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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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Monday, March 22, 1993

Commentary .
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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO 11m INTBU81'8 OF T111t KBlG8-IIAIIOI'f A1UtA

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assist.ont Publisber/ControUer

•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genetil Manager

"LETillllS OF OPIN10N are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
wordl. All !etten are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address 1111&lt;1 telephone number. No unsisned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good tute, addmsing issues, oot penonalities.

L,._ _ _...:;,_....;..;._....;._ _...;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _......

WTI.opponents

changing strategy
.

.

By RODD AUBREY
•
A&amp;lol:laled Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Opponents of a hazardous-waste incinerator in eastern Ohio appear to be changing their strategy.
.
. While the future of tile Waste Technologies Industries plant in East
J.;iverpool is oot of their bands and in the court's, opponents are turning
their sights on the Clinron administration and waste suppliers.
· Vice President AI Gore said in December that he wanted the General
Accounting Office; the investigative arm of Congi"ess, to re-examine
Wn's permits before the plant operated.
. But the administration rook no action to stop a.trial bum. Last week, it
~ cotild do nothing except·•'play the cards that were dealt by the Bush
administration," wbicb approved the plant's penn its in Ian~.
Opponents have tunied 10 JI'Oieats against the current allministralion.
Eight people wc.e arrested in the White House on Thursday, and more
pro1e111 were expected.
"We have a message for the president: It doesn't talce a Rhodes scholar to see that WT1 sbouldn 't go on line," said Greenpeace spokeswoman
BCih Newman during a news conference at the Statehouse last week.
She said toxic-waste lobbyists were pressuring the Ointon administra·
tion.
"I'm sure he's under a lot of pressure, and I'm sure that he's considering backing off of his promise,'' she said ''I don't think the people of the
Ohio Valley are going to let him get away with that''
. Terri Swearingen, a spokeswoman for the Tri-State Environmental
COIIDCil, was one of tile people arrested on Thursday and charged with
misdemeanor trespassing.
· . "The.Y talked about chan~e, and ret we've not seetf any change from
the prev10tiS administration,' she saJd. "But we're still holding out hope
that tlley'll fulfill that commitmeDL''
.. The two also attacked hazardous-waste suppliers. They asked oqe of
tile tbree supplien, DuPont, ID clarify a comment in a b1lde magazine that
the company was "rethinking" its role in the WT1 planL
• · DuPlin! confumcd that it canceled its cootract to supply one-third of
tile waste at the plant because of court delays but is still talldng ID the
company.
' DuPont was supposed to start delivering waste at the end of last year.
Now it's not sure when it will deliver 81 all, and suggested it might pull
otil of the deal.
. Wl1 aclalowledged that it's reviewilll! contracts with all three suppliers but Slid it was confident it would keep them. wn, which insists the
plant is safe, said it was shopping in the industry 10 line up other potential

.

·i

CUSIOIDCI1.

WT1 issued daily reports about the test bum's progress, usually two or
three paragraphs of mosily technical language. The company said its monitoring showed the incinerator was "performing as operators bad expect·
ed"
A federal appeals court in Cincinnati said the plant could go ahead
with commercial operations after its test bum was complete, overturning
~earlier ruling.

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Monday, March 22, the 8lst day of 1993. There are 284 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On March 22, 1765, Britain enacted the Stamp Act to raise money
from the American colonies. (The Act set off such a sttong protest that it
was repealed the following year.)
On this date:
In 1638, religious dissident Anne Hutchinson was expelled from the
Massachusetts Bay Colony.
In 1794, Congress passed a law prohibiting American vessels from
supplying slaves to other coumries.
In 1820, U.S. naval hero Stephen Decatur was killed in a duel with
Commodore James Barron near Washington D.C.
. In 1882, Congress outlawed polygamy.
- In 1894, hockey's first Stanley Cup game was played. Montreal, the
home team, defeated Ottawa, 3-1.
In 1929. a. U.S. Coast Guard vessel sank a Canadian-registered
schooner, tile "I'm Alone," in the Gulf of Mexico. (The schooner was
suspected of carrying bootleg liquor.)
In 1933; during Prohibition, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a
measure to make wine and beer containing up to 3.2 percent alcohol legal.
In 1941, the Grand Coulee Dam in Washington state went into operation.

.

Berry's World
•

WASHINGTON - President
Clinton's February pledge to cut
100,000 civil-scmce jobs, reduce
administrative overllcad by 14 percent and eliminate widespread government pelks promptt:d most federal agencies to begm belt-tightening. For senior officials 81 the U.S.
Customs Service, it prompted one
last hurrah.
.
'f!te CustOmS Service 1.$ week
shuttled more than 80 of its senior
officers from around the country
and the world to an enforcement
conference at a SSO million resort
outside Palm Springs, C•lif.
Numerous customs sources estimate that the total cost for food,
travel, accommodation and· salaries
at the conference ran more than ·
· $100,000. Although customs
spokesman Bill A,nthony was
unable ID provide an CXI!Ct budget
figure for the five-day desert jaunt,
he called such estimates "an ensgeration."
Taxpayers shelled oot thousands
just ro fly tbc Wasl!ingiDn coolin·
gent to Palm Springs round uip.
Even more was spent on round-blp
air fare for cuSIOnls attaches, wbo

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By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein
and Avilllion branch offidals were
also nown in ;from 111ajor U.S.
cities on tile go'VeniJllelll dollar.
Anlhony says tile~ of the
conference was to diacuss more
than a dozen impcirtant 11&gt;pics,
including budget issues, communications IIOCUrity and sexual harass·
menL Asked by our associate Dean·
Boyd why a cQDference in Palm
Sprinss w•s needed to address
these 1ssues, Antl)ony explained·
that "a lot of this stuff you just
can't do over tbc pbonc."
Judging .by their surroundings,
some cUSIOIIIs officials might have
found it bard to concenuate on
their WOit. The Palm Springs area
- home of golf courses, swim-

ming pools llld Soon)' Bono - is
so exclusive that a c1t:9 ordinance
bans the use of the wool "moiCl"
on public·signs. Oniinllnce or 1101,
nobody would confuse customs'
conference site at Hotel Indian
Wells with a roadside inn.
The boCci sits on lbe 11th fairway of the bolt golf course for the
Bob Hope Chrysler Classic and
offers its guests guaranteed tee
times on the 36-hole course. Customs officials were especially
luclcy last week; wben Lee Trevino,
Tom .Weiskopf and Chi Chi
Rodriguez came to IIIWII to kick off
the PGA Senior Tour at a nearby
country club.
. For those not interested in golf,
the hotel features a heated swim·
m~ pool, jacuzzi and sauna. Tennis, trail rides and ht;tt-air balloon ·
ri~ are availlble nearby. Eques·
uiin shows ud world-i:lass p&gt;lo
can be found at the prestigtous
Empire and Eldorado polo clubs.
For !bose Cl,uiet eveni~ inside,
customs offte11ls stayed m suitea
that were originally built at a cost
of $160,000 each. Rooms are
-equipped with marble batbs, mini·

1 !(uP iT exacTU'
-as ;r was Ttte. DaY
HaRoLP ~poUT.

MICH.

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Both President Bill Cliition and inexorably losit.l. "Tbe risbl or pie.
.
. ' ·
the National Rifle Association love the people" to maintain 1 militia
But as the bodies on bodr sides
their country. Both are pauiotic. extends to tbc right of a private cit- · are totaled up like pieces of raw
But they part company on one izen to stoCkpile IS many guns IS meat in a freezer, it niakes Ul aware
formidable rock-bottom difference ·
that once again the ignominiou
- the president's belief that cult
will or the NRA bas prevailed. And
leader David Koresh docs not have
we are all held hostage to a homicia legal right tO Koresh's murderous
dal idiocy that subsidizes a dubious
stot'eh.ouse of artillery:
he or she neurotically wisheS.
right to bear arms.
On the other hand, the NRA
Anti-abortionist Michael FrederNobody - with the exception
(known ID some Americans as the ick Griffin apparently thinks so. of NRA member! - can sanely
National Repository of Assassins) That's ;why he bou)tbt a gun, argue that the foundini fathers
believes that the Second Amend- prayed, then went out and assassi- endorsed the right cl a :P.vid KorCment gives Koresh the same right nated a Pensacola doctor who bad sh to Ratber a.s!Orebouse of deadly
to store up SO-caliber macbine guns saved lives and cured patients, but artillery.
and anti-tank weaponry as It gives had also performed abortions.
The rounding fathers w~re
theweekendhunteriOownarille.
But there is an even crueler scholars. The Lockian plnse "the
Tell me if you "believe that the · irony. David Koresb '1 conatituliOII~ people" means tbc ,PCOPie as a duly
following constitutionally guaran- al "militia" (courtesy of the constituted group 10 a representateed right refers to any private citi- NRA's intapretalion of the Second tive government, not 10111e perferzen: "A well-regulated militia, Amendment) was able 10 immobi· vid mob of NRA fanatica, David
being necessary to the security of a lize a ~:""'ent that bad wiped Kcireahes and Michael GrifftnS runfree state, the right of the people to ·out S8
Hussein's war-making ning amuck~ yelling they have a
keep and bear arms, shall not be capacity within a few days.
rigbl to bear 81'1111.
.
infringed."
.
Obviously, the two situations
In Locke's cpocbal treatise on
By the NRA's interpretation, aren't completely parallel When a civil government - the basis for
David Koresh and any other psy- satanic nut repeatedly proclaims his our Declaration of Independence
chotic barbarian$ are "the people." sick intention of becoming a mar- - he raised the question of wbo
An.:I they have a right ro build and tyr, law enforcement officials are shall decide a public controversy
maintain their own personal "well- forced to tread lightly to prevent and he answered his question:
regulated militia.'' The IICllt step is Koresh's slaughter of innocent peoo "The people shall judge." By no

Chuck Stone

Soutb-Ceatral Obio
Tonight, rain. Low in the ·mid40s. Chance of rain is near 100.percent TueSday, periods of rain and
drizzle. High SS-60. Chance of rain
is neat 100 percent ·
.
Extended forecast: .
Wednesday throuah Friday:

..

Edith Jay

'Rights Repo11 Makes El Salvador Confront Its Past," asserted
a fairly typical headline in The
WashingiDn PosL Accurate 11 far
IS it wenL For thoae Sdll clinJirig
to the by-now willful delusion that
' the Salva"ontn government, its
milltar~ forces and their allied
paramili~ death squads were not
overwhelmmgly rtlpOlllible for the
tonure, murder and mayhem that
racked El SalvadOr for 12 yem:a,
the com111iuion's findings delivered the coup de grace.
Amoog tbo ooncluaionl:
- Oovemmenl forcea, with the
knowledJe and dlrec:tlon of men
who are now or were then at the
top of the military cbaln of command, were JOipOIIsible for the VIII
ml\iOriiy ol·the 75,000 ldllinp dur·
ing tile war with leflilt perrillas.
Of those 75,000, sOme 40,000 WC!e

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civilians. And sifti~ through the sion.
The commission did not tum a
8,000 specific allepUons olabuse
blind
eye to the siils of the left It
it examined, the three-member
commission (including one law found that assassinalion of municipalleadeiS was adopted as a policy
..1..1•
C
Ill by
top guerrilla offiCials. It blamed
H Ouulng
the sucrrillaa for t11e execution of
two mjured U.S. servicemen whose
professor from the Uniuid Statea) heliccipter was shot down by the
found that 8S percent were leveled rebels.
against the armed forces or their
But its carefuUy oblique indict·
lethal associates on the far right 111ent of U.S. offiCials, for whom a
wing. .
blind eye was a matter of policy,
- Ranking military officers was all the more searing for its c:irordered and carried oot the murder cumspection. From the Carter
of six Jesuit prieltl, their bouse- administration through George
keepel and her IS-year-old dau~- Busb, the American line WIS that
ter at Central American Univer11ty there was no conclusive evidence
in San Salvadllr.
that the client regime in San Sal·
- The Guardsmen who raped vador was responsible for the
and killed four Amotlcan church- be~ crimea laid at its clo!Jntep.
women were o~ntln1 ''under 'lbcft were honorable cueptiODim
higher orders,' and their com·- each administration, particularly in
·mandina offtCCI' tried to cover up Carter' a, but most poliey-malt:O!'I
their c:rlme.. .
.·
""'' and ~ pefend 10 play
- Tbe U.S.-trainod Atlacatl the sood Gorman, backlDI the
battaliooayalelllllicaUy aJuallt&amp;nd para)' lino ropealedly when facts
everyone It could find ia tile vW.- flatly c:Ontndletcd iL Six billiQD
of El MOZOID and tbe awrOillldlliJ tlollan were Jllllftdlnto tho war
area In Decemllcr 1981. Mole 111111 · qaiaat "commuaist aapuion"
800 peallllll were IIIIIIICml In in E.l Salvador, and jUitifylnJ that
thai one Ol*llilln. denied and CO¥· inveatlllent maUOred more than
eret1 up for~
truth, honor, decency or con- Tbo ille Robo11o D'Aubnla- sa-.
son, rOUIICier of the rnll•l Amla
To wblch tbo m~po~tse in Party, ordered and paid for Jlle qlllitCII Ia: So what? Isn't it time to
assalllnatlon of San Salvador pill tile 11111 behind 1117 Tlwlb to
Archbiaboo Oscar Amulfo • ub111ritn on aldeii..S a U.N.·
Romero, tbe Rom•n Catholic ~~ ~-c!t" ~ msa1
champion of humiD riJbll and out- to '""" a ,..,.Iiiii t • ce m
•
· spoken critic of so-nment .._ vidor at JaiL Wby rab ovlt old

arter

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stretch of any sane imagination

people" to mean a c:onstitulional
entity, not a group or loose can- .
nons, waa behind former Supreme .
Court Justice l:ewis F. Powell's
interpretation of the Second
Amendment, in which be 6Xptmd
deep misgivings about it living
individuals the llllltSiricfled rigbl to .
build NRA-supported anenats or to .:
own handguns. In 1991, 11,411 .
persons exercising their right to
own bandsuns ended up using ·
them 10 commit murder. ·
But we are a nation ftlled with
protectors of dubiowl ripts. That's
why tbc United Stales bas the bigb.
est per capita murder rate in ihe
Weuem· world. And until Ibis
nation comes to ita coDective aenses, tile NRA will continue to our·
ture tile right of thC David Koreshes and the Micliael Griffins to bold
aU of us hostage.
.
Cbnck Stone Is 1 syndicated
,.--ter tor Newspaper Eattrprlse
Aslllldadon.

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Ryan and Michael and~ Ryan;
Revival slated
·
two daugbten and sons-m-law Ann , Revival at Calvary Pilgrim
and J~e _Devine and Helen and , Chapel on Route 143 near Pomeroy
J'!'lles Willey a_nd Femdora Story; will be Friday through April 4 at
e1ght gr~ndchlldren, t_wo great- 7:30p.m. nighUy with Rev. Amos
grandchl¥ren and 01eces and Tillis and Rev. Bill and Naomi
f!Cphews. ••.
.
Tillis will · be evangelist and
She was preceded 10 death by singers. Rev. Viclor Roush invites
her l!usband, John .Ryan, a son, the public.
·
·
LIIIT)r L. Clifford, and a brother,
Vem E. Story.
.
·
Conlestslated
5ervil:es will be'held. l1:30 a.m.
The Forked Run Sportsman
Wednesday at the Rutherford Club will sponsor a Big Buck ConF unera1 Home,' 2383 N• 'High St., test on April 4. Entries will be
Columbus, with lhe Rev. Edward · taken between noon and 2 p.m.
Charlton officiating. Burial will Ohio l;lig Buck Rules will apply for
follow.at Gieen Lawn Cemetery.
the contest Prizes will be awarded
Friends may call from 4-8 p.m. for first, second and third place
Tuesday at the funeral borne.
winners.

Margaret EDen Nichols
Margaret Ellen Nichols, 77, of
Pomeroy died Sunday, March 21,
1993, at the Veterans Memorial
Hospital Extended Care Unit in
Pomero.Y. ·
She IS survived by .her husband,
George Nichols of Pomeroy.
Services will be announced later
by the Fisher Funeral Home in
MiddlepOrt.
.

The Daily Sentinel
(l1.8P8 213·980)

l'l.li.Ji!ih00

I'!Vf!r)'

a(\.(\rftiX)ft,

~nndAy

throufl:h FridAy, Ill Court St., Pomm:oy.
Ohio by Lhc Ohiot V"Jiey l,ublilhing

COmpnny/Multirneclill

Inc.,

Pomeroy,

Ohio 45769, Ph. 99'2·2168. SecoM el. .
poRtAge paid at Po~, Ohkl.

Member: The AIIIOCiatltd Prell, and t.he
Ohio Naw~ ·AIIOeialion, National

Advcrtitlin« ~nt.lt;YG, ·, Branham

Nt!WIIJIIIJIOI" Spiel. 'IU 'llltrd Aoonue,

Now York, NewYortl00t7.

.

POSTMASTE~ Send odd,_ tho- ~&lt;&gt; ·
The O.tly Sentinel, 111 Court St..,
Po""""l'. OHio &lt;!fi789.
,,
8UBICIIIP110N &amp;ATU

Br c.mot or - l l o• ..,

,..tJJ

Hoddlns Carler Ill, former
State Departmeat apokeamaa
and aWII'd-wiDDins reparter, 1111·
tor aDd pablllber,la pi &amp;lldtlt or
MaiDStreet, a
D.c..
baled teltflaloD~ ....
pany aad a
lad write~ tor
Newapaper nterprlle .u.cld•·
tloa"

Lester A. Lathey

Hewasp~indeathbya

line to the contrary, history isn •t
bunk. Becan• U.S. offiCials WC!e
deliberately and deeply complicit
in the Salvadoral\ government's
depredations, 10d tlierefore must
share in the guilt u surely as anyone wbo conspires to abet or cover
up murder is legally 1 party to murder. Becanse, as the Post's headline
so aelf-riJbleously said or the Salvadorans, tile commission's report
shonld make the "U.S. Confront
liS Put."
And on the subject, while the
cOmmission on the Truth contems
itself wilh footnotea IIIII ...U.U.. '
refcrencea, 1 9-year-old book "by ,
former New York T'unes reporter '
Ra Bonner il direct aad llllilninl·
"Weakness and Deceit," its •
time-frame ia narrower than the
commialion'a, since jt was publillleclln 1984, but ill fell - ...
leu _.,._ lla lllpl .. American, •
ratber tbaD Salvt~Dan. pelfldy. To .
reRIId II. a I did last week, Ia to be
co•anmed uew by rqe that 1
dedluuaA:ally elot:tecl aovemment
wNd . . .II"'Sly CWM!one bulcheey .

Olio Weoll .•.....•.•••.....•..•..•.••.•.••- •••....•.11.110
()ne Month ................ - .......................16.96

()ne Year........................................... t83.20
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8ui.Mcrii.Jiln not dNirtni to pill)' U\11! cairt·

n 1M)' remil in advaMO dired 10 Tho
Onily NMUncl on 1 t.hree, 111 ar 12
-u.
""""'· Cftdtt will ba gi,.n
oorrieT
•c~wNtll.
,
Ne - p &amp; i - .bJ IMil permiltod tn
IU'MI Wltoft' home tanter aarAca ta

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Grace E Story Ryan 78 of 4 The French commander won· h., former
' 1y ' 0 f dered
bow thethe'
Serbfi gunners
. · M. IC
L tVORia,
ld aloud
,
rdi
'th
Columbus .died Saturday March cou . &lt;:00 nate . If ue w1 20, 1993. '
'
. out a seruor offi~ bemg present at
Daughter of the late Ernest and the headquarters.
.
Mildred Guthrie Story, she was a
In dte east, U.N. officials took
member of the Indianola Church of

son, William Carroll Lathey, a
brother and three sisters.
. Services will be held 2 p.m.
Wednesday at Ewing Funeral
Home witll the Rev. Uoyd Grimm
officiating. Burial will follow in
Riverview Cemetery in Middleport
Friends may call 2-4 and 6-8
p.m. Tuesday at the flinenl home.

partisan coals?
Because, Henry Ford's famous .

and wOWKied .scores.

