reinvent govemmenL
~
Now, if they can just get around the .dinosau~ bureaucracy that's
·always been in the way before.
; The image and the appraisal come from the UcS. comptroller general,
~who said that the structure of government is outdated, set up to deal with
··the needs of another era.
.
~ "It accomplished great things in its time," said Charles A. Bowsher.
: "But today it is a dinosatll'."
.
~
Vice President AI Gore is directing the administration effort, beginning
·'with a six-month review of each agency and department He is seeking, in
::clinton's words, ways to redesign, reinvent and reinvigorate the entire
.' government.
;: Those monos sound familiar. Ronald Reagan vowed a tough campaign
•to root out incompelence and cheating and Jimmy Carter called for zcro~based government planning so that every operation would have to justify
·itself aild its money.
~ Clinton is not only promising change, he's banking on it, budgeting for
::a 14 percent, $15.6 billion reduction in administrative costs. . .
·:· " .. .It is not enough simply to cut government, we have to rethink the
~whole way it works," Clinton said in his economic addn:ss to Conjli'CSS.
1 .Traditionally, go-.:emment reform efforts have concentrated on unprov'ing the management of the system that already exists. The idea now is to
r:change the system too, to get away from centralized bureaucratic hierar·
~chies- some created, ironically, on the advice of earlier reform commis·
t·sions.
o
~- BowSher told a Senate hearing on government reorganization that fed·
:·eral bureaucracies designed in the 1930s and 1940s have l!cen overtaken
:'by change, and don't work as well in the era of per$0nal computers, fax
;;machines and video conferenc~
'I
' He said the old ways need to be reassessed to take account of .newer
j.management concepts that flatten top-down' hierarchies, decentralize
i;authority, and focus on customer service.
..
. ' .
.• Changing those would take years. A more trad1uonal carnprugn agamst
:.waste and mismanagement is now ·under way; newly installec) Dc1J1ocrats
;'complaining of perks and problems they say the Republicans lefi them.
· For example:.
: - Housing programs are said by the new boss of that department to be
;plagued by mismanagement and the impact of a Reagl!ll·era influence
;peddling
· admm1strator
· ·
. pane 1
r - ThescatKil!i·
envuonmenta 1 protecuon
.toJd a House
'there was an appalling "lack of management accountability and di~i·. line" in that agency.
.
·
.
.
Budget Director Leon Panetta has JUSI ordered a rev1ew of outs1de
•contracting lhat costs $100 billion a year, saying he wants "a hard look at
~hether the government does too much contracting out."
: The government has been studying itself periodically since the days of
;the Hoover commissions of 1947 and 1953, created to seek greater effi·
:ciency and economy in a federal establishment that had grown explosive·
~ly in the New Deal and World War II.
•
• Whatever they've done to make government f~ction better, t!te public
ris more skeptieal now than ever before, according to a compllauon of
:pons published by The American Enterprise Instiblte..
.
.
• In 1948 for example, more people agreed than differed w1 th the 1dea
:that-centra'lizing government in Washington was a good thing for the
:Country. By 1965, people were worrying about big govenunent. In a 1966
'poll only 17 percent said the federal government spent tax dollars more
:wi~ly than the states; 49 percent said state governments did betler. A sur·
;vey in 1978 showed that 78 percent thoUg~t people in the government
'were wasting a lot of tax dollars.
: Mistrust has deepened since then. In 1992, one poll showed 70 percent
'of Americans dissatisfied with the overall performance of the govem!ment, another showed the same percentag~: believe that when the government runs something it, usuaUy is inefficient and wasteful. In a J!llluary
survey, 69. percent said the federal government creates more problems
than it solves.

f -

6:;:

Ill.

POINT PLEASANT - Ruth E. Brown, 83, of Point Pleasant, died
Thursday, March 18,1993, in Pleasant Valley Nursing Care Urtit
' She WL'I a member of Heights United Methodist ChUtt:h.
· Born June IS, 1909. in Morgantown, she wa a dauJ!.ter of the late
·Kramer and Anna (Goff) Roltr. She was also precede4 in .th by hc;r bus·
bttnd, Dana T. Brown, Si'., son, Charles J. Brown, two Sisters and one
•brodler.
Surviving are two daughters, Wanda Russell and Linda Kinney, both of
Gallii,K&gt;lis; two sons, James F. "Jim" Brown and Dana T. Brown,)r., both
ofPomt Pleasant; six grandchildren and eight great-f!I'8JI(Icllildren.
The funeral will be Sunday, 2 p.m., at tltc Crow-l!ussell Funeral Home
with the Rev. Louis A. Hu.Ssell officiating. Burial will be in the Beech Hill
:Cemetery, SouthsidC.
·

By Jack Anderson

and
hae l B rnstern
·
•

(

'.

Meigs ... coaliDuedfromA·l
!&amp;kc the population to 25,300 and

flowers will blossom, birds will break in the trout StreamS.
•
sing, young men's fancies will tum
" It's been a long winter," h~
to Jove and Ricky Henderson will . said."
•
whine about his pay.
Across the coun~ty at the Kn:.
At Jon~ last.
·
wood ski resort in California'.
It is ttme for picnic baskets, Sierra Nevada, Greg Murtha is diJt
allergy pills, fishing rods , Little .· ging out of his snow-covered ~
League, tennis racquets, short dominium - the drifts are 30 fecJ
sleeves, potting soil, barbecues, high ...,.. and. dreaming of summCf
golf clubs, car wax, sunglasses, days on a sailboard.
:
lawn mowers and the Easter bunny.
"Enough is enough," he said. :
In New Ipswich, N.H., Dr. Fred
If winter is the mother of sprinC,
Giarno, a dentist by trade and ftsh· as the poet John Gre4:11leaf Whittis
erman br avocation, is tying flies said, this spring had one wild ~
and wainng longingly for the ice to tempesttious parent.

1n 201S to 26.SOO.
The projections arc based on
assump11ons about future trends in
fertility, mortality, and net migra•
lion, it was reported.
The study showed that by the
year 2,015, Ohio's Jl(lpulatiQn is
projected to grow by 906,400 to
II, 753,500, . an 8.4 percent
·increase.
Acconling to the report Ohio's
fertility rates ate projected to
increase for all of the projection
years, the number of deaths will

students•••-·

+:

Rev. J.C. Johnston

Joseph Leach

LARGE SILICftON

•

'
"I couldn't say whether 1knocks said, "My God, no, it is bad enou~h
the boy. "I traded that pistol about
two months ago to John Hedrick on the door, or Hedrick. MeCum- the way it is," and I put my knt(e
for a .25 caliber automatic," said ber comes to the door and we away. After we thought for sur,e
young Stobart, identifying the walks on in. He. didn't ask us in. I McCumber was dead, I took one
asked about getting warm and he arm and leg and J.ohn takes tfie
peculiar revolver.
• For hours, Prosecutor Reed, dido 't say whether we could get othlll: arm and leg and we takes hi!n
Special Counsel L. Crary Davis, warm or noL I had my hand on the · to the cistern and drops him iii,
Police Chief Roush, Sheriff Rice black jack all the time I was there ·head ftrSL"
''Then they took back over tJie
and deputies took turns trying to by the stove. I got a chance and I
"break Hedrick and Rhoades, feel· hit him. He hollered and John hills to Hedrick's home", Rh~
grabbed him and I hit him a couple said. "Mrs. Hedrick and her two lit·
more times. I hit ·him three or four tie boys were in bed. Both men had
times, don't know just how many blood on their hands and they used
times. He kept hollering and I told gasoline to take it off. Rhoades
John, I says, "Kill him now" and looked over his clothes and ·could
John says, "no, I won't kitl him find no blood anywhere bul
in~ confident that they knew some·
thmg about the murder. At ftrSt, the here." Out in the yard we had a · Hedrick had stains of crimson ·an .
boys insisted they had left !he struggle with him. He kepl holler· his jacket. The two men stood in
for about an hour:IO
Hedrick place after eating supper ing and hollering. We both grabbed front of the
about 3:30 p. m., bummed around him. I hit him and grabbed him by thaw out. Hedriclt ·tossed his clip
ror a while, and returned between the' throat and he didn't holler no into the fire and watched it bum."
•
'
"What part diil Shorty Dry ant
7:30 or 8, not leaving the house more."
"We
takes
him
arm
in
arm.
I
had
have
in it?" inquired Prosecutor
again the night Jim McCumber disone
of
McCumber's
arms
around
Reed?
"Well, we had been framing
appeared. They explained their
me,
itnd
Jolm
had
one
around
him
it
for
a
week or I 0 days," replied
visit to Shorty Bryant on Sunday
and
we
goes
out
by
the
white
house
Rhoades.
"Bryant said that
by saying he was figuring on hav·
over
there.
We
rot
out
there
and
McCumber
Jmowed
too much. He
ing some brick work done and was
McCumber
gal
rough
again
when
said
he
wanted
to
get
bim out of tile
~etting a price from them for the
he comes to himself and Hedrick way. He said be would have this
jOb.
Zora Hedrick, John's wife, had pulled out his gun and says, "Damn party and. invite &amp;!I tbe_people Qn
told Rice the boys carne in between you, I mean business, and if you Wyllys Hill. He said we-tteedn't ~
9:30 and 10 that Monday night and holler again I witl leave you lay afraid and that he would uy to help
that she was in bed at the time and here." That scared him and us all he could. He said he would
had left a light burning. She also McCumber said he would go with see ·that we had money !UIY time we
remarked that it was snowing when us if we promised nal to hurt him. wanted iL"
And we says we won't hurt you if
"Can .you remember any otht
her husband reblmed.
.
reasonS that Shorty Bryant gave in
Using this information, and you be still."
"Had you had any talk with him addition to tbc ones you have
pounding away at them alternately,
Prosecutor Reed finally got Rhoad· in the hoti$C before you struck him already told al:lout why he wanted
es so confused the day following about what you were going to do McCumber gotten rid ofl" asked
his arrest that all of a sudden a ter· with him?" inquires prosecutor the prosecutor. "Well, he said he
rible tale of cold blooded murder Reed. "No sir, we didn't know knowed too much about moonshine
began tumbling from his lips. This what we were going to do," and stuff like that, but he didn't say
confession came on March 28. The responded Rhoades. "After we told anything elle I can remember abolit
gist of Rhoades confession is as him we wouldn't hurt him, we said liquor dcala." "He didn't mcntioq
follows:
we Had a machine in the holler, and anything about an1 woman being
connected with it? asked the pros.
"I would like to have you start would walk to iL"
Rhoades described the route ecutor. "I don't remember. It looks
in with the evening of March IS
and t.ell your story of what you did where we lost the tracks in a confu· like they are all pretty jealous of
in your own words," prompted sian of footprints on Kerr's Run that girl up there, Teresa Hick$,
· Prosecutor Reed. Rhoades told of road. • Hedrick had McCumber that stays at Nuby's."
"Rhoad~s and Hedrick wcru
eating with the Hedricks at about 4 ahead of him, and I' was back or
. o'clock and then starting out with them about ren or fifteen feet; when around two days after the murder,fD
John, winding up in a ravine just throe or four people carne along the collect and Bryant gave them $15
below Shorty Bryant's house at road and shouted "Who is there?" apiece, saying it would look SUSJ!i·
about 7:45 p. m. "And then it got conlinued Rhoades. "None of us CIOUS ·if thcl had too IQUCh money
dark," conunued Rhoades. "Well answered." Two ladies and a gen· at one time, Rhoades told officers.
the dogs kept barking all the time Ueman were going toward Kerr's A couple of days later, Rhoades
and we came down to the barn with Run, and some men were going met Bryant in the hollow and point·
a pint of liquor, and we drank it. from Kerr s Run. I heard one of the ed over the hill to the Arnold place.
Bryant said he would hllve to go men say that, "if he had a gun he ''That's where we've gal him at,"
back to the house to see if the coast would fmd out who we were." We Rhoades told Bryant, he said, at
was clear. He comes back and says waited until these people got in the which S.hoity just nodded his head~·
"Did you have any persona
everything is clear so we goes right . clear and then cut through 'the field
down the holler. to Mr. Nuby's where John Selby lives. We goes grudge against McCumber?" ask
across the creek and up over the Prosecutor Reed. "Not at all, sir.
house where McCumber stays."
hill, if I am not mistaken, we went "You undenoolt to kill him just fOI'
past that school house, Enterprise, I the reward that Shorty promisedd?'
think. Then we goes down Chester "Y.cs, I must have been crazy, . ·
road and takes McCwnber over to don't know what was wrong wi
the railroad tiack."
me." "You never killed anybod
" We went through allldijds of before?" "Not unless it was~·
By The Associated Press
fields until we got to a fence France," answere\1 Rhoades. "
Today is Sunday, March 21, the 80th day of 1993. There arc 285 days between two big trees just outside remember shooting them dow
left in the year.
the Arnold place on Five Points. over there. Smith and I were on
Today's Highlight in History:
McCumber was in the lead, John anti aircraft guns, Smith was th~
Thirty years ago, on March 21, 1963, the Alcatraz federal prison island ,was .cond and I was behind them. gunner and I wu loader, I put ~
in San Francisco Bay was emptied of its last inmates at the order of Attor· • McCumber was the first to go slleUs in the machine gun."
~
ney General Robert F. KenneJy, after three decades of housing some of ·through the fence and John Hedrick
·When Hedrick was told thi ·
America's most notorious criminals.
. was second. As I stood behind Rhoades had confessed, he crash
On this date:
them, I heard a shot and then I through with 1 statement that coin
In 1685, composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisenach, Ger· knew 10mcthing had happened. cidedwith that of Rhoades exce ·
many.
· WeiJ, I crawled throush the fena1 thallledril:k claimed Rhoades fi
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson reported to President George Washington · and McCumber was layins there tho fatal shot.
in New York as the new secretarY of state.
motJDing or groaning Ill' IIOIIICthlng,
In God We TNSL
In 1804, the French civil code, the " Code Napoleon," was adopted.
making a lot of noise. Hedrick SOl . Carry on
In 1871, journalist Henry M. Stanley began his famous expedition to one hand on my shoulder and put - Editor's Dote • Loaa-tlm ·
Africa to locate the missing Scottish missionary David Livingstone.
one foot on McCumber's n~k and Attoraey Fred W. Crow Ia 1~
In 1918, 75 years ago, during World War I, Gennany launched the . held It there four or five mmutes. toatrlbutor or a weekly tolum '
Somm,e Offensive, hoping to break through the Allied line before Ameri· When John took his. foot off, ror The Suada;r Tlmea-Seatlll
can remrorcements could arrive.
.
McCumber groaned lllUn. So John. Readers wllbiDI to applaud, crlt
In 1940, a new government was formed in France by Paul Reynaud, put his hands back on mt shoulder ldze or commeat OD UyiUbjec'
who became prime minist.er, succeeding Edouard Daladier.
•
and lliood on McCumber.
(tl!ttpt rellllo11 or poUIIqt) a...;
In 1945, during World War II, Allied bombers began four.days of raids
"Hedrick wanted I'! take my encour•1•l to write to M,U
over Germany.
.knife and cut his bead off, and I Crow, hi care althll -JIIper,
.,

FredW. Crow

fue

Today in history

J

"He's been a member o( a whacko religious
cult for years . They're not dangerous, though.
They PLAY GOLF. "

but spring officially began Saturday. If the weather is rotten from
now on, it's someone's terrible
mistake. The calendar says that

iise qi;Uckly by the rear 2;015, and
the migratory loss IS projected to
continue but Sleadily declll8SC.
Population within the state is
projected to shift to the central and
southwest areas of Ohio.
Among the five regions, the
sbutheast would hilve the highesl
•
decrease rates for the 1990-2015
period, the repon showed.
~Co~n~lin:::ue~d.!!.fro::::m:.,::A::.;·l:..,___ _ _ _
The median age of Ohio's popu·
lation inaeased from 29.9 in 1980 • than 580 schools in Ohio, West said while mixing chemicals t&lt;)
to 33.3 in 1990 and is pojected to Virginia, Kentucky, Michigan, make slime.
rise over the projection years.
While waiting to test sharnpool
Indiana and Pennsylvania, Warner
Amy Varney, 12, and her companl
said.
'' LIVERPOOL, Pa.• Norman L. Coleman, 80 of Liverpool, ~· died
Warner said reaction to the pro- ion Misty Hysell, 13, both of
:Thursday, March 18, 1993, in the Polyclinic Medieal &lt;;enter, Harrisburg,
gram has been favorable. "We're Racine, said ihe program was fun!
Varney and Hysell thought th;
proud of the program," he said.
,~·Mr. Coleman was born on May 13, 1912 at Regina, Ky., son of the late
Warner said program workers most fun Plll&gt; of the program was
·Levi and Maude Mullins Coleman. He· married Lady Notter, a former
VIm'ON- Services .for the Rev. Juliu!'Carneron (J.C.) Johnston, 71, spend a lot of time coming up with making the slime.
Varney said the program shows
'Gallipolis resident, who survives.
Vintoo, who died March IS, 1993, were held at I p.m. Saturday in the new ideas and teSting them on chil·
A World War II veteran, he served with the US Army in the European McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
students
that chemistry surrounds
dren
visitintCOSI.
,
·
·Theater in Germany and France.
students
seemed
them.
Participating
The Rev. Raymond Lambert and Brother George Johnston officiated.
., Mr. Coleman attended the Huntington, W. Va., scho!lls. He wa~ Burial was in Vinton Memorial Parle, with military graveside rites con- impressed with the program.
Vicky Hill, a teacher at the
&lt;employed for 33 years L'l an engineer for the Penn Central Rajiroad, Enola ducted by American Legion Lafayette Post No. 27.
junior
high, said the program was
Evan
Struble.
12,
of
Syracuse
,
·
scheduled
about a year ago and
··Yards, Enola, Pa., retiring in January of 1975. Mr. Colen,wt attended the ·
said
.the
program
offered
"a
nice
Pallbearers were Mark Bailey, Dale Bailey, Vincent Varney, Tom
Church of Christ in Christian Union, in ML Pleasant MiUs, Pa. He was Arney, Christopher Arney and Brad Johnston.
change" from the classroom rou· paid for by proceeds from dances.
The students need the exposure
tine.
:active in numerous commurtity act! vi~.
to
chemistry,
Hill said.
I am glad the school could pro' · In addition to his wife, Lady, he is survived by one son, Paul Norman
vide something like this, Struble
&lt;Coleman, Florence, Mont., one brother, CecU B. Colt;man. Pleasant Gar·
:den, N.C., one sister, Miss Ruth Coleman, Barboursville, and two grand·
. hildren.
.
.
.
CHESHIRE- Joseph WiUiarn Leach, 82, Cheshire; died Friday, March
e Mr. Coleman was preceded in death by his parents and one brother, 19, 1993, at Overbrook Center in Middleport following an extended ill·
·Estill Coleman. ·
.
' Funeral service will be conducted on· Monday, ~h 22, at 2 p. m., l)esS.
He was born in West Virginia on July I, 1910, a son of the late
: from The George P. Oarman Funeral Home, Inc.! ~ N. Front Street, Leonard and Elizabeth Clair Leach. He was a coal miner and a shovel
'Live.pool, Pa., with the Rev. Daryl M. Kuhns, offic1atmg.,
operator.
Burial will be' in Barner's Church Cemetery, RL I, LIVe.pool.
.
Mr. Leach is survived by his wife, Margaret Smith Leach, Cheshire; a
; • Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday fro~_!( 12 noon until daughter
and son·in·law, Gladys and Julius McGhee, Mebane, N.C.; a
"the time of services.
son, Arthur Ray Leach, Colwnbus; four sons and daughters-in-law, Don·
aid and Dotnthy Leach, Cheshire, Ronald and Margaret Leach, Lake Toxaway, N.C., Joseph and Barbara Leach, Gallipolis, Charles and Ka'thi
Leach, Addison; 17 grandcltildren, five great-grandchildren: a brother,
Paul Leach, New Lexington; two half-sisters, Bertha Stricker and Anna
• · POMEROY • Rodney Cardwell Hysell, 44, Harrah, Okla:. died McCune, both of Quick, W.Va.; two half-brothers, Carl Leach, MinnesoWednesday in Oklahoma City, Okla.
.
ta, and Russell Leach, Holiday, Fla.
Rock ol Ages offers you a choice ol 6 dlHerent colored gr•
.' Born Nov. 5, 1948 in Pomeroy, he was _the son of Homer and ~auline
Besides bis parents, Mr. Leach was preceded in death by a sister, Mary
niles. Whatever your requirements may be, complete satllllac_Cardwell Hysell of Pomeroy. He served m the U. S., Army dunng ':"e Camp.
Vietnam War. He is a lifetime member of the D.~.V. m V,:aco~ Texas, a
tlon
Is assured with Rock ol Agea. ·
Services will be Monday at ll am. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middle·
:member of the VFW in Waco, Texas; the Amencan ~on ~~ Bry~. port with Rev. Paul Taylor officiating. Burial will be at Gravel Hill CemeWinter Hours: Friday H. Others by Appolntmenl.
Jexas; the Hlmlh Oklahoma Soccer Association and the Operatmg Engt- tery.
.
593-6586 or 446-2327
'leers Local No. II!.
·
· .
· Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
· Besides his parents he is survived by his wife, June Hysell, Harrah,
,Olda.i a son, Tunothy Hysell, Hamill. Okla; a daughter •. AngelJI Hysell,
352 lhir• Ave.
••· 446·2327
G•llipolis, 011.
'Barlow; two step-sons, Roberts Hamilton, College S!~uon,. Texas, and
"WilUam Hamilton, Mesa, Ariz.; a step-daughter, DebbiC Kauffman ~­
.
.
- ~ Okla' a sister Chris Ramsburg, Pomeroy; a grandmother, Cynth1a
ALBANY- Dorothy Pincelli, 76, Albany, died Friday, March 19,
. · i,c:mdwcll, Vinton; ~d a grandchild, Pal Kauffman, Harrah, Okla.
1993 at Holzer Medical Center.
.
He was preceded in death by a son.
·. .
Born in Albany daughter of the late Pearl and Ollie Kenney Coe, she
&lt;~ Services will be TueSday at 2 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home m Mid_dle. was a graduate of Albany High School and a housewife. She was also a
iport with Rev. Paul Taylor offiCiating. Burial will be .at Rock Spnngs graduate of the Lillian Johnson Beauty Academy, Colwnbus, and was a
i (O:emetery.
· 9 · member of the Albany VFW Auxiliary, Pearl Chapel United Methodist
Jl~ ·Friends may call at the funeral hom~ on Monday from 24 and 7- p.m. Clnm:h tuld tho Americ:an Asaociation of Retired Persons.
.~ '
Surviving I1'C her husban!l, O.D. Pincelli; a daughter and son-in-law,
Carolyn and N011l1811 Wires of Albany; a soo, Robert Pincelli of Col!Jmbus; two grandchildren; a brother, Roger Coe of Albany; and two cousms.
She wu also pa:eded in death by four aunts and an uncle.
1! MILfORD. Joy Hurst, 57, a resideni of Milford, Ohio, died Friday,
Sernces will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany, with the Rev. Jim StcWirl officiating. Burial will be in Alexander .
. · March 19, 1993.
.
'935 da gh
.l• A fanner reaident of Gallipoli$, she was born Aug. 25, •
• u ter Cemetery, Frienda may call at the funeral home Monday from 3·5 an~ 7-9
~ the late Elmer Randolph and Mildred Smellzer Randolph, who sur·
p.mVFw Auxiliary serV.iccs will be conducted in the funeral home at 7
~vi~ married Dennis Ba~ who l,'ieceded her .in death in 1982. Sh~ p.m. Monday.
-Hospital Beds
··~~~en married Herbert Hurst. who !IIII'VlVCS. along With one daughter,.Cheri
•Wheelchairs
; .Wagner, North Carolina. and two sons, Jerry and.Larry Bayes, Milrord;
. •Bath Safety Aida
~three steJ)daughtcrs, Melissa Naylor, Sbe'!'Y and Mary Hurst, two stepoOstomy Supplies
·:sons, Jeriy mta Jesse Hurst. and 11 grandchildren.
,,; Funeral service will held tO a.m. Tuesday at th~ &lt;;raver-Hookom
•Diapers Chuxs
,:,;uncral in Milford, Ohio. Friends may call al the W1lltams~g Pente.
•Lift Chairs
~costal Church from 6 until9 p.m. Monday.
•Hundreds of Other
March 29
Items in Stock

Norman Coleman

James·McCumber murder _ _ _ _ _:

Part3
Investigation, coQfession
On March 27, McCumber's
body was found by John Radcliff, a
tenant on the Arnold rarm. Sheriff
Rice was out of his office when the
news carne of fmding the body of
Jim McCumber. Deputies rushed
out to Five Points with Deputy
Coroner H~ Vance after warn·
ing the fmders to keep their discov·
ery a secret and to guard the body
until they arrived Deputies wanted
to make some arrests before the
newsgotouL
Poor Jim had been shot through
the back of the head with a .22 cal·
iber bullet He had also been beaten
about the head and shoulders with
some blun1 instrument. Deputies
circled about into Pomeroy with
the body and toot it secretly to the
Vance Undertaking Parlors. Then
they ·had two warrants issued,
chargin~ ftrst degree murder, and
started out to serve them.
You see, Sheriff Rice had not
been marking time while awaiting
finding of the body. Rice had
learned from residents of Wyllys
Hill that Richard Rhoades and John
Hedrick, the two white boys living
at the Forest Run mining camp, had
been up at Shorty Bryant's house
three times during the week ·preceding Jim McCumber's disappear·
ance.
And, what was more significant,
Hedrick's sister used to live in the
Arnold house on Five Points where
the body was found. Deputies
arrested Rhoades and Hedrick at
the latter's home in Forest Run,
where officers found them playing
seven-up in the kitchen . They
offered no resistance. They didn't
know the body had been found.
After they were lodged in jail, offi·
cers searched the Hedrick house
more thorOUJihly and under a cloth
on a nail behmd a door, they found
a .22 caliber revolver hang~ng. It
was a peculiar looking weapon. It
was about seven inches long, had
an octagon barrel, and the cylinder
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum· held seven bullets. Th~ cylinder
nist ror The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and swung around, instead of revolv·
ing, but to swing it, a pin must be
national politics for more than 30 years.
removed. The handle was made of
walnut.
Sheriff Rice quickly traced the
gun to Biggs Hardware Store,
where he learned it had been sold
two months previously to Floyd
Stobart, a relative of Hedrick. Stobart told Rice, his son, Floyd, Jr.
had disposed of i~ so Rice talked to

By MlTCHELL LANDSBERG
AP Natioaal Writer
Congratulations. You made iL
It was a long, Mid, cold winter,

Ruth E. Brown

raise the current 24-cent federal at skillfully stopping things."
going to kill the GOP in the South.
cigarette excise tax to $1 a pack as
Stopping things was made sim- Darman told the policy lunch that
a way to bankroll health care, but · pler during 12 years of Republican we had to make painful choices..."
told ps he would withdraw if Clin· rule, when toadying up to tob8cco
Rep. Bob Michel, R-Ill.: "Meet·
helped deliver the South to the ing again today with Bush and. ~
GOP in presidential campaigns, leadership. He thinks the press ts tn
and was·part of the party's long- collusion with the Democrats 10
term ·strategy. It's a concern Clin- embarrass Bush by charging that hf::
ton doesn't have for the time being. has reneged on his no new taxe;s
lll"
To be sure, tobacco int=sts knew pledge."
.
lY.d C
they could play this card to great
Mu~h of tobacco's firepow~r
- - - - - - - - - - - '....effect with the White House.
over the years has been trained on ·
ton proposes a $2 tax.
Internal Pbili~ Morris docu- wining and dining on the state and
An implacable fde of tobacco, ments we have reVIewed from 1990 local level. Philip Morris dOCtj·
Bradley is beating the war drums. provide a snapshot of tobacco in its ments show that the company spent
He cif:Cs fm~gs showing 435,000 coatinuinJ war· to stav.e off tax $579,000 in seven Southwest states
Amencans dte'each year and $24 · increases. For example, a May 9, in 1989 to ldll a raft of lelPsJatioft
billion is spent on health tare treat- 1990, memo summanzcs the politi· ranging from increased CIIBI'Citc '
ing tobacco-related illnesses.
cal intelligence collected from key• taxes to smoking in public places.
'This is definitely the biggest Republicans, who clearly allowed
In Kansas, Philip Morris docu·
(battle) with the biggest impact, electoral consider!ltians to color mcnts show lhat they gave about
with the biggest chance of making . budgetary policy concerning iobac· $11,000 to legislatQrs there. "It
a real difference in the health of co. These are noteS Philip Morris ' may not seem litce much, but that's
millions of Americans since I've officials made after debriefing the most we can give without stick·
been here for 14 .years," Bradley these Republicans:
ing out like a sore thumb,". one
told us.
Ed Rollins: "He has told the document notes.
Aflti-smolcing advocates believe president that the GOP could lose
Passage · of a $2 tax would
that while an 800 percent excise· as many as 12·seats, mosUy in the almost certainly spell the twilight
tax increase contemplated by Clin- South and with freshmen putJing of the 'tobacco lobby, once perhaP.S
ton would significantly curb smok· taxes on the table. He says publicly the most influential in Washington.
ing in this country over the Jon~ and to the White House lhat it's a Despite public support for heftier
term, big tobacco companies would political disaster."
taxes, and a public rejection C?_f
not see their revenue shrink signifi.
Fcinner Congressman Guy Van- cigarette smoking, there .are plenty
cantly. Nearly half of all tobacco der Jagc "He told the White House of signs suggesting tobacco ~ian!S
sales are now in expbrts. And the at yesterday's leadership meeting like Philip Morris are not gqtng 10
biggest impact of a tax would be to that he personally would oppose ' go quietly into th~ night - quite
deter the lucrative youth market any new taxes and privately he literally.
froiil starting the habiL
stressed cigarette taxes ... " The
With the help of an "8001'
Regarding the coming battle, memo added p;ll'enthetically that 1 number, Philip Morris has been
Bradley observes: "I think big Vander Jagt may have been moti- able to flood pivotal members of
tobacco believes that the ultimate vated "F,t!Y because he is a chain Congress with calls from iraie
game is the inside game. They smoker. '
.
smokers.
·
·
know it's harder to get things done
Sen. Trent Lou. R-Miss.: "Told
Jack Anderson and Michael
than it is to stop things, So I think (Richard) Darman (former budget Binsteln are writers for United
that all of their resources are aimed director) to his face that t.lixes are Feature Syadicate, lac.
•

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Sunday nmes Sentlnet..:...Page-A7 •

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

•

Commentary

March 21, 1993

...March 21, 1993

...

Rodney Hysell

----

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS

Dorothy Pincelli

;Joy Hurst

MEDICAL SUPPLIES
FOR HOME USE

Sales - Rental - Service

FIT TOGETHER AEROBICS

a

New Session leglnnin1

Genevieve I. Grinstead.
.

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ALBANY- Genev~ve L G~tead, 73, Albany, d1ed Fnday, March
9, 1993 at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
.
.
•· Born in New Haven W.VL daughter of the late Lewis Jennmg and
£me FratiCCI Gnltam Grimm, 'she Will a housewife and a mothe~.. She
·was also a member of the Albany GraniC and the Albany VFW Aux!liary •
v., Surviving are three sons, Lawrence M. (Mike) Grinstead an~ Rtehard
11:: (Dick) Grinstead, both of Albany, and Robert K. (Bob) Gnnstead of.
·New Marshfield; and five grandcltildren, Jeff, Wendy, Amanda, Carol and
,Jennifer.
bert L G . tead, .
: • She wu also preceded in death by her husband. Ro
.. nns . tn
1980; by five sisters, Sadie Warth, Ada Wares, Agnes. Gnmm, Flo~ce
'ronkec and'Bva Roush; and by five brothers, Elmer Grunm, Roy Gnmm,
Melvin Grimm, Frank Grimm and Ray Grimm.
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in the Bigonr.-Jordan Funeral Home,
l,t;tbany with Willard Love officiating. Burial w1ll be in Graham Ceme·
!lay, New Haven. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from 24
IJiid 7-9 D.DI.
.
,
J'

·:Verna Sturgeon

•Mon.·W... 10-11 A.M. at
Midclleport Arts Council
•Tues.·IIMs. 6:00·7:00 at
Melts Co. Senior Center, P•eroy
Call992-6893
For Registration or Info.

May do a Co-ed Class.
Call if Interested.

Jeannie Owen
Certified Instructor

HOME OXYGEN THERAPY
Respiratory Tllerapist - 24 Hatr [nlerge~cy Service
We 811 Medicare, MetrJCaid, etc,. for tile patieat.
Horne Owned and Operated

Gallipolis
446-7283

Tol free
'1-IOHSB-6844

Jackso•
286-7484

So Many Great New Wh~~Is!

?.• POMEROY- The names of two deoeased sisters of Vema Violet Stur·

'ieon 78 -....,..,., who died Thunday, March 18, 1993. at Holzer Medi-

cal een~· ;';'Oalu.;olis, were unintentionally omitted from the obituary in
. ,Friday'• edWon of The Daily Sentinel. They Vl= Maftena Edmonds and
..•Elcallora Nowlin

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,

Birchfield Funeral Home

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I·'

•.,,

k.'

MAIN ST•

742-2333
-;

'.'•

Ca{( us totfay

p.:'r ;

®out our
funera£ pfannin9 program.

....

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id

•J'
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,!I

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Maq it easier for tfwse ydu fove.

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RUTLAND

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LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

l'lmM'all'laNUIIfl /or ~ Y011 Love
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And Now One Great Rate!
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.

�_.,. ...........

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Pomeroy......Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

/
March 21, 1993

••

-Along the River

Used for food preservation, salt vital to early settlements .
By.TIID Sauds .
Spedal Corresp~~~~dellt

ID the early days of Ohio, sail
became a vitalarticlelllltsomucbfor
llavoriDg as fordle pn:servaaion and
sbipping o( foodswlfs. Sculcmcols .
wen: even delermined to some
degree by the
availabilityohaiL
FathefliSlfeW

6'

years oftbe seuternent of Gallipolis, salt was brought here from Pins-

SALT WORKS - One or the last salt works iD soutlleasatra
; Ohio was the Excelsior Salt WiJrks in Pomeroy. Salt was IDIIIlufac:-._ tured in Gallia County rrom about 1807 to tbe time or the Civil
t War. The first salt well in Ohio was drilled 'in Gallia.County in
I 1809.'

GaUia County Court news

r

•'
Municipal
. GALLIPOLIS · The following
; cases have been processed by the
• Gallipolis Municipal Court of
' Judge William S. Medley:
Bengy J. Rhoades, 892 South
.,Second Street, Middleport, was
:1fined $100 plus court co sts for
·:Shoplifting . A charge of reSisting
: 'l!mst was dismissed.
· ·; David E. Manley, 21, Route I
Bidwell, was fined $500, wtth all
, but $100 suspended, plus court
' costs for no operator's license. He
: was also sentenced to 30 days in
; jail, suspended.
: Casey D. Starnes, 20, 2615 Neff
Road, Dayton, was fined $100 plus
; coun costs for expired registration.
' A charge. of no operator's license
was dismissed.
; Billy R. Glick, 173 Kelly Drive.
: Gallipolis, was fined $250 plus
· court costs for theft. be was also
; sentenced 10 six months probation.
! Rose Ann McCiasky, Route 2,
: Vinton, was fined $100, suspended,
l.plus court costs for passing bad
! checks. She was also sentenced 10
' six months probation.
: Charles L. Daniels, 21, Key: stone Road, Vinton, was fined $700.
: plus coun costs for driving under
• the influence. He was also sen; tenced to 60 days in jail, with all
1· b.ut 10 days suspended, and a one·
i year license suspension. A charge
~.of no operator's license was dis·
missed.
Ricky D. Lambert, 34, Route 2
Patriot, was fined $100 plus court
costs for a charge of driving- under
the influence, reduced 10 reckless
operation. A charge of failu~e 10
control was dismissed.
'
James M. Williams, 28, 2134
Chatham Ave., Gallipolis, was
fined $450 plus court costs for

l

I

driving under the influence. He was
also sentenced to 30 days in jail,
with all but three days suspended,
and a 90-day license suspensiOIL A
charge of speeding was dismissed.
A charge of disorderly conduct
against Marvin Hunt, 41, Ewington, was dismissed.
A charge of domestic violence
against Vaughn Taylor, 32, 3308
Kerr Road, Bidwell, was dismissed.
Common pleas
The following cases have been
processed by the Gallia County
Common Pleas Court of Judge
Joseph L. Cain:
Keith R. Gravely, no address
available, was sentenced to three
days in jail for a probation viola- .
lion and ordered to pay $75 in restiwtion.
Editor's note: Names, ages
and addresses are printed as they
are appear on court records.
lnfomlalion reporled depeads on
information available in court
records. All oewsworthy actioas
wHI be run without exception.

Divorces and
dissolutions
filed in court
POMEROY - Two divorces
were filed in the Meigs County
Cowt of Common Pleas Thwsday.
Filing were: Diana ·Starcher,
Langsville, from Ronald Slalcller,
Rutland, and Brenda K. Darst,
Pomeroy, from Rex Allen ~t,
a~

unknown.
In lldd.ition. a petitioll for disso-

.lution of marriage was filed by
Deborah A. Rizer and Kcnnedl H.
Rizer Sr., bolh of Portland.

Meigs County Court news .
POMEROY - The following 37
-cases were processed Wednesday
in the Meigs County Court of
·Judge Patrick O'Brien:
:• Jacob Kooser, Coolville, no registration, $10 plus costs; Donald
·Combs, Long Bottom, failure to
-obey traffic control device, $10
. plus costs; Rebecca Thompson,
Albany, seat belt violation, $25
plus costs; Michael L. Grant,
Racine, seat belt violation, $25 plus
costs; Jason S. Hysell, Pomeroy,
·misconduct at an emergency situation, $100 fine suspended to $40
plus costs, six months probation;
Gregory Satterfield, Racine, seat
belt violation, $25 plus costs; Douglas E. Posey, Belpre, speed, $23
plus cosiS; Joseph S. Emerine, Circleville, seat belt violation, $25
plus costs; Dale William$ Due's pohl, Charleston, W.Va., speed,
$75 plus costs;
Jim Sowards, Ewin-gton, failure
lQ stop at stop sign, $10 plus costs;
'!'odd L. Lee, Chester, no regi&lt;tra·
lion, $10 plus costs; Jasoo S. Lawson, Reedsville, fictitious plates,
525 plus costs; Tracy C. Wilson,
Mhens, speed, $21 plus cqsts;
James R. McDowell, Washington,
Pa , failure to possess a log book,
$60 plu s costs: Jeremy Rupe,
Columbus, speed, $24 plus costs;
Wendell E. Craig, Buffalo, W.Va.,
speed, $25 plus costs; Gregory L.
Morris, Columbus, speed, $28 plus
costs; James R. Ingels Jr., Long
Bottom, seat belt viplation, $25
plus costs; Joann Gard, Reedsville,
seat belt violation, SIS plus costs;
Sarah F. Hysell, Pomeroy, failure to drive in marked lanes, $20
plus costs, no operator's license,
$75 plus costs, three days jail sus·
pended if valid OL presented in 60
days; Todd L. Lee, no motorcycle
endorsement, $75 plus costs, three
days jail' suspended iii valid motor·
cycle endorsement presented in 60
days; James Reynolds, Middleport,
speeding, $20 plus costs; Rusty
Smith, Pomeroy, criminal trespassing, $25 plus costs, 10 days _jail
suspended, one year proballon,
resuaining order issu~; Kurtiss
English, Middleport, cnm•nal damaging, $25 plus costs, 10 days_jail
suspended, one year proballon,
restraining order issued; .
.
Michael Wolf, Reedsville, faJIure to stop for stop sign, $20 plus
costs; George Kuhn, Cheshire, seat
belt violation, $15 plus costs;

r;;~uZ·~~~·= ~:

plus costs, 60 days jail suspended
to 10, OL suspended for one year.
two years probation, no registration, $10 plus costs, no OL, 60
days jail snSJICIIded to 10 days coocurrent wilh DUI, $100 plus QOSis.
two years probation; Jimmy Graham, Middleport, litter. three days
Jail suspen4ed, $100 fine or 20
hours of community service, QOSis.
one year probatioQ;
,
Lance J. Asbworth, Point~
ant, W.Va., speeding, $20 plus
costs; Harold Darst, Rutland, DUI,
30 days jail suspended to 10 days,
$500 plus costs, OL suspended for
90 days, one year probation; John
White, Lancaster, $450 plus costs,
30 days jail suspended 10 10, OL
suspended for one year, one year
probation, no OL, 10 days concurrent with DUI, costs, speeding,
costs, seat belt violation, $25 plus
costs, fleeing, 60 days P.U suspend- ·
ed to I0 concum::nt With DUI, one
year probation; Jimmie Cain,
Pomeroy, failure to drive in marked
lanes, $100 plus costs, $200 forfeiture to the law enforcement trust
fund;
William H. Morris, Toledo,
bunting deer with a gun during
·closed season, S50 plus costs, 24
hours of community service;
Dwayne Qualls, Pomeroy, DUI,
$550 plus costs, six months jail
suspended 10 30 days, one year OL
suspension, one year probation, no
OL, six months jail suspended to
30 days concurrent with DUI,
cosiS, one year probation.
Forfeiting bond was Robert
Ziminsky, Batavia, N.Y., speed,
$85.
.

burgh by boat. Then in the late 1790s
the great salt springs near presentday Jackson became the chief soun:e
of saiL
These famous salt springs had
been known to the Indians for over
100 years and to the French traders
since 174S. Both Daniel Boone and
Jonalhan Alder were brought to the
spring~ while'pisone!s to lhe Indi-

ans. .

When salt had to be brought from
Pittsburgh. it sold for S6 to SlO a
bushel. By 1800 the pice had gone
down to $4 for a 56-PQUlld bushel.
The salt was usually iranspOrted in
five-bushel barrels.
The salt was collec:u:d by evapo-

ration as the salt water was placed iD
large kettles. After the water had
evaporated the salt would be left It
took about 600 gallons of wacer to
get 50 pounds or saiL Of that SO
pounds, some would include in:Jpurities of iron and other mi~.
Some people preferred the red
colored salt; claiming it made better
buner, but others liked to have the
removed.
From 1798 to 1804, 9Cttlcrs were
free to use tile springs withoutchllfge.
Bul in 1804, the springs were put
under state control. One bad to apply
to rent .ground for the Jlli1POSC oC
making saiL
,
·This "unofficial" tax caused petsons to look for salt in other soulh170
Ohio communities where a rent was
not required.
It was iD 1807 that FletCher and
Tupper began the making of salt iD
Gallia County by evaporation. It was
found that a weat brine coUld be
found near the bedrock close to the
Chickamauga Creek.
In 1809 these two men became
the flfSt Ohioans to drill through
strata, going 100 feet down. The
brine from below ihe surface was
found to be of much stronger concentration. Unfortunately
. for. tbese

Most of Budget's competitors
NEW YORK (AP) - Drivers
under age 25 face increasing diffi- had already stopped renting to the
culties in tenting cars as companies younger drivers, and accidents by
increase their rates for young pea- Budget's under-25 clients were
increasing, said Frank Burke, vfce
pi~ or even stop doing business
president for risk management
with lhem altogether.
Alamo Rent A Car Inc., which
The rental companies claim the
costs of covering damage and is ready to take the chance on
injuries fer drivers under age 25 are younger drivers, recently increased
running too high. Critics complain JIS daily surcharge from $10 10$15
lhe companies are penalizing safe for drivers under 25. The higher
rate is intended to help offset the
drivers.
costs
of fixing banged-up cars, a
Budget Rent A Car Corp., one
spokeswoman
said;
of the last .; ompanies to rent to
drivers under age 25, recently · Many companies such as Henz,
stopped lhe practice at most loca· Avis and National have. long-standing policies agai~st renting
to
tions. ·
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Amateur radio club offers help
GALLIPOLIS - Severe weatb- can and have occuncd in Ohio dur·
··
ing Ill month• of, the year: Most
Two words that became all io IOmldoell occ:ur between tbe holn
real to area residents lhe weekend of 2 and 10 p.m., but a ulmado can
. of March 12, as 20 inc;hes of snow touch down at any time of tbe clay
)llanketed lhe ~
·
or niJbt.
·
· But prepann• and being .aw
..are
TOrnadoea can appr01eb from
Of severe weather conditiOnS any direj:tion, but in Obio llilout 90
doesn·~ stop with snow as the percentofalltomadooscomefrom
~ng itoml and tornado season is tbe IOIIIhwat ljlllldraot or tbe horingbt around the~zon. Virtulllly all tomadoea .come
· The week of MarCh 21 has been from lhundentorma and ~J
declared as Tornado Safety Aware- drop to lhe pound from the b
ness' Week by Oov. George )l!ll'tion of lhe starm. 'I'IiCy aie W!uVoinovicb in an effon to educate ally preceded by very heavy IBIIlS
individuals about the ~gets and and{or hail. If bail falls from a
Safety mCasw-es for tornadoes and thunderstorm, it is an indication
severe storms, according to the · that the StonQ has lalge amounts of
Ohio Colhmiuee for Severe Wealh- ODei'JY and may become severe.
e r A -. The taraer the hail stoneS. tbe IDOle
During 1992, there were a potential for llrOIIJ lhllllllcnlorml,
record. setting 59 tornadoes. Since winds and possible tomadlles.
1950, Ohio has avczaged 14 tomaEyes andean
does per.year.
As the severe weather season
. In Gallia County, three torna- approaches, lhe National Weather
does have been reported frOm 1950 · Ser.:ioe wants Ohioans to be preto 1992, with no deaths.
pared for tornadoes and severe
· With 376 severe weather events thlinderstorms.
·
causing hundreds of millions. of
Assiating tbe NWS in Huntingdollars in damage in )uly 1992, ton, W.VL durin's severe weather
there were only rwo deaths and 48 · are members of lhe Mid Ohio Vii• injuriCs recorded ICI'OIII the S~.
ley Amaleur Radio Club.
~: In Ohio1 lhe peak tornadO
Approximately 100 members
, ion ·runa 1i0m April throop m1d- strona, th~ club is a non-busineu
, July. Nearly tbtee quarterS of all type of boblw with .memben, alsd
, ~that ha'VI: been reported known as Hams, rangiag ,from
; m the .lllte have occurred durinJ younJIIm to oldslen from the bi' that lhreo and a half month span. COIIIIIY area.
·
·
~ June has,been •tbe 111011 acd'VI: torFunded from money ott or the
; nado month. However, tornadoes
· ·'

e'r.

younger drivers. And in contracts company would have a lot of
negotiated with co~:porate clients, . young employees, generally it will
the rate would lilcely be 1\igher for cost.more:''
companies that expect employees
Budget is not limiting rentals to
under age 25 to be t;enting vehicles. corporate clients with younge·r
"Age can be negotiated," said em·ployees or imposing a sur ,
Ray Noble, Avis spokesman. "If a charge, Burke said.
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WASHINGTON (AP) - An
. has one of highest levels of
radioactive radon gas among the
schools surveyed by the Envirionmeo18ll'rolccticn Agency.
But the dislrict's superintendent
said Thursday that officials are prepared 10 do whatever it lakes to fill
the problem.
•
More lhan 70,000 classrooms in
the United States and oearly one o(
fi"Ve schools bas unacceplably high
levels of radon, the EPA said. More
lhan 10,000 classrooms have radon
·levels more than double the EPA
Slalld8nl, the agency said.
The staff of lhe House Com- .
mcrce Commiuce's health and
environment subcommittee, citing
tbe EPA, said !he Garfield Elemen·
tary School in Heath, about 25'

miles east of Columbus, "bas one
of the most serious radon problems
identified iD the survey."
A staff paper said that .initial
testing in March ~991 "showed
that all 34 groWid-conr.act rooms in
the schoQI had 'radon Ie\'tls" more
than double the EPA standard.
Daniel Dupps, superintendent of
Heath schools, said Thu~sday
evening that he hAd not seen any
comparative figures of other
schools. He said the distJ:ict. was
working with the Ohio Department
of Health and others 10 correct the
problem.
. ·· · • •
"What's good about this is that
we know. We think we're going to
have an answer for this," Dupps
said. "You've got to ... ventilate
the subsoil, and that's what we're
doing."