Editll Jay of Columbus died
Monday, ~h 22, 1993, at Veterans Memorjal Hospital after a brief
iUness.
She is survived by her husband
Bob Jay.
Arrangements
will
be
announced later by the Fish·er
Funeral Home in Middleport ·
. Lester A. .NJack" I;athey, 82, of
Middleport died Sunday, March 21,
.1993, at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
.
. He was born Dec. ,10, 1910, in
Ripley, W.Va., the son of the late
Verda and Mynle Smilh Lathey.
A heavy .equipment operator, he
was an Army veteran of World
War n wbere he was awarded the
Bronze Star, He was also a member
of the Rutlan!f American Legion
Postl467.
.
'Survivors include: his wife,
Mary Brooks Latlley of Middleport; three sons and daoghters~in­
law Cllarles MBill" and Donna
Lathey of Langsville, L8rry M. and
Carol Lathey of Letart. W.Va., and
Roger R. and Cheryl Lathey of
Hamden; two daugbten and sonsin-law Marlene and Jay Hall Jr. of
Cheshire and Linda and Roy Kean
of Sooth !Jloomingville; 14 grandchildren; two stepJ,randchildren;
nine' great-grandchildren and two
nieces.·

docs "the iJeople" mean a motley
grou of egomaniacal individuals.
~ bistorit:ll n:liance 011 "tbc

l

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina {AP} -. The U.N. commander
in Sarajevo accused Serb forces
toda)' of wgetins non-strategic
civilian areas in dte heaviest bombardment of the : year on the
besie ed itil.
Ice
Pf.
U~. ~ficlals, meanwhile,
' C1003 Aecu-Woolhor,ln&lt;:. worked to Clear the war for more ·
relief for Srebrenica, which was the
target of overnight sbelling.
Col. Marcel Valentin of France
Wednesday, a chance of rain.
Lows in the mid-30s to mid-40s. said U.N. military observers count·
Highs in opjler 40s to upper 50s. ed nearly 2,400 shells in a barrage
Thursday; a chance of rain early, Sunday, including 414 in Sarajethen fair. Lows in the 30s. Hi~hs m vo's Old City, a mainlr, residential
the SOs. Friday, fair. Lo.ws m the area without major military posj·
upp~r 20s and 30s. Highs in the ~ODS.
.50s.
•
.
Valentin said he uied without
success to reach a senior Serb commander to request a halt ID the barra~,
w.hich, accOJding to unoffiCial
,
counts, ldlled at least seven peopl~

Grace E. Story Ryan

o.~o~oJa 11•1• eo••.,.
13 W"'!!!o.... ................................... ... 1:13.411
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this date at the Columbus weather em California wc.e expecting nun
station was 82 degrees in 1938 by midafternoon as the Pacific
while the m:Oid low was 6 in 1885. storm that formed in the. Gulf of
Sunset IDnight will be at 6:46 p.m. · Alaska moved toward shore.
Coastal gale warnings were in
and sunrise Tuesday at6:30 a.m.
effect
Aroulld lbe aalion
A powerful storm headed
Snow was forecast throughout
toward the Pacific Northwest the day in Mirures01a, Iowa, Wistoday; making heavy rains liltely. consin and Illinois. To the south
Snow fell in Chitago as bad weath- and ranging as far east as Ten~
er moved eastward across the cen· nessee, heavy rains were forecast.
ual United States, with rain or The Ohio Valley could have scatsnow forecast from Wisconsin to tered showers.
TClUIS.
.
.Pans of South Dakota bad up to
·The East was mOStly dry, Scat- I foot of snow over the weekend.
tered. afternoon thundershowers
The forecast called for a break
were possible in Gecqia and Flori- hom heavy rains and bail in Aorida, where Vero Beach had nearly 7
da.
Washington, Oregon and ~1

,

up a Serb reqUest for evacuation of
272 Serbs from the governmentheld town of Tuzla in the DOrthcast.
·Serbs have mAde 'such an evacu-·
ation a condition for allowing heli·
copters into.Srebrenica ID evacuate
sick and wounded.
•
The list includes some Serbs
wbo want 10 leave, but have Jll'OI"'
erty and would be willinJIO stay m
Tuzla if their safety was assured,
said Peter Kessler, spokesman in
Sarajevo for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.
Gen. Philippe Morillon, commander of all U.N. forces in
Bosnia, negoliated the evacuations
Sunday. He rejected suggestions
that the move could be seen as the
start of more "ethnic cleansing" to
create more ethnically homogeneous regions in eastern Bosnia. '
Morillon has been holed up in
Srebrenica post office for more
thu a week, essentially standing
between auacldng Serbs ud tens
of thousands of desperate refugees
and !t&amp;dents suanded in dte town.
Serb forces again shelled the
Srebrenica region overnight, wijb .

~~!;~~~~o~~~J:~ 'Meigs announcements

James McGee
James NJim" Michael McGee,
48, of Portland, formerly of Sunbury, died S111day, March 21, 1993

at~~;:~·u,y 2·s . · 1944 in
Columbus, he was.the son oDalma
Bpwer McGee of Columbus and
the late.Charles Weldon McGee.
He was a retired aoiD mechanic,
and belonged' ro the Jackson Coonty Be14le Club, the National Rifle
Assoclation, MVPA, BMUCC,
National Wild Turkey Federation,
. North American Hunting Oub and
· Appalachian Gun Dog Associalion.
Besides his mother, he is Survived by his wife, Lillie Holsinger
McGee, Stiversville; two daughten
and sons-in-law, ·Dawn and Jim
Riley of Bloomingburg, and Jamie
and Eric Boone of Columbus; a
son, Charles Weldon "Mike"
McGce, Cardington; and five
grandchildren, Alan and Crystal
Riley, Bloomingburg, and Karl,
Ean, and Zachery Boone, Columbus. His fll'St wife, Phyllis McGee

VFWtomeet
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 will meet Thursdav al

Hospital news

7·30 m' All n'iembers are ur til to
iten~· ·
g
a
·
· Garden Club to meel
The Riverview Garden Club
will meet Thursday at7:30 p.m. at
the Reedsville Church or Christ.
Easter favors will be made for residents of Arcadia Nursing Center.
Hostesses are Marilyn Hannum and
N Ia y
oung.
·
ccL to meta
M.iddleP.ort
The Middlepot1 Child Cons~vation .l.ea&amp;ue will~ Tuesday at
6:30 p.m. 11 the Middleport Fire
Station. A potluck dinner will be
held for husband's night Table service will be furnished.

°

Lodae lo meel
There will be a regular meeting
of Pomeroy Lodge No. 164,
F&amp;:AM, on April 7 at 7:30 p.m. at
the Middlepon Masonic Lodge.

some attacksap,Parently coming
from weapons 1n Serbia itself,
~ the nearby Drina River border with Bosnia, Sarajevo radio
reporUd
Four people were killed and
seven wounded, the radio said. The
report could not be independenUy
coofirmed.
In Sarajevo, heavy fighting and
shelling abo conlinued early today
around the airpln The international airlift, halted Friday, remained
suspended.
Serb forces were gaining territo-

ry in a gi'adual offensive on Stup, a
western suburb near the airpon.
Further Sezb gains could place the
U.N. command post, located in a
former .Sarajevo commur,ications
building, directly on the front line.
Asked whether he thought Serbs
were trying to maximize their holdings before the possible signing of
a peace plan, Valentin replied: "Its

_
U.S. planes tlroppe4 .
more than 4 3 tons of food an)l
other supplies in the Srebreniea
area. ·
,
France said Sunday it would
join the U.S. airlift to easterq.
Bosnia. Joint flights are likely te
depart from Frankfun, where aid
supplies are sroclcpiled, by the end
of the week.
Kessler said the UNHCR had
set up a soup kitchen in Srebrenica,
providing 2,100 meals a day.
·.
On Friday, U.N. b11Cks bmught \.
the ftrSt overland shipment of aid tb
Srebrenica in more than three·
months. llte same b'IICks evacuate~\
almost 700 Muslim refugees tb:
Tuzla on Saturday.
··
U.N. offiCials are trying to bring
another food convoy and a Frent:/1·
field hospital past Serb lines inul'·
Srebrenica.
Ov~ight,

"·

The group had traveled abo~i:
JACKSON. Obio {AP) - Five
horseback riders from Ohio say eight mlles down a trail when they
they weren't worried when the set up camp for the=:· They •
shel~ .
blizzard that struck the East March found a three-sided w
and
put
a
lalptlulin
on
the
open
side
13kept them from leaving a primiID
break
tile
wind.
.•.
tive shelter in the West Virginia
Four
feet
of
snow
fell
by
mi4:,
mountains.
Dr. Robin Byers, a dentist who .afternoon the next day, and the
was the group's leader. said they group decided not to try to make i.t .
"
were surprised when a helicopter baclc.
T~e Pocahontas County, WeSt '
hovered over their camp oo March
Virginia, Sheriff's Departmen.t•
IS, two days after the storm hiL
"We dido 't realize till then that began searching Marth 14, after·,
anyone was looking for us," he one of the travelers' fatnily menibers called authorities.
,
saidc
The group said their only wllfl)i .
The five went to Monongahela
National Forest on March 12 to cel- was about the horses, who were
. :,
ebrate the 1Zth birthday of Byers' getting cold.
son, Sean.
.'

..

--Livestock report_..,;_._·.·.:
Receipts Friday 7,300. Estim~ '
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ed
receipts
Monday 6,500.
· ·
Direct livestoclc prices and receipts
Prices from The Producers Liveat selected buying points Monday
·· '
by the Ohio Department of Agri- stoclc Association:
Cattle: uneven, 1.00 lower u) ·
culture:
•.•
B8110ws and gilts: mostly 1.00 2,50 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 74.00;
higher; demand good.
..
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs., country 84.50; select 63.25-77.50.
Slaughter heifers: cboice 72.50points, 46.25-47.25, a few 48.00;
84.25; select 63..50-77.50.
plantS 47.75-48.75, a few 49.50.
Cows: Steady 10 !.SO higher; all
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
cows 58.00 and down.
points, 45.00-46.50.
Bulls: steady to l.SO higher; all.
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lbs., country
bulls
68.75 and down.
points, 44.004S.SO.
Sheep and lambs: uneven, 6.00 .
lower to 3.00 higher; choice wools·.
65.00-80.50; choice clips 73.0080.00; feeder lambs 76.50 and
down; old sheep 39.00and down. ·'··

Nine killed in

weekend wrecks

....,.,.."'ii

Stocks

_..,..;____;...;...Local briefs__;._......
....

obvious."

Trapped Jacksonians
~ay they weren't worried ·.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Leiion to meet
Saturday admissions • Herman
The Racine American Legion
Michael, Pomeroy; Margie
Auxiliary wUI meet Thursday at 7
Schuler, Shade.
p.m.
at the legion ball.
Saturday discharges • None.
Sunday admissions • John Brogan, Pomeroy; Hugh R. Daniels,
Program slated
Pomeroy.
·
.
Pete Woyar, ·professor of
Sun&lt;lay discharges· Mabel Rad- forestry, Hocking College, and
cliff, Coolville.
president of the Ohio Chapter of
,
the Society of American Foresters,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
will present "'n Overview of Ol)io
Discbaraea, March 19 _ Mrs. Forestry" o'n Sunday at 2 p.m. at
William Wells and daughter, Billy .135 College Hall on the Hocking
Hill, Dayton Williams, Beverly College campus. The program is
Queen, Jack Brandon. Bessie. ·sponsored by the Hocking College
Craig, Nellie Ford, Mildred Long, Forestry. Club and Athens CounBy The A&amp;lol:lated Press
Richard Henderson, Barbara tiansforOpportunity.
The
death:l of five teen-agers in
Stevens, Derek Roush, Justin ,. fl"'"""!!'"'"',.._..........
one
accident
accounted for more
Ramey 8nd Henry Thomas.
·
than
half
of
Ohio's
nine weekend
Dlacbar1es, March 20 traffiC
fatalilies,
the
State
Highway
Dorothy Pincellie, Christopher
Patrol
said.
Am Ele Po~....................36 1/8
ofCardington.~surv!ves.
McCoy, Shawn Barnett, Lindsey
The patrol said the teen-agers
Ashland Oil........................27 3/4
Funeral semces w11l be h~ld Webb, Raymond Stewart, R!JY
wc.e
in a car that collided with a
AT&amp;.T................................58 1/8
Wedneaday at II a.m. at the Ewmg · Kesterson. Emma Blankenship,
pickup
truck on a rural road north
Bank One........................... 53 314
Funeral Home, Pomeroy. The Rev. Mrs. T'unothy Mullins and daugh·
of
Springfield.
Two occupants of
Bob Evans ......................... 18 1/4
William Justis will officiate and ter Angela Campbell Edith Danthe truck were injured.
Owming Sbop. .................l4 3/8
burial will ~ In Stiversvllle Ceme- nd and Arthur Skeans:
·
·The patrol counted weekend
Chmp
lndustries
..............
~
..
l3
5/8
tery. Friends may call at the runerat
Discharges, Marcb 21 traffic
fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday
City
Holding
......................
22
home Tuesday from 2 ID 4 and 7 to David Lusk Danielle Ireland; Dalto
midnight
Sunclay.
Federal
Mol!ul...
...............
.l7
7/8
9. p.m. In lieu of flowers dona~ons las Craft, Ty)er Wolfe, Jeanie HalThe
dead:
Goodyear
nR
.......
;
..........
1S
l/4
may be made to the Amencan lc!y Jean Slayton Mrs. Danny
SATURDAY
Key centurion ................... 23 114
Heart Association, !iJox 586 •. · Angel and daughter: Beverly FranRicky Keeling, 18: Jeffery
Lands
End
..........................
28
1/8
Pomeroy, or the Amencan Heart cis Josephine Stewart and George
Rollins,
18; Judd..North, 16; Mandi
Limited Inc. .....:................ 23
Association, Delaware.
Sl~yton.
·
Stouffer,
IS, and Brandy VanMullimcdia IJic .................. 36
Anna Jo Shoemaker
· Birth, March 19 - Mr. and . Point
hoose,
14,
aU
of Springf~eld, when
llancolp.................... l3 l(l
Mrs. Danny Angel, daughter,
their
car
collided
with a pickup
Rax Resl8llnlllt ..........:.......5/8
Anna Jo Shoemaker, 25, of Crown City.
truck
on
Willow
Road
north of
Reliance Elcctric................23
Cheshire, died Sunday, March 21,
Blrlh, March 20 - Mr. an&lt;l
u.s.
68
ill
Clart
County.
.
Robbins.tMyen ................20
1993, at Holzer Medical Center fol· Mrs. Rodney King, daughter,
WARRENDonald
J. LayShoncy'slnc......................23 1/4
lowingu extended illncss. ·
Pomeroy, and Mr. arid Mrs.
fteld,
2S,
and
Phillip
1.
Barber,
25,
Star Bank .........................37 314.
Private ICI'vicea will be held·at Christopbcr Smith, daughter, PalriI
passenP,,
both
of
Wanen,
in
I
Wendy lnt'l...................... l3 SIS
the Fisher Funeral Home in Mid- oL
Worthitllton lntl ............. 2S lfl one-car accident olt a Trumbull
dlepOrt.
.
Stock reporll are the 10:30 Coun!yrold.
CLl!VE.LAND - Herman L. ·
•·•· quotet provided by
Eddie, 52, and Anita Davis, 37, 1
Ke.m per Secnrltlea, lac., o
j)IISIICIIJcr, both of Cleveland. in 1
Gampolla.
~
.Conllllu~ lroin Pale 1
two-car w:cident on a c:ity street.
depanmentiO Vlllaso Oreen Apartments {or an aulOIDobile rw with
vehicle OY(IIed ~ Dencll Hudlon; 8:49 p.m. Rutland squad and fuo
dopartmont ·to utland Township Road 175, Mallt Richard resi·
dence,lor odor

inches of rain in 24 hours ending" .
Sunday and West Pabn Beacb bad :
3 inches in one hour.
•
Daytime temperatures today :
were ex peeled to range from the :
20s and 30s in New EnsJand 10 the •
50s and 60s over the PacifiC North· :
west Thirties and 40s were fore- :
cast for central United States.
Highs in the 60s were forecast :
for a wide-ranging area from Vir· :
ginia to central California. Temper- :
atures in the 70s and 80s were •
expected in the South, southern :
Texas and the Southwest.
·
The high temperature Sunday ;
for the continental United States ·
was 96 degrees at Thermal, Calif. ·

Worst bombardment of year is reported·in Sarajevo

--Area deaths:--

Ugly truths surface in El Salvador__
__ _ __
There are white lies, there are
reprehensible lies and there arc
grotesque, foul lies. U.S. policy in
El Salvador was based on tile latter
from the late 1970s unlil the early
1990s. If dtere was ever any doubt,
the United Nations Commission on
the Truth last week put them to
rest, discretely but damningly, in
its repon on humu rights abuses
during the long Salvadoran civil
war. Unfortunately, and not for the
ftrSt time, much of the press commentary managed tO glide over
Washington's complicity while
concenuating primarily on the
report's findings about Salvadoran

By Tbe Associated Press
It loo.ks like Ohio is going to
have mild but dreary weather.for
most of this week, forecasters said.
Rain will spread across the state
and linger as light rain or drizzle
through Wednesday and possibly
inro Thursday, the National Weather Service said
Temperatures will continue a
slow trend upward through the
week. Highs over most of the state
will reach the 40s and 50s through
WedneSday. By Thursday, most of
the state will have its first brush
with legitimate spring weather, as
temperatures flut with the 60degree mark.
,
The record-high temperature for

-...;,.-----Weather ____. .·__
;.

Jack A•derson ..d Mlcbael
are wrlten for United
'
Fmhlre Syndlc:ate, Inc:.

.

· • lcolumbu!il4a•l

W.VA.

Ande~

'

PA.

IND.

ln a break orom tradiuon, customs officials at least refrained
from usinf "reimbursable coilfercnce fcea' at tile gathering. In the
past. conference participants wc.e
asked tolay a fee up llront for
liquor an food, which was later
billed as a confcnnce expense and
reimbursed by tile government At
last )'CIII''s enfOit!IIDCIIt conference,
held June 1 through June S at the
luxuriOus Peabody Resort in Orlando, Fla., CUSIOms OffiCials used this
practice ID amass a $4,000 enterllinment lday that taxpayers eventually picked up.
·

Ask the NRA abouf cult leader

•

Aa:u-Weatber• fon:c:ast for

AnthOny says dte Cusloms Service c.hose Hotel Indian Wells
because it was seized by customs
agerus last August after u invcsti·
galion into its bigh-rolling Japanese
owner. This, be says, enabled the
government to negotiate the standard government rate of $7 S per
night Asked why the meeting was
not held in Washington, whicb
cOuld have saved at least thousands
of dollars in air fares, he said, "If
(Indian Wells) were not a seized
property and the room rates IS low
IS tbcy were, we would have. ... I.
don't thinlt: we're spending a lot of
tu. dollars.''
While their suPeriors wc.e liv·
ing it up last week in Palm Springs,
CUJIOmS field agents reported that
case travel haS been cut back and ·
their equipment budget is practically dry. ·~ govemtne~~t car I use
' haS .over 107,000 miles on iL Every
bullet-proof vest in the office is
overS years old .... Someone's
gonna get killed soon," one agent
•

Mild weather forecast for most of this week:~

Tuesday, March 23

bars and private balconies with
views of the Sarua Rosa mounllins,
golf course or pool areas. Yet, they
pale in comparison to the multi·
level, four-bedroom, five-bath .
presidential suite, which rents out
for $6,000 per night aod comt)s
with • gold-plated private elevator
and emerald suede chairs. Aside
from fuU concierge service, valet
parking and dry cleaning, the hotel
can provide guests with Cadillac
Slretch limos.

griped.

cul~ility.