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power

~~~~e;;e::htbe~!~::c:i:

~!:.~orJ:\r:~~:!~

exat-

.·
Levy kuowa exactly wbat to .do If a tornado
comes ._.r way. LeY)' was tbe 1991 Tornado ,
Plllfer Coutest Stale Cbamplon.
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d
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d'
k
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Torna o prepare . ness ey to ·. oss.
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t
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t
r·
n
ado
sa•-t.ety
tz"ps
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preven zon, o .
'1 ~
.

the worlct In pmrioua Field Day
COLUMBUS _ Be'
,
ed. imalel
ilea.
mg to protect rourself, family
Ham&amp; have made contact fro both .
mgJd":iety
has cleared the m~~rs and ne~ghbors from furwlib Olbir putic~ll ill Australia, ' sta:dpoint~sh':~of primary area, 011 reconimencls tbe follow- thcr UlJ\10' or loss:
'
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Viraln Isialldafand Hawaii. The importance to Ohioans as peak tor• Notify ~roper authorities,
.•• LISTJU'IIS IN • Waltlua to talk to •o•e Ham• ID aa,au, ' event li IU!'JIId Dlto a con~ to see nado season ..........h... Accading
·w
'·
such as the I
Red Cross chap; 'Stepben willoll d ~ Mid Olllo Vde:r Amldlllr Itadlo Club liJ.
who can Jlla)te cdntact wttb the 10 the Ohio ~:;-s;-e Institute
. ,..
tcr, county emCI'JCIICy managemCI)t
.· "teu 1D OD u HP radiD. 1be radio Ia llltd tor 1011&amp; dlstlac:e commamostHains,saldNuU.
· (Oll), bomeownerl ins~ proageooy or law enforcement, '!hat
.. aicatlolll to plaees 1110 u Cuada and the Vlraln lslendL
This year's Field Day will be vides protection for losses to the
· · '
fill!~~~w~he trai~ed.
held June 26-27., as Hams simulate borne and its contents in the event
authorized offK:Cn llld vollllllecn
a disaster 4rill in severe weather of a tornado.
WA.TCH
who will arri"Ve to give aid.
1
with their base .set up on Mound
''There's a common misconcep'fhls term, wlten used with
• Do not enw 1 dama&amp;ed buildHilL
tion that home owners need to
tbe words tornado or aevere ing until cleared by IUthoride~. _ •
During the simulation the Hams acquire special tornado insurance
thuoclentol'lll, meau that tor·
• Check with local authoritieS
assume everything is dead: such as or that a policy l_oopho!e e1'ists
oaCI.oes or severe thunder- regarding the possibility or a taint,"
telephone and electrical wJreS, Pltf- · brc•nse a tornado IS considered an · storms are JIC*Ible lu the men- ed water supplr • use only
ticipants plher up alllhe necesSary 'act of God'," says Illniel J. Kelso,
tlaaed area. Watcballrt·IIIIJ81. approved or chlonnaled drinking
equipment foi the 24-hoiiJ' exercise on president. "Tornadoes are conly Ia elfe~t for aeveral boors
ter
including food )llld generato~, said sidered 'win&amp;torms' and this covand Indicate diet etmoapberic wa, C1lect food su~lies fer pani~
NuU.
·
.
erage iJ included in all .horneowncondition• are fa•orable for . cles and debris, discarding all
"Field Day helps us to find out en~p:;es.•
tllae lltonDI .to ~p. Toraa- canned goods with broken Seams.
what our limitations are as well as
· iJ quick to point out that doe&amp; or severe tllunderstorms
• ..,.otify relalives or your safeLY
our shorlcominp; said Null.
individuals need to investigate
ueto i!dbe. ~ed.be present for .a watcb so local authorities don't waste
Should Galli&amp; County .be hit by wbether current policy limits are
valuable time attempting to locate
severe weather or a tornl\do, the adequate to replace tbe borne in
WARNING
yoll. But, do not' tie up telephone
amergency Manaaement 'A-ency view of today's biaher COIISIIUI:tion
TIJII , . "tau lilt wllllur lines that are needed for emergcnc;y
will be put into operation agBin.
costs. By rem :win&amp; the jn1W1111oe ,,,., .(lorlllllo or.""" tllllll• calls.
Althout~b aovernment h4s a wlicy wilh your company repred.rstorte) 11 l••l111111 or 11
• Obcain necessary medical care,
~sibility to lhe public in dmes sentatiYC or agent, you can be sure ~ octlllrinl.
lilY
food, clothinJ or shelter at local
of emcqcncy, each individual bas . thai co•craao is suitable to ~ 111
Ill f!l"t /IN an llollr or Red Cross stations or designated
a personal responsibility to prepare needs and budgeL ·
lm. a ,.,.,., II "'""'for. community facilities
their homos alld Camilies for such
NUndcr 111011 homeownen poll- 1f?IU .,,., liiU ,aedon 1..,./llCbeck ~ lecbical probl
evll)tualitles. By" wqrking with ciei, if lhe owner baa ~IUC-ued aub,
,
...j
gas
lelb,or~ng damaaea
~
· HAMS • Dick Moan, (left), IDd llrlln Mullen, (rlpt), double
OaiHa Colinty EMA birector Terry enou&amp;h inauraoce 10 cover 8Q. perStVEIUl THUNDERSTORM
the utility companies ancf fire
~ check their IDfcnlatloll durl 1 tile 1992 Field De:r ill Galllpolla
J{emby, citizens can obtain impor· centoftolllreplaccment~oflhe
A .e.;re th1illdentonn Ia a depnnent.
;
• Both 11rt plctund M blq lu cd lipl ud varlou luf-atlor
lati1111
infllnnation
on
all
typea
of
home,
the
c:ompu:r
will
pa:r
100
tbandeniorm
wltb
damaalna
•
Coopinte
in
the
general
clean.·; •compiled durin&amp; tile 34 ltaur iititlwo
·
. nationallnd 11110-made disamn.
pera:nt oC a J1111ia1 IDsl, up to the wludl
or ~er arid/or up of propeny. wear IPPropriate,
.
'
'
policy limits. If the JJO!lcyllolder hall l/4 luch lu dfameter or shoes, clothl:s and 1~ove~ for ldtled
bas noi purchued llllfic*- cxwer- , ·.Jaraer; 11 tbll term IJ In tbe
.~. ·
h'l
.. : th
b'
age. he will have to ibeorb 1*1 of ' foreCast, JH llboulcl pay extra l:ri;:uon w • e $0• .. na roq :
die lou." Kello addL Many CIGIII- I~ to the -tber aud be
1f you haven't been affccll!d by,
· ·panics offer Mreplacemcint coat" p~eparect for later niebea or the tornado but have !datives in a;
' · covqe f'll' conteiJt.s, fqr an iddi- warnlup.
damaged area, do not attempt 10
donil fee, wbldl provides for lhe
· THU/iDERSTORM
visit the disaster area. Let rescue:
replacement of clamaaed belon•- 1-'!, A thadentorm Ia 1 rain wcirk pn~ un~ by Spec·
ings.
·
· ' shower accompaDied by U&amp;llt· tators. Repons will be broadcas!·
niDI and tbuDder. Tbe:r fre·
and ..~v... lines will be ---LJ:......i
Auto·... llld
•· od
t
I-"
·pre.. ••ecln= .._
queDt.., pr ace 1111 Y w .us, thrliDIIh local relief agencies to·
..-to ...
,.. e110,
....-can u:e !Oeau.ed ... nla ud •all L--"'·
· --'-'-.
.·
ACcor~
...,....., Otber
mq...._
tliOieCted
the "olher tblll CCII- ball. ·aemem er a tluiDder·
lnnraace dpa . ;
liJion" (~•omensi•e) physical atonn atn:ra product~ ll&amp;lll•
Contact your insurance agent or
"·~•of tbe 11110 l11111r- atua; wlllcll II Oltlo'a leadlua compeny representative to repor(
--..h d
db
-tiler rei I'd ldller IIIII .eat
damage. Closely Inspect propertf?
:!ls&amp;.!'u~y W. en a~age '1 y~ II riiPM•ll for umer- and can for damage, Take plcturca
Tbo ou recommends lhtl if
0. ~
.
of any dlrna&amp;e and llllke an inven-.
..___
·
PVNNBL CLOUD .
tory. especially if heavy,
severe slllmll u • .....,,, Ill your car
A rna• dOIId II a YloleDI)J
·del _. "·-·- bas arred
uoderCO¥et,sincoitcanauffer
rotetlu:r.eoluau of air tllat WI-JI-:·-~.
OC:C
·:
heavy· c11m1p troin hip wlndl,
. these will Ullll wath claima prodobdl ilod hill In till
d11ceu Ina tlle ralu free ceniq. Sol:un~ JXOilCilY from rur.,
· fl:rlnl
•
-~ ._ fla •••• llladl¥2 1: -. Iller , _ _ or theft. rr- ,.......,
of I tGrllldo Wlldl II' Wlnllna,
l ' ~ut II Ht Ia ..... wi* tbt _ .....:::--..:.....,_ ft&amp;....._
....._a, ......... llpabJU._IIId .
tona::JUIII · _ . , - . . .
ii'+*IYo II
car . . 'fllllli lllli!IIIIIIIW.If 1
IDIMI
- - I mu:r ... Jeialllui'lallle uildet ~
...ido .... .SJGUIIIIIIID · 1
1M
·
- · holw awllillpalicy.
·,
._. ibl-dtlr 1111 .._ JGIIl' dlrhit It•• hnlo,meut aud
If required to IIOit ...JIOIItJ
car-IIIIIIIIIJ !la,llliWidl.
brl•l.. illeiOICOIMdbiiiiQ,
aatltall ~ -...11111 -11 a .
,
11 aiOinlda, c1IICik JOIII' h
• •.
~oq.ftldlt'-=s,ltu..
toraado II a •loleutl:r policy for Madditlonal liYiq
.aJOtadD.
fJl .If lu COD• ewp RIC" CIINOI!p. OftiJa I pl1kj ;
bl• ,..,.Ill do
... •·
..,.
tact wltll lle 1rowDd tllat
Ide
~ te
If a tornado hit* :rour area, deletudl fro• 1111 ralw tree · e!!'!~ s coverage or mporary.
:=;,~:; ~~dl~ ._ ora •me llludeutona.
trade IUIICillioD~ .
Tile
Ia Hld to IuiD pnpllrt Ham tor
Most tomadou are·afiort-ll,od, Tlle7 are IIIIIIJ luuellbapecl fiiiiiUIIIIiDI ~ c1 I hi
.,... ,..tiler _,gcpc., fu tile eveat tlley are
__....__..
oal'l four or fl,. mI IUW, wl'tb llt 1arrew •4 ueareat ..,..
...... - ..-.called . . . . . . . durlq .. .......,.
1111 the pOIIId rot +IICM·
1M IP :nd
ty/cu\lalty 1M • I·
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oJe': :m-,

Seveli'D eather
termz"notogy

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W.,.,.,.

tPR FINANCING JUST ARRIVED
See our Dealership for details. All
1992 and 1993 models apply.
Fadory Progra111 Cars with less
than 20,000 miles also apply.

THE SHOE

CAFE
....,·::.· Mall

hll

11,01.

OVER 60 NOW IN STOCK
OVER 50 FACTORY PROGUM
CARS TO CHOOSE FROM.

PrlceUSau
trene. oil cooler,
eng. oil cooler, SlE
equipment, cantar
&amp; rear tnt, front &amp;
r..r ule.

.

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

=· ,·A.

Dealer

See Herb Smith or Vernon Harvey

..,.,,..,..JYMNADO

1616 EASTERN AVE.
OH.
446·3672

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER,·INE.

..........

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3

"We Are Deteruained To
Earn Tour Business!"

&lt;:omelook-

sa.,•

-

4X4 350 V-8, auto.,
H.D. radiator &amp;

IJ

pockeu of members, the. club Is
considered a n:soun:e by tlie federal government. according to Mike
Null, member.
,
"We are tbe eyes and ears during severe weather," he said. "We
track wind speeds,. hail and other
conditions apd tranSmit the information to the .weather service and
local officials.•
'
·
Some wealher conditions cannot
, . ,. .
be seen on ·radar, such as wind · !"'"'...___,_
speeds. ;\10.
,
,•.
"The e7 ..s tell you what electronics won'!,• he added.
Infotrn.tion is tnllWIIIJ!Cd to the
NWS by voice communications on
hand held radios, digilll computm
and even by television. The various
ways of communication is up to
each member's preference, said
Null.
'
In the event of a severe storm,
electric and telepbpne wires can be
either tied DP or taken out of commission due !0 the weather.
"During a power outage, the
Hams take a baclcground role when
they are called iD to assist," said
Null. "Hams can keep operating
wben
goes down. •
·
the Hams communicate on
what Is callC\1 a repeater, a loc~
frequency for active Hams. On this
frequency, Hams do not have to
request permission to talk on lhe
airways, said Null.
·.
"How can the National W~
Service in Huntington or
Cbirleston call if the phone lines
are down?; he added.
One reason some Hams can con-·
tinue ·to operate is their ability to
fuDi:iion on a 12 volt batt«y, The
Hams' equipment is ~ble and
not ded i!lto any lines, therc!fore the
•'
. ~ iJ not affected, he said. .
"'ur people are trained in. what
to loOk fur during severe weather,"
said Null. "It fives lhc weather ser'rice a chaneO to assess the condi- , CONTESr WINNER _ (:blldreu illd ·~
lions and illows for advance warn•
should be prepared iD the event ola tOnUido. St.
inas."
.Helen School (Daytoo) elgbtb &amp;rader Jamie
"There arc Hams scattered
J)iniuabqut the county," he ad!!ed.
.
·
how

::=.;:r&amp;:s.:mdC~ine

SUBURBAN
Loaded up with special
equipment.

.s ·evere weather ~~ason is just
beginning; how to prepare

Ohio school has one·
of highest radon -levers
elementary school in Heath, Ohio,

Section·B

March 21,1993

Rental car businesses droping risky ll;nder-25 d,rivers ·

pended if valid OL jRICIIted in 60
days; Charles Sm!lh, Reedsville, ....
13iiiS,.;,PioiiNoiiE-ST,;,;RiiiE;;.;ET-._ _ _ _ _ _4_4;,6-,;,253;;;;2..__ _ _~..,.;·G-Aiii.LLiiilii.POL.iiiiiliiiSii.'OHli i i li;iO. .
driving under the mnuence, $450 '

.

two men, at about the same time the
lolhe I880slherewcre seven salt
Kanawha salines near Charleston companies in Meip County: Pomwere found to be even better.
eroy Salt Company, Excelsior Salt
Saltcontinued to bemade in Gallia Company, Coal Ridge Salt Com- '
County fer another two or three pany, White R~ Salt Company.
decades by the Carel family. It is Great Bend Salt Ccmpeny, Buckeye
likely that Virgil Carel and his son Salt Company and the Syracuse Salt
Franklin were •ssoci•tr4alflfSt with Company. In the 1870s there were
F1etcher and Tupper and then suuck 13 salt companies in Meigs County.
off on their own. Some salt wasfllll\le
. It 10011: one ton of fuel to produce
alon&amp;.the Raccoon Creek in the early five barrels of salt .in Meigs County
days as well.
.
whereas in Michigan one ton of fuel
Ironically, when carl y Gallians could produce 15 barrels. of•salt
were boring for salt they found oil Hence Michigan salt soon drove the
and 118111111 gas which ruined the saiL Meigssaltoutofmany rnarlcets. Later
In the 186os wben the fi1Sl oif rigs competition came from huge salt
were put up in order to find oil, they mines found near Lake Erie.
Salt making near Charleston
.found brine.
· AccOrdiilg to recent geological ended just afletWorld War II with
maps, there is still a great quantity of Meigs salt beins. produced for four
salt in northern Gallia County, par- more decades. JJi contrast to the first
two decades of •Gallipolis history
• ticularly near Raccoon Creek.
·· In the time before the Civil War, when salt sold fo~ $4 a bushel, by·
most sail coming to Gallia County 1812 it was at62 l/2cents abusheL
came from Charleston; but after the In the 1830s it declined to 35 tents
Civil War until well into the 20th per bushel. It recovered to about the
century .most of the salt used by ' 70 cents level where it stayed for
Gallians came from Meigs County. some tir(le.
Sail..was first manufacwred at
Pomeroy in 1850. Meigs salt was
James Sands Is a special corre~igh in bromides and iodides as the
spondent ofthe Sunday 'flmes-Senbrines were high in tl1e'chloridcs of tiDel. His addrell8 Is: 65 Willow
lime and magnesia. ·
Drive, !Jpringboro OH 45066

wrdle

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=

A.

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eoiu••

Tiit&amp;Tu';

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CJ: ........ --., '.

�... ,.. . ... ............ . .
·-

...

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March 21,1993

,ag._B2-Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt-Gallipolis, OH---flolnt Pleasant,

wv

MR. and MRS. KENTON

GALLIPOLIS • Christy Lynn
Casto and Eric William Bamelle
were united in marriage Feb. 14 at
Elizabeth Chapel, Gallipolis, with
the Rev. Alfred Holley perfonning
the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Clyde and Brenda Casto of Gallipolis, and the granddaughter of
Gladys and Carroll Casto of
Cheshire, and James and Reva
Tt~nt of New Philadelpbia.
Tbe groom is the son of Ge«~e .
and Joaa Barneue of Gallipolis,
and the ~ of Mary Angel of
Gallipolis, and Mynle Barnette of
Point PleasanL
.
Tbe bride, given in marriage by
her parents, wore a floor length,
satin aown trimmed with lace
sculplllring in mermaid style. Tbe
gown was accented with a sweetbean neckline, irideacent beading,
and leg of muttoo sleeves.
Her bouquet consisted Of red
and white roses, iridescent babies
bRad!, and red and white love knot ·
ribbons. .
Matron of honor was T'l8 Cox,
who wore a tea length gown of red
talfeaa. Sbe carried 1 white lace fan
ICCCIIIted with white roses and red
MR. and MRS. ERIC (CHRISTY) BARNETIE
wild flowers. Flower girls were
Natasha Walker, daughter of the
Tbe couple.reside on Roc)cy Run
groom, and Lacey and Maranda cascading rose petals topped with a
Road, Gallipolis.
Bawneue, nieces of the groom. Each traditional bride and groom. "
wore d!ases of red and white. •
(SANDRA) DANIELS'
Best man was Ray Cox, friend
of the groom. Ringbearer was
Stephen Clark. cousin of the bride.
The
groom, best man, and ringbearfrom Hannan Trace High School,
.
er
each
wore black tuxedos.
Southcrton-Martz Beauty Academy
and Marshall University, where she
Ushers were Edward Barnette,
received an association de~. She brother of the groom, and 1&gt;aul
has been a Tupperwarc unat manag- Saia, friend of the bride and groom.
er/dealer for 14 years.
Music WM provided by Carol All·
The groom IS the son of Reva man and Jim Sisson.
Daniels of Columbus and the late
Kenneth Daniels. He graduated
. A reception followed at the ··
from Hannan Trace High School
horne
of George and Joan Bameue.
and is currently employed by
Servers
-were Brenda Barnette, sisNCR/AT&amp;T as vice president of
ter-in-law
of the groom, and Kelly
the southeast division. He has been
Taylor
and
Melissa Arbogast,
·employed with the company for 28 ·
cousins
of
the
groom.
years.
Tbe
heart-shaped
wedding cake
Tbe couple reside in Alpharetta,
was
a
three
tier
white
cake wijh
Ga.

~

ALPHARETTA, Ga. ·Sandra
Fulks and Kenton T. Daniels
; were united in matriage 'Feb. 13 it
:llhe Fifth Avenue Baptist Church,
Ffiuntington, W.Va., with the Rev.
_J?r. R. F. Smith officiating.
The bride was escorted by her
·brother, Ralph.
;., Matron of honor was Susan
,:Jay. Best man was Chuck Clay.
~usic was provided by Wanda
~Jean

~ose.

f

A reception was held in the
:thurch parlor witli Candy Taylor,
;J:athy Fulks, the bride's daughter,
;:1lunny ,BelviUe. and Janice Framp·
itOn assJSUng.
·; . The bride is the daughter of
th Belville of Gallipolis and the
,
Otha Belville. She graduated

POMEROY - Three pun:hases

eunion planned
~ CHARLESTON ,' .S.C. • The
~ational LSM . Associati~n will
~old ias fifth annual national
eunion i.n Charleston~ S.C .• Aug.
1-25 for all persons who serve4
n any LSM/LSMR type amphibius landing ship.
• For more information, including
:fplanned activities, hotel and activil).y reservations and costs, contact
~ichard Schatz, 66 Summer St.,
reenfield, Ma., 01301, or call
13) 774-2397, before June 21.

r

osby the land baron
• · SHELBURNE, Mass. (AP) $ill 'cosby and wife Camille are
~coming regular land barons in
i.1assachusetts.
Mrs. Cosby recently paid
t165,000 for about 154 acres of
woodland near where the family
..maintains a house in wesu:m Mas·
·
The Cosbys now own
~DOUl ·o~v acres in the area.
James Richardson, chairman of
Shelburne assessors. said FriMrs. Cosby bought the newest
of property, part of a now21eruncl ski resort, "to keep it from
developed."

,l

Cubs vs. Waverly··

MAI'~'il : 25

at Veterans Memorial Hospital at a

cost of $4,3)9 were approved
Tuesday when 1he Women's Auxil·
iary, t!Je hosjlilal's. volunteer.. &lt;qa·
nizatioln, met in the conference

room.

Durii)J. the meetil!g presided
over by'Labby Fisber,,~dent, the
group voted to pun:hase a small
copyang mach~ for use by business office emploYees at a price of
$2,100 plus $22S for a stand; a
wheel chair. It a price of $666, and
l•pcletccl patient charts at 11 price of
$1;3.78.
. Hospital Administrator Scott
Lucas met \vilh the group and discussed costS involved on 1he copy·
ing r~~aclliJle and ,the wheel chair.
Mr •• ~honda Dailey, RN, BSN,
director of nursing, disc\!SSed costs
involved in the purchase of new
patient charts. .

You never know. .
But, you can always ,
be sure.

.

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MARCH 22th·27th

I

I'

60" Muslin ..............................................~ .................. $1.79 yd.

FQf the finest lll!turai qulty, -

matchetl cranmanulp and
I!IW'IIIteed value, R.oek at Nl'el
memorlalllllnd alone.
Rock at . . . family aiemonala
llland for what peOple care to
remember.

LOGAN ' '·
MONUMENT
COMPANY INC.
MEIGS COUNTY .
. DISPLAYYARDNEAA
Por.EROY-MASON ali)QE
JAMES A. BUIH, lllgr•
PHONEII2-2111
, VINTON; OHIO
DISPLAY YARD
STATE AT. 180
JAMES A. BUIH, Mgr. ·
1'HONE311.

.Cheshire, Ohio
FREE REFRESHMENTS
BVBIIYONB WBUOD!

.a.

Baby Qullta ................................................................ $8.49
Selected Gathered Lace (Wed. only) ................. 4 yd1. $1.00

New Shipment of FtJbrk: frOm North Cai'DIIn11/

•

Mi{{-t£nd !Fa6rics
!

Pag1 113

overlays with accent bows. The
gowns of.the maid of honor and
'flower girl were teal while the
b~ide'smaids were dressed in
mauve. The attendants carried bouquets of teal, mauve and white
roses accen!ed with rjbbon, lace,
pearls and baby's breath. The flower girl earried a white wli:ker basket with white rose petals.
The groom was an a black tuxe- '
do with tailS He Wore a teal, mauve
and white rosebud boutonniere.
Roger Manley of Middleport
served ils'best man. Ushers were
Joh,nny RQush, Kevin Meadows·
$nd Tommy Roush, Middlepon,
and ChristQpher Smith, als.o of.
Middleport, was the' ring bearer.
The men wore black tuxedO waist
jackets. The ringbearcr was alsO in
a bl&amp;;k tuxedo. They all wore teal
and mauve rosebud bOutonnieres.
Miss Rebecca Ward registefel! the
guests and B~thany Boyles distributed rice bags.
.
A reception was held at the old
American Legion Hall. The bride's
table featured' a three tiered foun·
tain. ~tairways fro111 'the ca\ce the·
miniature attendants and groomsmen in colors of the wedding party.
cate over a fountain with stairways. The ca~e was topped with'
wh1te·doves highliglitcd with teal
and mauve.
Tile eouple toolc a wedding trip
to ·Pipestem Resort. They now
reside in Middleport. '

PATRlOT- Mr. and Mrs. ,Ted
Bailey or Patriot, announce the
· engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Christa Jo;
to Michael Douglas Wallcer. sdn of
Mr. and Mrs. Don Wallcer of Rio
Grande.
Miss Bailey is a 1989 graduate
of Southwestern High School and a
1992 graduate of the University of
.

'

Rio Grande Holzer College of
Nursing. She is employed at Riverside Methodist Hospital, C01umbus, and attends Otterllein College.
Mr. Walker is a 1989 graduate
of Southwestern High School .and
is employed at the Columb,us
Developmental Cenier, Columbus.
• Plans aie currently being made
for an op.en church wedding on
Aug, 21.

Revival slated
RUTLAND • Revival will be
held it the Rutliuad ~ B~
Church March 29 •through AprU 3.
Bob Sl.ewart will preach Marcil 29
and 30; Marvin Markham will
preach Match 31 agel April I; Rick
Weaver will PRBCh Afri12 IIIII 3.
Pasta' Paul taylor invatea the public.

•

Book ready for priJ.?,ter
GALLIJ'OI..IS • The Gallia tion of photographs taken in the
County Historical Society recently 1930s when most of the one-room
an.nounced that the manuscript for schools were consolidated. For
"Gallia County One-Room each Gallia County IOwnship, hun·
Schools: The Cradle Years," a local · dreds of former pupil and teacher
history. book, is·now at the· printer. names will be documented within
in Michigan. The new publication the ~XL
is expected to be available the last
Mrs. Jeap Freeman Houck of
part .i&gt;f April or around .May 1 for Studio Two Graphics in Gallipolis '
those :who ordered their copy dur- . has typeset the book and has .con- ·
ing the pre-publication sale.'
• tributed to the book's graphics and
The.h!lfdback limited edilion layouL
will contain 424 pages. The book
As soon as the book .js printed
was originally scheduled to consist and is shipped. the prc-publicatiO!.I ·
or 340 pages, but at least 80 pages sale orders will be mailed. ·Also
~r pertinent. '!&amp;ta was added, delay- notic.es of ~istributio~ timc.s and
m~ the wnung, typesettin~. and l.]ocations wall be published an the
pnnting ,processes, accordmg to ne~spaper for those to•pick up
society mem!1ers.
the1r·orders.
· .
.
The nc~ publication will ,not . 1,'he numbec of IJo&lt;?!cs pnnte4;1as
only contain history and'true sto~ ·hm,uc!l , For more anformauon
ries written by local contributOrs.,. about sal~s. ~ontact .the Gallia
but win atso include a.rai'e coliC!(· Cou.nty Hasto:"cll;l Socaety at P.O.
·
· · ,. .
•
Box 295. Oallipohs, 45631.

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, · GRID CONTRO~ . ~C .

WA5 100.00
5

szo·
o
o
NOW u

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ONE WEEK ONLY

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• Cer the f••linlf of /UniltiJ the_.,.,,, nery riiMyOUI' fool llribo

the lfNJUrul. The Crid Sy11em loll y011 peijorm lilut ,.._ before.

.. Sauco~y~
WE'RE IN THE SHOE BUSINESS, NOT SHOW BUSilfESS.

[iii]
'Mon.&amp;Fn.IIIP.M.
TUH., WIC(, Tllll'. IU P.M.

. .rom
•
•ha' ~ " " "
.
•
' - ·
th e wilderness far
By JULIA PRODIS .
u.,.ar aCCu:;- before," said
16-year-old
Hillary
Mariy
or those 1!(howenton the ·
Associated Press Writer
tomed comfort~. As the 'groups Stephenson, a sophomore at the annual wilderness e~pedition .l~t • - - - - - - - -...-~-~·S.•hlri!!""!dl,.;'f;.I.I&amp;•F!Io~
........
BLOOMFIELD HILLS, Mich. focused on sur.;!val, members ~Y exclusive Cranbrook Kingswood "!'~ C&lt;?me from wealthy ~amali7&gt;
·•
·• ,
- Before their.carnping trip, lhese t!ley learned some leSSOIIS 9f a life- Upper School. ~ow, "stuU like hxang an gra~d estates m thas
prep school students worried most- urn~.
.
.
wha! car you .~~ve !l&lt;Jesn1 seem u~s.cale DetrC?at suburb. Annual
ly about typical teen-ager stuff: . It ~med. lilce shopp1\lg• hav- that amponanL
. /'
, tu1Uon at the high school ranges up
cars clothes a date for the spring mg the nght clothes, maltang sure ,__ _'"!!"'_ _.;.;;;;;.....~-~r'to;.;;.$;;.;17-..;;,;;;..._;;__ _ __ ,
dan~e.
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you look .pe.rfec~ all the.time fl'lc!
·
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· Then the "storm of the centu- always lookang an the marror ... I
•
AND.
ry" hit, leaving them stranded in was more self ~ious &amp;bout that

~ I ~\'*

Butt Rolls (for rugs &amp; rag baskets) ......................... $1.79 pd.

Ba1·1·ey-uYVTalkef

.

A discussion was held on the
current fund raiser being held by
the vQiunteer organization ancf.that
is three good egg trees which have
been placed in the ~ospital lobby,
the 'cafeteria, and iii the skilled care
facility sun room·. Residents are
being invited to place the name of
thCir favorite "good eggs" on pasael
eggs which arc then used 10 !leco·
rate the trees.
_
Cost is $5 per name and so far
over seven dozen eggs have been
sold. Goal for the project is 19
dozen. Resi4ents may send their
money and names of "good eggs"
10 lhe Women's Auxiliary, liS E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
r~· group voted to remem~r
auxiliary members who arc hospit•lized or arc outpati~ts with flowers and Mrs . . Mildred Fry
announced the deadline for this
· spring's scholarship applications

Urban students learn lasting·:z,esson .from "ordeal '

. "' .,.-···"

Spool of Ribbon, re-g. 89¢·.................................... ~ •..•...• 21$1.00

.
CHRIST A BAILEY and MICHAEL WALKER

Smith-Roush

:.: MIDDELPORT- Conni~ L.
;: Smith, daughter of Mrs. Ruth
·::Smith 1\Dd the late ijomer Smith,
·:Pomeroy, and Torn Roush, son.of
:: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Roush,.
:· MiddleP.ort, were united in mar.
:: riag~ on ·Feb. 20.
·: The double. ring ceremony was
:: .performed at the Victory Baptist
: Church in Middleport with the Rev.
·: .Alan Blackwood officiating. The
• bride was escorted to the altar by
: her brotlier, Homer Smith Jr. ·
:: The bride wore a white satin
.. gown fashioned with a sweetheart
:: neckline. The bodice was enhanced
•: .with iridescent sequins and seed
:: pearls and the bouffant skirt fe~­
.: lured a five fold pouffe bow at the
'· back. The cathedral train was
: adorned wilh alencon lace which
: was accented , with iridescent
:: sequins and seed peails. The bride'
'· wore a pearl crown accented wilh
:: seed pearls and lily of the valley
· ·: with a waist length veil. The liride
:: carried a cascade bouquet of teal,
:• mauve; and ro~s complimented
. ;: with ribbon, ·lace, pearls, and
· •: baby:s breath.
·
~ ' Tile maid of honor was Diana
Shutt of Maryland. Bridesmaids
were Vickie McKinney and'Trish
Roush, both of Middleport, and lhe
junior bridesmaids were Patricia
Smith, P~y. and Jessica Shutt,
Mary Ian~.' The nower girl was
Che!Sda Mapley, Middleport;
The attendants wore tea length
dresses with bodices featuring lace

Children's Prlnts ............................................ ~•• flat ·fold $2.25

2" Pleated Velvet Trim ........................................ &amp; yds. $1.00

MR. and M~S. TOM (CONNIE) ROUSH

...
•
,..

45" Broadcloth, reg. $2.19 yd .....................u .......... $1.79 yd.
45" S.leeted Calicos, reg. $2.09-$3.98 ................. Sale $1.98
Quilted Fabric, Curtain Lace, Duat Rutftea ............ $3.10 pd.
.90" Quilt Lining (colora, white &amp; naturel) .................... $3.79
90" Decorator Fabrlcs .................................... $3.99-$4.11 yd.
Pouf Valances ......:.................................................... $1.60 ea. ·

Eyelet Lace ...........................................................2 yds. $1 ~00

.

·· ~ ''

- 12:00 ·N·oon'

Sentinel

for April 1. Appl.icarim• may be
·picked up in the hospilll lobby.
Scholarships which lii'C awU'ded
arc in medically·rclated faelda of
study.
.
A bake aale was IIIIIOtiiiCed for
April. 9 in tlie hOspitAl lo6by IIICI a
jewelry we for April 30 from 7
a.m. 10 4 p.m. in the hospital conference room.
'
Sample of Easter haskell to be
prepared for JeSidenll rl dte bollpital' s skilled nursing facility we~e
displayed by Mrs. Jeuie White
who was authorized by thO group 10
secure wrapPed trcali for tbe .bukets. Volunteer. Week was
announced flir AprU 26-May 2 aad
Mrs. Dailey 8llliOUliCed lhat a a or
luncheon is being planDCJd 10 hoaor
the volunteers of the ·hospital and
its skilled nursing .facilily 011 April
29. Thanks were eatcnded to
Becky Mankirl and Vinu Lee for
candy provided by them for 11\10
fancy Easter baskets beiiiJ PJC·
pared l&gt;y the Auxiliary. ·Cardssigned by those aueading 10 be sent
to Mrs. Louise Bearha and Mrs.
CarrieKeruxdy. ·
•
There was a white cleplmt laic
and refrcshments·eanyillg out a SL
Patrick's Day theme wero aerved
from a table also ClriyinJ oat tbat
theme.

10 help ill IICVcral areas of eodeavor

OREGON (AP) - A woman
has been accused rJ sttaling $2,361
.worth of Kool-Aid 10 get money to .
buy drugs, police said Friday. '
Sarah Cbavola, 28, of Romulus.
Mich .. has been c:harge4 with robbery. A trial date· has not been
scheduled.
If convicted. Ms. Olav~ could
be sentenced to IS years in prison
and fmed $7,500.
.
She was bein~ held Friday It the
Lucas County jail in Toledo.
·
Police said Ms. Chavois put
8,433 packets of Kooi·Aid in a
shopping cart 11 a lCroger store in
this Toledo suburb 011 March 11.
Tbey say she then wbeeled the cart
intO the parking lot and put the
. paCkets in her pic:lrup truc:t: .
SeveraJ.employees ran into the
parking lot after her. When she saw
them, she pushed the empty cart at
them, police said.
.
Store manager Rick R!lSh
jumped on the hood of Ms.
Chavois' truck to avoid thei cart.

EIHIBITibN·..
BASKETBAll ·GAME

GRAND·. RE-OPENING
.
.
SALE!

Sunday Times

Kool Aid bandit
stole to support
her drZfg habit

GUIDING HAND
SCHOOL/GALLCO INDUSTRIES
ANNOUNCES

•

YMH Auxiliary approves·:
purchases to help facility :

Fulks-Daniels

.,
.,

.

"

Po":Jeroy.....-Middleport-;-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

March 21, 1193

CastoBarnette

..

,

RARE COIN

270 MILL STREET . ,
MIDDLEPORT, 01:1. 992·3673
MON.-fRI. 9:30-5:00; SAT. 9:30-11:30

JEWE~RY
.

MICHAEL VANCE

PI"~IST &amp; EVANGEUST .
OF COLUMBUS, OHIO
WILL MINISTER AT

...
•
r

.

. .

•

11,;00 A.M. &amp; &amp; 7;00 P.M.- MARCH 14, 1993
AT LIVING 'WORD MINISTRIES ..
,,

-SHOW

TODAY 9:30·4:00
HOLIDAY INN, IANAUGA

, Main and First Streets
•
(First building behind Twln·TQwers)
Pelnt Pleajlant, WV•.

.

FEATURING:

.MIS ,COIN COMPANY__- ..:..·-..1....
....
I

SHOP AT MASON FURNITURE.:.
SAVE ON ALL YOUR FURNITURE

AtrfEt.~tL~~~EG~Ii~~~S I

BUY NOW • NO PAYMENTS TILL JUNEI
DARK PINE FINISH
7 PIECE DINEnE
6 ALL WOOD CHAIRS
36"x48"d0" TABLE

*349.00

~ll'f'l

fiUF IRIIIOIMf
IAMilf IIUIJII

MAS·ON FURNITURE CO.
2ND mEET

(304) 773·5592

.

MASON, WV

.·-

.

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'

·SILVER DOLLARS

With Bank One Electronic Tax Filing,"' you'll have"your refund cheh back weeks
earlier. Your completed return will be electronically processed and ~ntfaster than ifyou had

,.

filed by mail. Ifyou choose to direct deposit your refund il)to your Bank One chllCking or
savings account. you can sa~eeven more time. It's that easy. ,

11 Ohio Rlvefi Plaza
between·Hills &amp; Big lear ·

Need the money in a matter of days? Bank One has the Refund Anticipation Loan:•

446·SAMS

When your Bank One Electronic Tax Filing is confinned by the IRS. we'll advance you .the

) .· FEATURING BUYS·OR~ JEWELRY" : .· ~
(

Houro: Mon.Fri. 11·11; Set. 11-' • SundiiV 12~5 '
.
-NO APPOINTMENTJUST DA&lt;iP IN AT ~OUR CONVENIENCE

full amount of your refuiid, from $300 to $3,300.1ess a small ~ing fee.

.

To learn mo~. come into Bank One today or call1·800·395-0070' for a free brochure
'
on all Bank One's tax relief options to help you with your taxes this yeai and nelrt. 'We'll see

PBOOFS~TS

'GOLD CODfs -:·

'

A~tic8anfs•.
'8C the 01181&amp;&amp;111 Family l-larcuners ~

•
'
'

-BANKEONE.·

*59.00

-

ACQUISITIONS FINE JEWELRY
'

•

=

Membert1JIC

GOLD CHAINS!II

filCQ.UISirfi09{S .

n:~;;~~~~:"-62 4~~~·

Whatever it takes:

Ooseouts and One·of-a·Kiad lt•s

, ..

![PJ{f£ Jf£WEL~ .

••
C1993 BANC ONE CORPORATION Loans SOOJeCllo credit approval. ·Monday·Frlday 8 am -S pm. EST. Sa1urelay 9 Bm. ~ 3 p.m EST
~.

,f

~,

'

•' I

•

·~·Mrrs ·co!i[co!MPMV;r .

SPECIAL

•

~:

· ,u•ArAJIA Hlffll

---------------,
P.IRM PL.US

ifwe can't make tax ~n a lot more fun. Well. almost fun anyway.

DISTRESSED MAPLE FINSHI

._..,...

OF GALLIPOLIS

::

•

-,

�B4 Sunday Times · SenUnel

Port I O.J ' 1 ' 5 I I

a'

.

Mwch21,~1~ft~3~~~~~==========~======~P~o~m~e~r~ov~~~~d;d~l~~~rt~G~m~l;lpo~lls~,~OH;;;P~o;l~nt~P~Ie~a~sa~nt~,;wv~~~~========~s~u;nd;a~y=TI=m==es===Se=n=ti=M=I==P=a~g=e==B=S

-~ Pul&amp;ll Pllctl'rlt, WV

Gallia County calendar of events
'

Suociay, March 2.1
CENTENARY • The Centenary
United Christian Church will .fea·
ture the Sunshine Singers ar 7 p.m.
•
•

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/

CHESHIRE '. Revival at
Cheshire Baptist Clurch March 21·
26 at 7 f..m , Evangelist Rev. John
Caldwel . Everyone welcome.
SYRACUSE -' Born Again
Believers will be singing at Asbury
Methodist Church at II a.m.

7

.·.

..

i.,, .,

HMC sets
memorial
for patients

MR. and MRS. BENJAMIN BUNCH '

'·

Couple celebrates 59 years
-·
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DONIA CRANE and

JAM~

CO'ITON

·Crane-Cotton

.

.
MIDDLEPORT· Mr. and Mrs.
· , William Crane, Middleport,
: announce the engagement and
::. approaching marriage of their
-~ daughter, Donia Rene', to James
:- Franklin Cotton, son of Mr. and
-: Mrs. Larry Schultz and Mr. and
·: Mrs. Frank Cotton, both of Wash·
• ington.
The bride-elect is a 1987 gradu:, ate of Meigs High School and 'is

..·'

currently employed at Mcbonald's
ofPomeroy.
.
. Cotton is • 1984 graduate of
Kennedy High School anct is currently Sttving in the U.S.l\lavy as a
machinist mate stationed in Pearl
Harbor, Hawaii..
An open church wedding is
planned for Sa!urday, Apri117 Ill 6 •
p.m. at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Clurch. '
. ..

Open house will observe
couple's 50th anniversary
~ _, Ms:. Winebrenner are

dleJIIIICIUSaf 6chHdren, Bob
NEW YORK (AP) - Adolfo,
-.: I
a&amp; Millwood, 'W.Va., whose f;jS)Iions have ~ Nancy
llld:....
eli •Racine, Pp1 Reagan and Betsy Bloomin&amp;dale, is
Wi h'IJII&amp;r d
Columbus, . calling it quits on designing to cons
Faa oli ·Sunbury, Ruth centrate on his liccnslnj! bUsiness.
Slliil af Jtrii!e~llld sandy HyscU
He said he'IL.miss hiS clieniS. .
Glfll'4\llepull.
.
"Ther became like part of my
'Jky :liE 111m lilt grandpareniS family,' Adolfo said in Friday's
ar 11 pucl'c.ifdmen: Bobby, New· YIJ'k Tunes. "I never Social·
B ''· _. T - y Winebrenner, ized with them - !don't go to pal:·
SllciJr W"liliidliCallcr, Dawn•and ties - but I did enjoy very much
K'a!)lla Filial'. Eillily; ·Samuel, and the confidence and trust and help
liC'.J! • • l!llpjq, llld! Amy and Brit· they always gave me."
.
The 60-year-old, Cuban-born
are cor- Adolfo Sardina, who has never
.-., i&amp;iiuiiiD IIIICDd lhe eelebra- used his family name professionally, licenses his name for royalties
to manufacturers of men's wear,
lu"jlg'e, handbags, shoes, jogging
SUitS, f.US, sponswear, pcrlume and
hats.
I

...

...

Buckingham Palace wQuldn't
conrmn or deny a repon Friday In
the Daily Express that the princess ·
app&amp;!UII!yis II'CaraUlL
.
The writer of the'llbloid stOry,
columnist Ross Benson, said he
based the observation on circumstantial evidence.

Wedding
.· policy

=-t~:alfiieods

the Nation• ONJ
bus, wll=lll:-

GLENN EVANS aDd DIANA REES

. Rees-Evans
,, COLUMBUS • Mr. and Mrs:
~·George Rees. of Columbus
~ nnounce the engagement and
~pcoming marriage of their daugh·
•-ter Diana Carol, to Glenn Alan
~v~ns, son of Verna Evans of
::J}rove City and the late J. Roben
"Iiivans.
~ Miss Rces is a 1986 graduate of .
·:f.lorthside Christian School and
:ieceived a bachelor's degree from
:;teritage Baptist Univenil)', Green·

wood,-lnd., in 1992.
Mr. Evans is a 1980 gradWIIe of
GaUia Academy Hi'b School and
received an aSSOCiation degree
from the Colle~e of the Redwoods
in Eurelca, Calif.• in 1987. He is a
Navy veteran and service techni·
cian ror Swt TV.
The wedding will be held Ajd
3 at Columbus Baptist Temple in
Columbus.

•.

_,..~

...,.

1
IMIL_.-._u•a • _._,..,. .......

b
d
50th ann.iverSflr\'1
0 serve
_, J
"D1cy - *' JIIRDIS of three
Ri~~!~=:.s -.:;,·.~~ c:tiloiln:ol. lOJCC: llic bards or
-

'

Flit.. Sc Anlt Tbackcr
lis, •oblen'Cd doo:i&amp;' :!i1llllo ~ r af
('l!
'
_ . Kn'ltlh EogiDe
anniveraay Man:lo 6. 'IIIeynq alsothave four
4Jl&amp;rricd MaJdo 6, 1943 ia Glf Sp
a+Pl'
Pomeroy.
c

. REDWOOD CITY: Calif. (AP)
- John McEnroe agreed to pay an
airline worker an undisclosed sum
to settle her lawsuit 'claiming he
shoved her against a wall when she
rerused to hold a flight for him and
his fainily.
Diane Lempke was "pleased
and relieved" by the agreement
reached Wednesday, said her
lawyer, Tom LaLanne.
Lempke, a customer service repr
resenlalive for United Airlines, said
in her Superior Court lawsuit that
the tennis player grew angry when
she rerusett to hold a Hawaii-bound
flight until McEnroe's wife,.Tallim
O'Neal, tbeil two children and their
nanny arrived at the gate.
Lempte said she suffered a bfOr
ken finger in the December 1990
111Cket at San Francisco Iruemational Airport. McEQroe was questioned by airport police but not
arrested. .
1udge Gene ~cDonald Dfl!ered
the terms of the, agreement to
remain confidential
LONDON (AP) - Princess
Anne may or may not be qxpecting

a baby.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason coUnties u news and a
happy to publish· wedding stories
and pl)otographs without charge.
However, wedding news musl
meet general standards of timeli' •
ness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accouniS of weddings as
soon as ~ble after the evcnl
To be pUblished in tile SundaY.
edition, the 'weddinj must havo
taken place within 60 dllys prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in Jength. Material for
Along the River must be received .
by the editorial department by :
Thursday, 4 p.m .. prior to the date
of publication.
·'
Those not makipg the 60 day •
deadline wiU be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
· Photographs or either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published y,:ith wedding stories if
desired. PhOtogr&amp;pbs may be either
black and white or good quality ·
color;billfold size or larger.
Poor q1181ity photographs will
not lie accepted. Generally, snapo
shots or instant-developing photos
· are not of acceptable qualit.y.
•'.
Questions may be directed 10 the
editorial department from 1-S p.m.
Monday through Friday at 446: ·
2342.

B JIM sTRADER
~ ~iated Press Writer
. PITTSBURGH . - Even as
James McMurtry tunes his guitar
iind checks his microphone, his
¢ynicism shows.
· "Give us this day hors d'oeuin bed,' • rises out of his .deep
texas mumble, '' as we forgive·
those who have dressed up against
us."
Clever details, peppered with
sarcasm, fill the songs McMuruy
P.(aycd on a tour promoting his second folk-rock album, "Candy. l~d. ..
.
.
• The tour - 30 dates on seven
..ffi:ks half as Joan Bac:Z's opening
a'ct ....:. is part of the business
McMurtry chose. But that doesn't
racan he has to like iL
• "You forget that you're in a dif·
ft.ent town and ~ don't tno:w
~u just drove SIX hours,'' he llid
sbon after a trip from Philadelphia.
"It's not apparent by lookins at
u that you drol1e siz or 12 ,or
wever many hours, aqd so you re
already mad at 'em before you
meet 'em.
"That leads to irnotional behaviar on my part,'' he said.
.
, His departure from reason th11
night - at least aU thai wu apparem _ wu limited to the way he
introduced himself 10 the audience.

ires

r.::

' "I'm lames Mcl&gt;1urtry and I'm that •-A•
- fii 6o r • •. . Ill:
,.._ to .running for president," he dead- said. "lt •makn.._._,.,..
way."
panned.
s~...-~
'ly
McM~'s SOD$1 often tell lhe
tales of solitary losers and lonely to the ·son cit lbcst.w T• ....., liM
outcasts. One is 1ohnny, 1 former A Larry McMudl)', lililllu a&amp; ""UaoDstudent who won trophies and girls some Jl)o¥e"" m '"De Lam fliveasily but got lost on the way to his ture Show."
30s. Anqther is an old man watch"I make Rldfq~.iWiiiiiiJ. "il31111C
ing afrcrnoon shadows crawl across that's what lllh 'ilml:":s .... _
his floor, remembering his days as ing is." be &lt;aid. ""Nr flllott sa,s
an Old West bandiL
the same tdld.J*-IIiis--..
There's a weary, no-nonsense People 'Ire .alw.-ys !It • • z . . al
storekeeper who fires a teen-age
clerk who can't pay hisbilll or
keep his DOrgood frienda from !oi·
terin~ on the.stoop.
L1fe is not sweet in "Candy-

.co, s,.d.,_

land."

. ',, $14

......

.

TAWNE-YSTUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
GALUPOUS

all.

.!""" ~ords .- theh
• .oo .:.ong 1n t e
r
llllh l1linl on the
....,.. MIIMIItJ is aat 111 318 and he

{) 2
..,.,.. -

-

7

...

-

il.

I

•Eieclrellic .... ......_
•Direct
ef ...... Cleek

"I write a lot of cynical kind of ·
stuff, 'cause it's easier to ~r.e lhat
hr~ppa•do6.!llli._IIZ m.smc~.aand
way. Peoplo believe it," McMuruy
tbusioes5&amp;axppftllz-a4llil"• ...li.il&amp;-rerecall
said between slpa from a can of
beer. "~ fll' U the wasted chmcr ,
ters, that just happens to be the
ldndcipeopleimakcup."
McMullry, now 31 witb a dural
or so years writing music behind
him, dismiuea the 111
• that
hil own life is the ~Y of
736 SeCOildAW..
PI; II&amp;, Olio 45131
lhe songs. Maybe a snatch here and
(8141....-rJ
there about somebody he knows, or ,
a friend of a friend, but nothins
Open :MW 2 7 sa.E a- 5 ... 9lluldlltby

'Lynn E. AngeR
a

penonal.

"Every now and then I COiilc up
with a secondhand story, but even
J

'

• 2·5x7
95

''1'~-~
Ho:am
PI
we zof_.~~illl.gduare the
.... ,_a u-.IIUISlC In I try,
Jklhm)' said.. Wllat's not so
ojlijillk 1!1 tim&gt; is&gt; the business

•

Hyou are planning a wedding,
then you should come see us at
Huklns·Tanner.
You will have over 19~ 1tylel of
1UUdot to choou frorTL We have a
• large Hlectlon of the lateatllylal
and corr.,llmll\lary IICCIIIorila for ,
lhll apeclal occasion.

'

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

c,.u.wr-

'

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All M_erchandise Is On Sale. We Must
Sell %Of ()ur Inventory This Weekendl
'

LELED
DISPERSAL

Free Deli"ert
free Set·IIP

~·

lllbmlllloalllld wu aum,

aendy ltliJi used to Include r. ill
tho workihop, accordlDJ to Dr.
Arlie Pllck, aiiDCillo
ol
EnlliaiiiiiUo Ollllde and IJIOIIIDr
of ihe IJipa Tau Delta clla&amp;ll«.
' "OlD&amp; bu been hiJhly honored
since,llle ii'CG~DJIOI!ns' with honor
studenta from cotlcses 8CfOII the
eastern UnliOd Swes." Peck said.
"1110 Rio Grande community and
alumni aho11ld bo proud of her,

'

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pro_.

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fl

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SUNDAY-10 BIG HOURS
NOON 'TIL 10 P.M.
6MONTHS
, FREE
FINANCING .
(Witlt Approved

'·

(redlt)

·.

.

.

PURCHASES MUST BE PAID BY CASH, PERSONAL CHECKS, VISA, MASTER CARD,AND .ON
· . ACCEPTABLE CREDIT':APPUCATIONS. EMPIRE
WILL DEUVER AND'SET
UP FOR FREE.
.
I
'

HOU.R
,.

/o OFF

0

UP

SILE

'

TO

) BEST·

12 O'CLOCK
.NOON 'TIL
10 P.M
• ..
'

~·-

'

ENTIRE INVENTORY OF QUALIT¥ FURNITURE MARKED .DOWN!!!
.

.
.Bassett, Flexsteel, Kincaid, Lla1 Jsmso.-, ·
.

·.:mplre FumHu,.. hu .DV*' 15. Secttonala In
atock, 100 l.lvlng Room
In atoclt, over
100 RecRnera, over 40 Beclftlom ~Ilea, over
50 DlnettM, plus much, much -an In
atOc:k plus En\plre will Specllol Ord!N' at Sale
.Prices.
·'

.

su""

'

.
. Restonic, Entland, Spring Air,
Smith Brothers, Stewart.
.,
••
•
..
EMPIRE'S
STATEMENT
OF
FACTS:
~.,

Back Supporter Mattre~s Sets
By Spring Air- f1l Size SettOnly

CISB

(With Approved Credit)

Bassett Dining Room
Ught pine flnlah, 1 arrn l 5 aide ladder back
chal,.., table 1-leaf, elde board, hutch.
·

NOT $3799.95 SET .

SUNDAY

$

.

988

88

Twin Mattress
On-Matchllg Foutdatlon
FirII
Sold In S.l1 Only ·

SOFTSIDERV

Weterbed quMn alze, tu~ aty~e fral'lllllncluded. '
NOT S889.15.......................... SUNDAY 1444.44

Amol,. type, oak flillah by Baaaett.
NOT $1399.85

54995 Ide.

SUNDAY .

ssasu'

SUNDAY :

88
5
SUNDAY 988

,Sofa • Loveseat
Pale green velvet, Traditional curved tuhed
back.

NOT $1399.95

.

.

s88

SUNDAY $

~

88

•
3 PIECE TABLE SET
Brall and glaa.

All3 Plec•

NOT $34US..................... SUNDAY '155,55
ROLL TOP DESK Oa~ FI1JIIIh

NOT $398.85..................... SUNDAY *188.88

NOT $349.95 ..................... SUNDAY *168.88

CHAISE LOVESEAT RECLINER.

FLEXSTEEL SOFA

BluL
Ruat and beige ltrlpl. "
NOt $1889.95 .................:..suNDAY '644.44 ·NOT $16DUS ...............~...SUNDAY

.

.

•m.77

.DROPLEAF TA,BLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS

ou flnllh.

t.ar '-·• _. . _.suNDAY '399,95

. W' CHERRY FINI.H HUTCH
' • NOT . . . .IS ......:.iUNOAY'1188.88

Wall type Colonial, tNI plljd.

NOT $8811.85 .............. SUNDAY '388.88

QUEEN SIZE MAn'RESS SET

.•.,~·''i

KING SIZE
MAmEsssn

1•2

. Pho11• ·••6,1.05
Gellillelie

il
I

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C4.114 A•e.

NOT $451.111 Set ...SUNDAY '199.95 Set

,,

HOT S2199.95StT

.

SOlid wOod,

FLEXSTEEL REC~INI;R

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Oak Traditional by ~aett. Headboard,
dreaaer, mlri'Qr,cheet, night Ulble.

O.kflnleh. ·
• ~·NOT 17V8.95 .......-SUNDAY.'422,22.

,

SOFA, LOVES EAT,· CHAIR
Blue country. . •
NOT $14811.15 ........ ,.SUNDAY '699.~5

'

NOST,ALGIC C~W FOOT TABLE
4 prHa back chel....
1
. NOT $1299.95....... :.~ ........ s_ui•IDAY $688;88
TABLE l 4 CHAIRS Pine Finish

TABLE·&amp; 6 CHAIRS

.I

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5 Piece Bedroom
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t1788

Looae pillow back overalzed, mauva, beige,
blue, g~Mn. ·
NOT $1799.95·........................ SUNDAY '777, 77

,

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ANAL D/t.Y SUNDAY?

...proved creel!).

SWIVEL ROCKERS
5 Piece Sectional ·
NOT $499.95..........SUNDAY $248.88 lncludM 2 -Hnlng onda,
• SECTIONALW/RECLINER
:.:~ .~:,'"::~~~
NOT $1799.96.........SUNDAY $899.95 ' =.:-~INI, beige, fully
Flexsteel Reellner, Chaise
No ...- •
•
88
t_...
. Swivel Glider wnumtiar
_,.
SUNDAY
,
NOT$999: !~........... SUNOAY $488.•88 .__ _ _. _ _..

SOFA CHAIR, OTTO,MAN

Entertainment 1Center .

LA~T AND

·· We muat move 1111 111tlre floor of furniture
to do roof repelr · and atart 'our
remodeling. Empire muot. oell furniture
thio weekend. Wa will deal wtiara we can
eo coma on In and ... Skip, Mitch, Bav,
Kim and lhl! rut and get your beat dell • ·
wllh Free Delivery, FrM Set Up. and 8
Monlha s.,. At Caah Financing (with

MON-TIS
· SAMBAS

s488' 88 Set

SUNDAY

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NAME BRANDS TO BE SOLD ON TH!S LAST DAY,.,

All..a.-..11,"
.accom..--

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Empire wll mak, up the ~ifference.
We're preparing, but will be open.
We have to dear the second fiOOf,

RIO GRANDE- A·Universit.y ,
· of Rio Grande student has beeq
aSked to make two ~tations at
next month's ann~ Conference of
the Eastern Region· of Sigma Tau
Delta, the international English
honors societ.y.
Gina Pellcgrino-Pines of
Pomeroy, wh&lt;i is president' of the
~io Grande Alpha Alpha Lambda
chap.ter oi'Sigma Tau Della and of .
the University Honors Program,
will make the presentaiions April
IS-18 when the conference is held
in Boston, Mass. 'I
Pines will present a paper on
"Emily Dickinson: Poetry as Control," a selectioa from her senior
thesis in the Honors Program. In
addition, she will also read from
her poetry Cl!llecUon, Back from
the Glpjl] /sit, published last year
·and available through Alcove
Books in Gallipolis. 1
PiiiCIJ has llso been selected 10
panlcipale in • workshop conducted by. Bdward Alboo, Pul.tlzer
Prtze..wkllling author 11 sudl play_!
as Whll11JraJd tfVIrBltt/4 YIDol[l ·.
and Tu tAo· Slor'J. Albee road

·oLiJ~I! ·

Balladeer offers a cynical slil;e of life in Texas
•'

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GALLIPOLIS • Support group
GALLIPOLIS • Dean Warner
for
divorced persons, 7:30 p.m. at
will be preaching at Mina Chapel
·
New
Life Luth.eran Church, SR
Church, Neighborhood Rd. at 7
f
60.
For
more information call
p.m.
446-3808 or 446-4889. Fre~
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Greene babysitting provided. ·
Kitchen will be speaking at CalGALLIPOLIS • Narcotics
vary Christian Center at6 p.m.
Anonymous Just For Today Group·
meeting, 7 p.m. at Grace United
Monday, March 22
GALLIPOLIS - The board of Methodist Church . . Use Cedar
·
park commissioners of the 0.0. . Street entrance. .

.,

Rio student
set to make
presentation

~--~~--~~~.~~ .
81118UIYOUI

POINT PLEASANT· Narcotics
Anonymous Tri County Group
meeting, 7:30 p.m., at 611 'Viand
Street. Usc side entrance, base·
menL

·,1

NOT$1299.95 SET

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GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County
Vcterans As~iation meeting at
the. American Legion Hall, 7:30
p.m. Refresbmen!S will be served.

THE SNOW PUT EMPIRE FURNITURE IN A BIND .

mean-

-Names in the News____;,·:

Mcintyre Park District will hold
their regular monthly meeting at
S:30 p.m. at427 First Ave.

.

GALLJPOLIS • A patient
memorial service will be h~ld at the
Holzer Medical Center on Sunday,
March 28, at 2 p.m., either iii the
chapel or the French Five Hundnld
Room depending upon thi: number
attending, according to the Rev.
.Arthur C. LUJll). director of chap·
laincyservices.
.
The committee planning the service with Rev. Lund points out that
in an effort to do something
ingfuCror the families, the patltnt
" memorial service ia being planned.
It is designed to loonor persons who
have died at the 'Holzer Medical
Center.
,
·· The staff is always acelring ways
to care personally for famili.cs of
the patients. The servocc w1ll be
bOth lnspiraliooal ~ uplifting, litiltizing scripture, special music. and
prayer, to give comfort and
. strength following. the loss of a
loved one; acc~Xding to committee
members.
•
' Invitations have been sent to
r!linilics who lost a family member
at the hospital during !he months of
November 1992 throul!h March 14,
1993. However, any family members or friends of a patient who
died before that time, or after
March 14, is invited. Hospital staff
oilcmlicn who have 1oat a loved one
·. in their familienre also being
Invited to the service.
·It is requested that persons
wanting more information or those
planning to attend the memorial
service, who may not have received
·a letter ofinvitation, to call tloe
chaplain's office. at 446r50S3 by
TtourSday, March 25. Persons planning 10 aucnd will need to indicate
the expecled 11umbtr of family
members or frienda attending.
Chaplain Lund added, "This
·will be lhe second patient memorial
service the hospital lias held and it
is our desire tliat the service and
fellowship IOgcthcr will stmoglhen
our hope fOr toda and-tOmorrow."
Immediately rcll!lwiniJ the serf
vice there will be a time for persons in auendance lb visit togetl!er,
share in conversation and enjoy
.refreshments.

KERR - Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Bunch, Lisa Mitchell, and the late
F. Bunch of Kerr, celebrated lheil Carol Bunch. They also have· six ·
50th wedding anniversary March grandchildrell.
Mrs.
Bunch
retired
from
the!
•
17. They were married Man:h 17,
Urbana
School
System.
·
•
1943 in JunclionCit.y, Kan.
Mr. Buncll retired from the' .
They arc the parents of four
children; Myra Couts, Stephen Urbima Polic!e Department and :
·
O'Connor's Son Inc.. Urbana.

GALLIPOLIS • The public is
invited to the 41st anniversary of ·
Triedstone Blll'tist Clurch at 311.m.
The Rev. Rc&amp;ino~Jd HiU of Anuoch
Baptist Church, Huntington,
W.Va., will be giving the aflemoon
message. Dinner will be served following the morning worship ser.
vice.
,
•

RIO GRANDE _· Special service
at Calvary Baptist Church "Christ
CENTENARY
Glenn
in the Passover," at 10:30 a.m. Matthews will be preaching and the
Harold Silverman of the Beth Mes- Sisson Family will be singing dursiah Congregation will be the guest ing a revival at Elizabeth Chapel
speaker, speaking on the link . Church, SR 218,at7 p.m.
between the Ancient 1ewish Ceremony of Sedar, Jesus' Last Supper.
RIO GRANDE • $Jl!'lng revival
Freewill offering.
meeting March 21-26 at Trinity

PLANS Fll!iALIZED Details for the patient memorial service
to be held at Holzer Medicil Center March 28, wei'~ recently rmatlzed by members .ol tbe planning committee, (l·r), Nancy Smith, ·
patient representadYe; Pam Wltbrow-DoyYilk, stair nurse; Kathy
Kemper, chief recepdonlst; and Rev. Arthur C. Lund, director or
chaplaloc1 services. Nt!t pictured are committee members Dr.
Oscar Clarke, president ol the medical stair and Marianne Camp·
!Jell, director ol community relations.

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Baptist -Church. Sunday momi !I
GALLIPOLIS • Born Again services at 10:30 a.m., evening ser·
Believers will be singing at Bailey vices at 6 p.m. Monday through
Chapel Church, 7 p.m.
Friday at 7 p.m.

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant,

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March 21,1993

EHSBand
'superiqr_'

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

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EAST M&amp;GS - The Eastern :
Band was awarded a "SUJ.ICI!ior" Ill·
ing wbell,the ~ p8111cipaled in :
the OMEA DISirict 17 Band Col\· :
· test held rec:cnlly at Athens High
School..
•.
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Each of the tluec·judgcs award·
ed the group a superior rating arid a:
standing ovation.was m:ei~ed from :
the crowd.
"
· · ·
Music played by tlie,band was:
"Cenotaph" a fanfare , by Jack ;
Stamp, "Cajun Folk Songs" by ·
Franl&lt;Tichell and "Nathan Hate :
Trilogy" by James Curnow.
;
. Following its stage perfor- •
mance, Eastern went 10 the sight· .
reading room where the band:
played without prior practice a •
composition never before seen. The ; _
sight-reading ju&lt;!g~ also awarc!qd : .·
Eastern a superior rating. In the '
blizzard shortened contest, Eastern:
was the only band to receive a ;
superior rating from each judge.
•
.Upcoming events for the concen .
band include a nip 10 WashingiOn, i
D.C. on April15-17 10 participate •
in a National Concen Contest, and ;
the 0¥EA State Band Contest on :
April 23. Recently, the band was 1
selected 10 perform for the state ,
. d_epartmenl of education's annual ~
conference in Columbus on ;
. DPPF
May 5.
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The band consists of 41 mcm- •
bers undCJ the direction of William •
R. Hall.
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;·Never •Y ~.."
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seem just a little
These wQJdl of' wisdom were to make siuing
a trifle
sed 10
b uncomfonable and I do that .a lot,
pas
011. me many yean 8jiO Y don't yo\1'. Come to think about it.
my elders,
bUtdid I pay any altell·
tion1 Naw. After all, !hey were maybe it's the.body that~ s stiff and
old. What did they know? . ·
not the jeans at all;
So over the lifetime saying
My advisors do tell me, ho-.yev"never" has stuck .with me like er, that lots of washings will soften.
glue. I will admil I've found it a the jean fabric. Not Qnly that but
pretty difficult word to ·swanow as just think. Maybe the washings
.h
hd
·
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·
will create.some holes in the jeans
.I ave a 10 qutte 8 .ew umes, so that ! .will be able to make a
especially when it's covered with
·
1
really cool.fashion slalement On
g ~N vet'
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'th the other hand rna )'be my third pair
c
was gomg strong WI
will have them already builf in. I
me some 25 yCIIIII ago when jeans
came on like gang~ 115 a fash· understand that's good, too.
ion slatcment Fashion.il!ans with
~ho~ it's .okay, before I go sit
SUPERDANCE DONATION- ne AJJ. · Ludlaerr, AGC treuarer, representing Lamb·
designer labels made it big with a in·the watcr·fllled bathtub to get a
Greek COUIIdl of die Uaiwasit)
Grode
cia Olllkii1111 Psi; Beth Sanford, AGC secretary,
matching price tag. I was broad- beuer fit on my jeans, if this recy· presmtcd a doMtloa
to tile
Clli Omep; Cher li'ults, presideat of the AGC,
minded though. Jeans were fine cled teen-ager again reminds you 10
Alplla Mu Beta; D.ncl McNeUy, MDA's poster
Muscular DJStroplty Auocaf . 'a Col-bas
for everyone else, but not me,. I keep smiling.
olflc:e to further r •dt ucJ
·
bltoliDd- . child .ronoutbera Oblo; Michelle Mackey or
·
•
fmnly shunned any suggestion that
inga Clift for aiiiCIIIIr C
De
MDA, boldlag a plaque honoring AGC m~mI should get some jeans. 1-vowed , 'T!'cketS
ralsed frolll tbe Saperdaace $)111Q0red by die
hera for tltelr work; ud David's rather, Rick ·· I'd
"never" do tlie jean scene. l l
.
.·
AGC earlier tills a oatil. Froa Jell are Joe
McNeUy of Jtd;son.
'
After all I had worn jeans when . POMEROY. • Ttckets for t,he
they we~ Cll,led,overall pants and Meigs County Chamber of Comcoold be pic;ked up for about $1.98 111erce dinner and dance on Satur·
at the Middlepon Departmerit Store day are still ~vailable. ~ongress·
or Elberfelda. At t!lat lime they man Ted Strtc~land "':'II be. the
!llade absolutely no fashion state· guest speakc;r. Dmner w~l begm at
· . ment but they probably did make 6:~ p.m. w•th ~ce gewng under·
the statement that you weren't way: at 8 p.m. Ttckets are $20 pearolling in money. That was okay. penon ($40 per couple) and are
superdances itlso goes 19 clinics, · Few were. They were the best available at the chamber ._offt~e or
~0 GRANDE - Mc:ntlxrs of Columbus office, which bversecs
the University of Rio Gtaade's fla. activities in SOI!tbem Ohio. Also summer camps and research.
bang for the buck and the buck was . by calling 992-5005. MusiC wilt be
tmlitics and sorcxitics pooled their present was David Mc~:a' or
"'
provided by Gran Stand.
Mackey pointed . out that hard to come by.
eflitns recently to datalc 111 a t:bari· Jackcm, the MDA poster · for researCh direclly fwtded by MDA
Well, as I mentioned, "never" is
table cause. The end result was a soulhem Olti9. A fourtll ~at connibutions helped,in the recent a hard word to ·swallow but I did a
donation toWing more tlwt $2,000 Parkview FJemenliry, he is the son . medical breakthrough that i~~nti- . bit of that last fall when on my
to the M~ular Dyslrqllty •4 •soci- of Rick and Ellc:a MI:Nc:lly.
. lied the defective gene behind Lou birthday I received a pair of overall
ation in its ftght 10 eradicare mus"TTtey Sllged a great event for Gehrig's Disease.' The Rio Grande pants, excuse me, I meant 10 write
cular dise•se
us; Mackey said. •eonege stu_- su~rilance was c;oordinated with fashion jeans; from my daughter
The money was raised dtrotiglt dents .-e a ~ poop for us the University Counseling Center and her husband, Jayne and Toby
the annual supenlancc organiud by aod Rio Grallde Ita J.l the dance and advised by staff member Mann of Lancaster. Naturally, at
the All.()rcck Council, the so- for a number of yean. They're a Randy Price.
the urging of external forces
ing body for the sbtdent orpniza- gtCil group of kids 10 work with
"Every Greek organization on around me, I had 10 model my new
tions. For 1-1/2 days. the students and we cao always depend on ·campus participated in the super· apparel. Reluctantly, I did so and
I
danced nearly continuously to tbcm.•
•..
dance, and I think it's the most compl~incd because my new
.
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music provided by a aew of homeDue to lbc expcuse of ~uip- · beneficial thing any of us could be britches were too long. However, I
grown DJs, · armed with $2S ment IICCdctl by mliiCUlai- disease involved with," noted Cher Fults, was advised that all o( the personpledges apica: to lllisc the money victims. die llio Grande ~- president of the AGC. "We all . .nel in the store where they were
and lend a band to dlildn:a alllicthelp iD pun:hasinl. a danced for 34 hours for Jads Who pure~ were wearing. them long
ed by the dinsr.
wbn;Jdunr Cor at least one child, , can'ldance, and we feel great !!bout but-rolled up. So 1 rolled up the
'
The COUJtCil pell"#ed the cllxm- Mackey added. Bntbe money helping out ~le not as fortunate legs and was an irrstant hit. ·The
tion to Michelte Mackey ofMDA's raised at c:ampos lllld bigb school as we are."
jeans, they said, were slenderizing
and heaven knows 1 "eed that Sol
was kind of sold as I choked down
Route 62. • •
my --never.· .
·~.
What reallY was a convincing
North
factor though ·was the fact that the
jeans were accompanied by what is
Point Pleasant,
· known IOdaX u a "big shirt." Now.
"big shins arc great for people
·'
· with body bulgei and hide a multitude of powtds around the middle.
&lt;;p()ii/&lt;;I'JRf:n BY:
,
.That I atso need. So, a bit lies\tanI·
MASON COUNTY EXTENSION HOMEMAKERS
' ly in my new··outl'it, l' becalne· a
HERO CLUB-MASON COUNTY VO-TECH,Cf.NTER
lukewarm jeans convert
Then came Christmas. And
GFWC-POINT PLEASANT fUN/OR WOMAN'S CLUB
guess what I got from the Manns.
You've got it - anqther nair of
jeans and anolhcr "big' s!,Jirt.'h This
convinced me that my fiWOrite couple must think of me as a recycled
teen-ager rather than "the old
man." I love.t!Uitiind of thinking.
So, I'm liasking in my new role.
1!10 longer say things ~. ~swell.:
I now express myself wtth .worlls
like "cool," "fantastic, • "£ar .
Out"and "neaiO." I can enthusiastiI
cally do that "AW RIGIIT" thing
and I tell pebple 10 "haitg in d)ere"
and, "way .IP go, Becky," I don't
PRESENTS CHECK - Karla Carroll,
Wa..... s - y a $3U dleck to aulst
· just. leave anymore. Instead, "I'm
•'outa here" and I don't just do
(right), ptts'dalt fll die Glltipal• Eaba a.•
Dnlc Awareaes Ralstaace Education (DARE) . Something, J "go for it." I've -even
~#~1~99=,~r~ee::e~n~d=y=p=res=e•=tcd==G::a:Di::po::lis:::'::Pa:=tnl::::·=•·=~p~rogram~=~ln~tbe=~Gal=U~po~lls=C~Ity=Sc~h~oo~ls.===== pmcticed doing that "high five" bit,
~
· but my accomplishments are limit-

f
l
l
t
i
D
fllliOft=

-ey,.. '

avaz'lab/e

RG Greek groups.do their part

.with Superdance to aid MDA ·

'HANDMADE

HOLIDAY TREASURES :
,CRAFT SHOW.

'

MARCH 27 199

10 AM·8 PM

NATIONAL
GUARD
ARMORY·

em

wv

MeigS C
. ounty Cb_inmunity. Calendar

Comma.lty Caleadar iteDIS
appear two days bd'ore • nat
and tbe day of that eveaL Ice.s
must be received ,..,a ia • to assure publicatiOII ia tlte cal·
endar.

tioo.

POMEROY • An bo..- of ppel
and CODICIIlponry singing, piano
solo, uwnpet trio and saxophone
solos will be lbcld at the Meig&amp;
County Public Lilnry in Pomeroy
on Smtday • 3 p.m.
·
·

SUNDAY
POMEROY • Revival wiD conATHENS
Old Time
tinue at Hysell Run Holiness
Church thrqugh Tuesday at 7:30 Sq~ontra Dance, Swtday, 8p.m. nightly. David Scott. Logan, is 11 p.m. 11 the o.u. 1m Ba1lroorn in
the speaker. Paslor RObett Manley Atltats. Music will be provided by
invites the public:
Wild .A3pamgus.
RACINE • Tltc Racine Elemen·
tary PTO will sponsor a dinner
Sunday beginntng at 11 a.m.
Turkey, ham, mashed potatoes.
homemade noodles, slaw, green
beans, roll, dessert and drinks will
be available for $4 for ad~lts and
$3 for children under 12. Carry-our.
will be available.

STIVERSvn.E • There will be
a hymn silig 11 Freedom Gospel
Mission ChUrdl on County Road
31. Bald XDob Stiversvillc Road.
Singers will be the Ccnqerors, Ripley, W.Va. Rev. Roger Wollford
inviiCS the public:.

CHESmR • The Chester Base·

ball As..-iarim will meet Sunday

POMEROY· Rev. Eddie Buff- at 3:30p.m. • (.'Iacer Elementary.
.ington, Gallipolis, will be guest All ~ pemllS Ire invited.
speaker at tbe Naomi Baptist
Church in PomCI'O)' on Sunday at
RACINE - T1tc Racme United
.Metbodisl Ouln:II/Mei COQpera· ·
10:45 a.m. Public invited.
tive Parish Cltildrcn's ~ FestiPOMEROY • There will be a val will be held Sunday at 3 p.m.
hymn sing at Hillside Baptist Public invited.
Chun::h on Sunday at 6 p.m. EvayREEDSVD..LE • The Porterfield
one welcome.
Baptist Clowns will pn:sent I proNUDDLEPORT-RepjcingLifc gram 1111 social issues Sunday at 7
Chrisllan School will spoiiJOI' a p.m. at the Reedsville Fellowship
SIJIIIheai dinncl sundtw from 110011 Church of tbc Nazarene. Pastor
tO 3 p.m. II the ltboa( lia;II1IIUIII. Jolto W.l)ql• invUcs the public.
Cost is $3.50 fur atW11 ..S 12-for
POMEROY • The Rt. Rev.
diildren uadct 12. TtltMMM arden
available. Call 992-6149. A lileel Crait; Andel lim, •ristant bilhop of
auction will be bdd Cor aa •Aftlued the~ of Soutbml Ohio wiD
visit Grace Episcopal ChurCh on
the World" quilL
Sunday. Bishop Anderson is noted
. POMEROY • Couatry line for his ministry and work with
dance clwes. Pomeroy VU~e Native Ameritlm. Worship begins
Hall. Swtdaf,_2.-4 .l·•· Doo1110n 11 11 a.m. with a reception foUow$2.50 Call 992-78!53 for laforma- inl ilte service.

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&amp;#1M

~~~
i::~.v~~~1/n~~~~c:v~~
realizes I can do a "high five."
0

MONDAY
,
RACINE • The Big Bend Farm
Antique Club will meet·Monday at
7:30p.m. at Southern High School.
MIDDLEPORT • Eric Chambers will instruct a Tai Chi class fo(
the Middleport Arts Council beginning Monday. Cost is·$15 for three
classes. 10 register, call 992-2675
or 992· 7733.
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Youth Baseball League will hold
sign-ups on Monday and Thursday
of next week from 5:30-8 p.m. at
Pomeroy Elementary. Prices are
$12 per c!Jild, .not Ill exceed $25
pea- family. First time players will
need 10 bring a birth certificate.

MEDICAL SBOPPE

aasically I'm ''rollin. along" as
a recycled teen, what with the jeans
and the lingo, but 10 be real truthful
with you I am still having a bit of a
problem with the teen music. and I
tise the tenn music loosely. When
no one's around 1 dig out some
Mantovani pr Harry J;unes record•
ings of what we teens now call elevator music and play 'em long and
loud. I even do this when I' f11 in
my jeans and big shirt. ~ow docs
that make me a traitor? I hope you
won't tell anyone I do that. You
know how that would go against
the grain of my new image.
·
. If anrone asks how I'm getting
along wath the jean scene my s10ek
a'nswer is "fine." However,
between .tile and thee, the jeans

WHEELCHAIRS
HOSPITAL .BEDS
TRAPEZES
PATIENT LIFTS
LIFT CHAIRS
.BEDSIDE COMMODES

SHOWER STOOLS
WALKERS/CANES
OSTOMY SUPPLIES
URINARY &amp; INCONTINENT SUPPLIES
SURGICAL DRES$1NGS
,
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. ·. PRODUm

Delivery &amp; Set·up Available
Medicare &amp; Insurance Billing Done

SAlES AND RENTALS
Gallipolis, Ohio '

44&amp;.2206
Mark Dil

. WELCOME TANNERS

, GETIING SPRUCED UP
FOR SPRING • Cosmetology
stadentt were at the Senior
Cltlleaa Ceater Tlaursday
• alleraooa to 1lve manicures
'aad facials to a dozen or so
'llelllar dthns It Wll the third
' time this year that tlie stu·
, 11entt bave doDatcd their ser·
vices at the .(:eater. Next week
• several or the women will be
..takea to Me las Hlah School
wilere tlaey caa get cut aad
• curled, or even .p ermed for
Just the cost or the supplies.
Here Mabel Pearman 11ets a
racial from cOimetoiORY stu·
· dent Ursola Hart. Cora See,
· rroat, aad Leanae Cuaditr
gin maalcurn to Eileen
Justis, Maxlae Aldrid1e aad
Helea Bartoa front to back.
Otlaer at~deiltl practlelaa
their ~etoloiJ skUls oa the
sealors were ICandl Bachtel,
Jenn.lfer Barahart, Tonya
Hudnall, Jeaalfer Bol;rard,
Dawa Erwla, Lee lleaclersou,
Danlelle Hensley, Rhonda
Span, Jeaalfer Rowe, and
. Chrissy Taylor. · .

L-----------~~~~~----------~~
.

AC, TANNING ROOM l STEREO
PER PERSON . .

. $3'
10 SESSIONS *25

with the help of public and private
mistakes. ·
"If they leave 'each time having doiwions. They say elderly peq&gt;le
learned onc:llting, they'~e ahead of are eager to learn, but rarely try
the game," said Sydellc Spialtcr, because they are embarrassed or
an adjunct professor at ·union Scared.
County ·conc~e....1 don't sit on · Spialter, herself a 62-year-otd
. daughter of Russian ·immigrants, .
them 100 hard
-t .
•
The comrituntty colle~c offers said transpOrtation would prove too
tit!: free c~ 111 pan of tts Learn- great an obstacle for most of her 20
ing is For Ever, or LIFE, Center. students if she didn't come .to the
The class is one of 21 taught on senior center.
The majority of students are
subjects from biology to Shakespeare at locations convenient for Russian Jews; however, there are
also several Cubans as well as one
senior citizens.
.
College officials began the cen- Colombian.
Arriving for a recent class, the
ter in 1979 and liave continued
Spanish-t!f::Cers and Russian·
speakers
am11ng themselves
in their native languages as they sat
along a caf~ Jable.
.
.
.
Splatter snapped them mto
! GALLIPOLIS • The following • Mo~y: Macaroni and cheese, English with her arrival, asking _for'
ale activities and menus for Mar.ch spinach, vtnegar, fruit salad, bread, the date, calling_ the roll and USing
22-26 at thc Gallia County Senior vaniUa Wafers.
basic convcrsaiional phrase$ writ·
Tuesday • Porkeues and dress· ten on the blackboard.
Gitizen's Cerater, 220 Jackson Pike.
ing, Italian vegetables, b~. cher- .
;
Monday, Mardi 22
situa·
ry
crisp, whipped potatoes and tion.It was a typical classroom
• lOa.m.• Walldng
·
gravy.
.
• IO·a.m. to nooo ·~rug
The more confident students
Wednesday- Beef stew, crack· ' dominated
• 1P:4~ a.m. • Armchair uavct
the class; the teacher
ers, cottage clteesc, biscuits, apple• 11:30 a.m.· Blood pn:ssure
tried
10 draw in the others. Spialter
sauce, lime Jello. , ..
• I p.m. • Chorus
.
•
, Thursday • Baked chicken, periodically shushed the more
•
whipped potatoes, areen beans. talkative students, who often
~ . Tuadly, March 23
sought io translate for the othCI'S. .
bread, pudding, saocc.
~ 10 a.m.· Walldng
The tone of the class was
Friaay - Complete menu.
; 10 a.m.to 3 p.m. • Quihing
relaxed,
although lite students were
Cook's choice.
• 10:30 a.m. ·STOP/ExerCise
camCsL
Make reservations by calling
11 a.m. • Lenten aervicc
To one student Spialter offered
446-7000
before 9 a.m. on the day some
! 12:30 a.m .• Matintc
advice ·ror answering the
you wish to altcnd.
· Wedn'!SCIIJ, March 24
everr,day question, "How are
; 10a.m.· Walking
you7 '
: 10 a.m. to noon. Crochet circle
"In America, if someone asks
: 10 a.m. 10 3 p.m. - Adult day
you,
'How arc you,' say 'Fine,
BVBRGRBEN · - A youth
~
.
thank
~u' even if your head buns
revival will begin 10day and last
• 10:30 a.m .• Helbl
or
your
stomach buns," she said.
imtil Wednclday at Trinity United
•
"Nobody
wants to know if Yt&gt;u'n:
Methodist Church, Evergreen,
"
.
'
staning each night at 7.
not fme. .
The featured speaker will be the
The 90-minute lesson moved on
Rev. Greg Gardner, associate pas· to practicing sentences using
tor and adminislratllr of Christian "have" and "has" and "want""
education ~the Litncaster Church and uwantto.u
of the United Bre!lln:n in Christ
Said one student: "I want a
Special music is scheduled each good life." Another interjected,
night and
has been desis· "You have a good life."
·
nated as Children I NighL
Other swdents agn:e they have ~

By HENRY STERN
AS80Clatcd Preu )Vrlter
I ELIZABE111, NJ. - Hwtched
over DOteboob aDd foiciDg .them.
selves 10 _ ... unfamiliar En lisb
~--'-' ...I
~- cldaly cmigla liom Russia
ind Cuba strusgle lO team the Jan.
auage of lheir new·country.
..
'. Amid the
accents in the
weekly clua II a scoior citizens
center emerges a shared hatred of.
canmunism and the privations they
Cl,!dured in tltcir birthplaces.
- There's also a lot of laughter
li6m the "60- and 70-somelhing"
stpdents over their own linguistic

._vy

.

tenter
posts week's events
.

Tuesclar.

MEIGS COUNTY .
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
963 Gen.' Hartinger Parkway
MiddlepQrt, OhiQ 45760

FREE
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Men II Women's Cuts '

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Kids Cuts (6 &amp; Under)

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CAROL KilO
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OWNED

mtJIT

992-2168

WENDY

IICIIELE JOHNSON
ITYU8T

BY CAROL KING-

miJIT.fWL TECH.

7 HAIR

a STYLING
"•

.,Jr
. I

Mon.·Wed..frl.
1:110 a.m.oi:OO p.m.
T-. 1:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.

HAIRfiYUIT

,,

fell rrom i6.9 percent in 1986 10 three dar.s and sometiqles weeks,
7.8 percent in 1991 , below that of said Abraham, the Boston
researcher.
LSD.
"Use of LSD is really lilcc playThe same study, conducted
jointly by th~ University of Michi· ing Russian roulette with chemi·
gan and the National Institute for cals," Abraham said. "You can
Drug Abuse, found 5.1 percent of spin the chamber and maybe five
college students had used LSD in times you gel away with it Maybe .
1990. T)lat compared with 3.4 per• the sixth time you blow your brains
cent in 1988. The survey had a out. Instead of bullets, they arc
margin of error of plus or minus using drugs. God bless 'em."
LSi&gt;, or lysergic acid diethy·
one percentage point
. The PRIDE study of 26,000 !amide, is derived from a fun~us
high school students released in that grows on rye and other gnuns.
.1992 showed drops in marijuana It is easily produced in clandestine
and cocaine use, but a 20 ~rcent labs, mostly in California, and
commonly disseminated in the
jump in LSD use since 1989.
Today's doses, known ps hits, form of .drug-permeated bloner
are about half as powerful as those papa decorated with canoon char·
in the '60s, researchers said. But aetcrS.
many usen develop a tolerance·and
"There is a degn:e of expertise
·soon increase the number of hits to needed,for manufacturing, but you
:attain the LSD high that some say don't have 10 be a scientist," said
blows iriVfly cocaine and marijuana. Ken Jones, who heads a team of
"It just twists every ~rception ·narcotics investiutors fof the
that you have," said Alice Postal Inspection Service in Pitts·
Holopirek, a foriner user who now burRh.
. ·
counsels young users in Larned,
fhe distribution network is
Kan;
.,
much like. those for other drugs.
'"You see sounds, you see Street dealers buy in bulk from
music, you hear colors," Mrs. mid-level suppliers, who buy in
Holopirek said. "It's e complete even greater bulk from the manudistortion of the way we receive facturers, Missing is the drug carthings in our senses. Some people tels or mob families that dominate
.told me they would sec things that cocaine distribution.
weren't there, but I never had thaL
LSD is an entrepreneurial drug
I wou14 ten.d 10 see things there that with "big money" al stake, Jones
wen: very distoned - like a wall said.
melting. Or I'd look across the
street and see waves in the
asphalt"
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
That'·s what makes the drug dan- Athletic Boosters will meet Friday
gerous, Mn. Holopirek said. She at 7 p.m. in the high school cafete- ,
knows of a user who hallucinated ria.
having bugs under Y..is skin and
tried to cut them oul with a knife. · ·
There are also side' effects like
MIDDLEPORT · .There will be
flashbacks and panic au.acks. And a dance .March ·26 from 7·11 p.m.
some users suffer from protracted at !he American Legion At\nex in
prolonged psychoses in, which they ' Middleport. Music will be by ·
lose touch with reality for two to George Hall.

Boosters to meet
Dante planned

.

older emigres, it's.neve:r too late to. learn English

,•
•
'

, HAIR CLUB
Receive 5 haircuts or
shampoo &amp; set at regular
price and receive 6th one

'
5 BEDS AVAILABLE.

' By JIM URBAN
Associated Press Writer
Three .decades after LSD
defined the flower-child genera·
tion, the mind-altering hallucino·
genic
has seized a ·new set of
users in college dorms and subur·
ban high schOols.
That's righL Acid. The drug that
causes some peo(lle to hear COlors,
sec sounds arid JUmp out of windows thinking they can fly is making a re1U111 nip with a generation
that never heard of LSD maven
Timothy Le,ary.
"Some 'people will try it and
have liad nips and not try it again,
but most people like it," said John,
18, a University of Pitlsburgh
freshman who wanted his last name
withheld. He saw LSD. at his suburban Philadelphia high school last
year and even more when he got to
college.
· .
. "it'S become more acceptable,
not as much as pot. but it is h*·
ing in that direcuon,'' John said.
National studies show alcohol,
marijuana and cocaine use by
young adults has decreased while
LSD use has increased. The most
startling figure penains 10 male
high school stu~tll. in predomi·
nanlly white suburban neigbbor·
hoods, where hallucinogen USII in
1991 wu 18.9 percent. or about
one of ever)- five, according IQ the
Parents' Resource Institute for
Drug Education or PRD;&gt;B.
Among all young adults, about
one or 10 have experimented with
acid, LSI:l' s common street name,
statistics indicate.

dru'

Youth revilral set.

***CERTIFIED BRACE SHO'PE***
.
.,

1480 Jackson Pike

(EDITOR'S NOTE ..., The
LSD trip llu returned. The llal·
luclnogea called acid, derived
from a ruagus aad easll;r produced Ia elaadestloe labs, is
repladag marijuana and eocalne
u the drua of choice among high
seboOlaod eoDeae students look·
lag ror a chear. high. Like the
swloa Ia rash oa back to the
l!J"s look, today's ;routh are
lrlpplnglo the old hippie style.)

good life in theii new country, ana
Spialter regularly mi~~ in ~uas!·
ctvics lessons about why hfe ts
beucr'' in democracies.

Do you feel you are ~aying too much lor
your prescriptions? Then you shou~ be
shopping with us. With the cost of madlca·
lions constantly on the rise, we feel it is,
our responsibUtty to offer our
customers everr •dvantage possib:e.
You see, we've made It a point to know
when generic equivalents are avalliiDJe.
Then. working hand-in-hand with your
doctor, we fill your prescription. exactly
as ordered, and you •ave in the process.
~Low Prescirlpllon Prices
•Fraa Parking (Video Touch Lot)
•Fast &amp; Friendly Service '
•Store Charge Accounts
•Free Delivery to Home or Work
(Cheshlre,liradbury,
Middleport, Pomeroy, Ma10r1,
Mlnerayllla, RuUand, Syracuse)

1The students, who depend largely on Social Security f6r their
.income, become most animated
when they must explain why they
len their countries. Their thoughts
run ahead of theit words as they
talk of wanting better lives for their
children and a desire for freedom.

"I hal! many problems in
Cuba," said Guinola Gomez, who
c""e 10 the United States in 1968.
"I don't have much hope of
returning 10. Cuba because Fidel
Castro has it so controlled,"
-Gomez, 65, said in Spanish after
class. "I want to learn English $0 I
can handle my,self in daily life."
Most students hav.e similar
expectations.
"When I go·IO the doctor, when
I go outside my house, I need
English," said Sheymdlya Glaza·
man, a 68-year-old Russian who
emigrated in 1979.
.

WITHOUT PriD'ING
A LJD ON V4.LUE!

..,........._,.Ollie

.Prescription Shop
.

'

'

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IT'SA MAJOR DECISION!

I

Entering a nursing home·facility is a major decision for
both the potential resident arid f~ily members. The
choice must be made with the. assurance. 'that the
prospective resident will be "cared for" and
·
"cared about".
Our Skilled Nursing Facility, a 40-bed department of
Veterans 'Memorial Hosi?ital, offers accommodations
which exceed federal, state, and local requirements.
Residents are cared' for by a competent, well-trained
professional staff and have ready access to physicians
and state-of-the-art equipment.
Numerous activities are offered residents of the facility
and family membet"s are encouraged to visit. There are
numerous support functions. A pre-admission
o~entatioljl, which includes a tour of our facility, is
·1 '
'
offered to all interested individuals.
!;»lease call us .at 992·2104, Extension 281, if we can be of
'
'' any assistance or answer any questions. ·

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeror
992·2104

.

�Page BB Sunday nmes-5entlnel

Pomeroy . Yddleport G&amp;IIIPolll, OH Point Pleuant, WV

March 21,1113

. R. c.