~

cont;CRDCC from-.e
1S different countries, includlns
Thailand, Jl!*l, Italy and AUIIria.
About 45 special agents-in-i:harge

came to tile

·'

OHIO Weather

Customs has one more blast before budget cuts

The Daily Sentinel

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. Monday, March 22,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

JOHN WIDE, M.D., INC.

.

Thr-

12:5.' p.m. Pqcneroy squads and fire d_~t to
' SIIIC Ronie 7 ~n for 1 11101« vehicle aocidont. tfulb Daniels. .
wu tniaponed t0 VMH while R.obert Davia, Brandon Bacbncr,Tamara Blcbncr and Joencua Davia refused li08tment; 1:36 p.m.
~ ro Cheal« Road far Realna Rit:O wbo wai lillllpOited to
Sllllday •

·E•, No• '&amp;.
•AIItfsiJ •HMrlft8 Aldi
· .
•HIId a Nick Surgery
QUAUTY CARE FOR YOUR FAMILY

VfdH; .$:07 p.m. Pomeroy to Ol~y Road rex: Autlra.Hayes who
wu ~ to YMH; 6:34 p.m. Raciae to BIICktoWD Road for
lllllel Rbodel wbo wu ~ to VMH; 7:S4 p.m.l'om«&lt;oy 10

Vi)la&amp;e Oreeo Atlai1monll for NanCy Acttenn.. wlto wa liiDIPOit· '
ed.IO VMH; 11:37 p.m. ~ 10 Lasley S!reet for William Sny,
der wbo wasiiWIIpOnld to
.·
•

',j

Medicare a UMlVA Aulp'Mall Accepted

Suitt 112 W.llty lrln, Pt. PINnnt,
,,

Lottery numbers ·-·:
..
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
night's Ohio Lotter:y .
selecuoos:
·
Super Lotto
11-14-20-32-35-36
(ele~n. fowteen, twenty, thirty: "
two, thuty-five, thuty-six)
The jackpot is $8 miUion.
·•
Kicker
4-3-9- S-0-S
(four, three, nine, five zero
fi~)
•
'
Pick 3 Numbers
. 7-3-0
. (seven, three, zero)
Pick 4 Numbers
Satu~day

9-140

(nine, one, zero, zero)
William Shakespeare's last play is
"The Tempest,• which wu completed
in 1612. His ftrst known comedy is
"The Comedy ol llrron, ~ !1!1!1._ 1
in 1593.

�...

:sports

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

.I

.

B:r CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Spor11 Writer
It had COI\trovcny and elrama,
upsets and biOwOUIS, crying COIChes and acreamin' coaches.
Simply put. 11 was March Madness tile way it was Intended to be.
It was just five days ago that 64

Dlvlsloa ID-IV boys
(15-11-lO·l1=67)
Benji Lewis (Oak Hill) 3-1·
3=12, Chris Simpson (Oak Hill) 30-0=6, Chuck Jones (Ironton Sl.
Joe) 1-0-2•4, Michael Enns
(Racine Soutbera) 1-0·0=2, Rus·
sell Singleton (Racine Soutbera)
3-0-0:6, Chad Stewart (Fairland)
1-1-3"8, Brad Spencer (Wellston)
1-0-5=7, Brian Runyon (Chesapeake)4-l-2=13, Bruce Lanning
(Hemlock Miller) 4-0-1=9. Totals
-l0-4-15=67
Free throws - 15-19 (78.9%)

"GRABS REBOUND - Southern's RusseU Singleton (4:1) comes
down after IJ'IlbbiDI a rebound Ia front or River VaHey's Cbarles
Peck (10) duriq Sunday's District 13 C011cba' AD-Star boys' game
at Gallla Academy High Scbool, where tbe Division 1-11 boys
(Peck's team) won 79-67. Peck bad aiDe polots in tbe game, and Sin·
gleton bad six.
,
IV crew witll 15, which came in
part on three of her team 's four
three-pointers.
Division 1-D girls
(15-15-:Z:Z-23=75)
Markessa Layne (Soutll Point)
4..()..():8, Tracy Mullins (Rock HiD)

join USV, Liberty Union as Ohio's finest

sian I title and third in four years
with a 49-31 vietory against overmalehed Wooster.
In between, Baltimore Liberty
Union won the Division Ill title
over Sherwood Fairview .63-50.
And player or the year Jann on
Roland scored Urbana's last 15
points, including two free tllrows
with 11.2 seconds left, as the Hilltoppers won their second straight
D1vision II title, 50-48 over
Mil.lusburg West Holmes.
Division IV
Upper Scioto Valley (27-0) did
it without a senior on its roster.
"They would not be denied,"
said Rosecrans coach Larry Nash.
"They weren't looking around
with stars in their eyes. I think that

team' walCbed

'Hoosiers.'''

f

Rosecrans (25-3) reeled off I i
straight points to .build a 50-47 lead
with 6.8 seconds left in regu)ation.
Susan . Denbow, who had 13
rebounds to go witll nine points, hit
two free throws witll 21.1 seconds
left to give the Lady Bishops a 4947lead.
With 6.8 seconds left, she
reboJliided a miss by usv· s Tanya
Burkett and was fouled, hitting the
front end to make it S0-47.
The Lady Rams rebounded and
hurried the ball downcourt. Hicks,
who had 15.points, took tile ball
near midcourt, took two dribbles
and banked the shot in off glass as
tile buzzer sounded. The USV team
celebrated at midcourt while its
fans went wild in the stands.
.
Neither team scored in tile fli"SI
overtime, and Hurley, who finished
with 16, scored the only points of
the second one.
After a turnover by Rosecrans,
Hurley took the ball at the left
wing, drove and spun befcx:t toss·
ing in the bank shot with 18
onds left. Rosecrans turned the ball
over on its fmal possesSion.
points and 10 rebounds in the title
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ashley Bland, the division's colJpper Scioto Valley had three game.
player of the year, fmished with 20
Teammate Bridget Andrews, points for Rosecrans, which was
,players - all juniors - on The
who
scored 19 points to go with 15 seeking its fourth sLate lide.
Associated Press Division IV girls
rebounds
and five assists, also
~)ate all-tournament team, but it
made
the
squad
.
·
Division I
was Gwen· Hurley who was chosen
The Lady Tigers won the DiviBridget Andrews scored 10 of
the outstanding player.
· Hurley banked a shot witll 18 sion I stale championship in the 49- Pickerington's 12 ~oints in the
:"second remaining in the fust sec- 31 victory over runnerup Wooster, third quarter and fimshed with 16
ond-overtime game in the 18-year which was represented on the team points, opening it up inside for
· history of the girls high school state by Lori Blanchard and freshman Gwyneth Ballard as Pickerington
tournament as USV beat defending Joy Taylor. Blachard had 22 points rolled over shorthanded Wooster.
The title was Pickerington's
c'hampion Zanesville Rosecrans 52- and 10 assists in two games. Taylor
fourth
, matching Delphos . St.
totaled
18
points
and
10
rebounds
50 Saturday. It was USV's first
in
the
semifmals
and
finals.
John's
record
for championships.
a'ppearance in the championship
Ballard
added
13 points and 10
games.
RoundinB out the t.eam were
rebounds
for
the
Tigers.
Meanwhile, Gwyneth Ballard, Milford's N1ckie Sparks, who had
Pickerington (28-0) never trailed
who helped lead Pickerin~n to its 15 points and six rebounds in the
after
scoring the game's first six
Sj:cond straight state tnle, was · semifinals, and Eastlake North's
.
sclec ted the most valuable player Teresa Habat, who had 16 points points.
But it was never easy, despite
on the AP Division I all-tourna- and six rebounds in a semifinal
the fact that Wooster got little from
ment lealll .
loss.
Ash ley Poston and Erin BlackIn sharing the Division III MVP DivisiOn I player of the year Marhonors, Liberty Union's Poston cie Alberts. Alberts, who injured a
1 stone. who led Baltimore Liberty
: Union ' s second-half rally to the totaled 32 points, 14 rebounds and knee in the district tournament,
· state championship, share most five assists in two games, while played only sparingly in the final
: valuable player honors on tile Divi- Blackstone had 34 points, 30 and did not score.
"It's been a long, hard tourna• sion Ill aU-tournament team.
rebounds and three assists.
ment
trail," said Tiger coach Dave
· And , Jannon Roland, who
Joining them on the team was
: scored 33 points and had 16 teammate Lucinda Hed~es, who Butcher. "It feels like a heavy load
, rebounds in Urbana ' s champi- finished with 34 pomts, 13 has been lifted off our shoulders.
onship game, was chosen MVP in rebounds and three ass•SIS after the People have such high expectations
: the Division II all -tournament Lions beat Sherwood Fairview 63- of you."
LOri Blanchard scored 10 points
50.
'
to
lead
the Generals (25-2).
• Hurley scored 16 points and had
Fairvi.ew's Kacee English, who
Division m
; nine rebounds in the championship finished with 48 points in two
Ashley Poston scored 22 points,
;game. She totaled 23 points, 14 games, also made the squad along
~ rebound s and II assists for the with Amy Coaigal of Akron St. Erin Blackstone 20 and Lucinda
Vincent-St. Mary, who had 22 Hedges 15 as Liberty Union domi."
ooumamenL
· Joining her on tile team were points and 12 rebounds in a semifi- nated the middle two quarters to
beat Sherwood Fairview.
!teammates LeAnna Hicks, who hit nal loss.
The Lions (28-0) outscored the
In Division IT, Roland, a 6-foot1the three-point shot at the buzzer
Apaches
30-12 in the middle two
2
senior,
totaled
53
points
and
30
:that sent the game into the first
quarters
to
build a 46-33 lead headrebounds
in
two
games.
The
Pur'overtime, and Tanya Burkel!.
ing
into
the
fourth quarter, and
:Hickt totaled 37 points, seven due University signee scored
were
never
headed.
~rebounds and nine assists in two Urbana's lasll5 points in the Hill:games, while Bwteu had 36 points toppers' S0-48 champioNhlp victo- · Kacee English ICOred 19 points
for Sherwood FaiJ·view (23·5),
ry over MiUetsburg West Holmes.
,)llld IS reboun&lt;Js.
Joining her on the team was which ltar1ed three freShmen and·a
· · Also named to til~ team were .
.
A'lhlcy Bland of Rosecralis, who teammate Beth Ostendqrf, who sophomore.
One lr.ey to Liberty Union's suc1had 34ooints and 14 rebounds. and totaled 31 points in two games.
West Holmes placed two on the cess? No one foug(lt to be the leadKarla Wenzlick of Ottoville, who
hid IS points and eiJiht rebounds in team: Jodie Martiri, who had 40 ing scorer.
"For a team witll so much talpoinis in two games, and her sister ·
, ~ semir1D81Ioss.
ent,
and so many good offensive
Julie,
whQ
totaled
21
points.
. Pickerington '1 Ballard scored
players,
it's importan~ to stay
~making
the
team
was
Avon
ll3 pojnll aild had 17 JCbounds in
together,"
said Liberty Union
lhe 1W0 game&amp; She had 30 points Lake's Stacey Fifer, who had 16
coach
Del
Barr.
"Peuy ,lealousies
and seven rebounds in a semifinal points and 8 rebounds in a semifididn't
enlel
into
iL
''
victory and came back wltll 13 nal loss.

_· Ballard, Blacks.tone,

Jlurley, Rowland make

'all-tournament teams

:team.

.

- UCLA- that played its heart
outOII'Y 10 lose In overtime after a
CIXIIIIMnial play.
F~ the 16 survivors, it's on to
then-gion"•
. .
"We' IC pRtty happy with tile
·

..,

•

sec-

'

'

position we're in right now," said
Indiana's Damon Bailey. " We're
co~tfident enough that we feel
every game that we play we're
going to will , whoevm: it is."
For Indiana, it's Louisville.
Michigan will try to reach the
.final game for the second straight
year. Kentucky will try to redeem
Itself for its incredible lasl-second
loss last year to Duke, Cinc;jnnati
will look to make it back to tile
Final Four.
Underdogs George Washington
!Uld WCII.ern Kentucky will try to
hold onto !he emotion that got !bern
through the fli"SI two rounds. Tempie will try to forget the 12 losses
on its record. Arkansas, Florida
State and Kansas wiU try to elude
the tough 10S$:CS that have stunted
their tournament success in recent
years.
As good as the past weekend
was, next Weekend ShapeS up to be
·even better.
Here are the scores from the
weekend:
In the Bast Regional, it was
Nortll Carolina 112. Rilode Island
67; Arkansas 80, .St. John's 74:
Virginia 71, Massachusetts 56;
Cincinnati 92, New Mexico State
55; In tbe Southeast. it was Florida
State 94, Tulane 63; Western Kentuc:ky 72, Seton Ha1168; Wake Forest 84, Iowa 78; Kentuclri83, Utah
.

.

. .

!\2; In the Midwest, it was Kansas ·
90, Briduun Young 76: California
82, Duke 77; Indiana 73, Xavier,
Ohio 70, Louisville 78, Oklahoma
State 63; In the West. it was Vanderbilt 85, lllinois 68: Temple 61!,
Santa Clara 57; George Washington 90, Southern University 80;
Michigan 86, UCLA 84 in overtime.
Suoday's action
East Regional
Syracuse, N.Y.
Vil'llinia 71, MassachusetiS ~
Virginia used a smothenng
man-to-man defense to build a 17p.oint halftime cushion and then
withstood Massachusetts' secondhalf charge that cut the lead to
·three. The Cavaliers (21-9) earned
their fmt fmal16 appearance since
1989. Cory Alexander scored 17
points for Virginia.
.
Cincinnati 92, New Mexico St. 55
This one was over almost as
soon as it began. Cincinnati opened
a 16-2 lead and stretched it to 41 -$.
It was 50-18 at halftime and 88-39
with 4:44 to play. The Bearcats
(26-4) got 25 points (rpm Tarrance
Gibson.
Southeast Regional
Orlando, Fla.
Wake Forest84, Iowa 78
Rodney Rogers scored · 33
points, including 12 of Wake Forest's rma1 19., and the Demon Dea-

8-1-4=23, Beth Miller (Rock Hill) Lori Kelly (Meigs) 2-0-2 .. 6. 0..2. Amber Davis (Akxander) !1-0=5, Audr1 Andrews (Alexan3-0-0,.6, Mandy McFann (Rock Totals- 24-1-14='15
.
Free
tbrows-14;28
(50%)
·
der)
1-(}-0.2, Amber Loll (Well·
am) 0-0-3=3, Amy Hemby (Gal·
3-3-0=15, Christina Warren
stan)
Iia Academy) 0-0-1..1, Betll Salis·
(Nelsonville-York)
4-0·1•9,
Division 01-IV girls
bury (River VaHey) 1·0-0=2, Julie
Christina
Morrison
(Cheaa~)
(12-16-10-16=54)
Coffey (Jackson) 7-0-4=18, Verna
5-0-0=10, Carrio Hinkle (Fairland)
Stephanie Otto (Eastern) :Z·O·
Compston (Meigs) 3-0-0=6,
2-0-2-6.
Totall-19 • 4=&lt;54
Missy Sisson (Meiasl 1-0-0:2, 1=5, Kris Gillr.ey (Alexander) 1-0Free tbi'OWI-4-12 (33.3%)

~-. Urbana, Picke~ington

~

todayunblemisbed.F0{48ofihem,
it didn't work out that way.
The 48Ioeers included a handful
ofleanls expected to be alive in the
round of 16 - Duke, Georgia
Tech, Setoo Hall and Arizona -

but wbo WCIC lakco out by upstarts.
The 48 also included one team

COFFEY SHOOTS- Jackson's JuUe Cotrey (33) 'oes up above
Fairland's Carrie Hinkle (24), Chesapeake's Christina Morrison
(45), Eastern's Stepbaaie Otto (:14) and Alexander's Audra
Andrews (41) to take a sbot duriaJi Sunday's Dlltrict 13 Coacbes'
All-Star girls' game In GaDipolis, wblcb tbe Division 1-D girls .woa
75-54. Otto bad five poiata Ia ~. game. ' .

'

.
By RUSTY MILLF;R
. ·, COLUMBUS , O(lio (AP) Saturday started :.vitll a bang and
~ with a whimper at the 18th
apnual girls Slate baslcetball tournament at SL John Arena.
In the first double-overtime
giu:ne in tournament history, Upper
Scioto Valley won the Division IV
championship 52-50 over defending champion Zanesville Rosecrans.
: It took LeAnna flicks' 25-foot
three-pointer at the buzzer to send
lh~ game into overtime. Then
Gwen Hurley banked in a shot with
i8 seconds left in the second overtime for the winning points.
: In tile nightcap, Pickerington
c[Wsed to its second straight Divi'

teams went into the NCAA touma·
mcnt hoping to make it through 10

•

In 18th girls' state tournament,
.

•

o.. 4,

Bil·scboolprls wiD
'l'he Division III-IV girls
outscored their big-school foes 1615 in the second quarter to cut the
Division I-II squad's lead to two at
Division I·D boys
halftime, but the leadina team
(18-13-21-17=79)
outscored its opponent22-10 in the
Trevor Harrison (Meip) 1-0- third quarter to seal the matter.
3=5, Jerry Spurlock (South Point)
Rock Hill's Tracy Mullins and
7-0-0=14, Rob Canady (River Jackson's Julie Coffey led the
·Valley) 1-1·0=5, Charles Peck Division !·II girls with 23 and 18
.(River Valley) 3-0-1=9, Justin points, respectively. Wellston's
.Scholl (Athens) 2-2-0=10, Erie Amberl.ott paced the Division Ill-

,.

.

Indiana, California post second-round weekend victories

I

Horrmaa (Gallia Academy) l-ONatbaa Miller (Gallia
Academy) 0-0-:t..Z, Matt Walburn
(Jackson) 1-2•0..8: Jolin Deatley
(Meigs) l -0-0"4, Nathan Kitts
(Rock Hill) 2-0-1=5, Joe Leith
(Ironton) 1-0-2=4, Hank Fletcher
(Soutll Point) 4-0-1=9. Totals:16-6-!1..7!1
Free throws-9-13 (69.2%)

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In NCAA tourney action,

Monday, March 22, 1993

Division 1-11 squads
sweep District 13
all-star afternoon
The Division I-II all-star squads
sweJ?t both ends of Sunday's District 13 Coaches' All-Star doubleheader over the Division III-IV
tea ms at Gallia Academy High
School, where the boys won 79-67
and the girls won 75-54.
South Point's Jerry Spurlock,
who led all scorers with 14 points, ·
was the lone double-figure scorer
for the big-school gents, who led
by five at halftime and consistently
outpaced their Division lll-IV
oppone11ts throughout the contest.
Oak Hill's Benji Lewis led all
Division III-IV scorers with 12.
In extra-curricular activity, the
only event to go into overtime dur·
ing this basketball festival was the
boys' three-point contest between
Racine Southern's Michael Evans
and Spurlock. Both men nailed
.eight of I 0 shols in the fli"SI round
· before Evans canned seven of 10 in
a second-round playoff to win.
Nelsonville-York's Jill Shafer
won the girls' three-point c~ ­
tion with seven buckeiS in 10 tnes.
South Point's Hank Fletcher,
one of eight participants in the slam
dunk contest. won that evenl

Monday, March 22, 1993

picked that up. They knew who to
West Holmes (24-3) got the lia!I
Division D
to
Allison
Hoffman, who drove the
get
tile
ball
to
in
crucial
times."
Roland·amassed 33 points and
right
baseline
and. broke free. But
There
were
seven
ties
in
the
16 rebounds, plus personally carher
shot
with
two seconds left
fourth
quarter
alone,
the
last'
com,
ried Urbana (26·2) to the finish
rolled
orr
the
front
edge of the rim.
ing
with
20
seconds
left
when
Julie
line.
Aftel teammate Beth Ostendorf Martin.hit a long three-paini shot to Rolan.d cradl~ tile most important
fduled out witll 2:55 left. Roland counter a three•point play by of her 16 rebounds as the final
tiuzzcrsoundld.
,
Roland 15 seconds earlier.
tookover . .·
Jodie Martin had 14 pOints and
Roland dribbled the ball down"I knew that Stacey (Parker) or
me would shoot the ball," Roland court and was fouled by Martin sister Julie 12 for .the Knights, but
said.. "I think the rest.of the team with 11.2 seconds remaininsr;, then they hit just 8 of•32 shoiS from the
field.
calmly hit both free throws-'

.