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8 AM-10 PM
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Bo

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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - For at least
one game, North Carolina dispeUed the·notion that
the NCAA to1D11111Jlent gets progressively harder with
each round.
After a 20-point viciay over East Carolina in the
opening round of the East Regional, the Tar Heels
·were expecting a challenge from Rhode Island in Sat-'
urday's socond-round game. Ins!A;ad, they won 11267.- the most lopsided second-round game in
NCAA tournament !Ustory.
.
It _was Ni!rth Carolina largest margin oCvictory
ever m the toumamcnL
·
·
''I was really shocked that the game went the way
it did," Nonh Carolina coach Dean Smith said. "I
thnu~ht it would be a very close game. I thnught at
halfbme the game was essentially settled, and I had
no idea that would ha~. "
The top-seeded Tar Heels (30-4) advanced to lhe.
round of 16 for the 13th successive season. They wiU
play Albnsas in the East Regional semifinals next · Friday at East Ruthelford, NJ.
· .
North Carolina reached lhe 30-win plateau for the
fll'St time since 1987, when it went 32-4. It's the lhird
time that one of Dean Smith's teams has won at least
30 game£. The 1982 national champions had a 32-2
record.
"I lhink a couple of lhings happened," Smith
said. "We did a great job defensiYely. They misl!ed
some shots when we didrl't do a good job-defensivc-

Rhode Island (19-11) suffercc;l from a cold shooting speU iil the final 11 minutes of the fli'St half, hitting Just 4. of 23 shots and ending the half 8 for 35
(22.9 percent):
·
"The physical part is clearly lhe advantage they
have," Rhode Island coach AI Skinner said, ."The
next level was what we were trying to achieVe this
afternoon. We weren't able to achieve that level."
Abdul Fox's jumper drew Rhode Island within
11·10, but NCXIh Carolina scored lhe next six points.
Fox scored again 'at IO:S8, ·but the Tar Heels went on
a 26-6 .run over lhe next eight minutes.
,
"They clearly have all the answers to all the questions, especially if they shoot the baU aa well as !hey
did this afternoon," Skinner said.
Henrik Rodl's layup· off a turnover with 12:11
remaining in the second half pus!Ji:d lhe .lead to 7831. Reserve Ed Gelh's layup 81 1:24 made it 110-59.
It was Rhode Island's worst loss since i9S8.
As for the second-round record, lhe TIIC Heels
topped Oldahorna's victory margin in a 124-81 win
over Louisiana Tech in a 1989 second-round game.
Arkansas 80, St. John's 74 - At WinstonSalern, N.C., Arkansas held St. John's to one field
gOal in the flnal11 :57 and ended the game with a 24-.
8 run Saturday for an 80-74 vic.tory i,n lhe second
round of the NCAA East·Regional.
Darrell Hawkins scored 20 points and Scotty
Thurman added 19 for the Razorbacks, who
·ty." ,_
advanced to the regional semifinals Friday in East
Smith said an ever better game is within his
Rulherford, NJ. against top-seeded North Carolina, a
team's n:ach.
•
·
·
. 112-67 winner over Rhode Island earlier Saturday. ·
· "That's lhe best we've played, but obviously we
· Arkansas (22-8), the fourth seed, improved its
can improve.''
NCAA tournament record under coach Nolan
Donald Williams scored 17 points to lead North
Richardson to 11-5 and moved into the round of the
Carolina, w~h wu able to send its staners to the
16 for the lhird time in four years.
bench with 12 minutes left. Derrick Phelps hit all
St. John's (19-11) failed in its bid to make Brian
·. seven shots he took for 15 ~ints in his second game
Mahoney lhe first coach in tbe school's history to
since suffering' a bruised tailbone. ~c Monll'OSS also
win 20 games in his inaugural season.
had 15 for Nonh Carolina. Reserve Matt WenSirom
For 28 minutes, St. John's answered Arkansas'
added a llll8$00-high 14 and Kevin Salvadori 11.
pressure defense with strong inside play and built a
· "We hope we can keep this up in each and every
10-pointlead.
·. game of the tournament." Phelpe said. "We'll take
But lhe Razorbacks, who force!! n1ne turnovers
Ibis as·a ste_pping,ltOne. I hope we can stay wilh the
the rest of lhe way, surged back wiUt a I 5·3 run Utat
:same int.eoslly .we had today."
put !hem up 71 -69 when Hawkins banked in a ISAndre Samuel led Rhode Island wilh 17 points.
footer from Ute right wing with 4:51 remaining. It
. · The 45-poinl llllllgin of victory, 24 short of Loy~
was lhe Razorbacks' f1tst lead of the second half.
ola's tournament record 111-42 rout of Tennessee
After SL John's tied it on a pair of free thrOws by
' Tech in 1963, continued a
of blowouts by
David Cain, Arkansas went ahead to slay on Thur· top-seeded teams. Kentueky
Rider by 44 points,
man'sjumper in lhe lane at the 2:54 mark.
·Indiana beat Wright Slale by 43 and Michigan beat
The .basket started a 9-3 run 1&gt;y Arkl!Dsas to end
Wright Slate by 31 on Friday nighL
!he game.

cern

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Solis during Saturday's NCAA
East Regi!lnal tournament game in WiostooSalem, N.C., wbere tbe Tar Heels won 112-fi7.

In Division IV girls' state title game,

Upper Scioto Valley knocks off
Zanesville Rosecrans in overtime
.

.

I

'

By RUS'l:Y MILLER
COLUMBUS, O~io (AP) LeAnna Hicks sent lhe game iniO
.overtime with a 22-foot threepointer at lhe buz;rer, lhe9 Gwen
Hurley banked in a shot wilh 18·
seconds left'in the second overtime
as Upper Scioto Vallet denied
Zanesville ~$ecrans a second
straight Division IV girls state
champioruohip Saturday at St John

took lhe ball near midcourt, took
two dribbles and banked lhe shot in
off glass as the buzzer sounded.
The USV team celebrated at midcourt while its fans went wild in
lhe stands.
·
Rosecrans won the opening tip
of the fli'St C?Vcrt!me and spread its
offense; Wnh ume runntng out,
Division IV co-playel-of the year
Ashley Bland drove lhe middle,
Arena.
,
then passed into the' right cornez for
Upper Scioto Valley (27-n) did Carrie Glaas. But Burkett blocked
it wilhout a senior on its roster. It Glass's shot out of bounds witb
was lhe farst double-overtime game lhnee seconds left.
ever in the 18 years of the girls
Off lhe inbound&amp; play, freshman
slale !OIJI1lamenL
Amy Tatman got an open 16-foot.The Lady Rams, ranked second · .er, but it missed the mark at the
in the llnal Associated Press regu- buzzer.
· •
1ar-season poll, won the title il) its
·Rosecrans again won lhe tip to
first appearance ever at the slate start the second overtime and again
tournamenL
held onto the baU. But with 31 secBut it took a lot of heroics.
onds left, Hicks forced a turnover
Rosecrans (25-3), ranked fourth when she got a five•second call
in the poll, reeled off 11 straight while guarding Rosecrans' Abby
points to build a 50-47 lead with Durant.
6.8 seconds left in regula,tion. ' USV hurried the ball down floor
Susan Denbow, who had 13 and wasted little time in putting up
rebounds to go with njne points, hit lhe game-winner. Hurley took the
two free lhrows wilh 21 ;1 seconds ball at the left wing, drove and
left to give the Lady Bishops a 49- spun before tossing ilf the shot off
47 lead.
·
the backboard .wilh 18 seconds lefL
· With 6.8 seconds left, she .
Rosecrans had one last shot; but
rebounded a miss by USV's Tonya Bland was pressured underneath
Burkett and was fouled. Denbow and threw the ball away while
hit the front end of the bonus situa- attempting to pass back to the corlion to make it S0-47, but missed ner for Glass with 1.2 seconds lefL
the second.
Rosecrans intercepted the long
The Lady ~ rebounded-and in bounds pass, but was unable to
hurried the ball downcottrL Hicks

get off a shot before the final
buzzer sounded.
Hurley had 16 points and nine
rebounds for USV, while Hicks had
IS points and five assists. CoUrtney
Beaman added 10 points. Burkett,
who had scored 30 points in a 7451 victory over Ottoville in the
semifinal, was limited to six points
against Glass' defense.
Bland finished with 20 points,
while Glass had 11 for Rosecrans,
which was seckin~ its fourth state
title. The Lady .BJshops had won
crowns in 1982 and-'83 and again
last year.
Attenilance was 7,014 at lhe session.
Hurley tourney MVP
Hurley, was named the outstanding player on lhe Associated
Press Division IV girls slate alltournament team Saturday.
Hurley, one of three US V players - all juniors - to make the
team , totaled 23 points, 14
rebounds and II assists. Joining
her on lhe team were teammates
Hicks and BurketL
.
flicks tqtaled 37 points, seven
rebounds and nine assists in two·
games; while Burkett had 36 points
and IS rebounds.
Also named to lhe team were.
Bland of Rosecrans, who had 34
points and 14 rebounds in the two·
games, and Karla Wenzlick of
Ottoville, who had 15 points and
eight rebounds in a semifmalloss.

Union defe_a ts Sherwood
Fairview 63-50 for first state title

\

GROUND

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·

BEATEN TO THE BALL- North Carolina's Donald WU!iams (wbite jersey) rmds biniself late ID _Rttting to tbe ball grabbed by Rhode

In Division III girls' finals,

AMERICAN BEAUTY

CERTIFIED

C

March 21,1993

.99c ·

1-

Section

North Carolina, Arkansas
among second-round ·victors

aonu

2 liTER

~imts- ~entin~l

'

In NCAA East Regional action,

PRODU

STORE HOUR~ -· .

Sports

. TANGLED IN SCRAMBLE- Florida
State's Cbarlie Ward (backgronad) liDdl himsell tangled witb Tulaue's Pointer Willi•m• (left)
. durinaa ~ramble for tbe ball precedlog Ward's

bema called fur a roul in tbe rli-st hall or Saturday's NCAA Sputlleast Regional tournameat
game In Orlando, Fla., where the Seminoles woo
!14-63. (AP)

•

In NCAA Southeast Regional action,

Florida State beats ex-rival
Thlane 94-63 in second round
'

'

'

.

'

By FRED GOODALL
demoraliUcl Tulaile (22.·9) and set
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Sam the stage for a blowout just before
Cassell hit all seven of his lhree- halftime.
.
point attempts mi. acore4 31 points '
Tulane was shooting 34 percent
Saturday to lead Florida Stale to a fronl the llold yet Ollly trailoc1'3194-63 rout of Tulane in lhe second 29 before Edwards and his team_round of lhe NCAA Southeast mateS.turned up the.defensive presRegional.
sure in the last two minutes of the
Doua Edwards had 22 points half.
and 12 rebounds for the thini-MOdOne of Edwards' four blocked
ed Seminoles, who allot 67 percent sh'ots led to Derrick Carron's fast·
from the field after hafftime, break dunk·, and the Seminoles
including. 7-for-7 shoodng by Cas· scored a1ain after a Tulane.
sell.
·
turnover on their .way to a 39.29
Florida Slale (24-9) reached the halftime lead.
Sweet 16 for lhe second straight
Tulane, wblch had hoped to dis·
year. The Seminoles lost to Indiana rupt their former Metro Conference
m that round last yell'.
.
rivala wilh a variety of traps and ·
Edw.-ds liCOled 17 points ia the defonlel, never JeCOVOie4 Florida
fmt half and lptocl Florida State State, emetic at times during the
f'd'enslvely durinl an 8.() spirt dtat regular 1011011, began lhe second

M

~

run

half with a 17-5
and didn't let
up.
It was the fU'SI meeting between
the ·long-time rivals since Florida
State left the Metro for the Atlantic
Coast Conference two years ago.
Bolh enteled the 100man1ent struggling but reverted to their midseas.o n rorm in first-round games
Thursday.
Florida State, which used 111 180 run to puU away frorrl Evansville
in lhe opcnlna round. qain used
quick, devaswlns bunts to wear
down .Tulane, which lost four or its
last five games before the tOutna- .
menL
Edwards was the key early,
scoring 10 COIIICCutive points for
tile Seminoles dll'ing one llrelclt to
carry th~ load

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Ashley Poston scored 22 points and
Baltimore Liberty Union held Sherwood Fairview to 1-for-14 shooting
in the third quarter as the Lions
won the Division III state championship with a 63-50 victory Saturday at SL John Arena.
Liberty Union (28-0), ranked
second in the final Associated
Press regular-season poll, won the
title in its fli'St trip ever to the state
tournament.
,
· Erin Blackstone added 20 points
and 17 rebounds, while Lucinda
Hedges had IS points. The only
other person to seore for lhc Lions
was Steph Rogers with six points.
Kacee English scored 19 points
for Sherwood Fairview (23-5),
unranked during the regular season.

'

play. Poston stole the ball and
scored and also hit another layup
off a drive.
·
1
-Fairview missed its first 13
shots of the quarter, Mtting its only
basket when English lhrew in a
shot from behind lhe basket with
lhnee seconds left in the quarter.
By !hat time, the Lions were
ahead 44-33.
The Apaches !hen hit only one
of !heir fU'St 12 shots in the fourth
quarter to fall behind 59-44.
Fairview was seeking its second
title in five years but instead finis~ed second for lhe second time in
lhnee years. The Apaches won· the
1989 championship and were runners-up in 1991 to Heath.
Attendance was 7,062 for lhe
session.

Poston, Blackstone
share MVP bonurs
Poston and Blackstone shared
most valuable player honors oil the
Associated Press .Division III alltournament team.
Poston totaled 32 points, 14
rebounds and five assists in two
games, while Blackstone had 34
points, 30 rebounds and three
assists. Joining !hem on ihe team ·
was t~ammate Lucinda Hedges,
who fm•shed w•th 34 points, 13
rebounds and three assists.
She~ood F_airview's English;
who fimshed w•lh 48 points in two·
games, also made the squad along:
w!th Amy Corrigal of Akron St.
Vmcent-St. Mary, who had 22
points and 12 rebounds in a semifi.
nalloss.

OSU, Rutgers to square off
•
NCAA
'
t:rf~~~~~~~~i:~tea~J:e · zn
women .s cagefest .
:t!:::~~

3

points
The smaller Apaches were ham;

tage. Liberty Union held the~
hand on the boards 47-27 and limited the Apaches to transition baskeiJ off !heir fast break or perimetcr shots.
Fairview managed to hit just IS
of 61 sbou from the f~eld for 25
perecnt, lncludini four of IS lhreepoint attempts,
•
In conuut, the Lions made half
of their 48 ahota, good enouah to
overcome 29 turnovers against
Fairview'slethal fullcourt JRIL
Lesding 34-30 with 4:3S left in
the third quarter, Liberty Union
sprinted to the next I0 points - six
by Bl!!Ckstonc m1 four by Poston.
Blackstone scored twice on long
pasSe£ behind Fairview's ~· and
hit another basket off an mboUnds

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio Slate says it's ready for Rut·
gers, but wary about a ninth-seeded
team that •topplqd previously
· unbeaten Vennont last .week.
"That wu a peat"'Nin fur Rutgers," said Buckeye coach Nancy
Danch. "It would be a big win for
anybody to go inl9tllat gymnuium
up !here and give In undereated
team its first loSs.
"It's also a sign !hat !hey are
playlnJ Yery 1ooee llld playing the
role •oF tllo upeet people, which ~
SOIIICtbing that .we must be aware
of and be p-opared for,'' lho said.
Tho Ladz Knights (22-8) visit
Ohio swc (l4-3) today • SL John
· Arena in the second round of lhe
NCAA tournament. The winner

advances to a regional ·semilinal
against .!he Miami, Fla.-Western'
Kentucky winner Thursday night in
Richmond, Va
..
'
,
Rutgers is in its eighth straight NCAA tournamenL But this is the
first season it .has won a tourna,
ment prne on an opponent's floor
&amp;naPJ?Uig 111 0-3 streak with its SO:
74 v•ctory Wednesday over Ver. ,
mont (28-1).
Ohio Stite, w~h earned the top
seed in tile East Regional after·
being absent frorrl lhe tournament
the past twO JeiSOIII, is 5-1 at home '
in tournament play. It bu won the
five ~ by llll\'erlge of nearly ~

~pomts.

'·

�.'

Page-C2-sunday nmes Sentinel

March 21,,191;J

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

.-·March 21,1993

-In NCAA men's tournament action,

In NIT action,

ACC's representatives win .to move into second-round action ·
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
"·
AP Spor111 Writer
Sixteen games, none of them
very close, made for a day of few
~in the NCM toum1men1.
The~ was one big upscfFriday
- Georgia Tech .losing to Soulhem
93-78 - one milder upsetGeorge Washington beating New
Mexico 82-68 - and one nearqpse1 - Massachuseus edging
~nn 54-40. But otherwise the second day of the tournamen1 went
pretty much as expected.
-: Three of lhe four No. I seeds
we~ in action, and all posted lopsided wins.
In the battle for supremacy by
conference, the Atlan1ic I 0
e_rilerged as the early winner as all
four teams from !hat conference
advanced to the second round. The
..,CCalsoisdoingwellatS-1. ·
" "I lhought all along !hat we
(jeserved to have four reams in lhe
murnament, but no one was going
to believe it until we proved it on
the court," Atlantic 10 commis'

Jackson State beats Connecticut-90-88 in overtime contest

_By TOM COYNE
games now " he said "Y
STORRS, COnn. (AP) - Jack- to a Bi~ Eist camp~ ton~h~
son State coach Andy Sto lin made hlS
Th' .
•11 •
wanted to mike sure lhe Tifers · a Jackso~iate ~:.J~!':Ct~
knew ~xactly whl!t they had team has won a postseason Divi~~':l:!~~t~u=~~~ti- sio?.lgame. , . ·_ . .
.
a1 Invitation Tour8am
&amp;bonBut don t th1nk this IS a pat on

and Trelonnie Owens 22 as fifthseeded Wake Forest (20-8) rolled
past the Moccasins (26-7), who
made only 38.S percent of their ·.
shots and wound up 28 points
below their season average. ·
,
Iowa 62, NE Loulslana 69 • . ·
Acie Earl had 23 points, IS
rebounds and five blocked shots
and lhe Hawkeyes (23-8) outre:
bounded the smaller Indians {26-S)
45-23.
Kentucky !16, Rider 52
. In what amounted to a li~hl
workout f9r Kentucky, the Wildcats (27-3) scored from wherever.
!hey wanted. The ~2 points were.
the fewest of the xason for Rider
(19-11), the Nonheast Conference:
champions.
.
.
•
Utal 86, Pltt$burgll u ·
Phil Dixon scored 22 points,
John Grant 17 and Jimmy Soto 14;
as Utah (24-6) beat Pitt (17-11) ·
wilh a balanced allack.
•'

but MassachuseiiS (24-6) made its
foul shots in lhe fmal seconds 10
advance.
Vlr&amp;lnla 71, Mubattu 66
Cory Alexander made the most
of Menlwnaa•s decision to let bim

shoot, tying his career-high with 27
points as the Cavaliers (20-10)
ruined lhe CCIW'II 10 lhc tournament
or Manhattan (23-7) after 1135-year:
abstJice.
New Mexico St. 93
Nebraska79
•
Point guard Sam Crawford set
an NCM .tournament first-round
record wilh 16 assists and added 20
points. 'l)le Aggies (26- 7) pulled
away after lhe lOih•seeded Comlulskers (20-11) bah tied lhe game
it 49-49 with 16:2lleft.
CIDdnnati 93, CQppia St. 66
The upset dreams of 15th-seeded Coppin S181C (22-8} i:ame to an
end when Cincitmati used a 22-S
iun to take a ~s lead wilh 9:54
left. The Beareats (25-4) SI)CVived
the worst game or lhe season - 7
points- by Nick Van Exel.
·
Southeast
At NasbviUe, Tenn.
Wake ForestBl ·
Tennessee ·Chattanooga 58
ROlllney Rogers had 26 points

sioner Ron Bellovich said in Tucson, Ariz.
· The Bijl Ten is 4-1, the SEC is
3-1, the BIJ East llld WAC ~ 2-1.
On the losing side, only two of the
Big Eight's six teams remain Kansas and Oklahoma State. The
Great Midwest is 1-2 and the
Soulhwest and Big WCSI. are 0-2.
In other games in the East
Regional, Virginia beat Manhauan
78-66, New Mexico State SUIJirised
Nebraska 93-79 and Cinc1nnati
crusbed Coppin Swe 93-66. In lhe
Soulheast, Wake Forest defeated
Tennessee-Chattanooga 81-58, ,
. Iowa downed Northeast Louisiana
82-69, Kentucky crushed Rider 9652 and Utah beat Pii!Sburgh 86-65.
In lhe Midwest, Oklahoma Stile
beat Marquette 74-62, Louisville
defeated Delaware 76-70, Xavier
downed New Orleans 73-55 and ·
Indiana routed Wright Stlrc 97-54.
In the West, Michigan beat Coaslal.
Carolina 84-53 and UCLA defatcdIowa Swe 81-70.
East

~~sk•es and told them !hey had
em~th~~~ ';:: way Southwest-

be . edbfroc o erence teams will
~w
m ~won.
People won t be emb~sed
10 losebeto US anymore. We m1ght
even
able to get some home

.

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Manufacturetl Hol!'sing Industry•.

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Confer~nce
~ected for~
Cllampion Be!JR plai;ed lhrec play- team. Mayo~ and Bartlett are
PJI on the fJCSt team and split the seniors, and Colbrink is a sopbotOp individual with Alexander on more.
lhe 1992-93 girls Tri-Vallcy ConSenior guard Vema C11mpston
ference basketball team announced . and senior center Lori Kelly were ·
recenUy.
·
the Meigs Marauders selections.
; The most valuable player was Compston averaged 13.7 points a
junior Jamie Rolston of Alexander, ga!Qe and led the team in steals
while Belpre coach Dave Wilcoxen with 82. Kelly led 1he team in
was named lhe conference's top rebounding wilh 8.7 _a $ame ~nd
coach.
was second on the team m sc~ng
: Leading lhe fltSI team was Rol- with an average of 9.6 a game.
slon, a 5-foot-10 guard. She was
Olher selections included $Cilior
joined on the fust team by team· Jamie Hanning of Miller, junior
. mate Kris Gilkey. Tabby Mayne, Susan Crawford of Nelsonville1amie Colbrink and Christy Barllett York, sophomore Eric Hayes of
Vinton County and senior Amber
Lon of Wellston.
Honorable selections were
Audra Andrews a senior from
Alexander, junior Katie Max weD
, POMEROY - These are the of Federal Hocking, sophomore Jil\
' results of recent action at the Shafer and senior Christina War: Pomeroy Bowling Lanes.
ren, bodt of Nelsonville-York.
·
March 10
League - Early Wednesday
: Mixed
: Teams (In order of finlsb) • Tony's Carry Out (60), Hackett's
: Roofmg (59), Sports &amp;. Stuff (51),
• Banks Construction (44), RuUand
: American Legion (44), Teaford
: Golf &amp;: Trophies (38).
: , Team series - Sports &amp;: Stuff

.I •-cllnd1odplayoll'bor!h

I

So Let's Get Stated/

'

I

miti.WII afW

-·"'""!"

Division IV

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

'

·t·ra n ~ad ions

~.

They piiJtd Saturda7
AITheHcrizmo
a-.n~~~~

Bd&amp;hlm Youna (25-1) vs. Kanau (26-.
6).4;30p.m.

Ctlifomio (20-1) YL Duke (24-'1). 30
mlnuas afu:r pnicdinJaunc.

w.....,_ . . .

Spec-··· ............... .__.-....

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24 7 17
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303 261
211 241
294 252
235 311
171 331

Goorae Wuhin&amp;ton 12, New MWco

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.,

68
So1.11hcrn Unlvenily 93, GootJia Tech
71

Miohipn 84, Coaaul Cuolino 53
UCLA ll,lowa S~o~tc70
. TheJPloyed Saturday
AI The Jon M. lluntiJUn Cenler
Salt Lake Cit)'
IUino~ (19-12) v1. VandCRbill (27·.5),

·,

oro..
239

194 .

lltuoil '............. 31 71 9, 15 314 249

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Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2

9 IJ 249 206

9 75 245 255
30 9 75 244 2AO
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274 241
291 295
111 3SS

Friday's scores
Wuhln.,.. 5, 11u1!onl2

GOOD/RA• '

Tbey played Saturday

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424 SECOND AVE •
GAlliPOLIS, 01.

•

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

P'!I)'7DU•

9JWNEY
STUDIO,
I'

.-

75 l7l m

6 74 :1)4 2AI
6 72 212 252

I

Ill! $111..
Pli.WMIJ

5 M'I!I.Y_TIES

UCLA 81, Iowa St. 70
Ell O'Bannon had 20 points and
13 rebounds. and Tyus Edney
· added 19 points as the Bruins (2210) held off a second-half comeback by Iowa State (20-11).
0

'o '

7 77 212l50
II

.&gt;·Mma.ol........ 43 23 6 f.! 293 234

;::;;;;;::::;;;======~=-"'~'

.,

1 1111 1
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halt

.

Palrldl~
T I'll. GF OA
• 92 212 226

Too• .
W L
- . . . , ......... 43 21
3l 21
N.Y.Rq.t .... 32 21
Now JenOy ....... 34 30
N.Y........... .. 33 31
Phil...,.,......... :16 32

..

JllllC

PHOTO$

In business for yourself?

Boys' regional finals

13

PASSPORT

over
a six•minute
span of
the second half
to tum a 40-35
deficit
into ,.----------...:.~=========:::::
a 47-42lead. Ervin Johnson had 21
points for New Orleans (26-4).
Indiana 97, Wright St. 54
Calbert Cheaney scored 29
points and Alan Henderson
returned from an injury !hat had
left his postseason status in doubt.
Cheaney scored lhe first 13 points
for Indiana (29-3) in a 23-2 streak
that buried the Raiders (20-1 0).
West
At Tucson, Ariz.
George Washington 82
New Mexico 68
Yinlca Dare had 17 points and
10 rebounds and Kwame Evans
GALLIPOLIS
POMEROY
made five three ~ pointers for
,SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE
618 EAST MAIN ST.
George Washington (20-8). Steve
446-0303
992-6674
Logan led fiflh-seeded New Mexico (24-7) with 16J¥lints.
Southern 93, Georgia Tech 78

Division IV
Url&gt;ono 51, Avcn Loko 43
W. Holma S I, Omille T1

Fon.lpnmic67, Cin, Counuy Day !5I
Lima Ccmral Calh. 76, Miller City 53
LJQC~o~&gt;oua CloJ 9S. F....,.. Loltdond

onship.
5.
..
Olhers winning division titles
Lima Central led 10-1 at 4:18 iii
Friday were Lynchburg Clay, wilh lhe rust quaner and expanded ~
a 95-83 victory over Freeport advan1age to41 -21 at halftime. . ·
Lakeland, and Fort Loramie, which
Miller City cut the margin no'
defeated Cincinnati Country Day closer !han 14 in lhe second hal!, .
67-58.
trailing 59-43 with 6:51 left on a
Now 25-0, Lima Central will . basket by Kyle Erfonl.
'
meet Fort Loramie (22-4) in the
In Columbus, Lynchburg Clay
state semifinals next Friday. helped ens= the win witb an 18;
Lynchburg Clay (24-2) will play poin~ lead early in lhc lhird quart.eir, ·
the winner of today's game Clay outsco~d Lakeland 20-2 10.
betwein New Riegel (22-3) and lead 60-43. Lakeland could come
Mansfield St. Peter (17-7). It will no closer !han six points the rest 0(
be Clay's· fust appearance in lhe the game.
.,
toumamenL
Brian Glover scored 30 poin~
Aaron Hutchins scored 23 and Paul Cluxton, 29, for Lynclipoints to pace Lima Central in burg Clay. Lakeland, which fiq!
Toledo. Mike Otto, with 12 points, ished a~ 22-4, was paced by Briali'
led, Miller City, which fmished 20- Heddleston wilh 20 points.
&lt;Continued rrom c-2&gt;
Fort Loramie opened in Dayton
against Cincinnati Country Day
Jervaughn Scales had 27 points with a 16-2 run, built that to a 22and 18 rebounds, leading 13th- pointle:!d in lhe second quarter and
ranked Southern (21-9) back from
led 34-16 at halftime.
_
a IS-point deficit. The game may
have been the last at Georgia Tech
(19-11) for coach ~obby C~mins,
being wooed by Soulh Carobna.
Michigan 84, Coastal Carqlina 53
The wp-sccdcd Wolverines (274) had no trouble with the muchAIID I.D.
smaller Chamicleers (22-10) and
built a 21-pointlead in the first

WALES CONJ'UENCE

Pulllp

(614) 448 941&amp; or 1.fi00.872~SSI87

- t o - I u_p.
IUIIAffOU KIIOOL ID.,tAWPOliS,OI.

Division I
l'lelt'""S1&lt;in 64. Eaalolto N, 19

S\alll74. Mt.;'qucuc 62
LouiJvillc 76: Delaware 70
Xtvll:r. Ohio 13. Now Odouw SS
lndlana '17, WdP S111oSl

\Ill.

BElliED'S MOBILE HOME
HEATiNG &amp; COOLING
coo!lf!ll•~- wMh ~ ~ •

II.S. ha-.kl't ha II
Girls' state semifinals

At Tht Hooller Dclne

IIOIIoo•-·
-·'Dilloit • LA:'l.lttJs,
• p.m,

frllaJII&amp;IMfL nacHMt

Rice (I K-9) 1t Boaon Colltte (17- 12).
&amp;p.m.
Clcmaon (17-12) at Alabami-Binnina·
ham (11·13), 1,(15 pm.

Midwest Regional

1:30 p.m.

. .,

10)7:30 p.m.

NuhYU... Tenn.

-·-lp.IIL
.......
_._,_
I

Monday's games
Old Dominion (21 -7) ll Mi•mi, Ohio
(21 ·1) ..... 1:30 ,e .~ .
Oklohani (21)-11) IL MinncoOII (18-

-

WHo Forc.;t (20-1) ¥1. low• (23·8),
2;35 p.m.
l(..,... ty r·t:~- u.... (24-6). 30

....... ~.l;30pa.

' ~SIS)

1

£II

Wctt Vif&amp;inia (17- 11) at Providence

(18·11), 9 p.m.

AIM=~ c!;::'u1um

Today•i-

•

: - Team game - Tony's Carry
; bu1 (638)
,:
Men
: High series - Bub Stivers

Ell~(178)

Toda '

Oklahoma St. 74, Mar11,uette 62
Bryant "Bijl Country ' Reeves
scored' 26 pomts and drew five
fouls on Jim Mcllvaine in six minutes as Oklahoma State (20-8)
knocked the Warriors (20-8) out of
theirfirstNCMgamesince 1983.
Loulsville76,Delaware70
Louisville(21-8)almostblewan
18-pointlead against the Blue Hens
(22-8). The Cardinals had 15
turnovers and missed 12 of 25 free
lhrows. "It was a weird game,"
coach Denny Crum said.
XaYier 73, New Orleans 55
Xavier (24-S) used a 12-2 spurt

Today's game

AI C)rt.UO Artna
Ooloodo, Fla.
Tulane (22-1) "· F1orido S1tlo (23-9~

mlri--pooodin,-

· Lte.d Pm.C
LastTheMAssoclah
arc
1ma enual
Calholic played a game that ended
up being powerful motivation for
this sfasi&gt;n.
.. T~e Thunderbirds led Berlin
Hiland by seven in lhe last 27 seconds of a boys state semifinal. But
they were outscored 9-0 from that
point and ended up losing 64-62.
Those fmal seconds meant Uma
Central just had to return to state
~m~tion, coach Bob Seggerson

Peppcrdine SJ, UC Santa Barbara~

Tl1ty ..., ... SalUr&lt;ltJ

•
·
.
straight pomts fi_ve minutes into lhe verting a three-point play on an
second half to gtve lhe Tigers a SO- alley oop and free throw, then hit a
39 lead. He started the run by con(See NIT on C-4)

L•Ima C·ent raI Cath0 1•IC boys pound M•Iller •-.,,·
C•
·
Ity 76-53 to return to state tournament :

Midwest
.
Atlndlana)llllis

Woaacr 46, Millard 43

W. l;Ccntucky (lS-S) va. Seton Hall
(28-6~ 30

Lindsey H1mter scored 10

Friday's scores

Uuh 16,1'i1ubwJh 65

2;25 p.m.

""'second half.

Jaek.lan Stale 90, ConnccUau II (OT)
TCUI-1:1 Puo 67, H...- 61

lowo 12, N-I.ouWono 69
Konwoky !&lt;i, Ridco S2

S.A....-•N.""Y-.IIOoa

I

' (1846)

(l 7~cond-hlah game- Becky

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New Maico Slate (26-1) VL Cincinnali (lS-4), 30 minuta aflel prcccdina

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New-,99.Mil....-IS
llt11u 89. Phii..Wpl!it 17
",._ 121, ~ 103
lndlant 112, OwiGao 101
CU..pl04,W......... 99
Soo- !&lt;i. o.Wido 93
SeottloiOI, U1lh 'J7
1'holooit. 121, Ooadl 'J7
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.414

TedtJ''I""'"
At The Carrier Dome
Srrae..._N.Y.

·

NCAA tournament .. .

In the NIT•..

AI LB. Joel Memorlll Colllcum
Wlru:IM-Salem. N.C.
Nodh Catdina (29-4) w. Rhode lal1nd

GB

15.5

~·

·

?~- pomts, dorrunated for much of

The Thunderbirds did that Friday, and witb no game-ending worries. Uma Central, ranked No. I in
the state, never trailed in a 76-53
victory over Miller City for &amp;'Division IV boys regional cham pi-

Oco11a Wuhina,wn (20-B) YL Soulhcm Univcnity .(ll-9),2:20 p.m.
Micl&gt;iaon (27-4) vs. UCLA (22-10), 30
minllla al'tet ~teeedin&amp; aame

Tiler pl.ored Saturdor

10
1t.S
125
15.5
20

.Sl4

TempJe (11·12) vs. Sa.nta Clara (19·

ll).lO min~~~e~ after pricodina aune

Today"• &amp;until
At The tdc.Kale Cenkr
TIICIOn, Arb..

Srr.....,N.Y.
·
M.uo&amp;ch..... 54, l'a1nsJ1Yinia
V'UJinia 71, Maohoaon 66
New NcAico Stale 93. NebAJka 19
Cincianlti 93, Ccppia State 66

Frlday'IICOrfS

li I ED I UL"Da•

:Compston, Kelly receive
i~ll-TVC girls' cage honors
.:: ·; POMEROY of Belpre were
fltSt

.

ULTRA HIGH EFFICIENCY
HEAl PUMP SYSTEM

'

'.: .,_LL-TVC MARAUDERS- Meigs seniors Verna Compston
•: (left) and Lori KeUy Were this year's representatives on the aU-TVC
: girls' basketball team.
·

:PBL results

r.w.-..............

ha~h.ethall

AIThoC.rTitr-

CoolrtiDI.-

\

j!i

'us

notice and give us respecth -,
The Tigers surely earned the
respect of the Huskies After falling
behind by 12 in the fust half, Jackson Stare cut lhe lead to lhrec at
halftime ilod, behind lhe play of
Lindsey Hunler who finished with

East Regional

WESTERN CONFERENCE

:
:

most underrated conference in the
coun~ thi.s Y~- There~ five,
pombly s1x, olher teams m the

NCAA men's
tournament scores

GB

-~2

w........ ...........n

=

"\

. , ·The SWAC will be hard-pressed
to accomplish much more tlian it
did Friday when the Tigers beat
Connecticut and Southern s~
No. 18 _Georgia Tech 93-78 m the
fust round of. the NCAA West
Regional.

( · olle~e

\II\

POOL FOI THIS
LOW 1992

I'LL TAKE TIUS- As teammate Ron Carry (lower len) bits
tbe noor IIIli IICI'amble ·for the loose baD, Marquette's Damon Key
(rlgllt) striPI Cbe INIIlaW.7 from a noor-bonnd Terry CoUins (32) of
Oklahoma State during Friday's NCAA Midwest Regional first·
round ~ent pme in Indianapolis, where the Cowboys won
74-61. (AP)

t~.i:~e: ~':s=~·lhe

St~orchoard

MERCHAN

,

While the results shocla:d
bask tban ·~
S I'
.:r'l:y
e_
an~, tog 10 ~· t e

~ ~~ledhisptaye:~nroahud- :::r:·y~:OO~~;e.:c':nonha~~ ~~~n::~g~::a:\arg:~
U: 91,.si
locker COOl!! shott!y after so_me lhings to accomplish, •• he (25:8) have won '1i. of their last 24
. overume wm agwnst the srud. ·
·
games ''We've got to make DCilllle

YOU LAY·A·WAY

: ; Second-highest series - Larry
: Dugan (483)
· ; High game - Larry Dugan
: {178)
: • Secoad-hiRb game - Bub
' Stivers (17S)
: :·
Women
: ~ Higb series - Shirley Sim. mons(S08)
: • Second-highest series - Dottie
.Will (500)
: High pme - Susan Mossman
Xl92)
• Second-high game - Shirley
'Simmons (180)
:•
March 17
; ~ League - Early Wednesday
· :Mixed
: • Teams (in order of finlsb) : 'Mackett's Roofing (65), Tony's
· 'tarry Out (62), Sports &amp; Stuff
~S 1), Rutland American Legion
· {SO), Banks Construction (46),
: ;rearon1 Golf&amp;: Trophies (38),
: Team series- Hackett's(l879)
· : Team game- Teaford's Golf
~ Trophies (685)
Men
: High series- Russ Carson
JS46)
.
· • Second-lllghest series - Larry
: ;Dugan (510)
: ·· HJab aame -Jimmy Joe Haw. ley (221)
·
Secoad-bigb aame- Russ
: Carson (204)
Women
,
Hilb serle1 - Becky Ellis
; (474)
· Secoad-hlabest aeries : Shirley Simmons (466)
:
Hlah pme -Shirley Simmons

·'
Sunday nmea Sentinel Page ~-

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

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�I
.~Page C4 Sunday 1;1mes Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant, WV

March 21, 18113

. In NBA action,.

.llTexas sees Rockets' win streak sn~pped, Mavs win over 76ers
ByTbtAssociat..sPress
:.· The Texas team that always
t~sto win ... lost.
: • The Texas team that always
:1eems to lose ... won ... again.
:-' Houston saw its IS-game win.;;ing streak, longest in the NBA
: this season, stopped in Portland
;J!riday night when lhe Trail Blazers
•lvon 106-98 in overtime. Mean- ·
:.while, lhe Dallas Mavericks, in the
~midst of a 19-gamc losing streak
· ~liet in the week, won an 89-87
;,.jctory at Philadelphia. The out: .orne also created Salle doubt that
•:lh,e Mavericks could avoid eclips:10g the 9-73 season by the 1972-73
; .Sixers that stands as the worst in
•tffiA history.
;~ "This team is capable of win•aing some games," interim coach
:~ar Heard said. "I want them 10
; play as hard as they can every
: J:ame. We're lookin,g to wi!l as
;PJ~ny as we CBI!· We II ~.fimtely
. wm more lhan nme games.
•!· The victory also marked the first
. p.me Dallas has won more lhan one
:· ·

•! ·

•

,

,

,

game in a month. The Mavericks
(6-S1) previously won one game in
November, December, January,
February and March.
Hersey Hawkins had 26 points
for the S~rs, who have lost five
strai&amp;htgames overall and eight
times in nine home games.
Hateem Olajuwon had 34
points and 17 rebounds before fouling out wilh 15 seconds to play in
regulation l!nd Houston leadiJ)g 9492.
Jerome Kersey led the Blazers
with 22 points.
Elsewltere in lhc NBA, it was
New Jc(sey 99, Milwaukee 85;
Adanta 121, Minnesota 103; Indiana 112, Charlotte 108; Chicago
104, Washin1110n 99; San·Antonio
96, Orlando 93; SeauJe 108, Utah
97; Phoenix 127, Detroit 97;
Boston 129, the Los Angeles Lakers 119; an(! Golden State 113,
S8CJ11111en!D 101.
CeltJCS 129, Lakers 119
Boston .rallied from a 20-point
defiCit in the second half, scoring
49 points on 15-for-16 shooting in

.

. •

the fourth quarter to defeat Los
Angeles.
Xavier McDaniel scored 13 of
his 22 points in lhe fmal period for
Boston, which used a 23-2 rally 10
talce lhe lead.
Kevin Gamble scored 24 points
and Reggie Lewis 23 for the
Celtics. Byron Scou ·had 20 points
for the Lakers, who also squandered a 20-pointlead on March 7
against Charlotte.
SuperSoniq 108, Jazz 97
Sam Perkins spiked a Utah rally
and Ricky Pierce scored 29 ,i&gt;oints
for Seattle.
The Sonics, who led by as many
as 18 points in the fli'St half saw
the Jazz close the gap b;fore
Perkins took a pass from Vincent
Askew and dunked theri convened·
a free throw for a 99-92 lead Wi\11
1:.30 left Perkins who finished
with 17 Points and'10 rebounds in
~is first start for the Sonics, lhen
upped in a missed shot, putting the
game out of reach with t:031eft
Karl Malone had 29 poinis ~d
17 rebounds.

:ytmong Wznners zn gU'IS State Semifinal action,

'
t.er survives
•
•
:;:;t'J]
'' oos
poor sh00 t Ing
~in
. clutch to outlast Milford 46-45 .·

.· ::

.

'

~

;;: ·

By RUSTY MILLER
i:l · COLUMBUS, Ohio(~)- As
~the fmal seconds oflheir 64-39 vic;:# &gt;ry over Eastlake North ticked
,•eway Pickerington's fans chanted,
::: ·w~ want Wooster! We want

. ·:~ooster!"

;..; They'U get them but barely.
~;: Wooster,lhe staU,•s lhird-ranked
•;,earn, survived missing lhe front
;~ends of four bonus siluations in lhe
:::~118 seconds but held off Milford
•:4:6-45 Friday night at St. John
:~:Arena. That earned the Generals
:::(25-1) a s!Jot opposite .top-~
•:tiefending champion P1ckenngton
;.:(27·0) in the Division I girls state
'~hampionship game today.
':·. In lhe Division U championship
:"game, Millersburg West Holmes
·Z:sioes for its fourlh state aown,as it
:"t-ackles defending champion
::urbana. West Holmes (24-2) beat
•: Orrville 51 -27' in one semifinal,

::1\riT
:~~l.
a'cti"on •••

:~of rree throws, a three-pointer
:$nd a 17-foot jumper with 14:29
.
:;teft. .
•~ Connecticut hit three three:" inters in lhe final so seconds 10
·~rce the overtime. But Hunter,
':Who had just five points at half,~e. hit a pair of f'ree .lhrows wilh
left in overtime to tie the score
•::'at 84 a jumper from the left comer
~'with 2.:S4 left to give the Tigers an
-:87 _86 lead then scored on a break:,.~
Ia '
ds later
;oaway yup 17
. secon
·
.
•:. The Huskies had chan~~
,, t at the buzzer, but David Su~J
;.mons broke up Scott Burrell s
:,~ball pass 10 Don yell Marshall
.&gt;OS ume ran out.
h d 15
.;r ~odfrey Tho~pson a

:'"":25

a

a:

:;J&gt;~~rr;::: J'ge~ ~~~~~~

6Q . ~e

h J~n State (25 _
eac ·
.
SW C
the regular-season
,:

t!n pom

1:o ),

•:Cham~~:i !l~s ~~:;:\u~-

Suns 127,Pistons97
protesting an offensive foul. He
Charles Barkley had 22 points had 13 rebounds, but turned the
and l6 rebounds and Danny Ainge ball over eight times.
scored 23 as Phoenix rputed
The Ma~ic rallied without
Petroit for its 28th victory in 31 O'Neal, closmg a 19-point deficit
home games.
to 94-93 with 42 seconds left
Joe Dumars scored 31 points for before Sean Elliott ' s two free
the Pistons, but !hey couldn't over· • throws with 11 seconds ~aining.
come the balanced effort of the
It was .the fifth straight loss
Suns, who outrebounded 'Deuoit overall and seventh straight road
59,3S and had six players in double defeat for Orlando.
.
·figures.
·
Warriors 113, Kings 101 .
Bulls 104, BuUets 99
Golden State ended a six-game
Michael Jordan scored 11 of his losing streak by winning at Sacm·
25 poinlS in the final five minutes menlO.
as Chicago beat visiting WashingVictor Alexander scored 20
ton despite a career-high 37 points points and i'ytone Hill grabbed 16
by LaBradford Smith.
·
rebounds for lhe Warriors, who led
Jordan was held 10 14 points on by as many as 18 points late in lhe
4-for-21 shooting for 3 1{1. quar- second quart~. but trailed 90-88
ters, but the Bulls avoided an -with 6:171cfL
embarrassing loss to the Eastern
Wayman Tisdale sqJred 22
Conference's worst team '
points and Lionel Simmons and
Sco!tie Pippen scored 20 poi.nts Spud Webb had 20 each for the
and Will .Perdue bad a career-high Kings. .
.
17 for Chtcago. ·
Hawks U1, Tunberwolves 103
Spurs 96, Magic 93 _
Dominique Wilkins scored a
David Robinson outscored season-high 45 points despite sitShaquille O'Neal 30-15 as San ting out the final quarter of
Antonio beat Orlando.
Atlanta's rout of Minnesota.
.'
O'Neal, ~ho played big~ school . Wi!kins hit his first ~ve shots,
basketball 1n San Antomo, ·was mcluding three lhree-pomters, and
ejected. in lhe fourth qua,ner after had 21 first-qQart~r points as the
he rec1eved two techmcals for Hawks coasted to victory.

•

'

with Urbana (25-2) eliminating
Avon Lake 58-43 ~the olher.
Today's other Utle games find
Upper. Scioto Valley meet!n$
Zanesville Rosecrans for the DIVIsion IV crown and Sherwood
Fairview meeting Baltimore Liberty Union for lhe Division lli title.
"My wife says she doesn'tlikc
those kinds of games that come
down to free throws at lhe end,"
said Wooster coach Mike Gallagher. "I'm not crazy about 'em
either."
A~ead 46:40 after _Lori Blanchard s short jumper w11h 2:35 left,
Wooster did not score again and
weathered sloppy play down the
stretch.
.
Joy Taylor led W0011ter With 13
points on 6-of-7 shooting from lhe
field, while Blanchard had 12
points: Blanchard, II second-team
aii-Ohioan, also had eight assists
(Continued from C-3) .

and nine turnovers.
Blanchard t":ice turned the ball
over on offens1ve foul calls and ,
~as called fC?r ~aveling 1100ther
ume before N1ckie Sparks, who led
Milford (23-3) with 15 points, hit a
free throw and lhen a basket inside
to cut the lead to 46-45 with 26
seconds left.
But Milford missed a wild
three-point heave wilh 10 seconds
left thai ended up going over the
backboard. And W0011ter refused 10
put the game out of reach at the
line.
,
·
Marcie Alberts, who tore up a
knee in the districttourlla'"ent,
played sparingly but hit three threepointers 10 .fmish with nine points
for the Generals.
·
Gallagher said he knew a lot
about Pickerington, the nation's
No. 4-ranked team according to
USA Today.
'
. "You could Walch lhem play 2S
Urnes and you'd say, 'They're not
bauJcdbacktotakea 56-55 lead on flash~;· But.lhey do everylhing so
a jumper by Eddie Rivera, who fin. well, he wd.
ished with 12 points.
Gwyne~h Ballard scored 30
l'eppenliDe 53
pomts as l'ickenngton broke away
UC-Santa Barbara SO
early to pound Eastlake North.
At Santa Barbara, Calif., Pep·
. Ballard, a rirst·team all.Ohi?an•
perdine (23-7) escaped wilh a vic- hit 12 of 19 shots from the f•c:ld
tory when Bryan Parker's free and 6 of 9 free throws to go w11h
throw with 17 seconds remaining seve!! r~unds. .
gave lhe Waves a three-point lead
. Pickerington, WIMer of lhe last
and UC Santa Barbara's Michael f1ve ~p ~ta!e poll crowns, 1s
Meyer missed a three-pointer wilh a~pe~ng_ m 1~s foui'lh state final,
four seconds left.
wmmng utles m each of lhe three
Three players- Dana Jones, previous trips in 1985 1990 and
Bryan Parker !'I'd su:ve Guild last year. Only one tear{. - Aleron
scored II pomts ap1ece to lead SL Vincent-St. Mary in 1979 and
Pepperdine as lhe Waves avenged . 1980- has ever repeated as the
an early season loss 10 the Gauchos big-school state champion.
(18-11).
"Wooster has been waiting a
Pepperdine will now play long time to play Pickerington "
Southern Cal (17-11) in a second- said Tigers coach Dave Butch~r.
round game Monday night at the "It's like everybody wants to play
Los Angeles Sports Arena. The us. Wejustwanttoplay."
Trojans advanced to the second
Teresa Habat was the only play·
round by beating 25th-ranked er in double figures for Eastlake ·
UNLV90-74 Wednesday night. ' North (24-3) with 16 points.

•
? : a t a sitee~ ~determined.
·~ Marshall scored 22 points with
:•12 rebounds to lead UConn, Fair
~ ad 17 points, Burrell 16 ~nd
~~:D onny Marshall t4. Connecucul
r•(JS-13) finished the season with
::five straight losses.
•; Text~·EI Paso 6(, Houston 61 .
: • At El Paso. Texas, Johnny
;:Melvin had 21 points and R~y
.:Howard scored a key basket late m
:•the game to push Texas-EI Paso
r:~~ast Houston.
•· The Miners' next opponent wiD
:•be Georgetown, which advanced
•: by beating Ari zona State 78-68
:; Tuesday night. Houston, which was
:;;.angered at being left out of the
NCAA tournament, ended its Sea- .
• son 21·9.
UTEP overcame a 23-4 run by
&gt;: the Cougars lhat began wilh 16:20
~: left in the second half on a three!: pointer by David Diaz. The Miners
~

~·

.

•

.' Friday-5-7 p.m., open swun
;•! ' Saturday -closed for class
:• Sundav, March 18 - 1-3 and
'
.
1: 5-7 p.m., open swun

.

~~

Note: All facili~ in Lync Cen·
•. ter exctpt lhe pool will be closec! to
the public until further nouce
becaUse of work on the new gym