.

Boys' .state tourney to see )Jelpre
face ·one of its two sub-.500 teams
By Tbe Associated Press
Two teams enter the boys state
tournament this year with losing
records, one of them the worst
record ever 10 enter a high school
tournament.
Coldwater's 10-16 season was
the worst ever to go to the state
semifinals, according to tile Ohio
High School Atllletic Association.
The Cavaliers advanced Saturday after beating Patrick Henry 5654 for a Division DI regional title.
They meet top-ranked Belpre (24·
·
I) in the ~ifinals Friday.
Cincinnati McNicholas takes a
12-14 record into the Division Ill
semifinals after a 69-64 win over
Cincinnati CAPE. McNicholas will
play Campbell Memorial (19-6) on
Friday. '
Memorial advanced by beating
Orrville 55-54. Belpre gave Chesapeake its fmt loss of the year at 5840..
· In Division I on Saturday, topranked Stow beat Akron Firestone
82-75; Cincinnati Elder beat Trotwood-Madison 85-S9: Toledo St.
John's defeated Marion Fnuiklin
70-69; and Cleveland Heights beat
East Cleveland Shaw67-65.
In the stale semifinals Thursday,
Stow (24-l) 'will meet Cincinnati
Elder (22-4) and St. John's (22-4)
wiU play Cleveland Heights (22-3).
In Division II semifmals Tbunday, St. Marys Memorial (21-5)
wiU face Whitehall-Yearling (24-1)
and Girard (20-6) wiU play Ketleling Alter (19-6).
St. Marys advanced on 44-34
. win over Nordonia Saturday:
Whitehall beat Washington Court
House 67-52; Kettering beat
·Cincinnati Lovel~d 43-41 ; and
Girard defeated Cleveland Villa
Angela-SL Joseph 78-57.
The Division IV regionals were
completed Saturday as New Riegel
beat Mansf~eld St. Peter's 68-49 in
a game that bad been rescheduled
because of bad weather. New
Riegel (23·3) will play Lynchburg
Clay (24·2) on Fnday while Fon
Loramie (22-4) faces Uma Cenual

Catbolic
Last ~~~·wlna were common
in reaional play Saturday.
Hirold a..tJ accnd on a layup
wilh 26 IIOCilllils left to she CJCve..

land Heighta ila win over Sbaw.
St. John's edBed put MarlonFranldili in tile lalt 20 seeonda '011
the free throw sbpotinc of Denny
Amrhein. Curti• Slmmona~eored
34 · 11 io lead Marion-Pnlnklin,

,points agal••t

Iowa'• Acie Earl (center, back·

•

In theNBA ...

II
26
21
33
34
43
4S

a-CalpJj ......... 36

.~

.569

CLI!VI!UNI).........

a.doOe ... - .. .......3!1
Alllall ...... - .........33
lndiono ................... 3l
Deooll. ..........- ..... .19

Mil-·----·.15

.

.476
MO

w..,..... ___.

.69l
.631

4

30
32

.531
.501

10
ll

35

40

Bull'&amp;lo3.T..,...Borl

=~..J.z~3

T~4 . ~2

:10
7A

32

.SOD

N,Y. IIlanden 7, VII'IOOUY•2
Mmau~6.CO..ao2

Lo&amp;An..... 3,SL~1

12..5

.4S3

15.5

.3&amp;5

:10

Sunday's ~ores

T.._Will
. . . . . . ... Al
.s..An...............40
llloh _ .... ...... ,_...:n
"""'_",l;S

%J

.646

21

.569

23 .63!1

t

n...,.. __
"
.391
..............u .. .231

Dallu.... - .............. .6 5I

16.$

26

.094

Tuesdaf• gamos

34.5

a.- .. w . -. 7:4Dp.m.

N.Y. -•Dioroit. 7&gt;10pm.

Po&lt;UI&lt;Dhlllao
,.- . _ .........- .AI I' .762
•.s............. - ......46 20 .697

Zl
31
33
31
,..

Tonight's games

Tln'lpl Btyat New Jcncy, 7:40p.11L
Sanloealt Pilu~ . 1 :40 p.m.
TOialiOII WiMipet.l:40p.m.

3.5
ICJ.!I
I'·'

.m

.516
.492
.406

17
ru

In NCAA men's
tournament action ...

.m ru

East Regional

Saturday•ucora
ou..ll'! 126, w......_ 101

S.IIW4a1'• aeon~
AI LB. JD&lt;I 111.......1Coliseum

Mlomi 96, ClJIVIIUND 91
Mll•-•112, PhiWc1phia 16
Odmda 114, Donnr~ llf
.
LA. C1ippon 107, Ulib 100

'\l

-

Suaday'•ll&lt;OI'H

s,_r;.Y.

10)1 : 30~.m.

Rlo:c (11-9) ot-.., C.U.p

frlda''',.......
.........
AlTIIeMOidooloodl
-~~,.. ~N.J.

Nordl C.relia• (l0-4) n . Arktnaa1

~~ (21-9) w. ONCIIINATI (:16-

o..-.'

.....o

4)

c.m..n (17·12) .. All"""'·ainnin1·

11),10:30p.m.

Tuesday's game
Tu:u·EI Palo (21-12) at Gcc:qelOWn
(17·12), 7:30p.m.

Ohio H.S. boys'

tournament scores
COWMBUS, Cl1llo (AI') - H... an:

Ohio..,..,

tit .......... ..mtina1 ~p
~"'""" r.. "'•
Kh~
buke&amp;ball ~~ 11. Ohio
tc Uru·w:nity'a SL Jchn A.ft:nJI:

. Division I
S10w 04-1·) YJ, Cincinnati Elda (22·

4), Thundlr,6p.m:

TolodD SL ldon'a ~) •• O..daad
·~ (22-3), n..nt.y, 9 p.m.

·.

DlvlslonU

k MII)'S M..W (ll·!li) YL Whi...
hall·Ycartir:t.J_G4-I). "'lwnccay, lla.m.
Oinrd (&gt;11-6) ... Kcaaina Alta (19·
6). Thunday. 2 p.m.

DIYIIIDDm
Cmtpbd1 ~ (19-6) va. Cincin-

-.o

noti
(1:1-14), FILIIIy. 6 p.m.
BelpN (24-1) n. CaldwtiCr (111-16),
FridaJ, 9 p.m. .

•·

(2A-l). Friday, 2 p.m.

Foot l.o&lt;omio

·-.-

ao.m..a,TNt
• -$1&gt;o•
"&amp;5
a..
...... f/1, B. CloNlonj
-a;--75

-·

Taf.,IL lola•, 70, M d PnrW" t1J

oi.s.mm..... 10:30

.,

WALES CONFERENCE

n. I.imo Cannl

fllloalllltle IIIDell

,..30

In the NHL...

~)

Saturday's

•\'

....._ .. lllo!&gt;,tp.a
Now Yadt IIPiiooiJia,
1':!"Pocllall ........ ll .. Na~domc.

.'

Division IV

Now . . (23-3) \'J. I,.)IIIChbwJ C.y

c.-. (25-0), Friday. II a.m.

Tlllldafl- ,

....... OIIWo, 7:il..,..
1
7:30p.m.
. Dolloo .. 1::10 ......
. .
M'
')~7
:30p.m ,
.·
·
.
•
'JD.
San AIIIOido •
, I p.m.

(17-12~

1wn (ll·ll), l,o5 pm.
SW M*cmi SL (19-1 0) at lack~Cn St.
(25-1),1:30 pm. ·
Ploppo:ntinc (2).7} ot Swlhaa c.! (17·

55

ToaJabl'a pmea

L.A. c:u,-

~

Vira:irUa 71, M-··+·•· S6 '
CJNC~NNA.n 92. N•• Muiw Sta\c

_ _ , ............,..,,JOp.m.
lll&amp;b ..
pJD. .
Dooaila&amp;OoidmSUI!,IO;lOp.m.

,....

....,..

Al TM Carrilr Dame

_ _,106,0.U..I4
· Dooailt06, LA ........ lot
Boooao 106, PooiloNII04
Solalolii0,-19
lndiMa 109, ....... 101

·-

Wlos....S.IIfto, N.C.
Cuo1iDo Ill, a- ....... 67

Alba&amp;. 10, S1.1ahn'• 74

NowY. . IU.S..-96
Qwloae 99. M'
M' 9l

,-..·~··•;-..!

lp.llll.

IWI(on!OI-..,, 7:40pm.
Bulfala" --·7:40p.m.
N.Y. Itanpl:t u ou.awa, 7~ p.m.
k. Lauil• VaDC~~M~Wif, 10:40 p-.

'

Toolgbt~s1ames

Old DornUuoa (lf· 7) a1 .MIAMI,

Pllllbouah
6, ... 4
a.icap 3, Tamp~ Bay 2
'

Mklwllt.DIY . . .
WLI'd.GI

Sunday•s score

....,_.._ WESI'YIRGIIIIA67

OHI0(2l·l)va.7:30p.m.
otlahonu (20.11) •• MiMei!Wi (ll-

z

WEsTERN CONFERENCE

In the NIT••.

Wuhinp:11 !li, San lou l
Dlt..:ir. 6, Kon ot• l
Wllllipca •. c~

Now Jeacy 3, Pllilodelphial

.~ ...,~I!&lt;M

Ohio Power will remove any
woricing, second refrigerntor
from your home, at no cost
10 you, and have il recycled.
We'll recycle lhechloroflu. orocarl:lons to help protect
the earth's ozone layer. Any
capacitors that contain PCBs
will be safely destroyed. Then
all the remaining metal will be
reprocess00 into new, useful
items. That's good for the
environment and good for
your wallet: :')00 could save
up 10 $100 a year on your energy bills.
l:
,.
Why is Ohio Power recycling refrigeratots? Hecause ,
the more inefficient refrigerators we take out of service,
the more environmental and financial benefits all of liS
will reap. We'Dconserve precious nann! resources.
And Ohio Power will be able 10 hold down operating
~.When we all use energy wisely, it helps us continue 10 keep your eleclric rates below the natioOal
average. So tum it olf...turn it in...and do a good turn.
Calll-800-2-TilRN IN.

n

Satunlay'J scores

Zi
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.216

:196234

__ ,........

,!7•
16

.317

9

26 10

~ 7t, Qo. VAll :11

.

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P-DI·Ioo

TW L TI'II,GrGA
, . . . . . _ ... 4S 21 6 M2f7 233

:;-!.£.,
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I'I.Y.......... 32 21 II 75 'ZI2 259
»

Ohio U.S. prll'
state Iitle pmea
ill ow a.a

· - -- ... 2S • ,. . . 231
..,._
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:15 ••
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17 :liS
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• :1141
........__ Jo1 27 II 1t 2f7 :151

...... _ _ :11 ... 5 47 :151 Sll
o.... ----· ' 5I '4 22 171 JJI

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
,._

W LTPto.GPOA
23 10 ,. :144 liOII
o-i ..._ ........ 40 'll 9 19 3:11' ISS
T - ·-····· 21 25 9 1.1 ISS :101
a.. Lsoio _ ...._ n 31 ' ' ' :146 ,.,
a . - -"\""' ..

'

f- · 1·-·
·--·ll21 47:12 S9

7S :M7 :161
41 ZIS275

BASELINE MOVE -Indiana's Calbert Cbeaney (40) makes his
move to the baseUne agalost Xavier's Tyrice Walker during Sun·
day's ·NCAA Midwest Regional first-round tournament game in
lodlallapolls, wberi tile Hoosiers woo 73-70. (AP)

Providence hands West
Virginia loss '68-67 in NIT
-

Saturday's action
. East Regional · '·
Wiastoa-Saleaf, N.C.
N. Carolina 112, Rhode Island 67
Nonh Carolina reached the final
16 for the 13th straight season by
posting the most lopsidelf win ever
in the second round. The top--seeded Tar Heels had too much size,
strength and tialance for Rhode
Island (19-11). Donald Williams
·led Nonh ·Carolina (30-4) with 17
points.
Arkansas 80, SL ;John's 74 .
Arkansas held St. John 's to one
field goal in the final 12 minutes
and ended tile game with a 24-8
run. Darrell Hawkins scored ·20
points and Scotty Thurman added
19 for the fourth-seeded Razor- .
bac~ (22-8).
.
Southeast Regional
Orlando, Fla.
Florida State !J4, Tulane 63
Sam Cassell hit all seven of his
3-point attempts and scored 31
points as Florida State (24 -9)
advanced to the final 16 for the
second eonsecuti ve season.
'
W. Kentucky 72, Setoa Hall 68
Terry Dehere had been Seton
Hall's go-to player·a11 season, but
when the Pirates tur)led to him in
the stretch ~aturday he came up
empty. Dehere missed back-to·
back 3-pointers and commiued two
costly turnovers ill the final min:·
utcs as the Pirates were upset.
Midwest Regional
Kansas 90, Brigbam Young 76
Rex Walters scored 28 points
and Kansas used a 10-0 run in the
second half to reac~ the regional
semifinals for the sixth time in I 0
years.

Providence's Tony Turner led
By RAY FORMANEK Jr •
aU
scorers with 17 pomts and set a
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) Friars
record for 3-point shOts in an
West Virginia owned the boards
NIT
game
with four. Smith finduring most of the second half in
ished
with
IS
points and Franklin
its second-round NIT loss to ProviWestern
had
10
points for Providence. It didn't get the most impor..
tantreliounds,·however. The Fnars' dence.
Greene
led
the
scoring
for West
Michael Smitll did.
Smith, who had a game-high 12 Virginia with 15 points. Ricky
·. rebounds; grabbed the ball after Robinson had 14, including 12 in
Phil Wilson's 6-foot ltoolc shot hit the second half, Mike Boyd scored
the rim with four seconds left in the 12andBaseyhad II.
game. .
"I saw no one was in front of
me ... so I was going to run as
much time off the clock as possi·
ble," Smith said Sunday after the
Friars defeated the Mountaineers
68-67.
' 'Then I was fouled and tllere
was one second left," he said.
Smith missed both free throws and
a last second fullcourt heave just
befoJC the buzzer came nowhere
near the baslr.et
The Friara face the winner of the
winner of Monday's Rice-Boston
Colle&amp;e game in a quarterfinals
contest either Wednesday or Thursday.
.
•
. In other gtiiiiCIItonlght, it's Old
Dominion at Miami, Ohio; Oklahoma at Minnesota; Clemson 11
Alabama-Bimingham; Soutllwest
Missouri· Stale at Jackson State;
and Pepperdlno. Soutbem Cal.
1'llci Moulltaimn (17-12) took
their ODiy lead at.67-M on two free
throws by Pervlres Greene wit~
l:IS left; Greene then fouled Dick-' ,
ey Simpkins, aad he went to· the
fOul line 1DC1 scaed two of his six
poinll with 50 seooads left for tlic
flnal
.
'
Tb~t (19· 11) led by as
many • 10 durinl the lllecOIIII ball, ' •• , •• 22 ,.,. 27 '
! 10''~ Quee,.,· i'Of e~ _,,!;' n•1~o~ O \IX&gt;".O'S of tn~ C:tltiO•fl" s Mtroc re t .etwo•k
but the Mountaincrn chipped IWI)'
1,..rethnt · .,, •r n. t "1t "' '"~ ~r O! hOSIJ•I O' i 101 cntldr•"
on Providence tuniovera and bas·
• .,.DO C"'ff" 'IW'I
lr.ets off olfcnaive rebounds.

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33 34 6
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l!dmool&amp;oio ........ 2!! o\2 I 51 217 295
San Jc.~~·······-· 10 61 2 22 190 360
a-diodlod ployolf-

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LA. t.at-...... - ..33
LA. Cl..- .... - ..32
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Rec}cle \bur Second Re~r
And He~ Keep This From Spoiling

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l'lli1ldo!f!hia ......... .2ll
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Chad Doerr and a free tllrow by ward was arrested Friday and
Jeff Collins. Loveland ended its charged with delinquency by reaseason at 18.7.
son of armed robbery, pollee said.
Michael Farrington scored tile He is aa:used In the theft of a stugame winning layup on his way to dent's athletic .iackeL
a total27 points m Campbell's win --Sports briers-over Orrville (18· 7). Orrville had
Aatorada•
led until Farrington's shot came
GAINESVILLE,
Fla. (AP) with 26 seconds remaining.
Eddie
Hill
recorded
his
5e(:OIId Top
Farrington ensured .the win by · Fuel victory of the season,
grabbing the rebound ·after Jamie Ed McCulloch in tile finalbeating
the
Snyder's 21-foot attempt bounced Motoreraft Gatomationals onofSunoff the rim with four seconds to go. day. Hill covered the quarter-mile
Trotwood-Madison (20-4)
in 4.879 seconda at 286.07
played Elder witboutleading scorer track
mph in the Pennzoil Special to
Carlos Blanton. The starting for- McCulloch's
4.865 aild 294.02.

Sco t·e hoard

EASTERN CONFERENCE
T-

~n.u...,. 20-5.

And Ketter1n1 Alter clinched
the .win over Loveland in the f1D81
12 seconds with 1 jumpsbot by

LAYUP TIME comes for Wake Forest's Rod·
oey Roaen (center) aa be 1oes for tw• or bll 33

'

cons pulled away in the fi nal
minute after ~ game was tight all
the way. Wilke Forest (21 -8),
which also got 25 points from Ran dolph Childress, made the fi nal Hi
for the fli"SI time since 1984.
- Keat:"eL!83, Utab 61
The topWildcats ran out
to a 27-8 lead and coasted thereafter, just as tlley've done in every
game for the past two weeks.
Phil Dixon, who scored 22
points in a fli"SI-round viciOry ·over
Pitt, went .scoreless for tile Utes. ·
Midwest Regional .
Indiana~
·
Indiana 73, Xamr (Obio) 70
Indiana was outscored from the
field, but got 12 of its final 16
points on foul shots and held off
Xavier (24-6). It was tile closest
margin of vjclllry b Indiana. since
1\ 74-73 win over Syracuse m tile
1987 title game. Calbert Cbeaney
had 23 points, including four
straight free tllrows in the fmal 30
seconds.
,
Louisville 71, Oklaboma St.63"
Two days lifter he was knocked
unconscious and wheeled off tile
coun on a stretcher, Louisville's
James Brewer came back and
helped knock out Oldahoma State.
Brewer scored 26 v.oints Sunday
and spalked Louisville from a 10point second-half defiCiL
West Regional
Tuscoa, Ariz.
George WasblagtOD 90
Soutbera 80
.
George Wnshington, playinJ in
the NCAAs for the fmt time Since
1961, scored tile lint 10 points and
led Ill the way. Somi Holland led
GW (21-8) with 19 points.
MimlJiaa 86, UCLA 84 (OT) '
Mich1gan (28-4) scored a disputed basket with 1.S seconds ~ft
111 overtime, completing a comeback from a 19-point deficit .
Jimmy King scored on a put-back
to give Michigan t11e .win, but tile
shot set off a controversy. UCLA
(22-11) coach Jim Harrick argued
tile. ball'didn't hit the rim ·before the
shot clock expired, even tllough
Jalen Rose shot it with one second .
on the 45-second clock. Harrick
mistakenly believed the shot clock
rule was changed several years ago
so that the ball had to hit the rim,
not just leave tile shooter's hand,
before the shot clock expired. Ae
· later acknowledged his mistake.