j
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''I have mixed emotions. I'm
~happy about going borne. I'm
goinsto miss a lot of ftiendS.· and a
lot of &amp;ood times in Cincinnati."
When a reporter joked that the
mayor was somg 10 give him a key
10 the city as a going-away gift, he
tam•hed.
-,.,That's 1101 my understanding,"
he said. "Tbel, might give me the
bus ticket OUL ' •
Throughout his nine years as a
Bengal, Esiason never tried to
ingratiate himself with the fans .

~~~~~

the best send-off possible: a chance

10 go home.

Brown adm.il!ed a tertain sadness after trading Esiason, who has
criticized the front office lhe last
few r.ears.
' There's a bit ofa pang,"
Brown said. "It would have
seemed just a few years ago that
Boomer would have ended his
career with lhe Bengals .
"Personally, I'm fond of
Boomer. I'm .grateful for the job
he's done here. He's done a lot of ·
big lhings for this team over the
years. He was a good player. Yet at
the end, it seemed best for him to
go elsewhere."

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Loaded.

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•For 4ualified buyers on Toro'~ R~volvins Charge Plan.
Prices subjeclto loc~ l dealer opnon.
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"

rNew-look Pirates show just three
. piayers in same·places as in 1992
..

BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) ·PiusburJb Pirates have a lot of
: new· faces m camp this spring,
: which is nothing unexpected. But
• there are a few players, name!)!
• outfielden Gary VaBho and Cecil
: Espy and pitcher Bob Patterson,
- who some thought would still be
; around.
• They were released as the
• Pirates trimmed lhe payroll.
:_ "The only thing tllat swpri5e;'!
• me a liuJe bit were lhe releases,
: veteran shortstop Jay Bell said.
: "Every~in~ else I pretty much.
sawcommg.
·
:; Bell is baclc for his fourth full
:· season as the Pirales' ~egular short• stop, one of only tbree positions in
: the Pittsburgh lineup manned by
: the same penonnel as a season ago.
The others are center field (Andy
~ Van Slyke) and catcher (the pia;: toon of Don S!aught and Mike
·. LaValliere).
"Wben you see friends you
;' played with leave, certainly you
• feel bad," Bell said. "As players,
: we have a fi&amp;bl ., be upset. At the

~ Sports deadHnes posted

t·

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
;· The Daily Se11li11tl, the Poinr
P/efJSIUIJ Register anii the SIUIIIay• Tlmes-SellriMI value lhe conlribu- 1
' tions their readers make to the
~ sports sections of lhese papers. and I
~- these contributions wiD continue to · ·
be published.
.
~ llowever, certain deadlines for
subinissions will be observed. The
' deadline for photos and rellliCd ani• cles for MsJre!ball and other winter .
:· sports is the last day of the NBA
•· F'mals.
;' Likewise, the deadline for sub- .
• missions of local baseball- and
: softlllll-relaled Dbolos and related
·: articlel. from T-ball to the majors,
:: u well u Olbcr sprinJ and summer
;. sports. ilthe day of lhe last pme
•' ollhe World Series. The deadline
:: for pbolol and .elated article~ for
:· fOOiball anc1 other 1p0111 11 111e
-: Salmday ~ lhe Supt6Bowl.
~
, _ h 11iqel have lleeD insti:. IUIOd 10 pve &amp;elided plenty of time
•! 10 Jet dieir photos 1iiCk fnJm tho
:: pbulopiphy 11Ddlo of choice and
: 10 live the lt8ffs lhe opporlllllity 10
·! puliliA these sports pbo101 and
~: lniciCI Uin&amp; lhe 8JllllllPI'Iatc lel·
~~ - for tbat aport.
•

same time, we have a.job to go out
and do. I'd like 10 have seen those
guys stay here but it's 1101 our place
10 dwell on it 100 long."
Many of his former teammates
are gone, but Bell is keeping a pos·
iti.ve outlook about the new loolt of
lhe Pirates and his new teammates.
"Winning is an attitude fliSI and
foremost," he said.· "I really feel
like we're going to have a good
ball club."
Within two months after the
Pirates' playoff loss 10 the Atlanta
Braves, the team that. had won its
lhird consecutive National League-..
Ea9t title was dismantled.
Left fielder Barry Bonds and
pitcher Doug Drabek left as free
agents. Pill:hcr ~riy Cox and fliSI
baseman Gary Redus departed as
lower-tier free agents. Second
baseman Jose Lind was traded.
Outfielder Alex Cole and pitcher
Danny Jackson were lost in the
expansion draft

1990 hick leS1In

19449
(

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~

1992 TEMPO
. orTOPAZ
IJDLLY EQUIPPED,
NOT STRIPPED•....-·,..

--Sports briefs. ..;.;...

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:0 1993 The Thro.Compnny

considered dropping a few of his
'passes to make sure he never
'}llayed a down in~
. "I mean, he was so arrogant and
so cocky thai we didn't know what .
10 do with bim. But he also took
over a team that was struggling and
'over time, gave them the same conJidence that he bad personally."
He gave the city a lot 10 cheer: a
'Super Bowl appealUCC, NFL Most
Valuable: Player hooors, a take-noprisoners offCIIIC. He gave lhem a '
lot to critic~ too: his IUgh-profiic

, The

$9495
Bran~ lfeiW

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~~~~~~~~~

••

. 19.87 Oldsmobile Oera

BAU

:·Boomer was the guy who
believed he could do anylhing always has, always will," former
leammllle Cris Collinsworth .said.
"Wben he walked into the locker
room the very first day, we all
lhought be was the biggest jerk.

:"rcmovo

;
;:

;=
I;;
'E (DH)

room.

Mitchell used the inserts in his
Skiin
shoes. He came off the field limpLILLEHAMM~R.
Norway
'ing after the game, but showed no (AP) - Adrien Duvillard of
signs of a problem until manager France recorded his first World
Tony Perez pulled him for a pinch Cup doWnhill victory on i&lt;.vitfjell' s
runner after his two-run double in Olympic course, while Marc
the eildlth inning.
Girardelli of Luxembourg moved
"Clearly Dr. (Ian) Alexander's closer 10 a record fifth overall title.
recommendation was orthotics rust · buvillard finished ,in ) minute,
and the toe plate adjustments, and 42.32 seconds to edge Werner
10 see bow that works over a period Perathoner by 0.36 seconds.
of time," Perez said. "On lhe fJCid, · Girardelli finished 28th, but
'th'ere wasn't a problem. We can increased his overall lead when
open up right now with him on Kjetil AI]dre Aamodt of Norway
opening day and win the pennanL" missed a gate l\lSS lhan. 10 seconds
checked to see how it responded into his run. Girardelli has I ,208
&gt; during the ni!lhL
.
points and Aamodt.822.
·
The foot didJJ 't feel very good m
Skiing
the second inning while Mitchell
VEMDALEN, Sweden (AP) ran 10 frrst base during a ~und­ Vreni Schneider of Switzerland
OUL So he changed shoes, discard- edged Patricia Chauvet of France
ing the one where the front spike is by 0.33 seconds for her third World
moved back toward the instep so Cup slalom victory of the seasbn.
the spike doesn't pound on the Schneider finished wilh a two-run
:·fracture.
bone.
time of I minute, 43.36 seconds.
._ "I dou't want bim to be in pain,
He went wilh rubber spiked turf
Basket!JaU
,
~if' we ae'ed' to remove it, we'll · shoes thai Billy Larldn gave birD,
NEW YORK (AP)- Cleveland
it," said general man~ · whicb also have orthotics, an![ he forward Danny Ferry was fined
··Jim Bowden. "That's somethmg · got tbree $lnlight hits.
' .
$4,000 by the NBA for a flagrant
:: we have 10 find out in time. We
"I'd like to wear the spiklls foul against Philadelphia's Armon
: • have to watch it over the next week . while I'm biUin' and Barry's when Gilliam on Tuesday nighL
;: and see. The tey thing is thai I'm in Jhe ·field, • Mitchell said. "I
·~ (uainer) Greg Lynn says the just have 10 gec used to the shoes.
; • swelling is in just one spot and not .J'm going to be OK. I want 10 play.
all over."
.
,
I ean play through lhe pain."
;' For the first time Friday, _ _
.

Squore

•

Home athletk events
Wednesday -Baseball vs. /
f ' Wilmington. 1 p.m. (DH)
•
Saturday - Baseball vs.
w. va. Wesleyan, I p.m. (DH);
softball vs. Notre Dame, I p.m.

. Love him or hau: him, E•iaSO'I
gave lhem sornelhing 10 talk about
for nine years in a city lblll never
qui~ knew what 10 think of him.
The brash quarterback from New
:-t:ork has been stirring things up
Sin&lt;:e lhe fu:st day he Slepped iniO
the Cincinnati Bensals locker

.
Perhaps lhat's what bothered lhem
m011t of all.
"I've always tried 10 represent
not so much the team or the city
but lhe players thai played for the
team, in a way that they can be
h3J!py with the guy who's J;lUUing
the trigger, • • Es1ason sa1d. • ' I
played hard, 1 worked hard, 1 led
by example. And at times lied with
my mouth. I've had to tell some
people some things they didn't like.
"But I think m011t of the players,
I played with here. respected me,
and I know I did lhem. And we had
·· a great thing going here for a while.·
Unfortunately, it dismantled."
He asked for a trade to a contending team after the Bengals
benched him last season in favor of
rookie David Klingler. General

PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) Kevin Mitchell came back wilh a
nourish, driving in four runs on
lhnle hits after waitinj! a week for
special shoes to cushion a broken
sesamoid bone ncar lhe big toe on
his left foot.
Tbe Reds' new cleanup hitter
returned 10 the Cincinnati lineup
Friday despite persistent pain and
.sWelling in the foot.
"It buns, but I can still play,"
Mitchell said after .serving as !he
designated bitter in a 7-3 victory
over the Detroit Tigers. "I'D just
get a (cortisone) shot. I'm not
,going lj) have any surgery." .
Mana.gement also believes
, Mitchell can c:ontinul: 10 play wilh::out SUIJery, butlhe clUb says it will
••hinge on MiiCheU's ability 10 fmd
:•the right comllination or cusiOm·
:: made innerloles - orthotics ·~ lblll will tate the pressure off the

$39~!:1.

e;

.
sw1m

around.

role in lhe 1987 players' strike, his
cancb about lhe leam's slt&lt;lrtcomings.
.
HeneverelUICIIyfatinacitylhat
likes its heroes home grown Pete Rose, Marge Schott - or
humble - Ken Anderson, Tony
Perez. Esi&amp;!QII was DCitber.
.
When Johnny Bench retired,
they cried. When Rose was banned.
they rcvol~. When Schott was
suspended, they piOiatCd.
There was no public display
when lhe J!e!P.II trlded one of the
most accomplisbed players in fran.
chise hisiOry 10 lhe New York Jets
· for a drlfteWcdnesday. Basically,lhey .
"I 1:0111idcr · the end or the
last chapter of the Cincinnati
saga," Esiason said. "It's been

With new shoes, Mitchell pf:lshes
Reds to 7-3. victory over Detroit

Sale

"WHITE
GRAY

ByJOEKAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Boomer
Esiason is leaving, and a city lblll
doesn't readily tate outsiders 10
heart is going 10 miss having him

RE-ROOFING SALE

Center slate

RIO GRANDE - This week's
,: activities schedule for Lyne Center
: is as follows:
•·
Poolhours
~i Today - 1-3 and 5· 7 p.m.,
:~ open swim
Monday - 5-7 p.m., college
: swim
..•• iwim
.Tuesday - S·-7 p.m., college
• • Wednesday -closed for class
..~.: Thursday - 5-7 p.m., college
~

The Timberwolves were led by
Christian Laettner with 23 points:
Kevin Wiltis had I~ points and 14
'rebounds for AUanta.
l'acers 112, Hornets 108
.
LaSalle ThOmpson didn't play
lhe first three quaners, lhen scof'C4
12 of his 14 points in lhe final 2:41
as Indiana beat Charlotte.
.
Reggie Miller scored 28 points
for the Pacers.
.
·
Alonzo Mourning scored 37
points and Larry Johnson bad 21
points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds
for Charlotte, his second tripledouble in two ni~hts and the set•
' Ond in franchise hiStory.
.
Nets 99, Bucks 85
.
New Jersey held Milwaukee
scoreless for 3:59 down lhe stretch
to win.
•
Drazen Petrovic, held to six
points in lhe first half, scqred 13 of
his 27 in lhe fourlh quaner for lhe
Nets, while De!l'ick Coleman finished with 25 points and 12.
rebounds.
Milwaukee, which got 16 points
and 15 rebounds from Anthony
Avent, trailed 84-81 with 5:01 left
after a basket by Eric MUrdock, but
the Nets scored the next 11. points
.before the Bucks scored again with
1:07 remaining.

.

:S:

• /j

Cincinnati will miss Boomer

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Sunday llmes Sentlnei-Page-C5

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

-After: nine years,

.

·; ~:

jlarch 21, 1993

i,

•••

�~

. ., ... . .

..

~

" . .,.

.,

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

P....-cs--sunday nmes Sentinel

March 21, 1893

RIO GRANDE- With a.number of NAJA All-Americans 10 irs
credit since the laic 1970.. the Uni~
versity of Rio Grande track team is
gearing up t.o take on 1111 comers
dwing the new aeaaon. Coach Bob
Willey is expecting the same kind
of dedication
his athletes that
bas broul!hl naliorutl hoiKn to lhe
program 10 the past. .
The men's and women's teams
were to open the 1993 campaign at
West Virginia University's Mountain State Invitations!. but the meet
was postponed due to that weekend's w•nter storm. The teams
made their debut March 20 at
Wake Forest University and provided WiUey wilh his rust look at
what both could do under competitive fire.
''The rust meet is always interesting," Willey said as he began his
12th year guiding lhe teams' fortunes. ''You really don't know what
to expect bec•nse we have a lot of··
young faces this )ear, but they
have a lor of talent
In 1992, lhe men plaCed fowlh
and lhe' women second in the MidOhio Conference,while in District
22 the men finished sixth and the

rrom

·' SAGE AJ)VJCE - •Unlvenlty of Rio Grande track coach Bob •
Willey, left, gives lldvlce 10 All-American hurdler Tim Murphy
: during last year's Twilight Invltatloaal at Marshall University.
: Murpby Is one of several veterans aud AU-Americans back for Rio
; Grande's 1993 season.

~ IOC,

ASOIF ~gree
•
to use same sanctions,
; drog-testing procedures
for all sports ·
:
By STEPHEN WILSON
; ATLANTA '(AP) - The
: world's rwo major Olympic bodies
; agreed Friday to jom forces in
1applying the same drug-testing procedures and sanctions to all sports.
The International Olympic
Committee and the Association of
• Summer Olympic International
: Federations also decided to work
:·together in addressing another
G illiwng problem - civil law suits
• filed by athletes like Butch
Reynolds or suburban Columbus,
1 Ohio. ·
, "Today tbel1: is a will ·or all the
; federations and the IOC to be
! together," ,IOC president Juan
: Antonio Samaranch said. "The
; fight together will be much more
1effective. This is a good step for' ward."
ASOIF preside11tPrimo Nebiolo
' said, "We believe that the times
: are changing and it can no.,.. be
' ~uch easier to rmd a good decisi011
· from both sides."
' The two officia.ls announced
1 that the IOC executive board and
• the ASOIF council will hold a spe' cia! meeting June 21 at Lausanne,
1 Switzerland, 10 foonulate solutions
~ to the doping and litigation issues.
'
"On the table, we have two of
' the most important problems we
t are facing in sport," NeSiolo said.
1
The decision came one day after
1\SOIF, which represents all 26
l sports on the Summer Olymj&gt;iC
1 program, called for uniform dopmg
regulations.
As of now, testing procedures
and sanctions vary widely among
1 different fede~ations. Depending on
the sport, the penalty for use of
steroids can range from four years
I to two years to three months. .
~
"We agree we have to be
' l!lgethef, we have to fight together,
we have to harmonize many
things,'' Samaranch said. "If the
international
fedentions want. we
1
can coordinate lhis effort"
I!J tr•ck and. field,, where the
• dopmg problem IS considered espe; cially serious, the current sanction

l

j'

1

I
I
!

women.fowlh.

.

Among the several sttengths of
this year's teams touted by· Willey
is the experience of its veterans.
including Renee Peck, the senior
from Bahimore, Ohio, who
returned from the NAJA Indoor
Traek Nationals in March with her
seventh · All-American honor.
Peele's other ranlcings have been
spread over indoor and ' outdoor.
track as well as cross country.
·Joined by Bonnie Evans, a
junior from Kingston who also
came back from Kansas City as an
All-American, the women's team
bas a chance at winning the MidOhio Conference title based on distance running and other team memberli' expertise in other events such
as the long and ttiple jump, he said.
One of the new faces on the
team is Stacey Ritter, a freshman
from Sidney who was the 1992
state high school champion in the
long jump and the 200 meter, as
wen as runnerup in the 100. Ritter,
who cut an impressive first-year
record as a guard with Rio Grande
women's basketball team, win be
joined by sprinter Kim Sowers, a
sopbomore from Frankfort who
also played guard for the Red women.
The men's, team also has its
share of exiJCrienee and shoulil be
impressive tn the middle &lt;!istance.
distance and,long jump evenrs, the
coach added. Cha&lt;l Bimson, a

for steroid use is a four-year sus(lCnsion for the rust offense and a
life ban foe the second.
ASOIF officials said there
appeared to be a consen~us ~or a
standard two-year suspension 10 all
st?Orts! with a life ban for a second
vwlabon.
,
.
Nebiolo, who also is president
of the International Amateur Athletic Federation, the world goveming body for track and field, was
confident that most federations
·would agree to follow a uniform
doping policy.
However, he aclcnowledged that
some would need convincing. Also,
some federations, including the
IMF, wou14 have to change their
statutes to conform to the common
rules. ·
·
Samaranch suggested that about
15 federations could accept the regulations initially, with the others
joining later "bit by bit, step by
step."
Samaranch stressed that the
responsibility for random, out-ofcompetition dot?ing controls will
remain with the mtemational feelerations. The IOC,whicb administers
drug testfo only during the
Olympics, has resisted calls to
police worldwide controls.
"We cannot interfere," Samaranch said. "The responsibility for
sport between the Olympic Games --Sports briefs-belongs to the international federations."
Golf
The issue of litigation has been
INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (AP)
highlighted by the case of - George Archer shot a 9-undcrReynolds, the 400-meter world par 63 to talce a two-stroke lead
record-holder who sued lhe IAAF over Ray Floyd after the fust round
over a dop\ng suspension and won of the Senior PGA Tour's Gulfa $27.3 million judgment in a U.S. stream Aerospace Invitational. Bob
district court in Columbus, Ohio.
Chsrles and Don Bies opened wilh
"The problem totlliy is not on! y 66s on the Indian Wells course.
a medical problem, it is a judicial
problem," S310aranch said.
Track and field
The IOC and ASOIF sai.d this
ATLANTA (AP) - Butch
week they were working toward a Reynolds was offered sponsorship
system which would require ath- deals by two companies as an
letes to agree to settle any incentive to drop his claim of $27.3
ll!'ievances in amitration rather than million against track and field's
c•v•l courts.
world governing body, a source
close to the case said ·
The source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said one of the
offers came from a major sports
shoe company. The other company
The IMF source suggeste(llhat wasn't disclosed, but both are
Reynolds and his agent were will- believed to be sponsors of the
ing to accede to the federation's International Amateur Athletic
demands hut that his lawyers were Federation.
noL
The IAAF filed a motion
Reynolds, the world recordholder at 400 meters and lhc 1988 Wednesday in U.S. District Coun
Olympic silver medalist, recently· in Columbus, Ohio, challenging the
retwned to competition after serv- court's ruling that Reynolds was
ing a suspension of moo: than two entitled to $27.3 million in com years. He won the 400 meters at lhe pensation for his disputed doping
World Indoor Championships in suspensio!'· _
Toronto last Sllnday.

By STEPHEN WILSON
ATLANTA (AP) - Butch
' Reynolds bas been offered .sponsor1 ship deals by twO comparnes as an
incentive to drop his claim of$27 .3
million against track and field's
1world governing body: a source
' close to the case said Friday.
:
The source, speaking on condi: lion of anonymity, said one of the
~ offers came from a major sports
shoe company. The other company
wasn't disclosed, but both are
1 believed to be sponsors of the
~ International Amateur Athte.tic
• Federation.
Reynolds, of Columbus, Ohio,
. is a former Ohio State University
; track Star.
'
The terms of the contracts
weren't known, although tile
source said, "A guy lilce Reynolds
1 could ask for a few hundred thou' sand dollars a year for promotion.
A contract of two or three years
j coulil make him a substantial
1 amount or money."
The sponsorships could help
lead to a settlement of Reynolds'
. bitter dispute with the IAAF, the
source said
The IAAF filed a motion
I Wednesday in U.S. Dislric:t Court
i in Columbus challensing the
court's ruling that Reynolds was
entitled to $27.3 million in c~m­
pensati~n for his disputed dopmg
suspensiOR.
·
The IAAF bas aalced Reynolds
, 10 drop his leplaction - ' retnlet
! ·hisderoJBIOIY comment1 about the
I federation. Reynolds hal refused to
do so.
.
. ted F .
· An IAAF source re1teR1
nday that Jle_ynolds could face
"severe ·pun11hmeat" unlets he
j

1

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SELF-RESPECT
AND COMnDEMCE.

!

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Being a soldier in the
Anny is going to change
you-for the better.
Yes. you'll use muscles
you never thought you had,
but you'll get in the best
physical shape of your life.
Yes, you'll get up early and
work hard. but you'lllearn
skills that will last
you a lifetime.
·The end result? You'll walk a little taller because you11 have
developed self.discipline. a new sell-confidence and sell-respect
that will give you an edge on life.
You could also walk away with money for college and the maturity
to talce learning in stride once you get there.
II you're ready to put a lot of pride in your life, call your Anny
Recruiter today and start building for tomorrow.

I

C0111pliel,
AI illnollt Ol)llllcil meetin11n May,
the IAAF eould ban

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il*l dilft:pufe"
• biJn ~
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Ubel. -

ure

614•446•.3343
ARMY.• II ALL ~·
IVV CAN BE:
i

Sunday Times-Sentinel K:l

By LINDA A. JOHNSON _
LONG BRANCH, NJ. (AP) While the ocean steadily ears away
America's shores, those ·watching
are arguing abopt how -'-- or
whether - to keep it at bay ·and
who should pay the staggering bill.
CQnservationisrs, coastal residents and bUsinesspe()(llc agree on
one point- the ocean's daily
tides, a steadily rising sea level and
• periodic major storms will keep
moving beaches inland.
A December northeaster that
badly eroded shorelines in five East
Coast states left many seaside
.towns, especially barrier isla,nds,
vulnerable.
.
Those who own property along
,the heavily developed Eastern
·seashore or live off its tourist trade
:want io halt erosion, preferably
:\!lith government mone~.
,. · They argue that rebuilding
·'beaches is just like highway maintenanCe and costs less than its ben·

efits - protection of billions of
'doUars wQrth of coastal condominiums, hotels •and homes. Shore
tourism, they emphasize, mngs in
big money, than $8 billion a year
for New Jersey and $28 bUliori for
Florida, for example.
"It's a ttemeniloJIS resource and
we should If doing what ~ can ro
manage it and ()'reserve it professionally," says Kennet6 Smith,
founder of the lobbring group
Coastal Advocate Inc. m Ship Bottom and a vice president of the California-based American Shore and
BeaciJ Pm i 1vation Association.
Smith, lilce his clients and others
with a fiDBIICial stake in EaSt Coast
shore lourism and real estate, advocates prolei:ting that investtnent
throu~h beach engineering widenmg beaches with dredged
sand and building dune systems
between beaches and buildings.
Environmentalists, and some
university and government experts

.

'

By JOHN WISSE
l)lvlskm oiWlldUfe
1 COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Beginning next month, a survey
will resume of sport anglers on the
Qhio River between the Gallipolis
Dam to the Markland Dam in lndi-

Ohio River recreational fishing is
being funded by the Ohio Division ·
of Wildlife through the Federal-Aid
in Sport F'ISh Restoration program.
The Ohio River Recreational
Use Survey began in 1991 with
administrative planning and was
followed in 1992 with angler interviews and aerial counts.
The survey was conducted along
the stretch of the Ohio River
between the Pennsylvania border
near East Liverpool to the Greenup.
Dam near Portsmouth. Interviews
and aerial surveys will occur from
dusk to dawn on randomly selected ·
days this year from AprilS through

:

~

'ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP RAP
"We DellYer and Spread Uaae~ne"

•Mason Sand
•Top Soil
•Concrete Sand
•Fill Dirt ·
•Pit Run
~
•Shredded
Top Soil
•Drainage Gravel
•Pea Gravel
· •Straw
•Drainage Tile
•Culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5")
•Block and Mortar Mix

• The. survey is being conducted
liy the Ohio Division or Wildlife in
~with the Ohio Division
ef Watercraft, the West Virginia
I;lepanment of Natural Resources
and the Kentucky Department of
Fish and WildJife Resources.
· The majoc part of the four-year
study to determine the status of the

99

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GAME CALLS

CHALLENGER
FIGtmN'PURRS
1202

19.99

1845

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SE2•SE3 '~
SE4
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Resources, West Virginia Depart.ment rJ Agriculture, West Virginia
Farm Bureau, and the Mo~tn•laineera For Rural Pro~ress
(Wildlifo Committee) will inill81e a
"lJilot cooperative fanner/landowner
'and sportsmen access program in
:Calhoun, Jackson, Roane, Win and
,Wood counties during the 1993
hunting season.
•: The program is d!!signed to
:~st landowners who have higher
,lhan desired deer densities on their
·J&gt;roperties and provide hunters with
l~ditional private lands on which
•jOhunL
"It is our hope that this program
benefit both the landowner and
'the hunter. We are Jloing to malce
~very effort to mvolve !loth
lm&gt;iips," DNR direclilt Ed Hlmriclc

and sportsmen are enc~~ged to
complete one. or the apphcauons by
July 1.
.. .
·
.
. Any queauons should be direct- ed to Conservation Officer CaP.l·
B_en G_ragg or J?istrict Wildlife
b1olog•st J .R. Hill. They may be
reached at AC ~20-4550 cx- by
writing coope~a~v~ Ac.c~s~ Program, West Vrrgm1a DIVISIOn of
Natural Resources, 6321 Emerson
Avenue, Parkersburg, WV 2610 I.

,..m

........
~- Under the proposed programil,

;:;;;;,

'

~Farm

SNAPSHOT ··7r

Nov. 22. ·
In 1994, the final year of the
study, resulrs will be analyzed and
reports preparoo.
• 'We are conducting this study
to determine the status of the Ohio
River sport fiShery which will help
us better manage the Ohio River
fish populations .... The resll!ts of
this survey will enhance resource
protection and development on the
Ohio River," said Randy Miller, an
assistant fish management and
research administrator for the Ohio
Division of Wildlife.
Creel clerics wiD interview Ohio
River anglers to determine the

amount of time they rlsh, what they
are fishing for and what species
and sizes of fish they catch. Aerial
· surveys will be used to count .the
number of anglers.
.
While much attention has ceotered around t1ie Great Lakes, little
information is available on the status of spon fiShing along the Ohio
River.
"We all recognize the Ohio
River is a popular and important
source of recreational use. Our surv~y will seek some basiC, inf~I!DB­
lion about fishing and the opm•ons
and desires of Ohio River anglers,"
Miller said.

~ow-flying aircraft may cause problems for Lake Erie birds

By JOHN WISSE
cially concerned about aircraft flyDiVision of WlldUfe
ing between Cleveland and Detroit
·1 OAK HARBOR, Ohio (AP) that pass over western Lalce Erie.
1Baaft flying 111 tow altitudes can
The Federal Aviation AdminisCiisturb wildlife and may be a prob- tration rece.nt!Y. recogni~e.~ the
ICm along Lalce Erie according to . 2,000-foot limit as the m1mmum
:tjle Ohio Division of Wildlife. · requested altitude for aircraft oper.' The Lake Erie wetlands are vital ations over land manag~d by the
'&amp;reeding and restinJ grounds for U.S. Department o~ Interior's land
:ljjrds and other S(ICCICS or wildlife. ~~ment &amp;gentles. ~ agenAily type of disruption could be c1~s ·~elude !he U.~. F1sh and
[detrlmcatlll to wildlife using these . Wildlife Serv1ce, National Park
)!alunll.resource areas.
Service and Bureau of LB!'d Man~/··' These uca~ ue important ag~m~nt. The. U.S. F1sh and
nursefies and resting grounds, W1ldllfe ~erv1ce. m_anages t~e
~ specially in the spring. Bald Ottawa NBllonal Wildlife Refuge m
eagles and waterfowf are particu- Ottawa and Lucas COUI'Ities. . .
'IJii1y ~." said Gilda Tori,
"Bald Eagles are very IICIISIII~e
'hUP.erYisor of the Division of ilwinl ocatint pctiOdS ..cl any dis"
;w.tdlife's Crane Creek R~areh ~ ~d flush the ~lc fn?m
:Station on the Magee Marsh •rs nest This could resul110 a chill!Wildlifc Area in Ottawa County.
ing of the eg~and subsequent
· ': The Division of Wildlife is deathofthe .em o,''Torisaid.
~ncouraging pilots to voluntarily
.As of Man:!' I , 12 of Ohio's 22
qomply with a 2,000-foot minimum PBI!' of breeding ~Ies ~ begun
altitude while flying over the west- 10 I!ICUbate eggs, •ncludi~ll seven
:era· Lalce ·Erie shoreline between nest sites in the Lake Ene marsh
,,lJ'oledo and Sandusky. Tori is espe- region.
••

31NCH 'MAG
12 GA. 21" RCVR .

$119

trim federal spending, weather
experts are predicting a round of
hurricanes in the Northeast and
new beach technology l:ompanies
are hawking erosion cure-ails.
A Federal Emergency Management Agency report. issued in New
Jersey after the northeaster caused
hundreds of millions of dollars in
damage from Delaware to Mas,n '
.
Bennett notes that U.S. Army sachusetiS, suggests that lhe state at
Corps of Engineers' estimates for least consider retreating from
its planned beach replenishment repeatedly battered areas.
proJect next year stretching from
Since 1979, FEMA has doled
Sea Bri•ht 15 miles to the soulh out more than $3.6 billion in disasrun t.o $1 billion. It will cost more, ter aid for coastal storms alone,
he believes, and the sand won't last · $1.4billion of that in the last year.
the predicted 50 years.
The National Academy of Sci"I don't think we can afford to" ences Committee on Beach Nourkeep replenishing beaches, he says. ishment and Protection, established
"The other side will say we can't in September by the Corps and
afford not to."
FEMA, is studymg the issue arrd
The longstanding debate over plans a report early next year.
shoreline erosion is getting louder.
The committee also will review
A new administtatioQ is trying to the record of protective structures

Three-st3:te survey of Ohio River fishermen to continue

:WVDNR to start access program
):for sportsmen, landowners
f CHARLESTON, W.Va.- The from their land should they request
• )Nest Virginia Division of Natural this service. Farmer/landQwners

$219

on' beach erosion, give different
advice.
"Run away!" says D.W. Bennett, executive director of the
American LiUilral Society based in
SandyHoc*.
'
The engineering sOlution is very
expensive, and, says Bennett, "will
lead
nemle to a false sense of secu'ty of-.,.,

Bureau and the DNR w' l

work together to assist landown-·
:'trstrarmers in reducing the number
· :Pf deer on properties where
;landowners have suffCied damages
~ desire fewer deer.
.'
11 The program will be ·in effect
:roc the 1993 deer 'C'•pl!lll A public
'l)leeting will be beld in each county
"' April to explain the program;
.
·~Cooperating farmer/landOwners
' · be supplied lllll1leS or the numer of huntera they wish to deer
\lunt
on
their
land.
armer/landowners names will
athered on a voluntary basis.
rochures will be available from
'ljJe QNR, WV Farm Bureau, and
~nty extension agents exJli!U!Iinll
t=c=~ which bo,th '
:i-ill have to meet and
'Oent information iJ included 10 the

i

Many waterfowl use the Lake
Erie IIWBhes as a restin$ place during migration. Low.:flymg aircraft
can threaten and tipset bird$ that
are trying to regain energy after
flying as faras S,OOO miles during
the spring migration, the division

-··· -

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'2.99

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t 10 know IIIII •Y lpQIII·

pplyiJIIIO huat under IIIia
IIIII&amp; hava a~JC~~Uifully
~ a hUDiel' llftly couno

BY ,.ASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, POINT PLEASANT
_NEW ITORI HOURI: MONDY.flRIDAY, 1:30 ...a1111: IAlUfiDAY, 1:...... 1111: lUNDAY, 11 Alit,.

...

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IIIIRY deer IIIDu1d llo lllllOUed

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ORLANDO, fla. (AP) - Davis
Love Ill used patience and power

in windy conditions to shot a 3under-par 69 and take a ·one-stroke
lead after the second round of the
NesUe InvitationaL

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whisk it all, away.
•
In fact. some New Jersey shore;
towns decided after December's·
devastation not 10 rebuild Ill the·
wiped-out bo\lfdwalks an~ pavilions. Even Sm1th, the lobbvast. con.
cedes some spots just aren't defen:
sihle.

--Sports briefs--

Love had a 4-under 140 total on
Amol&lt;l Palmer's 7,114-yard Bay
said.
Hill Club course. Bernhard Langer
The u.s. Department of Interi- (70), Ben Crenshaw (70) and
or's land management agencies Michael Allen (72) were tied for
each signed an agreement in Jan- second and Ed Humenik (69), BUI
uary with the FAA in an effon to Kratzert (70), Joey Sindelar (70),
reduce incidents of wildlife distur- Kirk Triplett (71), Dan Pohl (72)
banee by low-flying aircrafL
and Vijay Singh (72) were two
baclc.

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such as out-of:fashion seawalls and
groins that ·worsened erosion in
many areas and new technologies
for slowing erosion.
Manufacturers promoted their
products last month at New Jersey's second Shore. Summit, a
state-sponsored ~athering of erosion experts, politicians and business interests in Long Branch, a
northern New Jersey shore resort.
Last year's summit produced a
lobby that helped pass state legislation guaranteeing $15 million
annually for shore protection projects. This year's summit ended
w.ith organizers pledging to seek
tighter laws governing coastal
development.
Shoreline development is a hot
issue in coastal states, according to
stale environmental .officjals; Some
states now bar buildins in sensitive
areas, but many restrictions were
imposed only after the coast was
extensively developed over the past
three decades, when the Northeast
had no major hurricanes.
Weather experts say_there's a
new hurricane cycle commg for lhe
Northeast, where cooler air and
other factors make hurricanes move
faster than farther Soulh.
The predictions intensify debate
over the wisdom _of costly beach
replenishment projects. Some argue
it's folly to widen beaches when
future hurricanes are bound to

-

•

Many factions arguing about ifs, bows of halting·shore erosion

junior frOm Glenford, also competed in the indoor nationals and has
been consistent in rlllishing firsl for
Rio Grande in running events. Tun
Murphy, a senior from Zanesville
·and another All-American, has
been the team leader in the hurdles
and high jump and is exvected to
continue the good WOik this year.
Returing to the men's team this
year are Mark Beanett (sophomore,
Sandusky), Chad Cannon (junior,
"Dublin), Courtney Hutchi.nson
(sophomore, Gallipolis), James
Johnson (sophomore, Wheelers- .
burg), HidC9 Meada (Urawa-City,
Japan), Marc Michigan Uunior,
Kettering), John Miller (soph\1more, Waynesville), Chris Smith
(junior, Gallipolis), Dan Longcay
(junior, Mount Sterling), Roh Radabaugh (sophomore, Piketon) and
Condy Richardson (sophomore,
Clarksburg).
New to the team are Russ Kern
(freshman, Marietta), Chuck Moore
(sophomore, Tuscarawas), Dave
Rose (freshman, Lowell), Jerry
Smith (sophomore, Franlcfort), Jon
Edwards (sophomore, Mount
Gilead) and Walter Stephens
(sophomore, Aleron).
·
Joining Peck, Evans, Sowers
and Ritter on the women's team are
Jennifer Beyer (freilhman, Perry),
Crist:y Cox (freshman, Chillicothe),
Tric1a Ho,mes (freshman, Coal
Grove), Kristy Lindsey (freshman,
London), Jennifer Owens (freshman, Waterloo), Ginger Smi1h
(junior, Botkins) and Teresa Montgomery (fieshman, Pleasant City).
Following its opening, invita- ·
tiona!,, the teams are to be at
Bluffton, March 27; Ohio Wesleyan, April 3; the Dogwood
Relays at Knoxville, Tenn., April
8-1 0; Cedarville, April 13; the District 22 Champio~hips at Canton,
April 17; the Penn Relays in
Philadelphia, April 23-24; the
MOC
Championships
at
Cedarville, April30; Marshall Uni, versity's Twilight Invitational, May
1; the Marauder ClllsSic at Central
State University, May ·S; and the
Billy lfliyes Invitational at Indiana
University, May 15.
.
The NAIA outdoor track nationals are set for May 20-22 and Willey anticipates taking qualifiers
from Rio Grande to the competition. Barring injuries, it's likely
~ Murphy,and others who previously qualified for the nationals
will malce a return nip this year.

: Two companies trying to get
!Reynolds to drop suit vs. IAAF
~

Outdoors

March 21, 1993

Talented you_th joins
RG's track teams

!.

.. - . .. .... .

.

IPICIAL
Brlncln J'Out beet deal on a New Car or Truck and we
will t17 to m1d or ..., the Deal.
POa A GOOD DUI ..

4--·-··
.

'2995
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Page C8 Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

~Henderson's
ByJIMUTKE
'
AP Sports Writer
;. Rickey Henderson was the last
gur in camp and the flll't to shoot
of his mouth. Again.
The best leadoff man in the history of baseball waited all of six
days after reporting to the A's
C!lffip in Phoenix before issuing yet
another of his rambling pay-me-or·
lrade-me ultimatums last week.
"If Oakland can't give me what
I want," Rickey began, "I'd rather
mov~ on ...."

"! don't care what anyone

says," he continued, "I know I'm
one of the top five in baseball. I'd
rather be paid in the top five.... "
, "It's not about money." Hend~rson concluded. "My preference
is to talk'about pride."

5

1 C •: 7 • 011 Potnt Pleesant, wv

March 21, 1993

If screaming in private or public
ridicule bad any effect on him,
Rickey would have stopped after
issuing the fust such ultimatum
three years ago. It seems impossi- ·
ble that anybody could be this
oblivious. But it may just be that
Henderson dbes this not out or a
sense' of injustice or insecurity, but
by instinct, the way bears hibernate
or birds migrate or tired old
ballplayers ~o to Japan - something else Rickey is lhn:aleoing to
do.
Of course, whenever a ballplayer insists it's not about money,
money is exac~y what it's about In
this, Rickey is no different from
any ballplayer, nor, for that malter,
from the Rickey who's puUed this
stunt each and every ttaining camp

siDI:e -t - • • •

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. AddiaJ ~ the bruised feelings

..........

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Series.
But 1M
diE 22
•

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7

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on Aldenon's side- the side of
him IbM is a lawyer at least - are
whallbe aencral mana~ views as
Henderson's fabrications. When
· Rickey signed his current ~. be
wu one of only two $3-million-a·
year 111e11. By the time be arrived at
training camp in 1990, there were a
handful. Today, there are about a
hundftd making $3 million.
Henderson says oow that he
signed ~. fltSl deal out of a sense

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of loyalty to the organization-"!
got caught up in the family thing ...
I got burned by being into the
unity" - but also that he was
· promised he could renegotiate.
Alderson calls the latter statemen~
"pate{ltly false."
In recent games, A's fans have
made it clear enough where their
sympathies lie. They've booed
Rickey and waved dollar biUs. But
there is little indication he is getting this message, eilber.

Pugh earns spot on Reds' ·rotation
he

1'1:..AHT em, Fla.. (AP) stnictive aurgery after wncked from Seattle, is returning 10 aclion
T•l'llp flu;~pp~rendy pitched his klllt in a July 1 home plale col· for the Reds. He fractured a bone in
lliis ...,. illlllie Cincini!IIJ Reds' Jlsiml ._ year. He won 20 games his left foot March 10 and was
·• Iliac . .,.•• ,
as a Rccla nOde' in \98S.
examined ~ a foot doctor.
.....,.s wod: hu impressed
With a fierce wind blowing in · MitcbeU s shoes ·have been fitJrc6 - a l l •eu&amp;er Jim Bow- behind bim, Pugh relied on his ted with a plastic insen. The shoe
-.aiiuliileady in die eahibition sinket ball to get six ground-ball spike underneath the bone, near the
liall of his big toe, has been 1110Vetl
::::·Ia ~ rillit-liand.er bas outs.
a~ • the starling staff,
· "This kind of day shows what two inches back so it won't pound
:111
llliil
kind of .pitcher I am," Pu~;h said. . the spoL He· has been running ani!
hitting in drills 10 teSt his recovery
......_~reliledlthe last 11 men "I'm 101111 to put the baU m play.
Now ftlu iJ Clll . . . p..
hJ in. fiYC iooings If the count is 2-0 and 3-1, I'm and the new arrangement
ture, u· h ...U 22 •saiD- 1111: lilall T
aa:
aile: ~troit TiJers and ooming after you."
·
Jly linbcra ae • • ·~jaiL B 11:111
Bowden said the club has not
Copies of ·
er. ,pJra:leli .... a T•lq' a no ' lfliiucoeless inrung sttea1c
DIIIIQ.
decided if it will take 10 or 11
says iblliJ-a--..
G.A.H.S. YS
a " h,lderrlng,10 Pugh, Jose pitcher&amp; nortb, even though the
"r...-.ID-SlladlleRIVER VALLEY
way I llawc·ill dlle .....- I q' ' ~ T• B "de and JoiiD Smi- Reds have just three off-days in
Basketball
Game at Rio
ky. !illiil: '"'B-'1 OIIIWbat they've April
·said. •••• dille
..Grande Feb. 20, 1993,
will &lt;OIIa' Rl- t ' F ,.. . . . . 6ae ..,.. ~. we've got four . "There's a lot of factors and
0
. Varsity and Reserves.
gqytik.e(OSL -st
- &amp;tu . m1liill pre"' ii to- start the year. one of them is, it depends on what
s1ey m (St.l.ctlis") Led - F, ,.. (JJiq&gt;) ~aq: just; been pbenome- you waat 10 do on tho6e off-days,"
CALL
.
Bowden said. "Maybe you put
llaveiO..__.__PJ' IIIII..7
ithaniCIIII fllltdlle27llllt-.~ leeps, putting up your fifth starter in the bullpen.
VIDEO TRANSFERS
.selindl ........ kiJillll- - &amp; j;rs alf~~Je":ssa~e
For Your Copy Today
~ons that have to be
rordlel'f
ll&amp;: . . dlleclllnai6
614-446-6939
J&lt;.evin Mitchell, the slugger
lhava llll
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likely miss the entire season.
The Pinltes signed~ 33, 10 a
one-year contract wonb $1.35 million as a free agent last Dec. 10. ·
Their hope was that he would be a
veteran that could take some of the
latc-inning relief load off Belinda,
26.

Boone has J~"amily's
experience
•
to help him shake 1992 woes
. ByJIMCOUR
PEORIA, Ariz. (AP) - Thirdgenera,tion l_llajor leaguer Bret
Boone says his father and grandfather didn't give him any advice
when he departed for Seattle's
spring ttaining camp.
That's the way Boone wanted iL
"I know where they are whenever I have a question that I'd like
answered," the Mariners' rookie
said. "But they don't come to me
with anything until I ask.·'
Bob Boone, Bret' s dad, was a
catcher for 19 seasons. Ray Boone,
Beet's grandfather and Bob's dad,
played in the big leagues from
!9484i0.
"Between the two of them, I
guess they·have a decent amount of
knowledge," Boone said.
· Boone will be 24 on April 6. His
first full season in the majors
begins that Tuesday night when the
Mariners meet World Series champion Toronto in an American
League opener in the Kingdome.
. "I'm really looking forward to
opening night," 'he said.
New Mariners manager Lou
Piniella has Boone ,penciled in as
the _Mariners' regular second baseman. With Boone seemingly ready,
the club elected 10 let longtime·second baseman Harold Reynolds go
as a free agent after last season.

Reynolds signed with Boltimore.
Boone is unconcerned that he
struggled in 33 games wilh the
Mariners at the end of last season.
Called up by Seattle from Class
AAA Calgary on Aug. 19, be hit
,!94in 129atbats.
"I have no excuses for what
happened last year," Boone said.
After biUin .314 with 13 home
runs and 73 ~Dis in 118 Pacific
Coast League games last season,
Boone thought he'd come to Seattle and hit .350 for the final six
weeks of the AL season.
The Mariners benched Reynolds
and let Boone play regularly to
give him an opportunity. Bqone
doesn't plan 10 let that experience
go to wasle.
"I think I learned a lot," he
said. .
"It's not that big of a jump
physically," be said of the switch
from Class AAA ball to the majors.
"It's more of 11. mental adjustment
The bottom line is the pitchen still
have td throw·it across the plate:" ·
The fact that the Manners let
Reynolds go'and kept Boone reinforced Boone's confidence.
"Harold is a quality player who
was here for a long time,' Boone
said. "I have a lot of respect for

.

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''People come to me
for good rates•• ~
they
formy
Good
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Umpires may ~ f!ie brunt of
enforcing the gutdehnes. They
aren't certain how easy that will be
to do.
~
"They're goinf 10 have 10 make
it more concrete,' National ~

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Final testing session for ·'
·farmers scheduled April 5 :

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l'boDI 446z4190
Home 446-4518

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tltlnlc.; ( )fti~o_·cs: HhK!minJ.:ttm. lllintlb

Like a good neighbor. State Farm is there.®

White announces retirement ·

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OOR

PICK-DIE

"FINAL FOUR"

Receive 1 Hour of .F reeT._

•111 1993
IOAIIIIETBALL .
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1. Quality. If you're not satisfied with 1!1i1e -li!IJ Gr the
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give you credit (one minute airtime).
2. Service. If we can't repair your phooe iim am limwcb'ing a scheduled appointment, weill giw y.11111 a we
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3. Value. If the phon~ do~sn't meet ¥OJJT~illns iii
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'Customer muot olgn 1112-mofltlu:oolllad.

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Turkey exports are growing

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77. ._ .. 7

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bbx and be says, 'I'm not ready.
Frank.' Am I supposed to eject
him?"
Fisk is so slow that major league
owners singled him out at their
meeting last week. He routinely
steps out between every pitch,
adjusts the grip on his bat and tugs
at the uniform on his shoulder.
Rickey Henderson wiU not leave
the on-deck circle until his name is
announced, and then strolls slowly
to the plate.
Among the pitchers on the hit
list is Fernandez. He never is in a
hurry on the mound for the New
~emound.
York Mcts, and usually steps off a
• - Limit the number of trips to few times each inning.
t.he mound by catchers and infield-

"But I don't know if you need
to make all of these rules. I'U tell a
sure way to speed it up - call the
strike zone the way it's written in

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won'tpwcajaiL 1 . .'\.._
how illllldl-l'w p • 1 a
How _ _ , . . .
il'l
can
we •
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back in the box. Carlton Fisk!
Throw the ball, Sid Fernandez!
Call those names, Sherm FeUer!
Baseball, worried that longer
games are leading to less interest,
on Friday announced ways to speed
up play. Among the guidelines
designed 10 cut up to 20 minutes ·
from each game:
: - Encourage hillers to stay in
the batter's box.
: - Enforce the rule limiting the
time. between pitches to 20 seconds.
- Make m!IJlagers signal for a
r~ licf pitcher as soon as they cross
tile foul line on their second visit 10

1/2 hours.

,_..,,

-

F

Several guidelines proposed
to make baseball games shorter
umpire Frank Pulli said. "What if
By BEN WALKER
DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) - Get the first guy up in the C .steps
out and lieU hllll 10 get
m the

Have public address
announcers call the next hitter
more quicldy.
-· Start games at the scheduled
time.
The recommendations do not
involve any formal rule changes.
Some of them will go into effect
right away at spring training.
"The games do last too long,"
Toronto's Paul Molitor said.
" They had to do something."
The average nine-inning game
in the majors last season took 2
hours, 49 minutes to play, up a few
seconds from the previous year,
and baseball officials said they
thought too much time was wasted.
The length of nine-inning games
in the major leagues has increased
15 minutes in the last 10 years.
Games take 24 minules longer than
.they did 15 years ago.
"The No. I complaint about
baseball is th81 the games last too
long and they're boring," Toronto's Dave Stewart said. "I'm a fan
in-between starts, and it's tough to
walch three-hour games. I think
they should take no more than 2

March 21, 1113

rr·eek'. s business

_,

gave the~ fidlp .,n7 I
this yt:M,"' ....... !lliil. . , j ' ioc
given jobs 101 •• - ,. JC1 dqo

'"

I

. '87 ROB WELLS
options, .swaps ·and financial eue existing regulations that limitAP l'n±r• Writer·
derivatives flllD, for S22S million. interswe banking.
NEW YORK- For bibemaling The purchase wiU enable Nllions.
''Northeutem bulks have in the
bmb. sprinJ .med early.
Bank 10 offer complex financial past few years focused on thinas
Healtlly profitS and improving risk manaaement services 10 corpo- like non-performing loans, problem '
l'op quality bave been stirring .::ral.e:;;cr;lien=
· :::11.7.~:-""'"';:----­ real estate," Murny said. ."That's '
m.p-..lenderJ from an exteod- - 1V
behind us."
ed aleep. Jut this pa,st week,
.
Nlli'oasBank, Chemical &amp;anking . The CRt purcliue II the latest
TICKER
Corp. and Fleet Finll!cial Group in a O!llry of moves by the CbarBusinesses sought bankruptcy
were on the pgvd, l!iJveiling deals lotlc, ~.C.sbued NationsBank, the protcclion in record numbers in
diat helJ!_position them for new country's fourth largest::= 1992, the eighth. straight y~arly ·
OJljJtlhnnhe!
company. ~ October, Nad
rcconl, the AmeriCan Baakruptcy
••As banks emerge from a struck an llliance with Dean Wit- lnstltote reported ...The Bunda·
fcaathJ 111et quali1y m:overy, thCy t.er, Discover &amp;. Co. 10 offer invest- bank cut ils di!COIIDII'IIIC by a half.
1\rc- outward looking and ment pmducts at 400 NadonsBank point to 7.5 per1:0n~ in a move that
llcsin thinking abOut growth as lnnches nationwide; in November, could help spc~d recovery of
oppoeed to m:overy," said John it announecd the purchase of Europe's economy, stabilize cur;
Hdbn, a bankinJ anal~ f~ Alex Chrysler First, the automaker's rency values and perhapi lower the
Brown'a Sons. Inc. in !altimore. coriaumer flllliDCe unit; in February, U.S. trade defJCit..A wea1c Europe
The expansionary mood comes it purchased MNC Financial Colp. and Janan were blamed for a 6 peralliefdltaation'a commercial banks o'Biltimore.
cent rise.in the merchanllise trade
rquled m:ool profits of $32.2 bilChemical Banking Corp. hasn't defJCit in Jan111ry from Deeember'a.
liiaD11Ut year and a sharp decline in been· quite that. frenetic, but this · levels...British Airways won Clin-;
lnlllblcd klan le'I'Cls.
Past week it reamed up·with a unit ton Administration, approval for i ·
Heffern said "everyone was · of Liberty Mtilllal lnsiii'IDCC Co. to $300 million Investment in
inwardly focused and hunkered crcatc a joint venture 10 expand the USAir ...Now you see 'em, now
down" in recent years u banks range of mutual funds, an.nuities you don'ti J. Ignacio Lopez de ·
d.ea1li with high levels of II'Oilbled and other Investment options avail- Arriortua, a top Geaeral Motors'
=
7 1•1 I 's5 .........
··~
:VISITS STUDENTS • Vlvlaa Jaml1oa,
u
loans
. and s}!,e;,~tion of able at Chemical branchea.
Corp. executive, rebuffed Cbair: (riJht), a secre1ar7111 IIIIIIIU NIDUI'-It SoatJt.
widespreadbank
·
.
'
FleetFinancialCorp.,NewEngman John Smith's pleas to stay~
Di+i
in
_.
I
I._
tll8t
em Ohio Coal Compmta Melp Dlftlioa, .WII
"And
now·
that
the
company
is
land'sbiggestbank,redlignedmanwith
the automaker and joined the
~
n
with students In JOUJn ~dklDs' clau It WlltoD
I
not Joing 10 go out of business,. agement to streamline decision senior ranb o( Volkswllgen AG. ·
shareholders will expect some making,-gct "ahead of the curve"
COMING UP
gmwdi," Heffern said.
and prepare to expand nationwide,
On Wediluday, February
Nationsllank,perhapsoneofthe said Terrence Murray, Fleet's durable goods orders; on ThursCOUDtry's liiOit aggressive banking chairman, president and chief exec- day, Febi'Uary horne sales; on Fri:'
'Jkcta. . . . . . . . . _ ,, companies. said Wednesday it utive.
- day, gross domestic product and'
: WILKESVILLE • 'Joann students spent •time I 'lf1 ....
h
pfanaed
10
buy
Chicago
Research
Murray
is
betting
the
Clinton
minutes from the Federal Reserve's'
Adkinl' classroom at Wiltonl!les thupidr:r-wllllileaiS.kllr . . .
andc
Trading
Group,
a
prominent
Administration
and
Congress
will
February
meeling.
mentag Scbool in Wilkesville is it livea and bow llrp it i'LZS. . . F 1 * ! r no ordmuy second-grade clus- They a1lo ~ IMt .......
'
'Jkilllil . . . . .
room. After all, in bQw many class- ~R not paiiO'MMII 1111
a
rooms can students watch wild leg back If they mmc.
---~..i;
birds feeding, go digging for fosThe tbM!mts bPe ,aJio .., •
~
sils, bold a tarantufa or visit the oj)jJOitunity 111 lelm ._liltJL A c:alic ...- V PI F
solar syat.em?
window bird feeder, u' 'd 7
j .... 1
tl
iizrof
The 20 students in Adkins' class purclwed with mini-p11Cl 5 I , . .
Jlew
J
..
ByEDVOLLBORN
Dr. Lawrence also indicates that comparing 700-.800 pound steer
have a chaJ)ce to do all these things hangs outside the ~ _.
'lt.l:.£.*;1~
GAUJPOLISThe
final
testeaule
prices lelll8in SII0!18· Choice price per hundred to September 10·
. and .more lhanb to funds provided provides a cia up 'View r10eM
steer
prices
at mid•mimth were juSt 5()().600 pound steer price per hun'l ·
F
F
ia
llilc
mt.
session
for
farmers
wanting
by Soutl!em Ohio Coal Company's l'i:n:n&amp; types of birdJ froiiiM '
under
the
record
se1 .Marcb 14, tired in April showed a 87 percent
tiL
Paticide
Applicator
CertiMeigs Division lhrougb the compa- the area.
·
allllil•
f'ICitioa:
will
be
beld
in
Gallia
1991.
H.e
ptedicts
prices 10 trade average during the last five years.'
ny' smini-g~,.nt program:
· Another excilin&amp; jXqjcct . . i$
die
.z..
--.,
•e;•cl
Coll8tJ
at
the
C.H.
M.:Kenzie
pear
$80
per
hun4red
into April The worst case was 79 percent in
In 1992,'tbe. Meigs Division part of the Life Science lllllil iJ a
4
Jlt:ip
.
_
.
.
,
Apicultural
Cenler
on
Monday~
before
moving
aeasonally
lower. · 1991..
8
.
. awarded more tbail S4.SOO 10 .fund butterflv prdea. 'llbil ,.,em
Grazing
feeder
catdo
during
the . Last week, Governor George'
Aprils.
Tile
..
wjll
be
from
312 projectl in the Alexander, Meigs whieb will t* p1lce ia Ule . . . .
: .. - , . . . - - F
) 6p.m. !'will be ooiid~. quiCk summer is a decision madt a1 J111SS V.Voinovich anuouneed that StewLocal and Vinton County sc;bool allow• the 1tudeats lO
A
ruicw
p.m. A starta to grow. While seuonal art Interest Inc. wiU purchase San-~
di~cts. During the seven years of eaiCipillar evolwe into a t
fly.
• A .... : "
"'-siieil•
llliou will
be pricca may differ from Yl:8f 10 ~· dusky DrCssed Beef. The new own·
uUIIII
the program, S'outbun Ohio Coal When die Natrrfly lhe• '
it wilE acccaz.-.
1
C.CIIIIIC
sliddoa.
29,
from
2-6
p.m.
in the amount (){,price change will be m will begin the Ohio &amp;eef Cor-1
has contributed over $28,500 for be rdcued ouQidc\
"'Cal
g,
lkK
~
a
.....,,
Lawreace
County
at
tbe
SWCD·
simi1Jr fmm S[l!'in&amp; to lale IUIDDler. poration which is expected to.
the funding of 77 creative and
· "I enjoy doing tbele ma al
•
..-office
i!lll.ina~ .
OYer
the past live years sale pice increase tbe slaughter of Ohio·'
innovative learning projec:t!.
.projects with my ltucJcnts • aid
Z
1
!elll:t
~
Qring
will
arrive
per
hundred
foi 600-700 pound grown cattle from 40,000 to
Adkins rcteivcd one of the $400 Adkini. ~Not only do _ , - .
r
llC:III
wcct,
boll!
officially
and
it
~in
Jul7
baYC
aYCrqld 91 per- 300,000 per year. Don Clark. Ag.mini-parua from the COIIIJ!UI)', and about the habitat of dae 6'
I
Uaie
Ill
_.we
;1!1811.MJAOiilofi00
cent
ot
die
aveta..,
IIIC price per Speclall-t from the Ohio DeJ18ft·
was able to purchllse numeroua anlmllls, bat IIIey illo kznlkllr •
.r
....
..
•
pills
soillsamplea
for
March
is
in
ltunclrecl
of
soo.alOo
poUnd
lteei'S in
ment of Development; has d1s :'
items for b,cr year-Ions ..Science be ~sible in carin&amp;lor Jlew
Ill*
._
.......
JalnaliiL
We
have
only
received
Ajliil.
The
worst
c:ase
hu
been
cussed
this project during his many
N~turally" projecL
- niltlni sure they I!'C paa.IDI
...._,...,
r.
•
•
·
...
_..,.,
dl8.
Ninety
IIIUIIPies
around
8S'llo,
which
has
oecurred
visits the past year 10 GaUia Co.un-'
"In the past, science wu often and water and ~tiler dliD.P dlcJ
_,
tca.aiil:aLi!aawelk l!lda ~would be a lot, four times sint:e 1980. An analyss
Continued on D-2
i,
illtau~ through .lect[!re, reading need to stsv alive."
·
, p
Ilia.._ lui: we wilily if ,ou bring them to
tex
ks aruf discussion," Adkins
Adkins' liudenu ani! odDs a
.. - y-.._
IIIII!
•
said. "This uaually ,.,.dted in bore- Wilton Elemen~~~y 11e allllllltitw
Sd'
1
s
.
_
Jk
.
So~tb1~g
new! The O.S.U.
·dom, a lack of intmlt and a desire . part !n a r;::.{~ling !!e; Her
',
'
•
~.
_
E•'CD•!Oil
11
a
co-sponsor for a
10 know more. I wanled to provide Joel 11 10
the - COLUMBUS
Gallipolis
native
served
on
the
finance
committee
oi'
Sr?'l• Ceattal Ohio, Economic W. Rbben ..Bob" White, .Nation•
my studenli! with hands-on manipu· aware of bow they can .. ... • Oe ·--~iatllir
....
-killik:•..,.
O*lh*
QJafaence in Cbillieothe widC lnsuritnce's vice [RSid.ent of St. Patrick's Episcopal Church in
lativea to stimulate interest in sci- environmen1 by rcc~J •
i.
?F . . . .. .... 31. The Prolram will be personal linea insurance ll!fVicea, Dublin.
~nce and 10 improve stlident underals. Recycling tubs- JliP'' ' ........
He
and
his
wife,
Patricia,
have
... sjej!ortD Ag ~ and Outlook
standing of sc:ientifiC processes and and students nve PDI cans _. - l!cw
will!Ctire in June after'37 years of three children and Jive in Wors;
~, ..._
lk ~faeacci
~ts.•
.
other recyclable IIIIICriall.llllll ia
thington.
.........
IFF
__ _ , ,!!:~b.buExte~Jlsi~~
_ _ IWI"" serviCe.
)'!
lth'
those
goals
in
mind,
the
classrooms.
White
joined
Nationwide
in
1
MICllll purchased unique materials
Adkins·hu also ClllllpJelei5 - - ;::.:I_A•JP-af pac41Dwcd the "bu•iDCIII com- 1956 u a ~ underwriter. White
c:dla
*!r-... ~ IIIII wm not Include any was promoted five yean later 10
lfnd kits last September and clevel- era! shott-term unitslby e@riwJ .- . _fir_,
I s
ia ~ IM!Ikri The pogram
:C,ped unit plaps 10 go with them. mini-grant funds. O!tc sud! 8111
fuc underwriting manager at the
5
.
_
,
F
will f"!JIR topics such u U.S. regional
The plans include projeciS designed was on magnelism. She pu!diBa1
offiCe in Raleigh; N. C.,
&amp; '*OW Fotecasts and State and
,to motivate hCl students.
several oorse.slloe miiiiJICIS :an4 iOic :llle.. 2
anilln-1966 wu prOmoied to fami"Some of the Wlili! are sb!)ll-term class observed the ,JXIWCif dilllll"
Yiaiaz
•·crt.
•form •;.:."'!ic.!-"-t
are d!7br- ly ullderwritinl superintendent in
~d only· last several weeks to a netic forces by conduotin&amp; apen~ • •
aSc •
·- w'Yy , the borne office In Columbus. .
au &lt;Jiiu C'cll c
;•s .. - , Mi1K:11&gt; 29. Tile CYCIIt wi111111!1 at S
~ ~onth," said Adkins. "'ilter plans, ments with numeroua objecls.
He wa,s appointed in 1982 an
wilils ,..i.
p.a at tfiC Chillicothe, Holiday underwriting
!J!owe'ver, are ongoin1 and last the
In another abort-~ uDit., die Di - and market analysis
. . 1st. Cilllfilri!Oie information.
~tire aclioo1 year."
studenta studied dinolaun _, .-- . . . . , ·- • . . . •
manager
at
tbe
regional offi&lt;;c in
· 'Mica 1tewc the bop gone? The
~ One of the long-term ~jccts is historic ·time&amp;
j Ssh. •&amp;·- ......
~-...
Portlanil, Orep. White reiumed
Jhe Life Science unit, which focus"I fouui! some 111-incb .cdcdillh•-•
~ "pea:..!'~.:'.!: to the hOme offiCI two years laler
~ on animals and their habitats. models and a fossil hunttitfardlis . . . . . . . . . Dit' - ...
as director of underwriting IIIII in
- ._....._. Slil!laiiW li!lte J•lllfY I hal aver- 1986 was elected vice president of
:Adkins purchased a tarantula sPider, unit and my ~ts just 11owed il,• 1 · 7 F.a
. . . i6p&lt;ly below 1992. lovcla.
)hat has become the class pet. Tilt\ said AdkinS.
a a
I -F
Sc call aplanatioaa ate beirig personal lines~·
.;-. Scoac winler weather, Jii1it · White holds a degree m history
taa-wciJiit c:orn and an USDA' and political science from Northern
c sm 'i••• on boa: aumbers are Colorado University and is a ehar7 Dr, .JobD LawRnee, tcrec!proj)City casualty underwriter
~
.
laue S.C _, lilt retention for (CPCU). While served in the
for four yean. He was active
:: WASj{INGTON (AP)- With
I..ootinJ at lndlvidall-.1.... -i!•-.......
·m • I biJ'factm. The Navy
with
the
Touunutara Club, Boy
llemand growing uound the world the report uid U.S. cxpodul
DA report ia duo out on
...,.~urScouts,
Indian Guides, Little
' ' ean meats,
turkey exports expect COIIIInuad robult •• • •
,, • i26.
Leaaue,
Elks, Optimists, and
ROBERT WHITE
five-fold between 1988 and the deliYUed pric:e of U.S. ' ; -~· I •ia BIZ.
•.•' ,·: ~: ':· ;': '.
re8ching a rccon1 $134 mil- cuta ia CllJi*ted 10 .re••i• well
,.
•
Jion.
. , below MoxDD podt pricra .. &amp;'
•Ia
k;
~~ "Tbc U.S ~ turkey indu1try
themld·1990&amp;.
~pects meat exports to cOntinue
"Mealcu IIICal pn1 cm resJl'owing, with ules expecled 10 rap~ ber,ominJ • - '~'~ ' ' ;
. reach nearl1 $200 million by the meat 1 excelleat •p roc•niq
aj )Sa
~ 1990s,' san a ~~~Cent report in
atlributes, panicullrly Ullbililr til . . .-.la!F
-~
ia
lie Foreign Agricultural Service's mix with other meatalllll._... . . . -.Ill! _.,....
~
nLiiuriblade highlights publlc:atlon.
.ents in prodUCII auc:b • ........
7

,_,~,

Section D
Banks back on the pr'Owl

•

Belinda .embraces chance as Pirates'
stop·per with Pena's pre-season exit
BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) :....
The Pittsburgh Pirates' grand plan
of having Alejandro Pena and Stan
Belinda serve as bullpen co-closers ·
has ended. ·
· Pena, a right-hander, underwent
surgery on his pitching elbow Friday in Birmingham, Ala. He will

:Farmlllusiness

'pay me millions or trade me' ravings a regular thing

(4)_ _,;...,_,:;.,,;_,,;_,_ _ _ _ Telephone----.,-_,;-=

1·

rMark~ Anal~ Comment
, ~ontrlbuted

b7 Stan E -

;eJ:illril!wa

=

#!ij • .:.. u.s..
F)
....!... a 5 4 -a 7

..
...,.....
=
----·- ill

----

M

•J ,

--

o.-..............
C 1

I•N

'

I
I
1
I

I

1
I

1

I

••••••••••••••••••••

WI SlAY J'AIM- 'l'ltlll .....'i ~
Oallla 14111 Md Water

••1.=.:'

,._,
nt n
C
a

---do.,

IIIIi Wf .......... la

S ClzalJ.IadiYidull ....... t6 pirdtl• \

. . . Ill . . TREk"

b)' 1111#11

ae lint's ow-. Jut ..U, or drop Olr JOur

&amp;MA • tile Dall.t. Seaetael, 111 Coart St.,
lil'lwll_".,"'' 4*11, 4170, w ... Gtii~M!II O.UJ
'nadl, 125 nlrd An., OalllpOIIa, Olrio,
(.I

•Hlll.IH J1M1 •ll win I Sl priM tr- tile
Ohhl nlltJ hWldillla Co. LeaYC JOUr ._..,
acldrea uc5 ltl!pllone adlber wldl ,_.. eant
or letter.lllo .-hme calli will lie ~d. .U
contest tntrlel 'sflould lie tvDed ID tD
!1eW1r
p1per onlce by 4 p.m. elldl WedlMIIIIJ. Ia of' a tit, tile winner will be c.._n b7 JoCttrr.
Next wnk, 1 M,l11 Couaty fare will lie ..,
tured by tile Mel• Sol 1nd Watlr C=st • Ill'
Dlatrict.

•

,.

·~

•_

·'
•••

·•

�~···~~-

March 21, 1993
Page 02-Sunday Tlme.....Senttnel

March 21, 1193

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

He~bicides

plus oil eq11;al increased earnings

acre, compared With the usual her· spreads much better than water on
"The reverse holds true this
. year," it said. "Bumper European '·
bicidc·and·water mixtme or 20 gal· leaf surfaces.
apple crops along with a atrons ·
waret could increase farmers' earn- !oils jlrz acre.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. dollar, and a European rec;es.
ings and benefit the environment
The lower volume requires
by rcd11cing the amo11nt of herbi- fewer trips with spray equipmeut to 1992-93 apple marketing seasiln sion are severely bampering U.S.
will be one of the most competitive apple elpCXIS to Ewcpe. ••
Cide needed, Agriculture Depart·
ueat an entire field for weeds.
It said Asian and Central and ·
· Paraffinic oil is similar to miner- 'U.S. exporters have experienced in
ment scientists say.
"Herbicides are commonly al oil. McWhorter said the mixture tbe last several years, say trade South American m~ts are lllllking up fill SOII)e of 1M ~all. but '
mixed with water and some type of of herbicide IJIII paralfmic oil pro- expens.
"U.S.
exporters
have
had
two
oil to boost their weed-killing abili- vided better weed conttollhan her·
U.S. ~le expons are trailing last
ty," said Olemr G. McWhoner, a· bicide mixed with soybean oil, cot- excellent years, both in terms of season s.
"Average to above-average
plant physiologisL "We've found
tonseed oil, No. 2 diesel fuel, ·export volumes and prices
received, due in part to the Southern Hemisphere crops ·
that it is possible to totally elimi- kerosene 01 jet A fuel.
nate the water and still have effecAgricultural engineers at the extremely limited European apple (excluding a large decline in .
tive weed control.' • ·
ARS research center in Stoneville crop in the 1991-92 season.~ · says.a 'Argentina) soon to be marketed,
He and James HiUW. an agri- have developed an ultra-low-vol- Foreign Agricultural Service report could funher aggravate tbe \Iori!\
cultural engineer, tound in four ume herbicide sprayer system that th.is month on horticultural prod- apple marke~ situation," the report •
..
said.
years of field tests at Stoneville, woukt allow farmers to apply her- ucts.
.
.
Miss,, that barnyard grass ~U~d john· bicides at volumes of less than 1
son gnss could be controlled with gallon per acre, the researchers
less herbicide wben it was m.ixed said.
NASHVILLE - Shoney's, Inc. years. We are extremely pleased
With J!U'8(Iinic oii instead of water.
"The ULV sprayer applies
Tlie herbicide and oil was smaller, more concentrated droplets (NYSE: SHN) Thursday reported with the strong earnings ilrowtll in:
· applied 81 a combined total volume thai are more toxic to the weeds," record · revenues and ·a 38% the first quarter and believe
of as little as one quart or liquid per McWhorter said. "Also, oil increase in earnings per share for earnings per share for the year ~­
the fJtStquarterendedFebruary 14~ beUpatleast25%."
"
1993.
.
On March 9, 1993, lhe Campa·
It's.time to sign up for fore~tland program
R~venues fill the 16-week f~rst ny signed a letter of intern to purquarter
increased 7% to chase all of the Comp.l!lly's stock
GALLIPOLIS • The Steward- buffers.
.
$3 17 672 000 from S297,S17,000 owned by R. L. Danner 81 $22-718
ship Incentive Program {SIP) is
The ASCS Offioe located in the
tuSt quarter of 1992. Com- per share. In addition, Danner
designed to improve forestland C.H. McKenzie Agriculwral Ceo- foi
through a set of innovative cost- ter at 111 Jacks~n Pike (Phone parable ·restaurant sales were up announocd he will not stand fotrc.9% for the first quarter of 1993, election 10 the Company's Board ci
share practica.
.
446-8686) is the starting point for
Innovative in that prai:tices can this program. Funds for the .Stew· which included a menu price Directors. Danner is the Compa. be l.ailored to meet landowner ardshlp Incentive Program are pro- increase of 1.0%. Net income ny's largest single shareholder and
objectives which can include: fenc· v!ded by the USDA's ~orest Ser- increased 3S% to $12,111,000 from owns directly 3,712,682 shares of
ing (to exclude livestock from v1ce wnh most pract1ces cost- $8,952,000. Earnings per share commQII stock.
were up 38% 10 S .29, compared
A(filiatcs of Danner also own
woodlands), logging erosion con- shared at 75% of cosL
.
with
$
.21
for
the
rust
quarter
of
approximately
one million addi·
trol, streambant stabilization,
All applications filed w1th the
1992.
uonal
shares
of
the Company's
wildlife habital enhancement, tree ASCS Office .are forwarded to the
Chainnan
and
Cl!ief
Executive
common
stock.
The
Company has
planting, and recreation practices qD~-Division· of Fore:srry's SecOfficer Taylor H. Henry; said, indicated it will purchase the·affili- .
such as scenic vistaS and forest v1ce Forester Jerry Grezlilc.
·
For more information about the "This is our .135th consecutive ates' shares upon the same terms
program, contact Jerry Grezlilc at quarter of record revenues - a and cohdltions as are set forth in
record of consistency for over 33 the letter of intenL
286-5900 or the ASCS Office.

if!e"

me

'

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
~· NEW YORK- As Americans have learned over the yeaJ'$, the
two worst taxes of all are inOation and high interest rates. Either can
~ cause more damage to budgets than a: major tax increase.
,
~·
While some consider any fonn of taxes insidious, inflation and
' rising interest' rates are in a category of theif own. They move in
: silently, unannounced.
·
·
;, Thus the big to-do about President Clinton's tax plan has attract·
: ed much of the attention of the consuming public, and it is likely to
I&lt; do so through much of the summer.
·
Meanwhile, inflation has shown indications it is still alive and
t maybe growing, the evidence of it hidden from sigh I. by a
~ widespread conviction that the monster has been tamed for the time
.
.
• bemg.
• But has it?
.
: The latest repon from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows the
: Consumer Price Index for the year through February has risen at an
~ annual rate of more than 5 percent. hardly a percentage that can be
' ignored.
·
·•
l
·Buying power disappears relentlessly at such a rate, eventually
·cutting the dollar's value in half if it continues for IS years. It means
- CD savers lose money every day since their rateS are around 3 per·
_ cent, and that many pay raises are wiped out before they can be
' used
.
.
;, . N~venheless, the popular view is that inthti~n remai~s in .its
•. cage, which only serves to underscore the stealthy manner m wh1ch
'I it does its work. It is, some say, the termite of the economy, wOI;king
, quietly to ~ne everything.
. .. .
·
·
; . ,.It has comparuons too, the worst bemg tising mterest rates, Once
' again, the popular notion is that interest rates are under control and,
_ in .fact, bound to fall. Some Wall Street analysts have staked their
careers on that forecast.
·

~

$

Contiaued from D·l
Kong, U.S. exporters have had to
oven:omc a poor imap: fiX turlc~y,
','caused in part by 1ts Cantonese
translation which is 'fire chickHowe-,lOiill U.S. turkey meat
sales to Hong Kong jumped more
·than SO percent in 1992 to nearly
$4 million.
•·u.s. shippers are confident
that demand for new consumerready iurkey products - which
was instrumental in doubling per
capita turkey consumption in the
U.S. during the past seven yearswin also continue to rise in. foreign
markets." the ~ said.
"Much of th1s optimism stems
from a growing worldWide realiza.
tiOI) of how diet affects health, particularly among ~onsumers in
· newly industrialized counuies such
as Mexico and Korea."

F inaI...

i.

Distribution of the February 1993 real estate collection we• redantly completed by Ronald K. CanacleV,
Gallia County Auditor. Gro. . diatributlon wu in 'the amount of $8,162,476.00. In llddhlon; - h of the
iaxing district• will receive from the state reimburaement for reductloll In taxu r;lua to 10% Rollback,
•• Homeltead and the 2'1.'1'. Rollback.

!&gt;

$24,533.07
39,399.34
4,210.70
10,490.37

"Addiaon Townthlp

! •Ch•hire Town•hip

•'Clay Township
• GaUipoli• Townohip
"Green Townahlp
·Greenfield Townohip
Guyan TowMhip

r Walnut Townsh.ip

GENERAL
FUND

••Gallipolio Cll'f .

$37,658.48
23.51
177.01
318.46

; Centerville Village
I Cheshire Village
! Crown Cil'f Village
fRio Grande Village

84.17

: vinton Vill•ge
I

.

l

$38,262.50

Tolal Corporation•

I

GENERAL
'

Gallil Counl'f LS.D.
Galllpollt Cll'f S.D.
SymmH Volley LS.D.
Vlnlon LS.D.

Totll Sc:hoolo

GENERAL
FUND

QenoniH..rth

~,712.84

'113,711.30
278,151.86
11,134.27

CoMmunity Col....

111,172.71

Toiii .. IC. Funds

11,411.113.11

Utir~~y

$163.31

4!,1143.38

.

t,OS2.27

1,233.01
3,745.00
254.68
425.42

17,&amp;61.77
1,574.711

1,1QAO

2,141.51

401.22

552.01

1,34U2
3,230.il

678.114

4,835.73

1,oot.78

157,373.811

St$,345.43

t,523.01
2,• .68

318.74
511.17 '

8,131.$3
2,211.55

IMP. SlliEETBCAPE
FUND
FUND

1,107.14
532.11

RE~MB.

$2,267.80

BOND
FUND

175.11
175.81
BONO

FUND

P8g~

b3

•

'

.J:.ru

ACROSS
1 Jane Fonda 111m
6 Wine cups
10 lmltatea
14 C011oacra1e
19 Black laogur
21 Oinn-are piece
22 Dispatched
23 Lea
24- vitae
26 Things lor
controlling· dogs
26 Pagan
29 License word
30 "Up 011 the-"
32 Change
33 Conduct
34 Goller's need
35 Blunders
· 37 Celebration
39 Brown ol music
40- ol arms
41 Brilliant display
42 Burn
44 Late actor Vic 46 Sandarac tree
47 Farm building
46- lrae
50 Shammed
52 Strokei
53 Anton 10
55 Lowest tide
57 Equally
511 CupOla
59' Singer Johnny 60 Ea~y morn
62 Towel Insignia
64 Falsehoods
66 Malden loved
by Zeus· ·
66 Agave plant
69 Delaat
70 N(ltlve metal
7t Poems
73 Fears
75 Wandering
77 Garment
78 Lingers
80 Wise persons
81 Part of a min.
82 - Seanawks
84 Fanatical partisan
86 Passageways
87 Tropical railllke
bird

\

•
8b Obese
92 Saber
95 Wort&lt;s at one's
trade
98 Rabbit
99 Harm
101 Carousal&amp;
103 Dutch cheese
104 Consumed
105 Rim
106 That man
107 Fulfill
108 "Aower -Song"
110 Japan ending
111 Swayze IQ
112 Woody plant
113 L.A. lootb'allers
115 Garden St.
1170bserws

119 Tellurium symbol
120 Boac
l21 "-57"
124 Stitches
126 Edible seeds
127 Spar
126'Bed canopy
130 GraluHies
132 Winglike '
133 Strain lor breath
134 Gr-letter
135 Small barracuda
137 Acto• Dillon ·
139 D.C. notable
140 Choicest
141 Prophets
t 43 Set - (begin
voyageI
145 Female ruff
146 Poor persons
146 "Down These
Mean-"

150 Serving dish
152 High regard
153 Jail 54 Anon; presently
· 156 ExPeilmenls
157 Remains at ease
158 Ancient
, Phoenician
capital
159 Slot')'
160 - macabre
DOWN
1 "A Fish Called
Wanda" star

2 Those who prefer
to be
Independent
3 Declared
4 -the line
5 Tech. specialist
6 Paid notice
7 Wire measure
8 On the ocean

9 Small onion
10 Residue
· 11 Equal
12.Abstract being
13 R-U l!nkup
14 Curve
15 Map abbr.
16 Newapaptr
executl17 Highly -lous
18 Brush away
20 Earth sci.
23 Flesh
25 Wander
27 Coolced slowly
26 Wheel tooth
31 Failure: cOlloq.
33' Burden
36 E. Ind. limber tree
38 Irish exclamailon
40 Alg.onqullin
'
Indian
41 Lane
43 VIrginia 45 Dwell
46 Worship
47 Choir voice
49 Declared
51 Memoranda
52 Adhesive
IUbStiii1CB8
53 Manlleatatlon
54 Verdi opera
56 Eminent man or
woman

59 Reflects;
deliberates
60 Seed conlalner
61 Apportion
63 Suddell attack
65 Chair
·67Predace880rol
CiA
69 "-Law"
70 Exterior

72 Cublo meter

74 Silver oymbol

76 Chamberleln 10
77Gr-tona
79 Sodium ci!IDrlde
83 High mountlln
85 Climbing davtce
&amp;eDry

EXPLOSION PRO'Q:ST - About 250 supporten oltk ~-wt.cllilld• Bllartiya Jamata
Party are llTIItld b police
the tried to
marc• ill pratat to lie Pat;ma Hlp COIIU!Ils-

*•

.Four killed in faJest explosion

97 Pintail duck
100 Myaell
102 Patnlono
105 Periods of time

By JAGDISH RA1TANANI
Associated Prea Writer
BOMBAY, India (AP) Polici invcstigaing bombinp !hal
kill CCI more thu, 300 people in
. Bombay are foCIIsill&amp; 011 a wealthy
-family they believe WIS involved in
smuggliog Fid.llld drugs.
Another bomb exploded Satur.day 81 a CIOWded nilway statim in
Calcutta, killing four people and
inJuring 12 others, officials .IIDd
Witnesses saicl The bhrst oa:ufred
minutes after an express lrain carrying more l.han 1,0()0 people
entered SealdM Slalion.
The bomb went off when a
police patrol stopped a man and
wanted to SCBJCh his bag, said nilroad spokesman Gautam bDjee.
"The lllllD became ncrvous..aad
dropped the bag IIIII it cxplodcd,"
B
. said.
.

112 Rend .
113 Grlte
,

116 Former team
lor Nemeth
1t 8 Move through
water

120 Popular comic
'
strip
121 Time gone by
122 Cloeeot
123 Corded al!!th•
125 Person of great
lortl-

126 Sillily'
127 Church Mr¥ic8
129 Gather (a crop)
131 Mikes reaolutt
132 Turkish currency
133 Microbe
134 uncanny
t36 Joust
136 Briel
1401noacts
141 H-ly bod}'
142 Portlc:O
'144 Fot
147 Fondle
148 Crafty
149 The oun
151 Juan's aunt
153-

a motor scoorcr e~ in l.he
crowded Khetwadi · • cl oen·
tra1 Bombay. 11 canvd 110 caSualties and little darnage,bla it further
disrupted life in the tense city,
Press Trust of India reported
Thirteen bombs rocked the 29story Stock Exchange Buildiag
'

155 Compaaa point

~losioo.

· ~
"lbe case is as good as solved.

Now we know what happened and

~ -·Attackers

.

MOELLN

15,D12.54

,,.

RE-IMB. FROM
STATE

...

·
Frid
1d
authoru ' 08
ay rcpor e
IIIOiber
IlliCit: 011 folclpeo.
Ualalown emQIIIIJ loblxd two
fuebombl at a Pld'aliriclled shell«
bousillllbout3011JiuT-KI1niD
this ulbwea German IOWll, ~
oa 1 Tultilb r.nuy
1 deadly
last- fllllled lhc gomiiiiiiCIII to
p;t :...:::.. with right-wing C&amp;llall·

,,''•

A mokenan for the JNOICCII·
· • ..,...
_.... L-·....·k
tor I ~mc:e in _..uy , _ •
!Jeinr!olt Wille. all no - wu

··

.'

1151,214.•
168,711.01

••

..

''•

1,201.78
71.27

$323,203.01
RE-IMB;..FROM
&amp;T..l! .

.....
t34,137.1111

Ill.All

.-z

iU. _..

who did it. It is a ·case of getting
them,' ' he' silid at a news conference Thursday.
·
Police have trlU!ed some of the
cars aiid mOtor scooters used in the
bombing' to the Memons, who own
several restaurants and hotels and
who police say were involved in
smuggling gold and narcotic;s. .
But p'olice -dmn they don't
know if they were the rlanners or
jqst the executioners o the bomb
plot. They also have offered no
convincing motive.
Some repons say the Memon~ ,
who are Muslim, lost pro(JCny in
the city's Hindu-Muslim riots in
January, and may have sought
vengeance against this predominarilly Hindu nation bv striking at
its financial nerve center.

lnl~tOII•III : r a .,••

•••

AEI&amp;-FROM

·- -

..

I·'

ITATE

-

.,

•~ $6~ ~.!!!ffi~
....,..,u _CIOkcin,.,::ODiid

' ·F'

11

...

t8,301 .•
~

neo-Nizi problem - - ieUIDI out
of hand, It wasn't until the lirebombina of a Turkish home in
MoeUa Jail November that tbc

I~-

a-

ed

·

I

llti&gt;'C!ow1
·"-·
..,_,,

-=.'7

lr n U., 10 81'111111.
Tlte III8Ct Mild
Ileal olli. . diM riaiJ&amp;-wiq Yio-

......

ao•••·

••

aoce.

=

mannelife..

.

· Televis1on footage showed a
glping hole in the charred deck of
the tanker, appan:ntly from the initia1 blast..
.
Oreenpeace said the ship was
cmying 2•100 tons ci chemicalsedtyllteqpol and dloetylphtalate JJHd to m111ko plaaticl. A
lfl'ri'SIJihll fof the environmenIii t1JNP.1 Pnnace Venlcuddonlc,
ail~~~ ~an take up to fivo days
beCOIIIIte substance&amp; dissolve In

·.
...1tlo-..!Ill · ·

~~
Two
CJernua 1118 baw.
-..
1laco ill au 'R)' jj dinb'FM I
beta cb
will • ...., - ·
.Interior t.flliiW Rlldoll Sellllil · . . . . dli ' J
· •
1

-·
'"

·
·
,
.
.
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands · , There . were no 1mmed1ate
(AP) -A J~ tanker repor\8 o~ leaks, althoug~ the
carrying roxie cbemiC'als exploded e!'PIOSJon ,npped a large hole m the
and caugltt rue in'the North Sea ·edsh1p, RadiodNboordl Hollandth reponSaturday. the Dutch coast guard
a secon
ast more. ~n y~vo
said. At least one crew member hours after the vessel s 1n1ual
was killed aail tine injured.
emergency call at 8:20a.m. EST.
·
·
A Dutch coast guard spokesman
,said at least one crew member was
dead and the remaining 22 sailors
were rescued by navy helicopters.
Three were in critical condition, he
· said, speaking only on condition of
BIM&gt;OY!ftity.
.
Dutch and German· navy heli. copters and coast guard vessels
were racing .to the scene IQ try to
said in a magazine interview this prevent further explosions from .
• week that through the ('~ weelc of cqusing epvironmental ·damage, the
Man:~ ~~jlad been, 141 rjgbt- ~kesman sai!l. .
. •
wing enacb.
, . • ,- · The PanamaDJan-reg•stered
se-ateca people,· 10 of them _ Sh. iokaze was ablue abou. t 50
·~
tal 1 d
GeriiiiDS, were killed ia 2,285 ,miles off ~ . Du,tch coas · !S 111)
recorded risht·wins attacka l.oet of' ~ers~helhns m an area.ncb m

rr-.Despite groWing
· ligu that the.

blazln&amp; Ship wa1 t ld'101
lllale COMtnental sltelf In an
uea rlcb in scala, includln&amp; the
-"' 150 py seals in die Wadden
~-..,
din 10 the Netberllnda'
11101 .. ter
I
~. ·
.
'

Ohio

Lawrence

under

cltottn baaed on tooled
blda aubmlltod to tiM,Foreot
Service. The Foreot Service
hae a proapectua wilh
particular inform1tlon,

Public Notice .
oppolntmont be modo
through , the Superln·
llndonfo Office (614-2455334).
..
The Boerd of Educotlon
.r.uorvea tho right to 'roj.Ct
My or oUbiciO~
•
Donolyn K. Kuhn, TI'Miunr,
·
a-d'ol Education
G.rll.,lld!aon-Yinlon
Joint Voclll.,... School
Dlolrlct
MAR. 2t, 26;
APR. 2, 8, 18113

•ite

___._ Notice

Publ~

'

Pltono ond 8peclflaallono :

•r• on flleln 1te D 111 rlli-"*"t IIi

of Tronap-llon - · the ~
oftlco of lhe.Dholrlcl Deputy •
Dlreck&gt;r.
.
.... .. JERRY WRAY,

- Dl,..,lor of Ti8niport~Jilon
t•

MAFI~ 1~ ~t,

PUBUC NOnCE
Tho Boord of Orono•
Townahlp, llolga County of
Ohio, wiU rocolvallldo unll
7:30 o'clock p.m. lite .7111
day of April t 11113 for the
purchoeo of a uaetl
loodorlbackhoe wllh'
minimum 'iii&gt;oclnaau- ••
lollowe: ·
- .4a net

-Throe (3) bedroom•
Public Notice
proceaa, available for all -Two (2) lull bath a
peraona or organization• -Dry-walled wallo and
laxtured ceiling!
LEGAL NOnCE
•ntereat,.t in bidding lor the
right ,. lo operato th• -lnotallod oolid red oak · Notice lo hore&amp;r gl_¥$n
kitchen ca~lntto ond ,lhll !htl ~~null m~Jig )!f
conceaaion ~ tacllitiu. Ally
bllhroorn v1111ilfu
- •h eha...,ol kii6 ol F..,. .
1,eraono or orgonlzatlqno
. may· ~ inter,ated In -Birch fluah inlarJ9!,c!Por,o Boncoh.I !H, Inc. will be
oP•!ating !ho focllltleo -Doubl•hungthermol pane held •t the m•ln office of
wlndowt by Anderoon (HI- Formora B1111k and Sovlnga ·
ahould contact the .Dialrlct
-(I) opoe4
Pro St-ylo)
,
· 1 Company, 211 Wnt .Seccind
Ranger, Rl ~. Bo~ 203,
meeh · with
"•
Pedro, DH. 45659 (614) 532· -Vinyl Siding- double four 1 Street, Pmooroy, ·Ohio,
(411nch
' eccordlng k&gt;lla by-1-o, on
32231. Alop, any peraona or
organlzetlona who may be -Aluminum oofflt and facie tho third Weclneadoy of Sl!l'lrlntl- HydrootaUc
lrim
April, 1993, ol4:00 p.m. for Enclosed C.b - With heawr •
intorooted ma-y inapoct lhe
conceaaion .aita. lnteruted ,Fiborglou lnaulo.tlon In lho purpou of electing
and dofroot.
.~
wolla ond celllnga
diractoro ond the trano- Loader - Un copeclly 3300'•
partieo should plan to moet
al tho lake Veauvlui Boat -Aoor jolala (2" x tO" on ocllon of ouch other
lbo. ·Bucket 314 rerd. 11·:~
16" contera)
buoinooo 10 may proparly
Dock ot9:.00 A.M. March 31,
wldo
.
•i
-Trull raftora
como before told.meeting.
1992.
.
Bockhae - Digging deptft'r
PM.I M. RMCI, Sec.-y
The foregoing lo not on -Fi.berglan 20 year roofing
13'1". bucklttr
•f
ohlngln
(3)21, 28; (4) 2, 11, 4tc
offer of aolh::it.Uon • .&amp;lao,
'l)re~ .,. t:to.nt 7.50 • 11 • •
· the Foreat Service reaerv• -Two hunc!red (200) omp
R. . t4,1r24
·
•
et,ctJicll_,orvtce
the right 10 oiler or modify
ContJol~
,.Ouol
'"-·
:
Publlc·Notlce
any Information on thia
llemo NOT INCLUDED In
Bidder to submit dotoltd'•
aubjecl which It currendy lhe hou••= ·
~peclllclllonti 'of.equtprneni;
-Aoor cov•lnge .
rlonCE TO CONTRACTORS olferod. The Boord o,..
available.
''
~
-Ught fbltur•
STATE OF OHIO
MARCH 21, 1993
Truateee r•-.,. right 1o'
-:Hootlngoplom
.
DEPARTMENT OF.
rejoclany or lllllldo.
~
-Applloncea ·ouch u: hot
TRANSPORTAnON
By Order rif the IIOinl of •
~ PubliC Notice
water hulor, clahwuher,
Columbue, Ohio
Truateea of Dronge :
PUBUC NOTICE
clothea wooherldryor,
Morch 5, 19113
Townohlp.
,
' ,The Ylllago of Mlddltoport atovo, Md rofrlgerotor.
ContJ.. t Polrlclo Collway, Cllrk:·
wlll be opplylnp far
METHOD OF SALE: SubLege! CopyNo.ll3 247
· - Gutltrle
Aoed·:
Communlly Develapmont jocllo the rlghl olh boord
UNit PRICE CONTRACT
Coolville,
Ohio 45723'•
Bloclc Gront Funda through to rejact MY ondlor oil bldo,
Soolecl propaaolo will be (311~. 2t, 28, 3tc
'.
•
tho Dblo Doportment of lho oalo sholl be modo to recelvod 11 tho office olthl
Dovetol!menl Compreh· the higheot bidder lor lhe Dlreclor of the Ohio
enolvo Houalng/Nolghbo· modulor houao, but aholl Dopartmonl of Tr•orhood Revltollzotlon Pro- not be fl~ol until written partition, Columbuo, Ohio,
..
grem.,
notlfl~ollo~ ._of
the until 10:00 A.M., Ohio
A public hurlng will· bo occeplan~ ol 1M bid to Standard Time, T.......,,
held Morch 31,1993 11 7:30 ~lvon by · th•· Boord ol Tu•day, ~ 30, 1~ lor
'
lm~rovem1111lilln:
,
P.M.•.In tho council room. ducoIIon.
.
TERMS OF SALE: C.h
alllo·County, Ohio tar
lacltod at 237 Roce Strul,
Mldd)epart,Dhlo, for the (In lh• form of cooh, or 1 improving Roode ond
purpoae of dlocu.. lng tho certlflod or ••hler'o check) Focllltln, Raccoon Croek
general provlolono of the FY wil!lln lh• time pravldod In Counl'f Perk, Mcintyre P•k
1883 CDBG .pragrom end lhe conclitlona of the o"'• Dlotrlcl, by opplylng • out
the omount of !undo rololfed to below.
cootbltumlnaua , ...riel.
expre•*
ovolloble.
DEPOSIT: Cooh or •
"Tho ,reto oot tar eympathy
Alllnteroelld peroona
certlllod or caohlor'o checl&lt;, completion ol thlo work
ard
fl
Invited to alland to mol&lt;• ·I poyoble to lhe Gollle· aholl be •• HI forth In the C ., !l,wara,
auggoallona on v1rloua Jacklon-~Jik&gt;n .h!lnt V~• bidding pro~"
ocllvllleo which moy b.o ll\&gt;ftll l!!l.li'10f Qiotrl~t. Jlr- !1
·•
•Il:~;onrrr.:~
undortekoin by lh• villoge combination, In the omount• 1 "•ret Of ........._1
v.ry muoh.
unct•lhlopragrom.
of ton ' (IO)price
per~onlwillof··be
the r~-===="=-;~:J~::::~~~==:::;1
Wrlnon
1 l!ldlaolo•
raqulrecl II the 11101 of. the.
public oucllon ·frolll the
including tha bidding

1

IDJures three

,-... =E·:;';:"••11,c:'o1-=
. ~~::f.
- "-

..

'

Gctmany (AP) _In

v•uvlua

COhCIIIIOnllre operlllon:
The conceaaionaire to be
aelecled, if any, will be

tireb.omb
Moelln refugee home

the city chalbas c:amc 10 JYIIII!olize
- 1Jcrm~·s ript-wl•g threat,

Veat~viua,

Count-y,

More Gernu11i violence .

,,• .

..

lhree hotels, and some of 'the
swanlcesr, em pol ate offices·in Born-·
bay on MElt 12. At least 317, people were lcilled, and the city came
to a haiL
·
.
Five' .days later, a powerful ·
'explosion in CaiCIIlta killed 86 people.
·
•'
~ombay Police Commissioner
Amarject Singh Samr~ said two
men arrested Thursday had beep
paid by a wealthy Bombay family
to park explosivo-laden vehicles in
two of the cily's crowded markets
on March 12.
Samra said India is asking other
countries for help in tracing membm cl the Memoli family, who left
for Dubai around the time of the

~oday.a..,.PbombbidclrniD .one,

STATE

.

.

the

Recreation Aroa located ot

~~~2:u?:ei Ta~~e~ explosiQn kills

•
''

' \1

place

'•

109 Encounter

Croeeword Puzzle Anawer on Page C-3

Tho USDA-f&lt;1r•t Service
(F~root Service) J&gt;lono to

Family investigated in In~ia
~ombi'ngs
.