Pt ' J

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SALE :

MIDDUPORT'
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By The Beiid

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~• Lawson elected as
~ Dental Study Club
~ secre~/treasurer

II

Grandsqr,t wears ring proudly
Dear Au' I mJ1n1: A help of'
bravos to you for telling "TCirl in .

New •Officers . _ 6 • ' a a · cam ...,...., Slll:i:IJ ol Anestliesiolrecent meeting &lt;if 6re ~ 111\J, liN lk- American Dental
'• Wei J;)ental Stac!y
lla5 ~ and its component
: : its pwpose m ~ ' •••• 5IBIC :at bed Sllcieticli."She has
) ~hange •ideas. aad • e - . lias 5D'GI auAaimlan of National
' mWlication bctwecll, optsn Dill dU Oii'rkll"s lli:Diial Heallh Monlh in
~ J!.IilmOte the &lt;CicDta1 IJc:altla cf 6c GJiliia ~
) siJice, 1988,
f cilmmunity.
Dr. La-m p;ad'11ated from
1 " Elected 'Were Dr. J,_. .IR- OliD S.: 1JDivasity in 1978 ind
• gensen. Gallipolis. u•• · " 1111, ad ca~CIICIJ Stncs 001 the Board of
! Dr. Margie LIWII!III.
Guauws crJ Ollio State Dental
: :iary-IICISUfCI'.
.....- Socidl). Slit. was. with the
: . Tu-Endie-Wci,. willidlD! •liS l'dllii;P n• Sa1riiz:mxn 19'l9to
...-a.,
sa.. is a liead:start provider
• joining or •minifulg cf
: iic a dental Sillily dlib ia 1didl .,._ r. Jlcip Ccamr,y, 11 member of
• tists in Galli~, ~ D4 )kip 0. •FjM# i"" DJ~sia. Committee,
: Counties JIIK1iciplle.
..a a _...,..of lbe American
• . Dr.J01gu- tmoallllll' dl:la- 1l)r!m,MI Aw• ¥MP and its compo• tal dc!!= 'liom &lt;JIIioS.CUiioa- - - - n a l societies.
: sity in 198S &amp;1111 uq' ' lila'
Dr..
lias; 11 pl'ivare prac; post-cloctoml ·ttmiu.~: ill 1 5 ic uafu alc!'rpri!rayin.Racine.
• dentistty in 19.85 at 6c FM1
1k ct. ;p ll(.cmdy for the
; Dentai ·Cenlcr iD llo•"
, INL Y. Ta &amp;Miic Wei p o11p shi' year
• She inmembc:r cl:6eA iuw i*'h' Dr.W.Vargo, Ptriadon: Academy of the Peadlric Olea- lia,.llaf 3; Dr. Jefg~osen, fluo; tlslry, .the .111mcricu SaQcay or rid&amp;;. oa.. •• udl Dr.. Jackrit
,.. ::pentiscry for ·~ 6e "-0- ~ma1, omtllonathic

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Mondlly, March 22, 1993

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The Daily Sentinel

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~our Social Security
E;.::

BY iEDI'EJEMSOII'f

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Sodll.5«wM.- a ill •r
t1:·
._,.,.,_. If you ·~~Rca " • H

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' eH sinaarions aR
f« eumple,
liml someone to

-=·we.
-..,line
~::r~ .::;-=.:.diMa:!; :::::!z'::·:' ~=e~;

~idcz, ya. •

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. When the minister inslrUCted my
future husband to place the ring on
Sprin&amp;field' lbat it Qllkes no IIIIISe
my fmger, his !!est man IUI1lCd white
to bury • penon wilh jewelry on.
as a sh~t. For -some mysterioos
You lhcn WCIII a l&amp;e(J finher and
reason, the ring was not in his
told the man fl1lm White Plains it ·
pocket After wbat seemed like an
was ~ bad his father was lluried
ecemity, n!y father, who was
wearing his Malonic ring bcc•IF'
Slllldin(C behind me, took off his own
that ring would have . been a
ring and handed it to the best man.
cherished heirloom ·for a son,
I t - the Muonic ring that he had
grandson or nephew.
victims ·of floods, fires and worn filr ,..,._ My fiance put it on .
I always ldlniftld my gnndfatbcr's ,hurricanes. I hope you wiD print Ibis; · my fin.U: ;;d we were pionOin:ed
Masonic ring. He IOid II!C when I hm II years old.
·IIWIIIId wife.
was a teen-Iller that I would inherit
Riverside, Calif.: There were four
·
that ring one day, but fd have to girls in our family. I WIS the only
Dallas:· My father was' 1 Mason
•earn• it·· that it wasn't just a piece one who joined lob's DatJahlm. ·an for over 30 yCII'I. He died ~May
of jewelry. He passed away when 1 organizaticn for girls whose fathers ataae 92. My 2J-year-otd grandson
was 22.
were Masons. When Dad died, Mom went lhrough the lhree degrees of
I remembered my gnuldfather's tOOk his Masbnic ring and put it Maaonry this past fall ..On the njnht
words and became a Mason ,when I ·away. On my30thbinhday, she pvc
16''
was 30. years of ue. I ·am now it to inC. That ring means more to he ~ived his Maste~. Mason's
""
degm:, I was there to present io him
wearing his ring, which will go to me than anylhing I own.
my dad's Masonic ring. In a
my eldest son, but like me, he, roo,
WashiJl&amp;ton,-D.C.: More years ago MaiJonic ball 'fllled with men of all
will have to earn iL Thank you, ~n, than I eire io lelllember, I joined a
there
for re\living some wonderful sorority 11 Northwestern University. ~ .... ~ many t.Can as I
memories.- ROCHESTER,N.Y. · AgirlwhomldislikedintenSClywas .
u"' i'Ulg 011 bill finger. My
DEAR ROCHESTER: What a a sorority sister. The Iirsl week, she brother and I just know our dad
'
that
beam wilh• pride .to know
his
heartwarming letter. 1 lulve heard wore a pl1lf. .10f eamngs
.were wouldgrandson
h' .
15
from hundreds of Masons and their actually made out of two Masonic pat·
wearmg •• nng
relatives lhese past several days, and rings. My father was a Mason. and I , today.
·
each has a different story to sell. nearly flipped when I saw those ·
Read on:
emblems being used like COSIWIIe • FeeliPlg pressured to have sa?
Froin Chattanooga, Tenn.: I am jewelry. I told her She lurid no rigllt How we/1-ilrformed ore yow? Write
proud to be the daughter of a 3'3ro to desecrate .the emblem of~, for AM l.iu~Mrs' booklet :•sa tuJd
Degree Mason. My mother is a and we gotmto a hair-pulling fight. the Tum-ager." StPld a self·ad·
member of lhe Eastern Star. My two · She became extremely unpopular dressed, loPlg, bll.liMss·siu.eltvc/ope
brothers ~long to De Malay. The / because of th~t incident and tuJd a cllect or money order for
Masons raisJ! millions of dolla!s '£or transfemd to Oh10 State at lhe end $3.65 (1/Jis iiiCirules postag11 111Jd
llandlillg) to: Teens, c/o AM Lanhospitaliand have done a lot to help ofBthale.year. · I
married . 1969 ders, P.O. Bo" 11562. Chic11go, Ill.
tlmore. was
lR
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II was a beautiful wedding and I 60611-0562. (In Ct1n11da, send

,_I ·

worethe~ditionalgownandveu.

to minority students

Names in the news

(&amp;$)

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er at a public school. A non-minorLONDON (AP) - . Robert
ity may qualify if he or she teaches Downey Jr. and Emma Thompson
a significant nuJ!lber of minority were chosen as lhe year's best ftlm
students.
·
actors by tlie British Academy of
The purpose of the p1:0grarns is Film and Television Arts.
to stimulate interest among minori"Howards End," the Oscarty students in •scientific careers. nominated film Thompson starred
Appointment to the program is not 1 in, was . named best picture.
based on financial need.
•
·Downey won for his starring role in
Students or teachers interested "Chaplin."
in lhe laboratory programs should
Bolh actors also have been nomwrite to C8rol Blllm, Assistant Vice inated' for Adacemy Awards,
President for. Research, Office of
Supporting actor awards also
Research and Sponsored Programs, Went to two Oscar nominees: Gene
105 Research and Technology Cen- Haclcman for "Uriforgiven" and
ter, Ohio University, A~. Ohio Miranda Richardson fbr "Dam·
45701,2979. .
~:·~ . • ..
.
Students shOuld state the nam II; Robert Allfllan was named be~t
and location of their high scbool, diicc10r for "The Player." Woody
number of years of high school Allen's script for "Husbands and
completed by June 1993,.science Wives" ·Was named best screencourses completed and names of play. The Chinese film "Raise tlie
instructors for the courses, and the Red Lantern" was named best forminority group lhrough which they eign language film.
claim eligibility.
. Th.e Academy Aww:ds ceremoTeachers who wish 10 be con- ny w1ll be ~eld March 29. m Los
sidered should write to Blum and Angeles.
enciOliC a resume, a briefcover let,
' LOS ANGELES (AP)- Veter·
ter that summarizes their inlerest in
an
TV star Robert Conrad ls
the program and the minority gro':IP
putting
the fminshing touches on a
through which they claim eligibihhuge
family
compound he's been
ty.
.
building
since
1980.
The deadline for applications· is
Conrad,
who
stars in the CBS
May IS , 1993.
movi~ "Sworn 10 Vengeance" on
Tuesday, has nine children am! six
grandchildren. His 10,000-squarefoot family c.ompound near Lake
Tahoe includes a three-apartment
Lee Fisher, Sutton.
guest wing.
Clifford Manley, 1{1. Lot 124, to
"Building J)ennits have been a
Faye Manley, Midd. VUI.
way of life up here for .me,.but now
Clero M. Baker, dec'd, to Edi- we're, done," he said.
son M. Baker, Cert. of Trans .,
Conrad, 58, starred in the TV
Midd ViU.
series "The Wild, Wild West" and
Charles Alkire, Jean Alkire, "Baa Baa Blackshcep."
0.8719 A, S.ll, T-2N, R-12W, to
Suzanne B. Wolfe, Su110n.
NEW YORK (AP) - Boy
Betty Spencer, parcels, to Nor- George says when he told the
man Eugene Hysell, Patricia Ann world he took both male and
Hysell. Pom. Viii.
·
female lovers, he was making it all
Carl E. Bowens, Lot #29, to up.
Milford Bowens Sr.. Anna Mae
"I used to say I was bisexual,
Bowess, Portland.
which is a lie, and I felt really bad
Charles E. Collins, Pamela G. about it," the former Culture Club
Collins, parcels, to Allen T. Down- . lead singer says in this week's
ie, Janet B. Downie, Salisbury.
Newsweek.
"I've always wanted to be a
great songwriter, but a gay songwriter, who can write gay !ove
.
songs
thai n;ally affect people and
Attending · were Margaret make lhem
realize ·tliere is no difAmberger, Ella Osborne, Betty ference - love is love, pain is
Roush, Goldie Frederick, Laura pain," he said.
Mac Nice, Lora Damewood, JoAnn
· George, 31, returned to the
Baum, Mary Jo Barringer, Erma American
pop charts after a five·
Cleland, Ada Bissell, Faye year hiatus with the movie theme
Kirkhart, Mac McPeek, Esther song "The Crying Game."
Smitli, .Ruth Smith, Marcia Keller,
Ethel Orr, Sadie Trussell, Mary K.
PENTICI'ON, British Columbia
Holter, Betty Young, Elizabeth (AP)
- There were people waiting
Hayes, Jean Frederick.
and the town's local scribe was in

$4.4S.)

~ Planned Parenthood
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l.. welcomes new physician

The services Iii f'll• ' I'Mw- QpnueeefiiJ llmspitaJ! iD Oak Hill,
; ~ of Solltheast Ollio (fi'SIEO) SIIIe is Ul :J'I!I~"fak:d with Meigs
: in Meigs Coullly mra .ay line a BrnOIJi Sa &amp;iatsimfUnmly.
Dr.. Bell~ llell medical
" &amp;new Jocarion ll .li09 S. 1liinl SL ill
ill
•
• z alk lli · cnir,y of Wis~iddlcport. bui alto a - (IIJ)siSdoo~ i~ 1986.
~.~
_. u. •• No• tieal
I a
~
reside ncyiD
'
z
t:" These a dd11lOII'S
on·u ..
-..p . SIIE
~ PPSEO meet dieaiiiCelbi _ . faail.t ('Mi li eflr:n:..
,
Sill!: a a w ,., of tlie Ameri• expand t he ·numbec of ~
' served. The family p'1•1 - c _ . CIIAI •' ) Iii filmil)'l Pl\~sicians
llllllll is ~fiedl i~ (amily
:, moved from illomCNy lit Mid •
» · c Bdhl111 llill'dS a&gt; bachelor
~ port several monihs ~
_
Kilox College
'; Tracy BeD, M.D. bepa .......... cf aa A p
llflaN.
.
ing medical services a IPPSB) •
PPSEO IUs prov rd'edi fami Iy
March2.
l;..;: Clinical services jpc1m!r a-- I'" ~ z wwitts 1D lfle residents
:-;iological •e xBllliuti..s. Pq cfllr:ip~ filr oves 2~ years.
' .onears, tests and .~ e 1 en' liar sa- ('limjcaJ atliuly is; upected to
ually transmiuecl diseascs_Jil' £
iM
•• .500 dli:nts in the
. Gy confirmation ~ _. 4 • z ,ar. "'=e hlersoo is the
l ~ption met,!lods d bidll- ~ 1 oiu Ill tl'lt Middleport

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Compiled by:
Emmogene Hamilton
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Ora Cook, dec'd, affid,. to Margaret Crawford , James Luther
Cook, Orange.
Mary J. Munay, 30 A., to James
M . Kelley, Mary A. Kelley,
Orange.
Vern T. Bailey, Dana M. Bailey,
parcels, S.23, 1D Ronald E. Jarrell,.
Meigs.
Alexander Couladis, parcels, to
John D. Riebel, Jr., John D. Riebel,
Sr., Chester.
~anne Sue Fisher, fka, Clark,
parcel, T·2N , R-12 W, to Ralph

News notes
Secretary of State William Jen-

nings Bryan resigned in 1915 in a
~ment over U.S. handling of
lhe sinking of lhe Lusitania

5

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Harrisonville news
Paul Anderson, who fell and
broke his hip on snow has been
re turn~ to his home and is slowly
1mprovmg.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hewitt,
Columbus, called on Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Alkire Tuesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Lanny Longstreth
sold their home and bought' and
moved .IQ the former Larry Haynes
property in Langsville. ·

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"Pecuniary" comes .from the Latin
word "pecus,• meaning cattle, be·
cause cattle were once used In place
or currency.
r

Do you

I certify thla report to ba
correct and lruo to lila ball
of my ki\Owladga.
March II, 11113
Karan R. Smith, C1ork
P. 0 . Box46
Cheater, Ohio 45720

who went to be with
JtBUI 3 y..rs ago
today March 22,
1990 '
,Memories Are Alii
1114·115-3512
Have of You ·
(3) 22, 1tc
I ·remember
doesn't
anyone
2
In Memory
elae? No one will
even mention hie
name.
l!'f'Lovlng Memory ·or
as If he never
JnmyRay .
axlsted at all, And
.Guinther
PubliC Notice
Notice
it's driving me
who paaaed away
March 22,11180
ln11ne. , . .
lntargovommenlal
Recolpl&amp; .... _..,_.... 84,71111.64 . The laughter baa left IStnelly In hla 12 years
ln-1...-...........-.. 2,282.47
my lifo. Thl music
He
brought '
AIIOihw
Is gone from my
somebody hope
Revenue ........-..... aa,7115.81
TOTAL
cheer,
eoul. The .de!lth of
lellol Copy No. fl3 235
RECEIPTS .......... 186,10&amp;.DI
my
only
cl!lld
H
..
And
If you'd let 1111
UNit PRICE CONTRACT EXPENDITURE
Bellied p1opoaola wHI ba DISBURSEI.ENTS:
exacted a terrible
show you, I can
recWved Ill the office oltho Ge-ol
toll.
of .him without
Dl,ctor of tha Ohio Govom1Mf11........ 311,571.34
Dapaiimanl of Tr.,.. Public Sltlely ........ 16,$75.41 What Is eMentlalto ·
.shedding a t11r.
portaUon, Columbua, 'Oillo, .Public
·
my bllng,My loving,
You say It makes
until 10:00 A.M., Ohio ·Worke ................- 67,012.72
enU!IIIIy
little
boy:!
·
you
· Standard Tlma, T-day, Health ...-..............~ 16,271.66
have bHn deprived
.
Tu•~.llar!lh 30, 11113, for C.ptlol
You don't know
ouaaiy................411,jl17.aa
lmp-•taln:
of. Vat I CI'IIV8 what I
to
handle the pain?
Athena, Malga, llortan, TOTAL DI~SE·
can't
enjoy
•
.
Noble Countlea, Ohio for MENTS-.......-.$186,214.~
So. you just avoid
Improving Btructuro"Noa. Total Receipla Over/ '
What I wouldn't give
whole l11u• I wish
ATH-1,_ on Stat. Route (Under) Dlab. - .......... 611.&amp;2
,
For
one
of
his
could
do the same!
13, Sacllon .D.D4, Amsso- OthwSourctel
bright lll!'lllesl What
0012, on Stale Route 550, Rei:eip11.-......... _, __ 22$.00
You're afraid if
Section 0.52, ATH-3~ ToW 0..., Fln.noing
I wouldn't do To
talk that I juat miGJhtl
on SIIJIIJ Roulo 321, Section Sour- (Una).....-.225.00
hold him for a
ery, ,And you'd
3.86, ATH·61t·D215, on Total of R... I Other
whllel
state .Rotito 612, Saellon Fln.noing Sourc.'OvW
guilty and want
2.1&amp;, IIEG-7-oseo on State (Under)Dlab.l
I pine to hear his
run and hld\11.
Route 7, Sacllon 5.10, IIRG- Other U.•--·-----•16.62
aweotlaugh To fall
555-2301 on SIIJIIJ Route Fund Cuh Boilet me 1hanl
Jotn.1,11112-...... 86,139.13
his band In rillnel To
~55, Saellon 23.01, ·and
thla with yo~,
NOB-210·9117 on Stale Fund'CuhiWRout. 210, lootlon 1.17 by Dec. 31,11112 ... -.64,055.75
please. Do not
,around my neck
overlaying dacka .with NON-EXPENDABLE
thti
teara.
'mlcro-alllca modified TRUST FUNDS
· would ba porfoctty
meaharsthe
concrete and p•rformlng RECEIPTS:
ratatadwork.
· 1 - 1.........- ........... 305.00 · dlvlnel
of · him,
My
"Tha data aat lor Total Receip11 .......- ...305.00 I long to ... his
Ionellneaa,
comrtotlon of thlo work DIBBURSEioE~:
p111cloua flea, To
ahal ba • eat fotlh In tha Total Dilbun8!11WI11..-..:-00
fear
a.
t.ermywiH
Total R.aeip11 Over/
bl' ... propoaol.. •
you love me,Iat
"'-• and Spaclflcallona (Under! Dlelt.- ....,.-305.00
ehlld's vlewa, To
·
love him, For I'm
.,. on
In a. Dip buoont Tolal ofR... ....tOiher
fHl his frequent
of Tranapol'tallon and tha s..ur- Over (Under)
granny
atlll,
hugs and ldsHe, To
. ollloe of the Dlatrlct DapiJ!Y Dlab.WidOther
u.. ...... ___ .......-.305.00 aha,. the I Love ·
if you do not
DII'ICtoro '
JERRYWRAY, Fund Coolh Bolinoa
me free, Then
You's.
Director of Tr•apoNtlon hn. 1, 11112------1.304.16
my memorlea
(3) 18, 22, 2tc
.
Fund Coolh Bol•ce
Bull can't do thea•
Dec. 31,11112 .......-3,801.1&amp;
kill.
anymo,. Except In
FundCuh
PubliC Notice
will alwaya
memories The
BoiWioa .....-...- .... 67,664.91
'
with us In our he11rll
DapoaiiCII}'
conatant hunger In
ANAHaAL REPORT OF
BIIIMce ••••• - ........ 14,864.1.1
and
thoughtl Jed,
TOWNMPS
lnvntman11----·-·3,000.00 . my aoull C.nn~t
'·For Flaeal V.. Enclng
we love you and
TotaiT,..ury
appoaH.
Dlc1n..,a1,1•
·
&amp;.!•oa.,
.......
....
&amp;7,6114.111
mlea , ·you .. ·vary
I miM you very much
CHESTER TOWNStiP
Laaa Ou11tlndlng
COUNTY OF IEIOI
Rllk.
much.
~ ...- .... \---····..o. . Gr..,ny &amp; PaPal
TOTAL
Love Mom
Flnanolol flaDM"

IS A.
WANT AD

I•

""*·-.. . . .