96 Orient

FROM

m.•u

sion in Ne\v Delbi Saturday. The demonstrators
were daimiDg Pakistan was responsible for the
recent bomb blasts ID Bombay and Calcutta.
(AP)

Lake

22.80
. 44.81
15.00
375.74
$41,330.113

Public Notice
Tho peraonol property
baing oHered tor auction Ia
a ono-otory lramo ronch
,ll'fll modulor houu. The
houoe, conolructod by tho
vocational achool_clwjo .of.
Building Trodeo ·. II,. II
twenty-olx (28) foot- wlcla
oncl fifty-air (56) foet lang
(1,456 aquore feet).
Featureolnclude: .
.
-Buill 11 ono unit to be
· divided Into lwo holv• for
trMoportlng to foundollon

PubliC Notice

87FelloW
88 Grains
89 Astalre ID
. 90 Terrified
91 Abounds
92 Turf , ,
931n)Ua~ King Ill Beohan

tt4Sofa

______
,
__ ___ ,

_.;_

+1111,0li.H(Une~)

St8,301 .•

Sunday Times SenUnel

~-·

SUNDAY PUZZLER

$4,550.51

2,267.80

BOND

$711&amp;,440.27

$455,141.00

· '

$163.31

~

· WOWided when a shell hit a school damaged buildings.
member council and was expected with the convoy.
on the town, killiDs two i:hildrn
~~CtVing as a refugee center in Kale·
In New York, U.N. ~kesman •to be adopted as early as.Monday.
Larry Hollingworth, a represcn- and two adults and woundins twO
sija, near TuziL
~
Joe Sills said: "We need a convoy
The measure had been sought . tative of the U.N. High Commi$· -other children.
AP lCJK!.IICr Oeorge Jahn said every day. This is a good first step by the U.S. State Department, and sioner fot Refugees in Srebrcnica,
Accordi.ns to U.N•.refo&amp;ca oftj.
Ser:bs were shelling Tuzla's airporL but it needs to be repeated over and Britain said Friday that it believed said .thousands of people, in the cials with .the convoy, bosnian
Fierce. fighting also occuned over."
the situation in Srebrenica and else- streets were stunned when the coli· Serb troops have moved to Wbln 1
Friday around Slf&amp;jcvo airport. A
He said two oth~r convoys w~ere had deteriorated enough to voy arrived.
.
1/4 miles of Srebreniea.
Serb tanlc deployed next to the air- bound for Zepa and Goradze were justify the intervention.
"I don't believe it," he said in
Bosnia's Serb leader, Radovanpon entrance was lobbing shells •'stuck, subjected to inventory
The convoy was allowed to pro- radio communications with U.N. I&lt;aradzil;, met Friday in New York ·
' mto the suburb or Dobrinja, an AP checks, box by box" by the Serbs. ceed after Morillon agreed to a officials.
·'
.
wilh U.N. peace envoys Cyrui
pholographet said.
He called it "a delaying tactic used Serb demand that it go ahead with"The people all crowded around Vance and Lord Owen.
•
Earlier Friday, radio said three and recognized as such."
out any armed escort, U.N. arid were joyous," said John
Asked whether Serb forces ·
people were killed and 10 wounded
In washington, aciing State refugees said.
McMillan of the U.N . refugee planned to take Srebrenica;
when titRe 8l1illery shells exploded Department spokesman Joseph
Medecins Sans Frontieres said office in Geneva.
I&lt;aradzic said only: "We are lrying
outside the entrance of the city's Sny\ler said u.s. airdrops in east- in a statement from Belgium thai li
Just two hours before th~ c_on_- .to establish peace and we seek talks
· main bakerY.
•· ern Bosnia were set for more than team of its doctors was stopped at voy arJived, Hollin11worth said _ f~to-face. Without talks face-toAn estimated 30 people have . 60 tons Friday nighl, about double the Serbian line an,!l not allowed in Serbs launchec1-an; ~llery .attaciC _face, .we cannot achieve anything.':
been dying daily in Srebrenica, · Thursday night's total, after the r::::=============================~====~
offiCials say.
· ·
U.N . High Commissioner for
·Sixteen trUCks pulled into the Refugees requested it. It was not
eastern town. It was the fm;t land clear if the mcreascd deliveries
c011voy to reach Srebrenica in more would continue beyond Friday
than titRe months. The only aid to nighi. .
. ,
reach the town since thcll has been
The U.N. Security Council on
lhnlugb U.s. Air Foree airdrops.
.Friday discussed a resolution
G.en. Philippe ~orillon, the authorizing "all necessary meaU.N. Commander in Bosnia, rode in sures" to enforce ~ban on Serbian .
'at the head of the convoy, said and other military flighlS ih Bosnia
Peter Kessler, a U.N. rdugee folloWing repons this w,eek of Serb
· spokesman.
· air raids on eastern Bosnia.
The convoy..also ~ed p)a»tic
The draft resolution, sponsored
sheetiilg 'for weatherproofmg war. · by France, was circulated to the 15.

3.113

$5,1110.368.75

711.28 .

St,212.37
1,354.54

$41,330.113

$633,241 .67
41,068.25
2,142.35

L.aWt- eo. Vocalonll

Mcintyre P•k Dlalrlct
168Bo•41

FUND

$3,688,004.28
1,484,681:58
7,130.86
550.02

S454,4Z2.7f

G.J. V. Vocotional School

BONO

FUND

FUND

Galllt Counl'f

7,471.• ·

FUND

GENERAL

. $3,174.33
5,450.14

$124,049.12

Total Townahlp

STATE

AJND

1,8113.115
2,414.37
1,964.04
4,481.21 :,. 527.67 (Uno Fen~)
3,503.03
1,643.03
2,679.03
6,220.14
' 7.170.64 + 711.23 (Uno Fence)
2,057.32

' Harrison Township

RE-IMMB. FROM'

RD. &amp;BLDG.

$12,2111.53
41,1154.13

1,349.98

"Huntington Townohip
Morgan Townohip
Ohio Townohip
. Pon-y Townohip
Raccoon Townahlp
. Springfield Townohip

I

BONO

FUND

~

en."'

WASHINGTON (AP)- World
cotton production for crop year
_c:.;o:::n=ti=nu:.:e.:..:d.:..:rr.:.om::..:D~-1:.__ _ _ _ _ _- : - - 1992•93 is estimated 81 83.2 million bales, down 13.3 percent from
:,
ly. Progress looks good toward the tetany. A reduced level of m&amp;gne- the previous level.
·
opportunity to feed more cattle in sium during a time of increased
The estimate 'for the United
hio. Economist have projected magnesium requirement brings on States ill 16.3 million ~. 8 per·
. e potential economic impact of the problem. The cheapest in sur- cent below last year's production.
e project ·81 $I billion.
~ce is often a supplemental feed- ·
World cotton consumption is
· Beef producers should be pre- 1~g of 20 grams per day of magne- forecast at 8.5 million lilies, and the
pared to prevent "Grass Tetany". s1um. Most local farmers try to world export projection at22.2 mil),.ow quality roughage during the supplemen.t at th~ rate of2 ounces l.ion ·bales, ·· according to this
ljte winter followed by ·lush cool of magnesmm OXI~e per ct:'Y·
month •s world ·cotton situation
season grasses and stress such as
Ed Vollborn IS Galha Coun- repon by the Agriculwre Depancalving trigger incidence of grass ty's agent, agriculture.
ment
·

· Following Is a breakdown ollhe dlotJibution:
GENERAL
FUND

. . .. ., ... -· . .. . .

Turkey.. ~

.

I,
'

._

.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Hcrzegovina (At&gt;) - Thousands of bWJgry
but joyous people mobbed a U.N.
convoy that rumbled in1o Sn:bR:nica with food and medicine 011 Fdday after, being beld up 'for nine
days by Serbs.
'
·
!..ale Friday, the U.S. Air Foroe
SIIl&amp;ed its largest airdrop in easlicm
Bosnia. Nine transports dropped
mQre than 72S tons of food and 1.6
tons ~f . '!'edical supplies to
Cumavltlhi and Ostnaei, villages
lyin~i~ five miles fiSrebrmica. Air Fon:e said Saturday in
.Frantfun, Germany,
·
U.N. High Commissioner for
Refugees Sadako Ogata had
appealed for increased aid, calling
it "a mauer of life or desth for
thousandsofinnot:CIItpeople.''
U.N. officials said more such
con voyslhewedearhr:e
nectollessary immedi1
ate Y or
would rise in
the besieged Muslim enclave.
Heavy Serb shelling preceded the
convoy's arrival in Srebrenic:a,
killing four people, i!ICiuding two
childrep.
·
• Elsewhae in Bosnia-Hmegovina. Bosnian radio reported 11 peopie were killed and- SO were

Shoney's earnings· up 38,percent

•·

....

;Long-delayed convoy· ·greeted by thousan·ds in .Srebrenica

WASHINGTON (AP)- Mix·
ing herbicides with oil mstead of

: S percent inflation
!·. really is serious ·

p

hlgheit lllcldlr ... -rlty '

· lbyor

1._,a_)21_.1-TC-----Public Notice

lor folthful porlormonce.
llhould the IIIli Ill __,ted
by tho boerd, the dopoalt
omount will be opplled to
tho puroheoe prloe.

..
·tHANK

TO TIE.IISIDENn OF
UC.COON
FOR

NoJ:!B~C ~':.y,lveil
IMI ... Boerc!.ol Ednallllotl
of the Qellle-Jeokoon·
Ylnton D11VIct,
Joint loe•llll
Voellllanll
School
In
Qallle lor
County,
will
ofler
oalo Ohio,
al publle
• : n at Bucker• HHI•
c Conllr; Alo ar.-.
Ohio, com-Ing et 1:00
on Aprll24,
peraonel .rop-

t•,...

.

\11

• ..

lion• I• •PBII ""
viewing Monclar
Frld., froM 1:00
......
ti.IIO&gt; ' '"'· It lo.
re~tlieelad t~al. on 11..-~-,..;.~~~~-"!!!'~~'!i!'!!...~

-~.

..

.

..

::.~,.-=·

·-·

"'

•

•

�·~-• ....,,~ . • •• •

PaQ!I D4 Sunday llmes-Sentlnel
11

Help Wanted

11

Help Wanted

.

l

... .

' '

..

•,

..

.. . . . .

• • I ,•

t•

•

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• • I"

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lllrcl\_21, 1113

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

..

· KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

'POITAL.IOIIS ; . - - -·

1'.....!41...........~ c::::.:.. ~

~~Fo&lt;
And£.- InCall 1-21t-'lllo4715

=...-

To I P.ll, 'I

I ol.lll.

5

18

Ads ·

SP

Lata
We
you
Happy 50th Birthday
Love, J.P.,
Nueha,

"Tell me everything about your fear
of deadlines. You have till 1 :30."

Anno c1 ncern ents

8

1, · :1- •

-

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Rio

a.vto..

.

.Help Wanted

11

:11!.

..

451:11.

Happy 50

Ronnie
Employment Serv1ccs
HelpWintld
............_.w.tiAI

With All Our
Love
The Family

110 To

, c;cc: -., - . Rlilll 1• u

lox II, HI-.

--,.,=.01-n-:-~-."'..,-.-..,..-:
1,mllll ~ • -

:fttc. worll,

H&amp;vo -blo · t ..........tlon.
Pooltlon Roq'*oo . An A0o
MCioloo Doaow In A Social
lorvlco Flolil, lA Prllornd.
Rloilv To'PIIIDiwiOI Doponmonl,
P.O. 'lox 464, G&amp;Uipollo, Ohio

this Is you.
The answer Is
yes!

'

I 'Ex:--po'""ortoo-100

~~= w~:.,.,..!:'m':,':.~ -

twice, to see If.

I

Eolll' Worlll Excotloile Port »
eomblo Procluclo AI HomO. COli
Tall F,_, ~. En.

VICTIM ADVOCATE: Full Tlmo
Pooltlon Avolloblt To Work
-ondo And EvtnintL Will
Bo. W«k~!~t ' With Womtn And
Chi- To Provldo Ltgol ·Ad¥OCOCY. Tronapor!l\lon, And

Wanted to Buy·

oloto .,..,, filing, limo

Moping, tvlllng, ind ...., ofllco
funCtloilo.- Roojlond to P.O. lox
10, 11-poot, Ohio 41110.
HQUSIINSPICTORS

-lilY·

:n•-

No Exp.
Uf To 1100
WkiY. Wll Tflln. Col
lid Ill. Hlllll. I A.ll. To I P.ll.
7Doyi.

'

Needed - ..
Produce manager

Gallipolis
Supermarket·
send resume to:
Box CD 105
c/o Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
45631

Mom,
Couldn't
., pus up the
ch11nce •. Wolildn't let
it go· Wonder if you ·
could still dance
since your the BIG
&amp; ...11111
tlva-ol
Colltll: P.-al
Hli)IIY 50th birthday
Com....tty
· - ·&amp;Wrc.l
· IIIIoC1111!.!.
Ill
LovaTarasa,
350 a..littt • • Oak 1111
Cindy &amp;Mike
OltiO 45656,(614) 612-7717
£0E
.

p.m.

· .No motollzed titled vehicles
·No animals
- All farm relat!!d 09nsignments welcome
• Consigmlents aQCepted Friday. March 2S.
1993, 12 nooli-6 pmor Saturday, M!lrCh 27,
8 am- Sale Time ·
- For more information .call (304) 675-5463
or (304) 773-5696
• Must preSent lax .e xempt or pay tax
- No Exceptions!
-Cash or check w~h proper I.Q.
• Not responsible lor accidents
·· ·
- Auctioneers: Rick Pearson and Edwin Winters
- All commisSions go lo lhe Mason County Fair!

Help Wanted ..;
.

o.-, 0111o 1144a-IIU.

MACHINERY AUCTION
Saturday, March 27, 1993
10:00 am.·?

~~~

11

From Gallipolis, Take Rt. 141, Turn left
pnto Rt. 775, Turn right onto Patriot Road.
Watch for signs.
Looking for merehandise? Try the 'Patriot
Auction Bam! We have all types of new and
used merchandise, Appliances, Furnitiure,
I·AI1tlques and collectors Items. Something tor
everyone!
Sale every Saturday at 7:00
Door Prizes Given Weekly
Consignments accepted from ·•
1:OQ-5:00 p .m. on Saturday.
Have something you want to sell?
Contact Martin Wedemeyer.
Arrangements for pick-up service available ..
Bam and auctioneer available for
public auctions on contact.
· Contact Includes hauling and transporting
all merchandise.
Auction service also available at
Estates, residents and business.
Now booking spring and summer auction.

at Mason County Fairgrounds
At. 62 N of Point Pleasant,WV :

1tiS br NfA.IM.

'WI du,t-ww"l Auction

.

.Siate

614-245-5152
'

' lie. and Bond in

ol
helped Ul
cea.bratt our 50th wedding

. ,;thoN

who

·_.nnlvtrsary rtcMltly. For

tht card•, gifts, call• and
thoH who attended. Your
·klodnon wiH alwoya bo
: rememb.red.
Eugene •net

~

RHo Buclder

n-.

2

In Memory

In memory of

: Bertha Parker on her
birthday March 20th
We miss you, Mom
Children &amp; Grandchildren

Loving
Memory of
In

LILLIAN

OLDACRE.
Sadly missed by
Garnet, Gerald,
Branda Smeltzer,
Jada, David, Jon &amp;
Adam Hall.

ore, ote

..... ..:''

. How far you go is up to you. If you are 17
to 27 years old, visil your Air Force recruiler or call 1-S0()-423-USAF,

.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Tom Beaver
is 40 Ole
'March

27th!

Flrot of all we would
like to thank the
National Guard who
were very cooparllllve
and caring thraugh our
lo... Alao, we are very
grateful to the V.F.W.
4414, American UgiOn
Poet 27, Eagl• of
Pomaroy, Galla Couilty
V.terana, D.A.V. lor
their contrtbutlona and
love. The too4. n and donatloJia ware
alncaratr appraclatld.
Slncer. appriCidon,
the Edward K. Fry Sr.
!emily.
11

Ani!Quo

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. T~,
o
Trimming. Foeo Eotlmotool 5
lll''IIIITAftw 4p.m.
Pootoblo lowmiiL don'
houl ,... ioao lo tho mfll Juot

114-441-t227. p,_.
dl HIIIW /School Age 814-40.

"'"·Br 11o_psemc.,
Slop

.14-4 ..

WI Do h All,

.......,... l box
goad oond, :104-

I"!~"-~~

w-,.
t.ocol
~!..~ ::~:.- R~•·
Exm 14,000 llonthiY.

Bualn~a

36

FAMILY
.
family room holghtena tho plea.,,.
taolliully decooatod llHevel. 4 badroorn10,
balht, 2 hall baths, oqulpfNid kitchen
. ,..,.ntly replaced range and rwtrigorator. Rae.

w-

Apartment
for Rent

Real Estate

w
2 v~~Golll!l olio Forry,
wanted
W.ntod To t..oo, Bur On
Donllo Uoo 01 W ActM To Lo- 2 Roomo I loth, No Kitchen,

gara~.

decking, In·

ground pool. Storage building. Plus much
more. Immaculate condition. Mako an
appointmenl todoy. Rodnoy aroal
~~~

HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD log home with basemtnt, 3
botho, lomYy room, , lvlng
laUndry arll,' llkyllgh~ 118111ife
porch, heat pump, oonlral air,
and much mora. Call tor datailo.

w/cue

Vond.

Owner leaving areil. aaya bring •n

Positive ID

olfwll Homei lika this raoaly'ooma on th&amp;
market. Tum of 1M -""'1' home leaturing
4-S largo bodt~. huge lYing room an9
dining rom. nicit kitchen,
deled bath. 1
car attached garage with mud room, la'lle
. uliliJy room. Nice large lo1 In quiet
community only 19 miles lrom ' - !. Now
for the old-lilne. p(ica tag ol ooly $38,000.

remodeled home
acres
Gall~ Counly. Ook
rem ode led
. bathroom, ,_ windows &amp; more. leave you
with little 10 do. FIM gu heal 3 bedroom•. 1
living room, cining ioom. Bam &amp;
ouibuUclrog. SSI,HD
1224

•••.a

.

this newspaper IS :wb}ect to
the Federal Fa• Housing Ad

011968 whiCh makes III&amp;Qill
to actvenlse ·an'; preference,
NmHalk&gt;n ot dlscotmlnoll",!l
baSed on rac:o, color, rolg[&lt;fn,

sex famiAIIatarus ot nat)Onal
origin, or any lnl:erilon. to
make ll'f such prerererice.
~m•auon or dlscrimlr'lallon.•

I'

adYef11S&amp;d In tills newspaper

oppot1unlly basis.

Real Estotc
31 Homes for Sale

Y11, You Can Hoovo KAn._. Town ivng, lar'ge
lo~ off street partUng, al brick. This 1 112 1101)
has a lot 10 oller. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living
room with fireplaoa, dining room, ilo'lle ea~in
kitchen. Upstairs you'll lind 2 ~ large
unllnlahe!l raama, lull unfinished basement.
Fumaca &amp; eentrll air Is only 3-&lt;1 yra. old. Call
Carolyn batore it'a too late. PriCed at only
$74,900.
.
H11'

1568 Sq. fl., ll IC.. lot, 211

wallo, 2 comploto botho, clnlng
room, living room, 3bdrm., wal"'"

In ciOMta,lully carpt4ed, 2 por-

-rle hoot, f':EJ .IIOYI,
rtfriatrator• .a.....w~. Home

ohH,

Nll'fBonk, Roclno, OH. 114-D4t-

ZI10,

2

Pion Now For Summerll Vour perfect
home can happen on thia 80 acr parcel
located juat•aff Rt. 218. Beautilulloomesila
ond ocreago thai ia perfec:t for.animals and
cropc. 65 ..,., have been raoondy llncod.
Great bam with 16 12'X·12' b~r•. drive
through ond 10'apoon .u.......,.._3 weao
ollet an OUIIIIInding water ou~. ·Tobacco
base, mineral rights and some timber. This
oculd ba rour bread ond butter investment.

llotho, . complllo kHchon, pump, boot romp, .! 11111 - .

Ntw H•wn. :104-112·2247 01
182·2GeD.

$60,000

247 EVERGREEN ROADI - IIIM£D1An
POSSESSIONI - Start poeldng today, This 3
bedroom hOII'• with batt, kilchon, llvlng room
neods a lamityl Owner hoa raP,Iecod root,
lumac., wAI8r h..llf .nd'!ft&lt;lro wilhil 1M r!ll
couple ol years. earn. ond - · Priced $20 o.
1511
2
STORY OLDER HOME WITH CHARACTER - Sltu1ted al 10 CIIY St,.et. 4
badoo&amp;no, nioo llfllllllvlng room, clnln9 room,
kllchan, 111 bathund moN.
1117

for Sale

1172 'lidO. 2 bedroon:at -•• tl,
oopolr, 111100, 114tQ4IMI.
1114 14oo'IV·CIIr,on t lldnoomo,
t 11Z llllh. I 1--. G&amp;o

1814---_,
.
.
,
.
,
bed=
-n,
wnh h24 1-ndo.!
tully oqoHDIIOII
pinning, a.-.. utroo, ....
...... INI.

liZ 2ND· AVE., GAwPOUI- Oldar home In
11 ltni ...,air. 2 BR, DR, ldl, LR, .,...,.,.,~
lg. laiiiPPftll. 43'x112'. Oltlloel parltlttfj: ~II :

IAI.III ITIIEIT- Gcod
~
older 2 olaly oanalallng o1 3 , ballt, FR and
mo... 3 aewage and water ~ookupa '011
ptOplrly, Cal lor men Into.
.
1111

tll7 lh""'

•
•'

""'"'"" !

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

•

.........

1

.
~-·-·.;.~_
~
'.LIIalfiiCIIIar-----..L.,nMtM
' "-"'" D..tta.,..----~--'--.441·1114

-

..
o-IL---·--~~·-·ttl tt•
...........
____..____IJI.IIIt

CalllrWrlr----·----···
•••
Chlr Dl~···ltl~-----111 ••., ;
•

v

I

•

:
l

i
..
'

14ln, C/11, -

bed-. I

...........
m-11'11. . tult, -

....
--~------------~-----4 i'
RuaniiMhod, llrakar-----.....11 '
I

bo -od. :104-171-

•

... -

!loll

glide .In and out ol tha lake or go alter that
funder bell in lhl lake. 52 loci treated
wifo atr¥n - . all rnaslor oullo, 11
waR ao laQiify room, lleo anhanooo t11e
laM lioilt loca1ion. $152.000 .s.no..
'
.......
on"'l
'
-~
~.
wvv. ,...~
~uly Allordoblo Crtap, lliHn a blllroou, 1
•

- · 11onr 1Jtrull14-15)1.11141.

m;:.11M1

*4

•n::,lou
\fly

~ Maintenance frail exterior
lela!H time to wetdl tloe goeea

Awning, ltopo 111,000 0 u, 304111-41:11.

lady.,.,.

100 AC. FARM - Situalod SR 141, 1 tlory
boick IIIYie homo conolatlng ol 3. BR, Zll balh,
LR, DR, 2 Clr garage, FP I mo;., ApPit*.
1200·1300 lb. lob. baM. Callormoralnfo.

.

SI5Z.t7 por month InclUding olr
monthe frH tot rtnt, new 14170,
· d l l - ond 101 up, llklttlng
ond ll!opo, 1-l'I5ZI.
121110 llobllo Homo, Goodedition, Air Concllllonlni'J.. With

hils ""'"nllloo loo anonnoua to mention. Can
1odlly~morolnl0rmation.
1411
'
"
IPOMER01) UNCOLN TERRAOIIU - · Thla
· ._~Iota ol ohoracltr and !hi
houae hu Iota ol QoOd IUie wllen ~ COIIIetiO
~tl Ill· Ita a 2 11111y home with 3 bla
bodiDomo, nlooo olzld Mtg room and plenty 01
apace In tl)a ldlchen and clnlng "'"· FUll
bm-~;ond lelga llllc. Rool jull 2 yra. old.
Takulook lor anly f24,800.00.
1111

CHEAPIEIII $11,000 - 14 Mill Creakl Uvlng
room, kitchen ond dining room combo,
. bodroom and bath, covared carport.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION.
Hill

ill iii I
1-800-585-7101
(614) 446-7101

32 : Mobile Homes

DECU11VE HOlle! - 2 olaly 1H1ck Calllllll,
311R, 2K befit, lui ftnlohod bill-·~ electric
h!MI pum~ wloolar hlatlng ayatam. Thla hou•

1517

•

Up Scale Ronal! Very otetely ~me in
Charloalo Hills Lake EotatAII· often a
. comlortable way ol Ute. ~Alva spacious
rocmo .Include 3 bac1'oom1, cielul8 eal~n
kitChen, family room with vauned oe~ing
and brick liraplaot, and lalae HYing room.
Loads ol windows take lulf advanlago ot
the 480 ft. of lalce lronlaQ!t. HUGE lull walk
out baaament doublll llv.ing apece If ·
needed. 2 car garage plua garage door
entrance to baaement workshop .

roont8 &amp; blth, 2 c.r g~~ge,' II•
locollon, 1511,8110, 11414,.,021.

IN VINTON VILLAGE- Hare you will find IIIIa
3 BR, 1y, bath one siOry homo wilh lYing room,
kitchen. laundry &amp; don. A cloiiChod ono cor
garego, blown-in insulation end mora. On a
1271X115/ comer 101. Alldng anly $30,000. Call
today lor your appolnlmanl .. •
t14t1

,

SCUD COMFORT Here's a very wen built
brick home in a wei establiahed residential
neighbooltood thars sure to mo1&lt;e your 119
more comlortable. 3 badiQOitll, 1 112 batha
plus a~DMT In baaemant. Cozy lamily
room , altractive eat-in kitchen. Fenced
back yard. 1.car garage. MaiiJiananca lree
&amp;xterior. Coovenient to shopping. Call
Oavo any time lor mont detalo. $79,900
1215

am available on an &amp;qual

" " - 1 112 ...... ,.. bodo

LOCATIONI LOCATJONI LOCATION! - 242
LARIAT DRIVE - Brick ranch otyla home, 3 ·
BRs, 2 baths, ba1101nant, FR, LR, kitchen llld'
dinlg oroa. Low utilitiu. House remodeled
1987. Muii ... IO approc:iato. 103'x 191' lol
1505

1812

Large Lot Largo Houulor $24,!100[ 3-4
bedrooms with po_tentiallor mora. Close to
grade school in ViniDn. Call Cllftllyn for
more details:
H04.

•• lntormed lhat alt dwallngs

~room8,

'

Clo.. to Qevln I Rlvor Volley High
SchooiiiTwo small acreage lots on
blacktop road. WaJer available. $5,900
each. Perleet loi ,movfle home. Both lor
$10,000."Callor moradetaila.
1214

This newspaper will not
knowingly aoc:opt
adver11sements lor real estate
whlct'lls i1 vlotallon or lhe
law. Our readers are I'Weby

•cr.e on rlver1 3

.

v-';,The lloa1Sp- For Your lloneJ.
. And there's just no comparison 10 thls ... 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, ia'1l8 living room , den,
large f&amp;n)ily room or ~ning room, 20X40
inground pool, large barn. and several
building, all th11 plus 6 ,190 acres; mil.
Ready forJou to move Into lor only
$59,900. o· that,phome .OWl
HOS

' All real estate actvenlslng In

wf290 cummins, 8 •t-&lt;1 w/a double

wner ~ Jan Parker Grain Farm
AudlonHr • 57·68·1344
Smith • Apprentice

No R11eonable OU.. Rotuald I OWner
haa movid and needs 10 tell' thi&amp; 3
bedroom, 2 bath, living room. clnlng room
lamlly room ond large e•t-ln !&lt;ftchtin.
OUidoor na laan1 3 """'"· mil, IICOIIIs
to larGe fishing pond, 2 car garage. Call
today. Now your doilams and pocketbook
fit togalhar.
1803

Good, SttllfY, ,Attordeblt, Bulin.... . Won"' Laat 1o800.ZM-

'

NRockwell rear-end ond a 17' Dump. has

Bodo

VENDING ROUTE: Got Aldi
Quick? No Woyl But Wo H&amp;vo A

"Truck"

'

you're over the

IWE8TVACO

54 -Miscellaneous .

Coli

10, G&amp;lllpollo.

Raccoon Townlhip................ ,............ 118 Acres
Raccoon Township .............................. 80 Acres
Harrloon Townll11p ............................... 81 Acres
Ohio Townohlp ................................... 133 Acres
Huntington Townll1ip ........................... 18 Ac.-a

8-

w.-

Eo-

G&amp;IIIJIOIIo Cllr, Nooo a~~opp~ng,
Chutehoa Condltlooo, p.,.
loCI For ~otload. Wrlto P.O. Box

Help Wanted

- - Ooby. IIW!rl-11141 .

Now 1 1115 1 Y- Wo'll'~~i
Merchandise
Konoilore
Htw
1171; T.V. Consolo 115;
Ajoplloncoo, 'It Vlno 81-, Oilllpcollo. , _ , _ , ,__.. .
Mit.
IIOOIIIna noomo wnh C&lt;OO!Wig. Goo ";~,", oncl 1 ooblioot Aloo trollor ~p~e~. Allloook..,po. _._.
•.t14-lti:I-21A
4 PG1a1Mn1 . . . 1100. eacll.
CaR aftor 2:00 p.m. :104-TD- --:::::':-.::---''=:::::--:-===
- . - WV. .
•• 0ooo USED APPLIANCES
~,..., rof!lgorlll~llnOII, 71
Vlni81ro0t,
114-441-7311,1-,
100-411-3411.

Soli. 1-

ION6S-8353.

Orovely w/st.eerins sulkey, culler bar, brush hog, ~ig snow
blower, older'gravely walk behind w/rolll'J mower &amp; spore
ond electric parts, old gas fored incinerator, approx. 40
chain &amp;aw, 112 Triplex. 400' wire, S basement pole
li ~·lfllliN.• PaniSOnic VHS VCR recorder &amp; player, Lawn
propelled mower.
"Guns''
Sov11e 99 2 barrel lakc:over w(l barrel set, 22 HP 3030

A

GREAT FOR MOM I POP OPERATION! Multi-purpoMI Lota,ol OP.IJOIIunities. GNat for
small gracery. Block buiding with 2 bedroom
apartment In 18lr. Upolairo unfinishod could ba
convened into apootmenll. Over 1 aero lot.
MobWo home lito with •plic and water. 1511

loUflnll old Jontom~1 Trotto.
-!nt ........... - -

Eloctrlc Aonoo olll:
R&amp;lrlaorotar Aloottlllinl SWo
1111: llo~or lido 1r lido
tall;
R&amp;~ : a.E.
.. z - · c.......
uu

Inch

t.ocll Voncllng Roulo:' 14,000 A
- h Potonllol. -

2

We love you,
Mom
Kevin &amp; Lorena

tolll0p.m. t14-te2.z&amp;a.
Fumlt... ,.,.., I rollnlohoc!,

Routo.
H~TroHic
,__1~ .

brown barrel chair, hair &amp;yer ch&amp;ir, king size
quilt mauve country blue &amp; pink, brown plaid
window &amp;ir conditioner lnd manual oypewriter.-

Refrulonwtts
Cuh
"Not reopan~ible for accidenll or lou

NEW USTINGI 40 ACfE FARM with 2 atory
vinyl aided home, 3 BR, LR, kit., familY, room,
bath, one car detachod gorago. Some anclng,
bam ond mo,.. Priced $40'a.
H21

-Of.

Renlals

Business

Exm ~oo

~Mlsc."

~

hill II
Happy Birthday

rlllf.;..:,ar~-:;;::-::R,-1-:-Ino--=Ant-:-lq·uo-o,

1124 E. loin Slow~ on RL 124,
Hou10: II.T.W. 10:00
o.m. to t:GG p.m., tlundoy 1:110

G.E. Wlaloer 1111; Whirlpool
Wo- 1111· K - Goo
Dmr $121; .0.E. Eloetrlc Dryer

·

$200tlo. .U Udlldn lnciUd1d,
A - l n g ~Col 114-246- ~ 114-446-77U,
DIDIAIIorl P.ll
,

Financial

ab•

~.PO.

35 Lots I Acreage
44

, ......... ph

--~ Anllauo Tnonll tiDO l'lnn.
114 441 O'ltl.

f9S; 30 Inch E-ric R&amp;ngo,
1111; 20 lnoh GAo AJngo, 11111 ~

cal Muuleludlng Atftl Club For

"Household.,

NEW LISTING! PEACEFUL &amp; PRIVATE
SETTING IS IDEAL FO'R THIS LOG HOME
l OVER TEN ACRES - 3 bod10oms, living
100m with cathedral ceiling and ~ardwood
llooring, 11/2 baths, lull bsemant. bam and 2
buildings. Really nice. Call today tor showing.
$40'1.
1527 .

2187.1M MW22t

-on,

Lown Caro, c....

Dllll Liwn
0128.

Full

_,_If
df'lll', olo.._UUI --., 614-IID-

.,,,.lcJenllel 2 .-:r•
wnh 214 l Ill. z .....,.&lt;!~!' bolo
11224.
. Aolotcln • Applo Orovo,
public
-·
t ....
lolo with
appcouucl
..,._
~ ...,..
- · old with CPA trolnlng
looldna tor eomeOM to take
- . Sui&gt;Gvlolon.
care Oil ln our hoin1, 814-112· CIJcl&amp;
JL »1-171433e.

tToddte...

Toblo, bcollonl

_Antiquo -

~--. z ., .......... nnt
In
Countoy llobllo PooL

MIIJ04..11So-1l57.

,.Auto's'•

room, attached 2 car

Coni....,: .z lodnoomo, Portly
Fumlohool,
Nq · 12401110.
W.t«
Fu.na.hed,
111141
. . ..

a-v•

IIIIas Pauto'a Dor Con Contor 1
lloelt ·WoOI 01 HMC on Jack1011
Plloo lt.f I A.ll. -1:30 P.M. H
OuooiHy And Exportonce It Tho
tl Ccincom For VolA' Child's
Con. CIU Us For A VloH. lnfonl

ur.ol., 114-311-,.01.

ConWrnl

!ftmm!ng, Trse Aomoval,

~ac:tor~ Mowen, Trailer &amp; eel."
Firma!! H w/extn.
end ports, Lowes 18 H.P. owin
cylillder wllarge inower deck. AC riding mower no deck.
Dune bugy wN.W. motor, Hondo 90 trail bikes, Honda 70
3....1)celer and I 5' Slwto camping trailer self contained.

WHAT A GOOD DEALt
:~~~~:~""~~•.~~'!•
home consisting
of lYing
3 bodroomo,
2 car
· ol Gallipolio. 1530

you ....

Amlques

1978 :VB Cordoba VB 2 door- auto, 1971 Plymoulh Scamp
2 door hardtop 31B VB auto- P.S.- P.B. radio, new radial
lira - 33,000oc:tual miles.

'

Plko.

258 1014.

::'o:!'~ hovotnvootr;atld

Localed 15 miles North of Pomeroy, Ohio or 25 lrutes
South of Parkersburg, W.Va. al the aouth end of Tuppers
Plains, Ohio on SL Rt. 7. WitCh for auclion signs.
"Farm Macblaerf'
JD S boliOm plows, 16' Dunltam wing fold oransport
Hl!riptor, LL Giant 'OII' com dump' elevator, 3 pL caL 2
Century IJI'IYU w/400 sat. tank, 8x35 auser. 5 shank 3 pL
caL . 2 Johitlon V ripper, 3 Pt. ·cullivator, 8' JD loader
bucki:L 2 hydraulic drive ~vioy bed ·augers. 4 ·ro plank:r
mill. Peerleu roller milL rowy hot$. Taiulcm a'xle frame ·
trailer, nat bed wa1on. 7' 3pt•.brush hog. / .·
. "Misc. Farm llems"
SO j®ul4" x 20' .HD PVC. wak:t or sewer .Jlipe new. nat
bed semi trailer side lril· w/storage box. 18,000 gal. storage
tank. I000 gal. woter tank. trailer axle, stuI HD weisht box
16" x 22" x 36", motor puller A frame w/roller. aluminum
5000 aal. tanker orailer. 16 pe. 15" x 20' black plastic
culvert pipe, set 18.4 x 38 duels, MM 45 HP motor, wood
liUCk bed for 1 1(2 to 2 ton liUCk. H~ generator 4500
Wilts, 50 sat. oil spreoder lriL hog tceclcn, S gal. self
heatins S.S. alcohol distiUer, front fenders for lale model
ID, wood work toble wllarge pipe vice, Dodge pickup bed.
.,
dollys, fuel tanlc:s, homemade winch frame,
yard roUer, A.l. markins halter, metal storage

tour is over.

NEW USTINGI IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
- SPARKLES INSIDE with l,.ohly painted
walls. Ranch atylo home wilh lull basement,
caoport, extra atorago room, living room, oat4n
kitchan,3 bedooonl&amp; will1 boauUtul hardwood
floonng. Approx, .4 acre lot. Call todey. 1531

!)' ,-_. . ......,.

hloW tllvor ~ Or 4 IIUoo OUt M1 On Uncoln

H ;

Opportunity

Sat. March 27, 1993
. 10:00 A.M.
.

' hiring. And, if you're a high school
Wr.'re
graduate, we'll orain you in a,great Air
Force job. In addition to oraiiting and a .
good pj.ycheck, the Air Force will help
you pay for college. Also. we have a twoyear degree program ~d a plan to provide
money for school even after your Air Force

NEW LISTING! GREAT LOCATION AT A
GREAT PRICE - 3 bedroom ranch with 2 flill
baths. 16'x32' ingrouni:l pool enclosed by a
privacy lonce with a nice dock lor sunbathing.
.Call now tor an appointtnertl
1529

of OhiO Lie. #3615

Dry...
. .. - ..

a

21

.

Clooolro ~I
wood~
· Wootoero.
• ••

Rodney

Coll114-2411-111t
11m rwnov11: need an otd b1m
~lot- 0111 o1 tho wor?
wtl romovo "" ulvago. 114-

,
OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
~=::;===============~I
INOTICEI
PUBLIC AUaiON
=-~~':v=:.:..~~~
Nar Ill ooiod rnonar throuon tho

[~~II S I I I~-'~!_]
· Wo wloh to thAnk Ill

...... noM Av•l&amp;able.

Ariel chi.. UH or ,.,_
,
Wool!; ColiN And End Wllh
Dooro $111 ~i 5' Toblo With I

f.

-------'

Wanted to 1lo
wtl l o - In lly "-o. Fo"'
0011 In Plar Aloo. E•porioncld.

Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer

11EAIIFORCE

Real Estate General

In Loving Memoty crf
EDWARD "Ed" K. FRY
SR. who fNIIIId nnoy
u.rch 16, 1tl3.
~ tnly crt Ectwn
."Ed" K. Fry Sr. would
Ilk• to ..:knowledge
tho.. whoa• eflorta .
and concern• were
greatly appreciated
during our loao. During
hla Uta he made
numeroua frlenda llld
touched many
all
of thoae wiQ nevar be
forgotton. Thw• .,. ao
many cllrlng people we
wlah to thank, but tho
llat Ia ao n11meroua
that wa cannot apeclfy
e..:h name, although
WI are aware of who

IEnlo&lt;loiMMonl Conlor'a 1141 0.
11.52 WMk· Ia ciLihlt¥11 aanl!&gt;o uus;'lh cllr- ttati_!ofl

Handled Willi Cere Mow rlgh1 Into 1111
pampelld 3 badloom, 2 112 batt blldt r.nch.
Larga, but cozy r.ntty room -"' waodbumlgn
IIOVO. Nice ancloald porch Of dlnina ,_,.,
Callloday 1o - thlt ona priced 11 pr,aoo.
; IICI1I

Trooo Make Grut Nelahboral Your
privacy 11 ~ In lhlll brick ranch.
Olleftng 4ooms, 2 112 bath•. lonnal
living &amp; cinlng rooms, large lamiiY room
with llraptaca Insert. large kitchen with
dining area. Ovtl'lizld 2 car attached
gal'ltlie, 2 horSe ttall , large works!IOP.
storage buldllll(. lanced ptoperty. AI ptei1Y
•• a ptlvale porto.! $103,900 .
1810

'

=

•

j{' '

-

bath renc1t will vlnrllitllr!i and nplr cr u~o~t
wlndowa. Thlo home haa a, OM .liar IIII!Ghld

garage and •

. . , _ ... ~ IHa,llln • , _

Old. The prico lo $41!,500.

In-patio,.--

11101

Fron1 ..,_, VInton I • hom 1 ...., bttcll
home wi11t ~- lvlnO IOiim. llluntlrr and
-Into ~.walt
3rcl btdrOCnl. Nloa ...Otlullllltt
,aid 11ont
part1t
and Iorge

geregW ... -

...
·

�···'t

Page-06-Sunday 1lmes-Sentlnel

~h21,1993

~~=:~~R~e~a~I~E~~at~e~G~e~n~~~~~~~~~=r~~~==~~==~~~~~~~~~
That Intriguing

Merchandise

Merchandise

,.... 11" - . SIO 110h; ohan

S-10 Top 1m And t.ongbed $90;

l50i 114-

Bumper Campw Tallg..•

ord Game with a Chuckle
W1M

Q Rearrar1ge

ttl a 6 Kramb led
wctdl below to make 6
$1mple- words
Prlr.f lenen of
eoch in ''s line of squares

54 Miscellaneous

54 Miscellaneous

r'MIIo tube

tr.-,

--

...,_ . _ . end bulk .- ... Dft lllo ot Point Pluo, 2801
.._ A... Paint Plouant,

Fer -

$10, hi~U.Sot ot Nollonol Encyolopodla
With .s..,. y- Bookl, $20,

114-387·71113.

wv, 3044711o1014.

or
oeo, 1 ..._
...,...

r11r "'"'"'

......, - · - 200
••
1124711.
Ill

a.v.,

11

Shopomlth '"' v woad ....,...
lng eywtem, IDta of extr~~•, 1J..
mo-t new. 304-571-2133 aner

Pets tor Sale

=-===-...,1
56

,.,

Oill

, Mu81csl
lnetrumenta

Fcrm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

:••

72 Trucks for Sale

•

1trT
l'o100_
I Cab_
l,lghlal
llodl_,

·~

=.

.....

-~MJIIIEilCIAl.

drj OIUnod, $:10, 114-1112·

. ..

. ..