St I"I•RY OF' CASH

BALANCE~
AND l!lC
s·
IJOVIIINIIENTAL FtJNDa

AEWNue RI!CEIPTI:
T-·------71M.1a

uu....,,....
.... ~-- -..,-1,221.00
.'
1 c.id of Thanks '

· BAI.ANCE.---17,614.11
IIUI•'ARY OF
. INDEBt EDHEII

Oulaiulug

'· .

Outalanclng

difference.
•Minimum 50 Cetane
•Low ash and sulfur
•Will not gel In winter time . .
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 16TH thru MAY 31ST
Special Iarm Ierma with payment 4 lime• a year
and NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARG.E.
Larry E. Miller
1-800-598-5654
614 446 1157

The family '
Drew
S111·ith
expresses gratitude
to Fisher Funeral
Home for their
excellent service
duri~g our recent
loss.
.
· Your
service
exfCnded far bcy_ond
call of duty.

YOUNG'S

. Quality
· Stone Co~

SIZED LIMESTONE •.
FOR SAlE .
Call 614·992· ·

. .~••tj••2:

71t3

The prophet Mohammed died in
A.D.632
I
Artist Paul Gauguin was·bom in
1843
The first drive-in movie theater
opened in 1933 in Camden, NJ.

PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE
DO'J,'J'JCO

NEW USllNG- Grant SL· Middleport: 2 story
frame hojne wkh 3 bedrooml, new bath.. new
kkchen, new wiring, new eleelrie heat pump w~h
central air, . fireplace, atlic ·apace, cable haok1Jp,

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

approx. 1 11Cf8 $55,000

INSURANCE
1l1 Second Sty Po11eroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS ,COUNTY
· , SINCE 1868

have rental property?

.

·

NEW USTIHG- Su1111181' ftd.: Ponroy:
Brickllrame apiM foyer home 4 bedrooms, 2 batha,
new carpet I vinyl flooring, new heat pump and
central u, 2 deckl, f~rep!Ke, cellar, IIIOrlliJe
building, aeeurity lights, 2 car garage, very nice
landacaplng. 1.485 IICre $89,500

.

IN POMEROY
8:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad~ for 1

PAGEVILLE· 24.93 IICIN in the country with
electric and wator wei on aMt Includes large IIHI
building with 011111111 fbar &amp; loundatlon. Immediate
po"IUiolll Aaltlftg .,1,1100 Owner wante to 1111
no rHIOnabte olflr r.tultldl

. FRE card.

Lie. No. 0051·32

'

$40.00 • LHII

Dellwered.

(6141 HJ-1449

Hours: 9:00-8:00 Monday-Friday, Saturday 9:00.5:00

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
36970 Bal Rtl Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

SIZED UMESTONE

IISSILL

-

.

'

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAYAnNG
(614)

--Card

Sha~e Riv~r Sadcle ShopCUSTOM SADDLES1
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Jeanie Howell, EA
. NOTARY
3/111 mo.

•DOZERS ·
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

1e

1

'

.'

36358 SR 7

Cheater, Oh. 45720
985--3406

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIC. ·.
New Homes • VInyl Slclng ·
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL 1111d RESIDEN'nAL

667-6628
:1-1-113 1· mo.

FREE ESTIMATES ·

•

614·992·7643

UCINE GUN
CLUI ·
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

(lolellflayCella)

211Vt2Mn

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAI.)GE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

2 Fro•t Strwts • L.. er
• 4 ........, . _ ,
Prieta Start•.. •
1129.95 + T•x

R&amp;C IICAYITIHI
BULLDOJING
PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
. QASEMENTS •
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmeetone,

IEYII'S UWI
MAIN111AICI

..
.... .

Dirt. GriYII and Coal

949·2Jtlw ~
1·100.U7·1460'

LICENSED ond BONDED

PH. 614~992:5591

,..~·
..... w ......'

12-5-tfn

,

81vu11Wid1Na'IIL a&gt;g
I Aa:eault

A1aociatlon,la
lOOking for current
l!ddras~ll of Melga
gradual. . for April
mailing for Alumni
Dance on
May 28, 1t93.
Mall addrs- to
Melga Alumni
Aaaocllltlon, P. O.
Box 25( MiddlepOrt,
Ohlo45780 1

1211111211tn
I' it

VIae ..

A If M&amp; Cl II

Frwf

Ill

7
•

.....

FJ11EW000 FOR BALE

3:11·93

&amp; lUBE

911·4473
667-6179

Quarterly and
Year:end Reports
REASONABLE
RATES

JeH Wkk,.sltall

.

•n

HOWELl'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; TAl SERVICE

•regardless of iucome
'regardless of grades
'pljJS $20k guaranleed loan
'regardless of crecM
To collect your acholanhlp. monay
call 614 985:3556
Opan M911.-Frl. 1~7 or Sat. 1G-4

OWNER:

COIISTIUCTION

aCe

.

992-3470

.........
=.•.=:......... ....,...........

f
FOR SAlE '

-DWOOD

'

v .

3-4-93- 1

12·30-92-111

IUY • SEU • TUIE
317 N. 2114 St,
· Mltltlleport, Ohio
Moll.•frl, I 0100·5:00
S.ttlrtlay 10100.6t00
Cloud ltllfldt·
tU4577

Guaranteed Scholarship Money
for all college bound studenti . ....

JOE II. SAYRE
SAYRE ,
614·742·2138

USED RAILROAD TIES

EAGLES
CLUB

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
Wid TRACKHOE WORK

Rates ·

992-2269 '

THE BOOK
BARN

EXCAVATING .

' ltGIOiable

We will NOW serve children

EVERY THURSDAY

MIDDLEPORT, 1 floor ffi!M &amp; vinyl home whh 5
rooma, 2 bedrooma, bath, on twO 1o11, IOtTI8 new
wirl!lll I t~blng. Clolo to shopping , and
pharmacy.
lNG $18,000 owner may ac::cept
reaaonabll otler. .

WE NEED LBIINC181 OIVI US A CALL TOD,lY
II' YOU ARIIN1IREITID .. •• ' 1101

618 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OHI 45769
992-6674

l.MESTOHE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL

BILL SLACK

BINGO .

POJafiOY· 01~ arne BL- lftDOr lr1tn1 home with
3 bedrooma. bltlh. full flnllhad baHmlllt. on 1at ol
100 x 1110. ASICINCUIO,OOO ·
•

AmeriCa's Tcu: Team

HAULING

......, •• tlte op..l•l of tlteir
lafalt/T041dler Protrailll
· 6._m9riths to 12 years of age.
Call us fo!' rno111 inforrn11lon
(614) 992-7328

Box 119
· Middleport, Oltio 45760
(614) 143·5264

HOWARD

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

514 NorJII - . I A Midclltport. Ohio 45760

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • A...t •

.._915·3511

TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Gingerbread-"ouse

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

992~5335er

'1122/1 1mo.

G1lllpolle

614·446 ·0736

14116tate Rt. 7

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE •1111 •
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMNIY

lEN'S "'t.ANCE
SERVICE ·

SCA Wolta Bed
15 Session $25
Depot St., Rutland
742-31.90
• Call for
Appointment

,., ,.._
IODIIII·1-1 RIDE

Addl8on.. Turn off St. AI. 7 onlo

lll'IIIIES .
lrl~lli Or We

MYSIIQl1E
TANNING

WoAIIo-

ApproJI . 4 mUte Nofth of O.IHpolta
and 4 ml'"- South of ChfthiN to

••dVCR REPAIR

NOW OPEN

AutprRntals
SprfntTfmc
Sp•efal

Mondly-Frida~:00-5:00
Cofrc&gt;ultrizod ESiiiNIII,
. WOO!, lnl. WOO!
We~ome. Fi&gt;trGiass W011&lt;, Coft1ollteRaptiilg&amp;
. Ralinishing, Frame Sllliglllltli"', c-.
San&lt;i&gt;lalling, Martin Slnour M~ong SY*n

MICROWAVI OVEN

3: 16-e3-tfn

6 .. .....

Extwlor
Paintiftll
. (FREE ESTIMATt;S)

P-oy,Ohlo

UCIIIE, OHIO
.

and Plumbing

Cllesllin,OH.

St.Rt.7 ·

949-2168

'Church, Home, Tntck, Boat, Auto.
and Ofl(ce Seating.

Addllona

V•.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 .

FREE ESTIMATES

"Helping You to Rocover Your lnvtstnumt''.

CARPENTER SERVICE

6637

Gutters
Downapout1
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

SnOdgrass Upholste_.y

U46AMU.II .... •Gdlr.,•llt,•416· ·

Addl•on Pike. Body 8hop appfox. 2
mlln of'l right.

NEW-REPAIR

·~ ·

1 cant of Thllnlll

.IAJUll''S BO.Dl' SHOP :
4146 6644
1·100~926·2022 (OW. Olilrt

FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YOU.
•BP Diesel Supreme..;Try it, thersls a

ROOFING

IP

Ji!DW OI'DP.

367~7444.

na~ SUP~ lOR

Hown L Wrltesel

Jotn. 1, 11112--H,IA •
,._.
luu•--"..12,000 00
Re1Jred_ ..:,____ 12,137.50 r-.;:;;;::

POIEROY- IDr!nll AVI.· 1 floor frame home 2
bedroome, N.G.F.A: ~uti bailment will utility and
gar~ge. ~ cebll hook-up; llllc ~­
$18,1100

q

GOOD SDIICE IS
ODGOAL

o...,

' French author George Sand dieCI
in 1896
The first parliament in Northern
Ireland was seated in 1921

·

Jeremy Guinther

Dec. 31; 11112 _..... 4~,12UI

The U.S. Sup1e111e Court ruled
in I953 lhat resJ&amp;urants in lhc District of Columbia could not refuSe
to serve blacks

D of A members meet ·

Past Councilors' Club of
Chester Council No. 323, Daughters of America, met rcc en~y at the
home of Esther Smith with Ruth
Smith, co-hostess.
Laura Mac Nice presided. She
read
from Psalm 136. The Lord' s
uD&amp;
Prayer
and Pledge of Allegiance
· Or. Bell came to PPSI3D rw. l'l'5B) is a plivare non-profit were given
in unison . Member
Spectrum· Emerce11ey Suo:iccs •&amp; .. •••• SC'niAI ov:et· 7000
answered
roll call by telling their
tjlroucb wllicll s'be wGbA • • l i ,a ,._ ill • ciglll Cllunty
Aoctins Val~y Clonn:naJiily Uas- - . Olu'I'I'S£0 sa:vi=·sites are maiden name . Off1cers reports
were given by JoAnn Baum. secrep~tal in Lolui ·aud l&amp;l 011t Pill .......,. ill Atku. Gallipolis,
0
1 7e., lad-., Cl\illicothe tary, and Goldie Frederick, treasurer.
-"
0
It was reponed that some mem.All
5 • _. teferraheJiVices
paowidtd IIJ PPSEO are. strictly bers were sick with colds and flu.
The next meeting will be April
...... 4W a.d aR: available to
• ; • wlla,...adlnccds them. 14. Members arc to wear Easter
• 1 7 ' " ll:ardl rdlwatioo1and bonnets or something pertaining to
Easter and bring Easter poems or
.atjcaJ DR aae: p"o"rcfed to
r. 7 • _. aarn and! fees are readings.
Poems read were: "Old Folks
. . . . . . 5 5 s: ICIIt. AIIOilyGIOUI
Are
Worth a Fonune" by Ella
1DY- a.d •
pro· Osborne;
"Life Is a .One Way
'liiEI:dllJfl'SB)•ils
.s.te.
lklllr:ipQ )' I'PSEO CUn- Street" by Laura Mae Nice; "Old
Times Past" by Sadie Trussell; "I
ic81J'h:•
•••992-59I2.
Have Noticed" by Esther Smith.
Games were conducted by Elizabeth
Hayes, Ada Bissell and Jean
'lile Sollwia U.kllt illl Nooth Africa
Frederick.
..._
is lbllliiFI aii!Hllt illlll\e world; its
Door
prizes
were
won
by
Faye
.. , _ ~ lill 311001miles from
Kirkhart and Jean Frederick.
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses.

... THE BEST

In Loving Memory

Ill•

the hairdresser's chair, but they all
siepped aside so former President
Bush could get a badly needed
trim.
.
"I already had three customers ·
waiting, but ... how are you going
to say no 10 the president of the
United States?" said salon owner
Sheila Watkins~
'
In town to give· a spoech, Bush
told Watkins sbe was the firsi to .
cut his hair since he left the White
HoUse in January.
Margaret&amp;yes, who publishes
a weekly newspaper, found herself
on the cutting edge of local jQumalism when she ga~e ,her chair to
Bush oh March 12. She"had:to .wait
for her haircut to resume, but she
got a great story.
And what do you chai about
with a former world leader?: ' 1
"That's what I was thinking,
too," said Watkins. "But he was
very pleasant. very cordial. He just
sat down like any·other touris~ and
aslced about Pentieton.''

Land transfers posted

•

&lt;I

Ann
Landers

• h lpS
• 011ere
"
d
Apprent ICeS

fiL , _ I • ; • a d-anployed
• s6e ..-w. If JIM ue iOJ doubt
t:•ymcnt of $'«iil Suailt _, ....
7 loll water, yilu
~· IDeS I« daL $1 _ ·
"!' " I &amp;II _Re,_enue Ser- Apprenticeships in the labs of
~e bousebGI4 wodrzr ss ,_- TIICC
,.bllnbon · 926, biomedical research scientists and
t:tinpiOyee lllil ,.. 'T s' ;
y_, t« Household health professionals at Ohio Uni- ..(or payi111 lbe uus. Olla .-s F : ' ;u,..• a.d 937, "Empl~y- Versity are being offered this sum' the household lldp is sdf- Tacs udl IafoiJlllallon m~r to high school juniors and
: t;nployed or~ ilr a ·
.,. •• - ~ last palllK:ation seniors and a minority teacher.
! ·In that CiSC, dley. « 6e
.......,lips .... llclp yov decide
Minority students with an inter! must pay the IDCL
.. al •
• - • peuw is your est in science, as demonstrated by
t . lfyoubRu • · •-*ill
jP; L
their high school course record, ·
' your home me pc:ma is
u, - W.lla' ,. glk iRSpublica- will be given ·preference in the
youremployceif:
a-..,-dM: &amp;mR" .o fthe . selection process for eight to 10
the per1011 daies- woad:. ilr • ''*'s
JGI 'caD file form student lab positions funded
! anyone eiJc;
SS-IwillllkltS...tdie IRS·will through a National Institutes of
•
• you coatrolbw Ilk p
1111 •
if de JCU0111 is. your Health grant. Students will work
l doeS the wade;
zl ;e • d.-plo.ycd. If the full-time and be paid at the federal
. { rial~:oo proVide lbe . . . or-is ,. ~pin~~oO:V~~· $4.25 an. hour, for
1 • • you pay ;aa ~!Chilly ar D1J
ad, , _ - w 4
filr (IIJiilg
Nlli has also proVided funding
• -wage,
Sacii1 Sa:aily lUes llw equal to pay a teacber-aJll?llllltice from a
!;-""' There .a~e two sifnliqn ill 7.65 pea ll af lis ar licr wages. minority public h1gh school about
I• which JOil d r !yare· Yea
1~6S pcn:c:11t $500 a week for 10 weeks.
., bfe ·for payil1&amp; uxa; far,.-h
liar t: . (Aqee"s: Sacfall S«urity
All applicants must be U.S. citir hold wodtcr.
• •.
1ha .co libo UliClD· zens or have pennanent visas. Stu!! ~lfthewo~IM •
· - - IOUiei's.com· dentsandteacherseligibleare
I"' agency and isn't
fimd, •
1 •iitw
•
- .must be those identifying themselves as
paiddireclly~,..,-*ililllc plliil_il,.- •"*t malin over a black, Hispamc, Al:nerican Indian,
agcncy"s ~a:.-:,-.. a.d w
Aad you m~ JIIY Alaskan native, Pacifte Islander or
~ the agency u A-q• •
liar..,... 5IBIC aa;s as well €Use .lh•s last Asian.
ll ingthetaxa
il,..-SIIO: a:q!liRS such
High"school applicants must
~ , •lfthepc:~-llll liis-)
have been enrolled during the
~ pany, adverlises, M!ldl:s liar a;
To h:lp JDW PJ' lbcse taxes, 1992-93 school year and may
" who needs mc ~ ~1 lis
94ll'. "Empl~er's either .be graduatinj! this spring or
I: ~ tools or ,~ ldis ,_ ·Q Kdy Taltcblm for, House- have completed thetr junior year.
!-'..When -he .can &lt;do die .at.._. iii ..., F I j • rial contains all
The teacher-apprenticeship pro)-paid a fixed arnOIIlll for a jail ,a- de liw.s a hi -bnlifl employer gram is open to any minority teach• formed rath« iJ11D • lady._, -*•liiiL YIIIIC. &amp;~=tlbc. pack·
: he is usually • -Mrp ' 4 ma- ••6ep.IE ati'Qns liycalling
; triCtor and ~ fiW f&amp;Ji:c IRS a 7.11BQLJ616..
'' k -

:::SOCW $eQuity ilawh

'

. Public Notice

· SUMER

·WE DO ROOFING

IMAGEs··

2 ..... - llyull

........ OH
Rt. 124
12 SIIIIHI $20

16 Sllslo•• $25

992·2417
. 3 U3-1

•

AND EYEmiiNG UNDDIU11

TR

.

20 Ye~rs Ezp.

BUILDERS...
•

�•

Pomero~lddleport,

SNAFU® ~y B111te Beattie

32 Mobile HOIMI
forS.Ie

Ohio

·Monday, flllch 22, 1tt;J

Apal1ment
for Rent

44

•

l"

•

The Dallv

Ohio

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

hOlM

4110re

37 Pigpen IOUIId
39 Slrllll-"

CCM~~~Mienl

I I02,Rom1n

42 -llljor
(constef.
filion)
43 Alnong
4-4 Crowds

12 Juzl)la,er

lllrlo-

.

.KQ 1013
.KIOI75S
to\5

==~=:-=
~=----""•::.-::! ...

46CIIorl0gl..
pher-AIIeJ
46 Glwon lo

t.en.r ot
..........
,
52 PeriOtllnorl

51

nllllical

EAST

23 IOr-gOJI
27 Tolmol1

.J5

~

14 Hotel
15Ttnlfttt
17 TIIPMirJ
18 VtniiiiiH

.20 ru-In
Belgium
21 lroldWIJ

-.-

flnli.l1t-ltll .......... .

.-::;::-...-:

a.u.n

• J62
tH2
• AQ6S2

29!~

.......

54 TV't-

30 Aii.rileuwe

57 Econ.

lndlciiOI

32 Anolller limo
34 Actor'• llgnal
35 IIH. olllcer

+10 9 3

·~·4

10o11 chltur

55Dnn
IIOdde..
58 818CIItmllh

WOld
31 Folld du -.
Wit.

SOUTH
.o\971
.AH

2 Exlat
3 Aclll'l
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Vu?nerable: East-West
Dealer: South

Bualness
Opportunity

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I WONDER IF IT'S AN
OMEN T~AT WE'RE 601N6
TO LOSE TI-lE FIRST 6AME
OF TI-lE SEASON ...

THAT'S RIDICVLOI!S!
WE'RE 601N6ltl WIN!
I DON'T BELIEVE
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,This week let's look at different cities around the country, st;lrting with
York.
~~1ohatttan means . different things
to different people: to Cynthia Heimel,
it is a combat zone; to James Cameron, the finest three-day town oo earth;
Christopber Mooley, the natioo's
6UT TI-IEV
MAVBE IT WAS I to
thyroid g?and; to Ogden Nash, the city
SOUNDED
AN OMEN TI-IAT
opportunity.
SO EE~IE .. WE'RE 601N6 TO
P.G. Wodeholl!l! felt that if you
threw a brick from a window of the
LOSE 1liE SECOND
Sheridan Apartmeet HOUle in the Jlo.
6AME OFT~E
hemian section of the city, you would
SEASON ..
be certain to brain some riiiDII interior decorator. some Vorticisl sculptor
or a writer of revolutionary l'l!rs Iibre.
Well, today if you threw a brick across
tfle floor of the Stock Excllanp, you
wolild probably brain a bridp player.
One of the Wall Street experts is
Jim Krekorian, who played today's
deal en route to victory in last year's
Grand National Pairs with Rick
Zucker.
·
Zucker's
cue-bid
of
two
diamonds
IT'S MAI&gt;f
shOwed a major two-suiter. With a
good fit and both major-suit aces, Kre;,yfTM
korian took a shot at 1ame. This persuaded Zucker to head toward a slam
with a five-diamond cue-bid.
·
.
After a club lead, making the slam
was no problem. But as it was a
event, collecting every trick wu
KrekOtlan iilffed the clull ' 1....1. ln"l"
the dummy, drew trumps and cashed
the heart king. When the queen fell
from West, declarer went with the
oclds, playing a heart to his nine. II
won, so Krekorian claimed aJi over- '
~
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Tbe IStb trick tlll'lled an overtrick.
WW;, t.ET~ ~ ...()1, IOIOO!FUl
average result into a top.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Dizzy Gllleople led the way far genntlonl or:;:
mullc:llna wt1o come to thl1 city." - (New Yort&lt; mayor) David Dlnldno. ~

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60 FAR, I'VE ONI...Y

15 'ltXJEiHER 'THAN I "Tl--al6HT.

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AND I'M AI..READ'( UP
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YE5TE!FU:IA.Y.

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OUR LANGUAGE

Q. Is there a term for the end of a
speech? I know I've heard one used.
WRITIN9MYA~Y

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LIZAHJA.

By Jeffrey McQuain
EXtreme paleness or lack of color is
PALLOR '( "PAL-ur "l: "We were
shocked at the patient's pallor." Any
spelling of this noun without a dou·
bled L is a. pale imitation of PALLOR.

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Want to: .
PIN ctonn EXTRA.

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A. The term that you probably want
is PERORATION. Pronounced "PERur·ay-shun," this noun is based on
ORATION ( "speech") and refers to
lhe concludintl section of a speech,
particularly when the ·words build to
a slrong finish . The noun, first used
in the !Sth century, comei from a
Latin term meaning "to complete a
long lalk or discourse," and that
ending is the PERORATION.

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A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
'1:1'. THESE SQUARES

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TO GET ANSWER

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SCRAM-I.m ANSWERS

Doling - Quest • Yours • Rotten - USED to IT ,
"Your son has madtt good progress with his violin,'
the music leather told ttie parents. "'h good,' sighed
the father, "I thought we hild just golten 'USED to IT I"

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CLASSIFIEOS

IWIL

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SliVERS.•••

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TIIIPA• •IDI

Turn your clutter into ca.h,
Sdl it the eau way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
PWce yqur claujfied ad tqday!
15 ll!Ord. or leu, 3 dan,
3 .vapea, 15.40 paid iA advance.

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AUC'T10H 1 I'UIIIITUIIE. a
Ollw •• ClollpoiL - I Ueod
hlmllon, - . W.U""' I
WcNil-._114-44W1a

By GARY LARSON

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ASTRO·GRAPH

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'Birthday

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15~----------------G.Wpolll DaOy Tribuae
446-2342
Pomeroy DaUy Sendael
992-2156

Ill b 5 4S:IIii'ID ,_.lb dllliU? peycha?ogy,
Pn?Dv'i lri!Ajloii?IIIIM -ID ring I belllnd
?tlecloiiD 8lildc Frald'1 Cit.
Iv

year. Send for Aries' Astro·Graph predic· you've been holding.
tions today. Mail$1 .25 plus a long, sell· LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Conditlono thai
addressed , stamped envelope to Astro- affoct your career or,financea are moving in
Graph , clo lhis newspaper . P.O. Bo• your lavor today. This could lead you to
91428, Cleveland , OH 4410t -3428 . Be make an adjustmenl which might prove
BERNICE
surelo stale your zodiac sign.
advaniiiQOOUS.
TAURUS
(APfll
:ZO.Ihy
20)
Fulfillment
is
SCORIIIO
(Oct. 24-~. 22) Knowledge
BEDEOSOL possible loday in a aituallon Where you and and ••perlence
are your allloo loday. II
your male share lhe same ·hopes and somelhing has you alymled, unlock the
eKpeclations .. Pull togoth•r until you are doorto lhe. peal and search lor a similar
able to produca lheresulls you dHire.
elCP'rlence lo gu~ you.
OE- (lhy 21..tune 20) Do not deviala SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Sitting
from or alter your ambitious objectives down illtllalriend you 0111 conlide In could
'today ol you lee! lhey are ca•lully'plannad . be utremely beneficial lor YO&lt;J todly .
and woffhy of eKOCUiing. Victory to 'I)Urer Ve..._b,. lna~tl f!\lghl be gained lrom a
••
lhan yQ11 might lhink. '
!rank IIICUIIIon.
CANCIR (.U. 21-.luiJ U) YO&lt;J llllghiiJIII CAPRICORN (Dec. U.J1n. II) Gonlp
Mlrah 22. 111113
an opportunlty lodly 10 vindicate you- you-.. . - • friend could...., be
'
- a pe,..., ·you unwittingly ottended In vtlllled or denouncld today lhniuglt pori·
..]'he breW you·,. hOping lor career· lhe pafL Make your movt, becluta thla ,.,..tlono wltll pall. You'D know lhl truth
you ' - M.
'
1fiM a• within the realm of poulblllty In -lion II illlpllrlant.
the JNI ahead. If IIIey come: be prepared LIO (July D-•t'l U) You might be bet· AGUNIIul (olin. »M. 11) You'll lhan lhllnlidd today 10 Nlllgllilze vou« l1llllrl
10 llllke adjullmenll, but only aftor ctrelul tor at maneglrlg lhl ellai,. of
you
wil
be
at
handling
your
own
lliluatlono
In I rrllnrM1I IIIII ilhotM'whould help you
"1»nlldllltlon of your protpeCIO,
lodly,
oopecillly
lllhly
are
ol
1
ltnanclal
"'en&gt;om~~lonnor ltllt :Ill. Qet going.
AR111 (llaroh 21·Aprll II~ Somtlhlng
neture.
PIICII
(Ptll. • lila IIIlO) The- to
you'vl ,..,..., 10 chlllge but ha.. lacked
VIRGO
(Aug.
2Hipt.
U)
Pecple
Whom
~CIII
locllrlllntol- will WUUf
:the powllr tb do ao could bo lecllllated
you'll
be
IIWOived
wlli
today
be
help'.
illatapllt
.
.
. . .. ·• you push tar . .
~Y through a third peny. Thlt perwon
beneflclallillli!ma· era to do at well 11 you'd llka to do,
1)11 lleen monitoring ntntt . M•lor ltlltn providing you chlnglt .,. aheld lor Arlft In lht-comlng tlon. You may even teverae a potltlcin _..,... tl\l!lill nllghlllllllflllt

:"

Pt. Pleuant Repter

675-1333
&lt;

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Women allege
sexual relations
with archbishop

Beat of the Berid...
by Bob Hoeflich

ALBUQUERQUE, N;M, (AP)
- An Ohio woman says her
Again lhc Meigs County Medi·
The group is doing a "Good alleged affair with an archbishop
cal Srices were busy in February. Egg" Easter tree project and this is destroyed ~tcrlaith.
Dlfector Bob B yer repons that how it worb. For $5 • name you
''At the time I was a very
units made 252 runs during the can place lhc name of your favorite devout catholic," Judy Maloof of
shortest month of the year trans- "good egg" on one of three trees at Columbus told interviewer Mike
porting 130 patients to Veterans the hospital. The names are Wallace on CBS-TV's "60 MinMemorial Hospital; 41 to Holzer attached to pastel Easter eggs utes'.' Sun!lay. "I think he exploit·
Medical Center; 12 to Pleasant which are placed on the tteeS and ed my spirituality by comparin$ me
Valley and nine to other institu· so far, the Auxiliary has sold eight at time,s \lith wwerful religtous
lions.
dozen eggs. And that's good. ico11s like the Virgin of
And here's the breakdo~n by EJtCepllhc qUOia for the drive is~ Guadalupe."
units of the services: Columbia · dozen so support will have to be
Two other woman said in the
two; Middleport, 74; Pomeroy,'
coming from you, xou 11nd you. on-camera interviews that Arch·
Racme,47;RuUand,43; Syracu~ You can send your money and bishop Robert Sanchez molested
17, and Tuppers Plains, 1S. In names of your "good eggs" to the them while they were teen-agers
addition, the services made 49 Auxiliary at 11~ E. Memorial active in the Roman Catholic
transfer ·runs and were involved in Drive, Pomeroy.
Chun:h.
four aero-medical transfers during
The white trees have been
Ms. Maloof, who grew up in
the month.
placed in lhc hospital lobby, cafete• New Mexico, now is an associate
I'm always impressed with the ria and the sun room of the Skilled professor of Spanish and ParSHOWBIZ • Fraak Slaatra poses with his
Los Angeles. Otlm:s tittendlnJ the ceremony
figures on the number of runs han· Nursing Facility. The auxiliary tuguese at Ohio Stale University.
wife, Barbarllj second from right, who was prewere Jilly Mack SeDeck, second from left, .and
died by the units lind wonder what members have used pastel ribbons
The interviews with Mike Walsented the 1!193 Womea in Show Business
Don Rickles, rtpL (AP photo)
we did before the services were along with \he eggs and already the , lace were broadcast two days after
Humanitarian Award by Tom Selleck Sunday in
established. I have been reminded trees are atuactive and provide Sanchez submitted his resig11ation
though that in past djlys, doetors pretty. spots about the hosl&gt;ital. to Pope Paul II. Abounwo weeks
made house calls many limes in the Bob Ftsher, husband of auxtliary a~o lhc archbishop publicly apolo·
evenings, on days off and between president, Libby Fisher, braved the giz:ed for any pain, harm and disapth~ir regular office hours and that
weather to cut down the tteeS and J:!OIDtment caused by the allegaLONDON (AP) - Bucldn&amp;Jtaro
Royalties from the -movie ninth-graders, Buffett will award
went a long way in relieving the pa~nted them along with some uons,
·
.
Palace
has
off~
the
Duchess
of
enabled
lhc Rungstedlund Founda· 1012,000 scholarships to Sea
situation. Funeral homes were asstst from several auxiliary mernSanchez hasn't con·firmed or
often called upon to provide trans- be? an~ Don Beegle of the hospi- denied the accusations and has York a fmal divon:e settlement of J tion to turn Blixen's white-brick Camp in Marathon, in the Keys.
ponation with their vehicles. The tal s mamtenance depanmerit.
been in seclusion. He had headed $750,000 and a trust fund for her house into a museum. It was the He'll also pick up expenses and
emergency units, of course, have
The auxiliary is such a deserv- .the Archdiocese of Santa Fe since d~~tghters, a newspaper reported flTSt time Streep visited lhc home round-trip Ill' fare.
&lt;Sunday.
.
··
about 19 miles north of Copen:
long been established and did lhcir · ing organization asking for your 1974.
Winners wiD spend Aug. 3-20
The
Mail
on
Sunday
said
friends
hagen.
thing long before· the "services" support. Just in the past weel:
studying marine scleiiCe at lhc nonMs. Maloof said Sanchez
became into being and so well members purchased a new seduced her by .using spiritual Jan. of the former Sarah Ferguson said · Blixen, who died.in Rungsled in . profit camp.
.
organized. The Middleport Emer- wheelchair, a quantity of modem guage. She said she was 19 when she had hoJ?ed for $6 million and 1962 at a,ge 77, published in North
"We're so excited we can't
gency Squad was the first to be patient charts and a copier al)d their·relationship began.
other fiJU!Dcial sttppOI'I,
,
AmeriCa under the pen name lsak stand it," said Linda Basler,
Buckmgham- Palace had no Dinesen
organized and that was back in stand oeedcd at the hospital. Trust . "And lhcn he took your virginischool-community coordinator for.
immediate comment on the n:port
·
1937. You remember that year, of me, this is a volunteer organization ty," Wallace said to Ms. Maloof.
Cincinnati public schools. "This is
that
the
settlement
has
been
·rmaJ;
CINCINNATI
(AP)
-Jimmy
course, what with lhc biggie flood. which docs a world or good in
very special for our district. We
"That wasn't all he took " she
Following :were Pomeroy, Racine, many ways. I frequently see the said. "I mean one of lhc OUIComes ized. Fergie and Prince Andrew BuffeU is sending some Cincinnati just don't get these Jdnda of schoJ.
you11gsters down to the Florida arship offers."
Syracuse, Rutland, Tuppezs Plains group in action so 1'm sold on of my affair wilh him was within a formally separated last year.
The
newspaper
said
lhc
pacbg\l
Ke~.
.
and first responders in Columbia them.
, BuffeU ~armed five sold-out
few months after he terminated lhc
offers
the
duchess
a
lump-sum
Through
-a contest for the city's shows in Cincinnati last year.
Township in 1989; Olive Town·
Hope you have at least one relationship, llost my faith."
ship, Chester Township, and "good egg" in your life whom you
She was not yailable for further "payoff' and a trust worth $2.1
Orange TowiW!ip just this year.
wll! hovor by participating in the comment Sunday. No one million for the couple's two daull:h·
At any rate, I'm glad there's proJect. The eggs from the trees answered the telephone at her ters and $900,000 earmarked Tor
·
help out there. If you've ever will be given to the honorees after . home early Sunday.evening and the the pun:hase of a horne.
. The newspaper didn't identify
needed .it. you're probably glad too. Easter.
,
line rang busy later.
tiS
sources.
.
.
Cathy Mendoza and Pauy
What wilh the wealher warming
According to the calendar Madrid said they were 18 and !he
'
RUNGSTED, nellllllirk (AP) - .
and looking up, the Women's Aux- spring did arrive. Now if we ca~ archbishop was 40 when he foniliary is hoping for a big upswing just crutch thtough without a flood, dled them. The broadcast did not Meryl Streep received a pnzc that
.in its current fund raising project
we should be able to keep smiling. ·make clear where the women lived. honors Karen Blixen, the Danish
writer she portrayed in "Out of
Africa.''
·
.
Same Day Service
"I have wallced in her path, but
AU Parts Extra
I will never walk in her shoes "
Includes: Cleaning,. Oiling,
Streep said Saturday during a cde.
AdJuslmelts; Gr~aslng
mony at Blixen's former home.
The sale of Blixen's boOks toOk
off after the release of the' movie
which won the 1985 Academy
By LEE SIEGEL
the "big bang" birth of the uni- Esiabroolc said
Award for best picture and earned·'
AP Science Writer
verse 15 billion years ago and other
The scientists are looking for Streep a nomination but not an
PASADENA, Calif.. Three cosmic cataclysms.
S~ond
Very long gravitational WaVes, such' Oscar.
·
Einstein's general theory of rel- as those produced by the "big
spacecraft heading in different
directions may help scientists fmal· ativity predicted such waves, gen- bang~" supermassive black holes
Iy prove one of Albert Einstein's erated by lhc most violent events in or the collision of two such objects.
predictions related to lhc creation the universe, should be rippling
Black holes are collapsed stars
of the. universe and his theory of through space and time. But despite so dense that not even light can
years of hunting, physicists have escape their gravity. Much larger
relativity.
"This is a once-in-a-decade yet to fmd any.
supermassive black holes are
The new search will be one of believed to occupy the centers of
opportunity. I'm on an adrenalin
htgh right now," said John W. the most sensitive ever because it galaxies, where they swallow hunArmstrong, an astronomer at uses three spacecraft- the Mars dreds of thousands of stars.
NASA'sJetPropulsion Laboratory .. Observer, the Jupiter-bound
Scientists give the.experiment
I
Scientists are looking for gravi· Galileo and the Ulysses solar only a 5 percent chance of success.
tational waves - faint echoes of explorer - and high-tech radio Estabrook said it will take six
equipment, said Frank B. months to a year to analyze data
· Estabrook, a physicist at the Jet from the experiment and determine
\
Propulsion Laboratory.
if gravitational waves were detect·
If strong enough waves are ed.
moving through lhc solar system a1
The Ulysses probe se:jl'Ched for .
the SDCed of light, lhcy shoulil warp gravitational waves last year. but
Gina Pellegrino-Pines of the fabric of space, causing slight
Pomeroy, a political science major changes in the frequency of the failed to find any, be added. ·
at the University of Rio Grande and radio signals.
Rio Grande Community College,
The search started Sunday when
has been named to lhc 1993 edition a NASA Deep Space Network
Looking for a Pet?
of Who's Who Among Students in antenna dish near Canberra, Aus·
American Colleges ll(ld Universi- tralia, began tracking the Mars
Shop
ties.
Observer spacecraft, Armstrong
A campus nominating commit· said.
the
we and editors of the annual direc·
The Galilee and the Ulysses
CUISSIFIEDS
tory chose Pelle~no-Pines based · also are being ttacked by the antenon her academtc achievement, nas near Canberra; Madrid, Spain;
community service, leadership in and Goldstone, Calif.
extracurricular activities and poten·
CW.Iflecle; .. your at
· The search, a joint effort of the
tial for continued success.
home ehopJIInll oenter.
National Aeronautics and Space
Pellegrino-Pines join.s an .lite Administratio'n and the European
Find great buyo on peu,
group of swdents from mon: than Space Agency, will continue until
pet aeceuOriea, and
1,400 institutions of higher learn· Aprilll.
service•.
ing in all 50 states, the District of
Findinjl: gravitational waves
This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For '100.00 Or Less
Columbia and several foreign would venfy Einstein's prediction
CaU for complete details ·
nations.
on placing.
And Advertise It FREE.
and provide scientists with a new
Outstanding students have been way to "see inside catastrophic
ads to sell for you.
Simply 'a ip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
honored in the directory since explosions in the cosmos,"
1934.
.
Fill In Your Ad And Mail It To Us Or Drop It Off At Our Office.