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

78

•

•

•

Avallablo PrieM- H'""mlngblnt

-

011C 1-11

-...

J-, 4.1 -

v.a. 4 ~m-·
.

...

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

7SI

21&amp; EMI-nd SIJMI

PO!MtOy, Olllo 45715
1614) 182-3325

YC!I1 Color T.l(.1 Wnhlr,
=~~otor,

INIII~ alf ooncl,
iwfilpfillor • .....U...
~good-.1,$850.

Scouy MW

D'l"·
MlofOWI!", 1+

TMiord' • f'Miuro Proporly Of Tbe
105. If you oon't mlko up your mind who4hor you
wanllo live in lawn or in tho counlry. This property is
far you: Ire cotwiDOIUy localed nat Ia clo• to town,
nat Ia faroul of lawn, Call, now, far mare infonnalionl
101. RIVER FRONTAGE- This PIOP"rtv IS oxl!amly
W&lt;lll maintained, Beauliful view ov8!1oaking 1111 calm
Ohio River. Wandotful fruil lrHI and Qf'NIIhooM far
Jhe nalule lave' And aJr-condilioning far Jlle hat,
humid monlhs ahead.
Asking $45,000.00
•

Complete the chuckle q uoted
by ftlling in t~e miuing words
. you develop from uep No. 3 below.

106. ROOMY- If you h~ve
a Ia
family or ovon if

you naad alot of roo~

&amp;•a~ noA 'p&amp;/11'" se~
AiluniJoddO JnoA UO~NI ii"IJ.U80 no.l
1, pue ·sa~!"n~Qddo meA 11 dwn! 01
a.e~ noA_ 'SSOJJ&gt;I 5uU!dsl 8~1 PJOI
J81S 6!q 8~1 ,'SAOWIJ OWOOeq 01.

his house comas

mo, Jhet is. Sit back and
Asking $30,000.00

UST WITH USI
We're eager to sell your property.
WhywaH? ·
G. BRUCE TEAFORD
SHERRY RIFFLE

·QNidr.nr uo d33&gt;J
uo d33ll 01

·

wolh an incomtt.Atlf&gt;tl1
roll in Jha monly. ·

!.::1 ·1 I I Ion I I I I I I I I
.10Nid~nr

..

Wcaforo 2f\cal

-.

I
'
,
.
.
I I 1 I I·
·~:;. r r r I' r I' r r r r r 1
•

~

Plumbing &amp;

82

R E R'G E M
1--rT-ii--',riTT-'-'-r-i
O
0
11
•

.

~

Sunday 1lmes-Sentlnei-Page 07

Serv1ces

I

~

.,.,kif

For SoJo. su~ olnalo waJar

bod,llko-- paddld 10111,
$100, 81+l'IZ.Zit1.

.

11+,.2·2357 or 114·1'12·.,...

$40,pold $150; alao mloc:. lacln
clolnlllll coil 614-112·11'5, 115pm or ~14-tll-2204 oft•lpm.

:'.1:'.::'"',;..,-:.. ';'n~-=

MUI• """"IIAU
ULOCATOON

... . ...

PI, Nt Cand~ CNM
CoillroJ, -lllc
.-; .

&amp; Roland
llarlln &amp; Q I -

O:OOPM.

Two line
phone, now In
boa, ATaT, $00; oluo GE oordloll ph-,~. 61+892ol100.
Two pJK. whfto lollol, 110; old
NOOnto, , ,10 oaoh; · - ol
clnwors, SID; 114-112·3430.

Fw .._ Blzo ........ lllloo

I~PSOPiil'nd

'

$1,100, -tl,a, ·~
1911 Ford F-110 SID, ¥.a, PB,

61 Fann

Fer- . . _ wln1or - . lull Twin olro bookeuo bod, llko
!MIIh. w,.,bli ocorf, hn now•• moftNH lnclu"!!!.... $40,

ANYHOUII

•••••

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

PloK..GIIllaiOAnd I I - - - Baldwlil

~

..

March 21, 1993

Porneroy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

'It

~·

Homo (&amp;14) 1192-3562
Brobr

STEElBUitDINGS, Foclory S,u1!111111. Sa¥1 Tho"!!fndo \200
!'II·. Fl. To 20 000 Sq. Fl. Con

,' 1:1301:13~

, S:llldO

Homo (614) 1192·2540

SaiMAaooclale

Erect.

' VIdOln
ASI'In1:l ""-

Dellv.r, Cln
O.vle Conatr.

WUI Deal.
1'14-446.0771.

EndoNI,

N3lllll . ,

311SOr
Sl31-i'f..1:1:lS

56

Real Estate General :

Pets tor Sale

fola-

G . - end SUpply Shop Pot
G.-!ng. All bnodo, olyloo.
1amt Pol Food tiNier. olulll

~nn

Ji'!IVUIDOI 4 A- Corn

Paint•, Dry Fertllz8r
Excollonl CondJo

C%.~
. ~ . 9!.

lloclulol~

llonl 1111331 E..,lngL .

Wtblt. Call 114 44t 0231.

IIF 2111 Tro-, 1t00 1ft.
SUID; IIF $4,1110; 231 IIF

""

h;IID; 131 IIF ~ FJnano.
. lng Awllllble. 114
·=

(2/mit{ ~~~ PROFE~=~:.v~!':.~~S~~-~~~RE~CE
·

4-

·

EUNICE NIEHII, AEALTOA..................44&amp;-1117
RUTH BARR, REALTOR....................... ~722
IICITES, REAlTOA .... ........I AEAlTOA..... ,, ..........

RESIDENTIAL · INVESTMENTS· COMMERCIAL· FARMS

23 LOCUST ST.
63

IIEALTOA....--.....141 1101

446~806

-------------------------Real Estate General

Livestock

~ "~--------·.:..•- - - - - - . . . . . ,
.... m old.... ""' Don INd
304-411

I lilonJII

!711.

=r.

Collll
HMIJing:
Aili)WheN.
ChUck

floor frame ranch
fireplace, dining room, sliding
fenced patio/in ground pool area, 2 . ,
garage with electric. Approx. 1 acre. N1ce
very good location. $49,500
, ·

Real EBtate General

Wood ~a£ty, Inc.

64

446·1-066 .
Allen C. Wood, RldoriBrok• 446 4523

K• Mo..,., Aooillor/Broker"""'6-0171
Mol&amp; C.nllrllury, Aeotllor-441 ,.• . , •
J ........ Moen, ANitor-45&amp;-1745
• 11m w.toon, ANitor unarr

="~~.--.1~1la:aco

.,...

-~ Cd ......, .....,

~-R~~POny,

,.._Te~T-

CHESHIRE· ROUSH LANE· 1+ acre With.1970 2 •
bedroom mobile home' and block efficiency apt. •
also additional trailer hook-up. Great rental
investmenll Mobile home &amp; efficiency are boll\
currently rented. ASKING $24,900

1~ . _ , . , . • • ~-1177.

71

NEW LISTING- SUMNER RD.· Gorgeous&amp;
brick/frame spl~ toyer home 4 bed10oms, 2 baths,
new carpet/vinyl flooring, new electric heat
pump/centrarair, storage building, cel!ar, 2 decks,
secur~y lighting, woodburning fireplace, 1.485 acre
that has very nice landscaping. $89,5oO
•

Autoll tor S8le

-·
-- .....--.

1u1o11 •
Englno And
- - - . $ 1 7 1 , CiJJ IMo

IT'S SPRING !IF YOU WANTTO,GET A,JU_MP .•
ON THE REAL ESTATE MARKIT·GIVE US A •
CALL TODAYI WE HAVE BUYERS!
WE NE.ED YOUR USnNGI
"IrS A BOYI"
(CONGRADULAnONS)
(TRACY It TIM BRINAGERI)

1111. . ... ... aat 'd,
A.U. ........... IIIC, 1111,

-

ta,IOO.:IOWJNaH.

HENRY E. CLELAND ....~ .....................982-6181 . ·
TRACY BRINAGER........................... 949-2438
KATHY CLELAND.................................912-I181
OFFICE..noOoUMHUo--.oooooOOIIOMOOOOO-OMoo:..oHooft2•2258

-

'

Hondo Proludo, .........

. . - . ». ~tHo,-· lop.,~
...... In; 1 lailllly
....,
. .,....a.aau
. .

'

We Are Looking Forward
To' Being of Service

Hay &amp; Grain

. ... to IMM

.

'

=

446·6806

Crooll Trucldng. 11W4&amp;o

Ground
oom,
-u,
30W7W4a
.
. . 4:00PM.

NEW LISTING~ GRANT ST. MIDDLEPORT· 2
story frame home with 3 bednoome, beth, new
wiring, newer kitchen, new electric heat
pump/central air, fireplace, new disposal, attic
space, cable hook-up, on ApProx. 1 acre. ASKING
$55,000
' '
.

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis ·

OFFICE 992-2886

-Col I

TO YOU!

•

205 Nor1h Second Ave.
Middleport, ott ·
RACINE·Famlly Needed fo( this 1 112 story, 3 to 4
bedroom home wHh, 4 porches, 112 basement,
d~ room, family room, and a small outbuilding.
G
sized lot.
.,
Wail $2S,!500.
•
$20,500
..
.. ~
-r-.
'
"'
MIDDLEPORT-Hamilton Strset-Looking for a nice
home in town, on a qulll11r•t. This 3 bedroom, 1
. 112 story homa Ia juat the one. It has a lot of
hardwood floors, fireplace, 2 full baths, 4 porches ..
Sits on a corner lot and the home Is well cered lor.
$32,000
RUTLAND-New Lima ROid·Spaclous lot, 3 112
acres in town and a cute gingerbread trimmed, 1
1/2 story home wHh 3 bedrooms, 3 porches and
equipped kttchen which has been remodeled.
FORMERLY $28,000
NOW AVAILABLE AT $25,000
'
.
'
'
f!ACOON CREEK·A nice camping lot wtth electric
and grey water "disposal. Sho'&gt;V~r&amp; and bathroom ·
really close, also haa frontage on Racoon Creek for
a boal dock. Could be yours for $2,000 down and
· $129.55 a month @12% interest lor 3 yeatS.
TOTAL COST $5,900
ST RT 325-Ungsviii•An older 1 112 story
that has 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, aluminum s101ng;
and 3 porches. Sits on o~er 3 acres. Can be

- SNuolod on 1 ac. nw1 upper

_,., BRICK

1n-

RJ. 7 Ololl10 ....... I l l -· This homo ....... 3
Do&lt;Jn&gt;omo, 2 JUl •.,_, ldlchon ond dining aroa. 2
_ , , . , u1111y room, romJJy room. ldlohln
mont, 3 . . .., • 6 oor do1oc:hod garogo. Coli

IIU.IIAJNTENAIICE FREE 1Nt IKYI.IIE ROYAl.
COVE MOBILE HOllE. ~nlollot , llncbc:opod, dacb
and 1..-.ce. Cu•om bult unn wtth au the utras Clltht-

dral oo~~nVo. inlulollon, bull·lri holm, - · ..OO~u:uo
and wll unlit, walk-ln closet, 2 bedrms., 2 baths, roo1
newly f;O&amp;Ied, down spouts &amp; gutters are new. c.ntraJ
air. A very QOod buy and the owner wanls an offer.
$18,000,

IH1. NEW LISTING. 3 Bodroom Mobie Home with
1.5 acres ol land located on Mt . Tabor Rd. Want to

1823. COUNTRY PLEASURE - 3 , bedrooms, LR ,

know maoo, oonlaollho SARGE.

bath, all.jn ldlchan, lg. tamly room, bsml: . on 5 aetas
m1 Can ba purchased with addHional 5 acras rnA.
also. Musl see ..

11825. VACANT LAND -Close-In 5 acres oollng lln&lt;t.

1113. NEW LISTING- 3 bedloom, 2 bath r.l'l::h horM
on~ oc. m11n- Towmhip. CIIIPO~. El.
HI. RUII1&gt; anct oont. Olr. Rlvor vatey Schools. Priced.

locolod
$40'S.

1J CL, H,OOO llllloo,

u.a,ai-.MJioL4-,

IIIW7N1taoa. 1:00 Pll. '

,

1140. RANCH HOME toclled on Slate Roula
.
This home ltatures 4 bedrooms and finished base· .

meN. CAll for more delalls. Priced $40's.

1861. MEW LISTING. LOOKING FOR A HOllE
SMALL BUSINESS AND SOliE ACREAGE? If
calllbout this 3 o. • bechom ranch home 2 baths'
llvlno ooom, klldlon, 1 ear garage, 2Bx30 sh.,p lind
WOO&lt;Ishop. Thllpropeny Is Slluated on 8 acras m11 In
Addlsoo Township, Pl1cod In lhe $60's.
1850. COUNTRY COTTAGE WITH PRIVATE
LOCATION - 2 BAs, ll&gt;lng .m., kit wicoontry eoblnets, storage building wJcarpor1, 2.6 acret $38 000
Vlrg/nlo -8826.
.
• '

so
a

cute. Has 2
more obedrooma
and heat. low utilities.

1712. FOUR BEDROOM HOllE, 2 BATHS - Roomy
ranch home located In the country. Exlanstve wort
completed IS IOIIows: new Thermo Altsldl Windows
security doOrs, Sleet siding, heavy roof, kllchen'
ceramic tile entry exlandad ltio kitchen 16x53 dick'
c:emonl wales and pad See lhb home

fttlllop ....,:

ingetsewhere.
1631. LAKEVIEW SUBDIVISION - A CHOICE
PLACE TO BUILD - 2 to 5

acres more

Of

lea!. Dnt1e

lo White Rd. to Charolala Lake Dr. to l.akaYIItw Ct.
Clfertng 2 IJal to rolling lots, a varktty of IfNI and

beautiful view or the lake . AH arnenldu IV~ .
Rural water, undargroLnt tKectrldty, Ml'lllor "".,..
KCeP""... Rtltricltvt covenanls fWIY. Cloli• to
HolZer anct OIOOflPino

corner

115.000 - HUNTINGTON TWP.

Main Street and
Spring
A great location
lor almost any good buain.... App10x. 88 feet
, frontage on Main Str•t and 182 teat on Spring
Street. All utilities'available. •
$85,000
ST. RT. 141
offers 3 BAs, 1Y, baths,
DR, unallai:hed
gaoago and nice garden epol. CaR for morv
de!ails.
QUIET COUNTRY SETTING FOR A
SPLENDID HOME - All brick mnch, 2 .374
acros mn. 4 BRs, 2 balhs, large kiJchon, 2
covered porches, dock, heal pump. 2 ear ,
garage. •

' 'JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - ADDISON
TWP. - ~l · acrv farm, 3 ponda, lobacco
baH. 65•100 ~lam, wilh concrell floora. ·
May ,contlder IPIIL (571)
LOT FOR .8ALi 'ON 8T.
RJ.
110,
N9RTH ciALUA IITATES - Approx. 314
oera, m~. a.utlful opo1 ror a homo .
39 ACREI,tiiiiUTES TO TOWN - Nie&lt;~
home on pr~p~rl)l foaJureo 3 SAt, bath, LA •.
kitchen, bam, tab!ICCCI bale.

- 3

killlch~·· ·

dining room, 2112 car unattached garage ,

boeutiful v;podod 4.5 acrvs, (864)
Call
EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT AT
A REDUCED PRICE OF $74,800111
Very convenient location. Centtnary area,
This homo offers 3 BRs, 1y, balhs, LA, DR,
15x30 lamily rm.; lull ·baaomant, FP,
anacllod gaoage. cont. air, ·

PANORAMIC 'VIEW OF OHIO RIVER
VALLEY - 2 ,484 sq fi., 3 BAs, 3 balhs,
graal room combo (kiJchen, LA. OR) 6' doc:k
all arounq houao, heal pump, buildong! on
pro~ny. Too much PIOPirtv Jo advertlao.
Cal.

LOOKINQ FOR A PLACE FOR · A NEW
BUSINESS?- SA 180 near Bulavlllo Pike.
Appiox. 200'x200' lot. All uUIIIIoe ilvailablo.
(BBI)

NEAR GREEN EiJ:MENTARY SCHOOL
- Woll malnlalned home offera 3 BRa, LR,
FR, kilchon, malh, 2 fireplooao, tlootric
htal, coni. air and 1,12 acroo mA.

CHURCHILL ST. (BIDWELL) 3
badraoma, bath, living nn., kltd!en, oollar,
unanaehod woll&lt;shop, 3 lots oeoh, 66'x166'.
t114
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 2.4 mn, 248

!!?•Ita~ along SA 7 juol acrots from Ohio

'FOR SALE - COAL TIPPLE with all
loading llciiiiJoo, 1.881 ft. tiYelflonl Col for
mora dolailo.

Rio Granclo.
tunoeYI.q vacant land.

1224, TAKE A LQOK AT THISII Localod on Second Avo ., ytalk lo etore,
church, ochoal and llhopping, 2 story t-&gt;me
o«ors kotohon, LA, DR, FR, 3 BR, 2 balhs,
gu hoeVcontral air.

ATTRACnYE HOME ·IN VILLAGE OF

CENTEAYILLE - Convonlonfly toca•d.

ownore have clone work 1o mak&amp; Jhle a
comlo11alita ~
·

414 THIRD AVENUE - 4115 BRo, 2 baths.,
kitohon , pA, LR, alum, lidlng, goa heat,
certl lir, ""' ......-. (lllltl
'

OLD CHEYY..OLDI BUILDING - 4 2 o'
fmnt on Second Avo, ofld ei!:;fronlago an

Otllpe.

FlATWOODS ROAD-Approx. 4 112 acres with a
graai laying building she. TPC water available and
eledric ·available. Almost reedy to go, just nseds
you.
$12,000

NICE FLAT LOT 314 aero mA. :Wilh 1988
mobile homo In vory good eondiiiOn. Priced
in tho 20'•. Call Rulh far ditails.
•
BEAUnFUL HOME LOCATED ON
NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD- Mt,toO- 4
BRo 2 belht equopped kitchen, LA, FR,
hoai pump, ~ontral air, ,2 car attached
gal811". 2 loiS With houll.

1.111 ACRES + 701t2tl

"""v

ON BEAUTIFUl OHIO

MIDDLEPORT •Thll ipiCioua 3 bedroom home II
juat what the f1111lty needs. • allo hu a lmge living
room, nloe liD kl1chen with a cute little nook. Hal
naw roof, new wiring, and even h• ann heat
pump. W..t23.1100
tNOW ONLY t21,tl00

MII;T~

HAVI YOU IVIR , DRaAMI!D 01' OWiiNO
YOUR OWN IUIIoiESS'I This buainaaa Ia

BIJILDfNQ eqUipped wilh (cllchon, bath1
ofllca, e~e . Great bll~·~
·
'

aquiDDed with ahakl machine, 4 fr11zare, Ice
micl*la, delp fryer, lea c:rMm rilei:hlna, llld (lrUL
Af!FN11. 1-Iaf llong a IIIIJie rD*. IIO,DOD

t

124.423 ACRES MIL, OR!EN AND
SPRINOFIELQ TWPS.- Julfall 91. At 35
all vt~C8f~t land. lcloallor ~·
'

'

INVESTORS - Raocoon Road, 40 A. rnA,
moally woaclod.
~r monlh 1noom1
•lrom moblli homll

- ..

.....

.

,.T~._J,
-~-.

·-

ou-·=....,--.. ._.

_ , . OF PEN'ECTION

dlul tKWII.

~In

-..l..argl 1111ngsrm. wi'n

an 1

'

tlllo 810·

'a ..... 11 .....

leMnet II In

row IW:ure,

IDl '1 r It* 4 bedroom

Cljll CGdiHtct ....... -~~-don 2K IICfOI

... hll1900 ... R. al ilvlnO - · 36wla .... bUIJcl.
lng 11017 0 14124 ~ - - - ..,..._
•21. F~JCID TO IELL. l'Nohomollu1.000 ... ft.

. Gl ilvlnO- 3 - . . . . . ; - oolloulldlng and Ill·
_ . . , K - m1. Pladt20'1.

= -....-....----- -,.-1111\--'*
......, , ...
, lannll eq rm.. gourm11
rm., lhUe and open ftrlptace,

·4_.. _____ _

•·· ......, a ..,.

wlndowi. Ftrll fiDor .......,, banrnenl, et eta 111t
poodlondloar I ?""IIIIQI.A!IP t•IIMI~.
- . Cll8d111JIIICIIIII- . _ .... • 1R Sli.
tM trl , _ .... MW tn.,auMMnla. LovelY
. . . . . lVI U,.., MW . . . fOOt I y.wa pill, .1 '
......... LA. ............. '; td lftwll pGftlh, oMae

•

·.~

~

.....

,c:·
. . .KajoniMI--.

ClOIIin!n' lJVJNQ. VOU . . 1b tills 2 BA, 2
mi. -~-:

1110.

I!ICILlEIIT

811 hoOI,l.A. on

Qllor """'·

APAIITIIENT

'"

BLDG .

- - N T - - m a " ' 1 - tiTDWN.IA!III
. . ..... - 3twe bl~- IIPfll.
-liao
. . . - - - - - Rlca!Oid price,

Havo,a boo! dOOk and
IIINng.., lioollng 11
IIUrMIIr. 3 bedcwwrw, 1 blth, 3 ICNI mor1 or 1ooo
J.ooa1od vory cloM10 IOWII.
•
•

f777.- TRACE ICIIOO?.I - -

-.,_ ....
3 8A ..... -

ond ctMn

LR. DR, oaHI ll&lt;:hon, 111111, lUll o1

1141. IU8URIAN .AUTY - 1'bl ,..,.., 22 ..-

"""'*"··--'-·

cloUI
......
wlh- .....
oolllodrll
Oillllngl..,
- . , , 3tlfl, 2K-..,..

room wlh -rnlng Jnplaoo, oqulp. - ·
bruktut rooM . . . . tg, .......... .-.o lllsshll
lioullllmolnll
.. _
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"
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anollie
........
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_......... - - · yaudiin"t-

�•
Page D8 SUnday llme....Sentlnel

Porneroy-Uiddleport-Galllpolle, OH-Polnt Pleatant, WV

March 21, 1883 .

'••

Ohio News in Brief:---. Pharmacy
Lawyers decry juror conversation
opens doors
in Mason

YOUNGSTOWN - Lawyers for a man charged with four
murder said a sheriffs deputy may have prejuclic.ed a Jli'OSPC(:tive juror by l8lldng with the juror about the case.
Defense lawyers 1. Gerald lngn~~~~ and John 1uhasz complained
Thursday that a deputy discussed details of the case while serving a
summons to the prospective juror.
Willie Williams, 36, of Youngstown, is charged in the Septem. ber 1991 slayings of four people. Police have said the slayings
~to be drug-related.
.
.
Williams eS£aptd from the Mahoning County jail after his arrest,
but was recaptured several months later after brejlking into the
county j~vcnilc delcntion f~ility. _Police say Williams was apparen~y try!ng to reach three JUvemles who have agreed to testify
agamst rum.
The defense lawyers told Mahoning County Common Pleas
Judge Pe1er Economus on Thursday that the deputy's alleged com!Dent was prejlldicial and raised the possibility lhat the prospective
Juror and others might be prejudiced against Williams.
·
The dcpu!Y was not identified. The delense said they learned of
the alleged c~nt while questioning the prospective jura-.
Economus deferred action on the complaint until a hearing Monday.
~IS of aggravated

Sign size limit backer seeks variance

ELYRIA - A man who worked to limit the Size of downtown
business signs is asking for permission to erect a sign larger than
allowed by the law.
·.
David Smith, senior vice president of operations for PremierBank, has asked the municipal zoning board for a variance so the
bank can erect 18-foot walls on top of its nine-story downtown
headquarters.
·
.
~name "~ierBank" would appear on the ;walls.
Smtth was pn:stdcnt of the Downtown Commons Association
when it pashed for the sign ordinance in 1991. The ordinance,
enacted April IS, 1991,-limits signs to 125 square feet
Signs largll" t!lall that limit are to be phased out by 1995.
Smith declined to comment Friday, his secretary said.
.
The proposed PremierBank sign, which would be about 300
square feet on each side, is intended to help publicize the bank's
ll&amp;llle change. It had formerly been known as Lorain County Bank.
. Bank Chairman Robert Bowman said he and Smith supponed the
ordinance, but said.it was aimed at ground-level signs.
The zoning board is scheduled to consider the request Monday
afrcmoon.

~

....
-'

'

•l

PIKETON (AP)- A man who
led a petition drive for a Study of a
uranium. enn·chmen~Ciclant w ·d he's
P!eased the U.S.~
Health Servtcc has~ to do one. .
_Floyd Musick, w~o led a camP81~ to ~::1 550 Signatures on a
peuuon
g for the assessment,
welcomed the news. Musick and
his wife, Donna, conducted an
informal survey which uncovered
204, cases of cancer in Pike County.
Musick said he will regard the

"

POMEROY • Nine calls for
assistance were answered by units
of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service on Friday and
early Salllrday morning.
On Friday at 9:07 a.m. the
Pomeroy unit respcnded to
Riverview Elemenwy for Kevin
B~burn whO was transported 10
Veterans MemiXial Hospital.

The Pomeroy unit, at 6:25 a.m.,
went to Lincoln Heights for Herman Michaels. He was taken to
VeiOrans.

CAFE

LYNN

COMFORT FLEX CONSTRUCTION

'

At 11:57 a.m. tlie Middleport
·unit went to North S~ond Sueet
for Robbie Clonch who was taken
to Veterans.
The Racine unit. a1 3:32 p.m ..•
went to Third Slreet for .William
Morris. He was liken to VeleranS.
Ai 6:40 p.m. the Middleport unit
was called to Main Street for
Edythe Jay. She was transported to
Veterans.
The Racine unit went to
Stiversville Road at II :3S p.m. for
Donald McKinstry. He was taken
10 Veterans. ..
On Saturday at 2:01 a.m. the·
Syracl.ise Fire Department responded to a one car motor vehicle accident in Minersville for 1ohn Pape.
He was taken to Velerans. At 3:09 ·
a.m. Pape was JranSpoited by Lifeflight to Grant t-fedical Center in
Columbus.
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A State H,igbway..Palrol, a legislator
solulioo offered by die administra- said.
·
·
tion of Gov. George Voino~ to a
Rep. Mare Guthrie said a HoUse
$46 million transportation bud&amp;et Finance su~ommittee he beads
problem falls too heavily on the may erea&amp;e 1 praD to shuffle existing revenue in the propQSed budget

b~

~ 614·221·0888
:J;: L. W. QNNAMO
AnORNEY AT LAW

No injuriea ~ JqlOJ1ed and both vehicles sustained moderate
·damage.

Two ·ci~dfor D.U.I.

Sulle800
ColumbUa, Ohio
1-800 Ill OLAW

·

The Oallia-Meip Post of the State Highway Palmi issued two

cilationl for drivinJ under the influence over the weekend.

Floyd H. Ward, 48, Raul4 I Marietta, was cited early -Sunday
morning and Randall L. Keateraon, 23, 35331 Texas Road,
PomiiiO)', was cited early Saturday morning.

.

2415 Jackson Avenue, Point Pleasant, WV 25550

lions will 1101 have to be reduced as
the administratioo recommended.
"We think that the Highway
Paaol is lakin¥ 100 much of the hit,
so to speak, ' said Guthrie, D-

report.

Unemployment rose 2.7 percent
in January to 13.3 percent in Gallia

two

Rutland

a e ..t Broad Street,

free lecture is provided as a community service. Seating is limited.
Please call675-3389 or 1-800-992-9106 for reservations.

5o that exJIBiision of patrol opera-

~--- Loca
· I b·ri·ef:s _.--....... . fortheH~der
the adniinisuation pian,
number of troopers available ·Opponents
highway work could not be
•
increased, he said.
request denied
Patrol seeking hit-skip suspect
"Keep in· mind that we have
State aoopen are sean:hing for the vehicle and driver n:sponsiless patrolmen on the slate highfor
bit-skip accidents Friday aftemol;&gt;n in Rutland TOWil•
ways today than we had 20 years by court

BAIKRIPI'CY

Picking Up The Pieces And Learning To Move On
Date:
Thursday, March 25

By The OVP Stair
Joblessness in Gallia and Meigs
counties took a sharp turn upward
in January, unadjusted figures from
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services revealed in its monthly

r-

shtp, a •nnt.-oman for the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State Highway
Paaol~mooun
.
In both inciderus, ~other driver was able .to obtain the vehiele 'I license number. The palmi reported the vehicle as a 1981
Oldsmobile Cutlaas owned by Vincent M. King, address unreported. ·
.
According10 the accident reports, Roger E. Riggs, 49, 3390!1
Side mu Road, Rutland, was DOr1hbound on County Road 3 whcln
the vehicle, wesdJourid on Rutland Township Road 172, entered the ·
intersection and SlrUCk him in the right side.
The vehicle then left the scene heading northbound and, approximately three minutes later, went left of center and struc;lc head-on a
southbound vehicle driven by Carolyn S. Darst, 32001 Lasher Road,

No one hurt in two wrecks
Two aa:idenll involving damue 10 three vehicles but no injuries
wae iDvelti&amp;ated by Pomeroy PofJCC Friday and Saturday ..
The lint ICICident oeeurn:d at 11:39 a.m. Friday on Shammy's
Jl8ltinl lot, Well Main $b!)el Donnie Pullins, 41, Coolville, backed
hil 1981 Mercury into the side of a parked car owned by Ellen

Za~ 74,NewHaven, W. VL
~ wu ilaht damaae to the ~er

side door of the Zayne
C., and llabt dlmap to ihe driver s side rear of the Pullins vehicle.
Neither~- wu cited.

UPTO

Molila Slnlit, 23, NeW Haven, ~ported to Pomeroy policeS = . . _ that ' - 1991 Chevrolet bad been hit while it
wu
111 Coart StJeeL Tilem wu li!'l damp to the driver's
llide
Tile II)( h... II UDdllr inmligldon.
. ·

12

5
'I
IN SAVINGSI

EMS responds to 10 callS

SMITH IUICK·PONTIAC
Gallipolis, Oh.

1900 Eastern Ave.
•
'Up to S1SO Culla.k

..

446-2282

Unill fJI the Meip eou.y Emeipacy Mr•aJ Service reapondod ., 10 Cllll tar 1....., durin&amp; the -ancL Uni11 RIJIOIIdina

wen:

Satunlay • 1:56 p.m. Rtllllnd 10 White Hill Road for Keith
Slltberlaa4 wllo W11 II spoued 10 Vewnu Memcrial Hosoilal;
3:56 p.lll. ~ Ill Ri.enlde Aplil"ljilill for lUI Wllfilml
who - • srorllld 10 VMR: 8:42 p.m. Pomoaoy aqllld anc( fire

c.,n ull• .... 3

,,

ago," Guthrie said.
WASHINGTON (AP) The Ohio Department of Transportation and the Obio Deoarunent Supreme Court 1ustice 1ohn Paul
ofPublic Safety last .week had to Stevens today t:efused to block
trim their spending plans after dis- commercial operation of a hazcovering they had less money to ardous·wasle incinerator in eastern
Ohio.
wort with ,than anticipated.
Stevens denied an emergency ·
Revenues were overestimated request flied by opponents of the
by $46 miUion. Gas tax projections Waste Technologies Industries
were short of the mart by $30 mil- incinerator in East Uverpool. He
lion, and the budget failed to did not comment.
include $16 million fa 1 roadwork
program administered by the Ohio
Christopher Stanley, 1 lawyer
Department of Development
for the envuonmental ~ GreenThe administration's proposed peace, said the group filed the
solution would reduce the OOOT motion Friday in .hopes of peventand Public Safety budgets by S23 iniWI'I from starting comm~
million each.
work. The company has conducted
The pattol, whic;h is a division a trial bum.
of the public Safety agency, would
A federal judge in Cleveland
lose 25 replacement troopers, eight ruled .earlier that reaulta from the
troojlm for the commercial motor tcsf bum mlllt bo analy~ befon:
vellicle program, eight trllO;Jlm for the Jl!ant·could swt ~ng comregional auto fraud invesllf8lions mercially. The anal)'Sls could take
and 20 additional load limit tnspec- . up to a year.
tors. ,
But an appeals court in CincinODOT said it would absorb its nati said W'tl could operate after
$23 million CUI by slicing 1 n:sur- the teslllum.
f~ing, rehai&gt;ilitation and restoreWTI spokesman Raymond
~on account. The 10 pen:ent redue- W&amp;Y.J!IIIIid he could 1101 comment
liOn _would mCII!I fewer contracts unlil he llpllbi10 plalltiawyOr.. He
· for,bigllway rcpal!l.
· said a .....,.., probebl would be
Guthrie said the subcommittee issued 1a1er today
Y
might adopt an llilemalive plan that
()ppoaeDII
been iobb in1r
would take IOlllC moaey from the the Cllrttoa llkJllnilllltio r.o
devell)pment and tran~portation llat·ap. They ICCWed tbe 1Jdmlnil. ·
depannlenll and Ull it wield for tration of blc:tinJ dowa from 1
the,~nk we~
'
oin
piQIIIile., '*- 1111 pllaL
g0111g 10 try .to
Clintoe aald Pridly be dido-' I
fmcl
atiGut plldullc-. think t•ere wu uythins the
~- of 25 new patrOimeiL I'm a1r.o admiDlltllliaD c:ouJd do.
tntoruted in trylna 10 find the · · About 100 peapiiJIUINied Set
moner for the fraud investiaa· un1ay • Lara,ti. Pirk ICl'DII
tiool,' bo llid.
the White Houle 'l'bale
The $3 billion trllllpOrtadon an-..
•

baw

County, compared to 10.6 percent ment was at 10 percent, a 2.1 perin December 1992, a possible cent increase from December
reflection of the dropoff in seasonal while Lawrence Co!Dlty was also ai
employment following the Christ- 10 percent, posting a I.S percent
mas season. Gallia's unemploy- ·increase. Compared to a year ago at
ment level was 12.5 percent in Jan- the time, Jackson's January rate
.
.
uary 1992.
was down five-tenths of a pen:ent,
For January, 1,600 people were although Lawrence was up oneout of wort from a total workforce eighth of a percent
of 12,200. according to OBES.
Vinton County's unemployment
Meigs County saw an increase bit 16.4 _percent for January, 1 2. 7
in January to 14.6 percent, rising percent mcrease over December's
2.4 percent from December's 12.2. · 13.7. and a 2.9 percent jump from
OBES said 1,200 people out of an January 1992's rate of 14.5. Washestimated workforce of 8,100 were !Jtgton County was at 11.4 pell)Cilt
unemployed. Meigs' 1anuary 1992 m 1anuary, up 2.3 percent from
jobless rate was 13.6.
December and an increase of 1.8
The increase was seen in most percent from January 1992..
surrounding counties , OBES
For the state, unemployment
reponed, with Alhens County hav- was at 8.2 percent, up 1.1 pen:ent
ing the.Jowest unemployment rate . from December and two-tenths of a
in Jhe area in)anuary at 9 percent · percent from the previous year.
Still, it was a 1.6 percent jump Adams County continued Ia have
from December's rate of 7.4. 1ob- the highest jobless rate in dJe lillie
lessness was at 10.5 percent in at 20.2 percent, while Franklin 111c1
Athens in January 1992.
Holmes counties tied for the lowest
In Jackson CounJy, unemploy- at 5.4.
.

=

men• .,

en..;

""""'·
ft~
line lilt and

!lmoney,
tbe 11110 J11011...--

m10 r.o. 1111 S30.8 bllllcill pnci!ll
Slate buditt that II IUppoiled by
the lnc:ane, IIIU and ildilr IWI.

- ·no

C1101 Coot-ly, ~
for V111 Roll IDe., 1111 Swill ow.r
pare~~ fJI wn, 111c1 111e 001.,..1
wu .,.,..,,, ll f!l'*l!lllllle 1D Dt
COI!I~cMl oparadcXq 1001.

'~

''

tiona! Court to review the legality and Russians oppose it
of Yeltsin's actions.
Kostikov accused Yeltsin 's
The United States, France, Ger- political foes of trying to "heighiCII
many, Canada, Britain, Denmark, tensions by hasty and legally IJese,Japan and other nations have all less actions do not find a response
endorsed Yeltsin's actions. Presi- among the po~lion."
dent Clinton was among the fltStto
The Consututional Coun began
pledge his continued support to the an informal review on its own
Russian leader, believing that Rus- before the Supreme Soviet vote
sia's democratic reforms are at because it considered Yeltsin's
stake.
·address "an attempt to cross out
Yeltsin's orrice said the presi- the basic principles of the onnstitudent remained in Moscow today. tion, primarily the principle of the
His 85-year-old mother died Sun- division of powers,'.' a court
day in Yekater'inburg, and no deci- spokesman told the ITAR-Tass
sion had been made on whether the news agency.
If the court rules against Yeltsin.
funeml would be held in the Siberian city or in Moscow.
the Congress of People's Deputies
Kostikov lambasted Zorkin for - which this month VOied 10 Slrip
criticizing Yeltsin before conven- many of his powers - could
ing the court to consider .the case. remove him from office.
Kostikov praised the army for stay·
Kostikov dismissed the Constiing out of the dispute.
·
tutional Court's deliberations, not" The population welcomed ing "the hasty and unilateral
wilh understanding the president's stand" ofZortin.
~s toward resolving the cri''Thus, the chairman of the
sis, ' Kostikov said.
Constitutional Court has a priori
''The proposals voiced in the adopted the position of one of the
president's appeal to the citizens of sides, casting doubt on bis own
,
Russia are fmding a growing sup- impartiality," Kostiknv said.
port in the coun1ry," he said, withYeltsin said he would ask voters
out citing evidence.
to appove a constiwtion to replace
Public reaction has been mixed. the Soviet-era charter, effecuvell
On Sunday, pro- and anti-Yeltsin · disbanding the Communist-donndemonstrations each drew about nated Congress and scheduling lcg5,000 people. ~eform•minded · islative elections.
poliiical groups and adminisaators
He said he was signing decrees
and some business people have odnumemer,
..bugtencyso 1rulethe
. ~-thelin~hasCR:nnot·
endorsed the president s stand,
so far
"-'Q"
while more hard-line politicians · released them.

New year opened with jumps
in area's unemployment rate

House panel wants to save patrol projects

GAU.IP()LlS -Friday's Gallipolis Daily Tribome incorrectly
auributed a qUOIC 10 Gallia County
Commissioner Harold Saunders
and also incorrectly identified him
as president of the commission.
·The quote was actually made br
Harold Montgomery, who is prestdent of the commission.

Coping With Divorce

Speaker:

LaftlnH••n
..Uf...II,OII.

,

Correction

(UOO 181 062ilh

c·a u s m

THE SHOE

Present

Mason County Library
Merritt Moore, M.A.

By SERGEI SHARGORODSKY
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW ..:..... Boris Yeltsin's
spokesman today aff!11!1Cd the president's resolve in the face of·efforts
to impeach him, lllld accused Russia's chief justice of prematurely
siding with parliamcnL ·
Presidential spokesman Vyacheslav Kostikov claimed Yeltsm has
""growing" public support as he
proceeds witll plans to hold a referendum AprillS, undeterred by criticism from hard-line lawmakers
and some of Russia's populace.
The fonnal statement from the
Kremlin came as the Constitutional
Coun convened today. to consider
the power.struggle between Yeltsin
and the parliament
II the court rules against Yeltsin,
the Congress of People's Deputies,
the highest legislative body, could
move to impeach him for breaching
· the constitution.
·
\
Russia plunged into its deepest
crisis since the failed August 1991
coup when Yeltsm declared emergency rule Saturday night and
scheduled a referendum 10 ask people whether he or legislators should
rule Russia. Valery Zorkin, chair·
man of the Constitutional Court,
immediately called Yeltsin's
actions an anempted coup.
The 247-member Supreme
Soviet slanding legislature, in an
emergency session Sunday night,
-:-YOted-t25...16-.-m ask the.Constitu-

COMFORT FLEX
With Matching Pune

Insight Outpatient Services
cand
New Hope Christian Counseling Center ·

Place:

Yeltsin reportedly has .
~growing' public support

S E L BY.

ans.

.,c.

•

ta ts · b( be
· f
th
In I'IIRd · haeshcaalpmhg robml e • ·
Ptheyantrru~gh.t bew t .e.a t pro ems
. The study iJ c~esfined to get a
general look and a hoaae-ro-house
study is unlikely. But he said each
house could be examined later
·

.At 2:20 a.m. the Middleport unit
weni to Coal Sueet for Rick Lauderrnilt Jr. who was taken 10 Veter-

1 Sec!ion, 1a P - 25 _,,.
A lluldll\oda.
NoMpeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday; March 22, 1993

'

study as a \lictory only if federal . who live near the plant in this ·
officials cooduct a house-to-house southern Ohio community will
survey.
begin. in October, said spokesman
Workers at the plant eniich ura· Mike Greenwell.
'
nium fuel for federally operated
GreenweU said doctors, toQCOI·
nuclear reactors elsewhere. Some ogists and public health experts
residents are concerned about will try to determine what poilu- .
radioactive and chemical materials
escaping into the air and water
around the plant
·
Plant officials have said the
plant is not dangerous.
A 30-month study or people

Meigs squads make 9 runs

By AVIVA L. BRANDT
CHARLESTON, W.Va (AP) - Gov. Gaston Caperton's plan Iii in·
crease the state gasoline tax by 5 cents a gallon is cruising toward approval in the House of Delegates.
The House Ways and Means Subcommittee endorsed the increase
Friday and House Finance Chairman Bob Kiss predicted it would win approval Monday from his committee.
The bill woold increase the tax on gasoline to 25.35 cents per gallon to
rai&lt;e SSO miUion a year to attraCt federal highway funds at a rate of up 10
$80 for each $20 put up by the state.
West Virginia is 17th in the nation in the amount of !axes it imposes on
psaline sales. Approval or lhe bill would raise that ranking to third, be6ind Connecticut and Rhode ls...nd.
"!think the comminee will pass it," said Kiss, D-Raleigh. "It could be
on the House floor Tuesday,"
The money raised by the lax increase would only be used for Jhe federal
funds match, said committee counsel Allison Patient.
Highways Commissioner Fred VanKirk on Friday ~ the House's
action on the gas tax . He said there is $430 million m federal funds al- ·
n:ady eannarked for West Virginia should the state pul up its 20 percent ·
match.
Bui he warned that there is no promise of matching funds beyond that.
In facl, VanKirk said, it is "highly unlikely" that the state wiU receive
fuU matching funds for fulurc projects "in light of current federal
b~!&amp;rY consttaints."

6:30 • 8:00p.m.

Vol. 43, No. 227
CoPI!ighled 11193

Neighbor wins campaign for Piketon health quiz

Woman indicted on 3 charges

Time :

Loiw IODI&amp;Jit ill mld-40&amp;. Jlala.
Tuesdly, rain, lli&amp;b bllllid 51!1.

~

TOLEDo - An city public housing agency has Jlgreed ro· make
sure its apanments are free of lead paint.
The action by the Lucas Melropolitan Housing Authority senJes a
lawsuit filed two years ago by a legal advocacy group. .
Advocates for Basic Legal Equality Inc. sued on behalf or two
mothers of children who were victims of lead poisoning. The famili~ lived in public housing.
·
·
.~
The authority manages 25 develo!Jments wilh 3,145 apartments.
It leases some or the units from landlords.
·
'
As part of the agreemenl, the authority has agreed to inspect
&amp;JIMlments and give infonnation about the hazards of lead-based
paint to residents and those applying for subsidized housing.
The agreement also requires landlords who rent homes to the
authority to take the same steps to remove the deadly paint ·
Lead paint causes serious neurological problems in children.

'

Page4

-·-·

No more lead paint

House subcommittee
endorses gasoline tax

Pick 3:
730
Pick 4:
9100
Super Lotto:
11-14-20-32-35-36
Kicker:
439505

~

-'
By MINDY KEARNS
Times-Sendnel Staff
MASON- Our Family Phar;
macy opened for business Jan. 13
in Mason with complete preserip. tion needs .for ev«Y member of the
family, plus more.
Owned and operated by Kim
Westmoreland, the pharmacy is
adjacent to the Westmoreland Fam·
ily Care Center. Dr. Dan Westmoreland is Kim's husband.
Open MOilday through Friday, 8 .
a,m. 10 5 p.m.: Ivan Everson serves
as the store's pharmacist, with
· Janet Hawk as pharmacy technician.
Westmoreland said the phaimacy will offer discounts for senior
citizens and will accep' Medicare,
''
IJMW, workers' compensation,
Care Center. Plctv,.t wliJa Kim, center, II pblr·
PHARMACY OPENS- Our FamUy Pb$r· .
PEIA and most insurances.
Diaty teebnldan Janet Hawk, len, _..d pluuma·
macy, OWDed ..and operated by Kim Westmor~- ·
. All ,recOrds If the pharmacy liJ.lf
cist I van Evtl'5011• The buslDCSI Is open Mooday
land, Is open ror business In Masqn. The phal'compurerized and the ilore features . macy Is. adjacent to the Westmoreland FamUy
through Friday, 8 LJD,·5 p.m.
(OVP photo).
.
.
'
eleclronic billing. A Fax machine is
also,loca•ed there for public use.
.
'
Along .with medicine, the phar- drugs, vitamiiis and baby diapers; ginia si.de of the Ohio River
"h's a good location for
macy offers American Greetings Smaller items like camera mm·and between Point Pleasant and New . patients,"lhc concluded.
greeting cards, Fenton glassware balteries will also be sold.
Haven. She added that when she
Questions about' medicine and
. and Russell Stover candy. Some
Westmoreland, formerly· a phar- was a salespe11011, all the prescrip- prescriptions can be directed to
home medical supplies, such as maceutical salesperson, saiq she tions ill her' area went to Ohio, and Westmoreland at the pharmacy's
canes, nebulizers lllld galucllllleters opened the busil!e$S because there she didn't get credit for them.
· number, n3-Snl.
are available, plus over-the-counter. are no pharmacies oothe West Vir·

TOLEDO - A Lucas County grand jury on Friday indicted a
woman accused of leaving her children alone at horne where two of
them were killed in a fue.
Helen Sproles, 35, of Toledo, faces two counts of involunlary
manslaughter and one count of child endangering in the deaths of
Victoria Sproles, 9; and Christopher Sproles, 10.
·
Their brother, Preston Sproles, 11, was in fair condition at St
Vincent Medical Center's bum unit.
Ms. Sproles was being held in the Lucas County jail on Friday in
lieu of $650,000 bond.
She told police she left her children at home on March 12 at
aboutll p.m. to go over her mother's house. She said she later went
to a bar.

Ohio Lottery

District 13
All-Star
cage results

J1111....., ._.

THE EAJn'H'S FORCES AT WOitX • C111
oa ICI nd1 Yoa . . . cm.lll17 CIL J.. ad: IIJ .It
Wolrl, -~~~Mr. ud Mn. Dnllll Waft ril Rr'n 011 . . . . .
at 10:43 a.m., Wolle, wltb tile aid fJI tile .-tll'l U18illl . . . .
stood at ea 08 ICI end for 1 period of tl&amp;lt, (fto&amp;o •1 D •
WoWe)
ID • •

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