Ohio Lottery

·Miami
Redskins
advance

Pick 3:

216
Pick 4:

0207

Low lmllght 1111 mkl-405.
Sbowen. Wednesday, showers,

Page4

blgb llllllid 50s.

..

54;

Committee :outlines park improve·m enf plans
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Sendael News Staff
Plans for further development
· and expanded use of Hartinger
Park were outlined by Middleport
·Recreation Committee members,
· Arnold Johnson and Skip Jobnson,
· at a meeting of Middleport Village
Council Monday nighL
. The two ~layed a map show·
ing proposed plans for a mini-park
inside Hartinger Park for children
· under seven. Then: would be spe: cial eqpipmerit for preschoolers
· along with sand in an enclosed area
· built from lmlled lumber.
. The need for more benches at
' lhc park was also nOted, along with
· plans bein$ made toward getting
· the swimmmg pool rea"'ly to open
· in late May. Fund raising projects
including the sale of bill boards
· were discussed.
: · Financial problems of last
• year's opetatioa of lhc pool were
reviewed, and May.or Fred lloff·
; man reported that he plans to!send

FREE INSPECTJ()N

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
(All Brands)

Student among
Who's Who

CC1LA®~lliFilJBJD)

AJD)

You Ad Will Run For One Week.

Community calendar

MONDAY
POMEROY • Revival will con~inue at H·ysen Run Holiness
' Church throDilh Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. nlghdy. David Scott, Logan, is
ihe speaker. Pastor Robert Manley
invitc81hc public.
RACINE • The Big Bend Farm
Antique Club will meet Monday at
7:30 p.m. at Southern High School.
MIDDLEPOltT • Eric Chambers will inltruCt a Tal Chi class for
the Middleport AriJ Council beginnins Monday. Colt is $15 for~
cluscs. to registet, call 992-2675
or992-n33.

RACINE • The Southern Local
Board Educatitwl will meet Mori·
day a1 7 p.m. at lhc high school.

or

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Xouth Baseball League will hold
stgn-ups on Monday and Thursday
from S:J0-8 p.m. a1 Pomeroy Elementary. Prices are $12 per child,
~ot 10 exceed $25 per family. First
lime players will need to bring a
birth certificate.
TUESDAY
POMEROY • American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39 will
hold its annual birthday dinner at
the Senior Citizens Center on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. The Ladies Auxiliary and family an: urged 10 attend.
RACINE • OPASB Local 4S3
Southern Local, will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at lhc high school. Everyone U!Jed to attend.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Youth Leaaue will hold a
coaches mi;Ciing at 6:30p.m. in the
Middleport Council Room. Anyone
interested in coachinil should
aiiCnd.
{

MIDDLEPORT • Ballroom
dance clalaes will begin Tuelday at
the Middloport Ans C&lt;&gt;uncil build·
ing. Bcglnngers come from 7:308:3l) p.m.; advauced, 8:30-9:30
re:On~ cost iJ $7 per ~le, per
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Intermediate
clas!'Cs in Texas style dance will
beam Wednesday at 7:30 p.m .
Advanced class will be held 8:30..
9:30 p.m. Classes are at the Mid·
dleJx:ln Arts Council building. The
.cost IS $7 per couple, per Jesson.

•

(NOTE: 15 WORD UMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, :rHIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)
~AME:~~~~~~~~----------~~~~

PHONE NUMBER: .,--__,,;..._,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....;.-"-::--

MAIL TQ:

The Daily ·Sentinel
111 Court ~treet, Pomeroy, OH 45769
(OFFER EXP.IRES 6/211/93)

biliwion funds through the Ohio
Department of Development. The
area being considered for rehabili·
tation is along Hartinger Parkway.
Other Busiaess
Roger Manley met with Council
about a spring cleanup program. It
was pointed out that while Manley,
according to his contract with the
village, hauls everything, except
remodeling materials, tires, brush,
old carpeting and rocks, anytime a
cleanup wc;ek might not be necessary. However, it was decided by
Council that perhaps a designated
month might encourage residents to
clean lip around lhcir homes. Mliy
was set as spring cleanup month.
The village's recycling program
was discussed and a contract was
given to James Johnson to pickup ··
materials from lhc 140 customers
in the village. There will be no
charge to the village, piclcups wiD
continue on the same day, and
materials collected will be stored
out of town.

Mayor Hoffman read a feuer
from lhc Environmental Protection
Agency advising !hat the village
has been granted an extension to
Jan. 1, 1994 to have a full-time cer·
tified water syslem person in its
employ. Bill Browning, a village
employee, will be taking the test in
May, the mayor reported.
The second reading of an ordi'
nance to abandon an alley off
South Founh between the Barcus
and .Mil!s prOJ!Crties w~s given.
.along wtth .a first readmg o£ an
ordinance reducing Jean Trussell's
salary f~om $18,456 to $12,649.
Now only three days will be paid
by the village wllh the Meigs
Housing Authority picking up pay
for the other two days.
.
Gail Hovatter and Marilyn
Meier wen: appointed to five year
terms on the Middleport Arts
Council. No apP.ointment was
made by Counctl to the Meigs .
County Park Oistrict advisory
Continued on page 3

Court says emergency
rule unconstitutional
MOSCOW (AP) - The Constitutional Court ruled today that
President Boris Yeltsin had violat·
ed the constitution when he
declared emeigency rule.
"There is an entire basis for
impeachment," parUament speaker
· Rqslan Kbasbulatov, Yeltsin's
· arcb~ri~ .~d at a.newl confer.ence. ''That's clear."
Russia's 247-member standing
legislature, 'the Supreme Soviet,
hastily called a meeting for later
today.
The 247-member Supreme
Soviet, Russia's standing legislature, could call an emergency session of the 1,033-member Congress
of People's Deputies, which has lhc
eonstiwtional right to impeach the
presidenL
In his televised address, Yeltsin
decl3ied Clllergency rule, called f~r
a public vote of confidence in his
administration, and said the refer•
eridum could lead to a new constitution in place of the Soviet-era
charter. The proposed constitution
would replace lhc current Congress
with abicameral legislature.
The independent lnterfax news
agency earlier had reported that the
court had found that Yeltsin violat·
ed the constilution but did not
deserve impeachment
That confrontation between
Yeltsin and the Soviet-era
Con~ress over who should rule
RuS$13 sh~ on Sawrday night
when Yeltsm, seeking to break the
logjam, said' in a nationally tele·
vised speech that be was declaring
emergency rule and scheduling a
referendum on April25.
Yeltsin, elected in democratic
balloting in June 1991, said he
wanted a new vote of confidence
from the people, popular endorse-

ment of lhc concept of privale ownership, and approval ofhis piuposal
for a new constitution replacing
Congress wilh a bicameral legislature.
'
The standing 247-meinber
Supreme Soviet leaislature, in an
· emergency sessi011 Sunday nigh~
vo!A. l25-16 to as.l: the ~ourlto
review the constitutionality of
Yeltsin's actions.
Impeachment sentiment is
strong among lawmakers, more
!han 80 percent of whom are former Communist Party offtcials.
The court, daninated by former
Communist Party members, has
ruled against Yeltsin in the past,
and chairman Valery Zorkin on
Saturday characterized the president's speech as an attempted coop.
The president's team was ·in a
fighting mood Monday an~ today,
vowing to go ahead wtth the referendum whether or notlhc Congress
voted impeachment. Yeltsin
spokesman Anatoly Krasikov
issued a stiuement saymg lhc president could not be impeached legally until after a referendum on a
new constitution.
U.S. Secretary of State Warren
C~stopher _
said Monday that the
Clmton admmtstration was coRditioning its backing of Yeltsin on
further democratic and economic
reforms.
"We will reiterale our concern
that the c·urrent situation in
Moscow must be resolved peacefully and in a way consistent with
respect for civil liberties " Christopher said in Chicago. '
The U.S. position appeared
destgned to caunon Yeltsin against
any dictatorial steps, and also to
keep the door open to any Russian
leaders who might succeed Yeltsin
if he loses his political gamble.

who spoke on condition of .
anonymity.
.
Twenty-five pe&lt;&gt;ple, including
21 children, had previously left the
cl!lt's nnl compound near W&amp;aJ.
lt was IICll immediately clear if the
people who departed Friday night
were adults or children.
Earljcr in the day, · federal
authorities had characterized negotiations with cult leader David
f\Oresh -to end a 2lklay standoff as
lhc "most positive" since March 2.
· A l1IOIIllllil telephone discussion
was "'the most positive convcr$11·
tion that we've had with David
SIGN IGNORED • An army vehicle drives . Texas, Monday. Recently, a tank drlvea by an
Koresh since Marcil 2," FBI a,gent
past a sign erected by the media at a chetkpolnt FBI agent ran over a car left by the media durBob Ricks said. "He indicllled that
at the Branch Davidian. compound near Waco, Ing the shootout on Feb. ZS. (AP)
it was his desire to get this matter
resolved.
"He asked for a little more time.
He has no intent ot committing sui·
cide. He believes that he has a message to get out, and be realius that
if ~' s killed. his message will not
get OUL"
·Negotiators refuse to get too
at a site in Youngstown once occu- dies Or adjustments of the two,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) hopeful because thc' leader of the
depending on the fate of local tax
pied
by LTV Steel Corp.
Branch Davidian sect has disap· The Youngstown and Massillon
Mayor
Pat
Ungaro
said
the
city
levies.
city school districts have been
pointed them before, Ricks said.
So far this flSC81 year, lhc s!J!te
hopes
to
attract
olhcr
industries
to
Authorities have been in a authorized to borrow a total of
has
~teed loans for 45 of ~
the
I
00-acre
si
tc
in
an
effort
to
standoff with Koreah since a Feb. Sl 0.3. million from local blll!ks to
state
s more than 600 districts.
eventually
provide
1,200
new
jobs.
28 gunfiaht that left four federal .keep their bills paid ~ maintain
·
AppUcations
arc pendin' for 16
The
other
school
districts
·
agents and ·at least two· cultists claisroom schedules.
others,
and
68
are repayma old
receiving
loan
guarantees
were
lhc
The state Controlling Board
dead. Twenty-seven people have
loans,
departll)ent
spokeswoman
left the compound since the siege voted Monday to guarantee six Manchester Local district, Summit Susan Tavllkolian said.
began. The four adults have been loans totaling $11.6 million. County, $443,000; Chippewa
Ungaro -said the Department of
held u witneues.
. Youn,stown's $7 miltion and Mas· Local, Wayne County, $353,000;
Development
will help Exal
"What 1 do see' is, though, a sillon s $3.3 million lOpped lhc list Champion Local, TrumbuU Coun- buy equipmentloan
and
machinery to
complete clwtge in the demeanor of districts that had deficits cerli· ty, $333,000; and Harrison Hills make aerosol containers for the
City Harrison County, $144,000.
aJI!I an active parti(:ipation in David fied by the state.
The Department of Education food, cosrnepc, housebold, pharma·
In olhcr action, the board authoKoresh ... an indication that he is
said
the districta aireed to pay· ceutical and other Industries. . •
now willina to uy to work this rized, a $3 million Joan to Exal mentallplans
Exal should employ 150 people r - - that include spending
Corp., an aerosol can manufacturer
lhintr out," Ricks said .
.rLet's hope that it takes place. that will employ 100-150 workers cuts and reductions in stale subsi· within a year, Ungaro said.
Let's hope nothing inletferes with
State troope~s located the vehicle and driver responsible for two
m.t•procea."
hit·skiJ!
accidents Friday afternoon in Rutland Township, the GalAuthorities thought the standoff
lia-Metgs
Post of lhc State Highway Patrol reported this morning.
'
at:Jhc Branch Davidian CIIDpound,
Vincent
M. King, 25, 35608 King Ridge Road, Pomeroy, was
·about 10 miles northeast ot Waco,
issued two hit-sldp citations, two citations for no operator's license,
would end Malch 2 after they pera left of center citation and a failure to yield citation.
suaded sever~! radio stAtions io
In both hit-skip incidents, the other driver was able to obtain the
play· a !18-mtnute sermon from .
Koresh. ButiCorelh reneged on hiJ
vehicle's license number.
taken by new transmission lines. knowledge.
promis~ ~o surrender, saying he
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Identify schools, hospitals,
was watllng for a message from New rules about electromagnetic Members of lhc panel an: represenGod
·
fields caused by high-voltage tatives of the PUCO, the deJ?Il!· churches and other institutions near
The Gallia-Meigs Post of lhc State Highway Patrol issued two
Not until Friday morning did wwcr Jines represent a balanced ments oFnatural RIOUfCCI, agncul· lines, alon' with estimatel of the
citations f~ driving under the influence.
.
Koresh stop talldng about "trivial response io an issue that may never ture, environme!ltal protection, number of people who live nearby.
James
R.
Ferrell,
35,
Elmwood
TerrtK;e.
Racine,
was cited early
htalth
ani!
development,
and
the
·
-Include
detailed
estimates
of
matters" and return to the main fuUy be resolved. astate utility regMonday
morning
and
RObert
K.
Arms,
47,
254
West
Main Stree~
public.
.
.
EMF
beneath
propOsed
transmisi~. Ricks said.
ulaJa said. ·
·
Pomeroy, was cited early this morning. Arms was also cited for left
The U.S. Environmental Protec.· siOn lines.
·
,
The rules adopted by the Ohio
of
center.
tion
A1ency
said
last
month
that
-Disc:uss
alternative
.ways
to
.
·Power Sltln1 Board recognize a
:
research
iii
needed
on
the
build
lines
to
minimize
EMF
more
matteJ of imporllliCe, but one on
whidl the IICienlific jury is sliD 0111, effec11 elecrromagnetic ftelcls on effecls.
Olauf said lhc board took I btl!·
.
b
oard Chairman Craig Glazer said health. For yean, I variety of stud· ..
.. Monday.
A Pomeroy IIIII! was injured in a two-vehicle accident Sunday
.
• . i~ have cited links between the anced approach between utilities
afternOODin
Sali""'ny ToWnship, the OaUia-Meigs Post of lhc State
A mectina of the. Me!{~ Local
"It's one wbere we need to have Acids and cancer, • well• blolos· that contend no further Information
Highway l'ltrol reported.
Board of Educlliao will bj held at the sc:ientific Information, to be ical effect~ in Jaboralory animals, should .be required, and citizen
Hugh R. Daniels, 39367 State Route 143, Pomeroy, was transgroups thai Willi to ban aU llanl·
the board offtee Ia the Pomeroy able to weigh that ill lhc equation tissues and cells.
ported 10 Veter1111 Memorial Hospital by Meigs County Emergency
There are no rules reaardin1 mission lines until the issue Is
'Municipal Buildin1 at 7 p.m. with all the other environmental
Medical SeMcc where be was admitled to intensive can: and is in
t!lnllht iDIICid or II the Har· . impacls and secioloaical impacts electromapetlc fiekll at presenL resolved.
stable
conditioo, a hOspital spokeswoman said.
"I'll) not sure it'll ever be firm.
rilooYIUe Blemenwy School. Pie· and cost impaell that thia board Adopted by the bolnl Monday was
According
10 lhe accident~ Dlniels Wllllopped at the u.s.
· dicled rain which could create a deals with on 111 ont:!.O: basis," a pachp that wlll ,require appli- Jy reaolved. So I tltinJc we're OOID·
33
off-ramp
at
Stile Route 7 ltld pullod into the J*h of a v, hicle
.
in1 down right where we need 10 In
flood probletll- pwn.u the Jea· Olazer said. He also
lhc Pu~ · ean1110:
-Address possible health taking a really balanced
'
Coatlnued on paJIC 3
1011 fOI' chlllsJng die mecdttJ Joca.
lie UtUities Commission of Ohio.
effec~
based
on
current
~~eientitlc
approach,"
be
said.
lion.
The sltins bolld approves muleS
.
.

State Controlling Board OKs
$11..6 million in school loans

Local briefs--

New rules for hlgh-voltage
power lines are approved

CHESTER • Ches~r Council
No. 323, Daughters of America
wiU meet Tuesday. Quarterly birth:
days will be Observed. Potluclt dinner. Practices for lhc rally will be
held
RACINE • The Racine Area
Community Organization will meet
Tuesday a1 6:30 p.m. at Sw Mill
Park. New members welcome.

p.llt~;..ii:l:dding,.uu)edcral ~

-- "

IFmiEIB

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that evenL Items
must be received well iu advance
to asnre publication in the cal·
eodar.

.ina week. '
Tbe members Je(t about 8:30

----

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

Gallia County were excluded.
Village Projects ·
Mayor Hoffman reported on the
Issue 2 funding for paving of Nonh
Second Ave. From Issue 2 the vii·
!age will receive $62,470 add put
in $7,721 for the project
. He also noted lhat the village
sun has under consideration for
funding from ihe Small Govern·
ment Fund lhe Park Street widen·
ing and paving project. The village .
·has applied for $27,681 .and' would
use $3,421 in local funds.
The mayQr was authorized by
Council to sign a contract for the
Broadway-Logan Street sewer !lfO·
ject. Total cost of that project is
$16,711 with $14,873 coming from
Issue 2 funds. Once the contract
has been signed the mayor wiD proceed to advertise for bids on the
projecL
Mayor Hoffman announced a
public hearing for Wedn~sday,
Marth 31, &amp;I 7 p.m. at village hall
· on an,application for housing reha-

WACO, Texas (AP) - Two

Ave. • Mldd,le rt, Ohio

'

ment has been scheduled 'for late
May and that another is planned for
June. He said that ·the committee
also plans several activities at lhc
park to be held in conjunction wilh
the Soapbox Derby as a means of
attracting a bet.-t crowd to that
evenL
The committee, he said, is also
interested in developing recreational programs in other parts of the
town. Bub McClure also serves on
the committee.
Airport ~lion Oppo&amp;ed
A resoluuon was passed by
Council opposing the location of
the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport
in the Rodney area. Council
exJ!ressed concern about the airport
bemg taken farther away from
Meigs County.
A preference for the Rodney
location was announced two weeks
ago by the Gallia·Meigs Regional
Airport Authority after existing
public and private airports in Meigs
County and.the regional airpon in

. in&lt;n people left lhc heavily armed
· CIIDpound of the Branch Davidian
: sect late Friday, lhc flfSt to depart

.FRUTH PHARMACY

••

out letters to companies and individuals suggesting lhc purchase of
blocks of season tickets. Hoffman
said that lhc goal will be 400 season tickets to be sold in advance of
the season. The mayor n~ported that
advance ticket sales were at their
lowest ever last year.
Skip Johnso'n talked about lhc
concession stand which has not
made money for the pool for the
past several years and said the
committee is ready to turn that
at9und lhrough better supervision
of lhc stock. ·He· also proposed that
scheduled activities be .held at the
pool to boost attendance, such
lhinP as water aerobics and water
volfeyb1111. Johnson emphasized
that the pbol itself should be COD•
sidered a "recreation thing rather
than a money-making thing", but
that the concession stand should be
profitable.
.Work on lhc fields and dugouts
was discussed and •Arnold Johnson
reported that on~. softball toUflla·

:'fwomore .cult
· members leave
·compound

, TUESPAY, MAR. 23, 2:30·4:30 P.M.

786 N.

A Multimedia

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 23, 1993

;eopy;lght..! 1Pll:l

People in the news--~

·Gravitational waves from ·'Big
Bang_' sought by three spacecraft

cent•
Inc. Newapapar

1 Section, 10 Pogea 25

·VoL 43, No. 228

Hit-skip suspect located

Two cited for D.U.I.

Board meeting
location changed

'"

or

P(Jmeroy man injured in wreck

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